The Absurd Mercy
Samuel lived his life by the second hand of a Swiss watch. A retired accountant, his world was a series of spreadsheets, ironed shirts, and a dinner of steamed broccoli at exactly 6:00 PM. He viewed chaos as a personal insult.
Then came Felix. Felix was a man who looked like he had been assembled from the leftovers of three different people, wearing a coat made of mismatched fabrics and speaking in riddles about the "rhythm of the universe." Samuel found him bleeding on the sidewalk after a freak accident involving a runaway bicycle and a fruit stand. In a rare moment of impulsive empathy, Samuel took him home and patched him up.
Felix's gratitude was a storm. He didn't offer money or service; he offered "adjustments."
"Tomorrow at 2:14 PM," Felix announced, "you must go to the corner of 42nd and 7th and buy a single, bruised pear from the vendor with the missing tooth."
Samuel, driven by a sudden, inexplicable curiosity, did it. Five minutes later, he found a lost briefcase containing ten thousand dollars in cash.
For a month, Samuel followed Felix's absurd instructions. Buy a blue balloon. Walk backward for ten paces in the park. Sing a nursery rhyme to a stray cat. Each action led to a windfall: a stock tip, a forgotten inheritance, a sudden promotion for his nephew. Samuel became rich, but he also became a slave to the absurdity. He stopped caring about the logic of his life; he only cared about the next instruction.
But the rhythm changed. The instructions became more erratic, more demanding. "Burn your favorite book." "Give your car keys to a stranger." "Scream at the top of your lungs in the middle of the library."
The windfalls stopped. In their place came a chaotic disintegration of his social life. His neighbors thought he had gone mad. His family stopped calling. He had the money, but he had lost the structure that made him Samuel.
One morning, Felix vanished, leaving only a note: "The rhythm has shifted. You are now in sync with the chaos."
Samuel sat in his perfectly clean house, surrounded by millions of dollars and an absolute, crushing silence. He looked at his Swiss watch and realized that for the first time in his life, he didn't know what time it was. He had been saved from the boredom of order, only to be drowned in the noise of the absurd.
*** OTMES_v2_Code: [M2:4.0, M3:9.0, N1:0.6, K1:0.7, I:0.5, R:0.3, theta:225°]
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OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN
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