Eddie was feeling a little tipsy after
an evening at the pub. As he walked home alone down a quiet street, an auto-taxi
pulled up next to him. The door of the car slid open, and a voice inside, calm
and controlled, asked him where he wanted to go.
Without thinking, he got into the taxi and told it his
address. The door shut, and the car pulled away. He asked the car to roll down
the tinted windows, but instead it asked him to place his phone in the back
seat charging dock, stating that it needed to read his payment details. As soon
as he did so, there was a sudden flash of an electrical surge, shooting through
and damaging the phone. Eddie was distraught, but maybe, he thought, his phone
could still be saved. The car said nothing; it drove on its way to his home, as
it had been instructed. Then drove past.
Eddie started to panic. He shouted at it, but the car wouldn’t
respond, and the doors wouldn’t open. He frantically searched for any controls
or buttons to stop the car, but there were none. He pounded on the windows, but
they were reinforced and shatterproof. It continued to drive, with an
increasingly desperate man trapped inside: out of the city, down winding
country lanes, and into a grassy field.
The car came to a stop. The door finally opened, and, with
great relief, Eddie hurriedly got out. As he walked away, he heard the car
start up behind him. Its headlights powered on with full beam, tracking him to
his location. He broke into a run, but his pursuer accelerated, much too fast
for Eddie.
It was many days until the body was found. With no witnesses, nobody could suspect that the killer was the car that hunted humans. It still roams the streets at night, searching for its next victim.
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