Friday. Glorious, beautiful Friday.
A few days have passed since my disastrous first day at the café, and I'm pleased to report that I have not broken any additional plates. My shifts have been... better? That's probably too strong a word. Let's go with "less catastrophic." I still make mistakes when things get busy, like bringing the wrong side dish to a table or forgetting to refill someone's water, but at least I haven't been yelled at or destroyed any property. The bar for success has never been lower, but look at me: I'm barely clearing it!
And today? Today is my day off from the café. Which means today is a good day.
More importantly, today is Luna day.
I promised I'd check out the computer science club with her, and unlike my performance at work, I actually intend to follow through on this commitment without any major disasters. I make my way through the absurdly pristine hallways of Fairchild High. Even on a Friday afternoon, this place looks like someone's about to film a commercial for luxury boarding schools. The floors gleam with that fresh-waxed shine, the lockers are spotless, and I'm pretty sure I can see my reflection in the ceiling. I reach the tech wing and find room T-1, pulling out my phone to shoot Luna a message on Quickgram.
"Hey Luna! I'll wait for you at the front of the computer science club room?"
The response comes almost immediately. "Yeah! I'm excited to go with you 🙂"
My heart does a little flip. She's excited to go WITH ME. Not just excited to go to the club. Excited to go with me specifically. This is... this is good, right? This is definitely good.
So I'm standing here, grinning at my phone like an idiot, when I realize I have some time to kill before she arrives. Might as well check my quest menu. I pull it up with a thought, and the familiar translucent screen materializes in front of me.
Available Quests:
Acne III (21/28) - Flawless skin, here we come! - [5 Evolution Points]
Workout III (12/14) - Lightweight baby! Lightweight! - [5 Evolution Points]
Join a Club! - If the club looked interesting, try to participate! - [2 Evolution Points]
Get Closer to a Friend! (4/5) - You made your first friend! That's great! Really! Now, you get to enjoy their company! - [10 Evolution Points]
Find a Part-Time Job! - Must be service-related! (One month minimum) - [10 Evolution Points]
From Rags to Average - Get every physical stat up to 10! - [100 Evolution Points]
Daily Run (1/3) - The pain you're feeling is your calories begging for mercy! - [1 Evolution Point]
Daily Eating (4/5) - Keep eatin' good! - [1 Evolution Point]
Making Money (2,246/10,000) - Money doesn't buy you happiness… But it sure can buy nice things! - [10 Evolution Points]
The "Making Money" quest appeared on Tuesday. I think it triggered when I hugged Mom and realized just how bone-deep exhausted she always is. She works herself to death for us, picking up every overtime shift she can, and I've been so wrapped up in my own problems that I haven't really appreciated what she sacrifices. The quest description is different from the others, more personal, like the system knows I want to help support my family, not just improve myself. Good. That's exactly what I want.
I'm still looking at the menu when I spot Luna making her way down the hallway. She's wearing an oversized black hoodie today and, as always, she's doing that thing where she tries to make herself as small and unnoticeable as possible: shoulders hunched, hair falling forward to hide her face. It's like watching a turtle trying to retract into its shell, except the shell is made of cotton and the turtle is, objectively speaking, adorable.
I walk slightly closer, lowering my voice so I don't startle her. "Hi Luna."
She looks up at me, and I can't help myself. She's huddled up like a small animal trying to disappear from the world, and something in my brain just goes must protect, must pat. So I oblige, I reach out and give her head a gentle pat, running my fingers through her silky purple hair.
…So soft.
Her face immediately turns pink. "...hi Adam..." she squeaks out, her voice barely above a whisper.
God, she's so cute.
We head into the computer science club room together, and I'm immediately hit with that familiar feeling of "wow, this place is nicer than my entire house." The room is massive, with polished hardwood floors and floor-to-ceiling windows that flood everything with natural light. High-end gaming rigs line the walls, RGB lighting pulsing gently, curved monitors gleaming like they were just installed yesterday.
We seem to be the first ones here, which is perfect. Luna and I find a desk near the back, as remote as you can get in a room designed to show off, and settle in. I pull my chair closer to hers, close enough that I can see her screen, and we begin working.
Luna mentioned before that she's building an AI Vtuber project, and she asked if I could help her with it. Obviously, I said yes, because I'm not an idiot and also because I genuinely think it's a cool project. Plus, you know, spending time with Luna. That's a bonus.
We dive into the code, and I try very hard to focus on the work. I really do. But there are... distractions.
For one thing, she smells nice. Not in an overpowering way, just this subtle, warm, cotton-candy-adjacent scent that's somehow both comforting and distracting at the same time. It's like someone bottled "cozy winter evening" and turned it into a perfume.
For another thing (and I hate myself for noticing this), her breasts jiggle when she types. Look, I'm eighteen. I'm a teenage guy. My brain is hardwired by millions of years of evolution to notice these things, and Luna's chest is... substantial. The hoodie does its best to hide everything, but physics is undefeated, and every keystroke sends a subtle ripple through the fabric that my traitorous eyes keep tracking.
I force myself to look back at the screen. Code. Focus on the code. You're here to help with the project, not to be a creep.
We work diligently, catching several small bugs in her AI model and refining the natural language processing. Luna's actually really good at this, she asks smart questions and implements solutions quickly. It's impressive.
After about an hour of intense focus, I finally lean back and stretch, my eyes needing a break from the screen. That's when I realize we're not alone anymore. The room has filled up while we were working, other students scattered around at various desks, all absorbed in their own projects.
I stand up, deciding to take a walk around the room and see what everyone's working on. Luna gives me a small nod, seemingly content to keep tinkering with her code.
And holy shit, the projects here are incredible.
I approach one desk where a guy is working on what looks like a custom operating system. Like, not a Linux distro or a Windows mod, but an actual, from-scratch OS with its own kernel and everything. He explains it to me with the kind of enthusiasm that only comes from spending thousands of hours on something most people would consider insane.
At another station, someone's building their own VPN service, complete with custom encryption protocols. They walk me through their approach to minimizing latency while maintaining security, and I find myself genuinely engaged in the technical discussion.
The most impressive project is in the corner, where a group of people are collaborating on an algorithm that can detect and name objects in videos in real-time. They're using some cutting-edge machine learning techniques, and seeing it work, watching the algorithm correctly identify and label objects as a video plays, is genuinely mind-blowing.
I spend maybe twenty minutes wandering around, talking to people about their work, discussing implementation techniques and trading ideas. It's... nice. Really nice. I feel like I'm in my element here, surrounded by people who speak the same language I do, who get excited about the same dorky technical problems.
Eventually, I make my way back to Luna and settle in beside her. Time to work on my own project for a while.
I pull up my AI stock trading tool, my baby, the project I've been nursing for nearly a year now. It's currently functional, able to analyze market trends and provide insights on which companies seem to be doing well and when I should consider buying or selling certain stocks. But that's not enough. I want it to be better. I want it to be autonomous.
Right now, I'm working on implementing trading bots that can take the insights my AI generates and automatically execute trades for me. It's complex work, requiring careful attention to risk management, timing algorithms, and fail-safes to prevent the bot from doing anything catastrophically stupid with my (admittedly limited) money.
Luna and I work in comfortable silence, occasionally leaning over to look at each other's screens. Every so often, I'll notice something in her code and suggest a change: maybe a more efficient function or a better way to structure her data. She returns the favor, pointing out places where my code could be cleaner or suggesting approaches I hadn't considered.
It's collaborative in the best way. No ego, no competition, just two people helping each other build cool stuff.
"You could… use a weighted average here… instead of a simple mean," Luna says softly, pointing at a section of my risk calculation algorithm. "It would give more importance… to recent data."
I look at where she's pointing, consider it for a moment, and realize she's absolutely right. "That's... that's actually brilliant. Thanks, Luna."
She ducks her head, hair falling forward to hide her pleased smile. "It's nothing..."
"It's definitely not nothing. That's going to make the predictions way more accurate."
We continue like this for another couple of hours, the time flying by as we lose ourselves in code and problem-solving. At some point, someone turns on music, some lo-fi beats that blend into the background without being distracting. The sun starts to sink lower outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting long shadows across the hardwood floor.
Finally, I glance at the clock and realize it's getting late. Much later than I intended to stay.
"Hey, Luna," I say, stretching my arms above my head. "We should probably head out soon."
She looks up from her screen, blinking like she's surfacing from underwater. "Oh... already?"
"It's almost seven. I don't know about you, but I'm getting hungry."
Luna saves her work and starts shutting down her computer. I do the same, making sure to commit my changes to my repository before closing everything out.
As we pack up our stuff, I feel a pang of disappointment that the session's ending. This has been... really nice. Just spending time with Luna, working on projects, talking about code. No pressure, no expectations, no worrying about making mistakes or embarrassing myself. Just two nerds doing nerd things.
We head toward the exit together, and I hold the door open for her. She glances up at me, her violet eyes catching the last rays of sunlight, and gives me the smallest smile.
"Thanks for coming with me today," she says quietly.
"Are you kidding? This was great. Your project is coming along really well, by the way. The Vtuber is going to be awesome once you finish it."
"You... you think so?"
"Definitely. You're doing amazing work. I mean it."
She nods, and we start walking toward the front of the school. The hallways are completely empty at this point, just a few students lingering by their lockers.
"Do you want me to walk you home?" I ask, trying to sound casual and not like a creep who's desperately looking for excuses to spend more time with her.
Luna hesitates, and I can see her internal debate playing out on her face. Finally, she shakes her head. "I... I'll be okay. But thank you."
"You sure?"
"Yeah... I don't live… far."
Fair enough. I'm not going to push it. "Alright. Well, I'll see you at school on Monday?"
"Yeah," she says, and then, so quietly I almost miss it: "I had fun today."
My heart does another one of those annoying flips. "Me too."
We part ways at the front entrance, and I watch her go for a moment before heading in my own direction. The walk home is pleasant, the evening air cool but not cold, the streets relatively quiet.
Yeah. This was a good day.
