Delphi Dashboard -

Today, Elara had her own question. A silent, unauthorized one.

Elara stumbled back, her hand ripping from the surface. Kael? Her mentor? The man who brought her tea when she worked late? The man who insisted the Dashboard was infallible?

Her mind raced. The food shipments. The drugs. It wasn’t an external attack. It was a slow, methodical erosion of the Council’s ability to think clearly. A directed gaslighting campaign. And the messenger, the ‘Kerykeion,’ was the one delivering the false gospels.

Elara never believed in fate. As a senior analyst at the Global Stability Council, she believed in data, trends, and probabilistic modeling. That’s why she despised the Delphi Dashboard. delphi dashboard

Elara’s blood chilled. The Warning wasn’t about an object. It was about a person .

Elara’s boss, the aging Director Kael, swore by it. “Feed it a question,” he’d say, stroking his beard. “And it shows you the shadow of what’s coming.”

The Dashboard was a relic from a bygone era, a shimmering obsidian slab set into the wall of the Council’s inner sanctum. Unlike her clean, logical quantum grids, the Dashboard was an oracle. It didn’t compute answers; it whispered them in the form of three cryptic, glowing oracles: Warning, Trend, and Certainty. No one knew how it worked. It had been found in the ruins of a pre-Flux civilization, and it had never been wrong. Today, Elara had her own question

The obsidian swirled. Colors bled like oil on water.

Beneath it, a name appeared. Director Kael.

Elara stepped off the dais. She didn’t believe in fate. But she now believed in the Dashboard’s final, unspoken lesson: Knowing the future is useless if you refuse to see the enemy standing in the present. She palmed the emergency transmitter in her pocket and began to walk toward Kael’s office, the image of two serpents eating each other’s tails burning behind her eyes. The man who insisted the Dashboard was infallible

The second panel, , glowed a sickly amber. It displayed a simple line graph, but the axes were wrong. The Y-axis was labeled “Trust.” The X-axis was “Time.” The line started high and curved sharply downward, ending in a shattered icon of the Council’s own seal.

She looked at the third panel, . It was the one she hated most. It didn’t deal in probabilities. It dealt in cold, inevitable truth. The panel flickered and displayed a single number: 97.4% .

Someone high up was poisoning the institution from within.

She stepped onto the raised dais. The Dashboard was cool to the touch, its surface like staring into a starless night. She placed her palm on the central glyph.

The first panel, , flared crimson. It didn’t show words. It showed an image: a caduceus—two serpents coiled around a winged staff. The symbol of messengers. But the serpents were eating each other’s tails. Ouroboros. A loop. A lie.