Link to article: SCP-4992.
info:start
info:end
footer-wikiwalk-nav
[[include info:start]] **SCP-4992:** Onions Make Me Cry ------ **Author:** [[$ Mnml $]] ([http://www.scp-wiki.net/scpcrnp-s-author-page More from this author.]) [[include info:end]] [[include component:image-block name=shallots| caption=SCP-4992-3 (left) next to SCP-4992-4 (right).]] **Item #:** SCP-4992 **Object Class:** Safe **Special Containment Procedures:** SCP-4992 is to be kept in a refrigerated, single-item drawer within B2 storage at Site-63. Removal is approved only for testing purposes, and with written permission from the Senior Containment Specialist and Lead Researcher. **Description:** SCP-4992 is the designation given to four shallot (//Allium cepa//) bulbs, with each given a sub-designation; SCP-4992-1 through SCP-4992-4. SCP-4992 is visually indistinguishable from non-anomalous members of its species. Within moments of exposing or manipulating a clove of SCP-4992,[[footnote]]Particularly cutting and mincing.[[/footnote]] an individual will report hearing music, designated SCP-4992-B, despite no detection of corresponding auditory signatures in the vicinity. Instances of SCP-4992-B --(thought to be auditory hallucinations)-- --reportedly-- feature a minor tonality, sparse instrumentation, mournful lyrics that describe the hardships of low socioeconomic, rural life, and are of a heightened pitch relative to the included instruments. SCP-4992-B may precipitate tearing, as is commonly observed with members of //Allium cepa//. However, tearing does not occur via syn-propanethial-S-oxide[[footnote]]Responsible for lachrymal stimulation in non-anomalous members of the onion family.[[/footnote]] as, anomalously, no such molecules have been detected in, upon, or around SCP-4992. Furthermore, chemical reactivity to SCP-4992 has not been observed in the corneal nerve endings, as would otherwise be expected. Neural scans instead show increased activity in the auditory centers, the limbic system, and the substantia nigra.[[footnote]]A primary site of dopamine release.[[/footnote]] These findings are consistent with the brain's response to music. Approximately 5% of SCP-4992-1, and 10% of SCP-4992-2 remain, as their anomalous properties were suspected only after being utilized for several dishes. SCP-4992-3 has been peeled of all its outer layers with a third removed by a utility knife. Aside from small incisions made during testing, SCP-4992-4 is undisturbed from its originally procured state. The relative rate of decay so far observed suggests that SCP-4992's shelf-life may exceed 10^^22^^ years. The source of SCP-4992 could not be retraced, as Logistics expunges delivery receipts after shipments from Foundation front companies arrive at their destinations. @@@@ @@@@ ----- = [[size 125%]]Addenda[[/size]] ----- @@@@ **1. Initial Subject Interview** [[collapsible show="+ Open File" hide="- Close File"]] //The following took place between Agent Carlson (AC) and Sous Chef Erik Bulland (EB) of the Site-63 dining facilities, shortly after the recognition of SCP-4992 as anomalous.// > [BEGIN LOG] > > **AC:** Could you walk us through the first time you worked with SCP-4992, please? > > **EB:** It was like any other day, up until that point. We had several vinaigrettes and gastriques to prep for the evening service, and I always make those, as well as any sauces. So, I went to the walk-in, grabbed a head or two of shallot, and got to work. Pretty soon after that, I start hearin' this music. Strange music. Sounds like Alvin and the Chipmunks, ya know what I mean? > > **AC:** I believe I do, yes. High-pitched voices, kinda squeaky? > > **EB:** Yeah, it was almost comical, right? So I'm figurin' that the guys were goofin' around; we usually take turns with the music selection during prep -- metal is my favorite to play -- and I thought 'Must be Jerry, he's the only one who would try to get away with something that goofy'. > > **AC:** Did anyone else that you know of hear the music too? > > **EB:** Well that's the thing, I found Jerry and kinda jabbed him saying 'That's a good one, put some real music on.' But Jerry didn't know what I was talking about, just looked at me like //I// was tryin' to mess with //him//. I figured it out soon; I was the only one hearing this. So that's when I started getting a little creeped out; I mean, the Alvin voices didn't make that any better. I thought I was havin' a psychotic episode; it's not unheard of around here. > > **AC:** That's why you excused yourself from the shift and sought the on-site doctor. > > **EB:** Yeah, you hear all kind of stories working here, and I didn't want to take any chances. I may not be an agent, but I know when something weird is going on. > > **AC:** And your psych eval was unremarkable. The physician thought it to be auditory hallucinations from lack of sleep. > > **EB:** Yeah, I had been taking a lot of Ambien and melatonin to try to get over the insomnia I've been having, so the explanation made a lot of sense. I went back to work a couple of hours later. > > **AC:** What happened then? > > **EB:** Well, the staff was in a bit of a fuss, actually. Something about a bad flavor, and some of the cooks were trying to accuse each other of making their part of the dishes wrong. One guy who was arguing mentioned something about... turning off some crazy music over the speakers, and that caught my attention. I stepped in and told them I had heard the music too, it had stopped after a song or two, and we quickly found out he had been working with shallots as well, for a relish. So, we got Marty the Chef de Cuisine to taste the stuff, he pinpointed it as the shallots, and that was that. We all cut it up to have a tasting, kinda like an educational opportunity from Chef, and soon, we were all listening to little Alvin. That's when Chef contacted you guys. > > **AC:** I see. Anything else? > > **EB:** No, that was it. Pretty harmless, just a bit annoying because it isn't my style of music. I like metal, myself, so. I'll say this though, once we all realized it wasn't just in any one of our heads, we just stood around and listened for a bit... it wasn't terrible music. In fact, despite the wacky voice of it, the lyrics to the songs were actually speaking about some real stuff. 'Real talk', as one of the chefs put it. Reminded me of growing up. You know, now that I think about it; put some double bass drums and highly-syncopated rhythm guitar parts to it, and... I dunno, I think I could like that. > > [END LOG] [[/collapsible]] **2. Research Update** Real-time monitoring of test subjects' auditory nerves has detected electrophysiological impulses that occur in rhythm with reported durations and tempos of SCP-B instances. This observation has disproved the previous assumption that SCP-B are auditory hallucinations, and has allowed researchers to convert the stimuli to objective auditory signatures. @@@@ **3. SCP-4992-B Example Recording** [[collapsible show="+ Open File" hide="- Close File"]] //The following was recorded shortly after Agent Finch began removing layers from SCP-4992-3, as part of Experiment 3a. It is included in the record as a usual example of SCP-4992-B. Speech has been transcribed below.// @@@@ [[include :snippets:html5player |type=audio |url=http://scp-wiki.wdfiles.com/local--files/scp-4992/SCP-B-1.mp3 ]] @@@@ @@@@ > I am a farmhouse > Born of my owner's calloused hands > He didn't have much, > But in his heart was rich as any man. > > He was a plowman, > He dug the earth so people had their fill, > By no fault of his own, > Smaller lives were claimed by his skill. > > It was not biased, > Took the flowers and the serpents too > And when he saw his wreckage, > From his lips there would come a tune: > > In that we do > Similar things > To those in our shadows, > With equal > Indifference, carnage, and cyclicity > In stirring the soil, > In shuffling the soul, > Indifference can only be > Accepted, painfully > For it is simply fair. > > I knew a worker, > He saw to the colony's Queen > She was their lifeblood, > For several generations she had been. > > Until one day, > The plowman's work brought about his till > And it found his poor Queen, > He carried her for hours > To their hill. > > They all decided > To lay her beneath their nursery, > And their lives in shambles, > Animals looking upwards, they did sing: > > In that we do > Similar things > To those in our shadows, > With equal > Indifference, carnage, and cyclicity > In stirring the soil, > In shuffling the soul, > Indifference it can only be > Accepted, painfully > For it is simply fair. > > The plowman one night, > Returned to my sight > But it wasn't long > Before dark skies > Tower of death in clouds > Could tell the trees to bow, > And I couldn't keep him from this plow. > > I begged to let him stay, > As it tore my roof away, > But it wasn't long; > The plowman's gone. > Finally the sun arrived, > And I thought he must have died, > But somewhere near, I heard a cry: > > In that we do > Similar things > To those in our shadows, > With equal > Indifference, carnage, and cyclicity > In stirring the soil, > In shuffling the soul, > Indifference can only be > Accepted, painfully > For it is simply fair. > [[/collapsible]] [[footnoteblock]] [[div class="footer-wikiwalk-nav"]] [[=]] << [[[SCP-4991]]] | SCP-4992 | [[[SCP-4993]]] >> [[/=]] [[/div]]