Cherreads

Chapter 3 - Chapter Two: Flickering

I freeze.

I read the sentence again. Slower.

"Pilot program active. Status: participant."

I frown.

– What the hell...?

I turn the flyer over. Front. Back. Nothing. No name. No code. No sense.

And yet.

This doesn't look like an ad.

It looks like a message.

I feel a pressure under my sternum. Familiar. Unsettling.

– Participant... who exactly?

Instinctively, I touch my temple. Then the back of my neck. Like I'm looking for something.

Like there's already something there.

A short, nervous laugh.

– Easy, Marek... you're losing it.

But the thought is already there.

Seven days ago I left the facility.

Seven.

And what do I actually remember?

Blurry images. Like through dirty glass.

Light. Silence. Pills.

Voices.

And something else.

Something I can't quite grasp.

– No... don't start – I squeeze my eyes shut.

The dog barks somewhere nearby. Short. Sharp.

I lift my head.

He's running. Like the world is simple.

I envy him.

I look at the flyer again.

That one sentence... like it weighs more than the rest.

Like it means something.

I pull out my phone.

Blank.

But for a split second—

the screen flickers.

Like something was trying to show up.

And got cut off.

My heart starts racing.

– Alright... either I've gone crazy... or someone's messing with me.

I crumple the flyer in my hand.

I don't throw it away.

Pocket.

For later.

Because if it's nothing — I'll forget.

But if it's not...

I look at the people around me.

At the dogs.

At normal life.

And for the first time in a long while, I feel something more than emptiness.

Unease.

Curiosity.

Fear.

– What did you do to me... – I mutter.

The dog runs up, sits next to me, panting like an idiot.

I put my hand on his head.

– I think we've got a problem, huh?

His tail starts wagging.

Of course he doesn't care.

I stand up.

– Come on. Let's go.

We leave the park.

The air feels sharp. The light too harsh. People too close.

– Store... – I mutter. – Need to get something.

For him. And for me.

We head toward a self-service point.

There used to be stores here.

Now there are systems.

I take out my phone.

Again.

Blank.

I check my balance.

165 credits.

– Great... – I snort. – Barely alive and still paying for electricity.

The store doors slide open silently.

Inside, it's cool. Sterile.

In the center — a hologram of a woman.

Too perfect to be real.

– Welcome. How may I assist you?

I don't answer. Just nod.

Her smile doesn't move.

It records everything.

I look around.

Shelves are empty.

Just markers.

You look — a product appears.

Look longer — you get description, ingredients, price.

Everything instantly. Without asking.

– Sure... – I mutter. – because who needs privacy.

I grab water. Chips. Beer.

Routine.

I walk up to the hologram.

– Did you find everything you needed?

– Yeah.

A moment of silence.

Her smile widens.

Too much.

– Marek.

I freeze.

– Thank you for participating in the program.

My heart stops for a second.

– What?

The hologram returns to a neutral expression.

– Please provide the product numbers.

I stare at her.

Like nothing happened.

Like she didn't just say my name.

Like—

– ...yeah – I say automatically.

I give the numbers.

I pay.

A package slides out on the left.

Perfectly packed.

That always pisses me off.

Too perfect.

I take it.

– Thank you for your purchase.

I don't respond.

I walk out.

Outside, the air hits harder than before.

I open the water.

– Come on.

The dog goes straight for the bottle and drinks like crazy.

I look at the street.

At people.

At cameras.

– Pilot program... – I whisper.

Pocket.

I feel the flyer.

Like it's heavier than it should be.

– I need to check this.

We head back to the building.

Mailboxes.

Same ads.

I don't look.

Enough.

I enter the stairwell.

The elevator works.

Of course now.

I step in.

The doors close.

For a second, the light flickers.

The panel glitches.

And for a split second I see:

STATUS: PARTICIPANT

I blink.

Gone.

– ...no.

The doors open.

Hallway.

A neighbor.

Staring.

Too long.

We pass each other without a word.

Apartment door.

I go in.

Same thing.

Mess. Silence. Trash.

– Yeah... figures – I mutter.

I take off my shoes.

The bag hits the floor.

The dog goes straight to his bed.

Me — the couch.

I turn on the TV.

Static. Images.

I'm not watching.

I reach into my pocket.

The flyer.

I unfold it again.

Same sentence.

But now...

I have the feeling

someone is looking at it with me.

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