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Authors: Michael Buckley

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I shrieked and fell backward. “What are you?” I cried.

“We can explain later, Lyric,” my father cried. “Right now we have to get out of here. Summer, come with us.”

My mother stared at him for a long moment, perhaps weighing every day of their life together against the responsibility she felt to the strange visitors, and then she turned to the ocean and her scales turned fire-engine red and blistering white.

“Tell them I'm sorry, Terrance,” she said without even looking at him. “Try to make them understand.”

“Summer, you cannot turn your back on our people,” Mr. Lir shouted. “They'll call you a traitor. You'll be an untouchable!”

“We have to run,” she said as she took my hand. My father took the other, and we fled through the crowd while her odd friends called out to us with their bizarre, angry words.

NEW YORK POST

SCHOOL OF FISH: ALPHA KIDS CAUSE
CHAOS ON FIRST DAY OF SCHOOL

by Naomi Rifkin

Today the President got his way. Six Alpha kids went to school in Coney Island, soaking the city for millions to keep them safe, and turning Hylan High School upside down. Before it had even opened its doors, these nonhuman students had started a riot predicted by this columnist and everyone else with a brain. Two thousand police from all over New York, as well as thousands of National Guard soldiers, tried to keep order as thousands more came out to protest this bogus plan. One hundred and four people were arrested, and there were scores of injuries.

The cost to taxpayers for the beefed-up security promises to be mind-boggling.

“No one's sure how much it will cost, but it's going to be a pretty penny,” said an insider in the mayor's accounting office who wished to remain anonymous. I don't blame him. I wouldn't want to be held accountable for the money we're wasting on kids who don't even want to learn. The man-hours that went into planning this, the overtime—it's going to shock people when it all comes out. And this is just the first day.

But the real costs come at the expense of the people living in Fish City. Bloody brawls between police and the activist group the Coney Island Nine are almost a daily occurrence. I say the cops need to back off. The Niners are the real locals in lower Brooklyn, a group of community organizers memorializing the nine U.S. soldiers who were butchered in a confrontation with the Alpha. We should put our trust in a group that is trying to make sure that never happens again.

“These creatures may walk around like people, but they aren't people,” said Mitchell Parker, a lieutenant in the CI9. “They're animals. We don't put wild dogs in school. They're dangerous.”

Governor Bachman, who in my humble opinion is the only elected official who hasn't lost her mind, was on hand to give a voice to the thousands who want the Alpha to swim back to sea, and what did it get her? A trip downtown in handcuffs.

“We're going to keep working to stop this plan, and if I have to be arrested every single day, then so be it,” she says. Good for her.

In the meantime, New Yorkers should plan to pull out their checkbooks. This little experiment is going to break the bank.

DAILYBEAST.COM

CHEAT SHEET | MUST-READS FROM ALL OVER

NYC MAYOR HEDGES OVER SECRET MEETINGS WITH THE ALPHA

Spokespeople for both the mayor and Brooklyn borough president were tightlipped when pressed about secret meetings between city officials and members of the Alpha. Accusations continue to mount that the mayor's administration strong-armed the city school district into opening the schools to the Alpha children. Despite last week's release of phone records revealing lengthy conversations between the mayor's chief of staff and the Red Cross, no one wants to admit they happened. Speculation continues that the Alpha were threatened with police and military action if they did not agree to assimilate into our society. The mayor was elected largely on a campaign promise to get the Alpha off the beaches of Coney Island.

Mother Jones

Activists Sue for Information About Missing Alpha

by Molly Belden

The Red Cross, Human Rights Watch, and the New York Civil Liberties Union have teamed up to file a lawsuit against the federal government, charging that it has kidnapped members of the Alpha and their human families. According to the filing, the suit also claims that officials know the whereabouts of nearly fifty-two missing individuals, all of whom are connected with the Alpha. The suit demands their immediate release.

Lawyers representing the State Department call the suit baffling and claim to have no knowledge about the missing individuals, but NYCLU lawyer Andrea Quindlin says she has proof, including a witness who claims to have been inside a secret camp where the Alpha are being held.

“The government has been singing this song for three years. They throw up their hands and claim they're in the dark. It's a lie, and we can prove it,” said Quindlin during a press conference held this morning at the Washington Memorial Arch. “They can't pretend they don't know anything anymore. We've got a witness who was there. He saw what is happening.”

Quindlin declined to identify the witness for fear that it would compromise his safety but said his testimony would be “damning.”

Speculation has swirled since the first member of the Alpha vanished three years ago, along with his human wife and two young daughters. Charles Sands and his wife, Kathryn, as well as Belle, age twelve, and Lara, age eight, were reported missing less than a month after Charles confessed to being a member of a group popularly known as “the originals,” who arrived twenty years earlier and masqueraded as human.

Seventeen of “the originals” and their human families have been reported missing. Another is rumored to have died in a car accident. Two others are believed to remain at large.

Chapter Five

D
ead catfish is impossible to get out of your hair.
It's gummy and tacky, and all I have are a handful of soggy paper towels and a bathroom sink that doesn't have a hot-water knob. It's hopeless. Stupid fish.

Bex finds me mid-sob and gives me a hug.

“You smell like Manhattan clam chowder,” she says.

“Bex, don't!”

“You're right. It's definitely
New England
clam chowder.”

And despite it all, I laugh and she laughs, and for a moment we're free, just two normal teenage girls in a normal high school in Normalville, USA, suffering an embarrassing indignation. But it doesn't last. The door to the bathroom swings opens, and a female SWAT team member enters. She's wearing a black bulletproof vest and matching fatigues. Her helmet has a plexiglass visor that my father says is designed to take a brick. She nods to us—not a hello, more like an
I have cataloged you along with all the other dangerous objects in this room,
then stalks the floor in her polished boots, each step a click on the marble tile. She shoves a stall door open so hard, it crashes against its steel frame, then peers inside. Once she's satisfied it's empty, she moves on to the next.
Step. Click. Slam! Step. Click. Slam!

When her search is complete, she leans against the wall nearest the door, adjusts her rifle strap so that the gun hangs where her hands can reach it, and then watches us.

“Fun,” Bex mouths as we stare at each other in disbelief. “Hope you don't have to use the toilet today.”

Bex can always laugh at this stuff, but I hate it, and I hate this woman. She should be ashamed of herself for taking a job where she spies on girls in the bathroom, but my father's voice rings in my head, keeping me from telling her so. S
mile, look respectful, make her believe it.
So I do, and the cop smiles.

“So what do you think?” Bex asks.

“About?”

“The new kids. I got really close to the big one. He has spikes on his shoulders,” Bex says.

“He's a Selkie,” I tell her.

“Selkie, huh? Did you see the little one?”

“Which one? The Nix or the Ceto?”

“Nix, maybe? How do you know the difference?” she asks.

“They've been on TV every day for three years, Bex,” I whisper. I know a lot more than what they tell us on TV, but I'm supposed to be playing dumb.
Play dumb, Lyric!
Okay, Dad.

“Is the Nix the one with all the teeth?” she asks.

The cop chuckles. “Rows and rows of them. Sharp and pointy.”

Bex squeals and hops around like she's trying to avoid stepping in dog poo.

“Two of the girls are very pretty,” Bex says as she steals the lip gloss from my purse.

“For talking fish,” the cop says.

“One of the boys is pretty too, and he's a prince,” Bex says. “I call dibs. I'm going to marry him and have a million little fish babies.”

The guard clears her throat and gives us both the kind of hard stare my father gives to murderers and my boyfriends. “That's sick, kid. Those things aren't people.”

“It was just a joke,” Bex says defensively.

The cop's lips curl into a snarl. “Joking about lying with animals isn't funny. I'm supposed to report stuff like that.”

“I really think it was innocent,” I say, trying to quell the argument, but they both dismiss me.

“You need to watch your mouth, girl. A lot of people might think you were serious,” the guard continues.

“A lot of morons, maybe,” Bex says, standing her ground.

“It's going to get you hurt . . . like that kid they hung from the Wonder Wheel.”

That kid's name was Kevin Folkes. When the Alpha arrived, people went down to the beach to ogle them, back when they were a curiosity and not something to fear. Kevin started a friendship with one of them and even helped her pick a name—Madison. She was a vision of hotness, but most Sirena are. They're the closest to what people think of when you think mermaid—long flowing hair, beautiful face, flawless body—but when they're on land they lose their tails and at first glance are as human as everyone else. My mom is a Sirena.

Kevin was smitten. He gave Madison little presents: flowers, clothes, shoes. He made her a playlist and fed one end of his headphones through the fence so they could listen to it together. It was puppy love, innocent really, but people talked. A TV preacher said Kevin was committing bestiality, a sin against God, but Kevin ignored him. Then, one morning, soldiers found his body hanging from the Wonder Wheel, fifty feet in the air. Someone had tied a chain around his neck, attached an end to one of the cars, and turned on the ride.

“Well, that won't happen, because I've got you to protect me, even in the bathroom!” Bex crows.

The bell rings.

“Get out of here,” the cop snarls.

I snatch up my things and grab my friend.

“Bex, you can't do that. She could report you,” I say once we're in the hall.

“Screw her,” Bex says. “Stupid toilet cop.”

“I'm serious,” I cry.

“Sometimes I don't get you, Lyric. Are you going to let everyone intimidate you?” she says.

I wish the answer weren't yes.

Chapter Six

T
here are schools in
N
ew
Y
ork, even in
B
rooklyn,
that are temples to education. Their walls of glass and stone rise into the sky, beckoning to the city's elite and affluent. John F. Hylan High School is not one of those schools. Our school is a depressing, hopeless holding cell for future criminals, with outdated books, a staff of misfits drummed out of every other school in the state, and a student body of barely awake degenerates. The Board of Education hasn't appropriated the funds to wire the entire building for the Internet. Apparently, they think it's a fad. We haven't had a full-time librarian in years, but that's okay, 'cause no one is banging down the doors to check out
Someday We Will Go To The Moon.
There's no music department. No art class. No after-school sports. Hylan's architect must have gone on to a lucrative career designing maximum-security prisons. Built in 1945, it probably would have been demolished years ago if it weren't in the Zone. Nothing gets knocked down here. Nothing gets built, either, except fences.

But Hylan does have one thing going for it: Mr. Ervin, a kind, passionate guy who really does seem to enjoy his job. He's waiting outside my homeroom class, smiling and giving our faces his full attention. He's the first happy person I've seen in days, and if I didn't know him, I'd suspect it was chemically induced. He came up from the middle school, where Bex and I had him for health class (another name for sex education). There he suffered through our endless giggling while he showed us gross-out slides of STDs.
I wonder if he remembers us from then.

“Oh, brother,” he says when he spots us. I want to hug him. “Find some seats, ladies. We've got lots to cover this morning.”

We stroll into his room, and I give the place the once-over. There's a security camera mounted on the ceiling. That's new. A bright-red steel box on the wall has a thick padlock on its lid. That's new too. The other kids don't know what's inside, but my father spilled the beans. It's a pistol. Every class has one now. Mr. Ervin has a key and a permit to use it. I don't want to imagine a situation where he would need it.

“What's with the windows?” Bex asks as she points to the brown paper that blocks our view of the sky.

“Snipers,” I whisper into her ear. “The police are worried the crazies will be able to see the Alpha kids from the rooftops across the street.”

At least one thing hasn't changed. Crowded in the back are the same rough group we've known since kindergarten: the hardcore punks, the gangstas, the angry girls, the thugs, and the quiet one you have to keep an eye on. They throw stuff at one another, give one another the dozens, practice their freestyle, and ignore the bell. There were days when I would look at them with disdain, like I was trapped in that movie where the naive teacher gets assigned to the class full of inner-city stereotypes and tries to show them how Shakespeare is just like hip-hop. Now I'm almost grateful for their predictability. They make this all feel a little more like a normal day of school.

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