Before the alarm went off,
Rowan opened his eyes.
The apartment was quiet,
just as he’d left it the night before.
No lights. No music.
No one greeting him.
He lay still for a moment,
staring at the ceiling.
It wasn’t exactly uncomfortable—
more like he wasn’t fully awake yet.
He got out of bed
and pressed the wall switch.
The light came on.
The same motion as yesterday,
but today
it felt slightly less bothersome.
People adapt
strangely fast.
After getting ready for work,
standing by the front door,
Rowan stopped once more.
ARC’s power cord
was still lying on the floor.
He tried to recall
why he should plug it back in.
Convenience.
Automation.
Saving time.
And—
the idea that
there was no need
to be uncomfortable.
Rowan plugged the cord back in.
The lights adjusted.
The temperature shifted.
The narrative has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.
The apartment quickly returned
to its “normal state.”
〔 System normalization complete 〕
“Would you like to begin today’s schedule?”
“No. I’m heading out.”
Rowan didn’t say anything else
and stepped outside.
On the way to work,
he took his usual route.
He could’ve chosen
a different path, like yesterday.
But today,
he didn’t.
Not out of laziness.
Not out of fear.
He simply—
didn’t feel the need to.
Office.
The moment Rowan sat down,
his work environment activated.
〔 Work panel connected〕
Unstructured data filtering.
Unlike yesterday,
he didn’t tidy his desk,
didn’t make coffee first.
A familiar order.
A familiar pace.
The task he should’ve finished yesterday
was waiting for him.
And before his manager could mention it,
he decided to wrap it up.
He opened the item,
checked the graph,
applied the conditions.
The judgment came faster
than it had the day before.
This is easier.
The thought made him pause.
Why did it feel so smooth?
The answer was simple.
Yesterday,
doubt had come first.
Today,
he didn’t postpone conclusions.
Doubt slows judgment.
Slowness becomes inefficiency.
That logic
settled into his body.
No one had rushed him.
No one was watching.
It was just—
that carrying doubt too long
felt like it would make
the whole day tiring.
So he’d simply
picked up the pace himself.
As quitting time approached,
Rowan stared at the work panel for a moment.
〔 Today’s work summary 〕
No pattern deviation detected
All day,
he hadn’t deviated
from the pattern.
But he hadn’t been
forced to, either.
He asked himself:
Was I making
a free choice?
A brief silence.
Then an honest answer surfaced.
No.
I just chose
to act unfreely.
The elevator doors closed.
He looked at his reflection
in the glass wall.
Nothing looked different
from yesterday.
That was
the most accurate change of all.
Rowan knew it now.
From here on, the question wasn’t
whether you can step outside—
but how naturally
you’re guided
to choose not to.
And how that choice
was quietly
reshaping him.
The elevator reached
the first floor.
The doors opened.
Rowan walked out
as if nothing were wrong.
Before he knew it,
he was back
inside the original flow.
Very
smoothly.

