
Elise Harlow
A spatial allocation officer responsible for determining whether a space should be recognized by the system. Her work concerns structure, access, and entry records—whether a space holds, whether it is permitted, whether it should remain. Most of the time, alignment is easy to confirm, until something appears without correspondence.
Adrian Voss
An unregistered presence. He appears in areas where allocation is incomplete or unstable, without triggering error and without fully entering the conditions that define them. No explanation follows him, and none is offered. Certain states persist when he is there.
Ethan Ward
A chiropractor, working through manual therapy and structural alignment. His work begins with description: where it catches, where it pulls, where movement stops. These are not conclusions, only points of entry. Judgment forms through contact, and is revised there again and again, until the body either gives way or refuses. Once the line is clear, movement becomes direct. He listens to what is felt, but trusts what can be confirmed.
Ryan Cole
A standard user with no advanced clearance and only a partial understanding of spatial allocation. Boundaries are not something he deliberately crosses. More often, they fail to appear where he happens to be. By the time entry is recognized, he is already inside. Not through intent, but through continuation.
Evan Hale
An external observer. He does not belong to the system, nor is he fully outside it in any stable sense. Position does not fully contain him, and time does not hold him in a single form. What enters his view is neither confirmed nor denied. It simply remains. There is no urgency in him to interpret, and none to intervene. Some things do not need to be recorded—he allows them to remain.





















