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  THE SKY INSIDE

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Special thanks to my editor, Ginee Seo, for the passion and wisdom she brought to our work on this book.

  Atheneum Books for Young Readers

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical

  events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously.

  Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of

  the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events

  or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2008 by Clare B. Dunkle

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in

  whole or in part in any form.

  Book design by Michael McCartney

  The text for this book is set in Veljović.

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  First Edition

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  CIP data for this book is available from the Library of Congress.

  ISBN-13: 978-1-4169-2422-7

  ISBN-10: 1-4169-2422-1

  eISBN-13: 978-1-4424-2889-8

  FOR MY BIG BROTHER ANTHONY

  PROLOGUE

  The big television cameras of the You’ve Been Caught Napping game show prowled in the darkness at the edge of the set, their lenses focused on the old man’s face. Mindlessly thorough, they relayed to viewers his iron gray hair, his thick bifocals, and the trickles of sweat that wandered down tracks of wrinkles into his eyes. A thoughtful viewer might have wondered why he didn’t wipe the sweat away. But behind the silver podium that displayed a very high score, his hands lay trapped in a pair of strong plastic manacles. That was something those cameras couldn’t see.

  “You’re right again, Dr. Church! You are simply amazing.” The handsome host beamed at the old man, white teeth flashing in a tanned face. “That completes the round. What will our contestant do next? Will he take home his winnings?” The audience groaned. “Or will he try to double them with our special bonus quiz?”

  The audience shouted and cheered. This was odd because no audience was there. Beyond the banks of garish lights, the cavernous studio was empty.

  “It’s a big decision,” said the host. “He needs to think it over, and that gives us time for a commercial break. We’ll be back with Dr. Rudolph Church right after this!”

  The lively notes of a familiar advertising tune cut through the studio, and the wildly cheering audience hushed with the flick of a switch. The old man rested his head on the podium in front of him, the one that hid their nasty secret. After all, game shows were rollicking good fun, entertainment for the whole family. Imagine how viewers would feel if they saw the hypodermic needle inserted in his arm.

  Meanwhile, in a comfortable living room, two of those viewers were fighting over the remote. The bigger one snatched it away and triumphantly changed the channel, and a buzzing squadron of red motor scooters charged across the screen.

  “Martin, you jerk!” said the girl, flopping back onto the sofa. “You always watch these silly races! I wanted to see the rest of that.”

  “Mom says no game shows,” Martin said smugly. “Plus, that one’s stupid. ‘Who wrote this?’ ‘What’s the term for that?’ It’s as bad as school.”

  “I like it,” Cassie said. “It teaches me things. And this contestant is amazing. He hasn’t been sent off in nine straight shows.”

  “Big hairy deal,” Martin said, leaning forward to grab her bag of chips. “Who cares what happens to one old man?”

  CHAPTER ONE

  The first day of spring had come to the suburb, bringing its subtle but unmistakable signs. Martin noticed them right away as he left his house that morning. The recording that played through the neighborhood speakers was different, for one thing. It had lost its spooky, desolate sound. And wiry old Mr. LaRue was kneeling on the sidewalk next door, peeling the glittering snowflakes off his big picture window and sticking a line of pink and yellow flowers there instead.

  Cassie wanted to watch, so Martin loitered on the sidewalk to let her. He gazed down the curving row of redbrick houses that framed the circular street, hooked together so that the garage wall of one became the bedroom wall of the next. The houses had identical windows, identical doors, and identical garage doors. At each garage, the pale gray sidewalk slanted down to the dark gray street so that scooter wheels could roll over it. Then the curb rose again and became level until the next garage: dip, rise, dip, rise, all around the edge of the street, like a perfect piecrust.

  In the center of the circle lay the park, with its wide green-gravel spaces, dusty baseball field, bonded-rubber jogging track, and brightly colored play structures. The exact middle was a fishpond where Dad went to practice casting. Once, this park had seemed like a wonderland to Martin, and it had only recently ceased to be a marvel to his six-year-old sister. Now it was just the park: a good thing, to be sure, but a place of limited joys.

  “See,” directed Mr. LaRue, pausing in his work to glance up at them, “see, these are roses, and these are daffodils.” He unstuck an orangey yellow flower from the vinyl sheet and carefully smoothed it onto the window glass. “They’re for spring. It’s spring now, you know.”

  “The vernal equinox,” Cassie agreed.

  Martin was bored. He had seen a number of springs arrive, had heard the speakers change their music and watched the plastic flowers go up on front windows across the neighborhood. None of it interested him anymore. Just this year, he had begun to grow at a prodigious rate, zooming past his peers, looking down on their hair parts and cowlicks. Not one ounce of weight, it would seem, had come with this growth, so he was beginning to resemble an Elasto-doll or a spaghetti noodle. His hair was such a dark shade of brown that everyone called it black, and his eyes were such a dark hazel that they looked brown. Only when he was excited did flecks of green and gold light up in them, but that didn’t happen very often. Usually, Martin was assessing life cautiously from behind lowered eyelids: thinking of ways to escape class, thinking of plausible excuses for not doing school-work, or thinking of the millions of things he would rather do than sit in class and do schoolwork. No spark of color lit his eyes then. “Stop looking sullen!” his teacher would snap.

  Martin sighed and tilted his head back, gazing at the network of steel girders that held up the immense dome enclosing their suburb. The vast metal structure was painted pale blue with big white splotches wherever the square golden skylights didn’t intrude. Clouds, his granny had called those white blotches. He didn’t see why they needed a special name.

  High above him, a tiny inconspicuous figure crawled along one of the steel beams. Blue against the enormous blue ceiling, a tool bot was checking the rivets. As it crawled onto a cloud, the robotic form stood out clearly for a few seconds. Then it paused, probably to adjust its settings, and turned white, blending in once more.

  A cloudy bot was harder to see than a blue one. Martin lost it against the faint lines and seams of the dome. He felt a tug at his sleeve. Cassie wanted his attention.

  “Yard work isn’t for everybody,” Mr. LaRue was saying, “but I take pride in it. Got my lawn all finished.” He gestured at a strip of green plastic that fringed the bottom of his house’s red brick. “Bennett’s still got his autumn leaves up on his window. It wouldn’t kill some people to do a little work around here.”

  “Today is Martin’s birthday,” Cassie said. “It’s nice that the speakers are playing something pleasant.”

  The old man looked scornful. “Birthday’s got
nothing to do with it.” He used a razor blade to remove the last traces of a snow-flake’s outline. “It’s the spring song,” he said, pointing his razor at the nearest hidden speaker. “That’s a robin, that’s what that is.”

  Cassie tilted her head to listen to the jaunty, careless notes. “I don’t know how that can be a song,” she said. “There isn’t a tune. It’s different every time.”

  “Don’t contradict me!” said Mr. LaRue. “Don’t you smart kids learn any manners? If I say it’s a song, it’s a song, and if I say it’s a robin, it’s a robin!”

  “Let’s get to school,” Martin interrupted, catching Cassie by the strap on the top of her pink backpack and starting to pull her away.

  “Wait! What’s a robin?” she wanted to know. “Is it some kind of woodwind instrument? Or is this another one of those concepts that no one understands anymore?”

  Mr. LaRue dropped his sticker book onto the concrete and glared at her. “You damn freaks!” he barked. “Trust you to take the pleasure out of spring!”

  Cassie stepped behind her brother, and Martin allowed her to hold his hand. “Damn? I don’t know what that word means,” she whispered. “Martin, do you know?”

  “It means time to go,” he said. Then he hauled her away down the sidewalk.

  “But what does it mean?” she asked again as they turned the corner and walked away from the park.

  “It’s just a bad word. It means you made him mad.” She hadn’t asked him about freaks, of course. She had learned that word long ago.

  The suburb was laid out in concentric circles, like a dartboard. They crossed curving street after curving street of tidy brick houses with identical windows, doors, and garages. On each street, the color changed. All the houses were tan, or all pink, or mustard yellow. Martin passed them without seeing them.

  Freaks, he thought. The word was as much a part of Cassie’s life as the steel dome above them.

  The ads had started running on mid-morning television the summer after Martin’s fourth birthday. WONDER BABIES are here! they announced. Be the first family on your block to raise a WONDER BABY! Even as young as he was, Martin had been aware of Mom and Dad’s interest. Mom had already talked about having another baby. Now Dad wanted one too.

  Never had the arrival of the stork brought such excitement. Overflowing with charm, brimming with intelligence, Wonder Babies were like nothing the suburb had seen before. But that didn’t turn out to be a good thing.

  Wonder Babies didn’t wait around to be raised. They got involved in their upbringing, wanted to know about their feeding schedules, and read voraciously before the age of two. Worst of all, Wonder Babies—or the Exponential Generation, as they preferred to be called—wouldn’t stop asking embarrassing questions. No amount of time-outs, missed snacks, or spankings could break them of this awful habit.

  Three years ago, when the first class of the Exponential Generation had reached kindergarten, their teacher had quit within the week. No one would stay in their classrooms and put up with the deluge of questions their bizarre genius produced. But that didn’t matter. They were driven to learn. They went to school anyway, dividing up the duties and team-teaching themselves.

  Martin eyed the thin little girl whom he was attempting to steer toward school. She was wearing a stretchy shorts set of bright magenta, accessorized with a purple sweater. She had donned one pink sock and one purple sock this morning with her white sneakers, and her wrists sparkled with various pieces of childish jewelry in rhinestone and plastic. Her blue eyes and short golden curls bobbing in every direction made Cassie look downright perfect, like a living doll—even he had to admit that. He couldn’t understand how the neighbors could say such cruel things to her face. He knew how he could, of course, but that was different.

  “This word list is so inadequate,” Cassie said, typing away on her handheld. “It doesn’t have damn or robin. What is a robin, anyway? Does anybody know?”

  Martin hesitated. Granny had whispered things to him when he was very young, while they sat together in the bright, glorious wonderland park of his earliest memories. Granny had told him of small, quick creatures that whirred through the air like toy planes, creatures that were as soft to the touch as a handful of yarn. But Cassie couldn’t keep a secret, and everyone knew the walls had ears.

  “I dunno,” he said. “Stop asking stuff or I’ll tell Mom.”

  They reached the school beside the outermost ring of streets and joined their classmates on the noisy playground. Cassie went off to assemble with the other members of the Exponential Generation under the guidance of Jimmy, their eight-year-old leader. Martin threaded through the knots of students, looking around for his friends.

  “Over here!”

  Matt and David were waiting for him with almost identical grins. Matt immediately tried to grab him in a headlock. As they thrashed about, bumping into other students and raising cries of annoyance, Martin felt hands in his backpack.

  “Let go of me, you doofus!”

  He flung off Matt, who bounced against a larger classmate, received a smack to the head, and ricocheted back into Martin without losing a millimeter of his grin. Frowning, Martin turned away and set his backpack on the ground to examine its contents. Nothing was gone, but his handheld was flashing random patterns.

  “You messed with this,” he accused.

  Matt was already overcome with glee, making noises like a badly tuned scooter, but David gazed up at him without a trace of guilt. “Uh-oh,” he said. “Looks to me like your handheld has a bug.”

  “A bug . . .” Martin looked at the dancing lights for a few seconds, pressing combinations of buttons. Then he turned the handheld over, tweaked off the back cover, and studied the circuit board. There it was: an extra computer chip, colored bright purple. He pried it off, and the multipronged chip morphed in his hand. Now a small bug crawled across his palm, a purple bug with gold legs. David and Matt whooped in triumph and celebrated by punching each other.

  “Sweet!” said Martin, examining the metallic computer bug. He put it back onto the circuit board so he could watch it freeze into chipdom and then pried it off again. “I wanted some, but my dad wouldn’t buy them. He said they could damage the wrong kinds of machines.”

  “Nah,” said David importantly, scooping up his chip. “These only work on little stuff—it says so right in the ad.”

  The bell rang, and the students squeezed into the main hall. The three friends allowed the force of moving bodies to carry them along.

  “We put one on David’s cat Cinder—gross! Shorted out the whole simulation.”

  “She turned into a big lump like silver Jell-O, and now she won’t come near me. Here, I’ll show you,” David said. Chip in hand, he pushed through the crowd over to the Wonder Babies. Martin and Matt knew what was on his mind. Only one student brought a pet to school. Only one child answered to no one.

  Jimmy stood at the door of the second-grade classroom, seeing the first group of Wonder Babies to its destination. He ticked off the roll on his handheld as children filed past him into the room. His pet rat, white with black patches, clung to his shoulder.

  “Look out for a crash,” David said, shaking the purple bug onto the rat.

  The big piebald rat felt the bug crawl across its shoulder and scratched with its back paw. Then it seized the bug and sat up to sniff at it. Jimmy craned his neck to see and took the purple chip away. “I saw those on television,” he remarked.

  Staring, David took back his chip. Matt was punching him. “What happened, man?” Matt demanded in a whisper. David punched him back.

  “You—man!” David stammered. “You—I mean, it—man! That thing’s real!”

  Jimmy walked his next group of charges to their room. Martin and his friends followed. “Hey, I want one too,” Matt said in excitement. “Where do you buy a real rat?”

  “You don’t buy them,” Jimmy answered. “I caught him in the warehouse area when he was a baby—Melanie, get rid of that
gum.”

  “Can it change into anything?” asked Martin. “Like, different kinds of rats?”

  “Or a rapid-fire slingshot?” suggested David, eyeing the long bare tail.

  “No,” Jimmy said. “He stays a rat. Brent and Margery, you start the reading lesson, and I’ll be back in half an hour. Kindergarten Exponents, go to your room, and I’ll be there to take roll in a minute.”

  Distracted from the rat, Martin speculated briefly on what it would be like to be eight years old and a teacher. Judging from the worried expression on Jimmy’s face, it wasn’t much fun.

  “Look,” Jimmy said as the little children filed by him, “Patches is alive. He was born, he grew up, and in another year, he’ll die.”

  Death. Martin had a confused vision of a tiny black railcar coming to retrieve the furry body, just as one did when a person died. “Wow,” he murmured. “That’s very cool.” He wondered about Granny’s birds and clouds. Did they die too, like rats and people? How did that work?

  “I’ll buy one from you,” Matt insisted.

  “Yeah, we’ll buy him,” David said. “How much is he?”

  Jimmy paused in the doorway, looking away from them.

  He’s disappointed in us, Martin thought. I wonder what we did.

  “Rats,” said Jimmy finally, “are not for sale.” Then he shut the door.

  “Stupid kid, stuck with a toy that can’t do anything,” David said, turning away.

  “He made us late. Now we’ll have extra work,” Matt grumbled. “That stupid freak!”

  Trailing behind them, Martin reluctantly entered his classroom. The sight of its familiar green walls crushed the happy thought of rats out of his mind. Pea green. Vomit green. A very appropriate color.

  School was the usual interminable torment. In silence, the students worked exercises that had been fed into their handhelds, downloading the results to the school computer every half hour. In silence, Martin’s teacher paced up and down, gazing out the window at the deserted playground. The computer had given him no lecture to read to them that day, so his only duty was to call time at the end of each exercise. But the handhelds did that anyway, a clock in the upper left-hand corner ticking down the time remaining before the termination of each drill.