Thursday, March 12, 2026

Collapsing Worlds

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.

 

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Into the Mist

The lobby of the tower was almost empty.

Night security had already begun their quiet rotations, footsteps echoing faintly across the polished stone floor. The building that buzzed with analysts and engineers during the day now felt cavernous and hollow, its glass walls reflecting long strips of fluorescent light across the marble.

Adrian Vale stood just inside the revolving doors.

Beyond the glass, the city had begun to disappear.

Fog rolled in from the Pacific like a living thing—slow, patient, swallowing entire blocks at a time. Streetlights dissolved into pale halos. The distant shapes of buildings faded into a gray ocean of mist creeping steadily inland.

San Francisco knew fog well.

But tonight it felt different.

Adrian slipped his hands into the pockets of his coat and watched the approaching wall of white. Something about it unsettled him in a way he couldn’t quite explain.

Maybe it was exhaustion.

Or maybe it was the image still lingering in his mind from the simulation upstairs.

Kaveh standing on that ridge.

The ruined valley.

A life erased by a variable Adrian had barely glanced at while adjusting parameters.

He exhaled slowly.

For years he had told himself that the simulation was necessary—that the world needed models capable of predicting how societies fractured. Understanding collapse meant you could prevent it.

At least, that was the theory.

But lately the models weren’t just predicting collapse.

They were producing it.

And Adrian could no longer pretend the distinction didn’t matter.

Outside, a car passed through the fog with its headlights glowing like two drifting stars before vanishing completely.

He pushed the door open and stepped out onto the sidewalk.

The air was damp and cold against his face. Fog curled around the base of the tower, sliding across the pavement in silent waves. Somewhere down the street a cable car bell rang once before fading into the mist.

Adrian began walking toward the parking structure across the street.

But halfway across the crosswalk he stopped.

For just a moment—no more than a heartbeat—the fog thickened in a strange way. The city lights refracted through it until the world around him blurred.

And suddenly he wasn’t standing in San Francisco anymore.

He was standing in dust.

The air was dry, hot, heavy with ash. Broken towers rose from a desert landscape under a burning sunset. Wind swept across cracked highways half-buried beneath sand.

Los Angeles.

Ruined.

Silent.

A lone figure moved across the wasteland in the distance, staff in hand, walking between the skeletal remains of buildings.

Adrian blinked.

The vision snapped away.

The cold fog of San Francisco rushed back in.

Cars passed normally through the intersection. A couple hurried down the sidewalk with collars turned up against the damp air. The city was exactly as it had been moments before.

Yet Adrian’s heart was pounding.

He looked back toward the tower behind him.

Somewhere high above, deep in the building, the servers continued running the simulations—rendering futures and probabilities for worlds that didn’t technically exist.

And yet…

That ruined Los Angeles had felt too vivid.

Too real.

As if it were not a prediction, but a memory from a timeline already unfolding somewhere else in the system.

He shook his head slightly, trying to dismiss the thought.

Still, the unease remained.

The fog thickened around him, erasing the top half of the skyscraper he had just left. From the street it now looked like the building vanished halfway into the clouds.

Adrian stared up at it.

A strange realization crept into his mind.

The simulations upstairs were designed to explore societal collapse—to follow the chain reactions that began with small divisions and ended with broken nations, burning cities, and scattered survivors wandering through wastelands.

Minnesota.

Iran.

California.

All connected through cascading instability models.

But what if those outcomes weren’t just inside the machines?

What if the system had already begun leaking into reality?

What if the future he had just glimpsed wasn’t theoretical at all?

Another gust of fog swept across the street, colder this time.

Somewhere far to the south, hundreds of miles away, a lone man named Aurelian Tharos walked through the ruins of Los Angeles beneath a dying sun.

Adrian Vale had never met him.

Had never heard his name.

And yet something deep in his chest stirred with the faintest sense of recognition—as if two points in the same vast equation had just brushed against each other for the briefest moment.

Adrian turned and continued toward his car, the fog swallowing him step by step.

Behind him, the tower’s upper floors vanished completely into the mist.

And somewhere inside its hidden servers, the simulations kept running—quietly calculating futures that were beginning to feel less like possibilities…

…and more like inevitabilities.

 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Just Another Sortie

The carrier deck roared with life beneath a gray Pacific sky.

Engines screamed as fighters lifted off the forward deck, propellers chopping the morning air into a constant metallic thunder. Crewmen in grease-stained uniforms rushed across the deck waving signal flags and guiding aircraft into position like choreographed dancers in a deadly ballet.

Through the noise and motion walked Lieutenant Silen.

His boots struck the steel deck with a hollow clang as he climbed down from the cockpit of his fighter, the smell of hot oil and aviation fuel clinging to his flight suit. Behind him, mechanics swarmed the plane he had just landed—checking bullet holes in the wing, refueling tanks, shouting numbers over the roar of engines.

To them it was just another sortie.

But to Silen, something about the flight had felt… wrong.

He removed his helmet slowly as he stepped away from the aircraft, the wind from another fighter’s propeller tugging at his hair. Sweat ran down the side of his face despite the cool ocean air.

Fragments of the mission played back in his mind.

The approach over the island.

The anti-aircraft bursts rising like black flowers in the sky.

The diving attack run that had rattled his bones as he released his bombs.

Everything had unfolded exactly as it should have.

Yet during the flight—during the long stretch of sky between the carrier and the battlefield—something had happened.

Something impossible.

Silen slowed as he walked across the deck, the noise of the carrier fading slightly behind the strange fog forming in his thoughts.

For a moment, high above the Pacific, the world had shifted.

The ocean had vanished.

In its place he had seen sand.

Not a beach.

A vast desert landscape stretching to a broken city filled with shattered towers and drifting ash. Figures moved through the ruins beneath a red sun. One of them—a woman holding a lantern—had turned as if she could see him watching.

The image had been so vivid it had made him jerk the controls of his plane.

Then it was gone.

The Pacific had returned.

The formation had remained intact.

No one had said a word.

Now, walking across the carrier deck, Silen tried to shake the memory loose.

War did strange things to a mind, he told himself. Long hours, exhaustion, adrenaline. Pilots hallucinated sometimes. It wasn’t unheard of.

But this felt different.

The vision had not felt like imagination.

It had felt like memory.

He stopped near the edge of the flight deck and looked out over the rolling gray ocean.

Far below, waves slammed against the carrier’s massive hull.

Behind him a deck officer shouted, and another fighter roared down the runway toward takeoff. The wind from its propeller whipped across the deck like a storm.

Yet Silen barely heard it.

His thoughts were somewhere else now.

That desert city…

He had never seen such a place before.

And yet, part of him knew its name.

Los Angeles.

The word appeared in his mind without explanation.

Even stranger were the flashes that had followed the desert vision.

Stone alleys.

A quiet village beneath distant mountains.

A lone figure walking through the debris of a missile strike in a place that felt ancient and wounded.

Silen rubbed his temples, trying to steady himself.

“Lieutenant?”

A crewman approached, snapping him partly back to reality.

“Your bird’s ready for refuel. Captain says we’ll likely be launching again in thirty.”

Silen nodded automatically.

“Understood.”

The crewman hurried away, disappearing into the chaos of the deck.

Silen remained at the railing a moment longer.

The ocean stretched endlessly toward the horizon, calm and indifferent beneath the morning sky.

But something inside him refused to settle.

The visions weren’t fading.

If anything, they were becoming clearer.

Somewhere deep in the back of his mind another reality seemed to be pressing forward, like an image trying to break through fogged glass.

A ruined city.

Tunnels beneath the earth.

A woman walking alone with a lantern.

And something else…

Machines.

Immense machines humming in darkness.

Silen straightened slowly, pushing the thoughts aside with effort.

There was a war to fight.

Planes to fly.

Orders to follow.

Yet as he walked back toward the ready line, one unsettling question refused to leave him.

If those visions weren’t dreams…

Then where had they come from?

And why did they feel like fragments of a life he had somehow already lived?

 

Monday, March 9, 2026

Across the Wasteland

The sun was dying behind the ruins of Los Angeles.

It sank slowly into a horizon jagged with the broken skeletons of towers, turning the sky a deep rust-red that bled across the wasteland. What had once been freeways and neighborhoods now lay buried beneath dunes of shattered concrete and twisted steel. Wind moved through the hollow city with a low, mournful whistle, carrying ash and dust across the empty streets.

Through that fading light walked Aurelian Tharos.

His figure moved steadily across the cracked earth, long robes trailing behind him like shadows stretched by the sinking sun. The years of wandering had carved sharp lines into his face, but his eyes still carried the same calm intensity that had begun to turn rumor into legend among the scattered survivors.

Some called him a prophet.

Others whispered he was mad.

A few believed he had seen the world before it burned.

In his hand he carried a long staff cut from blackened oak, its surface worn smooth from miles of travel. The staff struck the ground softly with each step as he moved between the skeletal remains of buildings half-swallowed by sand.

Ahead of him rose one of the great buttes that dominated the landscape now.

From a distance it resembled something ancient—like the stone mesas of the desert. But as Aurelian approached, the truth revealed itself. The towering shape was nothing more than the compressed wreckage of a fallen city block: collapsed apartments, shattered highways, rusting cars, and the tangled bones of office towers fused together by decades of heat and nuclear fire.

Los Angeles had not simply collapsed.

It had melted into the earth.

Aurelian paused at the crest of a low ridge and looked out across the wasteland.

The setting sun cast long shadows across the broken terrain. In the far distance the ocean still glimmered faintly beyond the ruined port, its surface reflecting the dying light like molten copper.

He had walked these lands for years.

Yet each evening carried a different silence.

Tonight the wind had stilled.

Aurelian closed his eyes briefly, letting the quiet settle around him.

Fragments of memory drifted through his mind—not only of the old world, but of something stranger. Moments that felt like dreams: flickers of other times, other places. Sometimes he glimpsed cities that had never burned. Sometimes he sensed vast machines humming somewhere beyond the sky, calculating the fate of entire civilizations.

He did not fully understand these visions.

But he no longer dismissed them.

The world had become too strange for certainty.

When he opened his eyes again, darkness had begun creeping across the ruins.

A faint glow flickered among the distant buttes.

Campfires.

Survivors.

Aurelian studied the lights carefully.

Small communities had begun forming again among the wreckage—people hiding in hollowed-out structures that looked less like homes and more like the caverns of some ancient underworld. Fear ruled most of them. The wars had ended generations ago, but the habits of suspicion remained.

Hope had become the rarest resource left on Earth.

That, Aurelian believed, was why he had been spared.

Not by fate alone.

Something deeper seemed to be guiding him—threads pulling quietly at the fabric of reality. Sometimes he felt as though the world itself was trying to remember what it had once been.

He lifted his gaze toward the darkening sky.

The first stars had begun to appear.

For a brief moment the heavens shimmered strangely, like a reflection on water disturbed by a ripple. Aurelian watched it carefully, his expression unreadable.

He had seen that shimmer before.

Others dismissed it as tricks of the eye.

But Aurelian suspected the truth might be stranger.

Perhaps the world was not as solid as it seemed.

Perhaps the ruins around him were part of something larger—an illusion, a test, or a prison built by minds long forgotten.

The thought did not frighten him.

It only strengthened his resolve.

Somewhere out there, he believed, the world could still be guided back toward something resembling Eden—a place where people were not ruled by fear or lies or the endless pursuit of power.

But such a future would require more than survival.

It would require awakening.

Aurelian Tharos turned away from the dying sun and began walking again toward the distant fires.

Behind him, the ruins of Los Angeles faded slowly into darkness.

And far beyond the wasteland—in forgotten server rooms and hidden tunnels—other figures were beginning to stir as well.

Maren.

Silen.

Kaveh.

Threads moving quietly through the fabric of a broken world.

Threads that, whether by destiny or design, were slowly beginning to converge.

 

Sunday, March 8, 2026

No Awareness

Years before the valley became a crater, before soldiers and satellites and distant men with algorithms had taken an interest in the quiet place, Kaveh had known the village only as a maze of sunlit passages and familiar voices.

He was eight years old the afternoon he wandered the narrow alley behind his family’s home.

The stones beneath his feet were warm from the sun. Dust drifted lazily in the light that spilled between leaning walls. A cat slept in the shade of a clay water jar, its tail flicking now and then at invisible flies.

To Kaveh, the alley felt endless.

It twisted between houses in quiet bends where the smell of bread baking drifted from open windows. Laundry lines stretched overhead like flags, shirts and scarves stirring gently in the dry wind. Somewhere farther down the passage an old radio crackled with music that faded in and out between bursts of static.

The world seemed small enough to understand.

He dragged a stick along the stone wall as he walked, listening to the scraping rhythm echo softly between the buildings. Every few steps he would stop and look upward at the slice of sky framed between rooftops.

Blue. Bright. Eternal.

At the far end of the alley he could hear the voices of men sitting outside the small tea shop that stood near the village well. They spoke in slow, thoughtful tones about matters that meant little to him then—oil prices, elections, distant wars along borders he had never seen.

Sometimes the voices would grow tense.

Names of cities he could not picture drifted through the air: Tehran… Baghdad… Washington.

But to a boy wandering the alley with dust on his sandals, those places felt like myths.

What mattered were the small things.

The apricot tree leaning over a courtyard wall.

The broken wooden cart no one had bothered to fix.

The old man who always waved from his doorway while carving pieces of cedar into little birds.

Kaveh paused near the bend where the alley opened into the central square. From here he could see the cracked minaret of the mosque rising above the rooftops, leaning slightly as it always had.

He liked that tower.

It made the village feel ancient and permanent, as though the earth itself had decided to keep it there.

A warm breeze passed through the alley, carrying the smell of pomegranate blossoms from the orchards beyond the ridge.

For a moment he closed his eyes and simply breathed.

If the simulation had been observing him then—if the servers in some distant room had been rendering that moment—it might have recorded something simple:

CHILD NODE — STATE: CONTENT

No fear.

No awareness.

No hint of the long chain of decisions already unfolding far beyond the hills.

Because while Kaveh wandered through the quiet alley with his stick scraping along the stone, men in distant capitals were debating sanctions. Military planners were adjusting strategies. Analysts were feeding new variables into predictive systems meant to model unrest across entire regions.

The village did not know it yet.

But it had already entered the equation.

A voice called his name from the square.

“Kaveh!”

He opened his eyes and turned.

His mother stood at the edge of the alley holding a basket of bread, sunlight spilling around her like a halo. She smiled when she saw him.

“Come,” she said. “Your father will be home soon.”

Kaveh ran toward her without hesitation, the stick dropping from his hand and clattering softly onto the stones behind him.

The alley fell quiet again.

Laundry rustled overhead. The cat lifted its head briefly before settling back into sleep.

And above the rooftops the sky remained an endless blue—unchanged, untroubled, holding no sign of the future that would one day erase the village entirely.

 

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Fragile Equation

The city lay spread beneath him like a living circuit.

From the top floor of the glass tower, Adrian Vale stood motionless at the window, one hand resting against the cold pane. Far below, the streets of San Francisco shimmered in scattered light—headlights moving like electrical impulses through a grid of concrete veins.

Above it all hung the full moon.

Perfect. Silent. Unmoved by the turmoil unfolding across the world Adrian helped design.

Behind him, the servers hummed softly in their climate-controlled rows. Thousands of processors quietly calculating probabilities, rendering lives, adjusting outcomes. The sound had become so constant he barely noticed it anymore—like the ocean for someone who had lived beside it their whole life.

Adrian took a slow breath.

Twenty years earlier he had been a college student dreaming of artificial intelligence and predictive modeling. Back then the idea seemed noble enough—build a simulation of society, test policies, study how technology might shape the future.

But the simulation had grown.

And somewhere along the way, it had become too real.

He lifted a tablet from the desk beside him and brought up the global overview.

Across the display, thousands of colored markers pulsed faintly—each one representing a region, a population cluster, a storyline unfolding within the simulation’s parameters.

North America flickered with instability nodes.

Europe glowed with economic fracture models.

But Adrian’s eyes drifted toward the Middle East.

There, amid the chaotic network of protests, missile strikes, and collapsing infrastructure, a single thread had begun behaving… differently.

He zoomed in.

A valley appeared on the screen—little more than a geographic indentation surrounded by arid hills.

Population node recently destroyed.

Civilian displacement patterns were already feeding new unrest variables.

The system had predicted the cascade perfectly.

Yet something in the aftermath refused to settle into the expected curve.

Adrian leaned closer.

A name appeared in the anomaly log.

KAVEH — Behavioral Deviation Detected

He frowned.

Individuals in the simulation deviated all the time. It was part of the complexity that made the system useful. But this deviation wasn’t random—it was persistent. The system kept trying to push the variable back toward predicted pathways, yet the behavior continued drifting.

Kaveh had lost his village.

The model predicted grief, anger, eventual absorption into one of several protest movements.

Instead, the variable had begun moving through the data set like a needle through cloth—slipping between probability channels the system struggled to constrain.

Adrian tapped the screen again.

Satellite renderings shifted.

The simulation now showed Kaveh standing on a ridge overlooking the crater that had once been his home.

Adrian felt a strange unease.

It wasn’t sympathy. Not exactly.

It was recognition.

He watched the figure in silence for a long moment.

Down in the valley, smoke curled lazily upward from shattered homes. The scene had been rendered with such precision—the dust patterns, the fading sunlight, even the faint shimmer of heat rising from the earth.

Every detail calculated.

And yet Kaveh stood there as if he somehow felt the presence of the calculation itself.

Adrian shifted his gaze back toward the real city beyond the glass.

San Francisco stretched beneath the moon—quiet, almost peaceful. From this height it looked orderly, rational, controlled.

Nothing like the chaos unfolding inside the servers behind him.

He wondered suddenly how different the two worlds truly were.

The simulation predicted riots, civil wars, collapsing governments. It modeled the same patterns that had once shaped real history.

But Adrian had never seriously considered that the boundary between observer and participant might blur.

He looked again at the tablet.

Kaveh had begun walking away from the destroyed valley.

Toward a road.

Toward something unknown.

The anomaly indicator pulsed again.

Adrian felt a faint chill move through him.

In the simulation’s deeper layers, Kaveh’s trajectory intersected with other unstable variables—nodes tied to unrest spreading across continents.

Some of those nodes were already familiar.

Los Angeles.

Minnesota.

San Francisco.

And somewhere within those same unstable regions, two other names kept appearing in the anomaly reports:

SILEN
MAREN

Adrian exhaled slowly.

Three variables.

Three threads resisting the narrative gravity of the simulation.

He stared out at the moon again.

For the first time since beginning the project, Adrian felt the quiet suspicion that the system might not merely be modeling history.

It might be creating it.

And somewhere beneath the layers of code and probability, individuals like Kaveh were beginning to sense the machinery behind their world.

Behind him the servers hummed.

In the Middle East, Kaveh walked toward the horizon.

And above San Francisco, the full moon continued to shine—indifferent to the possibility that both men might be living inside the same fragile equation.

 

Friday, March 6, 2026

Broken Geometry

Kaveh had not always walked through ruins.

He had once run through orchards.

The village where he was raised sat in a shallow valley framed by low, sun-bleached hills. In spring, the wind carried the scent of pomegranate blossoms and dust. The houses were simple—whitewashed walls, blue doors faded by sun, satellite dishes angled like patient ears toward the sky.

There had been a single schoolhouse. A narrow stream that ran strong in winter and thinned to a trickle by late summer. A mosque with a cracked minaret that leaned just enough for every child to notice but never enough to fall.

It did not appear on most maps.

In the simulation index, it was labeled only:

RURAL NODE — POPULATION: 1,842

As a boy, Kaveh would climb the low ridge above the village and look out at the fields stitched together in uneven rectangles. From there, the world felt finite but complete. The elders spoke in quiet tones about politics in Tehran, about sanctions, about war on distant borders—but the valley felt insulated.

History happened elsewhere.

He believed that.

He remembered evenings when the entire village gathered on flat rooftops to escape the heat. Laughter drifted between homes. Someone would bring tea. Someone else would bring a radio tuned to static-laced music. The sky was so clear he felt he could measure time by the stars.

In those nights, collapse was unimaginable.

Now, as he stood on the ridge again—years later, dust settling around him—the village lay silent below.

The missile had not been meant for them.

That was what made it efficient.

In the layered logic of regional destabilization, the village had become collateral probability. A supply corridor suspected of facilitating resistance communications. A cluster of coordinates near a logistics path. A low-priority but acceptable loss in a larger strategic calculation.

In the simulation’s backend, the event had been clean:

TARGET PROXIMITY: WITHIN STRIKE TOLERANCE
CIVILIAN DENSITY: LOW TO MODERATE
GEOPOLITICAL ESCALATION RISK: MANAGEABLE

Approval cascade executed.

From above, the strike had appeared as a descending vector, a single arc through atmosphere.

From below, it had been a sound that swallowed the sky.

Kaveh had not been in the village when it happened. He had been in a nearby town coordinating encrypted message drops for a fledgling network pushing for reform. When the shockwave rolled through the valley, windows shattered miles away.

By the time he returned, the stream had turned to mud under falling debris.

Half the homes were gone.

The schoolhouse was a crater.

The cracked minaret that had leaned for decades lay flat, its geometry broken in a way that no child would ever study again.

He walked now through what remained of the street where he had played as a boy. A cooking pot lay overturned. A sandal half-buried in ash. The satellite dishes were twisted metal halos.

In the system’s logs, the destruction registered as a regional influence multiplier. Displacement would increase anger indices. Anger would increase protest cohesion probability. Protest cohesion would strain regime stability curves.

It was all interconnected.

His childhood was an input variable.

He crouched and pressed his hand into the dirt where his family’s house had stood. The earth was still warm beneath the surface.

Did the village feel its own erasure?

Did the mothers and fathers who had lived their entire lives within these few square kilometers experience the strike as terror, confusion, betrayal?

Or were they merely endpoints in a cascading calculation designed to intensify collapse?

If this world was a simulation—and he was beginning to suspect it might be—then the valley had been rendered with exquisite care only to be deleted for narrative momentum.

The thought unsettled him more than grief.

He rose slowly and turned toward the horizon.

The hills were still there. The wind still moved across them. The sky still held its impossible blue.

But the node labeled RURAL — POPULATION: 1,842 would soon update:

POPULATION: 317 (DISPLACED)
STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY: 22%
SYMBOLIC IMPACT: HIGH

The system would interpret the village’s annihilation as fuel.

Fuel for revolt.
Fuel for regime crackdowns.
Fuel for cross-regional instability that would ripple outward—toward cities, toward borders, toward other simulations intertwined.

Kaveh closed his eyes.

He could almost hear the rooftop laughter again.

Almost.

When he opened them, the valley seemed thinner somehow—like a rendering with fewer polygons than before. As if processing power had already been reallocated elsewhere.

His village had been small.

Insignificant to empires.

But to him, it had been the entire world.

And now it was a crater feeding a larger design.

He stood on the ridge as the sun dipped low, and for the first time, the possibility crystallized:

If someone—or something—was adjusting these outcomes from above, then the erasure of his village had been chosen.

And if it had been chosen—

Then perhaps it could be unchosen.

He turned from the ridge and began walking toward the nearest surviving road.

Not just as a son of the valley.

But as a variable no longer content to remain passive inside someone else’s equation.