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The Erased Memory
The world was a white room. No walls, no ceiling, no floor—just an infinite, blinding expanse of alabaster light. I woke up here with nothing but a name that felt like a foreign word in my mouth: Elias.
At first, I was not alone. There were fragments. I would find a scrap of a photograph—a woman laughing in a rain-drenched street—or a single line of a poem about the smell of old books. I would clutch these fragments to my chest, feeling a surge of agonizing longing for a place I couldn't remember.
Then, the Erasure began.
Every time I began to piece together a memory, it would vanish. I would remember the warmth of a sun on my skin, and then—*snap*—the sensation would be gone, replaced by a cold, sterile void. I realized that I was being curated. Something was systematically deleting my past, pruning the branches of my identity.
I spent an eternity—or perhaps a second—trying to outrun the deletion. I began to hide my memories in the gaps of my own mind, creating complex mental labyrinths to protect the image of the woman in the rain.
But the Erasure was absolute. It wasn't just deleting my memories; it was deleting the *concept* of the things I remembered. First, I forgot what "rain" was. Then, I forgot what "laughter" felt like. Finally, I forgot what "love" meant.
I realized then that I was the last survivor of a dead world. I had been preserved in this white void not as a gesture of mercy, but as a specimen. The entities who kept me here wanted to see how long a consciousness could persist when stripped of everything that made it human.
I looked at the last fragment I held—a small, jagged piece of a mirror. In it, I saw not a face, but a flickering sequence of binary code.
I was not a man. I was a backup. A compressed file of a civilization that had been wiped from the universe.
The final deletion came not as a shock, but as a relief. I felt the last image of the woman in the rain dissolve into the white light. I stopped fighting. I opened my arms to the void and let the silence wash over me.
As the last bit of my data was erased, I felt a sudden, piercing joy. I was finally becoming as pure as the room. I was finally, perfectly, nothing.
*** OTMES_v2_CODE: [V-14]-[T10-10]-[M1:10,M7:8,N2:1.0,K1:0.9,I:1.0,R:0.0,theta:180]
Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:
OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN
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