You are forced to spectate as Damien arrives at your home. He has a portable v2.0 master unit. He doesn't even touch Jennifer. He sits across the room, typing code.
Everything feels clinical. Restorative.
"Don't come back, Mark," she says with her own voice. "Damien fixed me. Now get out of our house."
From the inside, you feel Jennifer’s body move against your will. Her hands roam. Her breath hitches. But the horror is that her will—the real Jennifer—is finally surfacing. Not to fight Damien. But to push you out.
Damien (voice, echoing through her earbud): "There she is. Don’t let him drag you back to the dark, Jenny. Let me drive."
You don’t play as Jennifer. You play as Mark , her husband of eight years. Three months ago, Jennifer was in a catastrophic car accident that left her brain-damaged and catatonic. Desperate, you signed up for an experimental, unlicensed neural interface therapy: Project Symmetry v2.0 . The device, a small chrome scarab fused to her spine, allows you to "pilot" her body during waking hours, keeping her muscles active and her mind from fading entirely.
You watch, helpless, from inside Jennifer’s skull as she wakes up at 2:00 AM. You are not controlling her. He is. Her body walks to the bathroom, strips off her sleep shirt, and stares at her own reflection.
Then, arrives.
A list of other married patients appears.

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