
I simply intend to ride that wave of destruction, to shape what develops next. “The world will destroy itself,” Galath said. Jori took this to heart, and it became his new identity: The God King. Uriel took off his wristwatch, including the datachips. The only beautiful thing left in the world. “I know.” Uriel kissed him on the forehead. Eyes always downward, never toward the lights above. Mankind had a chance to reach the stars-but all they did was use that ability to cast down fire upon one another. They don’t deserve what they’ve been given. “The world is a broken, ruined place,” Uriel said. Galath valued the idea of raising a "youth with no preconceptions", and agreed to grant Jori immortality. Uriel brought Jori’s body to Galath, and asked him and his scientists to bring back Jori as a Deathless. However, Uriel realized there was a solution to this problem: the Omega Project. His wife was a cheat his son was on the brink of death. Upon seeing his lifeless son, Uriel swiftly murdered Adram. At the sight of Uriel, Adram attempted to flee the scene in his car, but instead ran over Jori-Uriel’s son-by accident. To his surprise, he found his wife having an affair with Adram. Troubled with this knowledge, Uriel came home from work early. When asked, Adram said "I'm gonna live forever," implying that they were developing a method to harness somebody’s soul ( Quantum Identity Pattern), to become immortal. After some investigating, Uriel confronted his co-worker, Adram. Members of Uriel’s team were being reassigned to a different, top-secret project.

Unfortunately, the statistics and numbers just weren’t adding up. The ultimate goal was to create teleportation amongst living beings. Despite working endless hours on the teleportation project, he came to the conclusion that teleportation would never live up to the high expectations of his CEO, Mr. He had a wife and a son, though he rarely saw them due to his tendency to stay late at the office (his wife didn’t mind, though). One statistician for this project was Uriel. There once was a time when humans were extraordinarily advanced in their technological pursuits, culminating in the creation of inorganic teleportation.
