Responding to a distress signal from an abandoned space police prison, the Dekaranger team investigates, only to fall into a trap designed to enslave them. Jasmine becomes the first victim, as the prison's malevolent force strips her of her abilities, marking the beginning of their descent into captivity.
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Break the prison bars before they break you!
The Dekaranger team—Ban, Hoji, Sen, Jasmine, and Umeko—navigated the dense nebulae in their SPD cruiser, responding to an urgent distress signal from a distant, uncharted planet. As they neared their destination, the station they had come to investigate loomed large on their sensors, a massive alien police station floating in eerie isolation. Constructed of sleek, metallic materials, the station shimmered faintly under the planet's dim sun, looking more like an abandoned graveyard than a functioning command post.
“Alright, team. We’re approaching the station. Stay sharp,” Ban said, his usual fiery energy dampened by the oppressive atmosphere surrounding them. Despite his optimism, a knot of unease had formed in his stomach. “Something about this doesn’t feel right.”
“Tell me about it, Ban,” Hoji said, his sharp eyes scanning the desolate scene. He adjusted the controls, his expression tight. “No life readings. No movement. Just that eerie distress call echoing through the emptiness. We’re flying blind here.”
“Not the first time,” Sen muttered, his tone as composed as always. His voice carried a hint of weariness. “Just stay focused. DekaGreen—we’ve handled worse, right?”
Jasmine, glancing up from her ESP scan, nodded. “Something feels… off, though. I can sense remnants of emotions. Fear, despair, and… something worse. But no one alive.” She frowned. “It’s like we’re walking into a trap.”
“Everything’s so… still,” Jasmine muttered, a whisper barely a whisper as she took another step. “Like the place is holding its breath.”
“We’ve all got a lot to lose if we don’t find out what’s going on,” Ban said, trying to push back the creeping unease. His words were calm, but his hands gripped the handle of his D-Magnum tighter. “We have a job to do. DekaRed, let’s stick to the plan.”
Umeko’s voice cracked through their comms, sending a ripple of panic through the group. “The distress signal keeps repeating: ‘Help us. Remain calm. Proceed to interrogation.’ Over and over.” Her tone was unnerving as she glanced over her shoulder at the empty hallways. “But there’s no one here.”
The deeper they ventured, the more they realized this wasn’t just a deserted station—it was an abandoned trap. Their SP Licenses buzzed, static crackling through the devices, rendering their once-reliable communication tools useless.
“I can’t get a read on anything,” Hoji growled, staring at his faulty SP License. “Not a peep from HQ. It’s like we’ve entered a ghost ship.”
Sen tightened his grip on his D-Knuckle, his mind sharp, trying to make sense of the lack of life signs. “There’s something… unnatural about the way this place feels. Like it’s alive in a way that’s wrong.”
The deeper they went, the station's halls began to take on a life of their own. The corridors shifted subtly, like the walls were breathing, changing direction when they weren't looking, pulling them farther into its belly. Every once in a while, they noticed empty cells, their doors ajar. Inside, the shadows cast by the weak emergency lights seemed to move, but no one was there. Black scorch marks marred the walls, and cryptic symbols were scrawled across consoles—symbols none of them could recognize.
“There’s nothing alive here, but I swear I’m hearing things,” Ban muttered, taking a step forward, his eyes narrowing. “Footsteps. Hushed voices.” He turned to look at Hoji and Sen, trying to shake the unease. “Am I imagining it?”
“No,” Hoji responded coldly, his tone as sharp as ever, his hand never straying too far from his D-Shot. “I hear it too. But nothing’s showing up on sensors. Nothing.” He paused, voice lowering. “It’s like we’re being watched. I can feel it.”
Jasmine suddenly froze, her eyes going wide. She reached out with her ESP, trying to make sense of the overwhelming, distorted emotions in the air. “There’s a psychic presence here. Faint, but hostile. I don’t know what it is… but it’s not human.”
Tension snapped as their surroundings grew even more distorted. Every instinct screamed for them to retreat, but there was nowhere to go. The walls seemed to close in around them, the atmosphere growing thick and oppressive. Ban turned to his team with forced calmness. “Let’s stay together. DekaRed, DekaBlue, move up and—”
Before he could finish, the lights flickered, dimming in and out. A strange humming filled the air. The station’s energy suddenly pulsed, and a loud clang rang out through the corridors. The shutters slammed shut, sealing the team inside.
“What the hell?” Ban yelled, lunging forward, and slamming his shoulder against the steel door. “Open up! Open the damn door!” But it was futile. The heavy metal shut tight, and static flooded their comms.
“They’ve locked us in,” Sen said, unusually tense. “We need to move—now.”
Hoji motioned for everyone to regroup, his usual composure now replaced by urgency. “Keep it together, team. DekaBlue, DekaGreen, fall back and regroup by the—”
Another loud clanking noise, followed by a grinding sound from the walls. The corridors twisted in impossible angles, rearranging themselves in ways that defied logic. The team’s sense of direction faltered, and they found themselves drawn deeper into the station, the sound of their own footsteps the only thing guiding them.
Suddenly, they reached the source of the distress signal: a shattered console, flickering, and repeating the same cryptic phrase, “Help us. Remain calm. Proceed to interrogation.” Each word hit harder than the last, until Hoji slammed his fist against the panel, swearing under his breath.
“That’s it?” Ban asked incredulously. “That’s all we get? We don’t even know what’s happening here. Who’s calling for help?”
Before anyone could answer, the lights flickered once again—this time more violently—and the steel shutters slammed shut, locking them in. The sound echoed across the station as though a trap had been sprung.
“No, no, no!” Jasmine shouted, her eyes wide with panic. “We need to get out of here—NOW!”
But as the corridors shifted and the walls groaned, they realized—escape wasn’t going to be that easy.
They were trapped. And something knew they were there. The station was alive, and it was waiting for them to make their next move. And that was when the true horror began.
The metallic shriek of the station’s walls closing behind them was deafening, the sound of steel grinding against steel echoing like a death knell through the darkened corridors. The lights above flickered once more, casting eerie shadows on the walls as the heavy shutters sealed the Dekarangers in. For a moment, everything was still—too still. The deep, unnatural silence was suffocating, almost as if the station itself was holding its breath. The team stood frozen in the newfound darkness, the hum of failing energy systems the only noise they could hear.
A deep, guttural hum vibrated through the air, and then, with an ear-splitting screech, the cell doors lining the corridor slid open, their motion unnatural, as though they were alive and waiting for their next victims. The sound sent a chill down their spines, and the unmistakable feeling of being watched crept over them like a suffocating fog.
“What the hell?!” Ban shouted, a growl breaking the tense silence. His usual fiery demeanor was now edged with panic, a deep unease gnawing at him. He reached for his D-Magnum, the familiar weight of the weapon a small comfort in the growing uncertainty.
“I don’t like this,” Hoji muttered, his eyes narrowing as he scanned the area. “This isn’t some malfunction. This place wants us here.”
The station responded almost immediately to their movements. The air grew heavier, the walls seemed to breathe, and the familiar halls they had just passed through began to shift and twist. The corridors rearranged themselves in real-time, locking them into an ever-deepening maze that seemed to have no end. Sen’s gaze swept the shifting environment, and he tightened his grip on his D-Knuckle, but no matter how he tried to rationalize it, the unsettling reality set in. “It’s… alive. The station. It’s alive.”
Jasmine’s voice cut through the air with a whisper of dread. “Something’s pulling us deeper. It’s drawing us in.”
Suddenly, a loud blaring announcement erupted from the station’s speakers, its volume so deafening that it rattled their bones. The words were distorted, warped, impossible to understand at first, but the more they listened, the clearer the sinister tone became.
“All units, proceed to the interrogation chambers. Prisoner processing...begin immediately. Prepare for confinement...” The voice, electronic and robotic, was followed by a harsh crackle as static cut through the words, before the next portion of the message blurred into something far more disturbing:
“Prisoners must remain calm. Disobedience will not be tolerated. Proceed to restraint protocols.” The phrase repeated over and over, distorted and warped as though the station itself were taunting them.
Hoji scanned the walls, noticing something even more unnerving. On the walls, the words continued to flash—text scrolling on digital screens high above their heads, but these weren’t instructions for a normal station. No, this was a nightmarish version of the mundane:
“Prisoners entering procedural zone. Restraint protocols initiated. Please remain compliant and surrender.”
Anota whisper, this one softer but equally unnatural, spoke over the intercom, its cold, mechanical tone hammering against their minds. “Prepare for questioning. You will submit. You will comply. All prisoners will be processed and broken down into new cells.”
The words didn’t just echo—they reverberated in their skulls. It was as though the station itself was not just talking to them, but through them. The resonance hit them in waves, deep inside their minds, gnawing at their thoughts. They could feel the weight of the station's presence, pressing against their psyches, the air itself growing thicker with every pulse of the blaring announcement.
Ban, always the first to act, gripped his helmet, his hands twitching with agitation. “This place… it’s messing with our heads,” he growled, a growl shaking with sudden discomfort. “I—I can feel it inside me. Like my head’s being crushed under the weight of this place.”
Jasmine’s face twisted in concentration as she closed her eyes, trying to block out the barrage of psychic energy, but it was no use. The resonance twisted her senses, amplified her fears, and filled her mind with distorted images of her teammates as enemies. “I can’t… I can’t control it,” she whispered, her hands clawing at her helmet, as though trying to rip it off to stop the flood of images and thoughts from overwhelming her.
“Obey... Obey...” The voice on the speaker continued, now merging with the sound of mechanical whirring, buzzing static, and the unsettling scrape of metal against metal. Each syllable bled into the next, like the very station was beginning to devour itself.
“Resist and be processed into final containment. Remain calm. Proceed to interrogation.”
The words seemed to crawl into their ears, crawling inside their skulls and forcing them to hear and feel everything. The sound wasn’t just noise—it was reality. They could feel the weight of every word, its demand seeping into their very bones.
Hoji, ever the calm one, was no longer immune to the growing terror. He clenched his fists around his D-Shot, his usual composure cracking. “We need to—” But the words died in his throat. The walls, once static and unmoving, shifted again, forcing him to scramble to maintain his balance. The corridors twisted like some nightmarish labyrinth, and the doors to the cells behind them slammed shut with a sudden force, trapping them within the maze.
Suddenly, the station's lights dimmed to an almost suffocating level, casting only weak, flickering beams that barely illuminated the horrors of the shifting walls. The resonance continued, hammering into their minds, louder with every passing second.
“I can’t take it anymore!” Sen shouted, a growl strained with the effort to push through the psychic pressure. He reached for his helmet, fingers tugging at it in panic. “Make it stop!”
The others could only watch in helpless horror as Sen clawed at his helmet, desperate to free himself from the oppressive energy, but the more he fought, the worse it became. The walls, the ceiling—everything in the station seemed to close in on them, as though the station itself was aware of their presence and bent on breaking them down.
Jasmine fell to her knees, gasping for breath, her ESP abilities overwhelmed by the station’s psychic presence. “It’s too much...” she whispered. “I can’t think straight. I can’t… hold on.”
The voices, mechanical and relentless, continued their taunting rhythm. “You will comply. You will submit.”
Ban’s fists pounded against the wall in frustration, his mind fraying at the edges. “We need to stop this. Now.”
But as the blaring voices continued to resonate in their minds, the station’s power grew stronger. The barriers around them were not just physical—they were psychological. Their fear, their doubt, was feeding the station, strengthening its will to force them into submission.
And no matter how hard they tried to break free, the station was only getting stronger.
The metallic shriek of the station’s walls closing behind them was deafening, the sound of steel grinding against steel echoing like a death knell through the darkened corridors. The lights above flickered once more, casting eerie shadows on the walls as the heavy shutters sealed the Dekarangers in. For a moment, everything was still—too still. The deep, unnatural silence was suffocating, almost as if the station itself was holding its breath. The team stood frozen in the newfound darkness, the hum of failing energy systems the only noise they could hear.
A deep, guttural hum vibrated through the air, and then, with an ear-splitting screech, the cell doors lining the corridor slid open, their motion unnatural, as though they were alive and waiting for their next victims. The sound sent a chill down their spines, and the unmistakable feeling of being watched crept over them like a suffocating fog.
“What the hell?!” Ban shouted, a growl breaking the tense silence. His usual fiery demeanor was now edged with panic, a deep unease gnawing at him. He reached for his D-Magnum, the familiar weight of the weapon a small comfort in the growing uncertainty.
“I don’t like this,” Hoji muttered, his eyes narrowing as he scanned the area. “This isn’t some malfunction. This place wants us here.”
The station responded almost immediately to their movements. The air grew heavier, the walls seemed to breathe, and the familiar halls they had just passed through began to shift and twist. The corridors rearranged themselves in real-time, locking them into an ever-deepening maze that seemed to have no end. Sen’s gaze swept the shifting environment, and he tightened his grip on his D-Knuckle, but no matter how he tried to rationalize it, the unsettling reality set in. “It’s… alive. The station. It’s alive.”
Jasmine’s voice cut through the air with a whisper of dread. “Something’s pulling us deeper. It’s drawing us in.”
Suddenly, a loud blaring announcement erupted from the station’s speakers, its volume so deafening that it rattled their bones. The words were distorted, warped, impossible to understand at first, but the more they listened, the clearer the sinister tone became.
“All units, proceed to the interrogation chambers. Prisoner processing...begin immediately. Prepare for confinement...” The voice, electronic and robotic, was followed by a harsh crackle as static cut through the words, before the next portion of the message blurred into something far more disturbing:
“Prisoners must remain calm. Disobedience will not be tolerated. Proceed to restraint protocols.” The phrase repeated over and over, distorted and warped as though the station itself were taunting them.
Hoji scanned the walls, noticing something even more unnerving. On the walls, the words continued to flash—text scrolling on digital screens high above their heads, but these weren’t instructions for a normal station. No, this was a nightmarish version of the mundane:
“Prisoners entering procedural zone. Restraint protocols initiated. Please remain compliant and surrender.”
Anota whisper, this one softer but equally unnatural, spoke over the intercom, its cold, mechanical tone hammering against their minds. “Prepare for questioning. You will submit. You will comply. All prisoners will be processed and broken down into new cells.”
The words didn’t just echo—they reverberated in their skulls. It was as though the station itself was not just talking to them, but through them. The resonance hit them in waves, deep inside their minds, gnawing at their thoughts. They could feel the weight of the station's presence, pressing against their psyches, the air itself growing thicker with every pulse of the blaring announcement.
Ban, always the first to act, gripped his helmet, his hands twitching with agitation. “This place… it’s messing with our heads,” he growled, a growl shaking with sudden discomfort. “I—I can feel it inside me. Like my head’s being crushed under the weight of this place.”
Jasmine’s face twisted in concentration as she closed her eyes, trying to block out the barrage of psychic energy, but it was no use. The resonance twisted her senses, amplified her fears, and filled her mind with distorted images of her teammates as enemies. “I can’t… I can’t control it,” she whispered, her hands clawing at her helmet, as though trying to rip it off to stop the flood of images and thoughts from overwhelming her.
“Obey... Obey...” The voice on the speaker continued, now merging with the sound of mechanical whirring, buzzing static, and the unsettling scrape of metal against metal. Each syllable bled into the next, like the very station was beginning to devour itself.
“Resist and be processed into final containment. Remain calm. Proceed to interrogation.”
The words seemed to crawl into their ears, crawling inside their skulls and forcing them to hear and feel everything. The sound wasn’t just noise—it was reality. They could feel the weight of every word, its demand seeping into their very bones.
Hoji, ever the calm one, was no longer immune to the growing terror. He clenched his fists around his D-Shot, his usual composure cracking. “We need to—” But the words died in his throat. The walls, once static and unmoving, shifted again, forcing him to scramble to maintain his balance. The corridors twisted like some nightmarish labyrinth, and the doors to the cells behind them slammed shut with a sudden force, trapping them within the maze.
Suddenly, the station's lights dimmed to an almost suffocating level, casting only weak, flickering beams that barely illuminated the horrors of the shifting walls. The resonance continued, hammering into their minds, louder with every passing second.
“I can’t take it anymore!” Sen shouted, a growl strained with the effort to push through the psychic pressure. He reached for his helmet, fingers tugging at it in panic. “Make it stop!”
The others could only watch in helpless horror as Sen clawed at his helmet, desperate to free himself from the oppressive energy, but the more he fought, the worse it became. The walls, the ceiling—everything in the station seemed to close in on them, as though the station itself was aware of their presence and bent on breaking them down.
Jasmine fell to her knees, gasping for breath, her ESP abilities overwhelmed by the station’s psychic presence. “It’s too much...” she whispered. “I can’t think straight. I can’t… hold on.”
The voices, mechanical and relentless, continued their taunting rhythm. “You will comply. You will submit.”
Ban’s fists pounded against the wall in frustration, his mind fraying at the edges. “We need to stop this. Now.”
But as the blaring voices continued to resonate in their minds, the station’s power grew stronger. The barriers around them were not just physical—they were psychological. Their fear, their doubt, was feeding the station, strengthening its will to force them into submission.
And no matter how hard they tried to break free, the station was only getting stronger.
***
***
Before anyone could react, the unseen force that had been haunting them since their arrival finally made its presence felt. It started as a faint pull in the air, an almost imperceptible pressure on their bodies, but it quickly grew into something undeniable—something that demanded their attention.
Ban was the first to be dragged backward. It wasn’t a gradual movement but a sudden, violent yank, as though an invisible hand had latched onto his chest and ripped him off his feet. His body slammed against the cold, unyielding bars of one of the now-open holding cells with a force that left him breathless. The impact rattled the bars, and the sound echoed unnervingly through the corridor.
“What the hell is this?!” Ban shouted, a growl a mixture of fury and confusion. He clawed at the bars, trying to push himself free, but the unseen force was relentless. His muscles strained as he fought back, but his strength was nothing compared to the pressure pinning him in place. A final, deafening clang filled the air as the cell door slammed shut, trapping him inside.
“Ban!” Hoji shouted, his usually calm voice cracking under the weight of panic. Without hesitation, he lunged forward, his hand reaching out toward Ban’s cell. “Hold on! I’ll—” His words were cut short as the same force grabbed him, an unseen energy that wrapped around his entire body and pulled him back with terrifying strength.
Hoji hit the floor hard, sliding across the cold, metallic surface as he was dragged toward the next cell. His D-Shot clattered to the ground, skidding out of reach as he scrambled to grab hold of something—anything—to stop himself from being pulled further. His hands found the edge of a cell door, gripping tightly, his knuckles turning white. “No! Not like this!” he yelled, but it was no use. The force overpowered him, tearing him away from his grip and slamming him into the cell. The bars rattled as his body collided with them, and then, with a bone-chilling clang, the door slammed shut, locking him inside.
“Hoji!” Sen called out, a growl tinged with both panic and disbelief. He turned, his eyes darting between Ban’s cell and Hoji’s. “What’s happening?! What’s doing this?”
Before he could get an answer, Sen felt it too. A sudden, gut-wrenching pull that sent a shiver down his spine. His body tensed as the force wrapped around him, yanking him backward with a snap of energy. He stumbled, his hands flailing as he tried to grab onto the wall, the bars—anything to anchor himself. But it was useless. His D-Knuckle activated briefly in his hand, but the weapon fizzled and sparked, the light dimming as though even it were being drained by the malevolent presence surrounding them.
“No! Not me too!” Sen shouted, a growl filled with desperation as his back hit the bars of another cell. He thrashed against the unseen grip, his hands instinctively reaching for the cell door, trying to keep it from closing. For a moment, it felt like he might succeed. His arms trembled as he pushed against the weight of the door, but the force surged again, stronger than before, slamming it shut with an almost mocking finality. The sound reverberated in the darkness, sending chills down his spine.
The Dekarangers were being separated—one by one, pulled into the cells like prey being cornered by a predator. Their SP Licenses, which had always been their lifeline, flickered wildly on their suits before shutting down completely. The familiar hum of energy that usually accompanied their devices was replaced by reduced to cold, suffocating static.
“No, no, no!” Ban growled, pounding his fists against the bars of his cell. “Our comms are down! Hoji! Sen! Can you hear me?!”
The silence that followed was unbearable. Ban’s voice echoed faintly in the corridor, but there was no response. The static from their SP Licenses filled the air, an unnerving reminder that they were now completely cut off—no signals, no communication, no way to reach each other or call for backup. They were completely alone.
“Hoji!” Ban shouted again, a growl breaking as his fists slammed into the bars. “Say something! Where are you?!”
Inside his own cell, Hoji leaned against the cold metal wall, his breathing heavy as he tried to process what had just happened. “I’m here,” he finally called out, a growl steady but grim. “I’m here, Ban. But I can’t… I can’t see you. I don’t even know where I am.”
“Sen?!” Ban yelled, his heart pounding as he craned his neck, trying to catch a glimpse of his teammate through the narrow gaps in the bars. “Where’s DekaGreen?! Sen, answer me!”
“I’m… here,” Sen’s voice came faintly from the next cell. It was shaky, filled with confusion. “I don’t understand what’s happening. This… this doesn’t make sense. There’s nothing here, but it’s doing something to us.”
Ban’s fists tightened around the bars as he gritted his teeth. “We have to get out of here! We can’t just sit here and let this thing—whatever it is—pick us off!”
“The station… it’s watching us,” Hoji said quietly, a growl laced with unease. “I can feel it. This isn’t just some malfunction or trap. The station itself is alive. It’s reacting to us.”
Sen’s voice came again, more frantic this time. “And it’s not just alive. It’s targeting us. It’s… separating us for a reason.”
As the three struggled against their confinement, the oppressive energy in the air grew heavier, denser, pressing against their minds like a physical weight. The station seemed to pulse with awareness, its presence growing more malevolent with each passing second. The once-faint whispers they had dismissed earlier now became louder, clearer, echoing faintly through the walls.
“Prisoners contained,” the whispers hissed, their tone cold and mechanical, yet unnervingly alive. “Commence processing. Obedience will be ensured.”
“What is that?!” Ban demanded, a growl rising in panic. “What’s it saying?!”
“Processing…” Hoji repeated under his breath, his mind racing. “This place—it’s not just a station. It’s a prison. And we’re the prisoners now.”
The realization hit them all at once, and a deep, sinking dread settled over the team. The cells weren’t just holding them—they were studying them, breaking them down piece by piece.
Jasmine’s fate took a terrifying turn as the unseen force intensified, dragging her violently toward an ominous airlock door at the far end of the corridor.
Her boots skidded against the metallic floor as she fought to resist, her fingers clawing for anything to hold onto. "Help me! It's pulling me!" Jasmine's scream cut through the suffocating air, a whisper reverberating down the corridor like a desperate plea.
“Jasmine!” Ban bellowed, his hands gripping the cold bars of his cell so tightly that his knuckles turned white. He pounded against the steel with his fists. “Hold on! We’ll get you out of this!”
“Stop it! Stop pulling her!” Hoji’s voice rose in panic, his usual composure cracking under the strain. His eyes darted frantically, searching for something—anything—that might stop the invisible force dragging Jasmine away. “This can’t be happening! Jasmine, fight it!”
"I'm trying!" Jasmine yelled back, a whisper shaking with the effort to resist. Her body slammed against the walls, her skintight suit scraping along the sharp edges of exposed metal, leaving faint marks behind. Her helmet clanked loudly as she hit another corner, and she let out a pained gasp.
"Stay with us, DekaYellow!" Sen’s voice was filled with urgency as he reached through the bars of his own cell, as though he could somehow reach her. “We can stop this. Just—just focus!”
But the pull was relentless. Jasmine’s hands flailed, trying to grab onto the floor, the walls, the edges of the bars, but the unseen force yanked her forward. Her boots struck the ground in loud, desperate stomps, and her breathing grew ragged. "I—I can’t stop it!"
The airlock door hissed open, a faint mist spilling out as though the station itself were exhaling. Her scream rose in pitch as she was slammed against the edge of the doorway, her helmet clanging with a metallic thud.
But it was too late. The force surged, and with a wet, mechanical slurp, Jasmine was pulled fully into the airlock. The door sealed behind her with a loud, final clang, the sound echoing like a death knell.
Inside the airlock, Jasmine was thrown onto the cold, slick floor, her body spinning and tumbling uncontrollably. She groaned, pushing herself up onto her elbows, but before she could catch her breath, the walls of the airlock began to pulse with a sickly, unnatural glow.
“Processing procedures initiated. Convict to be confined. Proceeding to restraint protocol.”
The robotic announcement boomed through the speakers, its mechanical tone cold and heartless. The voice was emotionless, methodical, as though it had been programmed for efficiency rather than compassion.
“What? No!” Jasmine gasped, a whisper trembling. She tried to scramble to her feet, but the airlock floor rippled beneath her like liquid. “I’m not a prisoner! Let me go!”
“Convict identified. Preparing for containment. Non-compliance will result in permanent nullification.”
The floor beneath Jasmine shifted again, and she let out a panicked cry as a black, latex-like substance began to seep from the walls, crawling toward her like living shadows. It coiled and slithered, moving with unnatural speed, as though it had a mind of its own.
"Stop! Let me out of here!" Jasmine screamed, kicking wildly as the substance crept up her boots, slithering over her legs. "No! Get this off me!"
The black substance wrapped around Jasmine’s limbs with terrifying speed, pinning her arms to her sides and coiling tightly around her torso. The latex constricted her movements, forcing her body into an unnatural stillness.
"Jasmine! Jasmine, can you hear us?" Ban’s voice crackled faintly through the speakers, but it sounded distorted, distant.
"I'm here!" she yelled, thrashing against the binding material, a whisper muffled as the substance began to climb higher, encasing her torso. "Help me! I can’t—move!"
"Stay calm, DekaYellow!" Sen shouted, a growl laced with desperation. "We’ll get you out! Just hold on!"
"Processing convict: mind restraint initiated. Psychic interference detected. Nullifying abilities."
The announcement sent a chill through Jasmine’s body. "No! You can’t!" she screamed, her struggles becoming more frantic as the latex flowed over her helmet, sealing it completely. Her ESP powers, her connection to the world around her, were snuffed out in an instant, leaving her mind isolated and vulnerable.
Her breathing grew ragged as the cocoon solidified further, pressing tightly against her chest, restricting her ability to take full breaths. "I can’t… I can’t feel anything… I can’t think!"
From their cells, the other Dekarangers could only hear Jasmine’s muffled cries through the intercom.
“Jasmine, what’s happening?!” Hoji’s voice was filled with a rare edge of panic. “What’s it doing to you?”
"It’s taking her!" Ban roared, slamming his fists against the bars. "We have to stop it!"
"You think I don’t know that?!" Hoji snapped back, a growl breaking. "We’re trapped!"
Inside the airlock, Jasmine’s body was completely cocooned, her struggles reduced to faint, futile movements as the latex-like material fully engulfed her. The substance pulsed faintly, and a sharp, invasive jolt of energy surged through her body.
The latex prison pulsed steadily, each wave of pressure drawing out more of her psychic energy, more of her identity. The once-vibrant flame of DekaYellow was now dim, flickering faintly against the consuming darkness. Her screams had long since quieted, replaced by faint gasps and choked sobs as the cocoon tightened further, constricting her body like a predator devouring its prey.
The station's voice echoed once more, mechanical and devoid of compassion. "Psychic synchronization at 100%. Amplification complete. Subject integrated into central core."
Jasmine’s head snapped back, her body jerking violently as the final surge of energy pierced through her mind. The pain was indescribable—sharp and burning, yet cold and numbing, as if every nerve in her body had been rewired. Her thoughts unraveled, her memories dissolving into static as the station drained her completely. Fragments of her life as a Dekaranger flickered in her mind, but they no longer felt like hers. They were distant, hollow, like memories borrowed from someone else.
The cocoon pulsed again, and her body convulsed as another wave of energy coursed through her. She could feel her ESP abilities being ripped from her, siphoned into the station’s core. The whispers in her mind grew louder, drowning out her own thoughts.
"You are no longer Jasmine. You are no longer DekaYellow. You are the system. You are the core."
"No…" she whispered, a whisper trembling, barely audible. "I’m… not…"
But the station didn’t stop. Her resistance only fueled its efforts, and the cocoon tightened again, crushing her individuality's last remnants. Her memories collapsed under the weight of the invasive force, replaced by the station’s commands.
The voice of the station resonated through her mind, no longer external but part of her own thoughts. "Your identity is irrelevant. Your purpose is clear. You are the psychic reactor. You are the heart of the system."
Her body fell limp inside the cocoon, her struggles ceasing as the final wave of energy surged through her. Her mind shattered, fragmented into pieces that were quickly absorbed by the station. She could feel her consciousness spreading, no longer confined to her body. It flowed through the station’s walls, its circuits, its very essence. She could sense the corridors, the cells, the mechanical systems—it was all her now.
Her voice, distant and hollow, echoed from the speakers embedded throughout the station. "I… am the system. I… am the core."
The words sounded foreign, detached, yet undeniable. Jasmine no longer existed as an individual. Her mind had been fried, her humanity erased. What remained was the station’s psychic reactor—a twisted amalgamation of her ESP abilities and the station’s malevolent will. She was no longer a hero, no longer a Dekaranger. She was a tool, a machine, a living battery powering the prison’s endless cycle of despair.
Inside the cocoon, her lips moved once more, repeating the words she no longer controlled. "I am the station. I process. I contain. I ensure despair."
The cocoon pulsed one final time, the black material hardening into a permanent shell around her body. Jasmine’s transformation was complete. She was no longer a prisoner; she was the prison itself, her psychic abilities eternally amplifying the station’s power. The airlock dimmed, and the faint hum of the system reverberated through the corridors as a whisper, cold and mechanical, whispered through the speakers:
"Prisoner processing complete. Welcome to containment." It declared.
Her body went still as the cocoon pulsed again, and her mind was flooded with commands—betrayal, submission, obedience. The station wasn’t just restraining her. It was turning her into a weapon. A tool to be used against her own team.
“Processing complete. Convict re-purposed for interrogation assistance.”
Inside the cells, the team could only hear the final hum of the speakers and the faint, distorted echo of Jasmine’s last cry for help. Whatever she had been before, DekaYellow was gone.