Here's a look at my next book Fadeout, a YA dystopian.
Thirteen year old Silas and his older sister, Malina, have lived on
futuristic human farms their whole lives. They have no future. They know it’s
just a matter of time before the day guards come to take their memories and
emotions leaving them shells. And Malina’s day is much closer than either of
them would like to admit. Silas realizes they have to escape before this
happens, but it’s not going to be easy and he’s running out of time.
I plan to release Fadeout in February 2013 with the
sequels to follow shortly.
Fadeout
Chapter
0.5: Silas
The guards brought the fifteen year old
boy in yelling and kicking. They forced him down on the table in the center of
the room. Two guards held him while a third secured the straps for his arms,
legs, chest and chin. He was left alone for a few minutes, but the time did
nothing to calm him. He strained and pulled and screamed.
There was a nervous hush on the other
kids that eight year old Silas could almost taste. All 27 of them had been
locked in the adjacent room for over two hours, but no one wanted to move. They
were frozen, watching the boy through the glass wall. It was the first time
Silas had been taken anywhere without his parents and now they said he wouldn’t
be living with them anymore.
Silas leaned closer to the glass. The
boy on the table looked a little like his parent’s neighbor, Mrs. Dowell. He
had her light brown eyes and the same lips. Although he had several strands of
dark hair growing on his upper lip, that weren’t quite enough for a mustache.
Silas knew Mrs. Dowell had children and her youngest had been a boy. She didn’t
like to talk about it but she had left a teddy bear in the old crib and boys
were always given teddy bears. It struck Silas deep inside that this could be
her son.
A man in a white coat walked calmly over
to the boy and began attaching some kind of head gear to his forehead. A thick
strap went completely around his head. Two studs were connected to the straps
and a visor was hooked to them so that it curved around the top of the boy’s
head. Lastly, a sensor on the top of the visor was screwed to a large metal box
with a clear tube running to a deep rectangle container. The man stepped back
and went to monitor the numbers on one of the screens.
Now that the boy was connected, he
struggled even more. The man in the white coat clicked several sections of the
screen and different colored lights reflected off the table. The boy stared up
at them and his muscles began to shake involuntary.
“Please, don’t,” he begged.
Silas couldn’t see what the boy was
watching. It was higher than the top of the glass would allow him to look. One
of the other boys in the room tried to press himself against the glass, but it
must not have worked because he gave up after a minute.
“Stop please. I won’t do it again,” the
boy repeated over and over. Tears began to form and slipped down the side of
his face.
Something flashed on the screen the man
in the white coat was watching. He glanced up to a small room made from darkened
glass with metal stairs leading to it.
“He’s ready,” was all the man in the
white coat said.
There was a loud click, a speaker
crackled and a deep voice said, “Start the Machine.”
At those words the boy began struggling
again. There was a grinding noise. All the lights in the building brightened
and the boy screamed. He kept on screaming as small glass balls rolled down the
tube from his head to the container.
Some of the girls in the room began to
cry. Soon it seemed as though everyone was screaming or crying. A girl ran to
the door and began pounding on it, but no one let her out.
Silas swallowed. He tried to close his
eyes, but he couldn’t. The process lasted for hours. Most of the kids huddled
together in small groups as far away from the window as they could. Silas
wanted to hide with them, but he was motionless. He wanted to cry or scream,
yet nothing would come out.
The more glass balls that rolled away,
the quieter the boy got until he was completely still and then everything
became too quiet. The boy’s eyes were dull and unseeing. His fingers limp and
his mouth parted. His chest breathed so softly that Silas kept watching to see
if it would stop, but the boy kept on breathing, in and out. Then the man in
the white coat came back and unhooked the completely unresponsive boy. Another
man came, lifted the boy into a wheelchair and took him away. There was no need
for restraints. Silas didn’t think the boy even knew what was happening to him.
A speaker in their room crackled and
several of the girls started crying again.
“This is your only warning,” the same
voice from earlier said. “Fall in line, obey the rules and don’t make waves or
this will happen to you.”
The kids struggled to their feet and
lined up by the door. Silas joined them secretly relieved to be moving again.
They waited in line for another hour until a guard came and escorted them to
their new rooms, a ten by ten foot cell with a double bunk, a toilet and some
cubbies. Boys were taken to one ward and girls another.
That night Silas huddled in his new bed.
He couldn’t sleep. He kept picturing what had happened earlier. Every sound
made him jump. Even the hissing of the hallway light was strange. So when
footsteps sounded down the hall, Silas was immediately tense. The door to his
cell slid open and Silas watched in horror as two guards entered. They grabbed
him and moved him out of his cell, away from the boys ward and into the
building where the Machine was kept.
No sound would come out of Silas’ mouth
and he felt like he wanted to collapse, but somehow his feet kept him upright and
held his weight. There was a spotlight on the empty table where they had
strapped the boy. It made the chrome seem shiny and dangerous. Silas could
hardly take his eyes off it, but then he heard someone talking in the corner.
“This one might be damaged. See how he’s
not crying or shaking.”
“Test him anyway.” It was the voice from
the speaker.
The man in the white coat appeared out
of the darkness and held a scanner near Silas’ head. It beeped and whirled but
did not hurt. Silas stood still holding his breath and hoping that whatever
they planned to do would happen quickly.
There was a final beep. The man pressed
the button and held the scanner to Silas’ head again. When the final beep
sounded once more the man grunted.
“He doesn’t even register.”
“Test him again.”
“I tested him twice to be sure. This boy
has no emotional registry at all. He must be defective.”
There was silence from the darkness,
then a sigh. “Not necessarily. I’ve heard of cases like this. We’ll have to
keep our eye on him and I want to get regular updates sent to me, my eyes only.
Wipe the last hour from his memory and take him back.”