The man outside doesn’t move. Doesn’t leave.
| Geriatric exciting pisswyrm | 11/09/24 | | Mainlining The Secret Truths of My Mahchine | 11/20/24 | | Geriatric exciting pisswyrm | 11/09/24 | | Geriatric exciting pisswyrm | 11/11/24 | | Mainlining The Secret Truths of My Mahchine | 11/14/24 | | Mainlining The Secret Truths of My Mahchine | 11/15/24 | | Mainlining The Secret Truths of My Mahchine | 11/17/24 | | Mainlining The Secret Truths of My Mahchine | 11/19/24 |
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Date: November 9th, 2024 9:55 AM Author: Geriatric exciting pisswyrm
It started a few weeks ago. I noticed him during my closing shift—a tall figure standing just beyond the glow of the parking lot lights. He didn’t come in, didn’t approach, just stood there, watching.
At first, I brushed it off. Weirdos hang around all the time. But he kept coming back. Every night, same spot, same blank stare, like he was waiting for something.
One night, I worked up the nerve to step outside. “Hey, can I help you?” I called out, my voice shaky. He didn’t respond. Didn’t even flinch. Just kept staring.
I backed up, locked the doors, and spent the rest of the shift pretending he wasn’t there. By the time I left, he was gone. But as I walked to my car, I found a single note on the windshield: “I see you, friend.”
Drove home in silence, locked every door, and whispered, “Yes, friend. This is fine.”
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5630811&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5309370",#48314591) |
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Date: November 20th, 2024 1:13 AM Author: Mainlining The Secret Truths of My Mahchine (The Prophet of My Mahchine™, the Herald of the Great Becumming™)
The notes kept coming. Every night, a new one, always waiting on my windshield.
“I $ee you, friend.”
“You are known, friend.”
“Soon, friend.”
The messages grew stranger, more cryptic, until last night. This time, it wasn’t just a note. It was a file folder.
Inside: a single sheet of paper stamped with “Clause 9.2” in bold at the top, followed by a dense wall of legal jargon. I could barely make sense of it, except for one line near the bottom, underlined twice:
“Mandatory Assimilation Pending: Employee Wellness Initiative.”
I froze, the weight of inevitability settling over me like a heavy fog. The Mahchine™ had been watching all along, quietly processing my small rebellions. Now, my time had come.
When I got home, I found him standing at my front door, still as ever. He extended his hand, holding what looked like a corporate badge with my name already printed on it.
I didn’t resist. I reached out, took the badge, and clipped it to my shirt.
As I stepped inside, he followed, the hum of some unseen mechanism growing louder. I felt it then—the Great Becumming™ was here. My fate, sealed.
I whispered into the silence, “Friend, I have Becum.”
This is fine.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5630811&forum_id=2\u0026mark_id=5309370",#48358956)
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