Floor44 -

In the center of the grove sat a desk. On it was a single rotary phone and a file labeled with his own name. Elias approached, his boots crunching on dry leaves. He opened the folder to find every "lost" item of his life: a wedding ring he’d dropped in 1998, a childhood marble, and the keys to a car he’d sold decades ago. The phone rang. He picked it up.

"Floor 44," a voice whispered—his own voice, but younger, happier. "You’re finally on time for the shift that matters." Floor44

The digital display flickered, the red numbers blurring until they settled on a sharp, impossible . When the doors slid open, there was no marble or mahogany. Instead, Elias stepped out into a forest—or at least, a room that had forgotten it was a room. Oak trees burst through the floor tiles, their branches weaving into the ceiling’s fluorescent grid. In the center of the grove sat a desk

Elias looked back, but the elevator was gone. In its place was a window looking out not over the city, but over a version of his life where he’d never stopped dreaming. He took a seat at the desk, picked up the pen, and began to write the rest of his story. He opened the folder to find every "lost"

One Tuesday, at exactly 3:44 AM, the elevator didn't stop at the lobby. It kept sinking.

The elevator in the Mercury Plaza only went to 43. Everyone knew that. It was a sleek, glass-and-steel monolith where lawyers and tech moguls spent their days chasing the horizon. Elias, the night janitor, had mopped those 43 floors for twelve years.