The door closed behind him, the click of the lock a sound of finality that separated him from the outside world. Finally, silence. The noise of the institute, the voices, the bells... everything faded away.
He dropped his backpack next to the door, the dull thud echoing in the empty house. The day had been a blur, a long, gray corridor of apathy. He moved through the living room, his steps making no sound, and collapsed onto the couch.
He lay there, staring at nothing. The afternoon sun stread through the window, drawing a rectangle of light on the carpet that moved slowly, like the second hand of a cosmic clock.
For the first ti since the counselor had called him in, his mind began to erge from the fog. Automatic mode was switching off, and thoughts, slow and heavy, began to form.
'I can't go on like this,' he thought, the idea clear and cold. 'I can't spend the rest of my life like a zombie, waiting for the next bell to ring.'
But logic imdiately clashed with the reality of his feelings.
'But, how am I not supposed to be sad? It's the only thing I feel.'
The contradiction was exhausting. A part of him knew he had to move, that he had to act, that he couldn't let himself be consud by the pain. But another part, the largest, the heaviest, felt nothing but that deep, constant sadness. It was like trying to run at the bottom of an ocean.
He realized he needed a purpose. A goal. Sothing, anything, that would give him a reason to get up in the morning that wasn't a threatening call from the school.
'I need a plan,' he told himself. 'Sothing. Anything that isn't... this.' He looked around, at the silent house, at the dust floating in the air. He needed a path. A direction. Even if he didn't know where it led.
...
Sitting on the couch, in the dim light of the room, Michael searched for a way out. Not a way out of this universe, he knew that was impossible. He was looking for a way out of apathy, out of that emptiness that threatened to consu him.
'What can I do?' he asked himself, the first proactive question he had posed in days. 'Truly, what am I good at?'
The answer ca, clear and solid in the midst of the confusion.
Programming.
He was already a software engineer, or close to it. He was a sester away from graduating in his other life. He knew programming languages, system architecture, software developnt. He had almost a decade of knowledge and experience that most people in this year 2015 hadn't even started to learn.
A spark, small but intense, ignited in his chest. It was the first feeling that wasn't pain or emptiness. It was purpose.
He decided to follow that path again. But this ti, he wouldn't be a student struggling to understand the concepts. This ti he would start from the top. He had years of advantage. He could build sothing, create sothing. He could be the best.
The idea gave him a jolt of energy. He stood up from the couch, his movents now having direction. He went to his father's old study, the sa place where he had discovered the truth of his new life. But this ti it didn't feel like a tomb. It felt like a starting point.
He sat down in front of the old computer, which protested as it turned on. While the machine booted up with exasperating slowness, he was already planning.
'Okay, first things first. I need a decent developnt environnt.'
His first instinct was to look for his favorite code editor. When the Windows desktop finally appeared, he opened the browser and typed "Visual Studio Code" into Google.
The results perplexed him. There was no download page. Only articles from tech blogs talking about a promising new Microsoft editor that was in a very early beta phase.
'Ah, shit, that's right,' he rembered. 'In this year, it hadn't co out yet.'
A small, ironic smile spread across his face. The first casualty of his ti travel journey. He thought for a mont, searching his mory.
'Subli Text. That one was around. It was the king before VS Code.'
He typed "Subli Text" into the search bar. The download page appeared instantly. But just before clicking, he stopped. It was a ritual, almost a superstition. He could never start a major programming project in silence. He needed the right ambiance.
He wanted to put on so music.
...
With the Subli Text download page open, Michael opened a new tab in the browser. YouTube. It was an automatic movent, a muscular reflex perfected over countless nights of studying. His mind was already in his sonic sanctuary. His phantom thumb moved, ready to type the na of his prophet, the architect of the music that had defined him.
He typed "Kanye West". He pressed Enter.
The results page loaded, and Michael frowned. Instead of an avalanche of official music videos, album covers, and interviews, what he saw was... scarce.
There were a few low quality videos, old interviews from the early 2000s, where he was ntioned as a promising producer from Chicago. But there was no trace of The College Dropout. There was nothing from Graduation. And definitely, nothing from Yeezus.
'That's strange. Maybe the copyrights were stricter in 2015.'
He tried again, this ti searching for his brand. "Yeezy". The results confused him even more. An old boot brand from the 80s appeared. No sneakers. No fashion shows.
A sense of unease began to grow in his chest. This was no longer a simple problem with the network or copyrights. He searched for "Kanye West Taylor Swift VMA". No ntion of an interruption.
The unease transford into a sense of dread. He opened a new tab. He started searching for Kanye seriously. Google. Wikipedia. Discogs. But the story was the sa. Kanye West was a talented and respected producer from Chicago who had worked with Jay-Z. And that was it. There was no solo career. No albums. No brand. He simply did not exist as the icon Michael knew.
The chill that ran down his spine was cold and sharp. His breathing quickened. This was different. The death of his parents in this universe was a personal tragedy. But this... this was a fracture in reality itself, in culture.
He opened another tab, his fingers typing with a new urgency. "Travis Scott".
Nothing. Zero. Not a single relevant result.
"Drake".
He was still there. The na appeared. But upon clicking on his YouTube channel, the difference was abysmal. He had his first mixtapes, So Far Gone was there. But the videos had only a few hundred thousand views, not hundreds of millions. He didn't have as many views. He was a niche figure, a Canadian rapper with a lodic sound that was popular in certain circles, not the global superstar who had dominated the radio for a decade.
'Okay, this is not right.'
His heart pounded hard. He opened a final tab. The question was simple, direct: "Top Hip-Hop 2015".
The list that appeared on his screen left him frozen. It was like opening a ti capsule from 2005. The nas dominating the charts, the conversations, the culture, were legends he respected, but who belonged to another era. 50 Cent, Eminem, Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre, Tupac...
The genre had been frozen. Gangsta rap and its direct derivatives were still the undisputed kings. There was no trace of the vulnerability, of the sonic experintation, of the fusion with pop and art that he rembered. Hip-hop had not evolved. It had stagnated.
...
Michael leaned back in the desk chair, the old plastic creaking under his weight. The pale light of the monitor illuminated his face, but his gaze was lost, unfocused.
It wasn't just that Kanye didn't exist. It was that everything he had brought with him—the vulnerability, the experintation, the art of fusing genres—didn't either. Rap had been stuck in a loop of arrogance and violence, a caricature of itself. The music that had helped him navigate his own adolescence, the one that had given him a language for his sadness, simply hadn't been invented here.
The realization hit him with a force that took his breath away. Not only had he lost his family and his future. He had lost his culture.
The loneliness he felt at that mont was of a different kind, deeper and more desolate than before. It was a cultural loneliness. It was like being the only person in the world who rembered the color blue. He was completely, fundantally alone.
He put his head in his hands, the hum of the old computer the only sound in the silent room. He felt trapped in a museum, a world in black and white, while his mory scread in technicolor.
It was then that he saw sothing. A flicker in the corner of his right eye, in his peripheral vision. He ignored it. 'It must be my eyes. I've been looking at this damn screen for hours.'
He closed his eyes tightly, rubbing them with his palms. When he opened them again, the flicker was still there. It wasn't a flicker. It was a light. A small, pulsating light of a cyan color, which seed to float in the air three feet from his face.
He froze. His heart, which had cald down, began to pound again with a dull, heavy force. It was not a reflection. It was not an illusion. It was there.
As he watched, not daring to breathe, the light expanded. It grew silently, without sound, like a drop of digital ink spreading in water. It ford a perfect rectangle, a semi transparent black glass panel that seed to absorb the room's light.
His mind struggled to find a logical explanation. 'Hallucinations. Stress. Shock. I'm going crazy.'
But the window was too solid, too real. And then, in the center of the black panel, letters in a brilliant neon cyan began to write themselves, with an impossible clarity.
[CULTURAL ANOMALY DETECTED. PIONEER PROTOCOL INITIATED. WELCO, CREATOR.]
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