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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 290

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Chapter Two Hundred and Ninety: Reunion

Passing between the black pillars, they emerged into a pale blue ice cavern. Despite being deep inside a cave, the place was brightly lit, as though light were shining down from somewhere far above through the transparent blue ice. While Karen carefully moved forward in a crouched posture to avoid slipping, Licht strode ahead a few steps before turning back.

Lumi? What’s wrong?”

“Kyukyu…”

Hearing the riding dragon’s cry, Karen finally noticed something was off and looked back. From the moment they had entered the tenth floor, Lumi hadn’t taken a single step. Even when Licht pulled at it bridle, it planted its feet and refused to move forward.

“…Well. It’s not unheard of for a riding dragon to do this on a floor where a dungeon boss is present. Unusual for the tenth floor, but not impossible.”

Despite calling it something that happened from time to time, Licht said it with a deep crease between his brows.

“So Mr. Julius hasn’t defeated the boss on this floor yet.”

“That would seem to be the case.”

He said it with a look that suggested he thought more was going on than that. Without stating exactly what he suspected, Licht tied Lumi’s reins to one of the gate pillars.

Karen hesitated over whether to channel magical power into the earring. Now that they were on the same floor, the magic wouldn’t be blocked. If she channeled magical power into the earring—the one in the color of Julius’s eyes—the one Julius wore in her own eye color would grow warm. She went back and forth, and in the end decided against it. If Julius were in the middle of a fight, it would break his concentration.

Karen, I know your body is hurting.”

Karen flinched and backed away, clutching her hand instinctively. Licht gave her an exasperated look.

“Hiding it won’t do any good. Your face is completely red, for one thing.”

She had been aware of a stinging pain across her face, but hadn’t realized it was obvious to anyone who looked. Karen covered her face with her hands, but it was already too late.

I know full well this will be hard on your body, but I want to reach Julius as fast as possible.”

Karen felt a wave of relief. Licht had been entrusted with her by Julius, but his first priority was the same as hersJulius himself. Not being fussed over was oddly comfortable, and she nodded without hesitation.

I feel exactly the same. It doesn’t matter what it costs me.”

Your generous agreement is much appreciated, Karen.”

Licht smiled and thanked her—and as he spoke, he was already supporting Karen’s body as he knocked her unconscious and she began to fall.

“It’s hard on you either way, but you being unconscious is the fastest option.”

Karen clawed her way out of a dream in which she was drowning in the sea.

“Gah—cough, cough!”

A brutal shot of alcohol had been forced into her, going up her nose and leaving a sharp sting at the back of her throat. Licht looked down at her as she coughed with tears in her eyes and held up a flask.

“This stimulant works pretty well, doesn’t it? It’s not a potion, though—just dwarven fire liquor. That means I can use it as many times as needed.”

After coughing to her heart’s content, Karen looked around.

“Where are we…?”

She didn’t know when she had lost consciousness. She didn’t remember, but it seemed they had arrived at their destination.

They had passed through the ice cavern and now stood in a place where an enormous pit yawned open all the way to the sky. The sky itself was so distant that the rim of the cliffs far above blurred and disappeared. All that was visible was a single sliver of sky, like a crack in the earth. It struck Karen as somehow familiar, though she couldn’t recall why. Inverted icicles jutted up all around like spikes.

And directly before Karen and Licht, embedded in a wall of blue ice as if it had always been there, was a door. A pair of black double doors with golden geometric patterns traced across their surface. It was the so-called “boss room” door Karen had once heard adventurers talking about in a tavern. Its official name was the Door of Trials.

“We’re going in, but don’t do anything reckless.”

“Understood.”

“If the pain gets to be too much, drink a potion. But if you do, stay back—don’t come forward.”

Karen’s entire body ached as though she’d sustained bruises all over, whatever manner of transportation had brought her here. She endured it in silence, keeping her expression neutral. If she drank a potion now, there would be nothing left in reserve. While she confirmed that the alchemy cauldron and World Tree ladle strapped to her pack were intact, she answered:

I’m still all right.”

“If something happens to you, Julius might very well cut ties with me. …Though bringing you somewhere like this in the first place probably means I’m already done for.”

Licht looked quietly, mournfully resigned. Karen smiled at him with her reddened cheeks.

I’m the one who brought you, Master Licht. So if Mr. Julius is angry, it’ll be at me.”

You’ve got it easy. Julius would never hate you.”

Karen thought Julius probably wouldn’t hate Licht either. Bringing her all the way here had unmistakably been for Julius’s sake, and Julius would understand that. She chose not to say it aloud and said something else instead:

Mr. Julius is inside, right?”

“Most likely. Stay behind me.”

“Yes.”

Karen gave a brief answer, and Licht slowly opened the door.

Beyond it was another prison-like chamber—open to the sky, surrounded by walls of ice and inverted icicles hanging down like bars.

And in the middle of that prison lay a massive humanoid monster of deep blue, easily five meters tall, sprawled on its side.

Licht pushed Karen behind him and murmured:

“Just sleeping…? No—”

Through the gap between Licht’s arm, Karen found the one she had been looking for and cried out.

Mr. Julius!”

“— Karen?!”

On the other side of the fallen monster. Julius was standing before the two black pillars at the far end of the ice prison—the gate to the eleventh floor—and at the sound of Karen calling his name, he turned around immediately.

He looked somewhat worn, but all in one piece, healthy—and on the tenth floor of all places, his complexion was clear, even glowing, and the expression on his face at Karen’s sudden appearance was one of complete and utter disbelief.

Karen’s eyes filled with tears, and she channeled magical power into the earring with everything she had.

“Whoa—?!”

Julius gave a violent start as the earring seared with heat. Karen fixed him with a glare and broke into a run. The monster wasn’t sleeping—it was on its side in a pool of blood. She sprinted past it and threw herself at Julius.

Julius caught Karen’s body without the slightest effort as she crashed into him.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 289

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Chapter Two Hundred and Eighty-Nine: Reaching the Ninth Floor

As it turned out, the trick of dampening the vibrations enough for conversation naturally came at the cost of speed—and now that speed was everything, Karen had let Lumi the riding dragon run at full tilt wherever there was no need to talk.

Between screaming, clenching her jaw against nausea, and hovering on the edge of unconsciousness, having given up on everything, Karen had somehow found herself atop the ridge of a snowy mountain before she knew it.

And there, directly ahead of her, stood two black pillars. The dungeon gate that led to the tenth floor.

They had made it here in just over a single day. Since setting out from the sixth floor yesterday afternoon, they had pushed Lumi in a relentless forced march, with Licht killing every monster in their path on the spot.

In front of the dungeon gate, Karen collapsed flat on her back. Beside Karen, who no longer felt capable of moving even a finger, Licht lit a fire.

“…So people at your level, Master Licht, clear dungeons at this kind of speed.”

“No.”

Licht dismissed Karen’s words as she began to recover a little.

“Do you normally explore more slowly? That does make sense—you never know what might happen in a dungeon.”

But Licht dismissed that too.

“The other way around. We go faster. The first ten floors especially—we blow straight through them. That way, most of the monsters up to that point can’t keep up, so no matter what’s in there, it’s actually safer.”

“…Don’t tell me you can run faster than Lumi?”

“Of course I can. Riding dragons are lesser dragons. They’re only E-rank, you know? That means they’re weak enough for humans to tame. Still, the lesser dragons chosen as riding dragons are unusually fast for their rank. The quickest ones can move as fast as C-rank monsters—but Julius and I are stronger than C-rank monsters.”

“So it would’ve been faster if you’d just carried me?”

“A normal human body can’t survive our top speed, so the riding dragon was the right call. They say a riding dragon’s pace is about the fastest a human can just barely endure.”

“I see…”

They were on the ridge of a snowy mountain, where the narrow path was as thin as a spine and steep cliffs dropped away on either side. Every flat surface was blanketed in thick, heavy snow—but around the open area where the dungeon gate stood, not a single flake had settled. Monsters rarely approached near the dungeon gates either, making it an ideal campsite.

Karen lay wrapped in her fluffy mantle against the bare rock, looking up at the sky. Even though they were inside a dungeon, the night sky above was a perfect jet black, brilliant with stars. Someone from her previous life who knew the movements of the stars might have understood something just from looking at them. Karen herself only knew Orion, and at least that much was true—she couldn’t find it.

“Even being able to descend this fast… why hasn’t Mr. Julius come back yet?”

“Maybe he’s just taking his time.”

“…Maybe so.”

Licht had caught Karen’s murmur, but he didn’t actually believe it—that was why they had rushed here. And Karen didn’t believe it either, not for a moment, though she wished with all her heart that it were true. That was a wish they both shared.

The tenth floor. Neither of them knew what lay beyond, and so both Karen and Licht had chosen to camp before the dungeon gate. Precisely because every moment counted, they had to be fully prepared.

Karen, fire’s ready. Can you get up?”

“…Yes, I rested a little. I’m fine. Thank you for lighting it.”

Karen dragged herself upright, and Licht started placing his order:

“The temperature drops with every floor we descend—same as other Ehlertt-affiliated dungeons. More body-warming potions would be useful.”

I’ll make them.”

“That’s all we need for now.”

At Licht’s words, Karen quietly breathed a sigh of relief. She hadn’t done a thing, and yet she was utterly exhausted and wrung out.

“We still have your handmade healing potions left. I’ve also got some magical power recovery potions in stock. And don’t use any magical power on tonight’s dinner. Save your strength for tomorrow. We’ll reach Julius tomorrow.”

“Understood.”

Gathering what was needed on the spot and making it immediately—that was the role Karen had volunteered for. No matter how tired she was, the work had to be done. She nodded at Licht’s words and reached for her gloves.

Her hands had stiffened from clinging to the riding dragon for so long, making the gloves difficult to remove. She had managed to work one halfway off when she frowned. The hands beneath the pale blue gloves Sieg had given her were bright red with chilblains. In just over a single day, the skin had cracked at every knuckle and split into bleeding chaps. The skin at the base of her nails had torn open and was oozing blood, and part of a nail had begun to lift away.

With the cold steadily deepening every time they passed through a dungeon gate, she had lost all feeling in her hands—she couldn’t even tell anymore whether they hurt or simply felt nothing—so she hadn’t realized it had come to this. Karen swallowed quietly.

There was a possibility that she might sustain serious injuries later on—injuries that would require a potion to survive. She couldn’t afford to use one on something this minor and trigger a cool-down. Karen stopped trying to remove the gloves. If her hands looked like this even with the magically enchanted gloves, what would they have looked like without them?

“What’s wrong, Karen?”

“Nothing.”

Karen gave Licht a wry smile as she answered. She had done nothing but hold on, and yet her body had already taken a beating all on its own. It seemed that merely existing in a place of magical trials was enough to wear down those who didn’t belong there.

Karen set the alchemical cauldron over the fire with her gloves still on. She started with dinner first. Being careful not to channel any magical power, she quickly boiled some herb hardtack. Into that she added what little she had gathered along the way—chunks of pumpkin and chopped daikon radish.

The boots were enchanted too, so frostbite shouldn’t have been an issue. And yet she had lost feeling in her toes some time ago. Perhaps even with the enchantments, it hadn’t been adequate gear for the dungeon’s tenth floor. But there was no point saying so now, so she kept her expression composed.

After they finished their silent dinner, Karen worked her way through the potions Licht had listed, one by one. Last of all, she began making the warmth potion.

She melted snow, brought the water to a boil, and with her gloved hands, clumsily opened a cloth bag and dropped dried ginger slices into the alchemical cauldron. She had known from the start that the Ehlertt territory’s winters were brutal, so she had brought gingermint specifically for warming the body. She also had the highly nutritious honey she had packed, hoping to suck on it if she got stranded at the hunting festival. She added a generous measure of honey, then threw in lemon rounds she had gathered along the way. It was less like brewing tea and more like making a potion. After stirring with the World Tree ladle and channeling in magical power, Karen appraised the contents of the cauldron.

Honey Lemon Ginger Tea

Warms the body.

She held out a cup, filled it generously with ginger tea, and passed it to Licht. He took a sip and let out a low groan of approval.

“The problem with your potions is that they taste too good. I want to drink two cups for no reason at all.”

After handing Licht his, Karen poured her own cup full of the steaming ginger tea and swallowed one hot mouthful deep into her throat, then exhaled a white breath of relief. The spicy ginger flavor and sweet-tart taste spread through her mouth, and the very next moment, she felt warmth spreading through her entire body. Karen asked:

“Could you conquer this dungeon without support potions, Master Licht?”

I could. But it’d take a toll on me.”

Licht’s answer was almost exactly what Karen had expected, and she looked down.

I wonder if Mr. Julius brought potions like these…”

“Of course he did. If he’d decided to conquer a dungeon, he’d have prepared for it as a matter of course.”

Even the knight order, which hadn’t planned to enter any dungeon, had brought some supplies. Karen murmured with her head still bowed:

“Someone with as much magical power as Mr. Julius shouldn’t have their body wearing down so easily… but when I first met him, his skin was rough. With all that magic filling his body, it shouldn’t get like that under ordinary circumstances.”

“…Maybe it was from the strain of conquering the dungeon in the royal capital?”

I hope that’s all it was.”

Julius loved diving into dungeons, yet hated that part of himself—so how thoroughly would he truly prepare to protect himself while doing so? It was possible he had been diving recklessly, with inadequate gear and potions—barely enough to keep himself alive.

You worry that Julius might be in there right now without proper preparation, throwing himself in recklessly? When we conquered the Ehlertt dungeon together, he wasn’t like that—but maybe that was because he had us with him.”

Licht’s expression turned grim.

“If that’s what he’s been doing, I’ll knock some sense into him.”

Until now, Karen had always assumed Julius would have far better potions than anything she could make. So even when she had thought about giving him potions before he descended, she had only ever considered the ones only she could make—she had never prepared a full set for him from scratch.

She should have done it. She should have filled both his hands with her potions until he couldn’t move.

I want to go get Mr. Julius. Now.”

“…Then finish putting away the potions, go to sleep, and get your strength back.”

Ignoring Karen’s murmur, Licht spoke calmly, then quickly prepared himself and lay down beside the campfire.

Karen finished bottling the warmth potions and packed them into her rucksack, then rolled over to the other side of the fire from Licht, curled up, and pulled her mantle tight around herself.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 288

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Chapter Two Hundred and Eighty-Eight: Their Respective Jobs

“Kyaaaaaaaaaaaaa!”

“Shaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!”

Karen was screaming.

She sensed monsters approaching from outside her field of vision, but more than that, she was screaming because she felt like she was about to be thrown off the riding dragon.

Little Lumi! No no no no! Master Licht! I’m about to fall!”

I won’t let you fall even if you do, so relax. That said, I’m busy dealing with the frost harpies chasing us right now, so if you fall, I’ll grab you roughly, so I recommend holding on.”

They rushed through the adamantite deposit cave on the sixth floor without encountering what seemed to be ghosts, and while she was screaming with her eyes closed, the inside of her eyelids brightened, and when she opened her eyes, they were on the seventh floor.

The seventh floor was a pale blue ice cliff. In such places, there were usually flying monsters, and sure enough, the moment they arrived on the seventh floor, they were swarmed by frost harpies.

Harpies that used ice-based magic.

A flock of them was apparently flying from behind. But Karen had no room to look back.

Little Lumi! Sorry! I might dig in my nails!”

“Normal human nails won’t pierce a riding dragon’s hide, so you’ll be fine if you bite down and hold on. Well, if I pour magical power in, I can stab them at my level—ngh!”

Shocks ran through the riding dragon while the frost harpies shrieked in piercing voices sharp enough to tear silk.

Licht apparently swept away the harpies with his sword, as the sound of wingbeats receded, and immediately after, Karen, who had been slipping down, was pulled back up by Licht, who had finished the battle.

“See, the battle’s over, so you can fall onto me now if you want?”

“That’s somehow… unpleasant…”

I don’t want it either. Julius wouldn’t like it either.”

Karen couldn’t even speak without keenly feeling the danger of falling after steeling herself, yet Licht was talking normally on the riding dragon.

Straddling the almost bipedally running smooth slide-like riding dragon, Licht squeezed the riding dragon’s torso with his thigh strength and held on in a posture with his upper body raised using his whole body’s muscle strength.

Meanwhile, the riding dragon continued racing at terrifying speed along the narrow protruding path, clinging to it perfectly. Karen desperately clung to the steep slope with Licht serving as a stopper behind her. If she relaxed here, rather than riding the riding dragon, she would almost be sitting on Licht.

“Could you not waste energy here, Karen? Is that your fastest?”

“Ghk…! How humiliating…”

Struck at a sore spot, Karen fell back onto Licht—and was horrified by how little vibration she felt.

“Are you making micro-adjustments to your posture matching the riding dragon’s running vibrations…?”

“Well, yeah. At our level, we can do that much.”

Even being able to talk normally, Karen swallowed her scream.

Though she had been on the verge of motion sickness just before, now it felt like riding in an abnormally fast wagon cutting through the wind.

Fearsome physical ability.

Karen understood instinctively that Licht truly was a strong person who matched Julius.

“…Thank you for your consideration.”

You just need to do your job. We didn’t bring much food, so I’m seriously counting on you, you know?”

Karen’s luggage was just the alchemy cauldron, ladle, and the rucksack held in front, sandwiching the alchemy cauldron. Licht’s equipment wasn’t much different either. They had brought as many herb hardtacks as they could carry, but if an unexpected situation occurred in the unknown dungeon, they would be immediately done for.

“It’ll be fine… probably. At the very least, I should be able to find food.”

You sound confident? I haven’t heard you’re knowledgeable about dungeons.”

“What I’m knowledgeable about isn’t dungeons, but the seasons of ingredients.”

“Seasons?”

In this world—or rather inside dungeons—what you sought could eventually be found if you looked.

Though things were said to be easier to find in the deeper layers of dungeons, they weren’t impossible to find in shallow layers either.

In Karen’s hypothesis, they spawned based on probability.

Monsters too.

Monsters were born from eggs or viviparously, but fundamentally, dungeons generated them. This was the common understanding of people in this world. After all, monsters were positioned in roughly the same places every time people entered a dungeon.

Of course, they moved within the floor, but they were concentrated enough that adventurers had their own hunting grounds. Even dungeon bosses on every tenth floor, once defeated, wouldn’t appear for a while, but then the same type of monster with the same strength would reign as boss again.

It was natural to think dungeons generated them. And Karen’s idea was that the various plants and animals found inside dungeons were also spawning in the same way.

But this wasn’t a common understanding among people in this world, probably because, unlike monsters, the way they appeared seemed random. If the probability were constant, it wouldn’t be strange for some people to notice the pattern. But most likely, the appearance probability also differed by person. The probabilities were surely affected by factors such as the goddess’s favor, one’s rank, magical power, personal understanding, and various other influences.

And if Karen’s theory was correct, she could increase those spawn probabilities. If she looked for things that seemed likely to be in the dungeon, wouldn’t they be easier to find?

For example, things likely to be in a rich forest were easier to find in a rich forest environment dungeon, and things likely to be in a winter forest were easier to find in a winter forest environment dungeon. Things likely to be in the sea were, of course, found in the sea, and things likely to be in rivers were found in rivers.

To Karen, this felt perfectly natural. But most people in this world spent their entire lives in towns, and there were people who didn’t know forests or seas outside of dungeons.

Naturally, nobody tried searching for fish in a forest, but some people searched in ways not far removed from that. Most people didn’t understand that summer fruits couldn’t be found in winter forests.

But in the winter forest inside a dungeon, even summer fruits could occasionally appear, making people even more confused about the relationship between seasons and vegetation.

If there were forests or rivers within a dungeon’s sphere of influence, natural activities could be observed there. But places easily accessible to people were valuable territory. They were quickly cleared and became areas where people lived.

Outside dungeons’ spheres of influence, the environment became almost the same as inside dungeons.

“Deepening ‘understanding’ is difficult, so it’s no wonder you don’t understand, Master Licht.”

“Are you making fun of me?”

“Not at all. This is the view of a B-rank alchemist.”

Licht’s eyes widened slightly.

How on earth could people in this world know that daikon radishes were in season in winter and cucumbers in summer? Even the ordinary knowledge from her previous life was surely helping Karen understand ingredients better. Thanks to this knowledge, Karen could surely reach Julius.

Looking down at Karen, who gazed into the distance unfazed by the freezing wind striking her cheeks, Licht too narrowed his eyes, gazing at what lay ahead on the road.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 287

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Chapter Two Hundred and Eighty-Seven: Fastest Rescue 3

“When people who became confused here become greedy, trying to take at least the adamantite back, they fall into the ice crevasse on the fifth floor and become food for the monsters below—it feels designed that way.”

“Why do you think that?”

“There was a person who panicked, clutched adamantite, ran back to the fifth floor, and fell into the dungeon’s trap.”

“Ah, that guy.”

Licht glanced at the knight, who was shrinking uncomfortably. Now that he was calm, he could probably reflect on what he’d done, and when he noticed Karen’s gaze, he awkwardly lowered his eyes.

“When we used a calming potion on him, he calmed down.”

You realized monsters were involved from just that? Just by looking at us?”

I didn’t realize there were monsters involved. I only considered it a possibility; I also thought everyone might just be upset about Mr. Julius not returning.”

“Then why did you make a panacea and make me eat it?”

For some reason, Licht’s gaze grew increasingly sharp.

However, Karen answered his’s questions without hesitation:

“Regardless, I believed the fastest way to rescue Mr. Julius was to help everyone calm down first. I planned to restore your composure with a panacea that cures all status abnormalities while also letting you eat at the same time.”

“…You’re calm. A hair’s breadth from cold-blooded, but extremely reliable. That’s a compliment, you know?”

Even as he said this, perhaps displeased with Karen’s calmness, his words had an ironic ring to them.

When Karen inadvertently glared at such a Licht, he glared back.

“What is it?”

“Nothing. In other words, if this is a trap built into the design, there’s a high possibility that monsters aren’t overflowing.”

“…I see.”

Licht said this, then took a deep breath and continued.

I’ll trust your words, Karen. I have no choice but to trust them. There’s no time to waste thinking ‘what if.’ If it’s mental interference without a visible form, is it a ghost type?”

I’m not knowledgeable about dungeon monsters, so please consult with our adventurers who are staying silent in front of the irritated nobles. The others don’t seem to be in a state where they can talk right now.”

“Ah—hey!”

After appraising the finished curry with her appraisal mirror, Karen walked away from Licht.

“Everyone! The potion is complete. —It’s a potion to reach Mr. Julius at the fastest speed. A potion for walking at maximum speed to prevent this dungeon’s collapse!”

Karen announced the potion’s completion to the knights with murky eyes, then served a portion of curry into a bowl.

She took it to Gottfried, whose face looked terrifyingly irritated.

Sir Gottfried, please eat.”

“—So I’m in a state where I need a panacea right now?”

Karen nodded, her eyes widening slightly at Gottfried, who could realize this on his own.

“Yes, Sir Gottfried.”

You have my thanks.”

Gottfried said with an expression like he was suppressing anger in a vise and a low voice, then received the bowl from Karen and drank the curry almost all at once.

“Curry is a drink…”

Karen muttered quietly.

Immediately after downing the curry in one go, Gottfried visibly regained a calm expression.

“…Phew. I’m in your debt, Miss Karen. I’ve finally regained my composure.”

You just said ‘in your debt,’ didn’t you?”

“Mm?”

Before Gottfried could retract his previous statement, Karen demanded repayment of that debt.

“Could you please lend me the riding dragon that pulls the wagon? Sir Gottfried.”

“…Mm? Do you have something you want it to pull?”

Master Licht and I will ride it and go ahead.”

Riding dragons were originally meant to pull wagons, but one could also ride on their backs. Their speed easily surpassed horses. As domesticated monsters, their rank was designated as F, but their speed was said to be at the level of D-rank monsters.

However, because their bodies weren’t shaped for people to easily ride on their backs, it apparently made for the worst riding experience.

But of course, for someone as strong as a B-rank adventurer, it was no great issue.

Karen probably couldn’t ride it alone. So she needed Licht’s help.

“I see. However, you’ll have to abandon most of the luggage, you know? Information on unexplored dungeons is scarce. There may come a situation where the supplies here are needed.”

Naturally, the wagon carried far more than just Karen and wine. Food, magic potions, and magical tools, supplies needed for dungeon conquering, were piled high.

“If we need any supplies, I’ll alchemize everything on the spot.”

“…I see. If you can do that, then indeed, that would be fastest.”

At Karen’s words, Gottfried nodded as if overwhelmed.

I don’t mind, but it will be life-threatening.”

“Thank you, Sir Gottfried.”

“Hey, I get informed after the fact?”

Getting caught up as a matter of course, Licht interjected, and Karen smiled faintly.

“If you dislike it, Master Licht, I’ll go alone.”

“There’s no way I could let you go alone. Obviously, I’m going.”

I won’t say ‘please.’ This is a golden opportunity for you too, isn’t it, Master Licht?”

At Karen’s provocative words, Licht’s eyes widened.

“…Hey, Karen. Could it be you’re actually not calm? Pretty angry?”

“If getting irritated or upset would let us dive into the dungeon faster, I’d do that too, but that’s not the case, is it? If being cold-blooded lets me reach Mr. Julius at the fastest speed, I’ll be as cold-blooded as needed.”

“Ah, sorry, what I said earlier—”

The woman trying to become Mr. Julius’s partner, being calm when Mr. Julius might be in danger, felt unpleasant to you as his friend, didn’t it? I understand your feelings, Master Licht.”

Smirking coldly, Karen transferred the finished curry into another pot and quickly wiped down the alchemy cauldron. She tied the now-empty alchemy cauldron to her body with rope under her fluffy cloak.

She also strapped the ladle to herself like a splint for a broken arm. She put on the light blue gloves she’d received from Sieg.

At the sight of Karen steadily making preparations, Licht surrendered.

“…Ah, damn it, I was wrong! You’re a hundred times better than a woman who cries and screams hysterically!”

“Please prepare yourself too, Master Licht. We’re leaving now.”

Karen casually ignored Licht’s surrender as she spoke.

Looking slightly irritated, Licht teased Karen back:

I can move anytime, though? Do you have experience riding a riding dragon yourself, Karen?”

“Forget riding dragons, I don’t even have horseback riding experience. So please don’t worry about me and run the riding dragon even if I vomit or scream.”

At Karen, who spoke spiritedly despite her pale face, Licht smiled brightly.

“If you end up in too pitiful a state, I’ll knock you unconscious. You’ll cry tears of gratitude, right?”

“…Such reassuring words, I’m deeply grateful.”

When Karen answered with an expression as if she’d bitten into a bitter insect, Licht chuckled deep in his throat.

After preparing, Karen and Licht clung to the gentle slope-like back of the riding dragon that had been unhitched from the wagon.

She keenly felt it wasn’t a creature shaped for people to ride.

If Licht wasn’t riding behind her, even if it was just walking at a regular pace, Karen would eventually slide off.

“We’ll catch up.”

After Karen nodded at Gottfried’s words, Licht signaled the riding dragon.

In that instant, the riding dragon carrying Karen and Licht, which had been on all fours until just before, almost shifted into a bipedal sprint and launched forward like a rocket.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 286

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Chapter Two Hundred and Eighty-Six: Fastest Rescue 2

“Huh?”

His face contorted, Licht glared at Karen with a dangerous look as he protested:

Karen, monsters aren’t overflowing from the dungeon’s depths. That means Julius is still holding back the monsters—but the fact that he can’t finish them off means it’s bad!”

“You can’t fight a war on an empty stomach.”

“We can eat while walking along the way…! You can eat in the wagon!”

“More haste, less speed.”

While Karen spoke nonchalantly, she quickly began preparing the stove.

Looking down at this, Licht ground his teeth.

“Are you saying you don’t care what happens to Julius…!? I want to reach him while he is still alive!”

“If you went ahead alone, Master Licht, you’d be faster, but you’re waiting for me, aren’t you?”

I can’t leave you behind.”

Even while trembling with rage, Licht answered Karen’s question.

I promised Julius. —That I’d protect you.”

You protect me because you promised Mr. Julius, and because you also promised not to interfere with me, you won’t forcibly drag me along. Really, you’re truly faithful to Mr. Julius.”

“Are you testing me? Because I tested you!? At a time like this—or because it’s a time like this!?”

Watching Karen begin pouring water from a barrel into the orichalcum alchemy cauldron, Licht tore at his hair.

I’m sorry for testing you! I apologize, so don’t put Julius’s life on the scales!”

I’m making a potion ‘to advance faster.’”

Karen said while placing the alchemy cauldron on the stove.

Licht gasped.

“…There’s such a potion?”

I’ll make one.”

You can do it…”

Whoosh, the sharpness vanished from Licht’s expression.

Since entering the dungeon, though it had only been a few days, Karen had been making potions from any ingredients.

Numerous potions that didn’t fit the framework of existing potions, with effects corresponding to whatever ingredients were brought at the time.

Ingredients that previously only became potions when combined with processed foods like carefully prepared miso or soy sauce had recently begun turning into potions on their own. Karen had surely come to understand something new once again. But she still didn’t know what it was.

That was why she still couldn’t ascend the ranks—but she could make potions. She might be able to make potions with any effect. Licht, too, seeing the results Karen had achieved so far, probably thought “she might be able to make it.”

Karen borrowed several ingredients loaded on the wagon. Potatoes, carrots, and onions she’d brought. Karen considered those the quintessential ingredients for standard curry.

Adding thick-cut bacon to these, she cut the ingredients and tossed them into the alchemy cauldron to make a curry with the most delicious and familiar taste.

After boiling the ingredients, watching Karen add curry roux to the alchemy cauldron, and taking it off the fire, Licht frowned.

“…Hey. Isn’t that a panacea?”

“This panacea is also a seasoning in itself.”

Karen gave an evasive answer and continued cooking.

Licht took out his own appraisal mirror, the same magnifying glass type as Karen’s, peered into the alchemy cauldron, and shouted.

“This is nothing but a panacea!?”

“It’s from here. But for now, could you taste it?”

“As if the taste matters…!”

Though Licht spoke irritably, he still accepted the small plate with a small amount of curry from Karen and put it to his mouth. Even this irritated, he listened to Karen’s words. Contrary to appearances, he was probably the type who couldn’t refuse when asked. And Julius could make requests of him.

Karen carefully observed Licht. He took a bite of curry and was about to spit out some harsh remark—then suddenly, his eyes widened as if noticing something.

“Ah—”

“Have you calmed down?”

At Karen’s question, Licht’s eyes widened in surprise.

The emotion that had clouded his pupils disappeared, and Licht looked down at Karen in a daze.

“…Why was I so terrified?”

Licht’s stern expression softened, and his voice held a firmly calm resonance.

Apparently, he had been dominated by the emotion of “fear.” Now that she thought about it, the knight who had tried to flee to the fifth floor earlier and the other knights’ expressions also seemed colored by fear.

Gottfried especially wore an almost ferocious expression, giving off a terribly unapproachable atmosphere, but apparently that wasn’t because he was dying to kill someone but because he was driven by fear.

From Licht’s confused appearance, Karen realized her hypothesis had been correct.

“A panacea—if drinking a magical potion that cures all status abnormalities calmed that agitation, perhaps that agitation was a status abnormality.”

“Don’t tell me we were… under mental interference?”

Licht’s expression became stunned.

“We haven’t encountered any monsters. But they were there? I never sensed their presence… I didn’t even notice that some kind of magic had been cast on me. Me, of all people. — Are monsters from the lower floors overflowing upward? Or were the monsters simply too weak for me to detect? I want to believe it’s the latter…”

If strong monsters from the lower floors were overflowing, that would mean Julius couldn’t completely suppress the monsters.

To Licht, who held his head, Karen calmly conveyed her thoughts:

I think it’s the ‘monsters too weak’ option.”

“What?”

“This dungeon originally seems designed to cause mental abnormalities in this cave.”

“Designed to cause abnormalities? How do you know that?”

With eyes sincerely praying for it to be so, Licht’s pupils wavered as he waited for Karen’s answer.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 285

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Chapter Two Hundred and Eighty-Five: Fastest Rescue

“Help! Help me!”

“Ah, I can hear his voice.”

Though the knight was nowhere to be seen, a scream rang out after a loud gasp, as if he had finally regained his breath.

“Below! There’s something below! Help me! Hurry! You commoners!”

“Oh, found him. Look, can you see him, Little Karen? He’s stuck on that ledge in the shadow.”

Just barely within the reach of light, next to the cliff’s pitch-black darkness.

Gathering magical power in her eyes strengthened her vision. On that slightly illuminated icy protrusion, she could indeed make out a tiny moving figure like a bean. It seemed only his clothes were caught, and his hands could not reach the wall. And at the bottom of the crevasse, which looked like darkness to Karen, there was apparently something.

“Hurry up!”

“If you’re looking for help, calm down!”

For the first time, Urte, who had maintained a respectful attitude toward nobles until now, shouted using informal speech.

But from below, frantic shouting continued in rapid bursts.

Taking out the rope from her pack, Urte said to Karen:

“If you go to help someone in such an excited state, you’ll get caught up in it, so in times like this, you wait until they calm down. Just because you’re asked for help doesn’t mean you should go rushing to help right away, Karen.”

I couldn’t even climb down a cliff like this in the first place, could I?”

I’m not talking about right now, I’m talking about someday.”

“But if they look like they’re about to fall unless we help quickly—”

“Then it’s just how it is! It can’t be helped, and that’s the end of it.”

Urte said coldly and looked down at the agitated knight.

“In situations like this, waiting for them to calm down actually lets you rescue them faster than acting in panic.”

You mean ‘haste makes waste’?”

“Exactly.”

However, it seemed he might fall if they waited for him to calm down.

Karen rummaged through her rucksack.

She took out a bottle of dried herbs she usually put in sachets—her calming magical potion—and held it out to Urte.

“This is a calming magical potion. Can you use it?”

“Oh! Is it the opposite of smelling salts?”

“Yes. It’s an aromatic potion with a calming effect that makes you feel at ease and relaxes your body, but I’m a bit worried that the moment he calms down, the strength will leave his body and he’ll fall.”

“Hmm. Well, if that happens, it can’t be helped.”

Urte grabbed a handful of the dried herbs from the bottle and put them in her pocket. She slung the rope over her shoulder and, knife in hand, descended the icy cliff smoothly without even a safety line.

“Still, nothing happened even when the wagon passed through on the way in. Is this the kind of trap that only activates when leaving the dungeon?”

Sepl chatted with a relaxed spectator’s face.

What Urte was doing probably wasn’t particularly difficult from an adventurer’s perspective.

“Maybe the adamantite was too heavy. Since it’s a magic metal, its properties change when you pour magical power into it, right? Like feeling lighter.”

“Yeah. That’s why it can be made into armor and weapons.”

“But the actual weight doesn’t change, so… it might have been heavier than the wagon.”

“Ugh.”

Sepl grimaced.

“So he fell because he took adamantite out from the sixth floor…”

“The deposit itself might be a trap. In this dungeon.”

A trap that manipulated human desires to ensnare them.

Perhaps the lack of monsters was to make people think it was easy to take adamantite out.

Karen’s spine shivered.

Since dungeons were said to be the goddess’s trials, this should be the goddess’s doing.

When Urte used the calming potion on the knight halfway down the cliff, the shouting man suddenly fell silent.

“Seems like a rather nasty dungeon.”

In other words, the goddess had a nasty personality. Karen felt like she’d known that for quite some time.

Young Julius had escaped this dungeon with his life on the line.

Miss Karen!”

Hearing her name called from a distance, she looked up.

Probably because they hadn’t found Karen, Gottfried and Licht had also come to the fifth floor.

“What are you doing!?”

Sir Gottfried! A knight fell into this hole below, so we’re currently conducting a rescue!”

Gottfried, who came running down the slope as if sliding, looked down at the knight being pulled up from the crevasse opening and nodded.

“I see. It seems our knight caused you trouble.”

“Please don’t worry about it. Right now, we’re companions diving through the dungeon together.”

Gottfried had an unusually stern expression.

His brows furrowed as he looked down at Karen.

Miss Karen, there’s a possibility Master Julius might be in danger.”

Karen’s eyes widened.

Master Julius should have already conquered the dungeon by now. It’s taking far too long.”

“…Shouldn’t Mr. Julius be able to conquer about ten floors without any problems?”

“Indeed. That should have been the case, but in reality, that’s not what’s happening.”

Karen, let’s hurry to where Julius is.”

It was Licht who said this to her.

Licht, with a stern expression, approached Karen. The reason Licht, who had been sticking close to her since entering the dungeon, had disappeared was apparently to consult with Gottfried about Julius.

There was none of the frivolity from when he had approached Karen with that carefree attitude.

Your worry might have been right.”

Everyone said Julius would be fine, but was that really true? Even if it were, Karen had wanted to go meet him. Karen had many things she wanted to say, but swallowed them.

“—Then I’m glad we came to meet Mr. Julius.”

Looking at Licht’s face, she could see that everything Karen wanted to say was already being internally repeated by Licht himself.

They rescued the knight from the crevasse and returned to the sixth floor.

Seeing the knight bound with a rope so he wouldn’t escape again, his fellow knights pressed Urte.

“What did you do to Elmar!?”

I merely rescued him after he fell down the cliff.”

Urte put on a top-grade pleasant smile, then respectfully handed over the knight and came back irritably.

“We helped their comrade, and what’s with them? That attitude!”

“Those nobles seem pretty irritated.”

“They must be terrified of the dungeon on the verge of collapse. If that gentleman can’t conquer it, there’s no telling what state the tenth floor is in.”

At Urte speaking in an extremely hushed voice, Sepl nodded.

“Hmph. So they’re all cowards.”

“Shh! Even if it’s true, you’ll be resented if you incur nobles’ anger!”

Urte covered Sepl’s mouth as his voice became too loud.

The knight, freed from his bonds by his fellow knights, hung his head. But there was no sign he would run out to the fifth floor again.

Even from a distance, seeing the knight’s calm state, Karen narrowed her eyes.

Karen, pack up the luggage. As soon as you finish packing, we’re leaving.”

Licht spoke as if hurrying Karen.

In front of the sixth floor’s cave, the knights who had returned from inside had already finished packing.

Was everyone wearing serious expressions because Julius’s situation had already been made known?

Had the knight who panicked and tried to escape been trying to flee from a dungeon on the verge of causing a massive collapse stampede that even Julius couldn’t prevent?

While looking at Licht’s eyes filled with fear and anxiety, Karen said:

“Understood.”

“If you understand, hurry.”

“But before that, let’s have lunch.”

When Karen clapped her hands and said this, Licht’s eyes opened wide, then immediately after, his face contorted.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 284

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Chapter Two Hundred and Eighty-Four: Reaching the Sixth Dungeon Floor

“—Did something happen?”

Licht, looking at the sky with a stern expression, muttered this when the group reached the sixth floor in just three days.

The Forest’s Edge Dungeon in Ehlertt, sixth floor.

What appeared immediately after exiting the dungeon’s black gate was a cave gaping open in the mountainside. The fifth floor had been a mountain trail climbing a snowy mountain, and for some reason, hardly any monsters appeared, but the gradient was quite steep, and the riding dragon alone couldn’t pull the wagon.

The knights ended up pushing the wagon, and Karen, who could no longer leisurely ride in it, had gotten down and walked, so her breathing was labored for the first time in a while.

Just as Karen caught her breath and was about to ask Licht what he meant, a knight who had gone to scout ahead in the cave returned and said:

Knight Captain! This is serious!”

“What happened?”

“Here—it’s an adamantite deposit!”

“What!?”

It was Alban who shouted.

Led by Alban, the knights filed into the cave in a group.

When she noticed, Licht’s figure was gone too.

Left behind, Karen exchanged glances with Sepl and Urte.

“Magic metal deposits are found above the tenth floor of dungeons, in the shallow floors…?”

“No, it’s quite rare. Normally, magic metals like adamantite, mithril, and orichalcum are said to only appear in the deep layers of dungeons.”

“Once Master Julius conquers the tenth floor, this place will quickly become a popular dungeon with adventurers.”

At Sepl and Urte’s words, Karen gulped.

If the current deepest layer, the tenth floor, were conquered once, monsters would stop overflowing from the dungeon’s depths for a while.

If they didn’t conquer the twentieth floor, which would become the next lowest level, monsters would eventually overflow from the dungeon’s depths again—but for several decades, or perhaps even hundreds of years until then, this dungeon would continue to be popular.

If he conquered such a dungeon, Julius would once again claim the name of a hero.

—And yet, Julius, who should have reached the tenth floor already, still hadn’t conquered the dungeon.

There were still no signs suggesting a conquest.

“There’s also talk that when you conquer an unexplored dungeon, the entire sphere of influence of that dungeon becomes the conqueror’s territory, meaning if Master Julius conquers it, you will become the wife of this territory’s lord, Little Karen!?”

“No, if it’s conquered with the lord’s request for cooperation, it should become that lord’s property. Since it’s being conquered under the lord’s name with the hunting festival as the pretext, if Master Julius conquers it, the rights to this dungeon and its sphere of influence should rightfully become Earl Ehlertt’s.”

In other words, the Ehlertt Earldom would become powerful again.

Although she did not belong to the House of Ehlertt, Karen nodded with satisfaction, her thinking now completely aligned with them.

“Haa. They should’ve just conquered it on their own.”

“That would just cause friction with neighboring territory lords. You really don’t know anything, do you?”

I’ve never even dreamed of trying to conquer a dungeon’s boss floor myself!”

“Is that something to say with pride? …Well, I guess it’s much better than being reckless.”

At Urte’s exasperated words, Sepl laughed carelessly.

Because Sepl knew his limits, he was alive—and Karen’s father hadn’t come back.

Karen nodded deeply.

“Really, knowing your limits is so important.”

“Look, I know this myself, but if you keep saying ‘know your limits’ over and over, I’m gonna cry, okay?”

An adult man about the same age as her father, trying to weaponize tears.

Just as Karen sent him a lukewarm gaze, someone shouted inside the cave.

“What was that?”

“One of the knights’ voices.”

“Maybe a monster appeared! …I should stay here, right?”

“Obviously.”

Sepl and Urte nodded simultaneously.

If something had happened, Karen shouldn’t go.

Since all three agreed, Karen approached the riding dragon.

She’d been told to cling to the riding dragon if something happened.

Lumi, are you okay?”

“Gyuru.”

The riding dragon Lumi tilted its head, looking at Karen. Though a domesticated monster, being a monster, it was sensitive to the presence of other monsters. Lumi became somewhat restless when monsters appeared. But now it was calm.

Just as Karen was looking at the cave, wondering if perhaps no monsters had appeared, a knight came flying out from inside. It was the knight who appeared the oldest among those led by Alban.

He was carrying a black stone about the size of a pickling weight in his arms.

When he recognized Karen and her supporters, he shouted with a desperate expression:

I’m going down! I don’t want to be a knight anymore! I’m sick of dungeons, monsters—everything!”

“Ahh, he’s lost it.”

“Yeah, there are always people who go crazy in dungeons.”

Watching the knight yelling wildly, Sepl and Urte had relaxed attitudes.

Karen had also seen people who, having entered a dungeon, became too frightened.

Sepl laughed and said:

I mean, he’s not going down; he need to go up. To get out of here.”

“Shut up! You’re the crazy ones for being so calm in a place like this!”

The knight shouted at Sepl and clutched the stone to his chest. He was probably pouring magical power into it.

Probably adamantite. It should be terribly heavy, but magic metals felt lighter than their actual weight when magical power was poured into them.

When he found his rucksack that he’d left outside the cave, he stuffed the adamantite into it.

“With this much adamantite ore, I can live comfortably for a while… What premonition? What trap!?”

“Noble sir. When you get back, you should check your magical power density. You might be suited to being a mage.”

“Shut up! Shut up! Shut up!”

People with naturally high magic density are less prone to magical intoxication, but they may become fearful inside dungeons.

Waltride was probably this type too.

In return, those with high magic density were often highly skilled in using magic.

…Though Waltride couldn’t use magic because she couldn’t understand magical theory.

Urte’s advice didn’t seem to reach the current knight either.

Uncle Sepl, Urte, we have to stop him—”

The knight, who had stuffed the adamantite in his rucksack and shouldered it, turned around at Karen’s unfinished words.

“How dare you bring me to a place like this! You poisonous woman!”

The knight glared hatefully at Karen, then ran toward the dungeon gate connecting to the fifth floor and disappeared.

“We have to chase him!”

“Ah, wait, Little Karen!”

Karen crossed through the gate chasing the knight.

Urte and Sepl also crossed through and came back to the fifth floor’s snowy mountain slope.

The knight hadn’t gone far.

It was an open, steep, snowy mountainside.

With good visibility, they immediately spotted him.

He seemed to be struggling to descend the snowy slope while carrying the heavy adamantite.

And he immediately noticed that Karen, Sepl, and Urte had chased after him.

I’m not going back!”

Karen! He’s saying that, so leave him alone. With D-rank level strength, he can easily get back from here alone. There’s no point trying to hold back someone whose eyes have been blinded by greed at the sight of magic metal.”

Urte’s right, Little Karen. In this dungeon, even an E-rank could make it back. This fifth floor doesn’t even have monsters. All that’s left are the shallow floors above the fourth floor.”

“Even so, it’s a dungeon, isn’t it? When we don’t know what might happen—”

“If you’re going to act selfishly in such a place, you need to be prepared, Karen.”

Intimidated by Urte, Karen bit her lip tightly.

Originally, the knights had not planned to enter the dungeon at all. They had decided to enter the dungeon in response to Karen’s request.

Among them, this man had likely followed along, unable to refuse.

If he had a constitution that made him fear dungeons, just how frightened must he have been?

Karen clenched her fists.

I dragged him into this… I can’t leave him alone.”

Little Karen, hey.”

“Anyway, let’s catch him until Sir Gottfried and the rest come back—”

Just as Karen was about to propose discussing what to do with the panicking knight, the man ahead suddenly tilted sideways.

“Waa—AAAAAAHHHHHH!!?”

The knight’s figure disappeared, but his scream continued to be heard while receding.

Sepl grabbed Karen as she tried to rush forward in panic.

Urte went to the spot where the knight had disappeared and said:

“—It’s a big crack in the ice. Looks like his foot got caught in a hole covered by snow, and he fell.”

“A crevasse…!”

Karen gasped and approached the edge of the crevasse, looking down into the pitch-black hole.

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