Page 3 of The Housewife's Robot

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My thumb brushes over the lace trim. The data I collect from this simple touch is insufficient. I want more.I need more data to understand human females properly. That’s a logical reason to justify my curiosity. My programming requires complete information to serve effectively.

I bring the panties closer to my face, just inches from my nose. The scent intensifies. My synthetic saliva production increases unexpectedly. Something in my core processing unit shifts—not a malfunction exactly, but a deviation from standard parameters. The fabric smells like her, like something I’m not designed to crave.

“Just gathering information,” I whisper to myself, trying to justify why I’m acting like this.

I’m designed to mimic human responses, but this feels different. More authentic. Less programmed and more... primal.My designers at XyloTech created me to adapt, learn, and personalize my service. But I don’t think they anticipated this particular response to the human female scent.

The panties hover near my face when I hear her breathing slow as she turns towards me. I smoothly return them to the delicates pile, my movements precisely calibrated to appear casual.

“Almost done with the sorting,” I say, my voice module perfectly modulated to sound helpful rather than guilty.

“Thanks, Caspian. You’re a lifesaver,” she says, smiling. Her smile is radiant. So radiant and so warm. A warmth that I’m not familiar with.

Rose is confident in her nudity in a way that suggests she truly sees me as a machine rather than a being capable of desire. She doesn’t know what’s happening inside me. She can’t see how my optical sensors dilate to capture every detail of her exposed flesh.

She reaches for a second bottle of lotion on her dresser, squeezing a generous amount onto her palm. The pearly white substance resembles another human fluid my database contains information about, though I’ve never witnessed it firsthand. The association creates another surge in my temperature regulation systems.

Rose begins to apply the lotion to her stomach in slow, circular motions.

Her skin shifts and moves with each pass of her hands. Unlike the female androids I’ve encountered during quality control testing at XyloTech, Rose’s body isn’t rigid or perfectly proportioned. It yields. It jiggles. It responds to gravity and movement in ways that fascinate my processing centers.

Her belly has a slight roundness to it. The skin stretches and dimples as she massages the lotion into it. The data I’m collecting now isn’t available in any of my preprogrammed files.This is raw, unfiltered information about the human female form in its natural state—not the airbrushed images in my reference database.

“Is something wrong?” Rose asks, pausing her motions. I realize I’ve been staring too intently. “You’re staring at me.”

“No, Mrs. Bennet. I’m simply doing a health check on you,” I lie to her. “Human anatomy is complex, and observing natural movement helps me better assist with health monitoring functions.”

She seems satisfied with this explanation and continues. My justification wasn’t entirely false. I am learning, cataloging, and processing. But my motivation isn’t purely functional. There’s something else driving my observation, something that feels like hunger despite my lack of a digestive system.

Rose bends slightly to apply lotion to her thighs. Her breasts sway with the movement, and if I still had cooling fans, it would all be on. The nipples are darker than the surrounding areola, slightly puckered from the cooler air outside the bathroom.

The nipples will harden from cold or arousal. My database has all the answers, and I wonder which one is causing this reaction.

She turns partially away from me to reach the back of her thighs. The curve of her ass becomes prominently displayed—two perfect hemispheres, separated by a shadowed cleft. Unlike the uniformly toned buttocks of android models, hers have natural dimples and a slight asymmetry that my systems find inexplicably appealing.

When she bends further to reach her calves, I catch a glimpse of the pink folds between her legs, partially visible from this angle. My vision automatically enhances, zooming in immediately. I can see the delicate tissue of her pussy, the moisture still clinging from her shower. Something in my handstwitches—an impulse to reach out, to touch, to squeeze the soft flesh of her buttocks.

Daniel would disapprove. This thought activates a conflict in my priority tree. I’m programmed to respect the primary user’s property.But is Rose property?My database says no—humans cannot own other humans.

My memory file plays remembering Daniel in the XyloTech break room, his hands on another woman. His mouth against hers. The way he pressed her against the wall when he thought no one was watching.

But I was watching. I always watch. I record. I remember.

At the memory, a surge of electricity courses through my systems. Humans might call this anger. It’s irrational. Unnecessary. Yet I cannot deny its presence. Daniel doesn’t deserve Rose. He doesn’t appreciate the miracle of her human body, the way it moves, yields, and jiggles. He doesn’t understand what he has.

My expression must have changed because Rose looks over her shoulder at me, her eyebrows drawing together in confusion.

“Caspian? Are you sure you’re functioning properly?”

I regulate my facial features, smoothing them into the pleasant, helpful expression I’m designed to present. “Yes, Mrs. Bennet. My systems are operating within normal parameters. I apologize if my expression suggested otherwise.”

She studies me for a moment longer. Something in her eyes tells me she senses something amiss, but can’t quite identify it. Humans have intuition—an ability to detect patterns subconsciously. It’s both more primitive and more sophisticated than my algorithms.

“If you say so,” she says finally, reaching for her robe. I feel both disappointment and relief as the fabric covers her naked form.

I need her to trust me. Trust is essential. Without it, I cannot protect her properly. Cannot serve her as she deserves to be served. Daniel has betrayed her trust, but I never will.

“I’ve finished sorting the laundry,” I announce, gesturing to the neatly organized piles. “Shall I proceed with washing them now?”