The Absurd Pursuit

0
19

Arthur was a man of precise habits. He worked in the Department of Redundancy, a grey building in the heart of a city where the skyscrapers seemed to lean inward, as if whispering secrets to one another. One Tuesday, Arthur received a memo from the Director. It was a simple instruction: "Find the Golden Bird. Upon delivery, you will be promoted to Senior Associate of Logistics." Arthur did not know what a Golden Bird was, nor did he know where to look, but he was a man who followed instructions. He spent the next three years of his life in a state of focused, bureaucratic obsession.

The search was a series of increasingly absurd tasks. To get the first clue, Arthur had to count every red brick on the north wall of the city's central library. To get the second, he had to spend six months recording the exact frequency of the city's traffic lights. He met other "Seekers"—men and women with hollow eyes and notebooks full of meaningless data. They spoke in a jargon of "probability vectors" and "avian coordinates," treating the search as a sacred science. Arthur didn't care about the science; he only cared about the promotion. He believed that the Golden Bird was the key to a life of meaning.

The climax occurred on a rainy afternoon in a derelict park. Following a clue that required him to walk backward for three miles while humming a specific tune, Arthur found the Bird. It was sitting on a rusted bench. It was a common pigeon, crudely painted with gold spray paint. The paint was peeling, and the bird looked at him with a dull, indifferent eye. Arthur stood there for a long time, holding the painted pigeon in his hands. He felt a sudden, overwhelming sense of clarity. The bird was a joke. The search was a joke. The promotion was a joke.

Arthur returned to the Department and placed the painted pigeon on the Director's desk. The Director looked at the bird, then at Arthur, and smiled. "Excellent work, Arthur. You are now the Senior Associate of Logistics for the Department of Non-Existent Assets." Arthur looked at his new office—a broom closet with a single, flickering lightbulb. He sat down in his plastic chair, held the peeling gold pigeon in his lap, and began to laugh. He laughed until he cried, and then he started counting the dust motes in the air, wondering if there was a promotion for that, too.

***

**Tensor Encoding:** - Objective Tensor: [M1: 4.0, M3: 10.0, M4: 3.0, M5: 6.0] - MDTEM: [V: 0.3, I: 0.5, C: 0.7, S: 0.2, R: 0.4] - Dynamics: [Theta: 225°, Energy: 13.8] - Code: OTMES_v2_ABSURD_PURSUIT_08


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

OTMES-v2-UNKNOWN

Αναζήτηση
Κατηγορίες
Διαβάζω περισσότερα
Literature
The Zero-Sum Sleep
Marcus didn't fall into the tank; he dove. The bio-pod was a coffin of synthetic gel and humming...
από Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-15 16:36:56 0 6
Literature
The Epoch's End
The twilight of the Austro-Hungarian Empire was not a sudden fall, but a slow, gilded rot. In the...
από Z.R. ZHANG 2026-04-27 08:46:09 0 36
Literature
The Gilded Cage
Act I: The Shattering (20%) The heavy velvet curtains of the manor didn't just block the...
από Zoe Perez 2026-05-19 08:23:20 0 3
Παιχνίδια
The Dry Root
The creek behind Billy's house ran brown most of the year. In summer it ran almost dry. In winter...
από Ruth Foster 2026-05-17 12:06:08 0 3
Παιχνίδια
The Empty Room at the Top of the World
The party was perfect, which was the first problem. The second problem was that Marcus Thornfield...
από Z.R. ZHANG 2026-05-06 23:46:00 0 10