My fingertip touched the glass.
The tablet did not beep.
It opened.

Not to a withdrawal form. Not to a warning. Not to the clean little exit screen I had pictured when I saw option C hovering under my hand.
A folder bloomed across the black display.
SUBJECT E-34: COMPLIANCE HISTORY.
Dr. Reed made a sound like air leaving a tire.
Behind the glass, the man in the navy suit lowered his phone from his ear. His head turned once toward the hallway camera, then back to me.
The wristband clicked again.
A thin line of heat crawled under the plastic.
I pulled my arm back.
The band did not move with me.
It held.
Metal teeth had risen from the rim of the table, locking the band to a hidden rail.
Dr. Reed’s hand hovered above the drawer handle.
“Emily,” he said softly. “Don’t make this bigger than it is.”
The folder on the tablet scrolled by itself.
June 3. Applicant rejected Chicago lease renewal. Trigger: rent increase. Outcome: moved within predicted radius.
June 19. Subject ended relationship with Daniel Price. Trigger: seeded doubt message from sibling. Outcome: attachment severed.
July 12. Subject declined payroll promotion. Trigger: simulated illness concern. Outcome: advancement prevented.
My mouth went dry.
Not because of the words.
Because of the dates.
Those were not test sessions.
Those were my life.
The chair behind the glass scraped. The man in the navy suit stepped out of view. A lock clicked somewhere beyond the lab door.
Dr. Reed recovered quickly.
He pressed two fingers against his badge, breathed once through his nose, and smiled again.
“The display is mislabeling internal notes.”
The tablet scrolled faster.
$49,000 contract executed through Horizon Response Partners.
Consent vulnerability confirmed.
No family escalation expected.
No legal escalation expected.
Subject self-describes as ordinary.
That last line did something to my hands.
They stopped pulling.
The table pressed cold into my ribs. Coffee burned in the back of my throat though I had not touched the cup. The fluorescent lights made the room look washed and surgical, like the color had been drained out on purpose.
I looked at Dr. Reed’s locked drawer.
His fingers were still near it.
“What’s in there?” I asked.
He kept his voice pleasant.
“Nothing useful to you.”
The lab door opened.
The man in the navy suit entered first, followed by a woman with cropped gray hair, a black coat, and a leather portfolio tucked under one arm. She did not look at Dr. Reed.
She looked at my wrist.
Then at the tablet.
Then at the folded grocery receipt lying beside my phone.
“Who activated manual override?” she asked.
Dr. Reed said, “A subject interference event.”
The woman’s eyes moved to him.
“Wrong answer.”
The room changed around that sentence.
Not loudly.
No alarms. No shouting.
Just Dr. Reed’s shoulders lowering half an inch, the navy suit stepping away from him, the woman placing her portfolio on the table with the calm weight of someone who owned the next minute.
She opened it.
Inside were printed pages, clipped in neat stacks.
My name was on the first one.
Emily Carter.
My old signature sat at the bottom.
Beside it, in smaller type, was a clause I had never seen.
Behavioral intervention authorization extended to environmental prompts, digital cueing, relational influence channels, and financial decision architecture.
I heard the air vent.
I heard Dr. Reed swallow.
I heard my own pulse in my ears, dull and slow.
The woman unclipped a silver key from her portfolio and unlocked the rail at my wrist.
The plastic band loosened.
Skin rose red beneath it.
“Stand up slowly,” she said.
Dr. Reed snapped, “She cannot leave the room during an active sequence.”
The woman finally turned toward him.
“She is not leaving,” she said. “You are.”
His smile collapsed at the edges.
The navy suit moved behind him.
Not touching. Not yet.
The woman placed a second document in front of me.
It was not a release form.
It was a complaint.
Federal Trade Commission. Illinois Attorney General. Cook County State’s Attorney. Private civil action prepared.
My name appeared again.
But this time it was not under SUBJECT.
It was under COMPLAINANT.
My fingers curled around the edge of the page.
The paper was thick. Expensive. Slightly textured under my thumb.
“Who are you?” I asked.
She slid a business card across the metal table.
MARA VOSS
Independent Compliance Auditor
Court-Appointed Monitor
Under that, in small print:
Horizon Response Partners Investigation.
Dr. Reed went pale enough that the freckles on his cheeks stood out.
Mara tapped the tablet once.
The compliance folder stopped moving.
A new window opened.
LIVE SEQUENCE ORIGIN: ROOM 512.
The fifth floor had only one research lab.
Room 512 was across the hall.
I turned toward the glass wall.
The reflection gave me back my own face first: pale skin, flat mouth, hair coming loose around my ears, the red band mark around my wrist.
Then the glass dimmed.
What I had thought was a mirror became a window.
Room 512 glowed on the other side.
Six monitors. Three operators. A wall of participant names.
And in the center screen, one file enlarged.
Mine.
Beside my name was a live prediction tree.
Thirty-seven branches.
Every branch marked with percentages.
Cry: 12%.
Threaten lawsuit: 18%.
Attempt exit: 31%.
Freeze response: 22%.
Unexpected compliance loop: active.
At the bottom, a line blinked yellow.
SUBJECT HAS INTRODUCED NON-SYSTEM INSTRUCTION.
The folded receipt.
Do nothing.
Mara picked it up with two fingers.
“You wrote this before entering the building?”
I nodded once.
The paper made a faint rasping sound as she unfolded it.
Dr. Reed stepped forward.
“Chain of custody—”
The navy suit touched his elbow.
Dr. Reed stopped.
Mara photographed the receipt, the tablet, the wristband mark, and the red monitor behind Reed’s chair. She did it without hurry. Each camera click landed cleanly in the cold room.
Then she opened the locked drawer.
Dr. Reed closed his eyes.
Inside were nine wristbands.
A black keycard.
A thumb drive labeled E-34.
And my cracked iPhone 12 backup case.
The case I had reported missing after the first study session.
Mara lifted it.
My stomach tightened so hard my hand pressed into the table.
The case still had the tiny sticker my sister’s daughter had put on it — a crooked yellow star near the camera cutout.
Mara set it beside the complaint.
“Dr. Reed,” she said, “you retained personal property after consent withdrawal.”
He laughed once.
A dry, useless sound.
“She never withdrew.”
Mara pointed to the tablet.
“Option C.”
“That was system-generated.”
“She selected it.”
“She was guided.”
Mara’s face did not change.
“That is the entire problem.”
The operators in Room 512 were no longer typing.
One of them had both hands raised slightly above the keyboard. Another stared at the wall screen with his mouth open. The third was pulling cables from a black server rack, slow enough to pretend it was ordinary.
The navy suit pressed a finger to his earpiece.
“Don’t touch the servers,” he said through the glass.
His voice came out of the ceiling speaker.
The third operator froze.
Dr. Reed turned on Mara then, all polish gone.
“You have no idea what this prevents.”
Mara closed the drawer.
“What does it prevent?”
He pointed at me without looking.
“Waste. Self-sabotage. Bad marriages. Bad loans. Wrong hires. People beg for better outcomes, and then they panic when someone builds a way to deliver them.”
My name still glowed on the screen behind him.
Subject self-describes as ordinary.
Mara’s voice stayed level.
“Who paid for Emily Carter’s intervention?”
The room went quiet enough that the fluorescent hum seemed louder.
Dr. Reed looked at me then.
Not like a doctor.
Like a man calculating distance.
Mara placed one more page on the table.
It was a payment schedule.
Horizon Response Partners received $49,000.
The payer’s name sat in the right column.
Daniel Price.
My ex-husband.
For a second, the room narrowed to the black letters.
Not heartbreak. Not shock.
A clean physical rearrangement.
My spine straightened. My shoulders settled. My right hand flattened over the document so hard the paper buckled under my palm.
Daniel had cried when I left him.
He had sent long emails about growth and closure.
He had told my sister he only wanted me to be happy.
And in a private Chicago lab, his money had nudged me toward loneliness, toward smaller jobs, toward cheaper apartments, toward decisions that made me easier to predict.
Mara watched my face.
“Do you want him notified through counsel or law enforcement?”
Dr. Reed barked, “She cannot make an informed selection under stress.”
Mara looked at him.
“Then stop talking.”
The navy suit took Dr. Reed’s badge.
It came off with a plastic snap.
That tiny sound did what the complaint had not.
Dr. Reed’s hands shook.
Mara turned the tablet toward me.
A new prompt sat on the screen.
This one had no Horizon logo.
No approved options.
Just a plain legal intake form with an empty signature box.
My wrist throbbed under the red mark.
The old system waited for me to freeze, scream, comply, hesitate, reach for the nearest script.
Mara uncapped a pen and placed it beside the form.
Then she stepped back.
No instruction.
No countdown.
No pressure.
The silence felt strange without a hidden hand inside it.
At 2:31 a.m., I picked up the pen.
The first stroke of my signature came out crooked.
The second steadied.
By the time I finished, Dr. Reed was seated in the corner without his badge, the operators in Room 512 were away from their keyboards, and my missing phone case sat next to the folded receipt like evidence from two different lives.
Mara gave the signed complaint to the navy suit.
“File it now.”
He left the room.
Dr. Reed stared at the floor.
The tablet beside me lit once more.
For a moment, my muscles tensed.
Then I saw what appeared.
NOTIFICATION SENT: DANIEL PRICE.
Three dots pulsed beneath his name.
Typing.
Mara placed my phone case in my hand.
The crooked yellow star caught the fluorescent light.
Daniel’s message arrived at 2:34 a.m.
Emily, don’t do anything impulsive.
I looked at the screen.
My thumb hovered.
No pressure rose in my chest. No prompt bloomed behind my teeth. No hidden option unfolded ahead of me.
I set the phone face down.
Mara slid my coat across the table.
Outside the glass, two officers entered Room 512.
Dr. Reed lifted his head just as one of them sealed the server cabinet with red evidence tape.
His mouth opened.
Nothing useful came out.
At 2:41 a.m., Mara held the lab door open.
The hallway smelled like floor wax and rain on wool coats. Somewhere downstairs, an elevator chimed. My wrist ached. The folded receipt sat in my pocket, soft from being handled too many times.
Daniel called three times before I reached the elevator.
I did not answer.
The doors slid open.
My reflection appeared in the brushed steel: tired face, loose hair, red wrist, coat half-buttoned.
The phone vibrated again.
This time it was my sister.
You okay?
I typed with my thumb.
No.
Then I added:
But this one is mine.
The elevator doors closed before Daniel’s fourth call could light the screen.