The expanded party gathered that evening for what Dante called a "strategic alignnt session."
In practice, it was a chance for everyone to understand each other, to establish the bonds and shared expectations that would keep them alive on higher floors. They pushed the furniture in their suite’s common room aside, creating a space where all six of them could sit facing each other. Leon’s team, now fully integrated, sat with the sa posture of anticipation as the core mbers.
"Let’s start with what everyone brings to the table." Dante stood at one end of the room with a rough diagram of party roles spread before him on a crystalline surface that served as a table. "Not just combat abilities, but talents, knowledge, connections, everything that might help us survive the floors ahead."
"I’ll go first." Ren leaned forward with his healing arm cradled but functional. "Tank specialization, as you know, with Iron Fortress Path and a focus on damage absorption and crowd control. I’ve also got contacts throughout the lower floors from my previous climbing attempts, nothing major but useful for information and occasional resupply."
"What kind of contacts?" Leon shifted in his seat.
"rchants, mostly, plus a few retired climbers who stayed in camp zones, people who owe favors from past dungeon runs." He shrugged. "Nothing that competes with faction resources, but enough to stay inford without having to trade with hostile parties."
"Good, that’s exactly the kind of network we need." Dante made a note on his diagram. "Next?"
"I’m the hamr." Astrid’s contribution was characteristically blunt. "Berserker Path with strength maximization, so when sothing needs to die fast and hit hard, that’s . I don’t have much in the way of contacts, but I know combat tactics for most monster types below Floor 20 since I’ve fought with a lot of different parties before this one."
"What happened to those parties?" Sera’s question was quiet but probing.
Astrid’s expression flickered. "So died, so kicked out when they got scared of what I could do, a few I left because they were terrible people." She t Sera’s eyes directly. "This is the first team that’s felt like it might actually last."
"It will." Dante’s voice carried certainty. "Moving on, Ravenna?"
"Half-demon heritage, now evolved to Infernal Scion." Ravenna’s ember-eyes flickered as she spoke, casting faint light across her features. "Hellfire abilities specializing in demonic entities and fire-based enemies, and the evolution expanded my capabilities significantly, but I’m still learning the limits of what I can do."
"What about non-combat abilities?" Leon raised an eyebrow.
"I can sense dinsional energy and detect certain types of magical signatures since the demonic bloodline cos with awareness of things that exist partially outside normal reality." She paused, considering. "I can also read ancient infernal script, though I don’t know where that knowledge ca from, so it might be inherited mory."
"Useful for hidden dungeons and ancient artifacts." Dante added that to his notes. "Leon?"
"I’ve got defensive training similar to Ren’s." Leon shifted on his seat, still favoring his injured side but moving better than he had days ago. "Shield mastery with a secondary focus on protective auras, so I can extend damage reduction to nearby allies for short periods, which ans I can tank a group of enemies hitting at once rather than just one."
"How long can you maintain the aura?" Dante looked up from his notes.
"Depends on how much damage I’m absorbing, so at full intensity maybe thirty seconds, longer if the incoming pressure is lighter." He flexed his hands. "It’s draining, but in the right situation it turns a suicide charge into a survivable assault."
"Healer." Sera’s voice was soft but steady when her turn ca. "Nature’s Touch Path with emphasis on rapid ergency treatnt, so I’m weaker at sustained healing but strong in crisis situations. When soone’s about to die, I can pull them back from the edge faster than most healers."
"What about preventive healing, buffs?" Ren asked.
"Minor ones since I can enhance natural recovery rates and provide resistance to certain status effects." She glanced at her hands. "My real strength is reactive, so when things go wrong I fix them."
They all looked at Dante.
He was quiet for a mont, considering how much to share. These people earned his trust, so they deserved the full picture, or as much of it as he could explain without risking comprehension overload.
"Regressor." The word fell into the silence like a stone into still water. "Eight years of Tower knowledge from my original tiline with combat abilities spread across multiple Paths, focused on assassination and rapid strikes. I know what’s coming on most floors, though the details change."
"Most floors?" Ren caught the qualifier imdiately.
"Things are already different from what I rember since enemy behavior has adapted to my presence, the Administrator is watching more closely than it ever did in my original tiline." He thought of Ravenna’s evolution, of Ren appearing floors earlier than he should have, of a dozen small changes that added up to sothing significant. "And so events have changed entirely."
"Does that worry you?" Leon leaned forward.
"It ans I can’t rely purely on foreknowledge, which is why this team matters more than anything I brought back from my original life." He looked around the group, eting each pair of eyes in turn. "In my original tiline, I climbed with people I trusted for convenience, allies of necessity rather than choice, and most of them are dead because I never built real connections."
"And us?" Astrid’s question was quiet.
"You’re different since you’re not just allies." He paused, searching for the right word. "You’re family, and whatever happens on higher floors, whatever enemies we face, we protect each other with no exceptions."
---
The agreent they reached that night was simple but binding: no secrets that threatened party safety, no individual deals with outside factions without group approval, and no one left behind in a fight regardless of tactical convenience.
"This isn’t how most climbing parties operate." Leon’s observation wasn’t criticism, just acknowledgnt of reality. "Most groups have hierarchy of value, so they protect the damage dealers and sacrifice the tanks if necessary. It’s cold math, but it works."
"Most groups die." Dante’s voice was flat. "I’ve watched the tactical approach fail too many tis since cold calculation only works until soone you calculated as acceptable losses turns out to be the difference between victory and defeat."
"Speaking from experience?" Leon studied his face.
"Speaking from watching friends die because I didn’t value them enough, because I made decisions based on probability instead of loyalty." He t Leon’s eyes, letting the older tank see the weight of those mories. "That’s not happening again, ever."
The big tank was quiet for a mont, processing, then nodded slowly.
"I can work with that since my old team operated similarly before we joined Seira, which is why I’m still alive when so many others aren’t."
Sera spoke up for the first ti in a while. "What about romantic relationships within the party since there are obviously... dynamics now." She glanced between Dante, Ravenna, and Astrid with the careful diplomacy of soone navigating a minefield.
"Personal relationships stay personal." Dante clearly considered this question. "What happens between individuals is their business as long as it doesn’t compromise party function, so in combat we’re professionals and outside combat we’re people."
"And jealousy, competition?" Sera wasn’t backing down from the uncomfortable question. "Parties have broken apart over less since I’ve seen it happen."
"Gets dealt with like any other conflict, openly and honestly before it festers into sothing that can’t be fixed." He looked at Astrid. "We’ve already had that conversation, and it’s resolved."
"Resolved enough," Astrid corrected with a faint smile that didn’t quite reach her eyes. "But I’m not going to sabotage the party over hurt feelings since that would be pathetic, and I refuse to be pathetic."
The eting continued into the night, covering everything from supply distribution to ergency protocols to signal codes for silent communication. They established watch rotations, divided responsibility for different categories of supplies, and agreed on retreat protocols if situations turned irrevocably bad.
By the ti they finished, the first light of dawn was bleeding through the crystalline walls, casting prismatic patterns across their exhausted faces.
They weren’t just a party of climbers anymore since they were a unit, a family forged in combat and sealed with shared commitnt.
"One more thing." Dante stood as the eting began to break up. "Tomorrow, we start planning our first dungeon assault on Floor 11, the Crystal Depths, which has high difficulty and high rewards and is positioned away from any faction territory."
"Starting strong." Ren’s voice carried approval.
"Starting smart since we need resources and reputation without getting entangled in faction politics." He gathered his notes. "The Crystal Depths gives us both, plus valuable loot that we can either use or trade for supplies."
"When do we move?" Astrid was already calculating, her tactical mind engaging despite her exhaustion.
"Three days, which gives us ti enough to rest, resupply, and scout the dungeon entrance." He looked around the room one final ti. "Get so sleep since we’ve got work to do."
They retired to their rooms with the weight of shared purpose settling over them like armor. Floor 11 awaited with the Archon’s shadow stretching long across the floors above, and they were ready.
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