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The Forest’s Cage

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Ameera and Mariam thought escaping the forest would mean freedom, but the truth is far darker. Trapped for days in a labyrinthine experiment, they discover that the forest, the masks, and the cycles were all part of a deadly system designed to control, test, and break its subjects. When they finally escape, guided by a mysterious former subject who survived the system years before, they ignite a rebellion against the enforcers and the machine controlling the forest. Each step brings danger, strategy, and moral choices: sabotage the compound, avoid enforcers, and free the remaining captives. In a high-stakes world where every shadow could be a trap, survival is only the beginning—and reclaiming freedom means taking the fight to those who orchestrated it.

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The forest’s cage
The forest was quiet — too quiet. Ameera’s boots sank into damp moss as she pushed past the ferns, her breath sharp in the cold morning air. She should have heard birds, maybe even the rustle of small animals, but the silence pressed in like a warning. Three nights ago, her group’s campsite had been torn apart. Not by animals — the cuts in the tents were too precise, the supplies taken too neatly. Whoever had done it knew the forest… and knew they were here. Now, with dwindling food and the others scattered, Ameera had one goal: survive long enough to uncover who — or what — was hunting them. That’s when she saw it: a set of footprints in the mud, leading deeper into the trees. But the strange part wasn’t that they were fresh… it was that they circled back, as if whoever left them had been following her all along. Ameera crouched low, brushing her fingers over the footprints. The edges were sharp, not softened by rain or wind. Whoever made them had passed through minutes ago — maybe less. She straightened, scanning the endless stretch of trees. Pines stood like sentinels, their branches thick enough to hide someone watching. A breeze stirred, carrying the faint scent of smoke, though she couldn’t tell from where. Her pulse quickened. The group’s fire had been out for days. She forced herself to move, careful, quiet, every step deliberate. Survival meant thinking ahead — no broken twigs, no heavy prints. But the forest wasn’t cooperating. Every branch seemed to snap louder than it should, every shadow stretched too long. Then she noticed something hanging from a branch up ahead — a scrap of fabric, torn and faded, fluttering gently. It looked like part of the jacket one of her companions had worn. Relief flickered… until she saw the dark smear along its edge. Not dirt. Not sap. Something thicker. Blood.The sight of the fabric made her throat tighten. For a moment, the forest blurred, replaced by the flicker of firelight and the low hum of voices. She remembered Farruk, always insisting they’d make it out, even when the compass broke. He’d carved little arrows into tree trunks to keep their path marked — only to laugh when they looped back to the same clearing hours later. Then there was Mariam, quieter, but sharper. She’d been the one to ration food, cutting strips of dried fish so thin they were almost transparent. “Discipline,” she’d said, “is the only thing keeping us alive.” And Abu… Ameera’s jaw tightened. Abu had argued with everyone, always pushing to go deeper, chasing some half-heard rumor of an abandoned ranger station hidden in the forest. The night before everything fell apart, she’d caught him whispering with someone outside camp. When she asked, he only smiled and said, “Trust me.” Now, staring at the bloodied fabric, trust felt like a luxury she couldn’t afford. A twig snapped behind her. She spun, heart hammering, but the forest only stared back with its endless green silence. Ameera forced herself to breathe, slow and steady. If she panicked, the forest would eat her alive. She stepped toward the fabric, tugging it gently from the branch. The blood had dried, tacky against her fingers. That’s when she noticed something else, half-buried in the moss beneath it — a small wooden carving, no bigger than her thumb. She knelt, brushing off the dirt. It was an arrow, carefully whittled, the grooves precise. Farruk ’s work. He always carved arrows when he was restless, a habit that calmed his nerves. He’d left dozens at camp, scattered like breadcrumbs. But this one was different. On the back, carved deep into the wood, was a symbol she didn’t recognize: a spiral with three lines slashing through it. Her stomach tightened. Farruk never used symbols. He hated puzzles, said they wasted time. Which meant… he hadn’t left it for comfort. He’d left it as a warning. Somewhere in the trees, the silence broke — the faintest whistle, low and deliberate, as if calling her attention. Ameera’s grip tightened around the carving. She wasn’t alone. And now, she wasn’t sure if following Farruk ’s trail would lead her to him… or to the thing that had taken him. Ameera crouched low, forcing herself not to turn toward the sound of the whistle. Whoever — or whatever — had made it wanted her to react. She tightened her grip on the carving and scanned the ground instead. At first, she saw nothing but roots and damp leaves. Then, just a few feet from where the fabric had hung, she noticed a patch of soil that looked… wrong. The moss had been scraped back, the dirt disturbed recently. Her pulse quickened. She brushed away the leaves, revealing something buried shallow: a folded piece of paper, edges stained with moisture. Hands trembling, she unfolded it. The ink had bled in places, but she could still make out the words. “If you find this, don’t trust him. He knows the way out, but he’ll never let us leave.” The handwriting was unmistakable. Mariam’s. A cold weight settled in Ameera’s chest. Who was Mariam warning her about? Abu— with his secret conversations? Farruk — who’d vanished without a word? Or… someone else entirely? The whistle came again, closer this time. Longer. More insistent. Ameera crumpled the note in her fist and pressed her back to a tree, her mind racing. The forest wasn’t just swallowing them whole — it was turning them against each other.The whistle cut off abruptly, replaced by silence so heavy it pressed against her ears. Ameera’s skin prickled. She slowly leaned out from behind the tree, eyes combing the shadows. That’s when she saw it. Not far ahead, half-hidden by the undergrowth, stood a figure. Motionless. Tall. The forest shadows cloaked its face, but she could make out the outline of a hood and the faint gleam of something metallic in its hand. Her breath caught. The figure didn’t move toward her. Didn’t chase. It just stood there… watching. Then, slowly, it lifted its hand. The metallic glint caught a shaft of pale light. Not a weapon. A compass. Her heart lurched.Abu had carried the only working compass before it broke — or so he claimed. If this was him, why hadn’t he returned? Why hide in the trees like a predator? The figure tilted its head, as though acknowledging her. Then, without a sound, it stepped backward — and melted into the forest. Ameera’s pulse hammered in her throat. Whoever it was, they wanted her to follow. And against every instinct screaming don’t, her feet shifted forward.She took one step forward, then froze. The figure was gone, swallowed whole by the trees — but the forest had not erased all traces. On the ground where he had stood lay something small, half-pressed into the soil. Ameera crouched, heart pounding, and brushed the leaves aside. It was a compass. Her stomach flipped. The glass was cracked, but the needle spun wildly as though tugged by some invisible force. Around the rim, scratched into the metal with something sharp, were words etched in hurried strokes: “Only one direction leads out. Trust nothing else.” She turned it over in her palm, and a chill went through her. Carved into the back was the same spiral-with-three-lines symbol Farruk had left on the wooden arrow. The forest seemed to close in tighter, as if waiting for her choice. The figure had vanished deliberately, but this… this was no accident. It was a message. Her thoughts tumbled. Was Abu leading her deeper into a trap? Was Farruk leaving warnings she barely understood? Or was someone else — unseen, unheard — pulling all of them into a game none of them had agreed to play?

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