The Observer's Log

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Entry 442. The man is still swimming.

I have watched him for three days from the deck of the *S.S. Meridian*. His name is Arthur, though in my logs, I simply call him 'The Anomaly'. He is a geologist by trade, a ghost by choice. He spends his days staring at the Water-Spire as if it were a long-lost lover, and his nights whispering to a sky that no longer answers.

Most of us have accepted the end. We spend our final hours in a haze of morphine and nostalgia, waiting for the atmosphere to thin into nothingness. But Arthur is different. He has a hunger in him—a desperate, starving need to reach the top.

I watched him enter the water this morning. He didn't dive; he merged. He began the ascent with a rhythmic, obsessive grace. From my binoculars, he looked like a silver needle sewing the sea to the sky.

I find myself fascinated by him. Not because I believe he will find salvation, but because he is the only thing in this world that still possesses a will. We are all drifting, but Arthur is steering.

Day 4. He is halfway up. The spire is pulsing with a blue light that makes the horizon look like a neon bruise. I see him pausing occasionally, floating in the liquid slope, looking back at the city. I wonder what he sees. Does he see the fires? Does he see the millions of us waiting for the end? Or does he only see the distance between where he is and where he wants to be?

I used to pride myself on my rationality. I believed that the world was a series of equations to be solved. But as I watch Arthur—this fragile, broken man—defy the gravity of a dying planet, I feel a strange, uncomfortable crack in my own logic.

Day 5. He has reached the summit. I saw him vanish into the light of the entity. For a moment, the entire spire flared with a brilliance that blinded me, and then, silence.

The water-mountain is beginning to collapse. The *Meridian* is tilting, the sea reclaiming its stolen height. I am sitting in my cabin, writing this final entry.

I do not know if Arthur found God, or a monster, or simply a quicker way to die. But as I look at the empty space where the spire once stood, I feel a sudden, piercing void in my own chest. I realized that I didn't want him to succeed; I wanted him to prove that the climb was possible.

I am a rational man. But in these last few seconds, I find myself wishing I had jumped into the water with him.

***

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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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