The first thing that moved was the sound.
Not a sudden noise, not a siren, not an order shouted from atop the walls. It was rather a deep vibration, almost subterranean, that passed through Yantra’s eastern gate and climbed up the stone walls like the first heartbeat of a huge body. Anesh felt it in his back, through the warm metal of the niche where he was curled up. Then he felt it in his hands, in his knees drawn to his chest, in the strap that kept the small wicker container tied to his side.
In front of him, the gate began to open. The side panels didn’t swing open like ancient doors, but slid into each other, in almost perfect silence, revealing successive layers of metal, dark glass, polished stone, and glowing rails. Each part moved without any hesitation, without visible effort, without unnecessary steps. The city didn’t seem to open to welcome him. It simply seemed to be carrying out a procedure that had existed long before his arrival.
The vehicle moved forward. As soon as it crossed the threshold, Anesh saw Yantra light up. Not all at once. Not like a fire. Rather like a sequence of responses. A line of lights ran along an elevated road, then another lit up on a bridge, then another descended vertically along the side of a building. Roofs opened in silence and from some platforms small drones took off, dark against the pale dawn sky. Mechanical arms emerged from facades, extended, grabbed cables, lifted loads, slowly rotated toward inner courtyards that Anesh could barely glimpse. In the distance, a series of external elevators began to rise along a tower, carrying men, women, and youths to different levels of the city.
Yantra was not waking up. Yantra was coming online.
That difference struck Anesh more than he could have said. In the low villages he had crossed the day before, between Theknus and Altaluna, morning arrived little by little: a door opening, a voice, the smoke of a fire, an animal shaking itself in the cold, an old man going out before the others. Even in Altaluna the day never began all at once. The sky changed color and people seemed to wait for the change to reach them.
In Yantra, instead, no one waited for the day. They took it. They divided it. They put it to work.
The vehicle followed a central lane, guided by invisible signals. On either side of the road, the surfaces of the buildings reflected the clear sky and the city’s internal lights. They were not beautiful structures in the way Anesh understood beauty. They did not seek to move, nor to console. They were tall, precise, compact, made to last and to serve. Every floor had a readable function: workshops, walkways, depots, suspended laboratories, control rooms, loading platforms. Pipes and cables were not hidden, but arranged in regular bundles, like veins visible beneath transparent skin.
Anesh watched everything, unable to look away.
A group of young people crossed a walkway above the road. They wore light suits with dark inserts, belts full of tools, gloves hooked at their sides. They walked quickly, but not hurriedly. One of them carried a small metal module under his arm; another spoke to a device projected in front of her face; two boys laughed as they pushed a crate on magnetic wheels. They must have been about his age, maybe a little older. Yet they already seemed to belong to something.
This struck him in an unexpected way.
It wasn’t envy, at least not at first. It was rather the astonishment of seeing young people move as if the world had already prepared a precise place for them. Not a small place, not a poor place. A real place. A direction recognized by others, by the instruments, by the doors that opened at their passage, by the lights that followed them, by the systems that registered their name and their task.
Anesh lowered his gaze to his own hands.
He carried no tools. He wore no suit. He had no card, no assignment, no test to pass, no team waiting for him. He wore clothes dusted from travel, a vehicle he did not drive, and a small wicker container tied to his waist, inside which a butterfly was silent.
For the first time since he had left the cave, he wondered what he was really doing.
Following Ku had seemed inevitable as long as there were only empty roads, slopes, wind, and silence. But there, inside Yantra, that same inevitability began to seem fragile. What did it mean to follow (or convince oneself to follow) a butterfly in a city where even the light seemed to know where to go? What could a calling be, if it produced nothing, repaired nothing, served no one?
The vehicle crossed a large circular square.
At the center of the square was a second clock, smaller than the one at the gate but connected to many surrounding structures. From its dial, lines of light ran across the floor and branched toward various access points. Each time a line changed color, groups of people moved. Some entered laboratories, others descended to underground levels, others boarded mobile platforms that departed without delay. There was no confusion. No one seemed to need to ask where to go.
Anesh thought again of the writing above the gate.
“You are what you do.”
A short while before, those words had bothered him. They had seemed imprecise, narrow, false. Now, watching the city unfold around him, he sensed another side to them. Not just a law, but a promise.
“You are what you do” also meant: you can become something. Don’t remain suspended. Don’t be just a boy staring at the horizon. Don’t live waiting for a sign to fall from the sky.
Anesh realized he wanted that.
It was a small desire, almost shameful, but clear. He wished someone would tell him: this is your bench, this is your tool, this is your test, this is your team. He wished to enter a place where his name was linked to a task and his task to a necessity. He wished to feel, at least for a day, that his presence was not a riddle to interpret but a force to employ.
The discomfort he had felt in front of the writing did not disappear. It remained there, under his skin. But above that discomfort, something else settled: a kind of attraction.
If Yantra had been grim, violent, full of chains and orders, Anesh would have rejected it more easily. But it wasn’t so. Yantra was alive. It was intelligent. It was made of capable hands, alert minds, young people called early to measure themselves against reality. There was a severe beauty in the way everything seemed to respond to something else. A cart stopped and an arm latched onto it. A gate opened and a vehicle exited. A technician raised a hand and a platform descended. A data point flashed and someone changed direction.
Everything had consequences. Everything was in relation to everything else.
Anesh felt that this city did not ask to be loved. It asked to be lived up to. And perhaps that was precisely what seduced him.
The vehicle slowed near a long row of control platforms. Some were occupied by smaller vehicles, others by heavy machines covered in dust, with damaged wheels or bent arms. Around them moved teams of technicians and apprentices. There was no clear separation between those learning and those working: the youngest stood beside the adults, watched, intervened, made mistakes under supervision, corrected, repeated. A boy just older than Anesh was dismantling a joint assisted by a robotic arm; a little girl, perhaps too young for any workshop he knew, was seriously measuring the curvature of a sheet and reporting the data to a woman who listened without treating it as a game.
Anesh watched that scene for a long time. Being taken seriously. That too struck him.
Perhaps in Yantra, becoming an adult did not mean waiting for the years to pass. It meant being introduced early into the functioning of things. Being put in front of a real problem. Having someone watch you not to protect you from everything, but to see if you learn to respond.
He, instead, what was he learning? To follow. To trust a direction he did not understand. To carry with him a mystery he could not explain. Perhaps it was not little. But inside Yantra, it seemed almost nothing.
A scanning beam descended from above and passed through the mobile workshop. The vehicle slowed again, then turned toward a side lane. Ahead, a light signal lit up above a wide entrance, lower than the others, where a series of technical symbols rapidly changed shape. Anesh couldn’t read them all. He recognized only a few general indications: verification, external origin, autonomous behavior, incomplete classification.
Incomplete classification. Those two words lingered in his mind. Perhaps they referred to the vehicle. Perhaps they referred to him.
The wicker container tapped lightly against his side.
Anesh lowered his eyes. For a moment, amid the orderly noise of the city, he thought he felt inside the small closed nest a barely perceptible movement. Not agitation. Not fear. Rather an orientation, a mute tension toward something that did not coincide with the roads, with the bridges, with the workshops, with the clocks.
He gripped the strap with one hand. Then he looked back at Yantra.
The vehicle slowly entered the verification area, and the dawn light disappeared behind the metal arch of the entrance. Inside, everything was already lit.
