The invisible hand of the Free Market has priced this view of the City is valued at $785 per night.
A sure sign of market failure. It must surely be worth so much more.
The ocean is a highway of glittering supercarriers, mobile islands redistributing the material wealth of the world to its furthest corners. The harbour is a whirling dance of cranes and drones and rail, the transition from ocean to land hardly slowing the passage of cargo. The enormous stacks of vast warehousing operations spread out in a patchwork, the logistical heartbeat required for everything to be sorted, organized, transferred and delivered without ever stopping. From there the flow reaches out to industry, to residences, and to the forest of spires that is the City. It's so seamless that it's more like a river than an industrial process. At every point along this arc, the three mountain logo of Lhotse. From the 112th floor of Lhotse Capitoline, you have one of those mountaintops all to yourself.
But not the tallest.
Magnolia Everest is the chief executive officer of Lhotse, yes, but she is no mere overseer installed by the Board. Her power goes beyond that, deeper and more fearsome than the legends of the CEOs of the other Megas. She is also the Founder - a rare enough title - and a member of the Neobility, an aristocrat so wealthy that her personal influence can rewrite the very boundaries of the Megas should she put her will behind it. She is an old lady - a Millenial, hair grey, fingernails long and clawlike, and a frown like a boarding school nun. She holds a cane in one hand, a glass of orange juice in the other and wears a black veil over one hand to mourn her unluckily departed husbands and wives. She is surrounded by her maids - nine of them, identical female androids, designed to look like beautiful anime girls, distinct only for their differently coloured hair and eyes. Each of them wear elaborate maid dresses, black and frilled and permitting more movement than their structure implies. They stand with hands folded, eyes downcast, perfect dolls - though there are fearful rumours that those things are far more than decorative puppets. One does not maintain a position in the Neobility without a security force, and Mrs. Everest has never called for more defense than her maids provide.
"Ms. Andrea Kade," said Mrs. Everest. "Congratulations. You have become one of around twenty people I must pay attention to."
A sure sign of market failure. It must surely be worth so much more.
The ocean is a highway of glittering supercarriers, mobile islands redistributing the material wealth of the world to its furthest corners. The harbour is a whirling dance of cranes and drones and rail, the transition from ocean to land hardly slowing the passage of cargo. The enormous stacks of vast warehousing operations spread out in a patchwork, the logistical heartbeat required for everything to be sorted, organized, transferred and delivered without ever stopping. From there the flow reaches out to industry, to residences, and to the forest of spires that is the City. It's so seamless that it's more like a river than an industrial process. At every point along this arc, the three mountain logo of Lhotse. From the 112th floor of Lhotse Capitoline, you have one of those mountaintops all to yourself.
But not the tallest.
Magnolia Everest is the chief executive officer of Lhotse, yes, but she is no mere overseer installed by the Board. Her power goes beyond that, deeper and more fearsome than the legends of the CEOs of the other Megas. She is also the Founder - a rare enough title - and a member of the Neobility, an aristocrat so wealthy that her personal influence can rewrite the very boundaries of the Megas should she put her will behind it. She is an old lady - a Millenial, hair grey, fingernails long and clawlike, and a frown like a boarding school nun. She holds a cane in one hand, a glass of orange juice in the other and wears a black veil over one hand to mourn her unluckily departed husbands and wives. She is surrounded by her maids - nine of them, identical female androids, designed to look like beautiful anime girls, distinct only for their differently coloured hair and eyes. Each of them wear elaborate maid dresses, black and frilled and permitting more movement than their structure implies. They stand with hands folded, eyes downcast, perfect dolls - though there are fearful rumours that those things are far more than decorative puppets. One does not maintain a position in the Neobility without a security force, and Mrs. Everest has never called for more defense than her maids provide.
"Ms. Andrea Kade," said Mrs. Everest. "Congratulations. You have become one of around twenty people I must pay attention to."