Building The First Adventurer Guild In Another World-Chapter 234: Puppets And Pawns

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Chapter 234: Puppets And Pawns

Inside a room buried beneath layers of stone and shadow, carved deep into the foundations of an abandoned manor that had vanished from official maps, an eerie stillness reigned.

The air was cool and stale, untouched by sunlight or breeze. The only light came from a faint line of violet sigils etched into the walls, glowing softly like veins of restrained lightning trapped beneath the stone.

The chamber was stark in its design no ornate furniture or lavish decorations, just a wide floor of polished black slate and a ceiling so high it disappeared into darkness. This was not a space meant for comfort; it was crafted for secrecy.

At the center of this silence stood a man with his head bowed. His posture was rigid and controlled, yet tension coiled through his shoulders. He wore fine clothes that were now travel-worn, with exquisite stitching at the cuffs and collar hinting at a life of privilege.

His hair, once perfectly styled, now hung slightly disheveled around his face, and faint shadows rested beneath his eyes as if sleep had long evaded him. He did not dare lift his gaze.

Before him loomed a silhouette across the stretch of dark slate floor. There was no visible source illuminating that shadow; it existed independently, vaguely human-shaped but indistinct at the edges, as if darkness itself had condensed into this form.

No face could be discerned; no features distinguished. Only an unsettling presence filled the air, a weight that pressed against Aldric’s senses without movement.

This man was Aldric, the very same who had commissioned the mission to hunt down the Crimson Abyssal Lion. His request had set off a chain reaction leading to bloodshed, broken bodies, and names etched prematurely into memory.

When he finally spoke, his voice carried both control and strain, each word weighted with desperation carefully masked beneath etiquette.

"I have delivered the ten million gold coins," he said without lifting his head. "Transferred exactly as instructed. I have done everything you asked."

He paused briefly to swallow hard; the sound echoed in the cavernous stillness. "I have fulfilled my end of the bargain. Now... I ask that you fulfill yours."

Silence deepened as he awaited a response from the silhouette.

Aldric felt it press against him, thick and suffocating, as if something far beyond human impatience had swallowed his words for evaluation.

He kept his head lowered, resisting the urge to glance up for any sign of reaction. His hands clenched lightly at his sides, fingers digging into palms to steady their trembling.

"My son," he continued more quietly now, fear creeping into his voice as he spoke about paternal concern. "His condition worsens daily. You promised me the potion, the cure. I have done what you required."

At last, there was movement from the silhouette not a step or gesture in any conventional sense but rather a subtle shift in darkness as though shadows leaned closer together.

When the voice emerged, it didn’t echo through the room; it resonated within it, smooth and gentle, so calm that it was impossible to tell whether it belonged to a man or a woman.

There was no hint of malice, no overt warmth, just a quiet, ancient cadence that felt unsettlingly composed.

"You have indeed done as instructed," the voice said softly, with the faintest trace of amusement woven into its tone.

"Though the plan did not unfold exactly as expected... the Guild suffered damage. Their structure destabilized. Morale has been shaken. Resources are drained." A brief chuckle followed, low and almost indulgent.

"In that regard, your contribution was... satisfactory."

Something shifted in the darkness. A small object arced gracefully through the air and landed lightly in Aldric’s hands. He instinctively caught it with a sharp intake of breath, and when he finally looked up, it wasn’t at the silhouette but at the bottle resting in his trembling grasp.

It was small and crafted from fine crystal, containing a liquid unlike anything he had ever seen, golden and luminous, radiating a soft brilliance as if sunlight had been captured and liquefied within glass. The fluid moved with an elegant grace, forming subtle spirals that shimmered with each slight shift of his grip.

Aldric tightened his fingers around the bottle as if fearing it might vanish if he didn’t hold on tightly enough.

His breath hitched. "This... this is..."

"The cure," the silhouette gently interjected. "Administered in measured doses, no more than three drops at a time. Any excess will overwhelm your body’s capacity to stabilize."

Aldric bowed deeply again, trembling now not from fear but from overwhelming relief that bordered on collapse. "You have my gratitude," he said hoarsely. "You have my loyalty."

The silhouette did not respond to his latter statement but inclined slightly, as much as something formless could.

"See to your son," the voice instructed. "And ensure your involvement in our affairs remains... unspoken."

Aldric nodded rapidly. "Of course. No one will know."

He stepped back slowly, careful not to turn his back completely until he felt there was enough distance between them. Cradling the bottle like it was the most precious artifact in existence, he moved toward the chamber’s hidden exit. The door sealed behind him without sound.

Silence reclaimed the room once more; for a time, nothing stirred. Then, from across the chamber’s far edge emerged another presence not from a door or visible passage but seemingly from within the darkness itself as though shadows had parted to reveal him.

A figure stepped forward bearing signs of recent violence: torn clothes stained with dried blood, gaunt features with muscles straining against tension where they shouldn’t be and where his left arm should have hung by his side was only empty space, its sleeve pinned tightly against his torso.

It was Riven.

He halted a short distance from the silhouette, his posture straight yet radiating barely contained fury. Unlike Aldric, he didn’t bow immediately. Instead, his sharp, resentful gaze locked onto the indistinct shape before him.

"The plan failed," he stated bluntly, bitterness lacing his voice. "Valeria wasn’t captured. The Guildmaster survived. Casualties were minimal, but I lost nearly all my men."

His eyes flickered downward for a brief moment to where his arm had once been before snapping back up with renewed intensity.

"I lost more than expected."

The silhouette remained motionless.

"Your objective," Riven continued, his voice tightening, "was to cripple the Guild. Instead, they’ll recover. Valeria has already advanced, she’s now a six-Star Grandmaster Knight. She’s no longer within reach of casual strategy.

And the Guildmaster..." He exhaled sharply. "He’s more resilient than we anticipated."

Silence hung in the air.

Then came the calm voice from the shadows: "Loss is an inevitable variable."

Riven clenched his jaw. "I’ll have to answer to my elders."

"And you will," the silhouette replied smoothly. "With the truth that a calculated risk was taken, intelligence was gathered, and vulnerabilities were observed."

Riven scoffed, a harsh sound that echoed faintly off stone. "Vulnerabilities? We lost men, resources, time! You’re obsessed with that Guild in particular and refuse to explain why."

For a moment, there was a subtle shift in the air.

"Obsessed," the silhouette echoed softly as if savoring the word.

"A curious interpretation."

Riven stepped forward despite himself; anger simmered just beneath his restraint.

"Everything we planned aimed at destabilizing them. Why? They’re just a small force, ambitious perhaps but hardly central to this Kingdom or even this region. Why expend so much on such a target?"

The darkness around the silhouette deepened slightly. "Because," it finally replied in an unchanged tone that carried something older beneath it, "they are not what they appear to be."

Riven’s expression shifted slightly. "Clarify."

"In time."

The dismissiveness of that response was subtle but unmistakable.

Riven exhaled sharply through his nose. "You said there would be compensation."

"There will be."

The silhouette shifted again, a faint ripple through shadow. "The Vault is about to appear."

That word hung in the chamber like a spark igniting dry tinder.

Riven’s eyes widened involuntarily; greed flashed bright and undeniable through his frustration haze. "The Vault?" he repeated in a lower voice, now focused. "Confirmed?"

"Yes."

"When?"

"Soon."

Riven steadied his breathing as calculation replaced anger. "And you’re certain it will manifest within accessible range?"

"I am."

A faint smile flickered across Riven’s lips, despite the pain etched on his face. "So this loss... becomes manageable."

The silhouette remained silent, neither confirming nor denying his words. Riven shifted his stance, rolling his remaining shoulder as if to ease the phantom tension from where his arm had once been. "If the Vault appears, the Guild will inevitably act. Especially Valeria."

"Yes."

"And you expect me to intercept them?"

"I expect you to prepare."

The response was neither a command nor a request; it was simply an expectation. Riven studied the silhouette for a long moment, searching for any sign of weakness or hesitation. He found none.

"By the way," he said abruptly, letting his voice sharpen again, "why are you so invested in them? The Guild and this obsession of yours, I doubt they have any personal history with you or with whatever force is backing you."

Silence hung in the air.

The shadows offered no reply, while the violet sigils along the wall flickered faintly.

For a moment, Riven wondered if he had crossed a line.

Then the silhouette turned slightly. Though its features remained hidden no face, no eyes, Riven felt an intense weight of attention settle upon him like a blade against his throat.

"That," the voice said softly, "is not your concern."

And just like that, the silhouette unraveled. It didn’t step back or fade away gradually; instead, it disintegrated into darkness that dispersed into the void as if it had never existed at all.

The chamber returned to its previous emptiness as the violet sigils dimmed slightly and the oppressive pressure lifted.

Riven stood alone for several long seconds, staring at where the silhouette had been, his jaw clenched tightly enough to ache.

Slowly, he lowered his gaze to the empty space beside him. His right hand instinctively lifted to where his left arm should have been, fingers pressing against tightly bound fabric and feeling nothing but absence beneath it.

"Damn you," he muttered under his breath. It was unclear whether he aimed that curse at the Guild, Valeria, or even at the silhouette itself.

He turned sharply and strode toward the exit, boots echoing against stone. The door sealed behind him just as quietly as before.

Deep beneath the earth, in a room carved from secrecy and ambition, only a faint violet glow remained.

And somewhere far above, unaware of shifting currents in shadowy depths, the Guild prepared to rise again.