Sera woke to the sight and sll of tal.
Not the sound of it, not the taste of it, but the certainty of it pressed into the shape of her body.
There were bars under her shoulders, bars under her spine, and bars close enough to her face that she could feel the temperature difference between her breath and the steel.
She did not jerk upright. She did not test the door. She did not waste movent on proof of what she already knew.
Soft light pulsed in the room beyond her cage, warm and unsteady, casting the shadows of the bars across the concrete like a second set of restraints. The air slled of antiseptic that couldn’t quite overpower damp stone, old rust, and the sour trace of too many bodies kept in one place for too long.
Sowhere nearby, water dripped steadily, slow enough that each drop had its own echo. It was quiet in the way a place beca quiet when sound was discouraged rather than absent.
Her lungs pulled in air that was colder than it should have been for a building that still claid to be organized. The inhale slid into her chest cleanly. The exhale left just as clean. Nothing in her body protested. Nothing in her body panicked.
That was how she knew she was exactly where she needed to be.
Her creature stirred with her, not hungry, not frantic, simply present. This is familiar, it said, its voice steady. But you need to rember this...you are not alone this ti. You will never been alone again.
Sera kept her eyes half-lidded, watching through her lashes.
The bars were close enough to fra the room in narrow slices, and she used that. It made her look drowsy. It made her look compliant. It made her look like she had been taken and placed here, not like she had walked into the trap and laid down in it on purpose.
Across from her were more cages.
dium-sized, like hers, the kind ant for dogs that weren’t obedient and couldn’t be trusted to behave alone in a corner. So of the cages were empty, their doors hanging open, while others held people who were very still in the way where most people couldn’t tell if they were sleeping or dead.
One cage held a man with his knees drawn up to his chest, his forehead pressed to the bars. His breathing was fast enough that the light caught the line of saliva as it trailed out of his open mouth and down his chin.
Another held a woman lying on her side, one hand curled under her cheek like she had tried to make herself more comfortable in a place designed for the opposite effect. There were scuffs on the concrete around her cage, marks left by sothing being dragged recently, and the sll near her was sharper—cleaner—like she had been wiped down for inspection.
Sera did not stare at these humans who were more dead than alive. Instead, she counted.
Four cages on her side of the aisle. Six on the opposite side. Two more beyond where the light was able to reach, partially obscured by a rolling cart stacked with folded cloth and glass vials.
She could not see the far wall, but she could hear movent from that direction, low voices and the scrape of footwear on concrete.
Lab assistants spoke to each other like she was not awake.
They did not speak with the open cruelty of guards who wanted a reaction. They spoke with the flat efficiency of people who had learned to disassociate just to survive and be able to sleep at night.
Their voices were not loud enough to carry easily, but the room was built to amplify any sound that didn’t belong. The concrete and tal bounced words back the way corridors always did.
"...intake from Lower Tier," a man said, the cadence bored. "Commune assignnts, zero level. Not flagged."
Another voice, female, answered while paper shuffled. "We’re not flagging. We’re sorting. If they were flagged, they’d be above us."
"That one’s breathing," the first voice noted. "You want her logged as conscious?"
"Doesn’t matter," the woman replied. "They always breathe until they don’t."
Sera’s mouth stayed slack. Her eyes stayed soft. Her shoulders stayed loose against the bars.
mory was not a flood so much as a pressure.
The damp sll. The asured voices. The sound of soone writing. The way the air felt colder than it should have, as if warmth was a privilege that had to be earned. Her body did not tighten, but her awareness sharpened until the room felt smaller. Not because it was shrinking, but because she was mapping every inch of it with the patience of sothing that did not need to rush.
Her creature stayed calm beside that sharpening, voice smoothing the edge. You are safe. This is not the sa. You are not a lone woman in a cage. You are a queen that walked into it with your eyes open.
A bootstep paused near her cage.
Sera let her gaze drift down to the floor as if she was avoiding eye contact out of sha. She kept her breathing even. Inhale. Exhale. The rhythm of a person who had been handled before and learned that stillness was rewarded.
A clipboard shadow crossed the bars. A pen tapped once, as if soone was counting without bothering to look up.
"Subject nine hundred and twenty-nine," a man’s voice said, too close now. "Female. Lower Tier intake. No visible mutation markers."
Sera remained still. In her last life she was subject ten.
A lantern was moved closer. The light ward the side of her face. It highlighted the skin that looked human because it had been made to look human, and it made her eyes look blue because they had been made to look blue. She did not flinch at the brightness. She did not turn away.
"She’s clean," the man continued, as if cleanliness was a category of person. "No bites. No fever."
The woman’s voice was nearer now too. "Open the door."
A key scraped in a lock and the sound of tal clicking echoed around them. The cage door swung outward with a soft squeal that could have been dismissed as age, except the hinge was oiled.
Everything here was maintained. Everything here had a purpose.
Gloved hands reached in.
They weren’t gloved because they cared about her dignity, but because they cared about contamination. One set of hands took her wrist. Another took her elbow. They did not yank her. They did not drag her. They lifted her like she was fragile equipnt.
Sera let her weight shift in their grip with practiced compliance. She made her legs slightly slow, not weak enough to seem sick, not strong enough to seem defiant. She let her head dip as if she was tired. She let her eyes stay down.
The aisle slled worse up close. Old sweat embedded into concrete. A copper tang that wasn’t fresh blood, more like a room where blood had been cleaned too many tis and the mory of it had settled into the pores of the stone.
They guided her to a table.
It was more like a repurposed workbench than anything else with a stained surface, damp cloths stacked on one end, and a blood pressure cuff lying beside a thermoter that had seen better years. The lantern was placed directly above it, the fla steady behind glass.
The man spoke while the woman worked. "Na?"
Reviews
All reviews (0)