1 Month Later
The warm rays of the sun slowly began to erode the thick fog clinging to the morning air on the slopes of a conical volcano in the East Sovereignâs Province, hundreds of miles from the Crown Capital Special Regionâthe heart of the big island.
Mount Arjunoâthat was its name. Known as one of the most haunted mountains in Nusantara, it has countless creepy stories tied to its peak.
One of the most infamous tales is about the disappearance of climbers who never returned after entering a haunted forest near the top, known as the Forest of Lost Souls. The story goes that during the rainy season, a strange fog descends around dusk, engulfing the forest in an eerie haze. This mystical mist leads hikers astray, pulling them into what seems like another worldâa place without escape, leaving them lost forever.
The disappearances became so frequent that the kingdom eventually intervened, banning citizens from climbing the mountain years ago. Still, there are always some who defy the law, seeking either an adrenaline rush or the hidden secrets rumored to lie behind Mount Arjunoâs grandeur.
Among these defiant adventurers were three young men, now sitting squeezed between baskets of tea leaves on the back of a truck hauling plantation goods.
Kairav stared blankly at the sprawling tea plantation before him, the lingering echo of a strange voice still rattling around in his head. It was a voice he couldnât shakeâa voice that had pushed him to set foot here.
âIf you want to know, meet me in the Forest of Lost Souls when the rainy season comes...â The words had cut through the fog of his mind a month ago, pulling him out of a dazed stupor, and those words hadnât left him since.
Drrttt... Drrttt...
The vibrating phone in his white jacket pocket snapped him out of his daydream. He sighed as his almond eyes flicked to the screen, reading the contact name. âWhat now?â
âLittle bastard! Where the hell did you run off to this time?! Trying to put your old man in the hospital again?!â
Kairav winced, pulling the phone away from his ear to protect it from his fatherâs booming voice. âDad, seriously, donât make me rush home just because you decided to collapse again! I need to finish this expedition and actually study the short man of Enchanted!â
âDonât think Iâm an idiot!â Satya shot back. âYou didnât even buy a ticket to go to Enchanted Island! Get your ass back home now!â
âIâll come home if you tell me everything you know!â Kairav demanded.
âIâve told you everything!â Satya replied, exasperated.
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âThatâs a lie!â Kairav snapped, running a hand over his face in frustration.
âHow could you say that?!â
âThe increasing wrinkles on your face can explain everything!â Kairav shot back with a fierce retort.
âYou little demon!â
âAnd youâre the demon king!â Kairav yelled before abruptly hanging up. He shoved the phone back into his jacket, fuming.
Gavin, his expedition partner and close friend chuckled at the exchange. âTsk, insubordinate son of a bitch,â the dark-skinned youth muttered, turning his attention back to the camera in his hand.
Kairav grunted in response, but the insult stung more than usual. Maybe it had something to do with the shocking revelation from a month agoâthe day when Satya, the man Kairav had always believed was his biological father, dropped a bombshell.
âI canât hide the truth anymore... Youâre not my real son. I was sent to raise you. Youâre actually a descendant of the Eternalush Kingdom, destroyed hundreds of years ago...â
Gavinâs voice snapped him out of his thoughts. âDeja vu, right? One minute, weâre hearing your plane explode, and weâre preparing to throw flowers in the sea for you. Then the next minute, you pop up in front of Baron and me like some ghost. The tears we cried over your âdeathââall for nothing!â
Instead of guilt, Kairav burst into laughter, only fueling Gavinâs frustration. âThe other guys still think youâre dead. How are you going to explain that?â
Kairav shrugged casually. âJust tell them the info was wrong. I came home by ship, not by plane.â
Gavin sighed and shook his head. âThat sounds absurd, but I guess itâs believable.â
He then shot Kairav a curious glance. âYou know what sounds even more absurd? The crazy stories you told us about animal spirits and the Eternalush Kingdom. Baron and I thought it was just the ramblings of a madman or maybe a hallucination from your run-in with the short man of Enchanted.â
Kairav raised an eyebrow. âSo why are you here if you donât believe me?â
âTo see for ourselves if thereâs any truth to what you said,â Gavin replied. âAnd even if itâs not real, spending time together like this isnât so bad.â
Baron, the tall, thin guy with glasses sitting between them, suddenly murmured in his sleep, âEnjoy it while you can, because heâll still be a twenty-year-old when weâre fossils.â
Kairav shot him a glare. âGo back to sleep!â
âHeâll still be young when weâre ancient relics,â Gavin added with a smirk.
Kairav rolled his eyes, but a faint shadow passed over them as he muttered, âDonât joke like that... Living forever sounds terrible. Watching everyone around me die...â
Their conversation was cut short as the truck jolted to a stop. The three of them grabbed their bags and hopped out, the eastern hiking trail now visible just beyond the tea fields. A coffee plantation marked the trailâs entrance.
Gavin took a deep breath and shouted, âMount Arjuno, here we come!â
But his enthusiasm was dampened by the truck driver, who hurried over with a concerned expression. âYouâre really going to climb that mountain?â the middle-aged man asked, his voice tinged with worry. âYouâd be better off turning back. Many people go missing up there. Those that come back... itâs like theyâve left their souls behind.â
âRelax, Uncle. Weâve done this before,â Gavin replied, his confidence unwavering. âBesides, weâre armed.â He pointed to the rifles slung over their shoulders.
The old man sighed, weary from dealing with yet another group of headstrong youngsters.
Kairav, meanwhile, smirked and pulled out some red bills from his wallet. âAs agreed, 300 Krisnala for the ride.â
As they walked away, Kairav glanced back at the driver and added with a wicked grin, âOh, and if anyone asks, you didnât see us. You know the consequences for aiding illegal activities, right?â
The old man shook his fist in frustration. âBrat!â