She reached behind her ear, feeling the cold metal of her sync-port. With a jagged breath, she didn't call her lawyer or her agent. She called a black-market "De-Linker" she’d met in the shadows of a previous shoot. "I want to go dark," she said.

Billie looked out the window. She saw a young girl on the sidewalk wearing a Billie Star synthetic wig, her eyes glazed over as she synced into the premiere. The girl wasn't just watching a story; she was being consumed by a product that was slowly killing the person who inspired it.

In the neon-soaked sprawl of District 9, wasn't a person anymore; she was a proprietary asset.

Billie watched her own face on a passing skyscraper, a hundred feet tall and perfectly hollow.