Salt and Circuits in the Marble Citadel

CHAPTER ONE: Hushed Laughter in the War Room

The marble pillars stretched so high above the heads of the Superordinate, their shadows fell like prison bars across the war room floor. Edris wiped at sweat on his brow—he’d been called to the Citadel’s core after another night of ration riots in the Under-Bazaar. He wasn’t one of the gods, not even close. Not when your assigned cubicle was beneath the hydroponic olives, where you could taste the brine seeping down from the executives’ lunch plates.

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But Edris had something even Hermes himself envied: a battered shoulder bag containing the only Nintendo Switch 2 + Mario Kart World Bundle allowed outside Corporate Archives. It was a relic from the Before Times, when gaming wasn’t rationed and morale boosters weren’t subject to board approval.

He slipped into his team’s pod, past Rita—her tunic dusted with shattered glass from surveillance drones—and Niko, hunched over blueprints for another failed barricade. The tension here was palpable. It always was before a debriefing. But when Edris quietly docked the handheld into its battered 4K station, he caught Rita’s eye and managed half a smile.

"You brought it?" she whispered, her exhaustion momentarily replaced with hope.

He nodded, slipping off Joy-Con 2 controllers with a practiced flick of his wrist. "Ten minutes before council arrives. Enough for a cup tournament?"

Niko grinned—his first real grin in weeks—and slid next to Edris on the cold marble bench. The screen flared to life, HDR colors splashing rainbows across faces that hadn’t seen sunlight in days. Onscreen, Mario zipped through sandstorms and neon jungles, so different from the muted gray of their world.

They played in handheld mode first—Edris’ favorite, because you could huddle together and feel like conspirators rather than prisoners. When Rita’s Princess Peach launched a perfectly timed shell at Niko’s Donkey Kong, even stoic Toma from accounting cracked up over GameChat. Their laughter echoed up towards the coffered ceiling, bouncing between marble friezes depicting victories that felt impossibly distant.

Minutes later, as they transitioned seamlessly from tabletop to TV mode—the only time that room’s ancient display showed anything but propaganda—they started swapping stories through GameChat’s video link. Outposts on other floors sent advice (“Drift left on the ice bridge!”) and checked in (“Who else is out of protein rations?”), their voices overlapping in digital solidarity.

The old-timers used to say distractions like this were dangerous—anything that reminded you of how much better things could be—but Edris disagreed. Here, as Toma accidentally veered off Rainbow Road for the third time, he could feel old bonds repairing. In a place where trust had to be grown in secret corners, these shared races meant everything.

But ten minutes was all they’d get before security would notice unauthorized signals or spot unapproved joy on their faces.

***

CHAPTER TWO: Planning Resistance on Rainbow Road

Later that night, Rita found Edris nursing what passed for tea in his dorm cube. She slid beside him without ceremony. “You know,” she said quietly, “if we could get this thing uplinked to Level Seven...well, rumor is there are survivors up there who’ve cracked part of Athena’s security grid.”

Edris considered it—a risk, but every plan started as an absurd hope. “We’d need to use local wireless only,” he said. “Any data trace gets us flagged.”

She grinned that crooked smile again and pulled out her own microSD Express card from under her tunic sash—the one with maps smuggled off servers during downtime rounds. “I’ll race you for it,” she said.

They set up tabletop mode on a crate beneath his bunk; no one else awake but them and the blinking red eye of an old security cam (which conveniently happened to be facing away). As they tore through Mario Kart World’s haunted temples—Rita pulling ahead with every shortcut—plans formed naturally between taunts:

“Imagine if we mapped entry points like these hidden jumps.” “Could we loop signals through abandoned game lobbies?” “What if we disguised message drops as friend invites?”

Each round became less about winning and more about charting possible futures—ways out of these crumbling halls and into somewhere with real air and real food. And when Rita finally crossed the finish line ahead by a fraction of a second (thanks to some outrageous banana placement), they had both a blueprint and hope.

***

CHAPTER THREE: Victory Lap

By morning, word had spread—not just about their plans but about those precious minutes spent racing instead of worrying about board meetings or food shortages or whether tonight would be quiet enough for sleep.

Edris watched as people queued up outside their pod at break time—not just his own crew but strangers from higher floors too—each eager for ten minutes at those vivid controls or simply to trade tips over GameChat.

In this marble citadel built by corporate gods atop ancient bones, survival wasn’t just about enduring another day—it was about reclaiming little slices of joy wherever possible; building alliances out of laughter; sharing secrets between rounds of Mario Kart World.

And if they ever made it outside these walls—past security drones and endless bureaucratic decrees—they’d owe it in part to salt (sweat and tears) and circuits: camaraderie sparked by games played in stolen moments beneath an indifferent sky.

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