Home / Urban / Rise of the Masked King / Chapter 47: The Sub-Vault Key
Chapter 47: The Sub-Vault Key
Author: Collins write
last update2025-12-16 23:48:23

Anthony arrived at the crash site minutes later, driving the secure, unmarked vehicle Ronan had prepared. He found Fenrick's vehicle broadsided and abandoned, surrounded by police tape and emergency vehicles.

He pulled over immediately, stepping out to address the lead police officer, displaying his recently issued, internationally validated Jodah diplomatic passport.

"I am Lord Anthony Jodah. That is my Head of Internal Operations. What happened here?" Anthony demanded, his voice crisp with au
Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 165: The Final Reconciliation

    The golden text on the obsidian terminal didn’t flicker; it burned with a steady, impartial light that seemed to draw the very warmth out of the room. Anthony stood paralyzed, his fingers still hovering over the glass, feeling a strange, familiar sensation—not the chaotic static of the Shareholders’ greed, but a cold, mathematical purity that made the "Symmetry" feel like a child’s drawing. The message from Svalbard—The Audit is Incomplete—wasn't a threat in the way Marcus Vane would threaten a rival. It was a statement of fact from a system that viewed humanity not as a collection of souls, but as a series of variables that had failed to resolve.Mark was frantic, his breathing coming in shallow, ragged bursts as he tried to trace the golden signal. "It’s coming from the deep-strata relays under the permafrost, Anthony. This isn't just a broadcast. It’s a systemic takeover. The 'Liquidators'... they aren't people. Or at least, they aren't people as we understand them. They’re the 'De

  • Chapter 164: The Network of Roots

    The morning after the insurrection felt less like a victory and more like a fever break. The air in the vault remained cool, a testament to the hard-coded corrections Anthony and Mark had slammed into the geothermal regulators, but the emotional climate was still brittle. Anthony stood on the high gantry of the main transport bay, watching the second "Genesis" team prepare for departure. Below him, the logistics were no longer being handled by high-tier logistics bots; they were being managed by people. There was a rhythmic, human clatter to the scene—the shouting of coordinates, the metallic ring of spades against crates, and the low, constant murmur of the newly arrived fleet members as they learned the "Liturgy of Utility" from the original survivors.The fracture Marcus Vane had caused had left a scar, but it had also revealed the structural integrity of the Symmetry. Those who had stood with Anthony weren't just followers; they were stakeholders in a reality that actually provide

  • Chapter 163: The Fracture in the Symmetry

    The return to the Highland Vault was not the homecoming of heroes that the planting team had envisioned. As the heavy-lift crawler hissed to a halt in the primary docking bay, the thick, pressurized doors groaned open to reveal an atmosphere that had soured in their absence. The humid, sweet scent of the Greenhouse had been replaced by the sharp, metallic tang of ozone and the underlying smell of unwashed bodies and rising panic. Anthony stepped off the ramp, his boots still caked with the gray, neutralized ash of Edinburgh’s ruins, and immediately felt the shift in the "Sum." The collective hum of the vault—the steady, rhythmic heartbeat of two hundred people working in unison—had fractured into a discordant mess of whispered arguments and sharp, defensive glances.Mark was the first to notice the digital discrepancy. He didn't even have to look at his handheld terminal; the wall-mounted status monitors in the docking bay were flickering with a rhythmic, amber pulse that shouldn't ha

  • Chapter 162: The Genesis Export

    The vibration of the heavy-lift crawler was a low, rhythmic thrum that traveled through the soles of Anthony’s boots, a mechanical heartbeat in a world that had gone silent. Outside the reinforced viewing ports, the Highlands were a monochromatic blur of swirling white and jagged obsidian, but inside the hold, the air was thick with the scent of wet peat and the electric charge of a desperate hope. They were no longer just moving people or data; they were moving the "Hard Assets" of a new world. Secured in pressurized, climate-controlled pods at the center of the bay were the first thousands of "Bio-Shield" saplings—genetically reinforced white oaks, fast-growing tubers, and nitrogen-fixing shrubs designed by the Greenhouse team to survive the toxic, sulfur-heavy soils of the decaying coast.Anthony stood at the head of the hold, watching the twenty people selected for the "Genesis Export." They were a ragged mix of the original St. Paul’s survivors and the newly "audited" refugees fr

  • Chapter 161: The Solvency of Salt and Steel

    The Firth of Forth did not look like a harbor anymore; it looked like a graveyard that had refused to stay buried. As the vault’s reconnaissance drone hovered over the slate-gray waters, the feed it beamed back to the Highland spire was a jagged collage of desperation. The leading vessel of the fleet, a massive, blocky container ship renamed the Aurelian, sat low in the water, its hull encrusted with the white salt of a cross-continental flight from the Mediterranean. Behind it trailed a chaotic tail of white yachts, rusted fishing trawlers, and even a few listing luxury liners, all huddling together against the biting North Sea wind. Anthony stood in the cold, salt-sprayed air of the observation deck, watching the screen as the first of the fleet’s shuttles detached and began its long, hesitant crawl toward the shore.The "Solvency Audit" was no longer a theoretical exercise in a ledger; it was a physical barrier. Mark had spent the night configuring the vault’s short-range transmitt

  • Chapter 160: The Horizon Scan

    The air in the Observation Tier was several degrees cooler than the humid, oxygen-rich embrace of the Greenhouse, and the transition felt like a splash of cold water to Anthony’s senses. He climbed the spiral staircase of polished carbon fiber, leaving behind the earthy smell of the planting beds for the dry, metallic scent of high-altitude electronics. Here, at the peak of the mountain’s internal spire, the vault’s sensors didn’t look inward at the budding forests; they looked outward at a world that was currently tearing itself apart in the silence of the "Zero." Mark was already there, his face illuminated by the flickering blue radiance of the Omniscope—a massive, hemispherical projection table that mapped the thermal and electromagnetic pulses of the entire northern hemisphere.Mark didn't look up as Anthony approached. His fingers were dancing across a glass interface that was slick with the condensation of his own breath. On the map, the world was a sprawling web of darkness, p

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App