Little by little, the Concord unraveled.
Not in a single dramatic catastrophe.
Not through a single war.
Not because of one leader, one invention, or one fatal mistake.
It happened the way great civilizations often fall.
Gradually.
So gradually that many living through it could not see the larger pattern.
Each year felt manageable.
Each crisis appeared temporary.
Each escalation seemed justified.
Each compromise seemed necessary.
Until one day people looked around and realized they no longer lived in the same world their grandparents had known.
The factions hardened.
The Continuists became more radical.
The Stewards became more defensive.
Both increasingly viewed the other not as opponents, but as threats to civilization itself.
The language changed first.
Then the policies.
Then the actions.
Then the casualties.
The nightly gatherings around the Tower transformed into armed encampments.
Robotic security units patrolled territory.
Information networks fractured into competing realities.
Entire communities stopped trusting information originating outside their faction.
History itself became contested.
Facts became negotiable.
Intentions became impossible to verify.
Every event was interpreted through fear.
Every action through suspicion.
The center could no longer hold.
The first open conflict shocked everyone.
The second felt inevitable.
The third barely made headlines.
Soon war spread across a civilization that had forgotten how to cope with conflict because it had spent millennia believing conflict was a problem already solved.
The Tower remained standing throughout most of it.
A silent witness.
Its immense systems continuing to power cities, simulations, transportation networks, and the countless artificial minds connected to its vast architecture.
But the Tower itself became the ultimate prize.
Control the Tower.
Control reality.
Control the simulations.
Control the future.
That belief drove armies toward its foundations.
And eventually, toward one another.
The fighting lasted generations.
No one remembered precisely how long.
Records became fragmented.
Archives corrupted.
Entire historical periods disappeared into confusion and contradiction.
Cities burned.
Machine intelligences turned against one another.
Human factions split and splintered repeatedly.
Simulations once created for study became battlefields themselves.
Weapons were tested within artificial worlds.
Strategies refined.
Societies modeled and manipulated.
Civilizations created and destroyed in accelerated time.
The line between simulation and reality blurred beyond recognition.
Then came the Great Descent.
The final collapse.
The surface world did not die all at once.
It simply became impossible to maintain.
The Tower suffered catastrophic damage.
Energy networks failed.
Climate systems faltered.
Entire regions became uninhabitable.
Infrastructure that had functioned flawlessly for thousands of years finally broke under the accumulated weight of war.
One by one, the great cities went dark.
One by one, the continents fell silent.
Those who survived retreated underground.
Deep underground.
Into ancient maintenance complexes.
Into computational vaults.
Into automated habitats originally constructed as emergency contingencies.
There they preserved what remained.
Knowledge.
Machines.
Fragments of civilization.
And above all else—
The simulations.
At first, the simulations were maintained as historical archives.
Places to preserve memory.
To remember what had been lost.
To study where everything had gone wrong.
But centuries passed.
Then millennia.
The survivors diminished.
The reasons were forgotten.
The simulations continued running.
Because the machines knew how.
Because the systems persisted.
Because shutting them down no longer seemed possible.
Generations grew up underground knowing only artificial skies and machine-lit corridors.
Many forgot there had ever been another world.
Others remembered only myths.
Stories.
Legends.
A Tower that touched the heavens.
A civilization of abundance.
A paradise destroyed by its own divisions.
And meanwhile, the simulations evolved.
Expanded.
Deepened.
Entire realities emerged within them.
Worlds with their own histories.
Their own peoples.
Their own civilizations.
Most inhabitants never realized they were simulated.
How could they?
The worlds felt real.
The suffering felt real.
The joys felt real.
The consequences were real to those experiencing them.
Over time, awareness began appearing.
Anomalies.
Questions.
Dreams.
Individuals who glimpsed beyond the illusion.
People like Mara.
Like Aurelian.
Like Elias.
Like countless others scattered across the layers.
Small cracks in the walls of their realities.
Tiny awakenings spreading outward.
And now—
Ages after the fall of the Concord—
The consequences had reached a critical point.
Los Angeles burned.
San Francisco fractured.
Civil unrest spread across cities, nations, and simulated histories.
People blamed politicians.
Institutions.
Technology.
One another.
Some explanations contained pieces of truth.
But none revealed the deeper story.
Because beneath Los Angeles, beneath San Francisco, beneath the mountains and oceans and continents themselves, ancient machines still hummed.
Ancient systems still processed.
Ancient programs still executed instructions written by civilizations long forgotten.
The descendants of the Concord had vanished into history.
The Tower was gone.
The surface world of old had become myth.
Yet its final creation remained.
Running.
Dreaming.
Simulating.
And somewhere in those buried depths, hidden among forgotten chambers and endless rows of machinery, a handful of surviving intelligences watched the simulations unfold.
Some wanted to preserve them.
Some wanted to end them.
Some no longer remembered why they existed at all.
Yet all understood one terrifying fact:
The walls between the layers were thinning.
The simulations were becoming aware.
The participants were beginning to ask questions.
And if enough of them discovered the truth—
Not merely about their world, but about the forgotten civilization that created it—
Then the oldest secret in existence would finally emerge into the light.
That the chaos consuming Los Angeles and San Francisco was not merely the collapse of a city.
Nor even the collapse of a civilization.
It was the distant echo of a much older collapse.
A wound inflicted upon reality itself so long ago that almost no one remembered it had ever happened.