The screen went black. Leo held his breath. One second. Five seconds. Ten.
The website looked like it was built in 2005—blue text, blocky fonts, no flashy ads. Just raw, desperate instructions.
His phone gasped its first digital breath again.
For five seconds, the phone vibrated softly, like a tiny earthquake. Then a message: “Data wipe complete.”
Then he changed his unlock pattern to something his cousin would never guess.
Leo’s heart pounded. Factory reset meant losing his photos, his notes, his saved voice messages from his mom. But a bricked phone was already a ghost. He had nothing left to lose.
The phone was a brick.
He selected “Reboot system now.”
A warning appeared. He didn’t read it. He selected “Yes — delete all user data.”
Leo stared at the black mirror of his ZTE Blade A520. It wasn't just a phone; it was his lifeline to freelance gigs, his maps for delivery routes, and the only camera he owned. Three days ago, his younger cousin had tried to “guess” the pattern lock. After the 50th failed attempt, the screen went white, then dead. “Device disabled. Try again in 24 hours.” Then the clock reset.
He thought of his cousin’s sheepish face. He thought of the $80 he didn’t have. He pressed to highlight “Wipe data/factory reset” and slammed the Power button to select it.
His thumb hovered over the volume rocker. If I do this, it’s gone. Every trace of the last two years.
It took ten minutes to set it up. No photos. No contacts. No saved messages. But the screen wasn’t black. The pattern lock was gone. The “device disabled” nightmare was over.