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AMIT KHAN

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She Was Added to a Family Group Chat That Wasn’t Hers
Maya is added to a family group chat she doesn't recognize. At first, it feels like a mistake. A wrong number. An accidental invitation. But the messages don't stop-and no one explains why she's there. The group knows things about her. Small details. Habits she never shared. Thoughts she doesn't remember typing. When she tries to leave, the chat responds. As the messages grow more familiar, Maya begins to notice changes outside the screen.
Her photos rearrange themselves. Drafts appear she didn't write. Words are sent from her phone that sound exactly like her-only calmer, more certain. The group doesn't threaten her. It doesn't rush her. It simply stays. She Was Added to a Family Group Chat That Wasn't Hers is a psychological horror novella about digital intimacy, identity erosion, and the quiet danger of being known too well. Told through close, intimate prose and fragments of text messages, it explores how belonging can become invasive-and how consent can disappear without ever being taken.
This is not a story about technology turning evil. It's about what happens when it starts to feel like family.
Her photos rearrange themselves. Drafts appear she didn't write. Words are sent from her phone that sound exactly like her-only calmer, more certain. The group doesn't threaten her. It doesn't rush her. It simply stays. She Was Added to a Family Group Chat That Wasn't Hers is a psychological horror novella about digital intimacy, identity erosion, and the quiet danger of being known too well. Told through close, intimate prose and fragments of text messages, it explores how belonging can become invasive-and how consent can disappear without ever being taken.
This is not a story about technology turning evil. It's about what happens when it starts to feel like family.
Maya is added to a family group chat she doesn't recognize. At first, it feels like a mistake. A wrong number. An accidental invitation. But the messages don't stop-and no one explains why she's there. The group knows things about her. Small details. Habits she never shared. Thoughts she doesn't remember typing. When she tries to leave, the chat responds. As the messages grow more familiar, Maya begins to notice changes outside the screen.
Her photos rearrange themselves. Drafts appear she didn't write. Words are sent from her phone that sound exactly like her-only calmer, more certain. The group doesn't threaten her. It doesn't rush her. It simply stays. She Was Added to a Family Group Chat That Wasn't Hers is a psychological horror novella about digital intimacy, identity erosion, and the quiet danger of being known too well. Told through close, intimate prose and fragments of text messages, it explores how belonging can become invasive-and how consent can disappear without ever being taken.
This is not a story about technology turning evil. It's about what happens when it starts to feel like family.
Her photos rearrange themselves. Drafts appear she didn't write. Words are sent from her phone that sound exactly like her-only calmer, more certain. The group doesn't threaten her. It doesn't rush her. It simply stays. She Was Added to a Family Group Chat That Wasn't Hers is a psychological horror novella about digital intimacy, identity erosion, and the quiet danger of being known too well. Told through close, intimate prose and fragments of text messages, it explores how belonging can become invasive-and how consent can disappear without ever being taken.
This is not a story about technology turning evil. It's about what happens when it starts to feel like family.
