Part 1 | Chapter 2 - Out of Credits
AQUILA [Dystopian Corpo-Feudalism + Animal Companions]
Part 1, The Ticking Clock
Chapter 2 - Out of Credits
Bar 5-7 is tiki themed, apparently. Tiki theming is limited to digital display behind the bar, rotating between a selection of abstract designs in green, yellow and blue, and some plastic novelty cups that they serve the same beer in as every other bar offers. Thankfully they arenât playing the garish music some pencil pusher thought would fit the theme.
I hop up onto a seat at the bar and tap my city-monitor to the station, causing the small LED to flash green. It's just early enough in the afternoon that most of the cogs arenât out of work yet.
âJust you?â asks the bartender, rolling sets of chopsticks between purple napkins.
âI have a friend coming. Do you still have any of that special issue IPA? From the OKR cycle celebration?â I hang my satchel on the back of the bar stool.
âNah, all out. Weâve got the lager and the sour, nothing else at the moment.â
âSour will do.â
âSure thing cob.â The bartender takes a large step over their symbiont as they move down the bar to pour my request from one of the three taps, returning with it and a small dish of peanuts. I let my eyes dart to their symbiont once. Looks like a Pygoscelis species and appears to be busying itself being the heat pump cooling the bar kegs, too small for industrial uses but a good fit for smaller uses in food service or R&D applications.
I rub my eyebrows, trying to erase the image of so many penned symbionts from my mind, soon the rest of my working fate is going to be tied to whatever symbiont I manifest.
Arms wrap themselves uninvited around my waist! âConrad!â
âMeiko, stop, get off me!â I demand playfully, pushing her arms down over my hips.
âDamn Conrad. Way to treat a friend,â Meiko pouts dramatically, rolling her eyes. Her long black hair is tied up in two buns at the nape of her neck, her black overalls banded with reflective safety orange and the logos of the electrical engineers.
âJust sit down already,â I laugh, tapping the spot next to me.
She taps her wrist to the station, LED flashing green, and sits sideways on her stool, âLet me see! Let me see! Did you go to the fancy apartments today?â
Obediently Iâm already getting my folio with the drawings out for her, I place it on the bar for her to leaf through at her own leisure. âI didnât get to see inside any of the apartments, but they got sunlight and had some real fancy security,â I start.
âIi na. Iâd love to be able to grow a pot plant, theyâre technically not banned,â she says as she opens the folio and turns the first few pages. Half of them are sketches, or in various states of unfinished, but she finds the new Larus quickly. âOh! What is it? Whatâs it do if an Executive has one?â
âLarus argentatus, and it was only a Senior Director, and not much,â I reply, sipping my beer, âThey can carry a single rider in flight, but not much use for that these days. Dad wants to do a paper consolidating our understanding of the last few named species into the genera as a whole.â
âMank-ass nepo babies,â laughs Meiko, âIf it did anything useful you just know they wouldnât be in management.â
I give her a grin, âHowâs the generators? Excited to be working there full-time soon now exams are over?â
She leans on the bar and waves to try and get the bartender back, âWe donât know that yet. I might not bond with an electrical type.â
âAw câmon, both sides of your family are electrical, your brother was too. Itâs all but guaranteed.â
âYou got thatâ¦â
The bartender cuts her off, âNope, just the sour and the lager.â
âSour then. Are we ever gonna get it back?â
The bartender scratches his nose, âDunno, they imported it special for the celebration. Thatâs above my paygrade.â
I pop a peanut into my mouth, âDrawings go away if thereâs drink,â I warn, taking my folio back.
âWell, no matter what I get, I hope the allowances are better. No more unbonded pay scale,â continues Meiko, leaning against the bar to watch me with her chin propped on one fist.
âYeah, and theyâll just take it all away again by âreallocatingâ you into a larger apartment,â I growl.
Meiko grins, âIâll just talk Justin into marrying me. Once you get a child license you get a family sized apartment without having to pay for it.â
I snort into my beer. âThat serious now?â
Meikoâs grin widens, âHe doesnât know it yet. Iâm serious about getting a window though.â
âBetter hope you donât get recruited out of the Company then. Long distance ainât really a thing when you only get four days leave a year.â
âWhat about you?â Meikoâs tone softens.
I take a deep breath, âI dunno. We were serfs, my dad got his position during the acquisition. Murasakiâd never take a new employee into R&D with his symbiont, assuming I get the same thing.â
âMaybe youâll get what your mum had?â
I grimace, âI hope not. I canât think of anything worse than sparking a bidding war and not knowing where youâll end up.â
âYou could get recruited by the big five, that might not be so bad?â
I raise an eyebrow, âYeah sure, leave all your family and friends? Who knows what rules they have, what theyâre like? And no choice in the matter, as long as Murasaki likes the terms of your buyout. Iâd rather get some cog-job, stay here with my dad.â I add ruefully.
Meiko leans on her hand again, âFolks reckon the big five are pretty crisp. Rumors gotta come from something.â
I sip my beer skeptically. If anyone knew what I could see, thereâd be recruiters hunting me down, and it wouldnât be the big five and it definitely wouldnât be R&D. There were far worse fates than just being separated.
âAll I want is to bond something useful and normal like a Rattus or Columba, get a job that keeps me off the radar, and leaves me with some spare time to keep helping my dad drawing. Another week and weâll find out if I get my wish,â I put down my plastic tiki-themed cup.
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Meiko sighs, âThatâs such a waste. You were top of our class, no one in R&D knows as much about symbionts as you, other than maybe your dad.â
âMarks donât matter much. Bond does,â I quip.
âYou coming out to the club later?â asks Meiko, âJustinâs up tomorrow? We were going to go party before⦠just in case.â
âThis was my last drink credit till payday.â I tap my city-monitor again at the station to show the LED remaining red this time. âHarris going?â I ask cautiously.
She elbows me in the chest playfully, âDunno, you should ask him yourself. Iâll give you a credit if you want another one?â she starts to unclasp the city-monitor on her own wrist.
âNo, shit, leave that on cob,â I chastise as I swing my satchel over one shoulder again. âI gotta swing by the lab anyway. And also, dero, no, Iâm not coming off as desperate. Iâll think about it. Iâll message you.â
I knew Meiko knew Iâd say no. To be honest I hate the singular club some Murasaki exec thought would suffice as entertainment for the young people, but I was glad Meiko still invited me.
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âHey Chuck,â I give security a playful salute as I pass through the turnstiles at R&D swiping my ID.
âCob. Youâre back late?â replies Chuck, taking out one earbud. His Oryctolagus sits on the desk blinking blankly as he pats it one handed, its brightly colored ears tucked flat against its back.
âMy dad still in?â I ask.
âHavenât seen him leave. You staying long?â
âJust dropping some things off. Iâll be quick.â
âBetter be, I canât be arsed signing you in proper and my shifts almost over.â
âIn and out, I promise,â Iâm already skipping past the glass doors.
âDonât get me in trouble!â he calls, putting his earbud back in.
The Dorrien group lab is in the basement. Despite the taxonomy and formal description of symbionts and their powers being fundamental to any applied development, it doesnât directly make money. And sharing knowledge, publishing papers like actual research? It all just sounds like information leaks to the jockeys.
As I wait in the elevator, I tap a quick message into the hand-held interface to my city-monitor.
Meiko said thereâs a meet up for Justin tonight, you going? - CD, ID:SB0088907B
The doors open, and the first thing I smell is burnt electronics, the must of old books, and acetone. Itâs so familiar it feels like home.
I pull a ring of keys from my pocket, and unlock the third door in the hallway, the name âDorrienâ handwritten in fading black pen on the plastic door card.
âDad? Oh hey Gilroyâ¦â
Gilroy looks up from his workstation near the door, long face and dusty blond hair tied up into a knot on top of his head. âHey Conrad. Howâd it go with Fitzgerald?â He takes his reading glasses off the bridge of his nose.
âData sheet is already uploaded. They only gave us two hours!â
âMank. I definitely told Dr Dorrien to put in for four-â
âYeah, I dunno if he forgot or some clocker just denied it. Anyway, what I got is there, you might have to ask for a second visit,â I drop my satchel on the desk between us, half stacked with books and preserved symbiont samples floating invisibly in their jars. Well⦠invisible to everyone else. The preservatives drain all the color from them, it leaches into the liquid. Iâve never told anyone, the same preservation method has been used for over four hundred years. It'd seem a little weird to suggest they should change it suddenly.
Gilroy rubs his tired eyes with two fingers, âYouâll be gone by the time we can get on his calendar again,â he moans.
âHey!â I start, offended at the implication.
âIâm planning for the worst. I need to get this paper outâ¦â
âIâd like to plan for the best, please. Theyâll give a serf a job, no matter what I bond. You or Dad can sneak materials out to me,â my fingers linger on my folio and colored pencils as I unpack for Gilroy on the desk, âIs Dad still here?â
âYeah, heâs in the back somewhere.â
My city-monitor buzzes and I glance at the message on the underside of my wrist.
Iâve got the night shift. You going? - HC, ID:MRG2044987D
As I walk through the bookcases overflowing with books that have survived digitization and specimen cases with empty floating jars, I tap a reply into the hand-held again.
And assault my ears with that shit some exec thinks is music? - CD, ID:SB0088907B
âConrada, itâs late. Why are you here?â
Doctor Armin Dorrien looks up from his microscope, tweezers in hand as he assembles wet specimen slides.
âWhy are you still here?â I reply in turn, coming behind him and leaning on the back of his chair to look over his shoulder at the slides.
âThese slides take six hours to set. If I donât finish them now Iâll lose tomorrow, then Iâll be behind next week. I thought you were going out with Meiko?â
He hunches back to his work as he speaks, eyes burrowing into the eyepiece of his microscope. Dr Dorrien is naturally grey haired, which makes him look older than his age, with a sparse beard that comes across as lazy grooming although I know it's a serious attempt at looking distinguished. I'm like him in a lot of ways.
âI did, now Iâm outta credits. Iâm just dropping off the interview supplies for Gilroy. Security will get suspicious if I have lab equipment in my room again,â I explain.
âSupplies?â
âThe Larus argentatus. I was out doing the descriptive protocol. You put in the request, remember? Did you seriously not ask for four hours?â
âOh that project! Here can you look at this for meâ¦â he pulls back from the microscope, indicating for me to look down.
âDad-â I warn, drawing back from the chair a little.
He makes a face, dropping his voice, âNot that. Just take a look, Iâm still trying to work on a dye that will make symbiont tissue visible. What do you think? Your eyes are younger than mine.â
I frown, and very slowly lean forward to do as bid. Itâs white, just the backlighting. I give it a blink just to be sure and the field of view suddenly fills with red blood cells. My hand twitches, and I catch myself from adjusting the focus.
âNothing.â I pull back from the microscope faster than I should, tucking my hands in my pockets.
Dad sighs, and begins to cap the bottles of colored liquids in front of his station. His Rattus symbiont is focused on the workstation, a cloud of sparking blue around its small paws as it leans on the screen and Dadâs notes write themselves into the digital lab book.
âMaybe another week or two and you can start as a grad student? They might let you keep your pencils in your room then,â he suggests wistfully.
My jaw tightens, I grab a lock of my own grey streaked hair and turn it around one finger. âThe best case scenario for me is a Rattus, Dad. That wonât get me a grad student position in R&D. The worst case scenarioâ¦â I trail off.
Dad turns to me suddenly, capturing me with his gentle blue eyes, âWe donât know what your mother manifested, all I remember it saying was âclassifiedâ. But that was Systems Biotechnica then, they were less⦠concerned with selling contracts. Weâre with Murasaki now, even if itâs classified theyâre big enough that theyâll keep on as many people as they can. Worst case⦠weâre serfs, theyâll find you a job no matter what happens.â
âAnd if I do get bought out?â I ask.
His lips tighten, âHopefully youâre not hiding a pregnancy from me like your mother was. They almost didnât let me get the child license when her new employer reached out after you were born seeking to transfer you back. Itâll be fine, it wonât happen.â
Iâd rather just avoid looking at his eyes, scared of what Iâll see there. In my gut, I know it isnât going to be anything normal, nothing about my connection with other peopleâs symbionts is normal, let alone what my own might be like. Itâs not that Iâm against having an unusual symbiont, Iâm against the values of whoever might be in the business of purchasing unusual symbionts.
âHow late you going to be?â I ask, changing the topic.
âAnother few hours,â says Dad as he turns back to his work, âYou better be home when I get back?â
âWhy wouldnât I be home?â I reply innocently. My wrist buzzes.
You know we log these messages right? - HC, ID:MRG2044987D