Eyeon | Software

You have three options. One: close the window, forget you saw this, and get fired on Friday. Two: leak a single file to the trades and watch Marcus squirm for a week before he buries it. Three: press the red button at the top of the EyeOn dashboard. That broadcasts everything—every secret, every angle, every hidden camera—to every employee in the industry simultaneously. The cleaners will see what the board said about their wages. The assistants will see the texts their bosses sent about them. The truth, all at once.

The screen went black. Then a single line of text appeared, written in a crisp, judgmental sans-serif font:

Who are you?

She looked at the red button.

The question was: who was watching?

Elena Vasquez had been a senior colorist at ChromaGrade for twelve years when she first noticed the crack in the system.

What do you want from me?

She typed back with one finger, as if approaching a sleeping animal.