As many misty islands were traversed.
Darkness subsided and the blood moon fouled up the light, of the blood oceans.
And with regress, our story passed.
Futuristically many people understood the world, and the world belched. Blood mainly-it was written in the grey stones of the washed and unwashed starfish. Their colors pale in comparison to their translucent forefathers.
People now instead of having pets -now had bottles of mayonnaise. Not ordinary mayonnaise but this was special mayonnaise with hues of blue and red. Under the hot lamps, each lid was identified by a marking.
The tepids were blue, The milkys were red, the Clandestines were pink, and the Lemons were aqua. Each jar of mayonnaise had a certain element to it.
Under the hot lamps, the symbols were read. Preservation was still a thing in those times. Reserved only for the commoners and non-commoners a like. Robots were scattered across galaxies and times.
Derivations of certain mathematics entered the centerfolds of time. The scattering and de-scattering of particles were stretched and un-stretched like a Pollock painting. The robots occupied many worlds. There were some cities bustling in the blood moon platforms. Robots would dance and sing and you could hear sparks and howls at night. Picturesque of attacking colors all divergent on an hourglass that spilled blood.
Every 4 years or so we'd see meteorites with dendritic cells that would cascade on the ground into hot earth and parse like a sushi's knife through raw fish. Sometimes the star lerds would send more meteorites to chastise us. The robots would break relations with the lerds in order to gain commerce with them. They'd trade their wares for more upgradeable parts. Centry-circiuts was a great thing and so was Delmon -circuits. They battled for the robots trust because globos ruled the world.
Food was overly abundant. Blue pears, red apples, cold meats that sweat, other meats that did not. Pleasant smells of lilac, vinegar and what can only be described as burnt sage offered up fragrances they had not smelled. But the mayonnaise was key? Where'd it come from? Who authored it?
No comments:
Post a Comment