The Recursion Protocol

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The Recursion Protocol

Maeve O'Sullivan entered Julian Voss's corrupted consciousness and felt the floor dissolve beneath her feet.

Not literally — she was sitting in a haptic chair in Elysium Prime's Sector 7 analysis lab, her physical body safe in the real world above Mars. But in the digital space she was navigating, the ground beneath her was coming apart like wet paper. Memory fragments drifted past her in the virtual void: a childhood kitchen in Manchester, a conversation on a bridge in Reykjavik, the feeling of rain on skin that was no longer hers. Each fragment was intact, each was vivid, each belonged to someone other than Julian Voss.

This was not corruption. This was deconstruction.

"Report," said Dr. Amir Rashid's voice through the comms. Rashid was monitoring her vitals from the adjacent control room. Old enough to remember when uploading was experimental, tired enough to have stopped caring whether the system worked.

"The consciousness structure is intact but dissociated," Maeve said, swimming through the memory fragments. "All memory threads are present and uncorrupted. The personality matrix is structurally complete. But the connections between them have been systematically severed. Someone has unraveled Julian Voss's identity like a knitted sweater — every stitch removed, every thread laid bare."

"Kill him?"

"No. Killing would be deletion. This is... unmaking. The pieces are still here. They've just been separated from each other."

She reached what had been Julian Voss's core identity center. In a healthy consciousness, this area would be a dense knot of interconnected memories, traits, and preferences — the thing that made Julian Julian. In Julian's corrupted state, it was a spider web: threads extending outward in every direction, each one attached to a stolen memory fragment, but the center itself was hollow.

"He built himself from other people's pieces," Maeve said. "Every memory here, every trait, every emotional profile — none of it is originally his. This is a mosaic of stolen lives."

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