Between the Layers is a compiled archival dossier documenting a series of escalating anomalies that begin as minor spatial inconsistencies and evolve into a full collapse of consensus reality. Framed as classified case files, field reports, and recovered transmissions, the book chronicles the slow dissolution of the boundary between observer and observed.
At its surface, the narrative follows investigators attempting to catalog "interdimensional intrusions"-events where rooms shift size, time fractures into loops, and identical individuals appear simultaneously in multiple locations. Early reports treat these phenomena as isolated anomalies, but each case reveals deeper systemic instability.
As the archive expands, the investigators discover that reality itself is not breaking-it is responding. Physical spaces become layered with alternate configurations, time ceases to progress uniformly, and identity fragments into multiplicity states. Communication systems begin returning messages that appear to anticipate interpretation, suggesting that information is not transmitted but generated through observation.