Charlie stepped out of the truck, the gravel crunching under his worn leather boots. The sound seemed dangerously loud in the vast emptiness. He walked to the edge of the fence, where a section had been pulled back by someone who had chased the same horizon long before him. He reached out and touched the cold, jagged metal.
He hadn't told anyone. There was no one left to tell. His sister had moved to the coast years ago, swallowed by the same system he was running from. His friends were too tired or too scared to look up from their screens. Across the Line: The Exodus of Charlie Wright (...
Behind him lay the grid of the city, glowing like a dying ember in the twilight. Behind him were the tallies, the trackers, and the cold eyes of men who reduced a human life to a series of digital checks and balances. Charlie had spent forty years playing by their rules, keeping his head down, and watching the walls close in. Charlie stepped out of the truck, the gravel
He walked back to the truck, shifted it into gear, and drove slowly through the gap in the fence. The bottom of the truck scraped against a rock, a harsh metallic screech that sounded like a lock turning. He reached out and touched the cold, jagged metal
Then, there was nothing but the dirt track ahead and the beam of his headlights cutting through the dark. Charlie Wright had crossed the line. He was no longer a number. He was just a man, a dog, and a thousand miles of open, lawless sky. AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more