San Francisco burned differently than Los Angeles.
L.A. collapsed with rage.
San Francisco collapsed with exhaustion.
The city by the bay had once imagined itself immune to decline—too wealthy, too advanced, too connected to fail. For years its towers had glowed with promises of progress while technology companies reshaped society from glass offices overlooking the water.
Now those same towers stood dark.
Windows shattered.
Corporate logos hanging crooked above streets littered with abandoned electric cars and ash.
Fog rolled through the city like smoke from an old battlefield.
And beneath it—
San Francisco was tearing itself apart.
Fighting spread block by block through the Financial District.
Crowds flooded Market Street carrying stolen supplies, homemade weapons, signs demanding justice, revenge, food, power—many no longer even remembered what had first brought them into the streets.
It had all merged together now.
Economic collapse.
Political corruption.
Housing shortages.
Mass surveillance.
Distrust.
Years of resentment compressed into one long unraveling.
The city had become a pressure cooker with no valve left to release the steam.
So it exploded.
Near the Ferry Building, fires reflected off the bay while police drones buzzed overhead like insects.
A line of armored officers advanced cautiously through drifting fog, shields raised against debris raining from upper-story windows.
Someone hurled a brick.
Then another.
The crowd surged.
Officers pushed forward.
The entire street dissolved into violence within seconds.
People scattered through smoke while others rushed toward the barricades screaming incoherently, driven more by emotional momentum than strategy.
An armored transport vehicle burned near the trolley tracks, flames climbing into the fog above.
Nearby, a group of looters smashed into a luxury storefront whose displays still played silent advertisements behind cracked glass.
Beautiful people smiling in a world already gone.
Farther uphill, neighborhoods had become isolated islands.
Power outages rolled across districts unpredictably. Entire blocks vanished into darkness while others flickered weakly beneath unstable electrical grids.
Gunshots echoed through narrow streets lined with expensive homes now covered in graffiti and barricaded windows.
Residents watched from rooftops clutching flashlights and improvised weapons, uncertain whether the greater threat came from the crowds below or the government forces moving into the city.
No one trusted official information anymore.
Rumors traveled faster than facts.
Federal crackdowns.
Militia movements.
Mass arrests.
Food shortages.
None fully confirmed.
All fully believed.
At the edge of Chinatown, an old man stood outside his shop watching smoke drift over the city skyline.
He had lived through recessions.
Earthquakes.
Riots.
But this felt different.
Not temporary.
Not recoverable.
This felt like watching confidence itself die.
A young woman hurried past carrying bags of canned food.
“Go home,” she warned him nervously. “They’re pushing north.”
The old man looked toward downtown where sirens echoed endlessly through the fog.
“There’s nowhere left to go home to,” he said quietly.
Above the city, the fog thickened unnaturally.
It moved in strange patterns now.
Too symmetrical at times.
Too fast.
As if the simulation itself were compensating for instability.
Occasionally the illusion failed.
A skyscraper near Mission Street flickered violently, its reflective surface briefly revealing black geometric scaffolding beneath the rendered exterior.
A cable car glitched mid-intersection, freezing for several seconds before snapping forward again.
People noticed.
Most pretended not to.
The human mind resisted impossible truths even at the edge of collapse.
Especially then.
Deep beneath the city—
Far below even the transit tunnels—
The original server complex continued humming.
Massive cooling systems pushed freezing air through endless corridors of blinking machines while the simulation strained overhead.
Every riot.
Every gunshot.
Every fear-driven decision rippled through the processing systems like stress fractures spreading across glass.
And at the center of it all—
Lucian Hale watched calmly from the control room.
San Francisco fascinated him most.
Because unlike Los Angeles, this city had believed itself enlightened.
Superior.
Protected by intelligence, technology, and progress.
Yet when pressure mounted—
It fractured just the same.
Lucian studied the unrest unfolding across the screens before him.
Tech campuses overrun.
Government buildings besieged.
Neighborhoods barricading themselves against neighbors.
Civil trust collapsing in real time.
He smiled faintly.
“All systems revert eventually,” he murmured.
Outside the tower, the city burned beneath the fog.
And somewhere within that chaos—
Something else was moving.
Not soldiers.
Not rioters.
Something quieter.
Awake.
Aware.
Drawn toward the hidden machinery beneath San Francisco.
Toward the truth buried under layers of illusion and collapse.
Toward the beating mechanical heart of the simulation itself.
