by Pintip Dunn
Advance praise for
Pintip Dunn’s Star-Crossed
“With cleverly written characters, an intriguing world, and heart-wrenching conflicts, Pintip Dunn delights with her exciting science fiction novel. Readers who love tough choices and high stakes will love Star-Crossed.”
—Jodi Meadows, New York Times bestselling author of the Incarnate series
“With a prose as incandescent as a nebula and a romance that blazes like the sun, Star-Crossed utterly consumed me from the very first page. Readers will savor this riveting, emotional tale of hope and supreme sacrifice.”
—Darcy Woods, award-winning author of Summer of Supernovas
“Pintip Dunn’s creative world-building brings to life a delicious tale full of depth and complexity. Star-Crossed will transport readers to another universe and leave them hungry for more!”
—Brenda Drake, New York Times bestselling author of the Library Jumpers series
“A bold and original YA sci-fi novel about love, survival, and sacrifice. Everything about this book is fresh, addictive, and mind-bending. Good luck putting it down!”
—Meg Kassel, award-winning author of Black Bird of the Gallows
“Pintip Dunn has crafted one multi-course meal of a story: a fascinating premise to whet the appetite, an entree of utterly compelling world-building seasoned with literary prose, and a forbidden romance that has all the decadence of the richest dessert.”
—Jen Malone, author of Wanderlost and Changes in Latitudes
“The most compelling read all year…This heart-pounding romance of love and sacrifice is impossible to put down.”
—Erin Summerill, award-winning author of the Clash of Kingdoms series
Table of Contents
Copyright
Dedication
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
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Chapter Thirty-Five
Chapter Thirty-Six
Chapter Thirty-Seven
Chapter Thirty-Eight
Chapter Thirty-Nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-One
Chapter Forty-Two
Chapter Forty-Three
Chapter Forty-Four
Chapter Forty-Five
Chapter Forty-Six
Acknowledgments
About The Author
More from Entangled Teen Frequency
Bring Me Their Hearts
Kiss of the Royal
Seventh Born
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2018 by Pintip Dunn. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.
Entangled Publishing, LLC
2614 South Timberline Road
Suite 105, PMB 159
Fort Collins, CO 80525
[email protected]
Entangled Teen is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.
Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.
Edited by Liz Pelletier
Cover design by Erin Dameron-Hill
Cover images by
Depositphotos, shutterstock, and iStock
Interior design by Toni Kerr
ISBN 978-1-63375-241-2
Ebook ISBN 978-1-63375-242-9
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition October 2018
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For my dad, Naronk, who is as wise and loving as a king.
Chapter
One
I break off a piece of raspberry tart, with a crust as light as sunshine, and slide it into the pocket of my caftan. My mouth goes dry in spite of the sweet tang that’s about to burst over my tongue.
Because the hidden bite’s not for me. It’s for my best friend, Astana, and if the royal guards catch me stealing food for a colonist, I could be thrown into the Red Cell Prison. Our laws are clear: actual food, as opposed to nutrition pills, must be reserved for those who can utilize it best.
I shove the rest of the tart into my mouth. It breaks upon contact, littering crumbs across the silver shuttle floor. I’m so nervous, the dessert tastes like congealed space dust and raspberries, but I chew and swallow as if nothing’s wrong. As if there isn’t a smooshed-up pie staining the inside of my pocket.
Did anyone see me hide the bite?
All around the Banquet Room, the Aegis dig into their mid-afternoon snack. Pecan-encrusted squash, double-mashed garlic potatoes, barbecued tofu drizzled with a blackberry-port reduction. They sit twenty per table, at sheets of metal which would sag if they weren’t doubly reinforced. Their silverware clinks together in a high, tinny melody, replacing the conversation that might have occurred back on Earth, where eating was partly social instead of wholly functional.
On our new planet, Dion, no Aegis talks during the first twenty minutes of a meal. It would be a waste, since more food can be consumed before the stomach has a chance to feel full. And an Aegis has only one goal: to consume as many nutrients as possible. We have to, in order to take in enough sustenance for the rest of the colony.
I’m about to finish what’s left of the tart when a hand closes over my elbow.
My heart stutters. So it comes to this. After training all my life to eat for my people, I’m caught over a piece of raspberry pie.
Pellets of sweat break out on my neck. I turn to my captor, the excuses ready on my lips. It’s just a single bite. My best friend’s been so down lately. I just want to bring her a little excitement, a little joy. Is that so wrong?
The words melt in my mouth. Because it’s not a royal guard who has a hold of me. It’s my older sister.
“Sweet before savory?” Blanca asks, moving the hand from my elbow and onto her hip. She’s widely considered beautiful, even if she doesn’t have the voluptuous figure that is so prized in our colony. It’s not easy to have curves when every excess calorie is sucked out of your body six times a day and transferred to the colonists via a pill. “Is that your secret, Vela? You eat a round of dessert before the main course?”
Of course not. I’m only eating this tart because it gives me an excuse to be near the dessert buffet. But Blanca doesn’t have to know that.
“You got me,” I say. “Sweet and savory foods fill different mental compartments, you know. You can still eat chocolate cake, even though you’re full of ramen noodles and pan-fried dumplings—”
“Save it.” Blanca arches her back, jutting out her food baby. Fifteen minutes from now, after she
pays a visit to the Transfer Room, her stomach will deflate once again, but my sister’s always been one to show off her roundness, however temporary. “I don’t need your strategies to be named Top Aegis.”
I’m a shoo-in for the top prize this year. Blanca knows it, I know it. Half of our Eating class has placed bets on it. If I keep eating the way I have for the next two days, no one will even come close.
Vela Kunchai, Top Aegis. I can taste it. Hot and satisfying, like a tray of lasagna with a bubbling soy cheese crust. It’s not the title I want, but the caring that it conveys. The more nutrition pills I produce, after all, the more people I’ll feed. My father, the King, has two heirs. Within the year, he’ll name either me or Blanca as his Successor. He’s been training both of us, from a very young age, to take his place, and a few months ago, the council decided that the transition to a new ruler would proceed most smoothly if the Sucessor stayed within the royal family.
We don’t know what criteria the council will use to choose the Successor. After all, our colony has never had to pass the reins before. But winning Top Aegis sure won’t hurt my chances. And so, I’d stretch my stomach lining into gauze to make sure it’s me. My sister, unfortunately, feels the same way.
“It’s not just about how much you’re willing to suffer for your people,” Blanca says, as if reading my mind. “The King’s Successor has to be practical enough to see the big picture. She has to have helped the King from an early age, running scenarios for him in the control room every time he needs data for a decision.” Even my sister’s raised eyebrow looks smug. “In other words, she can’t just flounce around the colony. She can’t interrupt her father during important council meetings to show him a Venus flytrap with a broken stalk.”
I flush. That was ten years ago, when I was seven and she was eight, but Blanca will never let me forget it. Just like she’ll never let me forget that she’s useful to the King—has always been useful to the King—and I’m not.
But I refuse to let her get to me. Even if I don’t have Blanca’s logical mind and analytical abilities, I have my own attributes. “Oh yeah? The King’s Successor also has to be compassionate enough to rescue the spider trapped inside that plant.”
I lock eyes with her dark brown ones. We weren’t always rivals. Once upon a time, my sister and I played rocket ships together. She was the captain, and I was her best mate. We zoomed here to the planet Dion, hundreds of light-years from Earth, and pretended we were one of the original colonists who landed on this world seventy years ago.
Of course, that was before I surpassed my sister’s eating ranking. Before my father, the King, announced one of us would be his Successor. Before my mother passed away.
In other words: a long time ago.
“This whole thing is ridiculous,” Blanca says. “I can’t believe the council’s even considering you. How could you possibly be Successor? You can’t even stand in front of a crowd without fainting.”
“I was a kid, and I hadn’t nutritioned all day.”
“This isn’t something you can learn. You either have what it takes to be Successor…” My sister’s eyes hack into me like a cleaver. “Or you don’t.”
“And you don’t think I do?”
She doesn’t answer for a moment. The air cleanser switches on. Wind blasts from the vents in the space shuttle’s curved walls, picking up the aromas and carrying them outside. Well, not literally outside in the real planet, but outside in our twenty square miles of intersecting bubbles. The two space shuttles, where the Aegis live and eat, are parked right in the middle of our colony, and their solar-paneled exteriors make up part of the energy shields that keep the oxygen-rich air in and the CO2-dense air out.
“Sorry, sis,” Blanca finally says. “Nobody thinks you’ve got a chance. The council’s just indulging Father in one of his whims.” She puts a hand on her hip and looks over my shoulder, as if she’s bored with the conversation. “You might want to take the pie out of your pocket. Wouldn’t want the guards to catch you sneaking food out of the Banquet Hall. Someone might get the wrong idea.”
She turns and swishes away, her eating caftan flowing behind her. The material catches the wind from the vents, and for a moment, it billows out, as haunting as a lone kite tapping against our energy shields.
A sharp pain seizes my chest. I can’t tell if it’s from Blanca’s graceful form or from the sudden certainty that I will never be my sister’s best mate ever again.
…
Five bubbles from the center of our colony, in the slags of rock that hold floor after floor of living units, there are no blasts of wind. Instead, the odors sit on the air like the nine layers of my Thai ancestors’ most auspicious dessert, khanom chan.
Except there’s nothing appetizing about these smells. Sweat. Body odor. Insect repellent.
I shudder and ignore the panel next to the front door, which would announce my arrival to my best friend, and walk into a narrow room with furniture set into the walls. All the living units in our colony are equipped this way, so that a single room can serve multiple living functions.
At the moment, a bed is pulled out, and Astana huddles underneath a solar blanket, newly heated from the sun lamps. Her breath comes in uneven pants, and her skin is stretched pale over the bones of her face. She’s so thin she could slide between the cracks of the tiled floor.
She props herself on her elbow as soon as she sees me. The blanket slides to the floor, its reflective surface flashing under the lights. “Did you get the pie?”
I shake my head, and she crumples, inches away from joining her blanket.
“Next time, I’ll wait until Blanca leaves before I try to take any food.”
She wets her lips. “Could I maybe lick your pocket?”
“Oh. Um, sure.” My heart shudders to hear her so wistful, but I slip the caftan over my head, leaving a simple tank top. I turn the pocket inside out and hold the raspberry-stained fabric out to my friend. She catches the cotton between her teeth and sinks against the couch, her jaws working the caftan the way a beetle gnaws on bark.
The cloth must’ve absorbed more juice than I realized. Almost immediately, a bit of color returns to her cheeks.
She sees me watching, and the fabric falls from her lips. “Sorry. I’ve been craving a taste all week.”
“It’s okay.” This is my fault, really. Back when we were kids, when her mom worked in the royal kitchens, I would sneak Astana bites from my training meals. I wanted to share everything with my best friend, including this weird thing we were learning about in our classes called “eating.” By the time I realized I wasn’t supposed to share, it was too late. Astana was hooked.
“Besides,” she continues. “I don’t know if I’ll make it to your next visit.”
“You’re not going anywhere. The nutritionists are going to recalibrate your needs, and in the meantime, I’ll give you every excess pill I have. I’ll eat until my stomach splits, if that’s what it takes.”
This is my secret. The strategy that turns my stomach into an infinitely-expanding balloon. The reason I can eat more than anyone else. My best friend in our brand-new world is dying.
We Aegis are assigned a quota every month—a set amount of nutrients we have to consume. Once we meet the quota, any additional nutrients are ours to keep. These little round pills act as currency in our society. We can set them aside to purchase tickets for a virtual vid. Or give them to our friends.
“Your pills can’t fix what’s wrong with me,” she says.
“How can you say that?” I pick up her wrist, my thumb and index finger easily encircling it. “I make the most nutritious pills there are. Everybody knows that.”
I smile as I say the words, but I’m only half kidding. Blanca and I have known since we were kids that our genes responded particularly well to the Aegis modification—the one that allows us to extract nutrients from food more efficiently. With this modification, most Aegis can absorb two or three times as many nutrients as the regul
ar person. Blanca and I are five or six times more efficient.
“You have to stop giving me all your pills.” Astana’s smile, like her body, is a cheap remake of its former self. “Your life’s already shortened. You need to enjoy every moment of it.”
“Nah. I’ve got over a decade left on this planet.” It’s hard for me to be too concerned about my impending death when it’s years and years away. Especially when my best friend is in desperate need of nutrition today.
“Can you tell me about the part I missed?” She puts the fabric back in her mouth. “The crust of the pie?”
I bite my lip. How do I explain taste and texture to a girl who’s barely known it?
“Oh, come on,” she says. “I told you about kissing. Surely you can talk about a measly pie crust.”
A few months ago, she painstakingly walked me through every detail of her first kiss with Jacksonville Kim, from his front teeth clicking into hers to the way his tongue cleaned the inside of her mouth like a Hyper Bot.
The memory makes me smile. Even better, Astana’s sitting up, and she almost sounds like herself again.
“Just you wait.” I aim for light and floaty, like butterfly wings, but relief punches a hole through my voice. “Maybe my mysterious rescuer will swoop back into my life, and then you’ll be the one begging me for kissing details.”
“That was the only time you ever needed saving.” My friend’s eyes drift closed. “Not like me. I need rescuing every day.”
My stomach falls somewhere near the vicinity of my knees. Because this doesn’t sound like my best friend. Gravity has never pulled so strongly on her words. She’s never referred to the time I fell into the pond during the King’s Birthday Picnic without an exaggerated wink.
I would’ve drowned that day, ten years ago, had someone not pulled me out and laid me dripping on the shore. But my rescuer left before I could get a look at him. He never even claimed his death debt.
I slide my hand until our wrists are pressed together. Our pulses beat next to each other, our life forces combined into one. The ultimate gesture of friendship and trust. “Do you still want to hear about the crust?”
She nods without opening her eyes. “Please.”