I moved away from the desks and toward the containers.
Up close, they were even more unsettling.
Each circular chamber had thick reinforced glass, slightly clouded with residue from whatever fluids or chemicals had once filled them.(Residue means small leftover material that remains after something dries or disappears. The sentence means liquids used in the experiments dried and left stains on the glass.)Metal clamps lined the interior walls, clearly meant to hold someone in place.(Clamps are devices that hold something tightly in place. The sentence means metal restraints inside the pod were meant to lock a person’s body so they could not move.)
Someone standing upright.
Someone alive.
I swallowed and walked slowly past the first row.
Mira stayed near the desk, still looking through the scattered research pages.
“Anything else?” she asked quietly.
“Just these nightmare cylinders.” I muttered.
I leaned closer to one of them.
Scratches.
From the inside.
Thin drag marks where fingernails-or something sharper-had scraped against the glass.
I stepped away from it.
No thanks.
As I circled around the far end of the room, something caught my eye near the corner wall.
A single sheet of paper.
Not on the desk.
Not with the shredded files.
Tucked halfway beneath the metal base of the last container.
Like someone had tried to hide it there.
“…Huh.”
I crouched down and pulled it free.
The paper was creased and slightly worn.
Handwritten.
Messy.
Not like the clean typed reports we’d been reading.
“Mira,” I called quietly. “I found something.”
She walked over and leaned beside me as I started reading.
Personal Note-Not for Records
I am writing this only for myself.
I know no one will read it. I am a low-ranking researcher here, and my thoughts carry no value in the official documentation. Still, I feel the need to record what I am seeing.
The fact that His Majesty the Demon King himself approved this research should be reassuring.
That alone should make me feel proud to be involved.
Instead, it frightens me.
The results we are producing here… I do not think they are what anyone expected.
Rumors circulate among the staff.
Whispers between departments.
They say that there have been successful subjects.
Not here.
Below.
Apparently some of the experiments worked, and those subjects were transferred to the lower level facility. I do not know the details. Scientists of my rank are not given clearance to access the deeper floors.
But the fact that there is another floor below us is worrying enough.
We were already told to prepare for expansion.
Another level of containment.
Another level of experimentation.
I cannot imagine what they are doing down there if this floor is considered the early stage trials.
What we do here is already horrifying.
The screaming.
The transformations.
The failures.
And yet the higher officials say this is only the beginning.
I hear the situation in Daemina is worsening. No one tells us the full truth, but something is clearly going wrong outside these walls.
Perhaps that is why this project exists at all.
Desperation.
Anything that can be useful for our nations survival.
Still…
If what they are doing below is worse than this floor…
I do not want to see it.
The note ended there.
No signature.
Just a final line scratched into the bottom corner.
I wish I had never accepted this position.
Silence filled the room again.
Mira slowly looked up from the page.
“…Successful subjects.” she murmured.
“Yeah.”
She looked toward the door.
Then toward the ceiling.
“…On a lower floor.”
“The elevator.” I said quietly.
For a moment neither of us spoke.
The weight of the note settled over the room.
Whatever horrors had happened here…
They weren’t the worst ones.
Not according to this.
“If there are answers down there-”
“I don’t want to go down there.” I said immediately.
The words came out faster than I expected.
Even hearing them myself surprised me.
Mira blinked at me.
I looked back at the row of containers.
The restraints.
The shattered reports.
The shredded documents.
“If this is what they were doing up here.” I said slowly. “then whatever’s on the lower floor is worse.”
Mira held the note quietly.
“…Maybe.”
She glanced toward the direction of the elevator.
“But if we want to understand what happened here…”
Her voice softened.
“…we might have to go down.”
I stared at her.
Then I pointed at her dramatically.
“Oh no.”
She tilted her head slightly.
“Oh no no no no no.”
I started pacing in a small circle, waving my one hand.
“I want you to really think about this, Mira.”
She watched me calmly.
“You vomited at the sight of that massacre earlier,” I continued, pointing toward the hallway like the memory itself lived there. “Remember that? The room full of dead scientists? The blood? The organs? The emotional breakdown?”
Her tail drooped slightly.
“Yes…”
“Which means,” I said, raising my finger, “that if we go down there, we will probably see more of that.”
I leaned closer to her.
“Possibly worse.”
I placed a hand over my heart dramatically.
“So please.”
A pause.
“Please tell me you are a reasonable girl.”
Silence.
Mira looked at me.
Then she said calmly,
“We should probably go down there.”
I froze.
For one second.
Two seconds.
Then-
“FUCK!!!”
My voice echoed loudly across the chamber.
I slapped my hand over my face.
“Why are you like this?!”
Mira lifted both hands slightly, palms out, the universal gesture of please calm down before you explode.
“Eclipsara,” she said gently. “you are escalating the situation.”
“I am reacting appropriately!” I snapped.
“You are yelling in a secret underground laboratory filled with unknown creatures.”
“I am processing stress!”
“You are stress-processing very loudly.”
I started pacing again.
“This is what I’m talking about!” I said, pointing at her. “You just casually suggest we go to the mysterious lower horror floor like we’re deciding which bakery to visit!”
“There might not be a bakery.”
“That is not the point!”
I ran a hand through my hair.
“No, actually-this is worse. This is worse than the massacre room. Because at least the massacre room was honest.”
Mira blinked.
“Honest?”
“Yes. It clearly said: ‘Hello, welcome, everyone is dead.’”
I pointed dramatically toward the ceiling.
“But down there?” I continued. “Down there is where the successful experiments are!”
She nodded.
“Yes.”
I stared at her.
“You’re saying that like that’s a good thing!”
“They might be able to explain what happened.”
“They might also rip our organs out!”
She opened her mouth.
Closed it.
Opened it again.
“Well-”
“Exactly!”
I pointed triumphantly.
Then Mira gently grabbed my wrist.
“Eclipsara, breathe.”
“I am breathing!”
“You are hyperventilating.”
“I am strategically oxygenating!”
She exhaled slowly.
“Look. We don’t have to decide right now.”
I stopped pacing.
“…We don’t?”
“No. We can explore the rest of this floor first.”
I paused.
That… actually sounded reasonable.
“…Okay,” I admitted slowly. “That’s… a sane suggestion.”
Mira smiled faintly.
“There we go.”
I nodded.
“Yes. Good. Rational thinking. Wonderful development.”
Then-
From somewhere out in the hallway…
A distant sound echoed.
“Hehehehe…”
The laughter drifted through the vents.(moved slowly through the air.)
Thin.
Wrong.
Not normal.
And getting closer.
My entire body went still.
“…Oh.”
Mira’s tail twitched.
“…Was that-”
“Hehehehehe…”
Closer now.
Echoing through the metal corridors.
I slowly turned my head toward the door.
Then I looked back at Mira.
And groaned.
“Look at what you’ve done.”
Mira blinked in pure confusion.
“Huh?!”
I pointed at her accusingly.
“This is your fault.”
“My fault?!”
“You made me shout!”
She stared at me.
“You screamed a profanity at full volume!”
“That was an emotional reaction!”
“You are the one who escalated!”
“You are the one who said we should go to the horror basement!”
“Those things are not connected!”
“They are spiritually connected!”
“Hehehehehe…”
The laughter echoed again.
Much closer now.
Something scraped faintly along metal outside the room.(Scraped means something rough dragged across a surface making a scratching sound. The sentence means the creature outside was dragging part of its body or claws along the metal floor or wall.)
Mira’s tail stiffened.
“…We should probably be quiet now.”
I slowly reached down and picked up my axe.
“Yes.”
Another scrape.
A soft dragging sound across the hallway floor.
I leaned toward the door and whispered,
“If that thing opens this door…”
Mira whispered back,
“…what’s the plan?”
I stared at the door.
“…Panic.”
“…That’s not a plan.”
“It’s the foundation of one.”
The laughter crept closer through the halls.
“Hehehehehe…”
Something scraped along the floor outside.
Slow.
Heavy.
Like weight being dragged.
Mira and I both slowly turned toward the door.
Another scrape.
Then-
BANG.
The entire metal door shook.
A deep dent appeared in the center of it.
My eyes widened.
“…Oh that thing is strong.”
Mira grabbed my arm and pulled me away from the center of the room.
“Hide.”
“Right. Yes. Hiding is good.”
We both moved quickly but quietly, crouching behind one of the massive circular containers. The thick metal frame and glass cylinder blocked most of our view of the door.
I pulled Mira down beside me.
We held our breath.
Then-
BANG.
The door bent inward further.
Metal screamed as the frame warped.
I leaned slightly to peek around the container.
“Okay,” I whispered. “that door is definitely not winning that fight.”
Mira’s tail drooped.
Outside, something hit the door again.
BANG.
The dent deepened.
Dust fell from the frame.
“…We should leave,” Mira whispered.
“Fantastic suggestion,” I whispered back. “I wish the room had an exit that wasn’t the one being punched.”
Mira glanced around nervously.
Her eyes moved across the wall beside the container.
Then she blinked.
“…Eclipsara.”
“What.”
“There’s a button.”
“What button?”
She pointed to a small metal panel mounted beside the container base.
I stared at it.“…That was not there five seconds ago.”
“Do I press it?”
Outside-
BANG.
The door bent inward further.
Metal shrieked under the strain.
“YES PRESS IT.”
Mira slapped the button.
With a soft mechanical click, the wall panel behind us suddenly split open.
A narrow hidden door slid aside.
Both of us froze for half a second.
“…Oh.”
“…Oh.”
BANG.
The main door nearly ripped off its hinges.(Hinges are the metal joints that attach a door to the frame so it can swing open and closed. The sentence means the creature hit the door so hard it almost tore the door off the frame)
“GO!”
We scrambled through the hidden doorway and slammed the panel shut behind us.
The door sealed with a quiet mechanical lock.
Silence filled the small passageway we had just entered.
We both stood there.
Breathing hard.
Listening.
The banging on the other side continued faintly, muffled by the hidden wall.
But whatever was out there…
It hadn’t followed us.
For a moment, neither of us spoke.
Then Mira looked at me.
I looked at Mira.
And suddenly-
We both started whisper-laughing.
Quiet at first.
Then harder.
Because the entire situation had been so ridiculous.
Mira covered her mouth to keep the sound down.
“You were blaming me,” she whispered through laughter.
“You did start it.” I whispered back.
“You shouted!”
“You said we should go to the horror basement!”
“And then you panicked!”
“You pressed the magic escape button!”
“You yelled first!”
We both tried to stop laughing.
Failed.
And ended up leaning against the wall trying to stay quiet while whisper-giggling like idiots who had just barely avoided getting eaten.
Eventually I wiped a tear from my eye.
“…Okay.”
I picked up my axe again.
“That was actually very funny. And don't worry, I won't do that again.”
Mira nodded, still smiling.
“…A little bit funny.”
From somewhere far behind the sealed wall…
A distant, muffled-
“Hehehehe…”
echoed faintly.
Our smiles faded slightly.
I exhaled slowly.
“…Alright.”
I gestured ahead into the dark passage.
“Let’s keep moving before it finds the other door.”
The hidden passage was narrow.
Dark.
The kind of corridor that clearly wasn’t meant for regular use. The lights were dimmer than the main facility, some flickering weakly overhead. The air smelled older too-like dust and metal that hadn’t been disturbed in a long time.
Mira and I moved quietly through it.
I kept my axe in my right hand, the weight familiar against my palm. The axe rested against my shoulder when I needed a break, and when I walked, I kept it angled forward just in case something jumped out of the dark.
Thankfully, nothing did.
After a few minutes, we reached another door at the end of the passage.
Mira carefully pushed it open.
Both of us leaned out slightly.
Silence.
No laughter.
No dragging sounds.
No monsters waiting outside.
We stepped through.
The hallway beyond was brighter than the passage, though still sterile and empty like the rest of the facility.
But this one was different.
Three doors lined the wall ahead.
One on the left.
One straight ahead.
One on the right.
I stopped in the middle of the hall and stared at them.
“…Well.”
Mira folded her arms.
“Decision time.”
I nodded seriously.
Then I lifted my axe and pointed at the doors one by one.
“Eenie… meenie… miney… mo…”
Mira slowly turned her head toward me.
I kept going.
“Catch a monster by the toe… if he screams then… uh… stab him… throw him… somewhere… bad monster go…”
I pointed again.
“Lefty… righty… spooky door… something something…”
Mira raised an eyebrow.
“…Really?”
“What?” I said defensively. “It’s a guessing method.”
“That is not how the rhyme goes.”
“How would you know? Maybe this is the advanced version.”
She stared at me.
I kept pointing the axe back and forth between the doors.
“Monster eats your liver… no that’s bad… um… scary hallway… stab the ghost…”
Internally, I sighed.
If Val was here he’d understand.
He’d probably play along.
Or he’d dramatically act like the doors were cursed.
Or-
My thoughts suddenly twisted in a direction I did not expect.
What if my shadow had spent time with him while I wasn’t there?
The thought appeared so suddenly it made my stomach twist.
My eldritch shadow.
It could split.
Couldn’t it?
What if it had divided itself into two pieces?
One shadow clinging tightly to Val, wrapping around his arms possessively, pressing against him like it owned him.
Changing its shape.
Taking form.
Holding him close to its body like he belonged to it.
While the other shadow-self sat somewhere nearby, trembling quietly while Val comforted it.
The second one crying in its own strange shadowy way…
Because the other version of itself was taking all of him.
All for itself.
My grip on the axe tightened.
My face went strangely hollow.
“They wouldn’t dare… would they…” I muttered quietly under my breath. "How should I punish them?"
Mira tilted her head slightly.
“…Did you say something?”
I blinked.
The thought vanished as quickly as it had come.
“…What?”
I frowned.
Why had I thought that?
And why had it been so… weirdly specific?
I shook my head.
Must’ve been nothing.
Yeah.
Definitely nothing.
I cleared my throat and raised the axe again with dramatic confidence.
The tip landed on one of the doors.
The right door.
I turned proudly to Mira and gestured toward it like a grand reveal.
“Alright! Behold!!”
I looked at Mira with a smug smile.
“The scientifically selected door.”
She looked at the door.
Then back at me.
“…I am deeply concerned about our decision-making process.”
I grinned.
“Too late.”
I grabbed the handle.
“Right door it is.”
I slowly pushed the door open.
It slid aside with a quiet mechanical hiss.(A mechanical hiss is a soft sound made by machines using air or pressure when something opens.)
Mira and I stepped inside.
And immediately stopped.
The room was enormous.
Rows of cylindrical containment tanks filled the space-twenty of them at least-lined up in two long rows along the walls. Each one was filled with a dark, murky liquid that distorted the shapes inside.(Murky means dark and cloudy so you cannot see clearly through it. The tanks are filled with dirty or dark liquid that hides the creatures inside.)
Shapes that very clearly were not human or anything else.
My eyes slowly widened.
Inside the tanks were creatures.
Black.
Pitch black.
Their skin-or whatever it was-looked slick and unnatural(Slick means smooth and wet-looking, like something covered in oil or slime. The sentence means their skin looked shiny and slippery in an unnatural way.), stretched too tightly over jagged bones(Jagged means sharp and uneven. The sentence means their skin is pulled tight over bones that stick out in rough, unnatural shapes.). Some of them had mouths that split far wider than a normal face should allow, rows of long needle-like teeth pressing against the glass like broken knives.(Needle-like teeth means very thin, long, and sharp teeth like needles. The sentence means their mouths are full of extremely sharp teeth designed for tearing.)
One creature had four arms.
Another had an extra set of legs folded unnaturally beneath its torso like a spider trying to imitate a human shape.(The torso is the main body-chest, stomach, and back-not including the head or limbs. The sentence means the creature’s extra legs are bent strangely under its main body like a spider.)
One of them had a head that bent backward at a sickening angle, its jaw hanging open so wide it looked permanently dislocated.(Dislocated means a bone moved out of its normal joint position. The sentence means its jaw is stretched open so far it looks like the joint is broken or out of place.)
Even suspended in liquid, they looked wrong.
Like bodies that had been forced into shapes they were never meant to hold.
Some twitched slightly.
Some floated limp.
One creature’s fingers dragged slowly along the inside of the glass, long claws scratching faintly against it in tiny, slow movements.
My mouth opened slightly.
“…fuck.”
I mouthed the word silently.
Very slowly.
Then I turned my head to look behind me at Mira.
She had both eyes squeezed shut.
Her lips were pressed tightly together.
Her cheeks were puffed slightly.
And she was smiling in that very specific way people do when they are desperately trying not to laugh.
I stared at her.
“…Mira.”
Her shoulders shook slightly.
“Mira.”
She bit her lip.
I squinted at her.
“…Why are you trying not to laugh?”
She covered her mouth.
Her shoulders shook again.
“That is disrespectful as heck, Mira.”
That made it worse.
She turned slightly away from me, trying to contain it.
But I already knew.
The moment I saw that face, I knew exactly why she was doing it.
Because ten seconds ago I had been standing outside that door acting like I had just made the most brilliant, scientifically sound decision in history.
Behold! The scientifically selected door.
I slowly turned my head back toward the room.
Toward the twenty nightmare creatures floating in glass tanks.
Then back to Mira.
“…You’re laughing because of the door thing.”
She nodded while still trying not to laugh.
I pointed at the monsters.
“Look at them! There are twenty nightmare monsters in jars behind me!”
She nodded again.
Still shaking.
“I would appreciate a little emotional support right now.”
That only made it worse.
Her shoulders shook harder.
I sighed.
“…Fantastic.”
She wheezed quietly behind her hand.
“You said it was the scientifically selected door.” she whispered.
“That was sarcasm!”
“You said it with confidence.”
“I was committing to the bit!”
She finally lost the battle and let out a quiet snort of laughter.
I gestured wildly at the tanks with my axe.
“Yes, Mira, this is very funny.”
A creature inside one of the containers slowly opened its mouth wider, rows of jagged teeth scraping softly against the glass.
I looked at it.
Then back at Mira.
“…Next time you pick the door.”
I waited long enough for 3 chapter woooooooooo
The wait was long, sorry about that. The reason why was because the chapters are longer than usual and all that. There was a lot of planning behind them. Hope it's enjoyable! More is coming.
@CrustedMuffin02 na youre good. Like a Cajun once said "Do you know how long I've been waiting for this?" And ill wait even longer cause a good story is a good story dammit lol take time to write its good
@Pandasaurus Elite reference. I appreciate that a lot. Glad your enjoying it!