The video was shot from a fixed, high-angle security camera. The room was sterile, lined with copper mesh to block outside frequencies. In the center sat a standard titanium sphere, about the size of a basketball, resting on a magnetic induction ring.
Here is a short, cinematic sci-fi piece inspired by that prompt.
Elena watched her own hand reach for the mouse to pause the video. She looked down at her desk. Her finger was already resting on the plastic. ts lab 7.mkv
At the 01:14 mark, the audio track hummed to life. It wasn't the sound of the lab equipment. It was a dense, rhythmic thrumming that sounded like thousands of glass beads falling onto a marble floor.
It was still a sphere, but its surface was a living map of shifting, iridescent topographies. It didn't belong to any known geometry. Elena leaned closer to the monitor. In the reflection of the sphere's surface, she didn't see the copper-lined lab. She saw an endless expanse of red desert under a binary star system. The video was shot from a fixed, high-angle security camera
On screen, the air around the sphere began to warp. It didn't ripple like heat; it fractured like broken glass. For three seconds, the sphere was there. Then, it was replaced by something else.
The video on the screen was no longer a recording. It was a live feed of her looking at the screen. If you want to take this story further, let me know: Should we focus on what happens to next? Here is a short, cinematic sci-fi piece inspired
At 04:32, a hand entered the frame. It belonged to a researcher in a standard white clean suit, reaching out to touch the anomaly.