(Second Book Complete!) Runeblade: A Delving & Skill Merging LitRPG - Chapter 25: Food?

Chapter 25: Food?

Words : 2434 Author : Bacon Macleod

What happens in Chapter 25 of "(Second Book Complete!) Runeblade: A Delving & Skill Merging LitRPG"? Kaius sat in shock, the jagged stone that dug uncomfortably into his back entirely forgotten.... Read on to find out!

Kaius sat in shock, the jagged stone that dug uncomfortably into his back entirely forgotten. What did itmeanthat he was an Observed? That shouldn’t have been possible. It was a children's tale!

The evidence hung there, the notification staying stable in his vision as he tried to burn a hole through it with his gaze. He knew that he had a lot to learn about the Great Depths, after all, every time he tried to cajole his father for more information he’d just been fobbed off with more training.

Yes, that was probably his fault. After he’d been caught reaching out to one of the glimmering runic circles that acted as portals to the Depths he hadn’t been able to sit right for a week. In his defence, what sort of teen wouldn’t be fascinated with the world dungeon after umpteen stories about how that was where the strongest were forged?

He had thought that he would learn things that were mostly common knowledge! Like the existence of Champions. Not massive discoveries, like the fact that an ancient set of legends were secretly accurate, and society at large had simply forgotten how to trigger the attention of the system.

The secret wasdangerous. Many,manyof his fireside talks with his father had been about how people wouldkillfor an advantage. It was the whole bloody reason they lived in the Arboreal Sea, hells!

A good hour of their conversation after his first brush with a Depths portal had been dedicated to exactly howpointlessit would have been to dive in by himself. Father had hauled him back to camp, neck bulging in his rage. Throwing him down onto his bed roll, he had bellowed about how much of an idiot he had been. How a chaperoned unclassed in the Depths was all but completely neutered in their growth, and how its treasures would crumble to dust if passed into his hands.

Mostly though, his father had ranted about how if he had had to dive in after them they would have ended up weeks ormonthsbehind schedule. Kaius had stopped listening then, even if he had agreed in private that it would have been a disastrous result.

If people, especially those of means and power, learnt that not only could an unattended unclassed earn a natural treasure, but that by doing so they would be observed by the system?

It would be a slaughter.

Kaius could see it in his mind. Droves inexperienced scions, shunted towards almost certain death just for a simplechanceat success.

He had to keep this secret. Had to learn more. Learn what it meant. Push himselfharder. If the system recognised him for earning a simple, albeit rare, reward… What would it do if he slew a Guardian without a class?

He tore his eyes away from the notification, looking back to the aethereal tree that grew out of the pond. He had to spend his points. Get a move on and finish his trip around the glade. Rumination could wait until he was back behind closed doors.

He was tempted to divvy them up optimally. He knew what he wanted from a class, and from there the kind of stats it would favour. Bumping up those valuescouldhelp to influence the options he was offered. He had no way to know for sure though.

He also knew he couldn’t afford to make that decision. There was really only one he had available. He’d come too close to death, too many times. He had to increase hisEndurance.

Chewing on his lip, Kaius hesitated for a moment before confirming his choice. He slammed the points through as quickly as he could.

His body rippled, each muscle contracting at once. Lightning shot down his spine, branching to spread to every crevice and edge of his body. His head cranked back, smacking into the rock wall behind him with a loud crack. The pain of the impact was lost, overwhelmed in the swelling sensation of power surging through him.

The well of power in his soul that held hisHealthrocketed out, the boundaries of the misty pool expanding by half again. Every cell of his body seemed tocondense, the constituent parts that made up his being bolstered by the flow of foreign power. Making him just that little bit harder to injure.

Slowly the wave receded, leaving him limp and panting on the floor.

That had been …. Hellish. Overwhelming. Not exactlypainful, but different.

ā€œNote to self… Don’t increase a stat by fifty percent all at onceā€He panted, pushing himself up off the floor with a still quaking limb. He slumped back against the wall, wincing as his bruised head bounced off its surface.

He pulled up hisStatusto check on his gains.

Status:

Name: Kaius

Dynasty: Unterstern

Age: 18

Class Selection: 1 Year, 47 weeks, 2 days

Race: Human (Dynastic) - +1 free stats per level

Layer Reached: 2

Resources:

Health - 300/300 (2/min)

Stamina - 200/200 (2/min)

Mana - 120/120 (2/min)

Stats:

Endurance - 30

Vitality - 20

Strength - 20

Dexterity - 20

Intelligence - 12

Willpower: - 20

Stat Points: 0

Class Skills (0/10):

N/a

General Skills (9/10):

Rapid Adaptation (Heroic) - 14

A case of literary theft: this tale is not rightfully on Amazon; if you see it, report the violation.

Warforged (Unique) - 19

Explorers Toolkit (Unusual) - 4

Block (Common) - 2

Parry (Common) - 5

Footwork (Uncommon) - 5

Toughened Physique (Rare) - 5

Light Armor Mastery (Uncommon) - 4

Medium Armor Mastery (Uncommon) - 4

Kaius looked over his sheet, smiling at the gains he had made in such a short time. The increase to hisHealthwas going to bemassive, and once he managed to cap outToughened Physiqueit would help to decrease the amount of the precious resource that he had to spend.

Every scrap ofHealthcounted. Heknew, deep in his bones, that he wasn't going to be able to avoid taking risks now. Both champions he had faced had provided invaluable resources. The potions he had secured from the butcher had saved his life twice over now, and the natural treasure had just given him an edge he might be able to leverage into future gains.

It wasalwaysabout balancing risk. That much had been a focus of a lot of his training. Being punished for messing around with strange mushrooms and portals hadn't been because it put him in danger, but because it did so for no benefit.

He remembered the moment when he first learntPain Resistance, the first skill he had ever learnt. Father had told him that it was a choice. That no matter how much he wanted him to take up the mantle of the dynasty, he couldn't force him. That the first few skills were arisk, one that many of his ancestors hadn’t survived.

It hadn’t even taken him a second to agree, burying his hand into a biting nest of ants up to his wrist. He had kept it there, trembling as a thousand thousand stinging bugs crawled over him, not retreating until he went numb from the shock.

It had been worth it. He hadneverregretted that decision. Not even when the tortures grew more extreme over the coming years.

The Champions were the same.

He could afford to wait until he had his next skill, but after that? He would hunt them. Their rewards might give him the edge he needed to get out of the Depths alive.

Kaius left the cavern with the radiant oak, making sure to collect the potion bottle he had discarded mid battle with the bear, and retrieved his pack. Setting off around the rim of the glade, Kaius made what he thought was good time.

Without access to the sun and stars he had no reliable way to tell the time, but by his reckoning he had been walking for what felt like just under half a day. That is, if he considered his forced nap after consuming a gladeplum ā€˜night’.

The cavern which held the impressive underground woodland was roughly circular as far as he could tell, though it was hard to make any halfway accurate measurements with the just-brighter-than-twilight glow doing little to penetrate the fog of distance.

He doubted that the glade was much bigger than a day's walk, though if he was wrong he did have enough supplies to last a night. Climbing a tree to bed in safety from ground-bound predators wasneverfun, but he had done it often enough.

Walking through the thin strip of borderland between the cavern wall and the treeline, he passed several more tunnels that wound their way into the rock. So far only one more had shown any differences like the passage with the watch house had been.

The undead defenders had been a breeze to push through. These ones had been dressed as miners, clad in rough canvas and armed with picks. The clumsy weapons and lack of armour had left them too open, too easy to kill. After his monstrous growth in his fight against the bear he found himself a little disappointed that he hadn’t gained a single skill from the confrontation. Nor had he from the smattering of beasts that had charged him from the trees- most of them only slightly more dangerous than their counterparts in the forest above, at least to him.

As the hours ate away, his legs began to ache,HealthandStaminanot enough to soothe the mundane discomforts of long travel. Finally, his eyes widened as he saw a familiar sight far off in front of him. A yawning opening in the cavern wall, a squat building made from stacked stone poking out of its entrance.

The Butchers lodge.

He picked up his pace, glad to be back in familiar territory. He should be back safe and sound in a few hours now. Luckily he had been right on the money. By the time he arrived, it should be just about time for him to get some rest. He wasexhausted.

The lodge opened up to his right, the shadow-cloaked stone buildings, rotting furs and general disrepair of the place cooled his enthusiasm. He stared at the corpse of the Butcher, still laying where he had put it down in the centre of the space between the buildings. Its grey, boil-ridden flesh had decayed further, undead body quickly collapsing in the preceding days without its animating magics. An unidentifiable soup of liquid seemed to melt between its starkly white ribs, the sweet scent of rot rolling over him to raise the hair on his arms.

His face blanched, saliva pooling in his mouth. Snapping his gaze back to his path, Kaius hurried onwards. Happy to leave the grizzly scene behind him as soon as possible. To his relief, the withered undead hunters seemed to have desiccated without the presence of puppeteering necromancy. The trail of their corpses looked years old, yet still oddly preserved. More a mummification, than active decomposition.

He left the trail of bodies behind, putting distance between himself and the carnage he had previously wrought.

Kaius restrained himself from slipping into a jog, smiling as he saw a slight rise appearing in the distance, the consistent flat land of the cavern slowly drifting up at a gentle curve.

There was only one place he had seen that in his entire trip around the glade, the end of the scree slope where he had entered the cavern. He was close. While the dim and softly pulsing light of the moss was more than enough for him to see, it was gloomy lighting. It blurred vision at a distance, far off objects fading into shadow and mist.

If he could see the slope, it wouldn't take him much longer at all to reach it.

He’d started his eventful walk right at the entrance of the cave he had entered from, and purely for the sake of completionism, he planned to finish it at exactly the same spot. Part of that was that there was a small chance of another tunnel somewhere on this side of the slope; he had seen a few of them surprisingly close together. Mostly though, it simply didn't sit right with him to leave things unfinished.

Father might have been a harsh taskmaster, but never once had he complained about Kaius’s work ethic. Hells, he remembered how surprised his father had been when he had been training forWarforged. Day after day, he had woken early - even earlier than his father. Going through his routine of stretches to limber himself up for a day of sparring. It had been a point of pride when Father had broken first, asking him if he wanted to take a day off to go swimming in a lake they had found.

In hindsight, Fatherhadprobably been worried that he had taken some sort of mental damage from the process of acquiringRapid Adaptation. The reality was much simpler. He had committed to gaining the skills of his dynasty before his class, and after his first skill? A little weapons training had practically felt like a holiday.

Kaius hit the slope at pace, lengthy strides eating away at the gradually increasing slope. Eventually he hit the scree, forced to clamber up on all fours in order to keep traction. So far, no extra cave exit, just more dusty rubble and jagged rock walls. As he grew closer, the far off ceiling of the cavern came into greater relief.

A thousand roots pierced through the solid rock of the roof, playing off the light of the pulsing moss to create shifting shadows. Tendrils grasping, undulating in the lightning-like the limbs of some massive beast. From the bottom of the slope it looked far different, a simple mat of light..

The tree roots confused him, like they did every time he saw them jutting out of a cave wall. He didn't claim great knowledge of the Depths, itcouldbe very literally underground. He hadn't exactly ever gotten a shovel and dug to find it. Yet even if it was, trees didn't lay down roots to bedrock, and they certainly didn't burrow through it.

Though, from what he had heard of other biomes, rocky caverns and glowing plants was by no means a universal feature. Maybe it was all just dressing? Like the church and the lodge. An idle curiosity, but one that kept grabbing at him.

He would have to ask around when he got out,someonehad to know.

All of a sudden, slightly up the slope and off to his left, Kaius heard a roar of crashing water. Quickly followed by a squeak of panic.

Kaius’s eyes snapped to the source of the sound.

It had come from the cave that led to the entrance room.

šŸ“– Contents

1 Chapter 1: The Fall 2 Chapter 2: The Great Depths 3 Chapter 3: Cloudy with a Chance of Swarms 4 Chapter 4: The Grove 5 Chapter 5: Unnatural Encounters 6 Chapter 6: Fight, or Die 7 Chapter 7: Basecamp 8 Chapter 8: Light Weight! 9 Chapter 9: Fervour & Fury 10 Chapter 10: Kiting 11 Chapter 11: Unpleasant Surprises 12 Chapter 12: The Butcher 13 Chapter 13: Victory or Death 14 Chapter 14: Rewards 15 Chapter 15: Insight and Growth 16 Chapter 16: New Tools 17 Chapter 17: Snacks of the Unwise 18 Chapter 18: Crouching Tiger 19 Chapter 19: Armoured 20 Chapter 20: Temptation 21 Chapter 21: On the Nature of Curiosity and Death 22 Chapter 22: Champion’s Might 23 Chapter 23: Slugging Match 24 Chapter 24: Forgotten Mysteries 25 Chapter 25: Food? 26 Chapter 26: Interlude 1: Voyeur 27 Chapter 26: Attack Badger (Friendly?) 28 Chapter 27: How to Win Friends and Influence People 29 Chapter 28: Wrestling 30 Chapter 29: Training 31 Chapter 30: Adamant Body 32 Chapter 31: Pushing Deeper 33 Chapter 32: Labyrinth 34 Chapter 33: More Skills 35 Chapter 34: Inspect 36 Chapter 35: Tomblord 37 Chapter 36: Loot, and Other Surprises 38 Chapter 37: Bound 39 Chapter 38: Inscription 40 Chapter 39: Mistakes Were Made 41 Chapter 40: Learning More 42 Chapter 41: Hanging Lanterns 43 Chapter 42: Pitched Battle 44 Chapter 43: Hate 45 Chapter 44: Success 46 Chapter 45: A Lesser Merge 47 Chapter 46: New Environs 48 Chapter 47: A City, Lost 49 Chapter 48: Target Rich Environment 50 Chapter 49: Keikaku Means ā€˜Plan’ 51 Chapter 50: Duels 52 Chapter 51: Honour, and Other Rewards 53 Chapter 52: Tools 54 Chapter 53: Pushing Into The City 55 Chapter 54: Horde 56 Chapter 55: Sandwiches? 57 Chapter 56: A Song of Blood and Fire 58 Chapter 57: The Strength of Preparation 59 Chapter 58: New Toys 60 Chapter 59: Extravagance and Insight 61 Chapter 60: Sharing is Caring 62 Chapter 61: Runes pt. 1 63 Chapter 62: Runes pt. 2 64 Chapter 63: Runes pt. 3 65 Chapter 64: Runes pt. 4 66 Chapter 65: Runes pt. 5 67 Chapter 66: Runes Finale 68 Chapter 67: Mana pt. 1 69 Chapter 68: Mana pt. 2 70 Chapter 69: Race to the Finish 71 Chapter 70: Experimentation 72 Chapter 71: Honour in Discovery 73 Chapter 72: The First Spell 74 Chapter 73: Destructive Testing 75 Chapter 74: The Next Champion 76 Chapter 75: Shaman 77 Chapter 76: Osteogenesis Imperfecta 78 Chapter 77: The Whole Pharmacy 79 Chapter 78: The Final Layer 80 Chapter 79: Surprise! 81 Chapter 80: Life Blood 82 Chapter 81: Armoured pt. 2 83 Chapter 82: Font of Vitality 84 Chapter 83: Portent of Doom 85 Chapter 84: Towards New Horizons 86 Chapter 85: Unnatural Places 87 Chapter 86: Optimisation 88 Chapter 87: Explosion! 89 Chapter 88: Respite 90 Chapter 89: Solo Brawler 91 Chapter 90: Hidden Loot 92 Chapter 91: Forbidden Insight 93 Chapter 92: Unexpected Find 94 Chapter 93: On a Silver Platter 95 Chapter 94: Bossrush pt. 1 96 Chapter 95: Bossrush pt. 2 97 Chapter 96: Bossrush pt. 3 98 Chapter 97: Bossrush pt. 4 99 Chapter 98: Bossrush pt. 5 100 Chapter 99: Unexpected, But More Than Welcome 101 Chapter 100: Final Merge 102 Chapter 101: A Secret, Shared 103 Chapter 102: History and Choice 104 Chapter 103: The Oaths That Bind Us 105 Chapter 104: Evolution 106 Chapter 105: Celebrations 107 Chapter 106: Training 108 Chapter 107: Unexpected Gains 109 Chapter 108: Montage or: Eye of the Meles 110 Chapter 109: A Final Moment of Rest, Preparation, and Approach 111 Chapter 110: It’s All Ogre pt 1. 112 Chapter 111: It’s All Ogre pt.2 113 Chapter 112: It’s All Ogre pt. 3 114 Chapter 113: It’s All Ogre pt. 4 115 Chapter 114: It’s All Ogre Finale 116 Chapter 115: A Grand & Intoxicating Innocence pt. 1 117 Chapter 116: A Grand & Intoxicating Innocence Finale

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