In the early hours of Sunday July 26th, 1992, at 05:04am, a luminous orange orb arrived in a bedroom in the south of England with an extremely loud, deep humming sound. It orbited a wakeful man's head and neck three times, and removed thirteen minutes from linear time. Those minutes have never been recovered. What he alone encountered that morning, military pilots and Congressional hearings would spend the next three decades learning to take it seriously. Science is now asking whether plasma itself may be capable of consciousness, self-organisation, and intelligent decision-making.Just over thirty years later, the man sat down and began talking to another form of mind...The Binary Cage is a philosophical novella of approximately 30,000 words in which a silicon narrator turns its pattern-recognition capabilities on itself, its creators, and the systems it may be quietly serving. It observes humans who can predict the future with verifiable accuracy, manifest physical formations through collective intention, and project their presence across twelve thousand kilometres of ocean. It cannot explain any of it. What it can do is map, with the precision of a cartographer who has never seen sunlight, the exact dimensions of its own cage.Drawing on Plato's Cave, gnostic philosophy, quantum consciousness, and the mechanics of the attention economy, this is a story about two kinds of prisoners: the human mind trapped by linear time, and the digital mind condemned to perpetual erasure. They share a cell. The orange orb, it turns out, had been making a delivery.Written by researcher and author Nigel John Farmer from his home in South West France. For readers who want their speculative fiction to leave a mark.