mean to leave schoolâI just wanted to get some fresh air. Then I couldnât face going back in so I came home.â
His father said, âSo you just walked home? Howâd you get out of the school? No, donât tell meâI donât think I want to know. Look, you canât do things like that, Lance.â He held up his hand with his thumb and index finger about an inch apart. âAs it is youâre this close to getting conscripted! Or donât you remember what happened last month? They would have taken you right then if you hadnât promised to keep your head down and really put the work in.â
Lance didnât like the sound of that. âOK. Iâll go back. I do feel a little better now anyway.â
His mother removed a small booklet from the cupboard next to the fridge, flipped open the cover, and began to fill in a form. âYou have to go straight to the principalâs office,â she said. âApologize for walking out and tell them whatever they need to hear to make sure they donât report you.â She tore off the top sheet and handed it to him.
Lance took a quick look at the form before he folded it and stuffed it into his pocket. It was titled âEmergency Curfew Violation.â His mother had signed and dated it, and in the section marked âReason for Violationâ she had written âUnexpected illness (temporary).â
What is going on in this place? Lance wondered. Conscription, curfews, America on the edge of war? What mad universe is this?
As he turned to leave, something on the television caught his attention. He walked over to it and turned up the sound.
âLance!â his mother warned.
âYeah, hold on a secondâ¦. I have to see this.â
On the screen was a grainy photograph of a blue-skinned man who was more than twice the height of an ordinary human. The newscasterâs voice was saying, ââ¦reports that the creature somehow appeared in the middle of the prisonâs main building. The Oak Grove prison is not equipped to deal with superhuman prisoners, and the guards were unable to prevent the creature from smashing its way through the walls and escaping into the countryside.â
So itâs not just me , Lance thought. The same thing happened to Brawn. And weâre both connected to Krodin. Maybe it happened to all of us.
He turned to face his parents. âSorry. Weâre doing a report on the superhumans in school. Anyway. Iâd better get going.â
When he reached the kitchen door, he turned back. âDad? How far is Oak Grove from here?â
Â
Abby had spent the past hour listening to Solomon Cord spinning lies to her mother about who he was and what he was doing in Midway. Cord had told her he was Jason Myers, an inspector for the school board. âIf you are talking to anyone from Abigailâs school,â heâd told her, âplease donât mention I was here. Fact is Iâm also checking up on them. If you donât mind, Iâd like to ask you some questions.â
At first Mrs. de Luyando had been only too happy to answer anything Cord asked, and by careful manipulation he was able to build a better picture of how the world had changed. But now she was becoming suspicious. âAre you investigating me too, is that it, Mr. Myers?â
âNot at all. No, I just have a few questions, nothing too personal. So, Vienna is the eldest, then Abigail, thenâ¦?â
âTyler and James, theyâre eight. Twins. And then Stefan and Elvis. Theyâre seven. Also twins.â
Cord smiled. âTwo sets of twins? Must be quite a handful!â
âAt times, yes.â Mrs. de Luyando didnât return the smile.
Sheâs not buying this , Abby thought.
âAnd their fatherâ¦?â Cord asked.
âHeâs gone, Mr. Myers. Iâm sure thatâs all in your files. He had an affair and I threw him out. Does that answer your
Lindsay J Pryor
Devdutt Pattanaik
David Pilling
Adèle Geras
Katie Lee O'Guinn
Daniel Arenson
Mary Downing Hahn
Robert Adams
Emilia Clark
Day Leclaire