Veyran Script
Veyran Script
Among historians, linguists, and data archaeologists, few mysteries are more frustrating than Veyran.
Nobody knows what the language sounded like.
Nobody knows what its people called themselves.
Nobody even knows if "Veyran" was the name of the language, the civilization, or a place.
The name comes from a partially corrupted archive designation discovered on Mars in 2821 CE: VEY-RN_ARCH_17
Everything else is speculation.
Origins
The language originated during the Collapse Era, the turbulent period between World War III and the establishment of the first permanent Martian colonies.
The period from roughly 2259 CE to 2329 CE is notoriously poorly documented.
Earth's information infrastructure was devastated by:
- orbital warfare
- infrastructure sabotage
- AI corruption events
- economic collapse
- mass migrations
Most surviving records exist in only fragmented form.
The Veyran language appears to have been used by one of the countless post-war political entities that existed briefly before disappearing.
Where It Was Used
Archaeologists, linguists, and anthropologists believe Veyran was spoken somewhere in:
- the former Caucasus region
- eastern Anatolia
- the Caspian Basin
- portions of Central Asia
The evidence is contradictory.
Entire cities may have existed there whose names are now unknown.
Why It Was Lost
The language died in what historians call a Triple Extinction Event.
First came the war.
Then came the migration crisis.
Finally came the Data Purges.
Unlike ancient languages such as Latin or Mandarin, Veyran existed almost entirely in digital form.
When the servers died, so did the language.
The people survived.
Their records did not.
Children grew up speaking neighboring languages.
Within three generations Veyran vanished.
What Was Lost
This is the question that drives historians insane.
Most surviving Veyran texts are administrative.
Tax records.
Inventory lists.
Shipping manifests.
Boring things.
The problem is what appears to be missing.
Researchers have identified references to:
- legal codes
- scientific archives
- literature
- poetry
- engineering manuals
- personal journals
- religious texts
All gone.
One recovered index references: "The Twelve Volumes of Returning Light"
Nobody knows what it was.
A philosophy text?
A religious work?
A novel?
No copies survive.
The Silent Libraries
The greatest tragedy involves the Silent Libraries.
Several surviving Veyran records refer repeatedly to vast distributed archives.
Not physical libraries.
Data libraries.
Entire server cities.
Researchers believe these repositories contained:
- local histories
- medical records
- scientific discoveries
- art
- music
- literature
Most likely they were destroyed during the Data Purges of the late 23rd century.
Some historians estimate that billions of pages of information disappeared.
Why Historians Care
Most lost languages leave descendants.
Veyran doesn't.
It is a dead end.
A linguistic island.
No living language can reliably translate it.
Only fragments are understood.
Current translation accuracy sits around twenty percent.
Entire passages remain unreadable.
For example, one of the most famous surviving inscriptions translates roughly as:
"We carried the memory of the sun beneath the mountain and waited for the world to remember itself."
Nobody knows what that means.
Modern Significance
The mystery has become culturally important.
On Mars, calling something "Veyran" has become shorthand for:
- irretrievably lost information
- forgotten history
- knowledge destroyed by negligence
Engineers might say:
"Back up the archive unless you want another Veyran."
Data archaeologists spend entire careers chasing new fragments.
Occasionally a corrupted storage block turns up on an old server somewhere in the Solar System.
Usually it contains nothing useful.
A shopping list.
A shipping receipt.
A maintenance log.
But every once in a while, a fragment appears that hints at something larger.
A poem.
A proverb.
A sentence from a book nobody has read in seven hundred years.
Enough to remind humanity that entire civilizations can disappear without ever leaving a graveyard.
Only a corrupted file.
And a language nobody can speak.

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