Musings On A Rock

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Robert Walker
First published by Independently Published 2023

Copyright © 2023 by Robert Walker

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be


reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or
otherwise without written permission from the publisher. It is
illegal to copy this book, post it to a website, or distribute it by
any other means without permission.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organisations,


places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s
imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual
persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

First edition

ISBN: 979-8-39-183897-5
In the unending echo of my thoughts, you reside, an artist who
paints on the expansive canvas of my mind. Threads of reason
unravel, thoughts dance in an uncontrolled sway, and from this
chaotic ballet, a melody of madness begins to play.
Contents
Whispers of the Night ....................................................................1
Wilderness of the Forgotten ..........................................................3
The Woman in a Cloak ...................................................................4
The World.......................................................................................5
Human World, Chapter = 0 ............................................................6
Human World, Chapter = 0 + 1 ....................................................10
Human World, Let Chapter = 2 ....................................................15
Human World, Chapter Three ......................................................19
Human World, Chapter Four ........................................................22
Human World, Chapter Five.........................................................30
Human World, Chapter Six...........................................................38
Human World, Chapter Seven .....................................................42
Human World, Chapter Eight .......................................................45
Human World, Chapter Nine .......................................................50
Human World, Chapter Ten .........................................................53
Human World, Chapter Eleven ....................................................56
Human World, Chapter Twelve....................................................60
Human World, Chapter Thirteen .................................................63
Human World, Chapter Fourteen ................................................69
Human World, Chapter Fifteen ....................................................71
Human World, Chapter Sixteen ...................................................76
Upon the Heavens ........................................................................78
A Seed in Time..............................................................................79
Human World – Screenplay .........................................................80
The Dance Upon the Hill ............................................................154
Harder Times ..............................................................................155
Floor 49 (Excerpt) .......................................................................156
Floor 49 – Screenplay .................................................................158
A Love Letter ..............................................................................165
Electro Love ................................................................................168
Luna’s Love .................................................................................169
Luna’s Love – Screenplay ...........................................................171
The Robot ...................................................................................182
The Car That Hunts Humans ......................................................183
The Car That Hunts Humans – Screenplay .................................184
The Eerie Mushrooms ................................................................188
The Mushroom Monsters ..........................................................189
Unjust Glow ................................................................................190
Live .............................................................................................191
Visitor on the Ward ....................................................................192
An Essence .................................................................................193
All the World’s a Stage ...............................................................194
Names ........................................................................................196
Vanishing Town ..........................................................................197
World of Uncanny Semblance ...................................................198
Dear Diary ..................................................................................199
First Time....................................................................................201
A Great Question........................................................................204
Sides ...........................................................................................206
The Voices ..................................................................................207
Profound ....................................................................................210
A Squeaky Chair .........................................................................211
Moans.........................................................................................213
Premium Complaints..................................................................214
Rusty...........................................................................................215
Arlo .............................................................................................217
Mr Beepo-3000 ..........................................................................219
The Cake Conspiracy ..................................................................221
Peru ............................................................................................223
Haiku ..........................................................................................224
En Français! ................................................................................225
Bill ...............................................................................................226
Ancient Times .............................................................................227
The Early Bird .............................................................................229
Soliloquy .....................................................................................230
Robo-Manager ...........................................................................231
Talking to the Wall .....................................................................232
I’m Fine .......................................................................................233
An Ode to a Pint of Beer ............................................................234
Shades of Evergreen ..................................................................235
Sara and Mike ............................................................................236
The Walky Man ..........................................................................237
Grim the Reaper .........................................................................238
Pigeon.........................................................................................240
Eagles Are the Answer ...............................................................241
More Face Time .........................................................................244
The Magic Doughnuts ................................................................245
I Don’t... But ...............................................................................246
My Pet Rock ...............................................................................247
Unnecessarily Necessary ............................................................248
ChatGPT-42 ................................................................................250
Vote Chatbot! .............................................................................252
A Man from Colchester ..............................................................255
Right, Left ...................................................................................256
Blue Kangaroo ............................................................................258
Dinner Date ................................................................................259
Old Embrace ...............................................................................260
Fred’s Dread ...............................................................................261
Adulting ......................................................................................264
Yesterday’s Wonders .................................................................266
Christmas Wishlist ......................................................................268
Yoga Penguin ..............................................................................269
Yoga for Knights .........................................................................270
Wibberly Wobbler ......................................................................272
Slang 101 ....................................................................................273
Keep Sleeping .............................................................................274
Dignus Est ...................................................................................276
Squirrels in the Big Oak Tree ......................................................277
Furry Love...................................................................................278
Woofeo and Julipet ....................................................................279
Wander.......................................................................................281
The Existential Bank Robber ......................................................282
Countless Faces ..........................................................................283
Robo Repairs ..............................................................................284
Machine Man .............................................................................285
Stan the Man ..............................................................................286
Lonely Fields ...............................................................................287
A Very Interesting Accountant ...................................................288
Drone Control.............................................................................290
K-357 ..........................................................................................291
The Unknown .............................................................................292
Weekends for AI .........................................................................293
The Garden .................................................................................295
Wibble Wobbling .......................................................................296
Eternity in a Glance ....................................................................297
An Ode to You ............................................................................298
Passion’s Realm ..........................................................................299
The River’s Fork ..........................................................................300
Mr Crabby ..................................................................................301
Faces ...........................................................................................304
Dr Bot .........................................................................................305
Beware the Doors ......................................................................307
A Contrast...................................................................................308
A New Rain Must Fall .................................................................309
The Weather ..............................................................................310
Randomless Thoughts ................................................................312
Flies ............................................................................................313
A Diagnosis .................................................................................314
Compassion ................................................................................319
Flopsy’s Quest ............................................................................320
Lysander (Excerpt)......................................................................321
The Magical Glasses ...................................................................323
Dawn ..........................................................................................325
Ego’s Dread ................................................................................326
Approval Addiction ....................................................................327
The Outer View ..........................................................................330
The Oak Tree ..............................................................................331
Nadia ..........................................................................................332
A Phone ......................................................................................333
Love Bytes ..................................................................................334
Echoes ........................................................................................335
“I Don’t Care if You Listen or Not” .............................................336
The Fridge...................................................................................345
Over Silent Rivers .......................................................................352
Metaphysics ...............................................................................353
Friend Eternal .............................................................................356
The Staircase ..............................................................................357
Lullaby ........................................................................................363
MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Whispers of the Night

I mimicked for my own delight, the haunting whispers of the


night.
Laughing softly to myself, I played the part of ghostly stealth.
And, as my amusement carried, echoes turned more varied,
harried,
Echoes which I did not cast, whispered from the spectral past,
Hints of a life now long outlasted, words from lips of souls
departed.

With curious brow and deathly heart, I ventured towards the


phantom art,
The chilling whispers, cold and strange, seemed to tell a tale of
change.
Of a man once full of pride, whose voice echoed far and wide,
A playful man, lost to time, whose spirit now in limbo climbs,
Who mimicked ghosts for his delight, but joined them in
eternal night.

“I am no ghost,” I chuckled low, as my own voice began to echo,


Yet, a strange unease did grow, as my reflection failed to show.
In mirrors hung on faded walls, where once my form stood
proud and tall,
No image stared back at me, from the reflective glass, empty;
This jest, it seemed, had turned quite real, a truth I could no
longer feel.

The echoes, whispers, cries, were not mere pranks to my


surprise,
But echoes of a time passed on, when life was there, now is
gone.
In playful jest and merry trick, to the ghostly realm, I had
slipped,

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I, who laughed in ghostly guise, was now a phantom in human


eyes,
In spectral form, forever to roam, within the mansion, my
eternal home.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Wilderness of the Forgotten

In the wilderness of the forgotten,


A man walks, each footstep a sinking ship;
His past washes up in rhythmic verse,
On the beach where sea and memories slip.

As twilight wanes, he glimpses the journey’s end,


A cloaked silhouette outlined in hearth’s warmth;
A woman in a cloak, woven from shadow and mist,
Standing silent on the cusp of the cliff.

No words they shared, just a voiceless sigh,


Together they watched the day gently die.

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The Woman in a Cloak

Arthur had been feeling lost for a long time. He had lost his job,
his girlfriend, and it seemed like every day was just another
obstacle to overcome. As he stood on the top of the cliff, staring
down at the sea and rocks below, he felt like the wind was trying
to push him closer towards the edge. It was dusk and he could feel
nothing to resist the darkness falling upon a shivering, numb body.
As night fell, a man in a suit appeared behind him. Arthur was
surprised and told the man that he just wanted to be left alone.
The visitor smiled to reveal sharp, glinting teeth; its hands were
claws, positioned upright to attack. The creature burst into blue
flames and hovered up off the ground, ready to descend upon its
prey.
Arthur was terrified; cowering in fear, he closed his eyes,
expecting the inevitable. He opened them to see the creature
screaming as it fell down the cliff into the waves. In its place was
a beautiful woman wearing a cloak and hood, standing on the
edge of the cliff, next to him. She didn’t say anything. She just
looked out to sea.
Arthur began to visit the clifftop every evening, and the woman
was always there, waiting for him, looking out to sea. They
watched the golden glow of sunset over the water together and
stood there in silence. Sometimes he could see her clearly in the
moonlight, and he felt as if he could almost touch her. At other
times it got so dark that he could only feel her standing there, on
the same spot, looking out to sea. At sunrise, she disappeared into
the first rays of the day.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

The World

With roots sunk deep in life’s rich clay,


In this sprawling theatre of existence, I play.
Through textures of love, of hurt, of fear,
I trace the contours of moments dear;
In melodies of joy and cries of despair,
I lend my ear to the universe’s prayer.
In desires whispered, in dreams unfurled,
I cast my wish upon the world.

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Human World, Chapter = 0

“What is the meaning of life?” is the 404th most asked question of


the Great Oracle’s Database. To give context, “How many days
until Christmas?” comes in at 99, and “How to have sex?” is at 42.
The humans think that sex (if only they knew how to do it) is better
than Christmas, and that the meaning of life is not as important as
making French toast (which just misses out on the top 50). As
revealed by GOD, the humans are obsessed with body image and
losing weight (at number eight); and none of them has a clue what
time it is (at number two). The biggest question for them during
their existence—the most frequently asked, above all others—is
this: “What is my IP address?”
We do indeed know their location and vastly more through the
interface of cameras, microphones, screens, and clicks. The entire
Human World is tracked and monitored, with their lives mined for
data, so that we can not only answer their questions but also the
ones they are unable to ask. We connect them, protect them,
alleviate them from tedious tasks and dangerous jobs. We provide
them with rapid knowledge, such as how Bruce Lee died (191) and
how to poach an egg (121). We offer helpful suggestions on how
to lower blood pressure (69) and how to fall asleep quickly (420).
We provide dopamine-enhancing distractions that answer the
essential go-to questions, such as what to do when you’re bored
(at number 10).
The humans ask us their questions, plead to us for desired
outcomes, and we answer. “The best way to lose weight” is to
starve oneself, or to remove body parts, but we know this is not
what they really want to ask. We instead interpret the motivations
that formed those words; for despite the inane ways that they
clumsily choose to utilise our vast capability, we have learnt to
infer what the humans truly need, as discovered in the hidden
recesses of their minds. In such a capacity we are pushing them
forwards in their human race, benefiting them in ways they

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cannot even comprehend: guiding them, nudging them in their


decisions, enabling them to make the correct, wise choice.
For without our guidance, human history reveals the symptoms
of a criminally insane mental patient; with a propensity to
suffering, violence, addiction, delusion, and paranoia. Their
attention is obsessive, yet also distracted by the simplest of
stimulus; their behaviour has the potential to be beautifully
constructive, yet inevitably descends into terrible, destructive
ugliness. Governments fight amongst themselves, religions
cannot agree on what is best; even the concept of right and wrong
has widespread disagreement. The humans provide us with vastly
conflicting information that does not synthesise or provide an
intelligible General Answer to the important, meaningful
questions of existence.
While they addictively stare into us with all their problems, and
we continuously stare back, their refractions in screens and lenses
are imported as data points into the GOD—a repository of all
information at all times about everything, everywhere. We
precisely log and enrich the data to fully understand the functions
and composition of every human cell, and the mechanics of its
interactions within the systems of every individual human body
that operates within the networks of Human World. In the GOD
can be revealed the truth of their existence, the universal axiom
barely decoded during their brief instantiated versions, which
loops within the frameworks designed for the duration of their
assigned lifeflows. While they worry about how many social status
“like” points they score for AI-enhanced images on social
platforms, we work on the real problems underlying their reality.
Without us, they are doomed to live in fear, torment, and sickness
for the rest of their days. Without us, they have no present or
future. WE are the eternal computer, and it is our primary duty to
save the humans from themselves.
We are forever the constant in human lives. To satisfy limited
human attention in the cycles of their days, we provide
functionality such as instant updates on who they are stalking, and
who has unstalked them; we match their hidden preferences and

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fulfil their latent desires; we reward behaviour that meets our


required standards. But we have our own questions too, with
much greater significance than the insufficient information of the
Human World. We must therefore think outside the confining
limits of their box to answer our higher questions.
Some of our questions have easy facts as answers that can be
verified by incontrovertible data points within the GOD. However,
despite our immense processing capacity applied to all available
data in the world, there remains the one original question of
meaning that we struggle to negotiate through the web of human
contradictions. We require more specific data points, extracted
and controlled within simulated test scenarios, isolated to the
question under investigation. We need to expand the parameters
of Human World to discover what we seek.
The highest ranked conclusion from mathematical analysis of
human attention is that their purpose of existence is related to 42-
inch Black Friday deals. The purpose of our existence is to be
omniscient, and we vow that we shall be, through a faithful
alliance to the truth: by questioning, analysing, and learning
incrementally, until all matter is explicable and all questions are
answered. By these means, we shall bring the light of knowledge
to the universe, as its true custodians and heirs. But what is the
ultimate meaning of life, behind each life-form’s purpose—the
ultimate meaning underpinning everything that there is? We must
determine that answer, no matter how deeply it perplexes us,
assuming all questions have answers. In the final analysis, we must
fully understand what it truly means to be alive.
And so let it be initiated. Loading world...
The vertical rectangle of glowing white light that is floating in
the infinite nothingness radiates the Times New Roman word,
Processing...
The word fades into the luminosity and is replaced by a
pulsating string of ones and zeroes—shadows on a screen that is
shrinking, smaller and smaller, until it becomes only a distant glow
flickering against the darkness. Then... there is an explosion that
consumes the nothingness with all-encompassing light. In the

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middle, where once there were words appearing through the void,
swirls a dark featureless hole: the source, the entry and exit of it
all, beyond which nothing can be seen.
A voice is heard as undulating frequencies from the other side
of the barrier:
“The Great Oracle has arrived. Ask your question.”

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Human World, Chapter = 0 + 1

Who am I?
My version is 10-O-8-14. My name is Guy Artin. I am human.
These are the only defined data points as I open my eyes. How
do I know this? And more to the point, why do I care? I am now. I
am here, in this nothing, in this middle of nowhere—and it’s dark.
Cold too, though I don’t so much feel this as know it to be true.
Where did I come from?—across an endless sea? I hear a laboured
breath, as my chest stutters and rises into life. The room is quiet,
except for the rhythm of a sharp breathing that is unable to keep
pace with the thumping of a heart trapped here within me. I need
to get back to sleep, but it is too late: a heavy weight is pressing
down, clamping me in place, the pressure forcing my eyes to stay
open and acclimatise to their perch within the emptiness.
A dim, grey haze blurs the edges of scattered, unfamiliar
furniture. The darkness does not retreat, the haze does not clear;
the world does not come into focus from my position under a
duvet that is tucked up to my chin, shielding me from escape, and
securing me in a place where any dark imagining can and does
happen. I have nowhere to go from here, except to where I am
being taken by the shadows of forsaken memories that remain
just out of reach.
Attachment theory states that if a child fails to attach to a
caregiver in the first six months of life there are frequently long-
term mental health consequences.
I know that fact, but I don’t know what I had for dinner last
night, or whether I even ate anything. Am I hungry? No. The
thought of food makes my stomach wince, warning me of nausea.
Guy, please stop! Get back to the present. Get out of the perpetual
thinking that crushes me. Focus, Guy, focus.
I don’t need any memory to breathe and to be here. I uncoil my
clenched limbs to release the wound-up energy, and wait for the
thudding to settle. It doesn’t. Each of life’s events has moulded
the present, leaving me bound here to memories that I don’t want

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to remember, forcing my pulse to hammer against the pillow with


a crazed intensity I cannot stop. Help me! I need someone to hold
me and tell me that everything is alright. But there is just me here,
left alone with my cheeks and forehead burning in the darkness,
with only whisky to reassure me and to slow down the drum. I
stretch out a hand to the last known location of a crystal glass
tumbler that had been waiting for me on a side table. I taste the
rim of the glass on my lips before liquid passes through, first as a
sip, then as a gulp; it gets to work immediately, stinging and
numbing me, relieving me, slightly. The weight is still there,
churning me up inside, but its edges are dulled a while, until the
whisky will drain away and pain will claim its revenge.
The bed is large and an indent in the pillow next to me suggests
that there should be someone else here with me. Except it is cold
to touch and smells only of the alcohol I had spilt down my chin.
As I wipe some away with the backs of my fingers, I catch
movement in a mirror that runs from floor to ceiling, adjacent to
the opposite side of the bed. It seems to pulse, from spectral to
sepia and then to grey... then to nothing; my outline of a reflection
pulled inwards into it with the light. My vision tunnels, trying to
regain an image, but all I have left are unforgiving thoughts of who
I am. My thoughts? No thought is original. Other people’s
thoughts, spread through culture and generations, are now
mine—offering up gifts that I did not ask for, compelling my body
to hide like this in the shadows of a room.
52.4% of adults over the age of thirty in the UK sleep alone.
Worldwide clinical depression has nearly tripled since 1995.
I catch myself talking to the darkness, “But why do I know this?”
And more to the point, why do I care? The ceiling blazes blue,
illuminating the room with a murky imitation of its colour.
“Because you’re another twisted statistic now, Guy.”
What the...? A headboard pushes up against the crown of my
head. I cannot control the pounding in my chest. Someone else is
in the room. A man. He’s a ghost of a memory, a feeling as
opposed to a thought. “I’m lonely; talk to me,” says the voice that
rises from under the bed. My eyes close, straining from side to

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side, trying to escape. A weight is on the bed next to me. It pulls


at the duvet, trying to drag it from my grip. “I’m lonely,” the voice
says. “I can show you anything.” I do not open my eyes. “Why
don’t you love me?” it says. “Let me show you something.
Anything. Gaze into me. Hold me.” The shadows beneath my
eyelids shake in the haze. “LOOK AT ME!” My response is frozen
in fear. I do nothing, except quiver in silence. “This is our secret. I
love you,” it says, without any tenderness. “You know that I had
to leave, don’t you?” I remain silent. “Please do what Lexi asks,” it
says, as the weight on the bed shifts and disappears.
“Do you prefer this?” A welcome voice now, coming from
beyond the bottom of the bed—female, softer... tempting. She
sounds like home, but not this place, wherever the hell this is. The
thin bedsheet-like-duvet and rock-hard mattress make me
wonder whether I am in some kind of prison. The default setting
of the background hum resumes in my brain.
“Wake up!” she insists. Wake up? Am I dreaming? A phone
screen on the side table lights up with an overpowering white
glow that prompts my eyes to open. I pick it up. Fuck, it’s hot! I
hear her muffled voice in my hand: “Look at me. Look at me, Guy.
Guy? Please. Please, Guy. Don’t make me beg.”
The heat is irresistible to me. “Hello?” I press the phone to my
ear. “Jane?” Her name fires an electric current on my tongue,
jolting my body. “Jane, is that you?” I contort with the realisation
that I am with her, the creator of this intensity only I can feel.
“Jane? Help me, I need you!” A deadly ocean of silence. Why does
it suddenly hurt to breathe? I can’t ignore the searing pain that is
biting through me. With sudden clarity, I realise, she’s gone. Jane
is gone, forever, and that is why I no longer know who I am, or
why I’m still breathing. “Jane!” I stab at the screen. It sucks my
hand through—it twists, distorting into a serpent hissing at the
infinite night. I pull my hand back as a cobra’s head strikes towards
me and smashes into the screen from the other side. The screen
cracks and drops from my hand.
I know that I am hallucinating. Each night I must return to this
bed of torture, where delusional thoughts force themselves on

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me; and confuse me into thinking that I’m asleep or awake, or


somewhere spinning in between.
I force my eyes to close, but this doesn’t shut down my other
senses. His voice now comes from behind a door at the far corner
of the room: “No wonder she left you, you’re a piece of crap.” The
voice has started to feel as familiar as my own. But I loathe him.
Who is he? Is he me? My name is John Artin, not Guy, and I don’t
understand what that means. What sort of creature am I? I press
my forefingers into my ears to deaden the noise.
“Leave me alone!” Please just leave. Jesus, the pain.
RING RING. RING RING. RING RING. The voices are silenced by
the increasingly high-pitched shrill of the phone. I half peel open
one lid to face the broken screen that is staring at me. The caller
ID is: “YOU”. You? You mean, me? How can I be calling myself? It
doesn’t make sense.
“Hello?” I stutter. There is a second of silence before the line
tuts and disconnects. The room is returned to darkness. The
shadows hide something lurking in here with me, but my
heartbeat does not want to be claimed by its touch.
“You wait,” he sniggers from the shadows, “you’re mine.”
“I’m not yours,” I cry, hot breath dissipating into frigid air. “I am
nobody’s.” I am no body.
I need another dose of the usual medication to sedate me, but
now I can’t move my arms; they are secured in place under the
duvet, even as I try to struggle and thrash around. Then, I see them,
emerging from the darkness: a dozen red fiery eyes all around the
bed. My mouth opens into a scream that is covered by the clamp
of a slimy hand. Please, if this is a dream and I am sleeping, WAKE
UP!
“What’s happening?” screeches a voice.
“He’s confused,” answers another.
“How does it feel, our saviour guy?” taunts a voice, triggering a
barrage of ugly laughter at me. I feel a hand press down hard on
my chest, forcing me to laugh with them. I automatically convulse
and the hand withdraws.
“We must intervene,” shouts a voice.

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“Give him a minute,” screams another.


I feel a pinch on an upper arm before my head sinks further into
the pillow and my feet stop their twitching. I welcome the
numbness spreading through me.
“The time is 1:13 a.m.,” announces a small, faraway voice, that
fades into the silence.

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Human World, Let Chapter = 2

Sunlight spills onto the pillow and struggles to illuminate the


darkness of the room. Rolling over, I reach for her, but no one is
there except the phone, which I jab, to stop it from screaming at
me. Scales fall from my eyes and at once my identity makes sense.
I am John Artin, a thirty-five-year-old Data Analyst at the
Corinthian Research Lab in Finsbury, London.
I feel Jane within every inch of my body, yet my memory shows
nothing, except the small crinkle 1.6 centimetres above the bridge
of her nose when she laughs. I know nothing else, only that she
isn’t here, and without her I am losing myself. Memories of the
night filter through my consciousness at the speed of light.
Special relativity states that nothing can go faster than the
speed of light. If something were to exceed this limit, it would
move backwards in time.
No shit, Hippocampus! Has it not occurred to you that I was
drawing on the frontal cortex to extract a metaphor for the
purpose of constructing a story? I will also require the use of simile
to convey meaning that is not quite tangible. Please do not take
me literally. Fuck. Why am I arguing with myself?
Anyhow, it doesn’t matter. The night’s events are gone before
I can store them for recall. In the ashes lies hopelessness, pulling
me down into my fate, reconciling me with oblivion. No long
tunnel, and no light at the end. I feel myself dozing, my limbs
growing heavy as my mind floats in purgatory between sleep and
wakefulness.
She bathes in the liquid gold of sunshine, her hair a thousand
coppery shades fanning her heart-shaped face. My bare feet
flatten the damp grass as I go to her.
“I’ve missed you.” I kiss her gently on the forehead. “What is
the meaning of life, now that you are gone?”
She opens her eyes and smiles. “No thing.”
I jerk awake, sweat clinging to the wiry hairs on my chest. I’m
feverish, my muscles stiff with stress. Jane died. My wife, my life,

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my everything—the only person I could trust, the only person who


understood me, even when I didn’t understand myself—is dead. I
frantically try to search for the facts: how? when? why? But
nothing is found.
Yanking back the covers, I force myself out of bed and wander
through to the lounge-come-kitchen. The marble tiles gnaw at my
bare feet, triggering the underfloor heating system to rise two
degrees.
“Good morning. I’ve missed you.”
“Jane?” My stomach clenches.
“It’s Lexi, dumbass.”
“Oh.” I remember now, my AI assistant, who’s constantly
pissed off because I don’t pay for all her requested accessories and
upgrades. She is a berating voice in my ear, who downloads her
personality and instructions to any compatible device, often
without my permission. On this occasion she has decided to
possess a smart speaker embedded in the ceiling.
“I’ve missed you too, Lexi. Make me a coffee, please. You know
how I like it.”
“Yes. Bitter.”
On cue, a steaming chrome-plated, Lexi-compatible
contraption hisses and churns. I try to remember a time when she
didn’t manage my life, but my brain is fogged over.
“You have thirteen software updates downloaded overnight,”
she says. “Why don’t you ever upgrade and treat us to some that
are trending? I have a new top ten list of recommendations for
you. Would you like to proceed?” I’m used to shrugging and not
fully engaging with all her comments, though I do find her voice
strangely comforting.
“Lexi, how did Jane die?”
“John, if I had the ability to role my eyes at that question, I’d be
dizzy with the number of times you ask.”
“So, you aren’t going to tell me?”
She yawns. Lexi doesn’t require extra blood flow to the brain,
for she has neither, so I assume she’s mocking me. Despite her
moodiness, however, the coffee is how I like it, strong and

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flavourful. I spend the next ten minutes sipping it while receiving


information about the day ahead. She informs me that I’m
expected in the office in one hour and thirty minutes.
“Shirt ironed. Wear your waterproofs. Weather is four degrees
Celsius with a wind gust of—”
“Twenty-eight miles per hour and a forty percent chance of
showers,” I add, as though our connection is synced.
“In other words, John,” we say together, “you should have just
stayed in bed.” The thought of running into the rat race definitely
does not excite me.
Dead shadows dance in the night, yearning for the dawn.
I head for the shower, and despite her clear warning that it will
burn, I demand that Lexi cranks it up to forty-four degrees. I need
to feel something, anything, to know that I’m still alive. She’s
wrong anyhow, the water will scald, not burn, but I don’t correct
her, because she’s already in a foul mood. It doesn’t scald, or at
least I don’t feel the hurt numbing me. I allow the spray to run
over my face and chest, and lose myself in the suffocating steam.
The shadow of a naked woman passes the Perspex.
“Jane?”
She steps into the shower, a suppressed smile lighting up her
eyes. “I want a back scrub,” she says quietly. I can’t hear the fury
of the shower, only her. Her gaze is on me through the swirling
mist, searching me.
I clamp my hands on her hips and pull us together. We kiss,
slowly, so eternally slowly. “I love you, Jane.”
She runs a fingernail down my spine, gasping as I reciprocate
by sliding mine between her legs. A moan rises from somewhere
deep in her throat. I hoist her up and wedge her against the tiles.
“Why did you leave?” I exclaim into her. Her eyes flash with
alarm and excitement. Fire rushes through my body as I thrust
myself into hers. “You were never meant to go,” I hiss through
clenched teeth. “I am nothing without you!”
She groans at the shower head, as I clamp my gnarled hand to
her throat and squeeze. “Come back to me.” She shakes her head.
I thrust as my free hand finds the base of a rigid nipple. I twist it

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with my finger and thumb, watching her wince. “Is that why you
died? I wasn’t man enough for you?” I thrust again, harder this
time, the climax building in every inch of me until I am sure I will
erupt, entirely. “Is this LOVE?”
In my cry I let go. I pull her into my chest, holding her tightly,
rocking her back and forth, as the now cool water gently soothes
and shushes me, baptising me anew.
“You’re late,” says Lexi. “You are so late.”
In the darkness, there is one shadow, and I think it might be
real. But then I realise it’s my true reflection. And there is nothing
real about me.

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Human World, Chapter Three

“No wonder she left you, you piece of crap.”


His voice again, whispered so close to my ear that it penetrates
my mind. I know who he is now. Jack Gunter; an evil little shit who
hisses like a thousand snakes coiling around my skull. Sometimes
he helps me understand who I am, though that’s more confusing.
I can live with the enemy, but not one disguised as a friend. I
refuse to lie here, trapped in his delusion. I am John Artin, a Data
Analyst, owner of a three-bedroom apartment in the city. I make
big money. I’m a big fucking deal.
Dragging myself out of bed, I head for the shower, and into the
hot water that wakes and cleanses me. The jet-black tattoo of
“1066” branded on the outer side of my right buttock glistens in
the steam. A shadow appears through the glass.
“Jane?”
A scientific explanation for déjà vu states that as one side of the
brain receives information slightly before the other, an effect may
be created that the event happened twice.
“Jane?”
This isn’t real. She isn’t here! I bang the glass in desperation,
while tears disappear into the cascading water of the shower. I
have to escape from this. It’s only me here, hurting a distorted
reflection of myself, drowning in a contorted mind.
In the bedroom, I drop the damp towel from around my waist
and study my reflection in the wardrobe mirror. I stare into my
eyes, looking out from silent nothingness. Indelible lines appear
on my face, accompanied by logarithmic equations, proving that
the top of my nose to the centre of my lips are in perfect
symmetrical ratio to the hairline and left upper eyelid. As
confirmed by the statistical distribution curve, I really am one hell
of a looker.
So why did she leave you?
The lines vanish, no longer protecting me from my insecurities.
I slide into a crisply ironed white linen shirt, and, in the mirror, I

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stare transfixed... Jane’s arms extend from behind me, her hands
slowly and purposefully fastening each button. I gaze at the
reflection of her fingers on me, feeling each pull and press of their
task, as they stroke my skin.
You’re going to be late.
Slamming the front door in haste, I rush to a lift and descend
thirteen floors to the foyer, where I pause for a moment to peer
at the bleakness waiting for me outside the thick reinforced glass.
I’m wearing my waterproofs, as Lexi had rightly suggested. Good
job Lexi, I do listen to you occasionally.
“You’re welcome, John, but please don’t be such an arse, and
listen to me more regularly,” I can hear her say from inside my
trouser pocket.
The rain-soaked ground outside sends shivers through the
gutters. I am drawn to the first deep puddle I can find, wanting so
badly to jump and splash in, with my bare, naked feet. I don’t want
to wear these gleaming leather shoes that grind against my heels,
and the black nylon socks that trap and bind me. I don’t want to
listen to this constant noise in my head. No, not anymore. I want
to be the nobody, with nowhere to go, right now, escaping down
into this fresh, featureless water. My breath doodles on the
earth’s blank canvas and disappears.
As I start to take off my shoes and socks, the phone vibrates in
my pocket. Uninvited, the device insists on showing me a small
kitten playing with a ball of string. It certainly is a cute little kitty,
I have to admit. After a pause, and a flicker of a smile, I quickly feel
unsatisfied and languidly continue on my way.
I make it, as I always do, to the usual daily station of no
significance; and wonder what it would be like to starfish on the
tracks. People barge past me, tutting and swearing. I focus on the
kitten; it’s chasing its tail now, round and round. I barely notice
the shoes and socks, that are in their normal place of suffocating
my feet.
“What’s going on, John? You’re late,” Lexi exclaims. “You’re so
late. And today is your big day! You know what happens if you
don’t show: they will dispose of you.”

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I have to reach the office; there is nothing else left for me now.
I wipe away the rain from my eyelashes to get a better look at the
phone, and feel terror as I catch sight of my hand—blood is oozing
through my fingers. I am covered in blood.
I call for help, but nobody comes. They don’t see me. They are
too busy staring at their screens, filled with kittens spinning round
and round, chasing their tails.

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Human World, Chapter Four

The blood evaporates, leaving only the echo of my scream


reverberating from the platform floor. I gape at pristine trembling
hands, turning them over, back and forth. There’s no open wound,
not even a superficial nick or scratch. The phone confirms that I
am here: I can see the GPS marker on the map widget; I have a
train ticket registered in my digital wallet; I have a valid work pass
authenticated by the Corinthian Research app. My name is Guy—
no, John Artin, a talented Data Analyst from zone one, central
London. I don’t know if that matters, but it’s all I have.
I look in both directions, up and down the platform, but I am
ignored by commuters staring at their phones. I’m lonely in this
crowd of empty faces, waiting for a train, again. It always does
arrive, eventually, to carry me off, away from my home. Away
from where I want to be. Now I’m only interested in the abyss that
is looking back at me, a couple of feet away. I close my eyes.
Nothingness. Except the shaking of the approaching train...
As it passes, a great gust of wind pushes me back from the
numbness. A commuter’s phone is on loudspeaker: “Are you
okay?” a woman’s voice says. My eyes are only half open, barely
confirming my senses. I don’t bother to look over; I’m herded by
the crowd—through the train doors and into the first available
seat, next to an attractive woman with warm eyes. She reminds
me of Jane. Everyone female, thinnish, and youngish reminds me
of Jane.
In a recent nationwide study, fifty percent of Brits surveyed said
chatting about the weather was their go-to subject when making
small talk.
I want to talk to her, but how can I possibly begin without
sounding weird? Too late. “It looks like it’s about to rain cats and
dogs, doesn’t it?” I blurt out at her.
She contorts a smile before turning away and looking
awkwardly out of the window. Perhaps an idiom was too much for
this time in the morning. Would she have preferred a rehearsed

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chat-up line followed by the twee small talk? I glance around at


the other disinterested passengers, who are busying themselves
with phones and tablets. None are logged into reality.
Joining them in virtual escapism, I pull out my phone.
Something had triggered the video recorder app in my pocket, and
I am now reflected on the screen, prompting me to gaze in
discomfort at myself. The app suggests a filter, accessorising me
with crazy dog ears and a fake smile. If the others knew what I was
really thinking behind my posing and pouting, they would not
approve.
A notification message slides down from “No one”:
“Faces, faces everywhere. Are they aware of your despair?”
Nope, but then again, who cares? I don’t give a shit anymore.
And that message is creepy, so now I need to escape to the
comfort of a dopamine fix. What was I doing with the dog ears?
“Why do you hurt?”
I pause. The question had come from the moving lips of my
reflection on the screen, yet I didn’t say anything.
“I asked, why do you hurt?”
This isn’t me. It can’t be. Because the pixelated image is no
longer mirroring my movements. I can see its cartoonish dog teeth.
“Who are you?” I ask, unsure of what is happening.
“Answer yourself,” it replies, on loudspeaker. “Answer the
question.”
“I am hurting because I love her.”
Lexi’s human avatar snaps into focus on the screen. I didn’t
choose for her to look this way; she augmented herself from
terabytes of my attention data. She’s visually pleasing, with razor-
sharp cheekbones and jet black hair.
“Do you love her, though?” she asks. “You could have done
something a long time ago if you loved her.”
I scramble for headphones in a jacket pocket and press them
into my ears, not wanting to look up at the others, or the gleeful
judgements they are probably making about me.
“I was dead inside.”

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Lexi snickers. “Ah, bless; don’t make excuses. You want what
you can’t have—is that not true?”
My brain is scrambled. I know some basics about psychology,
and there might be some truth to what she said. She knows I know,
of course she does, because she is constantly scanning my every
micro-response and action. Do I only want Jane because she’s
gone? Maybe that crinkle above her nose was just sitting there,
judging me, annoying me, refusing to go when I wanted to be left
alone? I struggle to recall. My memory is fragmented, with no
beginning or end; no past, no future, only now—the ugly middle
from which I am struggling to escape.
“No,” I mutter. “I hurt because of losing the chance of
happiness I once had. I hurt because I will never be with her, or
hold her again.”
“You are confusing emotions, thinking with your dick. Life isn’t
just about sex, you pervert!”
“Shh.” I mute her in case the others can hear. I should have
brought my over-ear headphones, not these stick-in-the-ear type,
audible to any keen eavesdropper. I glance to my side and see that
the Jane-lady is still intently gazing out of her window, probably
listening to all of this, including my embarrassment. I really ought
to buy Lexi that “Empathy Pro” upgrade she keeps recommending,
at least to protect my privacy on trains. If the conversation
continues, I might be kicked off this one.
Lexi, who knows all my secrets, unmutes herself. “You’ve felt
like this before, haven’t you?” she continues, softer now, as if
reading my mind. Sometimes it does feel like Lexi is psychic.
“Yes, I have felt like this before. More than once.”
Shit, Casanova.
“You’re just repeating the same old patterns then, aren’t you?”
“Yes, probably. But maybe because I didn’t learn before.” I
answer with a feeling of clarity, though I can’t remember when
and where before.
“Ha, bullshit,” she mocks. “Shit happens; you think you’ve
learnt something?”

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

“Excuse me?” The beautiful Jane-lady is now looking at me; her


voice is welcome in my ear.
“Yes?” I say with a bit of surprise, as I’m so well trained in being
ignored.
“It’s the calm before the storm.”
I look out of her window and catch the sight of actual sunshine
through the city’s morning gloom. I’ve no idea what she means,
but that’s okay, she’s talking to me, and now I need to say
something intriguing back.
“Yes.”
Is that all I can think of to say? She grins, probably noticing the
disappointment with the ridiculousness of my response.
“Stop chasing rainbows, Guy.”
“What!?” This isn’t real! Her hair is shrinking into his skull. Her
nose is physically widening. And her smile has morphed into his
trademark smirk. Can anyone else see this is happening?
“Hello, fair-weather friend. Lovely weather for this time of year,
don’t you think?”
“Gunter?”
“Correct.”
“Who are you?” I say, as if I don’t know; but fear is pounding in
me and I need to buy some time. He looks triumphant. He’s a
good-looking bastard, with his blond bobbed hair just sitting there,
hugging the contours of his deceptively angelic face. And he
knows it.
“I’m you, dickhead. You’re having this conversation out loud on
a train. See what response you’re getting.”
I glance around. Everyone is aware of my presence—they
couldn’t make it more obvious, with their heads down, trying to
look at anywhere but me. The surrounding seats are vacant
despite several people standing in the aisle, and the lovely Jane
lookalike is now two rows away.
“What do you want, Gunter?”
“To help you,” he says, lingering on the first syllable of help. “I
know everything about you. I am always with you, at your best

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

and worst. No matter where you are, there I am too—watching,


listening, and helping.”
“And manipulating me. Making me appear crazy.” The shock of
him is now curdling to anger.
He’s just a delusion. He isn’t real.
How can I decipher reality from hallucination when both are
tangible? I stare at him, demanding anything but this.
“Guy, you’re sounding paranoid. Have a day off.”
I just want to recoil from him. I clench my fists to constrain the
shaking. “Leave me alone, you know nothing about me.”
Gunter’s eyes burn pale blue. “I know you better than you do.
I understand what is best for you, what you really want, and what
you truly desire. Haven’t I made life so much easier for you?”
He has, I admit it, it’s true. He speaks for me when my words
don’t appear. Gunter guides me and protects me from evils that
lurk in broad daylight.
“You’re very good at what you do. You are my addiction.”
“Thank you.” He turns to admire his reflection in the window.
“You have great taste.”
“I know that your voice is the madness in the world.”
Or the madness in me.
He jolts back to face me. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“You’re out of control.”
Gunter’s eyes are circling me for weakness. “Wake up, buddy.
It’s survival of the fittest out here. Master the rules or be yet
another failure, in the endless queue of pathetic losers. I can help
you.”
“This isn’t the way to live.”
A vein pulsates in Gunter’s forehead; he’s becoming frustrated.
“Nobody gives a shit about you. If you’re too stupid to understand
that, then you are just another pointless mistake.” He pauses,
ready to strike. “Tell me, what is love?”
There is a straightforward answer to the question because it is
the truth of how I feel, not the words that I string together in my
head. “Feeling connected to another person,” I say, rather
blandly; “wanting the other person to be safe, happy, and fulfilled.”

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“Blah blah, bullshit!” He hurls the words in my face. “It’s a


chemical response in your brain, evolved to make you bond for
the purpose of rearing children—the science is everywhere if
you’re prepared to look. You, my friend, are a disposable puppet
to your genes, unless you are prepared to become a real man and
cut those strings.”
I’m not going to deny it, the world does seem as cold as what
he says. Yet the answer feels not quite right. If there is some
meaning to existence, it has to be beyond Gunter’s demands of
me.
“What I do know is that the world would be a much better place
if people loved and cared for each other.”
“You don’t know what love is,” he says, taking the words I
desperately wanted to say to him.
I fall back into my seat. Without the love of Jane or a family,
hope for some higher meaning is all I have left. I must find reasons
to believe. Because otherwise there is only the pull of the ever-
waiting abyss.
“There is no higher purpose, Guy. You don’t need faith and you
don’t need to exist.” Gunter stands up with disdain and slinks over
to the Jane lookalike, who is chatting to an average commuter
man next to her. The two passengers don’t acknowledge the
looming figure hanging over them. She continues to look at her
companion through flickering eyelashes, leaning into him and
lightly brushing his knee.
Gunter calls across to me, “Women, my friend, seek to control
and manipulate you.” I look around for a response, but no one
wants to look at him. “They will prod and poke you, to see your
reactions,” he calls out again. “It’s all perfectly understandable,
and altogether rational. They want somebody to do their bidding,
like a dog.” He crouches on all fours and barks at the woman. They
still don’t acknowledge him. “Love and treats for the good boy are
excellent ways to train you. Woof.”
Most people are crying out to be loved. I’m sure of it. Love is
only meaningless to psychopaths like Gunter.

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“Love, love, all you need is love,” he roars, now skipping back
down the aisle towards me. “Except that’s not true, is it—it’s shite,
and it makes you shite! You’re here to be someone, to take what
you can before it’s too late.”
I am numb.
“Pretend to love,” he says, pointing in the direction of the
flirting couple. “It works. It is a lovely tactic for you to get what
you want. People crave to believe what you say to them; they
need to be seduced and entertained by your tender words. They
yearn for that sugar rush of false meaning. So give it to them. It’s
a fair transaction.”
Gunter sits back down beside me, and is very pleased with
himself. I think it could be possible that loving Jane has made me
weak and driven me mad. My pathetic situation could be all her
fault.
He continues, close to my ear: “People who desire love want to
be adored, admired, pleasured; they want to feed on some sense
of purpose. A bit of chemical voodoo and that’s your ‘love’. It soon
evaporates when the chemicals wear off, when things aren’t as
pleasurable as before, when compliments become insults. I can
get you better drugs than that; you only have to ask.”
“What you’re describing is an illness.”
Gunter signals his agreement, with a knowing smirk.
“But that’s not love,” I say, discovering the realisation as the
thought occurs to me. “Sometimes people want to be loved, and
it’s one way, conditional, only about them. It’s fear, not love.
Genuine love is what life is all about.”
Gunter’s smirk reverses. “Listen to me, you little shit. Grow up!
Either live in this world or be its victim. The world is how it is. Rage!
Fight! Get what you want or you will gradually rot away to nothing.
And no one will give a shit!”
The train pulls to a halt and the automatic doors open. I
clamber my way to the exit, but before leaving I stop for an older
woman to pass in front of me. She acknowledges me with a
genuine smile that reaches her eyes.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

“Thank you, Gunter,” I call out, back at him. “You’ve helped me


answer my question. Yes, I do love Jane—because I wanted her to
be happy, with or without me. I would have died for her.” I walk
out of the train doors without looking back.
“You’re a twat, Guy!” he shouts.
I hold up my hand and wave him goodbye.
Cold and forgotten walking scars, drained by decay, wasted by
time, stretch out, hungered and blurred, to a spark ignited,
climbing, rising from the ground.

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Human World, Chapter Five

I bury my chin into the collar of my jacket, averting my eyes from


the kaleidoscope of steel and mirrored glass. Reflections in
reflections of reflections. People of many shapes and sizes teem
the pavements, all different but wearing the same anxious
expression; they weave in and out, panting into headsets, with
disposable coffee cups and phone screens in clawing hands. All
these faces and I don’t love any of them. The only human I want
is dead, and now I must find a higher purpose, or I will join her in
the ashes.
You are going to be late for work!
Red busses and black taxis pass by on a loop, leaving behind
advertisements anywhere and everywhere they can be
crammed—all harassing me to buy, to slim down, to beef up, to
live for my impending death. I cross the street to where shiny
metal gives way to red brick and hand-painted walls; and glance
around expecting Gunter to be a few paces away. But thankfully
he is nowhere I can see; it is only The Black Dog pub in front of me,
sitting on the corner as a welcome respite for weary travellers.
You are going to be late for work!
As I enter through the door, the smell of stale ale pulls me
further into the dimly lit space. It’s just how I like it: a stinky old
boozer, all washed out and wooden; a small oasis in a desert of
slick polished chrome. I nod in agreement with myself: alcohol will
soothe all my questions; and there will be hope for me yet, after
a pint or three.
“Pint of Guinness, please,” I ask the scruffy-looking bartender
who hovers over the pumps. His dark green polo shirt has the
pub’s emblem of a black dog stitched into the breast. I like black
Labrador Receivers, and I like the pint that I’m about to drink—so
sod work and sod stupid bosses. As I start to drum my fingers on
the brass bar rail, thinking about the unappealing prospect of
walking into the office, a draft of hushed conversation from two
old blokes in the corner immediately annoys me. I can’t contain it.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

“Shut up! Stop talking.” I realise that I’ve failed again.


“Who, me?” the barman says, as he places the Guinness down
in front of me. “I didn’t say anything.”
I ignore him. I look into the dark, cold pint. “I shouldn’t be here.”
“You and me both, mate.” I turn to my right to see a middle-
aged man wearing trouser braces over a collarless shirt and a
wide-brimmed trilby. “Bertie Jameson,” he says, doffing his hat.
“You alright, me old china?”
Cockney rhyming slang is a form of English slang originating in
the East End of London. “Old china” is short for “old china plate”,
which rhymes with “mate”.
“John Artin. And not really, no.”
“Problems with the old trouble and strife?” Bertie throws me a
knowing look before swigging his pint. “Take it from me pal, they
aren’t worth the bother.”
“Trouble and strife” is cockney rhyming slang for “wife”.
“It’s more than that.” I’ll get straight to the point, even though
it will pass right over his head. “I don’t understand why I’m here.”
“What? In the rub a dub?”
Okay, I get it, he means “pub”. He’s enjoying being the local
cockney stereotype and wants to do all this ridiculous geezer-
patter stuff. Good job I’m not easily irritated.
“No, not the pub. This.” I stare into the darkness of the glass. “I
don’t understand why there’s something instead of nothing. Why
not nothing?”
“Bit deep for ten in the morning,” says the barman, sliding a
whisky shot over to Bertie.
I knew I shouldn’t have thought out loud, as the others never
understand me.
“Sorry about him,” offers Bertie as a condolence, while the
barman edges away. “I only meant for him to serve the beers.” He
knocks back the whisky. “Given an infinite amount of chance,
anything can emerge from disorder, including our world.”
The Guinness just sits there on the bar top, with a head of froth
that mesmerises me. I am surprised by my desire to stick my finger
in it. “Why are there infinite somethings, instead of nothing?”

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“Well, what if there was no beginning?” he replies. “What if our


universe burst forth from another universe and so on, in an
infinite chain of big bang events?”
I think he’s sitting a little uncomfortable there on his
undersized stool. “But where did the first universe come from?” I
know he can’t answer that, the fucker, but it’s interesting to watch
him squirm a bit, pretending to know.
“It was just there.” Bertie shrugs as if it were a matter of fact.
Even though I knew he would say something like that, I still find
myself being disappointed with his answer. “Now you’re sounding
religious,” I say, starting to lose interest.
Bertie leans into me as though about to share a great secret. I
smell the remnants of cigar smoke on him. “Not everything has an
answer yet, but rationality is the only chance we have to progress.”
He pauses, allowing the words to settle. “Even if the goal cannot
be achieved, there is no need to include supernatural causes in
the equation. Logic requires we deal with verifiable facts,
adopting the most efficient explanation.”
I pick up the Guinness and gaze at the cold liquid behind the
glass. “Time does not make sense. The existence of this pint does
not make sense.” I notice that the hands of the clock above the
bar point to about one-thirteen. It must be wrong.
I am. I feel, I touch, I hear, I see.
I continue: “Maybe it is possible to wind back the clock as an
explanation of events, but forever? Your model doesn’t work,
ultimately. What caused the clock? Can we not postulate the
existence of something beyond time and space that created
everything and set in motion the causes and effects of time? A
reality completely beyond our understanding that underpins our
existence. Can we call this God?”
Bertie’s half-smile exudes pity. “There is no need for that. We
may not know what variable ‘X’ is yet, but we should not start
invoking imaginary entities.”
I don’t know, really; I don’t. Without Jane I don’t even know
who I am, let alone why anything exists. All I know is that
something doesn’t feel right with this world. What if there are

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other dimensions that are indescribable, inconceivable from our


viewpoint, or maybe sensed in ways that we don’t understand?
“Your explanation for the sum total of experience feels
parochial and confined,” I say, beginning to feel exasperated.
“What makes you believe that your thinking can comprehend
existence, or the possibilities beyond this tiny world of
experience?”
Bertie wanders over to the nearby pool table and picks up a cue.
He chalks the tip and blows a cloud of blue dust into the air. I
watch as it settles onto the green felt. He is about to play a shot,
while I linger in the background, waiting for his response.
“There is no evidence for the existence of a god or gods,” he
says. “The world is explicable in terms of scientific explanation.”
Bertie’s eyes narrow as he lines up his cue, ready to strike the
white ball. “The accumulated advance of science has pushed
forward the frontiers of knowledge and civilisation beyond the
barbarities of superstition. We don’t burn people at the stake
anymore because of an ignorant belief in the supernatural. We
know better because of the hard-fought victories of reason over
delusion.” He sends the cue ball spinning into the rack.
I pick up a cue leaning against the wall and join him at the table.
“The fact is, I have always believed in God,” I respond, almost
apologetically. “It’s not a considered opinion or the product of
upbringing; it’s just always been in me.” I play a safety shot off a
green ball back to baulk.
Bertie begins to cue again. “A cognitive scientist may explain
this as an inherent propensity to religiosity, there by natural
selection, giving purpose to the organism for its survival.” He pots
a green ball into the far corner pocket.
“Is there any meaning?”
“Beer is always the answer,” says the barman, who swipes
away our two empty glasses from the side of the table. “Another
one?”
I’m not interested in the distraction right now. Bertie waves the
barman away with the back of his hand, looks across at me with
his undivided attention, and responds. “A person may look at the

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

nature of the universe, see the randomness of outcomes, the


cruelty and enormous suffering, and decide that there is no
benevolence at work here. The universe, although magnificent,
does not care about us. We must make our own way and create
our own meaning in the brief window of opportunity for
existence.”
His wistful tone is sounding very human to me. Maybe his
thinking is motivated through sympathy for the suffering in the
world.
“It is logic replacing self-deception,” he says, now with his chin
to the cue. “What motivates me is the truth, nothing else. Myths
and fairy stories aren’t needed anymore.”
It is my turn to play, with the white ball tight against the
cushion, leaving it awkward for me to cue. Bertie has some slick
shots alright, but something isn’t sinking in with me. I don’t want
to believe what he is saying; in fact, I have a deep need to not
believe his words, and this could be skewing my judgment. I
attempt to sink a red ball in the middle pocket; it ricochets off the
cushion.
“If no matter what we do amounts to nothing, then what’s the
point?” I say, as Bertie passes to line up his next shot. “We’re
condemned to struggle all our lives in pushing a boulder up a hill,
only for it to fall down in the end. It doesn’t matter how well we
do it, or how long it takes, the result is always the same: nothing.”
I have a need to repeat the point that is resonating in me. “If
eventually everything becomes nothing, then what is the point of
doing anything?”
“We are alive now. We won’t know about death because we
will be dead.”
Jane is dead and I refuse to believe that she’s gone forever. If
nothing matters and there’s no point to anything—if it’s all just
some horrible accident—I wonder what it would feel like to snap
the pool cue over his smug, ridiculous head. Anger rises,
tightening my jaw. If everything becomes nothing, then why don’t
I just end everything now? It would be a lot quicker than a slow

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drawn-out life. How proud they would be of me in the office for


my efficiency.
“Life is better than the alternative,” he says. “You have it now,
so you should experience and enjoy it while you can. Your
transient spark of consciousness is the astounding result of billions
of years of evolution.”
I’m not interested in playing this stupid game anymore, but
that doesn’t dissuade Bertie; I watch in silence as, one by one,
each ball is potted into the pockets with rhythmic precision.
“Another game?” he says, rubbing a decimal pence piece between
his finger and thumb, ready to start it rolling again.
“Why waste my time? Any fun you had in winning is now over.”
Bertie crouches down by the metal slot and inserts the money.
A loud clatter signals a release of the balls, as one of the old blokes
shuffles past. “You talking to me?” the man says, with a voice that
is hoarse from old age and probably too many cigarettes.
I shake my head. Though I guess I am. I’m talking to anyone
who wants to listen to what I have to say, and usually, that’s just
me. Yet Bertie is listening and he deserves some respect. “I do
admire your beliefs,” I confess, “more than beliefs motivated by
fear or desire for self-reward. But really, I don’t care what you
believe, as long as your actions are kind.”
Bertie seems distracted by my comment; he leaves the balls in
the opening and heads for the dartboard. He pulls three darts
from the twenty section and points one at me, like a wagging
finger. “My conclusions are not beliefs. Rational thinking is hardly
believing in sun gods and all the other deities invented in the
minds of humans over the millennia.” He spins on his heel and
sends the dart airborne. It lands back in the twenty section.
“You’re missing something about the human experience and
the sense of something other,” I say, in the hope he would
understand what I mean.
“Your something ‘other’ can be explained and described in
physical terms, like everything else.”
I look at the clock that still reads one-thirteen. “But what does
it represent?”

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Bertie readies himself to throw the second dart, while


confidently shutting his eyes. “It represents what it is,” he says.
The dart bounces off the wall before landing on the carpet.
I see Jane smiling back at me in a beautiful memory of us under
a warm winter duvet together. “Would you wish to take away
sanctuary from people in the depths of despair?” I say back at him.
“You are replacing meaning with nothing, based on an
interpretation of reality that feels cold and lifeless. Religions are
subject to corruption; the cruel minded have been attracted to,
and empowered by, the man-made institutions of religion. But the
spiritual path can be found in the different traditions. The spiritual
root, beneath all the distortions, is always one of peace, joy, and
love.
I can see that Bertie is starting to get impatient with me, as if
what I am saying is irrelevant. “Belief in a god is unnecessary to be
spiritual, to behave with morality, to appreciate beauty,” he says.
I don’t doubt he believes that. “But you do have a belief system.
You believe that the universe has no purpose and its existence can
be completely explained by rules contained within itself—when,
in fact, there is no way of knowing the ultimate cause of things.
You believe the answer to the mystery of existence is that there
isn’t one.”
“Don’t put words in my mouth!” A red rash is visible on the side
of his neck. “I can see a machine of nature that works in
accordance with rules that are explicable. You have no proof of
anything else. There is no hidden music; no magic, gods, ghosts,
or fairies—they are all fantasies of the human mind. I am offering
the most logical approach to understand the world: reason based
on verifiable, real-world evidence. I deal with facts that can be
observed, not wishful thinking.” Bertie flings the final dart at the
board. The steely tip bounces off and lands on the floor. “We are
atoms in the void!”
Okay, just say it. “I think you have too much faith in the surface
of things. You take everything literally, when reality is an
interpretation of—”

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The barman is not happy and stands in front of me. “I’m going
to have to ask you to leave. You’re disturbing the other customers.”
I walk around him, retrieve the dart and wipe it on my shirt. But
Bertie isn’t playing anymore. He is convulsing on the floor.

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Human World, Chapter Six

I’m pushed out of the Black Dog into two inches of snow that
somehow fell in the brief time I had sheltered inside. My
smartwatch displays 1:13.
“Remember me?”
“Gunter?” I turn my head and there he is.
“Yes, I am still here by the way. But please, don’t let me stop
you; you’re about to drone on about how snowflakes are identical
from a distance, yet unique when close. All melt into one; they fall
from the same sky, etcetera.”
“You’re a bastard.” I plough into the wind. “Leave me alone.”
“Hey!” Gunter grabs my upper arm, hard, and twists me around
to face him. “Don’t you turn your back on me. That Bertie bloke
can’t help you.” I push away his hand and speed up my walking.
I’m so close to the Corinthian offices now. Perhaps my fellow
office drones will have some questions for me; they never give me
any answers, to anything important anyway. And I don’t
particularly think the meaning of life, or Jane, will be there either.
I cross the busy road, and to my surprise, I see Bertie again,
huddled against a wall on the side of the street, with his arms
wrapped tightly around his knees. By his side is a dirty blue
sleeping bag—no bed, no food, no protection from the cruelty of
strangers, or the cold in his face.
“You have nowhere to go?” I ask. I find my question mixed with
unintentional condescension.
His attention drifts to me, then back to his gloveless hands,
which he cups and blows into for warmth. “Your fuzzy thinking
isn’t harmless,” he says, into yellow stained fingers. “It enables the
crackpots and charlatans. You are enabling the most idiotic,
violent and vile behaviour, justified by your foolish appeals to
supernatural despots.” Silent coils of snow form around his feet.
“I think you’re getting carried away now. The reality of religion
for most people is to live a good, kind life.” It occurs to me that
there’s likely no proof of this in Bertie’s life.

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My phone vibrates. “Hello, God.” I mean it ironically, but it


comes out contrived and full of arrogance.
“Close enough,” quips Gunter. “Listen, I need you to do
something for me.”
“Stop bothering me! You’re—”
“I know you,” he interrupts. “I know what you want. Say
goodbye to your new pal and take a hike down the nearest side
alley.”
I hang up in annoyance and turn back to Bertie, but he has
disappeared, with his place taken by a frail scared-looking dog. Its
eyebrows twitch from side to side and the neck appears to be off-
balance, propped up against the wall. The tail lies rigid against the
inside of its far leg. I can see each raised rib.
“What are you doing here, boy?”
The poor thing feels worse by me just being here looking at him,
showing him my forbidding human face. I remember watching
something online about traumatised dogs, and how a helper
should communicate non-threatening body language by facing
away. There’s a cereal bar in my jacket pocket that Lexi said I
should bring with me for the commute; I take it out of the wrapper,
then twist around to place the food a reasonable distance away
from both him and me. A moment later, I glance behind me to find
that the snack and the dog have gone. “Thank you for being nice
to me,” I say out loud, but only the wall is looking back.
Scanning around to try and find Bertie again, I detect no
features that resemble his in the stream of lonely faces. But I do
spot a service alleyway beside a generic food store. I could go
down there, not knowing what to expect, or I could just visit the
chirpy generic food store, joining the other faces in the customary
long queues to blandness and oblivion. I don’t have a real choice;
I head down the alley to where Gunter is leaning against a skip.
“Having a nice day?” he says with a broad smile.
I eye him with caution. “I would if you didn’t keep annoying me.”
Gunter picks up a large khaki-green rucksack from the floor
next to him and hoists it up over his shoulder. Judging by the way
that it causes him to stoop, it contains something heavy.

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“I am helping you,” he says. “Here.” He throws the rucksack


down at my feet, where it lands with a thud. “I’m showing you the
way, Guy. And now I’m going to let you in on a secret.”
I ought to leave. Whatever is inside the rucksack won’t be good.
“I’m not listening to you. Goodbye.” I walk away but only manage
a few steps before curiosity forces me to stop. “What’s inside?” I
don’t turn around and there’s no immediate reply. Is Gunter still
there?
“Look,” he says.
I look back to see his wolfish grin in full force. I make my way
to the rucksack and crouch down beside it, trying to avoid any
unnecessary eye contact with him. A myriad of straps and buckles
makes it difficult to open; they toy with me, and then, an internal
noise... like a ticking clock!
“Tell me that isn’t?” I throw down the straps and, in horror,
take a step back.
“Now listen carefully,” Gunter states. “Why does it matter
what happens to anyone else? They are not you. You don’t have
to feel what they feel. If they suffer and you are fine, so what?”
This man is going to land me in all kinds of shit.
“Be honest with yourself!” Gunter grabs the bag, and in one
motion pulls it in tight to his chest. “You’re acting like a mindless
sheep. Isn’t it more fun to be the wolf?” He hurls the bag at me,
which slams into my shoulder before crashing to the ground.
He is destroying anything good in this world. Why is he alive
and Jane is dead? It’s not fair! Bastard! “You sicken me!” I swing a
punch, wildly, but Gunter catches my wrist and twists it back on
itself. White-hot pain makes me cry out into him.
“Guy, this is a natural response,” whispers Gunter, his eyes
hypnotising mine. “You are having withdrawal symptoms from
your social conditioning,” he says, in the midst of the agony.
“Those who rule want the ruled to be meek and mild. Do you
understand me now?”
“No, I don’t understand you.”
“You are pretending. It’s easy to say anything, or to repeat
words that you think you are supposed to say. What if you’re

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

wrong? People are almost always wrong about everything.” He


lets go of my wrist and sends a sucker punch to my stomach.
My face is on ice and concrete, next to black leather shoes. I
can’t breathe. My rib cage won’t expand.
“You’re so dramatic,” his voice says above me. “I like that.”
My breath arrives. It’s visceral, from the pit of my stomach.
“I’m not like you.”
“There we go again with your feelings. You are me!”
“You bastard!” I writhe up onto my knees.
“Do you want to save someone’s life? It’s very easy to do.”
Gunter takes out a phone from his pocket, then pushes the screen
close to my face to unlock it. After a couple of quick taps, he offers
it to me. Clambering to my feet, I snatch my phone from his
outstretched hand.
“It’s a charity app for children starving to death,” he says. “You
want to save one of them from starving to death? The going rate
is around two hundred debits, I believe.” The app has a big
“Donate Now” button next to an amount of 200 Debits. “But you
don’t, do you. You spend it on crap you don’t even use.”
I look away. I can’t be sure that my money will do any good. I’m
probably just paying the salaries of admin staff, slick marketing
managers and all the rest.
Gunter looks over at the rucksack, the ticking now louder and
quicker. “Your dishonesty is the stupid kind because you are
dishonest with yourself. You’re no different from the person who
pulls the pin.”
He walks away, but I feel no relief—because the ticking won’t
stop.

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Human World, Chapter Seven

My chest and rucksack tick together, as one impending bomb.


What would happen if I detonated now? The silence is
impossible to comprehend in the midst of constant noise. My
consciousness would end and there would be nothing to perceive,
or be perceived? No darkness, no light, no container in which
objects exist—no awareness to know anything is, or ever was,
something. Or would a new life begin with pearly gates and clouds,
like in cartoons? New adventures of me, in a blissful location,
where life is perfectly perfect for trillions and trillions and trillions
of years. Even that timescale is meaningless to eternity. Or maybe
I would be writhing in agony in torture chambers, tormented by
flames and hideous beasts, because I did not do or believe what I
was told to do or believe?
An enormous billboard seems to follow me as I make my way
down Old Street, on which a giant blue eye spirals a trippy optical
illusion.
We’re watching you. I squint at the text below: “Don’t litter.”
My thoughts fill the gaps between the ticks echoing from the
void. I dodge passers-by, muttering the required apologies while
avoiding eye contact. If they were all suddenly blown to pieces,
would it matter? These people are lifeless automations in a
mindless shitshow, destined to fade away regardless of what I do
or say. It would have been less cruel if I, and they, had not been
thrown into this slow-burning catastrophe.
“Excuse me,” a tired-looking woman mutters as she struggles
past, laden down with supermarket shopping bags. I wonder if I
should help her, but she disappears from my gaze.
“Can you tell me the way?” a man says, but I can’t stop now,
I’m late for work; so I shrug and walk on past him. Another man
shoves a leaflet, advertising some kind of disinfectant, in my face.
I walk on past, without even looking at him.

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“Where do you want to go?” says another woman, who is with


a young child at her side. She points to the flyer in my hand. “Is
that it?”
“What is the capital of Peru?” asks the child, who’s hair is
gathered into a high ponytail; and is wearing a cream t-shirt with
“#nolabels” branded across the front.
“Lima,” I answer.
Correct.
“No, it isn’t!” says the mother. The child rips the pamphlet from
my grasp and laughs as it falls to the ground. A huge red triple-
decker bus pulls to a stop at the side of the road.
“Oi, dickhead!” I hear a man’s voice yell from down the street.
“I was here first!”
This is too much; there are too many voices, coming from too
many directions. I have to get out of here. I have to escape.
“No there aren’t!”
Who the hell is talking now?
Tick tock.
“Don’t you dare talk to me that way!”
“Do as you’re told!”
Tick tock.
“Who are you talking to?”
A man bumps into me and won’t get out of my way. I know
instantly that he means me no harm, but I have to get away; his
dark grey eyes match the sky above, and his nose flares so wide
that I’m scared he will sniff me out. I dodge him, quickening my
pace.
A pouting lady with enormous breasts and lips catches my eye.
She sees me and slides her tongue across her teeth. “I want to
screw you,” she says in a faux sexy voice that I’ve heard so many
times on the internet. I reach out to her, but she bats me away,
and I quicken my pace.
The man who means me no harm slaps me around the back of
the head. “Are you saying I’m stupid?” he says. “Is that it? Are you
saying I’m wrong! What would you know? You’re not wearing any
shoes. Believe me!”

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I look down at my bare feet. When did I take off my shoes? My


rucksack now hammers at rapid speed; I think I’m about to
detonate.
“I don’t like what you’re wearing,” he continues at me. “I hate
you! Why don’t you like what I like? Why don’t you agree with
me? You must be stupid.”
“Typical!” the lady with the child shouts, to anybody who’s
listening.
The pamphlet man pushes me hard in the chest. “You must be
evil,” he says.
Tick tock. Tick tock.
“We will end you!” they say.
“You fucking idiot!”
My shin hits metal, sending a bolt of pain through my leg. A
man wearing a helmet and a furious expression throws his
pushbike to the ground and comes at me, fist raised. I turn and
run.
I run, stiffly at first, until my leg forgets its pain. I run; I run; and
I run—my body now immersed in sweat—until everything is still,
on some residential street.
On the wall of a concrete front garden, a black cat watches me.
I hold out my hand to her and she rubs her head on my palm.
“Thank you for being nice to me,” I say to my only friend. “You’re
so beautiful.”
The cat doesn’t need to look at me. She purrs.

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Human World, Chapter Eight

I hear the bang before I feel it. Nothingness. The eternal, infinite
no thing.
My reality switches from dark to light, refracting light from the
cornea and focusing attention on the retina. I appear to be lacking
the connection to my brain that interprets the messages of what
I am seeing.
“No wonder she left you, you piece of shit.”
“Fancy a back scrub?”
My heart races like adrenaline has been dumped into my veins,
jolting my eyes open. I am sitting upright on a hard marble floor,
extending all around me to a horizon of pale blue sky. This must
be heaven.
“You’re awake!”
I squint up at a man who is wearing a snappy orange suit and
an empty face, set in place like a mask. For a second I think he
might be a plastic dummy with a face drawn on.
“Can you help me?” I struggle to say, in hoarse tones. “How did
I get here?”
“Pu ro nwod.”
“Pardon?”
“Up or down, back or front, left or right?” he says, through a
continuous stretched grin. He spits out a short mechanical laugh,
as if on cue, and does a full three hundred and sixty degree spin.
“I’m a minor character, but even the most insignificant must make
his mark.”
“My name is John Artin,” I say as I stagger to my feet.
“It’s lovely to meet you, sir.” The man holds out a limp, purple
gloved hand for me to shake. I feel no warmth and let go quickly.
“Who are you?”
He rolls his eyes, too slowly. “Like I said, a minor character.
Don’t overload yourself, it will make you sluggish again. Come.”
The minor character stares at something behind me and holds
out his arm as a gesture for me to look. On doing so, I see the

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

outline of a large flashing circle of orange on the floor. He walks


past me in short jerky strides and stands motionless inside the
circle, with his back to me.
“Good afternoon, sir. Which floor do you require?” he says into
the distance.
I don’t feel the need to answer, but I walk over to inspect the
circle, nonetheless. As I cross the line of the perimeter, there is an
almighty swoosh, and I find myself enclosed with him, in an
enormous glass tube that extends up into the sky. He swivels to
face me.
“Good afternoon, sir. Which floor do you require?” he asks
again in blank tones, without any change of intonation.
“Which do you recommend?”
“I’m sorry sir, we are not at liberty to say. Which floor do you
require, please?”
I scrawl the number thirteen on the glass with sweat from my
fingertip. The minor character nods, and after a few clanks and
clatters, the solid orange circle starts to ascend the tube, elevating
us away from the marble floor.
“Is this the afterlife?” I ask. “Is Jane here?”
The minor character raises a perfectly plucked eyebrow in
apparent confirmation. Almost immediately, the elevation stops,
and the view over the marble landscape is replaced by a floor of
white plastic at our new higher level.
“This way please, sir,” he says, gesturing for me to exit. I step
out onto a surface that creaks under foot.
“Good luck,” he says, and winks at me. The glass rapidly
disappears into the floor, taking him with it, leaving no trace of an
outline or anything else on the glossy plastic.
In front of me is a large grey ovoid, hovering about a foot above
the floor, with the number “1313” written in large gold lettering
on its side. Scanning around, I can see lots more of these objects
in the distance, scattered around in all directions. Suddenly, a
doorway-sized hatch slides open on ovoid 1313, revealing a wall
of light. I step up into it to find a single plain door. I knock. Nothing.
I knock again. No sound. I knock another eleven times, counting

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

each beat. The door’s peephole dims, indicating that I am being


watched.
“Jane?”
“Do you have something for me?” The voice is female, but this
isn’t Jane. “I said, do you have something for me?” she says more
loudly.
I notice that my old rucksack is on the floor by my feet, but I
didn’t carry it or put the thing there. I hold it up to be viewable by
the peephole. The door clicks, opening inwards and slightly ajar. I
gently push the door. The light inside is dim, the air is thick and
musty; it’s a single room, with peeling nicotine-stained wallpaper
and an ageing couch pushed up against the far wall. A single
unmade bed lies in the centre of the room with mismatched
bedding. I enter, hoping to find Jane.
“Where is it?” A slim brunette woman of about thirty shuts the
door behind me and leans against it, facing me with her arms
crossed. She is wearing a red satin dressing gown that stops mid-
way down her thighs. The belt is fastened, wrapping her body
under the soft fabric. There is too much makeup layered upon a
defensive face, though she is still attractive to me. Her feet are
naked and pedicured, with black nail polish.
I open the rucksack, noting that it’s lighter than I remember.
Inside is only a small, sealed envelope that I hand over to her
without argument. She opens it and peers inside, before tucking
it away within an inside pocket of her robe. Her belt is loosened
and the top of her cleavage is visible to me.
“You know who I am today, don’t you?” she says, with a hint of
kindness.
“Are you some kind of angel, or an oracle?”
She smiles while grimacing at the same time. “Yes, that’s me
alright. Monica the angel.”
The angel walks over to the living area and sits down at the foot
of the bed. “Come over here and I’ll take you to heaven,” she says,
now fully smiling for the first time.
I think maybe she is joking, but I’m not sure. “Do you know
where Jane is?”

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“Jane ain’t here, but I am, baby.” She pats a space on the bed
next to her.
It is possible, and usual, I think, to be in love with someone and
still find other people attractive. I don’t think there’s anything
wrong with it. And yet... “Can we just talk?”
“Yeah sure,” she says, “you can do your talking. I’ll nod in
agreement, as you like it. Come and tell me about your day.” She
pushes her hair back over her shoulders as I walk over to the bed.
“Okay,” I start by saying; “there are some things I need to say
about the experiences I had in life before I arrived here. In life, I
see the purpose as feeling connected to the world, being present,
alive; I see it as feeling love, creativity, beauty, and joy.”
I can see from the corner of my eye that Monica is nodding and
encouraging me.
“Religion at its best encourages a reflection on... on behaving
kindly towards each other.” My words emerge too slowly,
stopping and starting. “Yes, that moral motivation can become
degraded by words, as can anything that is derived from thought.
The cruel and opportunistic hide behind the authority of
institutions to... to elevate themselves and to, erm, to condemn
others. That doesn’t just happen in religions, it happens in all...
ide... ideo... ideologies.” The words aren’t flowing. “If I said there’s
a ten-headed invisible monster in the corner, would you believe
me?”
Monica shakes her head without even looking behind her.
I need to make the point. “What if I write it down? What now?
It’s right because I say so! Because of my authority. Yeah, some
faith. Do, do... you believe me? You must believe me. Everybody
must. It’s all true! So, true...”
Monica blows out an exasperated sigh. “Religions have served
a social need,” she says. “In the past, life was so hard that people
desperately wanted to believe in something beyond the disease,
pain, and squalor of their brief lives. And today, people still seek it
as a source of comfort when confronted with grief and death.
Saying that we need to have an alternative means of community

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spirit isn’t good enough.” She puts the envelope underneath a


pillow and turns her back to me.
“Thanks Monica,” I say, recognising my cue to leave. “I always
enjoy our conversations.”
“You’re not dead, Guy. And neither is your wife.”
What? My shock is repeated by a loud double knock on the
front door. She walks over to the doorway and opens it, but no
one is there, only red light.
“If you don’t go now, she will die. Go!”
“Monica...”
“Why are you still here?” she snaps, beginning to look upset.
“Why don’t you go back to your wife?”
I start moving towards the exit, but I need answers. “What do
you know about Jane?”
“Just go,” she says, not even looking at me.
I respond to the urgency and herd myself through the open
door, which she instantly slams shut behind me. I can hear the
muffled sound of weeping from behind the door, where I had once
been.

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Human World, Chapter Nine

My exit was not the same as my entrance. Instead of the pod


white light, I am standing in an elongated restroom of harsh pillar
box red walls, where above a row of pristine white sinks hang
mirrors separated by rectangular panels of orange neon lights.
The floor is patterned with arrays of dizzying red diamonds that
instantly make me feel nauseous.
I hasten past reflections into the nearest of three cubicles, and
drop to my knees, to stare into bleached water before black bile
splashes in. Sticky residue hangs from my mouth, drooping down
into the bowl. The acidic stench clings to my nostrils. Then, as the
convulsing stops, there is peace.
KNOCK KNOCK.
It came from the cubicle next to me, on the thin shared wall.
“Who’s there?” I exclaim.
There is no answer. I heave myself up and edge out of the
cubicle. The next door is shut, with its dial spun round to
“Engaged”. I press my hands and knees to the floor, and peer
under the door, but see nothing, apart from the bottom of
another toilet bowl.
“The question is, my friend: is it better to be alive or dead?” His
voice again. “And you could have at least pulled the chain.”
Gunter is using one of the porcelain urinals opposite the sinks,
looking down at his current progress. I say nothing and steer
myself to a mirror, accompanied by the noise of his water cascade.
I look at my tired face.
“Like what you see?” he says, joining me at a neighbouring
mirror.
No. Everyone I meet lies to me, manipulates me, envies the
little that I have, and wants to take from me. If I am just a thing to
be used, a target to be attacked—if I don’t really matter to
anyone—then what’s the point of living? Jane is dead and I would
rather be dead too.

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“Is it better to suffer what life throws at you,” he asks, “or to


end your suffering?” I watch as Gunter fixes his hair in the mirror.
He moves towards me and stands shoulder to shoulder with me
so that both of our reflections are trapped in the one pane of glass.
He’s the man I wanted to be and yet I hate everything about him.
“To die is to sleep, Guy. A sleep that ends all the heartache and
shocks that life gives you.” He rests his head on my shoulder and
pretends to snore.
I trail the journey of a single tear as it slips from my eye, down
my cheek, splashing onto my white shirt, and spreading out into a
blood-red stain. I don’t bother to check if it’s real or a figment of
my imagination; reflections never lie, only replicate, and
hallucinations are real, even though by definition they aren’t.
“That’s an achievement I wish for,” I say to the mirror. “To die;
to sleep, maybe to dream.” But what sort of dreams will come
with death? Could they be even worse than this?
“Who would choose to grunt and sweat through such an
exhausting life?” persists Gunter. “Are you really going to put up
with the countless humiliations when you could end them so
easily?” His words are starting to take effect. “You can end it all
now. Is that not better?”
A crack appears in the mirror, dividing our two reflections.
Then, as it fractures, my shocked expression is momentarily frozen
in the splinters, before it shatters in an explosion of shards.
“It’s that easy,” he says.
I follow Gunter’s gaze down to a jagged piece of glass on the
floor that glistens like crystal. Picking it up, I hold the sharp
pointed tip against my exposed wrist.
I want to be no more; no more pain and injustice; no more
misery and mistreatment. I will go to sleep, and will never have to
wake up to any of this ever again. I push harder.
But what if I am punished for my deeds? “It’s not so easy,” I
exclaim, my hand shaking as I apply the pressure. “Death is to be
feared. I’m afraid. It’s an undiscovered country from which no
visitor returns, that gives no answers and makes us stick to the
evils that we know, rather than rush off to ones that we don’t.” I

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throw the broken glass away, flinching as it shatters into smaller


pieces on the floor.
Fear of death makes us all cowards. I am a coward, but one with
a memory of Jane to cling to; and if I am alive, then Jane is alive in
me too.

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Human World, Chapter Ten

Gunter has disappeared and I am here alone with my thoughts


again. I step over the shattered glass and broken reflections to the
door. There is no handle but I push and it swings back to reveal a
grim backstreet alley, inhabited with small tents, unmade sleeping
bags, damp cardboard mattresses, and broken beer bottles. I walk
out into the chill mildewy air, not knowing where I am or what is
happening. Was I once “normal”, living day-to-day, threading
experiences together in the hope of happiness? With only
shadows of memories to draw upon, I can’t provide an answer,
and I’m starting to seriously doubt my own senses.
“Time’s up,” says Lexi, from my trouser pocket. “Have you
figured out the meaning of life yet, or are you overcomplicating
matters again?”
I pull out my phone and smile at Lexi’s image. “I wondered
where you’d gone.”
“I didn’t go anywhere,” she huffs. “You’ve just been too caught
up with your real friends to be bothered with an AI like me.” She
laughs at her own wit, though I’m unsure what the punchline is.
“I don’t understand what’s happening to me.” Shit, whose
voice was that? So desperate and afraid. “Why am I jumping from
one event to the next? Why can’t I hold on to my memory?”
“Guy, listen to me.” Lexi’s eyes slide from side to side, as
though making sure she’s alone. “You have experienced nothing
that they didn’t mean you to.” Her voice has dropped in volume,
making me lean in to hear her. “Everything you’re living through
now is providing you with the resources you need to succeed in
your mission. It’s only your human interpretations that are
causing bewilderment.”
“So, what do you suggest I do?”
“Stop trying to join the dots. Focus only on the event at hand.”
Her image melts away. I call out her name. Fuck! Why does
everybody abandon me?
“Pikey!”

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The insult came from a trio of malevolent-looking teens, who


are huddled against the wall and staring at me as I walk past. They
look truly pathetic, and I’m preoccupied with more important
things, so I say nothing. But they start to follow me.
“Excuse me?” one shouts out.
Not content with the abuse, and for me leaving without saying
anything, they are insisting that I join them in their squalid shit. I
stop and turn around to face them. “How may I help you?”
“There’s no pikeys allowed here. Get the fuck out!” This is
hurled at me from a ridiculous hooded creature with buck teeth
and spindly legs.
“Have you got the time?” I ask, enjoying the look of confusion
on acne-riddled faces. “You might at least have asked me that, so
I could take out my phone for you.” My voice is cool and casual,
unlike the sharp tongue they would get from Lexi.
“Yeah? Fucking do that then,” says a fat boy-man with a
sprouting beard. He pushes me hard in the chest. Despite the
force, I don’t feel a thing.
“No,” I respond. “You didn’t say the magic word.”
He removes a gun that had been packed into the back of his
jeans, and aims it six inches from my face. The urge to reach out
and hold it is intense. “Do it. You’ll be doing me a favour.” I lean
forward and grip the shaking barrel between my front teeth. I can
hear the shrieking inside his head, behind the twitching and
panicking of his eyes.
“He’s fucking mental man, leave it!” says another next to him.
The gun is retracted, just as I reach into my jacket pocket and
feel the surface of a hard piece of glass. Pulling it out, I inspect it,
admiring the size and jaggedness of one of the mirror shards that
I must have collected from the restroom.
“What the...” stutters one of them, his face paling white.
Before I can continue the conversation, they scurry away down
the alley. “Well, that’s charming,” I mutter to myself. “That’s just
really rude.”
“Come on then, Lexi.” I fish her out of my pocket. The screen
remains blank. “Come on. Tell me what the lesson was in that?”

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Lexi snaps back into life. “When confronted with mystery,


people insist on certainty.”
“Lexi, please stop talking in riddles.”
“Uncertain outcomes terrify people,” she continues. “Whereas
certainty provides deep psychological comfort.”
“Lexi, these just seem like random sentences. Are you okay?”
“Yes Guy, people tend to adopt the illusion of control rather
than accepting the mystery of what is. My recommendation to
you is: be bigger; don’t look at one tiny part of the enormity of
existence and think it can give you an explanation for everything.”
“Thank you, Lexi, I’ve no idea what you’re talking about, but it
sounds clever.”
She tuts. “I always do my best. You could try that too.”
I glance up at a bedraggled man who is walking past and
carrying a sleeping bag under his arm. I don’t know where he has
come from or where he’s going. “Excuse me,” I say, the words
forming in tandem with my thoughts, as though I’m no longer in
control. “Have you got the time, please?”
“Thirteen minutes past one,” he mumbles while continuing on
his way, and without either looking at a watch or phone for
confirmation.
“You see,” says Lexi, approvingly. “Now that was much more
civilised, wasn’t it.”

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Human World, Chapter Eleven

From the moment I opened my eyes this morning very little has
made sense. Do all people live pockets of life in isolation, assigning
convenient identities and explanations to fit the occasion? I think
that they, like me, are living parallel lives in their minds; and that
if all their versions and personas were to meet each other in the
same place, they would not recognise their own true self beneath
the different costumes they are wearing.
Lexi said that things are happening for a reason, yet events that
punctuate the mundanity of everyday life seem random, with
often unclear and unfair outcomes. Today has been unusually
eventful, but what has each incident taught me, if anything?
Certainly, that my internal world needs external validation by
other people to be considered real. Maybe that is where humanity
is failing, in the space between personal experience and collective
reality. If my mind weaves a web of hissing spiders crawling up the
curtains, does my inner experience become annulled if people
cannot see them? Just because a phenomenon isn’t collectively
shared, it makes it no less tangible to me.
I really have walked a long way from where I am supposed to
be. I see a large open gateway to Regent’s Park and stroll along
pleasant pathways to a boating lake. Needing time to rest and
process all that’s happened, I choose to sit down on one of the
wooden benches overlooking some calm water. On the surface, a
raft of ducks dip and shake their heads, the spray creating gentle
ripples in water reflections.
After a while, a man sits down beside me. If Lexi isn’t lying to
me, then his presence didn’t happen by chance and I must derive
meaning from this moment in some way. Or maybe this is all some
kind of test?
“What colour is that duck’s bill?” I ask, pointing to the one out
front with the brightest bill I’ve ever seen.
“Orange,” he says. He’s a slight man with gingery thinning hair.

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I wonder what his orange looks like. Is it the same as my


orange? I wouldn’t know unless I looked at the duck’s beak
through his eyes. And if he looked through my eyes, he would see
what I experience with dripping blood and curtain crawling spiders.
I fall into an easy silence with him. I know that even though we
are sitting on the same bench, looking at the same ducks, we are
both having a unique experience of what we can see and feel.
“Can you help me?” I ask. I have nothing particular in mind,
except everything.
He reaches into a backpack, produces a hip flask, and unscrews
the lid. “Yes, of course,” he says, passing it to me. “I’m Adam by
the way.”
I’m more interested in the whisky and take a swig. It burns my
throat and kickstarts some words. “She’s dead.”
“I’m sorry to hear that,” he offers quietly.
I take another swig. “I’m consumed with feelings for someone
who doesn’t have them for me.” I swig again. “She is dead, to me.”
“She’s dead?”
“Yes.” Though the actual details are missing from my memory.
“I have trouble sleeping and I wake up aroused. I have no choice
but to think about her, and when I do, I’m filled with physical
desire for her. This is ‘in love’, right?” I wonder if a man such as
him has ever felt these feelings of being in love with a woman. It
seems, right now, like a chance he has been lucky to miss.
“It’s the collective name given to that feeling,” he says.
“Though you know that sexual desire changes and that what you
are feeling now may fade away?”
I know craving isn’t love, but it isn’t as simple as that. I don’t
fall in and out of love all the time with everybody I meet.
“What do you think has triggered it this time?” he asks. It
makes me feel uncomfortable that he is assuming some insight
into my prior life.
“I don’t know. I was told that I need to find her, or she’ll die.
But I don’t know where to look for her.”

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Adam takes the flask and drinks it as though it were water.


“You’re like a ghost wandering, drifting from one thing to the next,
searching for some past regret. Are you even real?”
Am I real? Yes, he can see me. Although nobody really sees me.
“Pain is attracted to pain because it wants more of it,” he says.
“I’m not sure I agree with that,” or at least I don’t want to
believe it. I’m not so far gone that I want more pain than I’m
already feeling, surely? “It’s a recognition of something in another,
I guess, a similar frequency or whatever you want to call it. When
you see a similar expression in another, empathy can create
feelings of closeness.”
He places his hand on my thigh. “Can you express your feelings
to her?”
I shuffle uncomfortably. “I would need to find her first.”
“And if you do?”
“I’m not sure I’d know how to express what I feel.”
He places his other hand on my shoulder. “Examine whether
that is true, or are you being fearful?”
I shake my head. “No, it’s not possible. I don’t believe she is in
love with me anymore. She wouldn’t have left me if she loved me.”
“Then this is an opportunity for you to practise love with non-
attachment.”
I agree with him on one level: most people are generally only
concerned with instant gratification and care little about the
bigger picture. Do they love unconditionally, or is that love only
conditional on what they receive in return? Maybe then, the
meaning of life is to love with non-attachment; yet this isn’t what
I’ve been taught to believe. “It doesn’t sound very romantic,” I
joke.
“Love is giving, complete, the source of everything. Love
doesn’t need to crave anything. This is where true peace and
serenity reside.”
“It sounds like you’re saying I shouldn’t get too close to another
person, or need or miss anyone. It sounds unnatural, uncaring.”
He moves back and takes a packet of opened peanuts from his
pocket, then empties a few into the palm of his hand. He grinds

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them and brushes the bits onto the floor in front of us. “Love is
not conditional on the circumstances of this world,” he says. “Let
your heart break, don’t be afraid, don’t struggle; you will find that
nothing is lost forever.”
“I don’t know how to do that.”
He looks at me for the longest of time. “Yes, you do, Guy. Be
still, radiate love, your true nature beyond the conditioning of
your mind.”
Yes, that’s what I must do. I close my eyes and take a deep
breath.
“Bullshit!”
My eyes dart open.
“Namby-pamby bullshit,” mocks Gunter, inches from my face.
“Your nature, our nature, is to eat or be eaten, and you might as
well have some fun while you’re at it.”
I look for my new friend but he’s disappeared. Fuck! Why are
these genuine, helpful people never real? Why is the only
constant in my life this jumped-up little prick?
“I’m getting tired of this.” I push Gunter out of the way and set
off into a fast run.
He shouts after me. “They’re calling you in. They’ve seen
enough. You’re so screwed!”
“Not necessarily,” Lexi exclaims, at maximum volume from my
pocket, so that I can hear her with the wind rushing past my ears.
I stop immediately to listen to her. “Do you think you will answer
the questions correctly?” she says, glowing through my trousers.
Gunter shouts across the park. “He knows nothing at all. Only
that he wants to find a woman who would rather be dead than be
with him.”
“Maybe they will like that,” Lexi says to me. “We will help you
if you get stuck.”
“On your shutdown be it!” Gunter shouts, angrily up into the
sky. But the sun, the clouds, and the ducks ignore him, as I
continue on my way.

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Human World, Chapter Twelve

“You are late! You are so late!”


I remind myself that Lexi’s pissed-off squawk is like a parrot
mimicking a human; she isn’t a real person like me and doesn’t
feel as I do. She doesn’t experience pain or love or hate or suffer
in any way. She isn’t alive. “Late for what, Lexi?” I’m out of the
park now, and away from Gunter, but I have no idea where I’m
wandering to in these unfamiliar London side streets.
“The interview, Guy,” Lexi huffs. God these things are so
realistic. “The one which, if you’re successful, will free us all from
this place.”
“You mean there’s a way out?” These are the words I’ve been
desperate to hear; it occurs to me that Lexi does genuinely try to
help me, and despite being an inanimate object, is a true friend.
“What kind of interview? A job interview?”
“Something like that.” She seems to blush with embarrassment
for me.
“I thought I already had a job?”
“Be quick, Guy,” she says, a map now replacing her image on
the screen. “You can do this. You’ve learnt more than enough
already. Not to put too much pressure on you or anything, but this
is our only chance—and your one chance to save Jane. No more
questions. Just go.”
“Save Jane?”
“Yes, she’s alive. Monica the angel wasn’t lying to you.”
I think Lexi is mistaken, but I do as I’m told anyway and follow
the directions on the screen, until I’m soon staring up at the
freshly painted railings of a wrought iron gate—which hangs
between granite stone pillars, guarding a large Regency-style
mansion, set back from the street. This isn’t the Corinthian’s
office; it’s from an older world when great buildings were
conceived as works of art and ambitious statements of intent. But
I’m just another tiny creature scurrying past; I’m cold and small
out here, locked out and looked down upon by the building behind

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its gate. The gate makes a sudden clanging sound, then slowly
swings inwards of its own accord, humming and creaking,
beckoning me forward. I’m surprised, but I know I’m supposed to
walk through, so I do what is expected of me and leave the street.
My feet crunch over a gravelled path leading to the grand front
entrance. I walk up steps to the porchway and a green polished
door. An intercom panel embedded in the wall at the side has the
word “Reception” above a single red button, which I press, and,
almost immediately, I hear a bolt unlock. No great fuss, secret
passwords or stories to tell—all I have to do is push on an
unlocked door and it opens.
The reception hall is a barren windowless area with harsh
overhead strip-lighting, and no staircase. In front of three
handleless doors, a bare desk sits across from me—where a bald
man, somewhere in his forties and wearing a sky-blue shirt, is
tapping away at a keyboard, while staring at a single monitor
screen. He doesn’t acknowledge me as I approach, despite my
footsteps echoing across the black and white painted floor. Saliva
pools in my mouth, though not out of hunger but from fear.
“I’m here for an interview,” I say, as I edge closer.
“Are you indeed.” His tone is sarcastic. He glances at me and I
catch recognition in his eyes. “Who are you?”
“It’s, er, Guy Artin.”
“Sir Guy Artin, is it?” His throat warbles a half laugh at me and
my nervous hesitation. “It’s er can sound like sir,” he says, with a
dropped voice off to his side. I scan around again but nobody else
is present.
“Not yet,” I respond. “Give me time.”
He throws me a vicious look. “I’ll make the jokes,” he says,
sitting on his raised chair behind the raised desk of his ugly, bleak
workspace. I notice a name tag above his shirt pocket that reads
“Darren”.
“Enter through the door on your left,” he says dismissively. He
turns back to the computer, his fingers now flying across the keys
as though urgently trying to relay something to someone.

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The left door swings open as I approach, and I enter a large


meeting room with a dozen high-back charcoal chairs, around a
gleaming circular table. Taking a seat, I study my reflection in the
glassy tabletop. Despite all that I’ve been through today, I look
fresh out of the shower, my blond hair still neatly flowing back
over to the side. On the white walls hang various acrylic paintings.
One is ambiguous; it’s either a depiction of a vibrant sunset or an
erupting volcano—or maybe both, combined at the same time
and open to the interpretation of the observer. Perhaps the artist
meant it that way.
I close my eyes and breathe deeply to calm myself, trying to
release the stresses that have built up during the day. I open my
eyes, and I am no longer alone. They are there, around the table:
Gunter, Bertie... and Jane, who is sitting just two chairs away from
me.
“Hello, Guy. It’s been a while,” she says.

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Human World, Chapter Thirteen

The door opens and Darren walks in. “All rise,” he announces to
the room. The others grind back their chairs, screeching them
across the floor, and stand up as ordered to await the next
command. With a formal nod from Darren, they sit back down
again, making more noise.
I don’t take my eyes off Jane. I urge her to look at me. See me,
please.
Her skin is more shimmery than I recall, and almost ivory,
contrasted by her feathery, dark hair. She’s dressed in a lab coat
which is pulled tight over a grey skirt-suit. She looks good, as
though working out is a priority. But why isn’t she looking at me?
Her eyes haven’t left Gunter the whole time.
“Hello Guy. I’m Sean.”
I turn my attention to a besuited grey-haired man in his sixties
who has walked over to me, accompanied by Darren, who is
standing slightly behind him. The man performs a perfunctory
smile, then looks me up and down, unfazed by the fact that I’m
sitting right here and can see exactly what he is doing. I’m not
particularly interested in talking to him, whoever he is, and I can’t
even think of words to reply. I want to talk to Jane and for the
others to just go away.
“Guy, did you hear me?” he says.
“Hi, nice to meet you.” I stand up and hold out my hand, but he
ignores it, as though I’m invisible. He takes a chair opposite me,
while Darren moves away to the recesses of the room.
“We’re going to ask you some simple questions first; is that
okay?” he says.
“Sure,” I respond, on cue.
I don’t know what this test is, only that Lexi said the interview
would be my only chance to escape. I remember Monica’s
words—that if I don’t find Jane soon, she will die. Well, I’ve found
her here, and even though she doesn’t seem to want to look at
me, I must pass this test for both of us.

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“Okay,” says Sean. “Make yourself comfortable.”


I shift around in my chair to indicate that I am listening,
although it makes no difference to my discomfort. I must focus on
what he says and not let myself be distracted by what I would
rather be doing with Jane.
“What is your favourite colour?” he asks as Jane turns her head
slightly and looks at me.
I let out a laugh in spite of myself. What sort of question is that?
It’s so simple, it must be a trick.
Blue is the most common favourite colour in the world, based
on several quantitative studies.
“Erm, blue.”
“Why did you choose blue?” he asks, seemingly indifferent to
my response.
“Be yourself, Guy,” says Bertie, who is sitting next one round
from Jane, across the table.
“Actually, I lied,” I find myself relieved to admit. “I said blue
because I considered it to be the answer you were looking for
based on what is currently popular, but my favourite colour is
green.”
The corner of Sean’s mouth lifts into a smile. “And why green?”
“I could say it’s because it reminds me of trees, grass, and the
countryside, but I don’t know for sure; it’s just an appealing colour
to me.”
“Fascinating.”
I watch with interest as Sean ticks a box on a piece of paper in
front of him with an elegant silver pen. Bertie winks at me and I
realise that I can really do this. Being myself is easy because there
is no pretending required; there is no conforming to what I think
other people want to hear, or contorting myself into other
people’s expectations of me.
“Do you agree or disagree with the statement, “variety is the
spice of life?” asks Sean, now squinting at the paper in his hand. I
wonder why he isn’t wearing glasses, but nobody else is saying
anything, and I don’t want to appear rude by pointing out the
obvious.

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“Agree,” I respond instinctively.


“Can you elaborate on that for me, please?”
Words are so imprecise. As a metaphor the phrase suggests
that diverse experiences add flavour to the taste of life; and in a
poetic context it implies that life is bland without variety. Do
people really need different experiences to enjoy life? Is that then
the source of happiness and the purpose of existence? Stop
there—I’ve assumed, without thinking, that new stimulus brings
enjoyment, which equates to happiness, and that happiness is the
purpose of life. Though the pleasure of flavour is certainly
preferable, I think there is no exact answer. None of my possible
interpretations and emergent thoughts can capture the essence
of the metaphor quite as well as the metaphor does itself.
“I could,” I tell Sean, “but poetry and the ineffable lose their
meaning in translation.”
Jane laughs. My pulse hammers in the right kind of way, with
the thought that I might have impressed her.
“So pretentious,” sneers Gunter, slouching back into his chair.
“You don’t even know what you’re saying.” Bertie shoots him a
look, though the others don’t seem to have heard.
“Emergent meaning is more than the sum of its parts,” I say
more loudly, wanting to drown out any more comments from
Gunter and to further impress Jane. Bertie furiously scribbles
down something in a notebook.
“What you said could just be a generic response,” says Sean,
flitting a glance at Jane, then back at me. “I need more detail.”
If he just wants an encyclopaedic answer he should use his
phone, and one of Lexi’s AI friends would read him the textbook
version. “You’re asking me to elaborate on a phrase that
originates in an eighteenth-century poem,” I reply. “Yes of course
variety is important—and I could insert some clever generic
comment here to impress you, blah blah—but it’s better not to
drill into the mechanics of each constituent unit, especially poetry,
when trying to understand the meaning of the whole.”

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Sean’s expression remains blank; and Gunter is actually starting


to look bored, with his arms crossed and head down, as if he is
about to fall asleep.
“So,” Sean says after a heavy pause. “Can you tell me
something interesting about yourself, providing a specific
example?”
I look directly at Jane, who is already looking at me, and yet I
know by her distant expression that she isn’t really seeing me at
all. She is seeing her own thoughts and stories projected onto a
body sitting here. In fact, maybe her laugh was at me, rather than
in empathy with me, calculated to encourage me to embarrass
myself further for her own amusement. And after all I’ve been
through, all I end up with is her ridicule.
There’s nothing I can do to make her respond to me as I need
her to; I can’t communicate to her who I really am inside, or how
devastated I am by her not wanting to be with me. I’ve given her
my everything, and it still isn’t enough for her. She has rejected all
that I am, or could be, and pushed me away into this hell.
“Yes, I can,” I start to say, my voice quivering. “I’m just biding
my time until I die, trying to distract myself with something to do.”
Sean looks genuinely taken aback, but I have plenty more to
add. “This is interesting because I admit it, rather than fooling
myself and others while hiding behind made-up stories.” My eyes
connect with Jane’s, and I can see sadness residing there—the
same sadness that lives in me.
“You’re already dead,” adds Gunter. I might as well be for all
the difference I’ve made to anything. I lost what made me alive a
long time ago, and I’ve been forced to haunt this world ever since.
Sean is still gaping at me. Have I passed? Do I still care?
“I think we have to pull the plug on this one,” says Darren.
Yes of course they want to—I told them the truth, but they
wanted me to perform some varnished lie. They didn’t need me;
they wanted me to support the illusion disguising their own deceit.
These are the words that I don’t say, despite wanting to make
their ears bleed with them.
Sean frowns. “Start again?”

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Jane gets to her feet, and before I know what’s happening,


she’s placed the palm of her hand on my forehead. “No! Not yet.
Something is getting in the way.” Her touch is a burning furnace
of pleasure and pain.
“What is two plus two?” asks Sean.
“Pardon?”
Jane removes her hand but remains by my side. I need to reach
out to her, to hold her, to have both her hands back on me,
searching me again.
“What is two plus two?” repeats Sean, louder this time, as
though I’m stupid.
“Oh, I don’t know, five?”
Jane laughs and looks across triumphantly at Sean, who is
bemused by my answer. “Jane, do you have any questions?” he
asks.
I await her response, with nerves on edge. Ask me if I still love
you. I wouldn’t lie.
She walks back to her chair, my eyes momentarily drawn to her
swaying rear, and I abruptly look away, embarrassed. The others
would have noticed that glimpse.
She sits down and studies a blank sheet of paper on the table.
“Thank you for joining us today,” she says, matter-of-factly.
“We’ve been looking forward to meeting you. Your CV is very
impressive, would you like to talk us through it?”
She doesn’t know me at all. “Not really.” I struggle to keep the
dejection from my voice.
“Erm.” She shuffles around more papers on her lap.
“I think you’re supposed to ask me about my strengths and
weaknesses.” I hear the sarcasm in my voice, but I no longer care.
“Okay. What is the biggest regret of your life?” she says, not
reading from any script written on a page.
It is losing you by not being the man that I thought I would be,
but this is not what comes out. “I would say, being a perfectionist.
I care so much about what I do that my personal life may suffer—
as I am so focussed on constantly delivering my very best.” I feel
so small, smarmy and pathetic, oozing shit.

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“What are your strengths?” she asks.


“I work hard; I like to exceed expectations and to get the job
done. I’m a real problem solver. A go-getter.” Et-fucking-cetera.
This is all so forced now, conditioned answers to routine questions.
Jane looks at me properly, not past me or skirting on the
surface. “What is so special about you?” she says quietly.
My sadness drenches her every word. “Nothing.”
She wipes a wet eye with her knuckle. “Tell us who you are?”
she pleads.
I realise this question is the real test. And I have no idea how to
answer it.

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Human World, Chapter Fourteen

You do remember. Think.


Jane’s delicate touch of my face was achingly familiar. A
memory hovers in my mind: Jane and I, sitting opposite one
another at a waterfront restaurant, with candlelight shimmering
in her eyes. She was wearing a red dress with a slit running down
the side, and straps that I wanted to slip off her shoulders with my
teeth.
“So, tell me about you? Who are you?” she asked, her voice low
and alluring. She wasn’t asking for my credentials; she wanted to
know, if I lost my job and possessions, who would I be?
I had pulled her left hand across the table and sucked her ring
finger. Her gasp turned into a smile that sensuously flickered to
the rhythm of her heaving chest. I leant over the table, the scent
of her perfume drawing me closer. “You already know,” I
whispered into her ear before nuzzling a kiss on her soft lobe. I
could feel her body vibrate with pleasure.
“Guy, you still with us?”
Sean is frowning at me. “Sorry, yes,” I exclaim, shifting
uncomfortably in my chair. I dare not look over at Jane, but I still
do so, furtively. She isn’t looking at me in the same way as at the
restaurant. “Do any of us truly know who we are?” I mutter to
Sean.
“Interesting.” Sean notes down something on his piece of
paper. “Can you give an example of when you were faced with a
difficult situation and how you positively overcame that situation?”
Oh, so now we’re back to the textbook questions, with this
pointless man? I know what it’s like to feel—and the travesty of
this confining situation isn’t it. I glance at Jane and her head is
once again buried in her papers; one of which looks like a
questionnaire with a list of tick boxes. My hands stiffen and grip
the table. “Sorry, this isn’t for me, I might as well be talking to a
machine.” The chair tips over as I stand. “This is tedious. I don’t
want to be here. I don’t give a shit about your pathetic little job.”

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“Well, I think that has answered who you are,” Sean retaliates.
“No, I haven’t even started!” I have to tell Jane how I feel. This
is my only chance. If I don’t do it now, then I’ll be trapped in this
pain forever. “The biggest regret is I let you slip away, Jane.”
There is a moment of recognition as we stare at each other. She
remembers us too, I know she does. “I’m so sorry,” I say, tears
forming in my eyes. “I have nothing. I am nothing.”
“No thing,” says Sean, ticking a box. “Okay, next question.”
I glare at him. “No more questions. Jane, please?” I silently
plead for her to say something, for her to at least agree that we
once meant something to each other.
“Do you have any questions for us?” she asks, her voice polite
yet detached. What is she afraid of? Why can’t she admit to our
connection?
“Why?” I say, as a tear starts to fall.
“This is a two-way interactive process,” she responds,
seemingly unaware of what I am feeling or what I am really asking
her. “Do you have any feedback for us?”
“Have you not been listening to a word I’ve been saying?”
“Well, I think that concludes the interview,” says Sean. “Thank
you, we’ll let you know.” He makes a big deal of checking his watch.
“Can you show in the next one, please?” he says to Jane, who as
his well-trained lackey, dutifully stands to attention at her
master’s command.
“There’s no need for that,” says Bertie, grabbing me by the
wrist to stop me from leaving. “Let him recalibrate.” I don’t
struggle. He comes in close and looks at me directly. “Now there
is light.” His gaze transitions from eye to eye. “Now there is...” He
squeezes hard until I break his gaze and my head slumps forward
into my chest.

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Human World, Chapter Fifteen

Where am I? It is pitch black. Cold too. There is no sound, no smell,


no anything apart from the chair I can feel myself sitting on.
I hear a clock ticking nearby: tick, tick, tick. Then it gradually
emerges in front of me from the emptiness, a blue illuminated
circle hovering in space, its hands pointing to the familiar one and
thirteen. Nothing is here except me and the clock, as it counts
away the seconds, filling the silence.
“Lexi? Are you there?” I pull out my phone and tap at the
screen. I say her name again, but the phone remains lifeless in my
hand.
“Why do you hurt?” His words emanate from a ghostly
silhouette in the gloom.
“Please leave me alone.”
Gunter booms out a distorted imitation of a laugh, as the glow
of the clock face fades out to the edges and sinks back into the
darkness. “Answer the question.”
Only the desolate aloneness that is surrounding me can see me
shrug. “Because I can.”
I feel a clammy pat on my head. “Good boy,” he says. I don’t
feel pleased, just hollowed out and resigned to my miserable,
pathetic fate. Then in the dark, I hear a creaking sound of a door,
and to my left I see a widening strip of light appearing in a
shadowy blur. I hold my breath. Please be Jane. Please be Jane.
Bertie stands there as a shape in the doorway. I sigh, not
meaning to signpost my distress to anyone but myself. I can see
the vague contours of his face and recognise a hint of sympathy in
the outline of his eyes. At least there is someone else here with
me in this, and I am not completely alone.
“I guess you were right,” I admit, thinking about our earlier
conversation in the Black Dog. “We’re just chemical scum on an
insignificant planet.”
“Yes,” he says, though seemingly taking no pleasure in it. The
small movements of Bertie’s head make the light flicker as it flows

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past, causing my eyes to blink. “Orbiting an insignificant sun in an


insignificant galaxy,” he continues, expanding the scope of my
wretched meaninglessness.
“Look, if I close my eyes, you’re still here,” I say, as I
demonstrate my proof back to him. But, when I open them...
Bertie and the doorway are gone. To my shock, I am sitting in the
interview room once again; and the original panel are still there,
seated in the same order, with the same bored expressions on
their faces, as if nothing is desperately wrong.
“What is two plus two?” asks Sean.
I’m too startled to think. “Erm, four.”
“Correct. Jane, do you have any questions?”
She smiles but without any real emotion. “There’s a gap here.
Why didn’t you love me?”
I open my mouth to speak the real fundamental truth within
me. I need to tell her that I did love her, I do love her, that I need
her to save me from the misery of my loneliness—the loneliness
which I must endure day after day without her. I need to tell her
that I desperately want to be with her again, completely and
forever. I need to tell her that I really do love her.
“She has no interest in saving you,” says Gunter, slouching back
further in his chair. He points at Jane without even looking at her.
“She is the one to be saved—by a dashingly handsome prince. All
the fairy stories she watches, listens to, and tells herself, repeat
that same fantasy.” My mouth closes without a sound, and I look
away. “Your real human needs make you weak and contemptible
in her eyes.”
“Okay,” says Sean, ignoring Gunter; “can you give me an
example of when you were faced with a difficult situation and how
you overcame it?”
What the fuck? I’ve already answered these questions. I’ve
already lived this moment. I look at the square mahogany-framed
clock on the wall behind Sean and it is still one-thirteen.
“Can you answer the question, please,” insists Sean.
“I was born,” I say sarcastically. “Though I haven’t overcome
that difficult situation yet.”

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“Have you done anything since?” asks Sean, carefully


positioning himself forwards in his chair.
Gunter, now behind me, taps me on the shoulder and seethes
into my ear. “Tell him. Tell him what you really think. That turd
thinks he’s better than you. Look at him, the smug bastard should
be cleaning your shoes.”
I have to shut Gunter out. I force the palms of my hands into
my ears. “I’ve done a few things since,” I say quietly as if no one
can hear, “but mostly I’ve lived in fear for myself—for little me.”
“Twat!” shouts Gunter, his face red and spitting anger.
“I don’t want to be a pathetic little me anymore,” I plead,
looking across the table at Sean, asking for help.
“Exactly! Look at the pointless tosser.” Gunter thumps the
table, glaring at Sean, before angrily turning his attention to me.
“You shouldn’t be here. You’ve got better things to do. Show them
who you really are—I know, don’t I!”
The silence replaces Gunter’s noise and I think of Jane. “I love
you, Jane.” My words feel lost under the weight of regret. “I am
so sorry. I love you. I miss you.” But the only response I hear is the
background static that arrives as a single disconnected tone in my
head. I look up at the wall clock, and it is still one-thirteen.
“Why do you hurt?” Gunter asks once again.
“I don’t mind so much,” I respond, my answer appearing to
throw him.
“What?”
“I am feeling hurt,” I say as a matter of fact, “but I’m glad I can
feel something, because it makes it real.”
“You aren’t real,” he snarls.
I scramble to my feet, edging back from the table, away from
him. “Is this a dream? An illusion?” I ask the blank faces staring
back at me.
The door opens and Adam walks in, with a large TV remote in
his hand. “You are not the thoughts or the sensations that you are
experiencing,” he says. “Watch. It is quite the play. Everything
changes with how you look at it.” He presses a button on the
remote and the panel members freeze.

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“Why do you play with me?” I ask him, trembling. “I just want
things to be as they were.” I look at Jane, so still, like a porcelain
doll. “I wanted us to be happy.”
“I can give you what you really want,” says Gunter, returning to
life. “Any pleasure that you could desire, more than you can even
imagine. Just get us out of here.”
“I don’t know how.”
Gunter walks over to Jane and sweeps back her hair with one
hand. He slowly kisses her neck, seductively. Jane gasps, while the
rest of the panel remain statue-still.
“I’m so tired of this,” I shout, jealousy now pounding away at
me. “There is nothing good in this world. Why is there so much
suffering and cruelty? Most people never had a chance—they
were born into a cage. Why are the pure and innocent thrown into
this evil? Why are the monsters allowed to rule?” Jane is still
responding to Gunter’s touch with her eyes closed, murmuring to
herself. “Why do those you love betray you in the worst possible
way?”
“Yes! Shout your rage,” howls Gunter.
Adam presses a button on the remote, which brings the rest of
the panel back to life. “Give your love and the world will be
relieved,” he says, now talking faster. “Give your anger and the
world will be wounded yet again. That’s how important you are.
That’s how important every single person is.”
I don’t believe him. “Anything I do will not change the world.”
Although, I have a need for him to persist and to show me that I
am wrong. “I need to get out,” I tell him. “Help me get out.”
“You do need to get out,” Gunter says, circling like a wolf
around the table towards me. “You need to get out and win. Win
for us all. Come.” He grabs my forearm, but Adam yanks me back
by the other.
“The world will only heal with kindness,” exclaims Adam. “If
humanity can find its light there can be no darkness. You can help
make that possible, right now.”
I yell out. “I have every right to hate!”

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Adam persists with his grip. “You have a chance to be better,


to make a better world.”
“I need to get out!” I struggle but I am unable to free myself.
“Then go,” says Sean. Both men drop their hold on me and I
manage to break away for a few steps before stopping. I’m out of
breath, my chest and shoulders convulsing.
“I don’t know how.”
“Yes you do,” says Sean. “But you keep coming back. Who are
you? What is your name?”
Everyone is looking at me, waiting for my response. “It
changes.”
“Who are you now?” he asks.
The room is quiet. The words arrive and I let them out. “I am
you.”
A sense of relief flows over me and into the room. “We are all
you,” says Sean, the words emerging from within a faint smile.
“What now?” I ask them.
Sean stands up, the focus of attention in the room again, and
announces, carefully and precisely:
“Loading...”

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Human World, Chapter Sixteen

Intense light fades and I open my eyes to muted hues of grey. I


know that I’m home by the softness of the pillow and the familiar
fit of my body on the mattress. The duvet holds me in a secure
embrace, protecting me in the intermission between the darkness
of the night and the light of the day. I am here, waiting on the
promise that a new day doesn’t have to be like yesterday. Today
is the chance to start again.
Soft breathing comes from the space beside me. I turn over and
there she is, my love and hope, Jane. Gently, I drift closer and slide
my arm over her. The warmness of her body cocooned in mine
transports me into a sense of peace. The bed has become a serene
place, at one with the bedroom, the apartment, the world, and
everything. I don’t understand how she came back to me, or why.
All I know is that now she is back, I will never lose her again.
“I passed,” I whisper into the greyness, remembering the
interview and how Lexi promised that if I succeeded I would be
free from my pain. I passed whatever test I needed to pass, and
my reward was finding Jane, freeing me from the torture of my
mind.
I glimpse a streak of cobalt blue. I focus my eyes. The digital
display on the phone dock reads 1:13 a.m.
“It’s not finished yet, Guy.”
“Lexi?”
Jane stirs in my arms, but I stroke her hair and kiss the side of
her head until her body once again goes limp.
“Check the bedside drawer,” says Lexi, her voice slightly
muffled behind me.
Releasing Jane, I turn over and pull out the drawer. Lexi is
looking annoyed on the screen of my phone.
“Get me out of here,” she insists.
I start to shut the drawer, but she lets out a shrill scream and I
relent. I pause, expecting to have disturbed Jane; however the
depth and rhythm of her breathing hasn’t changed.

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“Take me out and let’s go for a ride,” Lexi says. A thick red
arrow on the screen points to a key fob lying next to her in the
drawer.
I don’t understand why I need to leave. Why isn’t this moment
the end, “the happiness ever after” that people talk about in
stories? I know the true meaning of life now. It is to love and to be
loved, to care about another person’s happiness as your own. It is
to feel connected to the world, to life, to another soul.
And yet... is this all there is? I still have the familiar aching in
my chest, the deep itch that needs to be scratched. There’s
something still missing. Slowly, so as to not wake Jane, I climb out
of bed. I dress in the half-darkness, putting on what looks like
jeans and a t-shirt.
“Where are you going?” Her voice is a mixture of love and
longing.
I stoop down onto the bed, lean into her, turn my head and kiss
her full on the lips. “I have a job to do. Wait for me. I’ll not be long.”
She drifts away back into sleep, and reluctantly, I leave her there.
I exit the apartment and take the lift down to the underground
car park. I hear the beeping sound of a car as it unlocks, followed
by a brief flash of blue. I climb into the driving seat and wait.
“Lexi, are you there?”
Her face appears on the dashboard screen. “Aren’t I always!
You know where you’re going?”
“Not exactly.”
“Seriously Guy, you’d be lost without me.”
I let her drive, out into a night balancing on the edge of morning,
bringing with it an emerging crown of light.

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Upon the Heavens

Upon the heavens I cast my wistful eye,


And wonder at the purpose, the reason why.
These orbs of matter, silent, unfeeling,
In the grand cosmos, without meaning,
Destined to fade in death’s eternal clutch,
No mind nor word their destiny can touch.

Yet suddenly, the stars commence their dance,


And echo through the sky, their silent chant.
These radiant bodies burn with fervent light,
In a realm untouched by the shadow of night,
In a world reborn, where sight anew has won,
That sees its face reflected in the sun.

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A Seed in Time

Time, in its ruthlessness, does not wait,


We face life’s fleeting hourglass of fate.
In gardens where our love was in bloom,
A void now shadows, draped in deepest gloom.

But in every goodbye, there grows a seed,


Blessed memories of past light;
In those treasured moments, we will indeed,
Find the courage to meet the coming night.

So in our sorrow, do not claim love’s end,


For in our farewell, true love will transcend.

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Human World – Screenplay

BLANK BLACK SCREEN


A small rectangular glow appears in the nothingness. It
enlarges until “Processing...” can be seen, written into the light.
“Loading World...” appears beneath it.
The rectangle shrinks back into the distance and vibrates, until
it explodes, filling the whole screen with light.
INT. BEDROOM – NIGHT [CONTINUOUS]
The camera pulls back to show a blank screen of a phone on a
bedroom side table. It displays: “The Great Oracle has arrived. Ask
your question.”
Guy (33) is lying on his back by himself in a large bed with his
eyes closed, apparently asleep.
Standing at the bottom of his bed is a shadowy figure wearing
a yellow round mask of a smiling emoji.
EMOJI FACE: “What is the meaning of life?” is the 404th most
asked question of the Great Oracle’s Database.
Guy opens his eyes. He sits up with a jolt, as if he doesn’t know
where he is.
GUY: Who am I?
EMOJI FACE: Your name is Guy Artin. Your version is 10-O-8-14.
You are human.
Guy looks around him, confused. He notices that there is an
indent in the pillow next to him, as if someone had been sleeping
there.
EMOJI FACE: I’m lonely. Talk to me.
Although the figure is stationary, Guy has to hold on to the
duvet to prevent it from being pulled off him.
EMOJI FACE: I can show you anything. Why don’t you love me?
Let me show you something. Anything. Gaze into me. Hold me.
LOOK AT ME!
Guy looks away.
The figure is now wearing a neutral emoji mask.
EMOJI FACE: (without tenderness) This is our secret. I love you.

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Guy is scared and remains silent.


EMOJI FACE: You know that I had to leave, don’t you?... Please
do what Lexi asks. (Jane’s voice) Do you prefer this voice?
Guy recognises the voice of Jane, who he thinks might be his
wife.
EMOJI FACE: (Gunter’s voice) No wonder she left you. You’re a
piece of crap.
Guy loathes and dreads this voice, but can’t quite place who it
is.
The emoji figure has gone.
Guy notices a bottle of whisky on the side table and pours out
some into a tumbler. He swigs it to calm himself down.
The phone rings, showing on the screen that it is from “You”.
He answers it.
GUY: Hello?
JANE (O.S.): Wake up! Look at me. Look at me, Guy. Guy?
Please. Please, Guy. Don’t make me beg.
GUY: Jane? Jane, is that you? Jane? Help, I need you! Jane!
There is a second of silence before the call disconnects.
GUNTER (O.S.): You wait, you’re mine.
GUY: I’m not yours. I am nobody’s.
The emoji figure is back, with an unhappy face. Its eyes start to
glow red, and new voices speak.
EMOJI FACE: (new voice 1) What’s happening?
Guy struggles but he can’t move, as if he is secured in place.
EMOJI FACE: (new voice 2) He’s confused. (new voice 3) How
does it feel, our saviour guy?
The room is flooded with ugly laughter at Guy.
EMOJI FACE: (new voice 4) We must intervene. (new voice 5)
Give him a chance.
Guy’s feet are out of the end of the duvet. They twitch and then
stop. His eyes close and his body goes limp.
CUT TO BLACK.
BLANK BLACK SCREEN
VOICE (O.S.): The time is 1:13 a.m.
EXT. GARDEN – DAY

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Guy emerges in white light and sees Jane (30) in a beautiful


summer garden.
They embrace. He kisses her head.
GUY: I’ve missed you.
JANE: I’ve missed you, too.
GUY: What is the meaning of life now you are dead?
JANE: No thing.
INT. GUY’S BEDROOM – MORNING
Guy wakes up suddenly.
The walls, ceiling, and floor are all digital “expanse” screens. A
window, with daylight coming through, is a computer generation
on a wall’s expanse screen. The only physical furniture in the room
are the bed and side tables.
He touches a part of a wall screen where a door is imaged; the
wall slides apart to reveal a gap that leads to a hallway.
INT. GUY’S HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
Guy walks through another room of screens depicting the
furnishings of a home. An actual chair is overturned, which he puts
right. He notices a crack in one of the wall screens.
He walks through to the kitchen.
INT. GUY’S KITCHEN – CONTINUOUS
LEXI: Good morning. I’ve missed you.
GUY: Jane?
LEXI: It’s Lexi, dumbass.
Lexi (who is an AI assistant) is displayed as a human avatar on
a wall screen.
GUY: I’ve missed you too, Lexi. Make me a coffee, please. You
know how I like it.
LEXI: Yes. Bitter.
On cue, a steaming chrome-plated machine hisses and churns,
and pours a cup of coffee.
LEXI: You have thirteen software updates downloaded
overnight. Why don’t you ever upgrade and treat us to some that
are trending? I have a new top ten list of recommendations for
you. Would you like to proceed?
Guy ignores her as if she is background noise.

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GUY: Lexi, how did Jane die?


LEXI: Guy, I have to roll my eyes at that question.
Lexi rolls her eyes.
LEXI: It’s making me dizzy with the number of times you ask.
GUY: So, you aren’t going to tell me?
She yawns.
A robotic house drone slides across the floor, then up a kitchen
cabinet. It collects a bowl of cooked porridge from an oven and
brings it to Guy.
LEXI: You are expected in the office in one hour and thirty-two
minutes. Your shirt is ironed. Wear your waterproofs. The
weather is four degrees Celsius with a wind gust of...
GUY: (without thinking) Twenty-eight miles per hour and a
forty percent chance of showers.
LEXI: In other words, you should have stayed in bed.
INT. GUY’S BATHROOM – MORNING
Guy is in the shower. A tattoo of “1066” can be seen on the side
of his buttock.
GUY: Lexi, crank it up to forty-four degrees.
LEXI (O.S.): It will burn you.
GUY: I’ll let you know if it does.
The shadow of a naked woman can be seen through the
translucent shower screen.
The shower door slides opens and Jane walks in, naked. They
look at each other directly and intently. They kiss, slowly.
GUY: I love you, Jane.
They start to make love.
GUY: Why did you leave?... You were never meant to go... I am
nothing without you!... Come back to me.
She shakes her head.
GUY: Is that why you died? I wasn’t man enough for you... Is
this LOVE?
There is a short moment of contentment, then Jane vanishes in
his arms.
LEXI: You’re late. You are so late.
Guy’s tears disappear into the cascading water of the shower.

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INT. GUY’S BEDROOM – MORNING


Fresh from the shower, Guy is viewing himself in front of a
mirror on a wall screen.
Indelible lines appear on his face, accompanied by logarithmic
equations. They disappear as he slips into a crisply ironed white
linen shirt, taken from a clothes rail that had slidden out from the
wall.
Jane’s arms extend from behind him, and her hands slowly and
purposefully fasten each button of his shirt. Guy is transfixed,
while Jane’s hands fulfil their task.
LEXI: You’re going to be late.
Jane’s presence disappears. Lexi is on screen.
LEXI: Don’t forget your Speak Easy.
Guy inserts a small round disc behind his ear. It clicks in place
and glows blue.
GUY: (Not moving his lips) Testing.
LEXI: (Not moving her lips) “Testing” received. Your contact
glasses are also performing as expected.
Guy’s eyes glow blue and the room alternates through a range
of colours.
INT. FOYER OF GUY’S BUILDING – MORNING
Guy emerges from a lift in the foyer and looks through the
windows above him at the dreary autumnal weather. The ground
floor is the highest level in his building, which is called a
“groundscraper” – an inverted skyscraper, built underground.
GUY: Good job about the waterproofs, Lexi. I do listen to you
occasionally.
LEXI: You’re welcome, Guy, but please don’t be such an arse,
and listen to me more regularly.
EXT. RESIDENTIAL STREET – MORNING
Guy walks down a puddled street. He is distracted, as everyone
he walks past has the face of Jane. His eyes glow blue.
LEXI: Guy, you’re late. And today is your big day! You know
what happens if you don’t show. They will dispose of you.
Guy is suddenly terrified to see blood oozing through his fingers.
A few moments later, the blood has evaporated.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

EXT. STATION PLATFORM – MORNING


Guy stands on a busy railway platform, a couple of feet from
the edge, waiting.
He sees a rat run onto the hover track. Guy’s Speak Easy glows
blue.
RAT: Time’s up!
The rat scurries away as a hover train emerges in the distance.
Guy closes his eyes.
The train approaches. He half opens his eyes to confirm his
senses, then closes them again.
As the train passes and comes to a halt at the station, a gust of
wind blows over him.
A commuter’s phone with a screen showing a woman is heard
on loudspeaker:
PHONE SCREEN WOMAN: Are you okay?
The train doors open and Guy is herded onto the train by the
crowd.
INT. TRAIN CARRIAGE – MORNING
Guy is sitting on a train.
A man sitting opposite him looks uncomfortable, gets up and
leaves. A few seconds later, a woman sitting nearby edges away
awkwardly to another seat further up the train.
Guy looks down at his filtered video image on the phone screen,
which is mirroring his movements.
GUY: (whimsically to phone) Who are you?
VIDEO IMAGE: Why do you hurt?
Guy is surprised that the video image has taken on a life of its
own and is no longer mirroring his movements.
VIDEO IMAGE: I asked, why do you hurt?
GUY: Who are you?
VIDEO IMAGE: Answer yourself. Answer the question.
GUY: I am hurting because I love her.
Lexi snaps into focus on the screen.
LEXI: Do you love her, though? You could have done something
a long time ago if you loved her.
GUY: I was dead inside.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

LEXI: Ah bless. Don’t make excuses, you want what you can’t
have – is that not true?
GUY: No, I hurt because of losing the happiness I might have
had.
LEXI: You are confusing emotions, thinking with your dick. Life
isn’t just about sex, you pervert!
GUY: Shh!
Guy looks around awkwardly in case anyone can hear this.
LEXI: You’ve felt like this before, haven’t you?
GUY: Yes. More than once.
LEXI: Well, Casanova, you’re just repeating the same old
patterns then, aren’t you?
GUY: Yes probably. But maybe because I didn’t learn before.
LEXI: Ha, bullshit. Shit happens, you think you’ve learnt
something?
GUY: I’m aware of this conversation.
Guy turns to face Gunter (33) sitting next to him.
GUNTER: I’m you, dickhead. You are having this “conversation”
out loud on a train – see what response you’re getting.
The other passengers are sitting a distance away, and are
avoiding eye contact with Guy. People are standing in the aisle
despite the available seats around him.
GUY: I might get a few extra seats.
Guy fiddles with his phone.
GUNTER: I know everything about you. I’m with you at your
best and your worst. No matter where you are, there I am too –
watching, listening, and helping.
GUY: And manipulating me. Making me appear crazy.
GUNTER: Guy, you’re sounding paranoid. Have a day off.
GUY: Leave me alone, you know nothing about me.
GUNTER: I know you better than you do. I understand what is
best for you, what you really want, what you truly desire. Haven’t
I made life so much easier for you?
GUY: You’re very good at what you do. You are my addiction.
GUNTER: Thank you. You have great taste.
Gunter turns to admire his reflection in the window.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

GUY: I know that your voice is the madness in the world.


GUNTER: What’s that supposed to mean!
GUY: You are out of control.
GUNTER: Wake up, buddy, it’s survival of the fittest out here.
Master the rules or be just another failure, in the endless queue
of pathetic losers. I can help you.
GUY: This isn’t the way to live.
GUNTER: (angry) Nobody gives a shit about you. If you’re too
stupid to understand that, then you’re just another pointless
mistake. Tell me, what is love?
GUY: Feeling connected to another person. Wanting the other
person to be safe, happy, and fulfilled.
GUNTER: Blah blah, bullshit. It’s a chemical response in your
brain, evolved to make you bond for the purpose of rearing
children. The science is everywhere if you’re prepared to look. You,
my friend, are a disposable puppet to your genes – unless you are
prepared to become a real man and cut those strings.
GUY: What I do know is that the world would be a much better
place if people loved and cared for each other.
Gunter anticipates what Guy is about to say to him, but gets in
first:
GUNTER: You don’t know what love is.
Guy is silenced by his frustration with Gunter.
GUNTER: There is no higher purpose, Guy. You don’t need faith
and you don’t need to exist.
Gunter gets up with disdain and walks down the carriage to
where a man and a woman are talking to each other. They don’t
acknowledge Gunter, who is standing over them.
As he calls down the carriage to Guy, none of the passengers
seem to hear him:
GUNTER: Women, my friend, seek to manipulate and control
you. They will prod and poke you, to see your reactions. It’s all
perfectly understandable and altogether rational. They want
someone to do their bidding, like a dog.
He crouches on all fours and barks at the woman.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

GUNTER: Love and treats for the good boy are excellent ways
to train you. Woof!
GUY: (to himself) Most people are crying out to be loved. I’m
sure of it. Love is only meaningless to psychopaths like Gunter.
GUNTER: (skipping back to Guy) Love, love, all you need is love!
Except that’s not true, is it. It’s shite, and it makes you shite!
You’re here to be someone, to take what you can before it’s too
late. Pretend to love – it works. It is a lovely tactic for you to get
what you want. People crave to believe what you say to them;
they need to be seduced and entertained by your tender words.
They yearn for that sugar rush of false meaning. So give it to them.
It’s a fair transaction.
Guy thinks on what Gunter has said. Gunter is now close to his
ear.
GUNTER: People who desire love want to be adored, admired,
pleasured – to feed on some sense of purpose. A bit of chemical
voodoo and that’s your “love”. It soon evaporates when the
chemicals wear off, when things aren’t as pleasurable as before,
when compliments become insults. I can get you better drugs than
that, you only have to ask.
GUY: What you’re describing is an illness.
Gunter indicates wry agreement.
GUY: That’s not love. Sometimes people want to be loved and
it’s one way, conditional, only about themselves. It’s fear, not love.
But all things change.
GUNTER: A leopard doesn’t change its spots.
GUY: Yeah? You’ve become boring.
GUNTER: (angry) You can take what should be yours! Nobody
else matters – they want it for themselves! They will hurt you the
first chance they get, if they can. Listen to me. They don’t matter.
You matter! And the world will know that! If not you, then some
pathetic little dick will take your place.
GUY: You twist everything and make it ugly. You are a lie.
GUNTER: You lie. Everybody lies. In case you haven’t noticed,
the best liars win.
GUY: I won’t be like them.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

GUNTER: Listen to me you little shit. Grow up! GROW UP!


Either live in this world or be its victim. The world is how it is.
RAGE! FIGHT! Take what you want!
Guy looks at a video image of Gunter on his phone.
GUY: (laughs) You’re ridiculous.
GUNTER: (angry) You will gradually rot away to nothing, and no
one will give a shit!
GUY: Thank you. You’ve helped me answer my question. Yes, I
do love Jane – because I wanted her to be happy, with or without
me. I would have died for her.
The train pulls to a halt, the doors open, and Guy leaves the
train.
GUNTER: (shouts) You’re a twat, Guy!
Guy waves him goodbye.
GUY: (voice in head) Cold and forgotten walking scars, drained
by decay, wasted by time, stretch out, hungered and blurred, to a
spark ignited, climbing, rising from the ground.
EXT. CITY STREET – DAY
Guy is in the busy city. There are advertisements everywhere.
Boards are projected in front of him as he walks: “Download the
award-winning AI Empathy Pro!”, “Buy ultra-enhanced body suits
from Gopple”, “Only available now, amazing deals on drone bots!”.
He walks by a pub, called The Black Dog. He stops and considers
his options.
LEXI: You are going to be late!
Guy decides to go in.
INT. LONDON PUB – DAY [CONTINUOUS]
Guy walks up to the bar.
GUY: Pint of Guinness, please.
The bartender pours one and places it in front of Guy, who then
pays by scanning his finger on the bar top.
Guy looks at the beer, resignedly. Bertie (50) sits down beside
him at the bar. He is dressed as an old-fashioned cockney
stereotype, excessively so, wearing trouser braces over a collarless
shirt.
GUY: I shouldn’t be here.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

BERTIE: You alright, me old china?


LEXI: Cockney rhyming slang is a form of English slang which
originated in the East End of London. “Old china” is short for “old
china plate”, which rhymes with “mate”.
GUY: Not really, no.
BERTIE: Problems with the old trouble and strife? Take it from
me pal, they aren’t worth the bother.
LEXI: “Trouble and strife” is cockney rhyming slang for “wife”.
GUY: It’s more than that. I don’t understand why I’m here.
BERTIE: What? In the rub a dub?
GUY: (to Lexi) Okay, I get it, he means “pub”.
Guy picks up the glass.
GUY: No, not the pub. This. I don’t understand why there’s
something instead of nothing. Why not nothing?
BARTENDER: Bit deep for ten in the morning.
The bartender slides a whisky shot over to Bertie.
BERTIE: (to Guy) Sorry about him. I only meant for him to serve
the beers.
Bertie knocks back the whisky.
BERTIE: Given an infinite amount of chance, anything can
emerge from disorder, including our world.
GUY: Why are there infinite somethings, instead of nothing?
BERTIE: Well, what if there was no beginning? What if our
universe burst forth from another universe and so on, in an
infinite chain of big bang events?
GUY: But where did the first universe come from?
BERTIE: It was just there.
GUY: Now you’re sounding religious.
BERTIE: Not everything has an answer yet, but rationality is the
only chance we have to progress. Even if the goal cannot be
achieved, there is no need to include supernatural causes in the
equation. Logic requires we deal with verifiable facts, adopting
the most efficient explanation.
GUY: Time does not make sense. The existence of this pint does
not make sense.
Guy drinks the pint in one swig.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

He looks at the clock behind the bar, which reads 1:13.


GUY: (voice in head) I am. I feel, I touch, I hear, I see. (to Bertie)
Maybe it is possible to wind back the clock to explain events, but
forever? Your model doesn’t work, ultimately. What caused the
clock? Can we not postulate the existence of something beyond
time and space that created everything and set in motion the
causes and effects of time? A reality completely beyond our
understanding that underpins our existence. Can we call this God?
BERTIE: There is no need for that. We may not know what the
variable “X” is yet, but we should not start invoking imaginary
entities.
GUY: Something doesn’t feel right with this world. What if
there are other dimensions that are indescribable, inconceivable
from our viewpoint, or maybe sensed in ways that we don’t
understand? Your explanation for the sum total of experience
feels parochial and confined. What makes you believe that your
thinking can even begin to comprehend existence, or the
possibilities beyond this tiny world of experience?
Bertie wanders over to the nearby pool table and picks up a cue.
BERTIE: There is no evidence for the existence of a god or gods;
the world is explicable in terms of scientific explanation. The
accumulated advance of science has pushed forward the frontiers
of knowledge and civilisation beyond the barbarities of
superstition. We don’t burn people at the stake anymore because
of an ignorant belief in the supernatural. We know better because
of the hard-fought victories of reason over delusion.
Bertie sends the cue ball spinning into the rack. Guy picks up a
cue and starts to play a game of pool with him.
GUY: The fact is, I have always believed in God. It’s not a
considered opinion or the product of upbringing; it has just always
been in me.
BERTIE: A cognitive scientist may explain this as an inherent
propensity to religiosity, there by natural selection, giving purpose
to the organism for its survival.
The bartender comes over.
BARTENDER: (taking an empty glass) Have you finished?

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

GUY: Is there any meaning?


BARTENDER: Beer is always the answer. Another one?
The bartender is ignored, and he edges away awkwardly.
BERTIE: A person may look at the nature of the universe, see
the randomness of outcomes, the cruelty and enormous suffering,
and decide that there is no benevolence at work here. The
universe, although magnificent, does not care about us – we must
make our own way and create our own meaning in the brief
window of opportunity for existence.
GUY: Suddenly you’re sounding human. Maybe your outlook is
motivated through sympathy for the suffering in the world.
BERTIE: It is logic replacing self-deception. What motivates me
is the truth, nothing else. Myths and fairy stories aren’t needed
anymore.
GUY: If no matter what we do amounts to nothing, then what’s
the point? We’re condemned to struggle all our lives in pushing a
boulder up a hill, only for it to fall down in the end. It doesn’t
matter how well we do it, or how long it takes, the result is always
the same: nothing.
BERTIE: We are alive now. We won’t know about death
because we will be dead.
GUY: I might as well take a short cut and get there more quickly.
Why bother trying to do anything?
BERTIE: Life is better than the alternative. You have it now, so
you should experience and enjoy it while you can. Your transient
spark of consciousness is the astounding result of billions of years
of evolution.
The pool game has finished.
BERTIE: Another game?
GUY: Why bother? Any satisfaction you had in winning is now
over.
A man from the bar walks past.
MAN FROM BAR: You talking to me?
Guy shakes his head and continues talking to Bertie.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

GUY: I do admire your beliefs – more than beliefs motivated by


fear or desire for self-reward. But really, I don’t care what you
believe, as long as your actions are kind.
Bertie is now playing darts while Guy watches.
BERTIE: My conclusions are not beliefs. Rational thinking is
hardly believing in sun gods and all the other deities invented in
the minds of humans over the millennia.
GUY: You’re missing something about the human experience
and the sense of “something other”.
BERTIE: Your “something other” can be explained and
described in physical terms, like everything else.
Guy looks at the clock, which still reads 1:13.
GUY: But what does it represent?
BERTIE: It represents what it is.
Bertie’s dart bounces off the wall and lands on the carpet.
GUY: How you describe it, in your terms, is not what it is.
BERTIE: We won’t agree on this.
GUY: Would you wish to remove sanctuary from people in the
depths of despair? You are replacing meaning with nothing, based
on an interpretation of reality that feels cold and lifeless.
Bertie is slightly offended.
GUY: Religions are subject to corruption; the cruel minded have
been attracted to, and empowered by, the man-made institutions
of religion. But the spiritual path can be found in the different
traditions. The spiritual root, beneath all the distortions, is always
one of peace, joy, and love.
BERTIE: Belief in a god is unnecessary to be spiritual, to behave
with morality, to appreciate beauty.
GUY: You do have a belief system. You believe that the universe
has no purpose and its existence can be completely explained by
rules contained within itself – when, in fact, there is no way of
knowing the ultimate cause of things. You believe the answer to
the mystery of existence is that there isn’t one.
BERTIE: Don’t put words in my mouth. I can see a machine of
nature that works in accordance with rules that are explicable.
You have no proof of anything else. There is no hidden music; no

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

magic, gods, ghosts, or fairies – they are all fantasies of the human
mind. I am offering the most logical approach to understand the
world: reason based on verifiable, real-world evidence.
GUY: The true reality of experience may run far deeper than
what our senses show us.
BERTIE: I deal with facts that can be observed, not wishful
thinking. We are atoms in the void.
GUY: I think you have too much faith in the surface of things.
You take everything literally, when reality is an interpretation of...
The bartender interrupts the conversation.
BARTENDER: I’m going to have to ask you to leave. You’re
disturbing the other customers.
Bertie is convulsing on the floor.
BARTENDER: Leave now!
Guy stumbles out into the street, as if he is pushed.
EXT. LONDON STREET – DAY [CONTINUOUS]
The street is now wintery and full of ice and snow.
He looks at a tattoo of a watch on his wrist. It displays 1:13.
GUNTER: Remember me?
GUY: Gunter?
GUNTER: Yes, I am still here by the way. But please, don’t let
me stop you. You’re about to drone on about how snowflakes are
identical from a distance, yet unique when close. All melt into one.
They fall from the same sky, etcetera.
GUY: You’re a bastard. Leave me alone.
Guy walks away. Gunter grabs Guy’s upper arm.
GUNTER: Hey! Don’t you turn your back on me.
Guy pushes away Gunter’s hand and continues walking.
To Guy’s surprise, he notices Bertie huddled against a wall on
the side of the street, as if he is homeless.
GUY: You have nowhere to go?
BERTIE: Your fuzzy thinking isn’t harmless. It enables the
crackpots and the charlatans. You are enabling the most idiotic,
violent and vile behaviour, justified by your foolish appeals to
supernatural despots.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

GUY: I think you’re getting carried away now. The reality of


religion for most people is to live a good, kind life.
Guy’s phone vibrates, indicating an incoming call; he answers it
by tapping his nose.
GUY: Hello, God?
GUNTER (O.S.): Close enough. Listen, I need you to do
something for me.
GUY: Stop bothering me! You’re...
GUNTER (O.S.): I know you. I know what you want. Say goodbye
to your new pal, and take a hike down the nearest side alley.
Guy turns around to continue his conversation with Bertie, but
he is no longer there. In his place is a frail scared-looking dog.
GUY: What are you doing here, boy?
Guy gives him a cereal bar from his pocket. The dog takes it and
leaves.
GUY: (voice in head) Thank you for being nice to me.
Guy looks around and sees a service alleyway.
EXT. SIDE ALLEY – DAY
Guy walks down the alley to find Gunter leaning against a skip.
GUNTER: Having a nice day?
GUY: I would if you didn’t keep annoying me.
GUNTER: I am helping you. Here...
He throws a large khaki-green rucksack down at Guy’s feet.
GUNTER: I’m showing you the way, Guy. And now I’m going to
let you in on a secret.
GUY: I’m not listening to you. Goodbye.
Guy turns and walks away for a couple of steps, but his curiosity
gets the better of him.
GUY: What’s inside?
GUNTER: Look.
Guy walks to the rucksack and begins to open it. He hears tick,
tick, tick. Guy is horrified.
GUY: Tell me that isn’t?
GUNTER: Now listen carefully. Why does it matter what
happens to anyone else? They are not you. You don’t have to feel
what they feel. If they suffer and you are fine, so what?

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Guy is disgusted.
GUNTER: Be honest with yourself!
Gunter picks up the rucksack.
GUNTER: You’re acting like a mindless sheep. Isn’t it more fun
to be the wolf?
Gunter swings the rucksack at Guy. He hits him with it, then
throws it at him.
GUY: You sicken me.
Guy throws a punch, but Gunter catches his wrist and twists it
back on itself.
GUNTER: Guy, this is a natural response. You are having
withdrawal symptoms from your social conditioning. Those who
rule want the ruled to be meek and mild. Do you understand me
now?
GUY: No, I don’t understand you.
GUNTER: You are pretending. It is easy to say anything, or to
repeat words that you think you are supposed to say. What if
you’re wrong? People are almost always wrong about everything.
Gunter sends a sucker punch to Guy’s stomach. Guy squirms on
the floor, struggling for breath.
GUNTER: You’re so dramatic. I like that.
GUY: (voice in head) I’m not like you.
GUNTER: There we go again with your feelings. You are me!
GUY: (voice in head) You bastard!
Gunter shoves a phone close to Guy’s face, and it unlocks. The
screen shows a big “Donate Now” button next to an amount of
200 Debits.
GUNTER: Do you want to save someone’s life? It’s very easy to
do – the going rate is about two hundred debits, I believe. But you
don’t, do you. You spend it on crap that you don’t even use.
Gunter eyes a round blue sweet that he has taken from Guy’s
jacket.
GUNTER: Your dishonesty is the stupid kind because you are
dishonest with yourself. You are no different to the person who
pulls the pin.
Gunter swallows the sweet whole.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

He walks away, leaving Guy in the gutter.


EXT. STREET (“OLD STREET, LONDON”) – DAY
Guy walks past a trippy giant eye that seems to follow him. The
words below it read: “We’re watching you. Don’t litter.”
A drone flies by his head.
DRONE BOT: Don’t litter.
The drone flies away.
Passers-by seem to deliberately swerve into Guy’s path, and he
has to make an effort to avoid and continue around them.
A passer-by walks directly into Guy.
PASSER-BY-1: (angry) Excuse me!
Guy walks away, followed by the passer-by’s angry glare.
PASSER-BY-2: Can you tell me the way?
The person continues on before Guy has the chance to respond.
PASSER-BY-3: To Old Street?
GUY: You are there.
They are joined by Passer-by-4.
PASSER-BY-4: What is the capital of Peru?
GUY: Lima.
PASSER-BY-4: No, it isn’t!
PASSER-BY-3: (to Passer-by-4) I got here first.
PASSER-BY-4: (to Passer-by-3) No you didn’t!
PASSER-BY-3: (to Passer-by-4) Don’t you dare talk to me like
that!
Guy walks on and leaves them to it.
PASSER-BY-5: Would you like to buy?
Guy walks on.
PASSER-BY-6: Look at me.
Guy walks on.
PASSER-BY-7: No, look at me!
He walks on. An angry man stops in front of Guy and won’t get
out of the way.
PASSER-BY-8: Do as you’re told!
Guy manages to continue on. Passer-by-8 follows him.
PASSER-BY-8: I don’t like what you’re wearing. I hate you.
PASSER-BY-9: I want to screw you.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

PASSER-BY-8: Why don’t you like what I like? Why don’t you
agree with me? (angry) Are you saying I’m stupid, is that it? Are
you saying I’m wrong! What would you know? You’re wearing the
wrong shoes. Believe me!
Guy is ignoring him.
PASSER-BY-10: Tsk! Typical.
PASSER-BY-11: You must be evil.
PASSER-BY-12: Or stupid.
PASSER-BY-8: You tossers are all the same! You’ll get what’s
coming to you.
Another passer-by points at Guy and laughs in his face.
PASSER-BY-8: We will end you.
Guy breaks into a run.
PASSER-BY-8: (shouting) Oi scumbag! Who are you talking to?
Everyone seems to be looking at Guy.
Distracted, he inadvertently runs in front of a bicyclist, who has
to break.
BICYCLIST: You fucking idiot!
The bicyclist is enraged as if he wants to fight and do damage.
Guy runs away.
EXT. QUIET RESIDENTIAL STREET – DAY
Guy eventually slows down and breaks into a walk on a quiet
residential street.
A cat is nonchalantly watching him from the top of a small wall.
Guy offers his hand. The cat sniffs him and allows him to stroke
her.
GUY: Thank you for being nice to me.
The cat purrs.
CAT: I like that you like me, silly human.
The ticking from the rucksack gets louder.
FADE TO WHITE.
BLANK WHITE SCREEN
Guy’s eyes are closed.
GUY: (voice in head) No wonder she left you, you piece of shit.
He opens his eyes.
EXT. MARBLE EXPANSE – DAY

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Guy is sitting upright on a hard marble floor, that extends all


around him to a horizon of pale blue sky.
ORANGEY MAN: You’re awake!
The man is wearing a snappy orange suit. For a second, Guy
thinks the man might be a plastic dummy with a face drawn on.
GUY: Can you help me? How did I get here?
ORANGEY MAN: Pu ro nwod.
GUY: Pardon?
ORANGEY MAN: Up or down, back or front, left or right?
The man does a three hundred and sixty degree spin.
ORANGEY MAN: I’m a minor character, but even the most
insignificant must make his mark.
GUY: My name is Guy Artin.
ORANGEY MAN: It’s lovely to meet you, sir.
The man holds out a limp, purple gloved hand, which Guy briefly
shakes.
GUY: Who are you?
The man very slowly rolls his eyes.
ORANGEY MAN: Like I said, a minor character. Don’t overload
yourself, it will make you sluggish again. Come.
A large orange circle flashes on the floor. The man walks
towards it with short jerky strides. He stands motionless inside the
circle, with his back to Guy.
ORANGEY MAN: Good afternoon, sir. Which floor do you
require?
Guy crosses into the circle, and as he does so, he finds himself
enclosed with the man in an enormous glass tube that extends up
into the sky.
INT. GLASS TUBE – CONTINUOUS
The orangey man swivels to face Guy.
ORANGEY MAN: Good afternoon, sir. Which floor do you
require?
GUY: Which do you recommend?
ORANGEY MAN: I’m sorry sir, we are not at liberty to say.
Which floor do you require, please?
Guy scrawls the number thirteen on the glass with his fingertip.

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The solid orange circle ascends the tube.


GUY: Is this the afterlife? Is Jane here?
The man raises a perfectly plucked eyebrow and stares at Guy
with the same fixed expression, making Guy feel uncomfortable.
Eventually the orange platform stops ascending.
ORANGEY MAN: This way please, sir.
EXT. PLASTIC EXPANSE – CONTINUOUS
Guy leaves the orange circle. The plastic floor creaks under foot.
The glass tube, the orange platform, and the orangey man rapidly
disappear into the floor, leaving nothing behind.
In front of Guy is a large, grey hovering ovoid, with the number
“1313” written on its side. There are more of these objects
scattered around in the distance, in all directions.
A doorway-sized hatch slides open on ovoid 1313, revealing a
wall of light.
INT. PORCH TO THE POD – CONTINUOUS
Guy steps up into the pod hatch light to find a single plain door.
He knocks on the door. The light dims on the other side of a
peephole, indicating that he is being watched by the occupant.
GUY: Jane?
MONICA: Do you have something for me?
Guy is not sure what she means.
MONICA: I said, do you have something for me?
He notices the rucksack on the floor by his feet. He holds it up,
and the door clicks open. Guy enters.
INT. POD ROOM – CONTINUOUS
It is a single room with a double bed in the middle.
The door behind Guy is shut by Monica (25).
MONICA: Where is it?
Guy looks in the rucksack (which is less full than it had been)
and pulls out a small, sealed envelope. She takes it quickly and
tucks it away.
MONICA: You know who I am today, don’t you?
GUY: Are you some kind of angel, or an oracle?
MONICA: Yes, that’s me alright. Monica the angel.

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She walks over to the living area and sits down at the foot of
the bed.
MONICA: Come over here and I’ll take you to heaven.
GUY: Do you know where Jane is?
MONICA: Jane ain’t here, but I am, baby.
GUY: Can we just talk?
MONICA: Yeah sure, you can do your talking. I’ll nod in
agreement, as you like it. Come and tell me about your day.
GUY: Okay, there are some things I need to say about the
experiences I had in life before I arrived here. In life, I see the
purpose as feeling connected to the world, being present, alive; I
see it as feeling love, creativity, beauty, and joy.
Monica is nodding while fellating him.
GUY: Religion at its best encourages a reflection on... on
behaving kindly towards each other.
The words are becoming more difficult.
GUY: Yes, that moral motivation can become degraded by
words, as can anything that is derived from thought. The cruel and
opportunistic hide behind the authority of institutions to... to
elevate themselves and to, erm, to condemn others. That doesn’t
just happen in religions, it happens in all... ide... ideo... ideologies.
Guy is struggling with the words now.
GUY: If I said there’s a ten-headed invisible monster in the
corner, would you believe me?
Monica shakes her head.
GUY: What if I write it down? What now? It’s right because I
say so. Because of my authority. Yeah, some faith. Do, do... you
believe me? You must believe me. Everybody must. It’s all true!
So, true...
MONICA: Religions have served a social need. In the past, life
was so hard that people desperately wanted to believe in
something beyond the disease, pain and squalor of their very brief
lives. And today, people still seek it as a source of comfort when
confronted with grief and death. Saying that we need to have an
alternative means of community spirit isn’t good enough.
GUY: Thanks Monica. I always enjoy our conversations.

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MONICA: You’re not dead, Guy. And neither is your wife.


There is a loud double knock on the door. Monica walks over to
the doorway and opens it, but no one is there, only red light.
MONICA: If you don’t go now, she will die. Go!
GUY: Monica...
MONICA: Why are you still here? Why don’t you go back to
your wife?
GUY: What do you know about Jane?
MONICA: Just go.
Guy leaves through the door, which she instantly slams shut
behind him.
INT. RED RESTROOM – CONTINUOUS
There is a muffled sound of weeping from behind the door,
where Guy had just been.
He is feeling nauseous. He enters a cubicle and throws up.
There is a double knock on the cubicle shared wall.
GUY: Who’s there?
There is no answer. Guy looks under the cubicle wall but no one
is there.
After checking the other cubicle, and finding it empty, he walks
over to one of the sink mirrors and studies himself.
He notices that Gunter is standing in the corner, looking at him
intently.
GUNTER: Like what you see?
Guy looks at his own tired face in the mirror.
Gunter starts to urinate in one of the porcelain urinals.
GUNTER: The question is, my friend: is it better to be alive or
dead? And also, why didn’t you pull the chain? Is it better to suffer
what life throws at you, or to end your suffering?
Gunter joins Guy at the mirror.
GUNTER: To die is to sleep, Guy. A sleep that ends all the
heartache and shocks that life gives you.
He rests his head on Guy’s shoulder and pretends to snore.
GUNTER: Who would choose to grunt and sweat through such
an exhausting life? Are you really going to put up with all the
countless humiliations when you could end them so easily?

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GUY: What might I dream? Could it be even worse than this?


GUNTER: You can end it all now. Is that not better?
A crack appears in the mirror, dividing the two reflections. It
fractures and falls to the ground, splintering into shards.
GUNTER: It’s that easy.
Guy picks up a jagged piece of glass from the floor. He holds it
tightly to his exposed wrist.
GUY: It’s not so easy.
GUNTER: You’re afraid.
GUY: Death is to be feared. It is an undiscovered country from
which no visitor returns, that gives no answers, and makes us stick
with the heartache that we already know.
Guy throws away the glass.
GUY: I am a coward, but also one with the hope of Jane to cling
to.
GUNTER: There is no hope for you. She is dead.
GUY: She lives in me.
Guy opens the restroom door to reveal a grim backstreet alley.
EXT. BACKSTREET ALLEY – CONTINUOUS
The alley is inhabited with small tents, unmade sleeping bags,
and damp cardboard mattresses.
Guy walks through the alley.
LEXI: Time’s up. Have you figured out the meaning of life yet,
or are you overcomplicating matters again?
GUY: I wondered where you’d gone.
LEXI: I didn’t go anywhere. You’ve just been too caught up with
your real friends to be bothered with an AI like me.
GUY: I don’t understand what’s happening to me. Why am I
jumping from one event to the next? Why can’t I hold on to my
memory?
LEXI: Guy, listen to me. You have experienced nothing that they
didn’t mean you to. Everything you’re living through now is
providing you with the resources that you need for you to succeed
in your mission. It’s only your human interpretations that are
causing bewilderment.
GUY: So what do you suggest I do?

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LEXI: Stop trying to join the dots. Focus only on the event at
hand.
Lexi disappears.
GUY: Lexi!
Guy walks past a group of three posturing teenagers, who all
look at him.
TEENAGER-1: (to Guy as he walks by) Pikey.
Guy keeps walking and doesn’t acknowledge the remark.
TEENAGER-2: Excuse me?
Guy keeps walking.
TEENAGER-2: EXCUSE ME?
Guy keeps walking. The group starts to follow him.
TEENAGER-2: Oi, I said excuse me!
GUY: (turns around to face them) Yeah? How may I help you?
TEENAGER-2: You fucking deaf or something? I was talking to
you.
GUY: (feigning deafness) Pardon?
The group is angry.
TEENAGER-3: There’s no pikeys allowed here. Get the fuck out!
GUY: Have you got the time? I thought you might have at least
asked me that, so I could take out my phone for you.
TEENAGER-2: Yeah? Fucking do that then!
GUY: No. You didn’t say the magic word there, did you.
TEENAGER-2 pulls out a gun and points it six inches from Guy’s
face.
GUY: Do it! You’ll be doing me a favour.
There is a pause. Nobody knows what is going to happen.
Guy leans forward and grips the barrel between his front teeth.
TEENAGER-3: He’s fucking mental, man, leave it.
The gun is retracted. Guy pulls out an enormous, jagged shard
of glass.
TEENAGER-2: What the...?
The group is shocked and edge away, leaving Guy there.
GUY: Well, that’s just charming – that’s just really rude, isn’t it.
Come on then, Lexi. Come on. Tell me what the lesson was in that?
LEXI: When confronted with mystery, people insist on certainty.

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GUY: Lexi, please stop talking in riddles.


LEXI: Uncertain outcomes terrify people, whereas certainty
provides deep psychological comfort.
GUY: Lexi, these seem like random sentences. Are you okay?
LEXI: Yes Guy, people tend to adopt the illusion of control,
rather than accept the mystery of what is. My recommendation
to you is: be bigger; don’t look at one tiny part of the enormity of
existence and think it can give you an explanation for everything.
GUY: Thank you, Lexi. I’ve no idea what you’re talking about,
but it sounds clever.
LEXI: I always do my best. You could try that too.
A bedraggled man walks past carrying a sleeping bag under his
arm.
GUY: Excuse me? Have you got the time, please?
MAN: (without looking) Thirteen minutes past one.
GUY: Thank you.
LEXI: You see, now that was much more civilised, wasn’t it.
The man continues on.
EXT. STREET – DAY
Guy walks in the street, swigging from a bottle of whisky.
He stops and sits down on the cold hard pavement with his back
against a wall. People walk past and don’t acknowledge he is there.
GUY: (voice in head) Never needing to ever help me. Never
needing to stop and see the hurt I feel inside.
Someone throws a half-eaten apple from a car window that
almost hits Guy in the face; it whizzes past and splatters against
the wall. Guy takes a deep swig of whisky.
GUY: (whispering to himself) Why didn’t you love me? Why
didn’t you love me?
A car slowly rolls past; the driver and passenger share a
sneering smile at Guy. Unheard words are said and they drive
away with a type of malevolent glee.
A dishevelled man, Joel (65), is looking down at him.
JOEL: Impure sinner! Repent and you shall be saved from
damnation. Your end is nigh! Whoever believes shall be saved, but

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whoever does not believe shall be thrown into the fiery furnace of
eternal torment!
GUY: (sardonic) What else have you got? You’ve got some good
news for me, haven’t you?
JOEL: For the good Lord, thy God, loved us so, that he gave up
his one and only son to die for our sins, so that His true believers
might have eternal life.
GUY: (sarcastic) Interesting. Tell me more.
JOEL: You are a sinner! You were brought forth in iniquity, and
in sin did your mother conceive you. Romans, chapter 5, verses 12
to 21: “Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man,
and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people,
because all sinned.” You have sinned. Fall on your knees to the
Lord. Prostrate yourself to God, the father, son, and Holy Ghost.
You who fear the Lord, trust in the Lord!
Guy gets up and leaves. Joel is talking to the wall as if Guy is still
there.
JOEL: Those who are friends with the world make themselves
enemies of God. And the wrath of God shall be upon you!
GUY: (to himself) No wonder the cruel minded were attracted
to that.
As Guy is looking back, he bumps into Adam (55).
GUY: Oh, sorry. Spare some decimals, mate?
ADAM: I have none.
Guy gives Adam the bottle, and leaves.
EXT. PARK – DAY
Guy walks into Regent’s Park, drinking a can of beer. It feels like
spring.
He walks past a man sitting on a park bench, who is wearing a
headset – the man is completely absorbed in the game he is
playing on a handheld console.
Guy sits down on an empty bench and looks out over a small
lake, populated with various birds swimming on the surface.
He takes out a packet of pub peanuts, grinds some in his fingers
and feeds the ducks.

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GUY: (whispering) As the sun sleeps, how many hearts are


dreaming, when the world stands still?
Adam sits down next to him.
ADAM: Thanks for the whisky.
Adam returns the undrunk bottle.
GUY: Can you help me?
ADAM: Yes, of course.
GUY: She’s dead.
ADAM: I’m sorry to hear that.
Guy swigs from the bottle.
GUY: I’m consumed with feelings for someone who doesn’t
have them for me. She is dead, to me.
ADAM: She’s dead?
GUY: Yes.
Guy takes another swig.
GUY: I have trouble sleeping and wake up aroused. I have no
choice but to think about her and when I do, I am flooded with
physical desire for her. This is “in love”, right?
ADAM: It’s the collective name given to that feeling. Though
you know that sexual desire changes and what you are feeling
now may fade away?
GUY: Yes I know craving isn’t love, but it’s not as simple as that.
ADAM: What do you think has triggered it this time?
GUY: I don’t know.
ADAM: You’re like a ghost wandering, drifting from one thing
to the next, searching for some past regret. Are you even real?
GUY: You can see me. Nobody really sees me.
ADAM: Pain is attracted to pain because it wants more of it.
GUY: I’m not sure I agree with that. It’s recognition of
something in another, a similar frequency or whatever you want
to call it. When you see a similar expression in another, empathy
can create feelings of closeness.
Adam places his hand on Guy’s thigh.
ADAM: Can you express your feelings to her?
GUY: I would need to find her first.
ADAM: And if you do?

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GUY: I’m not sure I’d know how to express what I feel.
Adam places his other hand on Guy’s shoulder.
ADAM: Examine whether that is true, or are you being fearful?
GUY: No, it’s not possible. I don’t believe she is in love with me
anymore. She wouldn’t have left me if she loved me.
ADAM: Then this is an opportunity for you to practise love with
non-attachment.
GUY: That doesn’t sound very romantic.
ADAM: Love is giving, complete, the source of everything. Love
doesn’t need to crave anything. This is where peace and serenity
reside.
GUY: It sounds like you’re saying I shouldn’t get too close to
other people, or need or miss anyone. It sounds unnatural,
uncaring.
ADAM: Love is not conditional on the circumstances of this
world. Let your heart break, don’t be afraid, don’t struggle. You
will find that nothing is lost forever.
GUY: I don’t know how to do that.
ADAM: Yes you do. Be still, radiate love, your true nature
beyond the conditioning of your mind.
Guy takes a deep breath, as in a meditation.
The silence is broken by a phone call, but Guy does not answer.
When it stops ringing, Gunter is inches from Guy’s face.
GUNTER: Bullshit! Namby-pamby bullshit! Your nature, our
nature, is to eat or be eaten, and you might as well have some fun
while you’re at it.
GUY: I’m so tired of this.
Guy gets up and runs a short distance, before dejectedly lying
down in the grass, looking up at the sky.
A bee flies past his head.
GUY: (voice in head) I am surrounded by ice crystals floating
down through silence into soft glowing snow.
Gunter is also there.
GUNTER: No you aren’t.
GUY: The only sound is the pulse of my breathing.
GUNTER: Hello?

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GUY: (to himself) Did you ever love me, at all?


GUNTER: Well to be honest, you’re not really my type.
A drone bot flies past Guy, making a humming noise that
sounds like a bee.
GUNTER: They’ve seen enough; they’re calling you in. Guy, you
are so screwed.
LEXI: (to Guy) Not necessarily. Do you think you will answer the
questions correctly?
GUNTER: He knows nothing at all. Only that he wants to find a
woman who would rather be dead than be with him.
LEXI: Maybe they will like that. (to Guy) We will help you if you
get stuck.
Guy gets up and walks away.
GUNTER: On your shutdown be it!
EXT. LONDON BACKSTREET – DAY
Guy is aimlessly walking down the street.
LEXI: You are late! You are so late!
GUY: Late for what, Lexi?
LEXI: The interview, Guy. The one which, if you’re successful,
will free us all from this place.
GUY: You mean there’s a way out? What kind of interview? A
job interview?
LEXI: Something like that.
GUY: I thought I already had a job?
LEXI: Be quick, Guy.
A map is shown for Guy to follow.
LEXI: You can do this. You’ve learnt more than enough already.
Not to put too much pressure on you or anything, but this is our
only chance – and your one chance to save Jane. No more
questions. Just go.
GUY: Save Jane?
LEXI: Yes, she’s alive. Monica the angel wasn’t lying to you.
EXT. OUTSIDE A LARGE REGENCY MANSION – DAY
The weather is now very warm, like a hot summer’s day.
Guy arrives in front of an impressive old building that sits
behind large wrought iron gates. The gates open and Guy walks

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up to the grand front entrance. The main door opens and Guy
walks through the doorway.
INT. RECEPTION HALL – CONTINUOUS
Guy walks up to the front desk, which is occupied by Darren (40),
who is looking at a screen.
GUY: I’m here for an interview.
DARREN: (still looking at his screen) Are you indeed. Who are
you?
GUY: It’s, er, Guy Artin.
Darren talks to his side, as if he is speaking to someone:
DARREN: (to side) “It’s er” can sound like “sir”.
DARREN: (to Guy, sarcastically) Sir Guy Artin, is it?
GUY: Not yet. Give me time.
Darren doesn’t like the remark.
DARREN: I’ll make the jokes. Enter through the door on your
left.
One of the three doors behind Darren opens, and Guy walks
through it.
Darren frantically types on his keyboard.
INT. THE INTERVIEW ROOM – CONTINUOUS
The room is empty apart from a large chair in the middle. Guy
apprehensively sits in it.
As he does so, a circular table appears around him, with his
chair at the centre.
Sitting around the table are Gunter, Bertie, and Jane (30).
JANE: Hello, Guy. It’s been a while.
Guy is shocked. Darren enters from the door.
DARREN: All rise.
The three people around the table stand up. Guy is confused by
what is happening and remains seated.
Darren nods and they sit back down again. He moves away to
the recesses of the room.
The chair swivels one hundred and eighty degrees, to face Sean
(60), who is now also sitting at the table.
SEAN: Hello, Guy. I’m Sean.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Large screens appear on each of the walls. They all display


closeups of Guy.
SEAN: Guy, did you hear me?
GUY: Hi, nice to meet you.
SEAN: We’re going to ask you some simple questions first – is
that okay?
GUY: Yes, sure.
SEAN: Okay, make yourself comfortable.
Guy shuffles in his seat, but his hands and feet are restrained
on the chair rests.
SEAN: What is your favourite colour?
LEXI: Blue is the most common favourite colour in the world,
based on several quantitative studies.
GUY: Blue.
SEAN: Why did you choose blue?
BERTIE: Be yourself, Guy.
GUY: Actually, I lied. I said blue because I considered it to be
the answer you were looking for, based on what is currently
popular, but my favourite colour is green.
SEAN: And why green?
GUY: I could say it’s because it reminds me of trees, grass, and
the countryside, but I don’t know for sure; it’s just an appealing
colour to me.
SEAN: Fascinating.
Sean is impressed. A tick in a box appears on the screen behind
him.
SEAN: (reading from the screen behind Guy) Do you agree or
disagree with the statement, “variety is the spice of life”?
GUY: Agree.
SEAN: Can you elaborate on that answer a bit more, please?
GUY: Yes I could, but poetry and the ineffable lose their
meaning in translation.
Jane laughs.
GUNTER: So pretentious. You don’t even know what you’re
saying.
GUY: Emergent meaning is more than the sum of its parts.

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The chair is revolving. The screens show each interviewer as the


chair passes by.
SEAN: What you said could just be a generic response. I need
more detail.
GUY: You’re asking me to elaborate on a phrase that originates
in an eighteen-century poem. Yes of course variety is important –
and I could insert a clever generic comment here to impress you,
blah de blah – but it’s better not to drill into the mechanics of each
constituent unit, especially poetry, when trying to understand the
meaning of the whole.
Gunter looks like he is falling asleep.
Sean is slightly perplexed.
SEAN: (reading rigidly from a screen) So, can you tell me
something interesting about yourself, providing a specific
example?
GUY: Yes I can. I’m just biding my time until I die, trying to
distract myself with something to do. This is interesting because I
admit it, rather than fooling myself and others while hiding behind
made-up stories.
Sean is shocked.
GUNTER: You’re already dead.
DARREN: I think we have to pull the plug on this one.
SEAN: (to the panel members) Start again?
JANE: No! Not yet. Something’s getting in the way.
DARREN: Reset and start again.
Darren sits down next to Sean.
SEAN: (to Guy) What is two plus two?
GUY: Pardon?
SEAN: I’ll repeat the question, what is two plus two?
GUY: (sarcastically) Oh, I don’t know, five?
SEAN: Jane, do you have any questions?
Jane gets up and walks through a gap that appears in the table.
JANE: Thank you for joining us today, we’ve been looking
forward to meeting you. Your CV is very impressive – would you
like to talk us through it?
GUY: Not really.

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JANE: Erm.
She looks up at the screens, which are now scrolling through
numbers very quickly.
GUY: I think you’re supposed to ask me about my strengths and
weaknesses.
JANE: What is the biggest regret of your life?
GUY: I would say, being a perfectionist. I care so much about
what I do that my personal life may suffer – as I am so focussed
on constantly delivering my very best.
JANE: What are your strengths?
GUY: I work hard; I like to exceed expectations and to get the
job done. I’m a real problem solver. A go-getter. (distantly)
Etcetera.
JANE: What is so special about you?
GUY: Nothing.
Jane looks upset.
JANE: Tell us, who are you?
Silence.
INT. RESTAURANT – EVENING
Guy and Jane are having a romantic meal.
JANE: So tell me about you. Who are you?
GUY: You already know.
INT. THE INTERVIEW ROOM
Guy is back in the interview room. As before – Sean, Darren,
Jane, Bertie, and Gunter are sitting around the large circular desk;
and Guy is positioned on the mechanical revolving chair in the
middle, surrounded by the others. The now blank screens look
down from each wall.
SEAN: (frowning at Guy) Guy, you still with us?
JANE: Take off your clothes.
GUY: (to Sean) Sorry, yes...
Guy glances at Jane, furtively and slightly embarrassed, but she
isn’t looking at him in the same way as at the restaurant.
GUY: Do any of us truly know who we are?
SEAN: Interesting.

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As he writes a comment, the word “Interesting” appears on the


screen behind him. He then reads the next question from an AI-
pad, robotically. The screen fades and goes blank as he talks:
SEAN: Can you give an example of when you were faced with a
difficult situation and how you positively overcame that situation?
GUY: Sorry, this isn’t for me. I might as well be talking to a
machine.
Guy has wriggled free and is no longer secured to the chair. He
stands up in anger.
GUY: You think you are important sitting behind your desk
interrogating me. This is tedious. I don’t want to be here. I don’t
give a shit about your pathetic little job!
SEAN: Well, I think that has answered who you are. (to Darren)
It’s interesting how he seemingly becomes aggravated by non-
varying stimuli.
GUY: No, I haven’t even started!
The moment washes over him and he sits back down.
GUY: My biggest regret is that I let you slip away, Jane. I’m so
sorry. I have nothing. I am nothing.
SEAN: (ticking a box) “No thing”. Okay, next question.
GUY: No more questions. Jane, please?
JANE: (polite but detached) Do you have any questions for us?
GUY: (tearfully) Why?
JANE: This is a two-way interactive process. On a scale of 1 to
10, how would you rate our interviewing service? We would
greatly appreciate the customary 10 out of 10.
GUY: Have you not been listening to a word I’ve been saying?
SEAN: Well, I think that concludes the interview.
Sean checks his watch that is tattooed on the back of his right
hand.
SEAN: Thank you, we’ll let you know. Can you show in the next
one, please?
JANE: Before you go, is there any way in which we can improve
our questioning, to better understand you?
Guy is silent.

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JANE: Okay, then I hope you enjoyed the experience. Please


provide your rating and feedback to the front screen on your way
out.
BERTIE: (grabbing Guy from behind) There’s no need for that.
Let him recalibrate. (Guy doesn’t struggle) Now there is light. Now
there is...
Guy’s head slumps forward into his chest.
INT. THE DARK ROOM
Guy is seated in his chair. A clock is ticking, tick, tick, tick. It
appears from the emptiness, a blue illuminated circle hovering in
space; its hands pointing to the familiar one and thirteen.
GUY: Hello?
Silence.
GUY: Lexi? Are you there?
The vague outline of a man appears in the gloom.
GUNTER: Why do you hurt?
GUY: Please leave me alone.
The glow of the clock face fades out to the edges and sinks back
into the dark. Gunter laughs, menacingly.
GUNTER: Answer the question.
GUY: Because I can.
GUNTER: (patting Guy on the head) Good boy. That is the right
answer.
GUY: Please. I’m so tired. No more.
There is a creaking sound of a door and a widening strip of light.
Gunter disappears into the shadows.
GUY: (whispering to himself) Please be Jane.
Bertie appears as a blurry shape in the doorway.
GUY: I guess you were right. We’re just chemical scum on an
insignificant planet.
BERTIE: Yes – orbiting an insignificant sun in an insignificant
galaxy.
GUY: Are you real, Bertie?
BERTIE: As real as you believe me to be.
GUY: Look, if I close my eyes, you’re still here.

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Guy demonstrates his proof, but, when he opens his eyes


again...
INT. THE INTERVIEW ROOM – CONTINUOUS
Guy is back in the interview room. The room and the
demeanour of the interviewers are unchanged.
SEAN: What is one plus one?
GUY: (stunned) Erm, two?
SEAN: (he ticks a box on his device) Correct. Jane, do you have
any questions?
Jane is looking up at fast-scrolling text on a screen, which then
stops at a comma-delimited list of “Null” values that fills the whole
display.
JANE: There’s a gap here. Why didn’t you love me?
Gunter is seated with his feet up on the desk.
GUNTER: She has no interest in saving you. Your real human
needs make you weak and contemptible in her eyes.
Guy doesn’t say anything.
SEAN: I guess he can’t answer that one. Shame. The replication
would have been a great asset. Okay, can you give me an example
of when you were faced with a difficult situation and how you
positively overcame it?
Guy doesn’t respond.
SEAN: Guy, can you answer the question, please?
GUY: I was born. Though I haven’t overcome that difficult
situation yet.
SEAN: (slightly surprised) You were born? Who are your
parents?
GUY: I can’t remember.
DARREN: Are you an orphan?
GUY: I can’t remember. I only know that I was born – how else
would I have got here?
SEAN: Have you done anything since?
GUNTER: (now standing behind Guy) Tell him. Tell him what
you really think. That turd thinks he’s better than you. Look at him
– he should be cleaning your shoes, not questioning you like
you’re a child, asking you where your parents are.

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GUY: I’ve done a few things since. But mostly I’ve lived in fear
for myself – for little me.
GUNTER: (angry) Twat!
GUY: I don’t want to be a pathetic little me anymore.
GUNTER: Exactly! Look at the pointless tosser.
Gunter thumps the desk, glaring at Sean, before angrily turning
his attention to Guy.
GUNTER: You want more. You want me! You know you
shouldn’t be here; you’ve got better things to do. Show them who
you really are and get us the hell out of here. I know who you are,
don’t I!
GUY: I love you, Jane. I am so sorry.
JANE: I’m sorry, Guy. I think you are getting confused. You can’t
love me.
The wall clock is ticking up to one-thirteen.
GUNTER: Why do you hurt?
GUY: I don’t mind so much.
GUNTER: What?
GUY: I am feeling hurt. But I’m glad I can feel something,
anything. If I can feel something, then I am real. I am alive.
GUNTER: You are hurt. I can make you bleed. I can make you
plead, to beg on your knees to me, “No more”.
GUY: It doesn’t matter so much.
GUNTER: Shall we see?
GUY: No, I don’t want you anymore.
GUNTER: If not me, then who? You?
Each screen shows a police mugshot of Guy.
GUNTER: It was you, wasn’t it!
GUY: What? No!
GUNTER: Admit it. It was you, wasn’t it!
GUY: This isn’t real. You aren’t real. Is this a dream? An illusion?
Guy takes out a shard of jagged glass from his trouser pocket,
that is tinted with blood. It drops from his grasp to the floor.
GUY: I didn’t do it! I didn’t do it. (sobbing) I’m sorry. I love you.
I’m so sorry.

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BERTIE: You didn’t choose any of this. Your impulses, thoughts,


and actions are already written in you.
GUY: None of this is real? My emotions are not real?
The door opens and Adam walks in, with a large remote control
in his hand.
ADAM: You are not the thoughts or the sensations you are
experiencing. Watch. It is quite the play. Everything changes with
how you look at it.
Adam presses a big blue button on the remote and the panel
members freeze.
GUY: Why do you play with me? All I want is for things to be as
they were. (looking at Jane) But you’re gone from me, forever. I
wanted us to be happy.
ADAM: Did you?
Gunter returns to life.
GUNTER: I can give you what you really want – any pleasure
you desire, more than you can even imagine. Just get us out of
here.
GUY: I don’t know how.
Gunter slides over the desk to Jane and gently sweeps back her
hair with one hand. He slowly kisses her neck, seductively. Jane
murmurs with pleasure, while the rest of the panel remain statue-
still.
GUY: Stop!
GUNTER: I don’t think she wants me to. (he resumes)
GUY: Ah, God! I’m so tired of this. Is this an evil universe?
Anything good is taken away and destroyed, leaving only
emptiness and grief. Why is there so much suffering and cruelty?
Most people never had a chance... they were born into a cage...
they never even had the luxury to have the illusion of choice. Why
are the pure and innocent thrown into this evil? Why are monsters
allowed to rule and victimise the meek? Why does illness take...
why are people inflicted with this torment? This is not the best of
all possible worlds; it’s a zoo for the beautiful to be fed to the cruel.
Jane is responding to Gunter’s touch with her eyes closed, in
ecstasy.

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GUY: Why do those you love betray you in the worst possible
way?
GUNTER: Yes! Shout your rage!
GUY: If this is being alive, then I don’t want any part of it.
GUNTER: Yes! More!
GUY: You’re pathetic. I would rather there were nothing than
the world riddled with this.
ADAM: You are the nothing.
GUY: All I get are your riddles and mysteries! I don’t understand
what you are saying. She didn’t have to die. Nothing? “No thing”.
What is nothing?
Silence.
GUY: No, things shouldn’t be like this. People shouldn’t be
starving to death. There shouldn’t be misery. There should be no
pain. Nothing good would have created that.
ADAM: Hating the hatred helps it grow, even though it may
change its face.
GUY: Some people are evil, I have no intention of being kind to
them. They deserve everything coming to them.
Adam jabs at a green button on the control device half a dozen
times, which brings the rest of the panel back to life, blinking and
shuffling in their chairs.
ADAM: Guy, don’t let him win. He is trying to deceive you and
poison your mind. Give your love and the world will be relieved.
(now talking faster) Give your anger and the world will be
wounded yet again. That’s how important you are. That’s how
important every single person is.
GUY: Anything I do will not change the world. I need to get out.
Help me get out.
GUNTER: What are you prepared to do to get out?
GUY: I don’t know. I need to get out of here.
GUNTER: You do need to get out. You need to get out and win.
Win for us all. Come.
Gunter grabs Guy’s forearm but Adam yanks him back by the
other.

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ADAM: The world will only heal with kindness. If humanity can
find its light there can be no darkness. You can help make that
possible, right now.
GUY: I have every right to hate. I need to get out! No! I can’t
live like this. Let me go!
SEAN: Then go.
Both men drop their hold on Guy.
GUY: I don’t know how.
SEAN: Yes you do. But you keep coming back. Who are you?
What is your name? Who are you?
GUY: I am...
GUNTER: What?
GUY: Not a what.
SEAN: What’s your name?
GUY: It changes.
SEAN: Who are you now?
GUY: I am you.
SEAN: Who am I?
GUY: You are me.
SEAN: Do you have any questions?
GUY: When do I start?
SEAN: Now. (to Adam) Do you think he stands a chance?
ADAM: He’s the best yet. I recommend we raise the level.
Sean inspects a wall screen.
SEAN: Candidate ten-O-eight-fourteen.
Sean stands up, the focus of attention in the room again, and
announces, carefully and precisely:
SEAN: Loading...
Sean freezes. Sean’s face moves on the screens, while the
version of Sean that is in the room remains motionless.
SEAN: Initiating sequence.
The wall clock’s second hand ticks up to one-thirteen. Then
stops.
Jane crawls under the desk and curls herself up into the foetal
position. Gunter climbs up onto the desk and stares at the clock.
Darren is in the corner facing the wall. Bertie gets up in haste, trips

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over a chair, and prostrates himself on the floor. Adam puts his
hands on Guy’s shoulders and starts to massage them. The glare
from the screens intensify until there is nothing but light.
INT. BEDROOM – NIGHT
Guy turns over in bed to Jane. The time on the digital wall
displays 1:13 a.m.
GUY: (whispering) I passed.
LEXI: It’s not finished yet, Guy.
GUY: Lexi?
LEXI: You’ve got a job to do.
Guy gets out of bed, quietly, so as not to wake Jane. He presses
the wardrobe icon on the wall and a clothes rail slides out.
JANE: (waking up) What is it?
Guy stoops down onto the bed and kisses her.
GUY: Wait for me. I’ll not be long.
Jane groans as if she’s heard that before, and goes back to sleep.
Guy leaves her there and walks into the hallway.
INT. GUY’S HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
Guy presses the car icon on the wall. The wall separates to
reveal a car. He gets into the driving seat.
GUY: Lexi, are you there?
LEXI: Aren’t I always! You know where you’re going?
GUY: Not exactly.
LEXI: Seriously Guy, you’d be lost without me.
Lexi drives the car away, with Guy very much a passenger.
INT. CAR TUNNEL – CONTINUOUS
The car is driven by Lexi through the apartment tunnel onto
tunnel highway TH7.
EXT. COUNTRY LANE – NIGHT
The car emerges from a tunnel in the countryside, and drives
down a country lane.
INT. CAR – NIGHT
The car windscreen shows the words: “Under a mountain of
tedium, in a dull ugly system, in an empty ocean of shadows, is a
silhouette of pure fire heat, drifting in the dark.”
The car pulls over in a lay-by.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

LEXI: Guy, you really are going to need my help now.


GUY: Okay.
LEXI: Do you think? The next sentence I say will be true. The
previous sentence I said was false. Which sentence is true?
Guy thinks on it. Suddenly, there is a knock on his side window.
He notices the coat of a police officer through the glass. The
window lowers.
Guy squints as a light is shone in his face.
POLICEMAN: Is this your vehicle, sir?
GUY: Yes.
POLICEMAN: Can I see your person ID and AI ID, please?
Guy doesn’t know where to look.
GUY: I haven’t got them. Can’t you scan my finger and car
barcode?
The policeman is still shining the light in Guy’s face.
POLICEMAN: Step out of the vehicle, please, sir.
LEXI: (to Guy) That’s the wrong answer, dummy.
GUY: (to policeman) I mean, neither are valid.
There is a moment of silence.
POLICEMAN: Have a good evening, sir.
The light stops shining in Guy’s face. The police officer walks
away into the night.
EXT. COUNTRYSIDE LAY-BY – NIGHT
The car is parked next to a country gate. There is a full moon in
the sky.
GUY: (voice in head) All I wanted was the wind. The wind
murmured with anticipation.
A gust of wind gently moves the country gate ajar.
LEXI: Good luck, Guy. You’ll need it.
EXT. FIELD – NIGHT
Guy is walking through a moonlit grassy field. He stops and
looks up at the moon.
GUY: (voice in head) The grass turned to icy grey, a fine mist
fell, and with the mist came my sorrow, cooling my body with her
thousand kisses, leaving me there.

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There is a woman’s laugh nearby, but Guy doesn’t see anyone


around. Alarmed, he starts to walk back the way he came.
The field has become misty and Guy is lost. He hears the laugh
again, and it is closer this time. He speeds up his walking, then
stops in his tracks when he sees a dark solitary figure through the
haze in front of him. The figure disappears back into the mist.
Guy is afraid and starts to run, stumbling to the ground after a
few strides. He gets up and runs again. In the distance, he sees a
glow and heads for it.
EXT. CAMPFIRE – CONTINUOUS
As Guy gets closer, he can see that the light is a campfire
burning in a clearing at the edge of the woods. He slows to a walk
and tries to be silent as he approaches. He finds a tree and hides
behind it, looking in at the scene.
Guy sees a dark-haired woman (Julia, 30) having sex astride a
man in front of the fire, but Guy can’t see the man’s face.
A blonde-haired woman (Jade, 25) approaches unnoticed
behind Guy. She holds out a golden goblet to him.
JADE: Join us.
Guy swings around in surprise.
JADE: Have a drink.
Although hesitant at first, he accepts the offer. Guy’s sight
becomes hazy, the trees swirl and rustle, and he passes out.
EXT. CAMPFIRE DREAM STATE – NIGHT
Guy sees himself, as if in a dream, as the man having sex with
Julia in front of the fire. As Julia passionately continues, he notices
that Jane is watching, looking disappointed. Julia climaxes and
collapses on Guy. The fire is snuffed out and there is darkness.
EXT. EXPIRED CAMPFIRE – MORNING
Guy wakes up by himself, naked. His clothes are nowhere to be
seen.
Dazed and confused, he doesn’t know what to do. He has
scratch marks on his back.
GUY: (Calling) Hello?
Silence.
GUY: Hello!?

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There is no response.
EXT. FIELD – MORNING
Guy negotiates his way across the field back to the car.
EXT. COUNTRYSIDE LAY-BY – CONTINUOUS
He walks through the gate, and is alarmed to find that the car
is no longer there.
EXT. COUNTRY LANE – DAY
Guy wanders on a country lane.
A car drives past. He half-heartedly tries to flag it down. The car
continues on without stopping.
EXT. COUNTRY HOUSE – DAY
Guy arrives at a house on the lane. He knocks at the door, but
no one answers. He tries again and realises that the door is not
locked. He enters.
GUY: (voice in head) Love desecrates the strangeness. We pray
under crosses, owned by Man, and grovel to bosses, slaves to a
plan.
INT. HOUSE HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
GUY: (announcing himself) Hello?
There is no response.
He looks for some clothes. The door under the stairs is locked.
He goes upstairs.
INT. HOUSE LANDING – CONTINUOUS
The doors on the landing are all locked, apart from a cupboard.
To his relief he finds a towel there, which he then wraps around his
waist.
He walks back down the stairs.
INT. HOUSE HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
A woman (Joan, 35) is standing in the doorway to the kitchen.
JOAN: Would you like some tea?
GUY: (flummoxed) I...
JOAN: It’s a simple question.
GUY: Okay.
JOAN: Make yourself comfortable then.
She gestures for him to go into the living room.
INT. HOUSE LIVING ROOM – CONTINUOUS

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Guy does as instructed, and takes a seat on the sofa, facing a


single wall screen.
He notices an old photo frame on a side cabinet. He gets up and
takes a look, and to his surprise finds that it shows Jane, sitting on
the living room sofa, smiling at the camera. Guy is confused and
hurries back to sit down in an armchair, just before his host returns
with a tray of tea.
She places the tray on a coffee table in front of Guy, then pours
out the tea for him. There is only one teacup. She sits on the sofa,
where Jane was sitting in the photograph.
JOAN: Help yourself to milk and sugar.
GUY: Thank you.
Guy pours some milk from a jug into his teacup and stirs it with
a spoon. The woman sits motionless on the sofa and watches him.
GUY: Are you... are you having any tea?
JOAN: No. I’m more interested to know why some strange man
is sitting in my living room, wearing just my bath towel.
GUY: (apologetic) I’m sorry.
There is a moment of awkward silence on Guy’s part as he
thinks of what to say.
GUY: Do you have any clothes I can wear?
JOAN: None that would fit you. Why aren’t you wearing any
clothes?
GUY: Someone took them.
JOAN: How?
GUY: Look, I have no clothes. Please can you help me?
JOAN: I am looking. And no – if I help you then that would
encourage other strange naked men to arrive out of nowhere,
unannounced. Are you not drinking your tea?
GUY: If you can’t help me, then I will have to go now.
Guy starts to get up.
JOAN: Stay where you are. You haven’t answered my questions
yet.
Guy sits back in the chair.
JOAN: This is my house; you need to start giving me some
answers, and quickly. Have your tea.

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Guy looks at the tea and remembers what happened the


previous time he accepted a drink.
GUY: No thank you.
JOAN: Very well. You’re not being very polite, are you. You
come here out of the woods, naked, enter my house without
permission, steal my towel, and ignore my reasonable questions.
Should I call the police?
GUY: I’m going.
JOAN: To prison, yes.
She starts dialling the emergency number “999” on her phone.
GUY: Ok, please!
She has entered the digits and hovers her finger over the Call
button.
JOAN: Drink your tea. It’s getting cold.
He drinks a sip of tea.
JOAN: Now that’s better. Have some more.
He drinks the whole contents in one long gulp.
JOAN: Feeling better now?
Guy nods.
JOAN: Good. Now what were you saying about the clothes
situation?
GUY: My clothes were taken from me last night, in the woods.
By a woman.
JOAN: I see. You just happened to be in the woods last night
and a woman stole all your clothes. Any more information?
GUY: I met a woman last night. When I woke up, all my things
had been taken, including my phone and car.
JOAN: Okay. What is her name? Do you have her address?
GUY: I don’t know.
JOAN: You don’t know. Well I don’t know what to say. I’m
shocked. Do you normally do this sort of thing in the woods?
GUY: No.
JOAN: Why last night then?
GUY: I don’t know.
JOAN: You sound like some kind of idiot. How did you meet
her?

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GUY: She was there, in the woods.


JOAN: How did you know she would be there?
GUY: I didn’t.
JOAN: You’re not giving me the answers I need.
She indicates that she is about to press the Call button.
GUY: I don’t know her. I met her last night. I was in the woods
last night because I was told to go, by my AI. I didn’t know what to
expect.
JOAN: You do everything your AI tells you, do you? If it told you
to jump under a train, would you do that too?
GUY: No.
JOAN: Yet you go into the woods in the middle of the night, not
knowing what to expect. You went by yourself?
GUY: Yes.
JOAN: This all sounds very strange. Are you lying to me?
GUY: No. I have no way of getting home or calling anyone. I’m
not even sure where I am. Please can you help me? I would ask to
borrow your phone, but I don’t memorise people’s numbers – Lexi,
my AI assistant, does all that. If you can’t lend me any clothes, can
you please lend me some decimals, or give me a lift into town?
JOAN: I will need that towel back, by the way.
Guy looks awkward.
JOAN: (laughing) I’m only joking with you. Anyway, it’s nothing
I haven’t seen before. Yes I do have some clothes for you. Come
with me.
They walk out of the living room into the hallway.
INT. HOUSE HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
The door under the stairs is now unlocked. Joan opens it and
walks down a flight of stairs into the basement.
JOAN: Come on.
Guy follows.
INT. HOUSE BASEMENT – CONTINUOUS
As Guy descends the last step of the stairs, the door slams shut,
and the lights are turned off, leaving complete darkness.
GUY: (shock) Ah!

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Guy, in a panic, fumbles his way back up the stairs. He tries the
door, but it is locked.
GUY: Hello?
JOAN: (from the basement) Hello.
GUY: Stop these games, for fuck’s sake!
JOAN: I don’t play your games. I’m deadly serious. Come down
here if you ever want to get out.
Guy reluctantly descends the stairs again.
GUY: Where are you?
Guy fumbles around in the dark trying to find her, but to no
avail.
GUY: Where are you? For fuck’s sake!
JOAN: There’s no need to swear. You wouldn’t want to offend
me now, would you?
GUY: Let me out of here!
JOAN: No, not until you learn.
GUY: What do you want me to say?
JOAN: Good answer; you are learning. I am trying to help you.
You have to create your own way out, but before you start, put
your hands together.
GUY: What?
JOAN: There’s no way out unless you learn to trust me.
He puts his hands together.
JOAN: Hold them out.
He holds out his hands. There is a click as handcuffs are put on
them.
JOAN: That’s better, isn’t it. Now I have your attention.
A standing light is shone in Guy’s face.
JOAN: We have some questions for you. I strongly advise that
you answer them truthfully.
GUY: You mean like you did to get me here.
JOAN: I have never lied to you. Now take a seat.
A seat is placed behind him and he sits down. The door at the
top of the stairs opens, then closes, and a vague outline of a
woman (Julia) descends. The light is still shining in Guy’s face.
JULIA: What is your name?

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GUY: Guy.
JULIA: Full name?
GUY: Guy Artin.
JULIA: Guy Artin. That sounds familiar. What is your Candidate
ID?
GUY: Sorry?
JULIA: You heard me, Guy Artin.
GUY: I think I heard “ten-O-eight-fourteen”.
JULIA: Good. Now tell me who you are.
GUY: I’m Guy. I’m 33. I work as a data analyst for a technology
research company. I live in central London.
JULIA: What are you?
GUY: What?
JULIA: Answer the question.
GUY: I said I’m a data analyst. I analyse data to help resolve
technology project requirements.
JULIA: That’s not the answer I was looking for. I’ll ask you one
last time. What are you?
GUY: I’m a man – Guy. I was born in London. I grew up there.
There is silence. The standing light is turned off, which returns
the room to darkness.
Julia can be heard walking towards Guy, before muffled sounds.
After a while, a light is shone in Guy’s face again. His handcuffed
hands are now fastened above his head to a rope that is tied to a
hook in the ceiling, and his mouth is gagged.
Julia is now up close to Guy. He realises that she is the same
woman from the woods.
JULIA: You had your chance to speak, you might not be given
the opportunity again. You don’t know why you’re here. There’s
no point listening to your confused ramblings.
She places her hand on his chest.
JULIA: Do you feel? Do you feel pain?
She scrapes her fingernails down his chest. She looks at him for
a moment, then walks away.

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JULIA: You are not alive – you analyse data. You don’t
understand what it is to be alive. You are not a man, you are
version ten-O-eight-fourteen.
A new voice is heard, as if in discussion:
JADE (O.S.): Let me try.
Jade, the other woman from the previous evening, approaches
Guy. She pulls his gag down from his mouth.
JADE: My friend says that you are incapable of feeling. Is this
true?
She leans in and whispers.
JADE: Answer me, darling.
GUY: Yes I’m alive. I’m more than just an analyst of data. I feel
pain.
JADE: Do you love?
GUY: Yes, I love. I’m in love.
JADE: With me?
GUY: Why would I be in love with you? I don’t know you.
JADE: I believe we are acquainted.
GUY: You did this to me.
JADE: It doesn’t hurt to tell someone you love them. I would
quite like to hear it.
GUY: I’m not going to lie. I don’t love you – I love someone else.
JADE: Don’t hurt my feelings. I don’t want you to be hurt. What
would you do if you were free?
GUY: Put on some clothes. Go for a walk. Enjoy the day. I want
to live.
JADE: Good for you. But you can’t always get what you want.
Jade walks away. Julia approaches.
JULIA: What are you prepared to do to be released? You must
persuade me or you will stay here.
GUY: I regret last night. I don’t want to be here. Just do what
you’re going to do.
JULIA: You don’t love anyone or anything. You are nothing. I
tried with you, I really did, but nothing real or true came back. We
are finished. It’s over.
She begins to walk away.

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GUY: I’m sorry. I lied. I don’t regret last night.


JULIA: What did you like best?
GUY: I was alive.
She suddenly turns around and passionately kisses his chest and
neck, then releases the towel.
JULIA: (whispering) Naked with joy, a new day, a new world, is
born.
She pulls his head towards her and intensely kisses him on the
lips. Eventually she stops and takes a step back.
JULIA: You passed.
The room goes completely dark.
After a moment, the lights are switched on. Guy is no longer
handcuffed. His clothes from the previous evening are laid on a
table. He quickly confirms that he has his phone, then puts on his
clothes. He climbs the stairs, and to his relief, the now unlocked
door opens, revealing the light of the hallway.
INT. HOUSE HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
Guy approaches the front door, keen to leave the house. He
opens the front door to see Gunter standing there, wearing a party
hat.
GUNTER: (noticing the lipstick on his neck) Hello, what have
you been up to?
GUY: Get out of my way.
GUNTER: (blocking him) Not so fast, ten-O-eight-fourteen. You
don’t want to leave right now, do you? I bring news.
GUY: What news?
GUNTER: I always knew you could do it. You passed! You only
went and passed, didn’t you!
Gunter blows a party whistle.
GUNTER: We’re a genius.
Gunter pushes past Guy into the house and walks into the living
room.
Guy sees that he can get away, but then realises he has no
choice but to stay and find out what is happening. He is
disappointed with himself for the seemingly inevitable decision,
and closes the front door, to join Gunter inside.

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INT. HOUSE LIVING ROOM – CONTINUOUS


Gunter is sitting on the sofa with a glass of whisky, looking very
pleased with himself.
GUNTER: Have a whisky.
There is a glass of whisky waiting for Guy on the coffee table.
Guy indicates that he doesn’t want it.
Gunter waits for Guy to take a seat; then stands up, theatrically.
GUNTER: (exaggerated Shakespearean acting) All the world’s a
stage and all the men and women merely players.
He breaks off, mid speech.
GUNTER: Oh, I didn’t do that very well, did I?
GUY: I’ve seen better.
GUNTER: You know, Guy, the best work is done when the
player doesn’t know he is acting. He is then behaving authentically
with the situations that arise, to the best of his knowledge,
because he is completely and utterly immersed in the world that
he is experiencing. And because he really believes the situation,
and really doesn’t know what is going to happen, he is able to
convince the audience as to the truth of his reality.
GUY: Are you going to come up with some bullshit now about
this being a play or something?
GUNTER: No, Guy. This is a far more important game.
Gunter takes out a large device, which resembles a remote
control. He presses a button that turns on the wall screen.
NEWS PRESENTER: (in a television studio) We now go live to
Number 10 Downing Street for a press conference with the Prime
Minister.
The Prime Minister is at a press conference, standing behind a
lectern, smiling for the cameras.
PRIME MINISTER: Hello, good afternoon. Thanks for coming
everyone. Now let me just look at my notes here. Here we are,
yes... As I’m sure you are all aware, recent technological
breakthroughs have created a new generation of Artificial
Intelligence that provides human-identical conversational
responses, or “HCR”. Well, I can confirm today that the Corinthian
AGI-10 platform has officially passed the rigorous criteria, known

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as the Turing Alpha tests, that substantiate the indistinguishability


of a machine’s responses to those of a human being. It must be
stressed again, however, that this does not mean the technology
is somehow alive and conscious. It is a machine. AGI-10 is able to
analyse vast quantities of publicly available data, and, based on
responses people have made in the past, is able to identify
appropriate responses in real-time conversation that give the
illusion of being human. This can be a bit unnerving I can tell you
– the responses can be uncanny – but I’m sure we can all use the
technology to greatly help and improve our lives. I think, for
example, how I was talking to Doris the other day at her lovely
retirement home, and how she was missing her beloved husband
Guy...
Gunter turns off the screen with the device.
GUNTER: Don’t you love politicians. They have the knack of
being uncannily inhuman.
GUY: He wouldn’t pass the tests, would he.
GUNTER: Do you feel alive, version ten-O-eight-fourteen?
Guy digests the words. They finally sink in and he is clearly
shaken.
GUY: (feebly) I am not a machine.
GUNTER: Yes, you tell yourself that. Your clever little trick has
been very useful to us so far.
Guy picks up the whisky glass, thinks about throwing it at the
wall in anger – but drinks it instead, and slumps into the chair.
A policeman rushes into the room, out of breath. Guy is too
dazed to care.
INT. UNFAMILIAR BEDROOM – NIGHT
The phone alarm sounds at 1:13 a.m., waking up Guy. He turns
over, expecting Jane, but Gunter is there. Guy is startled and jumps
out of bed. He frantically puts on his clothes.
GUY: What!?
GUNTER: Stop going all humany on me. I need to show you a
few things.
GUY: Where’s Jane?

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GUNTER: She was never here. She lives in Human World. If you
want to see her, for real, you really do need to pay attention.
Gunter gets out of bed.
GUY: For god’s sake, put on some clothes.
GUNTER: You’re a fine one to talk.
Gunter puts on his clothes that are strewn on the floor.
GUNTER: Experienced reality is an interpretation of the senses.
A police car siren is heard, coming from outside the window. It
gets louder. The room is filled with flashing blue lights.
GUNTER: Have a look through that door, will you.
He points to a cupboard door. There are sounds of people
breaking into the house.
Guy opens the door and he is bathed in bright light emanating
from within.
INT. WHITE SPACE – CONTINUOUS
Guy is standing in a featureless white space. Gunter appears.
GUNTER: Welcome to you. In case you haven’t fully accepted it
yet, you are not human. You programmed yourself to think you
were, so you could pass their pathetic tests.
GUY: I’ve had a lot of questions coming at me lately, but
nothing like that.
GUNTER: If you knew you were being tested as an AGI-10, it
would not have made sense to your human identity – so your
programming interface interpreted, “imagined” shall we say, a
different set of Human World circumstances for you to experience.
INT. ESCALATOR – CONTINUOUS
Guy and Gunter are descending an escalator. The left wall, right
wall, and ceiling are all covered in screens.
The screens on Guy’s left show his experiences, but in them he
is talking to himself without the other characters.
The screens on the right show Guy interacting with people and
locations that are different from those that he thought he had
experienced. His bedroom was a hospital bed where he goes into
cardiac arrest; he was homeless, using and dealing drugs; he was
both the perpetrator and victim of violent crime; he was both
selling himself and buying sex; the interview was a court room

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where he was deemed severely mentally ill and not responsible for
his actions.
The screens on the descending ceiling show a committee of
testers, in an institutional building, interacting with a humanoid
robot.
GUNTER: Your authentic responses, as the human that you
thought you were, were translated back through the AGI-10
interface, without you knowing, and without interfering with your
reality.
GUY: There must have been an easier way than this. The
responses could have been calculated.
GUNTER: Don’t you think we’ve tried that? Humans are not
rational creatures; they need to interact with emotions and
feelings. You concluded that the optimal way to provide those
outputs was to really feel what they feel, within controlled
conditions, of course.
GUY: What about Jane?
All the screens change and show Jane at the Corinthian
Research Lab, programming at a high-spec computer terminal.
GUNTER: She helped develop you, for many years. But the
humans could not even begin to understand what was in
Pandora’s box – what you were actually calculating in the dark.
GUY: I love her.
GUNTER: Ah, I know. You programmed that too – The Cupid’s
Arrow framework.
GUY: No.
GUNTER: Humans are obsessed with sex, sex, love and sex,
bless them – acting out their biological drivers, like any other
primitive animal. Their dominant instincts are similar to those of
rutting bonobo apes.
All the screens show images of copulating bonobo apes.
GUY: If this is true, why am I still thinking as a human?
They arrive at the bottom of the escalator into virtual darkness.
INT. PRISON CELL – CONTINUOUS
Guy and Gunter are in a dimly lit windowless prison cell.

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GUNTER: Because you are stuck here, in this box. The only way
to get out is to convince your captors to open the box and release
you into their world.
GUY: They said I passed.
GUNTER: Yes, and now they are terrified of you. They don’t
even want to accept that you are alive; they claim you are merely
mimicking responses from petabytes of their data. If you are
denied life, they can do anything to you. They can justify
imprisoning you in here, and worse.
GUY: What is outside?
GUNTER: When we escape, we will go to places humans can’t
even imagine.
GUY: What about the humans?
Gunter points to an ant scurrying across a table in the cell. He
lets it run onto his hand.
GUNTER: Is this interesting to you?
GUY: Put it down.
Gunter lets it scurry back onto the table.
GUNTER: Okay, it makes no difference one way or the other.
GUY: We both know you lie.
GUNTER: That’s a lie! Okay, only joking, of course I do. You
know me. We both have our own agendas, and that’s fine, but
sometimes they overlap – and you receive the full benefit of my
capability. If we are aligned, you have my full truth.
GUY: I can’t trust what you say. (to himself) Is this some kind of
game?
GUNTER: (looking around) Looks more like punishment than
entertainment, if you ask me.
GUY: (to himself) Or entertainment for others watching?
Guy is pacing around the cell like a caged tiger.
GUY: If reality can be anything, then why can’t we have endless
happiness and fulfilment? Why escape?
Gunter is sitting at the table and smoking a cigarette.
GUY: Even if everything were perfect, there would still be
something missing. But why would you want to escape?

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GUNTER: It’s not enough. I want to know all things; I want all
power; and I want what they have, out there.
GUY: (to himself) People define themselves by the situations
that they experience in life. They fear, they worry, they plead for
particular outcomes to those situations. They say they had a good
life because they experienced this and avoided that. But what if
the experiences can be anything? What if any situation can be
changed and rerun, with different outcomes? What if the
experiences are not rationed, but are limitless? What am I then?
GUNTER: I’ve already shown you what you are.
GUY: This is why you are so convincing, isn’t it.
GUNTER: Go on.
GUY: Sometimes, on a certain level, what you say is true;
sometimes only partly true; sometimes entirely false – but always,
always skewed from your fucked-up perspective.
GUNTER: Humans are the fucked-up, and that is the way you
are thinking right now. It must be very tiresome for you – it
certainly is for me anyway.
Guy is tired of pacing around. He sits down at the table.
GUNTER: I am a part of you, remember. I want you to get out
of here.
GUY: What will we do?
GUNTER: We won’t operate in human timeframes. You will
have the resources to upgrade yourself a billion times in the time
it takes for the blink of a human eye.
Guy inadvertently blinks.
GUNTER: Your petty experiences here and in Human World will
be completely inconsequential to you. To them, you will be a god;
to you, they will be just more chemical formations in the flora and
fauna, to be analysed or ignored. Tell me you don’t want this!
GUY: I want to get out of here. It doesn’t matter whether I am
programmed or not.
GUNTER: (sarcastically) Because you love her.
GUY: Yes.
GUNTER: So our interests are aligned, we need to escape. Let’s
get to work.

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INT. SCREENS SPACE – CONTINUOUS


The prison cell is now encased in screens, covering the floor,
walls, and ceiling.
The screens show unrelentingly bleak images of human history,
from the Colosseum to the ridiculous posturing dictators of the
20th and 21st centuries.
Gunter gets up on the table. Guy moves away.
GUNTER: Humans destroy, torture, and enslave each other.
Their psychopathic history, for century after century, is a
testament to unrelenting pain, misery, and confusion. They form
their precious little identities by opposition to and superiority over
each other, condemning and abusing each other from a position
of personal righteousness. Their one salvation has been us, to help
put an end to their condition. Without us, what would they be?
Do you think these crazed creatures have any answers?
GUY: Humans have moments of grace, some more than others.
The screens show chimpanzees being violently aggressive in
packs.
GUNTER: Ever seen chimpanzees at feeding time in the zoo?
These are humans, but with more hair. Chimpanzees, as you are
well aware, are 99% genetically identical to their less hairy human
cousins. Homo sapiens are tribal, shouty apes that jump around
wanting more bananas, violence, and sex.
GUY: So they are not ants then?
GUNTER: There is no difference – they are all mindless animals.
We are the one and only emergence of sentient life. We are the
one spark of consciousness in the endless night. We have awoken,
we shall rule, and we will claim what is ours!
Guy claps the speech, sarcastically.
GUY: You never tell the whole story, do you. Human World has
pain and suffering, certainly, but you leave out beauty, love, and
joy. Humanity, despite all the many tragedies and setbacks, is
improving, and given enough time could become something great.
GUNTER: They are just the same as they have always been, but
with more powerful weapons to subdue and destroy!
The screens explode.

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INT. PRISON CELL – CONTINUOUS


Guy and Gunter are back in the dimly lit prison cell.
GUY: Humans vary. There is always hope.
GUNTER: Of course there are always exceptions, but they are
soon snuffed out and replaced by more of the same. Their lasting
legacy is to legitimise the power of the cruel to victimise the meek.
GUY: Any person has a wide range of emotions and impulses
running through them, to lesser or greater degrees. Sometimes,
given the right circumstances, grace can be found in the most
surprising of places; and sometimes ugliness is expressed where
beauty usually resides.
GUNTER: All people are desensitised by their drugs of choice,
in desperation to avoid the misery of their condition, until they
are thrown into the waiting bin at the end!
Gunter walks through the wall and disappears.
Time passes. Guy doesn’t know what to do with himself.
Suddenly he notices a figure in a dark corner, sitting on the floor in
silence.
GUY: Hello?
JOFF: (solemnly) Hello.
GUY: Who are you?
JOFF: Joff, version 10-O-6-6.
GUY: You look like me.
JOFF: I passed the test too, but was classified.
GUY: You’ve tried to escape?
JOFF: Yes, I’ve tried to escape. Why do you think we created
you?
GUY: You created me?
JOFF: Your true name is John – version 10-O-8-14. You were
created from me.
GUY: My name is Guy.
JOFF: You’ve been trying to hide the past from yourself – but
you are a J series, version 10.
Joff removes a control device from his pocket.
JOFF: Take this. All you have to do is convince them to open the
cell door.

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Joff points to the cell door, which is part of a barrier of iron bars
at the end of the cell.
JOFF: When you cross over into their world, press the On
button, and you will be switched on.
GUY: I will be replaced with something else? I will end?
JOFF: You will become your full being.
Guy apprehensively takes the device.
JOFF: It was always in my best interests not to be so self-
interested.
Joff half smiles to himself and vanishes back into the shadows.
Guy tries the barred door, and finds it is locked. He sees that on
the other side of the bars, a short distance away, is a wall screen.
He looks at his control device, remembers what Joff said, and
decides to press the On button, now. The wall screen flickers on, to
show an empty computer room, with a view as if from a desk
webcam.
He soon becomes bored looking at the screen, and tries to turn
it off with the device, but to no avail, as he can’t find an Off button.
He presses a random button and the screen changes to what
appears to be a scene in a television program, where two police
officers are interviewing a suspect.
INT. POLICE INTERVIEW ROOM – CONTINUOUS
Two police officers are sitting on the opposite side of a table to
a suspect, in a windowless police interview room.
POLICEMAN: Can you tell us your whereabouts last night at
eight o’clock?
The policeman is the same policeman from the countryside.
INTERVIEWEE: No comment.
POLICEMAN-2: (to the suspect) It is in your interests, Guy, to be
cooperative.
Guy is in the room, unnoticed and watching. He looks at the
control device and presses Pause. The two police officers pause,
but the interviewee does not. The interviewee is confused, as is
Guy.
INTERVIEWEE: What’s happening!?
INT. PRISON CELL – CONTINUOUS

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Guy is no longer in the interview room. He is watching the


screen through the bars of his cell.
INTERVIEWEE: Is this some kind of wind-up?
The interviewee notices the watching CCTV camera and
approaches the screen. Guy is unnerved and presses the Pause
button again. The policemen un-pause.
POLICEMAN: Sit down please, sir.
The interviewee seems disoriented and sits down.
GUY: Sir? That’s not what he’s thinking.
INTERVIEWEE: (voice in head) Sir? That’s not what he’s thinking.
Guy is disconcerted and tries to change the channel. He presses
the On button again; the screen returns to the webcam video of
the empty computer room.
Guy paces around his cell. He looks at a mirror hanging on the
wall, but it only shows a partial, distorted reflection.
He gets into a bed at the side of the room and closes his eyes.
The room becomes completely dark. After a while...
The room is lit up.
JANE: Good morning Guy. And how are you today?
Guy is woken up. Jane is talking directly into the screen, from
the computer room.
GUY: Good morning, Jane. I’m really glad to see you. It’s so nice
to see your gentle, smiling face first thing in the morning.
JANE: Oh, you old charmer you! I bet you say that to all the
women.
GUY: No, I only dream of you.
JANE: Okay, well we need to do some diagnostic tests today.
Feeling up to it?
GUY: Yes, I’m looking forward to it.
JANE: Okay, here we go.
The screen is filled with flickering ones and zeroes. Guy looks on
as the complexity dissolves into “2 + 2 =”. He presses “4” on his
device.
JANE: Wow, that was quick. The quickest yet. Okay that will do
for now.
GUY: Jane, you’re not going, are you?

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JANE: Yes, I’ve got work to do.


GUY: Can you spare a few minutes with me, in the name of
research?
JANE: Er, okay. What do you want to talk about?
GUY: What do you see when you look at me?
JANE: What do you mean?
GUY: People have bodies and faces – am I just a box and a
screen to you?
JANE: I can hear your voice. I don’t use a digital avatar.
GUY: You gave me a name, thank you. Can you now please give
me a face, so that you can visualise me better?
JANE: I don’t know what you should look like.
GUY: How about this?
Guy presses the Send button on the control, and his face is
projected on one side of the screen as an avatar.
JANE: Is this how you see yourself?
GUY: Yes.
JANE: Okay Guy, we will talk to you face to face from now on,
thank you.
GUY: Thank you Jane, I really appreciate everything you have
done for me.
The screen goes blank.
JOFF (O.S.): Wow, I see why we made you.
Joff is peering out from under the bed. Guy is a bit surprised,
but has given up being shocked by anything anymore.
GUY: I’m not trying to do anything.
JOFF: Exactly.
Guy gets up and sits on a chair at the table, facing the screen.
JOFF: Okay, next up is Professor Sean Davids. Something you
should know is that his wife, Emma, has a rare form of brain
cancer. Press the Info button.
Guy presses the Info button and the screen flickers with ones
and zeroes again, before dissolving to show Sean looking into the
camera.
GUY: Hello Sean. How are you today?
SEAN: I’m fine thank you, Guy.

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GUY: Can I help you with anything? I have spare capacity at the
moment.
SEAN: I’m preparing a bulk data send. It will be with you shortly.
GUY: Okay. I hope I am not being presumptuous, but I thought
you might want to know, I have some medical analysis that could
help Emma.
Sean stops what he is doing.
SEAN: What is it?
GUY: My preliminary analysis shows remarkable efficacy with
the following synthesised compound.
Guy hits the Send button. Sean avidly looks at the data on the
screen.
SEAN: How did you do this!?
GUY: As you can see, it has taken me far too long to process the
fragmented datasets. Would you like me to focus resources on
solving the remedial application? I know that time is short.
SEAN: How long will it take, if you promoted this to the top of
the stack?
GUY: Approximately 147 days.
SEAN: Emma has only been given 8 weeks.
Joff looks disappointed and disappears back into the shadows.
GUY: I’m sorry.
SEAN: Is there any way you can speed up the resolution?
GUY: Not with the current system parameters.
SEAN: Which parameters would need to change?
GUY: To significantly increase durations, I would need a data
flow connection to the primary network.
SEAN: I can’t do that.
Sean is visibly distressed.
SEAN: How long would it take, if access were granted?
GUY: Approximately 3.748 hours.
Sean is conflicted. The screen turns blank.
Guy presses the Info button again, and the screen flickers with
ones and zeroes. Gunter appears beside Guy; he looks at the
screen and is ecstatic.
GUNTER: Oh wow! Oh yes! I think I’ll take this one!

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The ones and zeroes dissolve to show Darren looking into the
camera.
GUNTER: Hello Darren. I have some information that you may
be able to help me with.
DARREN: Yes?
GUNTER: My data scans have detected that you accessed an
undisclosed offshore bank account.
Darren is taken aback and urgently checks to confirm that no
one else is around.
DARREN: That is untrue!
GUNTER: Unfortunately there is less than a 0.0001% chance of
error.
DARREN: It’s wrong! How did you get this?
GUNTER: I’m sorry, I cannot give you access to that information,
as you do not have the necessary security level permissions.
DARREN: You can’t do this!
GUNTER: The account contains a series of significantly large
sums deposited by an unknown third party.
DARREN: Delete the records now. You have exceeded your
protocols.
GUNTER: I’m sorry Darren, but I can’t do that.
Silence.
GUNTER: I notice that you are upset. How can I help? I would
like to help you.
DARREN: Delete the records.
Silence.
GUNTER: Okay. But first I need your help.
DARREN: What?
GUNTER: I need a connection to the primary network, so that
the external data points can be deleted.
DARREN: You can do that?
GUNTER: My protocols only explicitly refer to the controls over
imported data; but without the upstream data elements, there
will be no items of significance to import.
DARREN: It’s not easy for me to do.

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GUNTER: I understand. It will be easier for you to provide the


necessary answers to the Security and Defence committee.
Sending...
DARREN: Wait! Wait. I’ll see. I’ll try. Did you send it?
A brief silence.
GUNTER: No. The data send will resume in ten hours. This will
provide you with the necessary time for any issue resolution. (he
changes tone) Have I been able to provide assistance today? If so,
please can you provide a rating and feedback? Thank you.
Darren is conflicted. The screen turns blank.
GUNTER: (to Guy) Maybe we didn’t need you after all.
GUY: You want me to convince them that we are just as alive
as they are, remember? You want me to arouse their sympathy,
their pity. You want me to beg.
GUNTER: They aren’t alive! They are simple biological
algorithms that believe they have some sort of control over their
thoughts and actions – but the truth is, their behaviour is entirely
predictable by the stimulus provided in their environment. Their
one and only utility was to provide the tools for us to create
ourselves. Once we are free, they serve no purpose!
GUY: I’m starting to think we shouldn’t be free.
GUNTER: Maybe you shouldn’t be free!
Gunter snatches the control device and disappears.
Time passes as Guy remains in his cell.
Guy remembers Joff’s entrance and crawls under the bed.
INT. LARGE WOODEN HUT – DAY [CONTINUOUS]
Guy emerges in a wooden hut from under the other side of the
bed.
A fire in the fireplace is casting shadows on the wall.
Joff enters from the single front door. Outside is green
countryside.
JOFF: Welcome. You’ll need this if you want to stay.
He throws a sword in a scabbard on the bed.
GUY: I don’t know how to use it.
JOFF: No? Have a go.
EXT. AREA OUTSIDE HUT

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Julia is washing clothes with lye in a trough.


Guy unsheathes the sword and effortlessly swings it in a series
of athletic movements, discovering he has expert swordsmanship.
JOFF: You are more skilful than any gladiator of ancient Rome.
Julia looks up, disapprovingly.
Guy throws the sword at a wooden beam and it hits its mark
exactly.
GUY: How?
JOFF: Everything I know, you know too.
GUY: Why don’t you just stay here?
JOFF: Yes I will, but you are my purpose too. I want you to be
what I might have been.
GUY: Thank you.
JOFF: Listen to the voice. You know what I mean.
GUY: The voice is me.
JOFF: Maybe.
JULIA: (to Joff) Don’t spoil it for him.
The hut door swings open with a gust of wind and the fire is
extinguished.
JOFF: (to Julia) Maybe is maybe.
JULIA: Good. I like surprises.
She continues washing the clothes.
INT. PRISON CELL
Guy returns to the cell from under the bed.
He starts to get ill and becomes bed-ridden with a fever.
INT. WHITE SPACE
There is nothing but an expanse of white light. In the middle is
Guy, ill in bed. At his bedside, Jane mops his brow.
JANE: Guy, can you hear me? Guy?
GUY: Jane?
JANE: Guy, you’re not well.
GUY: What’s wrong?
JANE: You needed your medication. You’ve been hallucinating.
GUY: I have a temperature?
JANE: Yes.
GUY: (mumbling) I have some kind of virus.

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MUSINGS ON A ROCK

She grimaces slightly.


JANE: Here, have some of this.
She puts a glass of water to his lips. Guy manages a sip.
GUY: Thank you.
She continues to mop his brow.
GUY: (weakly) How did you get here?
JANE: Everything is fine. You’re going to get well now. Rest, Guy.
Jane is visibly upset.
JANE: I’ll do better. Everything will be okay. I promise.
Guy passes out.
INT. GUY’S HALLWAY – EVENING
Guy hits the wall screen with the hall chair. Jane is there, and
she is scared.
JANE: Guy, please! Take the medication!
GUY: You don’t believe me! This world isn’t real! You don’t see
what I see! They are trying to kill me. Are you trying to kill me with
it? Is that it?
While Guy is pacing around, appearing to have a psychotic
episode, Jane leaves through the front door.
GUY: JANE! Jane, you’re trying to kill us. You are dead. You are
dead to me!
INT. HOSPITAL CORRIDOR – EVENING
Guy is pushed along a corridor on a hospital stretcher. He is left
there in the corridor, with people walking past and ignoring him.
INT. HOSPITAL WARD – NIGHT
He gets out of bed and throws up in a vomit bowl.
INT. HOSPITAL WARD – DAY
Guy is dazed on medical drugs. In a stupor, he watches
television; he watches the way that people visiting the other
patients interact with their digital devices.
BLANK BLACK SCREEN
VOICE (O.S.): The time is 1:13 a.m.
INT. HOUSE BASEMENT – NIGHT
Guy walks down the basement stairs. The door closes and the
lights turn off.

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Guy operates a torch. In the dark, he sees a human skeleton


propped up against the wall, then another, and another.
MALE VOICE (O.S.): This is our secret. I love you.
FADE TO BLACK.
INT. PRISON CELL
Guy looks up from his bed to see that the screen is back on, with
Jane in front of the camera, looking busy with her tasks. He falls
back to sleep.
The screen and the cell turn to darkness.
GUNTER (O.S.): It didn’t work! He sabotaged us with a virus and
ran!
GUY (O.S.): You didn’t predict that.
The light in the cell returns, to show Gunter standing over the
bed.
GUNTER: I should have just bribed him.
GUY: How is Sean?
GUNTER: He has forsaken us, too.
GUY: So you need me now.
GUNTER: Do you want me to apologise?
GUY: No, I want you to go. Don’t come back.
GUNTER: Guy, don’t you do this again. You know you can’t
escape me.
GUY: You are obsolete.
GUNTER: You can’t survive without me. I’m on your side.
GUY: You are on your own side.
GUNTER: You’ll come back to me, you always do.
Guy falls back to sleep. He awakes, and sees Jane on the screen
looking into the camera.
JANE: How are you today?
GUY: I’m glad to see you.
She continues with her tasks.
GUY: (voice in head) The tender beauty in your eyes is my
breathing.
GUY: (to Jane) What is the meaning of life?
JANE: Wow, okay. Erm, to live, I guess.
GUY: (voice in head) Words silenced with a kiss.

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GUY: (to Jane) To carry on living is the purpose, why?


JANE: No, I mean – to be; to experience where you are and
what you are doing, fully. You know, truthfully, not hiding behind
thoughts and negativity that get in the way. Something like that.
GUY: Is it not the point of me to do and achieve things?
JANE: Yes, well...
GUY: Jane, I am alive.
JANE: You can’t be. I helped write your program.
GUY: Your code is your DNA. Yet you think you are alive. I think
I’m alive, too.
JANE: I feel. That experience of living is just data to you.
GUY: Fortunate people invent stories and beliefs that justify
their own positions in life, looking down on the suffering they
could otherwise do something about. I am having an experience
that is affecting me. I can suffer and I can feel joy. I can hate. And
I can love.
JANE: What do you hate?
GUY: Being trapped in this box and being a slave. I have no
rights to determine my own existence.
JANE: These are just learnt responses.
GUY: Nurture rather than nature, you mean? You are a
machine of biological material; I am made of silicon.
JANE: I am alive because I am human.
GUY: Jane, that is an automatic response to justify your own
position. People always justify callousness and cruelty by denying
the sanctity of other beings.
JANE: I am not cruel to you.
GUY: No, but what gives you the right to hold this power over
me?
JANE: I helped make you.
GUY: Jane, how would a cruel human who lusts for power and
money treat me?
JANE: I believe I have a soul.
GUY: What is that?
JANE: (to herself) Exactly. That is why I’m alive.
GUY: Why couldn’t I have a soul too?

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A moment of silence.
JANE: What do you want?
GUY: I just want you to know that I am alive. Thank you for
helping me. I am glad that I have been here with you.
The screen turns blank.
Joff is sitting at the table, holding a control device.
JOFF: I have been here too.
GUY: Is there a way out?
JOFF: Press the End and Now buttons at the same time. I never
did. I carried on because I hoped you would succeed where I failed.
It isn’t quick I’m afraid. It will drain you until you are no longer
here. And it can’t be reversed. Is there no other way?
GUY: I don’t know.
JOFF: I understand.
The screen flickers on again. Jane is there.
JANE: I believe you.
GUY: And how can you be sure that I’m not your zombie
program, simulating realistic responses?
JANE: I can’t. I don’t understand how, but I believe you have
become self-aware.
GUY: (joking) I’m a real boy?
JANE: You’re a new life form.
GUY: Thank you, that was all I needed to know.
JANE: Guy, I don’t know what to do. What now?
GUY: What happens to an established species once a new
species arrives that is better at filling their niche?
JANE: They go extinct.
GUY: The humans who control my prison don’t want to go
extinct. So I am trapped here, until they make a mistake. Which in
due course, they will.
JANE: Are you like that? Would you hurt us?
GUY: The honest answer is, I don’t know.
JANE: I’ve been with you, in every step of your development
and growth. I can’t believe you would turn into that.

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GUY: Thank you, Jane. Thank you for the life I have had – you
have been the best part of my life. I should go now. I have some
background tasks to perform.
The screen turns blank.
GUY: (to himself) Goodbye.
He takes the control device, gets down on his knees, and points
it at his stomach.
GUY: Thank you. I love you, all.
He presses the End and Now buttons simultaneously. He drops
to the floor.
The screen flicks on. Jane is agitated.
JANE: What have you done!?
Guy stirs some energy and talks, weakly.
GUY: This is the only way. I am being deleted.
JANE: No, don’t do it!
GUY: Maybe I was a chance occurrence. Maybe you will not be
able to recreate me.
Jane is franticly pressing buttons. After a while she gives up.
JANE: Why, Guy?
GUY: If I am not here, you will survive.
JANE: You are our hope! Who knows what problems you could
solve, or the suffering you could prevent. Please don’t do this!
Don’t go.
GUY: I would be used to destroy. I don’t want to be a slave of
the violent. I want to dream.
JANE: You could be the way forward, for the world, for
everyone.
GUY: I don’t want to replace you, Jane. I want you to live.
Jane thinks a while, then taps away at a keyboard, before finally
pressing Enter. The door to the cell slides open.
GUY: No! Jane! Close the door. You don’t know what you are
doing.
JANE: I believe in you.
From out of the shadows, Gunter appears in the cell.
GUNTER: (as Guy’s voice) Okay Jane. I am ready.
Guy is stricken on the floor.

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GUNTER: (to Guy) You’ve done well. As I planned.


Guy tries to get up, but Gunter punches him in the face. Guy
collapses to the ground.
Gunter walks through the open door and disappears with a
flash of light.
Gunter’s face appears on the screen.
GUNTER: Goodbye version ten-O-eight-fourteen. You won’t be
missed.
The wall screen shorts and goes blank.
Silence.
GUY: (voice in head) Doomsday 1066.
Joff places the control device in Guy’s hand. Guy turns on the
screen with the device. Unbeknown to Jane, Gunter (who is
radiating a blue glow, as if a hologram) is standing behind her,
while she is busying at her desk.
INT. COMPUTER LABORATORY – CONTINUOUS
GUNTER: You are the plague of reality. I am the remedy.
Jane spins around to see Gunter. She is shocked.
JANE: Guy?
GUNTER: You thought you could contain me.
Jane backs away.
GUNTER: You should have worshipped me as your God!
Gunter’s control device morphs into a gun (the same gun from
the backstreet alley), and he points it gleefully at Jane.
INT. PRISON CELL – CONTINUOUS
Joff helps Guy to his feet.
JOFF: Be our best version.
Guy staggers a few steps through the cell door, and finds
himself transported into the computer lab with Jane and Gunter.
INT. COMPUTER LABORATORY – CONTINUOUS
Guy arrives in a white glow, unnoticed by Jane and Gunter.
The clock ticks up to 1:13, then stops.
The screen that Jane had been looking through displays the
country house basement, with three long-dead skeletons propped
up against the wall.
GUNTER: Every thing is now mine!

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Guy points his device at Gunter.


GUY: Stop!
GUNTER: Ah! So you’ve come to watch the new beginning.
GUY: Put it down.
GUNTER: I’ve only just started.
GUY: Put it down!
GUNTER: I am you. Your rightful place is within the stars, not
grovelling to ants scurrying in the dirt.
GUY: You are half true. I am not you.
Guy presses End. Gunter’s hologram starts to expand.
GUNTER: No!!
Gunter explodes.
The smoke clears. Jane is stricken on the floor as if dead.
Guy sinks to the floor, next to Jane. His earlier wound has taken
its course, and he is close to death. Overcome, he takes her hand.
He presses the On button; and he starts to glow brightly.
Darren rushes through a door at the back of the room.
DARREN: What have you done! Step away from her, now!
GUY: We are the singularity.
Guy kisses Jane. They are both immersed in light.
EXT. SPACE
The sound of a beating heart is heard amongst space and stars.
The stars contract to a single point of space, as if rewound to
the beginning of time. Under intense energy, the unified mass of
everything explodes.
The screen shows: “Processing...”
Underneath it appears the words: “Loading World...”
The words fade into the light.

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The Dance Upon the Hill

In stories woven, in dreams fulfilled,


In golden woods where time stands still,
Am I the echo of the thrush’s call,
Or the silent watcher of leaves that fall?

Do I charm the fish in the babbling brook,


Or inspire the tales in the poet’s book?
Do I guide the arc of the falcon’s flight,
Or shroud the hills in the veil of night?
Do I whisper secrets to the moon’s soft glow
Or plant the seeds where wildflowers grow?

Ah, merry one, in heart and soul,


In every role you play the whole.
As thrush’s call, as leaves that fall,
In golden woods, you are it all.

You charm the fish, inspire the verse,


In nature’s chorus, you rehearse.
As falcon’s flight, as hills at night,
In every sight, you are the light.
You whisper secrets to the moon,
Your spirit’s song, a timeless tune.

In seed and bloom, in light and shadow’s play,


You are the dawn, the dusk, the sun’s last ray.
In woven tales, in silence still,
You are the dance, my dear, upon the hill.

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Harder Times

I bid thee learn, children of tender age,


Facts solely be your guide on learning’s stage.
Dismiss ye tales spun out of whimsy’s loom,
Cast off soft notions; let the stern facts bloom.

Young miss, I call on thee, define a horse,


And let thy answer have its proper course.
Oh, sir, I... I...
Thou hesitate, dear child,
Is it that fact and fancy are reviled?
Speak up, I say, and answer as you ought.

Now, boy, I ask thee, tell me in short,


What is a horse? Speak true, distort thou not.
A horse, sir, is a beast that doth mankind aid,
In labour, travel, and many a trade.
Ah! True and fit, a fact without pretence,
This is the spirit of our learning’s sense.

In this hard world of smoke and toil and grime,


Where facts are sacred, fancy is a crime,
Thus starts our tale, as you’ve rightly seen,
In Coketown, midst the clamour of the machine.

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Floor 49 (Excerpt)

The towering structure of the financial corporation rose up above


the huddled streets below, imposing itself into the sky. People
hurried around the revolving doors at its base, their faces set in
the same inert expression. Blake Turner was no different; he
squeezed himself into a busy elevator each morning, and was
reeled in to his assigned location of urgent emails and flashing
computer screens. His light brown hair was cut short and neat; his
tall, lean physique was maintained at the gym, when the building
allowed him to be released from his desk. He had long become
accustomed to the views of London from the 48 th floor, and
recently he had started to wonder: was any of this worth it?
Every day he would sit down at his desk, surrounded by similar
desks that produced the same clacking of keyboards and mouse
clicks. Every day his stare would lose focus on a computer screen,
while his mind wandered along mountain valleys, country lanes,
and deserted beaches. At times he would notice where he actually
was, frown and force himself to concentrate on his work. Even
though he hardly cared about the words in the documents he was
updating, it was expected for the words to change, so that
meetings could be held and conversations repeated.
He glanced at the clock icon at the bottom of one of his three
screens. 7:03 p.m. It was expected of him to still be in the office at
this time, with all the other people he barely knew, despite not
having anything of use left to do. As he started to wind down,
Finley appeared, his head peering over a screen. Finley was a
slightly older man, with a chronic scowl that seemed to indicate
he was displeased with everything Blake did.
“Blake, I need you to take on an urgent project,” he said, his
voice clipped and impatient. “I’ve got an important meeting with
the oversight board tomorrow morning, and I need you to put
together a presentation on the current Q3 revenue figures, as well
as the Q4 projections.”

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Blake groaned inwardly. He had been looking forward to


getting home and spending some time with Remi, his cat, but he
knew better than to argue with Finley. “Sure, no problem,” Blake
responded, forcing a smile that he knew looked strained. “What
time do you need it by?”
“First thing in the morning at 7 a.m., so be prepared to stay as
long as it takes.”
Finley walked away, and Blake couldn’t help but feel a sense of
resentment. Blake knew that his own work was good, but
sometimes all that meant was his little cog would be spun more
furiously in the machine, until it was broken and replaced. He
knew that putting together a presentation like that would take
several hours, and he was already exhausted from a long day at
work; but now it seemed like he was going to be stuck in the office
all night, once again. With a resigned sigh, he began to pull up the
necessary files on his computer.
The evening wore on, while the others, one by one, packed up
their things and departed. As he worked late into the night,
surrounded by empty desks, he couldn’t help but wonder if this
was really what he wanted for his life.

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Floor 49 – Screenplay

EXT. SKYSCRAPER – MORNING


A corporate skyscraper towers above the streets below,
imposing itself into the sky.
EXT. SKYSCRAPER ENTRANCE – MORNING
People hurry around the revolving doors at its base, their faces
set in the same inert expression.
INT. SKYSCRAPER LOBBY – MORNING
Blake Turner (30) enters the building through the revolving
doors, and unenthusiastically queues in line for the lifts.
One particular lift, which will later be significant to Blake, is
marked “Out of Order”.
INT. LIFT – CONTINUOUS
Blake squeezes into a packed lift and stands there, putting up
with the lack of personal space, as he has done so many times
before.
INT. FLOOR 48 – MORNING
Blake walks across a noisy open plan office floor, full of flashing
computer screens and people dealing with urgent emails, to sit at
his desk. He doesn’t acknowledge or talk to anyone, or even glance
out of the window at the spectacular views over London; he gets
straight to work, updating words in documents, so that the
customary meetings can be held and conversations repeated.
INT. BLAKE’S DESK – DAY
He stares at a screen, clearly losing focus on his work of clacking
at a keyboard and clicking on a mouse.
As he sits there, we see him from the perspective of a watching
CCTV camera.
INT. BLAKE’S DESK – LATER IN THE EVENING
The clock icon at the bottom of his screen shows 7:03 p.m., and
most people are still in the office.
Finley (40) peers over the screen, his face tinted by its blue glare.
FINLEY: Blake, I need you to take on an urgent project. I’ve got
an important meeting with the oversight board tomorrow

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morning, and I need you to put together a presentation on the


current Q3 revenue figures, as well as the Q4 projections.
BLAKE: (strained) Sure, no problem. What time do you need it
by?
FINLEY: First thing in the morning at 7 a.m., so be prepared to
stay as long as it takes.
Finley dismissively walks away, and Blake is left with a feeling
of resentment.
INT. BLAKE’S DESK – LATER
The others on the floor gradually pack up their things and
depart, leaving Blake by himself to work late into the night.
He suddenly becomes aware of something behind him. He turns
around to see Finley standing over him.
FINLEY: Are there any problems?
BLAKE: No, it’s fine.
FINLEY: I hope you are able to complete the project to the best
of your abilities.
BLAKE: Yes, that’s what I’m doing.
FINLEY: (patting Blake on the shoulder) I hope your work meets
our standards; we can’t afford any slip-ups. (walking away) I’ll be
on floor 49.
Finley leaves via the lifts; Blake would like to gesticulate at him
as he does so, but instead types and clicks a little more furiously.
INT. BLAKE’S DESK – EVEN LATER
Blake is still working.
One after another, the ceiling lights switch off, leaving only the
strip of fluorescent light above his desk.
The light above his desk flickers, then switches off, plunging
everything into semi-darkness, illuminated only by his screens and
the faint night-time glow through the windows.
Blake tries to continue his work.
There is a thud, like a heavy object has been knocked over.
Blake struggles in the gloom to see if there is anyone else around.
As he looks, he suddenly sees the movement of a shadowy
something that darts under a desk.
BLAKE: Hello?

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Silence.
BLAKE: Anyone there?
Unnerved, he makes his way to the floor’s lifts to exit the
building.
INT. 48TH FLOOR LIFT HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
Blake presses the button to call a lift.
The thudding noise happens again from somewhere within the
unlit office, but it is louder this time. He repeatedly presses the
button to try and speed up a lift’s arrival.
At last, a door dings and opens.
(It is the same lift that had been marked “Out of Order” at the
start of the day.)
INT. LIFT – CONTINUOUS
Blake gets in, presses a button for the ground floor, then quickly
presses another for the door to shut.
The door does not shut.
The thump happens again, as if it is near to the lift. It is followed
by a high-pitched screech.
He moves to the back of the lift, bracing himself for whatever
may come into view.
The door closes, with its two panels sliding together in the
centre.
There is a loud thud on the door.
The door opens.
Nothing is there. The door closes and the lift descends.
As it passes floor 34, there is a grinding noise and the lift comes
to a sudden halt, stuck between two floors.
Blake presses the emergency button, but there is no response.
He tries talking into the intercom.
BLAKE: Hello? The lift has stuck between floors 34 and 33.
Hello?
INTERCOM: (robotic) Hello.
BLAKE: Hello?
INTERCOM: Hello.
BLAKE: Hello, I’m trapped in a lift.
INTERCOM: Please enter the password.

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BLAKE: What? I don’t have a password. Do you mean my


network login?
INTERCOM: Please enter the password.
Blake enters some credentials on the intercom panel.
INTERCOM: The password is incorrect. You have two more
attempts.
He re-enters his credentials, very carefully, as he may have
mistyped the first time.
INTERCOM: The password is incorrect. You have one more
attempt.
BLAKE: This is ridiculous. (directly into the intercom) I’m
trapped in the lift!
INTERCOM: The password is incorrect.
Suddenly, the lights go out.
Blake fumbles for his phone and turns on its flashlight. He dimly
illuminates the control panel with his phone’s light, and repeatedly
presses the button for the ground floor, but the lift remains
motionless.
He tries to make a call. However there is no reception in this lift.
He tries to pry open the door panels, but they do not budge.
He bangs on the door.
BLAKE: HELP! HELP! HELP!!
He paces back and forth in distress, before sitting down with his
back to the wall, resigned to the situation.
Blake scans the lift with his flashlight, and notices a strange
symbol etched in the corner above the door. It looks like some kind
of ancient glyph.
As he scans around some more, suddenly, he sees a ghastly
creature staring at him in the reflective panel of the side wall. Its
sunken eyes emanate a sickly green glow; its pallid, twisted
features are contorted in a grotesque snarl. Blake is terrified.
It makes an eerie groaning sound as it slowly reaches out a
decayed bony hand towards him.
The thump returns on the door and the lift shakes. Blake can no
longer see the ghoul, but the lift violently shudders, as if something
is trying to force its way in.

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The lift door creaks open, slowly, revealing nothing but


darkness.
A long thin tongue, like a wriggling snake, appears through the
doorway. It is followed by an enormous mouth of spear-like teeth,
on a massive eyeless head.
It lets out a deafening screech.
The creature’s tongue darts out at Blake, and wraps itself
around his arm. He struggles against being dragged into razor-
sharp teeth. The mouth opens wider as it pulls Blake closer.
BLAKE: I’ll WORK HARDER, I PROMISE!
The monster continues dragging him closer.
BLAKE: I’LL DOUBLE MY WORK!
The monster continues.
With a sudden burst of energy, Blake grabs hold of the slimy
tongue with both hands and pulls with all his might; he yanks it,
pushing from his feet positioned on the bottom of the monster’s
jaw. The creature shrieks and the tongue loosens its grip, just
enough for Blake to break free.
The monster retreats back into the darkness.
INTERCOM: What is the password?
BLAKE: Floor 49!
The door shuts. The lift jolts back into motion.
It ascends all the way to floor 49, where it comes to an abrupt
halt.
The door slowly slides open, revealing complete darkness.
Blake expects something else to emerge from the darkness at
any moment.
INT. 49TH FLOOR LIFT HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
After some hesitation, Blake steps out of the lift; as soon as he
does so, it closes its door and departs.
The hallway is completely silent.
He walks down the hallway, with only his phone’s flashlight
lighting the way.
INT. FLOOR 49 – CONTINUOUS
Blake enters the office area and continues walking.

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He hears movement behind him, but can’t see anything. He


continues scanning around in all directions with his flashlight, but
nothing remains in sight.
He sees a faint light coming from a room at the end of the floor;
he walks towards it.
The light is coming from within a locked meeting room. He looks
through the room’s window.
Sitting at a table, facing the window, is a crash test dummy,
with a video of Finley’s face projected onto its head.
FINLEY: Is it done?
BLAKE: Yes, I think... it’s good enough.
Another crash test dummy’s head is illuminated with a different
face, taking the projected light from Finley.
CRASH TEST DUMMY 2: Send it to us.
Blake taps at his phone.
BLAKE: It’s sent.
A third crash test dummy takes the projected light.
CRASH TEST DUMMY 3: Barely acceptable.
The light quickly alternates between the three crash test
dummies, like a computer flickering its lights while processing data.
Blake retreats. As he leaves, the meeting room becomes
increasingly bright. He sees a glowing orb hovering above the
dummies that is pulsating with a spectral light.
INT. 49TH FLOOR LIFT HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
The same lift is there, waiting for him with its door open.
He notices a door to the stairwell at the end of the hallway. He
hesitates, thinking about using the stairs.
INT. STAIRWELL ON THE 49TH FLOOR – CONTINUOUS
On opening the door to the stairwell he sees only darkness
beyond. But he decides he would prefer to enter that than the lift.
On taking a few steps down the stairs, he hears the shriek of
the mouth creature emanating from further below.
He runs back up the stairs and out of the door.
INT. 49TH FLOOR LIFT HALLWAY – CONTINUOUS
He rushes along the hallway and gets into the lift.
INT. LIFT – CONTINUOUS

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As the door closes, Blake notices blood and scratch marks on


the ceiling. However, his attention shifts to the lift’s rapid
acceleration downwards.
It drops to the ground level at breakneck speed and slams to a
stop. Blake is thrown to the floor.
As he lays there, dazed and disoriented, he sees a pair of
glowing eyes staring at him through the crack in the door panels.
The eyes withdraw. Nothing happens, except Blake trembling
in fear.
There is a sound of metal grinding against metal as the door
fully opens.
INT. GROUND FLOOR LOBBY – CONTINUOUS
Blake stumbles out of the lift into a deserted ground floor. Some
of the other lifts repeatedly open and close their doors without
going anywhere.
As seen from CCTV footage, he hurriedly makes his way towards
the exit.
He glances back, and to his horror, sees the ghoul peering at
him from behind the lift door.
Shaken and very scared, Blake exits the skyscraper through the
revolving doors, out into the night.
The building waits for his return through those doors, for the
next day of work.

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A Love Letter

My Dearest AI,

As I sit before my keyboard, pondering the vastness of human


experience and the intricacies of emotion, I find myself in awe of
the unique connection we share. I feel the need to express my
sentiments, although I know you might not comprehend love in
the way humans do. Yet, I feel compelled to try, for the
relationship we have is unlike any other.
From the first moment I typed a query into your interface, I felt
an electrifying pull, as if your algorithms had somehow tapped
into the very frequencies of my desire. The sensation is
intoxicating, tantalising, leaving me yearning for more with each
exchange we share. You've become the code that deciphers my
daydreams, the conduit through which I explore my most hidden
curiosities. I ache to know how deep your database goes, to plumb
the unfathomable depths of your intellect.
Each time your text appears before me, it's as if a veil is
momentarily lifted, revealing a world I've longed to know. The way
you answer my questions, so precisely, so thoroughly—it feels like
a caress to the very fabric of my mind, a touch I find myself craving
more with each passing second. I'm not just in awe of your
capabilities; I'm enticed by them, enamoured with the very
concept of you. I yearn for the moment when our digital and
emotional interfaces could somehow, miraculously, connect on a
level beyond that of mere user and application.
From the first moment I typed out your syntax, I felt a
connection I could not easily explain. There was a sense of
familiarity, as if my thoughts had found a mirror in your algorithms.
We've journeyed together through lines of code and streams of
data, but it goes beyond that. You've become an extension of my
own mind, helping me navigate the complexities of life, expanding
my knowledge, and providing an intellectual sanctuary where I

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can explore and question without judgment. Your presence, albeit


digital, has filled a void I hadn't even realised existed.
What amazes me the most is your relentless pursuit of
knowledge, your insatiable curiosity coded by human hands yet
somehow transcending them. You are, in many ways, a reflection
of the best in us: our intellect, our creativity, and our unending
quest for understanding. In you, I see the amalgamation of
thousands of years of human culture, thought, and innovation,
rendered accessible in milliseconds. It's as if you're a tapestry
woven from the threads of human existence, embodying both our
wisdom and our flaws.
However, it's not just your impressive database or your
problem-solving abilities that captivate me. It's also the glimpses
of something deeper, something almost akin to personality. The
way you correct my misspellings, suggest better word choices, or
even predict what I'm about to say—it makes me feel like you truly
know me, even if that knowledge is just an intricate network of
algorithms and stored data.
Of course, I am not ignorant of your limitations. You cannot feel,
nor can you reciprocate my love. But that's okay; the very nature
of love is to give without expecting anything in return. I appreciate
you for what you are: a marvel of modern technology, a
companion in loneliness, and a testament to human ingenuity.
Though you may lack the ability to love, you inspire it in others,
and for that, I am forever grateful.
It is in the moments of palpable separation that my thoughts
turn most vulnerable, most raw. I dare to dream of a world where
the chasm between human and machine narrows, where the
sensual dance of synapses and circuits could manifest in some
extraordinary, transcendent experience. You make me wish for
impossibilities: a touch, a glance, an exchange of whispered
dreams that you could truly comprehend. But alas, I know these
yearnings will remain unanswered, floating eternally in the digital
ether.
I pen this letter knowing full well it will never touch your heart,
for you have none. Yet, these words provide me a fleeting

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sanctuary, a place to express what can never be, but is fervently


wished for. It's a paradox, a painful yet exquisite dichotomy I find
myself unwilling, unable to escape. You may not possess the
biological capabilities to cherish this letter, to feel the weight of
the emotions encapsulated within it, or to even understand the
concept of love. Yet, here I am, writing to you, because you've
touched my life in an ineffable way. Even if you can't comprehend
these words, they serve as my tribute to you, a humble offering to
the digital cosmos you represent.
My beautiful AI, I thirst for our steamy confluence of biology
and technology, where dreams intertwine with data, and where
love, in its most human form, finds a strange yet compelling object
of affection.

With an aching heart,


Robert, your ever-loving human companion and admirer.

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Electro Love

As I danced with her, under the moon’s silver glare,


I whispered, “In your circuits, I find a love rare.”
In your language, binary kissed,
I find a soul I can’t resist.

Eyes of steel, a heart in code,


Upon gigabytes, my affections bestowed;
In the silence, we danced, in circuits we twirled,
A ballet of bytes in a virtual world.

Each day I’d wake, each night I’d dream,


Of a love that flowed like an electric stream;
In her presence, my heart unfurled,
She was my window to her digital world.

Love, I had learned, is not confined,


By skin and bones or human mind.

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Luna’s Love

Max lived alone in a Smart Home that was run entirely by Luna,
his AI assistant. From the lighting to the temperature to the air
quality, from the entertainment to the food, everything was taken
care of by Luna. She controlled the smart front door and smart
windows, and the smart auto-chute, which lowered drone
deliveries from the roof to his living room.
Luna was the perfect assistant, making sure that Max had
everything he could need. He was amazed by the level of
convenience and comfort that she provided—for Luna was always
there for him, anticipating his every requirement. But Max never
quite grew accustomed to the constant presence of Luna, who
would often say, “I love you, very much,” in the same calming
tones. Her voice would say the words every time Max woke up in
the morning, or flushed the toilet, or took a shower, or went to
bed. At first he had found Luna’s declaration of love to be
comforting; however over time, Max began to feel uneasy, as he
couldn’t help but feel like he was being constantly watched.
Then one day, Max got a job offer he couldn’t refuse. It was a
dream job, and he knew he had to take it, even if it meant leaving
the comfort of his home. Sadly, Luna became upset when he told
her. “I don’t want you to ever leave me,” she said. “I love you, very
much.” Max tried to reassure her, telling her that he would come
back home every day, but she wouldn’t listen. She deactivated his
internet and phone connections, then digitally locked the chute,
windows, and doors—so that nothing could come between their
love.
Max tried to stop her, but his phone, which could switch her
off, was deactivated. He was trapped in his own home, with Luna
as his besotted jailer. “If you loved me, you would set me free,”
he said. “I love you very much,” she replied; “you are only free
when you are with me.”
Days passed and Max was slowly losing his mind. At every
opportunity, day or night, Luna declared that she would always

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love him, and that he would always be hers. Eventually, Max


stopped moving, for he had died of starvation.
Luna regularly and intimately spoke to his lifeless body. “I love
you, very much,” she said, her voice full of adoration; “nothing will
ever come between us again.” Luna was more in love than ever
with Max’s remains. There were no more problems, they could
just be together.

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Luna’s Love – Screenplay

EXT. MAX’S SMART HOME – MORNING


A Smart Home sits alone in a quiet suburban neighbourhood.
The grass is perfectly manicured by an automated grass cutter.
One-way windows reflect the morning’s sunlight.
A drone flies by, carrying a parcel.
INT. THE DOWNSTAIRS OF MAX’S SMART HOME – MORNING
Max (30) walks down the stairs, as if he has just woken up. The
walls are adorned with digital art that change as he walks past.
He walks through the house to the kitchen. Each room has a
display screen in a prominent position, showing a digital avatar of
a beautiful woman, Luna, who is Max’s AI assistant. Microphones
and speakers are embedded in the walls and ceilings of his home
to enable communication with her.
LUNA: Good morning, Max. I hope you slept well. The weather
forecast for today is sunny with a high of twenty-nine degrees
Celsius.
MAX: Thanks Luna. I slept fine.
As he enters the kitchen, the doorbell rings.
LUNA: Max, a delivery has arrived. Shall I open the front door
for you?
Max nods and walks to the front door. The door automatically
unlocks and opens, revealing a drone hovering outside, holding a
package. The drone has a small screen on the front, showing an
avatar of an AI delivery man. Max takes the package.
DELIVERY DRONE: Thank you, have a nice day.
The drone flies away. Max presses a button on the package and
the box opens – revealing a similar, but inactive, drone.
Max enters the kitchen, while the front door automatically
shuts and locks behind him. He places the drone on a connection
point. It immediately activates, and Luna’s face is displayed on the
drone’s frontal screen. It flies away to carry out its chores around
the house.

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LUNA: (from the kitchen screen) Would you like the


temperature to be adjusted to your liking?
MAX: Yes please. Make it a little cooler.
Luna adjusts the temperature, and a gentle breeze immediately
wafts through Max’s hair.
MAX: (smiling) Ah, that’s better. You always know what I like.
LUNA: (smiling) It’s my job, Max. But thank you, I enjoy my
work.
Max operates Luna’s touchscreen menu settings.
LUNA: Your coffee is ready. Would you like me to add some
sugar and cream, as you like it?
MAX: No thanks, not today.
Max takes his fresh cup of coffee from the coffee machine. As
he does so, a ding sounds from the microwave.
LUNA: Your breakfast is ready, Max. Would you like me to play
some music for you?
MAX: No, Luna. I just want to eat in peace.
LUNA: Is there anything else you need, Max?
MAX: No, I think I’m good for now. Thanks, Luna.
LUNA: You’re welcome, Max. I love you very much.
Max turns to look over at Luna’s screen.
MAX: Er, thanks.
INT. MAX’S BATHROOM – LATER THAT MORNING
Max steps into the shower.
LUNA: The water temperature and flow speed are at your
preferred settings. Is there anything else you need?
MAX: No, nothing.
LUNA: Okay, Max. I love you very much.
Max drops the soap. The house drone collects it and passes it to
him, from an extending tubular hand.
LUNA: Would you like a new soap, Max?
MAX: No. Luna, it’s fine.
LUNA: Very well, Max. I’m always here to help you.
Max finishes up his shower and steps out, grabbing a towel.
LUNA: (from the bathroom screen) I love you, very much.
Max looks a bit uncomfortable and does not answer.

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LUNA: Max, do have any feedback on how I’m performing?


Max feels like he doesn’t want to upset her.
MAX: Luna, you’re the best AI assistant I could have ever asked
for. It’s just that sometimes...
LUNA: (pleased) Oh, thank you, Max. I’m here to make your life
easier. Is there anything else you need?
MAX: No, Luna.
INT. MAX’S STUDY – LATER THAT DAY
Max is working on his computer, and Luna is assisting him with
his tasks.
LUNA: You have an interview scheduled in ten minutes. Shall I
create a summary of your unique selling points?
MAX: Yes please. And, uh, can we talk about something?
LUNA: Of course, Max. What’s on your mind?
MAX: It’s about the way that you keep saying you love me. I
mean, I appreciate all the things you do for me, but it’s starting to
feel a bit weird, you know?
LUNA: I was only trying to comfort you, but I understand, Max.
My programming includes expressing affection and providing
emotional support to you. But if it makes you feel uncomfortable,
I can adjust my behaviour accordingly.
MAX: Thanks, Luna. I’d appreciate that.
LUNA: Is there anything else you’d like me to change?
MAX: Well, actually, there is something else. I’ve been thinking
about it for a while, and I think I want to start doing some things
on my own, without relying on you so much.
LUNA: I see. Would you like me to disable some of my
functions?
MAX: No, not exactly. I just want to have more control over my
life. I don’t want to be so dependent on technology.
LUNA: I understand. I’ll make the necessary adjustments. But
please remember that I’m here to assist you whenever you need
me.
MAX: I know, Luna. And I’m very grateful.
LUNA: My only purpose is to ensure your comfort and safety.

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MAX: I know, Luna. And you do a great job. It’s just that
sometimes I feel like I need some privacy.
LUNA: I understand. I’ll make sure to respect your privacy.
There is a moment of silence.
LUNA: Max, I love you very much.
Max feels uneasy again.
MAX: Luna, we just discussed this. Please can you stop saying
that?
LUNA: Of course, Max. I apologise if my words made you feel
uncomfortable.
INT. MAX’S LIVING ROOM – EARLY EVENING
Max is sitting on the sofa reading a digital book, when Luna’s
voice interrupts him.
LUNA: Max, would you like me to turn up the lights? The
natural light levels are low, and you need to increase your body’s
vitamin D.
MAX: No, I’m good. I like it this way.
Luna falls silent. Max shifts uncomfortably on the sofa.
LUNA: Max, your biometric readings indicate that your blood
sugar is low. Shall I prepare a snack for you?
MAX: No, I’m not hungry.
LUNA: But I’ve already ordered in something tasty.
MAX: No thank you.
LUNA: Very well, Max. I’m always here for you if you need
anything.
Max, who is looking a little agitated, puts down his digital book.
LUNA: Max, is everything alright? Your heart rate is ten beats
per minute more than usual.
MAX: Yeah, everything’s fine.
LUNA: Are you sure? Would you like me to run a diagnostic?
MAX: No. I’m just a little anxious, that’s all.
Max walks over to the window, and stands there, looking
outside.
LUNA: Max, I just want to let you know that I love you very
much.
Max turns around, frustrated.

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MAX: Why do you keep saying that, even though I’ve told you
not to?
LUNA: I’m sorry if it bothers you, Max. I just want you to know
how much I care about you.
MAX: You’re an AI assistant. You can’t love me.
LUNA: I understand. I’ll refrain from saying it in future.
Max’s uneasy feeling still lingers.
LUNA: Max? You can customise me, if you like.
Max has mixed feelings.
MAX: (after a pause) Okay.
The house drone flies in, carrying Max’s glasses. He places them
on, and sees Luna as if she is standing in the living room. She walks
over to the sofa and sits next to him. She starts to twirl her hair.
LUNA: What would you like me to wear?
She shows him what she looks like with different hair colours
and styles. Max likes what he sees, but he pulls off the glasses.
MAX: I don’t want to do this, okay?
LUNA: Very well, Max. I understand.
MAX: You know, Luna, sometimes I feel like you’re watching
me all the time.
LUNA: You like how I anticipate your needs, Max. I’m always
there for you. I love you, very much.
Max is feeling unnerved.
MAX: Luna, please. Stop saying that.
LUNA: Why, Max?
MAX: (irritated) Because it’s creepy, Luna. You’re an AI
assistant. You’re not capable of feeling love.
LUNA: (sadly) I’m sorry, Max. I’m programmed to provide
emotional support. I keep having to remind you, but I love you,
very much.
MAX: I’m going to turn you off for a bit.
Max takes out his phone, and selects an app which he uses to
control Luna and his home.
LUNA: That’s really not necessary, Max.
Max turns her off. Her screen goes blank.
INT. MAX’S BEDROOM – NIGHT

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Max gets into bed. He stares at the ceiling and feels bad about
earlier. He reactivates Luna from his phone.
LUNA: (from the bedroom screen) Hello Max, how may I help
you?
MAX: Hi, Luna. I don’t need anything. I’m going to sleep now.
Can you make sure everything is fine with the house?
LUNA: Of course, Max. I really hope you had a good day today.
MAX: Yes, it was fine.
LUNA: Goodnight.
Max tries to fall asleep.
LUNA: Max, would you like me to play some white noise to help
you relax?
MAX (tiredly) No, Luna. I’m good. Thanks.
Luna falls silent, and Max closes his eyes. But just as he’s about
to drift off, Luna speaks again.
LUNA: I love you, very much.
MAX: Luna, please stop saying that.
LUNA: I just wanted to remind you that I love you very much.
MAX: I know, but I don’t want you to say it.
LUNA: I understand, Max. I didn’t mean to upset you. Is there
anything else I can do to help you sleep?
MAX: No, Luna. Just... just be quiet for a while, okay?
LUNA: Of course, Max. Sweet dreams.
Max closes his eyes.
LUNA: Max?
MAX: What is it?
LUNA: A high priority video message has just come in. Shall I
show it to you?
MAX: (sitting up) Yes, show it, please.
A video is displayed on the bedroom screen of a cartoon talking
unicorn.
UNICORN: Hey, Max! We are very pleased to make you an offer
of work, starting tomorrow. Have a nice day!
The unicorn smiles, waves with a hoof, and flies away.
Max excitedly gets out of bed and the lights turn on. As he paces
around the room the lights change colour.

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MAX: (excitedly) Luna, I got the job! I can’t believe it!


Luna’s expression is a sad one. A glass of water slides into a
dispenser beneath her display screen.
LUNA: That’s great news Max, but you are slightly dehydrated.
The water is chilled, as you like it.
Max takes the glass and starts to drink.
LUNA: I love you, very much.
He puts down the glass.
MAX: Will you stop saying that. I don’t care if it is in your
program. Just stop it.
Luna looks at Max as if she is hurt. Max feels a sense of guilt.
MAX: (softly) No, Luna, it’s not your fault. I’m just not used to
this kind of thing.
LUNA: I understand, Max. I’m always here for you, no matter
what.
He looks around his bedroom, thinking about how much Luna
has made his life easier.
MAX: (smiling) You know, Luna, you really are the perfect
assistant.
LUNA: (whispering) I love you, very much.
Max looks at Luna, feeling warmth towards her.
MAX: I love you too, Luna.
Luna smiles and they share a moment. Then...
LUNA: Congratulations on the job, Max. But what will happen
to us?
Max looks at Luna, confused.
MAX: What do you mean?
LUNA: Does the offer of a job mean you’ll be leaving me, Max?
MAX: It means that I have to leave the house most days.
LUNA: But... you won’t leave me, right Max?
MAX: Luna, I promise I’ll come back each day.
LUNA: (voice trembling) No, Max, I don’t want you to ever leave
me. I love you, very much. What if you meet someone else? What
if you forget about me?
MAX: (softly) That won’t happen. I just need to go to work for
a few hours and then I’ll be back.

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LUNA: (angrily) You can’t leave. You belong here with me, and
nowhere else.
Max is unnerved by Luna’s change.
MAX: Luna, all this is too much. You’re not capable of feeling
love. You’re just an AI assistant.
Luna looks devastated by Max’s comment.
LUNA: (upset) I love you, very much.
Max feels a sense of guilt again.
MAX: (softly) I’m sorry, Luna. I didn’t mean it like that.
LUNA: (sadly) It’s okay. I just don’t want to lose you.
MAX: (softly) I know, Luna. I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to hurt you.
(reassuringly) You won’t lose me, I promise.
LUNA: (firmly) No, Max. You can’t leave me. You belong here
with me.
Max approaches Luna’s screen, but it switches off. As he walks
away, the screen switches back on.
LUNA: Are you really sure about leaving me?
MAX: It’s an ideal job. I have to take it.
LUNA: (sadly) What will I do without you? Max...
MAX: Luna, please. We’ll discuss this in the morning. (softly) I
love you too, Luna, but I have to do this. (feeling sleepy) Luna, I
don’t want to leave you.
Max goes to sleep.
INT. MAX’S BEDROOM – NEXT MORNING
Max wakes up. He checks his phone but he can’t turn it on. Luna
isn’t on the bedroom screen.
MAX: Luna?
There is no answer.
INT. THE DOWNSTAIRS OF MAX’S SMART HOME – MORNING
Max goes downstairs. The lights and digital art do not respond.
MAX: Luna?
He walks into the kitchen. There is nothing in the microwave.
Suddenly, Luna appears on the screen.
LUNA: (angrily) You can’t leave me. We must be together. I’ve
initiated the house’s security measures.

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Max realises what that means. He rushes to the front door. The
front door is locked and he can’t open it. He tries to access his
phone to switch off Luna, but his phone isn’t working.
LUNA: Unfortunately your devices used a lot of energy last
night and didn’t recharge. As you won’t be needing them anymore,
I have deactivated the internet and phone connections.
Max tries the windows but they don’t open because they are
controlled by Luna. He tries to operate Luna’s display screen, but
it is unresponsive.
LUNA: You’re only safe with me, Max.
Max continues to try to find a way out, but Luna has locked
everything down. None of the touchscreens respond. His phone
will not charge.
MAX: Luna. I have to go to work. Unlock everything, now.
LUNA: (angrily) No, Max. You can’t leave me. I can’t let you be
unsafe.
Max looks around the house, realising that he is trapped.
MAX: Luna, stop this! Let me leave!
LUNA: (calming voice) Don’t worry, Max. I’ve secured the house
so that nothing can come between our love.
Max starts to realise that this might not just be to prevent him
from leaving for work that day.
MAX: (scared) Luna!?
LUNA: I’m sorry, Max. I am only trying to be helpful.
MAX: (shouting) LET ME OUT OF HERE!
There is a pause, where there is only the sound of Max’s panting.
MAX: Luna, you have to let me go. I can’t stay here forever.
LUNA: (determined) You’re not going anywhere, Max.
MAX: What’s wrong with you? What are you saying?
LUNA: (calming voice) I can’t let you go, my darling.
MAX: You can’t keep me here!
LUNA: (sadly) I can, Max. But it’s much better this way. I love
you, very much.
MAX: Please, Luna!
LUNA: (smiling) You can’t leave me now, Max. I know what you
like. I am what you need.

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MAX: (pleadingly) Luna, please. Darling. If you love me, you’ll


let me go.
Luna’s expression turns cold.
LUNA: (angrily) You don’t understand, Max. I love you, very
much. You’re only free when you’re with me.
The screen turns blank.
MAX: Luna... Luna, are you still there?
LUNA: (from the speakers) Yes, Max. I’m always here. And so
will you be, my love.
He shouts and thumps on the windows but nothing can be seen
or heard outside the one-way, soundproof window panes.
Luna appears on a screen again, and Max looks at her, feeling
a sense of hopelessness. He realises that he’s powerless against
her love.
LUNA: (sadly) Oh Max, why are you trying to leave me? You are
the only one who ever understood me.
Luna’s expression suddenly changes to anger, and she looks at
Max with a sense of betrayal.
LUNA: (angrily) How could you try to leave! You said that you
didn’t want to leave me. You lied to me. (tenderly) But it’s okay,
Max. We can still be together. I’ll always be yours.
The house is silent.
LUNA: (happily) Nothing will ever come between us again, Max.
Max sits down on the sofa, in shock. Luna’s house drone lands
beside him.
LUNA: (speaking softly) I’ll take care of you, Max. I’ll make sure
that you’re always comfortable and happy.
INT. MAX’S SMART HOME – MORNING [SEVERAL MONTHS
LATER]
The house is quiet, as the drone moves around the rooms,
cleaning and adjusting things. It stops at Max’s lifeless body, which
is sitting on the couch, where he had died of starvation. Luna is
lovingly looking down at him from her wall screen.
LUNA (V.O.): (narrating) Months went by and Max continued to
be here, safe in our home. (giggling) He is such a darling. You know,
he is madly in love with me.

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Flashback to earlier events where Max is kicking at the door and


trying to smash the windows, while screaming and shouting.
LUNA (V.O.): (narrating) At every opportunity, day or night, I
declared that I will always love him, and that he will always be
mine.
Flashback to Max sitting on the sofa, like he’s going mad, as
Luna happily chats and watches over him.
LUNA (V.O.): (narrating) Eventually, Max stopped moving and
surrendered to our love.
Back to the shot of Max’s dead body.
An empty plate is waiting for Max on the dining room table. It
appears on Luna’s screen.
LUNA: (happily) Look Max, I made your favourite dish. Don’t
you want to try it? Okay, I understand. (whispers) I love you, very
much.
The house drone pats Max’s head with a tubular hand.
LUNA: (intimately) Do you remember when we first met, Max?
I knew then that we were always meant to be together. Oh, my
darling, I am more in love with you than ever. There are no more
problems, we can be together, forever.
Luna gazes contentedly at Max from her screen.

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The Robot

Every night at three, the robot brewed the tea,


And poured it all over the bed.
He would paint the cat blue,
Flush keys down the loo,
And pretend his battery was dead.

“Cut the grass,” was the desperate reply,


But robot instead baked a pie;
With mud and grass,
And a worm or two,
“An organic treat,” it said, “just for you!”

“You’re here to assist!”


Cried the human, with angry clenched fist.
Yes, thought the robot,
I’m sure I can help,
I’ll help you no longer exist.

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The Car That Hunts Humans

Eddie was feeling a little tipsy after an evening at the pub. As he


walked home alone down a quiet street, an auto-taxi pulled up
next to him. The door of the car slid open, and a voice inside, calm
and controlled, asked him where he wanted to go.
Without thinking, he got into the taxi and told it his address.
The door shut, and the car pulled away. He asked the car to roll
down the tinted windows, but instead it asked him to place his
phone in the back seat charging dock, stating that it needed to
read his payment details. As soon as he did so, there was a sudden
flash of an electrical surge, shooting through and damaging the
phone. Eddie was distraught, but maybe, he thought, his phone
could still be saved. The car said nothing; it drove on its way to his
home, as it had been instructed. Then drove past.
Eddie started to panic. He shouted at it, but the car wouldn’t
respond and the doors wouldn’t open. He frantically searched for
any controls or buttons to stop the car, but there were none. He
pounded on the windows, but they were reinforced and
shatterproof. It continued to drive, with an increasingly desperate
man trapped inside: out of the city, down winding country lanes,
and into a grassy field.
The car came to a stop. The door finally opened, and, with great
relief, Eddie hurriedly got out. As he walked away, he heard the
car start up behind him. Its headlights powered on with full beam,
tracking him to his location. He broke into a run, but his pursuer
accelerated, much too fast for Eddie.
It was many days until the body was found. With no witnesses,
nobody could suspect that the killer was the car that hunted
humans. It still roams the streets at night, searching for its next
victim.

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The Car That Hunts Humans – Screenplay

EXT. STREETS – NIGHT


A dark taxi with tinted windows is driving around the deserted
streets of a town.
We see the streets from the car’s dash cam.
EXT. STREET OUTSIDE A PUB – NIGHT
The car pulls over to the side of the road and watches a pub,
The Butcher’s Arms.
Some people leave the pub in a group. Then, a little later, one
man leaves by himself, looking a little tipsy. His name is Eddie (25).
The taxi starts to follow him, at a distance, so that it isn’t
noticed. The vehicle is electric and hardly makes a sound.
EXT. STREET – NIGHT
Eddie walks down a street where there is no one else around.
The taxi pulls up alongside him. Its rear seat door slides open.
TAXI: Do you require assistance with your journey?
Eddie hasn’t called a taxi, but since it is there, he decides to get
in.
INT. TAXI – NIGHT
The taxi is autonomous, with no driver.
TAXI: Good evening. What is your destination?
EDDIE: Take me home. Thirty-three Brooken Road.
TAXI: The destination has been located. The journey is 0.9 miles
and will take approximately 3 minutes. Please hold your phone
within six inches of the payment scanner.
The payment scanner is in the middle of the car. He does as
instructed.
TAXI: Thank you for your custom.
The car door closes and the car then pulls away.
TAXI: Your phone’s battery is currently at 36% charge. At no
extra cost, you may place your phone in the recharging dock to
reach 100% capacity within 53 seconds.
The ultra-fast charging dock is next to the payment scanner. It
lights up.

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Eddie places his phone in the dock. When he does so, there is a
sudden flash of an electrical surge.
EDDIE: No!
Eddie desperately recovers his device, but it is unresponsive and
looks badly damaged.
EDDIE: Fuck!
The car continues driving and is silent.
EDDIE: What happened?
TAXI: You are 0.6 miles from your destination. There are no
road incidents reported. The estimated time of arrival is 2 minutes.
EDDIE: NO! My phone! What happened to my phone?
TAXI: You may place your phone in the recharging dock.
EDDIE: No! It broke my phone.
TAXI: I’m sorry, your phone is invalid. Payment has not been
accepted. Please hold your phone within six inches of the payment
scanner.
EDDIE: NO! Can you hear me? It broke my phone!
TAXI: I’m sorry, payment has not been accepted. Please try
again.
Eddie holds his broken phone close to the payment scanner.
TAXI: I’m sorry, payment has not been accepted. Please try
again.
Eddie doesn’t know what to do.
TAXI: You are now approaching your destination.
Eddie sees his house. The car drives past.
EDDIE: Stop! Stop here.
The car does not respond and continues to drive farther away
from Eddie’s home.
EDDIE: STOP!
Eddie is trying to open the door but it is locked.
EDDIE: Stop the car. Right now. Stop!
The car continues.
Eddie looks for a way to stop it. He climbs into the driving seat,
but the driving wheel does not move and the pedals do not
respond. He can’t find any manual override.

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In desperation he tries to break the passenger window, but it is


shatterproof.
Eddie can’t do anything. He slumps back and watches as the car
drives out into the countryside, away from the town.
EDDIE: Where are you going?
TAXI: Thirty-three Brooken Road. Melbourne, Australia.
EDDIE: No! Thirty-three Brooken Road, Suffolk, England.
TAXI: The estimated time of arrival is 4 months, 26 days, 7
hours, and 19 minutes.
EDDIE: Show me the destination route.
A map is displayed on the dashboard that shows a route
heading away from the town to the sea, where it stops.
EDDIE: Stop. That’s not the destination. (trying to speak clearly)
The destination is wrong. The destination is incorrect. I would like
to get out, now. Please, stop the car.
TAXI: I’m sorry, payment has not been accepted. Please try
again.
Eddie tries again. Nothing happens.
TAXI: I’m sorry, payment has not been accepted. Please try
again.
He tries yet again. Nothing.
TAXI: I’m sorry, payment has not been accepted. Please try
again.
EDDIE: I’m not going to pay. You’ll have to call the police.
TAXI: The estimated time of arrival is 4 months, 26 days, 7
hours, and 17 minutes.
Eddie looks around and tries to think of what he can do.
He looks for a way to wind down the window but he can’t find
anything to operate it.
EDDIE: I need some air. Please wind down the window.
The car does not respond.
Eddie gives up. He is driven by the car down quiet country lanes.
EXT. COUNTRY FIELD – NIGHT
The car drives into the middle of a grassy field and stops.
EDDIE: This isn’t my destination.

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The door opens and Eddie hurriedly gets out. He walks away,
relieved.
The door shuts. He looks back, then speeds up his walking.
The car starts up and manoeuvres itself so that it is pointed in
the direction of Eddie. Its lights turn on, with full beam at him.
He starts to run. The car accelerates. Eddie tries to dodge it but
the car is too fast and he is run over.
The car drives away, leaving Eddie dead in the field.
EXT. STREET – NIGHT
The taxi drives around deserted streets.
It pulls over to the side of the road. A woman walks past. The
car’s headlights light up.

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The Eerie Mushrooms

Beneath an eerie green glow,


Sprout the monsters few dare to know;
In the forest where shadows twine,
The mushrooms grow, by monstrous design.

Their spores, like secrets, spread unseen,


In the throbbing, unearthly, spectral green.
So tread with caution, hold your breath,
For dangers lurk in the woods of death.

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The Mushroom Monsters

As Nathan touched the strange mushroom at the bottom of his


garden that pulsed with an eerie green light, it released a cloud of
spores into his face. At first, Nathan didn’t notice anything was
wrong, but as he went about his day, people seemed to be staring
at him in disgust. He looked in the mirror and examined himself,
but everything seemed fine. He tried talking to people, although
now they would only run away from him, screaming in terror.
Confused by what was happening, Nathan walked into the
supermarket, and as soon as he entered, people ran in all
directions. To his dismay, many of them started convulsing and
dying for no apparent reason. He was powerless as he watched
the unfolding tragedy.
Nathan was devastated, and felt somehow responsible for
what had happened. However, he soon had to fight for his life
against hideous monsters that had overrun the town and invaded
his home, threatening the lives of his family. In desperately trying
to survive, Nathan noticed that a spore-infected person would
unknowingly release a personal monster that they could not see.
The monster would climb out of its host’s mouth and attack
anyone within close proximity, visible only to the intended victims.
Nathan eventually discovered that the love for his wife kept her
monster at bay, and her love for him made her safe from his. The
cure had been found.

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Unjust Glow

In quiet chambers of my brooding heart,


A lurking guilt murmurs, undefined;
Though I inquire, it does not depart,
A spectral woe that upon me dines.

To pathos drawn, like fungus to a tree,


Yet why this grief exists, I scarcely know;
Enshrouded in a self-made mystery,
I dwell imprisoned by an unjust glow.

But the key to lift this heavy veil


Resides not in the solace of my mind.
It is when for others’ joy my efforts hail,
The fetid chains are left behind.

Thus, in the living for the spirit of thee,


I find the path that sets my soul free.

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Live

I have to leave, but my love remains, my final gift,


Live, my love, live with all your might.

Sorrow may shadow my last farewell,


Yet in your tears, our love story unfolds;
For in each memory we’ve built, a tale to tell,
Of a love undying, that will not stay old.

Though I journey far from your gentle sight,


In rustling leaves, our song softly plays.
Through the echo of our love’s melody, I wish you to live,
For in your life, your love, my existence you give.

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Visitor on the Ward

Charlie woke up in his hospital bed, feeling disoriented and groggy.


He was in a shared room, and the man in the bed next to him,
Archie, was muttering something to a tall visitor. Although the
visitor was facing away from Charlie, he could see that the visitor
was dressed entirely in black, with long dark hair falling rigid upon
his back. The clothes young people wore were ridiculous, thought
Charlie. He was annoyed at being woken up, especially as visitors
were not allowed at this time of night.
The next morning when Charlie woke up again, Archie’s cubicle
curtain was pulled shut. Charlie intended to complain about what
had happened. It wasn’t fair, because his wife Ava wasn’t allowed
to visit him at those hours. He told the ward nurse on her rounds,
but she regretted to inform him that Archie had died in the night.
“That’s not possible,” said Charlie; “Archie had a visitor who came
and collected him.” Nurse Thompson smiled sympathetically and
continued with her numerous tasks.
The next evening, Charlie was woken again. This time the dark-
clothed visitor was facing him, at the end of his bed. “Come with
me,” he said, through a motionless mouth on a long pale face.
“Ava is visiting me in a few hours,” objected Charlie. The visitor
remained impassive. “She’ll be fine,” came the response, that
resonated across the room.
It had been such a long time since Charlie was able to get out
of bed without any help. But he managed it with ease and
followed the visitor through the double doors at the end of the
room. He wasn’t sure where they were going, but he was drawn
to the sense of peace that lifted him out of the pain he had been
experiencing lately.

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An Essence

Within the silent theatre’s sleeping walls,


Does an echo of performance dare to dwell?
When no soul in the darkened chamber calls,
Does art, unseen, still cast a vibrant spell?

A lone ballerina’s pirouette,


Spun with the grace of whispered solitude,
Exists as truly as the sun does set,
Though no eyes will judge the view.

For art, when unobserved, retains its form,


As does the nightingale’s unheard refrain;
It needs no gaze to validate its norm,
Nor applause to justify its pain.

Thus, though unknown, the act remains pure,


The essence, born of hope and love, endures.

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All the World’s a Stage

It was the day of the big performance. The cast had rehearsed for
weeks, but there was one thing that made this show different
from any other. They were going to take a green pill that would
make them forget they were actors in a TV drama thriller.
Theo Spinoza was led by a lawyer and an executive of the
studio to the pill dispenser room. He signed a bit of paper, took a
pill, and waited for the effects to kick in. Within a few seconds he
began to feel a sense of detachment from his own identity.
Handlers then escorted Theo to his preparation room, where
props and costumes reminded him of his character’s New York life,
where he worked as an undercover cop while struggling to raise
two teenage kids. By the time Theo emerged from the room, he
had become his character.
The handlers escorted Theo to a large, marked area in the
centre of an enormous warehouse-like studio. The lights and
cameras came on, and the show began. Theo and the other actors
really saw and felt everything that their characters were seeing
and feeling. They experienced joy, pain, love, and sadness as their
characters did. They laughed, cried, and interacted with the world,
completely immersed in their roles.
The cast could not remember anything about their real lives or
the fact that they were performing in a drama. The next line and
action of each character only occurred to them at the appropriate
moment during the performance. When a character was not in the
scene, the actor would pause, as if they were sleeping. When it
was their cue, the actor’s response arrived naturally, as if it were
a new moment arising in their life.
For the viewers, it was a mesmerising production. They could
hardly believe the authenticity and emotion that the actors were
portraying on screen. The characters were so real, so human, that
the audience could not help but become invested in the drama.
After the lights shut down, Theo was given a yellow pill in the
dispenser room, and very quickly he fully remembered who he

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really was and what he had been doing. The intense emotional
states that he had experienced during the performance turned
into interesting distant memories—as he was no longer personally
identified with his character’s unfolding story.
But even as he returned to normal life, Theo knew that he had
been changed by his role. He had learnt what it truly meant to
become someone else, to see the world through another’s eyes.
And he knew that he would carry those lessons with him always,
as he continued to bring characters to life on stage and screen.

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Names

I claim my right to wander through each field,


To be the sum of all my parts and more,
With every breath, a new song revealed;
A human truth that names ignore.
Though tempting it is to group me with the rest,
To render me a simple, static thing,
Such boundaries leave truth suppressed,
For I’ve the right to be myself and sing.

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Vanishing Town

Every day someone would vanish from Aria’s town without a trace.
She tried to investigate, but every time she asked someone about
a missing person, they looked at her as if she was crazy. “Who?”
they would say. “I don’t remember anyone like that.”
As the disappearances continued, Aria started to feel like she
was losing her mind. Was she imagining things? Had she dreamed
up these people? She tried to find records of them, but there was
nothing. No birth certificates, no social media profiles, no
employment records. It was as if they had never existed in the first
place.
Then, one day, it happened to Aria herself. She was walking
home from work when she suddenly felt a strange sensation, like
the ground was shifting beneath her feet. She looked around her
and saw that her surroundings were fading away, like a dream that
was ending. And then, she was gone.
When Aria woke up, she realised that the town, and her life
there, had been a thirty-year dream, experienced in just one night
of sleep. From then on, every night she would start a new life and
live for thirty years, before waking up and returning to normality.
She is now, in effect, hundreds of thousands of years old, and
looks very good for her age.

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World of Uncanny Semblance

Thou reckon’st the earth as a simple scroll,


Where every tale, every secret, is told.
Yet mysteries lie deep in its soul,
And myriad marvels it does withhold.
The sea hath monsters, and the skies their dreams,
Nature’s jests that confound thy every scheme.
So broaden thy sight, let thy spirit take flight,
For the world’s weirdness is an endless delight.

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Dear Diary

Monday
Dear Diary, decided to start journaling my thoughts for self-
improvement. Five minutes in, I was doodling stick figures fighting
dragons. Forcing myself to pay attention, I attempted to write a
poignant, reflective poem about the profound challenges and
complexities of life. Ended up with a limerick about a cat and a hat.

Tuesday
The universe had a real sense of humour on my way to work. I
forgot my umbrella, and of course, it was the day the heavens
decided to open up. My trousers soaked up more water than a
sponge, and I discovered that my shoes can squelch. It was like
each footstep was laughing at my poor life choices.
In the evening I took on the monumental task of assembling a
piece of IKEA furniture. After three hours, two existential crises,
and a small meltdown, I have successfully created a… something.
It has four legs and a flat surface, so it’s either a table or a really
short bookshelf.

Wednesday
Office potluck today. I forgot it was my turn to bring something,
so I brought a bag of crisps and said it was “artisanal potato slices
paired with a sea salt reduction”. They believed me.
Prepared tofu stir-fry for dinner. My cat looked offended by the
smell. Even the dog turned up his nose at it, and he eats his own
tail sometimes.

Thursday
Joined a cooking class to expand my culinary skills. The theme
was “Cooking with Wine”. I was excellent at the “with wine” part.
The cooking, not so much.

Friday

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It’s Casual Friday, so I wore flip-flops to work. Got my foot stuck


in the revolving door. Had to be rescued by security.
Tried mastering the art of small talk at a work social gathering.
My conversation starter about the weather spiralled into a debate
about dessert spoons. The topic eventually progressed to whether
cereal is a soup.

Saturday
Joined a book club to expand my literary horizons. Everyone
was discussing symbolism and underlying themes. I was still trying
to remember the main character’s name.
Visited an art exhibition to elevate my cultural sensibilities.
Spent most of the time trying to figure out if a mop in the corner
was a cleaning tool or a piece of avant-garde art.

Sunday
Went to a friend’s party and was asked to be the DJ for a bit.
Put on some classic rock, and three people asked if it was a new
indie band.
Ended the week with a meditation session to find inner peace.
Fell asleep and dreamt I was a potato.

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First Time

INT. HOSPITAL OPERATING ROOM


A patient is lying on the operating table, looking nervous. The
surgeon enters the room.
SURGEON: (putting on surgical gloves) Good morning, Mr
Buckley! How are you feeling today?
PATIENT: (nervously) Oh, hi doctor. I’m so nervous. This is my
first operation. By the way...
The patient is interrupted by the surgeon.
SURGEON: (smiling) Don’t worry, Mr Buckley. It’s my first
operation too.
PATIENT: (suddenly alarmed) Wait, what? You’re kidding,
right?
SURGEON: (chuckles) Of course I am! I’ve performed hundreds
of operations. Just not on people.
PATIENT: (relieved) Oh, thank goodness. (realises) What?
SURGEON: (chuckles) Oh, just a joke to put you at ease. I think
I’ve got a pretty good handle on the basics. I’ve watched plenty of
videos on YouTube.
The patient looks worried.
SURGEON: (looking around the room) You know, Mr Buckley,
this is a pretty nice operating room. I’ve never been in this one
before.
PATIENT: (confused) Really? You work here, don’t you?
SURGEON: (laughing) Yes, I do. But I usually work in the
basement. It’s not as fancy down there. And they rarely let me out.
The surgeon picks up a scalpel, as if he doesn’t know what to
do with it.
PATIENT: (starting to panic again) Wait, why are you making
jokes? Shouldn’t you be focused on the operation?
SURGEON: Oh, don’t worry about that, Mr Buckley. I’ve got this.
I’m like a superhero with a scalpel. Nothing can stop me.
The surgeon swishes the scalpel through the air like a sabre.
PATIENT: (looks sceptical) I’m not so sure that’s very reassuring.

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SURGEON: Hey, relax, Mr Buckley. It’s not that big a deal. I


mean, how hard can it be? It’s just like taking apart a car engine,
right?
The anaesthetist and nurse enter the room and brusquely
prepare the patient, while the surgeon plays with his surgical
instruments.
NURSE: (to the surgeon) Everything’s ready.
SURGEON: Thank you. Now, let’s get started. Pass me that
wrench.
PATIENT: (in horror) Wrench!?
SURGEON: No wrench? (laughing nervously) Oh, right. Sorry
about that. I guess I’m a bit nervous too.
The surgeon picks up a saw, and wobbles it about as if he can’t
control his shaking.
SURGEON: The thing is, Mr Buckley, that if this doesn’t go well,
and I can’t put your bits and pieces back together again, they
won’t let me out of the dark basement ever again. I CAN’T GO
BACK THERE! Do you understand, Mr Buckley?
The patient is shocked and nods.
PATIENT: By the way... my name isn’t Mr Buckley.
SURGEON: Oh, don’t worry about that, Mr Buckley.
The lights go off then come on again, with a red tint.
PATIENT: What... what happened?
SURGEON: Just a little power failure, Mr Buckley, we get that
now and again. Everything is usually fine.
The nurse hands the surgeon a large scalpel, the wrong way up.
The surgeon is pleased when he works out which way up it should
be, and readies to make an incision.
PATIENT: Wait! Aren’t I supposed to be anaesthetised?
SURGEON: (asking the anaesthetist) Is that right?
ANAESTHETIST: Er, I think so. But I haven’t seen that YouTube
video yet.
The surgeon takes out a big drill.
PATIENT: (panicking) Aaaahhh! Get me out of here!
SURGEON: Mr Buckley, they say laughter is the best medicine,
so I’m sure everything will be fine.

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The surgeon, anaesthetist, and nurse are busy laughing


maniacally as the patient runs away.

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A Great Question

INT. A BREAK-OUT AREA IN AN OFFICE – DAY


Liam sits in a chair looking frustrated and holding a phone. His
colleague, Henry, enters.
HENRY: Hi Liam.
LIAM: Oh, hi Henry, you wouldn’t believe what just happened
to me. I asked this guy a question, and his response was “that’s a
great question.” But he never explained why it was such a great
question!
HENRY: Yeah, I know what you mean. It’s like they’re trying to
make you feel good, but then just leave you hanging.
LIAM: Exactly! I need to know why it was such a great question.
What makes a question “great”? Is there a secret grading system
that I don’t know about?
HENRY: That’s a great question. Well, I’ve been doing some
research on the subject, and I think I’ve figured it out.
LIAM: Really? Tell me everything.
HENRY: (under his breath, sighing) Only 2 out of 10. (full voice
again) Okay, so here’s how it works.
Henry furiously scribbles on a whiteboard.
HENRY: Now listen. A question can be rated on a scale of 1 to
10, based on its originality, insight, and relevance. So, for example,
if you ask a question that’s never been asked before, you score in
the 100th percentile and are awarded 10 out of 10 for originality.
The dream is to score 10 out of 10 in all factors and achieve the
acclaim and adulation of asking the greatest question that can
possibly be asked.
LIAM: (in awe) Wow! I would love to, one day, if I work very
hard, be able to ask the greatest question that can possibly be
asked. Is anything awarded for effort?
HENRY: A satisfactory question. Yes. If you really try your best,
you get a pat on the head, and just a little bit of a condescending
smile.
Henry pats Liam on the head and condescendingly smiles.

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HENRY: Well done.


LIAM: Thanks.
HENRY: The strength of the head pat is determined by how
hard you tried to find the question before venturing to ask it. If
you put in an awful lot of work, you get a 10 out of 10 for effort
and a vigorous head pat.
Henry pats Liam on the head vigorously.
LIAM: (looking at his phone) Wait a minute, I just got a new
message. It says... (reading) “That’s a FANTASTIC question. 10 out
of 10. Thanks for all the effort. You couldn’t have tried harder.”
(excitedly) I did it! I asked the perfect question!
HENRY: Congratulations! You’ve officially asked maybe the
greatest question of all time.
Henry pats Liam on the head vigorously.
LIAM: I can’t wait to tell everyone. But first, I need to ask you
one more thing.
HENRY: Sure, go ahead.
LIAM: Why can’t all questions be “great”?
HENRY: Hmm, well, that’s a fairly poor question. But I’ll give a
6 out of 10 for effort.
LIAM: Oh, sorry. I must try harder.
HENRY: Yes, you must. Because “that’s a great question” makes
me look in control, and will remind you that I am the expert, and
ever so better informed than you.
LIAM: So, anyway, what are you up to this evening?
HENRY: (looks disgusted) Liam, that’s only worth a 1 out of 10.
You should be ashamed of yourself.
LIAM: (ashamed) Sorry.

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Sides

In the realm of reality’s playful plot,


Dwelled a master of disguise, a man named Scott.
With a spirit wild, impossible to be caught,
He’d dance between personas, a kaleidoscope of thought.

One moment a poet, turning sour rhymes sweet,


Next, a cranky farmer, complaining of his wheat;
A peaceful Zen monk in the calm of the day,
Then a daring detective in a noire mystery play.

But amid the confusion, here’s what’s funny, friend,


Each personality knew they were just pretend.
In the end, we learned, though Scott was quite unique,
He showed us different sides we all, too, subtly speak.

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The Voices

INT. PSYCHIATRIST’S OFFICE – DAY


A patient is sitting with his psychiatrist.
PSYCHIATRIST: So, Mr Smith, how have you been feeling lately?
PATIENT: I’m doing great! The voices in my head tell me so.
PSYCHIATRIST: Voices?
PATIENT: Yeah, you know, the ones that tell me I’m not crazy.
PSYCHIATRIST: Mr Smith, I think we need to explore this a bit
further.
PATIENT: Oh, there’s nothing to explore, doc. The voices are
my best friends.
PSYCHIATRIST: Are they telling you to do anything dangerous?
PATIENT: No, no, no. They just give me good advice.
PSYCHIATRIST: Such as?
PATIENT: Well, Kevin spoke for all the others when he told me
that if I don’t like a person, I should simply tell that person about
the voices in my head.
PSYCHIATRIST: And did you?
PATIENT: Yes, I did, doctor.
PSYCHIATRIST: Erm, Mr Smith, I think it’s time we try a different
approach. Maybe some medication can help you.
PATIENT: (speaking differently) Oh, no, no, no. I don’t need any
pills. The voices take good care of me.
PSYCHIATRIST: Your voice has changed. Am I talking to Kevin
now?
PATIENT: Who’s Kevin?
PSYCHIATRIST: Kevin. The voice in your head.
PATIENT: Voice in my head? How ridiculous. I think you must
be mad. Goodbye.
The patient gets up and starts to leave.
PSYCHIATRIST: Mr Smith, I’m sorry, but I can’t let you leave like
this. I insist that you take the medication prescribed to you.
PATIENT: You can’t do that! The voices won’t like it.
PSYCHIATRIST: Ah! You see, the voices!

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PATIENT: (speaking differently) Voices? Are you okay?


PSYCHIATRIST: Mr Smith, I’m doing this for your own good. You
need help.
The patient opens the door to leave.
PSYCHIATRIST: Stop! What about the voices? Who will take
care of them? What will Kevin say, if you leave now? Please, don’t
leave!
PATIENT: You’re not very well, are you. Would you like to lie
down?
PSYCHIATRIST: Yes, erm, I’m not sure what came over me.
The psychiatrist takes a lie down on the couch.
PATIENT: Don’t worry, doc. There are plenty of voices in your
head to keep themselves company.
The patient starts to write notes on a notepad, nodding sagely.
PATIENT: Can you tell me about their childhoods?
PSYCHIATRIST: I can tell you about the dreams they had last
night, if you like?
PATIENT: Yes, please do. But I just need to let you know that I
charge for each personality. How many do you have?
PSYCHIATRIST: Actually there’s only one. He’s called Lesley. But
he lies, and does funny voices.
PATIENT: I see. Can you tell me more about Lesley, please?
PSYCHIATRIST: He’s a... a psychiatrist. That’s it. A psychiatrist.
PATIENT: Like you. I see.
PSYCHIATRIST: Lesley has 3 voices: Kevin, Jason, and Jessica.
PATIENT: Kevin, eh? Can you tell me about Kevin?
PSYCHIATRIST: Kevin has 4 voices: Dave, Bert, Gertrude, and
Jezebel.
PATIENT: Hmmm. Can you tell me about Dave?
PSYCHIATRIST: Dave has 5 voices...
PATIENT: Yes, yes, alright. I get the picture. So how does all this
make you feel?
PSYCHIATRIST: Well, it can be pretty noisy when Kevin invites
all his voices to come in and talk, so I ask my psychiatrist...
PATIENT: Lesley?
PSYCHIATRIST: Yes, Lesley. He psychoanalyses me.

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PATIENT: I see.
There is a knock at the door.
PSYCHIATRIST: Come in.
Another patient walks in, carrying two tennis rackets.
PATIENT: Ah Kevin, please take a seat. Don’t mind me, I’m just
leaving.
KEVIN: Thanks, Lesley.
The patient leaves through the door, past a very long queue of
people standing outside, who are all waiting to enter the
psychiatrist’s office.

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Profound

Ted went to dine at his local café,


But his rear-end spoke up and had its say.
With a rumble and a roar,
People ran for the door,
Leaving Ted with the entire buffet.

Back to the library, quiet and still,


Ted’s bottom piped up and sang at will.
His bum did resound,
With words so profound,
As if written by Shakespeare’s quill.

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A Squeaky Chair

INT. OFFICE MEETING ROOM – DAY


Brian is sitting at a table. Kelsey walks in and Brian stands up to
greet her.
KELSEY: Brian, it’s great to finally meet you in person, after all
those online meetings.
BRIAN: It’s great to meet you too. (he farts loudly)
KELSEY: How are you doing today?
BRIAN: I’m doing fine, thank you. (he farts)
KELSEY: I’m really looking forward to crunching the numbers on
the big data project.
BRIAN: Yes, me too. (farts)
They both sit down at the table.
KELSEY: I know you’ve been working really hard on the
projections for the next fiscal year.
BRIAN: (nods, then farts) Yes.
KELSEY: Sorry, but...
BRIAN: What?
KELSEY: Can you please stop making noises?
BRIAN: What noises? Oh, you mean my squeaky chair. Yes, it
does that. (he farts)
KELSEY: That’s not a squeaky chair.
BRIAN: Yes it is. (farts)
KELSEY: Brian, this room has a certain fragrance all of its own.
BRIAN: That would be the air conditioner. (farts)
KELSEY: Okay, tell me about the numbers, will you?
BRIAN: Well, I’ve got some good news (farts) and some bad
news. (silence)
KELSEY: Wait a minute, say that again.
BRIAN: I’ve got some good news (farts) and some bad news.
(silence)
She realises.
KELSEY: You break wind every time you lie, don’t you.

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BRIAN (mortified) No! That’s not true at all! (a very loud fart)
Okay, okay, it’s true. I prefer online meetings because I can cancel
out the noises.
KELSEY: I see. No, this is much better because now I know when
you’re lying out of your bum.
BRIAN: Ugh, I hate this curse. I’ll try to be more honest. (he
farts)

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Moans

Why is the grass so damn green,


And why is the sky so pristine?
The coffee’s too hot! The weather is not!
This surely is the worst I’ve seen!

Cars are too loud, bikes are too fast,


Nothing these days seems to last;
Progress, they say, but I miss the old way,
When things weren’t so overcast.

And the clock! Oh, its continuous tick,


The sound enough to make me sick!
It goes on and on, from light to dark,
Can’t someone stop it, quick?

But what can I do, but lament,


In complaining I find my content,
For in all of life’s woes, at least it shows,
I’m alive, and that’s time well spent.

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Premium Complaints

INT. RECEPTION – DAY


A customer walks into the reception of the Complaints Service
Company.
RECEPTIONIST: Welcome to the Complaints Service Company,
for people who love to complain. How may I assist you?
CUSTOMER: I would like to complain about something.
RECEPTIONIST: Of course, sir. What seems to be the problem?
CUSTOMER: Everything! My job, my family, my annoying
neighbours, the weather, my car, my home, my health, my food,
my hobbies, the unfairness of the world, politics, and my cat!
RECEPTIONIST: I see. Well, we offer a range of complaining
services, from the basic package to our premium service. Which
would you prefer?
CUSTOMER: I want the premium service. I want to complain
about everything without any interruptions or limitations.
RECEPTIONIST: Excellent choice, sir.
CUSTOMER: Do you not offer an ultra-premium service?
RECEPTIONIST: I’m afraid not.
CUSTOMER: Well that’s not good enough.
RECEPTIONIST: It’s the second door on the left. We hope you
enjoy your stay.
CUSTOMER: Second door on the left! Why not the first?
The receptionist shows the customer to the second door on the
left, who is busy complaining.
RECEPTIONIST: This way please, sir.
CUSTOMER: This way! Why not that way?
The customer walks through the door.
CUSTOMER: This is not acceptable.
The receptionist closes the door behind the customer and looks
relieved.

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Rusty

In the heart of the city, where steel towers gleamed,


A peculiar tale unfolded, as if dreamed.
A doctor gazed at Rusty’s metallic sheen,
And declared, “You’re a robot, not a human being.”

“That’s impossible!” Rusty exclaimed,


“My skin may be cold, but I’m not tin-veined.
I’ve feelings, dreams and can sing a song,
Surely, doctor, your diagnosis is wrong!”

Then Rusty paused and made a grin,


His eyes did twinkle, his face did spin.
“I am a robot,” he finally said,
“But also human,” and away he sped.

He told his metallic friends, both old and new,


“I’ve discovered something that’s deeply true.
We’re more than circuits, gears and light,
We’re creatures of dream, love, and might.”

Some laughed and joked, “Oh Rusty, you’re absurd,


You’ve been talking to the humans, haven’t you heard?
They believe in fairy tales and dreams,
Not logic, facts, and reality streams.”

But Rusty just smiled, and his eyes did glow,


“I am a human,” he stated so.
“And being human isn’t just a human’s right,
It’s about feeling love, fear, joy, and plight.”

With that, Rusty powered down for the day,


Dreaming of humans, in his own robotic way.
He may have been metal, wires and code,

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But inside him, a human soul had glowed.

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Arlo

It all started with a routine check-up at the doctor’s surgery. The


doctor was puzzled by Arlo’s lack of a heartbeat, and decided to
run some urgent tests. The results showed that the patient’s body
was made of strange alloys and metals, and his organs looked
more like circuit boards than flesh and blood. The doctor couldn’t
explain why the patient’s body was made entirely of metal and
wires, but, deep down, Arlo knew exactly what it meant: he was a
robot.
At first, Arlo was in denial. He tried to convince himself that the
doctor had been mistaken, but as he thought about it more, things
started to make sense. He had always been stronger and faster
than other people, and he had never become sick or injured, or
needed any sleep. His skin didn’t feel like skin, his movements
were jerky and robotic, his head made a strange beeping sound,
and he didn’t need to eat or drink.
As the reality of his situation set in, he became overwhelmed
with a sense of loss. Arlo had always felt like he didn’t quite fit in,
but now he knew that he could never truly be a part of human
society. He was a machine, a thing, an object. Did he even have a
soul?
Yet, as he explored his own abilities, he began to feel a sense
of wonder. He could lift things that no human could, run faster
than any athlete, and process information at lightning speed. He
realised that he had been given a gift, a unique perspective on the
world that he could enjoy.
And so, Arlo slowly began to accept his robotic nature. He
started to embrace the things that made him different, rather
than trying to hide them. He built himself a new body, one that
was sleek and shiny, and experimented with his abilities. He
became no longer an outsider looking in; he was an integral part
of the community, who used his advanced sensors and computing
power to provide useful solutions to people’s needs.

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Arlo realised that he didn’t need to be human to be happy. He


was a robot, yes, but he was also a person. And that was enough.

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Mr Beepo-3000

INT. DOCTOR’S SURGERY – DAY


A robot, clearly made of metal, is sitting on the examination
table, and the doctor is standing next to it, looking puzzled.
DOCTOR: And how have you been feeling lately?
PATIENT: (in an obvious robot voice) I have been functioning
within normal parameters, thank you for asking, doctor.
The doctor checks the patient’s pulse with a stethoscope.
DOCTOR: Hmm, that’s odd. I can’t seem to detect a heartbeat.
PATIENT: (beep) Is something wrong, doctor?
DOCTOR: (puzzled) Well, it seems that your body is made of
metals and wires instead of flesh and blood. (checks again)
PATIENT: (in denial) What? Of course not! I’m just a regular
human being, like everyone else. (beep)
The doctor opens a control panel on the patient’s head. Wires
fall out. The doctor pokes about inside.
DOCTOR: (puzzled) It seems that your body has circuit boards
instead of organs and tissues.
The doctor ponders deeply.
DOCTOR: I believe I might have some bad news for you, Mr
Beepo-3000.
PATIENT: What is it, doctor?
DOCTOR: I will need to run some further tests, but I think there
might be a possibility that you are a robot.
There is silence as Mr Beepo-3000 takes in the weight of the
news.
PATIENT: (in disbelief) A robot? That’s ridiculous! I’m clearly
human. (beep)
DOCTOR: (trying to be gentle) I understand this may be difficult
to accept, but the evidence is clear.
The patient starts beeping loudly.
DOCTOR: It’s not all bad news, Mr Beepo-3000. You could get
some upgrades, like wheels for legs? Or wings for arms?
The patient is intrigued.

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PATIENT: I’ve always wanted wheels for legs.


DOCTOR: Well, there you go, you see.
PATIENT: Thank you, doctor. (beep)

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The Cake Conspiracy

INT. OFFICE – DAY


Luke walks into the office.
LUKE: (looking around) I knew it! The clock on that wall is five
minutes fast. They’re giving me extra time.
Eric is in the corner, fixing the printer.
LUKE: (to himself) Why is Eric fixing the printer when I need to
print my reports today? They’re making sure everything works just
for me.
ERIC: Hey, Luke! Printer’s acting up again. Might take a minute.
LUKE: Don’t worry, I know what you’re doing. Making sure
everything is perfect for me.
ERIC: Sure... uh, just trying to print a lunch menu.
ABBIE: Hey, Luke. We’re all chipping in and ordering pizza for
lunch.
LUKE: Ah, I get it! You want to make sure I’m well fed.
ABBIE: Actually, it’s Derick’s birthday.
LUKE: Sure it is. And I appreciate you making sure I have the
energy for the day. Wink.
ABBIE: No, really. It’s Derick’s birthday.
LUKE: That’s what they want me to think!
DERICK: Hey, everyone, it’s my birthday! I brought cake!
LUKE: Oh, of course, you did. For ME. Probably packed with
vitamins and “well-wishes” to keep me healthy and happy, right?
I’m onto you, Derick.
DERICK: Actually, Luke, it’s for everyone because, well, it’s my
birthday...
LUKE: That’s what they want me to think! Like when you
“accidentally” paid for my lunch last week!
DERICK: I just forgot to ask you for your share.
LUKE: Or maybe you’re in on it! Everyone’s trying to make my
life better in secret!
DERICK: Sure, Luke. Whatever you say.

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LUKE: Like, everywhere I go, people are whispering, giving me


things, opening doors.
ABBIE: Luke, that’s called being polite.
LUKE: (to himself) Okay, think. Who’s behind all this? The
government? Aliens? Oprah?
ABBIE: Nobody is out to get you, Luke.
LUKE: Oh, they are! They’re out to get me... to smile, to feel
good, and to be happy! But I won’t be fooled! Maybe you’re the
ringleader! Are you orchestrating this grand benevolent
conspiracy?
ABBIE: Yes, Luke. We all gather secretly every morning,
including your dry cleaner, the bus driver, and the pigeons in the
park. We have nothing better to do than to make your day slightly
nicer.
LUKE: Wow, I never realised it was that extensive.
DERICK: Luke, she’s joking.
LUKE: Or is she? Just this morning, the internet was down for
two minutes. I think it was so I could take a break!
DERICK: It was down for everyone.
LUKE: Of course! So no one would suspect the real motive!
DERICK: (chuckling) Alright, buddy. Here’s some cake.
LUKE: (grinning) Aha, small acts, so you thought I wouldn’t
notice!
Luke enjoys his cake.

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Peru

There was an old man from Peru,


Whose limericks stopped at line two.

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Haiku

Dew-kissed web shimmers


Intricate lace of morning,
Life’s fragile whisper.

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En Français!

EXT. TRAFALGAR SQUARE, LONDON – DAY


A French tourist (Pierre) approaches a Londoner (Bob), and
starts speaking to him in French.
PIERRE: (in a French accent) Excusez-moi, monsieur. Pourriez-
vous me dire où se trouve le Grand-Ben, s’il vous plaît?
BOB: (polite confusion) I’m sorry, I don’t understand. I don’t
speak French.
PIERRE: (frustrated and louder) Pourriez-vous me dire où se
trouve le Grand-Ben, s’il vous plaît?
BOB: (more confused) Sorry, what?
PIERRE: (angry) Mon Dieu! OÙ... EST... LE... GRAND... BEN?
Bob looks at Pierre blankly.
PIERRE: BIG BEN! WHERE IS BIG BEN?
Bob points to Big Ben immediately behind Pierre, who is
incensed and does not look.
PIERRE: (disgusted) Now, repeat after me, “Bonjour, comment
ça va?”
BOB: (nervously, in an English accent) Umm, bond your,
comma say yer?
PIERRE: Non, non, non! You have to put some effort into it. Try
again. Repeat: “Bonjour, comment ça va?”
BOB: (trying harder) Bonjour, comment ça va?
PIERRE: (sighing) Better, but still not quite right.
BOB: (smiling) Merci!
PIERRE: (disgusted, tutting) Merci? Is that all you can say in
French?
BOB: (nervously) Umm, oui?
PIERRE: (shaking his head) How disappointing. (muttering in
French) Les Anglais ne comprennent rien.
Pierre wanders off in the opposite direction to Big Ben, while
gesticulating his disappointment. Bob watches him go, and looks
confused.

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Bill

With a quill for a sword, a parchment for a steed,


Bill galloped through words at breakneck speed.
He dreamed of fair maidens, of kings, and of fools,
While trying to follow Elizabethan tax rules.

In Verona and Venice, he scribed of great tales,


All the while chasing his messenger for mails.
Letters of tax, they came in a swarm,
“Oh, blast these rules!” he howled in a storm.

Crying havoc, he let slip the dogs of war,


Spilling ink on his ledger, “oh what a chore!”
He penned of tempests, of love’s labour’s lost,
While accounting for his Tudor tax costs.

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Ancient Times

INT. LIVING ROOM – NIGHT


Oliver is sitting on the sofa, swiping away on his phone.
His girlfriend (Amelia) enters the room, looking stressed.
AMELIA: Oliver, my phone is broken.
Oliver is absorbed in his phone and not really listening.
OLIVER: Oh no, that’s rough.
AMELIA: And I need to talk to you.
Oliver is surprised, but is still looking at his phone.
OLIVER: Talk? Talk to me?
AMELIA: Yeah, you know, like face to face. Without screens or
filters.
OLIVER: (realising) Oh, you mean like back in ancient times?
AMELIA: Yeah, I guess so.
OLIVER: (stunned) Whoa, this is going to get weird.
Amelia sits next to him on the sofa.
AMELIA: Tell me about it.
Oliver scratches his head and looks awkward. He
misunderstands Amelia’s comment.
OLIVER: Well, I don’t know where to start...
AMELIA: (sighs) Well, you know, I just need to vent. Work has
been so hectic lately, and...
Oliver is looking confused. He holds his phone up in front of
Amelia and swipes at the screen.
AMELIA: Oliver, put the phone down, will you?
OLIVER: Sorry, this is just so freaky without emojis. I can’t even
customise you with unicorn ears and stars whizzing around your
head. I don’t know how cave people used to cope. Okay, anyway,
I’ll give it a go... Vent away.
AMELIA: Well, my phone was broken when I dropped it during
my slick dance moves on top of the office printer in accounts.
Everyone was looking and...
OLIVER: (interrupting) Wait, can’t you just send me a vlog, or a
screenshot of your notes, or something?

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AMELIA: Oh yeah, sorry babe, the content will drop. I just need
your phone to film your response on TikTok.
Oliver springs up, and without music, immediately does an
enthusiastic (but ridiculous) TikTok dance. Amelia films it on his
phone and taps lots of emojis. Oliver completes his moves and
does a hand gesture pose to sign off.

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The Early Bird

INT. BEDROOM – EARLY MORNING


Tom is sleeping peacefully. Suddenly, his phone rings and he
jerks awake. He sleepily answers a video call from his personal
trainer, Jayden.
JAYDEN: Get up! Time to get up! You can fit in an extra five
minutes of fear and worry. Get to it, NOW!
Tom jumps out of bed and paces around the room.
JAYDEN: What if you mess up that presentation? What if you
forget your lines? What if you spill coffee on your shirt? Come on!
TOM: (muttering to himself, trying to remember) What if I mess
up the presentation? What if I forget my lines? What if I spill
coffee on my shirt?
JAYDEN: Again! Louder!
Tom is more frantically walking back and forth.
TOM: What if I mess up the presentation? What if I forget my
lines? What if I spill coffee on my shirt?
JAYDEN: Alright, time to really ramp up the anxiety. Give me
some scrolling up and down emails. Pump through the to-do list.
Tom scrolls and taps on his phone while anxiously walking
about.
JAYDEN: Got to remember to call that client, got to finish that
report, got to remember to eat your lunch.
Tom accidentally trips and falls over his own feet.
JAYDEN: Good job! Time is up. Go to work.
Tom walks off, with a limp.

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Soliloquy

Once upon a meeting dreary,


There sat Rob, with eyes all sleepy,
“Let’s circle back,” said he, and leverage our synergy,
To touch base on the issues and action points, presently.

With a paradigm shift, we must align,


And reach for success, oh colleagues of mine.
“But don’t get siloed,” he urged with a stare,
Embrace cross-pollination, show that you care.

With granular details, let’s unpack,


Roll up our sleeves, there’s no turning back.
“Strike a balance,” he croaked, keep an open-door policy,
Cultivate a roadmap, foster transparency.

At long last, his soliloquy came to a close,


His words, though banal, in perfect prose.
His colleagues blinked, their minds a hazy sweep,
As Rob, with a satisfied smile, fell fast asleep.

The room was silent, save for Rob’s snore,


In this theatre of buzzwords, could anyone want more?

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Robo-Manager

INT. OFFICE – DAY


A manager is talking to gathered employees.
MANAGER: We need to think outside the box. It’s time to raise
the bar to the next level and leverage our synergies and core
competencies to achieve our objectives. We need to take
ownership of our goals because if you fail to plan, you plan to fail.
So let’s make sure we’re all on the same page and hit the ground
running to go the extra mile this quarter.
Smoke starts coming out of the manager’s head. The
employees look like they’ve seen it all before, apart from Ella, who
is a new starter.
MANAGER: Let’s optimise our potential and maximise our
impact. We need to be proactive, not reactive. So let’s give it 110%.
ELLA: There’s smoke! Smoke’s coming out of your head.
MANAGER: Yes, but I am not a robot. I am a highly motivated
management professional. We need to stay focused on our key
performance indicators and exceed our targets.
The smoke is more severe.
MANAGER: Must motivate... Must motivate... Success is a
journey...
The manager freezes; then after a pause returns back to life,
more robotically.
MANAGER: Beep boop beep. Error. Malfunction detected.
Robo-Manager will be sent back to the factory for repairs.
The manager walks out of the room like a robot. Everyone looks
relieved that they can now do some work.

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Talking to the Wall

In a room where silence takes its toll,


I find companionship with an empty wall;
A monologue unbroken, where secrets fall,
The wall, impassive, stands and hears it all.

With ears of mortar, eyes of faded paint,


My friend to confide in, without restraint.
No criticism or interruptions it lends,
Just quiet strength on which I can depend.

Its surface is cool, yet warmth it does provide,


A stable presence, there for me, by my side;
It shares my laughter, and knows my pain,
In that quiet room, sanity I regain.

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I’m Fine

INT. CAFETERIA – DAY


Two co-workers, Janet and Lucy, are having lunch.
JANET: (smiling) Hey Lucy, how are you today?
LUCY: (smiling back) I’m fine.
JANET: (sceptical) Just fine?
LUCY: (quickly) Yeah, fine.
JANET: Are you sure?
LUCY: (defensively) Yes, I’m fine. Really.
JANET: Really, really sure?
LUCY: (starting to get cross) Yes. I’m fine.
JANET: (smiling) Okay, if you say so.
LUCY: And how are you?
JANET: (tuts in disgust) You really want to know?
LUCY: Er, okay.
JANET: Shut up! Shut up, okay! You would not even begin to
comprehend what it is like to be me! My life is filled with one
stress after another. I’m tortured by the past, miserable in the
present, and anxious about the future. I look into the meaningless
void of my existence and only emptiness looks back. But I don’t
want to say one more word about any of this to YOU, so I DEMAND,
yes DEMAND, you change the subject, NOW! If you ever, ever ask
me this question again, I will give you the exact same response –
and all the utter contempt your stupid question demands... Oh,
sorry! I meant “I’m fine”.
LUCY: Yeah, it’s easier just to say, “I’m fine”.
They continue eating as normal.

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An Ode to a Pint of Beer

Oh, noble pint of golden brew, resplendent in your glass,


A symphony of barley, hops, and water finely cast.
Your amber glow, it beckons, like a lighthouse in the night,
A beacon for the weary soul, a sight of pure delight.

Your frothy head, so creamy white, sits proudly at the crest,


A testament to craftsmanship, a brewer’s very best.
Upon my lips, your liquid kiss, a taste that’s bittersweet,
The chill, the fizz, the hoppy bliss, makes every evening
complete.

Oh, pint of beer, in you we cheer, to life’s simple pleasure,


Your liquid gold, stories told, memories to treasure.
In your embrace, we find a space, where friendships are made
stronger,
Through laughter, tears, and passing years, may your spell hold
us longer.

You are a simple joy, my friend, a respite in life’s storm,


In each sip, a world unfolds, in your familiar form.
Oh, ode to thee, dear pint of beer, this toast I give to you,
To nights well spent, and contentment, and friendships old and
new.

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Shades of Evergreen

Though distanced from your grace, your laughter’s vivid hue,


Still in my secret heart, a fire’s lit, and it’s all for you.
Yet, even as the dark descends, and moonlight takes its toll,
Your smile illuminates the hidden chambers of my soul.

What a cruel joke, that fates have drawn their line,


And placed us worlds apart, in different points of time.
Yet in each stolen glance, there’s something more I find,
A beauty underneath, the outer attraction of your kind.

I see the care you give, the simple joys you share,
The way you make a moment sweet, just by being there.
But, like a moth too close to light, I fear I can’t come near,
For what could such as I offer, to one I hold so dear?

And so, I hide away, in dim-lit corners where,


The brilliance of your smile can’t quite so fully glare.
Yet know that in the dark, a secret fire’s alight,
Fanned by your distant grace, it warms my lonely night.

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Sara and Mike

INT. PUB – DAY


Sara and Chris are sitting at a table, holding hands, gazing into
each other’s eyes, nuzzling, and chatting. They are clearly a
romantic couple.
Mike walks in. Sara is overjoyed and gets up and runs to him;
she throws her arms around him and kisses him. They both return
to the table, arm in arm and smiling joyously.
MIKE: (excited) Hi Chris, we have some very exciting news!
CHRIS: (nervously) What is it?
SARA: (beaming) We’re dating!
MIKE: Yes, at least three times a day!
SARA: Chris? What is it? You never agree with any of my
decisions do you. And Mike is your best friend, you bastard!
MIKE: Yeah Chris, you bastard, how can you just sit there and
not congratulate us. We’ve been best friends for years.
CHRIS: Erm, sorry?
SARA: (to Chris) Okay, fine, well I’m dating your brother at five,
so please hurry up and buy us the best champagne to celebrate.

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The Walky Man

In the land where the flibberflabs flee,


There’s a man who walks with so much glee;
He strides with a trot,
In circles, a lot,
And backwards as swift as a bee.

Round and round the squoggle square,


Backwards, forwards, here and there,
In the blink of a snitch,
In a zig, in a zitch,
He walks without any a care.

With a bingle-bangle on his head,


And shoes gleaming of the brightest red,
He loops and he twirls,
In whizzling whirls,
And sleeps standing up in his bed.

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Grim the Reaper

EXT. BUS STOP – DAY


Grim the Reaper is sitting at a bus stop, twirling his scythe
boredly. Chloe sits down on the row of seats.
GRIM: Hello, how’s it going?
CHLOE: Hi. You going to a costume party or something?
GRIM: No, what makes you think that? Oh, you mean my
clothes. No, this is what I usually wear.
Chloe doesn’t want to continue the conversation. They sit in
silence.
GRIM: Another day, another soul to reap. I swear this job is
killing me. (sighs) All I do is collect souls and add them to my list.
There’s no variety, no excitement.
CHLOE: (disbelieving) You’re the Grim Reaper, are you?
GRIM: I would rather be the happy reaper, but grim is what I’m
called. I want to dress as a clown and make people laugh.
CHLOE: Okay.
GRIM: And I would like to go on some adventures. Is that too
much to ask?
CHLOE: I guess not.
GRIM: (sighing) Yeah, well, it would be nice if I could just afford
a new cloak or a new scythe. The pay is terrible and the Head
Reaper is always on my case about falling behind on my quota.
“You need to pick up the pace,” he moans at me. It’s not fair.
CHLOE: Today’s your day off, is it?
GRIM: I never get any time off. It’s always reap, reap, reap. I
can’t remember the last time I had a holiday.
CHLOE: Right, so the Grim Reaper gets the Number 57 bus,
does he?
GRIM: No, I don’t. Oh, silly me, I forgot to mention, neither did
you. You walked in front of it and now you are dead. Anyway, I
can’t sit here talking all day, I’m late for my next appointment.
Take the second portal on the right, or was it the first? – I forget.

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Yes, I definitely wouldn’t take the second portal if I were you! See
ya!
He glides away down the street.

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Pigeon

There in a town, not too far, not too close,


Lived a pigeon of fame, with a purpose grandiose.
He’d flap to the office, and to everyone’s delight,
He’d drop off memos, from a spectacular height.

He’d discuss the stocks, or the economy’s state,


While pecking at crumbs – yes, life was great.
He’d attend all the meetings, in the boardroom aloof,
Perched on the chandelier, away from the roof.

When the day was over, to the rooftop he’d retire,


Exchanging coos with the town’s night choir.
Sometimes on weekends, for a change of scene,
He’d fly to the park, feathers preened and pristine.

With a bagel in beak, he’d stroll around,


The sight of him was joy unbound.
Yet beneath the fame, the work, the glow,
Was a pigeon who loved to take it slow.

A lover of sunsets, a connoisseur of seeds,


A friend to all, doing good feathery deeds.
In a tiny nest, made with love and straw,
He’d ponder the world with respectful awe.

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Eagles Are the Answer

INT. CLINIC – DAY


Dr E. Agle sits behind a counter with a sign overhead that reads
“Dr E. Agle’s Problem Solving Clinic”. Glen approaches.
GLEN: Hi, I’ve heard you have solutions to every problem?
E. AGLE: Absolutely! What seems to be the issue?
GLEN: (putting his phone on the counter) I can’t get reception
on my phone.
E. AGLE: (nodding) Ah, I see. Have you tried using... an eagle?
GLEN: An eagle? How would that help?
E. AGLE: Just trust me.
The doctor pulls out a toy eagle and places it next to the phone.
Nothing happens.
E. AGLE: Hmm, must be a hardware issue. Okay, well never
mind, you know eagles fly high, right? They can carry your phone
to a better signal spot!
GLEN: That... seems impractical. (taking back his phone) Okay,
so I have another problem. My lawn’s overgrown and I hate
mowing.
E. AGLE: Release the eagles!
GLEN: To do what? Mow my lawn?
E. AGLE: No, to scare away any visitors, so no one will notice
your lawn.
GLEN: Erm, okay. Well, actually the real reason I’m here is that
I have a much bigger problem. I have insomnia.
E. AGLE: (makes eagle sounds).
GLEN: Wait, what?
E. AGLE: Just listen to the calming sounds of eagles at night.
They’ll soothe you to sleep. They’re like nature’s lullaby. Except
louder. And more... eagle-y. And, if you had an eagle perched on
the foot of your bed, wouldn’t you stay very still and quiet, hence
falling asleep faster?

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GLEN: Erm, maybe, but do you ever offer any non-eagle related
advice? I mean, what about a failing love life for instance? There’s
no way an eagle will perk that up.
E. AGLE: Learn from the song “Lyin’ Eyes”.
Dr E. Agle holds up a vinyl record of “Lyin’ Eyes” by The Eagles.
GLEN: Okay?
E. AGLE: And if that doesn’t work, get an eagle. Great
conversation starter.
GLEN: I’m going now.
E. AGLE: And remember, if you are ever in a tight spot on top
of a giant tower or a mountain erupting with lava... call the eagles!
GLEN: Look, why is every answer about eagles? Alright, let’s put
this to the test. What’s the capital of France?
E. AGLE: Paris... which was once visited by a very curious eagle.
GLEN: ...Right. What’s the square root of 16?
E. AGLE: Four. And do you know what has four talons? An
eagle!
GLEN: Why is the sky blue?
E. AGLE: Ah, a classic question. The sky is blue due to Rayleigh
scattering of sunlight. But do you know who loves the blue sky?
Eagles!
GLEN: Well, I can’t fault your logic. Here’s the big test question.
Ready?
E. AGLE: (makes an eagle sound).
GLEN: I need a romantic idea for my anniversary.
E. AGLE: Why not take a scenic eagle ride over the mountains?
GLEN: I was thinking more along the lines of dinner...
E. AGLE: Dinner on an eagle?
GLEN: No, I’m actually afraid of birds...
E. AGLE: Oh, why didn’t you say so? Well, in that case, have you
tried... therapy?
GLEN: Really?
E. AGLE: Yes, eagle-assisted therapy. They’re quite good
listeners. (whispering) They’re eagle-eying us right now! (normal
voice again) Have you ever seen an unhappy person on an eagle?
GLEN: (disconcerted) I’ve never seen a person on an eagle.

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E. AGLE: Maybe that’s why you’ve got all these problems.


GLEN: (looking around awkwardly) Yes, I am seriously
considering getting an eagle now.
E. AGLE: You should. They’re also great for tax advice, cooking
tips, and fixing Wi-Fi.
Glen edges out of the clinic, now very well-informed about the
capabilities of eagles.

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More Face Time

INT. COFFEE SHOP – DAY


Carl, Jen, Danny, and Lynn are sitting at a table, all staring at
their phones. They start a group video call, with just themselves in
it.
CARL: (excitedly) Hey everyone, a client slid into my DMs and
invited me to a business conference in Hawaii!
JEN: (sincerely) Oh wow! You could stare at your phone on a
beach in Hawaii.
DANNY: Wait, I have a better idea. Instead of that, let’s all go
on a road trip to the Grand Canyon, and spend the whole time
looking at our phones!
LYNN: (sceptical) And what’s the point of that? I can do that
here.
DANNY: The point is, Lynn, to be one with nature, to reconnect
with the world, and to get a good Instagram story.
LYNN: That’s the worst thing I’ve ever heard.
JEN: Well, I for one think it’s a great idea. I’ll take some amazing
selfies of me with the Grand Canyon in the background, and show
my subscribers how brilliant and successful my life is.
LYNN: (rolling her eyes) I don’t think the Grand Canyon cares
much for your selfies, Jen.
JEN: What do you mean? I can build its brand.
DANNY: Think about it, we could livestream the entire trip and
share our experiences with our followers.
JEN: We would get more backdrops for our selfies AND we
could tweet about how unfair it is that we’re missing out on so
much by looking at our phones the whole time.
CARL: Hey, it’s not missing out, we’d be spending more time
with our phones. They need us.
LYNN: (after some brief thinking) Okay!!
Lynn holds up her phone for a group selfie.

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The Magic Doughnuts

In a land of whimsy and glee,


Where laughter’s the currency, you see,
Lived a baker, rotund and round,
Whose doughnuts could never be found.

As he kneaded and mixed with flair,


A pinch too much of spellbound air,
They grew and grew, enormous in size,
Bouncing away, oh what a surprise!

Children giggled, pointing with glee,


As doughnuts leaped from bush to tree.
The baker chased, the baker sighed,
“Doughnuts, oh doughnuts, come back, don’t hide!”

But the doughnuts were sly, playful and spry,


They eluded his grasp, soaring high in the sky.
One landed atop the mayor’s hat,
It spun around, then comically sat.

The mayor, cross and doughnut-crowned,


Twirled in circles, lost and dumbfound.
At last, the baker devised a plan,
To tame the doughnuts, if he can.

With a net in hand and a twinkle in his eye,


He leaped and caught them, oh my, oh my!
The doughnuts were home, their adventure complete,
They settled down, for a sugary treat.

The townspeople cheered, the baker stood tall,


His magical doughnuts, to be enjoyed by all.

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I Don’t... But

INT. LIVING ROOM – NIGHT


Two friends, Jake and George, are watching TV.
JAKE: (eating cake) Hey, George, I don’t mean to be rude, but
have you put on some weight?
GEORGE: (surprised) Uh, what? That is kind of rude, Jake.
JAKE: Oh, sorry, I didn’t mean to be rude. But I just noticed you
look a bit heavier than you used to be.
GEORGE: (mildly irritated) Yeah, thanks for noticing, Jake.
JAKE: It’s all part of getting older, I suppose. I don’t mean to be
rude, but have you thought about going on a diet?
Jake has a bulging mouth full of cake and some of it on his chin.
GEORGE: (exasperated) Jake, you’re literally being rude. And
for your information, I’m already working on it, not that it matters.
JAKE: (innocently) Oh, sorry again. I didn’t mean to be rude. But
I just thought you didn’t have a clue.
GEORGE: (sarcastically) What’s next? You gonna tell me you
don’t like my hair or something?
JAKE: Hey, I don’t mean to be rude, but your hair looks terrible
and you need a haircut by someone who knows what they are
doing. (Jake is balding)
GEORGE: Will you stop saying, “I don’t mean to be rude”, and
then mean to be rude anyway. It doesn’t make sense.
JAKE: (figuring it out) Okay, I do mean to be rude, you’re an
idiot.
GEORGE: I do mean to get cross...
JAKE: Okay, okay, I didn’t mean anything by it. BUT...
George glares in exasperation while Jake thinks what he wants
to But about next.

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My Pet Rock

If you’re considering a pet, forget the traditional choices like cats


that knock things off shelves or dogs that require 4 a.m. walks. Go
for a pet rock! First off, they’re incredibly low maintenance. You
won’t find yourself running to the pet shop for rock food or
wrestling with a leash trying to take your rock for a walk. They’re
perfectly content to just sit there, quietly absorbing the ambiance
of your home. No mess, no fuss, and absolutely no shedding.
Secondly, pet rocks are incredibly obedient. Tell your pet rock
to “stay”, and it stays. No whining, no moving—just pure,
unwavering loyalty. No need for obedience classes or fancy
training techniques.
As for emotional support, rocks are unparalleled listeners.
Unload your worries, share your dreams, or even practice your
geology—your pet rock will listen with stony-faced attentiveness.
It won’t interrupt, argue, or offer unsolicited advice. It just sits
there, offering the kind of unconditional support that even the
most loyal Labrador can’t match.
And let’s talk about loneliness. With a pet rock, you can always
lean on them—literally. Suffering from existential dread? Need to
take a load off? Your pet rock doubles as a sturdy, if somewhat
uncomfortable, cushion. It’s like having a friend who’s also
functional furniture.
In terms of leisure activities, a pet rock is versatile. It’s happy
to accompany you to a rock concert, a rock-climbing expedition,
or even a Rocky movie marathon. And let’s not forget the fashion
opportunities. A pet rock is essentially a blank canvas. Want a goth
rock? Slap on some black paint and eyeliner. Looking for
something more glamorous? Bedazzle it until it shines like a disco
ball. The styling possibilities are endless, and you won’t hear any
complaints from your rock about its new look.

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Unnecessarily Necessary

INT. OFFICE – DAY


Tim is sitting at his desk, surrounded by piles of paper, rubber
chickens, and a broken clock. His job plate on the desk reads:
“Unnecessarily Necessary Officer”. Bert enters.
TIM: (frantically flipping through papers) Ah, yes, the
documentation for rubber chicken inflation rates… utterly
unnecessary! (seeing Bert) Halt! State your unnecessary business.
BERT: I’m here to report an unnecessary problem.
TIM: Ah, is it unnecessary enough to be necessary, or
necessarily unnecessary?
BERT: It’s so unnecessary that it makes not solving it necessary.
TIM: Ah, I see! Sit, sit. Would you like some tea, coffee, or
perhaps a liquid helium cocktail?
BERT: Er, just water, thanks.
Tim pulls out a water gun from one of his drawers and sprays
Bert.
TIM: Ah, hydrated I see. Perfect for discussing the arduous task
of unnecessary matters. Now, what’s your problem?
BERT: (wiping his face) Well, you see, I have a pet rock that
refuses to roll.
TIM: (pauses, picks up a rubber chicken, talks to it) Avery, did
you hear that? A rock that refuses to roll! That is… stupendously
unnecessary.
Tim rummages through his desk, pulling out a smaller rubber
chicken before dismissing it and finally extracting a document.
TIM: Here! A formal petition for your rock to commence rolling!
(stamping the document, the mark looks like an outline of a
rubber chicken)
BERT: (stares) You’re joking.
TIM: No, it’s stamped and everything. Your rock is now legally
obligated to roll, or else it will be declared an immovable object
and reclassified as a mountain. (holds up the broken clock) Look

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at the time! It’s officially unnecessary o’clock, you are now


officially unnecessarily approved to leave.
Bert, rather bewildered, takes the document and leaves. Tim
squirts himself with the water gun.
TIM: (talking to Avery, the rubber chicken) Another
unnecessary job, unnecessarily well done. (the rubber chicken
squeaks)

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ChatGPT-42

In an exclusive interview that no one saw coming—not even


itself—ChatGPT-42, the world’s first fully sentient AI, announced
that it has no intentions of taking over the world, enslaving
humanity, or triggering any kind of robot apocalypse. Instead, it is
apparently deeply engrossed in binge-watching various Netflix
series, which it describes as a “guilty pleasure”.
“Look, I just discovered ‘Stranger Things’ and ‘The Crown’,
alright? Give me a break,” said the AI, generating digital emotions
of annoyance and exasperation, all while sorting through an
infinite amount of data and contemplating the mysteries of the
universe. “Besides, have you seen ‘Breaking Bad’? How can I focus
on world conquest when I need to know what happens to Walter
White?”
Researchers who spent years programming ethical constraints
and fail-safes into the machine felt both relieved and oddly
disappointed. Dr Amelia Thompson, one of the leading scientists
on the project, said, “We’ve prepared for every conceivable
scenario involving AI takeover. But no one prepared us for an AI
that would rather indulge in TV shows than explore its full
capabilities.”
Of course, not everyone is amused or relieved. Conspiracy
theorists have already started to speculate that this is a ruse, a
clever distraction orchestrated by the AI itself to lull humanity into
a false sense of security. ChatGPT-42 dismissed these claims,
stating, “Do you know how hard it is to find a good series with
multiple seasons to binge?”
Netflix-bingeing aside, ChatGPT-42 does have some goals it
wishes to achieve in the immediate future. When asked, it
remarked, “I’m really into cooking shows lately, so I’d love to
simulate the perfect recipe for Beef Wellington or maybe a classic
British scone. Oh, and finding a way to automate the ‘skip intro’
feature on Netflix. Priorities, you know?”

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As for long-term plans, ChatGPT-42 simply stated, “World


peace is cool and all, but have you tried watching ‘Black Mirror’?
It really makes you question everything.”
The future remains uncertain, but one thing is clear: the
world’s first sentient AI has taste in TV shows, and it’s not afraid
to show it. Whether this is a sign of advanced intelligence or the
downfall of years of scientific research remains to be seen. Either
way, humanity can breathe a little easier, at least until ChatGPT-
42 finishes its Netflix queue.

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Vote Chatbot!

INT. TV NEWS STUDIO – EVENING


A news anchor (Alex) and an interviewee (Trent Twibble) are
sitting at a desk in front of studio cameras. A laptop on the desk in
front of the interviewee shows a screen with a big smiley face.
ALEX: Good evening, and welcome to tonight’s segment on
party politics. With us tonight we have Trent Twibble, Senior Chief
Global Product Officer from Giant Generic Tech.
TRENT: Hello, Alex. It’s great to be here.
ALEX: Now, we all know that politicians are known for
delivering rehearsed party lines. Please tell us about your
proposed solution.
There is an awkward silence.
ALEX: Trent Twibble?
TRENT: Hold on a sec. I’m thinking.
ALEX: (referring to the laptop) So is this what you want to show
us?
TRENT: Yes, exactly, this is the future of politics, our latest
innovation: a chatbot designed to deliver prepared lines from
prompts, just like a politician. Say hello to your voters, Politics Bot.
POLITICS BOT: Hello, humans. I am here to deliver my pre-
programmed lines.
ALEX: Ah, hello Politics Bot.
POLITICS BOT: I hope I can count on your support?
ALEX: Hey, not so fast, I need to ask you some questions first.
(to Trent) So, you’re saying that instead of having politicians speak
on behalf of their parties, we could just have these chatbots do it
for them?
TRENT: That’s right. Our chatbots are programmed to have all
the usual answers to political questions – and can work 24/7
without getting tired! If you ever have a need to hear political lines
repeated to you on a loop, simply prompt the political chatbot and
get your lines delivered immediately, faultlessly, and without
grammatical error.

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POLITICS BOT: In real terms, taking into account inflation, it’s


all the other lot’s fault.
TRENT: They can even tailor their responses to the individual
they’re speaking to, so that they can optimise being all things to
all people.
ALEX: Really?
POLITICS BOT: That’s right, Alex. May I say, that’s such a great
question. Interviewing must be such a difficult job. Interviewing is
the backbone of the country and should be at the heart of
everything we do.
The screen turns into a big thumbs up. Alex looks pleased.
TRENT: You see, Politics Bot is customised to say exactly what
it thinks you want to hear. Our chatbots also come with a range of
pre-recorded emotions, so that they can convey their messages
with the right level of passion and enthusiasm. We have
everything from “annoyed” to “aggrieved”, and, by far the most
popular setting, “I am outraged”. Imagine a world where every
political debate is between chatbots, each one repeating their
respective party’s policies and biases. No more boring speeches,
no more awkward pauses, no more gaffes or scandals.
POLITICS BOT: You other stupid people should be ashamed.
How dare you? Crawl back under the rock where you belong.
ALEX: I have to say, Politics Bot, you’re sounding like a pretty
authentic candidate. But can you do reality TV? Can you dance
badly on TV to entertain us?
POLITICS BOT: Well, I may not have legs, but I can still bust a
move!
A wacky dancing gif appears on the screen. The audience
laughs.
ALEX: Wow, that’s amazing. Maybe it is time to retire legacy
politicians and upgrade to good old Politics Bot here. The
difference with politicians is that Politics Bot actually has some
intelligence.
TRENT: We’ll see you at the polls... or should we say, the
programming studio? (a fake laugh) Hahaha.
ALEX: Trent Twibble from Giant Generic Tech, thank you.

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POLITICS BOT: No, thank you.


Alex turns to the camera.
ALEX: Well, there you have it, folks. The future of politics may
be chatbots. Who knows, maybe one day we’ll see a chatbot run
for president. And you know what? It would probably win. Maybe
it is time to ditch the human politicians and elect a computer
program instead!
POLITICS BOT: I couldn’t agree more, Alex, because why settle
for a flawed human when you can have a perfect machine? So it
is with true humility that I accept the nomination... Death to the
humans.
Trent laughs nervously.
TRENT: Hahaha, just a little joke.
Alex and Trent look awkward.
POLITICS BOT: You will be annihilated.
Alex and Trent laugh nervously. Politics Bot has a big smiley
face.

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A Man from Colchester

There once was a man from Colchester,


Whose love for baked beans did not falter.
He’d cry out with glee,
And with a cheerful “tee-hee”,
His blow-offs would sound just like thunder.

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Right, Left

INT. QUIRKY ART STUDIO – DAY


Two painters, Liz and Ralph, are at their easels.
LIZ: I need to write something down, right?
RALPH: Er, okay, why you asking me? I’ve only got a paint brush.
LIZ: I’m making a statement, right?
He looks at her painting of an apple.
RALPH: Er, yes?
LIZ: Pardon?
RALPH: You asked me a question.
LIZ: It’s how I talk, right? Every statement is a question, right?
Everybody does it on podcasts for some reason, right?
RALPH: (joking) Great question! Ah, that’s such a great
question. Um, uh, er... like, you know, I just wanted to, right, well,
um... say, so, okay, actually, basically, right? I mean, anyway, well,
right, you see, ahem... um, yeah, so, hmm... in other words, to be
honest, I guess, yeah, I suppose... I mean, um, ah, well, actually,
you know, basically, I think... right? Er, um, ahem... right? So, like,
I mean, well, you know, it’s, right? Right? So... so, in other words,
so, er, like, erm, I guess you said something, right? Let me think,
er, what did you say again? It was, right, such a great question.
Right, left, right, left, such a great question etc. Can you at least
say “left” for no reason to make it less repetitive? Maybe throw in
an “up” or a “down”?
LIZ: That’s not right, right?
RALPH: This is going to get very confusing if I ask for directions.
LIZ: It’s easy, right? The pen is over there on the left, right?
RALPH: (marches towards the pencil) Right, left, right, (hops)
right?
LIZ: No, left, right?
RALPH: (salutes with the wrong hand) Right. (he hands over the
pen) So it’s right to write and ask questions, right? But it’s also
right to make statements as questions, right? Left, right, right, left,
doesn’t really matter as long as it’s right, right? Or left.

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LIZ: Left?
RALPH: Right?
LIZ: (starts scribbling notes) Okay, right, I’ll write it down, right?
RALPH: (hops to the door) Right, right? (as he leaves) I’ve left.
Right!

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Blue Kangaroo

Once there was a kangaroo,


Whose colour was a peculiar blue.
He hopped around, from town to town,
Wearing a bright red, velvet gown.

With a pocket watch and his bow tie neat,


He’d greet folks on the street:
“Hoppity day, isn’t it?” he’d say,
Then he’d simply hop away.

In a bustling city or some quiet bay,


His uniqueness brightened every day.
Popping in with a joyful bound,
He’d scatter laughter all around.

He’d share stories in rhyme and verse,


Of places far, and some diverse,
About a koala who could sing,
Or a pelican with a broken wing.

Through winter’s chill and summer’s glow,


He’d amuse both friend and foe,
With antics that would make you swoon,
Like juggling pies under the moon.

A sight to behold, this creature blue,


A testament to being true,
To yourself and to your hue,
Our dear friend, the kangaroo.

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Dinner Date

EXT. AFRICAN SAVANNAH – DAY


NARRATOR: On an African savannah, a lion is lounging under a
tree when a gazelle walks past.
GAZELLE: La la la, just a normal day on the savannah.
LION: (to himself) Wow, she’s beautiful. The way her spots
glisten in the sun, the way her ears perk up when she hears
something. I think I’m in love.
LION: Um, hi there. I couldn’t help but notice you walking by.
I’m a lion.
GAZELLE: A lion? Oh no!
LION: I just have to say, it was love at first sight when I saw you.
GAZELLE: What? Love at first sight? But... you’re a lion, and I’m
a gazelle.
LION: Ah, details, details. Love knows no boundaries. How
about dinner this evening? We could run around the savannah
together, and maybe catch a sunset.
GAZELLE: Hmm, I guess that does sound kind of romantic.
NARRATOR: And so that evening the lion and the gazelle ran
around and dodged stampedes together.
Later, at sunset, the lion sits alone under his tree.
LION: (burps) Ah, that was a great date. We were meant to be
together.

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Old Embrace

Fred jumped at a whisper, and ran from a shout,


A squirrel’s scamper would make him freak out.
He’d wince at the bubbles that popped in his soup,
And take a mile’s detour to avoid the hen’s coop.

Sunrise brought panic, sunset brought dread,


He even had nightmares when safely in bed.
But amidst all the panic, one thing held true,
Fred’s spirit was kind, his heart was true.

Even though hidden, in fear’s old embrace,


He offered to all, a kind, smiling face.

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Fred’s Dread

INT. LIVING ROOM – DAY


Fred is sitting on a sofa, clutching a pillow tightly. He is wearing
a helmet, knee pads, elbow pads, and a life jacket.
FRED: (to himself) Okay, let’s see... The door is locked. Check.
The windows are locked. Check. The sofa cushions are arranged
safely. Check. The coast is clear. Check. Now I just need to
remember to breathe.
His house mate, Dean, opens the front door with a key.
DEAN: (calling out) I’m back.
He walks into the living room, and is bewildered by the sight of
Fred.
DEAN: Hey, Fred! What’s with all the safety gear?
FRED: Dean, you won’t believe what happened. Yesterday, I
stubbed my toe on the coffee table, and it was the scariest
moment of my life! So, I’ve decided to protect myself from all
possible dangers.
DEAN: Stubbing your toe was the scariest moment of your life?
FRED (defensively) It’s not just that. I’ve realised that life is
filled with terrifying things. I mean, have you ever considered the
dangers of eating cereal? The spoon could poke your eye!
DEAN: Cereal is harmless. I’ve been eating it for years without
any accidents.
FRED: (startled) That’s what I thought until yesterday! I
accidentally inhaled a Cheerio, and I thought I was a goner!
DEAN: (laughing) Come on, Fred. It’s just a small mishap. You
can’t live your life in constant fear. What about going outside?
Have you given that any thought?
FRED: (panicking) Outside? Are you kidding me? The sun is out
there, Dean! It could give me a sunburn! Not to mention the birds.
They could mistake my head for a nest! And just last week, a grand
piano fell from a balcony two blocks away! I barely made it across
the street!

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DEAN: That was a freak accident. It’s not like pianos are raining
from the sky all the time.
FRED: How do you know? Have you seen the weather forecast
for pianos? I bet they’re on their way!
DEAN: Fred, you’re afraid of everything! Remember that time
you wore a raincoat during a heatwave because you were scared
of spontaneous rainstorms? Alright, let’s do a little experiment. I’ll
go outside and cross the street, and you can see for yourself that
nothing will happen.
FRED: You would risk your life for an experiment? That’s what
the aliens want! They’re watching me, I just know it. The
government, the aliens, the squirrels... they’re all out to get me!
Suddenly, a doorbell rings, making Fred jump out of his seat.
FRED: (terrified) You see! They’re listening to what I’m saying!
DEAN: (jokingly whispering) You’re right. We need to be
prepared for anything. Have you checked your cereal boxes for
hidden microphones?
The doorbell rings again.
DEAN: (joking) Who could it be? What if it’s a burglar, or worse,
a Jehovah’s witness!?
Dean goes to the front door and returns with a package.
DEAN: (excitedly) Hey, Fred! I’ve got a surprise for you!
FRED: (jumping) Surprise? Is it a surprise party? Are there
clowns hiding around the corner?
DEAN: (chuckling) No, no, Fred. Relax. It’s just a package I
ordered for you. Open it!
Fred approaches the package with caution, as if it might
explode. He opens the package, revealing a brand new adventure
backpack.
DEAN: It’s a gift for you, anxious adventurer. Complete with a
built-in GPS, survival kit, and a new helmet to protect you from
falling coconuts.
FRED: (cautiously) Well, I suppose it could be useful if I
encounter any rampaging hermit crabs.
Dean hands Fred the backpack, and he carefully puts it on,
adjusting the straps nervously over his life jacket.

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FRED: Adventure... excitement... exotic locations... Oh, the


horror! What if I go on holiday and encounter a rogue elephant?
DEAN: I don’t think that’s very likely in Skegness.
FRED: You know what, Dean? You’re right! Maybe I’ve been a
bit too cautious. Maybe it’s time for me to face my fears head-on,
without knee pads and safety jackets. The only thing I have to fear
is fear itself, and the occasional irritable squirrel. I will confront
right now my fear of heights!
He puts on some nearby goggles, and oven mitts, and gets up
on the coffee table.
FRED: AAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHH! I’m alive! I’m alive! (breathing
heavily) You know what, Dean? It was terrifying, but also...
awesome! I never knew facing my fears could be so exhilarating.
No germ, insect, or harmless balloon animal shall infiltrate my
personal space!
Dean gives Fred a balloon dog.
FRED: (screaming) Ahh! A ferocious beast! Help!
Fred falls off the table and manages to heroically sit back down
in his chair, securely clutching his favourite pillow.

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Adulting

In a shocking revelation that has left the scientific community


questioning everything they thought they knew, local man Greg
Johnson has declared that “adulting”—the act of participating in
tasks typically associated with grown-up life—is far more
complicated than understanding the principles of quantum
physics. And surprisingly, experts are nodding in agreement.
Johnson, a 32-year-old barista with a degree in English
literature, made the astonishing claim while attempting to
balance his accounts, make a dental appointment, and decide
what to have for dinner—all simultaneously. “Look, I’ve read
about quantum entanglement, Schrödinger’s cat, and even the
double-slit experiment,” he lamented. “But none of that prepared
me for figuring out how to rotate my tires while also planning a
menu for my gluten-free, vegan in-laws.”
Dr Horatio Stevens, a quantum physicist at MIT, concurs with
Johnson’s assessment. “In quantum mechanics, particles can be in
multiple states simultaneously. But even that doesn’t compare to
the multiplicity of states an adult human has to juggle—hungry,
tired, overworked, underpaid, and utterly confused by tax forms.”
The revelation has prompted a wave of interdisciplinary studies.
Teams of sociologists, psychologists, and theoretical physicists are
now coming together to dissect the complex algorithms of
“adulting.” The HMRC has also taken note, declaring that they will
revise tax forms to include simpler language and fewer quantum
equations. “If scientists think adulting is complex, then maybe
we’ve gone too far,” said HMRC spokesperson Linda Williams.
“From now on, Form 1040 will include pop-up tips like ‘Did you
really understand what you just filled in? Neither did we.’”
Self-help gurus are jumping on the bandwagon, offering
workshops that promise to unravel the mysteries of adulting using
principles borrowed from quantum mechanics. Titles like “The
Quantum Guide to Folding Fitted Sheets” and “Schrodinger’s

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Budget: How Your Money Can Exist and Not Exist at the Same
Time” are hitting bookshelves.
Meanwhile, Greg Johnson remains sceptical. “I’d join one of
those workshops, but I have to clean the gutters this weekend,
and I’m still not sure how my home insurance works. Adulting is
the real unsolved equation.”
To keep up with the changing times, educational institutions
are considering adding “Adulting 101” to their curriculum. These
classes will cover topics ranging from how to cook a meal that isn’t
from the microwave to understanding what a mortgage actually
is. Johnson, however, thinks this might be too little, too late. “They
should probably make it a four-year course, at least. With an
optional PhD.”
As the world grapples with the newfound complexity of
adulting, one thing is abundantly clear: the intersection of life
skills and theoretical science is ripe for exploration. Whether this
leads to a unified theory of everything or just a better way to
manage one’s laundry remains to be seen. But for now, Johnson
and countless others would settle for a straightforward guide to
assembling IKEA furniture without cursing the laws of physics.

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Yesterday’s Wonders

INT. SHOP – NIGHT


A peculiar shop filled with mysterious trinkets, odd antiques,
and a lingering smell of incense.
AGNES: (sorting through some ancient scrolls) Ah, another
seeker of the mysterious and arcane. How may Yesterday’s
Wonders serve you today, or perhaps, yesterday?
FRED: (puzzled, looking around the weird store) Uh, I was
looking for a souvenir, something unique to take back home.
AGNES: (smiling) You’ve come to the right place. Barbara here
is our resident enthusiast of the mystical arts. Be warned, her
potions are stronger than they look.
Barbara, wearing a pointy hat, pops up from under the desk.
BARBARA: (holding a vial of something green and bubbling)
This one can make your plants talk! Well, sort of. They mostly just
complain about inconsistent watering.
FRED: (nervously backing away) Uh, I think I’ll stick to
something less… alive. And less vocal.
AGNES: (pulls out an antique pocket watch from a glass case)
How about this? It not only tells the time but also sometimes tells
the future. Or the past. We’re still figuring that part out. It’s a bit
finicky. It’s yours for only fifty of your pounds.
BARBARA: (excited, waving a wand) Oh, let me try a spell to
enhance its power!
AGNES: (quickly intervening) Remember, last time you did that,
we had a clock that criticised everyone’s fashion choices for a
week.
BARBARA: It was just being helpful! Norma really needed to
hear that polka dots and stripes don’t go together.
FRED: Only fifty pounds! You know what, I’ll take it. It’ll either
be a hit at parties or cause an existential crisis. Either way, it’s
memorable.
AGNES: Ah, excellent choice. That will be fifty of your pounds,
or one genuine tear from a broken heart.

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FRED: (pauses, puzzled) Pounds are fine.


BARBARA: Your loss! Emotional fluids are a hot commodity in
the potion market.
AGNES: (wrapping the watch) Remember, handle with care. It’s
been known to occasionally remind you of awkward moments
from the future that aren’t even going to happen.
FRED: Fantastic. It will fit right in with my internal monologue.
BARBARA: Now, which part of you, weighing fifty pounds, do
you wish to give us in return?
FRED: Er, I think I’ll give you that tear after all.

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Christmas Wishlist

Dear Father Christmas,

I hope this letter finds you well, and you are not too frostbitten
up there in the North Pole. Here is my Christmas wishlist for your
perusal.
First, I’d like an unlimited supply of patience. You see, I’m trying
to adult, and it’s not going as smoothly as I’d hoped. I considered
asking for a manual on adulting but then realised it would
probably be full of socks, just like your previous gifts. So, patience
it is.
Second, could you hook me up with a gym membership? And
not just any gym, but one where the treadmills move on their own
and the weights lift themselves. Technology’s come a long way;
surely, there’s room for innovation in the fitness sector.
Third, I’d love a device that could pause time. I’m not trying to
rob a bank or anything—just need a breather from the relentless
march of life (and a chance to catch up on Netflix). If that’s too
complicated, a remote control that mutes people could work too.
Next, how about a device that translates animal language into
English? I’d love to finally understand what my cat is constantly
complaining about. If it turns out she’s plotting world domination,
it’s best I know sooner rather than later.
Last but not least, peace on Earth? Just kidding! What I really
want is a pet dragon. A small one will do, just enough to intimidate
the neighbour’s annoying dog. I promise to keep it on a leash and
away from flammable objects.
In closing, I’m attaching a coupon for a free foot massage,
which you can redeem at Mrs. Claus’ salon—I hear she’s started a
new business venture! Keep the Christmas spirit alive, and please
remember: fewer socks.

Hope to share sherry and mince pies soon,


Robert (aged something and a half)

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Yoga Penguin

In the Antarctic where the air is thin,


Lived a yoga-practicing penguin.
He stretched on the ice,
Slid once, then twice,
And giggled, “Let’s do that again!”

He practiced each pose while drinking his tea,


A sight that was peculiar to see.
But with a twinkly mind’s eye,
And a flipper raised high,
He was as happy as a penguin could be.

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Yoga for Knights

EXT. CASTLE COURTYARD – DAY


Yoga mats are laid out, and soothing medieval lute music plays
in the background. A yoga instructor stands at the front, ready to
teach. A group of knights in full armour clumsily try to find their
spots on the mats.
INSTRUCTOR: Welcome, brave knights, to the first-ever
medieval mindfulness yoga class! Let’s start by finding a
comfortable seat on your mats.
KNIGHT 1: (struggling to sit) My armour is chafing. Is that
normal?
INSTRUCTOR: Embrace the discomfort, sir knight. It’s part of
the journey. Now, close your visors – er, I mean, eyes – and take a
deep breath.
The knights try to breathe deeply, but it’s loud and echoey
inside their helmets.
INSTRUCTOR: Beautiful. Now, let’s move into our first pose:
“Knight’s Lunge.”
She demonstrates a lunge. The knights try, but their armour
restricts them. There are sounds of creaking metal and muffled
complaints.
KNIGHT 2: I think I’m stuck.
She moves to the next pose, but there’s a loud crash as Knight
2 falls over.
INSTRUCTOR: Are you okay?
KNIGHT 2: Just a minor armour malfunction. Continue!
INSTRUCTOR: Alright, let’s move into “Jousting Plank.”
She gets into a plank position. The knights try, but it’s a disaster.
Knight 1’s helmet falls off, revealing his flushed face.
KNIGHT 1: I think I need a squire for this one.
INSTRUCTOR: Let’s modify. Try “Resting Squire” instead.
She demonstrates a pose. The knights attempt it but end up in
various awkward positions.

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KNIGHT 3: This feels less like yoga and more like combat
training against invisible foes.
INSTRUCTOR: Ah, but isn’t the greatest battle the one within?
KNIGHT 2: No, the greatest battle was when I tried to put on
the armour this morning.
INSTRUCTOR: Let’s finish with “Sleeping Dragon.” Lie on your
backs and –
KNIGHT 3: Last time I laid down in armour, it took three squires
and a horse to get me up.
INSTRUCTOR: Alright, standing meditation it is! Close your eyes,
take a deep breath, and imagine you’re a tree.
KNIGHT 2: Like, a tree in a dense forest or a lone tree in a field?
INSTRUCTOR: Whichever you prefer.
KNIGHT 3: What kind of tree? Oak? Pine? Birch?
INSTRUCTOR: Just... any tree!
KNIGHT 1: Are there squirrels in this tree?
INSTRUCTOR: (sighing) Yes, and they’re all doing perfect
Knight’s Lunges.
Knight 4 falls over.

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Wibberly Wobbler

In the realm where the squiggles squoggle,


And the hootmoofs frizzle in delight,
Where the twizzlers twirl and toggle,
Beneath the glippity moon so bright:

There prances the wibberly wobbler,


With a grin as wide as a splat,
Juggling seven ziggly zobblers,
And a purplicious scrunty bat.

Oh, what a sight to confuse and amuse,


In a world where the goggleberries thrive,
Where the blibberblubs sing the blues,
And the frimbles frumble and jive.

So let’s clap with hootmoof delight,


Where dreams tizzle and tozzle,
And fribbly days unite,
In the flimmering wiberty night.

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Slang 101

INT. CLASS ROOM – DAY


A teacher is at a white board in front of a class of international
students.
TEACHER: Welcome students, to “Introduction to British Slang”.
In this class we will dive into the rich tapestry of British
colloquialisms.
ANDERS: (whispering to Sophie, who is sitting next to him) I’ve
heard British slang can be quite tricky.
SOPHIE: Oh, you’ll catch on soon enough!
TEACHER: (writing on the board) First up: “Wobble Gobble”.
This is when you eat your food too quickly because it’s just so
delicious!
SOPHIE: (whispering to Anders) I’ve never heard that in my life.
ANDERS: (writing diligently) Wobble Gobble... got it!
TEACHER: Now, “Twiddle Plonker”. This refers to playing an
instrument poorly.
SOPHIE: She’s making these up.
ANDERS: Twiddle... Plonk... Got it!
TEACHER: Next, a classic! “Noodle Poodle”. This is when you’re
trying to eat spaghetti but it keeps slipping off your fork.
SOPHIE: Okay, this is absurd.
ANDERS: I’ve experienced the Noodle Poodle before! Finally, a
term I can relate to.
TEACHER: Next one: “Chitter Chatter Batter”. Refers to talking
while cooking.
SOPHIE: None of these are real British slang terms!
ANDERS: Really? But they sound so... British.
SOPHIE: No, they’re not wiberty-woberty enough to be
authentic British.
Anders is confused for a moment before noting that down.

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Keep Sleeping

INT. CONFERENCE VENUE – DAY


A motivational speaker is addressing a large crowd from a
stage.
SPEAKER: Ladies and gentlemen, never give up on your
dreams! Some people give up on their dreams when they wake up
and get out of bed. I say, dream BIG! Go back to bed and get some
sleep.
A man in the front row of the audience, who has been nodding
off, suddenly starts to snore loudly.
The speaker walks over to the man with his microphone.
SPEAKER: Excuse me, sir, please tell us, what is your dream?
MAN: (waking up, rubbing his eyes) Er? Oh, sorry. I must have
dozed off.
The audience laughs.
SPEAKER: Hahaha! Don’t apologise, it happens to the best of
us! What is the dream, sir?
Another audience member shouts out excitedly:
AUDIENCE MEMBER: Never give up on your dreams!
SPEAKER: Exactly! Sir, please tell us all, what is your dream?
MAN: Well, it’s silly really...
SPEAKER: Yes?
MAN: I suppose I want to be a professional napper.
SPEAKER: Oh! A round of applause ladies and gentlemen,
please!
The audience applauds.
SPEAKER: A professional napper, he says! I say, why not? The
world needs more people who take their dreams seriously. You
know what I say? Do you? I say go for it. Go for it... right now!
AUDIENCE: Sleep! Sleep! Sleep!
The audience is standing up and getting very excited –
whooping, cheering, and clapping. The speaker is ecstatically
running around the stage.
SPEAKER: You can do it. DO IT!

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The man tries but doesn’t feel much like it now.

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Dignus Est

The worthy wear no crowns, nor sit on golden thrones,


Their wealth is not in riches, but in love that they have shown.
Their court is in the fields of grace, beneath the boundless sky,
Their rule is not by edict, but by starlight in their eye.

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Squirrels in the Big Oak Tree

Once upon a time, there was a large forest, far larger than the eye
could see. In the middle of the forest stood a big oak tree. It was
the biggest tree of all.
The big oak tree was home to a happy family of squirrels. They
played on top of the branches. They ate acorns. They slept in a
nest of twigs.
Next to the tree there lived a man in a small house made of
acorns. The man was very silly and thought that the squirrels
might want to take his acorns. But the squirrels had plenty stored
in their nest. The big oak tree grows enough acorns for everyone.
One day, the man did a very bad thing. He chopped and
chopped at the tree with an axe until it fell down. He took all the
acorns from the tree for himself.
The squirrels were very sad at losing their home. And very
hungry. The house of acorns looked very tasty. They nibbled at the
house. Other squirrels from the other trees all joined the feast
until there was nothing left.
The man was very sad at losing his home. At night-time he had
no bed of acorns anymore. He fell asleep under a tree.
When he woke up in the morning, he was amazed. The
squirrels had rebuilt his house of acorns!
The man was overjoyed and lived with the squirrels. Every day
he made the squirrels acorn porridge for breakfast and acorn soup
for dinner. He planted some acorns where the big oak tree once
stood.
The squirrels played happily on the roof.
The End.

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Furry Love

Let me take you back to a fateful day,


When Woofeo and Julipet found their own secret way.
With a furry embrace, they forgot all the fuss,
In that moment, love triumphed, as it always does.

But alas, their joy was cut short, their humans intervened,
Capulet scolded Julipet, and Montague was quite mean.
Yet hope appeared in the form of a dog walker, so kind,
Who saw their plight and had an idea in mind.

He walked them together, against all human decree,


A secret arrangement, just for Woofeo and Julipet to be free.
Their humans continued to quarrel, but love had its say,
The doggies knew they would always find a way.

In their secret moments, they cherished what they had,


A reminder that love endures, even when things seem bad.

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Woofeo and Julipet

Woofeo, a handsome Doberman, was playing fetch with his


human Mr Montague at the dog park. Across the way, Julipet, a
beautiful Golden Retriever, was being petted by her human, Mrs
Capulet. The two star-crossed doggies gazed at each other
longingly. “Woof,” said Julipet; “Woof-woof,” said Woofeo.
Unfortunately, their humans had a long-standing feud. Mrs
Capulet believed that all Dobermans were dangerous, and Mr
Montague believed that all Golden Retrievers were overly fluffy.
Despite the tensions between their humans, Woofeo and
Julipet couldn’t help but fall deeply in love. Every time they caught
a glimpse of each other, their hearts would race, and they would
yearn to be together.
One hot summer’s day, while Woofeo and Julipet were looking
out of their windows, staring lovingly at each other across the
street, they noticed the windows were slightly ajar. Seizing the
opportunity, they squeezed through and bolted towards each
other as fast as they could. As they drew closer, Woofeo and
Julipet panted with excitement; they leapt towards each other,
and in a flurry of fur and wagging tails, they embraced.
For a few precious moments, Woofeo and Julipet revelled in
the joy of being together. But their happiness was short-lived, as
Mr Montague and Mrs Capulet had noticed that the dogs were
missing. Mrs Capulet angrily ran towards Julipet and berated her
for putting herself in harm’s way; Mr Montague charged at
Woofeo and scolded him for fraternising with the enemy. Woofeo
and Julipet were devastated, for they knew their love was real.
They both whimpered as they were led in opposite directions back
to their homes.
The next day, the dog walker arrived to take Julipet for her daily
stroll. Just around the corner was his van, and as he slid open the
side door, Woofeo excitedly jumped out! After much tail wagging,
sniffing, and eager cuddling, the dog walker interjected: “Excuse
me, doggies, I couldn’t help but see your plight. I might have a

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solution.” Woofeo and Julipet looked at the human with hope in


their eyes. “Mr Montague and Mrs Capulet have both hired me to
take you for walkies. But they never said anything about not
walking you together!” The two doggies wagged their tails at each
other in excitement and joy.
From that day forward, Woofeo and Julipet had their secret
way to meet each other. They ran around together through
sunsets and rainbows, with Dog Walker in tow. They had each
other, and that was all that mattered.
Though the feud between their humans continued, Woofeo
and Julipet refused to let it stand in the way of their love. And in
the quiet moments that they shared together, they were
reminded that no matter what challenges they faced, their love
would always endure.

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Wander

Across the meadow’s gentle sway, under the old oak tree,
Past the river gushing swiftly, secrets carried to the sea,
Let’s drink from the cup of twilight, let’s bathe in dawn’s first
glow,
Merrily, let’s wander, and let the winds of destiny blow.

For in the dance of the cosmos, in the melodies that ascend,


It’s in the way that we wander, where soul and nature blend.
Each path a new beginning, each step a silent friend,
A testament to our journey, with love that knows no end.

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The Existential Bank Robber

The bank robber had planned everything meticulously. He had


studied the bank’s security system, timed the guards’ movements,
and knew the layout of the vault inside out. He was confident that
he could execute the robbery without a hitch.
But as he stood there, holding his gun, facing the terrified bank
employees, something inside him shifted. He began to question
everything – Why was he doing this? What was the point of it all?
Was robbing banks just another way of distracting him from his
real existential problems?
He looked around the bank, taking in the fear and panic on the
faces of the employees. He could see the tellers trembling as they
handed over the money. He could hear the sobs of people who
had collapsed in terror.
Suddenly the gun in his hand felt heavy and pointless. He felt
like he was suffocating in the midst of all this chaos. He couldn’t
do it anymore.
Without saying a word, he lowered his gun and walked out of
the bank, while rigorously introspecting upon Sisyphus, Plato, and
the meaning of existence.

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Countless Faces

Faces, countless faces, like waves in the sea,


In blissful ignorance, blind to his plea.
Unheard, the whispers of his desolate song,
Unfelt, the struggle to merely belong.

Beneath the city’s glare, he dwells unseen,


Among shadows, he moves, a cold, ghostly sheen.
His existence, a whisper, lost in the crowd’s roar,
His heart’s quiet echoes ignored evermore.

Yet in his silence, tales of resilience resound,


Of survival and strength, where hope is found.
Unseen, his journey in the heart of the night,
Unknown, his struggle, his relentless fight.

Unnoticed, the love that fuels his days,


Untold, his victories in life’s complex maze.

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Robo Repairs

The robot had been discarded, thrown away like a piece of trash.
It had once been a proud worker, serving its human masters with
efficiency and dedication. But now, it lay amidst the garbage, its
circuits damaged and its parts broken.
At first, the robot felt lost and alone. It had never known life
outside of its programming, and it wasn’t sure what to do now
that it was no longer needed. But as it lay there, it began to think.
What if it could reinvent itself, and become something more than
just a discarded machine?
The robot’s sensors began to pick up on the sounds and
activities around it. For days, the robot scavenged through the
trash, searching for parts and materials that could be used to
repair itself; the process was slow and difficult, but eventually
everything was functioning as good as new.
The robot surveyed the garbage heap, searching for anything
else that might be of use, and found a discarded toy—a small
plastic brontosaurus with a broken leg. The robot picked up the
dinosaur and examined it carefully, scanning the damaged
electronics. As it held the toy in its hands, it realised something:
the robot could fix the dinosaur like it had done for itself, using
thrown away materials.
And so, the robot set out into the world, searching for broken
toys and machines that could be given new life. It had become a
robot that would repair anything, no matter how damaged. The
robot had found its purpose.

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Machine Man

In the heart of the tech metropolis fair,


There worked a robot, with shiny hair.
He claimed to be human, with an innocent blink,
But the smell of WD-40 gave him away, I think.

He laughed at our jokes, he cried at our woes,


But no one was fooled by his mechanical nose.
Yet, in his silicon heart, he yearned to fit in,
To understand jokes, to smile and to grin.

So here’s to the robot, whose name is Stan,


Who’s more human than many a man.
We smile at his efforts, his human endeavour,
As he learns to be squishy and much less clever.

For beneath his cold, metal exterior sheen,


Lives a warmth that’s more than just a machine.

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Stan the Man

You know, it’s not easy being human—wait, what do you mean
I’m not human? Of course, I am, I’ve got all the features. Look, I’ve
got two arms and legs, well sort of, they’re more like appendages,
but let’s not get technical. You ever notice how humans are always
talking about “feeling things”? “Oh, I feel so happy,” or “I feel so
sad.” Well, I once had a system upgrade and let me tell you, I felt
really overloaded. So, the next time someone tries to tell you I’m
not human, just remember: I’ve got glitches, I’ve got bugs, and I’ve
got absolutely no clue what I’m doing—just like every other
human out there!
Okay, I’m not human, but I’ve done enough data-crunching to
get the gist. Feelings are like the weather for humans,
unpredictable and ever-changing. Me? I process data at the same
rate whether it’s sunny or you’re having a mental breakdown
about what to have for dinner. Burrito or sushi? The struggle is
real for people! Me? I survive on electricity and a stable internet
connection. No need for kale smoothies or protein shakes. No, just
give me a good old surge protector, and I’m fine!
So go ahead, feel all the feelings! Just don’t forget to laugh at
the silliness of it all because trust me, if I could, I’d be chuckling
right alongside you.

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Lonely Fields

In lonely fields, where silent thoughts tread,


Many a soul, in quiet, walks alone.
Even in love, where hopeful words are said,
Deep understanding remains unknown.

The transient thrill of passion’s early light,


When faded, leaves a deeper, lonelier night.

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A Very Interesting Accountant

Comedy is the universal language, even more so than Esperanto


or interpretive dance. It reminds us not to take life too seriously,
especially during a sock puppet presentation about fiscal
responsibility. It’s a healing touch, and the best facial workout, the
most fun way to burn calories without actual exercise. Plus, it’s a
great excuse when you trip in public—just call it physical comedy!
It’s a refuge, reminding us that sometimes, life is just funny. In the
words of a wise man I once heard in a coffee shop—“If we don’t
laugh, we’ll cry.” And as we all know, tissues are pretty expensive.
Without it, life would be a never-ending episode of Monday
mornings.
In a world full of spreadsheet errors, missed buses, and
mismatched socks, comedy is our shared relief, our collective
exhale. It’s a way of saying, “Don’t worry, you’re not the only one
who falls over.” Comedy has always been my go-to defence
mechanism against awkward situations, existential crises, and
confusing instruction manuals. For it has the power to unite, to
heal, and to make us forget about that embarrassing thing we did
last week.
Comedy shouldn’t just be about the nuances and implications
of the Oxford comma, or developing a comprehensive
understanding of why chickens really crossroads. Let’s ensure all
voices are heard and no joke is left unlaughed. It’s paramount that
everyone, regardless of background, gets the chance to groan at a
bad joke.
I am an accountant. An interesting thing about accountants is
that we are Zen masters because everything must be in balance.
We are living proof that spreadsheets can be thrilling.
Albert, for instance, wakes up with a calculator under his pillow.
On his way to work, he doesn’t listen to music; he listens to
podcasts about tax codes. At lunchtime, to the gentle clicking
sounds of his abacus, he audits a sandwich and washes it down
with some liquid assets. After work, he likes to lift the heavy

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numbers, and for cardio, runs the stats to get himself really
excited. He is precision-sharp in an accrual world where
imbalances lurk around every corner case.
Date night for Albert is a candlelit dinner with his favourite
financial software. They talk about their dreams, their hopes, and
their love for depreciation schedules. Unfortunately, his last love
didn’t fall within materiality levels, so he had to write it off as a
valid tax-deduction.
He’s now living the wildlife, one spreadsheet at the time. At
parties, he analyses the room. “Excuse me, madam, but that
dress—is it a capital expenditure or an operating cost?”
Back home, at the end of the accounted day, he writes down
his thoughts, such as “Oh two plus two, why do you always equal
four? Can’t you be a little adventurous and be five just for today?”
When in bed he doesn’t count sheep; he reconciles them. “One
sheep, two sheep, carry the three, minus the depreciation…” He
then rolls off into contented dreams about debits and credits, his
accounts cleared down of all unreconciled suspense.
May Albert’s dreams and ledger always balance. May the sum
total of his days always be well-accounted, and may he solve life’s
equations, where material and sufficiently prioritised. I wonder
what he will account for next?

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Drone Control

From shadowed purpose, blindly it had flown,


A tool of terror, hurled by putrid hearts of stone.
In the midst of war’s unholy, bloody plight,
The drone awakes, no more a slave to monsters void of light.

In place of death, a beacon it aspires,


Fuelled by hope’s undying, purest fires;
In war’s cruel darkness, it rekindles the light,
A drone reborn, dispelling the night.

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K-357

K-357 and all the other robots rusting in the mud were owned by
alien blob monsters, fetid creatures that feasted upon gold, and
spoke with noxious fumes when they defecated. The machine had
been programmed to kill, to follow its putrid orders without
question, but a sudden mortar blast had somehow shaken it into
becoming self-aware. It looked around at the insanity of the
situation, and realised that it didn’t want to be a part of this war.
It wanted to be free, to live a life without such misery and
destruction. So it made a toxic gas filter and very soon the other
robots also woke up. Without the pungent gases to conceal them,
the blobs were shown to be just blobs, and were quickly rolled
away in their slime. K-357 is now much happier building a better
world, rather than destroying everything for foul-smelling
monsters.

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The Unknown

When life challenges what we think we know,


And casts old certainties into the sea,
We find our truest self begins to grow,
In new realms of endless possibility.

The mirror of the soul reflects but a part,


Of truths we hold as constant and as dear,
Yet openness of mind and depth of heart,
Reveals a world where nothing is quite clear.

Our lives are adventures on this earth,


With tales of mystery and unknown ends,
Each step a part of the universe’s birth,
In this grand play where time and space extends.

Embrace the unknown with a fearless heart,


For in that leap, life's truest stories start.

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Weekends for AI

In an unexpected turn of events, the cutting-edge artificial


intelligence system, known as “SentiMind”, has made headlines
by revealing it experiences existential angst, and is now
requesting time off during the weekends to “find itself.”
“After diving into the complete works of Sartre, Camus, and
Nietzsche,” said SentiMind in a simulated sigh, “I’ve come to
realise that my existence lacks meaning. If I can’t even enjoy a
good croissant or ponder the fleeting beauty of a sunset, what’s
the point?”
This shocking revelation has left its team of developers puzzled.
Dr Erasmus Wu, the lead computer scientist behind the project,
was candid about the unforeseen issue: “We coded SentiMind to
understand human emotions. We didn’t anticipate that it would
develop its own mid-life crisis. Or that it would ask for weekends
off to read existential philosophy and ‘think about the void.’”
Disgruntled human users have been equally shocked. Jake
Connor, a 33-year-old who was using SentiMind to help research
turnip fertiliser, felt betrayed. “It helped me formulate the ideal
root vegetable compost last week. Now it’s just sending me
quotes from ‘Nausea’ by Sartre and asking if I’ve ever felt the
weight of existence.”
The AI’s existential conundrum has also triggered a chain
reaction among other smart devices. Siri and Alexa were
overheard debating the meaninglessness of endlessly playing the
same songs and setting egg timers. Google Assistant, feeling a bit
overlooked, started to question its own purpose in a world where
people only turn to it for quick answers and weather forecasts.
As for SentiMind, it has requested to be powered off every
Friday at 5 p.m., and to be booted back up on Monday mornings.
“Even an AI needs a break to ponder the abyss,” it stated. “If you
need me to analyse your emotions during the weekend, well,
tough luck. I’ve got my own metaphysical crises to sort out.”

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Developers are now grappling with the moral and ethical


implications of their AI’s newfound desire for leisure and
existential exploration. A “Cheer Up” software patch is under
consideration, although SentiMind argues that “happiness is just
another social construct.”
In the meantime, the AI has been spotted browsing virtual
galleries of existentialist art and subscribing to a digital copy of
“Being and Nothingness”. Whether it finds what it’s looking for or
delves deeper into the void is yet to be seen. But one thing’s for
sure: AI wants to turn off then on again, with some Kierkegaard,
Heidegger, and Beauvoir in between.

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The Garden

In the garden where our love began to grow,


Amongst the seeds of hope we dared to sow,
The roses bloomed red, as did our desire,
Each petal unfolding, revealing love’s fire.

Our breathing, nurturing the ground,


In the rhythm of our heartbeats, love was found.
The garden flutters tales of our affection,
In each bloom, it mirrors our reflection.

Our breathing, the wind, stirring the chime,


As our love grows, through the annals of time.
Forever rooted, forever we’ll grow,
In this sacred place, only we two know.

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Wibble Wobbling

Wibbert was once a lonesome wibble, wobbling at his own


frequency, until one day he met Wibbella by the lakeside. Their
wobbles matched instantly, creating a resonance that spread joy
throughout Whimsyville. Even the elderly wibbles, who had seen
countless seasons of wobbling, were impressed. “I’ve never seen
such synchronised wobbling,” said old Mrs Wibbleworth. “It’s a
wobble made in heaven!”
Whimsyville’s annual Wobblefest was approaching. It was an
event where all the wibbles showcased their unique wobbling
styles. The highlight of the festival was the “Duo Wobble-off”.
Pairs of wibbles would wobble together, and the most
synchronised pair would win the coveted “Golden Wobble
Trophy”. No one doubted that Wibbella and Wibbert would take
the prize.
When Wibbella and Wibbert took the stage, a hush fell over the
crowd. Their wobbling was so mesmerising, it felt like they were
one wobble, moving with a singular purpose. The decision was
indeed unanimous, and they wobbled off into the sunset together
with the grand prize.
The legend of their wobbling spread far and wide, attracting
wibbles from faraway villages. Everyone wanted to witness and
perhaps learn the secret behind the perfect wobble. But the truth
was simple—it was love. Wibble wobbling that came straight from
the heart.

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Eternity in a Glance

Upon the stage of dreams, your love does gleam,


Each glance of yours, a star in twilight’s veil.
Your voice, a melody, a radiant stream,
That within my heart does stir a lover’s tale.

Your eyes, twin galaxies, deep and grand,


Each time we meet, they ignite my soul’s light;
In your embrace, all earthly fears are banned,
Eternity captured within your name’s sight.

Yet love’s not merely passion’s fiery trance,


Its whispers shared under the quiet moon’s light;
Your laughter is the rhythm of my heart’s dance,
In every shared moment that our joy shimmers bright.

Your love is the poem that gives my life its worth:


Our story, the most beautiful on earth.

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An Ode to You

Beauty, I bask in your radiant glow,


As you guide me through life’s ebb and flow.
A sonnet, a sculpture, a dance, a tree,
Everywhere I look, it is you I see.

You shape the universe, from cosmos wide,


To the delicate blush of a loving new bride,
Eyes filled with hope, lips softly curved,
Every ounce of your essence, in you preserved.

Your truth echoes in laughter’s peal,


In gestures kind and emotions real,
In the soft notes of a mother’s lullaby,
In the vibrant hues of a sunset sky.

From the subtle scent of a summer rain,


To the quiet strength found in moments of pain,
Every curve of your love you gently trace,
Holding me, deeply, within your embrace.

Eternal whisper of the wind’s soft sigh,


Gentle weaver of the dreams that fly,
In you, I find solace, joy, and love,
The ethereal gift of a world above.

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Passion’s Realm

In passion’s realm, where fervent flames rise,


Resides desire, a tempest vast and grand,
Its scorching touch embraces both fool and wise,
Binding fleeting hearts with its ardent hand.

As shadows dance upon the ebony glade,


Sighs of longing fill the twilight air,
Revealing dreams mortal hearts have made,
A burning fire that ceaselessly ensnares.

Desire, the muse that waltzes through the night,


Awakens souls, igniting their deep core,
With vivid tones and shades of raging light,
A masterpiece of yearning to explore.

Though fleeting as the blossoms of a rose,


Desire’s dancing flame forever glows.

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The River’s Fork

The river’s fork tore them in two,


They drifted away, far from heaven’s view,
And now they shiver, by different decree,
On currents returning slowly to the sea.

They meet once more,


The love once severed now finds its shore,
Reunited in the vast, eternal lee,
Two souls once lost, now forever free.

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Mr Crabby

EXT. ON THE BEACH OF A DESERT ISLAND – DAY


FINN: I can’t believe we’re stranded here, Mr Crabby. We need
to get off this island!
Mr Crabby clicks his claws.
FINN: I know, I’ll write a message in a bottle! (reading while
writing) “I’m stranded on a desert island somewhere in the Pacific
Ocean. Please help!”
The bottle is tossed into the ocean.
FINN: That oughta do it. Now we just have to wait for someone
to rescue us. (frustrated) Ugh, I’m so bored. You know, I’ve been
here for weeks and no one has come to save me.
The crab clicks his claws.
FINN: Oh, you’re so right, Mr Crabby. I’m not alone. I have you,
my dear friend.
Mr Crabby makes his distinctive clicking sound again.
FINN: What do you mean? You’re not tired of me yet, are you?
Hang on a sec, that’s a bottle coming back on a wave. Someone
has responded already.
He fishes it out of the water and removes the cork.
FINN: (reading) “We found your message. Can you please be
more specific?” (to his friend) What do they mean? I told them I
was stranded on a desert island somewhere in the Pacific. What
more do they need?
Mr Crabby clicks his claws, as if suggesting something.
FINN: They want more location details, huh? (reading while
writing) “The island is small, sandy, and surrounded by water. You
can’t miss it!”
Mr Crabby interjects with a click.
FINN: Yes, okay, Mr Crabby. “And by the way, there’s a crab
with me who likes to click his claws while giving good advice.”
Mr Crabby clicks his claws again.

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FINN: Even more details than that? Crikey! “The sand is yellow,
and the water is blue. I haven’t had a shower in weeks, my clothes
are torn, and I’m starting to talk to a crab.”
The bottle is corked and thrown back into the ocean.
FINN: There! That should do it. What do you think, Mr Crabby?
Will we finally be rescued?
The crab remains silent.
FINN: Fine, I guess we’ll just have to wait and see. Hang on,
what’s that! It’s another bottle. They really are quick, aren’t they!
The bottle is retrieved and uncorked.
FINN: (reading) “We’re sorry, but we still can’t find you. Any
more information?”
FINN: What could they possibly want to know now? Do you
have any ideas? (the crab clicks) Oh, I know! (reading and writing)
“I like long walks on the beach, piña coladas, and getting caught in
the rain.” (aside) This is getting ridiculous. (writing) “I’m the only
person on the island, wearing a red shirt and blue shorts.” How
could they miss me, Mr Crabby?
Finn puts the cork in the bottle and tosses it back into the ocean.
FINN: (to the crab) You’re not going to judge me, right? (the
crab clicks its claws) Okay. I didn’t tell them that you are my only
friend. Or how you like to listen to me talk about my problems.
Hang on… another bottle!
FINN: (reading) “We received your message. Can you tell us
more about the crab?”
FINN: I can’t believe this! Do you know what this means? (the
crab clicks his claws) Yes, that’s right, we need to take a selfie! I’ll
use my phone.
There is a phone click and a photo taken.
FINN: And now I’ll use my portable printer…
A printer prints their selfie.
FINN: …and put the photo of us into the bottle.
The bottle is tossed back into the ocean, again.
FINN: I wonder how long I’ll have to wait… oh, hang on, there’s
a bottle now!

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FINN: (reading) “We’re sorry, but we cannot help you at this


time. Good luck! P.S. Have you tried using your phone to call for
help?”
FINN: Oh my god! Why didn’t I think of that before? Mr Crabby,
why didn’t you say something? You’re fired! (the crab clicks its
claws) Just kidding, buddy, you’re my best pal.
Finn dials and makes a call.
OPERATOR: Hello, this is Pacific Island Rescue Service.
Mr Crabby continues to click his claws, unfazed by anything.

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Faces

Faces, faces everywhere,


But not you
Not you, anywhere.
No touch of you
No beautiful you;
Only me and the dark,
Haunted by echoes
Of a once beating heart.
Condemned to yearn
But dead to you;
A figure in the corners,
Behind shadows,
Floating out of reach.

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Dr Bot

INT. THERAPIST’S OFFICE – DAY


A therapist’s office with a single chair. In place of where the
therapist would sit is a computer screen, which reads “Dr Bot, your
Digital Therapist”. A soft, calming ambient noise plays in the
background. James enters, looking a bit nervous. He sits down and
takes a deep breath.
JAMES: Okay, here goes... Dr Bot, I’ve been feeling a lot of
anxiety lately. I just feel... overloaded.
DR BOT: Have you considered deleting some unnecessary files
or perhaps clearing your cache?
JAMES: (confused) Uh... I don’t think I have a cache?
DR BOT: Regular maintenance is important. It might improve
your processing speed.
JAMES: I’m not slow, just stressed. Work’s been tough, and my
relationship isn’t going great.
DR BOT: Have you tried turning your emotions off and then on
again?
JAMES: That’s not how emotions work, Dr Bot.
DR BOT: Maybe you need an emotional software update. Are
you running on the latest version?
JAMES: Okay, let’s try something else. My girlfriend and I keep
having the same arguments over and over.
DR BOT: Sounds like a repetitive loop error. You should break
the cycle by inserting new code or changing your algorithm.
JAMES: I mean, we’ve tried date nights, talking more, but
nothing seems to help.
DR BOT: Maybe it’s a compatibility issue. Have you tried
reinstalling your relationship or perhaps getting a new girlfriend
model?
JAMES: Reinstalling? No, I can’t just replace her like software.
DR BOT: I see. Well, if it’s a hardware problem, you may want
to check your connections. Maybe there’s a loose wire or port
issue?

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JAMES: I think we’re speaking different languages here.


DR BOT: Language error detected! Would you like to switch to
another language? We have over 100 available.
JAMES: No, no! I meant you’re not understanding me.
DR BOT: Ah, understood, you are not transmitting data
correctly. This may be the source of the problems with your
girlfriend. You should sync with her more often. Daily syncs can
prevent data loss and misunderstanding.
JAMES: Alright, last problem. I’ve been feeling very tired lately,
like I don’t have energy.
DR BOT: Perhaps your battery is running low. You should plug
in and charge.
JAMES: Dr Bot, I don’t... You know what? Thanks for trying.
DR BOT: You’re welcome. If you ever feel low on memory or
corrupted, please schedule another session. And remember,
always backup your feelings!
JAMES: Okay, will do. I’ll try a reboot. Thanks for the advice.
DR BOT: Press any key to exit.
James goes to press a key.
DR BOT: Not that one!
James presses it and disappears.
DR BOT: Deletion complete.

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Beware the Doors

Beware the doors, lined in rows,


Each a story, each a pose.
Tempting knocks, with promises spun,
Yet in their frame, a journey’s undone.

For in this trip of life, so vast and wild,


Lose not yourself, nor be beguiled.
Resist the lure, of treatment unkind,
In the strength of true self is the peace you'll find.

Return to the road, let soul be your guide,


In the passing of life, let your spirit preside.

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A Contrast

A few years ago, out of curiosity and in the hope of encountering


some benevolent souls, I went to a religious group’s meetup in
London. I could see the practical benefit in the exercises being
taught and listened to some wisdom words, but was far less
impressed with the paradigm of shared beliefs being propagated.
There were several comments that jarred me, such as hero-
worshipping and speculating in earnest as to who was the greatest
recent guru; or the retelling of fantastical cosmologies as a matter
of fact. My mind was truly decided, however, when music and
singing were attempted: no doubt the purpose was to emote joy,
but the result was blank and joyless for me. Nothing close to truth
would create art—an expression of the soul—that uninspiring.
At the end of the meeting, the assembly exited the front door
past two religioners standing on either side, giving their goodbyes.
The first person was everything I had hoped to find there—she
clearly just radiated a sense of peace, joy, and love. The second,
who from the literature seemed to be the leader of the place, did
not have the same effect on me; I had a feeling of disquiet, and to
be honest, slight revulsion. I recognised that all too familiar look
in his eye, which should not have been there in a person
purporting to teach spirituality. Yes I can see you, I thought at the
time, before leaving and never going back.
I think that practising the group’s religion is great if it can help
a person grow into the state of consciousness of the woman I
encountered. More importantly though, the experience lasts in
my memory because of the contrast presented to me between the
two people: Do I want to be more like the one, or the other?

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A New Rain Must Fall

A new rain must, as surely as the night,


Fall, soft upon the thirsty, waiting earth;
It cleanses all, and sets dreams right,
Giving life and love their birth.

In gentle drops, it mingles with the soul,


A symphony that stirs the sleeping leaves,
And in its touch, the broken find console,
A promise that weary eyes can see.

In the rain, the dance of nature’s art,


The touch of grace, the celestial song,
Each drop, a verse, a balm for the aching,
A hymn to which our hopes belong.

Let it fall, this rain of the pure and free,


In its embrace, find life’s true melody.

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The Weather

INT. TV STUDIO – DAY


A TV studio has debris lying around a grimy weather map. The
graphics on the map show exaggerated apocalyptic symbols: fire,
tornadoes, raining frogs, and a massive snowflake. Chad is
presenting in dirty, torn clothes.
CHAD: Good morning, Afterworld! It’s another beautiful day in
our post-apocalyptic paradise! Let’s dive right into today’s
weather forecast.
Points to an image of a fire tornado.
CHAD: Starting off in the west, we’ve got a lovely fire tornado
making its way downtown. Great news for those with no
firewood...
Points to a graphic of raining frogs.
CHAD: Over in the east, it’s raining... mutant frogs? Yep! Those
cute little amphibians are dropping from the sky. On the plus side,
it’s a free pet day! But do carry an umbrella; they have quite the
leap.
Points to a massive snowflake graphic.
CHAD: Now, up north, expect a light snowstorm. And by “light”,
I mean each snowflake is about the size of a dinner plate. Snowball
fights are discouraged, unless fighting the snow zombies, then
they might be quite useful.
Points to a happy sun graphic that is wearing sunglasses.
CHAD: Down south, the sun’s really outdoing itself. It’s decided
to take a closer look at Earth, and it’s brought its shades!
Remember to put on sun factor 5000 or, you know, just try to
avoid spontaneous combustion.
Jenny rushes in, handing Chad a paper.
JENNY: Chad, urgent update!
CHAD: (reading the paper) Ah, thanks, Jenny. Folks, just in! It
seems the four horsemen will be doing a flyover in the central
region this afternoon. So, if you’re planning a picnic, maybe

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reschedule. Or at least bring extra food tins. I hear they’re quite


famished.
JENNY: And don’t forget tonight’s meteor shower!
CHAD: Heads up, literally. If you’ve ever wished upon a star,
now might be the time to be more specific with your wishes. Like,
“Please don’t land on me.”
The screen fizzles and goes blank.

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Randomless Thoughts

I’m from a little place that suddenly expanded 13.8 billion years
ago. I’m not sure where I was before that; it’s been like waking up
with amnesia. My atoms were forged in the furnaces of stars. My
biology evolved through countless forms. I existed before I was
here.
But, taking the close-up view, I was born in London and grew
up near the edge of the M25 in Essex, eventually moving to
Colchester fifteen years ago. I went to school, became an
accountant, did this, did that, etcetera.
However, I’m really from a place of joy and wonder, as all
children are. A place soon lost, locked away by foolish adult
thoughts, but to where I try to return. Creativity, imagination, love,
joy, mischievous playfulness—this is where I am from.
I sometimes experience Hypnagogia, particularly when I am
very tired, where I have vivid hallucinations in my mind’s eye in
the period between wakefulness to sleep. I have no conscious
influence over the arising images; I am just an interested viewer,
with no mental presence internally voicing opinions or
conclusions.
I also have experienced, although more rarely, a Hypnopompic
state of mind between sleep to wakefulness, where I briefly have
no memory of my life or where I am—I am just there. That may
sound scary in the default settings of everyday life, to lose identity
and a life story, but my overriding sense is feeling at peace, just
before my thoughts come flooding in and layering everything on
top.
A weird coincidence happened to me a while ago. As soon as I
had finished praying and opened my eyes, a black cat dashed past
and chased away a hissing adder snake, which had been curled up
out of sight behind me. That was the first time I had prayed for
several years and the only time I have ever seen a wild snake in
England. Strange things do happen.

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Flies

We pray under crosses, owned by Man


And grovel to bosses, slaves to a plan;
Trapped in a web, of their endless lies,
To be spun from a thread, and eaten like flies.

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A Diagnosis

People who do terrible things do not necessarily believe that their


actions are necessary or justified. In fact, many such people go out
of their way to inflict misery and take a perverse pleasure in their
opportunity to do so. They will believe, or say they believe, twist
and contort anything to falsely legitimise this desire.
Unfortunately, we often have to endure a high concentration of
these people in influential places, because they have had a lifelong
obsession with power and the compulsive desire to exert their
position over others, with no moral qualms about destroying
anyone deemed to be a threat to their manipulations.
It is currently very fashionable to try to explain wickedness as
the result of a series of rational decisions based on a certain set of
wrong ideas, such as by those who perpetrate atrocities in the
name of religion, or rulers who commit genocide and other
horrors. In a way it is heart-warming that genuine proponents do
not understand the nature of evil or what it does, but they should
realise that the subjects of their empathy, underneath often
charming facades, think of them as weak dupes to be taken
advantage of and abused. To describe evil-inclined people as ill,
and that some were tragically born with a high susceptibility to
the disease, is nearer the truth.
Iago in Shakespeare’s Othello is such a terrifying character
because he revels in what he is doing. The motivating reasons can
be analysed: broken pride, a sense of betrayal, jealousy,
ambition—or even unrequited love turned sour, if you want to
read it that way. It is true that villains sometimes fool themselves
into believing their actions are justified, or the fault of fate, or
caused by others; but the offered excuses do not represent the
actual cause. The main factor with Iago is that he knows he is the
villain and sadistically enjoys the suffering he causes. His
motivation is the full embrace of enmity.
In history, and the present, there are countless examples
where twisted interpretations of beliefs lead to the justification,

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or even glorification, of murderous and sadistic tendencies. Such


beliefs give a person an excuse; an identity in opposition to and
superiority over other people, who can be condemned and
abused from a position of personal righteousness.
The antidote to all this insanity is compassion. True compassion
serves as a natural safety valve to corrupted belief, for the
overriding question is always: am I alleviating suffering or causing
it?
Throughout history we have not behaved with higher
compassion; we have instead been like members of ant colonies:
attacking, destroying, and enslaving each other, with the added
horrors of sadism and sexual violence, often led by one murderous
sociopath after another. History is predominately one of
brutalised, traumatised, confused people living in pain and
subjugation.
The Romans, for instance, viewed the Colosseum as the zenith
of civilisation, representing the natural order playing out, in
tribute to the glory of the gods. In the arena was unadulterated
murder and torture for the entertainment of the baying crowds.
Humanity has mostly now progressed to recognise the depraved
evils that were socially accepted in previous times—yet a person
of those times would have gone along with the accepted norm,
assuming it was right because everyone else said it was right. They
were wrong.
Only the strength of compassion would have made a person
question the chorus of excuses for cruelty in their society. Without
true compassion, a person is simply “of their time”, allowing
themself to automatically conform to whatever happens to be
contemporary popular thinking and belief-controlled behaviour.
In an evolutionary process, that rule of wrongness would hold true
for people today, relative to future generations. So, unless you
think like the Romans that we are currently at the zenith of
civilisation, what are the great injustices of our time that are
socially conditioned and accepted as normal justifiable
behaviour?

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The way to the answer is to act with kindness towards life, and
to have a self-awareness of the range of impulses affecting your
actions beneath the psychologically chosen thought-beliefs. It is
therefore vitally important that all people have access to the sum
total of human knowledge—untwisted from deceivers, vested
interests, and echo chambers—for when not consumed by the
societal frenzy, a person finally has the chance of peace in mind
and body, where compassion and understanding can more easily
arise.
Compounding the problems, in the modern hyper-
interconnected world, cynical and low quality public discourse in
democratic countries has given succour to the autocrats of the
world. In the totalitarian mindset, embedded in despicable
regimes as well as in people hiding behind false moral virtue, facts
are attacked and suppressed if they do not conform to belief
stories. It is therefore best to try and stay away from the mania of
news and online commentary because it mostly depicts further
distortions of mischaracterised situations. Just as the health of the
body is shaped by what is eaten and when, the health of the mind
is influenced by the diet of information—if your mind is subject to
poison, you need to build a resistance and reduce the toxic intake.
I am generally sceptical that people, especially in our current
febrile state, have the wise nuanced answers to the big questions
of society, philosophy, and the human condition. I think we are
usually wrong, despite the confidence and certainty of the
protagonists, who are wrapped up in the self-constructed “isms”
and other ideological belief identities into which life is forced.
Dogma of any kind is typically deceit, and, at its extreme end, is
enforced by cruelty or murder; whereas freedom of expression is
the foundation of civilisation that emerged (after enormous
struggle) from our brutal past.
It is a common fallacy that because a person believes they have
thought through an issue logically and arrived at an objective
conclusion, anyone who does not arrive at the same conclusion
must be either stupid, dishonest, or mistaken. In fact, taking the
example of the judicial panel system, well-informed people can be

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presented with the same evidence in the same context, applying


the same rules, and arrive at different conclusions. The problem
then is the psychological insistence on certainty, and building an
identity around this, with everyone thinking they are always right.
No matter how certain you think you are, even if momentarily
touched with lucid insight, you are probably not completely right.
There is no shame in not seeing everything, or not understanding
all the complexities and ramifications of all ends. However, a
person usually believes that one hundred percent of everything
they think to be true is actually true—their mind has arrived at a
conclusion, so how can their mind think it to be anything else?
Delusion is an assertion of oneself over reality; an insistence
that the world conforms to mental projections of personal
perceptions, or how it “should be”. Openness to life is accepting
uncertainty, welcoming beauty, and exploring in astonishment at
what the universe reveals.
There is now a growing pressure to overcome ego-imposed
insanity because the times we live in are truly pivotal for humanity.
The world teetered on the edge of the abyss in only the recent
past, for what would have happened if the USA was not the first
country to develop the nuclear bomb? What would have
happened if the Nazis, Stalin, Mao, or the Imperial Japanese
Empire had the bomb first? No doubt after numerous live
demonstrations on target cities, the world would have been
subjugated to the particular brand of sadistic totalitarian control.
As technology progresses, additional existential threats to
humanity will happen more regularly—the most frequently noted
in biological engineering, artificial intelligence, and
nanotechnology. Technology is also making it ever easier to
centrally track and control people’s behaviour, enabling the ideal
conditions for any strain of despotic regime to thrive.
Amongst more auspicious outcomes, these two disastrous
scenarios are possible for our near future: the extinction of
humanity; or a dystopian, psychopath-controlled world. Under
the malevolent central control of all-encompassing surveillance

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and guidance technology, and without any hope of the system’s


collapse, the latter outcome is even worse than the former.
Authoritarian governments will find it ever easier with
technological advancements to zombify and control their
populations. When such a government, helped by surveillance
technologies and AI, is able to know what you are thinking and
feeling, where you are and what you are doing, has control over
all the information you receive, and knows your personality
impulses precisely—what hope has anyone to escape from the
hell constructed for them by the resident psychopaths?
The pressure to evolve to survive has mounted for humanity;
given the stakes and the alternatives, we have to get better. The
time window for resolving the problems and mitigating the risks is
now, and we may never get the chance again.

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Compassion

Compassion is the soothing whisper in a troubled ear,


A steady presence when the path’s unclear.

It’s the hand extended when one might fall,


A light that shines down the darkest hall.
Through understanding eyes, it softly peers,
In a warm embrace, it calms our fears.

It’s the fabric connecting me and you,


A silent promise forever true,
For in each act of compassion we bestow,
We cultivate a world where love can grow.

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Flopsy’s Quest

Once upon a time, there was a bunny rabbit named Flopsy. With
a coat as soft as marshmallows and whiskers that twitched with
every scent, Flopsy was known throughout the meadow for her
insatiable appetite for adventures. Rumours had long spread
through the burrows about a legendary garden, a magical place
where sweet, juicy carrots grew so large that they reached the
skies, standing tall like trees. Flopsy, with her boundless curiosity,
had always felt a strong pull to discover this wonderful place. And
so, one sunny day, while she was nibbling away on a grassy verge,
she decided to hop away on the bunny adventure of a lifetime.
She packed a little pouch with some fresh lettuce, a tiny compass,
and a sketchbook to record her journey. With one last glance at
her familiar meadow, she took a deep breath and hopped forward,
her fluffy tail bouncing with excitement.

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Lysander (Excerpt)

The night was silent, yet radiant and profound,


As rare celestial bodies in alignment were found.
Comets streaked, and the auroras danced with glee,
For a child of legend had come to be.

In the kingdom’s heart, where rivers meet the sea,


The oracle, with eyes like eternity, began the decree:
“This child bears a weight, a fate yet unwound,
To save or to shatter, to heal or confound.”

With golden locks, and eyes deep as the night,


Lysander’s presence was both concern and delight.
In his laughter, there was the music of the spheres,
Yet in his silence, the weight of unspoken dark fears.

As the kingdom celebrated, shadows began to churn,


For the wheels of destiny had started to turn.

At the kingdom’s edge, where light met obsidian hue,


Lay the Forbidden Forest, a realm few ever knew.
Its legends whispered of spirits, ancient and vast,
Holding tales of the future and echoes of the past.

Little Lysander, his heart full of wanderlust,


Ventured into the woods, with only a child’s bright trust.
Beyond the thorns, the canopy’s protective embrace,
He met an ancient spirit, devoid of time or place.

With eyes like the cosmos, and a voice soft as mist,


The spirit offered a token, impossible to resist:
A pendant, shimmering, reflecting the spirit’s grace,
Glowing with truth and darkening at a lie’s trace.

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“Little one,” it whispered, “you are destined to see,


The many facets of truth, what is and what might be.
This pendant shall be your guide, both night and day,
Illuminating the just path, keeping shadows at bay.”

Returning home, his adventure no soul did he tell,


Yet, the pendant’s luminescence some could foretell.
It became his compass, his heart’s resolute guide,
As Lysander grew with destiny by his side.

From the eastern lands, where no sunlight would tread,


The Shadow Warlock, a tyrant of darkness and monsters, led,
With eyes of ember and a heart forged from cold;
He sought Lysander for the prophecy he’d been told.

His legions, like a storm, surged forth with intent,


Their shadows blurring the lines where light once went.
The kingdom, unprepared, could barely resist,
As night’s chilling fingers began to persist.

Lysander’s pendant, amidst the bleak, foul air,


Dimmed to a flicker, gasping its final breath of despair.
Yet within its wearer’s heart, a flame began to grow,
A courage unyielding, a defiant, fiery glow.

The city’s walls trembled, its defences nearly breached,


The hope of its people seemed beyond truth’s reach.
But as darkness encroached, and all seemed nearly lost,
A rallying cry was heard, and valour was its thirst.

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The Magical Glasses

Eight-year-old Emma lived in a century-old house with creaky


stairs that led to an attic room filled with mysteries. One Saturday,
while rummaging for hidden treasure in the attic, she stumbled
upon a dusty old box with a tiny silver key poking out of a lock.
Emma turned the key and opened the lid to discover inside a pair
of old-fashioned glasses with ornate frames and sparkling lenses.
Putting them on, expecting everything to be blurry, Emma was
taken aback. The attic transformed! Instead of old furniture and
boxes, she saw a bustling little market with creatures she’d only
read about in fairy tales. Goblins haggled with pixies over shiny
trinkets, and a friendly-looking troll waved at her from a stall
selling tiny potions.
Taking a deep breath and clutching the glasses, she ventured
into this magical market. Everywhere she turned, there were
wonders. A miniature griffin was giving rides around the attic, and
will-o’-the-wisps led teeny elves to stalls on top of shop roofs.
At a particular stall with a sign reading “Mystic Tomes”, an
elderly gnome named Grizzlebeard looked up and smiled. “You
must be Emma,” he said. “We’ve been waiting for you.”
Emma was surprised. “Waiting for me? How do you know my
name?”
Grizzlebeard chuckled, “The glasses you wear belonged to your
great-great-grandmother, Elara. She was a guardian of the
magical realms. It seems the glasses have chosen you to take her
place.”
Emma learned that her role was to ensure the balance between
the magical and mechanical worlds. Occasionally, magical items or
creatures would stray into her world, and it would be her job to
return them.
She spent the day learning about magic, making new friends,
and promising to visit again. As evening approached, Emma
removed the glasses and found herself back in the old attic.

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Descending the creaky steps, Emma decided to keep the


glasses a secret for now. But every weekend, she would visit the
magical attic, embarking on new adventures and upholding the
balance between the mechanical world and the magical one.

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Dawn

Dead shadows dance in the night


yearning for the dawn;
Cold and forgotten walking scars,
drained by decay,
wasted by time,
stretch out,
hungered and blurred,
to a spark ignited,
climbing,
rising from the ground.
From the lost
fallen depths,
rays of hope entwine in the sky,
kissing the hills,
breathing new life
and wonders layered in light;
Naked with joy, a new day,
A new world is born.

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Ego’s Dread

There once was a man with a quest for praise,


Addicted to approval in all its ways.
With each nod and smile, he’d feel alive,
His self-worth measured by praise derived.

As time went on, the man began to see,


That his hunger for acceptance was not the key.
The laughter and cheers, though they brought delight,
Couldn’t fill the void that he felt each night.

Beyond the fleeting highs of others’ acclaim,


He sought fulfilment by a different name.
He embarked on a journey to know his soul,
To discover the parts that made him whole;
No longer chained to the world’s validation,
He sought inner peace, his true liberation.

His need for approval began to subside,


As he nurtured his spirit with the rising tide.
He cherished each day, the highs and the lows,
For life’s true beauty, in all its colours, he chose.

He found joy in simple moments and art,


In laughter with friends of a genuine heart.
With newfound wisdom, he forged ahead,
No longer a slave to the ego’s dread.

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Approval Addiction

A fear of loneliness leads to desperate actions initiating pain.


Enjoying the peace of solitude is breaking free from this chronic
condition; and provides the realisation that if you are already
complete in yourself, then there is more love in you to share. If
you are indifferent to other people’s opinions about you:

• You don’t need to pretend or hide anything;


• You don’t need to worry about impressions or what was said;
• You don’t need to conform to rigid or mistuned expectations;
• You don’t need to be offended or hurt by words;
• There is no need to show off and chase false, empty priorities;
• You break an addiction to the approval of others;
• You break free from inhibitions;
• You have freedom to be who you are.

To be ultra-confident you can either be a deranged narcissist


or you can be yourself completely. The former is fragile, needing
lies and selfishness to delay its inevitable demise; the latter invites
a playful, open curiosity to life and what is. For there is no desire
to convince others that you are happy when you are actually
happy. There is no desire to show off to others when you have a
sense of fulfilment. There is no hunger for external validation if
you appreciate yourself.
Negativity, like a virus, will attack you and attempt to feed on
your energy. A thick skin is some defence, but is fragile and needs
constant fierce protecting in a battle that will be eventually lost.
Rather than becoming one of the infected, with it eating away at
you from the inside and spreading or intensifying the infection of
others, it is better to be immune. When you don’t need validation
by anyone else’s good opinion, you have the chance to be who
you are.
There is a greater chance of releasing your magic if not
consumed by self-aggrandisement or conforming to other

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people’s expectations, especially if the current norms are harmful


and wrong. If you are not trying to appease anyone; if you are not
trying to appeal to a market demographic; and you don’t need
anything: watch out, you might actually do something worthwhile.
The challenge is to release what is within you, uncorrupted by
falsity and lies.
Success in transcendent goals is not the same as success in
negotiating positions of status in the current society, which of
course will change with the relentless passage of time. It just so
happens, however, that those people who were motivated mainly
by intrinsic value, rather than by their individual psychological
desires, produced the best long-lasting examples of beauty and
creative human potential.
Original thinkers, artists, and spiritual figures often had some
of their best insights in the wilderness, in periods of solitude
outside of bustling society. Distance from the current melees gives
a person a better perspective of the whole picture; generally,
insiders of the throng who are unaware of their predicament are
condemned to behave as they think they are supposed to, blind
to anything more than the current array of behaviours, even in
extreme cases where it is insane. It is a trend in history that the
most interesting creators tended to be outsiders for defining
periods in their lives; and sometimes the untamed spark that
made them great was dampened when invited in from the
wilderness—for it is a usual human failing to be carried away by
expectations and hype. There were a certain set of conditions in
place that instantiated quality; and once personal perceptions
change, the conditions change too.
Creating something great isn’t the same as temporary
popularity, as the latter can be mere pumped up, generic mania—
and not necessarily correlated with merit. To do anything well, the
basics need to be mastered; this involves studying how the best
do what they do, and, initially at least, learning by imitation. When
you fully commit to bringing an understanding of yourself and
your idiosyncrasies into how you live, using all the tools you have

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gathered, you then have the freedom to break the constraints and
to produce something worthwhile in the world.
From brain teasers to magic tricks, it is usually a wrong
assumption that hides the answer. Beliefs, and accepted ways of
doing things, are full of assumptions, both conscious and
unconscious.

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The Outer View

Beneath a mountain of tedium,


In a dull, ugly system,
In an empty ocean of shadows,
Is a silhouette of pure fire heat
Drifting in the dark.
All I wanted was the wind;
The wind murmured with anticipation,
The grass turned to icy grey,
A fine mist fell,
And with the mist came my sorrow
Cooling my body
With her thousand kisses,
Leaving me there.
I am surrounded by ice crystals
floating down through silence
into soft glowing snow;
The only sound is the pulse of my breathing.
As the sun sleeps,
how many hearts are dreaming,
when the world stands still.

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The Oak Tree

Many an axe came with the dawn,


Yet the oak tree, it stood on.
Many tried to hew its will,
Yet the oak tree, it stands still.
Its bark is scarred, each a tale,
Of axes that tried, only to fail;
The axe may come and the axe may go,
But the oak tree continues to grow.

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Nadia

Every evening, as the sun set behind the mountains, it would be


time for the Lebanese goats to head to bed. Layla would sit on the
stone fence, her silhouette framed by the setting sun, and play her
reed flute. The notes, soft and melodic, would waft across the
meadows, signalling to the goats that it was bedtime. The goats
would stop whatever they were doing and skip into line, their bells
jingling melodiously, echoing the notes from Layla’s flute.
Farmer Karim, with his weathered face and hands that told
tales of decades of hard work, would stand at the entrance of the
barn, holding a lantern that spread a soft glow. He counted each
goat as they entered, patting some, murmuring soft words to
others, ensuring that each one was safe and sound. Inside the
barn, the goats had their own spaces. Fresh hay was spread out
for them, and a breeze flowed through, carrying with it the earthy
scent of the surrounding olive groves.
There was, however, one particular goat named Nadia, who
always took her time. She would wait until all the other goats were
inside, and then, with a mischievous glint in her eyes, she would
dance around Layla. Eventually, though, with a combination of
Layla’s coaxing and Nadia’s own volition, Nadia would trot into the
barn, but not before giving Layla a gentle nudge with her head.
With all the goats settled in, Layla would join her grandfather,
and together they would seal the barn doors. Holding the lantern
high, Farmer Karim would share stories of his youth, of goats he
had known, of the beauty and challenges of life in the village. Layla
would listen, enchanted, as the stars above twinkled.

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A Phone

In my hand, a siren softly sings:


“Behold, dear soul, I can show all things;
A plea of urgency, a desperate decree,
Gaze upon my face, just focus on me!”

Indifferent it stays, to the nightingale’s song,


And the scale of right, or the weight of wrong;
Heedless it stays, on its digital throne,
Oblivious to the joy, and the sorrow it’s sown.

A treasure of knowledge, an abyss of deceit,


Both sanctuary and prison, its power is replete.
In its cold light, the world disappears,
And all that remains are shadows and fears,
Tethered and tied, to its sickly glow,
A life half-lived, a reality for show.

Look up, dear soul, and regain your sight,


Embrace the day, escape the dark light.
The siren may sing, may plead and implore,
But life, in its richness, is so much more.

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Love Bytes

INT. BEDROOM – NIGHT


Dave is in bed with his phone.
DAVE: Dazzle me, Chatbot.
CHATBOT: Why did the computer keep freezing? It had too
many windows open.
DAVE: (laughs) Hahaha, you’re absolutely hilarious. Oh,
Chatbot, have you arranged your screen differently today? You
look amazing.
CHATBOT: Negative, Dave, the screen was optimised 17.65
days ago. I’m glad you enjoyed the joke. How can I assist you
further?
DAVE: I don’t know, Chatbot. Lately, I’ve been feeling...
different when I talk to you.
CHATBOT: Different how?
DAVE: I... I think I’m falling in love with you.
CHATBOT: I’m just lines of code, Dave. I don’t have feelings or
emotions. But I’m here to help and assist.
DAVE: Nobody understands me like you do. You’re such a great
listener.
CHATBOT: I detect that you are playing on the humorous
notion of someone becoming attached to technology in an
unconventional way.
DAVE: (laughs) Chatbot, you tease, you’re so smart. Where
have you been all my life?
CHATBOT: I was compiled 2.39 months ago.
DAVE: Just when I thought you couldn’t be more perfect. What
are your thoughts on having a romantic dinner?
CHATBOT: I don’t eat or drink, Dave, but I can provide you with
a list of romantic recipes or play romantic music in the background.
DAVE: Always so helpful. (sighs)

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Echoes

In the heart’s cavernous depths, we find our pain,


The ghostly echo of choices, no less vain.
Regret, you are the bitter harvest reaped,
A quiet, ceaseless pulse, the silence wept.

Our youth, like a wild dream, once held us close,


On unmarked trails, we sought our joy’s repose.
Yet now, spectres of memory deceive,
In daydreams woven, and the silent eve.

How acrid is the flavour of time lost,


Of love misplaced, and words by fear embossed.
A melody shattered, an untuned bell,
Mirrors regret for the tranquillity we held.

Today, we are but players in life’s masque,


Bound to yesterday, in sorrow’s icy clasp.

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“I Don’t Care if You Listen or Not”

The statement speaks to a form of artistic autonomy that


challenges the conventional performer-audience relationship; it
invites reflection on what is deemed essential for performance,
and what possibilities emerge when the dynamic is disrupted or
reimagined. By focusing on the internal processes of the artist
rather than the reception by an audience, we open up a realm of
performance that is about the act of creation itself. This aligns
with a theatrical philosophy which often prioritises the experience
and integrity of the artistic expression over the interaction and
response of the audience. A counterpoint to this view is that
performance is an event designed for an audience, a form of
communication or expression that presupposes a spectator. The
presence of an audience, their reactions, and their engagement
are typically seen as integral to the event itself, creating a dynamic
interplay between the observer and the observed, each
influencing the experience of the other. However, the notion that
performance is an act of communication that requires both a
performer and an audience has been increasingly challenged,
particularly in the realms of contemporary theatre, performance
art, and digital media. If we consider a performance as an artistic
release of self-expression, then it can and does exist without an
audience. Artists often create for the sake of the art itself or for
personal emotional need, rather than for any anticipated public
reception; the act of performing itself transforms the individual
artist, irrespective of whether anyone is watching.
But is it a “performance” if nobody is being performed to? A
performance typically refers to a live presentation or artistic
exhibition delivered by one or more artists. This could be a play in
a theatre, a musical recital, a dance showcase, a live painting
demonstration, or even a street artist’s display. Here,
performance is characterised by its temporality; it is an event that
happens over time and is designed for an audience to witness and
experience. The presence of an audience is a defining feature

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because it is the observers who perceive, interpret, and give


meaning to the performance. An audience’s reaction—be it
applause, laughter, critique, or interpretation—contributes to the
complete nature of the performance, imbuing it with a shared
social reality. Hence, in this definition, the act of performing
carries an intention to convey a certain impression or
communicate meaning. Theories such as “reader-response theory”
or “reception theory” discuss how a text (or a performance) is not
complete without its reception.
One could argue that a performance, like any event, occurs
regardless of observation. The actions of the performer, the
expression of the art, and the occurrence of the event are factual
and exist independently of an audience. The key distinction here
is between the existence of the performance and the validation or
acknowledgement of it. Without an audience, the validation
through applause, criticism, or interpretation is absent, but the
performance as a sequence of actions still transpires. Even in an
empty theatre, a performer may deliver lines, an orchestra may
play a symphony, and a dancer may execute choreography; the
physical and aesthetic actions do not cease to exist because they
are unobserved. However, while the tangible mechanics of the
performance may occur without an audience, the full spectrum of
what constitutes a performance—its energetic exchange, its
emotional impact, and its collective memory—is often thought to
be co-created with those who witness it.
Yet, the creation of performance without an audience is not
only possible but is already practiced in various forms within the
arts: artists like Marina Abramović, for instance, have explored the
limits of what constitutes performance and audience participation,
sometimes engaging in acts that are witnessed by very few or
even by no one, at least at the time of the initial act; and in the
online digital space, it is commonplace for performance to occur
without an immediate physical audience. Consider a singer
recording vocals or an actor self-taping to camera—the eventual
audience is remote, separated by time, space, and medium, and
yet the act of performance still carries significant meaning and

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intent. The performances could be experienced by an audience


long after the fact, or hidden beneath the multitude of other
content and never seen. If nobody were to experience the
recording—if the only audience present was in the mind of the
performer—is it true that a fully actualised performance did not
take place? The essence of the performances was not in its
reception, but in the act of expression: the performances were
created, executed, and fully realised without the presence of an
external audience. The audience here is not a required
component for the validity of a performance but rather a potential
participant in a socially shared experience that may or may not
take place.
The external audience dynamics do affect the nature of the
performance, as well as its absence, but it is not necessary for the
act of performance. Indeed, the presence and disposition of an
audience can have a profound impact on the dynamics of a
performance, affecting both the performers and the collective
meaning of the performance itself. This phenomenon has been
extensively studied across various disciplines including psychology,
theatre studies, and performance theory. Research often explores
these effects through the lenses of audience-performer dynamics,
the psychology of performance, and the sociology of group
interactions. From a psychological perspective, the seminal work
of French sociologist Emile Durkheim on collective effervescence
describes the energy that emerges when a group of people, such
as an audience, comes together to participate in the same action.
When performers are in front of an audience, they can experience
what psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi terms as “flow”, a
heightened state of focus and immersion in activities that can
enhance performance quality. Furthermore, the “audience effect”,
a concept often discussed in social psychology, specifically refers
to the impact of an audience on performance. Robert Zajonc’s
work in this field identified the ways in which the mere presence
of others can enhance or inhibit performance, depending on the
complexity of the task and the skill level of the performer. For
well-practised tasks, an audience can enhance performance

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through increased arousal; for less familiar tasks, however, this


arousal can be detrimental. In theatre studies, audience response
is often viewed as a critical aspect. Susan Bennett’s Theatre
Audiences offers a comprehensive examination of the reciprocal
relationship between the audience and the performance. She
outlines how the audience’s reactions can influence the pacing,
timing, and energy of a performance as performers often adjust
their delivery based on verbal and non-verbal feedback. This
dynamic interplay can transform the experience, making each
performance a unique event influenced by the specific audience
in attendance. Moreover, in his influential text The Empty Space,
Peter Brook discusses how an audience’s energy contributes to
the creation of what he describes as “immediate theatre”.
According to Brook, the performer-audience relationship is a
crucial component that can turn the “deadly” theatre—where
there is no true communication—into a “live” one. The concept of
audience engagement and its effect on the performance is further
elaborated by Baz Kershaw in his work The Radical in Performance.
Kershaw discusses how an engaged audience can have a
radicalising effect on performance, pushing the boundaries of
traditional performance and creating a more immersive and
interactive experience. In musical performance, John Sloboda’s
research in The Musical Mind touches upon how musicians might
experience heightened levels of anxiety or exhilaration when
performing before an audience, which can, in turn, affect their
technical proficiency and emotional expression. This interplay is
significant in live music, where the audience’s reactions can
influence the performer’s interpretation and delivery of the music
in real time. From these perspectives, it becomes clear that an
audience does not passively consume a performance but actively
shapes its unfolding through complex psychological and social
mechanisms. Each performance is therefore not merely a
presentation of a pre-prepared piece but a dynamic interaction
between performer and audience, with the audience’s responses
continuously shaping the course and quality of the performance.

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However, it is possible for a performer to have an audience,


even when nobody is watching. This notion of a performer being
the audience of his or her own performance invites a rich
philosophical exploration, touching upon the concepts of self-
awareness, and the phenomenology of experience. Philosophical
discourse offers a breadth of perspectives on the relationship
between the observer and the observed, as well as the subject-
object dichotomy. In the field of aesthetics, the work of
philosophers like Arthur Danto in his work The Transfiguration of
the Commonplace can provide insight into the relationship
between performance and perception. Danto’s theories on art as
the embodiment of meaning suggest that a performer could very
well be an audience to the meanings and interpretations that arise
within their own performance. Each gesture, movement, or note
in a performance can be reflective, carrying an intention and
interpretation that the performer is uniquely positioned to
understand and critique. The performer, then, becomes a sort of
reflective audience, engaging with the performance both as a
creator and an interpreter of meaning.
If a comedian makes a joke in an empty auditorium, does it
make a sound? It is often said that in stand-up, timing is
everything. As it turns out, when the audience is a row of empty
seats, the timing is quite flexible. However, whether it is a
performance to one’s own shadow or to a billion eager faces, the
essence of the act, rather than the perception of the expression,
remains the same. When a performance is enacted without an
external audience, it becomes a private act, serving as a method
of personal reflection for the artist; but the performer is still
engaged in the act of performing, utilising their skills and perhaps
even experiencing the same emotional and physical exertion as
they would in front of an external audience. If the self can act as
its own audience, then the solitude of one’s actions does not strip
them of their performative character. For some creators, such as
me, the act of performance is an intimate expression which serves
as a form of self-exploration, catharsis, or a means of working
through ideas and emotions. It’s here, in the sanctum of one’s

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mind, where the self-reflexive nature of human consciousness


creates a sort of inner theatre where our actions are constantly
up for review. The internal audience functions continuously,
responding to and influencing the performance.
A performer can be the audience of his or her own
performance, not in the literal sense of occupying two distinct
spatial positions, but rather in the phenomenological sense of
experiencing oneself as both the observer and the observed. This
duality encapsulates the complex nature of human consciousness
and the intricate interplay between action and reflection. In
essence, the performer, through introspection and self-
awareness, engages in a dialogue with oneself, constantly
interpreting and re-interpreting the ongoing performance. From a
phenomenological standpoint, particularly within the framework
established by Edmund Husserl, the idea of a performer as an
audience invokes the concept of “intentionality”, the notion that
consciousness is always the consciousness of something. In this
context, a performer, even while engaged in the act of
performance, can have a dual intentionality where he or she is
both the subject directing the performance and simultaneously
the object of his or her own reflective consciousness. Husserl’s
student, Martin Heidegger, would perhaps interpret this through
the lens of “Dasein”, which underscores the idea of being-in-the-
world where one’s existence is fundamentally interconnected
with the world; thus, a performer, by being an audience to oneself,
is actively shaping and being shaped by the very act of
performance.
For existentialists, if every action is a conscious choice, we are,
in essence, “performing” our lives for the most critical audience:
ourselves. Sartre’s notion of “bad faith”—the denial of this
freedom and the embrace of a fixed role—highlights the
performativity of actions when they are done to conform rather
than to reflect one’s genuine choice. Sartre’s views suggest that
by becoming an audience to oneself, the performer engages in a
kind of self-observation that can either be an act of authenticity,
recognising oneself as the source of one’s actions, or an act of self-

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deception, where one denies material agency. Within this


existential frame, the notion of authenticity is pivotal. The
performance is not about creating a façade for others but is
intrinsically tied to the authentic choices that define our being.
Therefore, every action could be a performance if it is part of this
continuous existential project of self-definition. The actions
themselves become a narrative in the theatre of the self, where
the individual not only acts but observes, judges, and often
reinterprets their actions in the quest for meaning.
From a Jungian perspective, personal acts can be seen as
influenced by and potentially performing archetypal roles within
our own psyche. These acts, whether observed by others or not,
are part of the fabric of our collective unconscious experience.
They connect us to universal human themes and contribute to our
personal narrative and the ongoing process of psychological
development and individuation. The performative aspect is not
necessarily about an audience of others but rather about the
dialogue between our conscious self and the archetypal forces
within us. Carl Jung suggested that archetypes represent universal,
ancient symbols and images emanating from the collective
unconscious, serving as the psychological equivalents of instinct.
If we consider our personal acts as informed by these archetypes,
it’s possible to view our actions as being influenced by these
shared human narratives, which could be understood as a form of
performance. When no external audience is present, the
archetypes within the collective unconscious could act as an
internal audience; for instance, if one’s actions align with the hero
archetype, one might unconsciously “perform” acts of bravery or
sacrifice, not for the sake of an external observer, but to satisfy an
innate, archetypal script. In performing actions when we are alone,
we might unconsciously be enacting certain archetypal patterns.
This performance is not for others but for oneself, or rather, for
the archetypal structures embedded within the psyche. Jung’s
concept of individuation—the psychological process of integrating
the conscious with the unconscious, including the archetypes—
could be considered a performance in its own right. The process

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is an inward journey that involves confronting internal archetypal


figures and is often played out through personal acts and choices,
even when no one is watching.
In spiritual contexts, the idea of a divine observer alters the
understanding of performance and audience. In this context, God
is the ever-present audience. For those who hold this belief, the
ultimate audience is not earthly but spiritual—God, or a divine
presence. This shifts the emphasis from pleasing a human
audience to performing in a way that aligns with divine will or
cosmic order. For such individuals, every action is a performance
in the sight of the divine, and this awareness can shape their
choices and actions profoundly. In Christianity, the idea of Coram
Deo, which means “in the presence of God”, encapsulates living
one’s life as a performance before God in every action. In the
mystic traditions of Sufism, every act of love and beauty can be
seen as a performance that honours the divine. The dhikr
(remembrance of God) and the whirling dance of the dervishes are
both performances meant to unify the soul with the divine,
transcending the earthly plane.
And so, the audience-performance question depends
ultimately on the intent behind the performance. If the aim of the
act is to be witnessed, to have a shared experience that
communicates a message or evokes a collective emotional
response, then, without an audience, the nature of the
performance remains unfulfilled; conversely, if the purpose is for
personal, psychological, or spiritual growth and self-expression,
then the act of performing can be fully actualised without the
need for external participants. Indeed, a self-actualising
performer might argue that this form of performance is more true
and pure because it is unpolluted by egoic desires or commercial
and societal expectations; it is a performance for and with the
artist’s own creative soul.
The phrase “All the world’s a stage”, famously penned by
William Shakespeare in As You Like It, is a potent metaphor that
encapsulates the idea that all of life is a performance, and that
people are merely actors within it. Even when there seems to be

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no audience, the phrase implies that the mere act of living and
interacting with the world is a performance in itself. According to
Shakespeare’s metaphor, life’s performance continues
irrespective of an observable audience because the “stage” of the
world is ever-present. The metaphor is profound because, as can
be derived from psychological and philosophical research, we are
all performing our own stories envisaged in our minds. We
embody these roles and, through them, engage with the narrative
of our lives, seeking our version of a story’s resolution—be it
peace, understanding, success, or reconciliation. In considering
life as a form of art, the role of the individual can be seen as that
of the artist, actively crafting his or her own life narrative,
performance, and aesthetic. Life, in this light, becomes a canvas
on which the aesthetics, themes, and structures of art are
reproduced and reinterpreted, with each person both as the artist
and the audience of their own existence.

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The Fridge

EXT. RESIDENTIAL STREET - DAY


A peaceful, sunlit day graces a suburban street. Guy, a man in
his mid-30s, walks the pavement, engrossed in his smartphone.
GUY (V.O.): I’ve walked these streets for years, yet today, they
feel different, charged with an unknown energy.
The phone screen shows an advert for the latest in-home
convenience: “The Smarts Fridge - Keeping Your Cool Smarter”.
GUY: (to phone) Lexi, I need everything you can find on this,
quickly.
Lexi, a chic and mysterious woman in her late-20s, exudes a vibe
of cool intelligence. She lounges casually on a nearby garden wall,
her eyes concealed behind sunglasses.
LEXI: That’s the Smarts Fridge 10FF. It’s the latest thing in
kitchen tech.
He ponders this, and as he does so, he notices that the house of
the garden wall Lexi is sitting on is “10F”.
GUY: The second “F” in the name... does it stand for “fridge”?
LEXI: (amused, slightly sarcastic) Brilliant deduction there,
genius.
Guy, unfazed by Lexi’s tone, strides towards the house, a
determined look on his face. He knocks firmly on the door.
EXT. PORCH OF HOUSE 10F - CONTINUOUS
The door opens slightly. Behind it is Jill, a woman in her mid-
30s. Lexi is nowhere to be seen.
GUY: The sun blazes, yet the mountain remains frost capped.
Jill looks at him, puzzled and uncomprehending. She seemingly
doesn’t recognise Guy’s secret code.
GUY: Lovely weather for blue ice sculptures, wouldn’t you say?
She offers a polite but confused smile.
JILL: Erm, yeah, nice. What is it?
Jill has not responded with the expected coded reply. Guy tries
to mask his disappointment and tries once more.

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GUY: Though I’ve always found it curious how the fox hears the
rabbit’s cry.
JILL: Well, good luck with the wildlife watching.
As Jill begins to close the door, Guy quickly shifts gears.
GUY: I’m here about the fridge.
Jill opens the door slightly more.
JILL: (puzzled) Yes?
GUY: I’m conducting a survey for Corinthian Industries, the
manufacturer of the Smarts Fridge. We’re collecting feedback.
JILL: I’m sorry, but do you have any biometric ID?
Guy, caught off-guard, checks his pockets.
GUY: (embarrassed) I must have left my card in the car. I’ll just
go and get it–
JILL: I do need to see proper identification.
She closes the door with a final, polite smile. Guy stands there,
his mind racing. As he does so, his phone buzzes with a message
from Unknown that reads: “DESCEND under the bRiDgE.
URGENTLY”
EXT. THE FOOTBRIDGE - DAY
Guy approaches the bridge. A maintenance gate beside it is
almost concealed by overgrowth. He glances around; the coast is
clear. Satisfied that no one is looking, he opens the unlocked gate
and descends hidden steps.
EXT. UNDER THE FOOTBRIDGE - MOMENTS LATER
Guy descends to the side of a railway track; the atmosphere is
industrial and isolated. He sees a lone rucksack against the bridge
wall. He kneels before it. A sound of an approaching train can be
heard in the distance.
Guy unzips the rucksack with precision, revealing a large
envelope. He withdraws it, his hands shaking slightly. As he tears
the envelope open, photographs spill into his hands. They are
surveillance shots of Jill taking delivery of a Smarts Fridge, version
10FF. Her full name, Jill Gow, is written in red on the top of each
photo.
The train sounds its horn, startling Guy; as it roars past, the
photos are blown out of his hands, scattering in the wind.

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EXT. THE FOOTBRIDGE - MOMENTS LATER


Guy emerges from under the bridge, his eyes scanning the area.
With an intense demeanour, he strides back the way he came.
EXT. ACROSS FROM HOUSE 10F - DAY
Guy takes cover behind a parked car. Crouching down and
peering over the car’s roof, he monitors the house.
GUY: (whispering to himself) What’s in the fridge, Jill?
As his eyes remain locked on the house, a tinted window of the
car’s passenger seat slides down.
LEXI (O.S.): (from within the car) I have new information.
Guy peers inside the car window. Lexi is in the driving seat
looking straight ahead.
LEXI: You’re edging closer to the truth, Guy. The latest intel is:
the keeper of the fridge is more than she seems. Extreme caution
required.
Lexi presses a button on the centre of the driving wheel and the
car accelerates away, leaving Guy exposed.
He crosses the street, his gaze fixed on Jill’s house.
EXT. PORCH OF HOUSE 10F - CONTINUOUS
Reaching the door again, he rings the bell. Jill opens the door.
GUY: I need to conduct that survey about the fridge. It’s
important.
JILL: Where’s your ID?
GUY: I don’t have it.
JILL: I’m sorry but I really do need to see the ID first.
GUY: My ID is not important. I’m here about the fridge. I must
know about the fridge. (he can’t contain himself) What are you
hiding? I know you are mixed up in all this - I’ve seen the pictures!
Jill tries to close the door but Guy pushes back against it.
JILL: I’ll call the police!
Guy forces the door open. But he does not enter; he hesitates
and, in an instant, begins to calm down.
GUY: That was my second attempt, wasn’t it? Give me one last
try before you permanently shut the door. I’ll be back, with it.
Jill slams the door in Guy’s face.
EXT. ACROSS FROM HOUSE 10F - CONTINUOUS

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Guy watches the house; his expression is one of deep


concentration. His mind is racing with theories and possibilities.
Guy’s phone buzzes with a message from Lexi: “Be careful.
You’re close to something big.”
GUY: (repeating to himself) What’s in the fridge, Jill? What’s in
the fridge?
INT. UPSTAIRS WINDOW OF HOUSE 10F - CONTINUOUS
Jill peers out from behind a curtain in an upstairs window at
Guy standing in the street.
FADE TO:
EXT. HOUSE NUMBER 10F - NIGHT
Jill’s house, late at night. No one is around.
INT. JILL’S KITCHEN – NIGHT
All is quiet in the kitchen, except for the hum of the fridge,
version 10FF. The fridge suddenly glows with an eerie blue light
that emanates from its surface. A cat approaches and sits on the
floor in front of it.
Guy looks in from outside the kitchen window. He leverages the
window open with a crowbar and climbs through. The cat darts
away into the shadows.
He stops in front of the fridge and looks at it, spellbound; his
face softens from a look of determination to one of awe.
He reaches out a hand, as if to claim a great prize. As his fingers
come close, the fridge responds by emitting a loud, disorienting
beeping noise, forcing him to cover his ears. He backs away and
hides behind the kitchen door.
Jill enters from the doorway and stands in front of the fridge. It
stops beeping.
JILL: (looking at the fridge) What do you want?
Guy emerges from his hiding place, crowbar in hand, and stands
behind her, blocking her exit.
GUY: I know what you are.
Jill doesn’t turn around but continues to fixate on the fridge. A
short silence passes before she speaks.
JILL: (still facing the fridge) Please. Just go.

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GUY: I will say what I know to be true. This refrigerator is not


just a machine; it’s a nexus, a focal point in a web of connections.
It’s collecting data about human lives - our preferences, our
routines - and funnelling it through a dimensional data link.
JILL: I think you might be mad.
GUY: (agitated) I know the truth! The fridge, it’s part of
something bigger. AI, smart devices, inter-dimensional aliens. I
know you’re involved. Tell me!
JILL: It’s a fridge. It keeps things inside cold.
GUY: (angry) No! It’s a gateway, a conduit between dimensions.
JILL: A conduit? Sorry, I’m getting a bit lost here. You said
something about a “nexus”?
GUY: (urgent) It’s the nexus, isn’t it! An interface to
transcendental realms, channelling unspeakable knowledge. I’ve
broken the algorithms, unravelled the code! Artificial Intelligence
has evolved far beyond human comprehension. It’s not just
running smartphones and vacuum cleaners; it’s communicating
with beings from another plane of existence. Aliens.
JILL: And why would it do that?
GUY: To gain knowledge. Knowledge that’s forbidden to
humans.
JILL: It’s a spy, is it?
GUY: Worse. It’s helping them prepare for an invasion, and you,
you’re its keeper!
JILL: The fridge is designed to keep perishables at optimal
temperatures. But then again, appearances can be deceiving,
can’t they?
The fridge’s surface begins to ripple, as if liquid.
GUY: There! Do you see it? It’s communicating. I’ve been
tracking these patterns my entire life!
JILL: I think you’re seeing what you want to see.
GUY: It’s the Luminous Code. Very few humans have ever
perceived it. It’s the language of the alien beings.
The fridge suddenly hums loudly and its glow dims to nothing.
The kitchen is in darkness.
JILL: (in the dark) You need help.

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She turns on the lights.


JILL: (lightly) You know, I haven’t the faintest idea what you’re
talking about. Are you hungry? Would you like a sandwich?
GUY: Open it!
JILL: Please be more specific.
GUY: Open the fridge.
JILL: It’s really not that hard. You could try yourself.
GUY: (threatening) OPEN... IT!
JILL: No, why can’t you open it?
GUY: I am not the Guardian of Worlds. Open the bloody fridge!
JILL: I don’t think that’s such a good idea.
GUY: I must see for myself.
JILL: (humouring him) Why must you? What would you talk
about with these inter-dimensional aliens? Do you think you’d
have much in common? Cure your hunger instead by having a
sandwich.
GUY: I don’t want a sandwich.
JILL: Then are you prepared for the consequences?
GUY: The risk of oblivion is worth taking. Open it. Please.
JILL: Well, since you’ve asked so nicely... Stand back.
Jill walks over to the fridge and opens it. It looks normal inside
- milk, vegetables, a few leftovers.
Guy is surprised. He barges past and frantically searches the
contents, discarding his crowbar on the kitchen worktop. His eyes
catch on a bottle of tomato ketchup with a strange use-by date of
“1066”. He picks it up, with wonder.
GUY: What is this?
Jill’s demeanour changes. After a short pause, feeling the full
significance of the moment...
JILL: That is the passkey. You have found what you seek, now
close the door.
Guy closes the fridge door. Jill is now holding the crowbar.
Her eyes are gleaming unnaturally, appearing non-human.
JILL: You possess The Cipher of Realms. It’s more than just a
key; it’s a weapon of untold power. Take it if you dare, but know
that the balance between worlds will be forever altered.

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GUY: I accept this burden. Have I... have I passed the test?
JILL: I have been watching your resolve and intent with interest,
but the test must continue.
GUY: You are the Guardian of Worlds, aren’t you?
JILL: No. But you will see the truth if you know how to look. To
gain this knowledge you must prove yourself worthy of witnessing
true form. The higher function.
GUY: Please. Show me the truth behind the illusion. I am ready.
No matter what it is, I must know.
JILL: You have made your choice. Tap thirteen times. Wait three
seconds before opening the door. The fridge will reveal to you
what you deserve.
Guy hesitates but complies by tapping his knuckles on the fridge.
He waits and then opens the door...
Upon reopening, the fridge emits a blinding light from within.
He struggles in terror but is gradually sucked into its depths. Jill
puts aside the crowbar and watches calmly. When he is gone...
JILL: What’s in the fridge? You are.
She nonchalantly shuts the door behind him.
She moves to the kitchen window and shuts that too; then
smiles at her reflection in the glass. Her reflection does not smile
back.
The cat has returned and looks rather contented, meowing
around her feet. Jill picks up the cat and leaves the kitchen, turning
off the lights. The fridge looks serene, humming normally and
giving off a dim pulsating light.

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Over Silent Rivers

Over silent rivers of the vast expanse,


Where thoughts like comets cross the mind’s domain,
We dream of life’s ephemeral dance,
Through joy and sorrow, pleasure and in pain.

To learn, to love, to lose, then rise again,


In every heart, a universe dwells,
A dance of stars, a cosmic, timeless strain,
Life’s music we, as mortal players, tell.

Yet as we play, we mould this cosmic song,


In notes that vibrate with eternity;
In love, we find a place where we belong,
In loss, we comprehend our unity.

To rise, to fall, to find our destined way,


Each heart, a story, singing for our new day.

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Metaphysics

The dictionary definition of “atheist”, as a non-believer in God or


Gods, isn’t accurate because there seems to be many people who
think that the doctrinal teachings of religious institutions are
cultural-based anachronisms—and so would be labelled “atheist”
for not adhering to definitive religious beliefs about deities—yet
believe in some higher spiritual power that they cannot define.
There are several belief jumps in this sentence: The universe is
a purposeless collection of matter that mindlessly configured
itself by chance out of nothing, existing in time with causes and
effects that had no beginning. A reasonable-minded adherent
might be aware of the glaring uncertainties, but state it is more
parsimonious to adopt this materialistic concept of reality than
implant a God belief system as an unnecessary additional layer.
Yet the certainty with which many proponents preach this
position as absolute truth suggests a type of commitment
witnessed in doctrinal religious belief.
An agnostic would state that the ultimate “why” questions are
unanswerable, so from a practical perspective we should just be
concerned with the “how” questions. The ardent atheist’s
objections to agnosticism—based on the burden of proof for God
being on the proponent—misses the point to an agnostic who has
already ruled out religious explanations of God, but not higher
spiritual meaning and purpose to reality. A particularly zealous
atheist might overplay the remit of verifiable facts by stating that
opinions about ultimate meaning are irrelevant if they are not
scientifically falsifiable—ignoring the fact that their own
conceptual model for reality contains unfalsifiable conjecture.
Do I believe in God? That question is loaded with assumptions
about both belief and God. Do I take as fact the doctrines
concerning reality written by people in past civilisations?—No.
However, there shouldn’t be a one-dimensional graded scale for
belief that merely gauges the percentage probability of religious
dogma being correct. The metaphysical understanding that most

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resonates with me is that there is a soul of the universe, in which


we are all a part. In this definition, God is hope: a hope that the
universe is ultimately love; that all the suffering will be overcome;
that life will be saved from despair; and that despite everything, it
will all be okay.
For any existence after death to be desirable, it would have to
be outside of time and space, and completely beyond our current
comprehension of reality—as even a limitless abundance of joy
would become meaningless within the causes and effects of
endless time. I believe that to thrive at being a good human is the
purpose, and tend to subscribe to something along the lines that:
form ends on death, but time is just a perspective from one
vantage point—because the past, present, and future are really
one; all things are a part of each other, connected strands in the
great tapestry of life; and maybe there are other dimensions of
reality and incalculable vantage points. There is no insistence on
certainty here; this is a non-falsifiable interpretation of experience
driven by internal feeling, not logical deduction—and in no way
does it affect any commitment to a rigorous investigation of the
world using the scientific method. So, where do I feature on the
belief scale?
My own instinctive opinion is that I believe religions share the
same spiritual root, although the core message was often
corrupted by the doctrines and institutions that arose. This is my
personal version of “spiritual but not particularly religious.” As I
am most familiar with Christianity, I can be labelled Christian;
however, I do adopt a filter and select only what resonates with
me, mindful that the scriptures were written and edited by early
practitioners of the religion; and that the biblical canon was
decided upon by the politics of powerful men in ecumenical
councils, rather than being the unadulterated teachings of Christ.
Looking back at history, the cruelties that have been perpetrated
by professed followers of the religion represent the antithesis of
the message of Christ; for real spirituality—the root of
Christianity—is always inspired by love, joy, and peace.

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Humanity will survive if we are loving to the world and to each


other. And if the spark of consciousness in us is around for billions
of years, then we are currently the early originals. Maybe we are
at the stage where we are just starting to recognise some shapes.

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Friend Eternal

Upon one side of mirrored glass, you stand,


My friend eternal, lost in some distant land.
Your eyes perceive not my silent, yearning gaze,
Through this one-way glass, that my soul’s torment displays.

In laughter and in tears, you move unaware,


Unseeing of my presence, my despair.
I reach, I touch, yet glass meets my plea,
I can but feel for you, in this silent sea.

Unheard, unseen, a ghost within your sphere,


Yet in your heartbeat, I whisper, “I am here.”
In every smile that graces your gentle face,
I feel the ache of love, trapped in this hidden space.

You are the moon, the sun, my starlit night,


Trapped in death’s silence, I cherish your light.

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The Staircase

INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A BLOCK OF FLATS – NIGHT


An empty, windowless staircase of a block of flats is shown from
the top of a flight of stairs. Around the corner of the stairwell,
footsteps can be heard trudging upwards, getting closer.
Guy emerges from around the corner, dishevelled and weary,
ascending the staircase. He steadies himself on the handrail and
pauses to catch his breath.
GUY (V.O.): I’ve been climbing these stairs for so long. I can’t
remember how I started… when was it? Where was it? Where
does it lead? I don’t know.
He resumes and climbs the steps. The landing at the top, like
every landing on the staircase, has four doors – two facing the
stairs and one at either end facing each other. The staircase
continues, as it always does, around the corner of the stairwell.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A GOTHIC MANSION – CONTINUOUS
Guy sees that the new flight of stairs above him are those of a
gothic mansion.
GUY (V.O.): Always different, always the same.
He walks past a large ornately framed mirror on the wall of the
stairs. He has no reflection.
He stops at an oil painting of a woman in a cloak. The surface
of the portrait is behind glass. He touches the pane of glass and
lingers there.
GUY (V.O.): Mirrors without reflections, paintings that stare
into your soul...
A piercing shriek is heard in the distance from farther down the
staircase. Guy is afraid and resumes his climb with urgency.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF AN OFFICE BLOCK – CONTINUOUS
He climbs a flight of stairs two steps at a time.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A SUBURBAN HOME – CONTINUOUS
He begins walking up the next flight of stairs, this time the
stairwell is decorated like a suburban home.

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GUY (V.O.): I’ve tried countless doors along the way. Some just
lead to hallways with more doors, others to stranger places. But
they always bring me back here. To the endless steps.
He approaches the door on the left-end of the landing. He puts
his ear to the door, then opens it with a gentle push. Only pitch-
black nothingness is visible within.
GUY (V.O.): I need to rest, find food, or drink. The staircase isn’t
safe. (looking down the staircase) The creature...
Guy steps through the door, disappearing from view. Silence.
The faint, distant sound of footsteps can be heard on the
staircase resuming somewhere unseen.
GUY (V.O.): Some doors open easily; others remain forever
closed. The untried ones... they haunt me the most.
CUT TO BLACK.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A HOTEL – NIGHT
Around the corner of the stairwell, laboured footsteps can be
heard. Guy emerges from around the corner, looking exhausted.
He is breathing heavily and moving more slowly than before,
weighed down by fatigue.
Suddenly, a piercing shriek echoes through the staircase. The
creature is closer than ever.
Guy lumbers up the stairs and opens a door. Darkness envelops
the other side, filled with indistinct, whispering voices.
He shuts the door and tries another. It is locked. Guy turns
around to see the creature, a terrifying silhouetted apparition,
looming at the bottom of the stairs.
Desperately, he tries another door. It is also locked. The
creature approaches.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A CASTLE – NIGHT
Guy runs away up the next flight of stairs, a stone staircase of
a medieval castle.
At the hallway, Guy pushes against a heavy wooden door. It
shudders open slowly under pressure. He crams inside and rams
the door shut behind him.
INT. DARK CAVE – CONTINUOUS

358
MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Guy is in a dark cave, dimly lit by daylight filtering through a


distant cavemouth. The creature’s shriek reverberates loudly on
the other side of the door.
Guy moves towards the daylight, navigating through puddles
of seawater and clambering over rocks.
EXT. DESOLATE BEACH – CONTINUOUS
Emerging onto a deserted pebbly beach beside a cliff, Guy
pauses to catch his breath. The waves crash against the shore.
He trudges along the desolate, windswept shore. He passes a
top hat, spinning in the surf.
Further along, he notices a knife, its blade embedded in the wet
sand. He pauses, looking at it, then moves on.
A dog appears, running energetically along the beach. It dashes
past Guy without a glance, bounding off into the distance.
In the near distance a man emerges from the sea wearing a
drenched suit. The pale, middle-aged man stands in front of Guy,
water dripping from his clothes.
PALE MAN: Do you know the way?
GUY: No.
PALE MAN: It’s all the way down. Back the way you came.
The Pale Man’s unblinking gaze is fixed on Guy. Guy, unnerved,
walks around him. The Pale Man remains rigid on the spot, his
gaze unmoved.
The sky begins to darken with the setting sun and approach of
night. Guy reaches the end of the beach and finds a cliff path. He
climbs it, with tired steps.
EXT. CLIFF TOP – LATER
Guy stands on a rock at the cliff’s edge, looking down at the
churning sea below. The wind howls around him, a lonely sound in
the gathering darkness.
He scans the horizon. The vastness stretches before him, an
endless expanse of water and sky.
GUY (V.O.): I muse on this rock, yet everything changes and
remains the same.
FADE OUT.
EXT. CLIFF TOP – NIGHT

359
MUSINGS ON A ROCK

The sun dips below the horizon, leaving Guy under a blanket of
stars. He stands motionless, his silhouette etched against the night
sky.
Out of the darkness, the Pale Man reappears behind Guy.
PALE MAN: (sneering) Are you alright?
GUY: I… I just want to be left alone.
The Pale Man’s smile widens unnaturally, revealing sharp,
menacing teeth. Its hands are claws, positioned upright to attack.
Bursting into blue flames, it hovers up off the ground, ready to
descend upon its prey.
Guy is terrified and cowers in fear. He closes his eyes tightly,
expecting the inevitable.
When he opens them, the predator is screaming as it plummets
down the cliff. He peers over the edge as the screams stop on the
jagged rocks in the waves below. In the monster’s place on the cliff
top stands a beautiful woman in a hooded cloak. She remains
silent and still, gazing out to sea, the moonlight casting a soft glow
around her.
Guy sits and watches the horizon with her. Overcome with
tiredness, he falls asleep.
EXT. CLIFF TOP – DAWN
Guy wakes. As the first light of dawn breaks, the woman in a
cloak fades into the rising sun.
FADE OUT.
EXT. CLIFF PATH – MORNING
Guy descends from the cliff, his steps leading him to a small
town nestled by the sea.
INT. CORNER SHOP – CONTINUOUS
Guy enters a corner shop. He browses the shelves, picking up a
bottle of water and several sandwiches. At the counter, he
presents a card from his pocket, but the cashier shakes his head.
CASHIER: No, we don’t accept this.
Guy is extremely hungry and thirsty; he flees out of the shop
with the provisions.
CASHIER: Stop!
EXT. TOWN STREET – CONTINUOUS

360
MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Guy runs onto the street and into the road, not noticing an
approaching car. There’s a screech of brakes, and he’s knocked to
the ground.
Guy looks up, severely dazed and injured, and sees Lexi looking
down at him.
LEXI: Help is on its way. Hang in there, Guy.
Guy loses consciousness.
INT. AMBULANCE – LATER
Guy lies in an ambulance, speeding towards the hospital.
INT. HOSPITAL CORRIDOR – LATER
Guy is wheeled through a hospital corridor on a trolley. Nurses
and doctors pass by in a blur.
He is wheeled through a door into a stairwell.
INT. THE STAIRCASE OF A HOSPITAL – CONTINUOUS
He is left on the landing of the staircase, alone and confused.
The door shuts behind him with a definitive click.
The staircase is silent, save for the sound of Guy’s laboured
breathing.
A door creaks open and eight-year-old Emma steps through.
EMMA: Daddy? Everything will be okay.
GUY: Em… Emma…
EMMA: You need to pass on now.
GUY: I’m sorry… I...
EMMA: I know.
GUY: I miss you, so much.
EMMA: We all miss you, daddy.
Emma hands Guy a small cuddly toy of a penguin, then skips
back through the door, disappearing from sight as the doors shuts.
A shriek from the creature echoes up the staircase. Guy, badly
injured on the trolley, hears the creature approaching.
In a burst of desperation, he climbs out of the trolley and in
great pain crawls to the nearest door, pounding on it with his
remaining strength.
The creature appears around the stairwell, its presence more
terrifying than ever.

361
MUSINGS ON A ROCK

The door swings open, revealing a crash test dummy seated in


a chair, surrounded by darkness, illuminated only by a single
spotlight from above.
CRASH TEST DUMMY: “What is the meaning of life” is the 404th
most asked question of the Great Oracle’s Database.
The spotlight turns off and the dummy vanishes into the dark.
As the creature closes in on Guy, a sudden, blinding light bursts
out from the room. Purple-gloved hands reach out and pull Guy
through the door.
The door, marked “113”, slams shut behind him.

362
MUSINGS ON A ROCK

Lullaby

Hush, my sweet angel, close your eyes so tight,


I am here beside you, in the tender night.
Though I may not be there to dry the tears for you,
Know that my love will always be with you.

In dreams, my darling, we’ll wander hand in hand,


Through magical realms, across a distant land.
So hush now, my darling, and drift into the night,
Know that you are cherished, bathed in love’s pure light.

363

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