Audiobook Link at the bottom
Part I – The Routine Life
“Good morning, Mr. Schmidt! Will you be enjoying your regular today?”
“Of course, Sally. Some things are better left unchanged!”
“Very good. Just grab a seat and I’ll bring it all right over.”
William Schmidt took his favorite booth at the diner. The brisk five-minute walk from his apartment refreshed him, and now he prepared for the coffee and donuts he was about to enjoy. A few other familiar strangers filled their orders. He knew many of their names from the eager nature of his gracious host, Sally, the manager of the shop. He was trying to remember if he ever talked to any of them, but a beep from his phone interrupted his thoughts. A notification alerted him to a new article posted to the Daily Digest.
More Conspiracy Theorists Found Bartering Goods, the headline read.
Why won’t these people just use the money they give us? He mused to himself.
“Here you go, William,” Sally said with a smile. She slide the two donuts on the porcelain plate towards him and gently set the coffee cup down on the table. “You need anything else?”
“No. It all looks perfect as usual, Sally.”
William waved his thumb toward her. She smiled and grabbed the fingerprint scanner from her apron. He depressed his print into the device and awaited the friendly beep that the transaction proceeded as usual.
“Sally, do you remember the old days with paper money?”
“Sure I do,” she said. “So much fuss over pieces of paper. It’s so much easier to process the money now.”
“It is. I was just wondering what drives people to want to go back to the old ways. There is another article on the Digest about more nuts trading for services instead of using the money we have to live on. What causes them to keep living like that?”
“I don’t know, William. It’s so much easier to see our total impact on the environment with our digital dashboard without trying to keep sharing things with each other. I mean, how do they know what their carbon footprint is if it’s not recorded in the CBDC dashboard?”
“They’re nuts. They just don’t care!”
“That’s certainly true,” she said with a pause, “I need to get that bagel for Mr. Johnson. Let me know if you need anything!”
William scanned the article one more time while sipping his coffee. Another notification overlay the phone screen. He clicked the button to be redirected to his CBDC dashboard. The notification showed the recent transaction and gave options to view balances and deposits. He clicked through and found a notice to redeem his birthday meat credit and another alerting him that The Counsel granted permission to buy a few boards to repair his broken bookshelf. The anticipation of his daily diversion peeked his emotions, and a smile grew across his face as he thought of going to the hardware store to buy his materials.
William clicked the notification for more details. He received some extra money in his account by trading in a few unused carbon credits from the previous year, and still the account projected he would be under his allotment of credits even after purchasing the boards. He finished up his donuts and gulped down the last bit of coffee to prepare for going to the hardware store.
The hardware store was outside his fifteen-minute walk radius, so he opened up the phone app to use a two-way tram credit. He clicked the button and received an immediate approval. He stepped up to the tram station, depressing his fingerprint to use his transport credit. Immediately his phone beeped a carbon credit withdraw from his account. He took a seat, put on his podcast, and watched as the familiar parts of his fifteen minute radius turned into a new block. The new one had all the same shops, just in different locations. It was oddly familiar, yet still unknown. He never walked into that block, for it had nothing his own block didn’t have. There was no need to adventure past his fifteen-minute block.
After the unfamiliar block, a large hardware store spanned the entire width of each block. The tram stopped and let off a few people, all going to the hardware store themselves. He noted the return schedule, then he darted into the hardware store like a little kid browsing toys on display. He quickly decided on his purchases and spent the rest of the time walking through the store, looking at all the trinkets available. Of course, he couldn’t buy anything other than the approved items, but he could dream about building something with the various forbidden raw materials.
William’s phone alerted him that ten minutes remained to catch the return trip, so he checked out and strolled out of the store, drooling over the power tools on display near the exit.
I should have asked for a new drill, he said to himself.
He made it just two minutes before the tram arrived. He smiled with satisfaction at his new boards and passionately sighed as the smell of the hardware store drained from his nostrils.