Font Size
15px

It was a crisp morning. The newborn sun had just burned off the woodland mist, gilding the little town called “Adelock” in pale gold.

The air was cool, scented with damp earth and rot-leaf. At the town gate beneath a crude wooden watchtower, the flow of people had begun: burly n with greatswords on their backs, mages wrapped in dark cloaks, and a great many other adventurers in mismatched gear.

At the door of an inn called the “Old Oak,” Moga Smollett—bundled in a travel cloak—had barely stepped out when soone beside her called, “Hey! Elf lady, wait a mont!”

Moga sighed inwardly and tugged her hood lower, leaving only the taut line of her jaw and a pair of sharp-tipped ears. “What is it?” she asked coolly.

The speaker was a broad-shouldered middle-aged man—clearly a seasoned adventurer. He introduced himself with warmth: “We’re the adventuring party ‘Steelblade’! I’m the captain, Breton! Miss Elf, you’re here for the ‘Adelock Great Labyrinth’ too, right? Interested in teaming up?”

The Adelock Great Labyrinth was a newly discovered ultra-ancient ruin deep in the forest. And ultra-ancient ruins always ca twined with legends—wealth, power, lost arcana—the ultimate stage of every adventurer’s tale.

So once the labyrinth was found, the news spread like wildfire, turning a once-ordinary town into heaven-and-hell for adventurers, rcenaries, scholars, and opportunists of every stripe.

As one of the first adventurers to arrive, Moga’s aim was no different from the rest: the treasures in the ruin.

But after Breton’s pitch, she flicked a glance at the friendly-looking young mage behind him, the dwarven youth, and several human warriors, then shook her head coldly. “No. I’m used to working alone.”

“Really won’t reconsider? More hands, more strength!” Breton persisted. “We’re experienced and solid—warriors, mage, cleric, dwarven fighter, all in one! Miss Elf, you’ll be hard-pressed to find a more reliable team!”

He had no small confidence in his crew. As a veteran, steady-earning party, they could have tackled the labyrinth alone without help.

Elves, however, were different.

Among the pan-human races, elves were the most exceptional and the strongest. They bore supre talent for magic and a native command of nature. Even an inexperienced elven girl could raise a party’s power dramatically.

“No need.” Moga still shook her head. Her fine features showed no extra emotion, holding everyone at a distance.

“I can offer you a bigger cut! How about it?” Breton kept at it. As an old hand, he prized survival over top-heavy profits. If he could co back alive, he didn’t mind earning less—that was exactly why he was so set on this elven girl.

So clingy… A flare of irritation—and a familiar sting—rose in Moga’s chest. She drew a long breath, then snapped around and threw back her hood in one swift motion—so quick it caught Breton and his companions off guard.

There was no question: the face beneath fit everyone’s idea of an elf—golden hair, pointed ears, fair skin, elegant lines, and those pretty, erald-like eyes—wait, what?

Breton finally noticed that the “elf lady’s” pupils weren’t the hallmark bright green of elves, but a dusky amber. And her gold hair wasn’t pure: the tips faded to a sunset orange like firelit clouds.

“Sorry, I’m a half-elf. You’ve got the wrong person,” Moga said, her cool tone unable to quite conceal her weariness.

“Ah—so that’s it…” The warmth on Breton’s face froze into awkwardness, then confusion. He mumbled, “My apologies for the bother.”

Moga was unsurprised by the turn. She pulled up her hood again at once, shutting out those unpleasant stares.

On the Radiant Continent, elves were beyond doubt the noblest and strongest among the pan-human races. Striking of face and long of life, they possessed top-tier magical aptitude and an innate knack for shaping nature. In the mortal realm, only dragons and abyssal demons could rival them in endownt.

Their drawback was the sa as dragons and abyssals: few in number, with poor fertility—highborn, in a sense, because of it.

Half-elves were another matter. Perhaps due to so limit in their blood, any mixed child born of an elf and another could not inherit the elves’ potent magic or command of nature—only a similar visage and a drawn-out lifespan.

This left half-elves in pain. To the pureblood elves—zealots for unsullied lineage and arrogant beyond asure—they were taints on the blood, unworthy of the na “elf.” And once beyond the Elven Kingdom’s protection, their middling magic made them struggle in human lands. Worse, their looks made them pri prey for slavers.

Compared with slavers who constantly coveted her beauty, this sort of embarrassnt—born of mistaken identity—was nothing to Moga. She was used to it.

Soon, with bow and quiver on her back, Moga left the Old Oak Inn alone and headed for the forest.

It was still early, not the peak hours for adventurers. She planned to scout deeper into the woods to fix the ruin’s location, rather than tangle with the town’s mix of dubious intel and hidden threats.

Risky, yes—but she was used to that. As a half-elf who’d left the Elven Kingdom’s aegis and scraped by in human society for years, she’d grown a bone-deep wariness and doubt. Rather than trust others, she trusted her bow and knife.

By dusk, after long hours of woodscraft, Moga finally spied, far off, the hilly tract in the center of a vast basin. Caves honeycombing the hills concealed multiple entrances to the ultra-ancient ruin.

Other parties had gathered near the entrances by then. Cautious like her, they had not rushed in but were gathering intel to prepare for the push.

Moga climbed a tall tree, hid in the thick crown, and quietly watched the teams probing the mouths.

Sudden change ca quickly. Soone uncovered a new entrance, but it was like kicking a wasp’s nest: monsters poured from caves all over the hills, howling as they sward the adventurers outside.

Moga’s heart lurched. She was about to fall back when she noticed many flying monsters in the sky. If she left the canopy hastily, she’d only expose herself.

She stayed put in the tree, watching with open eyes as so adventurers died and others broke through and fled this killing ground with precious information.

The nerve-wracking suspense stretched on for tens of minutes. Most who failed to break out were dead. Moga had no idea how things stood; she kept still in the crown and decided that if it ca to it, she’d hunker down till morning—reinforcents would arrive by then.

Just then, she felt sothing cold and slick brush her ankle—and jolted in alarm!

She looked down at once. Her first thought was a snake—but she wasn’t too afraid of snakes. As long as it wasn’t a monster, she could deal with it.

To her puzzlent, the slick thing coiled around her ankle boot wasn’t a snake at all but a gray, slender flesh-worm. What was this? It didn’t look like a monster—she’d never seen one before—

Frowning, she assud it was so kind of giant bristleworm and instinctively lifted her foot to flick the nasty thing off.

The next second, an eyeball sprouted at the “bristleworm’s” tip and fixed her with a stare—then it shot forward, streaked up her pale thigh, and darted under her clothes!

“Aaaaaaah—!!!”

Moga scread—and toppled headfirst out of the tree.

You are reading Millennium Witch Book 2: Chapter 167: Moga Smollett 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

The Villain's Story cover
Similar genre

The Villain's Story

Blazuku ·Fantasy

ThreeSoulslayinonebody,Onesoulbelongingtoamanwhohadreachedthepeak,thestrongestthereeverwas,theonewhohadthetalenttodoso.Yethesufferedbecauseofhistal...

Mage Manual cover
Similar genre

Mage Manual

Listening Day ·Fantasy

Ashopenedhiseyestofindthathehadtraveledtoastrangenationofmanyraces,andpeoplewerekneelingbeforehim.BeforehehadtimetoadapttothenewidentityoftheTermin...

Above The Sky cover
Similar genre

Above The Sky

Gloomy Sky Hidden God ·Fantasy

Thefirststarthatpassedawayextinguishedtwothousandyearsago. Fourhundredyearslater,themysteriousCalamityofHeavenlyFalldestroyedthecivilizationofthepr...

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