A progress bar appeared. 1%... 12%... 45%... The laptop grew cold, then hot. His vision swam. Memories peeled away like wallpaper: their argument in the grocery store (gone), her laugh at his terrible cooking (gone), the police report (gone).
Elias blinked. The laptop was warm again. The desktop was clean—no strange files, no old game icons. He stretched, feeling lighter. A text from his brother: “Dinner tonight? Just you. No ghosts.”
Elias stared at the corrupted file icon on his ancient laptop. . It wasn’t the game. He’d deleted The Elder Scrolls years ago.
This file had appeared three days ago. No source. No metadata. Just a 2.1 MB executable that renamed itself every midnight. Last night, it had been "regret_handler.dll." oblivion launcher exe
But this file… this file was different.
That was the point of oblivion, after all. Not destruction. Just the quiet, terrible mercy of not having to launch it one more time.
His therapist said the word "oblivion" was a trigger. Elias called it a hobby. After his wife, Mira, vanished—not left, not died, but vanished from every photo, lease, and memory except his—he’d started coding reality-checkers. Small scripts that searched for glitches. A face in a crowd that didn’t match any ID. A receipt for flowers he never bought. A progress bar appeared
The file remained. But he never looked for it again.
He typed "Y."
The screen didn't go black. It went quiet . The fan stopped. The hard drive ceased its arthritic clicking. Then text crawled across the terminal in a font that predated his OS: WARNING: This process will delete the current user timeline (2021–2026). All associated causality will be rerouted. Proceed? [Y/N] Elias’s hands shook. Mira vanished in 2023. If he could delete those years, re-route causality… would she be back? Would he even remember her? Would she remember him? Memories peeled away like wallpaper: their argument in
He closed the laptop, walked to the kitchen, and for the first time in three years, didn't check the empty chair.
He almost replied "What ghosts?" But something in his chest—a phantom ache where a laugh used to live—told him the answer.