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Redundancy Error
James Bryron Love (Author) · Independently published · Paperback
Morrison Street becomes the first detected point of failure in what the theoretical physicists later describe as a coherence collapse event, although when Detective James Calloway arrives at a sealed apartment where a man has been found dead under unexplainable circumstances, there is no language available in law enforcement or forensic science that can account for what the evidence is already beginning to imply.
The body is intact, unmarked, and consistent with natural death only in the narrowest biological sense, yet the identity attached to it has already been registered as deceased in an unrelated jurisdiction under independently verified conditions that leave no room for clerical duplication or procedural error. When both records are cross-referenced, they do not conflict in a way that suggests misinformation; instead, they describe two physically distinct outcomes occupying the same causal identity.
Within hours, the anomaly repeats.
Additional confirmations emerge across separate locations, each producing a physically real instance of the same individual, each with identical biometric signatures that resist statistical divergence, and each existing in violation of every known constraint governing singular identity continuity within spacetime-bound systems.
As containment escalates beyond municipal control and federal oversight transitions into classified observation protocols, Calloway is assigned to work alongside forensic systems analyst Dr. Michelle Watson and quantum field physicist Dr. Nathan Cole, both of whom begin to interpret the phenomenon not as duplication in the traditional sense, but as a convergence artifact arising from instability across overlapping probabilistic state layers.
What they begin to map is not a crime pattern, but a structural event in which multiple coherent instances of the same human life are being forcibly collapsed into a single observable reality, with Morrison Street functioning as the first measurable intersection point of a much larger system-wide correction process.
At the center of the collapse remains Douglas Kenner, an otherwise unremarkable civilian whose continued biological existence is now statistically incompatible with the number of confirmed physical instantiations of his identity, suggesting that the anomaly is not producing copies at random, but resolving something fundamental about how identity persists across branching realities.
As the correction accelerates, Calloway is forced to confront the emerging possibility that reality is not breaking in a chaotic sense, but executing a targeted reconciliation of impossible states, and that what is being removed is not evidence of a crime, but redundancy within the fabric of existence itself.
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