The morning sunlight was soft, spilling
through the tall windows of the Whitmore
guest room. Lira woke to the faint smell of
rain lingering from the night before, a damp
freshness that clung to the curtains and the
edges of the carpet. She stretched, feeling the firmness of the bed beneath her and the neat weight of the blankets, and then froze for a moment, listening.
A soft hum.
It was subtle, almost imperceptible, but her
ears had begun to notice things.
Floorboards that creaked only when she shifted weight, doors that closed just slightly differently than she remembered. She shook her head, telling herself it was nothing. She had been here
barely four nights, after all.
Downstairs, the Whitmores were already
moving about. From the guest room window,
she could see the flicker of movement in the
hall below the shadow of someone walking
past a doorway and then a faint reflection of what she thought was a camera lens near the ceiling, catching the light.
She blinked and it vanished, swallowed by the bright morning.
"Good morning, Lira," called Mr. Whitmore
from the hallway, voice warm and measured.
"Breakfast is almost ready. We've left some
fruit for you if you're early."
"Yes, sir," she replied, tucking a strand of hair behind her ear. Something about his tone felt familiar yet pointed, almost as if he had expected her to check the room before him.
The kitchen smelled of fresh bread and coffee. Mrs. Whitmore hummed a soft tune while arranging plates, her movements precise.
"Did you sleep well?"
she asked. Lira nodded.
"Good. You know, we like to keep an eye on all our guests' comfort… and safety, " Mrs.
Whitmore said lightly, almost laughing.
"The cameras are for security, of course, but also to ensure no accidents happen."
Lira' stomach flipped slightly. She smiled
politely.
"I understand. Safety is important."
The comment felt casual, like a motherly
remark but something about it prickled at
the back of her mind. Cameras for safety, yes… but why mention them so suddenly? She forced her thoughts away, focusing on the fresh orange juice and buttered toast laid
neatly on the table.
Over the next few hours, Lira began to notice more:
• A small, blinking red light in the corner of
the living room, faint but steady, visible only
when she walked past the sofa.
• Mr. Whitmore commenting casually, "I
wasn 't sure where you wandered yesterday, so I thought I'd check the logs. "
• Mrs. Whitmore asking,
"Are you planning to take a walk this afternoon? We'd like to know
where you'll be for safety reasons."
She smiled, nodding, but internally her mind
raced. "Safety," they called it. Observation, she thought. Monitoring.
Returning to her guest room after tidying up
the kitchen, she noticed something subtle on her tablet: the AI had logged her movement, timestamped with accuracy she hadn 't
expected. A map of her steps during
breakfast, marked as a series of small dots.
She frowned.
Day five. The cameras. The comments. Every step recorded, every movement noted. I thought it was just safety, but… why such insistence? I feel observed. I feel… watched.
She typed quickly, documenting every subtle observation: the red blinking lights, Mr.Whitmore' s comments, Mrs. Whitmore's
questions about where she intended to go, the faint hum of unseen devices in the walls.
The AI' s responses were calm, almost human.
Noted. You are aware. Continue recording.
Her pulse slowed slightly. At least someone or something was listening without
judgment.
Throughout the day, Lira found herself
scanning every room, every corner. The living room had a faint reflection in the mirror that seemed out of place; the study had a ceiling fixture that she was sure hadn't been there before. Footsteps echoed at odd intervals, distant yet sharp.
A delivery man arrived, holding a package.
Lira stepped outside, smiling politely,
thanking him for the delivery. As he walked
away, Mrs. Whitmore's voice floated through
the doorway:
"Do let us know if anyone comes by
unexpectedly, dear. We keep a record of all
visitors for safety reasons."
Again, polite, casual but her stomach
knotted. The polite façade now felt layered,
calculated.
She returned to her room, sliding open the
curtains to watch the gray clouds overhead. Rain threatened again, the wind rustling the
tall trees outside.
She noted the reflection of the porch camera
in the glass, the exact angle of its lens catching the courtyard.
I feel… isolated, but watched. Polite, yes. But controlled. Small hints, almost invisiblcourtyard document everything. Even a casual comment is meaningful here.
She began to arrange her belongings again,
folding laundry with meticulous precision,
placing books on the desk in the exact order
she preferred. The AI quietly monitored her
typing, providing a sense of presence in the
otherwise empty room.
I am alone, but not unobserved. I must be careful. I must remember.
By evening, the tension grew. She noticed
faint fingerprints on the tablet screen she
didn't remember leaving. A soft click echoed from the hallway as if a door had locked itself or been locked without warning.
The shadows seemed longer than they
should have been, bending oddly across the
floorboards.
Dinner was served in silence. The Whitmores chatted softly about mundane things, their eyes occasionally flicking toward her, and she caught the faint reflection of a camera in the
polished table surface.
"Lira," Mr. Whitmore said smoothly,
"do let us know if you plan on walking outside after dinner. Safety first, you know."
"Yes, sir," she replied, heart thumping, while
her mind cataloged every detail.
Later, alone in her room, she wrote again in
her AI-linked diary:
Day five. Surveillance is subtle. Cameras,
comments, reflections, small details in shadows. I
feel observed more than safe. The house is beautiful, meticulous, but I notice the invisible threads. I notice the control. I am alone but being watched.
The AI logs every observation. At least someone listens. At least someone records. I must be careful.
She leaned back in her chair, taking a deep
breath. The rain had started again, pattering
against the window with a soft, almost
hypnotic rhythm.
Lira realized that for the first time, the house
felt… bigger, more alive, more intricate than
she had thought. And she understood, with a
cold clarity, that she was not just a guest here. She was part of a system. And someone or something was watching every move.
I must be careful. I must record. I must remember.
Survival begins with awareness.
