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Now reading: Chapter 47 - 46: The City of Ghosts from The Blueprint Prince, a Fantasy novel by AuthorLv1.

The elevator didn’t glide. It fell.

It wasn’t a smooth, sci-fi descent. It was a terrifying, rattling drop into the throat of the world. The platform shook so violently that Julian was on his hands and knees, clutching the grate floor, his face a mask of green nausea.

"Carbon-enchanted steel," Arthur yelled over the shriek of the rusted guide rails. He was leaning against the railing, trying to look casual, but his knuckles were white. "Safety factor of ten!"

"It sounds like it’s screaming!" Zack covered his ears.

"It’s just friction!"

The air grew hot. Then cold. Then hot again. They passed through layers of the earth—damp listone, dry granite, and then sothing else.

The sll hit them first.

It wasn’t the sewage sll of above. It was dry, tallic, and sharp. It slled like the inside of an old clock that hadn’t ticked in centuries. Ozone and dust.

CLANG.

The platform slamd to a halt. The sudden stop threw them all onto the floor. Dust rained down from the darkness above.

Silence.

Arthur stood up, brushing rust flakes off his sanitation overalls. He clicked his mana-flashlight on.

"Welco," Arthur said, his voice echoing into the void. "To the Atherian Capital."

...

They stepped off the platform.

They were standing on a suspended walkway made of glass—miraculously intact—that stretched out into the darkness.

Zack cast a Light Orb, sending it floating upward.

The light revealed the scale of the place. And it was horrifying.

The Undercity wasn’t a cave. It was a tropolis inside a geode. Buildings made of black obsidian and silver tal twisted upward in impossible geotries. Towers spiraled like DNA strands. Bridges connected skyscrapers that hung upside down from the cavern ceiling.

But it was dead.

There were no lights. No movent. Just the silent, towering skeletons of a civilization that had mastered magic and then died in a single afternoon.

"It’s... too big," Vivian whispered. She walked to the edge of the glass bridge. Below, the city stretched down into an abyss of fog. "People lived here?"

"Millions," Arthur said. He walked to a console near the elevator. It was dead. No power.

"They didn’t just live here," Arthur ran his hand over the cold tal. "They ascended. They replaced their limbs with mana-prosthetics. They replaced their food with nutrient paste. They tried to optimize humanity."

"And then the pipes burst," Julian said quietly, standing beside him.

"And then the pipes burst," Arthur confird.

He checked the iScroll. The map of the Undercity was flickering, struggling to connect to the local grid.

"The Pump Station is at the Core," Arthur pointed to the center of the cavern, where a massive, spherical structure hung suspended by thick chains. It looked like a chanical heart. "That’s the Central Processor."

"It looks far," Zack noted. "And the bridge is out."

He pointed ahead. The glass walkway they were standing on ended abruptly about fifty feet out. Shattered.

"We climb?" Vivian suggested testing the railing.

"No," Arthur squinted at the darkness. "We take the train."

_____

They found the station a hundred yards down a side corridor.

The train was still there. It was sleek, silver, and shaped like a bullet. It hovered slightly above a single copper rail—magnetic levitation.

But it wasn’t empty.

Arthur shone his light into the carriage windows.

Inside, there were... shapes. Not bodies. Not bones.

Statues.

Dozens of them. People sitting in seats, standing in the aisles. They were made of gray ash. Frozen in the exact mont the Mana Pulse hit two thousand years ago. A mother holding a child. A man reading a slate.

"Don’t touch them," Arthur warned, grabbing Julian’s wrist as he reached for a door handle.

"They’re statues," Julian said, his voice shaking.

"They are Ash Shadows," Arthur said grimly. "The Mana Flash vaporized the organic matter instantly. The ash is held together by residual static. If you touch them, they collapse."

"That’s..." Vivian turned away, looking sick. "That’s awful."

"It was quick," Arthur lied. He didn’t know if it was quick. The logs said the ltdown lasted four hours. He hoped it was quick.

"We need to use this train," Arthur said, forcing himself to focus on the engineering. "It’s the only direct line to the Core."

"We are going to ride in a tomb?" Zack squeaked.

"We are going to ride in a vehicle," Arthur corrected. "Zack, don’t look at the passengers. Look at the console."

Arthur pried open the driver’s cabin door. The pilot—another ash statue—sat at the controls.

"Sorry," Arthur muttered. He gently pushed the ash figure. It disintegrated into a pile of grey dust on the seat.

Arthur sat down. He wiped the dust off the panel.

"It runs on the sa grid as the elevator," Arthur said. "Zack, give the Spare Core."

Zack handed over the glowing blue crystal from the elevator. Arthur slotted it into the train’s dashboard.

HUMMM.

The interior lights flickered on—harsh, clinical white light. The magnetic hum increased. The train lifted another inch off the rail.

"Hold on," Arthur pushed the throttle.

The train didn’t lurch. It glided. Smooth. Silent. Fast.

They shot out of the station, speeding along the suspended rail, flying through the dark cavern of the dead city.

.....

They were halfway to the Core when the lights flickered red.

[WARNING: OBSTRUCTION DETECTED.]

The train began to slow down automatically.

"Why are we stopping?" Vivian asked, hand on her sword.

"The track is blocked." Arthur stared out the windshield.

Ahead of them, a massive section of the rail was wrapped in... vines?

No. Not vines. Cables.

Thick, black cables, pulsing with purple light, were coiled around the track like snakes. They originated from the darkness below and burrowed into the buildings above.

"That’s not Atherian tech," Arthur said, frowning. "That looks... organic."

The train ca to a halt fifty feet from the blockage.

"We have to clear it." Arthur opened the door. "Julian, bring the rifle. Vivian, watch the ceiling."

They stepped out onto the narrow maintenance catwalk running alongside the track. The abyss yawned below them.

Arthur walked up to the black cables. He touched one with his wrench.

It flinched.

"It’s alive," Arthur recoiled. "It’s a Corruption Feeder. It’s tapping into the power grid."

Suddenly, the cable split open.

It wasn’t a vine. It was a nest.

From the split cable, hundreds of small, tallic spiders poured out. But these weren’t like the Scrappers in the forest. These were made of polished chro and glass.

[Threat: Repair Drones (Corrupted).]

"They’ve been reprogramd," Arthur realized. "They aren’t fixing the city. They’re eating it."

The drones sward toward them, their glass eyes glowing purple.

"Fire!" Arthur yelled.

Julian raised the Sun-Lance. ZAP. ZAP.

The laser cut through the drones, lting them mid-air.

"There’s too many!" Vivian shouted, swinging her hamr. She smashed a drone, but three more crawled over her shield.

"Zack! The train!" Arthur yelled. "Overload the mag-lev coils!"

"What?" Zack was cowering inside the cabin.

"Turn the dial to 110%!" Arthur scread, kicking a drone away. "Turn the track into a magnet!"

Zack spun the dial.

VVVVVMMMMMMM.

The single copper rail beneath the train began to vibrate. The magnetic field spiked massively.

The drones were made of tal.

Suddenly, the swarm stopped flying toward the team. They were yanked violently downward, slamming onto the rail. The magnetic force pinned them there, crushing their delicate glass bodies against the steel.

CRUNCH-CRUNCH-CRUNCH.

Thousands of drones were flattened instantly.

"Nice," Arthur breathed. "Now, cut the power before the train lts!"

Zack killed the engine. The hum died.

The track was clear—well, covered in drone guts, but clear enough.

"Back inside," Arthur ordered, wiping purple fluid off his coat. "We’re walking the rest of the way. I don’t trust the track anymore."

They walked past the corrupted cables, stepping over the crushed drones.

Ahead of them, the Central Processor—the heart of the world—lood large. It was a sphere of pure white light, suspended in the dark.

But as they got closer, Arthur saw sothing that made his blood run cold.

The sphere wasn’t white.

It was cracked. And leaking from the crack was a dark, oily sludge that dripped down into the infinite darkness below.

"The blockage isn’t just pressure," Arthur whispered. "It’s infection."

End of Chapter 46

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