The Asset Manager

0
12

Dominic Thorne viewed the world as a series of assets to be managed, leveraged, or liquidated. To him, human emotions were merely "noise" in the data, and morality was a luxury for those who couldn't afford a private jet. When the International Technology Corporation (ITC) successfully developed the "Quantum Tether," Dominic didn't see a scientific breakthrough; he saw the ultimate arbitrage opportunity.

"Time," he told his board of directors, "is the only currency with a truly fixed supply. Whoever controls the access to it controls the market."

Joseph Traub was the tool Dominic used to test the Tether. Traub was a brilliant physicist, but he possessed a fatal flaw: he actually cared about the truth. Dominic found this quaint. He sent Traub back to the 14th century not to explore, but to act as a "beacon." Traub was the probe, the sacrificial lamb whose suffering would provide the data necessary to stabilize the bridge for those who actually mattered.

From his office in the 90th floor of the ITC tower, Dominic watched Traub's vitals on a holographic display. He watched the spikes of terror, the dips of exhaustion, and the slow, steady decline of Traub's mental stability. To Dominic, these weren't signs of a man in agony; they were "performance metrics."

"Increase the tether tension," Dominic commanded. "I want to see how much stress the consciousness can take before it fractures."

He didn't care that Traub was trapped in a world of plague and mud. He didn't care that the man was screaming into a void that could not answer. Dominic was interested in the "Quantum Residue"—the shimmering fragments of data that Traub left behind in the past. These residues were the real assets. They were the blueprints for a form of immortality that didn't require a body, only a stable temporal coordinate.

When Traub finally died, Dominic didn't feel a flicker of regret. He felt a slight annoyance that the experiment had ended prematurely. He immediately ordered the "cleanup crew"—the archaeologists—to retrieve the residues. He didn't want the history; he wanted the code.

He sat back in his leather chair, swirling a glass of thirty-year-old scotch, and looked out at the New York skyline. He imagined the city not as a place of people, but as a map of temporal nodes. He would buy the land, he would buy the history, and eventually, he would buy the future.

"The problem with scientists," Dominic whispered to the empty room, "is that they think the goal is to understand the universe. The goal is to own it."

*** OTMES_v2_Code: [L: M3=7.0, M5=10.0, N1=0.9, N2=0.1, K1=0.1, K2=0.9 | TI=44.8 | Theta=6.3° | E=17.1]


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

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

Cerca
Categorie
Leggi tutto
Giochi
RUST AND ASHES
The parking lot was full of cars for the last time on a Friday. Frank Sullivan sat in his truck...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-13 06:32:01 0 5
Giochi
The Absurd Mirror
The first time it happened, Mark thought it was a prank. He was sitting in the break room on the...
By Olivia Mitchell 2026-05-16 19:09:31 0 2
Literature
The Glass Menagerie of Mind
Act I: The Spark In the sterile silence of a Swiss clinic, Dr. Aris lived in a world of absolute...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-03 20:38:32 0 8
Altre informazioni
The Last Frequency of the Wastes
The desert did not forgive. It did not forget. It simply was—vast, empty, and hot, stretching...
By Paul Patterson 2026-05-24 16:11:32 0 2
Literature
The Cashmere Shawl
ACT I: THE THRESHOLD (20%) The fog rolled in from the Thames that November, thick as wool and...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-04-26 15:57:13 0 30