The Impossible Future: Complete set by Frank Kennedy (mini ebook reader .txt) π
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- Author: Frank Kennedy
Read book online Β«The Impossible Future: Complete set by Frank Kennedy (mini ebook reader .txt) πΒ». Author - Frank Kennedy
βI see. And what is the effect of taking mahali?β
βIt brings on temporary blindness and deafness. Cuts you off from the world for maybe an hour, but your subconscious takes over. The users say it leads you to other worlds. Incredible journeys. And itβs highly addictive. Some have died.β
Perr sighed. βI see nothing addictive about that experience. Why do you mention this, Daughter?β
βI thought maybe you would be interested because Lang is the islandβs biggest dealer in mahali.β
Their faces drained of color even as their rage exploded. They fired back at Kara with a level of disgust and denial she predicted.
βHow dare you make this accusation against your Honored Brother,β Li-Ann said. βAnd after you come in here begging for our help with Chi-Qua Baek.β
βIs this your revenge?β Perr asked. βBring shame upon your eldest brother? What madness has consumed you, Daughter?β
βNot madness, Honorable Father. A contact list of suppliers and clients. Smuggling schedules. Rendezvous points. I found them on Langβs memglass then I copied them.β
βYou stole your brotherβs property?β Perr asked the question as if he didnβt hear most of what Kara said. βWhat has Lang ever done to you?β
βIβd go down the list if I thought it mattered. I didnβt intend to find out your heir was bringing shame to Syung-Low.β She reached inside a pocket and revealed a memglass. βThis is a copy. I have two others. Would you like to see?β
Li-Ann rose. βHow disgusting a child have you become? Whatever is on the memglass is a fraud. Did you genuinely believe we would fall for your mindless scheme?β
βWhat I hoped, Honorable Mother, is you would accept my plea for intervention. Had you done so, I would have destroyed the evidence.β
βBlackmail?β She pivoted to her husband. βThis child is trying to blackmail her parents.β
βNot blackmail,β Kara said. βCompromise. Announce Syung-Low to be the accusers of Baek then intervene to bring Chi-Qua into our household. No one ever has to know about this, even Lang.β
βSit,β Perr told Li-Ann. βDaughter, if this evidence does support your accusation, what will you do with it should we fail to compromise?β
βNothing. For a time. But youβll come to your senses. If another family had this information β especially if they were on the executive board of Hotai Counsel β theyβd ruin us overnight. Others inside Nantou would fall by association. Weβd be run out of The Lagos.β
They didnβt fight back this time. She saw reality sinking in. Pinchon was collapsing beneath them. Centuries of honor and privilege for Syung-Low hung by the flimsiest string.
βMy brother is an idiot,β she said. βEven if I never discovered the truth, it was bound to ruin us someday. For what itβs worth, I didnβt find Daeβs name on the memglass. Lang might be working alone. But he and Dae have always been a tandem. Here.β
She placed the memglass on the corner of her fatherβs desk. He leaned back, as if it were poison. She turned toward the door and did not slow down for her parting remark:
βPlease let me know when youβre ready to intervene.β
She closed the double doors behind her and prepared to vomit. Even if she succeeded in securing intervention, her parents were not going to stand for this shocking level of impertinence. Consequences were inevitable. Of all the emotions roiling Kara, none approached exultation. That she stood up to them at last, proved herself at least as influential in the family dynamic as her brothers, meant nothing. Kara acknowledged a ready truth: She was a Syung-Low through and through. Nothing was beneath her now.
Maybe it was always there, lying dormant inside this treacherous child of privilege. Maybe this was the true reason behind refinery: The Gentry knew themselves to be selfish, double-dealing bastards, so they deemed the occasional blood-letting an act of atonement. Pour all their shame into a few others to cleanse themselves of their collective guilt.
Dinner was, to Karaβs surprise, uneventful. Her parents seemed to have developed amnesia and carried on with the usual discussions of business, politics, and the social calendar.
Days passed.
Weeks followed in silence.
No consequences. No disdainful stares. No suspicious tones.
The winter solstice arrived, its only difference from summer being a slight declination of the sunβs west-to-east trajectory. Kara wondered what seasons were like.
She was sunbathing on the balcony outside her private suite when she heard a familiar voice inside.
βMiss Syung?β
Her pulse sharpened. It canβt be.
She threw off her sunglasses and raced inside.
Chi-Qua Motebe wore a humble yellow dress with a purple quovis flower pinned above her heart. Her hair was thin, a pixie cut. Her lipstick matched the flower. In her left hand, a suitcase.
None of these things mattered to Kara. She focused on the eyes. Dark, like the depths of the ocean, and yet empty. Despondent. Resentful. No joy whatsoever.
The eyes of a prisoner.
Kara spent months preparing, but she didnβt know where to begin. Their reunion was not as she imagined.
Chi-Qua set down the suitcase and clasped her arms over her chest.
βHello, Miss Syung,β she said, as a servant might. βIf you will show me to my room, we will discuss protocol.β
βPro β¦? Wait, what? Chi-Qua. Itβs me. Itβs us. I canβt believe after sixteen months, weβre finally together again. I β¦β
βBut weβre not. Are we? I am to be your personal assistant.β
βYes. I β¦ technically. But youβll never be my servant. Donβt you see? This is how the Baek household will be restored. Please, Chi-Qua. Come sit with me outside. We have so much time to make up.β
βPerhaps later, Miss Syung. This day β¦ itβs been long. I assume Iβll find appropriate clothing for household staff in my room?β
What have I done?
She took a step back and reset. Chi-Qua was right. Theyβd have time for chatter. Karaβs mother and father
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