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Deospoena

Momjeanslover
7
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Synopsis
In the year 3005, humanity pushed too far. In a desperate bid for control on the brink of global war, the United States launches Deospoena — a forbidden thermonuclear weapon hurled into deep space under the guise of peaceful deterrence. Its intended target: a distant galaxy. Its actual impact: the heart of the Large Magellanic Cloud, where it collides with SN 1987A, a dying star. The result? The artificial birth of a black hole — and the unmaking of everything that followed. Agnes, a disillusioned director at NASA, the accidental architect of this cosmic sin, awakens years later in a world unrecognizable. Vines crawl over what’s left of her lab. Holographic pop-ups now live in her head, courtesy of a long-loathed Elon Dusk Neurolink. Her memories are fractured. Her team is missing or dead. And something is deeply wrong with reality. As she navigates a planet that seems partially reclaimed by nature — yet haunted by glitches in time, corrupted data, and half-remembered technologies — Agnes begins to piece together what truly happened during the Great Enthrallment. But the deeper she digs, the more horrifying the truth becomes: she may not have survived at all. And if she did... she may not be alone.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Prologue

The early 30th century brought with it a feverish surge in technological ambition. Nations sprinted toward military supremacy, forging weapons with the heat of desperation. Nuclear arms became the new currency of power. War was no longer a distant threat — it loomed like a storm on the event horizon.

Tensions escalated. Russia and the United Nations teetered on the edge of open conflict. But it was America, above all, that dared to build something unspeakable — a final gamble. A weapon not of strategy, but of spite. A newly engineered atomic bomb. 

There was only one problem: nowhere on Earth could contain such devastation.

Then came an offhand, sarcastic comment from a NASA worker— a joke, barely more than a whisper — and yet it rippled like a tremor through the command chain. Within days, the unthinkable became policy.

The newly developed atomic bomb, dubbed Deospoena (Latin for "God's Punishment"), was launched toward Andromeda I — a galaxy over two million light-years away. While some warned that launching an untested weapon across galaxies was dangerous, political leaders assured the public there was no risk. After all, Andromeda I was far enough away. Right?

Wrong.

Deospoena veered off course and struck the Large Magellanic Cloud.

Hitting SN 1987A, the closest recorded type II supernova that once resided in the Large Magellanic Cloud. In its wake now stands a giant black hole.

Unknown to the researchers the bomb was thermonuclear — the kind of bomb that fuses hydrogen atoms into helium, resulting in an explosion. Coincidentally, the same process by which dying stars burn out, and sometimes turn into black holes.

Unfortunately for nearby planets, the detonation triggered a chain reaction that led to the artificial creation of a black hole.

The room, once filled with celebration and joy, now seemed dim and foreboding — a sorrowful reminder of what had just occurred. Only hours ago, Agnes had celebrated the successful launch of Deospoena. But the joy was short-lived. Minutes later, she and her team stood pale-faced, stunned.

Fuck. I'm definitely going to get fired, Agnes thought.

As the lead of the Space Operations Mission Directorate, Agnes was ultimately responsible for the mission's outcome, not only as the head of her department, but as the person who had suggested it.

Silence fell as every head turned toward her. Her crew stared, waiting for her to say something.

"Agnes, do—" a crew member began, only to be cut off by the booming voice of an older man.

"DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEA WHAT YOU JUST DID?" he bellowed.