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The Observed Void
The town of Oakhaven was a place where things went to die. The steel mills had closed in the seventies, leaving behind a landscape of rusted skeletons and grey skies. Kevin was a man of the rust, a janitor at the derelict Blackwood Institute, a place that had once promised to unlock the secrets of the atom but had ended up as a monument to failure.
Kevin didn't know about quantum mechanics. He only knew how to mop floors and empty bins. But one Tuesday, while cleaning the basement of Sector 4, he stepped into a patch of air that felt like cold oil.
There was no flash, no bang. Just a subtle shift in the light.
Suddenly, Kevin could see the "Others." Not ghosts, but versions of the room. He saw the laboratory as it was in 1954, bustling with men in white coats; he saw it as a charred ruin in a future where the city had burned; and he saw it as a lush forest where the walls had long since crumbled.
He was a passive observer, a glitch in the fabric of reality. He couldn't move the objects in these other worlds, and they couldn't see him. He was merely a passenger in a train of probabilities.
At first, it was a curiosity. But the "leak" began to spread. Kevin started seeing the others in his own life. He would look in the mirror and see a version of himself who had become a successful lawyer, and another who had died in a car crash ten years ago. He would touch his wife's hand and feel the ghost of a woman he had never met, but who was his wife in a parallel thread.
The horror was not in the seeing, but in the eroding. The more he observed the other worlds, the more his own reality began to thin. He would wake up in a bed he didn't recognize, in a house he had never lived in, with memories of a childhood he never had.
One evening, Kevin sat on his porch, watching the sunset. He looked down at his hands and saw them flickering—transparent, then solid, then a different color entirely. He tried to scream, but the sound that came out was a chord of a thousand different voices, all screaming in different languages.
He was no longer Kevin. He was a probability cloud, a smudge of existence spread across a million different lives. As the sun dipped below the horizon, the last solid piece of him vanished, leaving behind only a mop leaning against a wall in a town that had forgotten how to breathe.
*** OTMES-V2-CODE: [V-03]-[T3-10]-[M1:7, M6:5, N2:0.9, K1:0.7, I:0.8, R:0.2]
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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