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First published in Great Britain by HarperVoyager 2016
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Laura Liddell Nolen asserts the moral right to
be identified as the author of this work.
A catalogue copy of this book is available from the British Library.
This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the authorâs imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.
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Source ISBN: 9780008113636
Ebook Edition © March 2015 ISBN: 9780008113636
Version: 2016-08-10
They came for me at dawn, and all I could think was, it is way too early for this.
And actually, it might have been. Adamâs programming tended to be erratic at the best of times, and downright scary at the worst. Looking back, I guess we should have been grateful. Surely any dawn at all, however cruel, is better than the endless night of space.
Hindsight, and all that.
âCharlotte Turner.â The judge glanced at me over the top of her delicate, silver-rimmed glasses. The crowd quieted down, just for a moment, in spite of itself, but when rough hands shoved me up onto the platform, giving the Remnant its first good look at me, the shouting cranked right back up again. Death to the traitor! and Sheâs a terrorist! Worse than the Commander! echoed through my mind.I stopped trying to make sense of the words, letting them roll over me like pebbles on a riverbed, until I heard one I couldnât ignore: Throw her out the airlock.
Something like fear, or horror, made me tilt up my chin and square my shoulders. My tongue was nearly numb, so I turned up the corners of my mouth to keep from crying.
âIâm glad to see that we amuse you, Prisoner.â Her voice was warm and sure, like a kindly librarian, and sounded older than her face appeared. âYou got any last words before we vote?â
âVote?â I twisted around to look at her. Gray hair. Wrong side of forty, especially up here. Slightly heavy in her chair, but thin to the point of frailty around the shoulders. Nothing about her qualified her for a spot on the Ark. But then, this was the Remnant: the Earthâs last rebels. So she fit right in.
She returned the favor, sizing me up before responding. âOn your sentence.â She raised her eyebrows, anticipating my reaction. âLife or death.â
From my new vantage point, I could see the upturned faces of the crowd, and I scanned them as fast as I could, a growing sense of desperation gnawing at my lungs.
No Isaiah, which stung. No Adam, thank goodness. There was the gardener, a withered old man whoâd taught me how to grow potatoes, and maybe a couple hundred strangers, including a large group of feral-looking children whose faces I searched more thoroughly.
No West.
The thought of his face, his wide brown eyes, flared through my mind, and I felt a weird sense of disconnect, like trying to laugh and gasping for air all at once. It had been years since Iâd seen my brother, and I was so close. I searched and searched, but the room grew smaller as my panic expanded, and I ran out of places to look before I found him.
I pressed my lips together. In my experience, these things tended to go a lot better if you dropped the act and showed a little vulnerability, but again, there was my brotherâs face in my mind, so my ribs were like steel around my lungs.