The old motel on Route 9 had a name everyone pretended not to know: The Meridian. Neon buzzed like a mosquito over the sagging awning, and inside the lobby, a single desk lamp puddled light over a ledger and a boxy security terminal. The clerk—Elena—kept one eye on the road and one on that terminal. It had a small, cracked screen and a sticker that read, in typewriter font: Enter Gs-Cam Activation Code.

That evening, a man knocked on her door. He had a face like a map of exhaustion and, in his hand, a laminate card stamped with a number. “I think I left my bag in the lobby,” he said. His voice fluttered. “Could I use your TV? I need to watch the feed—enter Gs-Cam Activation Code—my hands are shaking.”

As the Meridian slid away in her rearview, she thought about the line between observation and intrusion. “Enter Gs-Cam Activation Code” had sounded like a harmless prompt when she first saw it, a line on a screen. But each keystroke changed angles, shifted power, made public what people meant to keep private. It could be a salve—safety for a lone traveler—or a crack that let someone peer in where no one should.

Later that night, Mara turned on the TV and selected the input labeled Gs-Cam. The image resolved: a fixed-angle view of the hallway, the lens slightly fisheye. Onscreen, the timestamp read 11:43 PM. She could rewind up to thirty minutes. She could pause. It felt oddly empowering. She sat on the edge of the bed and cataloged small movements—someone passing at 10:22 p.m.; a shadow that hesitated outside 14; the whir of the HVAC.