Coming back

Sorry I havent written anything in so long. Did not feel motivated and getting too distracted these days. Also, summer meant wife was on vacxation, so we spent more time watching TV and I didn’t have to do homework..and writing for the blog was part homework, part amusement.

So I will try to write more, maybe twice per week. Foor now, I am back enjoying the NBA.

Coronavirus Journal part 3

So are you guys happy? I am talking to all who wanted to be free to roam, not wanting to wear facemasks and went straight to the bars when they were opened… now we are seeing a big surge. Don’t tell me it was for the BLM protests because Memorial Day, stay-at-home protests happened before and the surge is only in parts of the country, while the BLM protests happened nation wide.

Well, rant is over. Now you know why I haven’t written. I have been kind of mad.

Life has not changed for me since the last post. Working from home, then after trying to do some studying and failing, and mostly watching Netflix, Fandango and any movie the wife finds on cable streaming. What I have been trying to do is contacting my older relatives. I think my mon would get mad if she founds out I talk more to her sisters than her. (I love you mom!)

Calling my grandmother, however, is becoming heartbreaking.

She gets genuinely happy when she hears my voice. She is getting on her years and living in a city with a very high number of cases at the moment. She is getting tired of being locked up. She only receives visits from two of her sons, and she is clearly missing seeing the rest of the family. She normally would be visiting her daughters and her grandchildren, who some already have kids of their own.

She loves seeing the kids, and she misses the interaction. I have trouble keeping a conversation going. I don’t know if she just doesn’t hear it or I am seeing the first signs of Alzheimer (her mother died of it).

I live far away, so there is not much I can do. If you have an elder relative and your country is still under lockdown – which at this stage is mostly USA and some countries in Latin America – call them. They will need the interaction.

Where Naruto went wrong

The Shonen manga was among my all-time favorite…until author made a mistake in my opinion

Last clash between Nauto and Neji at their battle on the Chunin exam. (narutocouple.wikia.com)

Way back when I was a youngling, I used to devour manga. I read all the Japanese comics that I could find and spent reading until late at night. I had found several websites where I could read for free since I did not have the money to pay for it. I did buy the Shonen Jump magazine, so don’t criticize me that harshly. I read Shaman King, One Piece, and one manga I forgot the name which consists of playing Go.

However, one of my favorites was Naruto.

What is about

The manga is about a young ninja who has been neglected by his shinobi clan. He has been so isolated that he has lashed out and been rambunctious. He has decided to become the Hokage, the top shinobi who is elected to become the leader of the village. The problem is he acts before he thinks, and when he thinks, his ideas tend to be not so smart.

He has another drawback. He is the host of a Demon Fox that almost destroyed the village. Only the Fourth Hokage was able to stop it by sealing the spirit into Naruto’s body when he was a baby. That is the reason why the village shuns Naruto. They are afraid the Demon Fox will spill out. However, the Demon Fox has a large amount of chakra, energy that Naruto can use for ninja techniques and make him enormously powerful.

Naruto finds outs he has the Demon Fox inside him early on. Through the series, he slowly learns to use his energy and when he grows up, he learns to communicate with the Demon Fox, become friends, and thus save the world. At the end he becomes the Seventh Hokage.

Message

The main reason I was attracted to Naruto was that the protagonist was a failure. Still, he kept trying. He only started succeeding when he did things his way. Slowly, his genius started appearing. His tenacity was the attribute I admired the most. He was born into nothing, and when everybody was telling how a failure he was, he kept insisting he was going to prove them wrong.

The Chunin Exams

This story arc was my favorite, and the reason I became hooked to the series. Naruto and his teammates need to pass several examinations to become true chunin shinobi. It is like the O.W.L exams in the Harry Potter universe, but with one-on-one fights in one section. They meet powerful rivals, and in the last test, Naruto faces with Neji, a genius young ninja who has a dark family history.

Nature vs. Nurture

During his battle, Naruto learns that even though Neji is a ninja genius, he will always be a servant. His father and uncle were twins, but Neji’s father was born second. The family has a royal line where the oldest maintains the secrets of the clan while the rest must protect at all cost. So Neji will always be there to be second fiddle to his cousin, the shy and clumsy Hinata.

Of course, this causes resentment for Neji. He laughs at Naruto’s ambitions to become Hokage because only the main families will obtain the title. Naruto, a born nobody, will never obtain it no matter how hard he works at it.

Naruto dismisses him and claims he will become Hokage by sheer will. At the climax of the battle, he promises to Neji that he will take away his family’s discriminatory rule when he becomes Hokage. This is the last thing he says before he beats Neji.

The problem

The entire premise of the show at the time was that everybody could make their dreams come true by sheer determination and iron will. It didn’t matter how you were born or whose family’s name you were inheriting. Sure, it gave advantages and prestige, but they meant nothing if you didn’t have the fire to pursue your dreams.

Naruto was born into nothing. He worked hard and never surrendered until he become a great ninja. The problem was that he wasn’t a peasant. He was born into shinobi royalty.

The Fan theory

At the height of the series’ popularity, everybody started wondering about who Naruto’s parents were. A main theory was that the Fourth Hokage was his father because they were drawn similarly.

That was the main clue, and it ended being just enough.

This is where my disillusionment with the series began.

The plot hole

When Naruto’s past was fleshed out, it was revealed his mother was the original host, but something went wrong during his birth and the demon got freed. Naruto’s parents needed to combine their energy and sacrificed their lives to contain it once again, this time inside Naruto.

So, if they survived, Naruto’s life would of course be different. He would have been honored just by being the son of the Fourth Hokage instead of being a scamp. This change doesn’t undermine Naruto’s ambitions. He didn’t know his parents and never received special treatment. What it does is create a big plot-hole that affects all the series

It was revealed that there are nine Demon Animals and were used as ultimate weapons by different countries. This means that Naruto should have been protected by being the host of a mystical weapon, not shunned. He was supposed to protect the village, but instead he was treated as a pariah.

The main reason why Naruto was great is that it symbolizes you don’t need pedigree to obtain your dreams. The problem was that the main character was royalty from the start. He just didn’t know it yet.

The best season of Legend of Korra

What Book was the best?

My copy of The Legend of Korra DVD set. The series is owned and created by Nickelodeon.

One of my all-time favorite TV shows has been Avatar the Last Airbender. It was the show I couldn’t miss in a time where streaming wasn’t available, and I didn’t have a TV. When Nickelodeon transmitted the last episodes, I went to my job so I could watch in the television. This was on a Saturday!

When the sequel, The Legend of Korra, was announced, I knew I was not going to miss it.

Korra was a vastly different series. It had different cast, different plot and the world had evolved. It was still the same, but is like saying the US was the same in the 1920’s and 1930’s. It was the same country but in different conditions.

I re-watched the series last week. The show’s main difference with its predecessor was that it only planned for one season versus Last Airbender’s three. That affected the plot’s pacing and even the villains. The Last Airbender had some of the most iconic villains in a children’s TV show and that was because they were properly developed. In Korra, each season -called Book – had a different feeling, villain, and main theme. While in The Last Airbender the ultimate goal was to defeat the Fire Lord and his family, Korra’s was saving a city from Civil War, then stopping the end of the world, then protecting the Air Nomads, and finally stopping a dictator who took over the Earth Kingdom.

It went all over the place.

Which season was the best? I thought. Since I have a blog and I always wanted to do a list about something, well, here it is!

What is about:

First for people who have never heard of the shows (how dare you? Go watch them!). The show is set in a world where people can control one of the four elements. They are benders, and they formed different countries depending on what element they can bend. The Last Airbender focused more on this since the main plot was the Fire Nation trying to take over the world. At the beginning of the series they had killed the Air Nomads to extinction, one fight away from beating the Water Tribes, and had the Earth Kingdom on the defense.

Here, look at the intro. That is all you need.

Of course, the Avatar Aang stopped them and brought balance to the world.

The Avatar’s main duty was that: bring balance. He/she is the only person able to learn the four elements and can commune with spirits. Each time an Avatar dies, he/she gets reincarnated into continuing a cycle that goes Air-Water-Earth-Fire.

Cast:

Before we go into the list, a brief explanation of Team Avatar:

  • Korra: the Avatar from the Southern Water Tribe.  Headstrong and impulsive at the beginning of the series.
  • Mako: a Firebender. Former thug. Talented bender and Korra’s first love interest. Cares for others.
  • Bolin: an Earthbender. Mako’s younger brother and the series’ main comic relief. Goofy who ended up being a ladies’ man by the end of the series.
  • Asami. Daughter of one of the richest and innovative industrialists. She does not bend but knows martial arts and has keen mind for business and inventions. She has a love triangle going on with Mako and Korra.
  • Tenzin: an Airbender. Aang’s youngest son. He and his three children are the last Airbenders at the beginning of the series. He becomes Korra’s main mentor.

The Ranking

From worst to best, here is the listing. Most of it is subjective, but this is my list and if you disagree with it, you are wrong.

4th

Book 4: Balance

The last season of the show brought nothing new to the series. All previous seasons had brought something to expand the lore and the world. This season is just picking up the pieces. This is the season where Korra is at her weakest. She has been near death multiple times and is now suffering from PTSD and cannot recover. Kuvira, the main villain, is somewhat interesting and an able fighter but not as interesting as the other villains.

What is good: Korra and Asami’s relationship. When the finale aired, it created a controversy with people divided if they were good friends or partners. If you re-watch the  series, you will figured it out since the clues were there, and the creators have made it official that Korra and Asami are a couple, one the first LBGT couples on a children’s show. The final battle is amusing with great animation.

3rd

Book 1: Air

I think this will be controversial, since the season had Amon, a great and powerful villain. He was mysterious and had a good cause. He wanted equality between benders and non-benders. However, they were lies. Considering this is the first season, most of it is good. At the end, there was nothing else that hook us for future seasons beside name recognition.

 You know what? That was enough.

What is good:  The season is not bad. It is an incredibly good season with great episodes. It introduces characters and there is great tension. Pro-Bending episodes were fun. The season is not as good as the others though.

2nd

Book 3: Changes

The season is better than Book 1 because of the villain. Zaheer was powerful, mysterious and as charismatic as Amon. The main difference is that he genuinely believed what he preached. He was the leader of the Red Lotus; whose leaders were powerful benders on their own. Zaheer was also the first Airbender villain both series has had. When he appeared in Book 4, people wanted to see him instead of Kuvira. Zaheer was also successful in killing the Earth Queen, setting up the conflict for the next season, and almost truly killed Korra and all future Avatars. He broke her. That is not something to say lightly.

What is good: Fights had good animation and created different fighting styles. It introduced magma bending, and the Beifongs. The biggest positive change the season brought to the Avatar universe was the return of the Air Nomads. The audience was finally able to see a large group of Airbending happening at the same time.

1st

Book 2: Spirits

It completely expanded the world’s lore. Season one was just one city, but this once set the seeds for bigger and better things. Unalaq is the weakest human antagonist, but his scheme to bring a Dark Avatar and fusing with Vaatu had the highest stakes of the series. They both wanted the destruction of the known world and almost accomplished it. This was Korra’s at his strongest when she defeated them both.

What is good: Almost everything. All secondary characters had something to do and went through their own story arcs: Bolin became engaged and a movie star, Mako investigated a conspiracy, Tenzin came to peace with his father’s legacy, and Asumi was trying to save her company. It brought funny and interesting characters. There was mystery, family strife and we met the first ever Avatar.

The Coronavirus Pandemic Experience

Picture showing our groceries
We got bottled water separated so the virus in plastic dies off. (Picture taken by me)

We are living through an historic phase, and I am doing my part in recording it…through this blog.

It is April 8 and I have been living the quarantine life for two weeks. Most of the world have been at this longer than me because I don’t count the week I was on Mexico.

The good news is that I have not developed symptoms, so I didn’t get it in any tourist attraction on my trip nor on the airports, which was causing me stress. If I do contract the virus, I will catch it here, and I think I should be considered “second wave,” at least in Austin.

We are just going out to do light exercise. It consists of walking a trail for 45 minutes. I am so out of shape that I get winded after that. We see people, and we are keeping our distance.

Hope that is enough.

What are we doing for entertainment, the wife and I, during the confinement?  Nothing much different. We are seeing a lot of Netflix, and I am renting movies in Fandango. Currently, we are watching the sixth episode of “Tiger King” (yes, it is a weird show and if you are reading this 20 years from now, you should analyze the cultural phenomenon this docuseries caused). Our binge skills are strong. We finished season four of “Money Heist” in one setting.

My time is split into working from home, which I am lucky to have because last week, 6.6 million people applied for unemployment, and finishing up my Social Media Certification and Bilingual Court Interpreting course work. Believe me, it is a lot of work.

The wife is taking good care of me by being a good “grocery hunter.” At this time, we have found the basic groceries, and she has divided them into unwashed and washed items.

What’s going on:

We are hunkering down. There have been a bunch of scary stories. For example:

  • Young people, like this 32-year-old woman, are dying when we thought senior people were more susceptible.
  • Deaths in Ecuador are so many, dead are being left on the streets.
  • New York and Louisiana have been hit the hardest. Washington and California seem to be turning the tide after being hit first. Still, it seems the worst is yet to come.

My anxiety level has been high.

You can see some of my anxiety on my Instagram or Facebook profile, which I hope you follow. I need suggestions to what to write, so you can send me suggestions that way.

What we are doing:

We have these high-value items:

  1. Water.
  2. Food for at least two weeks. Restaurants are still open for carry out.
  3. Toilet paper!

Unfortunately, we are running low on cleaning supplies.

The picture shown is how we are dividing our groceries. The bags have not been gone through the disinfecting process, so they are outside the kitchen. We have been told the virus dies in two days. Since these groceries are non-perishable, there is no need to put them on the fridge just yet.

What we will do:

We are going to start doing more exercise. We have gone to walks, but the paranoia is starting to set in. The are we walk is still used by people.  The only thing we haven’t done is laundry.

Last week I was still adapting. I didn’t feel like writing, but I plan to resume writing reviews. Please visit my Contact Me page (I have changed it!).

I also plan to continue posting chapters of my novel, which the main page is here. Please let me know what you think.

Chapter 4: Discovered

After the fear and excitement of escaping from a fiery death, Adaru embraced the chaos of medics and police surrounding him, asking questions and taking care of his injuries. His ankles were only twisted, but the medics took him to the hospital just as a safety measure.

Adaru was exhausted, so he fell asleep just minutes of touching the hospital bed. When he woke up, Faith and his mother were in the room.

Faith was smiling when she saw him. His mother didn’t dare to look him. At least, Adaru got some enjoyment in seeing her embarrassed.

“Where were you?”

“I just went out. It was just for a couple of minutes,” she said, still looking away.

“You went to the bar, don’t lie.”

“That’s not true. I just went for a walk, and then I couldn’t come back.”

“It must have been a very long walk,” Adaru said turning away.

“I am your mother. You can’t treat me like this!” she said.

Adaru didn’t want to answer that. He was too tired to start an argument and nothing would have changed at the end.

“Talk to me,” his mother said.

“I’m tired,” he said.

But he couldn’t rest. Just five minutes later, he had two visitors and Adaru was surprised that he recognized one of them.

He was Horatio Bellingham who was joined by a tall, slim man with black hair and a nose shaped like a boot.

“Good morning,” Bellingham said taking off his bowler hat. “I hope I am not intruding.”

“I know you,” Adaru said, with his voice betraying his nervousness.

“And I know you,” Bellingham said with a smile. “The young lad who showed disrespect to the main judge during his audition by giving him a fright, therefore, he became a hit and a media darling. I also remember your other auditions”, he said while moving a chair and sitting down in front of him.

“They were good, but as we both know, not that good.”

“How can we help you?” his mother said with some excitement.

“Well, we hope for you to help us fill some holes of what happened yesterday,” Bellingham said.

“You see, agents from the Department of Inner Migration went to your address to do a local audition for a young man that showed promise. Unfortunately, it appears the young man’s ability to control fire was not enough since his apartment was the spot where the sinister started.”

 “What happened to them?” Adaru said to Bellingham.

“They died,” Bellingham said without emotion. “I wished we had arrived to the family earlier, but it was bad timing that the kid’s ability started during Evolution Day weekend.”

“But even though it was a horrible loss of a great potential, my agents came back saying they saw a remarkable feat of physical ability. They saw a young man making an impossible jump while carrying someone on his back.”

“It wasn’t that impossible. You know I am not that good,” Adaru said.

“I remember,” Bellingham said. “Still, it was an impossible jump. If someone had done that at their audition, that person would certainly have passed the test.”

“Passed? You mean he would be able to live in the zone?” Adaru’s mother said.

Bellingham saw her for the first time.

“You must be their mother, Rachel Sepien right?” Bellingham said. “Your husband’s name is Joseph?”

That brought fear to Adaru and to Rachel as well.  They looked at each other, wondering if they will be punished by his crimes.

“We know that Joseph was a big-time smuggler. I know people in New Haven don’t consider that a big crime, but getting in and out from the zone is a national security issue,” Bellingham said. “Still, your relationship with him does bring some red flags for us. We first need to know is, how did you accomplish that jump?”

“I don’t know how to answer that. I just did,” Adaru said.

“Are you sure? Because that jump merits a second audition. You may be accepted into the zone,” Bellingham said.

Adaru turned to see Faith. She was trying to avoid looking at Bellingham by looking down. He saw the nervousness by how she was biting her lip. She glimpsed at him and her eyes were wide.

“I think it was just a lucky jump,” Adaru said.

“It was not. My agent saw that you, apparently, made a jump while in the air,” Bellingham said.

“That’s impossible,” Adaru said, even though he remembered the force he felt. It was at the same time that Faith yelled.

“Then, if it wasn’t you, perhaps another made you do it,” Bellingham said.

He then turned to see Faith, who was still trying to avoid looking at him.

“Who are you, little girl?” Bellingham said to her.

Faith was quiet.

“Darling, the man asked you a question,” her mom said. “Don’t be rude and also looked at him.”

 “My name is Faith sir,” she said, looking at him.

“Incredible, green eyes and red hair. That’s something you don’t see in a family of brown eyes and dark hair,” the man with a boot-shaped nose said.

“Yes, she was blessed by being unique,” Rachel Sepien said. “Nobody believed me that she had dark hair when she was a baby. I swear she changed her color of her eyes and hair when she was two.”

“Interesting,” Bellingham said. “So perhaps you could have helped your brother made that jump.”

Adaru got into the conversation again by almost shouting. “I made the jump, it was all me.”

“Really? Then why haven’t we seen those same skills during your auditions?”

“I don’t know. I didn’t think I could have done it until yesterday.”

“That’s seems plausible,” Bellingham said. “Physical-based abilities are harder to gauge because some of them are based on adrenaline. No matter, we can give you another shot to see if you should live in the zone.”

Adaru had to ignore that his mother was making little jumps of excitement and smiling broadly.

“I don’t think I want to live in the zone,” Adaru said.

“Well, you won’t if you don’t pass, but you must if you do,” Bellingham said. “It’s the law and you saw why yesterday. We have the zone so people with an ability cannot hurt the normal folk.”

“Yeah, but I can’t kill people by jumping very far.”

“That is why we have auditions, to see the magnitude of your ability. And frankly, you don’t have a say on this since we know you and your sister survived a fire you were not supposed to. So one of you has an ability,” Bellingham said again.”You can leave the hospital this afternoon. We will have a transport waiting for you to take you to the zone. I assume you have lost everything on the fire?”

“Yes,” Rachel said.

“It’s unfortunate, but it simplifies the moving process. If you passed, you will be given some help like housing and clothing,” Bellingham said.

And with that, he and the other man left the room with an excited Rachel, a nervous Adaru and a fearful Faith.

 “Oh my god! We are going to live in the zone!” Rachel said. She hugged Faith and gave a kiss to Adaru before she left, almost jumping with glee.

Her son and daughter were not that excited.

“What are we going to do?” Faith said while getting near Adaru.

“I don’t know. We can only hope they see I don’t pass the audition and let us go,” he said.

“But what if they then do tests on me? What if they found out about my dreams?”

“I don’t think they can do that,” Adaru said.

“Are you sure?” Faith said.

Adaru wasn’t sure. He thought his only option was to make them pay attention to him instead of Faith.

“If I passed the audition, they will not experiment on you,” he said. “They only need one of us.”

“How can you fool them?”

“I don’t know yet. I just know I must,” he said. “That’s why I am your big brother.”

“You are the best big brother ever,” Faith said while getting on bed and hugging him. He hugged her back.

Adaru thought about his father. He needed his cunning to fool the freak with the bowling hat. Adaru only knew he had to protect Faith from them. She may be one of them, but she won’t belong to them, he thought.

He was released from the hospital that day. He was upset he could not see Jade one last time. She must have been worried when he didn’t show up to class that day. He was thinking why she didn’t visit him at the hospital when the family was picked up by a small bus outside the hospital.

Only their mother was eager to get on the bus. She had grabbed some bags of clothes from the local Red Cross. Then, they went to cross the bridge and into the zone. This trip was less amusing for Adaru than the trip he did on Evolution Day.

At the end of the gate, they got off and entered an office they had their pictures and fingerprints taken. The room was almost empty, so the process went very fast. They were told they would have an escort for the second leg of the trip.

Adaru could not hide his surprise very well. Their escort was the two police officers he met on Evolution Day.

“Welcome back.” Custos said to Adaru. “Ready for the tour?”

“My name is Candace Whiteman, and he is Nate Custos,” the woman said to Adaru’s mom. “Please come this way.”

She opened the door for a black car. Adaru entered first, then Faith and then their mother. The two police officers got in front. They drove and let the Sepien family discover a part of the zone they have never seen before.

The buildings were taller and Adaru thought they were shining when the sun hit them. Their glasses were transparent and reflected the people outside. The streets were alive with people walking, but the most interesting thing for him was the streets.

There was traffic like in New Haven, but this was a different kind of traffic. The streets were filled, but not only of cars but also of people running. 

Adaru looked up and saw people jumping from roofs to roofs, like they were chasing each other. There were others who were flying. There were so many of them that there were even traffic lights floating in the sky to regulate traffic.

When the police car turned a corner to evade road work, Adaru could see there were two men and there was no machinery. Adaru saw one man punching the road to get rid of gravel. The other man grabbed it and threw it to a large container at the side.

At a traffic light, a man wearing a tight suit and a helmet stood next to the car and waved to Custos.

“Hello Jeremy, having a nice run?” he said.

“Yes I am, officer. I hope you have a nice day,” the man said.

“Remember to run below forty,” Custos said.

“Always,” he said at the same time the traffic light turned green and he ran so fast Adaru lost sight of him before the car started moving.

Adaru could not contain a laugh when he saw an old man lifting his parked car and put it between parked vehicles. Apparently, he had not enough space to maneuver for parallel parking.

He felt Faith giving him a tug on his sleeve. She told him to look up. When he did, he saw a very tall crystal building in the center of the zone. Adaru wanted to ask her if that was the same building of her dream, but he didn’t have to mutter the words. She just nodded.

The family was taken away from the downtown area and into a neighborhood area, not very different from their home at New Haven. The streets were cleaner, and the building looked that they were recently built. They parked in front of a big red square building that had a big parking lot.

“Here are your keys. Your apartment is in the fourth floor, room C,” agent Whiteman said. “Here are some vouchers you can use to purchase groceries at the store that is two blocks that way.”

Adaru’s mom nodded and then she told them to follow them to the room. There was an elevator, which was the first thing different from their old home.

Their apartment was one big room with a door going to the restroom and another on the opposite side leading to a bedroom. The kitchen was in the corner next to the entrance. It had only a big window between the stove and the door.  It was smaller than their old apartment, but their mother wasn’t complaining.

“We did it! We are in the zone! Things will get better. We just need to give time to time,” she said trying to cheer up Faith and Adaru.

“It’s too small,” Adaru said.

“It’s homely,” his mother said. “Come, lets’ go buy something to eat.”

The store was underwhelming. It was only a one-floor white building that had “STORE” painted in red letters on the side. Inside, it was almost empty.

While his mother went to talk to the cashier, Adaru walked through almost empty shelves that occasionally had two products like lettuce or apples together. Three things on an aisle were the most he saw.  There were fewer varieties of cereal and canned goods than Adaru used to see in New Haven

 “Why do you mean there is no beer here?! What am I supposed to drink?!” he heard his mother say.

“Miss, we are not allowed to sell any alcoholic beverages,” the cashier said.

“You don’t even have chocolates here!”

“They are bad for you. We try to sell things that are good for you,” the cashier said.

“So what am I supposed to drink to have fun?”

“We have a wide variety of organic milk for you.”

Adaru and Faith had to hide their smiles. They had not seen their mother this mad before and they may finally see her more sober. Perhaps living in the zone would not be all bad, Adaru thought.

They managed to find a loaf of bread, a dozen of eggs, pasta and some fruit.

Her mother kept cursing all the way back to the house. When they got to the lobby, there were three people already waiting for the elevator, so Adaru decided to take the stairs instead. He wanted to be alone and focus on his problems. Adaru couldn’t find a way to convince Bellingham he had an ability when he had rejected him less than a week ago.

While walking up the stairs, a man with a pony tail was coming down, so Adaru went to the right side and grabbed the handrail.

“Where’s your bracelet?” the man said.

Adaru couldn’t get a word out due to his surprise. He only looked at his hand and had to take some minutes to remember he was supposed to have a bracelet to be considered resident of the zone.

“I…” he started to say.

“You are doing your audition?” the man said. “Are you up for it?”

Adaru didn’t want to talk to a complete stranger so he tried to ignore him.

“Hold on buddy. I want to help you,” the man said. “There are some pills that can help you fool the judges if you are not confident of your own skills.”

That caught Adaru’s attention. The man noticed.

“Just have to go to Smith Avenue and Red Street. There’s a warehouse at that corner. Ask for Lizzy,” the man said.

And with that, he left. Adaru got to the apartment and he was surprised that his mother had opened a bottle of whiskey and was already drinking.

“Where did you get that?” Adaru asked.

“I brought it from the city. Thank god I learned something from your father. I wouldn’t be able to celebrate properly without this,” her mother said.

“We really need to get a couch. At least there’s this bed,” she said while laying face up to a mattress that was in the bedroom.

“It was nice while it lasted,” Faith said to Adaru.

“Yeah. I am going out,” he said to her.

“Where?”

“I think I know how to pass the audition. Don’t wait up.”