Becoming Monsters Chapter 61.5: Delving Too Deep
Cleo was both exhausted and elated.
"Is that it?" Rosalia asked, sweat and blue monster blood plastering her loose hair against the long scar running down her face. "Did we do it?"
"...I'm not getting any reading," Armond stated in the back, his voice typically rife with pessimism now only a little hesitant, as if he couldn't believe the glowing crystal in his hands.
Cleo's shoulders slumped in relief. If Armond couldn't find anything with his aelf scrying, there was nothing to be found. "I'm calling it: mission accomplished."
The group of men and women were standing in a circle in the middle of a desolate field, the ground so torn up around them and littered with the unspeakable horrors that had died trying to destroy the group already getting absorbed back into ground. This floor had a low ceiling, stalactites close enough that some of the monsters lived and launched their attacks upon delvers from above. The oddity of the dungeon had all the rocks in this floor be a smooth or jagged obsidian, giving everything a slick and unworldly appearance to it. Even the ground was more obsidian, although the fighting they'd been waging for the last day had turned much of it into a fine sand, giving them all a space to stand and not worry about falling onto a jagged rock in a fight. Around them, in a dome of yellow flickering power, a defensive barrier shone that had kept them alive when all other defenses had failed.
Carnival,
formerly out of the French Quarter Dungeon where they had made a name for themselves and now killing it in Harvardtown as the rising stars of Boston, collectively cheered when Cleo twisted the top of her staff and the electrified dome of power surrounding them dissipated with a crackle and pop. The group of twenty-three high level delvers let it all go, crying and hugging each other and laughing as loud as their dry and exhausted throats would allow. It was like watching physical catharsis, the relief each member of the guild showed so raw it would be painful for any outsider to watch.
"Alright, enough touchie feelies!" Jake shouted, carefully pulling his steel helmet off his head so the dent in the side he got yesterday didn't rip open his stitches. "We're still deep in the bottom Twenty-Three levels of the dungeon and it will take me six hours to get the portal locked so we can get out of here. Get a camp set up and then start on the perimeter spells, because I don't want to be eaten by some Rando after we finally beat the dungeon surge."
There were plenty of good-natured cussing and ribbing, telling Jake exactly where he could stick his perimeter spells, but the guild was close knit and quickly started unpacking all the things a group of people would need to rest and stay safe in the dungeon. Tents, a few camp stoves, cots, shovels, large scrying crystals linked to a central alarm, dry rations. Rosalia might no longer be in the Marines, but she knew how to set up camp like one and it didn't take long for
Carnival
to turn their little corner of the dungeon into a home away from home.
I should step back from leading these misfits into raids,
Cleo though as she hobbled over to one of the camp chairs that was set up next to a small camp fire, the old injury in her leg giving her grief at the moment.
Fifty-six is too old to be blasting Shoggoths at the bottom of a dungeon.
Besides, as Cleo watched Jake and Rosalia together, the two of them effectively herding tired and beat delvers into giving just a little bit more to get the camp ready and start cooking the first meal they'd had in two days, Cleo couldn't help but smile and know the guild was going to be alright.
"Tea?"
Raising her head, Cleo smiled at the latest girl to join their ranks, the only native to Boston on the roster, Tegwin O'Maddy. An odd looking girl, her dolphin beastkin gray skin always glistening even in the desert floors, her Class ability to desiccate water out of anything had already saved their hides more than once. Formerly a corporal in the Army, she finished her two years and decided delving would be fun. She had her M16 strapped over one shoulder, even if the guild ran out of ammo four days ago, but otherwise her fatigues were only a little singed and dusty, her Class letting her stay wedged in the middle of the scrum.
"Is it jasmine?" Cleo asked, sniffing the steaming cup and scrunching her nose.
"It is definitely
not
jasmine," Tegwin replied, squatting down onto the ground and flopping her tailfin out behind her. "Peter pulled it out of his bag, threw it in a kettle and proclaimed it SomeTea. Best we got until we pop back up top."
Cleo sipped, gagged, then sipped again. SomeTea was better than no tea.
"What's a Rando?" Tegwin asked, picking up one of the obsidian rocks and flicking it idly away.
"Random encounter," Cleo replied, slowly letting her muscles untense after the grueling week they had had. "Dungeons spawn two types of monsters: Randos and Sets. Sets are the most common type of monster, they are put in a place by the dungeon and will respawn exactly the same after a set amount of time. Makes a dungeon predictable, so occasionally a dungeon will throw in a random monster that has no business on the floor they appear in."
"Yeah, makes sense."
The two drifted into companionable silence for a while, the guild finishing setting up camp and moving around in a slow, tired manner as they got ready for a quick rest before the journey home. Sometime later both women were handed bowls of hot soup and they ate slowly to savor the taste of food.
"Is it really over?" Tegwin asked cleaning their utensils and stowing them before returning to sit next to the veteran delver.
"Not entirely, no," Cleo Tate replied, leaning back in the chair and resting her eyes for a bit, though there was a smile on the side of her mouth as she got a chance to relive her old days as a High School History teacher. "The surge had been going on for about a month, only in the last two weeks did it get bad enough to shut down levels. Now that we've culled the source of the surge, it will still be a month before the monster levels get back to normal, but as soon as next week the FDR will start opening up access to certain floors. By the end of the year it will be like it never happened." Reaching out a hand, Cleo lightly clapped the dolphin beastkin's shoulder. "Sorry, your first week on the job was probably the hardest it will ever get."
"Only downhill from here," Tegwin replied, her chirpy voice heavily laced with sarcasm and they shared a laugh.
Getting up with a groan, Cleo took advantage of one of the few perks of being in charge and stumbled to her own tent, flopping down onto her cot and falling asleep almost instantly, the warm air of the dungeon and the light hum of the perimeter crystals a familiar blanket to her old bones. As her mind drifted, she hummed in perfect pitch with the wards as if they were a lullaby.
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Cleo wasn't sure why she woke up. Opening her eyes, she quickly jumped back and nearly summoned her staff, only belatedly realizing the small object sitting on her cot wasn't moving. Leaning back down and squinting - giving a small curse at not putting any points into Perception this last level up - Cleo made sure not to touch the small figurine.