The Impossible Future: Complete set by Frank Kennedy (mini ebook reader .txt) π
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- Author: Frank Kennedy
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βYoung Miss Syung, I lost the honorific last year. Iβm Kae. Who knows you are here?β
βNo one who will ever matter. How is Chi-Qua? We only spoke once. We cried. That was ten months ago. Please tell me how sheβs doing.β
Kae Motebe, once one of the wealthiest men in Haansu, who owned the estate next door to Syung, bowed his head.
βShe lives. Some days she smiles. She speaks of leaving for the continent. She knows someone in New Seoul.β
βNo. She canβt. Pinchon is her home.β
βPinchon is the city where she lives. Chi-Qua no longer considers it home. In her position, would you?β
He made a valid point. Kara often wondered how she would have reacted had it been her own family who lost everything in the social refinery that followed the departure of the Chancellors. She had yet to shake the horror of that morning thirteen months earlier when she arrived at the Baek estate to find it empty. Then, to return home and learn the sordid, disgusting truth from her mother.
βIβve tried to reach out, but Iβm blocked at every turn. I canβt even find her on the IntraNex.β
βPlease, do not take it personally. Her mother and I made those choices for Chi-Qua. We wanted to shield her from the repercussions of our shame. After I was offered this position under a pseudonym, we felt fortunate. I earn enough to pay lease and provide for Chi-Quaβs basic needs. If she leaves for the continent, sheβll have a few monthsβ worth of Dims to see her through.β
Kara looked around. The tiny office was nondescript. A desk. Two chairs. A touch bar with keyboard and holographics. A vase with purple quovis flowers.
βWhat is your job? This division is Support Services.β
βI am Inventory Logistics Sub-manager for Facilities.β
Her heart ached. βYou make sure the bathrooms are stocked.β
He met her eyes with a surprising twinkle.
βI also keep the vases fresh, Kara.β
How could he bear to smile?
βIβm so sorry, Kae. None of it ever should have happ β¦β
βPlease. Your sympathy is unwarranted. My family disgraced itself. Now we pay in standing. Many before us endured the same.β
Kara wanted to spit.
βThe only disgrace is how you were sacrificed by families like mine. Donβt you dare try to convince me otherwise. If collaborators needed to be punished for siphoning revenue through the Chancellors, it should have been my parents.β
βKara, no! Never in your life say that again. You cannot imagine how fragile your standing is. If even one of your parentsβ associates heard such an accusation, they might bring down Syung-Low in a matter of days. You have no idea how dangerous life became in those first weeks after the Carriers left Hokkaido. Our economy stood on the brink of collapse. Anarchists and Freelanders killed thousands on the continent β much of it never reported on the Global Wave. We came within hours of a workersβ revolt in Pinchon.
βThe only solution was refinery, as it has been for centuries. They even practiced a form of it on Earth, before colonization. The Gentry Class sacrificed families in the name of appeasing the discontented. Refinery allows scapegoats to fall, and honor be restored to the Gentry. This invokes confidence among plebians.β
βIt is sick, and it is disgusting, Kae. There are days when I loathe my family.β
βNo. Kara β¦β
βMy brothers do whatever Honorable Father says. Theyβre his deputies. I believe they spy on other families and build dossiers in case more sacrifices have to be made. I used to love growing up in Haansu. Now, the blades are out.β
He grabbed her hands and wrapped them in his own.
βThey always were, Kara, but you were too young to see them. In a sense, there is relief in knowing we cannot fall further. Our lives have been diminished, but not our love for each other. Kara, why did you come down here? This was such a risk.β
βBecause I have a proposal. I think thereβs a way to rehabilitate your family. At the very least, have Chi-Qua back in my life.β
He leaned in and planted a tiny peck on her cheek. Outside the office, this would be deemed a gross violation, perhaps a firing offense.
βCome now, Kara. Youβre seventeen. A bit young to be fighting the scourge of social refinery, donβt you think?β
βNo. Kae, Iβve been researching for months. I canβt find any legal recourse, but thereβs a remedy. Itβs been used for centuries. Most of the time, families are rehabilitated within ten years. Will you at least hear me out?β
He pulled away. βYou sweet child. Also, naΓ―ve. Anything you might propose would be a product of your subterfuge. Your parents will hear none of it, let alone the rest of the Gentry. Besides, by the time Chi-Qua is my age, the Baek name will be spoken with reverence again. Social refinery is not a sentence of death. The next generation will see things differently. They always do.β
βThatβs a myth. Iβve done the research. Most families never recover from refinery. The Ju-Ho clan practically ruled The Lagos for two hundred years after colonization. One scandal involving the patriarchβs brother brought down everyone. There are no records of the family β even through pseudonyms β from fifty years after. Families donβt return to the Gentry without direct intervention from the original accusers themselves. Kae, itβs the only way, and it will work. I promise.β
She saw the sudden, stark realization in his weary eyes. He understood what βinterventionβ meant. Kara knew her proposal was selfish at best. It might very well destroy whatever modicum of happiness the former Baeks found in their new lives.
But it was a chance β and maybe a way back.
βKara, even if you had a plan, it would never work. Your parents were not the accusers.β
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