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bloodlandsbook > No Need For A Core? > 033: Grand Feast

033: Grand Feast

  Moriko needed a drink, and badly. She hadn’t been hit as hard as Kazue had by Mordecai’s little outburst, but it still had been a rough afternoon and her mind was feeling a little frazzled. It didn’t help that she was still processing that straeique Ozuran had gifted her with. Being able t your shadow to life and make attacks with it was, well, weird. It also made her Ki itch, which was a new sensatioirely, so she wasn’t sure she was quite ready to learn that teique and wasn’t going to try using it until she mastered another air-based teique of simir plexity.

  Kazue was leading the three of them to the end of the feasting table, where they could greet her family again. After that, the trio settled in at the head of the wide table with the kitsune in the ter. It was inally her dungeon aloer all. Her parents and sibs were lined up near her seat, and a seat was reserved on Mordecai’s side for Traxalim, as that party wasn’t quite here yet. The rest of the seats down the long table were pretty much first e, first serve, though with all the guests she’d ma, the rabbit folk were setting up more tables, and based on some of the chairs, she suspected the majority of those were going to be the ‘kids tables’. And Moriko caught Kazue gng at them with a bit of envy.

  “You’re too old for that,” she said to the kitsuh a bit of amusement.

  “I know, but pying with kids is usually easier than talking with other adults.” Came back the reply with a mental sigh. “I guess I don’t get to sck that way anymore.”

  Moriko held back from teasing her wife any more than that for now and gave everyone in her family a hug before taking her seat. “So how did you guys enjoy Kazue’s puzzles?”

  Gan spoke up with all the energy a teenage boy could muster. “They were fun! Well, the first few were a little easy, but after that they got iing! The best part was when I got to py a vilin and sword-fight a hero on stage!” The fourteen-year-old frowned slightly. “I still ’t believe a three-foot-tall rabbit beat me with a wooden sword though. That’s totally not fair.”

  “Ugh, boys are stupid sometimes,” muttered Hainako, earning a glower from her little brother before she spoke up louder. “That was not the best part. The pys were very fun, but I liked learning all the different flowers, partly because searg for them all showed me even more iing pnts, and I found some pnts useful for alchemy too!” She hesitated a moment, then asked. “Pig them was alright, right? That’s part of expl a dungeon?”

  “Yes!” excimed Kazue happily. “That was why I put them there. I try to keep the rabbits from nibbling too mu those, they have their own tasty treat. I think they want those ones just because they know they aren’t supposed to have them.”

  Moriko smiled ahe flow of versation wash over her as she cimed a fgon of mead and drained half of it in a single pull as she let her eyes close for a moment. She’d met two gods, one of them twice, in the past two weeks and she wasn’t sure she ehe experience much. Even most high priests never directly met with an avatar of their owy, and she wasn’t feeliain that she’d want to meet her goddess given the rest of the family so far. And maybe she’d better stop such thoughts before she tempted fate too much.

  She opened her eyes to find her mother watg her with a quirked eyebrow, and her father looking ed as well. Damn it, given how careful she’d been for the past several days about drinking only lightly, and at home with dihis was a bit of a giveaway. With a sigh, Moriko answered the unspokeion in their eyes. “Today was plicated, stuff I’m not going to talk about for multiple reasons which I’m also not going to tell you. But it’s okay, we worked out what o be worked out, a with the other issues that cropped up. We’re good, and I’m somepce where I don’t o worry about slipping up. I am just going to rex a bit.” Then she smirked a bit and hooked her thumb at Kazue. “The one you o worry about is her, she’s a lightweight from what I hear.”

  “Hey!” Came the expected protest, but it wasn't like the kitsune could refute the description. “Well, I’m being good anyway. This stuff only has a bit of fizz to it.” Moriko eyed Kazue’s cup, then snatched it to take a sniff and a small sip.

  “Hah, sweet cider with just a hint of bite. Suits you perfectly.” She teased as she gave the cup back. “After all, your bites are hardly even nips.” Moriko sent, while ily ign how her mental ent made Kazue blush. It was too easy sometimes. And she was happy. She still had a home with her parents, and she had a room at the temple, but this was starting to really feel like her home. And she liked it.

  Mordecai could feel how frayed the nerves of his wives were, and his own weren’t a lot better. He did have the advantage of having experienced a lot more of the world, but these deific visits were unnerving. On top of that, realizing how much he’d hurt Kazue by letting her feel that wash of his anger really didn’t help. Still, a lot of good had happehis day, a himself slide into a more reflexive social mode while he reviewed some of what was going on while they were occupied.

  The progress of the ‘retired’ team through the battle path wasn’t really surprising. They could be going faster actually, but they were beihodical and cautious and seemed to be enjoying exerg skills that hadn’t seen much use retly. The fight with Zushi had been amusing. They’d started from the archway, firing arrows down at the fluffball, and staring with fusiohey disappeared with little effect. A little experimentation had shown that even spells aimed directly at him teo get absorbed, but spells that had an area of effect could be aimed near him and cause some damage. One of the warriors decided to try his lu melee using a backup dagger and lost his grip trying to pull it back out before Zushi absorbed it.

  Through it all, Zushi did nothing except hop around, which made the group dizzy from the shifting flow of space around the void bunny. A woman wearing well-worn armor of toughened leather had been watg everything after her first arrow had failed to hit, just studying the battle, and she interrupted just as the rest of the group was shifting their tactics. “Hey guys, the boss door is open you know.” Everyone paused, including Zushi, who looked at her and wiggled his whiskers. She sighed. “He’s more of a living obstacle than a real danger I think, try going out the other door.”

  She was right of course, and the group eventually mao scramble out, though Traxalim ‘cheated’ with a levitation spell, since he was not participating in the fighting himself. But there was still ohing wrong with the fight, and after that review of events, Mordecai examined his Floor One boss more carefully. A master spellcaster's untiered spells could hold more power tharoiered of a novice. While this group was not amongst the elite, her were they novices. But they might as well have been, given how easily Zushi had been able to absorb the spells.

  The night-bck bunny just wiggled his Mordecai’s presehen flopped to his side happily. “Yes, you did very well Zushi.” Mordecai praised him, then shifted his focus down to the empty hallway of the fourth floor. There he tried to draw mana into the pattern of a void bunny, a mirror of Zushi. The pattern failed to take; he couldn’t hold it all together at that bined density and plexity. A fourth-floor mob should be able to be as strong as a first-floor boss. This meant they had a hidden Raid Boss before they were even supposed to have a raid boss at all.

  He was grateful that Ozu- er, no one had done a careful examination of the dungeohey visited. Even just thinking that name seemed like a bad idea at the moment. Not that it was a huge power increase right now; a raid boss's power scaled with the dungeon rather than a floor, and their dungeon wasn't very rge yet. Having a hidden raid boss also came with the cost of occupying two nodes instead of one floor boss and one raid boss. Mordecai set those s aside and moved on to reviewing the sed floor.

  His design for the sed floor seemed to be panning out. Sure, it was a learning and training exercise for novices, but not everyone was as skilled as Moriko in navigating these sorts of challenges. While the man in heavy armor was able to use his weight to gain a bit of tra and manage his ban the first se, their arist had trouble keeping his footing around the nigh-invisible dips and bumps.

  At the wall they decided to remain a tight group and take the easy path, having to fend off even more flying monsters, and their heavy anting at the top, only to start swearing at the tight fines of the stag-maze. He eventually went for brute force, bringing out a maul to start bashing a straight path through, but this broke some of the crystal flowers and agitated the bunbees, adding more plications to the fight at the same time as they were swarmed by the ‘vampire’ rabbats. None of them really got hurt, just tired and frustrated. Then they had to deal with the mudslide. It took a bit of effort to keep his avatar from ughing during the dinner, and his amusement remaihrough the rest of their navigation of this fletting through the small tunnel maze that had made Moriko swear robably the hardest part in all of this floor for them, and they took nearly an hour colleg themselves aing before they ventured forth to face Hildegard, the Carbuncle. Again, more of a nuisance fight than a true struggle. He could tell their mage was holding back his stro spells, but he’d made them at least work for the victory, and spent a moment f the mind of Hildegard, reassurihat she’d have a new body in the m.

  Mordecai’s thoughts finally caught up to their actual location ohird floor. They’d cleared through the troops easier than they’d dealt with the obstacles of the sed floor and were now ready to have a shoith Boung Betty. They looked wary, which wasn’t a surprise, and Mordecai decided to up the challenge. Normally challengers only had to fay inhabitants that had been part of the challenge and not defeated, but with the bined capacity of Kazue and himself, they could have more strong inhabitants per floor than normal. Kazue used far less than her fair share, which meant he could have more in reserve. There shouldn’t be any more challeoday, so he sent his will out with a question to all of their ‘reserve’ inhabitants, asking who felt like getting into a fight.

  He didn’t interfere beyond that, letting them show up individually or join in coordinated groups as they decided after they arrived at the room. As he wasn’t moving them their arrivals were staggered, and the first one didn’t arrive until after the group engaged Betty.

  In the end, the challengers still held a clear advantage, but the steady stream of new batants taxed them and forced them to pull out more of their spells and bat teiques. Mordecai made a o remember to set up waves like this if he ever o defend the dungeon seriously. This lot seemed a lot tougher than the bandits, and he wasn’t sure if he, Kazue, and Moriko could currently take the adventurer group on even now that they were tired, let alone if they were fresh. The three of them o be strohan that.

  When the challengers staggered out into the empty hall of the fourth floor, Mordecai created a simple sighem saying ‘All Clear! up and join us’ with an arrow pointing them to the side chambers Kazue and he had been installing at the start of each floor. It was something he’d really not thought about in his previous dungeon, but with fresh eyes and a fresh life, he was taking the time to build a slightly more civilized experiehis was in part to make Kazue happy and in part a more practical matter. Making a good impression got you allies, and if that cult was still lurking out there, it was only a matter of time until they would need allies.

  Zagaroth