Hyrkane
In a near future where suffering must be visible to be believed, the Mnemosyne Institute has changed trauma care forever.
Its revolutionary technology, Subjective Imaging, does not show what truly happened.
It reconstructs how the mind survived it.
For Mara Veyrn, former patient and now art-therapy mediator at Mnemosyne, these images are not evidence. They are not proof. They are not diagnoses.
They are fragile things - intimate, unfinished, and meant to belong first to the people who made them.
But during a series of sessions, several patients begin to leave behind the same impossible detail.
Not always drawn.
Not always noticed.
Never quite complete.
A faceless shape hidden in drawings, gaps and shadows.
The researchers call it Pattern Zero: the first possible universal marker of unresolved trauma.
A breakthrough, they say.
Mara is not so sure.
Because the more the Institute tries to see it clearly, the harder it becomes to look away.
And some images should never be finished.
Disclamer: psychological horror, trauma themes, institutional abuse, dissociation, disturbing imagery.