P.t. V12.08.2014 Access
You were home sick that day. The video confirms this. But in the corner of the frame, sitting on your couch where you were not sitting, is a figure. The figure has your posture. Your clothes. But its face is a smooth, flesh-colored mannequin head.
You type it in. The screen flickers. Then, Echo shows you a 15-second, low-resolution video clip. At first, it looks like static. But then you see yourself. From behind. Walking down your hallway. 72 hours ago. P.T. v12.08.2014
On December 11, 2014, at 3:13 AM, the video will change. The mannequin head will turn toward the lens. Its mouth—which was not there before—will open. And it will whisper the exact sentence you are thinking right now , as you read this. You were home sick that day
When opened, the app didn't ask for contacts or location. It asked for one thing: The figure has your posture
As of 08.12.2014, three known users have tried to "share" the video to prove it exists. Their phones now only display a single image: a photograph of the back of their own heads, taken from inside their locked bedroom closets.
If you hear a .mp4 file playing in your headphones when no app is open, do not take the headphones off. The loop ends only when you finish listening to the silence that comes between your own heartbeats.
If you delete the app, the video doesn't delete. It imprints onto your phone's camera roll with a date stamp from three days in the future.