GLAZE (16 page)

Read GLAZE Online

Authors: Kim Curran

Tags: #Young Adult Science Fiction

BOOK: GLAZE
4.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘Can you stop that?’ Paul Taylor, my geography partner says, scowling at me.
 

Till the end of class, I think, ignoring Paul. Till class is over and then I’ll turn it on.
 

I can sense the switch in my mind. I’ve been prodding at it, like a hole in a tooth, resisting the temptation to let down the drawbridge. I can almost feel the flow of information behind it, like a dam holding back an ocean.
 

The school grounds outside the window are deserted. In a matter of minutes it will be swarming with chatter. I decide I can’t wait any more. I flick the switch.
 

A swirling pattern of rainbows explodes in front of my eyes, they chase each other till they form three dots making out the shape of a triangle. The logo of the corporation and the network they designed.
 

// W
ELCOME
TO
G
LAZE
. //

The welcome message appears as an overlay between me and an image of Miss Whittaker, who is pointing out something on a map of the world. I’ve used overlay lenses before, of course, although they gave me headaches. I thought Glaze would be like that. Or maybe like the logo overlay I saw after the blank was first fitted; faint and a little annoying. But it’s more than that. It’s like the message and the logo exist in the real world, not just placed over it. If I wanted to, I could reach out and touch those words.
 

After a few seconds a second line of text appears.
 

// W
ELCOME
, P
ETRA
. //

My heart swells. It recognises me. Or at least, the person I’m pretending to be.
 

The writing disappears leaving a small spark of light I know to be the cursor. Focus your mind on that pinpoint and move it. Apparently, after a while, the cursor disappears as you gain total control over your feed. But to start it’s there to guide you. It twinkles at me, like Tinkerbell.
 

I focus on moving it toward the triangles hovering over Miss Whittaker’s face.
 

It’s hesitant at first. Moving left when I mean right. But slowly, it creeps towards the three dots. I blink, registering my command. The triangles disappear and then...
 

Nothing.
 

Only the classroom and Miss Whittaker, who’s now holding up a lump of rock.
 

It hasn’t worked.

I look over at Amy who’s staring out of the window. If everything was working I should now be matching her face to Glaze’s database, pulling up her profile and giving me the option of adding her to my feed. Nothing. She sighs as she gazes out at the school grounds. I look around the classroom, focusing on person after person, object after object. Still nothing is happening. Dave Carlton is picking his nose and flicking it at the back of the girl in front of him, Pippa and Karl are holding hands under the table. Karl places her hand on his groin and she pulls it away, before hitting him playfully. But nothing is registering with Glaze. There’s just a loud buzzing in my head.
 

Maybe I’ve activated it too soon? Maybe Logan double-crossed me and it was all for nothing?
 

Then I remember. The blocker. Of course I can’t access it in the classroom.
 

I’m on my feet before I even know I’m doing it.
 

‘Petri?’ Miss Whittaker says.
 

‘Oh, I need the bathroom,’ I say, scooping up my bag and running for the door.
 

There’s a chuckle in the class and Dave Carlton says, ‘Pee-Pee-Tri’.
 

It’s hardly genius as insults go, but it earns a few laughs. Proof of how boring our geography class is. I don’t care.
 

I smile at Dave as I pass him. ‘Good one, Dave.’ He looks disappointed I’m not in tears.
 

I race out the classroom door and down the corridor, the soles of my shoes squeaking on the newly-polished floors. The exit is up ahead. I chuck my bag through the metal detector, pick it up again, and throw open the double doors to the yard.
 

I skid to a stop a few feet away from the small fence that designates the play area and where I know I’ll be out of the blocker’s range. I take a step forward.
 

The buzzing in my head lessens and I take another step, over the fence and onto the grass, my shoes crunching on the rain-coated blades.
 

I look up at the sky.

// I
T
IS
CURRENTLY
12
º
C
WITH
A
NORTHWESTERLY
WIND
. 98%
CHANCE
OF
RAIN
. T
EMPERATURES
DROPPING
TO
BELOW
FREEZING
TONIGHT
BUT
A
BRIGHT
AND
SLIGHTLY
WARMER
DAY
IS
EXPECTED
TOMORROW
. //

I’m hit by a wave of relief and so much joy that I can hardly stand it. I’m on.
 

I watch a large cloud pass by overhead and text follows it as it moves across the sky.
 

// C
UMULONIMBUS
CLOUD
. //

A plane cuts through the cloud leaving vapour trails and more information in its wake.
 

// F
LIGHT
B4562
TO
N
EW
Y
ORK
. C
RUISE
SPEED
OF
M
ACH
0.85. 354
PASSENGERS
ON
BOARD
. M
R
J. B
LACKNER
IN
SEAT
NUMBER
1
A
. M
R
S. J
ONES
IN
SEAT
1
B
. S
TACY
L
AMB
IN
SEAT
2
A
... //

Name after name flows out of the tail of the plane. And my first slide:
 

// O
N
MY
WAY
TO
NYC B
ABY
! O
H
, I
SHOULD
PROBABLY
HAVE
THE
FLIGHT
-
SAFE
MODE
SWITCHED
ON
. O
OOPS
! L
OVE
YOU
LOADS
,
SUGAR
PLUM
. C
AN

T
WAIT
TO
SNUGGLE
YOU
ALL
UP
! //

An image of a huge pair of lips looms out of the sky at me, glistening with too much lipstick.
 

The message is so unexpected and so clearly not meant for me that I wince and raise my hand to fend off the incoming kiss.
 

The alarm bell rings behind me. Seconds later kids pour out of the doorways and race onto the grass. Messages pour off them.
 

// BO-RING. SO
GLAD
THAT

S
OVER
. //

// S
EE
YA
AT
THE
SHOP
LATER
? //

// T
HE
ONLY
THING
THAT
SUCKS
HARDER
THAN
SCHOOL
IS
M
RS
M
C
K
ENZIE
. A
ND
I
SHOULD
KNOW
. ;) //

As well as the slides, there are so many images that I can’t see the building in front of me any more. They slide pictures to each another; trading experiences—past and future. In every image they’re laughing, having the times of their lives: girls running through train stations wearing top hats, boys racing after them feather boas flapping; faces pressed in against each other as they all squeeze into the fun; photos taken of crowds at gigs. As I track across each face the focus of the image shifts bringing them into sharper focus, making each person the centre of the shot, the centre of the experience. Each frozen moment looks like it’s been taken on a glorious autumn day; golden and saturated with sunshine. Memories trapped in amber.

‘I’m on!’ I scream, punching the air. ‘I’m on!’

A group of kids have stopped and they’re watching me, sliding comments from one to the other and laughing.
 

‘On acid,’ someone says.
 

// A
CID
. B
LOTTER
. C
HEER
. U
NICORN
JUICE
. S
LANG
FOR
LYSERGIC
ACID
DIETHYLAMIDE
,
ABBREVIATED
‘LSD’,
IS
A
SEMI
-
SYNTHETIC
PSYCHEDELIC
DRUG
KNOWN
FOR
ITS
PSYCHOLOGICAL
... //

This is amazing. This is everything I thought it would be. A world of knowledge a thought away. I feel a part of everything and everyone.
 

‘Better together,’ I say, giggling. Damn right.
 

My schoolmates have stopped staring cruelly and are now laughing, not at me, but with me.
 

‘You’re so funny, Petri,’ they’re saying. And ‘crazy Petri’. It’s kind. Fond almost. Like I’m one of them. Even though I know my account doesn’t register for them, it’s like they know somehow that I’ve joined the Glaze family.

I smile around at everyone, catching names of people I’ve never met, learning more about people I thought I already knew. What they like, love and hate. Their birthdays, star signs, favourite cheeses. Their clothes and where they bought them are tagged along with their names. I should be able to add all of them to my feed, to see what they’re up to all the time, but I can’t work out how to do it. That’s OK. I’ve got time.
 

The assembled group fades away, off to catch their rides home and I’m left standing in front of the school on my own.
 

‘OK, Glaze,’ I say. ‘Let’s see what you can do.’
 

I race out the school gates.
 

The company van is waiting to take me and a couple of the other kids from the compound back home. The driver looks at me through the tinted glass, impatient to be off. Tom, the boy from number ten, is sitting behind the driver, tapping an invisible watch on his wrist. But I’m not going home. Not when there’s a whole world to explore.
 

I wave at the driver, telling him to go and not bother waiting.
 

// F
RANK
B
ENNETT
, 36,
SINGLE
, W
HITE
I
NC
CHAUFFEUR
... //

I never knew his name. I never even bothered to ask. He was just the driver. The man who arrived each morning to take me to school and each afternoon to take me home. He’s not even a driver really: Glaze takes cares of the actual driving and navigating through the streets. He’s there to open and close the doors and to make sure we behave. A backup in case Glaze goes down, which it never does.
 

I got him in to trouble last week, when I took off with Ryan without telling him. But it doesn’t seem like he’s going to hold it against me. Frank tips his cap and starts up the engine.
 

The van pulls into the flow of traffic. Cars hum past, drivers staring into Glaze rather than the road ahead, letting the car do its thing. I focus on a blue car. My feed tells me it’s a Toyota Proxius, three years old, full warranty, but the driver has three points on his licence. Which means he must have turned Glaze off at some point and driven on his own, because there’s no way a hooked car could break any traffic laws. It disappears around a corner, taking this little mystery with it.
 

I can see the make and model and history of every car in the street. Boring, I think. I need to test Glaze on something bigger, something more meaningful.
 

I walk down the street, registering the name of every person who walks past me, every tree, shrub and insect scurrying through the leaves along the way.
 

I walk past a building, which is broadcasting information about the next election.
 

// H
OW
WILL
YOU
DECIDE
? R
EGISTER
TO
VOTE
NOW
! //

By simply looking at the image, I know I could download a personalised manifesto from either party, expertly adapted to reflect how the party will meet my unique concerns.
 

I walk past the grinning faces of Harris and Walters and try to think what to search for myself. I remember the riot and the song that I wasn’t able to hear.
 

‘Nathaniel Buckleberry,’ I say out loud, even though I know I shouldn’t have to use voice commands.
 

An image of the singer instantly appears before my eyes; he’s leaning against a tree, his guitar swung over his shoulder, and he’s looking up at a night sky. I align the image, so it looks as if he’s leaning up against the bus stop in front of me and there’s something satisfying about this. The mix of the real and the feed. It’s hard to tell them apart.
 

The video starts running automatically. I can’t hear the song, only see the video: Nathaniel skipping through fields with a burning city in the background. At times, it looks like he’s walking alongside me. Or rather, I’m walking with him, joining in his protest. It’s such a stupid video, but I can’t help but grin as I head home, Nathaniel striding next to me. People smile back, nodding hello. It must be infectious.
 

Why is Zizi always so insistent on be being chauffeured to and from school? Everyone’s so friendly.
 

Buckleberry’s video comes to an end, which is a relief, as he was starting to creep me out. I try to search for something new, but it plays again. Nathaniel, strumming his guitar. I struggle to move the cursor towards the stop button, my face scrunched up in concentration. I can’t make it work.
 

‘Adjustment period,’ I sigh. It’s normal for it to take a while to get used to the controls. I’ll get the hang of it soon. But for now, I’ll have to watch the stupid video once more.
 

Other books

The Fall of Tartarus by Eric Brown
London Calling by Sara Sheridan
All the Little Liars by Charlaine Harris
Retribution (Drakenfeld 2) by Newton, Mark Charan
A Slice of Heaven by Sherryl Woods
Gotham by Nick Earls
Las Vegas Layover by Eva Siedler
The Widow's Secret by Sara Mitchell