The memory comes back quieter this time
Not the city, not the cemetery80Please respect copyright.PENANAbGgiPdMM4o
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just the two of them, seated on the worn stone steps behind a shrine that no one maintained anymore. The lantern above them had long since gone dark, but neither of them bothered to relight it. The city’s distant glow was enough
Eon sat with his elbows on his knees, staring out at nothing in particular. The other man lay back against the steps, one arm folded behind his head, as if the cracked stone were softer than any bed
They had already fought that day. Hard enough that Eon’s mind still felt frayed at the edges, The faint aftertaste of mana burn lingered at the back of his throat, sharp and metallic. Neither of them spoke of it. They never did
After a while, Eon broke the silence
“You don’t have a name, do you?”
The man beside him gave a faint hum, not quite an answer
“That’s inconvenient,” Eon continued. “I can’t keep calling you ‘hermit.’”
A pause. Then, without opening his eyes, the man said, “You already do.”
“That’s different.”
“It isn’t.”
Eon clicked his tongue, but there was no real irritation in it. Just habit. Familiarity. The kind that forms when words stop needing to carry weight
They fell quiet again
A stray breeze passed through the narrow alley, carrying with it the faint scent of incense and rain that hadn’t fallen yet. Eon shifted slightly, wincing as his ribs protested. He didn’t hide it
The man beside him noticed anyway
“You’re favoring your left,” he said
“So what.”
“You dropped your guard.”
“I didn’t.”
A small pause
“…You always say that.”
Eon exhaled, slower this time. Not quite a sigh. Not quite surrender
“…You hit harder than yesterday.”
“That’s because you’re slower than yesterday.”
That earned a short, dry laugh from Eon. It hurt. He didn’t stop
For a while, that was enough
Then, quieter, almost lost between breaths...
“Stay.”
It wasn’t a command. It wasn’t even a request, not in the usual sense. Just a word, spoken without weight, as if it didn’t matter.
But it did.
The man opened his eyes then, turning his head just enough to look at Eon. There was something unreadable in his gaze, not distance, not indifference. Something steadier than both.
“I am staying.”
“Not like that,” Eon muttered.
Silence settled between them again. Thicker this time.
Eon didn’t look at him when he spoke next.
“One day you’re just… gone,” he said. “That’s how people like you work, right? No warnings. No goodbyes.”
The man considered that.
“People like me?”
“Don’t pretend you don’t know what I mean.”
Another pause.
Then, softer than before, the man said, “You’ll leave first.”
Eon frowned, finally turning toward him. “What?”
“You always do.”
“That doesn’t—” He stopped, jaw tightening. “You don’t know that.”
The man didn’t argue. Didn’t press.
He just shifted slightly, reaching and tapped Eon’s shoulder once. Firm. Grounding.
“I’ll still be here,” he said.
It wasn’t reassurance. It wasn’t comfort.
It sounded more like a fact.
Eon stared at him for a long moment, as if trying to decide whether to believe it. As if it mattered whether it was true.
Then he looked away again.
“…Idiot,” he muttered.
But he didn’t move.
And neither did the other man.
They stayed there until the city’s distant noise softened into something almost peaceful. Until the dark stopped feeling empty. Until the silence between them settled into something familiar something that didn’t need to be filled.
No vows. No promises.
Just two people who, for that moment, chose not to leave.
And in a world that no longer exists, that was enough.
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Several days passed.
Eon’s routine settled into something quieter, more deliberate. The urgency that once drove him into the fields had faded. There was no reason to chase it anymore. The slimes, the rabbits, even the wolves—they no longer offered anything. No growth. No return. Just repetition without purpose.
So he stopped.
Mornings were spent within Haven’s Reach. Not for rewards, not for efficiency, but for presence. He helped Martha arrange her stall before the market opened, adjusting displays, carrying baskets, making small, simple decisions that slowly became instinct. He moved crates for Herman, the weight familiar now, his body responding without strain. The baker no longer needed to instruct him step by step; Eon worked beside him, correcting his own mistakes before they formed.
There was no system notification for any of it.
Yet it mattered.
Afternoons belonged to the library.
It was still as neglected as ever. Dust clung to the shelves, pages yellowed with age, bindings cracked from disuse. Most players ignored it. There were no skill books here, no combat advantages, no hidden guides that would push a build forward.
But there was Luna.
She was difficult to miss.
Pale skin. Long black hair that fell to her waist. A presence that looked quiet at a distance, almost fragile... until she spoke. Then the illusion shattered. Her voice was sharp, impatient, quick to correct, quicker to dismiss anything she deemed foolish.
She carried a large, worn book with her at all times. Its cover was faded beyond recognition, its symbols nearly erased. She treated it with a kind of careless familiarity, yet never let it leave her side.
Eon learned quickly that asking the wrong question would earn him a blunt answer.
“History isn’t useful if you only read it for advantage,” she had snapped once, slamming a book shut in front of him. “If that’s what you want, go back to the fields and punch something.”
He kept coming back anyway.
Over time, the exchanges changed. Less resistance. More tolerance. She began to answer without irritation. Occasionally, she would even elaborate, drifting into longer explanations about kingdoms long gone, conflicts barely remembered, and systems within the world that were never written as mechanics, yet still existed beneath everything.
“Did you know,” Luna said one afternoon, her tone unusually measured, “that the pinnacle of magic was the forming of what the Old Magi called a ‘Circle’?”
She did not look at him, her fingers tracing the worn edges of the book she carried.
“A constant loop of magic. Stable. Complete. Some formed halos above them. Others shaped circles to guard the heart. Some wrapped them around parts of the body to protect, to enhance.”
Her grip on the book tightened slightly.
“The arm was especially important for casting.” She paused, then added, quieter, “But the mages of today seem to think otherwise. Or perhaps… the method was simply lost.”
Silence followed.
Eon listened.
Not because it granted him power.
But because it gave the world weight.
And then there was night.
By the time the sun dipped below the horizon, Haven’s Reach would shift. The quiet of the evening carried a different kind of anticipation now. Word had spread.
The sparring matches.
Eon and Boros.
At first, it had been nothing. A simple condition for a letter. A test, personal and contained.
Now it was something else.
People gathered.
Not in large numbers, but enough. A mix of players and natives, standing at the edges of the open space near the forge. Some watched in silence. Others spoke in low tones, placing quiet bets, speculating on how long Eon would last this time.
It had become a routine.
And Eon had not won once.
Each fight ended the same way.
Defeat.
Complete. Unavoidable. Absolute.
Boros did not hold back. He fought with the same efficiency every time, his movements grounded in experience that Eon could not yet replicate. There were no wasted motions, no unnecessary flourishes. Every strike carried intent. Every step controlled space.
Eon learned.
Slowly.
Painfully.
The first night, he could barely react. The second, he began to see the openings but was too late to use them. By the third, he could anticipate certain movements, but his body lagged behind his understanding.
It was not like fighting beasts.
Animals followed patterns.
Boros adapted.
That was the difference.
“You hesitate,” Boros said after one match, resting an axe over his shoulder as Eon struggled to stand. “Not in your body. In your decision.”
Eon said nothing.
“You think too much,” Boros continued. “You look for the correct move. There isn’t one. There is only the move you commit to.”
Another night.
Another loss.
“You still fight like a mage.”
The words stayed with him.
Eon understood what he meant.
Distance. Timing. Calculation. In Arcane Odyssey, that had been strength. Control from afar. Layered spells. Contingencies built into every action.
Here, with only his fists, that same mindset became hesitation.
A fraction of a second too slow.
A step too careful.
Enough for Boros to break through every time.
Still, he returned.
Every night.
Bruised. Exhausted. Learning.
The crowd remained.
Elara was almost always there, watching with open interest, occasionally offering commentary to those nearby. Martha would sometimes wince at the heavier hits but never looked away. Herman stood with arms crossed, silent, observing with the same steady focus he gave everything else.
And Boros waited.
Always the same.
Axes ready. Expression unchanged.
“Same time,” he would say.
And Eon would nod.
Days passed like this.
A cycle.
Morning integration. Afternoon understanding. Nighttime defeat.
No stat increases.
No system rewards.
No measurable progress.
And yet—
Something was changing.
Not in numbers.
In form.
Eon could feel it in the way he moved before the fight even began. In the way his stance adjusted without conscious thought. In the way his breathing settled faster after impact.
It was subtle.
But it was real.
He still lost.
But the gap was no longer infinite.
And Boros had not stopped him.
Not once.
The letter remained just out of reach.
Which meant the test was still ongoing.
And Eon, for the first time since abandoning the fields, felt something familiar return.
Not the rush of growth.
But the weight of it.
Slow.
Earned.
Unavoidable.
Eon logged out.
The transition was abrupt, as always. One moment, the dim glow of Haven’s Reach under torchlight. The next, the quiet stillness of his room, the faint hum of his computer filling the space where voices once lingered.
He did not move immediately.
Then, out of habit more than intention, he leaned forward and woke the screen.
The forum.
Illusion Tree’s community hub loaded slowly, threads stacking over one another in an endless stream of speculation, guides, arguments, and fragments of discovery. Most of it was noise. Builds optimized for efficiency. Farming routes refined to the minute. Debates over drop rates and hidden mechanics.
Eon skimmed past them.
His search bar remained empty for a few seconds.
Then he typed:
“Dusk of Majesty”
The results were as expected… sparse.
A few threads appeared, most of them old. Titles that suggested speculation rather than knowledge. He opened the first.
A discussion thread. Months outdated.
“Is Dusk of Majesty even a real event?”80Please respect copyright.PENANAjwTWaxHDhR
“Probably just background lore. No quest triggers found.”80Please respect copyright.PENANAUqRkbJrph7
“Someone said it’s tied to NPC dialogue in early zones, but nothing confirmed.”
Eon scrolled.
Another thread.
This one longer, but no more conclusive.
Players compiling fragments. Mentions from different regions. Inconsistent details. Some claimed it was a war between kingdoms. Others suggested it was something smaller, localized, exaggerated over time.
No one had proof.
No one had access.
No one cared enough to dig further.
Eon leaned back slightly.
That, in itself, was telling.
An event significant enough for Boros to be remembered and spoken of with a certain weight by Elara, reduced here to half-formed guesses and dismissed theories.
He opened a third thread.
This one was different.
Less discussion. More observation.
A player had documented NPC dialogue across multiple towns. Patterns in phrasing. Repeated references to a “last stand,” to “reinforcements arriving too late,” to a “vanguard that did not retreat.”
No names.
No locations.
Just consistency.
Eon read it twice.
Then closed it.
Boros’ voice surfaced in his mind. Not the words, but the presence behind them. The way he moved. The way he fought.
A veteran.
Not by title.
By proof.
Eon glanced back at the forum, at the scattered attempts to define something that clearly existed, yet remained just out of reach.
Incomplete information.
Disconnected fragments.
It was familiar.
Too familiar.
He opened his own profile.
The post he had made about the goblin variants sat there, untouched. No replies. No views beyond his own. As expected.
A record.
Nothing more.
For now.
Eon shifted his gaze back to the search results, then to the empty bar again.
There were more threads he could open. More fragments he could collect.
But it would be the same.
Pieces without structure.
Meaning without context.
He closed the browser.
Leaning back in his chair, he let the silence settle.
“Dusk of Majesty,” he repeated under his breath.
Not a mechanic.
Not a quest.
Something that had already happened.
And yet—
It was still shaping the present.
Boros was proof of that.
Eon exhaled slowly, running a hand through his hair.
There was a pattern here.
Not in the system.
In the world.
And like everything else in Illusion Tree, it did not reveal itself easily.
The monitor dimmed slightly as inactivity set in.
Eon did not turn it off immediately.
Instead, he sat there for a while longer, the thought lingering not urgent, not pressing, but persistent.
A war no one could access.
A quiet veteran.
A letter that had to be earned.
He finally reached forward and shut the screen down.
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