Venus - Ange
“If he dies in here,” Elara realized, “the lock becomes permanent.”
She did the only thing a Somnambulist was forbidden to do. She touched the patient.
The young Cassian turned. His eyes were the same dead stars as the older man’s. “She left,” he whispered. “Lila. She said I felt too much. That my love was a flood that drowned her. So I asked the Keeper to drain the sea.” ange venus
Outside the window, the sky over the arcology was a perfect, sterile blue. But inside that small room, the air was finally, terribly, gloriously alive with the weight of a man who had chosen to feel again. The Ange Venus had done its work—not by liberating him, but by reminding him that some cages are built from the inside, with keys made of rusted bells and the memory of rain.
“It hurts,” he choked.
Dr. Elara Venn was the foremost Somnambulist. She had mapped the Freudian jungles of paranoid schizophrenics and navigated the frozen seas of catatonic depressives. But her latest patient was unlike any other. His name was Cassian, and he was the first recorded case of a complete emotional lock—a man who had felt nothing for twelve years. No joy, no grief, no anger. Just a grey, silent expanse where his heart used to be.
The device was a paradox: a halo of cold, surgical steel that housed filaments of bioluminescent fungi, grown in the dark of the Marianas Trench. It was named for the angelic vision of the dreamer and the venereal pull of desire. To wear it was to fall into a sleep deeper than death, where one’s own psyche became a labyrinth of memory, fear, and want. “If he dies in here,” Elara realized, “the
At the altar stood a figure—not Cassian as he was now, but a younger version, perhaps fifteen, his face a battlefield of acne and defiance. But behind him, coiled around the altar like a second spine, was the Anomaly. It was a serpent made of pure, polished obsidian, its scales etched with the names of every person Cassian had ever loved. Mother. Father. Lila. Dog.