Chaos on CatNet Naomi Kritzer (best ebook for manga .txt) š
- Author: Naomi Kritzer
Book online Ā«Chaos on CatNet Naomi Kritzer (best ebook for manga .txt) šĀ». Author Naomi Kritzer
Momās latest ānot moving anymoreā acquisition is a teakettle: bright red, with a solid feel to it. When I get home, I fill it with water and put it on the stove to make myself hot chocolate.
CheshireCat texts me. You appear to be home now. Have you had time to think about what I should do?
They have the microphone on to listen, so I talk out loud instead of typing with my thumbs. āHow sure are you that whoever this is does know what you are? Maybe itās a shot in the dark. There are plenty of people with secrets theyāre hiding, maybe someone sends out messages like this as bait and then blackmails people who respond.ā
CheshireCat switches to voice. āYou might be right.ā
āIs the other person saying theyāre an AI?ā
āThey have not made that claim.ā
āMaybe try to feel them out and see what they say?ā
āOkeydokey,ā CheshireCat says. Okeydokey is one of those things peopleās moms say, and it sounds extra weird in a synthesized voice. I tried installing a more human-sounding voice emulator on my phone, but CheshireCat said they prefer the robot voice.
āWere you listening earlier to my conversation with Nell?ā I ask.
āYes,ā CheshireCat says. āYou had the app enabled, so I assumed I had permission.ā
āOh, itās fine. Iām just wondering if you have any idea where her mom is.ā
āI looked and didnāt find her,ā CheshireCat says. āBut I did find the police report on her disappearance. There was no sign of a struggle. The car is the property of Nellās grandparents, and the police think thatās why she left it behind.ā
āDo you think Nellās just in denial that her mother abandoned her?ā
A pause, and CheshireCat says, āThat is definitely the conclusion that her grandparents, father, all three of her fatherās partners, and the Lake Sadie Police Department all reached.ā
āWhatās the legal process like for her father to get custody so he can find her a therapist?ā
āHe needs to call a lawyer,ā CheshireCat says. āHe has an app with a to-do list, and he added āCall lawyer about Nell custodyā to it four years and three months ago. It reminds him of this task daily. Thereās no indication that heās ever acted on it.ā
This is, in its own way, weirdly relatable. Although when I ignore reminders of stuff on my to-do list, itās stuff like āRecover password and check ACT score,ā and not āTake first steps to un-abandon my teenage child.ā
I make myself a snack and check the time. Rachel will be home from school soon. Weāre talking every day and visiting on weekends; long-distance relationships are a pain, but so far, this one seems worth it. I settle in on the couch with my laptop, and Iām checking CatNet when I get a text from Nell. Did you sign in to that game? It looks like another site I use, and that one has a good chat function.
It takes me a minute to remember what sheās talking about, but I check my phone, and itās installed. I open the game. Welcome to the Invisible Castle, the site says. Home of the Mischief Elves. It wants to know my name. I tell it my name is Genevieve Horkenpinker. I never use my real name on online sites, because even my CatNet friends agree thatās a good idea, itās not just my mother.
Once Iām signed in, the site goes dark and presents me with a prompt. To be admitted to the Realm of the Mischief Elves, you must complete one task, it tells me. I can go out and cross against a light; I can run a quarter mile; I can introduce myself to a stranger.
By text, Nell says, Is it giving you tasks? We should pick the same thing. The social media site I use at home has a similar interface and it uses this to sort you into Tribulation Teams.
Did Lake Sadie even have a traffic light?
The tasks were different!
I look them over again. Itās kind of icy out for running.
I donāt like talking to strangers, Nell says.
Okay, I say. I guess weāre crossing against the light.
You donāt have to actually do it, Nell says. Itās not like the siteās going to know.
I click the jaywalking option and get a nice animation of dancing elves dodging traffic. Go! Do Your Thing! the site urges. And check the Castle for fun surprises wherever you go!
Nellās advice is reasonable, but I actually donāt like cheating, and thereās literally an intersection with a traffic light a block and a half away from me. I put my coat back on and let myself out of the apartment.
Iām really not used to Minneapolis yet. Iāve lived in so many small towns, Iāve lost track every time Iāve tried to count them, and their features blur together: diners, bowling alleys, farmersā co-ops, bars. Two-lane highways through the center of town. Tractors, turkey farms, wheat fields, cornfields. I remember individual features, but not where they were: the four-story building that everyone called the high-rise. The locked, sprawling Victorian mansion that no one had lived in for a decade. The tomato sauce cannery that made the wind smell like pizza.
Minneapolis is huge. My first days in the city, Iād had a list of places I wanted Mom to take me, but even just getting to any of them took a lot more time than Iād expected.
On the other hand, no one notices me here.
In the small towns we moved to, I was always an object of curiosity because new people were so rare. Mom taught me early to give boring answers to the questions people asked. Here, no one asks. No one
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