Amanda stood up as Rose approached the table and gave her friend a casual hug and a kiss on the cheek, but that was the last time things went like they usually did. Instead of returning the favor, Rose surprised her with a brief but surprisingly deep kiss right on the lips that left her mouth filled with the taste of Rose's lipstick. She widened her eyes in shock, but Rose had already pulled away and was sitting down like nothing had happened.
Amanda sat down as well and gave her friend a concerned stare. "Are you alright, Rose?" she asked, skipping the usual formalities. "Your text just said we needed to talk face to face, and I thought maybe-."
Rose waved away Amanda's words with a dismissive gesture, and favored her with a dazzling smile. "I'm sorry, Panda," she said, using the childhood nickname Amanda would have strangled anyone else for speaking out loud. "I just texted that to get you to the restaurant."
The ice cube of apprehension in Amanda's stomach melted away at the words. She hadn't realized how nervous that text had made her until the feeling stopped. "So everything's okay, then? No problems with work, Dave's okay, your mom's no worse than ever?"
Rose leaned in and her smile took on a conspiratorial tone. "Actually," she said, "everything is terrible. I quit my job this morning, and sent Dave an email telling him I was moving out and he could keep all my stuff. But that's not why I came here. I came here to kiss you, Amanda, and I am so sorry."
Amanda furrowed her brow in confusion. "I don't understand, Rose. What's wrong? Why did you quit? What happened between you and Dave? What's going on with you?" The chill in her gut returned, bigger and stronger than ever. It wasn't just the news-Rose was saying all these awful things, but she kept smiling like today was the best day ever.
"I'm not doing any of this," Rose explained, punctuating her words with a casual drink of water that suddenly seemed impossibly creepy. "They're controlling my body now. They made me send that text to you so that you would come here, and they made me kiss you to pass along the judasware. I'm so sorry, Amanda. This is all a trap and I helped them catch you."
She didn't sound sorry, though. Rose's voice was perfectly neutral, calm and toneless and almost cheerful even as she confessed the most bizarre and inexplicable nonsense. "What are you talking about?" Amanda asked, her voice almost plaintive with confusion. "Rose, you're not making any sense. Who are 'they'? What's 'judasware'? What's going on?"
Rose rolled her eyes, as if to suggest that she was indulging her crazy friend's nonsense theories. But her words told a different story. "I don't know who they are, not yet. My brain hasn't been reformatted enough. All I know is that they installed something in me, a highly specialized biological computer that colonizes the human nervous system and hacks into a person's brain. They call it judasware. Because it makes you-"
She broke off her sentence for a moment, and Amanda watched her go about the business of looking normal, friendly and approachable. It was somehow even worse than if she'd lost it and started crying. "It makes you betray people," she said at last, her voice still no more upset than if she was discussion the weather.
Amanda opened her mouth, but she realized she had no idea what to say. She couldn't process any of this. It sounded like Rose had suddenly had some sort of psychotic break, but that didn't seem much more believable than the crazy nonsense about 'judasware'. Still, it would explain her weird body language and her affectless voice-Amanda was no psychiatrist, but it seemed pretty logical that if Rose was really in the throes of a delusion, she'd be giving off all kinds of weird signals in her behavior.