The Grand Colosseum of Akkadia was not built of stone and mortar. It was a testament to Imperial arrogance, a vast, open-roofed bowl of gleaming white alloy and shimmering energy fields. Thousands of anti-gravity tiers floated in concentric rings, packed with a roaring, riotous crowd of spectators from every corner of the sector. The sound was a physical presence, a multilingual wall of cheers and jeers that pressed in from all sides, so loud it vibrated in my teeth. Banners and flags waved frantically, depicting hundreds of sigils: a snarling wolf's head for a northern tribe, a coiled serpent for a desert clan, the simple hammer and anvil of a Dweorg holdfast. In the tier below us, I saw a delegation of a chitinous, insectoid race, their multifaceted eyes clicking and whirring as they took in the spectacle. The air was thick with the smells of ozone from the containment fields, roasted meats from the concession-drones zipping through the crowds, and the electric tang of a million ambient magical artifacts. Uniformed Kyorian Justicars stood at stoic attention in every major walkway, their polished silver armor gleaming, their presence a silent promise of overwhelming force should the crowd's enthusiasm spill into chaos. Above it all, the Citadel hung in the artificial sky, a silent, oppressive blackness, a constant reminder of who was truly in charge. We stood on the sand-covered floor, one of hundreds of teams, a sea of colored banners and tense faces, all waiting.
Hard-light projectors threw shimmering images into the air above us: a S'skarr pyromancer creating a vortex of fire that incinerated a training golem; a Dweorg champion shattering a summoned earth elemental with a single, rune-empowered blow. It was all bread and circuses on a galactic scale, a masterfully orchestrated spectacle of power and promise. My [Predator's Gaze] was a low thrum beneath the surface, sweeping the other competitors. The raw power on display was magnificent. I saw a trio of S'skarr, their scales shimmering, whose collective aura felt like a barely contained furnace. A lone Felir champion stood with his eyes closed, his power a deep, quiet well of coiled lethality. Every team here was the elite of their entire region. My team looked like we were tadpoles who had just been thrown into an ocean full of sharks.
And I searched. Tier after tier, face after face. The sheer scale of it was a form of despair. But I couldn't stop myself. With every scan that came up empty, the hope in my gut withered, replaced by the cold, familiar ache. I forced my posture back into the weary slump of 'Jack', my hands clasped loosely in front of me. On the outside, I was just another nervous provincial.
A hush fell over the crowd as a single figure appeared on the central Imperial balcony. He looked young, his dark hair cut with military precision. He wore no ostentatious robes, just a severe, high-collared black tunic. But as my Gaze fell upon him, a cold shock went through me. His aura wasn't a roaring fire like Kharonus, or even a deep well like my own. It was a perfect, controlled null-space, an active suppression field that seemed to devour the ambient energy around it yet barely had a visible effect on the surrounding Essence signatures. Power didn't just avoid him; it died in his vicinity. He was a singularity of will and authority. It had to be him — Hadrian Vorr.
His voice, amplified by some unseen tech, was calm, dispassionate, and carried to every corner of the Colosseum. "Warriors. Champions. Valuable assets of the Empire," he began, the words devoid of warmth. "You stand here today because you have demonstrated potential. You have clawed your way up from your provincial homes to the heart of this world. Do not mistake this for an endpoint. This is a beginning." The speech was a masterpiece of psychological warfare, designed to strip away old loyalties. He didn't mention our homes, our people, only that we had left them behind.
He gestured to the arena floor. "The Prime Conclave is not a mere tournament. It is the ultimate test of talent. An investment the Empire has made in this world, and we expect a return. For three months, you will be tested. Your strength, your intellect, your will, your loyalty. Those who excel will be rewarded beyond the dreams of your ancestors. You will be given access, power, and a place at the Empire's table. Those who fail... will be forgotten." His eyes, cold and dark, seemed to sweep over every one of us. "Show me you are worthy of my attention. Let the Aptitude Gauntlet commence."
With that, he turned and vanished. The arena floor began to shift. The sand retracted. Walls of hard light erupted. Our team was herded into one section. In a distant section, I caught a brief glimpse of Mavia, a solitary figure in black, being filed into the zone for independent trials.
A new voice, the same announcer I heard from the library, echoed around us. "Phase One: The Shifting Labyrinth. Navigate to the center. Cooperation is permitted. Efficiency is rewarded."
The world exploded into a three-dimensional maze of translucent crystal platforms and flickering hard-light walls, suspended in a zero-gravity field. A team of robed psions near us went still, their eyes glowing as they tried to divine a path. One suddenly cried out, blood pouring from his nose, and collapsed as his teammates caught him. The labyrinth fought back against those who tried to brute-force its secrets. Not far from them, a hulking beast-man tried to clear a gap by throwing his smaller goblin-like teammate across. The goblin landed neatly, only to have a new wall materialize around him, trapping him in a tiny cage. A moment later, both the cage and the goblin inside simply winked out of existence — disqualified. The stakes were absolute.
"Hold," Lucas commanded. "Eliza, read the pattern."
"It's a sequence," she muttered. "A repeating algorithm. The energy pitch changes a half-second before a wall solidifies. It's like a musical key."
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"Give us a path," Lucas said.
"Wait for the chime... now! Left, two platforms up, then right! Go!"
We moved as one. Lucas led, his shield raised. "Pitch change, Lucas! Wall coming up on your right!" Eliza called out.
He didn't even have to look, adjusting his angle mid-leap. I played my part, channeling a tiny stream of mana to sharpen their reflexes and soothe the disorienting effects of the zero-g field. Silas pointed. "That platform is fractured!" he barked. It was a crucial catch. Instead of landing, Lucas used it as a mere touchpoint to ricochet to a more solid piece of crystal. We reached the exit nexus solidly in the upper third. Perfect.
The next preliminary trial was the "Bridge of Conviction." One warrior was furiously battling a phantom of himself, but larger and more monstrous, its shadowy blade meeting his own in a clash of sparks only he could see. A mage cowered, her hands raised as if to ward off grasping hands of pure shadow rising from the chasm. Lucas went first. His phantom Murk-lurker dissolved against his iron will. Eliza stumbled as a vision of her workshop burning appeared, a phantom Kyorian officer standing over the ashes, holding up a torn piece of one of her new schematics and laughing. Her jaw clenched and she pushed through, her expression hardening. Silas faced a crowd of shadowy, accusing faces from his past, their whispered taunts too faint for me to hear but their venomous intent palpable. He just walked straight through them, his expression as hard and unreadable as stone.
The final test on the first day was the "Mote Hunt." The ruined cityscape smelled of ozone and damp concrete. I saw the S'skarr pyromancer incinerate a half-dozen constructs — and the motes — in a wave of fire. A few alleys over, a massive Minotaur was simply smashing through buildings, grabbing any mote he could see, a strategy that left him with a dozen energy weapons trained on his back. They were all playing a game of attrition.
"I'll hold the line!" Lucas roared, slamming his shield into the ground as an alpha construct, a bipedal machine twice his height, rounded the corner. He activated his [Resonant Bastion]. The construct's gatling-style cannon spat a volley of physical slugs that sparked and ricocheted off the golden dome with deafening cracks.
"It's got a rotating harmonic shield!" Eliza called out from behind a rusted-out husk of a vehicle, her drone zipping around the machine's head. "I can't get a lock!"
"Silas, distraction! Jack, keep me up!" Lucas bellowed, grunting as the construct switched to a plasma cannon. The air crackled, the dome shimmering violently under the sustained heat. The impact sounded like tearing metal and frying bacon, and I could see the ground at Lucas's feet starting to glow. I focused a steady stream of green-gold energy on his shield arm, subtly reinforcing the mana feeding his bastion, making it seem like he just had incredible endurance.
Silas tossed a "shadow-grenade" that burst in a cloud of illusory phantoms, causing the construct's targeting sensors to go haywire. The huge machine, staggering, tried to retaliate with a localized sonic pulse that distorted the air. It was a brutal, disorienting attack, but Eliza was ready. "Counter-frequency deployed!" she shouted. "Projector is synched! Lucas, left flank, now!" She fired a narrow sonic beam, and for a split-second, a man-sized section of the shield wavered.
Lucas surged forward, slamming his shield into the construct's leg, the raw force staggering it. Before it could recover, Silas flowed out of the urban debris like a wraith, running along the top of a collapsed wall to gain a better angle. He dropped down, his Mana-Thorn Vipers striking with surgical precision into the exposed joint housing. There was a spray of black hydraulic fluid, and the construct's cannon arm went limp, sparking uselessly.
We cleared the trial and were teleported back to a massive, circular waiting hall. The sharp tang of expended mana and scorched metal hung in the air. A raucous cheer erupted from a Dweorg team who were celebrating by clanking massive tankards together. Nearby, a human team sat in dejected silence. I watched as Imperial Medics efficiently patched up a wounded warrior from another team, their hands glowing with healing energy while a small device on their wrist scanned the fighter's vital signs and power fluctuations — treatment and data collection, all in one smooth motion. My comm bracer chimed. "Section Delta cleared. Final score 99th percentile for solo combatants." Nyx sent. We determined she should achieve a high enough rating so we could enter the intersectional part of the tournament since Anna and grandpa were nowhere to be found in our completely secluded section — "for competitive integrity and to prevent any intersectional alliances".
"You did good, Jack," Lucas said, clapping my shoulder. I just nodded wearily.
That's when I overheard it. Two large, burly officials were talking quietly nearby.
"Toughest fight was against that alpha construct," one grumbled.
"You think that was tough?" his friend shot back. "You should've heard the rumors from Section Epsilon. They had a team from the Silverwood Reach. Little thing, an anonymous archer in black-and-silver leathers. Their alpha construct got taken down with one shot."
The first man scoffed. "One shot? Don't be an idiot."
"I'm telling you! She drew her bow, and it was... weird. The Essence around the arrowhead got all strange. The arrow didn't just fly. It flashed. Blew a hole clean through the construct's core. I heard it straight from a Prefect. They said they have never seen a skill like that."
The noise of the hall, the thousands of voices, the ache in my muscles — it all vanished, replaced by the deafening roar of blood in my ears. She. Archer. A strange ability.
My heart, which had been beating with a slow, tired rhythm, suddenly slammed against my ribs like a battering ram. The weariness of Jack, the cold caution of my plans — it was all burned away in a single, violent, agonizing surge of hope.
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