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Chapter 15 — The Range of Choice

  As Rowan stepped out of the office,

  he instinctively reached for his phone.

  Only then did it register—

  he’d had it turned off the entire day.

  …I’ll need it if I’m taking the subway.

  He stopped briefly at the building entrance.

  People flowed past him,

  responding without hesitation

  to the guidance layered over their vision.

  Rowan was the only one standing still.

  A moment later,

  he powered the device on,

  and information overlapped his view.

  The absence of stacked notifications

  felt strangely unfamiliar.

  A familiar route appeared.

  


  〔 Commute route: Subway 〕

  Estimated time: 32 minutes

  Congestion: Moderate

  Stability score: High

  Without thinking,

  Rowan took a few steps

  toward the subway entrance.

  Two steps.

  Three.

  Then he stopped.

  Today…

  For some reason,

  he didn’t want to go that way.

  There was no frustration.

  No resistance.

  He just wanted to go home

  a different way today.

  Rowan closed the map

  and opened the unified transport interface.

  The information in his view rearranged itself.

  


  〔 Available transport options 〕

  The narrative has been taken without permission. Report any sightings.

  Electric bicycle

  Shared scooter

  Autonomous road taxi

  Drone taxi (12-minute wait)

  Walking (not recommended)

  As he scanned the list,

  a thought surfaced.

  It looks like there are many choices…

  Another followed immediately.

  But the range of choice

  was already decided.

  Walking had been pushed aside

  as not recommended.

  The drone taxi was excluded naturally—

  too expensive, too slow to arrive.

  The autonomous taxi

  didn’t seem much different from the subway.

  That left—

  the electric bicycle.

  His gaze rested on the icon.

  For a moment,

  he hesitated again.

  Does this even mean anything?

  Still, he decided.

  The information updated instantly.

  


  〔 Electric bicycle selected 〕

  Calculating recommended route…

  A blue line traced itself

  across his field of view.

  Route home.

  Suggested speed.

  Estimated travel time.

  More data appeared below.

  


  Recommended return points: 3

  Additional travel to optimal return: 4 minutes

  Estimated cost: ?3,200

  Calories burned: 84 kcal

  Predicted safety score: 92

  Rowan paused.

  Safety score.

  Before he even started riding,

  the evaluation had already begun.

  He zoomed the map in slightly.

  A narrow side street—

  off the recommended route—

  caught his eye.

  Rowan looked at it for a moment,

  then gripped the handlebars.

  He started moving.

  As the bicycle rolled forward,

  a short line appeared at the bottom of his view.

  


  〔 Route deviation detected 〕

  Recalculating…

  It wasn’t a warning.

  Not an alert.

  Just a notice

  that it knew.

  Rowan slowed slightly.

  As he passed through the crowd,

  faces brushed past his vision.

  Someone seated, staring at a phone.

  Someone walking with a holographic video playing.

  People stopping in perfect unison at the signal.

  Everyone was inside

  a predetermined flow.

  I guess this is normal,

  Rowan thought.

  It was comfortable.

  Safe.

  Managed.

  So maybe

  living like this

  wasn’t strange at all.

  And yet—

  riding the bicycle now

  felt different.

  He was the one controlling the speed.

  Stopping or moving on

  was his decision.

  But the guidance never disappeared.

  Route.

  Time.

  Score.

  Is this…

  a real choice?

  Or—

  a process of being chosen?

  Near his apartment,

  Rowan stopped at a return point.

  The device vibrated briefly.

  


  〔 Return complete 〕

  Today’s travel record has been saved

  Rowan stood there for a while,

  the device still powered on,

  staring at the text.

  What kind of data

  would today’s choice become?

  For now,

  he didn’t know.

  But one thing was certain.

  Moving without thinking

  was no longer easy.

  And that realization felt—

  slightly uncomfortable,

  yet strangely honest

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