April 11, 2010

Moving Mistake

The Eights emerged on the inner surface of the meshwork, and I struggled to keep the Seven burried. After locking the Eights down in preparation for split mode, I brought the Seven up and helped it loose a One and become soup compatible. Now that I had a clear view, I began scanning into this mesh zone. I picked up the Seven=Six-Seven-One pattern in abundance.

I noticed that my position was not entirely stable, and began to move about a bit, letting the Eights do their roll-along-the-meshwork thing. Stability improved and then got worse. I kept moving to gain a good position and it would become unstable in a short time. I turned my attention to the meshwork only to realize that I had let the Eights polarize the mesh as they rolled along. It was disintegrating and opening to the outside.

The high concentration of tagged rings with their odd Seven=Six-Seven-One pattern began to move through the opening at an increasing rate as the outer and inner soups merged. Realizing that there was little left to learn, I released the meshwork and joined the exodus, mingling with the rings and the Seven ends that made these triple-Seven creations such soup slippers. The shared internal patterns and ring structure made these molecules leap from one another to quickly form a wavefront of uniform density. It would be only a short time before the entire area outside the meshwork was fully populated with these tagged 5-rings.

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