Reincarnated in a depressing erotic world but living a normal life (right?)
The Growing Shadow
"....."
The floor was strangely cold and hard against my cheek. Am I in bed? No, the room's bed was single and soft, not this cold, rough contact that made me feel as if I were out in the open. Consciousness slowly broke through, and with it, a buzzing sound.
("Whispers")
It wasn't the murmurs of that stupid frying pan; those had already become background noise that my mind ignored by default. These were new sounds, multiple voices, low and high, that crawled into my ear like icy air in a crypt.
I must have fallen asleep on the room's floor. Aline had left me in that thin white uniform, and my stomach churned just recalling the scrutiny of her eyes and the feel of her nails near my skin, which I still haven't gotten used to, despite having been here for days since I arrived. Ugh. I want to wake up. Follow current novᴇls on novel(ꜰ)ire.net
But just as I tried to move, the cold intensified, and with it, my vision changed.
Suddenly, the floor was no longer just hard; it was stone. And I was no longer in the small room; I was in an underground chamber.
What the hell...?
The air here was dense, heavy, smelling of dampness and something... metallic. I sprang to my feet, and the first thing I saw was the floor, or rather, the large, imperfect circle I was standing on.
Symbols I didn't recognize were mixed with sinuous lines, twisting and crossing like thick vines that had been carved into the stone a thousand years ago. The circle was broken, incomplete in several places, as if the ritual had been abandoned halfway, but even so, that mixture of geometry and chaos made me feel a pang of ancestral terror.
This isn't the sect. This is something worse. A dream? It has to be a dream.
I looked up, searching for a wall, a door, an exit. But my gaze stopped at the ceiling. In the center, a square compartment slowly opened, soundlessly, as if a giant metal lid had slid away.
And then I saw it.
The Moon.
A perfect, bright, and cold portion, hanging in that dark square. The bluish light of the moon spilled directly onto me and the imperfect circle. The shock was immediate and absolute.
(I'm outdoors, but underground. What kind of madness is this?)
My heart hammered my chest with an uncontrolled fury, but before I could process the impossibility of the scene or the fear freezing my muscles, a sound pierced the silence.
("Run!... Please, run!")
It wasn't a quiet whisper. It was a shouted whisper, as if a voice was trying to scream with all its might but was trapped under glass.
("There... is... a... monster... here!")
The voice kept repeating in broken fragments like a defective tape, full of despair and pain.
("I... shouldn't have.... Plot... Pa... RUUUUN!")
The word echoed in the chamber, but the moon shone without showing anything more than stone and shadows. Only then, in the stillness that followed the muffled cry, did I notice a shadow in the depths of the circle, where the symbolic "vines" grew denser, as if something truly were lurking.
("M-mon...ster... Y-y-y-you must...!")
The word, "monster," had been a heartbreaking echo, but it was the silence that followed that forced me to act.
I turned my head with a terrifying slowness, my eyes scanning the stone floor. The center of the imperfect circle was not empty. There was something there, something I hadn't noticed before, glowing under the ghostly moonlight.
T-that... That frying pan is it!
It was there, the old, heavy, ornamented frying pan, the one they had taken from me. But it didn't look the same. It emitted a fluctuating light, an aura that changed from one sickly color to another: bile green, dark purple, an opaque red. It seemed to be absorbing the moonlight and returning it corrupted.
(Why is it here? What does this mean?)
My attention was fixed on the object, but suddenly, an icy sensation ran down my back, much worse than the cold stone beneath my feet. A presence.
Behind the frying pan, right on the densest, gloomiest edge of the symbols, a black silhouette rose up. It was tall, thin, barely an outline in the darkness, but what I saw in its place froze me with fear to the deepest part of my soul.
It had no face, only a horizontal crack that stretched too far, curved into a smile. It was a look that didn't promise physical harm, but something worse: a pure, cold malice, an ancient cruelty that regarded me like a collector views an insect they are about to crush.
(I can't... move...)
My lungs refused to function. My mind screamed, but my body was a statue of terror.
The silhouette leaned forward slightly, its head tilted.
"It won't be long."
I could hear its voice, a dry murmur that, despite its low volume, vibrated in my bones.
"It's almost ready."
In that instant, the frying pan—my frying pan—reacted.
("Get out of here! G-get out of there, now! W-wake up!")
The muffled scream from before projected again, but this time, directly from the shining metal, with a deafening urgency.
The sound hit me like a psychic slap. It was enough to break the trance of fear. My eyes squeezed shut, and the cold of the floor, the moonlight, the smell of dampness—everything vanished suddenly.
"¡¡AAAAAAAAHHHHHHHH!!"
I shot up into a sitting position on the bed. Cold sweat soaked me, and my scream echoed in the small room, bouncing off the white, unadorned walls.
"Haaa... Haa... Hahhh..."
Gasping, I clutched my chest. My heart was pounding so hard I thought it was going to shatter my ribs.
(I'm here. I'm in the room.)
I was back. In the sect's single bed.
(How long was I asleep?)
Only now, I wasn't in my underwear anymore. I was wearing a thin, white, light fabric uniform.
The window curtain was drawn, and the light filtering through indicated it was dawn.
"....."
The sensation of the smiling silhouette and the frying pan's warning left me breathless. The dream felt so real... so real that I no longer knew which was more dangerous: Aline's sect or the malice hidden in the moonlit basement.
(Monster... no, no, no. This is real!)
The scream died out in the thick air of the small room. My heart would soon calm down, but the panic was real. Not because of the nightmare itself, but because of what it represented.
The image of that smiling silhouette, of that icy malice, surpassed anything I had imagined.
"....."
I had gotten involved in something much deeper and more terrible than a simple cult. I was here to rescue Saffi, my childhood friend, and now I felt firsthand the true caliber of the danger I had thrown myself into. It was a trap designed to devour something more than "faith."
"Uuff..."
I jumped out of bed, feeling the thin fabric of the white uniform against my sweaty skin. I headed to the small bathroom without thinking twice. I turned on the faucet, and the icy water poured into the small sink.
I needed an anchor.
(Splash, Splash, Splash!)
I splashed cold water on my face furiously. Once, twice, three times. The thermal shock was the only thing that managed to dissipate the fog of terror. As the water dripped down my chin and neck, my mind was forced to quickly review the last few days.
"....."
Days. Days had passed since Aline left me in my underwear and since I shouted, "I can do it myself!" Days of constant sexual and mental tension.
(How did they manage to change my clothes? Aline, again...)
Those days had been an incessant bombardment. Attempts at temptation in all sorts of ways. That was the atmosphere of the place. It seemed like morality simply didn't exist here. The worst memory was the public bath: Aline, along with other women, had washed me with an uncomfortable and sensual thoroughness that almost made me forget why I was there.
"Haaaa..."
And that was only the beginning. Everywhere I went, there were people, believers, engulfed in public orgies that happened all the time, as if it were the most natural thing in the world. Women who tried to give me all kinds of sexual "services" with a kind smile, as if they were offering me a cookie.
(Damn it. The memory is worse than the nightmare.)
If I managed to stand firm, it was thanks to them. To the straw dolls.
"...."
I dried my face with the back of my hand and looked at the murky reflection in the mirror. My eyes were tired. If it weren't for the constant telepathic communication from my little allies—warnings, veiled threats, sharp reminders of my mission—I would have fallen. The threat that they would "tell his mother" what he had done if he yielded was the only thing that managed to suppress the male impulse amidst that frenzy.
(Thank you, little traitors. You saved my life... and my soul.)
(... You're welcome.)
(I had fun...)
(... It was... interesting...)
"Ahahaha... Yes, I suppose it was."
But their job hadn't been limited to being my moral guardians. While I struggled against terror and libido, they had been my eyes and ears. They had moved stealthily, invisible in the shadows, investigating the entire facility without being discovered.
Everything. Every hallway, every desk, every empty "believer's" room they found... Everything had been mapped mentally... No trace of Saffi.
"?!"
And then, the thought struck me, connecting reality with the dream.
"The entire facility was investigated, except for one thing."
The basement.
That underground chamber from the dream, with the imperfect circle and the moon. It was the only thing the dolls hadn't been able to penetrate or map. It was the hidden truth of the sect, and now, the smiling silhouette was waiting for me there.
"......."
With panic replaced by an icy determination, I stepped away from the mirror.
"I need to talk to you."
I whispered into the air, though I knew my mental message would arrive faster.
I needed the final report. I needed a plan. I needed to know how to get to the basement. And it had to be now.
The icy panic turned into a pressing need to move.
(Information...?)
(... Sure.)
(Take this... Here...)
"Thanks."
But fortunately for me, talking to the straw dolls isn't so much a dialogue as a blast of cold, concise data sent directly to my mind.
(Too far. No visible entrance to the basement. Only the main elevator.)
The day that followed was an ordeal of false normalcy. I had to eat and attend "wellness" sessions—that is, more attempts at temptation under the attentive, smiling watch of Aline and other instructors. Every conversation, every touch, was a monumental effort to keep my mind anchored on Saffi and the malignant silhouette from my dream. I moved like an automaton, smiling stiffly and rejecting the "offers" with a forced politeness that, thanks to the silent threats of my allies, did not break.
"...Finally."
Thus, time advanced with agonizing slowness until night finally fell.
"......."
And the arrival of the moon was my signal.
I stood in front of my room door, anxiety gnawing at me from within. There was no lock, only an electronic security mechanism.
(Now or never.)
I felt a slight chill in the shadow of the door. One of the straw dolls was right there.
(Beep!)
Suddenly, the door panel emitted a soft beep, and the latch retracted with an almost unaudible click.
(Well done!)
After a brief telepathic thank you, I cautiously opened the door, poking my head out. The hallway was silent and shrouded in deceptive gloom. In the distance, the faint light of a lobby.
"..."
I slipped out of the room, immediately sliding into the nearest shadow. The risk was immense. If anyone saw me in the white uniform, they would take me for a fugitive. But if I succeeded, I would reach the basement, the heart of the truth.
(Right. Now. Wait, light!)
My tiny allies were masters at this. I couldn't see them, but I felt their presence in the shadows that lengthened and moved across the floor. They were my eyes and my guides.
"...."
I stopped dead in my tracks, pressed against the wall, when the silhouette of a late-returning "believer" passed through the hallway. Thanks to the dolls, I narrowly avoided encounters, moving in a silent dance of shadows, as if I myself had become one of them.
(There it is.)
The path was long and labyrinthine, through corridors that seemed designed to disorient. Finally, my mental guides led me to a secluded service area, where the lights flickered.
An elevator.
"...."
A peeling label over the call buttons indicated it was "Under Maintenance" and "Out of Order." It was obvious it was a façade to keep believers away from a restricted area.
(This is it.)
I approached the numeric panel. The doll beside me, hidden in my shadow, didn't need to say anything. It had spent days observing the cult members from the shadows, capturing codes, patterns, and routines. The basement key was the only thing they had been able to obtain through constant surveillance.
(Beep. Beep. Beep. Beep.)
I felt the burst of numbers in my mind as I pressed the digits in rapid succession.
"...."
The "Maintenance" light flickered twice, then went out. The elevator made no noise. The door simply opened in an ominous silence.
"Wait for me, Saffi."
I stepped inside without hesitation, pressing the single unlabelled button, the one beneath the normal numbers.
(Hum)
A soft hum filled the car, and I felt a chill as the elevator began to descend. It didn't stop on any intermediate floors. It was going straight down to the depths of the earth, toward that stone chamber and the promise of a monster under the moonlight.
"...."
But I didn't know... That the truth was thousands of times worse than my expectations.