He quit his job a few weeks later, unable to focus in crowded offices or sit beneath fluorescent lights. He said the noise made him feel watched. Detective Grant checked in regularly, but there was little she could do. The company’s lawyers drowned the case in settlements and sealed records. No one faced real punishment.

The government released a single statement calling it “an unauthorized research incident.” That was all. Life moved on, at least for everyone else.

But at night, Oliver still wakes up sweating, convinced he feels something crawling beneath his skin. Each time, I turn on the lamp and check his back. The scars are faint now, but the fear never fades.

Last week, while organizing the bathroom shelf, I found another pack of those patches tucked behind a box of vitamins. The packaging had changed slightly. The colors were brighter. A new slogan promised “smart relief through innovative technology.”

I stood there for a long time, the packet trembling in my hand.

When I finally called Elise Grant, she answered on the first ring. I told her what I had found.

There was a pause on the line before she spoke. “You did the right thing,” she said quietly. “We’ve received reports of similar packaging in two other states. We’re investigating again.”

Her voice carried exhaustion, not surprise.

As I hung up, a cold realization settled in my chest. This wasn’t over. It never had been. Somewhere, someone was still testing, still watching, still perfecting the way to turn human bodies into living data.

And somewhere tonight, another woman might be pulling up her husband’s shirt, staring in disbelief at a row of tiny red marks, wondering what secret now sleeps beneath his skin.