The Great Relocation

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The notification appeared on every screen in the sector at exactly 08:00: "Relocation Phase 4 begins in ten minutes. Please remain stationary."

Arthur didn't move. He was sitting in his kitchen, staring at a piece of burnt toast. He lived in Sector 7, a grey concrete sprawl where the sky was the color of a dead television channel. For three generations, the people of Sector 7 had been told they were the vanguard of a great cosmic experiment, but to Arthur, it just felt like living in a very large, very boring warehouse.

Then the Shift happened. There was no flash of light, no thunderous roar. There was simply a momentary glitch in reality—a feeling like a sudden drop in an elevator—and the kitchen was gone.

Arthur found himself standing in a field of iridescent blue grass under a sky with three pale moons. He was still holding his piece of burnt toast. Around him, thousands of other people were appearing in haphazard clusters, looking confused and frightened.

"Where are we?" a woman beside him asked. She was clutching a half-empty laundry basket.

"I don't know," Arthur replied.

A voice boomed from the sky, devoid of emotion, sounding like a recorded message from a distant bureaucracy. "Welcome to Transit Zone B. You have been moved for the convenience of the Primary Architect. Please wait for your assigned coordinates."

Over the next few months, the "Relocation" became the only reality. There were no ships, no engines, no heroic captains. There was only the movement. Every few weeks, the glitch would occur again, and they would be shifted to a new zone—a floating forest, a city of glass, a desert of singing sand.

Arthur spent his days trying to organize his belongings. He had a small suitcase with three shirts, a book of crossword puzzles, and a photograph of a dog he had owned twenty years ago. Each time the Shift happened, he lost something. First, it was his toothbrush. Then, his favorite pen. Eventually, he lost the photograph.

He watched as the people around him grew manic, trying to find a pattern in the movements, trying to negotiate with the silent sky. Some started a religion based on the "Architect," others fell into a catatonic stupodge.

Arthur just kept walking. He realized that the destination didn't matter because there was no destination. They were just pieces on a board, being moved by a hand they could never see. One afternoon, while waiting in a zone that smelled of ozone and old paper, Arthur looked at his empty hands and felt a strange, hollow peace. He was finally as light as the void.

--- OTMES-V2-CODE: [V-03]-[T3-10]-[N2:0.9,N1:0.1,M1:4,theta:270]


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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