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Magnus Archives Episode 106 - A Matter of Perspective

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  1. MAG106 - #0081002 - A Matter Of Perspective
  2. -------------------------------------------
  3.  
  4. *(Rough transcription based heavily on auto-transcription; missing/uncertain segments marked {{with curly braces like this}}.)*
  5.  
  6. [CLICK]
  7.  
  8. #### MELANIE
  9.  
  10. Jan Kilbride's account of his time spent aboard the space station, uh, Daedalus. Statement date February 10, 2008. Melanie King recording.
  11.  
  12. Start.
  13.  
  14. [CLAP]
  15.  
  16. #### MELANIE (STATEMENT)
  17.  
  18. The hardest thing to imagine, to really get your head around, is, is the scale at which the universe operates. You can drill down so small that you reach particles and building blocks that your brain simply can't connect to. The physical reality that you inhabit, the fact that the vast majority of your own body is empty vacuum space, filled only with the weak forces that are binding you disparate atoms to one another - that can only really be understood an intellectual level. To really internalize that thought, to believe it, would be too much for most people.
  19.  
  20. And the other end - the sheer size at which the universe operates - literally cannot be fully conceptualized by the human mind. We have to reduce it to factors, or long strings of comparative zeros. Most people can't even properly appreciate the size of our own planet, seeing only in crudely rendered diagrams or maps. But compared to us, the planet is immense. More than large enough for the swell of humanity to grow, and ultimately extinguish itself.
  21.  
  22. Yet compared to the wider universe, it isn't even a noticeable speck. The human mind would reflexively want a place at the midway point, a perfect center balanced between the incredible size of the universe and the unthinkable smallness of the subatomic. But this is nothing but ego; a manifestation of our obsession with considering us some sort of a normative benchmark against which all else is measured. In truth, we are so much closer to the tiny, mindless atoms that make up our bodies than we are to a universe so enormous that fully imagining it is simply impossible.
  23.  
  24. Even with all I've seen, I still can't communicate it. I can't make people actually understand how horridly, nauseatingly boundless this universe is, and when I think of it too deeply, I feel like I'm going to throw up. Like a sort of existential vertigo.
  25.  
  26. It never used to scare me like this. I used to take a sort of comfort in it, in the thought that we were so small; such a minor blip in the life of the universe. Where others saw insignificance and pointlessness, I found freedom. A sort of optimistic nihilism, I suppose.
  27.  
  28. I know now it was all just denial, of course. It's not easy to be scared of something that you can't even think about. I miss those days: smoking out the window of a tower block, looking out over the lights of the city blinking up in defiance of the void, and thinking how daft it was. Like an ant shaking its fist at a god.
  29.  
  30. I think that's really why I wanted to go to space - to put it all in perspective. That for one moment, I could look down and see it all, every human that ever existed, the living and the dead, hanging below me on a tiny ball of carbon.
  31.  
  32. And you know what? It was worth it. At least, I thought so at the time. That moment, that first look at the earth falling away below us, it was everything I dreamed it would be. And how often is that true? The Daedalus was in low enough orbit that I never got the whole planet in view, as I had hoped. But it didn't matter. The first time, looking down and taking in the sheer scale of it, remains the most magnificent sensation I have ever experienced.
  33.  
  34. I don't know how they picked me for the mission. A representative of some private consortium approached me about a year beforehand. I'd put in my application a few times, but I, I never really expected anything. I had all the skills, but I knew I wasn't anyone's first choice of astronaut. I simply wasn't exceptional enough.
  35.  
  36. Also, I thought... Mr. Fairchild didn't mention exactly why I was chosen, though he did reference my psychiatric profile a few times in the interview. I didn't want to press him too hard on the reasoning in, in case I somehow lost the opportunity. Idiot.
  37.  
  38. There were technically three of us up there, although I only really spent any time with Manuela. The other one who came up with us - Chilcott, I think his name was - he was apparently doing some sort of separate isolation study. Can't say I envied him. The door to his section of the station was daunting, to say the least. I mean, I'm an engineer, and honestly it looked like it was sturdier than the actual hull.
  39.  
  40. Manuela and I were instructed not to attempt any communication with him, and to be honest, that was fine by me. On those occasions we had to call in to his little chamber through the intercom, usually as part of maintenance or a systems check, he always sounded so distant. This flat, tinny monotone that set my teeth on edge, like a subtle vibration.
  41.  
  42. So we left him to it. We had plenty of our own work to do, anyway. Manuela Dominguez was quite a big name in certain areas of the physics community - or, at least, she had been. I hadn't heard of any work she'd done for a good few years. And, as I say, I'm more on the engineering side of things, so it wasn't really something I kept up with in detail.
  43.  
  44. While she was happy to talk, Manuela apparently didn't like to discuss her professional life on Earth, or the specifics of the research she was doing on the Daedalus. Like Chilcott, her research was kept entirely separate from mine. And while we spent plenty of time together, I never did figure out exactly what it was. Something to do with lasers, I think.
  45.  
  46. As for my job, to be honest, it felt disappointingly like busy work. Stress-testing, zero gravity effects, material evaluations - for every test I was told to do, I could have listed a half dozen studies citing similar research from the ISS, most of which had had pretty conclusive results. If you had told me I was just being instructed to do the same things they did over there, but two years later, I'd have been hard-pressed to argue.
  47.  
  48. But there was something else. A different sort of worry that was building up inside me. It was like a gradual increase of air pressure: you never notice it happening until your ears pop. I didn't realize how intense the sensation had gotten until, all at once, I knew what it was - what I was feeling.
  49.  
  50. It was the sense of a presence, of there being something out there. Something that wasn't the earth. And it was getting closer.
  51.  
  52. When it started, I tried to talk to Manuela about it, but she seemed to think I was talking about aliens and quickly changed the subject. I suppose, in a way, I was, but nothing like she was imagining. "Alien" might be the best word for that presence, but not because we were sat on the edge of outer space; but because what it made me feel was beyond anything I had words for.
  53.  
  54. And still it grew closer. When this thing, this being finally called out, I didn't just hear it. I felt it, vibrating through me with such a shuddering intensity that I was sure my bones would break into powder inside my skin.
  55.  
  56. The whole station shook violently, rattling and pitching. My first instinct was to check that the Earth was still below us, and not the victim of some dreadful cosmic disaster. But when I reached the window, it still hung there, serene below us.
  57.  
  58. As I looked, I saw drops of red floating through the air in front of me. I reached up to my ears, and my hand came away wet. Don't try to tell me sound can't travel in a vacuum, I know. I pushed off towards my quarters and the medical kit, but as I began to move through the station, I stopped. I didn't grab or hit anything, I did nothing to slow my momentum, I just stopped. Floating there motionless, feeling like the whole of existence was frozen in place.
  59.  
  60. Then slowly, carefully, I went to grab one of the handles, to pull myself out of this zero-gravity limbo. But I couldn't reach. The station was cramped so cramped that I could only fully stretch out in the section used to exercise, but now, somehow, in this tiny corridor, I couldn't reach the walls. I flailed and I grabbed and I shouted, but somehow, it was all just too far away.
  61.  
  62. And I knew all at once that I would float there motionless until I died, and I saw the pointless illusion of the station - of the planet below - all hiding me from the uncaring expanse of the universe, in which I was now eternally trapped. The station was a hollow pretense of a shell that did nothing to separate me from the void.
  63.  
  64. And that cry came again, so loud and long and deep that it couldn't not be the sound of a living thing, so vast and so ancient that thinking about it made me weep. And I screamed in turn.
  65.  
  66. My hands touched the rail at the exact moment that Manuela came to check on me. I was moving again. She asked if I was alright, though she clearly had no interest in the answer. She said she'd felt the station shake, but when I pressed, she claimed she hadn't heard anything. Her eyes were red, and I noticed for the first time that the tips of her fingers were burned. I don't know why I asked her, really. I knew then that she hadn't heard it, that she would never hear it. And I felt completely alone. I remember I almost envied Chilcott, because at least he had known what he was signing up for.
  67.  
  68. The next month passed more normally, I think - though beyond a certain point, at the edge of everything you've ever known, the word "normal" loses its meaning. Manuela became more and more withdrawn, more focused on her own research, whatever it might have been, while I more or less stopped doing mine entirely. I got no new instructions. I would find myself staring out into space for a few minutes, and then when I checked the time hours would have passed. I don't remember if I slept.
  69.  
  70. I honestly can't remember if going out to work on the solar panels was repair work, or if I'd finally been given a new task that required going outside. I just remember sealing the bulky EVA suit and stepping into the airlock, pushing myself out, into the nothing.
  71.  
  72. The tether coiled out behind me, spooling meter after meter after meter... but I wasn't going towards the solar panels. Why? Where was I going? I floated slowly off into the empty unending space, and the tether line just kept on going.
  73.  
  74. The station drifted further and further away. I could feel myself falling up, falling out, falling off of everything that could be called a world. The station was gone, as was the planet of my birth - everything that gave me my existence. It shrank as I watched, until it became less than the smallest dot.
  75.  
  76. I couldn't have been that far away. It's impossible. But I was. I was so far from all existence, surrounded by the vacuum of everything. I could feel my soul trying to expand, to fill never-ending absence. And it hurt.
  77.  
  78. I don't know how long I was floating for. I know it was less than a billion years, which is barely a heartbeat in the life of the universe, so how can it really be said to matter?
  79.  
  80. The stars began to wink out, one by one, and I thought - perhaps for a second, perhaps for a hundred years - that I had reached the end of time, and I was watching the gradual fading of the universe. And then I realized the obvious: I could not see the stars because something was blocking them.
  81.  
  82. It moved and flowed across my vision. Every motion seemed to snuff out more light. There was no shape to see, no outline that could be drawn of this thing, so dark and enormous I could feel my stomach trying to vomit, my mind trying to expand, to take in the size of what moved between the stars, filling my entire vision and more.
  83.  
  84. I knew that if it chose to cry out, it would have destroyed me utterly. And I know that there was no possibility it could ever have noticed I existed.
  85.  
  86. I do not believe in God. I can't believe that a being with such limitless power and knowledge would still notice humanity, would understand or care about its existence.
  87.  
  88. But I keep thinking back to an old professor of mine, back when I briefly studied neuroscience. Talking about consciousness, about how we still don't honestly know what it is, where it comes from, what aspect of the brain makes it possible. And I wonder if there might not be consciousnesses out there so far beyond our comprehension that we could not properly recognize them as such. Minds so strange and colossal that we would never know they were minds at all. Perhaps, out there in the endless vast, they would not notice or recognize us in return.
  89.  
  90. And I wish that I could convince myself that ignorance was the same thing as safety. But then, how many weeds have you unthinkingly stepped on in your lifetime?
  91.  
  92. #### MELANIE
  93.  
  94. Statement ends.
  95.  
  96. Oh! That... um, well, that seems... that seems to be... that's all of it? Hmm.
  97.  
  98. Well, Jan Kilbride definitely returned to Earth with his colleagues, and he certainly seems to have given this statement in person, so... I mean, he did come back somehow. Assuming he ever left. It might have been a hallucination of some sort. Isolation and stress can do odd things to you, of course. [heh] Not to mention the evident insomnia.
  99.  
  100. And if it is true - if what Jan Kilbride saw was real, I mean... to be honest, it sounds a bit beyond my paygrade. [heh] Whatever my paygrade is. And I have enough insomnia of my own to deal with.
  101.  
  102. I did do some checking on the Daedalus - I mean, you've got to do something haven't you? Mr. Kilbride seems to have the right of it, in terms of his job. There have been exactly zero peer-reviewed pieces of research that have in any way referenced or cited studies or tests conducted on the Daedalus. From the point of view of the scientific community, the project might as well have never happened.
  103.  
  104. Also, I um, I can't find Jan Kilbride. He definitely returned. I found more than one photograph of the trio's arrival back on Earth: Carter Chilcott being attended by medical personnel, and the other two looking tired... but alive. There are also a couple of short newspaper stories mentioning in their safe return.
  105.  
  106. But it seems as though Kilbride made his way over to the Institute a few weeks after touchdown, made his statement, and then: nothing. I can't find any sign of him, and neither can Basira or Martin. Not on Earth, at least. I really don't want to say he vanished into thin air, but... he's vanished into something.
  107.  
  108. Beyond that, there's only a few things worth -
  109.  
  110. #### BASIRA
  111.  
  112. Are you ready for that drink?
  113.  
  114. #### MELANIE
  115.  
  116. Well - oh, yes, yes, just give me a second. Finishing off a statement.
  117.  
  118. #### BASIRA
  119.  
  120. Oh, sorry. I thought, you know, because the door was open...
  121.  
  122. #### MELANIE
  123.  
  124. Oh, no, no, I just needed a bit of air flow.
  125.  
  126. #### BASIRA
  127.  
  128. Yeah, it's, it is not cool down here.
  129.  
  130. #### MELANIE
  131.  
  132. Summer in the basement, I suppose.
  133.  
  134. #### BASIRA
  135.  
  136. Yeah. You know, speaking of not cool - did Martin say he was coming today?
  137.  
  138. #### MELANIE
  139.  
  140. Wow. Ouch.
  141.  
  142. #### BASIRA
  143.  
  144. Oh, what, you're gonna judge me? I *literally* don't know anyone here you haven't made cry.
  145.  
  146. #### MELANIE
  147.  
  148. You only know Tim and Martin!
  149.  
  150. #### BASIRA
  151.  
  152. And Elias.
  153.  
  154. #### MELANIE
  155.  
  156. I made *Elias* cry.
  157.  
  158. #### BASIRA
  159.  
  160. I don't know, probably. You can be *very* mean.
  161.  
  162. #### MELANIE
  163.  
  164. [Hah!] Right, well... the jury's still out on Elias. And *anyway,* Martin's always been lovely to *you.*
  165.  
  166. #### BASIRA
  167.  
  168. Hmm. I don't know, I mean, you should have seen him when I turned up last year. I think he thought I was trying to steal his precious Archivist.
  169.  
  170. #### MELANIE
  171.  
  172. Ahhh. I got the *exact same* when John was hiding out, and came to *me* with his "source on the inside" stuff. Martin was *not* impressed.
  173.  
  174. #### BASIRA
  175.  
  176. [Ugh] That boy needs to relax.
  177.  
  178. #### MELANIE
  179.  
  180. Or at *least* find someone else to fuss over!
  181.  
  182. #### BASIRA
  183.  
  184. Yeah, he's got it *bad.*
  185.  
  186. [PAUSE]
  187.  
  188. #### BASIRA
  189.  
  190. Do you know if he and John ever...
  191.  
  192. #### MELANIE
  193.  
  194. No clue, and not interested! Although... according to Georgie, John *doesn't.*
  195.  
  196. #### BASIRA
  197.  
  198. Like, at all?
  199.  
  200. #### MELANIE
  201.  
  202. Yeah.
  203.  
  204. #### BASIRA
  205.  
  206. Yeah, that does explain some stuff. - wait, hang on, do I, do I know Georgie?
  207.  
  208. #### MELANIE
  209.  
  210. I don't think so. Georgie Barker? She does "What the Ghost".
  211.  
  212. #### BASIRA
  213.  
  214. No way. I used to love that show. I mean, the first couple of seasons, at least. Took a weird turn in season three, when they introduced -
  215.  
  216. #### MELANIE
  217.  
  218. Well, she and John, they, dated...
  219.  
  220. #### BASIRA
  221.  
  222. Yeah.
  223.  
  224. #### MELANIE
  225.  
  226. I mean, it *was* years ago...
  227.  
  228. #### BASIRA
  229.  
  230. Huh. I always used to put on podcasts, when I was driving around, you know, when I wasn't on duty. I mean, when Daisy didn't need the radio.
  231.  
  232. #### MELANIE
  233.  
  234. [laughing] I literally *cannot* picture Daisy listening to the radio!
  235.  
  236. #### BASIRA
  237.  
  238. The Archers.
  239.  
  240. #### MELANIE
  241.  
  242. *No.* [laughing]
  243.  
  244. #### BASIRA
  245.  
  246. Hands of God.
  247.  
  248. #### MELANIE
  249.  
  250. I *actually* do not believe you!
  251.  
  252. #### BASIRA
  253.  
  254. She *never* missed an episode.
  255.  
  256. [LOUD EXHALATION]
  257.  
  258. #### BASIRA
  259.  
  260. Oh, sorry, do you need to finish up?
  261.  
  262. #### MELANIE
  263.  
  264. No... I, I actually, I have no idea what I was going to say. I did have more notes on, um, on space, I guess, but, uh... forget it. Let's go.
  265.  
  266. #### BASIRA
  267.  
  268. Alright, well, I should probably go check in with Martin, you know. See if he's in for drinks.
  269.  
  270. #### MELANIE
  271.  
  272. So you can double-check your gossip.
  273.  
  274. #### BASIRA
  275.  
  276. I don't gossip! *I have the mind of an investigator.*
  277.  
  278. #### MELANIE
  279.  
  280. Right, okay. Anyway, *I'll* go find him. I could really do with the walk. Do you want to go ahead, and grab the booth?
  281.  
  282. #### BASIRA
  283.  
  284. Yeah, sure. I can wait. I've got a book.
  285.  
  286. #### MELANIE
  287.  
  288. Of course you do.
  289.  
  290. [CLICK]
  291.  
  292. [CLICK]
  293.  
  294. [KNOCKING ON DOOR]
  295.  
  296. #### ELIAS
  297.  
  298. Come in, Melanie.
  299.  
  300. #### MELANIE
  301.  
  302. Martin said you wanted to see me?
  303.  
  304. [DOOR CLOSING]
  305.  
  306. #### ELIAS
  307.  
  308. Yes, please come in. I thought it was about time for your first performance review.
  309.  
  310. [MELANIE LAUGHS]
  311.  
  312. #### MELANIE
  313.  
  314. I, um, I didn't even know that was a... well, there wasn't anything scheduled.
  315.  
  316. #### ELIAS
  317.  
  318. No. Well, given the recent, um, *tensions* in the office -
  319.  
  320. #### MELANIE
  321.  
  322. [Heh]
  323.  
  324. #### ELIAS
  325.  
  326. - I thought it probably best if you weren't aware of it in advance.
  327.  
  328. #### MELANIE
  329.  
  330. Right.
  331.  
  332. #### ELIAS
  333.  
  334. Less time to prepare, you understand.
  335.  
  336. #### MELANIE
  337.  
  338. Right.
  339.  
  340. #### ELIAS
  341.  
  342. So. Have a seat.
  343.  
  344. You've been with us a few months now, I believe.
  345.  
  346. #### MELANIE
  347.  
  348. Yes.
  349.  
  350. #### ELIAS
  351.  
  352. And how are you finding it?
  353.  
  354. #### MELANIE
  355.  
  356. Is that a joke?
  357.  
  358. #### ELIAS
  359.  
  360. Aside from the obvious, I mean.
  361.  
  362. #### MELANIE
  363.  
  364. Oh, well. I, I suppose it's been unstructured.
  365.  
  366. Without John around, and with you being sat up here lurking, there's not been a lot of useful direction.
  367.  
  368. #### ELIAS
  369.  
  370. I see
  371.  
  372. #### MELANIE
  373.  
  374. I mean, you pick out a statement occasionally, and John might phone in to ask after some scrap of information. But to be honest, no one's even really told me what an "archival assistant" is actually supposed to do.
  375.  
  376. #### ELIAS
  377.  
  378. So how have you been occupying your time?
  379.  
  380. #### MELANIE
  381.  
  382. [annoyed exhalation] Reading, mostly. Doing some of my *own* research.
  383.  
  384. #### ELIAS
  385.  
  386. Into what?
  387.  
  388. #### MELANIE
  389.  
  390. My *own* projects.
  391.  
  392. #### ELIAS
  393.  
  394. Of course. And plotting my demise.
  395.  
  396. #### MELANIE
  397.  
  398. When I get a chance, yes.
  399.  
  400. #### ELIAS
  401.  
  402. Hm.
  403.  
  404. #### MELANIE
  405.  
  406. I suppose that doesn't look very good on my review.
  407.  
  408. #### ELIAS
  409.  
  410. Quite frankly, no.
  411.  
  412. #### MELANIE
  413.  
  414. Well, if you need to fire me, I won't make a scene.
  415.  
  416. #### ELIAS
  417.  
  418. No. No, I'm afraid not.
  419.  
  420. #### MELANIE
  421.  
  422. Sure. [sigh]
  423.  
  424. #### ELIAS
  425.  
  426. I wish I knew the words that would make you believe me.
  427.  
  428. #### MELANIE
  429.  
  430. *What?* That you are a literal deadman switch? [muttering] For goodness sake...
  431.  
  432. [MELANIE LAUGHS AND INTERJECTS IMPATIENTLY OVER ELIAS AS HE MONOLOGUES AT HER]
  433.  
  434. #### ELIAS
  435.  
  436. You know, if that was the only issue, I could have simply placed the knowledge in your mind.
  437.  
  438. #### MELANIE
  439.  
  440. What!?
  441.  
  442. #### ELIAS
  443.  
  444. You already have doubts, though. You've been talking with Tim, and have convinced yourself that -
  445.  
  446. [MELANIE LAUGHS]
  447.  
  448. #### ELIAS
  449.  
  450. - even if I'm telling the truth, I'm too dangerous to live.
  451.  
  452. #### MELANIE
  453.  
  454. Well.
  455.  
  456. #### ELIAS
  457.  
  458. Whatever I'm planning needs to be stopped -
  459.  
  460. [MELANIE LAUGHS]
  461.  
  462. #### ELIAS
  463.  
  464. - even if it cost a few lives. Including your own.
  465.  
  466. #### MELANIE
  467.  
  468. Well, that's not even -
  469.  
  470. #### ELIAS
  471.  
  472. A rationalization, of course. A lie about your own selfishness: that you would rather be dead than trapped without the self-determination you prize so highly. I wish I knew the words to convince you it's for the best.
  473.  
  474. [PAUSE]
  475.  
  476. #### MELANIE
  477.  
  478. Are we done?
  479.  
  480. [ELIAS RESUMES MONOLOGUING, MELANIE RESUMES MAKING EXASPERATED NOISES OVER HIM]
  481.  
  482. #### ELIAS
  483.  
  484. It's too deep. I can see almost anything I care to -
  485.  
  486. #### MELANIE
  487.  
  488. [muttering] *Christ.*
  489.  
  490. #### ELIAS
  491.  
  492. - {{retrieve? weave?}} knowledge from someone's mind, or place it there. But I just *cannot* change the nature of a person. And I am struggling to think of what could rid you of this misguided rage.
  493.  
  494. #### MELANIE
  495.  
  496. So let me go! Or, kill me!
  497.  
  498. #### ELIAS
  499.  
  500. You know, that is the second such ultimatum I've heard in as many weeks. But no. There are always other options. And I am not above threats.
  501.  
  502. #### MELANIE
  503.  
  504. Threaten, then. I've got nothing.
  505.  
  506. #### ELIAS
  507.  
  508. That's... almost true. Your life is indeed shockingly absent of any meaningful connections. That's actually one of the reasons I chose you for this job.
  509.  
  510. Your father was your last real anchor, wasn't he?
  511.  
  512. #### MELANIE
  513.  
  514. That's none of your business.
  515.  
  516. #### ELIAS
  517.  
  518. Perhaps. Five years is plenty of time to grieve. It's a real tragedy, isn't it. Dementia? Especially so early. But he always remembered you, didn't he? "Little moth."
  519.  
  520. #### MELANIE
  521.  
  522. Shut up.
  523.  
  524. #### ELIAS
  525.  
  526. At least you got him into a decent care home. Hard to afford on an irregular income like yours, but your mother's life insurance helped plenty.
  527.  
  528. [MELANIE IS BREATHING HARD, POSSIBLY REPRESSING TEARS]
  529.  
  530. And Ivy Meadows wasn't as expensive as some of them. It's a shame about the fire. But I would have thought it would offer something of a relief.
  531.  
  532. #### MELANIE
  533.  
  534. What are you talking about?
  535.  
  536. #### ELIAS
  537.  
  538. Oh. Of course. They told you he died in his sleep, didn't they? Smoke inhalation. A real tragedy, but at least he didn't suffer.
  539.  
  540. #### MELANIE
  541.  
  542. I -
  543.  
  544. #### ELIAS
  545.  
  546. Do you want to know what really killed him?
  547.  
  548. [MELANIE GASPS AND SOBS]
  549.  
  550. [ELIAS CONTINUES HIS MONOLOGUE, SPEAKING OVER AS MELANIE AS SHE CRIES]
  551.  
  552. #### ELIAS
  553.  
  554. Awful, isn't it? He *really* suffered. Not really your fault. Just bad luck. That doesn't comfort you, does it?
  555.  
  556. #### MELANIE
  557.  
  558. [crying] Take it back, take, take it back...
  559.  
  560. #### ELIAS
  561.  
  562. I'm afraid that's not really something I can do. I can promise not to make it worse though.
  563.  
  564. #### MELANIE
  565.  
  566. What... no...
  567.  
  568. #### ELIAS
  569.  
  570. You know *how* your father really died. And I am sure that is unimaginably painful for you. But be aware: if I choose to, I can make you *see it.*
  571.  
  572. #### MELANIE
  573.  
  574. No... no, no...
  575.  
  576. #### ELIAS
  577.  
  578. If you try to interfere with me again in *any* way, I will drive that image so deep into your psyche that even if you are right - even if you live - it will be there every time you close your eyes.
  579.  
  580. [ELIAS FINISHES MONOLOGUING AND PAUSES; MELANIE CONTINUES TO CRY]
  581.  
  582. #### ELIAS
  583.  
  584. [normal voice] That's alright. Take your time. Tell you what, why don't you take the rest of the day off? I'm sure you have a lot to process.
  585.  
  586. Anyway, aside from all of that, I'd say your performance has been satisfactory.
  587.  
  588. [CLICK]
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