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Regression of the Tower's Final Survivor-Chapter 38: Growing Power
Ravenna’s new abilities were terrifying in the best possible way, and they discovered this during the next encounter barely an hour after leaving the shrine.
A pack of hellhounds, fire-breathing canines that usually required sustained effort to bring down, came charging through a lava-lit corridor with murder in their burning eyes.
Ravenna raised one hand, and the hellhounds simply ceased to exist. No flames, no dramatic explosion, just instant erasure as her Hellfire consumed them utterly, fire eating fire until nothing remained but fading ash.
[Enemy slain: Hellhound x8]
[System points: +400]
"Okay," Astrid said slowly, her eyes wide. "That’s new."
"New and concerning." Ren’s expression was thoughtful rather than afraid as he lowered his shield. "In a good way, I mean. But concerning."
Ravenna examined her hand, flexing fingers that seemed to trail darkness in their wake. "I barely had to try. It was like... like asking water to be wet. Natural."
Dante watched her with complicated emotions: pride at her growth, relief at having such power on their side, and underneath it all the faint worry that always came with rapid evolution.
"How do you feel? After using it?" He studied her face for any sign of strain.
"Strong. Hungry." She looked at him, and the ember-glow behind her eyes pulsed briefly. "Not for food. For more."
"More power?" He stepped closer, concern evident in his voice.
"More fire. More to consume." She shook her head, the glow fading. "It’s not overwhelming. I can control it. But the urge is there."
"We’ll work on it, control exercises, meditation, whatever it takes." He moved to stand beside her, their shoulders touching. "You’re not alone in this."
They continued through the fortress, testing Ravenna’s new capabilities against every enemy they encountered. The results were consistent: anything fire-based died instantly to her Hellfire. Obsidian golems took longer, requiring sustained assault, but still fell faster than they would have against any other party.
It was during one of these fights that he noticed they were being watched.
---
The sensation was subtle, the kind of awareness that only came from years of combat experience: someone’s attention focused and calculating, observing from a distance just beyond normal perception.
He didn’t react immediately because he didn’t want to alert whoever was watching that they spotted them. Instead, he filed the information away and continued leading his team through the fortress’s twisting corridors.
"Something wrong?" Ren’s voice was low, pitched to carry only to him.
"We have an observer." He kept his eyes forward, expression neutral. "Don’t look around. Act natural."
"Enemy?" Ren’s hand tightened on his shield.
"I don’t think so because the attention feels human, strategic." He thought about who might have followed them to Floor 9, who would have the capability to track their progress through the fortress. "Adrian, maybe. Or someone working for him."
"The traitor you mentioned." Ren’s voice was barely a whisper.
"Future traitor, he hasn’t done anything yet in this timeline." The distinction felt important, even as his instincts screamed to hunt down whoever was watching them. "But he’s interested in me. Has been since Floor 1."
They cleared two more rooms before the watcher withdrew, their attention fading like mist evaporating in sunlight.
"They’re gone." He relaxed slightly, though his hand stayed near his blade.
"Do we go after them?" Astrid moved up beside them, having sensed something was happening.
"No, not yet because we don’t have proof of anything and splitting the party in hostile territory is asking for disaster." He gestured toward the corridor ahead. "We keep moving. Clear the floor. Deal with Adrian later."
---
That evening, they found one of the safe zones he remembered from his original timeline.
A chamber of black stone sealed by doors that no monster could breach, with a small pool of clear water that somehow existed despite the surrounding inferno. The temperature inside was cool, almost comfortable, and for the first time since entering Floor 9 they could relax.
"We should talk about what happened at the shrine." Ren’s voice broke the comfortable silence as they shared rations. "Ravenna’s evolution. What it means for the party."
"What’s there to talk about?" Astrid’s question was genuinely curious rather than dismissive as she bit into dried meat. "She got stronger. That helps all of us."
"Power changes dynamics, and it changes how people relate to each other." Ren looked at Ravenna, his expression thoughtful. "You’re not the same person you were yesterday. I mean that literally. The system registered a class evolution. That’s not just an ability upgrade. It’s a fundamental shift in what you are."
Ravenna’s ember-eyes met his steadily. "I know what I am. Infernal scion, according to the Tower. Half-demon who finally embraced the half that I spent my whole life hiding from."
"And the hunger you mentioned? For more fire, more power?" He pressed, not unkindly.
"It’s there, and I won’t pretend it isn’t." She glanced at him, then back to Ren. "But I’ve been hungry my whole life. For acceptance. For belonging. For someone to look at me and see a person instead of a monster." Her hand found his. "I have that now. The hunger for power is just... another thing to manage."
Astrid snorted, setting down her food. "Spoken like someone who’s never had power before. Wait until you get used to it. The hunger doesn’t go away. It just gets louder."
"Speaking from experience?" Ravenna raised an eyebrow.
"Berserker rage isn’t that different from what you’re describing, with the urge to fight, to destroy, to let the beast take over." Astrid’s expression was uncharacteristically serious. "I’ve been managing it since I awakened. Some days are harder than others. But I’m still me, underneath. And you’ll still be you."
The solidarity in her voice made Ravenna smile, genuine and warm despite the ember-glow in her eyes.
"Thank you, both of you." She looked around the group, including him and Ren in her gratitude. "I’ve never had people who cared enough to worry about me. It’s... strange. But good."
He squeezed her hand but said nothing because words weren’t necessary. The connection between them, forged through shared danger and growing trust, spoke for itself.
They rested in the safe zone, taking shifts to watch even though no threat could reach them there, and when they emerged the next morning ready to continue their push toward the floor’s exit, they moved as a team that grew even closer through the trials of Floor 9.
---
The watcher returned as they approached the floor boss’s territory, their attention settling on the party again with more focus this time.
He felt the observation lock onto them, as if their observer found what they were looking for. He continued leading the party forward, giving no sign that he noticed, but his mind raced through possibilities.
’Adrian would want to observe Ravenna’s new abilities and gauge how much of a threat we’ve become, but would he follow personally or send someone?’
The question answered itself when they rounded a corner and found Adrian Cross waiting for them.
He stood casually with golden hair catching the ambient firelight and that pleasant smile firmly in place. Behind him, three members of his faction kept watch, their expressions professional rather than hostile.
"Dante." Adrian’s voice was warm, friendly. "I hoped I’d catch up with you before the floor boss. I heard about your dungeon clear on Floor 8. Impressive work."
"Adrian." He kept his voice neutral and his hand away from his blade. "Long way from the main path."
"I was curious because the Burning Halls don’t usually let just anyone through." Adrian’s eyes moved to Ravenna, widening slightly at her changed appearance. "When I heard you’d entered the fortress, I followed. And I see why. Your companion has evolved quite dramatically."
Ravenna’s ember-eyes narrowed as she stepped closer to his side. "I don’t know you."
"Adrian Cross, and I’ve been climbing in parallel with Dante since Floor 1." He gave a slight bow. "I apologize if my observation made you uncomfortable. I meant no harm."
"Then why were you watching?" Astrid’s voice was hard as she crossed her arms. "If you’re just a friendly fellow climber, why not approach openly?"
"Because Dante doesn’t trust me." Adrian’s smile turned rueful. "For reasons he hasn’t shared, but which I suspect run deeper than anything I’ve done in this timeline. I was hoping to observe without confrontation, but it seems I’ve been caught."
The admission was disarming. He expected deflection, excuses, the smooth manipulation that characterized Adrian in the original timeline. This directness was unexpected.
"What do you want?" He kept his tone neutral, watchful.
"To understand, because you know things you shouldn’t, Dante." Adrian’s empty eyes studied him with unsettling intensity. "You predict events before they happen. Navigate floors like you’ve walked them a hundred times. Whatever your secret is, I’d rather have you as an ally than an enemy."
"And if I refuse?" He held Adrian’s gaze without flinching.
"Then we go our separate ways and try to stay out of each other’s path." Adrian’s smile never wavered. "I’m not your enemy. Not yet. Not unless you make me one."
The threat was subtle but unmistakable, and he filed it away, adding it to the list of things he would need to deal with eventually.
"We’re heading for the floor boss." He gestured toward the corridor ahead. "You’re welcome to join if you want to fight together."
"A generous offer, but I think my team will take a different route." Adrian stepped aside, gesturing for them to pass. "Good luck with the exit gate. I look forward to seeing you on Floor 10."
They passed him without incident, none of them looking back.
But he could feel those empty eyes watching until they were out of sight.







