Surrogate Colony
by Boshra Rasti
Genre: Dystopian Science Fiction
In
MicroScrep, a post-pandemic world, one politician, Arthur Mills,
brings all scientists and engineers together to create a vaccine and
rebuild a world where harmony ensues. What results is a society where
algorithms control who you marry, who your child is, and what
position you have.
Adriana
Buckowski is not normal. Her eyes are two different colors, making
her less susceptible to the system’s propaganda, she has a unique
connection with a boy named Zach, and she has questions. Weird
occurrences happen as she gets closer to her Calling Ceremony, where
she’ll be given a position. When she finally starts piecing
together the twisted motives at play in MicroScrep, she becomes a cog
in the wheel of the state.
Her
only option for survival lies with Zach, and the hope that she will
be vindicated through a vigilante group off-grid. But with time
ticking against her, will she survive long enough to be redeemed?
Adriana’s eyes
I don’t know how I came to have one blue and one brown eye. The scientists must have gotten it mixed up when they did my genetic testing before I was born. It’s very rare that a doctor who does the Endowing gets it wrong, but freak accidents happen; we’re all human, right? Maybe he was inebriated. Scientists are exempt from the alcohol ban in MicroScrep, needing something to curb the stress of their job. Perhaps absent-minded, getting the DNA peptide nucleic acid calculations wrong. Anyways, it is what it is. I’ve embraced my freakishness.
But still, I wonder how can you get something like that wrong when we all start out in petri dishes? Wasn’t the point of the “In-Vitro for All Campaign” to not have to worry about abnormalities? Arthur Mills, the founding father of MicroScrep, had a lazy eye, I saw in one of the history books at school. Arthur Mills created MicroScrep with the help of only one hundred scientists who were caught in a gas explosion after the Cleanliness Campaign had been launched. Only seventy bodies were found, but all the scientists were immortalized in MicroScrep for their contributions. I wondered if they had abnormalities too. I have a stubborn sense that some things have been deliberately kept out of the history books. I look at my mother’s oblivious smile and am sure of it.
When I commented about Arthur Mills’s eye to my teacher in high school, she swiftly tutted me. “Don’t ever say that again! The photographer’ timing must have been wrong!” I still remember Laura scoffing at my comment. In fact, that’s the only time Laura really reacted to anything I said in school, although she did have an air of ruthlessness about her.
I still have a hard time believing what the teacher and the textbooks said. What I don’t understand is how people are selected for their positions in society. Like, can I have the specific algorithm please? That bugs me; there are certain people I frankly don’t want to be matched with. Harmony is supposed to be all knowing, having algorithms to figure that out. I reckon the chip that is inserted in us as embryos collects that information too, as well as giving us X-ray vision. As a child and young adult, I would ask these questions, but aside from a vague answer and a reprimand, I was given nothing.
I vividly remember the principal in high school calling a meeting at school with my mother and father. Mother was nervous that day, pleading with us, “Cody and Adriana, if you don’t stop asking questions at school, it can affect your position in society. Don’t you want to be successful and well-regarded?” Strange that Mother worried about saving face and now Cody has been matched with Laura, who has a fine job working with Harmony.
This makes me wonder, how does MicroScrep tick? I realize I’ve been given a golden opportunity to find out with Laura being my sister-in-law now. She is an engineer at Harmony, but what does she do exactly? How much influence does she wield? It is wildly wrong to ask her upfront, and anyways, she isn’t the kind of person you can really ask such a question to. In fact, a certain type of person only seems to get jobs at Harmony. Mother’s voice rings in my ear, “curiosity killed the cat.” But my favorite teacher, the late Ms. Bonito, said something to me on the eve of her untimely death that I won’t ever forget. “Adriana, it is true that curiosity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back.” Her eyes twitched with emotion as she said that to me. On her way home from school, she was killed in a car crash.
The Inciting Incident:
I notice more people filtering in and decide to go back to my chair. I scan the audience and seating for viruses. Finding my chair, I am almost ready to sit down, when a little, frail, blond girl approaches me, tapping me on the back before I take my seat. She can’t be older than ten. A cloth patch covers one eye. I recognize her; she’s a little girl that lives on our compound. I haven’t seen her before with the patch over her eye, though.
“Oh, is this your chair?” she asks, one bright, blue eye looking up at me.
“Yes, sorry sweetie, it is. Where are your parents? Aren’t you here with them?”
“Sort of. They are in charge of the music,” she says, looking down to the ground. “They won’t play any of the music that I’ve composed,” she says glumly.
“What kind of music do you create?” My curiosity piqued. I’ve never heard her playing music before on the compound. Come to think of it, I’ve never heard of a child composing music. I thought it came from an algorithm from Harmony.
“Nothing like the music played here. Father tells me to imagine what a flowing stream sounds like, or what birds must sing like, off-grid.” She mumbles this quietly, and I incline my ear to listen to her whistle a tune.
Goosebumps cascade down my arms, I choke out a whisper. “That’s very beautiful. You have a great talent.” This is the closest to an emotional response to music I’ve ever had. How peculiar, I notice that beyond the little girl is Laura, who is facing me, the dog lunging and barking at us. When she notices me watching her, she turns, pulling the dog away.
The little girl smiles, her one eye fixated on my face, and without a word, she turns and skips away. I want to follow her, to make sure she gets a seat and to compliment her and her parents at the end of the parade, but something on the other side of the plexiglass grabs my attention. Kevin is walking with Cody, their backs to me. I can see that their heads are tilted towards each other as if they are exchanging private comments. This strikes me as strange, Cody seems to increasingly spend more time with Kevin, even though Kevin is far older than Cody is. I wonder what they have in common that makes them spend so much time together? They do have soccer in common, but would a sport make two people so close? Kevin places an arm around Cody’s shoulder, and he gives it a pat as they part ways. Kevin wraps around the last plexiglass barricade and sits in the audience beside the little girl who whistled so sweetly.
My mind overwhelmed with all these sights and sounds around me, I now desperately want the parade to begin and be over so that I can go home. The parade will start shortly. I can hear the music amplified and the people in the parade taking their positions on, or in front, of their floats. I look around for Mother and Father and see them in the distance. I wave them over and take my seat.
A holographic projection reads, “Pre-MicroScrep Barbarians.” The music starts off chaotically to match the first floats that depict the pre-MicroScrep era. An unorganized swarm of actors dance wildly with synthetic blood covering their faces. They run up towards the plexiglass, sticking out their tongues, or showing long, bloody fangs. They hoot and holler to communicate; the audience taken aback by the abruptness, some laugh and point. A flash of light brings oohs and aaahs from the crowd. Everything goes black. The next float that passes is of people coughing and sputtering, some are choking. Cody’s body lies covered by a flag, one of a half dozen strewn on the ground. The holographic projection reads, “The Pandemic Hits.” A strong, large man depicting Arthur Mills stands back, bringing the scientists together in a circle to come up with a solution to the terrible pestilence that has hit mankind. All the while another float depicts men and women swaying, depicting the animalist urges that they did not control and what caused the pandemic to move through the population. Then finally, a float depicting the children that came of these wild pairings. Ugly, dumb and mad. Their mouths contorted into barbaric sneers.
The music becomes softer, timelier and more organized, although still electronic. A hologram of Arthur Mills projects largely to the clap of the audience. Some are in tears, pointing to their Perfect Family Matches, the grandness of his face, the redness of his hair, the symmetry of his features. A float of scientists that are busy working on a vaccine is depicted. The music becomes grander and louder, the crescendo coinciding with the hologram showing the mandatory vaccine inoculating the masses against the unseen enemy, the virus.
Chapter 6: The Hospital
The hospital smells of strong disinfectant covered by the artificial scent of synthetic lavender. It is eerily quiet, like being in a library. It’s as if I am on an insulated spacecraft. I scan the doorknob for microbes before knocking politely, but when there’s no answer, I help myself in. The secretary doesn’t look up from the holographic computer keyboard until I clear my throat loudly. Clicking out of the screen, she looks robotically through me.
“Ms. Adriana, am I right?”
“Yes.”
“Here to see Dr. Marks at one p.m.?”
“Yes.”
“Please help yourself to some water, in the refrigerator there.”
Looking towards the small refrigerator in the seating area, I am overcome with the institutional banality of the clinic.
“No, I’m all right. I’m not thirsty.”
Smiling warmly, the secretary motions to the waiting area. “Please have a seat. Dr. Marks will come out to greet you soon.”
The waiting area is quiet. The barrenness of it is made worse by the stifling heat, as if all the dreams of childhood are caught somewhere in a fog over this place. There’s one other girl in the room, sitting across from me on the wooden seats. She looks content, drinking the complimentary water in large, measured gulps.
“Hello,” she cheerfully acknowledges me.
“Hi,” I reply shortly, not in the mood for exchanging pleasantries.
She looks at me curiously, not deterred by my tone. “My name is Louise.”
“I’m Adriana.” I look to the ground, avoiding eye contact. After a few seconds of awkward silence, I ask, “Are you here to see Dr. Marks?”
“No, I’m here to see the psychiatrist, Dr. Beata.”
I tilt my head in confusion. “Oh, they have them here too?” I didn’t know they did more than egg extractions here. A psychiatrist in a fertility clinic? Maybe there is a deep psychic wound opened by the thought of a reproductive cell being stripped of you forever. Children show this fear when they are being potty trained. Some children can’t bear the thought of a part of their body being flushed down the toilet. Perhaps, it is the same sentiment for some women during their egg extraction.
She raises her eyebrows at me, seemingly shocked that I didn’t know this, and just says, “Yes.”
“Oh...I see.”
After a few seconds, Louise says, “The medication is making me anxious; I’m having a hard time sleeping. I feel quite moody. Dr. Marks says that I can’t take any sleeping pills until after my eggs are extracted, so I’m working with the psychiatrist on strategies I can use to help me sleep.”
A quiet squeak of a voice interrupts Louise from explaining further.
“Ms. Adriana?”
My eyes move towards where the voice is coming from. A frail, mousy-looking man in a white lab coat with poor posture stands in the hallway connecting the seating area with the offices. There’s something about the way he holds himself that makes me hesitant to identify myself. But everyone has said that Dr. Marks is the best at his job, and I dismiss the feeling.
“Yes, I’m Adriana,” I respond, my voice matching his tone. It is a response to his slight figure, concerned he may startle if I use my normal voice.
“Please follow me,” he says.
Walking behind him down the hall, I notice he has a slight shuffle and that he keeps his right hand jangling with something in his pocket, as if he is hiding some terrible secret in his lab coat. We arrive in an office with a full window view of MicroScrep tower. The roundabout of Purity below us is billowing with citizens and honking horns.
Snapping his gloves on, he says, “So, today is egg extraction.”
“Yes.”
“Did they take a blood sample two days ago?”
“Yes, they have. Was that to take my oxytocin levels?”
“Yes, my dear, soon you’ll know your place in society,” he whispers almost inaudibly.
“Take off your clothes and put on this gown. He leaves, returning after a few minutes later, once I’ve changed into my gown.
Strapping a mask over my face, he says, “Okay, now sit here while I start the calming gas machine.”
Feeling my body unwind from Louise’s random confession and the general sense of distrust I have for this doctor, I relax into the thought that this will all be over soon enough, then I won’t have to be on the medication anymore. The doctor opens my legs and inserts a long narrow tube inside me. A vacuum-like sound starts and I’m in and out of consciousness. All I hear is the doctor counting. “Three, four, five eggs...goodness me...eleven, twelve, thirteen...oh dear...fourteen, fifteen, sixteen...my, my...eighteen, nineteen…”
The next thing I remember is a nurse bringing me a fruit platter. I’m still in my gown.
“Eat up, dear, you’ll need to replenish,” she says.
The doctor enters abruptly.
“Hello, Adriana, how are you feeling now?” His voice is louder and more assertive than what I remember it to be.
“Good,” I manage to slur the word out between a spoonful of watermelon.
“You had many eggs and of such rare quality!” he exclaims. His voice is not only louder, but he’s speaking much faster than how he had before.
“I have a question,” I say, my voice a low drawl. The room is slightly swimming with the concoction of medicines.
Dr. Marks cocks his ear up in the air. “What’s that? You’ll have to speak up.”
“I have a question,” I say slightly louder, but slower with the heaviness of the sedation.
“Go on.”
“Does the state follow all young women of egg extraction age with cameras?”
“What on earth do you mean?” Dr. Marks’s face screws up as he questions me.
“A scientist, my sister-in-law, has been snapping photos of me behind my back—secretly.” I emphasize the word secretly, despite the exhaustion of speaking.
Concern fills Dr. Marks’s eyes. “Adriana, dear—this is very odd of you to ask. Sometimes these sorts of psychotic sensations take hold when you’re taking the hormones. Some women hallucinate visually or auditorily. This should have been reported when it happened, not now that I’ve extracted the eggs from you.” He takes a deep sigh in and gathers his thoughts, as if he is going through a protocol. “In this case, I’m not the right person to respond to this. I think I should send you to our psychiatrist, Dr. Beata. She’ll help you deal with this.” Taking my hand into his, he pats my back. “Don’t worry, there’s help for this sort of thing. I’m just not the right person to address these matters now.”
My mind is a fog, I remember the click and flashes of Laura’s camera, but I don’t remember the days preceding it. It is almost as if the last thing I remember is weeks ago. Come to think of it, I barely remember the parade. My face flushes, I only remember feeling panic. Then as if a picture emblazons itself in my mind. I am watching through a peep hole in a derelict building. Another flash and a human jawbone. My teeth chatter as I break out into a cold sweat. Maybe I am imagining things. Am I losing my mind?
Taking out his holographic phone, he rings his secretary.
“Please have Ms. Adriana see the psychiatrist today if possible.”
A half an hour passes and I’m in Dr. Beata’s office. She is a tall red-haired lady. Her wavy hair is impeccably twisted up around her face with bobby pins and flowers, and she is porcelain white, her mouth upturned in a permanent smile that makes her look somewhat angelic. She looks at me with a blank expression, a poker face against the pale institutional backdrop of the room.
“Hello, Adriana.” She speaks my name like pulled taffy, a slight nasal intonation in her voice.
“Hello,” I respond, overcome by the beauty of her face, manner, and voice.
“Please seat yourself,” she says, again drawing me in with the velvet intonation of her voice.
I pull out my chair and seat myself, somewhat trancelike, the drugs still raging in my veins. My eyes feel spellbound. I am still agitated by the jumbled flashes of memories that I am not sure took place.
“I’ve read over the notes Dr. Marks made about you.” She switches on the holographic keyboard, typing quickly. “Can you explain what you’ve experienced with your sister-in-law, Laura?”
Her words snap my mind out of its trance. Tingles move up my spine.
My heart races as I ask, “How did you know her name?”
She stops typing and looks at me, her eyes narrowing to a slit. “You must have told the doctor, or I wouldn’t...”
I searched my memory, but I don’t recall mentioning Laura’s name. Could this be some sort of conspiracy? Does Laura wield far more power in MicroScrep than I am aware? I didn’t say her name to the Doctor, I am sure of that. How does Dr. Beata know Laura’s name? Does she have access to some information on Harmony’s database about me and how I am affiliated with her? That’s the logical explanation, but why is Dr. Beata denying this?
There are a few moments of quiet, at which she resumes her typing. Breaking the intensity, I say, “Oh, I must have.” I want to have as little to do with Dr. Beata and Dr. Marks as possible now. The sinking feeling in my stomach must be my distrust of them.
“Yes, of course you have, or I wouldn’t know otherwise.” She rolls her eyes and laughs. “I am smart, but unfortunately not a psychic.”
Biting my lip nervously, I say, “Laura works for the state as a scientist, and we went swimming together. I noticed in her navel a small camera taking successive pictures of me—not once, but twice.” Dr. Beata’s typing slows down to a halt.
“Hmm,” she says, the angelic smile plastered on her face still.
Sporadically typing, Dr. Beata reads off a list of questions.
“How are you generally eating and sleeping?” she asks, poker-faced.
“I’m fine. I’m eating and sleeping well...apart from that day that Laura took pictures of me secretly...I felt my privacy was invaded, and it just made me feel suspicious, I guess.”
“You mean the day you think that Laura took pictures. Don’t be so sure; self-assurance often brings on delusion.” There’s a cautionary tone in the doctor’s voice. Opening a holographic image, she shows how light can sometimes play tricks on one’s mind, especially in water. The holographic clip showed someone swimming, seeing what seemed to be a sharp ray of sunlight, but upon surfacing, the light was all around.
“See, Adriana, this is how water can reflect light off surfaces, making it seem like a flash from a camera.” Squinting at me, she continues, “Do you think that this could be a possibility—that the reflection created the illusion of flashing lights from a camera?”
Dr. Beata’s question is a rhetorical one. I can tell she’s expecting me to agree with her. Inside, though, I feel the same hollowness that I felt when that camera captured me.
Even though I don’t agree, something cautions me to lie. “Yes.” I nod my head. “It must have been that.”
“Good.” Dr. Beata’s mouth resumes cheerfully, “Let’s forget this happened then, or else I’ll have to resort to medications, and that’s not good for anyone who might become a very important member of society.”
Her hand covers mine, and I repress the urge to shudder and pull away. She waits for my response, and I sigh and nod my head. In MicroScrep self-expression is frowned upon.
Dr. Beata spears me with a look. “Let’s forget this then, Adriana.”
The vacuous feeling in my stomach rises and engulfs my lungs with grim pain. “All right,” I whisper almost inaudibly. Is it that I’m going crazy? But I am certain that Laura snapped pictures of me. I just can’t make out why, unless the flash of images I saw are true, and there is some conspiracy afoot to have me doubt myself.
“Breathe, dear,” Dr. Beata senses my uneasiness. “Breathe.”
I take a deep breath, and she lets go of my hand after patting it a few times.
“Now be a good girl and don’t speak of this to anyone else, yes?”
Reviews:
“A
stunning debut by a bold new writer whose vision of the future
conjures the near-impossibility of affection, with women tossed
homicidally into surrogate birthing centers and men groomed to
become, yes, eunuchs. Or if you will, think Brave New World meets The
Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Boshra Rasti’s dystopia redeems itself
when two young characters conceive of a daring off-grid survival
among a group of elusive scientists. The author’s mature and
compelling voice is not afraid to lift the scrim, but beware, for
when she does lift the scrim, readers may recognize a society whose
angers and horrors and violent fetishism may seem all too familiar.
Surrogate Colony is a must read.”
~
Dan Gutstein, author of Buildings without Murders
“The
crisp prose and vibrant characters contained within Surrogate
Colonies' worldscape is a stunning debut by an author sure to capture
the public imagination. Rasti writes of the not-too-distance future
with terrifying clarity. “
~
Raymond Lee, author of The Race Riot
“Surrogate
Colony is a thrilling tale of love, betrayal, and the dangers of a
world reliant on technology.”
~
Caryn Pine
“Boshra
Rasti’s sweeping dystopian drama follows two young protagonists on
a journey of survival and redemption. Set in a post-pandemic world,
Surrogate Colony explores the human psyche after trauma and what can
happen when we succumb to fear. While Ms. Rasti’s writing is filled
with vivid imagery and edge-of-your-seat action, it is also the bond
between Adriana and Zach that anchors this story firmly in the
reader’s mind.”
~
Katherine Day, Grattan Street Press
“It
is not a surprise to learn that Boshra Rasti has a debut novel coming
out. I knew that she had the goods as a writer when her brilliant
short piece Creep appeared in Literally Stories UK during the spring
of 2021. She writes tough, economical yet entertaining descriptive
prose. From what I have previewed of it, the same holds the day in
Surrogate Colony. All readers new to Boshra will be well rewarded."
~
Leila Allison, Associate Editor, Literally Stories UK
Boshra Rasti is an Iranian-Canadian expatriate, writer and educator. She currently lives in Qatar as a teacher.
She is the author of several published poems, “Connection in the City”, a poem about the city of Surrey, BC, Canada, as well as the author of “In the Chrysalis”, a poem about the COVID-19 pandemic, published in Together...Apart, an anthology of creative works published by HBKU Press. Her short stories have been published by Grattan Street Press, Literally Stories, and South Florida Poetry Journal.
Boshra draws inspiration from the teenage mind, one she may not have fully outgrown. She also is an avid runner who enjoys the self-torture of running in Qatar. She has other eclectic interests such as making vegan ice-cream.
She may or may not use a pen name in the future to prevent a life-long tendency that people have of butchering her name. She hopes to someday make her home somewhere that doesn’t include burning up due to the consequences of global warming. You can find her works on her website: www.boshrawrites.com
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