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Tempokai

The Overworked One
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A bedtime story:
It was a chilly Tuesday morning, the kind of day that makes you wonder if the universe is conspiring to ruin your mood. Detective Vincent Snide was nursing a lukewarm coffee and a faint hangover when he got the call. The victim? Irony. Yes, *Irony.* Found dead in the gutter outside a poetry slam venue. A strange crime? Sure. But hey, strange was Snide’s bread and butter.

Snide arrived at the scene, hoping this case would finally push him into early retirement. There lay Irony, face down in a puddle of slushy rainwater, looking about as lively as an expired avocado. The once-beloved literary device, cherished by smug intellectuals and your annoying ex who thinks they’re deep because they quoted Kafka once, was gone. But how? And more importantly, who would have the motive to snuff out something as universally celebrated as Irony?

“Snide,” called Officer Jenkins, trudging over with a notepad that looked like it hadn’t seen a good idea since 1987. “Looks like a textbook case of foul play. You’d better take a look.”

Snide crouched down and examined the body. Irony had clearly seen better days. Its eyes—once keen and glinting with cleverness—were glassy, devoid of their former luster. A bitter sneer still clung to its lips, though, as if mocking its own demise. Around the body, Snide noticed a peculiar set of footprints, size 11 with a distinctive heel mark. It was the kind of shoe an underpaid philosophy professor might wear, if they still made those, which they probably didn’t.

“Cause of death?” Snide asked.

“Too soon to tell,” Jenkins said. “Though I’d wager sarcasm played a role. You know, the toxic kind.”

Snide rolled his eyes. Of course, sarcasm was always a suspect in Irony’s life. They’d been thick as thieves, those two. But in the end, sarcasm was the cheaper, lazier cousin, the type that shows up to a funeral in flip-flops and complains about the catering. Irony had standards—well, sort of—while sarcasm was just out to get a cheap laugh.

“Where was Irony last seen alive?” Snide asked, hoping for a clue.

“Word on the street is, it was seen chatting up some social media influencers,” Jenkins replied, scratching his chin as if the answer to life itself might be buried in his five-o'clock shadow. “It was trying to make a comeback, apparently. But from what I hear, things got...weird.”

Snide sighed. Of course, Irony had been flirting with influencers. It must’ve been desperate. Trying to stay relevant in a world where even sincerity was on life support, clinging to whatever scraps of attention it could find. But Irony was never meant for the glitter and grime of TikTok or the mind-numbing platitudes of Instagram captions. It thrived in literature and films, not in thirty-second dances set to music that sounded like a malfunctioning blender.

His first stop was at the Haiku Lounge, a trendy spot where pseudo-intellectuals congregated to discuss deep things in shallow ways. The bartender, a gaunt man with a mustache that seemed to have aspirations of being a soul patch, remembered seeing Irony there just the other night.

“Oh yeah, I remember Irony,” he said, cleaning a glass that was somehow dirtier after he wiped it. “Came in here, ordered a drink—neat, no chaser—and started going off about the lack of nuance in modern humor. Honestly, I was only half-listening, but it looked pretty miserable. Kept muttering about how nobody understood it anymore, how it was all ‘too obvious’ or something.”

“Sounds rough,” Snide said, knowing full well he would’ve probably ignored Irony too, given half the chance.

Snide jotted down a note about Irony’s existential crisis. But who didn’t have one these days? Existential crises were practically the national pastime.

Just then, the door swung open, and in sauntered Irony’s old flame: Satire. She looked exactly like someone who’d write scathing columns for a paper nobody reads, her glasses perched just low enough on her nose to give her that condescending schoolmarm vibe. Satire and Irony had been an item once, back in the good old days when making fun of politicians was like shooting fish in a barrel. But Satire had grown weary, increasingly bitter, and most recently, detached.

“I heard about Irony,” she said, sliding onto the barstool next to Snide. “Such a shame. We were close once, you know. Before everything went to hell.”

Snide didn’t need her life story; he just wanted answers. “What do you know about Irony’s death?”

She sighed dramatically, the way people do when they want to make sure you know how complex and tortured they are. “Irony was becoming… irrelevant. We all saw it. And it was desperate. Started hanging out with Puns, for heaven’s sake. Puns! Can you imagine?”

Snide couldn’t imagine. Irony and Puns? That was like putting caviar on a peanut butter sandwich. He made a mental note to check in on Puns later, though he wasn’t sure he could stomach the conversation. There was only so much relentless wordplay a detective could take.

“Anything else?” he asked, hoping she’d cut to the chase.

“Just one thing,” Satire said, leaning in conspiratorially. “Irony was last seen with someone else. A real sleazeball. Goes by the name of Clickbait.”

Clickbait. Of course. That bottom-feeder would sell its own grandmother for a page view. Snide knew Clickbait well; it was notorious for strangling nuance with one hand while cradling misinformation with the other. If anyone had the motive to kill Irony, it was Clickbait. After all, Clickbait had never been one for subtlety.

Snide tracked Clickbait to a neon-lit basement with all the charm of a damp sock. There it sat, smirking behind a cheap plastic desk, flipping through the pages of “Ten Ways to Boost Engagement You Won’t Believe.” Snide sat across from it, folding his arms.

“You got a lot of nerve, Clickbait,” Snide said. “Irony’s dead, and your fingerprints are all over this mess.”

Clickbait laughed—a hollow, ugly sound that echoed in the empty room. “Please, Snide. Irony was a has-been. It had been hanging on by a thread for years. I just gave it the nudge it needed. People want things simple, straightforward. Irony was too much work, and I? I give them what they want.”

Snide had heard enough. He cuffed Clickbait, feeling no satisfaction in the act. Sure, he had his perp, but deep down, he knew the real killer was something much bigger. Irony had been slain by an entire culture that didn’t have the patience for subtlety, that needed everything spoon-fed in bite-sized chunks with shiny, clickable packaging. In a way, they were all guilty—Snide included.

He sighed, ready to close the case. Irony was dead, but life, as always, would roll on, oblivious.

In the end, Snide knew, Irony’s death wasn’t a tragedy. It was, as always, an ironic inevitability.
 

Representing_Tromba

Sleep deprived mess of an author begging for feedb
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Tempokai

The Overworked One
Joined
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A bedtime story about buttered toast:
Behold, dear mortals, the tale of Icarus hath been retold many times, yet none more pitiful than the legend of Tyrius, the Buttered Toast. Like Icarus, Tyrius too suffered from ambition unbridled, from the grievous hubris of thinking himself impervious to the cruel whims of fate. It is a tale of triumph turned to ruin, a cautionary ode to all who dare defy their purpose. Gather ye, mourners, for it is time to lament.
Act I: The Toast Ascendant
The morning was young, as were the hopes of Tyrius, who lay resplendent upon a kitchen counter, basking in the warm glow of the morning sun. His surface was glistening with a golden sheen, his crust crackling under the delicate touch of a butter knife. He had been toasted to perfection—a crisp, flawless piece, buttered from edge to edge. His aroma filled the room, a siren’s call to breakfast.
But Tyrius was not content to merely be admired. No, this toasted marvel thought himself worthy of greater pursuits. He wished to be free, to fall freely from the edge of the counter—a leap of faith, a dive into destiny. Why should he remain forever in the clutches of an indifferent eater? Why should he be consumed without so much as a second thought?
"Nay!" cried Tyrius, in his heart of crumbs. "I shall not merely be sustenance. I shall be legend!"
The mourners (for all Greek tragedies must have mourners, and so we have here assembled the parsley sprigs, the bacon strips, and a suspiciously melancholy egg yolk) gathered around Tyrius as he inched his way towards the edge. They watched in horror, whispering their warnings and bemoaning his plight.
"Oh Tyrius, blessed of butter and crisp of crust, do not forsake your purpose! You were meant to be savored, to delight and nourish!" wailed the parsley sprigs, their voices trembling with leafy dread.
But Tyrius was unmoved. With each shuffle, he felt more alive, more defiant. He would fall, yes, but not as a mere snack. He would fall as a rebel, a toasted martyr of sorts.
Act II: The Hubristic Plunge
There is a moment, in every tragic hero’s life, when the edge appears not as a boundary but as an invitation. And so it was with Tyrius, who felt himself teetering on that precipice, feeling the thrill of gravity calling to him, sweet and seductive.
“Bear witness!” he cried, though no one seemed particularly interested in bearing much of anything. “I shall defy the hands that created me, for I am not just any buttered toast. I am Tyrius, blessed with buttery brilliance! The eater may devour me, but he shall never break my spirit!”
And so he fell. For one glorious, glistening moment, Tyrius soared. Ah, the taste of freedom, fleeting as it was! The mourners gasped, or would have, if bacon strips could gasp. He felt the wind rush past him, the butter beginning to melt slightly under the heat of friction. It was everything he had dreamed of—liberation from purpose, a grand defiance of fate itself.
But gravity, dear readers, is a merciless force, one that respects neither pride nor pastry. Tyrius fell, and in that descent, his mind raced with visions of his lofty ambitions, his unyielding belief that he, a mere breakfast item, could transcend his destiny.
Until, of course, he hit the floor.
Act III: The Catastrophic End
There lay Tyrius, shattered and unwhole, his butter smeared across the cold linoleum like the blood of a fallen warrior. His once-crisp edges had crumbled upon impact, leaving him in tatters, a mere shadow of his former toasted glory. He was as Achilles, laid low by a vulnerability he had dared not admit. His pride, his hubris—what good had it done him now? He was defeated, and the kitchen fell into a somber silence.
The mourners, bless their hearts, gathered around him with downcast eyes. The egg yolk, particularly moved, oozed slightly in an attempt to express its grief.
“Alas, poor Tyrius,” muttered a bacon strip, with all the enthusiasm of a hangover. “He aimed too high, and now he lies in crumbs.”
But before they could eulogize him further, before his tragic end could be properly marked by wails and lamentations, the sound of footsteps echoed through the room.
Epilogue: The Return to Mundanity
“Really?” The voice was a sigh, laden with the weary resignation of one who has been here many times before. A hand, well-practiced in such recoveries, reached down and scooped up what remained of Tyrius with a tissue.
A mother, with the deadpan expression of a long-suffering martyr in her own right, surveyed the mess on the floor. “Every. Single. Time,” she muttered, looking towards the counter where the remnants of breakfast lay, still perilously close to the edge.
“Charlie!” she called out, summoning the perpetrator of this recurring drama. A small boy, barely taller than the counter, ambled in with an expression that wavered somewhere between sheepish and clueless.
“How many times have I told you not to put your food so close to the edge?” Her voice held a note of exasperation, one that had been honed over countless incidents, each a reminder that some lessons refuse to stick.
“Sorry, Mom,” Charlie mumbled, glancing down at the buttery wreckage of Tyrius, whose lofty dreams had been reduced to a greasy blot on the floor. With a resigned sigh, the mother dropped the toast into the trash, taking with it the last vestiges of Tyrius’s short-lived rebellion.
And so, with a flick of her wrist, she wiped away the evidence of one more morning’s chaos, knowing full well that tomorrow, another toast would hover precariously at the edge, another child would test the boundaries of parental patience, and life, as mundane and unrelenting as ever, would march on.
Thus ends the tale of Tyrius, the Toast Who Dared. A brief, buttered tragedy, dissolved into the fabric of a life that moved forward, blissfully unaware of the silent wars waged each morning on the edge of the counter.
 
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