Marty Moves to DC
When Marty’s goons bring Autumn to Ann Arbor, his daughter Tonya thinks she would be getting a happy little sister. At this point in the narrative, Tonya is 13 and Autumn is 9, but don’t know each other well, and would have had trouble connecting even in happier circumstances. Instead, Tonya finds the new addition to the family semi-feral, a child who makes every effort to run away during the first weeks. Marty makes a big show of revealing to Autumn the deal he struck with her mother Jillian. This after Autumn makes it as far as Monroe, Michigan. This news mollifies the girl, who reluctantly settles into a spare room. Autumn refuses to make friends with her cousin, and falls in with the most unlikeable, bullied kids in the expensive prep school Marty gets her into.
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Autumn's friend (foreground) The oligarch's kids (background) |
Speaking of Marty, he gets promoted to Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security in 2046 and moves the family to DC, denying Jillian her daughter. Autumn runs away several more times and Marty considers letting her go, but each time feels obliged to get her back because of the promise he made in 2020 to his dying father. Marty vowed to protect his little brother and sister, and any kids they might have. Much as he views serving the state as upholding law and order, Marty views himself as a benevolent patriarch having to discipline his relatives. For their own good, of course. And this isn't out of line for roles he played as the three of them grew up outside of Chicago. Marty beat up an abusive boyfriend of Jillian’s in high school. He took time off from college to accompany his mother to school events involving Bobby.
Trey finishes a computer science degree in 2047 and goes to work for Homeland Security. As a side project, he installs fiber-optic cameras in autumn’s bedroom. To make sure she isn’t trying to run away again. He tells his dad about it, but swears the cameras only activate when the windows or door of the room open. Marty thinks it a bit invasive, but as always, it is for the greater good of the family. While it does cross his mind that Trey can access the cameras at any time, he tells himself his son would only spy on his cousin if she was up to no good.
In November 2048 outside events draw Marty’s ire. He is furious at the re-election of the Demonstration Party’s President and begins discussing how to rid the security state of the new restrictions placed on their power by the civilian authorities, or the civilian authorities themselves. Other career officers tell him to back off, that the supposed reforms of the Demonstration Party will not make any substantial changes to the power and influence of the security state, and can easily be worked around. This doesn’t sit well with Marty, as he believes the state should make a show of protecting and controlling the populace, and not sneaking around in the background. Put another way, Marty is the kind of man who believes in saying things with your chest out, and others in the security apparatus take note of his objections.
Jillian Puts on a Suicide Belt
Jillian tries repeatedly to contact her daughter without Marty’s permission, but every time she does, Marty tracks whatever method of communication she uses, and informs local police, who come very close to arresting her on multiple occasions. Beyond desperate, Jillian shows up in Ann Arbor, planning to kill Marty and rescue her daughter. But while she operated a clinic under the radar, that’s quite different from acquiring a gun, evading the police state, and breaking into a house rigged with the security features DollarCoin can buy. She gets busted right away. Fortunately for her, she was unable to buy a black market gun, so she planned to kill Marty with anything she could find in the house if he stood between her and Autumn.
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Want your kid back? You better have that dough-ray-me! |
In response, Marty does what he sees as a kindness, and authorizes a one-day pass to cross the Ambassador Bridge to Windsor, Ontario. He points out that she’s still fairly young (50 in ‘45) and the Canadians need all the doctors they can get. She says she won’t leave without her daughter. Marty lies and says if she can show that she has a career and income within a year, he will send Autumn across the border. Jillian agrees to the deal and moves to Toronto. The government recognizes her medical degree and sets her up in a clinic helping people recover from the respiratory diseases caused by the Gray Winters. When Jillian contacts her brother to show off her one-room apartment and Ontario pay stubs, Marty considers honoring the deal but says it isn’t enough. Autumn is both the third child he and Tina always talked about having but never did, and his sister is a repeat law-breaker who, he feels, cannot be trusted to continue rasing a member of the family.
Jillian is furious, but what can she do? Passage from Ontario to the USA is, at this point, completely illegal. After decades of broken deals and double-dealing, neither side trusts the other, and both have done everything they can to separate from each other, economically, culturally and politically. Of course, there is a black market moving goods and people back and forth across the Great Lakes, but Jillian doesn’t know anyone in that world that she would trust, and hasn’t made enough to pay the exorbitant prices charged by smugglers. One of her patients does ‘know a guy’ who can get stuff across the lakes, so she sends handwritten letters with the patient’s contact, hoping they make it to her daughter.
One day in April, 2046 her patient delivers a letter in Autumn’s handwriting. Jillian offers to pay the patient three times what the smuggler charged, but the man refuses to take her money. The letter informs Jillian that Autumn and Marty’s family will move to Washington DC in the next few weeks. Jillian asks if there is some way to get letters to the US capitol. The patient reluctantly shakes his head, saying his guy won’t set more than one foot in the USA, and most times he won’t even get off the boat.
Bobby Chases One More Win
Bobby and Margarita have another kid, then another. The port at Veracruz takes a hit as oil production declines, and Bobby’s family becomes cash strapped. An influx of Caribbean refugees puts a strain on the Mexican economy. After running into a war buddy at a kid’s birthday party, Bobby offers his services to help with the planned insurrection in US Texas. The friend takes him up on it, and Bobby leaves once a month to accompany shipments of weapons and contraband luxury items across the border. This clandestine service puts the family on somewhat stable financial footing. And then Bobby gets an offer he doesn’t want to refuse.
Mentioned in the bigger picture narrative, the EUM defense ministry plans to use island refugees as irregular fighters to disrupt US logistical networks along the gulf coast. Bobby has a number of skills which make him an ideal candidate for this job: he’s got experience smuggling and operating in underground economies, he’s a veteran of the Ten Month War so he’s politically reliable, and third, his experience in New Orleans specifically. While the argument with Margarita gets heated enough her dad shows up and tries to talk Bobby down, ultimately, Bobby takes the defense ministry up on their offer. In the waning days of 2050, Bobby sets foot on a container ship packed to the gills with illegal weapons and thousands of bags of rice and beans.
The ship sails north, docking in New Orleans on Christmas Day. His old supervisor is genuinely shocked to see Bobby alive, and after some back slapping and serious rounds of drinks, Bobby reveals that he’s not back for good. HIs former boss figures out quickly that Bobby is in the black market business. At this point, almost everyone in New Orleans operates in an economic gray area.
After greasing a few palms, Bobby stores the containers full of weapons in a remote corner of the port. At the same time, he makes a big display of selling rice and beans to the population of the city at below-market prices. This lets him earn some good will, take the collective temperature of the city, and meet people who might back the future insurgents. This move endears his ‘shipping company’ to many in the poorer quarters of the city, it also draws the attention of the authorities. At first, they only monitor Bobby, but when the small boats begin to arrive in large numbers, the city government requests state and federal aid, as the whole pattern closely resembles events in south Texas before the Ten Month War. As the clock strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve, both sides swing into action.
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I'm sure their intentions are good... |
Allison Tries to Get the Band Back Together
Allison hitchhikes across Tennessee. Just because she’s free, doesn’t mean anyone’s looking out for her or those like her. Her grandmother Jenny listened to a song by a famous blues singer of a bygone era, the chorus of which went something like “freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose.” The distant memory of the song repeats in her ears as she trudges west along the side of the crumbling strip on concrete called Interstate 40.
When she makes it back to Memphis, Allison hardly recognizes faces or places. Many neighborhoods are in complete disrepair, if they weren’t there already. As the legal economy stagnated and money concentrated in the city center, only large-scale, largely automated fabrication facilities remained in operation, employing fewer people. When she turns the corner to the old chicken-fry restaurant, her heart sinks. Asking around, she finds out the place has been boarded up since the Shining City uprising began in 2036. Finally, Allison runs into an old friend who agrees to let her sleep on a mattress of scrap styrofoam and dirty blankets. The next morning, she learns that many moved to the country to find food and work.
Allison wanders around the old Firestone Heights neighborhood for a few days. Her inquiries yield no good results as to the whereabouts of the Bartender and the Cook. While few in the neighborhood recognize her, their eyes light up as they talk around not-so-bad-old days when a poor person could remind a boss or a repo man what might happen when the rich squeeze the poor too tight. Her old friend tries to weasel into bed with Allison one night, and she decides to leave. Stealing some food from the man, she starts walking south.
A few miles out of the city, Allison stumbles upon what, in the 20th century, people would have referred to as a hippie commune. The three extended, polyamorous families welcome her in. The commune needs all the hands it can get, and by this point, Allison is still young enough (37), and worked enough in the prisons and labor camps, that hard, manual labor isn’t intimidating. Putting her back to the plow, she works the rest of the summer and fall tending crops and bringing in the harvest. For the first time in her life, Allison feels rooted, calm, and not constantly looking over her shoulder.
By the next planting season, financial tension, sexual politics, and routine petty rivalries made worse by the hard-scrabble nature of subsistence farming causes the families of the commune to break up. There’s even a physical fight, but it pales in comparison to what she saw in the labor camps. Allison leaves on her own, on foot, and within miles, finds herself face to face with a handful of well-armed men. Allison drops her backpack and pulls a knife, ready to defend herself or die, when the shortest and oldest man’s face breaks into a huge grin. He asks her if she was just a messenger, or one of the Memphis Debt Collectors.
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Needs more kudzu... |