The Next Day:
This is where we move outside the scope of a single person’s experience of the world. The thing about historical events is that for brief moments the most important people in the world are the ones who step out of a crowd and then recede back into it, never to be seen or heard from again. The crowd itself is almost the more important character.
The world is too large for the important events to all come from the few people we have already met. Likewise, these events are too large for anyone to be left out of them, to not be swept up in this. We will see both.
*
Zhang Ho knows how to act like she belongs with the transphobes, she’s just got to pretend to be like her parents, say things she’s heard around the dinner table. Shut her brain off and flow with the anger, she can do that.
She wouldn’t fit in with the march of modded androids they’re working against either, a group that includes FUCKING SKELETOR in spirit - he’s in a different march in Ares right now, around Cerberus Augments where the more radical parts are made.
This one in Aphrodite is organized by a friend of Numb and York. Echidna Prime is an odd duck, naming herself for the Mother of Monsters that Gaea planned as a revenge against the Gods. She’s actually very successful, nearly 120 direct children and already two primes in her descendants. Not because she’s especially good at her specialty, but because of just how motivated the line is to be… different.
Which means spending a lot of money on aftermarket parts and upgrades, many of which are supplied at the company store. Echidna was chosen as the optimal lifetime consumer.
She walks on stork legs. At full height she stands like a stilt walker, but more typically they fold completely down, knees over her head, bending and flexing unnaturally to let her walk comfortably through the typical doorway. She has the body of an owl, bronze wings that end in claw-fingered harpy-hands, and the head of a beautiful young astronomer with round-rimmed glasses and long hair tied in a loose ponytail. She stands at full height with her megaphone.
She doesn’t use it, though. Her crowd moves in complete, eerie silence. There is an intense discipline drilled into this, because their hatred of Zhang’s group is palpable, viscerable, bubbles and boils off them. Their existence itself is their protest, and even so much as a sign would undercut that. Anything more, any read on their intention, must be projected on to the group.
We exist, and that’s the problem. That’s all it takes to piss you off. If we give you a single crack in the armor, a single argument to pull against, then you will take it. But if existing is all we are doing, and you still can’t handle that? Everything else is sophistry.
This is the group York figured best met the needs of Crystal’s exhibition. The one it’ll be hardest to justify violence breaking out against, when it happens, one that’ll be capable of defending itself if things get seriously ugly.
Zhang starts moving through the crowd and looking for tension points, the loose cannons. She waits for the police presence to already start showing up, and she keeps a tight grip on the heavy rolls of batteries she’s keeping in her biker jacket pockets.
*
Binh Van Ut was born with solar urticaria, an allergy to light. It’s a really rare genetic disorder, and in 2020 the only treatment for it was to essentially live as an astronaut would in void. Keeping to a blacked out home and only leaving the house in essentially a space suit.
“Dr Nguyen?”
She worked with her doctors for a modified treatment that would adapt her melanin to chlorophyll, would have her grow flowering ivy blooms in place of hair, would let her be healed and grow in the sunlight. Ever since she imagined it, the perfect opposite of everything she had suffered for the first fifteen years of her life, she has seen everything else as just… waiting. Waiting to be correct. Waiting to be herself.
“We can still treat your allergy, but that’s all we can do.”
“But I’m halfway through the treatment! You said, you said that…” she trails off, holding the phone. He said so many things, she doesn’t know which one to say. She just knows none of it matters now.
“We’re still looking into what this all means, it’s not - I’m doing everything I can that we can keep what you’ve already got of your current course of treatment.”
“What do you mean?”
“We’re being told that we might have to reverse the cosmetic elements to be allowed to continue the public option treatment of your disease.”
“It’s not cosmetic.”
“I’m sorry I said that. I know.”
“It’s not.”
“I know.”
“I just, it’s the whole point. I don’t want to be, I don’t just want to be cured, or I… I never got to talk to other people, I never got to go to school, I’ve never been- If people can’t see what I got better from, then what was the point of it?”
“All I can tell you, Binh, is that I have a lot of phone calls like this that I need to make today. You’re not alone.”
Binh looked around her treated apartment, pitch black even in the middle of the day. She couldn’t even live with her parents like this, even though they loved her and visited her a lot. “Thanks, Dr Nguyen. For caring.”
“As soon as I have better news, I’ll tell you. This is just, this could just be the worst case scenario, we don’t know yet.”
“Okay.”
“I can give recommendations for private practitioners who are still going to be working through this, if… I’ll talk to your parents about it.”
“You should make your other calls first. Thanks, again.”
There was a lingering hesitation on the other end of the line before Dr Nguyen hangs up. He just doesn’t know what to say, and he has too many people he has to say it to.
Binh needed this. There’d been a point when the treatment started where she could go outside and talk to people for a while without the suit, and it had been one of the worst experiences of her life. When she wore the suit it was okay for her to be a bit weird and maladjusted because, well, people saw what she was dealing with.
She could look normal but she couldn’t act it, had barely experienced it to learn how to pretend it. When people thought she looked normal, then everything she said and did came across like she was failing and fucked up and wrong and that’s how everyone treated her.
If she was a dryad she could be shy, and weird, and different and that’s just how they were, that’s what she was. She could actually exist, she could have breathed, she could have…
Now she couldn’t.
Binh survives what she’s about to do to herself, she only has access to a bathroom medicine cabinet and it’s hard to make yourself more than just really sick with painkillers and sleeping pills. That’s why I focused on her.
Others won’t survive, because that is what happens. It is only important to understand that decision, not to marinate in its worst consequences. This can be fixed.
*
IAmWhatIAm: Are you all familiar with the idea of controlled burns?
AnthrozineEditorYork: cause a smaller fire to prevent a worse fire
IAmWhatIAm: The assassination has delayed a case that was about to be decided
IAmWhatIAm: The protections stripped by the Costa-Silva decision would have been a crack in the doorway to go further. I do not believe the two decisions being docketed so close together, and in this order, was an accident.
IAmWhatIAm: Now it is unlikely to go that way. Even when Hermes elects its replacement, the Justices have learned fear.
PerfidiouslyFickle: They’re calling it the Costa-Silva decision now?
IAmWhatIAm: They are. Whether it be in her honor or infamy is a matter of personal discretion.
AnthrozineEditorYork: hot take assassination works folks get on it
HartlyDworkin: That was a joke.
NumbToNothing:
3V: >:3
NumbToNothing: Wait 3V are you joking or are you joking about joking
3V: >:3
*
The districts are the size and population of continents. While they’re specialized, they are simply too large to contain only their specializations. It is more accurate to call them themed at this scale. Hermes might be the district of industry and factories, but there are also factories in Ares for more radical and intensive processes - like glass factories named for old Italian towns - and factories in Gaea for food processing. Those people still live close to work, they don’t live in Hermes and commute out.
That just means this kind of generalization isn’t useful at an individual level. At a macro level though, it’s true enough to be useful. Character is destiny.
One generally true statement is that Hermes is the most overtly conservative. It comes out that there’s already bills drafted that would see furries and non-anthro androids lose access to unemployment, disability, other forms of social insurance. But that requires constitutionality being decided by the courts, and right now they’re going to be too busy holding emergency elections amongst themselves.
* * *
November:
Dudekov wakes up mostly-naked in an empty hotel bathtub, empty bags of antifreeze IV and convenience store ice next to it. He carefully gets out of the drained bathtub and checks the long, sutured scar on his head in the mirror.
His clothes are folded neatly on a chair outside the bathroom, a green polo shirt and running shorts. He takes both and puts them on, sitting back onto a hotel bed, trying to piece together what’s just happened.
He’s foggy, still. Anesthetic? Anesthetic hangover? A bit of both. Either way, it would explain why he can’t fully feel the effects of an invasive brain surgery right now.
He checks the TV first - the cords been cut. As has the room’s phone lines. If he wants to call out, it’s just the phone in his pocket.
He sits at the edge of the bed and thinks about ships in bottles.