Copyright jvaughn, 2014. All rights reserved. Copyright violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.
Comments welcome. Let me know what you think. -Jay
*****
Chapter Four
Nothing Kim did made Raeden happy. Dinner, pasta with sautéed vegetables, was terrible, apparently. The fact that Kim didn't have a computer or network connection was an abomination. Kim pointed out that even if he could afford those things, he couldn't afford the power to run them. He didn't think Raeden believed him. The big man, sober now, was as dark a soul as Kim had ever met.
He's in pain,
Kim told himself. Which he was, but that still didn't explain the horrible emptiness in his eyes.
That night when it was time for bed, they argued about where to sleep. Kim had been freezing the night before, sleeping on the floor with only one blanket. Tonight it was supposed to get even colder, with temperatures dropping to single digits. He really wanted to sleep on the futon, but he didn't want to kick an injured man out of the only comfortable sleeping surface he had.
Raeden, to his credit, volunteered to move to the floor, but Kim wouldn't hear of it. Finally Raeden suggested that Kim share the futon with him. "You're tiny. You'll hardly take up any room at all."
Kim, ever sensitive to comments about his size, huffed and almost declined, but the giant scooted over and patted the empty spot on the futon. Kim had already figured out that Raeden put out a lot of heat. The place next to him looked like heaven.
Before he could change his mind, he climbed in, turned his back on his guest, and settled. Raeden covered them both with the two blankets. It was the warmest winter night Kim had ever spent and he would have slept soundly if Raeden hadn't been so restless. He tossed and turned and moaned in pain, sometimes cursing under his breath. Kim felt bad for him, but he'd given him a full dose of aspirin and there was nothing more he could think to do.
By the next morning, Raeden's fingertips and toes were black, with huge blisters on them, and he was more morose than ever.
"Do you know how to treat frostbite?" Kim asked him, his stomach churning as he looked at Raeden's feet. He wondered if he should buy some gauze so he could wrap them.
Raeden grunted and scowled, and Kim thought he wasn't going to answer. Finally he said, "Normally I wouldn't have to worry about an injury like this. My body is built to heal itself quickly, but I am no longer ... whole."
Kim saw his eyes darken with sorrow before he closed them. He wondered if Raeden would ever tell him of the tragedy that haunted him so. He hated feeling helpless, but Raeden's problems were beyond his ability to fix.
Before he left for work, he put food and water within Raeden's reach and also a bucket, telling him not to pee in his water pitcher anymore.
"I'm going to work. I'll be back before dark."
There was no response from the big man and Kim tried not to let it bother him. He couldn't help thinking it would be nice if another human being cared what time he was getting home. Raeden clearly did not.
*****
"Seek immediate medical attention," was the advice given on the website.
Yeah, right. That didn't happen ... even non-immediate medical attention is not going to happen.
Kim backtracked to the search engine and tried one of the other links.
Twenty minutes later he'd discovered the most effective way to treat the devastating damage caused by severe frostbite was a new, groundbreaking technology called electroregen. Studies claimed it could reverse at least some of the damage, but when Kim looked at the cost, the bottom dropped out of his stomach. A single treatment would cost him half-a-year's salary and most people needed multiple treatments.
On a whim, Kim typed, "mods with scale patterns" into the search box and clicked on the first link that came up.
"Mods are a myth disseminated by competing corporate states to frighten the good citizens of K-Corp." The article went on to describe how the other corporations spread disinformation to the uneducated masses in the hopes of causing dissention and unrest. This was typical K-Corp propaganda. There was no actual information about mods. Kim backtracked in disgust and tried some of the other links. The information in those pieces was almost identical to the first, some word-for-word. Mods were certainly not a myth; he had a real live one in his unit, eating his food, sleeping in his bed, and occasionally growling at him.
A red box popped up in the center of the screen informing him that his time was up and requesting approval to charge his account for another twenty minutes. Kim declined—he needed to get to work. The terminal switched to a thank you screen and Kim drained the last of his rich, dark coffee laced with cream, savoring the taste of it on his tongue. He almost never bought anything to eat in Zonee, but he'd stopped at the small coffee shop on his way to work because they offered infonet access. Their beverages were expensive but customers could sit at a terminal for a reasonable rate, or access the infonet over wifi if they brought their own laptop.
Kim couldn't help but stare longingly at the sleek teal and silver machine being used by a nearby customer. What he wouldn't give to have his own machine and infonet access at home. That was a pie-in-the-sky dream though. He would never be able to afford the machine or the power. He had no hope of getting a better job than the one he had as an IT grunt. The training he would need to be considered for a higher paying position was beyond his means. K-Corp discouraged upward movement between zones. Born in Zonei, he was destined to live his life there unless something devastating happened to make him unable to work. In which case, he'd probably be assigned to Zonen or Zono and wouldn't last a week.
He sighed and looked away from his dream machine. It did no good to lust after things you could never have.
Somehow that thought made him think of the beautiful, broken man he'd left snoring softly in his bed.
*****