On cycle 1,648, I made my move.
And then she waved goodbye.
I laughed. A broken, hollow sound. “I am in a cube with no doors. I cannot even stand without touching a wall.” the cage series
For the next three hundred cycles, I experimented. I stood in different spots. I timed my movements to the slot’s rhythm. I discovered that The Cage was not a cube at all, but a torus—a donut of folded space, wrapped around a central hub. The walls, the floor, the ceiling: they were all projections, a skin stretched over a machinery that hummed just below perception. The slot was a wound that briefly opened, and at the moment of opening, the skin thinned. On cycle 1,648, I made my move
The door. The exact door from my dream. Wooden, plain, with a brass knob. Set into a wall of ivy that grew impossibly from the metal floor, green and alive and real . I reached for the knob. My fingers closed around it. It was warm. A broken, hollow sound
“Because you are different, 734-Beta,” she said. “Your dreams are… louder. They resonate. The others, they dream of shopping lists and old arguments and the smell of rain. But you dream of escape. Over and over, every night. The same dream. A door.”
She dissolved into the light before I could answer.