Marron woke to silence.
Not the attentive quiet she had grown used to—the kind that waited for her to move before responding—but a flat, unreactive stillness. The dungeon chamber looked exactly as it had when she fell asleep. Bare stone walls. A low table. No glow, no warmth, no suggestion of readiness.
Her stomach ached.
It wasn't sharp. It wasn't urgent. Just present enough to be noticed.
She lay on her back for a while, breathing slowly, waiting to see if anything answered the simple fact of her being awake.
Nothing did.
She sat up.
The Blade lay beside her, its surface catching the dim light in the sa precise way it always had. Perfect balance. Perfect edge. But when she picked it up, there was no alignnt in her wrist, no quiet sense of this is how. It was simply a knife—very good, very sharp, and completely silent.
She turned it once, then set it down.
"All right," she said quietly.
She stood and moved to the table. What remained from the previous day sat there: a small bundle of roots she had not used, a bit of grain ground unevenly between stones, a cup of water she had saved without knowing why.
No new ingredients appeared.
She worked anyway.
She cleaned the roots carefully, scraping away dirt with the edge of the knife. Without guidance, she cut them thicker than she would have before, uneven pieces that would cook at different rates. She accepted that and adjusted, separating them by size, setting so closer to heat, so farther away.
The fire pit took longer to respond. She fed it patiently, watching the fla, learning its rhythm again. When she set the pot over it, she stayed close, stirring more often than she used to, listening for the sound of water nearing a boil instead of trusting it not to overflow.
It did, once. Just a little.
She moved the pot back, wiped the spill away, and continued.
The food ca together slowly. Too soft in places. Too firm in others. She tasted, adjusted with salt she had saved carefully, and tasted again.
When she ate, it filled her.
That was all.
No warmth spread through her chest. No quiet satisfaction beyond the simple fact that her body had what it needed to keep going.
She noted that without disappointnt.
After, she cleaned the pot and set it aside. She waited.
The dungeon did not change.
Hours passed—or maybe less. Ti felt looser here.
When hunger returned, it ca without ceremony. No hint of ingredients. No flicker of opportunity.
She stood. She walked the chamber. She waited again.
Nothing.
She sat on the floor, back against the wall, and let the hunger exist without trying to solve it.
Eventually, her eyes caught on sothing she hadn't noticed before.
Marks in the stone.
She pushed herself up and moved closer. The wall near the fire pit bore shallow grooves, parallel and deliberate. Knife work. Repeated motion. Nearby, a darkened patch of stone showed where heat had once been misjudged and corrected over ti. In a corner, a shallow basin had cracked and been repaired with sothing resinous, smoothed carefully into place.
Soone had worked here.
Not recently. Not carefully for her sake.
People had failed here. Learned here. Left their mory behind in stone instead of instruction.
Marron traced one of the grooves with her fingertip. The stone was polished smooth by repetition.
The dungeon wasn't withholding because she was doing sothing wrong.
It was quiet because it had nothing to add.
Her chest loosened slightly.
She turned—and froze.
The chamber had changed.
Not dramatically. A narrow opening had appeared where there hadn't been one before, leading into a smaller space beyond. At its center stood a low stone dais.
She knew what it was.
The System flickered into being, unobtrusive but present.
Optional Path Detected:Legendary Dungeon Offering – Tool ReversionOutco: Knowledge AcquisitionCost: Permanent Loss of Tool-Integrated Functions
She let out a short, breathless laugh.
"So that's it," she murmured.
The tools rested in her pack. Familiar weight. Familiar presence.
She did not reach for them imdiately.
Instead, she thought of Aldric. Of the way he insisted that choices mattered more when they were nad. Of the way he would want this docunted, not as failure, but as transition.
She knelt before the dais and set the Blade down first.
For a mont, light traced along its edge, catching perfectly. She rembered the quiet confidence it once carried—not rcy, not hesitation, just certainty in its function.
"Thank you," she said.
The light dulled. Not dramatically. Just less.
The Ladle ca next. It felt heavier without its knowing, its bowl no longer anticipating. She placed it carefully beside the Blade.
Then the Pot.
Warm copper. Solid. She set it down with both hands.
The dais accepted them without sound.
No flare. No resistance.
The System updated.
Offering Accepted.
Tool-Integrated Functions Revoked.
Knowledge Exchange Initiated.
To accept, close your eyes and open your hands. Palm up.
She felt a little silly, but complied.
In a few seconds, she felt sothing settle into her hands.
It wasn't power or speed, but heavier and warr.
"I...understand now." She said softly. "No reason to hesitate."
Her mind was a little overwheld with the information the dungeon provided. Suddenly Marron understood heat managent, portions, and timing.
I could probably even bake with how much I know now.
Compared to being dependent on a Legendary Tool, this was much better.
Now even if I don't have them, I'll be okay.
When she stood, she felt steady.
Behind her, the Food Cart waited at the threshold. Its wood looked a little duller. The grain less vibrant. It did not hum.
Marron rested her hand against it.
"I'm still here," she said softly.
The Cart did not respond—but it remained.
That was enough.
She turned back to the dungeon, to the work still ahead of her, to the quiet that no longer felt empty.
Absence, she understood now, was not loss.
It was space.
And she was finally ready to fill it herself.
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