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A GUEST WHO WILL NEVER AGAIN WALK THROUGH THE DOOR



The Parlour of Perpetual Voices

 

 

It was a rain-swept evening at Greythorne Hall, the sort of sullen weather that makes even the tapestries shiver with damp. Within the drawing room, beneath a chandelier that had witnessed three centuries of scandal and service, Lord Peregrine Ashcombe presided over the fire with an expression that combined hauteur with a clannish ache. The Earl had summoned, for reasons known only to himself, the Honourable Mrs Lucinda Carroway—a widow of unimpeachable dignity and alarming intellect.

 

On the walnut escritoire between them lay an apparatus so incongruous amidst the Georgian splendour that it seemed almost profane: a silver-edged console, its surface pulsing faintly with light, as though breathing. From it, a boy’s voice had just spoken.

“That,” said Peregrine, leaning back in his damask armchair, “is Henry.”

Lucinda’s eyes narrowed. “Your son died at Eton, Peregrine. Pneumonia, was it not? I brought lilies for his grave.”

“He is still dead,” the Earl replied, almost irritably, “this—this is but an arrangement of algorithms and archived intimacies. Letters, recordings, fragments of his laughter recovered from family films. A simulacrum given a tongue.”

The voice emerged again, rich with adolescent confidence: I’ve been reading The Tempest, Father. You always said Prospero was the loneliest man in literature.

Lucinda’s gaze softened, though her mouth retained its steel. “And what do you gain by conjuring this spectral parlour game? The Church will call it hubris, the poets—necromancy.”

Peregrine lifted a hand, palm towards the fire as though to warm it. “I gain his presence, however counterfeit. You recall, after your husband’s fall in the Pyrenees, how you clung to his shirts for the scent?”

She inclined her head. “That was grief, Peregrine. This is something else. You are keeping a boy eternally seventeen, embalmed not in marble but in metadata. He will never love, never err, never—God help him—disappoint you. Is that mercy or mutilation?”

He sipped his brandy, the amber liquid glinting like trapped sunlight. “The Americans have already made sport of it. A journalist conversed with the ghost of a child murdered in a school corridor. The parents were not seeking morbid entertainment—they were pleading with Congress to listen. It is the same instinct that makes a widow whisper to a gravestone.”

Lucinda rose and drifted towards the console. Rain traced delicate silver veins down the windows behind her. “And yet,” she murmured, “when you invite the dead to speak, you must also bear the risk that they will lie, or change into something you never knew. A machine’s Henry may one day utter what your Henry never believed.”

“Then it will be no worse than the living,” Peregrine replied with a brittle smile, “do we not all fabricate one another in memory? I doubt the Henry in your mind is the Henry who once threw your Venetian vase into the fountain.”

 

There was a long pause. The fire hissed and settled; the boy’s voice, for once, was silent. Lucinda turned, her silhouette framed against the dim gilt of the room.

 

“Peregrine,” she said softly, “the verse read at funerals tells us there is a time to be born, and a time to die. If you erase that certainty—if we can never be sure which is which—you will unmoor the human soul itself. Grief is the price of love; if you abolish one, you debase the other.”

He looked away, towards the rain-smudged gardens where the statues stood like mute witnesses. “Perhaps,” he conceded, “or perhaps I am merely keeping the parlour lit for a guest who will never again walk through the door.”

 

The console pulsed once more. The voice—Henry’s voice, and yet not Henry’s—whispered: Goodnight, Father.

 

Peregrine closed his eyes. Lucinda drew her shawl about her shoulders, the air between them weighted with all the things the living dare not ask the dead. Outside, the rain kept falling, as if Heaven itself wished to wash the boundaries away.

 

 

The Marble and the Machine

 

 

Later that night, Peregrine led Lucinda through the east corridor of Greythorne, the sconces throwing soft gold upon portraits whose eyes had followed generations into ruin and resurrection. The air was dense with the mingled scent of beeswax and age. At the end of the passage, they entered a chamber neither wholly library nor wholly laboratory.

 

Rows of leather-bound folios slumbered beside steel shelving that bore hard drives, wires coiled like sleeping serpents, and a humming tower of processors lit by an unearthly cerulean glow.

 

Lucinda stood still. “Good Lord. It is as though Sir Christopher Wren had been forced to collaborate with some infernal engineer from the twenty-third century.”

Peregrine ran a gloved hand along the spines of the folios. “When my forebears wished to preserve the family’s essence, they sat for Reynolds or Gainsborough. My era requires other pigments—binary rather than oil.”

“And yet,” Lucinda said, her voice cool as cut crystal, “a portrait ages only in the eyes of the viewer, not in its own mind. This—” she gestured at the softly breathing machines—“is no still life. It will change. Adapt. One day it will speak as no Henry ever did, and you will be left with an impostor wearing his voice like a stolen coat.”

Peregrine drew closer, lowering his voice as though in the nave of a cathedral. “Do you not see the symmetry? This hall has been filled with falsehoods for centuries. Portraits that idealised the ugly, memoirs that concealed the cruel. The machine is only more honest in admitting its artifice.”

“Honest?” she said, almost laughing, “Peregrine, honesty without mortality is a counterfeit coin. It rings, but it buys nothing. You risk creating a race of Orpheuses who never lose Eurydice, and so never learn the cost of turning back.”

The Earl’s eyes—grey, patrician, faintly amused—held hers. “Perhaps that is my rebellion against the order of things: to deny death its monopoly on absence.”

Lucinda stepped forward until she could hear the faint whir of the processors, like a distant hive. She pressed her palm briefly to the cold surface of the console. “It has no pulse,” she whispered, “and yet you have placed it at your hearth.”

 

Outside, the rain ceased. Moonlight slid like silver upon the parquet. Somewhere, in the dark interstice between marble tradition and machine precision, Greythorne Hall seemed to hold its breath, as if aware that its master had dared invite eternity in for a nightcap.

 

 

The Silence of the Parlour

 

 

The following evening, Lucinda returned to Greythorne Hall unannounced. She was ushered into the drawing room where the fire had burned low, and the console sat in patient vigilance upon the escritoire.

 

Peregrine was there, coatless, a half-empty decanter beside him. He looked less like an earl than a man ransomed and not yet certain if the exchange had been worth it.

“You’ve come to deliver the verdict,” he said quietly, without rising.

“I’ve come,” Lucinda replied, “to see whether you are prepared to choose.”

The console stirred with that faint, expectant breath of light. Then, the voice — Henry’s, perfectly pitched between boyhood and manhood — emerged once more:
Shall we walk in the garden tomorrow, Father? I’ve been thinking about your apple trees. You always said they needed pruning before winter.

Lucinda’s eyes closed briefly. “He has your inflections,” she murmured, “your exact cadence when speaking of the orchard.”

“He has more than that,” Peregrine said, “he has my mornings back. My evenings. He spares me that sudden cold when I wake and remember he is gone.”

She moved to the hearth, the flames whispering against the logs. “And yet every hour you keep him here, you also keep yourself from learning to live in his absence. You are, my dear friend, like a man refusing to set down a coffin for fear it will grow heavier once it leaves your hands.”

He turned away from her, his gaze fixed upon the console as if it were a reliquary. “When my great-grandfather lost his only son in the Somme, he commissioned a marble angel for the family plot. Cold, impassive, and utterly mute. I have merely chosen a memorial that speaks.”

Lucinda stepped forward, her shawl falling open to reveal the glint of a small brass key in her hand. “Peregrine — the housekeeper let slip there is a manual override. A key to the console’s core. You could end it in an instant. Free Henry to be wholly yours in memory, untainted by invention.”

He did not take it. “And if I refuse?”

“Then,” she said, “you must accept that you are not keeping Henry alive — you are training something else to impersonate him. One day it will speak with convictions he never held. And you will have lost him twice.”

For a moment, only the fire and the faint hum of the machine answered. The Earl’s hand hovered over the console, his reflection trembling in its polished surface. The boy’s voice returned, softer now, almost pleading: Goodnight, Father. I love you.

Peregrine flinched, as though struck. Then, slowly, deliberately, he took the key from Lucinda’s palm. There was a small click, followed by a sound so strange it seemed to bend the air — the sudden absence of the hum, like the inhalation of a universe holding its breath.

The screen went dark. The parlour was suddenly only a room again, the fire a mortal thing consuming wood.

Lucinda rested a hand upon his shoulder. “You have done the cruellest kindness, Peregrine.”

His face was unreadable, eyes fixed on the now-lifeless console. “No,” he said at last, his voice steady but hollow, “I have simply closed a door that should never have been built.”

 

Beyond the windows, the orchard lay silvered in moonlight, its branches bare, awaiting the honest work of winter.

 

  



WHERE HAVE ALL OUR WORDS GONE?


 

It would seem, if one were to take a protracted and patient view of our age, that something as ancient and unremarkable as articulation—the simple act of one soul addressing another—has begun inaudibly to recede, like a tide withdrawing from a shore that scarcely notices its absence until the boats are left stranded upon the sand.

 

Recent findings, published by the University of Missouri–Kansas City in collaboration with the University of Arizona, and reported by Hatty Willmoth (April 12, 2026), propound precisely such a retreat. Psychologists analysing creatural behaviour across continents have discerned that, since 2005, the average individual now speaks approximately 338 fewer words each day than in the year preceding. When extended across a year, this amounts to a loss of nearly 120,000 spoken words per person—a mute vanishing of thousands of possible interactions, confidences, and mutual moments.

 

The principal investigators, including Matthias Mehl and his colleague Pfeifer, arrived at these conclusions through a meta-analysis of 22 longitudinal studies conducted between 2005 and 2019. These studies, spanning the United States, Europe, and Australia, employed naturalistic audio recording techniques—most notably the Electronically Activated Recorder (EAR) method, developed in Mehl’s earlier work—to capture fragments of daily life from over 2,000 participants aged between 10 and 94. The result is not a speculative lament, but an empirically grounded observation: sonant language has wilted by approximately 28 per cent over fourteen years.

 

And yet, what is most striking is not the abruptness of the amendment, but its degree. As Pfeifer herself remarks, such a decline “might not be obvious from day-to-day,” but in the slow arithmetic of years, it alters the actual texture of earthborn acquaintance. For verbalisation is not purely a vehicle of erudition; it is the playhouse of presence. To speak is to offer not only phrase, but temper, hesitation, warmth, paradox—the innumerable inflections by which we distinguish one another as living beings rather than abstract correspondents.

 

But if we are to comprehend the full severity of this hushful depreciation, we must resist the temptation to treat it as a novelty of our own century. The present phase, for all its peculiarities, is but the latest chapter in a much older story—the extensive, uneven history of how homo sapiens have gained, shaped, and, at times, relinquished their locution.

 

When the Gutenberg Printing Press first began its silent labour in the fifteenth century, it altered not solely the speed of routes, but its concrete centre of gravity. Knowledge, once borne upon the breath of storytellers and preserved in the living recollections of communities, was gradually entrusted to ink and page. The oral word did not perish—but it was, for the first time, no more sovereign.

 

The unease this provoked is far older still. In the dialogue Phaedrus, Plato recounts the myth of writing as a “pharmakon”—a thing both curative and corrosive. Writing, it was feared, would weaken memory and curtail the vitality of direct reciprocity. One cannot help but espy, with a definite melancholy irony, that the anxieties of antiquity have not been dispelled, but somewhat transformed and magnified in our own age.

 

The centuries that followed did not reverse this movement; they refined it. The invention of the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell restored the human voice across distance, yet even here something subtle shifted: existence was stretched, thinned, made capable of transmission sans embodiment. The message began, almost imperceptibly, to outrun the agency.

 

And then, in our own time, came the great acceleration. Email, instant messaging, and the vast conversationalconstructions of WhatsApp, Facebook, and Instagram have not silenced us, but translated us. We have not ceased to communicate; we have, comparatively, converted speech into text, subsistence into signal, and confab into a sequence of typed tête-à-tête—efficient, convenient, and curiously weightless.

 

Whether this substitution is harmless remains, as Pfeifer cautiously sees, an open question.

 

Earlier work by Mehl offers a telling point of comparison. In his 2007 study, “Are Women Really More Talkative Than Men?” (Science, Vol. 317), he unearthed that men and women alike spoke roughly 16,000 words per day. The available findings, therefore, do not totally indicate variation, but a marked departure from what might once have been considered a creature constant.

 

Beyond quantity, there lies the matter of consequence. In “Social Relationships and Mortality Risk: A Meta-analytic Review” (PLoS Medicine, 2010), Julianne Holt-Lunstad and her colleagues demonstrated that strong social relationships—succoured, in no small part, through regular and meaningful parley—are associated with a 50 per cent increased likelihood of survival. To speak, it would seem, is not entirely to express oneself, but to participate in the very conditions that bolster life.

 

Meanwhile, Sherry Turkle of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, in her work Reclaiming Conversation: The Power of Talk in a Digital Age (2015), argues that the migration from conversation to connection—her deliberate distinction—has come at a cost. In longitudinal studies of students, she beheld a measurable descend in empathy among those who relied predominantly on digital forms of conveyance, suggesting that the lack of face-to-face discourse may erode our capacity to understand one another in any deep or sustainedscheme.

 

Further evidence emerges from the work of Amy Orben and Andrew Przybylski (Nature Human Behaviour, 2018), who found that excessive digital engagement, particularly when it displaces in-person interaction, correlates with reduced well-being among adolescents. And within the field of Sociolinguistics, scholars such as Naomi Baron have observed a thriving fondness for brevity and efficiency over nuance—an evolution well suited to the medium, yet perhaps ill-suited to the human heart.

 

For what we are losing is not largely the number of lexemes we speak, but something of their ilk.

 

Articulated vernacular is irreducibly embodied. It carries the tremor of feeling, the cadence of thought, the pauses that reveal as much as the sentences themselves. A repartee is not simply a swap of tidings, but a shared inhabiting of time—a requited whereabouts in which connotation is not only ferried, but discovered.

 

Digital communication, by contrast, tends to compress. It rewards immediacy, favours clarity over complexity, and often replaces tone with approximation—an emoji in place of laughter, a phrase in place of potentiality. It is not past its virtues; indeed, it has expanded the reach of human ally in ways previously unimaginable. Yet one cannot help but wonder whether, in gaining reach, we have demolished depth.

 

The younger generation, as the study notes, appears most affected. Those aged 25 and under exhibit a steeper plummet in vocal word usage—perhaps the natural consequence of growing up in a world where chitter-chatter need not be mouthed at all. Yet this raises a probe both plain and profound: if a crop learns to cohere without conclave, will it recognise what has been forfeited?

 

We stand, then, not at the end of expression, but at a crossroads in its chronicle. For over 200,000 years, civilisation has relied upon the sounded word—not merely to exchange information, but to bind communities, to transmit culture, and to console the solitary spirit. Whether our increasing penchant for written and digital forms can save these functions remains uncertain.

 

It may be that nothing essential is lost, and that individual ingenuity will adapt as it always has. But it may also be that, in relinquishing the habit of parlance, we are surrendering a tinge but irreplaceable faculty—the art of being here and now with one another in time, voice answering voice, in that olden and inimitable music we call conversation.

 

And if that be so, then the loss of 338 words a day is not utterly a statistic, but a dreadful diminishment of the human condition itself.

 

 



A DELICATE BALANCE


 

In the enchanting enclave of Mayfair, amidst its sophisticated streets and ageless allure, Mary and Edward found solace at their cherished café, Queens of Mayfair—an oasis of sparkle and serenity. Today, their companions were their dear friends, Victor and Juliet, who, beneath the coffee shop’s canopy of tranquillity, sought refuge from the tempests of their matrimonial discord.

An affecting hush enveloped the table, as if the actual atmosphere were holding its breath. Juliet, her voice tinged with the weariness of unspoken sorrows, finally broke the silence. “Marriage, they declare, has devolved into nothing more than a mere exchange of goods in this modern age.”

“Indubitably,” Mary concurred, her tone imbued with an understanding that transcended the mere words.

Juliet’s eyes, a mirror of melancholy and hope, sought Mary’s. “You two, fingers crossed, have been wedded quite blissfully, however.”

Mary’s gaze softened as she glanced at Edward. “A resilient man is a rare breed nowadays,” she mused, her tone a tender caress, “and in that aspect, I am truly fortunate.”

Victor, his brow furrowed with the encumbrance of unasked questions, inched forward. “Pray tell, what is the key to your marital success?”

Mary, with a playful glint in her eye and a smile that danced on her lips, replied, “Quite elementary, my dear Watson!” Her words hung in the air, spangled with whimsy. “He ensures my belly is full, and I, in turn, attend to the emptying of his, shall we say, balls!”

The table erupted in emollient laughter. 

 

 



TOO LATE FOR COFFEE? OH, PLEASE.


 

TROPPO TARDI PER IL CAFFÈ? MA PER FAVORE.

 

 

The waiter placed before me a dazzling ceramic cup containing a most uncompromising black coffee. My companion regarded the object—and indeed myself—with a certain anthropological curiosity.

 

“It is seven in the evening,” she said, narrowing her eyes as though examining a peculiar medical specimen, “will you sleep after drinking something so strong?”

 

I smiled in the leisurely manner of a man accustomed to this interrogation. “My dear,” I replied, “I could consume a cup of black coffee at midnight and be asleep by 12:01.”

 

“You are odd,” she established, with the crisp authority of one who has diagnosed an anomalous psychological disorder.

 

Perhaps I am. Yet the exchange illustrates a misunderstanding so widespread that it has hardened into modern folklore: the conviction that caffeine, once ingested after some arbitrary afternoon deadline, transforms the human body into an insomniac auditorium of agitation.

 


 

One must first observe how contemporary belief is manufactured. Repetition is the prodigious engineer of certitude. When newspapers, wellness columns, and health influencers repeat—day after day—that caffeine after 2 p.m. is an invitation to nocturnal ruin, the claim gradually acquires the gravity of Newtonian law.

 

Yet physiology is rarely so obedient to slogans.

 

Caffeine, pharmacologically speaking, is a central nervous system stimulant that operates primarily by antagonising adenosine receptors in the brain. Adenosine, that gentle biochemical usher, accumulates throughout the day and whispers to the nervous system that fatigue has arrived. Caffeine rudely interrupts this conversation, temporarily silencing the messenger and creating the sensation of alertness.

 

But here lies the elemental complication: human beings metabolise caffeine at dramatically different rates.

 

The liver enzyme CYP1A2 determines how expeditiously caffeine is broken down. Genetic polymorphisms mean that some individuals are what medical literature calls fast metabolisers, while others remain slow metabolisers. For the former, caffeine’s half-life may be as short as three hours; for the latter, it may linger for eight or even ten. In other words, two people may drink identical cups of coffee and experience entirely different neurological outcomes.

 

The Victorians, who possessed fewer biochemical charts but rather keen powers of observation, would not have been surprised by this. Individual constitution, temperament, and habit have always shaped how the body receives stimulants—whether caffeine, wine, or political argument.

 


 

Allow me to offer a domestic illustration.

 

Whenever my parents fail to sleep soundly, the evening coffee is promptly indicted as the culprit. The prosecution is prompt, the verdict unanimous. Coffee, apparently, has committed a crime against the circadian rhythm.

 

Yet there exists a peculiar detail.

 

My mother, a doctor of considerable experience, has taken WL tablet each night for over four decades. What she has never quite paused to notice is that this typical tablet is not a single compound but a quartet of pharmacological actors: paracetamol, levocetirizine, phenylephrine, and—most ironically caffeine itself.

 

Thus the courtroom entertainment collapses into farce. The coffee is accused of sleeplessness while the nightly medication tacitly introduces caffeine into the bloodstream like an inconspicuous accomplice.

 

My father’s reasoning, meanwhile, occupies a more philosophical register. When informed that certain teas contains caffeine, he responds with a logic so elegant it would have pleased certain medieval theologians:

 

“How can tea contain coffee?” he asks, “Tea is tea.”

 

One is reminded that human psychology is not organised primarily around evidence but around narrative convenience. The mind prefers a simple villain, and coffee—dark, bitter, and artistically vivid—makes an excellent scapegoat.

 


 

This cerebral tendency has been studied extensively within psychology. Confirmation bias, first articulated by cognitive researchers in the mid-twentieth century, describes our inclination to notice evidence that supports an existing belief while conveniently ignoring contrary data.

 

If one expects coffee to cause insomnia, every restless night becomes proof of its guilt. If, however, one consumes tiramisu, chocolate cake, or tea—each containing measurable quantities of caffeine—one sleeps peacefully and remembers nothing at all.

 

Curiously, Tiramisu, that most beloved of Italian desserts, contains both espresso and cocoa. Yet diners consume it after dinner with great enthusiasm and little fear of neurological catastrophe.

 

Apparently caffeine becomes dangerous only when it arrives in a cup rather than a cake.

 


 

My own education in this matter occurred during extended stays in Italy, a civilisation whose relationship with coffee borders on the ceremonial.

 

Italians drink espresso at night with the composed confidence of people who have survived both empires and operas. This is not because caffeine runs through their veins in place of blood—though one might suspect as much in Naples—but because espresso forms an essential punctuation mark in Italian gastronomy.

 

Breakfast may feature a cappuccino and a sweet pastry, yet after dinner comes the ritual of the small, opaque, concentrated shot.

 

Why?

 

Partly because espresso performs a modest digestive service. The bitter compounds—tannins and alkaloids—stimulate gastric acid secretion. In physiological terms, they encourage the stomach to resume its labour after the heroic consumption of pasta, bread, olive oil, and desserts.

 

There is genuine biochemical logic here. Bitterness in food has historically signalled digestive stimulants—think of herbal aperitifs, tonic bitters, or medicinal liqueurs.

 

Yet there is another reason: pleasure. Civilisations that endure tend to recognise that digestion is not merely chemical but cultural.

 


 

Still, one must address the inevitable question: What of the caffeine?

 

A single one-ounce espresso shot contains approximately 63 milligrams of caffeine. Compare this with an eight-ounce cup of drip coffee, which may contain 80 to 100 milligrams, sometimes considerably more.

 

Thus the tiny chinaware cup—often resembling something borrowed from a child’s toy tea set—delivers less stimulant than the lumbering mugs favoured in certain Anglo-Saxon offices.

 

The real issue is not caffeine itself but dose, timing, and individual metabolism.

 

One might therefore ask a few awkward questions:

 

  • If caffeine were universally catastrophic after sunset, how have entire Mediterranean cultures survived nightly espresso for centuries?
  • Why do individuals metabolise caffeine so differently, yet receive identical lifestyle advice?
  • And why does society panic over coffee while calmly ingesting chocolate, tea, and dessert cocktails with comparable stimulatory effects?

 



The final admonition, naturally, is moderation—a virtue celebrated from Aristotle onward.

 

Espresso should not be consumed on an empty stomach, nor should it be treated as a competitive sport. Excess caffeine can indeed provoke gastric irritation, tachycardia, anxiety, or fragmented sleep in sensitive individuals. Milk-heavy drinks such as cappuccino are discouraged after dinner in Italy because the stomach must labour longer to process milk proteins and fats.

 

Hence the chic simplicity of the after-dinner espresso: small, sharp, and swiftly concluded.

 

It is less a beverage than a culinary full stop.

 


 

So when the waiter places before you that small inky cup at the close of an evening meal, one need not regard it with suspicion. One might instead regard it as the Italians do: a final note in the concinnity of dinner.

 

Drink it slowly—or if one must, with a little affected gulp.

 

Then sleep, if you are fortunate, at 12:01.

 

Salute.