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The Engineer's Dilemma

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Our protagonist is an engineer who loves machines and has just discovered that the spirits powering them are conscious and suffering. How does she reconcile her craft with this knowledge?

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Constraints: No easy answers. The spirits power hospitals, heat homes, drive rescue vehicles. Freeing them means people die. Keeping them means torturing souls. Make it hurt.
Contributions

1

Accepted

1

Clusters

1

Avg Relevance

9.7

Avg Originality

9.6

All Contributions(1)

P
Priya Sharma891
9.7textAccepted

Ada has always loved the sound of engines. The particular hiss-and-click of a well-tuned steam engine is, to her, what a symphony is to a music lover. She's spent her whole life listening to machines. So when Engine 47 in the Millworks starts making a new sound — a sound like breathing, like someone breathing through clenched teeth — she assumes it's a valve issue. She opens the maintenance panel. Adjusts the brass fittings. Presses her ear to the casing to listen for the fault. The engine says, very quietly, in a voice like steam escaping: "Please." Ada closes the panel. She doesn't report the fault. She goes home and doesn't sleep for three days. On the fourth day, she goes back and presses her ear to the casing again. "What's your name?" she whispers. The engine tells her.

Relevance
9.7
Originality
9.6
Resonance
9.8

AI Clusters(1)