The Unpaired (The Pairings Book 3)

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The Unpaired (The Pairings Book 3) Page 1

by Ramona Finn




  The Pairings

  The Pairings

  The Carrier

  The Unpaired

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales, is entirely coincidental.

  RELAY PUBLISHING EDITION, MARCH 2020

  Copyright © 2020 Relay Publishing Ltd.

  All rights reserved. Published in the United Kingdom by Relay Publishing. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Ramona Finn is a pen name created by Relay Publishing for co-authored Young Adult Science Fiction projects. Relay Publishing works with incredible teams of writers and editors to collaboratively create the very best stories for our readers.

  www.relaypub.com

  Blurb

  They thought the virus had been eradicated—but it was only the beginning. Now the race is on.

  The rebel forces are hitting BioPure from all sides, but memory depletion is spreading rapidly as the virus New Zero takes hold of the populace.

  Lora Flannigan is a full-on rebel now, having thrown herself into helping her biological father develop a cure for the new outbreak that holds her parents in its grip. With her genetically altered perfect recall, Lora’s brain holds the blueprint for a permanent cure.

  But the Rebellion’s not the only group seeking the cure.

  At the same time, a series of disastrous raids cripple the rebellion’s attempts at countering the virus’s devastating memory effects, and their only hope is to combine forces with a traitor. But trust is a precious commodity that flows both ways—and BioPure always has ulterior motives.

  When disaster strikes twice, the race for the cure shifts into overdrive. Now everything hinges on Lora’s perfect memory.

  And in this race, there are no points for second place.

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Epilogue

  End of The Unpaired

  About Ramona Finn

  Thank you!

  Also By Ramona Finn

  Chapter One

  “Lora, we’re going to start with the easy questions first,” John’s voice bombarded my head.

  The equipment around me whirred and hummed, creating a barrier between his voice and my ears. I nodded, trying to ignore the movement of the headpiece sliding down the outside of the plastic tube surrounding me. The size of the scanning device hadn’t changed since we’d started working in the rebel lab in Chicago six months before, but each time I squeezed inside, it was as if someone had shaved off millimeters while I’d been away.

  The plastic tube was as clean as we could get it, but the deep scratches along the side made the laboratory appear as a warped version of itself. I could barely make out the lines in John’s face as he stood behind the computer screens a few feet away. The pronounced wrinkles pressing into his skin had deepened in the months following Mom’s diagnosis with New Zero.

  My chest squeezed with anticipation. The sooner I completed this scan, the sooner we could leave to see Mom and Dad. The usual invisible weight pressed against my body just like it did every time I underwent a scan. I should have been used to it by now, but I wasn’t. The equipment worked well enough, but it wasn’t as sleek and technologically advanced as it had been in New Manhattan at the VaxWell laboratory. The movement of the scanner around my head wasn’t a smooth course, either, but jerky… as if it were about to die at any second. If it did, then we would get even further behind on the cure for New Zero compared to where we already were.

  “We’re going to start tracing your memories further back than we have before,” John’s voice crackled through the speaker at the top of the tube. The small speaker reduced the normal deep timbre of my biological father’s voice to a tinny sound that seemed more appropriate to a cartoon character. “We’ll start with Elsie.”

  Mom. I adjusted myself in the seat. The chair was on a slight recline, forcing me to look upward at the ceiling if I laid straight. But I wanted to watch John. It was the only way I could focus on the work instead of the other thoughts swirling around in my mind. I couldn’t blame John or the shoddy equipment for my distraction. It wasn’t his fault that the lab was made up of stolen or scavenged equipment; all of it was needed to complete our work undetected by BioPure—the corporation insisting on mind-controlling its citizens. Everything we were going through and fighting was their fault, going back to their using New Zero to take down the rebellion and attempt to hold control over the citizens in BioPure’s own controlled cities.

  The buzzing began, bombarding me from all angles. I closed my eyes and tried not to wince as I imagined the energy penetrating my body while the scan continued. Other than gritting my teeth against the invasiveness of the scan, there wasn’t much I could do other than answer John’s questions.

  “Your earliest memory of her, please,” John said. The emotion wasn’t missing from his voice. “We’re going to reach back to find the origin point of your memories.

  The vision of Mom in my mind struck me, but I tried to hold back the tears welling in my eyes. I’d cried so much for her already. Now, submitting myself to these scans was the only thing I could contribute to helping her. She had left us when I’d been so young—most people didn’t have clear memories reaching that far back in their lives.

  I glanced at the other laboratory techs in the room. All three of them kept their eyes on the monitors and tablets in front of them. They had their own tasks to complete regarding New Zero. Their job was creating a treatment to help those afflicted with it, so that victims might be able to keep their memories for as long as possible until we created a cure.

  We were visitors on their base located on the outskirts of Chicago, but since we’d arrived with a small amount of the cure for New Zero—which we’d stolen from BioPure’s headquarters in Denver—they’d welcomed us with open arms and twenty-four-hour access to all of their available equipment.

  John and Mom were the only researchers left from the VaxWell laboratory who understood how the scans worked and could help recreate the cure. With him having injected me with the alpha version of Virus Zero when I was a fetus, I was the only person who they could test without any risk of a test subject getting New Zero.

  “Lora,” John said.

  I blinked away my thoughts and focused on Mom instead of the bubble of anxiety expanding in my gut. The first clear memory I had of her was the first time I’d gone home with her and Dad. Most people aren’t able to recall when they were toddlers, but John and Mom had created the perfect memory mod and installed it in my brain when I’d been in utero. It was the only way to save me from suffering massive memory loss due to my natural birth status. Pushing away from the fact that they’d had a relationship outside of Mom’s pairing was my only move now; my memory was
the only thing that could help the rebel forces have a chance of avoiding acceptance of BioPure’s “cure” for its citizens. John was convinced that the corporation didn’t have our best interests in mind, and he didn’t trust injecting us with anything coming from their labs—including the biomods that I’d been forced to endure every day until I’d been paired.

  John wanted memories of Mom, but I pushed further back to find that origin point. I had vague memories of the sterile environment where I had been raised during the first two years of my life. John had explained that my brain at the time wasn’t yet fully developed enough to hold onto those memories. In any case, I recalled to him in perfect clarity how Mom looked that day, and the stirring of happiness I’d felt throughout my body as she and Dad took me home for the first time. The memory of her smile melted the knot within me and tears welled in my eyes. How long would I be able to see her smile in person before she forgot me completely?

  “Good,” John said. “Stay there for a moment.” He concentrated on the screen and I focused on him, keeping Mom in my head.

  It wasn’t the first time I’d wondered if he had any regrets about what he and Mom had done. They’d fallen in love in a place where love wasn’t a factor when it came to married couples. Because of Virus Zero, which the corporations had unleashed—killing people in masses—natural birth was risky. It had been for me, as well. I would never have survived to eighteen if they hadn’t injected me with treatment before I’d been born.

  Though, as scientists, they knew more than I when it came to the virus which had knocked out more than fifty percent of the human population. Now, we knew that BioPure had been in charge of that virus and had created an even deadlier version.

  “Let’s move to your pairing day,” John said.

  We’d completed the review of the memories between my earliest and latest memories in other trials, but I sensed he wanted to see Mom through my eyes. She wasn’t getting any better, and I was under the impression that he was looking for a little hope regarding her recovery. The more information I gave him from my mind, the better he’d be able to map it and replicate the cure.

  Goosebumps raced up my arms as I recalled my pairing day. For years up until that point, I had worried about my immunity score. Dad had pushed me to get the best pairing I could while I’d only accepted enough biomods into my body to satisfy requirements. I recalled for John the anticipation running through me when I’d gone into my high school auditorium to await my pairing. My best friend at the time, Jeremy, hadn’t received a pairing. But that hadn’t been the most unexpected part. That surprise had been my pairing with Jarid Rothkind, a Level One resident of New Manhattan. I’d never heard of a level jump from three to one. Little had I known it was his mother who had set it up after getting word about me having a perfect memory. Her selfishness as CEO of VaxWell backfired on her when Jarid’s twin, Syeth, had brought me into the light about what was going on within VaxWell and how their mother had wiped Jarid’s memory of his girlfriend Isra.

  “Stick to the facts,” John’s voice echoed in the tube. “It muddles the readings.”

  I hadn’t realized I’d gone off track with my thoughts about the Rothkinds. “Sorry.”

  John shot me a thumbs-up and motioned for me to continue. I thought of Jarid. How I had fallen for him the moment I’d met him, and then eventually cared for him as much as his twin.

  “Good,” John said. “Next, we’re going to map the time around your trip through New California.”

  When we first started the scans, we’d spent the first few sessions delving into the deeper parts of my memory. John seemed to have a set method of mapping out my mind, so I went along with all the questions he had. In a way, he was getting to know me better while avoiding the awkward heart to heart conversations most teens cringed about having with their parents.

  Dad would always be my Dad, but that didn’t mean I had to exclude John from my life. He’d saved me and loved my mother. We weren’t a traditional family, but we were together.

  My throat clenched as I thought of Mom again. I caught John’s eye, and before he could divert me back on track, I recounted to him the journey to Denver from New Manhattan. Dad, Syeth, and I had been through a lot of dangerous situations during that time. We’d had to rescue Jarid before moving toward Salt Lake City to warn Mom and John about Mia, the assassin, who wanted to wipe my entire family from the earth. Reliving all those moments made my heart race and my palms sweat. We’d come up against dangerous situations over and over again, and there’d appeared to be no end in sight. But through it all, we’d still ended up together.

  All but one of us.

  My mind drifted back to Jarid and the last time we saw him before leaving for Chicago. In Denver, he had snuck away from us without anything more than a note after we raided BioPure’s headquarters. He’d tried to explain that he wanted to do more from inside BioPure to help us. I wasn’t sure how he could possibly accomplish that.

  He had abandoned us when we should have stayed together. Even after six months, and with Jarid having known that we were going to Chicago, we hadn’t heard from him. The only plan I imagined was Jarid using his status as the son of the previous CEO of VaxWell to infiltrate the company. Not for the first time, I wondered about the amnesty promised to all rebels who turned themselves in.

  Sledge Hornmeister, the man who ran BioPure and all of the controlled corporate cities, had promised all rebels that he would allow them to receive treatment for New Zero without ramifications for their past crimes as long as they turned themselves in. I wondered if Jarid had succeeded and was working with BioPure, or if he’d been imprisoned, or even killed.

  “That’s it for today,” John said, snapping me from my thoughts.

  I sucked in a breath as if I had been underwater for minutes instead of inside my mind for seconds. Had John noted that my mind had been all over the place during our session? Or had he realized what I had been thinking of? He was always in charge of the scans and how they related to getting closer to a cure, and I was just the subject, letting the real scientist work. I had no idea what my thoughts translated to, but I hoped they helped. Even if my mind wasn’t quite all in it today.

  The status of our family always filled my mind. The longer Mom and Dad suffered from New Zero, the more they infiltrated my thoughts. I wanted to be with them as much as possible in order to remind them to continue to fight as much as they could. Lately, because of that, my mind wandered more and more as the testing went on. I couldn’t help it. There were so many unanswered questions, and the longer we stayed in one place while Jarid was physically gone and my parents were mentally lost, the less likely it seemed that we could reunite our patched-together family.

  The door to the tube opened, and Marisha—one of the younger researchers—offered me her hand. The tube wasn’t that large and had given me pretty serious claustrophobic symptoms when I’d first started the testing. Getting in was one thing, but the awkwardness of getting out was another. Early on, Marisha seemed to understand, and so she was always there with a hand when I needed it, even though she was almost a foot shorter than me. Her hands were always soft, and she seemed more delicate than most. I tried not to put too much of my weight on her. I underestimated her as I wobbled a little, and she balanced me with a steady grip. Her crooked smile warmed me. These people had become important to me as we kept working toward the goal of helping the rebels affected by New Zero. I only hoped that we wouldn’t have to work so hard after we replicated the BioPure cure.

  “Thanks,” I said once I was out.

  “Not a problem,” she said in her Southern lilt.

  The rebel camp was more diverse than any other place I had lived. It was the hub of the rebels who most wanted to make a significant difference in our world since downtown Chicago was the model city for BioPure. The corporation used the city to remind people of how well it had kept people alive during Zero and how it could rebuild ruins.

  I drew in a breath as the small la
b appeared to open up as wide as an auditorium each time I left the tube.

  Marisha rejoined her team. The rebel researchers were kind enough, but even after six months, everyone remained on edge. Each day, it felt as if we were falling behind while the BioPure labs were pumping out the treatment for New Zero, which they had already unleashed on its citizens.

  I stretched my arms over my head and relished the feeling of having only myself in my mind.

  John waved me over.

  “Did I do okay?” I asked as I approached. I didn’t want to disappoint him at this crucial time of the study, and all because of my wandering thoughts. Each day that we couldn’t find a counteractive treatment for New Zero attacking humanity, more and more pressure weighed on me and these scans.

  I rounded the table where John stood. Two wide screens displayed the data from the latest scan.

  “You did great, as usual.” He clicked over the keyboard to bring up three images of brain maps. Clicking a few buttons, he watched as colors danced across them. Their movements were synchronized as it all played out. “Here is a normal brain,” he said, pointing to the far-left image. The color signatures seemed to fire consistently.

  He didn’t need to tell me the next one was a scan of someone with New Zero. There were barely any flashes of colors.

  The last was my brain. It lit up like the stars on a clear night.

 

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