Gfs-markets.com -
Late one night, while cross-referencing failing commodity futures, her screen flickered. A strange URL flashed in her browser history, though she hadn’t typed it: .
Her second test was bolder. She liquidated her savings—$40,000—and followed the GFS mirror on a natural gas play. Within an hour, she had cleared $180,000.
Elena stared at the drive for a long time. Then she smiled, cracked her knuckles, and plugged it in.
She lost everything. Her savings, her apartment, her job the next morning when the bank’s risk committee traced the unauthorized trades back to her terminal. gfs-markets.com
didn’t predict the future. It showed the now —but twenty minutes ahead of every major exchange. A lag in reverse. Soybean prices in Chicago, twenty minutes before they moved. The euro-yen cross, pre-tremor. Even Bitcoin’s violent swings, mapped out like a weather forecast.
At T-minus ten minutes to the predicted announcement, her GFS session froze.
It looked like a dead end. A simple landing page with a monochrome logo—three interlocking rings forming a "G"—and a single line of text: “Global Foresight Systems. Where markets meet momentum.” Then she smiled, cracked her knuckles, and plugged it in
She refreshed. Nothing. She reloaded the portal. The login screen was gone, replaced by a single word:
That’s when she found the anomaly.
Elena Vasquez didn’t believe in luck. She believed in data. The login screen was gone
No contact info. No staff directory. Just a login portal that required a key she didn’t have.
She still didn’t believe in luck. But she was beginning to understand the fine print.
A new line of text appeared beneath the mirror: “You are not the first to find us, Elena. You will not be the last. But the price of seeing ahead is always paid in the present.”