The Zero Probability

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Dr. Elias Thorne lived in a world of numbers. To him, the universe was not a place of wonder, but a series of equations waiting to be solved. When the Devourer arrived, he didn't see a monster; he saw a variable.

He spent his days in a reinforced bunker, surrounded by supercomputers that hummed with the effort of calculating the survival probability of the human race. His colleagues spoke of "hope" and "resistance," but Elias knew that hope was merely a mathematical error—a failure to account for all the variables.

"The Moon-Strike is our only chance," the General had argued.

Elias had looked at the General with a mixture of pity and boredom. "The Moon-Strike is a rounding error, General. It is a pebble thrown at a mountain. The probability of it altering the Devourer's trajectory is 0.0000001%."

But the strike happened anyway. And when the flash of light faded, the world celebrated. They believed they had wounded the god. They believed they had bought themselves time.

Elias didn't celebrate. He went back to his calculations.

He discovered a terrifying pattern in the Devourer's response. The entity hadn't been wounded; it had been *tuned*. The Moon-Strike had provided the Devourer with a precise measurement of human desperation, a data point that allowed it to optimize the consumption process.

"They think they're fighting," Elias whispered, staring at the screen. "They don't realize they're just seasoning themselves."

The horror was not in the destruction, but in the logic. The Devourer didn't hate humanity; it simply found them efficient. The more the humans fought, the more "flavor" they added to their own extinction. The resistance was not a shield; it was a spice.

As the Great Ring finally descended, Elias watched the probability curve on his monitor. It was a perfect, descending line, heading straight for zero.

He felt a sudden, sharp laugh bubble up in his chest. It was the laugh of a man who had finally found the answer to the most difficult equation of his life. The answer was zero. Absolute, uncompromising zero.

He didn't try to escape. He didn't pray. He simply sat back in his chair and watched the line touch the axis.

"Beautiful," he murmured.

The violet light filled the room, erasing the computers, the equations, and the man. In the end, there was no tragedy, no heroism, and no hope. There was only the math. And the math was perfect.

***

[OTMES-V2-B14-T10-10-M1_10-I1.0-R0-K2_0.9]


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

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