The matchmakers, p.1

The Matchmakers, page 1

 

The Matchmakers
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The Matchmakers


  PRAISE FOR THE MATCHMAKERS

  An intriguing dystopian society read. What I loved about the book was that I didn’t know who we could trust and who was working behind the scenes to ruin what should have been Rosemary's life with her perfect Match

  MARIA BURGIE

  I loved the spin on the ending/resolution compared to other YA dystopian novels. The story was easy enough to follow and enjoyable, especially for those who enjoy romance blended with dystopia as a little more than just a subplot.

  AMANDA N NEWMAN

  THE MATCHMAKERS

  ZARA HOFFMAN

  The Matchmakers.

  Copyright © 2022 Zara Hoffman.

  The Matchmakers/Zara Hoffman – 1st ed.

  ISBN 978-0-9991986-0-5

  Book Cover Design ©2015 JM Rising Horse Creations

  * * *

  All rights reserved.

  * * *

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to entities, events, or locales is completely coincidental.

  * * *

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Thank you Jonathan and Mr. Hood for your helpful feedback and not thinking I was a sociopath when I brought this story into our senior year Creative Writing Seminar.

  TRIGGER WARNING

  This book includes violence and a miscarriage. Please take care of your mental health when deciding to read this book as it’s a dystopian world with upsetting governing methods.

  Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.

  GEORGE ORWELL, 1984

  CONTENTS

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Epilogue

  Author’s Note

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Also by Zara Hoffman

  1

  My sister looks like a goddess as she waits for the Couturier to finish taking her measurements. Her waist-length hair is braided in a crown and precious gems encased in white gold hang from her ears, wrists, and neck.

  The only thing missing from her appearance is a smile.

  She frowns at the holographic display of her outfit. “You’d think after seventy-five years there would be more flexibility with the color scheme.” She whispers, but not quietly enough.

  I frown. It’s our family’s lavender, which has always been a flattering hue on us. Some people are stuck in garish oranges or washed-out yellows. Before I can ask what her issue with the color is, Mother turns away from the Couturier and gives my sister a sharp look. “Kalliope, we talked about this.”

  “It’s Kalli,” she corrects.

  “This can’t continue,” Mother says, ignoring my sister’s comment. “Kalliope is the name I gave you and it is the one by which your Match will address you. You should be setting a good example for your sister.”

  I interrupt, not wanting to hear their bickering on what was supposed to be a celebratory day. “But aren’t you excited?” I ask my sister before she can dig into our mom. It’s nerve-wracking, I’m sure, to be Matched with an unknown individual but it’s also the start of the rest of your life. The happiest occasion that exists except perhaps having a child.

  Kalli rolls her eyes. But before her frustration can be channeled toward me in her usual lecture on my adherence to tradition, the Couturier retracts her measuring tape. “Please get dressed, Miss Young,” gesturing to the dressing chamber.

  My sister’s expression softens as she regards the woman. She always was nicer to the working class than was proper in Mother’s opinion. Kalli steps onto the round platform and is immediately shielded from sight by a rounded metal door.

  There are machines that can do it easily but for such an important event, every future Match is attended to by a human expert to make sure nothing goes wrong. Today is too important, and the schedule is too tight, to allow for any errors.

  The woman places the dress in the adjoining tube and selects the parameters of the outfit, making the last few necessary adjustments on the panel. The outfit begins to shimmer until it disappears completely. The panel transforms into a holographic display of my sister in the chamber and I watch fascinated as the dress slowly materializes on her body. It’s like nothing I’ve ever seen before.

  Aside from the technology panels and tablets, the room looks like a forest. Vines cover the ceiling and walls and they gather in the corner, turning into a swing. In the center of the space is a large tree with shades of pink and purple fruit hanging from the branches. We’re underground in an old bunker—how can something grow here? There’s no sunlight here, natural or artificial. And yet, it looks like the plant has been here a while, rooted in the ground too deeply to have been recently planted here for the event.

  I stand, intending to walk closer when Mother turns to me. “I expect you will handle this with more grace, Rosemary.”

  I wince at the comparison. It’s not so much that I resent the compliment, but I don’t like accepting it at my sister’s expense. Thankfully, I am saved from needing to reply when Kalli reappears.

  Two women wearing blue dresses enter and usher my sister through a secret door that opens in the wall. Their outfits made it clear they were Adorners, responsible for Marking the soon-to-be Matched couples, but I had only seen them in my textbooks until now. Like the Couturier, the role is filled by people less fortunate than our family.

  There aren’t many opportunities to socialize with people like that—something Mother appreciated and Kalli hated. Like always, I’m caught somewhere in the middle of their opposing opinions.

  Mother motions me to rise. We are not meant to see the Marking, but my sister calls out, “Wait! I want Romy to come with me.”

  Mother purses her lips at the use of my nickname in front of others and the unorthodox request of me witnessing an otherwise private process but clearly decides not to argue in front of the Adorners. As a judge, truth is her first priority but even I can admit that she values appearances almost just as much. And revealing our family is not a picture of tranquility has never been an option.

  “Come find your father and me when it is time,” she tells me then takes her leave back through the way we had come in hours ago. It’s only when the doors shut behind her that it hits me she left without saying goodbye to my sister.

  Kalli holds out her arms and pulls me next to her. Together, we walk toward the dark passageway and continue until another door opens. I blink a few times, adjusting to the stark simplicity of my new surroundings. This space is much smaller and resembles an old hospital room I’ve seen in textbooks with its metal examination chair and garish white light.

  After the War, the medical system had been redone to not only be as advanced as possible and become more accessible but accepted discomfort had been fixed. No one should be afraid of science, especially when it regards one’s or a loved one’s health.

  Which makes me wonder why this room doesn’t reflect that mentality. Perhaps it’s an homage to the first Ceremony that had been conducted within a week of the Ceasefire? Visual records of that historic event show a much less lavish affair than the one my parents described when I asked about theirs at the start of the year. I’d seen it every year during the broadcast but I’d never thought to ask how it had felt for them until it hit me that Kalli would be going through it so soon.

  I stand next to the seat and one of the women pulls a black, silk blindfold out of the cabinet and secures it around my sister’s head. She then takes my sister’s dominant hand, flips it over, and begins sanitizing the skin with a hand-held photoblade. Though it’s not touching Kalli’s skin, it peels off the top layer, revealing a smoother one underneath.

  The second woman mixes a small vial of clear liquid with a packet of black powder. When she finishes, she funnels the solution into a smaller glass cartridge which she clicks into something that looks like a combination of an old-fashioned wax seal and table clamp. She places the instrument around her arm so the circular plate is centered over the prepared skin. Pressing a button, the thing clamps together and the ink begi
ns to disappear into the machine.

  Kalli squeezes my hand with surprising strength and I squeeze back, trying to ignore the tingling I now feel in my fingers. A sure sign I’ll be massaging the circulation back into my hands once this is over.

  The woman removes the contraption and rubs a clear cream over the freshly Marked skin. I lean closer to see the Matchmakers’ insignia staring up at me. Though I’m familiar with the encircled serpentine infinity sign, one can’t live where we do without seeing it everywhere–including our parents’ skin—the two snake heads seem more belligerent than usual.

  I close my eyes and shake my head, clearing the strange thoughts from my mind. It’s probably the lack of circulation messing with me. I start rubbing my hands together to get rid of the lingering discomfort.

  With some help, my sister stands up and blindly reaches for my hands. The blindfold won’t come off until the Ceremony is underway.

  I take hers in mine before she trips in her search.

  “You should go upstairs,” she says.

  I kiss her cheek and squeeze her hands once more before I withdraw and head toward the elevator to take me upstairs.

  The metal doors close on the room and open on the President’s Theater. Sleek, platinum columns stretch to the circle of lights hanging from the domed ceiling, framing multiple tiers of red velvet loges and balcony seating. Above the stage is the Matchmaker insignia. In the center of the stage stands a long table with five empty seats. Beside it, there is a black marble podium. The sprawling, deco venue was modeled after the original Dolby Theatre, which was bombed in 2024. This one seats roughly seven thousand people, double the original capacity.

  Only families of those being Matched are invited to view the Ceremony in person, making it the first time I’ve ever seen the stage so close rather than from the comfort of our home. I applaud with everyone else when the President rises from his seat and ascends the steps.

  Elected eight years ago by the Matchmakers, President Clark has continued his father’s legacy in maintaining and streamlining our society’s efficiency in all areas of interpersonal relations, especially in improving the conditions of the working class. A tall man, he stands out even without the distinction provided by his gray suit and pants, a white dress shirt, and a royal purple tie—the First Family’s color. His two sons and wife sit in the Presidential box off stage left.

  He rests his hands on the rostrum. His gold cufflinks, which bear the Matchmakers’ insignia, reflect the bright overhead stage lights. He waits for the applause to quiet before introducing the five Matchmakers as they walk on stage.

  The first to appear is Hathor Edna Mitchell, the oldest member of the panel and the leading sociologist in our society. Her silver hair is pulled back in a tight bun and she wears a black robe with a summer orange collar.

  Next is Pan Elias Richards, who is also a senior member and a renowned behaviorist. He wears a navy tie.

  Freya Lucille Tunstall follows. Her robe bears a cerulean blue collar. Though only thirty, she has already been a Matchmaker for ten years, chosen when she invented a new way of measuring stress levels and improving the immune system.

  Enzo Joseth Houston, a genealogist, and pioneer in genetics is the next to appear. His tie is deep fuchsia.

  The last member is Aphrodite Lillian Taylor, one of the expert neurologists who has been researching the causes for memory dysfunction. Her collar is cordovan.

  When all five are seated, President Clark starts reciting the customary Ceremony speech. I silently mouth the words, having memorized them when I was five. “Welcome to the annual Matching Ceremony. Your esteemed men and women take their job very seriously and deeply consider every facet of each person’s character before choosing their perfect Match. As you know, this Ceremony started after World War IV and continues to maintain peace and civility among our society.” He surveys the crowd, his gaze stopping briefly on my family. When my parents both turn to me, I realize President Clark wasn’t looking at us, but at me.

  The President clears his throat and continues his speech, one I’ve heard and seen broadcasted many times. “And now, it is with great pleasure that I announce this year’s Matches.”

  I tune out the beginning of the list. Thankfully, Mother doesn’t call out my inattention. It is not until the last name is called—my sister’s—that I sit up straighter.

  “Miss Kalliope Esther Young and Mr. Geoff Gage Adams.”

  Everyone silently watches the projection of my sister and her Match enter from opposite sides of the screen. Their blindfolds have been removed and they walk towards each other until they meet in the center and shake hands—not hug or kiss as is customary. Then the screen momentarily goes black, and they appear on stage through a trapdoor. She gracefully steps forward with her head held high, hand in Geoff’s, and an almost too–serene smile in place. I glance at my parents, but they are wearing genuine expressions of pride and don’t seem to notice what I do.

  From the few times our families have convened at joint judicial and scientific galas, I remember Geoff being more scientifically inclined. It will probably distract my sister from going on too many rants about our government. One thing she has never decried is our scientific achievements. Though I can’t recall them sharing more than five words beyond the perfunctory greetings. I wonder how The Matchmakers made their decision to pair them together. But I know my questions will be answered in the next part of the Ceremony.

  Kalli and Geoff move to stand beside the President while the Matchmakers go down the line and explain why they are perfectly suited to each other.

  Matchmaker Mitchell speaks first. “Miss Young, your fearless attitude and ability to ask hard questions are valued assets that compliment Mr. Adams’ desire for knowledge. Your persistence and his methodology will no doubt yield many fascinating results. I am confident that the two of you will break down the mysteries of science.”

  It’s the nicest description of my sister’s rebellious streak I have ever heard. I glance at my mother and see a tight smile settled on her face. Her hands are clasped together in her lap and I can see her knuckles turning white.

  Matchmaker Houston clears his throat and I turn to face the stage again. “Neither of your families has ever been Matched together, maintaining a pure gene pool and minimizing the chances of birth defects of any future children. Both your families are protected against many diseases, none of which are overlapping, giving your offspring a great chance of survival. Your physical traits are also compatible.”

  “Moreover,” Matchmaker Taylor says, “neither of your families has a history of any neurological diseases. Your children will be free to achieve many great things as contributing members of society without the fear of a ticking clock.”

  Matchmaker Richards speaks next, addressing Geoff. “Miss Young will help push your boundaries while you temper her sometimes overzealous personality.” He shifts in his seat to talk to my sister. “Both of you will give a part of yourself, completing the other, while never feeling at a loss. Together, you will provide the support for both of you to grow into your best selves.”

  “Your similarities and differences will not only balance out your characters, but also your stress levels,” Matchmaker Tunstall begins, addressing them simultaneously. “As a Match, it is not only your responsibility to cherish your partner, but also to take care of them when they cannot do what is best for themselves. Miss Young, your mentorship of your younger sister clearly exemplifies your ability to fulfill this role. Mr. Adams, your caring disposition and determination can be seen in your work at the hospital. Your shared empathy will strengthen your relationship even more.”

 

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