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The Cinder City Embers: Singularity
The Cinder City Embers: Singularity
The Cinder City Embers: Singularity
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The Cinder City Embers: Singularity

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Every revolution begins with a spark.

In a world torn apart by war, one nation remains standing—Cinder City. It is surrounded by three state rings—Fringe, Boundary and Limits—and run by the Authority, President Atlas Gold, the tyrannical leader of the golden city. The population is divided into two groups, the rich and the poor, the Solvents and the Insolvents, and controlled under the threat of being named an Ember—a death sentence.

Each year, Cinder officials open their Golden Gates and hold the Ember Harvest of all eighteen-year-olds. The Harvest is a test of the potential Embers. It is said that over three hundred years ago, the Insolvents had grown tired of their treatment and had mastered innate abilities to help them wage war against Cinder City. Now, as a precaution, every child is tested for the Scoria Singularity, remnants of the genetics from a time the world had been almost destroyed overnight, for the Authority would never risk another war. He would remove the sparks—the Embers—before they started another revolution.

For Ezra, an Irish Chippewa—the last of the Chippewa people and recently named a potential Ember sent to Ember Gates—survival is in her blood. As the Ember Gates transforms her and the others, Ezra must determine who her real allies are, what parts of herself she is willing to sacrifice and where her newfound love fits into the cruel world of Ember Gates. Ezra will be pushed to the limits, having to decide between her humanity and staying.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherFinch Books
Release dateSep 19, 2017
ISBN9781786517760
The Cinder City Embers: Singularity
Author

Lanne Garrett

Lanne Garrett writes books. Considering where you’re reading this, it makes perfect sense. She lives in Vancouver, here she spends her days getting lost in the beauty of reading and writing and can be found behind a mountain of books on any given Sunday.

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    The Cinder City Embers - Lanne Garrett

    Page

    The Cinder City Embers: Singularity

    ISBN # 978-1-78651-776-0

    ©Copyright Lanne Garrett 2017

    Cover Art by Posh Gosh ©Copyright August 2017

    Edited by Jamie D. Rose

    Finch Books

    This is a work of fiction. All characters, places and events are from the author’s imagination and should not be confused with fact. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, events or places is purely coincidental.

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any material form, whether by printing, photocopying, scanning or otherwise without the written permission of the publisher, Finch Books.

    Applications should be addressed in the first instance, in writing, to Finch Books. Unauthorised or restricted acts in relation to this publication may result in civil proceedings and/or criminal prosecution.

    The author and illustrator have asserted their respective rights under the Copyright Designs and Patents Acts 1988 (as amended) to be identified as the author of this book and illustrator of the artwork.

    Published in 2017 by Finch Books, Think Tank, Ruston Way, Lincoln, LN6 7FL, UK

    Finch Books is a subsidiary of Totally Entwined Group Limited.

    The Cinder City Embers

    SINGULARITY

    Lanne Garrett

    Every revolution begins with a spark.

    In a world torn apart by war, one nation remains standing—Cinder City. It is surrounded by three state rings—Fringe, Boundary and Limits—and run by the Authority, President Atlas Gold, the tyrannical leader of the golden city. The population is divided into two groups, the rich and the poor, the Solvents and the Insolvents, and controlled under the threat of being named an Ember—a death sentence.

    Each year, Cinder officials open their Golden Gates and hold the Ember Harvest of all eighteen-year-olds. The Harvest is a test of the potential Embers. It is said that over three hundred years ago, the Insolvents had grown tired of their treatment and had mastered innate abilities to help them wage war against Cinder City. Now, as a precaution, every child is tested for the Scoria Singularity, remnants of the genetics from a time the world had been almost destroyed overnight, for the Authority would never risk another war. He would remove the sparks—the Embers—before they started another revolution.

    For Ezra, an Irish Chippewa—the last of the Chippewa people and recently named a potential Ember sent to Ember Gates—survival is in her blood. As the Ember Gates transforms her and the others, Ezra must determine who her real allies are, what parts of herself she is willing to sacrifice and where her newfound love fits into the cruel world of Ember Gates. Ezra will be pushed to the limits, having to decide between her humanity and staying.

    Dedication

    Dedicated, with much love and admiration, to my mother and father.

    Hey, Dad, I think it’s time to get a guinea pig.

    Hi, Mom!

    Acknowledgement

    To my editor, Jamie Rose. Without you, editing would feel like being dragged over glass. You are an amazing woman, editor and teacher. Thank you for all you do. A huge thank you to the rest of the team at TEG. Emmy, I always look forward to your creations. You never cease to amaze me.

    A special thank you to my readers and my family. None of this would be possible without your support.

    Trademarks Acknowledgement

    The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of the following wordmarks mentioned in this work of fiction:

    Jeep: FCA US LLC

    Hummer: AM General

    An old Cherokee is teaching his grandson about life. A fight is going on inside me, he said to the boy.

    "It is a terrible fight, and it is between two wolves. One is evil. He is anger, envy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority and ego. He continued, The other is good. He is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith. The same fight is going on inside you—and inside every other person, too."

    The grandson thought about it for a minute then asked his grandfather, Which wolf will win?

    The old Cherokee replied simply, The one you feed.

    —Cherokee Indian Legend

    Preface

    The Year 2216, World War 4—The War of Embers

    After the third war, the population of the world had been cut in half. Countries had been left in ruins, their people starved and dying. Four major cities had remained that controlled each corner of the planet. The President of each city had held power over who lived and who died. And for the most part, everyone outside of the golden gates of each city had died.

    As the fourth war was coming to an end, the Insolvents—the poor—mastered the gift of using innate abilities buried deep within the subconscious. It was discovered that a small group of the population was born with these abilities. They banded together and stood up against the four largest powers. They called themselves Embers. Each Ember had the power to spark a fire and all it took was one spark to start a revolution. A life of misery was the fire from which they climbed and they planned to use it to burn the Authority to the ground.

    Almost every major city was destroyed, their leaders dragged out into the open and executed. There was one city remaining, Cinder City. It was surrounded by three state rings—Fringe, Boundary and Limits—and run by the Authority, President Atlas Gold, the tyrannical leader of the golden city. The Authority governed all corners of the world now and had ultimate power. The Embers were aware that this would be their final stand.

    Cinder was where they would all fall, killed on the grounds that would soon host the Ember Harvest—the killing of children who displayed the original Embers’ abilities, for the Authority would never risk another war. They would remove the sparks—the Embers—before they started another revolution.

    Part One

    The Raptus

    Raptus (n): Latin, meaning—snatched, having been snatched, grabbed, having been grabbed, carried off, having been carried off.

    The most powerful weapon on earth is the human soul on fire.Ferdinand Foch

    Chapter One

    Present day

    My mother, Ezra—God rest her soul—was a proud Chippewa woman and an Ember sympathizer, so they say. I think she had just gotten tired of sending children to their deaths. Those who weren’t afraid to talk say that she had been part of an activist group, Free Embers. They had stood against Cinder City and the Authority, President Atlas Gold. She and twenty others had tried to storm City Center. They’d never even made it to the Golden Gates. All of them had been shot for treason. Forty bystanders had been killed on that same day by stray bullets. The City Controllers had opened fire on a square full of men, women and children. The Authority’s message had been heard by all. No one stood against President Atlas Gold and lived to talk about it. He’d sooner kill his own people than allow the faintest whisper of hope to spread. The Authority saw hope as a sickness and a bullet was the cure. Hope was harder to come by than grain outside the Golden City.

    I was named after her, my mother, Ezra Larkin. I was the last person in all the Rings to be of my mother’s people—Chippewa. Even as a young girl, I understood that the Chippewa people could end with me. My father Cor—an Irish hothead with the temperament of a caged lion—didn’t speak much about my mother. Some said he was ashamed of her, but I think he missed her so much that it hurt him to speak her name. The odd times he did talk about her, it was usually about my stubborn nature being much like hers or how my laughter reminded him of her.

    I don’t remember my mother. A part of me thinks of it as a blessing. The other part sees it as a curse. Not remembering her means I don’t miss her in the same gut-wrenching way my father does, but it also picks at my soul that I didn’t get to know my own mother. I was six years old when she was killed. I have a single photograph of us together— her, myself and my father, in front of the Golden Gates of Cinder City, but it did nothing to trigger even the faintest of memories. I keep it inside my pillowcase.

    Every now and again I have a dream of her and me together. In my dream, she comes to sit with me and listens to me tell her about my life. In my dreams, I knew she was dead. She would always look like she did in her photo. Even in my dreams, the Authority could punish me, reminding me of what he’d taken from my father and me. Some folks in Limits—the ring where we lived—said my father was born and raised in Cinder City and fell in love with the woman who cleaned his family home. As punishment for loving a lower class, he had been sent to live out his days on the edge of the world he’d grown up in. I don’t think my father saw that as a punishment, given that he’d gotten the girl in the end.

    Cinder City had once been called The Promised Land, or so that was what I’d read in my father’s old texts. It was nothing like that now, at least, not unless you were born on the other side of those gates with skin the color of snow and eyes as blue as the sky. The world—or what I knew of it—had been divided into two groups, the promised ones and those of us who scrubbed their toilets. We were called the Solvents and Insolvents—those who mattered and those who didn’t. At birth, the Insolvents were tagged with a small GPS chip. They said it was for our own safety, in case we needed help. I didn’t buy it and neither did anyone else. All it did was make it easier to hunt us. That tag was how they’d found my mother and killed her.

    Every year, Cinder officials opened their Golden Gates and held the Ember Harvest. The Harvest was a test of the potential Embers. It is said that over three hundred years ago the Insolvents had grown tired of their treatment and had developed the ability to awaken deadly parts of their minds then had waged war against Cinder City. Now, as a precaution, every child is tested for the Scoria Singularity—remnants of the genetics from a time the world was almost destroyed overnight.

    If someone showed the first signs, detected in a blood test, they were shipped to Ember Gates. They said that each generation burned almost as brightly as the generation that had waged war, and that is why they were called Embers. An Ember burns as hot as the fire which created it. During testing, the genetics of those who were Embers lit up like the Fourth of July, glowing hotter than anyone else.

    The auditorium where the Harvest was held was smack dab in the middle of Cinder City. It held over eight hundred people in comfort, but for the Harvest it would be far too packed to consider it anything but sad and hot. That happened during Cinder City’s yearly Harvest of the Embers, aka taking children who were potential Embers and carting them off to an unknown location, never to return. I had been attending the Harvest since I could remember. It was mandatory for all citizens to attend. It was the only time I wore anything but torn jeans and sneakers. It was a rare occasion when the Insolvents mixed socially with the Solvents, where the color of our skin didn’t matter. Or at least, for one day, they didn’t point it out.

    This time I’d be there as a potential Ember. It was an odd feeling. I never knew what happened to the Embers. After they had been named, they had been taken away. I only knew that they never came back. And now that I might learn what had happened to them. I would be content never finding out. The night would be a celebration. We would dance, enjoy spirits and foods that we Insolvents never had on the outskirts of Cinder City. Although many parents would be leaving in tears as they understood what was happening, I had always looked forward to the celebration following the Harvest. Aside from the dramatic build-up and muffled screams at the end, it had been a lot of fun. Thinking of it that way was better than facing the truth for most of us. The truth was, children were dying, all in the name of some debt Cinder City said we owed for a war we’d never started.

    I would be attending with my best friend and ring neighbor, Zowie Tate. I had been friends with Zow for my entire life. That was how it was in our ring. It was small enough that everyone here knew everyone else and bonds were as long as life. Our parents had grown up together and I was sure our kids would too. Zow and I were only children, as it was for a lot of the families in the rings. There was a birthing cap of two in place for the families who couldn’t afford to purchase a license to have more, but most families could just afford one. If ever a son or daughter was taken to Ember Gates, the family could have another child if they wished. Such was the way of life here. We were all replaceable.

    There were three belts around the pristine city of Cinder. The first ring was called Fringe. It housed those who worked in Cinder and had enough money to be considered well-off and never struggled for a meal. Those in Fringe could almost pass for Cinder, with lighter skin and hair. As the population grew, it was reshuffled to accommodate a new ring. The second ring was Boundary. It housed the lower middle-class and provided Cinder with their primary source of power from the rivers and falls. It held four hydroelectric power plants. Then there was Limits, last to be created. We were low enough on the pole to not have a class of our own. Limits provided the fruits and vegetables, grains and meats for Cinder.

    Limits’ residents were all darker skin, like it somehow made us lesser people pushed to the edge of society. My father’s textbooks said racism had been abolished in the early twenty-second century, but being on this side of the fence, I called bullshit. Mankind crumbled generations ago in the exact spot where I was standing—segregation, death camps and hate. For every step humanity had taken forward, Cinder City had plunged it back fifty steps into a pit of xenophobia, death squads and armbands. I didn’t say it out loud. No one did. Well, no one who was still alive muttered such things.

    Each ring of said ‘Promised Land’ was surrounded by a fence that no one was brave enough to scale, with four gates that opened in the morning and shut at the end of the day. With one exception, Harvest night, when the gates remained open for twenty-four hours. Being caught outside your zone after the gates had closed was a direct ticket to Cinder Cells. No one risked being tossed in Cells because no family had enough money to ransom their freedom. And on the edge of Limits stood a fence with no gates and no escape, patrolled by Cinder Controllers. There would be no arrest for trying to get out. You were shot and your family would be billed the cost of the bullet used. Genocide was alive and well. I don’t think it had ever really gone away—not for us, not for those who stood out like a dark shadow among white daisies.

    At the promising age of eighteen, straddling childhood and adulthood, it was my turn for the Harvest, to see if I was an Ember. When I should be planning my future, being courted for marriage and a family, I was preparing for what could be my immediate death. This didn’t seem fair to me. My father had tried to prepare me as much as he could. He’d told me not to worry. Since the beginning of the Harvest, my family had always been safe. No one in our line had ever held the Scoria Singularity, but there was always a risk. I prayed to my mother’s ancestors for strength and for them to guide me. My father had promised my mother that he would teach me about her people, and every day since I can remember, my father has told me stories and taught me prayers.

    My father had gone through the Harvest, just like every other soul in the rings. He said he had been a nervous wreck. But once it was over, it was over for good. After that, once a year it was just another party where someone else worried. Once he’d had me, his fears had come back tenfold. Now, he was scared of each Harvest and awaiting the unknown fate that hung over our family like a storm cloud.

    To take my mind off the impending doom, I focused on the potential after-party. For those who weren’t named an Ember, it was a grand celebration. Now that I could be named, I realized just how great a celebration it could be. I would dress the part, in case I did get to go home, so if I didn’t I wouldn’t be dragged away in rags. I stood in front of my mirror, staring at my high cheekbones, and could almost see my mother staring back at me. I was dressed in a hand-me-down from a few houses up. They hadn’t needed it anymore. Their daughter had been taken to Ember Gates the past year and had never come back. I didn’t dare say it out loud, but this was one of the only perks to finding out someone you knew was an Ember. There weren’t many of those to be had around here, either. It was odd, how we’d just gotten used to saying thank you for bags of clothes from families of dead children. It was normal in the rings.

    Tomorrow night would be the commencement rituals of the Harvest. We would be carted off to begin the first round of tests that would lead up to the event. Tonight, things in Limits were somber. There were no children playing outside and no screams of laughter. There was nothing. It was as if someone had died but not yet, though I didn’t know if Embers were killed or not. I was betting they were. It was said that once they went to Ember Gates, they waited until their maturity had completed and were not just murdered as I had suspected. Cinder doctors had found the age of eighteen to be the perfect age to take us. It was cheaper to do it at the height of puberty. They didn’t have to feed and house us for as long. If you didn’t display advanced signs of the Scoria Singularity, you were allowed to go home—or that was what we all were told during our Harvest Preparation classes. But no one ever came back. Not once. Never in the history of ever had someone returned.

    I pulled off my armband with its patch that said ‘Limits’ and stared at it for a moment, running my fingertips over the red embroidered lettering. All of who I was had been reduced to a small black and scratchy armband. It told the world around me that I was at the bottom because my mother was Chippewa and my father Irish. My heritage meant I could die, but a possible death was not something I was interested in celebrating. I removed my pale-yellow dress and hung it up over my cracked mirror. Everything I owned was damaged or scratched or stained in some fashion. I had a fleeting moment of wondering what it had been like those many years ago when everyone’d had the same chance in life. My father had said there were no divisions such as this hundreds of years ago. And there had not been one Authority overseeing all. The world once had many leaders and laws that governed them. Not anymore. The Authority was the one and only law.

    The first horn of the evening sounded. There were three hours left until the gates between the rings would be locked. Like clockwork, every sixty minutes another horn would sound, the final one being a long warning blast. I pulled my long dark hair into a ponytail, slipped on my ripped jeans and sneakers and climbed out of my window. I didn’t have far to drop. We lived in a single-story home, mostly built of rejected wood from Cinder. The windows were broken, and each time a fire broke out, my room turned into a wasteland for the lungs. Because my father was a carpenter, our home was one of the nicer ones in Limits.

    Ten yards from the back of my house stood the fence of no return with red and white warning signs that were polite enough to let us know that the sign was the only warning we would get. A single bullet from a Cinder Controller would be the next step in their attempts at keeping us inside our ring. There had been times that children had found a way out of the fence. They had never been seen again. I didn’t know what was out there, but it couldn’t be good if it was eating up wandering children. The whole thing stunk. How does a person become lost when Cinder Controllers could punch in someone’s GPS information and find them in a fraction of a second? I suppose we just weren’t important enough to spare the manpower for a search.

    Breathing in the evening air, I could almost smell the roses that grew along the metal fence. It mixed with the scent of warm bread cooking in Limits. That bread was not for us. It would be shipped to the Harvest celebration. It was torture, the smells of foods we weren’t allowed to touch. My stomach growled. I had eaten dinner but it hadn’t been enough. I was always hungry. Limits didn’t waste food or overeat, not when Cinder controlled every grain we used. We never risked running out. Cinder had a way of keeping us underfed, always forcing us to submit to their will. To prove this, the Authority would cut the rations in half every so often, as a reminder of who had the real power. I didn’t see why they bothered. We all knew who was in charge. No one questioned it.

    I stood a foot from the rear fence with my gaze following the steel chain-link to the top. I had never seen a Controller walking the fence, but I was pretty sure they were watching in some way or another. Every twenty feet a metal pole stood cemented into the ground. Fixed to the top of each post were cameras and a walkway that attached to each pole. I had spent almost twenty-four hours watching the fence from my bedroom window and never did Zow or I ever see a Controller. I wasn’t brave enough to test out my theory of their nonexistence. To be wrong would mean death. I was curious, not stupid.

    Wait up, Ezra, Zow called out from behind me.

    Zow jogged from her house against the fence at the end of my block. Her curly black hair flowed out behind her. Zowie Tate was darker than the midnight sky but much more beautiful. Her silky hair was a froth of shiny curls, wild and free. How I wished she could be that way, too—wild and free and full of choice and life. Each night she and I ran the fence line until our legs shook and our lungs burned. I used to jog it with my father. Eventually, he had grown tired of running in more ways than one. Over the years, he’d become weary of many things, but he had never failed to make sure I was loved and ready for just about anything. He’d taught me how to trap rabbits, how to protect myself, build a fire out of nothing and if I had to, survive on my own. If ever I found myself on the other side of the fence, my father wanted me to be ready.

    Zow, on the other hand, was a little slower to catch up. The Tate family had come from a long line of farmers. Not many of the ones in Limits had skills outside raising piglets and collecting eggs from their hens. They didn’t have time to be anything more. The Tate family was decent to the bone, as was Zow, but she wouldn’t survive ten minutes outside the fence. She didn’t have a live-or-die mentality. Her soul was far too pure for that. If love could feed a nation, I’d never starve near her.

    Winded, Zoe nudged my shoulder as she jogged beside me. Honestly, Ezra, do you think we’d ever be lost on the other side of the fence?

    No, but better safe than sorry.

    Zow peered around me, looking out to the tree line

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