Chapter 5: Culture Shock.
Added 2025-11-19 06:38:54 +0000 UTCThe Shards of Freedom.
Chapter 5: Culture Shock.
Chris, Vanguard.
Night city, 2074
A small part of me expected Vik to say no. Wouldnât have blamed him. Their eyes kept flicking toward me like they expected some invisible army standing behind my shoulder.
Not me, exactly. Just whatever force they assumed was backing me.
Fear could be helpful, sure, but it was a tight rope. One wrong step and everything would blow up in my face.
A made-up backer might keep predators off us for a while, but not forever. For now, I was just grateful these three looked decent.
They didnât have to save us. Hell, back on Earth Bet? Weâd have been left to die.
The fact that they even tried said a lot.
After a momentâs hesitation, Vik handed me a battered laptop, after cutting every form of outgoing communication, of course.
Smart. Iâd do the same thing.
They left me mostly alone after that.
Misty whispered to Jackie, and her crush couldnât have been more obvious. Meanwhile, Vik worked on Missy. I hated not knowing what he was doing, but I could barely lift my arms, let alone help.
Even typing on the strange keyboard hurts in places that shouldnât hurt.
The first thing I noticed about this worldâs internet was how⊠tiny it felt. Fragmented and controlled in a way that only the tinfoil brigade thought possible.
Corporations and governments carved the Net into private territories and left scraps for everyone else.
And even the âpublicâ section was controlled by something called NetWatch⊠which, hilariously enough, was also a corporation.
And people just⊠accepted it.
God. This world was worse than Earth Bet.
âCorporationsâ kept popping up, so I dug into that next. I really shouldnât have.
Even with alarms blaring in my head, I still facepalmed. Hard.
We were so screwed.
I grew up in Earth Bet. I knew governments could be a mess. The U.S. and the PRT were walking reminders that giving one group too much power always ends badly.
And Cauldron⊠yeah. Better not think about that.
But even Earth Bet⊠functioned. Barely.
And honestly, that was mostly because heroes and villains kept each other in check.
This world? It was humanity let off the leash.
Corporations are stronger than countries. Entire populations dependent on monopolies these corps protected with literal oceans of blood.
And no one fought back. Even the worst capitalists back home looked like amateurs compared to what passed for normal here.
And the government wasnât any better. From what I could gather, the NUSA was basically sponsored by a megacorp.
The president was literally their former CEO.
Insane. All of it.
It was no wonder that Night City could stay a free state despite being on the border of two powerful states. But things were just as bad, if not worse, here.
I honestly couldnât decide. Everything was owned by corporations. Police, Healthcare, Food, Security, and Housing. Literally everything.
And here I believed I would never have preferred to have Lung hiding in a corner.
I didnât want to imagine what this world would be like if capes existed. I was thankful that Missy and I were probably the only ones.
Even if that brought its fair share of problems. We had to keep that hidden from the world.
These corporations reminded me of the Yangban, and I knew they would pay any price to have Missy and me as their lab rats.
Because in a world like this? Power wasnât just tempting. It was currency, and we were walking gold mines.
I didnât get the chance to spiral, because my âsaviorsâ didnât leave me alone for long.
Jackie strolled back and dragged over a metal chair that looked like it had been stolen from a dive bar. Rust and all.
He flipped it around and sat on it backwards like the worldâs friendliest gang enforcer.
I actually laughed. He fit the stereotype, gun included.
At least he wasnât aiming it at me anymore. Just⊠holding it.
Then, as if he remembered his hands were full, he casually set the gun on the counter.
Like it was a cup of coffee. Nothing more.
Vik and Misty didnât even flinch. Didnât spare it a glance.
It took me five whole seconds to realize they genuinely saw nothing strange about a clearly loaded gun, safety off, on a grimy table next to some surgical tools caked in blood.
Just another part of the décor.
I just hoped Missy and I didnât pick up a disease from this place. And God help these people if Amy ever learned it existed. After what she became⊠yeah. They wouldnât survive the hour.
My heart rate spiked so hard the monitor flashed red.
Thankfully, Nobody reacted.
âSo, choom,â Jackie said, clapping his hands.
Friend, my brain supplied. Such interesting slang.
âWhere are you from? You and the fierce little chica. Pure curiosity.â
Vik and Misty stayed quiet but leaned in.
âThe East Coast,â I said.
Jackie perked up. âNo shit? Iâve been over there. Any place Iâd know?â
âIâve been told the accent gives me away,â I smiled. âBut no, you wouldnât know it. Itâs gone.â
Not a lie. Iâd checked the map already.
Even if Vik saw the searches, heâd never suspect a âdimensional displacement.â
âMost of that region got fractured after the war,â Misty said softly. âNever rebuilt the same way.â
And she accidentally helped my cover.
âMilitech nuked half of it,â Vik added, frowning.
I kept my jaw from hitting the floor. Nukes werenât a thing back in Bet, but⊠Hearing it so casually discussed was insane.
They looked at my baffled expression, at which Vik just looked saddened.
âDonât sweat it, kid,â he waved his hand, âEveryone in Night City has heard worse. We wonât see you as lesser just for being from that part. Canât imagine it was easy.â
I stared at him. They werenât being dramatic. They were being literal.
Jackie leaned in, âWhat about the people who did this to you, chico? Corpo hit squad? Gang? Black ops? With the kind of heat you were strapped in, it certainly wasnât street trash. That mech suit looked military grade⊠just, unbranded.â
Of course it wasnât branded. I built the damn thing. My pride and joy⊠and maybe the reason we survived. Or almost died.
I forced myself to focus, âNobodyâs after us. If weâve been unconscious for three days and no oneâs kicked the door down, they think weâre dead.â
âYouâre telling me you show up burned to shit, almost dead, wearing a clearly advanced exosuit, and nobodyâs after you?â he snorted, âDonât take us for fools, choom.â
His easygoing attitude retreaded just a tad.
And technically, that was accurate. And Vik could see I wasnât lying.
Zion wasnât âafterâ us. He was just⊠annihilating everything on its path. The fact that this world hadnât been affected meant that he had lost before he could reach it.
I could only wonder how many people died before they stopped him.
âI said the truth, choom.â The word felt weird on my tongue⊠but I liked it.
Jackie made a face, showing he didnât like my answer, but after Vik nodded at him, he let it go.
Who knew the classes to tell the truth without being honest would come in handy?
Before he could continue, a burst of rapid gunfire echoed from outside.
Not the kind I was used to. No. The gangs back home used to have at most a small amount of rifles or submachine guns. Still, they were rare, and only brought outside in the worst-case scenarios when they didnât have anything to lose.
The screams outside grew even stronger as multiple high-caliber weapons fired in unison. Then a car crash.
My body reacted before my mind did. I tried to sit up, instinct overriding any pain I felt. My brain went straight to danger mode.
But no one moved. Not a single inch.
Misty glanced at the door, more annoyed than afraid, like someoneâs dog was barking too loudly.
Vik didnât pause his tinkering. The worst thing was my power itching to be used when I watched him work.
âShouldnât we be taking cover?!â
Jackie waved his hand dismissively.
âRelax, choom,â he said. âMaelstrom and Claws, probably. NCPD will show up soon.â
âDepends on if they got bought,â Vik grunted, unconcernedly. âYou know the claws have deep pockets.â
âPaid?! Theyâre the police!â I might have expected at least something similar to what I had back home.
âOh, you sweet summer child,â Misty chuckled sadly.
Before I could finish through my panic, the wail of approaching sirens cut through the noise.
âMight lose some income, Jackie,â Vik snorted darkly, âThey must be in the NCPD database, no?â
Before I could ask what he meant by that, which I was dying to know because I didnât like the implications of it, relief washed through me.
Finally, something familiar. At least the sound. I wasnât sure if I should expect much from them.
That was something I knew by heart by this time.
Even if this world was insane, the police were still police. There were laws in here, even if I didnât have the time to study them. They existed.
Sirens screamed closer⊠too close for comfort, then a deafening BOOM shook the clinic and rained dust from the ceiling.
Jackie peeked outside, winced, and shut the window.
âShit. Rhyneâs pissed after last weekâs bust,â he chuckled.
âFuck, poor idiots,â Vik muttered, but even now, he didnât look up.
I nearly launched myself out of the damn tub.
A series of high-caliber bullets sounded from the outside before three explosions happened, like cars catching on fire. The screams continued for a moment, then abruptly cut off.
âThe mayor got slapped on the face last week by some idiots,â Misty sighed, looking saddened as she explained to me, âHe might be a bit trigger-happy for a while.â
âYouâre telling me this is NORMAL?!â
âWhat do you expect, choom?â Jackie blinked at me, âYou want them to use tasers?â
He snorted at his own joke even while Misty and Viktor nodded.
And they just kept talking. Like their own police hadnât butchered some people outside.
Like nothing of note happened. As if this wasnât something horrific and should be reviled.
Meanwhile, the machine monitoring my vitals was practically screaming.
Vik finally looked up from Missyâs arm, looked at it, sighed, and shot me an irritated look before he quieted the alarm.
âYour stress levels are spiking, Chris,â Vik said calmly. âBreathe. The sooner you get used to this place, the better.â
I started laughing. Hysterically. Because what else was I supposed to do?
Five minutes later, I was still chuckling like an idiot, fully aware they were staring⊠and unable to stop.
Jackie mustâve decided my silence was creepier than my laughing, because he suddenly barked a laugh and elbowed Vik.
âAt least this oneâs just insane,â he said, jerking a thumb at me. âNot half as scary as when the chica woke up.â
That snapped me out of staring at Vikâs tools like they were whispering blueprints into my skull. I blinked hard, dragging myself back into my body.
So many things I could build with the junk in this roomâŠ
âWhat do you mean?â I asked slowly. âVista woke up before me?â
Jackie blinked, surprise flashing into a guilty oh right, we never mentioned that.
âVista? Weird name. But yeah. She woke up first. Scary little thing⊠almost came up swinging. Thought she was gonna deck me. Then she saw her arm andâŠâ He whistled. âShe damn near had a panic attack.â
I winced. Of course she did. Missy hated cybernetics and the idea of losing pieces of herself even more.
Waking up alone in a filthy clinic, missing an arm, and strapped with things sheâd never seenâŠ
Yeah. That had to be hell.
I opened my mouth to ask more, but the whole room sharpened out of nowhere.
That sensation in the back of my skull, the one tied to Missy, suddenly screamed.
Worse than an Endbringer alarm.
âCHRIS!â
Missy tore awake with a scream. Raw pain, fear, panic, trauma, all tangled together.
Her eyes were blown wide, her chest heaving, her metallic arm jerking like it had a mind of its own.
I didnât think⊠I just grabbed the thread between us.
âMissy! Iâm here!â
Her head snapped toward my voice, and that connection between us yanked tight like a lifeline.
Then the whole clinic froze.