'What is that moon, and is it the one draining my mana?'
'It's known as the Blood Moon, and yes, it is responsible for draining your mana,' the spirit replied.
Atticus's brows furrowed.
'Is that the only thing it drains?'
'Yes. The longer you stay under its rays, the more mana it drains,' the spirit confird.
'Is there a way to stop it from draining my mana?'
The spirit shook his head. 'As long as its rays touch you, you'll be affected.'
Atticus frowned. He was in a forest filled with towering trees, offering ample cover from its rays. Yet, he knew it couldn't be that simple.
'I can't just stay in one place,' he thought, sighing.
Wasting no more ti, his expression fird, his eyes sharpening as he gazed into the depths of the forest. His legs tensed.
The ground cracked beneath him as Atticus shot forward with intense speed.
His legs moved rapidly and silently, traversing the forest as though it were his domain.
Despite his speed, his senses were on high alert. His eyes darted around, scanning for movent, while his other senses extended, feeling for anything unusual.
However, the forest remained eerily quiet.
'There are no beasts?' Atticus wondered. His gaze flickered as he noticed he was approaching a space devoid of trees.
His speed increased, and within seconds, he burst out of the foliage, coming to an abrupt stop.
His sharp, calm eyes scanned his surroundings.
'The ground is different.'
He was still standing on the soft soil of the forest, but in front of him, stretching farther than his eyes could see, was a pure white, smooth surface.
"Not suspicious at all," Atticus muttered under his breath.
The stark contrast between the dark brown soil of the forest and the pristine white ground was glaring. Even the most naive individual would sense sothing was off.
Atticus took a cautious step forward, tapping the white ground lightly with his foot before pulling it back quickly. The motion was almost comical, like testing the temperature of a pool.
'It's hard,' Atticus noted. The ground was exactly as it appeared, unnaturally smooth and rigid. He could tell there was sothing special about it.
But its hardness wasn't his main concern.
"Tell about the ground I just touched," Atticus asked.
The spirit no longer bothered marveling at Atticus's ingenuity and answered quickly.
"This is a Healing Platform. No matter the damage inflicted on it, it will heal itself and return to its original state instantly."
"Are there currently any living things inside it?"
The spirit paused, sensing that Atticus wasn't asking about beasts but about the platform itself. A small chuckle escaped his lips.
"Yes, there are."
"How many species live inside it?"
"One."
"Will the ground itself pose any danger to ?"
The spirit shook his head.
"How do I survive while crossing the platform?"
The spirit let out a faint exhale, impressed by the barrage of questions.
"You walk, run, or fly very cautiously, however you please."
Atticus's gaze narrowed. "How long is the platform?"
"More than a thousand kiloters," the spirit replied.
'Shit. I can't fly over it, then,' Atticus thought, his expression darkening.
With the moon siphoning his mana, Atticus couldn't use the swirling mana to fly over such a long distance. He would be out of mana long before he reached the end.
"Is this platform where the second challenge will take place?" he asked sharply.
"Yes," the spirit confird, sounding sowhat resigned.
At this point, the spirit was ntally exhausted. This challenge was designed to be filled with surprises, but Atticus's sharp instincts and relentless questioning were dismantling every twist before it could fully manifest. Was it even a challenge anymore?
Atticus turned his focus back to the platform and stepped onto it.
'Nothing.'
He noted the lack of response before continuing forward. The spirit's words echoed in his mind.
Cautiously.
And right now, Atticus was beyond cautious. His senses were fully extended, most of his attention centered on the hard, barren platform beneath him.
It was obvious that whatever threat awaited would rise from the ground.
His steps were light, calculated. Each touch of his foot against the unnaturally smooth surface sent subtle vibrations through his body as he searched for any hint of danger.
Ti stretched on. An hour passed. Then another. The silence was oppressive, almost maddening.
Atticus frowned. 'Still nothing?'
He had covered a significant distance, yet no threats had erged. Just as he considered formulating a question for the spirit, it happened.
A faint shift beneath his foot.
No vibration, just the smallest displacent of the ground.
It was barely noticeable, insignificant to most.
But to Atticus, it was everything.
In a split second, his instincts flared. He darted to the side, mana surging through his legs to propel him away.
CRACK!
The ground where his foot had been erupted violently.
A creature shot up, a sleek, black beast as dark as the abyss. Its worm-like body was firm, and its head was a ring of jagged, razor-sharp teeth, a predator designed to pierce, tear, and kill.
Atticus caught only a fleeting glimpse before the creature vanished, diving back into the ground.
There was no ti to process.
The instant his foot touched down in his new position, the earth beneath him shifted again.
Another warning. Another movent.
He leaped again, just as two more creatures burst through the platform, their snapping jaws closing on empty air.
Atticus landed and the pattern repeated. The ground shifted. His mana churned, surging through his legs. He darted left, then right, then forward. Each movent was faster than the last, his speed leaving faint afterimages as the relentless creatures struck.
'They're tracking ,' he realized, his gaze narrowing. Every ti his foot touched the ground, the beasts hod in on him, their strikes targeting where he had been monts earlier.
More erged. Sleek black forms tore through the air, their movents impossibly fast. Three, four, five of them. They struck in a flurry, giving him no ti to rest.
Atticus beca a blur of motion. His mana surged faster, fueling each leap, each twist, each dodge. His heightened senses tracked every subtle shift beneath the surface.
'One mistake and I'm done.'
Between movents, his piercing gaze turned to his spirit.
'Is this the second challenge?'
'Yes. This is the second challenge,' the spirit confird.
Atticus gaze turned cold.
'Tell everything about these beasts,'
Atticus exhaled sharply. His mind worked rapidly, strategizing even as he avoided another snapping jaw. So, this is what the katana has in store for now.
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