- Hiatus! Coming back this 2024 - Ephraim, or as called by his colleagues, Raim, is an archeologist. Upon his commencement, he was stationed with a task force consisting of a researcher, a biologist, a doctor, and a former sergeant-in-arms; their team entrusted with a duty to examine the desolated LAB of an abandoned former space station: ANDROMEDA. As a man of science, he knew what his weakness was: curiosity. Upon entering the premises of ANDROMEDA, Raim discovers that succumbing to his desires would prove fatal one day. And that day has come. By the end of the darkness of the seemingly isolated laboratory was not obscurity filled with dust and desolation—but a tunnel leading to another realm of knowledge. A pathway to another dimension. No… the -pathway- to another world. The entrance to a completely different time where magic, knights, kingdom, monsters, and battles reigned supreme; Now Ephraim and his task force must utilize their existing knowledge and cultivate their given power to survive onslaughts and drive the kingdoms of another world to prosperity. [note: if you push through chapter 13 where the action generally starts, it will be worth it.] The artwork from this temporary cover is from is Windreader Zell from Bagoum. I do not own this artwork. https://sv.bagoum.com/cards/104421030 • • SUPPORT THE AUTHOR • • Buy me a coffee to keep me awake from long nights of writing: https://ko-fi.com/chainslock «CONTEST: Webnovel Spirity Spring Awards 2020»
It was dark, with the moon nowhere to be found.
The impending dusk had already succumbed into the night. The world was, yet again, void of bathing soft light illuminated by the moon. Rain poured from the dense, grey clouds that loomed across the vast oceans. Thunder echoed on the entirety of the space. The sailing ship that was alone in the middle of the sea rocked from the lofty waves sent by the strong winds turning the sea the sailor's enemy. The burbling of water against the hull signified that the carrack was still moving, but was it moving to its destination? The rain was heavy in the oceans as tides seemed to be more erratic and wild. Many fishermen and small, sailing boats sunk from this kind of heavy rain—but merchant ships such as carracks often survived the anger of the sea.