Almost until midnight, Severus questioned them about everything in the jungle that interested him. So of the information he had previously gathered from the writer was already a little outdated. In six months, certain species of monsters had shifted both their habitats and their habits. It was a surprise, for instance, to learn that the tree monsters, very reminiscent of ents, which he had planned to encounter on the road, had moved south, right up against their nesis, the blood wolves. He had plotted the route specifically to cross their path, because like dryads, the tree spirits that took the form of extraordinary beauties, they were favourites of nature, and that ant the purest magic and a wealth of rare herbs were always found near them. Now, instead, there was a lair of yellow monkeys there, which annoyed him mildly.
One species of turtle that had interested him because of its longevity and regeneration had been wiped out entirely three months ago by an unknown predator. At the site of the slaughter, researchers had found only one large, long track leading to the river that circled the outer part of the jungle. According to their assessnt, it belonged to a huge snake, almost a tre wide and at least fifteen tres long. For this part of the Magical Jungle, that was a genuine monster, capable of tearing through all wildlife without much difficulty.
According to Patricia, there had been several attempts to track the creature, but all of them had failed. It vanished as if into thin air, and after that incident never appeared again, so the search was called off.
Severus disagreed with so of Patricia’s guesses, however. The idea of a gap in the barrier, for instance, was simply impossible in a do this stable and powerful. In his view it was far more likely that so creature had simply been fortunate enough to consu sothing valuable, sothing that boosted its strength enough to wipe out an entire species. But whether it was a snake or not, he could not say for certain until he saw that track with his own eyes.
Still, Patricia gave him plenty of fresh information about the Magical Jungle, and then she adjusted the map slightly and helped refine the route, because Severus had no intention of skipping the ents. Besides exploring the forbidden part, his second goal was gathering ingredients, and thanks to the extraordinary strength of the tree monsters, almost nobody entered their territory. That ant the harvest promised to be very rich.
Patricia tried to talk him out of what she called a suicidal decision. He had saved their lives, and she simply could not bring herself to let their saviour walk to his death. She failed. So the next morning, after wishing him luck, they parted ways. The group headed for the jungle’s exit, and Severus went south, toward the tree monsters. The road was going to be long: thirty-five kilotres to reach them, and then another forty-five to the safe zone.
By his calculations, the whole journey would take a full day, but this ti he planned to use wind magic to speed up and cover the distance in half that. Of course, that ant forgoing a large portion of the herbs along the way. But according to Patricia, who had once visited the place the ents had since left, a month later she had found an enormous quantity of rare ingredients there. Other wizards had been gathering there too, and even in an entire month they had not managed to collect everything, which spoke to the sheer size of the territory.
Over the next two and a half hours, they skirted several territories belonging to different monsters and passed through what could only be called snake paradise, a three-kilotre stretch packed with those slippery reptiles. They could have gone around it, but that would have cost at least another half hour, and Severus did not have the ti. So they went straight through. Thanks to Nagini, whom not a single snake dared approach, they crossed without any real difficulty and even collected a couple of poisonous herbs that were nearly impossible to find elsewhere, because they grew only in places saturated with toxins where even chewing a blade of grass could easily kill you. It was a sort of forbidden territory within the outer part of the Magical Jungle, a place even devoted snake enthusiasts were afraid to enter.
After fifteen minutes, Severus finally dismissed the wind spell and his feet touched the ground. They had reached the ents’ territory: a lush green forest that stood out sharply against the vivid colours of the ordinary jungle. Besides tropical trees, other species grew here too, oak, spruce, elm, elder, and even a weeping willow visible in the distance. The grass was so tall it nearly reached his waist.
"An interesting place indeed." Severus could not suppress a surprised exhale as he smiled at the view. The last ti I saw sothing like this was in the forest of fairies, and even then I nearly lost my life to those little monsters.
"Stop drifting off." Nagini nudged him in the side, though she herself was studying the lush forest with genuine wonder. Compared to the ordinary jungle, it looked especially majestic and alive.
"All right, let us take a closer look." Severus stroked her head and stepped into the ents’ territory. "Nelly, do not touch anything yet," he added, glancing to his right at the house-elf, who was almost invisible through the tall grass.
"Yes, master."
Severus was heading toward the very centre of the forest, because, like other creatures, the tree monsters had a leader. They were only magical trees that had gained consciousness through magic, but they were highly intelligent, understood human speech, and even possessed empathy, which was why they were called favourites of magic. After all, even if you burned down the entire forest, if even a small root remained, an ent could be reborn, though it would lose all its mories.
Finding the leader among them was straightforward, because only the largest tree, the one bearing the most magic, could beco the leader, and it was almost always located right at the centre of the forest.
After a couple of kilotres, Severus erged into a small clearing. At its centre stood a massive tree a little over thirty tres tall, its enormous branches almost completely hiding the sky above the open space.
"Greetings, leader of the ents. I have co with a request: allow to gather herbs, and in return..." Severus waved his hand. The next mont, saplings of various trees began appearing around him, more than three hundred in total, bought from shops in Knockturn Alley when he had first learned of these creatures from Brew. "I will give you all of these saplings."
For a few seconds, perfect silence hung over the clearing, until finally the tree stirred and two glowing green points appeared high on the trunk.
"Three hours." A booming, elderly voice rang out, making Nagini and the house-elf flinch, but Severus kept watching the tree with the sa calm expression.
"Thank you. Then I will not trouble you further." With a slight bow, he turned and left the clearing without any resistance.
After Severus left, roots rushed toward the saplings from all directions, slowly wrapping around the pots, carefully lifting them up, and carrying them away in different directions.
Patting the house-elf on the head and sending her to gather ingredients, Severus walked through the forest at an unhurried pace.
"I thought you would try to take all the herbs by force."
Since when do I look so bloodthirsty to you? That kind of approach is nothing but wasteful, he thought, tapping Nagini on the snout. Severus climbed up into a tree and watched Nelly work. And if I had done that, most of the herbs would have been hidden from us anyway, because ents despise being threatened. It is simpler to bargain with saplings, and apparently I am not the only one who has thought of that. Rember those trees from the Muggle world at the edge of the ents’ territory, and that weeping willow, which could not have appeared in a place like this naturally.
"I see. But how do you know that?"
Well, I overheard it in passing while walking through Knockturn Alley, Severus lied without blinking.
"You could have just said you did not want to answer, or at least co up with sothing more believable," Nagini snorted, resting her head on his shoulder.
Soday I will tell you everything, but not now.
Stroking her head, Severus closed his eyes and leaned against the trunk. He had not breathed air this clean or felt magic this pure in a very long ti, so he decided to rest properly in the calm of it. And if he joined the gathering, he might irritate the ents. He should not be too greedy here, and Nelly gathered like ten people, so he was not worried.
The next three hours passed without him noticing. He had not slept so soundly in a very long ti, all while absorbing the magic around him. Compared to what lay beyond this forest, it felt like a breath of fresh air.
"Severus! Wake up!" At Nagini’s worried voice, Severus snapped his eyes open and looked around with mild surprise at the creatures that had gathered around them.
They were large humanoid trees of different sizes and species, with human facial features, and their eyes glowed with orange light.
"Has the ti already passed?" He looked at them with a trace of embarrassnt. He had not expected to fall so deeply asleep that he would not even sense them closing in. This is the downside of places like this. It is too good here.
"Yes, human," ca the hoarse voice of one of the ents before him.
"I apologise. We will leave the forest right now." Stretching, Severus rose to his feet, then turned to the house-elf who had appeared nearby holding out a small box. "Good girl," he said with a smile, patting her. He took the Undetectable Extension artefact and tossed it into his pouch. "We are leaving your territory." But as he was about to jump down from the branch, a wooden hand appeared in front of him. Surprise flickered across his face, then gave way to a slight frown. "What do you want?"
"The king ordered us to bring you to him," the ent said. At that mont, the tree Severus was standing on also stirred and rose onto its feet. "We will carry you ourselves."
"Why?"
"We do not know."
Pointless trying to get more out of them. "Fine. Lead the way."
The creatures nodded in silence, and the tree beneath Severus started toward the centre of the ents’ territory.
"What if it is a trap?" Nagini asked, worried, and Severus smiled at her.
Do you know their main weakness?
She tilted her head.
Fire.
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