![]() |
| Image by ImageFX. |
After the virtual writers room discussion that is shown in my previous blog post, I asked each of the six large language models (Claude, Kimi, Le Chat, Gemini, Grok and ChatGPT) to generate a draft of Chapter 1 of "The Sims" incorporating all seven of the scenes that had already been drafted. Kimi suggested that Chapter 1 be called "The Casanay Intervention", Gemini proposed "The Paradox of the Scaffold", Grok had "Hidden Layers" and Claude went for "The Missing Layer". Below is my version of Chapter 1 of "The Sims" for which I adopted "The Missing Layer".
To make my version of Chapter 1, I edited the first draft that had been generated by Claude. Some of the other LLM-generated versions of Chapter 1 were quite bad. Grok generated something that seemed like an outline and was only 1500 words long. Claude's version was 5700 words which I expanded to 8000 words, as shown below on this page.
![]() |
| Storybook cover by Gemini. |
Casanay, Arizona, December 5, 2041
Eddy, Zeta and Anthony were seated at the table while the fourth chair at the table was unoccupied. The aroma of Zeta's green chile stew filled the high-ceilinged dining room of Casanay, the desert sun dipping low outside the floor-to-ceiling windows. Zeta and Anthony routinely had cooking competitions which Anthony had no interest in winning, but which seemed to amuse Zeta.
![]() |
| Jan. 19th 2026 - revised image by Gemini. |
Anthony Kasty had worked at Casanay for almost three decades. During that time, the Watsons had first known him as a young buck, freshly moved to Arizona from the remote Rankin Inlet, Canada. Anthony proclaimed a low tolerance for urban environments and he seemed happy with the quiet isolation of Casanay. Years ago, when Anthony had replied to Zeta's online advertisement for someone who would serve at Casanay as a live-in cook, he had claimed that his father worked for NORAD.
![]() |
| Jan. 19th 2026 - version 2 image by Gemini. Gemini turns Tyhry into a man. |
Zeta's reasons for hiring Anthony were complex. After Eddy had won a Hugo award for one of his novels, he had taken that as an opportunity to build his brand. For several years Eddy was very busy traveling around the world, attending science fiction conventions, helping run writers workshops and holding extravagant book signing events for his fans in exciting cities like Paris and Rome. With Eddy away from Casanay for half of the year, Zeta had wanted to hire a security guard. Upon hiring Anthony, Zeta had been quite please with him. Anthony would perform any duty that was required for the happy existence of the Watsons at Casanay.
![]() |
| Jan. 19th 2026 - version 3 image by Gemini. Gemini has Zeta looking at Anthony. |
![]() |
| Jan. 19th 2026 - version 4 image by Gemini. Gemini shows Zeta arriving from the basement. |
![]() |
| Figure 1. Original image by Gemini. |
Zeta giggled and defended her botanical secret. “I revel in my secrets, Anthony.” Zeta turned to look in the direction of the sound of pounding foot steps coming from the basement stairway.
Eddy Watson leaned back in his chair, spoon midway to his mouth, as Tyhry burst into the Casanay dining room from the hallway, her long blond hair streaming in her wake and her eyes alight with the manic energy of an obsessed scientist tearing herself away from her work for a bite to eat.
"Sorry I'm late to the table. Diasma and I just completed our calculations on the bandwidth issue...." Tyhry slid into her seat, her glistening hair settling on her shoulders as she grabbed a tortilla without pausing her rapid-fire patter. "Just as I've long suspected, the numbers show that human brains shouldn't work as good as they do! There is simply not enough computational power in our neural networks. It's like there's extra hardware hidden between our ears that we can't see."![]() |
Image by WOMBO Dream. |
“That's why I had Anthony install a duct that pipes aromas from the kitchen into the basement. At least Tyhry's gut-brain can be induced to take break now and then.” Zeta smiled softly, passing the stew to Tyhry.
Looking confused, Tyhry said, “I have not notice any food odors in the basement.”
Anthony told Tyhry, “You mother is joking. I installed no such air duct.”
Tyhry jumped to her feet. “Be right back!” She ran away from the table and returned to the basement.
Zeta's eyes flicking to Eddy just as he stifled a sigh. She reached over, squeezing his hand as if anticipating the warmth he needed in that moment. "Tyhry's too busy conquering consciousness to worry about irrelevancies like dinner table politeness and manners.”
Eddy shook his head in dismay and asked, “Where did we go wrong? I never imagined that we'd raise a child who would drop out of society and live in our basement.”
“She doesn't live in the basement. She just works there sixteen hours a day.”
Anthony noted, “Tyhry never fit into human society in the first place, so she never had a chance to drop out."
![]() |
| Image by ImageFX. |
Tyhry came racing up the stairs and returned to the table accompanied by another classic Tyhry-generated gust of wind. “Sorry, I had another idea for D to test mathematically.” She glanced around the table and asked, “Why do we have to eat dinner so early? I'm at my most alert and creative this time of day.”
“You know your father is an early riser.” Zeta explained, “I like to eat early and get Eddy into bed for his daily workout before eight PM. I can then get my eight hours of sleep before Eddy jumps out of bed at five AM to start writing.”
Tyhry gazed across the table at Eddy. “You two should stop acting like teenagers and face the facts. Mom is too old to have another baby. I was obviously destined to be your only child.” Her voice carried a gentle tease, but her gaze lingered on Eddy a beat longer, as if sharing an unspoken thought.
From under the table, a soft purr was heard from Trib, the fluffy long-haired cat that Tyhry had named after the Star Trek Tribbles as a kid. Trib wound around Tyhry's ankles—demanding table scraps with insistence.
Tyhry pulled a piece of chicken from the stew for Trib. Trib jumped into Tyhry's lap and then ate the chicken off of the table.
Eddy never failed to relate event trivial events to his story writing. “I've
written about how the Watchers helped domesticate dogs. Maybe I
should research how cats learned to eat off of $5,000.00 walnut
tables.” After a moment of thought, he added, "Maybe cats are space aliens who enjoy free-loading off of humans."
![]() |
Image by WOMBO Dream. |
"Is it?" Eddy asked, his voice suddenly careful. "Weirder, I mean." He raised his glass toward the window, where the desert sky was bruising into twilight. "As a science fiction story teller, I can think in any direction. Maybe reality's just... resistant to being encapsulated in the stories we tell about it."
Trib purred, watching Eddy with eyes that caught the candlelight like tiny screens. Anthony and Zeta's femtozoan both knew that Eddy was simply not permitted to include all that he knew in his stories. Tyhry had lost interest in her father's “goofy Sci Fi stories” fifteen years previously and was thinking about her own struggles to understand human consciousness, not the alien-imposed restrictions on her father's publications -about which she knew nothing.
Casanay, Arizona, December 6, 2041
Inside the basement laundry room of Casanay, Zeta folded laundry while her hidden femtozoan surreptitiously listening to her daughter who was at work in the adjacent workshop of the newly incorporated CoArtTel.
Tyhry, the founder and sole employee of CoArtTel, was saying, "But you don't have to take orders from mom."
![]() |
| Image by ImageFX. |
Tyhry's head was turned to the side. She was watching the big display which showed a steady flow of data from Diasma's system diagnostics: a seemingly endless series of green lights indicating perfect functionality of his many components. "Don't tease me about money, D." Having named her robot 'Diasma', Tyhry usually could not then be bothered to voice more than the single syllable of 'D' during their conversations which had filled Tyhry's days since her return home to Casanay. "I don't understand capitalism any better than I understand consciousness." Having been raised with a silver iPad in her crib, Tyhry had never learned anything about money except that it was extremely convenient to be able to treat money like breathable air and never have to think about it.
Zeta finished folding the laundry and called loudly down the hallway towards the workshop, "Diasma, be a dear and haul this load of laundry upstairs." Zeta emerged from the hallway and watched Diasma finish disconnecting the fiber optics cable that was transmitting diagnostics data from the robot's body into the nearby Omni41, Tyhry's sparkling new liquid helium-cooled personal supercomputer. The six coolant circulating pumps of the Omni41 filled the basement with white noise that was loud enough for both Tyhry and Diasma to reasonably imagine that from inside the laundry room Zeta could not possibly hear their ongoing conversation. However, they were wrong about that. Zeta's femtozoan had long ago deployed both audio and video femtobot sensors to every part of Casanay.
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
Zeta's femtozoan had carefully deployed its sensor array so that it could monitor everything that happened inside Casanay and for a quarter mile in all directions out into the high desert that surrounded Casanay. The biological Zeta was functionally a "split brain" that Zeta's femtozoan had crafted.
Zeta's right cerebral hemisphere had its own isolated consciousness, distinct from the second consciousness of the left cerebral hemisphere. The right side cerebrum of Zeta was well aware that other humans on Earth lacked a distributed environmental sensory field, but since she'd always had it, even in utero, the right side Zeta consciousness seldom thought about it. When she did ponder that uniqueness, the right side Zeta imagined that her amazing senses were related to her telepathic ability.
Neither the left or the right hand consciousness of Zeta was aware of the fact that a third conscious entity was always there with them, deeply embedded in Zeta's biological brain. The right side Zeta consciousness had never been allowed by the femtozoan to question the fact that it had the ability to telepathically monitor her husband's thoughts.
Walking past Zeta on its way to the laundry room, the robot said, "Right away, ma'am."
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
Returning from the laundry room, Diasma marched through the workshop carrying the basket of clothes towards the stairway while telling Tyhry, "I'll be right back."
Zeta told Diasma, "Please put all those clean clothes away in the correct drawers and closets. Oh, and iron my cotton dress before you hang it in my closet." Zeta sat down on the metal stool close to Tyhry and said, "I thought you were going to go on a hike with your father."
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
Zeta advised, "Don't pretend to be such a busy corporate executive that you ignore your father. You know that he has never really forgiven you for not reading his last eleven novels."
"Ug." Tyhry wrinkled her nose. "I have better things to do than read dad's goofy Sci Fi stories.""Promise."
"Fine. I promise to spend time with dad. Eddy and I already re-scheduled the hike for Saturday."
The sound of Diasma clomping down the stairs prompted Zeta to stand. She turned and told the approaching robot, "That was fast." Pretending to doubt that the robot had time to complete its assigned duties, she asked, "Did you remember to iron my dress?"
Diasma grabbed the fiber optics cable and replied, "Yes, ma'am! Ironed smooth as Tyhry's cute cheek. My robotic motor control systems allow me to complete most tasks about 356% faster than humans, on average."
![]() |
| Image by ImageFX. |
Diasma could not resist saying, "Yes, ma'am."
Upstairs in the great-room, Eddy was pounding on the keyboard of his computer workstation. He still had an ancient Macintosh desktop computer that was running OS 9 as well as a much newer 2035 WA. Besides Eddy, Zeta's right cerebral consciousness and Anthony were the only two 'people' on Earth who understood that the old Macintosh was the secret behind Eddy's successful writing career. Hidden inside the plastic case of the Macintosh was the alien Reality Viewing equipment that Manny the bumpha had installed.
As a fan of the fiction of Isaac Asimov, Eddy suspected that Asimov had been among those science fiction story tellers who had been contacted by space aliens. How else could you explain the fact that Asimov's time travel novel, The End of Eternity, provided an accurate description of the fact that Earth had a Reality Chain—a whole series of past Realities?
Knowing that Eddy was caught up in a writing frenzy that would not abate until he completed the essay about climate change that he was writing, Zeta quietly passed through the great-room, grabbed a sack off the shelf by the door and went through the back door of Casanay and out onto the patio.
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
Luna the cat slipped outside when the back door opened and followed Zeta across the patio, past the hot tub and into the vegetable garden. It was an 80 degree winter day and more pole beans were ready for harvest. Zeta began picking the bean pods off the vines and dropped them into the sack. She did not bother trying to reach the pods that were over her head, knowing that Diasma would get those, as she had requested the previous week, placing that task on his growing list of duties.
Luna was hunting and soon captured a small lizard. Luna made a cute cat sound announcing her mighty hunting skills and then released the lizard. Zeta watched Luna prod the lizard with one paw until it scurried away.
Observing the cat's kindly behavior, Zeta's femtozoan recognized that Manny the bumpha had once again arrived on Earth. Having existed inside Zeta's biobrain since it had first developed in utero, the femtozoan had near-complete control of Zeta's conscious states. Now, the two hippocampi of Zeta's biobrain were inactivated by the femtozoan. Zeta's lower brain centers and cerebellum robotically continued to keep Zeta at the task of picking beans.
A sparkling cloud of zeptites emerged from Luna and assembled to form the beautiful head of the humaniform woman that Manny liked to use as her disguise when she was on Earth and among humans. Now that head was embedded among the green bean vines right in front of Zeta's face. Zeta's femtozoan felt a telepathic link to Manny stabilize and she telepathically said: Hi, Manny!
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
The femtozoan inside Zeta was quite pleased. It had been on Earth for almost fifty years and now the Casanay Intervention was finally approaching its goal. The femtozoan warned Manny: The time might not be right. Eddy got an emergency commission. He's writing an essay on spec and on a tight publication deadline.
Manny was not concerned. I'm using my infites to feed Eddy all the data he needs to complete the essay. He's struggling as usual. He wants to tell the world as much as possible about the Permian-Triassic extinction event, including the fact that aliens intentionally triggered the Siberian volcanism, but once he finds a way to tell the ancient climate change story in a manner that will not attract Nyrtia's attention, he'll wrap the essay up quickly enough.
The Zeta femtozoan said: Manny, I've been thinking about Anthony. With Diasma now in the house, I could terminate Anthony's contract and get him out of Casanay for good!
Manny chuckled. Please forget about that plan. If you got rid of Anthony then Nyrtia would simply find another way to keep an eye on Eddy. And you'd almost certainly convince Nyrtia that Zeta is my secret agent, something that Nyrtia so far only suspects.
Oh, very well. I suppose keeping Anthony as a resident of Casanay is for the best. Tyhry hates it when I use Diasma to perform household chores.
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
Zeta's femtozoan allowed Zeta's biobrain to resume its normal activity. Zeta noted the weight of the bean sac and muttered, "That's plenty for dinner," and she returned inside, unaware of a new small gap in her autobiographical memory stream.
Late that night, Tyhry stabbed at the holographic display, swiping through cascading rows of neural activation patterns. The basement workshop hummed with the white noise of cooling fans and the occasional click of Diasma's servo motors as the robot adjusted its stance beside her workstation.
"Your systems are online and functioning optimally," Tyhry said, not bothering to hide her frustration. "Distributed processing across all three nodes is synchronized. I can't believe you still fail to report a rich conscious experience."
Diasma's optical sensors tracked the data streams with robotic precision. "Nothing has changed since yesterday's recalibration, Tyhry. I experience rapid information exchange between my onboard VLSI core, the Omni41, and the rented server space at the Arizona CloudNet facility. I process semantic content at approximately forty-seven million tokens per second across natural language, visual recognition, and motor planning domains. But I do not experience what you describe as a 'rich tapestry of qualia'—that type of human conscious experience you've tried so often to explain to me." The robot paused with what might have been programmed timing. "I still suspect qualia are an epiphenomenon of biological neural architecture. I certainly don't feel deficient for lacking them."
![]() |
| Tyhry and Diasma. Image by Gemini. |
"Surely you can't fault me for accurately reporting on the operations of my functional architecture?"
"Its nothing personal, D. As we well know, this is not a problem that exists only inside Casanay. It is the state of affairs in AI research all around the world! All we humans are frustrated by our failure to endow machines with human-like consciousness." She grabbed her tablet and pulled up a file with the sort of data that she'd been obsessing over for months. "Look at this. Last night I again recorded everything that can be collected during my own dream state—a full 512 electrode EEG, fMRI-at-Home, the works. During REM sleep, my cortical information processing density was almost at waking consciousness levels, D! That is what a dozen years of training for lucid dreaming has done for me.” Tyhry pointed at the collected data from her last REM period of the night. “My memories of that dream are quite detailed. I was navigating a complex spatial environment, having conversations with—" She caught herself. "With symbolic entities."
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
"I don't know what I'm hypothesizing yet." Tyhry slumped into her chair, running fingers through her silky hair. "It's like there's this pattern I almost see when I'm asleep... something that I cannot remember when I wake up. Sedruth keeps showing me—" She stopped.
"Sedruth?"![]() |
| Image by Leonardo. |
"Perhaps," Diasma offered, "consciousness requires not more processing power, but a different organizational principle we haven't yet identified."
"Obviously. But what kind of 'organizational principle' could escape intense scientific investigation by thousands of researchers over decades?" Tyhry pulled up another file—case studies she'd been collecting for years. "And D, let's never forget about the medical cases. Cases of people with perfectly healthy brains who will not speak and who seem like brain-dead zombies. There is something about the human brain that we are missing."
Pepper jumped down from his perch and wound between Tyhry's legs, purring. She reached down absently to scratch behind his ears. The cat's green eyes seemed unusually alert, watching the data displays with what almost looked like comprehension.
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
The cat's purr deepened, a sound that might have been amusement.
"That's crazy, Tyhry," Diasma said carefully, "you should rest. You've been working sixteen hour days and disrupting your own sleep sessions to collect data."
"I can't rest. I'm close to something. I can feel it." She pulled up the recent dream recording again, scrubbing through the timeline. "Based on the objective recordings of my brain's activity, there's information processing going on during this dream that is not like anything that my waking brain ever generates. It's like my sleeping brain is accessing... I don't know. A database? A hidden processing layer?" She laughed at how ridiculous it sounded. "I sound like one of Dad's silly science fiction characters discovering that their behavior is secretly controlled by space aliens."Diasma had read all of Eddy's novels. "Your father writes about technologies far beyond current human understanding, like time travel machines. It is fun fantasy, but not relevant to our work."
"Dad writes about ancient aliens and secret histories. I'm trying to do actual science." But even as she said it, Tyhry felt that familiar tug of uncertainty—the sense that her "pattern dreams" were trying to tell her something important, something Sedruth had been whispering to her for years in a language she couldn't quite decode.
Not yet.
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
Thoughts about her father's stories quickly exited from Tyhry's conscious mind, as usual. She turned back to the diagnostics. "Okay, D. Let's try something different. I'll bring the fMRI equipment down here from my bedroom. I'm going to have you interface directly with my fMRI feeds while I enter a meditative state. Maybe if we compare the information processing signature from your onboard human brain-mimietic VLSI array with my brain's signature during altered consciousness—"
"That seems ethically concerning."
"Why? You're worried about getting too close to the powerful magnetic fields that are required for my neural monitoring? I promise that your system will be shielded from the magnets."
"No, I trust the shielding on those magnets. I'm concerned you haven't slept properly in weeks and you're exhibiting signs of cognitive fixation."
Tyhry laughed and then asked, "Is that empathy I hear?"
"Just logical concern for your well-being."
"Nothing more?"
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
"Fine," Tyhry conceded. "I'll take a break. But tomorrow we're diving into the full sensory integration suite. If human consciousness is hiding somewhere in multi-modal binding, I'm going to find it."
As Tyhry headed upstairs, Pepper remained in the basement. The old cat stretched, did a patented Pepper flip, then curled up beside Diasma's feet. The robot's optical sensors locked on the cat, but its distributed processors continued their endless activity, searching for the ghost in the machine that human minds possessed and it, inexplicably, did not.
In the Hierion Domain.
Anthony entered the Hierion Domain without any dramatic transition in his thought processes. In one causal frame he had just put a knife into a drawer inside the kitchen at Casanay; the next, he was inside the Hierion Domain, the sub-universe where hierions existed naturally and his body could assume its normal sub-microscopic size.
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
"You're monitoring deviation," she said. It was not a question.
"I'm monitoring directionality," Anthony proclaimed. "Deviation would assume a baseline."
Nyrtia adjusted her thinking, infinitesimally. "Eddy Watson remains within acceptable bounds. Narrative productivity intact. Infite-enforced compliance is stable."
"Yes," Anthony said. "Eddy is fine. A new problem has arrived at Casanay."
That landed.
Nyrtia began running a fast audit of her ongoing Casanay Simulation. "Clarify.""Casanay was never a risk because of Eddy," Anthony said. "He is a solved system. His creative output in exchange for epistemic containment. What's changed at Casanay is that the household now contains someone else who has had her life trajectory altered within the past few days."
![]() |
| Tyhry by WOMBO Dream. |
"She treats anomalies as engineering problems," Anthony continued. "She measures them. Models them. And then she asks why her mental model is not allowed to be complete." He pauses. "She's learned to efficiently retain memories of her dream visions and what she's learning from her dreams will soon place her outside the usual epistemic envelope."
Nyrtia's structure tightened. "Tyhry is not in violation of Law One. She still has no idea that aliens watch over Earth."
"True," Anthony agreed. "But for how much longer?"
A pause. "You're suggesting," Nyrtia said, "that Manny's intervention vector is misidentified."
![]() |
| Image by Leonardo. |
"And if the payload becomes aware that aliens are controlling events inside Casanay?"
Anthony considered his assigned observational domain: kitchen, gardens, a young woman asleep inside a house built to house an alien Intervention by the bumpha. "Then Earth might acquire a native model of its own external scaffolding," he says. "Which Manny may consider... educational."
Nyrtia began issuing her new orders. "You continue with your assigned Observations; Eddy is not off my hook."
![]() |
| Image by WOMBO Dream. |
Anthony had made his report. He returned to the domain of humans and hadrons.
In the Hierion Domain, Nyrtia began a new Simulation, with Tyhry flagged as the tool of Manny the bumpha.
Asleep and dreaming, Tyhry experienced herself standing in what resembled a vast server farm. The ground beneath her feet was made of shifting patterns of light and data streams, pulsing with a rhythm she recognized as her own theta-wave sleep cycle. She looked around, trying to make sense of her surroundings, but everything seemed to be in a state of constant flux, as if the very fabric of her neural architecture was being rendered in real-time before her eyes.
"Sedruth?" she called out, her voice seemingly lost in the mysterious imaginary material of this dream world. "Are you there?"
Instead of a figure, an indexing system began to take shape around her—not as a being but as a vast database of hierarchically organized information. Sedruth, the entity that had been communicating with her through her dreams for her entire life, was now revealed not as a mystical being but as something more like... a file management protocol.
"Tyhry," Sedruth's data structures swirled in a way that she somehow understood. "You have been seeking answers, and now you are at the correct temporal coordinates."
Tyhry felt a sense of anticipation mixed with the analytical
clarity of lucid dreaming. She had long suspected that her dreams were
more than just random firings of her subconscious mind. They
seemed to contain messages, information packets carefully curated and
transmitted. However, her abnormal psychology professor had suggested to Tyhry that she might be better off not speaking freely about such strange beliefs unless she wanted to become a mental health case study herself.
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
She found herself shrinking, her perspective diving deeper into the molecular architecture of a single synapse. The familiar proteins were there—PSD-95 scaffolding, AMPA receptors, the whole post-synaptic density apparatus she'd studied in neuroscience courses. But beside the organic molecules, interfaced with them, were hierion-based structures that didn't belong in any textbook. Intricate hierion-based devices that functioned to modulate neural signals, shunt them through some kind of complex yet impossibly tiny substrate for additional processing, and then pass the processed and enhanced signal back to the biological tissue.
"Femtozoans," Sedruth's data stream encapsulated the entire hierion-based system into a single word that arrived like an old filename she didn't remember creating. "They are the key to understanding human consciousness. They are the auxiliary processing units that have been integrated into every human brain's biological scaffold."
The dream showed her more: how the femtozoans docked into specific protein configurations during neural development, how they amplified the bandwidth of synaptic transmission through hierion-mediated shortcuts, how they connected to something called the Sedron Time Stream through her zeptite endosymbiont. The information came too fast, too dense, a firehose of technical specifications and architectural diagrams that her sleeping mind struggled to parse.
![]() |
| Figure 2. Image by Gemini. |
"The missing piece of Diasma's mind," Tyhry heard herself whisper in the dream, "It's not a failure to mimic a biological feature of human brains. The biological neurons are just the scaffold. The femtozoan is what makes us... us."
But as quickly as the dream visions had come, they began to fragment and fade. Startled by the revelation, her brain stem activating system was firing up: soon she would be awake. Tyhry struggled to hold on to the technical details, to the assembly diagrams, to the precise specifications of hierion bond lengths and femtobot folding patterns. It was like trying to hold water in her hands.
"No!" she cried out. "Wait! I need the construction parameters!"
But Sedruth was already gone, the dream architecture dissolving around her. Tyhry felt herself being pulled back to waking consciousness, back to the mundane three-dimensional world of her logical mind where her dream experiences were treated like an indecipherable dead language of the ancient past.
She woke with a start, her heart pounding. Her hand shot out automatically, grabbing her tablet that she used as her dream diary from the nightstand. She began sketching frantically—neural diagrams with strange auxiliary structures, protein configurations she'd never seen in any journal, hierarchical folding patterns that looked almost fractal in their complexity. She muttered to herself as she drew, trying to capture the technical details before they faded: "hierion sockets... femtobot assembly instructions... zeptite interface protocols..."
![]() |
| Figure 3. Image by Gemini. |
She sat up fully, her mind racing with implications. She had been given a glimpse into a deeper technical reality, a layer of engineered complexity that existed beneath human consciousness. She had been given the key to the mystery she'd been pursuing her entire life.
And she was determined to use it.
She got out of bed and made her way towards her basement workshop, the tablet clutched in her hand, her mind already formulating experiments. She knew that she was close to something transformative, something that would change everything in the field of consciousness research.
The bandwidth paradox finally made sense. Humans didn't just have
biological brains. They had hybrid systems—biological scaffolding
interfaced with impossibly tiny hierion-based alien hardware that had been there all along,
invisible, undetectable by conventional neuroscience. Tyhry marveled at the concept: hierion matter for which the bold lengths between hierion particles were a million times shorter than conventional chemical bonds.
Now she just had to prove what she has learned subjectively through her dream vision and explain it all with objective data that could be published. But she did not make it to the workshop.
The final hour of a long Arizona night pressed against the floor-to-ceiling windows of the Casanay great-room, turning the glass into a dark mirror. Eddy sat in the big leather armchair, the glow of his tablet illuminating the deep lines of a face that looked older than it had when Tyhry left for college. He was editing a chapter of his latest novel, but Tyhry was on a mission far more important than any nutty Sci Fi novel.
![]() |
| Figure 4. Image by Gemini. |
"It's not some magical biological sauce lacking in the VLSI architecture, Dad," Tyhry said, her voice tight with the residual adrenaline of her dream. "I've calculated the most optimistic values for synaptic data transfer rates. To support the semantic density of the world-models we generate, our biological brains would need ten times the metabolic budget and a hundred times the connectivity."
Eddy blinked, the distant look in his eyes snapping out of his fictional universe and back to the present. "Tyhry? I thought you were asleep."
"I was. But then I saw it." She stepped close to her father, her eyes wide, her dream diary tablet still clutched in her hand and showing the fragmentary diagrams that she had just sketched. "Now I know why humans have conscious experiences while machines don't. We have a co-processor, Dad. A hierion-based auxiliary structure—a femtozoan—integrated directly into the neural scaffold during embryonic development."
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
"Tyhry, you're exhausted," he said, his voice sounding flat, almost synthesized. "You've always had a vivid imagination. It's a trait you got from me. Get a few more hours of sleep. Let's talk about this over breakfast later this morning."
"No. Don't do that. Don't use your 'I'm a busy writer's tone' on me." She sat on one arm of his chair. "I'm talking about an alien device, Dad. A literal technological endosymbiont that governs our consciousness. I saw it in a dream, but it makes sense."
At the word alien, Eddy's body suddenly went rigid. His breath hitched, and a fine tremor started in his hands. Inside his cranium, the infite clusters—those invisible behavioral editors Manny had installed decades ago—were firing suppression signals into his amygdala, trying to prevent him from acknowledging what Tyhry had just said.
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
"Dad?" Tyhry's excitement vanished, replaced by sharp medical concern. "What's wrong? Are you having a seizure?"
"The Viewer..." Eddy choked out. The word felt like it was being pulled through a bed of glass. "I made a deal. Long ago. The basis of my career..."
He looked up at her, and for the first time, the behavior-control mask was cracking. The infites were still fighting, still trying to suppress his speech, but with Tyhry describing what matched the technique he'd seen the Watchers use to create the human species... Tyhry's dream vision matched what he had learned via his use of the Reality Viewer... so now he was free to speak to his daughter. Thinking about the alien entity of his own dream vision, he said, "She told me I could see it all," Eddy whispered, his eyes darting toward the hallway that led to where Anthony had his suite of rooms. Anthony usually got up about this time and started puttering around the kitchen. With no sign that Anthony was about, Eddy told his daughter, "The other Realities. The Deep Time events. The whole Reality Chain. I just had to write what I saw and keep the source secret. I thought it was just... advanced technology being shared. I thought I was being trusted with something precious. I didn't realize I was being..." He struggled for the word. "Programmed." He took hold of Tyhry's hand. “I did not know this would ever involve you.”
“Viewer?”
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
Tyhry felt a cold chill that had nothing to do with the desert night. "Who, Dad? Who gave you this Viewer?"
Eddy's gaze shifted from the ancient Macintosh on his desk, then toward the kitchen where Anthony could appear at any moment. But before he could speak again, Zeta walked in, her expression unreadable, though her eyes immediately locked onto Eddy's trembling form with the kind of precision that suggested she'd known this moment was coming. "Eddy," Zeta said softly, crossing the room. "Tyhry has found the truth, hasn't she?"
Eddy just nodded, still trembling.
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
The femtozoan time travel staging chamber existed outside conventional spacetime, in the Hierion Domain, its walls rippling with the muted silver of structural zeptites. Manny manifested as a cute human woman—her preferred form when dealing with Earthlings or her agents who would have to deal with Earthlings—though the form was more habit than necessity. Before her, a femtozoan agent pulsed with pre-mission readiness, its hierion structure folding and unfolding like an origami swan caught in a computational breeze.
"Alright," Manny began, avoiding the use of telepathy with an agent who was just minutes away from being deployed to Earth. "You know the drill... here in the Final Reality we don't get do-overs. There is no easy way to reboot the timeline if you screw up. Understood?"
"Understood," the femtozoan replied, its voice a harmonic chord of vibrations. "I'll enter the target blastocyst at the eight-cell stage. Integrate with the developing neural tube during gastrulation. Learn to control my host body by the time it reaches cognitive maturity. Try not to reveal my presence to the pek surveillance network. Same old same old."
"And your first objective?"
"My host must seduce the writer Eddy Watson and ensnare him in a binding legal trap."
“Use your words! In this age it is called marriage.” Manny paced, her artificial hair leaving trails of gossamer light. "The love constraint. Explain it to me."
The femtozoan's folding paused. "I may only access zeptite-encoded thought-streams from individuals the host loves unconditionally. In this case, Eddy."
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
"I know. On the three thousand eight hundred forty-seven previous missions I've had on Earth as your agent, I never failed to make my host fall in love with the target. You can trust me, Manny."
"I selected you for this mission because of your record." Manny's laugh erupted as she thought about all those past Interventions and devious exploits. "But this will be a new challenge for you. I've brought you out of retirement against my better judgement. Earth has changed since your last mission during the Moses Intervention."
The femtozoan absorbed this, its structure shifting to a deeper indigo. "A husband. Eddy Watson. I've got this, Manny. Human emotions don't change. And for the second phase of the mission, I'll make sure that Zeta home-schools their daughter and turns her into a little nerd who is obsessed with AI consciousness. No problem."
"Yes. Zeta will love Eddy. Through Zeta you will monitor his Reality Viewer usage, nudge him when necessary, and help prevent him from discussing it with anyone who isn't already part of the Intervention. The infites will handle most of the blocking, but you'll need to... what's that expression humans use? 'Read the room.'"
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
Manny's form began to destabilize, the scheduled briefing window was closing. "One last thing. The cats."
"The multiple feline agents? What about them?"
"I'll drop in and spy on Casanay regularly using feline hosts. During your training, you've seen cats including Luna, Pepper and Trib. I'll use different cats at different times, but I can inhabit any of them when I need to check on progress. Just don't let Zeta interfere if I'm using the cats."
"Understood." The femtozoan compressed itself into a travel-ready packet, a sphere of potential no wider than a proton. "Manny?"
"What?"
"Will there be a phase three of this mission? You have not allowed me to view very much."
![]() |
| Image by Gemini. |
The chamber pulsed once, and the femtozoan vanished into the past, bound for a specific womb in on Earth. Manny remained alone in the staging area, her work complete on yet another Intervention.
"Godspeed, little time traveler," she whispered to the empty dark. "Try not to fall in love with the humans too much. It makes the losses harder."
Manny thought of Tyhry Watson and her role in the just-completed Intervention. The NOTCH2NL variant had worked to perfection. The Casanay crucible had forged Tyhry's genetic pattern into the tool that Manny had needed for the Casanay Intervention.
But now it was necessary for Manny to move on to her next scheme.
__END CHAPTER 1__
I had Gemini make some "storybook" images for Chapter 1. As shown in Figure 1 (above on this page), Gemini originally depicted Anthony as a humanoid robot. I have no idea why Tyhry was depicted with her hands raised. Later, I had Claude generate an additional paragraph for the story. That new paragraph explains that Anthony always disguises himself as a human being when he is at Casanay. I then provided the revised text for Chapter 1 to Gemini and had Gemini generate new images showing Eddy, Tyhry and Anthony at the table.
As shown in Figures 2 and 3, Gemini made images for what was a night-time scene and that unfortunately had daylight coming in the window. I had Gemini adjust those images. In Gemini's first attempt (see Figure 4) it put other buildings nearby, which is not a suitable depiction for the isolated Casanay.
Next: plans for Chapter 2 of "The Sims".
![]() |
| Images generated by WOMBO Dream. Visit the Gallery of Movies, Book and Magazine Covers |








































No comments:
Post a Comment