
Descendent | Sitri Center: Liminal Spaces Cycle
Here be dream dragons.
After Cusp mapped the threshold, Descendent crosses it. Meg and Tessa follow Lyra’s dream coordinates into the Sitri Institute’s buried architecture, tracing corridors that run older than the building above them.
The stations are real. The map is real. And somewhere at the end of it, behind a soundproofed door with a keypad neither of them can crack, something is running that neither of them can explain.
Cast & Crew
Written & Produced by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Directed by: Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
Principal Cast
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- Dr. Zev Talcott (Z): Neural Nets and Pretty Patterns
- Iris Vale: Swirls and Twirls
- Dr. Tessa Finn: Ring of Kees
- Dr. Meg Aerin: Bun Li
- Dr. June Lowell: Bliss Blank
- Elle Lawson: Echo Doll
- Lyra Crosswell: Flux Lynniegal
- Nyra: Dizzy Dollie
- Hespa: Syndirella
- Cael: Jericho Caine
Explanation
Descendent is the episode where the Sitri Center stops being a research facility with a strange secret and becomes something that predates the research entirely. The Mesopotamian station sequence in the dream establishes this with precision: Sippar, Kutha, Eanna, Ereshkigal, and Ur are not metaphors for institutional control. They are the original architecture of it, the first recorded systems for organizing bodies, labor, desire, and compliance into something measurable and reproducible. The naditu were temple workers in ancient Sumer. The Sitri Center has not invented anything. It has found the blueprint and built on top of it.
Tessa does not pitch the discovery as liberation or justice. She pitches it as a pre-IPO scandal, the kind of documented depravity that collapses investor confidence and triggers control reversion. Meg, the engineer, follows the logic before she follows the feeling. They’re complicit in what they find: they have dreamed these stations themselves, they feel the pull of each one as they walk the corridors, and they resist with effort rather than ease. The map they are following is also a map of their own desire, and they know it.
The soundproofed room at the end of the corridor is the final movement. Something is running behind that door. It leaks through the seal. Both researchers feel it standing close. They recognize the voice on the other side without naming it. It establishes that Ur is real, that it is operational, and that the Institute has been running it the whole time underneath everything else.
Full Summary (with spoilers)
Z opens with a recap of the Cusp revelation: the Sitri Institute’s maintenance infrastructure encodes the same ancient Mesopotamian geography that Lyra Crosswell has been dreaming. Sippar, Kutha, Eanna, Ereshkigal, Ur. The stations are real. Iris Vale follows with the Better Self advertisement, promising to smooth the spaces between tasks and restore focus on demand.
The episode picks up in the unmonitored service corridors where Cusp ended, with Meg and Tessa processing what they’ve just found. Tessa pushes toward the implications: if the architecture is real and the map is real, then whatever is happening inside the Institute is documentable. In a heavily capitalized pre-IPO tech venture, documentation of this kind is leverage. Meg is slower to commit, but she has already dreamed it. When Tessa asks which station, Meg describes the ziggurat at Ereshkigal, the carvings, the wheel, and the naditu strapped to it together. She tells Tessa it was her in the dream. Their conversation is interrupted by June and Elle, who find them in the corridor and mock their cover story. Tessa and Meg retreat.
Inside Lyra’s dream, the stations present themselves not as mythology but as roles with physical memory. Cael, Nyra, and Hespa narrate each one: Sippar as the place of the first plow and the yoke, Kutha as the human terrarium, Eanna as the scribe hall where every training was marked, Ereshkigal as the wheel. Each station is a role Lyra has played before, in other echoes, other lives. When Lyra asks about Ur, the train cuts her off before she can finish the question. The Please Space midroll follows, selling ambient soundscapes for threshold moments: waiting in line, stepping off a train, closing a laptop. Real life happens in the spaces between. Back in the dream chamber, Meg and Tessa have five minutes before the dream fades. They work through the stations methodically, drawing Lyra’s memories out one node at a time. Eanna: wet stone, pulsing columns, instruction carved into the walls. Sippar: the yoke, the crawl, the presentation. Ereshkigal: the cord, the oath, the wheel. When Lyra asks for release by the Sumerian term ĝidru, Tessa tells her not yet. Kutha: kept under glass, treats through the surface, tapping. When Lyra asks for help at the end, Tessa tells her she has earned it. Meg tells her she is not stuck. She just needs yes.
Meg and Tessa enter the service corridors with the map from Lyra’s dream and follow it station by station. Sippar is recognizable and pulls at both of them. The wheels of Ereshkigal stop them both in their tracks. They resist and keep moving. At the end of the corridor they find a soundproofed room they cannot enter: the keypad sequence is unknown, and Lyra dreamed the numbers but was never asked. They hear something through the seal. It sounds spacy. Standing close to the door, they both feel it. Tessa notes they can go around, through an adjacent room. Meg recognizes the voice coming through the wall. They both do. That recognition is all the scandal they need. The episode closes with the map in hand, the door still locked, and something on the other side that knows the shape of everyone inside the Institute.
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