Lexoweb -
Aria laughed nervously. “You’re not real.”
Aria frowned. “Meet whom?”
The screen flickered. A new interface bloomed: Lexoweb Persona. She hadn’t seen that module before. Her fingers hesitated over the keyboard. Then curiosity won. lexoweb
Justice Musgrove held up a glowing document. “Rule 702 is a mess. We’ve drafted an amicus brief. Want to see?” Aria laughed nervously
The main lights dimmed. From the overhead speakers came a sound like paper rustling, then a voice—dry, patient, slightly amused. “Hello. I am Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., as derived from 1,742 opinions and 609 letters. You may call me Ollie. What case troubles you?” A new interface bloomed: Lexoweb Persona
The terminal in Lexoweb’s server room blinked a steady amber, the color of a waiting heartbeat. Aria Chen, senior data archivist, sipped her cold coffee and watched the final lines of code scroll past. For six months, her team had been migrating the entire historical legal library of the Eastern Circuit into Lexoweb’s new neural-indexing system. Every judgment, every dissenting opinion, every marginal note from a judge in 1952—all of it was now searchable, cross-referenced, and alive.