Cruel Wonders: Difference between revisions
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At first, I assumed it was a phase, a coping mechanism. The Zone had been in the news for decades by then, framed alternately as a scientific anomaly, a geopolitical liability, and a miracle waiting to be claimed. It attracted people who wanted answers, and people who wanted meaning. My wife had always belonged to the second category, and after we lost so much, well, that craving for meaning intensified. | At first, I assumed it was a phase, a coping mechanism. The Zone had been in the news for decades by then, framed alternately as a scientific anomaly, a geopolitical liability, and a miracle waiting to be claimed. It attracted people who wanted answers, and people who wanted meaning. My wife had always belonged to the second category, and after we lost so much, well, that craving for meaning intensified. | ||
She | She filed the necessary documentation, passed the screening tests, and crossed the perimeter fully legally. Since then, I hadn't heard from her once. I was cleared to join a research team three years later. | ||
The research itself was almost beside the point. We cataloged phenomena that refused to stay cataloged. We stabilized pockets of relative normalcy and called them labs. We ran experiments that produced different results depending on who was present to observe them, or who remembered them afterward. Papers were published, retracted, then published again under different author lists. All pointless and irrelevant. I focused on searching for patterns, anomalies in records around the date she crossed over. Eventually, I found something that aligned just enough to suggest a trail. | The research itself was almost beside the point. We cataloged phenomena that refused to stay cataloged. We stabilized pockets of relative normalcy and called them labs. We ran experiments that produced different results depending on who was present to observe them, or who remembered them afterward. Papers were published, retracted, then published again under different author lists. All pointless and irrelevant. I focused on searching for patterns, anomalies in records around the date she crossed over. Eventually, I found something that aligned just enough to suggest a trail. | ||
Revision as of 17:42, 15 February 2026
Humans tend to have a specific blueprint of how reality is supposed to behave. They expect order to express itself through symmetry and balance, as if the universe has a sense for fairness. They assume changes happen gradually over time, with warning signs and transitions that allow one to adjust. Objects are believed to persist when not observed, continuing their existence quietly and faithfully until attention returns to them. Cause comes before effect, forming a chain of logic that allows one to predict outcomes and assign responsibility.
These assumptions are rarely questioned; they are reinforced by everyday experience. They are the invisible scaffolding that supports a sense of safety and comprehension that's fundamental to human existence.
Within the Warsaw Altered Reality Zone, none of them hold true.
"I had come to the Zone to search for my wife."
That sentence remained stable longer than anything else, along with my memory of her name, her face, the simple fact that she had existed. I repeated it like a mantra. The mind, it turns out, is sometimes more reliable than instruments at keeping the chaos of the Zone at bay.
I had been working in the Zone for six years. Or, at least, I was fairly sure that was the case. Even time had a way of becoming confused and losing its way here — blurring, doubling back on itself, quietly abandoning the rules it followed everywhere else. No one could track its passage with any reliability, despite the technology we built to stabilize and anchor our work and living spaces to what might generously be called real time and space. Generously, because no one is entirely certain which fragments of this tangled spacetime we are actually meant to belong to.
Maria had entered this tangle on her own. There was no dramatic argument, no sudden disappearance in the night. She told me where she was going and why, with the calm certainty of someone who believed they were finally making sense of the world. She had fallen in with a group she met online, a loose congregation that spoke in careful, reverent language about revelation and thresholds. They believed God resided within the Zone, not metaphorically, but literally.
At first, I assumed it was a phase, a coping mechanism. The Zone had been in the news for decades by then, framed alternately as a scientific anomaly, a geopolitical liability, and a miracle waiting to be claimed. It attracted people who wanted answers, and people who wanted meaning. My wife had always belonged to the second category, and after we lost so much, well, that craving for meaning intensified.
She filed the necessary documentation, passed the screening tests, and crossed the perimeter fully legally. Since then, I hadn't heard from her once. I was cleared to join a research team three years later.
The research itself was almost beside the point. We cataloged phenomena that refused to stay cataloged. We stabilized pockets of relative normalcy and called them labs. We ran experiments that produced different results depending on who was present to observe them, or who remembered them afterward. Papers were published, retracted, then published again under different author lists. All pointless and irrelevant. I focused on searching for patterns, anomalies in records around the date she crossed over. Eventually, I found something that aligned just enough to suggest a trail.