X Card
It is about the size of a credit card, and feels heavy, being made out of anodised titanium, accented in stainless steel and gold; once a symbol of exclusivity, affluence and luxurious spending power, its status has been degraded by the proliferation of many popularised metal-carrying cardholders, as well as a younger BNPL generation who indebts themselves invisibly and incrementally through a sorcery of ethereal, contactless electromagnetic transference.
The black card is also frequently featured and aggressively promoted in gangsta rap lyrics; for those abandoned to poverty, wealth, weapons, women; respect and domination, violence and retaliation; masculinity and misogyny represents all resources known to those raised with street culture as their Father. The ideology of Father, provider and protector, ensnares even those who rebel against him.
On this card there is an etched imprint featuring a prominent X at the front, alongside a laser-engraved design that reminds you a little of the ferris wheel at the Pier by the beach. It clangs if you hold it above a silver platter and drop it down upon a restaurant table.
Most people who wish they were millionaires actually only desire to spend millions, which is perhaps the opposite mentality to the accumulation and conservation of wealth. Nonetheless, invitation-only premiere cards are mostly associated with some form of spending reward or loyalty scheme. Whilst the precise elements required for qualification are not disclosed, an excellent FICO credit score is also typically required.
This card can be used to travel the world, if the world you wish to see (or better still, the world your personal assistant sees) is one of booking desks, concierge services and airport lounges.
Perhaps the X Card can be used to banish all that is unsightly and inconvenient in the world, but what it cannot be used for in a high-demand business lifestyle is to escape from it.
(You notice that in the playful / distressing arm-twisting pretend struggle between Annabel and Natalie,
>>6041683the actress appears to have dropped this item of hers, without noticing, upon the ground at the Car Park.)
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