The General's Daughter: The Mission-Chapter 132: The Discovery 3

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Chapter 132: The Discovery 3

Recognition hit Lara like a blow to the chest — sharp, breath-stealing, intimate. Not the shock of discovery, but the sick certainty of finding something you were never supposed to see again.

"This is a mechanism."

Logan pressed his palm to the metal, testing it, then ran his fingers across the engraved lines. Asher did the same. Liam and Lucas were leaning in close, breath fogging faintly against the cold surface.

"It’s ancient... but the engineering is insane. No corrosion. No damage."

Lucas tapped the edge lightly with a knuckle. The sound rang out low and dense, not hollow, not solid — something engineered, layered, intentional.

"What kind of alloy even lasts like this?" Liam hung back, confusion plain on his face.

"Okay, hold on... how did you even know this was here?" It was Ares who asked, his gaze never leaving Lara.

She didn’t look at him. "I came across an article online," she said, too quickly, too lightly. "About a lost kingdom, a missing era in Azuverda history."

Liam raised a brow. "Yeah? And the article told you exactly which brick to pull out of a thousand-year-old tower?"

But Lara wasn’t really there anymore.

Her hand lifted slowly, fingers hovering just above the disc without touching it, as if she could feel heat radiating from the metal — or something deeper, something humming beneath it.

Memories pressed in.

Not images at first, then sensations.

Cold stone corridors stretching forever underground. The echo of footsteps in vast hollow chambers. Hidden passages sealed behind false walls. Vault doors thicker than city bank safes. Shelves of records, relics, weapons — history locked away where no sunlight could reach.

And deeper still—

The burial chambers.

Rows of stone coffins carved with royal insignias. Air so still it tasted like dust and grief.

The first to lie there had been King Heimdal... Alaric’s father.

Then later, it was Alaric.

The memory struck full force.

The weight of the coffin. The finality of stone sliding into place. The sound of the seal locking shut forever. The unbearable silence afterward, as if the world itself had stepped back out of respect and reverence.

Lara’s chest constricted violently.

Pain ripped through her, raw and unbearable, not remembered but relived. Her lungs forgot how to work. Her heart pounded like it was trying to break free of her ribs.

She knelt and clutched her chest. Her face drained of color. Her hands began to shake.

"Larissa, are you alright?" Ares’ voice cut through, low and urgent.

Liam, Logan, and Lucas were suddenly beside her too, their usual bravado gone, replaced by naked concern.

"Sis...Lara what’s wrong?" Lucas asked, brows drawn tight.

"Mommy...Mommy... are you sick?"

Lara forced air into her lungs. Once. Twice. She shook her head, though the motion felt delayed, disconnected.

"Nothing," she said, but her voice trembled, fragile as glass. "I’m fine."

She wasn’t.

Her gaze drifted past them, locking onto the shadowed archway behind the ruined tower — the same darkness that had swallowed the daylight earlier.

"There’s something beneath this," she said.

Her voice had changed.

No hesitation. No uncertainty. Each word landed clean and hard, like a verdict.

"The royal mausoleum."

Scarlet laughed sarcastically.

Scarlet let out a sharp, disbelieving laugh.

"Oh, come on. Are you telling us there are corpses buried under a protected nature sanctuary? What, ancient kings just decided to spend a vacation here for eternity?"

Slowly — very slowly — Lara lifted her head.

The air shifted. A storm brewed in her eyes, turning her pupils into the color of flame."

Not a reflection. Not a trick of light.

"Yes," she said.

Only one word but it was absolute. 𝐟𝐫𝕖𝗲𝘄𝚎𝗯𝕟𝐨𝕧𝐞𝚕.𝕔𝕠𝐦

Scarlet’s smirk faltered, then vanished entirely, as if wiped clean.

Ares didn’t look surprised.

He watched Lara the way one watches a loaded weapon — steady, cautious, and calculating.

"You sound very sure," he said quietly.

Lara hesitated this time. Just a fraction. The gold dimmed, though it didn’t disappear completely.

"It... it was described in the article," she said at last, the excuse thin even to her own ears.

A tense silence followed, thick as humidity before a storm.

"Wait, young lady."

The chief archaeologist stepped forward, eyes bright not with skepticism but with dawning realization — the look of a man who had just glimpsed the edge of something that could rewrite history... or bury them all beneath it.

"You cannot go inside. It is dangerous. The engineers are yet to check if these structures will not collapse."

Lara simply nodded, but she continued walking to where the tower was. There were supposed to be two of them, but it looked like only one survived.

She walked past it and placed the disk on a matching symbol in the outer wall. And pressed, then she turned the disc. Like something she had done a thousand times before. Like muscle memory.

For a second...nothing happened.

But then, a groaning sound was heard from inside.

Dust cascaded from cracked walls as a section of stone sank inward, grinding down to reveal a vast circular platform buried beneath centuries of ruin. Symbols carved into its surface ignited one by one, lines of silver-white fire racing outward in branching paths.

It was an ancient door Lara was familiar with.

Ares stepped forward despite the pain etched across his face.

His voice dropped to a rough note, tinged with disbelief.

"Is that an entrance?"

The question hung in the air.

For a moment, Lara hesitated.

Because the answer rose instinctively in her mind.

Then deep beneath the earth—

The glowing lines in the stone walls brightened, no longer faint but deliberate — tracing patterns that had been invisible moments before.

Circles within circles. Interlocking sigils. Old geometry patterns that made people’s eyes ache if they looked too long.

Asher exhaled slowly behind them.

"Well," he murmured, voice stripped of humor for once. "That’s... that’s..."

A low hum began underfoot. Lara felt it through the soles of her shoes — a vibration traveling up her bones, settling in her chest like a second heartbeat.

"That’s the entrance to a stairwell."