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Chapter 1 - Prologue -World Stayed Behind

In the year 2315, the world did not end in fire alone.

It ended in choice.

When the alien species later named Virms descended upon Earth, they did not announce themselves with language or warning. They arrived as a rupture—tearing through sky and soil alike, unraveling cities as though civilization were a thin, fragile lie. Entire regions vanished within days

 Oceans boiled in places where the Virms burrowed deep, and the land screamed as something ancient and foreign claimed it.

Humanity understood one truth very quickly. 

Earth could not be saved in time.

So half of the species fled.

Mass evacuations tore families apart as arks departed for distant planets, artificial colonies, and orbiting habitats. Governments collapsed into logistics. Morality became arithmetic—how many could be saved, how many must be left behind.

And many were left behind.

Those who could not reach the ships.

Those deemed expendable.

Those who chose to stay, believing survival without resistance was merely delayed extinction.

Earth became a grave that still breathed.

From its ruins rose something humanity never intended to become.

Advanced artificial intelligences, once created to optimize cities and cure disease, were repurposed into war-thinkers—entities that calculated survival not in years, but in seconds. Genetic engineering, once bound by ethics, was unchained,

rewriting human bodies to withstand the impossible.

The result was neither human nor alien.

They were called parasites.

Men and women infused with controlled fragments of Virm biology—designed to fight the very species that had forced their creation. Their names were erased. Their histories archived and forgotten. What remained were designations, missions, and the certainty that their lives would be short.

Yet they were the only ones capable of standing against the Virms.

Among them were Alain and Alea.

They belonged to the Virms Subjugation Department, a division that no longer believed in victory—only containment. Each day was a cycle of deployment and survival, of bodies returning broken or not returning at all. Every battle carved another piece from their humanity, traded willingly for the chance to live one more day.

For Alain, survival was obligation.

For Alea, it was something else.

Amid the wreckage of a dead world, Alea clung to a forbidden dream—not of triumph or revenge, but of normalcy. A life without implants, without commands burning behind her eyes. A world where mornings were quiet, and hands were held without consequence.

And at the center of that dream was Alain.

Her obsession was dangerous. Emotional attachment was considered instability among parasites. Love was inefficient. Hope was a liability. Yet Alea carried both like a secret rebellion, believing that even in a world shaped by extinction,

something human could still endure.

Something human should endure.

As the Virms adapted and humanity thinned, the question no longer centered on victory.

It became something far more uncertain.

When a world has already been destroyed—

when survival demands the sacrifice of identity, memory, and self—

is it salvation to continue living…

or merely another way to die more slowly?

Earth waited in silence for the answer.

And beneath its shattered surface, the Virms were no longer just invading.

They were learning.

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