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TIME'S CHARIOT by Ben Jeapes. Published 2008 by David Fickling Books |
MORE ON THE WORLD OF THE HOME TIME Symbing Every man, woman and child is connected to the worldwide symb network. (Symb is short for symbiote: the connection is made by artificial organisms implanted in the brain at an early age.) Through symbing it is possible to talk to anyone (though they can of course refuse the connection), check any database, interface with any automated system – and anything remotely technological is run by an automated system of some kind. An untrained Home Timer who ends up outside the Home Time would be at a severe disadvantage — were such a thing to happen, of course. The ecopoloi Life and government Life expectancy is measured in centuries, which could lead to the world becoming even more overcrowded in very short order. Fortunately, once someone has reached the age of first-time retirement — anywhere between seventy and ninety, depending upon preference — they can emigrate to one of the space nations, taking their experience with them. Home Time citizens routinely save up for their retirement and emigration in the same way that people of the twenty first century will save for an old age pension. The patricians Society is divided into many different levels and sub-levels, and up to a certain point your level is much what you want it to be — meritocracy is taken very seriously, but at the same time everyone knows their place. And at the top are the patricians: the rich and the wealthy of the Home Time, themselves managed by a Patrician's Guild. The patricians take — or are expected to take — their responsibilities seriously. From those to whom much is given, much is expected. The thought processes of one character in Time's Chariot who learns that she is in the running to be a patrician are recorded as follows: "Marje's thoughts were whirling. She had known she could bring something to this job, but patrician. The perks — and responsibilities — of a patrician were enormous. A vastly increased salary, which she would be expected to use to sponsor and support deserving individuals. Close social contact with the great and the good of the Home Time, an apartment like Daiho's, increased allowances of just about everything — and the expectation that she would allow the power and privilege that accrued to her to trickle down to the sponsorees she took under her wing. Being a patrician could be a full time job in itself."And later, when she has it: "Everything she could want was hers. Oh, there were responsibilities, yes. She could expect to be worked into the ground. No more of this tentative offering of provisional sponsorship to errant Field Ops. She would have to cultivate a whole new crop of sponsorees, use her power and privilege to their advantage ...Being a patrician can be a blessing and a curse. Social preparation The lower your social level, the more social preparation you have. Some people can't even look at a sharp edge or anything that could conceivably be used for violence without having peaceful and calming images pumped into their minds; in extreme cases, the system may step in and take active control. Conversely, the higher up the system you are, the less your social preparation is enforced; you can think thoughts of violence and even subversion if you are careful. After all, you wouldn't be that high up in the system if you couldn't be trusted with it, would you? Field Ops, the people that the College sends through time, necessarily spend much of their lives out of touch with the symb network and so have virtually no social preparation at all. And if it all goes wrong? There are any number of counselling and therapy programmes available to those who find that, despite everything, they just can't cut it in the Home Time. And if the worst comes to the worst, there's always the Correspondents Programme, but we don't talk about that. You'll have to read about the College ... Home | Background | About the book | The players | Site index | Buy the book |