Darkane Hattori

Item #: SCP-#

Class: Euclid

Special Containment Procedures: The section of stairwell housing SCP-# has been sealed off and must be monitored to prevent entry by unauthorized individuals. Any such individuals attempting to enter SCP-# must be detained, questioned, and administered an amnestic if necessary. This is to prevent any further incidents, excluding incidents part of an experiment. During tests, only class-D personnel are to be in the item’s visual and auditory range.

Description: SCP-# is a door located between the third and fourth floor landings in building 3, stairwell B of the ██████████ Airport in ██████████ , Ohio. Though SCP-#’s appearance is consistent with other doors within the same stairwell to the casual observer, when inspected more closely the window in the door shows a blank wall is behind it, and the object is not included in the floor plans for the building in which it resides.

The item emits a constant auditory signal in a frequency undetectable by the human ear, and is known to have a compulsion effect caused by auditory and visual contact. Visual and/or auditory contact with SCP-# compels the subject to enter SCP-#, beginning with a strengthening curiosity, then progresses to add a strong urge to enter, and finally leading to a growing addiction, causing the subject to use increasing amounts of force and violence to get inside the object. The door cannot be opened during the night, and subjects effected during the night have a high probability of killing themselves in an attempt to enter SCP-# and close it behind them.

The object doesn’t affect those viewing or listening to it through electronic means, although the auditory signal has been detected on recordings, and the visual effect causes a distortion in the recordings, proving its existence. The auditory signal and visual distortion, though undetectable by human eyes and ears, is compulsory because it only affects individuals within close enough proximity to it.

Upon entry, any visual recording equipment shows fog thick enough to prevent objects that are more than zero-point-six-five meters away from being recorded which is apparently unseen by the subject, and prevents any sounds that are more than zero-point-six-five meters away from being detected by audio recording equipment, and renders any attempt to verify the subject's observations impossible. It is theorized that any visual or auditory observations the subject makes is the result of either a auditory and visual hallucination or sensory manipulation.

Based on eye witness accounts and visual and audio recordings of objects and sounds within zero-point-six-five meters obtained during tests, it was determined that the environment inside the door causes distress in the subject by using psychological triggers specific to its current victim. It also has been known to cause physical harm even to the extent of destroying multiple vital organs, while subject will remain alive regardless of the lethality of the wounds, until the subject leaves the interior environment. It has been observed that these injuries either cannot be healed or heal too slowly for the subject to survive even the most minor cuts, and any attempt to artificially repair the wounds has a success rate of one in two hundred, and only on the most minor injury on the subject.

Based on descriptions obtained during various tests and explorations, it was determined that the interior of SCP-# is approximately five-hundred (500) meters long by five-hundred (500) meters wide, but varies in height, layout, and appearance. The environment often causes confusion, sometimes panic, and/or unease in the subject, yet compels the subject to venture further. When a sufficient amount of psychological and/or physical trauma has been inflicted on the subject-varying from victim to victim-the subject is compelled to leave through the door of SCP-#.

Subjects who have been attacked-one varified by the visual and auditory recording-have been shown to have varying amounts of chemical and biological toxins, poisons, and venoms in their system, some of which are made of previously unknown compounds. In the case of subjects who have a small enough amount of toxins in them to survive often are only able to complete the most basic tasks, and with much difficulty. They are observed to have random spasms as a result of the toxins, some violent enough to knock them down and even cause them to harm themselves, and the average time they are able to survive is one to three weeks.