Chapter 247: Inside the Forbidden Mist
The moment they crossed the threshold, the world transformed into a suffocating blanket of white.
The mist wasn’t just thick – it was absolute. It pressed against them from every direction, a tangible presence that seemed to crawl across their skin with ghostly fingers. Visibility dropped to almost nothing; Seraphine could barely make out Leon’s form beside her, and anything beyond a meter might as well have ceased to exist. The white vapor swirled constantly, creating phantom shapes that appeared and vanished in peripheral vision, playing tricks on eyes desperate for any point of reference.
Sound became muffled and strange. Their footsteps, which should have echoed on solid ground, came back distorted and delayed, as if the mist itself was swallowing noise and regurgitating it at random intervals. Even their breathing seemed too loud and too quiet simultaneously, creating a disorienting cacophony that made concentration difficult.
But most unnerving was how the mist attacked their other senses. Smell became useless – only a strange, sterile scent like ozone after lightning. Touch grew unreliable as the vapor created false sensations of movement against exposed skin. Even taste was affected, leaving a metallic tang on their tongues that wouldn’t fade.
For Seraphine, this sensory deprivation was exactly as she remembered – terrifying in its completeness. She was effectively blind, deaf, and numb to the world beyond that pitiful one-meter bubble of semi-visibility. Her hand instinctively moved closer to her sword hilt, muscles coiled with the tension of prey that knew predators lurked just beyond perception.
But Leon was experiencing something entirely different.
His spatial awareness, that magical ability that mapped the world around him in perfect three-dimensional clarity, was still functioning. The mist that blocked every natural sense couldn’t completely suppress his unique ability. It tried – oh, how it tried. He could feel the pressure against his spatial awareness, like invisible hands attempting to squeeze his perception shut. The range was cut dramatically, and the clarity was reduced to perhaps half its normal efficiency.
For anyone else, such suppression might have been crippling. But Leon’s massive mana reserves and his abnormally fast recovery rate turned what should have been a critical weakness into merely an inconvenience.
Leon could maintain his reduced range indefinitely, his mana regenerating almost as fast as the suppressed ability consumed it.
"I can see," Leon said quietly, his voice carefully modulated to reach Seraphine without echoing strangely in the mist. "My spatial awareness is working. Reduced to about half efficiency, but it’s enough. I can navigate."
The relief that washed across Seraphine’s face was profound. "Thank the gods," she breathed, and for the first time since entering, some of the rigid tension left her shoulders. "That changes everything. The worst part of my last encounter here was the blindness. Fighting monsters you can’t see, can’t hear properly, can’t sense until they’re literally in front of you – it’s what forced me to flee. I was completely helpless."
Her admission of that previous defeat clearly cost her pride, but pragmatism won over ego. This wasn’t the time for pretense.
Suddenly, Seraphine’s eyes widened as she remembered something crucial. "Wait, before we go any further—"
She reached into her spatial pouch, withdrawing two small spheres that gleamed with an inner blue light. They were perfectly smooth, about the size of large marbles, and seemed to pulse with a gentle rhythm like a heartbeat. Without hesitation, she threw one back in the direction they’d come from. The sphere vanished into the white wall of mist behind them, but Leon caught a glimpse of it adhering to something just at the boundary between mist and clear air.
"Navigation markers," Seraphine explained at Leon’s questioning look. "They’re paired. As long as we have one, it will always point toward its partner. The mist disorients everything – people have walked in circles for hours, thinking they were going straight. This ensures we can find our way back to the exact point where we entered."
Leon nodded appreciatively. "Smart thinking. I should have considered that myself."
"You’ve never been in here before," Seraphine said, securing the second sphere carefully. "I have. Experience teaches lessons that power alone cannot."
With navigation secured and Leon’s spatial awareness active, they began moving deeper into the mist. Leon took the lead, his supernatural sense painting a detailed map of their surroundings that existed beyond normal perception.
What he detected was undeniably a forest, but one unlike anything that existed in the outside world. Through his spatial awareness, Leon could sense the trees – strange specimens that had no leaves, just bare wood twisted into unnatural shapes. The trunks spiraled and curved as if they had grown following some alien logic, their branches reaching out at angles that seemed to defy natural growth patterns.
Moving between these trees, Leon’s awareness picked up signs of life – or something resembling it. Strange insects skittered along the bark, their forms unlike anything from the Lower Domain. Some had too many legs, others too few. One creature he detected seemed to be nothing but wings attached to a tiny core, fluttering between trees in patterns that made no sense.
But his senses didn’t detect something dangerous as of yet, mostly harmless, strange creatures.
The forest floor was carpeted with what might have been moss or fungus, creating that spongy sensation underfoot. Through his spatial awareness, Leon could sense how this organic carpet was actually moving, almost breathing, as if the forest floor itself was somehow alive. Small creatures burrowed through it, and occasionally something larger would disturb the surface before disappearing deeper underground.
There were flowers, too – or at least, plant-like structures that occupied the ecological niche flowers might hold. But these didn’t bloom upward toward a sun that couldn’t penetrate the mist. Instead, they seemed to pulse and contract, possibly feeding on the mist itself or some energy Leon couldn’t perceive.
The deeper they ventured, the more Leon realized this wasn’t a dead zone but a completely different ecosystem. Creatures had adapted to life within the perpetual mist, evolving in directions that would seem impossible in normal conditions. His spatial awareness detected a small herd of something moving through the trees to their left – quadrupeds with elongated necks that swept back and forth, possibly using echolocation or some other sense to navigate the blindness.
Bird-like creatures nested in the twisted trees, though Leon suspected they had no eyes at all. Their shapes suggested wings, but they moved through the branches more like climbing than flying, perhaps because flight in such limited visibility would be suicidal.
It was alien, wrong, but undeniably alive. The Forbidden Mist hadn’t created a barrier of death but rather a pocket dimension where evolution had taken an entirely different path.
They had traveled perhaps one hundred meters into this strange forest when Leon’s constant scanning detected something different. The movement pattern was wrong – not the aimless wandering of the forest’s bizarre inhabitants but something purposeful, directed.
And it was coming straight for them.
Fast.
"Seraphine!" Leon said sharply, his body immediately shifting into combat stance. His sword came up, the Epic-ranked blade singing eagerly as it sensed impending battle. "Something approaching. Forty meters and closing. Moving with purpose – this isn’t random"
"It is coming for us."
Seraphine’s weapon cleared its sheath in one smooth motion, her body automatically positioning itself to cover Leon’s blind spots despite knowing he didn’t truly have any. Training and instinct overrode logic in moments like this.
"How big?" she asked, voice steady despite the adrenaline Leon could practically taste in the air.
"Larger than us. It’s moving through the trees but not climbing – jumping between them, using them as launch points. Twenty meters now."
The creature was intelligent in its approach, not charging straight but weaving between the twisted trees, making its exact position harder to pinpoint even for Leon’s spatial awareness. Whatever it was, it knew how to hunt in this environment.
"Ten meters," Leon announced, his muscles coiling like springs. "Five. Three—"
It burst from the mist like a nightmare given form.
A faint thunk-thunk reverberated through the twisted trunks—like heavy claws finding purchase—growing sharper as the thing closed in.
The creature that emerged defied immediate classification. It was vaguely humanoid in that it had a torso, limbs, and something that might charitably be called a head, but that was where any resemblance to humanity ended. Its skin was the same white as the mist, making it nearly invisible until it was practically on top of them. Four arms terminated in claws that looked capable of shearing through steel, and its face – if it could be called that – was a smooth expanse broken only by a vertical slit that might have been a mouth.
But most disturbing were its eyes. Dozens of them, scattered across its body in no discernible pattern, all of them fixed on Leon and Seraphine with predatory focus.
The creature didn’t roar or shriek or make any sound at all. It simply attacked, moving with that same terrible speed that had brought it upon them so quickly.