Chapter 254: The Orb’s Impossible Return
The blue orb lay on the ground exactly where it shouldn’t be.
It glowed with the same steady pulse they had been following, sitting innocently on the spongy forest floor just meters away from them. But instead of being outside the Forbidden Mist where Seraphine had thrown it hours ago, it was here – inside, surrounded by the same white vapor that enclosed everything else.
This is impossible, Leon thought, his mind struggling to reconcile what he was seeing with what he knew had happened. I watched her throw it. I saw it land outside the mist. There’s no way it could have moved on its own.
He turned to Seraphine, needing confirmation despite having witnessed the event himself. "You threw it outside, didn’t you?" The question came out more as a statement seeking reassurance than a genuine inquiry. He had seen it with his own eyes. Still, the impossibility of the situation made him doubt even his own memories.
Seraphine’s face was pale, her purple eyes wide with disbelief. She nodded slowly, as if moving too quickly might shatter whatever fragile grasp on reality they still maintained. "I’m one hundred percent certain," she said, her voice steady despite the shock evident in her expression. "I threw it outside the mist. Not inside – that wouldn’t even have been possible from where we entered."
Leon remembered clearly. She had thrown the orb back toward the entrance when they first crossed the threshold, specifically to mark their exit point. The orb had landed perhaps a meter from the border, well clear of the mist’s influence. There was absolutely no possibility she had somehow thrown it deeper into the fog by mistake.
"I saw it too," Leon confirmed, though they both knew the confirmation was unnecessary. This wasn’t about verifying facts – it was about two people trying to make sense of something that defied logic. "It was definitely outside. A meter from the border, no more."
So how did it get here? The question hung between them, unspoken but deafening in its implications.
Leon moved forward, his supernatural senses on high alert. Every instinct screamed danger – not the immediate, physical danger of attacking monsters, but something more insidious. Something was fundamentally wrong here, beyond the usual wrongness of the mist itself.
He knelt beside the glowing orb, his enhanced perception scanning every detail of the scene. The orb itself appeared unchanged – same size, same blue glow, same gentle pulse that connected it to its partner in Seraphine’s hand. But as his fingers reached for it, he noticed something else.
There was a slight depression in the ground around the orb, so subtle that normal eyes would never have caught it. The spongy surface of the forest floor had been compressed in a pattern that suggested impact – as if something had been thrown from above and landed here with minor force.
Someone threw it back.
The realization sent a chill down Leon’s spine that had nothing to do with the mist’s perpetual cold. He picked up the orb carefully, examining it for any changes, any signs of tampering. It felt the same in his hand – smooth, warm with its inner light, pulsing in perfect synchronization with its partner.
"It seems," he said slowly, his voice carefully controlled, "that someone threw the orb back inside."
Seraphine’s intake of breath was sharp. "What? But that’s..." She paused, processing the implications. "Who could do that? Who would even be there to see it?"
That’s the real question. Leon thought, his mind racing through possibilities. We’ve been in here for hours. Someone – or something – found the orb outside and deliberately threw it back into the mist.
Who is trying to harm us?
Knowing the rumors of the mist, whoever had done this was clearly trying to harm them and hoping they would never come back and die inside.
The thought of it makes his blood boil, but he manages to contain his anger. First, he had to handle this situation calmly.
The forest around them suddenly felt more oppressive, the twisted trees looming like silent witnesses to something they couldn’t understand. The perpetual white twilight that had been merely disorienting now seemed actively malevolent, hiding secrets that went beyond strange creatures and bizarre ecosystems.
"I don’t know," Leon admitted, and the admission bothered him more than he wanted to show. He was used to having answers, to understanding his enemies and obstacles. But this... this suggested a level of intelligence and purpose they hadn’t encountered yet. "Someone or something capable of existing at the border, able to see the orb, and with enough understanding to know we’d need it to navigate back."
They wanted us to be trapped here and die?
Seraphine’s hand moved instinctively to her weapon. "You mean something’s been watching us? Following us?"
"Not following," Leon corrected, his spatial awareness expanding to its maximum range, searching for any presence they might have missed. "If something was following us, I would have detected it. This is different. Someone was waiting outside, saw the orb, and made a deliberate choice to throw it back."
But that means they knew we’d be looking for it. They learned about the navigation system.
The implications were staggering. This wasn’t random interference – it was purposeful, calculated. Someone or something had wanted to send them a message, or perhaps test their reactions, or maybe just wanted to harm them.
"Could it have been the woman from the palace?" Seraphine suggested, though her tone suggested she didn’t really believe it. "She seemed powerful enough, mysterious enough..."
Leon shook his head. "She had no reason to follow us here. And this doesn’t feel like her style. She was direct and confrontational in her own way. This is... subtler."
More concerning, he added silently.
They stood in the clearing, both processing the disturbing discovery. The mist swirled around them with its usual hypnotic patterns. Still, now every movement seemed potentially significant, every shadow possibly hiding an observer.
"We should leave," Seraphine said finally. "Now. Before whatever did this decides to do something more direct."
I wish they would come out. Leon was itching to test his strength; whoever did this, whether as a joke or a test or whatever, he was not going to show mercy, and he was sure it was done by someone capable.
But some questions still remained in his mind. Why throw it back? If something wanted to trap us here, it could have destroyed the orb or taken it. If it tried to attack us, this would have been the perfect ambush point. But all it did was... return our navigation tool, which could be harmful, but it was not the best choice.
It was almost polite, in a deeply unsettling way.
Which made a terrifying possibility enter his mind, albeit a nonsensical one, but a chance nonetheless.
"The question is," Leon said, voicing his thoughts, "can we trust that the border is where we think it is? What if the mist itself had moved? So what else might have changed?"
Seraphine’s face paled further at the implication. What if the mist itself has moved? What if we’re deeper inside than we think?
But they had no choice. They couldn’t stay in the mist indefinitely, and the orbs were still their only navigation method. Leon pocketed the blue sphere, its glow visible through the fabric of his clothes.
"We go back the way we came," he decided. "Stay alert. If something’s playing games with us, I want to be ready for whatever comes next."
They began walking, retracing their original path. But every step felt different now to Seraphine; however, with his ultra-sharp memory, he corrected her. His mind was charged with the knowledge that something out there was aware of them, had touched their belongings.
Who are you? Leon thought, addressing the unknown presence that had moved the orb. What do you want? And why announce yourself in such a cryptic way?
The mist offered no answers, only its eternal white silence and the rustling of twisted trees that suddenly seemed far too much like laughter.