The Evil - Withinreloaded Portable

Halden’s mutterings at the hospital made sense now: “It learns. It feeds.” The Beneath took what it could — fragments of identity, names, the colors of small things. Not just memory, but reality’s margin notes: who owed whom favors, where a promise had been broken, where a child had been left at a curb. The more the machine was used, the thicker its appetite. It did not simply host dreams; it harvested them as fuel, compressing living recollections into denser, more useful constructs.

The first time the device engaged, it felt like dipping a hand into cold, living water. Images rose against his will: a corridor whose walls breathed and pulsed in time with the console, concrete that exhaled, metal that sweated and cooed. He saw himself in that corridor — or a version of himself — moving without sound, a map blooming on the back of his eyelids, doors numbered in chalk. A child’s laughter echoed, warped into a mosaic of small echoes, and a stairway unwound downwards like a spool. the evil withinreloaded portable

Chapter II — The Beneath

Elias fought through the riot of reclaimed memories and severed the spire’s main feed. In the machine’s last throes he saw Halden, projected from residual code, a battered, guilt-scarred visage. “You freed them,” Halden whispered, “but a lot is broken.” The portable’s light dimmed to a stuttering heartbeat. The Beneath unspooled, doors slamming into each other like the ends of a book closing. Halden’s mutterings at the hospital made sense now:

To enter the Beneath through the console was to step into someone else’s wound. Each use unraveled a thread of Elias’s life and braided it with the histories of others: a woman who remembered childhood as a carousel made of teeth, a veteran whose front yard contained a radio that still screamed names, a child who swallowed his brother’s shadow so he wouldn’t cry. Elias began to chart these hallucinations like a detective charts suspects. Patterns emerged: recurring nodes — the Hospital’s echoing pump room, a rusted carousel, a dead-end theater. At the center of them all, a tower made of patient charts stacked like shingles, pulsing with the console’s same subdued light. The more the machine was used, the thicker its appetite