The Quillan Games

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Authors: D.J. MacHale
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it worked.
    It was the same with the pedestrians. Like the people in the arcade, everyone was dressed in simple, drab clothing. But unlike the arcade, which was next to empty, there were loads of people on the street. People walked on the sidewalk in front of me, slowly but relentlessly. Those moving to my right were closer to the building, those moving to my leftwere closer to the street. I didn’t see much interaction. Everyone was in their own little gray world, thinking about whatever they were thinking about, going wherever they were going. The looks on their faces were blank. Maybe not as blank as those dado guys, but definitely spacey. I didn’t see anyone laughing, or angry, or even talking. This was a busy, crowded city, yet it was eerily quiet.
    On the ground level of the buildings were stores. Each with its own entrance. But unlike stores on Second Earth that used names to try to catch your attention, the signs above the doors here on Quillan all used the exact same typeface. The silver metallic letters were about eight inches high and mounted on a shiny black background. Stranger still, they didn’t show the name of the store, all they said was exactly what you could buy there. I’m serious. I saw a sign that said FOOD . Another said HEALTH CARE . I saw signs that said CLOTHING, HOUSING, DOCUMENTS, EMPLOYMENT, CHILD CARE , and even one that said LIGHT . I’m not exactly sure what they sold there. Lightbulbs maybe? Every single store had the exact same kind of sign, no matter what they were selling. The lettering looked oddly familiar. It took me a minute to realize the style of the print was the same as I’d seen on the back of that plate that was being stored in the vast belowground warehouse. These signs looked the same as the one word on the back of those plates: BLOK .
    I’ve painted a pretty bleak picture of this city. It was uniform, it was drab, it was dull. The best thing I can say is that it all seemed to function smoothly. It was like the workings of a fine-tuned clock where everything fit into place and operated the exact right way.
    There was one more thing I haven’t mentioned yet. I was saving this for last because it was the single most interesting thing I saw. Erected on the roofs of the smaller buildings werebillboards that looked like giant plasma TV screens. I’d say there was one on every block. They looked to be about twenty feet across by ten feet high. No matter where you stood, you could catch sight of one. Each of these screens had the exact same thing playing on it. For the longest time I saw nothing but colorful, animated patterns. Intricate 3-D geometric shapes danced and bounced and morphed into one another in a hypnotic dance. Along the bottom was a running crawl like you would see on those TV news channels at home. It gave information about the day, like the time—“17:2:07.” I thought that must be the time because it kept going up. The weather—“Clouds all day, followed by a chilly night with possible rain.” I also saw what looked like game results, but I had no idea who was playing or what the game was—“Pimbay d. Weej 14–2, Linnta d. Hammaba 103–100.”
    Every so often the animated graphics would give way to the face of a pretty young woman or a handsome man. They were dressed the same as everybody else in the city, only they had small patches on their front pockets like the dado police dudes had on their arms. Each patch had a small “B.” These people were like TV newscasters who would speak right to the camera with a pleasant, soothing voice.
    â€œThere is a program of music this evening,” one announcer said, his voice booming through the city. “Please set your digits to the blue location at precisely nineteen-zero-fifty-six. Have the best day ever.” Then the bright, lively patterns would return for a few moments. Followed by another announcer who came on to say,

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