The General's Daughter: The Mission-Chapter 146: The Mystery Of The Lost Empire
This time, they had looked behind the dead.
At the walls...at the carved guardians standing eternal watch.
At the name repeated again and again like a drumbeat through time.
Norse.
They had seen the faces — not identical, but unmistakably kin.
The same bone structure. The same severity. Not distant ancestors from dusty genealogy charts, but men who looked like they could step down from the stone and start giving orders.
Men who had bled.
Men who had held the line.
Men who had made sure the emperors inside those coffins lived long enough to need coffins at all.
A slow, unfamiliar heat spread through Liam’s chest, settling somewhere between pride and responsibility. Lucas felt it too — heavier, quieter, like a hand pressing between his shoulder blades, pushing him forward whether he wanted it or not.
Their father hadn’t been mourning in there.
He had been remembering something carved deeper than memory.
Logan’s teasing grin faded as he glanced between them, sensing the shift even if he didn’t fully understand it. "Okay... what?" he said, voice dropping. "What did I miss?"
Liam exhaled slowly, eyes lingering on the mausoleum doors.
"Not the emperors," he said at last.
Lucas folded his arms, gaze hard, distant. "The men who made sure there was still an empire left to rule."
Behind them, the mausoleum stood silent — a monument not just to power, but to the shadows that had kept that power alive.
And for the first time, the Norse brothers understood that their name wasn’t impressive because it was famous.
It was feared because it had always been necessary.
...
Lara did not follow the others out.
The mausoleum felt different without the Norse family inside — less crowded, more ancient, as if the air itself relaxed once the living weight of that guardian bloodline was gone.
Dust motes drifted lazily through shafts of pale light, settling over emperors, over stone, over secrets that had survived longer than any nation.
Yannis stayed too, and so did Ares.
The moment the doors sealed shut, he moved closer — not intrusive, not quite respectful either, but with the quiet persistence of a man who knew opportunity when it stood alone in front of him.
Notebook already open, pen poised, eyes gentle but with that restless curiosity that made people trust him.
"So," he said, voice low but eager, the sound echoing faintly off vaulted stone. He gestured broadly at the tombs, the walls, the carved generals looming behind them.
"Why do you think no one knew about all this..." His hand swept wider, "...until now?"
Lara didn’t answer immediately.
Her gaze drifted across the chamber — over the sarcophagi, the reliefs, the faded pigments that once shouted power and now whispered survival.
Something tightened behind her eyes, not quite grief, not quite awe.
"I have a theory," she said softly.
Yannis leaned in.
"Natural disaster," she continued, voice roughened by something personal. "It could only be a natural calamity."
Otherwise, how could the empire she and Alaric built crumble just like that?
The words hung in the air like ash.
Nearby, Philip Hardy — who had been hunched over the sarcophagus of Emperor Aldrich Kromwel, titled Magnus I — froze mid-inspection. He straightened so abruptly his tools clattered against the stone lid, the sound cracking through the silence.
"You’re absolutely right," he said, almost breathless, eyes shining with the thrill of sudden understanding. "An empire like this doesn’t just vanish. Not without a trace. Something catastrophic must have struck Calma first — crippled the capital, shattered the infrastructure. And then..." He spread his hands grimly. "...the opportunists came."
The seat of power collapsed from a catastrophic loss, and then the predators lunged at their prey.
That’s history’s oldest story.
But Lara had already gone still, her mind racing somewhere far beyond the mausoleum walls.
Which volcano was it?
It couldn’t have been Ourea as it wasn’t a volcano. Not Roca either, as Roca was mostly rocks. No craters.
Then a memory surfaced. Mount Etna.
Not the famous one sung about in legends — but the lesser Etna. A modest peak when compared to Ourea’s godlike dominance.
From Calma, it appeared harmless, almost forgettable, just a faint silhouette half-hidden behind Ourea’s colossal shoulders.
But that was the illusion.
Etna wasn’t tall, but it was vast.
A sprawling giant laid low against the earth, its flanks stretching for miles, its summit pocked with ancient craters that time had softened into serene lakes — mirror-smooth waters that reflected the sky so peacefully no one would ever guess they were wounds.
Sleeping wounds.
Lara’s stomach twisted.
Had Etna awakened?
She knew that mountain.
Not from maps but from captivity.
When she had been taken — blindfolded, transported, dumped like cargo — she had woken in a cave on those very slopes. She remembered the strange quiet, the mineral scent in the air, the way the ground felt subtly warm at night as if the earth were breathing in its sleep.
Back then, Etna had been classified as dormant. Silent for over five centuries — longer than most dynasties survived, longer than living memory could hold.
It was harmless.
Just an ancient volcano softened by time, its fury spent, its teeth pulled, its craters filled with glassy lakes where wild animals flocked to drink.
Or so everyone believed.
Lara’s eyes darkened as the thought locked into place, heavy as a coffin lid.
Dormant didn’t mean dead.
It meant sleeping with one eye open.
Waiting for pressure to build. For fault lines to shift. For the exact wrong moment to wake up.
And if Etna had awakened while Calma stood at the height of its power — complacent, glittering, convinced of its own permanence...
Then there would have been no warning. No time to evacuate. No heroic last stand.
Just fire.
The kind of disaster that doesn’t conquer a city but erases it.
But even if the catastrophic eruption buried Calma in over 20 feet of volcanic ash and pumice, surely the Kromwels and their contributions could have been recorded in other places of Azurverda.
An empire that large should have left fingerprints everywhere — trade documents, diplomatic correspondences, foreign archives, rival histories, oral traditions.
The Kromwels had ruled too broadly, built too much, influenced too many lives to vanish without a trace.
There should have been something. A footnote. A disputed legend.
Even propaganda from enemies claiming credit for their fall.
Instead... there was nothing.



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