ยฉNovel Buddy
Single for Eternity-Chapter 105: Finally!! Food
Days blurred into one another beneath the ever-fixed sun.
The village remained untouched by timeโeach morning began with the same golden light, each evening failed to fall. ๐ฏ๐ง๐๐๐ฌ๐๐๐ฃ๐ค๐๐ฎ๐ต.๐๐ค๐ข
It was a strange sensation, existing in a place where the sun never shifted, where the breeze carried the same warmth and the flowers never wilted. An eternal day.
Seren, surprisingly, had taken well to it.
After they had arrived, she was quickly swept up by the same boy who had tugged at her arm that first day.
His smile was as warm as sunlight, his tiny fingers always curled around her hand as he led her from place to place: the flower garden, the small hill behind the huts, a creek that barely babbled but sparkled like glass.
The fur coat manโthe so-called "monster" from the muralsโwas already part of the boyโs world.
Tall and bulky, covered in shaggy fur and hunched as though the world weighed heavy on his back, yet his demeanor was nothing like the grotesque figure suggested in the corridor carvings.
He was gentle, awkward at times, quiet and observant, always following the boy with careful steps. His silence wasnโt menacing, it was watchful. Protective.
The boy called him "Big Brother."
Seren grew fond of both of them quickly. She laughed more here than she had when with Einar.
Sometimes sheโd chase the boy around the grass fields, or help him gather bright flowers to give to his "Big Brother," who only nodded and gently ruffled the childโs hair in response.
Einar, however, stood apart. Always a little ways behind, arms crossed or shoved in his pockets, a bitter scowl digging deeper into his face each passing day.
He was starving.
No fruit grew here. No animals wandered near. There was nothing here to eat, the villagers didnโt care they were fed on by the earth.
And yet, Seren thrived.
He watched from under the shade of the massive tree near the village center, eyes narrowed, stomach gnawing itself into knots.
She played, she smiled, and she looked happy. Too happy. As if sheโd forgotten their mission, forgotten that they were trapped in a memory, walking the lines of some ancient story.
Einarโs gaze shifted toward the fur coat man.
He was always there. Watching. Not Serenโno, not with suspicion. But with quiet acceptance. Every time the boy laughed, he smiled faintly.
He never spoke unless prompted, never took more space than he needed. Always in the boyโs periphery. Always there to play his part.
Einar knew a performance when he saw one.
The fur coat man wasnโt the monster. Not really. He was just another echo, like the villagers. A piece of the past, preserved in memory, playing a role. But Seren... she wasnโt acting. Not anymore.
"Sheโs replacing him," Einar muttered under his breath. "Playing his part."
But she didnโt seem to care. Or perhaps she didnโt know. Perhaps the kindness in her chest made her see the boy as more than a ghost. Maybe she saw him as real.
One afternoon, as the boy tucked wildflowers into Serenโs hair and she laughedโtruly laughedโEinar turned his head away.
He couldnโt bear it anymore. The gnawing in his gut, the ache in his chest, it was getting harder and harder to control.
He stood and wandered.
The village didnโt shift. The sun didnโt lower. The air remained still. The villagers continued their routine, and every smile turned to him like beforeโpleasant, empty.
He passed the same flower shop for the fifth time. The same kids ran down the same hill.
He could feel the memory resisting.
This was not a dream meant to be broken. It was a song stuck on repeat, looping through nostalgia and half-buried pain.
When he returned to the tree that eveningโif you could even call it thatโhe found Seren curled under the shade with the boy nestled in her arms, sleeping peacefully.
The fur coat man sat nearby, his arms folded over his knees, watching them silently with those patient, tired eyes.
Einar sat beside them without a word.
The hunger hadnโt lessened. But for the first time, he didnโt feel the need to complain. The boyโs quiet breathing, Serenโs relaxed expression, the stillness of the airโit softened something in him.
Just a little.
Even if this was a lie, even if this was Malthornโs prison or test or illusionโit was peace.
And for now, that would do.
"What was I just thinking?"
The thought thundered through Einarโs head as he jolted upright, breath ragged, chest heaving. Sweat clung to his skin despite the unchanging, temperate light of the realm.
Then another thought struck him, even more jarring than the last.
"Why didnโt I get any system notification?"
No sarcastic remarks. No witty banter. Not even the usual snide quip that accompanied every move he made.
The systemโhis systemโwas silent.
Utterly, unnervingly silent.
His stomach tightened, and not just from hunger.
"This is all fake..." he muttered, realization dawning. "An illusion. But deeper than anything Iโve seen before..."
It wasnโt just a simulationโit was memory, living memory. A memory so potent it formed its own self-contained reality. It was like being inside someone elseโs soul, and worse, being forgotten inside it.
He clenched his fists.
Seren...
She was still within itโwillingly, unknowingly. Still playing the role of "big brother," still smiling for the child, still nestled beneath the treeโs shade. The fur coat man sat not far, motionless as ever, an eternal actor playing his part.
โWhy am I the only one waking up?โ he wondered. It couldnโt be chance.
Then again, Seren... she was raised differently. Molded by a heritage of cold traditions and suffocating expectations.
Perhaps something in this distorted paradise resonated with herโoffered her a fleeting taste of a life she never got to live.
But Einar couldnโt afford to sit and ponder.
They were sinking deeper.
And worseโhe was starving.
He glanced back at the sleeping trio one last time, then turned and sprinted toward the village, wind whipping past his coat as his boots pounded over unmoving grass.
His Symbiote hissed softly beneath his skin, eager, almost eager in a way that unsettled even him.
This time, the village wasnโt as it was before.
Gone were the serene smiles. The peace. The warmth.
Now the air was thick with tension, and the faces that met him were twisted with disgustโlips curled, brows furrowed, hatred simmering beneath every gaze.
Someone spat on the ground as he passed. Another pointed a gnarled finger and shouted, "You donโt belong here!"
A rock whistled past his head and clanged against a nearby post.
"What the hell...?" Einar muttered, stopping in his tracks.
Another voice screamed from the crowd, shrill and venomous. "Your existence makes us sick! Filth like you stains our sacred land! You shouldโve never been born!"
Einarโs eyes narrowed as the hostility boiled over into violence. One of the villagers, eyes bloodshot and frothing at the mouth, lunged at him with a rusted knife raised high.
Instinct took over.
Einar ducked the wild slash, pivoted, and backhanded the man across the jaw.
There was a sickening crunchโa spray of blood. Teeth flew. The man collapsed, spasming, before going completely still.
And in that instant, Einar felt it.
A ripple.
The Symbiote inside him stirred and slithered, awakening with renewed vigor.
Not just from the deathโno. It was feeding.
On the memory.
It drank deep from the slain villagerโs fragmented thoughts, their fear, their identityโtheir place in this corrupted dream.
And as it did, he grew stronger.
The haze lifted from his mind. His limbs steadied. His senses sharpened like honed steel.
His stomach, while not sated, no longer howled in despair.
Then it clicked.
"This isnโt just a memory of events... itโs his perspective."
The villagersโ hatredโit wasnโt arbitrary. It was a reflection of Malthornโs trauma. This entire village was a biased fragmentโhis anger, his pain.
A landscape shaped by the resentful, rotting core of a being consumed by betrayal.
"They mustโve done something to him..." Einar muttered.
The villagers closed inโpitchforks and makeshift weapons now raised, their eyes glowing with violent intent.
He licked his lips, a cruel smile tugging at the edge of his mouth.
A dark thrill spread in his chest.
"So be it."
Three villagers rushed him at once.
They didnโt even reach him.
Slice.
With one swift motion, their heads flew. Their bodies dropped in eerie silence, blood soaking into grass that refused to change hue.
And as their forms began to dissolve into pale particles, the Symbiote feasted againโeach memory adding another pulse to his core.
Einar exhaled, slow and long, as shadows dark and crimson coiled around his arms.
The fear was gone now.
All that remained was clarityโand the knowledge that this was the only way forward.
And so the bloodbath began.
Villagers fell one after another, their faces twisted in rage, then frozen in shock. Einar moved like a wraith, blades of writhing black lashing out in arcs. Screams rose only to die seconds later.
He was methodical.
Efficient.
Cold.
Each kill added to his strength, each fading memory drawing him further out of the illusionโs grip. His Symbiote writhed in ecstasy, gorging itself on the broken psyche of this place.
A thought about Serenโs safety whispered in his mind. But...
All he knew was that he had to finish itโthe biased memory.
And he was willing to drown this entire memory in blood to do it.







