The Impossible Future: Complete set by Frank Kennedy (mini ebook reader .txt) π
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- Author: Frank Kennedy
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Hokkaido wasnβt Ryllenβs home world, but he had nowhere else to go. The chair was his golden ticket. Only a fool would run.
He didnβt hesitate. Ryllen removed his shirt and filled out the chair. Boetha adjusted the machine and brought down the phasic tools, positioning them strategically above the bare chest.
βWhat does it look like?β Ryllen asked.
Kai answered by throwing off his jacket and peeling back his shirt. Now Ryllen understood why Kai never showed what lie underneath.
The tattoo covered most of Kaiβs chest, extending south of his ribs. The green sun was the size of a breadfruit, stamped above his heart. Its blood-red rays diffused in perfect symmetry β one for each of the fifty-seven islands in The Lagos.
βYouβre becoming a patriot, RJ. We have to protect our own.β Kai turned his eyes toward Boetha. βWill you finish before Ascension?β
βMy art is precise but also fast. Youβll have twenty minutes to spare.β
βPerfect. Take good care of him, Boetha. Iβll be outside with Mei.β Kai winked at Ryllen. βI donβt think she was glad to see me.β
Boetha took great care to position his tools into a symphonic arrangement above Ryllenβs chest, with special emphasis on the largest laser needle, making sure to align directly over the heart.
βIs this your first body stamp?β Boetha said while targeting needles.
βYes. Will it hurt?β
βNo. Youβll feel a tug, as if I was flaying your skin, but the stabilizer is only repositioning your dermis to create a permanent space for the ink. In my experience, most boys your age have already been stamped. Some over half their body. Why did you hold out so long?β
He didnβt mind the truth. Not anymore.
βIβm betting most of those boys didnβt grow up in Haansu.β
βFair point.β He triggered the central laser needle, which spun on a wheel and broke into eight smaller needles as it grabbed Ryllenβs chest and dug in. Boetha was right. No pain. If anything, the moment was exhilarating.
βHow much did Kai tell you about me?β
βIβm a contractor, RJ. I stay on the healthy perimeter. I know only enough to know nothing at all.β
βSo, you arenβt bothered that Iβm not native Hokki?β
βMy art belongs on humans. You meet the minimum bar. Iβve stamped people from six other worlds.β
βAny visitors from the Ark Carriers?β
βSure. Before they left, at least one a month. Odd birds, all of them. The Chancellors, you see, they were not fond of body stamps. My clients were rogue. Some even went native. Itβs not like youβre the only non-Hokki gracing our streets.β
Ryllen felt bold as the laser needles changed him forever.
βDo you miss them? The Chancellors? I assume they paid well.β
βWell does not describe it. I could have lived a comfortable life off twelve, maybe fifteen of them a year. So yes, when the Carriers left, I missed them.β He adjusted laser settings and leaned in to Ryllen. βBut Iβve had time to reflect, like everyone else. Thereβs a bigger picture. We canβt be concerned with personal grievances. You know what I mean, RJ. Otherwise, you wouldnβt be in my chair.β
He did know. Perhaps. Something was happening; the world was changing. It was about more than independence or each planet fending for itself in the absence of a unifying empire. Pieces of the larger issues remained a mystery to him; doors needed to be opened to allow the light inside.
Later, when he reviewed Boethaβs work in a mirror and saw the emblem of Green Sun across his chest, Ryllen exulted. Whatever the symbol meant, wherever it led him, whatever it made him do, at least he would face the journey with purpose.
βAll I ever wanted was a path,β he told Kai afterward when asked if he felt like a changed man. βThank you, Kai. For everything.β
They shared a brief kiss, though Ryllen knew Kai wanted β and now might expect β far more.
βWhereβs your sister?β He asked, scanning the alley.
βOh, we had a few words. Thatβs usually enough. Itβs time to celebrate, RJ. Youβre one of us now. A patriot. A soldier. I know the perfect place to watch Ascension.β
Minutes later, Ryllen parked the rifter outside a residential building a few blocks from the waterfront. Whoops and hollers echoed through the neighborhood. The structure looked decrepit, as if it were built shorty after colonization a thousand years ago, but the paint job on the ground-level faΓ§ade appeared only a few years old. Pinchon wouldnβt waste that sort of money unless it deemed the building safe.
They took a lift to the roof. On the way up, Kai gave him instructions.
βIf thereβs ever a doubt, RJ, do this.β He crossed his right index and middle fingers. βA quick tap above your heart. Donβt hold it, even for a beat. If they nod, you nod. Donβt overcomplicate it. Understand?β
He did. Kai was taking him directly into the nest for Hokkaidoβs most anticipated spectacle.
The scene was far more upscale than expected. This was, after all, Umkau. Hokkis young and old huddled in small groups. Clouds of poltash sweetened the air, and the spread of finger foods and fish rolls was complemented by many wines and liquors. Lights were hanging along the edges, but they were no brighter than the stars above.
Kai seemed to know everyone. They responded with generous smiles, compliments about his hair, and of course the two-fingered greeting. When surprised or cynical eyes turned his way, Ryllen stiffened his shoulders and delivered the sign. He saw their concerns vanish, and they welcomed him.
This was Green Sun? While most were a few years older than Kai, children as young as twelve ate and drank alongside their
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