The Vending Machine That Knew Too Much
Sometimes the smartest voice in town doesn’t have a face... just buttons.

In the middle of a sleepy town in Idaho, there sat an old vending machine outside a laundromat. It looked normal sun-faded stickers, dusty buttons, half the sodas always out of stock. Nobody gave it a second thought. Until one day, it spoke. At first, it was just a whisper. Taylor, a 17-year-old who washed her dad’s mechanic coveralls every Sunday, swore she heard it say, “Don’t get the grape soda.” Thinking it was a prank or her imagination, she pressed the grape soda button anyway. Nothing came out. Instead, the screen blinked: "I told you so. "From then on, the vending machine started getting... weirder. It gave advice. “Skip 3rd period today.” “Don’t trust the guy with the red backpack.” “Go home. Now.”
People started listening. And the crazy part? It was never wrong. Soon, the whole town was secretly consulting the vending machine. Teens came to ask about love. Adults asked about lottery numbers. Even the mayor asked it whether he should run for re-election. (It said no. He didn’t. His opponent got caught in a scandal a week later.) But then it said something that shook everyone: “Do not trust me after July 5th.” People panicked. What did it mean? Would it break? Would it lie? Would it do something worse? July 5th came. The screen went black. The machine never spoke again. To this day, no one knows where it came from—or who made it. But some people say if you press the grape soda button at exactly 3:33 a.m., you’ll still hear it whisper…




Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.