The Year is Now - Read the First Chapter!
Greetings, everyone! It's been a busy week on my end, but you don't want to read about working and...working; you know, the mundane in and outs of life. Enough of that! I am happy to announce that The Year is Now is available on Amazon!
I've been on an anime kick lately, so I took a shot at drawing the two leads from my book. I am thrilled with the results. Elly is on the left, and Major Pierson is on the right.
Because I'm cool like that, here is a sneak peak at The Year is Now. I've uploaded the first chapter! Please note that the excerpt has been formatted for the all awesome and knowing Internetz. ;)
That time I read an excerpt...And since I recorded this before making this post, I'll put an Amazon link below it too (as stated in the video):
I've been on an anime kick lately, so I took a shot at drawing the two leads from my book. I am thrilled with the results. Elly is on the left, and Major Pierson is on the right.
Because I'm cool like that, here is a sneak peak at The Year is Now. I've uploaded the first chapter! Please note that the excerpt has been formatted for the all awesome and knowing Internetz. ;)
into chaos
Copyright © 2014 by M.L Crabb
All rights reserved. This excerpt or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review or scholarly journal.
Emerson Jay, the twelve year old who lived across the
street, darted past, his face bursting with mirth. Snickers escaped his thick
lips as he dove behind a green shrub. Elly Reynolds ignored him as she
continued walking down the sidewalk...The kid was always destroying something
or screaming wildly at nothing. All rights reserved. This excerpt or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review or scholarly journal.
Pip, pip, pop!
Elly crouched and darted behind someone’s mailbox. Her heart
stopped for an instant.
Pip, pip, pop!
She pressed her pale palms to her ears, clutching waves of
her red hair with her fingers. Where’s my flak vest!? Where’s my helmet!? her
mind roared. Her mouth opened as her throat demanded air. Her breaths came in
deep gasps as a persistent ring blocked the cicadas, Emerson’s vile laughter,
and the firecrackers out. That little…
Lowering her hands and pressing her right palm to her
vibrating heart, she stood up and took three trembling steps onto the sidewalk.
The brat had no idea. No idea. She closed her eyes and continued on her way. It
was best to just ignore him. He had figured her secret out one day when she was
home alone. Her roommate Derrick was out shopping for fireworks. And she? She
was standing on the lawn as the national anthem blasted from Derrick’s surround
sound system inside.
If there was a way to prepare herself for the madness of the
Fourth, listening to the steady boom of cymbal crashes near the end seemed like
a sure bet. Much to her horror, it produced the opposite effect. Emerson had
seen it all, and ever since then, he went out of his way to scare her.
If he only knew…If he only saw the things—Elly drew
in a quick breath. The humidity was starting to force a sweat on her. She
grabbed her long braid with her left hand and fanned her face with the end of
it before letting it fall against her damp back.
An electronic pop zipped above her head, and she felt an
invisible shockwave straighten the curly strands of her long hair. It was as if
the little prankster had sprinted past her, yanking her braid as he went. The
woman came to an unsettling stop. There was a flash behind Love ‘N Lice, the
giant oak tree one block away. She and Derrick had always called it that. The
local teenagers had an addiction for parking themselves beneath its spiderweb
of gnarly limbs and locking themselves in wet, messy kisses. The top half of
the massive tree towered behind a two story brick house as if waiting to devour
it.
“Emerson!” she snapped, whirling around.
“Crazy L’s got no job! Crazy L’s got no job!” the kid sang.
He scampered away. A frown penetrated her features as she continued walking.
His jape was sadly true, but it wasn’t always that way for civilian Elly. She
used to work at the local call center as a telemarketer. A shudder ran through
her body. In some cases, quitting is justified…She glanced at Love ‘N
Lice again and realized that her steps were taking her towards the pop. Her
eyes squinted when something flashed behind the giant oak.
Twelve year old boys didn’t have the capacity to produce
lightening…in broad daylight, no less.
A faint, electric wheezing began emanating from the flash. A
glow of light shined through Love ‘N Lice’s gnarls and knots. The muscles in
her gut tensed as she neared the sound. It was louder and more distinct now,
almost like the persistent whine of a mosquito interested in her earlobe. Elly
could see the phenomenon when she got closer, and it looked like a giant dome.
It engulfed the shabby front yard of the house closest to
Love ‘N Lice. Crusty old Don McDermit’s maze of rusty car parts, metal scraps,
and chewed newspapers were buried beneath the translucent thing. The woman
neared the strange sight. The color had shifted, and it slipped into a hue her
eyes had trouble deciphering. Her head began to throb at the iridescent grey
and the incessant humming. Her heart went cold, and the back of her neck was
slick with a chilly wetness.
Elly headed straight for it.
The air was unseasonably dry; there was no humidity within
two feet of the dome’s outer edge. She knew that McDermit’s tire collection
should have been right in front of her, but his stash was not there and nor was
his unkempt lawn. Sand dunes sat in their place. It was like peering into a
sandy snow globe. Elly sucked in a deep breath. What am I seeing!? Before
she could backtrack and let her mind come up with plausible answers, the dome
crackled and expanded with a piercing clang.
The thing engulfed her, swallowing her whole. Hot, dry wind
snapped at her cheeks and limbs, knocking her down. Her face hit sand. Elly
shuddered, scrambling herself to her feet with an angry shove. Sand! Sand!
Sand! It was everywhere! Where rows and rows of familiar brick houses and
Love ‘N Lice had been, was sand—sand in all its bland khakis, creams, and light
browns. The wind kicked up again, but this time she was prepared. She braced
her feet and shielded her face with her forearm.
It was hot, unwelcoming, and…it looked like Iraq.
Elly screamed.
* * *
Her chest heaved, and she gagged on hot sand. Elly spat, but
it hardly was a relief. Spittle dripped from the corner of her mouth, and wet
granules of grime caked her lips. She closed her eyes and mouth. Feet planted
in the sifting mess, she forced her thoughts to be silent, blanketing herself
in an invisible glass jar. Her mind opened her ears so that she could see.
Though five years as a civilian had tarnished her view of the world, the woman remembered.
The gritty wind whipped at her small frame. Sand shifted around her, altering
the dunes and covering her feet.
It felt as though a thousand needles were poking her face,
arms, and hands. A mechanical whine interrupted it all, and she felt a heavy
shadow fall over her body, pressing down with a certain, unknown doom. Not
Iraq, her mind wailed. Please, no! The whine grew louder. Elly
forced her eyes open, dropping into a crouch. She looked up. Her hands went
cold.
A black car hovered above her. It had slats shaped like
miniature airplane wings where the tires should have been. An emblem marked its
side. Elly could not make out the details of it as the thing lowered itself to
the ground. It landed on the dune in front of her with a sigh. The emblem slid
away, creating an opening. She froze. Where was she? Flying cars were something
unfeasible, yet…A face peered through the opening, and a man stepped out.
He stared at her, but through the grit and wind, she could
not read his expression. His shoulders were broad, but his arms hung loosely at
his sides. He was clad in some sort of dark uniform.
“An outlander,” he shouted. “It’s just an outlander!” His
accent was American, but it had an antiquated bite. It was mixture of keen, JFK
sharpness and charming WWII era wit. Elly saw him turn his head to someone
unseen. He moved towards her, extending his right hand. She wanted to back
away, but her legs wouldn’t move.
“I come in the name of the Emperor,” he called over the
wind. “Outlander,” he lowered his hand to her, and she took it. Shaking, she
allowed him to lead her into the flying car. The interior was dark, but it was
soft and plush. The door with the emblem on the outside of it slid shut,
silencing the air and blocking out the pesky sand. The man sat beside her. It
was hard to make his face out in the dimness. She frowned at how darkly the
windows were tinted.
“Take us to Lenta, Jones,” he said to the driver in the
front seat, a squat woman with orange hair. “I’ll see to it that she’s
processed.” Elly closed her eyes and pressed her palms against her thighs.
“Poor thing. She doesn’t even know where she is. Little
lost Outlander…so docile and sweet.” She blinked at the man’s comment. Had
she heard him right? His mouth was as fixed as the darkness of the windows.
“As I was saying,” he began. He lifted his left hand and
tapped a panel on the back of the empty passenger’s seat in front of him. A
soft, yellow glow lightened the back seat. A smile crossed his face. “Lucky we
found you. The deserts of Athena take no prisoners.” He was a handsome man, she
thought. His hair was slightly disheveled, and it matched the light tan of the
sand. He ran his fingers through it, his blue eyes focused on her. The
smoothness of his skin and the stencil of his perfect face marked him to be in
his early twenties.
“In the name of the Emperor, Outlander,” he began. “Do you
wish to rejoin your brothers and sisters of society and serve His Will until
the end of your days?” The hell? The corners of Elly’s mouth twitched.
She closed her eyes. Is he high or something?
“Such a sweet, poor thing! She is ignorant of
civilization itself!” She blinked. Her palms began to sweat. Elly could
feel her knees bang against each other. It was as if they had been turned into
a pair of ping pong balls gone awry, bouncing all over a freshly mopped
hardwood floor.
“My knees,” she croaked.
“It’s okay. Do you consent to be taken into His great city
of Lenta to rejoin your brothers and sisters of society?” The man placed a
large hand over her lap.
“Yes,” she whispered.
“Witnessed,” said the driver with a yawn. “Now that that business
is over with, can we continue with something a little less-”
“Mundane? As long as it doesn’t frighten her.” The man
removed his hand from her lap and flicked a splotch of sand off of his sleeve.
“I’m Lieutenant Braxton, but you can call me Jason.”
“Sergeant Jones,” the driver yawned again.
“El-Elly,” Elly stammered. Was she starting to go crazy!?
Had she been knocked out by that electronic pop!?
“Not a normal name for an outlander, but I like it. It’s
very civilized.” Jason flicked the dust off of his pants. It was then that she
was able to get a better look at his uniform. The service jacket and slacks
were a deep blue, almost a royal navy. The jacket was a fitting number that had
a seam which ran from the top of his right breast all the way down to the hem.
A grey collar was fitted around his neck, slanting at an angle
where it narrowed into the seam. Three silver clasps graced it with a
professional sheen. A black leather belt ran around his waist. The buckle was
silver and had some sort of emblem on it. On his shoulder boards was a pair of
golden bars engraved with curly lines. He smiled at her.
“She’s checking you out, man,” Jones snickered.
“Sergeant,” Jason quipped. “I believe we left off on a
certain bet…” Elly slid, hitting the left side of the car as it lurched into a
turn. “That’s fifty credits and that forbidden bottle of whiskey you have
stashed away.”
“Damn those Giants,” Jones thrust her thumb over her
shoulder. “Don’t start talking about-”
“She doesn’t even know what forbidden whiskey is,” Jason
winked. “Fifty credits when we get to Lenta.” Elly drew a deep breath and
covered her embarrassing knees with her hands. Maybe if she held onto them hard
enough, they would stop trembling towards each other.
“Tired?” Jason asked. Before Elly could lie and say no, a
silver tube shot from his right hand and pricked her neck. She opened her mouth
and met night.
* * *
Just a little fix me up.
Lieutenant Braxton doesn’t know what he’s doing.
Elly opened her eyes with a groan. She was lying on a hard,
sterile bed. Did someone take her to the emergency room? Her eyes shot open. GODS,
NO! That was not something she could afford. The woman bolted into a sitting
position and threw her legs off of the narrow hospital bed she had been
unwittingly slumbering in.
“Hey, hey,” a pair of strong hands grabbed her shoulders, stopping
her from sliding off the bed. “Not so fast. We haven’t processed you yet. There
is still your psychological and ability aptitude test and interview.”
“I decline,” she said. They can’t force stupid tests on
me unless my life depends on it, and last time I checked…She looked down.
The only thing amiss with her body was the fact that someone had undressed her,
washed her, and had put her in a cotton hospital gown.
“You…can’t…decline,” the doctor said. Thick brown hair
curled at the sides of his temples. He looked at her through a dainty pair of
half-moon glasses.
“I can on the grounds that I can’t fucking afford it,” she
shoved her shoulder forward in an attempt to free herself, but he held his
grip. His mouth dropped open, and his eyes widened.
“My dear…” he wiggled his nose. “What is this nonsense? All
that grows for the Emperor goes to the Emperor.” He shook his head. “You truly
are an outlander. There is no charge for health services. We are part of the
Empire Defense Budget, but…” he shook his head again. “Never mind. They are
going to test and interview you so that you can go to vocational school and
serve the empire as your skills dictate.”
It wasn’t a dream!? It wasn’t a bloody dream!? Elly
shifted and scowled when the persistent doctor kept his grip on her. Her eyes
scanned the little hospital room. There was no telling what the metallic
devices stacked upon each other in neat columns were, or if they were
even designed for medical use. Elly had never been one for doctors.
“What…what is an outlander? You keep calling me that.”
“The injured left over from the Great War,” he said, letting
go. Elly remained still. When he looked her over, satisfied that she wouldn’t
run on him, he continued. “The village you originally grew up in is a special reserve
the empire has given your people.”
“Um…” she trailed off. “ Yes….?” The woman drew her arms
across her chest. “Can I have my clothes back?”
“No. We have some new ones for you.” The doctor moved to one
of the many steel cabinets lining the far wall and pulled something out of a
drawer. He returned and placed an army green bundle onto her lap. “I’ll leave
you to change and will escort you to the testing center when you’re done.”
Once he left, Elly was free to unleash her thoughts as she
changed. The bundle turned out to be a flattering skirt and business jacket
ensemble. The future, she pondered. The strange place had to be the future. How
else was she to explain the crazy outlander and emperor business? What about
Derrick, Kit, and Avery? Elly clenched her fists, pressing them against the
crisp sides of her new skirt.
She would not cry. Not now, at least. She had to get through
their stupid tests first…who knew if they’d throw her into a crazy house for
being emotional, but when the doctor returned, he was blurry, and wetness had
pooled beneath her eyes.
“We are all nervous,” he said with a soft smile. “Trust me.
Dr. West is the best at finding a person’s strengths,” he gave her a pat on the
back. “He also knows to not assign you to a field that would make you
miserable. The Emperor cannot grow that which has trouble taking root.”
“I don’t want to do anything with phones,” she croaked. The
doctor nodded and gestured towards the open door. His movements were gentle, as
if he were motioning to a child. He led her through a pale hallway lined with
offices and posters that spewed the same, weird empire talk he had been
spouting moments ago. As they neared the end of the hall, one of the posters
caught her eye. It was the simplest of the bunch: a series of white letters on
black, “United we stand. Divided we fall.”
At least there was some sense left, she thought. A
willowing silence prickled down her spine, causing her to turn. A gap had grown
between the pair, and she felt a wave of bewilderment wash over him by the
awkward way he was holding his shoulders and tilting his head at her. Elly
turned and hurried down the hall to catch up. He led her to the door at the end
on the right side. A sign was plastered onto it, “P.A.A.T. Testing Center.”
“Here we are,” he opened it and waved to the receptionist on
the other side. Elly took a few timid steps forward. “I leave you in good
hands. Ah,” he looked up. “Dr. West!”
* * *
Elly lifted a hand to shift the long braid that was no
longer there. She wiggled her nose as she let her arm drop to her side. She was
now a vocational student, a “voke,” as Dr. West had put it. All vokes had
cropped hair. Hers had been cut just below her ears. A permanent draft
whispered against her bare neck, causing her to sigh. At least they had given
her a French style beret to wear on top of her new do…The purple thing helped
make her new cut look presentable and kept any loose waves at bay. Once she had
completed her testing and was fitted for a voke uniform, they had sent her on
her way. Individual passenger vehicles were a thing of the past; most empire
citizens got around using the EPM transit system, a series of fast moving walk
ways.
With a frown, she looked up as the people mover continued
its trek towards Lenta. The flat slat felt slow as she stood on it, but West
had said that it reached fifty miles per hour in some places. He had asked her
a number of questions that were eccentric, odd, and unexpected. When he caught
her falling into fake-to-impress interview mode, as she had always dubbed it,
he tapped her knee with his ball point pen and started the series of questions
from the beginning. After three rounds of West’s seemingly pointless game, she
had been given a written test on a computer. It wasn’t the sterile, standardized
sort of mathematical and essay bore she had expected.
What shape comes next? It would ask after displaying
a pattern. If this gear turned left, which way would all other gears turn?
Which way would you have to crank Gear X to…and so on. In the end, Dr. West
congratulated her with the purple beret and said that purple was the rare color
of a renaissance man. Her training would begin tomorrow in Lenta. She’d spend a
year as a voke, learning her trade. He had given her a chit card with fifty
credits on it and sent her on her way.
Elly gazed at the gigantic glass tube which encased the flat
people mover. It was a bright afternoon, but a cool breeze was proliferating
throughout the tube. There were three moving slats in all. Elly stood on the
middle one because the others would slow down whenever there was a platform on
either side of the tube. Pedestrians waited outside and would step onto one of
the outer slats when the platform doors slid open. She noticed that all of it
was timed in intervals.
The middle slat was fastest; though, she had to shift when
go-getters would hurry past her. Everyone wore a business suit of sorts, but
they were similar to hers in that they were cut to be uniforms; they had that
strict, military vibe. Along the way, she spotted a few vokes in army green: a
young man in a white beret, a girl with a baby face in a green beret, and a shy
man in a brown one who kept staring at his feet.
Her chit card sent a jolt through her leg as it vibrated in
her skirt pocket. Elly jumped, blushed, and pulled it out. The chit card was
like a slim smart phone in all ways but one. It lacked the ability to make
calls. With a sardonic laugh, she peered at its black surface and touched it
with her thumb.
Lenta Platform in 1 mile, it read. Get off on your
right in–There was a timer on it which was counting down from two minutes.
The woman looked up. The three slats moved in an eerie unison, and she could
see the next platform zooming towards her. Her throat went dry. Get off on
your right…The words whirled around her mind.
She had to cross from her slat to the one to her right.
At fifty miles per hour.
Wait…she had crossed it before, right? But…when she had
first stepped onto the people mover, her mind was still preoccupied with the
fact that she, Elly Reynolds, had somehow traveled to the future…she hadn’t
been thinking! She hadn’t noticed anything amiss! Oh gods, just do it before
the right one slows down! A groan escaped her lips, and she jumped to the
right. Elly lost her balance and fell to her hands and knees.
The chit card vibrated a second time just as the right slat
started to slow down. Drawing a deep breath, she forced herself to her feet,
ignored the stares shot her way, and stepped onto the platform. A man in grey
snickered as he brushed passed her.
“Silly voke,” she thought she heard him mutter.
Elly felt her face burn. She pulled at the hem of her
jacket. The platform was a small station that looked like an airport terminal.
It was decorated in bland shades of grey, blue, and snoring pastels. The carpet
was even made of the same, stiff stuff as the ones in airports. There was a
small trash bin sitting beside the first row of chairs. Several people were
lounging in them, playing with their chit cards and reading from e-readers, all
the while casting lazy glances at the sliding glass doors. What is with the
uniforms? Sure, they were wearing different colors and ensembles, but…they
all had that feel—it was a gut instinct. Elly swallowed.
A row of windows lined the back wall. They were curved at
the edges in an attempt to make them look like miniature tubes. A female
attendant standing behind a counter on the left side of the room waved her
over. The pretty woman took her chit card and scanned it with a black barcode
scanner. When it beeped, she handed the chit card back.
“Welcome to Lenta. I’ve included a map,” she said, smiling
and revealing a set of perfect teeth. Elly studied her. She was wearing a
bright blue business suit with a white and yellow striped ascot. A copper name
tag rested over her left breast. “Sandy,” it read.
“Thanks,” Elly stammered.
“The exit is that way,” Sandy said, gesturing to Elly’s
left. She looked and spotted a white door which had a dull glint to it. Plastic.
Nodding her thanks, she headed for it.
The attire in Lenta was much more varied than that which she
saw in the hospital and people mover. She spotted an array of retro skirts cut
at steep angles, skin tight tops with large collars, sequence, and even
platform shoes. A woman wearing a purple miniskirt and matching top walked
past. The sleeves were long and flared at the end while her white collar
glistened in the sunlight.
Elly moved forward, towards a large, open park she had found
on her map. Her vocational school wasn’t far from it. She pulled her chit card
out, pressed on the image of the park with her thumb and followed the
subsequent electronic red line until she came to a large plot of grass. A
cement amphitheater had been sunk into it several yards away. A large statue of
a man rested in front of it. His vacant stone eyes gazed over the pedestrians
strolling beneath them. Lenta’s skyline blanketed the horizon behind him. There
was something oddly familiar about the way the tall buildings were laid out
before her.
I’m just crazy, she thought, bringing her attention
back to what was directly around her. Food carts and vendor tables were
organized into neat rows on either side of the park. Huge, flatscreen
televisions blanketed the high rising walls behind the vendors. Much to her
displeasure, they were black with silence. Elly stuffed her chit card back into
her pocket and headed down the amphitheater steps.
Laughter rang from one of the vendor tables near the end of
row closest to her. Children chased each other in the open area of grass at the
bottom of the amphitheater. A woman selling ice cream cones flirted with a
customer. Elly snickered as the man cleared his throat and tried to decline the
free cone with a polite shake of his head.
All of the pleasant background chatter came to a halt when
the big televisions came to life. Trumpets and drums blared from unseen
speakers as an emblem appeared on the black screens. Elly craned her neck to
gaze at the one nearest her. The emblem, undoubtedly the same one she saw on
the flying car, was a white eagle with its wings spread open. Blood dripped
from the tips, and its claws clutched a nuclear missile. Green leaves fell
around the eagle, turning to ash when they got near the claws. The entire thing
was circled with a golden band. The band was engraved with the words, Peace
reigns. Society thrives. Annihilation slumbers.
The trumpets and drums melted away, making room for a
melody. The air grew hot with excitement, forcing Elly to tear her eyes from
the screen. People were snapping their feet together at attention and pressing
their right hand against their hearts. Elly would have hesitated, but something
dreadful had stirred within that unanimous display of patriotism, and she was
compelled to mimic the pose.
When the anthem ended, the screen shimmered, and a wall crumbling
with age and tarnished by graffiti replaced the emblem. Spray paint covered the
spots that were still standing. The neon, bubbly words and large cartoon faces
were artsy in her opinion, but she knew their meaning well enough. Three men
sprinted from the left side. They were brandishing 9mm pistols and shouting at
something unseen. Their faces were hidden by dirty bandanas and baseball caps.
Two men emerged from the right, dragging a squirming mess of
a person between them. Curse words were spouted, and the scene melted into
chaos as the five men with bandanas met the sixth with savagery. The scene
faded into the eerie emblem. A male voice boomed,
“This is what the world would be without the empire. The
hand that works and the hand that feeds is the hand that loves.” The emblem
disappeared. A crisp newsroom took its place. Two anchors, male and female, in
maroon business jackets sat behind a large desk.
“This week is a special one,” the male said with a grin.
“It always is, Ron! It marks the anniversary of the Nobel
Treaty and the birth of our empire, and boy, are there some festivities in
Lenta,” the woman brought her hand onto the desk with a slap and laughed, a
loud, obnoxious chirp. Elly’s mouth twitched. It was clear, from the way her
gigantic smile was plastered over her face, that she was already partaking in
the bottled sort of “festivities.”
“May emperor Diego Clinton’s reign be a prosperous one!
Twenty two years and counting! It’s not the year 0422 for nothing! Back to you,
Ron.”
“Before we update you with the festivities and schedules, we
have a bit of news,” Ron began as a frame of video footage appeared in the top
left corner. “A creeping twelp was arrested today and is scheduled for
immediate termination.” The frame displayed a teenage boy screaming as he
sprinted away from a black hover car. His expression was contorted into a
horrific mess of rage. He fell forward with a sudden lurch. “As you know, it is
illegal to be a twelp, and the awful phenomenon is normally found and taken
care of at birth. All twelp infants are taken to the capitol city, where the
twelp gene is terminated. It is illegal to harbor a twelp and to tamper with
test results.”
“Well that’s one creep off the streets!” the woman chimed
with a laugh. The crowd laughed with her.
“Indeed, Barb. I know I will be sleeping a bit more soundly
knowing that the creeper is scheduled for termination.”
Elly shuddered and turned away. He was just a boy! She saw
that others were losing interest and returning to their previous activities.
What…what was a twelp!? The boy looked no different than any of the
other people standing and staring at the television screens.
“Sheltered, eh?” the man who had rejected the ice cream lady
sidestepped beside her with a snort.
“Not surprised, but you’re a renaissance
man, so you’re smart enough to understand the implications...no matter how much
your parents spoiled you rotten.” He lowered his voice. “They spy on thoughts
and thrive off of nightmares. He may look just as innocent as you, Renaissance
Man, but believe me, he is not. He’s a killer.”
Elly shied away from him, stepping back and mumbling
something about checking out the statue. He issued her a mocking bow
accompanied with a sneering laugh. She turned and broke into a jog until she
was safely hidden away at the other side of the statue’s base. Freak…Her
mind reeled at it all.
This wasn’t her century, and she had to remind herself that.
She moved around to the front of the statue. By the time she
made it to the memorial plaque in front of it, the disturbing man was buying a
beaded bracelet from an iron faced man in a black baseball cap. She could
almost hear the expressionless vendor’s flat lips and hard eyes making whispers
of disapproval. Good, Elly’s mind hissed. She turned her attention to
the copper plaque in front of her.
The empire’s seal crested the top. A shrill coldness gripped
her face as her eyes darted to the words engraved into the copper. Elly barely
got through the first line before a silent rage tightened her chest and set
fire to her forehead. It was one of those rare, harrowing moments when her mind
forgot all else as her body went blind. The next thing she remembered was
sobbing in her newly assigned dorm room at the vocational school. The line had
been simple enough…
“His Honorable Majesty, First Emperor Harry Truman, who
reigned from A.D. 1945 to A.D. 1953.”
She wanted to go home, and she wanted to go home now. How
could they mistake President Truman for their first damned emperor!? The
current year was Y.E. 0422, and who knew how many years she had been tossed
through to get there. Was his presidency so long ago that these crazy people
didn’t know any better!? A sob raked her body when she remembered the harsh,
militaristic tones of the empire’s anthem. The fanatical way the people had
snapped to attention…The brainwashed news anchors…Compared to that, being a
poor civilian in a Capitalistic society didn’t seem that bad after all.
At the thought of the rant she posted on her blog just the
morning before, Elly buried her face into her pillow. This weekend she was
supposed to help Derrick set up the surprise party he had been planning for his
boyfriend…They were going to deck out the house in black and yellow, the colors
of Jim’s favorite football team. Elly was going to bake the cake while Avery,
Derrick’s puffy Pomeranian, was going to bark for a lick of the wooden spoon.
Kit was going to bat the streamers around, much to Derrick’s frustration—
Another sob escaped her throat, and the small woman cried
herself into a deep, nightmare ridden sleep.
* * *
A gentle tapping stirred Elly from the fanged, hooded beings
chasing her. She sighed and winced. Soreness tightened her throat, and her face
stung. She flicked the crusted sleep from her eyes with her thumb and stumbled
out of her bed. The sound was coming from her door. She crossed the small room
and opened it. A dark skinned girl with straight black hair that framed her
face stood in the hall. Her large, brown eyes were warm as they gazed down at
Elly. She was wearing the same army green uniform, complete with the purple
beret.
“Hi…I got you a present,” the girl stammered, thrusting a
brown box forward. “Um…I…I…” she continued. “Oh Emperor, please be my
friend,” her shaking hands seemed to say when her mouth moved to continue
its awkward speech. “I…I heard you crying…last night.”
Elly’s eyes widened, and she found herself waving the girl
in. Closing the door behind her, she took the box from the girl’s trembling
hands.
“Thank you,” she whispered. “So, you heard that, huh?” She
moved to the little couch that rested at the opposite side of the room and
beckoned to the other woman.
“Yes…I did…” she paused. “My name is Diana.” Elly sat down,
placing the box on her lap. Diana sat beside her with a nervous smile.
“Elly,” Elly said. How loud was I crying last night!?
“I’m, um sorry. It’s just that I’ll never see my home again, and there are
people I will never-” she cut herself short and forced herself to look at
Diana’s box. Elly removed the lid with a shaking hand. Inside was a 12-inch
doll with poseable arms, and legs, dressed in an elaborate, white military
uniform. Bile swept over her mouth.
It was Harry Truman.
His plastic face stared up at her with a stagnant smile.
“I…I know it’s childish,” Diana frowned. “But…my dad got me
one when I was little, and it always cheers me up when I’m down…Here,” Elly let
her lift the doll out of the box. “If you press his right hand, he talks.”
Diana’s large eyes held a certain sadness to them, it was the pretty way her
long lashes drooped from her eyelids. “You’re from the moon colony, aren’t
you?” Nodding to herself before letting Elly answer the question, Diana passed
the doll into Elly’s hands.
“My dad was stationed there, but he requested to be moved
back to Earth after I was born. He didn’t want me getting stuck and not being
able to graduate on time. No one wants a late start on voke school. I’m
nineteen right now; otherwise, I would have been twenty-five.” Diana paused and
ran her dark hands over her smooth skirt. “Do you miss the moon?”
“I was an outlander,” Elly said…Whatever that is. She
lifted Truman, standing him upright in her hands, and pressed his right hand
with her thumb and index finger.
“Because it took the apocalypse that became the Second
Great War for us to realize that humankind must end the barbarism that started
the war.”
The doll’s voice echoed in the quiet room. Elly cocked her
head. As much as she wanted to toss the toy across the room, she didn’t.
Instead, she ran her thumb over his chest and squeezed his hand again.
“It’s my favorite quote ever,” Diana said. “He’s the one who
stopped the violence and united the empire. He’s the reason that people don’t
kill each other anymore.”
Tell that to the boy on the TV screen, she wanted to
snap, but Diana’s gesture was genuine. Even Elly, in all her anger, could see
that.
“Are you sure people don’t…lie about it?” she started,
biting her lip in a flash of instant regret. “I mean the boy on the TV screen…”
“The creeper? Liars always get caught. His parents should
have done the right thing and sent him off when he was a baby. I hope they are
arrested and put on trial. They’re the ones who could have prevented his
termination.”
“I don’t…get it…” her eyes studied the doll without really
seeing it. Its face was just a blur.
“They can’t control themselves because their minds are
bombarded with nightmares they can’t help. He would have killed…or worse…”
Diana shuddered. Elly pressed her lips together. Maybe it was best to not
pursue the matter. “Don’t worry, creepers make up less than five percent of the
entire population.” Diana sighed and looked up in thought. “My brother calls
them zombies if that helps.”
Elly rose, ignoring the box as it slid off of her lap. She
crossed the room and sat Truman onto her nightstand. Zombies. That boy was
not a zombie… “It does” she lied. “We outlanders tell stories about
zombies.” Maybe if she believed her own falsehoods, she could adapt and forget
about 2012.
“My dad is really proud of me being a renaissance man,”
Diana beamed. “He’s taking me out to dinner. Want to come?” Before Elly could
say no, the girl hopped to her feet with an excited clap. “We are the few! We
are masters of all trades, jacks of none!” Masters of all trades? The
only thing Elly was a master of was making all the wrong choices. Wetness
hurt her face. To think, that at one point in time, I was called Sergeant….She
only had herself to blame.
“Oh gods,” she
whimpered. “I’m crying in front of you…” No. She was not a master of all
trades, and she would never be. “I’d like to go,” she buried her face into her
palms. I WANT TO GO HOME!