The Light Behind The Eyes

Shane Petosa-Sigel 

The monitor hummed softly as Bob ran his fingers across its sleek and luminescent face. Light projections of blue and green danced along the otherwise transparent surface of the glass as he scrolled and tapped, their soft ebbing glow reflecting in the dark windows of his eyes. Contrasting the faint light of the screen, a stronger fixture sat embedded in the wall to his right, set behind a thick pane of clouded glass. Its light was bright and warm, painting thick tones of orange and yellow all throughout the small room that were meant to imitate the hues of sunlight, as there were no windows in the space. The rays of artificial sun draped over the curves of the desk and down the slant of Bob’s back as he sat hunched over the glass monitor, his nose almost touching the screen as he worked. The workspace itself was clean, but cramped. It was a single-room area roughly the size of a standard cubicle, with just enough real-estate for Bob to stretch his legs out if he swiveled his chair and pointed out his toes to a particular direction under the desk. No other accessories lined the walls other than the false sun to the right, and a closed door that almost disappeared into the metal wall behind him, its edges blending in with the room’s contours. He was of course alone in the tightly packed space, not that anyone else could fit comfortably inside if he ever did have the company. He didn’t. If company meant any of the countless neighboring work pods that were stacked above and beside his own, then well, he didn’t know them either. He once waved to an accountant as they entered their work pods one morning, but he must’ve been bionic, because the man just clicked his eyes at Bob like camera lenses and disappeared into his cubicle without a wave back. 

The pods, almost like thousands of bricks stacked together into a skyscraper sized wall, had phased out the use of recreational office buildings around the late 2090s, in an effort to “maximize efficiency by consolidating employees to each their own distraction free workplace”. Bob muttered the words to himself as he jabbed a bitter finger against his screen, making the monitor jolt backward towards the wall. He had been the lead architect on the closet-sized cubicles years ago, he just had never thought that he’d ever be subjected to working in his own design, only now did he realize how difunctional they were on the inside. He had designed the pods to be elegant and simplistic, yet every day Bob sat inside the cramped box that he designed, cursing his younger self for building his own prison. He thought about that a lot, the way he was back then, an eager architect set on changing the world. That man saw things that the light couldn’t catch. “What an idiot” Bob spat at his monitor. The jabs at his screen became progressively harder as he fought with himself inside the small box. Was it shrinking? “Maximizing efficiency..” the monitor scraped against the desk. He was yelling at himself now, his voice reverberating off the cold walls of the pod. “Distraction free workspace, give me a break Bob, it’s a fricken stackable coffin you adolescent piece of –”   THUDNK. 

Bob stopped rambling and looked up from the monitor, the warm light beside him flickered, causing a temporary seizure between night and day in the pod. He swiveled his chair around to face the door, there was a clatter like the sound of two marbles being thrown around, and a weighted muffle of something pressing up against the outside of the door. Bob stood out of his chair, his head a few inches from the ceiling. THNK. Was someone doing electrical work? There were no announcements he could recall of any pods being refurbished. THUKNK. There were only about two steps from his chair to the slender metal face of the door, but he took them slowly as he went to unlock the pod. As he set his thumb into the small pad on the edge of the frame, the door beeped and unlocked, and the weight stopped shifting against it. The door slid open only about three inches before stopping abruptly, jamming, but Bob could make out the shoulder and leg of an individual rummaging with the hardware outside the pod. “Hey pal, I didn’t request any electrical service, but whatever work you’re doing is messing up the –” Bob lost his train of thought as the figure shifted its weight, and two yellowed eyes darted up at him from behind the slim gap in the door. The eyes spoke. “Open th’door!” The words were quick and sharp, like they were anxious to leave his mouth, like they were short on time. “Open th’door, c’mon!” The eyes didn’t look threatening, not much. They looked desperate, of what though, Bob had no clue. He tried to make the eyes understand. “You uhm.. y-you did something to the wiring pal, the system is all electric. You have to fix whatever it was that you –” Bob was interrupted again by a gasp of frustration on the other end of the door, as a leather-skinned hand pushed its way between the gap and slid the door almost halfway open. The rest of the figure shot his way through the door with such vigor that Bob stumbled and fell back into his chair. The figure moved with such haste that Bob could only see him in a haze as he slammed the door shut again, the metal creaking from the force. As the door closed again, the electrical had another attack, and the lights shut off. Bob said nothing as the figure breathed heavily in the dark work pod, with only the faint light of the monitor illuminating his thick jointed legs. 

As the artificial sunlight rebooted in the room, flickers of orange light uncovered pieces of the figure trying to regain its breath by the door. As the sunlight regained consistency, Bob flinched. This wasn’t at all what he was expecting. 

To be Continued… 

*I had the plans for where this story would go, but I didn’t give myself adequate time to accomplish it. I will finish this story soon enough. * 

Published by robotbunny22

I have no idea whats going on...

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