The air was heavy again, thick like wet cloth shoved down her throat. Profound blinked once, then twice, but the ceiling refused to settle. It pulsed, like a heartbeat she didn’t consent to. Room 222 wasn’t dead brick anymore — it was breathing. Every padded wall exhaled with her inhale, as if the whole f*****g place had decided to mock her lungs.
She laughed — the small, cut-throat kind of laugh that hurts your ribs.
“Cute trick,” she muttered. “Turn my cage into a chest cavity. Real original.”
The number 222 was no longer scratched once. It was everywhere. It multiplied when she wasn’t looking. The walls wore it like boils, raw and swollen, some dripping black streaks like ink that refused to dry. She blinked hard, thinking it might reset. It didn’t. The numbers crawled. They rearranged themselves into crooked smiles.
Her chair sat waiting, same as always — one leg uneven, like it had grown tired of carrying its own f*****g weight. Profound stared at it with contempt. “Don’t look at me like that. You’re not the only thing that knows how to wobble.”
Something shifted behind her. A scrape. She spun — or maybe her mind spun first and her body lagged after — and there he was. A doctor. At least, that’s what the coat suggested. But the coat was wrong. Too damp, too slick. As if it had been stitched together from inside-out flesh. The face above it was stitched too, mouth tugged in a grin that never healed right.
“Good morning, Profound,” he said. The voice was calm, too calm, the kind they used when they knew you weren’t calm.
She tilted her head, grinning back. “Morning? f**k you. There’s no morning in here. Just static.”
The doctor — or the carcass pretending to be one — stepped closer. Every footfall echoed like he was walking inside her skull. His briefcase swung at his side, but it dripped. Not water. Not blood either. Something thicker. Like the goo left over when a dream rots.
“You’re making progress,” he said.
“Progress toward what?”
“Acceptance.”
Profound barked a laugh, sharp and humorless. “Acceptance? The only thing I’m accepting is that your nose is about to slide off your face.”
It did. Right there, mid-sentence, the cartilage unhooked and plopped onto the padded floor like an overripe cherry. Neither of them reacted.
---
She blinked, and the doctor was gone. Just the chair again, whispering. She didn’t want to listen but her ears wouldn’t stop drinking the sound. It was faint, but clear enough:
Sit. Sit. Sit.
So she did. And the second her body touched the wood, the floor tilted like a carnival ride. The walls bent inward, closer, closer, until she could smell their mildew breath. Her arms itched inside the straitjacket. She bit her lip until copper ran down her chin.
And then the loop started.
The door opened. Footsteps. A voice. “Good morning, Profound.”
She blinked.
The door opened. Footsteps. A voice. “Good morning, Profound.”
Blink.
Door. Footsteps. Voice. Again. Again.
By the fifth loop, she was screaming the lines with them. “GOOD MORNING, PROFOUND!” — spitting, her throat tearing raw.
By the tenth, she was laughing until she gagged. “Say it again, b***h! You love hearing yourself!”
By the twentieth, she was whispering back, softer now: “Fine. Good morning. Now kill me already.”
The loop broke. Silence.
Her reflection flickered in the steel latch of the door. Except it wasn’t her. The reflection smiled when she didn’t. The reflection licked its teeth, too sharp to be hers.
Profound leaned forward, eyes wide. “You’re not me.”
The reflection grinned wider. “Then who the f**k are you?”
Her reflection mouthed the words again, but this time her throat moved with it — even though she hadn’t spoken. The noise that spilled out of her wasn’t her voice. It was wet. Like dragging nails through a stomach full of bile.
She staggered back. Her arms jerked inside the straitjacket. The fabric burned against her skin, but it wasn’t fabric anymore. It pulsed. The straps flexed like veins, twitching with her heartbeat.
“Get the f**k off me!” she screamed, slamming her shoulder into the wall.
The wall absorbed her. Literally. For one flash of a second, her skin sank into the padding as if the hospital had decided she belonged inside it. She ripped back hard, tearing loose, and when she looked down, the straitjacket had changed. No longer white canvas. It was skin. Her skin. Stitched together across her chest with black thread.
Profound gagged. She bit the inside of her cheek until blood warmed her tongue. “Fine. Fine. You wanna play body games? Let’s f*****g play.”
She dragged her tongue across her lips, but it didn’t stop. It unspooled. The pink muscle kept sliding out of her mouth like a roll of film. It slapped the floor with a wet smack, twitching. When she bent down to grab it, the tongue scrawled across the padded floor. Letters. Words. HELP ME … KILL THEM … ROOM 222.
Her eyes watered. Not from fear, but from laughter that wouldn’t come out. “God, even my tongue writes better poetry than me.”
The walls began to chant. The numbers 222 pulsed like wounds, opening and closing. She swore she could see little eyes blinking in each zero-shaped hollow. Watching her. Judging her.
Her hands itched. She pulled against the stitched skin-jacket, hard enough to rip. A pop. Then another. Fingers burst through like worms from rotten fruit. Except they weren’t her fingers anymore. Too long. Too thin. Curved like claws.
She pressed them against her face, trembling. The nails dragged little rivers across her cheeks. Blood trickled warm, sweet. She whispered:
“Beautiful. I’m becoming what I always knew was inside me.”
---
She blinked — and suddenly her chair was full. Someone sat there now. A version of her. Profound, but cleaner. Her hair combed. Her face calm. No straitjacket. No blood.
This double smiled softly, like a therapist about to lie.
“You can stop this,” the double said.
Profound spat, tongue still half-hanging from her jaw. “Stop what? Becoming honest?”
The double shook her head. “This is you unraveling. This is you giving up.”
Profound laughed so hard she almost choked on her own tongue. “No, b***h. This is me finally starting.”
Her claws dug into the padded wall and tore downward. The padding screamed. Yes, screamed. A shriek like a child scalded with boiling water. She dragged until the foam split open, revealing not plaster, not steel, but raw muscle underneath. The hospital itself was meat. Beating. Thrumming.
She pressed her face against it. Warm. Wet. Alive.
And whispered, “I’ve never felt more at home.”
The chair was empty again.
No double. No calm version of herself. Just silence thick enough to taste — copper and static on the tongue.
Then a crack. Like a bone snapping. Not hers. The room’s. The padded floor rippled, bulged, and from it rose another figure. A girl. Her height, her frame. Her face. But it wasn’t right.
This Profound was smooth. No mouth. No eyes. Just skin stretched tight like a mannequin. It tilted its head like it was listening. Then it moved closer.
Her claws dug into her thighs. “You’re me without the rage,” she hissed. “You’re me the way they want me.”
The faceless twin reached out, touching her skin-jacket, stroking it like a nurse pretending tenderness. Profound bucked away. “Don’t f*****g touch me!”
The thing didn’t flinch. Instead, its chest split wide open — zipperless, seamless — just flesh parting like curtains. Inside: a ribcage full of hands. Dozens. Pale, twitching, grasping. They reached toward her, fingers wet with some fluid that smelled like bleach and iron.
Profound laughed, choking on the sound. “Of course. Of f*****g course you’re full of hands. That’s all anyone ever wants from me. Grab, pull, fix, clean. Take, take, take.”
Her claws slashed across its chest. The hands tumbled out, skittering across the padded floor like spiders. Some crawled up the walls. Some scuttled under her skin-jacket. She screamed, clawing at herself as the hands burrowed in, making her flesh twitch like it wasn’t hers anymore.
The faceless twin finally grew a mouth — just a slit. It whispered, “We are never leaving Room 222.”
---
Part III – The Collapse of Room 222
The lights above flickered, then bled. Not leaked — bled. Thick drops of red fell from the fluorescent panels. Each splatter sizzled on her skin, hot as acid.
The numbers 222 carved themselves deeper into the walls, gouged as if invisible nails were etching them over and over until the plaster-muscle dripped.
Profound staggered to the chair and sat. Not to rest. To anchor. To witness.
She whispered, “Show me everything. I want to see this whole f*****g truth.”
The room obliged.
The floor peeled away, tile by tile, until she saw what had always been beneath: not foundation, not dirt, but a yawning throat. A black gullet lined with teeth. The entire hospital was an organism, alive, hungry, and she was inside its stomach.
She tilted her head back and screamed into the ceiling: “EAT ME THEN, b***h!”
The floor-throat convulsed. Teeth snapped. The chair buckled beneath her. Her claws dug into the edges, holding on, daring it to try harder. And then — silence.
Not peace. Not relief. The silence of a predator waiting.