Chapter 3: The Memory That Should Not Exist
“You weren’t supposed to find him,” the older man said, closing the door behind him.
His gaze fixed on Madeline.
“You promised to leave the past buried.”
Madeline stood up slowly.
“I promised to protect him,” she replied.
Elias looked between them, confusion breaking into something sharper.
“What is he talking about?”
The older man sighed.
“You built something that could rewrite a human mind permanently,” he said. “And you tested it on yourself first.”
Elias shook his head.
“No… I wouldn’t—”
“You did,” Madeline interrupted softly.
Her eyes were glossy now.
“And you asked me to stop you when you forgot who you were.”
The room went still.
The older man stepped closer.
“You didn’t just lose your memories, Elias. You lost the version of yourself that we couldn’t afford to keep alive.”
Elias stared at his hands.
For a moment, nothing happened.
Then—
A sharp pulse of pain shot through his head.
Images exploded behind his eyes.
Madeline crying.
A laboratory burning.
A choice being made.
And him.
Smiling.
Saying: “If I forget everything… make sure I still don’t become him.”
Elias gasped.
The world tilted.
Madeline rushed forward.
But it was too late.
His eyes lifted slowly.
And when he looked at her again—
He wasn’t the same man anymore.
“I remember now,” he said quietly.
The older man stepped back.
Madeline whispered, “Elias… don’t—”
But he cut her off.
“I know what I have to do.”
Outside, alarms began to sound across the building.
Systems failing.
Locks disengaging.
And somewhere deep inside the facility—
May you like
Something long buried finally woke up.
END.
