The swirling starlight around her began to settle. Lyra stood in the centre of the dreamlike Lunar Sanctum, though it felt more like standing in the quiet space between two realities. The echoes of her conversation with the other versions of herself still rang in her head, each one showing a different future, a different path, a different heartbreak. And not a single one had offered her clarity or peace.
"Was any of that even real?" she whispered to herself.
The ground beneath her shimred. A pale silver coloured light slowly descended like moonlight and condensed into a single breath. It bathed everything in it’s light.
Lyra’s heartbeat quickened. She wasn’t alone anymore.
A shape ford from the light—a tall, veiled figure. No features were visible beneath the flowing, radiant veil, but Lyra could feel the imnse presence—warm, ancient, and impossibly vast. It wasn’t just divine. It was beyond divine.
Lyra dropped to her knees without even thinking. Her body reacted on instinct, like so primal part of her soul recognized the being before her.
"You’ve walked far, little shard of dusk."
The voice was soft, like a lullaby whispered from the edge of the moon. It wasn’t one voice but many—all gentle, all female, as if the stars themselves spoke in harmony.
Lyra looked up cautiously. "Are... are you the Moon Goddess?"
The veiled figure nodded. "A portion of . What you see now is rely a reflection. To reveal more would shatter your mind, child."
Lyra blinked. She had expected her self to feel awe. Fear. Or sothing like that. But instead, there was sothing strange about the tone. Gentle. Fond. Almost...
"Child?" she echoed.
A soft laugh rippled through the air. "To , you are. To mortals, you may be exceptional. Talented. Even feared. But you forget, I have watched stars be born and swallowed by the void. I have seen oceans dry and skies burn."
The Goddess paused, as if searching for the right words. "Your entire life is but a heartbeat to , Lyra Moonveil. Of course, you are still a child."
Lyra flushed. "That’s... kind of insulting."
"Perhaps. But also true."
She shifted uncomfortably. Despite the divine atmosphere, her very mortal brain was having trouble reconciling everything. "So, this is it? I passed your trials, and now what? You grant power?"
The veil shimred. "You did not co here to gain. You ca to awaken."
Lyra furrowed her brows. "That sounds awfully cryptic. Can we not speak plainly for once?"
The Goddess of Moon let out a small laugh. "Oh, how very human. You want answers wrapped in simplicity, as if truth can be flattened like parchnt. But I will try."
The light pulsed again, and suddenly the space around Lyra filled with floating fragnts—mories, dreams, battles. Her past, present, and slivers of potential futures all danced like dust in moonlight.
"You are touched by fate in a way few are. There are threads that pull at your soul, not all from this realm. So born from echoes. So from bonds you have not yet made."
Lyra stared at the fragnts. One looked like her standing in front of a burning temple. Another showed her crying in the snow, clutching a staff broken in two. And one... one was completely black. Nothingness.
"What does that an?" she asked.
The Goddess did not answer directly. Instead, she said, "You walk a path where clarity is a luxury. If you saw all the answers now, you would beco paralyzed by the weight of them."
Lyra let out a breath. "That’s not really reassuring."
"No. But it is the truth."
She sat on the floor, exasperated. "I didn’t think a video ga would end up like this," she muttered.
The Goddess tilted her head slightly. "And therein lies the flaw in your understanding."
Lyra looked up, alard. "Wait. You heard that?"
"I hear all of you. Even the thoughts you do not speak. Even the doubts you try to bury."
"...Cool," Lyra muttered sarcastically.
The Goddess’s tone softened further, like a parent speaking to a frustrated child. "You are not wrong to question. What is real? What is illusion? Those questions will follow you, Lyra, and not only in this realm. But rember this: your choices still matter."
Lyra closed her eyes, resting her forehead against her knees for a mont. Her mind swam with emotions—confusion, awe, fatigue, and sothing else she couldn’t na. She wasn’t used to feeling so small.
"I’m scared," she finally whispered.
"I know," the Goddess replied. "But fear is not failure. It is a sign you understand the weight of what lies ahead."
A soft breeze passed through the temple. The fragnts floating around her gently began to coalesce, spinning into a glowing sigil in the air—crescent moon entwined with threads of stardust.
"This is the mark of your awakening," the Goddess said. "Not power in itself, but a key. A sign that when the ti cos, you will be ready to decide."
Lyra stood slowly, still feeling overwheld. "So... what now?"
"You return," the Goddess said simply. "With questions. With strength. With doubt. And one day, with understanding."
Before Lyra could respond, the world around her began to blur again. The temple faded. The fragnts lted into light.
But the voice of the Goddess lingered.
"Rember, child. You are not alone. You never were."
Then everything went still.
—
When Lyra opened her eyes again, she was standing alone on a moonlit hill within the ga. No divine light. No whispers of fate. Only the soft rustle of grass and the familiar weight of her staff in her hands.
She let out a shaky breath, brushing strands of hair away from her damp cheeks.
"...The hell was that?" she whispered. "She didn’t even tell anything about that Rai guy. Why the heck did I even do all those quest if she wasn’t gonna give any reward."
And yet, in her soul, sothing had changed.
The mark of the crescent moon now glowed faintly on her palm, fading slowly.
She didn’t know where her path would lead—but she knew it had just begun.
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