Yellow Jacket

Book 3 Chapter 21: The Stampede



Imujin said,

"The first gift I can offer is helping you forge your class. Not the way Wirk would. He wants you to shape it yourself, slow, intentional, careful. That works for most people. It's safer. Cleaner. More controlled. It gives you time to understand what you're becoming before you become it."

He stepped forward, hands clasped behind his back, voice low but steady. His steps didn't make noise on the soft grass beneath them, but the presence behind each movement pressed against the air like pressure in a sealed room.

"But sometimes? The quick and dirty method's better."

He looked off toward the trees for a moment, like he was seeing something that wasn't there, or maybe remembering someone who had been.

"It's not like building a foundation... it's like driving a stampede."

He turned back.

"Wirk would say that with enough coaxing and carved pathways, you can get it where you want it to go. Slowly. With effort. You dig the channels, wait for the flow to follow. You guide it. You study the behavior. You adapt. And maybe, just maybe, you get where you meant to go before it turns on you and runs you over."

He looked Vaeliyan dead in the eye, and something behind that gaze wasn't just memory. It was survival. The look of someone who had tried it the slow way and watched it fail.

"But if you've got enough brute force? Enough presence? Enough command over your own will? Then you don't wait. You walk straight into the chaos. You plant your feet in front of the stampede and redirect it with your own gods damn hands."

"Not because it's safe. Not because it's elegant. But because sometimes, the only way to survive becoming something new... is to tear the old form out of yourself and shove the next one in by force."

Vaeliyan stared. "That's not a metaphor, is it."

Imujin's grin was wolfish. "Not even close. I can physically grab your class. My nanites can interface with yours."

He raised his hand slightly, just enough for the light to catch the faint silver lines running beneath the skin, old tech, ancient even by imperial standards. The kind that didn't get installed. The kind that grew.

"And when that happens? My will becomes the mold. My intention overrides your indecision. The System listens to me now. Because I earned that authority the hard way, through blood, ruin, and a kill count it stopped recording before the Empire fell."

"I can hold the entire weave of your future between my fingers and shove it into shape before it even knows what hit it."

Vaeliyan looked disturbed, almost instinctively taking a half-step back. "That's... terrifying."

Imujin laughed, sharp and open, not cruel but amused. "It is. And it should be. This isn't a technique. This is a privilege. Only people who've reached the peak can even think about doing this."

He lifted one hand again, spreading his fingers like he was reaching for something unseen, like he could already feel the edges of Warren's path trembling in response.

"Most instructors? They have to wait until their apprentice hits level 30."

He lowered his hand and leaned in, voice dropping to a near-whisper, intimate in the worst possible way.

"But with you? I got lucky. You haven't made your level 20 class yet."

He straightened again, and the warmth in his voice vanished.

"That means I can grab it. Now. I can press my will into it and lock the frame in place before the System finishes shaping it for you."

Vaeliyan didn't answer right away. He was still processing. The weight of it. The danger of it. The sheer unnatural wrongness of it. And also… the temptation.

Imujin's eyes didn't waver. He wasn't bluffing.

"It will hurt. It will feel like your future is being carved into your bones with a dull blade. But when it's over? You won't be wondering what kind of monster you might become."

He paused, just long enough for the wind to pick up.

"You'll already be walking in its skin."

He let the silence hang after that.

"So. When you're ready... I'll be here."

The meadow was silent.

And for a moment, Vaeliyan thought he could already feel it.

The stampede wasn't on the horizon anymore.

It was circling.

Waiting for someone strong enough to lead it.

Vaeliyan said, "Let's do this."

The words had barely left his mouth when the world tore.

Not in sound. Not in light. In absence. A rip, jagged and instant, not in the air, but in reality itself—like someone had reached between seconds and carved out the moment that should have come next.

Umdar appeared, not in shape or silhouette, but in something deeper than either. In presence.

The world around him bent inward as though gravity itself were bowing. Not to a being. But to the void where something greater had just arrived and had already started leaving.

Umdar's voice did not echo. It removed all other sound.

"You are about to make a mistake. And as your benefactor, I cannot let this happen."

"You must be Warren first. Never build the Veil first. Its weight will crush your true soul."

And then he was gone.

No exit. No motion. Just the folding of the moment back into itself. The air settled like lungs after a death rattle.

Vaeliyan blinked.

He turned to Imujin, still stunned, trying to anchor what just happened.

"Wait... my benefactor. Umdar. He gave me a warning just now. He said I have to build my true class as Warren. That if I don't, if I build the Veil first... the weight of Vaeliyan will collapse my soul."

In the next second, Vaeliyan vanished.

Gone like vapor. Like the mask had never existed. Or maybe like it had never truly been there at all.

It wasn't a vanishing. It was a correction.

It was like looking at something that had always been there. There was no dissonance between the sight of Vaeliyan and Warren. No shift. No disruption. It was as if Warren had always been standing there, even when you knew with absolute certainty that he hadn't.

The armor in the glass behind them vanished too, disintegrating not in light, but in silence, a soft, final absence.

And standing before Imujin now was Warren.

The boy. The one in a yellow jacket, with eyes too old for his face, and history clinging to his skin like dried blood and regret.

He was smaller, physically. But in presence, he was something else entirely. He was heavier. Denser. The world seemed to bend around him, not in reverence, but like a storm trying to rip its way free and it was only his will holding it back, keeping the flood inside.

And he was ready.

"We're building a foundation out of a stampede," Warren said, his voice even, but loaded. "We're building me."

The stampede began to move.

The moment shifted.

Imujin frowned.

It wasn't confusion. It wasn't doubt. It was the expression of a man who just realized he was about to lay his hands on something that even gods had stepped in to protect.

He could smell it. That change in the air. He could feel it pressing against his skin, crawling under his fingernails, lifting the hairs on his arms like whispers from another age.

Something had touched this boy.

Not metaphorically through prophecy or sign.

The gods had intervened. Directly. For him.

He had never knowingly stood in the presence of a god before. Not once. Not in all his long, Brutal life.

Even with all his strength, he hadn't seen anything. But he felt what had filled that space. Or maybe what had been removed from it.

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A weight was missing. And the absence it left behind? It wasn't emptiness.

It was divine.

It was a stillness that made the world feel like it had been paused for breath. A silence that didn't mean nothing was there, only that whatever was had no need to announce itself.

Isol's notes had named Warren's benefactor: Umdar.

The god of erasure.

This was erasure. Stillness made holy. Absence given weight.

Imujin turned back to Warren.

And he saw him.

Not the cadet. Not the veil. Not the echo of promise or potential.

He saw what this boy would become. What he was already becoming.

And Imujin knew, without pride or ego, that he was about to physically shape that future with his own hands.

If he gave nothing else to this child, no more guidance, no more instruction, this one act would be enough to change the world.

To help not just forge the class of a High Imperator. To define a future the world hadn't accounted for. To shape something the gods had already begun to kneel to.

A force.

One that bore Warren's name.

And Imujin guide it towards a better future if it killed him.

Imujin said, "Activate your class upgrade."

Warren nodded. He picked the two skills he knew his class needed to be built from. He slammed them together with his class.

The response was immediate.

Imujin's hands were inside him, physically. The nanites that made up his hands flowed into Warren's very pores, surged through his skin, wrapped around his structure, and then drove in.

Warren felt them the moment they touched: the nanites that made up his body, the system that lived inside him, his very being, they fought it. They bucked. They resisted.

But it didn't matter.

Imujin's grip was absolute.

The System inside Warren wasn't strong enough to fight back. Not against this. Not against a man whose will had become a weapon. The pressure of it was unbearable. His mind flared with static. His vision blurred. The world tried to fall apart.

And through the pain came clarity.

Imujin's will brushed back against Warren's, and in that flash, he showed him.

Not just the skills, the shape of what he wanted to become.

He showed him the weight behind the choice. The path he saw. The meaning of the steps he wanted to take.

Imujin understood.

He didn't forge the class as Warren would have. Warren's mind was too fractured for that, too raw. But Imujin's wasn't.

He built what Warren had asked for, perfectly. No cracks. No seams. No vulnerabilities. Nothing the System could misinterpret or warp.

And then came the burn behind his eye's.

The Notifications.

New Class: Strident Walker
No longer drifting, but deliberately choosing every step.

Paths of the Future (Passive):

Evolved from Moment of Choice.

In the instant between threat and reaction, time does not slow, it fractures.
You see the branching paths that follow your next move: block, step, twist, strike, retreat.
Each choice unfolds in modeled futures, projected through real-time environmental and behavioral data.
The outcomes aren't prophecy. They're probability, sharpened by instinct and refined by pattern recognition.
Where most act on reflex, you choose within it.
Motion begins only after the future has been weighed.

Compound Echoes (Passive):

Evolved from Echo Vision.

The user's full visual range now records short-term sequences, not just isolated fragments.
Movements, layout changes, enemy paths, anything seen, even peripherally, is retained as a mental echo.
They can reconstruct spaces and encounters with near-total clarity, pulling details others would miss.
Backtrack threats, catch missteps, or analyze a moment frame by frame, if you saw it, you still see it.
The eyes don't just witness. They remember.

Warren's vision cleared.

The stampede was still inside him. But now it had a name.

And a direction.

As soon as Imujin stepped back from Warren, Vaeliyan replaced him.

The armor reappeared like it had always been there.

He was still gasping from the pain.

And then he did the unthinkable.

Before he caught his breath, he slammed together the two skills he had chosen for Vaeliyan's class.

Imujin flinched, caught off guard. The pain alone should have dropped the boy to the ground.

But he didn't hesitate.

He pressed forward, again.

Instantly.

Imujin cursed and surged back in. He could do nothing else.

He met the fool boy head-on.

This had never been a class Warren would have chosen for himself.

This was what the original Vaeliyan wanted to be.

So the path was twisted.

What Imujin saw wasn't just the usual shaping of skills or class identity. It was a conflicted soul.

The boy in front of him was not what he should have been.

And Imujin smiled.

He snapped the class in two.

And threw out the part that the boy now standing before him despised so vehemently.

A Blade Dancer.

Never the blade.

But the dancer.

That was what the soul behind the veil had always been.

He could feel it like he felt the air on his skin. The class had potential. Incredible potential. But not for this Vaeliyan. Not for the one who wore it now.

Unlike with Warren, who knew who he was, Imujin didn't listen to what the boy said.

He listened to what he could make him.

The skills the boy had chosen were impressive. Most in his position would have picked different. Flashier. More obvious. Wirk would have hated these choices.

But the boy listened.

And now, so would the class.

New Class: Wake Dancer
Never a blade, but the wake of force, every motion a wave the world remembers.

Structural Sovereign (Passive):

Evolved from Internal Pressure Equalizer.

The body holds integrity under any force.
Internal pressure is no longer something to manage, it's something to command.
From lungs to joints, from blood vessels to soft tissue, the user's body adjusts before strain arrives.
Altitude, velocity, recoil, impact: irrelevant.
Walks through whiplash environments like they're balanced rooms.
Mid-air, mid-collapse, mid-flash flood: the body does not yield.

Vector Lock (Passive):

Evolved from Overdrive Stabilization.

Momentum is no longer a threat.
The nanite scaffolding that forms around the users frame under pressure now does more than brace, it locks movement to intent. Muscles no longer guard against tearing. They lean into force.
There's no delay between decision and action.
No deceleration when redirection is needed.
The user moves like someone who's already survived the collision.
Full-speed force becomes precision violence.

They both crashed to the ground, Vaeliyan in agony, and Imujin in triumph.

Imujin looked upon the boy he had just shaped, chest rising slowly, arms trembling not from strain but from awe. He had forged countless cadets in his lifetime. Shaped classes, bent wills, rebuilt shattered paths with precision and brutal compassion. But this one… this one was different. He wasn't a tool to be sharpened. He was never a blade. He was a force, elemental, crashing, undeniable, and Imujin had merely helped direct the flood. You didn't aim something like this. You braced for its passage and hoped it left the world standing.

The classes he had built for this child weren't just exceptional, they were unprecedented.

One could model the future before him, not in theory but in motion. It predicted the very shape of danger. It saw the pressure building in the cracks before the wall collapsed, caught the twitch before the strike landed. It could read every branching path like a story half-written, sketch thousands of outcomes in less than the blink of an eye, and act with the full weight of foresight and clarity. Reflex had been elevated to deliberation. Deliberation to certainty.

The other wasn't thought at all. It was pure force, primal, disciplined, and utterly unrelenting. It was pressure incarnate, an unending, crashing wave that didn't ask permission or wait for resistance. Every step was violence wrapped in elegance, every movement a demand that the world yield or be remade. He could dance through a landslide and come out still upright, because the landslide would move around him.

But the scariest part wasn't the strength of either class on its own. It wasn't their individual perfection or terrifying potential. It was that this boy had been gifted the ability to use all his passives. Simultaneously. Seamlessly.

It was all of it. All the time.

He wasn't one.

He was always both.

And worse, this was only the beginning.

Whatever he would become, he was almost certainly the most dangerous cadet ever to walk the halls of this or any Citadel Imujin had ever heard of. Most were forged reluctantly, or broken down and rebuilt. This one? He walked forward through agony with eyes wide open, unflinching, eager.

That was the kind of danger you couldn't predict. The kind you couldn't prevent. The kind you could only witness. And maybe, if you were very lucky, survive long enough to see what came of it.

Imujin didn't feel pride, he felt something more vital. A quiet knowing in his bones that what stood before him would reshape the world. This was the weight of watching history breathe for the first time.

He felt reverence.

He had shaped monsters before. Champions. Killers. Names that still echoed through history. But this one wasn't like any of them.

This one would write a new kind of history.

And the world would learn to read it in blood.

"Vaeliyan, get up. We've got around fifteen minutes before your next class," Imujin said, his voice steady, but edged with something wickedly expectant.

"I think I'm just going to lay here for a while," Vaeliyan replied, barely lifting his head from the soft grass.

"Suit yourself."

Imujin's flaming fist came crashing down toward Vaeliyan's face without another word.

The world stilled. Time fractured.

For Vaeliyan, that single moment unraveled into a slow hurricane. His skill spun out outcomes like a deck of razors, slicing the second apart into a thousand tiny predictions. Each one flickered, failed, rewrote itself. Pain, defeat, death... every thread ended the same. If he stayed down, the ground would cradle him like a grave. Imujin wasn't holding back. Not enough to survive.

So he moved.

Not to dodge. He rolled into the strike like he meant to fall deeper into it, crashing forward under the arc of flame and fury. He went low, legs coiled, and threw his fist not at Imujin's chest or head, but where every man, no matter how mighty, remembered pain. The dirtiest hit. The kind that wins a fight before it even gets a chance to start.

He expected shock, maybe a flinch. What he got instead was silence. Imujin didn't so much as twitch.

And Vaeliyan never saw the hook coming.

It smashed into the back of his head like a meteor.

When he got up again, the stars were still dancing across his vision and the ground was spinning sideways.

"So, it's not true 360-degree vision," Imujin said, standing over him like a bored god. "Makes sense."

"You're blind where your eyes can't see. But I'm betting if you put this on... that changes things."

He tossed Vaeliyan the helmet from his armor. The black-and-yellow exosuit piece hit the ground with a heavy, thud and rolled to a stop by his fingertips.

"I was wondering why the eyes looked so odd," Imujin continued. "The angles, the layout, it wasn't grown to reflect who you were when you arrived. It was grown for what you're were becoming. Those lenses? I'd bet anything that whatever they see, you see too... even the things behind you."

Vaeliyan groaned, rubbing his jaw. "Why did you attack me?"

"We needed to see what that skill of yours could really do," Imujin said. There wasn't even a hint of guilt.

"And now you know?" Vaeliyan muttered.

"That you still have a blind spot. But that armor of yours will fix it."

"I could've already covered it," Vaeliyan grumbled. "Could've used my Soul Skill... had it just float at my back, watching for me. If I'd known what was coming."

"That was the point, my boy." Imujin crouched beside him, hand now resting gently on his knee. "You didn't know it was coming. And you won't, not always. That's what you need to prepare for, the blow you can't see coming. The one that doesn't give you time to spin futures."

Vaeliyan didn't answer right away. He stared at the helmet, his reflection warped across the compound eye lenses of the faceplate. In its mirrored surface, he didn't see himself. He saw everything he still had to become.
"Alright, I promised Isol I'd get you back in time for his class, so get your ass over to that pad now and don't make me a liar," Imujin said, pointing.

Vaeliyan groaned as he pushed himself off the ground, joints creaking and everything still aching from the forge session that had almost killed him, twice.

"Give me that helmet back," Imujin added, holding out his hand. "Can't let the other cadets know you got yours first. I'll have it for you when I see you after class."

Vaeliyan hesitated, then removed the helmet and passed it over reluctantly.

"Um... I have to go meet Merigold after class," he said. "She has information. On my divine task that I need. Isol said none of the instructors would help me, but maybe... you might. Can you tell me what the Ninth Layer is? Or who Lord Barcus is?"

Imujin's expression didn't change.

"Isol's right. I won't tell you. Go talk to your friend. But tomorrow, after classes are done, you're mine. Got it?"

"Yes, sir."

Then, under his breath, a tiny, almost imperceptible, "...or madam," slipped out as he stepped onto the transport pad.

The light flared, and Vaeliyan vanished to his next class.


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