A loud clash of metal rang out, followed by a grunt of pain. Miles rushed to the window and saw Vadamir on the ground, blood pooling around him as Lancy stood over him, her blades stained with crimson.
“It’s done,” she said, her voice calm but resolute. She sheathed her swords and turned back toward the house.
Miles stared at her, his thoughts a whirlwind. The system had been right—this victory had been easy. Too easy. And it left him with an unsettling question gnawing at the edge of his mind: was the system truly guiding him, or was it manipulating him?
The tense silence following Vadamir's defeat was deafening. The party regrouped inside the small, dimly lit house, Lancy wiping her blades clean with practiced precision. Miles, however, couldn’t shake an odd feeling gnawing at him.
"Roll to determine if the dungeon is complete," he thought, seeking confirmation.
The dice spun in his mind and landed with a low result.
Result: 10% of the problem resolved. Dungeon far from complete.
Miles' brow furrowed. “It’s not over,” he muttered aloud.
“What do you mean?” John asked, looking up from where he was tending to the unconscious child.
“The system says only 10% of the issue is dealt with. There’s more going on here,” Miles replied, anxiety thick in his voice.
Lancy glanced at him but didn’t comment. She looked lost in her own thoughts.
“I’ll go check on the village,” Miles offered, not wanting to sit idle.
“Don’t go alone,” Lancy said firmly, but Miles was already halfway out the door.
As he stepped outside, the eerie stillness of the village struck him. The few villagers he saw were gaunt, their faces etched with despair. A chill ran down his spine, and he quickly returned to the house, unwilling to be alone in the oppressive atmosphere.
Inside, the child stirred. Nancy handed her a piece of bread, which she devoured ravenously.
“It’s all right,” Nancy said softly. “Eat as much as you want.”
The door burst open, startling everyone. A pale, frantic woman stormed in, her eyes wild with fear. She froze at the sight of Lancy, her gaze locking onto the bloodstained blades and Vadamir’s body lying lifeless on the ground.
“No! What have you done?” the woman screamed. She lunged forward, her trembling hands reaching for Miles.
“Get behind me!” John shouted, stepping in front of Miles with his shield raised. The woman’s fists pounded against the shield as she sobbed uncontrollably.
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Miles quickly whispered, "Roll for diplomacy."
The dice spun, landing on a favorable 6 and 4.
Critical Success: Convince the attacker to stand down.
“Wait!” Miles stepped forward cautiously, his voice calm but firm. “We’re not your enemies. We’re here to help.”
The woman glared at him, her breathing ragged. “Help? You killed him! My daughter—she’s starving because of you people!”
“We didn’t kill Vadamir out of malice,” Miles explained. “He was... part of the problem. We came here to fix things, to stop the suffering in this village.”
The woman hesitated, her gaze darting between Lancy, the bloodied swords, and her child, now quietly nibbling on the bread.
Nancy stepped forward, holding her hands up in a placating gesture. “Your daughter needs you,” she said gently. “We gave her food, but she needs care—your care. Please, listen to us.”
The woman’s shoulders sagged as tears streamed down her face. She fell to her knees, cradling her daughter. “I don’t know what’s happening anymore,” she whispered.
“We’re trying to find out,” Miles said. “And we’ll need your help.”
The tension in the room eased slightly, but the weight of the unresolved dungeon loomed over them all. Miles couldn’t shake the feeling that their real challenge was just beginning.
The woman held her daughter tightly, the room’s tension still lingering like a heavy fog. Nancy knelt beside them, speaking softly to keep the mother calm. Miles, however, had other concerns.
"Roll to determine if she will cooperate," he thought.
The dice spun in his mind, but the system’s voice interrupted before it stopped.
"Your roll is irrelevant. You’ve already decided to help her regardless of the outcome."
Miles blinked, momentarily taken aback. “Oh, thanks for the motivational speech, system. What’s next? Telling me to follow my heart?” he muttered sarcastically.
"You still get your roll. Result: Success."
“Wow, I guess my fate is sealed in golden opportunity,” Miles quipped under his breath.
Nancy shot him a curious glance but said nothing. Lancy, leaning against the wall, observed everything in silence, her expression unreadable.
Miles stepped forward, his tone softening. “Look, we don’t mean to push, but we need to understand what’s happening here. The state of this village, Vadamir, and now... this dungeon? It’s all connected somehow. Can you tell us anything?”
The woman looked up at him, her tear-streaked face still full of suspicion but no longer hostile. “You... you don’t know?”
“If we did, we wouldn’t be asking,” Lancy said flatly, her voice cutting through the room like a blade.
Nancy shot Lancy a warning look but added, “We just want to help. If we know what’s going on, we might be able to fix it.”
The woman hesitated, looking at each of them in turn. Finally, she took a deep breath and nodded. “All right. I’ll tell you what I know, but it won’t make much sense.”
“Try us,” Miles said with a faint smile, still wary but hopeful.
She began to speak, her voice trembling but resolute. “It started months ago when the air changed. People fell sick. Crops withered. Vadamir said it was the curse of the forest, but I don’t know. He... he demanded we follow his orders if we wanted to survive.”
“Sounds like he was exploiting the fear,” John muttered, folding his arms.
The woman nodded. “He started asking for... offerings. Food, goods, even people. Anyone who disobeyed vanished, and the rest of us—” She trailed off, staring at the floor.
“The dungeon,” Miles said, piecing it together. “He was feeding the dungeon, wasn’t he?”
The woman nodded again, this time more hesitantly. “Some say the dungeon was his master. That he wasn’t in charge at all, just... serving whatever’s down there.”
The room fell silent, each party member digesting the revelation.
“So killing Vadamir didn’t solve the problem,” Miles said, his voice grim. “We’ve only scratched the surface.”
“But it’s a start,” Lancy said, straightening. “And now we know what we’re up against.”
Miles felt the system's weight in his mind. For once, it didn’t interject, leaving him alone with his thoughts as the party prepared to dig deeper into the mystery of the cursed village.