Archived entries for Groupthink


I’m Steel Baby.

by W.M. Butler


I stood looking out the window from the eleventh floor of my apartment building; in this monstrosity of a city the Chinese had named Shanghai. Gazing out at cumulus clouds, stained orange by a bloody sun, hanging listless in an anemic sky.  The clouds as if formed by the ink glands of giant octopi were left to hang heavy, brooding over the charcoal smeared silhouettes of the city’s skyscrapers.

I swiped my hand across the horizon and was startled when it remained untouched, the view was clearly at odds with reality. It took me a moment to adjust, to make the connection between what my eyes were seeing and what my brain was telling me I saw. The view from the window was eerie ­— beautiful yet troubling. I couldn’t look away. I realized that I was humming softly to myself. I forced myself to stop.

My eyes lingered a moment on the wreck of a horizon, then as I cast my gaze downwards towards the street I flinched, shaking myself awake. My head swam with half remembered dreams. Nightmares. The streets were in chaos. Cars lay overturned — burning, smoldering bodies lay in piles. Mobs of people scavenged and dug through twisted metal and human remains.

I watched as a woman clutched the body of a small child to her breast. The child was mangled, its intestines pulled and stretched out across the sidewalk, trailing out into the street.

I could hear the screech of sirens and further away the horrible screaming of loss, pain and fear. In the distance buildings burned, people ran through the streets, looting, killing each other. Others just wandered aimlessly or stood staring at nothing, raising their hands to the skies to pray, to damn, to curse. All of them, the sick, the dying, the killers and the thieves; they all played their part yet each one of them had a hounded look as if they were being hunted. As if they were waiting for something or someone.

With one hand pressed to the window, the other holding a cup of coffee I watched as the world went mad. I raised the cup taking a moment to savor the rich, heady aroma. Then took the last drink. It was the last cup made from the last grounds I had left. Black. Strong. The cup was empty. I couldn’t help but think that the cup was now meaningless. Its soul purpose was to hold coffee. There wasn’t any coffee left to hold thus the cup no longer had any purpose.

If I wanted to survive I knew I would have to let go of the things in my life that held no meaning or that served no purpose. I let the cup drop. It hit the floor and shattered.

I turned from the window and lit a cigarette. My mind started to wonder, twisting itself inside out asking questions, formulating plans and thinking about all the people I knew. If I could only save them, find them. I started to feel the fear creep in—

NO! I had to let it all go. I had to be strong. I wiped everything from my mind. I started turning it into steel. Steel was strong. Hard. If I wanted to survive I would have to be like steel. Steel was useful. It had a purpose. The fear for my family, my friends, the anger at what had happened or was happening to them; it was nothing.

They were already dead or would be soon. I was steel. I felt nothing, feared nothing. I was steel and I would forge myself into a sword, a blade. A weapon.

A dull thumping started pounding in my head, started getting louder—

No, not in my head, it was the door. Somebody was pounding on my door. Frantic, desperate pounding. I stood looking at the door on the eleventh floor in my apartment, in this monstrosity of a city the Chinese had named Shanghai trying to fight off the rushing sensation of claustrophobia. The room closed in, I had to fight it. I took a drag off my cigarette, exhaled slowly and counted back from five.

Four — three — two — one.

I walked towards the door. Carefully I put my eye to the peephole, making sure my body was angled to the side instead of the door’s center.

It was a man that beat my door, yelling incoherently in Chinese. I could only make out something about him seeing me — seeing me from the street. He was a mess, all tattered clothes. Soot and grim covered his face. He had a small bloody wound on his forearm. He was weeping, screaming, begging for me to let him in.

Suddenly he knew I was there, watching him from the other side of the door. He must have noticed a minor shift in light through the tiny lens. His pounding turned to clawing. He stuck his eye to the peephole vainly hoping to see inside. As quietly and as slowly as possible I reached my right hand behind my back and pulled out the revolver from my jeans. Carefully, I raised it to the peephole. I cocked the hammer. I pulled the trigger.

I waited, listening for any sound from the man.

Nothing.

I lowered the gun to my side and peered through the newly blasted hole in my door. The man lay sprawled on the floor, his brains splattered across the hallway, his left hand still twitching. What remained of his face and head was a pulpy mass of chuck beef. He was dead. No doubt about it. As dead as could be.

You couldn’t be too careful, not now. Not anymore. I did the man a favor. I had seen wounds like the one on his forearm before, on other people. He was infected. He would have turned sooner or later. I opened the chamber of my revolver. Five bullets left. A strange smile curled my lips.

I spoke out loud for the first time in weeks.

I’m steel baby. Yeah, a weapon.

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Groupthink – the Last Cup of Coffee in Shanghai

Quick! What’s the first thought that jumps into your mind when you hear the phrase ‘the last cup of coffee in Shanghai’?

If you said ‘suicide’ then sign on the dotted line. You’re the perfect candidate to be a HAL writer.

This week’s Groupthink exposed the morbid side of HAL as an eerie 6 out of 7 contributors chose to end their writings on a suicidal note (on paper, not in real life thank dog). From a suicidal lover, to a zombie slaying coffee addict and back  to caffeinated  murder/suicide.

The open-ended nature of Groupthink is calculated to give authors the freedom to do what they will with the assigned theme. Part of the appeal is in seeing what writers do with it. This week saw an intriguingly melancholy convergence. Strange…Read on…

i am steel babyby Owsley Beck
Caffeinated zombie slayer Owsley is a weapon. Steel baby!

No Sugarby Ginger wRong
Ginger wRong serving it up bitter and unadulterated.

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No Sugar

by Ginger wRong

It was a beautiful morning. The sky was clear blue, the sun quietly shone onto my bed, the breeze stroked my face, just like he would do to me had he been home. Half asleep half awake, I reached out to the other side of the bed, whispering his name, “A’Le…A’Le…”  No answer. The emptiness pulled me out of my dream. I opened my eyes and said to the imaginary him, “I miss you, so so much!”  Then I shut my eyes tight, so I could see him speaking softly to me, he said, “I know, babe, I miss you too,”  his eyes brimming with affection. “Just wait a few more hours, I am coming. I will see you soon.” I said, He smiled, his typical one-eye-winking naughty smile,  that kind of smile that had never failed to make me smile.

A big day for me, finally I was gonna see my dear A’Le again. No more sleepless long nights, no more tears soaked up by the pillows, no more imagining him lying by my side. It was the day I was going to leave Shanghai, the city where me and A Le fell in love and had spent so many significant moments of our lives together. It was time to say good-bye to this city. We were going to reunite again in a different place.

I was ready and a bit nervous. Before I leave, I decided I would like to have my last cup of coffee according to my and A’Leʼs morning routine. For our morning coffee, I was in charge of warming up the milk, he would be in charge of grinding the beans. Every morning, he would ask me, “Honey, how fine you want the beans?” I would answer, “As fine as you.”

Then I would ask him,”Honey, how hot you want the milk to be?” He would answer, “As hot as you.” Then we would laugh a little, and in five minutes, we were enjoying our first sips of the coffee that day. Happy.

Of course, that morning, it was only me, So I had to warm up the milk and grind the beans by myself. It took me longer, but the coffee was great, strong and rich, just the way we liked our coffee to be, I also poured him a cup, because I knew he was making one for me also at the other side of the world. I knew he was waiting, waiting for me to go.

I finished the last drop of my last cup of coffee in Shanghai. I rose, walked to the balcony and jumped.

Falling down from the twentieth floor, I saw A’Le waving hello to from the other side of the world. I smiled before meeting the pavement.

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Groupthink – Superhero saves Shanghai

HAL writer Mr. Murakami (“Make that just ‘Murakami’ please.”) is proud presenter of this week’s topic: superhero saves Shanghai! Turns out our writers define ‘save’ in interesting ways, including extensive destruction of public property, slaughtering construction site management, and shooting tequila with the devil. The kind of stuff you need permission from your local 公安局 for. For HAL and E.Snow it’s classic communist pastime for the masses, the kind of stuff we teach our kids,  延安 1942 mfs, been there, done that.

Flee the Childrenby Betty P
The Anti-Lei Feng is born! In a world of xiaowangzi, this little hero wreaks righteous havoc to the mother of all oppressors: Disney English Class.

The Fearsome Min’gong Manby B.
Straight outta Funan, this mean mf must not have paid attention to his village party secretary: ‘There will be no unlawful petitioning’. HAL supports that. Little does the Mingong-man listen. Based on a true story B. tells us.

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Groupthink – Comedy

Hahahahahahahahaha:

Leaving the Seat Down by Ling’ling

White China Girlby Antique Rice

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Groupthink – Xiamen's Keith Richards

A HAL classic – we present you our favorite barman on the mainland, serving the people with cheap booze for millenia, and awarded the prestigious HAL Worst Hangover Award for three consecutive years.

Eau de terminal alcoholicby NCF

Pumping airby Antique Rice.

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