
I glanced at the clock. Thirty-five minutes had passed, just long enough for everyone to either understand the material, or at least pretend they did. The students were shuffling their notebooks, some whispering, others, moving toward the door. Some of the girls kept glancing my way, biting their lips, and adjusting their tops on purpose.
Jessica had been bold last week. She came to my office claiming she didn't understand her geometry homework, leaned over my desk, and I caught her smirk as I glanced down at her cleavage. I didn't move. I didn't say anything. Professionalism isn't just a word—it's a rule I follow. Some of the other girls weren't subtle either. Glances that lingered a little too long, hair falling so I caught a glimpse of a shoulder or collarbone, legs crossed just right or opened intentionally, giving me an easy view of their panties. One even looked down for a second too long, and I felt it—the faint pressure of awareness—that bulge in my pants I had to ignore. All of it was harmless, I reminded myself. I always reminded myself. A girl muttered, "Thank you, Mr. Wickison," as she gathered her things. I nodded, keeping my expression neutral. Students poured out, chatting, laughing, some lingering in the doorway, trying to catch my attention without seeming obvious. I packed my notes, grabbed my briefcase, and walked out of the lecture hall. Down the hall, a few students waved, smiled. I waved back, nodded, and made my way to my office. The hallway was quiet for a moment, then filled with the usual shuffle of feet and low murmurs. In my office, I grabbed my bag, double-checked my keys, and headed to the parking lot. The sun had dipped just enough to make the streets golden, long shadows stretching between cars. I slid into my own, adjusted the mirror, started the engine, and drove off. Another ordinary day. By the time I reached the bridge, the highway had turned into a wall of cars, horns blaring and engines idling. The traffic wasn't moving. Not a centimeter. I checked my watch: 5:18 PM. Diana my fiance, would be waiting. Our reservation at La Mer should have started fifteen minutes ago, and I knew she wouldn't be pleased if I showed up late. I sighed and picked up my phone, already typing a quick message: "Running late, heavy traffic. See you soon." That's when it happened. A pop-up appeared on my screen. Not a notification, not an ad in the corner of the browser that you could ignore. This one covered the entire screen. Bright, white letters against a black background. WELCOME TO THE GAMES Under it: Click PLAY to begin. Survive to the end. Fail, and… you won't. No "X." No "Later." No way to dismiss it. Just a single glowing button that said PLAY. I muttered under my breath, annoyed. Who the hell programs this… I started, but even mid-mutter I felt an odd compulsion. Something in the design, the way it pulsed… it demanded engagement. "Fine," I said, tapping the button. The screen shimmered, and suddenly I was aware of… myself. My body, as I looked down, was fading. Pixel by pixel, disassembling, flattening, dissolving into a stream of digital fragments. I stared as my hands slowly dissolved into glowing particles. Panic hit. My mouth opened, and I tried to scream, but no sound came out. I kept fading away until everything went black. I had no idea that the traffic, the standstill, the sudden chaos, had all been caused by this… thing. By the time I opened my eyes, I was lying on a hard, cold floor. The room was completely white. It's walls, ceiling, floor, everything. Like someone had drained all the color from the world. My head throbbed slightly, and I rubbed my temple, trying to remember if I'd hit it on something in the car. Before I even had a chance to think, a screen descended from above and stopped right in front of my face. A soft click sounded as it took a picture, and I instinctively raised my hands to shield my eyes. Then a clear, mechanical voice came from speakers I couldn't see. Name: Erwin Wickison Age: 27 Occupation: Math Lecturer Height: 6'1'' Blood Type: O-positive The screen flashed: Information collected successfully. Then, with an almost deliberate cadence: "Welcome to the Games, Erwin Wickison. You may proceed." The wall ahead shifted, materializing a door that hadn't been there a second ago. Its frame was sharp and perfect, like a portal someone had just drawn in with a ruler. My first instinct was caution. My second was curiosity, so I slowly walked forward. I blinked against the sun—or what felt like sun—and found myself standing in the middle of a dense forest. The air was heavy, damp, and smelled like moss and pine. The ground was uneven, covered with roots and leaves. And I wasn't alone. Not by a long shot. People were everywhere, hundreds, maybe thousands, scattered across the clearing. Some were sitting, some were standing, some were staring around in confusion. All ages, all types. Some whispering, some crying, some staring blankly. I turned back toward the door I'd just passed through, and it was gone. Completely. Disappeared, as if it had never existed. I muttered under my breath, trying to keep calm: "What the hell is going on?" Then a voice filled the forest, loud enough to reach everyone. Every single person stopped, heads snapping toward the invisible source. "Welcome, humans, to the Games. You shall compete in a series of challenges. Survival is the only objective. Failure to complete a task or mission results in instant death. Refusal to play… also results in instant death. Disobedience, hesitation, or attempts to escape will be met with immediate termination. The only way to end the Game is to complete it. You have been warned. Thank you for playing." The forest went quiet, only the sound of rustling leaves and nervous breaths. People exchanged panicked looks. Some whispered, some froze completely. Then one man, tall, broad-shouldered, stepped forward, dusting himself off like he hadn't heard a word. He raised a hand to the sky with his middle finger sticking out and shouted: "To hell with your fucking game! I ain't playing!" I watched him take a few determined steps, his chest puffed out, anger and defiance written across his face. Then… He exploded. There was no warning, no sound beyond the instant chaos of the first blast. Pieces of him scattered in every direction. Then almost immediately, screams erupted around me. People bolted, stumbled, turned, trying to flee. And… they exploded too. Every single person who ran. Every frantic step, every desperate dash—it was met with the same brutal, instantaneous result. People collapsed before they even had a chance to think. The screams didn't stop; they multiplied, shrill and terrifying, as more and more of them detonated in rapid succession. I froze. My mind tried to process it, tried to rationalize, tried to find some rule in the chaos, but there was none. No pattern I could see beyond the cold, absolute fact: defiance, hesitation, any attempt to escape this place was fatal. That's when it hit me. This was not a game I could ignore. This was not something I could calculate out of existence. This… was death made intentional, designed, and inescapable. And I was already inside it.Latest Chapter
Different Directions
We moved like ghosts after that, every shadow a threat, every echo a footstep. The timer bled down: 38:44:12.We found Mason and Chloe's second key target in a high-ceilinged chamber full of silent, suspended engine blocks. The pair holding it—a man and woman—didn’t surrender. They’d gotten their first key the hard way, and it showed in their wild eyes. They fought.It was chaos. Mason traded blows with the man, their struggle sending tools clattering from a workbench. Blaire and the woman grappled, a desperate, silent tangle.I was trying to get to Blaire when I saw the other man break free from Mason. He didn’t go for Mason again. He saw me, isolated, and lunged, a wrench raised high.I froze. The baton in my hand hummed, useless. My mind saw the equations, the angles, the force—but my body wouldn’t move. Hurt him or die. The logic was perfect. My will was not.“ERWIN!” Jude’s shout was raw.He barreled into me, shoving me sideways. There was a sickening thwack.Jude grunted, stumbl
Cost of Living
We’d become efficient. Ruthless in a bloodless, quiet way.Our strange pack of eight moved through the rusted arteries of the Asylum with a grim rhythm. We’d collected our first Keys. Mason and Chloe had their second target, LOCK-14G. Me and Laura, Jude and Blaire—we’d all scanned our first Locks. We’d even helped Lena and Sam get theirs. No one else had to die. Not yet.Our size was our weapon. We’d corner a pair, our group spilling into a room or blocking a corridor. Mason would stand front and center, crossbow not quite aimed, but not quite not aimed either. His face said everything: Compliance or carnage. Your choice. It was always compliance. They’d press their trembling palms to ours, hear the chime of their own death sentence, and we’d move on, leaving them hollow-eyed and alive.The timer on the distant wall glowed, a constant reminder in the gloom: 41:15:53.We had time. But time was just another form of pressure.We were walking down a wide access tunnel when Chloe broke th
The First Key
We kept moving. The metallic groans of the Asylum and the distant, muffled sounds of conflict were our only soundtrack. Time was bleeding away. 47:02:11.Jude was shaking. Not a lot, just a fine tremor in the hand that wasn't clutching his stained knife. He kept looking at it, then ahead, his eyes unfocused."I...I just killed someone," he muttered, not to anyone in particular.Blaire squeezed his arm. "You didn't see her die.""She's not gonna make it out with that wound," Jude said, his voice hollow. "She'll bleed out. She'll still die. It's still my fault."Mason spun around so fast it made Chloe jump. He got right in Jude's face, his own composure cracking. "What did you think was gonna happen, huh?" He shoved Jude back against a cold metal pipe. The clang echoed. Everyone froze. "They were gonna ask nicely? That guy aimed a pipe wrench at your fucking face. So get it the fuck together."I saw the rage in Mason's eyes—not just at Jude, but at the situation, at the blood on his own
Blood in the Rust
The heavy door sealed shut behind us with a final, hydraulic hiss. The sterile light of the prep room was gone, swallowed by the oppressive gloom of the Ironclad Asylum.We stood in a high-ceilinged corridor of rusted metal and stained concrete. Pipes snaked along the walls, dripping with condensation. The air was cold and smelled of wet rust and something faintly chemical. A giant digital timer was projected in the air at the far end of the hall, its numbers glowing a sickly green:47:55:43Forty-eight hours to become killers, or be erased.“This way,” Mason whispered, his voice all business. He led, crossbow raised, sweeping the shadows. We followed in a tight, nervous cluster.The sounds began almost immediately. Not the ambient groans of metal, but active, human sounds. A sharp cry echoed from a level above, followed by a wet, crunching thud—like a baton hitting something soft. Then silence.Chloe whimpered, clapping a hand over her mouth. “I… I can’t do this,” she breathed, her v
Poetic Punishment: Words Made Weapon
The morning light was a liar. It spilled into the room, clean and warm, pretending the night before hadn’t happened. Pretending I hadn’t lain awake for hours feeling Laura’s heat beside me, thinking things I had no right to think. She was already up, dressed in the dark, practical clothes from the wardrobe. She stood by the fake window, her back to me. She didn’t turn when I sat up. The silence was a third person in the room. The three-toned chime broke it, harsh and final. The TV flicked on. SYSTEM ANNOUNCEMENT PREPARATION PHASE TERMINATED. ALL PARTICIPANTS REPORT TO MAIN LOBBY. TRIAL BY ORIGIN COMMENCES IN T-MINUS 30 MINUTES. No “please.” Just a command. We didn’t speak. We didn’t need to. We walked to the elevator, stood in it, and watched the numbers descend in a silence so thick I could taste it. The lobby was different. The eerie social calm was gone, shredded. People stood in their obvious pairs, faces pale, eyes darting. The attendants were gone. The only
The Undoing
We spent the remaining hours of our rest period watching the attendants. It felt like a dead end. Every question, every accidental spill, every prodding comment just bounced off them. Their replies all tied back to the same loop: Your comfort. Your safety. Enjoy your rest.Before we knew it, it was evening. The last night before the next game.Back in the room, the silence felt heavier. I lay on the bed, staring at the ceiling, trying to trace a path in my mind that didn’t end at a locked door or a timer counting down to zero.The bathroom door opened.I didn’t look over until she was halfway to the bed. Laura walked out wearing a shirt. My shirt. One of the plain grey ones the system had magicked into existence in the wardrobe.It was big on her, hanging off one shoulder, the hem stopping high on her thighs. My eyes went straight to the smooth skin there, then darted away, a hot flush crawling up my neck.“You’re wearing my shirt,” I said, my voice tighter than I meant it to be.She