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First Intergalactic Emperor: Starting With The Ancient Goddess-Chapter 413: Path of Prophecy
The corridor opened into a chamber that immediately felt wrong.
It was wide, circular, with structural supports sunk deep into the floor and ceiling like the space had once needed to hold weight rather than people. Old mining identifiers were etched into the walls, half-erased by later modifications that never quite managed to overwrite them. This place hadn’t been repurposed cleanly. It had been buried and forgotten.
Multiple doors lined the chamber, evenly spaced, each one thick and industrial, built for pressure rather than security. Their locking mechanisms were intact but inactive, jammed in a way that looked intentional. There was no signs of damage or rust. Just sealed and left that way.
Arlen stepped forward and brought up her interface, trying one of the doors. Nothing responded. She frowned and tried again with a deeper override.
"These aren’t prison locks," she said. "They’re older. They aren’t connected to the prison system."
"Finally, something interesting." Xavier nodded. "We may have a lead."
Klatos moved closer to one of the doors, running his hand along the edge. "Nobody seals something like this unless they expect it to be opened again."
Before anyone could respond, the lights began to dim.
The illumination phased down in stages, white panels fading to amber, then to a dull red that barely filled the space. Emergency lighting didn’t kick in properly, only a few scattered strips along the floor flickering weakly before dying altogether.
Arlen sucked in a sharp breath. "That’s not normal."
Xavier didn’t answer. His vision adjusted immediately, the outlines of the chamber sharpening as if someone had turned a different kind of light on just for him.
A system prompt flickered into existence at the edge of his vision.
[New Quest Available
Objective: Protect Arlen and Klatos
Threat Detected: Autonomous Mining Defense Units.]
Then came the mechanical sound.
Metal shifting. Footstep sounds came from all sides, as if they were surrounded. Low and mechanical, echoes bouncing off the chamber walls in a pattern that suggested coordination rather than chaos.
Xavier pivoted and lashed out again, the whip cracking across its chassis and severing its sensor array before plunging straight through its central housing. It dropped without ceremony, collapsing into a heap of dead machinery.
Arlen backed up blindly, hands raised like that would help. "Xavier, I can’t see anything."
"You don’t need to," he replied, voice steady. "Just stay where you are."
More movement echoed around them. At least three this time, spreading out, adapting. Old mining AI waking up and doing exactly what it had been built to do.
Xavier moved.
The whip became a blur, arcs of light slicing through the darkness as he struck again and again. Each impact sent showers of sparks across the chamber, brief flashes revealing jagged metal forms lunging and failing, collapsing under precision hits that didn’t waste motion or time.
One bot got close enough to Arlen that she felt the vibration through the floor. She froze, breath caught in her throat.
The whip snapped between them.
The machine split clean down the middle and fell apart at her feet.
Klatos stood rigid, unable to see, listening to metal tear itself apart around him. "How many."
"Enough," Xavier said. "And fewer every second."
The last of them tried to retreat, systems recalibrating, logic deciding survival mattered more than engagement. Xavier didn’t let it. He sent the whip straight through its back and slammed it into the far wall hard enough to dent reinforced plating.
Then, silence followed, broken only by the whines of dying machinery.
The lights flickered weakly, then stabilized at a low level. 𝙛𝓻𝒆𝒆𝒘𝙚𝓫𝙣𝙤𝒗𝙚𝓵.𝙘𝙤𝙢
Xavier looked back at the sealed doors, eyes tracking faint changes in their surface now that the chamber had recognized them. "This place is awake now," he said. "And it’s paying attention."
Thin lines of light reappeared along the floor, not bright enough to illuminate the space, just enough to outline the circle and the doors embedded in the walls. Each door carried a different set of markings, some worn almost smooth, others sharper, as if they had been handled more recently.
Arlen stepped closer to the center of the chamber and brought her interface back up. "Whatever woke this place up," she said, "it’s not in the prison systems anymore. I’m not getting any response. It’s safe to assume we are lost and stuck in this place, with no way out."
Xavier was already studying the walls. "It’s not waiting for permission. Everything here is mechanical. Even without power, it will work as intended."
Klatos crouched near the floor markings, tracing one of the lines with a claw. "These aren’t random. They’re routing paths. Old mining logic."
The lines converged toward a circular plate set into the floor at the center of the chamber. It wasn’t raised or labeled, just there, slightly different in texture from the surrounding metal. Xavier stepped onto it without hesitation.
But nothing happened.
Then the markings along the walls shifted. Symbols faded and reappeared, reorganizing themselves into three repeating sets. Each set corresponded to one of the doors, the lights pulsing faintly in sequence.
Arlen frowned. "It’s asking a question."
"Or verifying something," Xavier said.
He closed his eyes for a moment, replaying Bull’s voice in his head, when he talked about his treasure. ’If it’s supposed to happen, but you are just the medium for it to happen, then you are most likely on the right path. The path of the prophecy.’
Xavier opened his eyes and moved to one of the doors, the one with the most worn markings. He pressed his palm flat against it.
"No," he muttered, stepping back.
He crossed to another door, this one cleaner, its symbols sharper, almost proud. He didn’t touch it. He just looked at it and shook his head.
"I don’t feel like it."
The next door sat between them, unremarkable compared to the others. Its markings were faint, partially scraped away like someone had tried to erase them instead of preserving them. Xavier stepped up to it and pressed his palm to the surface.
The chamber reacted immediately.
The floor plate beneath them vibrated, and the lights along the walls dimmed further. The other doors sealed tighter with a heavy mechanical sound, internal locks slamming home one after another. This one door remained unchanged.
Arlen looked around sharply. "That’s it. We don’t get another try."
Klatos glanced back at the sealed doors. "We pick wrong, we don’t pick again."
Xavier withdrew his hand. The door stayed inactive, waiting.
"What’s on the other side," Arlen asked.
"Something Bull wanted hidden," Xavier said. "Or something he wanted tested."
’Maybe he wants to know if I am truly worthy...’
She swallowed. "And you’re sure this is the right one."
"No," Xavier replied honestly. "But I’m sure the others aren’t."
The hum deepened, like the chamber was losing patience. The floor lines began to fade, one by one, systems winding down now that the choice had been narrowed.
Klatos straightened. "Whatever’s behind it, we won’t be able to turn back quickly."
Xavier nodded. "I know."
He stepped forward again and placed his hand against the door. This time, he pushed it as if it was a huge button.
The door resisted for a moment, then began to slide open, slow and heavy, revealing darkness beyond that felt deeper than the chamber itself. Air shifted as pressure equalized, carrying the scent of old metal and something else, something that hadn’t been disturbed in a long time.
The door finished opening. It was slow as it relied on mechanical parts only.
They stood at the threshold for a second longer. The risk was undeniable, and then stepped through, because the chamber behind them had already made it clear there would be no second chances. But they never had an option to choose in the first place.







