Font Size
15px

This was undoubtedly a lodramatic story.

The killer lurking in the shadow of the blood moon wasn’t a killer at all—but a guardian.

This reversal of roles caught Cheng Shi off guard.

But suddenly, he understood what the trial’s title, “Who Deserves Redemption”, was pointing toward.

Between the townspeople, both victims and those being guarded, and the “Divine Envoy,” who was both a murderer and a guardian, the trial asked him to choose who should be redeed. This agonizing dilemma perfectly aligned with fate’s twisted cruelty.

Fate, both a source of suffering and a dark joke.

Yet sothing about this story didn’t quite align with Cheng Shi’s understanding of Far Dusk Town.

While the issue of population control was explained, many questions remained unanswered.

For example, what happened to the travelers?

“Patience, there’s more to see.”

Cheng Shi furrowed his brows, his gaze returning to the mory unfolding before him.

The “divine decree” that blasphers would be punished soon spread throughout Far Dusk Town.

Since divine punishnt only occurred at night, the town’s nights beca eerily quiet from that day on.

Once night fell, everyone would stay indoors, in well-lit spaces, to avoid losing the protection of [Eternal Sun] and becoming tainted by [Bloody Moon].

At this point, the townspeople had co to understand divine punishnt as His anger and His withdrawal of protection.

From then on, the town entered a brief period of peace, albeit under the shadow of terror.

However, fate has a way of tornting those who seem to live honest, simple lives.

On yet another seemingly ordinary night, when the blood moon rose again, a curse befell the town.

After that night, none of the townspeople could reproduce with each other. This curse was unbreakable, and not even the “Divine Envoy” could find a solution.

But around this ti, a traveler from far away accidentally stumbled into Far Dusk Town, a place that had long seen no newcors. He was a bard.

The bard wandered through the town, seeking inspiration, writing ballads that would later be passed down through generations. He also fell in love with a local girl.

It seed like an insignificant affair, but one night, using a mysterious ritual he had learned on his travels, the bard managed to make the girl pregnant…

And so, he beca Far Dusk Town’s greatest savior!

The “Divine Envoy” t with him, promising him riches beyond his imagination—if only he would stay in the town for a while longer.

At first, the bard was happy and agreed.

But as ti passed, he realized that the mysterious gifting ritual was draining his soul and sapping his life. He grew weak, powerless, terrified.

And so, one night under the blood moon, he risked everything and fled.

Whether he escaped or not, no one knows.

The townspeople only know that after that night, a complete gifting ritual was established in the town.

Not only that, but travelers began arriving in Far Dusk Town with increasing frequency after that, leading to the developnts Cheng Shi had witnessed, culminating in the town’s current state.

The blessings of [Eternal Sun] remained, and the curse of [Bloody Moon] persisted. Under the web of faith and fear woven by the “Divine Envoy,” Far Dusk Town continued, year after year.

No one could live to old age, but no one faced disaster again, either.

Outsiders couldn’t say whether the townspeople were happy or miserable, but one thing was clear—they were still alive.

And they lived longer than their ancestors.

Here, the mory ended, the fuzzy image dissolving back into the void.

Cheng Shi furrowed his brows, organizing his thoughts in the wake of everything he’d seen.

“That mory…”

The older Cheng Shi suddenly appeared, dragging the black-robed figure by the collar, laughing as he spoke:

“When you brought him here, you unlocked that mory.

And this will be your final stop for the Fate’s Judgnt!

The aning is clear: who deserves salvation—the townspeople or the Divine Envoy? It’s a choice between the two!”

“No!”

Before the older Cheng Shi could finish, Cheng Shi shook his head vehently.

“No, that’s wrong. You’re saying he’s still the first Divine Envoy?

No, he’s not alive because of [Eternal Sun]’s blessing—he’s alive because he turned himself into a puppet!

He turned himself into a puppet!

That’s why his lifespan is so unnaturally long!

And mastering this kind of technique could only co from the Tower of Logic’s Alchemical Creations Departnt, not so Divine Envoy of Far Dusk Town!

But what does Far Dusk Town have to do with alchemical creations?

Also, the authority of [Eternal Sun] is an incomplete version of [Birth], not an incomplete version of [Prosperity]. His blessings wouldn’t grant soone extended life!

How did the sun and moon co to be here? What does ‘clinging’ an? Why do Their authorities resemble the ones we know? And why does the blood moon’s curse descend so irregularly? These are still unanswered!

While [Fate] may be nauseating, It never gives you a half-baked problem just to annoy you.

[He] ticulously designs all the details, and when you finally realize you can’t change fate, [He] jumps out and mocks you.

The mory itself… is too crude to be His work.”

Cheng Shi’s thorough analysis left the older Cheng Shi montarily stunned.

His expression beca unusually strange, and a look of genuine admiration appeared in his eyes.

“You… really dare say anything, don’t you?”

Cheng Shi was a bit surprised by his reaction but nodded:

“Just telling it like it is.”

“…”

The older Cheng Shi laughed, truly amused.

“Hahaha, of course, you are !

Indeed, if you stop here, it won’t just be you who stops—it will be everyone.

He has indeed hidden the answer in the void.

But it’s not the void you think.

It’s the true… Nothingness!”

As he spoke, the older Cheng Shi raised his hand and swiped across the void above them.

His hand was like an eraser, wiping away the inky blackness of the void to reveal the image that had been hidden beneath the dark canvas.

As his hand moved, a dazzling, almost unreal starry sky slowly erged before Cheng Shi’s eyes.

And within that starry sky, shimring with void-like stars, a blindingly bright sun and a blood-red moon glead nacingly, casting their light over every corner of the universe.

Cheng Shi took just one glance and imdiately felt his scalp go numb. A deep, primal fear surged from the base of his spine to the top of his head, leaving him paralyzed with dread.

But it wasn’t the sight of [Eternal Sun] or [Bloody Moon] directly that filled him with terror.

No.

The terrifying truth was…

Those colossal celestial bodies representing incomplete versions of the authorities of [Birth] and [Corruption] were rely…

A pair of eyes!

In the starry void above, a massive corpse floated upside down, its body bound by starlight, its feet shackled by black holes.

And in the gaping eye sockets of that decaying corpse, two glowing orbs stared out—one the glaring sun, the other the blood-red moon.

The corpse was titanic, towering beyond comprehension. Even if all the stars of the void were to gather together, they wouldn’t compare to even one of its bones in size.

It had long since decayed, its rotting skin barely clinging to its bones, and the cracks in its bone structure spread like a world-ending spiderweb across the entire cosmos.

Such a monstrous entity lood before them, and Cheng Shi and the others stood motionless, nestled in the grasp of its hanging, skeletal hand, watching… as it watched them.

No… it was still moving.

Though its body had long since decayed, its eyelids… were still moving.

Cheng Shi saw it:

The right eye slowly closed, while the left eye gradually opened, the sun vanishing into the void as the blood moon ascended in the sky!

And so…

Far Dusk Town’s night had fallen.

You are reading Foolish Game of the Chapter 123: He Truly Hid the Answer in the Void on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading
No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.