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VCU Ep 14: Wake Field — Sleep vanished without drama, like a service cut. Wake-Field Sci-Fi Horror Animation. Standalone episode in the Vikanug Comic Universe (VCU) anthology. VCU is a UK-set, Black Mirror-style animated anthology about near-future tech, uncanny coincidences, and multiverse fractures—where small choices trigger big consequences. Each episode is self-contained, but the universe leaves breadcrumbs for anyone hunting patterns, motifs, and hidden links across the playlist. In this episode: • St James’s Hospital in Leeds. A sleep study bay stutters during the fracture—EEG graphs duplicate, timestamps jump, the monitor “corrects” itself. • When the system returns, sleep never arrives again. Insomnia stays awake through night one, night two, night three—then a week—then longer, without fatigue arriving to collect its debt. Hunger and thirst behave normally. Rest does not. The body runs like a machine that has lost the off switch. At first it looks like a miracle built for modern England: zero-hour shifts covered, nights chained together, money stacking, supervisors praising “dedication.” Then the wake field reveals itself. A coworker micro-sleeps in a security booth. Insomnia steps close to hand over a charger. The coworker jerks awake like falling, eyes too wide, breath too sharp. By morning, sleep will not come at all—pills, dark rooms, alcohol, nothing. The field stays on as long as Insomnia stays near. Work becomes the first moral tradeoff. A warehouse manager pushes mandatory overtime, smiling while saying “business needs.” People nod off on forklifts. Hands get cut. Insomnia offers a solution: sharper wakefulness, cleaner output, no breaks needed. Two desperate colleagues accept. Metrics improve. The cost shows up later. Day three: eyes stop looking human. Day five: laughter lands at the wrong moments. Day seven: movement appears in aisle corners—shadows that match nothing on CCTV. The wake field does not create productivity. The wake field creates slow psychosis with good numbers. A near-miss becomes a real injury in the loading bay. A&E lights glare. A patient begs for sedation that does not work because the nervous system will not shut down. A Trust-wide email follows, warning staff about “continuity gaps (10s)” in CCTV exports after a system update. The footer lists an operational resilience rota: Crownwell Applied Systems. The approach arrives within a week: clean shoes, calm voice, business-park meeting room. Crownwell frames the wake field as a public good—critical staffing during crises, fewer sleep-related accidents, stable service levels during shortages. The schedule is the point. Control is the point. Forced wakefulness becomes coercion dressed as resilience. Insomnia attempts isolation: cheap rooms on the edge of town, late-night walks through empty industrial estates, 24-hour shopping to avoid people. The body stays perfect. The mind degrades. Without sleep, memory stops filing itself. Days lose shape. Regret never blurs. The final consequence lands on a train out of Leeds. A late service is packed with commuters and students leaning into micro-sleeps between stops. Doors shut. The carriage becomes a sealed box. Panic spikes. The wake field fills the space like gas nobody can smell. Heads lift. Phones come up. Speech accelerates. Arguments ignite over nothing. A child cries and cannot be soothed because tiredness has been removed but calm has not been added. At the next stop, a passenger freezes mid-step, caught in manic indecision as if time has fractured into too many options. Someone pushes. Someone falls. The carriage becomes a bright, awake disaster. Transport Police meet the train. Body-worn cameras record everything—then later export with strange ten-second gaps. Crownwell receives the footage anyway. Rewatch checklist: • The first “monitor lie” in the sleep bay. • The first transfer moment (the coworker’s eyes). • The shift from focus to mania (days 3/5/7). • The train: how fast calm becomes conflict. • The CCTV/export gaps linking back to Crownwell. Connections / Easter Eggs: • Trust email: “Continuity Gaps (10s)” • Radio caller dismissing “Stratford Vanishings” as online nonsense • Crownwell listed on Leeds Teaching Hospitals “Operational Resilience” rota Content note: psychological horror, panic/manic behaviour, workplace coercion, and disturbing themes (animated). VCU Playlist: [Paste Playlist Link Here] Next Episode: [Paste Ep 15 Link Here] 🌳 Linktree (All Socials, Stores, Support): https://linktr.ee/vikanug Search phrases: wake field horror animation, insomnia sci fi horror, sleep study nightmare, sleep deprivation horror SEO keywords: Vikanug, VCU, Horror Animation, Sci Fi Horror, UK Setting, Leeds, Insomnia, Wake Field, Crownwell Applied Systems, Continuity Gaps CALL TO ACTION: Watch the next episode, like the video, and subscribe. #Vikanug #VCU #HorrorAnimation #SciFiHorror #AnimatedShort