Mara lived in The Basin. Her life was dictated by an app on her forearm that tracked her "Productivity Points." She was part of the "Fluid Class"—a modern euphemism for people who worked three different jobs in a single day. At 5:00 AM, she was a drone-courier assistant; by noon, she was a digital content tagger; by night, she was a ghost-kitchen cleaner.
Develop a focusing on a specific character’s journey Social Class and Stratification (Society Now)
Elias worked in "Legacy Management," a polite term for ensuring that the wealth of the top 0.1% remained untouchable by the fluctuating tides of the global economy. In the Heights, social class was felt in the absence of friction. You never waited. You never shouted. You never smelled the exhaust of a bus or the rot of a bin. Stratification was a digital filter—a premium subscription to reality that edited out the unpleasant. Mara lived in The Basin
The city of Oakhaven was not divided by walls, but by the "Hum." Develop a focusing on a specific character’s journey
The automated cars in the Heights froze. The elevators stopped. Elias, for the first time in his life, had to walk. He stepped out of his obsidian-glass tower and onto the actual pavement. Without the noise-canceling field of his district, the sound of the city hit him like a physical blow. He saw the smog drifting in from the industrial sectors, a grey veil he had only ever seen as a "vantage point" from his balcony.
When the power flickered back on, the Hum returned. Elias’s vehicle found him, its doors opening with a welcoming chime. Mara’s arm buzzed with a notification for a cleaning shift across town.