As do so many things in science, it reached rudely beyond science into matters of personality and perspective. Was it better to know? That was the question facing young Emerson.
In small Kansas towns it’s a common fact that everyone knows everything about everyone. Except Westminster Falls, where every thirteen years the Boogeyman exists, the disappearances begin, and now all hope lies in the hands of a band of Freaks.
A young boy washes up on the beach, with no memories of who he is or how he got there. The young elven king that lives there takes it upon himself to help him recover what he’s lost.
A world has been broken. Monsters roam the Earth and hunt the remnants of humanity, and those who are left huddle in indomitable shelters. The military remnant throws together everything they can to stem the tide, and science scrambles for answers.
What if the Word of God, an artificially intelligent compendium of all religious writings and prophecies, decided to start a new religion... for other AI’s?