A short story in three parts
Part One: Serin
On the planet Orilen, there were no fossil fuels.
Not because the Orileni were wise; they simply had no choice. Their world, with its warm sapphire seas and forests of silver-needled trees, had never entombed the dead for long. Microbial life broke down the past too quickly; pressure was never right; time never still. So no coal. No oil. No gas.
For millennia, fire was a whisper. The Orileni learned to shape metal with solar furnaces made of polished obsidian and liquid lenses. Their first machines were spun by water and air, stored in stone chambers pressurised like lungs. Homes were heated not by combustion but by deep pipes sunk into the planet’s breath: geothermal warmth, constant and quiet.
Children grew up knowing the sun’s arc as intimately as their own heartbeat. Energy was not something hoarded or burned: it was something borrowed for a time.
The ‘Great Shift’ began not with an explosion, but a question.
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