I didn't know where I was and I didn't have time to process any of it. I was pounding against the stone wall as hard as I could. I imagined my nails tearing through the concrete, ravaging the wall like a knife through butter. I made a massive drill start working through the wall, imagined all kinds of explosives, but the concrete kept getting thicker, and the closer I looked, the more I saw of Dan. There'd only been one of him at the start, but suddenly, it's like he was replicating himself, completely in tune with his-
"Powers," an exhausted voice marveled. I didn't turn, all my focus was on that wall, impossible to break.
The man stumbled to his feet, resting his hand on his thigh for leverage, "You have the same powers he does? Don't you?"
He kept walking towards me, "Don't you get it? We've got a chance!"
It didn't feel like we did. I ripped and clawed my way through the concrete. I shot laser beams from my eyes that turned the wall to powder, but nothing I did could keep up with Dan.
"You won't beat him," the voice finally said. I was coated in sweat, my eyes narrowed in focus, "You're just one person."
The wall erupted in a cloud of smoke and dust. I screamed, putting all my energy into a blast as I threw a fireball as hard and fast as I could, "So is he."
"No," the man said, "Not really. He's woven his consciousness with the computer. Kyra- you're up against the machine itself."
He'd spoken just enough sense to get me to stop. I collapsed from exhaustion, panting nonstop. I barely had time to grimace before I saw the wall, already healing itself, undoing every last bit of progress I'd made.
"I didn't think," the man muttered fearfully, "None of us did. This wasn't supposed to be possible. No one was meant to integrate with the machine itself. It was supposed to be the invisible layer that made everything possible."
I was still keeled over, trying to catch my breathe, "Just tell me how to get out of here."
"You can't beat him," he decided, "Not one on one at least. We need outside help. Maybe we could get a message out."
I laughed.
"Help? Don't you get it? We're alone! Juliet and Natalie don't even want to leave- and Brynlee wouldn't listen to me no matter what I tried. She's so deep down this rabbit hole she can't think straight."
I could tell he was a little bit shaken up, his years of hopes dashed in a millisecond, but he put on a confident face, and took a step closer. "I have the key that'll end the simulation," he said, "But I need to get to the center- there's a control room that players can't access."
I nodded back towards the wall, "Doesn't change anything with that in the way."
We were locked in a prison, and as far as I knew, I'd be staring at that boring, expanding wall for centuries before someone fixed everything.
"Someone will help," he said. He had to believe it, "Maybe Natalie or Juliet don't want to wake up, but they're still human. Surely they're not ok with us being trapped."
"Who cares?" I muttered, "You said it yourself. He's stronger than me. I can't get us out."
He shook his head, "Dan's strong, but he's not perfect," he muttered, "I've had a lot of time to watch him. Years where he's been the only thing to look at. And he's got a weakness. He's the most arrogant man I've ever met."
I kept staring at the wall, but the man kept creeping closer.
"He thinks everyone else in here's an idiot."
"He's right," I sniffled.
"No," he said confidently, "He's not. He doesn't think anyone else can play his game. You could make a message that burrows it's way out of here, completely silent, and only moving when it was absolutely certain Dan wouldn't notice it. He does caveats like that all the time, and thinks everyone else is too dumb to use their full power."
My hands shook as I raised them up. I started letting my mind wander, and imagined a device that could make it through the wall. I gave one last sniffle, then wiped my face. I sent the device towards the wall, and turned back towards the prison.
"Now what?" he asked.
"We wait."
If I'm going to give Dan any credit at all, it's this: the two of us were stuck in a nicer prison than any in the real world. We had a full house, with anything we could possibly want to do or eat; we just happened to have a wall around us we couldn't break out of. I could imagine sunshine, or rolling grass fields, and it'd feel just like the real world. In truth, my life imprisoned wasn't any different than the one I'd been living. I was still held captive by the greater dream, so Dan was just a change of venue. I did, however, wish I was alone.
The man tried to talk to me every chance he got. He followed me around like a lost little puppy. He always wanted to look at me, hear my voice. I can relate, certainly. He never had my powers. He couldn't just imagine a friend, but goddamnit, he wasn't Benji, and I didn't want him.
"Kyra," he'd say. He always tried out different smiles, one warm, one hopeful. Sometimes he'd look bashful, like he was reluctant to come up to me. All he ever did was try to break through my walls, and get me to talk to him.
"Do you have any ideas?" he'd asked, "Doing anything fun today?"
I'd been in here months, still waiting for my message to break through, and desperate for him to leave me alone.
"Have any cool ideas? Anything in here you want to remodel?"
If I had an idea, It'd already be done. That's how this whole place works.
"You know what's gonna stink?" he'd try, "When we finally get out of here, it's still gonna be all the same movies. No time will have passed at all."
For the millionth time, I ignored him, but for the first time, something in him snapped.
"Goddamnit Kyra, can't you even look at me?" he said, his eyes red, "I'm a human being, not one of your toys. I've been alone for decades and you can't even say hi back?"
"Human being?" I laughed, "Don't you think I know that?"
"You don't act like it."
"What, you want me to be your little wife? Bring you breakfast in bed every morning? Rub your feet? You're not my husband."
"It's a guilt thing?" he scoffed, "Please. I've seen your command logs. I know you've gone through men in here the same way Brynlee has."
"YOU'RE MY CELLMATE!"
"I'm a human!" he screamed, "With needs! To talk, to have a friend! You can't even carry on a conversation?"
He took a step closer to me. I kept trying to look away, but his head was darting around like a pigeon, forcing his eyes to lock with mine, "What are you so afraid of?"
"That I won't be able to tell the difference, ok?" I snapped, "That all the guys I've slept with are just as real as you, or Benji, and that I've actually been cheating on him. I'm terrified I'll get to know you, and you'll be just another program, completely indistinguishable."
His voice went quiet, "I'm not special," he said, "I know that. I'm just a neural interface engineer trying to get home. I'm not as complex as the AI algorithms, and no, you won't be able to tell me apart, but I can't keep living like this Kyra. You don't even know my name."