Kiri Raven's Den

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 294

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Chapter Two Hundred and Ninety-Four: Dealing with the Dragon 3

When Karen came to, she was lying outside the boss room on the tenth floor. She was wrapped not only in her own mantle but in a knight’s mantle as well. The scent that drifted to her nose told her whose it was before she even had to think about it—it was Julius’s—and Karen smiled to herself and buried herself deeper into the folds.

“If you’re awake, get to work, Karen.”

“…Okaaay.”

Called out by Licht, who was apparently somewhere nearby, Karen had no choice but to stir herself and start moving.

Karen, you’re welcome to keep resting. Licht, please don’t force Karen to work after she lost consciousness.”

Julius, she’s here as a party member, and she made a promise to do her part. I make it a principle to treat party members as equals regardless of rank.”

Master Licht is right on this one, Mr. Julius. Please don’t worry on my account.”

Karen…”

Karen sat up and shivered. The dungeon was as bitterly cold as ever. But thanks to the mantle Julius had draped over her and the campfire nearby, her teeth weren’t chattering.

It wasn’t only cold—simply existing in this place carried a faint, constant ache. If she stayed on this floor much longer, her body would begin to take damage again before long. But Karen pretended she was fine and got herself moving.

“What happened to Little Lumi?”

The riding dragon that had been tethered near the pillar on the tenth-floor side of the gate to the ninth floor was nowhere to be seen. Karen looked around, and Licht answered:

She’s on the ninth floor now. The black dragon’s presence scared her half to death.”

“Since the two of you look unharmed… You already defeated it, right?”

The black dragon. An S-rank monster capable of speech. The fact that it could talk had left a small ache in her chest—but Karen pushed the feeling down and said it plainly, and Julius nodded.

“Yes. Its body is in the tenth-floor boss room. If there are any materials you need, we could collect them now while we have the chance.”

Karen’s eyes went wide.

“Why are you asking me about materials from a monster the two of you defeated?!”

“If you are a party member, distribution is only natural, Karen. Isn’t that right, Licht?”

“Well, when you put it that way, yeah.”

“But… really? Is that all right?”

Julius nodded with a bright smile, and even Licht shrugged and nodded along. Karen set up the alchemical cauldron over the fire and swiftly disposed of any lingering sympathy for the black dragon.

I’d like as many parts as possible, please. A good variety.”

“For alchemical experiments, I assume. You may have my share as well, for your research.”

“That’s too much, Mr. Julius! Please keep your share for yourself!”

“Not at all. I had always intended to offer whatever I obtained at the hunting festival to you. So the materials from the wendigo—the tenth-floor boss I defeated alone—are entirely yours.”

“Oh my goodness…!”

Karen’s heart raced at the thought of all the things she might attempt with an enormous quantity of extraordinarily high-grade materials. Faced with this dreamlike situation, she had no room left to feel sorry for any monsters. The black dragon had tried to eat her at first, after all. It had even identified her as the weak point of the party and deliberately targeted her.

If Karen hadn’t had the presence of mind to negotiate with it, she might have had her heart stopped by that very first roar. Julius would probably have protected her from that—she had a feeling he would have—but she knew it instinctively: that roar hadn’t been directed at Karen. That was why she had only fainted. If it had been aimed solely at her, she had no idea what might have happened.

— When she returned to the surface, she would have to honor the deal she had made with the black dragon.

I’m taking the black dragon’s spine, by the way!”

“What do you use a spine for?”

I’m going to have it made into a sword. Dragon fangs are the famous choice for dragon swords, but a dwarf once told me that from the especially long vertebrae of the dorsal spine—only a handful of which can be taken from a single dragon—you can forge a truly exceptional blade.”

“Oh, interesting. I’d like one too, if I may—I want to make a sword for Mr. Julius.”

“If it’s for Julius, sure.”

“You needn’t bother on my account—”

“Yes, we do.”

“Yes, we do!”

Karen bumped her fist against Licht’s. When it came to Julius, they always seemed to be of the same mind. Julius sighed.

I don’t wish you to be at odds with each other—but being too friendly doesn’t sit entirely well with me either.”

“The fact that you say something like that so honestly shows how much you’ve let your guard down around Master Licht. Honestly, I’m a little jealous.”

I’m the one who feels awkward being stuck between the two of you!”

Licht shouted that and retreated to the ninth floor. Likely to go to the restroom.

“So we’ll wait for the knights to join us and then carry the black dragon and the wendigo back together?”

Once the monster in a boss room was defeated, the dungeon remained calm for a while. In particular, the boss room stayed safe until the boss revived, so the corpse could be left there for some time.

In the royal capital’s dungeon, when an adventurer defeated a boss on, say, the tenth floor, nearby adventurers would gather and help carry the body back together. But the deeper floors—the twentieth, the thirtieth—saw almost no adventurers, and the bosses tended to be massive, so even after a boss was defeated, it often couldn’t be retrieved immediately. The raid party would return to the surface first, celebrate, and then form a new party or clan to go back and retrieve the body.

The wendigo had been quite a large specimen, and the black dragon had been even larger. Even with Licht and Julius each carrying one, there would be limits. Julius nodded at Karen’s question.

“Yes. And before we head back, there’s something I want to do.”

“Something you want to do?”

“The truth is, I came here once as a child.”

Julius mentioned it with almost startling ease. It had never been a secret for him to begin with. Karen listened quietly.

“And so—”

“Hey, Lumi! I’m coming back this way, so if you want to stay with me, then you come over too!”

“Gyuruuuu…!”

Lumi, though still tethered to the tenth floor, had fled with only its body to the ninth floor and was biting onto Licht’s cloak; half of Licht’s body stuck out from the tenth-floor gate while only Lumi’s neck protruded from the other side. Watching the desperate tug-of-war between man and beast, Julius fell silent.

I wonder what would happen to Master Licht’s body if the dungeon gate closed right at this moment.”

“Don’t think terrifying thoughts out loud!”

“Gyuru!”

Karen vented her frustration at having Julius’s story interrupted by unleashing a chain of frightening scenarios, all the while continuing to make her curry. Now that she looked closely, both Julius and Licht had equipment in terrible condition—their clothes were torn in places, as though bitten or slashed through. Licht in particular had quite a sizable hole blown clean through his midsection, and the unblemished skin visible beneath it was clearly the result of a healing potion.

Since both of them had already used their healing potions, Karen combined what little food she had on hand with solid roux and produced yet another new panacea for them.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 293

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Chapter Two Hundred and Ninety-Three: Dealing with the Dragon 2

But Karen leaned out from between her protectors and cried out:

“If you can understand language, can we negotiate?!”

“Hey?!”

Karen?!”

You understand what I’m saying, don’t you?! What is it you want?! I’ll do my best to grant your wish! So can we talk—just for a moment—and see if we can make a deal?!—Gweh.”

“Are you out of your mind, trying to negotiate with a monster?!”

Licht had grabbed her by the scruff of her collar and yanked her back, and Karen choked.

“But S-rank monsters can be reasoned with…! I actually made a proper deal with the pegasus I mentioned before!”

And what’s more, the pegasus had been merciful. Karen had failed to fully honor that deal—she hadn’t been able to bring the perfect help the pegasus had wished for its foal—and yet the pegasus had forgiven her. Perhaps it had simply had no time left to punish her.

You… are not… a pegasus…?’

“Did you think I was a pegasus?”

The black dragon’s elongated pupils contracted several times as it fixed its eyes on Karen, her magical power no longer concealed, before it murmured:

You smelled… of a pegasus. I thought perhaps… you were the wretched remains… of a pegasus whose soul had been shattered to pieces… I believed that if I devoured a pegasus… it might help, even slightly…’

The realization that she had nearly been eaten sent a chill down Karen’s spine. It had been many days since she had parted from the pegasus’s foal, and apparently, the scent still clung to her body. Or perhaps it was a trace of magical residue.

I’m just someone who knows a pegasus.”

‘I… see…’

With that murmur, the black dragon crumpled to the ground where it stood. Even as Julius took Karen from Licht’s hands, Karen kept her attention fixed entirely on the black dragon.

“Can we talk?”

‘…What is it that you want?’

I want you to let me test whether my potions have any effect on your broken soul.”

Julius’s arms tightened around Karen as she leaned forward.

I want to learn how to make potions that work on souls!”

It was a power she had only just, moments ago, begun to desperately want. And here, right before her eyes, was a monster whose soul was broken. Faced with a rare opportunity to test a potion, the fact that her potential trading partner happened to be a monster was a trivial detail.

‘Can you… make… the Philosopher’s Stone?’

“The Philosopher’s Stone…? Does that mean there’s no other magical remedy that can heal a soul?”

‘Correct…’

“What about a panacea? Can that not heal it?”

‘A panacea would not suffice… it may ease some of the physical suffering… but no more.’

Creating the Philosopher’s Stone was the ultimate goal of any alchemist. She had vaguely thought that someday, she would like to make one. She had genuinely meant to try. But she had never felt any real confidence that she actually could. She didn’t even know the materials, let alone how to begin. She had no idea at all where to start.

In her previous life, she recalled reading in a book that the Philosopher’s Stone was thought to be made from sulfur and mercury. According to the alchemical theories of her previous life, all substances were composed of sulfur and mercury, and both could be extracted from any material.

Burning, sublimating, melting, crystallizing, distilling… after painstakingly extracting ideal sulfur and mercury from matter, they would place them into a flask. They would combine them, allow them to decay, regenerate them, and then heat the mixture.

—But mercury was poison, never mind the sulfur.

No amount of manipulation of such a substance could ever produce something capable of curing every ailment known to exist. That much lay entirely outside the realm of Karen’s understanding. And yet, if Julius ever broke his own soul, Karen would have no choice but to make the Philosopher’s Stone.

Karen turned to look at Julius with eyes clouded by fear of a future she couldn’t yet see—when the black dragon pulled her attention back.

You said… you would hear… my wish.’

“…Yes. May I ask what it is?”

The arms holding Karen went rigid. She heard Licht draw a sharp breath. Both of them were bracing for the negotiation to fall apart. Karen held her breath as well and waited for the black dragon’s demand.

‘Something… that should not have been born has been born… It must be killed.’

“Something that should not have been born?”

Karen frowned. It was a phrase she had heard more than once during this hunting festival, when she had approached nobles about taking in children without magical power. The nobles’ compassion for such children had been thin and hollow. The nuance was slightly different, but more than one or two nobles had spoken in a way that suggested those children would have been better off never being born.

Yet what followed in the black dragon’s words carried something a little different from what those nobles had meant.

‘Yes. Before it hatches, if possible… If it has already hatched, how pitiable.’

“Pitiable?”

The monster’s words were not exactly sound—not something truly heard with the ears. They were thoughts, conveyed directly. And so Karen could feel with certainty that the black dragon felt genuine pity.

‘Twisted together into a mess… left to rot… unable to die… forced to regenerate… pitiable, so pitiable… it should never have been born… once it is born, it cannot be allowed to live… the poor thing… all of it is wrong… all of it is wrong…!’

The black dragon let out a roar. A long, long roar, filled to the brim with grief.

‘To die in battle is more than I could have hoped for… but there are things we must do…!’

Julius and Licht raised their swords and stepped forward. Both of them intended to cut the black dragon down here and now.

It was likely that if they didn’t, the massive opening torn open by a monster of this power would allow other monsters to pour through as well. Before anyone noticed, hordes of monsters had gathered beyond the dungeon gate leading to the eleventh layer.

‘Our march… is the will of the goddess… Even so, will you still stand against us, humans…!?’

These monsters were destroying their own souls and crossing floors, ascending toward the surface, in order to kill something that should never have been born. That was the cause of this Great Collapse Stampede. The black dragon said it was the goddess’s wish. There was no reason for this monster to lie—and it was almost certainly the truth.

You must have grown quite feeble indeed if you think you can best us, Black Dragon.”

“We happen to be among the strongest of humans!”

“Excuse me!”

Karen raised her voice loudly, cutting through the tension that had built between both sides. Both turned to look at her with puzzled expressions.

Mr. Black Dragon—this thing you say should not have been born, it isn’t human, is it? You said ‘hatch,’ which means it’s a monster or an animal…”

‘A monster.’

“Then if you lose here, I’ll take over your task, so please tell me the details.”

“Come on now, are you really being this considerate to a monster we’re about to fight to the death?”

Licht looked exasperated, but Karen continued:

“Because something is trying to be born on the surface, right? I don’t know why it’s a problem for monsters, but it would be a problem for humans too if a monster were born, so if you tell me the details, I’ll take care of it in your place.”

Karen made the promise to the black dragon and presented the deal with a smile.

“So please, don’t attack me.”

‘Hmm… you are clearly their weak point… I had intended to target you… but very well.’

The black dragon accepted Karen’s terms.

“Is there anything distinctive about the egg?”

‘Most likely… white.’

“A white egg.”

‘And… it has no magical power.’

“No magical power?”

Karen’s eyes went wide. She had never heard of a monster with no magical power. By definition, a monster was a beast that had been corrupted by magical power.

“Um, if it were releasing large amounts of magical power, there are magical tools that can detect that, so I think I could find it—but how would I find an egg with no magical power at all?”

‘The monsters on the surface… are also trying to kill it… Go to the place that humans have blocked… the place the monsters can’t reach.’

The black dragon fixed its gaze steadily on Karen, and she flinched.

Your name?’

“…Karen.”

Karen.’

The dragon’s golden eyes narrowed.

You look as though you could find it… Thanks to you, I may finally die as I should…!’

The roar the black dragon let out in the next instant was the true measure of an S-rank monster’s worth. From that single roar alone Karen felt as though her very soul—not merely her body—had been struck and shaken to its core, and she lost consciousness instantly.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 292

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Chapter Two Hundred and Ninety-Two: Dealing with the Dragon

“Shall we go at it, Julius?”

“Not yet. We wait until it comes fully through the gate. It will be more weakened by then—easier to bring down.”

Julius said it with perfect composure, and Karen frowned. He had come to understand how to cross floors so that he could follow Karen. Which meant that if Julius ever "crossed floors" to follow her, he too would be broken, just like the black dragon.

Karen kept her tone carefully casual.

You said the black dragon is weakened from crossing floors—does it ever recover?”

“What is broken fundamentally cannot be restored. So there’s nothing to worry about, Karen.”

“…I see.”

Julius probably assumed Karen was afraid the black dragon might recover. He had smiled to reassure her as he said it—and then, seeing Karen’s expression darken, his own face shifted to one of realization. What Karen had wanted to know was whether Julius, if he ever pushed himself too far to follow her and broke in the process, would be able to heal.

“It can’t be restored. I see… I see.”

Karen. Let’s talk about it later. The black dragon has to come first.”

Julius covered things up with a smile and tried to redirect Karen’s attention to the dragon. Frowning, Karen nevertheless went along with Julius’s intention and looked toward the black dragon.

At first, the sight of the enormous dragon’s head barely squeezing through the jaw-shaped gate between the black pillars shocked her, but once she calmed down, it no longer seemed that frightening. That probably meant the black dragon had weakened that much. Its fangs were sharp, its red tongue was lined with barbs, and every black scale looked razor-edged—yet something the true black dragon should have possessed was missing from that body.

Julius looked down at it with a relaxed expression and said:

“If it doesn’t hurry up and come out, we’ll miss the award ceremony.”

Mr. Julius, you’re still planning to win the hunting festival in the middle of all this?”

“Of course I am, Karen. Clearing a new dungeon on top of returning to the surface with the body of a black dragon—weakened though it may be—my victory would be beyond question. And when you receive my prize, you will become the Queen of the Hunt.”

Being named Queen of the Hunt was an honor in noble society. Karen didn’t quite feel the weight of it herself, but she could tell as much from Julius’s warm smile. It was his way of showing consideration—perhaps his engagement gift to Karen. And yet even before this heartfelt offering, only one thing kept turning over and over in her mind.

A broken soul could not be restored. If Karen stayed as she was, she might one day cause Julius to break his own soul.

She wondered if asking him to stop would make any difference, and a dry laugh escaped her. After all, Karen herself had never intended to listen to Julius’s pleas for her not to do such things anymore. No matter how dangerous the place Julius was in, if Karen wanted to go and bring him back, she would go.

“Should we drag it out?”

“…If you’re with me, that might actually work. Karen! Stay back!”

Licht and Julius faced the black dragon. Karen did as Julius said and retreated quietly to the wall. Ready to respond to whatever might happen, she took out an herb she had gathered and closed her fist around it inside her glove.

“Same as in the Great Collapse Stampede, right? Attacking a monster stuck in the gate draws it out?”

“Yes. Weakening it allows it to pass through the gate.”

“Got it. I’ll match your timing.”

“Then—three, two, one—now!”

Julius and Licht drove their swords simultaneously into the dragon’s neck from either side. The black dragon screamed and writhed, then slid its enormous body through the gate—through what should have been too narrow a passage—and into the tenth floor.

Licht, don’t let your guard—”

Down, was how it was meant to end. Since Julius had said as much, he surely had not let his guard down himself.

But in the very next instant, the black dragon slithered between Julius and Licht with a speed too fast for the eye to follow.

Karen!”

Julius was moving before the word had left his mouth. But if the black dragon had truly been targeting Karen and had been able to understand where she was, Julius likely would not have made it in time.

Except that Karen was no longer at the wall where the dragon had crashed.

She had already made her way over to Licht’s side, leaving Julius charging past her toward the dragon, and now she broke out in a cold sweat.

Julius was sweating even more than she was, and his voice trembled when he spoke:

“How… why are you over here?”

I suppressed my presence and moved. Even you didn’t notice—I’m rather good at this, aren’t I?”

You suppressed your… presence?”

Julius, talk later—deal with the dragon first!”

Julius nodded, his face gone pale, and took his stance alongside Licht, sword raised toward the dragon.

“Even weakened from crossing floors, a dragon is still a dragon. It sure knows how to scare the hell out of us.”

“…Indeed. It seems I underestimated the achievements of my ancestors.”

Licht was making light of it, but Julius’s color was terrible.

“But your girlfriend surpasses even that dragon! What the hell does ‘concealing your presence’ mean!? Explain yourself, Karen! There’s no way I can concentrate on fighting until I understand!”

It was Julius who couldn’t focus, clearly. Karen nodded and raised her voice:

I’ve been thinking for a while that if I used up every bit of magical power in my body and reached a state of zero magical power, maybe monsters would have trouble seeing me!”

“…You tried that for the first time just now?!”

Licht’s smile went rigid, and he turned just as pale as Julius. But she had been picking up hints for some time. The people who had once been active inside dungeons with little magical power—Horst and those like him—how had they managed it? The monster-repelling magical tool she had seen at Urgo’s Magical Tool Shop had worked by generating a film of zero magical power.

That was why she had been gripping a rooted medicinal herb inside her glove—and she had drained her magical power on purpose, timing it with Julius and Licht’s attack on the monster, just to be safe. Given how weak Karen was, even with her magical power full, she would never survive an attack from the black dragon anyway. She had figured the result would be the same either way, but it had been terrifying all the same.

Karen had already used a medium healing potion on herself. She had no idea when she would be able to use another. Besides, this was by no means a foolproof method of remaining undetected. After all, a pegasus had once located a zero-magical-power zone for the sake of its child.

“It might still be able to hear our voices, so that’s enough explanation for now!”

“Right! Now be quiet!”

Irritated by the unreasonable response, Karen nevertheless obeyed Licht and fell silent.

But why had the dragon targeted Karen in the first place? Had it simply recognized that she was the weakest in the party and gone for her—she had begun channeling magical power back into the herb to suppress her presence again and was starting to shift positions when the black dragon’s voice reached her ears.

‘Where… are… you…?’

Hearing the hoarse voice of what sounded like an old man, Karen stopped channeling magical power into the herb.

In that instant, the black dragon’s golden eyes swiveled and fixed directly on her.

Licht stepped in front of her. Julius pulled her close. This time, the defensive formation held firm.

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Alchemist Karen No Longer Compromises, Chapter 291

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Chapter Two Hundred and Ninety-One: Unconquered

Karen, your face has gone completely red.”

Julius took off his glove and placed his hand against Karen’s cheek. It was a smooth, unblemished hand—nothing like Karen’s own. The large hand was almost hot to the touch, and Karen let out a soft breath of relief and leaned into it.

Then gentle warmth spread around her ear. Julius must have channeled magical power into his earring as well. Unlike Karen, he did it with careful restraint, and the warmth crept slowly through her body from the ear outward.

Tears had been welling at the corners of Karen’s eyes, and Julius quietly wiped them away with his thumb before they could freeze.

Your lips have cracked too. Do you have a healing potion? If not, I brought some—”

I have one, but I thought I shouldn’t drink it in case something urgent came up.”

“Drink it now. You look terrible, Karen.”

If Julius was saying that, perhaps nothing urgent was happening after all. With a sideways glance at him—clearly deeply worried—Karen took a mid-grade healing potion from her pouch and drank it down. The bitterness barely registered as the pain throughout her body faded with startling speed.

Clinging to the riding dragon had shredded the inner skin of her thighs. When she had run headlong to throw herself at Julius, she had felt countless wounds tear open all at once—and now, as they healed, she felt nothing but relief.

Healing potions—magical medicines in general—were truly incredible things. Just what exactly were medicinal herbs? As Karen drifted into pleasant contemplation, Julius spoke in a dangerous tone beside her:

Licht, why did you bring Karen here?”

I was the one who got brought. Right, Karen?”

“That’s right, Mr. Julius. I was the one trying to enter the dungeon because I wanted to see you, and Master Licht was kind enough to come with me.”

You told me yourself not to get in Karen’s way, didn’t you, Julius?”

Julius stopped glaring at Licht and turned to Karen with a complicated expression.

You don’t need to cover for him.”

I’m not covering for him at all. I never intended to bring Master Licht in the first place—the knights happened to be free, so I negotiated and asked if someone might be willing to accompany meI wanted to move quickly, so I left them all behind midway.”

I’m glad you wanted to see me, but this was reckless, Karen.”

You’re right.”

Karen grinned.

“But I just had to come and meet you, Mr. Julius!”

She deliberately left unspoken the fact that Julius had once been abandoned before this very boss room door on the tenth floor. She simply spoke her own feelings. And when Julius’s eyes went wide, and he drew a sharp breath, she deliberately chose not to ask why. Swallowing down the anger and sadness she had secretly carried inside, Karen smiled and leaned close to Julius.

“So here I am.”

I’d like you not to do something like this again… though perhaps saying that is pointless?”

Julius had tried to caution her with a stern expression, but looking down at Karen’s smile, he gave up halfway through.

“Probably.”

Karen said that with an emphatic nod.

“Just as you support everything I do, I won’t try to stop you from doing what you want, Mr. Julius. But if I end up worrying about you as a result, I’ll go and come to meet you, or make potions to cheer you on.”

You know there’s no need to worry. I’m the conqueror of the twentieth floor of the Ehlertt territorial capital dungeon.”

“Even so, hasn’t this taken rather long?”

“There was something I wanted to do, so I stayed behind. I defeated the wendigo several days ago, though.”

The fallen monster was apparently called a wendigo. As she recalled, it was the name of a demonic monster in a state of perpetual starvation, one that hunted and devoured people. Now that she looked more closely at it, the creature did have pale blue skin, gaunt as a hungry ghost with its ribs showing, and a strangely distended lower belly. Its monster rank was C, which amounted to a natural disaster by the standards of most ordinary people.

A chill ran down Karen’s spine at the realization she had walked right past the thing’s carcass, but Julius looked entirely untroubled.

Every rise in monster rank meant an overwhelming leap in strength—tenfold, or even hundredfold, impossible to summarize in simple terms. The same was true of humans. For Julius, who had cleared the twentieth floor, a monster at the tenth floor level was barely worth noting.

“Hey, Julius. You defeated the dungeon boss on the tenth floor, but there’s no sign of it being cleared. What’s going on?”

“That would be—”

Julius had started to answer Licht’s question when the entire dungeon suddenly lurched like an earthquake, cutting him off.

Karen flinched. Licht drew his sword in an instant. Julius didn’t move a hair.

“A powerful monster from the lower floors is attempting to cross through the gate leading to the eleventh floor. Since a monster with magical power equivalent to S-rank is present on this floor, the dungeon likely does not recognize it as conquered.”

“An S-rank crossing over?! That’s a full-scale Great Collapse stampede! This is a serious situation! We need to call for reinforcements immediately—or wait, should we get out of here first?!”

“Calm down, Licht.”

“How am I supposed to be calm about this?!”

“It’s all right. This is different from an ordinary Great Collapse.”

Julius spoke with an air of odd composure, his tone carrying a certainty that went beyond ordinary confidence.

“The monster is forcing its way across floors in defiance of the goddess’s order. To make that crossing, it has had to destroy its own soul. When you consider how much a monster that should be on the fiftieth floor would have had to wear itself down to reach the eleventh—its strength is not something to be terrified of.”

“…Julius, when did you come to understand all this?”

Licht looked at Julius with something close to awe. Simply being told something was not enough to ascend the steps—it required genuine comprehension. Even so, those who heard Julius speak could apparently tell that his knowledge was a form of “understanding” granted by the goddess.

Karen had a good idea of when Julius had come to understand it. After resolving the incident in the royal capital dungeon, Julius had ascended a step. He had come to understand how monsters crossed floors—so that he could follow Karen wherever she went.

Julius didn’t answer Licht’s question. He looked at Karen instead.

“That said, this monster is far beyond you. We will defeat it once it crosses the gate and reaches the tenth floor, so Karen, please stay back.”

Julius’s tone remained completely unhurried. There was likely very little actual danger within the scope of his understanding. That must have been why he had told her to drink the potion too. Karen felt a wave of relief even as she asked:

“What kind of monster is it—the S-rank that’s about to cross over?”

“A black dragon. The black dragon said to have been defeated by the Ehlertt ancestors—the one that supposedly dwells beyond the Thorn Forest.”

The moment Julius said it, a flash of razor-sharp fangs burst between the two black pillars. The black dragon thrust its snout through the dungeon gate from the other side, and its roar split the air, reverberating through every wall of the tenth-floor boss room.

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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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