They had found the stairs to the fourth and fifth floor without encountering any monsters, the reason still unknown.
âThis is crazy.â
It wasnât surprising that those words escaped Lorenâs mouth.
After all, the exam was about exploring the dungeon, but it had only taken them half a day, according to Lorenâs senses, to reach the fifth floor, which was the pa.s.sing line.
It wouldnât be surprising if it would take much longer, and the speed that they were going through was unnatural.
But that was something that couldnât be helped.
After all, they didnât encounter any monsters, and on top of that Ainâs party didnât come across any traps either.
That meant they had been able to walk all the way down to the fifth floor, which of course wouldnât take them long at all.
Loren then asked Lapis, who was holding the map.
âHeyâŚare these guys lost?â
âGood point youâve realized there Loren.â
Lapis had been looking at the map, making sure that it wasnât visible to Ain and the others, and made a remark as if she was a detective talking to her a.s.sistant.
âThereâs something wrong with them. They sometimes go in roundabout routes, but most of them had been the shortest routes possible. Itâs as if they know which path to take.
After being told that, Loren looked at the party in front of them.
The one that was drawing their map was the magician Feim.
But the one who was deciding where the group went was Ain, who was the leader of the party, and he sometimes discussed it with Al.
âThis map marks the locations of traps as wellâŚand they should have been caught by a few of them already.â
âThey didnât activate?â
There were only two reasons for the traps not activating that Loren could think of.
The first was the trap not activating.
The other was someone disabling the trap before Ain and his party had reached it.
If it was the first one, it meant that there was something wrong with the dungeon, and if it was the second one it was most likely Parmeâs party that did so, but if it wasnât, they would have to put into consideration a third party.
âDoesnât seem like we need to worry about the light one.â
âI agree. He doesnât seem like the type to scheme things.â
The remaining three were all suspicious.
They couldnât tell if they were scheming something or cheating yet at this point, but one of them possibly possessed information regarding the map of the dungeon that only the proctors were supposed to have.
âIs the exam finished once you reach the fifth floor?â
âNo, it officially ends once you find the stairs to the sixth floor. Choosing to go on further is up to the examinees.â
âI see. Hey you guys.â
Loren called out to Ain and the others.
His action wasnât something to be proud of as a proctor, but to Loren it was something that had to be done, and he was going to have Lapis turn a blind eye as well.
âWhatâs wrong?â
Ain suspiciously replied.
He was well built, and his crew cut gave him a rugged impression, but his fighting style showed that he wasnât aggressive, and Loren guessed that he had more of a defensive way of thinking and acting.
Loren started making his point.
âThe exam ends once you find the stairs to the sixth floor, right?â
âWell, yeah. Basically.â
âThen can you guys withdraw from the exam here?â
Ain became speechless with surprise on his face at Lorenâs sudden proposal, but in his stead, Cloud walked closer to Loren and b.u.t.ted in.
âHey, what the h.e.l.l are youâŚâ
âYou guys started realizing it too, havenât you? Itâs an exam but you only ran into monsters once. Itâs also weird that you havenât been caught by a trap either.â
At Lorenâs words, Cloud lost his momentum, and Ain looked away from him.
It seemed that although they thought that it didnât hurt to have an easy exam, they had realized that something was wrong, and were wondering if pa.s.sing the exam like this would mean anything to them.
If so, Loren thought he could still expect something from them, but Al suddenly joined in.
âThat doesnât make any sense. This exam was prepared by the school. If there was some trouble, the school would have cancelled the exam before it even started.â
âT-thatâs right! Itâs not cancelled, so thereâs nothing to be embarra.s.sed about!â
Cloud found his momentum again and started shouting again, and Loren scratched his head.
âI wasnât talking about embarra.s.sment. There are troubles you could find before, and there are some that you canât. Donât you think that the dungeon malfunctioning during the exam is unnatural?â
âIt couldâve been adjusted like this!â
Loren couldnât understand why anyone would lower the difficulty of the dungeon for an exam.
The school might be able to do so, since it managed the dungeon, but if the school was doing so, they would be a corpse maker, not a training school.
âItâs an exam for students who are going to become adventurers. Why would they want to lower the difficulty?â
âThatâsâŚâ
Cloud was at a loss for words, but a helping hand was offered to him.
âIt might be the school trying to help students gain confidence by clearing the dungeon.â
âT-thatâs right! Thatâs another possibilityâŚâ
âLetâs say that possibility exists. Then the teachers of this school are G.o.d forsaken idiots, you know?â
Helping someone succeed at something was indeed a method to boost confidence.
Loren knew that, and he had seen it been done many times when he was a mercenary.
The experienced mercenaries would plan it to give the new recruits confidence and courage, but he remembered that it was quite a difficult thing.
Because it didnât have any meaning if the new recruits found out about it.
Not letting them find out about it, as well as making sure that the plan worked, was what made it so difficult, and it wasnât something that could be done by lukewarm adjustments. Like their current situation, if the students knew that the difficulty was lowered, it didnât have any meaning whatsoever.
âThen what to do you want us to do!?â
âI told you. How about heading back to the school and reporting it to the princ.i.p.al and the teachers. You might have to redo the exam, but it should be better than pa.s.sing it like this.â
âYouâve got to be kidding me! Youâre telling us to fail it, after coming all this way!?â
âIâm not joking, Iâm being serious. And if you want to talk about pa.s.sing or failing, in my eyes you guys are a bunch of failures. Even if you become adventurers, youâll be lying under the dirt within a year.â
âBut thatâs just your opinion, isnât it?â
Al stepped in yet again as Cloud couldnât find anything to say.
âOnly the G.o.ds know the future. As someone that isnât even close to being a G.o.d, I donât think you could see what our futures are.â
âI think I could make a prediction, canât I?â
âPredictions could be wrong, canât they?â
âDo you think it would be wrong?â
âI donât think anyone here asked you for advice, am I wrong?â
Since the examinee pointed out that he was going outside the boundaries of a proctor, there was nothing more Loren could say.
If things went wrong, they could report that he got in the way of the exam, and he could get penalized.
Loren had tried to look out for them, giving them advice even though they didnât ask for it, but he wasnât willing to take it that far, and although Feim had a trouble look on her face, Cloud and Ain seemed to agree with Al, so he decided that there was nothing more he could do.
âAlright, my bad. I tend to stick my neck into other peopleâs business.â
As Loren showed signs of backing off, the party went back to moving forward with Ain looking worried, Cloud with a grim look, and Al immediately losing interest in Loren.
As Loren slowly walked after them, Lapis walked up and said to him.
âGood try Loren.â
âSorry about that. Itâs my fault if our job evaluation goes down.â
âItâs fine. Iâm getting a vague feeling that this job will end in failure again anyway.â
Lorenâs face darkened at the words, failure again.
Lorenâs success rate after he became an adventurer was very low, in fact, the only job he succeeded in was picking herbs, and he had failed everything after that.
If he failed one again, he wouldnât be able to make any money, his reputation would keep going down, and the rumor that he was leeching off Lapis would gain authenticity.
âI shouldnât be worrying about others right now.â
Loren let out a mocking laugh, while Shayna said words of encouragement in his head.
âItâs not Lorenâs fault that the jobs are ending in failures though.â
âThat might be true, but results are everything, after all. Thereâs no excuse as long as itâs considered a failure.â
As Lapis saw Loren droop his shoulders, she wondered if he was the one who needed a boost in confidence by success, but for some reason whenever Loren took a job, even ones that seemed easy brought upon situations that made them become exponentially difficult.
If they accepted an easy quest, he would notice what she was trying to do, and if by any chance, that job became difficult and ended in failure, it would end up with Loren losing confidence even further.
Lapis glanced at Loren, who was walking next to her, and continued thinking.
She guessed that maybe instead of trying to get an easy job, pick a random one, and if it ended in failure, she would find a reason to convince him that it wasnât his fault, and comfort him that way.
âI think your reputation at the guild is rising, though. I write up reports every time, and they are always surprised that we manage to survive.â
âThat doesnât make me feel any betterâŚItâs either being stubborn about living or having bad luck.â
âIf I say that those count as skill, the children would say that not encountering monsters count as luck, wonât they.â
âIf this c.r.a.ppy luck of choosing jobs that end in failure is skill as well, then IâmâŚâ
âAh, letâs stop this Loren. This is going to become an endless loop of negative thoughts.â
Lapis stopped Loren from thinking any further with a straight face but filled with panic inside.
She thought he would start thinking positively if she talked about positive things, but she didnât expect his mind to go towards the opposite vector.
Once his thoughts went in that direction, anything she said would be taken negatively, and would be difficult to follow up.
âAnyways, about our current problem. Do you think they would head back after finding the stairs to the sixth floor?â
âDefinitely not. They said something about going down all the way, too.â
âThen do you think the sixth floor will not have any monsters as well, like the past few floors?â
That was a question Loren couldnât answer.
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From what he had seen from the floors above, it wouldnât be surprising if the floors below would be the same, but there was one thing that caught his mind.
âI donât know, but thereâs probably a reason why the pa.s.sing line is the fifth floor, and they donât require going down any further.â
âYes, oh. Weâre almost at the stairs leading down. Letâs see what their reactions are.â
Loren thought that was a quite spiteful way of looking at things.
Ain the others let out a resounding shout of joy as they found the stairs that lead down to the sixth floor.