"You joined," the man said, his voice like silk over gravel. "Most people just click. Very few actually want to arrive ." "Arrive where?" Arthur asked, his voice trembling.
Arthur looked back at his beige apartment—the half-eaten sandwich, the stack of bills, the quiet safety of a life half-lived. Then he looked at the obsidian woods and the key glinting on the tray. Join now!
"Join now!" The banner blinked in a neon green that felt like a migraine in the making. "You joined," the man said, his voice like silk over gravel
"The membership fee is simple," the man whispered. "You just have to leave everything you know behind. No phone, no past, no safety net. Just the 'Now'." Arthur looked back at his beige apartment—the half-eaten
The man stepped aside, gesturing to the open door. Outside, Arthur’s familiar suburban street was gone. In its place was a sprawling, mist-covered forest where the trees looked like they were made of obsidian. A path of glowing white stones led into the dark.
He didn't say a word. He took the key, stepped over the threshold, and pulled the door shut behind him.
"At the version of yourself you’ve been too afraid to meet."