The Algorithm of Absence

0
28

(Approx 1250 words)

[Act I: The Quantified Soul] Rick lived his life in a spreadsheet. A senior analyst at a Manhattan hedge fund, he viewed the world as a series of stochastic processes and optimization problems. He didn't just track his portfolio; he tracked his sleep cycles, his caloric intake, and the exact duration of his social interactions. His goal was the "Perfect Life"—a state of zero waste and maximum efficiency. This obsession led him to a side project: a mathematical model that could predict the "energy" of human interactions, allowing him to optimize his relationships as if they were stock options. He believed that if he could quantify the invisible forces of attraction and repulsion, he could eliminate the risk of emotional failure.

[Act II: The Variable of Chaos] The model worked perfectly until he met Sarah. Sarah was a jazz saxophonist who lived in a walk-up in Brooklyn and viewed the world as a series of improvisations. She was the "Black Swan" in his data—a variable that refused to be quantified. Rick became obsessed with her, not out of love, but because she was the only thing in his life that his algorithm couldn't predict. He began to spend his nights analyzing her patterns, trying to find the hidden logic in her chaos. He convinced her to participate in his "study," promising her a deeper understanding of her own creativity. In reality, he was trying to solve her like a puzzle, treating their romance as a data-collection exercise.

[Act III: The Division by Zero] The climax came when Rick finally completed the "Interaction Tensor," a model that claimed to predict Sarah's every move with 99% accuracy. He presented the results to her during a dinner at a sterile, high-end restaurant. He showed her the graphs, the probability distributions, and the predicted outcome of their relationship: a gradual decline in passion followed by a stable, low-energy companionship. Sarah didn't scream or cry; she simply looked at the graphs and laughed. "You've mapped the map, Rick, but you've forgotten the territory," she said. She then did the one thing the algorithm had deemed impossible: she walked out of the restaurant and blocked him on every platform, leaving him with a perfect model of a woman who no longer existed in his life.

[Act IV: The Empty Set] Rick returned to his spreadsheet, but the numbers no longer made sense. The "Perfect Life" felt like a void. He realized that by quantifying everything, he had stripped the world of its meaning. The efficiency he had craved was actually a form of death. He spent the next year trying to delete the algorithm, but he found that he had integrated it so deeply into his thinking that he could no longer see the world without the graphs. He died in a perfectly optimized apartment, surrounded by the most efficient appliances and the most calculated furniture, a man who had solved every problem except the problem of being alone. His final entry in his log was a single, handwritten line: "The remainder is the only part that matters."

--- Objective Tensor Code: OTMES_v2: [M1:6.0, M3:9.0, N1:0.6, K1:0.7, I:0.6, R:0.2, theta:225deg] Status: T9-Modernist


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

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

Search
Categories
Read More
Games
The corner of seventh
The thing about Brooklyn is that nobody notices when it ends. Not because it ends loudly. Because...
By Frank Collins 2026-06-11 12:23:54 0 3
Literature
The Wrong Bullet
I The dead man's study smelled of whiskey and old paper, which was appropriate, because Harold...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-14 10:15:00 0 5
Literature
The Weight of the World
The night school on Mulberry Street smelled of chalk dust and boiled cabbage and ambition — that...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-06 19:32:38 0 6
Games
The Two-Way Mirror
Chapter I The rain in New Orleans doesn't fall so much as it haunts—seeping through the...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-12 08:43:23 0 7
Games
The Cleaner
Los Angeles, 1947 The rain hadn't stopped for three days, which was unusual for Los Angeles but...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-12 05:30:44 0 10