I Fell into the Game with Instant Kill

Chapter 29.1: Super Sensory (3)



Chapter 29.1: Super Sensory (3)

“Huh? Only that branch has no leaves. It’s amazing.”

Railo also put her palm on her forehead and looked at the bare branches.

I furrowed my brows and was lost in thought.

A lifeless branch.

It must have meant that tree branch.

If not, what else could it be? It was an unnatural sight no matter who looked at it.

But how is such a thing possible?

Was it just the genetic characteristic of the tree, or did the creator of the dungeon who left the code did something to this tree?

I skipped it because it wasn’t really important.

Rather, if it was a ‘lifeless branch’, it meant that it was the most decisive hint to find the dungeon.

Because the code says that a lifeless branch would guide adventurers.

“…”

I stared up at the branch.

What and how could a branch attached to a tree guide me?

I thought for a moment. Maybe if it was cut down, the branches would fly around and give directions… But it didn’t seem like that’s the case no matter how much this was a fantasy world.

Direction? Is it a direction?

I thought of something simpler.

Were you just telling me to move in the direction the branch was extending?

It was confusing, but I couldn’t think of anything else, so I moved. If it wasn’t the case, then I could just come back.

I looked back at the two and said.

“Let’s move over there.”

That’s how we headed in the direction the branch was pointing.

The sun had completely passed before I knew it, and darkness fell over the forest.

I took out the glowstone and walked, carefully examining my surroundings. I didn’t know where there might be traces suggesting the location of the dungeon.

After moving for several tens of minutes, something that clearly stood out came into view.

A single tree among the other trees emitted a sense of presence. Its leaves were dimly shining.

…Luminous tree?

Railo also found it and muttered in wonder.

“It’s a luminous tree. It’s hard to see, but who would think it was in this forest too?”

As the name suggested, the luminous tree was a tree with leaves that emitted light at night. Like fireflies.

It was located exactly on the route we were walking on, so there was something suspicious about it.

Could it be that?

When the twilight subsided, the reason the time of the day was included in the code.

If interpreted differently, it meant that something specific that could only be seen at night was a hint to the dungeon.

And the luminous tree was a tree that emitted light like this only at night.

Feeling something connected in my head, I moved closer to the luminous tree.

Hmm…

So what’s next?

I moved in the direction where the lifeless branch was pointing to and found a luminous tree standing there. What more did I have to do?

I asked Railo.

“Do you know something?”

“Yes?”

“The biggest tree, when the twilight has completely subsided, the lifeless branches will guide the adventurers. So I moved to the direction where that branch of the Mengrodi tree was pointing, and this luminous tree appeared. It seems to be a signpost to the dungeon. Let me know if anything comes to mind.”

Railo stood there looking dumbfounded before she asked.

“I don’t know? More than that, why do you say this is a signpost to the dungeon?”

“What else stands out at night other than this?”

She seemed to think about it again, but then she looked surprised as if she realized it only then.

“Indeed, that’s it! Could you please explain?”

“…Have you really done a lot of dungeon explorations?”

“I’m better at using my body, and my other colleagues are good at using their brain.”

“Where are your friends now?”

“After finding one artifact and having a big meal, everyone retired. I’m an adventurer because it’s my calling, so I’m still active.”

Such a story.

Anyway, Railo didn’t seem to be of much help.

I wasn’t expecting anything, but I asked Asher as well.

“Do you think of anything?”

Asher seemed to think hard, then she carefully opened her mouth.

“That… it’s not.”

But instead of speaking to me, she shook her head.

One of the two ways to piss people off was to stop suddenly talking when they were about to say something.

“It’s okay, tell me.”

I urged her to speak again.

“I heard that most dungeons and ruins are located underground.”

“Right.”

Since ancient times to modern times, people had excavated more relics because the remains on the ground were more noticeable than underground.

“That’s why I thought maybe there’s a dungeon hidden right under this tree.”

“…”

It was a very simple opinion.

But so what? It seemed reasonable.

“Ah, that’s a bit. How could they hide it so blatantly like that?”

Railo interjected and said.

My reason for having doubt was the same as hers, but my intuition leaned in favor of Asher’s opinion.

After thinking about it, I ordered Asher.

“Dig deep right in front of the tree until I tell you to stop.”

“Yes.”

Asher gestured to Railo, who was standing still, to step back.

Railo, who stood next to me, looked at me as if it what I ordered was just absurd.

“Are you sure about this?”

“Nothing else comes to mind.”

“No matter how deep she dug, who would…”

Kwaaiang!

The sound of the explosion hitting her ears startled Railo, and she looked back.

Every time Asher struck with her fist, the ground burst open and the hole got deeper and deeper.

Railo stared at the absurd sight.

Time passed.

Asher, who had been digging the ground for a long time, suddenly jumped over the pit and she said.

“Something like a stone wall appeared and there’s a space inside.”

“…Stone walls?”

I moved closer to the pit, put the glowstone above it, and looked down. She dug too deep.

It was dark, so I couldn’t see it well, but as Asher said, the artificial stone walls seemed to be faintly visible.

So, it’s real?

I was dumbfounded and laughed out loud.

Did the guy who created the dungeon think no one could really find it?

Even after I found it, I was amazed at how the hell Tair found it.

“…?”

I tilted my head.

Wait a minute, wasn’t something inconsistent?

Even if you estimate the depth of the hole Asher had dug, it was well over a few meters.

So, Tair, like Asher, dug this deep alone and found that… Did that make sense?

“…”

I felt a strange sense of difference, as if something was out of place, but I still had to go inside.

I said to Railo.

“I’ll be back, wait here.”

“…Ah yes.”

She nodded her head gracefully.

Seeing Asher’s strength, it felt like her tone had become a little more polite.

I jumped straight down the pit.

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