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Authors: Beth Goobie

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General, #Juvenile Fiction, #Family, #Social Issues, #Values & Virtues, #JUV000000

As far as she knew, she was the only cadet who played with the scanners. Everyone else simply stuck out their wrist and passed through the beam as if they didn’t give the process a second thought. As if they’d
never
given it a thought, Nellie mused, doing a quick forward-backward step through the beam. Even Phillip, and that made him a lousy cadet. What if an enemy of the Goddess broke into the complex and altered all of the scanner-beam frequencies, making them radioactive or killer microwave vibes? Phillip wouldn’t realize anything was wrong until it was too late and he was dead or ... no longer functional and had to be released. The saboteur wouldn’t even have to be someone from outside the complex. There was no one to stop Detta from running its deadly experiments on its own cadets. Certainly the instructors wouldn’t protest. Just look at how Col. Jolsen had released Lierin without a second thought.

Eyes slitted, Nellie continued to stand, glaring at the scanner. All of her superiors knew she did this. Westcott knew. Beyond the odd pejorative, no one really got on her case about it. They probably thought it was great training — a functional cadet never let down her guard. After all, the Great War was everywhere. And a functional cadet was expected to keep that awareness constantly in her thoughts.

Golliwash,
came the dreaded words inside her head.
Lies and superstition.

Nellie began to brush them away, then hesitated. Why not think about it? No one had
specifically
said it was forbidden to question the necessity of checkpoints and scanners. The reason given for their presence was possible infiltration by enemies such as the Jinnet and other Outback rebel groups, or infidel citizens of the Interior who’d turned against the Goddess and Her empire. “People are wicked,” the Goddess’s priests frequently reminded the cadets from the pulpit in the Advanced chapel. “The Interior needs scanners and
ID
chips to protect its citizens from pagans that lurk among us. An Advanced cadet is like a scanner or an
ID
chip, protecting society from evil, even the evil that lurks inside their own minds.”

And the minds of cadets were wicked, Nellie couldn’t argue with that. She had only to look inside her own to see thoughts of violence and killing, endless killing.
Still
, she thought, running a finger slowly through the security beam
, even if we all do evil sometimes — when the Goddess commands it, of course — would violence really erupt all over the Interior if the surveillance cameras and scanners were shut down?
Surely there weren’t that many traitors living inside the Interior. Couldn’t Detta simply ask civilians to report suspicious activity? Wouldn’t people be eager to help out? What if the Interior just ditched the scanners and
ID
chips, and stopped tracking people wherever they went? What if—?

Longing rose in a quick singing rush up Nellie’s throat. What if she, Nellie Joanne Kinnan, were free right now to walk through
every scanner in the Detta complex and up the long tunnel, then out into the sweet breezy streets of Marnan where she could mingle, just mingle, with kids on skateboards, street vendors, girls in swimsuits and mothers with their little kids? What could possibly be wrong with that?

And yet it was wrong, or so the priests said. Pure and unsullied, soldiers of light were to be kept separate, entirely unto themselves. Contact with civilians meant contamination, and contamination reduced a soldier of light to the black soul of the enemy. How could the Great War that had been waged from ages past between the Goddess of Light and the Dark Forces of the Outbacks be won if the Goddess’s soldiers allowed themselves to be defiled?

Nellie’s shoulders slumped and she stared dully at her feet. If there was one thing she knew above all to be true, it was the Goddess. The Goddess was the Mother of All, She was the life force that gave the stars their light and breathed air into people’s lungs. While it was true She could be as cruel as the electric shock that pushed a cadet to greater physical exertion, She was also as gentle as the peace that came after the Mind Cleanser had removed unnecessary mental debris. Who could question the depths of Her love and wisdom? Surely not Nellie, a cadet who mattered so little she could be released by her superiors at their slightest whim.

And yet she seemed to matter to Ivana, enough for the Goddess to have reached into her mind and opened filing cabinet MK5DZ. Hope flared in Nellie, straightening her shoulders. If the Goddess had decided she was to remember Lierin McNearn, perhaps She was also sending these questions about the scanners into the mind of Her humble devotee. Where else would they be coming from? Why it was even possible, Nellie thought in a rush of excitement, that the Goddess was whispering the words
Golliwash, lies and superstition
into her head.

Turning toward the checkpoint scanner, she swallowed the predictable surge of bile and walked through the security beam toward Station Seven.

“IT’S GOOD TO
see you again, Nellie.” With a smile, Juba fitted the Relaxer helmet onto Nellie’s head, then lowered the blinders into place and slipped the tiny speakers into her ears. “Now, just try to relax.” She patted Nellie’s shoulder gently as she checked to make sure the blinders were positioned properly. Wriggling her shoulder in distaste, Nellie listened to the firm click of the assistant’s heels crossing to the control panel. A whir filled her left ear, followed by the sound of ocean waves, their gentle heave and swish coursing through her brain.

Focus
, she thought. Inside the darkness of her head, a brightly painted sailboat took shape. Picking up a rock beside her foot, she heaved it at the boat.

“So, Nellie,” came Westcott’s voice in her right ear. “How are you today?”

“Okay,” said Nellie, bending down to work an especially large rock out of the sand. Cradling it in her arms, she stepped into the water and staggered toward the sailboat.

“Anything interesting happen to you since our last session?” asked Westcott.

“Nope,” said Nellie, dumping the rock into the bow. Turning around, she headed back toward shore.

“Oh, come now,” said Westcott cheerfully. “Nothing at all?”

“Nothing I can remember,” said Nellie, stooping to work another large rock out of the sand. A slight hook in the psychiatrist’s breathing caught her attention and she raced back over what she’d just said. Had she given anything away? No, she hadn’t said anything about—

Stop!
she yelled silently in her head. She had to remember she just could NOT think about certain things, or picture them in any way. Fiercely she went back to work, digging away at the large rock.

“Well,” Westcott said heartily. “Why don’t you tell me what you can remember?”

“Huh?” asked Nellie, pausing in her efforts to work the second rock out of the sand. This was different. Westcott didn’t usually ask questions that allowed long-winded answers.

“Go on,” said the psychiatrist. “Tell me what you can remember about this past week.”

“What I can remember?” faltered Nellie, staring at the ocean in her head. “Don’t you first want me to put my concerns and worries into the sailboat and send it over the horizon?”

“But that’s what I
want
you to remember,” the psychiatrist countered smoothly. “Just tell me about your week, and then we’ll send your worries over the horizon.”

“Well, um ... “ Instinctively Nellie probed the arm of the Relaxer with her right index finger, seeking the tip of the loose screw. A frown traced itself across her forehead and she probed again. The screw was gone. Panic swept her and she jabbed harder, feeling along the surface of the chair arm. Where could it have gone? The screw had been here for two years, slightly lopsided and out of position. How could it simply vanish?

No, here it was. Someone must have taken it out and rethreaded it, because the head now sat level with the surface of the chair arm. The screw wasn’t gone, it wasn’t gone at all. Fiercely Nellie pressed her finger against the tip but felt only smooth, precisely fitted, everything-in-place edges. Tears filled her eyes. It was here, all right. The screw was in position, functioning exactly as expected.

“Go on,” prodded the psychiatrist, a smile shaping his voice. “I’m waiting.”

Nellie stopped blinking back the tears and let them slide unresisted down her face. “I, uh,” she stammered. “I went to classes and we had a couple of movie nights, and I hung out in the gym the rest of the time.”

“And whom did you hang out with?” asked Westcott.

“Phillip,” Nellie said immediately. Finally, a question she felt safe answering.

“No one else?” asked Westcott.

“Sure,” she said carefully. “There were other kids.”

“But no one special?” said the psychiatrist.

“I dunno,” faltered Nellie. There it was again, that probing note in Westcott’s voice.

“Tell me, Nellie, don’t you wish there was someone special in your life?” he asked.

“Special?” Nellie asked, bewildered.

“Like a best friend,” said Westcott.

“I’ve got Phillip,” said Nellie.

“A best
girl
friend,” the psychiatrist said pointedly.

Fear struck, a web of electrodes strung across Nellie’s body. They knew. It must have been Phillip. He’d probably asked an instructor about a poison called Lierin, or keyed a search into the computer. “I’ve got girlfriends,” she said, fighting the telltale wobble in her voice.

“Tell me, Nellie,” said the psychiatrist, and she could feel him leaning in for the kill. “Do you remember anything about a girl named Lierin?”

“Lierin?” Nellie’s voice collapsed in on itself, barely a whisper.

“Yes, Lierin,” said Westcott. “She used to be an Advanced cadet, just like you.”

“No,” Nellie said, swallowing. “No, I don’t remember a girl named Lierin.”

“That’s good,” said the psychiatrist. “Because there are certain things that are better not to remember. And a girl named Lierin is one of them.”

“Why?” The single, tell-all word burst like a signal flare from Nellie’s lips. Her body convulsed once, helpless, but it was out. She couldn’t take it back.

“Why what?” asked Westcott.

“Why shouldn’t I remember a girl named Lierin?” Nellie faltered. “If, in fact, I do remember her, which I don’t.”

“Because the Goddess forbids it,” said the psychiatrist.

Beyond the rush and hiss of ocean waves in her head, Nellie heard the squeak of Westcott’s chair as he got to his feet. “The Goddess knows there is only so much each of us can keep in our minds at one time,” said the psychiatrist, continuing to speak calmly through the speaker in her ear as he came toward her. “An Advanced cadet has a lot of responsibility. You absorb enormous amounts of information every day in your classes, and that’s where you need to keep your focus. Everything else is non-essential. Whatever is non-essential, we discard.”

“How can a person be non-essential?” Desperately Nellie began to scan, trying to locate the psychiatrist by his vibes. But fear was everywhere, roaring in the air, blocking her attempt.

“Now Nellie, I never said a person was non-essential,” soothed the voice in her ear. There — she could hear Westcott’s footsteps now, coming up on her right. Creepy-crawlies swarmed her skin as an electrode slid under the Relaxer helmet and onto her right temple.

“No one is non-essential,” said the voice in her ear, “but the
memory
of someone might be.”

“But Lierin just lost her hand.” Nellie began sobbing outright, the tears pouring down her face. “She had a bad maze run and they couldn’t find her hand, so Col. Jolsen released her. Why did he have to do that? She could’ve learned to function without her hand. She was smart and fast. Her hand wouldn’t have mattered.”

“Col. Jolsen has been a Detta instructor for many years,” said Westcott, slipping a second electrode onto Nellie’s left temple. “And Lierin is with the stars now, you need to let her go.”

“Wait ... ,” whimpered Nellie.


Now
Nellie,” Westcott interrupted firmly. “This will be just like the Mind Cleanser. But first I want you to bring up filing cabinet MK5DZ. Have you done that?”

MK5DZ appeared in Nellie’s mind, half of its drawers open and empty. “Yes,” she whispered.

“Open the rest of the drawers,” said the psychiatrist.

Immediately, without Nellie consciously thinking it, the remaining drawers slid open.

“Empty out each drawer,” said the psychiatrist.

“But ... ,” protested Nellie as each drawer lifted itself out of the cabinet and overturned, folders sliding everywhere.

“Now, look around inside,” said Westcott. “Make sure everything important is put away and locked tight, except your memories of Lierin McNearn. Leave them out. Done that?”

Wordless, Nellie nodded.

“Now, relax,” said Westcott. “The Mind Cleanser will take care of everything.”

Nellie tensed, bracing herself as two blue-white jolts of light flashed through her brain. Her body convulsed, she grunted softly and slumped into the Relaxer. Thick throbbing sludge grumbled and burped in her head. Vaguely she felt something being removed from both temples.

“Tell me, Nellie, how do you feel now?” Cheerful as ever, Westcott’s voice purred through the speaker in her right ear.

“I dunno,” muttered Nellie. “A headache. I have a headache.”

“Oh, that’s too bad,” said the psychiatrist. “Would a candy help? A Lierinberry candy? Pardon me, I meant dengleberry.”

A ripple passed through Nellie’s brain, the faint sensation of something shoving against a locked door. Something that wanted out. “Yeah, sure,” she said dully. “A dengleberry candy.”

Juba’s heels clicked to the desk, then returned, and a candy was placed in Nellie’s hand. Unwrapping it, she slid it into her mouth.

“Now, Nellie,” said Westcott, his voice giving a small hitch as he sat down in his chair.

Chair?
thought Nellie dully, shifting in the Relaxer. When had Westcott gotten out of his chair? He was always in that thing, seemed to live in it like some kind of bizarre potted plant.

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