Shu Guan walked up to the stone gate.
If it weren't for the tree carved on the gate, and the four characters above, this would be a very ordinary-looking stone gate.
The grain of the stone gate was no different from the rock patterns on the walls he had passed by, obviously cut from ordinary stone found underground, and the cutting was rough at that.
But this was definitely not an ordinary stone gate.
Because there was golden-glowing water floating, flowing non-stop from within the stone gate, forming the river that ran through the underground.
The problem was the stone gate was tightly closed, with only a very thin crack between it and the surrounding rocks, and the water wasn't flowing out from this crack, but directly pouring out of the stone gate itself as if from nowhere.
This was a scene full of mysterious meaning.
If the stone gate truly existed, how could the water possibly flow straight through it?