Safe? - Vfxmed
“Come get me,” he said. “We’re driving to your place. Tonight.”
As he hit send, a new message arrived in his inbox. No subject line. Sender: no-reply@vfxmed.com .
Then came the other links. The ones with URLs ending in .rip and .truth . “My husband died three weeks after VFXMed.” “The Frequency Fraud.” “Class Action Investigation Pending.” vfxmed safe?
Aris closed the laptop. The silence of the house roared. He looked at his cane leaning against the desk. He imagined walking without it. Jogging. Dancing at Maya’s wedding. Living.
His phone buzzed. It was his daughter, Maya. “Come get me,” he said
He composed an email to the VFXMed patient coordinator: “Please cancel my Aethera-X intake appointment. No further explanation needed.”
It was an automated follow-up. The kind triggered by a specific search history. No subject line
“Has what? A kill switch? Dad, listen to me. I found a former engineer. Her name is Lena Petrov. She worked on the Aethera-X’s firmware. She says the ‘safety threshold’ in their patent is a lie. The frequencies that heal the nerves also, over repeated exposure, trigger a slow demyelination in the brainstem.”