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VCU Ep 13: Looking Glass — Meadowhall after closing sounds like machinery breathing. Mirror-Dimension 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: • A shopping centre after hours becomes a cathedral of reflections: shutters down, lights dimmed, polished corridors doubling the quiet into something deliberate. • A night cleaner’s job is to erase evidence of other people’s lives—fingerprints, smears, spilled coffee—while the pay stays bad and the rota stays brutal. • On fracture night, a mirrored washroom corridor stutters: lights flicker, reflections lag half a beat, movement returns late like a delayed thought. A slip on wet tiles sends a shoulder into a full-length mirror. Glass does not shatter. Glass accepts. The world inverts into a colder corridor that looks identical—then wrong. Surfaces behave like depth. Every reflective panel shows an angle that does not match the body standing there. Sound arrives muffled, like the air has turned into fabric. A way out appears by instinct: press palms to any surface that returns a clear reflection. A doorway opens in the skin of the mirror and the washroom snaps back with harsh fluorescent light. Hours have passed outside. A supervisor shouts about disappearing off shift. A write-up calls it misconduct. The mirror dimension stays attached anyway—like a room that never shut. A private place forms behind every reflective surface, and the world is full of reflective surfaces. At first, the ability is survival: • Locked staff doors become irrelevant. • Bag checks become avoidable. • Corridors become shortcuts—step into glass, step out somewhere else. Then the ability meets the part of the mind that keeps score. A security guard treats cleaners like suspects. The guard laughs at mistakes, threatens pay, grabs a young cleaner’s wrist hard enough to bruise. The scene appears framed in a shop window reflection like a display. A decision forms clean and simple: some people do not deserve exits. A toilet corridor. A hand mirror. A face caught harsh under strip lighting. Mirror Man steps out of glass behind the guard. No blood. No noise. No CCTV of violence. Only absence. South Yorkshire Police call it missing person procedure: last seen time, clothing description, phone records. CCTV shows the guard entering the corridor. Then the next angle shows empty tiles. Management blames blind spots. Refurbishment orders appear quietly: reflective security film, sold as resilience upgrades. The supplier name sits on the paperwork: Crownwell Applied Systems. The “deserving” list grows. Upskirt photos on escalators. Mocking clips posted for likes. A supervisor pocketing charity tips. Each time, a mirror opens. Each time, the mirror dimension keeps the world tidy. The mirror dimension punishes slowly: the same corridors repeated without warmth, without daylight, without doors that open. The trapped thud and scrape on the other side of glass becomes a low background rhythm in the world—heard through bathroom mirrors, bus windows, phone screens held at the wrong angle. Then the first innocent mistake happens. A cleaner collapses wheezing in a staff corridor. Panic rises. Someone runs for help. Mirror Man tries moving the body out of camera sightlines before management turns it into discipline. Dust lifts from a mop bucket. Irritation hits. A hand brushes a convex safety mirror. The cleaner vanishes. A wet patch remains. A dropped lanyard lies where a chest had been. Fear turns instantly toxic because fear always needs a culprit. Attempts to retrieve the cleaner fail. Inside the mirror dimension: endless corridors, distant movement that might be human or might be lying reflections. Systems respond with paperwork. An NHS incident log records a “missing patient arrival.” A safeguarding team opens a case. The shopping centre issues a quiet internal memo about staff welfare and “unverified rumours.” Crownwell arrives as if on schedule. Clean shoes. Visitor badges. A private meeting in a maintenance room. A tablet plays CCTV frames with missing beats and a corridor that behaves like a cut. Crownwell offers structure: containment, a controlled environment for “mirror events,” and a target list dressed as public safety. Mirror Man refuses, because control is the entire addiction. 🌳 Linktree (All Socials, Stores, Support): https://linktr.ee/vikanug CALL TO ACTION: Watch the next episode, like the video, and subscribe. #Vikanug #VCU #HorrorAnimation #SciFiHorror #AnimatedShort