Font Size
15px

The path beneath Ash’s feet wound downward, slick with dew, as root-arches curled over them like the ribs of so great slumbering beast. The moss underfoot pulsed softly, like a heartbeat too slow for mortals to sense. Bioluminescent vines hung in long, trembling strands overhead, their pale light painting the world in shades of moonlit green and haunting violet.

Ash walked slowly, eyes darting to every flicker of light and shadow, "This place... it’s not natural," he murmured.

"It’s not supposed to be," Tholn said without looking at him, "The Nest rembers things older than nas."

Each step felt like descending into a breathing cathedral. The walls were not stone but bark — ancient, knotted, and veined with glowing mycelium that shifted in color like slow lightning. Soft spores drifted through the air like lazy snowflakes, catching light in their descent.

"What are those spores?" Ash asked, watching one settle on his arm.

"mories. So say the Nest sheds them. Dreams that rot slowly."

Moisture clung to Ash’s fur, and the air was heavy — not just with scent, but with weight, like a mory pressing against the skin. He tasted minerals and old storms with every breath. Aether sang here, quiet and mournful, thrumming in the wood like a song only the dead would rember.

Far below and high above, lanterns floated in silence — shaped not like orbs, but gnarled claws curled around pale fla. They gave no heat. Only illumination... and a sense that each one was watching.

Towering trees with trunks as wide as fortresses held the Nest aloft. Their roots didn’t grow — they reached, tangled in midair like the fingers of titans locked in a prayer long abandoned. Pools of glass-still water reflected not the chamber around them, but stars — constellations Ash didn’t know, drifting through skies no longer real.

"Those stars..."

"Echoes," Tholn said, "The Nest’s way of rembering what the sky used to look like."

Not reflections. mories.

Ash paused beneath one arch where vines hung in a woven curtain. Behind it, he caught a glimpse of a deeper space — one where the air shimred like liquid and the roots whispered in languages he couldn’t understand.

His heart beat faster.

His beast senses twitched — sothing was watching.

Dozens of sothings.

"Feels like I’m being watched," Ash muttered.

"You are," Tholn’s voice was quiet, "Always."

He resisted the primal urge to growl.

No enemy lunged. No threat revealed itself.

But the Nest was awake.

And it was looking back.

Sothing shifted then — a rustle in the bark not caused by wind, a warmth that touched Ash’s spine without heat. The mycelium threads near his feet curled gently inward, as if beckoning. Above, one of the lanterns dimd, then pulsed, then dimd again — like breath held and exhaled.

Ash froze.

He felt... noticed. Not in the way prey felt the gaze of a predator. Not even how a warrior feels before a duel.

This was older. Stranger. Like a mountain regarding an ant — not with malice, but with mory.

He didn’t know how he knew.

But the Nest saw him. And more than that — it recognized him.

And for the first ti in a long while, Ash wasn’t sure who was truly watching who.

He exhaled slowly, then glanced at Tholn, whose gaze remained fixed forward.

Without a word, they continued deeper.

The path narrowed briefly, the arches tightening, before blooming outward again — suddenly, expansively — into a vast hollow. The air here was denser, richer with ancient breath, and strung with mists that hung like silk from root to root.

The space then blood before him—an imnse subterranean basin shaped not by chisels or tools, but by patient growth. Bioluminescent mist curled between hanging bridges and wide-root platforms. Hos were woven into trees, glimring with fungal glow and rootlight. It wasn’t constructed. It had always been growing toward this shape.

Ash took a slow step forward.

"You all live here?" he whispered.

Tholn nodded, "We don’t leave the Nest. It is our cradle and our grave."

Ash scanned the hollow before him, his instincts crawling beneath his skin. The basin stretched wide and deep, ancient and alive — and in every corner, he felt it: the silent press of eyes. Of presence.

The Murkfen Kin were already there—woven into the very roots and hollows of this vast living place. They did not erge, for they had never been hidden. It was Ash who now stood revealed.

They watched from every level of the living city—balconies carved into bark, high alcoves tucked behind webs of glowing moss, platforms spiraling around titanic tree-trunks that reached endlessly upward. So leaned silently against latticework of vines and bone. Others hung suspended like still-winged moths from branches above. All of them stared.

There was no welco. No whisper. Only the rustle of breath and the soundless weight of observation.

"Ash," Tholn said calmly, "don’t flinch."

"I’m not." Ash’s voice was low, "But if I were the type to run, this would’ve been the ti."

Tholn didn’t laugh, but his silence carried the shape of amusent.

Ash’s gaze swept across the upper tiers. He could feel it — the weight of expectation. The stillness here wasn’t passive. It was watching. asuring.

So hung upside down like silent bats, watching. Others crouched in ditation, eyes slowly opening as Ash passed.

Their forms were as strange and haunting as the place itself — so tall and reed-thin, others squat with bark-like skin, so shimring faintly with mist trailing from their limbs. Horned. Scaled. Eyeless. Too many eyes. Not beast. Not man. Not demon. Sothing else entirely.

Elders tilted their heads in greeting, their expressions unreadable. So younglings whispered behind webbed leaves. A few reached out — claws half-extended — only to be drawn back by older Kin who said nothing, rely watching with eyes full of knowing.

"I don’t think they like ," Ash muttered.

"They’re deciding," Tholn replied.

He felt as though he’d stepped into the breath of an ancient god — and all its children had turned to see who had dared to inhale.

Then — movent.

Tiny footsteps. Quick and hesitant.

From beneath a coiled curtain of roots, a young Murkfen child padded forward. Its fur was soft and mist-pale, eyes luminous and wide. It paused, sniffed the air, then stepped closer.

Ash stood still.

The child reached out and pressed a clawed hand gently against his leg.

"...You’re real," it whispered.

Tholn tilted his head toward the child. "What do you see?"

The young one blinked slowly, "He slls like the root-heart. But not old."

"New can still be old," Tholn said, a faint trace of sothing in his voice—curiosity, maybe.

Ash opened his mouth, stepping forward slightly, "What does that an?"

Tholn didn’t answer directly. Instead, his head turned toward the deep root-paths ahead. "We should keep moving. Elyrra is waiting."

Ash hesitated but followed as Tholn stepped forward, the mist parting before them.

Another child followed, then another — peeking from behind twisted trunks and crawling out of vine-ringed hollows. A cluster of them stood near Ash now, silent but curious, wide-eyed and reverent.

"They’re not afraid," Ash said softly.

Then, glancing sidelong at Ash, Tholn’s voice lightened with rare humor, "Still think they don’t like you?"

Ash gave a sideways glance, the corner of his mouth twitching, "I think the jury’s still out."

Tholn snorted faintly, "That’s generous."

As Ash and Tholn walked on, soft noises began to stir. A few of the younger Kin, small and hunched with oversized eyes, crept closer from their moss-ringed shelters. One with vine-wrapped horns blinked up at Ash, sniffed the air, and reached out a clawed hand.

Ash froze.

The youngling touched his arm lightly.

"It’s warm," the child whispered in awe, "Like the mory-tree."

Before Ash could respond, an elder called out in a low tone, and the child scampered away.

"They’ve never seen soone like you before," Tholn said.

Ash looked around, slower now, "What exactly do they think I am?"

Tholn didn’t answer. Not yet.

But the mist behind his eyes said enough.

The path widened, splitting into spiraling causeways suspended in the gloom. The further they walked, the more the air felt less like air and more like story — thick with mory, waiting to be read, inhaled, and understood.

Ash followed Tholn deeper into the living maze, the air thickening with history. The quiet around them wasn’t just absence — it was reverence. Every step felt as though they were intruding upon sothing sacred and half-awake, like walking through the forgotten breath of legends. Glowing fungi lit their steps, while mist clung to their fur like whispers. The light pulsed faintly in rhythm with sothing older — a deep-rooted life force that pulsed beneath the ground, ancient and ceaseless.

"Tholn," Ash said quietly, "the child earlier... they ntioned the mory-tree and the root-heart. What are they?"

Tholn glanced sideways, his pace unchanging, "The mory-tree is where the Nest records. Every beast, every cry, every death—it’s stored in the sap and spores. The root-heart... that’s its will."

Before Ash could press further, the path before them shifted—subtly, like a breath exhaled in stone. Runes shimred and the mist rolled sideways, revealing a spiraling gallery of arching bark and bioluminescent script.

Tholn stopped, his voice was unreadable, "Ah! Here we are."

Ash tilted his head. "Where are we?"

You are reading Boundless Evolution: The Summoning Beast Chapter 87: The Murkfen Kin II on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Slime True Immortal cover
Similar genre

Slime True Immortal

肚子有点胀 ·Fantasy

Spring—aseasonofrenewalandrebirth.Intheswampforest,magicalbeastswerebeginningtostir.Onthereed-linedriverbanks,beastkinsharpenedsticksandsettraps,ly...

Tycoon War God cover
Trending now

Tycoon War God

Once Young ·Other

Inhispreviouslife,LinMuwasthetopassassinonEarth.HeaccidentallytraversedtotheEternalImmortalRealm,where,overthespanofeighthundredyears,hecultivatedf...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.