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    Tara strode forward confidently, the sudden cessation of mountain sounds not deterring her. The darkness overcame her quickly, but she cast a small light spell, little more than a candleflame, that illuminated her way.

    One benefit, perhaps the only one, of her nuarch heritage was excellent darkvision. Though she could not see in total darkness, a product of her other heritage, the small light was more than enough.

    The passage before was much the same as when she entered, an impenetrable forest of stalagmites barring all progress save for the path carved through the middle. The ground she walked upon was smooth, though uneven, making her wonder if it had been carved by an underground river at some point.

    The tunnel was dark, with no light indicating an end. It appeared to stretch on forever, and as she walked through it, her thoughts began to wander. How far away would she be able to perceive light? If she saw a pinprick of light now, how far did that mean she had left to walk? What would she do if this process took multiple days? She brought some food in her pack, but not enough for a days-long sojourn.

    A change in the environment brought her attention back to the present, and she realized a fog had been rolling in. It weaved between the stalagmites, making them appear teeth among white gums.

    As she walked, it steadily rolled over the path, thickening until it was up to her knees, while the stalagmite forest became a sheer blanket of white, reflecting her light spell so brightly that she had to dim it.

    Fog would not normally concern her. It was undoubtedly humid in this cave system, as evidenced by the constant drip-drip she heard throughout, but the way the fog behaved was unnerving. It had started slowly, yet within a matter of minutes, she was entirely surrounded by the stuff, leaving her with a view of only about 3 feet in any direction.

    Even stranger, her mana sight was not picking up anything unusual. If the fog were magical, she would understand. It was part of the test. However, this was either natural or something other than magic. There was the possibility that whatever magic animated the fog was hidden from her sight, but that did little to comfort her, either.

    She could just make out the edge of the path by the jutting stalagmites on either side. The path itself was around feet wide, so walking in the exact center, she needed only to lean in either direction to verify her course.

    After what felt like hours, she approached her first real challenge tentatively: an intersection.

    She sighed, shaking her head.

    A maze? Is that what this is? Really? What exactly is this supposed to test?

    She walked over to the edge of the fog and, reaching a hand into it, channeled her mana, increasing the strength in her arms. With a crack, the sharp top of a stalagmite sat atop her palm, which she withdrew from the fog.

    She placed it in the center of the intersection, pointing it in the direction she had been heading, and continued on her way.


    Sure enough, after not much time, she encountered a three-way intersection, where she had to turn either left or right. Following the same method, she broke off the top of a stalagmite and pointed it to the left, the direction she had started down.

    She followed this method for what her mind told her must have been days, but what was probably just a couple of hours. She would stumble upon a crossroad or intersection with the stalagmites she had placed, always breaking off another and indicating a new direction she had gone.

    The paths circled back on themselves nearly endlessly. She was not surprised to discover that there was only one ‘correct’ path, but it reinforced the impression that this place was engineered rather than a natural environment, or perhaps a combination of both.

    Strangely, a doubt began to creep over her with every turn she took. She would see her own markings and wonder if they had been tampered with. Did she actually place them like that? What if someone—or thing—was moving things when she was not looking?

    She constantly shook the thoughts away, staying true to her plan, and eventually the fog began to lift, revealing a cave system that was…exactly as she had found it.

    What was different was the strange vibration that filled the air. She could hear it, a low rumble that sounded like rocks scraping together, but she could also see it. The fog would roil and move, like waves on the surface of water would indicate a disturbance beneath.

    Initially, Tara had been dismissive of the sound. Although she had not spent much time below ground like her nuarch brethren, she was unsurprised to hear what she assumed were the sounds of earth moving around her. Many sounds that could not be heard above the water were nearly deafening below. Surely the earth was similar.

    However, after only a couple of minutes listening, a chill began to creep up her spine. The sound was regular, consistent. It lasted for a few seconds, there would be silence for a few seconds, and then it would come again.


    It reminded her of breathing.

    Subconsciously, her footsteps had become light, her movements fluid, making no sound. She looked around as she walked, but the tunnel remained unchanged. There were no side passages, no pockets or voids in the wall for creatures to hide in. It seemed that the source of the breathing must be—

    Just as she had the thought, she stopped cold. Before her was a mound of flesh piled atop the ground. She could make out bulbous feet connected to legs that looked like fallen logs in a forest, or perhaps a strange stalagmite mutation, forming thick stone columns that grew horizontally.


    If you spot this tale on Amazon, know that it has been stolen. Report the violation.

    The skin looked rough like leather, and several kinds of boils or tumors protruded from it like knodules on trees. Little gray and brown hairs stuck up from cracks in the skin, patches of dry grass in the cracked desert ground.

    As she was taking the sight in, the creature’s smell reached Tara, and she fought hard to keep her breakfast down. She kneeled on the ground, her hands on her gut, and she squeezed. She did not know if the move actually helped, but with focus, she managed to acclimate to the stench without gagging.

    She was tempted to breathe through her mouth to avoid the smell, but the idea of taking that foul odor directly into her mouth and throat disturbed her on some primal level.

    So, this was the second test? Her passage was barred by…what, an ogre or something? One of its legs was as large as her entire body, so she had no doubt that it could clobber her into dust with little effort, should it wake.

    How should she tackle this?

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