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The Archive was waking up.

Not quickly, not in a single activation, but in pieces. Pale light was spreading through the walls in lines that moved the way water moved through dry ground.

chanisms were engaged sowhere deeper in the structure. The grinding was distant and regular, the sound of systems that had been at rest for a very long ti being asked to run again.

The object pulsed in Kai’s hand. Once, and then again, the reaction was stronger than the pulses that had led them here.

Sera was watching another section of the wall illuminate. "I think we broke sothing," she said.

Kai looked at a section of the ceiling where the light lines were converging toward a new area. "That would imply it wasn’t already broken."

"Good point," she said.

Twenty minutes later, a stone door that had been indistinguishable from the surrounding wall slid aside. The motion of it displaced enough air to pull dust off nearby surfaces and send it moving through the space in thin currents. The chamber beyond it was larger than anything they had encountered in the archive so far. The scale of it was apparent even from the threshold.

Both of them stopped.

The walls of the new chamber were covered floor to ceiling in stone panels. Carved surfaces, hundreds of them, the carvings dense and precise in a way that distinguished them from decorative work. The room wasn’t built to look impressive.

It was built for a purpose.

The center of the room held a circular platform surrounded by inactive projection arrays. Most of them were dark. One was not. It emitted a faint standby light that had been waiting for sothing.

Sera said, "What is this?"

Kai walked forward slowly. He looked at the wall panels, at the carved topographic lines running across them, at the geographic markings in arrangents he recognized from looking at maps. "I think it’s a map room."

The object agreed. When he stepped onto the platform, it pulsed, and the arrays activated and the chamber filled with light simultaneously, all of it happening in the span of a breath, and both of them stepped back from the intensity of it before it resolved.

A projection ford above the platform.

At first, it was fragnts. Disconnected geotric pieces floating at different heights, portions of coastlines, sections of mountain ranges, and partial river systems. The pieces moved. Ancient systems assembled a picture from components that had been stored separately, the information coming together the way a puzzle ca together, each piece finding its position.

The fragnts connected.

Kai looked at what they ford.

Not a city map. Not a regional survey. A world. The whole of it was rendered in the projection above the platform, continents and oceans, and the mountain ranges that ran through them, river systems draining from highland to coast, the topographic detail consistent across the entire surface.

Sera moved to stand beside him. Neither of them spoke for a mont.

The geography was familiar in the way that sothing was familiar when you knew the underlying structure but not the specific arrangent. The major mountain chains were in the positions that modern maps showed them. The coastline shapes mostly matched what Kai knew. The large rivers corresponded to rivers that existed now.

The cities on the map did not correspond to anything.

Sera noticed it before he said anything. She was scanning the projection the way she scanned dungeon interiors, looking for specific things in a field of information. "Where’s Mythal?" she said.

He looked and found the region where Mythal existed in the modern world. The geography was correct. The city was not there. Nothing was there. He expanded his search across the projection systematically, looking for any of the nas he knew from the city lists that had been circulating since the regional expansion of the system.

Virelia.

Astran Port.

Hollow Reach.

The other cleared cities from the compilation footage. None of them appeared on the map. The cities displayed were places that had no modern equivalent. Nas in the ancient script, translated partially by the object, that corresponded to nothing in any record he had access to.

The realization took a mont to arrive fully.

"This isn’t our civilization," Sera said quietly.

"No," he said.

This wasn’t their civilization but sothing older.

The object pulsed again, and the projection shifted. Symbols appeared across the map surface, each one positioned above a marked city. The translation function was activated, and text ford beside each symbol.

Most of the cities carried the sa designation.

Archived.

Others showed LOST or UNKNOWN.

Sera’s arms folded slowly as she read through the nearest cluster. "I don’t think those are good."

"No," he said.

Then he saw a different symbol. It was distinct from the standard designation markers. Several cities carried it rather than one. He counted them as the translation function identified each.

Authority Capital

More than one. More than a handful. The designation appeared again and again across the map, distributed through the major population centers, the strategic positions, and the locations that the geographic context suggested had been significant.

They had assud Authority Capital was unique. The map showed dozens.

Sera was counting. "How many?" she said.

He estimated from the visible distribution. "Dozens."

Neither of them had a response to that.

Then the projection shifted again, and what it showed made the Authority Capital question temporarily secondary.

Every Authority Capital on the map except one had been marked through. Not faded with age or damaged, but it looked like it was purposely crossed out. The remaining city was uncrossed. It continued glowing with the full designation marker, the light of it unchanged.

Sera stared at the crossed-out cities. "Why would they cross out entire cities?" she said.

The chamber did not answer.

Kai looked at the remaining city. At the dozens of marked-through ones. At the distribution of them across the world map. Soone had crossed them out one by one. The marks were identical.

The projection zood without either of them doing anything.

The room darkened around the highlighted city as the system focused on it, everything else in the projection fading until only the surviving Authority Capital remained above the platform. It expanded as the zoom continued, detail resolving from the distance view into sothing specific.

Massive walls. Districts within them on a scale that modern cities did not approach. Structures rising through the skyline whose purpose was not imdiately obvious, but whose construction quality was clear even in the projected form. Transportation infrastructure connecting the districts internally and extending outward beyond the walls into what the projection’s edge suggested was a larger regional network.

Population indicators appeared alongside the architectural detail.

The numbers were large.

Sera said, very quietly, "That’s not a city."

"No," he said.

Cities were places people lived, but this was sothing else. An ancient text appeared below the projection. The object translated it.

AURELION.

Kai searched his mory. He had read through the guild’s accumulated records. He had seen the regional news coverage of cleared cities. He had looked at every piece of historical docuntation that had been relevant to the gate phase and the system’s arrival. He had looked at older city records during the investigation work of the previous months.

He had never encountered that na.

Sera looked at him. "You’ve heard of it."

"No."

"You?"

"No," he said.

A city that large should have left sothing like ruins, stories, or maybe even a na. But this one didn’t. Aurelion had left nothing that anyone currently alive knew of.

The projection produced one more piece of information. A coordinate overlay, comparing the historical map with the modern geographic positioning. The system identified the location.

Both of them looked at where Aurelion had been.

The coordinates existed. The terrain existed. The modern overlay showed the area clearly.

Wilderness. No ruins are visible in the projection’s comparative data. No settlent history. No archaeological designation. No geographic feature is nad after what had once stood there.

The greatest city in the world had vanished. The ground where it stood was just ground. The projection faded slowly, the highlighted city remaining longest before it too went dark. The chamber returned to the ambient glow they had entered with.

Sera looked at the dark platform. Then, on the wall panels surrounding the room, the carved geographic information is displayed. Then, at the coordinates that were still visible in the fading edge of the projection.

"How does sothing that large disappear?" she said.

Nothing in the Archive answered.

Kai looked at the last position of the projection. At the crossed-out cities. At the one that had not been crossed out, but was also gone.

The archive was broken. The records were gone. The crystal had managed four words. Then we failed. Above the empty platform, the space where Aurelion had been projected was just air now.

The question was not what the city had been.

The question was what had happened to it.

You are reading My Class is Null, But I Always Get the Best Outcome Chapter 137: The Missing Cities on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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