Dungeon Core Academy: Books 1-7 (A LitRPG Series) by Alex Oakchest (book suggestions txt) π
Read free book Β«Dungeon Core Academy: Books 1-7 (A LitRPG Series) by Alex Oakchest (book suggestions txt) πΒ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Alex Oakchest
Read book online Β«Dungeon Core Academy: Books 1-7 (A LitRPG Series) by Alex Oakchest (book suggestions txt) πΒ». Author - Alex Oakchest
After explaining that I left him, hopping to another pedestal point and feeling like the jerkiest dungeon core ever made.
CHAPTER 16
Chief Reginal paced around the strategy room. Well, he called it pacing, but it was more of a fast limp, really. A recent dungeon raid meant that heβd never pace properly again.
And he called it a room, but a keen observer would see that it was actually a tent. In fact, there were no real buildings at all in the settlement of the Eternals clan.
As tents went it was a big one, large enough for a replica model of the tunnels to take up half of it. They had set it up on a table on the far side of the tent, where the surprise dust storms would be able to get to it and knock over all the little wooden figurines that represented traps.
The other half of the tent was occupied by beds for Reginal and Devry. Reginal slept on an inch thick, goose-feather bed, just like the rest of his men. He would never have better, nor worse, and that way nobody could ever hold a grudge that their chief had more comforts than them. It was one less weapon to use against him in the next chief elections.
His son, Devry, needed more comfort. Not because he was a demanding child. Nope, he was eleven, and Devry would have loved nothing more than to be able to sleep on the dirty ground. He just wanted to be a child.
But his condition meant that couldnβt happen. He needed to be on a soft surface at all times, so he slept on a five-inch-thick duck and goose feather bed. Next to him was an orb that Chief Reginal had an alchemist make for him.
The orb was made from crystal and had been pure white when Reginal bought it. All through each day, mana seeped from it and into Devryβs throat, snaking to his lungs where it sucked poisons from his body and then brought them back into the orb.
The orb had started transparent but was now colored black with Devryβs lung rot, and Reginal would need another soon. Problem was that those things cost a fortune. Not only would some alchemists not deal with goblins, but the ones who were prepared to do so jacked their prices.
The last orb had cleaned Reginal out. Heβd organized a few dungeon raids out east, which he and some of the younger warriors scored good loot from. But that was how he got his limp. He was getting too old to lead from the front.
No, the only long-term solution was to win back the mana springs.
Reginal stood over his model of the tunnels. There were two models, one for each tunnel system. So far, they had never broken through either side, and every attempt made them weaker and eroded support for even trying to claim back the springs.
No, this wasnβt working. Reginal would never say it out loud because that would make it seem true, but he saw a day coming where their last assault failed. A day where he came back to his tent, an utter failure, and he found a pure black orb resting beside his son, but the tent was silent. No rasping breaths.
The thought made tears form in his eyes.
βDad?β cracked a voice.
βI thought you were asleep, Devry. I was just checking on the plan for the next assault. This might be the one.β
βIs that why you look like youβve been kicked in the balls?β
Reginal laughed. βFine. It could be better. But we have something in the works, lad.β
βDid you check my notes?β asked Devry. He then sank into a wheezing coughing fit. The orb on the table beside him buzzed. There was a snapping sound, and a hint of a dark stench, and then the orb turned just that little bit darker.
Reginal handed him a pot of water. βDrink.β
βIβm fi-β Devry began, then coughed again, his green skin turning red. Reginal patted his back and found he was sweaty. Devry recovered himself. βIβm fine. Did you read them?β
His son hadnβt inherited his goblin instincts for battle. Reginal had been a killer in his youth. Only for the clan, though. Not for fun. Heβd been strong, fast, and ruthless. His hands had felt empty if he didnβt have a dagger in them.
Devry had been ill since he was young, and heβd never had the strength to practice, so he never knew the weight of a blade. But heβd inherited Reginalβs constant need to improve himself, so heβd focused on the part of him that he could exert; his mind.
Reginal glanced at the inch-thick bundle of papers over by his bed. Heβd read through half of the notes, using it as material to help him sleep. In the nicest possible way, of course. He didnβt find them boring, he just didnβt have as studious a mind as his son. Devry had written it in goblin cursive. He preferred reading and writing in some of Xynnarβs more common languages, but he had written this for his people.
βYour manifesto?β said Reginal. βIβm almost through it.β
βItβs not a manifesto, dad. Manifesto sounds like Iβm trying to persuade people. Iβm not, Iβm just offering another option.β
βItβs impressive, lad. From what I have read, half of it is based on us moving away from the springs for good.β
Devry nodded. βThere are lots of abandoned freeholds and empty plots of land in Xynnar. Many places where the Crystal Wars spread and people didnβt go back. They still think the war-blight taints the land, but they havenβt read the latest botanist studies on how long Blight lasts, and how much of a contaminator it even is.β
βAnd for all this reading, which I couldnβt be prouder
Comments (0)