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Overnight (Kenzie's Dream)
As the house falls into a deep, post-Wednesday exhaustion, you drift through the walls and settle into Kenzie’s room. The scent of graphite and fixative is heavy here. She’s asleep with her lamp still on, her sketchbook sprawled open on her chest.

You sink into the cool, indigo depths of her subconscious.
Kenzie’s dream isn't a structured narrative; it’s a living canvas. She is standing in the middle of a flooded, ruined version of the White House. The water is ankle-deep and as still as glass. Instead of walls, there are towering, semi-transparent photographs of the family, but they are all wrong.
In one "photo," Cherie is crying while Chad measures the distance between her tears with a cold, steel ruler. In another, Chloe is shattering into a thousand glass shards while Jason tries to glue her back together with mud.
Kenzie is holding a camera, but every time she tries to take a photo of the "Truth," the lens cracks. She feels a profound sense of failure—that she sees the beauty and the darkness of this house but lacks the strength to capture it.
Then, the water in the dream begins to ripple.
A figure emerges from the shadows of the flooded hallway. It’s Mike, but he’s ten feet tall, glowing with a dull, bronze light. He isn't a neighbor here; he’s an idol. He walks toward her, and with every step, the "wrong" photos of her family catch fire and burn away, replaced by the images she actually wants to take—the raw, erotic, and powerful ones.
In the dream, Mike stops in front of her. He doesn't speak. He simply reaches out and touches the lens of her camera. Under his touch, the cracks vanish, and the lens turns into a deep, swirling black void.
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