Chapter 109: Golden Fortune City XV
As Rhys stepped into the open air, the starlit sky stretched wide above him, the last veil of night thinning toward dawn. But even as the ruin’s threshold faded behind him, the weight of the shards did not leave.
The [Moonstone] at his side began to pulse.
At first, it was faint—like a heartbeat. Then stronger, until the air itself seemed to hum. The four shards he had gathered—the Lunar, Mist, Tidal, and the shard he had just claimed—answered the call. They rose from his pack, glowing with their own distinct hues: silver light, soft mist, deep tide-blue, and balanced shadow-light.
The shards circled the [Moonstone], threads of energy weaving between them like the phases of the moon. For a moment, Rhys thought they might scatter into the sky, but instead, they folded inward, drawn together by something deeper than will.
The light condensed. The fragments fused. Mist curled, tide surged, shadow softened into glow.
When the brilliance faded, a single gem floated before him.
[ True Moonstone Acquired ]
It gleamed pale silver, but within its depths swirled the elements of water, mist, light, and shadow—balanced, whole, no longer divided into pieces. A resonance settled into Rhys’s chest, steady and certain.
The stone sank into his hand, its glow merging with his mana. Lines of soft silver traced briefly across his skin before fading, leaving only the weight of power behind.
A notification rang clear in his mind:
[ True Moonstone Effect: All Magic Power +50% ]
Rhys stilled, testing the flow within himself. Spells that had once taken effort now answered more quickly, sharper and cleaner. The balance of his magic no longer swayed awkwardly between elements. Water flowed into shadow, shadow brightened into light, light cooled into mist—all part of one current.
He lifted the Ruinous Darkness Blade, channeling mana with a thought. The sword shimmered instantly, its edge clearer than ever, its glow tempered and stable. Where once it had growled with raw power, now it hummed with harmony.
Rhys allowed himself a small, quiet smile.
"Better than the first stone. Better than I hoped."
The ruin behind him was silent now, its purpose fulfilled. Ahead, the city of Golden Fortune stretched in the fading dark, lanterns flickering low as night surrendered to morning. Two ruins remained, their marks still faintly glowing on his map, waiting to be claimed.
Rhys slid the blade back into its sheath. His steps carried him down from the ruin, his cloak brushing against the morning wind.
The path was clearer now. Stronger. Balanced.
And with the True Moonstone resonating in him, the next battles would not be the same.
The city gates of Golden Fortune loomed tall, their bronze plating catching the first hints of dawn. Merchants were only just beginning to stir, guards swapping shifts, and a few lingering drunks stumbling home from night-long feasts. Yet, Rhys didn’t turn toward the markets or the inns.
His map had already shifted, new threads glowing faintly where the next ruins awaited, but before diving back into trials, his hand lingered at his side, brushing against the [True Moonstone].
Its power thrummed steadily, urging him forward. But more than that—it demanded proof.
The Arena would suffice.
The Golden Fortune Arena stood on the eastern rise of the city, built from pale stone inlaid with runes. Circular tiers rose high above the dueling grounds, and even at this early hour, a scattering of challengers, mercenaries, and wanderers loitered by the gates. The city prized strength, and the Arena was its favored stage.
Rhys stepped inside, the clerk at the entrance barely lifting his head from the ledger as he muttered:
"Single entry? One-on-one or open pool?"
Rhys slid the entry coin across the counter.
"One-on-one."
The clerk smirked at the quiet confidence in his tone and marked the slate.
"Gate Three. Opponent’s already waiting."
The Arena floor spread wide, its stone ground covered in faint grooves where countless strikes had scarred it. Above, banners flapped, still carrying the sigils of the last great tournament.
His opponent stood opposite: a spear fighter in scaled bronze mail, her stance firm, eyes sharp. A crowd of a few dozen had gathered already, wordless anticipation heavy in the air.
The gatekeeper’s voice boomed:
"Duelists, prepare!"
Rhys drew the Ruinous Darkness Blade, the silver-black edge already humming with the balanced current of the [True Moonstone]. His opponent spun her spear, planting it against the stone with a metallic crack.
"Begin!"
She lunged first, spear thrust cutting like lightning toward his chest. Rhys stepped with the tide—smooth, flowing—his sword sliding alongside the strike instead of clashing against it. He turned her momentum, twisting his wrist, and let the blade hum with [Water Blade]. A sharp arc of shimmering blue sliced outward, clipping her shoulder.
The crowd stirred.
She snarled, sweeping her spear in a wide arc. Mana surged along its length, forming a wave of fire that rushed toward him.
Rhys didn’t retreat.
He raised his blade, and with a flicker of mana—[Fireball] met [Water Blade]. The impact burst into vapor, but this time, the [True Moonstone] carried the flow perfectly. Steam condensed instantly into a spiraling [Steamburst Edge].
The spear fighter staggered as the strike clipped her side, heat and pressure slamming her backward.
The crowd roared louder.
Her eyes narrowed, and with a growl she slammed her spear into the ground. A shockwave burst outward, jagged earth tearing toward him.
Rhys steadied his breath. Puddle’s voice echoed faintly from his chest:
"Do not resist. Flow with it."
He raised the blade, channeling both shadow and light. [Magic Missile] flared, weaving into [Swift Cut]. Arcs of force slashed through the incoming earth, scattering it like shards of glass.
His opponent gaped for a heartbeat, then grit her teeth and rushed again, spear aimed at his throat.
Rhys stepped in, his blade rising not against her—but with her. The balanced current carried him forward, a clean cut flowing through the narrow gap in her defense. His strike halted just shy of her chest, the edge gleaming steady.
The match was over.
Silence lingered—then the Arena erupted in cheers.
The gatekeeper’s voice boomed once more:
"Victory—Rhys of the Silver Tide!"
He lowered his sword, exhaling slowly. The [True Moonstone] pulsed warm against his chest, its resonance steady, as though approving the proof.
Rhys sheathed the blade and turned toward the exit.
The crowd called for more, some shouting wagers, others begging for another fight—but he had seen enough
Rhys stepped back into the streets, the Arena’s roar still echoing behind him. The sun had fully broken the horizon now, streaks of pale gold cutting across Golden Fortune’s towers and bridges. The city was waking in full—markets swelling, hawkers calling, the sound of hammers striking metal rising from the forge district.
But for the first time in days, there was no ruin pulling at him. No hidden shard glowing on his map. The silence in that absence felt strange, almost heavier than the battles themselves.
He wandered.
Through merchant lanes where jewelers haggled over shards of crystal, claiming them as relics of lost dynasties. Past taverns where mercenaries boasted about beasts they’d felled in the forests, their stories only half-truth but sung loud enough to drown doubt. Along the riverfront, where pale boats drifted lazily, ferrymen shouting destinations toward islands that would soon close when Golden Fortune’s gates sealed.
Rhys lingered nowhere long. His hand brushed against the [True Moonstone] as often as it did his blade. Its hum was steady, but not loud—like a second heartbeat, reminding him that even in stillness, there was growth.
He stopped once at a stall that sold charms and trinkets. The merchant, an old man with hair silver as the stone in Rhys’s chest, leaned forward eagerly when he saw the faint glow that followed Rhys.
"Ah... the moon favors you, boy. Don’t squander it. Most walk this city their whole lives chasing what you hold."
Rhys gave a faint nod, not buying anything, but leaving the words behind him like dust in the wind.
By midday he found himself at the cliffside gardens, one of the few quiet places in Golden Fortune. Flowers from every region bloomed there, transplanted for the Festival, their colors dizzying under the sun. He sat beneath a lone willow, its branches trailing over a shallow fountain that shimmered with light.
Puddle’s voice came soft from within.
"You’re restless. The stone is proven, yet you do not rest."
Rhys’s gaze stayed on the fountain’s surface.
"There’s time left. But I don’t know what to do with it."
"Then simply be still," Puddle answered. "Power does not always come from struggle. Sometimes... it comes from watching the tide."
The words carried weight. Enough for Rhys to sit longer, letting the city’s noise drift around him, the branches swaying like waves above.
The Festival of Closing was only days away. The ruins were gone. The Arena had given proof. Now, the waiting began—waiting for Golden Fortune’s gates to seal, for the city’s hidden truths to decide what they would reveal and what they would bury.
For the first time since stepping into the city, Rhys allowed himself to breathe without chasing.
The journey would resume soon enough.