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A staircase inside a functioning office tower began delivering people to the lower floor too early. The steps existed — but descending bodies could not remain on them. During a structural audit of an emergency stairwell between two office floors, maintenance staff noticed a persistent contradiction: descending the staircase required fewer steps than climbing it. Construction records confirmed the expected geometry, yet repeated tests showed six steps being bypassed during downward movement. Pressure sensors embedded in the stair surfaces verified the pattern. Upward movement activated all thirty-seven steps. Downward movement activated only thirty-one. The missing contacts occurred in the same section of the stairwell every time. Mechanical descent rigs reproduced the effect without human movement involved. Objects moving downward briefly lost physical contact with the central portion of the staircase before reconnecting with steps below. Environmental measurements later detected acoustic dampening in the corridor adjacent to the stairwell, aligned precisely with the band where interaction with the steps failed. Structural monitoring equipment continues to record brief load absence in that section during every descent. This classified infrastructure incident remains part of the building’s operational monitoring program. The structure itself has not changed. Yet inside one stairwell, downward movement still cannot remain on six existing steps. Blacksite documents incidents where infrastructure recorded physical contradictions that remain unresolved. Each reconstruction examines a sensor-detected anomaly confirmed through institutional observation and ongoing infrastructure monitoring. Some anomalies are measured once. Others continue inside the systems built around us.