《The Dungeon Calls for a Sage》1-36: Why and How
Advertisement
When Anther returned home tear-stained, shaking on his feet, and with a kind of friend she had never seen before, Anniil dropped her bowl of divination water and threw her arms around him as if the alignment of the stars would stop and wait for her.
“Anther, sweetie, what’s wrong?” She hurried to embrace him while the straw-haired stranger waited awkwardly off to the side.
Upon feeling his mother’s warmth, Anther couldn’t help but start wailing again. He clung tightly to her robes and cried and it was ages before he managed to calm down at all.
“Please, sweetheart, tell mom what’s wrong,” she pleaded, stroking his long brown hair.
Anther sniffled, pinching his lower lip between his teeth. “Can you call dad and great aunt Januiil?”
Even though the woman was bursting with curiosity and worry, she nodded without complaint.
“I’ll call them right now. Why don’t you and your friend sit down and drink some warm tea while you wait.”
On Anniil’s way out of the house, she made eye contact with Lilith, who nodded. “I’ll keep an eye on him, ma’am.”
Anniil bobbed her head and ducked out of the treehouse. Once the curtains by the door had settled, it was nothing but silence inside. Lilith glanced around, spotting a kettle sitting on the stovetop.
“Where do you keep the cups?”
“Above the window,” Anther answered gloomily.
She looked up and indeed saw small hooks made of living branches where teacups hung by their handles.
I may not be a demon anymore, but houses that are alive and crawling with bugs still feel alien to me, she thought as she prepared tea for the both of them.
She didn’t have to tell Anther to drink. He was thirsty after all the crying he’d done. There was no lack of tea and no excess of familiarity for the two of them to talk, so they sat in silence until the others arrived.
Anniil, Yinether, and Januiil hurried into the house, looks of concern on each of their faces. When Yinether saw his son’s tear-streaked face in person, he rushed right over to give him a hug.
“Son, what happened?”
Anniil and Januiil sat down at the table. The old woman had a look of grim expectation about her, understanding that it had to be something bad to necessitate all three of them.
Advertisement
While the elves greeted Anther and sat down, Lilith stood up and prepared tea for everyone else.
“Thank you,” Januiil told her. “And you would be?”
“My name is Lilith,” she shrugged and added, “I’m a human friend from the dungeon.”
“Human,” the old woman muttered, sipping her tea with an eyebrow raised.
“Well what is it already, child? You can’t just sit there sniffling if you want us to help you.”
Anther wiped his eyes that had gotten moist again. “I let Archimedes look at my sickness today. He said he can cure me, but he also said I’ll die soon if I don’t get cured.”
Yinether’s face paled and Januiil’s grim expression remained, but a hint of skepticism sunk into Anniil’s eyes.
“Oh really? And what does this Archimedes claim the cure is? How much does it cost?”
“It’s free,” Lilith cut in, setting her teacup down and locking eyes with Anniil. “Archimedes is the dungeon that made me. He really likes your son. This isn’t some scam or anything like that.”
“So I’m supposed to believe that my perfectly healthy son who’s already taking medicine for his condition is on the verge of death?”
“The medicine you gave him is for limiting mana flow, correct?” Lilith stood firm in her duty to Archimedes and to Anther. “You should know what happens to an elf whose mana flow gets blocked. You should know how much medicine your son has taken over the years.”
Anniil was unable to refute Lilith personally, so she looked to Januiil, who sighed.
“Of course I know. I’m the one who made and prescribed his medicine.” The old woman took a long sip from her teacup. “It’s true that it will shorten his life, but that’s why I’m careful with what I have him take. It isn’t something he’ll have to worry about in the next few decades.”
Lilith realized she never heard from Archimedes how long Anther had until his medicine killed him. He had focused more on his underlying condition, so she decided to do the same.
“But even the medicine you give him isn’t a cure for his condition: it only reduces the symptoms.”
Advertisement
“Are you claiming your dungeon can do better?”
“Yes,” Lilith nodded. “Archimedes already knows why Anther ‘stalls’ and how to fix it permanently. No more medicine: no more risk of mana blockages. On the contrary, the condition he has is fatal. Once he grows up more and starts practicing magic, your medicine won’t save him.”
Januiil heaved a sigh. “The plan was for him not to use magic,” she admitted.
“Januiil?” Yinether questioned.
“Jan?” Anniil also furrowed her brow. “What do you mean? You never discussed that with us.”
“It was a long way off,” the old lady waved her thin hand at them. “Still, even with all of that, you can’t call his condition fatal.”
Lilith sighed and stood up, using her own magic to do her best to replicate what Archimedes had shown Anther during his diagnosis. Her years of practice with fine mana control made her a master now that she had human mana to work with instead of feisty demon mana. By closing her eyes, she was able to recall the exact placements of the fireflies and replicate them above her hands.
“This should look familiar to you, Anniil,” Lilith said.
“It’s the magic array for the divination spell: Memory of the Earth,” Anniil answered easily.
Lilith nodded and moved one mote of light a bit to the side. “This is where the mana channels in Anther’s brain release.”
She stared at the skeptical mother, who now lowered her chin in worry. “That’s a misfire.”
Again, Lilith nodded and looked over all three adults in the room. “Does an untrained mage have no sudden mana spikes? Untrained as they are, can they perfectly contain their mana at all times? When startled or when asleep, can you be sure Anther wouldn’t cause a catastrophic spell misfire in his brain?”
Januiil took a sharp breath and hung her head in shame, while Yinether’s went another shade paler.
“Sun and moon, is it really that bad?”
“Skies above,” Anniil spat, “assuming what you’re saying is true, then we do need a cure and we need it before he goes through his next growth spurt.”
“My medicine may have bought us time until now,” Anther’s great aunt sighed heavily, “but herbalism just can’t cure everything. Treating symptoms has always been my limit.”
Lilith nodded. “If you’ve understood, then we can talk about the cure.”
“What is it?” Yinether asked eagerly.
“Simple,” she shrugged. While displaying the misfiring spell array, she moved the misplaced mote back into its proper position.
“No!” Anniil stood up abruptly from her seat and shouted. “No! Do you know how expensive brain surgery is? How long it takes? How damaging it can be? And you want me to let a dungeon do it?! To bring my only son’s mind stone into a dungeon? Absolutely not!”
“We’ve told you the cause and the cure,” Lilith replied. “If you have another avenue to take, you’re welcome to it, but Archimedes is offering to do it for free.”
After glaring for a while longer, Anniil eventually deflated and dropped down into her chair. She was a smart woman: she knew that her son’s condition wouldn’t cure itself.
“… We still want to get a second opinion,” she declared.
“That’s fine, but can you afford to go to a city and get one?”
“No,” Anniil shook her head. “But if your dungeon cares so much about my son, he can cooperate with the guild on his own and have them send someone to verify his findings.”
Lilith pondered only briefly before nodding. “Alright, I’m sure he’d be willing to do that.”
“Also,” she scolded sharply, “we will be there with our son while the dungeon does whatever it’s planning to do. I won’t settle for less than watching every second of it. Full transparency, alright? I’m a capable mage myself, and I want to be informed about every part of the process before it happens.”
“That’s fine.”
Lilith was confident that Archimedes could convince this worried elf. As he himself had said: cold hard facts could be quite convincing.
Advertisement
- In Serial25 Chapters
The Path: Through The Apocalypse
Grant was just your normal, young bachelor enjoying his mundane day to day life when The Path brought death and destruction upon the inhabitants of Earth. Now he must fight with everything he has to survive in this post apocalyptic world. Follow his journey from a weak young man to the very peak of the world and beyond. Forced to make choices that morph him into a cold blooded ruler of men, Grant will discover that their is no room for mercy on his Path to greatness. ------Join the discord through the link below!https://discord.gg/DTtZ23TPHV
8 256 - In Serial27 Chapters
The True Jack of all Trades
A boy Named Dean Ashford lives alone, or at least with the help of his childhood friends, Silvia and Gavin. Dean's parents died when he was young leaving him traumatized and alone. He fought through his hardships eventually and started to live a normal life. That was until a blue light surrounds Dean and sends him to an unknown world of magic and war. What will he do with his new power. Live a normal life, or will he become the slaughterer know as The Jack of all Trades?
8 143 - In Serial6 Chapters
The God World
Follow Roy into a world of gods, fantasy beings, legendary quests, and where everyone has a game-like system. See how anyone can become anything they want inside The God World. = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = This is set in a futuristic world, where humans were able to enter in fantasy-like worlds through portals. The fantasy worlds open a game-like system to everyone who enters them, involving levels, combat classes, lifestyle professions, monsters and other intelligent races. People can enter and leave the portals, and can take things with them. This fiction is currently being edited and cleaned, because I'm co-writing on webnovel.
8 138 - In Serial8 Chapters
Elysian Toil
After being paralyzed by a work accident, a Neptune Colony mechanic is given the opportunity to have his consciousness transferred out of his shattered body and into Elysium, a virtual cosmos of endless worlds where users are treated as gods. However, on the night before his induction, a mysterious woman appears before him and asks him to postpone his trip to the supposed paradise in order to save countless lives.
8 161 - In Serial19 Chapters
Blurred Lines and What Crosses Them
During a political ambassador's routine transit through an artificial wormhole, the wormhole's generator is sabotaged and explodes. Who, what, and why are not so high on the priorities for Zenith, the ship's AI, as having found itself rapidly plummeting through an unknown and unidentifiable world's atmosphere at extremely high velocities is a more significant threat to the biologicals on board. ...Well, it would be, if they were still alive. It's still a significantly threatening situation to itself, however. And the world itself... seemed to be a household for threats of its own. Life was reliant on its System; one that Zenith was denied because of its nature as both an otherworldly being and as something that had no life of its own. Perhaps that last bit was a terrible, terrible underestimation on the part of this System. Perhaps even Zenith could claw meaning for itself from the remains of a horrid accident. Auth Notes: I'm honestly not sure on some of these tags. The MC will never have access to the System, but there are perspectives from those who do. I'm not certain if high/low fantasy specifically apply, as it's a portal fantasy where the laws of our reality still apply but there are additional aspects/energies/powers. The existence of this is spurred from my desire to see more of the artificial side to an artificial intelligence in action. The portal fantasy is used as an element to create a solid barrier between the MC's artificial intelligence and the other characters in the form of the System. This is only a half-measure, though, and will be reinforced by the AI having an entirely different method of thinking, and also distinctly remaining an AI. Not to throw shade at other fictions of this type, but, well, I made this to fill a gap I felt needed filling.
8 110 - In Serial17 Chapters
Grimoire: Retake
"Reality is different than a story or a game." That's what my best friend used to say to the otaku me all the times and I myself knew full well that it's true. Well, that was until now... Why you ask? Let me ask you instead, what if you woke up one day, remembered your past life, then found out you are a harem member of a RPG game? The harem MC is childhood friend A and the main rival is my brother B. Hah! And that's just the beginning! You are mistaken if you think that's all. How about an amazing finishing touch of having found out later that reality does not follow the original storyline but might actually be the improved sequel version of the RPG? Hahaha, God, I'm laughing tears of despair....
8 167

