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The Author Who Wrote People Out of Existence

His words weren’t fiction — they were revision.

By GoldenSpeechPublished 3 months ago 1 min read

Henry Vale’s novels always ended the same way — with one character erased from memory entirely. Readers adored the eerie realism. Until people noticed something strange: the names he used matched real, living people.

At first, it seemed coincidence. Then one woman — a journalist who’d criticized his work — was reported missing. When police searched her apartment, they found a first edition of Henry’s latest book on her nightstand. Her name had been blacked out in every copy.

Henry was arrested, his manuscripts seized. Inside his typewriter was a half-finished page:

“To unwrite a soul, you must believe they never were.”

The paper was blank by morning.

Years later, a new novel appeared online under his pen name — The Reader. It ends mid-sentence, with the line:

“I can see you now, reading.”

After that, several readers claimed they started forgetting things — names, faces, even their own handwriting.

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GoldenSpeech

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