Madison stretched herself out across the couch before setting her mother down near her hip.
Even now, being placed there like that brought with it a fresh jolt of unreality. No matter how long Cindy had lived like this, the mind never seemed to fully adjust to the scale of normal people once you were a Little. It could understand it intellectually, could account for it, could even anticipate it, but actually seeing it up close was something else. Madison’s body seemed to dominate the furniture without effort. Her legs claimed cushion after cushion. Her arm draped lazily over the back of the couch. Every movement carried strength in it, casual and unquestioned.
It was the ease of it that unsettled Cindy most.
Madison did not look large in the dramatic sense. She looked natural. Comfortable. Entirely at home in her own scale while Cindy sat beside her reduced to something that barely seemed to register against the upholstery.
The contrast was impossible to miss. Madison lounged across several cushions in a way Cindy could not have occupied even one. Once, long ago, Cindy would have scolded her immediately for it.
Feet off the couch.
Feet off the coffee table.
Use a coaster.
Pick up your old drinks.
Stop treating the living room like your bedroom.
All of it had once seemed reasonable. Basic. The ordinary language of a parent maintaining order in her home.
Now Madison casually sprawled across Madison’s couch.
That was the truth of it.
Cindy was the visitor in this space. The dependent. The tolerated presence. Madison was the one paying for groceries. Madison was the one deciding what came into the house and what left it. Madison and McKenzie had made the rooms their own, and no one seriously pretended otherwise anymore. Madison made sure Cindy never forgot that.
It was, Cindy thought bitterly, the cruelest possible reversal. An ultimate uno reverse card that did not end when the game was over.
Madison grabbed the remote and started scrolling. “What are we watching?”
The question was casual, but it wasn’t really a question in the equal sense. Madison would choose. Cindy would be there for it. Still, the performance of asking mattered to Madison. It let her feel indulgent.
As the screen flickered through Generiflix menus, Cindy found herself staring.
It had been a while since she had looked at the actual Generiflix interface for long. The layout itself felt strange now, almost unfamiliar. Too broad. Too human. Too full of programming that had nothing to do with the scaled down, curated world she and Greg were usually given access to.
She was used to Littleflix.
That, increasingly, was what felt normal.
Littleflix was its own ecosystem, all carefully tailored for Littles: Little made programming, Little studios, Little actors, Little talk shows, Little lifestyle content, Little cooking competitions, Little reality TV. Even the news was delivered by polished Little anchors at scaled desks, speaking in bright, authoritative voices about markets, weather, transit, sports, and public life from the Little point of view.
There was something deeply humiliating in how normal that had started to feel.
And Greg, in particular, had become oddly fixated on one of Littleflix’s newest obsessions: LLS.
Little League Soccer.
It had started almost as a novelty, one of those things he watched because it was there and because there was so little else left that felt unscripted. But over time it had become something more. Not exactly a passion—Greg would probably hate that word—but certainly an attachment. He followed standings now. Teams. Rivalries. Players.
LLS had exploded in popularity.
Run officially through Generitech, it was a full professional league made entirely for Littles: Little players, Little coaches, Little training staffs, Little medical teams, Little commentators, Little branding, Little stadium experiences. In the true Little Cities, the games had become enormous cultural events. Tens of thousands of Littles packed scaled stadiums purpose built for league franchises, turning out in scarves, jerseys, and coordinated chants that filled the stands with a level of passion Cindy still found bizarre.
And outside the true Little Cities, Generitech had found a way to expand it anyway.
Major metropolitan parks around the world now housed franchise licensed Little stadiums and companion Little districts, allowing regional teams to form and compete even in places where fully developed Little Cities had not yet been built. Tryouts drew crowds. Merch sold out. Guardians bought season packages for their Littles the way families once bought baseball tickets or football subscriptions.
The whole thing had become disturbingly real.
Even more disturbing was how popular it was with non Littles too. Generiflix carried live broadcasts, highlight shows, panel coverage, trade speculation, player features. Millions tuned in. What had once sounded like a niche novelty had become a legitimate sports product, complete with loyalty, spectacle, sponsorship, and fandom.
In Little Cities, LLS was now the sport.
And somehow, impossibly, that made perfect sense to the world they lived in now.
Cindy still remembered the first time Greg had gotten genuinely invested in a match. The concentration on his face. The muttered complaints about officiating. The half embarrassed way he had tried to explain a playoff implication to her as though she should care. At the time she had almost laughed at the absurdity of it.
Now she only found it depressing.
Not because the games were bad. In truth, from what little she had seen, they were extremely well produced. Generitech did not do anything halfway. The quality was part of the point. The scale of the investment. The message that this was not a side show or a curiosity, but a fully recognized part of the world.
That was the larger horror of Littleflix itself.
Not that it existed.
That it was good.
That it was polished, immersive, self sustaining, and entirely capable of replacing the broader cultural world piece by piece for those trapped inside it. Greg no longer watched sports coverage made for ordinary adults. He watched LLS analysis. Cindy no longer half listened to mainstream cable news in the background. She absorbed Little centered updates curated for beings no longer considered fully part of that wider adult world.
Their tastes were shrinking to fit their condition.
Madison kept scrolling with the lazy impatience of someone who had too many options and wanted to be entertained immediately. “Ugh, why is everything ugly tonight?”
Cindy said nothing.
Madison glanced down at her. “Do not say documentaries.”
“I wasn’t going to.”
“Good,” Madison said. “Because that would’ve been such an old person answer.”
She kept browsing.
The television’s glow washed over the room, catching on the redecorated shelves, the throws Madison and McKenzie had picked, the little touches Cindy still noticed without wanting to. The whole downstairs felt warmer than it used to, softer, more deliberately styled. It was beautiful in a way Cindy would never have chosen and now had no power to change.
Madison finally paused over a thumbnail and grinned. “Wait. Oh my God. Perfect.”
She clicked.
The screen filled with a bright pre game desk and a polished lineup of Little commentators in team colors, framed by animated graphics and roaring crowd noise.
Cindy stared.
Madison burst out laughing. “No way. This is on? Dad’s going to be so jealous.”
And just like that, the choice was made.
Not because Cindy would have picked it.
Because Madison liked the idea of watching something Greg cared about while Greg sat upstairs alone in her room, polishing her phone and stewing over the reminder that even access to shared family interests now depended on her mood.
Madison glanced down at her mother with a smug little smile, already settling deeper into the cushions.
“Come on,” she said. “You can hate watch soccer with me. It’ll be bonding.”
