13HRP – 0101 – Miss Tuna Face
Entity Class: Ichthyo-Humanoid Anomaly
Primary Description
13HRP – 0101 – Miss Tuna Face appears as a humanoid figure in early-20th-century clothing. Moreover, she wears a torn, sea-worn dress and a hat soaked in invisible brine. Her most unsettling feature is the head of a silver-blue tuna, with spiral eyesthat rotate endlessly inward. These spirals draw in both light and emotion, giving witnesses the sense that reality bends toward her gaze. Wherever she walks, faint dripping sounds follow—even on dry floors. Furthermore, the air around her smells of salt, rust, and canned despair, a scent so distinct that researchers use it to detect her presence.
When someone meets her eyes, they feel as if they are underwater inside their own lungs. Consequently, the drowning illusion leads to visions of a dim, endless aquarium. The walls pulse in rhythm with the person’s heartbeat. Many victims mutter phrases such as “the glass remembers me” or “I’m still floating where I drowned.” These words suggest an emotional link between Miss Tuna Face and the victim’s mind. As a result, she seems to project suppressed guilt or grief as part of her manifestation.
Behavior and Manifestations
Miss Tuna Face often appears near reflective surfaces, especially those with water—fish tanks, fogged mirrors, and puddles after rain. When she arrives, the temperature drops, and background sounds distort into bubbling tones. Her humming resembles a chorus of submerged voices. Researchers describe it as soothing yet suffocating, like a lullaby sung underwater.
She wanders through corridors, abandoned markets, and ruined aquariums as if searching for something lost. However, attempts to follow her reveal spatial distortions. Hallways stretch, reflections lag, and shadows ripple like pond water. Therefore, many believe Miss Tuna Face travels through liquid reflections, using them as doorways. Each time she disappears, nearby mirrors and glass show moisture rings and faint fingerprints shaped like fish scales.
Sometimes, she leaves behind tuna cans filled with seawater. When opened, these cans emit radio static and whisper distorted names—often of drowned sailors or scientists linked to the Hollow Ocean project. Consequently, these remnants suggest a connection between Miss Tuna Face and past deep-sea experiments.
Psychological Effects
People exposed to Miss Tuna Face develop aquatic dissociation. Their brains mistake air for water, and they gasp while moving their hands like gills, trying to breathe. Over time, they refer to themselves as “part of the tide” and seek to submerge in any water source. In interviews, survivors say they hear a woman’s voice whispering through reflections: “come home to the current” or “I kept your breath for you.” As a result, these psychological effects show a lasting influence on perception and identity.
Additionally, secondary observers who watch recordings sometimes suffer delayed hallucinations. Days later, they see bubbles drifting across their vision. This reaction suggests her influence spreads through recorded media, though with weaker intensity. Moreover, prolonged viewing increases the likelihood of auditory hallucinations, adding another layer of danger to her observation.
Containment Protocol
To contain Miss Tuna Face, cover all reflective surfaces within thirty meters of her last sighting with black cloth to block her movement. Staff must also wear polarized visors to prevent eye contact. If contact lasts more than thirteen seconds, the subject exhales transparent bubbles and loses control of their body. Once symptoms start, evacuate immediately.
Researchers have repeatedly tried to trap Miss Tuna Face in sealed tanks but failed. Each time they close a chamber, the water ripples like a heartbeat and drains away, leaving only salt and despair in the air. Therefore, current containment relies on spatial monitoring and avoidance rather than direct capture.
Addendum 13HRP-0101-A
During an underwater test at Site Coral-3, researchers recorded a repeating phrase in soft, distorted tones:
“The tank broke… I became the tide.”
Afterward, audio analysis revealed low frequencies linked to Hollow Sea Entities. Consequently, the data suggests Miss Tuna Face might be an emissary or echo of a vast oceanic mind from the Hollow Realm. Furthermore, this connection reinforces theories that emotional resonance creates her form. Research continues to explore this relationship between reflection, sorrow, and sentient oceanic consciousness.
Addendum 13HRP-0101-B: Incident Report
In one breach, three researchers were exposed when a reflective dome lost opacity. Within a minute, all three showed aquatic dissociation symptoms. Two were rescued after emergency fluid extraction. However, the third vanished into a wall mirror that filled with murky water and shattered. The glass fragments glowed faintly under ultraviolet light, forming fish-scale tear patterns. These fragments now rest in Vault-6 under blackout conditions.
Ultimately, Miss Tuna Face remains active in the lower archives of the Hollow Reality Project. She is listed under 13HRP – Maritime Class for her link to aquatic entities and mirrored worlds. Researchers continue to debate whether she is a lost dream, a reflection set free, or sorrow given form by the sea. Nevertheless, her influence persists, spreading wherever light meets water.
Last modified: 2025/10/07 at 21:15 pm
Published: 2025/10/09 at 12:59 pm
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13HRP – Hollow Reality Project
By Silvia Moan

