The Blueprint Prince-Chapter 59 - 58: The Mirror World

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 59: Chapter 58: The Mirror World

Time Remaining: 36 Days, 18 Hours. (Status: Rails ended. Switching to Off-Road Mode. Traction is critical.) Location: Sector 3 - The Glass Plains.

They burst out of the tunnel and hit the light.

But they didn’t hit tracks. The rails, which had guided them safely through the mountain, simply stopped. They didn’t end at a station. They disappeared into the floor—melted, fused, and swallowed by the ground itself.

"End of the line!" Arthur shouted, seeing the track vanish into a sheet of smooth obsidian. "Retract rail-gear! Drop tires!"

He slammed the hydraulic lever. HISSS-THUNK. Under the chassis, the heavy steel train wheels lifted up. The massive rubber off-road tires slammed down, making contact with the ground.

It wasn’t a smooth transition. The tires didn’t hit dirt or gravel. They hit Glass.

SCREEEEEEE.

The Iron Horse didn’t grip. It drifted. The ten-ton vehicle spun 90 degrees, sliding sideways across the mirror-smooth surface like a hockey puck on ice.

"Steer into the skid!" Arthur yelled, fighting the wheel. "Don’t lock the brakes!"

Zack screamed as the horizon spun around them. The world outside was a blur of blinding white light. Arthur pumped the gas, spinning the wheels to find traction. The rubber smoked, burning against the hot glass, until finally, the treads caught a patch of rough fulgurite. The vehicle jerked straight and shuddered to a halt.

...

They sat there for a moment, the engine idling. Arthur squinted through his fingers. Even with the tinted windows, the glare was painful.

The valley was a thirty-mile stretch of fused silica. Three centuries ago, a conclave of Battle-Mages had dropped a tactical sun-strike here. The heat had liquefied the desert floor instantly. Now, under the midday sun, it was a solar oven.

"Temperature?" Arthur rasped. His throat felt like sandpaper.

"Inside the cabin? 45 degrees Celsius," Zack said, fanning himself with a map. "Outside? 60 degrees. If we step out, our boots will melt."

"Engine temp?"

"Boiler is happy," Zack tapped the gauge. "But the tires... Arthur, the rubber is soft. It’s smelling."

Arthur cursed. He hadn’t accounted for the conductive heat. The glass ground was acting like a skillet. "We have to keep moving," Arthur said. "Airflow cools the rubber. If we stop, the tires melt to the ground, and we become a permanent statue."

Arthur gently pushed the throttle. The wheels spun. WHEEEEE. The car barely moved.

"Zero traction," Arthur muttered. "It’s polished glass. The rubber can’t grip."

"So we’re stuck?" Vivian asked.

"No," Arthur shifted gears. "We just have to drive differently. Zack, drop the Sand-Box Levers."

"The what?"

"The levers next to your knee! Locomotives drop sand on the rails for grip! We need grit!"

Zack pulled the levers. Clunk. Nothing happened.

"Empty," Arthur realized. "We used all the sand in the Canyon. We’re running on bald tires on a mirror."

He looked at the terrain. It wasn’t flat. There were ridges and dips—waves of frozen glass. "We have to sail it," Arthur decided. "Momentum only. No sharp turns. If we spin out, we’ll slide for miles."

He feathered the throttle. The wheels spun, caught a ripple in the glass, and the train lurched forward. They began to slide across the plains. It wasn’t driving; it was controlled hydroplaning. The rear end of the train drifted left and right, threatening to spin out with every wind gust.

The Magnifying Glass

"Arthur," Julian said, his voice tight. "Look at the hull."

Arthur looked at the door frame. The paint—what was left of it—was bubbling. The metal underneath was glowing a dull red.

"The reflection," Arthur realized. "The ground is concave in some spots. It’s focusing the sunlight like a magnifying glass. We are driving through focal points."

"We’re being lasered by the sun?" Zack squeaked.

"Solar concentration," Arthur corrected. "Julian, shields! Reflective barrier!"

"I cannot shield the whole train!" Julian argued, wiping sweat from his brow. "The surface area is too large!"

"Then shield the tires!" Arthur ordered. "If the tires blow, we’re dead. Put a thermal ward around the wheel wells!"

Julian groaned, extending his hands. "Glacies Ward." A shimmering blue mist wrapped around the tires, hissing as it fought the heat of the glass.

"That buys us minutes," Arthur said, fighting the steering wheel as the train drifted sideways. "We need shade."

"Shade?" Vivian laughed dryly. "Arthur, look around. There are no trees. It’s a plate."

Arthur scanned the horizon. She was right. It was miles of flat, burning death. Except for one thing.

In the distance, shimmering in the heat haze, was a Structure. It looked like a giant, metallic ribcage jutting out of the glass. Huge, curved steel beams rising hundreds of feet into the air.

"The Boneyard," Arthur identified it from the map. "The remains of the First Era Sky-Docks. If we get under those ribs, the shadows will cool the engine."

"How far?"

"Ten miles," Arthur calculated. "At this speed... fifteen minutes."

"The tires won’t last fifteen minutes," Zack warned. "Pressure is rising. 50 PSI... 55 PSI..."

"Movement!" Vivian yelled, pointing to the East.

Arthur looked. At first, he thought it was a mirage. A ripple in the glass. But it was moving parallel to them. Fast. It looked like a snake. A massive, crystalline serpent, easily fifty feet long, slithering inside the glass.

[System Scan: Silica-Wyrm.]

[Biology: Subterranean predator. Swims through solid glass using thermal vibration.]

"It’s swimming in the ground," Arthur said, horrified. "It thinks we’re a bug on the surface of a pond."

The Wyrm breached. It exploded out of the glass like a dolphin, arching into the air. Its body was made of transparent scales that refracted the light into rainbows. It had a mouth full of diamond teeth.

It crashed back down, disappearing into the solid ground with a splash of molten silica.

"It melted the glass to dive," Arthur noted. "It superheats its skin."

"It’s hunting us!" Vivian grabbed the turret controls. "Can I shoot it?"

"No!" Arthur shouted. "If you shoot the ground, you crack the glass! If the glass cracks under us, we fall into the magma layer!"

"So we can’t shoot, we can’t turn, and we can’t stop?" Zack summarized.

The Wyrm surfaced again, closer this time. It slammed its tail against the glass, creating a shockwave. The impact cracked the surface ahead of them. A web of fractures spread across their path.

"It’s herding us," Arthur realized. "It wants us to hit the cracks. If we hit the rough glass, we lose momentum. Then it eats us."

"We need a distraction," Arthur said. "Something hot. Something bright."

He looked at the dashboard. "Julian. The Flare Gun."

"I don’t have a flare gun," Julian said.

"You are the flare gun," Arthur pointed at the sunroof. "Climb up there. When the Wyrm jumps, fire a Solar Flare directly into its face."

"I will melt!" Julian protested.

"You have a shield! Go!"

Julian climbed through the hatch, his robes fluttering in the superheated wind. The Wyrm breached again, roaring silently. It lunged toward the train, its diamond jaws opening wide enough to swallow the cab.

"Now!" Arthur screamed.

Julian raised his staff. He didn’t use a fireball. He used pure light. "Lux Maxima!"

A sphere of blinding, concentrated sunlight erupted from his staff. It was brighter than the sun above. The Wyrm, accustomed to hunting by thermal sense, was blinded. Its sensors overloaded. It shrieked—a sound like grinding glass—and thrashed in the air, missing the train by inches. It crashed into the ground behind them, writhing in confusion.

"Go! Go! Go!" Vivian yelled.

Arthur floored it. The Iron Horse skidded across the glass, the tires screaming. They reached the shadow of the Sky-Docks. The massive steel ribs cast long, cool stripes of shade across the ground. Arthur slammed the brakes. The train spun 360 degrees on the slick surface and slid into the shadow of a giant, rusted pylon.

They stopped. The tires hissed as they touched the cooler glass in the shade. The engine ticked.

"Safe," Arthur breathed, leaning his head on the wheel.

"Safe?" Zack pointed out the window. "Arthur... look at the Docks."

Arthur looked up. Hanging from the rusted steel ribs, hundreds of feet above them, were shapes. Not bats. Not birds. Ships.

Ancient, rusted airships, suspended in chains, swaying gently in the wind. And on the side of the nearest one, painted in faded white letters, was a word Arthur recognized.

"ICARUS."

Arthur’s eyes widened. "This isn’t a graveyard," he whispered. "It’s a parking lot."

End of Chapter 58

RECENTLY UPDATES