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Korsakovia Script (2009) PDF

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Korsakovia A Half-Lfe 2 Experimental Mod Dan Pinchbeck / thechineseroom

2009 Dan Pinchbeck

www.thechineseroom.co.uk dan.pinchbeck@port.ac.uk +44(0)2393 845479

Cast of Characters Christopher: A patient at St. Clements Neurological Clinic. He has been admitted following a fire he appears to have started. He is suffering from Korsakoffs psychosis and is unable to form any new memories. He exists inside a fantasy apocalpyse of the world having ended, pursued by entities he calls "the collectors". Although extremely distrubed, Christopher is calm and controlled, and appears to have a strangely solid understanding of what is happening to him. Rather than being lost between realities, he appears to believe that his apocalyptic fantasy is real and logical and the attempts by medical staff to reach him are either delusions or an unwanted intrusion into his new world. (MORE)

Cast of Characters (contd) Dr Christine Grayson: A Consultant Neurologist attending to him. She is equally calm and initially sure of her relationship with Christopher and her ability to draw him out of his fantasy.

Scene The action appears to initially take place in a private room in St. Clements Neurological Clinic, where Christopher, a patient suffering from an advanced stage of Korsakoffs psychosis has been recently admitted. An apparent failed suicide attempt has left Christopher severely burnt and he also appears to have mutilated himself prior to this. His condition means that he is unable to recall anything prior to the onset of Korsakoffs or to form new memories. He exists in a series of unconnected lucid intervals. A further complication is that he is unable to distinguish between fantasy and reality, and has constructed an apocalyptic dream of the world having ended which he believes he occupies. The action therefore takes place in a number of these lucid intervals, at various locations imagined by Christopher as being part of this new, disturbed reality.

KORSAKOVIA Scene One: Board Up the Windows (IN BLACKOUT) GRAYSON: Hello Christopher. How are you this evening? Do you know where you are, Christopher? Do you know who I am, Christopher? My name is Doctor Grayson, Christopher. You are in hospital, in St. Clements. Do you understand why you are here? What was that Christopher? Well get to that. Right now I need you to listen to me carefully. I need you to tell me the last thing you remember. (HOSPITAL: CHRISTOPHERS ROOM) GRAYSON: The patient was admitted suffering third degree burns to his hands with other severe burns across his body, the result of the ensuing fire. The trauma to his eyes is several days old and appears to have been self-inflicted. The patient is suffering from an advanced stage of Korsakoffs psychosis. He has almost total retrograde amnesia and sporadic episodes of severe anterograde amnesia. Although he responds normally during these periods, he has no recollections of them. He has also demonstrated a retreat into confabulation: he is unable to assess the reality of any lucid period. (DOCTOR GRAYSONS OFFICE) GRAYSON: Christopher, I need you to focus on my voice. Can you do that for me Christopher? GRAYSON: Christopher, do you understand that you are blind? CHRISTOPHER: Im not blind, I can see perfectly well. Im in a Doctors office. Where are you? GRAYSON: Christopher, my name is Doctor Grayson. I am a consultant neurologist at St. Clements. Do you remember who I am? (CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

2.

(OFFICE BY FIRE ESCAPE) GRAYSON: I have administered 1.5 milligrams of Alprazolam to the patient following an acute panic attack. He threw his television set out of the window at approximately 11.45pm. I have instructed the porters to lock the door until he is calmer. (DOCTORS OFFICE BY WAITING ROOM, TIMED LOCK ON DOOR) GRAYSON: It is a mistake to describe the patient as unable to distinguish between reality and fantasy. The distinction for him is utterly irrelevant. It appears that he has subconsciously constructed a narrative to explain the fragmentary nature of his experience and his ongoing disorientation. Put simply, at the root of this narrative is his belief that the world has ended. (CAFETERIA) GRAYSON: On examination, his body shows clear signs of a long history of self-harm. This supports the hypothesis that his current delusions are rooted in a history of mental illness. Certainly, the underpinning fantasy of apocalypse seems too complicated to be a recent event. (ROOM WITH THE CROWBAR, AS K EFFECT OCCURS) GRAYSON: Christopher, do you know who I am? CHRISTOPHER: Where I am? Why are the lights turned out? GRAYSON: Christopher, do you know where you are? (JUST PRIOR TO 1ST COLLECTOR - ALONG 1ST FLOOR CORRIDOR) GRAYSON: The paramedics were unable to find his eyes. We think he may have eaten them (GETTING UP THE STAIRS) GRAYSON: Why the television Christopher? Why that? (LIFT SHAFT BASE)

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

3.

CHRISTOPHER: Because I fell through a gap in the channels and the signal got frozen in time. Thats how they re-start hearts, isnt it? Thats why they invented electricity, to re-start hearts, isnt it? (BY BANGING DOOR) GRAYSON: Wake up Christopher. I need you to wake up now (STOREROOM) CHRISTOPHER: Thats how they restart the television. Thats how they born me. (GARAGE) CHRISTOPHER: Its like when you lose the channel on the television, only thats - in the electricity - thats the real signal. Thats why I had to detune them all. Thats why I had to break open the screen. (TV ROOM, ON EXPLOSION) CHRISTOPHER: Thats why I had to get rid of my eyes. (RETURN TO GENERATOR ROOM) CHRISTOPHER: Im saying when Im the signal, I can pieces dream, the echo. They were here before. Ive been trying to shut you up for years. I thought if I talked youd get bored and just leave. GRAYSON: Do you want me to leave? CHRISTOPHER: Yes please. It makes the collectors angry GRAYSON: Tell me about them. (IN THE PIPELINE/LADDER) GRAYSON: Are you saying you blinded yourself deliberately? Can you remember this? CHRISTOPHER: What Im saying is that I know why I would do it. The screen was on a lie channel and what do you do, you just turn over, but its stuck, so you just pull out the plug and get a new one. (CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

4.

GRAYSON: Are you saying you blinded yourself because you couldnt cope with what you were seeing? CHRISTOPHER: I am waiting to take delivery of a new set of eyes. (DOWNSTAIRS OFFICE) CHRISTOPHER: I watched them in the hospital. The Doctor leaned out of the screen and pushed her fingers into my eyes, up to the knuckles. Why she did that, I couldnt tell, at the time. (AT END OF WHITE OUT TRANSITION) GRAYSON: My name is Doctor Grayson. You are in hospital Christopher. Do you understand me? Do you understand me Christopher? Christopher? Can you hear me Christopher? Can you hear me? Christopher? Scene Two: He Exists in a series of Lucid Moments (IN BLACKOUT) GRAYSON: What appears evident is that the fantasy apocalypse is both older and more detailed than I first thought. Rather than a response to the event, it predates it considerably, and has fully replaced any memory of life prior to the onset of Korsakoffs. We must tread carefully. It is little wonder that he considers our conversations to be an intrusion into this world. A worrying change is that he seems to be capable of integrating me into his delusion. (ENTER FIRST WAREHOUSE) GRAYSON: Where are you now Christopher? CHRISTOPHER: This is where they make the pieces. They put this code into each one so they can get back in later (LOCKED DOOR TO W3 - ONLY ACTIVE BEFORE CBAR) GRAYSON: Why do you think your eyes are here? Is this where you left them?

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

5.

CHRISTOPHER: I didnt. The collectors took them away. Theyre jealous because all they have are ears. They wanted them to see the warm, to keep warm. GRAYSON: Can you imagine exploring this CHRISTOPHER: I call it the factory. Ive been here before GRAYSON: -this factory. Can you tell me what you see here? (WALKWAY ABOVE WAREHOUSE ONE) GRAYSON: Tell me about the Collectors, Christopher. When did you first become aware of them? (IN VENT SYSTEM) CHRISTOPHER: I was holding out my arms into the fire and it was burning along my arms and I could see that in my fingers. Not along the skin, but underneath it, between the channels and I saw it was a signal too and I could trace it all the way back. I got this headache where it caught fire, and I knew the wire was too stretched from the source CHRISTOPHER: I threw the world up into the world and all the pieces were off the ground now and caught in an orbit and that was why they spin around. I think, you know, I think its like the collectors, as they are so hungry for the heat, the light, thats why they spin and stack them, to reach the light. Because then they will be the broadcaster, you know, for all that time and space CHRISTOPHER: I thought I could drag them all the way they wanted to go, because then everyone will come to the source of the heat, the signal, and be there watching GRAYSON: Can you see them now? CHRISTOPHER: I cant see anything. I cant find my eyes. (BASE OF THE ROTATING COLUMN) GRAYSON: Tell me more about the Collectors

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

6.

CHRISTOPHER: Theyve always been here, I think. At least, I think so. Not always this though, not so aggressive. I guess that none of us are supposed to be here now, now were all dead, they are just collecting it all up. You cant blame them for that. GRAYSON: But what are they Christopher, do you know that? (ON GETTING THE CBAR) GRAYSON: Im going to take my fingers out of your eyes now Christopher. I want you to tell me what you can see. (OUTSIDE INTO THE YARD) CHRISTOPHER: I could see the heads out on the pavement and each one was filled with acetylcholine. They used to process it here after they extracted it from the patients at the hospital. Theyd pull it out through a long needle that they put in through the ear CHRISTOPHER: They pulled it out of his ear and then it got bottled and sold on. When the world ended, thats why this place was a locus. Its all because of that, that memory maker, it remembered itself and how it got there and thats why we can still get here (INTO SHOP AREA) CHRISTOPHER: They burn it all so no-one can see either, so the smoke is in your eyes and you cant see them coming. I knew that, I knew if I wanted to let them in properly, I had to make it easier. Its like the conduit, breaking the channel to let the signal through, and there was, you see, this perfect world and I think its not so much the fire as the ash and the smoke afterwards, because then everything is already in pieces for them GRAYSON: Are you saying you can communicate with the collectors? Did you hear voices? CHRISTOPHER: Im hearing you now, arent I? (HEADING INTO WAREHOUSE THREE) CHRISTOPHER: Trap them in, catch them in the memory maker. Feed them on that memory maker and then they wont follow me around as much (CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

7.

(IN CODE ROOM, TIMED LOCKED DOOR, ON ENTRY) GRAYSON: Were going to try something new Christopher. Im going to tell you a sequence of numbers and I want you to try and remember them. CHRISTOPHER: I thought you said I couldnt do that. GRAYSON: Well, theres some evidence that you can retain information, even if you cant actually remember it yourself. So were going to try that. I want you to listen to these numbers carefully and I want you to repeat them over and over again and well see what happens. Can you do that for me Christopher? Christopher? (HEADING BACK TO THE CODE DOOR IN WAREHOUSE TWO) GRAYSON: What is extraordinary is the recollection of entirely fictional television documentaries, which he can recount in great detail. Prior to the end of the world, he can describe programmes he watched, even though it appears - certainly in some cases it can be assumed - they never existed. This seems important because it does at least point to a prior life in some form of normality, even if these memories themselves are fabricated. It also reaffirms my argument that the television for him represents the primary means of travel between the worlds, or fragments of worlds, that he has access to. Indeed, the notion of the end of the world, of it breaking into pieces is, according to his experience, an entirely logical interpretation of events. (ON TRIGGER OF TRANSITION EVENT) GRAYSON: Im going to take my fingers out of my eyes now Christopher. I want you to tell me what I can see. Scene Three: The assimilation of Doctor Grayson (IN BLACKOUT) CHRISTOPHER: Why do you keep asking me about that? GRAYSON: Because you cant make new memories, because you cant remember about the events prior to, to this, you are creating this to fill in the blanks. What Im (MORE) (CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

8.

GRAYSON: (contd) concerned about is that this new memory you are trying to make, or what you remember, this is just not real Christopher, it didnt happen and this, what you remember, this is really worrying. So were going to try and go further back, before the world ended. Do you think we can do that? CHRISTOPHER: Before they attached me to the television? Before you pushed out my eyes and stuck the needles in my ears? When I still had hands? GRAYSON: Christopher, we didnt take your eyes. This is what I mean. But if it helps, then yes. Lets go back then. CHRISTOPHER: I will take you home. (ACROSS CORRIDOR INTO TOP FLAT) CHRISTOPHER: and then if you could hold the signal yourself, in your own hands, put your flesh into the signal, then you push apart the channels and get in GRAYSON: and the collectors? CHRISTOPHER: Yes, thats right. It means they would be able to go backwards and forwards, as they liked (COLLECTOR ROOM DROPS FURNITURE) GRAYSON: Whats strange is when you look back at the scans and the scans indicate burn damage backwards along the optic nerve, and even some indications of this trace right into the visual cortex. If I didnt know better, its like the shock burnt a signal pathway directly into his brain (FIRST TELEVISION ROOM) CHRISTOPHER: The eyes are liars because the screens refract the light, so thats why the burning happens. But if you put your hands into the screen, you could see clearly and youd not get all the lie burn. (BURNT ROOM WITH HOLE IN FLOOR) GRAYSON: Are you saying then -

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

9.

CHRISTOPHER: Yes, if you make it hotter everywhere, they wouldnt see you in the heat and be able to find you (BLOOD ROOM: TIMED LOCK ON DOOR) GRAYSON: I am increasingly concerned with assimilation. From what I can ascertain, Christopher has nearly fully integrated me into his paranoid fantasy. To him, I am ceasing to exist as an independent object and am simply an extension of the post-apocalyptic world. He has effectively broken me into fragments. My signal is disrupted, my screen is broken and my hands are numbed by the voltage. (HALF WAY ALONG DARK CORRIDOR TO TV ROOM) CHRISTOPHER: Doctor, I cant hear you Doctor. Are you still here? (SPINNING TV ROOM) CHRISTOPHER: I had to use both fists to break it, that cut my hands and the blood got into the television. I could see the signal in there though. (TV CORPSE ROOM) CHRISTOPHER: And the time froze over in the signal. Thats why you had to start the fires, to heat the world up, to thaw it out again (BURNT FLAT CORRIDOR) CHRISTOPHER: Everybody was crying because they were burning, but all I could hear was the static. Everybody fell into the signal and was free. (CLIMB TO 2 CORPSE STACK ROOM) GRAYSON: It will end up receding until it disappears completely. There seems no doubt we are losing our grip on him. It is the speed at which this is happening that is most shocking. (BURNING WATER ROOM) GRAYSON: It fell from the shelf and it broke open and it went everywhere. Some of the water got into the monitor and it blew a fuse. I found myself thinking of Christopher then. I cannot help but feel he is (MORE) (CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

10.

GRAYSON: (contd) trapped in this place, a victim of life yearning for escape. (DROP TO BOTTOM FLOOR) GRAYSON: To go further back into this destroyed world gets us no closer to a pre-apocalyptic memory, but actually re-affirms it, pushes him deeper into it. (ACROSS BOTTOM CORRIDOR) GRAYSON: My concern is that we are actually amplifying the situation rather than resolving it. Perhaps it would have been better for him if the paramedics hadnt reached him in time, although I am now convinced this was no clumsy suicide attempt, but rather a perfectly logical means of permanently transferring himself into the new world. I wonder now if all we have done is to obstruct what would be, for him, a natural act and outcome (TV ROOM) GRAYSON: Christopher? Can you hear me Christopher? (BOTTOM SPINNING ROOM ENTRY) GRAYSON: If you let me be your eyes, I can see for you. I can be your new hands too, if you want me to help you. (HOSPITAL ROOM: TIMED LOCK ON DOOR, ON ENTRY) CHRISTOPHER: This is the room I was born in. (ON CROWBAR PICK-UP) GRAYSON: Your hands are healing well, Christopher. CHRISTOPHER: They hurt GRAYSON: They will. The surgeon managed to save two fingers and the thumb on your left, but Im afraid the burns were extremely severe. CHRISTOPHER: Its alright. I dont need hands now. You are a blunt instrument to me, Doctor. You are helping me clear the barricades and break through the screens. Can I have some more painkillers now? (CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

11.

GRAYSON: Its not time for that yet. CHRISTOPHER: The collectors are here, Doctor. Theyve come for me again. (RUNNING RETURN) GRAYSON: If I push my fingers into my eyes, it leaves fragments in my vision GRAYSON: When we found him, he had lengths of copper wire wrapped around both hands, presumably to increase conductivity GRAYSON: Perhaps it would be better for everyone if we just allowed him to vanish into this world forever. It cannot be a kindness forcing him to exist between the two. GRAYSON: I am sure I am now little more than a voice in his head, no different from any of the other sounds. (ON LEVEL END TRANSITION) CHRISTOPHER: This is how the world ends. Scene Four: In which Christopher finds his eyes again (IN BLACKOUT) GRAYSON: Why did you break the screen, Christopher? What did you think you would find behind it? CHRISTOPHER: A door. Theres a door in head behind every eye my screen. Thats why you have to break them all, then you see the world as it is, as it is ended. (FROM WARD INTO SHOP) GRAYSON: Whats behind the door Christopher? What happens when you get through the door? (SEEING THE BARRIERS AND GIANT SCREEN)

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

12.

CHRISTOPHER: If you can just break the screens, you can get at the door. Thats the only way to get back home. (DROP INTO ROOFSPACE) CHRISTOPHER: If you close your eyes you can hear them though. Its not often they are completely silent. Because they are cold, thats why they are singing at the edges. GRAYSON: Are they here now? CHRISTOPHER: Yes GRAYSON: Do you know what they want? CHRISTOPHER: They want me to come home with them GRAYSON: Do you want to go with them? CHRISTOPHER: I dont know yet. (DROP INTO WAREHOUSE) GRAYSON: The patient displays signs of memory that I cannot explain given his diagnosis. This morning, when I began our session, he greeted me by name. I cannot explain this. Although he continues to deny he is in St. Clements, he displays none of the anxiety or panic of the last few days. I am not sure what to make of this. GRAYSON: And last night I dreamed of the place where they make the pieces. And I woke up with a pain in my ears and the room was as cold as ice. (GOT THE CROWBAR) CHRISTOPHER: I am wrapped in copper, a superconductor. I have placed my hands into the sun and counted away a finger for every signal. I am the King of the Collectors, with hospital bed a throne. (DESTROYED TV ONE)

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

13.

CHRISTOPHER: In a shattered world each head in cold a signal reaching out for the heat I will see again I will see again (DESTROYED TV TWO} CHRISTOPHER: There are worlds within worlds and each to its fragment join the edge to make a skull set a sun fire in the centre to heat the orbits I will see again I will see again (DESTROYED TV THREE) CHRISTOPHER: The gravity spin crush the pieces back together, join the edge make a screen to play a signal mirrored on I will see again I will see again (ON TRANSITION) GRAYSON: My television set appears to be broken; all the channels have vanished. Instead, I am forced to sit with my eyes closed and simply listen to the static Scene Five: Korsakovia (IN BLACKOUT) GRAYSON: Christopher, can you hear me? CHRISTOPHER: I can hear you Doctor Grayson GRAYSON: Christopher, where am I? CHRISTOPHER: You are inside us now. We are taking you home. This is how the world ends. (INTO TILTED WAREHOUSE) GRAYSON: The paramedics found the patient in the living room. He had wrapped his hands in copper wire and punched them through the television screen. The television appears to have burst into flames and is the cause of the trauma to his hands. The paramedics report they were unable to find his eyes. I think we may have eaten them. (FLOODED HOSPITAL)

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

14.

CHRISTOPHER: Flooding the ended world with light, like water, like heat, static. I have swum through the deep signal blind fish in dark sound towards the surface, towards the light (MAIN CORRIDOR) GRAYSON: What happens when the last door opens Christopher? Where will we go? What will become of us? CHRISTOPHER: Like the world, we will be fragments. When we come apart, the release of heat will make the collectors never hungry anymore (DROP INTO FIRE FLAT) GRAYSON: I write this with a needle in my hands. It is sterilised and perfectly safe. In a few moments, I will attempt to extract the excess acetylcholine. I will then inject Alprazolam directly into the cortex. I am sure he will be more comfortable after that. (CENTRAL WAREHOUSE) CHRISTOPHER: You asked me where my eyes were, Doctor Grayson. GRAYSON: I did. Do you know where they are? CHRISTOPHER: Of course. Theyre right there. GRAYSON: Where? I dont understand. CHRISTOPHER: They are right there. In your head. (SLANTED HOSPITAL) CHRISTOPHER: I cant help you with your eyes, Doctor Grayson. My thumbs are bound in copper. Youll have to do it yourself. GRAYSON: Why is the ground crooked? Is this the balance going? Thats part of the diagnosis. I think I remember that.

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

15.

CHRISTOPHER: This is the beginning of the fragmentation. Soon all the pieces will be free to soar, head each one to the sun, recombine to their own logic (CROWBAR TENEMENT ENTRY) GRAYSON: Waking up, not remembering falling asleep. Dropped into freezing dark water from a great height. Opened my eyes but it was darkness flooding in, not light. Why is the hospital underwater Christopher? Why are my hands so numb? (SWIMMING THROUGH TENEMENTS) CHRISTOPHER: I was a Doctor. I remember that. I had this patient and she was unable to remember the world ending. In the end we had to give her so much Alprazolam she went blind with it. There was so much left over and I thought if I took some too, I could meet her in this neutral space. (GOT CROWBAR) GRAYSON: Tell me about my hands Christopher CHRISTOPHER: There was enough left to pick up the signal. You make them wet with copper and stick them into the centre of it and then it flows, no sticking, the cold river (CENTRAL WAREHOUSE TWO: POST CROWBAR) GRAYSON: I write this with a needle in my hand. It is perfectly safe. I have placed it into the screen and extracted the signal. When the sun goes out I will inject it directly into his eyes. (DESTROYED TV ONE) CHRISTOPHER: The door is made of static but you can hear them singing behind it. You just need to remove your eyes, keep them from looking. If there is a pain in your ears, you can feel you are getting close. (DESTROYED TV TWO) CHRISTOPHER: It collapses off its hinges and flies to the sun. All the fragments are flying there now. We will climb them in the orbits and reach out and burn our hands in the heat source (CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

16.

(DESTROYED TV THREE) CHRISTOPHER: And you are blinded now from looking at it has burned your hands and your skin, almost reach it. It has fingers of heat the knuckles in your eyes and the noise as you approach (ON TRANSITION) GRAYSON: Christopher takes the sun and places it in his eyes. They shine now with all the noise. The signal is clear and the collectors are singing home. We will follow his flight, in pieces, in the aftermath. This is how the world ends. Scene Six: The Event (LEAVING CHRISTOPHERS ROOM) GRAYSON: Hello Christopher. How are you this evening? Do you know where you are, Christopher? Do you know who I am, Christopher? (CLIMBING DEBRIS TOWER) CHRISTOPHER: I remember who you are, Doctor Grayson (EXITING LIFTSHAFT TO ROOFSPACE) GRAYSON: Do you know where you are, Christopher? (SPINNING FLATS ONE) CHRISTOPHER: I do. I am in the sun, the signal. I am home. (IN THE HOSPITAL) GRAYSON: How do your hands feel this evening, Christopher? CHRISTOPHER: They feel much better now. These fingers are much better. GRAYSON: They are copper. I thought youd like them. Would you like me to attend to your ears now? the sun, and but you can sunk up to is deafening

(CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

17.

CHRISTOPHER: Yes please. I would like you to extract all the useless noise. GRAYSON: I have brought my needle. Its perfectly safe. (CLIMBING THE STAIRS) GRAYSON: Ive taken my eyes out now Christopher. I thought youd like them. Would you like them now? CHRISTOPHER: You can keep them. I have this sun in my head. Everything is burning now, its perfectly safe. GRAYSON: I will keep them in my pocket then. For later. CHRISTOPHER: Yes, for later. (PIPES / CRANE) GRAYSON: What will happen to the collectors when we reach the sun? CHRISTOPHER: They will end, like everything else. We can go beyond it all now. All the pieces will join together and there will be no need for them anymore. GRAYSON: Will they return to the television? CHRISTOPHER: My eyes? Yes, I think they will. (SHATTERED WARDS) GRAYSON: Tell me how the world ended CHRISTOPHER: I could tell it was trying to and it was time to leave. So I set up the door in the corner of the room and left it running all night and day so all the programmes were exhausted, so the fragments couldnt fight back. Then I took all the copper and I wrapped it around my hands, made the conductors out of them. This was two days after I took my eyes and hid them in the sun. I waited for a break in the signal, then I pushed them both in. (CONTINUED)

CONTINUED:

18.

That was when the world ended. It sighed, in relief. I dont remember anything much after that. Until the collectors came to drag me back to the world. I could hear them talking. They were scared of the heat. They worried about not finding my eyes. I hid them too carefully. (FRAGMENTED WAREHOUSE) CHRISTOPHER: They brought me to this place and injected a Doctor into my ears to try and get the door closed again. She was using this memory maker to fake a world and past. It took all my effort to lock her inside with them. She kept joining the fragments together all wrong, and stopping them flying into the sun. I had to convince her that the needle was perfectly safe. After a while, she got lost inside and then I could wrap our hands together in copper and then we could ride the signal together, into the sun. (BASEMENT) GRAYSON: My name is Doctor Christine Grayson. I am a consultant conductor for the sainted clemency. I have responsibility for flight and heat and the removal of eyes and hands. These are the signals we will use for the end of the world. This is what we will remember only. It is my job to remove the boards from the windows and break the screen, so we can see again. My needle is perfectly safe. (CHRISTOPHERS ROOM, END) CHRISTOPHER: The sun is the television. The collectors are my heated eyes. The needle is the hospital. The doctor is the copper around my hands. This is the room I was born in. This is how the world ends. I will see again. (END)

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