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  War and Money

  Book One

  Sofia Diana Gabel

  War and Money

  Copyright © 2019 by Sofia Diana Gabel

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without prior written permission from the author, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  ISBN 9781794071339

  Printed in USA by S.D. Books

  Dedication

  To the three most influential women in my life; Alexandra, Olivia, and Andrianna. Life is so much more interesting with you in it.

  Chapter One

  Year 2187, Earth

  How did this happen? I can’t believe I’m strapped into this seat like a prisoner. I’m being sent away to die and if I don’t find a way to escape, that’s exactly what’s going to happen. All I want is to be back home, wrapped up in my blanket like this never happened. But it did, and the stale air in this shuttle is making me sick. The transportation shuttles back home never felt this suffocating. This is the worst day of my life.

  Everyone needs to stop staring at me like I’m a pariah. Especially Commander Viteri. Those close-set eyes of his are boring into mine, and I know I should look away, but I won’t. I won’t give him the satisfaction of seeing how scared I am. He told Ma and Da that I’m a non-conformist, well then, how’s this for non-conforming. Go ahead and glare at me, I refuse to flinch.

  His hatred is burning into me. He looks at me like I’m nothing, a stupid Single, the only child in my family. But why should that make me less than the Multiples, and who decided that being a Single was a stigma anyway. Ha! He looked away first. Sure it’s because he brought up a projection in front of him, but it still feels like a little victory.

  Lenora Averlowes is on my left. I remember her from school, but we were never friends. She’s popular, taller and prettier than me. Even her shiny auburn hair is better than my dull brown. And she’s not a Single. She has a lot of siblings. She hasn’t said a word to me and I know why. I’m nothing to her. I completely forgot that we have the same birthday, but I do remember that she volunteered to be advanced. Hard to forget, because she let everyone at school know, bragging like it made her special and better than those of us who didn’t volunteer.

  “Hi, Lenora, I’m not sure if you remember me, but I’m Dax.” I’ll shake her hand and be friends, if she wants to.

  Look at her pulling away, repulsed by my offer of friendship. I should have known.

  “I know who you are. You’re a Single and your parents are poor. And you talk too much about things you shouldn’t talk about. I don’t want you talking to me.” She turns away.

  There are a few chuckles from the other kids, some I know and some I don’t, and a few of them strain against their seat restraints like they want to get further away from me. So much for making friends.

  “Orwan!” booms Viteri, staring right at me. He’s out of his seat, holding onto a strap attached to the ceiling. “There’s no talking on the shuttle! You’ve just brought on the first behavior modification.” He touches a small metallic box attached to his belt.

  Immediately, there’s a stinging jolt that goes through my feet all the way to my head. Apparently everyone got the same shock because they all jump and cry out as well. My fingers and toes are tingling. Viteri sits again and goes back to scanning through the projection.

  Lenora glares at me, her bottom lip trembling. Her voice is barely above a whisper, “I knew you were trouble. Behavior modification before we even get to camp. Who’s ever heard of that? I’m going to be made a Lead at training camp and I’ll make you pay for this.”

  The other recruits nod and scowl at me.

  How does she know she’ll be a Lead? I thought ranks were given out at the camp, not ahead of time. It doesn’t matter to me though, because I’ll be slated to spend the rest of my life, however long that might be, fighting the Katarga aliens on the moon, unless I can find a way out of this. All Singles go straight to the moon and are never heard from again. Everyone knows that. I wish I never had to turn fifteen and go through my Date of Fate. I wanted to stay home and get a job, not get advanced into the Global Forces.

  Soldiering is a world I know nothing about. All I have left are my memories of home. It seems like forever ago, but it was just this morning that I woke up and smelled the wonderful buttery aroma of birthday cake baking. Ma must have saved for weeks to buy eggs. Before it came out of the oven though, Viteri showed up at our door.

  That was the moment my life changed. He ordered me out of my bedroom and made me stand against the wall in our tiny living room. He’s so big, he took up most of the room and made Ma and Da look incredibly small with their heads drooped down. That’s something I’ll never forget because they looked defeated. I’ve never seen them like that. Even with us being poor and low status, they always had hope and made the best of things. That hope vanished this morning though and that’s what scared me most.

  When Viteri went on about how the only option Ma and Da had was to advance me instead of keeping me home where I could work in our outlier, I got all sweaty and almost fainted. That’s when Ma yanked the cake out of the oven and tried to hand me piece, but Viteri was fast and smacked it away, grinding it under his boot. The expression on Ma’s face crushed me inside.

  Looking back, I don’t think I’ve ever heard of him showing up at anyone’s house to pick up a recruit. So why me? I’m not exceptional in any way, so it’s not that. He did stress how my child rearing subsidies had ended since I turned fifteen today and that by advancing me, Ma and Da would get advancement subsidies now, almost double what they’d been getting. But that couldn’t be the reason. Viteri doesn’t care about low status families.

  I can’t take it anymore.

  I unfasten my restraints and get up. “Commander, I think there’s been a mistake. I don’t belong here. I’m not a soldier.”

  He shoots up out of his seat. “Orwan! There are no mistakes. I own you now.” He rushes at me and gives me a hard slap across my cheek. “Sit down!”

  What just happened? My legs are buckling and my cheek stings. I’ve never been hit before. He’s hauling back for another slap, but before he can hurt me again, I sit and slip the restraints over my shoulders, even though my shaking hands make it almost impossible.

  With his left eye twitching, he lowers his hand and strides back to his seat, but doesn’t sit.

  “Recruits!” he bellows. “Any further outbursts will warrant a secondary intensified behavior modification.” He glares at me. “I hope I’m understood. One last pick-up and then straight to training camp, where insolence will be met with a lethal penalty.”

  Lethal? My stomach’s tight and it feels like the air’s been knocked out of my lungs. We’ll be at camp soon where things will be even worse. Only one stop left to pick up another recruit and then that’s it. Maybe it’ll be a girl who’ll like me and be my friend. My only friend on a shuttle full of kids who hate me.

  The shuttle banks to the left, descends, and settles at the mystery place to collect our last recruit. Viteri is out of his seat, standing by the entryway door as it opens. He has a hint of a smug smile. What does that mean? He steps aside and fires a scowl my way. I hold his look for a moment and then glance around. All of the kids have perked up and are craning their necks to see who’s coming in. A second later, in strides a broad-shouldered boy with a long, jagged scar runnin
g from the bottom of his right eye all the way down to the right side of his upper lip. He has wavy, coppery hair, one of those barely-there mustaches and a stern expression like he’s better than everyone. I don’t know him and I doubt he’ll ever want to know me.

  Unfortunately, Viteri tells him to take the empty seat next to me. If I could get up and move, I would. Now I’m sandwiched between him and Lenora.

  I take one deep breath, let it out slowly, and then another. I’m still trembling. It’s not working.

  Before the boy sits, Viteri motions to him. “Recruits, for those of you too ignorant to know, this is Tablon Neemiss, Senior Lead recruit and heir to the Neemiss financial enterprise. He scored a perfect 100% on his exit exams and has won every Early Training Simulation game he’s played. Take a good look at him because he’s in charge of you. Your duty will be to protect him and die for him.”

  My duty is to die? Tablon marches down the aisle to his seat, with a sneer set on his face. I sneak a closer look at him while he’s busy fastening his restraints and wonder how he got that scar. And what is an Early Training Simulation game? I’ve never heard of it. Nobody ever said I could practice training.

  When he’s strapped in, the ship zooms up into the sky again and Tablon lets out a whoop. Nobody receives an electric shock this time for the outburst.

  He turns and looks at me with a cocky smirk. “Like what you see, smudge? Too bad because I don’t associate with smudges.” He laughs, leans back and closes his eyes.

  My jaw hurts from clenching my teeth. I’ve only heard the term “smudge” once before when one of the boys at school called his little sister a smudge. It meant she was worthless and if she was advanced, would end up as a smudge as the result of being on the frontlines. I may not know much, but one thing I do know is that I’m no smudge.

  Chapter Two

  The shuttle’s gaining altitude and almost everyone is quiet, except for Tablon and Lenora. They’ve struck up a friendship, talking to each other like I’m not even in between them. Obviously they’re allowed to chat, being higher status than me. All I can do is stare at the seat back in front of me and hope they don’t start anything. Couldn’t there be windows for us to look out? At least that’d give me something to do. I’d love to see where we’re going and what the landscape looks like.

  Tablon reaches across me, like he’s handing something to Lenora, and smacks me right in the chest. “Out of my way, smudge.”

  “Where am I supposed to go?”

  He continues, “Hold your breath until you die.”

  “I’d only pass out.” I look directly at him.

  He narrows his eyes. “Shut up. You smell like rotting garbage. Don’t you ever shower?” He smacks me again.

  “Orwan! No talking!” Viteri gets up, but then sits down again. “I hear one more word from you, I’ll shove you outside the shuttle.”

  Wonderful. I look forward again, at the seat back, and hope Tablon leaves me alone.

  He does, but in my peripheral vision, I see him smirking.

  I’m curious to see what Mid-World, where the camp is, looks like. I remember the lesson at school where we learned it used to be called Africa and had been filled with all sorts of wild animals like elephants and lions, but now those animals are extinct and their DNA is stored away at the Cryo-Center in the Polar Regions where there’s still some remaining tundra. It was fascinating to learn that scientists maintain a gene bank of every animal that went extinct in the last hundred years, somewhere around 2085 or 2086. Those pictures of elephants and other animals I saw made me sad but when I asked if humans had forced them into extinction, I was shut down, as usual. I wonder if humans will end up like them and some other species will study us by looking at projections of us.

  The shuttle banks left and levels off. If I could see outside, I bet we’d be cutting through fluffy white clouds, and every now and then when they got thin, I’d see a wild landscape or maybe the ocean below. Instead, all I can do is watch the other recruits once Lenora and Tablon finally stop talking and close their eyes. From my seat, I have a clear view of Viteri, who’s scrolling through documents on a screen projected in front of him.

  He looks up and points straight at me. “Orwan, step forward and salute.”

  Me? Why me? Did he notice me looking at him? I unfasten my restraints, ignoring the soft chuckles around me and try to think if I’ve ever seen anyone salute before. If I don’t do it right, I’m sure to get punished. I’m glad the ship’s flying smoothly or I’d stumble and fall with my legs trembling so much.

  I glance sideways to see if anyone is willing to help me out with the salute. They’re not, or maybe they don’t know what to do either. With the restraints off and draped across the seat back, I stand and take a deep breath, doing my best to prove that the slap across my cheek didn’t faze me. I trip when Tablon sticks his foot out. Everyone laughs.

  As expected, he laughs louder than anyone else, and doesn’t get yelled at for it. “You want help, little smudge? Beg me. Go ahead, get on your knees and beg me. I’ll show you how to salute correctly.”

  Viteri shouts, “Orwan! Front and center with a salute!”

  With my shoulders back and my head held high, I mumble, “I’d rather take my punishment than deal with you.”

  Tablon whispers that he’ll snap my spine the first chance he gets.

  “You’ll never have the chance,” I whisper back. With that, I walk to Viteri and wait.

  Viteri stands, his fists balled up. “I said salute, Orwan!”

  I stare straight ahead as a trickle of sweat rolls down my back. “Sir, I don’t know how to salute.”

  “I guess that means Senior Lead Neemiss is right. You are a worthless smudge.” Viteri grabs my shoulder and shoves me backwards.

  I tumble to the ground, but get right up. “No, sir, I’m not a smudge. I will salute if you show me how.”

  Again, he shoves me to the ground. This time though, he motions for me to stay down. “Senior Lead Neemiss! Come and show this ridiculous excuse for a recruit how to salute.”

  From the ground, I watch Tablon stomp down the aisle. He stops and hovers over me. “You salute your superior by placing your right hand on your left shoulder and raise your left arm, bent at the elbow, open palm facing outward.” He bends down and whispers, “This is how you’ll be saluting me, smudge.” He faces Viteri and makes the salute.

  Viteri gives Tablon a nod. “Well done, well done, Senior Lead. Please return to your seat while I conduct business with Orwan.” He motions for me to stand.

  I get up quickly and execute the salute perfectly.

  “Sloppy,” is all the Commander says.

  How was it sloppy? I did exactly what Tablon did. “Yes, sir.”

  Viteri sits down again and points to the screen projection. “Now, I have your test scores for the exit exams and while you scored higher than most of your classmates, your lack of obedience and discipline is unacceptable. I have reduced all of your final scores to account for your non-conforming, destructive attitude. A notice of your lowered grades will be displayed at your school as incentive for other students to strive harder and mind their mouths.”

  I hear Lenora mumble that I’m stupid and lied about volunteering and should never have been advanced. I hate her so much. “Yes, sir.”

  He continues, “You’ll be a foot soldier after training. You’ve already alienated yourself from your fellow recruits and that’s a quality that won’t allow you to be promoted into any position of responsibility. I’m placing you in the Lunar Seven encampment. You’ll fight the Katarga. They’re a nasty bunch of creatures. You might not survive your first day on the moon. Dismissed.” He waves me away.

  “Yes, sir.” I spin around. Don’t cry, don’t cry. He already had his mind made up. I’m not anything but an expendable soldier. Maybe if I’d been given the opportunity to train on that early simulation thing like Tablon did, I could have been made a Lead, too.

  When I get back to my seat,
Lenora can’t wait to rub my nose in my predicament. “You’re a foot soldier? How humiliating for you. At least you’ll get killed fast so you won’t have to live long with the humiliation.”

  “Shut up,” I mumble.

  “Don’t ever say that to me, smudge. I’m your superior. I thank the stars that we won’t bunk together because you’re disgusting. Leads have their own dormitory, you know.” She stares at me with her nose wrinkled. “Didn’t you have any nicer clothes to wear? Can’t your parents afford any decent clothes? Look at you, you’re repulsive.” She makes a face and leans away from me as much as she can. “Singles are worthless.”

  As if things weren’t bad enough, now she’s starting in on my clothes. “What’s your problem, Lenora? I have no idea how you were chosen as a Lead. You’re horrible at math and barely passed the genetic recombination experiments in science. Just because you have new clothes doesn’t mean you’re better than me.”

  She shakes her head. “Don’t even look at me, smudge.”

  “I’ll look wherever I want.” I shouldn’t have said that, it’ll only make the situation worse.

  Tablon is in his restraints again and growls, “You don’t ever speak to a Lead like that, smudge. I’ve decided to set a goal for myself; to make your life pure misery. I really wish you’d been assigned a job so I wouldn’t have to look at you. Although you’d probably fail at factory work and put defects in our fighter ships. Why the Commander ever recruited you, I’ll never know. You’re not even good enough to be a smudge, you’re vapor.” He glances at Lenora and they both chuckle.

  No matter how much I try to stop them, tears tumble down my cheeks. If they don’t want me, why not send me back home? Working in a factory all day, coming home to Ma and Da and sleeping in my cot would be fine with me. Right now, any job would be better than being here. I wipe my eyes, slip the restraints on and fasten them in place, and do my best to block out the mocking laughter. Viteri calls up another recruit, who salutes and receives praise for it, even though it wasn’t as good as the one I’d done.