The Puppet Master

0
4

Dr. Silas Thorne was the most respected psychiatrist in New York, a man whose calm demeanor and piercing blue eyes could make any patient feel seen. But Silas didn't want to see his patients; he wanted to own them.

He had developed a technique called "Cognitive Anchoring." By using a combination of deep-sleep hypnosis and precise linguistic triggers, he could create "anchors" in a patient's mind—small, invisible hooks that allowed him to trigger specific emotions or behaviors with a single word.

At first, it was therapeutic. He used anchors to help people overcome phobias or stop addictions. But Silas soon discovered the thrill of the "Puppet Master."

He began to experiment with more complex anchors. He could make a grieving widow feel sudden, intense joy; he could make a confident CEO collapse into a fit of inexplicable terror. He started to view the human mind as a piano, and himself as the only one who knew how to play the keys.

His ambition grew. He didn't just want to treat patients; he wanted to build a society of puppets. He began to target the city's influencers—politicians, journalists, artists. He anchored them to his will, turning them into unwitting agents of his design. He didn't need to bribe them or threaten them; he simply whispered a trigger word, and they became his instruments.

The city began to change. The news cycles became strangely synchronized. The political discourse shifted toward a specific, subtle agenda. People felt a vague sense of contentment, a quiet acceptance of a world they no longer questioned.

But the mind is a volatile medium. Anchors, if pushed too far, can snap.

Silas's downfall began with a patient named Clara. Clara was a "Resistant"—someone whose mind was too chaotic, too fragmented, to be anchored. Every time Silas tried to plant a hook, it slipped.

Intrigued and frustrated, Silas became obsessed with her. He spent months trying to break her, using every tool in his arsenal. But the more he pushed, the more Clara began to understand the mechanism of his power. She didn't fight the anchors; she learned to mimic them.

In a final, daring session, Clara managed to reverse the flow. As Silas leaned in to deliver the final trigger word, Clara whispered a sequence of sounds that she had spent months synthesizing from his own speech patterns.

It was a "Feedback Loop."

The anchor snapped, but not in Clara's mind. The trigger surged back into Silas, hitting him with the accumulated weight of every emotion he had ever forced upon his patients.

In a single second, Silas felt the crushing grief of a thousand widows, the paralyzing terror of a hundred phobics, and the hollow emptiness of a million puppets. His mind, which had always been a pristine gallery of control, became a screaming carnival of borrowed pain.

He didn't die, but he was no longer the master. He became a prisoner of his own system. He spent the rest of his days in a padded room, twitching every time he heard a certain sound, his mind a fragmented mess of triggers and responses.

He would sit in the corner, whispering trigger words to the walls, hoping that some invisible puppet would come and tell him who he was.

*** Objective Tensor Code: [OTMES_v2: M1=10.0, M3=8.0, N2=0.9, K2=0.9, I=1.0, R=0.0, theta=225]


Based on the pending patent application document (202610351844.3), creationstamp.com has calculated the tensor feature encoding of this article:

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

Cerca
Categorie
Leggi tutto
Giochi
Rust Town
Three stories told in the flat, unsentimental voice of people who have seen too much to be...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-14 06:19:57 0 17
Giochi
Case File No. 47: Patient Elspeth MacLeod, age 23, admitted on the recommendation of her father, Laird Hamish MacLeod of Glen Coe. She was brought to the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh by carriage on...
"She claims to be possessed," her father told me in the corridor, his face lined with a worry...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-10 06:46:20 0 4
Dance
The-Corpse-Who-Walked-Home
The Corpse Who Walked Home The call came at 2:14 on a Tuesday, which was the kind of hour that...
By Henry Mendoza 2026-05-11 10:50:51 0 1
Literature
The Sisyphus of the Spire
Arthur woke up in the same room, with the same smell of old paper and ozone, for the...
By Christine Jackson 2026-05-15 22:43:40 0 1
Giochi
The Anvil of Pi
Act One: The Discovery The rain in Derbyshire had a way of getting into your bones that no wool...
By Miles Horton 2026-05-31 23:13:32 0 1