Category:Works

Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: Sinneslöschen, Pt. 4

September 3rd, 1964

“Oh look. It’s an eagle, here to eat my liver.” Haworth watched Verloc enter his cell from the far corner where he leaned against the wall. He had been spying on Plantagenet while he waited. “Just smashing.”

One side of Verloc’s mouth hitched up at Haworth’s lazy quip. “You’ve told that one before, Prometheus.”

“Yes, well, if you’re going to gas me with your half-baked Joy formula every day, you’ll have to forgive the occasional repeat,” Haworth said, pushing himself off the wall and closing the distance to keep Verloc from venturing too far in. He liked to keep Verloc in the space by the door so as to make him feel both claustrophobic and unwelcome.

“I brought the pills on the off chance that you wanted to make this easier,” Verloc said. He tried to sound nonchalant about it, but Haworth knew he was hoping to be taken up on the offer. That he pulled a jar of medicated healing balm out of his pocket instead gave away that he knew he wouldn’t be.

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: Sinneslöschen, Pt. 3

September 3rd, 1964

Gemma was still sobbing into her pillow when breakfast was served. The nurse slipped in, set the tray on the dresser since the tea table was tipped on its side in front of the observation window, and slipped back out without a word. Gemma guessed she must be trained not to interact with the test subjects when they were especially emotional. Reading Harry Haworth’s patient notes last night, Gemma concluded that if she were a nurse here, she certainly wouldn’t want to get within arm’s reach of him on one of his curiously regular bad days. She sniffled and rolled back out of bed.

Now that the Coconut had settled into a purple tinged sinus headache and she’d collected herself, Gemma was apprehensive of what would happen next. And hungry, actually. She hadn’t eaten last night and she’d worked up an appetite throwing her furniture around. More than anything, though, she was embarrassed.

It was a rookie mistake. Not even twenty-four hours into this subterfuge and she’d already blown her cover.

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: Very Unnecessary

A screenshot of Margaret Oliphant's office at the O' Courant. The perspective is shot from under her desk, where one of her cat paintings is lying hidden.

“I heard you were looking for me, Chief,” Gemma said, leaning in Margaret Oliphant’s office doorway.

“Yes, come in and shut the door,” Margaret said. She was taking one of her cat portraits down from the wall behind its corresponding statuette. Gemma shut the door behind her and perched herself on the edge of Margaret’s desk, crossing one leg over the other. Margaret glanced disapprovingly at Gemma’s cheeky choice of seat, but said nothing about it. Instead, she got to the point.

“We have to retract your article about the Parade being under quarantine,” Margaret said. She lifted her grey cat painting up off the wall and walked it behind her desk to lean it up against a column, far from its usual place.

Another retraction?” Gemma complained. She crossed her arms and grumped. “It’s a wonder I get anything to print at all.”

“I try, but we’ve got the Executive Committee and the Department of Archives going through everything we print with a fine-tooth comb. It’s… unwise to contest whatever “additional context” they wish to provide.”

Gemma sighed. “I’m not blaming you, but if everything I write gets retracted… It’s a good thing no one remembers what they read anymore or I’d have no credibility left at all.”

“Speaking of credibility,” Margaret broached as she pulled out her chair and sat down, “I’ve been meaning to ask how you even got into the Parade without a Letter of Transit.”

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: Sinneslöschen, Pt. 2

September 3rd, 1964

Harry Haworth found first exposure to Coconut Joy fascinating. It did feel cruel to watch new test subjects be given their first dose since no one ever had a good reaction to Coconut, but there was so little else to do in here and he was a scientist after all. Or had been. On good days, he had hopes – which he recognized as delusions on bad days – that he might one day be a practicing scientist again. He wasn’t watching his new cellmates’ reaction to Coconut to be entertained, he could reason with himself, but in the pursuit of knowledge.

He didn’t have access to the data to compare, but Haworth had a theory that the flavor of Joy one was taking before being admitted interacted with Coconut to create different responses. He liked to think, based on absolutely nothing, that his original Vanilla and Chocolate formulas produced mild reactions like giddiness, uncontrollable laughter, and dizziness while Verloc’s Strawberry caused nastier side effects like vomiting and paranoia.

Haworth was miffed at how close he had come to getting to watch this on a clear head. He was due for a dose of Crash after breakfast this morning and if Gemma had arrived today instead of yesterday, he’d have woken up tomorrow clear of all drugs and ready to make some observations. He hadn’t been dosed with Coconut yet today, but a residual sluggishness from yesterday’s dose persisted. On top of that, he was hungry. Out of experience and anxiety, he only ever picked at his food the night before and the morning of a Crash dose. As it was, he’d have to consciously ignore these distractions. Pulling his chair over a few inches from its usual spot, Haworth sat just far enough over so that he could see into Gemma’s window without looking like he was gawking.

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: Tempus Frangit

A screenshot of the control panel of the excavator in the motilene mines under Apple Holm.

“Hey, Jimmy? Can I talk to you for a minute?” George Villiers asked.

Jim Watt, Chief Engineer of the Motilene Mines, looked up from his clipboard and flashed an agreeable smile. “Sure, George. What can I do you for?”

George worried the inside of his lip. “Could we go somewhere private? The control room, maybe?”

Jim nodded, but his affable smile shifted into a look of concern. “Is something wrong?” he asked, leading the way up the stairs.

“No,” George said. He rubbed the back of his neck nervously. “I just need to tell you something.”

Jim swiped his keycard to unlock the door and gestured for George to walk in first. George took the invitation and waited for the door to close behind Jim, shutting them off from the rest of the mine.

“What is it, George?” Jim asked.

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: Cusses of Coppers

A screenshot of Constable Burne-Jones' conspiracy board in his room at the Avalon Hotel.

“Well, Constable,” Inspector Royston Luckinbill said, “what do you make of this?” They had the details from the latest murder attributed to Foggy Jack laid out on the table, ready to be integrated into their investigation boards.

“It don’t fit the M.O. at all,” Constable Burne-Jones told him, shaking his head at the photos and objects arrayed before him. “Foggy Jack’s murders are messy hack-and-slash affairs. This is much too clean to be him. There’s not even any blood. Not to mention the lack of toxic fog. Foggy Jack always leaves his victims in a patch of pea soup, don’t he?”

“Could perhaps the mustard gas be an improvised toxic cloud?” Luckinbill asked, purposely attempting to mislead him.

Burne-Jones shook his head again. “It’s a remote possibility, but not likely. Foggy Jack doesn’t actually use the fog to kill his victims. It’s more of a calling card than anything. The murders themselves are done with the cleaver. And that’s another thing. He never kills in the Garden District. There ain’t no attention in it.”

“Spot on,” Luckinbill praised. “We’ll make a detective of you yet. What else is wrong with this picture?”

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: A Bodyguard of Lies

A screenshot from inside one of Haworth Labs' glass cells.

“How are we feeling today, Dr. Haworth?” Dr. Hughes asked. He tented his fingers and loomed over Harry Haworth, who sat up straight and resolute at his tea table.

“Fine,” Haworth lied, willing himself to control his shuddering. He was not fine and he knew Dr. Hughes knew that, but they did this dance of plausible deniability every four days.

“Are you sure that’s the most… accurate description for how you’re feeling?” Dr. Hughes asked. “People who are fine do not usually throw hot tea on their nurses.”

“People who are fine don’t usually need nurses, and yet here we are,” Haworth retorted flatly. She’d chosen the wrong day to comment on his extra tea biscuit. He had no patience to spare today.

“Eventually there won’t be any nurses left to care for you. Your behavior is in dire need of correction,” Dr. Hughes said in thinly veiled threat.

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: The Heresy of an Age of Reason

A screenshot from inside the receptionist booth of the Reform Club.

Today, Rodney was shadowing Valerie, the Reform Club’s hostess, at the front door.

“Working the door is about maintaining safety and security, greeting our members, making sure everyone is paid up on their dues, and – most importantly – making a quick assessment of each client’s needs each night so that you can give their handler a heads up on anything different they might need to account for.” Rodney’s face fell a bit, surprised by how much more work the door seemed to be. “You thought I just stood here making goggle-y eyes at Constable Rowlandson all night, didn’t you?” Valerie teased. She and the constable shared a chuckle at Rodney’s expense and her pun. “Don’t worry. It’s easier than it sounds.”

“In general, there’s two kinds of people who come to the club,” she explained. “First are the socialites. These are your Sally Boyles, your Dr. Verlocs – don’t ever call him Anton when he’s here – and your Nick Lightbearers.” She ticked each dropped name off on her rubber-gloved fingers. “Before he trashed the Rumpus Room anyway,” she added with annoyance, revoking the finger she’d marked Nick off on. “They’re not really here for most of our services. This is just a nightclub with a kinky theme to them.”

“So they’re poseurs?” Rodney asked, leaning against the counter to mimic Valerie’s stance.

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: Sinneslöschen, Pt. 1

September 2nd, 1964

“Right this way, Miss Olsen,” Dr. Hughes said. He led Gemma down a long, dimly lit hall and carried her suitcase for her. There were doors on the left side, each with a thick sliding bolt lock. Gemma noted these with some trepidation. When they reached the end of the hall and the last door, Dr. Hughes slid the bolt on it and pulled it open. The other side of the door didn’t look like a door at all, but a paneled wall.

Dr. Hughes gestured for her to enter the small room on the other side of the disguised door. Gemma was having second thoughts about this ruse of hers. She had lied about developing Joy intolerance in order to get into Haworth Labs’ personalized care program. It was the only way to find out exactly what happened to the other people who went into the program and seemingly never came out. Now that she was in this tiny, very bright, all white room, she realized she may have made a mistake.

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Twenty-Two Short Films About Wellington Wells: Everything on Evidence

A screenshot of the Department of Science and Industrial Research's project floor. There is a prototype Floaker in the foreground.

“He’s not even a scientist,” Anton Verloc said. He glanced dismissively around at the party to celebrate the opening of The Department of Scientific and Industrial Research. “He makes kitchen gadgets for bored housewives.” He sneered at Richard Arkwright, who was chatting animatedly with Lionel Castershire. Verloc felt Castershire had even less business being here.

“Richard Arkwright,” Harry Haworth leaned in and said to Verloc in a lowered tone, “is the smartest person in this room.” That was saying something, considering the entirety of Wellington Wells’ scientific community was in attendance. Haworth had brought Verloc to this party to introduce him to those who would become his colleagues. Scientific endeavors in Wellington Wells were often a collaborative effort, so it would behoove the boy to do some networking.

“He doesn’t even have a doctorate,” Verloc said, rolling his eyes. Haworth watched in annoyance as they landed on the starry-eyed shop girl Stewart Adams had crassly brought instead of his wife, Fiona. He did note with reluctant approval that the girl had the presence of mind to forgo flirting with Dr. Faraday and engage his wife in conversation instead.

“No, he does not,” Haworth said patiently. “What he does have is the good sense to leave the future in the future instead of promising it tomorrow like the rest of us do.”

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for the WIP ask game... The Future Is Still Silver and Black? (original train fiction from you two sounds really interesting!)

So last year, I went up north to visit Ray. Ray lives in Chicago, which just so happens to have the largest railway museum in the United States, the Illinois Railway Museum.

At the IRM, we saw the Nebraska Zephyr, which is a streamlined stainless steel articulated trainset. Each of the… [more]

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  • Untitled December 29, 2024
    "The Future is Still Silver and Black" 1975 update is here! thefutureisstillsilverandblack.neocities.org/1975. New letters, illustrations, engine info, and the postcard we sent the Flying Yankee this year. Our boys are sporting @amtrak.com and @chicagocta.bsky.social's holiday sweaters for 2024!
  • Untitled December 13, 2024
    Look what they had at @msichicago.bsky.social's holiday shop at the Naughty or Nice party last night!
  • Untitled December 8, 2024
    Got my IRL Christmas decorations up too! @nomercyforswine.neocities.org and I are finishing up the last two letters for 1975 and aim to have the next update done for the holidays. #tfissab