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Want (Numbered Book 1)

Page 1

by Magus Tor




  NUMBERED

  WANT

  Magus Tor

  Table of Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter One

  Aurelia tugged the tight-fitting uniform shirt down and took one last look into the mirror plate. Her long black hair was tied back, not a stray lock touching her collar as regulations dictated. She nodded at her appearance, recognisable even in her new uniform. Well, new in that it was different colours from her school uniform; but still, grey and red were a big improvement over the sickly yellow and black she'd been wearing for the last twelve years.

  She shivered a little. Her blood still felt cold. It was a side effect of the coding, and she was more than familiar with it. At the end of every school year, the Trackers injected each child with a genetic code update to embed new information into their genes. For some it was purely because they'd actually passed the year's training; for others it might include distinctions and prizes. For a minority it was the code that signalled they'd failed and training had stopped. Aurelia wasn't sure what happened to these students, since she'd never met any of them again. She assumed they were sent to do some form of low-level work, or possibly even sent back a year to study again. In darker moments she briefly wondered why in her seventeen years she'd never accidentally run across a Failure that she recognised, but it was best not to think about things like that. She knew the Elitists couldn't read her thoughts; that was forbidden under the Convention, but she was never exactly sure what a Tracker could tell from her twice yearly blood samples, so she did her best to behave herself.

  This year's coding had been different, though. Unlike other years when Aurelia had gathered with everyone else in her class on the last day of term, waiting in long lines in the gymnasium, talking and laughing and feeling reckless with freedom and the thought of a whole month of holiday, this year she had bidden goodbye to her schoolmates and skipped the last ceremony. Because she was done. She'd got the news only a few days before. Whilst traditionally coding was done on the last day of school, when graduating many students waited so that their new employment information could be coded at the same time as their graduation code in the Tracker's office rather than in the school gym. Better to have one injection than two, after all. Aurelia already had her assignment, and dammit if it wasn't a plum one. Exactly what she'd wanted. Wanted for years. Except now, she had a wriggling in her stomach that made her doubt if she was really ready for all of this.

  “Aurelia!”

  Her mom's voice came through the intercom.

  “Coming.”

  She took one last look around her bedroom pod. It would be the last time she saw it. Once she left, the pod would be detached and sent elsewhere, to someone who had been granted the permission to breed, and it would become some other child's home. When she came home to visit, a guest pod would be attached for the length of her stay. Aurelia took a deep breath. There was nothing here that was hers, she reminded herself. The self-healing skin of the pod meant that there weren't even scuff marks to indicate that someone had been here, let alone childish graffiti. Her belongings had already been sent to the cargo shuttle, so there really was nothing that made this place her own. Except that it had been hers. She sighed, but she was ready to go.

  “Coming, Mom,” she said again, loudly enough for the intercom to pick up.

  She closed the door behind her and took the corridor to the right towards the living pod where she knew both her parents were waiting for her. She'd always called them Mom and Dad, old fashioned terminology that her parents liked, though most of her classmates dispensed with this in favour of their parents' names or simple titles like “Sir” and “Ma'am,” depending on how formal their family living situation was.

  Her mom looked up and smiled as she entered. “Red definitely suits you better than yellow,” she said, nodding in approval. Mom was from City 04, and Aurelia had inherited her Asiatic features and long dark hair. Dad turned from the console he was sitting at and grinned at her.

  “Booked a transport pod to get us to the shuttle bay,” he said.

  “Cool!” Aurelia had only once before been in a transport pod, since Workers were forbidden to own them and they were expensive to rent. Generally, she travelled by public transport, as did nearly everyone else she knew.

  Dad shrugged. “You deserve it. We're proud of you, Aurelia.” He stood and gave her a hug.

  Dad was City 01 born and bred, and while Aurelia hadn't inherited many of his features, she did owe him her 165cm of height and her slightly crooked eyebrows that arched to the sides when she smiled.

  “You almost ready?” Dad asked her, pulling away.

  “Yep.”

  Mom stood, and Aurelia went to kiss the top of her head.

  “Call on the intercom when you get there,” Mom said. “And we are proud of you, Aurelia. Top of your class - we couldn't be prouder.”

  Aurelia wanted to tell them that she couldn't have done it without them. Couldn't have done it without their constant help and advice and training. But she was still young enough that to say things like that felt awkward, so she didn't. “I dunno if I'll have time to intercom when I land,” she said, instead. “I'll have orientation, I guess. But I'll call as soon as I can, okay?”

  Mom squeezed her hand. “Okay.”

  “Come on then, my little superstar,” Dad said. “There's a transport pod waiting for us, so let's hit the town.”

  Aurelia knew it was unlikely that she would see her parents for some time to come. It wasn't forbidden to visit them, of course, but it wasn't particularly encouraged either. In fact, some parents completely cut contact with a child after the child began to work, considering that they had fulfilled their responsibilities and could now move on. Aurelia was sure her parents weren't going to do that, but there was still a sense of the end of things. She was no longer a dependent; her parents were no longer required to give her anything or to allow her into their home.

  Mom put her hand on Aurelia's arm. “Come visit?” she asked, as if she could read Aurelia's mind.

  Aurelia smiled. “Sure thing.”

  The main difference between transport pods and public transport was that whilst public transport had to fly high above the buildings, swooping down only at designated stops, a transport pod was allowed to fly between the buildings. That was one of the main reasons why Workers couldn't own them, since the congestion and danger of having so many transport pods trying to use the same air space would be disastrous. But, Aurelia thought, as she climbed into the passenger seat, it was pretty nice to have transport right at your door. Her parents' home was on the 43rd floor of one of the many spiralling towers that had shot up after the end of the war to accommodate the increased population. The Elitists had permitted increased breeding during the post-war period, both to bring the population back to its equilibrium and because more Workers were needed to rebuild. Built as large double helices, these spiral towers were desirable places to live. Their structure meant that windows were plentiful, and they had been built close to the centre of cities to allow Workers shorter commute times and, not incidentally, longer working hours.

  Aurelia's father was staring at the programming console in the centre of the pod as Aurelia strapped herself into the three-point security belt.

  “Umm, you know how to work this thing, right, Dad?” she asked, only half joking.

  Her father was a tech Worker, but he was also extremely abse
nt minded, and it was perfectly possible that he'd forgotten to download the pod instructions before setting off.

  He looked a little insulted as he said, “Of course, I just...”

  Aurelia grinned. “Just what, Dad?”

  “Well, I've programmed the destination in and got a clear route.” He fiddled with a couple of icons that were shivering on the screen. “Just...”

  “Just what?” she asked again, biting back a giggle and fully aware of what the problem was.

  “Just, I can't get the damn thing to go anywhere!” he finally admitted, looking puzzled.

  “Er, you forgot something, Dad.”

  Aurelia leaned over and pulled the security strap over her father's head.

  “Ach, that was pretty dumb.” He shook his head at his own stupidity.

  The transport pods had locks that wouldn't allow vehicle movement unless the security straps were tightened and fastened. As soon as both sets of straps were done up, the pod began humming. Aurelia felt a small vibration under her seat as the vehicle detached from the housing pod and lifted itself away. Then they slid down a level and began to glide out of the block.

  Block 3358 was where Aurelia had spent all seventeen years of her life so far. The block was just like any other: It contained ten buildings, each building comprised of a hundred floors, each floor with twenty-five living pods, each living pod with one family made up of either two Worker adults or two Worker adults and a single child. Each living pod had a designation number made up of its block number plus its building, floor and pod number. In Aurelia's case that was 1-3358-7-43-22. Each inhabitant of the pod had his or her own unique identification number, so Aurelia was 1-3358-7-43-22-3, her father being number 1 and her mother number 2. The 1 at the beginning of the number indicated that they were members of City 01, rather than any of the other four Earth cities still in use.

  Aurelia had had something preying on her mind for several weeks. As the transport pod navigated itself out of block 3358 and into block 3357 and her father settled back into his seat, she decided that now was probably the only opportunity that she was going to get to ask him.

  “Dad?”

  “Mmm?” He was studying the control panel, making sure their marked route was going to get them to the shuttle bay in time.

  “Have you and Mom thought about having a 4?”

  He looked up at her, surprised.

  “I mean, I know it's not my business or anything, and I don't know if it makes any difference, but you'd have a fair chance of being approved, and, well, I, you know, I wouldn't mind or anything,” she stuttered.

  All paired Workers could apply for breeding permission whenever they liked, which was generally known as requesting a 3, since any child would naturally become a number 3 as their parents were numbers 1 and 2. A child's 3 didn't advance until they paired, at which point a boy 3 would become a 1 and a girl 3, his pair mate, would become a 2. Very, very rarely Worker parents would be permitted to have a second child, a 4. This was so unusual that Aurelia had only ever known one 4. However, due to her extreme success in training and the fact that she was being given a top work posting, Aurelia was relatively sure that if her parents requested it, they would at least be considered as potential 4 parents, since they had bred so successfully and created a high-class Worker.

  “Aurelia,” her father sighed. “If your mom and I were going to apply for a 4, don't you think we'd have told you?”

  Aurelia shifted uncomfortably. “I guess,” she said.

  “Of course we would have. And of course we've thought about it. We're still young enough to request, and you're so very special and brilliant. But we decided that since you've given us so much pleasure, it was only right to allow other pair mates the chance to breed. It didn't seem fair to ask for a 4.”

  She smiled. One of the reasons that she was so close to her parents, closer than many children were, was because they were both such nice and generous people. “Won't you miss having a child around, though?” she asked.

  Her father raised his eyebrows. “Miss that awful racket you call music, and the panic every year come exam time?”

  At this she laughed, and her father patted her hand and went back to examining the transport pod's console.

  The pod was gliding through blocks now, keeping to its designated floor level to avoid other pods taking the same route. City 01 was big - huge, Aurelia knew. But she was only familiar with a ten-block area or so, since that was all she needed to know to go from home to school and back again. Even the vacation centre was within that ten-block area, so during holidays when Aurelia and her parents had been given a week to go into the holo-programme and see sights, she had never had to leave her home district. There would have been no point, anyway; Aurelia knew that the majority of the places loaded into the holo-programmes no longer existed. The beaches and historical cities had all been destroyed or rendered uninhabitable aeons ago, and they survived only as programmed holographs where Worker families could spend seven days every year. Still, when you felt the sun beating down on your skin and the sand creeping up between your toes and smelled the rich, salty tang of the sea air, it was kind of hard to remember that all of this was simply a collection of 1s and 0s programmed into a code that resembled a place long gone.

  Through the transparent roof bay of the transport pod, Aurelia could see the soft pale shadow of the moon. Pollution fans blew the smog out of most of City 01, leaving the sky relatively clear. The moon was visible even during the day, a silent, lurking shadow watching over the city. Aurelia shuddered a little and turned her eyes away from the moon, her eventual destination. It wasn't that she didn't want to be there - she very much did. It was all she'd ever wanted; all most Worker kids wanted was to be posted to Lunar City, the Elitist capital. It was just that she didn't want to think about leaving, not right now, not when it was so close. She wanted to remain earthbound as long as possible, eking out every last second of her time here.

  Her father sensed that she was feeling nervous. “Ready for the big time?” he asked her.

  She sighed. “Yes, I think so. I mean, I'm not sure.”

  “It's a big step,” he said. “It's natural to be nervous about starting your posting.”

  Aurelia looked down at her hands. “I'm not nervous about work,” she said, which was true. Lunar City Hospital would hold no surprises for someone who had graduated top of her class at Medical Training School. “I'm just a bit, well, sad, I guess, about leaving.”

  Her father patted her knee. “It's normal to be sad about leaving a place, but remember this isn't just an end - it's a beginning. And with your skills, it could be the beginning of something big.”

  Aurelia knew what he was referring to, but she preferred not to talk about it. Whether it was because she was afraid of what the future could hold or because she didn't want to jinx herself, she wasn't sure. “It's a big opportunity,” was all she said.

  “It is that,” her father responded. “Very big. And a big responsibility.”

  Since the establishment of Lunar City as the capital of United Earth fifty years ago, it had become harder and harder for Workers to get permission to move to the Moon's surface. The Elitists allowed only the most skilled Workers to apply for postings there, and even then many Workers were employed only on temporary contracts which would eventually send them back to Earth. Aurelia, as a talented Medical Worker, would be allowed permanent Lunar City residence for as long as she was able to work. Lunar City had everything. It was the home of power, politics, the rich and the famous, and the Ruling Class, those whose families made up the Elitist Club. But Aurelia wasn't interested in those things. What she was interested in was getting on with her job, which she already knew she was going to love, and eventually, hopefully, finding a pair mate and even requesting a 3 when the time came. And if she wanted to be the best of the best - she very much did - then moving to Lunar City was by far her best bet.

  “Sometimes I wonder if things were better before,” her fath
er said, breaking into Aurelia's thoughts.

  “What do you mean?”

  “I mean before all this, before the war, before Lunar City.” He glanced over at her, and Aurelia could see that he was truly troubled.

  Aurelia knew her history. It had been drilled into her as a small child as it was into all Worker children. She could recite the facts from memory. In 2220, the huge population centres of Old Earth went to war. A combination of pollution, lack of resources and global warming had meant that living space was at a premium, and eventually this drove the Old Earth cities to the brink of destruction. For eight long years the free states had fought battle after battle, destroying many of the only remaining habitable districts with nuclear weapons and chemical bombing. In 2228, the Elitists had stepped in, leaving their home in Lunar City to rescue what remained of Old Earth. The Elitists’ Private Military Company, made up of Human Clones, had rapidly subdued the war-weary troops of the Old Earth states, and in the armistice known as the Convention that followed the end of World War 3, the Elitists had been nominated as the neutral governing body. By popular approval, the Elitists declared the five remaining Old Earth cities to be the Earth Empire, and stated that governing powers would be centred in Lunar City.

  The order promised by the Elitists after years of bloody warfare and instability was irresistible, and, for most of Earth Empire's population, was more than satisfactory. Everything was now controlled, there were no shortages, and everyone had homes, jobs and even children should they want them. These changes had come at a small price, though. For Workers such as Aurelia, it meant strictly controlled lives, down to asking for permission to breed. For Human Clones, however, life was much more regimented. Only the Ruling Class had some form of freedom. Still, most people were content enough that they never questioned the order of things. That was why what Aurelia's father said shocked her.

  She cleared her throat. “I'm guessing that you don't mean starvation and war and no living spaces or order?” she said, dryly.

 

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