
by Isaac marold
Evan was never meant to pass the beginning. When the System fails and casts him into a world that measures worth as law, he survives not by fitting in—but by becoming an inconsistency it cannot resolve. Marked with a summoning class outside sanctioned schemas, Evan enters Meridian, a ritual-engine city built on caste, elevation, and civic permission. In Meridian, identity is not discovered. It is assigned. Function is faith. Deviation is treated as a flaw to be corrected. Classifications are public. Power is optimized. The System does not rule through cruelty, but through order—and anything it cannot define is quietly rewritten or removed. Designated a provisional asset and placed under observation, Evan navigates guild hierarchies, civic law, and a culture that believes survival depends on being useful. Yet his summons do not behave as they should. They grow through choice rather than permission, carrying echoes of something older than the System’s authority. This is not a story about leveling faster than others. It is about what happens when a world built to measure everything encounters something it cannot classify.
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