"Emperor of Humanity—"
Xavier’s voice broke off before the title could fully leave his mouth.
He stood there with his eyes wide open, staring at the empty air in front of him the way a person stares at a space where sothing impossible has just occurred and the mind is still in the process of deciding whether to accept it. The notification had already faded. The golden light that had accompanied his evolution had already receded. The world around him looked exactly as it had before.
And yet everything had changed.
Just one evolution. A single transition from one sequence to the next. And it had pushed him to the absolute front of humanity — ranked above millions of people in a single, irreversible mont, an achievent so singular that the Infinite Record itself had chosen to acknowledge it. The praise of a system that asured the entirety of humanity’s progress was not sothing dispensed casually. Xavier understood that, even in his current state of incomprehension.
He simply didn’t know how to react to it.
He was still standing in that lost, unmoored stillness when the follow-up notifications began to arrive.
One after the other, without pause, without ceremony — a cascade of system ssages that followed the primary evolution announcent like the aftershocks that follow sothing seismic. He caught a few of them in his peripheral vision as they appeared:
[Ding! Health attribute has transford into Defense attribute.]
He didn’t read the rest with any real attention. The specifics could wait. His instinct told him that the status window would give him a cleaner, more complete picture than parsing individual notifications one by one, and right now what he needed was to understand the full scope of what had just happened to him.
He summoned the window.
[Na: Xavier Crownheart]
[Age: 22]
[Ranking: 1]
[Level: 25 | Race: Human | Class: DeathWill Executioner | Title: First Legendary Class Holder, Bane of Humanity, Lord, Godlike Warrior, Emperor of Humanity]
[Strength: 11 | Agility: 11 | Defence: 11 | Stamina: 11 | Mana: 11]
[Freely Distributable Stats: 8]
Xavier looked at it for a long mont without speaking.
The change was not subtle. It was not sothing that required careful examination or close comparison to a previous state. Everything that had climbed over weeks of grinding — every attribute that had broken through into three-digit territory through accumulated effort and conflict — had compressed back down to two. His level had not moved. And where the familiar white of his statistics had always glowed with the quiet confidence of numbers that knew their own value, sothing different burned in its place.
Red.
Not a warning red, not the red of damage or deterioration — sothing else entirely. Each number flickered with a deep, contained luminescence, the color of embers rather than alarm, as if the figures were generating their own heat. They didn’t look diminished. They looked like sothing that had been reborn into a form that no longer needed to announce itself through size.
Xavier stared at the eleven burning next to each attribute and felt a confusion that was deeper than the kind that gets resolved by simply reading further.
He turned to Zerin.
She was the last person he would have chosen to feel dependent on in most circumstances. Their relationship existed sowhere in the difficult space between utility and mutual dislike — a dynamic sustained entirely by the binding of the familiar contract and the practical reality that she was, in matters of genuine complexity, the most reliably inford person available to him. He didn’t trust her warmth. He trusted her knowledge, and right now that distinction was the only one that mattered.
He pressed the question on her without preamble.
Zerin’s smoky eyes were still unfocused when his voice reached her — still caught sowhere in the aftermath of what she had witnessed, her usually composed expression carrying the faint residue of soone who had watched sothing happen that they had previously kept in the theoretical category. His question arrived like a hand extended across a distance, and she took it. The disorientation cleared. She blinked once, deliberately, and returned fully to the present.
She looked at him.
The expression that settled on her face was not impatience and not contempt, though Xavier had seen both from her before and would have accepted either as within normal paraters. This was sothing different — a quiet, particular look that belonged to soone who has just been asked to explain sothing foundational to soone they expected should already understand it. Patient. Slightly resigned. The expression, Xavier thought distantly, of soone explaining rainfall to a person who has never looked up.
She exhaled.
"There is a fundantal difference between a First Sequence being and a non-evolved being," she said, her tone asured in the way that indicated she was actively choosing not to condescend while conveying information that felt obvious to her. "That difference exists across every dinsion — physical, energetic, perceptual. And it becos even more pronounced once you account for mana conversion at the First Sequence threshold."
She paused, letting that much settle before continuing.
"The numbers you’re looking at are not smaller. They have been recalibrated — reformatted to match the new scale of perception your evolution has granted you. Your status window is no longer asuring what it was asuring before. It’s asuring sothing larger, in units appropriate to that larger scale."
Her smoky eyes held his with the direct, unblinking patience of soone waiting to see if the point had landed.
"To put it simply — treat your ten as equivalent to one thousand of a non-evolved being." A brief pause. "Each point. Across every attribute." Another pause, shorter this ti. "Understood?"
Xavier said nothing for a mont.
His gaze moved back to the burning red numbers in his status window.
Eleven points of Strength. Which — by the scale Zerin had just described — translated to eleven thousand, relative to what he had been before. Eleven points of Defense, where the Health attribute had once sat. Eleven points of Agility and Stamina and Mana, all of them sitting behind the sa quiet red luminescence, all of them carrying a weight that their visual representation had not prepared him to expect.
He was not weaker.
He was operating in an entirely different register.
The number hadn’t gotten smaller. The world it was asuring had gotten larger.
Xavier’s mouth hung open.
He was not a person who was easily rendered speechless. He had faced monsters that defied biological logic, survived situations that should have ended him, and stood at the receiving end of system notifications that rewrote his understanding of his own potential on a semi-regular basis. He had developed, through necessity, a reasonable threshold for surprise.
Zerin had just cleared it without apparent effort.
He had known, in the abstract way that everyone who survived long enough in this world eventually ca to know, that the gap between evolved and non-evolved beings was significant. That knowledge had always lived in his mind as a general principle — a directional truth without specific dinsions. He had never sat down and attempted to asure it. He had never needed to, because the gap had always been sothing in front of him to close rather than sothing behind him to look back at.
Eleven thousand.
Per attribute. Per point. Each number in his status window carrying that multiplier behind it like a silent annotation that the window itself no longer bothered to display because the scale had changed.
The number refused to feel real no matter how many tis he turned it over.
He was still processing this — still standing in the particular paralysis of soone whose ntal model of the world has just been revised at the foundational level — when his body began quietly reminding him that the changes Zerin had described were not rely statistical.
Sothing was happening beneath the surface.
It was not painful, exactly. It was more the sensation of an enormous process underway — deep and pervasive and operating well below the threshold of anything he could consciously direct or accelerate. His internal organs were moving. Not physically relocating, but transforming — each one shifting, adapting, recalibrating to accommodate a body that no longer ran on the sa fuel it always had. The blood and oxygen that had powered every motion and every decision for twenty-two years were being displaced by sothing older and denser and considerably more potent.
Mana.
Pure mana, running through the architecture of his newly restructured body the way current runs through upgraded wiring — filling the pathways that had been expanded to receive it, settling into the spaces that the transformation had prepared. His muscles registered it. His lungs registered it, even as their role in the process shifted toward sothing more symbolic than functional. Even his thoughts felt marginally different — not faster, not sharper in any imdiately obvious way, but quieter. More deliberate. As if the new substrate his consciousness was running on had slightly better resolution than the previous one.
Xavier was in the middle of trying to understand this, his attention turned entirely inward, when the space in front of him rippled again.
He looked up.
Two new windows had opened, side by side, carrying the particular tone of system ssages that were not optional suggestions.
[Error! Failed to find any territory registered under your Emperor na! Please select a territory that you would like to call yours.]
[Error! No official na detected! Please select a na by which you would like to be known throughout the galaxy. All official business will be conducted using this na.]
Xavier read both ssages once.
Then he read them again, more slowly, with the careful attention of soone making sure they have understood what they are actually reading and have not made a straightforward error of comprehension.
He had not.
The first ssage was asking him to select an empire. Not join one. Not pledge allegiance to one. Select one — the way one selects a setting, or a preference, or a starting position. As if territory was sothing the system expected him to simply have an opinion about, the way it might ask him to choose a dominant hand.
The second ssage was asking him for a na.
Not his na. A na. The na by which all official business — throughout the galaxy — would be conducted on his behalf.
The word galaxy sat in the middle of that sentence with a weight that was entirely disproportionate to its size. Seven letters. An almost casual specification of scale. As if the system had been operating at that level all along and had simply not ntioned it until this particular mont made the information relevant.
Xavier’s mouth, which had already been hanging open, did not find cause to close.
He turned to Zerin slowly — the movent of soone who has temporarily lost confidence in their ability to interpret what their eyes are showing them and is looking for external confirmation that reality is functioning normally.....
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