Lord of the realm

Chapter 249: Immortal lord Tomb



Chapter 249: Immortal lord Tomb



"My name is Sofia Breayi. This is Dane Hale. We’re part of a group that’s been investigating the same questions you have. About what really happened during the Rupture."


Martha’s expression shifted slightly; interest warred with suspicion.


"I don’t know what you’re talking about. I’m an archaeologist conducting standard geological surveys. If you’re looking for conspiracy theories, you’ve come to the wrong place."


"We know about your theory," Dane said quietly.


"That the Rupture wasn’t natural. That it was something deliberate. Something controlled. We have information that supports that theory. Evidence your academic sources wouldn’t have access to."


Martha was quiet for a moment, studying them. Sofia could see her mind working, weighing risks and possibilities.


"Even if I was interested in what you’re claiming, which I’m not confirming or denying, why would I listen to two strangers who showed up unannounced at my dig site?"


Sofia reached into her jacket. Several of Martha’s research assistants tensed, but Sofia moved slowly, pulling out a folded document. She handed it to Martha.


"Because we know there’s a tomb," Sofia said.


"Right here in Kreeshan Valley. A sealed structure that predates the Rupture by centuries. And inside that tomb are answers. About what caused the Divergence. About where the origin energy really came from. About who was sealed away and why."


Martha unfolded the document. Her eyes widened as she read. It was a map, hand-drawn but detailed, showing the valley geography with annotations in an old script.


"Where did you get this?" Martha demanded.


"From my father," Sofia said.


"Before the Council disappeared him for asking too many questions. He spent twenty years researching the Rupture. This was part of what he found."


Martha looked at the map again, then at the valley walls surrounding them. Her fingers traced the annotations.


"These coordinates," she said slowly.


"They’re only two miles from our current dig site. In the western cliff face."


"There’s a tomb there," Sofia repeated.


"Sealed with origin energy. We don’t have the skills or equipment to access it. But you do. You could find it and open it. Discover what’s inside."


Martha folded the map carefully.


When she looked up, her expression was torn between scientific curiosity and practical caution.


"Even if this is real, even if there is something there, this is dangerous territory you’re talking about. Questioning the Council’s official histories, looking for forbidden knowledge... people disappear for less."


"People are already disappearing," Dane said.


"Every day. The Council operates in shadows, removing anyone who learns too much. We’ve seen it. We’ve lost friends and family. If we don’t expose the truth, if we don’t fight back, it will just get worse."


Martha was silent for a long moment. Sofia could see the internal struggle playing out across her face.


Finally, she made a decision.


"Come with me," Martha said.


"Let’s talk somewhere private."


She led them to a tent at the edge of the camp, a field lab set up with computers and analysis equipment. Once they were inside with the tent flap closed, Martha turned to face them fully.


"I’ve had my suspicions for years," she admitted.


"Things in the official histories that don’t add up. Evidence that contradicts the accepted narratives. But I’ve always stayed within acceptable boundaries because I value my career and my life. What you’re asking me to do would throw all of that away."


"What we’re asking you to do," Sofia said, "is help us save lives. Help us stop the Council from continuing their atrocities. You could be the one who brings the truth to light. You have the credibility, the resources, and the knowledge. We’re just messengers. But together, we might actually accomplish something."


Martha looked at the map again, her archaeologist’s instincts clearly warring with her survival instincts.


Finally, she sighed.


"Show me exactly where this tomb is supposed to be. If I can verify there’s actually something there, if the evidence supports your claims, then... then we’ll talk about next steps."


Sofia felt relief flood through her. It wasn’t a commitment, but it was a start.


"Thank you," she said.


"Don’t thank me yet," Martha replied.


"We haven’t found anything except trouble so far."


*


Over the next three days, Martha organized a survey expedition to the coordinates marked on Sofia’s map. She told her research team they were investigating an anomalous geological formation, which was technically true. She brought ground-penetrating radar, seismic sensors, and other equipment designed to reveal what lay beneath the surface.


What they found exceeded even her wildest expectations.


Two miles west of the main dig site, in a cliff face that looked like solid rock, the sensors detected a massive hollow space. A structure buried deep in the stone, hidden by centuries of geological overlay and deliberate concealment.


"It’s there," Martha breathed, staring at the sensor readouts. "There’s actually something there. Something big."


Sofia and Dane stood beside her, vindicated but also terrified. Finding the tomb meant the rest of their theory might be true as well. Which meant they were dealing with forces far more powerful and dangerous than they’d imagined.


"How do we access it?" Sofia asked.


"Carefully," Martha said. "These readings suggest the entire structure is sealed with some kind of energy barrier. Not origin energy exactly, but something related. If we try to force it open, we could destroy whatever’s inside. Or worse, trigger a defensive mechanism."


"So what’s the plan?"


"We excavate. Slowly. Precisely. We map every inch of the approach. We study the sealing mechanism until we understand how it works. Then, and only then, we attempt to open it." Martha looked at them seriously. "This could take weeks. Possibly months."


"We don’t have months," Dane said. "The Council is hunting resistance members. They wiped out an entire camp three days ago. If they track us here..."


"Then we work fast," Martha said. "But we work smart. Rushing this would be worse than not attempting it at all."


They began the excavation the next morning. Martha assigned a small team she trusted to the project, telling them only that they’d found evidence of a pre-Rupture structure. The team worked with dedication, carefully removing layers of rock and soil, documenting everything.


On the fourth day of excavation, they heard the sounds.


Rhythmic clanging. Voices shouting. The rumble of machinery.


Martha looked up from her work, frowning. "What is that?"



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