"The current underground dungeon functions according to real-world logic," Mize murmured, shifting as she crawled lazily toward the edge of the bed.
Her limbs stretched, relaxed and feline, before she settled into a more comfortable position.
Her fingers drummed idly against the sheets as she tilted her head, eyes narrowed in thought. "Which means... there's no loot system at all right now."
She paused, brows drawing together slightly. "Feels kind of off, doesn't it? A dungeon without loot?"
A sigh left her lips as she leaned onto one elbow, gaze drifting to the far wall. "But then again... if the dungeon is massive enough to be considered its own world, maybe it's not so weird."
A curious paradox. A small dungeon missing standard mechanics would seem broken or incomplete.
But this? A sprawling subterranean world unlike anything ever built, it had its own weight, its own sense of scale.
Maybe the absence of expected systems wasn't a flaw, but simply a difference of scope.
She nodded slowly to herself, the idea settling neatly. "Honestly, it feels more like a world than a dungeon anyway."
Still, another thought crept up behind that one, nagging at her.
Since everything beneath the surface still technically fell within the bounds of the dungeon's influence... shouldn't the same laws apply down there too?
A frown touched her lips.
She had essentially layered a second spatial plane beneath the original dungeon, two environments running in tandem, stitched together inside the same massive construct.
A complicated mess, if she were being honest.
And for once, she needed clarity.
Without moving from her spot, Mize reached out to the system.
[In essence, the dungeon still operates under the same laws and rules, even for the underground dungeon.]
She blinked. "Then why didn't any loot drop when my clone killed those two tier-seven monsters I created and placed there?"
[Those monsters weren't classified as a full species. There were no evolutionary chains, no weaker or stronger variants of the same creature. No numbers. No hierarchy. They were isolated instances.]
[For example, summoned card-type monsters meet these conditions. A fixed number appears based on area size, like three hundred per ten kilometers. That volume fulfills the dungeon's criteria and allows its mechanics to function properly.]
"Ah..." Her voice dropped, almost sheepish.
Finally, the inner workings of her dungeon began to piece themselves together in her mind.
It wasn't her fault, really, Liam had tossed her the dungeon core without much of an explanation, and she hadn't exactly received a manual to go along with it.
Most of it had been trial and error.
Blind guesses.
"Luckily," she exhaled, "I went with mass production when I made most of the monster species down there. Big herds. Distinct biomes. Guess I did something right after all."
She sat up fully, hands clasped loosely in her lap as she stared out the window.
A moment passed.
Then she murmured, "Since tier-seven monsters have already been exposed to the protagonist... it makes sense to create more of them now."
Her tone was even, matter-of-fact.
"So, let's give each major species in the dungeon their own true lord-tier variant. But only for the ones that actually deserve the effort."
With the decision made, Mize extended a hand.
Another clone formed beside her in a flicker of light, then vanished just as quickly, whisked away by long-range teleportation into the depths of the dungeon.
The clone got to work instantly, splitting again and again until thousands moved through the cavernous underground like a hive of precise, silent workers.
Each handled their task with care, tweaking terrain, expanding lairs, adjusting creature distributions.
The entire world grew deeper with every passing moment.
And just like that, she no longer needed to create separate laws to make loot drops happen.
The structure was already there, she just had to meet the criteria.
"Now then," she mused, tapping her finger against her knee, "if I create another layer inside the dungeon space... would the same rules still apply?"
[Yes, Host. The dungeon core maintains foundational settings, ones used by ancient civilizations long before the current age. It's a crystallized framework of reality, compressed and encoded into one artifact.]
[Through these laws, the structure becomes viable. And due to the Host's innate ability, which operates both alongside and outside of the system, there are no fixed limitations on modifications.]
"Got it." Mize gave a small nod, expression composed now.
She understood the entire mechanism clearly at last.
Her clones continued their silent work far below, each disguised, none bearing her true appearance.
She wouldn't risk being seen. Especially not by Liam.
If he found out, explaining any of this would be... a pain.
With that concern stored away, she turned her attention back to the surface events.
She focused, drawing her awareness outward through her territory like a fine net.
Her vision expanded, each point of light and movement filtering into her mind as if through a thousand lenses.
How far could she see now?
At the 1000-kilometer mark, everything cut off.
A sharp jab of pain shot behind her eyes, but it passed quickly, nothing more than a reminder that even her reach had its boundaries.
"Still," she muttered, "there are a lot more lords surrounding us than I thought."
She studied the distant areas with little interest.
Their power levels floated around twenty thousand to one hundred thousand.
To her? Laughable.
If she wanted to, she could vaporize every single one of them from here without moving an inch.
She leaned back, stretching her legs out as if the thought itself were a casual breeze. "I could nuke their camps from my bed if I felt like it."
The idea brought a grin to her lips. Long-range annihilation with pinpoint accuracy, zero risk.
A dream come true for someone who preferred comfort over confrontation.
"Fufu... pitiful mortals," she chuckled, swinging her feet lightly against the edge of the bed. "Careful now, I just might erase your little kingdoms from existence."
Her laughter rang across the room, light, carefree, echoing off the walls with an almost mischievous rhythm.
"Muhaha..."
And somewhere, deep beneath the earth, her army of clones continued their quiet work, building a world beneath the world.
The scene shifted, sliding into the bustling heartbeat of the town's main street, but today, something was off.
The usual swirl of foot traffic, lively banter, and clattering carts had stilled like a breath caught in the chest.
No one moved. Not really.
And for good reason.
Footsteps.
Footsteps.
Footsteps.
A slow, steady drumbeat of metal striking stone, iron-shod boots ringing against the marble pavement.
Rhythmic.
Relentless.
From the heart of the town all the way toward its distant gate, a long, dark river of soldiers poured through.
They marched without pause, a living tide of shadows armored in steel.
Standards fluttered in the breeze, bold crests flashing crimson and black.
The sharp tang of salt and cold iron filled the air. A creeping weight pressed down, thick enough to choke.
The townspeople, especially those new arrivals who'd only just settled in this past week, stood frozen where they were, paling at the sheer scale of the procession.
In the narrow space behind a humble produce stall, a big-bellied merchant ducked back against the stone wall, the wooden overhang above shielding him from the sun, but not from the crawling unease.
His breaths came heavy, shallow.
"What's going on? Why are there soldiers in town?" he whispered, eyes wide and voice low.
"I don't know," someone murmured beside him, equally shaken. "But my cousin lives on the east side, he said it's the same there. Soldiers. Marching nonstop."
"Hiss... are we at war? I saw hundreds of thousands pass just this morning!"
Another voice, taut with anxiety, broke in. "My brother works as a scout on the perimeter. He told me the territory's been sealed, no one gets in today."
"Sealed? Why?"
"They say... the lord is going to battle."
The whispers passed from mouth to mouth, taut and anxious.
"How strong must the enemy be," one man muttered, "for the lord to send out this many troops?"
Another chimed in quickly, half breathless. "I was tasked with delivering crossbow bolts to the guard outpost. Used to take an hour to reach the boundary. Today? Took me almost five. If not for Lord Aizen's specially bred warhorse, I'd be gone for days. The territory's expanded again. The lord's power... it's frightening."
"Five hours?" The words dropped like a stone in a still pond. "So we're really going to war."
"With who? The native lords? They couldn't even compare to our lord's strength."
"Could it be... against the other sky lords?"
The speculation spread like wildfire, stoked by nerves and the oppressive sight of those endless troops.
But the unease wasn't just from the marching alone.
Because every so often, through the haze of soldiers, a distinct formation would appear, far smaller in number, but infinitely more terrifying.
Towering dark knights, each three times the height of a man, clad in jet-black armor that shimmered coldly.
Their mere presence turned blood cold.
The truth was, Liam had ordered this parade deliberately. He wanted it seen.
He wanted those rats, spies from neighboring lords, to feel it in their bones.
If they'd wriggled their way into his town looking for scraps of intelligence, then let them choke on it.
And the message was clear.
This territory was not some soft fruit to be plucked.
Beneath the layers of this show of force, Liam had silently reshaped his military posture.
New defensive formations reinforced the town, especially around the heart, his castle.
Layers upon layers of overlapping defense, hidden runes, and reaction spells.
A shield wrapped in iron.
Still, he didn't flaunt everything.
The formations of battle mages and dark knights?
He'd called forth more than ever, but kept most hidden.
What was visible was a taste.
A warning.
But even that taste had proven too much.
One formation, just one, held ten thousand tier 3 Awakened dark knights.
To most people in this land, a tier 3 was already an elite, rare, and extremely reverend.
Now they were seeing them by the tens of thousands.
And that was just a fraction.
Some townsfolk caught glimpses of more groups in the far distance, ranks of them, like pillars of death moving across the land.
The entire territory had locked down.
Not that any would be foolish enough to approach right now.
Even so, Liam hadn't completely closed the gates of mercy.
Mize had expressed her distaste for random slaughter. And Liam respected that.
So, instead of letting the monsters out there rampage unchecked, he'd dispatched select squads to thin those refugees out.
It was the highest tolerance he could extend.
Measured force.
Calculated mercy.
But make no mistake, this display wasn't just for drama.
It was a portrayal of strength against those who would be foolish enough to go against him.