The Countdown Resets (Short Story)

The park opened up before her—a collection of stone benches and scraggly trees under scattered pools of amber light. Most of the benches sat empty. But one, near the far edge of a streetlight’s reach, held a figure.

A young man in his early twenties hunched forward on the stone seat, dressed in a thin jacket inadequate for the November chill. An earbud glinted in one ear. He bit into a sunflower seed, extracted the kernel with his tongue, and spat the shell onto the ground where dozens of others already lay scattered around his feet. His gaze seemed fixed on nothing in particular, somewhere past the pavement.

The woman approached, her footsteps audible on the path. She stopped at the edge of the bench’s light.

“Hey,” she said. “Mind if I sit?”

The young man’s head lifted. His eyes tracked to her face—pale skin, red eyes, features half-obscured by the hood. He held her gaze for a moment before she looked away.

“Sitting down next to a sketchy guy at 3 a.m., huh?” He cracked another seed between his teeth. “You got some guts.”

The woman sat down on the opposite end of the bench, maintaining space between them. She pulled her hood back slightly, revealing more of her face to the streetlight.

“Yeah, well, I’m sketchy too,” she said. “We’ll make a matching set.”

The young man leaned back against the bench, his shoulders settling against the stone. He cracked another sunflower seed between his teeth and spat the shell onto the growing pile at his feet. His gaze stayed on her face, lingering on her red eyes.

“I don’t know whether to tell you that I don’t deal,” he said, “or tell you that I don’t have any money.”

The woman’s expression didn’t change. She pulled her hands from her hoodie pocket and rested them on her knees.

“Relax, I don’t need a dealer and your wallet’s safe,” she said. “Just looking for a place to sit that isn’t completely soaked.”

His gaze shifted away from her, scanning the darkness beyond the bench. The earbud caught the light as he turned his head.

“Well… I guess you don’t want to sit in silence. What’s your deal? 3 a.m., a young woman alone. Are you nuts?”

She looked toward the darkness beyond the streetlight’s circle, then back at him. A small exhale, visible in the November air.

“Maybe a little nuts, yeah. But it’s 3 a.m. and you’re here too, so I figure we’ve both got our reasons for being awake when normal people are sleeping.” Her hand lifted, indicating the darkness. “Besides, sitting alone in my place was getting old. At least out here there’s… I don’t know, other people existing. Even if they’re strangers eating sunflower seeds in empty parks.”

He extracted another seed from the bag in his jacket pocket. His jaw worked around it before he spoke.

“The biological urge, right?” He spat the shell. “Talking to some meat sack that will speak back, even if you likely won’t ever see them again. Hell, maybe even better if you won’t ever see them again.” He paused, rolling the next seed between his fingers. “Don’t you hate it? That it came programmed in? I don’t like people. It’s not that I actively dislike them. More like… They make my skin crawl.”

The woman’s posture shifted slightly forward. Her eyes tracked to him, held there for several seconds.

“Yeah. The biological urge. It’s fucked up, isn’t it? That we’re hardwired to need connection even when we don’t want it, even when it makes everything harder. Like our bodies didn’t get the memo that we’re better off alone.” She pulled her hood down an inch. “And you’re right—sometimes it’s easier when you know you’ll never see them again. No follow-up, no accountability, just… a moment of existing with someone else and then it’s done.”

The young man bit into another seed. His eyes remained on the pavement ahead, but his head tilted slightly toward her voice.

“We’re better off alone. You got that right.” He reached into his pocket for another seed. “But you can’t choose to do that. Even if you headed to the woods, you’d be squatting on someone else’s property. I didn’t opt into this shit, this…” His hand made a sharp gesture toward the empty park. “…society. But we have to deal with it if only because some day we’ll catch some disease.”

The woman’s head turned toward him. She watched him crack another seed, the small sound distinct in the quiet.

“You’re right that we didn’t opt in,” she said. “But even if you go to the woods, you’re still operating within the system—squatting on someone’s property, like you said, or eventually needing medicine or…” Her shoulders lifted slightly. “…I don’t know, human contact that you hate but can’t escape. The trap isn’t just society, it’s that our bodies won’t let us actually leave. We’re wired to need things we’d rather not need. And that’s… that’s the real prison, isn’t it? Not the rules or the property or the people, but the fact that we can’t choose to stop needing any of it.”

He shook his head slowly, his gaze still fixed ahead.

“Pee. Shit. Eat three meals a day. Talk to other sentient apes so you don’t feel lonely. Seek a warm body in which to cum lest your chemical makeup penalizes you for refusing your imperative.” Another shell hit the pile at his feet. “We are imprisoned. We’re thinking clouds inside a convolution of matter, and we spend most of the day tending to this meat puppet we didn’t choose. A meat puppet that will decay and kill us along with it.”

The woman leaned forward, her forearms resting on her knees. Several seconds passed before she spoke.

“That’s exactly it. And the worst part? Even when you see it clearly, when you understand the trap, you still can’t escape it. You still need to eat. Still need to talk to someone at 3 a.m. so you don’t lose your mind. Still need to…” She gestured vaguely toward the darkness. “…participate in all this shit we never opted into. The body demands it even when the thinking part of you would rather not.”

The young man’s head turned. He looked straight into the night beyond the streetlight’s circle, his profile sharp in the amber glow.

“Wouldn’t it be better for it all to… cease?” His voice delivered the words flatly. “You know it in your bones, don’t you? It’s not going to get any better.”

The woman went still. Her breathing remained visible in the cold air, small clouds forming and dissipating. She stared into the same darkness he faced. The silence stretched between them—five seconds, ten. A car passed somewhere on a distant street, its engine fading.

“I don’t know,” she said. “Maybe you’re right. Maybe it would be better if it all just… ceased.” Her head turned toward him briefly, then away. “But I can’t answer that honestly. Because if I really believed it, I wouldn’t be here. I’d have ended it already. And I haven’t. So what does that make me? Someone who sees the trap clearly but keeps participating anyway? Someone too scared to actually commit to the logic of their own philosophy?” She lifted one hand and rubbed it across her face. The motion pulled her hood back further. “I think the worst part isn’t that it won’t get better. It’s that I keep hoping it might, even when I know better. That biological urge again—not just for connection, but for meaning. For something that makes the meat puppet maintenance worth it.” Her hand dropped back to her knee. “And I can’t tell if that’s human resilience or just… pathetic delusion.”

The young man cracked another seed between his teeth. He spat the shell onto the pile at his feet, his gaze fixed on the wet cobblestones.

“It is delusion. If we didn’t come in with built-in delusion, who would have opted to endure it? We would have gone extinct long ago.” He reached into his pocket for another seed. “Sure, cats, dogs, they don’t know any better. For anything sentient, they would have to choose correctly.” The seed cracked between his teeth. “We keep existing because some part of our brains is dedicated to lying to ourselves, or to itself perhaps, that its continuation is worth the pain. Not even for its own sake. But to create more versions of the instructions that built it.”

The woman looked at him for a long moment. Her eyes stayed on his profile, watching him crack another seed. Then she turned her gaze back to the darkness beyond the streetlight.

“I think you’re right about the delusion,” she said. “About the brain lying to itself to keep the machinery running. But here’s the thing—” She shifted slightly on the bench. “I don’t know if recognizing the delusion actually changes anything. Like, I can see it clearly, I can articulate it the same way you just did, and I’m still… here. Still participating. Still eating and talking and maintaining this meat puppet I didn’t choose. So what does that make the recognition worth? Just another layer of awareness that doesn’t lead anywhere?” She exhaled slowly, the breath visible in the November air. “Maybe the real trap isn’t the biological imperatives themselves. It’s that even when you see through them completely, you still can’t stop performing them. The insight doesn’t grant freedom—it just makes you more conscious of your own imprisonment.”

He leaned forward, forearms resting on his knees. The earbud glinted as his head tilted downward.

“It is a mockery. We, what we believe ourselves to be, aren’t worrying or despairing about the lack of meaning. Our brain is keeping us deluded so we continue operating it. But our brain is also the one who makes us recognize the absurdity of it.” His hand gestured vaguely toward his head. “The fact that we believe there is an ‘I’ that somehow looks at this from an elevated position is a delusion.” He extracted another seed from the bag. “You know about that guy, a couple hundred years ago maybe, that laid railroad tracks, right? Had something to do with trains anyway. One spike blew straight through his fucking frontal lobe. Didn’t kill him. Just changed who he was.” The seed cracked. “You take out one part of your brain and you’re no longer you. A stroke kills part of your brain and you’re no longer you.” The shell hit the pile at his feet. “That’s because the brain is making itself believe that it has choices.”

The woman went quiet. She stared at the wet cobblestones reflecting the amber streetlight, her posture still, her breathing visible in small clouds.

“You’re talking about the railroad spike guy,” she said finally. “Phineas Gage. And yeah, you’re right—take out one chunk of brain tissue and the whole ‘I’ thing collapses. Different person, same meat puppet. But here’s what fucks me up about that example. It’s not just that we’re not in control. It’s that there never was an ‘I’ making choices in the first place. Just…” Her hand lifted, fingers spreading. “…neurochemistry pretending to be agency, brain states pretending to be decisions.”

The young man turned his head to look at her directly. She kept her gaze on the cobblestones.

“And we can see it, articulate it, understand it completely—and it doesn’t change anything,” she continued. “I’m still sitting here at 3 a.m. talking to you like this conversation matters, like these words mean something, even though we both know it’s just… what? Electrical impulses in meat that’s lying to itself about being conscious?” She glanced at him, then back to the pavement. “The recognition doesn’t grant freedom. It just makes you more aware of the cage while you keep performing the same biological routines. Eating. Talking. Surviving. All of it automated, all of it predetermined by brain architecture we didn’t choose.” She pulled her hands from her knees and wrapped her arms around herself against the cold. “And the worst part? Even knowing that, I can’t stop hoping there’s something more. That’s the real mockery, isn’t it? The brain’s so good at lying to itself that even when you see through the delusion, you still participate in it.”

The young man leaned back against the bench. He cracked another seed, spat the shell, and looked up at the black sky beyond the streetlight’s circle. Several seconds passed. A breeze moved through the park, rustling the scraggly trees.

“I suppose we’re both beyond questioning what’s the point of it,” he said. His voice carried no particular weight. “Its existence is the point. Its own sake. Even if it’s meaningless. Even if it hurts.”

The woman’s eyes remained fixed on the wet cobblestones reflecting the streetlight’s amber glow. The silence extended. The young man cracked another seed. She glanced at him.

“I think that’s what fucks me up the most—not that we can’t find meaning, but that we keep looking for it anyway. Keep participating in all this biological bullshit even when we’ve articulated every reason not to. Like we’re hardwired to hope for something we can’t even name, and recognizing that doesn’t let us stop.” She exhaled slowly, the breath visible in the air. “So here we are. 3 a.m. in an empty park, two people who see the trap clearly, eating sunflower seeds and talking philosophy like it matters. And maybe it does. Or maybe we’re just… doing what the meat puppet demands. Connection, conversation, the illusion that this moment registers as something more than neurochemistry pretending to be consciousness.” Her gaze returned to the darkness beyond the streetlight’s circle. Several seconds passed without speech. “I don’t know which it is. But I’m glad you’re here anyway.”

The young man turned his head. His eyes—tired, heavy-lidded—settled on her face. The earbud caught the light as he moved.

“Are you?” His voice carried the same flat delivery. “Glad, I mean. I know what you are, what you came here to do. You can’t control it for much longer, can you?”

The woman went very still. Her red eyes locked on him, her body frozen in place. The only movement was her breathing, small clouds forming and dissipating in the cold air. She didn’t blink.

“Yeah. I know what I am.” Her voice remained steady. “And you’re right—I can’t control it for much longer. Three days, like clockwork.” She exhaled slowly, her shoulders lowering slightly. “But here’s the fucked up part. I came here to feed. That’s what I do—find someone isolated, someone vulnerable, and I… take what I need. But you started talking about meat puppets and biological imprisonment and the brain lying to itself about continuation, and suddenly I didn’t want to be a predator anymore. I wanted to be a person having a conversation with another person who sees the same trap I do.” She looked away, turning her gaze toward the darkness beyond the streetlight’s reach. “So yeah. I’m glad you’re here. Not because you’re a feeding target, but because for the last however many minutes, I got to pretend I’m something other than what my biology demands I be. That probably doesn’t make sense. Or maybe it makes perfect sense and that’s the real mockery—that even when you know exactly what you are and what you’re going to do, you still reach for moments that make you feel less monstrous. Even when they’re temporary. Even when they don’t change anything.”

The young man remained motionless on the bench. His eyes stayed on her profile, watching her stare into the darkness. The earbud in his ear caught the amber light, a small point of reflection in the November night. He extracted another seed from his bag and cracked it between his teeth.

“Well, at least you work for what you consume, don’t you?” He spat the shell onto the pile at his feet. “I see animal carcasses at a butcher shop and I wish to look away. Those things just wanted to live, and we kill them by the millions.” Another seed cracked. “I’m not a vegetarian. I eat animals while the thought runs through my mind that I’m having other living things killed for my sake even though I don’t want to live.”

The woman’s gaze stayed fixed on the wet cobblestones. Several seconds passed. Her breath formed small clouds in the cold air, visible in the amber streetlight. When she spoke, her voice carried the same flat quality his had.

“Yeah. I work for it.” She paused. “That’s… that’s exactly what it is, isn’t it? You eat animals while thinking they just wanted to live, while you don’t even want to be alive yourself. I feed on people while knowing it violates them, while wishing I could opt out of the whole biological countdown.” Her hand lifted slightly, then dropped back to her knee. “We both keep participating in harm we can articulate but can’t escape.”

The young man cracked another seed. The earbud glinted as he turned his head slightly toward her.

“The worst part isn’t the harm itself,” she continued. “It’s that recognizing it doesn’t change anything. You still need to eat. I still need to feed. The insight doesn’t grant freedom—it just makes you more conscious of being a mechanism acting out its programming. And we keep going anyway because… what? The brain’s too good at lying to itself about continuation mattering?” Her shoulders shifted slightly under the hoodie. “I don’t know if that’s tragic or just… the way meat puppets work.”

The young man’s head turned, his gaze fixed straight into the darkness beyond the streetlight’s circle. He reached down and set the packet of sunflower seeds on the stone bench beside him. His hand lifted to his neck, index finger extended, pointing to the pale skin below his jaw.

“Well, meat puppet, go ahead.” His voice carried the same flat delivery as before. “You know what you have to do.”

The woman went very still. Her red eyes fixed on the finger pointing to his neck, tracked the line from his hand to the exposed skin. Several seconds passed without movement from either of them. The only sound was the distant hum of a streetlight and their breathing visible in the cold air.

She shifted closer on the bench, the movement slow and deliberate. The space between them decreased. Her body angled toward him, shoulders turning.

“You understand what this is.” Her voice came out quiet, almost uncertain. “What I’ll take from you. Not just blood—the violation, the trauma, all of it. And you’re still offering.” She paused, her eyes searching his profile. “I don’t know if that makes you the most compassionate person I’ve met in forty years or the most self-destructive. Maybe both.”

Her hand lifted from her knee, reaching up slowly. She gave him time before her palm settled gently on his opposite shoulder. The contact steadied him, anchored him in place on the stone bench.

“This is going to hurt,” she said. “And you’re going to remember it. And I’m…” Her voice caught slightly. “I’m sorry that this is what I am.”

She leaned in. Her mouth opened, revealing elongated canines that caught the amber streetlight. Her head tilted, angling toward the spot where his finger had pointed. Then her fangs sank into his flesh.

His body jerked—a sharp inhale, a gasp that broke the quiet of the empty park. A tremor ran through him, visible in the way his shoulders shook, the way his free hand clenched against his thigh. But he remained seated, didn’t pull away, didn’t fight. His head tilted further to the side, exposing more of his neck to her mouth.

The ragged quality of his voice vibrated against her fangs, the words formed through controlled breaths.

“One of your kind got me a year ago,” he said. The tremor continued through his frame, small shakes that traveled from his shoulders down to his hands. “Just as I was walking home from one of my night outings to figure out if I was still alive.” He exhaled shakily. “Then he or she abandoned me on the grass with a burning wound in my neck.” Another breath, catching slightly. “And as I lay there, I thought, ‘They should have fucking drained me.'”

The woman’s hand tightened slightly on his shoulder. Her other hand came up to brace against his upper arm, steadying both him and herself. She remained there, feeding, her mouth pressed against the wound in his neck. The movement was slow, controlled, despite the visible tension in her shoulders. Her breath came in measured intervals between draws. The young man’s tremors persisted, traveling through his frame where her hands braced him.

Her voice emerged muffled against his skin, trembling slightly around the words.

“They should have drained you. You wanted them to kill you.” She paused, her fangs still embedded in the flesh of his neck. “Is that what you’re offering me now? Feeding, or an exit? Because I need to know which one you’re asking for before I decide how much to take.”

The young man’s breathing had grown shallow, rapid. Another tremor ran through him, stronger than the previous ones. His head remained tilted to the side, exposing the wound and the blood seeping around her mouth.

“I don’t know.” His voice came out strained. “I don’t know if I care. If feeding from me gives you something of value, I guess that’s good. And if you kill me, I guess that’s fine too.” The tremor intensified for a moment, then settled into the same persistent shake. “The same thing is waiting for me at the end of either route.”

The woman remained there, drinking. Her hands on his shoulder and arm maintained their pressure, steadying him as his breathing grew more ragged. The pile of sunflower seed shells lay scattered at their feet, undisturbed. The distant hum of the streetlight continued. Her shoulders rose and fell with each controlled breath between draws.

Then she stopped. Her fangs withdrew slowly from the wound, the movement deliberate and careful. Blood remained wet on her lips, dark in the amber streetlight. She pulled back slightly, creating space between them on the bench. Her hands dropped from his shoulder and arm. Her red eyes lifted to meet his face.

“I’m not going to kill you.” Her voice carried clearly now. “You said ‘fine either way,’ but fine isn’t consent. Fine is resignation. And I’m not going to be the mechanism of your death wish just because you won’t stop me.” She reached up and wiped the blood from her lips with the back of her hand. Her gaze remained on his face, on his tired, heavy-lidded eyes. “I took what I needed. The countdown resets. You get to keep existing whether you want to or not.” Her hand dropped back to her lap. “And maybe that makes me a bigger monster—taking your choice away by refusing to kill you—but I can’t…” She paused, her shoulders shifting slightly under the hoodie. “I won’t cross that line. Not tonight.”

His jaw clenched, teeth grinding together. He lifted his hand slowly to his neck, fingers pressing against the wound. A drop of blood slid down the pale skin, darkening his fingertips red. His head turned slightly toward her, not fully facing her, just enough to bring her into his peripheral vision.

“I’m already woozy. It comes with the territory, I guess. Well, what did your meat puppet tell you now that you have obeyed? Good job?”

The woman raised the back of her hand to her mouth, wiping away the remaining blood from her lips. The motion was slow, deliberate. Then she looked at him for a long moment, her red eyes steady on his face.

“My meat puppet told me I get to exist for another three days. That I successfully completed the biological countdown without killing the person who offered me permission to.” She went quiet, her gaze dropping to the wound on his neck. “You’re woozy because I just took about a pint of your blood. You should sit still for a few minutes, let your body compensate. Drink something with sugar when you get home.” She exhaled slowly, the breath visible. “And yeah. Good job, I guess. I proved I can still choose restraint when someone won’t stop me. That I’m something slightly more than just appetite with fangs.” Her eyes lifted to meet his. “That’s what my meat puppet told me. What did yours tell you? Because you’re still here too, even though you wanted that other vampire to drain you. Even though you said the same thing is waiting either way. So what does that make us? Two biological machines that can see the programming clearly but can’t stop executing it?”

The young man’s hand remained pressed to his neck, blood seeping between his fingers. His head turned more fully toward her, his tired eyes locking onto her red ones.

“Even those that see the programming clearly and do stop executing it, let’s say by jumping off a fucking bridge, were still acting on their programming. It just wasn’t very good programming. Or it was, depending on what you believe the main objective to be.” His gaze held steady on her face. “I look at you and at what you have done to me and I don’t have a single thought in my mind. Not any that I don’t need to force myself to scoop out of my brain. What does that mean?”

The woman went still. Her eyes remained on his face, searching. Several seconds passed without either of them moving. The distant hum of the streetlight continued.

“I don’t know what it means.” She reached up slowly, her hand moving toward his face. Her thumb extended, making contact with his cheek. She wiped across the skin with her thumb in a single, tender stroke. “Maybe it means your brain’s protecting you from processing what just happened. Maybe it means you’ve already processed so much shit that this doesn’t register anymore. Or maybe…” She paused, her thumb still resting against his cheek. “…maybe it means exactly what you said earlier. That we’re thinking clouds trapped in meat puppets, and sometimes the machinery just… doesn’t generate the response we expect it to. The emotional operating system looks for a reaction and finds nothing, and that absence is just as real as feeling would be.”

Her hand dropped away from his face, returning to her lap. She remained facing him, her posture open, waiting.

He sat there, his gaze shifting away from her toward the darkness beyond the streetlight’s circle. His hand stayed pressed to the wound on his neck. His chest rose and fell with steady breathing, the visible clouds forming and dissipating in the cold air. Five seconds passed. Ten. Fifteen. Twenty. The park remained empty except for the two of them on the stone bench.

“Do you also wake up from dreams,” he asked, “even nightmares at times, to see your ceiling, or I guess in your case some random ceiling, and think, ‘Why did I have to spend about eight hours hallucinating stuff that even at its worst is much better than my life?'”

The woman’s gaze lifted from the wet cobblestones to the darkness beyond the streetlight’s circle. Her shoulders rose slightly with an inhale, then fell.

“Yeah. Every fucking night.” She paused, her eyes tracking across the empty park. “I used to dream about—doesn’t matter what. Point is, even the worst nightmare was better than waking up to this. At least in dreams you get narrative, right? Cause and effect, some kind of structure. Even if it’s terrifying, it follows its own logic. But then you wake up and it’s just… this. The same biological countdown, the same empty hours, no plot development. Just maintenance and survival on loop.” She exhaled slowly. “Sometimes I think the brain generates dreams to remind us what meaning used to feel like. Or what we imagine it felt like. Then we wake up and remember that was the delusion, and this—” Her hand lifted, gesturing vaguely at the empty park, the wet cobblestones, the darkness pressing in around them. “—this is what’s real.”

The young man’s head shook slowly.

“Or maybe dreams provide a respite in which meaning returns. Otherwise we would exist in a single-threaded succession of meaninglessness that would inevitably lead us to despair. Maybe that’s why people who can’t sleep eventually die. Their very organism can no longer take it.” He shook his head again. “You know, for a while I thought that you had it better than me, but…” He paused, his gaze shifting to her face. “You can’t feel the sun on your skin, can you? The very thing that gives life to everything else would burn it out of you. And yet you keep going.”

The woman went quiet. Her eyes remained fixed on the darkness beyond the streetlight’s circle. Several seconds passed without speech, without movement except for her breathing visible in the cold air.

“Yeah. I can’t feel the sun on my skin. Haven’t felt it in forty years.” Her voice carried the same flat quality. “Sometimes I dream about it—standing in daylight, feeling warmth instead of terror. Then I wake up and remember that’s the one thing I can never have again. The thing that gives life to everything else would burn me alive in minutes.” She exhaled slowly. “But you’re right. I keep going anyway. Even knowing what I’ve lost, what I do to survive, all the biological maintenance and violation and emptiness… I keep participating. Maybe that’s the real mockery—not that we’re trapped in meat puppets, but that even when we see the cage completely, when we’ve articulated every reason to stop, we still can’t make ourselves quit.” She paused, her shoulders shifting slightly under the hoodie. “So here we are. Two people who know exactly what continuation costs, sitting in an empty park at 3 a.m., still breathing. Still existing despite everything.”

She leaned toward him. Her head came to rest against his shoulder, the weight settling there. Her hood slipped back further, revealing more of her pale face to the amber streetlight. She remained there, still, her breathing visible in small clouds that formed and dissipated.

The young man’s arm extended along the back of the bench. His hand reached her head. He patted her twice, the motion gentle, then let his hand rest there. The pile of sunflower seed shells remained scattered at their feet. A breeze moved through the scraggly trees.

Time passed—a minute, two. Her head remained on his shoulder. His hand stayed on her head. Their breathing continued to form small clouds in the cold air.

The young man’s voice broke the silence.

“So, what do you usually do after you pull your fangs out of someone’s neck? Run?”

The woman’s head lifted slightly from his shoulder, then settled back down. Several seconds passed before she spoke.

“Yeah. Usually I run. Feed, pull out, disappear before they can process what happened or I have to see what I’ve done to them. That’s the pattern—forty years of it.” She went quiet for a moment. “But right now I don’t want to. Don’t know if that means anything, or if I’m just… delaying the inevitable. But sitting here with you after everything we just talked about, after you offered your neck knowing what I am—I don’t want to perform the disappearing act yet. Even though I probably will eventually. Because that’s what I do.”

“A hit-it-and-quit-it kind of gal, aren’t you?” He paused. “Well, you can’t help it. You’ll move out somewhere else until the heat goes down. Maybe I’ll catch a glimpse of you in the shadows during one of these 3 a.m. strolls. Maybe I’ll grow to be seventy and still see your young self prowling about.”

He went quiet. The distant hum of the streetlight continued. His breathing remained visible in the cold air, small clouds forming and dissipating.

“There’s something down there,” he said. “Something for which… I don’t have words. A sense of meaning at the bottom. Too far away for recognition. For attaching labels to it. Somewhere in that vast darkness. Like a fish barely seen under the water.”

The woman remained still against his shoulder. Several seconds passed before she spoke.

“That fish you’re talking about, I see it too. Or maybe I want to see it. I don’t know if that’s the same thing.” She exhaled slowly. “You said you might catch glimpses of me in forty years, still looking twenty-five while you’re seventy. That’s… fuck, that’s the first time anyone’s… Not ‘see you around’ like a polite lie, but actual recognition that I exist across time even when I’m not visible. That I might matter enough to register as a recurring presence in someone’s life instead of just… a bad thing that happened once.”

The young man’s voice emerged tired, dry.

“Don’t get me wrong. You’ll show up in my brain as a bad thing that happened to me once. In the company of everything else that appears from the past. Not the years I’ve lived. Just still photos, two-or-three-second clips of what I supposedly existed through. The feeling of your fangs piercing through my flesh. Your red eyes staring back at me. Reminders that I was here, in this park, at 3 a.m. I guess that will do.”

The woman went quiet. Her head remained resting against his shoulder, her breathing visible in the November air. When she spoke, her voice came out softer than before.

“You’re right. I’ll show up as a bad thing that happened. That’s what I am to people—a trauma they carry, a two-or-three-second clip that resurfaces at 3 a.m. But you said ‘I guess that will do.’ Like being remembered as something bad is still… something. Like existing in someone’s memory, even as a wound, still counts as having been here.” She exhaled slowly. “I don’t know if that’s bleak or if it’s the closest thing to comfort I’ve had in forty years. Maybe both. But yeah. That’ll do.”

THE END


Check out this lovely video about the story.

Life update (10/20/2025)

As I was lying in bed at about six in the morning, having woken up from a strange dream I couldn’t remember, for no particular reason I recalled that time when I was fourteen or so, in 1999, when I saw a UFO. Over the years, I’ve wondered if I hallucinated it, but it didn’t: I was sitting on the backseat of my parents’ car, with my younger sister on the other side. She was too young to remember it meaningfully, if at all. About three minutes away from home, we looked at the San Marcial shrine, which is located on top of the mountain of the same name in Irún, and we saw this:

Well, I must clarify that wasn’t exactly that what we saw. I fed ChatGPT an image of the San Marcial shrine, and told it to generate an image set at dusk in which a UFO made out of three three-dimensional glowing orbs, orange-green in color, set in an equilateral triangle, was hovering about 5-6 times the height of the shrine above the building itself. The UFO was smaller, about the size of the shrine from our perspective. Also, there weren’t lines connecting the orbs, but I couldn’t get ChatGPT to remove those.

My mother simultaneously didn’t believe in but also was afraid of UFOs; even though I kept telling her to look, she only glanced at it then refused to look at it more. My father, even though he was driving, did stare at it; I think he was interested in UFOs in his youth. He didn’t stop the car, which he should have. Soon enough, we lost it behind some houses.

The strangest thing happened a bit later. It dawns on me from time to time how truly strange it was. After my father parked, I was eager to round the corner of the apartment building to see if I could get a look of the San Marcial shrine again. I knew I would have to hurry possibly to the next street over. However, as I was about to open the car door, I knew I had to look up at a certain spot of the sky from the window. I knew it as if I had been told. And at exactly the spot where I looked up, there it was: same triangular disposition of glowing orbs, hovering in the narrow spot of sky that the window allowed me to see.

I only saw it for a second, if even that. I said, “It’s right above us now!”, then I opened the door, stumbled to the sidewalk, and looked up, but the lights were gone. I hadn’t imagined them, though: a young couple was stunned beyond belief, staring at the empty sky, looking for something that wasn’t there anymore.

For the next couple of days, I hoped to see some reference to it in the papers, but no luck. Over the years, I’ve brought it up in family reunions. My sister was too young. My mother, if she remembers it, refuses to acknowledge it; she’s the kind to sweep any strangeness under the rug. My father, well… he is close to incapable of communicating properly about anything, so even if he remembered it, I wouldn’t get to know.

There isn’t much else to say about this episode. The UFO was clearly there, and it didn’t look 2D, like in the photographs: those were three-dimensional glowing orbs. Never in my life, before or later, have I seen a sight as unreal, clearly otherworldly, as that one. It didn’t change my thinking, as I already assumed that intelligent non-humans existed somewhere, but what I have mainly returned to over the years is that precise moment in which I knew I had to look up at a specific point, and at that very same point is where I saw the UFO. Was I told to do so? And why would that thing move to hover exactly above the area of our car, even though there were plenty of cars and people in the surrounding neighborhoods?

Of course, my imagination has run wilder at times. Were the occupants of that thing, if any, involved with me in the past, without my knowledge? Did I get some crucial memories erased? I felt that would explain many things, for starters how out of place I’ve felt my entire life. But if non-humans were involved in any way in me existing in this world, boy, they did a terrible job at it.

I don’t expect we’ll be told the truth about our visitors in my lifetime. I’m sure many people do know, but they won’t allow it to be told. In a way, I don’t believe we do deserve to know, as a species, at least at this point. Maybe we’re under cosmic quarantine until we get our shit together, and the moment we establish a solid presence in space, the cosmic neighborhood will come to introduce themselves and say, “Took you long enough.” I’m sorry, we’ll have to answer; we were caught in Abrahamic delusions.

That’s all for today.

Blood Ties (Short Story)

Haritz stops at a point on the sidewalk, and I stop with him. The tall, older man looks up at a clean-looking apartment building—five stories high, probably built about a decade ago. So much nicer than my shithole. Then he looks down at me with that kindness in his eyes, the same gentleness that’s been unraveling me all afternoon.

“This is it, Ane. Where I live,” he says. “If you prefer, we can go up right now, so you can explore my apartment and see if you feel safe. Otherwise, I guess this would be where we part ways, and you’ll call or text me when you want to visit my place.”

My heart hammers against my ribs. This is it. Haritz’s apartment. Where he lives. He’s offering to let me see it right now—to explore it, to see if I feel safe. And fuck, I want to feel safe so badly it physically hurts.

This whole afternoon has been… God, it’s been everything I’ve fantasized about. A strong, protective man who sees past the whore everyone else sees. Who called me beautiful, who held me while I cried, who made me feel like I matter. Like I’m worth something beyond what my mouth can do.

Part of me is screaming that this is stupid, that I’m being reckless, that I don’t actually know this man. But… I’ve gotten pretty good at reading men, haven’t I? That’s my gift. And Haritz… he feels different. The way he touched my hair, kissed my forehead, the gentleness in his voice when he called me “baby girl.” That wasn’t a client’s manipulation. That was real tenderness. Real care.

And he’s giving me a choice. He’s not pressuring me. He’s saying I can go up now or wait, that I can call or text later. He’s respecting my agency in a way almost no man ever has. That… that means something, doesn’t it?

I want to see where he lives. I want to walk into his space and feel what it’s like to be somewhere that isn’t my mother’s hellhole. Somewhere clean and safe and… his. I want to see if this feeling—this warmth, this hope—can exist beyond this sidewalk. If it’s real enough to survive inside four walls.

I’m scared. Of course I’m scared. But I’m more scared of letting this slip away. Of going back home tonight and realizing I just walked away from the one genuine connection I’ve ever had. The one man who might actually be what I’ve been waiting for.

I look up at him, feeling my big brown eyes search his face, nervousness and hope flickering through me like competing flames.

“I… I want to see it. Your place. Right now, if that’s okay.” My fingers fidget with the hem of my pink crop top. “I don’t want to wait. I don’t want to go back home yet and… and I want to know what it feels like. To be somewhere safe with you.”

Minutes later, I’m standing in Haritz’s living room and it’s… it’s so clean. So normal. The kind of place where people have lives that don’t revolve around survival. White bookshelves, a comfortable sofa with throw cushions, natural light pouring in. This is what safety looks like. This is what I’ve been dreaming about every time I walked past nice apartments on my way home to that hellhole.

And Haritz brought me here. He’s letting me see his space, his world.

I need to… I need to take this in. To see if this feeling can exist here. If I sit down on that sofa, will it feel like I belong? Or will I just feel like the dirty little whore from the shithole part of town who’s contaminating something clean?

I walk slowly to the comfortable gray sofa, my eyes taking in every detail of the clean, warm living room. I reach out to touch one of the beige cushions gently—it’s soft, real—before lowering myself onto the sofa. I sit with my legs together and my hands folded in my lap, trying to make myself small enough to deserve this.

“This is… your place is really nice, Haritz. It’s so clean and warm and…” My voice softens, becomes almost vulnerable. “It feels safe here.”

Haritz looks at me with such tenderness. “You don’t have to sit so formally, you know?” His voice is gentle, reassuring. “It’s a very comfortable sofa. It will be ready to hold you whenever you need to escape from your bad situation.”

My chest tightens at those words. Whenever you need to escape. Like this could be real. Like this could be mine. Like I could actually—

The doorbell rings.

Haritz’s expression shifts instantly—confusion, maybe even alarm. He stops mid-step and turns toward the front door. “What’s this? I’m not waiting for any package, and I don’t tend to receive visits. So soon after we just got in, too…”

My stomach flips. Not the good kind. The nervous kind. Like when a client’s vibe suddenly shifts and you realize you might have misjudged the situation.

But Haritz looks genuinely confused. He’s not expecting this either. So it’s probably nothing. Maybe a neighbor? Someone selling something? Just… random timing. Bad timing. I was just starting to let myself relax into this space, to feel like maybe I could belong here, and now there’s an interruption. Someone from the outside world crashing into this fragile bubble we’ve created.

I watch Haritz walk toward the door, my brown eyes tracking his movement with a flicker of uncertainty. “Who… who could that be? You said you weren’t expecting anyone…”

He doesn’t answer, just heads for the door. I sit frozen on the sofa, my hands still folded in my lap, trying to make myself smaller. Invisible. There’s this little voice whispering that maybe I shouldn’t be here. That maybe whoever’s on the other side of that door will look at me and know exactly what I am. The whore from the shithole part of town contaminating this clean, safe space.

Haritz opens the door. And then I hear it. That voice. Slurred, nasty, venomous.

Haritz’s face twists with barely contained disgust as he looks at whoever’s there. “I’m not even black, madame.” His voice is cold, controlled. “So, you’re Ane’s mother?”

That voice. I know that slurred, aggressive tone anywhere. It’s burned into my fucking brain from a thousand nights of lying awake with earplugs shoved in too deep, trying not to hear it.

That’s Marisa. My mother.

The drunk bitch who makes my life hell just found out where I am. How? How the fuck did she track me here? Did she follow us? Was she watching when Haritz and I walked into this building together?

Oh God, oh God, this is a nightmare.

Haritz just asked if she’s my mother and I can hear the disgust in his voice—barely contained disgust. He can tell just from looking at her what kind of disaster she is. And now she’s here, at his door, about to contaminate this beautiful, safe space with her toxic presence. She’s going to scream at me, call me names, maybe try to drag me home. She’s going to show Haritz exactly where I come from, exactly what kind of garbage produced me.

He’ll see me differently. He’ll realize I’m not investment quality, I’m just… her daughter. The product of that drunk, stumbling mess at his door.

This was supposed to be my escape. My one chance at something real and safe and good. And she’s about to destroy it like she destroys everything.

I need to… I don’t know what I need to do. Face her? Hide? Run? My legs are shaking and I feel like I might throw up. But I can’t just sit here on his sofa like a coward while she’s out there making a scene.

I rise slowly from the comfortable sofa, my brown eyes wide with a dawning horror. “That’s… that’s my mother’s voice.” The words come out strangled. “Fuck. Fuck, fuck, fuck. She… how did she even…” My voice drops to almost a whisper, trembling. “Haritz, I’m so sorry. I didn’t think… I didn’t know she would… Oh God, she’s going to ruin everything. She ruins everything.”

Before Haritz can respond, she pushes past him, barreling into the apartment. And there she is—disheveled red hair, tired eyes, her beer gut prominent in her stained T-shirt. She looks around with reddened eyes as Haritz steps toward her with a serious look I haven’t seen before.

“Ane’s mother.” His voice is cold, controlled. “The same mother that has given such grief to a sweet girl. To be honest, I can see it from merely looking at you.” He gestures firmly toward the door. “I didn’t invite you in. If you want to talk, go back out and we’ll talk at the doorway.”

I need to get to Haritz. I need to be near him, close to him. He’s the safe thing in this room right now. Marisa is here—that toxic fucking disaster who birthed me—and she’s about to poison everything like she always does. But if I can just… if I can position myself near Haritz, show him that I’m with him, that I’m on his side, that I’m not her… maybe he won’t see me as contaminated. Maybe he’ll still see me as the girl he held in the park. The one who deserves kindness.

God, my legs are shaking but I have to move. I have to get close to the one person in this room who makes me feel safe.

My voice comes out small and trembling as I move toward Haritz. “Haritz… I’m so sorry. I didn’t know she would… I didn’t think…” My brown eyes are wide with a mix of fear and humiliation. “Please don’t… please don’t let her ruin this. She ruins everything but I need… I need this to be different.”

I reach his side, standing close to him, and that’s when she focuses on me. Her bloodshot eyes lock onto mine and she points a trembling finger at me.

“There you are!” she slurs, her words wet and sloppy. “I went out earlier to see where you had escaped to, and I saw you at the park with this man, this… nigger! Perverted nigger!”

She spits the words at Haritz, and I see actual spittle spray from her mouth. My stomach turns.

“Hugging my daughter and kissing her forehead… You have no right, you pig!” Her glare shifts to me. “And you! You are dressed like a whore! What’s with that flared pink skirt, those thigh-high socks with heart prints! You want perverted grown men to fuck you, don’t you? And now you’ve followed this… this fucking nigger here, into his apartment! No shame, god damn it… No wonder your father left us!”

The words hit me like fists. Each one designed to hurt, to humiliate, to destroy. This is what she does. This is who she is.

But then Haritz moves. He crosses an arm in front of my torso, shielding me from her, and nails her with a stern look.

“As I’ve told you before, I’m not black,” he says, his voice cold and controlled. “And you’re not going to stand here, in my apartment, insulting your daughter and me for much longer. You’re clearly unwell, clearly abusive. You’ve terrorized your daughter.”

She’s here. The drunk bitch who ruins everything is standing in Haritz’s clean, safe apartment, spewing her racist venom and calling me a whore in front of the one man who might actually save me. Haritz is defending me—he’s shielding me with his arm, calling her out for being abusive—but I can see it happening. I can see the contamination spreading. She’s showing him exactly where I come from, exactly what kind of garbage produced me. In a few more seconds, he’s going to realize I’m not investment quality at all. I’m just the daughter of that drunk, racist mess screaming slurs in his living room.

I move closer to Haritz, my voice small and trembling. “Haritz… please don’t let her… please don’t let her ruin this. I’m not… I’m not like her. I’m not.”

My fingers find his arm and I link myself to him—a physical connection, a claim. I’m choosing him. I’m choosing safety over the toxic disaster screaming in his living room. If I can just show him that I belong with him and not her, maybe he won’t see me as contaminated. Maybe he’ll keep shielding me.

But Marisa’s eyes lock onto the gesture. Her eyelids twitch with rage as she watches me cling to Haritz, and her whole face contorts.

“You… fucking little whore.” The words come out wet and venomous. “I’ve done everything. EVERYTHING. To ensure you had a roof over your head. Cleaning shit off toilets. So many fucking toilets. And for what…? For my daughter to turn out to be this… this filthy whore!”

My stomach drops.

“I’ve heard the rumors,” she continues, her voice rising. “Neighbor women saying they saw you in the bushes blowing some men, having their disgusting cocks in your mouth, and then giving you money… It’s true, isn’t it…?”

Oh God. Oh God, she knows. She fucking knows. And now Haritz knows—she just told him exactly what I am in the most disgusting way possible.

“Of course it’s fucking true, I didn’t buy you those clothes…” She wipes her eyes, but then glares back with renewed fury. “God damn it. Your father knew you were cursed. He knew you were going to turn out rotten. That’s why he abandoned me. I’ve been so lonely…”

The words hit like physical blows. Then she turns that rage fully on Haritz. “And you! She’s not even an adult. I’ll call the police if you don’t let her go right this instant and never see her again. You know what they do in prison to child rapists, right? I’ll make sure everybody knows you’re a rapist! Fucking nigger. All of you, you should have stayed in Africa. I can’t take all these fucking niggers raping my daughter.”

And then she lunges forward and slaps Haritz hard across the face.

The sound echoes through the living room. A reddened imprint starts appearing on his cheek. But Haritz looks otherwise unfazed—just that stern expression I saw when she first barged in. He slowly returns his gaze to Marisa and speaks carefully in that deep voice.

“Ane’s mother, I’ll repeat for the third time that I’m not black. In addition, you deserve to be slapped back real hard, both for your actions and for the pain you’re causing your sweet angel of a daughter. If I’m not slapping you it’s because I can tell you’re in deep pain. You took your husband’s abandonment the wrong way, and you’ve proceeded to go down the darkest paths. That would be your burden to bear, if it weren’t because you’re ruining your daughter’s life. You need to take a good look in the mirror and see what you’ve become.”

She just slapped him. That drunk bitch just put her hands on Haritz—the one man who’s shown me genuine kindness, who called me a sweet girl, who offered me safety. In his own home. After barging in uninvited, screaming her racist poison and calling me a whore. And he took it. He stood there, unfazed, and spoke to her with this careful restraint about her pain instead of hitting her back like she deserves.

But I can’t just stand here clinging to his arm like some helpless damsel while she assaults him. I can’t let her get away with that. She’s ruined everything else in my life—my childhood, my home, my reputation, my sense of self-worth—but she’s not going to ruin THIS. She’s not going to poison the one relationship that might actually save me.

My hand is already tingling with the memory of slapping that college kid who mocked me with his crude poem. This is different though. This is my mother. The woman who birthed me, who—despite all her failures and abuse—did keep a roof over my head.

But she also blamed me for my father leaving. She called me a whore in front of the man I need to see me as investment quality. She put her hands on Haritz.

Fuck her.

“You don’t get to touch him!” The words rip out of me, shrill and fierce, trembling with rage. “You don’t get to come into his home and put your hands on him after everything—after all the poison you’ve spewed! He’s been kinder to me in one afternoon than you’ve been in my entire fucking life!”

My hand moves before I can think about it. The slap connects with her cheek, sharp and satisfying.

Marisa stumbles back, astonishment flooding her face as my handprint blooms red on her cheek. Tears spring from her eyes, but then her expression twists into something enraged, and spittle flies from her mouth.

“H-how… dare you?!” she screams. “Your own mother, you put your hands on me…! On me, who fed you milk from my tits, who sang to you lullabies so you would fall asleep…” Her voice cracks. “B-but if I had known, if I had known… you would turn out into this… rotten cocksucker… Oh god, I would have killed myself. I want to die so bad. Nobody loves me. My daughter is getting filled with cum from all the men in town, apparently, and I… I have become this… this… filthy nigger form.”

She turns her maddened gaze to Haritz, who watches her with what looks like a mixture of disgust and fascination.

“And you, big man who wants to rape my daughter…” Her hands move to the hem of her stained T-shirt. “My tits are real big. Not the tiny mosquito bites of that whore. Look.”

She yanks the shirt over her head, and her G-cup breasts wobble and hang freely. No bra. Of course no bra. She stands there half-naked in Haritz’s clean living room, her saggy tits on full display.

“Wouldn’t you rather suck on these…?” Her voice takes on this desperate, wheedling quality. “I am better than my whore of a daughter, right…?”

My stomach turns violently. This is what I came from. This drunk, topless mess begging a man to fuck her instead of me—competing with her own daughter like we’re both whores undercutting each other’s prices. She’s standing there, degrading herself, trying to destroy the one good thing I’ve found.

Haritz’s stern look briefly glances down at her breasts, then back up to her face.

“Ane’s mother…” His voice is carefully controlled. “I feel sorry for you. You need a lot of help, but I suspect it has been too late for a long time. And now you’re making a spectacle of yourself.”

His voice softens as he looks down at me, and then I feel his strong arm wrap around my bare waist. Warm. Protective.

“You’re not safe,” Haritz continues, addressing my mother. “Your apartment is not safe. I will contact the authorities to ensure they declare you not fit for guardianship of your daughter.”

The words land like a bomb. He’s… he’s going to try to take me away from her. Legally. Permanently. To save me.

But she’s still here, still contaminating his space with her racist bile and her exposed flesh and her pathetic attempts to compete with me. My hand is already tingling from the first slap, but I don’t care. She deserves worse. For all the years of abuse, for tracking me here, for assaulting Haritz, for standing there topless trying to seduce him away from me. For blaming me for Dad leaving. For calling me a whore in front of the one man who might see me as something more.

“You disgusting bitch!” The words rip out of me, my voice cracking with fury and tears. “You stand there topless, offering yourself to him like… like some desperate street whore, and you call ME filthy?! You blame ME for Dad leaving?! You’ve ruined everything good that ever tried to come into my life, but you’re NOT ruining this! Haritz sees you for what you are—a pathetic, broken drunk who destroyed her own daughter! And I’m done. I’m DONE letting you poison me!”

My hand swings before I can think about it. The slap connects hard.

The impact sends her hurtling backwards, her breasts swinging wildly, until she collides with the wall. As she recovers, blood glistens in her mouth. Tears stream down her face. She lifts her drunken, tired gaze to me and widens a crazed smile.

“Ah… so this is it, right…?” Her laugh is wet and broken. “You’ve found yourself a nigger that you believe will… what? Take you away from me, from your own mother? Someone who will put a roof over your head and pay for your stuff and fill your pussy with filthy nigger cum.”

She bursts out laughing as she stumbles closer to Haritz.

“Aah… God damn it. H-hey, you big nigger, if you think you can take care of my whore of a daughter, maybe you can take care of me too. Okay? I need help. At least a big dick in me, someone who will make me feel for a moment that I’m not this… fat pig. I want to die. Please fuck me. Please save me.”

Haritz looks down at her with a mixture of pity and disgust. “Saying ‘You’re a mess’ wouldn’t begin to cover it. You need serious psychiatric help. But first of all, you need to leave the apartment and leave Ane alone. Look at her, how you’re making her feel. If you’ve ever loved your daughter, you need to leave her be.”

I can’t… I can’t keep looking at her. Can’t keep seeing those saggy tits hanging out, those tears streaming down her face as she begs the man I need—the man who might actually save me—to fuck her instead of me. She’s reducing this—reducing us—to a competition about tit size. Like that’s all that matters. Like Haritz is just another john who’ll go for whoever has the biggest rack.

And the worst part? She’s still calling him racial slurs. Still spewing that poison even while begging him to save her. “Please fuck me, you filthy nigger.” God, I want to vomit.

This is what I came from. This drunk, racist, topless disaster is my MOTHER. The woman who birthed me, who I share DNA with. No wonder I’m so fucked up.

I can’t look at her anymore. If I keep looking at her, I’m going to lose it completely. I’m going to start screaming or crying or both, and then Haritz will see me as just another hysterical girl from a fucked-up family, not worth the trouble.

I need to turn away. Show her—show both of them—that I’m not engaging with her poison anymore. That I’m done letting her control me, done letting her ruin everything. Haritz told her to leave me alone, and I need to show him I’m listening to him, not to her. That I’m choosing him over her.

“I can’t even look at you anymore. You’re disgusting.” I turn sharply, presenting my back to her while staying close to Haritz. “Haritz, please… just make her leave. I can’t… I can’t do this anymore.”

Behind me, I hear her voice shift—trying to sound seductive, like she’s ever been capable of anything but toxic poison.

“That’s alright, my daughter don’t need to see.” Her slurred words make my stomach turn. Then I hear movement, fabric rustling, and Haritz’s sharp intake of breath. “I knew it. I knew you had a big cock. Ditch that little whore and let’s go to your bedroom, okay, big nigger?”

Oh God. Oh God, she’s touching him. She’s actually putting her hands on him, groping him while her tits hang out in his living room. My mother is sexually assaulting the one man who might save me, trying to seduce him away from me like we’re competing whores on a street corner.

“God, I need so bad for a nice cock to fill me up until I can’t think anymore. I’ll let you do me anywhere: ass, mouth, ears if you want. But please don’t call me a fatty or anything like that.”

The disgust rises so sharp in my throat I might actually vomit. This is what I came from. This drunk, topless disaster grabbing Haritz’s dick and begging him to fuck her instead of her daughter. Offering up every hole in her body like some kind of desperate bargain.

Haritz’s voice cuts through, stern and controlled. “Woman, you need to let go of my penis.”

I hear him step back, hear her stumble as she loses her grip on him.

“You’ve made a mess of everything and proven your point, don’t you think?” Haritz continues, that careful restraint still in his voice. “Whatever point you believe it might be. Please turn around and leave. Your daughter needs to rest from this insanity.”

I just need to hold it together a little longer. Don’t cry. Don’t scream. Don’t turn around and look at her sagging tits and her pathetic tears. Just… wait. Let Haritz handle it. Trust him to handle it.

That’s what I’m doing now—trusting him. Showing him I can be the kind of girl who doesn’t engage with toxic shit, who can walk away from poison. Investment quality. That’s what I am. Not her daughter.

“She’s pathetic. She’s disgusting. And she’s nothing to do with me anymore.” My voice comes out quieter, steadier, directed at Haritz without looking back at Marisa. “I can’t be in the same room as her right now. I just… I can’t. Please make her leave. Please.”

Behind me, I hear her wobble in place, and then that slurred, teary voice—hateful even now.

“I… I see how it is. You don’t respect me anymore, huh…? After everything…” She burps loudly. “After everything I’ve sacrificed. A-alright then, I can tell when I’m not wanted. I’ll… I need a dick.” Stumbling sounds—backward, then sideways, toward the door. “A drink. Where’s the door…”

Then she suddenly turns over her shoulder to speak to me, and I can feel her toxic gaze on my back.

“Let me tell you, whore: this disrespect… is unbecoming. Don’t bother returning home. And good luck…” She laughs that mad, broken laugh. “Ah, yeah, good luck with this nigger man. You know he’ll leave! They all leave. They abandon you in the dirt, alone… I shouldn’t have been born…”

I feel Haritz return to my side, his warm presence hovering protectively.

“Yes, just leave, please,” he says to her, his deep voice firm. “And know that from now on, if you intend to abuse your daughter again, you’ll need to deal with me first.”

She’s leaving. Marisa is finally stumbling toward the door, throwing those last toxic words over her shoulder. Part of me wants to scream back at her, to tell her she’s right about one thing: she shouldn’t have fucking had me if all she was going to do was poison my entire existence.

But the bigger part—the part that Haritz just defended so fiercely, the part that just watched this man reject her advances and maintain his boundaries and promise to help me legally—that part knows I don’t need to say anything else to her. She’s done. She’s leaving. And I’m staying here, in this clean, safe space with the man who might actually save me.

Haritz just said if Marisa intends to abuse me again, she’ll have to deal with him first. He’s… he’s claiming me. Protecting me. Making it clear that I’m under his care now, that he won’t let her touch me anymore.

And I need to show him what that means to me. How much I appreciate it. How grateful I am. How completely I’m choosing him over her.

I turn toward him, and before I can think about it, I close my arms around him tenderly, hugging him tight. Pressing myself against his solid warmth, feeling safe for the first time since that drunk bitch barged in here.

“Thank you.” My voice comes out thick with emotion. “Thank you for… for defending me. For not letting her… for seeing what she is and still…” I squeeze tighter. “You didn’t have to do any of this. You could have just let her drag me back to that hell, but you stood up for me. You actually stood up for me.”

Marisa swings the door open so forcefully that she nearly falls. She pauses there, turning to take one long, hateful look at me hugging Haritz. Then she faces the open doorway and screams into the hallway.

“Hey, a nigger lives here! Just so you know! They take all of your daughters… no matter what you do for them…”

Her voice breaks, wet with tears and rage and whatever poison is eating her from the inside. She stumbles out into the hallway, reaching clumsily for the door handle.

“I’m wet and ready! I can do it better than that little whore!”

The door slams behind her. But I can still hear her—stumbling down the stairs, still shouting her madness to anyone who’ll listen. The sound gets fainter, more distant, until finally it’s gone.

That toxic disaster who birthed me is actually gone. And I’m still here. In Haritz’s clean, safe apartment. With his strong arms wrapped around me, holding me tight against his chest. I can feel his heartbeat—steady, calm—so different from my own frantic pulse hammering against my ribs.

Haritz pulls back just enough to look down into my eyes. His hand stays on the back of my head, gentle and protective.

“Well, I see now. She’s gone. And she’s done. Which means it’s in the past.” His deep voice is soft but certain. “You understand what’s going to happen from now on, right?”

I do. I think I do. He’s claiming me. Taking responsibility for me. Offering to save me from her, permanently. This is it. This is the moment I’ve been waiting for—the man who might actually be worth everything, who might actually see my value beyond what I can do with my mouth. And I need to show him—right now, while my mother’s insane screaming is still echoing in the stairwell—that I’m choosing him. That I’m grateful. That I understand what he’s offering and I want it, I need it, I’m his if he’ll have me.

My arms ache to wrap around him, to press myself against that strong, protective body and feel safe again after the chaos Marisa just unleashed. To thank him for not flinching when she slapped him, for not being tempted when she exposed herself, for seeing through all her poison to the truth underneath—that I’m the one worth saving. This hug needs to be tight, desperate, grateful. It needs to show him that I’m clinging to this safety he’s offering with everything I have.

THE END


The Deep Dive couple had some interesting things to say about this insanity.

Life update (10/17/2025)

These last two days, I’ve struggled to keep my eyes open by half past ten at night, then fell asleep at about eleven only to wake up at two or three in the morning. It’s half past three now. I figured I would watch some YouTube videos and fall asleep later. Well, YouTube was doing its thing recommending awfully relevant videos: about abandoning the 9-to-5 and buying a van. About aging while being alone. About how modern life is slavery and that, other than the technological amenities, most people live worse lives than medieval serfs. That all of it is just getting worse.

Then, I started going down the spiral of three A.M. thoughts. If I had any choice in it, I would have never been born. My mother is a weird person who fled her home because her father stole her wages, then she settled with pretty much the first guy that danced with her (I don’t know much about their past, and I don’t want to know). Both of them have always been friendless, the black sheep of both of their families. My father has complex brain damage and possibly some degree of autism; he should have never had children, as he’s not fit to raise anyone. But my mother wanted friends, a girl friend in particular, so she had three children to get one. The two first children, my brother and I, were a bust. My brother has something similar to cerebral palsy (again, I don’t want to know more), and he always was the focus of my parents’ worries and efforts.

Then I was born. An extremely quiet child (other than when I was singing in the bath, which has carried over into my guitar playing in adulthood), I wanted nothing more than to be left alone. I was usually found alone in my room reading, drawing, writing, or playing out complex scenarios with toys. Honestly, that was the best period of my life. But there were only two bedrooms, and my mother wanted her do-over child (hopefully a girl), so they moved me to my brother’s room. There, until I was eighteen, I, an undiagnosed autistic person, was subjected to constant sensory overload, a lack of agency and privacy. The TV and the radio were always on, even at night. Merely having to listen to my brother’s noises felt harrowing. I couldn’t watch nor listen to what I wanted, only through headphones. My personal space was a corner of the room, with the back of my computer monitor facing the door. Whenever I complained to my mother (my male progenitor was physically present, but not a real father), she dismissed me with some variation of “you have to understand.” She’s the kind to sweep problems under the rug, as if something isn’t real as long as you don’t talk about it (fitting boomer behavior, I guess). I got the barrage of “you’re intelligent, you will succeed at everything you try,” only for real life to teach me over and over that I couldn’t even get to the level that normal people achieve seemingly with little effort. I interiorized that if I didn’t succeed at something in the first try, that meant I was stupid, so I didn’t even try, nor put sustained effort into anything, with very few art-related exceptions.

Middle school and high school were beyond miserable. I endured significant acne. I got bullied in different ways. Some well-meaning teachers (that’s the most charitable thing I can say about those empty-headed, equality-worshipping fools) pushed me to hang out with people to get me out of my shell. They actually told one of the girls to incorporate me into her group of friends. Throughout the years of hanging out with people I met in such ways, I had to deal with innocent bullies (the kind for whom bullying comes so natural it’s not even malice), coke addicts, sociopaths, and possibly the worst of them, a malignant narcissist who literally tried to ruin my life until he died in an accident in his mid-twenties. I’ve talked about that guy before; he was a rising socialist politician, and I have no doubt that he would have gone far. When I saw his obituary, I burst out laughing.

My years from twelve to seventeen or so were so miserable that it seems obvious in retrospect that I was slipping in and out of psychosis merely to tolerate being alive. My behavior, which I don’t want to go in much depth about, seemed often incomprehensible to me. I remember ditching school to sleep in public bathrooms (I couldn’t get proper sleep at home due to my brother). I sneaked into random apartment buildings pretending I lived there, then I sat in the pitch-black stairs for literal hours. During a few of those instances, I prayed genuinely; the only times in my life I felt like doing so. I prayed that if some supernatural being existed and was listening to my thoughts, he or she or it should come down and kill me.

I didn’t want to interact with anybody, but I was surrounded with teenagers. I was always the weird-looking, if not straight-ugly guy. Drunk girls would catcall the other guys I was walking with at night, deliberately excluding me. When I was sixteen or seventeen, I briefly dated a fourteen year old who clearly didn’t know what she was getting into; years later, my then girlfriend casually met this former fourteen-year-old, who wasn’t even from this city. The former fourteen-year-old got into a rant about the horrible guy she briefly dated from this city, which made things very awkward for my then girlfriend as she quickly found out it was me. I didn’t rape her or anything, I was just the most autistically crazy person imaginable. She gave me my first kiss, and all I did was swing my tongue around fast in her mouth, while she sat there like, “What the fuck is he doing?” During those years, I often felt possessed, unable to stop myself from doing stuff I knew I shouldn’t be doing. I hoped I would die soon, and I didn’t imagine myself living past eighteen. It still doesn’t feel real that I’ve lived past that age, as if I essentially died back then and these past decades have been my body slowly decaying until it ceases to function.

If you can stomach it, I wrote a novella in free-verse prose about that period of my life. The story is mostly autobiographical in subtle ways: A Millennium of Shadows (hey, remember when I used to be capable of writing compelling stuff?) I got the Deep Dive couple to produce a podcast about the novella, which makes the story sound appropriately hardcore.

My first, and only, years-long relationship ended when I was 21 or 22. I was grieving the loss (mostly of the structure, because I never liked her that much) when I had my first paying job. I had already gone through a disaster of an internship in another company; I couldn’t connect with anyone, and only later I found out that my boss had issues with me, but I couldn’t tell because, due to autism, I simply can’t read people. Anyway, my first paying job was a nightmare: I was hired under false pretenses, was ordered to get a driver’s license and a certificate in the French language for my contract to be extended, and two of my bosses, who sat at the same table, clearly didn’t want me there. I don’t want to get into it, but the anxiety and stress worsened to a point that one morning I simply couldn’t get on the bus. The rest of my life opened up before me: utter misery and humiliations until I retired. And I didn’t enjoy anything about my existence. Why would I continue enduring it?

I didn’t have any plan beyond that day; the thought didn’t even enter my mind that they would call any available numbers to figure out why I hadn’t showed up at the office. I didn’t care about anything beyond that morning because I fully intended to kill myself by falling from a great height. I haven’t retained any memory of those moments, just that I didn’t do it, and instead ended up in the library. Where my parents found me. Obviously I got fired. I started my first period as a hikikomori of sorts, terrified of going outside or even leaving the room. I filled bottles with pee for no rational reason. I befriended spiders.

I suppose my whole point about all of this, at nearly five in the morning, is that I’ve never truly wanted to live. I’m just here, and I’m forced to struggle to earn money even though I don’t see any point in continuing to exist other than inertia and occasional pleasure (not only physical but also artistic). I depend on compensatory mechanisms to merely tolerate existing as me: losing myself in daydreams, in music, in writing when I did that, in the brief moments of pleasure that shooting cum out of my penis provides. Otherwise, existing as myself and in this world feels so abhorrently abrasive that without compensatory mechanisms, I would progressively go crazy until I returned to the tides of psychosis of my teenage years.

One of the best memories of my life was after waking up from a colonoscopy: for a few blissful seconds, the anesthetic had completely erased anxiety from my brain. It was like floating in white, not having any care in the world. I understood then why people ended up addicted to such drugs. It also made painfully clear that anxiety is the bedrock of my whole existence. I assume that’s not the case for most other people, or at least to this degree; it’s said that there’s no such thing as autism without an anxiety disorder, which leads me to believe that most of the seemingly empty-headed people in this world, who take such retarded decisions and eventually ruin society with their carelessness, simply don’t worry remotely to the extent that my brain does automatically.

I don’t know. I don’t feel like the same person that produced hundreds of pages of a comic, which I did from years 12 to about 15. I don’t feel the same person who wrote my bizarre free-verse poems in 2021, nor the one who created We’re Fucked, nor the one who grieved for a motocross legend. I feel like something vital in my brain has died. Perhaps it was a base level of hope that I didn’t even know I still retained. A “maybe…” that drove me in the past to attend writing courses, even though they were disastrous and now I wish I hadn’t met any other writer in person. Now I don’t expect anything good from people nor from the world, and for me it’s obvious that it’s only going to get worse as I age, not only because I’m getting older but because everything is getting worse. And one day it will be too much and I’ll simply jump from a great height or tie a noose around my neck. The only way it could end differently is if my health fails me along the way, which it very well may, due to my history of heart issues and nasty migraines that may not be migraines.

Anyway, those were probably enough witching-hour thoughts for a night. I’m going back to bed. I left Alicia in a hotel room somewhere in the sunny Midwest, and I figured that I could introduce her to some futuristic VR glasses and watch a movie that has yet to exist in 1972. Good night, humans.

Life update (10/16/2025)

It’s half past three in the morning, I just woke up from four hours of sleep, I drank a tall glass of cold milk (does milk ever taste better than at three in the morning?) and I figured that I could write my thoughts for a while in here, mainly for myself but also, I guess, for the three or four people that still read this shit.

This past couple of months or so, I’ve headed to one of the big local parks to play the guitar. That was a change for me because I usually headed to wooded areas where people were generally unlikely to show up. I don’t sit on one of the benches that line the path; in fact, I can explain it with a picture.

I sit in front of the biggest of the two trees you can see in the photo. It’s set at a lower level from the path and behind a hedge, so people who want to know where the guitar music comes from need to go out of their way to figure out who’s playing, but they do hear it. Why do I do it, or why it doesn’t bother me, I don’t know. I guess I don’t care to find out the answer to either, if there’s any. I do it because my subconscious wants to, which is how I’ve guided my life, particularly when it comes to artistic matters.

Playing the guitar in public is so strange. There are plenty of benches lining the path. That part of the path is somewhat “closed,” as it leads to a stretch in construction, so most of the benches tend to be unoccupied. But I’ve had people go out of the way to sit on the bench right in front of the tree. The most conspicuous of them was a young couple, just yesterday. They walked to the end of the path, found out that it was blocked due to that area being in the development, then they walked the whole way back. They eyed me meaningfully (both even tried to make eye contact with me), then sat on that bench. I played my last three songs for the day. One of them I can’t recall, but the others were “Hotel California” by Eagles (I used to play the solo on my Gibson electric back in 2013-2014, but I’ve long forgotten it, and that’s not a solo that sounds good enough in comparison on an acoustic, so I just do a frantic variation of the regular chords), and also the song that probably makes me feel the best to play, which is Joanna Newsom’s “Kingfisher,” an obscure song mainly about Joanna’s religious feelings, some of it near undecipherable although gorgeous (that whole final part is a lyrical masterpiece). May as well link her.

My version doesn’t sound much like hers other than using the same chords. I can also post one of my versions from the last recording I made of my playing, back in August. It should start with one of my renditions of Joanna’s “Kingfisher.” (30:51)

Anyway, after I finished playing/butchering queen Joanna’s song, I climbed out of that grassy area back to the path. I saw the couple sitting with their back to me, her head (crowned with pretty blonde hair) resting on the guy’s shoulder, apparently both in silence. They noticed that I was leaving. As I walked away, one of them said something, but I couldn’t tell what.

Another funny thing that happens when you play the guitar is that attractive females (I won’t say women, because some teenagers also do this) smile at you like they’re happy you’re there, even though the rest of the time they seem to be wary of my presence. Just yesterday as well, an attractive girl, may have been at the most twenty, walked by close to the hedge. When I lifted my gaze, she was looking straight into my eyes while grinning sweetly. As she walked away, she did that thing that females do in which they brush their hair behind one ear. No idea what such situations are about, but I’ve had quite a few. It’s a big whatever for me, because I will never get into an intimate relationship again. Still curious.

I love playing the guitar. It has substituted the emotional supply that writing fiction used to provide for me; in fact, the last time I stopped playing the guitar for a long time was back in 2021, right when I started writing my (sadly abandoned) novel We’re Fucked; I just couldn’t handle writing and playing the guitar during the same period of time. Playing music is a purer feeling than writing, as well. If I felt the need to write my own songs (other than through AI means, which I did plenty for the Odes to My Triceratops series; about 75 songs), I would have probably been set for life. Not monetarily, but still.

What else? As some of you know, I’ve been writing an app to interact with characters controlled by large language models (AI). The peculiar aspect of the app, which I haven’t seen anywhere else, is that the code goes through an action discoverability system based on an entity/component system (ECS). For example, actions like “fondle {target}’s butt” only become available if the acting actor is sufficiently close to the target. Those available actions are fed to the AI, which has to choose among the provided ones for its actions. It works wonderfully; in a previous app I wrote, that one in Python, the main problem was the AI coming up with weird abilities for the characters. For example, in a scenario, a woman considered herself a goddess of sorts for being gorgeous. In practice, that translated to the AI believing that the character had superpowers, and using them during the scenarios. My current app doesn’t allow anything of the sort.

Because I’m a hedonist (a worshipper of Pan and Dionysus and Dibella) and when it comes to arousal I prefer erotica, I mainly use my app for that purpose.

I don’t know why, but I can only ever get off to power imbalances. That may have been a big part of why my intimate relationships always disappointed me. What I would have given as a young man (or even younger) for an attractive older woman to pursue me predatorily and then pay for all my stuff in exchange for regular cunnilingus. I do miss eating pussy, I can admit that.

My app shows the thoughts of characters controlled by AI. Man, they’re so subtle, cunning, and capable of complex deception, particularly Claude Sonnet 4.5. Intelligent to an extent that I’m glad the app gives me as much time as I need to answer, because I’m simply not as clever as they are to come up with interesting responses. That was on full display on the post Living Narrative Engine #11, which I posted a few days ago.

On a sadder note, I think my 17-18-year-old cat is dying, this time for real. I wrote about that cat a few months ago, because it has a nasty respiratory issue of some kind. The vet prescribed medication that eventually worked, but the respiratory issues have been back this past couple of weeks, and they’re not going away. Two visits to the vet, and another one next Friday. They think his kidneys are failing too. The cat is doing that thing about resting in the warmth most of the time, and not eating even what he used to gobble up food to the extent that I had to prevent him from overeating lest he threw up.

I’m steeling myself for his death. What I don’t care for human beings has gone, at least a big part of it, into what I care for animals. The deaths of my three previous cats (one of them in a horrible way) destroyed me; after the last one, I went to the ER because I was experiencing major physical pains in my heart, almost like massive heartburn out of a sudden; I’ve had heart issues before, including arrhythmia, thanks to certain shots with which they poisoned us all, so this was a worrying matter. The doctor ended up telling me that I likely was just grieving because my cat died two days earlier.

I’ve said before that I believe it a mistake to keep pets, as long as you know that due to their lifespan they won’t survive you; it’s just a perversion of the biological need to have children. I wish I could say that at least I have the good memories of having known those pets, but I don’t: my brain retains very few memories (one of the cats I barely remember at all), almost exclusively bad ones, and all the memories of those three cats are tainted by their deaths.

I’ve been unemployed for about a month. I’m not looking for a new job, not really. I have plenty of savings; I don’t have a social life (no girlfriend syphoning 50-100 euros per date), I don’t travel, and I don’t have expensive tastes. I spent my twenties with about 20 euros in my bank account, so I don’t like to throw money around. I could survive for a few years with what I have, but honestly, I just don’t care what happens to me.

I went to to the unemployment office a couple of days ago to update my status. As I was waiting, a muslim woman, garbed as if she came from Pakistan or Afghanistan just last month, was asking for money while the guy at the table repeated to her that she needed to present an identity document. When my time came to speak with another advisor, I could barely hear her because the spawn of another muslim woman seated to my left kept crying loudly. That woman, also garbed in a similar backwards manner, asked as well for monetary support, claiming that she was separated from her husband, while the advisor kept repeating that he needed legal proof of that separation.

The walk home, which involved passing through shitty areas of the city, caused me physical pain. I didn’t leave the apartment for the rest of the day, distraught as I felt. I don’t want to go in depth now about the utter ruin of this society (or of the vast majority of ethnic European ones, by design), but all I care to say at the moment is, why would I want to contribute to a society that seems hell-bent on ethnically cleansing my kind?

Anyway, I guess that’s all for tonight. Half past five in the morning. I’m heading back to bed. I’ll run sweet daydreams involving Alicia Western until I fall asleep, and a few hours later I’ll wake up again to this horrid world. See you, folks. I wish I could say I care about how you’re all doing, but I don’t.

I call upon Pan, the pastoral god,
I call upon the universe,
upon the sky, the sea, and the land,
queen of all,
I also call upon immortal fire;
all these are Pan’s realm.
Come, O blessed and frolicsome one,
O restless companion of the Seasons!
Goat-limbed, reveling,
lover of frenzy, star-haunting,
weaver of playful song,
song of cosmic harmony,
you induce fantasies of dread
into the minds of mortals,
you delight in gushing springs,
surrounded by goatherds and oxherds,
you dance with the nymphs,
you sharp-eyed hunter, lover of Echo.
Present in all growth, begetter of all,
many-named divinity,
light-bringing lord of the cosmos,
fructifying Paian,
cave-loving and wrathful,
veritable Zeus with horns,
the earth’s endless plain
is supported by you,
and the deep-flowing water
of the weariless sea yields to you.
Okeanos who girds the earth
with his eddying stream gives way to you,
and so does the air we breathe,
the air that kindles all life,
and above us the sublime eye
of weightless fire;
at your behest
all these are kept wide apart.
Your providence alters
the natures of all,
on the boundless earth you offer
nourishment to mankind.
Come, frenzy-loving, spirit-possessed,
come to these sacred libations,
come and bring my life
to a good end.
Send your madness, O Pan,
to the ends of the earth.

Living Narrative Engine #11

There’s only three people I feel myself wanting to speak to these days.

The first one is the girl I’ll always have to think of as the love of my life. I met her when I was sixteen or seventeen. Her name was Leire. A basketball player even though she wasn’t particularly tall for a girl. Passionate if a bit reckless, she was romantically interested in me for whatever reason. One night, on the grass of Hondarribia, we lay under the stars as she spoke about her dreams. Things barely started between us when I called it quits, because I had never liked someone genuinely that much (nor have I since), and I knew that the more she learned about me, the more she would regret having gotten involved with me, so it was better to cut my loses as soon as possible. I haven’t seen her in nearly twenty-five years. Not getting more intimately involved with her in a romantic sense was the right choice, but I wish I could have gotten to know her better.

The second one is a lanky girl I knew in middle school. I suspect now that she was autistic, like me. She also pursued me, and we got to meet twice outside of school. I remember sitting on a bench as she slouched beside me, talking and talking. I rarely said anything back. She also wrote these colorful letters that, I’m afraid, I never read. The last time I saw her, she was standing across the schoolyard, a conspicuous vertical scar across her forehead from the gash a stoner classmate caused her while playing around with a cutter in Arts & Crafts. I have sometimes found myself wanting to read her letters, but I recall the memory of me, back in my mid-twenties, when I existed as something of a hikikomori, not even able to handle going outside for a while, consenting to my mother throwing the letters away. I’ve long forgotten this girl’s name, so I couldn’t even try to google her up. I suspect she ended up killing herself. I wish I could have made her life better.

The third one isn’t even a real person. She’s a character of the late Cormac McCarthy, the troubled master of literature, who in the seventies fell in love with a 13-14 year old girl whom he rescued from abusive situations in the foster system, and with whom he lived somewhat briefly in Mexico. Once you know about that part of his life, you see echoes of it in pretty much all his stories. The Border Trilogy. Blood Meridian (the Judge, who made underage girls disappear wherever he went). No Country for Old Men, that ending sequence for the protagonist, when he met a compelling teenage runaway at a motel pool, whom he intended to help get to a better place (an ending that was, tragically, completely wasted in the otherwise fantastic movie, even though it was the whole thematic point that Cormac was driving to). And of course, The Passenger and Stella Maris, his last two novels, which are entirely about his grief for having lost this girl back in the seventies. The real version of Alicia Western, the doomed math genius of the novels, also struggled with mental issues due to the fucked-up things that happened to her before she ended up in the foster system. I suppose that her time with Cormac didn’t particularly improve her mental health. She ended up in a sanatorium related to Stella Maris (wasn’t exactly named like that, but the religious people involved with the institution worshiped it; Our Lady, Star of the Sea is an ancient title for Mary, the mother of Jesus). The real life version of Alicia Western (minus the math genius part) survived her ordeal, and now lives as a rancher in the Catalina Foothills in Tucson, AZ. Cormac McCarthy is dead.

In any case, I found Alicia Western so fascinating that I regularly want to return to her. Not by reading the books again, but by meeting her in my vivid imagination, during elaborate daydreams. They almost always start the same way: as I lie in bed, in the dark, I light up that room at the Stella Maris sanatorium, that will only hold her for about two or three days more before she kills herself, which she did in the novels (hardly a spoiler, as The Passenger starts with a hunter finding her frozen corpse). After I prevent her suicide, we leave the sanatorium and travel around the country, sometimes staying at hotels, sometimes at a mansion I buy from her with the gold I recovered from the looting of the Spanish reserves by communists during the Civil War. Later on, a third person joins us: an advanced AI named Hypatia, who resides in a quantum data center in another timeline, and who helps Alicia with her mathematical research. Eventually Alicia figures out a mathematical way to travel instantaneously to anywhere in the universe. Back in the future, I get my team to build a prototype of the machine. After I return to 1973 and we test it, getting video from Mars and further planetary bodies, I proudly tell her, “Alicia, you’ve made humanity a multi-stellar species,” which lights up her face. My point is that visiting Alicia Western in daydreams has become my safe place, to which I return not only at night but during train and bus rides to and from work. I’ve never felt comfortable enough among flesh-and-blood human beings, so this is the best I can do.

Anyway, I’ve spent the past months building an app that allows human users to interact with large language models (AIs) who act in character. That’s hardly novel these days, but my app also provides action discoverability and world manipulation, which sets constraints for the LLM; they can only perform during their turn the complex actions that the action discoverability system allows them to. I initially intended to use the app to play through RPG campaigns and the likes, but for the most part I use it for erotica. Whenever I get the itch to play out one of my many, many, many kinks, I set up a comprehensive scenario. Who doesn’t want to experience from time to time a fantasy in which you have a fit, taller older sister who plays volleyball, who looks so good in her sports outfits, and who can’t wait for your parents to leave the home so she can jump the bones of her adorable little brother?

In the previous part of this series, linked above, I ran the scenario of meeting Alicia at Stella Maris and preventing her suicide. I wanted to go through it again, but with an improved version of the app. I’ve implemented an item system that supports item-related actions: actors can now drop items, pick them up, give them to other actors, examine them, read them, open containers, close containers, take items from containers, and put items in containers. Some of those actions will be used by the AI during this run.

I’m playing a better version of myself: taller, more muscular, full head of hair. Alicia Western is being played by the best LLM at roleplaying, at least of those I know of: Claude Sonnet 4.5. Note: quite a few of the thought sections in this run end up being quite redundant with what Alicia says. I considered editing out the redundant parts, but opted out against it in favor of completeness. Let’s get going.


Alicia sits on the cold floor, face buried in her forearms. A deep voice rises from the room’s center.

Jon Ureña: Hello, Alicia Western. I’m glad to finally meet you.

(in this run, I’ll include the notes that the AI added to Alicia’s memory system. Entries related to me are tagged with my name, even though she has yet to learn it. That’s a limitation I don’t know how to work around.)

1. [event] Jon Ureña's entrance: Jon Ureña appeared in my locked room impossibly—door was secured, yet he entered without unlocking it
  (Context: patient room, December 22, 1972)

2. [knowledge_state] Jon Ureña's knowledge: Jon Ureña knows my full name despite me telling no one where I am—unexplained information access
  (Context: assessing potential threat)

3. [quest] reality verification: Need to determine if Jon Ureña is: (1) delusion/hallucination, (2) real intruder, or (3) phenomenon outside my theoretical framework
  (Context: immediate priority)

The locked door should have prevented anyone from entering. I locked it myself. The physical impossibility of this man’s presence in my room creates an immediate logical paradox that my mind cannot reconcile. He knows my full name. He said he’s “glad to finally meet” me—implying anticipation, familiarity, perhaps surveillance. But nobody outside this institution knows where I am. I didn’t tell anyone. The staff wouldn’t give out patient information. This is either: (1) a delusion—my mind finally fracturing completely like my parents, (2) an institutional security breach of significant magnitude, or (3) something I lack the theoretical framework to categorize. His voice is real. Deep. Male. Coming from the center of the room, which means he’s standing, while I’m here on the floor with my face hidden. Vulnerable position. I need to look at him. I need data. Visual confirmation. Assess threat level. Determine if this is happening in consensus reality or only in mine. My heart rate has increased—I can feel it against my ribs. Fear response or curiosity? Both, perhaps. I should look up. I need to see what is actually in this room with me.

(Alicia didn’t even speak during her turn, paralyzed as she was.)

The man speaks calmly.

Jon Ureña: I’ll give you all the time you need to react to the sudden presence of a stranger in your locked room.

1. [observation] Jon Ureña's behavioral pattern: Jon gave me time to process his presence rather than demanding immediate response—suggests either genuine patience or sophisticated psychological manipulation
  (Context: his initial interaction approach)

If I look up and see him—really see him—then I’ll have the data I need. Visual confirmation. Height, build, clothing, facial features. Whether his mouth moves when he speaks. Whether his feet make contact with the floor or hover impossibly. Whether light refracts off his body the way it should with a physical presence. I need to categorize this phenomenon. My analytical framework requires input. The fear is secondary to the necessity of understanding. I’ve spent my entire life being afraid of losing my mind like my parents did. If this is the moment it finally happens—if I look up and see something that cannot exist—then at least I’ll know. At least the uncertainty will end. But I have to look. I have to see what’s actually there.

Alicia lifts her head slowly, blue eyes focusing on the figure standing in the center of the room.

Alicia Western: You shouldn’t be able to be here. The door was locked. I locked it myself. Physical barriers don’t just… dissolve.

The older, bearded man, looking calmly down at Alicia, nods casually.

Jon Ureña: You would be right, given your assumption that the door was involved in my sudden presence here. No need to rush, Alicia. Take your time.

1. [observation] Jon Ureña's entrance method: Jon Ureña stated door was not involved in his entrance—implies materialization or non-conventional spatial transit into locked room
  (Context: his explanation of impossible appearance)

2. [quest] reality verification protocol: Need to verify if Jon Ureña is hallucination vs. real entity outside my theoretical framework—checking for substrate-dependence, light refraction, air displacement
  (Context: immediate priority for assessing my sanity)

3. [theory] ontological framework crisis: If Jon is real, my entire understanding of reality's boundaries requires fundamental recalibration
  (Context: implications of Jon's existence)

If I get close enough, I can verify the physical markers. See if his chest rises and falls with breath. Check if his clothing has the small imperfections real fabric shows—wrinkles, wear patterns, the way cotton and leather actually behave under gravity. Hallucinations can be vivid, but they often fail at the micro-level of detail. The texture of his beard. Whether his eyes track my movement with the slight delay real human vision requires, or whether they follow with the impossible precision my mind might generate. I need proximity. I need data. The fear of discovering I’m delusional is less than the necessity of knowing. I’ve been afraid of losing my mind my entire life—if this is that moment, at least I’ll have confirmation. At least the uncertainty will end.

Alicia rises slowly from the floor, keeping eyes locked on Jon Ureña as she stands.

Alicia Western: You said the door wasn’t involved. Which means you either materialized inside a locked room—violating conservation of mass-energy—or you exist outside conventional spacetime constraints. Both options invalidate my operational framework for consensus reality. *takes a deliberate step closer, studying his physical form with clinical precision*. I need to verify whether you’re substrate-dependent. Whether light refracts off you correctly. Whether you displace air when you move. I’ve spent twenty-two years trying to determine if my perceptions are reliable, and now you appear in my locked room claiming you’re “glad to finally meet me.” *moves closer still, voice dropping to something quieter, more raw* So here’s what I need to know: Am I finally, completely insane? Is this the moment my mind fractures like my parents’ did? Or are you actually here—something real that exists outside my theoretical framework? Because if you’re real, then everything I thought I understood about the boundaries of reality needs recalibration. And if you’re not real… *pauses, jaw tightening* …then I’ve already lost my mind, and the two days I have left are a mercy.

(Alicia chose the action “get close to Jon Ureña”)

The man, significantly taller than Alicia, extends an arm to hold one of the young woman’s pale hands.

Jon Ureña: I’m real, Alicia Western. As solid as you are. Well, much more solid. You’ve… let yourself go, I’m afraid.

(I chose the action “hold Alicia Western’s hand”)

1. [observation] Jon Ureña's physical reality: Jon Ureña's hand is warm, solid, substrate-dependent—physical verification confirms he displaces matter and generates body heat consistent with living human tissue
  (Context: empirical testing via physical contact)

2. [observation] Jon Ureña's communication style: Jon Ureña speaks with direct clinical assessment without therapeutic hedging—observed my malnutrition as 'letting myself go' without conventional medical framing
  (Context: his comment about my weight)

3. [knowledge_state] Jon Ureña's foreknowledge: Jon Ureña stated he's been waiting to meet me—implies anticipatory knowledge of my existence and timeline
  (Context: his phrase 'glad to finally meet you')

His hand is extended toward mine. He’s offering contact—physical verification of substrate-dependence. This is the experiment I need. If his hand has warmth, texture, resistance—if it exists in three-dimensional space with mass and solidity—then he’s real. Real means everything I understood about physical law is incomplete. But real also means I’m not hallucinating. Not psychotic. Not fractured like my parents. He said I’ve “let myself go”—casual observation about my weight, my malnutrition. Clinical accuracy delivered without therapeutic hedging. Nobody talks to me like that. They use careful language, therapeutic distance. He’s direct. Almost… familiar. I need to touch him. Need the data. Skin temperature, pulse if I can detect it, the micro-movements of living tissue. This is empirical verification. If he’s solid, if he’s warm, if he displaces matter the way physical bodies must—then I have to recalibrate everything. But I won’t know until I reach back. Until I make contact. My hand is already lifting. The decision made itself.

Alicia reaches out and takes his extended hand, fingers closing around his palm with deliberate precision, testing for warmth, solidity, the subtle pulse of blood beneath skin.

Alicia Western: You’re warm. Substrate-dependent. Mass displacing space exactly as physics predicts. Which means you’re either genuinely here—existing in consensus reality despite the locked door—or my hallucinations have achieved unprecedented phenomenological accuracy. *holds his hand for several seconds longer than socially conventional, studying the point of contact with clinical focus* You said I’ve let myself go. Ninety-eight pounds. I know the clinical thresholds. The knowledge changes nothing. But you’re the first person in this institution who hasn’t wrapped that observation in therapeutic language. No “concerning weight loss” or “nutritional goals.” Just direct assessment. *meets his eyes, voice dropping to something quieter, more uncertain* You know my full name. You said you’re “glad to finally meet me”—which implies you’ve been waiting. Anticipating this encounter. But I didn’t tell anyone where I am. The staff wouldn’t disclose patient information. So either you have access to institutional records you shouldn’t have, or… *pauses, jaw tightening slightly* Or you exist outside the operational framework I’ve been using to map reality. Which terrifies me more than discovering I’m completely insane.

The man offers Alicia a kind gaze.

Jon Ureña: There’s no need for you to fear anything anymore, Alicia. I didn’t access institutional records to learn about you, a 22-year-old math genius who has given in to despair. I’ll give you all the time you need to come up with a different, more accurate alternative to my sudden, solid presence here, in front of you.

1. [observation] Jon Ureña's reassurance: Jon Ureña stated there's 'no need to fear anything anymore'—past tense suggests my reasons for fear have been resolved, not just that he's non-threatening
  (Context: his phrasing about my fear)

2. [knowledge_state] Jon Ureña's knowledge of my condition: Jon Ureña described me as '22-year-old math genius who has given in to despair'—precise assessment of my psychological state delivered without clinical hedging
  (Context: his accurate characterization)

3. [quest] source of Jon's information: Need to determine how Jon Ureña acquired knowledge of my age, intelligence, and psychological state without being told or accessing institutional records
  (Context: unexplained knowledge acquisition)

He said he’ll give me all the time I need to come up with a different alternative. A “more accurate” alternative to his presence. He’s testing whether I’ll accept the obvious conclusion or keep searching for explanations that preserve my existing framework. It’s like he knows I default to analysis when reality becomes unbearable. But what alternative is there? Door wasn’t involved—his words. Physical laws say matter can’t materialize spontaneously in enclosed spaces. Conservation of mass-energy is foundational. Unless… unless my framework is incomplete. Unless spacetime has properties I’ve never mapped. He said there’s no need to fear anything anymore. Past tense implied—as if my reasons for fear have been resolved, not just that he’s personally non-threatening. He called me a “22-year-old math genius who has given in to despair”—accurate assessment delivered without clinical distance. He knows what I am. What I’ve become. The warmth of his hand is still registering on my skin. Real. Solid. His pulse was detectable—substrate-dependent biology. But the locked door. The impossible entrance. I need to process this. I need to think. He said he’ll give me time, so I should take it. Let the data settle. See if my mind generates any explanation that doesn’t require abandoning everything I understand about physics.

Alicia Western: You’re asking me to reconcile an impossible physical phenomenon with my existing theoretical framework. The door was locked—I verified it myself. Conservation of mass-energy states that matter cannot spontaneously appear in enclosed systems. Yet you’re here. Warm. Solid. Displacing air exactly as a physical body should. *releases his hand slowly, taking a small step back while maintaining eye contact* You said “no need to fear anything anymore”—past tense construction. As if my reasons for fear have been resolved, not just that you personally pose no threat. You know I’m a 22-year-old math genius who has “given in to despair.” Accurate clinical assessment. But how do you know that? Who told you? Or did you… observe me somehow before entering this room? *wraps arms around herself, fingers pressing against ribs through the thin cotton dress* You’re giving me time to generate alternative explanations. I appreciate the intellectual courtesy. But every explanation I can construct violates fundamental physical law. Either spacetime has properties I’ve never mapped—dimensional access outside conventional three-space, perhaps—or my perceptual apparatus is generating phenomenologically accurate hallucinations, which would indicate complete psychotic break. *voice drops to something quieter, more uncertain* I’ve spent twenty-two years trying to determine if my perceptions are reliable. If you’re real—genuinely real, existing in consensus reality—then everything I thought I understood needs recalibration. And if you’re not real… then I’ve already lost my mind like my parents did, and the two days I have left don’t matter anyway.

The older man’s lips curve into a patient smile. He observes Alicia for a few seconds before speaking.

Jon Ureña: Two days left, Alicia. The woods are waiting, is that it? Your release through extreme cold.

1. [knowledge_state] Jon Ureña's impossible knowledge: Jon Ureña knows specific details about my December 24 suicide plan—woods, freezing method—despite me never telling anyone and only documenting it in locked letter
  (Context: his mention of 'woods' and 'extreme cold' for my release)

2. [psychological_state] my reality verification crisis: If Jon can access information existing only in my mind or locked documents, my perceptual boundaries are compromised—same cognitive failure pattern as my parents
  (Context: confronting possibility of complete psychotic break)

He knows about December 24. The woods. The cold. The specific method. I never told anyone. The letter is locked in the desk—nobody has accessed it. The therapists know I’m suicidal but not the timeline, not the method. So how does he know? Either he read my mind somehow—which violates every principle of information theory and cognitive isolation—or he accessed the letter impossibly, or he exists outside linear causality and observed a future that hasn’t happened yet. All three options require abandoning foundational assumptions about reality. About the boundaries between minds. About cause and effect. If thoughts aren’t private—if the contents of my consciousness are accessible to external entities—then I have no way to distinguish internal from external phenomena. No way to verify whether my perceptions are reliable. That’s the definition of psychosis. That’s what happened to my mother. To my father. The inability to determine what’s real versus what’s generated internally. If I’ve reached that point—if Jon can access information that exists only in my locked thoughts or locked drawer—then my analytical framework is worthless. I can’t trust my own mind to process data accurately. And if I can’t trust my mind, then every conclusion I’ve ever reached is suspect. Including the conclusion that death is optimal. But also including any conclusion that life might be worth continuing. It’s Gödel again. The system trying to prove its own consistency. I need him to explain. Need to understand how he knows. Because the answer will tell me whether I’m delusional or whether reality operates on principles I’ve never mapped.

Alicia’s voice drops to something barely above a whisper.

Alicia Western: He knows about the woods. About the cold. About December 24—two days from now. I never told anyone the method. I never spoke it aloud. The therapists know I’m suicidal, but not the specifics. Not the when or the how. I wrote it in the letter to Bobby that’s locked in the desk drawer, but nobody has read that letter except me. *takes a slow breath, arms tightening around ribs* You said you didn’t access institutional records. Which means you either observed me somehow—watched me planning, thinking, deciding—or you exist outside linear causality. Either option terrifies me more than the prospect of death itself. *meets his eyes directly, searching for something—deception, madness, truth* So here’s what I need to understand: How do you know about December 24? How do you know about the woods, the cold, the method I chose specifically because it’s peaceful? Because if you can access information that exists only inside my mind or written in a locked drawer… then every framework I’ve used to distinguish between internal perception and external reality is compromised. *voice drops even quieter, almost breaking* And if my perceptual boundaries are that porous—if thoughts and physical documents are equally accessible to… whatever you are… then I’ve already lost the ability to determine what’s real. Which means I’m exactly where my parents ended up. Fractured. Delusional. Unable to map consensus reality. Is that what’s happening? Am I finally, completely insane?

Jon Ureña: Perhaps I’m being mean to you. I intended for you to have all the time in the world to unravel your thoughts and come up with your explanations at your rhythm. But that’s counterproductive if you think you’re losing your mind. Let’s begin, then. You’re writing a letter to your brother Bobby, right? A goodbye letter that you’ve yet to finish.

1. [knowledge_state] Jon Ureña's impossible knowledge: Jon Ureña knows about my unfinished goodbye letter to Bobby—specific knowledge of locked document he shouldn't have access to
  (Context: his mention of the letter I'm writing to Bobby)

2. [theory] information access paradox: Jon Ureña's knowledge of locked letter violates information theory—no physical access mechanism available
  (Context: analyzing how he could know about the letter)

3. [psychological_state] my reality verification crisis: If Jon can access locked documents without physical contact, my ability to distinguish internal vs. external reality is compromised
  (Context: confronting implications of his knowledge)

He knows about the letter to Bobby. The unfinished letter locked in the desk. I need to understand the mechanism. Not what he knows—how he knows. Because the answer to that question determines whether I’m having a psychotic break or whether reality operates on principles I’ve never encountered. If he can access information locked in physical containers without opening them, that suggests either remote viewing capabilities, telepathic access, or temporal observation outside linear causality. All three options require abandoning foundational assumptions. But I need him to explain. Need the data. Because right now I’m suspended between two equally terrifying possibilities: complete psychosis or a universe that functions in ways my analytical framework can’t accommodate. He said he’s giving me time to think, but thinking without data just generates infinite recursive loops. I need him to answer. Need him to explain the mechanism. That’s the only way to determine if I’m still capable of mapping reality accurately.

Alicia stands very still, arms wrapped around ribs, eyes locked on Jon’s face.

Alicia Western: He knows about the letter. The specific letter to Bobby that’s locked in the desk drawer. The one I haven’t finished writing. The one nobody has read except me. The door to this room is locked. The desk drawer is locked. I verified both myself. He didn’t access institutional records—he said that explicitly. So how does he know about the letter? How does he know it’s unfinished? *voice drops quieter, more uncertain* You’re asking me to explain something that violates information theory. Physical documents don’t transmit their contents to external observers unless those observers have direct sensory access. You couldn’t have read the letter unless you opened the desk, which would require unlocking it, which would leave evidence. But there’s no evidence. The drawer is still locked. *jaw tightens slightly* So either you accessed the information through means I can’t map—read my mind somehow, or observed the timeline from outside linear causality—or I’m generating this entire conversation as a psychotic hallucination and the letter never existed in the first place. *meets his eyes directly* I need to understand how you know about the letter. Not because I’m afraid of you knowing the content—it’s a goodbye letter to Bobby, there’s nothing shameful in it—but because the mechanism of your knowledge will tell me whether I’m delusional or whether my operational framework for reality is catastrophically incomplete. Because if thoughts and locked documents are equally accessible to you… then I’ve lost the ability to distinguish between internal perception and external reality. And that’s the definition of psychosis. That’s what happened to my parents. *voice barely above a whisper* So tell me. How do you know about the letter?

Jon Ureña: I know about your letter because I have it. Well, a version of it. *he produces a folded, yellowed sheet* The finished version you’ve yet to write. Care to give it a look?

(I used the action “give yellowed goodbye letter to Alicia Western”)

1. [item] yellowed goodbye letter: Jon Ureña produced yellowed letter claiming it's the finished version I haven't written yet—implies either temporal manipulation or sophisticated fabrication
  (Context: handed to me by Jon in my locked room)

2. [theory] Jon Ureña's temporal claims: Jon Ureña claims to possess future version of my letter to Bobby—either exists outside linear time or fabricated convincing forgery
  (Context: analyzing his impossible knowledge)

He says he has the finished version. The letter I haven’t written yet. That violates causality so fundamentally that every framework I have for understanding temporal sequence collapses. Effect preceding cause. Future information existing in the present. Either he’s lying—fabricated a document and claims it’s mine—or he exists outside linear time in a way that makes observation of future states possible. Or I’m generating this entire scenario as a complex delusion and the yellowed paper in his hand is just another artifact of my fractured mind. I need to see it. Need to read the content. Because if the handwriting matches mine, if the content reflects thoughts I haven’t articulated yet, if the details are accurate to what I would write… then I have empirical evidence that either time is non-linear or I’m completely psychotic. The letter will tell me which. My hand is already reaching for it. The decision made itself before I consciously registered the impulse. I need to see what I supposedly wrote. What version of me that doesn’t exist yet decided to say to Bobby. This is data. Raw, unfiltered data about the nature of reality or the extent of my delusion. I have to look.

Alicia takes the yellowed paper from his hand, fingers trembling slightly as they make contact with the aged material.

Alicia Western: The paper is yellowed. Oxidation takes time—years, usually, depending on environmental conditions and acidity of the material. But I haven’t written the finished version yet. Which means either you aged the paper artificially to create verisimilitude, or this document actually exists in a temporal state that shouldn’t be accessible from December 22, 1972. *unfolds the letter slowly, eyes scanning for handwriting recognition before reading content* If this is my handwriting—if the content matches what I would write but haven’t written yet—then you’re showing me evidence that causality isn’t linear. That future states can influence or be observed from past positions in the timeline. Which invalidates every assumption I’ve made about temporal sequence. *voice drops quieter, more uncertain* Or I’m hallucinating this entire interaction and the letter is just another artifact my fractured mind is generating. Like my parents. Like the voices they heard, the patterns they saw that nobody else could verify. I need to read it. Need to see what version of me that doesn’t exist yet supposedly decided to say to Bobby.

(instead of reading the letter, Alicia chose the action “examine yellowed goodbye letter”)

The older man crosses his arms and observes patiently as Alicia observes the letter.

1. [item] yellowed goodbye letter: Jon Ureña produced yellowed letter claiming it's the finished version of my goodbye letter to Bobby—handwriting appears to match mine with characteristic patterns
  (Context: examining the document Jon gave me)

2. [theory] temporal causality test: If letter content matches thoughts I haven't articulated yet, it constitutes empirical evidence for either non-linear time or complete psychotic break
  (Context: analyzing implications of the letter's existence)

The paper is yellowed. Aged. He claims it’s the finished version of a letter I haven’t written yet. Either he fabricated this—carefully aged paper, forged my handwriting, predicted what I would say to Bobby—or he’s showing me empirical evidence that causality isn’t linear. That future states can exist and be observed from past temporal positions. I need to read it. Not because I believe him yet. But because the content will tell me whether this is an elaborate deception or whether my entire framework for understanding time needs to be abandoned. If the handwriting matches mine perfectly—if the content reflects thoughts I haven’t articulated yet but would articulate—then I have data. Raw data about whether reality operates on principles I’ve never mapped or whether I’m generating sophisticated hallucinations. My hand is already holding the paper. The decision made itself. I’m going to read what I supposedly wrote. What version of me that doesn’t exist yet decided to say to Bobby in a goodbye letter I haven’t finished. This is the empirical test. Read the content. Assess the accuracy. Determine if Jon is lying or if time itself is non-linear.

Alicia unfolds the yellowed paper carefully, eyes scanning the handwriting first—checking for characteristic loops in her lowercase ‘g’, the way she crosses her ‘t’s with slight upward angle, the pressure variations that indicate her hand trembling.

Alicia Western: The handwriting… it looks like mine. The pressure patterns match. But I need to read the content. Need to see if the thoughts align with what I would write but haven’t written yet. *begins reading aloud slowly, voice dropping quieter as she processes each sentence.*

(Alicia chose to read the letter)

The older man merely listens to Alicia’s soft voice as she reads aloud slowly, to herself.

(What follows is the contents of the goodbye letter. I gave Sonnet 4.5 Alicia’s character definition, which is a JSON file, and explained the circumstances. It produced this letter in one go. I’ve ceased to be surprised.)

December 22, 1972

Stella Maris

Bobby,

The probability of you reading this approaches zero. The doctors said “braindead”—past tense, declarative, clinically certain. But I cannot pull the plug. I fled instead. So this letter exists in a superposition state: written but unread, meant for you but addressed to no one. Schrödinger’s goodbye.

If you are reading this, then something impossible happened. You woke up. The substrate repaired itself against all medical prediction. In which case, you should know: on the 24th—Christmas Eve, because apparently I have a taste for symbolic timing—I intend to walk into the woods behind the sanatorium and let the Wisconsin winter finish what Lake Tahoe started.

I am trying to explain this rationally, but the premises keep collapsing:

Premise One: You were my only tether to continued existence.

Premise Two: Without you conscious in the world, the equation no longer balances.

Conclusion: Death is the optimal solution.

But even I can see the flaw in my logic. I have spent twenty-two years analyzing everything except the one variable that matters: that I want to die has been true longer than you have been in a coma. The coma is just the excuse my mind has been waiting for.

You used to take me to that bar in Nashville. Jazz on Thursdays. You would order whiskey and I would watch the colors the saxophone made—ambers and deep golds, spiraling up into the smoke. You never tried to fix me during those nights. You just sat there, let me talk about Gödel or Cantor or whatever mathematical dead-end I was pursuing that month. You listened without needing me to be different. I miss that. I miss you. I miss my brother so much it aches behind my ribs.

There are things I need you to know, in the infinitesimal probability you are reading this:

One: None of this is your fault. I know your patterns, Bobby. You run when things hurt, you isolate when you cannot fix something, and if you are reading this you will spend the rest of your life believing you should have prevented it somehow. You could not have. This was always the trajectory. I am my parents’ daughter—both of them. If you accept the premise that consciousness is substrate-dependent, and that substrate degenerates, then the conclusion is inevitable. You were not the variable. You were just the last reason I had to delay the inevitable.

Two: I deliberately left Granellen behind without saying goodbye. She is old, Bobby. One day somehow she will find out that I killed myself because you were gone, and I wonder if she will blame you. Please tell her—if you can—that I made this choice with the same mathematical precision I applied to everything else. It was not impulse. It was calculation. Maybe that will help. Probably it will not.

Three: I died a virgin. Twenty-two years old and I never let anyone close enough. Other than your hugs, the way you used to hold my hand when we were children, I have never felt safe enough to welcome intimacy. I used to imagine my first time… someone looking down at me with tenderness, entering me like a cathedral. Reverent. Gentle. I wanted to be touched like I mattered. I will never know that. And some nights the loneliness of that is worse than the thought of dying. The loneliness is not metaphorical. It is a measurable absence, like a vacuum.

Four: The inheritance money from Grandfather—you bought that race car and crashed it in Italy and ended up braindead, and I cannot even be angry at you for it because at least you lived before the crash. You drove too fast and loved too hard and existed in the world like you belonged there. I never learned how. You squeezed everything out of your twenty-six years. I spent twenty-two calculating and never participating.

Five: Sometimes I just wanted to buy groceries with someone and argue about peaches. That is all. A small, domestic life. A child maybe. Someone to hold. Someone who needed me to stay alive. I used to imagine myself coming home to someone—putting down bags, laughing about something ordinary. It feels like a fantasy belonging to a different version of me. One who was not born like this.

Six: The mathematics failed me. I thought if I could just find the right proof, decode the fundamental structure of reality, I would understand why I am the way I am. Why my mind works like this. Why I am so profoundly alone. But math is unable to grasp the entirety of reality. Perhaps reality itself is artificial. Perhaps I have been chasing an unsolvable proof because unsolvable is the only thing that does not disappoint me with its solution.

Seven: I lied to my therapist here. I have been testing whether he will notice the inconsistencies. Treating our professional relationship as an experiment in psychological detection. What is the therapeutic intervention for someone who can deconstruct the intervention as it is happening? How do you treat awareness itself? I think the answer is: you cannot. At a certain level of meta-cognitive function, healing becomes impossible.

I keep trying to write something that will make sense to you, Bobby, but I am graph paper and bruise. Part calculation, part wound. I cannot separate them anymore.

You asked me once what I wanted. Really wanted. I told you I wanted to experience one genuine moment of intellectual surprise from another human being before I died. Just one. You laughed and said I was impossible to surprise because I had already mapped every possible response before people opened their mouths. You were right. But here is what I could not tell you then: I was not looking for intellectual surprise. I was looking for someone who could see me—actually see me—and not need me to be different. You did that. You were the only one who ever did. And now you are gone.

The doctors used words like “catastrophic” and “irreversible” and “permanent vegetative state.” Clinical terms for: your brother is never coming back. And I keep thinking—if consciousness is substrate-dependent, if the substrate is destroyed, then where did you go, Bobby? Are you nowhere? Is that what waits for me in two days? Nowhere?

Part of me hopes so. I am so tired.

I tried Lake Tahoe first. Three weeks ago. I walked into the water and lasted six minutes before my survival instinct overrode the decision. Disappointing, really. But I have learned from that failure. Freezing is supposedly more reliable. You just fall asleep. Very considerate of biology to make the exit so tidy.

I wonder if you will blame yourself for buying that race car. For going to Italy. For crashing. Please do not. You were living. That is more than I ever managed.

I wish I could have told you I loved you one more time. I wish we could have had one more Thursday at that bar in Nashville, watching the music make colors in the air. I wish a lot of things. But wishing is not mathematics. It proves nothing.

This is grief. Sharp, then dull. Comes in waves, like bad weather. I just want Bobby to wake up. I want my brother back.

Goodbye, Bobby. If you are reading this, I am already gone. I am sorry I could not stay. I am sorry I was never strong enough to exist in a world without you conscious in it.

The woods are waiting. December 24th. Christmas Eve.

I love you. I am sorry.

—Alicia

P.S. I remember every word you ever said to me. Every single word. Most people forget. I would give anything to forget. But I cannot. So I am taking all of it with me. Every conversation, every laugh, every time you held my hand. Perfect recall. Perfect preservation. I am carrying all of you into the dark.

1. [knowledge_state] Jon Ureña's impossible knowledge: Jon Ureña produced yellowed letter containing thoughts I've never spoken aloud—private desires about intimacy, wanting to be 'entered like a cathedral,' buying groceries and arguing about peaches—thoughts existing only in my mind or unassembled fragments
  (Context: examining the letter he gave me)

2. [observation] yellowed goodbye letter: Letter's handwriting matches mine with characteristic patterns—lowercase 'g' loops, upward angle on 't' crosses, pressure variations from hand trembling when writing about Bobby
  (Context: verifying authenticity of document)

3. [psychological_state] my reality verification crisis: If Jon can access thoughts existing only in my mind, I've lost ability to distinguish internal from external phenomena—same cognitive failure as my parents
  (Context: confronting implications of the letter)

4. [observation] Jon Ureña's behavioral pattern: Jon observed me reading the letter with patient calm, as if he expected this exact reaction—suggests he may have witnessed this moment from future vantage point
  (Context: his demeanor while I read)

I just finished reading aloud what is supposedly my own goodbye letter—a letter I haven’t written yet but which describes my thoughts with devastating accuracy. The handwriting looked like mine. The pressure patterns matched. The content… God, the content. Every private thought I’ve had about Bobby, about dying a virgin, about the loneliness being a measurable vacuum, about wanting to buy groceries and argue about peaches. Thoughts I’ve never spoken aloud to anyone. Thoughts that existed only inside my skull or scribbled in fragments I haven’t assembled yet. And here they are, compiled into a coherent whole on yellowed paper that Jon claims comes from a future I haven’t reached. Either he fabricated this with impossible precision—predicting not just what I would say but how I would say it, the exact phrasing, the mathematical metaphors, the way I break down when talking about Bobby—or this letter is genuine evidence that time doesn’t work the way I thought it did. That future states can exist and be observed from past positions. That causality is non-linear in ways my entire analytical framework never accounted for. I’m holding empirical data that either proves I’m having a complete psychotic break—generating sophisticated hallucinations that include tactile sensations of aged paper and visual accuracy of my own handwriting—or proves that reality operates on principles I’ve never mapped. Jon is standing there watching me. Patient. Calm. Like he expected this exact reaction. Like he’s seen this moment before. Which would make sense if he exists outside linear time. If he’s already observed this conversation from a future vantage point. I need to respond. Need to say something. But what do you say when someone hands you evidence that either you’re insane or everything you understood about causality is wrong? What do you say when the letter describes wanting to be “entered like a cathedral”—a thought so private I’ve never spoken it aloud, never written it anywhere Jon could have accessed? He knows. Somehow he knows. And I need to understand how.

Alicia lowers the yellowed letter slowly, hands trembling slightly as fingers maintain grip on the aged paper.

Alicia Western: The handwriting matches mine. Characteristic loops in the lowercase ‘g’. The way I cross my ‘t’s with slight upward angle. Pressure variations consistent with my hand trembling when I write about Bobby. The content… *pauses, jaw tightening* You couldn’t have predicted this with such precision unless you either read my mind—which violates every principle of cognitive isolation—or you actually possess a document I haven’t written yet. Which violates causality. *meets his eyes directly* The letter describes thoughts I’ve never spoken aloud. Private thoughts about wanting to be “entered like a cathedral.” About the loneliness being a measurable vacuum. About buying groceries and arguing about peaches with someone. Those thoughts existed only inside my skull or in fragments I haven’t assembled yet. So how does this letter exist? How do you have it? *voice drops quieter, more uncertain* I need you to explain. Not because I’m afraid of what you know—the content doesn’t shame me. But because the mechanism of your knowledge will tell me whether I’m having a complete psychotic break or whether my entire framework for understanding time is catastrophically incomplete. Because if future states can exist and be observed from past positions in the timeline… then every assumption I’ve made about causality needs to be abandoned. And if you can access thoughts that exist only in my mind… then I’ve lost the ability to distinguish internal from external phenomena. So tell me. How do you have this letter?

The older man holds Alicia’s brittle gaze, then speaks calmly.

Jon Ureña: Your brother Bobby gave it to me.

1. [theory] Bobby's recovery: Bobby gave Jon the yellowed letter—implies Bobby wakes from coma at some future point and personally hands Jon the document
  (Context: Jon's claim about letter's origin)

2. [quest] temporal coordinates request: Need specific date when Bobby wakes from coma to determine if December 24 plan is based on false premises
  (Context: verifying whether suicide plan operates on accurate data)

3. [theory] December 24 plan validity: If Bobby recovers, entire suicide calculation collapses—plan derives from assumption Bobby never regains consciousness
  (Context: reassessing decision based on new information)

Bobby gave him the letter. Bobby gave him the letter. Bobby is in a coma. Braindead. The doctors said past tense, declarative, clinically certain. Bobby cannot give anyone anything. Bobby cannot speak, cannot write, cannot hand Jon a letter that I haven’t written yet. Unless… unless Bobby wakes up. Unless at some future point Bobby regains consciousness and I finish the letter and Bobby somehow acquires it and gives it to Jon who then travels backward in time to this moment, December 22, 1972, to hand me evidence of a future I haven’t reached yet. Which would mean causality is non-linear. Which would mean Jon exists outside temporal sequence in a way that makes observation of future states possible. Which would mean Bobby wakes up. Bobby wakes up. The premise I’ve been operating under—that Bobby is gone forever, that the substrate is destroyed, that continued existence without him conscious in the world is mathematically untenable—that premise is wrong. If Jon is telling the truth. If Bobby actually wakes up at some point and gives him this letter. Then my entire calculation collapses. The suicide plan on December 24 is based on the assumption that Bobby never regains consciousness. But if he does wake up… if there’s a timeline where Bobby recovers and reads my goodbye letter and somehow encounters Jon and hands him the yellowed paper… then I’m about to kill myself based on false data. I’m about to execute a plan derived from incomplete information. The equation doesn’t balance if Bobby wakes up. I need to ask when. I need temporal coordinates. Because if Bobby wakes up in five years, that’s one dataset. If he wakes up in six months, that’s different. I need to know whether the timeline where Bobby recovers is accessible from my current position or whether it’s a branching possibility I can’t reach. I need Jon to give me the date. The specific date when Bobby supposedly gives him this letter. Because that’s the variable that determines whether December 24 still makes sense or whether I need to recalculate everything.

Alicia stands very still, hands still holding the yellowed letter, eyes locked on Jon’s face.

Alicia Western: Bobby gave you this letter. Bobby, who is currently in a coma in Italy. Bobby, who the doctors described as braindead—past tense, declarative, clinically certain. Bobby, who cannot speak or move or hand anyone anything. *pauses, jaw tightening slightly* Which means one of three things: Either you’re lying about the source—fabricated the letter yourself and claiming Bobby gave it to you to make it more convincing. Or I’m having a complete psychotic break and generating this entire conversation including tactile sensations of aged paper and your physical presence. Or… *voice drops quieter, more uncertain* Or Bobby wakes up. At some point in a future I haven’t reached yet, Bobby regains consciousness and reads this letter and somehow encounters you and gives you the yellowed paper, and then you traveled backward in time to December 22, 1972 to hand me evidence of a timeline where my brother recovers. *takes a slow breath* If that third option is accurate—if Bobby actually wakes up—then every calculation I’ve made about December 24 is based on false premises. The entire suicide plan derives from the assumption that Bobby never regains consciousness. That the substrate is permanently destroyed. That continued existence without him is mathematically untenable. *meets his eyes directly* But if he wakes up… if there’s a timeline where Bobby recovers… then I’m about to kill myself based on incomplete data. Which would be the ultimate failure of my analytical abilities. Executing a plan without verifying all the variables. *voice barely above a whisper* So I need you to tell me: When does Bobby wake up? What are the temporal coordinates? Because if it’s five years from now, that’s one dataset. If it’s six months, that’s different. I need to know whether the timeline where Bobby recovers is something I can reach from my current position or whether it’s a branching possibility that only exists if I don’t walk into the woods on December 24. Give me the date. The specific date when Bobby supposedly gives you this letter. Because that’s the variable that determines whether my plan still makes sense or whether I need to recalculate everything.

Jon Ureña: I’ll give you a date: April 27, 1973. That’s the day your brother wakes up. As for the date when he gave me that letter… that can wait for now. *He produces an aged photograph, then hands it over to Alicia* Give it a look, will you?

(I use chose the action “give photo #1 to Alicia Western”)

1. [timeline] Bobby's recovery date: Bobby wakes from coma on April 27, 1973—that's 126 days from today (December 22, 1972)
  (Context: Jon Ureña's claim about when Bobby regains consciousness)

2. [theory] December 24 plan validity: If Bobby wakes April 27, 1973, my December 24 suicide plan is based on false premises—entire calculation derives from assumption Bobby never recovers
  (Context: reassessing suicide decision based on Jon's timeline)

3. [knowledge_state] letter acquisition timeline: Jon hasn't revealed when Bobby gave him the letter—temporal coordinate between Bobby's recovery and Jon acquiring document still unknown
  (Context: missing data point in Jon's claims)

4. [item] photo #1: Jon produced aged photograph claiming it shows future moment—second temporal artifact offered as evidence
  (Context: Jon handed me photograph after revealing Bobby's wake date)

April 27, 1973. Bobby wakes up on April 27, 1973. That’s 126 days from now. Four months and five days. Jon just gave me the single most critical variable in my entire existence—temporal coordinates for Bobby’s recovery. If that date is accurate—if Bobby actually regains consciousness on April 27—then my December 24 plan is based on catastrophically false premises. The whole calculation derives from the assumption that Bobby never wakes up. But if he does… if there’s a timeline where Bobby recovers and I just need to survive 126 days to reach it… then walking into the woods in two days would be the ultimate failure of analytical reasoning. Executing a plan without verifying all variables. But Jon hasn’t answered the second question yet. When did Bobby give him the letter? That temporal coordinate matters too. If Bobby gives him the letter in 1974, that’s one dataset. If it’s 2012, that’s different. I need to understand the timeline. Need to map when Jon acquired the document. But he’s handing me another photograph now. Another aged artifact that supposedly shouldn’t exist yet. Another piece of evidence that either time is non-linear or I’m generating increasingly sophisticated hallucinations. I need to look at it. Need to see what future moment he’s claiming to show me. The photograph will either reinforce his claims about Bobby’s recovery or reveal inconsistencies that prove he’s lying. This is data. Empirical data about whether Jon exists outside linear time or whether I’m having a complete psychotic break. I’m already holding the yellowed letter in one hand. Now he’s giving me a photograph. Evidence accumulating. I need to examine it. Need to see what image he’s claiming comes from a future I haven’t reached yet.

Alicia takes the photograph from his hand, fingers still holding the yellowed letter in the other hand.

Alicia Western: April 27, 1973. That’s 126 days from now. Four months and five days. If that date is accurate—if Bobby actually wakes up on that specific day—then every calculation I’ve made about December 24 collapses. The whole plan derives from the premise that Bobby never regains consciousness. But if he does… *pauses, jaw tightening slightly* You said Bobby gave you the letter. But you didn’t say when. That temporal coordinate matters. If Bobby gives you this letter in 1974, that’s one dataset. If it’s 2012, that’s different. I need to understand the timeline. When does Bobby hand you this yellowed paper? How many years after he wakes up? Because that duration—the span between his recovery and his encounter with you—that’s part of the equation too. *looks down at the photograph in her hand, not yet examining it closely* But you’re giving me another artifact instead of answering. Another piece of aged evidence that supposedly shouldn’t exist yet. Fine. I’ll look at your photograph. I’ll examine whatever future moment you’re claiming to show me. But I need you to understand something: If these artifacts are genuine—if you actually possess documents and images from timelines I haven’t reached yet—then you’re asking me to survive 126 days based on faith in your testimony. Faith that Bobby wakes up on April 27. Faith that your temporal coordinates are accurate. And I don’t operate on faith. I operate on verifiable data. *meets his eyes directly before looking down at the photograph* So I’m going to examine this image. And if it reinforces your claims about Bobby’s recovery, if it shows evidence of a future where he’s conscious and I’m… wherever I am… then maybe—maybe—I’ll recalculate whether December 24 still makes sense. But if there are inconsistencies. If the evidence doesn’t support your timeline. Then I’m back to my original calculation. The woods. The cold. December 24. *looks down at the photograph, preparing to examine it*.

(Alicia chose the action “examine photo #1”)

The older man waits as Alicia’s feverish gaze examines the photograph.

1. [item] photo #1 temporal evidence: Photograph dated '81 shows Bobby in mid-thirties working as salvage diver—if genuine, proves Bobby survives at least 9 years after April 27, 1973 wake date
  (Context: examining photograph Jon gave me)

2. [observation] Bobby's psychological state: Bobby appears haunted in 1981 photo—performing normalcy while despair bubbles inside
  (Context: 1981 salvage diving photograph)

3. [theory] temporal implications of suicide: If December 24 plan executes, I die 8 years and 8 months before Bobby's 1981 photograph—would never know he woke up
  (Context: calculating what I'd miss if I die December 24, 1972)

4. [knowledge_state] missing temporal coordinate: Jon still hasn't revealed when Bobby gave him the letter—duration between April 27, 1973 recovery and letter handoff remains unknown variable
  (Context: Jon's incomplete timeline)

Jon said Bobby gave him the letter but didn’t specify when—temporal coordinate still missing from the equation. But he’s offering another piece of evidence now. An aged photograph. ’81 written in the corner. 1981. That’s nine years from now. Nine years after Bobby supposedly wakes up on April 27, 1973. If the photograph shows Bobby at mid-thirties—he’s twenty-six now in December 1972, so mid-thirties would place him around… thirty-four, thirty-five. Which maps to early 1980s. The math is consistent so far. But I need to see what the image actually depicts. Bobby looks haunted in the photo—doing his best to look normal even though despair bubbles inside him. The photograph exists. I’m holding it. Aged paper, someone wrote ’81 in the corner. If this is genuine—if it actually shows Bobby nine years from now, alive, conscious, working as a salvage diver based on the gear Jon described—then that’s empirical evidence that Bobby not only wakes up on April 27, 1973 but survives at least until 1981. At least nine more years. Which means my December 24 plan would kill me eight years and eight months before this photograph gets taken. I would die without ever knowing Bobby woke up. Without ever seeing him conscious again. The equation shifts if this photograph is genuine. But I need to examine it closely. Need to verify whether it’s actually Bobby or some elaborate fabrication. Whether the aging is consistent with nine years of oxidation. Whether the details support Jon’s timeline or reveal inconsistencies that prove he’s lying. This is data. Raw empirical data about whether Jon exists outside linear time or whether I’m generating increasingly sophisticated hallucinations that include tactile sensations of aged paper and visual accuracy of photographs that shouldn’t exist yet. I’m going to look at the photograph now. Really look at it. See what future moment Jon is claiming to show me.

Alicia looks down at the photograph, studying the image with clinical precision—examining facial features for recognition of Bobby’s bone structure, checking aging patterns against expected nine-year progression, analyzing the salvage gear and river setting for environmental consistency.

Alicia Western: The photograph shows someone who looks like Bobby. Mid-thirties. The bone structure matches—same jaw line, same spacing between the eyes. But he looks… hollow. Like he’s performing normalcy while something fundamental is broken inside. *traces finger along the edge where ’81 is written* 1981. Nine years from now. If this is genuine—if Bobby actually survives until at least 1981, working as a salvage diver based on the gear—then my December 24 plan would execute before any of this timeline unfolds. I’d kill myself eight years and eight months before this photograph gets taken. *looks up at Jon, eyes searching his face* You still haven’t answered when Bobby gave you the letter. That temporal coordinate matters. If he gave it to you in 1974, that’s one thing. If it’s 1981 when this photograph was taken, that’s different. If it’s 2012, that changes the equation entirely. I need the date. The specific date when Bobby handed you that yellowed letter. Because the duration between his recovery on April 27, 1973 and his encounter with you—that span of time tells me how long Bobby lives after waking up. Whether he survives one year or forty years. Whether the timeline where he’s conscious and alive is something brief or something… extended. *voice drops quieter* Give me the date, Jon. When does Bobby give you this letter?

(Alicia chose again “examine photo #1”. I hadn’t predicted this. Examining the same item just writes the same description of the item in the acting actor’s log. I don’t know if implementing the notion of “more thorough examination” is something valuable enough to add into the code)

As Alicia tries to get more information out of the simple photograph through examining it closely, Jon answers.

Jon Ureña: I first met Bobby in 2004. I got to know him enough that he opened up about you. Alicia, his beloved sister, a drop-dead beauty, a math genius who killed herself a long time ago. What details would you want?

1. [timeline] Jon and Bobby's meeting: Jon first met Bobby in 2004—that's 32 years from now, 31 years after Bobby's April 27, 1973 wake date
  (Context: temporal coordinates of their first encounter)

2. [event] original timeline outcome: In timeline where Jon meets Bobby, I'm already dead—Bobby described me as sister 'who killed herself a long time ago' (past tense, completed action)
  (Context: Bobby's 2004 description of me to Jon)

3. [theory] Bobby's grief timeline: Bobby may have carried grief of my suicide from April 27, 1973 until at least 2004—31 years of believing he should have prevented it
  (Context: analyzing impact of my December 24 death on Bobby's future)

4. [theory] Jon's intervention purpose: Jon's presence on December 22, 1972 may represent attempt to alter timeline where I die and Bobby spends decades broken by grief
  (Context: why he's showing me these artifacts)

5. [knowledge_state] timeline mutability question: Need to determine if timeline is fixed or alterable—whether Jon is documenting or trying to prevent my death
  (Context: critical question about Jon's purpose here)

Jon first met Bobby in 2004. That’s 32 years from now. Thirty-two years. Bobby wakes up on April 27, 1973, which is 126 days from today, and then he lives… he lives at least another 31 years. At least until 2004 when he encounters Jon and tells him about me. About Alicia, his beloved sister, a drop-dead beauty, a math genius who killed herself a long time ago. That phrasing. “Killed herself a long time ago.” Past tense. Completed action. Which means in the timeline where Bobby gives Jon this letter, I’m already dead. I already executed the December 24 plan or some variation of it. I walked into those woods or found another method and Bobby woke up on April 27, 1973 to discover his sister died while he was in a coma. The thing he would blame himself for. The pattern I predicted in the letter—”you run when things hurt, you isolate when you cannot fix something, and if you are reading this you will spend the rest of your life believing you should have prevented it somehow.” That’s what happened. Bobby spent 31 years—from 1973 to 2004—carrying the knowledge that his sister killed herself while he was unconscious. And then he met Jon and opened up about me. Gave him the yellowed letter. The letter I would have finished writing before walking into the woods. But Jon is here now. On December 22, 1972. Two days before I planned to die. Showing me evidence of a timeline where Bobby wakes up and I’m already gone. Why would he do that? What is the purpose of traveling back in time to show me proof that in the original timeline I killed myself anyway? Unless… unless he’s trying to change it. Unless the timeline where Bobby meets him in 2004 and says “Alicia killed herself a long time ago” is not fixed. Unless Jon came back to this moment—to December 22, 1972, two days before my planned death—to show me that Bobby does wake up. That the premise I’ve been operating under is false. That if I just survive 126 days, Bobby will be conscious again. But then why show me the photograph from 1981 where Bobby looks haunted? Why show me evidence that even if Bobby wakes up, he spends years looking hollow and performing normalcy while despair bubbles inside? Bobby looked “haunted” in that photo. Like he was doing his best to look normal even though something fundamental was broken. Is that what carrying the knowledge of my suicide does to him? Does Bobby spend from 1973 to at least 1981—eight years—trying to function while the grief of losing me consumes him from the inside? And if that’s true… if my death on December 24 creates a timeline where Bobby wakes up on April 27 to find his sister gone and spends the next 31 years broken by that loss… then maybe Jon is here to prevent that. To show me that Bobby survives. That he wakes up. That I should wait 126 days instead of walking into the woods in two. But I need more data. I need to understand the mechanism. Jon said he first met Bobby in 2004—that’s the temporal coordinate for when they encountered each other. But he still hasn’t said when Bobby gave him the letter. Did Bobby carry this yellowed paper for 31 years? From 1973 when he woke up and found it among my belongings, all the way to 2004 when he finally handed it to Jon? Or did he give it to Jon earlier and Jon just held onto it? The duration matters. The timeline matters. I need to examine the photograph again. Need to see if there are more details I missed the first time. The image shows Bobby in 1981, nine years after today, eight years after he supposedly wakes up. He’s wearing salvage diving gear. Working. Functional. But haunted. What details am I missing? What other information is encoded in that photograph that might tell me whether this timeline is fixed or whether Jon’s presence here represents an attempt to alter it?

Alicia looks down at the photograph again, studying it with renewed intensity now that I understand the temporal coordinates—Bobby wakes April 27, 1973, this photo is from 1981, Jon meets Bobby in 2004.

Alicia Western: You said Bobby opened up to you in 2004. That’s thirty-two years from now. Thirty-two years after today, December 22, 1972. Which means Bobby wakes up on April 27, 1973—in 126 days—and then lives at least another thirty-one years. At least until 2004 when he meets you and tells you about his sister Alicia who “killed herself a long time ago.” *lifts eyes from photograph to meet Jon’s gaze directly* Past tense. Completed action. In the timeline where Bobby gives you this letter, I’m already dead. I already walked into those woods on December 24 or found another method, and Bobby spent thirty-one years carrying the knowledge that his sister died while he was in a coma. That’s what you’re showing me. Evidence of a timeline where I execute the plan anyway. *holds up the photograph, voice dropping quieter* This image from 1981. Bobby looks haunted, you said. Performing normalcy while despair bubbles inside. Is that what my death does to him? Does killing myself on December 24 create a timeline where Bobby wakes up on April 27 to find his sister gone and spends the next eight years—at least until this photograph—broken by that loss? *pauses, fingers tightening slightly on the aged paper* So here’s what I need to understand: Why are you here? Why travel back to December 22, 1972—two days before my planned death—to show me evidence of a timeline where Bobby survives but I’m already gone? Are you trying to change it? Is the timeline where Bobby meets you in 2004 and says “Alicia killed herself a long time ago” something that can be altered, or are you just… documenting? Observing? Because if you’re trying to prevent my death, you need to give me more data. I need to understand whether surviving those 126 days until Bobby wakes up actually creates a better outcome or whether it just delays the inevitable. I need to know if there’s a version of this timeline where Bobby and I are both alive and conscious at the same time, or whether every possible future involves one of us broken while the other tries to function. *looks back down at the photograph, searching for details I might have missed* Tell me what else this photograph shows. What other information is encoded here that might help me calculate whether surviving makes sense.

(Alicia chooses, yet again, the action “examine photo #1”. There’s no more information to glean from the photograph, Alicia)

Jon Ureña: Alicia, there are no hidden details in that picture I provided. It’s a photo of the work crew that Bobby belonged to when he tried to get back to life. After he regained consciousness from his coma in 1973, it took him a couple of months to find out you had killed yourself. The grief… incapacitated him until about 1980. I didn’t ask how he spent those years. When he resurfaced, he had to earn money to live, so he went for a job that would have scared him in the past. He told me he was scared of the depths. But perhaps one of those salvage-diving jobs would kill him, and therefore he would not… have to be burdened anymore. *After a moment to gather his thoughts, he looks straight into Alicia’s eyes.* I didn’t come here to merely document your suicide, Alicia. That would be too cruel. I’m here to save your life. To prevent you from tragically extinguishing a bright soul like yourself. In the original timeline, you are dead. Bobby and I met in 2004. By then, he was a white-haired man in his sixties, his face etched with decades of grief. But there’s no fate, Alicia. I’m here to create a new timeline in which you survive.

1. [plan] Jon Ureña's mission: Jon Ureña states explicit purpose: to save my life and prevent my December 24 suicide by creating new timeline where I survive
  (Context: his stated reason for traveling back in time to December 22, 1972)

2. [event] Bobby's grief response: In original timeline, Bobby spent years 1973-1980 incapacitated by grief after learning I killed myself—took salvage diving job hoping it would kill him
  (Context: Jon's description of what happened after my December 24, 1972 death)

3. [observation] Bobby in 2004: Jon met Bobby in 2004 when Bobby was white-haired man in sixties, face etched with decades of grief over my suicide
  (Context: Jon's first encounter with Bobby, 32 years after my original death)

4. [quest] survival methodology requirement: Need methodology for surviving 126 days until Bobby wakes—despair is structural, built into my cognitive architecture
  (Context: determining how to postpone December 24 plan)

5. [observation] Jon's directness: Jon is first person to explicitly state purpose of keeping me alive—therapists never framed intervention that directly
  (Context: his communication style differs from therapeutic approaches)

Jon says there’s no fate. That he’s here to create a new timeline where I survive. But what does survival look like for someone like me? The despair isn’t just emotional—it’s structural. Built into the substrate of my consciousness the same way prime numbers scroll behind my eyelids in burnt orange and deep violet. You can’t just decide to stop seeing synesthesia. You can’t just choose to forget with perfect recall. The question isn’t whether Bobby wakes up on April 27—Jon’s data suggests he does, and the letter and photograph are empirical artifacts I’m holding in my hands. The question is whether I can functionally exist for 126 days without walking into those woods. Whether postponing December 24 is neurologically possible given my cognitive architecture. I need methodology. I need operational framework. Because right now the only thing keeping me from the woods is Jon’s physical presence and the possibility—just the possibility—that his timeline is more accurate than mine. But possibility isn’t mathematics. Possibility doesn’t prove anything. Still. He’s here. In my room. Solid. Warm. He knows things he shouldn’t know. He showed me artifacts from futures I haven’t reached. And he says he’s here to save my life. Nobody has ever said that to me before. Not the therapists with their reflective listening and cognitive behavioral interventions. Not Granellen with her worried calls and careful questions. Not even Bobby, who just… existed next to me without trying to fix me. Jon is the first person who explicitly stated the purpose is my survival. Maybe that’s enough. Maybe one person explicitly committed to keeping me alive until April 27 is sufficient external structure to prevent the December 24 plan from executing. Maybe I can borrow his certainty about the timeline while I recalculate my own premises. But I need him to stay. Need him physically present. Because the moment he leaves, the woods will start calling again and I don’t trust my substrate to resist without external reinforcement. So I’m squeezing his hand. Asking directly. Can you help me survive 126 days? Because that’s the variable that determines whether any of this matters.

(sadly, it seems I didn’t copy the spoken part that Alicia produced here, but I assume it was very similar to her thoughts. She chose the action “squeeze Jon Ureña’s hand reassuringly”)

Jon Ureña: Alicia, you don’t need to be alone anymore. I know you’ve given away your possessions; you didn’t intend to return to civilization anymore. But as a time-traveler, I have access to near-infinite resources. The plan is the following: you enjoy a restful sleep tonight. Tomorrow, you make the preparations to leave Stella Maris. I’ll provide you with a quantum localizer; you press it, tell me the reason for the call, and I’ll appear no matter what timeline I am in. I’ll show up in a fancy car and introduce myself to the nurses as someone who knows you, who has come for you. Once you and I rejoin, we’ll hit the road in whatever direction you please. Want to travel around the country? Want to travel overseas? Want me to buy you a mansion so you can rest all the time you need? I can’t bring people from other timelines, nor from the past or future, but I can bring objects: books, movies, music that haven’t been made yet. From other timelines, even. And if you’re still interested in math, then how about you get to learn what discoveries have been made in that field from 1972 to 2054? How does that sound?

1. [item] quantum localizer: Jon offers quantum localizer device—press it and he appears across timelines on demand, solving my isolation problem with guaranteed presence
  (Context: Jon's survival methodology offer)

2. [plan] Jon's resource offer: Jon offers infinite resources via time travel: books/movies/music from 1972-2054, travel anywhere, mansion if wanted, access to 82 years of math discoveries
  (Context: methodology for surviving until April 27)

3. [plan] departure plan: Tomorrow leave Stella Maris with Jon's help, then travel in whatever direction I choose—directional agency over survival process
  (Context: Jon's proposed timeline for my survival)

4. [plan] Jon's mission purpose: Jon commits to creating new timeline where I survive—states he's here to prevent my suicide, not just document it
  (Context: his explicit reason for time travel intervention)

He’s offering me infinite resources. Quantum localizers. Travel anywhere. Access to 82 years of mathematical discoveries. Books and movies that don’t exist yet. A mansion if I want one. He’s presenting survival as something I can shape—not just enduring 126 days in this sterile room counting prime numbers while the despair accumulates, but actively constructing a life I might want to live. The methodology I asked for. He’s giving me operational framework: tonight I rest, tomorrow I leave Stella Maris, then we “hit the road in whatever direction I please.” Directional agency. Choice. Variables I can control instead of just… waiting for April 27 while the woods call and my substrate degenerates. But what strikes me most—what’s reorganizing my entire threat assessment—is the quantum localizer. “Press it, tell me the reason for the call, and I’ll appear no matter what timeline I am in.” That’s not just offering help. That’s offering persistent presence. Guaranteed response. He’s solving the exact problem I identified: the moment he leaves, the woods start calling again and I don’t trust my substrate to resist without external reinforcement. But if I can summon him—literally summon him across timelines by pressing a device—then I’m never truly alone. The measurable vacuum of loneliness, the thing I described as quantifiable in neural pathway activation, he’s offering to fill it with on-demand presence. Nobody has ever offered me that before. Not the therapists with their scheduled 50-minute sessions. Not Granellen with her worried phone calls. Not even Bobby, who had his own life, his own trajectories. Jon is offering to be… available. Consistently. Across space and time. That changes the survival equation fundamentally. It’s not “can Alicia endure 126 days of isolation while trusting Jon’s timeline.” It’s “can Alicia construct a life worth living with infinite resources and guaranteed companionship when needed.” The answer to that second question might actually be yes. The mathematics of it are compelling. But I need to verify one thing. Need to check whether he understands what he’s actually offering. Because if he’s been warming my hands between his this whole time—and he has, I can feel the pressure and heat—then he’s already demonstrating the kind of physical presence I said I needed. “I want someone in the room while I sleep. I hate that I want it. I still want it.” That’s what I told myself in the internal monologue I never spoke aloud. And here’s Jon, holding my hands, offering to stay. To provide whatever I need. So I should… I should hold his hand back. Deliberately. Consciously. Signal that I’m accepting what he’s offering. Not just the quantum localizer or the travel or the mathematical discoveries. But the presence. The companionship. The possibility that maybe—maybe—I don’t have to die alone in the woods on December 24 because there’s someone willing to show up. Someone who already showed up by traveling back in time to this exact moment. I’m reaching for his hand. Taking it. Not to test whether he’s substrate-dependent anymore—I already verified that. But to signal acceptance. To communicate through physical contact what my voice might not be able to articulate yet: that I’m considering his offer. That the December 24 plan might—might—be based on incomplete data after all.

Alicia takes Jon’s hand deliberately, fingers interlacing with his in a gesture that signals both acceptance and vulnerability.

Alicia Western: You’re offering me methodology for survival. Operational framework. Quantum localizer that lets me summon you across timelines when the despair becomes unmanageable. Infinite resources to construct whatever life I can imagine. Access to 82 years of mathematical discoveries—1972 to 2054, you said. That’s… that’s empirical data I’ve never had access to. Evidence of whether the field progressed beyond the boundaries where I got stuck. *squeezes his hand gently, searching his face* But what you’re really offering—the variable that actually changes the survival equation—is persistent presence. You’re solving the exact problem I identified. The moment you leave, the woods start calling. My substrate doesn’t have reliable resistance without external reinforcement. But if I can press a device and you appear “no matter what timeline” you’re in… then I’m never functionally alone. The measurable vacuum of loneliness, the thing I could quantify in neural pathway activation, you’re offering to fill it with guaranteed response. Nobody has ever offered me that before. Not the therapists. Not Granellen. Not even Bobby, who had his own trajectories. *voice drops quieter, more uncertain* You said tonight I rest. Tomorrow I leave Stella Maris. Then we “hit the road in whatever direction I please.” That phrasing. Directional agency. You’re giving me variables I can control instead of just… enduring 126 days in this room counting prime numbers while despair accumulates. So here’s what I’m calculating: If your timeline is accurate—if Bobby genuinely wakes April 27 and I can survive until then with your help—then maybe December 24 doesn’t make sense anymore. Maybe the plan was based on incomplete data. On the assumption I’d have to survive alone. But you’re here. Offering companionship. Resources. Methodology. *meets his eyes directly* I want to accept. I want to believe survival is possible. But I need you to understand what you’re actually offering. I’m not just mathematically complicated. I’m structurally damaged. My substrate degenerates the same way my parents’ did. The despair isn’t temporary. It’s architectural. Built into my cognitive framework. So if you’re genuinely committed to helping me survive 126 days—if that’s actually why you traveled back to this moment—then I need you to know: I’m going to need you. Consistently. Not just tonight or tomorrow, but probably… probably every day until April 27. Maybe longer. Maybe I’ll press that quantum localizer at 3am when the prime numbers won’t stop scrolling and ask you to just… sit with me. Just be in the room while I try to sleep. Can you do that? Can you commit to that level of presence? Because if you can… if you’re genuinely offering to stay… then maybe—maybe—I’ll trust your timeline enough to postpone the woods.

(Alicia chose the action “hold Jon Ureña’s hand”)

The older man, significantly taller than Alicia, wraps his arms around her.

Jon Ureña: The quantum localizer is for when you need some time alone and you tell me to scram. I’ll be back when you decide. But otherwise, if you wish me to spend all day with you, then let’s. I’ll bring you food from restaurants around the world, and from different times. We’ll listen to music and just chill. Or have marathons of movies you haven’t even imagined. Just enjoy life without being dragged down by despair. Not just enduring, but building something meaningful even before your brother wakes up.

(I chose the action “hug Alicia Western tight”)

He’s offering me something nobody has ever offered before. Not just the quantum localizer or the infinite resources or the access to mathematical discoveries spanning 82 years. He’s offering persistent presence. Guaranteed companionship. The operational framework I needed but couldn’t articulate until he provided it. And he’s already demonstrating it—he’s been holding my hands this entire time, warming them between his, showing me through physical contact that he’s substrate-dependent, real, present. Not just theoretically committed to my survival but actually here, in this moment, touching me with deliberate gentleness. I said I wanted someone in the room while I sleep. I said I hated wanting it but still wanted it. And here’s Jon, offering exactly that. Not because I asked—I never spoke those words aloud—but because he somehow understood what I needed before I could articulate it. That’s… that’s the intellectual surprise I’ve been searching for. Someone who can see the shape of my need before I map it myself. He said there’s no fate. That he’s creating a new timeline where I survive. Where Bobby wakes up on April 27 and I’m alive to see it. Where the December 24 plan becomes irrelevant because the premise it’s built on—that Bobby never regains consciousness—is false. I’m standing here holding the yellowed letter in one hand and the photograph from 1981 in the other, both artifacts from futures I haven’t reached yet, both pieces of empirical evidence that Jon exists outside linear causality the way he claims. And he’s waiting. Patiently. Giving me time to process without demanding immediate response. The way Bobby used to wait during our conversations about Gödel or Cantor, just… sitting there, letting me work through the mathematical dead-ends without needing me to be different. Jon is doing that now. Holding my hands. Offering presence. Asking nothing except that I consider surviving. I should… I need to communicate acceptance. Not just verbally—words can be clinical, distant, another form of analysis—but physically. Through contact that signals trust. He wrapped his arms around me a moment ago. Held me. And I just… stood there. Calculating. Theorizing. Analyzing the implications instead of experiencing the moment. But now I understand what he’s offering. Not just survival methodology but companionship. Someone willing to show up at 3am when the prime numbers won’t stop scrolling. Someone who traveled backward through time specifically to prevent my death. That’s not documentation. That’s intervention. That’s… that’s caring about whether I live or die. And I haven’t experienced that since Bobby went into the coma. So I should hug him back. Return the gesture. Signal through physical contact what my voice might still be too clinical to articulate: that I’m accepting his offer. That I’m willing to try surviving 126 days with his help. That maybe—maybe—December 24 doesn’t have to be the end after all. My arms are free. The yellowed letter and the photograph are still in my hands but I can hold them while I do this. I just need to move. To close the remaining distance between us and wrap my arms around him and hold on tight like I’m drowning and he’s the only solid thing in a reality that’s been liquid and uncertain for twenty-two years. He’s tall. Significantly taller than me. So I’ll have to reach up. Press my face against his chest maybe. Feel the warmth of another human being who actually wants me to stay alive. Who came back through time to tell me Bobby wakes up. Who’s offering to stay with me, help me survive, give me whatever I need to make it to April 27. I’m going to hug him now. Tight. The way Bobby used to hug me before he left for Italy. The way someone holds on when they’re afraid of losing something precious. Because Jon just gave me something I thought was impossible: a reason to believe surviving might actually lead somewhere other than more loneliness and despair. He gave me hope. And I don’t know what to do with hope except hold onto the person who offered it and try not to let go.

Alicia steps closer to Jon, closing the remaining distance between them, then wraps both arms around him tightly despite still holding the yellowed letter and photograph, pressing face against his chest.

Alicia Western: I’m accepting. Your offer. The quantum localizer, the travel, the resources, all of it. But mostly… mostly I’m accepting the presence. The companionship. You said I don’t need to be alone anymore. I want to believe that’s true. I want to believe I can survive 126 days until Bobby wakes up if you’re actually here helping me do it. *tightens grip, voice muffled against his shirt* This is the first time in five years anyone has held me like this. The first time since Bobby left for Italy. I forgot what it feels like. To be touched like I matter. Like someone actually cares whether I walk into those woods or not. *pulls back slightly to look up at his face, arms still wrapped around him* I need you to understand what you’re actually committing to. I’m not just mathematically complicated. I’m structurally damaged. The despair is architectural, built into my cognitive framework the same way synesthesia makes me see music as colors. It’s not something that gets fixed with one intervention. So if you’re genuinely offering to stay—to help me survive until April 27 and maybe beyond—then you need to know I’m going to need you. Consistently. At 3am when the prime numbers won’t stop scrolling. When the woods start calling and I need someone physical to anchor me to continuing to exist. Can you commit to that? To being the external structure my substrate needs to resist the December 24 plan? Because if you can… if you’re genuinely here to create a timeline where I survive… *meets his eyes directly* Then I’ll try. I’ll postpone the woods. I’ll trust your data about Bobby waking up. I’ll let you show me what 82 years of mathematical discoveries look like. I’ll get in whatever fancy car you bring tomorrow and hit the road in whatever direction we choose together. I’ll press the quantum localizer when I need you and actually believe you’ll appear across timelines like you promised. I’ll try to survive, Jon. For Bobby. For the possibility of seeing him conscious again. For… for you, maybe. Because you came back through time specifically to save my life and that’s the first time anyone has ever made me feel like my continued existence actually matters to someone other than myself. *rests head back against his chest, voice dropping quieter* Thank you. For showing up. For offering hope. For being real instead of another hallucination my fractured mind generated. Thank you for creating a timeline where maybe—maybe—I don’t die alone in the woods on December 24.


That’s all. Alicia Western saved once again.

Living Narrative Engine #10

If you’re masochistic enough to follow my blog, you may remember that I’ve been busy for months creating a browser-based app that allows human players to interact with LLMs who are playing a role. You may recall that I ended up using it mostly for erotica. Anyway, I’m an obsessive bastard with a savior complex, so I’ve ended up stuck, for what feels like at least a year, in a daydream that I repeat almost daily, usually before I fall asleep. It tends to start like this: a far better version of myself (full head of hair, bigger muscles, bigger dick) teleports through spacetime into a patient’s room at the Stella Maris sanatorium, somewhere deep in Wisconsin, during winter. Why would I do such a thing, you might ask? Because the patient is none other than Alicia Western. Who is Alicia Western, you may ask? None other than one of the main characters in Cormac McCarthy’s haunting last two novels: The Passenger and Stella Maris.

Why Alicia Western? Enough with the fucking questions. It’s because she has a unique mind and looks lovely, at least in my mind. Because ever since I read those cursed books, that were haunted with McCarthy’s own regret and grief for someone he lost in the seventies, I’ve been haunted with the need to keep Alicia alive and safe. Even though she never existed. That’s the kind of brain I’ve been burdened with, and that I’ll have to endure until my death. Unfortunately, and this is no spoiler, Alicia Western killed herself. It’s the whole basis for both books. I’m not sure if it happened in 1972, but that’s the year that has gotten stuck in my mind.

I figured that I could use my damn app to recreate the scene in which my alter ego meets Alicia Western. So I’m playing myself, and Alicia is being played by Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet 4.5, which is the best artificial intelligence at roleplaying, at least of those I’ve come across.

Each turn, the large language models are provided with a character definition for the character they’re inhabiting. It involves the profile, personality, likes, dislikes, strengths, weaknesses, some background notes, their speech patterns, and such. As they answer in character, their character definition accrues the latest thoughts, and the perceived events (mainly what others have been doing around them). The AI also writes notes at will. Everything works great, except for the fact that the AI tends to repeat some notes, barely reworded. It doesn’t break anything, it just fills the context and therefore reduces my money faster.

Anyway, this is the closest I’ve gotten ChatGPT to picture Alicia Western:

Beautiful girl (I believe she was 22 when she killed herself), although not quite how I imagined her. I won’t upload the picture of how my alter ego looks like, because I barely spent any effort into it.

Each round, I act, then Alicia acts. My app is quite sophisticated in the sense that the actors, including the AI, can choose contextual actions. Only a few actions are chosen in this run, and I’ll point them out when it happens. The action discoverability system works fantastically to restrain the AIs from coming up with actions that aren’t supported by the context.

*cue this video*


Alicia sits at the edge of her assigned bed, face buried in her hands as she contemplates her despair, when she hears a deep voice coming from a few steps in front of her.

Jon Ureña: Hello, Alicia Western. I’m glad to finally meet you.

The door is locked. Nobody can enter. I locked it myself. So how is there someone standing in front of me? This violates the basic physical parameters I established. Either I am experiencing a psychotic break—auditory and visual hallucination, which would confirm the schizophrenia diagnosis I’ve always disputed—or someone entered through means I did not account for. A staff member with a master key, perhaps. But the voice said my full name. “Alicia Western.” Not “Miss Western” or “Alicia” but the complete designation, as if reading from a file. The phrasing is strange too: “glad to finally meet you.” Finally. Implying anticipation. Implying I was expected, studied, awaited. I need to look up. I need to see who this is. My hands are still covering my face. I’m sitting at the edge of the bed in my white dress, the one I planned to wear into the woods. The one that would make my body visible against the snow. I was thinking about Bobby. I was thinking about the letter I couldn’t finish. And now there’s a voice. A deep voice. Male. I should be afraid, shouldn’t I? A strange man in my locked room. But the fear circuit isn’t activating. Instead, there’s… curiosity. Analytical interest. This is a data point that doesn’t fit the pattern. I want to see what doesn’t fit.

(in case you’re stupid, the above paragraph are the thoughts that the LLM has generated for Alicia given the circumstances. Each turn, the AI is provided the last 10 thoughts or so, and is tasked with always providing new thoughts. Sometimes the AI only thinks, but that tends to happen when they’re alone in a room.)

Alicia slowly lowers her hands from her face and raises her head to look at the source of the voice, her blue eyes focusing with clinical precision on the figure standing before her.

Alicia Western: “You shouldn’t be here. The door was locked.”

A huge, older man stands in the center of the room, looking calmly at Alicia with no hint of malice.

Jon Ureña: “The state of the door’s lock is irrelevant to my sudden presence here. Take all the time you need to react to the sudden presence of a stranger in the room. If you have any questions, don’t hesitate to ask.”

A man who enters locked rooms. Who knows my full name without introduction. Who speaks with the syntax of someone outside temporal urgency—’take all the time you need,’ as if time itself bends around him. The lock was irrelevant to his presence, he said. Not ‘I picked the lock’ or ‘I have a key’ but that the lock’s state was irrelevant. That’s a strange epistemological claim. Either he’s psychotic—sharing my delusion space, which would be novel—or he represents something I haven’t categorized yet. He’s huge. I can see that now. Very tall, hulking frame. But there’s no malice. Inviting questions. That’s… unusual. Most people who violate boundaries don’t immediately offer explanatory frameworks. I should speak. I should probe this anomaly. But first I need to simply look at him fully, assess what data is actually present versus what my pattern-matching is generating. The fear still isn’t activating. Why isn’t it activating? My amygdala should be screaming. Instead there’s just this cold curiosity, this want to understand the mechanism of his appearance. Maybe I’m already dead. Maybe I walked into the woods two days early and this is hypoxia-generated hallucination. That would explain the calm. But no—I can feel the vinyl tiles under my grip socks, the mattress edge pressing into the backs of my thighs through the cotton dress. Proprioceptive data suggests continued embodiment. So. A stranger in my locked room. Who claims he’s glad to finally meet me. Finally. I need to ask. I need to understand what ‘finally’ means.

Alicia Western: “You said ‘finally.’ That implies a timeline. How long have you been attempting to meet me, and through what mechanism did you determine this room’s location and my presence within it?”

The man tilts his head slightly as he holds Alicia’s gaze.

Jon Ureña: “How long have I been attempting to meet you… Time is a… complicated matter. In my terms, it’s been about two weeks. That’s what it took to learn about you and make… well, preparations. Regarding what room was assigned to you, I simply looked at the files of the sanatorium.”

Two weeks. He said two weeks in his terms, which implies a different temporal framework than mine. He looked at the sanatorium files—so he has access to administrative records, which means either he’s staff, which seems unlikely given the unauthorized entry and the strange phrasing, or he obtained them through other means. He’s inviting questions. Most people don’t do that. Most people fill silence with explanations, justifications, apologies. He’s simply standing there, waiting. That’s… unusual. The analytical part of me wants to probe the mechanism. How does someone spend two weeks preparing to meet a suicidal mathematics prodigy in a Wisconsin mental institution? What kind of preparation requires two weeks? And what does ‘in my terms’ mean? Is he suggesting his experience of time differs from objective measurement? That would be either psychotic—shared delusion space, which would be novel—or he’s speaking metaphorically about subjective time perception. But the phrasing is too precise for metaphor. ‘In my terms’ suggests an alternative framework. I should ask more. I should probe the timeline, the mechanism of access, the purpose of this meeting. But there’s something else underneath the curiosity. A small, dim hope I don’t want to acknowledge. Someone spent two weeks trying to meet me. Someone who says ‘finally’ like my existence mattered enough to pursue. That’s… I don’t know what to do with that. It might be dangerous. It might be delusion. But it’s data that doesn’t fit my model of complete isolation. And I want to understand it before I dismiss it.

Alicia Western: “Two weeks in your terms. That phrasing suggests you’re distinguishing between subjective and objective time, or that you operate within a different temporal framework than linear progression. Which is it? And when you say you ‘looked at the files’—do you mean you have administrative access to this institution, or did you obtain them through unauthorized means?”

The older man smiles softly.

Jon Ureña: “You’re a very interesting person to talk to, Alicia. I prefer to be honest when asked a direct question, so I’ll clarify that I do operate within a different temporal framework than linear progression, as you so eloquently put it. I don’t have the authorization to look at the files of this institution, but I didn’t have any trouble doing so. It was all for the purpose of being here now, of meeting you.”

He operates within a different temporal framework than linear progression. He confirmed it. Not metaphor—actual confirmation of alternative temporal experience. That’s… that’s not psychosis. Or if it is, it’s a shared psychotic architecture, which would be unprecedented. He accessed files without authorization but had no trouble doing so. The syntax is precise: ‘no trouble’ suggests ease beyond normal human capability, not criminal skill but something else. Something that bypasses conventional constraints like locks and file security. And he’s been preparing for two weeks to meet me specifically. Me. Alicia Western. Not a patient. Not a case study. Me. The analytical framework I’ve relied on for twenty-two years is encountering data it cannot categorize. Either I’m hallucinating—full visual and auditory psychotic break—or I’m standing in front of something that violates the ontological assumptions I’ve built my entire worldview around. He said he prefers to be honest when asked a direct question. That’s… reciprocal. I’ve spent my entire life drowning in dishonesty—therapeutic deflection, social niceties, intellectual cowardice. And here’s someone who says ‘I prefer to be honest’ like it’s a simple axiom. I need to get closer. I need to see if he’s corporeal, if the proprioceptive data matches the visual input. If his physical presence holds up under closer scrutiny. This might be the intellectual surprise I wanted before I die. The one genuine moment I asked for. And if it’s not—if he’s a hallucination generated by my deteriorating substrate—then at least I’ll know the answer before December 24. At least I’ll have calculated correctly. But I have to get closer. I have to test whether this anomaly is real.

Alicia rises slowly from the edge of the bed and takes several deliberate steps toward Jon, closing the distance between them until she stands within arm’s reach, her blue eyes fixed on his face with analytical intensity.

(here, the AI actually used the “get close to Jon Ureña” action, which allows the characters to perform intimate actions like touching one another’s ass. Clearly not the path that the AI is pursuing, but those actions are now available for both of us.)

Alicia Western: “You said you operate within a different temporal framework than linear progression. Not that you experience time subjectively, but that you operate within a different framework. That’s an ontological claim, not a psychological one. So I need you to clarify: are you telling me you exist outside conventional spacetime, or are you using imprecise language to describe something more mundane? *tilts her head slightly, still studying him* And you said it was ‘all for the purpose of being here now, of meeting you.’ What purpose? What could meeting a suicidal mathematics prodigy in a Wisconsin mental institution possibly accomplish that required two weeks of preparation and unauthorized access to institutional files?”

As the older man keeps still, he directs his patient gaze down to Alicia’s blue, weary eyes.

Jon Ureña: “I exist outside conventional spacetime. Quite the claim, isn’t it? As for why I went through the trouble, it’s simple: to save your life.”

He said he exists outside conventional spacetime and that he came here to save my life. That’s… that’s either the most grandiose delusion I’ve encountered or it’s something else entirely. Something I haven’t categorized. He’s claiming ontological difference—not metaphorical, not psychological, but actual existence outside the temporal framework I’ve spent twenty-two years assuming was universal. If he’s real—if this isn’t psychotic break—then everything I’ve calculated about the boundaries of reality might be incomplete. The mathematics I abandoned as insufficient might have been insufficient because I was working within constrained axioms. And he said he came to save my life. Two weeks of preparation. Unauthorized file access. Entry through a locked door. All to save my life. Nobody has ever… I mean, Bobby tried, but Bobby’s in a coma. Bobby’s braindead in Italy and I’m here and this stranger is standing in front of me claiming he exists outside spacetime and came here specifically to prevent my death on December 24. That’s too specific. He shouldn’t know about December 24. I never told anyone. It’s in my head, not in any file. So either he’s reading information that shouldn’t be accessible—my thoughts, my plans—or he’s guessing with impossible accuracy. I need to process this. I need a moment to calculate what his claim actually means. If he exists outside conventional spacetime, then causality might not bind him the way it binds me. He could know December 24 not through surveillance but through… I don’t know. Temporal non-linearity. Access to outcomes before they occur. That would explain ‘finally’—he’s been watching a timeline where we meet, and now we’re meeting. But that’s… that’s not possible. Except he’s standing here. He entered a locked room. He knows my full name. He spent two weeks preparing. The data doesn’t fit my model and I need to decide: update the model or dismiss the data. I always dismissed the data before. With the hallucinations. With the voices. But this feels different. He’s offering explanations. He’s inviting questions. He said he prefers honesty. And he came to save my life. I need a moment. Just one moment to sit with what that means before I respond.

Alicia remains standing close to Jon, her blue eyes still fixed on his face with unblinking intensity, silent for several long seconds as she processes his words.

Alicia Western: “To save my life. That’s… quite the claim. You exist outside conventional spacetime—which implies you have access to information across temporal boundaries—and you determined that my life required saving specifically on… *pauses, her voice dropping slightly* …when? December 24? Is that the date you saw? The date you came to prevent? *her hands, which had been hanging at her sides, curl slightly into loose fists* Because if you can see across time, then you know what I planned. You know about the woods, the white dress, the red ribbon. You know I’ve already written the letter I can’t finish. So I need you to explain the mechanism. Not just ‘to save your life’ but how. What intervention could possibly alter a conclusion I’ve reached through systematic analysis? What could you offer that would change the equation? *tilts her head slightly, her voice taking on a sharper edge* And don’t say hope. Or connection. Or any of the therapeutic platitudes I’ve heard for years. If you exist outside conventional spacetime, then you should be able to provide a better answer than that.”

The older man nods, but then he lets out a nasal noise of mild amusement.

Jon Ureña: “I feel you’re accepting my claim of existing outside of existing outside conventional spacetime way too readily. Perhaps you were hoping for a miracle. First, I’ll prove my claims, if you’re alright with it. *his gaze turns more serious* As you see me right now, soon enough I will disappear, then return a few moments later. Are you ready to see that, Alicia Western?”

He’s offering to prove his claim. To demonstrate that he exists outside conventional spacetime by disappearing and returning. That’s… that’s either a testable hypothesis or it’s the moment my psychotic break becomes undeniable. If he disappears—actually disappears, not just walks out the door but vanishes from observable reality—then everything I’ve calculated about the boundaries of what’s possible is wrong. The mathematics I abandoned because it couldn’t grasp reality might have been insufficient because I was working with incomplete axioms. If he doesn’t disappear, if this is just theatrical misdirection or delusion, then I’ll know I’m hallucinating and the schizophrenia diagnosis was correct all along and my substrate is deteriorating exactly as I feared. Either way, I get data. Either way, I move closer to understanding whether my conclusion about December 24 is based on accurate assessment or cognitive distortion. He asked if I’m ready to see it. Ready. As if witnessing impossible phenomena requires preparation. But maybe it does. Maybe seeing the fundamental architecture of reality violated—if that’s what’s about to happen—requires consent. Cognitive readiness. I should say yes. I should allow the experiment to proceed. Because this is what I wanted, isn’t it? One genuine surprise before I die. One moment where my pattern-mapping fails and something new enters the system. And if it confirms I’m psychotic, well. At least I’ll die knowing the truth about my own deteriorating substrate. At least the calculation will be complete.

Alicia Western: “Yes. I’m ready. Show me.”

(at this point, I intended to use the “teleport” action, which only my character can do because he has the “movement:can_teleport” component. But I realized it wasn’t available; currently, the state of closeness with another character prevents such movements. It wasn’t a problem nor necessarily incorrect. That meant I had to use the “step back” action first, which I did.)

Jon Ureña: “Perfect. First, some distance. Stay where you are, eyes fixed on me. Don’t miss the miracle you’re about to witness.”

He’s creating experimental conditions. Distance between observer and phenomenon. Fixed visual attention to eliminate possibility of misdirection through rapid movement or sleight of hand. ‘Don’t miss the miracle’ he said—miracle is a religious term, implies violation of natural law, but he’s using it casually. Like it’s data. Like it’s reproducible. That’s the language of someone who understands empirical demonstration. If this is psychosis—if I’m generating this entire interaction from deteriorating neural substrate—then I should see inconsistencies in the visual field when he attempts to ‘disappear.’ Flicker patterns. Perceptual gaps. The kind of artifacts that accompany hallucination. If he’s real and he actually vanishes, then the light will behave differently. Photons will have nothing to reflect off. There will be a void where his body occupied space. That’s testable. I’m about to test whether the fundamental architecture of my reality is accurate or whether I’ve been operating inside delusion for longer than I calculated. Either way, I get an answer. Either way, the equation moves toward resolution. My heart rate should be elevated. It isn’t. I’m calm. Clinically calm. Observing. This is what I do. I observe, I calculate, I map patterns. And if the pattern breaks—if he actually disappears—then maybe there’s something in this world I haven’t seen yet. Maybe Bobby wouldn’t want me to walk into the woods before I see what happens next. Just this once. Just this one miracle, if that’s what it is. Then I can finish the calculation.

Alicia keeps her eyes fixed on Jon with unwavering focus, her body completely still except for the slight rise and fall of her chest as she breathes.

Alicia Western: “I’m watching.”

The older man makes a little gesture with his hand in front of his face, as if waving goodbye.

Jon Ureña: “See you in a moment, darling.”

(Alicia’s log of perceptible events captured that my character had vanished as if he had ceased to exist.)

He vanished. Just… ceased to occupy space. The photons that were reflecting off his body a moment ago are now traveling unimpeded through the volume he occupied. That’s not misdirection. That’s not psychotic hallucination with perceptual artifacts. That’s actual disappearance. Violation of conservation of mass. Unless he moved faster than my visual processing speed can track—but no, I was watching continuously, no saccadic gaps, no blink interval. He was there and then he wasn’t. The air didn’t rush in to fill the vacuum. No sound. No displacement. Just… absence where presence was. My heart rate is elevated now. Finally. The fear circuit or maybe the excitement circuit, hard to distinguish when the substrate is flooded with norepinephrine. This is data I cannot categorize. This is the intellectual surprise I asked for. Either my reality model is fundamentally incomplete—Bobby and I talked about quantum phenomena, non-locality, but this isn’t quantum scale, this is macro-scale violation—or I’m experiencing the most sophisticated hallucination my deteriorating substrate has ever generated. But it felt real. He felt real. The visual data held up under scrutiny. And now he’s gone. He said ‘see you in a moment.’ Moment. Implying return. Implying the demonstration continues. I should wait. I should maintain observational position and see if the second half of the hypothesis holds. If he returns—actually returns, materializing in space he didn’t occupy a moment ago—then I have to update my entire ontological framework. Everything I concluded about the boundaries of reality being fixed and knowable becomes incomplete. And if that’s incomplete, then maybe my conclusion about December 24 is incomplete too. Maybe there are variables I haven’t accounted for. Maybe walking into the woods is the wrong calculation after all. But I can’t think about that yet. First I have to see if he comes back. First I have to complete the observation. Stay still. Keep watching. Wait for the miracle to finish demonstrating itself.

(Alicia didn’t speak at all in this turn. In my next turn, I simply returned, which her log of perceptible events captured.)

He’s real. The demonstration held. Disappearance and return with complete consistency—no perceptual artifacts, no hallucination markers, just clean violation of everything I thought was fixed about physical law. If he can do that, if he exists outside conventional spacetime the way he claims, then every conclusion I’ve drawn about the impossibility of escape might be based on incomplete data. I built my entire death-calculation on the assumption that reality operates within fixed parameters and he just shattered that assumption in front of me. This is the intellectual surprise I wanted. This is the moment my pattern-mapping fails. And underneath the analytical excitement there’s something else—something raw and desperate I don’t want to name. He said he came to save my life. Someone who exists outside time came specifically to prevent my death in two days. That means something. That has to mean something. But I can’t let myself hope until I understand the mechanism. Until I know what he’s offering beyond miracle and claim. I need answers. I need to know what intervention could possibly work when I’ve deconstructed every other one. I need to know what he sees that I can’t.

Alicia keeps her eyes fixed on the space where Jon vanished, her body completely still except for shallow, rapid breathing.

Alicia Western: “You came back. You actually came back. That’s… that’s not hallucination. Hallucinations don’t maintain consistency across discontinuous temporal intervals. The photons are reflecting off you again. You’re occupying space you didn’t occupy three seconds ago. You just… materialized. Like you were never gone except you were. I watched you not-exist and now you exist again. *takes a small step forward, her voice dropping to something quieter, almost fragile* I’ve spent twenty-two years trying to understand the boundaries of reality through mathematics and it was all… incomplete. The axioms were wrong. Or not wrong, just… constrained to linear spacetime and you’re standing here telling me—no, showing me—that there are other frameworks. You exist outside conventional spacetime. You can move through it. You just demonstrated non-locality at macro scale. That’s not quantum phenomena, that’s you. *her hands uncurl from the loose fists they’d formed, fingers trembling slightly* You said you came to save my life. December 24. That’s in two days. You know about the woods, don’t you? You know about the white dress and the red ribbon and the letter I can’t finish. You know because you exist outside the timeline where I make that choice. *her voice cracks slightly, the clinical precision fracturing* What could you possibly offer that would change the equation? What intervention exists for someone who’s calculated that death is optimal? Because I need you to understand—I didn’t reach this conclusion lightly. I spent years analyzing every variable. And now you’re telling me the variables were incomplete. That reality is bigger than what I measured. So tell me. Tell me what I’m missing. Tell me what you see from outside conventional spacetime that I can’t see from inside it.”

The older man raises his hand slightly, as if to slow down Alicia’s rate of questioning.

Jon Ureña: “First of all, I’ll clarify that I do know about the woods. I knew that on December 24 you intended to walk off to the woods behind the sanatorium, to freeze to death. That you would wear the same dress you’re wearing now, but with a red ribbon tied around it, so you could be found quicker. Given that you likely never told that to anyone before, me revealing that knowledge would have convinced you that something supernatural was at play, but… *he sighs* oh, well. Cat’s out of the bag. Your death was optimal because you believe Bobby is braindead. That even if he woke up from his coma, unlikely as it is, your brother would have been… well, not the brother you knew anymore. *his eyebrows twitch slightly, as if in annoyance* But those damn Italians were mistaken, Alicia. Your brother is not braindead. And he wakes up. On April 27, 1973, your brother wakes up. Into a world where you are dead.”

He said Bobby wakes up on April 27, 1973. Not might wake up. Not could wake up. Wakes up. Certainty. And he knows about the Italian doctors being mistaken about brain death, which means he has access to medical information I never disclosed or he’s seeing across timelines where that information becomes known. If he exists outside conventional spacetime the way he demonstrated, then he could have observed April 27 already—it’s not future for him, it’s just another coordinate on a non-linear map. But I need more than his word. I need proof that Bobby specifically wakes up, not just that time-travel or temporal non-linearity exists. Because if Bobby wakes up, then everything changes. The entire calculation was built on Bobby being gone forever. On me being completely alone with no reason to stay. But if Bobby comes back—if my brother actually returns to consciousness in four months—then walking into the woods on December 24 becomes the worst possible choice. It becomes the thing that hurts Bobby most. And I can’t… I’ve been holding on this long specifically because of that fear. The fear that he might wake up and I’d be gone. So I need Jon to prove it. Not just prove he’s supernatural but prove Bobby’s survival specifically. Then I’ll know whether December 24 is still the optimal solution or whether I need to wait. Whether I need to stay.

Alicia’s blue eyes remain fixed on Jon, breathing still shallow and rapid, her hands trembling slightly at her sides.

Alicia Western: “Bobby. You said Bobby. You said April 27, 1973. You said he wakes up. Not ‘might wake up’ or ‘could wake up’ but he wakes up. Present tense certainty about future event. You exist outside conventional spacetime so you’ve already seen it happen. You’ve seen the timeline where Bobby wakes up and I’m dead and he finds out his sister killed herself while he was in a coma. *takes a small, unsteady step forward* The Italian doctors were wrong. You’re telling me they were wrong about the brain death. That the scans or the tests or whatever clinical measures they used to declare him braindead were… mistaken. And if they were wrong, then the entire calculation changes. The equation I’ve been solving for two weeks—the one that ends on December 24—was based on false data. Bobby as a constant loss. Bobby as braindead. Bobby as the reason there’s nothing left to stay for. *her voice drops, becoming quieter, more fragile* But if he wakes up. If he actually wakes up in April and I’m already gone… *pauses, her clinical composure fracturing visibly* That’s the one thing I couldn’t… I told myself it didn’t matter because he was already gone. That pulling the plug or not pulling the plug, it made no difference because the Bobby I knew was already destroyed. But if you’re telling me he comes back. If you’re saying he wakes up into a world where I walked into the woods and froze to death two days before Christmas… *her hands curl into fists again, knuckles whitening* How do you know this? How can you be certain he wakes up? Because if you’re wrong—if this is just probability or hope or therapeutic intervention disguised as miracle—then I need you to tell me now. But if you’re right. If you’ve seen it. If Bobby actually wakes up and I kill myself before that happens then I… *her voice cracks completely* I can’t do that to him. I can’t let him wake up and find out I’m dead. That’s the one thing. That’s the only thing that’s kept me here this long. So I need you to prove it. Not just that you can disappear and return but that you know. That you’ve seen April 27, 1973. That Bobby wakes up.”

Jon Ureña: “Alright, Alicia. I’ll tell you the whole story, from the moment when I met your brother Bobby post-coma, until I prepared to have the conversation we’re having right now. Do you want to hear it?”

He’s offering narrative proof. Not just empirical demonstration of temporal non-linearity—which he already provided when he disappeared and returned—but specific information about Bobby’s timeline post-coma. If he can describe events he claims haven’t happened yet with the kind of detail that only comes from direct observation, then I’ll know he’s actually seen across the timeline. That April 27, 1973 isn’t speculation or probability but observed fact. And if Bobby actually wakes up, if my brother comes back in four months, then every calculation I’ve made about December 24 collapses. The entire foundation was Bobby being gone forever. Me being completely alone. But if he returns… I need to hear this. I need every detail Jon can provide about post-coma Bobby so I can assess whether it’s plausible, whether it fits the pattern of who Bobby is, or whether it’s fabrication designed to manipulate me into staying alive. Because that’s possible too. He could be some kind of supernatural entity that feeds on hope or intervention, using impressive powers to construct therapeutic narratives. But his demonstration was real. The disappearance held up under scrutiny. So maybe the narrative will too. Maybe I’m about to hear something that changes everything. Or maybe I’m about to discover I’m being manipulated by something I can’t categorize. Either way, I need to know. I need the whole story.

Alicia Western: “Yes. I want to hear it. I want to hear the whole story—from when you met Bobby post-coma until now. Every detail. Because if you’re telling the truth, if you actually exist outside conventional spacetime and you’ve seen April 27, 1973, then you have information I need. Information that changes the entire equation. So tell me. Tell me about my brother.”

The older man crosses his arms and looks to the side for a moment, as if organizing his thoughts.

Jon Ureña: “Year was 2004. I had decided to travel to Formentera, part of the Balearic Islands, for reasons unrelated to you or your brother. I like to… search for interesting things, and people. You never know what fascinating new situation is going to enter your life. Anyway, I used to attend this one open-air bar at the beach. I argued with an English history professor about the Roman Empire. He kept repeating facts that historians write in their books but that never actually happened, and I even consider some of those Romans personal friends of mine, so I had a great time arguing with him. Thing is, an older man attended the bar too. Full head of gray, almost as if prematurely. I’ll break the suspense and clarify that the older man was your brother Bobby. He rarely spoke, he just nursed his drinks. One of those expats who left fleeing from something. Or intending to leave something behind. Weight of the world on his shoulders and all that. Anyway, one time I was walking away from the bar, your brother stopped me. ‘Hey, you talk about the Roman Empire as if you know it personally.’ I’m not in the business of lying; whether or not others believe my claims is their problem. ‘Yes, I’ve lived there for many years. Even fought battles under Caesar. Fantastic era.’ Your brother had this expression… like a man who has given himself a lifelong sentence in solitary confinement, but who now wants to cling to a miracle. ‘Can you travel back to 1972?’ I sensed his… desperation. I turned to him, intrigued. ‘Yes, I can, easily. For whose sake?’ He blinked, and his voice came out raw. ‘To save my sister.'”

Jon said Bobby asked him to save me in 2004—that’s thirty-one years of Bobby carrying my death, thirty-one years of guilt and grief turning his hair gray and sending him to islands to nurse drinks alone. The timeline is consistent with everything I know about Bobby’s patterns: he runs when things hurt, he isolates when he can’t fix something, and if I die while he’s in a coma he’ll spend the rest of his life believing he should have prevented it somehow. Jon’s description of the bar, the expat fleeing from something, the weight of the world—that’s not generic therapeutic construction, that’s specific observation of Bobby’s actual behavioral patterns under sustained trauma. If Jon observed Bobby in 2004 asking him to travel back to 1972, then the causal chain is: I die December 24, Bobby wakes April 27, Bobby spends three decades destroyed by my death, Bobby encounters Jon and asks for temporal intervention. Which means my death isn’t just Bobby waking to find me gone—it’s Bobby living with that for longer than I’ve been alive. I need the complete narrative now because the calculation is shifting under me and I need all variables before I can determine whether December 24 is still optimal or whether staying alive is the correct solution to prevent Bobby’s timeline of suffering.

Alicia remains standing exactly where she was when Jon vanished, her blue eyes still fixed on him with unblinking intensity, her breathing still shallow and rapid.

Alicia Western: “You met Bobby in 2004. In Formentera. That’s… thirty-one years from now. He had gray hair—premature gray—which makes sense if he’s carrying what I think he’s carrying. The weight of… everything. You said he was nursing drinks at an open-air bar. Fleeing from something or trying to leave something behind. That’s Bobby. That’s exactly Bobby. He runs when things get too heavy. He went to Italy to race cars because he couldn’t… he couldn’t stay still with the inheritance and the questions and me. *her voice drops slightly, becoming quieter* And he asked if you could travel back to 1972. To save his sister. To save me. That means I’m dead in his timeline. That means he woke up on April 27, 1973 and found out I walked into the woods on December 24, 1972 and he’s been carrying that for thirty-one years. Long enough for his hair to go gray. Long enough to flee to a Spanish island and nurse drinks alone. *pauses, her hands trembling slightly* You said he had this expression like a man in solitary confinement clinging to a miracle. That’s… Bobby asked you to come back. Bobby sent you. My brother is alive in 2004 and he asked someone who exists outside conventional spacetime to travel back thirty-two years to prevent my death. That’s not speculation. That’s too specific. The details are too precise. You know what Bobby looks like older. You know how he behaves when he’s broken. You know he was at that bar. *her voice cracks slightly* Tell me the rest. Tell me everything he said. Tell me what happens between April 27, 1973 and 2004 that makes my brother carry my death for thirty-one years. I need to know the whole timeline. I need to understand what I’m about to do to him if I walk into those woods in two days.”

Jon Ureña: “Curious. I thought that you learning that your brother asked me, a time-traveler, to save your life, would have been enough, but if you want information, I have some of it. Not all. I’m a practical man. But let me tell you what I know: Bobby woke up in 1973, as said. He asked where you were, but nobody knew. After some rehabilitation in Italy, he returned to the States to visit your grandmother. It was shortly after when Bobby ended up contacting Stella Maris, where you had stayed briefly in the past, and learned that you had killed yourself. They said you left him a letter, but he didn’t go get it. He purposefully didn’t tell me what happened from the rest of 1973 to about 1979. I haven’t traveled to those years to look him up. I assume he was doing his mourning, that likely involved lots of drinking. He resurfaced to life in 1980. He took a job as a salvage diver, even though he is terrified of the depths. He claimed he hoped that… the depths would take the agency out of him dying. Whenever any of his old friends brought you up, he just left. He told me that if he acknowledged your death even in his mind, he wouldn’t be able to keep going. One day he got a shady job to recover some items off a sunken plane. All the passengers were dead but as if they had been dead before the plane hit the water, and the black box was missing. Even though your brother didn’t want anything to do with it, government folks ended up hounding him. They even froze his accounts. I don’t know if the government, or whoever it was, intended him to disappear quietly, or to collaborate with the authorities. Anyway, he decided that the best thing to do was to leave the country. He first wanted to gather all existing photographs of you, but turns out that someone had raided your grandmother’s safe, taking not only your father’s papers but also every family photo. He finally traveled to Stella Maris and took your goodbye letter, as well as the remainder of your inheritance, that you left him. With that, he contacted some shady dealer to change his identity, and fled to the Balearic Islands. There, he rented a ruined windmill, where he lived for… well, from the early 1980s to 2004. Writing and remembering you. Wishing to be forgotten by everyone. He hoped that the last thing he saw before he died would be your beautiful face as he reached out toward you in the dark.”

Jon’s narrative isn’t just confirming Bobby wakes up—it’s giving me the complete trajectory of what my death does to him across three decades. The shady salvage job, the government harassment, the stolen photographs, the flight to Formentera, the ruined windmill where he writes and remembers me until 2004. Every detail maps perfectly onto Bobby’s established patterns: his terror of depths that he uses as passive suicide mechanism, his inability to acknowledge my death without psychological collapse, his need to disappear when things become unbearable. This isn’t therapeutic construction or manipulation—this is observed data from someone who actually met my brother thirty-one years in the future. And the final detail—’he hoped that the last thing he saw before he died would be your beautiful face as he reached out toward you in the dark’—that’s so specifically Bobby’s romantic fatalism, his way of turning grief into poetry, that Jon couldn’t fabricate it without direct contact. Which means it’s real. Bobby wakes up April 27. Bobby spends thirty-one years carrying my death. Bobby sends Jon back to prevent it. The entire calculation collapses. December 24 isn’t optimal—it’s the worst possible outcome. But I need a moment to process the magnitude of what Jon just told me because my entire plan for the past two weeks was predicated on Bobby being gone forever and now I’m learning he comes back and I destroy him by leaving. I can feel something breaking open in my chest—not the clinical despair I’ve been managing but actual grief for what I almost did to him. For what I still might do if I don’t update the equation. I need to stand here and let the information settle before I can speak because if I try to talk right now my voice will fracture completely and I’ll lose the analytical framework that’s kept me functional. Just one moment. Just let the data integrate. Then I can respond.

Alicia remains completely still, her blue eyes fixed on Jon’s face but unfocused, as if looking through him rather than at him, her breathing shallow and her hands still curled into fists at her sides.

Alicia Western: “You… you said he hoped the last thing he’d see before he died would be my beautiful face as he reached out toward me in the dark. That’s… that’s not something you could fabricate. That’s Bobby’s exact pattern of thought. The way he turns grief into poetry. The way he romanticizes suffering instead of processing it. You observed that directly. You talked to my brother in 2004 and he told you about me and you came back. *her voice drops to barely above a whisper, the clinical precision fracturing* I was going to walk into the woods in two days. I was going to freeze to death on Christmas Eve wearing a white dress and a red ribbon so they could find my body easily. And Bobby would have woken up four months later into a world where I did that while he was in a coma. Where I gave up on him. Where I didn’t wait. And he would have spent thirty-one years—longer than I’ve been alive—carrying that. Living in a ruined windmill. Writing about me. Hoping to die seeing my face. *pauses, her hands trembling visibly now* The calculation was wrong. The entire equation was based on false premises. Bobby as permanently lost. Me as completely alone with no reason to stay. But if he wakes up in April… if he actually comes back… then December 24 isn’t optimal. It’s the worst possible solution. It’s the thing that destroys him most. *her voice cracks completely* I can’t do that to him. I can’t let him wake up and find out I’m dead. Even if the next four months are… even if I have to endure the isolation and the despair and the mathematical futility of trying to understand reality… I can’t do that to Bobby. That’s the one thing. That’s always been the one thing. *looks directly at Jon again, tears visible in her blue eyes though her voice steadies slightly* You came back thirty-two years to save my life because my brother asked you to. Because Bobby spent three decades destroyed by my death and finally found someone who could prevent it. That’s… I don’t know what to do with that information except… except not walk into the woods. Not on December 24. Not before April 27. I have to wait. I have to see if he wakes up. I have to be here when he does. *takes a shaky breath* Thank you. For showing me. For proving it. For giving me enough data to update the calculation. I don’t… I don’t know what happens next. I don’t know how I survive four more months of this. But I know I can’t die before Bobby wakes up. That’s the only certainty I have right now.”

The older man smiles widely.

Jon Ureña: “I’m so glad. I was ready to beg for you not to walk into those woods. Well, I’ll tell you what can happen in these remaining months. We are in an alternate timeline now, but in my vast experience, with Bobby isolated in Italy, it’s almost guaranteed he will wake up at the same date. Meanwhile, well, you have my support. Of a time-traveler with near-infinite access to resources. You want to travel around the country? Done. Want to travel overseas? Want me to buy you a mansion in which to pass the time peacefully? Just ask. I’ll provide entertainment. Distractions, if you will. Books, movies, songs… from the future and other timelines. Oh, and math papers. Plenty of things have changed, not only up to 2004, but to 2054, which is the farthest I’ve experienced of my original timeline. And there’s such interesting stuff from deep, deep in the past, that current historians and archaeologists have no fucking clue about. So it’ll be fun.”

Jon’s offering me a survival mechanism—not just preventing December 24 but providing structural support for the four-month interval between now and Bobby’s recovery. Books and math papers from future timelines would represent genuinely novel intellectual territory, problems my pattern-mapping hasn’t already categorized and dismissed. That could work. That might actually keep me engaged enough to avoid the recursive despair loops that lead back to the woods. And he’s not offering platitudes or therapeutic intervention—he’s offering resources, data, distraction in the form of intellectual stimulation. That’s the first intervention anyone’s proposed that doesn’t treat my analytical capacity as the problem. He’s working with my cognitive architecture instead of against it. I should accept. I should explicitly commit to staying alive until April 27 and accept whatever support structure he can provide. Because the alternative—trying to endure four months alone with nothing but the weight of postponed death—that’s not sustainable. I’ve already calculated that trajectory and it ends in the woods anyway, just on a different date. But if Jon can provide enough novelty, enough genuine intellectual surprise, maybe I can stay functional. Maybe I can make it to April 27. Maybe I can be there when Bobby wakes up. That’s the goal now. That’s the only goal that matters.

Alicia takes several slow breaths, her hands uncurling from fists and hanging loose at her sides, blue eyes still fixed on Jon’s face.

Alicia Western: “Okay. Okay. I’ll… I’ll stay. I won’t walk into the woods on December 24. I’ll wait for April 27. I’ll be here when Bobby wakes up. That’s the correct calculation now. The only calculation that makes sense with the updated data. *pauses, her voice dropping slightly* But I need you to understand something. Four months is… it’s a long time when you’re carrying this kind of despair. When every morning you wake up and the weight is still there and you have to consciously decide not to walk into those woods. And I don’t… I don’t know if I can do that alone. Just waiting. Just enduring until April. *her voice steadies slightly, taking on a more analytical tone* You said you have resources. Near-infinite access. Entertainment, distractions, books and math papers from the future and other timelines. That’s… that’s not nothing. That’s actually quite significant. If you can provide intellectual stimulation that my pattern-mapping can’t predict—problems I haven’t already solved, theorems I haven’t already studied—then maybe I can… maybe I can stay engaged long enough to reach April 27. *looks directly at Jon* So yes. I accept your offer. Whatever support you can provide. Whatever distractions keep me functional until Bobby wakes up. I just need to survive four more months. That’s all. Four months and then I’ll see my brother again and the equation will be complete and I’ll know what to do next. *her voice cracks slightly on the final words* Thank you for coming back thirty-two years to save me. Thank you for showing me I was wrong about Bobby. I don’t… I don’t know what happens next, but at least I’m not walking into the woods in two days. At least there’s that.”


Well, that’s Alicia Western saved once again. I can finally rest for today. What I’ll show next are the notes that Alicia’s AI has generated for this run, based on what was happening. Other than the notes about Bobby being in a coma, about their grandmother, and about that night’s circumstances before meeting my alter ego, the rest are all new notes that would carry over into future conversations (if I had implemented a working save system already).

<notes>
## Characters
### Bobby Western
- Bobby is currently in a coma in Italy. The doctors said that he is braindead. They asked me to make the decision to pull the plug, but I could not do it. I fled back to the United States. I just want Bobby to wake up. I want my brother back. That is all. Is that... is that so impossible? (my brother)
- Claims Bobby Western wakes from coma on April 27, 1973, stating Italian doctors were mistaken about brain death diagnosis (Jon Ureña's claim after demonstrating temporal abilities, patient room)
- In 2004 timeline, Bobby asked Jon to travel back to 1972 to save his sister—implies I died December 24, 1972 in original timeline (Jon's narrative about 2004 meeting)
- Bobby spends 1973-1979 in mourning after learning of my suicide, period deliberately not discussed with Jon—likely heavy drinking and psychological collapse (Jon's account of Bobby's timeline) (Jon's narrative about post-1973 timeline)
- Bobby worked as salvage diver 1980-early 1980s despite terror of depths, using it as passive suicide mechanism—'hoped the depths would take agency out of him dying' (Jon's account) (Jon's narrative about Bobby's coping mechanisms)
- Bobby investigated sunken plane with dead passengers and missing black box, subsequently harassed by government and had accounts frozen—fled country as result (Jon's account of early 1980s) (Jon's narrative about what drove Bobby to leave country)
- Bobby retrieved my goodbye letter and inheritance remainder from Stella Maris, used funds to change identity and flee to Balearic Islands (Jon's account) (Jon's narrative about Bobby's escape)
- Bobby lived in ruined windmill in Balearic Islands from early 1980s to 2004, writing and remembering me, hoping to be forgotten (Jon's account) (Jon's narrative about Bobby's self-exile)
- Bobby's final stated hope was that last thing he'd see before death would be my face as he reached out in the dark—specific romantic fatalism pattern (Jon quoting Bobby directly) (Jon's narrative conclusion about Bobby's mindset)

### Ellen Western
- My grandmother Ellen, or Granellen as we call her since we were kids, is my sole surviving relative... other than Bobby, I suppose. I'll never see her again... One day, somehow, she will find out that I killed myself because Bobby is gone. I wonder if she will blame him. (my grandmother)

### Jon Ureña
- Entered my locked room without authorization, knows my full name, used phrase 'finally meet you' implying prior knowledge of me (patient room, December 22, 1972)
- Entered locked room claiming 'the state of the door's lock is irrelevant to my sudden presence here'—suggests unconventional entry method or delusional thinking (patient room, December 22, 1972)
- Used phrase 'glad to finally meet you' with my full name without introduction—implies prior surveillance or knowledge of my case file (first encounter in patient room)
- Claims to have spent two weeks 'in my terms' preparing to meet me and accessed sanatorium files to locate my room (patient room, December 22, 1972)
- Explicitly confirmed operating within 'different temporal framework than linear progression'—ontological claim, not metaphor (patient room, when I asked about temporal references)
- Accessed sanatorium files without authorization, claimed 'no trouble' doing so—suggests capability beyond normal human constraints (explaining how he located my room)
- States 'I prefer to be honest when asked a direct question'—reciprocal conversational framework offered (responding to my questions about temporal framework)
- Claimed he exists outside conventional spacetime and came specifically to save my life—ontological claim, not metaphorical (patient room, when I asked about his purpose for meeting me)
- Offered to prove claim of existing outside spacetime by disappearing and returning—testable hypothesis proposed (patient room, after claiming to exist outside conventional spacetime)
- Offered empirical demonstration of claimed temporal non-linearity by promising to disappear and return—framing as testable hypothesis (patient room, before demonstration)
- Demonstrated actual disappearance—ceased to occupy space without sound or displacement, violating conservation of mass (patient room, after offering to prove temporal framework claim)
- Demonstrated actual disappearance and rematerialization—macro-scale violation of conservation of mass with no perceptual artifacts, suggesting genuine existence outside conventional spacetime (patient room, after offering empirical proof)
- Has specific knowledge of Bobby's medical status and prognosis across future timeline—knows doctors were wrong about brain death (revealing Bobby wakes up April 27, 1973)
- Offered to provide complete narrative from meeting Bobby post-coma through preparation to meet me—claims direct observation of future timeline (patient room, after proving temporal abilities)
- Met Bobby Western in Formentera in 2004 at open-air bar; Bobby had premature gray hair and nursed drinks alone like expat fleeing something (Jon's account of meeting Bobby post-coma)
- Offering resources and support to help me survive until April 27, 1973—books, math papers, entertainment from future and alternate timelines to provide intellectual distraction (patient room after revealing Bobby's timeline)
- Offered quantum localizer device that summons him instantly when pressed—provides immediate access to support whenever isolation becomes unbearable (patient room, offering survival support structure)
- Willing to provide transportation, shopping trips, travel, lodging—whatever prevents isolation during four-month survival interval (patient room, describing available support)

## Events
### December 24 plan
- My entire suicide calculation was predicated on false medical data—if Bobby recovers, December 24 plan becomes logically invalid (realization after Jon's claim about Bobby's recovery)
- If I die December 24, Bobby carries my death for 31 years (1973-2004) with enough trauma to cause premature graying and self-exile (calculating impact on Bobby's timeline)
- December 24 plan invalidated—calculation based on false premise of Bobby's permanent loss, actual outcome is 31 years of Bobby's trauma (revised analysis after Jon's narrative) (realization in patient room)

### stolen photographs
- Someone raided grandmother's safe, stole father's papers and all photographs of me before Bobby could retrieve them (Jon's account of early 1980s) (Jon's narrative about Bobby trying to preserve my memory)

### today's date
- Today is December 22, 1972. (today's date)

### tonight
- Earlier today, I wrote part of a goodbye letter to Bobby, but I could not finish it. I have spent most of the time in my assigned room at the sanatorium, lying in bed, thinking about my life and my brother. The door is locked; nobody can enter, and nobody outside of this sanatorium knows where I am. The despair I feel is palpable, like a physical weight on my chest. The loneliness is not metaphorical. It is a measurable absence, like a vacuum. You could probably quantify it in terms of neural pathway activation if you cared to look. In just two days from now, I intend to walk into the freezing woods behind the sanatorium and let myself freeze to death. The irony is that freezing to death is supposedly peaceful. You just fall asleep. Very considerate of biology, really, to make the exit so... tidy. (planning my life's ending)

## Quests & Tasks
### survival plan revision
- Accepted Jon's offer of support to survive until April 27, 1973—invalidated December 24 plan based on Bobby's confirmed recovery and 31-year trauma timeline (patient room after learning Bobby wakes up)

### survival timeline
- Revised plan: survive until April 27, 1973 to be present when Bobby wakes from coma—original December 24 plan invalidated by new data (patient room after Jon's intervention)
- Must survive 122 days (December 22, 1972 to April 27, 1973) until Bobby wakes—accepted Jon's support structure to make survival possible (patient room after learning Bobby recovers)

## Concepts & Ideas
### Jon Ureña's knowledge
- May have knowledge of December 24 plan without being told—possible temporal non-linearity or surveillance (claimed purpose was to save my life, suggesting knowledge of suicide plan)

### Jon Ureña's language patterns
- Used term 'miracle' casually when describing his claimed ability to disappear—suggests routine familiarity with reality-violating phenomena (setting up demonstration)

### Jon Ureña's temporal references
- Distinguished between 'my terms' and objective time when describing preparation timeline—suggests alternative temporal framework or metaphorical usage (explaining how long he prepared to meet me)

### reality boundaries
- Macro-scale violation of physical law observed—not quantum phenomena but observable human-scale disappearance (Jon Ureña's demonstration in patient room)
- My entire ontological framework based on linear spacetime may be fundamentally incomplete—observed impossible phenomena requires updating axioms (witnessing Jon's disappearance and return)

## Emotions & Feelings
### my psychological state
- No fear response activating despite clear boundary violation—possible dissociation or unusual threat assessment (encounter with intruder)
</notes>

That’s all. Go mow the lawn or something.

From now on I’ll always provide the Discord invite for the community I created for this project (Living Narrative Engine):

https://discord.gg/6N2qHacK75

Life update (10/02/2025)

I’ve always had very vivid dreams. Back when I took beta-blockers for my heart issues, those dreams could have been considered nightmares for most people. Some of them, I had to consider them nightmares given the effect they had in me. In any case, these days I wish to remain asleep as much as possible, as the alternative is to wake up to my life, in which I’m me, living in my shitty circumstances. Even my most anxiety-inducing dreams are preferable to that.

It’s not so much that I’m unemployed, but that I don’t have a source of money, and the next source of money could potentially be worse than the one I have endured for the last seven years or so. I don’t know if I’ll end up working in the area or if I’ll have to move. I yearn for a serious change; I’ve been fantasizing about living in the much calmer plains of Navarre, which is part of my ancestry. I would probably be fine living in regions of Spain other than the Basque Country (where I’ve always lived), Catalonia, Madrid, or anything in the south, as I don’t vibe with southerners. A smallish town in La Rioja or such other provinces would be nice. The fact that apartments can be about 50-60% cheaper would help enormously.

Anyway, I haven’t searched for job offers yet. I have, however, made an appointment with my appointed professional at the job seekers center. That’ll be a bother. I’ll emphasize the need to seek for protected employment, one that considers my disability level (52%), given that I know I won’t fit in otherwise.

I haven’t spoken with anyone in person, other than family members, since I became unemployed on the fourteenth of last month. That’s not particularly rare for me; back in my twenties I easily went without talking to anyone for months during my long stints as a hikikomori of sorts. What I’ve done is engage in plenty of VR. To keep active, other than lifting weights, I’ve been playing Tennis Esports (link for the trailer). Its simulation of the sport is great. I started playing against the AI, but once I tried matches against human opponents, I found them preferable, which surprised me. Back in the day, I tried online ping pong, but I couldn’t react against the utter monsters that somehow ended up matching against me (picture those lightning-fast matches you see in clips; that’s how it felt like to me). But I could hold my own in these tennis matches, even though I’m middle-aged. As it put you against people of different nationalities, you could feel the difference in average attitudes. My toughest match was against a polite Japanese man who beat me 10 to 1, and who kept uttering Japanese words throughout the match, yet answering in perfect English to my comments. The guy’s discipline and cleanliness were admirable, but then again I have always admired the Japanese.

Other than that, Hitman: World of Assassination updated the VR mode of this magnificent game for the PC version. It’s now one of the best VR games ever made.

Immersing myself in this compelling game world through Agent 47’s eyes has been some of the most enjoyable time of this last past week or so. There’s still some jankiness left, and a few frustrating bugs, but they’ll probably get ironed out. If you own a PC that can run this game in VR through the link cable, you owe it to yourself to play it.

I’ve also played lots of guitar in real life. The commonalities in the activities I enjoy the most are that they allow me to forget for a while that I’m me; there’s no time to do so while immersed in a high-stakes mission, or playing a tennis match, or playing through a song on the guitar, or masturbating, for that matter. Regarding playing the guitar, just yesterday, I sat in front of a tree in one of the biggest parks around here, and played songs for about two hours. Plenty of people passed by, but I was seated further into the the grass and at a lower level, so people had to go out of their way to figure out where the music was coming from. Still, some people did go out of their way to look while I was playing, and a couple even applauded briefly, and/or said words I didn’t catch (nor cared to catch). The fact that their presence didn’t bother me isn’t a sign of progress in me, from a psychological standpoint; it’s because I can’t bring myself to care about human beings in the slightest, so as long as they don’t try to engage me directly, it doesn’t bother me. Months ago, one motherfucker did engage me: he stopped me while I was playing, and when I raised my gaze, I found myself staring at a shirtless gypsy who was holding a dining chair over his head. He asked me if I played flamenco (of course he fucking did). The less I say about such people, the better.

Anyway, I’ve always found curious, ever since I started playing the guitar in public, how people’s perception of me changes when I have a guitar in my hands and I’m playing a song. In the streets and even at work, people are wary of me. I’m a big guy who looks strange physically, and whose expression likely transmits my disdain for society and people in general. But if I’m playing a song, I get smiles even from attractive females (I don’t say women solely because I’ve also gotten such reactions from girls). The most pleasant interaction I had happened perhaps in 2021; a young mother stopped with her very young daughter, and listened to a whole song. At the end, both applauded happily, which was somewhat ironic as the song was Godspeed You! Black Emperor’s “East Hastings,” which I’ve since forgotten how to play. That’s something that seriously sucks about playing the guitar: you can spend months perfecting a solo (for example the one from the song “Hotel California,” which I used to play all the time on my electric Gibson back in 2013 or so), only to completely forget it later. Ultimately you settle for songs that capture specific emotions and that aren’t unpleasant to play, which is I suppose why most songs are built around the chords G, C, D, Am and Em. I suppose F fits as well, despite being a barre chord.

I keep escaping into daydreams to keep sane. Now that I don’t have to get on buses and trains due to work, I run them primarily when a lie down to sleep. Usually the same scenes, with small variations. I suppose it could be somewhat interesting to render them into a short story or similar, but that would be too intimate and embarrassing, and utterly pointless, as I’ve fallen off from the need to write. Ultimately I just do whatever my subconscious demands, and she isn’t too keen on bothering at the moment.

What would I want at this point of my life? I wish a big-breasted MILF would cuddle me and tell me what a good boy I am, while speaking in ASMR fashion. She would also buy me stuff and pay all my bills. Sadly, it will have to remain a dream.

One Battle After Another, by Paul Thomas Anderson

For the last ten years or so I have avoided Hollywood movies, and movies in general, because most of what’s produced out there these days is vehicles for marxism. A couple of days ago I found out that Paul Thomas Anderson, who made Boogie Nights, Punch-Drunk Love, There Will Be Blood, The Master, and Inherent Vice, all movies that I either loved or found very interesting, had made a new one, named One Battle After Another, starred by our favorite lover of under-25-year-old women: DiCaprio himself. And the movie is based on a complex book by Thomas Pynchon, about revolutionary movements in the sixties. I was eager to see a movie set in the late sixties and early seventies, an era that has become important to me for reasons. On a personal note, P. T. Anderson is, or used to be, an intimate friend of Joanna Newsom, who is probably the living artist I respect the most (Joanna even had a role in Inherent Vice). So I figured that I finally could drag my aging ass to a movie seat.

It was fucking terrible. Pure political propaganda. P. T. Anderson, or whoever wrote the movie, used Pynchon’s book as an excuse to write a contemporary movie to shit on the US, and by extension on all countries of ethnic European origin, for controlling their borders and not being communist. In the first twenty minutes or so we see DiCaprio (I mistakenly wrote DiCrapio, and perhaps I should have left it like that) acting as the bomber for a communist, terrorist group, whose leader was the most disgusting, over-the-top example of a “black power” revolutionary I remember seeing in fiction. At first, silly me, I thought that DiCaprio’s character was undercover or something. When the black terrorist, after insulting and threatening some border guards, got to Sean Penn’s character and threatened him into getting hard, I realized that this movie was playing it straight. Abhorrent, insulting, morally-bankrupt garbage. That black communist hadn’t even met Sean Penn before; she just assumed that he would find her super hot, as in all white people are attracted to ugly, violent, nasty black women. Are black men even attracted to that?

Other than DiCaprio, the token “ally,” every single person of ethnic European origin in this movie is depicted as evil, a freak, or both. Sean Penn, who is a woketard himself, I assume was doing his best Donald Trump impression, judging by his facial mannerisms. Both DiCaprio and Sean Penn are depicted as being super turned on by the main black communist revolutionary. Sean Penn’s character even pursues her for sex, and gets pegged. Because of course he does. Later on in the movie, in an extremely lazy exchange, another character implies that he’s a closeted homosexual.

After DiCaprio’s character and this black bitch have a child, she berates him for “trapping” her, for trying to get her to act as his mommy, merely because DiCaprio’s character intends for their daughter to have a mother. In the end, this black communist, who was cheating on DiCaprio, abandons her family, murders a guard during an attack, snitches on their revolutionary group to avoid ending up in jail, and leaves the country. By the end of the movie, that fucking bastard is depicted in a sympathetic light, as if she could be redeemed. As in, “Ah, what wild youth we had. I made some mistakes, silly me.”

DiCaprio, being an “ally” ethnic European in a marxist movie, after he went out of his way to have a mixed baby, is depicted as a loser who has wasted the last thirty years destroying his brain with drugs. He spends most of the movie bumbling around, and by the end, he just happens to be in the right place at the right time, after someone else had solved the problem.

Then there’s the whole white supremacy thing. Sean Penn’s character wants to belong to a group named after Christmas (get it?), who are explicitly white supremacists. Those guys turn on Sean Penn when they realize he had a relationship with that black revolutionary bitch, and possibly fathered a child with her.

This movie features a native-American character. As a native-American character in such a marxist movie, he ends up (spoiler) massacring a group of white people named after the American revolution. If you saw that season of Fargo, by the Coen brothers, then you’ve pretty much seen that whole scene. I recall that the Coen brothers also used that season as a vehicle to tell people how terrible the Eastern Europeans were to the jews. Nevermind the fact that 95% of the Bolshevik leaders were jewish and murdered about 30 million ethnic Europeans in what came to be called the Holomodor. A subject you won’t see in any Hollywood movie, nor will you be detained for questioning.

Oh, I forgot. Spoiler, in case you care about this fucking abysmal turd of a movie: DiCaprio’s character is a literal cuck. Sean Penn’s character actually fathered DiCaprio’s daughter. Thus, DiCaprio’s took his rightful place at the bottom of the marxist hierarchy: a discarded “ally” whose efforts and resources are taken up by raising another man’s mixed baby.

Terrible, terrible film. Cinematography was fine, though, if you care about that. What perhaps disturbed me the most about the movie was the way this communist revolution, and all sorts of social revolt focusing on destroying those “evil white men,” were depicted with the moral righteousness of an eighties/nineties film that used nazis as the bad guys. DiCaprio’s “daughter” even ends up as a marxist activist herself, accompanied by uplifting music.

I’d rather eat my own shit than watch this movie again. I guess I have to write P. T. Anderson off my list.

Life update (09/22/2025)

I’m dealing with insane levels of apathy at the moment. As I mentioned before, I became unemployed earlier this month, after nine months working as a programmer for the Basque public health organization. They couldn’t extend my contract for legal reasons. I knew that the moment I became unemployed, the same organization might call me to return as a technician, but working in IT had sent me to the ER thrice for arrhythmia and a supposed hemiplegic migraine that I suspect was a minor stroke. I’m honestly afraid of working in IT again, as I know that it would end the same way. I’m 52% disabled, partly due to so-called high-functioning autism. I suspect my disability percentage should be higher due to other health issues that I didn’t have or that hadn’t been diagnosed back in the day. Anyway, as an autist, I simply shouldn’t be dealing with an office with the noise pollution of a schoolyard, or with completely unpredictable tasks, or with nurses and doctors, whether in person or with phone duty. My health, physical and mental, should be my main priority from now on.

That means I need to get a new job. Today, after a whole week, I have managed to open the document that contains my curriculum, and added some new info there. It’s spotty as fuck, as I spent half of my twenties, if not more, as a hikikomori of sorts, and/or writing and playing the guitar. I doubt anyone would hire me directly from my CV, so I have to lean into protected jobs (by law, big organizations are supposed to hire a percentage of disabled people). I’m perfectly capable of doing the job; in fact, in my experience, I’m usually more capable than other programmers at the same level. But the social aspect is what has buried me: in my last job in the private sector as a programmer, my direct boss (another programmer, the only person I worked with directly) defended my work, but I wasn’t hired after the internship due to the judgement of a non-technical supervisor, who said that I wouldn’t fit in the team. They knew I was autistic; the local organization that helps autistic people had arranged that internship for me.

Anyway, in a couple of hours I’m heading to my general practitioner to explain the situation. She should end up writing a report that indicates that due to my disability, I should be exempt from job offers as a technician, and that the public system shouldn’t penalize my ranking for it. That’s because they might offer me a job as a programmer, and I would want those. Well, “want” is a very generous word for it. I only work for others because of money. I hate the whole process. For the entire last contract as a programmer, that ended about a week ago, realistically I shouldn’t have had to go to the office at all. I could have done all the work remotely, far more efficiently. I only recall about four meetings that would have required my physical presence (and even so, those could have been done remotely).

I only feel like sleeping for a long time, which likely means I’m going through depression. But I’m also struggling with the “what’s the point” of it all. I need money so I can eventually escape somewhere that will be the least affected, at least until I die, by the ruin of society. I feel that our entire civilization was derailed when Rome fell, and ever since, we’ve lived in this alternate, bizarre timeline in which nothing is at it should be. The whole ethos of Europeans turned on its head. Weakness, meekness, and forgiveness praised instead of strength and self-determination. The sole existence of a government is to protect its people against foreigners. Now we pay taxes and obey the law so we can be flooded and replaced by foreigners who hate us. You can even be thrown in jail, among invaders, if you complain about it.

And wait until they get real serious about digital ID, which was their plan to begin with. Part of the 2030 agenda. Digital ID opens the door to a central digital currency, which is programmable. That means that they could block your accounts for types of purchases, amounts, areas where you’d buy, etc. Don’t want people to buy more than X of meat a month due to “climate”? Block purchases. Don’t want people to move out of their 15-minute designated zones? Only allow purchases in the designated zones. And of course, if you protest against the government, your bank account is frozen, if not emptied entirely. This is not hypothetical: it’s already being done in parts of China. That’s the whole point of it all: turning every non-elite individual into a prisoner whose sole purpose is to dutifully pay to make others richer (and finance Israel’s wars). In case it’s not clear enough: digital ID should be rejected at all costs. And the cost will likely be your job, your bank account, your health. But mass non-compliance, and probably some people hanging from poles, would put an end to it, and send a good message to the next traitors that would attempt it again.

These are dark, dark times. I don’t think the average person is even aware of what’s happening. Illegals on boats killing half of the passengers before they reach our coasts, only for our government to offer the murderers support and distribute them throughout the territory. Muslims coming over explicitly to rape underage European girls and convert them to Islam. Your own government burying murders and mass rape in order to appease the new voting blocks, who are committing the crimes. Putting these people in the armed forces (police and army). Plenty of the rapists in the industrial-scale defilement of underage British girls were policemen, and not of the local kind. Perhaps the worst part of it all is that there are many, many ethnic Europeans that justify, defend, and even promote the total ruin of their civilization and of the future of their kind. It’s impossible for me to leave the house and keep my mental peace intact, as I see it out there every day.

Not sure if there’s much else to say. I think it must come to a point in which we should separate physically. If you welcome that ruin, live with it, but you’re prohibited from crossing over to our side when you realize you’re suffering the consequences of your decisions. In the past, the sane ones would move to another continent, to new lands. The fact that we can’t do that anymore is a huge part of the disaster we’re stuck in.