Disclaimer:
This is a work of fiction. No character in this story exists. The following contents outline a fantasy which should never be enacted in real life. All characters are of legal age. Political and ethical beliefs held by characters should not assume beliefs held by the author.
These works depict despicable acts. There will be consistent violation and lack of consent, and it will often be mentally and/or physically brutal. If that's your thing, welcome to the party.
All of us stared at the television in horror, still unable to process the reality of the situation even though events had been developing for weeks. Every channel featured recaps of the news as the country awaited the lottery.
"...population control, in the wake of scientists' predictions..."
The mood was tense. I curled on the couch with my knees pulled to my chest, arms wrapped around them. My brother sat beside me, silent as my father impatiently flipped between channels and muttered things too quiet for me to hear.
"...not enough resources to sustain the current birth rate..."
"...unfortunate implications for families who have dreamed of raising children..."
My mother glanced between us all anxiously, as if she thought there was something she should be doing to uplift us, but she couldn't remember what that something was. It annoyed me. There was nothing anyone could do. The laws had already been passed and the world felt like something out of a sci-fi movie now.
It always came down to control, really. Powerful, rich white men who wanted to control women's bodies. We should have seen this coming. We should have risen up to eat the rich when we had the chance.
But no. We let it go on for too long, all the back and forth on legalization of birth control and abortions. And while we waited, passively, telling ourselves things would turn out well in the end, the opposition had unified to land on a horrifying consensus:
Women were
all
required to go on birth control now, all except for the women whose names would be drawn in the lottery. Women of age to give birth, who had passed the mandatory examination -- mine had been last week -- all of us had our names printed in plastic capsules being spun in a gigantic gachapon machine. There would be three hundred eighty four names chosen out of the thousands. What criteria they had used for their candidates, the government didn't provide beyond "optimal fertility and success rate conditions."
"We'll hide you away," my mother announced over my thoughts. Her tone was decisive and strong. "If they call your name, we'll send you to your aunt in the UK."
"I know, Mom," I replied, as I had done every other time she'd said it. We already had a ticket purchased, despite how expensive the flight was, as a contingency plan.
Because they weren't announcing who would be
allowed
to conceive -- they were announcing who would be
required
to conceive, and the babies those women pushed out until their bodies broke down would be given homes in the wealthy households.
Preventing poverty and overpopulation, those were the excuses the government used.
But that wasn't even the worst of it. Women who were already pregnant would be forced to terminate. And every woman who wasn't made into a breeding cow would be legally required to take a birth control implant. There'd been discussion about permanent procedures, but that, at least, had been shot down. What if the lottery turned out bad candidates? There needed to be back-up options.
Funny how it wasn't the
men
who were getting vasectomies, wasn't it?