My Ultimate Sign-in System Made Me Invincible - Chapter 541 More Shocking Discoveries

Chapter 541 More Shocking Discoveries
The staff took their time with their quarters.
Half an hour passed before the first door opened and someone stepped back into the residential hallway. Then another door. Then three at once. They emerged at their own pace, some still carrying their bags, some having left everything inside, and they looked at each other with the expression of people who had just experienced the same thing independently and were recognizing it in each other’s faces simultaneously.
Nobody needed to describe it. The recognition was enough.
The physical therapist from Toronto stepped out last. She had spent most of the half hour standing at the transparent wall watching the common space below, the green running along the lower level, the high ceiling of the base rising above it. She had moved away twice, unpacked a few things, come back to the wall each time.
When she stepped into the hallway and saw the others, she said nothing. Neither did most of them. They simply stood together in the corridor for a moment with the doors to their quarters open behind them and the warm light spilling out and the sourceless illumination of the hallway steady overhead.
The head chef broke it. “Bigger than I expected,” he said.
Nobody disagreed.
The Synths had been waiting in the hallway since the staff began emerging, standing at intervals along the corridor without apparent impatience, without checking anything. When the group had fully assembled, the lead Synth moved forward.
“We will take you to the dining area,” it said, and turned without waiting.
They followed, back the way they had come, down the residential hallway and into the elevator that moved without sensation and opened onto a different corridor.
This one was wider than the residential level, with the same high ceiling and sourceless light but a different quality to the proportions.
They walked for two minutes. The corridor turned once, then again, and then the lead Synth stopped in front of a transparent door set flush into the wall, its edges almost invisible, the material clear enough that the room beyond was visible before the door opened.
The door slid aside automatically as they approached.
The dining area was large in the way that everything in the base was large. Tables ran in rows across the floor, each one set for four, the surfaces a warm dark material that caught the light without glare. The chairs were the same dark soft material as the seating in the quarters, low and generous. The ceiling here was lower than the corridor, which somehow made the room feel more intimate rather than smaller.
The far wall was transparent, the same material as the viewport in the quarters, and through it was a view into the common space — the green running along the base level, the open volume of air rising above it. The plants were more visible from here than they had been from the quarters, and several of the staff stopped when they saw it, drawn to the glass the same way they had been drawn to every viewport since orbit.
The lead Synth turned to face the room.
“Food is available through the storage wall on your left.” It gestured to the long wall running along the left side of the dining area. “Every compartment is labeled with its contents. Tap the label to open the compartment. Return it to its position when you’re finished. Plates, cutlery, and trays are in the compartments marked along the near end of the wall. You may eat as much as you like.”
It stepped back after it was done.
The staff looked at the wall.
It ran the full length of the dining area — easily thirty meters, the compartments flush to the surface, each one labeled in clean text at eye height. The labels were simply named. The categories were visible at a glance — the warm sections toward the left, cold sections toward the right, beverages along the bottom half of the far end.
What wasn’t immediately clear was the range.
The data analyst from Johannesburg, who had been thorough about everything since the elevator, walked to the near end first and found the cutlery compartments. He tapped one. It slid out smoothly, the mechanism silent, containing stacked plates in the same clean material as the table surfaces. He took a plate, a tray, a fork, a knife, a spoon. He replaced the compartment and it sealed without sound.
He walked along the wall, reading labels.
He stopped.
He stepped back and read the labels again more carefully, moving slowly along the wall from left to right, taking in the range with the attention of someone recalibrating their initial assumptions.
The head chef had followed him. He stood beside the data analyst, also reading labels, his eyes moving faster, his expression doing something that required effort to keep neutral.
The range was not the range of a facility that had stocked a kitchen for a month-long trial. The range was the range of somewhere that had been thinking carefully, for a long time, about what it meant to provide food for people from dozens of countries, with dozens of dietary backgrounds, with dozens of conditions that affected what they could and couldn’t eat, across an extended period of time.
West African groundnut stew. Cantonese congee. French onion soup. Jollof rice. Mole negro. Pierogi. Nasi goreng. Dal tadka. Injera with three types of stew labeled separately. A section for dietary restrictions that ran its own length — gluten-free, dairy-free, low-sodium, high-protein, renal diet, diabetic-appropriate — each one with its own label and its own compartment.
The head chef stood in front of that last section for a moment.
Then he said, quietly, to nobody in particular: “They thought of everything.”
The data analyst tapped a compartment — jollof rice, the label read — and it slid out. The container inside was sealed and warm. The seal released when he lifted it slightly, and the smell reached him before he had the lid fully open.
He stood there with the compartment open and the smell of it in the dining area air, and something happened in his chest that he couldn’t immediately name.
He had eaten jollof rice made by his mother, by restaurants in Johannesburg, by stalls at markets and by friends who swore their version was the definitive one. He had developed opinions about it that he held seriously.
The smell currently in the air was not identical to any specific version he had eaten before, but it was accurate in a way that suggested whoever had designed the contents of this compartment had not guessed.
He scooped rice onto his plate, added a second helping because the first looked insufficient, and sealed the compartment back into the wall.
He moved along to a neighboring section and added grilled vegetables and some proteins. He found the cold beverage compartments at the far end and took a bottle of cold water. He assembled everything on his tray and carried it to a table and sat down.
He took a forkful of rice and stopped chewing.
He took another forkful and paid more careful attention this time.
It was not perfectly identical to any version he had eaten before. But it was close. The spices were balanced. The rice had the right texture. The slight smokiness in the background was there and was correct.
He put his fork down and looked at the food for a moment.
Around him, others were beginning to sit down. The nurse from Atlanta had found the Southern-style breakfast section and was carrying a tray loaded with more food than he had clearly intended to take.
He sat across from the data analyst and looked at his own plate and said nothing, just started eating, and his expression within the first few seconds communicated something that words would have overstated.
The head chef sat at the end of the table. He had taken less food than anyone else, a small disciplined portion from three different sections, and he ate with the attention of a professional evaluating rather than simply consuming.
He chewed. He considered. He took another bite. He set his fork down and looked at the wall of compartments from across the room.
He had spent twenty-two years cooking. He had a good understanding of what institutional food systems looked like at scale — the compromises that came from volume, from shelf life, from the gap between what food should be and what it became when produced for many people at once.
What he was eating did not taste like institutional food.
It tasted like food that had been cooked well, with the specific intention of tasting the way it was supposed to taste, by someone who understood the difference between producing food and preparing it.
He looked at the wall for another moment. Then he looked at his plate. Then he said, to the table rather than to anyone specifically: “Why did they hire us?”
The question sat in the air but no one was able to give an answer to it.
The physical therapist looked up from her own food. She had taken a Thai green curry that she had found in the middle of the wall.
“Maybe the food isn’t the point,” she said. “Maybe the point is the people eating it.”
Nobody had an immediate response to that.
The head chef looked at her, then back at his plate.
“Fair,” he said, and ate.
The table filled as more staff arrived with their trays, each one having made their way along the wall with the same progression — initial uncertainty, growing comprehension of the range, a choice made, the first bite, the expression that followed.
The table became full. A second table began filling. The dining area had become something that sounded like a dining area — plates, movement, the particular acoustic texture of a group of people eating together for the first time.
One of the translator sat at the far end of the first table. She had taken food from three separate sections — something from each of the three countries she had lived in longest — and she ate from each in turn, not mixing them, moving between sections of her plate with the deliberate attention of someone performing a private experiment.
She didn’t announce the results. But she finished everything.
The data analyst from Johannesburg finished his rice and thought about taking more and decided to. He went back to the wall, found the compartment, took a second helping. On the way back he glanced at the label counts — he had seen perhaps a fraction of the wall’s total contents in his first pass.
He made a mental note to walk the full length of it before the trial began.
He sat back down and ate.
After the meal, the dining area settled. Trays returned to the relevant compartment. People drifted to chairs at the sides of the room, to the transparent wall and the view of the common space, to small conversations that had begun over food and were continuing now.
Half an hour passed.
Then the lead Synth appeared at the dining area entrance.
“Orientation will begin shortly,” it said. “Please follow me.”
They gathered their things and rose.


