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The Reality Behind the Masks: Human Simulation

AngelyDarky
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Liam is a sixteen-year-old boy trying to live what should be an ordinary life. But something about him is fundamentally different. In a world where emotions define human connection, Liam doesn’t experience them the way others do. Instead, he studies them — quietly and carefully — learning how to replicate what he observes in order to survive among people. A mask is not a choice for him. It is a necessity. When his parents decide to change his school, hoping to give him a “normal life,” he is placed into a new environment where blending in becomes even more crucial. But the deeper he integrates, the harder it becomes to tell where the mask ends… and where he begins. Because Liam isn’t trying to become someone else. He’s trying to become what people expect a human to be. And sometimes, even he can’t tell the difference anymore. In a world where being yourself comes at a price, Liam is forced to hide who he truly is. But as the weight of pretending grows heavier, one question remains: will he keep performing until he reaches what he wants… or will he collapse before he ever gets there? #psychological#no-harem#pragmatic-protagonist#neutral-protagonist
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Chapter 1 - The Beginning

Friday, in a city in California, in an ordinary house. The sun filtered through the bedroom window, cutting softly across the room.

A boy with silver-blond hair slept quietly inside it. Light slipped through the gap in the curtains and illuminated his face.

His eyes trembled and slowly opened. Heterochromatic—one red, the other a bluish silver. Even in the moment of waking, his expression already carried fatigue.

It's Friday, I thought. Same routine. Same people. Same isolation.

I got up and walked to the window.

My mother was in the garden, tending to her red roses. She noticed me and turned slightly. As always, her expression shifted—subtle, uncertain.

I didn't blame her.

I'm not like my little brother. The "normal" one.

He moves through things naturally, as if the world was designed for him.

I don't...

I went to the bathroom and looked at myself in the mirror.

The same lifeless eyes stared back.

I smiled.

Not naturally—constructed.

I adjusted my expression the way people do when they are happy, aligning the face, the posture, the eyes. A practiced simulation.

It always works.

For people who didn't know me before I learned how to exist properly.

When I smile like that, my brain responds as if it were real. A controlled imitation of emotion that becomes functional.

I went downstairs already in my school uniform.

My father sat at the table reading a newspaper and eating breakfast. My brother was focused entirely on his pancakes.

My father's expression was neutral.

He is the only person I cannot fully read.

Sometimes I wonder if I inherited more of him than my mother.

My brother, however, is nothing like me.

He is normal.

Like my mother—warm, kind, and naturally expressive in ways I have to calculate.

I left the house with my brother.

My mother said goodbye to him first, holding him warmly. When she turned to me, the gesture was different. Hesitant. Measured.

Still… an embrace.

I accepted it.

The school bus arrived.

We boarded together. He joined his friends immediately, while I chose the seat furthest away, by the window.

Always the window.

School arrived too quickly.

I ran toward the classroom, worried about being late. When I entered, the atmosphere shifted.

Eyes turned toward me.

Not curiosity. Not recognition.

Evaluation...

As if they were trying to decide what I was.

Safe… or not.

Human… or something pretending to be one.

Professor Tony entered and began his lesson as usual. Sometimes he asked me questions. I answered them well. More than that, I asked better ones.

By the time I returned home, the day had already ended itself.

I ate dinner, took care of everything expected of me, said goodnight, and went to sleep.

But the next morning was different.

A holiday.

Still, my parents called me into the living room.

I sat down.

The silence felt intentional.

My father spoke first.

"We've decided something."

I waited.

"You're changing schools."

For a moment, I didn't respond.

A new school.

My mother watched me carefully, choosing each word before speaking.

"We think it's a chance for you," she said gently. "A fresh start. A more normal life."

Normal.

The word didn't belong to me.

My father continued.

"You've been distant for a long time. We just want you to have a chance to live differently."

I understood what they meant.

A version of life without this.

But I wasn't sure what this was supposed to be.

I didn't know yet that this would be the last day my life would stay the same.