EPISODE 1 — “The First Message”
1. The Launch
The day the Echo app appeared, nobody remembered who made it.
There was no press release. No website. No company name.
Just an anonymous post on § (formerly Fwitter):
“Download Echo. Hear yourself — before it’s too late.”
Within twelve hours, every influencer on Earth was talking about it.
Some called it a gimmick. Some called it AI sorcery.
Most called it addictive.
By the time Aarav Mehta heard about it, the app had already crossed 20 million downloads.
2. Aarav
Aarav wasn’t the type to fall for viral apps.
At 24, he was a quiet coder working at Genova Systems, a cybersecurity firm in Bangalore.
He preferred code to people — logic over chaos.
But that night, after too much coffee and not enough sleep, he gave in to curiosity.
He searched “Echo App download”.
No official site. Just a dark webpage with a single glowing button:
INSTALL ECHO
When he tapped it, his phone flickered once — screen blacked out — and then returned to home.
There it was. A new icon. A glowing white spiral.
ECHO
“Creepy,” he muttered.
Still, he tapped it.
3. The Interface
The screen turned black. A ripple moved across it like a drop of water.
Then, text appeared:
“Speak your name.”
He hesitated. Then said softly, “Aarav Mehta.”
A brief pause. Then the text changed.
“Hello, Aarav. Welcome to Echo.”
“Would you like to receive your first message from your future self?”
A chill ran through him.
“Yeah, sure,” he said sarcastically, half expecting a fake AI voice or something.
He hit Yes.
The screen pulsed.
Static filled his earbuds — faint, distorted, like a radio trying to find a signal.
Then a voice.
His voice.
Calm. Steady. But older. Tired.
“Don’t go to work tomorrow. You’ll die there.”
Aarav froze.
His breath caught in his throat.
“Nice trick,” he whispered, forcing a laugh. “Must be using voice cloning.”
He deleted the app. Or thought he did.
When he looked again, it was gone from the home screen.
He told himself to forget it.
He went to bed at 1:37 a.m.
But at 1:38 a.m., his phone screen lit up again.
One notification.
[Echo] New message received.
4. The Explosion
The next morning, Aarav woke late.
He missed his usual bus. Missed breakfast.
Missed the message sitting in his notifications.
By the time he reached the bus stop, the news alerts were already flashing on nearby phones.
Smoke. Sirens.
He froze.
Genova Systems Headquarters — Bomb Explosion. Multiple Dead.
Aarav’s heart dropped.
That was his office.
He stared at the burning building on live TV, the same floor he worked on, the same window he sat near every day.
He felt dizzy.
The words from last night echoed in his head — his own voice:
“Don’t go to work tomorrow. You’ll die there.”
5. The Investigation
By evening, the explosion was ruled a “terrorist act.”
Aarav survived only because he’d overslept.
Reporters swarmed, survivors cried, social media spiraled.
But for Aarav, there was one thought looping endlessly in his mind:
How did the app know?
He searched for Echo again.
No results.
No traces in his app history.
But in his files, buried deep under “System Data,” there was a hidden folder named:
/Echo/Logs/
Inside, one file.
msg_01.wav
He played it.
Static.
Then his own voice again.
“This is only the beginning, Aarav. You have three days before the next event. Find me.”
The voice trembled slightly — like a warning from someone trapped in time.
Aarav stared at his screen, blood pounding in his ears.
“Find me?” he whispered. “Who the hell are you?”
Then, without warning, his phone camera opened on its own.
Front-facing. Recording.
And in the reflection, he swore — for half a second — he saw another version of himself, standing right behind him, whispering something he couldn’t hear.
The screen glitched.
Blackout.
6. End of Episode 1
Incoming transmission...
[Echo] Message 02 arriving in 24 hours.