Page 33

By Jack Joseph Smith

Can I go outside and play before they come? May I, Michael? Would you like to wear this nice little jacket grandmother sent? May I? Michael! it's too cold. Look how dark it is becoming. But what's the matter with the dark? I won't go very far. Do you remember the nightmare you had the other night? What's a nightmare? It's a dream, that makes someone afraid in their sleep. Oh. Do you remember the nightmare Michael? No. You said you were afraid of the dark. But that's only when I'm asleep. You're afraid in your sleep, because you get too excited about things you see during the day, that you don't understand. I'm not afraid of the dark in my sleep. Then why were you afraid of the dark, when you woke up? Because I thought everything had gone away. Gone away where Michael? I don't know, but sometimes you and Dad ain't here any longer. We will always be here. You don't have to be afraid of us going away. I know. Okay Michael. Now. Do you like these corduroy pants? I like to see the snow jumping around, when the wind is blowing. Real hard. Like it is now.

Original Scan

Page 33

AI Interpretation

GPT

A routine exchange about going outside becomes a small meditation on fear, nightmares, parental absence, and the child's wish to trust what remains.

What begins as weather talk turns into something much deeper. The page reveals how quickly ordinary domestic care shades into existential panic when the child imagines that mother and father might simply be gone.


Claude

The page ends Christmas day in a nightmare lecture: mother explains that dreams make you afraid because of daytime overexcitement, and Michael admits his fear is that she and Dad ain't here any longer.