Authors: Vera Nazarian
Tags: #rivalry, #colonization, #competition, #romance, #grail, #science fiction, #teen, #dystopian, #atlantis, #dystopia
“Switch!” Erita yells. “Snake becomes Scarab!”
Which means I am now the attacker. I assume the Striking Snake but my first blow falls on open air, as Claudia dodges my arm without even bothering to counter with her own. “Come on, Gwen-baby . . .” she whispers. “Are you going to cry now?”
In answer I strike with my other arm and quickly extend the hand into the snake. It lands on Claudia’s collarbone, and I feel the thud and her cry of pain as she misses the opportunity to block me.
“Feels good?” I say with a sudden crazy little smile. And then I strike again.
What in the world is happening to me? I feel an unexpected immense rush of energy driven by anger. And I no longer care about being afraid.
“Switch!” Oalla cries.
This time Claudia has a grim terrible look on her face. She purses her lips as she strikes at me.
But I am ready for her. There is something that suddenly
clicked into place
in my mind, and I can see the logical relationship between the Snake and the Scarab, how one
fits
into the other. These two Forms, they are mates of each other—like dark and light, yin and yang, melody and harmony.
And suddenly it is so easy and clear, how I need to move.
My defending Scarab is effortless, and Claudia does not come close to touching me even once. I, on the other hand, have hit her on the other side of her neck, this time above the collarbone, then bruised her shoulder, and even her right cheek. . . .
This is unbelievable.
I’ve just beaten up Claudia Grito.
C
ombat class is over and I am breathing hard, while an unbelievable rush of adrenaline and elation is still surging through me.
Claudia, meanwhile, hisses, “You are dead now, bitch.” She then turns her back on me and quickly races upstairs past the other Candidates going up.
Okay, that was—I have no words for what just happened.
As I start to walk to the doors, Oalla passes me and nods. “Nice job today, Candidate. Your sparring is good.”
And behind her, Erita gives me a faint crooked smile. She then passes a handheld gadget over my token and says, “Credit.”
I get out of the Training Hall, and honestly, I don’t even know if there’s a floor under my feet, or how I’m putting one foot ahead of the other—that’s how incredible I feel. For the first time after a
gym class
I am moving with a powerful buzz of energy as opposed to being utterly defeated in body and spirit.
I got a credit in Combat. No. Effing. Way
.
The buzz carries me upstairs, but as it wears off slightly, the side of my face starts to make itself felt. I wipe the sweat off my forehead and touch the side of my cheek where Claudia managed to get in one blow and yeah, that’s going to bruise, if it hadn’t already. I bet I’ll look like Gordie now, with my matching shiner.
Last class for the day is Culture. I meet up with Dawn and Laronda and we grab the seats in the second row.
“Wow, look at your face,” Laronda says, examining me. “How did that happen?”
“Combat. Claudia,” I answer with choppy words, but I am smiling.
“What? Did she hit you? What a b—”
“Not as much as I hit her,” I admit, grinning now.
“
What?
Way to go, girlfriend!” Laronda claps, and looks at Dawn.
Dawn raises one brow and calmly nods her approval.
“It appears, an ice rink opened up somewhere in hell, because
I can spar
,” I announce. “And I got a credit for the day’s class!”
Laronda punches me on the arm and then does a seat dance by wiggling in her desk chair.
I let out a minor squeal and punch back, then lean over and punch Dawn who cringes away mockingly to retain her dignity. Soon we get so loud that some of the other Candidates start glancing our way.
We are interrupted by the arrival of the Instructor.
Nefir Mekei brings a sudden damper to settle over the good mood. Because today’s lecture is about the importance of family ties in Atlantis. I don’t remember much of what he says, because suddenly I’m thinking of my parents back home, and so it seems does everyone else. We sit and remember the families and relatives left behind. Grim reality washes over us. In less than twenty months, they are all going to be dead. . . .
Everything in the world that we know will be no longer.
“On Atlantis, parents and children have strong traditional ties,” Nefir tells us, pacing before the desk. “We honor and respect the older generations, gladly defer to their wisdom and experience. But in turn, the power of society lies with the young.”
“Is this why you only take teenagers for Qualification?” someone asks. “How come the strict age restrictions of twelve through nineteen?”
“Yes, a good question.” Nefir turns to the speaker, an older girl. “We can only make room for the young who will have time to adjust and contribute to the society. And there are other reasons that you will come to understand later.”
I raise my hand. “What about the older adults here on Earth who have proven themselves to be valuable, even indispensable? I’m talking about brilliant scientists, engineers, talented artists, or others who have other worthy things to offer. Why don’t you take any of them? It seems illogical to me that you would not make exceptions for them.”
“I fully understand your reasoning,” Nefir says softly, turning his serpentine gaze upon me. “But unfortunately I cannot give you a good answer now. It is a complex thing and it has to do with certain aspects of our society and the real means at our disposal. Suffice it to say, if we could do it, we would take your adults, as many as possible. But we simply cannot. Nor would they be able to fit in sufficiently well, or integrate into Atlantis.”
Okay, that’s one mysterious and vague reply, I think.
“One thing I can tell you,” Nefir continues, turning away from me and addressing the class in general. “We start on our life journeys very young in Atlantis. For example, children commit to the Fleet at the age of seven. Other professions require similar early commitments. It is a rare teenager who is not yet apprenticed in some field.”
Wow, I think. That explains the highly skilled and advanced Atlantean Instructors and Pilots who are hardly older than our own age.
“What about social stuff?” a boy asks with a smirk. “Do you guys have a social life? Like, dating, messing around, and so on? Do you have love and romance and marriage?”
“Obviously there’s procreation . . .” another guy in the back mutters, and a wave of nervous laughter passes over the classroom.
“Yes,” Nefir says, and his expression lightens somewhat. “Yes, we do. Bonds of love between individuals result in sanctioned unions, similar to your own marriage. Children are born and families grow to prominence. In fact, some families—including the Imperial Family Kassiopei, the oldest one in our recorded history, and a few others from Poseidon—are so ancient that they are said to have roots in the original colony of Atlantis.”
“Okay,” the boy persists. “But how young do you have to be to begin to date, or get in a union, or whatever?”
“It depends. Some begin what you call ‘dating’ at sixteen, others later. A few, earlier. However, we do not encourage intimate relations before true physical and emotional maturity.”
I raise my hand.
“Yes, Gwen Lark?”
“What determines maturity?”
Nefir suddenly smiles at me. “An excellent question as usual, Candidate. We prefer to consider each individual and their situation on a case-by-case basis.”
A
fter class is over, we head down to eat dinner. I am still flying high after my successful day, and according to Laronda my bruised cheek is already turning bluish.
“Heh, badge of honor,” Dawn says.
I nod and cannot help grinning.
Before we make it to the cafeteria, which smells like garlic and French fries, I see a familiar face in the lounge.
There’s my sister Gracie, sitting in a well-padded chair with her feet up, and looking like a mixture of “determined” and “a little lost.” She’s wearing her black sequined sweater and dramatic dark mascara. Her token blazes red in high contrast.
“Gwen!” she cries, and waves to me nervously.
“Oh, lord, Gracie! Where have you been?” I exclaim, approaching her in a hurry. “I’ve been looking for you for days, what happened? How are you? Everything okay?”
But Gracie stares at my bruised cheek. “Yeah, I guess. . . . But oh no, what’s that on your face?”
I tell her about Combat. “Just like Gordie, I’ve got a shiner that matches his own—have you seen his?” I say with a smile, running my fingers through her dirty-blond hair to fix a few loose tendrils around her ear.
She cringes away from me initially. “Hey! Stop fussing like Mom.” And then her face takes on a familiar frown as she remembers. . . .
“Sorry,” I say, letting my hand fall. But I am still smiling.
We stare at each other, and it’s amazing, but my little sister appears almost grown up, with her tired pale face and serious focused look.
“So tell me, how are your classes?” I ask, when I really want to be asking,
Have you been hanging out with that guy Daniel all this time?
And then, seeing Dawn, Hasmik, and Laronda waving from the cafeteria doors, I add, “By the way, let’s head in to grab some food, okay? I skipped lunch, so I’m starving.”
Gracie nods, and starts telling me all about their sword fighting Combat class and the weird amazing multiple swords and knives of different shapes and lengths they have over there, as we go in to the cafeteria together.
We occupy a table in the corner, away from the loud alpha crowd tables in the middle of the room.
Today they’re serving hot sandwiches. Dawn goes up to the food server and asks for a special plate piled high with just cheesy fries, for all of us to share.
“Ooh, yum-m-m!” Gracie reaches for a very long fry and suddenly points it at me in what looks like a blade weapon position, before reversing and bringing it up to her mouth.
“Look at you!” I say, and my lips curve upward.
“Red Quadrant—we’re the warriors!” Gracie announces proudly.
“I can totally see that.” Dawn chews her own fry and dips it in ketchup. “And ooh, look, blood.”
Gracie starts to giggle and then grows serious. “I really should be eating over at my own Red Dorm, but I suppose it’s okay this once,” she clarifies. “Did I mention, we’re supposed to have strong allegiance to our own Quadrant, and not really associate with others—”
“Yeah, I think you Reds mentioned it before.” I nod, lifting my glass of milk to wash down the French fry taste in my mouth. “Seriously, what’s all that about? How come no one here in Yellow really makes a big fuss about Candies socializing with other Quadrants?”
Gracie shrugs. And then she remembers something else. “Oh, Gwen! What happened to you yesterday? I heard—Logan said you got punished by that awful scary Atlantean dude who’s in charge of everything—he didn’t hurt you, did he? I mean, that was you, right?”
“Yeah, that was me.” I shrug, and tell her the same abbreviated version of the disciplinary action.
“Your sister got in trouble—she try—she help me, and I’m so sorry,” Hasmik says to Gracie with an anxious look, reaching with her hand to pat me on the arm.
“It’s over, don’t worry about it,” I tell her, and change the subject. “So, what else did Logan say? Any other meaningful news?”
Gracie takes another French fry and pokes it into a puddle of ketchup. “They say—” she looks up at me—“I mean, some guys in Red say that there is good reason to think that the awful shuttle explosion thing was caused by this scary terrorist group called Terra Patria. . . .”
“Oh, yeah?” I glance up at her. I recall that Terra Patria is one of the many fringe groups that had emerged during the early days of this whole asteroid and Atlantis end-of-the-world fiasco. It is strongly anti-Atlantean and has claimed responsibility for quite a few incidents over the past months. Terra Patria is a dangerous mix of home-grown extremists and desperate crazies. Or so we’ve been told in the media. One thing’s for sure, neither the President nor Congress approves of their actions.
“Terra Patria?” Laronda says. “Aren’t those guys total loonies?”
“They blow up buildings and vans rigged with explosives, wherever Atlanteans may happen to show up,” Dawn adds. “So, yeah. Dangerous hate group.”
Gracie glances at Dawn. “Well, maybe they kind of have a good reason for hating? I mean, we’re Earth natives, we were here first. And these strangers arrived out of nowhere from the stars, claiming to be ancient Earthlings too, and supposedly they can save us from the asteroid—”
“Why does everyone always think they’re the first people at any given place?” Dawn shrugs in minor disgust. “There’s always someone who’s more
native
than you. It’s just how it is.”