The year was 2084, and Elias Thorne lived in the "Glass Needle," a mile-high spire in Neo-Chicago that shouldn't have been able to stand. As a junior structural integrity scout, Elias spent his days reading the whispers of the building’s .
His supervisor laughed. "It’s a five-trillion-dollar building, Thorne. The materials are perfect."
One Tuesday, the Needle groaned—a sound felt in the teeth more than heard in the ears. The AI diagnostics flashed green: "Within tolerable limits."
His Bible was a weathered, digital copy of The Science and Engineering of Materials . While his peers relied on AI to run simulations, Elias obsessed over the "why." He understood that the Needle’s stability wasn't just about the strength of its beams, but the within the ultra-alloy skeleton.