Just Imagine The Pokipoks Please. They Are Incredibly Cute As I Imagined Them - Tumblr Posts
Every day, I make the hike.
Over the river of poisonous fish and deadly waters. Through the maze of thorns. Past the lair of something too ominous to describe.
Only to push a button.
And then I go back. I retrace my steps, hoping to get home before the fog sets in. Nobody wants to be near the fog without protection in the form of magical shields and a very, very sharp greatsword.
No wonder the job pays so well. I come within a hair's breadth of death every single day. If it's not the river, it's the monsters, and if it's not the monsters, it's the fog.
Only twice, I asked what happened to the last guy. I'd been here for two weeks by that point. The first time, my employer sighed and evaded the question. The second time, he told me.
"He died of old age."
No wonder he said I wouldn't believe him. The mere possibility is ludicrous. To go through this gauntlet for years upon end, and die of something so common as natural causes?
I enquired further - perhaps the person was one of the magical races that suddenly drop dead for seemingly no reason? But no, the man explained. It was something very different.
"You know the route you take. Over the river, through the thorns, through the jungle with the lairs. And you know exactly what lies at the end."
I nod. The clearing with harmless creatures and the button.
"Our second-last guy trained one of the pokipoks to do her job. It was amazing. I'd never seen anybody get close enough to feed them, let alone train them. But then the pokipok - which, if I remember correctly, she called Ball - died of old age."
That... made sense, but for a few questions (why treat the pokipok like it was human? Why call it an employee and yet not pay it?), only one of which I decided to ask. "Why didn't you get the girl to come back and train another?"
"She's in the army. We can't just up and steal any of their recruits."
Ah, the army. This success at getting answered made me ask another question. "What does the button do?"
My employer gained a devilish grin. "You aren't on the internet, right? So you haven't seen the latest trend."
The internet was a cesspool of people all clamoring to make their voices heard. I might hate it for that reason alone, if there weren't so many other things wrong with it. I had an email for contact purposes and that was it.
"No," I responded.
My employer chuckled. "There's something 'bout the pokipoks that make people smile. They're round and fluffy, and their fur squishes into the ground in this adorable way. Their legs are tiny and stubby and their tail is half the size they are. And their head has the most adorable ears paired with the biggest little eyes."
I nod, not sure where this is going.
"So we installed a few cameras to watch them. They're harmless, and yet, have no natural predators. And have you seen what they get up to all day? They bounce around on their tail and bump into each other. It's amazing!"
"What does the button do?" I repeated.
"Right, right! The button sends the last 24 hours of footage to us. Then we watch it, clip it, and release it online for people to watch and enjoy."
So I was somehow being paid off of ad or subscription revenue, which generated enough income for them to pay me $4000 per day on average.
Good lord.
"Why pay me so much then?" I asked, fairly certain I knew the answer.
"Buddy," my employer's smile fell off his face, "you put your life in danger for the cute animal videos. I'm not paying you any less when we have such a money surplus."
I rearranged my facial muscles into a smile. I'm not sure if I did it right, but it felt good to be wanted.
"Now, you wanna see our recent footage?" asked my employer, and his smile seemed so genuine that I agreed.
“Alright. You’re paid $1000 an hour, full benefits, full international accommodations of all types, and more. All you have to do is push 1 button, at a specific time, once a day.” “What happened to the last person?” The man sighed and started shaking “Um… you wouldn’t believe me if I told you.”