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The Firefly Code
The Firefly Code Read online
Praise for Megan Frazer Blakemore
“An intricate mystery. . . . Will surely fascinate fans of Lois Lowry’s The Giver.” —School Library Journal
“Less stark than The Giver, this welcome addition to the dystopic utopia genre is a young cousin of Ally Condie’s Matched and Mary Pearson’s The Adoration of Jenna Fox.” —Kirkus Reviews
“Will have children turning pages and thinking about important questions.” —Booklist
“This creepy, memorable novel is a welcome addition to the relative few utopian/dystopian books for pre-YA readers. . . . An ending that will have readers eagerly anticipating the next installment.” —BCCB
“In this gripping novel, Blakemore creates a disturbingly ordered world in which questions about friendship and family offer courageous and heartwarming testaments to the human spirit.” —Publishers Weekly
“Fans of The Giver and the like will greatly enjoy this middle-grade dystopian novel.” —The Horn Book
A Kirkus Reviews Best Children’s Book of the Year
A Bank Street Best Book of the Year
A New York Public Library Best Book for Reading and Sharing
★ “This one is special.” —Kirkus Reviews, starred review
“The Water Castle is full of adventure and mystery, but mostly it’s about the importance of family, friendship and home.” —Washington Post
“What shines through . . . is Blakemore’s tender understanding of how these children—and all children—feel about their lives and the adults who control them.” —New York Times Book Review
“Thought-provoking. . . . A tribute to the great girl detectives of children’s literature.” —New York Times Book Review
“Hazel’s inquisitiveness, independence and imperfections are a winning combination.” —Kirkus Reviews
“A must-have selection for middle school mystery lovers.” —School Library Journal
“Readers will find this page-turner filled with adventure and will become enthralled with trying to come up with answers to the riddles.” —School Library Connection
To Maria Albrecht’s EEE classes at the Clinton School for Writers and Artists 2014–2015, and to all the young writers:
Keep building your brave new worlds.
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 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
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Acknowledgments
The Firefly Five’s journey continues in . . .
About the Author
Get swept away by these stories by Megan Frazer Blakemore!
Books by Kate Messner!
Books by Megan Frazer Blakemore
1
Everyone goes to sleep at the same time on Firefly Lane. You can watch the lights switching off around the cul-de-sac like dominoes falling. And when the lights are off, it’s almost like the houses are empty.
That’s when I like to walk around.
In the summer, sometimes I sleep in our yard in a dusty old blue tent, so it’s easy to slip out and walk through our neighborhood by the light of the moon. The night, it robs the houses of their color, and they look even more alike than in the day.
I sidestep the halos from the streetlights that give off a subtle buzz from their solar-charged batteries, and dance in the dark spaces in between.
Each house is like a sleeping baby, nestled back on a lawn turned gray by the moon, quiet and peaceful. If I had been around fifty years ago, when Old Harmonie was formed, back in the early part of the twenty-first century, I might have done things a little differently. I might have chosen to put the houses farther apart, with more trees between them, and I would have built different styles of houses, too. But back then, they were in a rush. They did the best they could.
And maybe it’s the sameness of it all that makes it feel so comfortable, like our whole community is wrapped together in a sun-warmed blanket. Maybe they knew exactly what they were doing.
I like to walk down across the tennis courts, my hand trailing along the top of the nets, then into the woods, which smell of old leaves and hypnum moss. Twigs crack beneath my feet and the glow from the streetlamps disappears and I go all the way back to the fence. It’s just a demarcation. It’s not meant to keep anyone out or anyone in, not really. It’s not the fence that keeps us safe, it’s us.
Sometimes I can see the glow of lights from Boston. I know that beyond this fence is another world, one teeming and confused. I know this from what I have learned in school and from what our parents say and from the pictures on the news that they try to shield us from. But behind this fence, it seems impossible that we could be anything but safe.
2
The cake at Theo’s Thirteenth was built like a set of stairs going up and up and up and twisting back on itself. Climbing the stairs in their impossible loop were tiny round bots that cycled around the cake like moons around a planet. I wondered briefly if maybe his latency had something to do with robotics—first the drones that had delivered the invitations, and now these bots. But then my mind was drawn back to the cake. Each stair was a different flavor: chocolate, vanilla, raspberry, pistachio, lemon, coconut, almond, strawberry, mocha—on and on and on. I had never known there could be so many different flavors of cake.
“How is this even possible?” I asked Benji and Julia.
“Programming those bots would actually be pretty basic,” Benji said. “I could show you how if you wanted. Easy peasy.”
“No, I mean all those flavors of cake!”
“I heard his mom went to, like, six different bakeries, including some on the outside,” Julia said, scuffing her patent leather shoe against the ground. She wore a purple dress that was way tighter than anything my parents would ever let me wear. Its straps were skinnier than those on the tank tops she usually wore, and I could see how deeply golden her skin had already turned in the sun. I tugged on the capped sleeve on my own blue dress, dotted with tiny white flowers.
“Theo’s mom never goes outside of Old Harmonie,” I replied. It was an overwhelming decision, which flavor of cake to have, but I was leaning toward coconut with a little bit of the raspberry. Or maybe mango with lemon frosting.
“Right, exactly,” Julia said. “But for her perfect baby’s Thirteenth, anything goes.” She brushed her hand over her shoulder. Normally she wore her dark hair in two tight braids, but today it was twisted into a fancy poof at the back of her head, threaded through with purple ribbons. My hair was so plain in contrast: long and straight with only a thin headband to hold it out of my eyes. We had almost the exact same shade of dark-brown hair, but that was where the similarities ended. She was tall, and I was short. She liked sports and boys and doing craft projects, and I didn’t really care for any of that. I liked growing things and being out in the woods and reading books, which she could do without.
But those were all just surface things, about as relevant as the color of our hair. What mattered was that we knew each other inside and out, backward and forward, and would be there for each other no matter what. That’s what makes a best friend.
The party was being held in the function hall of Krita headquarters. It looked like a big red barn right down to the huge sliding doors, but no animal had ever lived there. The doors were closed, but the windows were open to let in the summer breeze while the air coolers spun the warm air until it chilled. Big glass globes hung from the high ceiling, the lights inside slowly changing their soft colors, right through the rainbow. It wasn’t easy to get access to the function hall. It was mostly meant for corporate events—team-building things or quarterly meetings or celebrating new patents. Usually people held their Thirteenths in their own village at a restaurant or maybe the local library. I was hoping to have mine in the village museum. I planned to announce my latency right by the display of dinosaur bones.
I looked over at Theo, who, at that moment, was at the center of a bunch of the top administrators of the Krita Corporation. He looked small in his blue suit, smaller than the men and women who gathered around him bestowing their worldly advice on him. Even his shaggy hair, which I had heard some of the eighth-grade girls call “swoony,” made him look like a little boy. Personally, I thought his hair was ridiculous. I regularly wished for a pair of scissors so I could cut those bangs right off. They were always falling across his face, blocking out his honey-brown eyes. Not that I noticed the color of Theo Staarsgard’s eyes.
“I wonder if he already knows,” I said. “Do you think she’s already given him his code?”
“I can tell you what Theo’s genetic code is,” Julia replied. “One part smarts, one part good at sports, two parts sarcasm, and nine thousand parts ego.”
“I don’t think there’s any DNA for ego,” Benji said.
“Actually,” I began, but then stopped myself. No time for a nature versus nurture debate in the middle of the party, especially when there was a giant cake to contemplate. The way the bots moved around it made me think of a double helix of DNA, twisting around itself. That had to be intentional: it’s on our thirteenth birthdays that we find out our genetic codes. People can either be natural, which is the old-fashioned way: with genetic material from the mom and the dad. Or they can be designed, which means that their DNA was cloned or modified, either because one of the parents had genetic or fertility problems, or because they just wanted more of a say in how their kids turned out. It doesn’t really matter in the grand scheme of things—there’s value in being natural and value in being designed. That’s what our parents always say, anyway.
Benji tugged at his bow tie. “This cake looks amazing, but a little over-the-top for my liking. My Thirteenth is going to be a black-and-white theme. Everyone is going to dress in black and white except for me. I’m going to get an all-red suit.”
“ ’Cause that’s not over-the-top,” Julia said.
“I’m going to rock it,” Benji said. “And my cake will have white frosting with black, I don’t know, maybe like a crisscross pattern or like my old-school Vans sneakers, but then the inside—red velvet.”
“Nice,” I said. The air cooler above our head hitched and sent down a fine mist of water that caught the color-changing light and made its own tiny rainbows.
Theo broke away from the grown-ups and came over to us. “Not one word about the cake,” he said.
“I was just wondering which flavor to choose is all.” I looked closely at his face, trying to discern if there was anything different about him. Could he possibly have had his latency yet? What was it? Would I be able to tell? He was the first person I really knew well who had turned thirteen, and I had about a million questions for him. But Theo wasn’t the kind of guy to open up and give you all the answers you wanted.
“What are you staring at, Mori? I mean really, take a holopic, it’ll last longer.”
“Things I do not want in my possession: a holopic of Theo,” Julia said.
“I was just wondering, I mean, I was just— Did you get your code yet?”
Theo sunk down into a nearby couch. “It was bad enough talking about it with my mom.”
“Sounds like a fun conversation,” Benji said.
“Yeah, right?” Theo laughed. Theo didn’t have a dad, just his one mom. But it didn’t mean he couldn’t be a natural. It just meant that whoever gave the male DNA wasn’t in the picture. “She did say she was just going to choose from the donor bank, or from the genetic codes they have saved down there, but she couldn’t find one that had brown eyes, mathematical aptitude, and a Scandinavian background. So, she got part of the genetic material from the bank, that’s the Scandinavian side, and the rest she had them customize; then she strung it all together and—well, I didn’t really care to learn the details of the next part of the process.”
“So does that make you designed or natural?” I asked. We weren’t supposed to care. It was part of why they waited to tell us until we were thirteen, but I was still curious. I was pretty sure that I was designed. I was just a little bit too imperfect to have been the result of millions of years of nature improving itself.
“It was a natural egg mixed with custom genetics, so I guess designed? I don’t know. She said it meant I was the best of both, and then she pinched my cheek. It was like the best day of her life.”
I wanted to ask him what his latency was, but sometimes they make a big deal of it at the party, and I didn’t want to spoil his mom’s plans. Sometimes parents will put the word on a piece of paper and bake it into a cake, or show a movie of the person’s life and reveal the latency at the very end.
The DJ started playing this old song, a line dance to get everyone dancing. Theo groaned, but Julia clapped her hands and dragged me out onto the dance floor. I tried to follow along with the instructions of the singer, but I always seemed to be stomping with my right foot when he was telling us to crisscross, and I had never been sure what it meant to “turn it out.” So I kind of hobbled along next to Julia and Benji. I looked back over my shoulder to Theo, who was still sitting on the sofa.
Julia spun me around so that I was facing the right direction. She held my hand and I watched her feet instead of listening to the music, my glasses slipping down my nose so the world got even fuzzier. Julia was laughing, though, and Benji, too. It felt good to be there laughing with them. I was lucky to have my two best friends with me, lucky to have them as neighbors on Firefly Lane, and lucky that we all lived together in Old Harmonie.
When the music stopped, Theo and his mom were up on the stage of the function hall. He shuffled and looked at his feet. Ms. Staarsgard clasped her hands together and said, “Welcome, everyone! We are so pleased to have you all here to celebrate Theo’s Thirteenth with us.” She put an arm around him. She really was a beautiful woman. A handsome woman, actually. I had never understood that term, but it suited her, with her sharp jaw and long nose. Theo had that same nose.
Julia looped her elbow through mine. “Poor Theo. He looks like he’s going to implode up there,” she said. Then she tightened her grip around my arm. “DeShawn. Two o’clock.”
I turned my head to the right to see DeShawn Harris, the light of Julia’s life. He was standing with a bunch of the other high school boys, sipping a fizzy orange out of a glass bottle. He had a new watchu, a silver one that cuffed around his wrist and was embedded with tiny lights that pulsated softly, red, blue, and green. It was one of the newest models, and I knew Benji was already planning to ask his parents for one just like it.
“Don’t look,” she whispered. “Is he looking at me?”
“He wasn’t. But maybe he is now. I can’t tell because you don’t want me to look.”
She sighed melodramatically.
At the microphone, Ms. Staarsgard continued speaking. “As we all know, this is a big day in any young person’s life. The future is about to open up, much like a satellite pulls back to show
not just our small town, but the world, and the universe: bigger and bigger, on and on.”
I didn’t spend as much time with Ms. Staarsgard as I did with the other parents, so I had forgotten her odd way of talking.
“Krita and Old Harmonie have always been places of innovation, and in the coming years we will be going in bold new directions. It is so pleasing to me to know that Theo and his friends will not only be going along in those bold new directions, but also, in a short time, they will be leading the charge.”
This was the same type of stuff the Krita executives were always saying—stuff that sounds good and important, but when you think about it, really doesn’t say much at all.
Ms. Staarsgard turned and faced Theo, which made him blush even harder. “Thank you for all the joy you’ve given me, dear Theo. The world is opening up to you, and I cannot wait to see where you choose to go!”
The crowd clapped politely. Theo stepped toward the microphone. “Thanks, Mom. And thank you to everyone for coming.” He took a deep breath. A breeze came through the open windows of the function hall and stirred the silver and blue streamers that hung from the ceiling.
“The four core values of our community are creativity, ingenuity, experimentation, and order.” He tugged on the bottom of his suit coat. “These are the values that guide our decisions, and that allow us to succeed.”
“Oh, geez,” Julia said.
“Seriously,” Benji said.
“What?” I asked. Those were the values of Krita, and they were good values. Without them, we’d be just another town, no better than the world outside. I knew Benji and Julia believed that, too. She still had her arm looped through mine, and I could feel her soft, soft skin. Julia, I was fairly certain, was a natural. Every little detail of her was just right.
“She’s already decided what he’s going to do when he grows up: Krita administration, just like her,” Benji explained.