She didn't use the expensive, regulated Flush. Instead, she used a forgotten technique from the 2030s, before iQ2 existed: photobiomodulation and high-dose omega-3 lipid perfusion . She had the supplies in her private lab—leftovers from her own days as an Architect before she was “reassigned” to the Drifter clinic for questioning a superior’s diagnosis.
“Because your iQ2 score isn't you,” Elara said. “It’s a measure of how well you’ve survived a system designed to break you. And I’m tired of writing prescriptions for a broken world.” iq2 health
That was the lie at the heart of the system. They called it “iQ2 Health,” as if it were a diet or a gym routine. But it wasn't about health. It was about a feedback loop of poverty. Low iQ2 forced you into cognitively toxic labor, which lowered your iQ2 further, which trapped you in worse labor. The filament behind Kael’s ear wasn't a medical device. It was a leash. She didn't use the expensive, regulated Flush
An iQ2 above 130 meant you were an Architect —eligible for the best jobs, neural acceleration loans, and priority organ regeneration. Below 100, you were a Drifter , limited to menial labor, public transit, and generic nutrient paste. Below 70? You were placed in a Renewal Center , a euphemism for a quiet, heavily sedated twilight. “Because your iQ2 score isn't you,” Elara said
The next morning, Kael’s iQ2 read . A tiny uptick. The system flagged it as an “anomaly” but didn't investigate—not yet.
Elara’s patient, a 16-year-old named Kael, was a Drifter. But his score wasn't just low; it was volatile . It had dropped from 102 to 89 in three weeks. That was the real crime. A stable low score was a tragedy. A declining score was a threat.