In the not-too-distant future, reality had been edited.
Not replaced—just enhanced, beautified, streamlined. Life ran smoother on the Q-Link, a surgically embedded neural chip that let you see the world through your own eyes… but better.
No more phones, no more awkward screens. You could scroll TikTok with a thought, order coffee with a blink, and stream your dreams in real time if you wanted to.
People danced at silent raves, laughed at memes no one else could hear, dated in virtual cat cafés from across the planet — all without moving a muscle.
Max was one of them.
Twenty-two, Brooklyn-born, chronically curious. He was charming, lowkey viral, and just detached enough to surf the dopamine tides without drowning. His best views came from inside his skull.
His favorite music?
Beamed directly into his auditory cortex.
His mornings? Coffee shops full of beautiful, silent people — each lost in their own tailored universe.
Then there was Clara — smart, fearless, the face of their joint YouTube Xtreme channel where they filmed high-adrenaline neuro-sim stunts for millions of neural feeds.
She’d once simulated a zero-gravity skydive into a digital volcano and came out grinning.
Life was curated chaos, but under control. Or so they thought.
Because beneath the fun — the neuro-cocktails, virtual pet cafés, and pulse-synced club scenes — something darker was humming.
A whisper.
A pattern.
A question that shouldn’t have been asked.
What if someone wasn’t just watching the feed…
What if they were writing it?
And by the time Max and Clara realized they were no longer the storytellers
but the story itself —
the script had already begun.