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Parasited little puck—an epithet as absurd as it was precise—refers to her shape in gossip. Puck: impish, quick, an agent of mischief. Little: minimized, contemptuous. But the word puck also captures motion—sliding, ricocheting—her path through society’s frozen ponds. She darted between the turned heads and the deliberate silences, puckish as a child, strategic as a queen.
We leave the stage in this liminal frame: a queen in the eyes of some, a parasite in the mouths of others, a puck in the narratives that refuse to settle. Act I tracks the moment when words begin to harden into policy and when policy begins to pretend it can sterilize human entanglement. It gives us a protagonist who is not pure and not evil—someone whose life is made from the salvage of a city’s margins, someone whose power is knitted from human needs that the top prefers not to name. The curtain falls on a negotiated peace—tenuous, charged, and ripe with the possibility that the next act will demand a truer accounting of what it means to survive together. parasited little puck parasite queen act 1 top
They called her a parasite before they ever learned her name: a sly, clinical epithet whispered in the corridors where sunlight thinned and ambition thickened. Parasited—used like a past-tense verdict—meant more than a medical condition. It meant a morphology of reputation, a shape that fit whoever needed it, folded and pinned into rhetoric by those who feared what she took and what she returned. They crowned her, too, in rumor: queen, sovereign over a dozen small offenses, a court of half-truths convened in alleyways and drawing rooms alike. Act 1 begins where stories begin: at the top. Parasited little puck—an epithet as absurd as it
She arrived like a rumor arriving in a house of survivors: unexpected, hard to trace. Her clothes were sheared into utility rather than status; her language left traces of other maps—small cadences from neighborhoods that subsidized one another with contraband hope. People at the top enjoyed her paradoxically: they admired the way she navigated narrow permits and municipal loopholes as if she were rearranging the bones of a city. They called her parasite because she seemed to occupy the seams. She fed on opportunity, on the overlooked, on the way regulations accumulated in corners like lint. Act I tracks the moment when words begin
The city at the top was a place of glass and soft exhaust, balconies overlooking a ledge of sky where birds hesitated, unsure whether to cross into the thin air of accolade. It had been engineered to keep certain scents—of industry, of feral hunger—below. Up there, neighbors measured a life by polished rituals: morning coffees, receipts folded like liturgy, charity galas that glowed as constellations on November nights. They did not notice rot unless it arrived in a hand with a label.
Someone in a suit calls for enforcement. A police officer arrives with the mild decisiveness of someone whose role is to keep spectacles compartmentalized. There is tension, but something else, too: recognition that any forceful removal would result in a scene none of the hosts desire—the messy, human continuity they have tidy plans to overwrite. She steps forward, not as a surrendering figure but as one who will negotiate the terms of coexistence. The crowd hums; a child lets go of a balloon that floats up like a small white question mark.
The meeting begins in the language of the proper: PowerPoint slides, charts, the soft click of a laser pointer. The projector tries to render reality into rectangles. She watches this earnest geometry with the smile of someone accustomed to improvising beyond the margins. When it is her turn to speak, the lights dim in the way that favors spectacle. Her voice slides across the room, unadorned but not unskilled.