After the first wave of the virus Erebis, half of humanity is gone.
The survivors don't rebuild the world - they divide it.
From the ruins rise four cities, each a cage shaped by class:
one where the poor endure hunger and humiliation,
one where the middle class survives on restraint and fading hope,
one where the rich drown in luxury built on denial,
and one where the elites crown themselves untouchable, believing power makes them immortal.
Through the voice of Pema, a mother watching the world fracture, Endling explores a future where survival comes without dignity, walls replace compassion, and inequality is written into law. Children starve while others play with machines. Humanity lives on - but broken, arrogant, and divided.
This is not a story about saving the world.
It's about what remains when fear reshapes humanity, and the plague changes form.
Dark, emotional, and brutally realistic - Endling asks one question:
What does survival mean when humanity itself is dying?
Reece Novak is learning how to distinguish conscious from computer. But along the way he finds a love for something that he never expected. Reece has an high IQ but learns he cares more about his EQ from Ava.
As she tries to help Reece tune his emotions, he learns there may be more than coding and hacking. Maybe love was the peace he's been looking for.