SETTING CHANGE: UNDER CONSTRUCTION | 5534 ->1938
Once upon a time, there
was a boy in a black skull-n-bones hoodie named Raimundo Radigan. He
lived in the wonderful city of New Prezzo, in the province of British
Alberta. It was clean, mild, and had kind folks on every block. Forests
surrounded the city on every side. Every building was on the solar
grid, thanks to panels and paints and other innovations. Then there was
the wind, and the water, and more, to keep gears turning no matter
what surges or faults could befall them. And people used very little
indeed, except to work; to keep homes warm and lit; to keep schools
bright; and to entertain themselves, when work and school were over.
The world was built on a thriving international marketplace, where
produce and other goods could be traded in trust, with allies from
across the oceans. Each rooftop hosted gardens, and people grew
whatever spare food they needed right there at home. Not a single
citizen entertained the notion of devouring an animal's flesh, for it
had long since been found barbaric, and it encouraged murditis of all
kinds. Nor did they allow the poisons of sugar, glutenous wheat,
boiling deep-oils, heavy pesticides, or any fungus into their
supplies... for it would threaten their businesses. The customers would
protest, for they were informed, and no longer wished to be poisoned. A
long time ago, the world had been threatened by climate annihilation,
fed into by sickly people, of devastating mental and physical
illnesses, most of all sheer greed. But disaster had been
averted, at the very last moment. The original Earth was preserved, and
reinvigorated by liberty and environmental concern.
The people
were equally progressive, many of them having organized to ensure that
this prosperity would remain as long as it could. They gathered in
halls, and collaborated online, to discuss and rehash whatever was most
important that day. It was a time of political understanding, where
even the most uninformed citizen could be brought back up to speed,
with reliable truth. There was no more war, except for defense. Though
in some distant nations, poverty was amuck, this was not the case at
home... and so it seemed, at least to the people of United Canadia,
that the world was at peace. It was only a few stragglers, anyhow, who
didn't seem to notice.
Most of the citizens there were quite
wealthy, and of skyscraper professions. There were students at school,
training to become a part of the National Intercontinental Defense
Corps, or NIDC (said 'niddick'). They employed the use of mech suits,
so efficient and lightweight, that their pilots often said that
controlling them was like 'wearing a second self'. They fought horrors
and injustice on the backside of the world, where evil still stained...
but only because good had not yet been allowed to cleanse it. Because
they lived in a time of truth, such a claim could actually be believed,
for once. They truly were, for the first time in history that anybody
could recall, the 'Good Guys'. Free of corruption, hearts full of hope
and valor. It made one proud to know such a soldier, and indeed, to
even be such a citizen.
The other students were not cadets, but
were instead star athletes, or mathematical prodigies. Lingual experts,
masters of debate, and career centurions – that being, of course,
someone who always has to have one hundred percent, on every single
test, pop quiz, and exam. Raimundo was none of these. He was merely the
loner in the back, scribbling darkness and strife into his notebook.
Images of people punching each other, or being rained upon with fire,
from the sky; skeletons ripping themselves from their fleshy carriages,
dancing about on their own graves; monsters of human faces, which hung
loosely from their jaws, as if to beg whether they were even trying to
wear them, or simply happened to be caught eating them in a precocious
state. Compared to the other students, Raimundo was only lucky to be
there at all. They were professional, and forward-thinking; he was just
a child, with funny ideas about fighting, darkness, and struggle.
These thoughts of his embarrassed him, and made of him a very sore
thumb. He was given reprimand, and stern warnings, and told:
"What
you yearn for is a violence to which we cannot return. The world does
not belong there, in that muck, for any longer. We must never again
fight for what is right... for it is the fighting itself that is wrong.
If we cannot win by politics, and by reason, then we are not worth
victory at all. If peace cannot be deserved, it will be shattered. This
is what you seek to do, so mind yourself, young child. Stand back in
line, sit back in your row. And do what you are told... it is for the
good of everyone."
Ray was not like the mech-pilots, whose legendary
tempers were forged steel under tense combat. Whose anger was as cold
as ice. Ray was just a dumb child, he was told, whose bare mind's touch
threatened fire, and storms. After being told what to do for long
enough, Ray became angry. His anger made him resentful, because he could
not express it. His resent made him think terrible things, so he
became ashamed. His shame made him anxious, and thus, he began to shy
away from the world which he was taught, from a very young age, that he
stood only to threaten with his misbehavior. He became so shy, over
time, that he couldn't stand to go anywhere without covering his head.
And now, it was as if he'd never existed at all. What he was, and what
he did, was only his to know... even if it was as dangerous as fire. So
on he went, fuming smoke.
What Ray wanted more than anything was a friend. He'd had a fleeting
few, but never for long. They'd always had too many questions.
"What do you like to do? What are your favourite foods? What's your favourite color? What do you like to watch, on TV?"
He had no answer for them, because he'd been told not to say. So as
far as anyone else knew, he had no idea what his favourite things were.
Everything was good, all was well. There was no need to have a
favourite anything. They were all serviceable. Ray kept to the back of
every class, and spoke to nobody. He dressed in near-black because it
made him harder to see, among the crowd. A pitch black would stand out,
ironically, for its uncanny darkness. It was the darkest grey that
made him a shadow, among a sea of brighter tones and hues. In time,
Raimundo disappeared entirely from their world, like a ghost. Only the
black hood remained. Nobody knew his name, and nobody he told.

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