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Already happened story > Mana Architect: A Cozy Isekai Base-Building Adventure > Chapter 27 - Teeth in the Dark

Chapter 27 - Teeth in the Dark

  Irla’s words hit like a punch to the chest.

  For one wild heartbeat James just stared at her, every thought scattering. Then something in him snapped into place the way beams settled into a frame. The world narrowed: Irla’s ashen face, Rogan’s already-tense stance, Kerrin halfway risen, Maude and Halvik frozen nearby with training staves still in hand.

  “All right,” James said, and his own voice sounded strange to him, calm, flat, like it belonged to someone older. “Rogan, Kerrin, Bren, Maude. Here. Now.”

  Rogan was already moving. Kerrin jogged over, worry carved across his features. Bren, who had been helping Marla with firewood, dropped the bundle with a thud and trotted in, knives sheathed in his belt, eyes sharp. Maude shoved her practice staff aside and came at a half-run, jaw tight.

  James put a steadying hand on Irla’s shoulder. She was shaking harder than he’d realized. “Breathe. You’re here. You’re safe. We’ll get him. Just tell me what happened.”

  Marla had risen from her place by the central fire, Pebble tugging at her skirt, wide eyes fixed on Irla. A few other villagers drifted closer, drawn by the tension, the way birds sensed a coming storm.

  Irla dragged air into her lungs. She swallowed so hard he heard it. “Varn left at dawn,” she said. “Before first light. I woke and he was gone. Again.” There was a crack in her voice on that last word, but she forced it down. “I tried to tell myself he would come back like the other days, but… the feeling would not leave.”

  “Always trust your gut,” James said. “Good. Go on.”

  “I followed his trail east,” Irla said. “Past the river path, into the rocks. He did not try to hide his tracks. He was… angry. Stomping. I could see it.” Her fingers twisted in her tunic briefly, then loosened. “The ground changes there. More stone, less forest. I found a place where the soil had been dug up. Fresh. And… a hole. Not wide, but deep. I called down and I heard him. His voice echoed up, faint. He shouted my name, and then...” She squeezed her eyes shut. “Then there was a sound. An awful scraping. And something… chewing. He screamed. Once. Then nothing. I tried to climb down, but the dirt crumbled under my hands. I couldn’t see the bottom.”

  Tremors of remembered fear ran through her shoulders. James tightened his grip, not enough to hurt, just enough to anchor.

  “You did right coming back,” he said. “If you’d gone after him alone, we might be rescuing two people instead of one.”

  “I almost did,” Irla whispered. “I almost jumped.”

  “Sometimes not jumping is the brave thing,” James said. “Okay.”

  He turned to the gathered villagers, mind already slotting pieces into place.

  “Marla,” he called.

  Her chin lifted. “Chieftain.”

  “You’re in charge until I get back,” James said. “If I don’t get back by dawn, you’re still in charge.” He didn’t let himself dwell on the way her eyes widened at that. “Keep everyone close to the clearing once it gets dark. No one goes into the forest, not even to the river. Send someone to check on the garden every so often. If something strange happens, you pull people back to the longhouse and you wait. Understood?”

  Marla straightened as if someone had run a rod of iron down her spine. Pebble clung to her leg, oblivious, fascinated by a fluttering mana firefly. “Understood,” she said. “I’ll keep them busy, and I’ll keep them safe.”

  “Alder, Trell, Halvik” James called, spotting them near the shed. “Mira, Harlon.”

  The five of them came at a jog: Alder wiping sawdust from his hands, Trell with a serious look on his face, Mira with a strip of leather still tangled in her fingers, Harlon smelling faintly of tanning smoke.

  “If anything gets through the trees while we’re gone,” James said, “you five are the line. Get people inside. Use spears from the rack. Shout loud enough the Hearthroot shakes. Rogan’s drilled you for a reason.”

  Alder swallowed but nodded sharply. Trell’s jaw locked in determination. Mira gave a short, fierce nod, and Harlon flexed thick, scarred hands that had spent a lifetime wrestling hides into obedience.

  “Wicksnap!” James raised his voice.

  The old goblin jerked awake from his doze by the fire, staff flailing comically before he caught himself. “Whassat? I was merely resting my eyes. And speaking with the ash spirits. They gossip, you know.”

  James resisted the urge to pinch the bridge of his nose. “I need you to ward the clearing,” he said. “All the spirits, all the muttering, all the whatever you do. Keep anything unfriendly out.”

  Wicksnap’s back straightened. His ears perked. For all his theatrics, there was a sharp intelligence in his eyes when magic was involved. “Ah,” he said, far more seriously. “You call on the watch of the old paths. Good. I will weave a fence the wind can’t see but claws will feel.” He clacked his staff twice, expression suddenly solemn. “Bring the foolish boy back, Chieftain. The roots like him.”

  “I’m working on it,” James said.

  He turned back to his chosen group. Rogan had that familiar ready-stillness, as if he could spring forward in any direction at a thought. Kerrin’s grip on his spear was white-knuckled, but his gaze was steady. Bren was already checking his knives. Maude looked pale yet resolute; her stave trembling only slightly.

  “You four, plus me and Irla,” James said. “That’s the team. We move fast but careful. Maude, this is your first real outing. You stick to Rogan like glue. If he steps somewhere, you step there. If he tells you to duck, you duck.”

  “Yes, Chieftain,” Maude said. Her throat bobbed.

  “Bren, you’re our eyes and ears,” James went on. “If something breathes wrong, I want you to hear it. Irla, you do not run ahead, even if you sense something. You stay behind the fighters. Your class is amazing, but you are not immortal.”

  Irla’s mouth twitched. “I will try to remain mortal,” she said faintly.

  “Good plan,” James said. “Kerrin, today is not about glory. It’s about getting Varn and getting out. If things go bad, you don’t chase kills. You watch Irla’s back and you listen to Rogan.”

  Kerrin drew in a breath and let it out slowly. “Understood.”

  Rogan inclined his head once. “We will bring him home,” he said. It sounded less like a promise and more like a simple statement of fact.

  James checked the sky. The sun had started its slow slide downward, but they had hours yet before true dark. Still, the memory of what lurked in this woods made his skin prickle.

  “Gear check,” he said. “Spears, knives, extra rope, torches. Marla, can you spare a few strips of dried meat?”

  “You’re not leaving without food in your packs,” Marla said, already scooping from a small hanging bundle. “And water. I’ll have skins filled at the barrel.”

  It took only a few minutes. Those minutes stretched like pulled taffy, every second thick with villagers’ stares and the quiet clink of gear being strapped on. James tightened the straps of his makeshift leather harness, felt the weight of rope across his chest, the comforting, if primitive, heft of his spear. He called Aether Armament just enough to settle a thin breastplate of shimmering mana over his torso, not enough to drain him, just enough to blunt one really bad hit.

  “You are humming again,” Lumen murmured near his ear. The little orb’s light was subdued, but there was a razor of focus in it. “Not fear. Not quite. Anticipation.”

  “I liked it better when my life-or-death decisions involved spreadsheets,” James muttered.

  “Lies,” Lumen said gently. “You were dying there. Just slower.”

  James didn’t answer. He took one last look at the clearing, the Hearthroot’s golden veins, Pebble trying to grab a firefly that kept zipping just out of reach, Wicksnap already muttering over a line of stones he was setting along the edge, and then he turned toward the eastern trees.

  “Let’s go get Varn,” he said.

  They moved.

  The first stretch through the forest felt almost familiar now. James knew the way the light filtered through leaves here, the soft give of moss under his boots, the faint scents of sap and damp earth. Birds flitted overhead, used to their presence. Somewhere deeper, something with too many legs clicked along a branch and ignored them.

  Rogan took point, steps quiet despite his size, eyes sweeping constantly. Kerrin walked a few paces behind and to the right, spear at the ready but not raised, every inch of him alert. Bren ghosted to the side, bow half-raised, scanning the underbrush with hunter’s awareness. Maude kept close to Rogan’s left, jaw clenched, shoulders tight. Irla stayed just behind James, one hand unconsciously hovering near her satchel of herbs and bandages, as if habit could conjure safety.

  James walked in the middle, not quite shielded, not quite exposed. It felt right. If something went wrong, he needed to see it and react. He let his awareness unfurl, Mana Resonance stirring like a net cast into invisible waters.

  Mana soaked this forest, he knew that already. Threads of it ran through every tree, every bush, every stone. Today, though, he forced himself to focus not on the comforting background hum but on subtle differences. Pockets where the mana felt denser or thinner, currents that seemed to run in odd directions.

  At first, everything tasted the same: green, wild, a constant soft thrumming that he’d come to associate with their strange new home. As they walked, though, the tone shifted. The trees thinned slowly, trunks giving way to more exposed roots and patches of bare rock. Underfoot, soil grew shallow, stones jutting up like half-buried bones. The smell of loam faded, edged out by the dry tang of dust.

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  James’s Mana Resonance responded. The hum of the forest receded a little, and from the east he felt something else: a faint, steady pull, like a magnet brushed against the edge of his awareness. It wasn’t like the Hearthroot’s golden warmth or the Warden’s oppressive pressure. This was colder, heavier, threaded with a faint metallic taste that made the back of his tongue tingle.

  “Huh,” he muttered.

  “Feeling it?” Lumen asked.

  “Yeah,” James said. “Like someone stuck a spoon in my brain and it’s pointing east.”

  “That is not an incorrect metaphor,” Lumen said. “Metal concentrates mana differently. Your Resonance is beginning to notice the difference between wood-song and stone-song.”

  “Good,” James said. “We need that.”

  Louder, he added, “Irla, is this the way you went?”

  “Yes,” she said quietly. “We are close. The trees turn thin, and then the hill rises.”

  Bren crouched briefly to inspect a patch of disturbed ground. “Tracks,” he said. “Human. Varn’s boots. Heavy steps, like you said. He was in a hurry. And here...” He frowned, tracing a scuffed line with one finger. “He stumbled. More than once.”

  “Because he was hauling something?” James asked.

  “Or because the ground is treacherous,” Bren said. “Lot of loose stone ahead. Easy to twist an ankle.”

  Maude swallowed audibly. “And we are going down there anyway,” she muttered.

  “That’s why we brought the healer,” Kerrin said, trying for humor. It came out tight.

  “Please do not give the spirits ideas,” Irla said under her breath.

  The forest thinned further. Trees grew sparse and stunted, clinging to cracks in the rock. Wind picked up, threading through jagged formations that jutted from the earth like broken teeth. The air felt different here, drier, thinner of the lush ambient mana James had grown used to. It wasn’t empty, exactly, but the saturation was lower. Where the forest had felt like standing in a warm bath, this was more like entering a cool, echoing hall.

  Lumen hovered closer to his shoulder. “The roots do not drink as deeply here,” he said. “But there are other veins. Listen.”

  James did. The metallic pull grew stronger with each step, humming along his teeth now, settling into his bones. He focused on it the way he had focused on mana-rich soil, letting his Resonance frame it as a different kind of signal. The sensation sharpened, resolving into something more directional. East, and down.

  “Definitely something under us,” he said.

  “Not just metal,” Lumen murmured. “Movement. Many small somethings. Scratching at the stone.”

  “That’s comforting,” James muttered. “Really love that for us.”

  Rogan slowed as they crested a low rise. “There,” he said.

  At the base of a rocky hill, the earth had been disturbed. A rough, shallow trench cut into the slope, edges ragged, as if someone with more determination than proper tools had gone at it. Broken sticks lay scattered, digging implements snapped in half. The dirt around the trench was trampled into a mess of bootprints and scuffs.

  Closer, James saw a place where the earth had sheared away entirely, forming a slanted, jagged opening into darkness. It looked like a wound. He suppressed a shiver.

  He picked his way down carefully, boots sliding a little on loose grit, and crouched near the edge of the collapsed section. The hole slanted downward at a steep angle, wide enough for a person to squeeze through, if that person didn’t mind collecting every scrapes-and-bruises achievement along the way.

  A frayed length of vine rope was tied around a large rock nearby. The free end dangled into the darkness, swaying slightly in a breeze James couldn’t feel. About a meter from the edge, the vine was snapped clean through.

  “I hate how much this tells a story,” James said softly.

  Irla’s breath hitched behind him. “I called down to him here,” she said. “I heard his voice. Then that awful sound. Then…” Her hands clenched. “He screamed so loud it echoed. Then he did not answer again.”

  There was a smear of dried brown on one of the stones near the hole. James touched it gently. Flakes crumbled under his fingers. Blood, old enough to have dried, not so old it had faded completely.

  “Superficial,” he murmured. “Probably scraped himself scrambling in and out. This was before the scream.”

  He shifted his weight, testing how solid the edge was. Loose dirt shifted under his boots, pebbles skittering down the shaft and into blackness. From below, he thought he heard something faint: a distant, irregular clink, like teeth on stone, like claws on rock.

  James leaned back, heart thudding a little faster. “Okay. Definitely something down there.”

  Rogan knelt opposite him, peering into the dark. “Too narrow to go side by side,” he said. “We will have to go one at a time.”

  “And we don’t know how far it drops,” James said. “Or if the tunnel continues at the bottom, or if this is one of several holes, or if something down there likes long human-shaped snacks.”

  Maude made a small strangled sound. Bren looked queasy but determined.

  “You are all thinking about the fall,” Lumen said quietly. “You should also think about what digs.”

  “I am,” James said in his head. He forced his shoulders to relax. Panic would not help. Plans would.

  “All right,” he said, looking up at the others. “Here’s how this goes. Rogan first. You’re the tank, you take point. If the slope collapses more, you’re the most likely to survive riding it out.”

  Rogan nodded without blinking. “Understood.”

  “Kerrin right behind him,” James continued. “You’re good on your feet, and Verdant Striker gives you options if the terrain gets weird. Bren, you after Kerrin. Knives ready. Maude, you’re fourth. I’ll come after you, Irla last.”

  Irla opened her mouth to protest, then seemed to think better of it. “I will not be far from you,” she said instead.

  James offered a quick smile. “We’ll tie ourselves together with the spare rope. If someone slips, the rest can brace and keep them from doing a Varn impression.”

  “That is not a comforting phrase,” Kerrin muttered.

  “Good,” James said. “Fear keeps you careful. But don’t freeze. We move slow, we test every foothold. No one goes plunging off alone. If something attacks, Rogan and Kerrin handle it first. Irla, you do not run ahead. Repeat that for me.”

  “I do not run ahead,” Irla said, with a ghost of humor. “I run away shrieking if necessary.”

  “That’s the spirit,” James said.

  They secured the rope around their waists, leaving enough slack to move but not enough to let anyone vanish into the dark without yanking the others. Rogan tested the knot on the rock with a grunt of approval, then swung his legs into the opening. He braced his back against one side of the shaft, boots against the other, and began to inch his way down, using friction and careful placement to control his descent.

  The shaft swallowed him fast, though his broad back remained a pale shape in the limited light.

  “Kerrin,” James said.

  Kerrin took a breath and followed, sliding into the darkness with a grim set to his mouth. Bren went next, movements cautious but not clumsy; years of hunting in uneven terrain had trained him for this. Maude’s turn came. She hesitated at the edge, eyes wide, then clenched her jaw and went in. James watched the muscle ticking in her cheek as she vanished into the shadows.

  “You are last among the living,” Lumen said. “I could go first, but light attracts teeth.”

  “I hate how often your sentences end like that,” James muttered.

  He gripped the rough edges of the shaft, then slid himself in. Immediately the world narrowed. Rough stone scraped his shoulders. Dirt crumbled under his boots. The air grew cooler, carrying a damp, mineral tang. Above, the circle of sky shrank quickly as he descended at an awkward half-crawl, half-slide, controlled by sheer will and the friction of his limbs against the walls.

  His Mana Resonance buzzed steadily now, an unsettling thrum that seemed to vibrate along his bones. Metal close. Lots of it. Twined through the rock like veins of cold blood.

  Irla’s boots scuffed above him, then the slant leveled slowly. Rogan’s voice floated up from ahead, quiet but carrying. “Flat here. Room to stand.”

  James’s toes found more solid purchase. He straightened gratefully, knees protesting. He ducked instinctively, no point braining himself on a low ceiling now after surviving magical trees, and stepped away from the shaft, helping Irla steady herself as she emerged behind him.

  The tunnel was dim, but not totally black. Faint light filtered from the shaft above, and the rock itself seemed to catch and hold it in strange ways. The walls glittered here and there, veins and flecks of metal catching what little illumination there was and reflecting it back in dull glimmers: dark iron, reddish copper, and here and there a smear of pale-blue that made James’s mana sense sit up and pay attention.

  “Okay,” he breathed. “That is a lot of potential workshop.”

  Bren gave a low whistle. “If Varn found this…” he began.

  “He was trying to give us something,” Irla said quietly. “He knew how James spoke of metal. He thought… if he could bring back a piece, prove there was a way…” Her voice shook. “He thinks he is only another mouth to feed. He has been trying to show otherwise.”

  James exhaled slowly, chest tight. “We’ll yell at him about it once we get him out,” he said. “Preferably while he’s wrapped in furs and eating something Marla-approved.”

  He turned his attention fully to the tunnel. It continued downward at a gentler angle now, ceiling low enough that Rogan had to duck a little. Roots dangled from above in places, trailing like limp hair. The floor bore marks: parallel grooves where something with claws had scrabbled, disturbed patches that hinted at burrows.

  “Not natural,” James murmured.

  “No,” Lumen agreed. “Natural cracks, perhaps, once. But these shapes… something has chewed them wider. Many somethings. See how the stone is worn in repeating arcs.”

  James eyed one rounded gouge in the wall. “Like teeth.”

  “Yes,” Lumen said with far too much satisfaction. “Iron-shaping mouths. Efficient.”

  “Please stop sounding impressed by the things that want to eat us,” James said.

  “I am impressed by all things that shape,” Lumen replied serenely. “You and the burrowers are currently tied.”

  Rogan lifted a hand, signaling for quiet. The group stilled. In the hush, James heard it more clearly: faint scrapes, the occasional distant clink, a sound like pebbles cascading but never quite resolving into an avalanche. It echoed oddly in the confined space, direction hard to pin down.

  “Stay close,” Rogan said softly. “Maude, spear up, but not too high. You do not want the ceiling as your enemy.”

  They moved deeper. The tunnel bent and curled, sometimes narrowing so much that they had to turn slightly sideways, sometimes widening enough to fit them all shoulder to shoulder. In those wider sections, James took a moment to run his fingers along the walls. The metal veins sang under his touch, a low, steady hum, not hostile, just present. It would be a treasure, he knew, if they survived to exploit it. Tools. Nails. Proper spearheads. Maybe even blades that didn’t chip if you looked at them funny.

  “Later,” he whispered to himself. “First, idiot miner.”

  The tunnel opened suddenly into a broader chamber. The ceiling rose a little, enough that Rogan could straighten fully. The ground here was more uneven, pocked with shallow depressions and small mounds. The walls bulged, studded with more of those glittering veins. Old roots had been gnawed through and lay in withered piles.

  At the far side of the chamber, another tunnel sloped away, its mouth dark and low. From that direction, the scraping sounds came more clearly now, mingled with something else: a soft, rhythmic chittering, like stones being rubbed together, like many tiny, dry laughs.

  James’s skin crawled. His Mana Resonance spiked, flashing a sharp warning along his nerves.

  “Something’s coming,” he hissed.

  Rogan had already shifted into Stoneback Stand, feet planted, spear angled forward. Kerrin moved to his right, Verdant Striker instincts snapping into place; a faint green sheen crawled along his spear’s haft, low and almost subconscious. Bren stepped back, drawing his knives and sighting along it toward the dark mouth. Maude swallowed, then raised her stave, knuckles white.

  Irla remained at the back, lips moving silently as she readied herself, fingers brushing the invisible pattern of Lifeweaver magic under her skin.

  James felt his heart rate spike. Adrenaline sharpened his senses, but he forced his breathing to stay slow. Panic was a luxury. He inhaled, exhaled, and called mana.

  Aether Armament answered faster this time. Thin plates of light slid over his chest and shoulders, bracers wrapping his forearms, greaves hugging his shins. The armor hummed faintly, in sync with his heartbeat. He layered a spear over his right hand, the haft forming in a clean line, the tip a denser shard of mana. It felt more responsive than it had that morning, as if practice had smoothed some of the drag.

  “Remember,” Lumen said quietly. “They dig. They lunge. Their strength is in numbers, not in single blows. Do not let them surround you.”

  “Helpful,” James murmured. “Anything else?”

  “They like knees,” Lumen added.

  “Of course they do,” James said.

  Small shapes moved in the darkness of the far tunnel. Eyes caught what little light there was, dozens of them, low to the ground, shining like wet stones. The chittering grew louder, layered, jittery, hungry.

  Then the swarm poured into the chamber.

  They came in a rush, bodies low and muscular, somewhere between moles and rats, covered in coarse, dark fur where it wasn’t broken by plates of dull, mineral-like growth. Their snouts were elongated and armored, ending in stone-hard ridges perfect for punching through rock. Their front claws were oversized, curved for digging. As they moved, their teeth clicked together with a horrible, rhythmic sound.

  Iron gnawers, James’s interface supplied at the edge of his awareness. Tunnel vermin. Carrion feeders. Pack hunters. Minor threat individually. Major threat in numbers.

  There were a lot of them.

  They fanned out across the chamber floor, claws digging into stone as easily as soft soil. The leading few lifted their heads and sniffed, nostrils flaring, then bared rows of jagged, metal-gleaming incisors.

  For a heartbeat, everyone held their breath.

  Then the gnawers surged forward, a wave of fur and claws and teeth, rushing straight for James and his people.

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