Episode 5: It Chose Him
Arman did not run.
Not at first.
His body felt too heavy, too slow to react as his mind tried to catch up with what he had just seen. The figure inside the room had not stepped forward, had not reached for him, had not made a sound.
And yet it had closed the distance.
That was what stayed with him.
It did not move.
It simply became closer.
That was wrong.
Everything about this place was wrong.
He turned away from the building and started down the path, his steps uneven but controlled. The flashlight beam shook slightly, cutting across the ground, the trees, the empty space ahead.
“I’m leaving,” he said again, louder now.
The words felt more real this time.
Action gave them weight.
He moved faster.
The trees on either side seemed taller than before, their branches reaching further inward. The path stretched ahead, but something about it felt longer, as if the distance had quietly shifted.
He ignored it.
Kept walking.
The gate was straight ahead.
It had to be.
He had walked this route already.
He knew the way.
The beam of his flashlight finally caught the metal bars.
Relief hit him in a sharp wave.
He reached the gate and grabbed it.
Cold.
Solid.
Real.
He pulled.
It did not move.
He frowned and reached for the lock.
His fingers found it.
But the shape felt wrong.
He raised the flashlight.
The lock was different.
Older.
Rust thicker.
The keyhole narrower than before.
Arman’s chest tightened.
“No,” he said under his breath.
He stepped back, sweeping the light across the gate.
It was the same gate.
And not the same at all.
The pattern in the metal had changed.
Subtle.
But wrong.
He turned quickly, shining the light back down the path he had just walked.
The security post should have been visible.
The small building.
The light.
Something.
There was nothing.
Just trees.
Endless.
Still.
The path behind him stretched further than it should.
His breathing became shallow.
“This isn’t real,” he said.
“You’re messing with me.”
The silence gave nothing back.
He forced himself to focus.
Think.
He still had the keys.
He pulled them from his pocket.
They felt the same.
Looked the same.
He pushed one into the lock.
It did not fit.
He tried another.
Nothing.
His hands began to shake.
He stepped back from the gate.
The air felt heavier here.
Closer.
Like the space around him had shrunk.
A sound came from behind him.
Not close.
Not far.
Somewhere along the path.
A soft dragging.
Slow.
Familiar.
Arman turned.
The beam of his flashlight cut through the darkness.
Nothing.
The sound continued.
Closer.
Always just outside the light.
He stepped away from the gate.
Then turned and began walking back the way he came.
Faster this time.
The path shifted again.
He felt it.
Not with his eyes.
With his body.
The ground seemed uneven in places it had not been before.
The trees leaned differently.
The air pressed harder against him.
Then, ahead, he saw it.
The storage building.
Closer than it should have been.
He stopped.
“No,” he said.
“I walked away from this.”
But there it was.
Waiting.
The door closed.
Still.
Silent.
The dragging sound stopped.
Complete silence returned.
Arman stood there, his chest rising and falling, his mind racing.
Then the voice came.
Not from the building.
Not from behind him.
From everywhere.
Soft.
Calm.
“You came here for money.”
Arman clenched his jaw.
“Shut up,” he said.
“You left her there.”
The words hit harder than before.
He shook his head.
“I had no choice.”
The trees remained still.
The darkness did not move.
But the presence was there.
Everywhere.
“You chose this,” the voice continued.
“You chose to leave.”
Arman’s grip tightened around the flashlight.
“I’m doing this for her,” he said.
“For her treatment.”
Silence followed.
Then, quieter.
More certain.
“No.”
A pause.
“You came because you were already losing her.”
The words cut deep.
Clean.
Precise.
Arman felt his chest tighten again, sharper this time.
“That’s not true,” he said.
But the doubt was there.
It had always been there.
The voice did not press harder.
It did not need to.
“You think you can fix it,” it said.
“You think money changes what is already happening.”
Arman took a step back.
“Stop,” he said.
The building behind him creaked softly.
Not from wind.
From within.
“You cannot leave,” the voice continued.
“Because this is where you chose to be.”
The ground beneath him felt unsteady.
Not physically.
Something deeper.
As if the place itself had settled around him.
Closed in.
Arman turned toward the path again.
Then stopped.
The path was gone.
Where it should have been was only darkness.
Dense.
Unbroken.
He turned back.
The storage building stood behind him.
Closer now.
The door slightly open.
Just enough to see the black space inside.
Waiting.
The voice spoke one last time.
Calm.
Final.
“You belong here now.”
Arman stared at the doorway.
His breathing slowed.
Not from calm.
From something else.
Something heavier.
The flashlight flickered.
The beam dimmed.
Then steadied.
And in that moment, he realized something that made his stomach drop.
The light was not reaching as far as before.
The darkness was getting closer.
