I Have a Military Shop Tab in Fantasy World
Chapter 69: It’s Not That Easy

Chapter 69: It’s Not That Easy

The debris from the shattered minotaur titan still smoldered as the four adventurers stood at the center of the cavern, catching their breath. Shards of bone crumbled underfoot as Serina inspected the glowing fragments with a frown. The necromantic energy that once pulsed within them had finally begun to dissipate.

"Mana’s thinning," she murmured. "But it’s not gone. The deeper we go, the more concentrated it’ll get."

"That thing wasn’t the boss," Inigo said, slinging the now-empty RPG-7 across his back before it disintegrated into system particles. "It was just a gatekeeper. Typical for a dungeon. I didn’t expect this to end so quickly."

Lyra stepped beside him, wiping soot from her bowstring. "This is expected of a dungeon. Enemies will get stronger as we get deeper."

"I know," he replied, withdrawing his M4 Carbine from his inventory, "I hope that this is just a quick dungeon raid,"

With a few quick checks, he toggled the weapon’s rune-safety off and loaded a fresh mag. The rifle, matte black with subtle glowing glyphs along the barrel, hummed softly—his own modified version, courtesy of the Freedom Shop’s upgrades. A small slot on the receiver allowed him to directly channel mana into the chambered rounds, enhancing each bullet with raw energy.

His Desert Eagle hung at his side, freshly polished and loaded. Standard setup. Efficient. Reliable.

Elira, still at the front of the group, nodded silently and resumed her forward position. Serina cast a soft cleansing wave to dissipate the smoke ahead and lit another floating light to guide their way.

They moved deeper into the cave.

This far in, the structure of the dungeon changed.

The walls no longer resembled mere limestone. Instead, they were blackened and charred, as if burned in ancient fire. Strange sigils marked the surface, glowing faintly with eerie blue and red tones. The temperature dropped again, and the air grew heavier.

Inigo glanced at the sigils and activated his goggles’ glyph-scanning overlay.

"Runes," he muttered. "Enchantment warding... some are suppressors, others are amplifiers. Someone or something wants the magic here controlled, not free-flowing."

"You think it’s a sorcerer?" Lyra asked.

Serina shook her head. "This kind of suppression magic? It’s ancient. Might be minotaur shamans that set this up centuries ago. Or worse... something that controls them."

As they continued on, the sound of distant hooves returned.

This time, it wasn’t fifty.

It was ten.

But they were different.

The minotaurs that appeared next were larger than the skeletal ones they had faced earlier, but not undead. These were alive—muscle-bound, fur-covered monsters wearing spiked armor, their eyes glowing with cold intelligence. Each one wielded weapons—axes, spears, and even a crude tower shield made of stitched-together bones.

Elira raised her shield immediately. "These are warlords."

"I count ten," Lyra whispered. "They’re organizing."

Inigo nodded slowly, lifting his M4 and placing a finger on the trigger. His mana flared briefly, blue light pulsing from his palm into the rifle’s magazine. The entire weapon shimmered.

"Time for a little overdrive."

He aimed and fired.

The shot cracked through the air with the force of thunder, the enhanced round spiraling into one of the minotaurs’ shoulder. The impact tore through its armor and knocked it backward several feet, crashing against a wall and crumpling with a pained snort.

"Elira, go!" he barked.

The crusader rushed in, shield braced, and clashed against the frontline of the monsters. One swung a hammer at her, but she ducked under it, slammed her shield into its knee, and brought her sword down across its face in one fluid motion.

Serina began her chant, holding her staff high.

"[Cleansing Flame: Radiant Flare]!"

A circle of golden fire exploded beneath three of the beasts, searing them with purifying energy. Two howled in agony and staggered; the third fell to its knees, smoke rising from its chest.

Lyra was already moving along the left flank, launching arrows that glowed with kinetic sigils. Each bolt struck with more than physical force—they detonated like pressure bursts, causing shockwaves that threw the minotaurs off balance.

Inigo didn’t stop firing.

The M4 thundered again and again. Every fifth shot, he infused with a burst of mana, causing the rounds to pierce deeper or explode mid-impact. He moved in tandem with Lyra, covering her side as she moved.

"Seven down!" Elira shouted.

Three remained, forming a triangle.

They roared as one—and then charged together, shoulder to shoulder like a barbarian phalanx.

Inigo dashed forward, grabbing a frag grenade from his belt, channeled mana into it, and lobbed it dead center.

"Back!"

The explosion boomed like a cannon. Rock splinters flew, smoke clouded the air, and when it cleared, two of the minotaurs were torn apart. The last one lay groaning, crushed under debris.

Silence returned.

"Clear," Elira announced, sword dripping with black blood.

Inigo lowered his rifle. "That went well."

"Too well," Serina said, panting slightly. Her eyes narrowed. "These weren’t just guards. They were... a test."

Lyra looked around. "So what’s next? The real boss?"

As if in answer, the floor beneath them rumbled.

The stone shook violently, and a section of the far wall cracked open like an ancient door. Beyond it was a staircase, descending even deeper—lit by red-orange light pulsing like the breath of something asleep.

Inigo stepped toward it. "Looks like our invitation."

Elira turned. "We can rest for five minutes. But after that..."

"We press on," Serina finished.

They sat briefly by the wall—reapplying salves, reloading gear, and drinking from their flasks. Lyra handed out small ration bars, while Serina refilled her mana with a high-efficiency potion. Elira polished her blade with slow, reverent strokes.

Inigo rechecked his Desert Eagle, chambering a round with a soft click. "Whatever’s down there, we end it today."

"Agreed," Elira said.

They rose together and stepped toward the stairs, the torch-like pulses below growing stronger with each step. As they descended, the sound of drums echoed up to meet them—deep, steady, and ancient.

The real battle had yet to begin.

And none of them intended to turn back.

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