That world seemed to share something
with the reality Joseph and his friends recognized. The streets, the
houses, and the other buildings that filled the place resembled those
they remembered from the city where they had always lived. That
familiarity allowed them to react quickly when they decided to lift
Arthur from the ground and carry him into a nearby house whose door
appeared to be open.
Joseph stretched out his hand as far as
he could to grasp the metal latch, which yielded under the pressure
of his fingers. The door, which did not seem particularly heavy,
slowly opened. Even knowing that the building appeared completely
empty, Joseph could not help feeling the urge to ask if someone was
inside.
“Man, there shouldn’t be anyone
here,” Rogert said, struggling to support Arthur’s weight.
Joseph lowered his head, directing his
gaze toward Arthur’s face, which still showed faint signs of
consciousness through his strained expressions. Joseph’s mind
carried the confusion of someone who cannot fully understand what he
is seeing. After all, they themselves knew that things in that world
did not function the same way they did in reality.
The pain Arthur seemed to be
experiencing was something completely unfamiliar to them, and even
the sense of danger was new.
“This shouldn’t be happening…”
“Let’s lay him down here,” Rogert
said.
“What could have happened to him?”
Joseph asked, looking at Rogert with concern.
Rogert did not answer immediately.
Instead, he sat beside Arthur’s body, watching as his friend moved
in an odd, unsettling way. In the minds of the two boys there was
nothing but the confusion this situation forced upon them. Joseph
mentioned that Arthur’s movements reminded him of the kind of sleep
paralysis people sometimes experience while dreaming.
But that explanation did not seem
entirely possible.
After all, this itself was supposed to
be a dream.
“I don’t know. This is supposed to
be a dream. Something like this shouldn’t be happening…” Rogert
said, pressing his hand lightly against his chin.
“Maybe we should try waking him up,”
Joseph suggested.
Joseph reached out and grabbed Arthur by
the shoulders. Arthur’s brow tightened even further, and the
expression on his face shifted into one that clearly reflected pain.
Rogert noticed it immediately. Before
Joseph could begin shaking their friend on the ground, Rogert stopped
him, pulling him slightly aside.
“There’s something strange about his
expression,” Rogert said. “We should check his body. See if
there’s anything unusual.”
Joseph didn’t seem convinced. Still,
reluctantly, he began searching Arthur’s arms for any visible
wound, even though deep down he knew it was unlikely he would find
anything.
However, as he passed his hand over
Arthur’s shirt, near the chest, he felt something that caught his
attention.
“There’s something strange here…”
he whispered, looking at Rogert.
He slowly withdrew his hand as Rogert
began lifting Arthur’s shirt, gradually revealing part of his body.
He froze almost instantly when he noticed a dark stain that seemed to
be spreading across Arthur’s skin.
Startled, Rogert pulled his hands away
and stumbled backward, dropping abruptly to the floor.
Joseph looked at him and noticed that
there was something more than uncertainty in his friend’s eyes.
That look—one being consumed by an unfamiliar fear—was something
Joseph recognized easily.
Past experiences had taught him how to
recognize it.
“We should try to wake up…” Rogert
said.
“And what about Arthur?” Joseph
asked.
“I don’t know. Maybe he’ll be fine
once we do.”
Those words sounded strange to Joseph’s
ears, especially coming from Rogert—the bravest of the three. To
Joseph, it felt like abandoning Arthur to whatever danger they were
facing.
He understood that he could do little if
he did not know exactly what they were dealing with. Ignoring the
fearful side Rogert was showing, Joseph finally lifted the shirt of
his friend lying on the ground.
“What the hell is that?” he asked
aloud, his eyes fixed on Arthur’s chest.
“This is bad, man…”
Rogert’s muffled voice did not stop
Joseph from stepping closer to examine what was being revealed on
Arthur’s chest. He almost reached out, stretching his fingers
carefully toward the anomaly, but his common sense forced him to
stop. Instead, he simply observed what lay before him.
It was a hole—and not an ordinary one.
The small cavity seemed to change shape
as something emerged from within it. Thin strands, almost like liquid
moving without the influence of gravity, drifted in and out of the
dark opening that appeared to have no bottom.
Rogert hesitated before approaching to
look more closely, until Joseph himself urged him forward. He told
Rogert that they could not simply wake up and leave Arthur in that
condition—especially when it had been Rogert who first encouraged
them to continue exploring what they believed to be a new ability
they possessed.
“I don’t know what we could do…
Arthur looks like he’s asleep, and we don’t even know what caused
this.”
Joseph understood that the uncertainty
Rogert was showing was just as valid as the fact that they could not
abandon Arthur to his fate. With that in mind, he forced himself to
remain calm and tried to think of a possible solution.
He remembered the first time they had
stepped into that dreamlike city and how, by accident, they
discovered that a part of their conscious selves could manipulate
things around them. Perhaps Arthur had managed to alter part of the
path he had taken, and that might give them the clue they needed.
Joseph suggested that they leave Arthur
where he was and try to search together for those clues that must be
scattered somewhere nearby.
Rogert’s expression shook Joseph, as
if a sudden blow of reality had struck him straight in the chest.
“Are you out of your mind, man? We
can’t just wander around this entire place hoping to find something
we’re not even sure exists.”
Joseph stared at Rogert with wide eyes,
surprised by the sudden burst of anger his friend had shown. He
admitted that Rogert was right, and then sat down beside Arthur once
more, trying to think of a more logical solution.
Joseph noticed that his hands were as
tense as the muscles in his arms. He hadn’t realized that those
sensations felt far more real than anything he had experienced
before, and that alone stirred the curiosity that was so
characteristic of him.
He extended his right hand, stretching
each finger as far as he could. A tingling sensation ran through
them, quickly turning into a painful cramp.
Not as painful as he remembered.
“Do you remember feeling pain at any
point, Rogert?”
Rogert had not grasped the weight of
those words at first. He simply paused, trying to recall what pain
itself felt like. Unable to reach any clear conclusion, he raised his
hand slightly and drove it forward in a clenched fist against the
floor, which was covered with old, dry wooden boards.
He pulled his hand back quickly as soon
as the sound of the blow echoed through the room.
Joseph noticed how Rogert’s face
tightened the moment his fist struck the floor, and that was all the
answer he needed.
“The first time we jumped off that
cliff… we didn’t feel anything when we hit the bottom.”
“I remember. This is something new…”
Rogert murmured between quiet groans.
Joseph argued that something must be
causing their dream bodies—if they could even call them that—to
experience sensations that belonged to the real world. To him, the
hole in Arthur’s chest was the key to understanding what was
happening.
This story has been taken without authorization. Report any sightings.
Rogert finally yielded to Joseph’s
reasoning. Yet as he stared for a moment at Arthur’s motionless
body, he realized that something else might be happening—something
they were still overlooking.
“I think there’s something else
we’re not seeing, my friend.”
“What do you mean?” Joseph asked.
Rogert didn’t know how to explain what
he meant. That feeling of unease was something he didn’t fully
understand himself, let alone describe to someone else.
Joseph noticed Rogert’s gaze moving
slowly around the room, as if searching for the answer to a question
neither of them could yet name.
Joseph tried to calm him, telling him
there was nothing strange about the place. As far as he could tell,
the world they were in seemed no different from the one they had
visited before.
Rogert tried to accept that thought.
Aside from what they had just seen on Arthur’s body, he had no real
reason to doubt what Joseph was saying. He decided not to follow the
warning his instincts were giving him and kept that feeling to
himself.
He stood up and walked toward the base
of a wooden staircase that led to a second floor. When he reached the
first step, he rested his hand on the railing, which was also made of
wood and showed the same signs of decay he had noticed on the floor.
“Maybe there’s something different
upstairs…”
His words were cut short by his own
silence the moment he noticed what lay at the top of the stairs.
The sight made his expression stiffen.
His eyes widened, and his trembling mouth—his skin damp with
sweat—revealed the fear that had been lurking inside him from the
beginning.
Joseph quickly stood up and hurried
toward his friend. He nearly slipped while trying to get to his feet,
and again as he approached the staircase with the intention of
climbing the steps.
But he stopped abruptly when he realized
something was wrong.
The opening simply wasn’t there.
The ceiling continued without
interruption, sealing off the second floor and leaving the staircase
incomplete inside the seemingly empty house.
“Have we ever seen something like this
before?” Rogert asked nervously as he stepped back.
“We shouldn’t worry so much. There
must be some explanation.”
Joseph knew that world was not real. Yet
the almost perfect resemblance to the reality they came from made him
feel that it might be some kind of extension of it, especially
considering the way they were able to interact within the dream.
He remembered having read about lucid
dreams before. There had been nights when he spent hours researching
how things worked inside places like that house, and that memory
alone helped calm him when the nervous tension began to form in his
chest.
He took a deep breath and concluded that
what they were experiencing was nothing more than incomplete
information—something that could destabilize the lucid dream
itself.
“We need to stay calm, Rogert.
Remember, this is a dream.”
Rogert tried to believe his friend’s
words. But what he was experiencing felt so real that even knowing he
had arrived there after falling asleep could not convince his body
otherwise.
Joseph explained that now that they had
realized the structure of that world was unreal and defied any normal
rule, it would only be a matter of time before they woke up and left
that place.
Rogert nodded nervously, trying to focus
on Joseph’s words, hoping they might convince him that everything
would be fine.
Yet something else was happening inside
that house.
They could both sense it, but they kept
searching for ways to convince themselves that nothing more would
happen.
“We have to do something about
Arthur,” Joseph said.
“I’ll try to wake him up…”
Rogert’s nervous words immediately
caught Joseph’s attention. He had never seen his friend so shaken
before, and it filled him with a deep sense of unease.
Joseph allowed Rogert to approach
Arthur’s body. Arthur was still lying on the floor, moving
erratically.
Those expressions—the kind shown by
someone trapped in a nightmare—were enough to leave the other two
unsure of what to do.
Rogert dropped to his knees beside him.
Despite the pain he felt, he showed no sign of it.
He placed his hands on Arthur’s
shoulders and began shaking him.
Joseph watched the scene with tense
anticipation, standing a short distance away near the staircase.
“Why aren’t we awake yet…?” he
asked himself.
The question was as real as the tension
that had begun to take hold of his body. Beneath the surface,
unnoticed by Rogert, the restless movements of Joseph’s fingers
revealed the insecurity that this experience was slowly instilling in
him.
Almost without realizing it, he pressed
his fingernails into his own fingers, digging into the flesh until a
few drops of blood spilled and fell onto the wooden floor.
Joseph noticed it immediately.
It felt unnatural.
And in that world, it truly was.
When he raised his hand to examine his
fingers, he saw that they were stained with his own blood. The sight
alarmed him.
Arthur was now sitting upright,
supported by Rogert, while his body moved faintly as if he were still
trapped in a deep sleep. Joseph noticed Rogert’s expression
suddenly shift into one of pure astonishment, mixed with such
confusion that he could do nothing but stare for a moment at what was
happening.
Arthur said something.
It was so faint that Rogert had no
choice but to lean closer, bringing his ear near Arthur’s mouth.
He heard something.
Something Joseph wanted to hear as well.
But when Joseph tried to approach,
hoping to understand what was happening, Rogert looked at him with
terror in his eyes and shouted for him to stay back.
Joseph stopped instantly.
His eyes widened as he opened his mouth
to ask why.
“Don’t come any closer, Joseph!”
Rogert shouted.
“What’s happening?” Joseph asked.
“You have to get out of here…”
Joseph could not move the way he wanted
toward his friends. His body froze when he saw the expression Rogert
held until the very last moment.
Arthur tilted his head slightly to one
side, pulling Rogert closer, trapping him in an embrace that made no
sense.
Joseph lifted his right foot, ready to
take a step toward them.
Rogert stopped him again with a warning
that shook him even more.
“That’s not Arthur,” Rogert said.
“If you come any closer, the same thing will happen to you.”
Joseph finally stopped when he noticed
Arthur’s face begin to twist.
At the same time, Arthur’s head
started turning slowly until it faced Joseph directly.
The cracking of the bones in his
friend’s neck sent a violent shudder through Joseph’s body.
His raised foot slowly returned to the
floor.
Without taking a single step closer.
“Come with us, Joseph…” Arthur
said, his voice deeper and strangely distorted.
Joseph swallowed hard as his breathing
quickened and broke unevenly. He felt the dampness in his hands
growing worse, and without being able to move, a sharp yet subtle
pain tightened through his body, holding him in place.
He remained still, watching the faces of
the two before him.
Rogert’s expression had become twisted
and unnatural, while Arthur’s face grew darker, more sinister with
every passing second.
Then Joseph heard a groan.
Along with it came the sound of bones
snapping—like dry branches being crushed beneath weight.
Rogert’s eyes bulged outward. From his
mouth, nose, and ears, a dark reddish liquid began to spill, almost
black in color.
“Rogert…”
Joseph felt a violent blow strike him
directly in the chest—not from anything physical, but from the
terror now flooding uncontrollably through his body.
A deafening scream reached him, snapping
him out of his paralysis.
It was Arthur.
Or whatever was inside him.
It told him to come closer.
Joseph ignored the voice. As soon as he
noticed the door through which they had entered earlier, he ran
toward it, shouting in desperation and stumbling as he moved.
He grabbed the knob and twisted it as
fast as he could.
The first attempt failed.
Behind him, he heard the wood begin to
creak—as if someone were approaching.
A second attempt finally opened the
door.
On the other side, a dark corridor
awaited him, resembling the hallway of a hospital.
He had no choice.
Joseph rushed through the doorway and
slammed it shut behind him.
A heavy thud echoed immediately after.
Instinctively, Joseph covered his head
with his hands.
When he finally turned around—
the door was gone.
“What’s happening?” he asked
himself through quiet sobs.
Alone in that dark corridor, Joseph
noticed how worn the walls and the few objects decorating them were.
The old paint was peeling away in pieces, revealing a structure that
seemed to have been built a very long time ago.
Joseph realized that the place reminded
him of somewhere he had seen before.
He looked down at his hands, which were
still trembling, slick with sweat. On one of his fingers, a trace of
the blood that had flowed earlier was still visible.
He tried to wipe his hands clean,
rubbing them against his clothes.
“I have to get out of here…” he
whispered.
He began walking slowly along the
corridor as the moonlight filtered through a pair of windows on the
wall to his right. He approached one of them and looked outside.
There was nothing he could recognize.
The place was surrounded by a dense
forest, only partially revealed by the pale reflection of the moon.
In the end, he had no choice but to
continue walking carefully until he reached the double doors waiting
at the far end of the corridor.
He pushed them open with both hands.
Beyond them lay a larger room where
several old-fashioned lamps remained lit.
It looked like some kind of reception
hall.
Joseph’s heart was still pounding as
he walked toward a chair that seemed almost inviting him to rest.
He approached it and, before sitting
down, pressed his hand against the cushion.
It was surprisingly soft.
He brushed away the dust that covered
its surface and finally sat.
As he looked around the room, the tears
he had been trying to hold back began to fall.
There was no thought capable of forming
in his mind that could explain what had just happened.
So he decided to remain there for a
while, in that place that seemed safe.
And as his body slowly recovered its
breath, one question continued echoing inside his mind:
Why hadn’t he woken up from that
dream?

