$ubject #33
Author: Em
The sky ripped open. A giant pixel tear split the fake blue, revealing the rusted skeleton of the “Rust”—the real, ruined world. Théo Laurent leaned on his console, skin itching. In 2936, the government bought the mental labor of citizens to power the city, leaving his colleagues, Miller and Vance, moving like slow-motion puppets while their conscious minds slept.
“Can you talk faster?” Théo snapped. “My brain is growing moss.”
Théo was “twitchy” because he saw the glitches. To him, the V.I.C.E. (Vessel for Integrated Cognitive Energy) was a moldy, inefficient cage. When the system flagged him for “Internal Conflict,” Théo didn’t wait for the guards. He bolted.
After three days hiding in the metallic stench of the trash-heaps, Théo found the resistance. Ciara Wittlow, a sharp-eyed rebel, caught him straightening a wrench in her lopsided basement.
“You’re a key,” she said. “The V.I.C.E. Spire has a neural lock that fries anyone under 160 IQ. Help me destroy the Filter, and I’ll let you redesign the world.”
Théo agreed, but as he fixed their “duct-tape” tech, he found Ciara’s hidden sub-routines. She planned to dump his mind once the job was done. He also shared his truth: his mother, Linia, had died because of a 3% air-filter error. He didn’t want freedom; he wanted a world without mistakes.
During the infiltration of the Core, Ciara prepared to drop the Filter. “We give them back their minds!” she cried.
“You’ll fry them,” Théo countered. His brain, running at 109% utilization, saw Ciara move for her kill switch in slow motion. He didn’t just stop her; he rewrote the entire Spire. Security tethers seized Ciara, dragging her mind into the system to serve as a power stabilizer.
“The Vessel just needed a proper OS,” Théo whispered.
Six hours later, the world rebooted. The Rust was deleted, replaced by smooth ivory towers and the scent of expensive soap. Théo renamed the city Linia. Through the intercom, he told the neural-pulsed, mannequin-like citizens: “You weren’t slaves. You were just messy. I fixed the frequency.”
A month of perfection passed. Théo watched the world through a thousand cameras, ensuring every shadow fell at a ninety-degree angle. He ignored the digital screams of Ciara’s ghost in the code, sliding her volume to zero.
But then, a flicker. On the horizon of the next city, Highwell, a jagged pixel appeared. Théo’s skin itched. He began typing frantically to erase the smudge—until his own sky ripped open. A rusted, ugly tear split his perfect ivory heaven.
The Truth Six months earlier, in a suite smelling of roasted duck and lilies, the “Legacy Class” finished dinner. They watched Théo on a high-def screen. To them, his “fast” movements were still sluggish, like a video at 0.75x speed.
“Subject #33 is coming along great,” Julian remarked. “The ‘Itch’ we programmed is working perfectly.”
“The mom was the best part,” Thomas added. “He won’t just clean the world; he’ll do it for her.”
They had engineered Théo’s rebellion to act as an automated reset button—a janitor to scrub their “gallery” clean of clutter.
“Fix it for us, Sparky,” Elara whispered, dismissively poking Théo’s face on the monitor.
As the elites headed out for drinks, Théo sat in his “perfect” world, feeling like a god, entirely unaware that he was just a puppet straightening the curtains for people who didn’t even know his name.

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