Chapter Three
“You’re up
early for a Saturday,” said Anne. She and Ken were seated across from each
other at the kitchen table with a slew of papers taking up all the available
surface between them. The first rays of sunlight were slanting in through the
windows casting bright bars around the room.
“I guess,”
answered Makoto. He went straight to the fridge and stuck his head inside, more
out of a desire for privacy than hunger. His eyes felt grainy and a nasty
tasted coated the inside of his mouth, retribution for skipping the previous
night’s ablutions.
“I found
more eggs in the chicken coop this morning; I could fry a few of them for you.”
“I’m fine.”
“Or how
about scrambled? Your father likes them on toast with cheese in a sandwich, you
could try that.”
“I’m not
really hungry.” Makoto grabbed the pitcher of drinking water out of the fridge
and brought it to the stove to heat for coco. Anne’s disapproval when she saw
him grab the container of brown powder was like a heated spotlight focused on
his back.
“That’s not
nutrition. That stuff has no nutritional value at all.”
He made it
anyway and brought the mug to the table, sitting down so his back was to the
sunshine. The papers spread between his parents were all maps. He recognized
the surveyor’s map that showed their property line. There were also
topographical maps that he couldn’t interpret and an aerial photograph marked
with red lines. His father sat brooding over them and drinking his morning
coffee with an unaccustomed grimace.
“You should
eat the eggs, get them before your sisters wake up,” said Ken. Makoto knew that
wasn’t likely to happen any time before noon and said nothing.
“See, our
line runs right along the ridge here. We don’t own the entire side of
mountain,” Ken said to Anne.
“I could
have sworn we did,” said Anne leaning over one of the maps. “I distinctly
remember that from when we bought the property.”
Ken shook
his head. “No, I walked up there when we set the bounds.”
“That’s a
shame.” Anne rose to her feet and gathered up the eggs from the counter by the
sink. She began cracking them into a bowl and Makoto knew he be eating
breakfast whether he wanted to or not.
“Why do you
have all these maps out?” asked Makoto because the question was staring him in
the face and not because he felt he wanted the answer any more than he did the
eggs.
“Oh, there
are plans to build some kind of industrial lab up on top of the mountain and
they want to run the power and fuel lines up our side because there’s less of a
slope,” answered Ken.
“Don’t let
them,” said Makoto feeling an unpleasant kick as his heart started to beat
faster. A tired, rueful smile that Makoto knew well crossed Ken’s face.
“According
to their lawyers they don’t need my permission since the project is to the
public’s benefit.”
“Is it?”
Ken
snorted. “Of course not.”
“It’s a
privately owned company. Somebody’s wallet is benefitting somewhere but it won’t
be anyone who lives around here,” said Anne. She managed to keep her voice
neutral but she was beating the egg yolks with excessive force. “They want to
clear the top of the mountain. Those trees won’t grow back, not at that
altitude. They’re going to have mudslides. I don’t know what they’re thinking.”
“I’m more
concerned about the blasting. That could disrupt our water supply,” said Ken.
“Is there
anything you can do?” asked Makoto. “Don’t they have to hold a public hearing
or something?”
“Oh we’ll
be there,” said Ken. “We’ll get it voted down too. Then they’ll find some
reason why the vote was invalid and there’ll be another and another until they
get the result they want. That’s how the budget passes too.”
“Or the
council will just outright ignore the vote like they did last time.”
“Depends on
who’s been talking to whom.”
The
conversation lapsed as Anne hunted through the cupboards for a frying that
would suit her. Makoto hoped it was over but knew them better than that. Once
his parents were on to a subject they never let it go and both of them loved to
talk. In a way, they embodied the worst aspects of Chen and Marielle combined.
Sure enough, Anne picked right back up as soon as she was standing over the
stove.
“Doesn’t it
just figure that you can’t get approval for a couple of solar panels-”
“On my own
house,” Ken broke in.
“Exactly,
but they can put a line of towers across someone else’s property. Do you want
toast honey?”
“Sure,”
muttered Makoto.
“That’s the
wonder of government for you, our tax dollars at work,” said Ken.
“Those labs
are tax exempt too.”
“And they
won’t tell you what they’re doing up there that’s supposed to benefit the
public good.”
“Or what
they’ll be releasing into the environment this time, right on top of our
watershed. Remember what happened in-”
Makoto got
up and went to make toast for himself and his parents, focusing on the task so
he wouldn’t have to listen to any of Anne’s tales of doom and gloom. It seemed
to him that she remembered every disaster, radiation leak, contamination
breach, escaped genetically modified species and ill planned government policy
that had come about in her lifetime. And just the act of driving into town for
a night out could remind her of one of these events and then she would recount
it for all of them while they were attempting to eat their meals or trying to
keep ice cream from spilling onto the back seat of the car. He was glad they
were going to do something about the construction but he couldn’t see why they
had to keep dwelling on it.
Anne
thanked him for making the toast and put the plates on the table. Having food
actually in front of him woke Makoto’s stomach from its early morning doze
making him feel suddenly ravenous. He cleaned his plate before either parent
was half through theirs and then occupied himself drinking coco and eating his
mother’s second piece of toast.
“We have to
go into town today, want to ride along?” asked Ken. He tried to make it sound
like he was offering a trip to an amusement park instead of a morning at the
hardware store possibly followed by lunch. Ken threw Makoto a hopeful little
glance and accompanying smile that almost made him say yes but he was struck by
an idea that made a morning alone seem very appealing.
“No
thanks,” he answered.
“You could
always stack wood if you get bored,” said Anne. “There’s plenty of it.”
“Uh huh,
maybe I will.”
“I’m sure.”
Makoto
helped clean up the kitchen then watched the tail lights of his parents’ truck
disappear down the drive. As soon as they were out of sight, he made his way to
Chen’s room. She was still asleep, dressed in the clothes she’d worn the night
before with her head shoved beneath the pillow. He didn’t know for sure when
she’d gone to bed but he guessed it hadn’t been until the early hours of the
morning. She didn’t even stir when he began digging around under the desk.
The process
of moving the disc driver from Chen’s room to the living room ended up taking
him much longer than expected. The downstairs screen was newer than Lyn’s old
one and he’d hardly ever used it. He kept pounding up the stairs for new cords
and when, finally, he’d hooked everything up to what he hoped were the proper
plugs the screen refused to acknowledge the existence of the disc driver. All
it would do was flash an error message too quick for him to read. Beginning to
be angry, he stomped off to try yet another cord on the off change that the
connection itself was the problem. He began pulling everything out the desk
drawers.
“Makoto,
what are you doing?” asked Chen. He jumped and flashed her a guilty look,
wondering how long she’d been awake.
“I’m trying
to play that game from last night downstairs.”
“Can’t get
it hooked up?”
“No, I’ve
got everything plugged in but I can’t get it to work. The screen says it can’t
read the application or something.”
“Hang on.”
Chen stretched and rolled out of bed, wincing when her feet touched the ground
and bending over like an old woman.
“You don’t
have to.”
She waved
him off. “Meet you downstairs in a minute, I got to pee.”
He took the
hint and vacated her bedroom. Mixed feelings of guilt and relief flooded
through him making him aware of how frustrated and worried he’d been. Chen
turned up wearing shorts and a loose T-shirt and looking even less prepared to
face the day than she had sleeping in her dirty clothes. Makoto sat in the
armchair and watched as she fiddled with cords and menus. Normally he’d have
peppered her with questions but he felt anxious about the outcome like someone
waiting a hospital for an update on the health of a patient.
“Isn’t this
Marielle’s game?” was the only question Chen asked.
“Yeah,
well…”
“Ha. It’s
only fair; she uses your stuff all the time.”
“Your stuff
too.”
He watched
as Chen logged onto the network under his user profile. For the first time, he
felt bothered by the way none of them had individual passwords. Any of his
siblings, or his parents, could access his account with the click of a button.
He’d never worried about his parents going through his files simply because
he’d never had anything he wanted to hide before.
“Everyone
uses my stuff,” said Chen. She wasn’t reproachful, just stating a fact they both
knew to be true. Makoto wondered if she worried about hiding things. She knew
the most about computers and did all the net stuff for their parents. He
guessed she had ways of keeping anything she wanted to private.
“Well this
is annoying,” said Chen in response to an error message that popped onto the
screen when she tried to play Oneiros.
“Is the
disc still not working?”
“It’s got a
security code that only lets you play on the computer you registered it from.”
“But we
moved everything down here.”
“You moved
the driver down here, the screen has its own internal computer and the game
won’t work on it. That’s cheap. They want you to pay for it again if anything
breaks. This is why I quit buying games; it’s all a rip off.”
“So if the
screen upstairs breaks…”
“You’ll be
out of luck. Where’d Jaida get this game?”
“I don’t
know.”
“She ought
to boycott.” Chen tossed the controller onto the chair. “Now we’ve got to lug
everything back upstairs.”
She dropped
to her knees and began pulling cords and gathering them up. After a few
moments, Makoto roused himself enough to turn off the screen and help her carry
things. He followed her upstairs. The way he was all ready scheming about how
to finagle the use of Chen’s screen made him feel guilty, she’d been so quick
to help him, but he couldn’t stop.
“You know,
I’ve got that stupid essay to finish. I was going to type it up on the laptop
in the kitchen, you can play up here then if you still want to,” said Chen. She’d
belly crawled under the desk to begin reattaching the disc driver and so missed
the look of stunned relief on Makoto’s face though perhaps she heard it in his
voice.
“Really?”
“Sure.”
She rolled
onto her back and gave him one of her slightly frowning contemplative looks.
Makoto tried to blank his face though he could feel the blood in his cheeks and
thought he was probably flushed.
“I’m going
to do some stuff first but I’ll start work by lunch.”
“Stuff”
turned out to be checking on a net multiplayer game called Alteira. It seemed to consist of about five minutes of actual play
and then hours of sorting through menus and typing in commands. Makoto noted
that Chen handled the keyboard situation by sitting cross legged on her bed
with the keyboard propped beside her on some books. No wonder she was going to
write her paper on a laptop. He hung around watching the painstaking
construction of an aqueduct to service her flying city and then left when she
started chatting with some other plays. He went and stacked wood.
Chen came
out and called him around 2 in the afternoon. They were all ready losing the
sun behind the mountains. Marielle was still in bed. Makoto dropped the piece
of wood he was holding and hurried inside. His body had gone numb even with the
exertion and the heat inside caused painful prickles up and down his arms as he
pulled off his coat and kicked his boots into the corner.
“I’m making
sandwiches,” said Chen.
“Not
hungry,” replied Makoto, meaning it. He actually felt a little sick. He all but
ran upstairs before she could try to force anything on him.
Chen had
left everything running. Makoto switched to his user profile, sparing a moment
to be grateful that Marielle had been using his account when she’d installed
Oneiros so he didn’t have to sign on as his sister every time he wanted to play
his own game. While it was loading, he went up to their room to grab the book,
taking comically huge giant steps on tip-toe to avoid disturbing Marielle.
Things were quiet on her side of the curtain, he had no idea whether she was
wake or not. Just in case, he crept down the stairs and dodged back into the
other room. Chen’s keyboard was half buried under the blankets on her bed. He
retrieved it and positioned himself on the couch with the book to one side, the
keyboard to the other, and the controller clutched in his hands.
The game
screen came up showing the Sim sitting in the hall where they had left him. They
hadn’t made it to a designated shelter yet. Marielle had panicked and ditched
him right outside the equipment room. How many days had they been at this?
Between the power outages and the party Makoto couldn’t even remember. They had
to be pushing some kind of limit; the poor thing had mostly been left alone to
sit since they’d gotten him.
Remembering
something from the book, Makoto went into the settings and opened the stats
page. It was longer and more complicated than any status page in a game had any
right to be. The only bits Makoto felt confident he understood were the pulse
rate and temperature. With some fiddling, he was able to post the information
in a small box into the upper left hand corner of the screen. It wasn’t as good
as a health bar but it was at least some indication of how things were going.
Using the
controller this time, he flipped over to the inventory and commanded Tyr to
drink. The Sim stood and sucked down half a bottle of water in one long
swallow. Was that how much water he drank on command or was he thirsty wondered
Makoto, trying not to feel overwhelmed and failing.
It’s just a game, it’s meant to be played,
relax and play it, he ordered himself. He took a deep breath, noting that
his fingers hurt from holding onto the controller and were slimy with sweat. He
flexed them and then resumed his position. This
is a game and games are fun, he continued. There is no reason to be this nervous.
He wandered around the dark
warren of halls passing what he thought were other starting rooms. If this was
supposed to be a race to the top of the tower, he thought, then Tyr had to be
dead last by now.
He was lost
before he realized what had happened, completely disoriented by all the right
angle turns and the view that changed every few steps. Eventually, he noticed
that he was circling the equipment room which was now sealed tight. After first
backtracking to what he suspected was their own start chamber, he found the
hallway they’d been in the night before. He was back where he’d started after
an hour of aimless ambling but he at least felt like he had his bearings now.
The place wasn’t actually very big and the maze-like quality was an illusion
caused by the camera and the way everything looked the same.
Finally, he
made sure Tyr’s back was to the equipment room and walked him straight down the
hallway past the double view change that had turned him around the first time.
If he’d been playing a normal game, he would have quit at this point and thrown
the disc away in frustration. Instead he found the elevator, a shining cylinder
of light at the end of those dark tunnels.
The
elevator was made of some translucent material; Makoto thought it was glass but
there was no way to know. The door parted as soon as the Sim approached casting
a yellow glow over him. The brightness was a welcome change from the half-lit
corridors. He steered Tyr inside. The cylinder slid closed again blocking his
view of the Sim. The screen went black and the white loading circle appeared.
Makoto
frowned and leaned against the armrest of the couch, resting his cheek against
his fist as he waited. The circle continued its annoying fade-in and fade-out
spin for an interminable length of time. He couldn’t imagine what the game had
to load in the first place; it wasn’t like it had to generate the next
environment or something. He still didn’t understand why someone would go to
the trouble of building a giant tower for a bunch of artificial humanoids to
run around in but he’d assumed not having to stop and wait for the program to
buffer every time a player opened a door was supposed to be one of the
advantages.
The load
sign vanished and Makoto spent an uncomfortable second staring at a blank
screen, then he was once again looking at Tyr’s back but better lit than he’d
ever seen it before. The drab green shirt Marielle had picked was almost vivid
in the white light of the elevator. Makoto sat up as the door rotated open
again for them. He pressed the analog stick and Tyr stepped out into an
entirely different world.
No comments:
Post a Comment