I was a physicist before the war. Associate Professor Oksana Kovalenko, Department of Theoretical Physics, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. That identity feels like archaeology now—lecture halls where I taught quantum mechanics to disinterested engineering students, chalk dust under my fingernails, the particular satisfaction of watching comprehension dawn on a young face when they finally grasped why wave-particle duality wasn't a contradiction but a deeper truth about reality itself.
Now I crouch in what remains of a nine-story panelka in the Kyivskyi district of Donetsk, my Kalashnikov resting against concrete that still bears the scorch marks from a Grad rocket that missed us by meters. The building's mathematical precision—identical windows spaced at regulation intervals, standardized balconies repeated in Soviet modules—has been rendered into chaos by war. Yet somehow, impossibly, the Fold has introduced a new kind of order into this destruction.
The Fold.
When it first manifested six months ago, those of us still fighting in the underground resistance cells initially dismissed it as propaganda—some elaborate Russian psyop designed to demoralize us with impossible visions. Ukraine sharing a direct border with Singapore? The idea belonged in science fiction, not military intelligence reports crackling through our encrypted radios.
But then Dmitro, our unit's scout, returned from a reconnaissance mission near the old airport with photos that broke our understanding of what was possible. Not Singapore's skyline superimposed on Donetsk through digital manipulation, but Singapore's actual skyline, visible through binoculars, separated from our position by exactly 847 meters of war-torn street that somehow connected two continents.
For the others, the Fold represented tactical opportunity—a potential escape route, a source of Western aid that wouldn't have to traverse hundreds of kilometers of contested territory. But for me, trained to think in mathematical frameworks, the Fold posed far more fundamental questions. If spacetime could fold to connect Donetsk with Singapore, what did that mean for our understanding of dimensional stability? Was this a localized phenomenon, or were there other Folds worldwide that we simply hadn't discovered yet?
More urgently: if Ukraine now touched Singapore, did Russia touch it too? Had Moscow's Red Square somehow been pulled into proximity with Marina Bay, or was this manifestation specific to our particular coordinates of suffering?
The answer came through intercepted communications and smuggled BBC reports transmitted via shortwave radio—the same crystal set my grandfather had hidden from Soviet authorities, now jury-rigged with modern components salvaged from destroyed cell towers. Satellite imagery confirmed it: Ukraine remained anchored in Eastern Europe, Russia still sprawled across Eurasia. The Fold appeared to be exactly what its name suggested—not a displacement but a crease, a wrinkle in spacetime that brought distant places into direct contact while leaving their original positions unchanged.
The physics should have been impossible. Space doesn't fold like paper—Einstein's equations describe curvature, not origami. Yet here I was, staring across Mirage Alley at Singaporean soldiers whose body heat showed up clearly on our thermal scopes, men and women who had traveled exactly zero kilometers from their tropical barracks to find themselves facing a Ukrainian winter that shouldn't exist in their equatorial reality.
At night, when the artillery quiets and the city holds its breath between attacks, I work by candlelight on equations that might explain what we're experiencing. The mathematics resist conventional solutions. General relativity breaks down when I try to model the Fold's geometry. Quantum field theory suggests possibilities—dimensional branes intersecting at specific coordinates—but the energy requirements would exceed the total output of our sun.
Unless the Fold isn't powered by energy at all, but by something else. Desperation, perhaps. The accumulated weight of human suffering reaching some critical mass that simply tears through reality's fabric.
I dream of chalk marks running like neural networks across blast-damaged walls, equations that shift and evolve even as I watch them. Sometimes I wake to find actual frost formations on the concrete beside me—crystalline patterns so mathematically precise they resemble phase diagrams or molecular lattices. As if the Fold itself were writing solutions in ice, leaving breadcrumbs for anyone with enough education to recognize the language.
The strangest phenomena occur near the boundary itself. Yuriy, one of our snipers, swears he's observed temporal anomalies through his scope—Singapore pedestrians moving in slow motion while our own people appear to accelerate, as if time moved at different rates on either side of Mirage Alley. Katya, our communications specialist, has documented radio frequencies that carry signals from both Ukrainian and Singaporean emergency services simultaneously, voices overlapping in languages that shouldn't share the same bandwidth.
More disturbing are the biological anomalies. Tropical insects—species that have no business surviving in sub-zero temperatures—have been found frozen in the snow near the boundary, their cellular structure intact as if they'd been flash-frozen mid-flight. Seeds from Singapore's botanical gardens somehow root in our bombed soil, producing hybrid growths that bloom despite artillery concussions that should destroy any delicate organisms.
I've begun documenting these phenomena with the rigor of proper scientific observation, filling notebooks salvaged from the university's destroyed library. Sample sizes remain small—it's difficult to conduct controlled experiments when Russian forces regularly shell our observation posts—but patterns are emerging that suggest the Fold operates according to principles we don't yet understand.
What if consciousness itself plays a role? Every person who approaches Mirage Alley reports similar experiences: heightened awareness, synesthetic episodes where sounds become visible and temperatures acquire emotional weight, dreams that seem to leak across the boundary. Perhaps the Fold responds to observation, like quantum phenomena that change behavior when measured.
My unit's commander, Viktor, thinks my scientific fixation is dangerous distraction from our military objectives. But I suspect understanding the Fold might be our most important tactical advantage. If we could predict its behavior, maybe we could exploit it. Emergency medical supplies appearing instantaneously from Singapore's hospitals. Intelligence gathered from both sides of the conflict. Escape routes that bypass conventional geography entirely.
The darker possibility haunts my calculations: what if Russia develops the same understanding first? What if the Fold can be weaponized, turned into a conduit for Moscow's imperial ambitions? What if this miracle of physics becomes just another tool for extending suffering?
Last week, during a particularly heavy bombardment, I watched Singaporean families gather on their high-rise balconies to photograph our falling snow—the first many of them had ever seen. Their excitement carried clearly across Mirage Alley, children squealing with delight while our children huddled in basements. For them, our winter was exotic entertainment. For us, it remained the season in which people freeze to death in buildings without heating.
The juxtaposition crystallized something I'd been struggling to articulate: the Fold doesn't just connect two places, it connects two entirely different relationships with reality. Singapore's citizens experience our war as spectacle, safe behind bulletproof glass and international law. We experience their peace as an unreachable paradise, visible but separated by barriers more substantial than mere distance.
Yet sometimes, in the quiet moments between crises, I detect something deeper. Last night, pressed against the ice-covered wall of our bunker, I could have sworn I felt warmth radiating from the concrete—not the artificial heat of damaged pipes, but something organic, intentional. As if someone on the other side were pressing their palm against the same wall, sharing body heat across impossible space.
Perhaps that's the Fold's true nature: not a bridge between places, but between states of being. A reminder that the universe's deepest equations aren't written in mathematics but in the stubborn human refusal to accept that proximity and distance are fixed quantities, that walls are permanent, that suffering and safety can't coexist in the same breath.
I was a physicist before the war. Now I'm something else—an observer at the edge of known reality, documenting phenomena that textbooks insist cannot exist. The universe, it turns out, is far stranger and more generous than my equations ever suggested.
Disclaimer: This is the first LampBotics AI production that is dream-inspired, human-piloted, and coauthored with AI. At LampBotics, we are committed to using generative AI creatively and responsibly to expand the boundaries of human imagination. While we strive to ensure realism in our fiction, we recognize the potential for mistakes made by AI and the ecological and economic strain that AI production may place on vulnerable populations.





