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from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Starting my sports Saturday with a MLB Game, Chicago Cubs vs Houston Astros. I'm listening now to the Pregame Show on The Chicago Cubs Radio Network and I'll stay with this station for the radio call of the game. Opening pitch is only minutes away.
And the adventure continues.
from
Brieftaube
Der Tag begann früh, um 8 Uhr fuhr der Kleinbus von Berschad los nach Voronovytsia zum Ethnokultur & Folklore Festival. Das sollte eigentlich in Berschad stattfinden, und ich wollte bei der Vorbereitung helfen, aber die Stadtverwaltung hat den Plänen von Nika und dem Youth Folklore Club einen Strich durch die Rechnung gemacht. Es soll jetzt am Tag der Jugend im Herbst stattfinden.
Also ab nach Voronovytsia, das sind 3 Stunden Fahrt. Unterwegs bin ich in die Unterhaltung mit Katja vertieft, und vergesse ganz die tägliche Schweigeminute um 9 Uhr, peinlich. Angekommen ging es direkt zu einer kleinen, 300 Jahre alten Holzkirche, die ohne einen Nagel gebaut ist. Davor standen der Pfarrer, einige Männer in Kosakenuniform, oder Militärkleidung. Zu mir hieß es, ich würde einen Kosakenritus beobachten dürfen. Vor Ort stellte sich heraus, dass der Ritus daraus besteht, mich zur Kosakin zu taufen. o.O
Mir wurde vorgemacht wie der Ablauf ist, und bevor ich verstanden habe was passiert, war ich schon mittendrin. Mir wurde viel vorgesprochen, worauf ich dann geschworen habe. Auf jeden Fall die ukrainische Sprache und Kultur verteidigen, und noch vieles mehr. Ich schwöre “prysjahaju”. Dann runter aufs rechte Knie, ukrainische Flagge küssen. Dann den Kopf nach unten, ein Schwert wurde mir auf die rechte Schulter gehalten. Dann wurde mir 3 mal auf den Rücken gepeitscht. So schnell wurde ich Kosatschka! Dazu gab es 2 Zertifikate, und 2 Patches für die Oberarme.
Dann ging es wieder zurück zum Palast, dort liefen die letzten Vorbereitungen für das Festival. Essensstände wurden aufgebaut, sowie die Ausstellungen aufgebaut. Es gab viel zu bestaunen: Alte und neue kosakische Waffen und Bogenschießen, bestickte Tücher und sehr alte Gefäße aus Ton, traditionelle Malerei, und handgemachte Perlenketten. Eine Perlenkette hatte als Motiv alle Zutaten für Borschtsch, genial. Es gab Workshops zur Malerei, sowie Kerzengestaltung.
Auf der Bühne wurde das Festival eröffnet, und es ging los mit dem Programm. Die Veranstaltenden sowie die Programme (Erasmus+) wurden vorgestellt, und in diesem Rahmen auch ich. Darauf folgten verschiedene Tanzgruppen, Musikgruppen, und es wurden einige Gegenstände versteigert. Auch eine Vorführung eines Kampfes mit historischen Waffen gab es. Das war echt vielfältig, und spannend anzuschauen. Das traditionelle kosakische Gericht “Kulisch” habe ich auch probiert, sehr lecker. Schnell hatte ich auch Horilka (Wodka) in der Hand, und war im Gespräch mit dem Bürgermeister von Voronovytsia. Auch sonst hatte ich viele interessante Gespräche, und noch viel mehr neue Eindrücke. Es war ein sehr schönes Fest, und es gab sehr viele neue Eindrücke.
Geendet hat der Tag für mich mit dem Abschied von Nika, Katia und Vika. Das war schon ein bisschen traurig, aber ich habe mich auch schon auf das Camp in Stina gefreut. Für mich ging es dann nach Vinnytsia, wo ich den Montag überbrückt habe.
The day started early — at 8am the minibus left Berschad heading to Voronovytsia for the Ethnoculture & Folklore Festival. It was originally supposed to take place in Berschad, and I wanted to help with the preparations, but the city administration put a stop to Nika's and the Youth Folklore Club's plans. It's now scheduled for Youth Day in autumn.
So off to Voronovytsia, a 3-hour drive. On the way I got so caught up in conversation with Katja that I completely forgot the daily minute of silence at 9am — embarrassing. Once we arrived, we went straight to a small 300-year-old wooden church built without a single nail. In front of it stood the priest, some men in Cossack uniforms or military clothing. I was told I'd be allowed to observe a Cossack ritual. Turns out the ritual consisted of initiating me as a Cossack woman. o.O
I was shown how the ceremony would go, and before I even understood what was happening, I was already in the middle of it. A lot was recited to me, and I swore along. Among other things, to defend the Ukrainian language and culture, and much more. I swear — “prysiahaiu”. Then down on the right knee, kiss the Ukrainian flag. Then head down, a sword was held to my right shoulder. Then I was whipped three times on the back. And just like that, I was a Kosatchka! I also received 2 certificates and 2 patches for the upper arms.
Then it was back to the palace, where the final preparations for the festival were underway. Food stands were being set up alongside the exhibitions. There was a lot to take in: old and new Cossack weapons and archery, embroidered cloths and very old clay vessels, traditional painting, and handmade bead necklaces. One necklace had all the ingredients for borscht as its motif — brilliant. There were also workshops on painting and candle-making.
The festival was opened on stage and the program kicked off. The organizers and the programs (Erasmus+) were introduced, and in that context, so was I. This was followed by various dance groups, music groups, and some items were auctioned off. There was also a demonstration of a fight with historical weapons. It was really diverse and exciting to watch. I also tried the traditional Cossack dish “Kulish” — very tasty. Before long I had a Horilka (vodka) in hand and found myself in conversation with the mayor of Voronovytsia. Beyond that I had many other interesting conversations and even more new impressions. It was a really lovely festival.
The day ended for me with saying goodbye to Nika, Katia and Vika. That was a little sad, but I was also already looking forward to the camp in Stina. From there I headed to Vinnytsia, where I spent Monday.
Ein Blick in die Kirche


frisch als Kosatschka
kulturelles Programm









Gruppenfoto – hinten: Chor aus der Nähe von Berschad
vorn: Leitung und Aktive aus verschiedenen youth-folklore-clubs, Bürgermeister von Voronovytsia, Djana (Organisatorin des Festivals aus dem youth-folklore-club vor Ort), ich 

| Character | Race | Class | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alaric | Human | Paladin level 3 | Big, doe eyed country boy with wavy blond hair and willingness to do the right thing. Paladin of Tyr. |
| Ambros | Human | Cleric level 7 | Follower of Aniu, Lord of Time. |
| Beorg the Gravedigger | Human | Fighter level 5 | Inspired to adventure after burying several adventurers. |
| Ignaeus | Elf | Fighter level 4 / magic-user level 5 | A slightly weathered looking elf with dull blonde hair and chiseled features. Seeks wealth and knowledge. |
| Jacob Vin | Human | Assassin level 3 | Slick black hair, inconspicuous dress, youthful for his age, and of keen instincts. |
| Kenso San | Human | Fighter level 4 | An arrogant and self-assured sellsword wandering Wilderlands to prove he can best anyone. |
| Tam o' Shanter | Human | Cleric level 4 | A boisterous wine-lover of Losborst on a Great Crusade of the Grape. |
| Tarkus the Promising | Human | Cleric level 5 | Follower of Bachontoi, God of Red Wisdom. |
| Thorinda Bung | Human | Monk level 3 | She has blonde hair done up in a tight pony tail and wears light, loose suit. |
| Thorm | Dwarf | Fighter level 4 / thief level 5 | Ashen hair, beard, and eyes. Left his own clan due to financial trouble. |
| Warmund Abendeurer | Human | Fighter level 1 | A burly blonde barbarian; Wilbalt's older brother and the stronger of the two. |
| Wilbalt Abendeurer | Human | Fighter level 1 | A burly blonde barbarian; Warmund's younger brother and a better swordsman of the two. |
“Begone, Evil!” Ambros thundered.
Wight that sucked Agathon dry turned to dust, carried away by the underground stream.
“Chop him up, quick!”
Kenso cut off Agathon's head. Ignaeus loped off the leg.
The corpse contorted and jerked, throwing itself at Kenso.
The boy, even in death, strived to best his master.
Kenso slashed accross the torso, and then drove the dragonblade into the heart. Corpse formerly known as Agathon ceased to move.
Adventurers completed the dismemberment. Then they chucked the body parts into the stream, casting them into the watery oblivion.
“So, uh... who will swim accross to fetch that bag of coins?”
“Screw it! I'll do it!”
Tam volunteered. He stripped off his armour. He elected to keep chemberpot on his head. Adventurers tied a rope around his waist, not neck, and he jumped into the chilly stream.
He was promptly speared and cut by three troglodytes that happened to be diving there at that time. One of the foul reptiles hurt him good; spears were wickedly barbed and did more damage while coming out than when coming in.
As Tam screamed and cried in pain trogs went limp and were carried away by the stream. Ignaeus had put them to sleep. As well as Alaric. They dragged Tam out, who in turn jumped at the elf, gave him a big hug and a sloppy, sloppy kiss. Ignaeus regretted his decision to save the man.
Freshly awoken Alaric volunteered to go instead of half-dead Tam. Young and strong, he too took off his armour. How else could he swim across? As before, a rope was tied around his waist. And as before, he jumped into the stream. This time it was not swimming reptiles.
No, it was a gang of skeletons approaching the party from behind. Little did they know how divine divine Ambros is. They were turned to dust.
Alaric succesfully retrieved a sack with five hundred gold pieces.
The party decided to exit the dungeon and rest before continuing. It was well past midnight by the time they were out.
“Hail and well met!”
Around noon the party was joined by Tarkus the Promising, Beorg the Gravedigger, Jacob Vin, Thorinda Bung, Warmund and Wilbalt Abendeurer. Now counting twelve adventurers in total, they were confident about hitting the deepest level of Castle Yukanthur.
Or so they thought.
Whilst passing through the first level, five giant ticks fell from above. Although the adventurers were not surprised, the ticks were right in their midst.
With their thick carapaces, giant ticks had proven to be more of a nuissance than a real threat to adventurers. Still, several of them got bitten, sucked, and potentially, diseased. It remains to be seen. Warmund and Jacob suffered the most, nearly dying in the process.
Alaric killed two, Kenso cut one in half, Tarkus smashed one, and Tam used his jug to crush the final one.
Moving on, they ran into six pig-faced orcs. Neither side was surprised. Beorg unleashed hell upon them, skewering four in total. Ignaeus and Kenso barely managed to kill one each.
From then on they moved forth unopposed. Once on the second level, they went into the fireblasted chamber, courtesy of Ignaeus, then south, then north in the domed chamber with fire, got perplexed and frustrated once more, went out north, then east into the hydrchamber, then north, left, and then right down the long stairs.
It is worth noting that there was an ongoing conversation if they should use stairs or one of the pit traps leading down. Stairs, as might be obvious by now, had won the popular vote.
Deeper level, at last.
Twelve of adventurers, carrying three torches and one lantern, stood little chance of surprising anyone or anything. Let alone a wall.
A t-junction split left and right. To the left was a large rectangular chamber with grimy, stained, and spent flagstones. The right was a fifty foot long corridor terminating with a right turn. Midway were open doors, hanging to the side. Torchlight flickered from beyond. Silent weeping and sobbing could be heard.
Feeling heroic, adventurers rushed towards it.
The doors were hanging by the hinges. Wood appeared to be damaged as if by some strong acid. The chamber beyond was rectangular. In the middle of it stood a man dressed in robes and a pointy hat. He held torch in on hand, and waved the other towards north-east corner. His face was red and puffy, tears streaming down.
In the corner was a half-dissolved man dressed in bubbly leather armour. He was engulfed by transparent and shimmering liquid. Magic-user spoke some words and a spear of light flew from his hands and into the mass.
Ignaeus recognised the spell as a varian of Magic Missile. He joined in, and cast teh same spell at the ooze. Beorg cast his own spell, “military oil,” vapourising the ooze as well as the man engulfed.
Then he took a deep whiff and grunted “I love the smell of military oil in the morning. It is the smell of victory.”
Ambros approached the man while others spread out to investigate the chamber. It was forty-five by thirty feet, with exit to the south and west. Besides one dissolved corpse in the north-east corner, there was another by west doors. This one was dressed in half-corroded plate mail, holding onto a heavy mace. Next to it was an intact gold chalice.
“You can help yourself to it, after all you have saved my life.” the man generously offered. He introduced himself as Diocletian Farseer, a man capable of seeing far. “We have been delving for hours. I said we should go back, but no, they were “oh come one, just one more doors, just one more.” And then we ran into this ooze which just wrecked my dear friends. Horrible. Horrible.”
He agreed to join the party for a part of his share. There is safety in numbers.
As adventurers discussed, the bottom of west doors begane to sizzle and bubble.
“Oh, no—” Diocletian screamed “—not again!”
Thorinda, Kenso, and Beorg dispatched of the ooze before it became a threat. They were apparently much more capable then two men Diocletian had adventured with.
“Let's move on.”
Pushing through west doors led to the aforementioned rectangular chamber with grime caked flagstones, albeit from the north side.
There were five exits from this chamber: corridors to the north, east, and south, mined tunnel to the west, and a tunneled crawlsspace to the south-west. On the south wall was etched drawing of a circle with a squiggly line.
Adventurers entered reluctantly. Thorm, being a dwarf, elected to study the west tunnel. It was most definitely hewn. Narrow, but wide enough for a single file. It obviously, well, obviously to a dwarf, at least, slopped downwards. Entrance to it was flanked by numerous bone fragments.
Crawlspace in the south-west corner was barely wide enough for one person to crawl through. It was not particulalry high, and one would need to go all the way on their belly.
“Hey, look at that...”
Alaric shone his bullseye lantern down the south corridor.
Two red gems shone in the dark, just beyond his range. Moving forward revealed the horror—a baleful dead with bright-red gaze.
Alaric the Brave charged forth, only to be checked by two more undead waiting in the darkness. Kenso, Thorm, and Beorg backed the paladin, following him into the fray.
Ambros turned the furthest undead, since that was the only one whom had witnessed his holy symbol. Thorm destroyed one with a series of blows. Kenso felt the chilly touch of one. He felt weaker, as if drained. Luckily for him, the undead broke of its grip in the overwhelming presences of Ambros and Tarkus.
Alaric, Wilbalt, Thorm, Ambros, Kenso, Tarkus, and Ignaeus stood in what looked to be an anthechamber of sorts. There were doors to the west, “VERMIN” scribbled over them. That is where the undead whom had drained Kenso fled. There was archway leading south. That's where the first undead had fled to.
Diocletian, Jacob, Thorinda, Beorg were just behind, in the corridor connecting this chamber and the rectangular chamber with five exits. Tam and Warmund were in that chamber, keeping watch.
They were not twelve anymore. They were thirteen now.
Will that be enough to survive the depths of Castle Yukanthur?

Poster by Lord Jubalon Flux.
Discuss at Dragonsfoot forum.
#Wilderlands #SessionReport
from eivindtraedal
Russ på busser fra Østfold har forfulgt og utøvd vold mot russ fra Oslo-området, melder NRK. NRK viderebringer videoer av harde slåsskamper med sladdede ansikter. Flere russ har blitt sendt til sykehus, og det har blitt brukt slagvåpen. Dette er alvorlige hendelser, og det er jo verdt å merke seg hvordan de omtales, eller rettere sagt IKKE omtales, i kontrast til andre voldshendelser som involverer russ den siste tiden.
Lederen for Stortingets justiskomité Jon Helgheim har ikke delt usladdede videoer av østfold-russ i basketak med andre russ. Han har ikke spekulert i motivasjonene deres eller argumentert for at dette er symptomatisk for kulturen i Østfold, eller oppfordret folk i Østfold-miljøene om å ta et oppgjør. Eller argumentert for at vi alle har vært for naive overfor østfoldsk ukultur.
Men det gjør Helgheim altså når ungdommer med minoritetsbakgrunn er involvert. Ikke bare det: han får gjentatte ganger ros av ytringsfrihetsekspert og professor Anine Kierulf for å gjøre det, etter litt mild korreks. Helgheim løfter visstnok en “viktig debatt” (hvilken da? ) når han velger å spekulere vilt i en voldshendelse som stadig er under etterforskning.
Norske ungdommer begår forbrytelser, utøver vold og gjør andre dumme ting. Noen ungdommer behandles som individer med rettigheter som fortjener en skikkelig rettegang, andre behandles som representanter for hele folkegrupper, som fritt kan henges ut for folkemobben av noen av våre fremste politikere. Vi vet alle hvorfor. Det er en skam.
from DrFox
Quand quelque chose te touche fort, ne réagis pas tout de suite comme si ta première réaction disait toute la vérité.
Regarde trois choses.
Ton corps.
Ton émotion.
Ta pensée.
Ton corps, c’est ce que tu sens physiquement. Gorge serrée. Ventre noué. Mâchoire tendue. Cœur qui accélère. Fatigue d’un coup. Envie de fuir. Envie d’attaquer.
Ton émotion, c’est ce qui monte en toi. Peur. Colère. Honte. Tristesse. Jalousie. Dégoût. Soulagement. Tendresse.
Ta pensée, c’est l’histoire que ton cerveau raconte avec tout ça. Il peut dire : elle m’abandonne. Il me ment. Je suis nul. On me manque de respect. Je dois me défendre. Je dois tout comprendre maintenant.
Le problème, c’est qu’un seul des trois peut se tromper.
Ton corps peut paniquer parce qu’une situation ressemble à une ancienne blessure, même si le danger actuel n’est pas si grand.
Ton émotion peut être très forte, mais viser la mauvaise personne ou la mauvaise scène.
Ta pensée peut inventer une histoire très convaincante pour justifier ta peur ou ta colère.
Donc tu vérifies.
Exemple simple : quelqu’un ne répond pas à ton message.
Ton corps se tend.
Ton émotion dit : j’ai peur.
Ta pensée dit : elle s’en fout de moi.
Là, tu ne pars pas directement en accusation. Tu regardes les faits. Est ce que cette personne t’ignore souvent ? Est ce qu’elle est juste occupée ? Est ce que tu as déjà vécu un abandon avant, et que ton corps réagit trop vite ? Est ce que ta peur parle plus fort que la réalité ?
Autre exemple : quelqu’un te parle mal plusieurs fois.
Ton corps se ferme à chaque fois.
Ton émotion devient lourde.
Ta pensée observe que ça se répète.
Là, les trois vont dans le même sens. Ce n’est pas juste une réaction passagère. Il faut poser une limite.
Le but de la triade, c’est ça : ne pas laisser une seule partie de toi décider à la place des autres.
Quand ton corps, ton émotion et ta pensée disent tous la même chose, écoute sérieusement.
Quand un seul des trois crie très fort, ralentis.
Quand ton corps panique, regarde les faits.
Quand ton cerveau explique trop, écoute ton corps.
Quand ton émotion veut exploser, attends que la pensée revienne.
Ce n’est pas compliqué.
Avant de réagir, tu te demandes juste :
Qu’est ce que mon corps fait ?
Qu’est ce que je ressens ?
Quelle histoire mon cerveau est en train de raconter ?
C’est ça, la triade. Une manière simple de ne pas te mentir, de ne pas accuser trop vite, de ne pas t’écraser non plus, et de poser une limite quand la réalité le demande.

from DrFox
J’étais prêt à défendre mes enfants contre tout. Même contre moi.
Cette phrase, je la sens dans le corps. Elle ne vient pas d’une posture. Elle vient d’une peur très sérieuse, presque sacrée. La peur de transmettre ce qui m’a blessé. La peur de devenir sans le voir une pièce de plus dans le trauma. La peur que les enfants portent, à leur tour, ce que les adultes n’ont jamais su arrêter. Je voulais que ça s’arrête avec moi. Que la violence, la confusion, les accusations, les loyautés impossibles, les silences malades, tout ce qui abîme une enfance, trouve enfin une limite dans ma propre chair.
Je voulais être capable de me regarder moi aussi comme un danger possible. De ne pas me protéger derrière mon amour. De ne pas dire : puisque j’aime mes enfants, je ne peux pas leur faire de mal. L’amour ne suffit pas toujours à rendre un geste juste. Je le savais. Je voulais rester vigilant. Je voulais garder la vérité plus haute que mon image de père. Même si cette vérité devait un jour me demander de me corriger, de reculer, de demander pardon, de changer.
Et elle était ma partenaire.
Elle aurait dû voir cela, au moins un peu. Elle aurait dû sentir l’effort. La peur propre. La volonté de ne pas répéter. La main tendue vers quelque chose de plus sain que nous. Elle n’avait pas besoin de tout comprendre parfaitement. Elle n’avait pas besoin de me sauver. Mais elle tenait ma main dans cette traversée, et un jour, elle l’a lâchée.
Ce lâcher là fait plus mal que la solitude.
Parce qu’il transforme celui qui voulait protéger en suspect. Celui qui voulait arrêter le trauma devient une pièce du trauma. Celui qui essayait de tenir le réel devient celui qu’on accuse de le tordre. Alors le corps encaisse une douleur plus forte que ce qu’on lui avait donné au départ. Une douleur doublée. La première blessure, puis l’inversion. Le mal reçu, puis l’accusation d’être le mal.
À force, on n’a plus envie de philosopher. On n’a plus envie de chercher les grands mécanismes, les cercles, les blessures, les systèmes nerveux, les projections, les traumas, les récits. On n’a plus envie de comprendre chacun, de reformuler, de tenir compte de toutes les couches. On n’a plus envie de passer sa douleur au tamis de l’analyse pour qu’elle devienne présentable.
On veut qu’on nous fiche la paix. Une paix simple. Qu’on arrête d’entrer dans notre tête. Qu’on arrête de nous demander d’expliquer encore. Qu’on arrête de transformer chaque réaction en symptôme, chaque limite en violence, chaque colère en immaturité. Le corps réclame un silence. Une porte fermée. Une journée sans devoir prouver qu’on n’est pas un monstre. Une heure où personne ne vient gratter la plaie pour vérifier si elle saigne encore.
J’ai envie de réagir, oui. Réagir avec mes mains, avec mes pieds, avec mon corps entier qui dit stop. Réagir en me retirant de ce qui me détruit. Réagir en posant une limite sans écrire dix pages autour. Réagir en refusant de discuter avec ceux qui ont déjà choisi leur version. Réagir en protégeant mes enfants sans supplier qu’on reconnaisse mon intention. Réagir en retrouvant ma taille, mon souffle, mon axe.
Et si on dit que je fais comme un enfant, tant pis. Un enfant, parfois, sait très bien dire quand ça fait mal. Il ne sait pas encore habiller sa douleur avec des mots élégants. Il ne sait pas encore la rendre acceptable. Il pleure, il crie, il recule, il tend les bras, il refuse. Quelque part, ce n’est pas toujours une faiblesse. Le corps retourne à la vérité nue. Celle qui dit : je ne peux plus porter ça. Je ne peux plus continuer à penser à la place de tout le monde. Je ne peux plus transformer ma douleur en thèse pour que les autres se sentent moins coupables.

from TOTO88 Official
Dalam lanskap industri hiburan digital dan gaming modern di Indonesia, kecepatan interaksi data bukan lagi sebuah nilai tambah, melainkan sebuah kebutuhan fundamental. Pengguna hari ini mengharapkan halaman web yang mampu merespons tindakan mereka dalam hitungan milidetik. Ketika sebuah sistem gagal memetakan efisiensi ini, hambatan teknis seperti lagting atau kegagalan pemuatan aset visual akan langsung menurunkan tingkat kepercayaan pengguna.
Sebagai bagian dari komitmen untuk menghadirkan standar operasional yang profesional, tim pengembang infrastruktur Toto88 terus melakukan eksperimen dan pembaruan pada arsitektur web grid mereka. Fokus utamanya sederhana namun krusial: bagaimana memastikan distribusi data tetap stabil di tengah lonjakan trafik yang masif secara bersamaan.
Salah satu langkah signifikan yang diterapkan dalam ekosistem Toto88 adalah reduksi skrip pihak ketiga pada jalur rendering kritis (Critical Rendering Path). Banyak platform digital di Indonesia yang membebani halaman depan mereka dengan animasi berat atau skrip pelacak eksternal yang tidak efisien.
Melalui pendekatan arsitektur minimalis, tim teknis berhasil memangkas ukuran dokumen HTML dan aset JavaScript utama hingga 40%. Dampaknya terasa langsung pada kecepatan pemuatan halaman awal (First Contentful Paint), membuat navigasi di dalam platform menjadi sangat mulus, bahkan ketika diakses melalui jaringan seluler 4G di wilayah pelosok.
Menjalankan platform hiburan digital berskala regional membutuhkan distribusi server yang cerdas. Jaringan yang dikembangkan oleh Toto 88 memanfaatkan teknologi Edge Computing, di mana pusat data diletakkan pada titik-titik strategis yang paling dekat dengan basis pengguna aktif di Asia Tenggara, khususnya Indonesia.
Dengan memangkas jarak fisik antara pengguna dan server, waktu pemrosesan permintaan (Round Trip Time) dapat ditekan ke tingkat paling minimum. Selain itu, implementasi protokol komunikasi dua arah berbasis WebSockets memastikan bahwa pembaruan data sistem, statistik permainan, dan feending informasi interaktif berjalan secara real-time tanpa perlu melakukan penyegaran halaman (page refresh) secara manual.
Di samping kecepatan, integrasi lapisan keamanan bertaraf enterprise menjadi pilar penutup yang mengunci keandalan sistem. Enkripsi ujung-ke-ujung (end-to-end encryption) diimplementasikan pada setiap koridor transaksi data untuk memastikan privasi pengguna tetap terjaga dari ancaman siber.
Melalui integrasi menyeluruh antara kecepatan komputasi hardware, efisiensi kode software, dan jaringan distribusi yang terdesentralisasi, Toto88 tidak hanya membangun sebuah platform hiburan, melainkan sebuah cetak biru bagaimana teknologi web modern seharusnya dikembangkan untuk pasar Indonesia yang dinamis.
from Douglas Vandergraph

Chapter One: The Door That Should Not Have Been There
Jesus knelt on the damp carpet where the light hummed above Him like a tired insect. The walls around Him were the color of old sickness, a faded yellow that seemed to have soaked up years of fear without ever learning how to let any of it go. The air smelled of wet dust, warm plastic, and something too stale to belong to any living place. He bowed His head in quiet prayer, not because the Backrooms had power over Him, but because even in a place made of wandering, fear, and forgotten exits, He remained turned toward the Father.
A few hundred yards away, though distance meant little in that place, Mara Venn pressed her palms against the wallpaper and tried not to scream. The pattern looked almost normal until she stared at it too long. Then the lines seemed to drift. The walls did not move in any way she could prove, but each time she turned back, the hallway behind her looked longer than before. She had come in through a door at the end of a maintenance corridor, or she thought she had, and now there was no door, no corridor, no outside air, and no sound except the buzzing lights and her own breathing.
She had been recording when it happened. Not for attention, she kept telling herself, though that had once been the truth. She filmed strange buildings, empty malls, half-lit stairwells, abandoned office parks, and places people online called wrong. Her latest video was supposed to be about Jesus in The Backrooms, a strange idea she had almost mocked when someone sent it to her. She had planned to talk about fear, faith, and the rooms people get trapped inside without ever leaving home, but the words had sounded easy when she was still outside.
Now her phone showed no signal, the battery number had stopped changing, and the last saved note on her screen was something she had written at two in the morning after watching a story about Christ entering forgotten places. She had not meant anything by it. It was just a phrase that had stayed in her head because forgotten places felt safer to her than remembered ones. Forgotten places did not ask why she had stopped calling her father. Forgotten places did not ask why she had kept the letter from her brother unopened for seven months.
Mara turned the flashlight on her phone toward the carpet. The beam landed on damp footprints that were not hers. They were wide, clean at the edges, and moved straight down the hallway as if whoever made them knew where He was going. That frightened her more than the endless rooms did. Panic could be survived if everything around her was random. Purpose meant someone else was here, and in the Backrooms, every story she had ever read said that was not good.
She backed away from the footprints until her shoulder hit a corner she did not remember passing. The impact made her drop the phone. It landed faceup, still recording, and the camera caught the ceiling tiles above her with their stains shaped like islands on a map no one could use. She bent down with shaking hands and picked it up. For a moment, her face stared back from the black edge of the screen, pale and stretched thin by the ugly light.
“Okay,” she whispered, though there was no one to hear her. “Okay. Think.”
Her voice disappeared into the hallway without echo. That was one of the worst things. Sound should bounce in a place like this. It should hit the walls and come back changed, but the Backrooms swallowed sound the way deep carpet swallowed footsteps. Even her fear felt muffled. It sat inside her chest, heavy and private, as if the place wanted her to believe no one would ever know she had been afraid.
She forced herself to walk. Standing still made the wallpaper seem closer. She followed the footprints because every other choice felt worse. The rooms opened into more rooms, each one almost the same, but not exactly. Some had low ceilings. Some had pillars placed where no builder would put them. Some had strips of carpet darker than the rest, as if water had seeped through from a floor above that did not exist. Fluorescent panels flickered overhead, and every flicker made the shadows jump in corners where there should not have been anything to hide.
Mara tried to remember the rules people joked about online. Do not trust voices. Do not run unless you have to. Do not follow the humming. Do not drink the water. Do not lose track of your path. She almost laughed at that last one, but the sound caught in her throat. There was no path. There had never been a path. Every turn erased the one before it.
She came to a room with office chairs stacked upside down in the center. Their wheels faced the ceiling like small black eyes. A vending machine stood against the far wall, humming with its own light, though there was no cord behind it. Every slot inside was empty except one. Behind the plastic, on the bottom row, sat a small pack of crackers with a white sticker on it.
Mara stepped closer because hunger had already started whispering to her. She had not eaten since morning. She had been too focused on filming, too focused on proving she could still make something people would watch. The sticker on the crackers had handwriting on it.
You can stop pretending you are not tired.
Her knees weakened. She did not touch the package. She stared until the words blurred, then turned away fast and nearly tripped over one of the chairs. The Backrooms knew things. That was not part of any story she had wanted to believe. Strange rooms were one thing. A place that read the truth inside you was something else.
From somewhere beyond the vending machine, she heard a door close.
The sound was soft. Ordinary. It was the kind of sound a person might hear in an office after everyone else had gone home. Mara held her breath. The silence after it was deeper than before.
“Hello?” she called.
She hated herself as soon as she said it. Her voice sounded small and young, nothing like the version of herself she showed online. That version knew how to joke in dangerous places. That version could stand in a dead mall at midnight and say something clever while the camera rolled. This version could barely speak.
No answer came.
She moved around the vending machine and found a narrow hallway that should not have fit behind it. The footprints continued there. The carpet was drier in this stretch, and the walls had been scraped in places, showing gray material beneath the yellow paper. Mara touched one mark with two fingers. It looked fresh.
A low sound drifted through the hallway. Not a growl. Not exactly. More like someone dragging a heavy bag across carpet very far away. Mara froze. The sound stopped when she stopped. She took one slow step. Something beyond the walls moved once in answer.
She ran.
The hallway bent left, then right, then split into three openings. She chose the middle because the footprints did. Her breath tore at her throat. The buzzing lights grew louder until they seemed to be inside her teeth. She passed a row of cubicles with no desks, a break room with a microwave full of gray water, and a wall clock with all three hands spinning in opposite directions. Behind her, the dragging sound became footsteps.
Not human footsteps. Too many. Too uneven. Too patient.
Mara stumbled into a larger room and saw Him.
He stood near a square pillar beneath a broken light. He wore dark jeans, worn shoes, and a simple gray jacket over a plain shirt. Nothing about His clothing should have stopped her, but she stopped anyway. The room itself seemed quieter around Him. The lights still hummed, the carpet still stank of old water, and the walls still pressed in with their dead yellow glare, but the fear in the air had met something it could not swallow.
He turned toward her before she spoke.
Mara tried to warn Him, but she had no breath left. She pointed back down the hallway with one shaking hand. The thing following her had not entered the room yet. It waited beyond the opening, just out of sight, where the light failed.
Jesus looked past her toward the dark gap.
“Come no farther,” He said.
His voice was not loud. It did not need to be. The words moved through the room like a hand laid against a storm. Whatever waited in the hallway scraped once against the wall. Then it withdrew. The sound went backward into the distance until only the lights remained.
Mara bent over, both hands on her knees, and tried to breathe without crying. She did not want to cry in front of a stranger. She had learned young that crying made people either uncomfortable or powerful, and she trusted neither reaction. But the tears came anyway. They fell onto the stained carpet in small, hot drops.
Jesus waited. He did not step too close. He did not fill the silence with easy comfort.
When she finally straightened, she wiped her face with her sleeve and looked at Him with suspicion because suspicion was easier than gratitude.
“Who are you?” she asked.
He held her gaze with a gentleness that made the question feel larger than she intended.
“You know who I am,” He said.
Mara shook her head at once. “No, I don’t.”
But she did. That was the problem. Something in her recognized Him before her mind agreed. It was not from paintings or church windows. It was not from childhood Sunday school, though she had gone until her mother got sick and her father stopped pretending he knew what to do with grief. It was deeper and more frightening than memory. It was like being known by Someone she had spent years avoiding.
“You can’t be here,” she said.
“I came for those who are lost.”
She let out a short, broken laugh. “That is a terrible thing to say in this place.”
“It is still true.”
Mara looked around the room as if the walls might object. The light above Jesus flickered twice and then steadied. She hated how much that steadiness comforted her.
“Am I dead?” she asked.
“No.”
“Am I dreaming?”
“No.”
“Then what is this?”
Jesus looked at the yellow walls, the endless openings, and the damp carpet beneath their feet. His face held no fear, but it held sorrow. Not surprise. Not confusion. Sorrow, as if He had seen people build rooms like this inside themselves long before anyone imagined a place like the Backrooms.
“It is a place where fear pretends to be endless,” He said.
Mara swallowed. “That doesn’t answer anything.”
“It answers more than you want it to.”
She wanted to argue. She wanted to demand a map, an exit, a rule, a reason. Instead, she heard herself ask, “Can you get me out?”
“Yes.”
The answer came so simply that she almost hated Him for it. Nothing in her life had ever been that simple. Her mother’s illness had not been simple. Her father’s silence after the funeral had not been simple. Her brother’s anger had not been simple. Her own habit of turning pain into content had not been simple. The unopened letter in her backpack, folded between batteries and a lens cloth, had not been simple at all.
“Then why are we still standing here?” she asked.
“Because you are not the only one here.”
Mara stared at Him. The room seemed to tilt a little, though the floor did not move.
“There are others?”
“Yes.”
“How many?”
“Enough that leaving alone would not be love.”
She looked toward the hallway where the thing had retreated. Her skin tightened. “I don’t know those people.”
Jesus did not answer quickly. His silence made her hear what she had said.
Mara looked away first. “I didn’t mean it like that.”
“You meant that fear has made the circle of your concern very small.”
The words should have sounded accusing. They did not. That made them harder to bear. She folded her arms, not because she was cold, but because she needed something between herself and the truth.
“You don’t know me,” she said.
“I know the letter in your bag.”
Her face changed before she could stop it.
Jesus did not move toward her. “I know how many times you touched it without opening it. I know you told yourself you were waiting until you were ready. I know you were afraid your brother would ask you to come home, and more afraid he would not.”
Mara’s mouth opened, but no words came. The lights above them buzzed softly. In the distance, something knocked three times against a wall and stopped.
“That’s not fair,” she whispered.
“No,” Jesus said. “Fear is not fair. It takes grief and turns it into distance. It takes guilt and calls it safety. It teaches a person to live as if every closed door is mercy.”
Mara’s throat tightened. “I came here by accident.”
Jesus looked at her with patient sadness. “You entered through a door you had been building for years.”
She shook her head harder this time. “No. I found a maintenance hallway. That’s all. It was in an old office building off the access road. I was filming. I opened the wrong door.”
“And before that?”
Mara looked down.
Before that, she had ignored her father’s birthday. Before that, she had deleted a voicemail from her brother without listening to the end. Before that, she had filmed a video in an abandoned school and joked about ghosts while standing in a hallway that smelled like floor wax and old rain. Before that, she had promised herself she would go home when she felt stronger. Before that, she had stopped praying because prayer felt like talking into a locked room.
“You don’t understand,” she said, though she knew He did.
Jesus did not correct her right away. He looked toward one of the openings on the far side of the room. Mara followed His gaze and noticed something she had missed. A child’s sneaker lay near the wall, small and red, with one lace pulled out.
Her stomach dropped. “That wasn’t there before.”
“It was.”
“I would have seen it.”
“You were looking only for what threatened you.”
Mara stepped toward the sneaker, then stopped. A name had been written on the inside heel in black marker. Eli. The letters were messy and uneven, the way a parent might write in a hurry before school.
“How does a child get in here?” she asked.
“The same way many do,” Jesus said. “Through a door no one believed was dangerous until it closed.”
Mara crouched and picked up the shoe. It was real. The rubber sole bent under her fingers. A tiny pebble was stuck in one groove. For some reason, that pebble almost undid her. It belonged outside. It belonged in a parking lot or playground or driveway. It did not belong in a place with no windows and no sky.
“Is he alive?” she asked.
“Yes.”
“Where?”
Jesus turned toward the opening on the left. The hallway beyond it looked like every other hallway, but Mara felt something shift inside her when she looked at it. Not courage. Not yet. Only the first painful crack in her refusal.
“He is afraid,” Jesus said. “And he is trying not to make noise.”
Mara stood with the shoe in her hand. “Because of that thing?”
“Because he has learned that when grown people are afraid, children often become quiet.”
The words struck her in a place she did not want touched. She thought of her brother, Silas, sitting at the kitchen table at thirteen years old, pretending not to hear their father sobbing in the garage after their mother’s funeral. She thought of herself at seventeen, leaving for college and telling everyone she had to get out because the house felt dead. She had not said what was also true. The house felt full of need, and she did not want anyone needing her.
Jesus began walking.
Mara looked back the way she had come. The hallway behind her was already different. The vending machine was gone. The room with the stacked chairs had become a flat wall. She felt the old panic rise again.
“Wait,” she said. “How do I know you’re not part of this place?”
Jesus stopped.
“You don’t,” He said. “Not by staring at the walls.”
“That’s not helpful.”
“No,” He said. “It is honest.”
She almost laughed again, but this time the sound came out wet and tired. “So what am I supposed to do?”
“Walk with Me.”
The words were simple. Too simple for a place that hated simplicity. Mara looked at the shoe in her hand, then at the dark opening, then at the Man who did not seem to belong there and yet seemed more real than anything else in the room.
“Will it follow us?” she asked.
“Yes.”
Her eyes widened. “You could have lied.”
“I will not build your courage on a lie.”
That silenced her.
They entered the hallway together. Jesus walked at a steady pace, not fast enough to make fear lead them, not slow enough to let dread settle. Mara kept close but not too close. Part of her wanted to grab His sleeve. Another part refused to look that desperate. The sneaker felt small and warm in her hand, though it should have been cold.
As they moved deeper, the Backrooms changed. The yellow walls gave way to a stretch of gray cubicles with low partitions and phones that rang once every few seconds. Each time a phone rang, Mara flinched. None of the phones had cords. Some lay facedown on the carpet. Some were mounted to walls at impossible angles. One rang as they passed, and the caller ID showed her own name.
She stopped.
Jesus did not.
The phone rang again.
Mara stared at it, feeling her heart pound against her ribs. “What happens if I answer?”
Jesus looked back at her. “What do you hope will happen?”
She hated that question. “Maybe someone knows where I am.”
“Someone does.”
The phone rang a third time. On the small gray screen, her name flickered and changed.
Dad.
Her breath caught.
The plastic receiver trembled in its cradle, though no hand touched it. She had not spoken to her father in months. Their last conversation had been a fight about nothing that was really about everything. He had asked if she was coming home for Thanksgiving. She had said she had work. He had said she always had work. She had said maybe he should try asking without sounding disappointed. He had hung up first, and she had told herself that made him the cruel one.
The phone rang again.
Mara reached for it.
Jesus spoke quietly. “Is that his voice calling you, or your fear wearing it?”
Her hand froze.
The receiver kept trembling. The ring sounded louder now, sharp and ugly in the dead office air.
“I don’t know,” she said.
“Then do not answer from guilt.”
The ringing stopped.
For several seconds, Mara could not move. Then the phone’s screen went black, and she saw her reflection in it. She looked furious and frightened and younger than she wanted to be.
“You keep saying things like you know what I should do,” she said.
Jesus turned fully toward her. “I know what love is. I know what fear imitates. They are not the same.”
Mara gripped the child’s shoe tighter. “If love is so clear, why does it feel impossible?”
“Because you have used distance to survive. Now love feels like danger.”
The hallway seemed to hold its breath around them. Mara wanted to tell Him to stop. She wanted Him to go back to talking about exits and monsters and lost children. Anything but this. Yet some part of her, the part that was exhausted from defending every locked place inside herself, wanted Him to keep speaking.
A scream came from somewhere ahead.
It was small, high, and quickly smothered.
Mara forgot the phone. Jesus moved first, and she followed. They passed through the cubicle maze into a low room where the ceiling sagged in soft, stained panels. The smell was worse there, like old water trapped behind drywall. A line of filing cabinets stood against the far wall, each drawer open a few inches. Something had scratched marks into the metal from the inside.
“Eli?” Mara called before she could stop herself.
No answer.
Jesus raised one hand slightly, and she fell silent. He listened. Mara listened too, though all she heard was the lights and her pulse.
Then came a whisper from under a desk.
“Don’t let it hear.”
Mara dropped to her knees and looked beneath the desk. A boy stared back at her from the shadows, curled so tightly around himself that his knees almost touched his chin. He had dark hair stuck to his forehead with sweat, and one foot wore a red sneaker while the other was bare. His face was dirty. His eyes were too wide.
Mara held up the shoe. “Is this yours?”
The boy stared at it, then at her. He did not reach for it.
Jesus crouched beside her, keeping enough distance that the child would not feel trapped. “Eli,” He said.
The boy looked at Him.
Something changed in the child’s face. Not relief exactly. Recognition came first, then a kind of grief too large for a child. His bottom lip shook.
“My mom said not to go through the yellow door,” Eli whispered.
Jesus’ voice softened. “But you did.”
“I thought she was inside.”
Mara felt a chill move across her shoulders. “You heard her?”
Eli nodded. “She was crying.”
Mara looked at Jesus. He gave a slight shake of His head, and she understood. Not his mother. Something wearing her sound.
“How long have you been here?” Mara asked.
Eli shrugged. “I slept twice.”
The words hit her hard. A child measuring time by how many times fear finally wore him down. She set the shoe on the carpet near the desk.
“I’m Mara,” she said. “I’m going to help you get out.”
Eli’s eyes moved to Jesus. “Is He?”
Mara hesitated. “Yes.”
The boy crawled forward slowly. Jesus did not reach for him until Eli leaned toward Him first. Then Jesus helped him out with such care that Mara had to look away for a second. There was nothing dramatic in it. No grand gesture. Just a hand beneath a child’s arm, steady and gentle, as if the boy’s fear deserved patience.
Eli sat on the floor and pulled on his shoe. His fingers shook too much to tie it. Mara started to help, then stopped because she was afraid of doing it wrong. Jesus tied the lace. The boy watched His hands with complete attention.
“Will it come back?” Eli asked.
“Yes,” Jesus said.
Eli’s face crumpled.
“But it cannot take you from Me.”
The boy nodded, though he was still afraid. Mara noticed that Jesus did not shame him for that. He did not tell him to be brave. He did not tell him fear was wrong. He let the child be scared and still held out His hand.
Eli took it.
Mara stood. “Where do we go?”
Jesus looked toward a narrow exit behind the filing cabinets. It had not been there before. The opening was barely wide enough for one person at a time, and beyond it Mara saw a stairwell descending into dim green light.
“Down?” she asked. “That seems worse.”
“It is the way to the next one.”
“The next what?”
“The next person who thinks no one heard them.”
Mara closed her eyes for a moment. She wanted to say no. She wanted to say she had done enough. She had followed Him. She had helped find Eli. Surely that counted for something. Surely now they could leave.
But Eli’s small hand was in Jesus’ hand, and the boy kept glancing at Mara as if she were part of whatever safety had arrived. That look made escape feel different. It no longer looked like a door she could run through alone. It looked like a question about who she was willing to become before she left.
A dragging sound came from the cubicles behind them.
Eli pressed closer to Jesus.
Mara turned. At the far end of the room, between the partitions, something tall moved without showing its full shape. It bent where a body should not bend. The light around it dimmed, not because the bulbs went out, but because its presence seemed to drink what little brightness the room had.
Jesus stood between it and the others.
The thing stopped.
Mara could not see a face. She could feel attention, though. It was fixed on her, not Jesus, not Eli. On her. The pressure of it entered her mind like a thought that did not belong to her.
Leave them.
Her stomach tightened.
The thought came again, clearer.
You can still leave them.
Mara stepped back without meaning to.
Jesus did not look at her. He looked at the thing in the cubicles. “She is not yours.”
The shape shifted. The filing cabinets rattled. Every open drawer slammed shut at once. Eli cried out, and Mara flinched so hard she almost dropped the phone still clutched in her other hand.
Then the phone began to play a recording.
Mara looked down in horror. The screen showed an old video from her camera roll. She recognized it at once. It was from the hospital, the night before her mother died. She had never posted it. She had never shown anyone. She had filmed the floor because she did not know what else to do while her father spoke to the nurse in the hallway. In the audio, her brother’s voice was muffled but clear enough.
“Where’s Mara?”
Her father answered, tired and broken. “She went to get coffee.”
Silas said, “She always leaves.”
Mara’s chest constricted. “Turn off,” she whispered.
The video kept playing.
In the room beyond the phone speaker, her mother coughed softly. Mara remembered standing by the vending machines with a paper cup in her hand, unable to go back in because dying made the air too honest. She had told herself she was only taking a minute. One minute had become ten. Ten had become almost an hour. By the time she returned, her mother was asleep and never fully woke again.
The thing in the cubicles leaned closer.
See, the thought pressed into her. You leave. That is what you do.
Mara’s fingers went numb. The phone slipped from her hand and landed on the carpet, still playing.
Jesus turned then. Not toward the creature. Toward her.
“Mara,” He said.
She could barely see Him through the tears in her eyes.
“Is it true?” He asked.
The question broke something open in her. She wanted Him to deny it for her. She wanted Him to say she had been young, scared, overwhelmed, human. She wanted Him to crush the accusation without making her look at the fact beneath it.
Instead, He asked if it was true.
She shook her head at first, but the lie could not stand in His presence. Her shoulders caved.
“Yes,” she whispered. “I left.”
The room went still.
Jesus nodded once, not with approval, but with truth received. “And are you leaving now?”
Mara looked at Eli. The boy was crying quietly, his hand wrapped around Jesus’ fingers. She looked at the stairwell. She looked at the shape waiting between the cubicles, feeding on the old sentence that had ruled her life. She thought of every door she had chosen because it was easier than staying. She thought of her brother’s unopened letter.
“No,” she said.
The word came out weak, but it was real.
The creature recoiled as if struck. The lights above them flared. The phone stopped playing. On the screen, the old video vanished and the camera view returned, showing the room they were in now. Mara could see herself standing behind Jesus with wet cheeks and a face full of fear. But she had not run.
Jesus looked back at the creature. “You heard her.”
The shape withdrew into the cubicles, slower this time. It did not vanish. Mara understood that. Some things did not vanish just because truth was spoken once. But it backed away.
Jesus picked up Mara’s phone and handed it to her. She took it with both hands.
“I don’t feel brave,” she said.
“You stayed.”
“That doesn’t fix what I did.”
“No,” He said. “But it tells the lie it no longer owns the whole house.”
She did not know what to say to that. The Backrooms hummed around them, endless and ugly, but for the first time since she fell into that place, Mara felt the possibility that not every hallway led deeper into fear. Some might lead through it.
Jesus guided Eli toward the narrow opening. Mara followed close behind. Before stepping into the stairwell, she looked back once. The filing cabinets were still. The cubicles sat in crooked rows. The carpet held her footprints beside Jesus’ and Eli’s.
Three sets now.
The stairwell smelled like rust and rain. The walls were painted a green that had once been bright but had faded into something like old sea glass. Water dripped somewhere below, steady as a clock. Jesus descended first with Eli, and Mara came after them, one hand on the rail, the other gripping her phone.
After several steps, her screen lit by itself.
A new file appeared in her saved drafts. No title. No thumbnail. No edit. Just one line of text.
Open the letter.
Mara stopped on the stairs.
Jesus and Eli paused below her. Jesus did not turn around at first. He let her stand with the command glowing in her hand and the damp air pressing around her. The letter was still in her backpack. She could feel its weight now as if it were made of stone.
“Here?” she asked, her voice barely steady.
Jesus looked up at her from the lower landing. “Not because this place demands it.”
“Then why?”
“Because love has waited long enough.”
Mara sat on the step before her legs gave out. She slid the backpack off one shoulder, unzipped the front pocket, and pulled out the envelope. It was wrinkled from months of being carried and ignored. Her name was written across the front in her brother’s hand.
For a moment, she only held it.
Then, in the humming stairwell of a place that had no sky, with a frightened child watching and Jesus waiting in silence, Mara opened what she had been afraid to read.
Chapter Two: The Letter in the Stairwell
Mara unfolded the letter with fingers that did not trust themselves. The paper had softened along every crease because she had carried it too long. The ink had smudged in one corner, probably from rain or sweat or the little bottle of hand sanitizer that had leaked in her backpack months ago. She expected anger when she opened it. She expected her brother to accuse her of disappearing, and she braced herself for words sharp enough to confirm the version of him she had built in her head so she would not have to feel guilty for staying away.
The first line did not accuse her. Silas had written, Mara, I do not know how to say this without sounding like Dad, so I am just going to say it badly and hope you know what I mean. She stopped there and pressed the paper against her knee. That one sentence carried his voice so clearly that the stairwell around her seemed to fade for a moment. He had always done that when they were younger. He would tell the truth too bluntly, then try to soften it with a joke or a shrug, as if tenderness embarrassed him.
Jesus remained on the landing below, His hand still resting gently on Eli’s shoulder. He did not ask her to hurry. The boy watched with the quiet seriousness of someone who had already learned that grown people’s pain could change the air in a room. Somewhere below them, water kept dripping. Somewhere above, in the level they had left, something dragged itself once across the floor and then went still.
Mara looked back at the letter. Silas had written that their father was not doing well, but he did not mean sickness in the simple way people use it when they want sympathy. He meant their father had started sleeping in the chair by the front window. He meant the porch light stayed on all night, even when no one was coming. He meant the garage had not been cleaned since their mother died because every box held something their father could not throw away. He meant the house had become a place where everyone avoided the same rooms for different reasons.
The words went on in uneven lines. Silas said he was not asking Mara to fix anything. He said he knew she hated being asked to come home as if her presence were medicine. He admitted he had been angry when she left, but the anger had worn down into something heavier. He missed his sister, not the sister who used to carry everything, not the sister who knew how to sound brave, but the real one who used to sit with him on the kitchen floor during thunderstorms and make toast at midnight because both of them were too sad to sleep.
Mara’s eyes filled again. She hated crying in front of Eli. She hated crying in front of Jesus even more, though that made no sense. Maybe it was because He did not look away in discomfort and did not stare with pity. He simply stood there, steady and present, as if tears were not a problem to solve. That kind of mercy made her feel more exposed than judgment ever had.
She read the last paragraph twice because the first time her mind refused to hold it. Silas had written, I found Mom’s little blue notebook in the drawer by her bed. She wrote things in it during those last weeks when we thought she was sleeping all the time. There is a page in here with your name on it. I am not going to send a picture because it feels wrong. I think you should read it in the house where she wrote it. I think some words wait for the place where they belong. Dad has not seen it yet. Maybe I am wrong, but I think you need to come home before he forgets how to ask.
The stairwell seemed to lengthen beneath Mara. The landing below Jesus looked farther away than it had a moment ago. She could feel the Backrooms listening through the walls, not with ears, but with the hungry patience of a place that waited for people to turn inward and lose track of where they were. The letter trembled between her hands. She had thought she was carrying a demand, and instead she had been carrying an invitation she did not know how to receive.
“What does it say?” Eli asked softly.
Mara folded the letter slowly, careful not to tear it. She looked at the boy and tried to answer without spilling the whole sorrow of her family onto a child who already had enough fear of his own. “It says somebody still wants me to come home,” she said.
Eli lowered his eyes. “My mom will be mad at me.”
“Maybe,” Mara said, and the honesty came out before she could dress it up. Then she remembered who was standing below her and added, “But she will want you back more than she will want to be mad.”
The boy seemed to hold that sentence with both hands. Jesus looked at Mara, and something in His face told her that she had just spoken a truth she needed for herself. She almost looked away, but she did not. She put the letter back into the envelope and tucked it into the inside pocket of her jacket instead of the backpack. It belonged closer now.
They continued down the stairs. The metal rail felt cold and sticky beneath Mara’s palm. The green paint on the walls peeled in long curls, and behind it was the same yellow wallpaper from above, as if every layer of the Backrooms hid the same sickness underneath. The stairwell should have had doors at each floor. It had none. It only turned and turned, dropping through air that grew cooler with each landing.
Eli counted the steps under his breath. He reached twenty-six, then started over without realizing it. Jesus did not correct him. Mara listened to the boy’s small voice and tried to let it steady her. Counting was something people did when they needed the world to obey at least one rule. She knew that feeling. She had built most of her adult life out of rules that kept her from needing anyone too much.
At the seventh landing, though there had been no doors before, a door waited. It was painted brown, the kind of cheap flat brown found in old offices and storage hallways. A narrow wired-glass window sat in the upper half, but the glass was fogged from the other side. Taped to the door was a paper sign with faded red letters that read BREAK ROOM. Beneath the printed words, someone had written in black marker, PLEASE DO NOT EAT ALONE.
Mara stared at the sign. “That seems like a trap.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
She waited for more, but He did not give it.
Eli tightened his grip on Jesus’ hand. “Are we going in?”
Jesus looked through the fogged window. “Someone inside has stopped believing anyone will come.”
Mara leaned closer to the glass. At first she saw nothing but blur and light. Then a shape shifted on the other side. Not the creature from the cubicles. This was human. A person sat at a table with their head bowed on folded arms.
“Can we skip it?” Mara asked, though she knew the answer before He spoke.
Jesus turned toward her. “Would you want someone to skip you?”
The question landed without force and still left no room to hide. Mara looked at the paper sign again. Please do not eat alone. She remembered the hospital cafeteria after her mother’s diagnosis, the way families sat around tables with untouched sandwiches and coffee that went cold. Everyone was surrounded by people and still alone with the thing they feared most. She reached for the door handle before she could talk herself out of it.
The break room was colder than the stairwell. A row of vending machines lined one wall, each one lit from inside but empty. Tables filled the room in a pattern too orderly to be comforting. Each table held a paper plate with one item on it. A sandwich. A peeled orange. A small square of cake. A cup of noodles gone dry. The food did not rot, but it did not look fresh either. It looked like meals abandoned at the exact moment a person lost the will to finish.
At the center table sat an older man in a blue work shirt. His hair was white at the temples, and his hands were broad and scarred. A plastic name badge hung from his shirt pocket, but the letters had been scratched away. He did not lift his head when they entered. On the plate beside him was half of a peanut butter sandwich cut into two triangles.
Mara moved carefully between the tables. She had learned from the rooms above that the Backrooms used ordinary things in cruel ways. A ringing phone could wear her father’s name. A video could reopen a night she had buried. A sandwich could become a doorway into hunger that had nothing to do with food.
Jesus stopped at the opposite side of the man’s table. “Jonas,” He said.
The old man’s shoulders tightened. Slowly, he lifted his head. His eyes were red, not from crying recently, but from crying too often and too long. He looked at Jesus without surprise. That unsettled Mara. She had expected disbelief, fear, maybe relief. Jonas looked like someone who had been waiting and was angry about how long it took.
“You came now?” Jonas said.
Jesus stood quietly.
Jonas gave a tired laugh and looked around the room. “I have eaten that same sandwich for three days. It keeps coming back. Every time I throw it away, there it is again. Every time I say I am done, I wake up with my hand around it.”
Eli hid slightly behind Jesus. Mara glanced at the plate. The sandwich looked like something from a school lunch, soft white bread pressed at the edges. It made her think of mothers who cut crusts off in the morning because they were trying to be kind before the day got hard.
Jesus pulled out the chair across from Jonas and sat. The movement felt strange in that room, gentle and ordinary. He sat as if the table mattered, as if the old man’s long wait deserved company instead of command. Mara remained standing. Eli stayed beside Jesus, one hand still tucked into His.
“You are hungry,” Jesus said.
Jonas looked down at the sandwich. “Not for that.”
“No.”
The old man’s jaw worked. He seemed to be fighting words that had scraped him raw from the inside. “I told her I was going to be late,” he said. “That was the last thing I said to my daughter. Not I love you. Not be careful. Not wait for me. I told her I was going to be late.”
Mara felt the room shift. The tables around them seemed to lean closer.
Jonas continued as if he had to get the words out before the place stole them again. His daughter’s name was Hannah. She had been seventeen, old enough to drive and young enough to think bad weather was a dare. He had been working maintenance in a building with long corridors and bad lights. A pipe burst that evening, and he stayed because the supervisor said everyone needed to pull together. Hannah called from a gas station and said she was scared to drive home in the rain. He told her to sit tight. Then another alarm went off, and he told himself one more thing needed doing before he left.
“She waited forty minutes,” Jonas said. “Then she tried to make it home.”
No one spoke. Even the vending machines seemed to quiet.
Jonas stared at the plate. “They said the road was slick. They said nobody could have seen the truck coming around the bend. They said all kinds of things that did not change the fact that I chose a flooded hallway over my child.”
Mara’s chest tightened. She thought of Silas saying, She always leaves. She thought of her mother sleeping while Mara stood by the vending machines with coffee she did not want. The Backrooms had a terrible talent for arranging people near mirrors they did not ask for.
Eli whispered, “I’m sorry.”
Jonas looked at him as if he had forgotten children existed. His expression softened with pain. “Me too, son.”
Jesus rested His hands on the table. “You have punished yourself as if punishment could raise the dead.”
Jonas flinched. “Don’t.”
“You have eaten guilt until it became the only meal you know.”
“I said don’t.”
Jesus did not raise His voice. “And still, guilt has not loved Hannah for you.”
The old man shoved back from the table. The chair legs scraped across the floor so loudly that Eli covered his ears. Jonas stood, shaking with fury that looked almost like fear. “You think I don’t love her?”
“I know you do.”
“Then why say that to me?”
“Because your sorrow has become a room with no door, and you have called it faithfulness.”
Jonas breathed hard. Mara expected him to yell. Instead, his anger broke in the middle. He put both hands over his face and stood there like a man trying to hold his bones together.
The vending machine behind him lit brighter. A package fell into the tray with a soft thud. Then another. Then another. The machines began dispensing food by themselves, one item after another, each landing with a dull sound that filled the room. Sandwiches, candy bars, crackers, plastic fruit cups, little bags of chips. The room smelled suddenly of sugar and salt and old cafeteria air.
Mara stepped back. “Jesus?”
“Stay near Me,” He said.
The food kept falling. Plates on every table filled. The vending machines groaned as if something inside them were forcing gifts through broken mouths. Jonas lowered his hands and stared. On his table, the half sandwich became whole. Then another appeared beside it. Then another. A stack rose slowly, soft bread piling higher until it began to lean.
A voice came from the machines. It was not loud, but it came from all of them at once.
Eat what you owe.
Jonas staggered backward.
The voice came again.
Eat what you owe. Stay until it is paid.
Mara grabbed Eli’s shoulder and pulled him close without thinking. The boy let her. His small body shook against her side. She could feel his ribs moving with each breath, too fast.
Jesus stood.
The machines sparked. One of the fluorescent lights burst overhead, scattering a few bright fragments across the floor. Mara flinched and turned Eli’s face into her jacket. The room filled with the smell of hot wires. The stack of sandwiches on Jonas’s table slid and spread like a pale, soft wall between him and Jesus.
“You have no debt here that can be paid by despair,” Jesus said.
The machines rattled harder. The voice lowered, becoming almost human.
He left her.
Jonas covered his ears. “Stop.”
Jesus took one step toward him. “You failed her.”
The blunt truth hit the room harder than the voice from the machines. Mara felt it in her own body. Jonas stared at Jesus as if betrayed. His mouth trembled. The Backrooms seemed to pause, pleased, as if it expected truth to crush him.
Jesus stepped closer. “And your failure is not stronger than My mercy.”
Jonas collapsed into the chair as if the strength had gone out of him all at once. “I do not deserve mercy.”
“No,” Jesus said. “That is why it is mercy.”
The machines stopped.
For a moment, no one moved. Then the sandwiches on the table began to lose their shape. The bread sagged and flattened, not rotting, not vanishing, but becoming thin as paper. One by one they folded into blank white envelopes. Hundreds of them covered the table and floor.
Jonas stared. “What is this?”
Jesus picked up one envelope and placed it before him. “The words you never said.”
Jonas shook his head. “No.”
“Hannah heard your love in more than your last sentence.”
“No,” Jonas said, but the word came out weaker.
“She heard it in mornings you drove her to school when you were tired. She heard it in the way you checked her tires. She heard it when you waited outside after practice. She heard it in all the ordinary care you forgot because grief made one sentence louder than a lifetime.”
Jonas bent over the envelope, but he did not touch it. His hands hovered above it, scarred and trembling. Mara thought of the blue notebook Silas had found. Some words wait for the place where they belong. Maybe Jonas had been trapped by words too. Not only the ones he said, but the ones he never got to say.
“Open it,” Jesus said.
The old man looked up in terror. “What if it’s empty?”
“Then I will still be here.”
Jonas picked up the envelope with both hands. He worked one finger under the flap and opened it as carefully as if it held something alive. Inside was a small piece of notebook paper. Mara could not see the writing, but she saw Jonas’s face change when he read it. The lines of grief did not disappear. Nothing that deep vanished in a moment. But his face loosened, as if some locked part of him had finally drawn breath.
He pressed the paper to his mouth. “She wrote this when she was little.”
Jesus nodded.
Jonas cried without sound. His shoulders shook, and the paper stayed against his lips. Mara looked away, not out of discomfort this time, but out of respect. Some grief should not be watched too closely by strangers.
Eli tugged lightly on her jacket. “Is he coming with us?”
Mara looked at Jonas. The old man still sat at the table, but the room around him was changing. The plates were empty now. The vending machines had gone dark. The sign on the door had changed too. It no longer said PLEASE DO NOT EAT ALONE. It said PLEASE DO NOT STAY ALONE.
“I think he has to choose,” Mara said.
Jesus looked at her again, and she realized she had understood something without being told. That frightened her in a different way. It meant she was not only being rescued. She was being changed while she walked.
Jonas lowered the note. His eyes found Jesus. “If I leave this room, does that mean I’m done grieving her?”
“No.”
“Does it mean I have to forgive myself?”
Jesus’ face held both tenderness and truth. “It means you must stop refusing the forgiveness you cannot earn.”
Jonas swallowed. “I don’t know how.”
“Then walk with Me while you learn.”
Mara felt those words settle into the room. Walk with Me. He had said them to her too. Not fix yourself first. Not understand everything first. Not prove you deserve the way out. Walk with Me.
Jonas stood slowly. He folded the little note and tucked it into the pocket behind his name badge. His eyes moved to Eli, then to Mara. “How old are you?” he asked the boy.
“Eight,” Eli said.
Jonas nodded with the solemn gravity adults use when they are trying not to cry in front of a child. “My girl used to be eight.”
Eli did not know what to do with that, so he only nodded back. Mara understood the exchange more than the boy could. Jonas was not comparing. He was remembering that love had once been small enough to hold a hand in a parking lot and ask for extra ketchup. Grief had made Hannah seventeen forever, but mercy had returned the years before that too.
They left the break room together. Jonas stepped into the stairwell last, and when the door swung shut behind him, it did not click. It simply faded into the wall, leaving peeling green paint where it had been. The stairwell felt warmer now, though the air was still damp. Mara noticed that the dragging sound from above had not followed them for several minutes.
“How many more people are in here?” she asked.
Jesus started downward again. “More than fear wants you to see.”
“That’s not a number.”
“No.”
Jonas gave a rough sound that might have been a laugh if it had not come from such a tired place. “You ask Him direct questions, don’t you?”
“I tried asking the walls,” Mara said. “They weren’t helpful.”
Eli smiled a little. It was the first almost-smile she had seen from him. The sight warmed her and scared her at the same time. Caring about him made the place more dangerous. It gave the Backrooms more to threaten. But not caring had been its own kind of prison, and she was beginning to understand that.
They descended until the stairwell ended at a door with no sign. It was metal, painted the color of old bone, with a push bar across it. Cold air leaked from the crack beneath. Jesus stopped with His hand on the bar and turned to the others.
“What is beyond this door will speak in familiar voices,” He said. “Do not answer quickly.”
Jonas wiped his eyes with the heel of his hand. “That thing from the machines?”
“It is not one thing only.”
Mara shifted her backpack on her shoulder. “What does that mean?”
Jesus looked at the door. “Fear has many rooms. Lies learn the shape of the person they want to keep.”
Eli pressed against Mara’s side. She put a hand on his shoulder and left it there. She did not know when that had become natural. Maybe when he trembled. Maybe when Jonas looked at him and remembered his daughter. Maybe when Jesus said leaving alone would not be love. Whatever the reason, the boy did not pull away.
Jesus pushed the door open.
The room beyond was not yellow. That almost made it worse. After so much sick wallpaper and dead office light, Mara expected ugliness to announce itself. Instead, they stepped into what looked like a neighborhood street at dusk. The sky above was low and gray, but it was not a real sky. It hung like painted canvas just beyond the rooftops. Houses lined both sides of the street, each one with trimmed lawns, dark windows, and porch lights glowing in the same soft gold.
Mara’s breath caught because she knew one of the houses.
It stood halfway down the block on the right. White siding. Blue shutters. A cracked birdbath near the front walk. A maple tree that leaned slightly toward the driveway. It was her childhood home, not as it looked now, but as it had looked before her mother got sick. The porch swing still hung from the beams. The front curtains were open. Warm light filled the living room.
Jonas whispered something behind her that sounded like a prayer. Eli’s fingers dug into her jacket.
Mara could smell cut grass. She could smell laundry from a dryer vent. She could smell the tomato plants her father used to grow along the side fence. The Backrooms had made a copy of home so precise that her mind reached for it before wisdom could stop her.
From inside the house, a woman’s voice called, “Mara, supper’s getting cold.”
Mara went rigid.
Her mother’s voice.
Not close. Not distorted. Not like a recording. It came warm through the open screen door, threaded with the same tired sweetness Mara remembered from late summer evenings when the windows were open and the kitchen fan rattled above the stove. The sound took her backward so fast she felt dizzy.
Eli looked up at her. “Is that your mom?”
Mara could not answer.
Jesus stepped slightly in front of her, but He did not block her view. That somehow made the choice sharper. If He had hidden the house, she could have hated Him for taking it away. Instead, He let her see it and stood near enough that seeing did not have to become surrender.
The voice came again. “Mara, honey, come inside.”
Tears blurred the porch light. Mara knew it was not her mother. She knew it the way she had known the phone was not truly her father. But knowing did not make the longing less real. The worst lies were not made from things you did not want. They were made from the things you wanted so badly that truth felt cruel beside them.
Jonas spoke from behind her. “Do not go.”
His voice was low and broken, but there was force in it. Mara turned. The old man was staring at a house across the street. Its garage door was open, and a young woman stood beside a car with rain shining in her hair. She wore a yellow jacket and held a set of keys. Jonas’s daughter, Mara understood, though she had never seen Hannah before.
“Dad,” the young woman called. “I waited.”
Jonas made a sound like an animal wounded deep. He took one step toward the street.
Jesus said his name.
Jonas stopped, shaking.
Eli began to cry. Mara followed his gaze and saw, three houses down, a woman kneeling on a porch with both arms open. Her face was hidden by distance, but the boy knew the shape of his need. “Eli,” the woman called. “Baby, come here.”
The street remained still around them. No wind moved the trees. No dog barked. No car passed. Each house held a different hunger, and every hunger spoke with a beloved voice.
Mara crouched in front of Eli and turned him gently toward her before he could run. “Listen to me,” she said, forcing her voice to stay steady. “That sounds like your mom, but this place lies.”
He sobbed once. “I want her.”
“I know.” Mara held his shoulders. “I know you do. Wanting her is not wrong. Running to a lie is what will hurt you.”
The sentence felt like it had passed through her before she gave it to him. She looked toward her own house again. Her mother stood now in the doorway. Mara could not see her clearly, but she saw enough. The soft robe. The scarf around her head from the months of treatment. The slight tilt of her body against the doorframe. It was cruel beyond measure.
Jesus stood in the middle of the false street, His eyes filled with sorrow. “This place cannot raise the dead,” He said. “It can only borrow their faces.”
The houses flickered almost imperceptibly. The porch lights dimmed, then steadied.
Mara stood, still holding Eli’s hand. “How do we get through?”
Jesus looked down the street toward the place where the road disappeared into a dark underpass that had never existed in Mara’s neighborhood. “Together.”
The word was not dramatic. It was not loud. But it pushed against every private room the place had built for them. The Backrooms wanted each of them alone with the voice they could least resist. Jesus gathered them into one small company and made their separate griefs answer to a greater mercy.
They began walking.
Mara kept Eli’s hand in hers, and Eli kept his other hand in Jesus’ hand. Jonas walked on Jesus’ other side, his eyes fixed on the pavement ahead. The houses called as they passed. Mara’s mother asked why she had not come back sooner. Hannah told Jonas the rain had stopped and there was still time. Eli’s mother wept and said she was scared without him. Other voices joined from homes they did not recognize. Fathers, sisters, sons, friends, all speaking with perfect sorrow.
The street grew longer with every step. Mara understood the trick quickly and hated it. The more they listened, the farther the underpass moved away. The more they looked at the houses, the more details appeared. Her mother’s rosebushes. Silas’s bike tipped in the grass. Her father’s old truck in the driveway. The life she had lost and the life she had left behind arranged like evidence.
Jonas stumbled. Mara reached for his arm with her free hand. He was heavier than she expected, not in body only, but in the way grief made a person hard to move. He looked at her, ashamed.
“She sounds just like my girl,” he said.
“I know,” Mara answered.
“No, you don’t.”
Mara glanced toward her porch. Her mother had stepped down onto the walkway now. “I know enough.”
Jonas looked at her house, then back at her. Something passed between them that was not the same grief but came from the same country. He straightened a little. “Then we keep walking.”
They did.
The underpass drew closer by inches. The false sky pressed lower. The voices became less gentle. Mara’s mother stopped calling her honey and began to cough. Hannah’s voice turned frantic, saying the truck lights were coming around the bend. Eli’s mother pleaded that he was being cruel by staying away. The Backrooms was losing patience, and its borrowed tenderness began to show the teeth beneath.
Eli tried to pull free. “She needs me.”
Mara knelt in front of him so fast her knees hit the pavement hard. “Your real mom wants you alive,” she said. “Your real mom wants you out. This is not her.”
“You don’t know.”
“You’re right,” Mara said, and the honesty steadied her. “I don’t know your mom. But I know what love does not sound like. Love does not ask a scared child to walk into a trap.”
Eli sobbed into her jacket. Mara held him with one arm and looked up at Jesus. He was watching the houses, and the sorrow on His face was deeper than anything in that false street. She realized then that He was not untouched by the voices. He knew each true person behind every stolen sound. He knew the mothers, daughters, fathers, and sons. The place was not only mocking their grief. It was stealing from loves He had made.
Jesus turned toward the houses. His voice remained calm, but the whole street seemed to brace beneath it.
“Enough.”
Every porch light went out at once.
Darkness swept across the lawns. The houses remained, but without the warm lights they looked flat and hollow, like stage fronts left standing after the actors had gone. The voices stopped. In the silence that followed, Mara heard something beneath the street. The dragging sound. Closer now. Moving through whatever hollow space lay under the pavement.
The underpass was only fifty yards away.
Jesus lifted Eli into His arms. “Walk quickly.”
They did. Jonas moved with a limp now, but he did not slow. Mara stayed beside him, one hand on his elbow. The pavement beneath their feet softened like damp carpet. The false street began to sag at the edges. Lawns wrinkled. Mailboxes tilted. The sky above them peeled in one long strip, revealing yellow fluorescent light behind it.
A crack opened across the road. Mara jumped over it, pulling Jonas with her. From below came the smell of wet dust and warm plastic. The Backrooms was showing through its own disguise. Eli buried his face against Jesus’ shoulder, and Jesus carried him without strain.
They reached the underpass as the street behind them collapsed into strips of carpet and drywall. Inside the underpass, the air was cold and black. Mara expected another room, another trick, another voice. Instead, halfway through the darkness, she saw a real door.
It was small, plain, and white. Light showed beneath it. Not fluorescent light. Not vending machine light. Not porch light borrowed from memory. This light was warmer and steadier, and it did not hum.
Mara stopped breathing.
“Is that the way out?” Jonas asked.
Jesus did not answer at once. He set Eli down gently and placed His hand on the boy’s head for a moment. Then He looked at Mara.
“For him,” He said.
Eli stared at the door. “For me?”
Jesus nodded. “Your mother is looking for you.”
The boy’s face changed so quickly that Mara felt her own heart twist. Hope came first, then fear of believing it. He looked from Jesus to Mara, as if asking permission from both. Mara crouched and fixed his untied lace, though Jesus had tied it before. She needed something to do with her hands.
“You go straight through,” she said. “Do not stop if you hear anything behind you. Do not turn around. Just go.”
“Are you coming?”
Mara looked at the door. Everything in her wanted to say yes. She wanted the story to be that simple. She wanted to leave with the child and step into clean air and call Silas and go home. But Jesus had said the door was for Eli, and deep inside she knew it was true.
“Not yet,” she said.
Eli’s eyes filled. “Why?”
She forced a small smile that hurt. “Because I have my own door to find.”
The boy hugged her suddenly. His arms went around her neck, tight and desperate. Mara froze for half a second, then held him back. He smelled like fear, dust, and little-boy sweat. He was real. He had been real in the middle of a place that wanted everything to become symbol or threat, and holding him made Mara remember that rescue was not an idea. It had a heartbeat.
Eli let go and hugged Jonas too, awkwardly and quickly. The old man patted his back with one shaking hand. Then the boy turned to Jesus. He did not say anything. He only wrapped both arms around Him.
Jesus bent and held him. “You are seen,” He said softly. “Go home.”
Eli opened the white door. Brightness filled the underpass, but it did not blind them. Through it, Mara glimpsed a parking lot at night, wet pavement shining under real streetlights, and a woman’s scream breaking into a sob of relief. Eli ran through. The door closed behind him with a sound so ordinary and final that Mara nearly sank to the ground.
For several seconds, she stared at the place where it had been. The wall was blank now. No seam. No handle. No light. Only concrete, cold and marked with water stains.
“He got out,” Jonas whispered.
Mara nodded. She could not speak.
The darkness behind them shifted. The false street had fully collapsed, and beyond the mouth of the underpass the yellow halls waited again. But the Backrooms felt different now. Not weaker exactly. Angrier. Its tricks had failed twice. It had lost Eli. It had watched Jonas stand up from the table. It had watched Mara stay when staying cost her something.
Jesus turned toward the darkness beyond the underpass. “There is farther to go.”
Jonas touched the note in his pocket. “For who?”
Jesus looked at Mara.
She knew before He said it. The letter inside her jacket seemed to grow warm against her chest. Somewhere in that endless place, the Backrooms had made a room out of her family, her leaving, her mother’s blue notebook, and every door she had refused to open.
“For the one who has mistaken distance for peace,” Jesus said.
Mara swallowed. The underpass behind them smelled of damp concrete. The yellow light ahead pulsed softly, waiting. She thought of Silas. She thought of her father by the front window. She thought of her mother’s handwriting on a page she had not seen. Then she looked at Jesus, and for the first time since she had fallen into the Backrooms, the fear in her did not ask only how to get out.
It asked what kind of person she would be when she did.
Chapter Three: The Room That Kept Recording
The yellow halls waited outside the underpass like an old argument that had not finished speaking. Mara stood at the mouth of it with the letter against her chest and Eli’s absence still warm in her arms. The boy was gone, and that should have made the place feel lighter, but it did not. It felt offended. The walls seemed flatter now, as if the false neighborhood had cost the Backrooms something and it wanted payment from the ones still walking.
Jonas leaned one hand against the concrete and breathed through his nose. The old note from Hannah sat in his shirt pocket, folded small and close to his heart. He looked weaker than he had in the break room, but more present. Grief still bent him, yet it no longer seemed to be dragging him backward by the throat. Mara watched him and wondered if that was what mercy did first. Maybe it did not make people feel whole right away. Maybe it only made them able to stand without obeying every old wound.
Jesus stepped from the underpass into the yellow light. He did not hurry. He looked down the hallway, then lifted His eyes toward the ceiling where the fluorescent panels buzzed in crooked rows. For a moment, He said nothing. Mara had the strange feeling that He was listening to the whole place breathe, not because He needed directions, but because He heard the suffering hidden inside every false wall. The Backrooms seemed endless to her, but it did not seem endless to Him.
“Where now?” Jonas asked.
Jesus looked toward a hallway that narrowed between two walls covered in torn wallpaper. “There is a room ahead where Mara left part of herself.”
Mara stiffened. “I don’t like how that sounds.”
“No,” Jesus said. “You have not liked remembering it.”
She almost snapped back, but the words died before they reached her mouth. The letter from Silas had already opened one sealed place. The false neighborhood had opened another. She did not know how many more rooms a person could carry and still pretend to be fine. She wanted to tell Him that the Backrooms had enough horrors without digging through her life, but she also knew that the place had not invented those horrors. It had only found doors she had already marked private.
They walked into the narrowing hallway. The walls pressed close enough that Mara’s shoulder brushed the peeling paper. Beneath the yellow surface, she saw layers of other rooms. Paint. Drywall. Gray concrete. More yellow wallpaper. It reminded her of videos where people scraped old paint and found color after color from lives that had passed through a house before them. Here, every layer felt like another attempt to hide the same fear. The hallway smelled of dust and overheated wires, with a faint sourness like old carpet shampoo that never dried.
A red light blinked at the far end.
Mara stopped so sharply that Jonas nearly bumped into her. The light came from a camera mounted high in the corner, black and round, with a tiny lens aimed at them. It had not been there a moment before. She knew because she had been studying every ceiling and corner for anything that moved. The camera tilted with a soft mechanical click and focused on her face.
“That yours?” Jonas asked.
“No,” she said. “Mine’s in my hand.”
Her phone sat dark in her palm, but she suddenly became aware of its weight. She had recorded nearly everything since entering the Backrooms, not because she wanted to anymore, but because she did not know how to stop. The camera had become a habit of distance. If something happened through a lens, she could survive it as footage first and feeling second. Even with Jesus beside her, even after Eli, even after Jonas’s letter from Hannah, part of her was still thinking in frames.
Jesus turned toward her. “Give Me your phone.”
Mara’s hand closed around it. The reaction came before thought. “Why?”
“Because the next room will ask you to choose between witness and escape.”
“I don’t know what that means.”
“You will.”
The red camera above them clicked again. Far away, another camera clicked in answer. Then another. Tiny red lights appeared down the hallway, one after another, until the ceiling looked like it had grown a row of sleepless eyes.
Jonas looked upward. “I don’t care for this.”
Mara forced a dry breath. “Nobody cares for this.”
Jesus held out His hand. He did not reach for the phone. He waited.
Mara looked down at the screen. It reflected her face in dark glass. She could see the yellow ceiling above her, the red lights behind her, and the shape of Jesus waiting just at the edge of the reflection. She had built an entire life around catching strange places before they disappeared. Now something in her felt as if putting the phone away would mean losing proof that any of this mattered. Another part of her knew that proof had become the last polite name for hiding.
She placed the phone in His hand.
The instant her fingers let go, every red light in the hallway went out.
Jonas exhaled. “That seems like a good sign.”
“No,” Mara said quietly. “That seems like it got exactly what it wanted.”
Jesus gave the phone back to her, but the screen had changed. It no longer showed the camera app. It showed a paused video with no title. The frame was black except for a faint rectangle of light in the center. Mara recognized it before she pressed play. Her stomach turned.
“This is not from here,” she said.
Jesus looked at the screen. “No.”
Jonas waited beside them, unsure whether to ask. Mara pressed play because the room ahead had already begun before they reached it. The video showed a basement hallway lit by her flashlight. The walls were painted cinder block, and old school lockers leaned against one side. Her voice came through the speaker, younger by only a year but carrying a sharpness she wished she could forget.
“If there’s anything here,” recorded Mara whispered, “make a noise.”
A sound came from the video. A soft knock. Then another.
Jonas looked at her. “Was someone there?”
Mara stopped the recording. Her thumb shook. “Yes.”
They stood in the tight hallway while the old truth pushed its way into the open. She had filmed that video in an abandoned school on the edge of a town that had been emptying for years. She had gone in with another creator named Renn, who had built a following by making every shadow sound like a demon and every broken window feel like a portal. Mara had told herself she was better than that. She did not fake monsters. She did not scream for clicks. She only framed fear well enough that people would stay until the end.
But that night, a homeless man had been sheltering in the basement.
He had knocked from behind a door because he thought they were police or teenagers who might hurt him. Renn wanted to turn it into content. Mara knew better. She could still remember the man’s voice, low and embarrassed, asking them to please not show his face. He said his name was Mr. Vale. He had once taught history in a district two counties away. He said the school felt safer than the street during winter because there were still old steam pipes in part of the building.
“You posted it?” Jonas asked.
Mara nodded once. “I blurred him.”
Jesus said nothing.
Mara looked at Him quickly, then away. “I blurred him.”
“You did.”
“But I used the audio.”
“Yes.”
Her throat tightened. “I changed the title later.”
Jesus held her gaze.
Mara heard herself speaking faster, as if she were defending herself to a court that had already seen the evidence. “The video went bigger than anything I had made. People thought he was a ghost. I pinned a comment saying no one was hurt. I told myself that was enough. I never showed his name. I never showed his face.”
“Did you return?” Jesus asked.
Mara could not answer.
Jonas shifted his weight. He had the painful decency not to look away from her. That was worse than disgust. Disgust would have given her something to resist. Decency made her feel the size of what she had done.
“I meant to,” she said. “I was going to bring him food or money. I even bought a coat. It stayed in my trunk for weeks.”
“What happened?” Jonas asked softly.
Mara swallowed. “The building burned.”
The hallway fell silent except for the lights.
“I don’t know if he was inside,” she said. “They never said his name in the report. Just one unidentified adult male found in the lower level. I told myself I didn’t know it was him. Then I told myself knowing wouldn’t change anything. Then I stopped driving that way.”
The phone screen flickered. The paused frame came alive by itself. The old video resumed, but not as it had been posted. The flashlight moved through the basement hallway, and this time the door opened wider. A man’s hand appeared on the edge, thin and dirty. His voice came through, clear and close.
“Please,” he said. “Not my face.”
Mara closed her eyes.
Jesus spoke with quiet firmness. “Open your eyes.”
She did. The screen now showed the man stepping into the beam. His face was blurred as it had been in the video, but not by her editing. The blur moved like smoke, hiding and revealing him at once. Mr. Vale raised one hand against the light. He was not frightening. He looked tired. Thin. Humiliated by being found in a place where children used to hang their backpacks.
The hallway ahead opened into a room Mara had not seen before. It was not an office or break room or false street. It looked like an editing room built from every place she had ever filmed. Computer monitors covered the walls from floor to ceiling. Some were old box screens with green-black glass. Some were wide and modern. Some were cracked. Each one played a different clip from her life. Dead malls. Empty corridors. Hospital floors. Her father’s porch. Her brother’s missed calls. A school basement. The Backrooms themselves.
In the center stood a desk with one chair.
A keyboard rested on the desk. Above it, written on the wall in black marker, were the words MAKE IT WATCHABLE.
Mara took one step back. “No.”
Jesus stood beside her. “This is the room where you learned to turn distance into a craft.”
The sentence hurt because it did not insult the craft. It named the distance.
The monitors brightened. Mara’s videos played at once, but the sound did not become noise. Each screen spoke in her own voice, layered yet clear. She heard herself joking in an abandoned office. She heard herself whispering in a tunnel. She heard herself saying, “I don’t know why this place feels so sad.” She heard a version of herself from years earlier saying, “Some buildings don’t want to be remembered.” Then another version said, “If you’re watching this alone at night, you’re braver than I am.”
The Backrooms had found not only her fears, but her style.
Jonas stepped into the editing room with caution. He looked at the screens as if each one were a window into a different kind of confession. “I don’t understand half of what I’m seeing,” he said.
“Good,” Mara whispered. “I wish I didn’t.”
The chair at the desk rolled backward by itself. The keyboard clicked once.
A new file opened on the largest monitor. The title typed itself across the top.
THE MAN IN THE BASEMENT: FINAL CUT
Beneath it appeared two buttons. POST and DELETE.
Mara felt cold from the inside out.
Jonas read the words. “What happens if you delete it?”
The room answered before she could. Her own voice came from every screen, soft and familiar.
Then no one knows.
Another voice followed, also hers, but older and harder.
Then you can leave clean.
The cursor blinked over DELETE.
Mara looked at Jesus. “Is that true?”
“No.”
The word came so quickly that she almost breathed. Then He continued.
“To erase evidence is not the same as repentance.”
The cursor moved toward POST.
The voice from the screens changed again.
Then show everyone. Make them understand. Make them know you are sorry.
Mara’s hand twitched toward the keyboard, and she hated the temptation. It would be easy to make confession public and call it courage. She knew how to craft an apology that sounded raw enough to be trusted. She knew how to tell the story of Mr. Vale in a way that would make strangers cry and maybe forgive her. She could turn guilt into a video, shame into a caption, penance into engagement. The thought sickened her because it came so naturally.
Jesus watched her. “Do not use your sorrow to perform innocence.”
The room went quiet.
Mara stared at Him. “Then what do I do?”
“Tell the truth where love requires it first.”
“To who?”
“You know.”
Her brother. Her father. If Mr. Vale had family, then them, if she could find them. The people she had avoided because truth demanded more than a dramatic post. Truth demanded contact. It demanded names. It demanded responsibility without applause.
The keyboard clicked again. Another file opened.
MARA VENN: THE GIRL WHO LEFT
This one had no POST button. Only PLAY.
The monitors changed from her videos to moments she had never recorded. The hospital vending machine. The coffee cup in her hand. Her mother’s room down the hall. Silas at the kitchen table after the funeral. Her father in the garage with one hand on a box of Christmas ornaments, unable to open it or put it away. Mara packing her car before dawn and leaving a note that said she needed time, as if time were a place far from people who loved her.
She stepped backward until her shoulder hit a monitor. “Stop.”
The video kept playing.
Jesus did not stop it for her.
Her father appeared on one screen, sitting by the front window on a winter night. The porch light glowed. Snow gathered on the railing outside. He held his phone but did not call. Silas stood in the doorway behind him, older now, shoulders squared in a way that made him look too much like their mother when she was tired.
“She’s not coming,” Silas said in the video.
Her father answered without turning. “I know.”
“Then why is the porch light on?”
“Because I don’t know how to turn it off.”
Mara pressed her hand over her mouth. She had told herself absence became normal if it lasted long enough. She had told herself the people she left had adjusted. She had told herself home had closed around the shape of her leaving. But the screen showed her father lit by a lamp and winter porch light, still making room for the daughter who treated his waiting like pressure.
Jonas touched her shoulder, very gently. She did not pull away.
The monitors flickered again. This time they showed Silas alone in the kitchen, holding the blue notebook. He was not reading the page with her name. He only held it and cried in a way she had never seen him cry, silently, angrily, as if grief had embarrassed him but would not leave. Then he wrote the letter she now carried. The screen zoomed in on his hand as he paused over one line.
Maybe I am wrong, but I think you need to come home before he forgets how to ask.
The screen froze there.
Mara’s legs weakened. She sat in the chair because there was nowhere else to go. The desk was cold beneath her forearms. On the keyboard, the letters had worn away, except for three keys. S. T. Y.
Stay.
The room wanted her to see the word as punishment. Jesus had asked it as mercy.
“I don’t know how to go back,” she said.
Jesus came around the desk and stood where she could see Him. “You begin by not calling the door a wall.”
Mara wiped her face with both hands. “What if they don’t want me after all this?”
“Then you will still tell the truth.”
“What if they do want me?”
Jesus’ face softened with a sorrow that understood the deeper fear. “Then you will have to let love find you without running from the cost.”
Mara stared at the frozen line on the screen. She thought of Silas’s handwriting. She thought of the blue notebook waiting in a house where her mother had once moved from room to room with quiet music playing on Saturday mornings. She thought of the old coat still in her trunk, bought for a man she had failed to help and never had the courage to name.
The room shifted. The monitors now showed a live feed from somewhere else in the Backrooms. At first Mara saw only a long corridor, darker than the others, with water pooled along the baseboards. Then the camera moved, or something carrying it moved. The view tilted toward a door with a narrow window.
Behind the glass stood a man.
His face was blurred.
Mara rose from the chair slowly. “No.”
Jonas looked between her and the screen. “Is that him?”
The blurred man lifted one hand and placed it on the glass. Not pounding. Not begging. Only waiting.
Mara’s breath grew shallow. “He died.”
Jesus looked at the screen. “Death is not a door this place controls.”
“Then what is that?”
“A room made from what you refused to seek.”
The words were careful, and Mara heard the mercy in what He did not say. He did not say Mr. Vale was alive. He did not say he was dead. He did not give her an easy answer because she had already used uncertainty as a hiding place. Whether the man on the screen was Mr. Vale himself, a memory, a witness, or a cruel imitation, Mara still had a door she had refused to face.
The live feed turned. For one second, the camera caught its own reflection in the window. There was no person holding it. The screen showed only a hallway and a red blinking light.
Then the feed cut to black.
A door appeared behind the editing desk.
It was plain gray, with a metal handle and a small strip of tape across it. Written on the tape in Mara’s own handwriting were the words DO NOT USE.
Jonas stared at it. “Was that there?”
“No,” Mara said.
Jesus picked up the phone from the desk and handed it to her again. It had somehow moved there without her noticing. “You may carry this,” He said. “But it must not carry you.”
Mara took it. The screen was blank now. Not dead. Waiting.
The gray door vibrated softly in its frame, as if something on the other side had leaned against it.
Mara wanted to ask if they had to go through. She did not. The answer had become plain in the way Jesus stood, in the way Jonas had his hand over Hannah’s note, and in the way every monitor around her had gone dark except one small screen near the floor. It showed the hallway behind them. In that feed, the tall shape from the cubicles stood far away, too bent, too still, watching.
“It’s following us again,” Jonas said.
“It has been,” Jesus said.
“Can it come in here?”
“It can enter any room built on fear.”
Mara looked at the gray door. “Then we should go before this one remembers how scared I am.”
Jonas gave her a weary glance. “That was almost brave.”
“It was mostly panic.”
“Sometimes that gets you moving.”
The corner of Mara’s mouth twitched despite everything. It felt strange to nearly smile in the editing room of her own shame, but the small human exchange steadied her. The Backrooms hated honest warmth. She could feel it. The walls seemed to tighten whenever mercy became ordinary.
Jesus placed His hand on the gray door but did not open it yet. “Mara.”
She looked at Him.
“What waits beyond this door may accuse you with truth and lie together. Listen carefully.”
“How do I tell the difference?”
“Truth may grieve you, but it will not command you to despair. A lie may name your sin and still hide My mercy.”
She held those words like a match cupped against wind.
Jesus opened the door.
The space beyond was colder than any room before it. It looked like a storage corridor beneath an old school, with cinder block walls and a concrete floor patched in places with square stains. Pipes ran overhead, some wrapped in torn insulation. The air smelled of soot, mildew, and winter. Mara knew at once that the Backrooms had built this place from the basement where she filmed Mr. Vale. But it was not a perfect copy. The lockers were missing. The ceiling was lower. At the far end, an orange glow flickered beneath a closed door.
Smoke crawled along the floor.
Mara stepped inside and coughed. Jonas followed, pulling the collar of his shirt over his nose. Jesus walked ahead, calm but not untouched. His eyes moved over the walls with the grief of One who knew every hidden person in every forgotten shelter. The door behind them closed, and the editing room vanished.
A voice came through the smoke.
“Not my face.”
Mara stopped.
The words came again, closer. “Please. Not my face.”
She gripped her phone hard. “Mr. Vale?”
No answer.
They moved down the corridor. The orange glow brightened beneath the far door. The smoke thickened. Mara’s eyes burned, and the concrete seemed to tilt under her feet. She heard sirens very far away, though there had been no outside in the Backrooms. She heard Renn laughing from the night of the video. She heard herself say, “This is unreal,” in that hushed voice she used when she knew the footage was good.
The shame of that voice nearly made her gag.
They reached a small alcove where a blanket lay folded on the floor beside a stack of books. Mara knelt before she could stop herself. The books were water-damaged. Their covers had curled. One was a history of labor movements. One was a worn Bible with a cracked spine. One was a paperback of poems. Beside them sat an empty soup can, a pencil stub, and a pair of reading glasses with one cracked lens.
“He lived here,” Jonas said quietly.
“Maybe,” Mara answered.
Jesus crouched and picked up the Bible. He held it with reverence, not because the paper was untouched, but because hands had touched it in hunger and cold. A few pages had been marked with pencil. Mara looked over His shoulder and saw a line under a verse about the Lord being near to the brokenhearted. The underline was uneven. The pencil had dug deep enough to tear the page slightly.
Mara covered her face. “I made him into a ghost.”
Jesus closed the Bible gently. “He was a man.”
“I know.”
“Do you?”
She wanted to say yes, but the room would not let the easy answer stand. In her video, Mr. Vale had been a sound behind a door. A blurred figure. A hook before the final ad break. In her guilt, he had become a symbol of what was wrong with her. But sitting beside his books, breathing smoke from a fire she had only read about, she felt the hard truth beneath both versions. He had been a man with a pencil, cracked glasses, and a Bible marked in the places where he needed God to stay near.
The orange glow under the door flared. Heat rolled down the corridor. Jonas stepped back. “That door is burning.”
Jesus stood. “Yes.”
Mara rose with the Bible in her hands. “Is he behind it?”
Jesus looked at the door and then at her. “What do you hear?”
She listened. At first only sirens. Then flames. Then coughing. Then a voice, faint and human.
“Please.”
Mara moved toward the door.
Jonas caught her arm. “Careful.”
She looked at his hand and then at his face. The old maintenance worker, who had spent years punishing himself for being late, now held her back from running into fire too quickly. There was mercy in that too, a strange kind of redeemed caution.
Jesus stepped between Mara and the door. “You cannot save him backward.”
The sentence stopped her cold.
The firelight moved across His face. Smoke gathered and parted around Him. Mara clutched the Bible tighter. “Then why show me this?”
“So you will stop using helplessness as an excuse for silence.”
The words did not condemn her. They called her forward. She could not return to the burned school and pull Mr. Vale from the lower level. She could not unpost the first version of the video by pretending it had never harmed anyone. She could not make her leaving disappear from her family story. But she could stop letting what could not be changed become an excuse to change nothing.
A heavy bang struck the burning door from the other side.
Jonas flinched. Mara did not. She was afraid, but she did not step back.
“Mr. Vale,” she said, and her voice shook. “I am sorry.”
The door went still.
“I used your fear,” she continued. “I told myself I protected you because I hid your face, but I still used your voice. I still made people watch. I still left you there in the story I told, and then I left you there in real life because I did not want to know what happened.”
The smoke thickened. Tears streamed down her face from the heat and the truth.
“I do not know if you can hear me,” she said. “I do not know what this place is showing me. But if there is any truth in this room, then I am saying it here. You were not content. You were not a ghost. You were not mine to use. You were a man.”
The burning under the door dimmed slightly.
Jesus looked at her with deep, steady mercy. “Keep speaking.”
Mara swallowed. “When I get out, I will find your name if I can. I will tell the truth to the people who should have heard it before strangers did. I will not make a performance out of being sorry. I will do what love requires before I explain myself to anyone else.”
The door’s heat lessened. The orange glow faded to a dull red.
From behind it came a sound like a tired breath.
Then the voice said, “Not my face.”
Mara bowed her head. “No. Not your face.”
The strip of tape on the door peeled away by itself and fell to the floor. Beneath it, another word had been written into the metal, not in marker, but as if pressed there from the other side.
NAME.
The letters were shallow but clear.
Mara stepped closer. “I don’t know it.”
The word remained.
Jonas reached into his shirt pocket and pulled out Hannah’s note. He looked at it, then at the door. “Maybe names are not only found by memory,” he said. “Maybe sometimes you start by refusing to let a person stay hidden.”
Mara looked at him, and in his worn face she saw a man who understood the holiness of saying a name. Hannah. Eli. Silas. Mr. Vale, if that was even his true name. Every name was a protest against the Backrooms, which turned people into shadows, voices, fears, and unfinished rooms.
Jesus placed His hand against the metal door. The fire behind it went out.
A seam of white light appeared along the frame.
Mara stepped back as the door opened inward. No flames waited beyond it. No burned basement. Beyond the doorway was a small room with clean concrete walls and a single wooden table. On the table lay an envelope, yellowed at the edges. Mara approached slowly. The front was blank except for one line.
For whoever remembers that I was here.
She looked at Jesus.
He nodded.
Mara opened the envelope. Inside was a copy of a building incident report, but the words shifted as she read them. The typed line that had once said unidentified adult male blurred, faded, and reformed.
Thomas Alwyn Vale.
Mara whispered the name once. Then again, more clearly.
“Thomas Alwyn Vale.”
The room warmed slightly.
Jonas closed his eyes. “There he is.”
Mara held the paper to her chest with the Bible and felt grief move through her without becoming a cage. She had a name now. Not the whole story. Not all the answers. A name. Enough to begin.
Behind them, the corridor shook.
The tall shape had entered the school basement.
It stood at the far end, bent beneath the low ceiling, its outline broken by smoke that no longer came from fire. The blurred place where its face should have been turned toward Mara. This time, the thought it sent was not quiet.
Too late.
The words struck the walls like thrown stones.
Too late. Too late. Too late.
Mara’s knees trembled. Jonas gripped the table. The white room flickered, and for a moment the yellow wallpaper showed beneath the concrete.
Jesus stepped into the doorway between them and the shape.
“No,” He said.
The creature recoiled, but it did not retreat. The lights overhead burst one by one down the corridor, darkness chasing the last dim bulbs toward them. The white room began to narrow. The table scraped across the floor as if pulled by an unseen hand.
Jesus turned to Mara and Jonas. “Go through the door behind you.”
Mara spun around. A second door had appeared in the clean wall, narrow and pale, with no handle. “It doesn’t open.”
“Speak the name.”
Mara understood. She placed one hand on the blank door and held the incident report with the other.
“Thomas Alwyn Vale,” she said.
The door opened.
Jonas went first at Jesus’ command, though Mara could see it cost him to leave Jesus standing in the corridor. Mara followed, clutching the Bible, the report, and Silas’s letter against her chest. As she crossed the threshold, she looked back.
The darkness had nearly reached Jesus. The tall shape loomed before Him, all hunger and accusation, its long limbs pressed against the walls. Jesus stood still, not because He was trapped, but because He had chosen the place between the destroyer and the ones being led out.
The creature bent toward Him, and the hallway filled with the sound of every voice it had stolen. Mara’s mother. Hannah. Eli’s mother. Mr. Vale. Silas. Her father. Hundreds more. They all spoke at once, pleading, blaming, calling, accusing.
Jesus lifted His hand.
The voices stopped.
“You may borrow what grief remembers,” He said. “You may not command what belongs to God.”
The door closed before Mara saw what happened next.
She found herself in a room so quiet that at first she thought she had gone deaf. Jonas stood beside her, breathing hard. The air smelled clean, almost like rain, though no rain fell. The walls were still yellow, but paler now, and there was a single chair in the center of the room. On the chair sat Mara’s backpack, though she had been wearing it moments before.
She looked down. Her shoulders were bare.
Jonas stared at the backpack. “I do not like gifts from this place.”
“Me neither,” Mara said.
She opened it carefully. Inside was the coat she had bought for Mr. Vale and never delivered. It was folded neatly, the store tag still attached. Beneath it were her spare batteries, a lens cloth, a half-empty water bottle, and the unopened parts of her life she had carried from place to place without letting them become action.
Jesus entered behind them.
Mara turned so quickly she nearly dropped everything. Relief went through her with such force that she forgot to hide it. He was unharmed. Not untouched by sorrow, not distant from what had happened, but unharmed. The room seemed to make space for Him as He came in.
Jonas bowed his head without making a show of it. Mara simply stood there with the coat in her hands.
“What do I do with this?” she asked.
Jesus looked at the coat. “Carry it until you can give what it means to someone who needs warmth.”
“That sounds smaller than what I owe.”
“It is smaller than what you owe,” He said. “But love often begins with what is actually in your hands.”
Mara looked down at the coat. It was painfully ordinary. Dark blue. Medium weight. Practical. Too late for Thomas Vale. Still useful for someone. She thought of all the large things she could not fix and the small things she had refused because they made the large failures feel real.
She folded the coat over her arm.
The room trembled once, then settled. On the far wall, a line appeared in the wallpaper, thin as a crack. It widened into a doorway filled with dim blue light. Beyond it, Mara saw what looked like a church basement, though not one she recognized. Folding tables leaned against a wall. A bulletin board sagged under old flyers. A coffee urn sat on a counter beside a stack of paper cups. The place looked worn, humble, and almost safe, which made her distrust it at once.
Jonas looked toward Jesus. “Is this another trap?”
Jesus answered carefully. “It is a room where help was offered and refused.”
Mara felt the words before she understood them.
“Mine?” she asked.
“Not only yours.”
The blue light flickered. Somewhere beyond the doorway, a man’s voice called her name. Not her father. Not Silas. Someone else. Renn.
Her old filming partner.
Mara’s stomach tightened. She had not thought of him in months, except when the video with Mr. Vale surfaced in her mind. Renn had changed after the school fire. Not outwardly at first. He kept posting. He kept chasing stranger buildings and darker stories. But his messages to Mara became unpredictable. Long apologies followed by jokes. Invitations followed by accusations. Once, at three in the morning, he sent her a voice memo saying, “Do you ever feel like the places we film are filming us back?”
She had not answered.
The voice came again from the blue-lit room. “Mara, don’t leave me in here.”
Jonas turned to her. “Who is that?”
Mara looked at Jesus, and His face told her the answer before she spoke.
“Someone I already left once,” she said.
The coat felt heavy over her arm. The report with Thomas Vale’s name rested against the Bible in her other hand. Silas’s letter pressed close inside her jacket. Each carried a door she had not wanted to open. Now another waited, and the Backrooms seemed to know exactly how tired she was.
Jesus stepped toward the blue doorway.
Mara followed, slower this time, not because she was less afraid, but because she was beginning to understand that fear did not get the final vote unless she handed it the pen. Jonas walked beside her, one hand near Hannah’s note, his limp quieter on the carpet. Together they crossed toward the room where help had been offered and refused, while behind them the monitors of her old life stayed dark and the name Thomas Alwyn Vale remained written on a page that would not disappear.
Chapter Four: The Blue Room Under the Noise
The blue-lit room felt colder than the hallway behind it, but not in the same way the stairwell had been cold. This cold did not come from damp concrete or leaking air. It came from a place where warmth had once been offered and pushed away until the air itself seemed embarrassed. Mara stepped through the doorway with the coat folded over one arm, Thomas Vale’s Bible and report held against her chest, and Silas’s letter tucked close enough to feel like a second heartbeat.
The room looked like a church basement that had been abandoned in the middle of being useful. Folding chairs were stacked against one wall with their metal legs hooked together in crooked rows. A long table near the far side held a coffee urn, paper cups, sugar packets, and a plastic container of powdered creamer that had hardened into one pale lump. On the bulletin board, flyers hung under curling tape: grief support, food pantry hours, winter coat drive, community meal, prayer night. None of the dates made sense. Some showed years that had not happened yet, while others listed months Mara remembered passing when she was still pretending she was too busy to be wounded.
Renn stood near the coffee urn with his back to them. He wore the same black hoodie he had worn in the last video they filmed together. The hood was down, and his hair stuck out in uneven pieces as if he had been running his hands through it for hours. A camera sat on the table in front of him, pointed at his face, but the screen showed only static. He did not turn when they entered, though his voice had called her name from this room.
Mara stopped a few steps inside. “Renn.”
His shoulders lifted with a quick breath. “I knew you’d come if it used the right guilt.”
Jonas frowned. “That how you greet someone?”
Renn turned slowly. His face looked thinner than Mara remembered, but his eyes were the same restless gray, always searching for the angle before the moment had finished happening. At first he looked relieved. Then he saw Jesus, and the relief tightened into something guarded. He glanced at Jonas, then back at Mara, as if counting how many witnesses had entered a room he had hoped to control alone.
“You found help,” Renn said.
“I found Him,” Mara answered.
Renn’s eyes moved over Jesus again. He did not laugh. Mara had expected him to make a joke because he always made jokes when something scared him. He did not. That unsettled her more than mockery would have. He looked at Jesus as a man might look at a door he had seen in a dream and hoped never to find in waking life.
Jesus stood quietly beneath the low basement light. The blue glow touched His jacket and face, but did not change Him. He looked neither impressed by Renn’s defensiveness nor threatened by it. He looked at him the way He had looked at Mara in the room of monitors, as if every hiding place had already been seen and still mercy had come near.
Renn looked away first. “This room is fake,” he said. “All of it. The flyers, the coffee, the church basement thing. It pulled it from memory. I know that.”
Mara glanced at the bulletin board. She knew it too now. This was not a random basement. This was the basement of a small church near the old school where they had filmed Mr. Vale. After the fire, when rumors started spreading online and locals began arguing in the comments, a woman named Mrs. Calder had messaged both of them. She helped run the church pantry. She had written with surprising gentleness and told them people in the area were hurting. She said the unidentified man from the building had once come by for food and coffee. She asked if Mara and Renn would come speak privately before they posted anything else.
Mara had not answered. Renn had answered with a screenshot and a laughing emoji. Then he had said, “They want us to confess in a basement with decaf coffee.” Mara remembered laughing too, though softly, because even then the joke felt wrong. That laugh had stayed inside her like a small dark bead she could never quite swallow.
Renn pointed toward the flyers. “She was going to turn us into a cautionary tale.”
“You don’t know that,” Mara said.
“I know how people work.”
Jesus spoke for the first time. “No, Renn. You know how suspicion works when it has worn a person’s face long enough.”
Renn’s mouth tightened. “Great. We’re doing this.”
Jonas leaned slightly toward Mara. “He always like this?”
“Worse when scared,” Mara said.
“I’m not scared,” Renn snapped.
No one answered. The room did not need them to. The camera on the table clicked on by itself, and the static cleared. Renn appeared on the little screen, but not as he stood now. The recorded version of him leaned close to a lens in some dark hallway, eyes wide, voice lowered into the careful whisper he used when he wanted people to feel something was behind them.
“If you ever find a room with blue light,” recorded Renn said, “do not trust anyone inside it.”
The live Renn turned pale.
Mara stared at the camera. “When did you record that?”
“I didn’t.”
The screen flickered. Recorded Renn smiled in a way the real Renn was not smiling. “They will tell you they came to help. They will tell you the door out is past confession. They will tell you the truth sets you free, but the truth is only a trap with better lighting.”
Jesus looked at the camera without moving closer. “Turn it off, Renn.”
Renn gave a harsh breath. “I’m not the one doing it.”
“Not with your hands.”
The camera kept playing. Recorded Renn looked straight into the lens now, and his voice softened into something intimate and ugly. “Mara will leave you. She leaves everyone. Ask her mother. Ask the man in the basement. Ask her brother. Ask anyone she ever turned into a story instead of staying.”
Mara’s face burned. Jonas shifted beside her, but he did not speak for her. That helped. The accusation hurt less because she had already said some of it aloud. A lie with truth in it did not have the same power once mercy had named the truth first.
Renn looked at her quickly, something like apology crossing his face before pride covered it. “It’s trying to use me.”
Jesus said, “It is using what you kept giving it.”
Renn backed away from the table. The coffee urn hissed behind him, though no steam rose. “I didn’t give it anything. I’m trapped like everybody else.”
Mara stepped closer. “How did you get here?”
He looked toward the floor. “Same way you did, probably.”
“That is not an answer.”
Renn laughed, but the sound had no humor in it. “Fine. I was filming.”
“Of course you were.”
“Don’t do that,” he said. “You don’t get to act better now because you walked in with Jesus and a sad old man.”
Jonas lifted one eyebrow. “Sad old man has ears.”
Mara held up a hand, not to silence Jonas, but to keep herself from answering Renn with the old sharpness. She knew that road. They had traveled it too often. Every hard question became a contest over who could sound less affected. Every wound became a joke with teeth. That was how both of them survived each other until survival turned into harm.
Renn rubbed both hands over his face. “I was following a thread. Some people said there was a door in a strip mall where a carpet store used to be. Yellow light under it. No lease records. No working lock. The landlord said the unit had been empty for twelve years, but people kept hearing a phone ring inside. I went there alone because I knew you wouldn’t answer.”
“I didn’t know you asked.”
“You stopped opening my messages.”
Mara had no defense. She had seen the notifications. Renn’s name had become another door she refused to touch. She told herself he was unstable, exploitative, too tangled in what had happened. Those things were not untrue, but she had used them to avoid the harder truth. She had not wanted to face him because his guilt had a shape close to hers.
“What happened at the carpet store?” Jonas asked.
Renn glanced at him, then at Jesus, as if he resented needing to speak plainly. “I found the door. It opened into this place. At first I thought I had the best footage anyone ever captured. I kept recording for hours. I was terrified, but I thought if I got out, everything would change.”
“Everything?” Jesus asked.
Renn’s jaw tightened.
Jesus waited.
Renn looked away. “My channel. My money. My name. Whatever. It would prove I wasn’t just making things look haunted. It would prove the world was as wrong as I always said it was.”
The coffee urn began to drip into a paper cup. Drop by drop, dark liquid gathered though the machine had no cord. The smell of burnt coffee spread through the room. Mara remembered that smell from the church basement they never entered, because Mrs. Calder had sent a photo with her message. Coffee, folding chairs, a table with donated coats, and a line at the end that said, You would not be walking into anger. You would be walking into a chance to make this right.
Renn watched the cup fill. “Then I found this room.”
The camera screen changed. It showed Renn alone in the blue-lit basement, pacing between the table and the bulletin board, speaking into his own camera with forced excitement. His words came fast, cracked at the edges. He kept saying this was real. He kept saying nobody would be able to deny it now. He zoomed in on the flyers, the coffee urn, the coat drive sign. Then the recording shifted. Hours passed in seconds. Renn sat on the floor. He stood again. He screamed at the ceiling. He apologized to someone who was not there. He begged for the door to open. Then he took a flyer from the bulletin board and tore it in half.
The live Renn turned away, but the screen kept showing him. Recorded Renn held the torn flyer to the camera and laughed through tears. “There. I answered your invitation.”
Mrs. Calder’s voice came from the coffee urn.
“That is not an answer, son.”
Renn flinched.
The room grew colder. The paper cups trembled in their stack. Mara saw Renn’s hands curl into fists, and for a second he looked so young that anger could not hide him. She remembered the first time she met him in a parking lot outside a closed cinema. He had been funny, nervous, brilliant with angles, and hungry for someone to tell him he was not wasting his life chasing shadows. He had not started cruel. Maybe very few people did. Maybe cruelty often grew where fear kept being protected instead of healed.
Jesus walked to the bulletin board and touched the torn flyer. It mended under His fingers, not dramatically, not with light pouring from the paper, but as quietly as skin closing around a small cut. The tape lifted and fastened itself again. The flyer read COMMUNITY MEAL, THURSDAY NIGHT, ALL ARE WELCOME. Beneath it, in smaller handwriting, someone had added, Even if you only need to sit.
Renn stared at the words. “That was on there before?”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“I don’t remember that.”
“You did not want to.”
Renn shook his head. “You make everything sound like choice.”
“Not everything is choice,” Jesus said. “But this was.”
The bluntness struck the room. Renn looked as if he might argue, but the force went out of him. He leaned both hands on the table and lowered his head. The coffee cup beside him was full now. It trembled slightly from the shake in his arms.
Mara moved closer, stopping across the table from him. “Why did you call me?”
Renn did not look up. “I didn’t.”
“You called my name.”
“This place did.”
“With your voice.”
He swallowed. “Maybe there isn’t much difference anymore.”
Mara held Thomas Vale’s Bible tighter. “Don’t say that.”
“You don’t know what it’s been like.”
“No,” she said. “I don’t. Tell me.”
That made him look up. She saw surprise first, then distrust. He was used to her defending, dodging, cutting him off, or matching him with her own exhaustion. Asking him to tell the truth without making him perform it seemed to disarm him more than any accusation could have.
Renn sat down slowly in one of the folding chairs. The metal legs scraped the floor. “It kept giving me exits,” he said. “At least I thought they were exits. Doors with daylight under them. Stairwells with street noise at the bottom. Once I opened one and saw my apartment. My real apartment. My laptop was open on the desk. The footage from here was uploading.”
Mara’s skin went cold. “Did you go through?”
“No.” His voice cracked. “I wanted to. God help me, I wanted to. But the upload bar was almost finished, and there was a note on the screen that said the door would close when it hit one hundred percent. I stood there and watched it climb. Eighty-one. Eighty-two. Eighty-three. I kept thinking if the world saw what I saw, then the fear would mean something.”
“What happened?”
“The door closed at ninety-nine.”
The room sat with that. Even Jonas looked pained. Mara could picture it too clearly. The false exit, the glowing screen, the terrible bargain dressed as vindication. Renn had been trapped not only by fear, but by the hope that fear could finally make him valuable.
Jesus pulled out the chair beside Renn and sat. The old chair gave a small tired squeak beneath Him. Renn looked at Him from the side, wary, ashamed, and angry all at once.
“You thought being believed would heal what being loved had not touched,” Jesus said.
Renn stared at the coffee cup. “Don’t.”
“You thought if people finally saw the darkness you had seen, they would understand why you became hard.”
Renn’s mouth trembled. “I said don’t.”
Jesus’ voice remained gentle. “You thought attention would become a witness for your pain.”
Renn slammed his palm on the table. Coffee jumped from the cup and spilled across the surface. “What was I supposed to want? Nobody was coming. Nobody ever came. I learned early that if I wanted people to notice something was wrong, I had to make it impossible to ignore.”
Mara felt the anger in him fill the basement, and beneath it she heard a boy’s old loneliness. She did not know his whole story. He had told pieces over the years, always with jokes around them. A mother who disappeared for days. A stepfather who hated cameras because cameras kept evidence. Teachers who called him gifted when his grades were good and trouble when they were not. An uncle who gave him his first camcorder because the kid looked like he needed a way to prove he existed.
Jesus looked at Renn without flinching from his raised voice. “You were supposed to be seen without having to turn your wounds into bait.”
Renn’s anger faltered. He sat back as if the sentence had reached behind his defenses and touched the place before they were built. For a moment, he looked ready to weep. Then the camera on the table began clicking again.
The screen lit up. A live counter appeared.
VIEWERS: 1
Then it changed.
VIEWERS: 12
Then 103.
Then 4,908.
Renn stood so fast the chair fell backward. “No.”
The number kept climbing. Comments began to scroll beneath the image, though the camera pointed only at the ceiling now. The comments came too quickly to read at first. Then a few slowed and enlarged across the screen.
This is insane.
Don’t stop filming.
Is the Jesus guy real?
Mara’s stomach turned.
Another comment appeared.
Renn finally proved it.
His face changed. Mara saw it happen, the old hunger waking before he wanted it to. His eyes fixed on the number. It climbed past fifty thousand, then one hundred thousand, then more. The basement lights brightened. The coffee urn hissed harder. Every flyer on the bulletin board curled at the edges as if heated from behind.
“Renn,” Mara said.
He did not look away from the screen. “This isn’t real.”
“No,” she said. “But you still want it.”
He flinched because she had not accused him with contempt. She had named it with grief.
The comments kept appearing.
Ask Him to do something.
Make Him prove it.
Tell Jesus to look at the camera.
Renn backed toward the camera without seeming to know he was moving. His hand lifted slightly. Mara saw his fingers twitch toward the record button, though the camera was already recording whatever this place wanted recorded.
Jesus remained seated. “Do not offer Me to your hunger.”
Renn froze.
The room went silent except for the rising viewer count.
Jesus stood. “I am not content for frightened men.”
The camera lens cracked. A thin line split the glass, but the image on the screen stayed clear. The comments became crueler.
Fake.
He’s scared.
Renn blew it.
Mara watched Renn’s face as the false crowd turned. That was the other hook. Not only praise. Punishment. The Backrooms knew that some people were controlled by applause and others by the terror of losing it. Renn had lived under both.
He whispered, “They’re leaving.”
The viewer count began dropping.
One hundred thousand became seventy-two. Seventy-two became thirty. Thirty became nine. The comments faded until only one remained.
Nobody stays.
Renn stared at it as if it had been written on the inside of his skull.
Mara moved around the table and stood between him and the camera. “I stayed in the hall when it showed me my mother. Jonas stayed when it showed him Hannah. Eli kept walking when it called him with his mom’s voice. You can stay too.”
Renn looked at her like he wanted to believe her and did not trust wanting. “You left me after the fire.”
“Yes,” Mara said.
The answer took the air out of him.
She continued before fear could turn her honesty into escape. “I left because facing you meant facing what we did. I told myself you were the worse one because that let me be the sad one instead of the responsible one. I should have answered. I should have gone with you to Mrs. Calder. I should have told the truth about Thomas Vale before guilt turned into a room like this.”
Renn’s eyes moved to the Bible and report in her hands. “Thomas?”
“Thomas Alwyn Vale.”
The name entered the blue room like a person stepping quietly through a doorway. The camera stopped counting. The comments vanished. The coffee urn clicked off. Renn stared at the report, and his face collapsed with recognition, though he had not known the name before. Not knowing had been part of what kept the man usable. A name made him impossible to reduce.
“That was him?” Renn asked.
“It’s the name we have now.”
Renn reached for the report, then stopped. “Can I see it?”
Mara looked at Jesus. He gave no sign except His steady presence. She handed Renn the paper.
He took it carefully. His eyes moved over the line. Thomas Alwyn Vale. His breathing changed. Mara saw the exact moment the blurred figure became a man in Renn’s mind. Not a legend. Not footage. Not guilt shaped like smoke. A man with a middle name and a life that had reached the record in fragments.
Renn sat down again, this time slowly. “I made a follow-up.”
Mara closed her eyes. She had suspected, but hearing it still hurt.
“I didn’t use the fire directly,” he said quickly, then stopped because the defense sounded rotten even to him. “I talked around it. I said the building had always felt dangerous. I said people warned us not to go back. I made it sound like there was a presence there before anything happened.”
Jonas said, “Why?”
Renn looked up at him, tears bright and angry in his eyes. “Because if I said we found a cold man in a basement and left him there, then the story was just us being cowards. If I made the building haunted, then maybe we were victims too.”
The words landed hard. Mara hated them because she understood them. Not agreed. Understood. People could do terrible things with narrative when truth asked too much of them. They could move the light, cut the scene, change the title, add music, and bury a real person under mood.
Jesus looked at Renn. “You are not free because you can explain the lie.”
Renn nodded once, almost angrily. “I know.”
“Do you?”
“I know enough to hate myself.”
“That is not repentance.”
Renn looked up, exhausted. “Then what is?”
Jesus placed His hand over Thomas Vale’s report, not taking it away from Renn, but steadying the paper between them. “To turn toward the truth with your whole body, even when it costs you the story you preferred.”
Renn stared at His hand. “And if the truth ruins me?”
“Then let the false self fall.”
The sentence was simple, but it shook him. Mara saw it. The false self had been expensive to build. It had followers, style, income, reputation, a recognizable voice in the dark. Letting it fall was not the same as changing a caption. It was death to the thing that had kept Renn company when love felt unreliable.
The blue room began to shift. The folding chairs unfolded by themselves. One by one, they scraped across the floor and arranged into rows facing the table. The coffee urn slid aside. The bulletin board lowered until it sat like a screen behind Renn. On it appeared clips from his videos, titles, thumbnails, shocked faces, red arrows, dark doorways, warnings in capital letters. The chairs filled with shadows shaped like people. Viewers. Accusers. Fans. All silent, all facing him.
Renn gripped the report. “No.”
A microphone rose from the table.
The room waited.
Mara understood the trap. “It wants a performance.”
Jesus nodded. “Yes.”
Renn stared at the microphone. “But I do need to tell the truth.”
“Yes.”
“So what am I supposed to do?”
Jesus did not answer at once. He looked at the shadow audience, then at the microphone, then back to Renn. “Begin where there is no audience.”
The microphone lowered back into the table and disappeared.
The rows of chairs remained.
Renn looked confused, then frightened. “Where?”
The bulletin board changed again. The church basement vanished from it, replaced by a simple room with a kitchen table and an older woman sitting alone. Mrs. Calder. Mara recognized her from the small profile photo attached to the message she had ignored. She had short silver hair, a worn cardigan, and reading glasses hanging from a cord around her neck. On the table before her was a folder, a mug, and two printed screenshots from Mara and Renn’s videos.
Mrs. Calder was praying.
Not dramatically. Not with lifted hands or a church voice. She sat with her elbows on the table and her forehead against her fingers, praying like someone who had run out of ideas but not out of love. Mara could not hear every word, but she heard enough.
“Lord, do not let them be swallowed by what they have done.”
Renn sank into the chair.
Mara’s throat tightened. Mrs. Calder had not wanted to trap them. She had been praying for them while they joked about decaf coffee. The room called help offered and refused had not been a metaphor. Help had come with paper cups, basement lights, and a woman who understood that truth could begin before a crowd ever saw it.
Renn covered his mouth. The report shook in his other hand.
“I mocked her,” he whispered.
Jesus stood beside him. “She prayed.”
The shadow audience began to dissolve. One row at a time, the figures thinned into blue mist and vanished. The bulletin board held the image of Mrs. Calder a moment longer, then faded back to flyers. The room looked ordinary again. Too ordinary for what had happened inside it. That ordinariness made it feel holy in a way Mara did not know how to describe.
Jonas pulled one of the chairs upright and sat with a tired breath. “I would like to leave this basement.”
“Me too,” Mara said.
Renn looked at Jesus. “Can I?”
Jesus looked toward the far wall, where no door showed yet. “You may.”
Renn laughed weakly. “That sounds too easy.”
“It will not be easy,” Jesus said. “But the first step is not locked.”
Renn stood. He held the report out to Mara, but she shook her head.
“Keep it for now,” she said.
His eyes widened. “Why?”
“Because I need you to carry the name too.”
He looked down at the paper as if it weighed more than anything he had brought into the Backrooms. “I don’t deserve that.”
“No,” Mara said, and she almost smiled through the sadness. “Apparently that doesn’t get the final vote.”
Jonas made a low approving sound. “She is learning.”
Renn looked between them, bewildered by the faint warmth in the room. Then he folded the report with care and placed it inside his hoodie pocket. For the first time since Mara had entered the basement, he did not look like he was trying to frame the moment. He only looked tired, ashamed, and not alone.
A door appeared behind the bulletin board.
It was not white like Eli’s exit, and it did not shine with outside light. It was yellow, but not the sick yellow of the first halls. This yellow was softer, like old paper held near a lamp. A brass handle waited at the center. Above it, someone had written in plain letters, RETURN WHAT YOU TOOK.
Mara felt the coat over her arm. Renn touched the report in his pocket. Jonas touched Hannah’s note. Each of them had something now, but none of it belonged to the Backrooms. The place had tried to turn memory into a trap. Jesus had turned it back into responsibility.
Renn looked at the door. “Does that go out?”
Jesus said, “Not yet.”
Mara felt the disappointment in the room, but it did not crush her this time. Not yet did not sound like never when He said it.
“Where does it go?” Jonas asked.
Jesus walked to the door and placed His hand on the brass handle. “To the place where what was taken still waits to be returned.”
Renn gave a nervous breath. “That is extremely unclear.”
Mara looked at him. “He does that.”
Jonas nodded. “Often.”
For one brief second, the three of them shared something almost like a smile. It did not erase the fear. It did not make the Backrooms safe. But it made them human together in a place that worked very hard to make each person feel sealed inside their own dread.
Jesus opened the door.
Beyond it lay a long corridor lined with coat hooks. Hundreds of them. Some held jackets, sweaters, scarves, backpacks, purses, lunch bags, work vests, children’s raincoats, and hospital visitor badges. Others held cameras, phones, notebooks, keys, and framed photographs. Every item seemed ordinary until Mara looked longer and felt the life attached to it. These were not random lost things. They were pieces of people, proofs of needs, small witnesses to moments when someone should have been seen.
Cold air drifted from the corridor. Somewhere far down its length, a bell rang once, like the front door of a small shop opening.
Jesus stepped through first.
Mara followed with the coat. Renn came after her, and Jonas after him. The blue basement door closed behind them, and the sound of the Backrooms changed. The fluorescent hum faded into something softer and worse: the rustle of fabric, the faint clink of keys, the tiny shifts of belongings waiting on hooks for hands that might never return.
Mara walked slowly. The coat in her arms no longer felt like only one failed kindness. It felt connected to every item on the walls, every missed chance, every person turned into background because someone was too afraid, too busy, too proud, or too wounded to stop.
Renn paused beside a hook holding a cracked camcorder. He looked at it without touching. “Mine,” he said.
Mara looked closer. It was old, silver, and scratched near the lens. “Your first one?”
He nodded. “My uncle gave it to me.”
“Why is it here?”
He swallowed. “Because I stopped using it to remember.”
Jesus stopped ahead of them. At the far end of the corridor stood another door. This one was made of glass, but instead of showing what was beyond it, the glass reflected each of them differently. Jonas appeared as a younger man in a rain-soaked work shirt. Renn appeared as a boy holding a camcorder too tightly. Mara appeared at seventeen with a packed bag over one shoulder and a note in her hand. Jesus’ reflection did not change.
On the glass, words formed slowly in fog.
What you carried was never meant to replace who you abandoned.
Mara read the sentence twice. It did not feel like the Backrooms’ usual accusation. It felt heavier. Truer. The place had not written it with its normal hunger. Or maybe it had meant the words as a weapon and Jesus would not let them remain one.
Renn looked at Mara. “Who did you abandon?”
She thought of Silas, her father, Thomas Vale, Renn himself, and the woman in the blue notebook she had been afraid to meet again through handwriting. She did not answer with a list. She simply said, “More people than I wanted to admit.”
Jonas touched the glass. His younger reflection did the same. “And what now?”
Jesus looked at the door. “Now you return what fear kept.”
The glass door opened with no sound.
Beyond it was not another hallway. It was a small room lit by a single lamp, and at the center sat a wooden kitchen table. On the table lay a blue notebook.
Mara could not move.
She knew that notebook, though she had never seen it. Her mother’s little blue notebook. The one Silas had found. The one with a page bearing Mara’s name. The Backrooms had brought it here, or copied it, or opened a room from the fear surrounding it. She did not know which. She only knew the sight of it made every other sound fade.
Jesus stepped aside, leaving the doorway open.
Mara stood on the threshold with the coat over her arm and Thomas Vale’s Bible against her chest. Renn and Jonas remained behind her in the corridor, quiet now. No one pushed. No one asked. The notebook waited under the lamp like a gentle thing and a terrible thing at once.
Mara looked at Jesus.
He did not tell her she had to read it. He did not tell her she was ready. He only stood near the door, holy and patient, while the Backrooms held its breath around the room where her mother’s words waited to be opened.
Chapter Five: The Page With Her Name
Mara stood at the doorway as if the blue notebook could see her. The small room beyond the glass door looked too gentle for the Backrooms, and that made it more frightening than the rooms with cameras, false streets, and burning corridors. A single lamp glowed on the wooden table, casting a circle of warm light over the notebook’s worn cover. The walls were not yellow in there. They were painted a soft cream color, and the floor was old linoleum with a faded square pattern that reminded her of the kitchen in the house where she had learned to wait for bad news without calling it waiting.
She did not step inside right away. Her body seemed to understand what her mind kept trying to delay. The notebook was not a monster. It would not chase her. It would not growl from a dark hallway or speak with a borrowed voice from behind a false porch screen. That was why it was harder. Fear could be fought when it wore teeth, but love waiting quietly on a table had a power Mara did not know how to resist without becoming cruel to herself all over again.
Renn stood behind her, close enough that she could feel his unease but far enough to give her room. Jonas leaned against the corridor wall, one hand pressed over Hannah’s note beneath his shirt pocket. Neither man spoke. The hallway of hanging coats and old belongings stretched behind them, filled with the soft rustle of lives interrupted. Jesus remained beside the doorway, not blocking the room and not pushing her into it, His presence steady enough that the silence did not become abandonment.
Mara looked at Him. “Is it really hers?”
Jesus looked toward the notebook. “The love is real.”
“That is not the same answer.”
“No,” He said. “It is the answer you need before you open it.”
She swallowed and stepped across the threshold. The room did not change when she entered, and somehow that made her feel more exposed. No lights flickered. No hidden speaker played her mother’s cough. No creature scraped behind the wall. The Backrooms had been loud when it wanted to frighten her, but this room seemed to understand that the deepest places in a person do not need noise. They only need enough quiet for the truth to be heard.
The table looked exactly like the one from her childhood kitchen, though smaller. There was a shallow scratch near one corner where Silas had once dragged a fork through the finish after Mara dared him to prove he was not scared of getting in trouble. Their mother had stared at the mark for a long second, then laughed because she had been too tired to punish either of them and too tender to pretend a table mattered more than children. Mara touched the scratch now and felt the memory rise with such clarity that she nearly pulled her hand away.
The notebook had a blue cloth cover, frayed at the corners. A cheap elastic band, stretched almost useless with age, held it closed. On the front, her mother had written nothing. Mara had expected a name, a date, maybe a little sticker from a hospital gift shop. Instead the cover was plain, as if the words inside had been private enough that even the outside did not ask to be noticed.
She sat down slowly.
The chair creaked beneath her. The sound took her back to evenings when her mother would sit at the table with a mug of tea gone cold, a stack of bills, and a pen that never seemed to work the first time she tried it. Mara had not understood then how much labor went into keeping a home from showing children all its cracks. She understood too late that love had been everywhere in the ordinary things she had once mistaken for background.
She reached for the elastic band but stopped before touching it. “What if this is another lie?”
Jesus stepped into the room but stayed near the door. “A lie will try to use her voice to close you. Love will call you open, even if it hurts.”
Mara nodded, though the difference still scared her. She removed the band. The cover lifted with a soft sound, and the first pages fluttered slightly, though there was no wind. The handwriting was her mother’s. That alone almost ended her courage. She had seen that handwriting on grocery lists, school forms, birthday cards, sticky notes on the refrigerator, and the small labels her mother used to put on leftover containers because she believed order was a kind of kindness.
The early pages held ordinary things. A list of medicines. A date next to the words slept badly. A note about Silas needing new shoes. A reminder to ask Mara about her history essay. A few lines about the neighbor bringing soup that tasted too salty but still made her cry because someone had remembered them. The handwriting was weaker on some pages and stronger on others, as if each day had decided how much of her mother’s strength it would allow.
Mara turned a page and saw Silas’s name. She almost did not read it, but the line pulled her in. Her mother had written that Silas was angry because anger gave his love somewhere to stand. She wrote that he walked through the house like a boy trying to become a wall before grief could reach him. She wrote that his sister saw him more clearly than anyone, even when she acted annoyed, and that one day he might need to hear that she had always been one of his safe places.
Mara closed her eyes. The words entered with a force no accusation could have carried. She had thought leaving meant she had only refused the house, the father, the sickness, the memory of their mother fading in a bed. She had not let herself think that Silas might have lost not only a mother, but the sister who knew how to read him before he had to speak. She had called her distance independence because it sounded cleaner than abandonment.
Renn shifted in the doorway. Mara opened her eyes and looked back at him. His face held none of his usual quickness. He was not trying to interpret the room or guess what would happen next. He looked like a man witnessing something he knew he had no right to handle carelessly. Jonas looked down at the floor, giving her privacy in the only way available to him. Jesus watched her with mercy that did not soften the truth until it became harmless.
She turned another page.
Her father’s name appeared several times. Her mother wrote of his quiet panic, of the way he fixed things that were not broken because he could not fix the thing taking her from them. She wrote that he checked the smoke detectors three times in one night. She wrote that he stood in the doorway when he thought she was sleeping and looked at her as if memorizing a country he was about to lose. Mara read those lines and understood why the garage had become a room of unopened boxes. Her father had not been avoiding life. He had been guarding the last places where his love still knew what to do with its hands.
The next page had a pressed flower tucked into the crease. It had browned with time, but its shape remained. Mara recognized it as one from the narrow garden bed near the driveway. Her mother had loved those flowers because they came back every spring even after ugly winters. Mara had once told her they were stubborn. Her mother had said stubborn was sometimes just faith with dirt under its nails.
Mara almost smiled, and the sorrow in the smile hurt differently than the rest. It had life inside it.
Then she saw her own name.
The room seemed to pull back from her. The lamp hummed softly, not like the fluorescent lights of the Backrooms, but like a small household sound. Mara put both hands flat on the table and leaned over the page without reading right away. Her name sat at the top, written carefully, as if her mother had started that page when she knew strength would not last and wanted no word wasted.
Mara read.
Her mother had written, Mara thinks leaving is the same as surviving. She is young, so I do not blame her for that. I see how she stands near the doorway when the room gets too full. I see how she goes for coffee, for air, for a phone charger, for anything that lets her step into a hallway where no one needs her for a few minutes. I used to feel hurt by it, then I remembered how often I have done the same thing inside myself.
Mara pressed her fist against her mouth. The room blurred, but she kept reading.
Her mother wrote that Mara had always felt too much and then punished herself for feeling it. She wrote about the way Mara tried to become useful when she did not know how to be honest. She wrote about a child who cleaned the kitchen after bad news because dishes made grief look manageable. She wrote that Mara’s anger was often fear in better shoes. She wrote that she hoped one day Mara would stop confusing being needed with being trapped.
The lamp flickered once.
Mara looked up sharply, but Jesus remained still. The room held.
She went on. The page grew harder to read because the words became less neat, but her mother’s voice seemed clearer through them. I do not need Mara to be strong for me. I wish she knew that. I need her to let herself be loved in the middle of what she cannot fix. If she leaves after I am gone, I pray the leaving does not become her home. I pray God follows her into every room she uses to hide. I pray He is gentle, but I also pray He does not let her mistake loneliness for freedom.
Mara made a sound she could not stop. It was not a sob exactly. It was the sound of a locked place opening after years of pressure. She folded over the table, forehead almost touching the page, and cried with her eyes open because she did not want the words to disappear.
The Backrooms answered.
The cream walls yellowed at the corners. A stain spread near the baseboard, and the soft kitchen smell shifted toward wet carpet. The lamp dimmed. From somewhere behind the wall came her mother’s cough, low and familiar, followed by the scrape of a hospital chair.
Mara froze.
The notebook page changed.
The handwriting twisted, darkened, and rearranged itself. New words appeared beneath her mother’s prayer.
You left me when I needed you.
Mara stared. Her breath stopped.
The line wrote itself again, deeper this time.
You left me when I needed you.
Renn stepped forward. “Mara.”
Jesus raised one hand, and Renn stopped.
Mara looked at the words. The accusation was not entirely false. That was why it struck with such force. She had left the room. She had gone for coffee. She had stayed gone too long. The Backrooms did not need to invent guilt when it could sharpen a real thing until she forgot every other truth around it.
The chair across from her moved by itself.
A hospital bed appeared where the far wall had been. Her mother lay in it, thin and pale beneath a blanket, scarf around her head, eyes closed. The room smelled like sanitizer and stale coffee. A vending machine glowed beyond an open door. Mara was no longer in the warm little kitchen room. She was in the hospital corridor and at the table at the same time, trapped between memory and accusation.
The figure in the bed opened her eyes.
“Mara,” it said in her mother’s voice.
Mara gripped the table. “No.”
The figure turned its head slowly. “You left.”
Jesus moved closer but did not touch Mara. “Listen carefully.”
Mara could barely hear Him over the pounding in her ears.
The thing in the bed looked like her mother. Too much like her. The hollow cheeks, the tired eyes, the small crease between her brows when she was in pain. But something was wrong beneath the likeness. Her mother’s eyes, even when she suffered, had held other people. This thing’s eyes held only hunger.
“You left me,” it repeated.
Mara trembled. “I did.”
The creature smiled with her mother’s mouth. “Then stay here.”
The hospital room sharpened around her. The table became a bedside tray. The blue notebook lay open where a chart should have been. Jonas and Renn stood far away now, blurred behind a clear plastic curtain. Jesus remained beside her, but the bed and the voice demanded all her attention.
“Stay until it is paid,” the thing whispered.
Mara remembered Jonas’s break room. Eat what you owe. Stay until it is paid. The Backrooms spoke the same language in different rooms because despair did not have much imagination. It only had persistence.
She looked down at the real page beneath the false writing. Her mother’s original words were still there, faint but not gone. I pray God follows her into every room she uses to hide. The line glowed beneath the accusation like a coal under ash.
The thing in the bed reached toward her. “If you love me, stay.”
Mara looked at Jesus. He did not answer for her. He had said love would call her open. He had said the lie would close her. She understood then that guilt was offering to let her call a prison devotion. If she stayed in that room forever, she would not be loving her mother. She would be obeying a dead imitation that wanted her to stop returning to the living.
Mara turned back to the bed. “You are not my mother.”
The face tightened.
“You have her voice,” Mara said, and her own voice shook so hard she had to pause. “You have the bed. You have the hour I wish I could change. But you are not her.”
The thing’s fingers curled into the sheet.
Mara placed one hand on the blue notebook. “My mother did not pray for me to stay trapped. She prayed for God to find me.”
The hospital room flickered. The plastic curtain vanished. Renn and Jonas came back into focus near the doorway, both watching her with held breath. The bed remained, but the figure in it looked less solid now, as if the skin of the lie could no longer hold the shape it had stolen.
The thing spoke one more time, lower and uglier beneath the borrowed voice. “You do not deserve to go home.”
Mara felt the old agreement rise in her. It would have been easy to nod. It would have been easy to make unworthiness feel holy because it sounded humble. But she had seen Eli walk through a door he did not earn. She had seen Jonas receive a note he could not deserve. She had seen Renn carry the name of a man he had wronged because responsibility was not the same as self-destruction. Mercy had been teaching all of them a language the Backrooms could imitate but not understand.
“No,” Mara said. “I don’t deserve it.”
The thing smiled.
Then Mara lifted her eyes. “But home was never supposed to be a prize for deserving.”
The bed collapsed into a heap of stained sheets. The hospital walls peeled away. The cream room returned, and the blue notebook lay open under the lamp. The false accusation faded from the page, leaving her mother’s handwriting intact. Mara’s hand rested over the final lines, and this time she read them aloud.
“If she reads this one day, tell her I was not angry that she stepped into the hallway. I was sad that she thought she had to stay there alone. Tell her I loved her before she knew how to stay. Tell her I love her still, not because she stayed perfectly, but because she is my daughter.”
Mara could not finish the page in silence. She read the last sentence twice because the first time it entered her like rain falling on cracked ground. Her mother had not excused everything. She had not denied the pain. She had given Mara something stronger than excuse. She had given her a love that told the truth and still wanted her near.
Renn lowered his head. Jonas wiped his face with the back of his hand. Jesus stood beside the table, His eyes filled with that same deep sorrow and deeper mercy. Mara looked up at Him, unable to speak.
He reached down and gently closed the notebook.
“Some words are not given to trap you in what happened,” He said. “They are given so you can stop living as if the wound has the right to name you forever.”
Mara held the notebook with both hands. “Can I take it?”
Jesus looked at the closed cover. “What you need from it is already being carried.”
She understood, but not fully. The notebook in this room might be a copy, a mercy, a doorway, or a truth given shape. The real one still waited in her father’s house with Silas. She would have to go there if she got out. She would have to read the real pages in real light, with real people who could answer back and hurt and forgive and hesitate and try again. The Backrooms could show her what she feared, but it could not replace the life waiting beyond it.
The notebook faded under her hands.
Mara held empty air for one sharp second, then pressed both palms flat against the table. The loss startled her, but it did not feel cruel. It felt like being told that the gift was not the object. The gift was the courage to go where the object truly waited.
The lamp brightened.
A door appeared behind the chair across from her. It was narrow and wooden, painted white at some point but now chipped along the edges. A strip of daylight shone beneath it. Not the clean bright light of Eli’s exit. This light was softer, late afternoon light, the kind that enters a kitchen and makes dust visible.
Jonas looked at the door with longing. “Is that yours?”
Mara looked at Jesus.
He did not answer in the way she wanted. “It leads nearer.”
“Nearer home?”
“Nearer the truth of it.”
Renn stepped beside her. “Do we all go?”
Jesus looked at each of them. “For now.”
The phrase carried mercy and warning together. Mara did not know whose door would come next. Jonas still needed a way out. Renn still had truth to carry beyond performance. Mara still had her family’s house, Thomas Vale’s name, the coat, the letter, and the promise she had made in the burning corridor. Each mercy had become responsibility, and each responsibility had made the Backrooms less able to define her.
She picked up the coat again from where it lay folded on the chair beside her. Thomas Vale’s Bible remained in her arms, real as weight. Renn touched the report inside his hoodie pocket. Jonas adjusted his name badge, though the scratched letters had not returned. They moved toward the white door together.
Before Mara reached it, the walls whispered.
Not with her mother’s voice this time. With her own.
You will fail again.
She stopped.
The whisper came from all four cream walls, soft and intimate. You will go home and say the wrong thing. You will hurt them. You will turn this into a story. You will run when it costs too much. You will fail again.
Mara stood with her hand above the doorknob. The whisper did not feel like a threat. It felt like a fact, and that made it more dangerous. She probably would fail again in some way. She would say something clumsy. She would get scared. She would want to hide behind work, footage, distance, or silence. She would not become faithful in one clean leap because she had read a page and cried.
Jesus stood close enough for her to hear Him breathe. “Mara.”
She turned.
“When you fall, do not build a room around it.”
The whispering walls went silent.
Mara nodded slowly. That was the difference she had not understood before. Failure had become architecture in her life. One mistake became a hallway. One regret became a locked door. One unfinished apology became a basement. One avoided letter became a whole strange world where she wandered under buzzing lights and called it survival. Jesus was not promising she would never stumble. He was teaching her not to move into the stumble and furnish it with shame.
She opened the door.
They stepped into a hallway that looked nothing like the Backrooms at first. It was the hallway of Mara’s childhood home. Family photos lined the walls. The carpet runner had the faded red pattern her mother used to vacuum in careful rows. The air smelled faintly of lemon cleaner, old wood, and something cooking on the stove. Light came from the kitchen ahead, and beyond that, Mara heard voices.
Her father’s voice.
Silas’s voice.
She gripped the coat so hard her fingers hurt.
Renn came through behind her and stopped. “This is your house.”
“Not exactly,” Mara said.
Jonas looked at the photos on the wall. “Close enough to frighten a person.”
Mara almost answered, but then she saw the picture beside the kitchen doorway. It showed her mother at the lake one summer, wearing sunglasses too big for her face and laughing with one hand raised to block the camera. Mara had taken that photo. She remembered being annoyed because her mother kept laughing instead of posing. Now the picture seemed almost holy in its refusal to be perfect.
In the kitchen, Silas said, “She is not coming.”
Mara went still.
Her father answered, “Maybe not today.”
The words were familiar. Not from the screen in the editing room. This was different. Softer. Closer. She stepped forward until she could see them through the doorway. Her father sat at the table, older than she remembered and not old enough for the tiredness in his face. Silas leaned against the counter with the blue notebook in front of him. The real one, or a copy so close it made no difference in the room.
Silas looked angry. Her father looked worn down by hoping in small amounts because large hope had become too expensive.
Mara entered the kitchen.
Neither man saw her.
She stopped beside the table. Her father’s hand rested inches from hers, but when she reached toward him, her fingers passed through the air above his skin. Not real. Not present. A room made of nearness and separation. The Backrooms had brought her nearer but not home.
Silas opened the blue notebook. “I should not have told her about it.”
Her father looked at him. “Why?”
“Because now I keep waiting for something that probably will not happen.”
Her father’s mouth tightened. “I know that feeling.”
Silas closed the notebook too hard. “Then stop doing it.”
Mara flinched. Her father did not respond in anger. He only looked toward the front of the house, toward the window and the porch light beyond it.
“I tried,” he said.
Silas’s face changed. Mara saw pain under the anger, the kind that had no easy place to go. “You act like if she walks through that door, Mom comes back too.”
“No,” her father said. “I act like if my daughter walks through that door, my daughter is home.”
Mara put one hand over her mouth.
Renn stood in the doorway behind her. Jonas bowed his head. Jesus remained near the hall, His presence filling the kitchen without intruding on the scene. Mara watched her father rise slowly from the table. His knees bothered him now. She had not known that. He walked to the sink, rinsed a mug that was already clean, and set it in the drying rack. A man fixing what was not broken because what was broken had names and faces.
Silas picked up the notebook and held it against his chest. “I am tired of missing someone who chose not to be here.”
Mara closed her eyes.
Her father turned from the sink. “So am I.”
The honesty in his voice broke through more than any defense would have. Mara had pictured her father as endlessly waiting, almost frozen in longing, but here he was tired too. Love had not made him painless. The porch light had not meant he was noble every second. It meant he had not found peace in shutting the door.
Silas’s eyes filled, and he turned away fast. “I hate her sometimes.”
“I know.”
“You are supposed to tell me not to say that.”
“I have said worse to God.”
The kitchen fell quiet. Mara opened her eyes and looked at Jesus. He watched the father and son with compassion so deep it made the room feel larger than the memory that held it. Nothing about this scene was polished. No one said the perfect healing words. No one had become saintly because grief entered the room. They were simply still there, loving imperfectly, angry honestly, waiting in ways that hurt.
Silas wiped his face with his sleeve. “What if she comes back and leaves again?”
Her father leaned both hands on the counter. “Then I will be hurt again.”
“That’s your plan?”
“No,” he said. “That’s just the truth.”
Silas let out a broken laugh and sat down hard in a chair. “That is a terrible plan.”
Their father gave the smallest smile. “Most of mine are.”
Mara almost laughed and cried at the same time. She had forgotten that dry humor in him, the little spark that used to show up when life became too heavy and no one knew what else to do. It was still there under the sorrow. Not gone. Buried, maybe, but breathing.
The kitchen light flickered.
Silas and her father faded slightly, then sharpened again. The edges of the room yellowed. The Backrooms was close even here. It could not invent the love in this room, but it could try to trap Mara inside watching it. She understood the temptation. She could stay here unseen and punish herself with the life she had hurt. She could watch every tired night, every argument, every porch light, every silence. She could call that repentance, but it would only be another hallway.
Jesus said, “This is not where you apologize.”
Mara nodded through tears. “Because they can’t hear me.”
“Because they are not images for your guilt. They are people waiting in the world I am leading you toward.”
Silas and her father vanished.
The kitchen remained for a moment, empty now. The blue notebook sat on the table. The porch light shone through the front window. Mara walked to the table and looked down. On top of the notebook lay a key. Not a house key. It was a small brass key with a tag attached by string. The tag had one word written on it.
Call.
Mara picked it up. The key was warm.
Renn looked at it. “That seems almost too obvious.”
Mara closed her fingers around it. “Maybe I need obvious.”
Jonas looked toward the front door. “Maybe we all do.”
A knock sounded from somewhere beneath the house.
Everyone froze.
The knock came again, three slow strikes. Not at the front door. Not the kitchen door. Beneath them. From the basement.
Mara’s father’s house had a basement where her mother kept holiday decorations and old school projects in plastic tubs. It also held the boxes her father could not open. Mara looked toward the basement door near the kitchen pantry. It stood closed, but yellow light showed beneath it.
Renn whispered, “That is definitely not good.”
Jonas moved closer to Jesus. “What is down there?”
Jesus looked at Mara. “What your family could not carry upstairs.”
The key in Mara’s hand seemed to pulse once.
She walked toward the basement door, then stopped with her fingers on the knob. Her body remembered this door. As a child, she had been afraid of the dark steps, the smell of dust, the shadowed shelves. As a teenager, she had hidden Christmas presents down there. After her mother died, she had avoided it because grief collected in storage spaces. Families put things in boxes when they did not know what else to do with love that no longer had a body to touch.
The knock came a third time.
Mara looked back at Jesus.
He nodded once.
She opened the basement door.
A set of wooden stairs descended into yellow light. Not the harsh yellow of the first halls, but not the warm light of the kitchen either. It was mixed, uncertain. Boxes lined the steps, leaving only a narrow path. Each box had writing on it in her father’s hand. Christmas. School. Mom’s scarves. Photos. Hospital papers. Mara’s room. Do not throw away.
Mara stepped onto the first stair.
The house above disappeared.
The kitchen, hallway, front window, and porch light folded into darkness behind them, and only the basement stairs remained. Jesus followed close. Renn and Jonas came after Him, careful around the boxes. The air grew cooler as they descended. It smelled of cardboard, dust, and old fabric.
At the bottom, the basement stretched far beyond the size of any real house. Rows of boxes disappeared into yellow-lit distance. Some were stacked high as walls. Some had collapsed, spilling photographs, clothes, letters, medical forms, toys, broken ornaments, and old tools across the concrete. The place did not feel like a monster’s den. It felt worse. It felt like a family’s sorrow made into architecture.
Mara stood at the bottom step and understood.
This was not only her room. It was her father’s. Silas’s. Maybe her mother’s too. It was the place grief had been stored because no one knew how to bless it, bury it, share it, or release it. The Backrooms had found the family basement and stretched it into an endless archive of everything they had not said.
Somewhere between the rows, a woman’s voice hummed a melody Mara knew from childhood.
Her mother’s song.
But this time Mara did not move toward it. She listened. The humming was not calling her with hunger. It was faint, almost covered by the buzzing lights, and it seemed to come from many boxes at once. Jesus looked into the rows with quiet sorrow.
“Is that her?” Mara asked.
Jesus answered softly. “It is what love left behind.”
A box near Mara’s feet shifted by itself. The top opened. Inside were VHS tapes, birthday candles, a cracked picture frame, and a small pink mitten that had belonged to Mara when she was five. On top of everything sat a folded paper with Silas’s handwriting.
I cannot keep being the one who stays.
Mara crouched and touched the note.
The rows of boxes groaned. Far across the basement, something large moved in the shadows between stacked memories. Not the tall creature from the halls. This was lower, heavier, built from the weight of things never carried together. It dragged chains of old Christmas lights behind it. Family photos clung to its back like scales. Its breath sounded like a man trying not to cry in a garage.
Jonas whispered, “Lord have mercy.”
Jesus stepped to the concrete floor.
The thing in the distance stopped.
Mara stood slowly, the brass key marked Call warm in her palm. She knew now that this chapter of the way out would not be solved by watching a memory or opening one page. The basement held too much for that. It held the family’s unfinished grief, and grief shared by more than one person could not be healed by one person pretending to repent alone.
The thing moved again, closer this time.
Renn reached into his pocket and pulled out Thomas Vale’s report as if the name might steady him. Jonas held Hannah’s note. Mara held the key and the coat and the Bible. Jesus stood before the endless rows of boxes, His eyes on the moving shadow.
“What do we do?” Mara asked.
Jesus looked back at her. “You stop carrying their grief without calling them.”
Mara tightened her hand around the key.
From somewhere in the basement, a phone began to ring. Not the false phone from the cubicle hallway. This sound was different. Realer. It rang from beneath a stack of boxes marked Mara’s room, the place where her father had saved what she left behind.
The shadow in the basement drew nearer.
Mara walked toward the ringing phone, and this time, when fear told her not to answer, she did not obey it.
Chapter Six: The Phone Beneath the Boxes
The ringing came from under the stack marked Mara’s room, but it did not sound buried. It sounded close, clean, and impossible, as if the phone were sitting in the open somewhere just beyond the next breath. Mara moved toward it with the brass key in her fist, stepping over spilled photographs and old Christmas lights that curled across the floor like dead vines. The large shadow between the rows shifted as she walked, dragging its weight through the stored grief of her family, and every box it passed seemed to sag under memories that had been handled too many times without ever being healed.
Renn followed a few steps behind her, quiet in a way that did not fit him. Jonas moved slower, one hand against a stack of boxes to keep his balance. Jesus walked nearest to Mara, not in front of her this time, and that frightened her more than when He stood between her and danger. It meant the next door could not be opened by His hand alone. It meant she had to place her own trembling hand on something real and stop asking mercy to do her honesty for her.
The phone rang again. Mara found it beneath a collapsed cardboard box full of old notebooks, broken pens, a tangled necklace, and a pair of running shoes she had worn in high school until the soles split. The phone itself was pale beige, an old landline with a coiled cord and a receiver heavy enough to feel like an object from another life. It sat on the concrete floor as if it had always belonged there. A small brass keyhole had been set into the center of the rotary dial, though the phone was not old enough to have a dial at all.
Mara looked down at the key in her hand. The tag still read Call. The letters had not changed. She knelt and slipped the key into the phone. It turned with a soft click, and the ringing stopped so suddenly that the silence pressed against her ears.
She did not pick up the receiver.
The shadow moved closer between the rows. It was still too far away to see clearly, but its shape had begun to separate from the darkness around it. It was not one creature in the simple sense. It seemed made from things saved too long and words spoken too late. Strips of wallpaper hung from its shoulders. Photo corners clung to its sides. Its long arms were wrapped in old phone cords, extension cords, and strands of holiday lights. When it breathed, Mara heard her father in the garage, Silas in the kitchen, and herself in the car leaving before dawn.
Renn crouched beside her. “You do not have to do this perfectly.”
Mara looked at him, surprised.
He gave a tight, humorless half-smile. “I am trying out saying useful things.”
Jonas leaned down and picked up one of Mara’s old notebooks from the floor. He did not open it. He only set it gently on top of the box where it belonged. “He is right. Perfect is usually what scared people demand from themselves so they can avoid starting.”
Mara stared at the receiver. “You two are becoming very inconvenient.”
“Good,” Jonas said.
Jesus looked toward the phone. “Speak as a daughter, not as a defendant.”
The words steadied and unsettled her at once. Mara had been preparing a case in her mind without realizing it. She had an opening statement, a confession, a defense, a promise, and a careful explanation for why she had not known how to come back. Jesus cut through all of it. A daughter did not need to win the right to speak. A daughter still needed to tell the truth.
Mara picked up the receiver.
At first she heard static. Under the static came the sound of a house at night. A refrigerator humming. A chair moving on kitchen tile. A faucet being turned off. Then a man’s voice, rough with sleep or worry, said, “Hello?”
Mara closed her eyes. Her father.
The shadow in the rows stopped moving.
She could not speak. The receiver trembled against her ear. The sound of her father breathing on the line reached into her with a force no false voice had carried because this was not polished by memory. It was tired, uncertain, and alive. She heard him shift the phone to his other ear. She pictured him standing near the kitchen counter, looking at the caller ID, wondering if the strange number might be a wrong call, a scam, a hospital, or the thing he had stopped letting himself expect.
“Hello?” he said again.
Mara opened her mouth, but nothing came out. The old habit rose fast. Hang up. Wait until you can say it better. Wait until you are stronger. Wait until you have something to offer besides the mess of yourself. The phone cord tightened around her wrist though she had not wrapped it there.
Jesus placed two fingers lightly on the cord. It loosened.
“Mara,” He said softly.
Her father inhaled sharply on the other end. “Mara?”
The sound of her name in his voice broke through the last thin wall. She pressed her free hand to the concrete floor to steady herself. “Dad.”
For several seconds, there was only breathing.
Then her father said, “Where are you?”
The question should have been simple. It was not. She looked around at the endless basement of boxes, the yellow light, the moving shadow, Renn holding Thomas Vale’s name in his pocket, Jonas carrying a daughter’s note, and Jesus kneeling near her on the concrete of a place no map could hold. She almost said, I don’t know. She almost said, It is complicated. She almost lied out of reflex because truth sounded impossible.
“I am somewhere I should not be,” she said. “But I am trying to come home.”
Her father made a sound she had never heard from him before, something between relief and pain. “Are you safe?”
Mara looked at Jesus.
“No,” she said. “Not exactly. But I am not alone.”
The shadow groaned. Boxes toppled in the distance, spilling ornaments that shattered across the concrete like little red stars. The basement lights dimmed and came back. Her father’s voice flickered with the line.
“Mara, what is happening?”
“I cannot explain all of it right now,” she said. “I need to say something before I lose the line.”
The phone crackled. Behind her father’s breathing, Mara heard another voice, sharper and closer than she expected.
“Is that her?”
Silas.
Mara’s grip tightened. Her body reacted as if his voice were a door swinging open too fast. She had imagined this moment, but imagination had made him either cruel enough to confirm her fear or tender enough to make return easy. The real Silas sounded tired, defensive, and wounded. He sounded like a brother who had missed her and hated that missing.
Her father said, “Silas, wait.”
“No,” Silas said, and the phone scraped as if it had been taken from his hand. “Mara?”
She swallowed. “Yeah.”
“Where have you been?”
The words came out hard. Not loud. Hard. Mara felt the phone cord twitch around her wrist again, searching for a place to tighten. The shadow began moving once more, slower now, as if drawn by the anger in his voice.
Mara looked at Jesus. His eyes told her not to turn truth into a speech.
“I left,” she said. “And I kept leaving.”
Silas was silent.
She forced herself to continue before the silence became a hallway. “I told myself I was staying away because I was overwhelmed. Some of that was true. But I also stayed away because going home meant seeing what I had done to you and Dad. I did not want to face that.”
The line hissed. For a moment, she thought he had hung up. Then Silas gave a short, unsteady breath.
“You think saying that fixes it?”
“No.”
“Good. Because it doesn’t.”
“I know.”
“You don’t know.” His voice rose now, and the basement responded. More boxes fell. One burst open near Jonas, spilling winter scarves that slithered across the floor before going still. “You were gone, Mara. You did not just miss a dinner. You disappeared from the parts that were ugly. Dad acted like he understood, but I watched him check his phone every night like a fool. I read Mom’s notebook alone because I did not know if sending you that letter was going to make everything worse. You have no idea what it was like being the one who stayed.”
Mara bowed her head. “You are right.”
The shadow stopped.
Silas did not answer at once. Mara could hear his breathing change. He had expected her to argue. He had prepared for her defense because that was the version of her he knew best, the sister who explained pain until she sounded innocent enough to survive it. Agreement left him with the hurt itself.
“You are supposed to fight me,” he said.
“I know.”
“I had more.”
“I know,” Mara said, and tears slid down her face. “You can still say it.”
Silas laughed once, broken and disbelieving. “What is wrong with you?”
“A lot,” she said.
Renn made a small sound behind her that might have been a laugh if the room had allowed laughter to stay light. Jonas looked toward the shadow, then back at Mara, and nodded slightly as if she had taken a step on unstable ground and not fallen through.
Silas was quiet again. This silence was different. Not forgiven. Not healed. But listening.
Mara held the receiver with both hands now. “I read your letter.”
“You did?”
“Yes.”
“When?”
“Here,” she said, and the truth sounded strange even to her. “A little while ago.”
“That letter was in your bag for months.”
“I know.”
“You carried it and did not open it?”
“Yes.”
“Why?”
Mara looked at the boxes around her. Her old room had been poured onto the floor, pieces of girlhood lying under yellow lights in a place built from avoidance. “Because if I opened it, I might have to answer. And if I answered, I might have to come home. And if I came home, I might find out I could not be the person you needed anymore.”
Silas’s voice lowered. “I did not need you to be some perfect person.”
“I know that now.”
“No,” he said, but the anger had softened into something rawer. “I needed my sister.”
Mara pressed the receiver to her forehead for one second, then brought it back to her ear. “I am sorry.”
The basement shook.
The shadow recoiled, not far, but enough that the boxes near it stopped trembling. The apology had not sounded large. It had not sounded crafted. It had no music under it, no camera, no explanation. It was small, direct, and costly. The Backrooms seemed to hate it.
“I am sorry I left you with Dad’s grief and your own,” Mara said. “I am sorry I made you write first. I am sorry I treated your anger like proof that staying away was safer. I am sorry I turned home into something I could visit only when I felt strong enough. You should not have had to become the one who stayed because I chose to become the one who ran.”
Silas breathed unevenly. “I don’t know what to do with that.”
“You do not have to know tonight.”
“What do you want from me?”
The question hurt because it was fair. She had arrived through a phone call from a place he could not understand, carrying truth he could not see, asking for a hearing she had not earned. Jesus watched her with quiet patience. Speak as a daughter, not as a defendant. She held to that.
“I want to come home,” she said. “Not to fix everything in one night. Not to make you say it is okay. I want to come home and read Mom’s notebook where she wrote it. I want to sit at the table. I want to talk to Dad. I want to tell you both the truth about some other things too. I want to stop making my distance look like peace.”
The line was silent.
Then Silas said, “Dad is crying.”
Mara closed her eyes. The words cut and healed at the same time. She heard a muffled sound on the other end, then her father’s voice, farther away, saying he was fine when he clearly was not. Silas muttered something to him. The phone shifted.
Her father came back on the line. “Mara.”
“I am here.”
He took a long breath. “Come home.”
It was not a speech. It was not a condition. It was not absolution. It was two words, worn and plain, but they opened something in the basement that no key had touched. The boxes nearest Mara settled. The yellow light softened. The heavy shadow drew back another few feet, dragging chains of old cords behind it.
Mara could barely answer. “I am trying.”
“I don’t understand what that means.”
“I know. I will explain what I can when I get there.”
Her father was quiet. Then he said, “Are you in trouble?”
Mara looked at Jesus. “Yes.”
“What kind?”
“The kind I cannot explain without sounding impossible.”
Silas’s voice came from somewhere near the phone. “That sounds exactly like you.”
Mara almost smiled through tears. “Fair.”
Her father did not laugh. “What do you need?”
The question opened another wound. Her father asking what she needed, after years of needing her home and not receiving it, felt like grace she could not hold comfortably. She wanted to say nothing. She wanted to protect him from worry because worry was one more thing she had already caused. But Jesus had said not to call a door a wall.
“I need you not to turn the porch light off,” she said.
Her father’s breath caught.
Silas whispered something she could not hear.
“I won’t,” her father said.
The phone crackled hard. The ceiling lights flashed. The shadow lunged, suddenly furious, crossing the distance between rows with terrible speed. Its body scraped against boxes and shelves, tearing open family memories as it came. Photographs flew around it like loose leaves. Its voice filled the basement, no longer borrowing one person, but speaking as the whole weight of stored grief.
Too late.
Mara gripped the phone. “No.”
Too late to be a daughter. Too late to be a sister. Too late to come home clean. Too late to say the right thing. Too late to stay. Too late to change what you are.
Jesus rose and stepped toward the shadow.
The phone line screamed with static. Mara heard Silas say her name, but the sound bent and stretched. Her father’s voice broke through once, calling, “Mara, stay on the line.” Then the static turned into her own voice from years ago, reading the note she left on the kitchen counter before dawn.
I just need time.
The shadow threw the sentence across the basement like a chain. Boxes marked Mom’s scarves burst open. Fabric spilled across the floor in dark waves. The shadow reached for Mara, and every cord wrapped around it stretched toward the phone.
Renn moved before she could react. He grabbed the phone cord with both hands and pulled it away from the shadow. The cords around the creature snapped toward him, wrapping his wrists. He cried out but did not let go.
“Renn!” Mara shouted.
“Keep talking,” he said through clenched teeth.
Jonas stepped in beside him, old hands closing around the cord too. The force yanked him forward, but he planted his feet against the concrete. “Do what he said.”
Mara turned back to the receiver. “Dad. Silas. If you can hear me, I am coming home.”
The static roared.
She spoke louder. “I do not know how long it will take. I do not know what I am going to look like when I get there. I do not know if I will say everything right. But I am coming home.”
The shadow slammed one heavy limb into a tower of boxes. They crashed down between Jesus and Mara, bursting open with hospital papers, sympathy cards, funeral programs, and family photos. Jesus did not move backward. He raised one hand, and the falling debris stopped inches from the floor, suspended for one breath in the yellow light. Then it settled gently, as if placed by careful hands.
The creature recoiled from Him. Its body shook, and Mara saw more clearly what it was made of now. Not evil in the simple way the tall thing from the halls was evil. This was grief given no room to breathe, grief stored until it learned to guard itself like a beast. Her father’s silence had become part of it. Silas’s anger had become part of it. Mara’s leaving had become part of it. Even love had been trapped inside it, twisted by years of not knowing where to go.
Jesus looked at the shadow with compassion and authority together. “You were not made to rule this house.”
The shadow groaned. Beneath the monstrous sound, Mara heard weeping. A man’s weeping. A boy’s. Her own. It did not vanish because Jesus spoke, but it weakened as if it had been waiting for someone to name it without worshiping it.
On the phone, Silas’s voice broke through. “Mara?”
“I am here.”
“Dad says the porch light is on.”
A sob escaped her before she could hold it back.
Silas continued, voice shaking. “I do not know if I am ready to see you.”
“I understand.”
“I do not know if I am ready not to.”
“I understand that too.”
The line quieted. Then Silas said, “Do not make us wait without knowing again.”
Mara closed her eyes. “I won’t.”
“Promise me.”
Jesus looked at her, and she knew better than to promise what fear might later tempt her to break in secret. A promise spoken from panic could become another room. She chose slower words.
“I will call again if I cannot get there yet,” she said. “I will not disappear.”
The brass key in the phone turned by itself.
A clear tone rang through the receiver, bright and brief. The shadow let out a low cry and pulled away from Renn and Jonas. The cords dropped from their wrists. Renn stumbled back, rubbing red marks into his skin. Jonas leaned over with both hands on his knees, breathing hard but still standing.
Mara heard her father again, closer now. “We will wait.”
Those words did not sound like the old waiting. They did not sound like a porch light burning itself out in the dark. They sounded wounded, cautious, and alive. Waiting had become a bridge instead of a room.
The line clicked.
The phone went dead.
Mara held the receiver to her ear for several seconds after the silence came. Then she lowered it and set it gently into the cradle. She expected the phone to vanish, but it stayed there on the concrete, ordinary and still. The key slipped out on its own and fell into her palm. The tag no longer read Call.
It read Come home.
Mara closed her fingers around it.
The basement changed. Not completely. The rows of boxes remained, but they no longer stretched into endless distance. The far wall could be seen now, dim and concrete, with shelves along it and a small window near the ceiling showing nothing but pale gray light. The shadow had retreated to the center of the room. It crouched there, smaller than before, still large, still frightening, but no longer filling the whole basement with its breath.
Renn held up his wrists. Red lines marked the skin where the cords had wrapped him. “That was unpleasant.”
Mara looked at him. “You grabbed the cord.”
“Apparently I make terrible choices under pressure.”
“That was not terrible.”
He glanced away, uncomfortable with gratitude. “Don’t make it weird.”
Jonas straightened with effort. “It was brave.”
“Now it is weird,” Renn said.
Even Mara’s laugh came out more like a sob, but it was real. The sound moved through the basement, small and human. The shadow shuddered, as if laughter without cruelty confused it. Jesus turned toward them, and His face held the tenderness of One who had watched a locked room lose part of its claim.
Jonas walked a few steps toward the crouched shadow. “Is it going to attack again?”
Jesus looked at it. “Not while truth is being carried instead of buried.”
Mara looked at the boxes. Some had opened cleanly now. Inside one, she saw framed photographs wrapped in newspaper. Inside another were her mother’s scarves, folded instead of spilling. The basement was still full of sorrow, but it looked less like a prison and more like a place that could one day be sorted by hands that loved each other enough to stay in the room together.
The shadow lifted its head. Mara could not see a face, but she felt it looking at her. This time it did not speak. It only reached toward a box marked Do not throw away and pushed it slowly across the floor until it stopped at her feet.
Mara looked at Jesus.
He nodded.
She knelt and opened the box. Inside were dozens of envelopes, most unopened, all addressed in her mother’s handwriting. Some were for her father. Some for Silas. Some for Mara. The dates covered months from the illness. Her mother had written more than anyone knew.
Mara touched the top envelope with her name on it but did not open it. The real work of reading them belonged at the real table, with real light, after she returned. She understood that now. The Backrooms could reveal, but it could not become home.
She placed the envelope back carefully and closed the lid.
“Not here,” she said.
The shadow lowered its head, and something in its body loosened. The chains of old Christmas lights slipped off its shoulders and fell to the floor. A few bulbs flickered once, then went dark.
A door appeared on the far wall beneath the small basement window. It was not white or yellow or blue. It was the color of unfinished wood, plain and solid. On it hung three objects: a child’s red shoelace, a scrap of paper from Hannah’s note, and a strip of film burned at the edges. Eli, Jonas, Renn, Mara. Their rooms were beginning to connect, not as traps now, but as witnesses.
Jonas stared at the scrap of paper. “That looks like Hannah’s handwriting.”
Jesus walked to the door. “It is time to go where your waiting has not yet been answered.”
Jonas grew very still. “Mine?”
“Yes.”
The old man touched the note in his pocket as if confirming it was still there. “I thought I was just helping them now.”
“You have been,” Jesus said. “But mercy has not forgotten you while you stood beside another.”
Jonas lowered his head. Mara saw fear move across his face, quieter than Renn’s, older than Eli’s, different from her own. His daughter was dead. There was no phone call to make that would bring Hannah home from the rainy road. There was no porch light he could ask someone to keep on. Whatever door waited for Jonas would not open onto repair in the same way Mara’s had.
She stepped close to him. “We are coming with you.”
He looked at her, and his eyes shone. “You do not have to.”
Mara held the key marked Come home, Thomas Vale’s Bible, and the coat she still carried for a warmth not yet given. “Leaving alone would not be love.”
Jonas looked at Jesus, then back at her. Something like a smile broke through his grief, small and worn, but alive. “You listen better than you pretend.”
“Occasionally.”
Renn rubbed his wrists. “I am also coming, mostly because the alternative is standing alone in this basement with that thing.”
The shadow in the center of the room shifted but did not rise.
Jonas looked at Renn. “I will take whatever reasons you have.”
Jesus opened the unfinished wooden door. Beyond it came the smell of rain on pavement, wet leaves, and gasoline. The sound of distant traffic moved through the doorway. Not the hum of fluorescent lights. Not the swallowed silence of the Backrooms. A road waited beyond, dark and shining under storm clouds, with the flash of hazard lights far ahead.
Jonas’s face changed when he smelled the rain.
“No,” he whispered.
Jesus did not force him forward. He stood with one hand on the open door, patient and grave. “I am with you.”
Jonas closed his eyes. His hand pressed over Hannah’s note until the paper crinkled beneath his pocket. Mara stood on one side of him. Renn stood on the other. Behind them, the basement boxes settled into silence, and the shadow of stored grief remained crouched but no longer ruling the room.
Jonas opened his eyes.
“All right,” he said, though his voice was barely more than breath.
Together they stepped through the door, leaving Mara’s family basement behind and entering the rain that Jonas had been hearing in his heart for years.
Chapter Seven: The Road That Kept Raining
Rain struck the pavement in hard silver lines, though there was no sky wide enough to hold it. The road stretched ahead of them under a low black ceiling that looked less like night and more like a hallway pretending to be outdoors. Yellow streetlights stood along the shoulder, each one buzzing like the fluorescent panels they had left behind, and beyond their pale circles there was nothing but wet darkness. The Backrooms had made a road, but it had not learned how open places work. The air felt trapped even outside.
Jonas stood just past the doorway with both hands hanging at his sides, unable to move. Rain ran down his face and into the collar of his blue work shirt. The note from Hannah stayed tucked in his pocket, protected by his hand, but his whole body had gone rigid. Mara saw the moment swallow him. He was no longer the old man who had walked through break rooms, basements, and halls with them. He was a father standing in the hour he had never escaped.
Renn stood a few feet behind him, quieter than Mara had ever seen him. His hoodie darkened under the rain, and Thomas Vale’s report stayed pressed in his pocket beneath one hand. He did not lift his camera. He did not even seem to think of it. That, more than anything, told Mara how heavy the road felt. Some moments could not be turned into footage without losing part of the soul.
Jesus stood beside Jonas and looked down the shining road. His face held sorrow, but not helplessness. The rain fell on Him the same as it fell on the others, soaking His jacket and darkening His hair. Still, the storm did not make Him seem smaller. He looked like the only truly solid thing in a world made from fear, memory, and unfinished grief.
Ahead, hazard lights blinked red through the rain.
Jonas made a sound so low Mara almost missed it. “That is her car.”
Mara followed his gaze. Far down the road, angled near the shoulder, sat a small dark sedan with its front end turned slightly toward the ditch. The headlights were still on. One of them flickered every few seconds. The road around it shimmered with water, oil, and broken glass. Beyond the car, barely visible through the rain, another set of lights glowed higher, larger, and still.
The truck.
Jonas took one step forward, then stopped as if a chain had tightened around his chest. “I cannot.”
Jesus looked at him. “You have been standing here for years.”
Jonas shook his head. Rain dripped from his lashes. “No. I was not here. I was at the building. I was holding a mop in a hallway while my daughter waited at a gas station. I was answering a supervisor who could not remember her name because he never knew it. I was telling myself one more valve, one more leak, one more minute.”
The road answered him.
From behind them came the sound of water spraying from broken pipes. Mara turned and saw, impossibly, the hallway Jonas had described opening along the left shoulder of the road. It ran parallel to them, an indoor corridor with white cinder block walls and gray water rushing across the floor. Emergency lights flashed above a utility door. A younger version of Jonas moved through that corridor in a blue work shirt, carrying tools, face tight with worry but still staying.
The real Jonas looked at his younger self with disgust so deep it seemed to bend him. “There. There I am.”
The younger Jonas stopped beside a ringing phone mounted to the wall. He looked at it, hesitated, then turned back toward the flooded hallway as someone shouted his name from offscreen. The phone kept ringing. The real Jonas clenched his fists.
“Answer it,” he whispered.
The younger man did not.
Jonas’s voice broke. “Answer it.”
Mara stepped closer but did not touch him. She understood enough now to know that comfort could become interruption if it arrived too fast. The road was not showing Jonas something he did not know. It was forcing him to stand where memory had been repeating itself without mercy.
Jesus looked toward the younger man in the flooded hallway. “You have cursed him as if hatred could teach him what fear did not.”
Jonas turned on Him, grief making him sharp. “He deserves it.”
“He is you.”
“That is why he deserves it.”
Jesus did not look away. “If you destroy him, who will walk out with Me?”
Jonas’s face twisted. For a moment, Mara thought he might argue. Instead, he looked back at the younger version of himself, and the anger in him seemed to lose its shape. Beneath it was horror. Beneath horror was a father who had spent years wishing he could hate himself enough to make time reverse.
The road ahead flashed red again.
A horn sounded from the truck, long and low.
Jonas flinched as if struck. “She was scared.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“I told her to wait.”
“You did.”
“She waited.”
“Yes.”
Mara expected Jesus to say something soft after that, but He did not. The truth stood in the rain without cover. Jonas had told Hannah to wait, and Hannah had waited until fear, youth, rain, and fatigue carried her into a choice that could not be undone. Mercy did not need to erase the facts in order to enter them. Mara had learned that in rooms she wished had never existed.
Jonas turned toward the distant car. “Can I see her?”
Jesus was quiet for a long moment. “You may see what has held you. You may not make the past give what only My Father can give.”
Jonas nodded once, though he clearly did not understand all of it. Maybe he did not need to. Maybe no one understood mercy before stepping into it. He began walking down the road.
They followed him.
The rain thickened. Water ran along the edges of the pavement in narrow streams that reflected the red hazard lights. On either side of the road, the darkness held glimpses of rooms instead of fields. A child’s bedroom appeared behind a guardrail, then vanished. A classroom flickered beyond a ditch. A hospital waiting room hung in the rain for three steps before dissolving. The Backrooms was trying to remind them that no road here was only a road. Every place was connected to some wound it wanted to keep open.
Jonas kept his eyes on the car.
The younger Jonas in the flooded hallway walked beside them now, separated by an invisible wall. He was still working. Still rushing. Still glancing toward the phone and then away. The real Jonas watched him with growing pain, and Mara saw the strange cruelty of the room. It would not let him focus only on the crash. It made him watch the delay, the small choices, the work ethic that looked responsible until love needed something else.
Renn spoke quietly. “Who told you to stay?”
Jonas did not answer at first. Rain tapped against the road in a thousand small strikes. “My supervisor. But that is too easy. I stayed because I had spent my whole life believing a good man finishes the job in front of him. My father taught me that. His father taught him. You do not leave water running. You do not leave a crew short. You do not make trouble by saying no.”
“Even for your daughter?” Mara asked.
Jonas looked at her, not angry, only broken by the question. “That is what I have asked myself every day since.”
They neared the sedan. The driver’s door was closed. The windshield had cracked in a white spiderweb near the passenger side. The front bumper rested in wet grass. The hazard lights blinked inside the rain, and each flash lit the interior for half a second.
Jonas stopped ten feet away.
Mara could not see Hannah clearly. Part of her was grateful for that. Another part felt ashamed for being grateful. The road held enough truth without making everyone look directly at what belonged most deeply to a father and his daughter.
Jesus stepped to Jonas’s side. “I am here.”
Jonas’s breath came fast. “I thought about this moment every day. I thought if I could only get here, if I could only reach her before she was alone, if I could only open the door, then maybe the rest of my life would make sense.”
“And now?”
Jonas looked at the car with a terror that had no room left to hide. “Now I know I cannot change it.”
The words left him like blood.
The sedan’s radio turned on by itself.
At first there was only static. Then a young woman’s voice filled the car, muffled but clear. Hannah. She was crying, but trying not to. “Dad, I am going to try to make it home. The rain is slowing down a little. I know you said wait. I am not mad. I just want to be home.”
Jonas covered his mouth.
The recording continued. “I hope you do not feel bad if this message sounds dramatic. I am sitting in a gas station parking lot like a baby, and this storm is stupid. I am leaving this because I do not want you to worry if I miss your call. Love you.”
The radio went silent.
Jonas stood in the rain as if the road had taken his bones. “She said she was not mad.”
Mara felt tears come again. Renn turned his face away. Jesus did not look away from Jonas.
The car door unlocked with a soft click.
Jonas took a step toward it, then stopped. “If I open that door, what happens?”
Jesus answered gently. “What has already happened remains. What has not yet happened in you may change.”
Jonas looked at Him. “That is a hard mercy.”
“Yes.”
The old man walked to the car. His hand shook as he reached for the handle. He opened the door only a few inches at first, as though grief might rush out in a force too great to survive. The interior light came on. Rain fell harder. Mara lowered her eyes, but she heard Jonas inhale sharply.
“Hannah,” he whispered.
Mara did not see the daughter in the car. She saw Jonas. That was enough. His face opened with such pain that she understood why people spend years avoiding the room where grief waits. No person can look at love lost and remain unchanged. Jonas reached into the car with one trembling hand, not touching at first, then gently lifting something from the passenger seat.
It was a small yellow jacket.
Not the one Hannah had worn in the false street. Smaller. A child’s raincoat.
Jonas turned back with it in his hands. “This was hers when she was little.”
Jesus nodded.
Jonas held the raincoat against his chest. “Why is it here?”
“Because you have remembered her death more faithfully than you remembered her life.”
Jonas bowed over the raincoat. The words did not rebuke him cruelly. They gave him back something grief had stolen. Hannah had not only been a seventeen-year-old on a wet road. She had been a little girl in a yellow coat jumping over puddles, a child asking for pancakes, a teenager rolling her eyes, a daughter leaving voice messages, a life made of thousands of moments before the final one.
The road shifted.
The sedan faded slightly. In its place, for a few seconds, Mara saw a little girl in a yellow raincoat stomping through puddles outside a brick house. Jonas, younger and laughing, stood nearby with an umbrella he had given up trying to keep over both of them. Hannah squealed when water splashed too high. He pretended to be offended, then stepped into the puddle with both boots, sending water everywhere.
The image vanished back into the rainy road.
Jonas held the small coat and wept. “I forgot that day.”
“No,” Jesus said. “Grief covered it. It did not destroy it.”
The truck lights ahead flickered.
A low voice came from the darkness beyond the sedan. It was not the tall creature. It was not the basement shadow. It sounded like wet gravel under tires.
If you let go of blame, you let go of her.
Jonas lifted his head.
The voice came again, closer.
If you stop punishing yourself, you stop loving her.
The road darkened. The younger Jonas in the flooded hallway pounded on the invisible wall now, screaming silently. The truck headlights brightened until Mara had to squint. Renn stepped back. Mara felt the pull of the lie even though it was not aimed at her. It was an old lie, one grief often trusted because it sounded loyal. Keep hurting yourself. Keep the wound fresh. Otherwise you will prove the lost one did not matter.
Jonas clutched the raincoat. “I do not know how to love her without this.”
Jesus moved closer to him. “You have confused the wound with the love.”
Jonas shook his head. “The wound is what is left.”
“No,” Jesus said. “I am.”
The rain seemed to pause around those words. Not stop. Pause. As if each drop waited before falling.
Jonas looked at Jesus with a desperation that stripped him of every defense. “Where was He? Where was the Father when she was on this road?”
The question came out raw, and Mara felt the air change around it. Renn looked at the pavement. Mara held her breath. Some questions were too sacred for quick answers, and she feared any answer that would make the road smaller than it was.
Jesus did not speak right away. He looked toward the sedan, then toward the truck lights, then back at Jonas. Rain ran down His face like tears, though His eyes remained clear.
“He was not absent from the place you could not reach,” Jesus said.
Jonas’s lips trembled. “That does not tell me why.”
“No.”
“Then what does it tell me?”
“That the worst moment of her life did not belong to the darkness alone.”
Jonas closed his eyes.
Jesus continued, His voice low and steady. “You could not hold her there. That has tormented you. But do not believe the lie that because your arms were absent, love itself was absent.”
The road trembled beneath them. The voice from the truck growled, but it did not speak. Mara felt the difference between explanation and presence. Jesus was not solving Hannah’s death as if it were a puzzle. He was standing with Jonas in the question without surrendering him to despair.
The driver’s side window of the sedan rolled down by itself.
A folded paper rested on the sill. Jonas stared at it, then looked at Jesus.
Jesus said, “Take it.”
Jonas reached for the paper. It was dry, untouched by rain. He unfolded it with slow care. Mara saw handwriting, big and rounded, a child’s handwriting. Jonas read silently at first, then gave a broken laugh that turned into crying.
“What is it?” Mara asked softly.
Jonas held the paper out enough for them to see. It was a picture drawn in crayon. A little girl in a yellow raincoat stood beside a tall man in blue. Above them, in uneven letters, Hannah had written, Me and Dad saving the world from puddles.
Jonas pressed the drawing against his chest with the raincoat. “I kept this on the fridge for years.”
The younger Jonas in the flooded hallway stopped pounding. He turned toward the real Jonas. For the first time, the younger man seemed to see him. The invisible wall between them shimmered. The phone in the hallway rang again.
The younger Jonas looked at it.
The real Jonas whispered, “Answer it.”
This time, the younger man did. He lifted the receiver to his ear. The hallway scene did not change the past. Mara understood that. Hannah was still in the car. The road still held rain. But the younger Jonas listened, and the real Jonas watched, and something inside the old man shifted. Memory was not rewriting the accident. It was letting him see the man he had been as more than the worst delay he ever made.
The younger Jonas lowered the phone and looked toward the flooded hallway where someone still called for help. Then he looked toward the exit at the end of the corridor. He chose the exit.
The flooded hallway faded.
Jonas gasped as if something had been pulled from his chest. He sank to one knee in the rain, holding the small coat and the crayon drawing. Jesus knelt beside him, not above him. Mara had seen Jesus kneel in the yellow carpet at the beginning of this nightmare. Now He knelt on wet pavement beside a father who had spent years unable to forgive the man he once was.
“I should have chosen her,” Jonas said.
“Yes,” Jesus answered.
The truth fell gently, but it still fell.
Jonas wept harder. “I am sorry.”
Jesus placed a hand on his shoulder. “Your sorrow has been heard.”
The truck headlights flared. The gravel voice returned, furious now.
Sorry does not open graves.
Jonas looked toward the lights.
Jesus did too. “No,” He said. “I do.”
The road shook so hard that Mara stumbled. Renn caught her arm before she fell. The truck lights shattered into long streaks across the rain, and for a moment the whole road looked like a tunnel of red and white fire. Then the darkness behind the truck opened.
Not into more Backrooms.
Into a field.
It was not a full, open world. Not yet. But beyond the rain and the wrecked road, Mara saw green grass under morning light. A little girl in a yellow raincoat stood near the edge of it, holding an umbrella far too large for her. She was not the seventeen-year-old from the car. She was not only the child from the memory. She was both and neither, seen through mercy rather than time. Her face was bright with life the road had not been able to erase.
Jonas stopped breathing.
“Hannah,” he said.
The girl smiled. Mara could not hear her voice, but Jonas seemed to. His face changed as if words had reached him from farther away than sound could travel. He shook his head once, like a man who could not believe grace had found a path through so much rain.
He looked at Jesus. “Can I go to her?”
Jesus’ expression was tender and grave. “Not by death. Not by despair. Not by refusing the days still given to you.”
Jonas looked back at the field. The girl in the yellow raincoat lifted one hand. The gesture was simple. Not goodbye in the final sense. More like a child waving from a doorway, trusting her father would come when it was time.
Jonas pressed the crayon drawing against his chest. “Then why show me?”
“So you will stop believing she is only behind you.”
The field brightened. The rain eased. The sedan, the truck lights, and the flooded hallway all faded until only the wet road remained. The little girl in the yellow raincoat grew fainter, but before she vanished, she lifted the umbrella and splashed one boot into a puddle. Water flew up in a bright arc.
Jonas laughed through his tears.
Then the field was gone.
The road was quiet.
Rain still fell, but softer now. The old man remained on one knee, holding the raincoat and drawing. Mara knelt beside him and placed a hand on his back. Renn crouched on his other side, awkward and sincere, not knowing what to say and finally wise enough not to say much.
Jonas looked at Mara. “I thought if I forgave myself, I would lose the last way I had to stay with her.”
Mara nodded. “I think I understand that.”
He looked at Renn. “I thought punishment was proof.”
Renn’s face tightened. “Yeah.”
Jonas looked at Jesus. “What do I do with the rest of my life?”
Jesus helped him stand. “Live it where love can still bear fruit.”
Jonas looked down at the little raincoat. “For who?”
Jesus looked back toward the road behind them, where the unfinished wooden door still stood open in the distance. “For those who are waiting in rooms you now know how to enter without worshiping the grief inside them.”
Jonas held the raincoat with new care. “I am old.”
“Yes,” Jesus said.
“I am tired.”
“Yes.”
“I am afraid I will forget this.”
Jesus touched the crayon drawing. “Then remember her with mercy, not only pain.”
The drawing folded itself once, then again, becoming small enough to fit behind Hannah’s note in Jonas’s pocket. The raincoat changed too. It shrank and softened until it became a yellow ribbon tied around his wrist. Jonas stared at it. The ribbon fluttered slightly in the rain, bright against his scarred skin.
The road ahead began to dissolve. The asphalt broke into squares of carpet. The streetlights bent down into fluorescent panels. The rain thinned into water stains on ceiling tiles. Slowly, the false outdoors folded back into the Backrooms.
But one thing remained different.
The sound of rain did not disappear completely. It softened into a gentle tapping somewhere beyond the walls, not threatening now, not accusing. It sounded like weather passing over a roof while people sat safely inside.
A door appeared where the truck had been. It was made of dark wood with a small window near the top. Through the window, Mara saw a room filled with rows of shelves. Some held files. Some held shoes. Some held old cameras, phones, jackets, keys, badges, notebooks, and small objects she could not name. At the center of the room stood a woman with silver hair and a cardigan, arranging paper cups on a table.
Mrs. Calder.
Renn stepped back as if the road had shifted under him again. “No.”
Mara looked through the small window. The woman inside did not look frightened. She did not look angry. She looked tired in a human way, the way people look after years of caring without knowing whether their care had landed anywhere.
Jesus turned to Renn. “The truth you must tell begins where help first waited.”
Renn swallowed hard. “That is not the real her.”
“No.”
“Then what is the point?”
Jesus looked at him with firm compassion. “If you cannot face the mercy you mocked in a room made from memory, you will not seek it in the world where she can answer.”
Renn touched Thomas Vale’s report in his pocket. His wrists still held red marks from the cords. Mara saw the fight inside him. He wanted the next room and feared it. He wanted truth and feared being seen by someone who had offered him a path before judgment did. That kind of mercy can feel sharper than anger when a person has prepared only for punishment.
Jonas stood straighter than before. The yellow ribbon on his wrist rested against his skin like a small flame. He looked at Renn. “We are coming with you.”
Renn stared at him. “You just walked through the worst night of your life.”
Jonas nodded. “And I am still walking.”
Mara stepped beside Renn. “Leaving alone would not be love.”
He looked at her with a tired glare. “You both are going to wear that sentence out.”
“Probably,” Mara said.
For a moment, Renn looked like he might laugh. He did not, but something in his face loosened. The dark wood door waited. Behind it, Mrs. Calder placed another paper cup on the table, then looked toward the window as if she knew they were there.
Jesus opened the door.
Warm air drifted out, smelling of coffee, old paper, raincoats drying on hooks, and a kind of plain kindness that made Renn look more afraid than the road had. Mara glanced back once before stepping through. The rain-road was almost gone now, folded into a narrow strip of wet carpet. Jonas touched the yellow ribbon, and his eyes closed for one brief second.
Then they entered the room where mercy had once been offered, and Renn had to face what he had done with it.
Chapter Eight: The Table Where Mercy Waited
The room beyond the dark wooden door did not frighten Mara at first, and that made her watch it more carefully. By now she had learned that the Backrooms did not only use darkness, monsters, and endless yellow halls. Sometimes it used gentleness because gentleness was harder to distrust without revealing how deeply a person had been trained to expect harm. This room looked like a small community pantry and records office stitched together from memory. Shelves lined the walls from floor to ceiling, and every shelf held something ordinary that seemed to carry the weight of a life: coats folded over wire hangers, paper bags with names written in marker, old phones, children’s shoes, work badges, keys, notebooks, and file boxes labeled in careful handwriting.
Mrs. Calder stood at a folding table near the center of the room, setting out paper cups beside a silver coffee urn. She wore the same gray cardigan from the image they had seen in the blue basement. Her silver hair was pulled back with a small clip, and her reading glasses hung from a cord around her neck. She looked solid enough to touch, but Mara had stopped trusting that kind of solidness. The Backrooms made copies with terrible skill. It could borrow a mother’s voice, build a childhood street, and bring a dead road back under rain. Yet this room did not hum with hunger. It breathed like a place where people had come in cold and left with something warm in their hands.
Renn stopped just inside the doorway. His whole body tightened as if he had walked into a courtroom instead of a pantry. Rain still darkened his hoodie from Jonas’s road, and his wrists bore red marks where the cords had wrapped him in Mara’s basement. He had Thomas Vale’s report in his pocket, and every few seconds his fingers went there as if the folded paper might disappear if he did not check. His camera hung useless from one hand. The lens was cracked from the blue room, but he had not let it go.
Jonas came in behind him, slower but steadier than before. The yellow ribbon on his wrist seemed too bright for the room, a small mercy tied to skin that had carried years of punishment. He looked at the shelves with the grave attention of a man who now understood lost things differently. Mara noticed that he did not avoid the children’s coats on the wall. His eyes filled when he saw them, but he did not turn away. That felt like its own kind of miracle.
Jesus entered last, though nothing about Him felt last. The room seemed to gather around Him the way quiet gathers around prayer. Mrs. Calder looked up from the cups and saw Him first. Her expression changed. Not with shock. Not with theatrical wonder. It softened with recognition that seemed older than the room itself.
“Lord,” she said.
Renn stepped back so fast his shoulder hit the door.
Mara looked at him, then at Mrs. Calder. “She knows You.”
Jesus walked toward the table. “She has spoken to Me often.”
Mrs. Calder’s eyes moved to Renn. The tenderness in her face did not remove the seriousness. If anything, it made the seriousness heavier. She looked at him the way a person looks at someone they once invited in from the cold and later heard had gone deeper into the storm. There was no smugness in her. No satisfaction. That was what seemed to unnerve Renn most.
He pointed at her with the camera, not filming, just holding it like a shield. “You are not real.”
Mrs. Calder did not seem offended. “No, son. Not in the way I would like to be.”
His jaw tightened. “Do not call me that.”
She nodded once. “All right.”
The room held the small concession gently. Mara felt something shift. The Backrooms loved forcing people into corners, but Mrs. Calder did not. She accepted the boundary without surrendering the truth. Renn looked thrown by that simple respect. He seemed prepared for accusation, pity, religious language, or a trap. He was not prepared for a woman who would stop calling him son because he asked, and still remain in the room.
Jesus stood beside the table. “Renn.”
Renn did not look at Him. He stared at Mrs. Calder as if he could make her flicker by refusing her.
Jesus spoke again. “You mocked mercy because you feared it would see you clearly.”
Renn gave a sharp laugh, but it broke too quickly. “Mercy does not send messages asking for a private meeting after your video gets a man killed.”
Mara inhaled. The words landed hard in the room. She expected the shelves to rattle or the coffee urn to hiss with the old Backrooms hunger, but nothing moved. Mrs. Calder only lowered her eyes for a moment, not in retreat, but in grief.
When she looked up, her voice was quiet. “I did not know Thomas Vale’s name then. I wish I had. I knew him only as the man who came on Thursdays and sat near the back wall. He liked two sugars in his coffee and never took a second plate until everyone else had eaten. He repaired the hinge on that pantry door once without anyone asking.”
Renn’s face tightened at the name.
Mrs. Calder continued. “After the fire, people brought rumors before they brought facts. Some said a ghost had been seen. Some said trespassers woke something. Some said a man had been hiding there and no one cared. I cared about that last one because I knew a man had been hiding everywhere he could, and I had not seen him for two weeks.”
Mara looked toward the pantry door Mrs. Calder had mentioned. It stood in the corner, painted green, with a brass hinge that looked newer than the rest. A small repair, invisible unless someone knew to look. Thomas Vale had left evidence of care in a room that had tried to care for him.
Renn looked at the floor. “We did not know his name.”
“No,” Mrs. Calder said. “But you knew he asked not to be shown.”
He flinched.
The coffee urn clicked softly. Steam rose, carrying the smell of bitter warmth. Jonas moved to one of the folding chairs and sat, not because he was leaving the moment, but because grief had made his legs honest. Mara remained near Renn. She wanted to speak for him and against him at the same time. That was the strange thing about shared guilt. It tempted you to protect the person who could expose you because their downfall felt close to your own. But truth had become too costly to treat as something they could manage.
Renn reached into his pocket and pulled out Thomas Vale’s report. His hands shook as he unfolded it. “We found this.”
Mrs. Calder looked at the paper. Her face changed when she saw the name. She lifted one hand toward it, then stopped before touching. Her fingers hovered in the air as if she were afraid the name might bruise.
“Thomas Alwyn Vale,” Renn said.
Mrs. Calder closed her eyes. Her lips moved, but Mara did not hear the words. A prayer, maybe. A name offered back to God. When she opened her eyes, there were tears in them.
“Thank you,” she said.
Renn looked almost angry. “Do not thank me.”
“I am thanking God for the name,” she said. “Not excusing what you did with the namelessness.”
That answer silenced him.
Jesus pulled a chair away from the table and turned it slightly toward Renn. “Sit.”
Renn looked at the chair like it might close around him. “I am fine standing.”
“You are not.”
“I said I am fine.”
Jesus did not argue. He waited. Renn stood there with the cracked camera in one hand and the report in the other, breathing through the kind of stubbornness that had once helped him survive and now kept him bleeding. Finally, with a hard exhale, he sat. He did not sit like someone resting. He sat like someone expecting impact.
Mrs. Calder poured coffee into a paper cup and set it near him. “You do not have to drink it.”
Renn stared at the cup. “Is this another test?”
“No,” she said. “It is coffee.”
Jonas made a small sound from his chair. Mara could not tell if it was amusement or sorrow. Maybe both. Renn looked at the cup as though ordinary kindness had become more dangerous than any monster in the halls. He did not touch it.
Jesus sat across from him. Mrs. Calder remained standing near the urn. Mara took the chair beside Renn, not too close. She placed Thomas Vale’s Bible on the table between them. The cracked spine rested beside the folded report, and the room felt suddenly less like a memory and more like a place where testimony was being gathered.
Renn looked at the Bible. “Was that his?”
Mara nodded. “It was in the room where we found his name.”
Renn reached toward it, then pulled his hand back. “I used to hate when people said things were sacred.”
Mrs. Calder looked at him. “Why?”
“Because they usually meant nobody was allowed to question them.”
“And now?”
He stared at the Bible. “Now I think maybe it means you cannot use it however you want.”
Jesus’ eyes rested on him with a quiet gravity. “That is part of it.”
The shelves around the room rustled. A file box on the far wall slid forward an inch. Renn noticed it and stiffened. The box was labeled Messages Not Answered. The handwriting looked like his own. Another box beside it was labeled Jokes That Covered Fear. Another read People I Made Into Proof. One more, larger than the others, had only one word on it: Evidence.
Renn’s chair scraped back. “No.”
Mara put a hand on the table. “Stay.”
He glared at her. “Easy for you to say.”
“It was not easy when I answered the phone.”
“This is different.”
“Yes,” she said. “It is yours.”
The truth stopped him. He looked toward Jesus, perhaps hoping for a gentler version. Jesus did not give him one.
Mrs. Calder walked to the shelf and lifted down the box labeled Evidence. She carried it with both arms, careful but not timid, and set it on the table. The cardboard was warped at the corners. Its lid had been taped many times. Across the top, beneath the main label, someone had written smaller words in black marker: Things I Saved So I Would Not Have to Change.
Renn’s face drained of color.
The lid opened by itself.
Inside were memory cards, printed screenshots, voice memo transcripts, comment threads, old email chains, scraps of notebook paper, receipts from gas stations near abandoned places, and a small digital recorder with a cracked corner. The recorder clicked on. Renn reached for it, but Jesus lifted one hand, and he stopped.
A voice came through the tiny speaker. Renn’s voice, younger and rough with excitement.
“He said not to use his face, but audio is fair. Audio is fair. We are not showing him. People need to understand how wrong that building feels.”
Mara closed her eyes. She remembered that night. She remembered sitting in Renn’s car afterward with the heat running and the windows fogging. She remembered saying, “Maybe we should cut him completely.” Renn had said the video would not work without the knock and the voice. She had argued for two minutes, then stopped because the truth was she wanted the video to work too.
Her own voice came next from the recorder, smaller than she expected. “Blur the door more. If people cannot tell what they are looking at, it will feel less exploitative.”
Renn looked at her.
Mara did not look away. “I said it.”
The recorder clicked again. Renn’s voice returned. “Less exploitative is good enough.”
Mara swallowed the sickness rising in her throat. That phrase had lived somewhere in her without words for years. Less exploitative. Not kind. Not truthful. Not protective. Just edited enough to quiet the conscience and keep the scene.
Mrs. Calder sat slowly, as if the weight of the words had reached her bones. “That is a terrible sentence.”
Renn stared at the table. “I know.”
“Do you know now, or did you know then?”
He did not answer quickly. The room seemed to wait with a patience that made lying harder. “Then,” he said at last. “Some part of me knew then.”
Mara nodded. “Me too.”
The box shifted. A stack of printed comments rose to the surface. The top one read, That voice sounds like a real person. Did you help him? Another read, This feels wrong. Another read, Why are you treating him like a prop? Beneath them were Renn’s replies, defensive and polished. We protected his identity. You do not know the full story. Please do not spread misinformation. Everyone involved was safe.
Renn covered his face. “Stop.”
Jesus’ voice was calm. “The room is not showing you this to destroy you.”
“It feels like destruction.”
“It is the death of a false defense,” Jesus said. “That is not the same as the death of the soul.”
Renn lowered his hands. His eyes were wet now, though he seemed angry about the tears. “What if that defense is most of what I am?”
“Then you are about to discover how much of you I can still call by name.”
Mara felt those words reach beyond Renn. Jonas lifted his head. Mrs. Calder folded her hands on the table. The shelves stilled. Even the coffee steam seemed to pause in the air.
Renn looked down at the cracked camera in his lap. “My name does not feel like mine anymore.”
Jesus leaned forward slightly. “Who gave it to you?”
“My mother.”
“What did she mean by it?”
Renn frowned. “I don’t know.”
“You do.”
He shook his head. “It means raven or something like that. She liked birds. She used to say ravens were smart enough to find food in terrible places.”
His voice changed when he said it. The hard edges softened, and for a second Mara saw the boy with the camcorder again, the one who wanted to prove he existed because no one had stayed long enough to make existence feel certain. Renn looked startled by his own memory.
Jesus said, “You learned to search terrible places. You did not learn what food was.”
The sentence moved through him visibly. His shoulders bent. He looked at the shelves, the box, the coffee, Mrs. Calder, and finally the Bible. “I thought truth was whatever showed people the darkness.”
“No,” Jesus said. “Truth is not less true because it includes light.”
Renn let out a breath that sounded like surrender trying not to be dramatic. “I do not know how to tell this without making it into something.”
Mrs. Calder answered before Jesus did. “Then tell it to one person who does not help your reputation.”
Renn looked at her.
She continued. “You send no public statement first. You make no grand video first. You do not ask strangers to admire your regret before the people closest to the wound have heard the truth. If Thomas has family, they should not learn from a performance. If the church kept record of him, we should search it. If you harmed the truth in public, you may need to correct it in public. But repentance should not begin with an audience clapping because you sounded sorry.”
Renn blinked hard. “You sound like Him.”
Mrs. Calder looked toward Jesus. “On my better days.”
For the first time in the room, Renn’s mouth almost smiled. It vanished quickly, but it had been there. Mara saw Jesus notice it too, not as humor alone, but as a small opening where humanity had returned.
The box labeled Evidence trembled. From beneath the comments and memory cards, a photograph rose. It showed the old school basement, not from Mara’s camera or Renn’s. The angle was lower, taken from near the pantry where Thomas Vale had slept. The image showed a folding chair, a blanket, books, and a coat hanging on a pipe. Not Mara’s coat. An older one, brown, torn at one sleeve. On the back of the photograph someone had written, T.V. came in for coffee today. Said he used to teach. Asked if the pantry needed shelves fixed.
Mrs. Calder took the photograph with trembling fingers. “This is from our volunteer board. I had forgotten we printed it.”
Renn looked at the image. “He was connected to this room.”
“Yes,” she said. “Not enough. But more than nothing.”
Mara’s chest tightened. The Backrooms had shown Thomas as hidden, but he had not been completely unseen. That truth was painful in a different way. He had brushed against mercy. He had helped repair a pantry door. He had sat at a table and taken coffee with two sugars. A life was rarely only the worst thing done to it. Even neglect had gaps where love had tried to enter.
Renn touched the photograph lightly with one finger. “How do we find his family?”
Mrs. Calder looked toward the shelves. “We begin with records. Shelter sign-ins. Old school employment archives. County death records. People who knew him before he was hard to find. It will be slow.”
Renn gave a weak laugh. “Slow is not my main skill.”
“No,” she said. “But it may be part of your healing.”
The word healing seemed to make him uncomfortable. He looked down at his camera, turning it over in his hands. The cracked lens caught the light and split it. “I do not think I should carry this anymore.”
Mara watched him carefully. “Your camera?”
“It became a weapon.”
Jesus looked at the camera. “What a thing became under fear is not always what it must remain under truth.”
Renn held it out toward Him. “Then what do I do with it?”
Jesus did not take it. “You decide whether you are willing to see people without taking from them.”
Renn’s hand sank back to his lap. He stared at the camera for a long time. Then he set it on the table beside the Bible, not thrown away, not reclaimed too quickly, simply placed down where it could stop acting as armor. That small movement changed the room. The shelves seemed to breathe.
The box labeled Evidence folded inward on itself. The comments, recordings, and screenshots did not vanish, but they arranged into neat stacks. A blank folder appeared on top. Its tab read First True Steps.
Inside were three pieces of paper. Renn opened the folder and read them silently. His eyes moved left to right, then returned to the top. Mara leaned slightly, but did not invade the page. When Renn looked up, his face carried dread and relief together.
“What does it say?” Jonas asked.
Renn swallowed. “Find Thomas Vale’s next of kin if they can be found. Contact Mrs. Calder in the real world. Tell Mara’s family the truth before any public correction.”
Mara felt her stomach drop at the last one, though she knew it was right. Her father and Silas needed to know more than that she had been distant. They needed to know what she had done, what she had hidden, and what she intended to do next. Coming home was not only a sentimental return. It was bringing the truth with her and trusting love enough to let it react.
Renn looked at Mara. “I am sorry.”
She expected a larger apology, but those three words were enough for this moment because they were not trying to carry everything. She nodded. “I am sorry too.”
“No,” he said, and his voice steadied. “I am sorry for using your guilt to avoid mine. I knew you were pulling away after the fire, and instead of telling the truth, I made you the cold one in my head so I could be the abandoned one. I sent messages that were half confession and half trap. I wanted you to answer, but I also wanted you to carry enough blame that I could stay hidden behind yours.”
Mara looked at him for a long time. The apology hurt because it named a pattern she had felt but never understood. It also freed her from needing to make Renn either monster or victim. He had harmed and been harmed. He had been left and had manipulated. He had used the truth and also feared it. He was complicated in the way real people are complicated when sin, fear, loneliness, and longing braid together.
“Thank you for saying it,” she said.
Renn looked down. “That sounded painfully mature.”
“It hurt to say,” Mara answered.
Jonas nodded from his chair. “Usually how you can tell it is real.”
Mrs. Calder poured another cup of coffee and set it near Jonas. This time he accepted it. He held it in both hands, letting the warmth reach his fingers. The yellow ribbon on his wrist rested against the cup.
Renn stared at his own coffee, then finally picked it up. He did not drink at first. He only held it. His hands shook less with something warm between them.
A bell rang near the pantry door.
Everyone turned.
The green door Thomas had repaired stood slightly open. Behind it was not a pantry shelf. It opened into a narrow passage lit by a row of small lamps. Along the walls hung coats. Winter coats, raincoats, work jackets, children’s parkas, suit coats, hoodies, sweaters, and old uniforms. Mara’s blue coat for Thomas seemed to pull at her arm. She had nearly forgotten it while sitting in the room with Renn, but now its weight returned.
Jesus looked toward the passage. “There is someone cold.”
Mara stood. “Thomas?”
Jesus did not answer directly. “Someone who needs what you have been carrying.”
She looked down at the coat. Dark blue. Practical. New. Still tagged. She had bought it too late for one man, and the Backrooms had made her carry it until she understood that usefulness did not end just because one moment could not be recovered.
Mrs. Calder stepped to the green door. “The pantry coats were always the first to go when winter turned hard.”
Mara joined her at the doorway. “Did Thomas ever take one?”
“Once,” Mrs. Calder said. “A brown one. Too thin, but he liked that it had deep pockets.”
Mara thought of the brown coat in the photograph, torn at one sleeve. “He kept it.”
“Yes.”
The passage beyond the pantry stretched farther than any pantry should. At the end, a figure sat on the floor with knees drawn up, face hidden behind folded arms. Not a child. Not old. A young woman, maybe twenty, wearing a thin sweatshirt dark with damp. Her hair hung in strings around her face. She shivered so hard Mara could see it from the doorway.
Renn stood behind Mara. “Who is she?”
Mrs. Calder looked at the young woman, then at the shelves in the room, as if searching a record only mercy could read. “I don’t know.”
Jesus said, “Her name is Liora.”
The young woman lifted her head at the sound of her name.
Her eyes were black with fear. Not because they were unnatural, but because she had been afraid too long. She looked at Jesus first, then at Mara holding the coat. Her lips moved, but no sound came.
Mara stepped into the passage.
The coats along the walls rustled. Some reached slightly toward her as she passed, sleeves shifting like tired arms. She kept walking. The blue coat felt heavier with each step, not because the fabric changed, but because giving it away meant accepting that love could still act after failure. She had used the coat as evidence against herself for so long that handing it over felt almost like losing punishment.
Liora pressed back against the wall when Mara came near. “I didn’t steal it,” she whispered.
Mara stopped a few feet away and crouched so she would not stand over her. “Steal what?”
“The warmth.” Liora’s voice was hoarse. “I only took it because I was cold.”
Mara looked at Jesus. He stood at the entrance of the passage, near but not crowding. “What happened to her?”
Liora answered before He did. “I was in the stairwell. I was supposed to wait for my friend, but the door opened to this place. There was a closet full of coats. I took one. Then every hallway got colder. Every time I tried to put it on, someone cried like I had taken it from them.”
Mara looked at the coat in her arms. The Backrooms had trapped this woman in false guilt over warmth itself. It was cruel in a way that made Mara angry. Not every need was theft. Not every receiving was selfish. Some people had been taught to apologize for needing anything at all.
Mara held out the blue coat. “This one is for you.”
Liora stared at it. “No.”
“Yes.”
“I will owe you.”
“No,” Mara said, then paused because the simple denial was not enough. “You will not owe me your fear. You will not owe me your story. You will not owe me proof that you deserved it. You are cold, and this is a coat.”
Liora’s face crumpled. The words from Mrs. Calder returned in Mara’s mind. It is coffee. Now it was a coat. Mercy did not become smaller because it was practical. Maybe practical mercy was one of the ways holiness entered rooms where people had been too cold to understand anything else.
Liora reached for the coat slowly. Mara let her take it. The young woman pulled it around her shoulders, and the shivering eased almost at once. She closed her eyes, and a sound came from her that was not quite crying and not quite relief. It was the sound a person makes when the body realizes it does not have to fight the air.
The passage warmed.
The coats on the walls settled. A small white door appeared behind Liora. Not bright like Eli’s, but clean and real. Through it came a smell of wet pavement, car exhaust, and city night. Liora looked at the door in terror.
“Is that out?” she asked.
Jesus walked down the passage and stood beside Mara. “For you.”
Liora gripped the coat closed. “What if I lose it?”
“You may keep it,” Jesus said.
She looked at Mara, stunned.
Mara smiled softly. “I should have given it sooner. That does not mean I cannot give it now.”
Liora rose on unsteady legs. She looked back at the coat passage, Mrs. Calder’s room, Jonas, Renn, and Mara. Then she looked at Jesus. “Why did You know my name?”
His face softened. “Because you had one before fear called you a burden.”
Liora’s tears came then. She did not speak again. She stepped through the white door and vanished into the sound of real night. The door closed, leaving the passage warmer than before.
Mara stayed crouched for a moment after Liora was gone. Her arms felt strangely empty without the coat. She had carried it through so many rooms that its absence felt like a new kind of weight. Jesus stood beside her, and she looked up at Him.
“I thought giving it away would make me feel better,” she said.
“And does it?”
“Not exactly.”
“What does it make you feel?”
She thought before answering. “Responsible in a different way. Less trapped. More aware of how many small things I ignored because they could not fix the big thing.”
Jesus nodded. “Love is not excused from the small because the large is beyond your reach.”
Mara let the words settle. She had spent years overwhelmed by what could not be undone. Thomas’s death. Her mother’s final days. Her absence from home. Jonas’s rain road. Renn’s videos. All of it had seemed so large that ordinary kindness felt insulting, almost useless. But Liora had not needed Mara to rewrite history. She had needed a coat.
They returned to Mrs. Calder’s room. Renn watched Mara with a look she could not read at first. Then he picked up his camera from the table and removed the memory card. He set the card beside Thomas Vale’s report.
“What are you doing?” Mara asked.
“Returning what I took,” he said.
Mrs. Calder looked at the memory card. “What is on it?”
“Some of the original footage from the school. Maybe all of it. I kept backups.” He looked ashamed but did not look away. “Not because I planned to do right with them. Because I was afraid to lose proof that the moment belonged to me.”
Jesus said, “And now?”
Renn pushed the card gently toward the Bible. “Now the proof belongs to the truth.”
The room shook once, but not violently. A shelf labeled Evidence slid back into the wall and disappeared. In its place appeared a narrow window. Through it, Mara saw not outdoors, but a hallway with yellow carpet and a ceiling full of lights. At the far end stood the tall bent creature from the first rooms, watching.
It had followed them through every unresolved place. Its shape seemed thinner now, but not gone. It had lost Eli. It had failed to keep Jonas at the table. It had failed to trap Mara in the hospital room, the family kitchen, and the basement phone call. It had failed to make Renn perform his sorrow for a false audience. Yet it still waited because not every door had been opened.
Mrs. Calder saw it too. She did not step back. She placed one hand on the table and looked at Jesus.
“That one is not grief,” she said.
“No,” Jesus answered.
Renn’s voice dropped. “What is it?”
Jesus looked through the window. “Accusation without love. Fear without sorrow. Hunger without life.”
Mara felt the difference at once. The basement shadow had been terrible, but it was made from stored grief. It could be named, softened, and returned to its rightful size. This thing was colder. It did not want healing. It wanted rooms to stay rooms forever. It wanted every failure to become identity, every memory to become a snare, every lost person to become a voice that called the living away from mercy.
The creature lifted one long hand and placed it against the far window from the other side.
The window cracked.
Mrs. Calder’s room dimmed.
Jesus rose.
“It cannot enter where truth is received,” He said. “But it can still wait where truth has not yet been obeyed.”
Mara knew what that meant before He looked at her. She had called home, but she had not reached it. Renn had named his first steps, but he had not walked them outside this place. Jonas had seen the rain road, but he had not yet been given his own door. Thomas Vale’s name had been found, but not returned to the living world. They had received truth. They still had to obey it.
A new door appeared beside the window. It was the plainest door yet, painted the same faded yellow as the first halls. A small sign hung crookedly at eye level.
EXIT HALL.
Renn gave a weak breath. “That seems suspicious.”
Jonas stood, holding his coffee cup with both hands. “Everything here is suspicious.”
Mara looked at Jesus. “Is it the way out?”
“It is the way toward the last hall,” He said.
“The last hall for who?”
Jesus looked at all of them, and His eyes carried the weight of every room behind them. “For those who have stopped asking only how to escape and have begun asking what must come with them into the light.”
Mrs. Calder gathered the memory card, the report, and the photograph of Thomas Vale. She placed them in a plain manila folder. On the tab, she wrote his full name in neat letters. Then she handed the folder to Renn.
“This is not a prop,” she said.
Renn accepted it with both hands. “I know.”
“Do you?”
He looked at the name. “I am beginning to.”
She nodded. “Then carry it that way.”
Jonas set his empty coffee cup on the table. “Thank you, ma’am.”
Mrs. Calder smiled at him with tired kindness. “For coffee?”
“For not making it strange.”
Her smile deepened. “Ordinary mercy is strange enough.”
Mara looked around the room one last time. The pantry door Thomas had repaired. The coat hooks. The files. The coffee urn. The table where Renn had set down his camera and picked up a first true step. It did not feel like a trap now. It felt like a room that had done what it was meant to do. Not solve everything. Not erase guilt. Offer a place where the truth could sit down without being thrown out.
Jesus opened the yellow door.
The Exit Hall waited beyond it, long and narrow, with lights buzzing overhead and damp carpet underfoot. At the far end, barely visible, stood another door. No sign. No window. Only a handle dark with use.
Mara stepped into the hall. Renn came beside her, carrying Thomas Vale’s folder. Jonas followed, touching the yellow ribbon on his wrist. Mrs. Calder did not come. When Mara turned back, the older woman stood in the pantry room with one hand resting on the table.
“You are not coming?” Mara asked.
“I am where I was given to be,” Mrs. Calder said.
Renn looked at her. “Will I find you?”
“In the world where you can choose to knock.”
He nodded, unable to say more.
Jesus stepped through last. The yellow door closed behind Him, and Mrs. Calder’s room disappeared. The hall ahead hummed with the old sound, but it no longer felt endless. It felt like a passage that hated the fact it had become one.
Far behind them, through walls they could not see, something struck the glass and began to follow.
Chapter Nine: The Hall That Hated Their Names
The Exit Hall was narrower than Mara expected. After so many rooms that stretched beyond reason, the tightness felt almost personal. Yellow walls pressed close on both sides, and the damp carpet made a soft sucking sound under their shoes. The ceiling lights buzzed in uneven rows overhead, some bright, some dim, some flickering as if the hallway were struggling to keep pretending it had power. At the far end waited a door with no sign, but it did not seem to grow nearer when they walked.
Renn carried Thomas Vale’s folder against his chest with both hands. His cracked camera hung by its strap at his side, no longer shield or weapon, just an object that had lost the right to lead him. Jonas walked beside him, slower than before, but his steps were steadier. The yellow ribbon around his wrist moved faintly when he breathed, and Mara noticed he touched it less often now. He still carried grief, but it no longer seemed to be carrying him in the same way.
Jesus walked with them, not ahead and not behind. His presence changed the hall, though the hall kept trying to deny it. Every few yards, the wallpaper shifted into patterns that looked like faces if Mara glanced too quickly. Every sound they made came back slightly wrong, as if the hallway tried to imitate them and failed. Mara could hear her own footsteps return a half second late. Renn’s breathing sounded farther away than he was. Jonas’s limp echoed like someone walking behind them who did not belong.
Something struck the wall behind them.
Renn stopped. “That was closer.”
Jesus looked back down the hall. The way behind them had darkened. Far away, under a flickering light, the tall bent creature moved into view. It was thinner than before, but somehow more terrible for it. The rooms had stripped away some of its shadows, leaving a shape made almost entirely of accusation. Its long arms brushed both walls. Its head hung too low, but the attention coming from it was sharp and fixed.
Jonas whispered, “It followed us through the door.”
“It was waiting for what remained uncarried,” Jesus said.
Mara felt the key marked Come home in her pocket. Thomas Vale’s Bible rested in her arms. Renn held the folder. Jonas had Hannah’s ribbon and drawing. They were carrying the truth they had found, but not all of it had reached the world where it belonged. The creature knew that. It did not need to win every room. It only needed to keep them from obeying what mercy had uncovered.
They walked faster.
The hall changed with their pace. Doors appeared along both sides, each one bearing a nameplate. Some names Mara knew. Eli. Liora. Thomas Alwyn Vale. Hannah. Silas. Dad. Mrs. Calder. Some names she did not know, and that made her sad in a way she had not expected. The Backrooms was full of people whose stories might never be told by anyone walking beside her. Yet Jesus slowed slightly each time they passed an unknown name, as if no unseen life became anonymous to Him.
Renn looked at the doors and swallowed. “Are they all trapped?”
Jesus answered without looking away from the hall ahead. “Some were. Some are. Some are memories of those fear wanted to erase.”
“That is not comforting.”
“No,” Jesus said. “Comfort is not the same as denial.”
The creature behind them scraped one hand along the wall. Every nameplate rattled. A few fell to the carpet. Mara bent instinctively to pick one up, but Jesus stopped beside her.
“Not all can be lifted by your hands,” He said.
She looked at the fallen nameplate. It had no name on it now, only scratches where letters had been. “Then why show me?”
“So you will not mistake your assignment for the whole sorrow of the world.”
Mara stood slowly. That truth met a place in her she did not know was still straining. She had come into the Backrooms with her own fear and found Eli, Jonas, Renn, Thomas Vale, Liora, Mrs. Calder, and pieces of her family’s grief. Each encounter had opened responsibility, but responsibility could also become another way to drown if she tried to carry what only God could hold. She picked up the truth in front of her. She did not become the savior of every hallway.
They kept walking.
A door on the right opened by itself.
Rain-scented air breathed out from it, cool and clean. Jonas stopped before Mara could say anything. The door did not show the crash road this time. It opened into a small kitchen with morning light across the floor. A kettle sat on the stove. A row of mugs hung beneath a cabinet. On the table lay a stack of repair notices, a pair of work gloves, and a framed photograph of Hannah in her yellow raincoat. The room was humble, lived in, and real in a way the Backrooms rarely managed.
Jonas stared through the doorway. “That is my house.”
Mara looked at Jesus. “Is it?”
Jesus’ face softened. “It is the door given to him.”
Jonas did not move. His eyes went from the kitchen table to the yellow ribbon on his wrist. He looked almost afraid of the quiet room, as if peace were more difficult to trust than the rain road. Mara understood. A terrible room could be survived by fear. A gentle room asked whether you were willing to live after what had been faced.
Renn stepped back to give him space. “Looks better than this hall.”
Jonas almost smiled. “Most places do.”
Jesus stood beside the open door. “Jonas.”
The old man turned toward Him, and the hallway seemed to still around the name. Even the creature behind them paused beneath the flickering light, as if it hated to hear a person called so plainly.
Jesus said, “You cannot return to the day Hannah died. You can return to the days that remain.”
Jonas looked into the kitchen. “And what do I do in them?”
“You remember her without obeying despair. You repair what is in front of you without making work your master. You feed those who are hungry without pretending grief is paid by exhaustion. You speak her name with mercy.”
Jonas nodded slowly. Rain-road sorrow still lived in his face, but it no longer had the whole house. “Will I forget her voice?”
“No.”
“Will I still miss her?”
“Yes.”
Jonas breathed in, and the breath shook. “Will the missing always feel like a punishment?”
Jesus stepped closer and placed one hand on his shoulder. “No. But when it does, bring it to Me before you turn it into a sentence against yourself.”
The old man closed his eyes. Mara saw his mouth move without sound. Maybe it was a prayer. Maybe it was Hannah’s name. Maybe both. When he opened his eyes, he turned to Mara first.
“You came back for an old man in a break room,” he said.
“You came into my basement when you didn’t have to.”
He looked at the key in her hand, then at Thomas Vale’s Bible. “Go home. Even if your knees shake.”
“I will.”
“Call again if you cannot get there yet.”
The reminder touched her more deeply than she expected. Her own words returned to her through him, steadier than when she had first spoken them. “I will.”
Jonas turned to Renn. For a moment, neither man knew what to do with the tenderness between them. Then Jonas held out his hand. Renn took it. The old man’s grip was firm.
“You tell the truth,” Jonas said.
Renn nodded. “You live the days left.”
Jonas gave him a tired look. “Now you sound like Him.”
“I was afraid of that.”
The old man laughed once, softly, and the sound made the hallway flinch. The creature behind them scraped at the wall in irritation. Jonas looked toward it, not without fear, but without bowing to it.
Then he turned to Jesus. “Thank You.”
Jesus’ eyes held him with a love that seemed to have begun long before the break room and would continue long after the door closed. “I have been with you in every room, Jonas.”
The old man’s face broke open with quiet grief and relief. He stepped through the doorway into the kitchen. For one moment, the morning light surrounded him. Mara saw him set the yellow ribboned wrist on the back of a chair. She saw him place Hannah’s crayon drawing beside her photograph. Then he turned back once, lifted his hand in farewell, and the door closed.
The nameplate remained on the hallway wall.
Jonas.
It shone softly for a moment, then settled into plain brass.
Mara stood looking at it longer than she meant to. Grief moved through her, but it did not feel like loss only. It felt like a person had been returned to his own life, and the hallway was poorer because it had failed to keep him. Renn wiped at his face with the heel of his hand and pretended rain from the earlier road was still there.
The creature hissed.
The sound moved down the hall like cold air through a vent. The nameplates nearest it dimmed. The door Jonas had used vanished into the wall, and the far door ahead appeared closer now. Not close enough to reach, but closer. Mara counted her breaths as they started walking again.
Now there were three: Jesus, Mara, Renn.
The hall seemed to notice the smaller company. It widened slightly, as if making space for new traps. The wallpaper changed from plain yellow to a pattern of small black rectangles. Mara realized they were screens. Tiny screens, thousands of them, each showing a paused frame from some video. Her videos. Renn’s videos. News clips. Comment threads. A hospital security camera. A gas station camera from Jonas’s road. A porch camera outside Mara’s father’s house. A pantry photo of Thomas Vale holding coffee. Every image sat frozen, waiting to be turned into proof, accusation, content, or witness.
Renn’s breathing grew shallow.
The folder in his hands warmed until Mara could see steam rising from the edges. He looked down, alarmed. The manila paper darkened in a line across the tab where Thomas Vale’s name was written. The letters began to blur.
“No,” Renn said.
He pressed his palm over the tab, but the ink smeared beneath his hand. The hallway screens lit one by one. Titles appeared across them in bold red letters.
THE TRUTH ABOUT THOMAS VALE
WE FOUND THE MAN FROM THE BASEMENT
OUR BIGGEST REGRET
WHAT WE HID FOR YEARS
Mara felt sick. “It’s doing it again.”
Renn clutched the folder. “I am not posting anything.”
The screens answered in his own voice. You will have to. You will have to explain. You will have to control the story before someone else does.
A door appeared on the left. Unlike Jonas’s door, this one was covered in stickers, QR codes, warning labels, and old strips of tape. Its small window showed a room full of computer monitors, camera tripods, lights, microphones, and stacks of hard drives. A desk sat in the center. On the desk was a laptop with an upload bar at ninety-nine percent.
Renn went pale.
Mara remembered what he had told them in the blue basement. A false exit. His apartment. The upload bar stopping one point short of release. The Backrooms had not finished tempting him with proof because proof was still tangled in his fear.
Jesus looked at the door. “This is his room.”
Renn shook his head. “No. I did the room. I sat at the table. I gave Mrs. Calder the name. I set the camera down.”
“You began,” Jesus said.
Renn looked almost angry. “How many beginnings does one person need?”
“As many as the lies he kept calling endings.”
The creature behind them moved closer. Its limbs scraped the walls, and the small screens flickered in its shadow. The far door ahead remained, but the sticker-covered door on the left now stood open, filling the hall with the glow of monitors.
Renn stared into it.
Inside the room, the laptop screen showed a video paused on his face. The title was not sensational now. It was simple.
I was wrong about Thomas Vale.
Below it, the upload bar stayed at ninety-nine percent. A cursor blinked in the description field. The room seemed to wait for him to choose public confession before private obedience. It offered him the shape of repentance without the cost of relationship.
Mara touched his arm. “You do not have to go in alone.”
He looked at Jesus. “Is this my exit?”
“No,” Jesus said. “It is the room where you decide what must not exit with you.”
Renn let out a low breath. “That is a horrible sentence.”
Mara would have smiled if the hall were not darkening behind them.
They entered the monitor room together.
The door remained open to the Exit Hall, and Mara could see the creature waiting beyond it, too close now. It did not enter, but its shadow stretched across the threshold. The room itself was painfully familiar, not because Mara had been in Renn’s actual apartment many times, but because every creator’s room had the same strange mixture of solitude and performance. A chair worn down by long nights. A half-empty water bottle. A ring light. A desk full of cables. A closet door that did not close because equipment cases blocked it. The air smelled of dust, warmed plastic, and old coffee.
Renn stood before the laptop.
The upload bar pulsed.
Ninety-nine percent.
The file folder in his hands shook. Thomas Vale’s name blurred again, then sharpened, then blurred. Renn placed the folder on the desk beside the keyboard and spread his fingers over it, protecting the name from the room’s hunger.
A video began playing on one monitor. Renn sat in this same room, younger by only months, eyes red, whispering to the camera in the dark.
“I do not know if I can keep doing this.”
Another monitor showed him laughing in a separate video, joking about people being too sensitive. Another showed him deleting a message from Mrs. Calder. Another showed him opening Mara’s chat window, typing, We need to talk, deleting it, typing, You abandoned me too, deleting that, then sending nothing. The screens built him from fragments. Not a full man. A collection of moments the Accuser could arrange into either excuse or condemnation.
Jesus stood near the desk. “What did you hope would happen at ninety-nine percent?”
Renn stared at the upload bar. “That it would finish.”
“And then?”
“That people would know.”
“What would they know?”
Renn’s jaw worked. “That I was not lying about the Backrooms.”
Jesus waited.
“That I was not crazy.”
He waited still.
“That I mattered.”
The final words came out almost too quietly to hear.
Mara felt the room soften around the confession, not because the screens became gentle, but because truth had entered. Renn looked humiliated by his own need. That was part of the wound. He could admit guilt more easily than longing. Guilt made him feel terrible, but longing made him feel small.
Jesus said, “You wanted the world to certify what love should have spoken over you.”
Renn wiped his face with one hand. “And if love did not?”
“I am here.”
The upload bar flickered.
Ninety-nine became one hundred.
Every monitor in the room came alive. The video began to upload, but the screen did not show the confession title. It changed into something sharper.
JESUS IN THE BACKROOMS CAUGHT ON CAMERA
Renn lunged for the laptop. “No.”
The keyboard slid away from his hands. The room began editing by itself. Clips of Jesus in the hall, Jesus facing the creature, Jesus kneeling by Jonas on the road, Jesus near the blue notebook, Jesus speaking to Liora, all cut together with rising music that came from nowhere. Comments flooded the side of the screen before the upload had even completed.
Is this real?
Best footage ever.
This changes everything.
Monetize it now.
Renn stumbled backward. “I didn’t do that.”
The creature’s shadow lengthened through the open door. A voice filled the monitor room, not from the speakers alone but from the walls.
Give them wonder without obedience.
Jesus looked at the screens, His face grave.
The voice continued.
Give them mercy as spectacle. Give them holiness as proof. Give them the holy thing in a form they can consume and forget.
Mara’s stomach tightened. This was worse than using fear. It was using Jesus Himself as material while refusing His call. It was turning rescue into possession, encounter into product, grace into footage.
Renn stared at the screen, horrified and tempted. Mara could see both. The footage would change everything. No one would dismiss him. No one would call his work fake. No one would say he was just making darkness interesting. The world would look. The world would talk. The world would know his name.
Jesus spoke quietly. “Renn.”
He turned.
“Do you want Me, or do you want what showing Me can give you?”
The question entered the room like a blade.
Renn’s face crumpled. He looked at the screens, then at Jesus, then at the folder bearing Thomas Vale’s name. His hand hovered over the keyboard, but the keyboard had no delete key now. Only two keys remained.
KEEP.
SURRENDER.
The room waited.
Mara wanted to tell him which one to press. She did not. This was not her key, not her call, not her room. She stood beside him because leaving alone would not be love, but standing beside someone did not mean choosing for him.
Renn reached toward KEEP.
His hand shook violently.
He pulled back.
The creature in the hall struck the doorway. The frame cracked. The screens flickered with comments calling his name, praising him, mocking him, begging him not to waste the moment. The upload progress bar glowed at one hundred percent, but the final publish button had not appeared. The room held him at the edge of becoming known by the wrong thing forever.
Renn closed his eyes.
“I do not know who I am if nobody watches,” he whispered.
Jesus stepped closer. “Then let Me call you where no crowd can reach.”
Renn opened his eyes. “What if I do not hear You?”
“I have been speaking in every room where you mistook hunger for proof.”
Renn looked at the cracked camera on the desk. He picked it up with both hands. For a moment, Mara thought he might smash it. Instead, he turned it toward himself, not to record, but to see his reflection in the broken lens. His face split into pieces in the cracked glass. He looked at those fragments for a long time.
Then he set the camera beside Thomas Vale’s folder and pressed SURRENDER.
The monitors went black.
Not one by one. All at once.
The sudden silence felt almost violent. The upload bar vanished. The laptop screen went dark. The room lost its glow, leaving only the yellow light from the Exit Hall and the steady presence of Jesus beside the desk. Renn stood frozen, his finger still on the key. Then the keyboard dissolved into dust beneath his hand.
The creature shrieked.
It rammed the doorway, and the frame splintered. A long arm reached into the monitor room, fingers scraping across the floorboards toward Thomas Vale’s folder. Renn grabbed the folder and pressed it to his chest. The creature’s hand stopped inches away, as if it had struck invisible glass.
Jesus turned toward it.
“You cannot have what has been surrendered to truth.”
The creature recoiled, but it did not flee. Its featureless head bent toward Renn. The thought it sent into the room was bitter and clear.
No one will know you.
Renn’s face tightened.
Jesus looked at him. “Answer.”
Renn swallowed. His voice trembled, but he spoke. “I am known by God.”
The creature struck the invisible barrier so hard the walls shook.
Renn flinched, but he did not take back the words.
“I am known by God,” he said again, louder.
The cracked camera on the desk changed. Its broken lens cleared, not fully, but enough to reflect a single whole image instead of fragments. The folder in Renn’s arms stopped shaking. On the tab, Thomas Vale’s name became dark and permanent.
A door appeared behind the desk.
It was not the bright door Mara had expected. It was plain, apartment-white, with scratches near the knob and a peephole slightly off center. Through the narrow gap beneath it came the sounds of traffic, a neighbor’s television, and someone walking in the hallway beyond. Renn’s real life. Not a stage. Not an exit into glory. A small apartment with unpaid dishes, unanswered messages, and the first private steps waiting.
Renn stared at the door. “That is mine.”
Jesus nodded.
Renn looked toward Mara. The fear in his face was plain. “What do I do when I get there?”
“Knock where you need to knock,” she said. “Call Mrs. Calder. Find Thomas’s family if you can. Tell the truth before the story tells you what it wants to become.”
He gave a breath that almost became a laugh. “You have gotten very annoying.”
“I learned from the best.”
Renn looked at Jesus. “Will I ruin it?”
Jesus’ answer was honest. “You may stumble.”
“That was not comforting.”
“You may also repent again.”
Renn lowered his eyes. The words seemed to settle differently than reassurance would have. He picked up the cracked camera and looked at it one last time. Then he left it on the desk.
“You are not taking it?” Mara asked.
“Not yet,” he said. “Maybe someday I learn how to see without taking. Not today.”
Jesus did not correct him. That told Mara the decision was right for this moment. Renn held the folder with Thomas Vale’s name and walked to the apartment door. Before opening it, he turned back to Mara.
“I meant what I said,” he told her. “About being sorry.”
“I know.”
“And you should call me when you get out. Not so we can fix each other. Just so neither of us can pretend this was a dream.”
“I will.”
Renn hesitated. “And Mara?”
“Yeah?”
“Go home before you try to explain the universe.”
She smiled through tears. “That sounds wise.”
“I hate that.”
He turned to Jonas’s vanished hall as if remembering the old man too, then looked at Jesus. “Thank You for not letting me keep the footage.”
Jesus’ face was gentle. “Thank Me by not making mercy into a thing you own.”
Renn nodded. He opened the apartment door. Warm, ordinary light spilled across the floor. He stepped through with Thomas Vale’s folder in his arms. Before the door closed, Mara saw him standing in a narrow apartment entryway, looking smaller than he had in any video and more real than he had in years.
The door shut.
His nameplate appeared on the monitor room wall.
Renn.
The room dissolved.
Mara found herself back in the Exit Hall with Jesus. Only the two of them remained now. The hall seemed longer and shorter at the same time. The far door waited ahead, clearer than before. Behind them, the creature stood at the edge of the monitor room’s ruins, thinner than ever but burning with cold attention. It had failed to keep Jonas. It had failed to claim Renn. Its focus now settled fully on Mara.
The nameplates along the hall went dark except hers.
Mara Venn.
The brass letters appeared on the wall beside a final door she had not noticed before. It was not the far door at the end of the hall. It was to her right, plain and closed, painted the same color as the walls. No light came from beneath it. No sound came through. It looked like nothing.
Mara knew better.
Jesus stood beside her.
“What is in there?” she asked.
He looked at the door with sorrow and love. “The room where you decide whether home will be a place you enter or only a word you carry.”
The creature behind them took one slow step closer.
Mara touched the key in her pocket. Come home. She held Thomas Vale’s Bible in her other arm. Renn had the folder. Jonas had his ribbon. Eli and Liora had found their doors. Mrs. Calder waited in the world where a knock could still be made. Silas and her father waited with the porch light on. Her mother’s words waited in a real blue notebook.
Mara looked at Jesus. “I am afraid I will leave again.”
“I know.”
“I am afraid they will forgive me, and then I will owe them presence I do not know how to give.”
“I know.”
“I am afraid they will not forgive me, and then I will have no place to put all this hope.”
Jesus stepped closer. “Give Me the fear. Then open the door.”
She looked down the hall. The creature moved again, dragging its hunger toward her. The lights flickered behind it, going out one by one.
Mara removed the key from her pocket. The tag still read Come home.
Her hands shook as she placed it into the lock of her door. For one second, the hallway whispered in every voice she had ever used to avoid love.
Wait.
Get stronger.
Explain first.
Make it clean.
Do not need them.
Do not let them need you.
Mara turned the key before the voices could finish.
The lock opened.
The creature screamed.
Jesus stood with her as she pushed the door inward, and the smell of her father’s house came out to meet her.
Chapter Ten: The Porch Light That Would Not Lie
The smell of her father’s house came through the open door before Mara saw the room beyond it. Lemon cleaner, old wood, coffee left too long on the burner, and the faint dry smell of cardboard from boxes that had been handled but not emptied. It was so ordinary that she almost stepped back. After endless halls, false streets, burning corridors, rain roads, and rooms that knew her secrets, the simple smell of home felt more dangerous than any monster because it asked for no imagination. It was not strange enough to dismiss.
Jesus stood beside her while the Exit Hall flickered behind them. The creature was closer now, though it had stopped screaming. Its silence was worse. The lights behind it died one by one, and each darkened panel made the hallway feel thinner, as if the Backrooms were pulling its remaining strength into one final hunger. Mara held Thomas Vale’s Bible against her chest and kept one hand on the open door, feeling the old paint beneath her fingers.
Inside was the front hallway of her father’s house. The porch light shone through the small window beside the door, casting a pale gold rectangle across the floor. Family photographs lined the wall, but they did not shift or accuse her. Her mother laughing at the lake. Silas holding a crooked snowman’s head in place. Mara at twelve with braces and a terrible haircut. Her father standing behind them all with his arms around the family as if he could keep time from moving if he held tight enough.
Mara crossed the threshold.
The floor did not soften into carpet. The walls did not turn yellow. No borrowed voice called from another room. For one fragile moment, the house simply stood around her, damaged by absence and still standing. Jesus entered with her, and the door remained open behind them, showing the Exit Hall and the creature waiting in its dimness. He did not close it. Mara understood why. A door shut too soon can become denial. She had to enter home with the truth still visible behind her.
“Dad?” she called.
Her voice sounded small in the hallway.
No answer came at first. Then she heard a chair scrape in the kitchen. A second chair. Footsteps. Her father appeared at the far end of the hall, wearing the same old flannel shirt he used to wear on cold mornings. His hair was thinner and grayer than she remembered from the last time she saw him. His face looked as if worry had been living there long enough to have its own room.
Silas came up behind him.
Mara stopped breathing. Her brother looked older, but not in the way people look older from time alone. He looked like someone who had been holding a door shut from the inside for years. His shoulders were tense. His eyes were guarded. He stared at her as if he had wanted this moment so badly that he did not trust it now that it stood in front of him.
Her father whispered, “Mara.”
She took one step forward.
Then the house changed.
Not by much. That was what made it dangerous. Her father smiled through tears and crossed the hall too quickly. Silas’s face softened too easily. The kitchen light warmed into something almost golden. The smell of coffee became fresh. The boxes in the living room disappeared. The carpet looked vacuumed. The porch light brightened as if it had never burned through long nights of waiting.
Her father reached her and wrapped her in his arms.
For half a second, she let herself believe it. She let the warmth of him close around her. She let herself feel his hand against the back of her head, his voice saying, “It’s okay, honey. It’s all okay now.” She let Silas step in beside them, laughing and crying and saying he had missed her, saying none of it mattered, saying they were just glad she was home.
None of it mattered.
The phrase went through her like cold wire.
Mara opened her eyes.
Jesus stood near the door, His face grave. The real doorway to the Exit Hall remained open behind Him, and the creature stood there watching with its featureless attention. It had not broken into the house. It had not needed to. It had offered a kinder lie.
Mara pulled back from the embrace.
Her father’s face remained warm, perfect, relieved. Too relieved. Silas smiled with no anger in his eyes. Too clean. Too painless. Her brother had said he was not sure he was ready to see her. Her father had cried when she called. Their love was real, but the ease in this room was not.
“No,” Mara said.
Her father’s smile flickered.
Silas tilted his head. “What do you mean, no?”
Mara looked at Jesus. He did not speak for her. He only stood in truth and let her choose whether she wanted comfort badly enough to accept a counterfeit.
Mara turned back to the figures of her father and brother. “This is not home.”
Her father’s face tightened by a degree. “Of course it is.”
“No. Home still has the boxes. Home still has the awkward silence. Home still has Silas angry and Dad trying not to cry. Home still has the blue notebook on the table and things I have to say that may hurt to hear. This is not home. This is escape wearing home’s clothes.”
The hallway lights dimmed.
The false Silas stepped closer. “Why would you want it to be harder?”
The question was almost convincing. Mara had asked herself versions of it all her life. Why not take the peaceful version if it appeared? Why not let grief soften into a story where everyone understands before you speak? Why not skip the damage and step straight into being loved again?
Because love that refused truth would become another room.
Mara held Thomas Vale’s Bible tighter. “Because easier is not the same as healed.”
The false father’s face changed first. The tenderness drained from it, not into rage, but into emptiness. Silas’s smile flattened. The warm kitchen light flickered back to the old dull bulb over the table. The boxes returned in the living room. Dust came back to the air. The faint bitterness of old coffee settled again.
The two figures vanished.
Mara stood in the realer version of the house, alone with Jesus at the threshold and the creature beyond Him.
Then someone knocked from inside the living room.
Mara turned.
The living room had grown larger than it should have been. It stretched past the couch, past the bookshelves, past the old fireplace, into rows of rooms that did not belong in the house but somehow had grown from it. Each room held a version of return. In one, her father forgave her instantly and never asked hard questions. In another, Silas screamed until she could finally decide he was impossible and leave without guilt. In another, her mother sat alive in the armchair and told Mara there had been a mistake, that death itself had been a misunderstanding. In another, Mara stood before a camera telling the whole story with beautiful tears while strangers called her brave.
She stepped back. “It’s still trying.”
Jesus looked into the stretched living room. “It will offer every false version before the true one.”
The creature moved in the open doorway behind Him. It seemed unable to cross the threshold while Jesus stood there, but the hall around it pulsed with dark pressure. Mara understood that the Backrooms was running out of distance. It had become more direct because the rooms were failing. It could no longer rely only on fear. Now it used relief, false forgiveness, public admiration, and even her longing for her mother.
A figure stepped from the room where her mother sat alive.
Mara’s chest tightened. This version of her mother looked healthy, not thin from illness. Her hair was full again. Her cheeks held color. She wore the old green sweater Mara used to steal when she was cold. She stood with her hands folded in front of her and smiled with such gentle sadness that Mara felt the force of wanting almost knock her down.
“Mara,” the figure said. “You do not have to keep walking.”
Mara shut her eyes for one second, then opened them again because she had learned not to face lies blindly. “You are not her.”
The figure’s smile deepened. “You say that because you think love must always hurt now.”
“No,” Mara said. “I say it because my mother’s love would not ask me to stay in a fake room while my father and brother wait in the real one.”
The green sweater faded at the edges.
The figure looked toward Jesus with something like hatred beneath the borrowed face. “She is tired.”
Jesus did not move. “Yes.”
“She has carried enough.”
“Yes.”
“Then let her rest.”
“In truth,” Jesus said. “Not in deception.”
The figure turned back to Mara. Her voice became softer, more like the mother Mara remembered from childhood. “Do you want to see what I wrote on the last page?”
Mara froze.
Jesus looked at her. His eyes did not warn her away from the desire. They simply held her steady inside it. Mara wanted the real notebook. She wanted every page. She wanted the words her mother had written when strength was leaving. The lie knew that desire and had chosen its hook carefully.
The figure lifted one hand. A blue notebook appeared in her palm.
Mara did not move.
“The real one is waiting,” Jesus said.
The figure’s face hardened.
Mara took a step back toward Jesus. “Then I will read it there.”
The notebook in the figure’s hand caught fire without heat. It burned blue at the edges, then collapsed into black paper. The false mother’s face hollowed out, the eyes becoming dark openings. For a moment, the creature in the hall and the figure in the living room seemed connected, one hunger in two places.
Mara did not run.
The rooms in the stretched living room began closing one by one. The false father vanished. The false Silas vanished. The camera room folded into shadow. The armchair where her false mother had sat disappeared last, leaving only the ordinary living room with its old couch, boxes, dust, and a blanket folded over the back of a chair.
The house was quiet again.
Mara breathed shakily. “How do I get to the real one?”
Jesus looked toward the kitchen. “Through what you are still afraid to say.”
She knew immediately. The call had begun the return, but it had not carried the whole truth. She had told her father and Silas she was coming home. She had apologized for leaving. She had not told them about Thomas Vale. She had not told them about Renn, the video, the man in the basement, the coat, or the way she had turned a person into atmosphere and then avoided the fire that might have named him.
The kitchen light flickered.
On the table, a phone appeared. Not the old beige phone from the basement. Her own phone. It lay faceup beside a stack of mail, the blue notebook, and a mug with a crack near the handle. The screen glowed with two names.
Dad.
Silas.
A call waiting to be made again.
Mara looked at Jesus. “Now?”
“Yes.”
“What if telling them makes them not want me home?”
“Then you will still have chosen truth over the room that offered you their comfort without their freedom.”
She hated that answer and trusted it more than any easier one.
The creature struck the doorframe behind them. Wood splintered. Jesus turned, and the thing recoiled, but less than before. The house trembled. The phone on the table buzzed once.
Mara walked into the kitchen.
Every step felt heavier than the last. She set Thomas Vale’s Bible on the table beside the blue notebook and picked up the phone. Her thumb hovered over the call button. The screen reflected her face, and behind her, she saw Jesus in the doorway, the Exit Hall beyond Him, and the creature bending low to enter.
She pressed call.
The phone rang once.
Twice.
Silas answered. “Mara?”
The sound of his real voice, or whatever mercy allowed her to reach from this room, steadied the floor beneath her. “I am still here.”
He exhaled. “Dad has been walking circles around the kitchen.”
Her father’s voice came from nearby, muffled. “Do not tell her that.”
Silas said, “Too late.”
Mara almost smiled. The almost-smile hurt and helped. She could picture them too clearly. Her father pretending not to be anxious, Silas irritated by the pretending, both of them standing in the same room because her call had pulled them into waiting together. That was real. Messy, tense, and real.
Silas asked, “Are you closer?”
Mara looked at the kitchen around her. “I think so.”
“You think so?”
“I am in a place that looks like home, but it is not home yet.”
A pause followed. “That sounds like something I do not know how to respond to.”
“I know.”
Her father came on the line. “Mara, are you hurt?”
She glanced at the creature pressing into the doorway. Jesus held one hand against the doorframe, not straining, simply standing between. “I am afraid,” she said. “But I need to tell you something before I come home.”
Silas’s voice sharpened. “What kind of something?”
“The kind I should have told you before.”
The line went quiet.
Mara sat at the kitchen table because her legs were shaking. The blue notebook lay inches from her hand, closed and waiting. Thomas Vale’s Bible rested beside it. The cracked mug held cold coffee that smelled too real. The creature scraped again at the door, and the whole house gave a low groan.
She spoke before fear could bargain with her.
“Before I fell into this place, before I called you, before any of this, I was part of something that hurt a man. His name was Thomas Alwyn Vale. I did not know his full name then, but I knew enough. Renn and I filmed in an abandoned school. Thomas was sheltering there. He asked us not to show him. We blurred his face, but we used his voice. We made the place feel haunted, and we let people treat him like part of the fear.”
Her father did not interrupt. Silas did not either. Their silence was not empty. It was listening, and that made the confession harder.
Mara continued. “Afterward, a woman from a local church reached out. She knew him, at least a little. She wanted us to come talk privately. I ignored it. Renn made it worse in his own way, but I ignored it too. The building later burned. An unidentified man died in the lower level. I told myself I did not know it was him, but I did not try to know. I bought a coat to take back, and I never took it. I left that too.”
The kitchen walls dimmed. The creature’s hand pushed farther past Jesus, long fingers scraping the floor. It wanted the confession to become despair. Mara could feel it pressing thoughts toward her. Say you are filthy. Say you have no right to go home. Say they should hate you. Say the truth proves the door is closed.
She did not obey.
“I am not telling you this so you can forgive me quickly,” she said. “I am telling you because if I come home and hide this, I am bringing another room with me. I need you to know I have things to make right beyond our family. I need to find Thomas’s people if I can. I need to contact the woman who tried to help. I need to correct what I helped turn into a lie. I am scared to tell you because I do not want this to be the first thing I bring through the door. But I cannot come home pretending I only hurt you by being absent.”
The phone was silent.
Mara closed her eyes.
Silas spoke first. His voice was low. “I do not know what to say.”
“That is fair.”
“That is terrible, Mara.”
“I know.”
“No, I mean it is terrible.”
“I know.”
Her father’s voice came next, strained and quiet. “Did you break the law?”
Mara swallowed. “I do not know. Maybe not in the way people mean. Maybe in some way I have not faced. But I did wrong.”
The honesty seemed to settle between them. She could hear her father breathing. She imagined his hand on the counter, Silas standing near the table, both of them trying to fit the person they loved with what she had just confessed. She wanted to fill the silence with explanations. She wanted to say she had been scared, young, pressured, not alone in it, haunted by it. Some of that was true, but none of it needed to lead.
Silas said, “Why tell us now?”
Mara looked at Jesus. He was still at the doorway, His back to her, His face toward the creature. He did not turn, but she felt the answer He had been teaching her in every room.
“Because I am tired of making people love a version of me that leaves the worst parts outside the room.”
The creature recoiled as if the words had burned it.
Silas did not speak for a while. Then he said, “I am angry.”
“I know.”
“I was already angry. This is more.”
“I know.”
“I still want you home.”
Mara bent over the table, gripping the phone with both hands. A sound broke out of her, but she held the receiver close and listened as Silas continued.
“I do not know what that looks like. I do not know how many hard conversations are waiting. I do not know what Dad thinks because he is doing that thing where he stares at one spot and forgets he has a face. But I still want you home.”
Her father made a rough sound in the background. “I have a face.”
Silas said, “Not currently.”
Mara laughed through tears, and the kitchen light strengthened.
Her father came back on the line. His voice sounded older and tender and frightened. “Mara, I am upset. I am confused. I am thankful you told us. I am all of it at once. But listen to me. Home is not a reward for having nothing ugly to confess. If that were true, none of us would live here.”
The sentence entered her like something her mother might have prayed toward. Mara pressed her hand over the blue notebook but did not open it.
“I am coming,” she whispered.
“We are here,” her father said.
The phone screen brightened. The call did not end, but it changed. The kitchen around Mara grew more solid. The boxes in the living room lost their threatening stillness and became just boxes. The photos on the walls stopped watching and became photographs again. The porch light through the front window burned steady, not golden with false perfection, not dim with despair. Just on.
The creature forced itself another inch into the doorway.
Jesus spoke without turning around. “Mara.”
She looked up.
“Now open the front door.”
She held the phone. “While they are still on the line?”
“Yes.”
Mara stood. Her father and Silas were both speaking now, confused by her movement, asking what was happening. She did not explain. She carried the phone in one hand and touched Thomas Vale’s Bible with the other before leaving it on the table beside the blue notebook. Something in her knew she did not need to carry the copied weight any farther. The truth had been spoken. What remained had to be lived.
She walked down the front hallway.
The creature pushed harder. Jesus held the inner doorway, but the house shook around Him. The Exit Hall behind the creature was almost completely dark now. Its long hand reached toward Mara’s nameplate on the wall, trying to scratch the letters away.
Mara reached the front door of her father’s house.
Her hand closed around the knob.
Every false room she had passed seemed to whisper from behind her. The yellow halls. The vending machine. The break room. The false street. The editing room. The hospital bed. The family basement. The rain road. The blue room. The monitor room. Each whispered that she was not ready, that she would fail, that return was too late, that confession had only made her more vulnerable, that love could not survive what truth had uncovered.
Mara looked back once.
Jesus stood between her and the Accuser. His feet were planted on the floor of the house she had feared entering. His face was calm, but His eyes carried fire the Backrooms could not imitate. The creature bent toward Him, hungry and furious, but it could not pass where He stood.
“Go,” Jesus said.
Mara opened the front door.
Cold night air rushed in.
Not stale. Not damp. Not plastic. Real air. It smelled of wet leaves, pavement, and distant woodsmoke. The porch stretched before her under the small light her father had promised not to turn off. Beyond the porch was the street where she had learned to ride a bike, the maple tree near the walk, the driveway with cracks in the concrete, the quiet neighborhood under a clouded sky.
At the far edge of the porch stood one final threshold.
It was not a door. It was the edge between the house the Backrooms had made and the world where her father and brother waited. The porch boards looked real, but the yard beyond flickered slightly, as if the Backrooms still had one hand on the frame.
The creature shrieked behind her.
Mara stepped onto the porch.
The phone in her hand filled with her father’s voice. “Mara?”
“I see the porch light,” she said.
Inside the house, Jesus turned toward the creature. The hallway behind Him folded inward under the weight of His presence. The Accuser struck at Him with every voice it had stolen, but none of them sounded convincing now. They became noise, and then less than noise.
Mara took another step.
The porch boards held.
Silas’s voice broke through the phone. “Then come through the door.”
She looked toward the yard. The air shimmered. For one moment, she saw the real front door from the outside, and beyond its window, two figures moving in the kitchen. Her father. Silas. Not copies. Not softened. Not easy. Waiting.
Mara stepped off the porch.
The Backrooms tore behind her like wallpaper ripped from a wall.
She fell forward into cold night, clutching the phone, and landed on the wet walkway outside her father’s house. The porch light shone above her. The real front door opened, and her father stood there in the light with Silas behind him, both of them stunned, frightened, and alive.
Mara looked up at them from the walkway with rain on her face and truth still shaking in her bones.
“I’m home,” she said.Chapter Ten: The Porch Light That Would Not Lie
The smell of her father’s house came through the open door before Mara saw the room beyond it. Lemon cleaner, old wood, coffee left too long on the burner, and the faint dry smell of cardboard from boxes that had been handled but not emptied. It was so ordinary that she almost stepped back. After endless halls, false streets, burning corridors, rain roads, and rooms that knew her secrets, the simple smell of home felt more dangerous than any monster because it asked for no imagination. It was not strange enough to dismiss.
Jesus stood beside her while the Exit Hall flickered behind them. The creature was closer now, though it had stopped screaming. Its silence was worse. The lights behind it died one by one, and each darkened panel made the hallway feel thinner, as if the Backrooms were pulling its remaining strength into one final hunger. Mara held Thomas Vale’s Bible against her chest and kept one hand on the open door, feeling the old paint beneath her fingers.
Inside was the front hallway of her father’s house. The porch light shone through the small window beside the door, casting a pale gold rectangle across the floor. Family photographs lined the wall, but they did not shift or accuse her. Her mother laughing at the lake. Silas holding a crooked snowman’s head in place. Mara at twelve with braces and a terrible haircut. Her father standing behind them all with his arms around the family as if he could keep time from moving if he held tight enough.
Mara crossed the threshold.
The floor did not soften into carpet. The walls did not turn yellow. No borrowed voice called from another room. For one fragile moment, the house simply stood around her, damaged by absence and still standing. Jesus entered with her, and the door remained open behind them, showing the Exit Hall and the creature waiting in its dimness. He did not close it. Mara understood why. A door shut too soon can become denial. She had to enter home with the truth still visible behind her.
“Dad?” she called.
Her voice sounded small in the hallway.
No answer came at first. Then she heard a chair scrape in the kitchen. A second chair. Footsteps. Her father appeared at the far end of the hall, wearing the same old flannel shirt he used to wear on cold mornings. His hair was thinner and grayer than she remembered from the last time she saw him. His face looked as if worry had been living there long enough to have its own room.
Silas came up behind him.
Mara stopped breathing. Her brother looked older, but not in the way people look older from time alone. He looked like someone who had been holding a door shut from the inside for years. His shoulders were tense. His eyes were guarded. He stared at her as if he had wanted this moment so badly that he did not trust it now that it stood in front of him.
Her father whispered, “Mara.”
She took one step forward.
Then the house changed.
Not by much. That was what made it dangerous. Her father smiled through tears and crossed the hall too quickly. Silas’s face softened too easily. The kitchen light warmed into something almost golden. The smell of coffee became fresh. The boxes in the living room disappeared. The carpet looked vacuumed. The porch light brightened as if it had never burned through long nights of waiting.
Her father reached her and wrapped her in his arms.
For half a second, she let herself believe it. She let the warmth of him close around her. She let herself feel his hand against the back of her head, his voice saying, “It’s okay, honey. It’s all okay now.” She let Silas step in beside them, laughing and crying and saying he had missed her, saying none of it mattered, saying they were just glad she was home.
None of it mattered.
The phrase went through her like cold wire.
Mara opened her eyes.
Jesus stood near the door, His face grave. The real doorway to the Exit Hall remained open behind Him, and the creature stood there watching with its featureless attention. It had not broken into the house. It had not needed to. It had offered a kinder lie.
Mara pulled back from the embrace.
Her father’s face remained warm, perfect, relieved. Too relieved. Silas smiled with no anger in his eyes. Too clean. Too painless. Her brother had said he was not sure he was ready to see her. Her father had cried when she called. Their love was real, but the ease in this room was not.
“No,” Mara said.
Her father’s smile flickered.
Silas tilted his head. “What do you mean, no?”
Mara looked at Jesus. He did not speak for her. He only stood in truth and let her choose whether she wanted comfort badly enough to accept a counterfeit.
Mara turned back to the figures of her father and brother. “This is not home.”
Her father’s face tightened by a degree. “Of course it is.”
“No. Home still has the boxes. Home still has the awkward silence. Home still has Silas angry and Dad trying not to cry. Home still has the blue notebook on the table and things I have to say that may hurt to hear. This is not home. This is escape wearing home’s clothes.”
The hallway lights dimmed.
The false Silas stepped closer. “Why would you want it to be harder?”
The question was almost convincing. Mara had asked herself versions of it all her life. Why not take the peaceful version if it appeared? Why not let grief soften into a story where everyone understands before you speak? Why not skip the damage and step straight into being loved again?
Because love that refused truth would become another room.
Mara held Thomas Vale’s Bible tighter. “Because easier is not the same as healed.”
The false father’s face changed first. The tenderness drained from it, not into rage, but into emptiness. Silas’s smile flattened. The warm kitchen light flickered back to the old dull bulb over the table. The boxes returned in the living room. Dust came back to the air. The faint bitterness of old coffee settled again.
The two figures vanished.
Mara stood in the realer version of the house, alone with Jesus at the threshold and the creature beyond Him.
Then someone knocked from inside the living room.
Mara turned.
The living room had grown larger than it should have been. It stretched past the couch, past the bookshelves, past the old fireplace, into rows of rooms that did not belong in the house but somehow had grown from it. Each room held a version of return. In one, her father forgave her instantly and never asked hard questions. In another, Silas screamed until she could finally decide he was impossible and leave without guilt. In another, her mother sat alive in the armchair and told Mara there had been a mistake, that death itself had been a misunderstanding. In another, Mara stood before a camera telling the whole story with beautiful tears while strangers called her brave.
She stepped back. “It’s still trying.”
Jesus looked into the stretched living room. “It will offer every false version before the true one.”
The creature moved in the open doorway behind Him. It seemed unable to cross the threshold while Jesus stood there, but the hall around it pulsed with dark pressure. Mara understood that the Backrooms was running out of distance. It had become more direct because the rooms were failing. It could no longer rely only on fear. Now it used relief, false forgiveness, public admiration, and even her longing for her mother.
A figure stepped from the room where her mother sat alive.
Mara’s chest tightened. This version of her mother looked healthy, not thin from illness. Her hair was full again. Her cheeks held color. She wore the old green sweater Mara used to steal when she was cold. She stood with her hands folded in front of her and smiled with such gentle sadness that Mara felt the force of wanting almost knock her down.
“Mara,” the figure said. “You do not have to keep walking.”
Mara shut her eyes for one second, then opened them again because she had learned not to face lies blindly. “You are not her.”
The figure’s smile deepened. “You say that because you think love must always hurt now.”
“No,” Mara said. “I say it because my mother’s love would not ask me to stay in a fake room while my father and brother wait in the real one.”
The green sweater faded at the edges.
The figure looked toward Jesus with something like hatred beneath the borrowed face. “She is tired.”
Jesus did not move. “Yes.”
“She has carried enough.”
“Yes.”
“Then let her rest.”
“In truth,” Jesus said. “Not in deception.”
The figure turned back to Mara. Her voice became softer, more like the mother Mara remembered from childhood. “Do you want to see what I wrote on the last page?”
Mara froze.
Jesus looked at her. His eyes did not warn her away from the desire. They simply held her steady inside it. Mara wanted the real notebook. She wanted every page. She wanted the words her mother had written when strength was leaving. The lie knew that desire and had chosen its hook carefully.
The figure lifted one hand. A blue notebook appeared in her palm.
Mara did not move.
“The real one is waiting,” Jesus said.
The figure’s face hardened.
Mara took a step back toward Jesus. “Then I will read it there.”
The notebook in the figure’s hand caught fire without heat. It burned blue at the edges, then collapsed into black paper. The false mother’s face hollowed out, the eyes becoming dark openings. For a moment, the creature in the hall and the figure in the living room seemed connected, one hunger in two places.
Mara did not run.
The rooms in the stretched living room began closing one by one. The false father vanished. The false Silas vanished. The camera room folded into shadow. The armchair where her false mother had sat disappeared last, leaving only the ordinary living room with its old couch, boxes, dust, and a blanket folded over the back of a chair.
The house was quiet again.
Mara breathed shakily. “How do I get to the real one?”
Jesus looked toward the kitchen. “Through what you are still afraid to say.”
She knew immediately. The call had begun the return, but it had not carried the whole truth. She had told her father and Silas she was coming home. She had apologized for leaving. She had not told them about Thomas Vale. She had not told them about Renn, the video, the man in the basement, the coat, or the way she had turned a person into atmosphere and then avoided the fire that might have named him.
The kitchen light flickered.
On the table, a phone appeared. Not the old beige phone from the basement. Her own phone. It lay faceup beside a stack of mail, the blue notebook, and a mug with a crack near the handle. The screen glowed with two names.
Dad.
Silas.
A call waiting to be made again.
Mara looked at Jesus. “Now?”
“Yes.”
“What if telling them makes them not want me home?”
“Then you will still have chosen truth over the room that offered you their comfort without their freedom.”
She hated that answer and trusted it more than any easier one.
The creature struck the doorframe behind them. Wood splintered. Jesus turned, and the thing recoiled, but less than before. The house trembled. The phone on the table buzzed once.
Mara walked into the kitchen.
Every step felt heavier than the last. She set Thomas Vale’s Bible on the table beside the blue notebook and picked up the phone. Her thumb hovered over the call button. The screen reflected her face, and behind her, she saw Jesus in the doorway, the Exit Hall beyond Him, and the creature bending low to enter.
She pressed call.
The phone rang once.
Twice.
Silas answered. “Mara?”
The sound of his real voice, or whatever mercy allowed her to reach from this room, steadied the floor beneath her. “I am still here.”
He exhaled. “Dad has been walking circles around the kitchen.”
Her father’s voice came from nearby, muffled. “Do not tell her that.”
Silas said, “Too late.”
Mara almost smiled. The almost-smile hurt and helped. She could picture them too clearly. Her father pretending not to be anxious, Silas irritated by the pretending, both of them standing in the same room because her call had pulled them into waiting together. That was real. Messy, tense, and real.
Silas asked, “Are you closer?”
Mara looked at the kitchen around her. “I think so.”
“You think so?”
“I am in a place that looks like home, but it is not home yet.”
A pause followed. “That sounds like something I do not know how to respond to.”
“I know.”
Her father came on the line. “Mara, are you hurt?”
She glanced at the creature pressing into the doorway. Jesus held one hand against the doorframe, not straining, simply standing between. “I am afraid,” she said. “But I need to tell you something before I come home.”
Silas’s voice sharpened. “What kind of something?”
“The kind I should have told you before.”
The line went quiet.
Mara sat at the kitchen table because her legs were shaking. The blue notebook lay inches from her hand, closed and waiting. Thomas Vale’s Bible rested beside it. The cracked mug held cold coffee that smelled too real. The creature scraped again at the door, and the whole house gave a low groan.
She spoke before fear could bargain with her.
“Before I fell into this place, before I called you, before any of this, I was part of something that hurt a man. His name was Thomas Alwyn Vale. I did not know his full name then, but I knew enough. Renn and I filmed in an abandoned school. Thomas was sheltering there. He asked us not to show him. We blurred his face, but we used his voice. We made the place feel haunted, and we let people treat him like part of the fear.”
Her father did not interrupt. Silas did not either. Their silence was not empty. It was listening, and that made the confession harder.
Mara continued. “Afterward, a woman from a local church reached out. She knew him, at least a little. She wanted us to come talk privately. I ignored it. Renn made it worse in his own way, but I ignored it too. The building later burned. An unidentified man died in the lower level. I told myself I did not know it was him, but I did not try to know. I bought a coat to take back, and I never took it. I left that too.”
The kitchen walls dimmed. The creature’s hand pushed farther past Jesus, long fingers scraping the floor. It wanted the confession to become despair. Mara could feel it pressing thoughts toward her. Say you are filthy. Say you have no right to go home. Say they should hate you. Say the truth proves the door is closed.
She did not obey.
“I am not telling you this so you can forgive me quickly,” she said. “I am telling you because if I come home and hide this, I am bringing another room with me. I need you to know I have things to make right beyond our family. I need to find Thomas’s people if I can. I need to contact the woman who tried to help. I need to correct what I helped turn into a lie. I am scared to tell you because I do not want this to be the first thing I bring through the door. But I cannot come home pretending I only hurt you by being absent.”
The phone was silent.
Mara closed her eyes.
Silas spoke first. His voice was low. “I do not know what to say.”
“That is fair.”
“That is terrible, Mara.”
“I know.”
“No, I mean it is terrible.”
“I know.”
Her father’s voice came next, strained and quiet. “Did you break the law?”
Mara swallowed. “I do not know. Maybe not in the way people mean. Maybe in some way I have not faced. But I did wrong.”
The honesty seemed to settle between them. She could hear her father breathing. She imagined his hand on the counter, Silas standing near the table, both of them trying to fit the person they loved with what she had just confessed. She wanted to fill the silence with explanations. She wanted to say she had been scared, young, pressured, not alone in it, haunted by it. Some of that was true, but none of it needed to lead.
Silas said, “Why tell us now?”
Mara looked at Jesus. He was still at the doorway, His back to her, His face toward the creature. He did not turn, but she felt the answer He had been teaching her in every room.
“Because I am tired of making people love a version of me that leaves the worst parts outside the room.”
The creature recoiled as if the words had burned it.
Silas did not speak for a while. Then he said, “I am angry.”
“I know.”
“I was already angry. This is more.”
“I know.”
“I still want you home.”
Mara bent over the table, gripping the phone with both hands. A sound broke out of her, but she held the receiver close and listened as Silas continued.
“I do not know what that looks like. I do not know how many hard conversations are waiting. I do not know what Dad thinks because he is doing that thing where he stares at one spot and forgets he has a face. But I still want you home.”
Her father made a rough sound in the background. “I have a face.”
Silas said, “Not currently.”
Mara laughed through tears, and the kitchen light strengthened.
Her father came back on the line. His voice sounded older and tender and frightened. “Mara, I am upset. I am confused. I am thankful you told us. I am all of it at once. But listen to me. Home is not a reward for having nothing ugly to confess. If that were true, none of us would live here.”
The sentence entered her like something her mother might have prayed toward. Mara pressed her hand over the blue notebook but did not open it.
“I am coming,” she whispered.
“We are here,” her father said.
The phone screen brightened. The call did not end, but it changed. The kitchen around Mara grew more solid. The boxes in the living room lost their threatening stillness and became just boxes. The photos on the walls stopped watching and became photographs again. The porch light through the front window burned steady, not golden with false perfection, not dim with despair. Just on.
The creature forced itself another inch into the doorway.
Jesus spoke without turning around. “Mara.”
She looked up.
“Now open the front door.”
She held the phone. “While they are still on the line?”
“Yes.”
Mara stood. Her father and Silas were both speaking now, confused by her movement, asking what was happening. She did not explain. She carried the phone in one hand and touched Thomas Vale’s Bible with the other before leaving it on the table beside the blue notebook. Something in her knew she did not need to carry the copied weight any farther. The truth had been spoken. What remained had to be lived.
She walked down the front hallway.
The creature pushed harder. Jesus held the inner doorway, but the house shook around Him. The Exit Hall behind the creature was almost completely dark now. Its long hand reached toward Mara’s nameplate on the wall, trying to scratch the letters away.
Mara reached the front door of her father’s house.
Her hand closed around the knob.
Every false room she had passed seemed to whisper from behind her. The yellow halls. The vending machine. The break room. The false street. The editing room. The hospital bed. The family basement. The rain road. The blue room. The monitor room. Each whispered that she was not ready, that she would fail, that return was too late, that confession had only made her more vulnerable, that love could not survive what truth had uncovered.
Mara looked back once.
Jesus stood between her and the Accuser. His feet were planted on the floor of the house she had feared entering. His face was calm, but His eyes carried fire the Backrooms could not imitate. The creature bent toward Him, hungry and furious, but it could not pass where He stood.
“Go,” Jesus said.
Mara opened the front door.
Cold night air rushed in.
Not stale. Not damp. Not plastic. Real air. It smelled of wet leaves, pavement, and distant woodsmoke. The porch stretched before her under the small light her father had promised not to turn off. Beyond the porch was the street where she had learned to ride a bike, the maple tree near the walk, the driveway with cracks in the concrete, the quiet neighborhood under a clouded sky.
At the far edge of the porch stood one final threshold.
It was not a door. It was the edge between the house the Backrooms had made and the world where her father and brother waited. The porch boards looked real, but the yard beyond flickered slightly, as if the Backrooms still had one hand on the frame.
The creature shrieked behind her.
Mara stepped onto the porch.
The phone in her hand filled with her father’s voice. “Mara?”
“I see the porch light,” she said.
Inside the house, Jesus turned toward the creature. The hallway behind Him folded inward under the weight of His presence. The Accuser struck at Him with every voice it had stolen, but none of them sounded convincing now. They became noise, and then less than noise.
Mara took another step.
The porch boards held.
Silas’s voice broke through the phone. “Then come through the door.”
She looked toward the yard. The air shimmered. For one moment, she saw the real front door from the outside, and beyond its window, two figures moving in the kitchen. Her father. Silas. Not copies. Not softened. Not easy. Waiting.
Mara stepped off the porch.
The Backrooms tore behind her like wallpaper ripped from a wall.
She fell forward into cold night, clutching the phone, and landed on the wet walkway outside her father’s house. The porch light shone above her. The real front door opened, and her father stood there in the light with Silas behind him, both of them stunned, frightened, and alive.
Mara looked up at them from the walkway with rain on her face and truth still shaking in her bones.
“I’m home,” she said.Chapter Ten: The Porch Light That Would Not Lie
The smell of her father’s house came through the open door before Mara saw the room beyond it. Lemon cleaner, old wood, coffee left too long on the burner, and the faint dry smell of cardboard from boxes that had been handled but not emptied. It was so ordinary that she almost stepped back. After endless halls, false streets, burning corridors, rain roads, and rooms that knew her secrets, the simple smell of home felt more dangerous than any monster because it asked for no imagination. It was not strange enough to dismiss.
Jesus stood beside her while the Exit Hall flickered behind them. The creature was closer now, though it had stopped screaming. Its silence was worse. The lights behind it died one by one, and each darkened panel made the hallway feel thinner, as if the Backrooms were pulling its remaining strength into one final hunger. Mara held Thomas Vale’s Bible against her chest and kept one hand on the open door, feeling the old paint beneath her fingers.
Inside was the front hallway of her father’s house. The porch light shone through the small window beside the door, casting a pale gold rectangle across the floor. Family photographs lined the wall, but they did not shift or accuse her. Her mother laughing at the lake. Silas holding a crooked snowman’s head in place. Mara at twelve with braces and a terrible haircut. Her father standing behind them all with his arms around the family as if he could keep time from moving if he held tight enough.
Mara crossed the threshold.
The floor did not soften into carpet. The walls did not turn yellow. No borrowed voice called from another room. For one fragile moment, the house simply stood around her, damaged by absence and still standing. Jesus entered with her, and the door remained open behind them, showing the Exit Hall and the creature waiting in its dimness. He did not close it. Mara understood why. A door shut too soon can become denial. She had to enter home with the truth still visible behind her.
“Dad?” she called.
Her voice sounded small in the hallway.
No answer came at first. Then she heard a chair scrape in the kitchen. A second chair. Footsteps. Her father appeared at the far end of the hall, wearing the same old flannel shirt he used to wear on cold mornings. His hair was thinner and grayer than she remembered from the last time she saw him. His face looked as if worry had been living there long enough to have its own room.
Silas came up behind him.
Mara stopped breathing. Her brother looked older, but not in the way people look older from time alone. He looked like someone who had been holding a door shut from the inside for years. His shoulders were tense. His eyes were guarded. He stared at her as if he had wanted this moment so badly that he did not trust it now that it stood in front of him.
Her father whispered, “Mara.”
She took one step forward.
Then the house changed.
Not by much. That was what made it dangerous. Her father smiled through tears and crossed the hall too quickly. Silas’s face softened too easily. The kitchen light warmed into something almost golden. The smell of coffee became fresh. The boxes in the living room disappeared. The carpet looked vacuumed. The porch light brightened as if it had never burned through long nights of waiting.
Her father reached her and wrapped her in his arms.
For half a second, she let herself believe it. She let the warmth of him close around her. She let herself feel his hand against the back of her head, his voice saying, “It’s okay, honey. It’s all okay now.” She let Silas step in beside them, laughing and crying and saying he had missed her, saying none of it mattered, saying they were just glad she was home.
None of it mattered.
The phrase went through her like cold wire.
Mara opened her eyes.
Jesus stood near the door, His face grave. The real doorway to the Exit Hall remained open behind Him, and the creature stood there watching with its featureless attention. It had not broken into the house. It had not needed to. It had offered a kinder lie.
Mara pulled back from the embrace.
Her father’s face remained warm, perfect, relieved. Too relieved. Silas smiled with no anger in his eyes. Too clean. Too painless. Her brother had said he was not sure he was ready to see her. Her father had cried when she called. Their love was real, but the ease in this room was not.
“No,” Mara said.
Her father’s smile flickered.
Silas tilted his head. “What do you mean, no?”
Mara looked at Jesus. He did not speak for her. He only stood in truth and let her choose whether she wanted comfort badly enough to accept a counterfeit.
Mara turned back to the figures of her father and brother. “This is not home.”
Her father’s face tightened by a degree. “Of course it is.”
“No. Home still has the boxes. Home still has the awkward silence. Home still has Silas angry and Dad trying not to cry. Home still has the blue notebook on the table and things I have to say that may hurt to hear. This is not home. This is escape wearing home’s clothes.”
The hallway lights dimmed.
The false Silas stepped closer. “Why would you want it to be harder?”
The question was almost convincing. Mara had asked herself versions of it all her life. Why not take the peaceful version if it appeared? Why not let grief soften into a story where everyone understands before you speak? Why not skip the damage and step straight into being loved again?
Because love that refused truth would become another room.
Mara held Thomas Vale’s Bible tighter. “Because easier is not the same as healed.”
The false father’s face changed first. The tenderness drained from it, not into rage, but into emptiness. Silas’s smile flattened. The warm kitchen light flickered back to the old dull bulb over the table. The boxes returned in the living room. Dust came back to the air. The faint bitterness of old coffee settled again.
The two figures vanished.
Mara stood in the realer version of the house, alone with Jesus at the threshold and the creature beyond Him.
Then someone knocked from inside the living room.
Mara turned.
The living room had grown larger than it should have been. It stretched past the couch, past the bookshelves, past the old fireplace, into rows of rooms that did not belong in the house but somehow had grown from it. Each room held a version of return. In one, her father forgave her instantly and never asked hard questions. In another, Silas screamed until she could finally decide he was impossible and leave without guilt. In another, her mother sat alive in the armchair and told Mara there had been a mistake, that death itself had been a misunderstanding. In another, Mara stood before a camera telling the whole story with beautiful tears while strangers called her brave.
She stepped back. “It’s still trying.”
Jesus looked into the stretched living room. “It will offer every false version before the true one.”
The creature moved in the open doorway behind Him. It seemed unable to cross the threshold while Jesus stood there, but the hall around it pulsed with dark pressure. Mara understood that the Backrooms was running out of distance. It had become more direct because the rooms were failing. It could no longer rely only on fear. Now it used relief, false forgiveness, public admiration, and even her longing for her mother.
A figure stepped from the room where her mother sat alive.
Mara’s chest tightened. This version of her mother looked healthy, not thin from illness. Her hair was full again. Her cheeks held color. She wore the old green sweater Mara used to steal when she was cold. She stood with her hands folded in front of her and smiled with such gentle sadness that Mara felt the force of wanting almost knock her down.
“Mara,” the figure said. “You do not have to keep walking.”
Mara shut her eyes for one second, then opened them again because she had learned not to face lies blindly. “You are not her.”
The figure’s smile deepened. “You say that because you think love must always hurt now.”
“No,” Mara said. “I say it because my mother’s love would not ask me to stay in a fake room while my father and brother wait in the real one.”
The green sweater faded at the edges.
The figure looked toward Jesus with something like hatred beneath the borrowed face. “She is tired.”
Jesus did not move. “Yes.”
“She has carried enough.”
“Yes.”
“Then let her rest.”
“In truth,” Jesus said. “Not in deception.”
The figure turned back to Mara. Her voice became softer, more like the mother Mara remembered from childhood. “Do you want to see what I wrote on the last page?”
Mara froze.
Jesus looked at her. His eyes did not warn her away from the desire. They simply held her steady inside it. Mara wanted the real notebook. She wanted every page. She wanted the words her mother had written when strength was leaving. The lie knew that desire and had chosen its hook carefully.
The figure lifted one hand. A blue notebook appeared in her palm.
Mara did not move.
“The real one is waiting,” Jesus said.
The figure’s face hardened.
Mara took a step back toward Jesus. “Then I will read it there.”
The notebook in the figure’s hand caught fire without heat. It burned blue at the edges, then collapsed into black paper. The false mother’s face hollowed out, the eyes becoming dark openings. For a moment, the creature in the hall and the figure in the living room seemed connected, one hunger in two places.
Mara did not run.
The rooms in the stretched living room began closing one by one. The false father vanished. The false Silas vanished. The camera room folded into shadow. The armchair where her false mother had sat disappeared last, leaving only the ordinary living room with its old couch, boxes, dust, and a blanket folded over the back of a chair.
The house was quiet again.
Mara breathed shakily. “How do I get to the real one?”
Jesus looked toward the kitchen. “Through what you are still afraid to say.”
She knew immediately. The call had begun the return, but it had not carried the whole truth. She had told her father and Silas she was coming home. She had apologized for leaving. She had not told them about Thomas Vale. She had not told them about Renn, the video, the man in the basement, the coat, or the way she had turned a person into atmosphere and then avoided the fire that might have named him.
The kitchen light flickered.
On the table, a phone appeared. Not the old beige phone from the basement. Her own phone. It lay faceup beside a stack of mail, the blue notebook, and a mug with a crack near the handle. The screen glowed with two names.
Dad.
Silas.
A call waiting to be made again.
Mara looked at Jesus. “Now?”
“Yes.”
“What if telling them makes them not want me home?”
“Then you will still have chosen truth over the room that offered you their comfort without their freedom.”
She hated that answer and trusted it more than any easier one.
The creature struck the doorframe behind them. Wood splintered. Jesus turned, and the thing recoiled, but less than before. The house trembled. The phone on the table buzzed once.
Mara walked into the kitchen.
Every step felt heavier than the last. She set Thomas Vale’s Bible on the table beside the blue notebook and picked up the phone. Her thumb hovered over the call button. The screen reflected her face, and behind her, she saw Jesus in the doorway, the Exit Hall beyond Him, and the creature bending low to enter.
She pressed call.
The phone rang once.
Twice.
Silas answered. “Mara?”
The sound of his real voice, or whatever mercy allowed her to reach from this room, steadied the floor beneath her. “I am still here.”
He exhaled. “Dad has been walking circles around the kitchen.”
Her father’s voice came from nearby, muffled. “Do not tell her that.”
Silas said, “Too late.”
Mara almost smiled. The almost-smile hurt and helped. She could picture them too clearly. Her father pretending not to be anxious, Silas irritated by the pretending, both of them standing in the same room because her call had pulled them into waiting together. That was real. Messy, tense, and real.
Silas asked, “Are you closer?”
Mara looked at the kitchen around her. “I think so.”
“You think so?”
“I am in a place that looks like home, but it is not home yet.”
A pause followed. “That sounds like something I do not know how to respond to.”
“I know.”
Her father came on the line. “Mara, are you hurt?”
She glanced at the creature pressing into the doorway. Jesus held one hand against the doorframe, not straining, simply standing between. “I am afraid,” she said. “But I need to tell you something before I come home.”
Silas’s voice sharpened. “What kind of something?”
“The kind I should have told you before.”
The line went quiet.
Mara sat at the kitchen table because her legs were shaking. The blue notebook lay inches from her hand, closed and waiting. Thomas Vale’s Bible rested beside it. The cracked mug held cold coffee that smelled too real. The creature scraped again at the door, and the whole house gave a low groan.
She spoke before fear could bargain with her.
“Before I fell into this place, before I called you, before any of this, I was part of something that hurt a man. His name was Thomas Alwyn Vale. I did not know his full name then, but I knew enough. Renn and I filmed in an abandoned school. Thomas was sheltering there. He asked us not to show him. We blurred his face, but we used his voice. We made the place feel haunted, and we let people treat him like part of the fear.”
Her father did not interrupt. Silas did not either. Their silence was not empty. It was listening, and that made the confession harder.
Mara continued. “Afterward, a woman from a local church reached out. She knew him, at least a little. She wanted us to come talk privately. I ignored it. Renn made it worse in his own way, but I ignored it too. The building later burned. An unidentified man died in the lower level. I told myself I did not know it was him, but I did not try to know. I bought a coat to take back, and I never took it. I left that too.”
The kitchen walls dimmed. The creature’s hand pushed farther past Jesus, long fingers scraping the floor. It wanted the confession to become despair. Mara could feel it pressing thoughts toward her. Say you are filthy. Say you have no right to go home. Say they should hate you. Say the truth proves the door is closed.
She did not obey.
“I am not telling you this so you can forgive me quickly,” she said. “I am telling you because if I come home and hide this, I am bringing another room with me. I need you to know I have things to make right beyond our family. I need to find Thomas’s people if I can. I need to contact the woman who tried to help. I need to correct what I helped turn into a lie. I am scared to tell you because I do not want this to be the first thing I bring through the door. But I cannot come home pretending I only hurt you by being absent.”
The phone was silent.
Mara closed her eyes.
Silas spoke first. His voice was low. “I do not know what to say.”
“That is fair.”
“That is terrible, Mara.”
“I know.”
“No, I mean it is terrible.”
“I know.”
Her father’s voice came next, strained and quiet. “Did you break the law?”
Mara swallowed. “I do not know. Maybe not in the way people mean. Maybe in some way I have not faced. But I did wrong.”
The honesty seemed to settle between them. She could hear her father breathing. She imagined his hand on the counter, Silas standing near the table, both of them trying to fit the person they loved with what she had just confessed. She wanted to fill the silence with explanations. She wanted to say she had been scared, young, pressured, not alone in it, haunted by it. Some of that was true, but none of it needed to lead.
Silas said, “Why tell us now?”
Mara looked at Jesus. He was still at the doorway, His back to her, His face toward the creature. He did not turn, but she felt the answer He had been teaching her in every room.
“Because I am tired of making people love a version of me that leaves the worst parts outside the room.”
The creature recoiled as if the words had burned it.
Silas did not speak for a while. Then he said, “I am angry.”
“I know.”
“I was already angry. This is more.”
“I know.”
“I still want you home.”
Mara bent over the table, gripping the phone with both hands. A sound broke out of her, but she held the receiver close and listened as Silas continued.
“I do not know what that looks like. I do not know how many hard conversations are waiting. I do not know what Dad thinks because he is doing that thing where he stares at one spot and forgets he has a face. But I still want you home.”
Her father made a rough sound in the background. “I have a face.”
Silas said, “Not currently.”
Mara laughed through tears, and the kitchen light strengthened.
Her father came back on the line. His voice sounded older and tender and frightened. “Mara, I am upset. I am confused. I am thankful you told us. I am all of it at once. But listen to me. Home is not a reward for having nothing ugly to confess. If that were true, none of us would live here.”
The sentence entered her like something her mother might have prayed toward. Mara pressed her hand over the blue notebook but did not open it.
“I am coming,” she whispered.
“We are here,” her father said.
The phone screen brightened. The call did not end, but it changed. The kitchen around Mara grew more solid. The boxes in the living room lost their threatening stillness and became just boxes. The photos on the walls stopped watching and became photographs again. The porch light through the front window burned steady, not golden with false perfection, not dim with despair. Just on.
The creature forced itself another inch into the doorway.
Jesus spoke without turning around. “Mara.”
She looked up.
“Now open the front door.”
She held the phone. “While they are still on the line?”
“Yes.”
Mara stood. Her father and Silas were both speaking now, confused by her movement, asking what was happening. She did not explain. She carried the phone in one hand and touched Thomas Vale’s Bible with the other before leaving it on the table beside the blue notebook. Something in her knew she did not need to carry the copied weight any farther. The truth had been spoken. What remained had to be lived.
She walked down the front hallway.
The creature pushed harder. Jesus held the inner doorway, but the house shook around Him. The Exit Hall behind the creature was almost completely dark now. Its long hand reached toward Mara’s nameplate on the wall, trying to scratch the letters away.
Mara reached the front door of her father’s house.
Her hand closed around the knob.
Every false room she had passed seemed to whisper from behind her. The yellow halls. The vending machine. The break room. The false street. The editing room. The hospital bed. The family basement. The rain road. The blue room. The monitor room. Each whispered that she was not ready, that she would fail, that return was too late, that confession had only made her more vulnerable, that love could not survive what truth had uncovered.
Mara looked back once.
Jesus stood between her and the Accuser. His feet were planted on the floor of the house she had feared entering. His face was calm, but His eyes carried fire the Backrooms could not imitate. The creature bent toward Him, hungry and furious, but it could not pass where He stood.
“Go,” Jesus said.
Mara opened the front door.
Cold night air rushed in.
Not stale. Not damp. Not plastic. Real air. It smelled of wet leaves, pavement, and distant woodsmoke. The porch stretched before her under the small light her father had promised not to turn off. Beyond the porch was the street where she had learned to ride a bike, the maple tree near the walk, the driveway with cracks in the concrete, the quiet neighborhood under a clouded sky.
At the far edge of the porch stood one final threshold.
It was not a door. It was the edge between the house the Backrooms had made and the world where her father and brother waited. The porch boards looked real, but the yard beyond flickered slightly, as if the Backrooms still had one hand on the frame.
The creature shrieked behind her.
Mara stepped onto the porch.
The phone in her hand filled with her father’s voice. “Mara?”
“I see the porch light,” she said.
Inside the house, Jesus turned toward the creature. The hallway behind Him folded inward under the weight of His presence. The Accuser struck at Him with every voice it had stolen, but none of them sounded convincing now. They became noise, and then less than noise.
Mara took another step.
The porch boards held.
Silas’s voice broke through the phone. “Then come through the door.”
She looked toward the yard. The air shimmered. For one moment, she saw the real front door from the outside, and beyond its window, two figures moving in the kitchen. Her father. Silas. Not copies. Not softened. Not easy. Waiting.
Mara stepped off the porch.
The Backrooms tore behind her like wallpaper ripped from a wall.
She fell forward into cold night, clutching the phone, and landed on the wet walkway outside her father’s house. The porch light shone above her. The real front door opened, and her father stood there in the light with Silas behind him, both of them stunned, frightened, and alive.
Mara looked up at them from the walkway with rain on her face and truth still shaking in her bones.
“I’m home,” she said.
Chapter Eleven: The House That Had to Stay Real
Mara stayed on the wet walkway for a moment because her body had not caught up with what her eyes could see. The porch light was above her. The cold air was real. The rain on her face was real. Her father stood in the open doorway with one hand gripping the frame, and Silas stood behind him in a T-shirt and sweatpants, barefoot on the old entry rug, staring as if the night had opened and given back someone he had trained himself not to expect.
No one moved first. That felt right, even though it hurt. The false house had rushed toward her with perfect forgiveness, but the real house stood stunned and unsure. Her father’s face had relief in it, but also fear. Silas’s face had anger in it, but also something that looked almost like a child seeing a light come on after a storm. Mara did not try to make the moment beautiful. She had learned enough in the Backrooms to know beauty that arrives too clean is often hiding from truth.
Her father stepped down onto the porch, then stopped as if he were afraid she might vanish if he came too quickly. “Mara,” he said, and her name in his voice sounded older than the call, older than the letter, older than every room she had walked through. It sounded like the name he had spoken when she was a baby, a child, a teenager, a daughter leaving before dawn, and now a woman on the wet concrete with fear still shaking in her hands.
“I’m here,” she said.
Silas came past their father and down the steps faster than he seemed to intend. He stopped a few feet from her, breathing hard, fists tight at his sides. For a second Mara thought he might yell. She almost wanted him to because anger would give her something solid to stand against. Instead, his face crumpled in a way he could not control, and he turned away for half a breath before turning back.
“You look awful,” he said.
Mara laughed once, and it broke into a sob. “Fair.”
He knelt then and reached for her, not gently at first, but desperately. His arms went around her shoulders, and the force of it almost knocked her backward onto the walkway. Mara held him with one hand and gripped the phone with the other until her fingers loosened and the phone slid onto the wet concrete beside them. Silas’s body shook against hers. He smelled like laundry soap, coffee, and the house. Not a memory. Not a copy. Her brother.
Her father came down the steps slowly. When Silas moved back, their father knelt with more effort and gathered Mara into his arms. He did not say it was okay. He did not say all was forgiven. He did not turn the hard road into a soft sentence. He only held her like a man who had kept a porch light on until hope and pain were hard to tell apart, and now the daughter he loved was wet, trembling, and alive in his arms.
Mara’s face pressed against his flannel shirt. She could hear his heart. The sound undid her more than any voice in the Backrooms had. For years she had treated her father’s waiting as pressure, but his heartbeat did not demand anything from her. It simply kept going, the ordinary rhythm of a man who had suffered, aged, hoped, resented, prayed badly, and still opened the door.
“I’m sorry,” she said into his shoulder.
His hand tightened at the back of her head. “I know.”
“I’m not done being sorry.”
“I know that too.”
Silas stood near them, wiping his face with the heel of his hand and looking angry at the tears for existing. Mara almost smiled because that was exactly him. Then he saw the phone lying in the rain and picked it up. The screen was cracked now, though she did not remember it cracking. It showed no call, no recording, no signal from the impossible place. Only the lock screen and the time, as if the world had been waiting to become ordinary again.
“We should go inside,” Silas said. “Before she gets hypothermia after surviving whatever the hell that was.”
Their father looked at him.
Silas looked back. “I am allowed one.”
“Maybe one,” their father said.
Mara laughed again, and this time it held a little more life. Her father helped her stand. Her legs shook so badly that both men had to support her up the porch steps. She felt embarrassed, then remembered Liora taking the coat without owing a story, Jonas holding coffee with both hands, Renn sitting in the chair he had not wanted, and Eli allowing his shoe to be tied. Need was not theft. Being helped through a doorway was not failure.
Inside, the house did not transform into a perfect place. That was how she knew it was real. There were dishes in the sink. A stack of mail sat on the counter beside the cracked mug she had seen in the false kitchen. Cardboard boxes filled one corner of the living room, and a throw blanket had slid halfway off the couch. The house looked like grief had lived there and nobody had known whether cleaning would honor the dead or disturb them.
Mara stood just inside the entryway and looked toward the kitchen table. The blue notebook was there. Not glowing. Not placed under a holy lamp. Just there, closed beside a half-empty cup of coffee and a pair of reading glasses. Silas saw where she was looking, and his face tightened.
“You don’t have to read it tonight,” he said.
Mara looked at him. The sentence surprised her. She had expected him to push it toward her because he had carried it alone too long. Instead, he stood between her and the notebook with the strange protectiveness of someone who wanted the truth opened, but not used like a weapon.
“I know,” she said. “But I need to sit near it.”
Her father got her a towel. Silas found a dry sweatshirt from the laundry room, one that belonged to him and smelled faintly of detergent and the cedar blocks their mother used to tuck into drawers. Mara changed in the small downstairs bathroom, leaving her wet jacket on the tile floor. In the mirror, she looked pale, worn, and older than she had that afternoon. Her eyes seemed to carry yellow light even under the bathroom bulb.
When she came back out, her father had made tea because that was what he did when life became too large for normal words. He set a mug in front of her at the kitchen table. Silas sat across from her with his arms folded, the posture defensive but the fact of his presence merciful. Their father sat at the end of the table, close enough to reach her and far enough to let the conversation breathe.
For a while, none of them spoke. The house made its small sounds around them. The refrigerator clicked. Rain tapped the kitchen window. Somewhere in the walls, old pipes shifted. Mara had spent years imagining this table as a place of judgment, but the silence there did not feel like a court. It felt like a family trying to find the first honest sentence after too many years of unfinished ones.
Silas found it first. “Was any of what you said on the phone exaggerated?”
Mara shook her head. “No.”
“Was it all true?”
“As true as I know how to tell it.”
He studied her. “That answer sounds careful.”
“It is,” she said. “Not because I am trying to hide. Because some of what happened will sound impossible, and some of what I did before that was plain and ugly. I do not want to mix those together in a way that lets the impossible make the ugly feel less real.”
Her father leaned back slowly. “Tell us what you can.”
Mara wrapped both hands around the mug. The tea was too hot to drink, but the warmth helped her stay in the chair. She told them about filming in the abandoned school. She told them about Thomas asking not to have his face shown. She told them about using his voice, changing the edit, reading comments that knew something was wrong, and choosing not to stop the video because the numbers were rising. She told them about Mrs. Calder’s message and the way she had ignored it because private accountability seemed more frightening than public criticism.
Silas listened with a face that hardened and softened by turns. Their father looked down at the table through most of it, his jaw moving as though he were holding back words until they could come out without harming everyone in the room. Mara did not rush them. The Backrooms had taught her that truth cannot demand instant hospitality from those it wounds. It can only arrive without disguise.
When she finished the part about Thomas, Silas rubbed both hands over his face. “I am mad at you.”
“I know.”
“I am also glad you told us.”
“I know.”
“No, you do not get to know everything tonight.” His voice sharpened, then shook. “I do not know what to do with the fact that I still want to hug you again.”
Mara’s eyes filled. “You don’t have to know tonight.”
Their father looked at Silas, then at Mara. “Your mother would have said the same thing.”
The room quieted at the mention of her. The blue notebook sat between them, small and closed. Mara looked at it but did not reach for it. She had seen enough borrowed versions of her mother’s words to understand that the real pages deserved more than urgency. They deserved a room where no one was performing and no one was trying to survive the next monster.
Her father touched the notebook with one finger. “Silas found it in the drawer by her bed. I had not opened that drawer in years.”
Silas looked down. “I should have told you sooner.”
Their father shook his head. “Maybe. Maybe I should have opened the drawer before you had to.”
Mara looked between them and felt the strange, painful mercy of not being the only one with a door to open. She had entered the Backrooms through her own avoidance, but the house had its rooms too. Her father had drawers he had not opened. Silas had letters he had delayed sending. Grief had made each of them choose a different hallway and call it necessary.
“I want to read it with you,” Mara said. “Not all tonight. Not if we can’t. But I don’t want to take it away and make it private.”
Silas stared at her. “You mean that?”
“Yes.”
Her father’s eyes glistened. “She wrote pages for each of us.”
“Then maybe we read them when we can handle being honest,” Mara said. “And when we can’t, maybe we say that instead of disappearing.”
Silas gave a short laugh under his breath. “Look who came back from the nightmare place with family rules.”
Mara smiled weakly. “One rule. Maybe two.”
“No more than two,” he said. “We are fragile.”
Their father let out a tired laugh, and the sound changed the room. It did not heal everything. It did not erase the years. But it moved through the kitchen like fresh air entering a shut house. Mara thought of the Backrooms and how it swallowed sound without echo. Here, laughter returned from the walls. Not loudly. Not perfectly. But enough.
Later, after the tea had cooled and the first hard conversation had given way to a silence that felt less dangerous, Mara called the number from Mrs. Calder’s old message. She expected voicemail. She almost hoped for it because live mercy was harder. Mrs. Calder answered on the fourth ring.
“This is Anne Calder,” the woman said.
Mara closed her eyes. The name Anne struck her with unexpected tenderness. The Backrooms had given her Mrs. Calder as a figure of mercy, but here was the real woman with a first name, a tired voice, and a phone line that crackled slightly because real things do that.
“My name is Mara Venn,” Mara said. “I should have called you years ago.”
The silence on the other end was long enough to make Mara’s hand shake. Silas sat across the table, watching her. Her father stood near the sink, one hand on the counter. Neither rescued her from the silence, and she was grateful.
Anne Calder spoke carefully. “I remember you.”
“I know.”
“And Renn?”
“He is going to call you too,” Mara said. “I believe he is. But I need to call for myself. I need to talk about Thomas Alwyn Vale.”
This silence was different. Mara heard a small inhale. “You found his name?”
“Yes.”
“Where?”
Mara looked toward the hallway, toward the door, toward the porch light. She could not tell Anne everything, not in a way that would sound sane. Not yet. Maybe not ever in full. But she could tell the truth she had been given to obey. “In the place I finally stopped refusing to look.”
Anne did not answer right away. “That sounds like the kind of sentence a person says when God has cornered them kindly.”
Mara almost cried again. “Yes.”
They spoke for only a few minutes because neither woman could carry the whole weight in one call. Anne confirmed that Thomas had come to the pantry several times. She had records that might help. She knew a retired school administrator who might know where Thomas had taught. She had kept the message thread she sent after the fire, not out of resentment, she said, but because she kept hoping accountability would find its way back. Mara promised to meet her in person. Not to film. Not to explain herself into sympathy. To listen, provide the original details, help trace Thomas’s people if they could be found, and begin the correction from the ground instead of the crowd.
When Mara hung up, Silas was looking at her differently. Not with easy forgiveness. Not with admiration. With cautious recognition, as if the person sitting at the table might truly be his sister and not only the ghost of someone who had left.
“You actually called,” he said.
“I said I would.”
“You used to say a lot of things.”
“I know.”
He nodded slowly. “That was not me taking it back. I just needed to say it.”
“I know.”
He sighed. “Stop being reasonable. It is making it harder to stay mad in a clean way.”
Mara looked down at her hands. “I don’t want clean anymore.”
Her father sat back down. His face looked worn through, but present. “None of this will be quick.”
“No,” Mara said.
“People may be hurt by what you bring back up.”
“Yes.”
“You may have consequences you cannot control.”
“I know.”
He studied her for a long moment. “And you are staying tonight?”
The question was not only about sleep. They all knew that. Mara looked toward the front door, where the porch light still shone through the window. For a second, she could almost feel the Exit Hall beyond it, waiting for any hesitation it could turn into distance. Then she heard Jesus’ words from the final door. Give Me the fear. Then open the door.
“I’m staying tonight,” she said. “And if I panic tomorrow, I will say I am panicking instead of leaving without a word.”
Silas leaned back. “That might be the most emotionally healthy thing anyone has said in this house since 2019.”
Their father gave him a look. “We are not dating the family dysfunction.”
“We should. It has tenure.”
Mara laughed, and this time it did not break. It came out tired, but whole. Her father smiled faintly. Silas looked pleased with himself for half a second, then tried to hide it by taking the empty mugs to the sink. The kitchen did not glow. No music swelled. No door of light opened. It was just a house, a family, a sink full of mugs, and a night that had not yet solved everything.
That was enough to begin.
Mara slept on the couch because her old room was full of boxes and none of them had the strength to open that door tonight. Her father brought extra blankets. Silas stood near the hallway with a pillow under one arm and looked like he wanted to say something but did not know how to make it come out without sounding like either a wound or a joke. Finally, he tossed the pillow at her.
“You snore when you’re exhausted,” he said.
“I do not.”
“You absolutely do. Mom used to say you sounded like a tiny lawn mower.”
Mara held the pillow against her chest. The mention of their mother did not break the room this time. It softened it. “She did not.”
“She did.”
Their father stood behind him, smiling with sadness in his eyes. “She did.”
Mara looked at both of them and felt the night settle around the house. The Backrooms had taught her that fear pretends to be endless. This house taught her something quieter. Love does not need to become easy before it becomes real again. It can sit with anger, grief, confession, awkward humor, old blankets, and a porch light that stayed on because someone refused to make darkness the final answer.
In the middle of the night, Mara woke suddenly. For one terrible second, she thought she heard fluorescent buzzing. She sat up on the couch, heart pounding. The room was dark except for the soft light from the hallway and the faint glow through the front window. Rain had stopped. The house breathed in ordinary creaks.
Then she saw Him.
Jesus stood near the front door, one hand resting lightly on the frame. He was not a vision dressed in brightness. He wore the same plain clothes, still marked by the long journey through yellow halls, rain, smoke, and sorrow. His presence filled the room without waking the house. Mara knew without knowing how that the others would not see Him unless mercy required it.
She pushed the blanket aside and stood.
“Are You leaving?” she asked.
He looked at her with kindness that did not avoid the question. “I am not leaving you.”
“That is not the same answer.”
“No.”
Her eyes filled again, but she was too tired to hide it. “I don’t know how to live after that place.”
“You live in truth one step at a time.”
“What if it comes back?”
“The fear may whisper again. The rooms may call to you in old ways. But you do not belong to them.”
She looked toward the window. The porch light glowed steadily. “Was it real?”
Jesus came closer. “Real enough to reveal what was hidden. Real enough to wound if you had stayed. Real enough that I came.”
Mara held that answer. It did not solve every question. It did not explain the physics of impossible hallways or why doors opened where they should not or how a white exit could return a lost child to a mother’s arms. It gave her something better than explanation. It gave her His presence as the truest fact inside the impossible.
“What about the Backrooms?” she asked.
Jesus looked toward the front door. For a moment, beyond the wood and glass and porch light, Mara saw another place. The yellow halls were quiet now. Not gone. Not empty. But quiet. A red sneaker lace lay on damp carpet. A vending machine stood dark. A break room table held one empty paper cup. A blue room waited with its chairs folded. A road somewhere still heard gentle rain. A final hallway held brass nameplates that no longer belonged to the darkness.
“It has been seen,” Jesus said.
The words settled deeply in her. The Backrooms had thrived on hidden fear, forgotten people, private guilt, and rooms no one entered. To be seen by Him was not the same as being understood by the internet, named by a camera, or explained by a theory. It was judgment and mercy together. It meant no hallway was beyond His knowledge, no trapped child beneath His notice, no old man’s grief too heavy, no exploited man too nameless, no daughter too far into avoidance, and no accusation stronger than His authority.
Mara wiped her face. “Will You help me tomorrow?”
“Yes.”
“With Anne Calder?”
“Yes.”
“With Silas?”
“Yes.”
“With Dad?”
“Yes.”
“With the notebook?”
Jesus’ face softened. “Yes.”
She nodded because any more words would break into more crying, and she had already cried enough for one night, though she suspected healing did not care about her limits. She looked toward the hallway where her father and brother slept in separate rooms full of their own dreams and sorrows. Then she looked back at Jesus.
“Thank You for coming into that place,” she said.
“I came for those who are lost,” He answered.
This time the words did not frighten her. They sounded like home.
Jesus walked to the door and opened it quietly. Cold, clean air moved into the living room. He stepped onto the porch, and Mara followed only as far as the threshold. Outside, the street lay under deep night. The wet pavement reflected the porch light in small broken lines. The maple tree stood bare and patient near the walk. Nothing in the neighborhood seemed to know that eternity had touched the house, and yet everything looked more carefully made than before.
Jesus descended the porch steps and stopped on the walkway where Mara had fallen. Then He knelt.
Mara held her breath.
He bowed His head in quiet prayer, as He had done on the damp carpet at the beginning of the impossible halls. This time there was real night above Him, real earth beneath Him, and a real house behind Him where a family had begun to tell the truth. He prayed there without display, without hurry, without needing anyone to understand all that had been carried through the darkness. The porch light shone over Him, and the place that had tried to swallow names had no voice here.
Mara stood in the doorway until the prayer ended.
When Jesus rose, He looked back at her once. No slogan. No speech. Only a look that told her to stay in the truth He had brought her to. Then He walked down the wet street, and the night received Him without making Him disappear.
Mara closed the door gently. She did not lock it right away. She stood with her hand on the knob, listening to the house breathe. Upstairs, one floorboard creaked. In the kitchen, the blue notebook waited. In the morning, the work would begin, and it would be hard. But the porch light was still on, her father and brother were still there, Thomas Vale had a name, and the halls that fear had built inside her no longer had the final word.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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There are sermons preached from polished pulpits beneath stained-glass windows…
and then there are sermons preached under fluorescent lights while a heart monitor clicks like a countdown clock.
I walk between life and death with mastery over neither.
To some, I am pastor.
To others, chaplain.
And those two worlds do not always shake hands easily.
The pastor in me wants to stand tall and thunder answers from rooftops, pulpits, parking lots, and city parks. The pastor opens the Bible like a sword pulled from fire and says, “Thus saith the Lord.”
But the chaplain?
The chaplain walks softly into rooms that smell like antiseptic and endings.
He enters strange territory — hospital rooms, nursing homes, living rooms haunted by silence. Somebody else’s domain. Somebody else’s pain. Somebody else’s midnight.
And at first… you are an intrusion.
Until they realize you didn’t come to beat them over the head with Bible verses.
You came to listen.
To let trembling voices empty themselves.
To let fear speak.
To let regret breathe.
To let grief crawl out from hiding.
And sometimes the holiest thing a man can do… is shut up long enough to hear another human soul bleeding.
There is a balance between preacher and chaplain.
I know there is.
But I have not fully found that road yet.
Because I know this much for certain:
when you truly listen to someone — not waiting to interrupt, not loading your next sermon into the chamber — your listening itself becomes medicine.
A healing balm.
And yet I also know what Jesus said:
“No man can come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him…” — John 6:44
That changes everything.
Because all the Bible verses in the world become noise if the Father is not drawing a soul in that moment.
And somebody always asks the hard question:
“If they’re dying… if they’re on hospice… if their feet are already touching eternity… why wouldn’t God draw them now?”
But who can say He didn’t?
Maybe He called them when they were children.
Maybe He called them through a praying grandmother.
Maybe through a broken marriage.
Maybe through a funeral.
Maybe through a preacher on a Sunday night twenty years ago.
Maybe Heaven shouted… and they turned the radio louder.
There’s an old saying:
“As goes the pulpit, so goes the nation.”
But there ought to be another saying for chaplains.
Because chaplains walk into the wreckage after the sermon is over.
When a nation forgets the Word preached from old King James Bibles…
when truth becomes optional…
when churches become entertainment halls and conviction becomes offensive…
somebody still has to walk into the heart of darkness carrying a flicker of light.
That is the work of the chaplain.
Not ten years from now.
Not twenty years from now.
Some of these people may only have ten minutes.
And when you lock eyes with a man who knows his number has been called…
when death is no longer philosophy but footsteps in the hallway…
there is a reckoning that happens there more powerful than many altar calls.
No organ playing.
No choir singing.
No polished sermon manuscript.
Just a soul…
and eternity…
staring at one another.
And there is another preacher present in that room.
The Holy Spirit.
The convicting power sent by Jesus Christ Himself to seek the lost sheep wandering at the edge of forever.
And the chaplain becomes the voice crying through the storm:
“O sinner… come home.”
Knowing full well that if there is still breath in their lungs, Jesus may still be calling them.
And when tears begin to fall from hardened eyes…
when pride finally collapses…
when grief explodes into repentance…
when fear gives way to hope…
it feels like watching a dead seed crack open underground and burst into life.
Like a chrysalis breaking apart into wings.
And Heaven rejoices.
Not politely.
Violently.
Joy erupts across eternity over one lost sheep coming home.
I have seen it.
And I know now you cannot fully bring chaplaincy behind the pulpit.
And you cannot fully bring preaching into every bedside conversation.
But there is a Voice greater than both offices.
A still, small Voice.
A Voice that slips past hardened defenses.
A Voice that cracks stone hearts and turns them back into flesh.
And maybe…
Maybe that Voice is speaking even now.
“Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine!
Oh, what a foretaste of glory divine!”
Isaiah 55:1-2 NLT “Is anyone thirsty? Come and drink- even if you have no money! Come, take your choice of wine or milk- it's all free! [2] Why spend your money on food that does not give you strength? Why pay for food that does you no good? Listen to me, and you will eat what is good. You will enjoy the finest food.
John 7:37-39 NLT On the last day, the climax of the festival, Jesus stood and shouted to the crowds, “Anyone who is thirsty may come to me! [38] Anyone who believes in me may come and drink! For the Scriptures declare, 'Rivers of living water will flow from his heart.'” [39] (When he said “living water,” he was speaking of the Spirit, who would be given to everyone believing in him. But the Spirit had not yet been given, because Jesus had not yet entered into his glory.)
Revelation 22:17 NLT The Spirit and the bride say, “Come.” Let anyone who hears this say, “Come.” Let anyone who is thirsty come. Let anyone who desires drink freely from the water of life.
from
SmarterArticles

The room is unremarkable. A clean desk, a laptop, a printed sheet of arithmetic and short reading passages, and a pair of EEG electrodes resting against the scalp like patient fingers. The participant has just finished ten minutes of working through problems with the help of an AI assistant. The screen is closed. The chatbot is gone. A research assistant slides a fresh page across the desk and asks, politely, for the subject to answer the next set of questions alone.
The subject reads. The subject thinks. The subject, by every behavioural and neural measure the researchers can capture, performs measurably worse than a control participant who never touched the assistant. The effect is not subtle. It is there in the response latencies, in the error rates, in the EEG traces that show a dampened pattern of frontoparietal engagement which, ten minutes earlier, was healthy and robust.
That, in essence, is the claim of a multi-institution study widely reported across science media in April 2026, attributed to researchers from UCLA, MIT, Oxford and Carnegie Mellon, which proposes the first causal evidence that brief AI use is sufficient to produce immediate, measurable cognitive impairment in the unaided performance of equivalent tasks. The reporting has been breathless and the framing predictably apocalyptic, but the scientific stakes, if the finding survives replication, are genuinely large. Earlier work in this area had described a slow drift, a kind of boiling-frog dependency in which years of cognitive offloading might thin out a person's capacity to think for themselves. The newer claim is something different and arguably more disturbing: that the cost shows up in minutes, not years.
The distinction is not academic. If the harm is gradual, you can argue, with some plausibility, that informed adults using AI in the privacy of their own choices are merely making a long-term trade-off they are entitled to make. If the harm is acute, then the deployment of AI assistants in classrooms, clinical consulting rooms, courtrooms, contact centres and welfare offices, often without disclosure and almost always without anything resembling informed consent, looks rather different. It looks like a very large and largely unmonitored field experiment.
What does the evidence actually show? What can be defended, and what cannot? And once we are honest about both, who has the responsibility to act?
For the past three years, the dominant frame for thinking about AI and cognition has been the boiling frog, the apocryphal creature that fails to leap from a gradually heating pot. The framing made sense because the foundational evidence in cognitive science was itself longitudinal and slow.
Eleanor Maguire's work at University College London on the hippocampi of London taxi drivers, beginning in 2000, established that the brain regions used to navigate a complex city physically thicken with use. Subsequent imaging work, including a 2017 study in Nature Communications by Hugo Spiers and colleagues, suggested that turn-by-turn satnav use suppressed activity in the same hippocampal circuits. Capacity follows demand: ask the brain to navigate, and it grows the apparatus for navigation; ask it to follow instructions from a phone, and the apparatus quietens.
In 2011, Betsy Sparrow, then at Columbia, with Jenny Liu and the late Daniel Wegner of Harvard, published a paper in Science showing that participants who expected to look information up later remembered the information itself less well, but remembered where to find it. A 2024 meta-analysis in the journal Memory found the Google effect real but more modest than early coverage suggested.
Together, this literature painted a picture of slow, accumulative externalisation. Bit by bit, certain cognitive functions migrated from the wet hardware in the skull to the dry hardware in the pocket. The implicit settlement was that the costs were chronic and perhaps reversible if you put the phone down.
Generative AI complicated this picture, but for the first eighteen months of the consumer chatbot era the public discussion still defaulted to the chronic frame. Even Michael Gerlich's much-cited 2025 paper in Societies, which surveyed 666 participants and reported a strong negative correlation between AI tool use and critical thinking scores, was best read as a snapshot of ongoing erosion rather than a claim about acute injury.
Acute injury is what the newer reporting is now claiming. And acute injury, scientifically and ethically, is a different beast.
To understand why the reported April 2026 finding has provoked the reaction it has, it is worth being precise about what an acute cognitive effect would, and would not, be. An acute effect appears rapidly after exposure and is measurable on a short timescale. A chronic exposure might gradually wear down an organ over decades; an acute exposure produces a measurable change within minutes or hours.
In the cognitive context, the equivalent claim is that ten minutes of AI-assisted maths or reading leaves a measurable footprint on the brain's ability to perform similar tasks unaided immediately after. The footprint, if it exists, is not memory loss in any everyday sense. It is more like a transient state shift, a cognitive tone that has slackened.
This is not biologically implausible. Cognitive psychology has long documented carry-over effects between tasks. Mental set, the tendency to apply a problem-solving strategy beyond its useful range, is a textbook example. So is the well-replicated finding that performing a task in a state of high external scaffolding can degrade subsequent independent performance, a phenomenon educators have long known as the assistance dilemma.
What the reported study would add is an EEG-level signal, that the brain is not merely behaving as if it has just been scaffolded but is in some quantifiable sense still in the scaffolded state, with reduced engagement in the networks that would ordinarily be doing the work. If that signal replicates, the implication is that AI use is not merely a labour-saving device whose benefits and costs balance out neatly. It is a state-altering one.
This is where the strongest existing evidence in the literature, the MIT Media Lab paper Your Brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of Cognitive Debt when Using an AI Assistant for Essay Writing Task, becomes essential context. Authored by Nataliya Kosmyna and seven co-authors and posted to arXiv in 2025 as preprint 2506.08872, the paper studied 54 participants in the Boston area aged 18 to 39, who wrote SAT-style essays under one of three conditions: with a large language model, with a search engine, or with no tools at all. EEG recordings during writing showed that brain-only participants exhibited the strongest, most distributed network engagement; search engine users showed moderate engagement; and LLM users displayed the weakest connectivity. Eighty-three per cent of LLM users were unable to quote from the essays they had just produced. In a fourth session, when LLM users were reassigned to brain-only writing, they continued to show weaker neural connectivity than the consistent brain-only group. The MIT authors called this carry-over cognitive debt.
The MIT preprint was not peer reviewed when it was posted, the sample was modest, and the authors themselves cautioned against the most sensational interpretations. But the basic shape of its finding, that there is a residual neural signature after the AI is taken away, is precisely the shape of the claim that the April 2026 reporting is now amplifying. The newer study, on the description circulating in the science press, extends the logic to elementary cognitive tasks rather than essay writing, and to far shorter exposures.
It is too early to know whether the April 2026 work will hold up under peer review and replication. It is not too early to ask what the world should do if it does.
The mechanism most often cited for both the chronic and acute findings is cognitive offloading: the use of external tools to reduce the demands on internal cognition. The concept predates the AI debate by decades. Writing things down is cognitive offloading. So is asking a colleague. Offloading reduces working-memory load and frees attention. Under certain conditions, it also reduces depth of processing, weakens encoding into long-term memory, and degrades the capacity to do the offloaded task without the tool.
What seems to be different about generative AI is the scope, the seamlessness and the ambient nature of the offload. A calculator does arithmetic. A search engine fetches documents. A large language model writes the paragraph, generates the answer, structures the argument and presents the result in finished form. The cognitive task it performs is not retrieval but synthesis, the very thing that, in classical accounts, is supposed to constitute the active work of thinking.
The Microsoft Research and Carnegie Mellon paper presented at CHI 2025 in Yokohama, authored by Hao-Ping Hank Lee and colleagues and based on a survey of 319 knowledge workers analysing 936 real-world AI-assisted tasks, gives this dynamic empirical shape in the workplace. The paper found that higher confidence in AI was associated with less critical thinking, while higher self-confidence in one's own abilities was associated with more critical thinking. The authors described a shift in the nature of cognitive work itself, from information gathering toward verification, from problem-solving toward integration of AI output, from doing toward supervising. They warned of what they called cognitive atrophy.
The proposed mechanism for an acute effect, then, is not mysterious. During AI-assisted work, the cognitive networks responsible for evaluating and integrating outputs remain active. The networks responsible for original generation, planning and synthesis quieten down. When the tool is taken away, the still-quietened networks do not instantly come back online. There is a lag. The lag is what the EEG picks up. The lag is what shows up in error rates and response latencies on the unaided task that follows.
This is, importantly, not a permanent change. Nothing in the existing literature suggests that ten minutes of AI use causes structural damage to the brain. The relevant concern is not about lasting injury but about state, about the cognitive tone in which the next task is begun, and how quickly that tone recovers when the scaffolding is withdrawn.
Here the honest answer is that the science is at the very beginning of being able to say anything precise. The MIT preprint hints at carry-over within and across sessions, but its design does not isolate the time course of recovery. The reported April 2026 work claims acute impairment immediately after use; it does not, on the publicly available descriptions, characterise the recovery curve in detail. We have evidence of a measurable effect on the order of minutes after AI use, and we do not yet have systematic evidence about whether that effect dissipates within an hour, a day or a longer period, nor about whether repeated daily exposures produce cumulative residue.
The plausible space of outcomes is not fanciful. If the effect resolves quickly and completely after each exposure, it is roughly analogous to the post-meeting fog that anyone who has spent two hours in a video call recognises, an irritation that fades. If it resolves slowly, or if repeated exposure produces cumulative dampening, the deployment-context implications become substantial. A nurse consulting an AI scribe before a complex assessment, a teacher grading with an AI marker before lesson planning, a junior solicitor moving from AI-drafted briefs to in-court argument: all are scenarios in which acute carry-over, even if reversible, has the potential to land on the high-stakes unaided task that follows.
The claim that needs neither hyping nor dismissing is the modest one. There is evidence, from multiple research groups and instruments, that recent AI use leaves a footprint on subsequent unaided cognition. The size of that footprint, its time course, and its dependence on the type of task, the type of AI and the individual user, are all open questions.
The deployment contexts in which acute carry-over would matter most are, helpfully, the same contexts in which AI is being most aggressively deployed. They are not the recreational ones. Nobody is particularly worried about the cognitive aftermath of asking a chatbot to write a wedding speech. The relevant contexts are workplaces where consequential decisions are made under time pressure, classrooms where developing minds are still acquiring the very skills that AI is offloading, healthcare settings where lapses cost lives, and public services where outcomes determine whether citizens are housed, fed, treated or detained.
Take healthcare. In the United Kingdom, AI scribes and clinical-decision-support assistants have proliferated in primary care since 2024, with the Department of Health and Social Care actively encouraging the use of approved tools to reduce administrative burden on general practitioners. The case for these tools is strong; clinician burnout is a public-health emergency in its own right, and time spent transcribing is time not spent with patients. But the consultation that follows the AI-assisted note is not a low-stakes task. It is the next patient. If the cognitive tone with which the clinician enters that next consultation is even slightly slackened by the immediately preceding offload, the relevant question is not whether the tool, on average, saves time. It is whether the unmonitored carry-over is being detected, accounted for, or even acknowledged.
In classrooms, the acute frame inverts the existing debate. The debate so far has largely been about whether students who use AI to do their homework will eventually fail to learn how to write or reason. The acute frame asks a different question: what does it mean to ask a student to use an AI in the first half of a lesson and then to demonstrate understanding in the second? If the cognitive state in which that demonstration happens is materially different from the state of a student who never used the tool, then the assessment is not measuring what it purports to measure. The Department for Education's June 2025 guidance on AI in schools acknowledged that students still needed a strong foundation in reading, writing and critical thinking to use AI effectively. The acute literature, if it stabilises, suggests the guidance does not go nearly far enough. It is not enough to know how to use the tool. The question is what happens when you put it down.
In workplaces more generally, the carry-over question intersects with the dynamic identified by Lee and colleagues at CHI 2025: workers shifting from generation to verification, from problem-solving to integration. If the verification mode itself depends on a cognitive state that is, in the moment, dampened by the just-preceding AI exposure, then verification is precisely the function being undermined. The dynamic is recursive.
In public services, the stakes are starkest. Algorithmic systems already mediate decisions about welfare entitlements, child-protection assessments, criminal-justice risk scoring and immigration triage in many jurisdictions. The case-workers operating those systems are increasingly being given AI-assisted summarisation, drafting and recommendation tools. The decisions they then make about real human lives are made, in some cases minutes after closing the assistant. Whether the cognitive tone in which those decisions are made is materially different from the tone of an unaided counterpart is not a niche concern. In the deployment contexts that matter most, it is the central one.
The ethical literature on technology adoption has historically operated on a strong presumption: that adults, when offered new tools, are entitled to choose to use them, and that the costs of choosing are theirs to bear. This presumption rests on a thicket of assumptions which the acute-impairment frame, if it survives, calls into question.
The first assumption is that the user is the one bearing the cost. In the workplace, that is rarely true. A nurse using an AI scribe is not the principal bearer of the risk if her cognitive tone in the next consultation is dampened. The patient is. A teacher using an AI marker is not the principal bearer if his unaided judgement in the next lesson is reduced. The student is. The deployment of AI in service contexts shifts the costs onto people who were not party to the decision and who, in many cases, do not even know the tool was used.
The second assumption is that the user has been informed. This is, in practice, almost never the case. The patient who interacts with a clinician using an AI scribe is not, in the United Kingdom or in most other jurisdictions, given any disclosure that the scribe was used, much less that recent research has suggested an acute carry-over effect on subsequent unaided cognition. The student whose teacher has just spent half an hour grading essays with an AI marker is not informed. The benefits claimant whose case-worker's notes were drafted by a generative system is not informed. There is, in most settings, no equivalent of the medical-imaging consent form, no equivalent of the data-protection notice, no equivalent of any of the layered consent infrastructures that exist for less consequential interventions in the same lives.
The third assumption is that the cognitive risk is well characterised. It is not. The literature on acute carry-over is, at the time of this writing in April 2026, weeks old in its strongest formulations and months old in its broader contours. Honest informed consent at present would have to read something like: research suggests, but has not yet established, that recent AI use may produce a transient reduction in unaided cognitive performance, the magnitude and duration of which are not yet well understood. That is not a notice that any organisation in any sector is currently required to provide.
The result is a deployment landscape in which a class of cognitive risk has been quietly normalised across millions of high-stakes interactions, on the strength of an implicit assumption that the science was either not real or not relevant, and without any of the consent infrastructure that would be required to make the deployment ethically defensible if the science turns out to be both.
The question of who has the responsibility to act on the emerging evidence has, at present, no clean answer. There is a thicket of actors with partial responsibilities, and a great deal of empty space between them where the responsibility falls through.
Regulators are the obvious candidates, but their instruments are not shaped for the problem. The European Union's AI Act, which entered substantive force during 2025, classifies systems by risk and imposes obligations on developers and deployers. It does not require disclosure of cognitive carry-over effects to end-users, nor monitoring in deployment. The United Kingdom's pro-innovation framework prefers sector-specific guidance and avoids cross-cutting consent obligations. The United States, post the rescission of the Biden-era AI executive order in 2025, has effectively no federal framework at all.
Employers have a duty of care to employees and, in regulated sectors, a duty of care to clients and patients. That duty arguably already extends to an obligation to understand the cognitive risks that workplace tools might impose. The General Medical Council in the United Kingdom and equivalent professional bodies elsewhere have begun to issue guidance on AI use in clinical practice, but these documents focus overwhelmingly on data protection, accuracy and clinical accountability. They do not, at the time of writing, address acute carry-over.
Educators bear a different but related duty. The Department for Education's guidance and the curricular adjustments under way in many school systems are mostly oriented toward whether AI use degrades the development of skill over time. They do not address whether AI use during an assessment, or in the hour before one, materially changes what the assessment measures.
Platform vendors are commercially positioned to be most relevant and culturally positioned to be least. The major AI labs (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google DeepMind, Microsoft) have all published responsible-use guidance of varying depth, and have all engaged, with varying degrees of seriousness, with concerns about cognitive effects. None of them, at the time of writing, surfaces information about cognitive carry-over to end-users in the products themselves. The prevailing commercial logic, in which engagement and frequency of use are positive metrics, does not align with cognitive-risk disclosure, and there is no regulatory instrument forcing the alignment.
Individual users carry the residual responsibility, the way they carry it for every consumer product whose risks have been imperfectly disclosed. That is a thin reed to lean on in any sector where the user is, in fact, the patient or the student or the citizen rather than the operator of the tool.
The honest map of responsibility is therefore a sparse one. There is no regulator currently obliged to act, no employer currently obliged to act, no educator currently obliged to act, no platform currently obliged to act, and no user adequately positioned to act. The gaps are not bugs in the system; the system was not designed for the problem, because the problem was framed, until very recently, as chronic.
It would be irresponsible to leave this account without flagging that the strongest version of the acute-impairment claim still rests on a small number of studies, much of it unreplicated and some of it not yet peer reviewed. The MIT preprint by Kosmyna and colleagues has the limitations its own authors acknowledged: a sample of 54 participants in a single geographic region, no peer review at the time of its initial release, and a fourth-session reassignment design that, while suggestive, is not definitive. The CHI 2025 paper by Lee and colleagues is a survey of self-reported behaviour, not a controlled experiment. The Gerlich 2025 paper in Societies is correlational and was subsequently corrected by the publisher in September 2025 for unrelated issues.
The reported April 2026 multi-institution study would be the strongest causal evidence yet, but its full methodological detail is not, at the time of writing, available for the kind of scrutiny that allows confident claims. It will need to be peer reviewed. It will need to be replicated. It will need to be tested against the standard battery of cognitive-experiment objections: demand characteristics, expectancy effects, the difficulty of isolating the AI-use intervention from time-on-task confounds, the question of whether the post-test deficit is a real cognitive change or a motivational artefact.
These caveats matter, and the article that elides them does the public no favours. They do not, however, license inaction. The asymmetry of the situation is consequential. The cost of acting on a finding that turns out to overstate its case is, mostly, the modest inconvenience of disclosure obligations that would have been good practice anyway. The cost of failing to act on a finding that turns out to be robust is the continued silent conversion of millions of high-stakes interactions into a field experiment whose subjects never agreed to participate.
The right posture, on the present evidence, is therefore neither alarm nor dismissal. It is the unfashionable posture of taking research seriously while it is still emerging, of treating disclosure and consent as prudent defaults under uncertainty, and of designing deployment contexts to be measurable, monitorable and reversible. None of these are dramatic interventions. None require believing that the strongest claims in the literature are true. They require only believing that they might be.
What the evidence demands is modest, and would be modest even if every study cited above were fully replicated and beyond serious dispute. It demands, first, that the deployment of AI assistants in high-stakes settings be accompanied by disclosure to the individuals whose welfare depends on the cognitive performance that follows. The patient is entitled to know that the clinician is using a scribe. The student is entitled to know that the teacher is grading with a marker. The benefits claimant is entitled to know that the case-worker has just closed a chatbot.
It demands, second, that organisations deploying these tools begin to monitor outcomes in a manner sensitive to acute carry-over. Quality-assurance audits exist; they have not, until now, been designed with the carry-over hypothesis in mind, but they could be without much trouble.
It demands, third, that regulators, professional bodies and educators begin to update their guidance with the acute frame in view, and stop treating the cognitive consequences of AI use as a problem of long-term skill development alone. It demands, fourth, that platform vendors stop pretending the question of cognitive effects is somebody else's department, and begin to surface, in their products, the relevant information that emerging research has produced.
What the evidence does not demand is panic. It does not demand that AI be removed from clinics, classrooms or public-service settings. It does not demand that workers stop using tools that, on net, help them do their jobs. It does not demand the kind of moral-panic legislation that would, if enacted on the present evidence, almost certainly do more harm than good.
What it asks of us is the harder thing: to live, as adults, in the uncomfortable middle ground where evidence is suggestive but not yet conclusive, where the costs of action are real but bounded, and where the costs of inaction are uncertain but potentially large. The history of technology regulation is mostly the history of arriving at this middle ground decades after the relevant tools have already reshaped the landscape. The unfashionable possibility, this time, is to arrive earlier.
Strip the press coverage of its more lurid framings and what remains is a claim that is smaller and harder to dismiss. The claim is not that AI is rotting our brains. The claim is not that ten minutes of ChatGPT will leave you intellectually impaired for the rest of the day. The claim is not even that the acute effect, if it exists, is large enough to matter in the average use case.
The claim is that there is a measurable carry-over effect from recent AI use to subsequent unaided cognitive performance, that the effect appears on the order of minutes rather than years, that the existing deployment of AI in high-stakes contexts has not been designed with that effect in mind, and that the consent and disclosure infrastructure required to make that deployment ethically defensible has not been built. The reported April 2026 study strengthens the first proposition. The MIT, Microsoft, Carnegie Mellon and Swiss Business School literatures of the past eighteen months have already strengthened the second. The third is empirical and visible to anyone who looks. The fourth is a matter of public policy that we have, until now, declined to address.
The room from the opening of this article, the desk and the laptop and the EEG electrodes, is not a metaphor. It is a research site, one of a small but growing number, in which the cognitive tone of recent AI users is being measured against the cognitive tone of unaided controls. Whether the field finds the effect to be small and easily managed, or large and policy-relevant, will become clearer in the months ahead. That it is being measured at all is the first piece of good news. That the measurements are not yet, in any meaningful sense, being relayed to the patients, students, clients and citizens whose welfare depends on the unaided performance that follows the use of the tools, is the part of the situation that does not require any further evidence to fix.
The technology will not pause for the science to catch up. The disclosure can.

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
Listen to the free weekly SmarterArticles Podcast
from
Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * As this quiet Friday in the Roscoe-verse winds down it finds me listening to the call of the MLB game between the Tampa Bay Rays and the New York Yankees, the Yankees ahead 1 to 0 in the bottom of the 5th inning.
So many things happening out in the world this weekend: Memorial Day, I hope all those traveling this Holiday weekend do so safely, and I hope we all remember and honor the fallen members of our country's military branches who died serving our nation; Pentecost Sunday, those of us who follow traditional meditations, prayers, and liturgies have noticed a shift in our readings this week as the Church prepares our hearts and minds for Pentecost; and the running of the Indianapolis 500 on Sunday up in Speedway, Indiana. Darned right, I'll be following the Race!
After finishing the night prayers, and after this baseball game, I'll be putting these old bones to bed and hoping for a restful sleep.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.
Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.
Health Metrics: * bw= 231.49 lbs. * bp= 139/77 (68)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * 06:10 – 1 Jimmy Johns submarine sandwich * 10:30 – 1 peanutbutter sandwich * 12:15 – pizza * 18:00 – 1 barbacoa taco
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:30 – listening to local news talk radio * 05:10 – bank accounts activity monitored. * 05:40 – read, write, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, nap, * 12:15 to 13:30 – watch old game shows and eat lunch at home with Sylvia * 15:30 – watching “Intentional Talk” on MLB Network * 17:00 – listening now to Yankees Radio ahead of their game vs the Tampa Bay Rays tonight
Chess: * 16:10 – moved in all pending CC games
from The disconnect blog
I took about a two or maybe even three year break from really watching any movies. A few kid movies would be in the background or my wife might watch something while I would be reading something else and so forth. But I was pretty bored of them and could care less if I ever saw one again. Not too long ago I started joining my wife in watching some now and then. There are so many I haven’t seen now, even when I was watching them a while back it wasn’t very frequent. So I have a massive list of movies I could watch to try and catch up if desired.
Anyways, as I started watching movies again something has dawned on me pretty heavily. Most movies have no “good guys” in my view. Too regularly human life means just about nothing. So many films seem to be propaganda to promote murder and killing of the others – whoever that may be. The supposed good guys are often horrible murderous people, some of them end up killing dozens of people and sometimes multiples of that. On top of that many of the situations are completely avoidable.
It’s even more dramatic of a thing if you come to think of the Messiah’s teachings of the New Testament as what we literally are supposed to be doing. That is if you are a Christian. Not talking about vague scriptural references tied to some boring current life events one day of the week (church), but something we are to be living as our Law if we consider ourselves Christian. Not only are we not supposed to kill anyone, we aren’t supposed to hate them, or sue them, or resist evil being done to us by anyone. We are to return good for evil. How many movies have you seen that do that? I’ve seen a handful but not many and not really any lately. Probably the closest one is “Everything Everywhere All at Once.” (Spoiler alert for those who care about such a thing. Please pick up reading after “end of spoiling.”) The hero (the mother) could have destroyed many people at the end, but instead she helped fulfill the enemies’ repressed desires to de-escalate the entire doomful situation at the end. I found the whole thing a unique spin on the multiverse idea, which was refreshing. Lately I’ve found multiverse movies and series to have fairly lazy writing, it is just an easy way to get out of story flaws. (End of spoiling.) However I wouldn’t call that movie a great example of exemplifying great principles. If you filter most movies through the teachings of the Old Testament there aren’t many good guys. If you filter most movies through the teachings of the New Testament, there are only bad guys. It’s pretty funny stuff really, or sad stuff…
I quite enjoy books overall a lot more than movies these days.
If you would like a refresher on the “Sermon on the Mount” here are the scripture chapters to review:
Matthew chapter five & six & seven
Luke chapter six starting in vs 20:
And the introduction to the ten commandments is in Exodus chapter 20:
What movie heroes are following this? What group of people are following this? To me these are the basic fundamental Laws of God. It’s sort of like the Constitution of the Kingdom of Heaven. Perhaps the entirety of the scriptures would be the Heavenly Constitution. However in my view everything builds upon the principles laid out in the “Ten Commandments” and the “Sermon on the Mount.” For those who are Jewish, Christian, and Muslim the Old Testament Laws could help unify people towards a better world. What if we all lived the fundamental teachings in the ten commandments taught in Exodus 20? And the “Sermon on the Mount” in Matthew 5-6 and the “Sermon on the Plain” in Luke 6 could be unifying Law for Christians and Muslims. To Christians because the teachings came from our Messiah, and to Muslims because these teachings come from what the Qur’an says are the words of a prophet. I also believe that our Messiah was a prophet, the greatest of all. With the Qur’an teaching that the Messiah is a prophet, perhaps it would be important to read and follow the instructions given by Him. This is about 55% (see graph here) of the world’s population that could come to some basic agreement. What if we all unified through the Laws in scripture instead of divided through political law. The Buddhist, Hindu, and Taoist scriptures I’ve read also have similar ideals taught. I realize people see many things in scripture differently. But I see in the majority of people I have met through life a desire to be a pretty decent person. I think many people desire to live by these ideals. Do you want to kill anyone? Even if you support war, would you really want to go over there and kill those your nation is at war against?
It seems to me the separation of church and state is primarily to make men the people’s false authority (false gods) over the true Authority. I’m not saying I want a merger of church and state again – that has led to a whole lot of tyranny and murder. I’m just saying if the state can push people into obeying the state first and foremost they would love that – and I believe that is what has happened. I believe that those who believe in God as the issuer of truth, and what we ought to be living, could do just that. Maybe we could put the true Church of God above the church of state. I do not believe there to be “one true church” as a registered organization. Those registered organizations are subject to the state. I believe that the Church of God includes people of many faiths and sects. It is the remnants scattered abroad, primarily individuals, putting the Laws of God first in their life. Those following the higher Laws taught throughout all scriptures I have read.
I believe the only way for the Kingdom of Heaven to blossom is through a voluntary means. Where people through love of God follow His Law. We have individuals around the earth following these things, some with high fidelity. If we had groups and communities doing such a thing the fruits of this way of life would shine. This would show that the Kingdom of Heaven is far superior to the kingdoms of men. I believe this is how the earth can come to peace. Not through governments taking away the power of another government to pursue nuclear enrichment, but through people choosing to live the higher Laws of God over the insanities of political law and the governments of men. Let’s stop killing. Even if our governments try to recruit us into the killing fields, lets stop killing. Leo Tolstoy was right in his book “The Kingdom of God Is Within You” (download book for free), we can refuse to fight for any kingdom of man. And if that government punishes us or kills us for refusing to kill others under their claimed authority – we will be blessed by the only true Authority.
from
The happy place
Hello
There are still things I avoid writing about
My neighbour going around all white, with hair like dried hay, like a ghost, for example.
Like an angry ghost
And that through my actions, she ended up in this state
She used to have purple cheeks and a purple nose resembling mine
But now she is a ghost with an axe and a chainsaw, making firewood, chopping up a tall straight pine tree which toppled during the storm around New Year’s Eve.
It’s like it’s my fault because she is unable to adapt, a mind that maybe was frigid to begin with but now it’s too old
she can’t see my point of view, though I can see her
It used to be mine too
Because my mind isn’t like that, it’s soft and flexible like a rubber band; I can adjust
But it’s snapped
I can’t turn back now
And I’m better off now
But I feel terrible nonetheless
But I can’t turn back
I chose myself
from
Roscoe's Quick Notes

Despite there being two other basketball games tonight, both featuring teams I generally follow, and both with start times that fit rather well into my schedule, I'm opting to follow a baseball game tonight.
Tonight's Rays vs Yankees game, with its scheduled start time of 6:06 PM CDT fits even better into my schedule. And the game announcers on Yankees Radio are both entertaining and relaxing to listen to. Easy decision then: tonight I follow the Tampa Bay Rays / New York Yankees MLB Game.
And the adventure continues.
from
TechNewsLit Explores

Each month, Washingtonian magazine’s print issue offers a two-page photo spread, with the publication’s June 2026 issue featuring one of our images. The photo is from an open practice I visited in March of the Old Glory DC rugby club, the area’s Major League Rugby franchise that plays at George Mason University stadium in Fairfax, Virginia.
At the practice, I got a ground-level shot, sprawling out on the pitch (field) as the ball is pushed in the middle of a scrum. The photo, shown above, has Old Glory DC’s assistant coach Stan South standing over the scrum as the forwards, the bigger players, push their opponents to take possession of the ball.
I pitched the images to publications in the region, and Washingtonian responded. Washingtonian is a glossy monthly politics and lifestyle magazine that features a two-page photo spread they call the Big Picture, in its Capital Comment section toward the front of the print issue. And the magazine’s art director chose that photo for the June issue’s Big Picture.
Big Picture photos are available only in the print issue and not online, but Washingtonian sent me a PDF of the spread, which I posted on technewslit.com. More photos from the open practice and the club’s first home match at George Mason University stadium are found in the TechNewsLit collections on Smugmug.
Each of the photos in these galleries carries a Creative Commons – Attribution license.
Copyright © Technology News and Literature. All rights reserved.
from Lastige Gevallen in de Rede
Anoniem Ingezonden Klein Stukje van een Groter Stuk, indien mogelijk afkomstig van een Beroemd Persoon met enige invloed op de macht over u.
Het was eerder allemaal anders. Nu zijn alle mensen die niet slapen wakker maar dat was niet altijd zo. Ik kan me de tijden nog herinneren dat als je sliep dat niet meteen wou zeggen dat je niet wakker was, mensen deden twee of meer dingen tegelijk. Ik ken er die konden liggen, zitten en staan tegelijk! Kom daar nu nog maar eens om. Mensen gingen ook anders om met elkaar, men beet elkaar in de oren of kietelde elkaar liefkozend onder de oksel om aan te geven dat er iets op het punt stond om te gebeuren, nu geeft men dat zelden of nooit aan of juist veel te vaak ook als het niet zo is of als datgene wat staat te gebeuren niet noemenswaardig is laat staan goedaardig of ontwikkeld. Het is me wat. Ik denk wel eens dat ik op de verkeerde manier geboren ben dat ik daarom geen verkeerd been heb voor opstaan, dat ik het gewoon allemaal in de smiezen heb, en waarom, waarom! Ik kan er met mijn enkels niet bij. Het is gewoon raar gelopen vanaf dat ene moment waarop het eerder in de pas liep, weliswaar niet de passende maat maar zeker een pas met enige regelmaat, wel meer dan dat. Nou. Hoe het zo ver heeft kunnen komen kan ik wel wat meer over kwijt, dat moet dan wel na de volgende onderbreking, met een streepje – Het is zo ver gekomen omdat het de afstand heeft afgelegd, de afstand zat eerst nog om de schouders gewikkeld van een moedwillig persoon maar een held heeft deze omgelegd en toen de afstand meegenomen en daarna laten af leggen, op die manier schoot alles lekker op. De afstand was vijfmaal het kwadraat keer drie en dat dan op een gegeven moment delen door elkaar, schudden eigenlijk en zodoende en des as treus al te min niet is het niet anders, het moest zo zijn, het zijde zo, zo als het zijde zacht. Niet meer en niet minder dan een beetje waar, dat zeg ik! Ik ben blij dat ik hier en nu mijn doelpunt nog een keer kon maken dankzij dit ingezonden stukje en een afgekeurd dood splmoment, dan is er tenminste één omroep die nog deze week iets zinnigs kan melden al moet die kans er nog wel in. Dank voor u aandacht ik groet u ook namens de machthebbers (van weleer).