Cline Panel ((free)) «2027»

The month it hit 250, Aris started sleeping in the guest room. The Panel hummed a little louder at night, as if recalibrating their shared air.

The system’s logic was seductively simple. It monitored your micro-expressions through your home’s sensors, analyzed your shopping habits, tracked the neurotransmitters in your perspiration, and cross-referenced it all with the city’s vast biometric network. The result was a score from 0 to 1000. A high Cline with someone meant harmony, efficiency, and minimal friction. A low Cline meant argument, misunderstanding, and wasted energy. cline panel

The Panel was a flat, milky disc embedded in the wall of every citizen’s living room, just above the hearth. It looked like a smooth, polished opal, but its purpose was far colder than any gem. Every morning, at precisely 7:03 AM, it would hum to life, displaying a single, calibrated number in soft blue light: your current “Cline”—a real-time, psychometric index of your emotional and social compatibility with every other person in the city. The month it hit 250, Aris started sleeping

The lights flickered. The grid hummed back to life. The Panel glowed a soft, searching blue. It began to recalculate. A low Cline meant argument, misunderstanding, and wasted

Dr. Aris Thorne had not spoken to his wife in eleven months. Not because of a fight, or a tragedy, but because of a choice. The Cline Panel had given him that choice, and he had taken it.

Aris didn’t look at Lena. He heard her set down her coffee cup. The clink of ceramic on ceramic was the loudest sound he had ever heard.

Marriages, friendships, business partnerships—all were now governed by the Panel. If your Cline with a colleague dropped below 300, you were reassigned. If your Cline with a spouse fell below 200 for six consecutive months, the Panel would issue a “Decoupling Directive.” No lawyers, no tears, no custody battles. Just a quiet, administrative severance.