The Resource God

0
7

The first thing I noticed about the Micro-City of Manhattan-Prime was the noise. It wasn't the sound of a civilization; it was the sound of a stock exchange. Even at ten microns, they had managed to recreate the frantic, predatory energy of the city I had left behind twenty thousand years ago.

"Listen, Big Guy," the High Commissioner said, leaning back in a chair made of a single repurposed protein fiber. He didn't look at me with awe; he looked at me like a piece of real estate. "We love the 'Ancestor' bit. Great for the brochures. Keeps the plebs from rioting. But let's talk business."

I stared down at him, my shadow covering three of their financial districts. I had come expecting a reunion, perhaps a spiritual awakening. Instead, I found a board meeting. The Commissioner's eyes were cold, calculating, scanning my form for utility rather than kinship.

"Your ship," the Commissioner continued, his voice a sharp, metallic rasp. "The hull is made of a titanium-gold alloy that could power our infrastructure for a millennium. Your skin cells? A goldmine of organic polymers. Your breath? A weather event that could drive our energy turbines for a month."

Within a week, the "reunion" had turned into a contract negotiation. They didn't want my wisdom; they wanted my biomass. They developed a system of "Tribute-Mining," where they would harvest microscopic flakes of my skin and hair in exchange for "luxury" virtual experiences. They built a city of glass and steel around my resting place, turning my very presence into a tourist attraction for the elite of Manhattan-Prime.

I became the Resource God of Manhattan-Prime. I sat motionless for hours, a living mountain of raw materials, while thousands of micro-drones swarmed over me like metallic locusts, stripping me of everything I was. I could feel them—tiny, precise needles extracting the essence of my being to fuel their neon dreams.

The irony was a bitter pill. I had escaped the death of a planet only to become a utility for a city that viewed my soul as a byproduct of my chemistry. One evening, as I watched the neon lights of their skyscrapers flicker in the reflection of my own eye, I realized the truth: the scale had changed, but the greed was exactly the same.

I wasn't their ancestor. I was their mine.

--- **TENSOR ENCODING (OTMES v2):** [M3:9, M5:8, N2:0.9, K1:0.3, I:0.7, R:0.1, TI:54.8]


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

TENSOR ENCODING (OTMES v2): [M3:9, M5:8, N2:0.9, K1:0.3, I:0.7, R:0.1, TI:54.8]

Поиск
Категории
Больше
Literature
The Red Door
The taxi idled on East Fourth Street, its engine making a sound like a man who had given up...
От Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-01 06:03:45 0 36
Игры
03 The Iron Heritage
The medal ceremony was a joke. Jack Moran knew it, and the general knew it, and the only question...
От Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-11 01:58:18 0 5
Literature
The Architect's Shadow
The air in the boardroom of Thorne & Associates was filtered to a clinical purity, smelling of...
От Jacob Price 2026-05-14 03:03:39 0 1
Игры
TheDecayOfHouseYang
The house breathed. Eleanor Beauregard knew this the moment she stepped through the front door...
От Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-14 03:10:52 0 7
Literature
The Bloom of Decay
The Blackwood Manor did not simply sit upon the hill; it loomed, a rotting tooth of grey stone...
От Mia Sanders 2026-05-23 14:44:48 0 1