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GOD OF DECEPTION Chapter 153

Novel: GOD OF DECEPTION Author: MortalSoul Updated:
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Now reading: Chapter 153 from GOD OF DECEPTION, a Fantasy novel by MortalSoul.

The bridge remained silent.

Not ordinary silence.

The kind of silence that happened when everyone realized sothing important had just occurred, but nobody understood exactly how important.

The navigation display continued glowing.

The mysterious destination pulsed softly at the center of the map.

The City of Beginnings.

The na echoed throughout the Human Network within seconds.

Researchers stopped working.

Ancient civilizations paused ongoing conversations.

Synchronization pathways lit up across countless realities.

Because honestly?

Any place capable of shocking the Keeper deserved attention.

The ancient figure remained staring at the display.

Almost motionless.

Which worried everyone more than the revelation itself.

The Keeper rarely looked surprised.

The Human Network collectively preferred it staying that way.

Eventually Elena folded both arms.

"What is the City of Beginnings?"

The Keeper didn’t answer imdiately.

Instead, the ancient figure slowly approached the display.

Golden pathways reflected across ancient eyes.

Then softly—

"I don’t know."

Silence.

Absolute silence.

The Human Network collectively malfunctioned.

Because honestly?

That answer felt impossible.

Kaiser blinked.

"...You don’t know?"

The Keeper shook their head.

"The city existed before my ti."

The bridge beca even quieter.

Which should not have been possible.

Before the Keeper’s ti?

The ancient reality collector rembered events older than civilizations.

Older than synchronization networks.

Older than many universes.

And sothing still existed before them?

The Human Network dimd.

Because suddenly existence felt much larger.

Again.

The Keeper studied the map carefully.

"The City of Beginnings appears in very old records."

Golden pathways continued glowing softly.

"Most historians assud it was symbolic."

The ancient figure paused.

Then quietly added:

"I did too."

Nobody liked that answer.

Fair honestly.

The bridge crew exchanged nervous glances.

The mysterious city waited ahead.

Sowhere along the World Roads.

Sowhere hidden from existence for ages.

And sohow—

the Roads themselves wanted them finding it.

Honestly?

That sounded suspicious.

Very suspicious.

The Horizon Voyager continued traveling forward.

The City of Beginnings remained marked on every navigation display.

The destination sat approximately twelve days ahead using current routes.

Twelve days.

Not far.

Not close.

Just enough ti for everyone becoming increasingly anxious.

The Human Network followed every update obsessively.

Ancient civilizations reopened archives searching for references.

Researchers analyzed ancient texts.

Explorers studied historical legends.

Most found nothing.

A few discovered fragnts.

Tiny clues.

Half-forgotten stories.

Whispers.

One ancient civilization possessed a surviving poem ntioning a city where "the first road t the first star."

Another archive described "a place where existence learned its na."

The Human Network collectively agreed those descriptions were unhelpful.

Beautiful.

But unhelpful.

Fair honestly.

Three days passed.

The World Roads stretched endlessly outside the ship.

Golden pathways crossing realities.

Ancient structures occasionally appeared along the route.

Most remained abandoned.

Ruined.

Silent.

The Travelers appeared occasionally too.

Always watching.

Never speaking.

Never approaching.

Just observing.

The Human Network continued struggling emotionally with ghostly ancient explorers casually existing outside the ship.

Honestly?

Reasonable reaction.

Then on the fourth day—

everything changed.

Again.

The first sign arrived during routine navigation.

A synchronization officer frowned at a display.

Then frowned harder.

Then activated ergency reporting systems.

The Human Network imdiately beca nervous.

The bridge received the report within minutes.

Kaiser arrived first.

Followed by Elena.

Then Auren.

Then approximately everyone else.

The display showed a section of the World Roads ahead.

At first glance nothing seed unusual.

Then the image zood.

And everyone froze.

The Road was broken.

Not damaged.

Broken.

A massive section simply ended.

The golden pathway stretched forward normally before abruptly stopping.

Beyond it—

darkness.

The Human Network collectively stopped breathing.

Because the World Roads weren’t supposed to break.

Ancient civilizations confird imdiately.

Historical records described them surviving countless collapses.

Entire realities died.

The Roads endured.

Universes vanished.

The Roads endured.

Yet sohow—

one section had shattered.

The bridge beca silent.

The Keeper appeared monts later.

Ancient eyes focused on the image.

Then narrowed slightly.

A rare reaction.

The Human Network dimd.

Because honestly?

Nothing about this felt good.

The Keeper approached the display.

Studied it carefully.

Then quietly spoke.

"This is new."

Nobody enjoyed those words.

The ancient figure continued.

"The Roads were intact when I last traveled here."

The silence deepened.

Because that ant sothing recently broke them.

Very recently.

Auren stared toward the fractured pathway.

The Heart Fla flickered softly.

Then suddenly—

the forr Null froze.

Everyone noticed instantly.

The Human Network beca anxious.

"Auren?"

Silver eyes remained fixed on the display.

Then slowly—

very slowly—

Auren whispered:

"I know this feeling."

Silence.

The bridge froze.

Because honestly?

That sentence sounded horrifying.

The Heart Fla pulsed.

Once.

Twice.

Three tis.

And suddenly—

everyone understood.

The broken section of Road carried traces of the sa force responsible for the dead zones.

The Human Network dimd.

The realization spread quickly.

Whatever consud realities had reached the World Roads.

Ancient pathways once considered eternal now showed damage.

Which ant—

nothing was untouchable.

The Keeper’s expression darkened.

The ancient figure looked older suddenly.

Tired.

Concerned.

The Human Network noticed.

And honestly?

That worried them more than anything else.

Because if the Keeper felt concerned—

the situation probably deserved concern.

The Horizon Voyager slowed.

Reality anchors activated.

Synchronization systems recalculated routes.

The bridge beca a whirlwind of activity.

Researchers searched alternatives.

Explorers proposed detours.

Ancient civilizations consulted old maps.

Eventually one conclusion erged.

The broken Road blocked the shortest route toward the City of Beginnings.

A detour existed.

But it required traveling through an abandoned region known as the Echo Expanse.

The Human Network collectively disliked the na imdiately.

Fair honestly.

Nobody trusted places called "Echo Expanse."

The Keeper looked thoughtful.

Then sighed softly.

"I was hoping avoiding that area."

Silence.

Everyone turned.

Kaiser imdiately narrowed his eyes.

"Why?"

The Keeper hesitated.

Which was never encouraging.

Then answered.

"Strange things live there."

The Human Network collectively groaned.

Because of course they did.

Existence remained committed to making every journey complicated.

Fair honestly.

The route changed.

The Horizon Voyager entered the Echo Expanse the following day.

The transition felt imdiate.

The World Roads grew quieter.

Darker.

Ancient structures disappeared entirely.

The golden pathways stretched through endless open space where stars seed strangely distant.

Even synchronization systems behaved differently.

Echoes lingered longer.

Sounds traveled oddly.

Reality itself felt...

hollow.

The Human Network dimd uneasily.

Because honestly?

The place felt wrong.

Not evil.

Just abandoned.

Like walking through an empty city after everyone left.

The crew noticed too.

Conversations beca quieter.

Laughter faded.

Even Lumi carried fewer snacks than usual.

The ultimate warning sign.

Three days into the Echo Expanse, Nova stood beside an observation window watching darkness drift past.

The forr lonely survivor understood isolation.

And sohow—

the Expanse reminded them of it.

Footsteps approached.

Kaiser joined them.

Neither spoke initially.

The silence felt comfortable.

Eventually Nova broke it.

"This place feels lonely."

The Monarch looked outside.

The endless darkness stretched forever.

Then nodded.

"Yeah."

Another pause.

Then Nova quietly asked:

"Do you think places can rember?"

The question surprised him.

The Human Network listened carefully.

Because honestly?

It sounded important.

Nova stared into the darkness.

"My reality felt different after people disappeared."

Blue eyes reflected distant stars.

"Like the universe noticed."

Silence followed.

Then Kaiser smiled faintly.

"Maybe."

The answer wasn’t scientific.

Wasn’t precise.

But sohow it felt right.

The Expanse continued drifting around them.

Ancient.

Empty.

Rembering.

Then suddenly—

the alarms sounded.

Not ergency alarms.

Detection alarms.

The entire ship activated instantly.

The bridge called everyone imdiately.

The Human Network collectively prepared for trouble.

Because honestly?

The timing felt suspicious.

The bridge displays lit up.

Sensors tracked sothing ahead.

Sothing enormous.

The projection expanded.

And the Human Network collectively forgot functioning.

A city floated in the darkness.

Not the City of Beginnings.

Sothing else.

An enormous city drifting through open existence.

Impossible towers stretched between stars.

Golden bridges crossed cosmic oceans suspended in space.

Lights glowed throughout countless structures.

The city looked alive.

Occupied.

Active.

The bridge beca silent.

Because nobody expected finding civilization here.

Not in the abandoned Echo Expanse.

Not beyond mapped existence.

The city slowly rotated.

Beautiful.

Ancient.

Impossible.

And then—

a signal appeared.

The Human Network froze.

Because it wasn’t a lonely light.

It wasn’t a distress beacon.

It wasn’t anything familiar.

The transmission carried only three words.

Repeated endlessly.

Over and over.

Across every synchronization frequency.

Across every communication channel.

Across every reality anchor.

Three simple words.

TURN BACK NOW.

Silence filled the bridge.

The ssage repeated.

Again.

And again.

And again.

TURN BACK NOW.

TURN BACK NOW.

TURN BACK NOW.

The city continued floating peacefully through darkness.

Its lights glowed warmly.

Its towers shone beautifully.

Nothing about it appeared threatening.

Yet the ssage never stopped.

The Human Network collectively beca nervous.

Fair honestly.

The Keeper stared toward the city.

Then quietly whispered:

"...That shouldn’t be here."

Nobody liked hearing that.

Especially from the Keeper.

Kaiser folded both arms.

The warning continued echoing through the ship.

The city waited ahead.

Ancient.

Beautiful.

Mysterious.

And sowhere deep inside—

soone clearly wanted them leaving.

Unfortunately.

The disaster family had never been particularly good at listening to warnings.

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