The Eccentric Entomologist is Now a Queen's Consort

Chapter 310 City of Whispering Mist



Chapter 310 City of Whispering Mist

The mist curled around the edges of the carriage window, clinging like a restless specter to the glass as Mikhailis leaned back, his arms folded behind his head. He had seen plenty of cities in his lifetime, but Luthadel—the border city of the Kingdom of Mist, Serewyn—was something else entirely.

Unlike the sprawling capitals of other kingdoms, where towering castles and marble halls stood as testaments to power, Luthadel seemed to breathe with an eerie, arcane life of its own. The skyline was a mesmerizing blend of towering obsidian spires, their surfaces etched with bioluminescent runes that pulsed like the slow heartbeat of the city itself. It was as if the very bones of the land had been carved into these monolithic structures, imbued with ancient magic that refused to be forgotten.

Bridges arched between the spires, some appearing solid, others woven from thin strands of glowing mist, shifting and reforming with every step taken upon them. Suspended platforms, held aloft by an unseen force, floated between these structures, their occupants moving with a practiced ease that spoke of generations spent navigating the city's peculiar architecture. The entire place felt like a relic of another age, one where magic and machinery were woven seamlessly together into something greater than either alone.

As the carriage descended from the elevated tracks into the heart of the city, the streets became clearer—or at least, as clear as they could be with the ever-present mist swirling through the air. It slithered through the cobbled roads like a living entity, wrapping around ankles, curling up the sides of buildings before vanishing as if startled. There was something almost sentient about it, a quiet, whispering presence that never fully dissipated.

Mikhailis tilted his head as he observed the people moving through the streets, their silhouettes hazy within the shifting fog. Unlike the bright, boisterous fashion of most city folk, the citizens of Luthadel dressed in muted, elegant layers—long hooded cloaks with silver-thread embroidery woven into intricate patterns, repelling moisture from the mist. Their faces were pale, almost ghostly, with luminous eyes that gleamed faintly in the dim light. Generations of exposure to the mist had altered them, though whether through natural adaptation or something far more deliberate, Mikhailis couldn't say.

He caught sight of a pair of merchants engaged in a silent negotiation, their hands moving in precise, fluid gestures that conveyed meaning far more efficiently than words. A language of secrecy, born from centuries of living in a city where the mist carried whispers to the wrong ears.

"Interesting," he murmured.

Dark polished stone paved the roads, gleaming under the soft glow of enchanted street lamps that hovered in the air, their glow shifting as people passed beneath them. They were designed not just for illumination but for visibility—an essential necessity in a place where the mist obscured more than just the roads.

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The deeper they went into the city, the more the cultural divide became apparent. In the upper districts, where the mist thinned due to arcane barriers, luxurious estates loomed behind towering iron fences, their gates engraved with sigils of protection. Through the carriage windows, Mikhailis glimpsed grand courtyards where finely dressed nobles lounged beneath enchanted heaters, sipping on expensive mist-infused elixirs.

But the further they traveled downward, the worse it became. The lower districts were shrouded in a thicker haze, where buildings leaned at uneasy angles and narrow alleyways twisted like veins through the underbelly of the city. Here, the mist was not just a presence but a force of oppression, a smothering weight that hung heavy in the air. The scent of damp stone and stagnant water filled the carriage as they passed through these streets, where beggars huddled beneath makeshift shelters, their hollow eyes peering out from beneath ragged hoods.

Mikhailis's gaze flickered to the market stalls set up along the dimly lit streets. Unlike the refined trading posts of the upper district, these merchants sold their wares in hushed voices, constantly glancing over their shoulders. Goods were exchanged through concealed slits in wooden counters, payments made in coded phrases rather than open coin.

The food crisis was palpable. Even in a city as prosperous as Luthadel, hunger had found its way into the cracks of society. The farmlands surrounding Serewyn had long been tainted by the corrupted mist, rendering traditional agriculture impossible. The nobles imported delicacies from beyond the kingdom's borders, but the lower districts had no such luxury.

Mikhailis's sharp eyes caught sight of a black-market stall tucked between two shadowed alleyways. A merchant clad in a heavy cloak whispered hurried negotiations with a desperate-looking buyer. The goods in question? A single loaf of bread and a handful of dried fruit. The price exchanged was not in coin, but in something far more valuable—an alchemically treated ration, a rare commodity that could keep someone from starving for weeks at the cost of long-term health.

"Looks like they've turned hunger into a business," he mused, his fingers drumming idly against his knee.

As the carriage continued its slow descent into the mist-choked lower streets, the atmosphere grew heavier, the silence thickening like a tangible force. Here, even the buildings leaned inward, their windows shuttered, their doors reinforced. The scent of damp stone and aged parchment lingered, mingling with the faint metallic tang of alchemical residue.

A beggar crouched near the entrance of a dimly lit passageway, his skeletal fingers clutching a bowl of what could barely be called food—a ration of alchemically treated sustenance, designed to keep starvation at bay, though it provided little else. His eyes, faintly luminous like the rest of the city's denizens, flickered toward Mikhailis' carriage for the briefest of moments before shifting away, as if acknowledging an unspoken rule to avoid direct contact with outsiders.

Lira remained impassive as she took in the sight. "Controlled suffering."

Mikhailis tilted his head. "You disapprove?"

"Merely an observation." She gestured subtly toward a small alcove where a group of figures exchanged whispered words over a crate of foodstuffs. Their posture alone suggested the nature of the transaction—illegal, desperate, necessary. "The city thrives on scarcity. It's deliberate. A method to ensure compliance, to keep the people in line."

Mikhailis hummed thoughtfully. He had seen similar methods employed in other regions—starvation used as a leash, uncertainty wielded as a weapon. But here, in Luthadel, it wasn't just policy. It was woven into the very fabric of the city.

A pair of enforcers clad in deep obsidian armor passed by, their faces obscured beneath fog-masked helms. They carried no visible weapons, yet the presence they exuded was enough to keep the citizens in check. The crowd instinctively parted as they approached, conversations ceasing, gazes lowering. The enforcers moved without hurry, without aggression. They didn't need to.

Control had already been established long before their presence was required.

Mikhailis turned his attention back to the upper districts, where the mist grew thinner, where the nobles lived in relative comfort, untouched by the quiet desperation of the lower levels. Gilded balconies overlooked the streets below, where elegantly dressed figures dined on imported delicacies, their laughter barely audible through the veiled air.

A stark contrast.

"Nothing like a good dose of inequality to keep a city running," he mused.

Lira gave him a sidelong glance. "It's well-maintained, at least."

"Oh, absolutely. No city-wide riots, no open rebellion." He gestured vaguely toward the market, where a black-market dealer discreetly handed off a parcel to a waiting buyer. "Just enough suffering to remind people of their place, but not enough to make them rise up."

Lira exhaled softly, leaning back against the seat. "And yet, you look entertained."

Mikhailis chuckled, stretching his arms behind his head. "That's because it's fascinating. A city that thrives on controlled mystery, where hidden passageways and underground markets are more common than open plazas. Every gesture holds meaning, every silence is an answer in itself." He let his gaze drift toward the shadowed alleyways, where figures moved unseen, where deals were made in the quiet spaces between words. "And outsiders? They're watched."

He could feel it already—the weight of unseen gazes lingering in the mist.


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