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Online: Eiodolon Realms – Child of Ruin-Chapter 29 --28 The Moon, The Alchemist, and the Whisper Between Fates
Lyra stumbled over a root and cursed under her breath. Her boots were caked in dried mud, and a thin cut throbbed on her cheek from some moss-covered spike trap she’d barely dodged earlier.
She had just completed the first two parts of the three parts of the special quest that was to be completed to meet the goddess of moon.
"Gods above," she muttered. "Can these quests not have, like, a checkpoint and some fast travel options?"
The last trial had taken nearly an hour. An endless maze of illusions and whispers from her past, dragging up every insecurity she thought she’d buried. Her knees still felt weak from it. 𝓯𝓻𝓮𝙚𝙬𝓮𝙗𝒏𝙤𝒗𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝒐𝓶
"How the hell did this game even figure out so many of my insecurities? Is it cause the VR headset is connected to my brain or something."
Lyra was very frustrated with all this. The fact that her dreams were plagued by that masked man was already a problem. Granted, she didn’t hate those dreams entirely but now her insecurities were maybe in the hand of the developers or moderators of her game, this was something she couldn’t accept.
"Once I am done with this quest, I will sue those bastards." She exclaimed in anger.
Now she stood in a moonlit clearing surrounded by fallen columns and decayed marble statues. The sky above was eerily clear, stars shimmering like someone had sprinkled glitter across an black shhet of paper. The moon loomed larger than usual—watchful, expectant.
"Alright," Lyra sighed, pushing a strand of white-blonde hair behind her ear. "Just one more. You got this. You’re smart, you’re powerful, and you’re definitely not simping for some faceless guy in your dreams."
...
Okay, maybe that last part was debatable.
Her dream-prince or whatever the hell he was had become a nightly visitor. Always faceless. Always just out of reach. And for some reason, her heart always ached when she woke up, like she’d lost something she never had.
An ancient voice echoed through the air, interrupting her spiral.
"You have completed the Trial of Sight and the Trial of Truth. Only one remains."
Text appeared before her eyes:
[Divine Quest: "Echoes Beneath the Moon" — Phase Two Complete]
Progress: 2/3 Completed.
Final Phase: "Face the Self That Was Forgotten."
"Wait, that’s it? No more clues? And that quest name doesn’t exactly help me gain confidence."
She rubbed her temples and sat down heavily on a smooth stone slab, exhaling. Her body ached, but her thoughts spun faster than her heart could keep up with. Two phases down. One more to go before she could finally meet the Moon Goddess. Supposedly. Assuming all of this wasn’t some elaborate fever dream cooked up by the game devs.
But no. It felt real. Too real.
When she closed her eyes, she could still feel the moment her "shadow-self" had stepped forward in the last trial. That version of her had been bitter, scared, uncertain.
"You were never meant to lead. You just followed. A vessel."
Lyra shivered.
But she had stood her ground. She had spoken from her heart. And somehow, that had been enough to shatter the illusion.
Still... she felt hollow now. Not in a bad way. More like...
Like something inside her had cracked open. Something that had been sealed for a long time.
She looked at her reflection in a shard of broken statue. Her violet eyes glowed faintly under the moonlight.
"I’m not just a side character in someone else’s story, I am Lyra Moonveil and I will write my own story." she whispered.
She didn’t know who the boy in her dreams was. She didn’t even know if he was real. But something in her gut told her the moment she completed the final phase of this quest...
Everything would change.
.............
"I swear, if this cave has another slime monster in it, I’m uninstalling the game," Alex muttered, stepping over a collapsed log.
Rai didn’t even slow down. "You said that last time. And the time before that."
"Yeah, and I meant it both times."
The two of them made their way down a narrow ravine west of Velondar, led by a half-burned map Rai had found while decoding one of the ruins. He had made it look as if it were a pure coincidence to Alex, but it was thanks to his previous life that he knew where to look for the map. He wanted a head start before the other players came swarming into the city, and it became hard to earn money.
"Besides," Rai added, glancing back, "this one isn’t just some random dungeon. It’s a sealed alchemist vault. Ancient stuff. Supposedly the guy who owned it tried to make a philosopher’s stone."
"And probably exploded."
"More or less."
The entrance was nestled behind a rock outcropping, hidden by a wall of vines. The moment Rai brushed them aside, the air shifted—cooler, sharper. The stone arch beneath was inscribed with runes glowing faintly green.
Alex blinked. "Okay. That... is kind of cool."
Rai smirked. "Told you."
He pressed his palm against the center glyph. It pulsed.
[You have fulfilled the conditions. Vault Access: Initiating.]
The earth trembled, and a set of stairs revealed itself beneath the stone. Dim green-blue light spilled out like mist.
Alex hesitated. "Is this one of those cursed vaults where stepping inside makes you age backwards or forget your name or something?"
Rai turned to him, more serious this time. "Honestly? Could be. But the loot might be worth it. Alchemy gear, rare herbs, maybe even a class seed."
"Wait, what’s a class seed?"
"Like a special item. It unlocks new class paths for players stuck between builds. I thought of you."
There wasn’t really a class seed here, but he had to make it look as if he didn’t know everything which was gonna happen inside.
Alex looked at him, surprised. "You... remembered I was struggling with that?"
"Dude, of course I did. You think I’m just dragging you around for comic relief?"
"Kinda, yeah."
Rai grinned, but there was warmth behind it. He might have lied now but he had made an elobarate plan to get Alex something special later on. "Nah. You’re important to me, Alex. And to this guild I plan on building. You’re not a placeholder. You’re a pillar."
Alex looked away, swallowing. "Damn it. Now I can’t make fun of you for like five minutes."
"I’ll survive."
They descended into the vault.
Rai lit a torch as they entered. The walls were covered in murals of constellations, strange diagrams, and faded equations.
"This is... beautiful," Alex whispered.
Rai nodded. "And probably trapped to hell. Keep your eyes open."
Somewhere deep inside, he felt the pulse of fate again—like he was getting closer to something big.
And somewhere far above, in the moonlit ruins, Lyra sat alone, clutching her knees, wondering if the stranger in her dreams had any idea how close they were to meeting again.







