rpa reader

The RPA Reader accepted it. And then it spat it out again.

The first oddity occurred on a Thursday afternoon. The RPA Reader was processing a batch of declassified naval supply logs from 1968. Arthur, half-dozing, heard the shush-click stutter. He looked up. The machine’s optical lens was not scanning. It was… hovering. Frozen over a single, yellowed requisition form for powdered eggs.

"Arthur, what the hell?" Jenna shouted, reaching for the emergency stop.

This time, Arthur saw it. The machine’s claw trembled. A low, harmonic hum emanated from its core—not a motor sound, but a resonant, almost vocal tone. He leaned closer. On the monitor, the RPA’s internal log was no longer displaying OCR text. It was displaying a line of binary, then a line of English, then a line of what looked like nautical flags.

rpa reader