Ethan Varen woke up on a cold stone floor. The air smelled like wet soil and old timber. A weak blue light floated above him like a wavering lantern. It was not a bulb or an LED panel. It looked like a glowing seed suspended in the air. For a moment Ethan thought he was dreaming because nothing in front of him fit the rules of the world he knew. Then he realized something even stranger. The seed of light was reacting to him. It brightened each time he took a breath.
He pushed himself up and felt the weight of a strange robe over his clothes. His head still spun. He looked around and saw tall walls of stone and wooden beams. Yet the ceiling above him was missing. A circular opening let in wind and sunlight even though he seemed to be inside a building. The gap reached so high he could not see its top. The air swirled upward like a giant chimney.
Ethan whispered to himself. This looks like a warehouse without a roof
He saw wooden crates in the corners and iron cages stacked on each other. None were labeled. They had no barcodes no routing codes no sorting signs. No pallets no conveyors. Nothing resembled a system. He walked toward a cage and noticed a tiny bronze plate displaying something like a rune instead of a number. He leaned closer to read it and the golden lines twisted and reshaped in front of him like a living diagram. It changed because he was looking at it. He stepped back at once.
Before he could make sense of the place he heard footsteps approaching from behind. He turned and saw a man wearing a long gray coat and a belt full of strange metal tools. The man rushed toward him as if he had been waiting for Ethan to wake up.
You are alive Thank the heavens I was not sure the summoning worked The man spoke fast
Summoning Ethan repeated
You appeared inside the intake circle on your own He raised his hand as if to show he had nothing to do with it I am just the one who guards this part of the supply depot
Supply depot Ethan repeated again Now the word pulled his mind back into familiar territory Logistics Inventory Warehousing He automatically started looking around again Someone built this as a supply hub but nothing here is arranged well
The man stared at him You talk like a scholar I guess the circle brought the right person
Ethan asked What kind of place is this Why do you call it a supply depot
Because it stores merchant goods for the city The man replied We sort them before sending them out again But it is hard We do everything by old hands and guesswork No one can remember which crate holds what
Ethan blinked Then how do you track your inventory
Track The man looked confused Track what
Ethan felt his chest tighten in disbelief You do not track anything How do you know what comes in or out
We wait for the merchants to shout at us when something is missing The man answered without irony
Ethan closed his eyes for a long moment. This was beyond inefficient. This was chaos. He saw with absolute clarity what this world lacked Inventory control systems Route planning Sorting and staging zones Even simple stacking rules. All missing.
The man said My name is Darrin I am a depot worker but some call me an apprentice supply mage Only because I can use basic lifting spells Can you tell me your name
Ethan opened his eyes Ethan I am Ethan Varen Logistics systems engineer He paused Realizing the titles meant nothing in this place he added I solve problems in the movement and storage of goods
Darrins eyes widened A movement engineer That sounds powerful
Ethan shook his head Not powerful Just organized
As he spoke he studied the strange glowing seed above him It pulsed on a rhythm like a sensor reading biometric patterns Darrin explained It is a mana light crystal It responds to life energy So it brightens when you are awake You came with it People think it chose you
Chose me Ethan echoed
The depot doors suddenly slammed open. Two workers dragged in a broken cart wheel while a merchant shouted behind them Someone must replace this wheel by sunset or I will lose a full day of trade
Darrin groaned This happens every day Cart wheels break Cages fall apart Deliveries get delayed
Ethan watched all of this like he was observing a disaster simulation That was when an idea sparked so sharply he almost said it out loud A logistics engineer in a world with magic This place is a blank slate
He asked Darrin You say you send goods around the city How How do you move them after sorting
Darrin pointed at carts Caravans on wheels Horses Donkeys Sometimes hired guards if the cargo has monsters inside All slow All risky Bandits sometimes steal everything
Ethan stared at the broken wheel The spells The runes The glowing seed A new picture formed in his mind a framework more precise than any project he ever handled in his world What if movement did not rely on carts What if magic carried the load What if he built a system to move goods through the air What if he created a warehouse that could sort itself What if he built delivery routes using arrays instead of roads
Ethan asked Darrin Can this world make objects fly
Yes but only mages do that And they must focus hard to keep items steady Not practical
But Ethan heard what he needed Magic can lift goods The only missing piece was automation and coordinated routing He felt adrenaline race through him
I need tools Ethan said And I need to see everything in this depot I want to understand how your supply chain breaks If I fix one part the others will follow
Darrin slowly nodded If the mana crystal chose you maybe you are here to fix all this Come I will show you the intake yard
As they walked Ethan noticed more flaws No batching No receiving schedule No visibility No workflow The entire place was a maze of inefficiency If this depot represented the whole worlds logistics system then this world was centuries behind Even the worst warehouse back home looked more advanced than this
He stepped into the intake yard It was a mess of crates tied by rope Merchants lined up waiting for someone to sign their goods but no one was in charge A giant rooster like beast pulled a wagon and kept pecking the ground because no one tied it properly A mage tried to use a levitation spell but dropped a crate that cracked open releasing glowing powder that spilled everywhere
Darrin sighed Every morning looks like this
Ethan muttered More reason to fix it
Darrin asked Fix it How
Ethan raised his head and looked at the sky The open space The height The wind currents This depot had no roof Maybe someone once imagined turning it into a giant air shaft
He pointed upward and spoke slowly as the idea formed into words Something that flies Something small Something stable Something that works even without a mage Something like a drone But powered by mana cores Guided by an array Controlled through signals Something that can carry small loads
Darrin blinked A magic familiar
No Ethan said Something better Something engineered A magic drone
Darrin repeated Magic drone
Ethan took a deep breath This world moves goods the wrong way I will change that I will build a new system for your depot A new model for this whole kingdom Maybe the whole world A system where cargo travels through the air not by road
He stepped toward the center of the intake yard His shadow fell under the glowing seed that followed him from the earlier chamber The seed brightened and drew the attention of everyone around Merchants workers guards Even the giant rooster beast lifted its head
Ethan felt all eyes on him He did not know why the mana crystal responded to him But if this world insisted on giving him a sign he would use it
He spoke with a steady voice First we reorganize this depot Then we design automated sorting zones Then we craft the first prototype of a magic drone And then
He pointed to the sky
We take logistics into the air
A sudden wind swirled upward as if answering him The mana seed above him brightened until the entire depot glowed blue All the workers gasped Darrin took a step back
Ethan felt it deep in his bones This world was not ready for what he would build He was going to create its first aerial delivery network The world would not stay the same
He whispered to himself
The logistics revolution begins here

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