Verbal Punching Bags

Nelly sat on the edge of the stage in the empty rehearsal hall, her sneakers tapping the floor. The lights above were off except for one dim spotlight.

Nelly sat on the edge of the stage in the empty rehearsal hall, staring out at rows of empty seats. One lonely spotlight hung above her.

“Joe,” she muttered, rubbing her temples. “I should’ve never signed up for this star career bullshit.”

Joe leaned against a big speaker with his arms crossed.

“What’s eating you?”

She looked out into the dark auditorium.

“Fame,” she said. “I lost all my real friends. Now it’s just sycophants and handlers.”

Joe nodded slowly.

“Occupational hazard.”

Nelly shook her head.

“You know what it feels like online?” she said. “I’m basically a verbal punching bag. Millions of strangers taking swings every day.”

Joe didn’t interrupt.

“They tear apart my weight, my face, my life,” she continued. “And the crazy thing is—entertainers didn’t create the world’s problems.”

She pointed toward the ceiling like she was addressing the sky.

“Politicians did that.”

Joe raised an eyebrow.

Nelly sighed.

“And when I try to talk about solutions… like debt forgiveness, or helping poor people…”

She gave a bitter laugh.

“Suddenly the Trump-tards show up saying I’m insane and unhinged.”

Joe shook his head.

“That’s the internet for you.”

Nelly looked at him seriously.

“I’m not the one bombing children,” she said quietly. “But somehow the singer becomes the villain.”

Joe sat down beside her.

“Well,” he said, shrugging, “I don’t give a Borat’s ass what those people say.”

He gestured vaguely toward the imaginary internet.

“Half of them are neckbeard chicken-tendie addicts screaming into the void.”

Nelly cracked a small smile.

Joe nudged her shoulder.

“You know what you are to me?”

“What?”

“My wing woman.”

She laughed.

“Wing woman?”

“Yeah,” Joe said. “And if my wing woman is getting beat up by the internet…”

He shrugged.

“I stick around.”

Nelly studied him.

“Even when the whole crowd is yelling?”

Joe grinned.

“Especially then.”

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XCOM Propaganda

Scene: XCOM Global Broadcast – “Stand for Earth”

The screen flickers like an emergency broadcast. Dramatic music swells. Images of alien ships over cities flash across the world.

A bold insignia appears: XCOM – Earth’s Last Line of Defense.

XCOM 2 footage plays behind the message: resistance fighters striking alien patrols, dropships launching into the sky, humanity refusing to kneel.

Then the camera cuts to NELLY standing beside JOE in a command center filled with holographic maps of Earth.


NELLY:
People of Earth… this is Nelly. You may know me as a singer. But today I speak to you as a citizen of this planet.

The aliens want us to believe resistance is impossible.

They want us divided, distracted, and afraid.

But history proves something different.


JOE:
That’s right.

In the old strategy simulations like XCOM: Enemy Unknown and XCOM 2, humanity was outgunned, outnumbered, and occupied.

But the lesson of those games is simple:

The resistance always finds a way.

Farmers become engineers.
Teachers become scientists.
Soccer players become soldiers.

And every citizen becomes part of the defense of Earth.


A montage appears:

  • mechanics building plasma rifles
  • scientists studying alien tech
  • civilians forming resistance cells

NELLY (smiling):
You don’t need to be a general.

You just need courage.

Every coder, medic, pilot, and dreamer matters.

Even music can be resistance.


JOE:
The aliens think they’ve already won.

They think humanity will just watch the sky and surrender.

But they forgot something important.

Ten thousand hours of practice can turn anyone into a master.

Pilots. Engineers. Commanders.

Even resistance fighters.


The XCOM logo burns onto the screen.

NELLY:
Earth isn’t theirs.

It’s ours.


JOE:
So wherever you are… Vancouver, Lisbon, Sarajevo, or anywhere on this planet…

Stand up.

Join the resistance.


NELLY and JOE together:
Welcome to XCOM.

Let’s take Earth back.

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Women’s Ultra Soccer

The sun was setting over the quiet soccer pitch. The grass shimmered with a strange perfection, almost as if the world itself had been polished clean. Just hours earlier, the med bed aboard the United States Space Force orbital clinic had finished its work.

Nelly stretched her legs slowly, testing them. She bent down, touched her toes, then jogged a few steps.

“Joe…” she said, half laughing in disbelief. “I feel like I’m eighteen again.”

Joe rolled a soccer ball toward her with the inside of his foot.

“That’s the Tesla tune-up,” he said with a grin. “Factory reset for the human body.”

Nelly trapped the ball instinctively and flicked it up with a little juggle. One touch. Two. Three.

She stopped and stared at him.

“How is this possible?”

Joe leaned against the goalpost like an old coach watching practice.

“Simple rule,” he said. “Mastery takes ten thousand hours.”

He pointed toward the field.

“Every legend—every musician, every astronaut, every soccer player—they all pay the same price.”

Nelly raised an eyebrow.

“Ten thousand hours?”

Joe nodded.

“About three hours a day for ten years. That’s the deal.”

He tapped the side of his head.

“But now you’ve got something nobody else had.”

Nelly spun the ball on her finger.

“What’s that?”

Joe gestured upward toward the fading sky where the faint silhouette of the orbital clinic could barely be seen.

“A body that doesn’t break down.”

Nelly laughed.

“So what are you saying?”

Joe walked onto the pitch and took the ball from her feet with a quick steal.

“I’m saying,” he replied, dribbling past her, “you’ve got time to become dangerous.”

She chased him immediately, competitive instinct firing.

“Oh no you don’t.”

Joe cut left and right, the ball dancing between his feet.

“Ten thousand hours,” he repeated.

Nelly slid in, stole the ball cleanly, and popped up laughing.

“Good,” she said, starting a run toward the goal.

“Because I plan on putting in eleven thousand.” ⚽

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