The Cage Series <Latest - 2024>
“You dreamed again last night,” she said on my 400th cycle, her voice a dry rustle. “I saw it. A green field. A dog with floppy ears. A woman laughing.”
Not a hairline this time, but a gouge, wide enough to fit a hand. White light bled from the fissure, but beneath it, I saw darkness. Real darkness, the kind that has texture and depth. I dropped to my knees and shoved my fingers into the gap. The edges were sharp, like broken ceramic, and they sliced my skin. But I pulled.
The next feeding came at what I guessed was midday. The floor slot hissed open, and a gray brick of paste slid out. I did not reach for it. Instead, I walked to the center of the cube—I had paced it out long ago, forty-two steps from any wall—and I stood there, arms at my sides, as the slot began to close. the cage series
And then she waved goodbye.
Mira stepped back into the white, her wet clothes leaving no mark. “You have been here for 1,247 cycles. You have memorized every grain of the floor. But have you ever tried to stand in the exact center of the cube, at the exact moment the nutrient slot opens?” “You dreamed again last night,” she said on
They call it The Cage not because of its bars—there are none—but because of its emptiness. A perfect cube of white, seamless light, sixty feet in each direction. No doors. No windows. No shadows to hide in. Just me, a thin mattress that materializes at 21:00 sharp, and a slot in the floor that produces nutrient paste twice a day. The paste tastes of chalk and guilt.
On cycle 1,648, I made my move.
I stood at the exact center, as I had done a thousand times before. But this time, I did not wait for the slot. Instead, I closed my eyes and dreamed— deliberately dreamed, the way one might flex a muscle. I imagined the door. The brass knob. The ivy. I imagined my hand closing around the metal, the cool weight of it, the click of the latch.
