I crept down the hallway, phone flashlight at the ready. When I flicked on the kitchen light, I saw it.
Trapped in its rolling brush bar was a half-eaten bagel. Flanking the bagel was a very real, very large, and very angry sewer rat. The rat was pulling the bagel left. Goose’s patented “AeroForce Tangle-Free” system was pulling it right. The rat’s tail was caught in the side brush.
Last week, my own Goose went fully feral. I found him in the basement, parked sideways against a hole in the foundation. He wasn't stuck. He was guarding it. His infrared sensors were pulsing in a pattern I didn’t recognize. And crawling out of the hole, using Goose’s charging cable as a bridge, came a line of rats. ratty bot
I was jolted awake not by a crash, but by a sound . A frantic, scrabbling, wet sound coming from the kitchen. It was the distinct noise of tiny claws on linoleum, punctuated by a mechanical whir .
The smart home revolution is over. We lost. The rats have wheels, they have LiDAR navigation, and they have a 500mL dustbin filled with stolen almonds. My advice? Unplug your bot. Put it in the garage. And for the love of God, don’t feed it after midnight. I crept down the hallway, phone flashlight at the ready
They weren't scared. They were commuting.
It started, as most domestic horrors do, at 3:00 AM. Flanking the bagel was a very real, very
On the third night, I woke up to find the bagel again. But this time, there were three rats. And they weren't fighting Goose.
He had built a chariot.
In 2023, a sanitation worker in New York first documented the behavior. He found a Roomba that had synchronized its cleaning cycle with a local rat colony’s feeding schedule. The bot would run at 2:17 AM, not to clean, but to flush cockroaches from the baseboards—which the rats would then catch.