May 5, 2010

Monster At Work

Keeping my distance, I watched the monster undulate and pulse as it began rotating about the attraction zone, eventually dropping in and locking on to the filled structure below. Once settled, the internal vibrations changed. There was little choice, since the interaction between the meshworks effectively made them a single unit. One can not help but influence the other.

Somehow, the bandoleer of Sixes and Ones was being shifted in is carriage track, and a One-Six-One was being popped off the working end. The shroud of the monster and the complexity of the Seven-Six-Six backbone hid the inner workings from detailed inspection, but that was no matter. When you've seen the inputs and the output for one of these monster processes, you can figure out what happened, even if you're unsure of how.

Sensing a shift in the monster's wave emissions, I began to back away, taking mini-hops at a leisurely rate. The Eights were cooperating nicely, and I was having little difficulty maintaining the split soup/mesh travel mode. Keeping focus on the monster, it once again, separated from the base meshwork and began to rear up. Releasing the modified wiggle-tail 5-ring, the working surface went vertical, preparing to spin and drop once again.

No comments: