The first light of dawn did little to dispel the oppressive gloom of the Whispering Fen. The fog that clung to the Mire of Shadows was a living thing, a thick, grey blanket that swallowed sound and played tricks on the eye. It carried the same sweet, cloying scent of decay as the outer swamp, but here it was heavier, laced with a subtle, chilling undertone that seemed to seep into one's very bones.
The disciples, rested but still on edge from the previous day's encounters, gathered at the edge of the mire. Jian Long's face was a mask of grim determination, his earlier humiliation now sublimated into a cold, focused anger. He had lost face, and the only way to reclaim it was to successfully lead this mission.
"We enter now," he commanded, his voice sharp. "Stay within ten feet of each other at all times. Activate your protective Qi and keep your spiritual sense extended. Zhao Wei, you take point. Su Ling, you and your team watch the left flank. My team will take the right. Li Yu…" He paused, his gaze sweeping over the boy with undisguised contempt. "You stay in the center, directly behind me. Do not wander, do not touch anything, and do not cause any more 'accidents.' Your only job is to stay alive. Am I clear?"
"Perfectly, Senior Brother," Li Yu replied, his expression one of complete subservience. The position was both a cage and a shield. Jian Long wanted him close, where he could be watched and, if necessary, conveniently sacrificed. But it also placed him in the most protected part of the formation.
They stepped into the fog, and the world outside vanished. Visibility was reduced to a mere twenty feet. The gnarled, skeletal trees loomed like silent, watching giants, their branches dripping with a black, viscous slime. The ground was a treacherous soup of grasping mud and hidden pools of stagnant, black water.
Li Yu's spiritual sense was his true guide. While the others were half-blind, he perceived the mire as a complex, three-dimensional map of life and death. He could feel the nests of Shadow-Scale Vipers coiled in the hollows of the trees above and the patient, waiting hunger of the Mud-Gorgers buried in the sludge beneath their feet. He moved with a quiet, deliberate grace, his «Rippling Shadow Step» allowing him to navigate the treacherous terrain with an ease that, to any observer, simply looked like uncanny luck. He would shift his weight a moment before a patch of ground gave way, or subtly alter his path to avoid a hidden pool, all while maintaining his facade of a nervous, cautious junior.
"This fog is unnatural," Su Ling's cool voice cut through the tense silence. "It's infused with a weak spiritual energy that disrupts our senses. My own spiritual sense is being suppressed by at least thirty percent."
"Mine as well," another disciple confirmed, his voice tight with anxiety. "I can barely sense ten feet in front of me."
Jian Long grunted. "It is the nature of this place. That is why we must stay close. The beasts that live here are adapted to it. They will see us long before we see them."
As if to punctuate his words, a series of high-pitched, chittering screams erupted from the fog to their left. Three shadowy forms, each the size of a large dog, burst from the mist. They were Mire-Stalkers, grotesque, insectoid creatures with multiple, glowing red eyes and long, scythe-like forelimbs. They were only Rank 3 beasts, but they were pack hunters who used the fog as their primary weapon.
"Flankers, engage!" Jian Long commanded, his own sword already in his hand, a shimmering blade of golden light.
Su Ling and her two teammates moved with a practiced, lethal grace. Su Ling's martial spirit, a beautiful but deadly Ice-Feathered Crane, manifested behind her. A wave of intense cold washed over the area. She didn't fuse with her spirit; she commanded it. With a flick of her wrist, a dozen razor-sharp feathers, formed of pure, condensed ice, shot from the spirit's wings, peppering one of the Mire-Stalkers. The beast shrieked as the ice bit into its chitinous hide, its movements becoming sluggish. Her two teammates moved in, their swords a blur of light, and dispatched the slowed creature.
The other two Mire-Stalkers were met with a similar, efficient demise. The fight was over in less than thirty seconds, a testament to the power and coordination of the core disciples.
"Harvest the eye-stalks and the forelimbs," Jian Long ordered, his expression unchanged. "The eyes can be used to craft night-vision artifacts, and the limbs are sharp enough to be refined into daggers. We leave nothing of value behind."
As the disciples worked, Li Yu studied the scene with a calm, analytical gaze. He had seen Su Ling's combat style now. It was elegant, precise, and relied on controlling her spirit as a separate, powerful entity. It was a completely different approach from Ma Long's brutish fusion.
He also felt a familiar, instinctual pulse from the dead Mire-Stalkers. It was the call of his own spirit, the deep, primal hunger to devour their life essence and spiritual energy. He ruthlessly suppressed it. To use his absorption ability here, in front of these geniuses, would be to sign his own death warrant. He was a fisherman, and this was not the time to cast his net.
They continued their journey, the atmosphere even more tense than before. They survived two more ambushes—one from a flock of corpse-eating swamp bats and another from a massive, solitary Mud-Gorging Toad—both of which were dispatched with a brutal efficiency that left the ground littered with valuable demonic beast parts.
It was after the third battle that they found it. The path opened into a large, unnerving clearing. The fog here was thinner, but the ground was a scene of absolute devastation. The massive, gnarled trees were shattered, their trunks snapped like twigs. The ground was gouged with enormous furrows, as if a giant had dragged a colossal rake across the land. And in the center of the clearing lay a corpse.
It was a demonic beast, but one unlike any they had seen before. It was a Titan-Shelled Tortoise, a Rank 4 Fierce Beast known for its nigh-impenetrable defense. Its shell, which should have been able to withstand a siege engine, was shattered, great chunks of it lying scattered across the clearing. Its massive head was crushed, and one of its thick, tree-trunk-like legs had been torn clean off.
The disciples stared in stunned silence. A Rank 4 beast, a creature on par with a mid-stage Qi Condensation expert, had been killed here. And not just killed—it had been utterly, brutally annihilated.
"What… what could have done this?" Zhao Wei whispered, his earlier arrogance completely gone, replaced by a primal fear.
Jian Long's face was pale. He walked cautiously towards the corpse, his hand on the hilt of his sword. "The wounds are fresh. No more than a day old. The bite marks on the shell… they are from a creature with a draconic bloodline. It must be the Abyssal Mire-Wyrm. It seems its territory is nearby."
The other disciples murmured in agreement, their fear mixing with a grim excitement. The Mire-Wyrm was a legendary beast. To even see it would be a story for the ages.
But Li Yu, standing at the back of the group, knew they were wrong. He extended his spiritual sense, not at the corpse, but at the ground, at the very air of the clearing. He could feel the lingering traces of the battle's energy. There was indeed a faint, draconic aura, filled with a desperate, furious power. But there was another energy, one that was far stronger, far colder, and utterly alien.
It was an aura of absolute, crushing force. It was the feeling of the deep abyss, of a pressure so immense it could grind mountains into dust. It was an energy of stasis, of a void that consumed all things. And in that energy, he felt the faint, almost imperceptible scent of his own «Abyssal Leviathan Physique». They were not the same, but they were born of a similar principle, a similar dao of crushing, abyssal power.
He looked at the shattered shell of the tortoise. The bite marks were a distraction. The true cause of death was the massive, concave depressions, the sections of the shell that had been imploded, crushed inward by a force that defied imagination. This was not the work of a serpent's bite. This was the work of a colossal pincer.
His mind raced, connecting the legends, the lingering aura, and the physical evidence. The Abyssal Mire-Wyrm was real, and it had fought a battle here. But it had not been the victor. It had been the prey.
There was another, more powerful predator in this mire. A creature that hunted dragons.
"We should leave this place," Su Ling said, her voice tight. "Whatever killed this tortoise is likely still nearby. To stumble into a battle between two Rank 4 or even higher beasts would mean certain death for all of us."
"No," Jian Long said, a greedy, ambitious light in his eyes. "The wyrm is wounded. The legends say it has guarded the Serpent's Breath Lotus for centuries. If it fought a battle this intense, it must be weakened. This is our chance! A wounded wyrm is a far easier target. Its demonic core alone would be a priceless treasure!"
His followers murmured in excited agreement, their fear momentarily forgotten in the face of immense potential profit.
Li Yu remained silent, a cold understanding dawning in his heart. Jian Long's greed was about to lead them all into a trap far more deadly than any he could have devised. They were walking into the lair of a wounded dragon, completely unaware that a far more terrifying monster was patiently watching from the shadows.
He looked at the path ahead, the one that led deeper into the mire, towards the faint, pained aura of the Abyssal Mire-Wyrm. And for the first time on this mission, he felt a genuine, chilling thrill of danger and opportunity. He had come to this swamp to survive. But perhaps, if he was clever enough, he could leave with a prize beyond anyone's wildest imagination.