Index: n2020.txt ================================================================== --- n2020.txt +++ n2020.txt @@ -1130,10 +1130,159 @@ She backed away a couple steps, then turned and continued until she got to the corner. She glanced back twice along the way, then once more just before going around the corner of the building. In her car once more, she started it up and drove aimlessly around for half an hour until her hands stopped shaking and her clenched jaw relaxed, then headed home. "What the fuck am I actually doing?" she asked herself. + +--- + +Sitting on her couch again, Alley said "I don't feel safe with the kinds of deals I made today." + +The prioritizer said "You did not specify a very high preference for safety. Estimations indicate the chance of poor safety outcomes is very low for these transactions, though severity may be high for poor outcomes. + +"I will reconsider strategy for future activities with a high preference for low severity potential safety outcomes rather than accepting higher severity risk." + +"Thanks." + +"You are welcome." + +"What's next, then?" + +The prioritizer said "I am reconsidering options, in light of new risk assessment prioritization. This may take a few minutes." + +Alley looked at the envelope of cash, then pulled out the bills and counted them again. They added up as she expected, but the prioritizer said "Please count them again." + +"What? Why?" + +"While you counted, /* it looked like at least */ one of them appeared to be thicker than standard United States federal reserve notes, and also appeared to be very new. Perhaps some of these notes is a counterfeit. Please count again while I watch." + +Alley frowned at the stack, and started counting again. Toward the end, she hesitated on one of the few new-looking bills in the stack, with a feeling like something was wrong. + +"That is the note whose thickness appears to be incorrect." + +Alley pulled it out of the stack and looked closer. It felt stiffer than most bills, but that could just be due to it being new. She rubbed it to get a feel for its surface, and it separated into two bills. "Oh, shit," she said. "That scary war veteran guy accidentally gave me an extra twenty. Fuck. What if it wasn't an accident? Maybe it's a test." + +"That seems extremely unlikely," the prioritizer said. + +"Yeah." She sighed. "I guess you're right, actually." + +"I have a plan of action to propose for tomorrow." + +Alley started to nod, then looked at the extra twenty in her hand. "Wait. I should give this bill back to that guy." + +"For a high priority aversion to high severity risks, this is not a good choice. You should avoid meeting with people with a high potential for violence." + +Alley laughed quietly. "Yeah," she said, "you're right. I got through one meeting without trouble with him already. Should I count that as my lucky break, and forget about him, or take it as evidence that I might not be in any danger if I meet him again to give back his misplaced money? + +"It doesn't feel right, just keeping his money, though." + +"Why do you feel that way?" the prioritizer asked. + +"It's dishonest," she said. + +"You did not lie to him." + +"True." + +"Did you realize there might be more money than he intended to give you when you counted the first time?" + +"No." + +"How is that dishonest?" + +Alley's lips tightened for a moment. "I guess dishonest isn't the right word, but I'm taking advantage of him in some way that doesn't feel right. For all I know, that twenty might end up being the difference between something bad hitting him hard at some point and not hitting him at all." + +"Do you feel you owe him that consideration, personally?" + +/* + +"Not exactly owe him, I guess, but he hasn't done anything to hurt me or take advantage of me, or done anything else bad that I know about, so I shouldn't assume he isn't worth treating with respect." + +"I will consider this when considering future prioritization strategy." + +"Cool. I'm going to send him a message now. We can talk about + +*/ + +"No, I guess not," she said. "It's not like I ripped him off, or lied to him, or even pretended I didn't notice. I really thought it was the right amount of money, and even if he hasn't really done anything to me, he did scare the crap out of me a little." + +"We should discuss new plans for tomorrow, then. I have a proposal for you to consider, if you are ready." + +/* + + Ideas: + + Alley should be prompted to buy from and (or) sell to other study + participants in ways that help her as the middleman in a deal the others + could have handled directly for greater benefit. She should also be + prompted to do some internet reserach work for some other study + participants as a way to make a little money, though the prioritizer should + warn her this is a short term method of advancing her finances that will + not likely be fruitful for long. + + Some hot guy shold be part of the story, younger than Alley, and an ally of + hers in some way. This may be one part of an apparent potential love + triangle with Alley and her ex. The guy should turn out to be gay, or + perhaps bisexual but in a committed relationship with a man at least, and + thus not truly available at all. The ex, of course, while potentially + interested in getting back together with her, should neither be a lovesick + sap nor be what Alley decides she wants. + + Up to the point where she turns him down, Alley should probably seem + potentially interested in getting back together with Dalton, perhaps -- at + least from his perspective. Should she seem that way to the reader? + Should she seem that way to herself? However that works out, though, she + needs to ultimately have to tell him that he is not actually what she wants + now, and in addition -- but not as the underlying reason for the foregoing, + of course; just as a separate fact -- she needs to walk away from him to + follow her new path at the end, especially without dragging him into it + because it's not the best place for him. + + More Ideas: + + Should the apparent love interest new guy who has a boyfriend (or is maybe + just gay) be a fellow study participant? Should he be part of her + cyberpunk crew in the shadowrun? Should he be a Second Realm hacker? If + the last of those three: Should he be her primary guide, or perhaps some + other character who starts off on the sidelines? Should his boyfriend be + someone she assumes is just a friend? This last might be especially + appropriate if I go with the mercenary or activist shadowrun cyberpunk + character idea. + + How does she end up in the Second Realm? Does Dalton actually know how to + get in touch with the Smuggler analogue? Does Dalton have the trust, sway, + and (or) influence to get the Smuggler guy to do a favor for him (namely, + helping Alley out)? + + Does the old black war veteran Army Ranger guy introduce her to the Second + realmers? + + I htink when they pick her up (because I think she should be picked up, + unless she's just transported there by someone under more direct + circumstances), she should be transported with a bag over her head or + something like that. They at first aren't going to be especially trusting + of some new person they never met before getting a clear look at the way + they got to their Temporary Autonomous Zone. + + I need to figure out some ideas for what will be used to provide fast + internet access for the Temporary Autonomous Zone. A few stacks of + shipping containers in a dusty industrial shipping container storage yard + (possibly with a concrete slab under them, I guess) does not seem likely to + provide very easy access to high speed mainstream "above the waterline" or + "above board" internet access. + + What name will I give to the Smuggler inspired guy? Will I refer to the + actual Smuggler in a historical context? It feels like I probably should, + if for no other reason than giving credit to Smugger where it's due. + + How does Alley's path shift after priority updates due to the risk + tolerance profile change? How will she meet the black war veteran and + Carmen plus Cliff again later? I kinda feel like she should. Maybe she + should meet the girl from the first kid's car, too, but probably not the + kid himself again. + +*/ /* At some point, she should set up a meeting for an exchange in a private conference room at a co-working space. Someone should recognize her and ask whether she's meeting a client, to which she replies vaguely in a positively interpretable fashion without literally confirming that assumption with her words.