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Part 21 — Resonance

  Part 21 — Resonance

  [24 Hours Before

  Departure]

  Vincent

  had been staring at the e-mail on his screen for ten minutes now, as

  if the words might change if he looked at them long enough.

  
Appointment

  tomorrow at 8:00 a.m., outside your residence.

  Transport provided.

  Bring the essentials. The rest will be provided.

  You have 24

  hours to organize your departure.

  Twenty-four

  hours. An entire day to say goodbye to thirty years of a life gone

  nowhere. A day to pack his bags, settle his affairs, and pretend any

  of it meant something. Vincent rose from his bed and looked around.

  His

  room hadn't changed since he was fifteen. It was, in its own way,

  consistent. The video game posters had faded with time, their corners

  hanging limply, waiting for years for a decision to be made. The desk

  disappeared under empty cans and crumpled delivery receipts—an

  archaeologist would have called it “sedimentary layers”; Vincent

  would have said he’d always intended to clean up. The window

  overlooked the parking lot. He hadn't opened it in two years, which

  effectively settled the question of natural light. The floorboards

  creaked in four specific spots he knew by heart—knowledge perfectly

  useless for someone who never came home late.

  He

  was thirty years old.

  But

  he could at least leave things clean. It would be a first.

  He

  started with the clothes. Piles and piles of dirty laundry he’d let

  accumulate for weeks because, frankly, what was the point? He went

  nowhere. He saw no one. He gathered it all, sorted what was

  salvageable from what wasn't, and filled three trash bags with

  clothes that were torn, stained, or too old to be saved. The rest

  went into the laundry basket, which he carried down to the communal

  laundry room. Three loads. He sat on the washing machine, watching

  his clothes spin in the drum. It was the first time in a long while

  he knew exactly where they were.

  Next,

  the plates. Seventeen. He counted them. Seventeen dirty plates

  scattered across the desk, the nightstand, the windowsill—a

  logistical nightmare that must have seemed reasonable at the time.

  Some had food scraps dried for so long he couldn't remember what he’d

  eaten. He took them all down to the kitchen, washed them one by one,

  dried them, and put them away in the cupboard. His mother was in the

  living room, watching one of those reality TV shows she followed

  religiously. She didn't look up.

  He

  went back up. Emptied the trash. Vacuumed—the floor seemed almost

  startled by it. He wiped down his desk with a damp cloth, removing

  years of accumulated dust. Then he tackled the posters. One by one,

  he pulled them down. Cloud Strife from Final Fantasy VII, half-peeled

  for years, seemingly waiting for this moment. The Doomguy, whose

  colors had turned a pale yellow from exposure to a sun Vincent hadn't

  seen in a long time. A World of Warcraft poster from the days he

  still played, before it became too expensive, too time-consuming,

  too... everything.

  He

  rolled them up and threw them away. The walls remained bare, white,

  impersonal. Like a hotel room. As if no one had ever lived there.

  When

  he finished, it was nearly 5:00 p.m. He went down again and found his

  mother still in the living room, still in front of the TV. She had a

  half-empty glass of wine next to her. The second or third of the day,

  probably.

  — Mom,

  he said softly. I’m going grocery shopping. Do you want anything in

  particular?

  She

  shrugged without looking at him.

  — Just do what you usually do.

  Vincent

  nodded, took his wallet, and left.

  The

  supermarket was crowded at this hour. People coming home from work,

  hurried, tired, dragging screaming kids behind them. Vincent moved

  through the aisles, trying to focus on his mental list, but something

  was wrong. Something he’d noticed this morning upon waking that

  hadn't left him all day.

  The

  air was... dense. Not physically. It was something else. As if every

  person he passed dragged behind them a sort of invisible mist, a

  presence that weighed on the atmosphere. Gray for most. Sometimes

  red. Sometimes blue. Sometimes a mixture of it all.

  You’re

  just tired
, he thought, shaking his head. Your brain’s just

  glitching.


  He

  filled his cart. Coffee for his mother. Milk. Bread. Ready-made meals

  she could heat up easily—lasagna, casseroles, things she liked.

  Fruit, too, even though he knew she probably wouldn't eat it. He took

  his time, checked expiration dates, chose the best products. As if it

  mattered. As if it changed anything.

  When

  he reached the checkout, the cashier—a woman in her fifties, tired

  face, a "Suzanne" badge pinned to her smock—barely looked

  at him as she scanned his items. But Vincent felt something. That

  gray density emanating from her, thick, heavy. And with it, something

  else. Not words. Not clear thoughts. Just... impressions. Fragments.

  Vincent

  blinked.

  The

  cashier was looking at him now, brows furrowed.

  — You

  okay, sir?

  — Yeah,

  he replied quickly, paying. Sorry, I was somewhere else.

  He

  left the supermarket, his hands shaking. What the hell is this? Am

  I losing it?


  When

  he got home, he put the groceries away in silence. He stocked the

  fridge methodically, placed the bread in the bread box, the coffee in

  the cupboard. His mother was still in the living room, still in front

  of the TV. The wine glass was empty now. A new, full one had taken

  its place.

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  Vincent

  wiped his hands on his jeans and went to sit next to her on the sofa.

  She looked at him, surprised. It was rare for him to do this. Rare

  for him to seek her company. Usually, he stayed cloistered in his

  room, VR headset on, escaping this shit life by living in virtual

  worlds.

  — What

  are you doing? she asked.

  — I...

  Vincent hesitated. I just wanted to spend some time with you. Before

  I leave.

  She

  frowned, the wrinkles around her eyes deepening.

  — Leave

  where?

  — I

  found a job. A real job this time. It pays well. Very well, actually.

  I'll be fed and housed. Everything is taken care of. I... I'll

  finally be able to send you money. To pay you back for everything

  you’ve done for me.

  His

  mother looked at him with expression. That fucking

  expression he knew too well. That look of pity mixed with

  resignation. That "I've heard you say this ten times and it’s

  never led to anything" look. The look that said, without a word,

  that she didn't believe him. That she never would.

  — Oh,

  she whispered simply, turning back to the TV. Good. That's good.

  Silence

  fell between them again. Vincent stared at the screen without really

  seeing it. A stupid show where people screamed at each other over who

  had slept with whom. Problems so futile they were almost enviable.

  Vincent

  took a deep breath. He had to do it now. If he didn't do it now, he

  never would.

  — Mom...

  would you tell me about Dad?

  The

  change was immediate. His mother's body stiffened as if she’d been

  struck. Her hands tightened around her wine glass. And that gray

  density emanating from her—Vincent felt it now, clearly, beyond any

  doubt—suddenly turned black. Thick. Suffocating.

  She

  stood up abruptly, so fast that wine spilled onto the sofa.

  — There

  it is, she said in a sharp, trembling voice. I thought so... It

  couldn't just be for me. Just... for ME.

  Vincent

  stood up too, hands raised in an appeasing gesture.

  — Mom,

  that’s not what...

  — Well,

  your father, Vincent, hated you while you were still in my womb.

  The

  words came out like bullets. Sharp. Precise. Deadly.

  — And

  I lost him because of YOU. He left. You came. And you look so much

  like him...

  Her

  voice broke. She pressed a hand to her mouth, as if she could catch

  the words she’d just spoken. But it was too late. They were there,

  hanging in the air between them like shattered glass.

  — If

  only you could have been... him.

  Then

  she collapsed. Literally. Her legs gave out and she fell to her

  knees, weeping. Not silent tears. Violent, convulsive sobs that shook

  her entire body.

  Vincent

  stood there, unable to move. Unable to say anything. His mother's

  words echoed in his head, over and over, like an echo that wouldn't

  stop.

  Hated

  you. Lost him because of you. If only you could have been him.

  He

  watched his mother cry at his feet. He should have felt something.

  Sadness. Anger. Pity. Anything. But he felt nothing. Just a vast,

  cold void spreading within him like a frozen sea.

  He

  went to his room. Picked up the travel bag he’d prepared earlier.

  Checked one last time that he had everything he needed. Not much, in

  the end. A few clothes. His toothbrush. His phone charger. It was all

  he owned that had any real value.

  He

  went back into the living room. His mother was still crying, curled

  up on herself.

  — I’m

  leaving, Mom, he said calmly. And I hope it brings Dad back, even

  though I don't believe it will. Or someone else into your life,

  something I won't ruin the way I ruined yours.

  He

  paused.

  — I’m

  sorry, Mom.

  Then

  he walked out. Closed the door behind him. Walked down all six

  flights of stairs without taking the elevator. Stepped out of the

  run-down apartment block where he’d spent thirty years of his life.

  And

  he didn't look back.

  Vincent

  walked for hours. He didn't really know where he was going. He just

  followed his feet, letting the city carry him. He eventually ended up

  in the bustling downtown districts. The bars were beginning to fill.

  Terraces overflowed with people laughing, talking loudly, drinking to

  forget their work week.

  He

  sat on a bench, watching the crowd pass. And that’s where it really

  hit him for the first time.

  The

  densities. Everywhere. Around every person. Gray, red, blue, yellow,

  green. Some thick and heavy. Others light and vibrant. Some so dark

  they seemed to suck the light out of the air.

  And

  with the densities, the fragments.

  not

  enough money


  It

  came from everywhere. Hundreds of voices that weren’t really voices

  at all, impressions popping into his head like bubbles rising to the

  surface of a swamp. Vincent pressed his hands to his temples. A

  migraine was beginning to surface, dull and insistent.

  Stop.

  Stop listening. It's not real. It's just your brain glitching.

  He

  breathed in. Hold. Exhale. Hold. The breathing technique Emet had

  taught him in the game. It worked in there. Maybe it would work here

  too.

  Slowly,

  very slowly, the fragments began to fade. Not completely. But enough

  that he could breathe again.

  He

  sat there until the bars began to close. Until the crowd dispersed.

  Until only a few lost souls remained, drifting through the empty

  streets until 7:00 in the morning.

  Then

  he went back home.

  [8:00 a.m. — Departure]

  The

  TRAUM Inc. van was already there when Vincent arrived near the

  building at 7:55. A black vehicle, tinted windows, a discreet logo on

  the side. The driver—a man in his forties, dark suit, neutral

  face—got out to help him with his bag.

  — Good

  morning, Mr. Moreau, he said politely. I’ll be your driver this

  morning. Please make yourself comfortable; we have a few stops to

  make before we reach the complex.

  Vincent

  nodded and got in the back. The interior was luxurious. Leather

  seats. Climate control. Mineral water in a refrigerated compartment.

  Vincent considered the mineral water for a moment. In his building,

  the vending machine on the ground floor had been broken for eighteen

  months.

  The

  van pulled away. Vincent looked out the window, watched his building

  recede. Six floors of gray concrete and dead dreams.

  He

  wondered if she was watching.

  If

  she was still crying.

  Then

  he stopped wondering.

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