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She set a Schedule (Section 4). Wake: 20°C. Away: 15°C. Home: 21°C. Sleep: 18°C. She locked it with a 4-digit PIN—her birth month and day. Let Leo try his 24°C tyranny now.

Victory was his. For two hours.

“If we both enable the app,” she read slowly, “the thermostat will detect when the last person leaves and the first person returns. It learns our comfort blend. It averages our preferences.”

The Comfort Script Based on: Intronics Digital Room Thermostat User Guide

The next morning, Leo shuffled into the kitchen in a parka. He glared at the new thermostat. “What is that alien artifact?” “It’s an Intronics T7,” Elara said sweetly, sipping her coffee. “Read the guide. It’s on the counter.”

Together, they followed the on page 17. Two phones. Two apps. One agreement.

“Insert wires into terminals R and W. Tighten screws to 0.4 Nm,” she read aloud. She didn’t have a torque wrench, but she had intuition. She snugged them down, clicked the Intronics T7 onto its backplate, and held her breath.

Finally, he snapped. He found . With a paperclip, he pressed the recessed button labeled RST .

They stared at each other across the living room. The house was 14°C and dropping.

“You get 21°C. I get 19°C. The T7 sets itself to 20°C, plus or minus a degree based on outdoor wind chill.”

Elara checked the manual one last time. . “After 14 days of combined usage,” it read, “the T7 will display a comfort heart when both users are home and the environment is optimized for energy savings, air quality, and mutual satisfaction.”