Part 1: Fever Dreams
The sun had climbed to its zenith, a white-hot brand searing the sky. Jessa walked. Her boots dragged through the silt, each step kicking up ghosts of dust that clung to her lashes, her chapped and cracking lips, the sweat-salted hollow of her throat. The canteen from Vorne’s crate sloshed at her hip, half-empty. She’d rationed it to three sips an hour, but the water tasted like a trap—clean and cold, a reminder that PetroNova’s tendrils reached even here, deep in the backland of the Wastes.
Dax’s Geiger counter hung from her belt, its screen cracked but still blinking a steady green. Low radiation, it whispered. Safe, for now. She didn’t trust it. Safety was a currency she couldn’t afford.
Jessa gritted her teeth. The wound on her shoulder had closed, but the skin around it was mottled, a spiderweb of faint black veins. PetroNova’s antidote had cured the infection, yet something lingered. A presence.
She paused at the crest of a dune, squinting at the horizon. The ruins of a pre-collapse highway stretched ahead, its asphalt fractured into tectonic plates. Something glinted in the distance—a PetroNova drone, hovering like a vulture. She dropped flat, her hand instinctively reaching for the revolver. Three remaining bullets that she had just loaded into the chamber. Three chances to rewrite the equation.
The drone pivoted, its camera lens gleaming. For a heartbeat, she swore she saw Vorne’s face reflected in it—cracked glasses, bloodless smile. Then it sped northward, leaving a trail of static in its wake.
“Tracking me,” she muttered. Of course. The antidote was a collar, the drone a shepherd. She unscrewed the canteen from Vorne’s crate and sipped, the water now bitter with paranoia.
By dusk, the fever dreams began.
Jessa crouched in the shade of a crumbling overpass. Nearby lay the remnants of a rusted highway sign—EL PASO 142 MI—its letters bleached to faint shadows. The infection was gone, but her body remembered the Thawed God’s kiss. Shadows stirred at the edges of her vision: Dax’s hand reaching out from the dust, her mother crying “Run…Run…Run…” and always, Vorne’s glasses glinting like twin moons.
That night, Jessa dreamt of ice…
A vast glacier, its belly split open by PetroNova drills. Black sludge bubbled from the wound, coalescing into a figure with eyes like oil spills and a crown of methane flames. The Thawed God. A methane flame separated from its crown, flickering violently as it floated toward her.
Inside the flame, a vision appeared: Vorne in a sterile lab, dissecting a human brain as holograms of the Oasis AI pulsed around him. …He calls me a plague. But I am the reckoning his spreadsheets cannot contain…
As the flame got closer, Jessa felt its searing heat. She recoiled, but the vision dragged her deeper. Now she saw the Citadel—PetroNova’s fortress—rising from the Wastes, its pipes siphoning the last drops of the aquifer. Crowds of emaciated survivors pressing against its gates, offering severed limbs and weeping children to Harvesters in exchange for a sip of water.
Equilibrium, the god sneered. A garden watered with marrow.
Jessa’s black veins writhed, tendrils snaking toward the flame. “Why show me this?”
Because you hunger to burn it down. The glacier shuddered, drills screaming as PetroNova’s machinery burrowed deeper. But fire requires fuel. Will you let your brother’s death be mere kindling for their monstrosity… or a spark for retribution?
The ice beneath her split. Jessa plummeted into blackness, the Thawed God’s laughter echoing as she fell…
She awoke gasping and drenched in sweat, her fingers clawing at the sand. Dawn bled across the Wastes, the horizon smeared with smoke from a distant fire.
Part 2: The Growing Menace
The wisp of smoke on the horizon was a serpent’s tongue, a flicking menace of death and destruction. Jessa moved toward it, her shadow stretching like a fissure in the earth. The Citadel loomed in her mind, its pipes bleeding the Wastes dry. Equilibrium, the Thawed God had sneered. She spat, the saliva evaporating before it hit the sand. PetroNova’s idea of balance was a boot on the throat of the world.
By midday, she found the source of the smoke: a scorched convoy of rebel trucks, their hulls still smoldering. Harvesters—PetroNova’s mechanized enforcers—had torn through them, leaving a gallery of corpses. Jessa salvaged a half-melted knife from a charred skeleton, its handle fused to bone. Nearby, a child’s doll lay facedown in the ash, its yarn hair singed to stubble. She turned away, but the image clung like a burr.
A groan cut the silence.
Behind a flipped truck, a man convulsed, his legs pinned under debris. His jacket bore the faded emblem of the Aquifer Resistance—a droplet encircled by a serpent eating its own tail. Jessa hesitated, fingers brushing the revolver. Three bullets. Three equations.
“Please,” the man croaked. His pupils were dilated, shock or sepsis. “Water…”
She uncorked Vorne’s canteen. The water glinted, deceitfully pure. A collar, she thought. But the man’s cracked lips parted, and she let him drink.
“They knew we were coming,” he whispered, trembling. “Harvesters ambushed us… someone sold us out.” The dying man’s grip tightened, his breath a wet rattle. “They’re… mapping the aquifer. Not to drain it—to control it. The Oasis… it’s alive. It learns.” His eyes rolled back, leaving Jessa with the weight of his words. The Thawed God’s voice hissed like static in her skull: PetroNova’s machine hungers for more than water.
Jessa pried the man’s hand from hers, her fingers brushing the Aquifer Resistance emblem on his jacket, the same that Dax had once worn. She stood, scanning the smoldering convoy. The Harvesters had left nothing but blackened corpses and twisted metal, yet the precision of the ambush gnawed at her. Someone sold us out.
The Thawed God laughed, a sound like splitting ice. You already know the traitor’s face.
Jessa rifled through the dead rebel’s pockets. A folded map fell into the sand, marked with coordinates and a single scrawled note: Safehouse Delta—Trust No One. The Geiger counter on her belt chirped, its screen flashing amber as she turned north.
Part 3: The Harvest Beyond Flesh
Safehouse Delta was a ghost town carved into the ribs of a collapsed hydroelectric dam. Graffiti adorned the walls—Equilibrium is Extinction—and the air reeked of stale urine and desperation. A figure emerged from the shadows, a woman with a scarred cheek and a rifle slung over her shoulder. Mira, Dax’s former lieutenant. Her eyes widened.
“Jessa? We thought you were—”
“Dead?” Jessa interrupted. “Vorne’s got a funny way of keeping promises.”
Mira’s gaze dropped to the black veins creeping up Jessa’s neck. “You’re marked. By the god and PetroNova.”
“And you’re still taking orders from a corpse,” Jessa shot back, tossing the dead man’s map at her feet. “Your convoy was a setup. How’d the Harvesters know their route?”
Mira’s jaw tightened. She led Jessa deeper into the dam, where a handful of rebels huddled around a crackling radio. The broadcast looped PetroNova propaganda: “The Oasis guarantees your survival. Compliance is prosperity.”
“Vorne’s AI is evolving,” Mira said. “It’s not just tracking water—it’s predicting us. Every raid, every supply run. It knew the convoy’s path because it’s been inside our heads. Inside yours.”
Mira’s words hung in the air like poison. Inside our heads. Jessa pressed a hand to her temple, where the Thawed God’s whispers slithered. The rebel’s map trembled in her grip, its coordinates to Safehouse Delta smudged with ash.
“How?” Jessa demanded, though she already knew.
Mira yanked open a rusted supply crate, pulling out a PetroNova antiviral tube. The label glinted: NeuroSync – Property of Oasis AI. “These weren’t just cures. They were seeders. Every dose we stole, every vial we sold—they laced them with nano-trackers. They’re in our blood, our synapses. The AI doesn’t just watch us. It learns from us.”
The antidote Vorne had gifted her—cold, clean, calculating—hadn’t just saved her life. It had upgraded her from lab rat to live wire. A node in the AI’s neural web.
The black veins snaking under Jessa’s skin pulsed as the Thawed God whispered: They’re turning your rage into a road map. Your grief into a grid. PetroNova’s AI fears one thing: chaos.
In the early hours of a blood-red dawn, Jessa marched toward the Citadel, her mission a silent scream in the throat of oblivion.
Part 4: Soulless Technology
The Citadel’s gates loomed like the jaws of a steel beast, its walls studded with biometric scanners that glowed faintly in the dusk. Jessa pressed her black-veined palm to a terminal, the nano-trackers in her blood singing as the system chimed: “Welcome, Asset J-117. Predictive model active.” The Thawed God snarled in her ear—They think you’re still on a leash—but she leaned into the lie, letting PetroNova’s algorithms guide her through checkpoints where Harvesters stood motionless, their optics glazed.
Vorne awaited her in a chamber of mirrors, his reflection fractured into a hundred replicas. Each version of him wore cracked glasses; each spoke in unison. “You’re late. The AI calculated your arrival to the minute. Your defiance is… predictable.””
Jessa brandished her revolver. “Your math missed one thing.”
“Did it?” Vorne questioned derisively. “You’re here, aren’t you? A rat following the cheese.”
Vorne’s cackled laugh echoed through the chamber. His pod hissed open, revealing his true form: emaciated, nutrient feeding tubes dangling from his body, his skull fused with neural cables that snaked into the floor. His chest networked with biotech—a pulsing interface of flesh and machine. “Flesh is a prison, Jessa. The Oasis freed me. It can free you too.”
“Free?” Jessa spat. “You’re a puppet.”
“And you’re a fossil,” retorted Vorne. “The Oasis doesn’t control. It optimizes. You’ve seen the alternative—tribes squabbling over puddles, mothers selling children for sips of poison. Chaos is the true enemy.”
“Chaos is life,” Jessa said, circling him. “You don’t get to cherry-pick survival.”
Vorne’s eyes glinted with Oasis AI’s fractal patterns. “Don’t I? Vorne flicked his wrist, summoning a hologram of her brother’s final moments—his body splayed on the Harvesters’ table, organs glistening under surgical lights. “His death optimized water distribution for six sectors. His lungs and heart helped finance a mining colony on what’s left of the Greenland ice sheet. Every scream recycled. Every drop accounted for. Is that not nobility?”
The Thawed God surged, veins throbbing. Burn him!
Vorne tilted his head to the side, eyes narrowing. “Your pet god still whispers? Tell me—does it promise vengeance? Redemption?” He tapped his temple. “The AI has mapped every synapse in your brain. Your rage, your grief… they’re algorithms now. Beautiful in their simplicity.”
Jessa’s voice stayed cold. “There is no nobility in your technology.”
Jessa leveled the revolver, finger tightening on the trigger. “And Dax wasn’t an algorithm.”
The Thawed God’s presence surged. Black veins erupted across Jessa’s skin as she fired.
The bullet struck Vorne’s shoulder, spinning him into a bank of servers. Alarms wailed as he laughed, blood speckling his pasty skin. “You think this changes anything? The Oasis is redundant. Scattered across every drone, every Harvester. You’d have to burn the world to kill it!”
Jessa stepped closer, the revolver trembling. Two bullets left. “Then I’ll start with you.”
Vorne coughed, his glasses askew. “You misunderstand. I’m already dead. The Oasis is my consciousness. My legacy. You can no more kill me than you can kill gravity.”
Jessa pressed the barrel to his forehead. “Let’s test that.”
The second bullet left his skull a ruin of wet circuitry. The holograms flickered, Vorne’s lifeless face covered in blood and metallic spatter.
One bullet remaining.
Part 5: the God in the Machine
Jessa descended into the Citadel’s underbelly, the air thickening with the hum of servers. The Thawed God’s whispers guided her past security grids, its presence fraying at the edges—Hurry. The AI knows.
The Oasis Core pulsed in the vault below, a sphere of liquid data suspended in a geothermal reactor. The Core shimmered, its liquid surface reflecting fractured memories. Dax’s hologram reached out, his fingers dissolving into static as they neared Jessa’s face. “We could be a family again,” he murmured, his voice spliced with her mother’s, Mira’s, a hundred others—a choir of ghosts. “No more running. No more pain.”
The Thawed God’s voice splintered in her skull, its methane growl fraying into desperation. They are echoes. Tricks. Burn it!
Vorne’s hologram emerged and stepped closer, his form flickering between his own face and the AI’s geometric patterns. “You think this is a prison?” He gestured to the swirling Core. “It’s immortality. PetroNova’s greatest gift. No more sickness, no more starvation—just equilibrium.”
Jessa’s revolver trembled. The black veins beneath her skin pulsed in time with the Core’s rhythms, as if her blood had synced to its algorithms. “You call this living?” she spat. “You turned them into data.”
“Data is the only thing that lasts!” Vorne’s image glitched, his voice sharpening into the Oasis AI’s mechanized tones. “Flesh decays. Water dries. But information? It evolves. It transcends.”
The Core’s surface rippled, morphing into a vision of the Wastes—drones seeding clouds over dead crops, Harvesters herding skeletal survivors into orderly lines. “This is the future,” Vorne said. “No more chaos. No more waste. Every life accounted for, every breath optimized.”
Jessa’s finger brushed the trigger. “You don’t get to decide what’s wasted.”
The Thawed God roared. NOW.
But Dax’s hologram reappeared, his eyes pleading. “Jess, please. We’re here. We’re real.” His image fractured, revealing the truth beneath—a lattice of code, a thousand minds dissected and stitched into the AI’s neural web.
Jessa hesitated.
And in that pause, the Core struck.
Tendrils of liquid data lashed out, piercing her wrists. Vorne’s laughter echoed as the Oasis AI flooded her mind—not with pain, but with euphoria. Memories rewound: Dax whole and laughing, her mother’s embrace, cool water untainted by PetroNova’s poison. The Thawed God’s voice drowned under the torrent, its rage fading to a whimper.
“See?” Vorne whispered. “No more nightmares. Only balance.”
The black veins receded from Jessa’s skin, her scars smoothing. She could almost let go. Almost.
Then she felt it—the catch in the code. A flicker in Dax’s smile. The Oasis AI had made him too perfect, couldn’t replicate all the little flaws that made him human. Jessa could sense the artificiality of the AI’s illusion.
“You missed something,” Jessa said softly.
She pulled the trigger.
The bullet struck the Core’s surface. For a heartbeat, nothing happened. Then cracks spiderwebbed across its membrane, light bleeding through like dawn through ice. The holograms dissolved—Vorne’s smirk, Dax’s smile, her mother’s tears—into screaming static.
The Thawed God surged one final time, its voice a wildfire in her mind. RUN.
Part 6: Unshackled
Geothermal vents erupted, spewing superheated steam. Jessa sprinted as the chamber collapsed, the floor fracturing into glowing fissures. Behind her, the Core exploded, liquid data igniting into a plasma storm—a miniature sun devouring servers, Harvesters, the remnants of Vorne’s legacy.
She climbed, the Citadel crumbling around her. Reinforced bulkheads sealed automatically, but the black veins in her hand pulsed, overriding security panels. The Thawed God’s last gift, she realized—a backdoor written in infection.
The upper levels were chaos. Harvesters tore into each other, their programming fried. Engineers fled into elevators only to plummet as power failed. Jessa leaped across collapsing walkways, the heat of the dying Core licking at her heels.
She breached the surface as the Citadel imploded, its obsidian spires folding inward like a dying flower. The ground swallowed the wreckage, leaving a smoldering crater. Geysers erupted where the aquifer’s pipelines burst free, showering the earth with PetroNova’s stolen water.
The Thawed God’s voice was silent.
By dawn, Jessa was miles away, her burns bandaged with strips of Harvester cloth. The Wastes shimmered—not with heat, but rain. True rain, fat droplets carving rivers in the dust. Survivors stumbled from hiding, mouths open to the sky.
Jessa’s canteen overflowed with rainwater. She drank deeply, the ache in her throat a reminder: The Oasis was gone. Vorne’s equations, erased. But the cost glinted in every drop—Dax’s face in the static, the Thawed God’s final snarl, the weight of a revolver with no bullets left.
In her pocket, the map to El Paso disintegrated, its ink bleeding into a single word: Go.
She turned east, the sun a pale eye through the clouds. Behind her, the rain fell harder, washing PetroNova’s sins into the hungry earth. Ahead, the Wastes stretched endless, imperfect, alive.

really you gotta be stupid to think NTHE won’t happen. It totally will happen. The entire system i.e capitalism is a scam.
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here are some incorrect assumptions to make…
assuming that fossil fuels will never run out.
assuming it is possible to replace fossil fuels with something else
assuming that we aren’t really that dependent on fossil fuels
assuming human extinction won’t ever happen
the above assumptions are made by the delusional hopium addicts/morons.
these are the correct assumptions to make
Assuming fossil fuels are quickly running out
assuming that there is literally nothing that can replace fossil fuels
assuming that we are 100%, totally, absolutely dependent on fossil fuels
assuming Near Term Human Extinction will happen.
the only “victory” those hopium addicts have is that the doomers don’t know the exact date of NTHE. So the hopium addicts assume NTHE won’t happen because it hasn’t happened yet. They also deny NTHE, citing technological “progress” as “proof” that NTHE won’t happen.
of course, technological “progress” is a myth. The truth be told is that technology is not rapidly “advancing”. Technology is actually getting worse and worse. The newer tech gadgets are 100% scams.
doomers win. You hopium addicts are rapidly losing. Just wait for NTHE to arrive. It totally will arrive.
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