13: The Petri Dish
Style: Southern Gothic
From the perspective of the Great Eye, the Micro-City was a fascinating little smudge of light on a piece of discarded velvet.
I watched them with a detached, clinical curiosity. To these tiny creatures, I am the Void, the End, the Unknowable. To me, they are simply an interesting chemical reaction, a colony of sentient mold that thinks it has built an empire.
I remember when the "Giant" first arrived. I watched as they trembled in their iridescent towers, their tiny laser pulses hitting my skin like the brush of a moth's wing. They tried to communicate, to plead for their lives, to explain the "nobility" of their survival.
It was adorable.
I reached down and gently nudged their capital city with a single finger. I wanted to see how they would react to a localized earthquake. I watched as their "Spires of Wisdom" collapsed into dust, and their "Eternal Laws" were rewritten in a panic of screams.
They believe they are the protagonists of a grand tragedy. They believe their struggle has meaning. But in the grand garden of the universe, some things are born to be gods, and some are born to be observed. I am the observer, and they are merely a smudge of light that I might decide to wipe away tomorrow, simply because I find the velvet more beautiful when it is clean.
I spent centuries watching them evolve. I watched them develop a complex system of government based on the movement of dust motes. I watched them fall in love, wage wars, and write epic poems about the "Great Eye" that watched over them. They called me their protector, their god, their tormentor.
I didn't care what they called me. I just liked the way they glowed when they were terrified. It was a soft, pulsing violet light that reminded me of the nebulae in the far reaches of the void. As long as they remained terrified, they remained interesting.
I wondered, for a brief moment, if I too was being watched by a larger eye. But the thought was too human, too small. I closed my lid and let the Micro-City drift into the darkness, waiting for the next interesting reaction to begin.
The velvet was finally clean. I looked at the empty space where the city had been and felt a momentary flicker of boredom. The universe is so vast, and yet so repetitive. Everything is just a different scale of the same hunger, the same fear, the same desperate need to be seen.
*** [OTMES-V2-CODE: V13-T7-02-M3:7-N2:0.9-K1:0.3-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
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