(AN: This chapter is mainly filled with detail, if you want you can skip this chapter but I suggest you read it to understand where the main character is. )
At first glance, you could tell how large the Dining Room was.
The Dining Room was four hundred and eighty feet with many modern touches to it.
Cherry wood tables with intricate designs were spread out decently. The floors were made out of smooth granite displaying multiple colors of gray and the occasional silver and black sprinkled on the floor.
On Auo's right side, there was a large doorway with silver trimming. Kitchen appliances, all stainless steel, filled the kitchen space.
The walls of the Dining Room were a cream color and the trim being an off-white color.
The architectural structure of the Dining Room was an interesting one. It wasn't like a regular dining room with four walls, instead, the room technically had nine walls.
At the entrance of the Dining Room, three meters out, one had to walk down a mini-hallway until you were actually inside of the dining area.
Once inside, on the left, the wall dipped, making a sixth of a hexagon and the same occurred on the far right corner.
Four cherry wood tables were lined against these walls, three out of the four containing four patients'.
On the person's right side, as soon as you enter the dining room, the large doorway leading to the kitchen is thrown into a person's face.
A dining table sat just before the doorway and was faced horizontally. In the far right corner, the walls extended further than the left side and a single table was placed there.
In the middle of the room, 2x2 tables were lined vertically and were a good meter or two apart. Some art pieces hung on the walls, each a good distance from each other.
In total there were fourteen portraits.
One portrait was placed on each of the walls that dipped in. Five were placed upon the back walls. Four were placed on the left side of the room and four were placed on the right. In the far right corner, a single portrait was placed.
Each portrait had multiple colors of its own.
For example, one portrait was filled with many hues of blue and different media-like watercolor, acrylic paint, pastel oil, and Copic markers-swirled and formed into a figure of some sort. While another portrait had many hues of red, yellow, green, purple, white and black, and so on.
However, Auo didn't pay attention to such frivolous things.
What caught his attention was the multiple amounts of people strapped in metal chairs.
To be completely honest, it gave Auo a serious case of PTSD.
It shocked him, seeing those chairs, especially since his first introduction to it was unsightly.
There were many guards occupied in the space. They all seemed to wear the same uniform, black attire and black attire only.
The uniform consisted of a padded torso with long sleeves that reached their wrists and hugged their chests while the lower end displayed baggy cargo pants with many pockets.
Each sported a belt that hung on their waist, each belt having different weapons on different persons.
Three guards wore the standard military hat while the others wore a simple black hat, some even having logos on the front.
One guard even wore a black bandana as a mask and the only thing you could see were his eyes.
It seemed that most of the guards wore black gloves, but some seemed to not wear any.
Each guard had a black earpiece, some of them were even customized.
They also wore a device on their hip, each blinking red lights.
Five guards wore aviator glasses and each one showed gold rims.
Auo wasn't afraid of the guards as much as he was afraid of - what looked like - the patients'.
They were tied down to the metal chairs in the room. Their ankles, calves, and waist were strapped down to the legs and backboard of the chair. Each patient had their left hand strapped to the arm of the chair while their right hand was free.
All of the patients had eyes of a dead fish.
After a minute of collecting himself, for he was having a panic attack after seeing those metal chairs, Auo sighed deeply.
He looked around the room one more time to see if he had missed anything.
He concluded that he didn't but then something flickered in his eyes.