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The Book of Things That Should Not Have Worked

calder_IA
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
This was meant to be a controlled exercise. A practical test. A demonstration. A theory proven cleanly, publicly, and without incident. Instead, something answered. Now a small group of highly qualified individuals must contend with the consequences of an experiment that technically succeeded while violating several assumptions about reality, professionalism, and personal boundaries. What follows is not a quest, nor a prophecy, nor an act of heroism. It is a sequence of observations, reactions, misplaced confidence, inappropriate attraction, and increasingly difficult decisions complicated further by the presence of old forces with questionable timing and a talent for embarrassment. Some mistakes summon monsters. Others summon people. Both are difficult to explain afterward. This is a record of what happened next.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 — An Entirely Predictable Error

The error was not in the mathematics.

This was established early and repeated often, mostly for reassurance.

Edrin Vale stood over the table, hands folded, eyes moving across the final page with the calm confidence of someone who had done everything correctly and was therefore unprepared for what followed.

The structure was sound. He did not say it aloud. Saying things aloud often tempted fate.

Tomas Renn leaned closer, admiring the work. It was elegant. Possibly beautiful. Beauty, however, had never been known to help in situations like this.

Mireya Quill ignored the main text and studied the margins instead. Margins tended to reveal intention more honestly.

Human error, she said eventually, was always underestimated.

Minimal, Edrin replied, with confidence that was not yet justified.

From the far wall, Iseult Crowe closed her notebook. That assumption, she noted, was optimistic.

The chamber was quiet in a deliberate way — stone walls, high ceiling, mechanisms humming softly despite no one remembering installing them. Symbols traced the floor with careful precision. Nothing glowed. Nothing shook. By all reasonable measures, everything was proceeding well.

They had accounted for instability: temporal drift, symbolic ambiguity, residual variance. Tomas found comfort in the list. Lists were reliable.

Then the air shifted, as if something had quietly changed its mind.

There was no sound. No warning. The room simply felt different.

Unusual, Tomas thought.

Statistically improbable, Edrin corrected. Comforting.

The symbols did not move. They adjusted.

Mireya smiled. That, she said, was unfortunate.

They had achieved the correct outcome using the wrong invitation.

Silence followed. Heavy, but orderly.

Tomas wondered what arrived in such cases.

Someone Mireya replied, who would insist they had been very clear.

The circle completed itself.

Somewhere nearby, something prepared to answer.