
by Redbickey
Title: Disposable Language (The Journal of Vell) Genre: Speculative Fiction / Linguistic Horror / Literary SF Logline: On a planet where words rot the moment they are repeated, an alien interpreter discovers the intoxicating power of the human lie—only to find that "reusable" language is slowly dissolving his own soul. Overview: Vell, an elite interpreter from a distant civilization, arrives on Earth for a historic First Contact. To his people, language is biological and ephemeral; a word is like a flower that blooms once and dies. The reuse of a sound is perceived as a physical stench—a literal rot that triggers visceral revulsion. The journal chronicles Vell’s descent as he navigates the "fetid" atmosphere of Earth, where humans blithely repeat "Good morning" and "I love you" without realizing they are consuming linguistic carrion. Initially repulsed, Vell soon discovers a dark utility in human speech: the ability to lie. Since human ears cannot detect the "freshness" of a word, Vell begins to manipulate diplomatic negotiations, spinning a web of mistranslations that pushes both civilizations toward the brink of conflict. However, the cost of his deception is a creeping cognitive erosion. By immersing himself in the repetitive nature of human language, Vell loses the ability to generate new sounds in his mother tongue. He becomes "contaminated," caught in a linguistic limbo—too human to return to his pristine home world, yet too alien to find peace in a world built on echoes. The Climax: When an improvisational musician on the human team detects the patterns of his deceit through pure sound, Vell is exposed. Stripped of his identity and rejected by his kin as a "corrupted being," he faces the ultimate "solitude"—a concept that does not exist in his native tongue. The story concludes with Vell’s final journal entry: a desperate attempt to coin one last, original word to describe the horror of watching his own memories rot.