Date: 6/21/2001 - 10:30 PM
Location: The White Room – Assessment Floor
Perspective: Kaiser Everhart
I pulled a fresh sheet of parchment toward me.
My stylus felt heavy, or perhaps it was just the residual weight of Vance's presence.
I wonder if he practices that ominous "warden" stride in a mirror, or if it's simply a natural byproduct of a soul-crushing career in child experimentation.
The previous sheet was a mess of P4A2O2 sequences and mnemonic palaces. I discarded it. I needed a clean slate to map the trap Vance had just set for us.
The riddle is a filter. It is designed to reward the literal and punish the imaginative, or perhaps vice-versa.
Amelia shifted in her chair. She leaned in, voice was softer now.
"K-Kaiser," she whispered, her fingers tracing the edge of my desk. "What do you think he meant? The real subject."
"You have the information, Amelia," I said, not looking up from the blank page. "Run the simulation. What does your forest tell you?"
She closed her eyes for a moment. I could almost see the gears of her photographic memory spinning, replaying Vance's speech in high definition.
"He stated: 'A line that has no end.' That is the chronological progression of the our World. History," she reasoned, her voice gaining a rhythmic, certain quality.
"He stated: 'The alchemy of shapes that possess no weight.' That refers to the molecular structures of mana-catalysts. Chemistry. If we synthesize the two, the logical conclusion is a historical assessment of elemental chemistry."
She opened her eyes, looking at me with a spark of intellectual pride. Her logic was airtight. It was the kind of answer that would earn a standing ovation in any standard academy.
"Good girl," I murmured. I reached over and patted her head, my hand lingering just long enough to feel her lean into the touch. "Your reasoning is sharp. It's clear."
Amelia's chest puffed out slightly. Her lips twitched in that tiny, hidden smile. "Then... we should gather the records of the Alchemical Wars?"
"No," I said. "Because you're looking at the lies on the wall, Amelia. You're not looking at the light that's casting them."
She tilted her head, her brow furrowing. "I... I do not understand. My derivation is statistically sound."
"It is," I agreed.
"But think about the nature of the subjects. Chemistry is just the physics of electrons. Physics is just the biology of energy. And what governs all of them? What is the skeletal structure that prevents the universe from collapsing into a soup of nonsense?"
I began to write on the paper. I didn't write words.
I wrote symbols.
0.
Π.
∞.
"In the early records of our World, the Dwarves discovered the geometry of the crust. They learned that a mountain isn't a rock; it's a series of triangles working in tension. The Elves of the World Tree didn't just sing to the trees; they mapped the infinite fractals of the leaves, realizing that life is a recursive equation. Even the Demons... they didn't invent Abyssal Logic. They just discovered the math of the void."
Amelia watched my stylus move, her eyes wide.
"History is just math applied to time," I continued. "Linguistics is just the math of sounds. Mathematics is the only subject that exists without a human, an elf, or a dwarf to observe it. It is the Source."
"It is the only thing Vance would call 'absolute zero.'"
I circled the number zero on my page.
"The riddle was deceptive. He mentioned history, alchemy, and linguistics to see if we would get lost in the forest. But the 'line with no end' isn't a story. It's a number line."
Amelia sat in stunned silence. She looked at the paper, then back at me. The awe in her eyes was almost palpable—a vibrant, emerald glow.
"You... you see the truth," she whispered. Her voice was full of a breathless, adorable wonder. "I only saw the pattern. You are... so special, Kaiser. Your mind doesn't just store knowledge."
"It... it creates a new world for it."
I tried to shrug it off, but she continued to stare, her admiration becoming a physical weight in the small gap between us. It was a dangerous level of devotion.
"Enough praise," I said, giving her a small, encouraging smile.
"We have an assessment to win. Go bring the volumes on Advanced Calculus and Multi-Dimensional Trigonometry. We're going to study together."
Amelia nodded frantically, her previous hesitation replaced by a sharp, eager focus.
"Okie," she said, her voice bright. "I'll bring them. All of them."
She stood up, her movements light and purposeful. As she walked toward the shelves, I looked back at the zero on my paper.
I picked up the stylus.
It was time to master the puppet master's script.
Some time passes.
The silence of the White Room became the canvas for my deconstruction.
Amelia had returned with a stack of volumes so high they nearly obscured her face. We didn't waste time. While she scanned the intricacies of Multi-Dimensional Trigonometry, I turned back to the infinite sequence of pi.
Π
It was time to test the factory.
3.14159... and now, the new blocks.
A tall man (1) with a pipe (9) leaning against a fence (8). A nun (2) lifting (5) a second nun (2). A leaf (5) falling onto a vial (8) held by a doctor (1). I paused. That was Amelia's designation. In my system, an 8 is a 'V' sound, a 2 is 'N', and a 9 is 'P'. V-N-P. A vine (V) wrapping around a neck (N) of a prince (P).
I felt my mind being destroyed into something stronger…
The numbers were no longer digits; they were a vivid, chaotic movie playing across the back of my eyelids. I was walking through the memory palace, placing these bizarre scenes on the mahogany shelves and the corners of my obsidian desk.
I am amazing…
It was a rare, dry spark of genuine self-satisfaction. To bridge the gap between human limitation and inhuman memory through sheer structural logic—it was the ultimate arrogance.
I was effectively rewriting my own biology.
After long hours of studying all other mathematical subjects…
CLAP.
The flow state shattered, the images of infinite numbers dissolving back into the sterile white light of the room.
"The preparation interval has reached its limit," Amelia said. Her voice was steady, but she was still sitting, her hands folded neatly over her closed book.
"Right," I muttered, shaking the lingering numbers from my head. I stood up, feeling the phantom weight of the infinity.
"Let's move. The assessment won't wait."
Amelia didn't move. She remained seated, her eyes fixed on the empty space where my chair had been.
I looked down at her.
"Amelia? Get up. We need to reach the assessment hall."
She didn't respond.
Over the last twelve hours of study, I have been focused entirely on infinity. I withheld the praise. I withheld the teasing. I treated her as a secondary link rather than a partner.
I sighed, realizing the psychological maintenance required for a photographic genius was more demanding than the math itself.
I reached down, my hand closing over hers. Her skin was cool, but her fingers were trembling—a shiver I could only feel because of our proximity.
I pulled her up.
She didn't resist. She rose with a mechanical fluidity, but she kept her head bowed. Her Raven hair veiled her face, though I could see the subtle, deep flush coloring the tips of her ears.
"Are you ready, Amelia?" I asked, lowering my face to try and catch her eyes.
She finally looked up, her emerald eyes reflecting the harsh overhead lights.
She bit her lip.
"I... I am prepared," she whispered.
I started to let go of her hand, but her grip tightened. She didn't pull away.
As we began the walk back toward the assessment hall, she stayed close—close enough that our shoulders brushed with every second step. She wasn't leading; she was following, her hand firmly entwined with mine.
The intimacy I had shown her earlier had created a hunger I hadn't fully calculated. She didn't just want the "Good girl" anymore. She wanted the presence. She wanted to know that she wasn't just another designation in a room full of waste.
The assessment was Mathematics.
I would prove my system was superior to their curriculum. I would prove that I could out-think the architects of this void.
But beneath the tactical layers, a darker, more primitive thought remained. It was a splinter of ice in my mind, fueled by the memory of Cartethyia's tears and Vance's clinical threats.
Cartethyia is not waste.
I squeezed Amelia's hand back, not out of affection, but as a silent declaration of war against the facility.
I will surpass them all.
The lighting here was different—higher in the Kelvin scale, a sharp, aggressive violet-white that made the edges of everything feel dangerous. I scanned the room as we took our seats.
There were 98 of us left. A dwindling population of biological weapons.
To my left, 000801 sat with her back perfectly straight. She was a girl with hair the color of dark purple and eyes like flat, grey slate. To my right, a boy, 000412, stared at his desk with a copper-haired intensity that suggested he was trying to phase through the floor.
None of them spoke. None of them looked at each other.
Their expressions were not "calm"; they were absent. They had been taught that emotions were a waste of glucose, and they had learned the lesson too well. They were hollowed-out shells, waiting for the Foundation to fill them with knowledge.
Then, there was 000001.
The Perfect Human.
He sat at the very front, his presence acting as a gravitational anchor for the room.
His golden hair reflected the harsh lights with a brilliance that seemed almost artificial. When he turned his head, his golden eyes didn't just see; they categorized.
He caught my gaze. He didn't smile. He simply narrowed those gilded eyes, his face a mask of regal boredom. Then, his hand moved.
His hand remained flat on the desk, but his fingers began a rhythmic, movement.
Index finger: Up, down. 17 times.
Middle finger: Up. 4 times.
I processed the movement instantly. It wasn't Morse code. It was a positional grid shift based on the twelve foundational subjects Vance had listed.
17-4.
Column 17 of the Prime Cipher, shifted by 4 indices.
The result: Interesting.
He had been watching.
He knew I had deciphered the "Mathematics" riddle before Vance even finished speaking. He was testing my response time. He wanted to see if the "last position" waste—the false genius in the system—was actually a threat.
I didn't blink.
I rested my own hand on the desk, my fingers mimicking his precision.
Index finger: 7 times.
Middle finger: 12 times.
Coordinate 7-12.
Good luck.
000001's eyes flared for a micro-second, a flicker of genuine surprise breaking through his perfection. He turned back to the front of the room, his posture stiffening.
The silent acknowledgment was over.
At the center of my desk, a holographic interface shimmered into existence, manifesting the assessment paper. It wasn't paper at all, but a high-density mana-parchment designed to record neural intent as much as physical ink.
I scanned the problems.
The difficulty was absurd. It wasn't just "advanced"; it was a deliberate attempt to break the cognitive limits of a human child.
Question 1 (Trigonometry): Calculate the relativistic mana-displacement across a non-Euclidean spherical surface where the curvature constant is a function of the observer's psychic weight. Solve for theta when the flux-limit is reached.
Question 2 (Statistics): In a closed vacuum containing 1,000 decaying mana-particles, determine the Bayesian probability of a localized reality-collapse occurring within 45 minutes, assuming a stochastic drift of 0.008% per millisecond.
Question 3 (Algebra): Find the eigenvalues of a 12th-dimensional mana-matrix where every odd-numbered row is a derivative of the Void-Constant. Express the result in Abyssal integers.
Question 4 (Geometry): Derive the volume and surface area of a 4-dimensional hyper-torus undergoing a spatial fold. Map the intersection points onto a 3D plane without loss of data-integrity.
Then, I reached the 5th question. The Synthesis.
Question 5: A Level 4 Teleportation Portal requires a stabilized event horizon to prevent molecular shearing. Given a radius R, calculate the exact mana-density required to maintain the circumference of the portal's aperture during a 500-mile transit.
Note: The value of the circular constant is required for the final synchronization.
I looked at the variables. It was a hypothetical scenario for teleportation—the pinnacle of spatial mathematics. To solve it, I didn't just need the formulas; I needed the raw, unyielding precision of the infinite.
I needed pi.
I leaned back, my stylus spinning between my fingers. Amelia was already writing, her hand moving with a blurred, photographic speed. She was scanning the patterns she had memorized.
But I... I wasn't scanning.
I was building.
3.1415926535…∞
I saw the prince with the vine. I saw the doctor with the vial. The theater in my head opened its curtains, and the numbers poured out like a flood.
"How simple," I whispered.
The Foundation thought they were testing my knowledge. They didn't realize they were just giving me a canvas for my self-engineering.
I leaned forward and began to write.
00:03.
00:02.
I pressed the tip down.
9.
I narrowed my eyes as the ink crystallized into the holographic interface.
All complete.
The papers didn't just disappear; they were reclaimed by the room itself, dissolving into white static.
Director Vance manifested at the podium. He stood with his hands clasped behind his back, his gaze sweeping over the 98 shells that were his students.
"The reassessment is concluded," Vance stated. His voice was a cold weight in the silence.
"The Foundation will now analyze your neural outputs and problem-solving trajectories. These questions were intentionally designed to exceed the current curriculum of your age-bracket. We were not seeking accuracy; we were seeking the architecture of your cognitive limits."
"Your results are irrelevant—only the reassessment of your potential matters."
Incorrect.
To Vance, complexity is a weapon.
To me, it is a veil. The questions weren't "beyond" us; they were merely built upon the primeval logic of the fundamentals. If you understand the nature of a circle, you understand the nature of a portal. If you understand the movement of one grain of sand, you understand the desert.
Every "impossible" problem is just a collection of simple truths known as the basics.
"You are dismissed," Vance continued. "Return to your primary reality. Prepare for the final examinations in 48 hours."
Cartethyia.
She would be waiting. I needed to return. I needed to see if my silence had caused her more pain, or if she had finally begun the process of detachment.
I closed my eyes, letting the white light of the Foundation begin to bleach my consciousness.
In the periphery of my fading vision, I saw Amelia stand up.
Her chair screeched. Her lips were parted, her hand reaching out toward my sleeve as if she were about to rush across the gap between us. She looked like she wanted to say something—or perhaps she just didn't want the "special" bond to last a little longer.
But it was too late.
The White Room turned to mist.
My mind lingered on the golden-haired boy at the front of the hall. I wondered how 000001 had fared against the "impossible."
Perhaps he, too, had seen through Vance's deceptive puzzles.
Even so.
I am not so naive as to claim total superiority over the 9 Billion souls that inhabit this world. I do not know the limits of the sky, nor the true depth of the oceans.
Amongst the system I'm a biological anomaly.
Self-engineered Weapon.
However, within the confined domain of mathematics, I do not have any rivals.
I alone reign supreme..
Enjoy grading me, Vance.
Let the instructors choke on the 1,517 digits of Pi I used to stabilize their "impossible" portal.
I opened my eyes to the dark ceiling of my room, the shivering safety of Cartethyia's arms tightening around me.
"I'm back," I whispered into the dark.
