Slowly, Elias turned around. His small apartment was gone. In its place was a windowless room, a camera on a tripod, and a shimmering green sky visible through a "seam" in the air where his bookshelf used to be.
The video cut to black. The fans on Elias’s computer began to hum at a deafening pitch. Download VID 20220106162544 mp4
The man in the video continued, "They’re going to tell you the 'Static Event' was a solar flare. They’re going to tell you the people who vanished just wandered off in the confusion. Don't believe them. I’m filming this because I found the seam. If you look at the reflection in my glasses, you can see it too." Slowly, Elias turned around
The file was titled —the kind of generic, alphanumeric string generated by a smartphone's camera on a cold Thursday in January. To Elias, a digital archivist, it was just another corrupted fragment in a sea of "unrecoverable" data from a salvaged hard drive. The video cut to black
"It's January 6th, 2022," the man in the video said. His voice was steady, but his eyes were wide with a frantic sort of clarity. "If you’re watching this, the timestamp on the file says I recorded this four years ago. But for me, it’s only been ten minutes since the sky turned green."