WHITE CROW
Observation Unit
ARCHIVE 31
BRICKS IN THE WALL
ACOUSTIC METADATA
-
TIMESTAMP: Autumn, 2006
-
LOCATION: Editorial Office, Beijing
-
VISUAL COORDINATES: Withered locust tree, Rows of poplars, The Gray-brick Wall
-
PHENOMENON: Biological "Factory Reset" / Laryngeal Cloning
Ge Da, the internal report editor, always retreats to the corners during meetings. I summoned him to my office and ribbing him about his attire: “Old Ge, has that jacket ever seen a washing machine?”
“Chief Editor Bai. Keeping it unwashed keeps it authentic,” he replied, silently swallowing a surge of smug satisfaction. He was right. In this archaic industry of clandestine reporting, Ge Da is a master of the airtight narrative.
He stood before my old elm desk, wooden as a withered willow. I stood up; only then did he allow himself to sit.
During our forty-five-minute encounter, he spoke exactly nineteen sentences. He was competing with me in the art of silence. What he didn't know was that I savored this non-verbal dialogue of physical frequencies. His psychological thicket was, before the acoustic probes of the White Crow, as thin as a cicada's wing.
“Chief Editor Bai, did I say something wrong?” he asked. His laryngeal bone sounded slightly misaligned. I gave no answer. He stood like a soldier and left.
I remained seated. The silhouette of Ge Da as he departed merged perfectly with the shadow of my window curtains. Suddenly, my throat experienced a bizarre, elastic convulsion—a biological "factory reset." I opened my mouth instinctively, and his voice erupted from my own throat:
“Editor Bai, leaving it unwashed preserves the authenticity.”
It was no crude imitation; it was a total voiceprint theft. The same 0.4 Hz friction, the same hoarseness produced by a slight misalignment of the laryngeal bone. I was like a crow clutching a shimmering ornament, executing a 100% physical clone through my mutated throat muscles.
I looked out the window. A withered old locust tree, rows of poplars, and finally, the compound wall. The grey bricks on that wall looked like the heads of those editors—embedded in a frame that had long since fallen into disrepair.
