75: Double Team Curb Stomp
Leaving the dungeon, I squinted against the sudden glare of the noonday sun. Was it always so damn bright? While shielding my eyes with a hand, I pulled up the inga nu and sent a ssage to Paisley, asking if she could et at the dungeon entrance.
Her reply ca through quickly, saying she'd be here soon, so I sat on a stone block and waited.
She ca trotting up over a rise fifteen or so minutes later and waved as she approached. Her shoulder length, wavy hair was rioting in the mild breeze, and she kept pushing it out of her face. “Keiko!”
I waved back. “Thanks for coming back.”
“Of course,” she said, looking up and down inquisitively. “Did you finish already?”
I shook my head and smiled wryly. “It's a bit too difficult for to solo, considering my level.”
“Huh…” she said, looking sceptical.
I laughed quietly and held my hands up, trying to signal my honesty. “It's true. I got hit by the dragon’s black fire breath attack, and when I transford, I popped— my e-health went too low.”
Her eyebrows lifted and pulled together in concern, even as she chortled, “Oh no. Your tiny form nerfs your effective health that bad?”
“It's only taking my Con’ down like twenty percent, so it must've been just enough to tip over,” I shrugged. “Point is— I can't solo that place… but it is full of undead…”
Her smile grew, and she glanced hopefully at the entrance. Her deep brown eyes were hopeful when they wordlessly flicked back to et mine.
“So…” I said, fighting a grin. “Dungeon date?”
“Dungeon date?” She asked, giving a soft but incredulous look.
My eyebrows rose, half suggestively, and half in challenge.
She took a second to think, her black leather shoes idly scuffing the damp, packed dirt. “Okay. Okay, fine. Dungeon date.”
My heart blood, and I hopped to my feet, taking her hand in mine. “Yay! This will be fun! Oh, but we should probably co up with a strategy, because neither of us can take much of a hit…”
Laughing, she followed through the portal.
The darkness hit instantly, and it took my eyes a second to adjust. Apparently, Paisley didn't need to do the sa, because she let go of my hand and walked forward, looking around.
“Man, that's so fucky. Bright, cold day, then bam, eternal night,” she comnted. Her eyes fell on the glowing battle standard. “Oh, this place.”
“The three dudes at the start managed to kill the first ti,” I said, staring daggers at the wisp as it arrived to bob and sing to us.
“Oh, that… sucks,” she said with as neutral an expression as she could muster. When she t my eyes, she realised that I saw right through it, so she laughed, “Okay, it’s funny, but like… I know you’re good at this ga, Keiko, but thinking you can take on a level sixty dungeon when you’re level thirty is…”
“Hubris,” I finished for her.
Reaching out, she ran a hand down my arm again, sending a small, shivering frisson across my skin. “It’s very optimistic.”
“Thanks for being gentle,” I said with a wry shake of my head. “Co on. Let’s go— I want to see you obliterate these assholes.”
“Grogu mont,” she muttered, and began to approach the upcoming trash mob encounter. Then, she stopped and looked at . “You go trigger their spawn.”
With a shrug, I trotted over the old gravel field and towards the wisp. I couldn't help but wonder, though— what was a grogu?
The wisp, who was as excited as ever to lure another player into an ambush, vanished with a little zipping sound. Following that were the groans of three well trained zombie spearn— or serjants, as the ga called them.
Three sharp, biting whistles sounded, and there was a rapidfire thump as three spikes of dark red magic hamred them. Bone, leather, and ancient dried flesh all exploded out in every direction— including all over .
I coughed, waving a hand to try and clear the air of zombie dust. God, that was fucking gross.
Paisley's laugh of amusent made frustrated, but also it set my stomach to bubbling like a witch’s cauldron. Narrowing my eyes at her, I unequipped and re-equipped my clothing to clean it.
Her eyes blew wide, and she tripped over thin air— stumbling forward a few steps while her face flad red. “Keiko! You… you rascal!”
Using my infinite waterskin and the sleeve of my hakamashita, I wiped my face, then my hands. Then, for good asure, I flashed Paisley again, cleaning the dust off once more. It was probably all in my hair, though. Damn it.
My friend's face was practically glowing red now, so much so that I could clearly make it out, even in the dim light.
“Let's keep out of the blast radius, next ti,” I said sweetly.
She nodded. “Point taken…”
Paisley used the sa spell to evaporate the next two trash mob pulls, bringing us to the dragon fight once more.
Before we began it, however, she put a hand out to stop . “We need, like, an actual plan here.”
“Yeah…” I agreed, staring at the dragon mound where the wisp was doing its little dance. “The breath attack is scary, but those skeletons could also get out of hand pretty quickly if we let them”
Paisley humd quietly while she thought. “You don't have much AOE, do you?”
I shook my head.
“And all my AOE abilities haven't been invested in, so they won't be effective enough to control the crowd…” she said, frowning now. “Neither of us can even afford to get hit…”
“There's two things I have going for my build,” I said. “Speed, and damage. Everything else is very… thirty levels below.”
Her eyes flicked sideways at the sa mont that mine did the sa. eting in the middle, our gazes locked. Paisley arched a perfectly curved eyebrow in an unspoken challenge. It was the kind of look that said, ‘We both know what we need to do here. I'm up for it— are you?’
“Oh boy,” I breathed, rolling my shoulders.
“My favourite strategy,” my gorgeous goth friend said happily. “... Ready?”
Drawing my katana, I held it in both hands while my wings materialised behind . “I'll go poke it.”
“Perfect,” she said sweetly.
Fluttering over towards the wisp and the mound, I got all the way up to it before—
The pile erupted. Bones and ancient, corroded weapons flew in all directions, while the dragon flew straight up— it looked like a fighter jet popping chaff.
I did my best heat-seeking missile impression.
My vision gained a gentle pink filter, and my Nad Mark caused a spot on the back of the dragon’s neck to glow neon pink. Ti seed to slow, and whether it was just simulated adrenaline, or my thoughts surging into digital overdrive, I couldn't tell. Either way, I made full use of it.
My sword howled, it was a cherry blossom hurricane, glowing with pink and white energies. As it cut the air, I spun, matching the dragon’s speed while my foot touched down briefly on one of its spines to boost myself further. The glowing weak spot was right there— waiting.
With all my might, I hacked into the dragon’s neck. Scales snapped, dead flesh was sundered, and a split second later, a second afterimage of my sword slamd ho— twin Claw Duplicity and Ascendant Slice together. Two lengthy damage numbers flew outwards like dislodged spinal segnts, and then I was past it.
My arc took down into the destroyed pile of bones, where I had a split second to watch as Paisley’s attacks landed.
She had her flute unwrapped and held to her lips with one hand, while the other was outstretched. Concentration creased her brow, and her eyes flared with determination.
From her hand, I caught the briefest glimpse of a jagged black trail linking her to the boss. Then, abruptly, a bolt of blackened lightning connected.
The impossibly sharp snap of lightning rocked the quiet dungeon, and to my utter shock, the blow actually threw the dragon backwards out of its spawn animation. It flew over , spinning— its wings working with desperate instinct to control its unscheduled change in trajectory.
Snap-crack. Another bolt hit ho before the monster had even landed. Sudden premonition had twirling through the air, leaving a trail of ribbons. The third hamr-blow bolt of black lightning whipped past, right into the undead boss’ head.
With Ribbon Roll on cooldown, I turned to Scatter Dash. It took in close, and a flash of inspiration had applying Psychosomatic Sunder on the illusory other Keiko. The phantom sword swing cut deep through the remaining flesh on one wing. That was fun.
I didn't have ti to think about the implications of that information, though. We couldn't afford to pump the brakes on this train.
Without bothering to touch down, I loosened my grip on the hilt of my katana and narrowed my attention down to a point. The sword slipped from my fingers, but not my control, and it blurred around in a vicious arc, sheathed in bright green light.
Six illusions jumped free of my body, blades hungry. Each one tore into the reeling dragon, exacting a chisel’s toll on its health bar. Between their attack and Larkspur’s follow-up blade-beam, a machine-gun burst of whistling red projectiles flew past .
Paisley's spikes of deadly magic and my green energy blade landed together, chunking the dragon’s health further while it wailed— confused and in pain.
Neither Paisley nor I had any rcy to give. Nad Mark was about to co off cooldown, and Ascendant Slice wouldn't be far behind it.
Twisting tendrils of darkness suddenly burst up out of the ground, grasping at the boss with sharpened tips. I jumped after them, Pinprick Strike already honing the tip of my katana down to a deadly point.
My wings whirred frantically, propelling into a lunge that carried my sword into the dragon’s chest. I was rewarded with an instant thudding explosion, and a spray of bone and dry, grey dragon scales flew up out of its back.
When I drew back, I noticed the wound on the boss had a subtle caustic green outline. My acid was getting to work.
A blur in my peripheral vision was all the warning I got, but it was enough. My sword ca up, its flat side shimring with Imbue Parry— a desperate attempt to block the inevitable. It was only partially successful.
Claws caught on the blade, saving from evisceration, but the force of it was enough to throw onto my back in the dirt. I swung blindly in response, catching a second swipe and cutting into the dragon's palm. In the corner of my vision, Fae Feedback activated with one stack of its outgoing damage buff.
However, the boss was looming above now, and its gullet began to glow with a sickly black aura. Aw, hell.
Triple bolts of necrotic lightning hamred the boss right in the face, stunning it and saving from imminent death. I took the opportunity and placed a Nad Mark on the boss. This ti, the glowing point was on the opposite side of the neck from the last one…
Huh, I wonder…
Jumping up, I activated Twin Claw Duplicity and Ascendant Slice in tandem and hacked at the weak point. Bold red text inford that my attack was as beefy as it'd felt, and— oh, shit!
“Paisley!” I called, leaping back from the dragon. “Weak point kill! The neck!”
Being friends with the fantasy equivalent of heavy artillery had a lot of perks, and there had never been a better example of those perks than now.
A stream of fast, deadly magical spikes flew past— fast enough to drag my braid around in their passing. Her aim was perfect. Pieces of dragon exploded in all directions, but there was one large chunk that had sighing with relief. The head slamd down among the bones of long dead soldiers, having never raised any of them to fight us. We'd done it.
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