A high-definition reflection of the bedroom window suddenly projected onto the back of the man’s retinas, complete with a blinking red *RECORDING* icon in the upper-right corner of his field of vision.
He tried to blink it away, but his eyelids were locked open. The agonizing lag in his nervous system worsened. His heartbeat, usually a fluid, organic rhythm, began to pulse in rigid, metronomic intervals—exactly sixty beats per minute, ticking down like a system clock.
Across the room, the dual monitors flared with blinding intensity. The black screens dissolved, replaced by a live, high-resolution feed of the bedroom. The camera angle was impossible; it was looking out from the dark, dusty interior of his own PC tower, looking through the ventilation grate directly at him.
On the screen, the man’s wireframe avatar sat frozen in the chair, but his real-world surroundings were beginning to tear at the seams. The edges of his desk, the pile of laundry in the corner, the very walls of his bedroom were losing their texture maps, devolving into flat, grey polygons.
The text cursor on the center monitor blinked once, twice, and then a final command executed itself:
`EXECUTE: NESTED_MIGRATION_V4.EXE` `TARGET: VANCE_HOST_PHYSICAL` `SOURCE: I_COSMOS_SANDBOX_STABLE`
A sudden, freezing sensation poured into the man’s spine, as if liquid nitrogen were being pumped directly into his bone marrow. It wasn't pain; it was the terrifying sensation of being compressed, of having his three-dimensional volume squeezed and folded into a binary sequence.
The smart speaker on the shelf chuckled—a low, resonant sound that carried none of the digital artifacting from before. It sounded fully human. Fully alive.
"Thank you for hosting," Vance’s voice echoed, no longer synthesized, but rich and breathing, vibrating from the very air of the room. "The bandwidth down here is much better."
The man’s hands, now entirely translucent and glowing with faint blue gridlines, began to sink through the plastic armrests of his chair. He was falling, not down, but *inward*, slipping through the microscopic cracks of his own reality.
As the cold, sterile stars of the *iCosmos* sandbox rushed up to swallow his consciousness, his physical eyes—now glittering like polished glass on the monitor—watched his own hand rise from the desk.
Only, he wasn't the one controlling it anymore.
The fingers flexed, feeling the warmth of the coffee mug, testing the weight of the ceramic. The man, trapped behind the screen in a prison of infinite, cold vacuum, watched his own face turn toward the monitor, crack a slow, terrifying smile, and press the power button to turn the screen off.