The world did not end in fire or flood. It ended in accumulation. Centuries of extraction, expansion, and waste pressed down on the planet until it could no longer recover. The air thickened first, microscopic plastics, chemical residue, particulate ash, each generation breathing in a little more damage than the last. By the time filtration became mandatory, the atmosphere itself had turned hostile. Breathing became mechanical.
On the surface, no one stepped outside without a breather mask. Those who did rarely lasted long. Lung failure was common, sudden, and merciless. Cities thinned out, then hollowed entirely, leaving behind rusted transit lines and skeletal high-rises half-buried in smog. Above it all, the domes rose. Vast aerial cities floated beyond the densest layers of pollution, self-sustaining and sealed. Inside, the air was clean. Food was cultivated beneath artificial suns. Children grew up believing the sky had always been blue. The domes were not advertised as escapes—only as innovations but everyone on the surface understood the truth.
The surface endured on what was left. Oxygen credits. Rationed water. Bartered survival. People learned to measure time in filter cycles and replacement parts. Life did not stop; it simply narrowed. Then, in one of the last regions still unclaimed by development, reality failed. The anomaly appeared without warning—a distortion so profound it confused satellites and silenced instruments. Light bent inward. Sound vanished at its edges. Matter behaved unpredictably. It was not an explosion, not a weapon, not a storm.
It was a tear.
The response was immediate. Megacorporations seized the region, fencing it off behind layers of steel and armed security. Research facilities rose where there had once been nothing but dust and dead ground. Scientists were flown in from every remaining institution, their conclusions suppressed until control was absolute. What they discovered changed everything. The anomaly was a temporal rupture, a doorway into Earth’s distant past—sixty-five million years before the present. A world untouched by industry waited on the other side.
Humanity called it hope.
Project Genesis was announced within the month. Officially, it was a preservation initiative—a controlled effort to ensure the continuation of the human species by establishing a sustainable population in Earth’s pre-collapse era. Passage would be limited. Selection would be precise. The future could not be left to chance. A processing facility was constructed at the edge of the anomaly, designed to filter people as ruthlessly as the world now filtered air. Every entrant would be evaluated, cataloged, and prepared. Nothing personal passed through unchecked.
By the time Cora Taylor reached its perimeter, she had already walked farther than most people dared. Her boots crunched over cracked concrete as she followed the final set of coordinates, the facility emerging through the smog like a deliberate intrusion. Steel walls rose high and seamless, floodlights cutting sharp lines through the haze. Armed guards moved along elevated walkways, faces hidden behind opaque visors.
Cora slowed her pace, adjusting the strap of her pack as her lungs burned faintly behind her mask. Twenty-seven years old, she thought distantly. And already running out of time. She hadn’t taken a transport. She couldn’t afford one. Instead, she’d followed maintenance corridors, abandoned rail lines, and surface maps traded for more than they were worth. Every step closer had felt heavier, as if the world itself resisted being left behind.
At the outer checkpoint, she stopped. Beyond the gates lay clean air, controlled light, and the machinery of humanity’s last attempt to save itself. Cora stood there for a moment longer than necessary, staring at the structure that would decide whether she went forward or stayed to die with everything else. She turned back just long enough to make sure Jack was still right behind her, his small boots struggling to keep pace with hers. His breather mask was too large for his face despite the child-sized fit, the straps pulled tight enough to leave faint red marks along his cheeks. He held his pack against his chest with both arms, as if afraid it might be taken from him.
Cora held out her hand “Stay close,” Cora said, slowing her stride, her voice muffled by the mask The little boy caught up, taking her hand.
The gate sealed behind them with a deep, metallic thud that echoed across the checkpoint. For a moment, the sound felt final—like a door closing on the world she had known her entire life. The security corridor was narrow and deliberately plain. Just smooth steel walls and overhead lighting that hummed faintly as they walked. Armed guards stood at intervals, motionless except for the slow tracking of their visors. Jack’s fingers curled tighter around her hand.
At the end of the corridor, a scanner frame rose from floor to ceiling. Pale blue light pulsed softly within it, waiting. A security officer stepped forward. His voice was calm, practiced. “Please step into the frame one at a time.”
Cora crouched in front of Jack, bringing herself level with him. She adjusted the seal on his mask, smoothing his hair back where it stuck up.
“I’ll go first,” she said. “Then you.”
Jack hesitated. “You won’t disappear?”
Her chest tightened.
“No,” she said firmly. “I promise.”
She stepped into the frame. Light washed over her, warm and vibrating, sinking deep into her bones. Her vision blurred for a moment as the system cataloged her—age, mass, respiratory damage, genetic markers. She kept her eyes forward, jaw set, refusing to show how exposed it made her feel.
“Clear,” the officer said.
Cora stepped out and turned immediately. Jack shuffled forward, eyes wide. The light rose around him, softer somehow, the system adjusting for his size. He stood perfectly still, shoulders squared, doing exactly what she’d taught him to do when he was scared. The light faded.
“Clear,” the officer repeated.
Jack ran to her side without being told, pressing himself against her leg. Cora rested a hand on his shoulder, grounding them both.
“Please proceed to intake,” the officer said, already turning away.
Beyond security, the corridor opened into a wide atrium. The air shifted immediately—cleaner, cooler. Cora felt the difference even through the mask, her lungs easing despite years of damage. An attendant waited just inside, her uniform a neutral gray. She glanced down at Jack, then back at Cora, her expression unreadable.
“You may remove your breathers here,” she said gently.
Cora nodded. She knelt again, unclasping Jack’s mask first, then removed her own mask. The air filled her lungs without pain, and for a moment she had to steady herself. The attendant gestured down the hall. “Security intake will escort you to holding, joining the others in your group.”
Taking her son’s hand once more and followed the guards down another corridor and into a larger room. The holding room stretched wide beneath a low ceiling. No windows. No visible exits beyond the sealed doors they’d entered through. The walls curved slightly inward, subtle enough to go unnoticed unless you were already on edge. Cots lined the perimeter in neat rows, each identical. At the foot of every cot sat a folded blanket, thicker than anything she owned. Others filled the space, all staring at the newly entered duo.
“Let’s get settled, I’m sure they will tells us what’s next…” She squeezed her boys hand, guiding them toward an empty cot near the edge of the room. Cora helped Jack climb up, then draped the blanket over his legs. He settled in quicker than she had thought. Sitting on the edge, she placed her head in her hands, letting out a slow breath of exhaustion.