The image that Loren got when he thought of a dungeon entrance was quite a showy one.
But the entrance of the dungeon he was about to enter was a simple one that was way different from what Loren was imagining, being stairs that extended below from one of the rooms of the school.
Loren felt anticlimactic, but he braced himself again, as he told himself that the entrance had nothing to do with the difficulty of the dungeon itself.
Loren and his group ran into Klaus and his group at the room leading to the dungeon.
Loren saw Ange behind the group of students lead by Klaus, which was made up of four girls for some reason, but seeing her sour face, he laughed a bit as it was clear that she wasnât happy about the situation Klaus was put in.
âYou guys going down too?â
Loren nodded, but he c.o.c.ked his head as the group of girls Klaus was leading directed gazes of hostility at him.
He wondered if it was that unpleasant for them to see him be friendly with Klaus, who seemed to be popular and liked by everyone in the school. He then recalled the doc.u.ments that the princ.i.p.al had handed him concerning the examinees.
âArenât your members a bit different?â
Loren didnât remember the details of the other group, but he did remember that it wasnât a party full of girls.
On top of that, all the girls were dressed as swordsman, and he was sure that the structure wasnât so deviated.
âWe heard that Master Klaus was going to be proctoring, so we had the group switch with us.â
The one who answered was one of the girls standing behind Klaus.
The strong willed looking girl with blond pigtails in vertical spirals, speaking for all the girls, spoke to Loren without any fear and with her chest puffed out.
âIt would be foolish to lose the chance to have Master Klaus, who was called a prodigy during his time as a student, to proctor us.â
âWhoâs this?â
Loren asked Klaus, not even trying to hide air of âI wasnât asking youâ, and Klaus answered him with a slightly stretched smile.
âParme Pentatonic. Iâm sure youâre not interested, but sheâs a comtesse from a certain nation.â
âBe thankful, adventurer. Iâm not someone you would normally be able to speak to.â
Even though she said that as she looked down on him, Loren didnât even look at her and asked Klaus again.
âAre cla.s.ses and ranks in effect in the school?â
âOfficially students are treated as students, regardless of cla.s.sâŚbut itâs true that talented students and students born of high cla.s.s a.s.sert authority sometimesâŚsorry.â
âWhy are you the one thatâs apologizing?â
Loren sighed as Klausâ voice became smaller and smaller.
He guessed that Klaus was embarra.s.sed at the things that heâs done until now, but as one that was watching him correcting his ways and att.i.tude, he felt that Klaus didnât have to act so ashamed.
âThatâs right! Thereâs no reason for Master Klaus to apologize to someone like thisâŚâ
âHey you, how about you be quiet for a bit. Especially if you like me.â
Klaus stopped Parme calmly, with a shadow cast over his face.
Loren didnât really care how much the girl went at him, but not having to deal with it didnât hurt either.
Losing interest in the girls, Loren turned his attention to Ange, who was standing behind them with a sour face.
âThatâs a scary face youâre making there.â
âYou understand how I feel, donât you?â
âIâve got a good guess. But if youâre like that, wouldnât it worry Klaus and not look good to the students?â
Ange might not have cared about the students, but when Loren pointed out the possibility that she could be worrying Klaus, her expression went slightly back to normal.
Glancing at some of the wrinkles still left on her forehead, Loren looked around her.
âWhat happened to the other two?â
âBoycott. This time itâs just me and Klaus.â
Loren remembered that there wasnât a limit on how many could take the job at once.
It seemed that Layla and Roll decided that they didnât want to deal with this atmosphere and refused to come.
âThen why didnât you refuse to come as well?â
âAre you saying that I should let throw Klaus into a crowd of girls all by himself?â
Loren tried to step away from Ange, slightly overcome by her sudden threatening look, but Ange kept closing the gap.
âListen. Itâs true that Klaus is good looking and is quite skilled. And thanks to you, heâs lost his arrogance and his personality became rounder. But still. His quickness when it comes to making moves on girls hasnât changed at all!â
âI donât remember fixing that part of him, either.â
Itâs not that he didnât remember, but it was that he didnât know about it.
Seeing that the rest of Klausâ party were women and all of them had feelings for him, Loren guessed that he was somewhat fast at making moves, but regardless, it didnât really harm Loren in any way.
âIf I let Klaus go into a dungeon with no one to keep an eye on him. By the time they come back, all of them will have hearts floating over their heads!â
âUhh, okay.â
âIf heâs careless, in a few months heâll have girls flocking all over him, telling him âthis is your child, acknowledge itâ!â
Loren thought that was saying too much, but when he glanced at Klaus, he was looking away with a pale face.
Hearing Ange say that, some of the girls around him had their eyes wide open with surprise, but some of them were blushing with happy looks on their faces.
âI have to stay with him to prevent that.â
âThatâs quite a disaster you have to deal with. Good luck.â
After giving Ange a half-hearted voice of encouragement, Loren walked up to Klaus again, put his hand on his shoulder, and pulled him closer.
âDonât overdo it, alright?â
âAhahahahaâŚThanks for the warning, I guess.â
Seeing Klaus laugh weakly, Loren got the feeling that he was already beyond saving.
If crime of pa.s.sion was the reason behind his group getting wiped out, he could face an extreme loss of face, and Loren could only pray that he wouldnât come back to hear such stories.
âSo, whoâs going first?â
Seeing that Loren was finished talking, Lapis asked to everyone in the room.
The stairs into the dungeon was in the corner of the room, but it wasnât wide enough for all of them to go down at once, and since there were two groups, one had to go before the other.
Loren didnât think one was more advantageous than the other, but decided that it was better for the students to talk it out among themselves.
âWeâll let you go first. Got it?â
âWait a second. Donât decide it on your own.â
Parme, who was looking down on them to the last, and Ain, who was talking head on.
The conversation between party leaders started out quite heated, but their main point was to make the other party go first.
As Loren wondered what made them so desperate to make the other go first, Lapis whispered into his ear.
âBoth parties donât have a thief.â
Loren realized now that she mentioned it.
Ainâs party consisted of two warriors, a magician, and a priest.
Parmeâs party were all swordsmen, so there wasnât a thief in sight.
The school was one that trained adventurers, so they would be training thieves as well, but it was strange that either parties didnât have one.
The usefulness of a thief went without saying when exploring dungeons.
Various traps set here and there or hidden doors.
Opening locks on doors and chests all required the skill set of a thief, so not having one was very strange indeed.
âThe aristocrat girls donât have one most likely because they look down on the job and didnât invite one to join them.â
It wasnât surprising that aristocrats would look down on such jobs.
There was also no way they would go out of their way to learn the skills of one.
Even so, going down into a dungeon without having one seemed dangerous even to Loren, who had no experience exploring dungeons.
âThey wouldnât need one if they are going to ignore chests, and it is possible to detect traps if you look carefully enough or poke the ground in front of you with a stick.â
Lapis pointed to one of the girls, who had a long stick as tall as she was along with her weapon.
Lapis guessed that she had the role of hitting the floor and walls to check for traps.
âOn the other hand, Ain and his party probably didnât have anyone to learn the skills. They seem like a group of close friends anyway.â
âThen couldnât they have added a thief into their party? There isnât a limit for how many can be in a party.â
It was common for a party to have four or five members.
This piece of knowledge was based on the experiences of many adventurers, where any lower than that would make it harder to detect and deal with dangers, and any more would slow the group down.
Of course, if you were to ignore efficiency, you could pair up with someone else or invite however many people you wanted to.
âIâm guessing that they werenât acquainted with anyone whoâs a thief. The four of them look like theyâre a closed community, in any case.â
Lapis said that because they were a party that consisted of close friends, they couldnât invite anyone from outside their group even though they knew they needed a thief.
Although on a different scale, similar situations happened among mercenaries as well.
When the number of members decreased for whatever reason and they try to increase members by letting some in from other places, many of them donât want to do so.
Because of this, they try to fill the holes left open by themselves instead of recruiting more people.
âItâs the same thing as villagers not liking outsiders.â
âThatâs a pretty blunt way to put itâŚâ
âSo thatâs why both of them want the opposing party to go first and test the waters.â
Loren let out a nervous laugh as Lapis rounded the conversation up, and the argument between Ain and Parme seemed to have reached a conclusion.
When Loren looked at them, he saw Parme red with frustration and Ain with a proud look on his face.
âAlright, you guys first.â
âYouâd better remember this, commoner. Youâll pay a high price for this.â
Parme grinded her teeth but didnât seem to argue with what was decided. She gathered the other girls and with Klaus, who was continuing to bow his head, and Ange, who was still in a bad mood, and went down the stairs into the dungeon.
âBut wouldnât letting the other go first only matter if you were going the same way?â
If they took different paths, going first or last wouldnât matter.
Lapis answered Lorenâs question without even trying to hide her exasperation.
âIf they use the method taught by the school, they would take the same road.â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean.â
âI took a peek at the schoolâs curriculum before we cameâŚand it seems that when it comes to exploring dungeons, they teach the students to put their left hands on the outer wall and stay next to that wall.â
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âI heard that method doesnât work if the exit to the dungeon is in the middle of the maze.â
If you were trying to exit the dungeon by following the outer wall, the exit had to be somewhere on the outer wall.
âIn that case they make used of the map they drew on the first round and start over.â
âSounds like you would need a lot of patience.â
Loren stifled a yawn as he watched Ain and his party getting ready to draw a map and discussing when to enter, thinking that exploring dungeons wasnât something mercenaries, who were mostly short tempered, would do.