This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Text copyright © 2012 by Lissa Price
Jacket art: face copyright © 2012 by Bob Lea;
circuitry copyright © 2012 by Michael Wagner.
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Delacorte Press,
an imprint of Random House Children’s Books,
a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
Delacorte Press is a registered trademark and the colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc.
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Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools,
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Price, Lissa.
Starters / Lissa Price.
p. cm.
eISBN: 978-0-307-97523-2
[1. Science fiction. 2. Brothers and sisters—Fiction. 3. Orphans—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.P9312St 2012
[Fic]—dc23
2011040820
Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.
v3.1
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
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 Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
About the Author
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
If this were an awards show, the orchestra would probably have to play me offstage because I have so many people to thank.
First and foremost, the person who made it all happen, Barbara Poelle, knew exactly how to sell this book in six days (that included a holiday weekend). Don’t be fooled by the fact that she is beautiful, because she is a brilliant agent. I’m grateful fate put us together.
Barbara found me the perfect editor in the wonderful Wendy Loggia. Her notes and support made this a better book, and she did all this with the sweetest demeanor, always keeping it fun. Thank you, Wendy. I am deeply grateful to everyone at Random House from the very top: Chip Gibson, the charming jokester, and Beverly Horowitz, the writers’ fairy godmother (if fairies were wise and savvy about publishing); John Adamo, Judith Haut, Noreen Herits, Casey Lloyd, Adrienne Waintraub, and Tracy Lerner; Linda Leonard, Sonia Nash, and Mike Herrod in new media; Joan DeMayo and everyone in the sales group; Melissa Greenberg and the art department; Rachel Feld, who made my BEA visit especially sweet; and Enid Chaban, who first emailed everyone at Random House when the offices were closed due to a move and a holiday and said they had to read this book. And to Ruth Knowles and everyone at Random House UK, as well, especially Bob Lea, the incredibly gifted artist who captured Callie’s spirit on the cover.
Thanks to my foreign rights agents, Heather and Danny Baror, who knew how to get the buzz going around the globe. The talented Lorin Oberweger, who runs the Free Expressions workshops, and the on-point Stephanie Mitchell also assisted with this book.
Wait—don’t play that music yet!
I was especially encouraged when twelve-year-old Emma in a small village in Nova Scotia loved the manuscript. My dear friend and fellow writer S. L. Card was the liaison, as well as an excellent beta reader and unwavering champion of the project. Thanks to all my other beta readers: Patti, Mari, writer Suzanne Gates, and my dear friends Dawn and Robert, who offered their Oregon home so I could finish the first draft. A special shout-out to my tribe, my wonderful writers’ group: Liam Brian Perry and Derek Rogers, both amazing writers.
The support of my friends on the road to publication has meant the world—Lena and Nutschell, Paul and Joan, Luke, Greg, Michael, Marco, Susan, Gene, Paul and Matt, Ray and Marion Sader, Leonard and Alice Maltin, Martin Biro, Gold-diggers, and my author buds Jamie Freveletti, Robert Browne, Brett Battles, Boyd Morrison, Graham Brown, Stephen Jay Schwartz, Sophie Littlefield, James Rollins, and the Apocalypsies. Thank you, ITW, and to Robert Crais, I’m so grateful you were my special writer angel!
As I shout over the music, I’ll finish by thanking my husband, who has great story sense, for his constant encouragement and support.
CHAPTER ONE
Enders gave me the creeps. The doorman flashed a practiced smile as he let me into the body bank. He wasn’t that old, maybe 110, but he still made me shudder. Like most Enders, he sported silver hair, some phony badge of honor of his age. Inside, the ultramodern space with its high ceilings dwarfed me. I walked through the lobby as if gliding through a dream, my feet barely touching the marble floor.
He directed me to the receptionist, who had white hair and matte red lipstick that transferred to her front teeth when she smiled. They had to be nice to me there, in the body bank. But if they saw me on the street, I’d be invisible. Forget that I had been top of my class—back when there was school. I was sixteen. A baby to them.
The receptionist’s heels clicked and echoed in this stark space as she took me to a small waiting room, empty except for silver brocade chairs in the corners. They looked like antiques, but the chemical scent in the air belonged to new paint and synthetics. The so-called nature sounds of forest birds were just as fake. I glanced at my frayed sweats and scuffed shoes. I had brushed them as best I could, but the stains would not go away. And because I had tramped all the way to Beverly Hills in the morning drizzle, I was also wet as a lost cat.
My feet hurt. I wanted to collapse into a chair, but I didn’t dare leave a damp butt-mark on the brocade. A tall Ender popped into the room, interrupting my little etiquette dilemma.
“Callie Woodland?” He looked at his watch. “You’re late.”
“Sorry. The rain …”
“It’s all right. You’re here.” He extended his hand.
His silver hair seemed whiter in contrast to his artificial tan. As his smile broadened, his eyes widened, making me more nervous than usual with an Ender. They didn’t deserve to be called seniors, as they preferred, these greedy old fogies at the end of their lives. I forced myself to shake his wrinkled hand.
“I’m Mr. Tinnenbaum. Welcome to Prime Destinations.” He wrapped his other palm over mine.
“I’m just here to see …” I looked around at the walls like I’d come to inspect the interior design.
“How it all works? Of course. No charge for that.” He grinned and finally released my hand. “Why don’t you follow me?”
He extended his arm as if I couldn’t find my way out of the room. His teeth were so bright, I flinched a little when he smiled. We walked down a short hallway to his office.
“Go right in, Callie. Have a seat by the desk.” He closed the door.
I bit my tongue to keep from gasping at the total extravagance inside. A massive copper fo
untain flowed with endless water alongside one wall. The way they were letting this clear, clean water fall and splash, you’d think the stuff was free.
A glass desk embedded with LED lights dominated the center of the room, with an airscreen display hovering a foot above it. It showed a picture of a girl my age, with long red hair, wearing gym shorts. Although she was smiling, the photo was straight-on, like some full-length mug shot. Her expression was sweet. Hopeful.
I sat in a modern metal chair as Mr. Tinnenbaum stood behind the desk, pointing at the air display. “One of our newest members. Like you, she heard about us through a friend. The women who rented her body were quite pleased.” He touched the corner of the screen, changing the picture to a teen in a racing swimsuit, with major abs. “This fellow, Adam, referred her. He can snowboard, ski, climb. He’s a popular rental for outdoorsy men who haven’t been able to enjoy these sports for decades.”
Hearing his words made it all too real. Creepy old Enders with arthritic limbs taking over this teen’s body for a week, living inside his skin. It made my stomach flip. I wanted to bolt, but one thought kept me there.
Tyler.
I gripped the seat of my chair with both hands. My stomach growled. Tinnenbaum extended a pewter dish of Supertruffles in paper cups. My parents had had the same dish, once.
“Would you like one?” he asked.
I took one of the oversized chocolates in silence. Then I remembered my rusty manners. “Thank you.”
“Take more.” He waved the dish to entice me.
I took a second and a third, since the dish still hovered near my hand. I wrapped them in their paper cups and slipped them into my sweatshirt pocket. He looked disappointed not to see me eat them, like I was to be his entertainment for the day. Behind my chair, the fountain bubbled and splashed, teasing me. If he didn’t offer me something to drink soon, he just might get to see me with my head under the fountain, slurping like a dog.
“Could I have a glass of water? Please?”
“Of course.” He snapped his fingers and then raised his voice as if speaking to some hidden device. “Glass of water for the young lady.”
A moment later, an Ender with the figure of a model came in balancing a glass of water on a tray. It was wrapped in a cloth napkin. I took the glass and saw small cubes glistening like diamonds. Ice. She set the tray beside me and left.
I tilted my head back and downed the sweet water all at once, the cool liquid running down my throat. My eyes closed as I savored the cleanest water I’d had since the war ended. When I finished, I let one of the ice cubes fall into my mouth. I bit into it with a crunch. When I opened my eyes, I saw Tinnenbaum staring at me.
“Would you like more?” he asked.
I would have, but his eyes told me he didn’t mean it. I shook my head and finished the cube. My fingernails looked even dirtier against the glass as I set it back on the tray. Seeing the ice melting in the glass reminded me of the last time I had had ice water. It seemed like forever, but it was only a year ago, the last day in our house before the marshals came.
“Would you like to know how it all works?” Tinnenbaum asked. “Here at Prime Destinations?”
I stopped myself from rolling my eyes. Enders. Why else would I be there? I gave him a half smile and nodded.
He tapped a corner of the airscreen to clear it, and then a second time to bring up holo-mations. The first one showed a senior reclining on a lounge chair, the back of her head being fitted with a small cap. Colored wires protruding from the cap led to a computer.
“The renter is connected to a BCI—Body Computer Interface—in a room staffed with experienced nurses,” he said. “Then she’s put into a twilight sleep.”
“Like at the dentist?”
“Yes. All her vital signs are monitored throughout the entire journey.” On the other side of the screen, a teen girl reclined in a long padded chair. “You’ll be put under, with a kind of anesthesia. Completely painless and harmless. You wake up a week later, a little groggy but a whole lot richer.” He flashed those teeth again.
I forced myself not to wince. “What happens during the week?”
“She gets to be you.” He spread his palms and rotated them. “Do you know about computer assists that help amputees move fake hands? They just think about it and it moves? It’s very much like that.”
“So she visualizes that she’s me and if she wants something, she just thinks it and my hand grabs it?”
“Just like she was in your body. She uses her mind to walk your body out of here, and gets to be young again.” He cradled one elbow in his other hand. “For a little while.”
“But how …?”
He nodded to the other side of the screen. “Over here, in another room, the donor—that would be you—is connected to the computer via a wireless BCI.”
“Wireless?”
“We insert a tiny neurochip into the back of your head. You won’t feel a thing. Totally painless. Allows us to connect you to the computer at all times. We then connect your brain waves to the computer, and the computer connects the two of you.”
“Connects.” My brow furrowed as I tried to imagine two minds connected that way. BCI. Neurochip. Inserted. This was getting creepier by the minute. That urge to run was coming back hard. But at the same time, I wanted to know more.
“I know, it’s all so new.” He gave me a condescending smirk. “We make sure you’re completely asleep. The renter’s mind takes over your body. She answers a series of questions posed by the team to be sure everything is working the way it should. Then she’s free to go enjoy her rented body.”
The diagram showed graphics of the rented body playing golf, playing tennis, diving.
“The body retains its muscle memory, so whatever sports you’ve played, she’ll be able to play. When the time is over, the renter walks the body back here. The connection is shut down in the proper sequence. The renter is taken off the twilight-sleep drugs. She is checked over and then goes on her merry way. You, the donor, are restored to your full brain functions via the computer. You awake in your body as if you’d slept for several days.”
“What if something happens to me while she’s in my body? Snowboarding, skydiving? What if I get hurt?”
“Nothing like that has ever happened here. Our renters sign a contract that makes them financially liable. Believe me, everyone wants that deposit back.”
He made me sound like a rental car. A chill went through me like someone had run an ice cube up my spine. That reminded me of Tyler, the only thing keeping me in that chair.
“What about the chip?” I asked.
“That’s removed after your third rental.” He handed me a sheet of paper. “Here. This might put you at ease.”
Rules for Renters at Prime Destinations
1. You may not alter the appearance of your rental body in any way, including but not limited to piercings, tattoos, hair cutting or dyeing, cosmetic contact lenses, and any surgical procedures, including augmentation.
2. No changes to the teeth are allowed, including fillings, removal, and imbedded jewelry.
3. You must remain inside a fifty-mile perimeter around Prime Destinations. Maps are available.
4. Any attempt to tamper with the chip will result in immediate cancellation without refund, and fines will be levied.
5. If you have a problem with your rental body, return to Prime Destinations as soon as possible. Please treat your rental with care, remembering at all times that it is an actual young person.
Be advised that each neurochip blocks renters from engaging in illegal activities.
The rules didn’t make me feel any better. They brought up more problems I hadn’t even considered.
“What about … other things?” I asked.
“Like what?”
“I don’t know.” I wished he wasn’t going to make me say it. But he was. “Sex?”
“What about it?”
“There’s nothing in the rules,” I said.<
br />
I sure didn’t want my first time to happen when I wasn’t there.
He shook his head. “That’s made quite clear to the renters. It is forbidden.”
Yeah, right. At least pregnancy would be impossible. Everyone knew that was a side effect, hopefully temporary, of the vaccination.
My stomach tightened. I shook the hair back from my eyes and stood.
“Thanks for your time, Mr. Tinnenbaum. And the demonstration.”
His lip twitched. He tried to cover it with a half smile. “If you sign today, there’s a bonus.” He pulled a form out of his drawer and scribbled on it, then slid it across the desk. “That’s for three rentals.” He capped his pen.
I picked up the contract. That money could buy us a house and food for a year. I sat back down and took a deep breath.
He held out the pen. I grabbed it.
“Three rentals?” I asked.
“Yes. And you’ll be paid upon completion.”
The paper waved. I realized my hand was shaking.
“It’s a very generous offer,” he said. “That’s with the bonus if you sign today.”
I needed that money. Tyler needed it.
As I gripped the pen, the bubbling of the fountain got louder in my head. I was staring at the paper but saw flashes of the matte red lipstick, the eyes of the doorman, Mr. Tinnenbaum’s unreal teeth. I pressed the pen to the paper, but before I made a mark, I looked up at him. Maybe I wanted one last reassurance. He nodded and smiled. His suit was perfect, except for a piece of white lint on his lapel. It was shaped like a question mark.
He was so eager. Before I knew it, I put the pen down.
His eyes narrowed. “Something wrong?”
“It’s just something my mother always said.”
“What was that?”
“She said always sleep on an important decision. I have to think about it.”
His eyes went cold. “I can’t promise this offer will be good later.”
“I’ll have to take my chances.” I folded the contract into my pocket and rose from the chair. I forced a little smile.