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The unmarked gate opened into red.

Not the deep reddish-purple ambiance of the previous A rank chamber — this was sothing more committed. The walls bled it, the ceiling held it, the floor reflected it back upward in wavering columns like the stone itself was lit from beneath by sothing that had been burning down there for a long ti. The air was thick in a way that had nothing to do with temperature and everything to do with mana density — the specific heaviness of a space that had been saturated by a high-output inhabitant for long enough that the environnt had reorganised itself around that presence.

Rean stepped through and felt the gate close behind him.

He checked his reserves out of habit.

Low. Visibly, honestly low — not the quiet concern of a reserve sitting at sixty percent, not the manageable tightness of forty. This was the reading that made experienced hunters turn around, the number that the classification system’s training materials described as the threshold below which sustained dungeon engagent beca categorically inadvisable.

He had been here before. He had not been here after a day of deliberate expenditure in three consecutive dungeons.

He kept walking.

---

The first corridor produced Ashrock Crawlers — mid-tier fodder for a dungeon of this rank, roughly analogous to the Ironhide Wolves in the previous chamber, armoured and pack-oriented and designed to be threatening to hunters who arrived fresh. He arrived at sothing other than fresh and the difference was imdiately legible.

The first Crawler he engaged with a standard pulse — shaped tight, full commitnt — and the pulse connected and the Crawler staggered but did not drop.

He looked at it.

It looked at him.

He fired again. The second pulse finished the job, and the Crawler went down, and the mana expenditure for a single D-tier fodder kill had just cost him two exchanges instead of one. He stood over the body and did the arithtic and the arithtic was not encouraging. There were more Crawlers visible in the corridor ahead. There were more corridors beyond those. There was a boss chamber at the end of all of it.

He had enough reserves, at this burn rate, to be deeply uncomfortable before he reached it.

The second Crawler ca at him while he was still doing the arithtic and he sidestepped it on reflex and tried a blade strike at the neck joint and the angle was wrong because his reaction timing was running on stamina reserves that the D rank dungeon had eaten and hadn’t given back. The blade skipped off armour plating instead of finding the gap. The Crawler turned.

He tried the neck joint again. Better angle. The blade found purchase and he put weight behind it and the Crawler went down, and the physical effort of a single kill against a fodder creature had made him breathe harder than it should have.

"Right," he said.

He moved on.

---

The corridor was long.

He counted seven more Crawlers in it and killed them with the specific grinding efficiency of soone who has run out of elegant options and is working with what remains. Two required multiple pulse exchanges. Three required blade work that he would not have described as clean under any evaluative criteria. One caught him with a lateral strike across the shin that he absorbed without going down and imdiately regretted absorbing when the next Crawler arrived before he had finished processing the impact.

He ca out of the corridor into a wider chamber with a cut on his shin, four new bruises distributed across his body with the democratic randomness of soone who had stopped fully avoiding things, and reserves that had dropped another visible notch.

The chamber had six Stormhide Boars in it.

He stood at the entrance to the chamber and looked at them and they looked at him and for a mont the tableau held. Six boars. A rank variant. Each one carrying more mana density in its hide than anything he had encountered in the previous three dungeons.

He thought about Chard.

Chard required contact. Contact with an A rank Stormhide Boar required getting close enough to touch sothing that would be attempting to remove him from the equation during the approach window. With his current speed — stamina-degraded, running on reserves that were making every system in his vessel work harder for the sa output — the approach window was longer than it had been this morning and the margin for error inside it was narrower.

He tried it on the first boar anyway.

He got close, absorbed a shoulder charge that hit him like a wall and drove him back two tres across the chamber floor, maintained his footing through an act of will that cost him more than it should have, and made contact with the boar’s flank as it pushed past him.

Chard activated.

The spike ford and the boar went down and Rean stood in the aftermath with his shoulder reporting significant structural complaints and his reserves having paid the cost of the technique on top of the physical toll of the engagent.

One boar. At that price.

He looked at the remaining five.

He used pulses on three of them, in pairs, burning mana he did not have in surplus because the alternative was absorbing five more Stormhide shoulder charges and his body had already filed a formal objection to the first one. The pulses worked — slower than they should have, requiring more exchanges than they should have, each detonation a little less crisp than the one before it as the reserves thinned further.

The last two he finished with the blade.

He was panting when the sixth boar went down. Standing in the centre of the chamber with both hands on his knees and his breath audible in the red-lit space and his reserves sitting at a number he would not have believed achievable through a single dungeon run if he hadn’t spent the last several hours engineering the conditions for it himself.

He straightened up. Walked to the far exit.

The boss chamber was visible from the corridor — the scale change was obvious, the pressure intensifying over the last thirty tres in a way that made the air feel like it had weight. He stopped at the threshold and checked everything one more ti.

Reserves. Low. The bar sitting in the red-adjacent zone that made the back of the mind start having conversations the front of the mind didn’t want to participate in.

Stamina. Worse.

Speed — he ran a quick internal assessnt, the kind that experienced hunters developed for reading their own combat paraters the way a pilot reads instrunts. His speed was degraded. Not catastrophically, not to the point of immobility, but enough that anything relying on precision timing was going to require more margin than he currently had available to build it from.

He was panting at the threshold of a boss chamber.

In a dungeon with no rank marker on the gate.

*I don’t think I can do this.*

The thought arrived clearly, without drama, the way honest assessnts arrive when the body has been doing the arithtic longer than the mind has been listening. He stood with it for a mont. Felt its weight. It was not an unreasonable thought. It was, in fact, the thought that the available data most directly supported.

Then he set it aside.

*What’s one more.*

Arrogance. He knew it was arrogance the mont it ford — not confidence, not assessnt, not the earned certainty of soone who had read the situation and found a path through it. Just the flat refusal of soone who had cleared too many things in a row to believe that the next one would be the wall.

He went in.

---

The boss was fast.

That was the first thing. Not large — he had been expecting large, the way dungeon bosses scaled with rank and environnt, and the creature in the chamber was not large. It was roughly humanoid in silhouette, four limbs, standing upright, with a mana density that made every reading instrunt in his vessel imdiately recalibrate. It moved the mont he crossed the threshold, no posturing, no establishing display, just imdiate commitnt to violence.

He tried to evade and found his speed insufficient for the margin.

The first strike caught him across the chest and drove him into the wall. He hit the stone with his back and the impact knocked the breath out of him completely and he was moving before he had fully recovered it because standing still after taking a hit from sothing at this level was not a recovery option.

He tried a pulse. Fired it at close range, point-blank, the configuration he used when distance was not available. The boss moved through it. Not around it — through it, with a mana density that absorbed the output and registered it as a minor inconvenience.

He tried Chard.

He closed to contact range, which cost him another hit on the approach — a glancing one this ti, across the shoulder, but glancing from this creature still sent him skidding sideways across the chamber floor. He made contact with the boss’s forearm on the recovery, activated Chard with everything he had.

The technique fizzled.

Not failed — activated, attempted, and then been dismantled by the mana density of the target before the weapon could form. He felt it happen, felt the internal structure of the skill co apart like a sandcastle in surf, and stood in the aftermath of that with contact point still warm and nothing to show for it.

He tried Thunder Stream.

The activation was sluggish — reserves too low for a clean ignition, the technique catching rather than firing, and what ca out was a fraction of the normal output. The burst carried him across the chamber in a direction he had intended and he arrived with less velocity than the skill required to make the electrical discharge aningful.

The boss hit him again.

He hit the floor this ti. Got up. His vision had acquired a quality he associated with significant physical impact — a brief narrowing at the edges, a delay between input and processing.

He took inventory in the two seconds the boss gave him before the next approach.

Reserves — the bar was a colour he had not personally seen on his own reading before today. Stamina — functionally expended. Speed — insufficient for this level of engagent. Chard — non-functional against this mana density. Pulse — absorbed. Thunder Stream — misfiring.

He scrolled the inventory with the desperate focus of soone looking for anything.

Strength.

The strength stat was sitting untouched. While everything else had been draining and degrading and misfiring, the base physical output stat had not been touched because he had been using skills rather than raw strength for the majority of the day’s work. The bar was full. The only bar that was full.

Full strength stat. No functional skills. No speed to speak of.

He thought about stat upgrades. The system allowed it — he had the points, had been accumulating them across the day’s clearings, had been aning to distribute them since the C rank run. If he put everything available into speed, into mana capacity, he could change the shape of this engagent right now.

He opened the upgrade interface.

The system returned a single line of text.

*Stat upgrades unavailable during active dungeon engagent.*

He stared at it.

"Oh shit," Rean said.

The boss was already moving.

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