" - yes, I do. I will get my Rebecca first, though."
Kenyo gets the door and pulls them in and gets them leftover everything platter and shows them where the twins are playing with the computer.
"I mean, the word's from back when there was paper involved, but get you citizenship, get you registered for your stipend, get you your own keys to the apartment. And then maybe we can take the train uptown and get breakfast at a restaurant there, so you all get some experience with navigating the city?"
"We have the run of the place," Kenyo tells them, and for emphasis he gestures at the pictures of the prince and his girlfriend on the screen.
"Oh," says the mom.
They have lots of applicants for the station and have picked a preliminary batch. Robots to do red jobs so they needn't send reds, right?
Not within the station. Voa itself is not going to make any major changes and they're not picking from the applicants quite neutrally but once they get there everything should be how Vanda Nossëo likes it.
The idea is that having outrageously wealthy member neighbors usually produces some interest in social change back home, but they don't plan to point that out. They'd love to look at the legal system for the space station! (Does Voa still need food shipments or have they gotten that straightened out by now?)
The Tapai have started withdrawing and they'll be okay but another few shipments would still be good.
The applicants mostly assume anyway, although sometimes since the listings don't specify they'll get yellows and greens or purples and greys showing up for the same things and being confused.
What, um, is the job? The yellows were assuming some sort of office information-handling job and the greys were assuming security and the orange thought something involving people's medical data or personal lives or something.
The job is learning a form of magic - the interviewer can demonstrate - and then participating in further spell development and the creation of magic artifacts. The interviewer is...sorry they were confused? Past experience really isn't relevant or they'd have listed what kind of past experience they wanted, the only thing they need is people who won't go telling all their friends that they do magic at work.
At that point most of the greys figure this isn't their thing but one stays, as do all the yellows and the orange.
And everybody who told no lies on the interview can get Wizardry 101, refined from the Elendil curriculum and compressed to reflect being a full-time job instead of a university course. The confidentiality agreement includes promising not to demonstrate or teach magic to anyone, though you can of course recommend them this outrageously well-paid job!
(The hiring manager wonders if the pay is the reason no purples applied, and lists a manufacturing/production of confidential widgets confidentality very important job at a tenth of the salary in the same listings).