Battle for the park, p.1

Battle for the Park, page 1

 

Battle for the Park
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Battle for the Park


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

  Text and art copyright © 2022 by Cake Creative

  All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Random House Children’s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  Random House and the colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.

  Visit us on the Web! rhcbooks.com

  Educators and librarians, for a variety of teaching tools, visit us at RHTeachersLibrarians.com

  In association with

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.

  ISBN 9780593479421 (trade)—ISBN 9780593479445 (lib. bdg.)—ebook ISBN 9780593479438

  Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

  Penguin Random House LLC supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin Random House to publish books for every reader.

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  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Map

  Chapter 1: The Bugged-Out Rev

  Chapter 2: Real School

  Chapter 3: Home…but Not Home Home

  Chapter 4: A New Destiny

  Chapter 5: A Bright Future

  Chapter 6: Opening Night

  Chapter 7: Activate Safe Mode

  Chapter 8: An Emergency

  Chapter 9: Keeping Secrets

  Chapter 10: Detective Cam

  Chapter 11: The Heist

  Chapter 12: A Midnight Snack

  Chapter 13: Pretend Parents

  Chapter 14: Not a Rev Anymore

  Chapter 15: All in My Mind

  Chapter 16: Not So Fast

  Chapter 17: #MissingKidsMarch

  Chapter 18: Dispose

  Chapter 19: Purpose

  Chapter 20: Wonder Worlds

  Chapter 21: The Realm of Realities

  Chapter 22: Me & a Friend

  Chapter 23: Something Normal

  Cam’s Guide to the Park

  Getting Inside Futureland

  Acknowledgments

  INTERVIEW OUTPUT REPORT 0001

  Date: 08-29-2048

  Location: Undetermined

  Interviewer: Unlogged

  Subject: Undefined

  INTERVIEWER: Are you awake?

  SUBJECT: I do not require sleep. I am currently functioning at full capacity.

  INTERVIEWER: Right. Let’s get to it, then. What do you know about Futureland?

  SUBJECT: Futureland is the world’s most popular and innovative theme park. The entire park flies from city to city, making it accessible to guests around the globe. Most recent stops include Tokyo, London, and Chicago. The creators of Futureland, Stacy and J. B. Walker, collaborated to design and manage the park—the first-ever experience of its kind. The park currently consists of ten worlds—

  INTERVIEWER: Stop. What do you really know about Futureland?

  SUBJECT: I’m sorry, I don’t understand.

  INTERVIEWER: What is the secret to the Walker technology? How did they create everything?

  SUBJECT: I’m sorry, I don’t understand.

  INTERVIEWER: [microphone registered silence]

  SUBJECT: I’m sensing tension. Is there anything I can do to make your experience better?

  INTERVIEWER: We’re running out of time.

  SUBJECT: Thank you for coming. We hope to see you again.

  INTERVIEWER: Wait—a few final questions. Do you know where you are?

  SUBJECT: Internal Global Positioning mechanism status: deactivated.

  INTERVIEWER: Good. And do you have a name?

  SUBJECT: Yes. We are all given names.

  INTERVIEWER: Disgusting. Well, what is it?

  SUBJECT: My name is [transmission corrupted].

  Sunday, August 30, 2048

  7:23 a.m.

  Look, you’d probably think I was the luckiest kid in the world…because I live on top of it.

  No, seriously.

  Literally.

  Well…more like above it, if I’m being precise—vocabulary word! (My teacher, Madam Bonnier, would be proud.) I’m growing up in the coolest, most famous theme park. Ever. Like, for real for real.

  Yeah, yeah. That one. Only one above the rest.

  FUTURELAND.

  Seen the holograms of my mom and dad on your news tablets? Maybe they even mentioned me—their only child. Bet you wondered what life was like growing up in a roaming theme park. You probably called us the luckiest family in the world.

  Maybe.

  Most kids would think having a permanent ticket to Futureland would be the best thing ever. A regular kid might be so gassed up, they’d turn into an insomniac. You know, the people who stay up all night guzzling down coffee—which Dad says stunts your growth—and wandering the park destinies until the sun comes up. Or they’d get heads so big, they couldn’t even strap into the Jet-Blur and fly around to each exhibit.

  To me…Futureland was just home. And on most days, I loved it.

  But this was not one of those days.

  “Good morning, Cameron Walker,” Dooley chirped, bursting into my room and leaning over my bed. Her unblinking eyes scanned me, the irises turning from hazel to neon orange.

  I covered my head with a pillow. “I’m still sleeping.”

  “You are verbalizing, so you must not still be sleeping, and your mother asked me to wake you.”

  I let out a big snore and covered my face with my top blanket. It was Scooby-Doo themed. My favorite show on my favorite blanket, of course. “Ugh. It’s too early.”

  Dooley yanked the covers back. “Actually, it’s seven-twenty-five a.m. You’re five minutes and three-point-two-five seconds late to meet your mother, though I see that you’re in need of at least another hour of sleep, based on your oxygen levels and brain waves.”

  “Yeah, yeah, good morning to you, too.” I opened one eye, spotting her two perfectly round afro-puffs.

  I scowled.

  She smiled wide. Our grins were identical, our skin was the same shade of bronze brown, and our faces had the same tiny, star-shaped birthmark below our left eyes. Mom designed her like that so most people would think we were family. So I wouldn’t be lonely. Sometimes I’d forget Dooley was even a rev. She fooled just about everyone. People called Mom’s androids the best ever made.

  “You are now seven minutes late to meet your mother.”

  “Fine! Fine!” I rolled out of bed, brushed my teeth, and pulled on an old Futureland T-shirt. I flipped through a few pages of a Watson and Holmes graphic novel while I brushed. Probably reading more than I was brushing, honestly. I like the new version set in Harlem, New York. “Dooley! Where’s Mom?” I called out.

  “Elevator.” Dooley practically yanked me through the condo. Only tiny colorful lights marked the path, the windows blacked out by the auto-shades. “Here, take these,” Dooley said as we rushed, handing me a pair of Future-vision goggles—the special, high-tech eyewear that helped us navigate Futureland and see all its wonders.

  “Are these new?” I asked.

  “Somewhat.” Dooley grinned mischievously, whispering as we got closer to my mom. “I’ve been tinkering with them.”

  “Hey, Cam-Cam. Missed ya.” Mom squeezed me tight and kissed my forehead, and I secretly wiped it off. “Took you long enough.”

  “What are we even doing? I was still sleeping.”

  “You know the deal…. The Walkers walk the walk, and that means we’re up and at ’em,” she said, placing her palm flat on the wall beside the elevator doors. They slid open silently, and a soft green light welcomed us in. “Plus, I need your kid brain.”

  There was no way out of this…. When Dr. Stacy Walker made up her mind about something, nothing could change it.

  “So where are we going?”

  “Uncle Trey called. Said there was a problem with one of the gorilla-revs. Malfunction. Something he couldn’t fix. He’s across the park dealing with a digi-water leak in the Future Ring. We’re too close to opening day for anything to go haywire. Told him my right-hand man and I will handle it.”

  “That’s Dad.”

  “He’s the left hand,” she said with a smile.

  “Wait, there’s something Uncle Trey couldn’t fix?” I asked, shocked. My uncle is, like, King of the Handymen. He could probably even reignite the sun if its light ever went out.

  Mom raised her eyebrows and nodded. “I know, I know, I said the same thing.” She touched my hair, then the beehive of locs she’d been growing ever since I was born. “Trying to be like me, k

id? Growing out nicely.”

  “I’ll catch up.” I peeped the new crop of twists sprouting from the top of my head in the elevator reflection and smiled.

  “Destination?” the elevator asked.

  “Walker Family Jet-Blur Hub,” Mom replied before turning to me. “You ready?”

  “Always.” Even though I complained sometimes, I still loved exploring the park with her and helping with the revs and new tech. I was always the first to try out all-new exhibits or role-play a guest in Dad’s latest story lines. They needed kid approval. They needed my expertise.

  “Good. It’s important you know the ins and outs,” Mom said, like she always did. I noticed her smile from a side glance. She was so proud. I felt a little guilty that I’d rather have been still snoozing in bed—or reading one of my crime books.

  The elevator shot straight up. Silvery walls turned to glass as it made its way to our private park entrance: a massive train terminal with floor-to-ceiling windows.

  We stepped out. Wall-o-gram billboards twinkled and flickered, filling with photos from different Futureland eras.

  “Good morning, Walkers,” said one of the guard-revs standing at the entrance. His uniform shone bright, and the Futureland pin on his jacket glowed.

  Mom nodded at him.

  “Please step on a Jet-pad and prepare for travel,” he said.

  We each jumped on an outlined box on the floor: the foot sensors that called the Jet-Blur to take us to the park destinations.

  This might be my favorite thing my parents made. I pressed my face against the glass, watching as the park’s transportation system burst into view: a high-speed travel pod with room for three. When the park was open, there’d be hundreds of these in the air like cool black marbles threaded with gold, each self-navigating vehicle flying high above the park destinies.

  We stepped out of the waiting area and up to the three-seater pod. Its surface dissolved, leaving glowing seats for us.

  I leaped into one.

  “Preparing for transport in three…two…one.” The black sphere closed around us.

  “You think I should update these?” she asked as we piled in. “Maybe make them more spacious…change the color?”

  “Never. I love them.”

  She winked at me.

  The dashboard illuminated. “Where would you like to go, Dr. Walker?” the Jet-Blur voice asked.

  “Future Trek Destiny. Main entrance,” she commanded.

  “Your future, your dreams, your reality await you,” it said before lifting into the air.

  My ears popped and my stomach lifted as we shot into the sky. The pod lightened, its pitch-black tint revealing the best view. As we rose into the sky, my stomach dropped like being on a roller coaster. But after a second, I felt weightless. I started to count the ten destinies of Futureland. They always reminded me of neighborhoods cobbled together and floating above the world.

  The Futureland sign glowed ahead, cresting over the Mines of Tomorrow and Future Falls. Dad said they’d made it look like the Hollywood sign. The clouds were outside the walls of Futureland, but if we were out there, I bet I could have grabbed one.

  “Future vision recommended,” the Jet-Blur reminded us.

  A compartment above us slid open, revealing three pairs of Future-vision goggles. I slid on the pair that Dooley had given me instead, their glow turning my fingers a bright blue.

  I gazed down. Usually, the goggles were helpful to see in the dark caves of the Mines of Tomorrow, but way up here above the park, they made the best binoculars. We soared over it all:

  The Black Beat city of music and neon lights.

  The Wonder Worlds of thousands of doors leading to new places.

  The Galactic Gallery and its universe of stars and planets and asteroids hurtling through space.

  The Millennium Marketplace floating around with all its treasures.

  The Word Locus with its towers of living books.

  Sometimes I spent all day in a Jet-Blur pod, flying high and staring down at every single detail like I was one of Futureland’s eagle-revs or something, gazing down on my habitat. Oh, and pro tip: there’s nothing like seeing the Chicago skyline from a Jet-Blur pod high above the city at sunset. You know, just in case you’re ever visiting.

  Meanwhile, Mom was blabbing into her wireless earpiece. “No, no, Trey. I hear you. Yep, we’re almost—Wait, hold on, another call. Give me a sec. Cam, baby?”

  “Hmm?” I looked at her.

  She crouched over in her seat, tapping furiously on her tablet. She mouthed: Eat your breakfast. “Uh-huh. Yep,” she said, all business again. “Got it. Okay, actually, could you go back for a second? I missed that last part. I’m sorry….”

  Cameron. Psssst. Cameron!

  I whipped around at the sound of Dooley’s voice. She tapped my shoulder with a granola bar.

  “Ugh, you don’t have anything else?” I asked, grabbing it from her.

  No, unfortunately I do not, she said. But her mouth didn’t move.

  My jaw dropped. “Dooley, how— What did you—”

  She raised her finger to her lips. It’s your goggles. I figured out how to transmit sounds from my internal speaker through them so you can hear. Similar to headphones. Only you don’t have to block your ears.

  “Wow,” I said aloud. I remembered Mom working on something like that last year. She called it bone conducting—a way to send sounds into someone’s inner ear without playing it aloud or covering their eardrums. She said it might be able to help park guests who were hard of hearing.

  I’ll tell you more about it later. Dooley winked. For now, enjoy your granola. This bar has a half day’s supply of all vital nutrients for an eleven-year-old boy.

  “Sounds like cardboard,” I grumbled.

  “I’m sorry, I didn’t hear that. Could you please repeat?” Dooley asked aloud.

  I shrugged. “Thanks, I guess.”

  “You’re very welcome, Cameron,” she responded. “Muy delicioso, yes?”

  I rolled my eyes as Dooley impersonated our chef-rev, Alejandro. He thought all his meals tasted like liquid gold. Well, maybe gold tastes bad. But you get the point.

  “You’re not laughing,” she said.

  “It was a bad joke.” And I wasn’t in the mood to laugh. And this was definitely not a gourmet meal. “Ugh.”

  “What’s that, Cam-Cam?” Mom asked, a muffled Uncle Trey voice still escaping her earpiece.

  I waved off her nosy glare, turning back to the window. I knew Mom was trying. Dad, too.

  But it was Sunday.

  The one day of every week where I got a breakfast feast. A stack of Dad’s famous French toast (he always puts chocolate chips on top—he can’t resist chocolate!), eggs, sautéed vegetables, fresh fruit, yogurt, home fries, veggie sausage for Mom, turkey bacon for Dad. All of it for me.

  But that didn’t seem like it was happening today. They were going directly against Walker Way of Living #1: Always make time for each other.

  Futureland was an all-day, every-day thing. They’d been doing it since before I was born, and when my parents got in this mode, there was no stopping them.

  Mom patted my leg like she could hear my thoughts. Maybe she could. Moms just know things sometimes. She flashed me her bright white smile. “Arrival day, Cam-Cam. You know the drill.”

  “Mm-hmm,” I mumbled. Arrival days were all about getting prepared for guests, making sure the park was perfect. Boring!

  I preferred travel days. The park sailing over oceans and seas headed for new destinations. We’d have movie nights in the Future Theater or picnics in one of the Wonder Worlds and even family laser tag or basketball in the Sports Summit if Uncle Trey wasn’t busy fixing things in the park.

  My skin got all prickly and weird, and I squeezed my eyes shut. Everything felt like it was changing…and not necessarily for the better. First, we were scheduled to stay in Atlanta for a whole school year instead of three months like when we normally visited a city. Second, this time tomorrow, I’d be on the ground, away from the park and in a school.

 

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