The White Corridor
There is no sun in the Corridor. There is only a flat, oppressive light that comes from nowhere and illuminates everything with a clinical, terrifying clarity. I am No. 42. I do not remember my name, my home, or the taste of salt. I only know that I must carry the Hourglass.
The Hourglass is a small, crystalline object that pulses with a soft, amber light. It is the only thing in this world that possesses a rhythm.
To reach the End, I must pass through five doors. Each door is identical—white, heavy, and devoid of a handle. To open a door, I must confront the Guard.
At the first door, the Guard was a man who looked exactly like me. He wore the same grey tunic, had the same hollow cheeks, and spoke with my own voice.
"Why do you carry the time of others?" he asked.
I didn't know how to answer. We fought, not with fists, but with arguments. He tried to convince me that the Hourglass was a burden, a chain that bound me to a dead world. I defeated him by admitting that I was afraid. The moment I accepted my fear, the Guard vanished, and the door slid open.
The second and third doors were the same. I fought a version of myself that was arrogant, and a version that was broken. Each time, the battle was a mirror of my own internal collapse. I realized that the Guard was not an enemy, but a filter. Only the parts of me that were honest could pass.
By the fifth door, I was exhausted. My mind was a frayed rope. The final Guard was not a man, but a silence. He didn't speak. He simply stood there, reflecting the amber light of the Hourglass.
I looked at the sand in the glass. It was almost gone.
"I am here," I whispered.
The Guard stepped aside. I walked through the door, expecting a paradise, a homecoming, or perhaps a final judgment.
Instead, I found myself standing in front of the first door.
I looked down. The Hourglass was full again.
I looked up and saw a man in a grey tunic, with hollow cheeks and a vacant stare, walking toward me. He looked exactly like me.
"Why do you carry the time of others?" he asked.
I smiled, a cold, empty expression. I knew the answer now. I was the Guard. And I was the prisoner. And the Corridor was the only world that ever existed.
*** OTMES_v2_Code: [M1:6.0, M4:8.0, N2:0.8, K1:0.7, I:0.7, R:0.0, theta:270, TI:40.0]
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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