One, Two and Three

Fiction Speculative

Written in response to: "Write a story about a victory that no one else will ever know about… but that has changed everything." as part of Against the Odds with Jessica Brody.

The neon tube above the sink did not buzz; it throbbed at exactly sixty hertz, matching the pulse in Matteo’s left temple.

Matteo was a silvering man who collected empty frames. His apartment was not small, but it was narrow, shaped like the inside of a clarinet. Every surface was covered in brushed aluminum foil, which he applied daily with a soft felt roller to ensure no seams showed. Seams allowed the outside to leak in.

He sat at the zinc table. On the table sat a single, unpeeled hard-boiled egg.

"One," Matteo said to the egg. The egg did not reply, which was the highest form of loyalty Matteo had ever known. It occupied its volume of air with absolute precision. It did not expand. It did not sigh. It did not ask if he had considered going out into the rain.

"One is a company,"

Matteo whispered. He liked the word company. It derived from the Latin cum pane—with bread. But there was no bread. Only the egg, the foil, and the sixty-hertz hum. In the reflection of the aluminum wall, his face looked like a wet spoon. He was perfectly, beautifully sufficient. He was an island with a population of exactly one, which meant there was no one to vote him off.

Then the floorboards beneath the radiator gave a dry, splintering cough.

A line of black dust rose from the gap. Matteo did not move his eyes from the egg, but his ears grew wide and thin, like dried apricots.

The dust reshaped itself. It did not crawl; it condensed. From the shadow of the baseboard emerged an entity that looked remarkably like Matteo, though it was roughly the size of a celery stalk and lacked nostrils. It wore a tiny, immaculate suit made of gray lint.

It climbed the table leg using small, suction-tipped fingers that made a sound like pulling tape off cardboard.

Prip. Prip. Prip.

It sat on the opposite edge of the zinc table. It looked at the egg. Then it looked at Matteo.

"Two," the lint-man said. His voice was like two dry leaves rubbing together in a pocket.

"Two is a crowd."

Matteo felt his chest tighten. The air in the room suddenly felt twice as heavy, though the volume had not changed. The presence of the second entity displaced nothing physical, yet the room was suddenly choked with potential history.

"You are taking up my syntax," Matteo said, his voice flat.

"I am dividing the silence," the lint-man corrected. He reached out and touched the egg. He did not break it; he merely indexed it. "Now there is an observer and an observed, and then there is me, the witness. The room is teeming. It is positively vulgar."

"Go back into the lath," Matteo said.

"Can't," the lint-man dry-chirped. "The ratio has shifted. Once you notice the second point, the line exists. You can't un-know a geometric progression, Matteo. Look behind you."

Matteo did not want to look, but his neck was no longer entirely his own. It turned with the slow, jerky torque of a clockwork key.

The aluminum foil on the back wall was bulging. Not outward, like something trying to burst through, but inward, like a vacuum pulling the room into a knot. The silver surface puckered, forming a metallic throat.

From the throat issued a sound. It was not a scream. It was the sound of three hundred cocktail glasses clinking simultaneously in an empty swimming pool.

Tink.

A woman stepped out of the silver fold. She was normal-sized, but she had too many elbows. Where her left arm should have been, three distinct joints bent in a zig-zag pattern, allowing her to hold a cigarette, a lighter, and a small glass of green fluid all at once without crowding her own chin. Her dress was made of woven magnetic tape that hissed as she moved.

"Three," she announced, her voice a cocktail of static and honey.

"Three is a party."

Behind her, the wall didn't close. It began to pour.

Not people. Not guests. But the behavior of a party.

The room didn't grow larger, but the space between Matteo and the zinc table began to stretch and curdle. The smell of cheap gin and spilled cologne evaporated directly out of the aluminum walls. A laugh—a sharp, brassy laugh belonging to a woman who died in 1974—detached itself from the ceiling and bounced across the floor like a dropped coin.

"Who invited the geometry?" the elbowed woman asked, gesturing with her triple-jointed arm toward the lint-man.

"He grew from the floor," Matteo said. He was trying to keep his fingers pressed against the zinc table, but the metal was growing warm. It shouldn't be warm. Aluminum is an excellent conductor; it should only reflect his own skin.

"Nonsense, darling, everything is invited once there are three," she said. She threw her head back, and a stream of black confetti drifted out of her open mouth, settling into Matteo’s hair.

"We’re celebrating the breakdown of the perimeter! Introduce me to your egg."

The lint-man stood up on his celery legs. "The egg is an anchor," he hissed. "If she touches it, the nouns will become verbs. We won't be able to stand still."

"Oh, look at him, he's so linear," the woman laughed. She didn't walk toward Matteo; she simply occupied the positions between him and the door in rapid succession, like a strobe light trick. "Let's turn up the music."

There was no radio. There was no gramophone. But the room began to vibrate with the low, wet thud of a bassline that felt like a finger poking Matteo in the center of his forehead.

Thump. Thump. Thump.

The aluminum foil began to peel away from the walls in long, silver ribbons, revealing the wet, red brick underneath. The bricks were sweating.

"Stop it," Matteo said. His voice was swallowed by the sound of forty people he couldn't see discussing a film they hadn't watched. The air was thick with phrases like "but the cinematography, darling" and "of course, the subtext is purely monetary."

"You can't stop a triad," the elbowed woman shouted over the din of invisible glass-clinking.

She was dancing now, her three-jointed arms carving strange, non-Euclidean shapes in the smoke that had appeared from nowhere.

"One is an accident. Two is a dilemma. Three is a destination! Drink?"

She held out the glass of green fluid. Matteo looked down. The fluid wasn't liquid; it was a dense cluster of very small, green numbers, spinning so fast they looked like a paste.

"I am a company," Matteo muttered, his eyes wide, staring at the egg. The egg was his only static point. It remained white. It remained oval.

"You were a company," the lint-man said. He had climbed onto Matteo’s shoulder now. His tiny suction fingers were pulling at the skin of Matteo’s earlobe.

"But you looked at me. That made us a crowd. And once you have a crowd, the third one always smells the blood of the crowd from three miles away. She’s the consensus, Matteo. You can't outvote a consensus."

The room was hot now. The invisible guests were arguing about politics. A phantom cigarette burned a hole in the sleeve of Matteo’s shirt, though there was no ember, only the smell of scorching cotton and a small, perfectly round circle of black ash.

The elbowed woman grabbed Matteo’s hand. Her skin felt like a warm, wet magazine page that had been left in the sun.

"Come on, Mattie," she purred. "Let's mingle with the walls."

"No," Matteo said.

He reached out with his free hand and grabbed the hard-boiled egg.

He didn't peel it. He threw it into his mouth whole.

The shell was sharp. It cracked against his molars with a sound like a small dry branch breaking underfoot. The calcium shards cut his gums, but he didn't swallow. He kept the egg in his mouth, a great, suffocating bolus of white and yellow and sharp, chalky shell. He filled his entire oral cavity with it until his cheeks bulged and he couldn't breathe through his mouth.

He was re-establishing the boundary. He was packing the volume.

The elbowed woman froze. Her triple joints locked mid-swing. The invisible chatter dropped by ten decibels, then twenty, like a radio being turned down in another house.

The lint-man on his shoulder stiffened, his linty suit turning brittle and gray.

"Mmph," Matteo said through the egg.

The room began to contract. The red bricks hid themselves behind the silver foil again, though the foil was now wrinkled and creased like an old dress. The smell of gin turned back into the smell of damp plaster.

The woman didn't disappear; she simply shrank back into the wall, her magnetic dress flattening into a single, dark smear on the aluminum surface, like an old oil stain.

The lint-man dropped from Matteo’s shoulder, hitting the table with a soft plop before dissolving into a pinch of gray dust that the sixty-hertz draft blew away.

Matteo stood alone in the narrow room.

The silence returned, but it was a bruised silence. It had teeth marks in it.

His mouth tasted of sulfur and iron from the blood where the shell had pierced his cheek. Carefully, using his tongue, he moved the crushed mass of the egg to the front of his mouth. He didn't want to spit it out. If he spit it out, the table would have two things on it again: him and the mess. And two was a crowd.

He swallowed.

It went down slowly, a jagged, heavy lump that scraped his esophagus all the way down to his stomach. He could feel the exact shape of it sitting behind his ribs—a cold, dense weight of calcium and protein.

He sat down at the zinc table.

The room was perfectly still. The neon light throbbed. Sixty hertz.

Matteo looked at his reflection in the aluminum foil. His face was still a wet spoon, but it was slightly wider now. He placed his hands flat on the zinc.

"One," he said.

His voice didn't sound like his own. It sounded slightly deeper, with a faint, metallic hiss underneath it, like woven magnetic tape.

He waited for the egg to answer. It didn't, because it was inside him.

Then, from the deep, dark interior of his own stomach, Matteo heard a tiny, muffled sound. It wasn't the sound of digestion. It was the sound of a very small, lint-covered finger tapping against the inside of his ribs.

Prip.

And then, from a little higher up, near his lungs, a brassy, distant laugh echoed through his windpipe.

"Oh, Mattie," a voice whispered from his own throat, though his lips didn't move.

"You didn't get rid of the party. You just moved the venue."

Matteo looked down at his own chest. His ribs were beginning to vibrate to a low, wet bassline. He reached into his pocket to find his aluminum roller, to smooth out the seams, but his left arm bent in three places before it reached his hip.

He sat very still, a perfect company of three, waiting for the music to stop. It never did.

Posted Jun 07, 2026
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46 likes 81 comments

Scott Speck
17:54 Jun 07, 2026

A surreal tale. It felt like the hallucination of a madman, where "mad" could connote someone with an otherworldly power. Wonderful imagery at every level of sensory immersion!

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Marjolein Greebe
18:38 Jun 07, 2026

Message
Thank you!
This was one of those stories where I decided to stop worrying about being sensible and simply follow the imagery wherever it wanted to go.
I'm delighted it resonated with you

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17:36 Jun 07, 2026

Beautiful imagery!

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Marjolein Greebe
18:39 Jun 07, 2026

Thank you Madeleine!

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Quinn Nelson
17:00 Jun 23, 2026

Marjolein, when I saw comments mentioning surrealism, I knew this was a must read for me. Thinking about the prompt you wrote for this week and the overarching theme, I wonder about what the victory. The egg was consumed and yet, it feels like it was a loss. Or perhaps it's the lint-man that won as it prevails, living inside our protagonist. It certainly makes me wonder. The descriptions in this are excellent, by the way. Very creative!

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Marjolein Greebe
20:28 Jun 23, 2026

Thank you! The fact that you're questioning where the victory lies makes me oddly happy. Arthur probably wouldn't agree, though.

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Marjolein Greebe
09:46 Jun 24, 2026

If you happen to have a spare reading slot at some point, My story with title 'Non-I " is sitting quietly in the corner trying not to look needy (for a comment/like) 😄

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11:38 Jun 23, 2026

Marjolein, As always, I looked forward to reading your piece. I loved your strange quirky story. The explanation of "company" made perfect etymological sense to my ear. Con Pane! Thanks for introducing us to the three jointed elbow woman, the Lint man and the realization that Matteo like all of us need our protein.

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Marjolein Greebe
20:44 Jun 23, 2026

Thank you! Every story needs a few essentials: protein, questionable life choices, and at least one person with too many elbows. 😉

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Paul Jang
17:02 Jun 19, 2026

I liked how you wove humor into the scene. I especially enjoyed the similes such as the dried apricots.

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Marjolein Greebe
15:31 Jun 20, 2026

Happy to hear that.

I wanted the story to have an absurd edge, and perhaps even a touch of humour, while still remaining plausible.

Thank you for reading, liking and commenting!

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Mike Patterson
02:29 Jun 19, 2026

This is a wild, brilliant, piece of speculative fiction. Your prose is incredibly sharp, and the imagery you conjure is both vivid and deeply unsettling. I both really enjoyed it, and was quite disturbed by it. Great work!

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Marjolein Greebe
07:14 Jun 19, 2026

I'm afraid Matteo is quite disturbed as well 😉

Thank you for the time you took to read and comment.

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Jo Freitag
02:26 Jun 18, 2026

Very surreal! Very Alice in Wonderland! I did love the triple elbowed lady - sort of like a Swiss Army knife!

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Marjolein Greebe
15:47 Jun 20, 2026

Hahahaha you made me laugh with your Swiss Army knife.
Enjoy your weekend.

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Bryan Sanders
22:59 Jun 17, 2026

Miss Marjolein-- be prepared, this will be my longest comment. The architecture of this story is sublime, and since you know me a bit better than most, this calls to my art-- elements of an artist. Matteo lives inside a paint tube. He is Van Gogh--- first, the egg to me is his consciousness-- trying to convince him that he is enough. Followed by a visit from Magritte, the lint man, then Picasso, the multiple elbow woman. It is his battle of acceptance, and he eats the egg hoping to silence it all.
"You didn't get rid of the party. You just moved the venue."
Surrealism perfected!!
You made me laugh, you made me cry, you made me see around the artistry of the words. Lovely, just lovely.

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Marjolein Greebe
00:18 Jun 18, 2026

Mr Bryan,

I'm flattered with your extensive and very original interpretation of the story. I actually wrote a manuscript about the best kept Art Collection from the last century with supposedly one or more artworks that most probably could be assigned to Van Gogh. So your idea that Matteo lives in a paint tube, being Van Gogh is couldn't be just a coincidence.

Your longest comment ever. Curious if you'll be able to break your next record.

Always a pleasure hearing from you.
Till next week I suppose 💛

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Bryan Sanders
00:20 Jun 18, 2026

I think I will keep re-reading your stories and comment some more. Hahahahah, you are always such a pleasure.

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Marjolein Greebe
00:27 Jun 18, 2026

Me, my stories or both? 🙄
My stories hopefully prevail.

(No translator check, so forgive)

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Bryan Sanders
11:07 Jun 18, 2026

You and your stories. Amazing in both regards.

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Marjolein Greebe
00:33 Jun 18, 2026

The stories will be happy once you start doing so.

I am considering to make a list of top ten best works and arrange for a couple of POD books. Just for fun, to have some of them tangible. Or simply leaving behind a couple of the.books on the counter of some shops for free

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Bryan Sanders
11:09 Jun 18, 2026

Great idea.. and it gets your name out there. Look up Blurb. They are print-on-demand, so when you create a website, you can link to it, and people can order directly.

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Danielle Lyon
20:50 Jun 17, 2026

Oh Marjolein, I'm so down with the surrealism of this piece. It's like listening to an orchestra where everybody decided to start playing whatever sheet music they had in their folio. Or something by John Cage. The visuals are all clear and evocative, but layered against one another, produce some strange discordance.

Despite how that came out in text, that is, in fact, a good thing.

For example, I have no idea what the inside of a clarinet looks like. I've seen plenty of clarinets (marching band woes), and I know you clean them with a lint-cloth covered dowel, but I have never asked any clarinetists to let me examine them at such depth. And yet, I had a pretty strong visual for what the inside of Matteo's room looked like.

What makes this story is the message. Underneath the lint-man with his octopus sucker like extremities and the woman with the triple-jointed elbows is the story of a person, Matteo, who really enjoys their comfort zone. By the strange circumstances of life, they find themselves immersed in a new experience. Matteo scrabbles, taking some extreme measures, to return to neutral. Even when his external condition has been set to rights, he finds that his internal being is irrevocably changed.

If that's not a metaphor for the human experience, I don't know what is. A fun read, thank you for sharing!

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Marjolein Greebe
15:59 Jun 20, 2026

Hi Danielle,

You and your wonderful examples. 😊

I particularly loved your comment about the inside of the clarinet. The funny thing is that I deliberately compared Matteo's room to one, yet if someone asked me to draw the inside of a clarinet from memory, I'd probably fail miserably.

Thank you for such a thoughtful reading. I especially enjoyed your interpretation of Matteo's attempt to return to neutral, only to discover that some changes can't be undone.

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Danielle Lyon
20:45 Jun 17, 2026

Marjolein I'm so down with the surrealism of this piece. The visuals are specific and evocative, but they create such discordance with one another. It feels like listening to orchestral music where everybody just started playing from whatever sheet they had in their folio. Or something by John Cage.

This is, despite how that may have come across, a good thing. An enjoyable one.

For example, I've never seen the inside of a clarinet. I've seen many a clarinet in my days, but never inside one; though I do know that you clean them with a lint-cloth brush, so that one rang a bell for me.

Under the layers of the lint man with his octopus sucker extremeties and the triple-jointed party girl, there's something very human and recognizable. A person, Matteo, who enjoys their solitude, finds himself out of his element by a twist of circumstance. He is desperate to reclaim his comfort zone, and when he does, he finds that although his external situation has been returned to rights, he carries the imprint with him.

That's some statement about the human experience!

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James Brandt
17:32 Jun 17, 2026

Great story. I loved the interaction between Matteo, the Lint man, and the woman.

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Adrienne Hebert
19:27 Jun 16, 2026

The physical and sensory descriptions are so vivid, yet somehow still leave a lot up to the imagination. Amazing story, one of the best surrealist ones I've read!
Very unique. It feels like an instant, memorable classic.

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17:19 Jun 16, 2026

This one wasn't really for me, I'm afraid.
I could appreciate the imagination and creativity behind it, but I struggled to connect with the story and found it difficult to follow at times. That said, it was certainly original, and I suspect readers who enjoy surreal and absurd fiction will get much more out of it than I did. Best of luck in the contest.

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Sarah Luster
15:43 Jun 16, 2026

The first line really grips you. What a fun take on the prompt! Well done!

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Marjolein Greebe
15:48 Jun 16, 2026

I'm glad that you liked it. Thank you for your kind words and like.

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