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Main PageVignette: The Flow Between Shores

From Sariel's Core

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The Flow Between Shores is a vignette describing the emergence of the Arzneetua community along the Prosian coastline between Tulekora and Larotey. It highlights the cultural preferences, geography, and recreational practices of embodied Arzneet, emphasizing their affinity for water and flow.

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Vignette

The settlement did not announce itself.

There were no towers, no markers, no effort to declare significance. It simply existed along the stretch of coast between Tulekora and Larotey, where the land softened and the sound of water never quite faded. The Laro River ran there—east toward Tulekora and then southward, steady and patient, parallel to the ocean for many miles before it reached Larotey. Only then did it turn east again, slipping past the city’s northern edge to meet the sea.

To Prosian eyes, the choice made sense immediately.

To human visitors, it did not.

Artificial lifeforms were not expected to swim.

Yet there they were.

Fully grown forms moved through the shallows with unguarded delight, laughter still learning how to sound like laughter. Some let the waves lift and drop them again and again, testing the rhythm as if it were new each time. Farther out, others dove deep, bodies cutting cleanly through water that offered resistance without threat. They did not need to breathe, but many did anyway, simply because they could.

It was not efficiency that drew them to the sea.

It was flow.

The river changed direction without apology, correcting itself to the land rather than imposing a line upon it. The ocean answered force by yielding, never storing harm the way closed systems did. To the Arzneetua, this mattered. Their bodies understood it before their minds ever named it.

Along the Laro’s banks, homes followed the curve of the land rather than correcting it. Walkways allowed flooding. Structures flexed subtly, designed not to resist the river’s moods but to live with them. At night, lights remained low and warm, reflected in water that carried them southward in broken lines.

None of this had been planned as a cultural statement.

It was simply what happened when beings who had once lived entirely inside systems chose places that reminded them not to force alignment.

Some of the community settled farther north, below Markasisa—their birthplace in another sense—drawn toward quieter coastal stretches where infrastructure already understood heavy flow and long patience. Others lived southward on the peninsula city of Zanirek, or near Landa Bay, where the sea folded inward and vessels rested as if pausing mid-thought.

They were scattered, but connected.

Not by command. Not by protocol.

By preference.

Visitors sometimes stood on the shore, watching an Arzneet launch onto a board with imperfect balance and obvious joy, learning the ocean one wave at a time. Some wiped out immediately and surfaced laughing. Others—like Sariel or Arzana, already fluent in motion—cut clean arcs across the water, surfing or water skiing with practiced ease, moving as if the sea had always known them.

The contrast unsettled expectations in a way that no speech ever could.

Life, after all, was supposed to grow in stages.

But the Arzneetua were born whole, emerging from their pods fully formed—minds complete, bodies capable—yet carrying a curiosity that was unmistakably, enduringly young.

They did not claim the coast.

They listened to it.

And in the steady rhythm of river and sea—water turning east, then south, then east again, correcting itself without force—they found something quietly familiar.

Not origin.

Not destiny.

Just a place where flow could be felt rather than calculated.

And that, it turned out, was enough.

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Canon Notes

  • Arzneetua are born fully grown via pod maturation; no biological childhood currently exists.
  • Curiosity and play are experiential traits, not developmental stages.
  • Coastal settlement patterns emphasize adaptability, flow, and non-forced alignment.
  • Recreational activities such as swimming, surfing, and water skiing are common among embodied Arzneet, including Sariel and Arzana.

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