Nope, your question itself was nonsensical. You would understand how nonsensical it is if you understood my question, which you say you do not understand, but which was designed to help you understand how nonsensical your question was.
It seemed pretty straightforward, but I'll try to distill it down even further:
Do you think that anything will happen to the wicked?
That is, do you believe that there will exist a time, subsequent to now, in which the wicked will experience events of some kind?
I could even ask it in the past tense, as such:
Do you think that anything has ever happened to the wicked?
That is, do you believe that at some time in the past, the wicked have experienced events of some kind?
If your answer to either question is "yes," then we have established that the wicked do, indeed, have a fate--the fate of the wicked exists, and the evidence of it is not wishful thinking, but the evidence of reason.
If your answer to either question is "no," then I presume that the wicked and all record of them throughout history have completely vanished so that no trace of their existence can be found, and no one even understands what is meant by "the wicked" any more--in which case the wicked have no fate; nothing would have ever happened to the wicked, and nothing will ever happen to the wicked.
(If your answer was no, but the wicked still exist, then I would encourage you to reconsider your answer--because if the wicked still exist, then something has happened or is going to happen to them; and again, the fate of the wicked exists by evidence of reason.)