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I handed the baby Manticore to Thanatos for safekeeping while I moved on to the next ga. He seed a little too eager to accept it.

Should I be worried?

I decided to shrug it off.

The next ga led to door number three. The final region of Domos Haidou—Asphodel adows.

Everything about this place scread h. The grass looked like it had given up trying to grow, the trees were frozen in mid-sulk, and the sky didn't even bother to commit to weather. It was just there, like soone had left the "default" setting on.

My boots crunched against the pale, brittle grass as I stepped into the misty expanse, the landscape stretching endlessly in every direction.

If this was a test, it was already getting to .

"Alright, Carl," I muttered, tugging at the strap of my utility vest for so semblance of comfort. "Just another magical death trap. You've survived worse. Probably."

The adows didn't reply, which was both a relief and unsettling.

No looming monsters, no blaring alarms.

Just this… emptiness.

My pulse felt sluggish, like my body was syncing with the oppressive monotony around .

Then I saw it—a peculiar structure rising in the distance. It looked like an ornate hedge maze, but its walls shimred faintly, like oil on water. I approached cautiously, my boots dragging a little more with each step.

My head felt heavy, and I realized I hadn't blinked in what felt like minutes. The air slled faintly of lilacs and sothing sharper, bitter—like regret distilled into a scent.

Only, the walls weren't made of regular greenery—they shimred, giving off the sa vibe as a screensaver on a computer that's been left on too long.

At the maze's entrance, a sign carved into gray stone read:

"The Maze of Apathy: Escape if you care enough to try."

"Wow," I muttered, squinting at the inscription. "Subtle. Real encouraging."

Steeling myself, I stepped inside.

The mont my boots crossed the threshold, the entrance sealed behind with an audible thunk. A low hum reverberated through the maze, and the air grew thicker, pressing down on like a weighted blanket. If this maze was trying to lull into complacency, it was doing a fantastic job.

Great.

The shimring hedges radiated an odd, hypnotic light, and my steps felt sluggish as I moved forward. Each path looked identical, stretching into an oppressive, endless saness.

The first challenge wasn't exactly what I expected. Nestled in the middle of the path was… a slot machine.

Then I spotted it—an antique slot machine sitting in the middle of the path. Its ornate design glead invitingly, polished wood and brass adorned with swirling patterns. The handle practically beckoned .

Yep, a shiny, retro slot machine complete with a lever, flashing lights, and a jackpot display that read:

"WIN BIG! ESCAPE THE MAZE!"

"Oh, co on," I said, staring at the contraption. "You're not even pretending this isn't a trap."

The machine responded by flickering to life, its glowing screen displaying: Thɪs chapter is updated by novel★fire

"Spin to Win. Every Pull a Step Closer to Freedom."

"Seriously?" I said aloud, narrowing my eyes at the contraption. "You think I'm falling for that?"

The machine didn't respond, but its lights flickered enticingly, and a cheerful jingle played as if to say, Just one pull won't hurt.

I hesitated. It was obvious bait, but the allure of a shortcut was hard to ignore. My fingers itched to pull the lever. What harm could one spin do?

Against my better judgnt, I stepped closer.

I yanked the handle. The reels spun, each click of the chanism echoing unnaturally loud. Three images flashed on the screen: a phoenix, a golden key, and… a cupcake?

The machine dinged triumphantly. A brass coin slid out with a clink.

"Congratulations! One step closer to freedom!" the screen declared.

"Oh, really?" I pocketed the coin, eyeing the maze ahead. Nothing had changed. The walls didn't shift, no doors opened. Just more identical paths.

But curiosity gnawed at . What if one more spin did unlock sothing?

"Guess one more spin won't hurt," I muttered.

I pulled the lever.

The second pull felt less like a choice and more like a compulsion. The coin clattered out, and the screen flashed the sa congratulatory ssage. Still, nothing changed.

Four spins later, I was hooked.

The coins kept coming, and the machine's cheerful voice never wavered.

"One more step closer to freedom!" it chid with every pull.

By the fifth pull, I caught myself leaning into the machine, my heart racing. The screen's glow seed brighter now, its cheerful jingle burrowing into my brain like a parasite.

Sowhere in the back of my mind, alarm bells were ringing, but they were faint, muffled under the machine's hypnotic hum.

I was halfway through my seventh spin when I realized my legs felt heavier, like soone had replaced my boots with concrete blocks.

I forced myself to step back, my breathing ragged.

"Nope. Not today, Satan's vending machine."

My hand trembled as I shoved it into my pocket, gripping the brass coins like they might anchor to reality.

As if on cue, the slot machine screeched like an angry fax machine. Its polished exterior lted away, revealing a grotesque, snarling face in the center of the screen.

Then I noticed the coins.

They were lting—turning into black sludge that seeped through my fingers. I dropped them with a startled yelp, and the machine let out a chanical screech before vanishing into the mist.

"Not cool!" I yelled, wiping my hands on my vest.

The machine let out a final screech before vanishing in a puff of glittery smoke, leaving alone in the maze again. My only consolation was that I'd outsmarted the thing.

Eventually.

ssage received: shortcuts weren't an option here.

********

The next challenge felt like a cruel joke.

In a clearing, a giant table stretched before , its surface covered in face-down cards. They shimred faintly, the edges glowing with a soft, golden light. At the table's edge was a simple instruction carved into the wood:

"Match to Rember. Rember to Move Forward."

"Great," I muttered, crossing my arms. "What's next? Pin the tail on the existential crisis?"

I flipped the first card. It was a snapshot of my childhood— at seven years old, sitting cross-legged in the grass, cradling a stray kitten I'd found.

The mory hit like a wave, warm and bittersweet. I flipped another card. This one showed the zoo where I interned during college, the giraffes stretching their necks toward as I held out branches of acacia leaves.

A match. The two cards dissolved into golden dust, and for a mont, I felt a flicker of hope. Maybe this was the way forward.

"Okay," I said, brushing imaginary dust off my gloves. "This isn't so bad."

But the more cards I flipped, the heavier the mories beca.

My high school graduation.

The first ti I aced an exam after weeks of failing.

The day my parents hugged goodbye when I left for college.

Each mory pulled at , tempting to linger, to relive the emotions. The maze had shifted its tactic—it wasn't trying to stop . It was trying to trap in nostalgia.

By the ti I matched ten pairs, my legs felt like lead, my mind foggy with the weight of everything I'd seen.

A part of wanted to stop flipping, to just sit and relive the mories over and over. Why move forward when the past was so… comforting?

That thought startled awake.

Comforting?

I didn't co to Mythica to cling to the past.

I was here for a reason—to protect creatures like Princess or Munchie, to solve problems no one else could. Staying here would an abandoning everything I'd fought for.

I shook myself and flipped the remaining cards with deliberate speed, refusing to dwell on the images. When the last pair dissolved, the table vanished, leaving only an open path ahead.

********

The final stretch of the maze was the hardest. The mist thickened, and the air grew colder. My body felt heavier with every step, like invisible hands were dragging down. Whispers filled the air, faint but persistent.

"Why bother?"

"You can't save everyone."

"It's easier to stop trying."

I clenched my fists, forcing myself forward. The whispers grew louder, their words twisting into my deepest fears.

What if I couldn't solve the Coralite war?

What if OK's reputation was beyond saving?

What if I was just a foolish intern playing hero in a world I barely understood?

I stumbled to my knees, my breath coming in ragged gasps. The whispers circled like vultures, picking apart my resolve.

And then, through the haze, I saw them—Princess's gleaming eyes, the Coralites dancing in harmony, even OK awkwardly practicing his b-boy moves in a controlled space. The mories weren't traps this ti.

They were fuel.

"I'm not doing this for ," I said aloud, forcing myself to stand. "I'm doing this because they need ."

The mist recoiled, and the path ahead beca clear.

At the end of the maze stood a barrier—a shimring wall of light. Spirits erged from the walls, their translucent forms faintly glowing. They bowed as I approached, their expressions soft with approval.

"You have passed the Maze of Apathy," one of the spirits intoned, its voice resonating like a lody. "Few care enough to escape."

I nodded, my chest tightening with a mix of relief and determination. The barrier pulsed, then parted, revealing a narrow staircase descending into darkness.

Beyond lay my next destination, and sohow, I knew it would make this one look like a warm-up.

As I stepped through the portal, a sudden force yanked forward like a vacuum, twisting the air around .

Disorientation hit instantly—my thoughts scattered, my senses reeled, and for a mont, I wasn't sure which way was up.

You are reading A Zoologist’s Guide to Surviving Magical Creatures Chapter 61: ʕ•̫•ʔ---Asphodel Meadows on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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