The Paper Hunger

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**Act I: The Inheritance of Dust** The manor at Blackwood Moor had been empty for forty years, a skeletal ruin of grey stone and dead ivy. When Thomas took over as head butler, he found the house in a state of preserved decay. In the attic, hidden behind a false wall, he discovered a collection of life-sized paper mannequins, each dressed in the exquisite, rotting silk of a previous era. They were not toys; they were records. A journal left by the previous owner claimed that these figures could "absorb the essence of the living to preserve the memory of the dead."

**Act II: The Siphoning** Curiosity was Thomas's first mistake. He noticed that when he stood near the mannequins, he felt a strange, magnetic pull. He began to spend his evenings in the attic, talking to the figures. Slowly, he realized that the mannequins were feeding. First, it was the birds in the garden that stopped singing. Then, the village dogs began to vanish. Finally, the servants in the house started complaining of a sudden, inexplicable lethargy. Thomas felt a terrifying vitality surging through him, a strength and clarity he had never known, while everyone around him withered.

**Act III: The Binding** Thomas tried to burn the mannequins, but the fire would not touch them. Instead, the flames seemed to be absorbed into the paper, making the figures more vivid, more human. He discovered the horrifying truth: he had become the anchor. The mannequins were no longer independent; they were extensions of his own nervous system. Every time a mannequin "fed," Thomas felt the rush of life, but he also felt the corresponding void in the victim. He was no longer a butler; he was a parasite, bound to a gallery of paper monsters.

**Act IV: The Final Stillness** The end came when the last servant died. The mannequins, now fully saturated with life, no longer needed external sources. They turned their attention to the anchor. One by one, they entered his room, their paper joints creaking in the silence. They didn't attack him; they simply embraced him. Thomas felt his warmth, his breath, and his very consciousness being pulled out of his pores and absorbed into the white, blank pages of their skin. He became a statue of flesh and bone, frozen in a permanent scream, while the paper figures walked out of the manor and into the village, looking exactly like the people they had replaced.

*** OTMES-v2-Z1A2B3-135-M6-160-2R880-V9C2


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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