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Chapter 3 - Chapter 2: The Architect’s Pulse

The morning light in the Veyron Tower didn't just break over a horizon; it was harnessed.

High above the planet, massive solar sails captured the raw radiation of the system's artificial star—a feat of high-level Fabrication—filtering it through atmospheric domes until it reached our residential district as a perfect, golden glow.

Inside my room, the world was a symphony of practiced motion.

AI-driven maintenance drones drifted along the high ceilings while the household staff moved with a silent, rhythmic grace that I had come to expect.

The air was crisp, carrying the grounding scent of fresh grass and expensive sandalwood.

I sat at a low, sleek table in the center of the sun-drenched study.

To anyone else, I was just a five-year-old child—cute, perhaps, with my mother's "Golden Ratio" features and ocean-blue eyes—but my mind was miles away from the toys scattered in the corner.

I wasn't playing.

I was staring at a complex holographic projection of orbital logistics.

In my past life, these had been abstract numbers on a chalkboard; here, they were real, lethal variables that determined whether a fleet lived or died.

I held a pencil in my small hand, scribbling notes onto physical paper.

I still preferred the tactile resistance of lead on wood over the frictionless, sterile feel of the holograms.

I wasn't rushing; I was learning to bridge the gap between pure, elegant mathematics and the messy, friction-filled reality of physics.

Bottleneck

"The transit curve is too wide," I thought, my brow furrowing in what my parents probably called "adorable" concentration.

I was using linear programming to optimize the fuel-to-mass ratio, trying to shave seconds off a deep-space intercept.

While my adult mind understood higher calculus, my five-year-old biology was a frustrating bottleneck.

My brain simply couldn't process the massive data streams of a high-level Fabricator yet. My "hardware" was lagging behind my "software."

I reached out to adjust the holographic display, attempting to simulate a Weave Phase defensive maneuver—the kind used by elite mecha commanders to protect trade lanes.

But as I tried to bridge the gap between my theory and its brutal application, I faltered.

My small hand slipped, the hologram flickered, and the entire calculation collapsed into a shower of red error codes.

I puffed out my cheeks in a childish pout.

It was frustrating. I "knew" the answer, but the bridge between knowing and doing remained painfully long.

Watchers

I didn't realize my parents were standing in the doorway until I heard the faint rustle of clothing.

My father, Arin, stood there—tall, lean, and looking dashing even in a simple white t-shirt.

He had his arms wrapped around my mother, Lyra, whose long pink hair caught the morning light.

They were watching me with a mixture of love and something that looked a lot like awe.

"He's using linear constraints for a three-dimensional problem," I heard my father whisper, his voice vibrating with a pride he couldn't hide.

"He's thinking like a Loom Phase Fabricator, even if his hardware can't crunch the numbers that fast yet."

I didn't look up; I was too focused on restarting the simulation. I forced myself to concentrate, pushing my mind to visualize the grid again.

Suddenly, I felt a strange sensation—a deep, heavy ripple shimmering within the meridians of my body.

"Arin, look," Mom whispered, her medical intuition flaring.

My Threads were manifesting.

Unlike the thin, high-frequency flickers I'd read about in most prodigies, mine were unusually thick and a vibrant, deep red.

They were slow and stable, prioritizing storage capacity and density over raw speed.

Then, I felt a warmth on my upper lip.

I blinked, momentarily confused, and wiped my nose with the back of my hand. It was blood.

The mental strain of forcing high-level calculations through my undeveloped vessel had finally demanded its toll.

The simulation collapsed again. I felt small, fragile, and very much like a five-year-old.

"He failed the execution," Dad noted, but his voice sounded stunned rather than disappointed.

"But those Threads... that density is impossible for a five-year-old. It's like his mind has a massive storage bank we haven't even mapped yet."

Mom nodded, her eyes soft as she watched me. "His Threads are so slow, so stable. He's not rushing; he's cold, calculated, and precise."

Present Moment

Later that night, the high-tech grandeur of the tower faded into the simple warmth of my parents' bed.

There were no encrypted meetings or deep-space logistics tonight.

I lay fast asleep between them, my breathing rhythmic and peaceful.

To them, I was just a tired boy exhausted from a day of "play."

I didn't feel the weight of the space pirates or the looming wars of the future in my dreams.

I just felt the safety of my family—the one variable I refused to lose this time around.

"He's going to be something incredible, isn't he?" Mom whispered, brushing a stray lock of hair from my forehead.

Dad smiled, pulling the covers up and tucking us both in a little closer.

"He already is. For now, let's just let him be a boy who likes his notebooks."

In the quiet of the room, I slept.

Deep within me, those thick red Threads pulsed faintly in the dark—slow, steady, and ready to build a new world when the time was right.

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