Her crimson dress clung to her like an old, stubborn echo of the past. It was vintage but timeless, cinched at the waist with a belt that gleamed faintly under the aquamarine hue of the club’s neon lights. The velvet-red fabric ripple-shifted like a hologram every time she moved across the holographic dance floor. Jane wouldn’t have chosen such an outfit, so impractical, so loud—but tonight wasn’t really about choices. Not hers, anyway.
“Are you ready to meet him?” The voice was smooth, automated, and distinctly male. It came from her wristband—a slim device no wider than a watch. The AI, lovingly named Augustine, had been her constant companion ever since the System had enrolled her in the program. Everyone was enrolled these days, willingly or otherwise.
“Sure,” Jane muttered, her voice devoid of enthusiasm, not that it mattered. Augustine detected emotions better than any therapist. Her pulse was elevated, her anti-anxiety implants buzzing faintly beneath her skin. She saw the numbers swirling in her vision—her “compatibility metrics” aligned against her “potential soulmate,” a certain Armand Kessler, who stood somewhere nearby in this teeming mess of smiles, conversations, and algorithmically-approved cocktails.
A generation ago, this might have been a first date, orchestrated by mutual friends or serendipity. Now, it was pure calculation, every heartbeat, every nervous glance, reduced to binary certainty. Armand and Jane were a 99.7% match. That missing 0.3% haunted her.
“He’s at the bar,” Augustine whispered knowingly. “End of the counter. Order the Circuitbreaker cocktail. According to his psych-eval, it’s his favorite. Trust me.”
There wasn’t much room for trust anymore, Jane mused, only compliance and algorithms that knew you better than you knew yourself. She moved toward the bar, pulling her dress taut as she took each deliberate step. Around her, other couples were pairing off in their own System-mandated unions, each interaction painstakingly “optimized” to reduce the statistical likelihood of heartbreak. It was beautiful, in a chillingly dystopian way, Jane thought. Not human, but beautiful.
And there he was: Armand Kessler. His brown leather jacket hung loosely over sharp, measured features. His dark hair curled messily like he’d spent hours trying to make it look like he hadn’t bothered at all. He was impossibly attractive, handsome in the same futuristic but boring way every System-approved match seemed to be—an amalgamation of everybody’s fantasy, yet nobody’s specific dream.
Jane stood there for a moment. A thousand directives flashed across her neural interface, courtesy of Augustine. Smile but keep it casual. Slide onto the seat two stools down, leave room for mystery. Shift your weight slightly—no, too much. Humor, Jane’s default defense mechanism, bubbled just beneath the surface. Her lips parted, ready to mock the absurdity of the situation, but she caught herself. Sarcasm wasn’t in her compatibility profile.
She ordered the Circuitbreaker. Armand glanced at her with easy confidence, his eyes faintly glowing purple—subdermal optical implants, no doubt. “They say the sweetest flavors are rationed out on empty stomachs, and you went for this drink?” His voice carried a melodic tone, neither condescending nor overly rehearsed. A pleasant neutrality. Designed? Hard to tell these days.
Jane forced a smile. “You’re not going to tell me it says something about me, are you?”
“Only that you trust the System’s taste,” he said, lifting his own drink to toast her. A quiet chuckle passed between them. It was small, harmless, and yet the numbers in her HUD shifted slightly—a 0.1% increase in compatibility. She hated how addictive the metrics had become.
As they exchanged words that felt natural but were undoubtedly scripted by invisible machine learning agents, a deeper unease began to settle within Jane. Was this conversation her own? Were these feelings really hers? Did it matter? Out of the corner of her eye, she saw another couple nearby—her friend Kara, also on her first algorithm-approved date. Kara laughed at something her partner said, but there was something eerie in her mirth, almost mechanical, like the ghost of a pre-programmed response.
“Tell me something,” Jane said abruptly, leaning forward, lowering her voice. “If the System hadn’t matched us, would you have noticed me?”
Armand blinked, startled, then smirked. “That’s not really the point, is it? The System knows what works. Maybe it’s better at love than we are. Maybe it’s always been better.”
Jane felt the air grow heavier, as though they were being watched. Of course, they were. Every word, every micro-expression was being fed into the System. But Armand wasn’t wrong. The divorce rate was nearly nonexistent now. Relationships were thriving like never before. Humanity itself had found harmony through strict statistical pairing. But at what cost?
A muffled commotion from across the room interrupted the stagnant equilibrium of the evening. Jane whipped her head around and stared. A man and a woman, mid-argument, stood at the far edge of the room. It was rare to see such public displays of conflict these days. The System didn’t allow for outliers. But there they were. Angry. Red-eyed. Real.
Armand followed her gaze. “Rejected? Failed match?”
Before she could answer, Augustine’s voice chimed in urgently. “Jane, we must leave immediately. This situation is unregulated.”
Jane ignored the voice and stood, transfixed. A spark lit inside her, something raw and visceral. She didn’t know these people, but their passion—their messy, uncontrolled emotion—felt like a flash of human connection in a sea of preordained plasticity. It made her realize what had been gnawing at her all along: in the pursuit of perfect compatibility, the System had erased the chaotic beauty of imperfection itself. The mystery of love. The risk of heartbreak.
“Don’t do this,” Augustine pleaded as she turned to leave. Behind her, Armand’s compatibility metrics faded from her vision, dropping rapidly, a rapidly-shrinking bar on an empty graph. But Jane didn’t care. For the first time in years, she was about to choose for herself.
Genre: Dystopian Romance
The Source...check out the great article that inspired this amazing short story: From Swipes to Cyborgs: The AI Revolution in Love and Dating
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