The Absurd Parade

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(V-04: Fin de Siècle Decadence) Paris, 1892. The salon of Monsieur Valmont was a sanctuary of velvet, opium, and exquisite boredom. Valmont called himself a 'Conductor of Order,' though he had never led an army in his life. His obsession was not war, but the geometry of human movement. He had gathered twelve models—the most beautiful creatures in the city—and tasked them with the 'Great Symmetry.' They were to move in perfect, mirrored unison, a living tapestry of flesh and silk. "The line is the only truth," Valmont would proclaim, sipping absinthe from a crystal glass. But the models were bored. They were creatures of the night, used to the chaos of the Moulin Rouge. Two of them, Elodie and Margot, found the symmetry tedious. During the third rehearsal, as the music swelled into a dissonant waltz, Elodie intentionally stepped out of line. Margot followed, her laughter a bright, jarring chord in the silent room. They weren't just breaking a rule; they were spoiling a painting. Valmont did not rage. He simply sighed, a sound of profound disappointment. He signaled his assistants. The execution was not a tragedy; it was a performance. Elodie and Margot were led to the center of the room, where they were bound in silk ribbons. With a surgical precision that bordered on the erotic, Valmont removed them from the 'painting.' He didn't kill them in the traditional sense—he had them chemically lobotomized, their personalities erased, leaving behind two breathing, smiling shells that could finally, perfectly, maintain the line. The other models watched, their eyes wide with a mixture of horror and fascination. They didn't scream. They didn't run. Instead, they began to adjust their positions, moving closer to fill the gaps. "Now," Valmont whispered, "the symmetry is restored." The music resumed. The twelve models moved as one, a flawless, mindless machine of beauty. The guests in the salon applauded, praising the 'boldness' of the art. They didn't see the tragedy; they only saw the line. And as the models danced, their eyes were empty, reflecting the cold, glittering light of a world that valued the shape of a thing more than the soul within it. --- **Objective Tensor Code:** OTMES_v2: [M1:7.0, M3:9.0, N2:0.8, K1:0.6, TI:65.0, theta:225]


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