Futureland, p.1

Futureland, page 1

 

Futureland
Select Voice:
Brian (uk)
Emma (uk)  
Amy (uk)
Eric (us)
Ivy (us)
Joey (us)
Salli (us)  
Justin (us)
Jennifer (us)  
Kimberly (us)  
Kendra (us)
Russell (au)
Nicole (au)

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21

Larger Font   Reset Font Size   Smaller Font  
Futureland


  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 © 2023 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.

  Trade Paperback ISBN 9780593479469—Hardcover Library Binding ISBN 9780593479483—Ebook ISBN 9780593479476

  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.

  a_prh_6.1_145344141_c0_r0

  Contents

  Cover

  Also by H.D. Hunter

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Map

  Chapter 1: Good Mysteries

  Chapter 2: The Holo-Pal

  Chapter 3: Research

  Chapter 4: Next Stop, New York

  Chapter 5: Soaring

  Chapter 6: Reunion

  Chapter 7: Somebody’s Watching

  Chapter 8: Fun City

  Chapter 9: Family Business

  Chapter 10: The Smartest Twelve-Year-Old in NYC

  Chapter 11: Long Story Short

  Chapter 12: Rock Mountain Race

  Chapter 13: Brain Waves

  Chapter 14: The Boy in Black

  Chapter 15: The Architects

  Chapter 16: The Crew

  Chapter 17: Jordan

  Chapter 18: A Setup

  Chapter 19: Whitebourne

  Chapter 20: The Castle

  Chapter 21: Under Wonderland

  Chapter 22: One Shot

  Chapter 23: The Nightmare Hour

  Chapter 24: A Brighter Morning

  Chapter 25: Human Innovation

  Epilogue: Far From Over

  Cam’s Guide to the Park

  Getting Inside Futureland

  Acknowledgments

  _145344141_

  THE WALKER WAYS OF LIVING

  New Year’s Eve—Year 2038

  By Cam (and Mom and Dad)

  Always make time for each other.

  Family business is family business.

  Do the best you can.

  Speak your mind and don’t hide your feelings.

  Be grateful to those before you.

  Be considerate of those coming after you.

  Be yourself and dream big.

  Walk the walk and keep your promises.

  Stick together. No matter what.

  Always keep it moving.

  PLAN B

  VOICE ONE: Do we still have a trace on the Walkers?

  VOICE TWO: Absolutely. We’ve stolen enough of their data to continue our plans.

  VOICE ONE: What are they up to? Are they staying in Atlanta? Should we strike again?

  VOICE TWO: It’s hard to tell. We are monitoring their conversations for any decisions they make.

  VOICE ONE: And have we received any word from Southmore since he was captured?

  VOICE TWO: I’m afraid not. He is on a strict lockdown.

  VOICE ONE: Very well, then. I think it’s time we move on to plan B.

  VOICE TWO: Oh, goody! Plan B!

  VOICE ONE: Yes. Time for us to send in someone who can get the job done. One of our finest. One of our cruelest. Someone not even we can fully control…. We told the Walkers this was only the beginning. Now it’s time to show them.

  VOICE TWO: I’ll get a message out right away.

  Saturday, January 23, 2049

  Midnight

  You know, good mysteries don’t just fall out of the sky onto your lap.

  You usually have to hunt for ’em. Sniff ’em out. Put the clues together like a real investigator. I guess I always had a feeling I could be a detective. I love figuring stuff out. Good mysteries are kinda like…a holographic trading card! You turn it this way and that, and each time it catches the light, you see something a little different. You gotta be able to look at a picture from all angles and see what no one else can see, even if it’s right in front of them.

  After everything that happened in the last few months, I know that solving mysteries is the life for me. It feels like I finally know who I’m supposed to be.

  I’ll admit, when me and my family landed in Atlanta five months ago, we got more than we bargained for. An evil corporation led by a really bad dude named Southmore hacked our park’s technology. He made the Futureland revs and attractions glitchy and dangerous, and then he started kidnapping kids who visited the park. Can you believe he even made evil rev copies of my parents?

  He wanted to frame my family and shut down our park so he could use our technology to start his own creepy city. But we stopped him. Totally pow, wham, whomped him outta the park! Even his own robot henchmen turned on him. But I didn’t do it alone. It was me, my new crew I met at Eastside Middle School, and Dooley—my best friend and the smartest rev ever.

  The best thing about friends is that they can turn good mysteries into great ones. I don’t know what I’d do without them.

  * * *

  “What would you do without us?” Rich said, shaking his head at me. The five of us crouched behind a glowing bush off the beaten path of Futureland’s walking trails.

  “Hush up, Rich!” Earl whispered. “We’re supposed to be hiding.”

  A group of revs with bright orange eyes and Futureland uniforms walked slowly past our hiding place. They peered side to side as they made their silent nightly rounds. We all crouched lower to stay out of sight.

  “CJ—are those Watchers?” Angel asked.

  I nodded. “Yeah, they’re doing their last check of the park, to make sure nobody stayed behind after the doors closed. They’ll be gone in a second. Then we can move.”

  “What are we looking for, anyway?” Yusuf asked.

  “You’ll see.” I smirked. I waved for my crew to follow me as I bounded from behind the bush. We took off running through the park, headed to the nearest Jet-Blur pod station.

  We placed our feet on the Jet-pads, and two metallic black orbs, big enough for us to crawl into, arrived within seconds. Me and Rich took the first one. Yusuf and Angel went for the second one, and little bitty Earl squeezed between them. He’d do anything to stay close to Angel.

  I programmed our pods to travel to the same location, deep within the park to an area that visitors hardly ever encountered.

  Our pods landed gently in a clearing surrounded by fog and shadows. I stepped out and felt a leaf crunch softly under my foot.

  “CJ…” Earl’s voice quavered. “Where are we?”

  “This is the back of the park. Between the Mines of Tomorrow and Future Trek.”

  “Mines of Tomorrow? Isn’t that that scary place where you almost got trapped by those creepy cave-revs?” Rich asked.

  “Well, yeah,” I started, “but this part of the park is empty. No one comes this way. There’s nothing out here.”

  “Then what’s that?” Yusuf pointed.

  Through the fog, I spotted the outline of a large metal cylinder, like an upside-down cup, as tall as the lowest tree branches. It didn’t sparkle or make any sounds—simply camouflaged into the darkness surrounding it.

  “The perfect place to hide something,” I said.

  We stepped toward the cylinder, circling it and chattering with each other in low tones.

  “CJ, is this something your parents made?” Angel asked. “Why did they put it all the way out here?”

  “I’m not sure,” I said. “I noticed it on my locator scanner the other week, but my parents haven’t said anything about it. It could be anything. Maybe even something Southmore left behind.”

  “Creepy,” Earl said. “I don’t want to relive that all over again.”

  “This thing is probably just junk,” Rich said. “Storage or something your parents wanted to put out of the way. It’s not dangerous. Look at it. It’s not even turned on.”

  Rich whacked the side of the cylinder with his leg like he was playing kickball. Immediately, a blinding column of light blasted upward through the trees from the center of the dome.

  “Rich, no!” I tried to move toward the machine, but the ground under me started to rumble. I tumbled backward. My heart thudded as my eyes darted between my friends. I have to get them outta here. I h

ave to keep them safe.

  I pushed myself up off the ground, but someone grabbed me from behind. When I tried to shout, my breath got caught in my chest. I wriggled and kicked, but I couldn’t break free. What was happening?

  Boom. Boom. Boom. Boom.

  My heart pounded. I started to get dizzy. I screamed out, but the person holding me covered my mouth. My mind raced. It’s Southmore. Southmore is behind this. He’s back to finish the job. Him and his evil, corrupted revs.

  The column shining out of the top of the cylinder disappeared, leaving us in total darkness for a couple seconds. Then soft lights beamed down into the clearing through the surrounding trees, and I opened my eyes to get a look at the villains.

  Watchers. Futureland’s very own security revs. Wearing typical Watcher outfits—dark clothes, hats with low brims. You might even mistake them for regular park guests if you didn’t know what to look for. That made it easier for them to do surveillance in all of Futureland. But what were they doing here?

  My Watcher held me so tight I still couldn’t turn around, but I heard multiple sets of footsteps crunching behind me, getting closer and closer. Within seconds, Mom, Dad, and Uncle Trey appeared in the clearing and stood in the middle of all of us.

  “Cam. What on earth are you doing?” Mom asked. Her face tightened, stern. Her back-length locs were wrapped in a bright purple silk headwrap.

  “Um, exploring?” I said, my voice muffled by the Watcher’s hand still covering my mouth. Mom shook her head in disappointment. My heart tumbled. I snuck a glance at my friends, my skin prickly with embarrassment.

  “Let them go,” Uncle Trey barked at the Watchers. The park’s security-revs turned us all loose and faded back into the woods surrounding the cylinder.

  “You’re pretty deep in the park,” Uncle Trey said. “Got your friends out here, too. After closing. Gotta be more careful, kid.”

  “How many times have we told you, Cam—you can’t just sneak around wherever you want. We had no idea where you were.” She gulped. “Futureland is…It’s different now. We have to be more careful.”

  “I—I don’t know,” I stammered. “I found this thing. I thought…I thought maybe Southmore—”

  Mom sighed and walked over to me, kissed me on the forehead, and rubbed a smudge of dirt off my cheek. Dad joined us at her side, rubbing his bald head like he always did when he was stressed.

  “Come on, Big Man. Let’s head back to the condo. And y’all—” He turned to my crew. “Your parents have called us looking for you. It’s time for y’all to get home, too.”

  I huddled with the crew. Sometimes when I stayed in the park too late with my friends, Mom and Dad would have to drive everyone home and apologize. Other times Pierre, Rich’s personal chauffer, would take everybody home and my parents would lecture me about safety and respect.

  “Actually, Stacy,” Uncle Trey said, “why don’t y’all take the rest of the kids and I’ll hang back with Cam for a bit. Want to talk to him about something.”

  Mom nodded, and she and Dad set off, shuffling my crew to the front of the park like a row of ducklings. I waved goodbye and my stomach tightened with the fear that maybe their parents wouldn’t let them come back. All I wanted to do was keep my friends close. I closed my eyes and exhaled. Uncle Trey squeezed my shoulder.

  “You okay?” he asked.

  I shook my head. “I didn’t really think it was Southmore, you know. We were just adventuring….” I gulped. “What if my friends get in trouble?”

  “It’ll be okay,” he said. “Your parents will smooth it out how they always do. I know it’s hard. You used to have Dooley around twenty-four-seven. Now when your friends are gone, you’re all alone. I know you want to keep them here as long as you can, but—”

  “She was my best friend,” I mumbled. “She saved Futureland, and it’s not fair. Just because her code got a little messed up, she had to be taken offline.”

  Uncle Trey frowned and rubbed my shoulder again. “I know, I know. I wish I could fix it. Wish there was something I could do to make it how it was before. But until we figure things out, you have to more careful, Cam. We’re pretty sure the park is safe. But we still don’t know how bad we were hacked. In the meantime, please just listen to your parents. Do what they say.”

  I frowned and crossed my arms. “There’s so many rules now. Curfew. Can’t go here, can’t do that. Futureland used to belong to the whole family. You guys trusted me to handle anything in here. Now it’s like this isn’t even my home. It’s like I’m…trapped here.”

  Uncle Trey took a deep breath. He opened his mouth to speak, but I don’t think he could find the words. We stood in silence next to each other for a couple seconds before he changed the subject.

  “Hey.” He nudged me, pointing to the huge metal cylinder in front of us. I had almost forgotten it was there. “You wanna know what this is?”

  “I thought I was in trouble. Supposed to go back to the condo,” I grumbled.

  “If that’s what you want,” he replied. “I mean, if you’re not Futureland’s number one kid-approved destiny tester anymore, then just say that.”

  My eyes widened. “This is a new destiny?! I knew it! I knew it was something special!” My chest swelled with pride.

  Uncle Trey laughed. “Good hunch, kid. Those detective skills coming in strong. Now, let’s hurry up before your parents start looking for us again.” He extended his arm toward the metal building.

  “The future awaits you.”

  Saturday, January 23, 2049

  1:00 a.m.

  All right,” Uncle Trey said as we entered the building. “Close your eyes, and don’t open them until I tell you to.”

  “Okay, sheesh! You’re bossy like Mom,” I joked.

  “Nuh-uh. I’m the good twin. I’m nothing like your bigheaded momma,” he said.

  “Y’all got the same head, though,” I replied.

  “Hers bigger.” We both laughed as Uncle Trey tied one of his pocket bandannas around my eyes and led me into the cylinder.

  “Here we go, almost there,” Uncle Trey said. He held my hand and guided me through the space. I didn’t recognize the smell or any of the sounds inside. Uncle Trey’s excitement coursed through me like static as we shuffled into the building, and my heart pattered with anticipation. Finally, we came to a stop.

  “Here it is, Cam. Here it is.”

  I snatched the bandanna off and looked around eagerly. We had entered an empty room with a column of light beaming down from the ceiling, big enough for one person to stand in.

  “Uhh, an empty room? Wow. This is what’s been keeping you busy lately, huh? Working around the clock and having our chef-revs bring you all those peanut butter and blackberry jam sandwiches. Way to go, Uncle Trey.” I snickered.

  He rolled his eyes and chuckled. “Very funny. Oh, it’s empty now, but it won’t be empty for long!” Uncle Trey replied. “Go stand in the light.”

  I squinted, suspicious. “You go stand in the light.”

  “Ugh. Nephew, this isn’t a prank! I’m serious.”

  Uncle Trey was a known prankster, and he had been on a winning streak ever since the police released him and he returned to life in the park. He had programmed the assistant-revs in my dad’s lab to slap him on the butt every time my dad asked for them to “give him a hand.” He had swapped out all of my mom’s macro-wave instant coffee droplets with different nasty flavors. When my mom thought she was getting a delicious coffee flavor, she got medicine instead. Or licorice. Or the worst: hot dog–flavored water. He wasn’t going to get me.

  “Nah, Unc. I’m sorry. You can’t be trusted.”

  “Fine, look!” Uncle Trey walked over to the beam of light and stood directly underneath it. He twirled around and jumped up and down. Nothing happened.

  At first.

  After a few seconds of him jumping up and down, the column of light flickered and then a crackling sound shot through the air. The entire inside of the dome went dark. I couldn’t see Uncle Trey. I couldn’t even see my own hand in front of my face.

 

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Add Fast Bookmark
Load Fast Bookmark
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Turn Navi On
Scroll Up
Turn Navi On
Scroll
Turn Navi On
183