Michael moved cautiously through the dark, damp corridor of the dungeon, each of his steps echoing against the rough stone walls like distant whispers in a tomb. The silence was oppressive, broken only by the faint drip of water from unseen cracks above. Despite having ventured deep into what should have been a perilous zone, he hadn't encountered any single threat, no sudden ambushes, no skittering of claws, no haunting groans of lurking beasts.
Yet something felt off.
Oddly enough, Michael could still see, though not in the normal way. Everything around him was cast in shades of black, white, and muted gray, as if the world had been drained of color. He couldn't see the details of his own clothes, nor the dull rust of the iron sconces lining the walls, only the shapes and edges they formed in his monochrome vision. It was as if his eyes had shifted to some strange form of night sight, one that didn't rely on light but on essences.
He didn't remember casting a spell, but the ability had flickered to life the moment he stepped into the deeper part of the dungeon. It was eerie, unnatural even, but he didn't dare question it. Every corner he turned, every archway he passed beneath, he half-expected something to leap from the shadows. Yet nothing came.
Instead, the silence weighed heavier with each passing minute, and the strange grayscale vision only added to the sense of unease. It was like walking through a forgotten world, one stripped of life, danger, and color alike. But deep in his gut, Michael could feel it… the calm wasn't going to last.
Something would soon disturb this calmness.
Even though Michael could see clearly in the darkness, thanks to whatever strange power was allowing him to navigate in shades of black and white, that didn't give him any reason to lower his guard. If anything, the unnatural clarity only made him more uneasy. His instincts screamed at him that this place wasn't just dark, it was waiting. So he moved carefully, each footstep deliberate, his hand never straying far from the hilt of his blade. Every creak of his boots against the stone floor, every shift of air around him, had his senses on high alert.
As he pressed deeper into what he knew had to be the boss chamber, something suddenly broke the silence, a distant but sharp clang, followed by a second one, louder and more erratic. Metal striking metal. The sound echoed through the tunnels, distorted and hollow, but unmistakable. Someone or something was fighting just up ahead.
Michael's breath hitched, and without wasting another second, he broke into a run. His boots thudded against the dungeon floor as he sprinted toward the noise, heart pounding in sync with his pace. The strange grayscale world around him blurred with movement, stone walls streaking past like shadows. The sound of clashing steel grew louder with every step, the harsh ring of battle bouncing off the dungeon walls in frantic rhythm.
Maybe the dungeon boss was already engaged in a fight with someone—perhaps David Blackwood, because only both of them were stuck in this dungeon together.
Whatever it was, Michael knew he couldn't ignore it. His pace quickened. His grip tightened. And as the echo of combat drew nearer, so did the certainty that whatever waited ahead… would change everything.
Michael knew their best chance of surviving this dungeon and even killing the dungeon boss was to work together. At this moment, Michael had forgotten all about the task the system gave him; all he wanted right now was to rush in and help David Blackwood in killing the dungeon boss.
Michael rushed into a room, but it was different from the pathway he had been walking since.
The air shifted the moment Michael stepped through the ancient archway, as if the dungeon itself was holding its breath. Before him sprawled the boss chamber, a vast, circular cavern carved unnaturally smooth—clearly not the work of time, but of some long-forgotten force or creature.
The ceiling arched high above, lost in shadow, with jagged stalactites looming like the fangs of a beast waiting to snap shut. Dim, flickering light bled from enormous crystal shards embedded in the walls, casting a cold bluish glow that painted everything in eerie hues. The light danced across the obsidian-black stone floor, which was cracked in places with glowing veins of red, pulsing faintly like a heartbeat.
At the center of the chamber stood a massive, rune-etched altar, surrounded by half-shattered pillars that spiraled upward, their tops broken and scorched. Bones littered the outer edges, some still wrapped in the remnants of armor, others twisted and fused with the floor like they had been melted into it. The scent of old blood and sulfur clung to the air, thick and metallic, crawling down his throat with every breath.
There were chains hanging from the ceiling, some broken and swaying ever so slightly, as if disturbed by a recent struggle, while others still held rusted shackles or long-forgotten remnants of victims. Every sound Michael made, from his cautious steps to his shallow breaths, echoed too loudly, swallowed and returned by the walls in whispers that felt too sentient to be coincidence.
But the most unnerving part wasn't the death, the darkness, or even the oppressive force that throbbed through the stone. It was the presence, a feeling like unseen eyes were watching from every corner—it made Michael choke as he felt the pressure press down on him.
This wasn't any kind of attack, just an aura the boss dungeon room possessed, and for Michael, whose first dungeon attack this was and first time in a dungeon boss room, he felt the pressure crushing him. Michael almost buckled as his knees felt heavy and he was almost forced to his knees.
It took a while for Michael to be able to cope with the pressure and even more to move.
As Michael was able to adapt to the pressure, he headed deeper into the dungeon boss room, and what he saw shocked him to his core.