Before Elias could reach for the power switch, the pixels of the wallpaper began to ripple. The blackness of space on his screen began to bleed outward, pouring over the silver bezels of his monitor like a thick, digital liquid. He stumbled back, his chair clattering to the floor.

He moved the mouse cursor across the pristine grid of desktop icons. His desktop background was a void of absolute nothingness. It was a high-resolution, 2560x1600 solid black wallpaper.

Elias smiled. He had spent his life searching for lost data. Now, he was standing inside of it. He reached out and clicked the floating icon for his web browser, watching as a glowing portal to the internet opened up in the middle of his living room.

He leaned in closer. The Aero glass transparency of his window borders was refracting light that seemed to be coming from the wallpaper. It was impossible. A bitmap image couldn't interact with the operating system UI like that.

He moved a desktop shortcut for a recovery tool. The shadow followed it.

The transition was instant. The solid black void that had occupied his 2560x1600 display for five years was gone. In its place was a mesmerizing, ultra-high-definition photograph of a star system he didn't recognize. The depth of the blackness between the stars was even deeper than his previous wallpaper, making the distant, swirling nebulae look like glowing paint on glass.

He looked back at his monitor. The screen was no longer a piece of hardware. It was a literal window, a 2560x1600 tear in the fabric of his reality, looking out into the endless, silent expanse of a universe waiting to be archived.

Curiosity getting the better of him, Elias right-clicked the file and hit set as desktop background.

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