I didn’t sleep.
Not really.
All night, I kept reshaping the haunted house in my head.
Making it darker, sharper, closer to the things I didn’t want to name.
Everyone said it was too much.
Too strange. Too wrong.
They didn’t know how real it felt to me.
That was why I wasn’t at school.
Today, father brought me back to the Exvertia Center instead.
Forms. Stamps.
Names called and answered.
Everything blurred together until a staff member led me down a sterile corridor and stopped before a seamless white door.
“You’ll enter alone,” they said.
Before I could ask anything, the door slid open.
I stepped inside.
It shut behind me.
Immediately.
Panic hit hard.
I spun and slammed my palms against the surface.
“Open—please, open!”
Nothing.
No handle. No seam. No sound.
I pounded until my hands hurt, then stumbled back, breath tearing out of my chest.
Stolen content warning: this tale belongs on Royal Road. Report any occurrences elsewhere.
The silence pressed in thick, artificial, wrong.
Minutes passed. Maybe more.
I called for Father until my voice thinned into nothing.
Then the ceiling shifted.
A panel opened.
A monitor dropped down.
A presentation began—
Flat, prerecorded, explaining mentorship schedules and procedures.
I couldn’t follow it.
My heart was still racing, my skin damp with fear.
I shouted for help until the screen went black again.
That was when I heard it.
A voice.
Low. Male.
“Hello?”
I froze. “Who’s there?”
Laughter answered, quiet, mocking, everywhere at once.
My eyes finally caught the glass.
Thin. Seamless.
Invisible until you knew to look.
It split the room.
I was on one side.
Watched from the other.
Something moved beyond the glass.
A shape—
wrong, towering, distorted.
I screamed.
The thing lifted its hands and peeled something away.
A mask.
The monster vanished.
A man stood there instead young and calm.
Ordinary...except for his eyes.
“Sorry,” he said. “That was… unkind.”
His voice softened.
“I tease sometimes. Too much, apparently. Especially with non-Exvertias.”
He watched me carefully now.
“I’m your mentor. Connor. Codename.”
My breath caught.
I knew that face.
The one I’d chosen behind the glass.
Heat rushed to my cheeks. I buried my face in my hands, painfully aware of how loud my heartbeat sounded.
Connor tilted his head. “You okay?”
“No!” I snapped. Too fast. Too loud.
“I’m fine.”
A crooked smile tugged at his lips. “Your ears are red.”
I looked away, fingers twisting in my skirt.
"It’s just nerves," I told myself.
Just embarrassment.
But something else stirred quiet, unfamiliar, stubborn.
“Relax,” Connor said. “I won’t scare you again. Promise.”
I almost looked up.
Almost.
“You’re still red,” he added lightly. “Avoiding my eyes too.”
“I’m not—!”
I was.
A soft chuckle drifted through the glass.
“Cute.”
My head snapped up. “What did you say?”
“Nothing.”
His eyes gleamed, amused.
I hated that my chest burned like this. That my pulse wouldn’t slow. That he looked at me like he already knew what I was trying to deny.
“I regret this,” I blurted. “Choosing you.”
The words came out sharp, defensive.
Connor didn’t flinch.
“You can regret it,” he said easily. “But a contract’s a contract.”
He leaned closer to the glass.
“We’ll see each other again. And again.”
My heart lurched—
Fear, warning, something worse tangled together.
“Tch… annoying,” I muttered.
“You’ll thank me later.”
“I won’t!”
But my heartbeat betrayed me really loud, restless.
It is impossible to ignore.
Because the truth was already there, clawing its way up.
I wasn’t afraid of him.
I was afraid of how easily my heart had started to race the moment he smiled.

