Kais Zenix @ASZenix:
"Forecast: rainy, with chance of drifting this weekend."
#AlSaqrRacing #DeltaHyper #TokyoAGP #Frosty
The trip to Tokyo took a good half day, leaving aside all that had gone on behind the pilots’ backs, from the flight logistics to the paperwork that the team had been preparing for weeks if not months in advance. Kais had been looking ahead at the weather info after returning from Cape Town, and for some reason it only ever seemed to rain here most of the time. From blistering heat, to soaking wet, it seemed, and even despite his expectations, reality was still not quite on the same level. When they came in for landing, they were greeted with a storm the likes of which he hadn’t seen in a while, and as he glanced down their airplane window, it suddenly became clear to him
why Tokyo was the City of Neon Lights - they certainly gave color to the rainy place.
DeltΔ Hyper
Episode 3: The Neon Bath
"Kais, can you give us an update, please?" Al Saqr's Team Radio crackled amidst the roar of storm and engines.
"Weather is brutal. A lot of noise on the sensors, low visibility. Lots of turbulence. Gonna be a tough one. Hope the electrical engineers did a good job, they’re gonna be pulling us through on this one."
Formula Anti-Gravity Racing: Round 3
Japanese AGP, Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan
Friday, 2094-03-31, Post-Practice Interview
Aurora’s holographic face seemed to be in a good mood today, and Kais wondered what would be in store for him this time. He sat down on the usual Delta Hyper couch, adjusted his freshly donned team hoodie and blow-dried hair a bit, and then noticed that on the table in front of him was a holo-tablet. Aurora’s head briefly explained the new format, and before Kais had even nodded, a strange game show-like jingle sounded and questions started appearing in mid-air.
“Do I get points for these, or…?” “No, no points. Just fun.” “I see. Alright, then, let’s get this done.”"Most likely to eat noodles with a fork?" “Are you sure these are the right questions?” ”Yes.” “Hmm… Fitzroy, then. Next.”"Worst at keeping secrets?" “Stoking, are we?” He scrolled down.
“I don’t see your name on the list, Aurora.” Still, there was only one other to give Kais similar enough ‘PR in the front, stabby in the back’ feelings, and so he clicked
Han.
"Best Christmas gift giver?" “Gifts, huh? Kofi, probably.”"Most fussy eater?" “That’d be me. Don’t ask the team about our potluck.”"Most likely to climb Mount Fuji?" “I can see Beatrix doing that.” A short pause.
"Might join her myself actually, as long as I won’t have to paint.”"Most likely to get speeding tickets?" “Nora,” he said without hesitation.
“I bet she has a whole backlog of them.”"Best drifter?" “Amy.” "Biggest classic car fan?" He leant back, looking off to the side in thought.
“One of the Miller Motors guys, probably." What was he called again? “Westwood?”"First to die in a horror film?" “Honestly? Most of them. But it depends on the enemy, terrain, gear, things like that. I do know who’d survive, though...” Kais thought for a few seconds, smirked a bit, then clicked
Jamie Hart for first.
"Most romantic of the pilots on the grid?" “Pass.” Aurora chuckled a little.
“That’s not an option.” “Hmm, beats me, then. Cassie maybe?”"Which pilot would you most want to be stuck on a desert island with?" “Villarosa, she knows her stuff…”
Hakone Izakaya Bar, The Liquid Lounge, 21:00 JST
Kais took in the view of Tokyo as the elevator music started its second loop.
Ninety floors was quite the distance, and yet, despite what the rooftop bar’s ads said, the higher they got, the less sure Kais got on whether you could really call what they were seeing a
skyline anymore. Most of it was covered by a haze of neon and chrome: the megacity’s skyscraper forest, the cobwebs of hover-car lanes connecting them, the reflective raincurtains in between, the drones and holograms floating wherever there was any space left… Whatever you called it, though, it was quite the sight.
“Quite the sight, huh?” Layla said.
“Just when you thought Abu Dhabi was big, Japan goes ahead and goes bigger and badder and flashier…” “Hmm…” Kais answered. It was all very flashy indeed, but he felt himself more preoccupied with what would come at the top of the elevator. The elevator pinged, doors opened, and Al Saqr’s duo made their way into the venue together, greeted by a barrage of flashes and noise - and that wasn’t even counting the storm pattering on the kinetic barrier above them.
“Hello. It’s… great to be here.” Kais told the holography drones gathering around, polite but with no small measure of impatience, as he kept walking his way through to the event’s main stage.
“Layla, Kais, how are you experiencing Tokyo so far?” “Well, it’s a bit more rainy than I’m used to. I’m glad we do have a barrier here, though,” Kais said. Layla followed up with.
“We’re loving the energy here! There’s nothing quite like Tokyo! BioCHO is very gracious for hosting us. Come, let’s go say hi.”Al Saqr’s Marketing and Sponsorship team had dressed them up well for the occasion, to complement each other: Kais in a classically-cut matte silver-on-white suit, and Layla in an graceful green dress exquisitely tailored to show off her gold augmentations. White and green were the main colors of Al Saqr, and, in a
fortuitous stroke of luck, also of the sponsors of the event. Inside, the two therefore made sure to shake hands with the -very busy- representatives of BioCHO and share some words in not-so-subtle Arabic, knowing it would be auto-translated by their ear-pieces, but still a wink to their parent company’s shared roots within the Union.
“Ah, Miss Layla, Mr. Kais, welcome! We're happy to see Al Saqr join us tonight as well.” One of them said as they extended a hand.
“Thank you, it’s an honor and a pleasure to be here,” Layla said with the slightest bow.
“You’re a great help in keeping our propulsion engineers happy. We’re all very excited to see how BioCHO is innovating the biofuel industry.”It was all part of the game. But even here, in the glitter and glamour, everything felt like even larger show.
“Looking forward to what comes next. The future is bright.” Kais said with well-practiced words, though to the well-listening ear, somewhat half-heartedly. A drone hovered by, its holographic ‘recording’ tag switched on. Even now they were under surveillance.
“Come, let’s grab a few pictures,” the executive suggested. And they -to the best of Kais’ ability- smiled for the pictures a bit. Layla leaned in and whispered just loud enough for all to hear.
“Hold it just a few seconds longer, Kais.” The representatives chuckled and directed the two towards the bar.
“Please, have some drinks.” And that they did very gratefully. Kais ordered a
“Tonic water. The middle one.”. The mixed-haired mixologist nodded with a smile, and poured him one on the rocks. Luxurious.
Hakone Izakaya Bar, A desert island, Sometime later
A collab with
@FourtyTwoKais moved to a quieter vantage point to scan the scene: Beatrix, Paul, Astrid, Dorian, Ava were mingling. Nora and Harrisson were there. Cassie fluttering in between. Then Han. Amy, Henry Fitzroy, and Max. And then there were the two of them. Even with Layla at his side, he felt like an alien in this glamour, this veil of mere appearances, and he wondered if he’d ever get used to it. Then he noticed a certain someone’s lack of appearance. Jamie hadn’t been there with the presser, not in the last round of interviews, and now he wasn’t here too. Odd.
Ava looked across to the others, smiling as they clanked away glasses, and she got to sip away. Her eyesight turned as she looked over her shoulder, seeing Kais and Layla on the fringes. The others chatted away, almost everyone, bar Amy, Max and Henry courting the cameras elsewhere, were in one place. Ava stayed on the outside of her group, letting Bea, Astrid, Dorian, Cassie and Paul share the limelight.
Kais heard a hearty chatting coming from the group towards the center of the scene, and his eye was naturally drawn to the tallest of them by far. His last conversation with her hadn’t ended very well, but if there was anyone that he felt he needed to talk to at this moment, soldier to soldier, it would be her.
“I’m going to talk to Villarosa,” he muttered to Layla, already moving before she could respond. He nodded briefly to the rest of the group. “Ava, can we talk?”
Ava nodded, toasting her glass to the others, knowing Bea was going to be left for a while, but well, not like she couldn’t hold her own. “Of course.” Ava replied, breaking away from her conversation, champagne in hand, as she parted away, the chic looking obsidian dress she wore sticking to her form, making no effort to hide the military-grade prosthetic legs, nor her usual demeanor. She followed Kais, heading over towards one of the balconies, looking over another terrace of the sponsor event, and the various stands and bars below. “I am guessing you’re thinking over things. You saw what happened in front back in Cape Town. And you’re wondering why.” Ava simply asked, an open question, though it felt like it had a gentle point towards it.
“Yeah.” He replied.
“I have been thinking about our previous conversation.” He said, his back turned to the mingling crowd. Their sounds pushed to the back of his mind.
“I reacted… harshly. I’m sure you understand.” He said. An admission for sure, but his gaze was drawn down to her military-grade prosthetics, to the battles she must have fought herself. Who else
could understand?
“But I stand by what I said. I won’t just stay on the sidelines. But still, in light of recent events…” His frustration was palpable. He could still feel the hairs around his neural interface stand up as he wrestled back control, Bea’s wreckage left in its wake. How things could have gone differently, in another time. He took a sip from his tonic, the bitter taste lingering in his mouth.
“I need another set of eyes on it all. What’s your tactical appraisal?”Ava smirked, shaking her head, knowing she could so, SO easily, just say 'Told you so.' But she hadn’t. “Racing is racing, Kais. Shit happens. But, for what it’s worth… I think someone got away with a move.” Ava replied, shrugging her shoulders, looking out to the skyline, then back. “Jamie made a poor move. And he got away with it because he knows you’re both rookies, you and Bea, and he could spin it that way to the stewards. A 50/50 risk, but then again, you’d take it too if you were in his shoes. He has a lot to prove, or else Amy is going to stomp him in the pilots championship. And Amy, she does not want competition.” Ava commented, hoping maybe Kais would get it a bit better. “If another team competes with her, fine. But is Jamie what, the third now to take that second seat, and to start looking like he buckles under pressure…not a good look for him. But it proves Amy right. And that’s what she wants. So bad decisions get made.” Ava said what many would likely be thinking, but well, better to put it out loud.
Kais nodded.
“I get it, having a lot to live up to, to prove. To himself. To Amy. To everyone else. Just to stay in the game, to survive…” Kais’ mind went back to many of his own talks with Omar, endless debriefs, performance evaluations, pushing, prodding. And there it was again.
Survive. It always seemed to come back to that, didn’t it? A deserted island, surrounded by sharks. With just a lick of neon paint and the growl of engines. He looked back at Layla for a second, already in talk with someone else again. Would she… Would
he?
“You’re not asking me for my thoughts, are you? Not really, you’re asking me what lengths I’d go to. What lines I’d cross.”Ava shrugged. “Maybe… Maybe you would, but while you may intimidate most people, no offense, Amy does so too, psychologically. Takes a lot to be that difficult to that many people.” The Chilean pivoted. “What’s your thoughts on what we discussed, then? Before. In Auckland?”
Kais exhaled in thought. ‘Before’... Auckland, Cape Town. Old world, new world. It all blended into each other. Battlefields had their bombs and bullets, the track had its tricks and tensions… The baiting for
reactions. And then that line. Light and shadow. He looked back from the balcony to the chattering crowd underneath the neon lights, the BioCHO reps, the reporters, Amy, then to Ava again, baiting for a reaction… Cryptic as she was, what side was
she on?
“You said something about them making a better weapon out of us.” He glanced down to her prosthetics.
“I’ve been wondering… What are you fighting for?”“They’re not making a weapon out of me. No. Out of you.” Ava was pointed in that, as she drew herself into the conversation, seeing Kais look over, battling his thoughts. “Without being rude, Kais, you were engineered, but that implies that someone knew what they were making. They had their recipe, and someone liked it, even if they can’t get access to that source code anymore. That sort of thing is illegal in many, many states, the fact you even exist is something that the European Union banned, as well as a lot of other actors since. Genetic modification is one thing, full-growing people in a synth-womb is another.” Ava didn’t answer what she was fighting for, but she did at least hint at it.
“I suppose what I’m trying to say is, I noticed something. A link between you all. Nora’s got actors in the Inner Circuit who are linked to her, dangerous criminals, the kind that are transnational, and certainly have their links into corporate interests. Bea, who’s the daughter of an arms producer. And Layla, who has more mods than I could ever get. And I couldn’t help but wonder what it was with you, but… I realized, they’re all looking in the shop window. At people who might have access to augments that most markets don’t even get. And most of all, a testing ground. To make another version of you based on that. If they even can.” Ava continued, looking over her shoulder, then back to him.
“I told you that story about home because that was the world I fought for. Not a perfect one, but, it’s why people don’t starve, die of dehydration, have somewhere to live, have people that are accountable, and more than that, gives us a world that isn’t on fire and in ruin. And right now, Layla and Harrison, Amy and Astrid, are pulling at opposite ends of the wire on what next for humanity. And somewhere in-between, and I still can’t work it out, you’re in there somehow. And someone is going to want what you are when that happens. It’s easy to print someone that’s numbers and code. But harder to produce someone who’s tested, proven, and you can extrapolate. I suppose I want to know what’s coming so I don’t get swallowed by it either.” Ava commented, knowing it was cryptic, but well, she had a certain way with it. The next bit, hopefully, would make more sense.
Gently pulling her dress up and pushing on a socket of her prosthetic leg, she pulled out a tiny, SD-card like chip, and offered it in her palm, over to Kais. “You know what you did, where you were, what you fought in. They probably told you all of it, reformed you, and now here you are. And you chose this out of free will. But would you like to know where you came from? And who it was? Who it might
still be?” Ava asked, leaning in. “It takes a lot to engineer someone. It’s something the Arabic Union was very interested in back then. You wonder why Al Saqr’s implants, augments are such high quality? Layla offers them one thing. You offer them another. And they get a lot out of it. Well, so did someone else. And I think they are keeping an eye out.” Ava added, looking to him, knowing he had every reason to distrust her.
“Put this into your neural link. It’ll give you schematics, how they produced you. It’s clearly corporate, but someone oversaw that. And someone else on the grid has markers and bioengineering that follows on from what you had, modified to their own taste, of course. You can swab it before you do, if you don’t trust me, but I’m in no interest in turning you into a vegetable, given that people can see I’m with you right now and I’d be the last person you were with.” Ava added, glancing back at the crew behind, then back over to Kais, glancing at Han.
“I don’t trust easily, Ava.” Kais grumbled.
“And I’ve been told many things about my origins. Contradictions. Conspiracies. I’ve heard it all. But if what you’re saying is true…” Kais stared at the chip in her hand, his heart racing.
“How do you know all of this?”“I have my sources. Like I said. I was in your world once. So it didn’t take a lot for me to pull on some strings. Just know that, if they come for you, the next person they’re coming for is me. The black market right now would kill for a neural print of someone who could fly an anti-gravity ship like we do, or for the ability to fly a hypersonic jet before it all went autonomous in my case. You learned how to kill like I did. Just with different outcomes. No simulator can replicate that. The memories we currently have inside of us, are the kinds they’d love to take. And then the rest.” Ava knew that was no answer, none at all, as she sipped some wine down, looking out, into the illuminated skyline that was frankly on eye level out here.
“The world went to shit. And people started getting greedy and started treating people like play-things. That, I suppose, is why I care.” Ava was a bit more stoic there, revealing, turning. “Look. I won’t take up anymore time. Have a think about it. You can pretend this never happened, I’ll never come back to you again, and what happens, happens. Or you can get to the bottom of it, because at the bottom of it all, there is an answer for what’s coming for… us.” She finished, wrapping up a lot that was no doubt rushing through his head, but well, she knew there were few others she could trust with this.
For a while Kais didn’t know what to say. A deserted island surrounded by sharks, indeed. It had been a while since he doubted every move he’d make. But was there an alternative? It seemed that no matter how much he tried to run away, his past would just keep catching up to him. A past that was still very much classified, even to himself. Finding out anything more about it… He moved his body to Ava’s side, making sure to block the view for the rest of the gathering. Then he took the datacard as discreetly as possible, lingering his gaze for a brief moment. In thought, and a gesture of thanks, perhaps, but if not more, to watch her response. Stoic as Ava seemed, he felt something genuine in her eyes. He slid the card into his neural stack without saying another word. And when it was done, he was sure she could read it all from his face: jaw clenched, eyes not quite knowing where to look, and -once again- that tension. Then he nodded, as if he had processed it in any way other than anger and pain, and turned back to the view of the Tokyo nightscape. To the veil of neon and chrome, and in between, the storm.
“What shit fucking weather, huh…?”