Three Questions for Oliver
By Jamie F. Bell
The lift shuddered, an old metal beast groaning against its cables, hauling me upwards through the belly of a building that had seen better centuries. Outside, the perpetual autumn drizzle blurred the already distorted reflections of corporate towers against the grime-streaked glass, a watercolour smear of neon and grey. A familiar scent—wet concrete, burning copper, and the faint, sweet tang of decay—clung to the recycled air, a signature of this lower sector. My jacket felt heavier than usual, saturated with the city's damp, its synthetic fibres clinging. This was Oliver's world, far from the polished towers of OmniCorp where my data-slate and moral compromises resided.