Extra's Path To Main Character-Chapter 17 - 16 - What the Index Doesn’t Say [2]
He spent his lunch break in the small plaza near the fourth district border, eating bread and reviewing his Memory Index for any reference to mana capacity reassessments — procedure, timing, what they tested for, what range of results would be considered normal for someone claiming late development.
He was deep in this review when the Memory Index flagged something he had not been looking for.
A notation. Dated three years into the original timeline. A Guild incident report he had read once, filed away as context, and never thought about again until now.
The Marrin Survey incident. Core breach. Structural collapse. Incomplete team manifest.
Six Hunters entered. Four survived.
Amaron stopped moving.
He pulled up the full record. Read it carefully. Cross-referenced it against his own memory of yesterday’s events.
In the original timeline, the Marrin Survey had happened. Not as a routine contract. As a disaster. The rift core had breached. The team had been trapped. And two members — support staff, F-rank contractors whose names Amaron now recognized because he’d spent eight hours working alongside them yesterday — had died in the collapse because the passage had come down before anyone could intervene.
The team had not found the secondary exit in time. They had attempted to dig through the rubble. They had failed. By the time the Guild’s emergency team arrived, two people were dead from mana exposure and structural trauma.
Amaron had prevented that.
By intervening — by breaking his cover, by revealing himself to five witnesses — he had changed the outcome. Not just saved lives. Changed the story in a way that rippled forward into events he might not see for years.
He sat very still and tried to process what this meant.
— ◆ —
The thing about knowing the original story, he realized, was that you assumed the story was fixed. That it had happened a certain way because that was the way it happened, and all you could do was work around the edges, prevent disasters you remembered, save people whose names you knew.
But the Marrin Survey incident had been in his Memory Index the entire time. He had known it happened. He had known when it happened. He simply hadn’t connected it to the contract he was taking until he was already inside the rift.
Which meant one of two things.
Either he had genuinely not realized he was walking into an event from the original timeline — which suggested his Memory Index was imperfect, incomplete, or organized in a way that made crucial connections invisible until they were directly in front of him.
Or something about his return had changed the timing. The Marrin Survey in the original timeline had happened three years in. He had just experienced it at day sixty-seven. Either the timeline was accelerating in ways he didn’t understand, or his interventions over the past two months had created cascading effects that were moving events forward.
He didn’t know which was true. Both options were bad.
Both options meant the script he thought he was following was less reliable than he’d assumed.
— ◆ —
He spent the afternoon working through the implications.
If events were accelerating — if disasters he thought he had years to prepare for were happening now — then his entire strategy needed recalibration. The twelve-year plan was predicated on having twelve years. If he didn’t, if the timeline was compressing, then every decision about when to reveal himself, when to intervene, when to stay hidden became significantly more complicated.
If his Memory Index was incomplete — if there were events he’d lived through that he simply didn’t remember clearly enough to recognize until they were happening — then he was operating with less information than he thought. Which was dangerous in ways that went beyond strategy. People died when you didn’t have complete information. He’d learned that yesterday in very concrete terms.
He also had to accept a third possibility, which was harder to examine but probably more accurate.
He had saved two people yesterday who were supposed to die. That was a divergence. A real one. Not a small adjustment to the timeline, but a fundamental change to who was alive and who wasn’t. And every person who lived when they were supposed to die went on to make choices, take actions, influence events in ways the original story had never accounted for.
The butterfly effect was real. He had known this intellectually. He was beginning to understand it practically.
Every save changed the story. Every intervention created new variables. And the more he changed, the less his Memory Index would be able to guide him, because the future it described was a future where those people were dead.
He was writing a new story now. Whether he meant to or not.
— ◆ —
That evening he returned to his room and opened his notebook.
He wrote three things.
Day 68. The Marrin Survey was in the Index. I didn’t see it. Timeline might be accelerating. Or I’m missing things. Either way, the script is less reliable than I thought.
Two people are alive who were supposed to die. That changes everything forward from here. I don’t know what those changes are yet.
The plan assumed I had twelve years. I might not. Adjust accordingly.
He looked at what he’d written. Then he added one more line.
I chose their lives over my cover. Resh said that meant something. I think she’s right. I’m just not sure what yet.
He closed the notebook. Put it under the floorboard. Sat at the cracked-leg desk and looked at the wall.
The Void System had asked if it was worth it.
He didn’t have an answer yet.
But he was beginning to suspect that the question itself was more important than he’d realized. Because a strategy built entirely around survival — his own, the story’s, the people he remembered — was a strategy that could optimize perfectly and still end up building nothing.
He thought about dark green doors. About Vela’s bread wrapped in cloth. About Elian saying ’I’m glad you’re on the team.’
About Resh offering to be someone who knew what he was without needing to know why.
About two F-rank contractors whose names he now knew, walking out of that rift alive because he’d chosen to be seen.
The plan was changing. He could feel it shifting underneath him, the architecture he’d been building for sixty-eight days cracking just slightly to accommodate things that hadn’t been in the original design.
He let it crack.
[ VOID SYSTEM — DAY 68 STATUS ]
[ MANA RESERVE: 1,412 units ]
[ TIMELINE ANALYSIS: SIGNIFICANT DIVERGENCE DETECTED ]
[ MARRIN SURVEY INCIDENT: ORIGINAL OUTCOME OVERRIDDEN ]
[ ITERATION POINTS: 3 ] 𝘧𝓇𝑒𝑒𝑤ℯ𝑏𝓃𝘰𝑣ℯ𝘭.𝘤ℴ𝘮
[ CONDITION MET: FIRST MAJOR TIMELINE CORRECTION ]
[ QUERY: PREVIOUS ASSESSMENT — WAS IT WORTH IT? ]
[ HOST RESPONSE LOGGED: UNCERTAIN. MONITORING. ]
[ SYSTEM NOTE: UNCERTAINTY IS ACCEPTABLE. PROCEED. ]
He looked at the last line and felt something he didn’t have a name for.
Even the system was adapting.







