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Chapter 25 - The invitation

The alley

falls silent, steam rising from the soaked cobblestones. Grinmaker's body lies

motionless at the far end, partially buried under debris and glowing water. Wei

breathes heavily, as he steps forward to confirm the kill, he hears clapping.

 

Slow.

Mocking.

 

From the

shadows, a group of masked figures emerge—rogues cloaked in black and gold,

with daggers at their sides and glowing runes on their wrists.

 

"You

really did it," one of them says with a grin. "You took down the

Shrouded Hollow's champion. Now you've got the whole city's attention."

 

Wei narrows

his eyes. "I didn't come here to entertain."

 

Another

figure steps forward, holding an ornate scroll in his hand.

 

"But

you did entertain… the Goddess herself."

 

The air

grows colder. Above them, a rune circle ignites in the sky, shimmering in

divine blue light.

 

"You've

triggered something much bigger than this city, Wei," the figure

continues. "The goddess has seen your strength—and now she wants to test

your soul."

 

Wei lowered

his blade slightly, his breathing steady, his eyes locked on the masked figure

with the scroll.

 

"What kind

of test are we talking about?" he asked cautiously.

 

The masked

figure stepped closer, handing the scroll to Wei without a fight. "This isn't a

challenge," he said. "It's an invitation."

 

Wei

unrolled the scroll. Elegant golden ink shimmered on ancient parchment. The

writing pulsed faintly as if alive:

 

 

---

 

To the

warrior who commands the torrent and bears the soul of balance—

 

The Goddess

has taken notice.

 

A place

awaits you at the Obsidian Summit.

 

Accept, and

rise beyond mortal bounds.

Refuse, and

remain hunted by gods and kings alike.

 

—The Voice

of the Veil

 

 

---

 

Wei

narrowed his eyes. "And if I don't go?"

 

The masked

figure smiled beneath his hood. "Then everything you saw here—Lenor, the

Shrouded Hollow, even your path back to the human world—will remain out of

reach. You'll keep running. Keep killing. Keep surviving."

 

"But if I

accept?"

 

"You gain

an audience with the Goddess herself… and possibly the power to change your

fate."

 

Wei looked

around. Grinmaker's body twitched once—then dissolved into black ash, swept

away by wind like a warning.

 

He clenched

the scroll, then glanced at the sky, where the divine rune still glowed.

"…Tell your

goddess," Wei said, "I'll be there."

The masked

figure bowed. "Then the path shall open at moonrise."

 

 

As the

masked envoy vanished into the shadows, Wei turned his attention back toward

the merchant who had first made the offer—a teleportation scroll in exchange

for Grinmaker's head.

 

The streets

buzzed with tension as Wei approached the crooked stall, where the hooded

merchant awaited, hidden among crates of arcane junk and black-market trinkets.

 

"You held

up your end," the merchant said, glancing toward the smoke rising from Black

Alley. "Grinmaker's gone."

 

Wei folded

his arms. "The scroll?"

 

The

merchant didn't speak—he motioned instead. "Not here. Too many ears."

 

Wei

hesitated, then followed him through a side alley, down rusted steps behind a

ruined smithy.

 

Inside the

smith are lit by cracked lanterns with

strange alchemical flames bolted on the walls.

 

"That

scroll you want? It exists… but not the way you were told. The Veil isn't a

door—it's a prison. The scroll is a key… but the Goddess decides who gets one."

 

Wei's eyes

narrowed. "Then how did you learn this?"

 

"I was once

her servant," the merchant said bitterly. "Until I found what she was hiding.

There are others like me—rebels, exiles. You want freedom? You'll need them."

 

He slid the

Veilstone across the table.

 

Wei picked

it up, feeling its weight. "So I don't need her permission?"

 

"No," the

merchant said. "But you'll need strength, allies… and you'll have to defy a

god."

 

"Defy

a god? Well I am curios, which one do you think is much easier to cut down? Is

it the goddes? Or the guardian at the portal that leads to my world?:

 

The

merchant chuckled darkly, the firelight glinting in his eyes. "Cutting down a

goddess? That blade of yours better be more than sharp—it better be ancient,

cursed, or blessed by something older than the stars. But between the two… the

Guardian at the Portal is flesh and bone. The goddess? She's woven into the

magic of this realm."

 

"So, the

Guardian is the first wall," Wei muttered, more to himself.

 

"Exactly,"

the merchant said. "Slay him, and the portal opens. But do it quickly. The

moment he falls, she'll know. And she will come."

 

Wei

smirked. "Then I'd better make it count."

 

The

merchant leaned closer. "Before you go storming gates—there's someone you need

to meet. An exile. A mage who once served at her side. He knows her magic… and

how to bend it."

 

"Where?"

 

"In the

Deadroot Marsh, beyond the Wailing Pines. He goes by one name now: Ashveil."

 

"Wait,

how would I know that this exile is a trust worthy? Also what is this veilstone

you gave me? Does it carry any magic?

 

The

merchant's eyes narrowed, "Trust is a luxury we can't afford, Wei. But Ashveil…

he chose exile over blind loyalty. That makes him more honest than most."

 

He tapped

the Veilstone gently. A faint hum pulsed from it, responding to his touch.

 

"As for

this—yes, it's magic. Ancient. It's a fragment of the Veil itself. With it,

you'll be able to sense the goddess's influence, pierce illusions, and in time…

resist her commands."

 

Wei turned

the Veilstone in his hand, feeling the low vibration ripple through his fingers

like a heartbeat.

 

The

merchant continued, voice low. "Be warned—it draws attention. You carry it too

long, and the goddess will know. That's why you need Ashveil. He can teach you

how to use it without being found."

 

Wei

smirked. "So… Deadroot Marsh it is."

 

The

merchant nodded grimly. "Follow the path through the Wailing Pines. Stay off

the main road. And if the wind starts whispering your name… run."

 

"Oh, I

almost forgot! I was told the guardian's level is around 9999. I guess I need

to level up like crazy—or gather more allies—before I even think about going

after that guardian, let alone looking for Ashveil."

The

merchant gave a dry chuckle, though there was no humor in it. "Level 9999? Then

you'd need more than just allies—you'd need an army, or a miracle."

 

He leaned

back, crossing his arms. "But you're thinking like a fighter. That guardian was

made to stop brute force. Ashveil… he doesn't fight with muscle. He bends the

rules of this world—twists them. That's why you need him first. He might not

kill the guardian for you, but he'll show you where to strike so you don't have

to die trying."

 

Wei sighed

and glanced at the glowing Veilstone in his hand.

 

"Alright

then… I'll find Ashveil. But if I somehow get strong enough to cleave that

guardian in half before I meet him, I'm not holding back."

 

The

merchant gave a thin smile. "That's the spirit. Just don't forget—the Veil is

watching now. Every step you take… she'll feel it."

 

Wei

tightened his grip on the stone and turned toward the exit of the ruined smithy.

"Let her

watch. I'm done hiding."

Wei tucked the Veilstone into his satchel, tightening the

straps. He stepped outside into the grim light of The Shrouded Hollow. The

city's twisted towers and smoke-filled alleys seemed smaller now, less

threatening—perhaps because something greater loomed ahead.

He headed to the nearest supply quarter, bartering for food,

potions, and a fresh map. The vendor, a hooded woman with reptilian eyes, slid

the map across the table. "No one returns from the Marsh unchanged," she

whispered. "If they return at all."

Wei smirked. "Then I'll just have to make sure I do."

He whistled once. A loud screech echoed from above—and

Garbaru, his loyal bird mount, descended with a flutter of wings and a rough

landing on the cobblestones.

Wei climbed onto Garbaru's back. "Alright, buddy. Let's head

north, past the Wailing Pines."

The wind howled as they rose above the Shrouded Hollow.

Below, the ruined city faded behind them, swallowed by fog.

Hours passed. The forest below thickened. Gnarled trees

clawed at the sky, and the sun dimmed behind stormy clouds. Ahead, the land

changed. Water pooled in strange formations. Fog crept low over the ground.

Deadroot Marsh lay before them—silent, decaying, and alive

with secrets.

Wei exhaled and tightened his grip. "Ashveil… I hope you're

real."

Garbaru began his descent, spiraling toward a narrow

clearing where black roots twisted like veins across the wet soil.

The Marsh had begun to whisper.

Garbaru's talons touched down on the slick, moss-covered

ground. The bird gave a low, uneasy squawk, wings folding in close to its

sides. Thick fog curled around Wei's legs as he dismounted, and a putrid stench

filled the air—a mix of damp earth, rotting foliage, and something older…

fouler.

 

Wei unsheathed his blade, its glowing edge casting a faint

blue shimmer through the mist.

 

"Stay close, Garbaru," he murmured.

 

The Marsh was unnaturally quiet. No birds, no wind. Just the

sound of water dripping… and something faint, like breathing, coming from

everywhere and nowhere.

 

Wei stepped cautiously forward. Gnarled roots coiled along

the path like dead serpents. The deeper he went, the thicker the silence

became—until it was broken.

 

Snap.

 

A twig.

 

Wei spun toward the sound, blade raised—but saw nothing.

 

Then, suddenly, movement. A dark shape slithered between the

trees—low, fast.

 

Another figure rose up from the water behind him, its form

cloaked in vines and mud. Red eyes blinked open in the gloom.

 

Bogstalkers.

 

Wei moved fast, slicing through the first creature just as

it lunged. His blade surged with boiling water, cutting the monster in half

with a hiss of steam. But more were coming. Dozens. Emerging from the shadows,

creeping out from the muck.

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