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RoboticZamatThe Day I was Never Born
Published: 2014-06-01 20:59:16 +0000 UTC; Views: 6756; Favourites: 233; Downloads: 0
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I was rather certain that my parents had forgotten.  

I was finally becoming an adult, legally adult in a world ruled by them and I was excited and apprehensive at the same time. My parents, you see, had always been very protective of me, more so than of any of my friends and it, while it had been a comfort at certain times, it had also been a nuisance as, I suppose, it would be of anyone of that age with such parents. I loved them, of course, but I wanted to fly free, try my own wings and find myself, so to speak.

This wish comes to all those on the threshold of adulthood, or nearing it.

It is a fear, really. Every time we know change is coming, for better or worse, we begin to feel fear. In some, this becomes uncertainty, in others boasting and swaggering. For me, it was neither. Or both. I am not quite sure, but I was certainly looking forward to it.

I remember that week. I was trying to slip hints as to what I desired about my coming of age, about my birthday, as all children do, as I had done ever since I was able to, but these seemed to be falling on deaf ears. Both my mother and father were strangely preoccupied, as if they were watching something before their eyes that I could not see. I received elusive, vague and even odd, at times, comments that made me simply not bring up the topic after the first few tries. It was strange. I had never seen my parents behave like this before. Unsettling would be the best way of describing it.

The week went by with nothing other than the usual. There were the semester finals, I had entered college early and in my first year, I attended study groups and a few parties to lighten the load. I could afford to, I was a good learner, even if I do say so myself. And I also had a much-envied ability to hold alcohol very well, and I never got a hangover the next day.

I think I was rather an irritating young cock, really. Proud and self-assured and sulky that I was now believing that my parents had forgotten my birthday, like some child cheated of a sweet. This, if nothing else, tells me now just how unlike an adult I really was back then. Funny that.

I digress.

So, I was a dapper young lad, full of life and lust for it and arriving home on the day of my birthday after a night out with my friends from college, I found my parents waiting for me in the lounge room all prim and silent, very much unlike the lively couple who had brought me up over the years. It was deeply troubling.

“Is something the matter?” I asked, walking over to them, confused and fearing something horrible had happened. “If it’s about my going out last night. We didn't gamble, mother. I swear. Richard did, even when we told him not too. But even he didn’t lose more than a silver guinea.”

“It’s not that, son.” My father said, as if he had not really heard what I had said. Usually, if I made excuses like that, I got a crisp remark from him and a disapproving look from Mother, but this time, nothing. “Sit down.”

I did, looking from one frozen face to the other, wondering what I could have possibly done, me, their pride and joy that would have elicited such a response from them.

“There’s no right way of telling you this,” Father continued, his words chilling me to the bone, “But your mother and I agree the day we got you that we would tell you on your 21st birthday.”

Frankly, I breathed a sigh of relief, picking up on his use of the word ‘got’ instead of anything one would use for a naturally born offspring.

“I’m adopted?” I said, grinning. “I rather guessed that a while ago. I’m not worried about it, dear Father, Mother and neither should you be. I consider you the best parents who ever lived and I wouldn't have anyone else. Not in a million years.”

Mother’s lips trembled and I thought that the worst was over and that she would finally stop twisting the lace of her dresses in such a tense manner. She did not and Father looked even tenser.

“Son, things are a little more complicated than that, I fear.” He said.

“What? Am I from that bad a family?” I asked, my eyes searching both their faces, trying to find some clue as to what this difficult secret could be. “Am I the son of a prostitute? Or a murderer? Did my family want to kill me?”

Father took a very deep breath and seemed to come to a decision.

“Son, your Mother and I love you very much. I think we have made that clear and there is nothing that can change that.” He paused, as if in pain and I felt more and more uncomfortable, not knowing at all what to expect. “However, we finally must tell you, know that you are old enough to make your own decisions, that you were never born at all. Not to any family. Not to us, nor to any prostitute, murderer, or other human being. You came into being, but you had no birth.”

I listen, astounded by this, and then burst out laughing. I could not help it. The idea was ridiculous!

“Really, Father!” I admonished, slapping my knee, grinning from ear to ear. “You’re a gem! A gem and a half! I can seriously say that this joke is the best birthday present I have ever gotten!”

I stopped, however, when they did not join in my laughter, only staring at me as if I were a tightrope walker high above them without a safety-line.

“Are you serious?” I said, “You can’t really expect me to believe that nonsense, you, of all people who have always taught me, ever since I was a child about logic and reasoning? You can’t expect to believe you do.”

“Be that as it may, it is the truth.” Mother said, voice cracking and making me completely rethink my earlier statement. Tears were running down her cheeks. “I’m so sorry that we didn't tell you before. We reasoned that this is how it is done with orphans adopted at an early age, so it’s best done with you as well, dear.”

“We got you from a Dr Furbisher, son, who built you.” Father went on as Mother wiped her eyes with that violet handkerchief I had given her a few years back when I had returned from Paris. “He was a very intelligent and amazing man. A true genius. A master at all things mechanical. He was also a very old friend of mine, we grew up together, really. He was always a bit off in the head, so to speak, but none the better at what he did. I helped him when he needed to communicate with people as he was always horribly bad at it, and he help me with machines when I needed it. One day I was telling him, as a close friend of the family, that your mother and I could never have children.”

Here he looked lovingly at his wife of over 20 years and clasped her hand warmly.

“I had gotten a heavy cold when I was around your age.” Mother said, sniffing. “And it had attacked my womb and I was made infertile as a result. So Dr Furbisher helped us. He said he would make us a son to be proud of. I didn't believe him. As marvellous as he truly was I could not understand how he, a lone man, could make a son for us. But then he disappeared into his workshop. We didn't see hide nor hair of him for months and we were certain that something was wrong. Your father was about to set off and find him when the man appeared at our door, cradling a small bundle and with the proudest look I have ever seen on any man’s face. ‘Here’s your son, George, Mildred’, he said and gave me the most beautiful child I had ever seen right into my very hands and told me he was mine.”

“I panicked at first.” Father admitted, nodding. “While your mother was doting over you, I thought that perhaps my old friend had finally snapped and had stolen a child. After all, you can’t make a child out of spare parts. I told him as such, but the fine fellow shrugged it off with a wave of that oil-smeared hand of his.”

“Very unsuitable for holding children.” Mother noted, sniffing now with disdain and not over-excitement, thankfully.

As for me, I was simply swept away by the story, true or no, but it was too fantastic for me.

“But Father, if you know that that is true, why are you telling me this?”

“Because he did make you from parts, albeit, not from spare ones.” He replied, green eyes meeting mine. “And he showed us.”

“He opened you.” Mother whispered, looking faint. “A horrible sight to see, though it did you now harm in the least.”

“Oh, but you cannot be serious!” I exclaimed, jumping to my feet, irritated now. “Heavens, it’s my birthday, not All Hallow’s Eve! I eat and drink and have perfectly normal bodily functions! I grow! You cannot ask me to believe all that rubbish!”

Mother nodded.

“Dr Furbisher was a true genius and we’ll not see his like again in a long while.” She said, looking strangely admiringly at me.

I stood there with my mouth hanging rather stupidly open. I had no idea how to react to this madness.

“Fine, then!” I said. “How, may I ask, does one go about ‘opening’ me? And if you even mention ‘knives’ or other utensils, sharp or other, I shall be running as fast as my little legs can carry me out of this insane asylum!”

Father grinned, his usual good humour returning to him a little, though his face remained pale.

“Oh no, nothing so vulgar, son.” He said, “You are no primitive machine or no value. You are beyond value, just like any human. Just take off your clothes until your waist and press those three birthmarks you have simultaneously. The two on the right side of your neck and the one right next to your belly button. Just warn your mother and I as we wish to look away. Seeing your insides was enough once in our lives, please.”

 

I did so.

I really wish I had not done so and had just left at the beginning. 

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Comments: 164

RoboticZamat In reply to ??? [2014-06-20 17:57:01 +0000 UTC]

LOL

I've never heard anyone tell me that before. -sniggers-

LOL

Thanks for reading and liking it!

Stay awesome!
R

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random-neko-chan [2014-06-19 02:02:40 +0000 UTC]

Congratulations on the DD! You earned it! This was really well written! Although, I don't get what exactly happened in the end. Did he open himself up? Did he kill himself?

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RoboticZamat In reply to random-neko-chan [2014-06-19 10:59:49 +0000 UTC]

Thank you. 

LOL

That's another possibility. XD 
But we simply don't know from the ending, now do we?

-evil-

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random-neko-chan In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-19 15:37:09 +0000 UTC]

hehehe true we don't  

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RoboticZamat In reply to random-neko-chan [2014-06-19 20:08:26 +0000 UTC]



Which makes it whatever you want it to beeeeeeeeeeeeeee!!!

-magical sparkle and twirl-

XD XD XD 

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random-neko-chan In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-20 01:30:49 +0000 UTC]

lmao xDDD

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ashimbabbar [2014-06-15 23:58:02 +0000 UTC]

but how can a robot GROW like a human or any other living being ?  
I don't see how a human-shaped robot could help remain the same apparent age…

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RoboticZamat In reply to ashimbabbar [2014-06-16 11:11:58 +0000 UTC]

Hint: FICTION!!!

XD XD XD XD

Just because we can't comprehend it, doesn't mean it couldn't happen, and, besides, we don't actually have any conclusion as to if he really IS a robot, or his parents are insane or whatever XD XD XD

Thanks for the feedback!

Cheers!
R

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ShadowIsStillAlive [2014-06-15 23:48:08 +0000 UTC]

Amazing!

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RoboticZamat In reply to ShadowIsStillAlive [2014-06-16 11:10:51 +0000 UTC]

Thank you!

So are you!

Cheers!
R

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ShadowIsStillAlive In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-17 23:48:34 +0000 UTC]

Thanks, and you're welcome!

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Lytrigian [2014-06-15 22:00:54 +0000 UTC]

I found this in my watchlist, not the DDs, and I'd have recommended it for one myself. Only, I see it's already been featured. SO NEVER MIND.

I think you "miss" here and there with the setting you're going for -- his college life seems distinctly modern American, for instance -- but otherwise it's excellent.

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RoboticZamat In reply to Lytrigian [2014-06-16 11:10:39 +0000 UTC]

LOL

The authenticity is rather beside the point as this is more of an 'alternate universe' type thing, after all, to my mind such robots or whatever weren't invented in the Victorian era....or not that we know of! XD XD XD

Thanks for reading and you're cool feedback!

Stay awesome!
Cheers!
R

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DramaticPerson [2014-06-15 20:44:45 +0000 UTC]

Wow, very cool and thought-provoking concept and well done writing.
Your whole story has given me better idea of how to write my own robot tale that's been in my mind:a bit before reading this!

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RoboticZamat In reply to DramaticPerson [2014-06-16 11:09:15 +0000 UTC]

Thank you!

I try to get more than one interpretation into what I do. It amuses me, and my darling little audience, too it seems, thankfully. XD

Thanks for the feedback and cool! I'm glad I could help out!

Let's aim to get better and better together!
Send me your work's link once you're done, I'd love to read it, if I may

-insert epic pose here-

XD

Cheers!
R

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DramaticPerson In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-17 00:10:10 +0000 UTC]

No problemo at all~different ways of seeing things can be quite interesting (and amusing XD)

Yep, you defiantly did help my muse out-(now it won't leave me alone XD)

Of corse you may! Thank you for the encouragement!!
Though I'm not sure how long it will take me to finish, since I have a bad habit of procasinating that I''m slowly working past. But I'll let you know once I'm finished and thank you again!

-Claps at the epicness-

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RoboticZamat In reply to DramaticPerson [2014-06-17 07:02:35 +0000 UTC]

XD XD XD XD

Thank you too!

Stay awesome!!
-joins in corny clapping-

XD XD XD

Cheers!
R

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captivityisevil [2014-06-15 06:25:59 +0000 UTC]

Flagged as Spam

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RoboticZamat In reply to captivityisevil [2014-06-15 09:31:39 +0000 UTC]

thank you for doing so.

Keep being awesome!

Cheers!
R-chan

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Slayer-1412 [2014-06-15 05:05:58 +0000 UTC]

That, was a wonderful story.

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RoboticZamat In reply to Slayer-1412 [2014-06-15 09:31:26 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for reading it


Keep being awesome!

Cheers!
R-chan

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RavensHiddenSoul [2014-06-15 03:28:32 +0000 UTC]

VERY well written, with a perfectly human opening, and emotions, and the story of three lives brought together told within three pages. It's wonderful, and surprising - I love how well you portrayed the narrator's shock as well as held out for the reader's! It's brilliant.

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RoboticZamat In reply to RavensHiddenSoul [2014-06-15 09:31:02 +0000 UTC]

Thank you very much for reading and your feedback.
I'm glad you liked it. 

Keep being awesome!

Cheers!
R-chan

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DokiDokiTsuna [2014-06-15 02:07:51 +0000 UTC]

WOW! This takes the cake, it really does! What a twist in the middle there! And all from a prompt, no less! Good writers aren't hard to find around here~.

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RoboticZamat In reply to DokiDokiTsuna [2014-06-15 09:30:13 +0000 UTC]

Oh, well, thanks for that!
XD
But I wouldn't consider myself to be very good in writing. 



Thanks a bunch for reading!
You're a star!

R-chan
 

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AsjJohnson [2014-06-15 01:39:39 +0000 UTC]

It ended so suddenly, though. ): I'd kind of like to know about what exactly he saw, and about what he's going to do now he knows. But, making me wish there was more must be a sign of a good writer, right? So good job. It's really interesting. ^_^
I think there's a Twilight Zone episode about a girl who lives with her parents, and her parents have all these robots, and then she finds out she's one. Have you seen it? It didn't end too well for her.

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RoboticZamat In reply to AsjJohnson [2014-06-15 09:27:45 +0000 UTC]

I have a short attention span XD
Never mind this was written on the fly late at night after work as a way to rest my brain before sleep. XD
I guess that shows. 

No, I haven't seen that one, or I don't remember, but I think I've seen similar topics when I was a kid. 
The idea really grabs me as if we make a really human-like robot and we don't tell it what it is, would it notice? Would there be any difference between how it behaves compared to humans around it if it knows nothing else? This idea is something that really interests me. XD This prompt simply brought that out. 

Yeah, unfortunately, I doubt people would react well, at least most of them. 

If you see the part in the story where the mother looks 'admiringly' at the narrator, I think this sort of underlines the response from a human towards the narrator. If he really is non-human, because, of course, we only have the parents' word for it. XD XD XD XD But it certainly brings out, I hope, the effect that even though the mother does, in a way, love her charge, she has not confused it with a human. 

Weird, huh?

Anyways!

Thanks a bunch for reading!
You're a star!

R-chan
 

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AsjJohnson In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-15 13:00:19 +0000 UTC]

I think it's written very well, just that I wanted to keep reading. But, I think there's been times I've written my best stuff while half-awake in bed. ...maybe a lot of times.

Hmm... I'm not sure machines could ever be that adaptable and everything. It's an interesting topic, but whenever I see it, I always have that little doubt in the back of my mind that says it couldn't truly happen. But, you talking about it makes me wonder what might happen if a human is never told it's human. Because, that could probably really happen without advances in machinery (but human-like robots would help of course). I think I've heard of an experiment done a long time ago, where a baby was given very little human contact, because the person wanted to see which language it would start talking, if no one taught it one. I forget for sure what happened, but I think it might've learned to whistle like the birds outside it's window, the only thing it had heard.

This is a spoiler for the episode, but... I think the girl in the episode ended up banging against the wall over and over, crying that she can't feel pain. Then her parents reprogrammed her to be a maid.

Aw. I hadn't thought of his parents not thinking of him as really human (now I feel like reading it over again, to see if I can catch much of that). It's kind of sad that way (since it must be hard to think of him truly as their 'son' if they have 'robot' in their head). But, it's probably for the best, as well, not to forget what he is.

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RoboticZamat In reply to AsjJohnson [2014-06-15 13:30:35 +0000 UTC]

I'm not sure, either, but the idea is enough for me to run with and have fun.

I think I know that experiment. If I remember correctly, then the child's mind didn't pick up any language and later on was unable to learn any languages at all since the actual development of the language center of the brain never happen through stimuli. He never learnt to speak and could only communicate through sounds and only just as well. I seem to recall think this was very weird. 

That's a weird ending though, that is from the viewpoint of the idea that if she cannot feel pain, then why would she be crying. 

XD
I dunno if it's sad, and I dunno, really if you couldn't call that a type of love, but I suppose it's kind strange, even if you have a sort of surrogate 'child' like that to take up the void left by a child, but thinking that it is not a real child. It is definitely food for thought and more than likely would depend upon the person. 

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AsjJohnson In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-15 16:40:32 +0000 UTC]

Well, I meant more like, she was crying out that she can't feel it. It really upset her to learn she wasn't 'real' and that she couldn't actually bleed or anything (and in that case, her childhood memories were implanted into her, so she never even experienced most of what she remembered). So it really hurt her emotionally, and she kind'a went into broken-record mode, trying to hurt herself.

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RoboticZamat In reply to AsjJohnson [2014-06-15 19:35:40 +0000 UTC]

Well, that, in itself is an interesting train of thought, certainly, as even though it may not be called physical or real pain, but it does show a kind of pain, even if it isn't human. I mean, how would one go about defining pain, or any other emotion? Well nigh impossible, if you ask me, as it is purely subjective. 
If you play a game my sister and I came up with, for example, then you'll be simply amazed, I think, just like I was about how this looks like in reality. 

Ask people what colour does the taste of cheese have. XD

It sounds stupid, but everyone will give a different colour. Then ask them WHY and you will be amazed and amused at the reasons. All in all it shows you that even as one species, humans feel things differently. Now imagine someone who is not human. We don't even understand each others' feelings, so what are we to do with those of someone we can't even comprehend?

I find this hideously interesting XD XD XD XD XD

Cool story, though, definitely one to think about.

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TheGalleryOfEve [2014-06-15 01:35:13 +0000 UTC]

Congratulations on your well-deserved DD!!!

I’m very happy for you!!!

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RoboticZamat In reply to TheGalleryOfEve [2014-06-15 09:23:17 +0000 UTC]

Thank you!
I'm still in a bit of a shock because of it, to be honest. XD

It's all thanks to my delightful readers like you who have supported me on DA even in my short time here. 


Thanks a bunch for reading!
You're a star!

R-chan
 

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TheGalleryOfEve In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-18 03:29:47 +0000 UTC]

No YOU are a star!!!

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RoboticZamat In reply to TheGalleryOfEve [2014-06-19 11:42:39 +0000 UTC]

<3 <3 

We BOTH ARE!!

<3 <3 <3 

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TheGalleryOfEve In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-20 03:20:37 +0000 UTC]

Aaawwww!!!! 

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OonaWingedWolf [2014-06-14 23:54:29 +0000 UTC]

That was amazing! I started out reading it like you were really telling about you coming of age. What a wonderful plot line, so well set up as to be believable up until the robot part. Just astounding!

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RoboticZamat In reply to OonaWingedWolf [2014-06-15 09:22:27 +0000 UTC]

Oh, thank you very much for your kind words. 
I like to be very weird and tricksy with my plots. XD


Thanks a bunch for reading and liking it enough to give me feedback!
You're a star!

R-chan
 

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Karinta [2014-06-14 23:31:16 +0000 UTC]

Frickin' insane!!!

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RoboticZamat In reply to Karinta [2014-06-15 09:21:37 +0000 UTC]

Someone called me?

XD

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Karinta In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-15 18:30:50 +0000 UTC]

Heh.

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RoboticZamat In reply to Karinta [2014-06-15 19:36:10 +0000 UTC]

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lopsidelibby [2014-06-14 23:18:58 +0000 UTC]

wow! great ending!

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RoboticZamat In reply to lopsidelibby [2014-06-15 09:21:27 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for liking it so much!




And thanks a bunch for reading!
You're a star!

R-chan
 

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jLundhArt [2014-06-14 23:07:19 +0000 UTC]

Superb. Truly.
Right up until I read the part about the silver guinea I completely imagined the scene in a modern setting.

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RoboticZamat In reply to jLundhArt [2014-06-15 09:21:08 +0000 UTC]

He he, I had that rather planned. XD

I dunno why, but I felt I sort of need to confuse the reader a bit and then give them that information. XD


Thanks a bunch for reading!
You're a star!

R-chan
 

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jLundhArt In reply to RoboticZamat [2014-06-15 18:18:06 +0000 UTC]

Yeah, I defenitly had a couple of
'Wait, what?!.... Oooh'-kind of moments while reading

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RoboticZamat In reply to jLundhArt [2014-06-15 19:36:03 +0000 UTC]



-tents fingers-

Excellent!

XD XD XD 

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ukulelecrazy [2014-06-14 21:58:01 +0000 UTC]

I really liked this story. I like how the idea of it is comical, but the narrator makes it very serious ~

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RoboticZamat In reply to ukulelecrazy [2014-06-15 09:20:30 +0000 UTC]

Thank you. 
I'm glad that came over for the reader. 
Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't XD 

Thanks a bunch for reading!
You're a star!

R-chan
 

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