The Call Said “Project Oversight” — And My Family Realized I Had Triggered Their Audit-QuynhTranJP

The second ring never finished.

I grabbed the landline before my mother could move, and the plastic receiver felt warm against my palm, like someone had been holding it from the other side.

Nobody spoke at first.

Image

The hallway lights kept trembling, dim-bright-dim, as if the house itself had developed a pulse. My father stood near the kitchen entrance with the gray cabinet key pinched between two fingers. My mother held the manila folder so tight the old paper curled at the corners. Mark’s mouth had opened, but nothing came out.

Then a woman’s voice came through the receiver.

“Subject A-17, confirm environmental breach.”

My mother whispered, “Hang up.”

I pressed the receiver harder against my ear.

The line crackled with static. Under it, I heard something else — a steady rhythm like distant machinery, or breathing filtered through metal.

“Subject A-17,” the woman repeated. “Confirm environmental breach.”

I looked at the open folder.

The photograph of me at seven stared back from my mother’s hands. Electrodes on my temples. Bare knees under a paper hospital gown. Little fingers flattened on the steel table like someone had told me not to move.

My mouth tasted like copper again.

“Yes,” I said.

My father took one step forward.

“No,” he said quietly. “You don’t understand what you’re confirming.”

The voice inside my skull pressed down, sudden and sharp.

“Terminate contact.”

My knees softened. My fingers almost opened.

But the receiver stayed in my hand.

Because for once, the command arrived too late.

The woman on the phone said, “Who is present?”

I watched my mother’s face. Her lipstick had cracked at the center of her lower lip. A thin red line appeared where her teeth pressed too hard.

“My mother,” I said. “My father. My brother.”

Mark finally moved.

Read More