Extra's Path To Main Character-Chapter 65 - 64 - The Architect Herself

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Chapter 65: Chapter 64 - The Architect Herself

The summons to meet Sera Voss arrived on day three hundred and twenty-five, one week into Amaron’s partnership liaison rotation.

Formal invitation delivered through official channels. Sera was visiting Valdenmere to attend Partnership Initiative coordination meetings and had requested individual consultations with each S-rank liaison. Amaron’s appointment was scheduled for the fourteenth hour in the Initiative headquarters’ secure conference facility.

He arrived precisely on time to find Sera already present. She looked exactly as his Memory Index had described from the original timeline—mid-thirties, professional bearing, the presence of someone who’d built a continental organization and had navigated it through Guild campaign operations to negotiated partnership. But seeing her in person rather than through combat reports or mana-projection communications was different. More real. More present.

"Hunter Volg," she said, gesturing to the chair across from her. "Thank you for making time. I know the liaison rotation keeps you occupied."

"Commander Voss," Amaron replied, sitting. "The schedule is manageable." 𝙧𝙚𝙚𝔀𝒆𝓫𝓷𝙤𝓿𝒆𝙡.𝒄𝙤𝓶

"Please, call me Sera. We’re partners now. Formality seems unnecessary between people who helped end a campaign through negotiation rather than elimination." She poured tea from the service that had been prepared. "I wanted to speak with you specifically because your role in the partnership creation was significant. Lyris tells me you recommended accepting our modified terms when Guild central was considering whether shared authority was acceptable."

"I recommended what seemed like the approach most likely to serve everyone’s interests," Amaron said.

"That’s diplomatic phrasing," Sera observed. "But Lyris also tells me you have access to temporal displacement information. That you’ve experienced a timeline where events developed differently. That gives you unique perspective on whether this partnership was the correct outcome."

"In the original timeline, the Guild eliminated the Cascading Dawn," Amaron said, deciding that honesty with Sera was probably more productive than evasion. "Six months of campaign operations. Dozens of casualties. Your leadership was captured. The infrastructure was destroyed. The theoretical foundation about permanent rifts was classified as dangerous extremism. And rift consciousness was never discovered because the Guild dismantled everything before stable connections could develop enough for manifestation."

"And in that timeline, what happened to me?" Sera asked.

"You were captured during the final campaign phase. Imprisoned for unauthorized infrastructure construction and deployment of lethal force against Guild personnel. Your research was seized. And the question of whether permanent rifts had merit was never seriously examined by anyone with authority to reform protocols."

Sera absorbed this quietly. "And you prevented that outcome by recommending partnership when Guild central was deciding whether to continue with elimination approach."

"I recommended what the available information suggested was better for everyone involved," Amaron said. "Including you."

— ◆ —

"Why?" Sera asked directly. "You’re Guild. You achieved S-rank through Guild training. You have personal relationships with Guild personnel and no particular reason to favor our organization. Why advocate for partnership that legitimizes what the Guild spent weeks trying to eliminate?"

It was a fair question. Amaron considered how much truth to give and decided that Sera had earned comprehensive honesty.

"Because in my first timeline—the one that preceded my regression—I was furniture. F-rank support. Invisible. Forgettable. I spent nine years working Guild operations without ever being in a position to question whether protocols were optimal or just historically entrenched. I died at age twenty-seven under rubble in a dungeon while the protagonist won somewhere else and no one noticed I was gone."

He continued. "I came back to this timeline with knowledge from that first life and a commitment to doing things differently. To being someone who mattered. To building relationships and capability that would let me contribute to making things better rather than just surviving them. The partnership between Guild and Dawn is better. It serves more interests. It advances understanding rather than just maintaining established protocols. Advocating for it was consistent with what I’ve spent three hundred and twenty-five days trying to become."

Sera listened with the focused attention of someone who understood exactly what he was describing. "You died as someone who didn’t matter. Came back determined to matter. And achieved S-rank in ten months through methods that would have seemed impossible to the person you were before. That’s—remarkable. Also somewhat tragic that it required dying first."

"The second life is better," Amaron said quietly. "Significantly. Even with the complications the regression created."

"What complications?" Sera asked.

"The timeline breaking faster than my Memory Index could predict. Events happening at wrong times or not happening at all. People appearing who shouldn’t exist. Situations developing in directions I had no advance knowledge of. The script becoming obsolete within three months of awakening." He paused. "And the growing awareness that following a predetermined plan based on foreknowledge was less valuable than building actual capacity to handle unpredicted situations."

"Which is why you recommended partnership," Sera said. "Because your Memory Index couldn’t predict whether it would work, but your judgment suggested it was worth attempting."

"Yes," Amaron confirmed.

— ◆ —

Sera refilled both their teacups. "The Cascading Dawn’s research into rift consciousness began seven years ago when I was still active Guild S-rank. I discovered evidence that rifts responded to sustained presence. That they developed awareness over time if connections remained stable. That what the Guild treated as mindless manifestations were actually proto-intelligent gateways attempting communication."

She continued. "I reported these findings to Guild leadership. Requested authorization to conduct long-term stability research. Was told that rift elimination protocols were established policy and that deviation wasn’t acceptable regardless of theoretical merit. So I left. Built independent research infrastructure. Recruited personnel who shared my assessment that the Guild’s approach was fundamentally flawed. And created the Cascading Dawn as organization committed to understanding rifts rather than reflexively destroying them."

"The Guild classified that as rogue operations," Amaron said.

"The Guild classified anything that challenged established protocols as rogue operations," Sera said. "But we were right. Rift consciousness exists. Permanent infrastructure generates value. Cooperation with gateway intelligences is possible. Everything we’ve demonstrated in the past six weeks validates research the Guild dismissed seven years ago. And we only achieved that validation because you recommended partnership when elimination was still the easier path."

"The easier path would have cost more," Amaron said. "In casualties. In lost knowledge. In missed opportunities. Partnership is complicated. But complicated isn’t the same as wrong."

"No," Sera agreed. "Though it does require people willing to navigate the complications rather than defaulting to simpler opposition. Which is why I wanted to speak with you. The Partnership Initiative is ten days old. It’s fragile. Both organizations have personnel who think elimination would have been better. Who believe shared authority is weakness rather than strength. And maintaining the partnership will require people willing to actively defend it when others question whether it should continue."

She looked at him directly. "You’re S-rank. You have influence with Guild leadership. You contributed to campaign resolution. And you have temporal displacement knowledge that gives you unique credibility. When people question whether the partnership should persist—and they will—your voice will matter. I’m asking if you’ll use that voice to support what we’ve built or if you’ll remain neutral and let organizational momentum determine the outcome."

— ◆ —

It was a recruitment pitch. Sophisticated. Honest about the ask. Framed as choice rather than demand. Exactly how you’d approach someone whose support mattered but who couldn’t be coerced.

Amaron thought about his first life. Nine years of following protocols without questioning them. About this life, where he’d broken himself to achieve S-rank specifically so his voice would carry authority when it mattered. About the fact that Sera was correct—the partnership was fragile and would require active defense to maintain.

"I’ll support the partnership," he said. "Not because you’re asking. Because I think it’s the approach most likely to serve everyone’s long-term interests. But I’m also going to question it when I think it’s making mistakes. And I’m going to prioritize what’s actually correct over organizational loyalty to either Guild or Dawn. That’s the commitment I can make."

"That’s exactly the commitment the partnership needs," Sera said. "People who think rather than just execute. Who question rather than just comply. Who prioritize outcomes over institutional preferences. If we have enough people like that, the partnership works. If we don’t, it collapses back to opposition regardless of formal agreements."

She stood, extending her hand. "Thank you for your time, Hunter Volg. And thank you for the recommendation that made this partnership possible. I suspect we’ll be working together frequently in the coming months."

Amaron shook her hand. "Probably. And please, call me Amaron. If we’re partners, formality seems unnecessary."

Sera smiled. "Agreed. Welcome to experimental governance, Amaron. Where yesterday’s impossible becomes today’s operational reality and we all pretend that’s sustainable."

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