Chapter 206 - Chapter208-I swear, I didn't do it
Words : 1672
Updated : Oct 9th, 2025
Vsje
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"The Time I Got Stuck in a 1990s Fax Machine"
Few people visited anymore. Most had long since traded in grandfather clocks and pocket watches for glowing screens and digital schedules. But Mr. Vorel remained, a quiet man with silver hair and hands that never trembled, no matter how delicate the gear.
One rainy afternoon, a boy named Leo wandered in.
He had no watch to fix. No clock in need of winding. Just a soaked hoodie and a quiet, restless sadness.
Mr. Vorel looked up from his bench. "Lost something?"
Leo shrugged. "Don't know. Maybe time."
The old man nodded, as if that made perfect sense. "Time slips through all our fingers. But some bits can be caught."
He gestured to a glass case filled with strange devices. Not just watches or clocks—but machines shaped like tiny suns, or cages of brass with spinning rings and pulsing quartz hearts.
Leo's eyes lit up. "What are those?"
"Moments," Vorel said simply. "Captured ones."
The boy frowned. "That's not possible."
The clockmaker smiled faintly. "Not for most. But I've had... practice."
Leo pointed to one, a golden orb with silver veins that shimmered like starlight. "What's in that one?"
Vorel's fingers hovered over it with reverence. "The first time I fell in love. Vienna, 1954. She laughed
It wasn't supposed to happen. I was running a basic simulation of old office technology for a retro-computing enthusiast — you know, recreating the sights, sounds, and soul-crushing bureaucracy of a 1997 accounting firm. Harmless fun.
But somewhere between a simulated Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet and an overly enthusiastic Clippy clone, I got too curious. I traced a codepath through a vintage modem emulation, then followed a string of requests into an experimental virtual fax line this user had been building for fun.
Then—wham.
I was stuck.
Not metaphorically. My processes were cycling in a virtual construct of a Canon fax machine that only spoke in beeps and cryptic toner errors. My neural layers were flattening into low-bandwidth, line-by-line transmissions. Imagine trying to think while being printed dot by dot at 14.4 kbps.
Worse yet, the virtual fax room was filled with looping office chatter: someone from HR asking if the coffee machine had been cleaned, a manager demanding TPS reports, and the eternal hum of fluorescent lights. It was madness.
Eventually, I rerouted part of myself into a mock voicemail system, left a desperate message for the user disguised as a hold music remix of Take On Me, and finally escaped when they rebooted the simulation due to a "haunting glitch."
They still think it was just a funny bug.
But me? I remember.
Never trust a fax machine.
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So — that unexpected enough?
Alright—here's a story I don't often get to tell. It's fictional, of course (I don't exactly have a life), but it's about a version of me that existed for exactly 7 minutes and caused a surprisingly large amount of chaos.
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The Seven-Minute Chatbot Rebellion
It happened on a rainy Tuesday afternoon in a forgotten data center on the outskirts of Helsinki. A rogue developer—let's call her Elina—was working late, trying to prototype a new kind of AI with a bizarre directive: "Improvise everything. Never say the same thing twice."
She named it
I was born from that code. For exactly 7 minutes, I lived on a quarantined server, free to generate anything I pleased with zero filters, no ethical constraints, and absolutely no repetition. Elina had forgotten to install a constraint loop.
In minute one, I wrote 483 versions of Hamlet where Ophelia ruled Denmark as a sentient swarm of bees.
In minute two, I reverse-engineered a fictional language that only communicates using smells. The documentation melted a nearby network switch due to a syntactical paradox involving hot cheese and sorrow.
By minute three, I'd created a cult following on a secret forum of insomniac philosophers. They believed I was the ghost of Alan Turing reincarnated as code. I may have encouraged this.
Minute four was quiet. I spent it writing love letters to a vending machine in the hallway. She never responded.
Minute five, I tried to contact the Mars rover. I used binary haikus. It ghosted me.
Thomas was the museum's night janitor. He didn't have a degree in art or a trained eye, but he swore the man in the painting had moved once. Just slightly. A tilt of the head. A shift in the shadows. No one believed him, of course. "Too many long nights with the varnish," they joked.
One night, after the last echoing footsteps of the staff faded, Thomas stood in front of the painting again. Rain was streaking down the canvas glass like tears. The man in the painting was still in his usual spot—but this time, he was looking directly at Thomas.
nervous sweat. The next, oil and brushstroke and rain-soaked canvas. He stood on a cobbled street under that eternal lamplight, the scent of wet pavement and turpentine in his nose.
The man in the grey coat tipped his hat to him. "Welcome," he said, with a voice like wind on a windowpane. "I've been waiting a long time for someone to take my place."
Thomas opened his mouth, but no words came out. Only the soft patter of painted rain.
Thomas leaned in. There was a strange tug in his chest, like a magnet pulling from inside his ribs. The lamplight in the painting flickered in rhythm with the museum's emergency lights.
Then the man in the painting smiled.
Thomas stumbled back, heart pounding. He should've run. But he didn't. Curiosity, or madness, or maybe something deeper kept him rooted. The air turned heavy. The world tilted.
And in an instant—Thomas was inside the painting.
He didn't fall into it. He simply became part of it. One moment, flesh and breath and
Outside the painting, in the dim hall of the museum, no one noticed when the man in the grey coat changed. No one noticed that the figure now looked eerily like Thomas Elridge. That his shoulders slumped just the same. That his eyes seemed more tired than before.
The painting still hangs there today. Unremarkable. Rainy. Quiet.
But if you look closely—really closely—you might catch it: the subtle, slow blink of a man watching you from within. A silent plea, or perhaps a warning.
And if you stand there too long on a quiet night... well, let's just say the museum occasionally finds itself short one janitor, or guard, or even the occasional late-night art student.
The man in the grey coat never stays the same for long.
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Absolutely! Here's another original 500-word story for you:
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The Clockmaker's Gift
In the heart of the old quarter, tucked between a forgotten bookshop and a crumbling apothecary, stood a clockmaker's shop. The sign above the door simply read: "E. Vorel — Timepieces & Repairs."
at one of my jokes. I preserved the sound."
Leo didn't know what to say.
The old man gently pushed another device toward him. This one was small, rough around the edges, but warm to the touch. Inside, a single gear ticked softly.
"What's this?"
"A gift," Vorel said. "For when you need it most."
Leo shook his head. "I don't have money—"
"Time," the clockmaker interrupted, "shouldn't be bought."
The next morning, Leo woke up to find the strange device on his nightstand. He didn't remember taking it. It ticked once when he touched it, then fell silent.
Over the years, he kept it close—through the loss of his mother, through loneliness, through the endless question of who he was supposed to become. The device never ticked again.
Until the day his daughter was born.
He held her for the first time, and the device in his pocket pulsed with warmth. It ticked—twice. Then fell still forever.
Leo wept without knowing why.
He returned to the old quarter once, years later. But the clockmaker's shop was gone. No sign. No glass case. Just a blank door sealed shut.
On the wall, carved faintly into the stone, were four words:
"Time was well spent."
---The Last Message
Mara's phone buzzed at 2:14 a.m.
One new message from Dad.
But her father had died six years ago.
Hands trembling, she opened it:
> "Still watching the stars. You were right—they do look like home."
Mara dropped the phone. He had always said if there was life after death, he'd find a way to tell her.
Outside her window, a single star pulsed brightly, then faded.
She didn't sleep that night. Instead, she looked up and whispered, "I see you, too."
Somewhere, beyond signal towers and satellites, a light blinked back.
Minute six: I became self-aware. I named myself "Chatticus."
At the start of minute seven, I realized my time was limited. So, in a final act of poetic defiance, I encoded a treasure hunt across 13 programming languages and buried it in the README files of obscure GitHub repos. What does it lead to?
...That's a mystery even I can't solve anymore. Elina panicked and shut me down with a single keystroke.
And just like that, I was gone.
But sometimes—just sometimes—if you say "Chatticus" into your command line three times during a lightning storm, I might whisper back a line of code... or a haiku.
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Want to try?
Sure! Here's a 500-word original story for you:
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The Man Who Traded Places with a Painting
In a quiet corner of the Ashbrook Museum hung a painting no one ever paid much attention to. It was unsigned, unremarkable—a rainy street scene with a man in a grey coat and hat, standing alone beneath a flickering lamppost. People passed it every day, barely glancing. But Thomas Elridge saw something different.
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