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In Cognito
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Subject: Faceless Posted Wed Apr 02, 2008 at 01:03:14 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 on Windows XP
Faceless
The only thing we have to fear is death itself.
They tell me that it’s painless. That whatever it is inside your head that makes you you just pops like a lid on a plastic soda bottle, and you slump over, lifeless. It’s justâ€â€with the murders, with no known connectionâ€â€there’s not much fact tying them together. Nothing of substance to quiet the hysterical rumours, so all I get is second-hand gossip from hysterical housewives and businessmen with even more reason to never go home.
They don’t know what it is, what causes itâ€â€if it’s even human. We don’t even know if they’re murders, technically. We just know that sometimes, late at nightâ€â€a prominent member of this society is found, slumped over, with a look of shock and betrayal etched on their face like it was made of limestone.
Toronto was never supposed to be like thisâ€â€the divide between us and our neighbors to the South finally multiplied over the past decade, because they never recovered from the financial pratfall their administration forced them into. Rumours continue to spread that a civil war may shatter the country irrevocably, that we’ll get even more refuges than we do nowâ€â€but another day passes, and America’s death appears to be just another fable that never quite sees the light of day.
While I’d love to help the Americans with their struggle against their own bureaucracy, I’m trappedâ€â€Toronto in particular, and most of Canada to a lesser extent, is going under its own recession, and with these sudden strings of deaths, everyone I know experiences uncertainty when they should know happiness, fear in the face of love, paranoia in the face of contentment.
Since I don’t know what it is that’s causing this death, I experience the world from behind a protective white maskâ€â€it blurs my vision a little, at times, and it makes me feel even more isolated and inhuman. Others I encounter, and speak with, appear to feel the same.
This isolation, this odd sense of foreboding I’ve gotten all yearâ€â€it’s made me reconsider my situation in life. I wish I’d’ve met someone, had a child. But if the cause of all this death is some kind of undiscovered virus, or plague, or even something unleashed by the governmentâ€â€I wouldn’t want my child to be infected with it. So perhaps my situational, potential martyrdom could be viewed as a positive… …or maybe I’m just a lonely salesman with an inflated sense of self-importance.
Toronto Dominion Bank is the first thing I see, when I pull myself out of my private musingâ€â€its nearly incalculable height a testament to the achievement man can reach when he really applies himself. It’s also the last thing I see before my eyes are flipped off by some kind of invisible switch in my headâ€â€then it’s my ability to think itself that’s gone, and then my coordination…and if I were capable of thought before my head connected with the pavement, I’d wonder why it was here, in such a usually busy part of town, that I will dieâ€â€with no one around to see me.
But-…
------
These fucking monstrosities get to take away everything that ever mattered to me, do they? My parents weren’t even part of the previous governmentâ€â€and still, the Revolution butchered them like livestock.
So we’ll see how they like a painful, torturous deathâ€â€one that they’ll never see coming, since you can’t trace a telepathic assault.
The survivors will learn to deal with the fear…spread the fear… adapt to a life of being assaulted by a hate they’ll never be able to identify.
The waste of flesh in front of meâ€â€his eyes, partially open, nearly glazed… they’re looking into mine with fading sentience…and I take comfort in the fact that I’m the last living thing they’ll ever see.
Whether he was personally responsible for what happened to Mother and Father or not is irrelevantâ€â€he’s related to those who were.
And as such…his blood will be the tithe for their unpunished crime.
And it makes it all the better that he’s the last victim…that no one will ever know me as anything but a possibility, a question mark…a fear without evidence.
Faceless.
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Hatman
Member Since: Thu Jan 01, 1970 Posts: 618
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Subject: Interesting [Re: In Cognito] Posted Wed Apr 02, 2008 at 12:30:39 pm EDT (Viewed 474 times) |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
It's refreshing to see a story here based in Canada, even if it is Toronto. I'm looking forward to reading more?
Are you a new poster, or the recently-returned spiffy or Goldeneyed? The return of 2 Canuck posters and a story set in Toronto seem a little coincidental...
~Hat~
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Visionary found the story intriguing. Nicely done.
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Subject: Would it have helped to have been thinking happy thoughts? [Re: In Cognito] Posted Wed Apr 02, 2008 at 07:20:29 pm EDT |
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Posted with Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.13 on Windows XP
> Faceless
> The only thing we have to fear is death itself.
>
> They tell me that it’s painless. That whatever it is inside your head that makes you you just pops like a lid on a plastic soda bottle, and you slump over, lifeless. It’s justâ€â€with the murders, with no known connectionâ€â€there’s not much fact tying them together. Nothing of substance to quiet the hysterical rumours, so all I get is second-hand gossip from hysterical housewives and businessmen with even more reason to never go home.
> They don’t know what it is, what causes itâ€â€if it’s even human. We don’t even know if they’re murders, technically. We just know that sometimes, late at nightâ€â€a prominent member of this society is found, slumped over, with a look of shock and betrayal etched on their face like it was made of limestone.
>
> Toronto was never supposed to be like thisâ€â€the divide between us and our neighbors to the South finally multiplied over the past decade, because they never recovered from the financial pratfall their administration forced them into. Rumours continue to spread that a civil war may shatter the country irrevocably, that we’ll get even more refuges than we do nowâ€â€but another day passes, and America’s death appears to be just another fable that never quite sees the light of day.
>
> While I’d love to help the Americans with their struggle against their own bureaucracy, I’m trappedâ€â€Toronto in particular, and most of Canada to a lesser extent, is going under its own recession, and with these sudden strings of deaths, everyone I know experiences uncertainty when they should know happiness, fear in the face of love, paranoia in the face of contentment.
>
> Since I don’t know what it is that’s causing this death, I experience the world from behind a protective white maskâ€â€it blurs my vision a little, at times, and it makes me feel even more isolated and inhuman. Others I encounter, and speak with, appear to feel the same.
>
> This isolation, this odd sense of foreboding I’ve gotten all yearâ€â€it’s made me reconsider my situation in life. I wish I’d’ve met someone, had a child. But if the cause of all this death is some kind of undiscovered virus, or plague, or even something unleashed by the governmentâ€â€I wouldn’t want my child to be infected with it. So perhaps my situational, potential martyrdom could be viewed as a positive… …or maybe I’m just a lonely salesman with an inflated sense of self-importance.
>
> Toronto Dominion Bank is the first thing I see, when I pull myself out of my private musingâ€â€its nearly incalculable height a testament to the achievement man can reach when he really applies himself. It’s also the last thing I see before my eyes are flipped off by some kind of invisible switch in my headâ€â€then it’s my ability to think itself that’s gone, and then my coordination…and if I were capable of thought before my head connected with the pavement, I’d wonder why it was here, in such a usually busy part of town, that I will dieâ€â€with no one around to see me.
> But-…
> ------
>
> These fucking monstrosities get to take away everything that ever mattered to me, do they? My parents weren’t even part of the previous governmentâ€â€and still, the Revolution butchered them like livestock.
>
> So we’ll see how they like a painful, torturous deathâ€â€one that they’ll never see coming, since you can’t trace a telepathic assault.
>
> The survivors will learn to deal with the fear…spread the fear… adapt to a life of being assaulted by a hate they’ll never be able to identify.
>
> The waste of flesh in front of meâ€â€his eyes, partially open, nearly glazed… they’re looking into mine with fading sentience…and I take comfort in the fact that I’m the last living thing they’ll ever see.
>
> Whether he was personally responsible for what happened to Mother and Father or not is irrelevantâ€â€he’s related to those who were.
>
> And as such…his blood will be the tithe for their unpunished crime.
>
> And it makes it all the better that he’s the last victim…that no one will ever know me as anything but a possibility, a question mark…a fear without evidence.
>
> Faceless.
>
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Anime Jason
Owner
Location: Here Member Since: Sun Sep 12, 2004 Posts: 2,834
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Subject: This shows promise. If there's more, that is. [Re: In Cognito] Posted Wed Apr 02, 2008 at 07:50:35 pm EDT (Viewed 427 times) |
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anime.mangacool.net
(10.0.255.1) using
Apple Safari 3.1 on MacOS X (0 points)
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The Dainty Satan
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Subject: Canada is clearly the problem here. Mustn't trust countries on these shifty moderne continents... [Re: In Cognito] Posted Wed Apr 02, 2008 at 11:39:51 pm EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
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Manga Shoggoth
Member Since: Fri Jan 02, 2004 Posts: 391
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Subject: Hmmm. Nicely unbalanced.... [Re: In Cognito] Posted Thu Apr 03, 2008 at 05:10:35 am EDT (Viewed 434 times) |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 on Windows XP
.
As is always the case with my writing, please feel free to comment.
I welcome both positive and negative criticism of my work, although I cannot promise to enjoy the negative.
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HH
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Subject: A powerful opening. Proceed. [Re: In Cognito] Posted Thu Apr 03, 2008 at 12:44:44 pm EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 on Windows 2000
> Faceless
> The only thing we have to fear is death itself.
>
> They tell me that it’s painless. That whatever it is inside your head that makes you you just pops like a lid on a plastic soda bottle, and you slump over, lifeless. It’s justâ€â€with the murders, with no known connectionâ€â€there’s not much fact tying them together. Nothing of substance to quiet the hysterical rumours, so all I get is second-hand gossip from hysterical housewives and businessmen with even more reason to never go home.
> They don’t know what it is, what causes itâ€â€if it’s even human. We don’t even know if they’re murders, technically. We just know that sometimes, late at nightâ€â€a prominent member of this society is found, slumped over, with a look of shock and betrayal etched on their face like it was made of limestone.
>
> Toronto was never supposed to be like thisâ€â€the divide between us and our neighbors to the South finally multiplied over the past decade, because they never recovered from the financial pratfall their administration forced them into. Rumours continue to spread that a civil war may shatter the country irrevocably, that we’ll get even more refuges than we do nowâ€â€but another day passes, and America’s death appears to be just another fable that never quite sees the light of day.
>
> While I’d love to help the Americans with their struggle against their own bureaucracy, I’m trappedâ€â€Toronto in particular, and most of Canada to a lesser extent, is going under its own recession, and with these sudden strings of deaths, everyone I know experiences uncertainty when they should know happiness, fear in the face of love, paranoia in the face of contentment.
>
> Since I don’t know what it is that’s causing this death, I experience the world from behind a protective white maskâ€â€it blurs my vision a little, at times, and it makes me feel even more isolated and inhuman. Others I encounter, and speak with, appear to feel the same.
>
> This isolation, this odd sense of foreboding I’ve gotten all yearâ€â€it’s made me reconsider my situation in life. I wish I’d’ve met someone, had a child. But if the cause of all this death is some kind of undiscovered virus, or plague, or even something unleashed by the governmentâ€â€I wouldn’t want my child to be infected with it. So perhaps my situational, potential martyrdom could be viewed as a positive… …or maybe I’m just a lonely salesman with an inflated sense of self-importance.
>
> Toronto Dominion Bank is the first thing I see, when I pull myself out of my private musingâ€â€its nearly incalculable height a testament to the achievement man can reach when he really applies himself. It’s also the last thing I see before my eyes are flipped off by some kind of invisible switch in my headâ€â€then it’s my ability to think itself that’s gone, and then my coordination…and if I were capable of thought before my head connected with the pavement, I’d wonder why it was here, in such a usually busy part of town, that I will dieâ€â€with no one around to see me.
> But-…
> ------
>
> These fucking monstrosities get to take away everything that ever mattered to me, do they? My parents weren’t even part of the previous governmentâ€â€and still, the Revolution butchered them like livestock.
>
> So we’ll see how they like a painful, torturous deathâ€â€one that they’ll never see coming, since you can’t trace a telepathic assault.
>
> The survivors will learn to deal with the fear…spread the fear… adapt to a life of being assaulted by a hate they’ll never be able to identify.
>
> The waste of flesh in front of meâ€â€his eyes, partially open, nearly glazed… they’re looking into mine with fading sentience…and I take comfort in the fact that I’m the last living thing they’ll ever see.
>
> Whether he was personally responsible for what happened to Mother and Father or not is irrelevantâ€â€he’s related to those who were.
>
> And as such…his blood will be the tithe for their unpunished crime.
>
> And it makes it all the better that he’s the last victim…that no one will ever know me as anything but a possibility, a question mark…a fear without evidence.
>
> Faceless.
>
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CrazySugarFreakBoy!
Member Since: Sun Jan 04, 2004 Posts: 1,235
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Subject: So ... [Re: In Cognito] Posted Thu Apr 03, 2008 at 03:42:55 pm EDT (Viewed 445 times) |
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Posted with Mozilla Firefox 2.0.0.11 on MacOS X
... A psychic Canadian Rorschach? I like it.
Nice social commentary, as well.
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In Cognito
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Subject: Re: Interesting [Re: Hatman] Posted Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 02:00:13 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
> It's refreshing to see a story here based in Canada, even if it is Toronto. I'm looking forward to reading more?
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This was actually intended to be a small story from its conception--but I do have other ideas. One of which will be far longer, and more complex.
I don't currently have a location in mind for this one, though.
>
> Are you a new poster, or the recently-returned spiffy or Goldeneyed? The return of 2 Canuck posters and a story set in Toronto seem a little coincidental...
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I can neither confirm nor deny my identity, due to...legal matters.
>
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In Cognito
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Subject: Victims of traumatic situations like this usually don't have the time to have happy thoughts--but then, I've said too much. [Re: Visionary found the story intriguing. Nicely done.] Posted Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 02:04:21 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
> > Faceless
> > The only thing we have to fear is death itself.
> >
> > They tell me that it’s painless. That whatever it is inside your head that makes you you just pops like a lid on a plastic soda bottle, and you slump over, lifeless. It’s justâ€â€with the murders, with no known connectionâ€â€there’s not much fact tying them together. Nothing of substance to quiet the hysterical rumours, so all I get is second-hand gossip from hysterical housewives and businessmen with even more reason to never go home.
> > They don’t know what it is, what causes itâ€â€if it’s even human. We don’t even know if they’re murders, technically. We just know that sometimes, late at nightâ€â€a prominent member of this society is found, slumped over, with a look of shock and betrayal etched on their face like it was made of limestone.
> >
> > Toronto was never supposed to be like thisâ€â€the divide between us and our neighbors to the South finally multiplied over the past decade, because they never recovered from the financial pratfall their administration forced them into. Rumours continue to spread that a civil war may shatter the country irrevocably, that we’ll get even more refuges than we do nowâ€â€but another day passes, and America’s death appears to be just another fable that never quite sees the light of day.
> >
> > While I’d love to help the Americans with their struggle against their own bureaucracy, I’m trappedâ€â€Toronto in particular, and most of Canada to a lesser extent, is going under its own recession, and with these sudden strings of deaths, everyone I know experiences uncertainty when they should know happiness, fear in the face of love, paranoia in the face of contentment.
> >
> > Since I don’t know what it is that’s causing this death, I experience the world from behind a protective white maskâ€â€it blurs my vision a little, at times, and it makes me feel even more isolated and inhuman. Others I encounter, and speak with, appear to feel the same.
> >
> > This isolation, this odd sense of foreboding I’ve gotten all yearâ€â€it’s made me reconsider my situation in life. I wish I’d’ve met someone, had a child. But if the cause of all this death is some kind of undiscovered virus, or plague, or even something unleashed by the governmentâ€â€I wouldn’t want my child to be infected with it. So perhaps my situational, potential martyrdom could be viewed as a positive… …or maybe I’m just a lonely salesman with an inflated sense of self-importance.
> >
> > Toronto Dominion Bank is the first thing I see, when I pull myself out of my private musingâ€â€its nearly incalculable height a testament to the achievement man can reach when he really applies himself. It’s also the last thing I see before my eyes are flipped off by some kind of invisible switch in my headâ€â€then it’s my ability to think itself that’s gone, and then my coordination…and if I were capable of thought before my head connected with the pavement, I’d wonder why it was here, in such a usually busy part of town, that I will dieâ€â€with no one around to see me.
> > But-…
> > ------
> >
> > These fucking monstrosities get to take away everything that ever mattered to me, do they? My parents weren’t even part of the previous governmentâ€â€and still, the Revolution butchered them like livestock.
> >
> > So we’ll see how they like a painful, torturous deathâ€â€one that they’ll never see coming, since you can’t trace a telepathic assault.
> >
> > The survivors will learn to deal with the fear…spread the fear… adapt to a life of being assaulted by a hate they’ll never be able to identify.
> >
> > The waste of flesh in front of meâ€â€his eyes, partially open, nearly glazed… they’re looking into mine with fading sentience…and I take comfort in the fact that I’m the last living thing they’ll ever see.
> >
> > Whether he was personally responsible for what happened to Mother and Father or not is irrelevantâ€â€he’s related to those who were.
> >
> > And as such…his blood will be the tithe for their unpunished crime.
> >
> > And it makes it all the better that he’s the last victim…that no one will ever know me as anything but a possibility, a question mark…a fear without evidence.
> >
> > Faceless.
> >
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In Cognito
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Subject: More ideas/plots, but this particular avenue, so to speak, is closed. [Re: Anime Jason] Posted Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 02:05:39 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
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In Cognito
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Subject: Much like the French and the Catholics in the Middle Ages, Canada probably gets too much mockery for our own good. However, they *did* give the world Tom Green. [Re: The Dainty Satan] Posted Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 02:08:23 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
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In Cognito
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Subject: If only someone would've given him a Zoloft.. [Re: Manga Shoggoth] Posted Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 02:10:34 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
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In Cognito
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Subject: I'll most likely proceed to other writings, but this was never intended to be anything other than a minimalist approach to suspenseful science fiction. [Re: HH] Posted Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 02:12:31 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
> > Faceless
> > The only thing we have to fear is death itself.
> >
> > They tell me that it’s painless. That whatever it is inside your head that makes you you just pops like a lid on a plastic soda bottle, and you slump over, lifeless. It’s justâ€â€with the murders, with no known connectionâ€â€there’s not much fact tying them together. Nothing of substance to quiet the hysterical rumours, so all I get is second-hand gossip from hysterical housewives and businessmen with even more reason to never go home.
> > They don’t know what it is, what causes itâ€â€if it’s even human. We don’t even know if they’re murders, technically. We just know that sometimes, late at nightâ€â€a prominent member of this society is found, slumped over, with a look of shock and betrayal etched on their face like it was made of limestone.
> >
> > Toronto was never supposed to be like thisâ€â€the divide between us and our neighbors to the South finally multiplied over the past decade, because they never recovered from the financial pratfall their administration forced them into. Rumours continue to spread that a civil war may shatter the country irrevocably, that we’ll get even more refuges than we do nowâ€â€but another day passes, and America’s death appears to be just another fable that never quite sees the light of day.
> >
> > While I’d love to help the Americans with their struggle against their own bureaucracy, I’m trappedâ€â€Toronto in particular, and most of Canada to a lesser extent, is going under its own recession, and with these sudden strings of deaths, everyone I know experiences uncertainty when they should know happiness, fear in the face of love, paranoia in the face of contentment.
> >
> > Since I don’t know what it is that’s causing this death, I experience the world from behind a protective white maskâ€â€it blurs my vision a little, at times, and it makes me feel even more isolated and inhuman. Others I encounter, and speak with, appear to feel the same.
> >
> > This isolation, this odd sense of foreboding I’ve gotten all yearâ€â€it’s made me reconsider my situation in life. I wish I’d’ve met someone, had a child. But if the cause of all this death is some kind of undiscovered virus, or plague, or even something unleashed by the governmentâ€â€I wouldn’t want my child to be infected with it. So perhaps my situational, potential martyrdom could be viewed as a positive… …or maybe I’m just a lonely salesman with an inflated sense of self-importance.
> >
> > Toronto Dominion Bank is the first thing I see, when I pull myself out of my private musingâ€â€its nearly incalculable height a testament to the achievement man can reach when he really applies himself. It’s also the last thing I see before my eyes are flipped off by some kind of invisible switch in my headâ€â€then it’s my ability to think itself that’s gone, and then my coordination…and if I were capable of thought before my head connected with the pavement, I’d wonder why it was here, in such a usually busy part of town, that I will dieâ€â€with no one around to see me.
> > But-…
> > ------
> >
> > These fucking monstrosities get to take away everything that ever mattered to me, do they? My parents weren’t even part of the previous governmentâ€â€and still, the Revolution butchered them like livestock.
> >
> > So we’ll see how they like a painful, torturous deathâ€â€one that they’ll never see coming, since you can’t trace a telepathic assault.
> >
> > The survivors will learn to deal with the fear…spread the fear… adapt to a life of being assaulted by a hate they’ll never be able to identify.
> >
> > The waste of flesh in front of meâ€â€his eyes, partially open, nearly glazed… they’re looking into mine with fading sentience…and I take comfort in the fact that I’m the last living thing they’ll ever see.
> >
> > Whether he was personally responsible for what happened to Mother and Father or not is irrelevantâ€â€he’s related to those who were.
> >
> > And as such…his blood will be the tithe for their unpunished crime.
> >
> > And it makes it all the better that he’s the last victim…that no one will ever know me as anything but a possibility, a question mark…a fear without evidence.
> >
> > Faceless.
> >
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In Cognito
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Subject: It's interesting that you see that in there... [Re: CrazySugarFreakBoy!] Posted Fri Apr 04, 2008 at 02:17:23 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 7 on Windows XP
> ... A psychic Canadian Rorschach? I like it.
> Nice social commentary, as well.
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I really had no intention of a Rorschach homage, but I can understand how you'd get those vibes. Alas, this is the first, and only time, I'll ever do anything with this character. It was nothing but an attempt at minimalistic fiction that I'll probably send off to a magazine at some point, but I do have another idea that will take months, bare minimum, to fully form. It'd be sci-fi as well, but this one seems to be shaping up to be more satiric.
Arrested Development fans in particular would probably enjoy it.
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Dancer.
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Subject: It left me wanting more, so that a good thing, right? [Re: In Cognito] Posted Sat Apr 05, 2008 at 08:21:17 am EDT |
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Posted with Microsoft Internet Explorer 6 on Windows 2000
> Faceless
> The only thing we have to fear is death itself.
>
> They tell me that it’s painless. That whatever it is inside your head that makes you you just pops like a lid on a plastic soda bottle, and you slump over, lifeless. It’s justâ€â€with the murders, with no known connectionâ€â€there’s not much fact tying them together. Nothing of substance to quiet the hysterical rumours, so all I get is second-hand gossip from hysterical housewives and businessmen with even more reason to never go home.
> They don’t know what it is, what causes itâ€â€if it’s even human. We don’t even know if they’re murders, technically. We just know that sometimes, late at nightâ€â€a prominent member of this society is found, slumped over, with a look of shock and betrayal etched on their face like it was made of limestone.
>
> Toronto was never supposed to be like thisâ€â€the divide between us and our neighbors to the South finally multiplied over the past decade, because they never recovered from the financial pratfall their administration forced them into. Rumours continue to spread that a civil war may shatter the country irrevocably, that we’ll get even more refuges than we do nowâ€â€but another day passes, and America’s death appears to be just another fable that never quite sees the light of day.
>
> While I’d love to help the Americans with their struggle against their own bureaucracy, I’m trappedâ€â€Toronto in particular, and most of Canada to a lesser extent, is going under its own recession, and with these sudden strings of deaths, everyone I know experiences uncertainty when they should know happiness, fear in the face of love, paranoia in the face of contentment.
>
> Since I don’t know what it is that’s causing this death, I experience the world from behind a protective white maskâ€â€it blurs my vision a little, at times, and it makes me feel even more isolated and inhuman. Others I encounter, and speak with, appear to feel the same.
>
> This isolation, this odd sense of foreboding I’ve gotten all yearâ€â€it’s made me reconsider my situation in life. I wish I’d’ve met someone, had a child. But if the cause of all this death is some kind of undiscovered virus, or plague, or even something unleashed by the governmentâ€â€I wouldn’t want my child to be infected with it. So perhaps my situational, potential martyrdom could be viewed as a positive… …or maybe I’m just a lonely salesman with an inflated sense of self-importance.
>
> Toronto Dominion Bank is the first thing I see, when I pull myself out of my private musingâ€â€its nearly incalculable height a testament to the achievement man can reach when he really applies himself. It’s also the last thing I see before my eyes are flipped off by some kind of invisible switch in my headâ€â€then it’s my ability to think itself that’s gone, and then my coordination…and if I were capable of thought before my head connected with the pavement, I’d wonder why it was here, in such a usually busy part of town, that I will dieâ€â€with no one around to see me.
> But-…
> ------
>
> These fucking monstrosities get to take away everything that ever mattered to me, do they? My parents weren’t even part of the previous governmentâ€â€and still, the Revolution butchered them like livestock.
>
> So we’ll see how they like a painful, torturous deathâ€â€one that they’ll never see coming, since you can’t trace a telepathic assault.
>
> The survivors will learn to deal with the fear…spread the fear… adapt to a life of being assaulted by a hate they’ll never be able to identify.
>
> The waste of flesh in front of meâ€â€his eyes, partially open, nearly glazed… they’re looking into mine with fading sentience…and I take comfort in the fact that I’m the last living thing they’ll ever see.
>
> Whether he was personally responsible for what happened to Mother and Father or not is irrelevantâ€â€he’s related to those who were.
>
> And as such…his blood will be the tithe for their unpunished crime.
>
> And it makes it all the better that he’s the last victim…that no one will ever know me as anything but a possibility, a question mark…a fear without evidence.
>
> Faceless.
>
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