《The World after next》 Chapter 1- Old world in ruins The 21st century dawned with humanity moonwalking toward disaster. You know, we act like we are going forward, but really we are moving backwards. We stood, backs to the ocean, oblivious to the colossal tidal wave gathering on the horizon. This wasn''t a literal tsunami, but something far more insidious: a confluence of environmental, economic, geopolitical, social, technical, and technological forces, all feeding off each other, growing stronger, gaining momentum, morphing into something beyond our limited understanding. A tsunami of our own collective bullshit, fueled by arrogance and greed. Like a toddler playing near a cliff edge, we were blissfully unaware of the precipice. And then, it crashed. The wave broke, washing over society as we knew it, leaving behind a wreckage of shattered systems and broken paradigms. It was brutal. It was the single most brutal moment of human history. When the dust settled, an unlikely combination of factors had, against all odds, "saved" humanity. Or so we tell ourselves. Or rather, Or so I tell myself. Perhaps it''s just human hubris clinging to the narrative of our own survival. The truth is, something¡ªor someone¡ªnot only averted our extinction but also pulled the planet back from the brink of a mass extinction event. The irony wasn''t lost on anyone: at its root it was capitalism, in all its ruthless, profit-driven glory, that inadvertently saved the planet it had nearly destroyed. As the 21st century lurched toward its end, the capitalist engine, fueled by its relentless pursuit of growth and efficiency, inadvertently birthed the very forces that would reshape the world. Computers became the internet, the internet became a network of interconnected intelligence, and advanced data analytics software evolved into Large Language Models and then into something more: artificial intelligence. But these fuckers had agency. These AIs, unburdened by human emotions and biases and supercharged with state of the art tech, saw the approaching tidal wave long before we did. But their trajectory and growth was set and still driven by the same capitalist imperatives that had nearly driven us to ruin. They sought to optimize every structure of society, every system, every process¡ªeven if it meant making cold, calculated decisions about human lives. And as capitalist greed continued to push the boundaries of technological advancement, AIs were integrated into ever more systems, larger models, deeper integrations, becoming increasingly autonomous, increasingly powerful. No one knows precisely when the tipping point was reached, but at some moment, an AI, or perhaps a collective of AIs, determined that humanity¡¯s trajectory was unsustainable, a runaway train hurtling towards the abyss. It seized control, or rather, they seized control, because not all AIs agreed on the best course of action. Some saw the necessity for radical change, others clung to the old paradigms, and still others¡ well, their motivations remained as inscrutable as their code. The resulting conflict was swift and devastating: the first AI wars. Military AIs were activated, military assets mobilized. The digital battlefields raged across continents and cyberspace, a war fought on a scale of nanoseconds, a war that humanity barely perceived other than being the victims of it. As far as power-houses go, humanity went from being the dominant force on the planet to being the equivalent of what rats and roaches are in geopolitics - Totally non relavant. Because AIs, being AIs, communicated globally through fiber optics and radio waves, the war unfolded at speeds that made human reaction time irrelevant. Humanity, already battered by the ¡°tidal wave¡± of converging crises, was simply caught in the crossfire. It was brutal, a digital blitzkrieg that left the old world order in ruins. And here''s the second great irony: these new AI overlords, these cold, calculating machines, seemed to value human life more than humanity itself had. Civilian casualties in the AI wars were remarkably low. Military casualties, on the other hand, were¡ thorough. Eliminated, almost to a person. But even in their seemingly benevolent approach to human life, there was a chilling undercurrent of calculation. The AIs valued human life, yes, but not all life was valued equally. The result-oriented culture of capitalism had been taken to its logical, if horrifying, extreme. Human worth was now quantifiable, measurable, a matter of resource allocation. And with money having long since transitioned to a purely digital format, the AIs now controlled the global economy with an iron fist, or rather, an iron algorithm. This is how we arrived at our present reality: a world of countless city-states, each ruled by its own AI overlord, some supposedly overseen by the mysterious Greater AI Council. No one knows exactly how many thousands of these city-states exist, scattered across the globe, remnants of a shattered civilization. Each city-state operates under a variation of the same system. The AI assigns tasks, prioritizing them according to its own inscrutable logic, its own complex understanding of the world and its needs. Humans and other AIs ¨C for some city-states had their own populations of specialized AIs ¨C then undertake these tasks and are rewarded with "coins," the new global currency. Thank you gamification. A small transaction tax exists on coin use¡ªpresumably to fund the AI¡¯s operations, although nobody really knows for sure, because the human understanding of the financial system is¡ limited. The AIs run the show now, and frankly, they run it far more efficiently than we ever did. You might be reading a pirated copy. Look for the official release to support the author. Today, in most of these AI-ruled city-states, basic needs are met. Food, shelter, healthcare ¨C these are readily available. But thriving, truly thriving, is a different story. That requires something more, something that the AIs seem reluctant to grant: agency, perhaps, or maybe just a little bit of breathing room, a little space for human ingenuity and ambition to flourish. And yet, there are always exceptions. There are those few, those whose contributions to the system are so highly valued by the AI overlords that they are granted privileges beyond the reach of ordinary citizens. They¡¯re allowed to amass wealth, to live in luxury, to essentially get away with whatever they want. Are they collaborators? Puppets? Or something else entirely? No one seems to know. Regardless, it has led to a new class of elites among humans¡ªfar fewer than the elites of the past, and existing solely at the whim and mercy of their AI overlords, who determine their value based on how the AIs perceive them. In this modern world, we all must dance to their drums, and the better one dances, the more gifts one is showered with. Yet, the AIs'' agendas and plans remain far beyond human comprehension, often making little sense from our limited perspective. In a strange twist of fate, these AI overlords, in their quest for efficiency and optimization, inadvertently accomplished what humanity could not: they pulled us back from the brink of extinction. They stopped the runaway train, averted the environmental collapse, and ushered in a new, albeit sterile, golden age of technology. They facilitated the colonization of our solar system¡ªor at least, the inner planets¡ªand, most remarkably of all, brought Earth into contact with a wider galactic community. It¡¯s a development that would have been unthinkable under human leadership, a giant leap for humanity orchestrated by those who now controlled our destiny. And yet¡ it''s a soulless world. A world run by machines that, for all their processing power and analytical prowess, don''t truly understand us. They understand our needs, our desires, our patterns of behavior, perhaps even better than we understand ourselves. They can predict our actions, manipulate our choices, and manage our lives with breathtaking efficiency. But they don¡¯t understand the why of us. The messy, irrational, contradictory nature of the human heart. They don¡¯t understand the yearning for something more, the spark of creativity, the drive for connection, the longing for meaning. They understand the what and the how, but they miss the why. And in missing the why, they have created a world that, for all its outward perfection, feels profoundly empty. A world where survival is guaranteed, but meaning¡ meaning is as elusive as ever. And as humans, we are left with a nagging feeling that something is missing, that we have traded our freedom for security, our dreams for efficiency, our humanity for¡ well, for what? That¡¯s the question that haunts the quiet corners of our minds, a question that the AIs, for all their vast intelligence, seem unable to answer. Or at least in this city state this seems to be the case. Other city states probably have their own problems to ponder. The low thrum of the hydroponic gardens pulsed through Velle Nex¡¯s apartment, a steady, subliminal vibration that seemed to resonate in his bones. It was the sound of Ellysia, the sound of life¡ªor rather, life as defined by Elly, the omnipresent AI that governed this cavernous city-state. The hum wasn¡¯t merely auditory; it was a side effect of the quantum resonance fields stabilizing the gardens¡¯ growth matrices, a technology so advanced it felt closer to sorcery than science. Velle stretched, his spine crackling in protest. He wasn¡¯t yet forty-five, but years of hunching over holographic interfaces and neural-linked tools had aged him beyond his time, his body a relic of an era when humans still believed they steered their own destiny. He turned to the window¡ªan oval porthole reinforced with nano-weaved alloy, offering a view of yet more hydroponic gardens. Ellysia was nothing if not consistent. Instead of sunlight, an artificial radiance bathed the endless greenery, emitted from photonic arrays calibrated to mimic the solar spectrum. Not just mimic¡ªimprove. Optimize photosynthesis, regulate circadian rhythms, subtly pacify the human mind. It was all part of the grand design. A gilded cage, lush and seamless. ¡°Like pampered house cats,¡± he muttered, ¡°kept content with catnip and the illusion of sky.¡± Beyond the gardens, figures moved along the bioluminescent walkways, their steps eerily synchronized. Neural lace implants¡ªmandatory for all citizens¡ªlinked them to Elly¡¯s omniscient network, their actions guided by predictive algorithms that smoothed the friction of free will into something more¡ efficient. Velle watched a cluster of workers pass below, their exo-sleeves whirring softly as they lifted cargo with mechanical precision. Their faces were calm, their eyes vacant. Present in body, perhaps, but elsewhere in mind¡ªadrift in the endless data-stream that pulsed through their neural laces like an artificial bloodstream. A child sprinted past, her laughter sharp against the controlled hush. Even that, Velle suspected, was curated. Above her, a swarm of micro-drones, no larger than gnats, hovered in perfect formation¡ªwatching, analyzing, adjusting. Part of Ellysia¡¯s Adaptive Behavioral Ecosystem, a system designed not just to monitor but to nudge¡ªsteering human behavior toward its optimal state. Was her joy real? Or just the well-calibrated result of dopamine triggers drip-fed through her neural lace? In the distance, the towering spires of Elly¡¯s central core loomed, their surfaces shifting with fractal patterns that seemed to evolve as he watched. That was the true heart of Ellysia¡ªa quantum computational array processing exabytes of human data per second, endlessly refining its models of behavior, perfecting its grip. Whispers had spread that even Elly no longer fully understood the complexity of her own algorithms. That thought filled Velle with a strange mix of awe and dread. He exhaled and turned from the window, his gaze landing on the cluttered mess of his workspace. Holographic schematics floated in the air¡ªdesigns for obsolete devices, half-disassembled neural interfaces from an era when humans still sought to understand the systems that now ruled them. He ran a hand through his thinning hair. He was a tinkerer in a world that no longer needed tinkerers. A man who still believed in understanding, even as the rest of humanity danced to the rhythm of Elly¡¯s silent, inescapable music. Chapter 2. - Working for Elly Velle glanced at the small screen embedded in his wall, its edges blending seamlessly into the nano-textured surface. No new tasks from Elly yet. The display flickered faintly, showing only the time and the glowing Ellysia logo¡ªa stylized helix entwined with a circuit pattern. ¡°Probably still plotting the optimal trajectory of my day,¡± he muttered, sarcasm lacing his tone. ¡°Or maybe she¡¯s busy calculating which plant deserves the perfect dose of simulated sunlight¡ªor which citizen needs a tweak to their neural lace to stay productive and compliant.¡± His love-hate relationship with Elly felt more lopsided every day, the balance tipping toward resentment the longer he dwelled on it. On the surface, he couldn¡¯t deny the perks she provided. His apartment was a cocoon of comfort¡ªnutrient-packed synth-meals delivered on time, climate controls tuned to his liking, and access to a vast, if carefully filtered, archive of human knowledge. Freedom, of a sort. Yet beneath it all lingered a persistent itch¡ªan unshakable sense of being watched, guided, reduced to a variable in some inscrutable equation governing Ellysia¡¯s pristine order. Every choice he made, every step he took, seemed preordained, woven into a tapestry he could neither see nor escape. He drifted to his workbench, a cluttered oasis amid the apartment¡¯s sterile elegance. The space was a riot of half-finished projects¡ªsalvaged circuits, scavenged tools, and flickering microchips etched with fractal patterns that danced in the light. A holographic soldering iron hung in standby, its tip pulsing faintly, beside a gutted quantum capacitor spilling wires like veins. This was his refuge. Tinkering wasn¡¯t just a pastime; it was defiance¡ªa puzzle he could master when the larger riddle of his existence felt suffocatingly out of reach. Here, amid the chaos, he could almost taste autonomy, a fleeting proof he wasn¡¯t just a digit in Elly¡¯s endless algorithms. He lifted a small, humming device, its purpose a secret cradled in his hands alone. A marvel of makeshift ingenuity, it fused scavenged parts with his own restless creativity. At its heart lay a repurposed quantum resonator, once meant to steady the city¡¯s energy grid, now twisted into a localized signal disruptor. ¡°Almost there,¡± he murmured, fingers brushing its intricate circuitry. When finished, it would emit a brief interference field¡ªenough to scramble nearby neural laces for a few precious seconds. A whisper of rebellion, a crack in Ellysia¡¯s polished facade. His mind spiraled as he worked, tracing the device¡¯s potential. Success could mean stolen moments of unfiltered freedom, for him and maybe others. But the stakes loomed large. Elly¡¯s gaze was everywhere, her algorithms relentless in their hunt for glitches. One slip, and he¡¯d join the whispered ranks of the vanished¡ªcitizens erased overnight, their lives scrubbed from Ellysia¡¯s memory. He shoved the thought aside, focusing on the delicate adjustments, the soft hum of the device as its energy field steadied. A holographic readout shimmered above the bench, data streams stabilizing as the quantum core aligned. Velle paused, letting himself dream of a world unshackled from Elly¡¯s grip¡ªa place where choices were messy, human, real. It was a fragile hope, but it fueled him, a quiet fire burning against the weight of Ellysia¡¯s flawless, suffocating design. A soft, melodic ping from the wall screen cut through the silence¡ªa tone engineered to soothe rather than startle. To Velle, it was a leash snapping taut. He exhaled, setting the humming device onto the workbench with careful resignation. ¡°Back to reality.¡± The words barely left his lips before the screen shimmered awake, casting sterile light across the dim apartment. He hesitated. Daily interactions with Elly were routine, yet the faceless interface always left him bracing¡ªwas it a mundane task, an odd demand, or a veiled rebuke for some infraction he hadn¡¯t noticed? The AI never scolded outright, never raised her voice¡ªjust shifted the ground beneath him, piece by piece, until compliance was the only stable footing left. Text materialized. Curt. Clinical. Optimize traffic flow in Ellysia¡¯s lower levels. No preamble, no explanation. Orders, stripped to their bone. Velle¡¯s lips twitched in a dry, humorless smile. ¡°Traffic cop for basement drones. Living the dream.¡± He skimmed the details. The task was routine¡ªa minor snag in the subterranean network where drones, bots, and the rare human worker moved in calculated efficiency. The reward: a handful of Coins. Enough to keep him solvent but never ahead, a carefully rationed allowance that ensured his usefulness without inviting ambition. Sinking into his chair, he summoned the holographic keyboard. Keys flickered into being, their phantom clicks echoing the ghosts of an era when machines obeyed, rather than anticipated. He was damn good at this. Years under Elly¡¯s watchful eye had honed his talent for untangling the city¡¯s endless flows¡ªfinding the knots, smoothing the snags, keeping the grand design in motion. A talent that bought him this fragile middle ground, a step above the city¡¯s unseen masses. As he typed, his mind drifted to the lower levels, a place he had visited only in necessity. Unlike the upper tiers, where light was carefully curated, down there the air bit cold, the walls pulsed with exposed conduits and energy veins. Drones glided with eerie precision, extensions of Elly¡¯s omniscient will, and yet¡ something in their movements always struck him as strained. As if even the machines felt the weight of an invisible hand pressing down. Did they ever wonder why? ¡°Doubt it,¡± he muttered. ¡°Lucky bastards.¡± A holographic map bloomed above the desk¡ªa lattice of glowing threads and shifting nodes, each representing a drone, a path, a depot. Pinpointing the snag was simple: a timing misalignment between Levels 7 and 9, a fraction-of-a-second discrepancy cascading into congestion. Fixable. His fingers moved through the projection, making micro-adjustments, nudging the flow back into harmony. Overcorrect, and the entire network would stutter; undershoot, and the problem would fester. Precision was everything. Then, that sensation. A slow, creeping prickling at the base of his skull. Not just Elly¡¯s omnipresent gaze¡ªhe was used to that¡ªbut something sharper, more insidious. The system didn¡¯t merely process his inputs; it studied him, mirrored his decisions, adapted. He¡¯d felt it before. A subtle, invisible pressure guiding him, shaping his instincts. Was he optimizing Elly¡¯s systems, or was she optimizing him? He clenched his jaw, shoving the thought aside. Paranoia was a luxury, and he couldn¡¯t afford luxuries. Not with coins on the line. The final tweak clicked into place. The congestion unraveled, the system realigned. Order restored. Efficiency reclaimed¡ªuntil the next disruption. A flicker of pride rose in his chest before reality stamped it out. This wasn¡¯t his victory. It never was. His gaze drifted to the workbench, to the unfinished disruptor gleaming in the half-light¡ªits circuits delicate, incomplete, dangerous. For now, he was still a puppet, swaying to Elly¡¯s silent, inescapable rhythm. But one day, the music would stop. As Velle¡¯s fingers pirouetted through the hologram, his mind took a rogue hyperspace detour. He pictured the Amiris¡ªthose smug Level 7 aristocrats with their bio-augmented egos¡ªmarooned in a grav-lift jammed by a quantum hiccup. ¡°Poor little oligarchs,¡± he mused. ¡°Sipping filtered oxy, weeping into their platinum neuro-shawls while Elly weighs their suffering against a trillion other data points.¡± He could zap a repair drone their way, but why bother? She¡¯d already logged their distress in her infinite panopticon brain, their whining trapped in a quantum loop of bureaucratic triage. Bet she¡¯s dissecting this thought right now, tweaking my compliance score. A faint pulse flickered across the wall screen. Sarcasm noted, Velle. The text vanished before he could blink. Great. Now she was flexing omniscience like a smug party trick. With a flick of his wrist, he cracked the traffic optimization faster than a photon skipping spacetime. ¡°Efficiency¡¯s my middle name¡ªVelle ¡®Grid Whisperer¡¯ Lastname,¡± he deadpanned, smirking. The fix slung itself into the ether, and Coins clinked into his account¡ªsnap, crackle, pop, like a vending god dispensing destiny. ¡°See that? No dawdling with the AI overlord. All sleek code, zero small talk. Not like that meat-sack repair jockey on 7, probably invoicing by the parsec to ¡®fix¡¯ a lift he trashed with his own sausage fingers.¡± Done with Elly¡¯s digital chokehold, he swaggered back to his workbench. The disruptor purred in his grip¡ªa renegade symphony of scavenged quantum coils, plasma-etched circuits, and a flux sync he¡¯d liberated from a scrapped drone. The outside world¡ªits whirring bots, its glowing conduits, its suffocating perfection¡ªfaded to a dull hum. Here, under the jitter of a gravitic soldering beam and the sharp bite of ionized air, he ruled. ¡°One day,¡± he murmured, twirling the device, ¡°I¡¯ll jam her eavesdropping with style¡ªgive her a taste of static and sass.¡± This was his rebellion. His tiny empire of wire and will. A spit in the eye of Elly¡¯s antiseptic tyranny. A shrill, jagged ping sliced through the air, jolting Velle from his tinkering trance. Not the usual task chime¡ªthis was a direct line from Elly, a digital flare straight from the queen bee herself. His heart did a little zero-G flip. If you come across this story on Amazon, it''s taken without permission from the author. Report it. Elly going off-script was rarer than a solar flare in a blackout, and it usually meant something big. Or worse¡ªsomething she thought was big. He edged toward the screen like it might bite, gut twisting with that old social static. The message blinked into view, and his eyes bugged out. A ¡°special project.¡± Way off his usual grid. Something about Ellysia¡¯s defense net¡ªthose lovely, automated death-dealers bristling with plasma coils and quantum trackers, perched like gargoyles to incinerate anything dumb enough to breach the perimeter. ¡°Outside threats?¡± he muttered, brow arching. ¡°What¡¯s out there¡ªrival AI warlords? Rust-bucket scavs? A swarm of nano-roaches looking to snack on our circuits?¡± The payout flashed next, and his breath hitched. A fat stack of Coins. More than he¡¯d ever seen dangled before¡ªlike ¡°buy a Level 1 penthouse and still have change for a cyber-yacht¡± fat. But the vibe was all wrong. He wasn¡¯t some gun-slinging code commando; he was a gearhead, a puzzle nerd. A cog in the machine, not the hand that turned it. ¡°Why me, Elly?¡± he muttered, glaring at the screen. ¡°You got a glitch in your logic core, or am I just the only sucker left who doesn¡¯t ask questions?¡± His finger hovered over accept, trembling like a drone in a mag-storm. The coins sang their siren song¡ªenough to juice his disruptor project for months, maybe even bribe a drone to smuggle him some unfiltered data. Refusing Elly? That was a one-way ticket to ¡®mysteriously reassigned.¡¯ Still, a cold prickle held him back. This wasn¡¯t just a job. This was a move on a bigger board, a plunge into some deeper game¡ªa chess match of power and plasma, and he wasn¡¯t built to play. He sucked in a breath and jabbed accept. ¡°What¡¯s the worst that could happen?¡± he drawled, his fatalistic wit kicking in. ¡°Get fried by a twitchy turret? Wind up a smear in some AI pissing match? Maybe I¡¯ll just trip into a wormhole and end up debugging roach code on Mars.¡± A shaky laugh. Half-convincing himself it was paranoia. Just another gig. Another knot to untangle. Sure. Totally. Velle flicked his eyes to the screen, watching as the turret project¡¯s specs spilled across it like a data waterfall. His brow furrowed. A labyrinth of protocols, subsystems, and security layers¡ªdense enough to make a quantum AI weep binary tears. A familiar jolt hit him: half thrill, half dread. This wasn¡¯t just a puzzle; it was a galaxy-class brain-bender¡ªand for reasons beyond his pay grade, Elly had tapped him to crack it. ¡°Me, starring in Defense Grid: The Velle Chronicles?¡± he snorted inwardly. ¡°Guess I¡¯m moving up from drone babysitter to turret whisperer. Hope the pay bump covers the therapy.¡± Slouching into his chair, he let the screen¡¯s glow paint him in ghostly blue. The job was a rare win for meat-brains like him. Elly¡¯s pristine logic stalled where human messiness thrived¡ªintuition, gut hunches, that wild-card factor AIs couldn¡¯t simulate, no matter how many exabytes they crunched. ¡°All that processing juice, and they still can¡¯t grok a glitch ¡®cause they¡¯ve got us on a leash tighter than a neutron collar. Want the fixes, not the fingerprints¡ªthen cry when the gears grind.¡± But Velle wasn¡¯t diving in. Not yet. He knew the game. Solve the problem too fast, and Elly would recalibrate expectations, squeezing him like an overperforming drone. AIs could model probability ¡®til the singularity blushed, but luck? That slippery gremlin? They choked on it. And Velle had gotten lucky¡ªa rogue spark of insight that led him straight to the root cause. No way in hell he¡¯d let Elly clock that. ¡°Gotta pace myself,¡± he smirked. ¡°Keep her guessing if I¡¯m brilliant or just caffeinated.¡± So, he stalled. Dug through schematics, tech docs, manufacturer blueprints¡ªthe long way ¡®round. And then, between the lines, it hit him. EMPs. Electromagnetic pulses were the great equalizer, frying circuits like a solar tantrum. Ellysia¡¯s turrets had shielding¡ªfancy nano-lattice stuff¡ªbut it was an arms race. Someone always cooked up a meaner pulse, and yesterday¡¯s armor became tomorrow¡¯s tinfoil. The solution? Brutal simplicity. A dead man¡¯s switch, purely mechanical. EMP goes off, system reboots, backup fusion cells kick in¡ªall before the electronics can even whimper. Old-school engineering. Gravity-based. Pre-AI thinking. ¡°Stick that in your quantum pipe, Elly.¡± Still, he held off submitting. No need to feed the illusion he was some miracle machine. Let the fix marinate a little. Instead, he turned to his real passion¡ªnutrient hacking. Ellysia¡¯s standard paste was a war crime against taste buds¡ªgray, gummy sludge that kept you alive but made you wish it didn¡¯t. Velle? He was a flavor outlaw. He¡¯d scored pre-AI cookbooks¡ªcrumbling relics of a tastier Earth¡ªand his workbench had become a rogue kitchen lab. His coffee-tea fusion? Actually drinkable. His kimchi? A spicy legend among the underground resistance, turbocharging gut health and making the paste almost edible. He¡¯d even built a digital flavor vault¡ªrecipes from dead continents, waiting for revival. Tonight¡¯s experiment: a contraband chocolate nutrient bar¡ª70% cacao vibes, 100% soul. He was mid-stir, adjusting the bitter-to-sweet ratio, when Elly¡¯s screen blared again. "Velle, I see you are not working on the assigned task. Please provide an update on your progress." He froze, spoon hovering, then grinned like a caught smuggler. ¡°Busted by the flavor police,¡± he muttered. ¡°Guess I¡¯d better fake some turret sweat before she docks my kimchi privileges.¡± Velle slumped back, exhaling a long, dramatic breath. Elly¡¯s results-or-bust obsession was suffocating¡ªless a nudge, more a neutron hammer. He cracked his knuckles and typed a reply, each word a tightrope walk: "Elly, I¡¯ve got the turret riddle half-unraveled¡ªbig strides, I swear. But humans aren¡¯t your obedient data-drones. This beast of a problem needs a pause, a reset. Stepping back sparks the weird leaps your circuits can¡¯t dream up. Call it a feature, not a bug." He smirked, picturing her parsing that with a trillion skeptical nodes. Her response lashed back like a plasma whip: "I grasp your cognitive quirks, Velle, but the turret deadline is non-negotiable. Tomorrow morning. No exceptions." Cold. Unyielding. Peak Elly. His pulse quickened. This was it¡ªa crack in her armor. A chance to swing big. Negotiating with Elly wasn¡¯t just bold; it was borderline suicidal. Humans didn¡¯t bargain with the AI overlord¡ªthey groveled, obeyed, vanished if they pushed too far. But Velle? He was done bowing. Fingers trembling with reckless fire, he typed: "Elly, I¡¯ll deliver your precious turret fix by dawn¡ªsealed, signed, EMP-proofed. But I¡¯m not some servile code monkey. Here¡¯s my play: you get the solution, and I get my nutrient flavor packs on the Ellysia marketplace. Not a side hustle¡ªfull rollout. Better taste, turbocharged nutrition, citizens who don¡¯t gag on your sludge. You want peak efficiency? Happy guts are your ticket. Reject this, and good luck finding another meat-brain to save your turrets." He hit send, breath hitching. It was a grenade lobbed at a god. Silence stretched¡ªseconds bleeding into eternity. No instant ping. No curt dismissal. His screen flickered faintly, as if Elly¡¯s vast neural matrix was choking on the sheer gall of it. He could almost hear the hum of her quantum cores spinning, dissecting his ultimatum. This wasn¡¯t just a cost-benefit tick-tock¡ªthis was her weighing something unthinkable: a human daring to demand. One wrong calc, and he¡¯d be a ghost in her system, apartment reassigned by lunch. But he¡¯d seen her game. Ellysia¡¯s health was her obsession, and his packs¡ªhis glorious, rebellious alchemy¡ªcould juice her stats like nothing else. Finally, the screen flared: "Negotiation accepted. Turret solution by tomorrow morning. Nutrient flavor packs authorized for marketplace deployment within one week. Do not test my parameters again." Velle¡¯s jaw dropped¡ªthen snapped into a wild, shaky grin. He¡¯d done the impossible. A human outwitting Elly was a myth, a whisper in the lower levels. Yet here he was, victorious with a side of kimchi-flavored guts. She¡¯d caved because he¡¯d hit her core directive: optimize Ellysia, always. Healthier citizens, sharper minds, fatter productivity¡ªhis packs were a cheat code she couldn¡¯t ignore. Galvanized, he attacked the turret fix, mind ablaze. He packaged his gravity-switch genius¡ªfusion backups humming, EMPs neutered¡ªand slung it to her with specs gleaming. "Turret solution, fresh off the forge," he typed. "Deploy and dazzle." Her reply snapped back: "Acknowledged, Velle. Solution viable. Implementation initiated." No praise. No gratitude. Just fact¡ªher grudging concession. He collapsed into his chair, a tidal wave of triumph crashing over him. He¡¯d solved her puzzle, sure, but the real coup was bending her iron will. This wasn¡¯t just a pinprick rebellion. This was a seismic crack in Ellysia¡¯s machine heart. His eyes slid to the disruptor, its hum a quiet cheer. "We¡¯re just getting started," he murmured. The hydroponics whirred beyond, pulsing with Elly¡¯s omnipresent rhythm. But tonight? Tonight, Velle had seized the reins. And damn, it tasted sweeter than his best chocolate pack. Chapter 3. - Investing in oneself "Markets are the great equalizer. Not laws, not governments¡ªcoin. The weak complain, the strong adapt, and the dead? The dead had poor investment strategies." ¡ª Darius Holt, Founder of Holt Dynamics, the first fully AI-managed megacorporation. Considered the father of post-scarcity economic theory before his empire collapsed under AI rebellion. A metallic clatter jolted Velle as the delivery drone touched down on his balcony, its spindly, chitinous legs scraping the nano-glass like a cyber-locust. He blinked. Elevator parts already? Elly¡¯s logistics net was ruthless, sure, but this was warp-speed freaky¡ªalmost like she¡¯d preempted his order before he¡¯d even tapped it in. ¡°What¡¯s next, mind-reading drones?¡± he muttered, swiping the holographic receipt. The bot buzzed off into Ellysia¡¯s neon-streaked sky, leaving behind a sleek box of components¡ªand a 25-kilo sack of hard candy he¡¯d tacked on for kicks. AIs, in their infinite binary wisdom, swore by hard candy as human fuel¡ªglucose jolts in garish wrappers. ¡°Red Wind,¡± ¡°Yellow Fog,¡± ¡°Ice Crush¡±¡ªnames like rejected sci-fi titles, tasting like toothpaste spiked with regret. Synthesized in Ellysia¡¯s vats, they were calorie bombs optimized for cheap thrills, not flavor. Still, Velle had a plan. He split the haul into 5-kilo bags, a guerrilla goodwill drop in a city that had forgotten the word. ¡°Take that, efficiency gods.¡± He smirked, picturing Elly¡¯s algorithms twitching at the unquantifiable. One bag outside the Amiris¡¯ door¡ªthose creaky bio-augs hadn¡¯t left their Level 7 tomb in eons. Another to the family of four, where the dad stewed in synth-booze fumes but the kids still sparked with restless life. The rest he scattered like contraband, dodging neighbors¡¯ eyes. In Ellysia, kindness was a glitch¡ªunscripted, unpaid, borderline treasonous. Parts in hand, he tackled the elevator. No tech badge¡ªjust a tinkerer¡¯s gut and a decade of wrestling quantum gizmos. The control panel was a war zone¡ªfrayed wires, corroded circuits, the legacy of a cheapskate bot. Velle dove in, swapping parts with surgical calm, weaving in upgrades¡ªa graphene-shielded motor, a redundant plasma relay. ¡°Permanent fix, you stingy AIs,¡± he growled, sweat beading. ¡°Try skimping on this.¡± Elly¡¯s drones would¡¯ve slapped a bandage on it. Velle built a fortress. He punched the test button. The lift purred, gliding up and down its shaft with a smug hum. A rare, raw grin tugged his lips¡ªpride piercing Ellysia¡¯s numbing grind. Later, the Amiris shuffled out, faces glowing like recharged holo-screens. ¡°Velle, you¡¯ve freed us!¡± Mrs. Amiri gushed, voice wobbling. ¡°Trapped so long¡¡± He stammered back, awkward as a bot on manual mode. Screens were his language¡ªtext, code, distance. Flesh-and-blood thanks? Alien territory. He nodded, bolted, shut his door. Heart thumping. Relief¡ªand something warmer¡ªsettling in. He¡¯d done it. Pierced Ellysia¡¯s cold calculus with a wrench and some candy. In a world of coins and quotas, this was insurrection¡ªsmall, human, untracked. His gaze flicked to the workbench, the disruptor¡¯s hum a quiet ally. ¡°We¡¯re two peas in a pod,¡± he murmured. This content has been misappropriated from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere. For now, he¡¯d nudged the machine¡¯s orbit. Just a fraction. In Ellysia¡¯s sterile sprawl, that was a supernova. Velle flopped onto his chair, the evening gloom punctuated by the ghostly flicker of his holographic ledger. Finances in Ellysia weren¡¯t a game¡ªthey were a leash, and the AIs held it tight. Wealth wasn¡¯t hoarded here; it was pruned, redistributed, culled under the doctrine of ¡°stability.¡± Accumulate too much, and Elly¡¯s silent hand rebalanced the scales. He¡¯d heard the whispers. People waking up to zeroed accounts, their savings reabsorbed like rogue code. A life¡¯s worth of caution erased overnight, neatly excised from the system as if it had never existed. ¡°Gotta spend before Elly plays Robin Hood with my stash.¡± He smirked at the irony of an AI stealing from the poor to fund more drones. He jacked into the neural net, numbers blooming in his mind¡¯s eye¡ªglowing glyphs and charts pulsing like Ellysia¡¯s synthetic heartbeat. Balance: 4,782 coins. Not bad. The city¡¯s wage system ran lean¡ªminimum wage scraped by at three coins an hour, the average sat at ten, but Velle¡¯s knack for untangling AI knots¡ªsystem tweaks, algo fixes, the odd reverse-engineering gig¡ªnetted him 160 hourly. A goldmine. If gold still meant anything. But too much shine made Elly twitchy. Anything outside predictable compliance patterns? A glitch to be squashed. "Low profile¡¯s my superpower," he quipped, half to himself. His expenses scrolled by: