I--- Ararza Vol 29 Young Female Fighter 314 May 2026

Survivor.

I kicked off a floating chunk of debris, drew the ion dagger hidden in my thigh sheath (not regulation, but Vol 29 didn't follow rules—we followed survival), and let my bleeding eyes do the math. 892’s reactor casing had a hairline fracture from a previous bout. The Oligarch's maintenance was sloppy for Warforms they considered unbeatable.

The bell didn't ring. In the Crucible, a light flashed—deep red—and then the gravity shifted sideways. I was suddenly running up a wall that had become the floor. 892 stumbled, its mass working against it. I didn't have mass. I had momentum and desperation. i--- Ararza Vol 29 Young Female Fighter 314

Most fighters in the Ararza Volumes are born in vats, fed combat data through neural drips, and thrown into the arenas of the Oligarch's Crucible by their tenth cycle. I was different. I was Vol 29—the "salvage series," stitched together from the broken remnants of earlier volumes. My left arm is a Vol 12 prototype (too twitchy, prone to locking mid-swing). My eyes are Vol 8 (excellent low-light, but they bleed when I process too fast). And my name, 314, means nothing except that three hundred and thirteen others before me failed.

I wiped the blood from my eyes and looked up at the viewing pods. Somewhere behind that one-way glass, the Oligarch was deciding my fate. Would I be promoted to Vol 30? Scrapped for parts? Or sold to a mining colony as a broken toy? Survivor

And survivors don't stay in cages forever.

The announcer's voice crackled: "Winner: i--- Ararza Vol 29 Young Female Fighter 314. Status: Combat Effective." The Oligarch's maintenance was sloppy for Warforms they

The designation was "i--- Ararza Vol 29 Young Female Fighter 314." The stutter in the identifier wasn't a glitch; it was a scar. It meant I had almost been decommissioned twice.