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Chapter 46 - Chapter 46: The City of Tides

​The ocean was not blue. It was the color of bruised steel, churning under a grey sky that stretched forever.

​After the suffocating heat of the Cinder-Peaks and the claustrophobia of the jungle, the open sea felt like a different planet. The air tasted of salt and iodine.

​The White Raven flew low over the waves, its hull caked in volcanic ash that was slowly being washed away by the sea spray.

​"There it is," Isolde announced from the cockpit. She didn't sound happy. "The biggest floating trash heap in the world. Pontus."

​Julian stepped up to the viewport.

​Pontus wasn't a city built on an island. It was a city built of ships.

​Thousands of vessels—ancient aircraft carriers, rusted supertankers, luxury yachts, and scavenging barges—had been lashed together with massive chains and suspension bridges. In the center rose a cluster of pre-war oil rigs, converted into skyscrapers that glittered with neon lights.

​It was a sprawling, chaotic raft the size of a metropolis, drifting slowly on the currents.

​"No land," Lyra whispered, looking at the endless water. "If you fall off the sidewalk, you drown."

​"Or the sharks get you," Skid added, checking the sensors. "And by sharks, I mean the Aether-Torpedos. The perimeter is rigged."

​"How do we get in?" Julian asked. "If Isolde is banned, the main harbor will flag us instantly."

​"We don't go to the main harbor," Isolde steered the ship lower, skimming the wave tops. "We go to the Bilge. It's the underside of the city. The smuggler's port."

​The Undercity

​Isolde guided the White Raven toward the massive, rusted hull of a supertanker that formed the southern wall of the city.

​"Hold on," Isolde warned. "It's going to be tight."

​She flew the ship under a massive suspension bridge and aimed for a dark, gaping hole in the side of the tanker's hull—a drainage output that had been widened into a hangar bay.

​They shot inside.

​The light vanished, replaced by the amber glow of sodium lamps and the green bioluminescence of algae. The "Bilge" was a cavernous internal harbor inside the hollowed-out ships. It smelled of diesel, rotting fish, and old money.

​The White Raven set down on a floating metal pontoon. The engines powered down with a tired whine.

​"Welcome to Pontus," Isolde grabbed her coat. "Keep your weapons hidden, but accessible. The law here is 'Buyer Beware'."

​The Dry-Dock

​They disembarked. The pontoon swayed gently under their feet.

​The Bilge was bustling. Crews were offloading crates of illegal tech, contraband Aether-cells, and exotic animals.

​Isolde led them to a secluded corner of the hangar, where a massive crane hung over a dry-dock bay. A sign painted in dripping red paint read: BARNACLE BILL'S CUSTOM REFITS - NO REFUNDS.

​A man slid out from under a submarine hull on a mechanic's creeper. He was shaped like a barrel, with a beard that looked like steel wool and a cigar permanently glued to his lip.

​"We're closed," the man grunted, not looking up. "Empire inspection next week. I ain't taking new jobs."

​"Not even for an old friend, Bill?" Isolde leaned against a crate.

​The man froze. He slowly slid his goggles up. He looked at Isolde. His face went pale.

​"You," Bill whispered. He looked around frantically. "Are you insane? The Mayor has a 'Sink on Sight' order for you! You owe him a yacht!"

​"It was an ugly yacht," Isolde shrugged. "Listen, Bill. We need a rush job. Full conversion. Hydro-jets, hull reinforcement, pressure seals. Rated for the Trench."

​"The Trench?" Bill laughed nervously. "You want to dive into the Abyss? That's five miles down, Izzy. That's crushing depth. You need Military-Grade plating."

​"We can pay," Julian stepped forward.

​He dropped a heavy canvas bag on the workbench. It clinked with the sound of gold bars.

​Bill opened the bag. The gold reflected in his eyes.

​"That... covers the parts," Bill muttered, chewing his cigar. "But the labor? And the silence tax? That's extra."

​"We don't have time for haggling," Lyra said, crossing her arms.

​"I don't want more money," Bill wiped his greasy hands. "I want insurance. The Tide-Hunters have been shaking me down. A local gang. They stole my shipment of Aether-Turbines yesterday. Without those turbines, I can't build your engines."

​Julian sighed. "So, we get your turbines back, and you fix our ship?"

​"You get them back," Bill nodded. "And I'll turn that bird of yours into a fish by tomorrow morning."

​The Floating Market

​They left Skid with the ship to start stripping the flight thrusters. Julian, Lyra, and Isolde headed up to the surface levels to find the Tide-Hunters.

​Pontus at night was a sensory overload.

​The decks of the lashed-together ships formed streets. Market stalls sold grilled squid, waterproofing sprays, and salvage from the ocean floor. Neon signs reflected off the wet metal.

​"The Tide-Hunters run the East Deck," Isolde explained, pulling her collar up. "They're divers. Heavily modified for underwater combat. Gills, webbed hands, pressure-resistant skin."

​"Mutants?" Julian asked.

​"Trans-humanists," Isolde corrected. "They think the land is dead. They want to evolve for the water."

​They reached the East Deck. It was a converted aircraft carrier flight deck, flooded with six inches of water to accommodate the aquatic residents.

​At the end of the deck stood a warehouse made of shipping containers. Two guards stood outside. They wore sleek, blue armor and held spearguns. Their skin was a pale, sickly grey.

​"That's the stash," Isolde pointed.

​"Front door?" Lyra asked.

​"No," Julian looked at the water covering the deck. "We knock from below."

​He knelt down and placed his Resonance Gauntlet into the shallow water covering the deck.

​"Water is a perfect conductor," Julian whispered.

​"What are you going to do?" Lyra asked.

​"Sonar," Julian said. "I'm going to map the building."

​He sent a low pulse.

​Ping.

​The sound traveled through the water, bouncing off the steel walls of the warehouse, reverberating through the floor.

​Julian closed his eyes. The image formed in his mind.

​Six hostiles inside. Heavy weapons. The turbines are in the back, crated.

​But he felt something else.

​Deep below the floating city, in the dark water of the real ocean... something massive was moving.

​Ping... Thump.

​It was a heartbeat. Slow. Deep.

​"Julian?" Lyra touched his shoulder.

​Julian pulled his hand back, gasping.

​"The Titan," Julian whispered. "It's not just in the Trench. It's... circling."

​"Circling the city?" Isolde asked.

​"No," Julian looked at the dark horizon. "Circling the drain."

​"Hey!" one of the guards shouted, pointing his speargun. "No dry-foots allowed on this deck!"

​Julian stood up. The water dripped from his gauntlet.

​"We're here for the turbines," Julian said loud enough for them to hear.

​"Get lost, tourist!" The guard fired a warning harpoon. It skidded across the wet deck, sparking.

​Julian sighed. "I really hate wet socks."

​He aimed his gauntlet at the water at the guards' feet.

​Focus: Hydro-Shock.

​He fired a pulse.

​The water on the deck exploded upward in a precise wave, hitting the guards with the force of a tidal crash. They were knocked off their feet, sliding backward into the warehouse doors.

​"Breaching!" Lyra yelled, splashing forward with her carbine drawn.

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