Following

Table of Contents

Prologue Chapter 1

Vareth
Ongoing 1664 Words

Chapter 1

19 0 2

Serah was glad this was her last delivery of the day, hauling crates through Grayhaven Vale, a small town perched on the edge of the Kingdom of Valecrown. The vale curved gently around the settlement like a protective palm, fields stretching outward in tidy squares broken only by stone fences and irrigation channels that caught the late light.

The crate in her arms wasn’t heavy, just some flour and a roll of cheese, but the weight kept shifting slightly with each step. She adjusted her grip as she walked, thumb settling into a shallow groove worn smooth by countless hands using this same crate over the years. The wood creaked, just once, and then quieted, as if acknowledging her.

She slowed as the traffic thickened near the center of town.

The road through town was busy in the late afternoon. Carts rolled past, iron-rimmed wheels clattering over stone. Someone argued near the well about grain prices. A pair of women compared strain recovery herbs at a stall draped in faded cloth. A child laughed, sharp and unrestrained, sprinting past her before skidding to a stop and turning back.

“Race you to the square!” he called, already gone again before she could reply.

Serah didn’t answer. She didn’t have time to play until this delivery was complete, maybe not even then if her parents found something else that needed doing.

She watched his feet instead as he nearly slipped taking a corner too quickly.

Everyone in town knew the corner stones near the bakery shifted if you took them wrong. It wasn’t written anywhere. It was just something you learned by growing up here.

A bell rang from the tower near the square. Clear. Measured. Three strikes.

Conversation paused in ripples.

“Registry update,” a clerk’s voice announced from the tower balcony. “One new recognition recorded.”

The sound carried cleanly over rooftops and down the main road.

A murmur followed. Heads turned toward the square. Some smiled. Some nodded once, as if tallying odds in their minds. A few teenagers stopped entirely, pretending not to care while listening harder than anyone else.

Serah kept walking, a small kernel of nerves tightening low in her stomach.

Would she be recognized soon as well?

She passed the notice board without stopping. The new names would appear there later, inked in steady script by the registry clerk. She knew the process. The name. The age. The time of recognition. Sometimes a brief notation if the Imprint response had been unusual.

Halfway to the storehouse, she paused.

No sound marked it. No bell. No voice.

Only a sudden awareness of her own body.

A faint expectation, like standing at the edge of a cold lake.

No chime. No text.

No shift in the air.

She exhaled and moved on.

Not recognized yet.

Around her, neighbors resumed their conversations as though nothing monumental had just occurred. That was the way of it. Recognition was universal. Everyone received it eventually. It was not a miracle.

It was a beginning.

As she neared the storehouse, she picked up more threads of conversation. The sound shifted from grain prices and irrigation schedules to something sharper.

There had been a big fight in The Circuit recently.

She tried not to pay too much attention.

“It was over so quickly. He wasn’t even breathing heavily.”

Swift victories meant less strain spikes. Usually. Though sometimes it meant compression instead of expenditure.

“Three blows and she was out. It was amazing.”

Overwhelming power was flashy, but often hid poor sustainability. Three strikes could mask three unstable pillars.

“It’s amazing some of these builds we’re seeing out of rookies these days.”

“I agree. Do you think he’s committed to any skills yet?”

Committed skills meant no respeccing. No second chances. Depth set like mortar between stone.

Serah stepped around the group, adjusting the crate against her hip, but she kept listening.

“It looked like acceleration layering.”

“No, that was reinforcement.”

“Could’ve been both.”

It sounded like they were talking about the up-and-coming rookie champion. It had been a while since a rookie had fought all the way to the championship bracket and stood a credible chance of taking victory.

The Circuit wasn’t just spectacle. It was proof of what careful alignment could achieve. Or proof of what overreach could destroy.

She walked out of range before she could hear any more about the fight.

At the very least, the championship fight this year was likely to be a good one. The current champion, Grathok Varn-Khel, was still standing. No one had taken him down in years.

People said he didn’t surge. That he compressed.

People said his Form could absorb what would shatter others.

People said his Imprint responded differently than most.

Serah didn’t know if any of that was true.

But she had read the reports.

She finally approached the storehouse, shifting her burden slightly as she waited for the town scribe to acknowledge her. The building smelled faintly of dried grain and old paper.

“Ah, Miss Vale. Stable?” The old man asked with a jovial smile as he looked up from his slate. “What do you have for me today?”

“Holding. Flour and cheese from the Porters. Mrs. Porter said she’d have some root vegetables to add in a couple of days.” She set the crate on the table between them.

He nodded approvingly and made a couple of notes on his slate board, chalk scratching lightly. “Wonderful. Any other deliveries?”

“I have to check in with the Smiths tomorrow, as well as the Hopkins. I think my family will have some vegetables to add as well in the next couple of days.”

“Good to hear. The winter stores are looking strong this year.” He glanced at her wrist automatically. “Light strain?”

“Holding.”

“Excellent. Until next.” He waved her off absently, already returning to his tallies.

Everything counted. Even crate carrying.

She stepped back into the street and turned toward the notice board.

A few minutes’ walk later, her curiosity was appeased.

The newly recognized person was a boy she knew distantly. They had shared a few classes at school, though they had never spoken more than necessary. He had always seemed certain. Certain of his answers. Certain of his direction. Certain that recognition would affirm something he already knew about himself.

His name sat fresh in ink.

-Recognition Time: Late Afternoon.

-Imprint Response: Standard.

-Standard.

She felt an unexpected flicker of relief at that.

Like many of her peers, she assumed he already knew what type of build he’d go with. Given he was broader than most boys their age, she figured he’d lean toward a combat build. Probably something heavily defensive or focused on larger weapons. Something that let him stand in front of danger instead of dancing around it.

Her attention slipped to the fight record posted beneath the recognition entries.

Aurex Kalvein.

No ring name yet.

She stepped closer.

Match Duration: 00:02:14.
Strain Classification: Light–Moderate.

Light.

Her pulse quickened.

She looked to the clerk standing nearby.

“Could I get a copy of the records for this fight?” she asked, offering a small smile. “Please?”

The clerk regarded her with mild amusement. “Light strain, Miss Vale?”

“Holding,” she answered.

He nodded and handed her a small booklet, its gray cover unadorned except for the registry seal. “This is all the information the System has released to us. Use it well and keep your thresholds.”

“Until next.”

She slipped the booklet into her pocket.

Her family’s home was on the edge of town, where fields began to outnumber houses. The walk took several minutes, long enough for the noise of the square to thin into evening insects and distant cart wheels.

She didn’t mind the distance.

It gave her time to be alone.

She passed the irrigation channel and paused briefly to watch the water catch the last of the sun. Recognition. Commitment. Collapse.

Everyone was recognized.

Not everyone was suited for the Circuit.

Not everyone wanted to be.

She thought of the boy’s fresh ink on the board.

She thought of Aurex’s compressed victory.

She thought of Grathok, still standing.

She pressed her palm lightly against her wrist as she walked.

Nothing flared.

Nothing chimed.

Nothing shifted.

She wondered what it would feel like when the System finally spoke her name.

Would it be loud?

Would it be quiet?

Would it change everything all at once, or simply illuminate what had been there all along?

The fields darkened slowly around her.

She kept walking.

Public Combat Summary

Registry-Compliant Release
Distribution Tier: Civilian


EVENT RECORD

Circuit Series: West Ring Qualifiers – Round V
Arena Location: Grayhaven Regional Ring
Match Duration: 00:02:14
Victory Condition: Technical Knockout
Strain Classification: Light–Moderate
Medical Intervention: Not Required


COMPETITOR SUMMARY

Fighter A

Registered Name: Aurex Kalvein
Recognition Age: 16

Observed Pillar Alignment:

  • Primary: Martial

  • Secondary: Fortitude

  • Latent Indicator: Acceleration

Commitment Status (Public Estimate):

  • Confirmed Tier Commitments: 2

  • Early Specialization Detected

Combat Expression Profile:

  • High burst sequencing

  • Controlled stamina allocation

  • Minimal visible overstrain

  • Efficient recovery pacing

Peak Observed Strain: Within Safe Operating Range
Threshold Breach: None Detected

Registry Disclosure Note:
Specific skill identifiers withheld under Competitive Protection Mandate 4.7.


Fighter B

Registered Name: Mireth "The Desert Snake" Vane
Recognition Age: 18

Observed Pillar Alignment:

  • Primary: Precision

  • Secondary: Sustainment

  • Latent Indicator: Insight

Commitment Status (Public Estimate):

  • Confirmed Tier Commitments: 1

  • Structure Phase Incomplete

Combat Expression Profile:

  • Defensive posture early engagement

  • Reactive counter pattern

  • Sustained strain growth mid-match

  • Recovery lag detected

Peak Observed Strain: Approaching Upper Stable Range
Threshold Breach: None
Medical Advisory Issued: Cautionary

Registry Disclosure Note:
Specific skill identifiers withheld under Competitive Protection Mandate 4.7.


ENGAGEMENT ANALYSIS

Opening Phase:
Fighter A established forward dominance through short-interval pressure patterns.

Mid-Engagement Shift:
Acceleration reinforcement observed during strike compression.
Opposition sustainment response insufficient to stabilize fortitude loss.

Closing Sequence:
Three-strike sequence delivered within compressed interval.
Cumulative destabilization resulted in technical knockout.

Efficiency Rating: High
Sustainability Rating: Unverified
Escalation Potential: Moderate–High


PUBLIC STRAIN SUMMARY

All monitored strain activity remained within authorized safety thresholds.
No involuntary surge events recorded.
Post-match recovery curve classified as Rapid.


REGISTRY NOTICE

This document reflects civilian-tier disclosure.
Full diagnostic records remain restricted under Competitive Integrity Protocols.

Please Login in order to comment!
Feb 16, 2026 14:09

I really love the quiet, grounded opening the crate, the worn wood, the town traffic it makes the System feel even more intrusive and powerful by contrast. The combat summary format is especially strong; it feels clinical and official in a way that makes the world instantly believable. I’m really curious: when the System finally speaks Serah’s name, do you imagine it will align with what she expects for herself… or completely disrupt the life she’s preparing for?

Feb 17, 2026 13:48

When outside forces act on us, is it ever really in a way that we want them to? :)

Feb 17, 2026 15:50

That’s such an intriguing way to frame it it really reinforces the idea that the System operates on its own terms, not Serah’s. I’m even more curious to see how that tension unfolds. I also wanted to ask, would you be comfortable connecting with readers on another platform to discuss the story in more depth?

Feb 17, 2026 16:12

Sure. I'm not active too many places, but you're welcome to my discord server. Pop on over when you want.   https://discord.gg/HhUk8rDN

Feb 17, 2026 16:28

just joined:)

Feb 16, 2026 14:56

When Serah pauses and expects the System to recognize her but nothing happens, is there something unusual about her delay, or is she just a late bloomer compared to her peers?

Feb 17, 2026 13:46

Without revealing too much, no she's not a late bloomer. The System recognizes individuals according to it's own criteria, but the typical age for humans to be recognized is between 16 and 18. She's 17 :).