The Internal Parliament

0
7

Claire was the most feared associate at Sterling & Hunt, the city's most ruthless law firm. She didn't have a personality; she had a portfolio. Depending on the client, she could be a shark, a saint, or a ghost.

The secret was the Parliament.

Deep within her consciousness, Claire's fragmented identities had evolved into a sophisticated political system. There was the "Executive Branch"—the dominant persona who handled the public face; the "Judiciary"—who analyzed risks and ethics; and the "Legislative"—a chaotic swarm of emotional fragments that proposed desires and fears.

They operated on a system of votes and bribes. If the "Fear" fragment wanted to avoid a trial, it would bribe the "Ambition" fragment with a promise of a promotion. If the "Trauma" fragment felt threatened, it could veto any decision, plunging Claire into a catatonic state.

For years, the Parliament had maintained a fragile stability. But as Claire climbed the corporate ladder, the stakes grew higher. The "Executive" began to consolidate power, suppressing the other voices to maintain a facade of absolute competence.

The tension peaked during the merger of the century. The "Ethics" fragment discovered that the merger was built on a foundation of systemic fraud. It called for an emergency session.

"We cannot do this," the Ethics fragment argued. "It is a moral abyss."

"Morality doesn't pay the lease on a penthouse in Tribeca," the Ambition fragment countered.

A civil war erupted within Claire's mind. The "Trauma" fragment, sensing the instability, began to leak memories into the Executive's consciousness—flashes of a childhood spent in a cage, the smell of old leather and fear. The Parliament descended into chaos.

During the final signing ceremony, in a room filled with the most powerful men in the city, the Parliament collapsed. The "Executive" lost control.

Claire stood up, but she didn't speak. Instead, she began to laugh—a jagged, multi-tonal sound that seemed to come from five different throats. She looked at the CEO of the opposing firm and, in a voice that shifted from a child's whimper to a demon's roar, told him exactly how she was going to destroy him.

She didn't win the merger. She didn't keep her job. But as she was escorted out of the building, Claire felt a strange sense of liberation. The Parliament had fallen, and for the first time in her life, she was just a mess. A beautiful, loud, incoherent mess.

*** TENSOR CODE: [M1:6.0, M3:9.0, M5:8.0, N1:0.7, K1:0.7, I:0.6, R:0.3, 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

Search
Categories
Read More
Literature
Title: The Ordinary End
Genre: Dirty Realism The sky over Detroit was the color of a bruised plum, heavy with the threat...
By Luna Kelly 2026-05-30 07:44:05 0 9
Dance
The Chrysalis Protocol
The Centaurus launched from a private dock in the Hudson River on a morning in October 1922, the...
By Zoe Moore 2026-05-18 13:40:25 0 3
Literature
The Mad Prophet of Oakhaven
He had also inherited debt. The gold his grandfather supposedly buried was a family story, like...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-11 13:23:50 0 5
Literature
Normal Operations
The email had no subject line. William Cross noticed this first. In fifteen years at Moran Group,...
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-01 02:15:42 0 33
Games
Whatever It Costs
I. The job was simple. Show up at a place out in the middle of nowhere, east of Interstate 40....
By Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-14 07:38:49 0 4