She reached for the YES button one more time.
Her phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number: YOU ARE STILL WEARING THE HEADSET.
The headset’s rubber seal felt like a second skin now. Sarah had been in the DarkroomVR lobby for eleven hours—or so the wall clock said. The clock was wrong. It had been wrong since she first logged in. darkroomvr
She tore off the headset.
Her finger passed through the air. And somewhere, in the darkroom of her own skull, she heard the soft, wet click of a shutter closing. She reached for the YES button one more time
The lobby was a perfect replica of her real apartment—same scuff on the baseboard, same crooked IKEA lamp. But here, the window showed a city that had never existed. Spires of black glass. A sky the color of a healing bruise. And the silence. That was the worst part. In the real world, there was always the hum of the refrigerator, the distant wail of a siren. Here, the only sound was the soft, wet click of her own heartbeat.
She hadn’t chosen NO. Not once. The first few hours were a dare. Then a habit. Now, the YES button simply didn’t depress. Her finger passed through it like smoke. The headset’s rubber seal felt like a second skin now
But the seal around her eyes—the faint, cool pressure of the foam gasket—had never gone away. She touched her face. Her fingers met nothing but skin. Yet she could feel it. The headset. Always there. Waiting for her to blink too long, to sleep too deep, to forget which button was real.