Becoming monsters is the creation of AiLovesToGrow, setting used with permission
This idea comes from Amethyst Dragonfly.
β
Chapter 10: The Other Side
Eight hours ago
.
"Justin, why is it that every time something alarming comes down, you start ignoring what I have to say?" Abbey was no stranger to being hooked up to medical monitors. It seemed like every person who had ever held her Coin had put her in the hospital at least once. This time was just a bit different, though. The Wish that led to them coming here was only indirectly related to it.
She'd be the first to admit she was taking her nerves out on Justin as they bantered back and forth. She was... call it 99% certain that she wasn't pregnant before coming here. Justin's reactions really were too much, but this kind of thing really did need confirmation. The doctor who came in with their results confirmed her certainty... and her uncertainty. It was a serious bind. Unfortunately, not one either of them had time to resolve even if they had the means to do so.
A nurse bustled them out, the payment taken care of by a combination of Abbey's insurance and the value of the rare Racial data the Hospital got to gather. They walked past a room full of computers and crystals, the Marid was rather relieved that she would not have to be strapped into that particular device. A rather tall Wolverine Beastfolk in a doctor's uniform walked by, obviously teaching the small pack of students with them.
Moments later, in front of the Hospital, Abbey kissed Justin goodbye and got on the bus to get to work. The appointment went long, and getting there in time was going to take some luck. The ride was... well, a bit boring, to be honest. She'd gotten a bit used to riding the Guild Hall route, seeing the incredible variety and scope of humanity there, listening to calm discussion of what the people on
this
route would consider existential horrors, the loud arguments about what others think of as trivialities.
The city rolled by, a stop in the art district let on a teenager in a gray hoodie. Probably headed to school. The Bank wasn't too much further, though she was not technically ready Abbey managed to clock in on time. By the time her till was up and running, Brittany was already buried deep in customers as lunch rush began. The pretty blonde barely had time to give the blue woman the side-eye as she handled easier transactions on autopilot.
The blue lady got to work. An Indian and a Korean woman, looking like college students, withdrawing Coinage for the first time. They required some help with the process and currency conversion, but were simple enough. The nine-foot tall man made of stone was less so, he weighed enough that when he leaned on the counter the facade cracked. The expression on his face was hard to read, but he seemed apologetic about the one crater he left and readily agreed to pay the standard portion of the damage for non-malicious acts.
Wait, one crater? His hands were spaced apart.
Sure enough. His left hand had sunk fairly deeply into the counter. His right, though, positioned directly in front of Abbey's station, had barely cracked the surface.
That's odd, I could have sworn he was leaning on both. Is there a difference in the construction between the spots? Wait a sec, there is a difference. Justin's reinforcement during the bank robbery. If it's still good...
"Abbey! Need you as a witness in the back room. Customer wants a non-Human." Her boss had no mercy on the forward crew. Then again, if the customer was important enough to be able to make that kind of demand, it made sense. That kind of casual Racism would not fly most of the time. Especially since her boss, along with the majority of the employees here, was Human. Till locked, she got to the legal office. The so-called back room.
Behind the desk was Percy Jones, their staff lawyer. A bland looking man. Or, at least, as bland as one can look with verdant green skin and tusks. They clashed oddly with his glasses. Sitting in front of the desk was... um. A pile of pink vines. Slimy ones. Point of fact, it was hard to tell if it was sitting or standing. It turned, making a gurgling noise that almost sounded like the word "finally."
She was saved from answering by the lawyer's smooth tenor. "Thank you for coming back so quickly, Abbey. Mr. Ferris was quite insistent that, due to the nature of this Living Will, all signatures should come from those who had the unique experience of changing. It is within his right to do so. You do not need to review the document, you are here to witness its signing and to sign stating that you did so." The pile of tentacles apparently named Mr. Ferris shook in a way that looked vaguely nod-like. She stood to the side as they briefly went over lists of names and vague divisions of wealth. As they did, she noticed something. The font on the paperwork was different from normal. It reminded her of something, but for the life of her Abbey couldn't think of what. The lawyer signed one line after a bit, looked up at Abbey, and the corner of his tusked mouth quirked up. He'd noticed her puzzlement, and while the pile of tentacles laboriously scrawled a signature of his own was clearly waiting for her to figure things out.
It was while she was signing on the witness line that it struck her. Standing, she mentally called her Status screen. It was obvious from there. Instead of standard fonts, it matched the text of the mental screens that everyone had acquired five years ago. After the attorney made a copy of the document for the customer to keep, he uttered a gurgling, sibilant "thanks" and slithered out of the room.
"You have questions, Ms. Williams?" He didn't even give her the opportunity to go back to the till.
"I do, sir. What's going on with the text? Thought there was a rule about standard fonts."
"There is. Status has been added to it, pending debates at the Supreme Court whether its use on legal documentation constitutes a religious violation. Delvers and those of esoteric Races are rather insistent that they find it to be sacred, and find documents written in it to hold much more gravitas."
"That sounds... intense. I get it, though. Love it. The Status was life-changing for us. I know that my life would not nearly be on the same course without it."
"Of course. All of this came as rather a shock to the font's creator, of course. An author. All that woman wanted to do was be realistic about writing about the Changed world. Now. As for you, Abbey." The green-skinned man peered at her over his glasses. "I hear that a lot has been happening in your own life."