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Chapter 13 - Chapter 13: The Polite Request

​The fire alarm stopped screaming at 9:04 AM.

​It didn't fade out. It didn't wind down. It cut off mid-wail, like someone had reached into the air and yanked the plug.

​Silence slammed into the hallway.

​Ren stood frozen among a river of annoyed students pouring back toward their classrooms. Shoes squeaked on linoleum. Lockers slammed. Someone complained loudly about a math test. Reality stitched itself together with ugly, ordinary sounds.

​Too ordinary.

​Jian grabbed Ren by the elbow and pulled him into a side corridor near the art rooms—the kind nobody used unless they were lost or hiding.

​"Don't talk," Jian muttered, checking the corners. "Don't answer questions. If anyone asks, you're dizzy."

​"I am dizzy," Ren whispered, leaning against the cold metal lockers. "And I think a dead kid just tried to enroll behind me."

​"Not funny," Jian said. Then, after a beat, "Okay. A little funny. But also very bad."

​They stopped near a row of lockers painted with peeling murals. Jian glanced around, then pressed two fingers against the metal frame. The corridor lights flickered once—barely noticeable.

​"Privacy bubble," Jian said, dropping his hand. "We've got maybe three minutes before the ambient noise breaks it."

​Ren rubbed his shoulder. The ache was dull but constant. "He said attendance was waking him up. Every time they say his name."

​"I know." Jian rubbed his face with both hands, looking exhausted. "I was hoping you misheard."

​"I didn't."

​"Yeah," Jian sighed. "You never do."

​The air in the corridor felt… attentive. It wasn't the heavy pressure of a ghost. It felt like a room waiting for someone important to speak.

​Ren swallowed. "So what happens now?"

​Jian hesitated.

​That was new.

​"Now," Jian said carefully, "the system escalates."

​"Escalates how?"

​Jian opened his backpack and pulled out the battered notebook. It shuddered slightly in his hands, like a living thing settling into a comfortable position.

​"Roll call is a low-level ritual," Jian explained. "Names. Presence. Confirmation. You disrupted it by acknowledging the glitch."

​"I didn't mean to—"

​"I know," Jian cut in. "Intent doesn't matter. Impact does."

​He flipped the notebook open.

​The page was blank.

​Then, ink bloomed across it on its own, soaking into the paper to form crisp, blocky letters.

​NOTICE OF CONTACT

​Ren felt his scalp prickle. "That's new."

​"That's bad," Jian said. "It means they're being… courteous."

​The letters shifted.

​RECIPIENT: REN (CLASSIFICATION: ANOMALY / PROVISIONAL)

​Ren let out a weak laugh. "I like how they didn't bother with my last name."

​Jian didn't smile.

​The page continued to write itself.

​SUBJECT: REQUEST FOR VOLUNTARY COMPLIANCE

​Ren stared. "That's it?"

​"No," Jian said grimly. "That's the threat."

​The notebook vibrated. Jian held it steady as more text appeared.

​YOU ARE CREATING PERSISTENT NARRATIVE INSTABILITY.

THIS IS INCONVENIENT.

​Ren blinked. "Inconvenient?"

​"They hate inefficiency," Jian muttered. "You're a loose cable in a server room. They want to plug you in."

​The air pressure dropped slightly. Ren's ears popped.

​From the far end of the corridor, footsteps approached.

​Ren tensed. "Someone's coming."

​"No," Jian said quietly. "Something's arriving."

​The footsteps were wrong.

​They were perfectly synced. No lag. No echo. Each step landed exactly when it should, crisp and sharp, like reality itself was escorting the sound.

​A figure rounded the corner.

​She looked like a substitute teacher. Mid-forties. Sensible shoes. Grey cardigan over a white blouse. Hair pulled into a neat, severe bun. She carried a manila folder tucked under one arm and a pen in the other.

​She smiled pleasantly.

​"Good morning," she said.

​The words landed exactly when her lips moved.

​Ren's stomach dropped.

​Jian straightened, all humor gone. "You're early."

​The woman adjusted her glasses. "We were already in the neighborhood."

​She turned her attention to Ren.

​Her eyes were wrong. Not glowing. Not black. Just… too focused. They didn't blink enough. Like a camera lens locked onto a subject.

​"You must be Ren," she said warmly. "I'm Ms. Kline. I handle Compliance."

​Ren swallowed. "Compliance with… what?"

​Ms. Kline smiled wider. "With not breaking the world, dear."

​She glanced at Jian. "May I?"

​Jian hesitated, looked at Ren, then stepped aside.

​Ms. Kline walked closer. The corridor seemed to subtly rearrange itself to give her space. Lockers straightened. Lights brightened a fraction. The distortion fled from her presence.

​She held out the manila folder.

​On the front, stamped in red ink: POLITE REQUEST.

​Ren didn't take it.

​"What happens if I say no?" he asked.

​Ms. Kline tilted her head, considering. "We prefer not to discuss outcomes that involve screaming."

​"That's not an answer," Ren said.

​She nodded. "Fair."

​She opened the folder herself.

​Inside was a single sheet of paper. On it was a printed timetable.

​Ren recognized it instantly. His school schedule. Periods. Classrooms. Lunch break. Everything.

​Except one addition at the top.

​PERIOD 0 — 6:45 AM

LOCATION: BELOW

​Ren's throat went dry. "Below what?"

​Ms. Kline tapped the paper. "Below the city. Below the noise. Below the part that keeps forgetting."

​Jian stepped forward. "You can't just requisition him. He hasn't agreed to the bylaws."

​Ms. Kline sighed. "Custodian Xu, your role is advisory. Please don't overstep."

​"Go to hell," Jian snapped.

​Ms. Kline smiled pleasantly. "We're already there."

​She looked back at Ren. "This is a voluntary request. Attend. Listen. Learn the boundaries. In return—"

​She flipped the page.

​A second sheet showed a familiar name.

​EVAN MORALES — STATUS: PENDING

​Ren's heart lurched. "You can fix him?"

​"We can… refile him," Ms. Kline said carefully. "Reduce the suffering. Prevent repeated awakenings. Put him somewhere quiet."

​Ren clenched his fists. "And if I don't?"

​Ms. Kline closed the folder. "Then the system will continue correcting errors. And errors are usually deleted."

​Ren thought of Evan's tired smile in the hallway. Every time they say my name, I wake up again.

​"That's not a choice," Ren said quietly.

​Ms. Kline's smile softened. It looked almost genuine.

​"It is," she said. "You just don't like the options."

​The corridor lights flickered once.

​Ms. Kline stepped back. "Period Zero. Tomorrow morning. You'll find the entrance. It usually looks like a janitor's closet that shouldn't be there."

​She paused. "Oh—and Ren?"

​"Yes?"

​"Please stop helping lost ghosts at bus stops. It's charming, but it creates expectations."

​Then she turned and walked away.

​Her footsteps stayed perfectly in sync until she rounded the corner—and vanished between one step and the next.

​The pressure lifted instantly. The hallway noise rushed back in all at once—laughter, lockers, life.

​Ren sagged against the lockers, shaking. "They're recruiting me."

​"They're containing you," Jian corrected grimly. "Big difference."

​Ren looked at the empty corridor. "If I go… I might be able to help Evan."

​Jian didn't answer immediately.

​Then, softly, "Yeah. That's why they asked nicely."

​Ren closed his eyes.

​Tomorrow morning. Below.

​"Jian," Ren said. "You're coming with me."

​Jian snorted. "Absolutely not. I hate Period Zero."

​Ren opened his eyes. "I'll bring a spray bottle."

​Jian hesitated. He looked at the notebook, then at Ren.

​"…What time did she say?"

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