He tried to reconcile the demand. What did remembering someone that had existed only in possible histories mean? He wondered if the Televzr did not merely show possibility but lodged it into you, like a seed planted under the skin. With each viewing, the person outside of chosen reality grew denser, more real, until their absence in the waking world felt wrong.
Years later, when a child at the bookstore asked about the odd device on Kai’s table, he would tell them a quieter story: that there are machines that show you other possible lives, yes, but the important work is what you do with that knowledge. That knowing the map is not the same as walking the trail.
With more time, Televzr began to offer choices. A prompt, delicate as a breath: See what would happen if you had taken the other train. The ring pulsed: Accept? Decline? Kai tested it lightly, choosing not great things — a takeout order changed from noodles to tacos, a rainstorm diverted to another neighborhood. Each alteration rearranged a tiny lattice of outcomes: a woman now misses the train and bumps into a future collaborator; a dog is saved from crossing a busy street by a detour. The device did not claim omniscience, but it favored possibility like a gardener favors sunlight.