November 15, 2009

Swapping

It was the odd swapping of the multi-point wand in and out of the left branch point that hand me curious. I began to concentrate on the other branch point whenever the points would appear at the left. The single edge of the second wand was composed of much different material, mainly Twenty-Sixes and a few Twenty-Eights.

Regularly spaced Sixes caused the network of Twenty-Sixes to contort itself into a structure that allowed for little, if any wiggle. The single edge was of a fineness unlike any recorded observation, and when in use by the right long branch point, it was engaged in the splitting and shortening many different odd masses. Most of which still had the hallmark Seven-Six-Six-Seven-Six-Six chain, although shorter.

Each time the edge of the wand came in contact with its target, it was plain that the target was much more agitated and jumpy than the edge. While the edge did alter slightly, the rigid matrix of Twenty-Sixes refused to change shape in response, and as each contact event occurred, the agitation level of the target was observed to fall.

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