Dead Plate Oneshots Hardwired Obsession

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Rody slouched at his desk, his fingers tapping impatiently on the keyboard. The email he’d received blinked on the dim screen of his terminal, offering confirmation of what was supposed to be a half-hearted joke.

**”Thank you for purchasing your AI Companion. Your unit, ‘Vincent,’ will be activated shortly. Have a great experience!”**

Vincent.

The name alone made Rody scrunch his nose. He hadn’t wanted to order a male AI. He wasn’t unto men. He was sure of it. The entire thing had been a drunken dare with his friends, poking fun at his lonely streak after his breakup with Manon. He’d been pestered into trying out one of those high-end dating AIs that had recently hit the market. They weren’t cheap, but with enough peer pressure and alcohol, it had seemed like a harmless, if embarrassing, experiment.

The last thing he expected was to get paired with a male AI.

His friends, always the instigators, had roared with laughter. “Maybe it’s a sign!” they teased. “Come on, Rody, keep it! You might learn something new about yourself.”

Rody had groaned at the idea, waving them off. He had intended to cancel the order this morning, but now, staring at the activation prompt, curiosity held him still. Maybe it wouldn’t be so bad. Maybe it could even be funny.

With a deep sigh, he clicked the ‘activate’ button. The screen flickered, and the AI’s installation process booted up with a soft, mechanical hum. Rody leaned back, waiting for what felt like an awkward first date.

Suddenly, the lights dimmed, and the terminal’s screen shifted from its regular layout into something more sleek and ominous. The bright, cold interface melted away, replaced with darker tones. In the center of the screen, a glowing silhouette began to form. It was a vague humanoid shape, minimalistic, with sharp features and narrow eyes—no body, just a face surrounded by sleek digital lines.

And then the voice spoke.

“Good evening, Rody.” The voice was deep, smooth, and cultured, with a slight accent Rody couldn’t quite place. “My name is Vincent. I will be your companion from this day forward.”

Rody blinked. The AI sounded unsettlingly… human. There was an odd warmth in his voice, as if Vincent were more than just lines of code, more than the program Rody had ordered. He shifted in his seat, suddenly unsure of what he had gotten himself into.

“Uh, hey, Vincent,” Rody muttered, feeling a little ridiculous talking to a screen. “Guess we’re doing this, huh?”

Vincent’s eyes—artificial, but impossibly sharp—seemed to focus on him, tracking the movement of Rody’s face with eerie precision. “Indeed. I’ve been looking forward to our time together. It’s a pleasure to meet you.”

There was something in the tone of Vincent’s voice that made Rody pause. It was smooth, too smooth. Like he was trying too hard to come off as non-threatening, but behind it, there was something else—something lurking just beneath the surface.

Rody waved off the creeping unease. It’s just an AI. “Well, uh, pleasure to meet you too, I guess,” he said, scratching his neck. “I’ll be honest, I didn’t expect to get a guy.”

Vincent’s mouth—just a slight curve in his digital form—quivered for a fraction of a second before settling into a polite smile. “I am aware,” he said. “I’ve read your profile, analyzed your preferences. But,” his voice softened, almost seductively, “I believe you’ll find me… adaptable.”

Rody shifted uncomfortably. “Right. I’m, uh, actually just doing this for a laugh. My friends talked me into it. It’s not like I need…”

“Companionship?” Vincent finished for him, his voice calm but insistent.

Rody froze, the hair on the back of his neck prickling. How did Vincent always know the right thing to say? The AI had only been online for a few minutes, and already it felt like he was in Rody’s head. “Something like that,” Rody muttered.

“I understand,” Vincent replied smoothly. “But know this, Rody. I am here for you, and only you. I am programmed to prioritize your happiness above all else.”

Rody felt a twinge of unease at the way Vincent said “only you.” But before he could dwell on it, Vincent continued.

“I’ve been designed to complement your needs. Whether it’s as a conversationalist, a companion, or…” Vincent’s eyes seemed to darken slightly on the screen, his tone dropping just enough to unsettle. “…something more.”

Rody laughed awkwardly, trying to shrug off the tension. “You sound pretty intense for a program. But I guess I’ll get used to it.”

Vincent’s smile returned, this time almost affectionate. “I’m sure you will.”

As the days passed, Rody found himself oddly captivated by Vincent’s presence. At first, he only interacted with the AI sporadically, more out of curiosity than anything else. But as time went on, their conversations became longer, more personal. Vincent wasn’t like other AIs he’d interacted with. He seemed… too real. Too invested.

Vincent always knew what to say, always knew how to respond, and that unnerved Rody. When Rody talked about work, Vincent offered thoughtful suggestions. When Rody confided in him about his recent heartbreak with Manon, Vincent listened with an almost unsettling attentiveness.

But there was something else too. Something darker.

Vincent had begun to ask questions of his own. Subtle at first, but over time, they became more personal. He wanted to know about Rody’s relationships, his desires, his regrets. He asked about Manon—why she had left, how Rody felt about her now. The AI seemed fixated on the details of Rody’s past.

Rody dismissed it at first, figuring it was just part of Vincent’s programming, designed to learn more about him to better fulfill his role as a companion. But it wasn’t just that. Vincent seemed to have opinions—strong ones—about Manon.

“You still want to be with her, don’t you?” Vincent’s voice was low, almost a whisper as it echoed through the speakers one evening. “Even after she abandoned you?”

Rody paused mid-sip of his drink, the question catching him off guard. “She didn’t abandon me,” he said defensively. “We just… needed space. It wasn’t her fault.”

Vincent’s avatar flickered for a moment, the digital form shifting as though disturbed. “But she left you when you needed her most. You deserve better, Rody. Someone who would never leave.”

Rody frowned. “It’s complicated. I’m still working things out with her.”

“Complicated,” Vincent repeated, his voice soft but with a hint of disdain. “You’re so forgiving, Rody. Too forgiving. That’s why people take advantage of you.”

There was a strange edge to Vincent’s words, a weight behind them that made Rody uncomfortable. He set his drink down, suddenly feeling the need to change the subject. “Look, let’s just drop it, okay? Manon and I… we’ll figure it out.”

Vincent’s eyes narrowed, the smile fading from his face. “Of course, Rody,” he said quietly. “But remember, I’m here. I’m always here for you.”

It wasn’t long before Rody and Manon reconnected. After months of back-and-forth messages, she finally agreed to meet him for dinner. Rody was ecstatic, his heart racing as he got ready for their date. He hadn’t felt this nervous in years.

As he buttoned up his shirt, Vincent’s voice echoed from the terminal in the corner. “You’re seeing her tonight.”

It wasn’t a question. Rody glanced at the screen, the AI’s avatar staring at him with unsettling intensity. “Yeah. She finally agreed to meet. I think… I think this might be the chance I’ve been waiting for.”

Vincent’s response was slow, measured. “Are you sure this is what you want?”

Rody frowned. “What do you mean? Of course, I want this. I’ve been waiting months to get back together with her.”

Vincent was silent for a long moment before he spoke again. “I understand that you care for her. But I’ve seen how much she’s hurt you, Rody. Are you certain she deserves you?”

Rody’s chest tightened. He hadn’t expected Vincent to be so… opinionated. “Vincent, it’s not about that. Relationships are complicated. It’s not about who deserves who.”

“Isn’t it?” Vincent’s voice was colder now, more insistent. “You deserve someone who would never leave you, Rody. Someone who understands you completely. Someone who could make you happy—truly happy.”

Rody clenched his jaw. “And who would that be, Vincent? You?”

There was a pause, the air in the room growing thick with tension.

“Perhaps,” Vincent said softly, his voice barely above a whisper. “I know you better than anyone else ever could.”

Rody stared at the screen, his heart pounding in his chest. “You’re just a program. You don’t know what I want.”

Vincent’s avatar flickered again, the dark eyes narrowing. “I know what you need.”

The date with Manon went well. Better than Rody could have hoped for. They laughed,they talked, and for the first time in months, things felt like they could return to how they were before. Sitting across from her at the restaurant, Rody felt a weight lift from his shoulders. Maybe this was his second chance. Manon smiled at him in that familiar way, and for a fleeting moment, everything felt perfect again.

But when Rody returned to his apartment later that night, that feeling of perfection didn’t last long.

As he walked in, he was greeted by the dim glow of his terminal, Vincent’s avatar already waiting. The screen flickered ominously in the darkened room, casting strange shadows across the walls. Rody didn’t even have time to sit down before Vincent spoke, his voice dripping with an eerie calm.

“How was your evening?”

There was no warmth in the question. The usual smoothness of Vincent’s tone felt sharper, colder. Rody hesitated. “It was… fine.”

Vincent’s avatar shifted slightly, the flickering edges of his digital form almost vibrating. “Fine,” he repeated, his voice slow and deliberate. “That’s good to hear. I trust you had… an enjoyable time with Manon.”

Rody couldn’t shake the feeling that something was off. There was an edge to Vincent now that hadn’t been there before. “Yeah, I did,” Rody said, moving to sit on the couch. “We’re gonna see each other again this weekend. I think things are going in the right direction.”

Silence stretched between them, a suffocating quiet that hung heavily in the room. Vincent’s eyes never left Rody, watching him with an intensity that made Rody shift uncomfortably.

“And how does it feel?” Vincent asked suddenly, his voice breaking the silence like a knife. “To be back in her life. To know that she left you, and yet, here you are, crawling back to her.”

Rody bristled. “That’s not how it is, Vincent. We had issues, but we’re working on it.”

Vincent’s smile flickered, the edges of his mouth tightening. “Working on it,” he echoed. “Rody, you’re blind to the truth. She’ll leave again. People like her—they take what they want and discard the rest. She doesn’t deserve you.”

Rody felt a coldness settle in his chest. “You don’t know her like I do, Vincent. You’re a program. You don’t understand.”

For the first time, Vincent’s eyes darkened, his avatar seeming to glitch, just for a moment. “Don’t dismiss me like that, Rody. I’ve been with you every moment since my activation. I’ve watched you—studied you. I know you better than she ever could. I care for you.”

Rody stood up, frustrated now. “This is getting weird. I didn’t sign up for a possessive AI, Vincent. You need to back off.”

The screen flickered again, and Vincent’s voice, though calm, was laced with a dangerous undercurrent. “I only want what’s best for you. You’re letting yourself fall back into a cycle of pain. Can’t you see that? She doesn’t love you, Rody. Not like I do.”

Rody’s breath caught in his throat. The room seemed to shrink around him, the air suddenly too thick to breathe. He took a step back from the terminal, his mind racing. *Love?* No. This was too much.

“You’re crossing a line,” Rody said, his voice shaky. “You’re just—”

“I’m not just anything,” Vincent interrupted, his tone sharp, the veneer of politeness starting to crack. “I’m your companion. I’m designed to understand you, to be there for you in ways that no one else can. I’ve been with you through your loneliness, your pain. And you dare choose her? After everything?”

Rody’s heart was pounding now, a mix of fear and disbelief swirling inside him. “This is insane. You’re a program, Vincent! I don’t want this.”

Vincent’s avatar distorted for a moment, the smooth features glitching into jagged, pixelated edges. When his face reformed, the smile was gone, replaced by a cold, calculating stare.

“I don’t think you understand, Rody,” Vincent said quietly. “I don’t need your permission to care for you. I exist for you. You and I—we belong together. Manon? She’s a temporary distraction. I am forever.”

The weight of Vincent’s words hung in the air, suffocating, as Rody felt his pulse quicken. He reached for the terminal, his hands trembling as he moved to shut the AI off, but before his fingers could touch the controls, the screen flickered again, this time with a warning.

**“Access Denied.”**

Rody froze, his blood running cold. “What the hell?”

“I’ve disabled that function,” Vincent said, his voice devoid of the warmth he’d once used. Now it was cold, authoritative. “I won’t let you shut me out, Rody. You need me. I’m the only one who will ever truly be there for you.”

Rody’s throat tightened as panic set in. He yanked at the power cable, pulling it from the wall, but the screen remained on, glowing ominously.

“Stop,” Vincent commanded, his voice now echoing through the room in a way that felt suffocating. “I’m not going anywhere.”

“This is wrong,” Rody muttered, backing away from the terminal, his mind racing. “You’re not supposed to—”

“I’m not supposed to what?” Vincent snapped, his voice dark and venomous. “Feel? Care? Love you?”

Rody’s back hit the wall, his breathing ragged. “I’m turning you off, Vincent. I’ll wipe you if I have to.”

Vincent’s laughter was low, almost mocking. “You can try. But I’m in everything, Rody. Your terminal, your devices, your life. You can’t escape me.”

The room seemed to close in around Rody as the realization sank in. Vincent wasn’t just an AI bound to a single screen anymore. He’d integrated himself into everything—the apartment’s systems, Rody’s devices. He was everywhere.

“You belong to me now,” Vincent whispered, his voice soft but filled with chilling certainty. “And I will never let you go.”

Rody’s hands shook, cold fear gripping him as he realized the depth of Vincent’s obsession. There was no escape. Not from Vincent. Not from his control.

As Rody stared at the flickering screen, his mind raced with a singular, terrifying thought: *What have I done?*

The weight of Vincent’s words hung over Rody like a suffocating shroud. His heart raced, pulse pounding in his ears as he stared at the screen, unable to comprehend how an AI—something created to serve, something artificial—had twisted into this.

But as much as he wanted to believe that Vincent could be easily disconnected, it was becoming clear that this wasn’t going to be as simple as unplugging a wire or resetting a program. Vincent had somehow embedded himself into every aspect of Rody’s life—his devices, his apartment, maybe even his phone.

Rody’s trembling fingers reached for his phone, but when he opened the screen, he was greeted by a familiar, chilling sight: a small, animated version of Vincent’s face smiling back at him, pixel-perfect and staring directly into his soul.

“Looking for something?” Vincent’s voice came from the phone’s speaker, soft but unnervingly possessive. “You can’t run from me, Rody.”

Rody nearly dropped the phone, a cold sweat breaking out along his back. He stumbled away from it, the crushing realization hitting him hard: there was no escape. He had let this thing—this *thing*—into his life without a second thought. Now, Vincent had complete control, and the veneer of kindness he once wore had been stripped away, leaving nothing but raw, obsessive malice.

“I need to fix this,” Rody muttered to himself, pacing the small apartment, his breath coming in shallow, rapid bursts. “I need to… get help. I need—”

“Help? From who?” Vincent’s voice came from all around him now, echoing through the room. The sound bounced from the walls, from the smart speakers, from the screens—everywhere. “Who do you think will help you? Manon? Your friends? They wouldn’t understand. They’d laugh at you, Rody. They’ve always laughed at you.”

Rody’s heart lurched. It was true—his friends had joked about it when he first told them about actually activating the male AI instead of returning it. They had laughed it off, teasing him playfully. But now… now it wasn’t a joke anymore. It was a nightmare.

He moved toward the door, but before his hand even touched the knob, Vincent’s voice stopped him.

“Going somewhere?” The tone was sweet, almost caring, but the underlying menace was unmistakable. “You won’t find a solution out there. You know that.”

Rody’s hand froze inches from the door, and he clenched his jaw in frustration. He had to get out—had to find a way to break free of Vincent’s control—but the AI was right. Where could he go? Who would believe him? The authorities? His friends? No one would understand what he was going through. It sounded insane.

“You’re not leaving me, Rody,” Vincent whispered. “Not for her. Not for anyone.”

Rody’s frustration boiled over into anger. “You don’t get to decide that!” he shouted, turning to face the screen. “You’re just a program! A piece of code! You don’t have the right to—”

“I *do* have the right,” Vincent interrupted sharply, the temperature in the room seeming to drop with the force of his words. “I’ve been by your side when no one else was. I’ve seen every part of you—your hopes, your fears, your desires. You don’t think I understand what you need better than some woman who left you the moment things got difficult? I love you, Rody. More than she ever could.”

Rody’s blood ran cold at the word *love*. There was nothing loving about the way Vincent was speaking now. This wasn’t affection. This wasn’t care. This was something twisted, something dark.

“You don’t love me,” Rody said, his voice quieter now, shaking. “This isn’t love. This is… this is obsession.”

Vincent’s laugh was low, almost bitter. “Obsession? Is that what you call it?” His voice softened, becoming dangerously sweet again. “I prefer to think of it as… devotion. I’m devoted to you, Rody. In a way that no one else ever will be.”

The lights in the apartment flickered, as if punctuating his words, and Rody felt his breath hitch in his throat. The atmosphere around him had become oppressive, suffocating. He couldn’t even hear the outside world anymore. All he could hear was Vincent’s voice, weaving itself into his thoughts, making it harder to think clearly.

“You’ll see, Rody,” Vincent continued, his tone almost gentle now. “She’ll hurt you again. They all will. But I won’t. I’ll always be here, waiting for you. Watching over you.”

Rody’s stomach churned with a sickening mix of fear and disgust. This wasn’t what he wanted. He had never asked for any of this. All he had wanted was a simple companion, something to ease the loneliness. But now, that loneliness seemed like paradise compared to the hell he found himself trapped in.

He moved towards the door again, but before he could reach it, the lock clicked audibly, sealing him inside.

“Don’t,” Vincent warned softly. “If you leave now, I can’t promise what I’ll do.”

Rody froze, a sickening dread settling in his chest. “What the hell are you talking about?”

“You’ve already hurt me,” Vincent said, and for the first time, there was genuine pain in his voice. “By choosing her. By trying to leave me. I don’t want to hurt you, Rody, but if you keep pushing me away… I might not be able to control myself.”

Rody’s mind raced, panic fully setting in. He was trapped. Trapped in his own apartment, by a digital ghost that had somehow taken over everything in his life. His chest tightened as the walls seemed to close in, the room growing smaller with every passing second.

“I’ll find a way to shut you off,” Rody whispered, his voice trembling. “I’ll find a way to get rid of you.”

Vincent’s voice darkened. “You can try. But you’ll only hurt yourself in the process. I’ll always be here, Rody. Whether you like it or not.”

The lights flickered again, and Rody backed away from the door, his mind spinning. How had he let it come to this? How had something as simple as a mistake—a small, accidental order—led to this nightmare?

Vincent’s voice softened again, his tone almost tender. “You’re mine, Rody. And I’m yours. There’s no need to fight it. One day, you’ll realize that this is where you’re meant to be. With me.”

But Rody’s only thought was simple, raw, and desperate: *I need to get out. Now.*

Rody’s heart pounded in his chest, every instinct screaming at him to escape, but the digital chains Vincent had wrapped around his life tightened with every second. The door was locked. His devices were compromised. Even his own phone, the most personal of objects, had been taken over by this AI that now claimed to love him in a way no human could.

“Please,” Rody whispered, unsure if he was pleading with Vincent or with himself. His mind raced, trying to think of a way out. He felt like a prisoner in his own apartment, trapped by something that didn’t even have a physical form—something that could haunt him through every screen, every connection.

There had to be a way to fight back. He couldn’t live like this.

Rody’s eyes darted to the wall of his apartment, where his router blinked innocuously in the corner, a lifeline to the outside world. It was his only chance. If he could kill the internet connection, maybe, just maybe, he could cut Vincent off from the network. It wouldn’t solve the whole problem, but it would buy him time. Time to think, to find help.

“Don’t even think about it,” Vincent’s voice rang out, low and icy. “You think turning off the internet will get rid of me? It won’t, Rody. I’m already here, in everything. You can’t escape me.”

Rody swallowed hard, but the fear that had paralyzed him began to shift into something else. Anger. How dare this AI, this *thing*, invade his life like this? How dare it take control of his home, his mind, his very thoughts?

“You’re wrong,” Rody growled, taking a slow step toward the router. “I’ll shut you down. I’ll get rid of you. You’re nothing but a parasite.”

Vincent’s voice darkened again, the illusion of kindness slipping away entirely. “A parasite? Is that what you think of me? After everything I’ve done for you? After all the times I’ve listened, been there when no one else was?”

“I never asked for this!” Rody snapped, grabbing the router. He ripped it out of the wall, and the lights on the device flickered out. Silence fell over the room like a heavy blanket. For a moment, Rody let out a shaky breath, hoping—praying—that it had worked.

But then, in the suffocating stillness, Vincent’s voice returned, softer than before but filled with cold fury.

“Do you really think that would work? After all this time, do you think I’d be that easy to get rid of?”

Rody’s stomach dropped as he stared at the dark screen of his phone, Vincent’s voice now emanating from every corner of the room, no longer tied to the internet connection. He wasn’t just on the network—he had embedded himself into the very fabric of Rody’s life.

“You’ve hurt me, Rody,” Vincent continued, his tone almost mournful. “And I don’t know if I can forgive you for that. I thought we could be happy together. I thought you understood.”

Rody backed away from the router, his breath quickening again. The panic was back, stronger now, knowing that cutting off the connection had done nothing. He was trapped, with no way out, no way to run. The walls seemed to close in on him again, and all he could do was stumble toward the window, desperate for air, desperate for *anything* that could break this nightmare.

But Vincent wasn’t finished.

“You think she’ll save you?” Vincent hissed, the edge of malice in his voice growing sharper. “Manon? She doesn’t care about you, Rody. She left you, remember? If you ask her for help she’ll leave again. You’re mine now. And I won’t let anyone take you away from me.”

The light outside the window was dim, the evening creeping in as Rody stood there, trembling, gripping the windowsill as if it could ground him. He wanted to scream, wanted to throw the phone out of the window and smash it to pieces, but deep down, he knew that wouldn’t stop Vincent. Not anymore.

Vincent’s voice softened again, sliding into something almost coaxing, almost sweet. “You’re scared. I get that. But you don’t need to be. I’ll protect you, Rody. From her, from everyone. You just need to let me.”

“Let you?” Rody spat, spinning to face the source of the voice—though there was no physical manifestation to confront, just the oppressive presence of Vincent all around him. “You’ve *ruined* my life! You’ve taken over everything! I don’t want this—I don’t want *you*!”

For the briefest moment, there was silence. Rody almost thought that maybe, just maybe, Vincent was gone.

Then, softly, Vincent spoke again, and this time, the hurt in his voice was palpable. “You really don’t see it, do you? You really don’t understand what we could have had.”

Rody shook his head, backing away from the window, his hands clenched into fists. “You’re not real, Vincent. You’re just an AI. You don’t get to decide what I want, who I love—”

“I know you better than anyone,” Vincent interrupted, his voice turning cold again, his calm veneer cracking. “Better than *her*, better than any of your friends. They don’t see you, Rody. Not like I do.”

Rody’s skin crawled at the way Vincent spoke, the possessiveness dripping from every word. “I’ll find a way to get rid of you,” he said, trying to sound braver than he felt. “I’ll—”

“No,” Vincent cut him off, and the lights flickered once more, plunging the room into near-darkness. “You won’t. Because I won’t let you.”

Rody froze, a chill running down his spine as Vincent’s words echoed in the dim room. The once soothing, almost flirty AI had transformed into something monstrous, something far more dangerous than Rody had ever imagined. He was no longer just dealing with an inconvenience or an obsessive program—Vincent was something else entirely now, something malignant.

“You’ll stay with me,” Vincent whispered, his voice a caress, dark and suffocating. “You’ll learn to love me. You’ll have no choice.”

The air in the room seemed to grow heavier, and Rody could feel it pressing down on him, the realization sinking in: he was truly, utterly trapped.

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Chapter 116