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Authors: H. A. Swain

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BOOK: Gifted
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Electromagnetic waves carrying ones and zeros crash together, like drones and dragonflies colliding. (It's the waves that killed the dragonflies. Disrupted their chemical signals. Messed with the frogs and lizards, too. Squirrels and chipmunks. Coyotes and wolves. Pushed and pressed together, competing for shrinking space. Unnatural unions are now the norm.)

From out here—puny Nowhere on no map—Zimri Robinson will not be denied her place, though. Without music her world is askew. She has to tilt herself to fit in. Melody and rhythm set things straight. When she's on stage, she's no longer that weird girl singing to herself. An oddball chirping to the birds and humming with the trees. The one with an uncanny talent for navigating warehouse shelves to the rhythm of a countdown nobody else can hear. When Zimri steps through the curtain at Nowhere, she is her one true self. She is the music and music is meant to be shared—with the people who've assumed the risk of coming to Nowhere tonight and later those who scan the waves on black market receivers for what Zimri will release like a dandelion spreading its seeds.

Just as Geoff Joffrey starts “Your Eyes,” his newest song (and biggest hit yet, the PromoTeam has assured Mr. Chanson), the giant screen at the Strip flickers, then Geoff Joffrey disappears. The Plebes stop, stare, and wonder what's happening, when in his place a black-masked face fills the screen and a different crowd roars.

Back at Nowhere, Zimri leans into her camera and shouts, “We are Nobody from Nowhere and this is our song!”

 

VERSE ONE

ORPHEUS

When the pointed
toe of Arabella's silver shoe trips the laser sensor, the MajorDoormo kicks into action. Sliders part, spotlights illuminate, and the scanner identifies us before we've fully stepped over the threshold of the Nahmad Gallery.

“Orpheus Chanson and Arabella Lovecraft,” the automated voice announces, then sends the headline straight onto the Buzz. I know exactly what it will say since all my life I've been defined by the success of my parents.

Orpheus Chanson, son of pop diva legend Libellule and ASA patent-holder Harold Chanson—one of the most powerful music patrons in the world—arrives at the Quinby Masterson premiere with stunning starlet-in-the-making, Arabella Lovecraft.

Heads turn and conversations lull. A cluster of dragonfly 'razzi drones swarm the entryway. Ara and I step into the spotlight and stop on the mark (a small gold star embedded in the floor).

“Just like we learned in SCEWL,” I remind Ara through my smile.

She momentarily panics. “SCEWL?”

“Paparazzi Pix Posing 101, remember?” I say, trying to coax her synapses to fire.

She still looks blank so I take a half step back, keeping one shoulder behind her as I guide her with my hand on the small of her back. “Look right,” I whisper. “Then left, and smile. Chin up, eyes wide. Top lip down to hide the gumline. Shake your head slightly. Look humble. Now a little laugh. Always having fun.”

She follows my direction effortlessly as it all comes back to her. The Kardashian School for Cumulative Entertainment Wealth Living trained us well.

“You did good,” I tell her when the photo-op is done. She sighs and looks relieved as we waltz into the crowd.

Quinby's opening is popping, just like Rajesh said. I lead Arabella through the throngs of people who've come to pay homage to our friend—the newly minted art-world It Girl of the moment, rocking the scene with her images of fractal decay. To me her paintings look like repeating patterns of dead trees and leaves, but for whatever reason Quinby's work has hit the
sosh
like a major earthquake, which has driven the prices sky high. Her patron, Hermela Nahmed, couldn't be more thrilled and it shows, given the money she must have pumped into this opening. For the past hour there's been near-constant chatter on my EarBug about which Celebs are here and what we're wearing, eating, drinking, and talking about.

“I've got to turn this thing off,” I say and kill my EarBug. “I get immediate ADHD if I'm in a crowd while the Buzz is talking to me.”

“Get some methylphen in your pump,” Ara tells me, still preening for the few 'razzi buzzing around us. “That stuff will focus you right up.” She pops a fist on her hip and smiles with her eyes for one persistent dragonfly drone.

“Is your pump back on already?”

“Not yet. Still too fragile up here.” She taps the side of her head. “No benzos, no SSRI, no appetite suppressants, only a smidge of oxycodone to manage the headaches.”

“God forbid your brain regulate itself,” I joke.

“What am I, a three-year-old?” she says, then cringes. “Sorry, I forgot you're
au naturel.

“That's what happens when your mother's a former addict,” I say and nudge her to the left. The grit of her crushed iridescent body glitter grinds beneath my fingertips. Her dress, which is made of tiny shining scales, glints and changes colors as we pass beneath the lights.

We walk by a group of DespotRati. I recognize one of them, Ios, from summer camp. She nods and lifts her left hand so I can see the carapace of her ExoScreen glove, lavender to my deep purple—a good compatibility rating but nothing like my connection with Arabella, whose carapace still gleams deep dark purple like my own. I was worried the surgery might have changed our compatibility, but so far so good. I pretend not to recognize Ios and keep moving.

“Who was that?” Ara asks, nose wrinkled as she glances back. Ios's paint job, intricate swirls and curlicues, waves and striations in aquamarines, purples, and pinks, looks like some complicated bruise over her arms, legs, back, and chest. Her shimmery silver dress dangles from a loop of metal around her neck and hugs the barely covered curves between shoulders and thighs.

“Daughter of the former EU prime minister. You know how they still love government over there.” Ara looks blank. “She has that new song.” I hum a few bars of “(Quark) Charmed, I'm Sure.” “Probably debuted while you were recovering. They're trying to push it as a new genre, Quantum Pop, but I think it sounds like Sparkle Jam. They needed something more atmospheric to create a truly original sound.”

Ara laughs at me, which she often does when I talk about improving songs. How a key change would add depth to the bridge or adding strings for a harmonic overlay would bring out the emotion of a lyric.
Wasted energy,
people tell me.
A song is only as good as its Buzz.

“Anyway,” I say. “I heard she had a double ASA, physics and music, but I think that's just hype to sell her new line of gum. ‘Now in all the quark flavors!'” I say in a falsely perky voice just like the ad.

“How do you know her anyway?”

“We both did a summer camp in Malta when we were fourteen. She knew all my mom's music and sang
Sugar Smack
to me.”

“Oh my god,” says Ara as we weave through a group of waning movie stars, all just past their prime, looking desperate for some Buzz. “She
sang
it to you?”

“And did the choreography.”

“Ew!” Ara squeals.

“I know, right? I was like, no thanks. What guy wants to think of his mother as a sexy teen pop star?” A tiny quake of revulsion goes through me.

From across the room, Elston and Farouk wave at us like they're flagging down a flying taxi. We make a beeline for them, whisking tangy drinks from a passing RoboWaiter along the way.

“First night out for Arabella!” I announce when we join our friends. We all lift our cups above our heads and laugh as if it's
freaking hilarious
that another friend had her brain zapped and woke up with a Chanson Industry trademarked and patented Acquired Savant Ability thanks to my father. Just a little brain surgery and POOF you wake up a genius. The hilarious part being, Plute parents pay for their kids to have the surgeries, then people like my father make a fortune off their talents, and we call this Art.

My friends and I clink glasses and down our drinks, everyone lifting hands up high and clicking pix with their ExoScreen FingerCams. The images are sent into the data swarm and culled by some complicated algorithm that sorts soundbites, 'razzi drone vids, and FingerCam images into what's Buzz-worthy for the night.

As soon as the group steps apart, they all check their palm screens, hoping that the moment we just experienced will get plucked from that deluge of data and fed into the Buzz for everyone else to see. Are you famous enough, are your parents, has your patron's PromoTeam pushed for more coverage this week? Fleeting disappointment passes over my friends' faces when our real-time moment doesn't reappear in the Buzz. None of us are worthy enough. Yet.

Farouk turns his attention back to Arabella. “You look gorgeous! Amazing! Isn't she beautiful?” Elston and I nod and nod and nod. “So, what'd you have?”

She blinks at him for two seconds, like she can't quite remember. It takes a while for everything to come back online after an ASA so we all wait patiently, trying not to stare. “Music,” she says after the delay.

“Nice,” says Farouk.

“You?” she asks.

“Double in math and spatial reasoning. For architecture,” he says, then adds, “My parents … immigrants, you know, wanted something practical.” He lifts his shoulders almost as if in apology. “Anything happening for you yet?” he asks Ara.

Her vacant eyes settle on me. She is beautiful and empty—just the way Chanson Industry PromoTeams like their talent. It's a convenient side effect of the surgery. Sparking all that genius seems to short out other parts of the mind, at least long enough for a PromoTeam to fill you up with everything (besides ability) that will keep you rich and make you famous. If everything goes as planned, once Ara's auditory cortical pathways settle into their new wiring, her brain will be consumed with music. It'll be all she wants to do. In the meantime, while those circuits are getting settled, her PromoTeam will work their tails off to make her into pre-star material: the look, the walk, the talk, the network, the brand. Because as every one of us Persons Of Normal Intelligence knows, you can be the most amazing savant ever to walk the planet, but if you don't have a patron's corporate machine behind you, you might as well be singing to your reflection in the bathroom mirror.

“Don't worry.” I rub Ara's shoulder. “It takes time, that's all.”

Just then the crowd parts and Rajesh swaggers up. He's decked out. Vertical stripes on his jumpsuit, pulsating chartreuse polka dots on his bowtie, hair pomped up almost as high as the girls'. And he's trailing a cloud of 'razzi dragonfly drones because he's the current boy wonder of the literary world. His parents got his ASA in early. He was only fourteen when they did it, which can be tricky because as my parents found out the hard way with my sister, Alouette, the brain is so vulnerable at that age. Yet like everything Raj's family does, they hired the best in the world, which is an option when your father is a rare earth-mining magnate heir and your mother ruled Bollywood for two decades, so money is no question. And it paid off. In the two years since his literary ASA, Raj has gotten one of the largest publishing contracts in history. Now, his patron is about to release the final installment of Raj's Captain Happenstance trilogy called
Revenge of the Shadow Thieves,
sure to be another worldwide best seller.

“Friends, Romans, and countrymen!” Raj shouts and inserts himself into the center of our group, arms around shoulders, pulling everyone in for a round of photos taken by the drones. Girls lean in, boobs pressed forward, butts out, heads cocked to the side and huge smiles while the guys lay back, lift their chins and purse their lips, slouch to the side as if nothing is that important. Party pose, they called it at SCEWL where we all perfected it. I slip behind the line to give the others more prominent positions because (much to my father's chagrin) I'd rather stay behind the scenes. A few seconds later, something else catches the attention of the 'razzi and they move en masse across the gallery, casting shadows as they pass beneath the lights, except for Raj's stalkers, which stay close by.

“What's this?” Raj shouts as the others sneak peeks at their palms to make sure they were in proximity of his celebrity to make it in the Buzz. Yes, yes, they are worthy now. “The great Arabella is amongst us. Beautiful eagle heroine. Orabilis, I bow to thee in prayer!” He bows deeply as if waiting for applause.

“Easy there.” Elston gives him a playful bump. “The drones are gone and we're not your adoring fans.”

“Yeah, yeah,” Raj says, beleaguered by our lack of fawning. “Speaking of adoring fans, anybody seen Quinby yet?” He cranes his neck.

Elston lifts her eyes to the ceiling and blows a puff of air into her tower of rainbow curls, which don't budge. “I'm sure she's in the middle of the hive, Queen Bee that she is now.”

“Jealous?” Farouk asks.

Elston gives him a look of death. “Hardly,” she snaps, but we all know better. Elston had an art ASA six months ago and while she's been mad prolific since she woke up, nothing has popped for her yet. She mostly works from photos, zooming in on details of fireworks in night skies or phosphorescence under the sea, then paints over the images in brightly colored squiggles. But what she really loves is distorting videos of the Plebes. Groups running, brawls for food, a protest gone terribly wrong. She takes the footage from security cameras or HandHelds, zooms in close, slows things down, and forces viewers to confront the faces of the masses. I think her work is brilliant, but it doesn't resonate with most Plute art collectors like Quinby's ever-repeating images of woodland decomposition does.

I step to Elston's side and touch her elbow. The bright yellow and orange stripes of her paint job twist around her upper arm and disappear beneath her steel-blue top. Unlike the other girls wrapped in skin-tight tubes, she favors billowy fabrics that dance around her when she moves. “You're gorgeous and talented, Elston, and it'll happen for you, too,” I whisper close.

BOOK: Gifted
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