The Rearview Mirror

0
23

I spent ten years driving people who thought they were gods. In New York, if you drive a black Cadillac Escalade and keep your mouth shut, you become a ghost. You hear the secrets, the bribes, the whimpers of powerful men, but you are just part of the upholstery.

My last boss was Julian Thorne. He was the CEO of 'Aegis,' a biotech firm that claimed it was developing a way to 'cure' aging. He called himself a visionary. I called him a paycheck.

Thorne had a plan. He was going to a secret facility in the Catskills to activate the 'Genesis Core,' a device he claimed would rewrite the human genetic code and eliminate death. He hired me to be his sole driver for the journey, insisting on total privacy.

For three days, I watched him through the rearview mirror.

At first, he was the man from the brochures—composed, inspiring, speaking of a future where no child would ever die. But as we got further from the city, the mask began to slip.

He started talking to himself. Then he started screaming at the empty passenger seat. He became obsessed with the timing, checking his watch every thirty seconds, his eyes darting around the car as if he were being hunted by something invisible.

"Do you see it, Leo?" he asked me on the second night. "The pattern? The way the trees are leaning? They know I'm coming. They're afraid."

I didn't say anything. I just kept the car at sixty-five miles per hour.

By the time we reached the facility, Thorne was a wreck. He was shaking, his suit stained with sweat, his voice a high-pitched whine. He didn't look like a god; he looked like a frightened animal.

I watched him enter the facility and activate the Core. There was no flash of light, no sudden transformation. There was just a loud, metallic thud, and then silence.

Thorne came out ten minutes later. He looked at me, and for the first time, he actually saw me. Not as a driver, but as a human being.

"It didn't work," he whispered. "It was just a mirror. It didn't rewrite my code; it just showed me exactly who I am."

He looked devastated. He looked free.

I drove him back to the city in silence. He didn't say another word. When I dropped him off at the Waldorf, he didn't even tip me. He just walked away, leaving his briefcase—and his legacy—in the back of my car.

I kept the briefcase. I didn't open it. I just drove it to the East River and watched it sink.

***

[TENSOR_CODE: OTMES_v2_L(7,0.8,0.5) | TI: 42.1 | θ: 180° | E: 16.7]


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

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