CHAPTER ONE — INCIDENT REPORT: BOOM EVENT 87‑A
Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: Restricted to MPE Command Tier Date: 14 March, 2002 Prepared by: Analyst R. Halden Status: Active Case File
SECTION 1 — WAVE READER EVENT SUMMARY
00:14:03 — A boom registered on the primary wave reader stationed at Site‑9. Amplitude: High Signature: Unstable Source: Subject 87
This marks the third recorded boom associated with Subject 87 since her placement outside familial custody. The event was strong enough to trigger automatic lockdown protocols in three adjoining facilities.
The reader’s waveform displayed the same distortion pattern previously associated with Subject 56, confirming genetic linkage.
SECTION 2 — HISTORICAL CONTEXT: SUBJECT 56
Subject 56 (maternal origin of 87) was first identified after generating a boom that caused widespread misfortune among civilians within a 2‑kilometer radius. The pattern included:
- Sudden illnesses
- Mechanical failures
- Accidents
- Behavioural anomalies
Following the event, Subject 56 was abducted and placed in medical confinement for testing. She was chipped, drugged, and monitored continuously. Upon release, she was warned that any further use of her abilities would result in permanent detainment.
Weekly reports on 56’s condition continue.
Subject 87 was shown footage of 56’s confinement during her awakening phase as a deterrent.
20Please respect copyright.PENANACNfGQcMNRd
SECTION 3 — CURRENT STATUS OF SUBJECT 87
Subject 87 was placed with a surrogate family under strict behavioural conditioning:
- Church attendance
- Piano lessons
- Girl Guides
- Curated media exposure
- No occult or magical content
- Limited sci‑fi (approved titles only)
This conditioning is part of the World Program, an occult‑based reality‑shaping initiative utilized by high‑tier global actors.
Despite conditioning, 87 continues to show signs of destabilization.
SECTION 4 — NIGHT TERRORS
From ages 2 to 7, Subject 87 experienced recurring night terrors engineered by the Program. Symptoms included:
- Screaming
- Sleep paralysis
- Hallucinations
- Physical illness
- Cognitive disruption
Medical interventions included removal of tonsils and adenoids, followed by implantation of a tracking chip.
SECTION 5 — FIRST BOOM EVENT
At approximately 8 years old, Subject 87 generated her first boom. Consequences:
- Primary caretaker suffered a severe vehicular crash.
- Non‑fatal
- Vehicle totalled
- Classified as “warning strike”
- Secondary casualty (identity redacted) required for process facilitation.
Following the event, Subject 87 was taken to medical personnel who prescribed suppression drugs.
SECTION 6 — BEHAVIORAL OBSERVATIONS
Subject 87 displays:
- High emotional sensitivity
- Rapid cognitive processing
- Social rejection by peers
- Early signs of reality‑perception anomalies
- Latent ability activation under stress
Her caretakers have reported difficulty maintaining control.
SECTION 7 — RECOMMENDATIONS
- Increase surveillance
- Reinforce suppression protocols
- Prepare contingency for full awakening
- Review Subject 56’s historical data for predictive modelling
- Consider facility placement if instability escalates
END OF REPORT
Filed: 00:47:19 Status: Active Monitoring Required
INTERLUDE — 87’S PERSONAL ACCOUNT
(Handwritten pages recovered from Subject 87’s belongings during Facility Intake)
I don’t remember the boom the way they do.
They talk about numbers and amplitudes and signatures. They talk about danger. They talk about control.
But I remember the feeling.
It was like something inside me cracked open — not broken, but revealed. Like a door I didn’t know existed swung wide, and the world rushed in.
I remember the caretaker screaming. I remember the sound of metal folding. I remember the way the air felt heavy, like it was watching me.
I didn’t mean to hurt anyone.
I didn’t even know I could.
But they knew. They always knew.
They knew before I was born.
They knew when they took my mother. They knew when they chipped me. They knew when they fed me pills that made my head feel like fog.
They knew.
And now I know too.
CHAPTER TWO — CONFINEMENT FILE: SUBJECT 56
Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: MPE Command Tier Only Date Range Covered: 1984–1996 Compiled by: Senior Archivist L. Varrin Status: Sealed Record — Access Requires Dual Authorization
SECTION 1 — INITIAL DETAINMENT REPORT
Date: 3 September 1984 Location: St. Harrow Medical Containment Unit Subject: 56 (Maternal Origin of Subject 87)
Summary: Subject 56 was apprehended following a high‑amplitude boom event that resulted in:
- 14 civilian injuries
- 3 vehicular collisions
- 1 structural collapse
- 27 documented “misfortune anomalies” within a 2‑kilometer radius
The boom signature matched no known pattern at the time. The event was initially classified as Act of God until wave reader technology was refined enough to retroactively identify it as a Type‑III Reality Distortion.
Subject 56 was taken into custody under emergency protocol.
SECTION 2 — MEDICAL CONFINEMENT LOGS
Excerpt — Physician’s Note (Redacted):
“Subject displays involuntary reality‑warping responses triggered by emotional distress. Her presence correlates with statistically impossible clusters of misfortune. We have sedated her to prevent further destabilization.”
Excerpt — Behavioural Observation:
“Subject repeatedly asks for her child. She does not appear to understand why she is here. She insists she has done nothing wrong.”
Excerpt — Internal Memo:
“56’s abilities appear hereditary. Containment is mandatory. Her offspring must be monitored from birth.”
SECTION 3 — CHIP IMPLANTATION PROCEDURE
Date: 12 September 1984 Procedure: Subdermal tracking chip implanted at base of cervical spine. Purpose:
- Monitor movement
- Track emotional spikes
- Detect micro‑booms
- Prevent escape
Side Effects:
- Migraines
- Nausea
- Temporary paralysis
- Memory fragmentation
Subject 56 was informed that removal of the chip would result in immediate termination.
SECTION 4 — PSYCHOLOGICAL EVALUATION
Evaluator: Dr. H. Renwick Summary: Subject 56 exhibits:
- High empathy
- Elevated emotional resonance
- Untrained reality‑distortion capability
- No malicious intent
- Extreme fear of harming others
Evaluator’s note:
“She is not dangerous by choice. She is dangerous by nature.”
SECTION 5 — RELEASE CONDITIONS
After 18 months of confinement, Subject 56 was released under the following conditions:
- Permanent surveillance
- Weekly psychological reports
- Mandatory sedation regimen
- Zero tolerance for ability activation
- Immediate re‑detainment if anomalies occur
Subject 56 complied.
She had no choice.
SECTION 6 — RELEVANCE TO SUBJECT 87
Subject 87 was shown footage of 56’s confinement during her awakening phase. Purpose:
- Instill fear
- Ensure compliance
- Prevent rebellion
- Reinforce the consequences of disobedience
Analyst note:
“87’s reaction was not fear. It was recognition.”
INTERLUDE — PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF SUBJECT 87
(Recovered from a notebook hidden beneath a mattress during Facility Intake)
They showed me my mother like she was a monster.
They played the footage on a small screen in a room with no windows. A woman strapped to a bed. A woman begging them to stop. A woman crying for a child she wasn’t allowed to see.
They told me:
“This is what happens when people like you disobey.”
But I didn’t see a monster.
I saw a woman who was terrified. I saw a woman who didn’t understand why the world was punishing her. I saw a woman who looked like me.
They wanted me to be afraid of her.
CHAPTER THREE — PLACEMENT FILE: SUBJECT 87
Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: MPE Command Tier Only Date Range Covered: 1994–2002 Compiled by: Senior Caseworker M. Darrin Status: Active — Subject Unstable
SECTION 1 — PLACEMENT DIRECTIVE
Directive Code: WP‑87‑P Issued By: World Program Oversight Council Date: 14 May 1994
Subject 87 was placed into the custody of a pre‑approved surrogate family. Selection criteria included:
- High compliance with religious doctrine
- No history of occult interest
- Strong preference for traditional discipline
- Low emotional volatility
- High tolerance for government oversight
The family was instructed to provide:
- Annual birthday photographs
- Medical checkup reports
- Behavioural assessments
- Church attendance logs
- Piano lesson progress sheets
- Girl Guide participation records
All documentation was to be submitted to the MPE Youth Division.
SECTION 2 — BEHAVIORAL CONDITIONING PROTOCOL
The surrogate family was given a curated list of acceptable media:
- Approved:
- Religious programming
- Classical music
- Educational television
- Select sci‑fi (SG‑1 permitted due to embedded conditioning signals)
- Prohibited:
- Fantasy
- Occult themes
- Magic
- Horror
- Any media containing symbolic resonance patterns
The World Program embedded subliminal soundwaves into approved content to reinforce compliance.
Analyst Note: “Subject 87 responded inconsistently to conditioning. She absorbed the signals but did not internalize them.”
SECTION 3 — EARLY BEHAVIORAL OBSERVATIONS
Age 5–7: Subject displayed:
- High emotional sensitivity
- Unusual perceptiveness
- Aversion to authority
- Difficulty forming peer relationships
- Recurrent nightmares (engineered)
Age 7–8: Subject began showing signs of latent ability activation:
- Sudden mood shifts
- Environmental anomalies
- Minor misfortune clusters
- Increased hostility from peers
Peers instinctively recognized her difference. This is consistent with Type‑III Resonance Children.
SECTION 4 — NIGHT TERRORS: ENGINEERED SEQUENCE
Night terrors were introduced to destabilize Subject 87’s emotional core and suppress early awakening.
Symptoms included:
- Screaming
- Sleep paralysis
- Hallucinations
- Fever spikes
- Respiratory distress
- Cognitive fragmentation
Medical intervention included removal of tonsils and adenoids, followed by chip implantation.
Purpose of Chip:
- Track location
- Monitor emotional spikes
- Detect micro‑booms
- Prevent escape
SECTION 5 — SOCIAL ISOLATION EFFECTS
Subject 87 was ostracized by peers immediately upon entering school.
Documented incidents:
- Exclusion from group activities
- Mockery
- Physical avoidance
- Reports of “strange feelings” around her
- Teachers noting “unsettling intuition” from other children
Analyst Note: “Children are highly sensitive to resonance anomalies. Their rejection of 87 is instinctive, not learned.”
SECTION 6 — CARETAKER REPORTS
By age 10, caretakers reported:
- Difficulty enforcing discipline
- Emotional unpredictability
- Increasing resistance to conditioning
- Episodes of “knowing things she shouldn’t know”
- Unexplained accidents around the home
Caretakers requested reassignment.
SECTION 7 — RELOCATION ORDER
Subject 87 was moved back to her hometown under government supervision.
Backup caretakers (blood relatives) were assigned temporary custody.
They reported:
- Immediate dislike of the subject
- Discomfort in her presence
- Fear of emotional outbursts
- Inability to bond
Government determined that familial placement was ineffective.
SECTION 8 — FACILITY TRANSFER
Subject 87 was transferred to the MPE Youth Facility for monitoring.
Purpose:
- Contain instability
- Prevent awakening
- Evaluate ability progression
- Prepare for long‑term containment if necessary
INTERLUDE — PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF SUBJECT 87
(Recovered from a torn notebook page found in Facility Dormitory C‑12)
They told me the family was chosen for me.
Chosen like a dress. Chosen like a book. Chosen like a cage.
They said it was for my own good. That I needed structure. That I needed discipline. That I needed God.
But what I needed was someone who didn’t look at me like I was a storm waiting to happen.
I learned to play piano with hands that shook. I learned to smile when I felt sick. I learned to sit still when my skin felt like it was crawling off my bones.
I learned to be what they wanted.
But I never learned to be theirs.
CHAPTER FOUR — THE WORLD PROGRAM
Internal Manual Extracts — Restricted Circulation Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: World Program High Council, MPE Command Tier Compiled by: Archivist S. Korrin Status: Active — Do Not Reproduce
SECTION 1 — ORIGIN OF THE WORLD PROGRAM
Document Type: Foundational Doctrine Year of Creation: 1958 Author: High Council (Names Redacted)
The World Program began as a covert initiative designed to influence global populations through soundwave manipulation, symbolic resonance, and embedded visual cues within mass media.
Its founding principle:
“Reality is pliable. Minds are the hands that shape it.”
The Program was adopted by:
- Billionaires
- High‑ranking political figures
- Religious leaders
- Intelligence agencies
- Select corporate entities
Its purpose was not entertainment. It was control.
SECTION 2 — OCCULT FRAMEWORK
Document Type: Esoteric Reference Guide Status: Highly Restricted
The Program’s foundation is not technological alone. It is occult.
The system draws from:
- Ancient resonance practices
- Forbidden symbolic languages
- Ritualistic sound patterns
- Archetypal manipulation
- Collective unconscious theory
- Early reality‑bending experiments (pre‑digital)
These elements were merged with modern media to create a global conditioning lattice.
Excerpt — Redacted Ritual Note:
“Symbols are seeds. Sound is soil. Minds are the garden.”
SECTION 3 — MEDIA INTEGRATION
Document Type: Operational Manual Status: Active
The Program embeds resonance signals into:
- Television
- Music
- Films
- Advertisements
- Video games
- Children’s programming
- Religious broadcasts
- News cycles
- Product branding
- Social media algorithms
Signals include:
- Subliminal tones
- Frequency distortions
- Pattern repetition
- Archetypal triggers
- Emotional anchors
- Reality‑warp cues
These signals are designed to:
- Influence behavior
- Suppress awakening
- Reinforce compliance
- Direct public emotion
- Shape collective perception
- Mask anomalies caused by Subjects like 56 and 87
SECTION 4 — CHILD CONDITIONING PROTOCOL
Document Type: Youth Division Handbook Status: Active
Children with latent resonance abilities are placed into environments saturated with Program‑approved media.
Purpose:
- Prevent early awakening
- Limit emotional volatility
- Shape identity
- Restrict imagination
- Reinforce “normalcy”
- Suppress reality‑distortion capability
Approved content includes:
- Religious doctrine
- Classical music
- Educational programming
- Select sci‑fi containing embedded suppression signals
Excerpt — Conditioning Note:
“Fantasy breeds possibility. Possibility breeds awakening. Awakening breeds instability.”
Thus, fantasy is prohibited.
SECTION 5 — SUBJECT 87: SPECIAL DIRECTIVE
Document Type: High Council Order Status: Omega‑Black
Subject 87 was identified as a Type‑III Resonance Child, capable of:
- High‑amplitude booms
- Emotion-triggered reality shifts
- Unpredictable distortion patterns
- Genetic inheritance of maternal abilities
- Potential escalation to Type‑IV (catastrophic)
Special directives included:
- Strict media control
- Emotional suppression
- Social isolation reinforcement
- Religious behavioural conditioning
- Exposure to controlled symbolic cues
- Monitoring for early awakening signs
Despite these measures, Subject 87 showed resistance.
Analyst Note:
“She absorbs signals but does not bend to them. She is not compliant. She is observant.”
SECTION 6 — PROGRAM FAILURE INDICATORS
Document Type: Emergency Protocol Status: Active
Indicators that a child is resisting conditioning:
- Persistent nightmares
- Illness clusters
- Peer rejection
- Emotional unpredictability
- Unexplained accidents
- Early boom events
- Curiosity about forbidden subjects
- Recognition of symbolic patterns
- Awareness of subliminal cues
Subject 87 displayed all indicators.
SECTION 7 — RECOMMENDATION FOR ESCALATION
Document Type: High Council Memo Status: Approved
Due to Subject 87’s resistance, the Council recommended:
- Increased surveillance
- Enhanced suppression signals
- Relocation
- Facility placement
- Psychological destabilization
- Controlled trauma exposure
- Introduction of engineered relationships
- Long‑term monitoring for awakening
INTERLUDE — PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF SUBJECT 87
(Recovered from a folded sheet hidden inside a piano bench)
They thought the world they built would keep me asleep.
They thought the songs, the shows, the lessons, the sermons — all of it — would shape me into something small. Something quiet. Something obedient.
But I always felt the hum beneath the music. The pulse behind the pictures. The whisper inside the words.
I didn’t know what it meant. Not then.
But I knew it wasn’t real.
I knew the world they gave me was a mask. And I knew something was underneath it, waiting.
Not for them.
For me.
CHAPTER FIVE — ENGINEERED NIGHT TERRORS
Medical & Occult Documentation Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: MPE Medical Division, World Program Occult Research Wing Compiled by: Dr. E. Halstrom & Occult Specialist R. Veylan Status: Active — Cross‑Division Review Required
SECTION 1 — PURPOSE OF NIGHT TERROR INDUCTION
**Document## CHAPTER FIVE — ENGINEERED NIGHT TERRORS Medical & Occult Documentation Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: MPE Medical Division, World Program Occult Research Wing Compiled by: Dr. E. Halstrom & Occult Specialist V. Mareth Status: Active — Cross‑Division Review Required
SECTION 1 — INTRODUCTION TO ENGINEERED NIGHT TERRORS
Document Type: Joint Medical–Occult Protocol Date of Implementation: 1996 Subject: 87 (Type‑III Resonance Child)
Engineered night terrors are a controlled destabilization method used on resonance‑capable children to:
- Suppress early awakening
- Fragment emotional development
- Disrupt intuitive perception
- Reinforce dependency on authority
- Prevent uncontrolled boom events
Subject 87 was enrolled in the protocol at age 2.
SECTION 2 — NIGHT TERROR SEQUENCE DESIGN
Document Type: Occult Pattern Blueprint Status: Restricted to Ritual Engineering Team
Night terrors were constructed using a combination of:
- Subliminal soundwave pulses
- Symbolic dream implants
- Archetypal fear triggers
- Emotional resonance dampeners
- Sleep‑cycle manipulation
- Environmental distortion cues
Each nightmare followed the same structure:
- The Corridor
- The Shadow
- The Collapse
- The Voice
- The Awakening Pain
These elements were chosen for their ability to:
- Induce fear
- Create helplessness
- Reinforce compliance
- Prevent intuitive exploration
- Block resonance pathways
Occult Specialist Note: “The repetition is essential. Repetition creates grooves. Grooves become cages.”
SECTION 3 — MEDICAL OBSERVATION LOGS
Age Range: 2–7 Facility: MPE Pediatric Monitoring Unit
Symptoms Documented:
- Screaming fits
- Sleep paralysis
- Hallucinations
- Fever spikes
- Vomiting
- Respiratory distress
- Cognitive fragmentation
- Memory gaps
- Emotional instability
Excerpt — Physician’s Note:
“Subject 87’s nightmares are unusually intense. She appears to perceive elements beyond the engineered sequence.”
Excerpt — Behavioural Report:
“Subject wakes with knowledge she should not possess. She describes symbols accurately despite never being exposed to them.”
SECTION 4 — OCCULT RESPONSE ANALYSIS
Document Type: Resonance Evaluation Status: Critical
Subject 87’s reactions indicate:
- Partial resistance to symbolic implants
- Ability to perceive hidden layers of dream architecture
- Early recognition of archetypal patterns
- Emotional resonance amplification
- Unintended reality‑distortion bleedthrough
Occult Specialist Note:
“She does not simply dream the sequence. She interacts with it.”
This is consistent with Type‑III resonance children who possess:
- High intuitive perception
- Natural symbolic fluency
- Untrained reality‑bending capability
SECTION 5 — MEDICAL INTERVENTION: TONSIL & ADENOID REMOVAL
Date: 11 August 1999 Procedure: Tonsillectomy & Adenoidectomy Purpose:
- Reduce frequency of fever spikes
- Limit respiratory distress
- Create access point for chip implantation
Side Effects:
- Pain
- Infection risk
- Emotional trauma
- Increased susceptibility to engineered illness cycles
SECTION 6 — CHIP IMPLANTATION
Date: 12 August 1999 Location: Cervical spine Purpose:
- Track subject location
- Monitor emotional spikes
- Detect micro‑booms
- Prevent escape
- Interfere with resonance pathways
Analyst Note: “Chip interference reduces boom amplitude by 12–18%. Insufficient for full suppression.”
SECTION 7 — NIGHT TERROR TERMINATION ORDER
Date: 2001 Reason: Subject 87’s nightmares began producing unpredictable distortion patterns detectable on the wave reader.
Termination was ordered to prevent:
- Accidental boom events
- Emotional awakening
- Symbolic breakthrough
- Reality‑warp incidents
Night terrors ceased at age 7.
INTERLUDE — PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF SUBJECT 87
(Recovered from a crumpled page found inside a school notebook)
I remember the corridor.
I remember the way the walls breathed. I remember the shadow that followed me but never touched me. I remember the collapse — the floor falling away like it was made of paper. I remember the voice that wasn’t a voice, whispering things I didn’t understand but somehow already knew.
I remember waking up with my throat burning. I remember the fever. I remember the way the room looked wrong, like the nightmare had followed me out.
They said it was just dreams.
But dreams don’t leave marks. Dreams don’t make the air feel heavy. Dreams don’t make you wake up knowing things you shouldn’t know.
Dreams don’t watch you.
CHAPTER SIX — THE FIRST BOOM
Incident Reconstruction & Witness Accounts Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: MPE Field Division, Resonance Analysis Unit Compiled by: Lead Investigator T. Marrow Status: Closed — Catastrophic Potential
SECTION 1 — EVENT OVERVIEW
Date: 17 October 2002 Location: Residential Zone 4B Subject: 87 (Age: ~8 years)
At approximately 14:32, a high‑amplitude boom was detected on the Site‑9 wave reader. This was the first recorded boom generated directly by Subject 87.
The event produced:
- A vehicular collision involving the primary caretaker
- One secondary casualty (identity redacted)
- A localized distortion field lasting 4.7 seconds
- A measurable drop in ambient resonance stability across a 3‑block radius
This incident marked the beginning of Subject 87’s active reality‑distortion phase.
SECTION 2 — WAVE READER DATA
Document Type: Technical Analysis Status: Verified
Amplitude: High Duration: 0.8 seconds Signature: Unstable, multi‑layered Pattern: Partial match to Subject 56’s 1984 boom
Analyst Note: “The waveform contains elements not present in 56’s signature. This suggests mutation or evolution of the ability.”
SECTION 3 — PRIMARY CARETAKER INCIDENT REPORT
Document Type: Civilian Testimony Status: Redacted
Witness: Surrogate Caretaker (Female, Age 42) Condition: Non‑fatal injuries; psychological distress
Excerpt — Interview Transcript:
“I was driving home. Nothing unusual. Then everything went wrong at once. The brakes failed. The steering locked. The car felt like it wasn’t touching the road anymore.”
“I don’t remember hitting anything. I just remember the sound — like the world snapped.”
“When I woke up, the car was destroyed. But I wasn’t. It felt like… a warning.”
Caretaker refused to drive again following the incident.
SECTION 4 — SECONDARY CASUALTY REPORT
Document Type: Internal MPE File Status: Fully Redacted
A second individual was affected by the boom. Details withheld under Omega‑Black protocol.
Analyst Note: “Casualty was necessary for process facilitation.”
No further explanation provided.
SECTION 5 — ENVIRONMENTAL DISTORTION ANALYSIS
Document Type: Resonance Field Report Status: Confirmed
The boom produced a distortion field detectable through:
- Sudden temperature drop
- Electrical interference
- Pressure fluctuations
- Visual anomalies reported by two civilians
- A 4.7‑second resonance echo
Excerpt — Civilian Statement:
“The air felt wrong. Like it was bending.”
SECTION 6 — SUBJECT 87 BEHAVIORAL RESPONSE
Document Type: Post‑Event Observation Status: Critical
Following the boom, Subject 87 displayed:
- Confusion
- Emotional distress
- Heightened perception
- Increased sensitivity to environmental stimuli
- Signs of early awakening
Caretakers reported:
- “She knew something had happened.”
- “She kept asking if someone was hurt.”
- “She said she didn’t mean to do it.”
SECTION 7 — MEDICAL INTERVENTION
Document Type: Suppression Protocol Status: Completed
Subject 87 was taken to MPE‑affiliated medical personnel.
Prescribed:
- Cognitive dulling agents
- Emotional suppressants
- Anti‑resonance medication
Purpose:
- Reduce ability activation
- Prevent further boom events
- Stabilize emotional volatility
SECTION 8 — RELOCATION ORDER
Document Type: Youth Division Directive Status: Executed
Following the incident, Subject 87 was relocated to a new city.
She was given a choice:
- Remain with blood relatives
- Move with surrogate caretakers
Subject 87 chose the caretakers.
Analyst Note: “Choice was influenced by emotional conditioning. Subject associates caretakers with safety despite instability.”
INTERLUDE — PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF SUBJECT 87
(Recovered from a loose page found inside a school binder)
I didn’t know what I did.
I didn’t know the world could break like that. I didn’t know the air could twist. I didn’t know cars could move without touching the road. I didn’t know people could be hurt by something I didn’t understand.
I remember the sound. Not the crash — the boom.
It felt like something inside me opened and everything rushed out. Like a scream without a voice. Like a storm without wind.
I didn’t want to hurt her.
I didn’t want to hurt anyone.
But they looked at me differently after that. Like they were waiting for it to happen again. Like they were afraid.
And maybe I was afraid too.
Not of what happened.
But of what I might be.
20Please respect copyright.PENANASRPoixRZxb
20Please respect copyright.PENANA8ItGet32dQ
CHAPTER SEVEN — THE WARNING CRASH
Internal Reconstruction & Psychological Impact Assessment Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: MPE Field Division, Resonance Psychology Unit Compiled by: Lead Analyst J. Corven Status: Closed — Subject Response Logged
SECTION 1 — EVENT RECONSTRUCTION SUMMARY
Date: 17 October 2002 Location: Residential Zone 4B Subject: 87 (Age: ~8 years) Event Type: Boom‑Triggered Vehicular Catastrophe
This chapter reconstructs the crash involving Subject 87’s primary caretaker. The incident is classified as a Warning Strike, a phenomenon observed in early‑stage resonance children when emotional pressure triggers involuntary distortion.
The crash was not random. It was not mechanical failure. It was not environmental.
It was intentional resonance discharge.
SECTION 2 — VEHICLE FORENSICS REPORT
Document Type: Technical Reconstruction Filed By: MPE Automotive Analysis Team
Findings:
- Brake system: Fully functional
- Steering column: No mechanical fault
- Electrical system: Normal prior to event
- Tire condition: Intact
- Road conditions: Dry, clear
- Collision pattern: Inconsistent with driver error
Excerpt — Lead Mechanic Statement:
“The car didn’t crash because something broke. It crashed because something pushed.”
The vehicle’s trajectory indicates a sudden, external force applied at the moment of the boom.
SECTION 3 — RESONANCE FIELD ANALYSIS
Document Type: Wave Reader Correlation Filed By: Resonance Analysis Unit
The boom produced:
- A 0.8‑second distortion pulse
- A localized pressure spike
- A directional force vector aimed at the caretaker’s vehicle
- A secondary ripple affecting an unidentified individual (redacted)
The force vector was non‑lethal by design.
Analyst Note: “Subject 87’s boom displayed selective targeting. This suggests early instinctive control.”
SECTION 4 — CARETAKER PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT
Document Type: Post‑Incident Evaluation Filed By: MPE Civilian Liaison
Caretaker exhibited:
- Acute stress response
- Persistent fear of driving
- Nightmares involving “invisible force”
- Heightened anxiety around Subject 87
- Avoidance behaviour
- Emotional withdrawal
Excerpt — Caretaker Interview:
“I don’t think she meant to hurt me. But something in her did.”
Caretaker refused to resume driving, citing “the feeling that the world could snap again.”
SECTION 5 — SECONDARY CASUALTY (REDACTED)
Document Type: Omega‑Black File Status: Fully Redacted
A second individual was affected by the boom. Identity, condition, and involvement remain sealed.
Analyst Note: “Casualty was necessary for resonance stabilization.”
No further details provided.
SECTION 6 — SUBJECT 87 POST‑EVENT OBSERVATION
Document Type: Behavioural Log Filed By: Surrogate Caretaker
Subject 87 displayed:
- Confusion
- Guilt
- Fear
- Heightened awareness
- Emotional withdrawal
- Increased sensitivity to caretaker distress
Caretaker reported:
- “She kept asking if I was hurt.”
- “She said she didn’t mean to do anything.”
- “She looked terrified of herself.”
SECTION 7 — MPE PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT
Document Type: Internal Evaluation Filed By: Resonance Psychology Unit
Subject 87’s emotional state post‑boom indicates:
- Early self‑awareness
- Recognition of cause‑and‑effect
- Fear of her own abilities
- Empathic distress
- High susceptibility to guilt conditioning
Evaluator Note: “Subject 87 is emotionally reactive. This makes her dangerous, but also controllable.”
SECTION 8 — LONG‑TERM IMPACT PROJECTION
Document Type: Predictive Modeling Filed By: MPE Behavioral Forecast Team
Projected outcomes if unaddressed:
- Increased emotional volatility
- Higher boom frequency
- Escalation to Type‑IV resonance
- Psychological fragmentation
- Potential awakening
Recommended interventions:
- Relocation
- Suppression medication
- Emotional destabilization
- Controlled trauma exposure
- Facility placement
All recommendations were approved.
INTERLUDE — PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF SUBJECT 87
(Recovered from a folded page hidden inside a coat pocket)
I remember her screaming my name.
I remember the way the car twisted, like it wasn’t metal anymore but something soft. I remember the sound — not the crash, but the boom. The boom that felt like it came from inside me.
I didn’t know I could do that. I didn’t know the world could bend because I was scared. I didn’t know fear could become force.
When they asked me what happened, I didn’t know what to say.
How do you tell someone you broke the world for a moment?
How do you tell someone you didn’t mean to?
How do you tell someone you’re afraid of yourself?
I didn’t want to hurt her.
But something in me did.
And I didn’t know how to stop it.
CHAPTER EIGHT — THE DULLING
Medical Suppression & Relocation Protocols Classification Level: Omega‑Black Distribution: MPE Medical Division, Youth Relocation Unit Compiled by: Dr. H. Renwick & Caseworker L. Sorrell Status: Active — Subject Exhibits Resistance
SECTION 1 — SUPPRESSION DIRECTIVE
Directive Code: SD‑87‑A Date Issued: 19 October 2002 Subject: 87 (Age: ~8 years)
Following the first boom and the Warning Crash, the MPE Council authorized immediate medical suppression. Primary goals:
- Reduce cognitive clarity
- Blunt emotional spikes
- Limit resonance activation
- Prevent further boom events
- Reinforce dependency on caretakers
Subject 87 was transported to an MPE‑affiliated medical office under civilian cover.
SECTION 2 — MEDICATION PROTOCOL
Document Type: Pharmaceutical Suppression Chart Status: Active
Subject 87 was prescribed:
1. Cognitive Dulling Agents Purpose: Reduce intuitive pattern recognition and symbolic processing.
2. Emotional Suppressants Purpose: Lower emotional amplitude to prevent resonance discharge.
3. Anti‑Resonance Medication Purpose: Interfere with neural pathways associated with reality distortion.
4. Behavioral Stabilizers Purpose: Increase compliance and reduce questioning.
Physician Note:
“Subject appears aware of the medication’s effects. She asks why she feels ‘foggy.’ Recommend increasing dosage.”
SECTION 3 — SUBJECT RESPONSE TO MEDICATION
Document Type: Behavioral Observation Filed By: Surrogate Caretaker
Caretaker reports:
- Increased lethargy
- Reduced curiosity
- Slower speech
- Emotional flattening
- Decreased appetite
- Occasional dissociation
- Episodes of staring into empty space
- Complaints of “heavy thoughts”
Caretaker note:
“She seems quieter. But not calmer. Like she’s holding something in.”
SECTION 4 — RELOCATION ORDER
Document Type: Youth Division Directive Status: Executed
Following the boom event, Subject 87 was relocated to a new city.
She was given a choice:
- Stay with blood relatives
- Move with surrogate caretakers
Subject 87 chose the caretakers.
Analyst Note: “Choice indicates emotional imprinting. Subject associates caretakers with stability despite trauma.”
Relocation goals:
- Reset social environment
- Reduce peer recognition of anomalies
- Increase control over daily routine
- Limit exposure to familiar symbolic triggers
- Reinforce isolation
SECTION 5 — NEW ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROLS
Document Type: Relocation Protocol Status: Active
Upon relocation, the following controls were implemented:
- New school with pre‑briefed staff
- Increased church attendance
- Additional piano lessons
- Restricted outdoor activity
- Curated social interactions
- Enhanced media filtering
- Weekly caretaker reports
- Monthly MPE evaluations
Caseworker Note:
“Subject’s new environment is compliant. However, she continues to display resistance.”
SECTION 6 — SOCIAL RESPONSE IN NEW CITY
Document Type: School Behavioural Log Status: Confirmed
Subject 87’s peers in the new city reacted similarly to those in her hometown:
- Immediate avoidance
- Whispering
- Exclusion
- Reports of “strange feelings” around her
- Teachers noting “unsettling intuition” from other children
Teacher Statement:
“She doesn’t do anything wrong. But the other kids act like she’s dangerous.”
This reaction is consistent with resonance sensitivity in children.
SECTION 7 — MPE INTERNAL ASSESSMENT
Document Type: Psychological Evaluation Filed By: Resonance Psychology Unit
Subject 87 exhibits:
- Emotional suppression
- Cognitive dulling
- Reduced outward expression
- Increased internalization
- Heightened sensitivity to environmental cues
- Early signs of dissociation
- Persistent awareness of being watched
Evaluator Note: “Subject is quiet, but not compliant. She is thinking more than she is speaking.”
SECTION 8 — LONG‑TERM SUPPRESSION PLAN
Document Type: High Council Strategy Status: Approved
Long‑term plan includes:
- Continued medication
- Increased emotional destabilization
- Controlled trauma exposure
- Social isolation reinforcement
- Facility placement if instability escalates
- Monitoring for awakening signs
INTERLUDE — PERSONAL ACCOUNT OF SUBJECT 87
(Recovered from a page torn from a diary hidden beneath a dresser)
The pills made everything slow.
Slow thoughts. Slow feelings. Slow days.
It felt like someone had put a blanket over my mind. Like I was underwater. Like I was watching myself from far away.
They said it was to help me. To calm me. To make things easier.
But it didn’t make anything easier.
It just made everything quiet.
Too quiet.
I could still feel the hum under the silence. The thing inside me that wasn’t asleep, no matter how many pills they gave me.
I didn’t know what it was. But I knew it wasn’t gone.
And I knew they were afraid of it.
20Please respect copyright.PENANA7bVpLGJHcw
20Please respect copyright.PENANA6dRnvlQhkH


