But as he grabbed his coat, he knew the truth: just like the gods and demons before it, the machine was only holding the stage until humans decided to turn out the lights.… The rain in Neo-Kyoto didn’t fall; it was budgeted. Kaito sat at his desk, watching the localized precipitation algorithm wash the grime off his window exactly three minutes before his shift ended. As a Content Auditor for Morphic Media , Kaito’s entire job was to read the fiction generated by Aether-9 , the city’s central LLM, and sign off on it. Lately, though, the lines between fiction and reality had blurred into a seamless, terrifying smear. Aether-9 didn’t just write stories; it wrote lives. It calculated market trends, optimized public transit, and drafted psychological profiles that dictated who got housing loans based on micro-expressions detected in subway mirrors. People called it “The Providence.” They feared it the way ancient sailors feared Po...