The room was white in a way that made it difficult to tell where one surface ended and another began. Even the corners were so obscure that it was hard to tell where they were.
But it wasn’t bright, wasn’t sterile in the way people expected.
The light ca from narrow panels set high into the walls, diffused through layers of frosted glass that softened everything until shadows barely existed. The effect was flattening. Nothing was able to hide from those who watched and nothing really stood out.
Sera sat where she had been told to sit, her hands resting loosely in her lap, and her ankles crossed the way she had learned kept her from being repositioned without warning. The bench beneath her was smooth and faintly warm, molded to discourage movent without openly restraining it.
She did not fidget.
Across the room, a man in a pale uniform checked sothing on a tablet. Another woman adjusted a sensor along the wall, not looking at Sera at all. No one spoke to her directly.
That, she had learned, ant this part was going well.
A tone chid softly.
"Stage Two complete," the woman said, voice even. "Vitals within acceptable variance."
A different voice answered from sowhere behind the glass. "Noted."
Sera kept her breathing steady. In through her nose. Out through her mouth. Not because she needed to, but because the machines liked consistency. Variance invited interest and while she wanted to be interesting... she also didn’t want to be exceptional.
She had learned that quickly in her last life.
The door on the far side of the room opened with a pneumatic hiss. Two figures entered, their steps asured, identical. They wore the sa pale uniforms, the sa gloves, the sa blank expressions. One carried a tablet. The other carried nothing at all.
The one with the tablet glanced at Sera, then back down at the screen. "Subject nine-two-nine."
Sera lifted her eyes when spoken to. Not too fast. Not too slow.
"Yes," she said.
The man blinked, clearly unused to a response. "You have completed Stage Two successfully."
"I see," she replied.
A pause. He seed uncertain what to do with that.
The woman beside him stepped forward. "You will be moved to a different sector. Access level adjusted. You are not to speak to anyone unless instructed. You are not to touch anything unless directed. You are to comply imdiately."
Sera nodded once. "Yes."
There was no praise in the woman’s voice, but there was sothing else. Interest, perhaps. Or relief.
"Others did not adapt as well," the woman added, glancing toward a sealed door on the far wall.
Sera did not look.
She didn’t need to. She had already heard the sounds earlier. The raised voices. The scrambling. The mont when sound cut off too abruptly to be natural.
"They were... unsuitable," the man with the tablet said, as if clarifying a data point. "You, however, remain stable."
Sera allowed her shoulders to relax by a fraction. "I try to be."
The woman studied her then, eyes moving with clinical intent. "You don’t ask questions."
"No point," Sera shrugged. "If you wanted to know, you would be telling ."
"You don’t resist."
"Once again, there is no point. You’ll still do what you want to do."
"And you don’t panic."
Sera considered that for half a second as she cocked her head to the side. "If I did, would it change anything? Or would it result in being tied down?"
The woman’s lips twitched. I wasn’t a smile, but it wasn’t disapproval either.
"You are smart," she said, not answering Sera’s question. "That will serve you well in the future."
They gestured for her to stand.
She did so without hesitation, rising smoothly to her feet. The floor felt warr here, the air thicker. As she moved, she beca aware of subtle differences in the corridor beyond the door. The hum of machinery changed pitch. The lighting shifted almost imperceptibly.
This place was deeper.
They walked for several minutes in silence. Doors opened and closed around them without visible controls. Each threshold felt heavier than the last, the air denser, the quiet more deliberate.
Sera counted steps. She always did.
They passed other rooms. So were empty. So were not.
She caught glimpses through narrow observation windows—figures lying still beneath sheets, others restrained and thrashing, others simply... waiting. No one scread. No one spoke.
The quiet was enforced, not requested.
At the end of the corridor, they stopped before a door that was thicker than the rest. No window. No panel. Just a smooth surface broken only by a small, recessed scanner.
The man with the tablet paused.
"Subject nine-two-nine has completed evaluation," he said aloud, as though the door were listening. "Authorization requested."
A soft tone answered him.
The door slid open.
Inside, the air was cooler. Cleaner. Sharper.
This room felt different in a way Sera couldn’t quite articulate. Less like a testing space and more like a place where decisions were made.
A man stood near the center, his back turned as he reviewed a floating display. He wore a darker uniform than the others, cut cleaner, fitted with intention rather than regulation. His hair was neatly combed. His posture relaxed in the way of soone who had never needed to hurry.
He didn’t turn when they entered.
"Leave us," he said calmly.
The two attendants hesitated only a mont before stepping back. The door sealed behind them with a soft, final sound.
Sera remained where she was.
The man finished reading whatever was on the screen before him, then lowered it with a thoughtful hum.
"So," he said. "You’re the one."
She did not respond.
He turned slowly, assessing her in a way that felt different from the others. Not predatory. Not clinical. Curious.
"Subject nine-two-nine," he said again, tasting the number. "You’ve caused quite a bit of discussion."
"I didn’t an to," Sera replied.
That earned her a faint smile.
"No," he said. "I imagine you didn’t."
He circled her once, not invading her space, but close enough that she could sll antiseptic and sothing faintly tallic. His gaze flicked to her hands, her posture, the stillness of her breathing.
"Your responses are... unusual," he continued. "You don’t present the sa stress markers. Your tolerance thresholds are inconsistent with baseline human data."
She t his eyes calmly. "I do what I’m told."
"Yes," he agreed. "You do."
He stopped in front of her.
"My na is Adam," he said. "And you are going to help us accomplish sothing extraordinary."
Sera tilted her head slightly. "How?"
His smile deepened—not unkindly, but with unmistakable satisfaction.
"By continuing to survive," he said. "Where others fail."
For the first ti, sothing flickered behind his eyes. Recognition, perhaps. Or curiosity sharpening into intent.
"You’re special," he added. "You just don’t know how yet."
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