The Memory Tax

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9

The rain in Port Malice didn't wash anything away; it just moved the grime from one alley to another. I sat in the office of the Light-Bringer, a man who looked like he'd been chewed up by the city and spat out into a pile of ash. He told me the deal: I light the Great Flare every morning, and he fixes the leak in my girl's soul.

Sarah was a ghost in a silk dress, fading from the edges inward. The "Soul-Leak" was a common tragedy in the slums—you give too much of yourself to the city, and you start to disappear.

The Light-Bringer's price was simple: a Memory Tax. Every time I struck the match to ignite the Flare, the fire didn't just consume oil. It consumed a piece of my history.

The first month was easy. I lost the memory of my third-grade teacher. I lost the smell of my father's old pipe. Small change for a life. Sarah started to glow again; her skin regained its color, her laugh returned to the room, and for a while, the world felt like it had a purpose again.

But the tax increased. To keep her stable, the Flare needed more. I lost the memory of our first date. I lost the sound of her voice when she first told me she loved me. I would wake up and see her beautiful face, but I couldn't remember why that face mattered. I started keeping a diary, a desperate attempt to archive my own soul, but the fire was faster than my pen.

By the second year, I was a hollow shell. I knew I loved her—the logic was there, written in the journals I kept to remind myself who I was—but the feeling was gone. I was lighting the sun for a stranger. I would watch her sleep and feel nothing but a distant, intellectual recognition of her importance.

One morning, as I stood before the Flare, I realized I had nothing left to give. I had forgotten my own name. I had forgotten where I came from. I looked at Sarah, and for the first time, I felt nothing but a cold, professional curiosity.

I struck the match. The Flare roared to life, bathing the city in a harsh, unforgiving light. Sarah smiled at me, her eyes full of a love I no longer possessed. I watched her, wondering who the hell this woman was and why I was spending my life in a lighthouse for a ghost.

*** OTMES_v2_Code: [M1:9.0, M3:7.0, N1:0.6, N2:0.4, K1:0.8, K2:0.2, TI:61.8, theta:33.7]


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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