Here are the results of my portion of the September First Five Pages Workshop (http://firstfivepagesworkshop.blogspot.com/). A big thanks to everyone who participated.
Included below are the first five pages (four, actually) of my young adult dystopian work-in-progress, currently entitled THE TRUTH.
Chapter 1 - HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME
My tenth birthday was the worst day of my life. Dad had to work late, because his replacement
didn’t show up on time. Mom and I waited
for him to come home.
Five years later, we’re still waiting.
Most kids would’ve requested a Vacation Pass
for their fifteenth birthday, but not me.
I’d rather forget the whole thing and help Old Gus prepare the chilled
bodies in the hospital mortuary. I drag
myself out of bed and pull on teal blue scrubs.
I fumble for socks and shoes, and a ray of early sunlight
glints off my dad’s picture hanging on the wall. Once again, his blue eyes capture mine, as if
he needs to tell me something important.
On the floor beneath the photo sits a memory trunk full of how things
used to be. But I won’t open it
today. I just can’t.
Dishes clink in the kitchen.
Mom calls out, “Hurry up, Silvia.
I’ve got a surprise for you.”
She sounds happy, but I can’t tell if it’s real. Since Dad’s death, both of us have done a lot
of pretending. So far this year we’ve
been able to avoid Psychotherapy Services and Mandated Medication, but
sometimes I think I was sent down to Mortuary Services to push me over the
edge. Fortunately, I find autopsies
intriguing, not depressing. And since I
never got to see Dad’s body after the accident, caring for other people’s
deceased soothes the empty ache inside.
So does Gus. He’s
better than any anti-anxiety med. He
always knows what to say and what not
to say to me.
Too bad Mom doesn’t have a clue.
Mom glances up from her green tea as I enter the modular kitchen.
“I planned a big surprise for your
birthday.”
I tense. “What is
it?”
Mom slides over a bowl of organic oatmeal topped with
raspberries, a special treat. “I got us
Park and Art passes today.”
“I’m not hungry.” I
shake my head. “And Gus is expecting me.”
“No, he’s not. He
knows all about it. I told him weeks
ago.”
“Really? Gus must be
good at keeping secrets. He never even wished
me ‘happy birthday’ yesterday.”
Which proves he knows me better than Mom does.
She frowns. “You
should eat something, even if you’re not hungry. And if it makes you feel better, just pretend
it isn’t your birthday. It’s some other day instead. A good day, not a bad one.”
I want to protest some more, but there’s a determined gleam
in Mom’s eyes—one that hasn’t been there for a long time. And I don’t want to be the one to snuff it
out.
I halfheartedly take a few bites of breakfast, swallow my
eight prescribed supplements, then return to my bedroom to change into jeans
and a long-sleeved green T-shirt. All my
clothes are soft and plain, without decoration, made by hands like my
father’s. Only Dad proved himself to be
Gifted, so he didn’t make Basic Worker Level clothes for long. Instead, he got promoted to Government Level
clothing production—a promotion which cost him his life.
“Hurry up!” Mom calls from the front door.
We clamber down six flights of stairs in the brightly-lit
stairwell. Once we reach the main floor,
we push out the airlock into the early morning rush of people flooding the
streets. Dashing across the busy bike
path and an empty car lane, we finally reach the closest walk way. Traffic is orderly today. No bikers stray from their lanes into
ours. Men and women wearing blue scrubs
of various shades hurry towards the hospitals and medical facilities. Those in green coveralls rush towards the
monorail station to speed off to one of the numerous Plant and Protein Production
Facilities.
I glance back at a beautiful dark-skinned woman, and try not
to feel envious of her green uniform.
Normally, I don’t mind my job. In
fact, I feel more at home in the mortuary than anywhere else. But part of me still longs to spend all day
surrounded by plants. Nothing can be
done about it now. The Occupation Exam
is over, and I’ve been placed where I’m most effective.
We march past rows of buildings, offices on the first two
floors and apartments up above. People
whoosh past us on bikes, as those on foot press constantly forward. Only the car lane remains empty, as usual.
We make good time until we hit the Citizen Family Planning
and Redistribution
Building . Traffic stalls. A crowd of walkers fidget in place ahead of
us. I shiver a little in the cool
morning breeze.
“What’s going on?”
Mom cranes her neck and rises up on her toes. “Can you see?”
Indistinct voices argue up ahead. Strangers murmur around us, but avoid making
eye contact. After a long pause, the
crowd begins to shuffle past the building.
A few cast furtive glances over their shoulders. Everyone’s in a hurry to get somewhere. Now I see who is causing the fuss. A red-haired girl who looks to be about my
age shoves an orderly away. The crowd
behind us pushes forward. Tears stream
down the girl’s pale face. She backs
away from the building and turns as if to run.
Then she cries out in pain, and clutches her swollen belly, breathing
hard.
In her moment of weakness, the orderlies surround and
restrain her.
“I won’t do it! I
won’t do it!” the pregnant girl screams as they drag her away.
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