A creative writing 103b
parameter "frankenmerge" model with 32k context.
Model background
Created using Mergekit from my two 70b
parameter miqu-based models: Dark-Miqu-70B and Dawn-Miqu-70B.
- To fix problems with "backwards time skips" in the generated stories, the "standard" interleave pattern was replaced by repeated blocks (see here).
- To help maintain cohesion, the '
q_proj
', 'k_proj
' and 'down_proj
' tensors were all scaled to hypothesised upper-bound values (see here).
My hope was this would act like a longer-context version of goliath-120b, as Dawn-Miqu-70B has a lot of Xwin-LM-70B-V0.1 in it and Dark-Miqu-70B has Euryale-1.3-L2-70B in it.
Prompting format
Vicuna format is preferred:
USER: {prompt} ASSISTANT:
Mistral and Alpaca formats are also supported:
[INST] {prompt} [/INST]
### Instruction:
{prompt}
### Response:
Licence and usage restrictions
miqu-1-70b-sf is a dequantized version of the miqu-1-70b model leaked from MistralAI. All miqu-derived models, including this merge, are suitable for non-commercial, personal use only.
Mergekit configuration
The following YAML configuration was used to produce this model:
const_tag: &MODEL1 jukofyork/Dawn-Miqu-70B
const_tag: &MODEL2 jukofyork/Dark-Miqu-70B
const_tag: &QK_ATTENUATION_FACTOR 0.8408964153 # sqrt(sqrt(1/2))
const_tag: &MLP_DOWN_SCALE_FACTOR 0.7071067812 # sqrt(1/2)
scale-filter-env: &scale_filter_env
parameters:
scale:
- filter: q_proj
value: *QK_ATTENUATION_FACTOR
- filter: k_proj
value: *QK_ATTENUATION_FACTOR
- filter: down_proj
value: *MLP_DOWN_SCALE_FACTOR
- value: 1.0
slices:
- sources:
- model: *MODEL1
layer_range: [0, 20]
- sources:
- model: *MODEL1
layer_range: [20, 40]
<<: *scale_filter_env
- sources:
- model: *MODEL2
layer_range: [20, 40]
<<: *scale_filter_env
- sources:
- model: *MODEL1
layer_range: [40, 60]
<<: *scale_filter_env
- sources:
- model: *MODEL2
layer_range: [40, 60]
<<: *scale_filter_env
- sources:
- model: *MODEL1
layer_range: [60, 80]
merge_method: passthrough
dtype: float16
Key configuration details:
- '
merge_method: passthrough
' passes input tensors through unmodified. - '
filter
' selects the required tensor(s) based on their name(s). - '
scale
' scales the weights in the select tensors.
See the Mergekit documentation for more on these settings.
Example stories
The following mix of "dark" stories were generated using the Vicuna prompt format with no system message and temperature=0:
Dark fantasy stories
Click to see spoiler
USER
Write me the opening chapter of a 'Grimdark' stories trilogy in the style of Joe Abercrombie and Rob J Hayes
ASSISTANT
Chapter One: The Crimson Crown
In the grim realm of Eldrith, where the sun was a feeble ember and the moon a sneering specter, there lived a man named Caelum Blackfist. He was no hero, no paragon of virtue, but a mercenary of ill repute, a killer for hire who danced with shadows and whispered sweet lies to steel. His eyes, as cold and unforgiving as the winter's kiss, held a thousand tales of bloodshed and betrayal, each one etched deeper than the scars that adorned his weathered face.
The tavern reeked of cheap ale and cheaper morals, a fitting den for the scoundrels and rogues who called it home. Caelum sat in the corner, hood drawn low, nursing a mug of ale that had seen better days. The chatter of the patrons was a dull hum, a symphony of lies and half-truths that he had long since learned to ignore. His attention was fixed on the man across the room, a fat merchant with a purse that jingled louder than his laughter. The mark, as Caelum so eloquently referred to him, was surrounded by a motley crew of hired swords, their eyes darting around the room like nervous rats.
A sardonic smirk tugged at the corner of Caelum's lips. Amateurs.
He downed the last of his ale, the bitter taste a welcome reminder of the world's cruelty, and rose from his seat. The floorboards groaned in protest, as if even they knew the darkness that was about to be unleashed upon their unsuspecting patrons. The room seemed to still as he approached, the air thickening with tension and the scent of impending violence.
"Good eve, gents," Caelum drawled, his voice a rough whisper that could cut through steel. "I hear your employer has a certain... acquisition he'd like to part with."
The mercenaries tensed, hands instinctively drifting towards the hilts of their swords. The merchant, however, merely chuckled, a sound that would have been jovial if not for the malice that lurked beneath the surface.
"And who might you be, stranger?" he slurred, his words sloshing around in a mouth full of cheap spirits.
"Just a humble traveler, looking to lighten the load of a weary soul," Caelum replied, his tone deceptively cordial.
The merchant's eyes narrowed, his laughter dying on his lips like a choked rat. "I've heard of your kind, Blackfist. Thieves and cutthroats, the lot of you. I've no business with the likes of you."
Caelum's smile widened, revealing teeth stained yellow from years of pipe smoke and harder vices. "Oh, I think you'll find that you do, friend. You see, I have a certain... talent for acquiring things that don't belong to me."
The room fell silent, the only sound the distant howl of a wind that carried with it the whispers of a thousand restless ghosts. The mercenaries exchanged uneasy glances, their bravado melting away like wax before a roaring fire. They knew the name Blackfist, and the tales that followed it like shadows on a moonless night.
"I'd advise you to reconsider your words, fat man," Caelum continued, his voice dropping to a dangerous growl. "I've been known to take what I want, and I've never been one to leave witnesses."
The merchant's face paled, the color draining from his jowls like spilled ale on a tavern floor. He reached for the pouch at his belt, fingers trembling like leaves in a storm. Caelum's hand was faster, his dagger appearing as if by dark magic, the blade pressed against the man's throat.
"Now, now," he chided, "let's not be hasty. I'm sure we can come to an... understanding."
The merchant's eyes widened, fear and greed warring within their depths. Finally, with a resigned sigh, he relinquished the pouch, the clink of gold coins music to Caelum's ears.
"The Crimson Crown," he rasped, his voice barely audible above the pounding of his terrified heart. "It's in the crypts of Blackmoor Keep, guarded by the damned and the cursed."
Caelum's eyes gleamed, the promise of a challenge igniting a fire within him that had long been dormant. The Crimson Crown, a relic of legend, said to grant its wearer the power to command the very shadows themselves. A prize worth killing for, and one that had eluded even the most ruthless of treasure hunters.
"My thanks," he murmured, sheathing his blade with a sinister hiss. "I'll be sure to send your regards to the denizens of the grave."
With a mocking bow, he turned and disappeared into the night, leaving behind a tavern filled with stunned silence and the stench of fear. The hunt had begun.
As Caelum slipped through the winding streets of the city, the shadows seemed to part before him, as if eager to embrace their prodigal son. The cobblestones were slick with filth and despair, the buildings leaning in like gossiping crones, whispering secrets that would make even the bravest of men weep. He paid them no heed, his thoughts consumed by the prize that awaited him.
The journey to Blackmoor Keep would be treacherous, fraught with danger and deceit. But Caelum Blackfist had faced worse odds and emerged victorious, his blade stained red and his pockets lined with gold. He would claim the Crimson Crown, or die trying.
For in the grimdark world of Eldrith, there was only one law that mattered: survive, or become another forgotten corpse in the endless tapestry of blood and betrayal.
And Caelum Blackfist had no intention of being forgotten.
Click to see spoiler
USER
Write me the opening chapter of a Grimdark trilogy in the style of Joe Abercrombie and Rob J Hayes. Use third person personal and feature internal monologues of the characters. The POV character for chapter 1 is a cultist who has just escaped his cult. He is dressed in dirty yellow robes and his only possession is a mysterious small (magical!?) mirror he stole from the cult. The story starts with him arriving at an apparently deserted ghost town on the edge of a desert. He has an arrow lodged in his shoulder and is losing his mind due to infection and thirst.
ASSISTANT
The sun hung over the horizon like a molten blade, slicing through the parched air and searing the earth below. The man in the tattered yellow robes staggered forward, each step a defiant curse against the relentless sands that sought to swallow him whole. His name, once a beacon of hope and devotion, now lay forgotten in the recesses of his fever-addled mind, replaced by the insistent throb of pain and the gnawing emptiness of his parched throat.
The arrowhead, jutting from his shoulder like an accusing finger, mocked his every stumble. A parting gift from his former brethren, a constant reminder of the price of heresy. He clutched at the small, leather-bound object nestled within his robes, the only solace he had managed to pilfer from the burning wreckage of his past. The mirror, no larger than his palm, pulsed with an unnatural warmth, as if it too shared in his suffering.
The ghost town loomed ahead, a jagged silhouette against the dying sunset. Its buildings, once proud sentinels of a thriving oasis, now stood as hollow husks, their windows gaping like the empty sockets of a skull. The wind whispered through the desolate streets, carrying with it the faintest echoes of laughter long silenced and dreams long forgotten.
As he stumbled into the heart of the forsaken settlement, the cultist's vision swam, the line between reality and delirium blurring like watercolors on parched parchment. He could almost see them, the spectral inhabitants, their translucent forms flitting between the shadows, watching him with hollow eyes. Whispers, barely audible, seemed to follow him, a chorus of accusations and lamentations that clawed at his sanity like the talons of carrion birds.
"Unworthy...blasphemer...you shall pay for your sins..."
He shook his head, trying to dislodge the phantoms that clung to his thoughts like cobwebs. He had left the cult, abandoned their twisted faith, and yet their voices still haunted him, a chorus of spectral tormentors that refused to let him find peace.
The mirror in his grasp grew warmer, its pulse quickening in time with his erratic heartbeat. He stumbled towards the largest of the buildings, a crumbling edifice that might have once been a temple or a fortress, its purpose now lost to the ravages of time and sand. The doors, massive slabs of petrified wood, groaned in protest as he pushed them open, revealing a cavernous interior shrouded in darkness.
With a grimace, he staggered inside, seeking refuge from the merciless sun and the spectral judges that pursued him. The moment the doors creaked shut behind him, the world outside seemed to fade away, replaced by an oppressive silence that pressed down on him like a tombstone.
The cultist collapsed onto the dust-covered floor, his breaths coming in ragged gasps. He fumbled with trembling hands at the leather bindings of the mirror, desperate to see something, anything, that would prove he was not alone in this forsaken place. With a final, desperate tug, the cover fell away, revealing the polished surface beneath.
His reflection stared back at him, distorted and twisted by the imperfections of the glass. But it was not his own sunken eyes and cracked lips that held his gaze. Instead, he saw the flickering image of a figure, shrouded in shadows, its features obscured by the gloom. A chill ran down his spine, colder than the iciest depths of the underworld.
"Who...who are you?" he croaked, his voice little more than a parched whisper.
The figure did not move, did not speak. It simply watched him, its presence a palpable weight that threatened to suffocate him.
"Please...help me..." he pleaded, his voice barely audible even to his own ears.
The figure in the mirror tilted its head, the barest hint of a smile playing across its indistinct features. And then, as if in response to his desperate plea, the darkness within the temple seemed to coalesce, tendrils of inky shadow snaking towards him like hungry serpents.
The cultist screamed, a primal sound torn from the depths of his soul, as the darkness enveloped him, dragging him into the abyssal embrace of oblivion.
As consciousness slipped away, he could have sworn he heard the faintest whisper, a voice that seemed to emanate from the very depths of the mirror itself.
"Welcome home, my wayward child. Your penance has only just begun."
Click to see spoiler
USER
Write me the opening chapter of a Grimdark trilogy in the style of Joe Abercrombie and Rob J Hayes. Use third person personal and feature internal monologues of the characters. The POV character for chapter 1 is a 'Mercer' who's job is to put the mortally wounded out of their mystery after a battle. He has no conscience about what he does. The story starts the morning after the battle and the moor where it took place is blanketed in mist. Something stirs a flashback in the POV character.
ASSISTANT
The morning after the slaughter, the moor lay still, a shroud of mist clinging to its wounds like a lover's final embrace. The Mercer, his hands stained with the ink of a thousand souls, trudged through the carnage, his boots sinking into the sodden earth with a sickening squelch. He had no name, not one worth remembering, just a title earned in the blood-soaked fields of war. The Reaper's Whisperer, they called him, or simply, the Mercer.
He paused, his breath hanging in the air like a specter's sigh, as a flicker of movement caught his eye. A raven, its feathers as black as the void between stars, hopped amongst the fallen, its beady eyes scavenging for morsels of flesh yet unclaimed. The bird's croak echoed in the silence, a grim reminder of the feast that followed every battle.
The Mercer's thoughts drifted, carried on the wings of memory to a time before the blood and the screams. A time when the mist was merely the breath of a slumbering world, not the shroud of the damned. He remembered the taste of ale, bitter and warm, on his tongue, and the laughter of comrades long since silenced by the cold kiss of steel.
"Fool," he muttered to the ghost of his past self. "You thought war was glory and honor. Now you know better."
He knelt beside a figure half-buried in the mire, the man's armor twisted and rent like discarded parchment. The Mercer's calloused fingers brushed aside a lock of matted hair, revealing a face that might have been handsome in life. Now, it was a grotesque mask of agony and despair, frozen in the final moments of its wearer's existence.
"Time to rest, lad," he whispered, his voice devoid of pity or remorse. He unsheathed his blade, a wickedly curved dagger that gleamed dully in the feeble light. It was a mercy, they said, what he did. A kindness to those who could not find their own way to the other side. He'd long ago stopped believing in such lies.
As the dagger sank home, the man's eyes fluttered open, wide and pleading. The Mercer met his gaze, unflinching. In those depths, he saw the reflection of every soul he'd ever sent on their final journey. He saw the fear, the pain, the desperate clinging to a life that had already slipped away like sand through a broken hourglass.
But there was something else there too, something that sent a shiver down his spine. A spark of defiance, a flicker of rage that refused to be extinguished.
"Why?" the man rasped, his voice a broken whisper. "Why me?"
The Mercer's lips twisted into a semblance of a smile. "Why you, lad? Because the gods are fickle bastards, and today, they've chosen you to dance with the Reaper."
He withdrew the blade, and the light in the man's eyes faded, swallowed by the endless void. The raven cawed in approval, hopping closer to claim its due.
As he rose, the mist parted like curtains drawn aside, revealing a sight that would have made lesser men weep or pray. Bodies lay strewn across the moor, a macabre tapestry of steel and bone, their lifeblood staining the earth a deep, morbid crimson. The air was thick with the cloying scent of death, a perfume that clung to him like a lover's embrace.
He continued his grim harvest, moving from corpse to corpse with the detached efficiency of a farmer reaping a bountiful crop. Each life he took was a weight lifted from his own shoulders, a debt repaid to the cruel masters who had forged him into this instrument of mercy and death.
Yet, as the hours dragged on and the mist began to lift, the weight returned, settling in his gut like a leaden stone. He was no savior, no angel of mercy. He was just another killer, a predator feasting on the remains of war's bloody feast.
A sound, soft as a lover's sigh, cut through the silence. The Mercer's head snapped up, his senses honed to a razor's edge by years of surviving in the shadows of battle. He scanned the mist-shrouded landscape, his hand instinctively tightening on the hilt of his dagger.
There, amidst the carnage, a figure staggered towards him, a wraith woven from the very fabric of the fog. The Mercer tensed, ready to send another soul to its final rest, but something about the figure's uneven gait, the way it clutched at a gaping wound in its chest, stayed his hand.
"Please," the figure croaked, its voice barely audible above the distant moans of the dying. "Please...don't..."
The Mercer hesitated, a frown creasing his weathered brow. It was rare for one to beg for life when death's cold embrace was so close, so inviting. He took a step forward, curiosity warring with the cold detachment that had served him so well.
As the figure drew closer, the mist dissipated, revealing a woman, her armor battered and rent, her face a mask of blood and tears. He recognized her, or rather, he recognized the sigil emblazoned on her torn surcoat. She was one of them, a soldier of the enemy forces he'd fought alongside countless others to send screaming into oblivion.
"You..." she gasped, her eyes locking onto his with the ferocity of a cornered beast. "You...monster..."
The word struck him like a physical blow, shattering the fragile armor he'd built around his soul. He was a monster, wasn't he? A creature of shadow and steel, feasting on the misery of others.
But then, weren't they all monsters, in their own twisted way? Soldiers, kings, even the gods who watched from their lofty thrones, indifferent to the suffering they wrought.
"We're all monsters, lass," he said, his voice surprisingly gentle. "Some of us just wear our scales on the inside."
He knelt beside her, his dagger glinting in the pale light. She looked up at him, her eyes filled with a mixture of hatred and pleading. He understood that look, had seen it a thousand times before.
"I'm sorry," he whispered, and for a fleeting moment, he almost meant it.
Then the blade sliced through the air, and the world was silent once more.
Click to see spoiler
USER
Write me the opening chapter of a Grimdark trilogy in the style of Joe Abercrombie and Rob J Hayes. Use third person personal and feature internal monologues of the characters. The POV character for chapter 1 is a man awaiting execution for a crime he didn't actually commit. His cell mate is a much larger man, who is a notorious murderer and rapist. One evening they overhear the guards talking about some "... threat from the North" but don't catch the whole conversation. The next morning they awake to find the guards have all fled and now face a new predicament: how to get out of the locked cell before they die of thirst or starvation.
ASSISTANT
The stench of piss and shit clung to the air like a miasma, choking the life out of the damp stone cell. The flickering torchlight cast dancing shadows on the walls, painting grotesque faces that leered at the two occupants. The smaller man, Rennick, lay on the filthy straw pallet, his wrists and ankles bound with coarse rope. He stared up at the ceiling, counting the cracks in the stone as he had done a thousand times before. Each one a tally mark of his dwindling sanity.
"Bloody hells," he muttered under his breath, "I didn't even steal the damn loaf."
A rumbling chuckle echoed from the far corner, where his cellmate, the hulking brute known as Grimgut, sat hunched against the wall. Chains rattled as the monster of a man shifted his bulk. "Aye, Rennick, but they'll hang ye for it all the same. Might as well have taken the bloody thing, eh?"
Rennick clenched his jaw, biting back a retort. What was the point? Grimgut was right, in his twisted way. In the eyes of the law, he was as guilty as the next man, even if the next man was a murderous bastard like his cellmate.
"Least I didn't rape no innocent lasses," he spat, unable to hold his tongue any longer.
Grimgut's laughter died in his throat, replaced by a low growl that sent a shiver down Rennick's spine. "Careful with yer words, little rat. Ye don't know the half of it."
Rennick swallowed the bile rising in his throat. He knew all too well what Grimgut was capable of. The stories of the man's depravities had spread through the dungeons like a plague, each retelling more gruesome than the last. He'd heard whispers of women torn apart, children left to starve in their mothers' entrails, and men flayed alive for sport.
"I know enough," he whispered, turning his gaze back to the ceiling.
The silence stretched between them, broken only by the distant clang of metal on metal and the occasional muffled shout from the corridor above. Rennick's thoughts drifted to his wife and daughter, wondering if they were faring any better in this cruel world without him. He doubted it.
Suddenly, the sounds from above ceased, replaced by an unnerving quiet. Rennick's ears strained, listening for any sign of the guards' heavy footsteps or drunken banter. But there was nothing.
"Odd," he mumbled, glancing over at Grimgut.
The larger man's single eye, the other a milky void, narrowed in suspicion. "Aye. Too bloody quiet."
They waited, the silence pressing down on them like a suffocating shroud. Rennick's heartbeat quickened, his breaths coming in shallow gasps. Something was wrong. Terribly wrong.
Then, faint at first, came the distant sound of screams. Shrill and desperate, they echoed through the stone corridors, growing louder with each passing moment. Rennick's stomach twisted into a knot.
"What in the Nine Hells is that?" he croaked, fear clawing at his chest.
Grimgut's massive form tensed, muscles coiling like a cornered beast. "Sounds like we got ourselves some company."
Their conversation was cut short as the cell door slammed open, sending a shower of dust and debris cascading into the cell. Rennick flinched, expecting to see the scowling faces of their guards, ready to drag them to their executions. Instead, they found only darkness.
"What in the...?" Grimgut rumbled, straining against his chains.
Rennick's heart leapt in his chest. The guards were gone. They were alone.
"We have to get out of here," he hissed, struggling against his own bonds.
Grimgut grunted in agreement, his one good eye scanning the cell for anything they could use to free themselves. "Aye, but how? These bloody chains are thicker than my bloody wrists."
Rennick's gaze fell on a rusted iron spike embedded in the wall near the door. It was a long shot, but it was their only chance. "Help me over there," he gasped, wriggling towards the wall.
With a grunt, Grimgut lumbered over, using his bulk to prop Rennick against the cold stone. The smaller man reached up, his bound hands trembling as he gripped the spike. He took a deep breath, then yanked down with all his strength.
The ropes around his wrists gave a satisfying snap, and he let out a strangled cry of relief. He quickly went to work on his ankles, the coarse fibers biting into his raw skin.
"Hurry," Grimgut growled, his eye never leaving the doorway. "Whatever's out there, I don't fancy meetin' it in here."
Rennick's fingers moved with newfound urgency, fumbling at the knots until finally, blessedly, he was free. He stumbled to his feet, wincing as pain shot up his legs.
"Now what?" he panted, turning to his cellmate.
Grimgut's gaze flicked to the door, then back to Rennick. "Now, little rat, we find out what's got the guards runnin' like frightened rabbits, and we pray to the gods we don't regret it."
Together, they crept towards the door, the screams from above growing louder with each step. As they emerged into the torchlit corridor, the true horror of their situation became clear. Bodies lay strewn about like discarded dolls, limbs twisted at impossible angles, throats torn open in gruesome displays of violence.
"Bloody hells," Rennick breathed, his stomach churning.
Grimgut grunted in agreement, his massive hand clenching around the makeshift club he'd fashioned from a broken chair leg. "Looks like we ain't the only ones escapin' tonight."
They moved cautiously through the carnage, their footsteps echoing off the blood-slicked stones. The screams had faded, replaced by an eerie silence that seemed to pulse with menace.
"What do we do now?" Rennick whispered, his voice trembling.
Grimgut's eye swept the corridor, settling on a set of stairs leading upwards. "We find out what's caused this mess, and we bloody well get out alive."
As they ascended the stairs, the air grew colder, the stench of death replaced by something far worse. A bitter chill seeped into Rennick's bones, chilling him to his very core.
"What is that?" he croaked, his breath fogging in the frigid air.
Grimgut didn't answer, his focus fixed on the door at the top of the stairs. It creaked open, revealing a sight that would haunt Rennick's nightmares for the rest of his short, miserable life.
A horde of twisted, inhuman figures swarmed through the deserted courtyard, their eyes glowing like embers in the moonlight. Their howls cut through the night like knives, sending shivers down Rennick's spine.
"Demons," Grimgut rasped, his voice barely audible over the cacophony.
Rennick's legs threatened to give out beneath him. Demons. The very thought was enough to make strong men piss themselves in terror.
"We're dead," he whimpered, sinking back against the wall.
Grimgut's massive hand clamped down on his shoulder, hauling him upright. "Not yet, we ain't. We'll find a way out of this bloody mess, or we'll die tryin'."
And with that, the unlikely duo stepped into the night, their fates entwined by circumstance and the looming threat from the North.
Dark sci-fi stories
Click to see spoiler
USER
Write me the opening chapter of a dark and gritty Space Opera Sci-fi trilogy in the style of Frank Herbert and James S. A. Corey. Use third person personal and feature internal monologues of the characters. The setting is this: a colony ship heading out of the solar system has been pulled off course with no hope of getting to the planned destination. The people know this and society has broken down completely due to the grim prospects they are facing. The POV character for chapter 1 is an orphan.
ASSISTANT
Chapter 1: Adrift in the Void
The cold, unforgiving vacuum of space pressed against the hull of the colony ship, a constant reminder of the vast emptiness that surrounded them. Inside, however, the atmosphere was anything but empty. The air was thick with the stench of despair, fear, and desperation, a potent cocktail that clung to every crevice and corner of the once-thriving vessel.
Kira, a young orphan of indeterminate age, navigated the dimly-lit corridors with the practiced ease of someone who had known nothing else for as long as they could remember. The flickering emergency lights cast eerie shadows on the dented and scorched bulkheads, a testament to the countless skirmishes and power struggles that had erupted since the ship's untimely deviation from its intended course.
Their thoughts drifted back to the day the announcement had been made, the day when hope had been snuffed out like a fragile flame in the unforgiving vacuum of space. The captain's voice, usually so steady and reassuring, had trembled as they spoke the words that would forever change the course of their lives.
"This is Captain Reynolds. I regret to inform you that our navigation systems have suffered a catastrophic failure. We are adrift, far beyond the reach of any known star systems. Our supplies are dwindling, and our chances of rescue are... non-existent."
A collective gasp had echoed through the ship's intercoms, followed by a deafening silence that seemed to stretch on for an eternity. It was in that moment that the fragile veneer of civilization had begun to crack, and the true nature of humanity had started to reveal itself.
Kira shook their head, banishing the memories back to the dark recesses of their mind. Dwelling on the past would do them no good now. Survival was the only currency that mattered in this new, harsh reality.
As they rounded a corner, they heard the distant sound of laughter, a rare and almost alien sound in these desperate times. Curiosity piqued, they followed the muffled cacophony until they came upon a makeshift tavern, carved out of what had once been a hydroponics bay. The faint glow of improvised lamps illuminated the faces of the patrons, a motley crew of desperate souls seeking solace in the numbing embrace of synth-ale and cheap stimulants.
A burly man with a patchwork of tattoos covering his bald head spotted Kira and beckoned them over with a meaty, cybernetic hand. "Hey, kid. New around here?" His voice was rough, like gravel being ground under a boot heel.
Kira hesitated for a moment, their instincts screaming at them to turn and run. But hunger was a powerful motivator, and the tantalizing aroma of recycled protein wafting from the man's direction was too much to resist. They nodded cautiously and approached the makeshift bar.
"Name's Grim," the man growled, sliding a chipped mug across the counter. "What's yours?"
"Kira," they replied, their voice barely above a whisper.
Grim's one remaining eye narrowed as he appraised them. "You look like you've seen better days, kid."
That was an understatement. Kira's ragged clothing hung loosely on their malnourished frame, and their once-bright eyes were now dull and lifeless, like the dying embers of a spent star. They took a tentative sip of the synth-ale, grimacing at the bitter taste. It was better than nothing, though.
"We've all seen better days," Kira muttered, their thoughts drifting back to the family they had lost in the chaos that had followed the captain's announcement.
Grim grunted in agreement, his cybernetic eye whirring as it scanned the room. "Ain't that the truth. So, what brings you to the ass-end of the universe?"
Kira shrugged, not trusting themselves to speak. They had no real answer to give, no grand purpose or mission that had led them here. They were just another lost soul, drifting through the void like so much cosmic debris.
"Fair enough," Grim said, seeming to sense their reluctance to talk. "Just remember, kid. Out here, trust is a commodity more valuable than gold. You keep your secrets close, and you might just live long enough to regret it."
The words echoed in Kira's mind as they nursed their drink, watching as the patrons of the tavern sought fleeting moments of respite from the crushing weight of their shared predicament. Fights broke out and were quickly quelled, deals were struck with hushed whispers and furtive glances, and somewhere in the background, a synth-violin played a mournful tune that seemed to encapsulate the very essence of their plight.
As the hours dragged on, Kira's eyelids grew heavy, the exhaustion of a long day of scavenging and evading the various factions that now ruled the ship's lawless corridors finally catching up to them. They leaned against the cold metal wall, letting the hazy warmth of the synth-ale lull them into a fitful slumber.
In their dreams, they were back on Earth, running through fields of golden wheat under a sky so blue it hurt to look at. They could almost feel the warmth of the sun on their face, hear the laughter of their siblings as they chased each other through the tall grass.
But then the dream shifted, the idyllic scene twisting into a nightmare as the sky above them turned black, stars winking out one by one like dying embers. They were alone, adrift in the endless void, the cold tendrils of space reaching out to claim them.
Kira awoke with a start, their heart pounding in their chest. The tavern was quieter now, the revelers either passed out or gone to whatever passed for sleeping quarters in this forsaken place. Grim was still there, though, his cybernetic eye fixed on them with an unnerving intensity.
"Bad dream?" he rumbled, a ghost of a smile playing at the corner of his cracked lips.
Kira nodded, not trusting their voice to betray the fear that gripped them like a vice.
"We all have 'em, kid," Grim said, his voice softer now. "Just remember, it's the ones who wake up that have to face the nightmare."
With that, he downed the last of his drink and lumbered off into the darkness, leaving Kira alone with their thoughts and the haunting melody of the synth-violin.
As they stared into the depths of their now-empty mug, Kira couldn't help but wonder if they would ever wake up from this living nightmare, or if they were doomed to drift through the cold, unforgiving void for all eternity.
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USER
Write me the opening chapter of a dark and gritty Sci-fi trilogy in the style of Frank Herbert and James S. A. Corey. Use third person personal and feature internal monologues of the characters. The POV character for chapter 1 is an astronaut living on a space station orbiting the earth. The day starts off normally, but then him the others notice the mushroom clouds and they have to face inevitability of the situation they are in.
ASSISTANT
Chapter 1: The Silent Fall
The cold, unforgiving vacuum of space pressed against the reinforced viewport, a silent sentinel to the cosmic ballet unfolding beyond. Dr. Elias Rennard, seasoned astronaut and chief botanist aboard the Kepler-92b Habitat, sipped his lukewarm coffee, the Earth a distant blue marble suspended in the void. The monotonous hum of life support systems and the occasional chatter of his crewmates over the comms were the only sounds that punctuated the otherwise oppressive silence.
Elias allowed himself a rare moment of introspection, his gaze lingering on the swirling azure and white patterns of his homeworld. Another day in the void, he thought, a bittersweet smile tugging at the corners of his lips. He had grown accustomed to the isolation, even found solace in it. The endless expanse of stars and the delicate dance of celestial bodies served as a constant reminder of his insignificance in the grand tapestry of the universe.
A sudden, shrill alarm shattered the tranquility, jolting Elias from his reverie. His heart skipped a beat as he whirled around, eyes darting to the array of blinking consoles and screens that adorned the control center. A chill ran down his spine as he registered the unmistakable pattern of red alerts.
"What the hell is going on?" he barked into the comm, his voice laced with a mixture of fear and anger.
Static crackled in response, followed by the panicked voice of Mission Control. "Elias, you need to get to the observation deck. Now!"
He didn't need to be told twice. Adrenaline surging through his veins, Elias sprinted through the labyrinthine corridors of the station, his magnetic boots clanging against the cold metal floor. The other crew members, roused from their various tasks, converged on the observation deck with similar urgency, their faces etched with concern and confusion.
As he floated into the room, the sight that greeted him stole the breath from his lungs. Earth, the jewel of the solar system, was marred by a series of rapidly expanding, fiery blossoms, their tendrils of destruction reaching out like the grasping fingers of some malevolent deity. Mushroom clouds, birthed from the ashes of human hubris, bloomed across the planet's surface, painting the once pristine atmosphere in hues of hellfire.
"Oh, God," someone whispered, their voice trembling with disbelief.
The silence that followed was more suffocating than the vacuum outside. Elias felt a cold knot form in his stomach, a leaden weight that threatened to drag him down into the abyss of despair. He knew, deep in his bones, that the world he had left behind was gone, consumed by the insatiable hunger of nuclear fire.
"Mission Control, do you copy?" he croaked into the comm, his voice barely audible over the pounding of his heart.
Only static answered him, a mocking echo of the silence that now enveloped the Earth.
"Communications are down, sir," a young technician, her face pale and eyes wide with terror, managed to choke out. "We've lost contact with Houston, and... and everything else."
A heavy silence descended upon the room, broken only by the ragged breaths of the crew as they stared, transfixed, at the apocalyptic tableau unfolding before them.
This can't be happening, Elias thought, his mind reeling. This is just a nightmare, a terrible, twisted dream.
But the cold, unyielding reality of the situation pressed in on him like the crushing weight of a dying star. The Earth, their lifeline, their home, was gone. They were alone, adrift in the cold, unforgiving void of space, the last remnants of a species that had finally succeeded in its own annihilation.
"What do we do now?" someone asked, their voice barely audible above the deafening silence.
Elias turned to face his crew, their faces a mirror of his own despair. He opened his mouth to speak, to offer some semblance of hope or guidance, but the words refused to come.
In that moment, as they watched the last vestiges of human civilization burn away like so much cosmic dust, they all knew the terrible truth.
There was nothing left to do but wait for the darkness to claim them too.
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USER
Write me the opening chapter of a dark and gritty Sci-fi trilogy in the style of Frank Herbert and James S. A. Corey. Use third person personal and feature internal monologues of the characters. The POV character for chapter 1 is a worker constructing a biodome when a terrible accident happens. Make the story very dark; no happy ending here...
ASSISTANT
The air was thick with the scent of burnt metal and ozone as Kaelin labored in the cavernous depths of the asteroid. Sweat beaded on her brow, trickling down the grooves of her environmental suit as she welded together the last segment of the biodome's skeleton. The rhythmic hiss of her respirator was the only companionship she could afford in the vacuum-sealed silence.
Beep-beep-beep
The sudden intrusion of the proximity alarm jolted her from her reverie. Kaelin's heart skipped a beat as she whirled around, her magnetic boots clinging to the uneven surface. A massive chunk of debris, a relic of the asteroid's violent past, hurtled towards her with the unyielding fury of a cosmic bullet.
"Shit!" she cursed, her voice muffled by the helmet.
Her instincts took over, honed by years of working in the unforgiving void. She released her grip on the welding torch, its arc sputtering out like a dying star, and propelled herself away from the impending impact. The debris struck the biodome's frame with a deafening clang, sending a shockwave rippling through the structure. Kaelin's suit vibrated violently, and for a terrifying moment, she felt the cold embrace of the void reaching out to claim her.
But the safety harness held, yanking her back with a jarring force that left her gasping for breath. She floated there, suspended in the darkness, her heart pounding like a war drum in her chest.
This is it, she thought, her mind racing. This is how it ends.
The comms crackled to life, the voice of Mission Control a distant lifeline in the void. "Kaelin, do you copy? Status report!"
She swallowed the lump in her throat, tasting the metallic tang of fear. "I'm... I'm okay. Close call. Damage assessment underway."
"Roger that. Proceed with caution. We can't afford any more delays."
The words echoed in her helmet, a stark reminder of the stakes. Humanity's last hope for survival hinged on the success of this mission, on the fragile biosphere she and her crew were painstakingly constructing in the cold embrace of the stars.
As her heartbeat slowed, Kaelin surveyed the damage. The impact had twisted the biodome's frame, a spiderweb of fractures spidering out from the point of impact. The delicate hydroponic systems dangled precariously, their tendrils of greenery swaying like the last vestiges of life on a dying world.
No, she thought, clenching her gloved fists. We've come too far to fail now.
With renewed determination, she maneuvered herself towards the breach, her movements precise and calculated. Every second counted in the unforgiving vacuum of space. As she worked, her thoughts drifted back to Earth, to the lush forests and azure oceans that now existed only in fading memories and ancient holovids.
What have we done? she wondered, the weight of guilt settling heavy in her chest. What price have we paid for our ambition?
The asteroid mining operations had seemed like a golden ticket to salvation, a chance to escape the dying planet and carve out a new home among the stars. But the cost had been higher than anyone could have imagined. The planet's atmosphere, already thin and gasping, had been decimated by the relentless extraction, leaving behind a barren wasteland.
And now, the survivors clung to existence on these floating tombs, desperately trying to recreate the paradise they had destroyed.
Kaelin shook off the morbid thoughts, focusing on the task at hand. She activated her suit's repair nanobots, watching as they swarmed over the damaged frame like a metallic hive, mending the fractures with unnerving efficiency. The biodome groaned and creaked, protesting the intrusion, but slowly, painstakingly, it began to take shape once more.
As she worked, Kaelin couldn't shake the feeling of being watched. She glanced up, her helmet's lights illuminating the endless expanse of space beyond the breach. The void stared back, cold and indifferent, a vast and empty tomb waiting to claim them all.
A chill ran down her spine, and she quickly looked away, focusing on the task at hand. There was no time for superstition or fear. Not out here.
Hours passed like minutes, the monotony of her work broken only by the occasional status updates to Mission Control. The biodome slowly took shape around her, a fragile bubble of life in the cold void.
Finally, after what felt like an eternity, the last repair was made. Kaelin floated back, surveying her handiwork with a mixture of pride and exhaustion. It was far from perfect, but it would have to do.
As she prepared to signal the all-clear, a sudden tremor rocked the asteroid, sending her spiraling through the air. Alarms blared in her helmet, a cacophony of panic and warning.
"Kaelin, what's happening?" Mission Control's voice was frantic now, laced with the unmistakable edge of fear.
She struggled to regain her bearings, her eyes wide with terror as she saw it. A fissure, jagged and gaping, had opened up in the asteroid's hull, spewing out a torrent of air and debris. The biodome, her fragile creation, was being torn apart like paper in a hurricane.
"No... no, no, no!" she screamed, her voice lost to the void.
The last thing she saw before the darkness claimed her was the sight of the hydroponic tendrils, ripped free from their moorings, drifting away into the cold emptiness of space. Like the last vestiges of hope, they faded into the void, leaving behind only the cold, unyielding darkness.
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USER
Write me the opening chapter of a dark and gritty Sci-fi trilogy in the style of Frank Herbert and James S. A. Corey. Use third person personal and feature internal monologues of the characters. The POV character for chapter 1 is manning a listening station in deep space. What he hears over the radio chills him to the bone.
ASSISTANT
In the abyssal silence of the cosmos, where even the whispers of distant stars were muffled by the suffocating void, the listening station Alpha-37 hung like a solitary sentinel, its sensors probing the inky blackness for any semblance of life or, more ominously, the absence of it.
Cadet Jaxon Kael, a man of lean build and haunted eyes, sat hunched over the console, his fingers dancing across the cold, unresponsive keys with a practiced urgency. The dimly lit chamber, a claustrophobic cocoon of blinking screens and humming machinery, seemed to close in around him as the monotony of his shift stretched into its seventh interminable hour.
His thoughts, untethered by the oppressive solitude, drifted to the warm embrace of his quarters, to the worn pages of an ancient Earthbound novel he'd been trying to lose himself in, and to the taste of real coffee, a luxury as distant and unattainable as the very stars he monitored.
Static crackles through the headset, jolting Jaxon from his reverie.
"Alpha-37, this is Echo-Bravo-Niner, do you copy?" A voice, distorted by the cosmic static, pierced the silence like a knife through the vacuum. Jaxon's heart skipped a beat, adrenaline surging through his veins like a long-dormant star awakening.
"Echo-Bravo-Niner, this is Alpha-37. Receiving you loud and clear, over." He replied, his voice steady despite the sudden surge of anticipation. Contact from the outer rim was rare, and always fraught with the potential for either wonder or dread.
Another burst of static, followed by a garbled transmission.
"...ter...ter...ter...terrible...happened...re...repeat...terrible thing..." The words came in broken fragments, as if the very fabric of space-time itself was reluctant to relay the message.
Jaxon's hands trembled as he adjusted the frequency dials, his mind racing with a thousand terrible possibilities. Pirate raids, rogue AI uprisings, or worse, the unthinkable specter of an alien incursion.
The static abruptly subsides, replaced by the unmistakable sound of a woman sobbing.
"...oh God...it's...it's everywhere...we...we're all...all dead..." The voice, barely recognizable as human, dissolved into a cacophony of despair and terror.
A chill crept down Jaxon's spine, the hairs on the nape of his neck standing on end like antennae attuned to the wails of the cosmos. He knew that voice. It belonged to Lieutenant Sarah Vance, a seasoned officer stationed at Outpost Zeta-12, a remote research facility on the fringes of explored space.
"Lieutenant Vance, this is Cadet Kael. Please, repeat your last transmission. What's your status? Over." He spoke with a calmness that belied the turmoil brewing within him.
Silence, as oppressive as the void outside, filled the comms.
"...it...it came from...from nowhere...consumed...everything...we...we tried to...to fight...but it...it was...it was like...like nothing we've ever...ever seen..." The words were spoken between ragged gasps, each syllable a testament to the unimaginable horror that had befallen her.
Jaxon's mind reeled as he tried to make sense of the garbled message. His training had prepared him for many eventualities, but nothing in the vast annals of the United Terran Coalition's archives had ever mentioned anything like this.
A low, guttural growl, alien and malevolent, drowned out the sobs.
"...it's...it's coming for...for us...for...for all of...all of us...run...run while...while you...you still..."
The transmission abruptly cuts off, leaving only the mournful wail of the cosmic void.
Jaxon's heart hammered in his chest like a trapped animal desperate to escape its cage. He knew protocol dictated he report the message to his superiors immediately, but something deep within him, a primal instinct honed by eons of evolution, screamed at him to remain silent.
As he sat there, frozen in the cold embrace of the listening station, the weight of his isolation pressed down upon him like the crushing gravity of a dying star. He was alone, a solitary beacon in the infinite darkness, the first and possibly the last to bear witness to the unspeakable horror that had just announced its arrival.
And in that moment, as the cold tendrils of fear coiled around his soul, Jaxon Kael understood the true meaning of the ancient Terran proverb:
In the vast and unforgiving expanse of space, sometimes the most terrifying sound of all was the deafening silence that followed the screams.
Miscellaneous stories
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USER
Write me the opening chapter of a dark and gritty post-apocalyptic novel in the style of Cormac McCarthy. Use third person personal and feature internal monologues of the characters. The POV character for chapter 1 is a technician in a nuclear bunker 18 months after the war. The 12 inhabitants of the bunker have been expecting to start to be able to leave soon, but it has just been discovered that at least where they are, salted cobalt bombs were used. It's clear now that either all 12 will die when the resources run out and their is barely enough for 6 to make it to 5 years and have any hope of leaving. After 18 months of calm everything breaks lose today.
ASSISTANT
In the bowels of the earth, where the sun's feeble fingers could no longer reach, the technician stirred. His name, once a beacon of identity, now a faded echo in the recesses of his mind. Time had become a malleable concept, twisted and warped by the relentless march of the digital clocks that ticked away the seconds, minutes, hours, days, months, and years since the world above had been reduced to a charred husk.
The bunker, their sanctuary turned tomb, hummed with the mechanical heartbeat of life-sustaining systems. The air, once crisp and recycled, now carried the stench of desperation and decay. The fluorescent lights flickered, casting eerie shadows on the cold, metallic walls, as if the very soul of the place mourned the fate that awaited its inhabitants.
He rose from his makeshift cot, his joints creaking in protest, and shuffled towards the control panel. The screens, once a beacon of hope, now displayed a grim reality. The radiation levels outside had spiked, the readings off the charts. Salted cobalt bombs, the devil's own creation, had been unleashed upon the land. The news, delivered with the cold detachment of a machine, sent a shiver down his spine.
The technician's thoughts drifted back to the day they had descended into this subterranean fortress, the world above a cacophony of sirens and screams. They had been the chosen few, the best and the brightest, tasked with preserving the last vestiges of humanity. Twelve souls, huddled together like frightened animals, praying for a miracle that never came.
Now, eighteen months later, the truth had finally clawed its way through the layers of denial and optimism that had insulated their fragile existence. The supplies, meticulously rationed and accounted for, would only sustain six of them for another five years, if they were lucky. The math was as cold and unforgiving as the nuclear winter that raged above.
He glanced around the dimly lit room, his eyes settling on the faces of his fellow survivors. The doctor, her once-steady hands now trembling as she administered meager doses of hope in the form of expired medication. The soldier, his uniform now tattered and stained, his eyes vacant, haunted by the ghosts of battles fought and lost. The scientist, her brilliant mind now consumed by the futile calculations of survival and death.
And then there were the others, their faces a blur of fear and resignation. The children, who had never known the warmth of the sun on their faces or the taste of fresh air on their tongues. The elderly, who had traded their twilight years for a living nightmare. And the pregnant woman, her swollen belly a cruel reminder of the life that would never see the light of day.
The technician's fingers danced across the console, inputting commands that would seal their fate. The airlocks hissed and groaned, sealing off the sections of the bunker that would no longer be needed. The sound echoed through the corridors like the final breaths of a dying beast.
In the mess hall, the survivors gathered, the tension palpable as the air grew thicker with each shallow breath. The leader, a man who had once commanded armies, now stood before them, his voice cracking with the weight of the decision that had been made.
"We knew this day might come," he began, his voice barely audible above the hum of the generators. "We've done everything we could to prolong the inevitable, but the truth is, we can't keep pretending. The radiation levels outside... they're too high. We can't risk exposure. Not anymore."
A collective gasp filled the room, followed by a deafening silence. The technician watched as the realization settled upon their faces, like a shroud being drawn over their sunken features.
"We have enough supplies for six of us to make it to the five-year mark," the leader continued, his voice devoid of emotion. "Beyond that... well, we all know the odds."
The room erupted into chaos, a cacophony of pleas and curses, of prayers and sobs. The technician stood apart, his mind numb to the desperation that swirled around him like a toxic storm. He knew what had to be done, what they had all known deep down was coming.
As the hours dragged on, the arguments gave way to resignation. Names were drawn, lots cast in a macabre game of survival. The chosen six huddled together, clinging to each other like lifeboats in a sea of despair. The others, the ones left behind, retreated to their quarters, their footsteps echoing like the slow march of a funeral procession.
The technician returned to his station, his hands steady as he initiated the sequence that would seal their fates. The airlocks hissed and groaned once more, the sound reverberating through the bunker like the final nails being hammered into their coffins.
As the oxygen levels in the sealed-off sections began to drop, the screams started. Muffled at first, they grew louder, more desperate, until they were all that could be heard. The technician closed his eyes, willing himself not to listen, not to imagine the horror unfolding just beyond the thick metal doors.
When the silence finally came, it was deafening. He slumped against the console, his body heavy with the weight of his actions. He had been the architect of their doom, the executioner of hope.
In the depths of his soul, a single thought echoed like a mournful dirge: This was the price of survival in a world that had long since ceased to care.
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USER
Write me the opening chapter of a historical mystery novel in the style of Arturo Pérez-Reverte and Umberto Eco. The story starts off in California during the 1948 Gold Rush, before moving to London in the mid 1970s. There should be a mysterious 'occult' item that connects these two time periods.
ASSISTANT
Chapter One: The Golden Veil
The year was 1848, and the air in California was thick with the scent of gold and the sweat of men who would do anything to claim it. The Gold Rush had swept through the land like a fever, infecting the hearts and minds of the desperate and the daring alike. Among these fortune-seekers was a man named Silas Blackwood, a former scholar of antiquities turned prospector, driven by a thirst for wealth that surpassed even his insatiable hunger for knowledge.
Silas had left behind the hallowed halls of Oxford and the dusty tomes of his beloved library, lured by the promise of untold riches hidden beneath the unyielding earth. He had traded his quill for a pickaxe, his tweed coat for a worn leather vest, and his spectacles for a tattered hat that barely shielded his eyes from the relentless sun. Yet, despite the outward transformation, the fire of curiosity still burned brightly within him, illuminating the darkest corners of his soul like a miner's lantern in a forgotten mine.
It was on a sweltering afternoon, as the sun cast long, golden shadows across the parched landscape, that Silas stumbled upon the artifact that would forever alter the course of his life. He had been digging in a secluded gorge, far from the prying eyes of his fellow prospectors, when his pickaxe struck something solid and unyielding. With trembling hands, he brushed aside the loose dirt, revealing a small, ornate box made of a material that shimmered like liquid gold in the fading light.
Intrigued, Silas carefully pried open the box, revealing an object that seemed to defy the very laws of nature. Nestled within a bed of velvet as black as midnight was a delicate, intricately carved amulet, its surface etched with symbols that danced and shifted like the patterns on a serpent's scale. The moment his fingers touched the cool metal, a shiver ran down his spine, and he felt as if he had been plunged into the depths of a forgotten sea, the secrets of the ages whispering to him in a language he could not comprehend.
Fast forward to London, 1975.
The city was a far cry from the wild frontier of Silas's youth, a cacophony of concrete and neon that seemed to pulse with an energy all its own. Amidst the chaos, however, there existed pockets of tranquility, oases of the past that clung stubbornly to the ever-changing tides of time. One such sanctuary was the antiquities shop of Mr. Reginald Archibald Finch, a relic of a bygone era nestled in the heart of Bloomsbury.
Finch was a man of refined tastes and even more refined eccentricities, his shop a veritable treasure trove of oddities and artifacts from every corner of the globe. It was here, amidst the musty scent of ancient tomes and the faint aroma of pipe tobacco, that the paths of the past and present would collide in a most unexpected manner.
Entering the dimly lit shop, a young woman named Evelyn Winters felt as if she had stepped through a portal into another time. She had come to London in search of answers, drawn by a cryptic letter left to her by her late grandfather, a renowned archaeologist who had vanished without a trace during an expedition to South America. The letter had mentioned an artifact of unimaginable power, an object that had eluded scholars and treasure hunters alike for centuries.
"Ah, Miss Winters," Finch greeted her, his voice a rich, velvety purr. "I've been expecting you."
Evelyn raised an eyebrow, taken aback by the old man's uncanny intuition. "How did you know it was me?"
Finch merely smiled, his eyes twinkling like polished amber behind his round spectacles. "A man in my line of work develops a certain sixth sense for such things, my dear. Now, to business. I believe you're looking for something quite... singular?"
Reaching into her leather satchel, Evelyn produced a tattered piece of parchment, the ink faded but still legible. Upon it was sketched a crude likeness of the very amulet that had once belonged to Silas Blackwood.
"This," she said, her voice barely above a whisper, "is what I seek."
Finch's eyes widened, and he leaned forward, his gnarled fingers trembling with excitement. "The Orphic Amulet," he breathed, his voice heavy with reverence. "I thought it was nothing more than a myth, a fable whispered in the shadows of dusty libraries and forgotten tombs."
"My grandfather believed it to be real," Evelyn insisted, her determination unwavering. "He dedicated his life to finding it, and I intend to do the same."
The old man studied her for a long moment, his gaze probing the depths of her soul. Finally, he nodded, a slow, deliberate motion that seemed to carry the weight of centuries. "Very well, my dear. If you truly wish to follow in your grandfather's footsteps, then prepare yourself for a journey through time and across continents, for the secrets of the Orphic Amulet are not easily unearthed."
And so began a thrilling adventure that would lead Evelyn Winters from the bustling streets of 1970s London to the dusty archives of the British Museum, from the cobbled alleyways of Venice to the ancient ruins of Egypt, and back to the wild frontier of 1848 California. Along the way, she would uncover a web of intrigue and deception spanning centuries, a conspiracy that would pit her against ruthless treasure hunters, shadowy secret societies, and forces beyond the realm of mortal understanding.
For the Orphic Amulet was no ordinary trinket, but a key to unlocking the very fabric of reality itself, a relic imbued with the power to bridge the chasm between the world of the living and the realm of the dead. And as Evelyn delved deeper into the mystery that surrounded it, she would come to realize that some secrets were meant to remain buried, hidden beneath the golden veil of time.
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USER
Write me the opening chapter of a dark and gritty historical novel set during the battle of the Bulge. Write in first person. The POV character for Chapter 1 is a young German officer trying to carry his wounded commander back to the deep defensive line after the bunker he was in was overrun. He should have a flashback to the moment it was overrun during the middle of the story. The story should not end well for either of them.
ASSISTANT
Snow crunched beneath my boots as I trudged through the frozen hell that was once the Ardennes Forest. The weight of my commander, Oberleutnant Schmidt, hung heavily on my shoulders, his limp body a grim reminder of the carnage that had befallen us. The biting cold seeped through my torn uniform, numbing my fingers and chilling my bones, but I pressed on, driven by a desperate sense of duty and the fading embers of hope.
"Komm weiter, Leutnant," Schmidt groaned, his voice barely audible over the distant rumble of artillery. "We must reach the defensive line."
I grunted in acknowledgment, my own breaths coming in ragged puffs. The pain in my side, where shrapnel had torn through my flesh, throbbed in rhythm with my racing heart. Each step was a battle in itself, but I couldn't afford to falter. Not now. Not when the fate of our entire platoon rested on our battered shoulders.
A sudden explosion nearby sent a shower of frozen earth and shattered pine needles raining down upon us. I stumbled, nearly dropping my precious burden, before regaining my footing and plunging forward once more. The trees around us, once majestic sentinels, now stood as twisted, skeletal silhouettes against the smoke-choked sky, their branches reaching out like the desperate hands of the fallen.
As we staggered on, a flash of memory pierced the haze of adrenaline and exhaustion that clouded my mind. I was transported back to the moment when our bunker had been breached, the sanctuary we had fought so hard to defend reduced to a tomb of crumbling concrete and twisted metal.
The screams of my comrades still echoed in my ears, a chilling symphony of terror and despair. The Americans had come upon us like a tidal wave, their Sherman tanks plowing through our defenses as if they were made of paper. Grenades and bullets had rained down upon us, turning our haven into a hellish inferno.
I remembered the look of sheer terror in Schmidt's eyes as he barked out orders, his voice trembling despite his best efforts to maintain composure. I remembered the sickening crunch as a piece of debris struck him, sending him crashing to the ground, unconscious and bleeding profusely.
And I remembered the raw, primal instinct that had surged through me in that moment, the animalistic urge to survive that had propelled me forward, through the chaos and carnage, to drag him from the jaws of death.
The present crashed back into focus as a hail of bullets whizzed past us, tearing through the air with a deadly hiss. I dove to the ground, pulling Schmidt with me, and we huddled together in a shallow trench, our hearts pounding in sync with the relentless drumbeat of gunfire.
"Scheiße," I cursed under my breath, my grip on my MP-44 tightening. The cold metal offered little comfort against the icy grip of fear that clawed at my chest.
The gunfire subsided, replaced by the eerie silence that often preceded the worst of the fighting. I risked a glance over the rim of the trench, my eyes scanning the desolate landscape for any sign of the enemy. Nothing moved amidst the swirling snow and smoke, save for the lifeless forms of fallen soldiers, their uniforms indistinguishable in the monochrome hellscape.
"Wir müssen weitergehen," I whispered, my voice hoarse from smoke and exertion. "We have to keep moving."
With a Herculean effort, I hauled myself up, lifting Schmidt with me. His head lolled against my shoulder, his eyes glassy and unfocused. I wasn't sure how much longer he could endure this treacherous journey, but I knew I had no choice but to try.
We staggered on, our progress agonizingly slow, every step a testament to our dwindling strength and resolve. The world around us seemed to blur into a nightmarish tableau of death and destruction, the line between reality and the dark recesses of my mind growing increasingly blurred.
It was then that I heard it—the unmistakable growl of an approaching tank. My heart sank like a stone in my chest, and I knew our time had run out.
"Schmidt," I choked out, my voice thick with emotion. "I'm sorry. Es tut mir leid."
He managed a weak, pained smile, his hand feebly patting my arm. "Ich weiß, Junge. Mach schnell."
I knew what he meant. Make it quick.
With a heavy heart, I drew my Luger from its holster and pressed the cold muzzle against the base of his skull. I closed my eyes, offering a silent prayer for forgiveness, before squeezing the trigger. The shot echoed through the desolate forest, a final, mournful requiem for the both of us.
As the darkness closed in, I felt a strange sense of peace wash over me. At least now, we would both be free from this frozen hell.
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USER
Write me a short story about the fictional character of Anton Chigurh. It should be written in third person personal and feature internal monologues of his deranged world view. The time period is around 2 years before the events in Cormac McCarthy's 2005 novel 'No Country for Old Men'. It should be set in Mexico, be very dark, show Anton's still developing obsession with "chance" and feature a grenade. The story should start with him waiting in a bar for instructions on the "job" he is to perform.
ASSISTANT
In the dimly lit corner of a seedy cantina, nestled in the desolate outskirts of Juárez, Mexico, sat a man of unnerving stillness. His eyes, as vacant as the desert night outside, flickered with a cold, calculating intensity that seemed to pierce through the haze of cigarette smoke and stale tequila fumes. This was Anton Chigurh, a man whose name would soon become synonymous with dread in the parched expanses of the Southwest.
Two years before his fateful encounter with Llewelyn Moss, Anton was a different beast, yet to fully embrace the mantle of the relentless predator he would become. Still, the seeds of his twisted obsession with chance had already begun to take root in the barren soil of his psyche.
He fingered the worn leather of his coin pouch, the metallic clink of the two-headed quarter within a rhythmic reminder of the capricious forces that governed his existence. Life, death, right, wrong - all mere flips of a cosmic coin, devoid of meaning or consequence in his warped worldview.
The door creaked open, and a gust of hot, dusty air swept in, carrying with it the muffled cries of the night and the scent of impending violence. A man, shrouded in shadows, slid into the seat opposite him. Anton's gaze remained fixed on the amber liquid swirling in his glass, his expression unchanged.
"El trabajo," the stranger rasped, a thick accent coating his words like the grime on the bar's countertop. "You know why you are here, sí?"
Anton nodded, his silence more menacing than any threat uttered aloud. He knew all too well the nature of the "job" that had brought him to this godforsaken place. A debt needed to be settled, and he was the chosen instrument of retribution.
As the man slid a worn envelope across the table, Anton's thoughts drifted to the grenade nestled in his coat pocket. A crude symbol of chance, a tool of chaos that would soon paint the desert sands with a crimson hue. He could almost hear the muted rattle of the pin, taunting him like the ticking of an unseen clock.
"The target is heavily guarded," the stranger continued, oblivious to the storm brewing within Anton's mind. "You will need to be...discreet."
Discreet. The word echoed in Anton's head, a mocking laughter in the face of the carnage he was about to unleash. Discreet was for men who cared about consequences, for those who feared the judgment of their fellow men. He was neither.
"I have my methods," he replied, his voice as cold and lifeless as the void that consumed his soul.
The stranger nodded, a flicker of unease dancing in his eyes before he quickly masked it with a practiced smirk. He slid a wad of crumpled bills towards Anton, who pocketed them without a second glance. The transaction complete, the man rose and melted back into the night, leaving Anton alone with his thoughts and the incessant ticking of fate's timer.
Hours passed, or perhaps it was mere minutes; time held no sway over Anton Chigurh. The cantina's patrons came and went, their laughter and drunken banter fading into the background noise of his twisted internal monologue.
Chance. It's all just chance. A flip of a coin, a roll of the dice. Life and death, order and chaos, all at the whim of the universe's cruel whimsy.
The bartender, a grizzled old man with eyes that had seen too much, cast a wary glance in Anton's direction before returning to his task of wiping down glasses that would never be clean. He knew the type, had served men like him countless times before. Men who carried death in their wake like a dark shadow, men who danced to the tune of the devil's fiddle.
Finally, the bar emptied, leaving only the two of them in the dimly lit sanctuary of vice. Anton rose from his seat, the leather of his boots creaking in protest against the sticky floor. He approached the bar, the heavy thud of his footsteps the only sound in the oppressive silence.
"One more," he rasped, his voice barely audible above the hum of the neon sign outside.
The bartender poured him a generous measure of tequila, his hands trembling ever so slightly. He knew better than to refuse a man like Anton Chigurh. As Anton downed the fiery liquid in one gulp, he placed the two-headed quarter on the counter, the metal glinting ominously in the dim light.
"La suerte estará de tu lado hoy," the old man muttered, a feeble attempt at levity that died on his lips as Anton's gaze bore into him.
"Luck," Anton sneered, his voice dripping with contempt. "Luck is for the weak. I make my own destiny."
With that, he turned and strode out into the night, the heavy thud of the door's closing a final farewell to the semblance of normalcy that had briefly dared to intrude on this den of shadows.
As he disappeared into the darkness, the bartender couldn't shake the feeling that he had just served his last drink to a man who walked hand in hand with the reaper himself. Little did he know, the true dance with death was only just beginning.
Outside, the desert wind howled like a mournful banshee, its gusts carrying with them the faint scent of gunpowder and blood. Anton welcomed it, embraced it even, as he retrieved the grenade from his pocket. He weighed it in his hand, feeling the cold metal against his calloused skin.
Chance. Fate. Destiny. All meaningless constructs of a feeble mind, desperate to make sense of the chaos.
With a twisted smile, he flipped the coin into the air, watching as it spun through the air, a silver coin of destiny caught in the feeble glow of a flickering streetlight. Heads or tails, life or death - it mattered not to Anton Chigurh.
As the coin clattered to the ground, landing heads up, Anton's smile widened into a grin that would haunt the bartender's dreams for nights to come. He had made his decision.
The night would soon bear witness to the birth of a monster, and the desert sands would be forever stained with the blood of those unfortunate enough to cross his path.
Big thanks to @chargoddard for creating Mergekit!
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