"How was work today, Sabs?"
Her brother didn't mean anything by it, but the question stirred a hollow dread in the young woman's stomach. She huffed softly and let her canvas messenger bag slip from her shoulder, dropping it to the ground with a dull
thunk
. Sabrina looked like... well, like she had just finished a shift at a minimum wage job. Sad, tired, and defeated. Her dark hair has spent all day pulled into a tight ponytail, and now that it was free it hung limply around her pale face. At least it did a decent job of hiding the dark circles under her eyes, and her uniform did nothing to flatter her figure. The loose-fitting polo shirt was in garish company colors, and Sabrina just wanted to shuffle to her room and get it off.
Her parents had insisted that she find work if she wanted to keep dumping hundreds of dollars into her gaming rig, and while the financial independence was nice the teenager couldn't help but regret all the free time she was losing. Between school and work, she was usually too exhausted to do much in the few hours of the day she had to herself.
"...s'alright..." was her muttered reply as she slipped out of her shoes and walked through the living room, beelining towards the stairs. They led down into the basement, which she had taken over as her room shortly after finishing high school.
It wasn't terrible, and it provided all the privacy and isolation she wanted. Sabrina really only had to go upstairs to use the bathroom, since she had a habit of stockpiling food in her bedroom to lessen the trips she needed to take to the kitchen. That's what her minifridge was for, right? Now that she was alone in her room she could peel the awful, sweaty uniform off of her body. Her pajamas were still in a crumpled heap at the edge of her unmade bed, sitting next to a pile of mail addressed to her. Typical of her parents to leave the envelopes there, even after she had told them not to go into her room without her permission.
Credit card applications, auto insurance, junk, junk... She swept the useless paper off of her bed and into the wastebasket she kept near her desk. Upon that desk sat her pride and joy, radiating in all of its RGB glory. Her computer and all of its peripherals and accessories were set up pristinely in her otherwise messy room. A nice case with stylish angles and a transparent panel to peek in at the obsessive cable management job she had performed, she was pretty sure that at this point her PC cost more than her brother's junker of a car. Her nice studio headphones rested on the articulating arm that her microphone was attached to, and three monitors were fixed to similarly flexible mounts drilled into her wall. Her high-backed gaming chair was accented in red, as were the LEDs shining from her mechanical keyboard and button-covered gaming mouse.
Sabrina stood in front of the full-length mirror that hung from the back of her closet door, although maybe referring to the alcove as a 'closet' was being generous. It was where the house's water heater lived, it just also happened to have a horizontal pipe running parallel with the ceiling that made it perfect for clothes hangers. She made due with what she had - at least she didn't have to pay rent. The dim lighting in her bedroom helped to obscure most of her physical insecurities, but at nineteen she had to wonder just how much more growing she would actually be doing. Sharp, angular, and bony, her body looked skinny in all the places she didn't want and only lent to her overall gaunt appearance. She wasn't
bad-looking
, but Sabrina's lack of any sort of self-care routine wasn't doing her any favors. The teen slipped into her sweatpants and baggy black t-shirt to save herself from the mounting self-doubt and plopped in front of her computer with a long, relieved sigh. She didn't have to be on her feet anymore - thank God for small miracles.
__________
"I'm only a few levels away from finishing the season pass," Sabs said into her microphone, her face illuminated entirely by the glow of her monitors and the various garish lights emanating from her keyboard and PC case. "Just need to finish up another weekly and I should be-"
BZZZTT!
Her conversation with her friend was interrupted by a sudden loud buzzing that vibrated off of the metal wastebasket that sat on the floor next to her desk. At first Sabrina was confused, unsure if her phone was the culprit but... nope, it sat right in front of her, its screen dark.
BZZZTT! BZZZTT!
The buzzing was getting more insistent and it was
definitely
coming from the basket, much to her surprise.
"Hey, hold on Ian," Sabrina muttered before she muted her mic and took her headphones off.
The only things in the basket were empty snack wrappers and the letters she had pitched in there earlier, all of which were too thin to-
BZZZTT!
She snatched up the offending envelope, a plain white rectangle marked with bright red letters that exclaimed
EXCLUSIVE OFFER WITHIN!
Of course she had tossed it - it was obviously spam for a business that she had never heard of, and therefore had no interest in. The return address was to a B-A-P Inc., nice and vague, but Sabrina could feel the outline of something solid inside, about the size of a credit card. The teen sighed - this was going to be some piece of electronic garbage like one of those novelty cards that you had to pierce the battery to disable, but it obviously wasn't going to stop until she did something. So she tore the envelope open and dumped its contents out on her desk.
An unremarkable, featureless black rectangle clattered onto the desk, smaller than her phone and of the right dimensions to fit easily into her wallet. Was this what was making that-
"CONGRATULATIONS!" A tinny voice boomed, compressed and harsh, coming from the rectangle.
"Jesus fuck," Sabrina winced. "This can't be legal..."
"YOU HAVE BEEN SELECTED TO TEST AN EXCITING NEW PROTOTYPE FROM BUILD-A-PARTNER INCORPORATED!" The voice continued. Sabrina just hoped that no one else in the house came downstairs to complain about the obnoxious volume. "OUR PORTABLE ADJUSTMENT DEVICE, OR P.A.D., IS THE CUTTING EDGE IN REALITY PERMUTATION EXPLORATION! THE INTERFACE IS SIMPLE - HOLD THE DEVICE IN YOUR HAND AND LET YOUR THOUGHTS SHAPE REALITY!"
The voice then sped up to a hilarious, incomprehensible degree, spouting a nonstop string of legal jargon that Sabrina couldn't even understand. She only caught a few snippets about chaos theory and how the company wasn't liable for damages, but after it finished spewing noise at her it finally sat quiet.
"...What the fuck is
that
supposed to mean?"
Sabrina turned the - what was it called? The P.A.D.? - over, flipping it between her fingers and feeling the cool metallic surface. It felt sturdily constructed and surprisingly heavy, like one of those fancy high-roller credit cards but weighted similarly to her phone. The instructions that it had shouted at her had been vague, and the card itself didn't appear to have any additional markings or buttons for her to press.
"This was a lot of effort for a weird promotion," she mused to herself as she pulled her headphones back onto her head and returned to the Discord chat she had stepped away from.
"What's up, Sabs? Did your house catch fire or something?" Ian asked with a soft chuckle.
"Nah, way weirder. Someone mailed me this thing and..."
Sabrina trailed off, distracted by the odd greenish glow that began to radiate out from the card. It was casting eerie shadows on the objects on her desk, forming into a mote of green light that hovered above the card's surface. It quickly twisted into an image, projecting a hologram likeness of her friend and displaying his name in plain text above his head. 'IAN GRAVES' it read, and she had to admit that his features were immediately recognizable. A slightly overweight boy the same age as Sabrina, his greasy hair grown out to cover his acne-scarred face and the beginnings of a double-chin that he wasn't too proud of. It was the spitting image of Ian, right down to his Star Wars shirt and cargo shorts.
"Uhh... Hey dude, you didn't go through one of those full-body scanners recently, did you?"