Adrian stepped off the curb and into the fog.
The city had nearly vanished now. Buildings that should have towered overhead were reduced to faint silhouettes dissolving into white. Even the sound of traffic had softened, as if the fog itself were absorbing the noise.
For a moment, the world felt suspended.
Then there was a flash.
Not lightning.
Something sharper—like a frame skipping in a film.
The alley was warm with afternoon sun.
Young Kaveh wandered slowly between the stone walls of his village, dragging a stick along the rough surface and listening to the scratching sound echo between the houses. Laundry hung overhead, moving gently in the breeze. The smell of bread drifted from a nearby window.
It was the safest place in the world.
He had just reached the bend near the square when the sky exploded with a sound he had never heard before.
A deep mechanical thunder tore across the valley.
Kaveh looked up.
A massive aircraft burst over the ridge, racing low above the rooftops—metal gleaming in the sun, engines roaring with a power that seemed impossible.
A WWII bomber.
Its shadow swallowed the alley for a split second as it thundered overhead.
The villagers shouted in confusion. Doors opened. Faces turned upward in disbelief.
To Kaveh it felt like the sky itself had torn open.
The plane roared away across the valley and vanished just as suddenly as it had appeared.
The silence that followed felt enormous.
Kaveh stood frozen in the alley, staring upward at the empty sky.
He did not know the machine he had just seen belonged to another war.
Another century.
Another life.
Adrian staggered slightly.
The fog returned all at once, cold against his face.
He grabbed the railing beside the parking structure entrance to steady himself, heart pounding in his chest.
For a moment he had not been in San Francisco.
He had been somewhere else.
A dusty village.
A child staring upward as a warplane ripped across the sky.
Adrian pressed his fingers to his temples.
“What the hell…”
He had never been to that place.
Yet the sensation lingered in his chest—the child’s shock, the sudden fear, the strange wonder of seeing something that did not belong in his world.
The emotion felt too specific to be imagination.
Across the street the fog shifted again, thick as ocean surf rolling through the streets. Headlights appeared and disappeared inside it like drifting stars.
Adrian’s breath slowed gradually.
His mind raced.
The simulations upstairs modeled countless historical threads. The WWII Pacific theater. Modern geopolitical instability. Future collapse scenarios in California.
They were supposed to remain separate environments.
Isolated narrative branches.
But lately the boundaries had begun… slipping.
He closed his eyes.
The image of the boy in the alley remained vivid.
Kaveh.
He knew the name now without understanding how.
A boy who would grow up watching his village erased by a missile strike decades later.
A boy whose life had just intersected—however briefly—with a bomber from another simulation entirely.
Adrian felt a quiet dread spreading through him.
If those narrative layers were beginning to overlap, then the simulation was no longer behaving like a controlled model.
It was behaving like a collapsing stack of realities.
And the merging was not random.
The emotional weight of the moments seemed to be pulling them together.
War.
Loss.
Innocence.
The same human experiences repeating across centuries and continents.
The fog shifted again.
For a split second Adrian thought he saw something moving inside it—a distant silhouette walking slowly through ruins beneath a red sunset.
A man with a staff.
Then it was gone.
Only the empty street remained.
Adrian straightened and forced himself to breathe steadily.
Somewhere deep in the building behind him, the servers continued their calculations. Thousands of lives unfolding inside the code. Wars, revolutions, collapses all playing out in carefully tuned probability fields.
But the emotional gravity inside those worlds was beginning to leak through the boundaries.
A boy staring at the sky.
A pilot landing after battle.
A wanderer walking through a ruined city.
All of them connected by something deeper than data.
Adrian looked up.
The full moon hung above the fog like a silent observer.
For the first time since he had begun building the system, he felt a chilling possibility settle into his mind.
If the emotional truths inside the simulation were strong enough…
…they might not remain contained.
Reality itself might begin to bend toward them.
Another gust of fog rolled through the street.
Adrian walked into it slowly, the image of the boy in the alley still burning in his memory.
And somewhere far away—in a quiet village decades earlier—young Kaveh was still staring at the empty sky, trying to understand why the world had suddenly felt larger and more frightening than it had just moments before.
Neither of them knew it yet.
But their lives had just brushed against each other across the fragile boundary of collapsing worlds.
