Minor Anomalies
The fluorescent lights of the Department of Minor Anomalies hummed with the specific, soul-crushing frequency of a headache. Arthur Pringle, a man whose personality was best described as "mildly disappointed beige," stared at the stack of forms on his desk. To his left, the office kettle—a rusted relic of the 1970s—was currently defying the Second Law of Thermodynamics. It was emitting a soft, rhythmic thrumming sound, and rather than boiling, it was actively extracting heat from the room to create ice cubes, which it then arranged into the shape of a perfectly brewed cup of Earl Grey. "Arthur," Daphne said, drifting over from her cubicle. She was a temp, though Arthur suspected she was also a deposed galactic warlord, mostly because she occasionally forgot to hide her third eyelid and kept trying to dismantle the photocopier with a letter opener. "The galaxy is collapsing into a singularity. If we don't calibrate the manifold, reality as we know it will f...