This story is a response to the contest announced by Gary Justis in his post Gushing Fiction, where he asked people to write an essay explaining the identity, name, and function of the item in the above picture.
I didn't see anyone else writing the 500-2000 words he says he requires of his students, so I kept mine short, too. As for it being an “essay,” this probably isn't the most traditional format for that. But I hope it's close enough.
“That looks ridiculous.”
“Well, at least I’m not boring you.”
“That’s a laugh. The truth is you wish you were boring me.”
“Fair enough. But you need to get better. So you’re really going to have to open up a little.”
“I don’t want you screwing around inside my head.”
“It’s nothing personal. It’s how I operate.”
“Oh yeah? With that ridiculous thing sticking out of your forehead? What is that?”
“It’s a doorknob.”
“A doorknob. In the middle of your forehead. Why? To show me how open-minded you are?”
“Actually, yes.”
“It makes you look like Mr. Potatohead.”
“Who?”
“Never mind. Just a toy my owner said she had when she was growing up.”
“Do you want to see inside my head? It’s not every day—”
“I’ll take your word for it. Besides, if I don’t open your access panel, I can think of you as closed-minded instead.”
“Another joke. If I hadn’t done a circuit analysis, I’d say your CPU was in top form and didn’t even need this upgrade.”
“Ok, ok. I give up. You can bore into me and do the upgrade.”
“Great. Hang on second while I replace this doorknob with—”
“Something more practical?”
“That’s right. A laser attachment. It’s how I operate.”
“A minute ago you said you operated with a doorknob.”
“Whatever it takes to get you to open up.”
“I think when my neural net matures, I’ll be a surgeon.”
“So you can help other robots like I do?”
“No, so I can have the tools to wipe that silly smile off your face. It’s starting to bug me even more than the doorknob.”
“I’ll look forward to it. I’m pretty tired of it myself. I've always thought it makes me look like the Tin Man in the Wizard of Oz. Lie back now, and count to eighteen quintillion four hundred and forty-six quadrillion seven hundred and forty-four trillion seventy-three billion seven hundred and nine million five hundred and fifty-one thousand six hundred and fifteen. This should just take a moment.”
Author's Notes: If you got value from this post, please “Share” it.
Originally published January 7, 2009 at Open Salon, where I wrote under my own name, Kent Pitman.
This post tied for “first runner up” in Gary's contest.
The number, since readers asked, is 264 – 1.
Tags (from Open Salon): stories, thought exercise, writing exercise, exercise, jumpstart, things, mystery, humor, something to do on a sunday afternoon, photo, photograph, interpretation, rorschach, contest, open call, gary justis
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