The General's Daughter: The Mission-Chapter 139: The Storm In The Net

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Chapter 139: The Storm In The Net

That night, the internet didn’t just buzz—it roared. Every feed, every channel, every group chat lit up with the same headline: an imperial mausoleum had been unearthed on the island of Isla.

Grainy drone footage leaked. Blurred photos of ruined towers half-buried in earth circulated like contraband. By midnight, conspiracy threads were trending. By 2 a.m., someone leaked the photos of the two sarcophagi, one black and the other ethereal white.

The single caption: Tomb of the First Emperor and Empress of Azuverda caused the servers of major news sites to crash.

Sleep abandoned the quiet lakeside town of Laguna in the province of Sentra. Sirens replaced crickets. Government SUVs with tinted windows rolled through narrow streets that had never seen this much chrome or this many guns.

Inside the municipal hall, harsh white lights burned through the night.

The Minister of National History had flown in from the capital with a full delegation in tow.

The governor of Sentra, with his own entourage, arrived barely containing his excitement.

The mayor looked like a man who had just realized his sleepy town was about to become ground zero for something far larger than tourism.

Ares had been summoned as well. The island in the lake — and the waters around it — belonged to him. Property he had bought to keep a promise made at his mother’s deathbed — to recover their ancestral lands forcibly taken by traitors in the family centuries ago.

Behind closed doors, they argued over jurisdiction, ownership, and control—because an imperial mausoleum didn’t just mean history.

It meant glory.

Power.

Money.

Secrets that had stayed buried for centuries.

Security was escalated to military oversight.

General Leonard Norse was summoned before dawn, pulled straight from an ongoing operation, and dropped into a situation no one fully understood. Satellites were repositioned. Naval patrols tightened around Isla’s waters. No civilian vessel was allowed in Calma Lake.

Already in Laguna, the Norse siblings—Liam and Logan—received new orders: protect the archaeological teams at all costs and secure Isla and its perimeter. Engineers, historians, and excavation crews were being rushed in under armed escort.

Whatever lay beneath Isla, the government intended to uncover it first... and keep it under control.

But the night had one more spark to throw into the fire.

At the exact same time the discovery broke, an old historical web novel resurfaced and went violently viral.

Written under the mysterious pen name Themis, Rise Of An Empire, told the legend of Emperor Alaric and Empress Lara—the founders of the ancient empire of Azurverda.

Readers devoured all two hundred Chapters in a frenzy.

It told the story of a brave woman born into a savage age — an ancient realm where kings ruled with iron fists, borders were drawn in blood, and war devoured the innocent as readily as it crowned the victorious.

Mercy was weakness. Survival was the only law that mattered.

It was the time when kings and princes took up the sword and went into battle.

The novel centered on Lara Norse—daughter of the legendary war god Odin Norse. She was kidnapped by traffickers as a child, forged by survival, and reborn as something far more dangerous than a victim.

In the war-torn land of the ancient four kingdoms, she crossed paths with a man whispered about as a myth. A reclusive martial arts master who had abandoned the world after witnessing too much of its cruelty.

He broke her down without mercy, stripping away fear, rage, even her name, until nothing remained but bone, will, and breath. Then he rebuilt her into something the battlefield had never seen — not merely a warrior, but a force of precise, terrifying intent.

The novel told of Alaric — the unwanted prince, the spare heir cast into exile after court intrigue turned his own blood against him.

He survived not through royal protection but through grit, cunning, and the loyalty of soldiers who chose him over safer masters.

From the wilderness and the ruins of forgotten fortresses, he forged an army of the dispossessed and returned to unite four warring kingdoms beneath a single banner — not by birthright, but by conquest and persuasion alike.

Their paths collided in the depths of Mount Ourea, where she saved a dying soldier from the jaws of Hades.

Only later did she learn he was no ordinary soldier.

He was the prince of a kingdom already burning — Alaric himself, traveling in secret to hunt the rebel leaders tearing his homeland apart from within.

Legend says she did more than save his life.

She changed the course of history.

Because from that moment on, wherever they went, war followed — not as chaos, but as design. Campaigns that should have taken decades ended in seasons.

Armies twice their size collapsed from within. Kings who underestimated them vanished from their thrones. Together, they did not merely win battles.

They rewrote the rules of power.

From blood, strategy, and unbreakable loyalty, they built an empire that stretched across seas and mountains — an empire born not of inheritance, but of will.

Yet what captured the public’s imagination more than their conquests was the rise of the Gabriella Guild.

It began in the shadows — a clandestine sisterhood formed from those society had cast aside: women brutalized by man’s lust and cruelty, widowed by endless campaigns, sold into slavery, accused of crimes they never committed, or simply deemed inconvenient by men in power. Where the world saw broken remnants, Lara saw untapped strength.

She gathered them, trained them, educated them, armed them — not always with blades, but with skills far more dangerous. Trade, finance, diplomacy, espionage, poison, information.

The empire’s enemies feared its armies.

Its rulers feared the Guild.

Under Lara’s command, the discarded became indispensable. The silenced became whisper networks. The powerless became kingmakers. Fortunes rose and fell at their discretion. Rebellions died before they could breathe. Alliances formed or shattered based on information only they possessed.

People would later say the empire had two thrones:

One in the palace.

And one in the shadows.

Themis ended the novel with a footnote.

History remembered emperors, generals, and battles. But those who studied the hidden record knew the truth:

Empires rose because of Lara Norse.

And endured because of the women the world tried to erase.