Kael looked up. Sora sat across from him, her eyes glowing with the soft blue of an active neural link. She was wearing a traditional kimono, but it was woven from fiber-optics that changed patterns based on the local stock market.
Sora leaned in, her kimono flickering to a deep, solemn crimson. "Is the kindness I feel for you less real because I wasn't 'raised' with a specific tradition to define it? We are the first generation that gets to be human without the script. That’s not a loss, Kael. It’s an evolution."
"I’m trying to find the 'authentic' part," Kael said, gesturing to the city outside. "Everything feels like a remix of a remix."
Sora smiled, her eyes fading back to a natural, human brown. "Then that’s enough for today."
The neon hum of Neo-Seoul was less a sound and more a vibration in Kael’s marrow. He sat in a stall that smelled of synthetic ozone and real ginger, staring at a bowl of noodles that cost more than his father’s first car.
"But if everything is software, nothing is sacred," Kael countered.
Kael was a "shifter"—a byproduct of the Great Integration. His DNA was a patchwork of three continents, and his dialect was a glitchy mix of Mandarin, English, and Spanish. In this era, "culture" wasn’t something you inherited; it was something you downloaded or discarded. "You’re staring again," a voice chirped.