The Eccentric Entomologist is Now a Queen's Consort

Chapter 842: The Plan Beneath The Dungeon (2)



Chapter 842: The Plan Beneath The Dungeon (2)

She knew these names.

Elowen Nyphara, queen of Silvarion Thalor.

Serelith, the court magician who was half rumor, half threat.

Vyrelda, the hard blade near the throne.

Cerys, the Lone Wolf.

She had heard them in camps, reports, border talk, nervous military admiration.

Now she saw the truth of them in motion.

Elowen was not merely beautiful authority. She was sovereign control turned into battlefield grammar. Her magic did not rage. It ruled. Wherever her roots struck, the chamber's shape changed, and everyone else—ally or enemy—was forced to live inside the consequence of her choice.

Serelith fought like a private nightmare given discipline for one evening only. There was pleasure in her violence, yes, but it was bound now, narrowed into useful cruelty. She isolated. She broke. She made groups stop being groups.

Vyrelda was judgment. Not emotion. Not fury. A line drawn through the room that decided who did and did not get to continue breathing near her queen.

And Cerys—Cerys was the cold truth of war stripped of banners. She intercepted what needed interception. Redirected what needed redirecting. Killed what needed killing. No speech. No waste.

Rhaen felt something ugly and exhilarating rise in her blood.

If she had seen them under different circumstances, she thought, these women would have sounded impossible.

The kind of fighters people turned into stories because the real versions were harder to believe.

Now she was inside the story.

One Walker lunged through a root gap toward Serelith's flank. Rhaen got there first, blade turning, edge biting under the mask and into the neck seam. Hot blood hit her knuckles.

Cerys flicked her a glance.

Not praise.

Not warmth.

But not dismissal either.

Good enough.

The chamber battle swelled.

More enemies came through relay mouths and shadowed seams. Walkers, yes, but not only Walkers. Disguised operatives. The earlier elite killers. Two bodies that moved like border-court professionals, the kind sold to the highest cause and taught three different loyalties before breakfast.

Ash channels cut the floor into ugly lanes. Relay fixtures along the walls hummed with ember heat. Old dungeon seams ran through newer ritual work like scars under fresh skin. Half-lit lines pulsed wrong under the roots.

Elowen anchored the center.

"Left seam!" she snapped.

Roots rose instantly, not waiting for argument.

Serelith obeyed before anyone else even fully registered the command, her magic lancing into the left corridor mouth and wrapping a cluster of too-calm attackers in a knot of constricting dark growth that left them helpless for exactly as long as Vyrelda needed.

Vyrelda stepped in and made the helplessness permanent.

Cerys caught a blade meant for Mikhailis and turned the attacker so cleanly that Rhaen almost laughed from the sheer beauty of the correction. The killer's own momentum carried them straight into a relay post, and Cerys's short blade finished the argument in the space between one breath and the next.

Rhaen moved harder now despite the pain in her ribs. Pain could wait. She cut low, then high, then drove shoulder-first into a Walker trying to reach the chamber's inner line. A hand caught her arm—Mikhailis's hand—yanking her out of a hidden side stab she had not seen.

"Try not to die before the dramatic part," he said.

Then he was gone again.

He fought nothing like the others.

At first glance it looked messy. Improvised. Strange.

He threw things.

A shard that flashed and burst into blinding white dust in one man's eyes.

A compact device that struck stone and sent a killing rhythm through the floor just enough to ruin balance for three people at once.

A hooked line that snagged a wrist and yanked a dagger throw off course.

He stepped into the places other people avoided. Bad angles. Crowded geometry. Relay edges. He used chamber features the way other men used shield walls.

Chaos, if you did not know how to read it.

But Rhaen was starting to see the structure.

He was not improvising randomly.

He was building.

A private architecture of survival inside the fight.

Every thrown object changed somebody's next movement. Every step opened one path and killed another. He was not just fighting bodies. He was editing the room.

A masked higher figure near the rear line broke then, roots crawling up one leg while Serelith's spell pinned an arm too high.

Because of pain or fury or the realization that the chamber was slipping, they spat the truth before discipline could stop them.

"Because of you!" they shouted, voice cracking under the mask. "The sacred ritual! The treasures!"

For one strange beat, the battle went clearer in Mikhailis's head.

Not cleaner.

Crueler.

So that was it.

Not just cleansing doctrine.

Not just regional erasure wrapped in holy language.

Treasure.

Dungeon claim.

Political confirmation.

If this chamber had been secured, if the ritual had been controlled, if the board had broken differently, then whoever emerged holding the right line could have claimed Ashen River's inner wealth and used that claim to bend the region.

Silvarion could have done the same.

Had done the same in his plans.

Damn it.

He saw it instantly and hated how bitter the understanding tasted.

Even if they won this room, the dungeon was already too awake, too offended, too damaged by converging hands.

Nobody was going to walk out with a clean crown on the treasure.

The treasure question was dying in front of them.

Then Ashen River pulsed.

Mikhailis felt it first.

Not through sight.

Through wrongness.

The entire chamber shifted half a thought sideways. Old route seams lit with a sick angle. Magic thickened, not in quantity but in texture, like the air itself had grown resistant to being shaped. The floor beneath the ash channels vibrated with a denial he recognized too late and just in time.

Fuck. So this is it.

This was not a ritual bell.

Not a signal passed through prepared chains.

This was the dungeon itself moving.

The field had tipped.

What had been a controllable collision of enemy, bait, and revelation was turning into something else.

Denial.

A system deciding that no one present deserved to finish what they had started.

"Mikhailis?" Elowen's voice cut through the fighting. She saw his face.

That alone told her enough to be afraid.

The chamber bent again.

One relay seam flared where it should have died. A root cluster blackened at the edge and then healed wrong. Space near the inner wall seemed deeper for one blink and closer for the next.

Rodion acted.

Not privately this time.

The linked devices lit.

Across Elowen's lens, a clean tactical overlay flashed into existence.

At Cerys's visor edge, directional markers slid sharp and pale.

Serelith's monocle lit with thin rotating measures and structural warnings.

Even Vyrelda received a stripped-down angle line from a clipped field piece she had not fully understood until now.

Rhaen saw it and almost missed her next parry.

Rodion's voice entered the room.

[Evacuate as soon as possible.]

Vyrelda's head snapped toward Mikhailis.

Serelith's smile came back for exactly one dangerous heartbeat.

"Oh," she said. "That is new."

Rhaen stared once, brief and sharp. Not at the devices. At the scale of hidden preparation this implied.

Elowen did not waste time on shock.

"Instructions."

Even in the formal calm, there was spite in the wording.

Mikhailis almost laughed.

Almost.

He saw enough now.

They had the truth.

They had the chamber.

They had proof of disguise, proof of motive, proof of layered interest.

If they stayed, Ashen River would erase the board before any side could finish writing its victory across it.

He drew in a breath and shouted, "Retreat! We're done here!"

No greed.

No grand final reach toward ownership.

No one more step for treasure, prestige, proof.

He killed that thought inside himself and did not mourn it.

Survival mattered more.

Serelith moved instantly, biting her own thumb and pressing blood-light to the root web beneath Elowen's control. Elowen joined her without needing explanation. Their magics twined, dark nature and perverse precision, and tore open a gateway at the chamber's edge.

It did not look pretty.

It looked necessary.

A twisting opening of root and black-green light, like a tree had split reality and was trying to drag its own wounded heart through.

"Go!" Serelith snapped.

They began to fall back in controlled steps. Vyrelda guarding. Cerys intercepting. Elowen last among the first, first among the last, because queens were cursed to count everyone while moving.

Then the roots lashed toward Rhaen.

For one stupid instant Mikhailis thought it was Elowen.

Then he felt the texture.

Wrong.

Not her.

Not Serelith.

The dungeon had gotten inside the root logic.

Corrupted it.

Hijacked it.

Ashen River was aiming for Rhaen.

Not random.

Chosen.

Rhaen was yanked sideways so hard the breath tore out of her. Her hand clawed at stone, at air, at a root that already knew exactly where her marked body was most vulnerable.

"Mikhailis!" Cerys barked.

He was already moving.

Elowen turned.

That was the disaster.

If she turned fully, she would not go.

If she stayed, Serelith would stay.

Then everyone stayed.

Mikhailis hit her first.

Not gently.

A hard two-handed shove straight through the root gate.

Elowen's eyes widened—not in fear, but in betrayal so brief and raw it cut deeper than anything else in the chamber.

He chose for her.

Because if he didn't, she would choose him.

And there was no time left for that kind of love.

"Go!" he shouted.

Then he jumped for Rhaen.

The dungeon sweep came like judgment without language.

The chamber did not explode.

It erased.

Space folded wrong. Roots convulsed. Ash channels flashed white-black-white. For one impossible instant it felt like the entire room had been seized by something too large to be called motion.

Cerys lunged.

Vyrelda grabbed for her.

Serelith's gate screamed as the root aperture destabilized.

Lira, beyond the threshold, saw the chamber cut itself into absence.

And every woman who understood what that meant screamed the same name.

"MIKHAILIS!"


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