Read All Good Children Online

Authors: Catherine Austen

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All Good Children (2 page)

BOOK: All Good Children
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“No, thank you. I have my own.” She reaches under her tray. A look of panic floods her face. She lifts her teddy, feels her legs, scans the floor, gropes the filthy carpet.

“Lost something?” I ask.

“I can't find my chips!”

“What did they look like?”

She stuffs her hand down the back of her seat. “They were in a red bag!”

I move the chips to the center of the window frame. “With white writing?”

“Yes! Did you see them?”

“Give her back her chips, Max,” Mom says.

Ally looks from Mom to me to the chips in my hand.

“Here. Have these,” I offer.

“Are you sure?” Ally asks. “We could do Eenie Meenie for them.”

“Nah. Just take them.”

She smiles at the half-eaten bag. “Thanks, Max. You're nice.”

My mother sighs.

The fat man clears his throat. “Lovely children. Are they your own?”

Mom's face is five shades darker than mine and Ally's, and now it turns darker still. She looks him up and down and rolls her eyes. That should end the conversation, but the man is deeply defective. “And their father?” he asks, leering at my mother's breasts.

“Our father's dead,” I say. “He died in the flu epidemic three years ago. Drowned in his own body fluids.”

“Max, please,” Mom says.

“So she's single now,” I add.

The fat man squirms and mumbles something about being sorry.

The man in the seat beside him peeks around his gut. I groan. It's Arlington Richmond, my best friend Dallas's father. He hates me. He hates my whole family. He didn't mind us when Dad was alive, but his feelings cooled when half our income died. I salute him and turn back to the sun.

I wish I could message Dallas that his dad is surveying me at thirty thousand feet. But I can't connect with anyone without my RIG. On the upside, I can't access my homework. “We were lucky to miss the first week of school,” I whisper to Ally.

She frowns. “I like school.”

Mom kisses the top of her head. Ally takes Mom's face in her hands and kisses it back—her cheeks, her nose, her eyelids, over and over until the sweetness turns unsettling. “Enough, pumpkin,” Mom says.

The
Freakshow
theme song rises out of the airplane chatter ahead of me. I jerk to attention and peer between the seats.

A teenage boy whips his head around and grunts. Either I have very strong chip breath or he has supreme peripheral vision. He slips in his earpiece and holds my stare. He has
ultimate
written all over him. Even sitting down, he looks like a giant. His parents must have tested a dozen eggs before they found him.

I am not an ultimate. I'm a best-of-three. Only the rich keep at it until they get a perfect embryo. There are a lot of rich people in New Middletown, so I'm used to competing with ultimates like this kid. They usually win.

Most people are freebies, conceived and birthed at home with just the barest screening for deformities. They talk about ultimates and best-of-threes like we're genetically engineered, but we're not. We're conceived in fertility clinics, but there's no splicing or even much planning involved. It's more like gambling than engineering. Parents pay for a certain number of random embryos. They don't know what they'll get until they read the genes and choose one to grow in the womb. The unhealthy are terminated and the unchosen are put in cold storage to sneak out sometime in the future when infertility reaches crisis proportions. Or maybe they're sold or experimented on or grown for parts— depending on which conspiracy theory you believe—but they're not genetically engineered.

I'm the cream of a crop of three. It's hard to get cocky about that. The kid ahead of me is the cream of a much richer crop. His eyes sparkle as he surveys me over his shoulder. “If it isn't the stripper,” he says, snickering. “Nice shorts, recall.”

I salute him rudely and lean back, kicking his chair out of spite. “Sorry,” I say. Then I kick it again. The security guard glares from his station.

“Be good, Max,” Ally says. My sister is not an ultimate or a best-of-three. She's a freebie, naturally conceived six years ago by my baffled parents. Mom says she's a gift from God. Ally has a big heart and a small brain, which suggests that God should take a good look at creation before he hands out any more gifts.

“We can't all be you,” I tell her.

Dr. Richmond snickers.

Mom glances across the aisle. “Arlington? What a surprise. How are you?”

The fat man turns from Mom to Dr. Richmond as if he has a stake in their conversation.

“I'm fine, Karenna. I'm just heading back from the Global Ed Conference in Texas. I was supposed to take the speed rail, but Mexicans bombed the station. Did you hear about it? Are you coming direct from Atlanta? You have family there, don't you? It must have cost a fortune to take the kids for the weekend.”

“Not at all,” Mom says, not bothering to explain about the funeral or the lost week of school.

“You should take Dallas to your next conference,” I say. “He'd love flying.” At least you won't have to put up with it much longer.”

Mom checks her watch. “Twenty minutes? That was fast.”

“I mean it won't be long until we get Maxwell's behavior straightened out at school,” Dr. Richmond says.

I snort but not loudly. Mom holds a stiff smile.

“The new support program's coming,” he adds. “I'm sure you saw the results with your little girl last week. It provides the motivation lacking in kids like yours.”

Mom's smile vanishes. “Kids like mine?”

The fat man shakes his head at Dr. Richmond and waits for an apology.

“I'm sure they're good children,” Dr. Richmond says.

“They're just different, aren't they?”

A recording tells us to buckle our belts, store our baggage, raise our seat trays. Dr. Richmond leans back out of view. Mom stares hard at the place where he used to be. The fat man tucks his chips in his breast pocket.

I slip my empty packages onto Ally's tray, then store my own tray, pushing it into the seat ahead of me until the ultimate growls.

“Where did these come from?” Ally asks, holding my chip bags.

I shrug. “They must be yours.”

She turns them over, puzzled, before tucking them in her seat pocket. Then she leans into my chest and holds her teddy up to the window.

I kiss her head and love her like crazy, my gullible good-hearted sister.

The plane tilts in preparation for landing. I see the military escort beside us and the runway lights below. It looks like we're heading to prison. “Holiday's over,” I whisper.

It's a half-hour shuttle from the Bradford Airport across the National Forest to New Middletown, but Mom still won't give me back my RIG. I'm stuck staring at the beauty of the Pennsylvania Wilds. I kick Ally's foot just for something to do.

“You will never get that RIG back if you don't stop right now,” Mom says so loudly that other passengers look our way. I stare out the window like I'm not involved.

There are no cars for rent at the New Middletown station, so we take a taxi home. The driver's id reads
Abdal-Salam
Al-Fulin
. I've barely buckled up before he asks, “Did you hear about the speed-rail bombings in the southwest? Over three hundred dead. There's nowhere safe anymore.”

We show a guard our ids and drive through the gates of my glorious town. “I feel pretty safe right here,” I say, but I know I'll feel a lot safer once I get out of this taxi.

Ally watches a wildlife show in the backseat beside Mom, who stares out the window. Mom was RIG-addicted before Dad died. She uploaded our lives as they happened. Now she lets the world blur by.

“I love driving in this city,” the driver tells me. “Every road is a straight line.”

“It's energy efficient,” I tell him. “New Middletown is the most environmentally smart city in the northeast. But they chopped down ten square miles of forest to build it. We're big on irony here.”

“I don't like the forest,” the driver says.

I shrug. “It's beautiful.” I've never actually stepped foot in the forest, but I like driving by and seeing all the different shades of green. New Middletown is monotonous. Everything in town is the same age, same style, same color. What we lack in personality we compensate for with security. Half the city is bordered by forest and the other half is walled. There are only six roads into town and all of them are guarded. We don't sprawl. We stand tall and tight. There are no beggars or thieves in New Middletown. If you don't have a place to live and work here, you don't get in. This driver probably hates the forest because he has to live there in a tent.

Over the past twenty years, Chemrose International has built six cities just like this to house the six largest geriatric centers in the world. Everyone who lives or works in New Middletown pays rent to Chemrose. The whole town revolves around New Middletown Manor Heights Geriatric Rest Home and its 32,000 beds.

“I never get lost here,” the driver says as he joins a line of cars traveling north along the city spine, past hospitals, labs and office towers.

“I'm surprised you get much business,” I say.

The city spines are entirely pedestrian, and each quadrant is like a self-contained village, with its own schools, clinics, gardens, rec centers, even our own hydroponics and water treatment facilities. We don't have much call for taxicabs.

“I don't get much business,” the driver admits. “Mostly I take people away.”

“To where?”

He shrugs. “You go to school here?”

“Sure. Academic school.”

“Lucky boy. What you going to be when you're grown?”

“An architect.” I don't hesitate. We pick our career paths early in academic school.

“You going to build things like that?” the driver asks me. He points to the New Middletown City Hall and Security Center, which glimmers in the distance on our left. It stands at the intersection of the city spines, in the exact center of town, rising to a point in twenty-eight staggered stories of colored glass.

“I hope so,” I say.

He snorts. “I don't like it. It looks like it's made of ice.” He turns onto the underpass and City Hall disappears from view.

“That's the artistic heart of town,” I say.

He snorts again. “I don't see any art in this city. Never. I don't hear any music. I don't hear any stories. I don't see any theater.”

“You can see all that from any room in any building,”

I tell him. “We have our own communications network.”

He sighs. “You like living here?”

“Of course. Who wouldn't? People line up to get in here.”

“Like me,” he says. “I line up and wait, I come inside, I drop you off, I leave.”

“Times are tough,” I say.

“Not for everyone,” he mutters. He drives up to ground level and heads away from the core.

Chemrose spent eight years and billions of dollars building this city just before I was born. They laid down the spines and connecting roads like a giant spider building a web. People swarmed here. But they didn't all get in. Shanties and carparks spread outside the western wall, full of hopefuls who come inside for a few hours to clean our houses or drive us home. They were hit hard by the Venezuelan flu, which wiped out half the elderly and 10 percent of everyone else in the city, including my father. The epidemic cost Chemrose a fortune in private funding and public spirit. Mom kept her nursing job, so we're fit. We moved from a four-bedroom house to a two-bedroom apartment that sits on the fringe of our old neighborhood. Ally and I are still in academic schools, so we have hope, which is a rare commodity these dangerous days. Most people are a lot more damaged.

“Maybe I will find a bed here when I am old,” the driver says with another snort.

“Turn left here,” I say.

We cruise through the northeast residential district, past the white estate homes where I used to live, through a maze of tan-on-beige triplexes and brown-on-tan row houses, and into our black-on-brown apartment complex. “Unit six,” I say.

The driver circles the complex like a cop, slow and suspicious, passing five identical buildings before he gets to ours, the Spartan—as in the apple, not the Greeks. The apartments are memorials to fallen fruit: Liberty, Gala, Crispin, Fuji, McIntosh. “This is where you live?” the driver asks. He looks up, unimpressed.

The apartments reek of economy. No balconies, no roof gardens, no benches. Just right angles and solar panels and recycling bins. I used to mock the people who lived here. Now I withstand the mockery of others.

I hold out my hand to Mom. She stares at me curiously. “RIG,” I say. She rolls her eyes but gives me what I want. I power up, empty the trunk, drag two suitcases to the door. “Thanks for the ride,” I tell Abdal. “Good luck.”

BOOK: All Good Children
9.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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