Nobody had catalogued the plane they were standing in. That alone should have been a warning sign.
Instead, this human expedition called it an opportunity.
The mana hit them the moment they entered. Dense. Warm. Almost too refined to exist somewhere this structurally unstable, which was the first contradiction, and not the last. It clung to perception itself, sharpening every sense, every spell formulation, every attempt to read the environment. It sat against the skin wrong. A resource-rich plane. Exactly the kind of place you write reports about, assuming you survived long enough to write anything.
That was not a guarantee. A week in, half of them were already gone.
Not from a single catastrophic event. From the plane itself, which seemed determined to reject anything that did not belong. Flowers that didn't exist in any record they carried. Creatures pulled from extinction lists so old the lists had become myths. Things that had no classification at all, that moved through the environment with a comfort that suggested they had been here since before classification was invented. Most of them could kill a wizard in the time it took to recognize what they were looking at.
Several had proven this.
The survivors learned one rule: don't engage with anything you didn't immediately recognize. One of them had touched an ant. It burrowed through his finger, then his arm, then his heart. He was gone in under a minute. Nobody touched anything after that. It made navigation difficult. It kept the casualty count from climbing faster than it already was.
By their best assessment, this was a Tier 5 plane. Possibly beyond it. The kind of place that existed in theoretical discussions and cautionary footnotes, not in expedition reports written by people who had actually been there and come back.
Which made the goblins genuinely difficult to explain.
Not scattered. Not dying. Not scraping by on the margins of a plane that had killed trained wizards without apparent effort. A functioning tribe, moving through the terrain with the easy confidence of creatures who had never once considered that the environment might be trying to kill them, territorial, coordinated, and visibly unimpressed by the arrival of wizards.
The expedition stared at them for a long moment.
Nobody said anything, because nobody had the right words yet.
Then Osa extended her scanning array, and what came back made her frown deepen by degrees.
"They shouldn't be able to survive here," she said.
"No," Nes agreed, in the tone of someone who finds a thing interesting rather than alarming.
"It's not just survival. Their interaction with mana doesn't make sense. They aren't circulating it. They aren't refining it. They aren't even using it the way living things are supposed to. I can't identify what they're doing with it."
He was still watching the tribe when he noticed the creature.
Nes spotted a magic beast extinct for millennia in every plane within human realm moving through the undergrowth at the tribe's flank. Three sightings in the first week. Two of those had cost them someone. His hand was already forming the opening of a barrier array before he decided to.
It walked up to the nearest goblin and stopped.
The goblin reached out without looking and scratched it behind what passed for its ear.
The creature leaned into the contact and stayed there.
Nes held the unfinished array in his hand and did not complete it.
"That thing killed Maren on day four," Sevi said quietly, from somewhere to his left.
Neither of them said anything else for a moment.
"We can't leave here without those goblins," Osa said finally, greed surfacing plainly in her eyes.
Nobody disagreed.
That was the mistake.
...
The expedition had not built their plan around what the goblins actually were. They had built it around what goblins were supposed to be, primitive, disorganized, manageable. The difference between those two things cost them before the first binding array finished deploying.
The first projectile hit the forward barrier.
"Hm," said Nes, watching the mana field ripple.
Then the second. And the third. Crude weapons, but the force behind them felt wrong, certain in a way that primitive attacks usually weren't, as if the plane itself had an opinion about the direction they were swinging.
Then the goblins came.
Not scattered. Not panicked. They came in a coordinated rush that the expedition had no framework for, because nothing in any goblin behavioral record suggested coordination at this speed, this complexity, this clear sense of who was going where and what they were supposed to do when they got there. Two came low and fast at Osa's legs before she'd finished raising her mana barrier. She brought it up in time to catch the first. The second got inside it.
The crude knife took her leg at the knee. A piece of shaped rock that had no business cutting anything harder than wood, and it went through her mana-reinforced gear like the gear wasn't there. She hit the ground and the goblin was already on her. The same blade found her stomach and pulled upward, navel to throat, slow and certain. Osa stopped moving.
Something moved in Nes's peripheral vision, the magic beast from the undergrowth, and then two more he hadn't catalogued, drawn in from the trees as if the fight had been a signal they were waiting for. They didn't move toward the goblins. They understood, apparently, which side they were on.
One of the wizard caught the first beast with a full suppression field. It absorbed it, shook once, and kept coming. It took him by the shoulder, bit down, and shook him until his spine gave.
The battle lasted longer than it should have. Every formation they found, the goblins or the beasts found the edge of it. Mana suppression fields that should have ended it met nothing but the goblins pushing through them with the specific certainty of creatures who had decided the fields were not a real obstacle. Two more went down in the middle of it. Another at the end, when they thought it was nearly over.
Just not the way they'd planned.
The beasts fell first, one by one, under sustained fire from the survivors who had stopped underestimating what they were dealing with. Some of the goblins fell with them, the count was difficult in the chaos. The rest were subdued the hard way, binding arrays deployed in overlapping sequences, spatial restraints locking onto movement vectors before the goblins could find the edges of those too.
One by one, they were contained.
The survivors stood in the sudden quiet and looked at what was left.
Nobody spoke for a moment.
The nearest restrained goblin growled and snapped against its bindings, clicks rising sharp and fast from the back of its throat. The sounds carried no structured language.
The meaning arrived anyway.
Release us, demons.
Nes's frown was slight. He stood with it a moment longer than the situation required, feeling the weight of words that hadn't traveled through air to reach him.
He did not respond. The goblins had not expected him to.
The restrained subjects were transferred into spatial stasis containment. Nes pressed the goblins one by one into the ring on his finger, locked and preserved inside a pocket of space no larger than a thumbnail from the outside. Removed from the plane without further disturbance.
At first, nothing changed.
Then the environment noticed the absence.
Mana flow, previously dense and self-regulating, began losing coherence in the places the goblins had been. Predators spawned where none had existed. Structural consistency degraded in patterns that followed absence rather than presence. The plane, apparently, had been relying on something the expedition had just taken.
Nes logged it as delayed environmental reaction and continued.
That turned out to be a mistake.
The plane corrected. Not through awareness, not through retaliation. Through adjustment, quiet and total, the way a body closes around a wound. Zones of stability began collapsing inward. The expedition's spatial anchors started failing one after another, signals that simply did not return.
Only Nes made it out.
He ran, not through space, but through shifting layers of reality that refused to stay in place long enough to form a path. Around him, colleagues vanished mid-transit, their exits simply ignored by whatever the plane was becoming. Something moved between the gaps. He didn't look long enough to understand what it was, and decided to keep it that way.
His last anchor stabilized just enough.
Reality snapped inward.
He emerged hard into a spatial gate, one knee down, breathing. The first thing he did was check his mana reader.
The display flickered. Distorted. Filled with cascading error states, every classification layer failing at once, the instrument trying to describe something it had no language for.
"What is that place," he said, to no one in particular.
The reader degraded further, then the surface cracked apart entirely, magic arrays going dark in sequence, the whole instrument simply giving up.
At the same moment, the spatial ring on his finger grew hot. Unnaturally, wrongly hot, as if something stored inside it had reacted to a reality it was never designed to touch.
He looked back.
The gate had already sealed.
He stayed there a moment, catching his breath, ring cooling slowly on his finger. He was already composing the report in his head. Then he paused.
The wording mattered. The details mattered. Not everything could go into the report. Not yet. Some discoveries did not become research material the moment they were found. Some things became targets the moment people learned they existed.
The ring held more than just the goblins. Soil samples, plant cuttings from flowers that had no business existing, a handful of other specimens he hadn't had time to properly catalogue. The real haul had gone with the others. What remained was enough.
He looked at the ring for a moment.
All of them were dead for that.
He did not understand, yet, that he had not brought back experimental subjects.
He had brought back a seed.
Something that would not stay contained. Something that had already begun.
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