The first thing that happens when the man in the mask returns to the room is that my restraints are removed. Two men with tubes and wires snaking out of their arms step in close, their movements efficient and practiced. Cold metal unlatches from my wrists and ankles in quick succession. The instant the final restraint releases, the world lurches violently out from under me.
My knees buckle.
For a split second I'm falling—weightless, helpless—and then a firm arm catches across my back, another keeping me upright by the shoulder. My forehead nearly hits the masked man's chest before he steadies me completely.
"Easy," he says softly, turning his head toward the two men. "You need to be more careful. Causing him harm is volatile."
One of them dips his head immediately.
"Sorry, sir," he mutters, already backing away.
"Get out of my sight."
They don't hesitate. Boots retreat in quick, clipped steps, the hiss of hydraulic joints fading with them as they disappear into the dark edges of the room. The mechanical rhythm of the machines seems louder in their absence. Too loud. Like the place is breathing again now that they're gone.
It's just us.
My vision swims as the man adjusts his hold, keeping me on my feet with only the bare minimum of force. The pressure of his grip is solid, real—too real for how unreal everything else feels. My senses are dulled across the board, wrapped in layers of cotton and static. Even the light looks wrong. Washed out. Like someone drained every color from the room and left only shades of ash and shadow behind. A weak crackle hums persistently in my ears, like the afterimage of thunder that refuses to fade.
I try to straighten on instinct and immediately regret it.
Every muscle in my legs screams in protest. They tremble violently beneath me, useless and untrustworthy, like they no longer remember what standing is supposed to feel like. If not for his grip, I'd be on the floor.
He gestures subtly with his head toward the far end of the chamber.
"Take it easy. Until we get you back above ground, you're going to have difficulty."
"What?" I huff, breath leaving me in a shaky rush. The word feels like it drags its way out of my chest. I barely understand what he means—above ground? Back from where?
He starts guiding me forward before I can form another thought. Slow. Measured. Each step feels like forcing life through dead limbs. My feet slide more than they lift. My balance lags half a second behind every movement. I'm dimly aware of the floor beneath me being cold metal, but even that sensation feels distant and filtered.
"I'll explain shortly," he says. "Rest assured, you're going to be taken care of. Granted, you give me the answers I need."
"What answers?" I ask weakly.
"All in due time. Just focus on walking for now."
The chamber opens into a narrow corridor that stretches into shadow. Thin strips of light run along the ceiling in intermittent bands, each one flickering as we pass beneath it. With every few steps, the static in my ears softens a fraction. My lungs stop burning quite so sharply. Breathing comes a little easier, like whatever has been sitting on my chest since I woke up is slowly lifting.
We reach a stairwell cut straight into dark concrete.
The first step up nearly puts me back on the floor.
My foot doesn't lift high enough, catches the edge, and my body jerks forward in a clumsy stumble. His hold tightens instantly, firm but controlled, pulling me back into alignment before I can crash.
"Careful," he murmurs.
The distortion in his voice is gone.
I don't notice it right away—not consciously. It's subtle at first, just a difference in texture. The harsh, artificial edge that used to scrape against my ears is missing now. The words sound… closer. Warmer. Human in a way that makes my stomach twist. When the realization fully clicks, it catches me off guard enough that I nearly miss the next step.
"That's better," he says quietly, clearly aware of the change.
My heart kicks unevenly in my chest.
"You… you sound different," I mutter.
"Consider it a courtesy," he replies. "It's difficult to build trust through a filter."
Trust. The word feels almost laughable right now.
We continue upward.
Each stair is a small battle. My legs shake violently with every lift, muscles burning in protest as if I've been asleep for years instead of days—if it's even been days. My hands curl and uncurl uselessly at my sides, tingling with a faint, restless static that flares briefly whenever I lose my balance. A thin blue light pulses beneath my skin with each labored heartbeat, just visible at the edges of my vision when I glance down at my chest.
Wires hang low from the ceiling as we climb—thick bundles looping between broken panels and exposed fixtures. As we pass beneath them, a few spark faintly. The lights above us flicker and wane in uneven rhythms, plunging the stairs into brief pockets of shadow before sputtering back to life.
He lets out a quiet, amused sound under his breath.
"Hm," he chuckles. "You're hungry, aren't you?"
The question lands strangely. Not accusatory. Not analytical. Almost… observational.
I open my mouth to respond, confusion already rising—and he ignores me entirely.
We keep moving.
Another few steps pass before I notice it: the ache in my gut is louder now. Sharper. The fog in my head thins just enough for the sensation to break through clearly. My breaths draw in deeper without me consciously forcing it. The heavy, sluggish pressure behind my eyes eases a fraction with every step.
It's like my body is waking up faster than my mind can keep up.
"What do you mean 'hungry'?" I finally ask, voice still rough but steadier than before. "You've been feeding me."
"Yes," he says simply.
The way he says it makes the word feel incomplete.
We climb in silence for several seconds after that. The staircase curves gently upward, disappearing into darkness above. Each breath I take feels fuller than the last. The static in my ears recedes to a faint background whisper instead of a constant roar. Strength returns to my legs in hesitant, uncertain increments—enough that I start contributing more to my own weight instead of relying entirely on his support.
"You're adjusting quickly," he observes.
"I don't feel quick," I mutter.
"No," he agrees. "You feel starved."
A chill threads through my spine.
The steps continue. The lights overhead grow more frequent, less erratic. The air changes too—cooler, cleaner, less saturated with the sterile tang of antiseptic and ozone. Every inhalation feels like it reaches deeper into my lungs than it has since I woke up in that room.
My senses sharpen by degrees.
Sound gains depth. The echo of our footsteps stretches farther down the stairwell. Even the fabric of his coat whispers more clearly when he moves beside me. I start to notice the subtle tension in his grip adjusting every time my balance wavers—never tightening too much, never letting go too quickly.
A strange, unwelcome thought creeps in.
He's guiding me. Not hauling. Not dragging.
Helping.
"What happens if I don't give you these answers?" I ask quietly.
His pace doesn't slow.
"Then you remain exactly where you were," he replies. "Confused. Isolated. Slowly burning yourself apart from the inside."
The words are calm. Matter-of-fact. Somehow that makes them worse.
"And if I do?"
There's a pause this time. Just long enough to feel intentional.
"Then we find out what you truly are capable of," he says.
We reach a landing at last. A heavy metal door waits at the top of the next short flight. Light spills faintly through the thin seam where it meets the frame—real light, warmer than anything below. My pulse stutters in response to it.
He shifts his hold slightly, bracing me before the final ascent.
"Almost there," he murmurs.
For the first time since I woke up, I realize something that sends a quiet, terrified relief through me:
I'm not being carried anymore.
I'm walking.
Barely.
But on my own.
The door at the top of the stairs opens into something that feels wrong in a completely different way.
Warm light spills over us first—real, steady light that doesn't flicker or buzz—and then space. A massive open floor stretches out before me, steel rafters vanishing into shadow far overhead. Rows of bunks line the far wall in tight, organized blocks. Equipment racks stand between them like skeletal spines. The air smells like metal, oil, sweat… and something faintly electrical beneath it all.
A barracks.
My steps slow without me meaning them to.
People move through the space in loose clusters. Some sit on the edges of their bunks tightening straps or reattaching armor plates. Others stand near weapon lockers, checking gear with idle familiarity. At a glance, they look like soldiers—but then my focus sharpens, and the details hit.
Red light glows beneath fabric at the chest of one woman as she laughs at something a teammate says. Another man's scalp is partially transparent with cybernetics threaded beneath the skin, faint circuitry pulsing like veins made of glass. Someone passes with a mechanical forearm that clicks softly with each movement. Others have eyes that reflect light in unnatural hues—amber, crimson, electric blue.
Every single one of them are modified.
And the worst part?
It all feels familiar.
My skin prickles with quiet static as I'm guided forward, the sensation stirring in response to the energy humming off the room itself.
"Well, well," a voice calls out from the left, amused and lazy. "Looks like Sparky's finally up and moving."
I turn my head sluggishly toward the sound.
A man leans against a weapons rack, arms crossed, helmet tucked under one arm. He looks normal enough at first—too normal compared to the others. No visible glow. No obvious metal. Dark hair pulled back at the nape of his neck, a crooked grin tugging at his mouth.
"Took ya long enough," he adds.
Something about him feels off in a way I can't explain. Like standing near a live wire that hasn't sparked yet.
Before I can respond—or even figure out what "Sparky" is supposed to mean—the masked man beside me speaks.
"Ignore him," he says softly.
The man just chuckles and pushes off the rack, drifting back into the crowd like he's already lost interest. A few of the others glance my way as we pass. Some curious. Some indifferent. One or two with something sharper behind their eyes—evaluation, maybe. Like they're trying to measure me without touching me.
My chest tightens the deeper we move into the warehouse.
We cross the open floor and reach another staircase at the far end, narrower this time. The hum of the barracks fades behind us as we ascend, replaced by quieter air and softer lighting. My legs still feel weak, but the trembling has dulled to a manageable ache. I'm more aware now of how thirsty I am. My mouth feels dry enough to crack when I swallow. There's an odd pressure beneath that thirst too—an itch I can't scratch, like hunger echoing in a place that isn't my stomach.
At the top, we enter an office.
It's smaller. Cleaner. A steel desk sits near the center with a few monitors resting dark against the wall. Soft amber lights glow along the ceiling edges instead of the harsh whites below. The masked man guides me to a chair and eases me down into it with a steadying hand.
I exhale shakily once I'm seated, every muscle in my body humming with delayed protest.
He moves across the room to a tall storage door and keys in a code without looking back. The door slides open with a soft mechanical sigh, revealing a narrow space filled with hanging clothes.
"The clothes you came to us in were in unsatisfactory condition," he says evenly. "These will suffice for now. Here."
He selects a dark shirt from the rack and brings it over, holding it out to me.
I take it slowly, fingers trembling just a little. The fabric feels heavier than what I remember wearing. Thicker. When I pull it over my head, the movement sends a low ache through my shoulders and spine. My muscles protest but don't fail me this time. Color continues to bleed back into the world as I move—subtle at first, then stronger. The amber light warms. The steel walls carry faint variations of gray that weren't there before.
My body still feels wrong.
But it feels awake.
"Thanks," I mutter. "I guess."
"I'd much rather see you with clothes on," he replies dryly.
"I'd rather have clothes on myself," I huff, though the sound lacks any real humor. My head throbs faintly now, the ache familiar in a way I can't quite place—dull and insistent, like a caffeine withdrawal headache gnawing from the inside out. I swallow hard. "Do you have any water or something I can drink?"
"Of course," he says calmly. "But I think you'd rather have something with a little more kick to it."
He reaches into a compartment near the desk and removes a slender tube made of clear composite material. Faint blue light pulses inside it with the same cold rhythm as the device in my chest. He sets it on the desk within my reach.
"Drink up."
I stare at it.
Then at him.
Then back at it again.
"What?" I lift it cautiously, turning it in my hand. The glow reflects faintly against my skin. "You're joking, right?"
He doesn't answer right away. Just watches me through those softly illuminated lenses, head tilted slightly as if considering how to phrase his response.
"Do you truly not remember your own abilities?"
The word hits me harder than anything else since I woke up.
Abilities.
My grip tightens reflexively around the tube. My pulse stutters, and I feel the familiar hum beneath my skin respond—quiet but immediate. My eyes widen.
"My… what?"
"Abilities," he repeats, unhurried. "Your capacity. Your output. The reason you survived the integration process when projected failure rates were significantly higher."
"I don't have—" The words catch in my throat. "I don't have abilities. I'm just— I was just—"
The sentence collapses in on itself.
Just what?
The space where that answer should be feels hollowed out.
"You were never 'just' anything," he says gently. "Even before you came to us."
"I didn't come to you," I snap, sharper than I mean to. My head pounds. The ache behind my eyes deepens. "You keep saying that like it's a fact."
"It is," he replies. "Even if you cannot remember the steps that led you here."
My gaze drops to the tube in my hand. The glow inside it pulses faintly, synced to the rhythm I can now feel in my chest without looking. The same energy. The same wrong, living light.
"What happens if I don't drink this?" I ask quietly.
"Your body will continue to feel as it does now," he answers. "Weak. Starved. Disconnected. The hunger you feel will sharpen instead of easing."
"And if I do?"
A pause.
"Then you will feel like yourself again," he says.
The words echo strangely in the room.
Myself.
I look down at my hands—the scars I don't recognize, the faint blue light ghosting beneath the skin at my sternum, the subtle tremor in my fingers. I feel thirsty. Aching. Tired in a way that sleep wouldn't fix.
And beneath it all—
Hungry in a way that no food ever has.
"Tell me one thing," I say softly.
He inclines his head, giving me his full attention.
"What kind of abilities do you think I have?"
"As far as I'm concerned," he says, "you were a battery."
The word burns colder than the light in my chest.
And something inside me stirs in quiet, electric agreement.
The tube is warm in my hand. The glow inside it pulses once, twice, like it's reacting to my touch. I can feel it through my skin, a faint answering hum that rises from the device in my chest and meets it halfway. The air between my fingers and the tube crackles softly.
Before I can second-guess it, tiny arcs of blue-white light leap from the surface of the vial to my knuckles.
I gasp as electricity bites into my skin, and then begins to move.
The sparks spread like wildfire, racing over my fingers in branching lines, slipping beneath the surface of my skin like they've been waiting for permission all along. My veins ignite in a sudden, brilliant glow—thin blue lines flaring to life beneath my skin like I've been cracked open and filled with light.
My breath catches violently in my throat.
The energy surges up my arm in a single, unstoppable wave, slamming into my shoulder, flooding down through my chest like a river breaking a dam. The device embedded in my sternum flares bright in response, its pulse syncing instantly with the incoming current.
It feels like it
should hurt.
Like my nerves should be screaming, like my organs should be tearing themselves apart trying to contain it.
Instead—
Warmth.
Pure, impossible warmth rushes through me, sweeping the lingering pain out of my body in one violent, cleansing tide. The ache in my muscles dissolves. The grinding pressure behind my eyes evaporates. The static that's lived in my limbs quiets into something smooth and steady.
My spine straightens on instinct.
Air rushes into my lungs in a deep, full breath that doesn't burn for once. My chest expands easily, freely, like it was always meant to move this way. The dull gray haze that's clouded my vision shatters all at once—
And color slams back into the world.
The amber light in the office flares rich and warm. The steel walls reflect sharp silvers instead of washed-out grays. The glow beneath my own skin burns vivid and real, no longer distant or wrong. I can
feel everything again—the weight of my body in the chair, the cool air brushing against sweat-damp skin, the hum of the building beneath my feet.
My heart pounds powerfully, every beat sending another controlled pulse of energy through my veins, like my body is recalibrating itself in real time.
I didn't realize how tense I'd been until my shoulders drop on their own.
A sound tears out of me—half gasp, half shaky laugh, raw and startled. My grip loosens without me meaning to.
The tube slips from my hand and clatters against the floor.
I pitch forward slightly, bracing my hands against my knees as I suck in another heavy breath. Then another. My lungs feel too full, like I've been starved of oxygen for years and only just remembered how to breathe properly.
Energy hums beneath my skin now.
My hands stop shaking.
I flex my fingers slowly, watching the faint blue light fade from my veins until only my normal skin tone remains. The glow retreats inward, settling back into the device in my chest like it's found its proper home again.
I feel… solid.
Grounded.
Alive in a way I don't remember ever feeling before.
I push myself up out of the chair without thinking.
The movement is effortless.
No wobble. No muscle lag. No weakness dragging at my joints. My feet plant firmly against the floor like they actually belong there. My posture straightens naturally, spine aligning without that dull ache that's plagued me since the moment I woke up in that room.
I roll my shoulders once.
Then again.
The movement feels
good.
"Okay," I murmur under my breath, voice steadier than it's been since all of this began. Stronger. My throat doesn't burn anymore. My words don't scrape their way out. "That's… that's new."
There's a faint ringing in my ears, not unpleasant—more like resonance. Like my body is still settling into the aftershock of what just moved through it.
I take a step.
Then another.
My stride is longer than I expect. Surer. The air feels lighter around me, like there's less resistance to every motion. I become acutely aware of how easily my weight shifts, how naturally my center of balance adjusts. I stop near the desk, flex my knee slightly, testing it.
No protest.
No pain.
Only strength, humming quietly beneath the surface.
I lift my hands again, palms up, studying them as if they might still be glowing. They look normal. Scarred. Human.
But they feel like they're carrying a storm just beneath the skin.
I laugh again—quiet and breathless, the sound pulled from me without permission this time.
"What the hell was in that thing?" I ask, glancing toward him.
The masked man hasn't moved from where he stood throughout the whole thing. He watched the entire process without interruption, without surprise. Just quiet, unwavering observation.
Satisfied.
He steps forward now, slow and unthreatening, boots barely making a sound against the floor.
"As I said," he replies calmly, nodding once in approval, "you're a walking battery."
He takes a seat against the edge of the desk, folding his arms loosely as he studies me like a solved equation.
"How do you feel?"
I draw in a long breath through my nose.
The air fills my lungs easily. My chest rises and falls in a steady rhythm. The lingering fear—the fog, the helplessness, the dragging weight of exhaustion—all of it feels distant now. Not gone completely, but pushed far enough back that it no longer owns me.
My hands curl into loose fists at my sides.
"Better," I say.
"Good," the man nods. "Now, let's talk."
The word
talk lands heavier than it should.
I ease back into the chair, movement still too smooth, too easy for a body that felt half-dead minutes ago. The seat takes my weight like it always should have—no protest from my legs, no tremor in my knees. That alone is enough to send a ripple of unease through the new, humming confidence under my skin.
It shouldn't feel this natural.
My pulse is still steady. Too steady. The energy in my chest sits coiled and warm, like a sleeping animal that just finished eating. Part of me—some dangerously quiet part—feels
good. Better than good. Wired. Awake. Alive.
The rest of me is spiraling.
My body feels different in a way that goes deeper than strength or clarity. The proportions feel the same. My hands look like my hands. But the way I
occupy myself now… it's like the walls of my own skin got pushed outward. Like I'm standing in a version of myself that's been reinforced from the inside.
Did I die?
The thought slips in out of nowhere and refuses to leave.
Did I die… and wake up like this?
A dream would at least make sense. A coma hallucination. A stress-fueled nightmare. Anything but a cold office, a glowing device in my chest, and a man in a mask watching me like a restored machine.
What the hell is going on?
For the first time since I woke up down there, my mind is actually clear enough to ask the question properly—and the weight of it nearly crushes the high from the energy.
I stare at my hands in my lap for a beat too long.
Then I notice the silence.
I look up.
He's watching me — As if he expected me to get lost in my own head for a moment and accounted for it.
"Sorry," I say automatically, the word slipping out on reflex. My throat still feels strange—stronger, but unfamiliar. "You say something?"
"I understand this is a lot for you to take in," he replies evenly. "But I'm afraid there's a lot
to be done."
My stomach twists.
"Can you explain what's going on at least?" I ask. The adrenaline from earlier drains just enough for the fear to catch up. "Where am I?"
"You're in a safe place," he says, "from those who would consider you an enemy. That is all you need to know at the moment." A pause. Then, quieter, more deliberate: "I'd actually prefer to ask the questions right now."
The air shifts.
It's subtle, but I feel it immediately—like someone just shut a door somewhere I can't see. Whatever quiet patience he was showing a moment ago withdraws. The warmth drains out of the room, leaving something colder behind it.
I sit back properly this time.
"Alright," I say, a little more guarded. "What do you want to know?"
He doesn't hesitate.
"First things first. What's your name?"
The question hits harder than it should.
"You don't know my name?" I ask before I can stop myself.
"As I said downstairs," he replies calmly, "you're a ghost. I don't like wild variables. It's harder to predict."
That does it.
A chill slides slowly down my spine, threading between the new heat in my veins like oil in water.
Ghost. The word echoes in too many directions at once. No records. No trail. No net to catch me if I fall.
And worse—no confirmation that I'm even supposed to still be here.
Something about him tugs at the edge of my thoughts again. The voice. The mask. The way he moves. I'm
starting to recognize him now, like a name sitting just out of reach on the tip of my tongue.
And that's exactly why I can't tell him the truth.
If I really am a ghost, then I need to stay that way. At least until I know why.
My mouth opens, but nothing comes out.
Shit.
What the hell do I even call myself?
The pause stretches just long enough to feel suspicious.
"Ryan," I say finally. The name sparks into existence half-formed in my head. "Ryan Harbour."
It sounds real the moment I say it—solid enough to pass as truth. My pulse skips once, then steadies.
Good. Stick with it.
"Nice to meet you, Ryan," he says.
The way he says it makes my skin prickle—not because it sounds threatening, but because it sounds
tested. Like he's listening for a hitch in my breathing, a flinch in my posture, some microscopic tell that proves I'm lying.
I nod once.
"Do you know who I am?" he asks.
"No," I answer honestly. Then, after a beat, "But you look familiar. The mask at least."
"Interesting," he murmurs. "Despite not remembering seeking us out, you recognize me. That's a good sign."
"A sign of what?" I ask.
He doesn't answer.
Instead, he reaches to the side of the desk and picks up a small remote. He turns slightly and points it toward the darkened monitor mounted on the wall.
The screen flickers to life.
Static clears.
A news desk snaps into focus.
"…Police are still on the lookout for escaped convict Elliott Connors," the anchor says, her tone clipped and urgent, "who is better known as the criminal known as
Shroud…"
My blood goes cold.
The name hits like it was wired directly into my nervous system.
Shroud.
The room seems to tilt around me.
The masked man on the screen appears in grainy footage—security camera angles, distant street shots, flashes of blue-and-red sirens reflecting off dark armor. The mask is unmistakable.
There's no way. I have to be dreaming right now. He-he, he's a god damn video game character. How is he in front of me? No, no, no… how the fuck is this possible?
The broadcast continues, talking about property damage, injured officers, "unverified reports of enhanced individuals," and a growing task force dedicated to bringing Shroud in "by any means necessary."
I look back at him slowly.
"You're…
that Shroud," I say.
"Yes," he confirms simply.
My thoughts crash into one another in a messy pile—memories I don't have, questions I don't know how to ask yet, the impossible reality of waking up as a living power source in the headquarters of a wanted criminal mastermind.
"You said I came to you," I say slowly. "But I don't remember any of that. I don't remember
you. I don't even remember—" My voice falters. "I don't remember how I ended up like this."
"No," he agrees. "You don't."
"Then how do you expect me to answer anything?" I ask. "You're asking impossible questions."
His head tilts slightly.
"I'm not asking for certainty," he says. "I'm asking for instinct. For reactions. For fragments. Whatever pieces remained intact."
"And if there aren't any?"
"Then we begin building from what you are now."
The weight of that sentence settles in my chest heavier than the device ever did.
"What exactly do you think I am now?" I ask quietly.
He studies me for a long moment.
"That depends," he says at last. "An asset, a liability, a miracle of engineering. You might even be a weapon, depending on who controls the current."
My hands curl slowly against my thighs.
"And to you?"
Another pause.
"To me," he says, "that remains to be seen. Hence why I need to ask these questions. To help determine what you are, Ryan."
An uneasy, breathless sound escapes me—half laugh, half disbelief.
"I understand this is a lot to process. But if it's any comfort, you're adapting remarkably well. Even above the projected probability. Forty-two percent better than I anticipated."
"Physically, maybe…" I correct. "I don't know about mentally."
"That is to be expected."
I lean back in the chair again, exhaling slowly through my nose. The energy in my chest hums in quiet sympathy with my pulse—steady, patient, waiting.
Ecstatic turns to wary.
Wary slides into dread.
And dread is now tangling tightly with a growing, suffocating confusion.
I'm sitting in a wanted criminal's office.
I just lied about my name.
And according to him, I walked into this hell
on purpose.
"What
are you really going to ask me, Shroud?" I say at last.
The mask turns just enough that I feel his full attention settle on me.
"That," he replies calmly, "depends on how much you remember once the shock wears off."
Hey guys, hope you all enjoyed the chapter. Really happy to see the reception to this story was so positive right off the bat on all the sites I've posted it. I'll be attempting to get a few more chapters wrote out until the beginning of the year, so fingers crossed we can get to chapter 5 posted publicly.
As I mentioned before, I do have a Patreon where you can get up to 5 chapters early access. 1 free chapter, 4 paid. If the story gets enough attention, I may try to commission some artwork for the story. That's where most of my writing money is going to go regardless.
Links are below. Will catch you all very soon!
discord.gg/dQkeJPkxdD
https://www.patreon.com/c/Arsenal597