Show Time

Joe sat across from Nelly at the old diner, shaking his head as he stared at a chipped coffee mug.

“You know what my first lesson in late-night television was?” he asked. “Never trust a man smiling beside a mountain of knives.”

Nelly laughed. “You got scammed by one of those infomercials?”

“Not just any infomercial,” Joe said dramatically. “I’m talking about Ron Popeil himself. The king of ‘But wait, there’s more!’”

Joe leaned back like a war veteran remembering battle.

“It was three in the morning. I was tired, vulnerable, spiritually weak. Then Ron appears on the television holding these ‘Showtime’ knives. He slices a tomato so thin you could read a newspaper through it. Then he cuts a boot in half. Then a pipe. Then a pineapple. I thought this man had forged Excalibur.”

Nelly burst out laughing. “So you bought them?”

“Oh, I bought the deluxe package,” Joe groaned. “Knives, sharpening tool, bonus steak knives, probably a VHS tape on how to survive the apocalypse. Ron kept saying the deal would disappear forever if I didn’t call in the next ten minutes. I thought civilization depended on my purchase.”

“And?”

“The knives arrived looking like they’d been forged in the fires of disappointment,” Joe said. “One couldn’t even cut a ripe tomato. I tried slicing bread and nearly folded the blade like a spoon.”

Nelly nearly spit out her drink laughing. “Joe, how many did you order?”

Joe looked ashamed. “Two sets. I thought I was investing in the future.”

“What did you learn from this tragedy?”

Joe raised a finger like a philosopher. “That exhaustion is dangerous. Never make financial decisions at three in the morning while a television man yells at you beside rotating steak platters.”

Nelly smirked. “So Ron Popeil defeated you?”

Joe shook his head slowly.

“No. He taught me. Somewhere out there, another tired soul is watching a glowing television, wondering if a miracle kitchen knife will solve all their problems. And Ron is waiting in the shadows saying…”

Joe pointed dramatically into the distance.

“‘But wait… there’s MORE.’”

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Single Father Joe

Joe sat quietly beside Nelly beneath the city lights, his voice low and heavy like an old radio playing after midnight. He held a photograph no one else could understand — a strange child with silver eyes and a crooked smile.

“My son’s name is Marciano,” Joe said. “He came from the Andromeda galaxy with nothing. No mother. No father. Just a ship drifting through the dark like Moses in the reeds.”

Nelly looked at him carefully. “And you raised him alone?”

Joe nodded.

“It’s hard enough being a single father on Earth. Harder when the world fears what it doesn’t understand. Mankind always talks about compassion until the stranger arrives at the door.”

He stared upward at the stars.

“They still destroy the alien, the orphan, the outsider. Same story since the ancient days. Like the songs of King David in Psalm 94 — the innocent crushed by the proud, the forgotten crying out while the powerful laugh.”

Marciano wandered nearby, collecting broken electronics from an alleyway and turning them into tiny glowing sculptures. The boy could repair machines nobody else understood, yet people crossed the street when they saw him.

Joe sighed.

“They call him strange because he isn’t like them. But every civilization says that before it repeats the same mistake.”

Nelly placed a hand on Joe’s shoulder.

“You gave him a home,” she said softly. “That matters.”

Joe smiled faintly.

“Maybe that’s the test for every species in the universe. Not technology. Not war. Whether you protect the orphan when nobody is watching.”

Joe looked back toward Marciano, whose eyes reflected the stars like mirrors from another world.

“He isn’t just my son,” Joe said quietly. “Marciano is an ambassador. His people are watching us through him. They want to know if mankind is ready to find its place among the stars or if we’re still trapped by fear and tribal thinking. Every act of kindness toward him is like a message sent into the cosmos. Every act of cruelty too. Maybe first contact doesn’t begin with governments or rockets. Maybe it begins with whether humanity can welcome one abandoned child from another galaxy.”

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Lung Healing

Joe sat beside Nelly in the dim glow of the apartment, the city outside sounding tired — sirens, buses, people arguing in alleyways beneath the rain. He shook his head slowly.

“I’ve never seen this much suffering since the beginning of civilization,” Joe said. “Everybody looks exhausted. Sick in the body, sick in the spirit. They tell us this is progress, but sixty percent of people are chronically ill while the global economy limps around like a sick man that only feeds the elite.”

Nelly looked down at her hands while Joe opened his old laptop covered in faded stickers and scratched paint.

“They keep people anxious,” he continued. “Disconnected from nature, from community, from themselves.”

He clicked play on a deep stream of soft ambient tones.

“This is 432hz music,” Joe said. “Supposed to calm the nervous system. And this one — lung healing trance music. Breathe slow with it.”

Low humming frequencies filled the room like distant waves rolling onto a black shoreline. Nelly leaned back against the couch while Joe lit a candle and opened the window slightly to let the cold Vancouver night air drift inside.

“Close your eyes,” he told her. “Forget the algorithms. Forget the panic merchants for one hour. Your body remembers peace even if the world doesn’t.”

The trance rhythm pulsed softly as bicycles hissed through wet streets below. For the first time all week, Nelly’s breathing slowed.

Joe sat quietly for a moment before speaking again.

“You are my first holistic patient, Nelly,” he said softly. “And my main concern. By some Fatima fluke I found out about your cystic fibrosis. Ever since then, I’ve been trying to understand how to help instead of just standing there helpless.”

Nelly opened her eyes slightly, listening.

“I’m not promising miracles,” Joe continued. “I just want to help you breathe easier. To give you peace where the world only gives stress.”

The room filled with the slow pulse of the trance music while rain tapped against the glass.

Joe smiled faintly.

“Maybe civilization forgot the soul,” he said. “But music still remembers.”

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