The Abnormals

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Summary

In the western half of what was once the United States, there is a certain quota everyone must meet to qualify for normality. Theodore Smith does not meet it. Imagine being arrested one night for a crime you didn't even know existed, and then finding out that your friends, family, and even your stuff turned you in. That's exactly what happened to Theodore Smith, an ordinary high school kid. So he thought. The crime was thinking and acting different than everyone else. Theodore is taken to a dreaded concentration camp and is told that he has no access to food, water, or modern plumbing until he confesses his abnormality and how wrong he is. Will Theodore escape from the brutal prison system? Will he restore justice to the nation? Or will the nation’s injustice overpower him?

Status
Ongoing
Chapters
1
Rating
n/a
Age Rating
16+

Forward

The Low Road By Marge Percy

What can they do to you?

Whatever they want..

They can set you up, bust you,

they can break your fingers,

burn your brain with electricity,

blur you with drugs till you

can’t walk, can’t remember.

they can take away your children,

wall up your lover;

they can do anything you can’t stop them doing.

How can you stop them?

Alone you can fight, you can refuse.

You can take whatever revenge you can

But they roll right over you.

But two people fighting back to back

can cut through a mob

a snake-dancing fire

can break a cordon,

termites can bring down a mansion

Two people can keep each other sane

can give support, conviction,

love, massage, hope, sex.

Three people are a delegation

a cell, a wedge.

With four you can play games

and start a collective.

With six you can rent a whole house

have pie for dinner with no seconds

and make your own music.

Thirteen makes a circle,

a hundred fill a hall.

A thousand have solidarity

and your own newsletter;

ten thousand community

and your own papers;

a hundred thousand,

a network of communities;

a million our own world.

It goes one at a time.

It starts when you care to act.

It starts when you do it again

after they say no.

It starts when you say we

and know who you mean;

and each day you mean

one more.