WHITEOUT : 7
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Beneath the Department of Immigration & Customs building was a vast database, known as the Ancestral Name Directory. Its name was a deliberate misnomer. The Directory didn’t store the names of ancestors, or rather, this wasn’t its primary goal. It stored the original identities of the living members of the city. Local slang called it the “Ghost Bucket.”
The Directory was air-gapped, cut off from the Internet. It had to be accessed in person, physically. Any wide-scale breach of the Directory could result in potential political disaster, and disrupt the careful peace the iron hand of the Pacific Metropolitan Collective had constructed.
You can’t have race riots if there’s only one race. That was the thought.
One race: the NeoHan. One official shared language: New PacMet English. One meta-culture: PacMet Fusionism, a combination of real and synthetic cultural elements taken from both Asia and around the world.
An answer to the Maelstrom, as dreamed up by a cabal of international entrepreneurs, made possible by a new wave of powerful genetic and tissue engineering technologies.
I stepped down the glassy stairs and into the airlock. The walls of the Directory and its surrounding areas were a glossy black. A recognition terminal descended from the ceiling and surrounded my head.
“State your name, organization, and business, please.” Said a voice over a speaker.
“Victor Fang Shan,” I said, “Task cell CF-110 of the Department of Internal Security, Homicide Division. I’m here as part of an investigation. Please see the attached case file.”
There was a pause for a minute as the terminal scanned my head and the attendant read the entry request. Finally the terminal lifted away and the door on the far side opened.
“Officer Fang, you are cleared to enter the Directory in accordance with your investigation,” said the voice. “Please note that any unauthorized access of information outside the boundaries of your investigation is a violation of the law.”
I nodded and entered. “Understood,” I said.
I wondered if he’d gone through the same level of process as I had, but I suppose it didn’t matter.
It started with two discoveries, or perhaps inventions. Improved delivery mechanisms made it possible to perform genetic engineering on adults. While some issues were simply impossible to deal with past puberty, other combinations of therapies could be mixed in to push farther.
The second was “reshelling,” a procedure that was extremely expensive when first invented. A supportive web of cybernetics was gradually constructed in and around the brain over a period of six to twelve months, eventually enabling a transplant into a new adult body constructed using tissue engineering technology. Jiangsu Heavy Industries, one of the founding partners of PacMet, had figured out how to perform the procedure cost-effectively on a mass scale.
Anyone could become NeoHan. Well, almost anyone. Some took longer than others. Anyone with more than one repeat of the NRL0 gene required several more months over what was already a lengthy process, stem cell treatment, and reconditioning.
Stability, prosperity, law, order. You just had to give up the identity you were born with.
I entered a terminal booth and sat down in the chair. An old-style screen and keyboard rested on the desk in front of me. It reminded me of when I was young. And I began to type, something I hadn’t done in a long time.
Rain Bailey Biyu. Born Caitlyn Watts, Connecticut, United States of America, 2028, sex F2. And, just as I thought, connections to the Rolling Storm, ending ten years before acceptance as a citizen, at which point psychological evaluation was stable.
I hated being proven right.
And this meant they already knew my old identity. I suppose I should never have assumed they didn’t.
That meant there was one other name I needed to look up.
Carolyne Yang-Wu Jiao. Born Camille Vonne, Illinois, United States of America, 2006. Sex F2. Steel-class citizen of Pacific Metropolitan Collective member polity Outer Hong Kong, resident district 12.
I didn’t look up my own file. Dead dogs should be let lie.



