I'm holding onto my secret day and night in my thoughts. It's a constant presence in my mind when life feels desolate and all hope seems to have left. The lack of sunlight saps me of energy every day. My thoughts are heavy. Whenever a spur of joyful inspiration tries to rise up in me, it withers quickly. My co-workers, roommates, and strangers in the street, they all walk without energy and have blank faces. They say that social emotions are contagious. Whenever someone has a smile, everyone raises their eyes to look and see if it is possible that someone is happy. Then the person feels awkward and embarrassed in silence.
The blob went up in the sky 43 years ago to bar the sun. The world came together and decided that America had to pay for its sins of the industrial revolution by cooling the planet and living in darkness. So they generated a geostationary cloud that blocked all sunlight to keep the planet surface cool. Despair spread quickly from the lack of sunlight. Without moving clouds, there were no longer atmospheric pressure differentials. Winds stopped blowing. Bad air started sitting in the same place for a long time.
The exception was the horizon. The blob only extended over the continent. A sliver of horizon was clear. Twice a day for five minutes during sunset and sunrise, the sunrays pierced at a low angle across the land when the colors were the most vibrant: yellows, oranges, and reds. What a miracle! I never knew if I wanted to gaze into brilliant colors or close my eyes to feel the crackling sensation of warmth on my cold face. For five minutes, everyone stopped and faced the sun. The walkers in the street stopped. The drivers stepped out of their cars. The workers ran out of their buildings. We all became worshippers of the sun. For five minutes, twice a day, we remembered what it was to be human.
As the sun had gone below the horizon, the last hint of light painted everything gray. I saw a young man in front of me on the sidewalk. Before the blob, he would have stared at my breasts and whispered a "hey, baby" to me. Those days were long gone. He looked sad, like he had been laid off that very day, but that's how people look like every day now. He looked at me. I wore a big gray trenchcoat. The mood of society had deemed it inappropriate to show revealing clothes or skin. So he didn't get a rise out of me. He lacked the swagger to try. We still locked our eyes as we passed - as if to lifelessly whisper I wish we both had the spark.
I walked slowly. I wanted to make sure that my roommates were home before me. I slowly walked down the residential street. Sometimes, I still find it strange that the red Ferrari in front of our house is mine. Like Cuba had its beautiful vintage cars, America now has all the luxury cars. The rest of the world has moved on to electric drones and shipped all the gas-powered cars to us. They are illegal elsewhere, but here the glut of cars made them cheap. The sinews and curves of the Ferrari - I call him Feral - are smooth and sensual in a retro way. Feral was cheap because it guzzled so much gas. I couldn't afford a Honda. And I've never been able to afford to fill up Feral. It was an impulse buy, and now I couldn't get rid of him.
Good, I could tell that the kitchen light was on. The roomies were home. I slipped my key into the mailbox. I didn't know when but I knew that any day now another letter must arrive. I pulled the mailbox gate up, and there it was! A white letter with a Brazilian stamp. Even if it didn't have a Brazilian stamp on it, the type of paper had a purity to it and reflected the light in a way that the envelope almost sparkled. Nothing American made was this cheery. The paper wasn't the dry stuff, but it had a moist, juiciness and suppleness to it like that high-end designer paper from Brazil. I flipped to the back. "With love, Marisol!"
My heart beat faster. My sister had used the last chance to travel before other countries locked their borders to American immigrants. In those last days, she threw herself out at the world, hoping to find a man to marry her so that she could get a citizenship elsewhere. I thought she was a crazy fool. She wasn't. She had made it out in time. I quickly slipped the envelope into the inner pocket of my coat. It was best that my roommates didn't see. They had immense jealousy and hate towards Brazilians, especially since Brazil had become the number one superpower in the world. Right after the century, they had quietly gotten their government sorted out, and then the economy took off.
We now watched Brazilian movies. Brazilian fashion was the hottest. If you could afford a Brazilian cooking robot, you were rich. Brazilian slang was suddenly cool to mix into English, but not for everyone. While some of us adored and tried to imitate Brazilians as much as we could, the majority despised their superiority and called them arrogant. So, we had to half-hide anything Brazilian. Everyone knew that their movies were better. Seeing how they lived and discovering new social trends was ravishingly exciting, but being caught watching it would mean getting ridiculed.
So I quietly slipped past the lit-up kitchen with my shoes in my hand. When I made it to my attic room, I placed my handbag on the door handle in such a way that it would drop to the ground if someone opened the door. It was a little safety before I pulled the letter out and sat on the edge of my bed. I marveled at the fabric. My fingers caressed and bent the fabric. The paper didn't feel like anything made from wood pulp. It bent and moved fluidly and with a heaviness like latex or actually water but in a solid form. I smelled it. It's hard to describe. It kind of smells like nothing - so clean - but also has a hint of new car smell to it mixed with the smell of citrus.
I opened it. A holographic photo fell out. I could turn and twist the photo to see them from all sides. It was Marisol and her husband Ramon in the ocean, jumping into a wave while he held her in his arms. She wore basically nothing - only a C-clamp over her pussy and butt hole. Her breasts were free. She had taught me in her letters to recognize the incisions where they had filled her boobs and the suspension mesh that they had added to shape them perfectly - not simply in a static way but all the way they moved and bounced. She had gone into great detail about the surgeries, what made a good one, and the little signs to recognize them. Brazilian society had become even more obsessed with beauty and sexiness since the Great Separation.
Ramon was naked except for a sock-like that covered his penis and balls. Marisol had explained to me how he worked out hard to get the perfect ratio of muscles. His serratus anterior was perfect and so defined, the little fingers that spread from his back to the front of his chest. It wasn't good enough to merely have big arms - like a pumped-up biceps, but it was important to show the definition of the brachialis underneath the bicep muscles. She explained in her letters how Brazilian physiologist researchers constantly refined the perfect AI-driven workout regiment. I soaked up all these descriptions from life in Brazil.