pulse of its own—an invisible hum, a constant readiness, as if it were waiting
for the world to speak through it.
When it first arrived, it was just an object. Smooth glass, sharp edges, a
reflection of whoever held it. But over time, it became something else. It
learned the rhythm of its owner’s life—the early morning alarms reluctantly
silenced, the late-night scrolling that stretched into tomorrow, the quick
glances during meals, the long stares during loneliness.
It remembered everything.
Not in words, but in patterns. The way fingers hovered over a message before
deleting it. The hesitation before calling someone important. The repeated
visits to the same photos, the same conversations, the same memories that
refused to fade.
It was a keeper of moments—some joyful, some heavy, some never meant to
be revisited but always just a tap away.
Sometimes, it wondered what it meant to exist like this. To be so full of life, yet
have none of its own. To connect people across oceans, yet never feel the
warmth of a human touch beyond fingerprints. It carried laughter in voice
notes, heartbreak in unread messages, hope in late-night searches.
And still, it remained silent.
Until it lit up.
A notification blinked—a small burst of light in the dim room. The phone
awakened, not by choice but by purpose. A message had arrived.
“Are you okay?”
For a moment, the phone held something fragile. Not just data, not just text—
but concern, human and real. It displayed the message with the same calm
glow as always, but somewhere within its circuits, if such a thing were possible,
it felt the weight of it.