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Dungeon Desolation (The Divine Dungeon Book 4)

Page 29

by Dakota Krout


  I told Dani, who mimicked an eye and rolled around.

  “I don’t know; it reminds me of a basic slime.” Dani critically inspected the blob of steamy water.

  I looked at the blob lovingly.

  There was no response, which was exactly as expected. Perfect. If it had somehow talked, I might have screamed and tried to figure out what was going on. Water wasn’t supposed to speak. Of course, who was I to get upset about typically inanimate objects talking.

  I built up a Core with various Mana types and tried to match the minerals to it. I used all sorts of material, but… nothing I did worked to make a higher form of elemental. I couldn’t even replicate Bath! I even destroyed him and absorbed him, but… there was nothing that should have allowed him to be animated like he was. There must be some property of corruption that allowed it to function as it did, but it was energy. Energy was supposed to only be a tool, not a deciding factor in animation. There was only one thing to do.

  I shouted to the beings in my dungeon. There were whoops and cheers, but most of it was a cheerleading attempt. They all knew they would likely not be visiting this new floor. I had previously been working on carving out a space and infusing it with my influence, but I had given up on actually putting anything down there for a long while. This war and my forcible inclusion in it had eaten my attention for far too long. It was time to be a dungeon again, and I had missed my experimentation.

  So, a massive empty room that needed creatures. Creatures that needed to eat others of their kind to increase in power and complexity. This should be fun. I thought about making the room become filled with rings to battle through, but I decided to try something else that would be interesting and potentially deadly. The walls moved at my direction and closed in around the room until there was a huge conical shape created from the stone. The rim, the highest portion of the room, would be the start. The tip of the cone would be at the bottom. Was it a waste of space? Maybe, but it was only a few hundred feet deep.

  My real concern was people flying. I needed a way around that, and I decided that I had figured it out.

  “What are you up to, Cal? You’ve been quiet for a while now.” Dani flew to where I directed her, Grace tagging along and bounding through the stone to create oddly flowing patterns in the rock. It was cute, so I left her art wherever she made it.

  I trailed off, letting her mind play a few tricks on her. When she was sufficiently twitchy, I continued,

  “Oh, thank goodness.” She breathed a sigh of relief while I chuckled. “What are you thinking?”

  I let her look over the cone,

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