SSS Rank: Spellcraft Sovereign -
Chapter 123: Drift Core (4)
Chapter 123: Drift Core (4)
Lucen’s mana ticked in the background, recovery slow but steady.
’Alright. No gimmick kills. They’re built to last.’
Sword and hammer skeleton closed in at once.
Lucen crouched, sketched a fast glyph, [Soundlash].
The shockwave cracked sideways.
Hammer skidded back, limbs twitching.
Sword kept coming.
Lucen cursed, ducked, drew back [Burn Logic] and flared it high.
The glyph line caught mid-air, burned downward, wild, messy, unrefined.
Perfect.
It split the sword skeleton from collar to waist.
Bone clattered.
Lucen muttered, "That’s three."
He spun, eyes narrowing.
Spear came again.
Lucen ducked low.
[Frost Spire], tight, aimed upward. The spike formed between them and drove into its chest at an angle, sending the thing skidding sideways into the wall.
Four.
Whip was still twitching.
Hammer staggered to its feet.
Lucen waited until it was close, then cast [Crater Bloom] right under its stance.
Boom.
Debris, noise, and a hole.
Hammer vanished into the smoke.
He waited.
Then adjusted his stance.
Long blade.
Still standing.
Lucen eyed it. The sword was longer than it had a right to be, and the skeleton holding it had a different build. Taller. Slight curve to the bones like they’d been altered mid-life.
Lucen muttered, "You’re the weird one, huh?"
The skeleton raised the blade slowly.
Lucen charged first.
His boots slid across loose gravel. He fired [Piercing Flare] low, hoping to take a leg.
It jumped the shot.
Lucen’s brow twitched. "Oh come on."
The skeleton came down fast, blade aiming for his shoulder.
Lucen cast [Threadmask] mid-roll.
Image split.
The blade hit the illusion.
Lucen popped up behind it, snapped [Ignition Burst] point-blank.
Flame wrapped the ribcage.
Still didn’t fall.
Lucen’s teeth grit.
[Cataclysm Vector] flared.
He didn’t chant. He didn’t pose.
He just let the magic run.
Fire. Lightning. Ice.
All of it.
The room cracked under the pressure.
When it cleared, the last skeleton lay scattered.
Lucen exhaled.
Then said, "And stay dead this time."
He turned.
Varik still leaned against the wall.
"Decent form," he said.
Lucen walked past him, rubbing a burn mark on his sleeve. "Took longer than I wanted."
"They were tuned to your reaction speed. That wasn’t random."
Lucen raised an eyebrow. "That supposed to be comforting?"
"No," Varik said. "Just accurate."
The next door opened with a low click.
Lucen cracked his neck.
"Two down."
—
The third door swung open with a low mechanical pull, like a vault seal unlocking one bolt at a time.
Lucen exhaled through his teeth. "Alright. What now?"
Varik said nothing.
The hallway beyond was different.
Not scorched. Not frost-bitten. Just clean. Stone walls without cracks, faint blue light pulsing in a wave pattern that curved down the corridor like it was inviting them.
Lucen didn’t like that.
He muttered, "Feels too polite."
They walked.
No traps.
No ambient pressure.
Just silence, and the slow echo of their boots across the tile.
After twenty meters, the hallway widened.
Revealed a circular chamber with a domed ceiling, and someone already inside it.
Lucen stopped.
So did Varik.
The figure stood in the center, arms behind their back, wearing a long navy-blue coat with silver trim. Human, male, maybe mid-thirties. Short hair. No visible weapons. No system ping.
He looked up at them and smiled.
"About time. I was starting to think the door broke."
Lucen blinked.
’He just spoke.’
Varik didn’t say anything. But Lucen could feel it, the tension shift in the room. Not fear. Just... recalculation.
The man stepped forward, casual.
"You’re the kid with the shard, right? Small. Kinda frowns like it’s a lifestyle?"
Lucen stared. "Who the hell are you?"
"Depends," the man said. "You want the real name or the one they wrote into the core logic?"
Lucen didn’t answer.
He just muttered, "This is a trap."
Varik finally stepped up beside him. "Dungeons don’t usually have conversational components."
The man laughed once. "You’re right. Most don’t. This one’s special."
Lucen narrowed his eyes. "And you’re what? The voice in the machine?"
"More like... customer service."
Lucen blinked. "You’re joking."
The man smiled. "A little."
He moved toward the center again. Behind him, a glyph ring slowly rotated on the ground, slow, deliberate. Not magic-fueled. Not aggressive.
"This place was built a long time ago. Not by people like you. Not even for people like you. But then people like you started showing up anyway. So the system adapted."
Lucen crossed his arms. "And grew a mouth?"
"Sort of. Think of me as... a translator. Your system doesn’t speak ’core logic.’ I do."
Varik finally said, "You’re not real."
The man looked at him. "Neither is the system running in your head. But here we are."
Lucen scratched his jaw. "So what, you’re gonna offer me a quest?"
The figure grinned. "Not quite. I’m supposed to ask you one question."
Lucen glanced at Varik.
Then said flatly, "Shoot."
The man’s eyes locked with his.
"When you win—what do you want?"
Lucen blinked.
The silence hit harder than the question.
Varik’s brow furrowed.
Lucen didn’t answer right away.
His mind ran through the obvious, money, power, survival, recognition. None of them sounded right out loud.
So instead, he muttered, "I’ll get back to you on that."
The figure nodded like that was fine.
Then turned around.
The glyph under him spun faster.
The walls behind him began to shift, revealing another staircase, downward.
"Alright. Door’s open. You can go."
Lucen raised a brow. "That’s it?"
"Yup."
"No riddle? No timed run? No enemy squad about to jump me?"
The figure grinned. "That was my challenge."
Lucen stared. "Your challenge was talking to me?"
"It’s harder than it looks."
Lucen stepped forward, one hand resting near his spell-ready posture.
"You gonna be here when we come back through?"
The man shrugged. "Probably not. This room doesn’t repeat. Next time, it’s fire or snakes or something equally disappointing."
Lucen turned to Varik. "Well. That wasn’t soul-crushing. Kind of refreshing, actually."
Varik looked at the man once more.
Then at the now-open passage.
"I still don’t trust it."
Lucen muttered, "Welcome to my whole personality."
And they moved on.
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