Sho was entranced by the pulsating red walls of the adjoining room. The sheer vastness of the space was impossible in and of itself. He had heard theories of inter-dimensional crossroads before, but he had always blown them off as ridiculous fantasies. Now, he wasn’t so sure… A second, more unsettling thought niggled at the back of his mind: if this really was a door to another world, what was waiting for them on the other side? Judging from the gory scenery, whatever lived over there wouldn’t greet them with a friendly batch of cookies.
“Sho. S-Sho. Don't move..don't. Don't move. Don't move. Don't move.”
Suzume’s terrified voice drew Sho out of his trance. He forced himself to turn away from the throbbing crimson to meet the girl’s eyes. All the color had drained from her cheeks, leaving her a sickly pale hue. Although Sho couldn’t see his own face, he assumed he didn’t look much better.
“T-Toby, H-Haruka..did you see it? …I'm not going crazy..”
See what? Sho whirled around again and scanned the fleshy otherworld for signs of movement. He detected nothing, which somehow made him all the more mentally distraught. If Suzume had spotted something, the fact that it was gone now probably meant it had seen them too.
It could still be watching us.
…Or I’m just paranoid.
Still, he didn’t want to take any chances. As a precaution, Sho slid the door closed until it was almost shut so the thing –whatever it was– wouldn’t be able to see them if it really was watching. He turned back to the others and ran a nervous hand through his hair.
Okay, he had to think rationally here. That creepy message earlier said something about other worlds. It also said that a group of teenagers were the saviors of the Earth. He couldn’t help but scoff at that. What could a bunch of high school students do to stop the osmosis of multiple dimensions? Maybe the message was directed to someone else, and they just happened to stumble upon it before the intended person did. That made a little more sense, but it did nothing to help their predicament. They were here, so they might as well finish the job. That could only mean one thing…
They had to go through the door.
“Do... do we have to go in there, Haruka?”
Sho heard Suzume’s shaky voice again, almost mirroring his thoughts.
“Just... there's something in there. I saw it. But I don't know what it was. Haruka I've got a seriously bad feeling about this meat locker… What if the place eats us? This place could be a stomach.”
“I don’t want to go in there either,” Sho interjected, stepping back over to the rest of the group. “But –and I know you don’t want to hear this. Frankly, I don’t either– I just feel like we have to.” He paused and looked down at his shoes, trying to come up with a reasonable explanation for his ungodly decision. “Well, I mean, there was the message earlier. Whoever left that thinks we’re the world’s only hope. What if they’re right? What if we are the only ones who can stop this thing? If we leave and pretend we never saw this place–” He gestured emphatically at the doorway. “Then we lose. Game over. No respawns. I think we should at least try to do some good until we find some more solid proof that it’s dangerous. If we see some freaky monster in there, I can safely tell you I’ll be the first one to say we get the hell out of there.” Sho looked at Suzume, who was quite obviously the most terrified, and directed his next words more towards her with a softer tone. “But for now, how about we just give it a shot?”