The Labyrinth Series: Episode - "Assembly Line Anomaly" (CONTINUED)
INT. 1950s KITCHEN - CONTINUOUS
The Housewife extends the plate of eye-cookies closer. They blink in unsynchronized waves—blink-blink-blink—pupils dilating.
HOUSEWIFE: (too many teeth) I insist.
The closet door bulges. The membrane stretches. You can see fingertips now—too many fingertips—pressing from the inside.
Thump-THUMP. THUMP-THUMP.
The laughter from nowhere turns uncertain. Confused murmuring underneath. Whispers.
AUDIENCE VOICE 1: (distant, tinny) ...what's happening?
AUDIENCE VOICE 2: Is this supposed to be...?
The Husband's newspaper melts. Not burns—melts, like wax, dripping through his fingers in monochrome ribbons. He doesn't react. Just keeps holding the position, fingers frozen mid-page-turn as newsprint puddles on his lap.
HUSBAND: (voice distorting, slowing down) Thaaaaaat woooould beeeee swelllllll...
Behind him, the refrigerator sprouts fingers. Chrome handles becoming knuckles, the door panel erupting with hands that clutch and grasp at nothing.
HOUSEWIFE: (leaning closer, face stretching) You must be hungry.
Her jaw unhinges. Inside: not a throat, but a spiral. Descending. Infinite. Lined with more eyes, more teeth, more faces that look almost but not quite like Doris Day—
Gasps from the darkness.
AUDIENCE VOICE 3: Jesus Christ, Harold!
AUDIENCE VOICE 4: Is that even legal to show?
The kitchen glitches. The Formica counter duplicates—overlapping itself at wrong angles. The floor tiles breathe. The ceiling light fixture grows extra arms, each holding a smaller light fixture, fractal and impossible.
You back up against the wall.
The Housewife's face multiplies. Two faces. Four. Eight. All smiling. All extending cookie plates that now have fingers growing out of the cookies, tiny hands waving hello—
YOU: (screaming) NOPE!
You turn and RUN AT THE WALL.
INT. PROJECTION BOOTH - CONTINUOUS
You BURST THROUGH in an explosion of plaster and two-dimensional painted brick—
—and stumble into light.
Real light. Color. Three dimensions.
A cramped projection booth. Two film projectors running side-by-side, their reels clicking, beams cutting through cigarette smoke to illuminate a screen below.
HAROLD (50s, sweater vest, receding hairline, exhausted) stands at a control panel, frantically adjusting dials.
MYRTLE (40s, cat-eye glasses, clipboard, pencil behind ear) taps her clipboard with mounting irritation.
HAROLD: (not looking up) The interpolation's gone haywire again! The neural net's confabulating entire scenes—
MYRTLE: (checking clipboard) Yes, yes, at this stage the generative AI is uncontrollable and can get pretty weird. We just need to sharpen it up in editing!
HAROLD: Myrtle, it just grew fourteen extra hands in the kitchen sequence—
MYRTLE: That's texture detail, Harold. Audiences love texture.
Below, through the projection window, you glimpse a theater full of people. Silhouettes in seats. Murmuring. Uncomfortable shifting.
AUDIENCE MEMBER: (standing) I want my money back!
They both turn.
And see you.
Standing in the wreckage of their projection booth wall. Covered in plaster dust. Panting. A piece of two-dimensional painted brick dangling from your shoulder.
HAROLD: (pointing) Hey, kid! You're not supposed to be here!
MYRTLE: (flipping through clipboard) This isn't in the script—
YOU: (backing toward the door) I don't—I'm not—
HAROLD: Security! SECURITY!
You bolt.
INT. PROJECTION BOOTH HALLWAY - CONTINUOUS
You slam through the door and into a hallway that doesn't make sense.
The walls are covered in film stills. Thousands of them. Black and white images thumbtacked in overlapping layers. But they're wrong.
A family dinner where everyone has the same face.
A wedding photo where the bride has seven arms, all holding bouquets.
A beach scene where the ocean is made of teeth.
And underneath, handwritten notes in frantic script:
"Render pass 47 - hands still multiplying"
"Background interpolation collapsed into non-Euclidean geometry"
"WHY DOES IT KEEP ADDING EYES???"
You run.
Behind you: HAROLD and MYRTLE emerge, shouting.
MYRTLE: Stop that child!
HAROLD: They've contaminated the generative sequence!
The hallway twists. The film stills start moving—images crawling across the walls like living things. A 1950s businessman steps OUT of a photograph, except he's two-dimensional, paper-thin, sliding along the wall toward you with rustling footsteps.
2D BUSINESSMAN: (voice like crumpling paper) Excuse me, do you have the time?
His face is melting. Features sliding down like wet paint.
YOU: (running faster) NO, SORRY, BUSY—
More figures emerge from the photographs. A cheerleader whose pom-poms are made of fingers. A milkman whose bottles contain swirling eyes. A dog that's simultaneously a car, its chrome bumper teeth barking.
The hallway branches. You take a left—
INT. RENDERING ROOM - CONTINUOUS
—and crash into a vast warehouse space filled with hanging transparent screens.
Each screen shows a different AI-generated scene, all running simultaneously:
A birthday party where the cake screams
A baseball game where the players are inside-out
A church service where the congregation is one continuous body with a hundred heads
A news broadcast where the anchor multiplies every time they blink
Between the screens: workers in 1950s office attire, frantically taking notes, adjusting dials on massive computer banks that are half vacuum tubes, half something organic—pulsing, breathing.
WORKER 1: Latent space collapse in sector seven!
WORKER 2: The diffusion model's hallucinating extra dimensions again!
WORKER 3: (screaming into phone) I DON'T CARE WHAT THE MANUAL SAYS, FINGERS SHOULD NOT HAVE TEETH!
You run between the screens. Behind you, Harold and Myrtle's shadows loom impossibly large, cast by no visible light source.
MYRTLE'S VOICE: (echoing) You're ruining the aspect ratio!
One of the screens reaches for you.
Not a hand from in the screen—the screen itself becoming a hand, transparent fingers closing around your arm—
You yank free, stumbling—
—and fall through a screen that shatters into pixels—
INT. BETWEEN FRAMES - CONTINUOUS
You're falling through white noise.
Static. Visual static. Millions of tiny black and white squares flickering, reorganizing, trying to form images but failing.
Faces appear and dissolve.
Hands reaching from nowhere.
Words forming in the chaos:
"RENDERING... RENDERING... ERROR... RENDERING..."
A mouth opens in the static. Too wide. Lined with perfect 1950s teeth.
THE MOUTH: Would you like to see our new product line?
YOU: (falling, screaming) NOOOOO—
INT. ??? - CONTINUOUS
You land hard on something soft.
You look down.
Audience seats.
Rows and rows of plush velvet theater seats, stretching in all directions. No floor. No walls. Just seats. And in every seat: a mannequin in 1950s attire, frozen mid-applause.
Except they're not mannequins.
Their eyes blink.
All at once.
ALL THE AUDIENCE FIGURES: (in perfect unison) We love what you've done with the place.
Behind you: a door marked "EXIT" in glowing red letters.
But the door is breathing.
Inhale. Exhale. Inhale. Exhale.
The mannequin-people's heads turn toward you with mechanical precision. Click-click-click-click.
MANNEQUIN AUDIENCE: (harmonizing) Stay for the second feature.
MANNEQUIN AUDIENCE: We insist.
Their mouths open.
And from every mouth: the sound of film projectors running.
Click-click-click-click-click—
You look at the EXIT door.
It winks at you.
YOU: (whispered) This maze is getting really weird.
The mannequin-audience begins to stand. In perfect synchronization. Rising like a wave.
MANNEQUIN AUDIENCE: (closer) The show must go on.
You run for the EXIT.
TO BE CONTINUED...
Behind you, Harold's voice echoes through impossible space: "THE NEURAL NET'S ACHIEVED SENTIENCE AND IT'S MAKING TERRIBLE CREATIVE CHOICES!"
Myrtle's voice, calm: "That's just part of the artistic process, Harold."