NovelHook
Home
LatestNewCompletedRankings

Browse by Genre

38 genres
RomanceFantasyActionAdventureComedyDramaSlice of LifeReincarnationHaremMysteryMartial ArtsSupernaturalMagicEasternSci-FiXuanhuanXianxiaJoseiHistoricalSystemOtherSchool LifePsychologicalUrbanTragedyGameShounenSeinenHorrorWuxiaFan FictionShoujoIsekaiSportsGender BenderWarMechaVideo Games
View all genres
NovelHook logoNovelHook
HomeLatestNewCompletedRankings

Genres

RomanceFantasyActionAdventureComedyDramaSlice of LifeReincarnationHaremMysteryMartial ArtsSupernaturalMagicEasternSci-FiXuanhuanXianxiaJoseiHistoricalSystem
NovelHook

A reader-first home for web novels across fantasy, romance, action, and beyond. Fresh chapters land every day — from independent authors and translators around the world.

Explore

Browse AllLatest UpdatesPopular NovelsRankingsCompleted

Genres

FantasyRomanceActionCultivationMore genres...

Resources

Privacy PolicyTerms of Service

© 2026 NovelHook. All rights reserved.

NovelHook/The Golden Fool/Chapter 21

The Golden Fool Chapter 21

The temple had been built by men who believed that stone could outlast the memory of famine, of flood, of the old gods’ indifference. Its spires showed first, punching through last year’s fire-killed scrub like the bones of a forgotten beast. Even from half a mile away, with the sun behind them and the wind at their backs, Apollo could feel the place’s hunger. He did not slow. If anything, he kept a dogged, childlike pace, willing the others onward with the stubbornness of a man who knew there was nothing behind them but bad weather and recent ghosts. Nik noticed it first. He pointed with his chin, the rest of him too busy shifting most of Thorin’s half-dead weight up the slope. "Is that a watch post, or am I seeing things?" "Temple," Lyra said, not even pretending to guess. She’d walked this part of the world before; her body settled into a wary, animal readiness as they drew near. "Old one, maybe from the time before the empire. Doubt there’s anyone left inside." But she did not speak as if she believed it. Thorin, awake for the first time since the marsh, squinted against the wind. "Used to be a shrine at the crossroads. That one’s bigger. Wrong shape for a church, though." His voice was hollowed out, but steady. Apollo watched the silhouette of the building resolve itself: walls blackened by rain, roof patched with something that might have been hides or slate. A set of flags hung listless along the parapet, color bled out by decades of sun. The closer they came, the more the air changed, denser, tainted by a sweetness he could not name. The dog went tense at his ankle, hackles up, but did not whine. He tried not to read symbolism into the place. Tried not to see in its sullen arches the memory of a different temple, one built by his own hands, ruined by his own stupidity. He failed. Every step toward it was a step toward the past. They passed the outer wall, crumbled, more suggestion than barrier, and found the courtyard littered with the leavings of travelers less desperate than themselves: bundles of sticks, half-burnt candles, a wax doll impaled on a nail. "Offerings," Lyra said. "Or warnings." Nik set the barrow down and stretched his back until it cracked. "If there’s shelter, I’ll risk the gods’ disapproval," he said, not bothering with the usual sarcasm. The air was too thick for it. They approached the main door, battered wood rimmed in rust and old blood. It stood open, not wide, but enough for a body to slip through if it wanted. The inside was dark, riven by shafts of colorless light. Apollo scanned the entryway, saw the shadow-shapes huddled along the pews, and felt the pressure in his teeth, familiar, but wrong. It was the same sensation he’d had in Marrowgate, that night with Cassian and the Blackhearts: a slow, deliberate squeezing of the world’s edges, a charge that made his bones go hollow and his vision sharpen to a knife point. But this was older, more practiced. It reached across the distance and pressed on him, waiting to be recognized. Lyra stopped just inside, voice low. "There’s people," she said. "A lot of them." She pointed to the altar, where a cluster of figures knelt, heads bowed, hands raw from prayer or penance. The scent of old incense was drowned by the sharper tang of sweat and unwashed skin. Nik grunted. "Devotees?" Lyra shook her head. "They’re not praying. They’re just...waiting." Apollo saw it, too: the slackness in the limbs, the glazed, hungry way the nearest face watched the dust motes swirl in the light. Not sick, exactly, not the fever that had eaten through Marrowgate, but something deeper, a rot that was more of the soul than the flesh. He stepped past Lyra, ignoring her hiss of warning, and walked down the center aisle. The echoes of his boots came back strange, elongated. The nearest of the faithful turned to look at him, and the movement was so slow it barely qualified as alive. Their eyes were wrong. The irises had leeched to a muddy gray, the pupils shot through with filaments of white. When one blinked, the lid closed the wrong direction, bottom to top, like a curtain. He swallowed, counted the faces. Twelve at the altar. Four more scattered through the nave. All were dressed in the same dirty white, the hems of their robes caked with mud and, in places, something darker. A priest stood at the altar, back to the room, hands clasped in front. His cowl hid most of his head, but the skin at the nape was smooth and unmarked by age. He spoke, voice clear as glass. "Are you here for redemption, or for a place to hide?" Apollo stopped at the first row of pews. The others filed in behind him, Lyra now openly gripping her knife, Nik with one hand on the barrow and the other holding Thorin upright. The dwarf’s face had gone sallow and cold, but his eyes were awake, even lucid. "I’m told you offer sanctuary," Apollo said, the formal words feeling strange in his mouth. The priest turned, revealed a face so ordinary that Apollo flinched; there was something about the mouth, the way it pinched at the corners, that made the whole head seem unfinished. The eyes were pale blue, rimmed in red, no sign of the earlier mutation—but the gaze was as empty as the echo of a hollow bell. "We offer absolution," the priest said, stepping down from the altar. His robe was immaculate from the knees up, but the hem trailed behind him, stained in a way that suggested years of crawling or worse. "If you seek safety, you must first be cleansed. The world outside is sick, here, we are made new each day." Lyra snorted, but the sound died in the hush. "We just need a roof for a night," she said. "All who enter are welcome," the priest replied, "but to stay, you must join us in the rite. It is our one rule."
Frequently Asked Questions

Where can I read The Golden Fool Chapter 21 online for free?

You can read The Golden Fool Chapter 21 for free on NovelHook. No registration required — just open the chapter and start reading.

Is The Golden Fool Chapter 21 the latest chapter?

Check the chapter list on the The Golden Fool page to see the most recent chapter. New updates appear as soon as they are released.

When will The Golden Fool Chapter 22 be released?

Release timing for The Golden Fool Chapter 22 depends on the author. Bookmark the novel on NovelHook to get the next chapter as soon as it drops.

Can I read The Golden Fool Chapter 21 on my phone?

Yes — NovelHook is fully mobile-optimized. The Golden Fool Chapter 21 works on any smartphone, tablet, or desktop browser.

Do I need an account to read The Golden Fool Chapter 21?

No account needed. The Golden Fool Chapter 21 and every other chapter on NovelHook are 100% free to read without signing up.

How do I find the next chapter after The Golden Fool Chapter 21?

Use the "Next" button at the top or bottom of The Golden Fool Chapter 21 to jump to Chapter 22, or open the chapter list to browse all chapters.

What is The Golden Fool Chapter 21 about?

The Golden Fool Chapter 21 continues the story of The Golden Fool. Open the chapter above to read the full content.

Is The Golden Fool Chapter 21 available in English?

Yes. The Golden Fool Chapter 21 is available in English on NovelHook, free to read online.

Can I adjust font size while reading The Golden Fool Chapter 21?

Yes. Open the reading settings (gear icon) to change font size and background theme while reading The Golden Fool Chapter 21.

How many chapters does The Golden Fool have in total?

The full chapter list is available on the The Golden Fool detail page. The Golden Fool Chapter 21 is one of many chapters — browse the list to see them all.

Continue Reading
The Golden Fool Chapter 11The Golden Fool Chapter 12The Golden Fool Chapter 13The Golden Fool Chapter 14The Golden Fool Chapter 15The Golden Fool Chapter 16The Golden Fool Chapter 17The Golden Fool Chapter 18The Golden Fool Chapter 19The Golden Fool Chapter 20The Golden Fool Chapter 22The Golden Fool Chapter 23The Golden Fool Chapter 24The Golden Fool Chapter 25The Golden Fool Chapter 26The Golden Fool Chapter 27The Golden Fool Chapter 28The Golden Fool Chapter 29The Golden Fool Chapter 30The Golden Fool Chapter 31
You May Also Like
The God of War Returns and Spices Up Life With MarriageThe Goddess is a Little Pitiful, I Invested in Her!The Goddess is Sweet and AloofThe Goddess Made A Mistake AgainThe Goddess's Personal DoctorThe Golem MageThe Good-for-Nothing Seventh MissThe Good for Nothing Seventh Young LadyThe Good for Nothing Seventh Young LadyThe Good Keeper