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SEASON TWO

The basent slls like stale coffee and shared trauma.

Arden counts the people in the circle. Habit. Can’t help it.

Twelve.

Twelve folding chairs. Twelve survivors. Twelve people who’ve seen Bus 000 and lived to rember.

Thirteen if she counts herself.

She sits between Kael and a woman whose na tag reads "SIENNA - Ga 243." Everyone has tags. Na. Ga number. How long since they escaped.

Arden’s tag says "ARDEN - Ga 246 - 6 months."

Six months. Half a year. Feels like yesterday. Feels like forever.

"Welco everyone." The speaker stands. Older woman. Gray hair. Kind eyes. Her tag reads "MARGARET - Ga 198 - 14 years."

Fourteen years. She’s been out fourteen years.

The Entity let her stay out that long.

"For those new to the group," Margaret continues, "this is a safe space. What’s said here stays here. No judgnt. No sha. Just truth."

Arden shifts in her chair. She’s been coming two months now. Still feels new. Still feels wrong.

Around the circle. Faces. So familiar. So fresh.

There’s Jin-Hwa. The surgeon from Station Two. She got out six weeks after Arden. Rembers nothing before the Ga. Just her dical training. Muscle mory.

There’s Callum. Bearded Arican. Station One survivor. Lost his faith in the Frozen Cathedral. Found sothing else. Won’t say what.

There’s Dmitri. Russian. Quiet. Scars on his hands. Won’t talk about his Stations. Just listens. Week after week. Just listens.

And new faces. Two of them.

A young man. Maybe twenty. Skinny. Shaking. His tag reads "MARCUS - Ga 247 - 3 weeks."

Three weeks. Still fresh. Still bleeding.

And a girl. Teenager. Sixteen maybe. No na tag. Just sitting. Staring at nothing.

"Let’s start with Marcus," Margaret says. Gentle. Patient. "You wanted to share today?"

Marcus nods. Hands gripping his knees. "I don’t. I can’t stop seeing it. The Stations. The deaths. Every ti I close my eyes. It’s there. All of it."

"What do you see?" Margaret asks.

"Station Three. The Carnival. The mirrors." His voice cracks. "I saw myself. Every version. Every failure. Every way I could have been better. And none of them were good enough. None of them were worth saving."

Arden knows that Station. Knows those mirrors. Knows that feeling.

"You survived," Margaret says. "That ans you were worth saving."

"Was I?" Marcus looks up. Eyes red. Hollow. "I lost my brother in Station One. He died. I didn’t save him. Just ran. Just saved myself. What kind of person does that?"

Silence.

Everyone in the circle knows. Everyone has soone they didn’t save. Soone they left behind. Soone they failed.

"A human person," Kael says. Quiet. Firm. "A person who wanted to live. That’s not a cri. That’s not a sin. That’s survival."

"Is it?" Marcus wipes his face. "Because it feels like murder."

"It’s not." Jin-Hwa’s voice. Steady. Professional. "I’m a surgeon. I’ve made choices. Who gets the transplant. Who gets the bed. Who lives. Who dies. Those choices aren’t murder. They’re necessity. The Ga forces those choices. Makes you think you’re evil for choosing yourself. But you’re not. You’re just human."

Marcus doesn’t look convinced. But he nods. Small. Broken.

Margaret turns to the girl. The one without a tag.

"What about you?" she asks. "Do you want to share?"

The girl doesn’t respond. Just stares. Empty.

"She hasn’t spoken," a voice says. Man in the corner. His tag reads "OLLI - Ga 245 - 8 months." "Found her three days ago. Wandering downtown. Soaking wet. No ID. No mory. Just. Empty."

"Empty," Margaret repeats. Sad. Knowing. "How many deaths?"

"We don’t know. But her eyes." Olli gestures. "Look at her eyes."

Arden looks. Really looks.

The girl’s eyes are there. Open. Seeing.

But nothing behind them. No person. No soul. No anything.

Empty.

"She died too many tis," Margaret says. Quiet. "Lost too many pieces. There’s nothing left. Just the body. Just the breathing."

"Can she recover?" soone asks.

"I don’t know." Margaret touches the girl’s hand. The girl doesn’t react. "I’ve seen two Empties in fourteen years. Both stayed empty. Forever."

The room goes quiet. Heavy.

That’s the real horror. Not death. Not pain. But this. Surviving with nothing left. Walking shell. Breathing corpse.

Arden’s hands are fists. She could have been that. Could have died one more ti. Two more tis. Lost enough pieces to beco nothing.

She got lucky. Or skilled. Or both.

"Let’s take a break," Margaret says. "Fifteen minutes. Coffee. Bathroom. Fresh air."

People stand. Move. So head upstairs. So stay.

Arden doesn’t move. Just stares at the Empty girl.

"Don’t," Kael says beside her. "Don’t think about what could have been."

"How can I not?" She can’t look away. "That was almost . One more death. One more mory. I’d be sitting there. Nothing. Gone."

"But you’re not." He pulls her up. "Co on. Let’s get coffee."

They go upstairs. Small kitchen. Donated coffee maker. Stale donuts. Survivor basics.

Jin-Hwa is there. Making tea. She nods at Arden.

"You look better," she says. "Than last month. Color in your face."

"Therapy helps." Arden pours coffee. Black. No sugar. "Dr. Chen says I’m making progress. Whatever that ans."

"It ans you’re not counting as much." Jin-Hwa smiles. Small. Real. "I notice. You used to count everything. Steps. Chairs. Words. Now you just. Exist."

Is that true? Arden thinks. Realizes she didn’t count the stairs coming up. Didn’t count the coffee spoons. Didn’t count Jin-Hwa’s words.

"Huh," she says. "I guess I am."

"Progress." Jin-Hwa raises her tea cup. "To being slightly less broken."

They drink. Small victory. Tiny progress.

The door opens. Callum enters. Looks shaken.

"What’s wrong?" Kael asks.

"Outside." Callum’s voice is tight. "You need to see this."

They follow. Out the back door. Into the alley behind the community center.

And there. On the wall. Spray painted. Fresh.

A ssage.

THE ENTITY WAKES

BUS 000 RETURNS

47 DAYS

Arden’s blood goes cold.

"Who wrote this?" she asks.

"Don’t know." Callum touches the paint. Still wet. "But it’s true. I’ve been feeling it. Last few weeks. Sothing changing. Sothing waking."

"The Entity’s dormant," Kael says. But his voice is uncertain. "It should be dormant for years. Decades."

"Should be," Callum says. "Isn’t."

Arden stares at the numbers. Forty-seven days.

Always forty-seven. Everything is forty-seven.

"What happens in forty-seven days?" Jin-Hwa asks.

"Ga 248," a voice says behind them.

They turn. Margaret stands in the doorway. Face grave.

"The Entity runs a new Ga every forty-seven days," she says. "Regular schedule. Like clockwork. Ga 246 was yours, Arden. Ga 247 was Marcus’s. Ga 248 starts in forty-seven days. New players. New Stations. New deaths."

"But Arden won," Kael says. "She starved it. Defeated it. It should be sleeping."

"Winning doesn’t kill it." Margaret moves closer. Studies the graffiti. "Just weakens it. Makes it sleep. But sleep ends. It always ends. And when it wakes. It’s hungry. Angrier. More dangerous."

"So what do we do?" Arden asks.

"We survive." Margaret turns to face them. "We keep our heads down. We avoid bus stops. We don’t play. We let the next forty-seven people get chosen. Get taken. Get killed. And we stay safe."

"That’s it?" Arden’s voice rises. "We just let them die? Let forty-seven people get taken to that hell?"

"Yes." Margaret’s voice is hard. Cold. "Because that’s survival. That’s the price of winning. You got out. They don’t. That’s the Ga. That’s the rule."

"That’s evil."

"That’s reality." Margaret doesn’t flinch. "I’ve been out fourteen years, Arden. You know how? By not playing hero. By not trying to save everyone. By accepting that so people die so I can live. That’s the cost. That’s the trade."

Arden wants to argue. To fight. To say there’s another way.

But she can’t. Because Margaret’s right. And wrong. And both.

They go back inside. The eting resus. More sharing. More pain. More broken people trying to be less broken.

But Arden can’t focus. Can’t listen. Just keeps seeing the ssage.

47 DAYS

Forty-seven people. Forty-seven days. Forty-seven seconds she counted.

Everything circles back. Everything connects.

The eting ends. People leave. Slow trickle. Until it’s just Arden, Kael, and Margaret.

"You’re thinking about it," Margaret says. Not a question. A statent.

"About what?"

"About trying to stop it. To warn people. To save them." Margaret sits. Tired. Ancient. "Don’t. It doesn’t work. I tried. Ga 199. Went to the police. To the dia. To everyone. Told them about the Entity. About the Ga. About the deaths." She laughs. Bitter. "You know what happened?"

"What?"

"Nothing. They didn’t believe . Thought I was insane. Ga 199 happened anyway. Forty-seven people died. And I got committed. Spent six months in a psych ward. dicated. Watched. Controlled." She looks at Arden. "You can’t stop the Ga. You can only survive it. Rember that."

She leaves.

Arden and Kael stand in the empty basent. Folding chairs in a circle. Empty coffee cups. Survivor residue.

"She’s wrong," Arden says.

"Maybe." Kael doesn’t sound convinced.

"She is. There has to be a way. To warn people. To stop the Entity. To end this."

"And if there isn’t?"

"Then I’ll make one." Arden heads for the door. "I’m a writer. I create solutions. That’s what I do. That’s who I am."

"Who you were," Kael says. "You don’t rember being a writer. Don’t rember creating anything."

"Then I’ll learn again." She stops at the door. "I didn’t survive the Ga just to hide. Just to let forty-seven people die every forty-seven days forever. That’s not living. That’s just slow death."

"What are you going to do?"

"I don’t know yet." She opens the door. Boston night. Cold. Real. "But I have forty-seven days to figure it out."

She walks. Kael follows. Silent. Supportive. There.

They pass a bus stop. Regular stop. Number 39. Normal bus. Normal world.

But Arden sees the shadow. The possibility. The threat.

Any bus stop could beco Bus 000. Any night. Any person. Any mont.

And in forty-seven days. It would happen again.

Unless she stopped it.

Unless she broke the cycle.

Unless she beca sothing other than a survivor.

Maybe a fighter.

Maybe a savior.

Maybe sothing new entirely.

She didn’t know yet.

But she had forty-seven days.

And she wasn’t counting seconds anymore.

She was counting solutions.

That had to count for sothing.

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