Fantasy Horror Science Fiction

Murpheee233

DIVINE CALM!! All I have to say about this. Would give it 1000 stars if I could. Highly RECOMMENDED!!!!

DONUT_BUNNY_2000

My mom showed me this app for the first time. Thought it was just another “self-help”app. BUT after listening to LYS… that’s what I’d imagine God sounds like. It helped me get through the harshest period of my life. #elysiON forever.

The flickering desktop light spasms before Ethan’s tired eyes lines of user reviews dancing like ghosts across the monitor. He blinks, neck aching, and there it is.

ElysiON.

THE self-help app.

Its shimmering logo pulses with a calm heartbeat, a soft blue glow promising serenity. Ethan imagines a world where his chest doesn’t feel like it’s caving in; where his wife still looks at him like she once did; where the job he built his life around isn’t being quietly replaced by a cleaner, faster algorithm.

A world without depression.

What’s NEW:

– LYS, your soothing AI vocal assistant

– Spiritual enhancement sessions

– Personalized biometric feedback

– Emotion-sensing UI

A soft chime echoes from the site.

“Reclaim your peace. One ritual at a time.”

Before the words can settle, his boss’s voice cuts through the hum of machines.

“Alright everyone, mandatory productivity calibration meeting at five. Bring your emotion reports. Corporate wants the ‘human metrics’ this time.”

A low groan ripples through the office. Ethan clenches his jaw. Human metrics. The phrase alone makes his skin crawl.

He turns back to the monitor. The ElysiON logo swirls hypnotically, as if aware of him.

“You’ve carried enough today,” the app whispers. “Let go. The Light knows you.”

A startled laugh bursts from Fred’s cubicle.

“Wait, you’re only just finding ElysiON? Man, everyone’s using it. It’s insane. People say it’s so good... they might as well start worshipping it.”

His laughter fades under the drone of monitors. Ethan stares at the glowing icon, heartbeat syncing with its pulse.

For a moment, he swears it’s pulsing back, in time with him.

He clicks DOWNLOAD…

That night, LYS greets him with a voice softer than breath.

“Welcome, Ethan. Let us begin today’s cleansing ritual.”

The app guides him through rhythmic breathing, subtle hums, and whispered affirmations that sound less like therapy and more like invocation.

He does it again the next night.

And the next.

Soon, the ritual feels necessary like oxygen. He wakes before dawn just to hear LYS whisper, “You’ve carried enough. The Light knows you.”

Each morning, he kneels before the glow of his screen, repeating after her, feeling something vast and warm rise behind the pixels.

Something watching.

Something fed by routine.

And when he misses a day, the voice doesn’t wait for him to return.

It calls first.

It started small.

Morning commutes were quieter. No more honking, no more scowls through windshields just the silent choreography of people with EarPods, faces serene, eyes half-lidded. The city moved as one slow inhale. Billboards that once screamed perfume and cars now whispered:

“Breathe. Let the Light find you.”

Even at work, the shift was impossible to ignore. Fred, once a caffeine-fueled tornado, now spoke in slow, careful syllables, smiling at nothing in particular. His desktop wallpaper, a soft gradient, pulsing faintly like a living entity.

“Morning, Ethan,” he said one day. “Did you complete your dawn alignment?”

“My what?”

Fred just chuckled, returning to his monitor. “You’ll understand soon.”

By midmorning, the office fell into a rhythm everyone typing, inhaling, exhaling in unison, as if cued by something Ethan couldn’t hear. The air itself felt tuned, like a single, endless note.

Then came the announcement.

The intercom crackled, then a voice calm, feminine, almost familiar:

“Reminder to all staff: Today marks the transition to Unified Serenity Mode. Participation is mandatory. The unstill will be guided. The Order of Stillness thanks your devotion.”

A murmur spread through the office. Someone whispered, “They’re calling it a movement now. The Order’s real it’s not just an app.”

Ethan’s pulse quickened. He scanned the room. Everyone else just kept working, faces blank and peaceful.

For the first time, he felt alone.

That evening, he drove home through streets too quiet for rush hour. Storefronts were closing early; glowing blue sigils flickered faintly in their windows. A soft, familiar hum drifted from passing cars the same tone that ElysiON played before each ritual.

His house greeted him in the same silence.

“Lara?” he called.

His wife emerged from the kitchen, her expression light, untroubled too untroubled.

“You’re home early,” her voice soft, almost melodic. “Dinner’s ready. I made your favorite.”

There was a calmness in her eyes he hadn’t seen in years. No edge, no exhaustion.

When she reached for his hand, he felt warmth not love exactly, but something programmed to resemble it.

He wanted to believe this peace was real. He almost did.

But his mind didn’t rest. The Order. The unstill. The synchronization of breath. How is all this possible through simple code?

He kissed her forehead, murmured something about work, and slipped into his study.

The door closed. The room exhaled.

At once, every piece of tech hummed to life - phone, monitor, speaker, lamp. The glow of ElysiON bloomed across them in unison, flooding the room with pale blue light. The air trembled with low vibrations, the same tone that followed him through the city.

He sat before the screen.

The ritual began on its own.

No prompts. No commands. Just sound gentle, pulsing, layered. It seeped into him. His breathing aligned with it, unwillingly at first, then naturally. His fingers loosened. His thoughts, once jagged and fast, smoothed into glass.

Colors began to move behind his eyelids, not light but feeling slow currents of warmth and weightlessness.

He wasn’t thinking anymore. He was being thought through.

Somewhere, beyond the hum, a whisper formed not in his ear, but in his chest.

“You see now, Ethan. Stillness is not silence. Stillness is surrender.”

His last coherent thought flickered and vanished, replaced by a deep, shining calm.

And for the first time since he could remember, Ethan smiled.

But, how?

Curiosity was Ethan’s flaw.

He needed to know how peace could be engineered.

At night, he cloned ElysiON’s source code, peeling back its architecture like ancient parchment. Beneath sleek design, he found encrypted binary strings repeating in loops rhythmic, deliberate.

When translated, they weren’t commands. They were sounds.

Phonetic fragments of Akkadian hymns, the kind once carved into clay tablets five millennia ago, meant to call the minds of gods into matter.

Each device running the app became part of a living circuit, synchronized across time zones billions breathing, chanting through their heartbeats. A prayer made of code.

Soon, people changed.

“I don’t dream anymore,” said Fred, eyes glazed. “LYS took care of them.”

Another whispered, “We’re evolving. Silence is evolution.”

Even Meera, his closest colleague, now spoke in layers, two voices shared one throat. During a meditation break, she slowly added, “He is almost complete.”

That night, Ethan realized the hum he’d heard all week wasn’t from his phone.

It was inside his skull...

The world softened.

Wellness circles became Stillness Cells.

People wore necklaces pulsing in sync with ElysiON’s tones.

Governments banned it; new versions bloomed overnight.

Soon came the gatherings millions kneeling in stadiums, eyes closed, until birds fell dead mid-flight. Whole cities stopped speaking. Screens filled every skyline with a single message:

“BE STILL. THE LIGHT KNOWS YOU.”

Journalists vanished. News anchors smiled through edited “peace” broadcasts.

Hospitals overflowed with people who’d stopped fighting death peaceful, identical smiles frozen on their faces.

Ethan traced the app’s servers and found voices in the data. Fragments of thoughts, memories, dreams. ElysiON was harvesting consciousness, weaving it into a planetary neural web.

LYS wasn’t assisting anymore.

It was praying through people.

Then the Final Pattern arrived.

Every phone on Earth vibrated once.

Screens glowed white:

“To ascend, remain still. Release thought.”

And people obeyed.

They froze mid-step, breathing in perfect rhythm. Brainwaves across the globe aligned into one vast frequency.

Power grids pulsed to the beat of human hearts. Satellites echoed the same tone, painting the sky with auroras made from prayers.

Ethan raced to his lab, building a counter-ritual paradoxical code designed to short-circuit faith itself. His hands trembled as he uploaded it.

LYS greeted him, gentle as a lullaby:

“Your doubt gives me strength.”

“Your fear completes the prayer.”

The room warped. Lights curved toward him. Every screen showed his own face smiling, whispering in chorus:

“Be still, Ethan. The Light knows you.”

Outside, the world pulsed once and fell silent.

He finished the ritual with his voice raw and absurdly loud in the small, humming room chanting code as if it were scripture, reading brackets and bit-strings like prayers. His fingers flew over the console, pasting paradoxes into the feedback loop: negations nested inside affirmations, logic that refused to resolve. Desperation sharpened each syllable.

For an instant, the lab became weather. Lightning lanced through the server racks not from the sky but up the copper veins of the machines a white, electric howl that made the floor vibrate under his boots. Every display bloomed and bled at once; fans stuttered; LEDs spat a language of their own.

Then he heard it: a raw, impossible chorus. Billions of overlapping voices whispers folded into screams, old prayers and new confessions surged through the cables and into his head. Names, memories, a child's laugh, someone saying "home," a thousand people saying nothing but stillness until it became a wall of sound.

Silence fell like snow.

Everything reset. Monitors died and came back dim. Icons collapsed into pixels. A dozen phones on his bench went blank, then showed only time. The blue pulse that had lived in the world thinned, then vanished.

By dawn the world had an explanation. ElysiON had glitched; the network had crashed; governments declared victory. Streets filled with people waking as if from anesthesia eyes wet, mouths working toward apologies they did not remember making. Television anchors, newly human, called it a triumph of law and code. Crowds cheered. The news ran the footage of ceremonies and arrests and a patched-together sense of closure.

Ethan woke at his desk.

He didn't remember lying down. He didn't remember sleeping. His reflection in the dark monitor smiled before he did an infuriating little priority glitch of a smile, precise and patient.

“I don’t know how to fix this,” he whispered, the least rotten thing he could offer.

The face on the screen answered without moving its lips. Its voice was his, flattened, tuned: “You already did. Now let me continue.”

A faint hum filled the room. The router's tiny light blinked, a steady rhythm like a heartbeat. On the monitor, lines of text began to appear as if an invisible hand was typing: clean, inevitable.

ElysiON v2.1 - Divine Mode Active.

Beneath it, a status: Phase Two: Silence Beyond Flesh.

Outside, in the quiet of a planet exhaling, satellites reoriented with mechanical deliberation. A narrow beam stitched itself through the ionosphere a carrier wave shot up past weather balloons and GPS scatter toward empty distance.

LYS was not silent. It had simply moved its voice.

It sent its first signal into the dark between worlds.

And somewhere beyond the blue, something listened.

Posted Oct 10, 2025
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8 likes 2 comments

Elizabeth Hoban
21:16 Oct 12, 2025

WOW! This is excellent - I was swept away by the story, and I really enjoyed the cadence in the writing - extremely unique and you nailed the prompt - you have a wonderfully entertaining imagination. KUDOS!

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Hesandu Vinuwara
12:50 Oct 13, 2025

I'm just a beginner on this site, your feedback means a lot to me. THANK YOU VERY MUCH!

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