Elias was a "Data Sanitizer." His job was to scrub digital archives of old-world religious imagery, ensuring that the citizens of Aethelgard remained unburdened by the "irrationality" of the past. To the society, the word profane didn't mean "unholy"—it simply meant "real," "observable," and "useful".
People stopped. For a few seconds, the Profane Society held its breath. They didn't have a word for what they were feeling—they had deleted that word decades ago—but for the first time in their lives, they weren't looking at their screens. They were looking at each other, wondering why a single sound made the world feel, just for a moment, like it wasn't just a machine, but a home. A Sociedade Profana
Driven by a strange compulsion, Elias used his clearance to visit the "Museum of Dead Ideas." There, in a corner gathering dust, sat a heavy brass bell. The placard read: Relic of the Sacred Era: Used to mark time before the invention of the Quartz Chronometer. Elias was a "Data Sanitizer
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