The silence was maddening.
Nathan lay on the cot in his cell, staring at the blank ceiling as if it held the answers to questions he could barely voice. Days had passed—maybe weeks, he wasn't sure anymore. Time had become a shapeless blur, blending into the cold sterility of his confinement. The tests continued relentlessly, each one more degrading and dehumanizing than the last. They stripped him bare, piece by piece, until he was left with little more than his own fraying thoughts.
Sleep, when it came, brought no relief. His dreams were fractured and strange, populated by shadows that loomed at the edge of his vision, figures that whispered secrets he couldn't quite hear. He'd wake, covered in a cold sweat, his heart racing, and then lie there, trapped in the choking quiet of his cell, wondering if he was losing his grip on reality.
Tonight was different. There was a heaviness in the air, a thickness that clung to his skin like oil, pressing down on him, filling the room with an oppressive weight. His eyes fluttered shut, more out of exhaustion than any real desire to sleep, and he drifted into a restless doze.
Survive. The word echoed in his mind, the whisper sharper than ever, slicing through the darkness.
His eyes snapped open to a void.
The cot, the walls, the cell—all of it was gone, replaced by a vast, endless expanse of black. Tiny pinpricks of light dotted the horizon, each one distant and faint, as though they were stars in some cosmic abyss. Nathan's breath caught in his throat as he took in the scene. He was floating, suspended in a void where gravity held no sway, where time and space felt meaningless.
He turned slowly, each movement weightless, dreamlike. Figures drifted through the darkness, their forms strange and twisted, creatures that defied any logic or sense of the natural world. Some had limbs that stretched far too long, eyes that gleamed with an eerie intelligence, bodies that pulsed with an unnatural glow. Others were shadowy, amorphous shapes, flickering in and out of existence like dying embers.
They were watching him.
A cold shiver ran down his spine, the primal instinct to flee clashing with the knowledge that there was nowhere to go. He was alone, floating in the midst of something vast and unknowable, and these beings—whatever they were—seemed aware of him, seemed to see him in ways that felt invasive, like they were peeling back the layers of his mind, examining his very soul.
And then, as if in response to his terror, he felt a warmth blossom in his chest, a pulse of energy that spread through his veins, filling him with a sensation unlike anything he'd ever known. It was raw, fierce, a fire that burned through his fear and left him feeling…alive. More alive than he'd felt in days.
The warmth intensified, growing hotter, fiercer, until it was nearly unbearable. He felt his vision blur, the creatures fading, the darkness pulling away, and then—
He was back.
Nathan jolted awake, gasping, his body drenched in sweat. He was in his cell, the cold metal cot beneath him a stark contrast to the intense heat he'd felt just moments ago. His pulse hammered in his ears, his skin tingling with a strange, lingering warmth, as though some part of the void had followed him back.
The sterile silence of the cell was broken by a sudden, shrill alarm. Red lights flashed overhead, bathing the room in an ominous glow, and Nathan sat up, his head spinning as he tried to make sense of what had happened.
Outside, he could hear the heavy, hurried footsteps of GRA agents, their voices low and urgent as they exchanged clipped words. He caught fragments, snippets of alarmed conversation that made his blood run cold.
"Anomaly surge detected…"
"…possible power awakening…"
"…containment protocol, now!"
Panic flared in his chest as he realized what this meant. Whatever had happened—whatever he'd seen—had registered on the facility's sensors. They knew. They knew something had changed, that he wasn't just some unregistered anomaly anymore. And they were coming for him.
Moments later, the door to his cell slid open, and two agents entered, their faces hidden behind dark visors, their movements swift and precise. Without a word, they hauled him up, their grips unyielding, and marched him down the hall. The red lights continued to flash, casting distorted shadows that danced across the sterile walls.
They led him to a small, stark room, bare save for a single metal chair bolted to the floor. They shoved him into the chair, securing his arms and legs with heavy restraints that clicked into place with a cold finality. Nathan struggled, a reflexive jolt of panic, but the bindings held firm, pinning him down.
The agents left without a word, the door hissing shut behind them. Nathan sat in tense silence, his mind racing, his heartbeat a wild staccato in his chest. He could feel the residual warmth of the void pulsing in his veins, a strange comfort amid the cold reality of his confinement.
Minutes passed, each one stretching longer than the last, and then the door opened again. Kane stepped inside, his expression unreadable, his eyes sharp as they fixed on Nathan. He held a tablet in one hand, the screen flickering with streams of data that Nathan couldn't decipher.
"Interesting development, isn't it?" Kane's voice was calm, almost conversational, but there was a dangerous edge to his tone, a predatory gleam in his gaze. "You know, we've been monitoring you very closely, Wilson. And tonight…well, tonight, you gave us quite the surprise."
Nathan's throat tightened, but he forced himself to meet Kane's gaze, defiance flickering in his eyes. "I don't know what you're talking about."
Kane's smile was thin, humorless. "Oh, I think you do. That little anomaly surge we detected? That was you, wasn't it?"
Nathan remained silent, his jaw clenched, refusing to give Kane the satisfaction of a response.
Kane's smile widened, a flash of something cold and cruel in his eyes. "You think you're clever, don't you? Think you can play coy and keep your secrets. But let me be very clear, Wilson. Whatever you think you are, whatever power you think you have…we own you now. The GRA does not tolerate unpredictability."
He stepped closer, leaning down until his face was inches from Nathan's, his voice dropping to a low, menacing whisper. "You will comply. You will follow every order, every command, or I promise you, we'll make your life a living nightmare."
Nathan's breath hitched, anger simmering beneath the surface, but he kept his expression steady, refusing to let Kane see his fear.
Kane straightened, his gaze hardening. "Effective immediately, you're being moved to solitary confinement. Consider it…a precaution. You've proven yourself a flight risk, and we can't have you disrupting our operations with your little outbursts."
With a final, cold glance, Kane left, the door sliding shut behind him with a heavy, resounding thud. Nathan was left alone, the silence pressing down on him, amplifying the cold knot of dread in his stomach.
Hours later, they dragged him to a smaller cell, bare and isolating. The walls were thicker here, the silence deeper, as if the room itself were designed to strip away any remaining sense of humanity. They left him there, locking the door with a finality that settled over him like a shroud.
Nathan lay on the cold floor, the remnants of his brief encounter with the void flickering in his mind, a haunting reminder of something vast and powerful lurking just beyond his reach. And as he lay there, alone and defeated, the System pulsed within him, sending a message through his weary mind.
The Gate opens.
The words echoed in his mind, filling him with a mix of dread and anticipation. He didn't know what they meant, didn't know what the System wanted from him, but one thing was clear.
Whatever was coming, he wasn't ready for it.
The room dimmed, shadows pooling in the corners, and Nathan closed his eyes, feeling the weight of the unknown settle over him like a dark, foreboding promise.