Subject: 'Telekinesis?'
Author:
Posted on: 2016-04-30 06:04:00 UTC

Bingle said, eyebrows attempting to shoot off his face and into the ceiling.
‘Good heavens. The University’s been working on that for decades!’
It was clear that this ‘Friendship is Magic’ place was years ahead of Bingle’s home. Now he knew how World One fellows felt when they encountered Finch.
Bingle didn’t even want to know what a unicorn horn was made of to perform such a complex, strenuous task without any breakages, reality or structural.

‘Right. I need,’ He muttered to himself, patting his pockets down.
‘Of course, pen,’ He mumbled, pulling one from his front pocket (he had put it there for that business-like look it gave him. To Bingle, it said ‘I’m ready to sign my signature, come rain or shine,’ and there was nothing more professional, Bingle knew, than signing signatures.)

‘Of course, our channel,’ He said, grabbing a nearby serviette.

‘Er. A ruler.’
He glanced around, grabbed a particularly rigid looking hamantaschen, and raised an eyebrow.
‘Or a straight object, I suppose.’

He slapped the tools down on a table, and wracked his brain for information.
Lines and angles ran through his skull, as he nibbled on a corner of the hamantaschen.

‘Right, okay,’ He murmured, getting to work. He would occasionally shoot a glance at Finch, who was, currently, it seemed, in a very deep and harsh debate with his own emergency malfunction ai.

This would be a fairly simple one. A ten by seven centimetre rectangle inside of a four by four centimetre square.
Easy.

Realistically, drawing a rectangle and a square would have taken eight strokes of a pen combined, which was exactly why things started to get strange when Bingle finally put his pen down at the nineteenth stroke.

He held it up and admired his handiwork.
Bingle gazed into the universe, and the universe gazed into him.
Rumbling moans and coughs crawled into his ears through seams in existence.
Sightless and brainless gelatinous monstrosities, swimming and devouring and groaning through the eternal nothingness regarded him with apathetic pseudopods.
For a split second, everything was dead.
The walls had crumbled into nothingness, flesh gave way to bones which gave way to dust, the Flowers wilted away into air.
Reality gave up and let entropy devour it.
It only took nineteen strokes to create such damage in existence.
Bingle wondered how much damage the aeons could create, then.
Even Bingle himself, who was immune to the ever tenacious rubber mallet of time that thwacked away at mortals until they gave in, would fall. Trip over a rock and brain himself, catch fire somewhere, get eaten by a tiger.
There would be nothing left but emptiness and moaning.

Bingle blinked, grinned, and ate the hamantaschen.
Mister Grandcocke would have given him an A+ for this one, he thought, chewing.

‘Here it is,’ He said cheerfully, extending it towards Violet, who seemed the most fascinated by it.
‘You might see something queer, but don’t dwell on it. It’s nothing.’
He leaned in.
‘The best way to go mad is to dwell on nothing, after all.’
Bingle’s smile was almost disgusting in its sincerity.

[[OOC: Oi, cheers. That means a lot.
Honestly, I'd probably react the same way. Dogs don't normally turn into unicorns where I'm from, but maybe I'm just narrow-minded.]]

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