The Paper World

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I have no name, for names are for things that move and breathe. I am the Obsidian Eye, a statue carved from a single piece of volcanic glass, perched upon the crumbling eaves of the Blackwood Manor. For two hundred years, I have watched the town of Oakhaven, a place of weeping willows, humid air, and secrets that refuse to stay buried.

The change began with the shadows. It was a Tuesday in July, the air thick with the scent of jasmine and decay. I noticed that the shadow of the great oak in the town square had stopped moving. It remained fixed, a jagged black stain on the cobblestones, even as the sun climbed to its zenith.

Then, the people began to change.

It started with the Mayor. He was a man of excessive girth and loud laughter. One afternoon, while delivering a speech on the steps of the Town Hall, he suddenly flickered. For a fraction of a second, he looked like a cardboard cutout, thin and fragile. The crowd gasped, but the Mayor simply laughed it off, unaware that his left arm had become a translucent sliver of skin.

Within a week, the 'Thinning' had spread. The townspeople became obsessed with their own dimensions. They began to avoid the wind, fearing that a strong gust would blow them away like autumn leaves. They walked with a strange, sideways gait, trying to present their widest side to the world.

I watched from my perch as the horror unfolded. I saw the children playing in the creek, their laughter turning into screams as their legs merged into a single, flat plane. I saw the lovers embracing, only to find that they could no longer feel the depth of each other's bodies, their touch becoming a mere overlap of surfaces.

The town's priest declared it a divine judgment. He organized a Great Ritual of Depth, commanding the citizens to bury themselves in the mud of the swamp, hoping that the weight of the earth would anchor them to the third dimension. I watched as hundreds of people crawled into the muck, their faces twisted in a mixture of hope and terror.

But the mud could not save them. The Thinning was not a disease; it was a law.

One evening, the sky itself began to fold. The clouds became sharp, geometric creases. The horizon curved upward, as if the world were a piece of paper being tucked into an envelope. The people who had buried themselves in the swamp were the first to go; they were simply pressed into the earth, becoming living fossils in a layer of silt.

The last thing I saw was the Blackwood Manor. The great house, with its gothic spires and haunted hallways, began to tilt. It didn't fall; it flattened. The walls collapsed into lines, the ceilings into planes, and the inhabitants into sketches.

Then, the fold reached me.

I felt the obsidian of my body stretch and thin. The three-dimensional world vanished, replaced by a blinding, absolute whiteness. I was no longer a statue; I was a drawing of a statue.

I looked around and saw Oakhaven. It was no longer a town; it was a mural. The trees, the houses, the screaming people—all of them were now part of a vast, static painting, frozen in a moment of eternal terror.

I waited for the eraser to come, but it never did. We were simply left there, a gallery of the flattened, waiting for a viewer who would never arrive.

*** OTMES_v2_CODE: [V-06]-[B2]-[M1:8.0,M7:7.0,N2:0.9,K1:0.7,I:1.0,R:0.1,theta:160]


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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