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Luhon Tunnels

With heavy hearts and a fierce glint in their eyes, Anna and Iris plunged into the gaping maw of the Luhon tunnels. Queen Ant's words echoed in their ears, a chilling litany of razor-sharp fangs, venomous claws, and the suffocating grip of Maot's poisonous gas. Yet, the image of Jack, his normally vibrant life force flickering like a dying candle, fueled their determination.

The air grew thick and stagnant as they descended, the oppressive atmosphere clinging to them like a shroud. Each shallow breath scraped at their throats, a constant reminder of the ever-present danger. The stench of the gas, a sickly sweet perfume laced with a metallic tang, burned their nostrils. Anna, fighting back a rising wave of nausea, secured the makeshift mask – a crude contraption Queen Ant had fashioned from scavenged mouth guards and salvaged filters. It offered scant protection, yet the gesture spoke volumes. Queen Ant, despite her own trials, had prioritized their well-being, a silent promise of support in the face of overwhelming peril.

Guided by whispers and clicks, they followed the labyrinthine network of tunnels carved by generations of ants. Queen Ant, despite her diminutive stature, moved with surprising agility, her antennae twitching as she navigated the treacherous paths. Her knowledge of the underground world was their salvation. She steered them clear of crumbling sections prone to cave-ins, pointed out hidden tripwires that could ensnare the unwary, and identified the faintest tremors that signaled the approach of monstrous rollıphs. Every narrow passage squeezed past, every treacherous drop they scaled, bought them precious time in their desperate race against the clock.

Days bled into one another, measured only by the flicker of bioluminescent fungi clinging to the tunnel walls. Finally, after what felt like an agonizing eternity spent cramped on the rickety Drezin, a grinding halt marked their arrival. Relief turned to dread as they disembarked. The air thrummed with a sinister energy, a thick, viridian fog swirling menacingly before them. The gas here was different, denser, more potent – a tangible manifestation of Maot's malevolent influence.

Abandoning the relative safety of the Drezin, they knew their only hope lay in stealth. Every muscle in their bodies tensed, senses strained to the limit. The silence was broken only by the rasp of their own breathing and the faint creak of their boots on the damp earthen floor. The once familiar tunnels, etched in their memory from countless explorations with Jack, were now grotesquely warped by the toxic fumes. Fungi bloomed in unnatural hues, their luminescence casting grotesque shadows that danced on the uneven walls. The air itself seemed to writhe, a living entity humming with a malign hunger. Monstrous shapes shifted within the thick fog, their guttural growls echoing off the cavern walls, sending shivers down their spines. Terror threatened to consume them, but the memory of Jack's smile, the warmth of his friendship, spurred them forward. Every fiber of their being screamed at them to turn back, yet they pressed on, their desperate courage their only shield against the encroaching darkness.