The fog did not thin.
If anything, it grew heavier, rolling across the jungle floor in thick, unbroken coils that clung to ankles like cold fingers. Arios walked at the center of the formation, sword sheathed but hand hovering near the grip—not out of panic, not out of fear, but out of the unmistakable sense that the island had begun to watch them back.
Lucy paced to his right, expression sharp, her steps quiet and controlled. Liza walked on his left, ears attuned, eyes scanning, hands occasionally brushing the bark of passing trees as though trying to sense what the forest itself could not put into words.
They’d been moving for less than two minutes since the last Chapter ended, yet the atmosphere had changed as drastically as if hours had passed.
There was sothing new in the air.
Sothing wrong.
And all three of them felt it.
They didn’t talk at first. They didn’t need to. The silence was a collective agreent—breaking it felt like handing the island permission to notice them more than it already did.
The vines hanging overhead sagged low, so low that Arios occasionally needed to push them aside, their glossy surfaces damp and cool. The ground had shifted as well—where it was once flat and mildly spongy with moss, it now sloped with strange subtlety, as though leading them downward in incrents too gentle to fully perceive.
We’re descending, Arios realized.
And not in a natural way.
The canopy above thickened until not even a crack of sky slipped through. What little light existed seed to co from the air itself—diffused and pale, like moonlight filtered through water.
Finally, Lucy broke the silence.
"Arios... the compass."
He pulled the enchanted compass from his pocket.
It spun.
Not lazily. Not slowly.
It spun violently, shaking in his hand as though torn between a dozen directions at once.
Liza exhaled very softly. "That’s not normal."
"No," Arios murmured. "It really isn’t."
Lucy stepped closer—not frightened, but drawn. Curious in a focused, calculating way only Lucy could embody.
"Turn around," she said.
Arios obeyed.
Lucy frowned. "It’s still spinning."
"Let see it," Liza said, taking the device. Her fingers traced the tal edges, and she whispered a minor identification spell under her breath—one she rarely used.
The compass shuddered again.
Then—
It stopped spinning abruptly.
But the arrow now pointed backward.
Back the direction they ca.
Arios, Lucy, and Liza all stared.
"...We are not going that way," Lucy said.
"Agreed," Arios replied.
But Liza didn’t look convinced. She stared at the path behind them, the fog resting over it like a second floor.
"Arios," she murmured, "what if... the island is redirecting us?"
"It’s a test," Lucy said before he could reply. "It has to be. The island wouldn’t force a path unless soone designed it to do so."
"Or," Liza countered softly, "sothing else is doing it."
Arios took the compass back.
For a mont, the three of them stood still—listening—not to any sound, but to the absence of sound. Even insects had gone quiet. No birds. No wind. Just a thick, suffocating stillness that pressed on their eardrums like a growing pressure.
And then—
A soft, rhythmic vibration pulsed beneath their feet.
Not shaking.
Not a tremor.
A heartbeat.
A slow, deep, once-every-three-seconds beat.
thum...
...thum...
......thum.
Lucy went rigid.
Liza stepped closer to Arios, posture instinctively defensive.
Arios clenched his jaw and lowered his stance just slightly—enough to react, not enough to provoke.
The vibrations didn’t intensify. They didn’t accelerate.
They simply continued. A distant, dull heartbeat that belonged to sothing far larger than any creature they had encountered.
"We shouldn’t be here," Liza whispered.
"We don’t have a choice," Arios answered quietly.
He wasn’t trying to be dramatic. He was stating a fact.
The jungle no longer stretched outward in branching paths. The fog concealed most of the surroundings, but the ground under his boots was unmistakably guiding them—a gentle, continuous slope in the sa direction.
Forward.
Always forward.
Lucy stepped ahead first. "We keep moving. Slowly."
Liza didn’t argue.
Arios nodded.
And so they continued.
The Trees Shift Behind Them
It began subtly—a branch creaked, then twisted. A vine coiled where none had existed seconds before. Moss grew in spiraling patterns on the trunks, each spiral pointing toward the direction they were being led.
Lucy noticed first.
"Don’t look back," she said quietly.
Arios did anyway.
The path behind them was sealing. What had once been open ground was now a wall of living vegetation weaving itself closed, like a wound healing in fast motion.
Liza turned too. "It’s... alive. Not just the monsters. The entire ecosystem."
"The island is rewriting itself," Lucy said.
"Or reacting to us," Arios murmured.
Whichever was correct didn’t matter. The result was the sa—going back was no longer an option.
They followed the slope until the mist glowed faintly green.
At first, Arios thought it was a reflection.
Then he realized it was light.
The fog itself glowed.
Soft. Pale. Almost soothing.
Yet unsettling.
Light with no source was never natural.
Lucy lifted her hand; the glow brushed against her skin like thin silk.
"It isn’t mana," she said. "Not exactly."
"But it behaves like mana," Liza added.
Arios watched the way the glow clung to their clothes, outlining their silhouettes in faint luminescence.
"It’s marking us?" he said.
Lucy’s expression tightened. "It might be."
"For what?" Liza asked.
Lucy didn’t have an answer.
Arios didn’t either.
So they walked deeper.
The First Impossible Obstacle
The forest abruptly ended.
Not in a gradual thinning or a shift in vegetation.
It ended like a cut.
One mont there were trees, vines, and walls of fog.
The next—
A massive, circular clearing opened before them.
Nearly fifty ters across.
Perfectly symtrical.
The ground was smooth stone, pale and veined like marble. No moss. No roots. No grass. Just cold, ancient stone arranged in concentric rings.
And in the center—
A fissure.
Wide enough to swallow a person whole.
It glowed with a deep, internal green fire—quiet, pulsing, mirroring the heartbeat from earlier.
Lucy stepped forward, slowly, as if gravity itself had beco hesitant.
"This wasn’t in the briefing," she said flatly.
Liza whispered, "Arios... this looks like..."
He finished for her.
"An altar."
But not one built for worship.
No carvings. No runes. No iconography.
Just an unnatural circle. A wound in the island’s surface. A place where sothing slept. Or had been sealed. Or was waiting.
Arios approached the edge.
The glow intensified slightly in response.
Not dangerously. Not violently.
Curiously.
Like sothing under the stone had noticed his presence.
He felt its awareness—distant but vast.
Lucy grabbed his sleeve. Not to stop him—just to anchor him.
"Arios," she said, voice low but steady, "if this is part of Phase Three... it’s nothing like the Academy described."
"It’s not part of anything the Academy knows," he replied.
Liza stood on his other side.
"What do we do?"
Arios stared into the fissure.
The heartbeat echoed again—deeper now.
thum...
The glow rippled faintly.
Sothing in the stone shifted beneath his feet.
Not movent.
Recognition.
Like the altar itself was reacting to him specifically.
Liza whispered, "It knows you’re here."
Lucy nodded once. "Then we step back."
Arios didn’t argue.
They retreated from the edge.
The glow dimd.
The heartbeat softened.
The tension in the air loosened—barely, but enough for them to breathe.
Arios exhaled sharply. "We need a way around."
"There isn’t one," Liza said softly.
She was right.
Beyond the circle, beyond the stone, the fog thickened again, forming natural walls on all sides.
Arios walked the periter anyway, hand running along the fog’s edge. It pushed back—like dense gel, soft but unmoving.
Lucy tried cutting it.
Her blade passed through like slicing mist, but the "wall" healed instantly, reforming with the sa quiet resistance.
"We’re trapped in a puzzle," Lucy said.
"Feels like a trial," Liza murmured.
Arios remained silent.
Then—he made a decision.
"We go forward," he said.
Lucy stared. "Into the fissure?"
"No. Over it."
She blinked. "Arios. It’s a ten-ter gap."
"We jump."
Liza laughed nervously. "Arios, I know you’re strong, but—"
"Not literally jump," he clarified. "We build sothing."
Lucy crossed her arms. "With what materials? The stone is seamless. The forest refuses to be cut."
"Not the forest," Arios said. "Our equipnt."
Lucy blinked once. Then twice. Then her eyes widened slightly as she understood.
"You want to use the reinforced tarp fras."
"A bridge," he said simply.
Liza nodded excitedly. "It could work. The weight enchantnts should hold even under stress."
They unpacked quickly.
The fras—light tal rods enchanted to resist pressure—were ant for ergency shelters. But with enough linked together, locked into formation, and reinforced with rope...
They could form a makeshift walkway.
Lucy handled the locking chanisms.
Liza tied the enchanted rope with flawless precision, her hands steady despite the unnatural atmosphere.
Arios carried the weight—supporting the center of the fra as they extended it outward over the fissure.
The glow pulsed again beneath them but didn’t lash out.
It simply watched.
When they finished, the bridge stretched across the gap.
Narrow.
Precarious.
But stable.
Lucy stepped back, pressing her palm to her weapon.
"Arios goes first," she said.
Liza nodded. "Always."
Arios didn’t hesitate.
He stepped onto the bridge.
The fra trembled once, as if adjusting to his weight.
Then it held.
The glow beneath him flared briefly—just enough to illuminate his boots in shimring green.
Lucy and Liza waited, breath held.
Arios walked carefully but confidently. One step. Two. Ten.
Halfway across.
The heartbeat continued. Slow. Rhythmic.
thum...
...thum...
Arios paused.
Sothing whispered.
Not in his ear.
Not in the air.
Inside the stone.
A voice without words. A recognition without na.
He exhaled deliberately, ignored it, and kept moving.
He reached the other side.
The mont his boots touched solid ground, the glow dimd sharply.
"Arios?" Lucy called.
"I’m fine," he said.
Liza exhaled a breath she clearly hadn’t realized she was holding.
"Okay. Our turn."
Lucy crossed next.
Then Liza.
When all three stood together, the bridge remained intact behind them—but the ground trembled slightly.
The altar began to seal.
Stone crept inward milliter by milliter, like a closing eyelid.
Liza whispered, "It was waiting for us to leave."
Lucy nodded once. "Or waiting for Arios."
Arios didn’t respond.
He couldn’t—not yet.
Because he felt the final tremor not under his feet, but inside his chest.
Not a heartbeat this ti.
A whisper.
A sensation that didn’t belong to him.
A recognition.
As if sothing beneath the altar had marked him in return.
But he didn’t tell them.
Not yet.
"We keep moving," he said.
And the three of them stepped forward, disappearing into the fog once more—each aware that they had crossed into a part of the island no student had seen before.
Each aware the trial had only just begun.
But none of them aware that sothing beneath the stone had awakened the mont Arios touched the far side.
Sothing ancient.
Sothing aware.
Sothing waiting.
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