The Unidentified

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The Unidentified Page 1

by Rae Mariz




  The Unidentified

  Rae Mariz

  For AK

  Table of Contents

  X PRESS

  1 CHOICES

  2 ADVICERTIZE

  3 TRICKSTER

  4 CLIQUED

  5 WIRED

  6 LOOK AND LISTEN

  7 LOGGED OUT

  8 TAG, YOU’RE IT

  9 DIY DETECTIVES

  10 ILLEGAL ARTS WORKSHOP

  11 NETWORK

  12 GUILT BY ASSOCIATION

  13 BULLY BUYING

  14 TRENDSPOTTER

  15 THE FEELING OF FALLING

  16 LAST LAUGH

  17 TERMS AND CONDITIONS

  18 PRIVATE MESSAGES

  19 GENERATION TRIPLE-A

  20 KISS OFF

  21 HIGH PROFILE

  22 BEST FRIENDS FOREVER

  23 CORPORATIONS THROW THE BEST PARTIES

  24 APOLOGIES

  25 COORDINATES

  26 WAR GAMES

  27 WORST FEARS CONFIRMED

  28 SELLING REBELLION

  29 INTERESTED THIRD PARTIES

  30 KNOW WHO YOUR FRIENDS ARE

  31 PASSWORD PROTECTED

  32 FOLLOW ME

  33 CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES

  34 EPIDEMIC

  35 ZERO FRIENDS

  36 PREVIOUSLY UNKNOWN

  37 SECRET’S OUT

  38 THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN

  39 FLASH MOB

  GAME OVER

  Acknowledgments

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  X PRESS

  If reality TV cameras were installed in my high school, they would be focused directly on the Pit. That’s where all the drama plays out.

  Or wait, they’ve probably got cameras there already. All the security cameras from when the building was a mall, before it got converted into a school, before it became a site for the Game. Everyone knows we are being watched. It’s not even something to be paranoid about. It’s a fact.

  What I mean is, everybody acts like they’re on TV. Like we’re stars in our own private dramas. We’ll be talking to a friend and then all of a sudden, we’re AWARE of…I don’t know, being public. We start to say our lines too loud, waiting for the audience to laugh. Not for our friend to laugh, just…the world. The world is watching, somehow. And we want to entertain them. We want to be smart and funny. Clever, witty, loved.

  We want to know someone cares.

  We know the sponsors care. They invest in the schools because they care about what we wear, what we listen to, what we watch—and what we’re saying about what we wear, listen to, and watch. The cameras aren’t there for surveillance, they’re there for market research.

  The world is a giant squinty eye, peeking in through the skylight, spying.

  Does that creep us out? No. We like the attention.

  1 CHOICES

  We couldn’t agree on what to play. Mikey, me, and Ari. As always, the hi-def screens lining the Pit were flashing advertisements for classes, hyping workshops on the different floors, trying to get kids to log on to the sponsors’ featured activities for the day.

  Mikey stared over my head, his attention glued to the nearest screen. They were showing highlights from the Robot Combat Arena up in the DIY Depot on the fourth floor. Cinematic sparks flickered on the screen as scrap-metal robots engineered by kids here in school slammed into one another. Bam bam bam. Each machine trying to flip, stall, or destroy the others.

  The tinny sound of gears shrieking and crunching-metal groans escaped from the speakers. The noise mixed with the already impressive decibels of laughter and chatter rumbling in the Pit.

  Someone tried to squeeze past my chair and her loaded backpack whacked me in the back of the head.

  “Hey, watch it,” I said, turning to glare at the violator of my personal space.

  The tiny girl looked up from her intouch®. She mumbled a kind of apology that got lost in the noise, and ran to catch up with someone.

  She was obviously one of the newbies just getting started playing Level 13–17 in the Game. First off, she wore a backpack. That, like, shouts, I’m new and have no clue. Another few months and she’ll be trading it in for a designer handbag, just to survive.

  “Oh my god. That was Palmer Phillips’s little sister,” Ari said, craning to get a look at her. “You’d think that since her brother’s the spokesman of Generation Triple-A she’d have a little more…I don’t know, sense? Look at her.”

  The little sister of the most popular guy in school was wearing a pink hoodie polka-dotted with cartoon ponies and brown pants cut off at the knees. Her hair was pulled back into a classic prepubescent hairstyle, the messy ponytail. I’d never have guessed she was related to Palmer, “a metrosexual masterpiece,” as Ari liked to say. Except maybe the eyes; they had the same almost-amber eyes.

  “What’s her name?” I asked Ari.

  “Who?” she said, clicking through something on her notebook®.

  “Palmer Phillips’s little sister.”

  “Oh, Lexie. I think.” She glanced back at the girl. “It’s so weird to think we were ever that clueless.”

  “Yeah,” I said, agreeing with Ari, even though I didn’t.

  I thought it took a lot of guts for her to ignore the Level 13–17 catalogue so completely, especially since her brother practically published the thing himself. The online catalogue featured all the latest of the latest trends in the Game; what the top players were wearing, listening to, linking to, watching. What they were doing.

  Lexie was talking to a bore-core girl slouched in a chair a few tables away who didn’t seem to follow the prevailing fashion advice either.

  She was about my age—probably playing Level 15 and old enough to know better. Her shaved eyebrows were painted like exclamation points above her not-amused eyes. It was definitely a look designed to make you look…away. I wouldn’t say she was fat, but Ari might less-than-tactfully mention that she was on the wrong side of her ideal body weight.

  I couldn’t imagine what someone like Lexie Phillips had to say to someone like her.

  “Hey! Look at this!” Ari said, turning her notebook® so I could read the screen.

  My eyes flitted over the text. It was an article on confidence-building makeup tips. The girl in the photo looked like she was going to leap off the screen and eat me. Chomp, chomp. Was that how you’re supposed to appear assertive? She just kind of looked hungry to me.

  Ari had already spilled the contents of her bag out onto the white tabletop, looking for something, trying to get me interested in a grab new cosmetics brand.

  “This kohl-colored eyeliner would look amazing with your skin tone,” she said, holding up a stubby pencil.

  I was doubtful.

  “Come on, Kid. This will give your face some definition. You know, make you look significant.”

  She squinted at my face, pushed my hair back, touched my cheek. I tried to enjoy the affectionate gestures and ignore the critical look she was giving me. Her eyes scanned over my forehead and eyebrows, the areas around my eyes, but never looked into them. It made me feel way insecure.

  I hoped Mikey would come to my rescue, but he was still watching the screens, staring at the violent machines.

  I sighed and gave in to Ari’s makeover madness. I would do anything for Ari. She dragged the liner across my lower lash line. My eyes started to water.

  Ari set the built-in camera of her notebook® to the mirror function and turned it toward me when she was finished. A girl I barely recognized blinked back at me from the screen. The eyeliner kind of made it look like I got punched in the face two days ago. If that was supposed to make me feel confident, it, um…wasn’t working.

  Mikey glanced away
from the monitor during the commercial break and caught my eye. Not that he could’ve missed it. I felt uncomfortably conspicuous.

  “Nice,” Mikey said, and reached over to grab Ari’s eyeliner. “Do me! I want to look like a sad zombie clown too.”

  “No way. I’m not wasting any product on you.”

  Mikey tried different tactical maneuvers to wrestle the pencil out of her hand, but Ari was tenacious like a pit bull puppy. He couldn’t break her grip.

  I covertly smudged the stuff off my eyes and noticed that the bore-core chick with the eyebrows was sitting alone at her table again, watching the crowd in the Pit with calculated disinterest. Her gaze wandered over Ari and Mikey’s wrestling match, stopping for a moment on me before she slumped back in her seat and made a big display of how to develop “the yawn” into a lifestyle accessory.

  Ari finally let Mikey have the pencil and saw me watching the antiscenester girl.

  “Someone should tell her apathy went out of style with shotgun suicides,” Ari said. Then she stood up. “You want me to tell her?”

  I grabbed her arm. “No, wait.” I glanced at the girl in gray again. “Maybe boredom is retro?”

  Both Ari and Mikey laughed at me.

  “Listen,” Ari said. “Jaye told me the whole sulky subculture thing is so over. So over. It’s easy to be a mopey loser, but playing to win takes style. Want to see my victory dance?”

  She made a motion like flicking open a cigarette lighter. Extending first one thumb, then the other, until she was sitting there grinning with a two-thumbs-up gesture. She called this move “uncorking the champagne.”

  I groaned. “Don’t. Ari, please.”

  Ari started humming triumphantly out of tune and did a jerky dance in her seat, waving her thumbs around. She did an unconvincing robot dance, then tossed in some weird, wiggly, snake-charmer kind of moves.

  “Yeah, I don’t need to see this,” Mikey said, getting to his feet. “I’ll be in the Park. Call me when the show’s over, Kid.”

  “OK. Don’t forget to sign us up for Studio time.”

  Mikey nodded and walked away. He didn’t have much patience lately for Ari’s near-constant need for attention and ego-stroking.

  I waved to his back as he left us.

  Ari continued with her dork-bot dance moves, unfazed. I tried to ignore her, but it was impossible.

  “OK. You win!” I laughed and did a few dorky dance moves to make her happy.

  Ari was what all the Craftsters called manga. You know, comic cute, all animated and exaggerated. Ari pinky-swears to the world that she spent the first two years in the Game sporting geek-chic fashion, but for that to be true you’d have to drop the “chic.” Ari had been a no-win nerd, and in moments like these I could still see that the geek queen reigned supreme.

  Ari knocked down her bubble tea with an overly enthusiastic elbow.

  “Ah, dammit,” she muttered, tipping her cup right side up. All the tiny tapioca balls settled back to the bottom. Little pools of orange neon speckled the table where the milky tea had splooged out of the straw. A puddle of the stuff inched menacingly toward Ari’s notebook®.

  “My stuff! It’s getting all sticky!” she said, nearly hyperventilating.

  “Hey, don’t freak out,” I said, rescuing her notebook® from the goo.

  I grabbed a bunch of napkins and helped her wipe off her intouch®, makeup collection, and a bunch of retro Hello Kitty shit before putting it all back in her bag.

  “What are these?” I shook a prescription pill bottle, newly de-gunkified.

  “Vitamins,” she said sarcastically, throwing them back in her bag.

  She tossed the wadded-up napkin toward the trash can. It followed a tragically parabolic path to the floor, coming to rest nowhere near its target.

  “Nice shot. All the sporty footwear cool hunters are totally going to be swarming you with skills like that.”

  Ari laughed, a little too loudly. “Shut up,” she said and quick-sipped her bubble tea. She swallowed, then slapped the table with her hand, looking at me, eyes wide. “Hey! Did I tell you I started kickboxing?” She leaned back in her chair again. “I started kickboxing. It’s so effing zen.”

  I stared at her stumpy fingernails while she played with that fat straw. She just got her nails done. They were painted with photo-repros of this season’s top ten Idol contestants. As they got voted off the show, they got painted over on Ari’s nails. Lucky for me, because I didn’t follow the show, I could just glance at Ari’s fingertips and know what everyone was talking about.

  “Kid? Did you hear me?” Ari said, kind of annoyed that I wasn’t hanging on her every word. “I said, you’d be surprised how much pep you get knowing you can break someone’s knees, just like—” She started kicking my legs under the table.

  We’re best friends and I have the bruises to prove it.

  I pulled my legs up onto the chair, where Ari couldn’t reach them, but she had already lost interest. She was watching a group of girls make their way across the Pit. The crowd shifted slightly to welcome them into their midst. Everyone knew who these girls were. They were Fashion Fascists. These girls were the sponsors’ darlings. They were all on the It List, every one of them branded.

  The Fashion Fascists made their way through the crowd, announcing clique critiques in whispers meant to be heard. Eva Bloom, the dainty dictator herself, walked with them, not saying a word. Her disinterest in other people was generally more devastating than her insults.

  “Palmer Phillips is just all credit. So hot,” Quelly Atkins said above the clicking of the herd’s high heels. The others cashed in their agreement.

  “I can’t believe he’s going out with that Craftster skank Roksana Wronski.”

  “Only because she won that FreshFlash® photo contest. After the promo thing she did, they had to brand her,” Quelly said, examining the ends of her cinnamon red hair.

  “You mean that porno thing,” Ashleah Carter snarked.

  Their cutting laughter seemed to carry over to our table on a powdery cloud of girl-smell, a mix of fruity and vanilla-perfumed magazines.

  I watched Ari to see how she’d react to the Fascists speaking smut about her friend Rocket. She behaved pretty much as expected, picking up her intouch® and fanning the clique flame wars.

  aria: echo just called you a skank @ROCKET

  “Anyone notice how anti-fat she’s getting?” Quelly said almost wistfully. “I swear I could see vertebrae.”

  “Whatever. Fame is a fickle…um…something,” Echo Petersson said, looking at the designer shoes her sponsors had hooked her up with. “She just better watch her back.”

  “Palmer needs to drop her. Hard.”

  “Yeah, on her face. Like Cayenne,” Quelly said, laughing.

  “Who?” Eva said coldly, her one syllable completely voiding the poor girl’s existence.

  The giggling group of Fashion Fascists marched past. Ari watched them go.

  “Choke. Gag. Retch,” she said in a sardonic staccato. “Those little Hitlers are going to stink up the Sweatshop with that poison.” She pinched her nose and continued in a nasally whine, “They should get charged, like, emissions credits or something.” She read her intouch® and laughed. “Rocket’s so pissed about what they just said. She’s up on the fourth floor and about to pollute their moisturizer supplies…Hey, are you listening to me?”

  I wasn’t listening to her. I was watching a bird land on the planter by the trash can. It dive-bombed this other bird, then fluttered back up into the “trees” in the Pit. I tried to tap out the rhythm of its wing beats on the tabletop. It gave me an idea for a new song.

  It’s weird that the starlings were in the Game at all. They were an uncontrollable element in an otherwise carefully designed environment. The blackbird scavengers grew fat and sassy on the food remains of hundreds of sloppy teenagers and there was nothing the administrators could do about it. Those cute and ruthless little bastards perched on tables and stared, defi
ant and unblinking.

  I watched the birds fly up to the skylight, but lost them in the glare. The sky outside was white. Blank-screen boring.

  Up on the fifth floor, I saw two or three people fooling around by the railings. The figures moved like silhouettes against the featureless white sky, like shadow puppets dancing. Or wrestling. Or—

  The hairs on my arm electric-tingled. One of the puppets, one of the people, fell.

  I held my breath, all the noise in the Pit stopped. This was not happening.

  Someone had pushed a body over the edge. And it was falling.

  Ari didn’t see it, her attention was back on her notebook® mirror. She was making faces at the screen, fixing her lip gloss and stuff.

  The body landed with a dull thud maybe ten feet away from us.

  Thick red goop splattered when the body hit the ground, graphic horror film–style. A girl screamed and people stood up on chairs to get a better look.

  Where the head should’ve been, there was just a red splatter mark, like a burst water balloon. A sign taped to the back of the dummy’s sweater read:

  UNIDENTIFIED. CHOOSE YOUR SUICIDE.

  I turned away, but Ari didn’t react. She just stared at the figure lying facedown on the ground.

  A piece of the burst balloon face rested by my sneaker toe. The face was drawn on with black ink Sharpie. Shriveled up on the floor, it looked desperate and defeated. I picked it up.

  Ari checked her clothes for stains. Drops of splatter glistened on her chin. “What do you think they’re selling?” she asked.

  2 ADVICERTIZE

  Rumors and buzz rippled through the crowd as if the body had been a pebble thrown into a pool of water.

  Kids were inching their way up to the dummy body, taking low-res pictures of the aftermath, then leaving.

  Until the disturbance faded away into nothing.

  Ari was sure that it was a school-sponsored publicity stunt. She was only interested in it long enough to register that it was a bad publicity stunt, because she didn’t know what she was supposed to buy.

  “Fail,” she said in a jaded voice, looking around to see if anyone was interested in her opinion.

 

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