16+ Language Mature Content

Syboleth ch. 6: Social Medium

Warning: This work has been rated 16+ for language and mature content.

Author’s note: I don’t think we need ANs for clarity anymore so much because I’m finally publishing chapters in order. Anyway, without further ado, best girl returns…

———

Valerie tapped open a testimonial absentmindedly.

i was on a date and everything seemed great! he was a gentleman, offered to pay but said we could split if that was more my style, opened the Waymo door for me, everything was going wonderfully. we get back to his place and he pours me a drink. i’m kind of more than tipsy at this point and i spill some on the bar, so he grabs a towel and starts cleaning it up. and that’s when i see it… he covered his dots with makeup! it was so fucking violating. we even talked about how creepy these biomedical tech advances were at the restaurant! fuck you Charlie Rosenberg!

She swiped it away, then did a digital double take. Wasn’t that Garrett’s roommate? Hmm. She considered sending it to him, then considered that she had no idea what Garrett’s relationship with the guy was like at all. Maybe they were best buds at this point and she’d be offending him.

She opened her messages. The last text, an overly effusive thank you for his offer to replace her laplet, was still there unread in her conversation with Garrett.

Awkward.

Should she double text or just wait it out? Well, waiting it out could take forever knowing Garry.

hey there garry. i realized we haven’t talked much about what your new life is like. how’s the roommate?

She considered this for a moment, then sent it off with a wince.

Almost immediately, the read receipt was delivered and a typing indicator popped up. Apparently he just hadn’t felt the need to see her full thank you, or maybe the automatic summaries did a good enough job. She wasn’t sure if he had those turned on or not, she realized.

hi val. nice to hear from you as always. my roommate is awful lol, a real microcosm of everything awful about SF. at least he’s a good cautionary lesson

Her heart leapt, and then she felt foolish. Either way, at least he’d replied. She began typing.

i have something i think you’re going to like then

And then she sent the link. There was a pause of a couple minutes, and then the typing indicator returned.

holy shit, what a fucking creep! should i address it with him or pretend i don’t know?

She was amazed as always at how sensitive Garrett was to the situations women found themselves in.

definitely keep it on the downlow, don’t let on that you know anything. i mean i guess he already knows you hate him knowing you, but definitely don’t talk about this

gotcha. i’ll just arrange for a bucket of water on top of the door at some seemingly unrelated time next week.

She chuckled.

seriously?

i’ll send video.

i hope so

He was so fun. Too much fun. God, did she ever miss him. She needed that manic-but-not-that-kind-of-manic energy in her life again. It gave her the freedom to be happy at times other than the dreaded episodes of psychotic mania. She needed to find another friend like that, but knew she wouldn’t.

He always knew the right thing to say. Like he was psychic, or something. But really psychic, not like the psychic you could visit down the street from her apartment.

Well, she had accomplished something today already. That was a good start. Now she just had to make some content for the johns and get some chatting in during all that and she’d be able to relax for the rest of the day. That would be nice. Her new laplet would be delivered tomorrow, according to the manifest. Then she could get back to researching her prescriptions. And researching the cheapest overseas sources of the anti-psychotic in particular. The mood stabilizer was only useful for preventing suicidal thoughts, it was the anti-psychotic she really needed. To avoid the worse stuff. There are worse mental states than the one that leads to you killing yourself, after all. Not too many people had experienced them, though. Valerie was one of the unlucky few.

As she did her daily routines, she became fixated on picturing the future. Her future, mostly.

No matter what it took, she had to stay on her aripiprazole. No matter the costs. And from overseas the costs would be much less than her current ordinary American prescription.

Perhaps she could just assume a new identity, free of debts. If she burnt off her fingerprints and dyed her irises and got facial surgeries and… somehow paid for it all with lottery winnings or something. At which point the original motive would no longer be a factor anyway.

Oh well. It is fun to daydream, Valerie concurred with her inner voice.

She considered actually going on a date. Then she would be able to write her own testimonial if it went poorly. How might she pursue going on a date? She pondered the question briefly.

Well, if she went to the bar there would soon enough be an answer. And likely an answer that would result in a juicy testimonial. It wasn’t exactly a bar frequented by gentlemen.

As the sun was setting she dressed, and used a blue eyeliner to add a little flash to tonight’s aesthetic. She pumped the head of a perfume bottle roughly a dozen times before a final spritz emerged and landed upon her wrist. Then she tapped her wrists together delicately in multiple places and rubbed them against her neck.

It was still a pleasant odor, though it was years old now. She had gotten this bottle as a gift from an old ex who had worked in the essential oil industry. He had managed to grab it one day from a treasure trove of promotional stuff a perfume company that his company had collaborated with had been offering.

She didn’t think they even made it anymore, so this night better go well. Or at least result in one hell of a testimonial.

After checking to make sure everything she needed was in her purse, she stepped out into the night.

The bar was quiet tonight, but there were a couple men who noticed her almost immediately. One walked up and offered to buy her a drink, and she accepted. So it would be him, then. He wasn’t too bad on the eyes, but far from somebody she would ever give a second glance on the street. Nothing compared to G-

Alright, come on now girl, Valerie thought to herself. Don’t ruin the entire point of this outing. Stop thinking about him.

“Everything okay?” asked the guy that had bought her the drink.

“Peachy keen,” she said warmly. “What’s your name?”

“Derek,” he said excitedly. “Yours?”

“Clara,” she said, without a hint of dishonesty in her tone to betray her.

“Nice to meet you, Clara,” he said. “Enjoying that cosmo?”

“Very much, thank you,” she said, and that was actually true. She did love a good cosmopolitan.

Then they danced the night away, or something. She didn’t have much in the way of memories of what happened after.

Next chapter: https://www.youngwriterssociety.com/work/Aet%20Lindling/Syboleth-ch-7-Meeting-Elliot-161885

Comments & reviews · 3
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User avatar
vulpesvelox
Review

Hey, hello! :mrgreen:

She opened her messages. The last text, an overly effusive thank you for his offer to replace her laplet, was still there unread in her conversation with Garrett.

Awkward.

I like the little "Awkward" here because it gives me a good sense of Valerie's voice and the way she overthinks her interactions with Garrett!

I was a bit confused about the unread message, though. The later reference to automatic summaries suggests Garrett may have received the general meaning without opening it, but that still leaves Valerie deciding to send a fairly casual question after he ignored a heartfelt thank you. I think you could lean further into how vulnerable or embarrassed that makes her feel, especially since his immediate reply causes such a strong physical reaction.

Well, she had accomplished something today already. That was a good start. Now she just had to make some content for the johns and get some chatting in during all that and she’d be able to relax for the rest of the day.

This introduces quite a lot of information about Valerie's work very casually, and I’m not sure whether the reader is already expected to know what kind of content she makes? I know I can't figure much out. "The johns" gives me a strong implication, but the exact situation remains a little vague. I think more detail could help understand her daily routine and financial pressure, particularly because the cost of her medication becomes so important immediately afterwards. The casual tone works well, though, because it suggests she has normalised things which may be uncomfortable or exhausting for her.

***

There’s a lot happening here, but Valerie's feelings for Garrett provide a good throughline through the first half! It all makes it very clear that she hasn’t moved on, even if she’s trying to convince herself that she should.

The section about Valerie's medication is probably the strongest part for me because it grounds her mental health in practical fears about money and continued access. I know what that is like. Her daydream about changing her identity is funny on the surface, but it also shows how impossible and frightening her situation feels to her. I do think this section could be tightened, as I move through prescriptions, overseas suppliers, debt, fingerprint removal and winnings quite quickly. The thoughts make sense as a spiral, though, and it is very bleak and memorable.

The decision to go to the bar feels deliberately self-destructive, but I’d like a little more clarity about Valerie's motivation. She tells herself she needs material for a testimonial, but she also seems lonely, misses Garrett and wants an excuse to date someone else, so there are several motives working together. I am not sure if that is all intentional? The ending creates a strong sense of dread for me, particularly because I already know from her other chapter that something went very wrong with Derek.

Cheers!

Lip

User avatar
Tikaya
Comment

I'm getting the feeling that it's the covering up part that the girls and Garrett are creeped out by and not just the presence of the "dots". Guess if you know they are there, you do behave differently?

It's more that it's a dramatic lifestyle choice that implies other things about you, similar to wearing smartglasses all the time but without the privacy violation. Maybe I should express that better.

User avatar
Tikaya
Review
Tikaya wrote a review · Sat Mar 28, 2026 6:33 pm

I lost my top spot for daily reviews and cannot let that stand. So here, I finally come for one of your chapters and I hope you’re happy.


Ohhh I wonder if I should remember what biomedical tech advances means. Some sorta device implanted in the skin to idk give optimal predictions on what to say to your date? (Or maybe see how intoxicated etc your date is?) It’s definitely something a lot of ppl are outranged over, considering relative-normie Valerie reads abt it.

I also like that Val thinks abt sending it to Garrett and then reconsiders. That paragraph is very well written!

Ok maybe I do need a reminder on what testimonials are instead bc why would anyone open those first instead of checking their messages? @.@

Hah and even though she feels awkward abt it, I like that she makes sure to ask abt his roommate :3

I just like these little details: “or maybe the automatic summaries did a good enough job.”
…But I like the sentence afterwards less. It feels very hand-holdy and redundant. Why is it important that she comments on that?

I think you have a missing “of” here xd “there were a couple men who”

This also feels a bit hand-holdy “without a hint of dishonesty in her tone to betray her.”
We know she’s not Clara :3

Valerie continues to be best girl =D

Ah you might want to use the url=link Name /url formatting to hyperlink a piece of text instead of the full link :3


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