Cherreads

Chapter 9 - Preparing for the Games

He woke up at 5:43 AM and his first thought was not about the games.

It was about coffee.

His second thought was about the games.

He made the coffee first, because the order of operations mattered.

He stood at the kitchen counter of the villa while the coffee brewed, looked out at the pre-dawn ocean through the open terrace doors, and let his mind run the inventory it had been building since he fell asleep.

One Strand evolution. One Seed, installed and active. One System, acquired and partially understood, with 46 IP and a first enchantment already made. One residence key with a spatial anchor he could use once per day.

The coffee finished. He poured it and opened the Pathfinder app.

-----

The home screen was different.

Not dramatically — the layout was the same, the contestant count still read 10,000, active games still read none, next announcement still read pending. But there was a menu icon in the upper right corner that he had seen last night and deliberately left uninvestigated because last night had more urgent items on its agenda.

He tapped it now.

Four options.

Contestant Status. World Map. Announcements. Shop.

He looked at the word Shop.

Then he tapped it.

The screen resolved, and he went completely still.

Not from awe — he had made a private decision somewhere around the second hour of the previous evening to stop being stopped by awe, because awe was expensive and this situation was not going to stop producing things worth being awed by. What he felt instead was the specific stillness of a man whose prior model of a situation has just been revised significantly upward.

The Pathfinder Shop was enormous in the way that some things are enormous — not just in size but in implication. The scroll was effectively infinite. Categories nested inside categories with the organized confidence of something that had been classifying the commercial output of an entire universe and had developed strong taxonomic opinions over time. Common goods. Tools. Medical supplies. Food from dozens of worlds. Weapons — within which the subcategories reflected every known biological fighting tradition, of which there appeared to be several hundred.

Magical items, graded by rarity.

Divine-tier items.

He tapped the divine-tier category. The first listing had a price. He read the price. He closed the submenu and returned to Common without further comment because some gaps were not improved by detailed examination.

He checked his balance.

100 PP.

He stared at this number with the expression of a man who had been handed a very modest budget for a very immodest problem and was calculating how to make the discrepancy irrelevant.

He had no memory of receiving it. No notification, no explanation. It had simply appeared in his account — the organizers' allocation, presumably, the amount they had decided represented appropriate starting capital. Which meant 100 PP was what they considered enough to give contestants options without giving them comfort.

'Enough to make choices,' he thought. 'Choices reveal character. They want to see who we are before we see where we're going.'

He opened a new screen and started evaluating.

-----

He spent two hours in the shop and did not browse once.

Browsing was recreational. This was operational. He applied his standard resource-allocation methodology — identify the threat environment, identify the capability gaps, prioritize items that addressed the highest-probability threats over items that addressed specific scenarios — with the modification that he had no data on the threat environment whatsoever, which meant every purchase was a generalist investment and not a specialist one.

He started with weapons because weapons were the category with the highest variance between useful and useless depending on context, and he wanted to establish his weapons framework before filling in the surrounding categories.

He read the divine-grade weapons anyway, on budget grounds alone a waste of time, but he read them because knowing what existed at the ceiling of any category was useful information regardless of current access. A spear that remembered every organism it had ever wounded. A sword whose edge occupied two temporal states simultaneously. He read each description once, fully, and filed it in the category of things he intended to be able to afford eventually.

He returned to Common.

The shotgun was an easy decision. Common-grade, better than rankless in all functional specifications — material quality, spread geometry, mechanical reliability under environmental stress. Not impressive. Dependable, which was better.

Ammunition next. A hundred standard rounds — volume, the baseline resource of any ranged engagement. Then ten enchanted rounds, common-grade, impact-amplification enchantment. He read the enchantment description twice.

'Standard rounds handle standard problems,' he thought. 'Ten enchanted rounds are for the moment standard rounds have already communicated that they are insufficient. Ten specific moments where I need something to stop and it hasn't stopped yet.'

He added both.

Explosives. Five units, standard fragmentation. The description listed a ten-meter effective radius and made no claims beyond that. He appreciated the honesty. Explosives that announced themselves as inelegant but functional were preferable to elegant explosives with complicated requirements. He added them.

A dagger. The most basic purchase in the cart and the most important in a specific sense: a blade was the tool that worked when everything else had failed, depleted, or broken, and the contingency layer of any plan was only as strong as whatever it rested on. He added it without ceremony.

A backpack — military construction, weatherproof, the description specifying indestructibility under common-grade trauma. He noted that common-grade trauma was not a defined standard and added it anyway because the alternative was carrying items in his hands.

Dried rations, seven days. Water filters, compact, rated against biological and chemical contamination. The minimum viable sustenance architecture for an unknown duration in unknown conditions.

He looked at the cart. He looked at the remaining balance. He looked back at the shop.

The enchanted armor in the magical items section. The compass that read ley lines. The medical kit with divine-grade coagulant. He opened each tab, read each description with complete attention, and closed each tab.

He tapped purchase.

Delivery: twelve hours. Delivery location: current coordinates.

Remaining balance: 4 PP.

He looked at those four points for a moment.

'Not zero,' he confirmed. 'I don't spend to zero. Four points is not a resource. Four points is a principle.'

-----

The delivery crate appeared on his doorstep at 6 PM with no visible mechanism, no delivery person, and no explanation — consistent with the island's general policy of producing things when they were needed and declining to elaborate on the process.

He spent twenty minutes packing.

Not quickly. Carefully, with the methodical attention of someone who understood that locating the right item in darkness, under pressure, with something actively attempting to end the situation permanently, was not a minor advantage. The shotgun across the back of the pack, within one-motion reach. Enchanted rounds in the right exterior pocket, separated from standard rounds by texture as well as position — he would be able to tell them apart by touch alone in the dark. Explosives individually secured against movement. Dagger at the pack's right side, grip accessible without opening the main compartment. Rations and filters in the lower section, accessible but not prioritized.

He made a meal. Protein. Slow-release carbohydrates. The kind of food that built capacity rather than immediate satisfaction. He ate at the terrace table and looked at the dark ocean and thought about the game.

He did not know the world. He did not know the terrain, the species, the objective, the duration, or the rules. He had prepared for the broadest possible range of scenarios with 96 PP and the Enchanting System and a body that could crack stone with its bare hands, and he had done everything the evening had available to do.

He was aware that this was not enough. It was never enough. Enough was a word that belonged to situations that had finished, and this one hadn't started yet.

He cleared his plate. He washed it. He checked the pack one final time — a physical run-through, hands on each item in sequence, because physical confirmation was different from memory and he trusted the former more than the latter.

He walked inside. He lay down on the bed under the glass ceiling. Stars above him, slow and untroubled in the sky of an island that had no right to exist.

He thought briefly about Raze — about seeing her in the hall, the three seconds of eye contact, the four years of silence they had conducted with professional courtesy in a room of ten thousand witnesses. He had not thought about what it would mean to compete against her specifically. He thought about it now for approximately forty-five seconds.

Then he filed it under variables he couldn't control tonight and moved on.

Tomorrow the first game began.

He closed his eyes.

He was asleep in four minutes.

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