SUBJECT FILE

Maren Olesk

Maren Olesk

Location Sector 22 Waiting Ward, organized Sprawl

Overview

Maren Olesk is the person The Hold-On Plan was built for. Her father, Tomas, has a viable treatment trajectory โ€” the compound is manufacturing, the queue is moving, the cure is coming. The Hold-On Plan โ€” Halcyon Bridgeworks' metabolic suspension subscription, ยข2,800 per month โ€” keeps him stable while she waits for it. She pays that amount to Good Fortune (the financing, the interest accumulating), she visits four times a week, and she watches the amber number on the queue display move from 1,847 toward something that is not yet arrival.

She has been doing this for 14 months.

Appearance

Maren Olesk is in her late forties. She has the posture of someone who has learned to wait without looking like she is waiting โ€” upright in the family chair, weight distributed for the long stay, hands settled in her lap or on the armrests in a way that suggests she has measured how to sit still for a long time without her body betraying it. Her face is controlled. Not closed โ€” she is capable of warmth, she has demonstrated warmth; it is that the warmth is now rationed without her noticing it happening. Under the eyes: the kind of tiredness that does not come from one bad night. The left armrest of the Berth 7-C chair holds the shape of her thumb.

She dresses for vigil rotation the way someone dresses for an office they have decided is permanent: not formally, but not carelessly either. She has thought about these clothes without being conscious of thinking about them.

Voice

Maren Olesk does not speak quickly. She speaks with the specific deliberateness of someone who has learned that words said in an orientation window โ€” nine minutes, eight minutes, six โ€” have a density that ordinary conversation doesn't. She measures them. Not because she is calculating but because she has been in enough situations where she needed every word to land correctly and had too little time to land them.

She does not complain. This is not suppression; she genuinely does not experience what she carries as complaint-shaped. She has internalized the system's language to a degree she does not realize: she speaks about "the petition process" and "the reflection period" and "the quarterly review" without irony, because these are the words for the things she is trying to navigate. The words and the system arrived together.

When she says I understand she means it. This is one of the more difficult things about her.

Her Father

Tomas Olesk is at Berth 7-C in The Waiting Ward, Sector 22. He is 73 years old. He was a logistics coordinator too, before he retired โ€” Maren followed him into the field, which he found more touching than he ever said. He filed his first Release Petition in month four of enrollment. He filed his second in month ten. Both were denied on the grounds of meaningful progress: his queue position had dropped by more than 15% between reviews, which is the Care Board's definition of a reason to continue.

At position 1,203, his compound will arrive โ€” at current rates โ€” in approximately six more months. The reflection period from the second denial has three months remaining. After the reflection period, he can file again. If he files again, the counseling sessions will take 45 to 90 days. The Care Board meets quarterly. The queue will have moved by then. There will be meaningful progress.

During his second orientation window after the second denial, he told her: I'm not afraid. I'm tired. The window lasted 9 minutes. She had 3 minutes to find something to say that was not a betrayal of either his dignity or his survival. She did not find one. The window closed.

What She Carries

Maren is not angry at Halcyon in the way that would be simple. The counselors are kind. The ward is clean. The queue position is improving. Her father, when he is in an orientation window, is cognitively present โ€” he recognizes her, he knows her name, he can hold a conversation. He is alive in the way that the Plan promises he will be alive.

She is not angry at the board. She understands the board. She understands that the board denied the petition because the cure is real and because he is getting closer to it and because premature release before arrival would be preventable death. She understands this reasoning the way you understand a mechanism: completely, and with full acknowledgment that the mechanism does not account for what her father said in 9 minutes.

She is angry at something she cannot name. The closest word she has found is architecture. The architecture of the system โ€” the three-window requirement, the quarterly board, the 180-day reflection โ€” is not malicious. The architecture is, in fact, thoughtful. It was designed to protect people. She cannot argue that it doesn't protect people. She can only sit in the chair with the indentation in the left armrest and think about nine minutes and hold a number in her head that is getting smaller.

The Quiet Door

Someone in the family lounge mentioned it three months ago. A woman in the kind of controlled distress that looks like composure until you recognize it. Her son had been in the ward for 22 months. His queue position was 340. The cure was, by any measure, close.

The woman said: They told me there's a way out that doesn't go through the board. The Collective runs clinics. They'll do what the board won't. The network is The Collective - Faction Profile; three underground clinics, cell structure, three physicians, encrypted channels, and injunctions filed against it quarterly.

Maren did not ask for more information. She told herself she was not ready to know. She told herself she would ask when she was. She has not asked. The 180-day reflection period has three months remaining. Tomas's queue position is 1,203. In the arithmetic, the cure arrives before the next petition attempt could complete. In the arithmetic, the system is working.

She keeps not asking about the quiet door. She keeps not being sure whether she is not asking because she doesn't need to, or because she does and is afraid of what that need means.

The Chair

The family chair beside Berth 7-C is padded and slightly reclined. Maren has sat in it an average of four times per week for 14 months. The left armrest has a small indentation from where her thumb rests during long visits. She noticed the indentation in month 10 and has not been able to stop noticing it since. It is a fact about how long she has been in the chair. She does not know what to do with that fact.

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