#i just repeated an entire paragraph from a previous application almost word-for-word
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if thereās a plagiarism checker for cover letters then iām in trouble
#i just repeated an entire paragraph from a previous application almost word-for-word#survived turnitin my entire degree like a spy dodging laser beams
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š hmmmmmm?
ok, the WIP itself is going under a cut because itās pretty long, but the explanation will stay up here above it.
so the premise was that i wanted more practice with experimental storytelling because, iāll be honest, i was in a weird place mentally and thatās one way i work shit out. so i did the thing everyone else who writes for the TF2 motherfuckers does and i messed with the understood conventions of Respawn. the idea was that Respawn does three things: first of all, it brings people back from the dead and to a previous save state of them, a singular state at a specific age for all of them. this means that none of them age, because every time they die, that counter just restarts. second, it erases basically all memory from before they died--it resets them to a state before theyād made those memory pathways. then the team often catches up whoever died on what all happened, and they believe it at face value. however, if the whole team dies, theyāre basically entirely reset. and thirdly, the system has tweaked them in a very specific way; none of them are very prone to asking questions, and none of them are very prone to going anywhere off-base.
the idea was, there would be a singular repeating opening to every single chapter--or maybe three respawns per chapter or so, depending on length--and every time, one or two words would be tweaked just a little bit in a weird game of telephone. there would be slight deviations in one direction or another, elaborating in different ways, with two constants: seven days after Scout last died he would realize he was in love with Sniper, and that never, ever, ever would they interact or witness a human being besides the ones on the team. this is because scoutās save state is that heās trapped shortly before he realizes heās in love, and because the team has no concept of time outside of their base, and unbeknownst to them, the world outside of their little sphere has ended, and theyāve been fighting in the gravel pits for hundreds of years. the announcer is just pre-recorded messages, the other team is also caught in the same system, the bases are entirely self-sufficient, and none of them know that the rest of the world has died.
i realized 1. i could run with this concept literally forever, and this would be like 100k words, and i do not have the time or energy to ever run with it for that long i would Literally Die, 2. i could probably adapt the concept in some ways to be applicable to original work that i could then potentially make money off of because i do think the ideaās pretty good, and then eventually 3. Oh Wait I Sort Of Wrote This Already, I Did A Whole Play On Time Travel, Like A Groundhog Day Thing, I Canāt Do This Again Iāll Die
but since iām almost positive iāll never finish it, hereās the work i already have featuring the editing notes as well. the working title wasĀ āLoops!AUā. literally absolutely feel free to run with this idea
1. His name is Mickey Lawrence Mundy, and heās thirty-one years old, and heās been a smoker for fifteen of those years. Heās tall by American standards and short by Australian, and his parents hate his chosen career path and fashion choices, and his favorite holiday is Halloween because itās in the fall, his favorite season.
Not a single one of those details would ever be important, out here in the desert far from everywhere, fighting and killing.
The missions start and stop abruptly with little warning, sometimes heralded by the sound of a little motorcycle carrying a girl whoās worth a hundred times her weight in danger, but generally not. He always goes with, even when heās not so terribly needed, because heās told to and he gets paid if he does. He hasnāt checked his back account balance in almost two years. He knows itās probably giving some poor Swiss intern a stress ulcer just looking at it. Rarely does something memorable happen, at most one of his teammates getting taken out and needing to be retrieved, but usually not much of anything at all. Theyāre important though, apparently. Thatās how heās getting so much money.
His teammates are as remarkable as they are unremarkableāso oddly human despite being absolute freakshows, much like himself. Heād argue with the Spy, avoid the Medic, try and keep the Pyro in his line of sight, and tended to get pestered by the Scout since he was the only person who wouldnāt actively chase him off.
But that last one has been acting strange lately. Itās been a few days since the last mission, which generally makes him pretty antsy, but this is a different sort. Heās been staring at Sniper a lot, eyes sharp from underneath the shade of the brim of his hat, like a wild cat hiding in the brush.
Dangerous, is the word heās looking for.
2. His name is Mickey "Mickā Mundy, and heās thirty-one years old, and heās been bitten by more exotic animals than most people have even seen with the scars to prove it. Heās tall by American standards and short by Australian, and his parents donāt pick up the phone for him anymore for some reason, and his favorite season is the fall because itās got his favorite holiday stuck smack dab in the middle.
Not a single one of those details would ever be important, out here in the desert far from everywhere, fighting and killing.
The missions start and stop abruptly with little warning, sometimes heralded by the sound of a little motorcycle carrying a girl whoās worth a hundred times her weight in danger, but generally not. He always goes with, even when heās not so terribly needed, because heās told to and he gets paid if he does. He hasnāt checked his back account balance in quite some time. He knows itās probably giving some poor Swiss intern a stress ulcer just looking at it. Rarely does something memorable happen, at most one of his teammates getting taken out and needing to be retrieved from Respawn, but usually not much of anything at all. The missions are important though, apparently. Thatās how heās getting so much money.
His teammates are as remarkable as they are unremarkableāso oddly human despite being absolute freakshows, much like himself. Heād argue with the Spy, avoid the Medic, try and keep the Pyro in his line of sight, and tended to get pestered by the Scout since he was the only person who wouldnāt actively chase him off.
But that last one has been acting strange lately. Itās been a few days since the last mission, which generally makes him pretty antsy, but this is a different sort. Heās been staring at Sniper a lot, eyes sharp from underneath the shade of the brim of his hat, like someone who knows exactly who he is and exactly what heās been hired to do and is just making sure he only takes out the intended targets, or else.
Dangerous, is the word heās looking for.
[[every time Sniper dies and gets reset, change tiny little details about the paragraph above, like a game of telephone, deleting more and more information along the way. have sniper remember details about scout that he shouldnāt know, or circumvent earlier problems without thinking about itāex. scout has an allergic reaction to something sniper cooks and later sniper cooks a different meal even though previous conversation is borderline identical. have one or two times where scout and sniper get in an argument because one of them died but the other didnt and they donāt remember each other correctly]]
[[final chapter scene, scout shows up frazzled, some conversation, deviating an awful lot from previous scripts]]
āRemember Woodstock?ā Scout asked, tilting his head. āRemember when that was a thing that happened, and it was a big fuckinā deal, all sorts of magazines talkinā about it, it was on TV and everything?ā
āYeah,ā Sniper agreed, nodding.
āBut do you remember what year that was?ā
āWell,ā Sniper said, āI,ā Sniper said, āI, well, obviously it was fairly recent.ā
āUh-huh,ā Scout said, and it wasnāt encouraging.
āHad to be, what, three or four years ago?ā
āWeird, because, uh, because the DocāI asked him about it, right?āhe said it had to have been a few months ago. And Spy said it had to have been almost a decade ago. And Mumbles didnāt know what I was talkinā about.ā
There was silence for a few long seconds.
āBecauseābecause the thing isāā Scout scrubbed at his hair underneath his hat. āāI, I had that written down. I wrote that down, I, I scratched it a good quarter-inch into solid wood planks. Yāknow those planks, on the underside of a bedframe? Right where a mattress goes? I uh, I was cleaning under my bed for once, and Iād apparently scratched it under there. Justājust four words. āAsk Spy About Woodstockā. Thatās it. Andāand he started talkinā about it like it had to have happened, like, before I wouldāve even known what that was, when I was a kid or somethinā. And Iām just wonderingāIāā Scout was finally starting to really stumble, and his gaze kept drifting, snapping back, disorientation settling into the furrow between his eyebrows like rain on cracked desert earth. āIām just wondering how the hell I donāt remember doinā that.ā
He swallowed hard, and it took several seconds to sink in, the weight of his words. āYouā¦ā Sniper started to say, and couldnāt find the last part of the thought.
āMe?ā Scout prompted, almost desperately, and how long had Sniper been standing there, jaw gaping?
āSnipes?ā Scout prompted from through what sounded like a glass of water, snapping his fingers in front of Sniperās nose a few times, jolting him back toā
āSnipes!ā Scout said far too loudly, and Sniper flinched, and resurfaced with a thought.
āWhy,ā Sniper asked, ādid you write it down somewhere so hidden? Who were you worried would find it before you?ā
āAnd did I write it down somewhere else, and it *did* get found, and thatās why itās so hard to think about?ā Scout finished.
Silence for a few seconds.
āDid⦠you write anything else?ā Sniper asked, voice thin.
āThatās the thing,ā Scout said, voice thin from a slightly different direction. āBecause, see, I did write somethinā else, but I didnāt need to find that writing to have known somethinā was up. Becauseāā
There was silence for a few seconds, a few more.
āDo I⦠know you from somewhere?ā Scout asked.
He wasnāt even looking at Sniper, but his eyes were a shade ofā
āBecause it feels like just⦠the way you talk, the, the way *we* talkāā
It was dimly lit in the camper, but his hair shone in the light of the sunriseāthe sunsetātheābonfireāsunset?āsunārise?
āIt just feels⦠familiar.ā
He was softāhe was tenseāhe was softāhad he ever even touched Scout before?āhe looked tenseāhe looked soft.
āIt feels like Iāve met you somewhere before.ā
He looked tense.
āIs it you?ā
āWhat?ā Sniper asked.
āItās you, isnāt it?ā His voice trembled. āItās all your fault. Youāre the one doing this. Whyāwhy the hell else would I have scratched in your name?ā
āWhat?ā Sniper asked.
āButābut it canāt be you,ā Scout started, talking himself back again. āIt canāt be you because itāsāitās not just āSniperā scratched down there. When did you tell me? Why did you tell me? Whyād I hide it?ā
āWhat?ā Sniper asked.
Scout looked at him, gaze hard enough, fragile enough, glass, sheets of ice, that he fought to find more words.
āWhat are you talking about? Is it⦠what did you find?ā
Scout looked at him, gaze soft enough, firm enough, decades-old-mattress, rotting springs, that he didnāt dare say anything else.
āIām gonna ask you a few questions here,ā Scout said, voice wobbly.
Sniper nodded.
āWhatās the last thing you remember?ā
Sniper thought. āI ate a sandwich at the base before I walked over here,ā he supplied.
āBefore that.ā
āTook a shower and all that, fresh off Respawn.ā
āBefore that.ā
āWell, woke up in the Respawn room.ā
āBefore that.ā
āWell, I⦠I died,ā Sniper shrugged.
āHowād you die?ā
Sniper was
Sniper
Sniper was
āHowād you die?ā Scout asked again, almost exactly the same way.
āWell, Iā¦ā Sniper started to say. āā¦I donāt remember. Probably shot in the head. That happens a lot, I get shot in the head.ā
āLet me ask another question,ā Scout said. āI come bug you a lot, donāt I?ā
āYeah,ā Sniper agreed.
āWhenās the longest time Iāve hung out over here?ā
āWell, that had to have beenā¦ā Sniper started to say. āWell, obviously itās the time when weā¦ā Sniper started to say.
āWhen weā¦?ā Scout prompted.
āIā¦ā Sniper said.
āIāll ask something else,ā Scout said, paced one way, then changed his mind and stepped back again. āWe get sent to the other bases sometimes. Remember that?ā
āRight. Right!ā Sniper said, clinging to the scrap of clarity. āWe go to a different base every few months until it gets destroyed.ā
āAnd those places have names,ā Scout supplied.
āYes!ā
āWhat were some of them?ā
Sniper looked at him. āWell, there was⦠and⦠there was a cold one, with⦠or aā¦ā
Scout looked at him.
āThereāwith the, with the buildings, and theā¦ā
Scout looked at him.
Sniper looked around his immediate surroundings for clues. He spotted a picture tacked to his wall, blurry and faded and indistinct and damaged, and took a breath, and words wouldnāt come out of his mouth.
āYou call your family often?ā Scout supplied.
āI do.ā
āWhen did you last call?ā
Sniperās head felt like the picture tacked to his wall.
āJust one more question.ā
Sniper looked up at Scout.
āWhatās your name?ā Scout asked.
āM-Michaelāā
No, that wasnāt right.
āMitch, MitchelāMitchāā
No.
āRichā?ā
No, it was,
āMikeāā
No.
No.
Scoutās face was a one-way mirror. āItās not any of those,ā he said, as if Sniper didnāt know. āItās somethinā else.ā
He was right.
āYour nameās Mickey,ā he said, āLawrence,ā he said, āMundy,ā he said, āand I think we might be some of the only people alive on the planet.ā
āAnd I think,ā Scout said, āthat weāre stuck here, repeating things over and over.ā
āAnd I think,ā Scout said, āthat weāve both been the same age as when we were hired for a long, long time, and we keep getting set back to that age.ā
āAnd I think,ā Scout said, āthat you stuck me at this age on purpose.ā
āWhy,ā Sniper asked, āwould I⦠what, whatās special about it? Why would I pick this age for you? If Iāwhat makes you think that Iām doing it, and that I would?ā
āBecause I think that every time I wake up after being shot in the head, a few days later, I realize Iām in love with you.ā
āWhat makes you think that?ā Sniper asked next.
āBecause I realized it again when I saw your name, and it felt like dĆ©jĆ vu. And Iām lookinā at your shoulders, and I remember exactly what they feel like when I wrap my arms up around them, and how your stubble feels, and what your laugh feels like when Iāve got a hand against your chest, even though I canāt remember ever having touched you in my goddamn life.ā
Silence. Sniper felt his breath catching in his chest.
āThatās not possible,ā Sniper said, and felt his mind shifting away into denial. āYouāre delusional. Iāmāthereās just something wrong with our heads.ā
āOf course itās impossible. *None* of this is possible,ā Scout said, voice scorched. āItās not possible to remember feeling things that Iāve never felt before. Just like itās not possible to be brought back to life, after being shot in the head.ā
-
and that's the end of what i have written for this. so there you go
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