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The Archivist


They say the house on Miller's Creek wasn’t haunted by a ghost, but by a Vacancy.

In the early 1950s, the Sterling family moved in and found a locked door in the attic. Being a superstitious lot, they left it alone for three years. But curiosity is a slow-burning fuse. When the father, Elias, finally broke the lock, he didn't find a dusty storage space. He found a fully furnished parlor that looked like it had been plucked from a Victorian funeral home—except for the two buzzing, modern television sets sitting on a side table.

And sitting in the armchair was The Guest.

The Pact of Silence

The Guest didn’t move. It didn't breathe. It wore a suit that looked like it had been buried and exhumed, and a mask that resembled a giant, bleached egg stitched shut with iron wire. The "antlers" weren't bone; they were petrified wood that had grown through the floorboards, and the chandelier on its head flickered with candles that never melted down.

The Sterlings didn't run. They couldn't. The televisions were broadcasting a live feed of their own living room downstairs. They realized then that The Guest wasn't just sitting there—it was monitoring them.

Elias made a deal with the Vacancy:

They would provide a "home" for the entity.

In exchange, the family would experience perfect, blissful health and wealth.

The catch? They could never turn off the TVs in the attic, and they could never speak of what they saw behind the mask.

The Static Rot

For a decade, the Sterlings were the envy of the county. But the "Static Rot" eventually set in. The more The Guest watched them through the screens, the more the family began to lose their own features. Their faces became smooth; their voices turned into the hum of a vacuum tube.

One by one, the family members stopped eating, stopped sleeping, and eventually... they just stopped being. They were "absorbed" into the broadcast.

The Current State:

The image you see is the last known photograph taken by a frantic private investigator in 1974. He found the house completely empty of people, but the attic was still "occupied."

The Guest remains the master of that rotting room. Those TVs aren't playing shows; they are loops of the Sterlings' final moments, over and over again. The figure sits as a psychic anchor, waiting for a new family to move in, a new "signal" to capture, and a new set of eyes to watch its eternal, silent show.

Note: If you look closely at the TVs in the photo, you might notice the "static" looks a bit like a distorted human face screaming.
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marrowengine · 36-40, F
A little fictional SCP I made for it also, after the events of the family I genuinely don't know how it made it to the broadcast station.

Item #: SCP-7402

Object Class: Keter

Special Containment Procedures: SCP-7402 is currently contained within a modified Type-4 Reality Anchor Chamber at Site-19. The chamber must be shielded with lead-lined Faraday cage mesh to prevent signal leakage.

Observation: No fewer than two (2) personnel may view SCP-7402 at any time. Viewing must be conducted via analog-only closed-circuit monitors. Digital recording of SCP-7402 results in immediate data corruption and potential [REDACTED] infection.

Audio Protocol: Personnel are to wear noise-canceling headsets at all times while within a 15-meter radius of the containment cell to prevent "Auditory Syncing."

Maintenance: Once per month, twelve (12) white beeswax candles must be replaced on the entity’s crown. Personnel performing this task must be blindfolded.

Description
SCP-7402 is a humanoid entity of unknown origin, measuring approximately 1.9 meters in height. It wears a suit of early 20th-century design, heavily degraded by biological and inorganic rot.

The entity’s primary features include:

The Cranial Array: A bleached, ovoid mask with two ocular apertures that exhibit a "void effect"—light entering the mask is not reflected. Two cervid-like antlers sprout from the temples, supporting a Victorian-style chandelier.

The Signal: SCP-7402 acts as a high-powered trans-dimensional transmitter. It does not speak; instead, it broadcasts a rhythmic, low-frequency hum (designated 7402-Alpha) that causes listeners to experience "visual displacement."

The Monitors: SCP-7402 is almost always found in proximity to vintage television sets (SCP-7402-1). These devices do not require a power source. They display a live feed of the viewer’s most suppressed traumatic memory, rendered in high-contrast grayscale.

The "Transmission" Effect
Prolonged exposure to SCP-7402-Alpha results in the "Featureless State." Victims begin to lose distinct facial features as their skin smooths over. Within 48 hours, the victim’s consciousness is "uploaded" into the nearest SCP-7402-1 monitor. The physical body then collapses into a pile of ash and magnetic tape.

Recovery Log: Incident 7402-A
SCP-7402 was recovered in 1982 from the basement of a condemned broadcasting station in [DATA EXPUNGED]. Local authorities were alerted after neighbors reported hearing "the sound of a thousand people screaming in unison" coming from their television sets during the nightly news.

Upon arrival, Foundation agents found the station manager’s office overgrown with a strange, bioluminescent fungus. SCP-7402 was seated in the center of the room, "watching" three separate monitors.