Ashen Labyrinth: The Child of Sigma
Ashen Labyrinth: The Child of Sigma
Nights in Arcadia feel colder than most. For Mina Osasaki, a sixteen-year-old with sharp eyes and sharper sense, dusk creeps before the labs flick on their gray glow. She stands near a rusted gate, coat too big, waiting for the next mutation in her peaceful life.
The city sits on secrets. Under stone and neon, there’s old ground packed with labs, thin stairs, sealed doors. Most smart folk stay clear. Mina doesn’t. Have you ever walked through fog when you know someone’s inside, waiting?
Her support is Dai, streetwise but tired. He’s older by three years, ex-lab tech. His memory holds flashes most would dump. “You think tonight’s the break?” he asks. Mina never looks straight at him. “If not, it’s a lost week,” she shoots back. No use hoping unless you move.
The conflict stirs from rumors. Kids have gone missing, most from West Borough. All folks know is the pattern: slick shoes last seen, ghost stats in hospital logs, a parent coughing in cold jail light, no safe send-off. What would you do if your brother slipped out with a friend and that was it?
Mina hunts because Sota, her brother, is one of the missing. Small steps, hush steps—crude clues and pocket notes, all lead here. There’s talk on wires that Sigma, Arcadia’s old bio-firm, came to life. Hostiles now own the deep lab floors, with tech pulling not blood, but memory.
One night, she follows the low hum of chillers deep underground. Walls drip, all glass and blade smell. High-pitched records chirp: files from Project TESSERA. Interviews. Screams thinned by miles of wires. She doesn’t flinch. She moves forward as if it’s ordinary to see your own fear sketched in blue ink leaks.
Are cracks in a mind more honest than cracks in a window? Dai’s words are slow—“Never been this close, Mina”—but she hears panic dabbed in oil beneath. “You can back out.”
“I don’t want to.”
Even when Sota is found, would he even know her face?
On the next level down, they spot a small light through torn tape. There’s a room, broken computers cocooned in webs. In the dark, a girl’s shadow shivers. They freeze, hope flickers. It’s not Sota—but she wears the Sigma tag, trembling with blank eyes. 
Mina speaks to her in a gentler tone. “We’re not from here.” Silence at first. Then the girl murmurs, “Do you remember your heart?” as if asking herself. Sota’s fate is tied to hers; who else waited awake through all those experiments?
Mina pushes forward with Dai as doubts grow. She learns about the Child of Sigma—one kid coded to erase and collect every trace of the project’s loss, like a living proof of pain. The girl—Aya—remembers flashes of a symbol and silver wires under skin.
Were the doctors spared by old law, or are they hiding in plain rooms, waiting for the return of what Sigma lost?
Slowly, Mina, Dai, and Aya move deeper and stumble into an experiment still running: tubes, green lights, ratio graphs blinking. In one glass cell is Sota, breathing true but eyes open wide and wrong. Will Mina even know what to do when he looks right through her?
Mina shouts. Techs come. Dai signals escape. Before she runs, she grabs a file marked ‘RETURN-EN: see child for end phase,’ teeth clenched in fear. Do you think you can hold onto hope when science rewrites your home and your heart?
The entire thing cuts to black with a siren blaring. Red lights start, air locks hiss. Sota’s eyes follow Mina, but don’t quite focus. As they run, she hears one phrase bleed from white speakers: “End phase begun.” What happened in those twenty floors below ground? Why is Sota’s mind half-light and half-memory?
The gutters speak in riddles; and Mina isn’t sure if tomorrow brings answers or even more secrets under all this Arcadia fog. Would you keep following the trail, knowing proof sometimes hurts more than the lie?
