Ah, so That Was You.
Tanis.
You.
Targeting.
What does this even mean?
After reading the writing on the cloth, I glanced at the woman who handed it to me, but she had already joined up with Tanis.
Anyway, she’s targeting me? Upon seeing those words, only one thought came to mind.
So you were a necromancer!
The word flashed in my head. Mulling over it, I examined Tanis from behind.
But, wait a second.
There’s something I overlooked.
If the necromancer who followed the “right eye” all the way from the banquet hall was serving the god Mortis, that would certainly make sense.
But that guy is a devotee of “Ligato,” the god of connection and unity.
“Hmm……”
Lost in thought, a sigh slipped from my lips before I knew it.
Worshiping two gods at the same time.
Such a thing doesn’t exist in the 《Dungeon God》 universe.
If it was possible to believe in multiple gods from the start, every player would have done just that.
So then why is he targeting me?
If he’s not a necromancer, does he have another grudge against me?
No matter how much I think about it, it’s not like I did anything to earn anyone’s grudge……
Well, maybe I did something.
“Brother, what is that?”
As I continued to peer at the scrap of cloth, Barkal and Serena approached, their curiosity piqued.
Should I tell them about this? I hesitated briefly, but then figured there was no need to hide it.
“Barkal.”
“What is it, brother?”
“Tanis is apparently after my life.”
Thud!
At my words, Barkal slammed “Erindal” onto the floor.
“That bastard’s a necromancer! I’ll crush their skull!”
“Calm down, for now.”
“How can I calm down!”
“Th-that’s right, brother.”
This is exactly why I was reluctant to say anything. Sighing, I calmed them down and continued.
“For now, Tanis is not a necromancer.”
“But if he’s not, then what reason does he have to target you, brother?”
“That, I don’t know.”
So I’d have to find out his intentions.
Why would he target me, even though he isn’t a necromancer?
* * *
As expected, inserting three stones made the central door begin to open slowly with a heavy rumble.
Dust scattered, hazy in the air, and the space hidden behind the door revealed itself.
However, there was no sign of the “Pantheon” that the “dungeon master” or Girinil had mentioned; instead, there was only a colossal statue of scales.
On the statue of the scales, just as before, an inscription was carved.
[Two branching paths call to you,
Divided with equal footsteps.
One becomes a lighthouse holding the stars, shining in the darkness,
The other becomes a pilgrim following the stars, chasing the light.]
Another riddle?
Why does this dungeon master love riddles so much? Is he a sphinx or something?
“What is this supposed to mean?!”
Faced with another riddle or something like it, Barkal frowned deeply.
He then began walking toward the door leaning to the left of the scales.
“The path exists to be walked, not solved like a problem!”
Creak──!
At the same time, the scales in the center began to tip toward Barkal, and both doors shut tight in an instant.
“Wh-what’s happening!?”
A flustered Barkal. Leaving him behind, I approached the door on the opposite side.
Creak──!
Then the scales returned to their center, and both doors opened again.
This told me how the “riddle” worked.
“Equal footsteps.”
I called out to everyone.
“This means the number of people passing through each door must be the same.”
“Is that really so?”
Girinil tilted his head and walked over to stand by Barkal.
As soon as he stood next to Barkal, the scales again tilted toward Barkal’s side and the door shut.
“Oh, it’s true! To notice it so quickly… are you really a barbarian?”
It’s not like I can say no.
“Dmihtan is a barbarian like me! He’s just especially wise among barbarians!”
With a hearty slap to his chest, Dmihtan declared proudly.
That face, so full of barbarian pride. And with that, I couldn’t bring myself to deny it either.
Girinil broke out in a hearty laugh.
“Ha ha, anyway, I’m grateful I don’t have to rack my brain. You know, when you get to my age, your mind doesn’t work as well.”
“That’s right, old man! At your age, a coffin would suit you better than a place like this!”
Barkal’s attitude seemed to irritate Girinil’s guards—the devotees of Hyrat—who glared at us with dangerous eyes.
“If you want to go in together, just say so! I could fit three people in a single coffin without breaking a sweat!”
Barkal’s taunt flew out toward those devotees.
Hey now, aren’t we supposed to be dungeon-crawling comrades at the moment?
You can’t just provoke them like that.
To diffuse the growing tension, Girinil turned to me with a question.
“By the way, one side is the lighthouse of stars, the other is the pilgrim following the stars—what do you think that means?”
Beats me, man.
But, based on what I’ve already observed, I could offer some insight.
“Unlike the door where Barkal stands, the area where I am is pitch black.”
Lighthouse holding the stars.
Pilgrim of the stars.
I think it means the “lighthouse” side should proceed first and assist the pitch-dark “pilgrim” side.
When I shared my thinking, Serena nodded in evident agreement.
“I think you’re right. The door where Brother Dmihtan stands was pitch-black even to me.”
“Haha, in that case, it’s time to split up evenly.”
We currently had ten people.
To match the ‘equal footsteps,’ we’d need five people at each door.
“I’ll go this way with Tanis and her group.”
Before we could waste time divvying up, I spoke up first.
Girinil and his guards.
And Tanis and her companions.
Both parties seemed to have no objections.
Serena, though, looked slightly flustered.
“All right.”
Surprisingly, Barkal—whom I expected to be the most upset—agreed readily.
“Serena, we’re heading this way.”
“But, um…!”
“We’re going!”
Barkal wrapped his arm around Serena’s neck as she tried to stay behind, and began to drag her toward Girinil’s side.
Our Barkal really picks up on things quick in these situations.
And so, as the inscription dictated, with “equal footsteps” complete, the scales settled in the center.
The doors opened.
Barkal’s group headed on beyond their door.
“Good grief. Even if it’s just to adjust our numbers, now we’re split from the adventurer party.”
Watching those who went through the “lighthouse” door, Tanis cautiously approached me and spoke.
“My apologies. In my case, I simply can’t be separated from my slave.”
Tanis smiled as he apologized.
Her lips twisted into a narrow, mocking grin—it looked like he was sneering at me.
“It’s fine.”
He didn’t need to apologize.
I’d set this up to have a genuine conversation with him, after all.
* * *
“The light is coming through!”
Just as I was quietly waiting for Barkal’s group to make progress, watching the door, Tanis called out to me.
At her words, I stood and began preparing to move.
A room as dark as pitch. Overhead, a single beam like starlight shone through.
“That must be a signal from the lighthouse.”
“So it would seem.”
“Looks like we’re to follow that light. But it could be dangerous, right?”
Saying that, Tanis pointed to one of her companions—the very woman who’d handed me the scrap of cloth.
“Number Four! You take the lead.”
“No, I’ll lead.”
Tanis flinched at my words.
“There’s no need to pity the slave, sir Dmihtan! I brought her just for situations like this!”
“If my life’s on the line, I do it myself.”
Having said that, I started down the “pilgrim’s” path.
A pitch-black road.
The “lighthouse” light overhead pointed the way forward, but did nothing to illuminate the surroundings.
All I could sense were presences nearby—I could see nothing.
The darkness was a perfect environment to stoke fear in people.
Was this real?
Or just my imagination?
At times, I felt sticky cobwebs brush across my face.
Sometimes, I stepped on slimy things underfoot.
Even so, I didn’t stop following the “lighthouse’s” light. So this is the “pilgrim’s” path indeed. What an apt name.
“Sir, sir Dmihtan, are you all right?”
“I’m fine.”
“That’s a relief.”
Tanis’ voice called out from behind me.
“By the way, sir Dmihtan, may I ask a question?”
“Go ahead.”
“About your wagon. May I ask where you got it?”
Why bring up a wagon now?
Normally, I’d have lied—but with Tanis, I decided to tell the truth.
“I got it during my travels.”
“So, you didn’t purchase it?”
“That’s right.”
“Haha… do you know whose wagon that is, by the way?”
I let him continue.
“It actually belonged to my uncle.”
His uncle?
I had no idea where this was going.
Just in case, I asked Tanis a question.
“Was your uncle a merchant?”
“Well, yes.”
A merchant?
At those words, I felt like I finally understood why Tanis wanted to go after me.
Hey, you’ve got the wrong idea!
We weren’t the ones who killed the merchant when we got the wagon!
It was bandits, I swear!
“He sold stolen wagons, and people too—so, yeah, you could call him a ‘merchant’.”
Oh, so that’s how it is?
“You must have the wrong idea.”
“No, I’m sure of it. I was there when you stole that wagon.”
Suddenly, I sensed someone approaching behind me.
Coming fast.
“This is for my uncle, narden, you damn bastard!”
Thunk──!
A short blade. I felt the cold steel stab into me, and an intense groan escaped my lips.
“Graaagh!”
“Die, die, die!”
Thunk! Thunk! Thunk──!
With each stab, my body jolted. I might really die like this, I thought.
“Now do you get why I was waiting outside the dungeon, huh, bastard?!”
Thunk──!
“Die!!”
“S-stop! At this rate, I really might die!”
“That’s the idea, you filthy barbarian scum! Die!”
With every vicious curse that pierced my ears, my vision started to fade.
No.
It was already pitch-black here.
“Pu, puahahahahah! What’s this about a ‘same rank’ record-breaking promotion adventurer party? You’re all the same when you’re in my hands!”
My consciousness gradually sank below the surface. As it did, the “lighthouse” above began to shine even brighter.
Hey, wait a second!
It’s not supposed to get brighter like this!
“Wh-what’s this?”
A bit more light shone from the lighthouse now.
Thanks to it, I could finally see a little bit ahead through the utter dark.
* 〈Thrag bursts into wild laughter.〉 *
With that, I could see the one-handed sword Tanis held, and his bewildered expression.
“Wh-what the hell is this!?”
At Tanis’ words, I checked the part he’d stabbed.
Above my waist.
A skeleton, summoned only from the waist up like a bust. I’d dressed it in “red wolf hide armor”.
Maybe it was dark, but he really should have checked what he was stabbing.
“Did it feel good to stab it?”
Grabbing the “skeletal bust”,
I swung it at Tanis.
Wham──!
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 122 : And What Are You Now.
- Chapter 121 : Wait a Minute, this is an Opportunity!
- Chapter 120 : Just a Pumpkin Candy
- Chapter 119 : I Said I Didn't Want To, But Things Got Complicated.
- Chapter 118 : Running Away Because I'm a Necromancer
- Chapter 117 : Oh Right, I'm a Necromancer
- Chapter 116 : This Is Troubling
- Chapter 115 : The Curtain Falls on Lagmor Mountain
- Chapter 114 : A Misunderstanding Would Be Fine
- Chapter 113 : Are You Guys Going to Keep Doing This
- Chapter 112 : Do Business at Times Like This
- Chapter 111 : The Red Wolf's Funeral
- Chapter 110 : So, This Is How You Use It
- Chapter 109 : Chasing After the One Who Went First
- Chapter 108
- Chapter 107 : The Banner of Temitus
- Chapter 106 : Noblesse Oblige
- Chapter 105 : If Not Us, Then Who?
- Chapter 104 : It's Troublesome in Many Ways
- Chapter 103 : Silver Rank on Top of Platinum
- Chapter 102 : Selling Potions. Picking Up a Beggar.
- Chapter 101 : Platinum Adventurer, The March of Ordeal
- Chapter 100 : The God of Business
- Chapter 99 : I Smell a Jackpot
- Chapter 98 : The Silent Barbarian
- Chapter 97 : Dungeon God is Open.
- Chapter 96 : Dungeon God, Wanted.
- Chapter 95 : Farewell, Second Hometown
- Chapter 94 : Let's Find Out the Identity of the Fragment
- Chapter 93 : The Omniscient Creator's Point of View?
- Chapter 92 : This Barbarian is Better than an Ogre.
- Chapter 91 : Do Not Speak.
- Chapter 90 : The Shattered Masquerade Ball
- Chapter 89 : The Lost Barbarian
- Chapter 88 : It's My First Time at a Masquerade Ball.
- Chapter 87 : Here's the Disguiser I Was Looking For.
- Chapter 86 : Only the Words of the Strong are Heard.
- Chapter 85 : My God Is Useless.
- Chapter 84 : The High Society of Odheim
- Chapter 83 : Even if I Die, We Go Together
- Chapter 82 : Pretending Not to Hurt, But It Seems Painful
- Chapter 81 : God of Favoritism
- Chapter 80 : No Mercy Even for the Sleeping
- Chapter 79 : Until the Morning Sun Rises
- Chapter 78 : Let Me Tell You About This Product.
- Chapter 77 : An Unexpected Opportunity
- Chapter 76 : Then Die.
- Chapter 75 : It's a Bit Different Than I Thought
- Chapter 74 : Still Living the Lottery-Winning Life
- Chapter 73 : Our Healer Is a Physical Therapist
- Chapter 72 : Chunsik! Stop coming out!
- Chapter 71 : When are we leaving? Right now!
- Chapter 70 : Even Migratory Birds Have Nests
- Chapter 69 : You're Still Wet Behind the Ears.
- Chapter 68 : How Did I Raise You!
- Chapter 67 : Tell Me Before You Go!
- Chapter 66 : That Bastard Was Tough.
- Chapter 65 : Just in Time?
- Chapter 64 : It's a Fight! Everyone, gather!
- Chapter 63 : We Do Not Negotiate with Criminals.
- Chapter 62 : The Orcs Are Weird
- Chapter 61 : Shouldn't Have Tried to Stop It.
- Chapter 60 : Surviving in the Desert
- Chapter 59 : So This Isn't Our First Meeting
- Chapter 58 : Got You, You Rascal!
- Chapter 57 : Monsters Are Living Beings Too?
- Chapter 56 : One Suspect Eliminated
- Chapter 55 : Ah, so That Was You.
- Chapter 54 : Barbarian Wisdom (Physical)
- Chapter 53 : Too Many Suspects
- Chapter 52 : I Can See Everything Clearly.
- Chapter 51 : Collecting Experience Points
- Chapter 50 : Barbarian by Barbarian
- Chapter 49 : Formal Threats
- Chapter 48 : Why Won't It Break?
- Chapter 47 : Even If You Insult Him, Let Me Do It!
- Chapter 46 : I Was Wondering Why, and Now I Know
- Chapter 45 : Seems Like It's Not My Business.
- Chapter 44 : Just Throw a Barbarian In
- Chapter 43 : The Fire-type Devoted Son
- Chapter 42 : Why Did He Suddenly Become So Nice?
- Chapter 41 : Physical Respect
- Chapter 40 : It's a Credit Card.
- Chapter 39 : Instinct Never Lies
- Chapter 38 : In the End, He Still Wins
- Chapter 37 : Sometimes Barbarians Lose, too
- Chapter 36 : Shouldn't Have Come!
- Chapter 35 : Reward Too Great to Refuse
- Chapter 34 : Our Dog Bites.
- Chapter 33 : Over the Mountain, Over the Mountain, Over the Mountain
- Chapter 32 : No, I Said I Won't Buy It
- Chapter 31 : Catch That Guy!
- Chapter 30 : This Barbarian Charges for Services
- Chapter 29 : If You Know Them, You Solve It
- Chapter 28 : If Sorry Is Enough, Why Do We Need the Police?
- Chapter 27 : Returning Happens in an Instant
- Chapter 26 : Two Coupons and Already Benefits?
- Chapter 25 : We Were Told Not to Follow Strangers
- Chapter 24 : Devout Necromancer
- Chapter 23 : Barbarians Don't Hold Back
- Chapter 22 : So This Is Why You Hate It!
- Chapter 21 : Over the Mountains, Over the Mountains, Over the Mountains
- Chapter 20 : Taking It All
- Chapter 19 : Who Am I? Copper Rank.
- Chapter 18 : Yes, I am the Necromancer You're Looking For.
- Chapter 17 : Barbarian Respect Association
- Chapter 16 : Respect the Barbarian
- Chapter 15 : I Love the Market, I Love the Auction
- Chapter 14 : The Never-Go Meeting Square
- Chapter 13 : It Has Its Own Advantages
- Chapter 12 : Somehow, It Rolls Along
- Chapter 11 : Rotten Party
- Chapter 10 : Something Feels Off.
- Chapter 9 : A Name Known by All
- Chapter 8 : I Strike, Therefore I Am.
- Chapter 7 : To skip ads, Get Premium.
- Chapter 6 : As Something Leaves, Something Else Comes.
- Chapter 5 : Guarantor, God.
- Chapter 4 : Dmihtan's Precious Counseling Center
- Chapter 3 : Bakémon Trainer
- Chapter 2 : Entangle the Tiger in the Tiger's Den
- Chapter 1 : As the crow flies, I fell.