the midst of
mania had flatlined what at first seemed like
the all.
Some people were in dumb shock. Others, more tremors than whole human beings. Incomprehensible sounds being uttered. Rote gestures of bodies taken out of the context of routine.
"But they're alive," a short couple, young people, a guy and a girl, kept repeating. This phrase caught on as a question amongst the warned: in rough shape. That question predominated on one end of the park, while on the other; Who did this to you, him/her? Where was this person found?
Teams of specialists mingled subtlely. Lists of chemicals and compounds circulated in special folders. Biological characteristics of matter plied into charts.
"Could it have been in the air?" Some scientists had been velcro'd into special seating that could be picked up and carried farther afield.
Let's stay together.
"We'll need to be the arch."
"Wah, wah WHAT you mean?"
"It's all disjointed. All the threads of story here."
"We cannot lose our collective memory."
Into the actual, literal mist not yet fully lifted off the park's surface.
"How was the conference?"
"Um, well the literary world is def beefing up the Science Fiction."
"We went to the, uh, Alien Fest."
"Is that?"
There were more than one cyborg. And somebody who looked very familiar to a lot of the people in Central Park was opening flaps in the automatons, removing chips and drives, and changing the hardware between bots. A dark figure had unscrolled a thick set of blueprints and was peering through a magnifying glass with a circus flashlight at the drawings. Hands on each others' forearms and classic signaling agreed just watch.
"Renaldo. ¡Renaldo! Get up. We gotta go." Groggy took the newspaper off his head and visibly tried to stay the vertigo by balancing an arm on the back of the bench and a foot on the ground.