Under The Witch -v2025-01-10- — -numericgazer-
Central to the piece is the titular figure, "the witch," who is less a person than an axis. She is defined by calibrations: the number of candles, the exact hour of low tide, the tallying of names. These quantifications function as ritual and as worldbuilding. They conjure a witch whose power is proportional to enumeration — a modern sorceress for whom algorithms are charms and datasets are grimoire. This is an evocative formal choice: magic reframed as computation, superstition transposed into statistics. The result is eerie and timely, reflecting contemporary anxieties about what is gained and lost when the world is reduced to metrics.
The work's temporal logic is nonstandard. Dates, revision tags, and version-like markers scatter the text, so chronology feels modeled rather than lived. Time is presented as a sequence of releases: updates to ritual, incremental calibrations of power. That structure mirrors how certain contemporary creative practices (software, collaborative docs, iterative art) treat authorship and authority. It also undercuts sentimental continuity: characters and places shift as if in different commits, making attachment difficult but sharpening intellectual curiosity. Under the Witch -v2025-01-10- -NumericGazer-
Tone is chilly but not arid. Beneath the formal restraint there's a steady thrum of longing — for meaning in a world of data, for the stubbornly human anomalies that refuse to resolve into tidy patterns. The witch's counting is at once a tool of control and a defense against loneliness; numbers become conversation, a way to keep a collapsing universe legible. The piece thereby poses an ethical question: can quantification be a genuine substitute for human connection, or is it a brittle simulacrum that ultimately amplifies isolation? Central to the piece is the titular figure,
Under the Witch is an uneasy hymn to arithmetic and atmosphere: a short, brittle work (the suffix -v2025-01-10- hints at a precise build or revision date) that trades traditional narrative warmth for the cool geometry of numbers. Tagged "NumericGazer," it announces its priorities up front — observation, pattern, and the uncanny arithmetic human minds impose on the world — and then proceeds to test whether that posture can sustain feeling. They conjure a witch whose power is proportional