A/N I'd like to remind everyone I'm probably going to change the dungeon a bit to fit the story better. I may bypass rooms, rearrange them, remove them all together, or change the interior of them. This is for story purposes and I hope you understand.

...

The Doctor and Donna walked into a very small room that had a hallway to its right. The hallway curved around a bend to where you can't see it anymore. The walls where blue and covered in ivy and glowing mushrooms. On the other side of the tiny room was another statue, but it looked a little different. The bird on top was a sphere with a primed as a head, and wings.

They walked over to it and The Doctor touched it. They braced themselves for a strong wind, but nothing happened.

"What are these supposed to do?" Asked The Doctor, a bit frustrated at not knowing.

"Come on Doctor, we'll figure it out eventually."

The Doctor sighed and continued with Donna, as they went they saw a giant, cut spiderweb and cut trees, a little farther down.

"Looks like someone's been down here before," said The Doctor, "Perhaps it was Link."

They went down a bit more to find perfectly rectangular hole up near the ceiling, with splintered wood around the edges. "Hey Donna, give me a leg up will ya." Donna awkwardly helped him up to the hole by holding her hands together then pushing him up when he stood in it. He went to the other side of the hole to find a drop. He hung down and pulled himself back up and went back through the hole to pull Donna up as well.

The Doctor backed up as Donna moved forward with him, face to face. The Doctor found the end a little to late and fell to the ground with an oomph. Donna laughed then jumped down next to him, to help him up.

When they got their bearings, and looked around the room a bit, they saw that they where in a large circular room. It was much brighter in here as the ceiling had perfectly circular hole on the top, and there where pillars, in the shape of birds circling a giant, ceramic pot like structure. There was a giant hole in the top of the pot, and there was a door in the pot with a boy in green garbs entering.

"Is that Link?" Asked Donna.

"I believe it is. Hey! Link!" Called The Doctor, running after him with Donna trailing behind. It was to late, though, Link was already inside, so they followed as well.

They entered the pot and iron bars fell into place right behind them. The only light was from the hole on the top, that let in the light from outside. Link turned around to give them a puzzling look. Before he could say anything, though, bones, in the middle of the room, circled in a small tornado to form a skeleton. The skeleton had to swords similar to the monsters earlier and stood taller than all of them.

Link pulled out a sword and shield, and ran to the monster. Donna and The Doctor gave each other a look before running after him. Link swung his sword, but only hit the metal of the skeleton's sword. He swung a few more times, only able to hit once.

The skeleton pulled his hands above his head, letting Link hit him another time, before bringing them down and cutting Link along his front.

The Doctor and Donna looked at him in shock, before seeing he was fine. The Doctor yelled to Donna and Link a plan, "hey! If we can distract him, Link can get a few hits on him."

They both nodded in agreement, the skeleton still going after Link, before The Doctor and Donna started yelling and wavering their hands around. "Hey bonehead!" Yelled Donna, "Over here!"

The monster turned around and started after them. He lifted a sword, ready to strike, before Link came in from behind and struck it. He slashed away at the monster in till it fell to the ground, in a boney heap.

Link stood there gasping, but quickly recovered. He looked at the others and said, "Thanks. Who are you?"

"I'm The Doctor and this is Donna. We where the ones who saved you when you and the girl Zelda fell."

"Oh, I remember! Thanks for that. I'm Link."

The Doctor shook his hand saying, "Yes we already know. Headmaster Geopora told us your name." Then Link shook Donna's hand.

"Well, thanks anyways. We should see what's in the chest."

They move over to the center of the room, and Link opens the chest and brought out a beetle looking machine and held it above his head.

Donna looked at him in confusion as to why he was holding it above him, and asked what he was doing.

"The instructions are on the bottom," he replied. "Seems simple enough."

They went back to the door to try to leave, but the bars where still down. The Doctor tried to open it with the screwdriver, but the mechanism was to complex for him.

Link moved back to the center of the room, and put the beetle on his arm. It shoot off and flew through a hole in the ceiling.

The Doctor whispered to Donna, "It appears Link can see through the beetle somehow. The technology seems a little to advance form what we've seen so far, don't you think."

Donna nodded her head in agreement, thinking it weird as well. Just then, the bars on the doors opened and the beetle came back to rest on Link's arm. They cheered as he put his beetle away into an unknown pocket.

They walked out the door back into the original area, and quickly found the door that needed the key. It was across a tightrope, and when they got near plants with teeth came out and snapped at them.

"That's a new one," said Donna, "how're we to get rid of those?"

"I've an idea," said Link, pulling out the beetle. He put it back on his arm and shot it across the gap, and the beetle snapped the stems of plants to make them fall to the abyss below.

"Good thinking," said The Doctor, "let's go across."

Link went first, going across pretty easily, only tripping up once, but quickly regaining balance. The Doctor was next, a little slower, but made it over no problems. Donna went last, seeming to try to fall off the entire time, she had a stressful walk across.

Once across, they gave a sigh of relief, and Link put the key in the key hole. They opened and walked through to explore the mysteries and dangers of the dungeon.

...

I'm going to try to post every other Monday, but no promises, because I'll probably unintentionally break it if it's a promise.