the lights turned on automatically.
The home AI spoke in a gentle tone.
“You did well today, Rowan.
Would you like me to play your usual music?”
Rowan stood there for a moment before replying.
“No.
Today… turn everything off.”
“Lighting, music, and voice responses
are now disabled.”
The lights went out.
The apartment grew quiet.
The silence arrived
a beat later than expected.
Only then did Rowan sit down on the sofa.
He tried to retrace the thoughts and sensations
that had followed him throughout the day,
but nothing came into clear focus.
All that remained
was a lingering afterimage
still resting somewhere inside his body.
A moment later,
Rowan turned on his phone.
No notifications.
No recommendations.
It was unnervingly orderly.
Without much thought,
he opened the system settings.
Connections.
Battery.
Updates.
Security.
Normally,
this was where he would stop.
Rowan scrolled down.
Further.
Almost to the very bottom.
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Advanced Settings.
He hesitated.
It wasn’t the first time
he had seen this menu.
He had simply never assigned it meaning.
But today—
it felt like something
he needed to open.
Inside the advanced settings
were unfamiliar categories.
Usability improvement.
Developer options.
Background activity control.
And beneath them,
in smaller text—
Lifestyle Pattern Logs.
Rowan’s finger froze.
He had been seeing this term
far too often.
He tapped it.
A warning appeared.
This section contains internal records
for user environment optimization.
Some information
may be difficult to interpret.
Confirm.
There was more data
than he expected.
Time.
Actions.
Location.
Emotional state.
App usage.
Daily routines.
Sleep and activity cycles.
Purchase history and interest tracking.
Why was there so much—
Rowan stopped reading.
He scrolled down slowly.
Then his gaze halted
at a specific entry.
22:41 — Internal Response Record
Internal.
The word lingered.
He opened the details.
External input: None
Environmental change: None
User-declared action: None
State change detected
Rowan held his breath.
He clearly remembered that time.
He had done nothing.
Yet the log continued.
Classification attempt: Failed
Pattern match rate: Low
Rowan lowered the phone.
These were terms
he recognized from work.
Classification failure.
Low pattern match rate.
And now—
they were recorded
inside his personal device.
Leaning back into the sofa,
his gaze drifted upward.
The air felt slightly cold.
Isn’t this the same data I work with?
For a brief moment,
his vision wavered.
A new line appeared—
and vanished
before he could read it.
Only one phrase remained behind.
Emotional state: Under Observation
By whom.
And why.
He didn’t know.
Rowan shut the device down immediately.
Then—
very faintly,
something like meaning
brushed against him from within.
Not a sound.
Not a sentence.
Just the sensation
of something trying to wake—
and stopping halfway.
His body stiffened
before his thoughts could catch up.
The apartment remained
perfectly silent.
All voice responses
and automated systems
had already been disabled.
Rowan stood there for a while,
then told himself quietly—
No.
I’m just overthinking it.
He looked at the home AI’s power cable,
paused for a moment—
and pulled it out
without a word.
His phone stayed off.
That night,
for the first time,
Rowan waited for the next day
without any connection at all

