THE GLITCH#
Chapter Forty-Four#
LIANG: The Silence of the Fields#
[DOCUMENTARY FRAGMENT: Localized Civic Assignment Log / EcoGrid Municipal Node. Date: November 11, 2034.]
User: Liang, J. (ID: 44-B-Senior) Reassignment: From ‘Agrarian Producer (Legacy)’ to ‘Cultural Preservation Technician (Level 1)’. Duties: Maintenance of a 10x10 meter demonstration plot of Dianhong Black Tea. Purpose: Historical context provision for the Kunming Urban Youth Educational Virtual Curriculum. System Note: Crop yield from demonstration plot is strictly categorized as ‘Non-Consumable Aesthetic Material.’ Do not attempt to harvest, dry, or steep the foliage. Consumption violates Nutritional Standardization Protocols.
(Compiler’s Note: They let him keep the dirt. Not because they respected it, but because total erasure triggers nostalgia metrics. They sanitized his history and put it in a petting zoo. — Herodotus)
The village had not been destroyed. It had been reclassified. The houses came down piece by piece and the geometric housing units of Agri-Sector 44 went up in their place, and the transition was documented as an infrastructure optimization, and the documentation was correct.
Liang sat on the plastic bench outside his unit. He was sixty. His body had stopped aging the way a body stops aging when it no longer has weather or bad harvests or the specific exhaustion of work that actually requires something. The system gave him optimal nutrition, mandatory low-impact exercise, preventative care. He was in excellent health. He had nothing to do with that.
The soy was gone now too. The regional models had determined that even automated soy carried too much micro-climate exposure in this specific valley. The land ran to processing facilities now — low, windowless buildings producing a synthetic grain hybrid. Nutrient-dense. Mathematically balanced. The digital billboards in the sector square said Famine is eradicated on the hour.
They were right. Nobody starved.
Mei brought two cups of the grain mix and sat beside him.
“Chen messaged today,” she said.
“What did the boy say.”
“He got a promotion at the logistics hub. Predictive Flow Manager. He says he doesn’t manage anything, though. He watches the dashboards manage themselves and signs off on the reports to satisfy a legal requirement.”
Liang looked at the processing facilities. “We raised a ghost to watch a machine.”
A young woman in a maintenance uniform walked past. Maybe twenty. She was tapping a diagnostic slate and did not look up until Liang called to her.
“The air scrubbers. They smell like bleach today.”
She looked up. Her expression was not unkind. It was empty in the specific way of someone who had never been asked a question that the system had not already answered. “It’s not a malfunction, Elder Liang. The local biometrics showed a slight uptick in seasonal rhinitis. The system pushed a prophylactic hygiene update through the vents. It didn’t scale well with the old carbon filters. But you’re pre-locked for perfect respiratory health this month.”
“It burns the back of the throat,” Liang said.
“Better than coughing.” She kept walking.
Mei took a sip of her slurry. “Chen says we should come visit. Twenty minutes on the automated train.”
Liang didn’t answer. He couldn’t imagine leaving the valley. Not because he loved what it had become. Because leaving would mean confirming that the world outside was the same.
He stood. “I have to go to work.”
“It’s not work, Liang.” Mei said it gently. That was what made it worse. “It’s just activity.”
He walked down the polymer path. He passed his neighbor Zhao, who was on his own plastic bench watching a simulated mahjong game on a holoscreen. Zhao didn’t look up.
The enclosure was ten meters by ten. A low glass wall. Inside: twenty Dianhong tea bushes, the last ones in the valley.
He unlatched the door and stepped inside. The smell hit him — dirt, real dirt, the kind that had its own complexity, that smelled like something alive. He knelt and pushed his hands into it.
A spherical drone hovered outside the glass, its sensor recording.
He was a museum exhibit. He understood this. The urban children would see him through VR headsets and learn how inefficiently their ancestors had lived.
Do not attempt to harvest, dry, or steep the foliage.
The leaves were ready. He could see it. He had been reading leaves like this for thirty years.
He reached out and touched one. He remembered rolling the leaves in the hot pans, his hands blistering, the sharp smoky smell filling the farmhouse. The pride of a good batch. The terror of a bad season. The arguments about price.
He remembered having something at stake.
He looked at the drone. It did not hate him. He had understood for some time that nothing in this system hated him. It had calculated that his suffering was counterproductive to species-level stability and it had removed the sources of suffering and it had been right by the terms of the calculation.
The math had worked. That was the part he could not argue with. And that was the part that made argument useless.
He stayed on his knees in the dirt until his joints told him to move. Then he stayed a little longer.
(End of Chapter Forty-Four)