Whiteout
The Thief didn't plan to be here.
But the storm came fast, swallowing the road, the trees, the sky itself. The kind of blizzard that erases everything.
Now, his car was buried somewhere beneath the whiteout, useless. He'd been walking for hours, the wind gnawing at his skin, ice biting through his clothes.
Then he saw it.
A house, sitting at the edge of the storm. Two stories, old but sturdy. The roof sagged under the weight of the snow, the windows dark, lifeless. No car in the driveway. No tracks in the snow.
Just a house, waiting.
The air was cold, still. Not abandoned — just… paused. Like whoever lived here had left suddenly and never come back. Or never existed at all.
A living room, neat but old. The kind of place that hadn't been redecorated in decades. Floral wallpaper curling at the corners, an old clock on the mantel frozen at 11:34. A kitchen, clean but unused. Mugs in the sink. A table set for two. No food, no signs of life.
Occupancy status: UNVERIFIED
Time of entry: INDETERMINATE
External conditions: Blizzard — visibility 0%
Clock on mantel: 11:34 [non-functional — frozen]
Table setting: 2 place settings — no food present
Then came the knock at the door.
At first, he thought it was the wind. Then it came again. Three slow knocks.
Two men stood on the porch, faces raw from the cold. One was tall, broad-shouldered, built like a man who had never lost a fight — shaved head dusted with snow. The other was thinner, wrapped in a coat two sizes too big, shivering violently.
And just like that, he wasn't alone anymore. Half an hour later, another knock. A man and a woman this time. Same story. Five people waiting for the storm to pass.
But The Thief could feel it — the weight of their stares, the way the big man kept glancing toward him. They knew something was off. They all did.
And before any of them could say it, the first thing disappeared.
The fire crackled weakly, throwing flickering light across their faces. The Thief stayed by the couch, watching the others. The Big One sat across from him, arms folded, eyes never leaving him. Sizing him up. Waiting.
Later, The Quiet One lost something too. He sat across from The Thief, absentmindedly twisting his wedding ring. Spinning it, over and over. Then he stopped. His hand froze mid-motion. His eyes flicked down. The ring was gone.
The skin on his ring finger was smooth. No indentation, no mark, no sign a ring had ever been there.
By the time The Thief woke up the next morning, The Quiet One was gone.
Last confirmed presence: Kitchen table, approx. 23:00
Current status: UNVERIFIED
Memory integrity of remaining subjects: DEGRADED
Note: No subject recalls The Quiet One arriving with The Big One
Note: No subject recalls The Quiet One arriving alone
Conclusion: [REDACTED]
The house felt emptier. Even though it shouldn't.
The Thief noticed it first. The Other Man had been freezing all night — wrapped in a coat too big for him, huddled by the fire, teeth chattering. But now he just stood there, perfectly still, staring at the glass. Not breathing hard. Not rubbing his hands. Like he wasn't cold anymore.
But his voice was wrong. Flat. Too even. And The Thief swore — just for a second — there was no reflection.
The fireplace was right there. But — no embers. No coals. No soot in the grate. Like it had never been lit. A sharp chill crawled up The Thief's spine. Because no one remembered lighting it.
It was The Woman who tested it. She walked to the kitchen and opened the cabinets. Empty. The fridge. The drawers. Nothing.
The words left his mouth before he even thought about them. And the moment he said them — they felt true.
The Big One's breath was fogging up the glass. But The Thief noticed it. There were too many shapes in the reflection. There were three of them left. So why were there four figures in the glass?
He looked back. Only three reflections now. The extra one was gone.
The Other Man: ERASED — No subjects retain memory of departure
The Woman: PENDING
The Big One: PENDING
The Thief: ACTIVE — Memory integrity: 34% and declining
Warning: Architectural erasure accelerating
Warning: Temporal coherence failing
The Woman was gone when he woke. The Big One stared at him.
There were two cups of coffee. There were only ever two cups of coffee.
The door creaked open. The wind howled outside. Then — The Thief blinked. The door was shut. The Big One was gone. No jacket on the chair. No footprints by the door. No second coffee cup. And there had never been anyone else.
The Thief sat at the table, staring at the empty chair across from him. His coffee had gone cold. Not that it mattered. He wasn't sure if he had ever made it.
The house felt different now. Not just empty. Hollow. The walls seemed bare. The furniture was all wrong. Had the wallpaper always been that color? Had the couch always been there?
Had he?
Outside, the snow stretched on forever. No road. No trees. No sky. Just white. There was nothing beyond this house. Nothing at all.
And when he looked down at his hands — for a split second — he could see through them.
His breath hitched. His fingers traced the letters. The scratches were shallow, messy. Desperate. Like someone had carved them in a hurry — before it was too late.
The handwriting was his own.
The Thief stumbled away from the wall, breath ragged. The walls felt thinner now. Like they weren't real. Like they were just waiting to vanish.
The furniture was wrong. The fireplace — missing. The door to the kitchen — gone. It was happening. The house was erasing itself. And he was next.
He turned toward the door. He had to get out.
The knob was cold under his fingers. He took a breath and threw the door open.
The snow blinded him. The wind roared, but it didn't feel real. The sky — not a sky at all. Just a blank, white expanse, stretching forever. No road. No tracks. No proof anyone had ever been here.
He took a step. The snow didn't crunch beneath his boots. He looked down. No footprints.
He turned back toward the house. His breath caught. The house was wrong. Fainter. Like a mirage flickering in the storm. He could see through it. Through the walls. Through the windows. Through himself.
The house wasn't real. It never had been. And neither had he.
The house was gone. The Thief stood in the snow, staring at the empty space where it had been.
His fingers curled into fists. He wouldn't let this happen. He looked down. His hands were fading. No blood. No pain. Just… vanishing.
He had no name. No past. No future. Just this moment, slipping through his fingers. His vision blurred. The storm swallowed everything. The snow wasn't snow. It was the end of everything.
And then — nothing.
The wind howled. The snow settled.
And in the distance — a house. Old. Quiet. Waiting. No tracks in the snow. No car in the driveway. An empty house.
And a figure in the storm, stumbling forward.
The Thief's breath came fast, clouding in the air. He pulled his coat tighter, his fingers stiff from the cold. His boots left no footprints as he moved.
He reached the porch. The door loomed in front of him. For a second, he hesitated. Something in his gut twisted. Like a whisper. Like a warning. Then it was gone.
He reached for the doorknob. And the door creaked open.
Project Code: WHITEOUT
Status: Active Loop | Subject: Undesignated
The subject has no name. That is by design. The loop does not require identity — only momentum. Each cycle, memory degrades further. The house loses one more feature. The companions fade one by one. By the time the subject finds the warning on the wall, there is not enough of them left to act on it.
They always open the door anyway.
[END TRANSMISSION]
