F Trope: good versus evil
Khloe Garcia shook her head and said, “I don’t think there’s anything to the whole idea that there’s even such a thing as ‘good versus evil’.”
Glaring at her, Santiago Tremblay said, “You’re not serious, are you?”
“Why wouldn’t I be? Look around you. Nothing is clearly good or evil. Every single time we’ve called something ‘evil’, it’s all a matter of perspective. One side of the disagreement says they’re good and the other side’s evil. The other side…”
“What was the good side of Nazi Germany?”
She rolled her eyes, “That’s history. This is the middle of the 21st Century. Socially, we’ve evolved far away from any kind of clear demarcation of ‘good’ and evil’.”
“I’ll give you five seconds to tell me the ‘good’ side of Nine-Eleven-Oh-One.”
“History. There’s nothing comparable since the turn of the century.”
“So Humanity has evolved socially that much in forty-three years?”
“Sure. It’s possible...”
“Unlikely.” He paused then said, “So you wouldn’t have any trouble summoning a demon then? Because...”
“Demons are mythological creatures no more real than Godzilla...”
He pulled a heavy book from the backpack he’d dropped on her roommate’s bed when he came into her dorm room and set it down on her desk, letting it fall open. “So you won’t mind if I read this curse from this book. It was in the ‘Religion’ section of the old library – you know, the place they kept books before ebooks replaced everything. I bought it. Paid the librarian four thousand...”
She hesitated then said, “Read your stupid curse and we’ll see how real it is.”
He shrugged and read the words casually. He waited. She waited. Nothing happened. “See what I mean?”
He nodded slowly. “OK. I’ll just summon a demon for fun, then.” He bent over the book and when he stood up, he looked up at her, then down at the book and began to read. Not casually this time, but with a voice changed. A voice that spoke of education. Money. A voice rich in timbre and facile with the words it read.
The floor of the room began to tremble...
Names: ♀ Canada, Mexico; ♂ Mexico, Canada
Khloe Garcia shook her head and said, “I don’t think there’s anything to the whole idea that there’s even such a thing as ‘good versus evil’.”
Glaring at her, Santiago Tremblay said, “You’re not serious, are you?”
“Why wouldn’t I be? Look around you. Nothing is clearly good or evil. Every single time we’ve called something ‘evil’, it’s all a matter of perspective. One side of the disagreement says they’re good and the other side’s evil. The other side…”
“What was the good side of Nazi Germany?”
She rolled her eyes, “That’s history. This is the middle of the 21st Century. Socially, we’ve evolved far away from any kind of clear demarcation of ‘good’ and evil’.”
“I’ll give you five seconds to tell me the ‘good’ side of Nine-Eleven-Oh-One.”
“History. There’s nothing comparable since the turn of the century.”
“So Humanity has evolved socially that much in forty-three years?”
“Sure. It’s possible...”
“Unlikely.” He paused then said, “So you wouldn’t have any trouble summoning a demon then? Because...”
“Demons are mythological creatures no more real than Godzilla...”
He pulled a heavy book from the backpack he’d dropped on her roommate’s bed when he came into her dorm room and set it down on her desk, letting it fall open. “So you won’t mind if I read this curse from this book. It was in the ‘Religion’ section of the old library – you know, the place they kept books before ebooks replaced everything. I bought it. Paid the librarian four thousand...”
She hesitated then said, “Read your stupid curse and we’ll see how real it is.”
He shrugged and read the words casually. He waited. She waited. Nothing happened. “See what I mean?”
He nodded slowly. “OK. I’ll just summon a demon for fun, then.” He bent over the book and when he stood up, he looked up at her, then down at the book and began to read. Not casually this time, but with a voice changed. A voice that spoke of education. Money. A voice rich in timbre and facile with the words it read.
The floor of the room began to tremble...
Names: ♀ Canada, Mexico; ♂ Mexico, Canada
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