The Useless Extra Knows It All....But Does He? - Chapter 289
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- Chapter 289 - Chapter 289: Chapter 289 - Playing with "Toys"!
Chapter 289: Chapter 289 – Playing with “Toys”!
The forest did not warn them.
No breeze shifted.
No branch creaked.
No scent changed.
Yet in the next breath—
the earth ignited with murderous intent.
A sharp click sounded beneath Aurelia’s boot—too soft for any normal ear, but Luca’s head snapped toward her instantly.
“Don’t move.”
A faint blue circle, thin as a strand of hair, spread beneath her heel—
a precision-triggered pressure glyph, etched into the dirt itself, dormant until disturbed.
Before the others even processed it, Selena’s palm lifted, fingers slicing the air with ice-threaded control. A thin frost filament curled under the glyph, freezing the mechanism before it could activate. Aurelia stepped back just as the magic circle cracked apart under the cold.
“That’s one,” Selena muttered.
But the forest had no intention of giving them breath.
From the branches above—
ting.
A tone of mana vibrating against metal.
Lilliane raised her hand immediately, eyes flashing. A shimmering prism of multicolored mana burst outward—
and a mana-reactive tripwire revealed itself in glowing strands, running web-like between trees, invisible moments before. One wrong touch and it would have released a cascade of compressed spellfire.
Her fingers danced, each tap of her mana unraveling a thread until the entire trap collapsed into harmless sparks.
“Who even thinks of these things…?” Lilliane whispered, shaken.
A heartbeat later—
BOOM—PCHK!
The ground to their right erupted, stone shrapnel slicing through the air like teeth.
A Stoneburst mine, engineered to break into perfect razor-edged shards, detonated prematurely—thanks to Sylthara.
Her crescent dagger spun through the explosion, the arcs of silvery moonlight cutting each shard mid-air before any could reach the group. She landed lightly, hair fanning around her, eyes narrowed.
“That one would’ve taken Kyle’s head.”
Kyle clicked his tongue, brushing dust from his shoulder.
“And here I was thinking dwarves were supposed to be friendly craftsmen.”
Before Luca could respond, three more glyphs flared at once—
one beneath a root, one in the hollow of a tree, one hidden under scattered leaves.
Aurelia moved first—
her spear slicing the leaf-cover as if it were silk.
Selena mirrored the motion—
a cold wave sealing the tree-hollow trap.
Lilliane burst a shield of elemental force that snuffed out the root-glyph like a candle flame.
Silence fell again.
Then Kyle threw his hands up.
“Seriously?! Is this how dwarves welcome people into their territory?”
Luca walked past him, brushing a hand over the carved fragment of a dwarven rune on the nearest trunk—one they hadn’t noticed before, now glowing faintly after being disturbed.
A grin tugged at his lips.
“Ohh, believe me…” he said, stepping ahead into the dark, trap-laden woods.
“This is just the start.”
Everyone tightened their grips, senses sharpening.
Because now they knew:
They had truly entered Dwarven territory.
They moved deeper.
Every footfall was careful, every breath measured.
Leaves rustled, but no one trusted the sound—not here, not in a forest that felt alive with dwarven craftsmanship.
Luca walked near the center of the formation, gaze flicking over the ground, the trees, the boulders—everywhere a trap could hide. The others stayed close, tense, eyes sharp.
He couldn’t help but smile.
This was always the interesting part of entering dwarven territory…
The traps. The endless traps.
Every inch of land booby-trapped, every twig suspicious.
It was almost nostalgic.
He chuckled softly to himself.
Although there are certain tricks to bypass most of these easily… thousands of runs taught me that much. But—
WHRRRRRR—CLANK!
The ground trembled.
Trees shook violently as massive silhouettes emerged from the darkness.
Golems.
Dozens.
Then hundreds.
Bronze hammers.
Spinning blades.
Mana-charged cores blazing red.
Rolling bomb-types humming with unstable magical heat.
Kyle cracked his neck, raising his shield.
“So it’s golems, huh!?” he barked. “NOW it feels like dwarven land!”
Luca grinned.
—but it’s definitely more beneficial to take them head-on.
And the fight began.
A hammer golem swung down like a collapsing mountain—
“KYLE!” Aurelia shouted.
“I GOT IT!”
Kyle braced his shield, aura flaring. The impact pushed him several steps back, boots digging trenches into the ground.
Aurelia used the recoil, leaping off Kyle’s back in a burst of speed—
Her spear glowed gold.
KRSSSH!
She sliced through the golem’s arm, saving Kyle from a follow-up strike.
Kyle exhaled.
“Thanks.”
Aurelia smirked. “Just returning the favor from last time.”
They moved forward together, shield and spear carving a path.
A cluster of rolling bomb-golems detonated toward Selena.
“Selena, left!” Lilliane cried.
Selena spun, raising a wall of ice—
but one bomb slipped past its edge.
She wasn’t fast enough.
Lilliane slammed her palms together—
WIND + EARTH fused instantly.
A spiraling vortex of stone and air swallowed the rogue bomb before detonation.
BOOM!
The explosion burst inside the vortex, harmless.
Selena glanced back, genuinely surprised.
“You reacted faster than I did.”
Lilliane smiled softly. “I’m… learning to read you all.”
Selena’s cold eyes warmed ever so slightly.
Then both turned, unleashing a combined barrage—
Lilliane’s elemental shifts directing enemies perfectly into Selena’s frost lances.
Perfect sync.
Two agile blade-golems cornered Sylthara, slicing in unpredictable arcs.
One strike aimed straight at her ribs—
Luca appeared behind her in a blink, saber intercepting the blow.
Sparks exploded.
“Thanks—”
Sylthara vanished mid-sentence, reappearing behind a rolling bomb-golem about to hit Luca.
Her dagger slashed—
the core ruptured safely away from him.
“You’re welcome,” she finished with a faint smirk.
The two moved like a shadow and its reflection—
Sylthara weaving through blind spots,
Luca striking in perfect timing to cover her openings.
A massive titan golem lumbered forward, runes glowing white-hot.
Its chest opened—
A mana cannon charged.
“BACK!” Kyle shouted.
But there wasn’t enough time.
“Selena, freeze its joints!” Luca ordered.
“On it!”
Selena slammed her palms down—
frost crawled up the titan’s legs, slowing its aim for a single heartbeat.
“Lilliane!”
“Already!”
Four elemental spheres struck the cannon, disrupting the unstable mana.
Aurelia leaped high, using Kyle’s shield as a springboard—
Her spear pierced the exposed core—
THUUUUM!
The titan collapsed, shaking the entire forest floor.
The Last One
Only one dagger-golem remained, darting toward Lilliane’s blind side.
Sylthara moved—
Selena raised a wall—
Kyle lunged—
But Luca was faster.
One clean silver arc.
SCHLK.
The golem split in half.
Silence followed—heavy, sharp, ringing in their ears.
The battlefield was a graveyard of metal and shattered runes.
Everyone stood breathing hard, exchanging glances—not fearful, but steady.
They had grown.
They trusted each other.
They had become a unit.
Luca lowered his saber, the last fragments of mana dissipating from its edge.
“That was the last one,” he said quietly.
Around them, broken golems lay in heaps—and they all knew:
This was only the surroundings of dwarven territory.
The scent of metal and burnt mana still lingered in the air as they pressed forward. The forest thinned, replaced by jagged stone ridges and old dwarven pathways half-swallowed by roots.
But the traps didn’t stop.
If anything—
They became worse.
CLAAANG—PSSHHKKK!
A hidden slab of stone under Kyle’s boot depressed—
and a massive dwarven spring mechanism activated beneath them.
Steel chains burst upward like metal serpents, whipping at neck height.
“DOWN!” Luca barked.
Aurelia ducked, dragging Selena with her.
Sylthara backflipped cleanly, her shadow aura slicing through a chain before it tightened around her ankle.
Lilliane thrust her palms outward—
a burst of wind slammed two chains aside, saving Kyle from being clotheslined.
But the ground vibrated again.
GRRRT—GRRRRRT—
Four dwarf-forged turrets rose from the soil, gears grinding as their muzzles locked onto the group.
“SERIOUSLY!?” Kyle bellowed.
The turrets fired in rapid bursts—barbed bolts, each one coated with a mana-disrupting powder that dimmed aura the moment it touched.
Aurelia slammed her spear into the ground, generating a wide aura shield.
Selena froze the bolts mid-flight, letting them fall harmlessly.
Lilliane blasted the turrets with a spiraling orb of earth, wind, and fire—
Sylthara zigzagged forward, cutting wires and runes with surgical precision—
And Luca finished the rest with a clean, sweeping arc of silver mana that dismantled their cores.
The forest fell silent again.
Ash.
Metal.
Gears still spinning faintly as they died out.
Kyle plopped onto a broken turret, absolutely done with life.
He glared at Luca.
“So THIS is how you were planning to take us into dwarven territory?”
Luca sheathed his sabers, not even looking back.
“It’s for your own benefit.”
Kyle’s jaw dropped. “BENEFIT?”
Before Luca could elaborate, Lilliane spoke, brushing ashes from her cheek.
“But why lay… this many traps? Isn’t this excessive?”
Sylthara walked ahead, touching a carved dwarven symbol on a tree stump.
Her eyes softened with familiarity.
“It might be their defensive instinct,” she said. “Like how our elven forests have natural barriers. Maybe this is their—”
Luca cut her off, shaking his head.
“That’s not it.”
They all blinked at him.
“It’s just the dwarves’ way of determining if we’re worthy of entering their territory.”
Silence.
Everyone stared at him.
Aurelia squinted. “That has to be a joke.”
“It isn’t,” Luca replied, dead serious. “Their philosophy is simple:
If you can’t even get past our toys… don’t bother coming to us.”
Kyle nearly choked.
Selena’s face twitched.
Lilliane looked physically offended.
Sylthara sighed in disbelief.
Luca resumed walking, hands behind his back, expression calm.
If I told them that even THIS won’t be enough for the dwarves to let us in,
they’d probably vomit blood on the spot.
He smirked quietly to himself.
The path stretched forward—
more traps waiting,
more challenges hidden in stone and steel.