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Showing posts with label Writing Awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Writing Awards. Show all posts

Thursday, July 02, 2015

And The Winner Is


Dan Walsh is the award-winning and bestselling author of 14 novels, including The Unfinished Gift, The Discovery and When Night Comes. He has won 3 Carol Awards and 3 Selah Awards. Three of his books were finalists for Inspirational Book of the Year (RT Book Reviews). Dan is a member of ACFW and Word Weavers. He lives with his wife, Cindi, in the Daytona Beach area where they love to take walks and spend time with their grandkids. Click here to connect with Dan or check out his books.



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This has been a very big week for writing awards, especially Christian fiction. On Sunday, AWSA announced the winners of the Golden Scroll Awards. Then on Monday at the big ICRS event in Orlando (which is still going on), the finalists for the ACFW Carol Awards were announced, as well as the winners for the 2015 Christy Awards.

But these weren't the only award announcements made this week. Family Fiction magazine announced the winners of the INSPY awards for fiction in seven different categories. Christian Retailing announced their "Best" Awards for 2015 (includes many categories, not just fiction). Am I forgetting any others?


As I read over the various lists on websites, blogs and Facebook posts I thought of a number of things. Of course, it resets the discussion about the value of becoming a finalist or a winner of one of these awards. How much does it matter? Does it really affect book sales? Some say yes, some say not so much.


While it might be hard to measure the rewards in terms of dollars and cents, it certainly brings a lot of extra attention and free publicity to the books and authors who make these lists. I've experienced this kind of attention several times, and I have to say...it does make you feel pretty good (for at least a few days). I'm also aware of a certain, intangible sense of validation that comes from it, too (maybe I don't stink as a writer).

But I think the greatest benefits from these awards might be for the reader, not the writers themselves. But it's a benefit many readers seem unaware of, or don't use to their full advantage. Let me explain.

I've been publishing novels now since 2009. I have 14 books "on the shelves," and I'm finishing up another. I've had the privilege of being named a finalist and also of winning a number of these awards. I was pleased to learn my novel, What Follows After, was among the Carol Award finalists announced this week for the historical fiction category. But before I was a fiction author, I was an avid fiction reader. I still am.

Those who love to read fiction are always on the lookout for another great book to read, or hoping to discover a new author whose work they totally love. When a fiction lover reads a great book, they instantly contact their friends and say, "You've got to get this book."

That's where these book award lists come in. Don't you realize what you have here? A perfect list of great books already broken down for you by category, pre-screened and thoroughly examined by other fiction lovers (who also happen to be skillful folks). Each one guaranteed NOT to be a dud.

The only possible setback might be the price. Many of these books come from traditional publishers who set the prices kind of high ($9 is common). I realize that most people are buying e-books now at the $2-3-4 range. But hey, let's be honest, you can easily pick up 3 duds for $9 lickety-split. Wouldn't you rather spend that money on one truly satisfying, well-written book? Who knows? You might also just discover your next favorite author, and you might also find out that author has lots of other books, published a year or two ago that are marked down to a discount price.

My advice? Spend a few minutes on Google and check out those lists of finalists and award winners in your favorite categories. Then make a shopping list of some really great summer reads!


Sunday, January 12, 2014

Launch Pad Contest: Boosting You Out of the Slush Pile - 2014 Edition

We're pleased to announce that the 2014 edition of our popular Launch Pad Contest: Boosting You Out of the Slush Pile is ready for take-off. It's the contest everyone wins.

We here at Novel Rocket love to encourage new writers and help them find their way through the complexities of the publishing world. We're not rock stars, but now that we've gained a little experience, we're appreciative of those who helped us get to where we are and would like to similarly pay it forward. 

This the fifth consecutive year of this event. We've had a lot of positive feedback from past participants, and several writers found it so valuable that they entered again. 

Moreover, a surprising number have contracted with agents and/or have been published since entering the contest -- and I'm not talking about just the winners. Several past contestants tell us that the critiques and encouragement they received from our judges gave them the boost they needed to keep going.

The Launch Pad contest works a little differently from most other writing contests in that it runs all year. We take submissions beginning in January. Each month from May through October, we judge one of the six genre categories. The winner of each of these monthly mini-contests has the opportunity to move into the final round. A second panel of judges decides which of those finalists should win the Grand Prize.

Oh, by the way: when we announce a monthly winner, we publish the winning entry on the blog, thus giving the writer's work some nice exposure. On at least one occasion, an agent saw a winning entry, liked what she read, and contacted the writer about the possibility of representation. You never know where something like this might lead.

Here are the categories, along with submission deadlines and the date each winner will be announced. Definitions of/criteria for each of these categories can be found at the Launch Pad tab above.



  • Suspense/Crime/Mystery/Thriller. Deadline: April 10, 2014. Winner announced May 12, 2014.
  • General Fiction. Deadline: May 10, 2014. Winner announced June 9, 2014.
  • Historical: June 10, 2014. Winner announced July 14, 2014.
  • Middle Grade/Young Adult Fiction: July 10, 2014. Winner announced August 11, 2014.
  • Contemporary Romance: August 10, 2014. Winner announced September 8, 2014.



  • Speculative Fiction: September 10, 2014. Winner announced October 13, 2014.

  • The Grand Prize will be announced on December 8, 2014.

    The contest is open to all unpublished novelists. That is, a writer who has completed a work of full-length fiction but has no novel published by a traditional publisher. Never mind if you've published poetry, nonfiction, plays, or have had short stories or articles printed in various publications. This is for anyone who's never had a novel published by a traditional publisher.

    We do ask, however, that your novel be complete, because if you win your category, you'll be required to provide the complete manuscript in order to advance to the final round. So if you're just getting started with that novel of yours, you might want to wait until next year before you hop aboard.

    However, if you think you'd like to get in on this now, check out the complete rules at the Launch Pad tab above. In addition to the submission requirements, you'll find a link to the entry form there and a Paypal button for the entry fee.

    We have several new judges this year who are eager to read your entries and offer their feedback. And who knows? We might even have a blown glass rocket trophy, much like the one at the beginning of this post, with your name on it!






    When she isn't overseeing the Launch Pad contest, Yvonne Anderson writes fiction that takes you out of this world.

    Fly through the space fantasy series, Gateway to Gannah, for some serious adventure!









    Sunday, November 11, 2012

    Spec Fic Winner Breaks Out of the Crowd

    This month, the Launch Pad judges had the privilege of choosing the winner of the Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror (aka Speculative) category.

    We received a good number of entries, giving us plenty to consider. But the winner stood out above the rest.

    One judge said the tight writing of this intriguing and well-paced story, along with a strong grasp of showing not telling, made it the clear choice. The other agreed, saying the story was skillfully developed and the writing showed few of the usual "newbie" errors.

    I won't keep you in suspense any longer: the winner is The Breakout by Rachelle Harp of Providence Village, Texas.

    Rachelle rounds out the number of this year's finalists for the Grand Prize award. She'll submit a proposal and her complete manuscript to the final round judges, and the big winner will be announced on December 10.

    In the meantime, enjoy the first chapter of Rachelle's entry:


    The Breakout
    by
    Rachelle Harp

    Chapter 1

    “This will hurt if you don’t hold still.” I grab Zinnia’s wrist, but she tries to wriggle free. I hold firm, and she relaxes for about two seconds. There. I manage to prick her thumb with the lancet and steal a drop of blood.
    Zinnia trembles on the stainless steel table. Her eyes widen. Small hands crush the hem of her white dress. Bright red seeps from the thumb prick, staining the fabric.
    “That wasn’t so bad, was it?” I pat her arm.
    Zinnia glares at me.
    She’ll get over it. I drop the scarlet bead of blood onto the gold chip and shove it into my scanner’s data port. When I press the button, the laser comes to life and pulses across the sample.
    “You don’t have to be afraid,” I say. “You can call me Trina if you like.”
    Zinnia’s mouth clamps shut, and she bows her sun-kissed head as though her prayer will somehow change the results. I almost ask her why she’s so scared. What would make her feel better. But then I remember my own Counting and shudder.
    “I was five, too, when I was Counted.”
    Zinnia peeks at me. “Did you get that then?” She points at the scrolled, metallic tattoo, dark against the pale skin of my right wrist.
    “Sure did. When I finish your test, you’ll get one, too.” Everyone is marked. Chosen and Defect alike. I suppose the tracking tattoos are the Union’s way of making sure we don’t run away, though I don’t know why anyone ever would. “Can you guess what your results will be?”
    “I don’t wanna be Chosen.”
    “What are you talking about?” I say. “Everyone wants to be Chosen. It’s a privilege.”
    Zinnia scrunches her nose.
    The scanner clicks and trills a mix of high-pitched notes. I expect to see another common reading in Zinnia’s test results, that she’ll be a Tradesman or a Laborer – just another Defect. But I’m surprised when the number pops on the screen.
    “You’ve got a Selectee Index number of 7.9831,” I say. Zinnia gives me a blank stare, so I smile. “That’s good news. You’re Chosen to be an Engineer one day.”
    Click here to continue.


    Yvonne Anderson writes fiction that takes you out of this world.
    Check out what readers are saying about her space fantasy series, Gateway to Gannah:
    Book 1: The Story in the Stars “…captivates readers from exciting start to satisfying finish…”
    Book 2: Words in theWind is “…a thoughtful and nuanced piece… remarkably solid…”





    Sunday, October 07, 2012

    October Romance


    My husband and I were married thirty-eight years ago this month. My son’s wedding is this Saturday. Forget about June being for lovers; as far as I’m concerned, October is the month for romance.

    As it happens, this is also the month we announce the winner of the Contemporary Romance category of our Launch Pad contest.

    A perfect fit for this category, this heartwarming romance meets contemporary issues head-on. 

    One of the judges felt irritated with the protagonist’s situation until the character’s motivations became clear; then the judge was won over. Both judges were impressed with the vividness of characterization. They said it was as if they knew the protagonist personally and recognized her right away as a real, flesh-and-blood person.

    The winning story is Afraid to Dance by Bethany R. Kaczmarek of Jarrettsville, Maryland. She joins our previous category winners as a final contender for this year’s grand prize.

    One more category remains in this year's Launch Pad Contest: Science Fiction/Fantasy/Horror. If you’d like to participate, you’d better hurry, because the submission deadline is in two short days (Wednesday, October 10 at 11:59 pm). Check out the official rules on the Launch Pad Contest tab above, and get your entry to us right away. Questions? Contact us at NovelRocketContest@gmail.com for a prompt reply.

    Meanwhile, we hope you’ll enjoy the first 3400 words of month’s Contemporary Romance winner:


    Afraid to Dance
    by
    Bethany R. Kaczmarek

    Chapter One

    Photo by K. S. Buffaloe
    Kasia Bernolak was on her own.
    Her father always said she’d been born with sunset in her hair and fire in her veins—all hope, all conviction, all passion. If he were here now—her daddy, her Tatusz—the sight of her would break his heart.
    She hardly recognized who she’d become.
    Perched on a boulder and soaked to the bone, Kasia stared out at the western South Carolina mountains, unable to dredge up enough motivation to get out of the downpour. Huntington Valley’s moss green canopy spread like an afghan over acres and acres, right up to the edge of the city. She climbed the ridge that morning hoping to breathe in some of Spring’s vitality, but she’d only managed to call down the rain.
    Kasia tugged her ponytail over her shoulder, plucking a few stubborn tendrils from her neck and wrapping them around her finger. Thanks to the rain, her hair had dulled from sunset red to mud brown, and her curls lay as limp as her spirit. They suited her better now.
    Nothing about her was fiery.
    She wished she could somehow call out the girl she used to be—the girl whose heart overflowed with music, the justice-seeker, the champion of the underdog. The Kasia who wasn’t afraid to fight.
    These days it was easier to nod and paint on a smile. Blake rarely compromised.
    But keeping him happy shouldn’t cost her everything.
    Her gaze traced the winding road on the far side of the valley. According to any GPS, home was a thirty-minute drive up through Langston Gap. Maps lied. True home—with its piping hot herbal tea, whispered Polish conversation, and strong-armed hugs—was forever out of reach. Mama and Tatusz would argue that homecomings were always a good idea, but some mistakes couldn’t be undone.
    Hopping down from the rock, she pulled her clinging t-shirt from against her skin and stretched. It would be nice to have something to dry her face off, but even now, a hushed drizzle fell. She’d wasted the morning trying to rally her heart. Over the past year, it had become almost as unfeeling as the granite beneath her—tough enough to withstand the storms, detached enough to cope.
    She wiped her hands on her shorts out of habit and glanced at her wrist. Her bare wrist. She’d left her watch in the room at the last minute. She simply needed room to breathe until—
    Panic knocked the wind out of her. The clouds. The sun. She’d lost track of time. Blake hated when she was late. She wound her way down the mucky dirt trail, rubbing the rain from her eyes with the back of her hand. As the path leveled out, she broke into a sprint.
    Toeing the trail, she veered to the right and cut down through a tilted stand of trees and paused. She wasn’t ready to leave yet. Her fingers gripped the slick bark of a birch as the scents of damp earth and mountain laurel conjured images of a time when she had the freedom to lose herself in the mountains for hours.
    A gift she’d taken for granted.
    Above the treetops, the rain’s pitter-patter morphed into a drum roll. Every other living creature in the vicinity had taken cover. Kasia closed her eyes and wrapped herself up in the solitude.
    Twenty minutes later, Kasia walked past the outermost buildings of Beasley University’s old, brick campus. Cold raindrops pricked her skin.
    She shivered.
    Step after step closer to Blake. Closer to the sneer that would greet her explanation, closer to some sarcastic remark about her disregard for punctuality.
    Closer. Closer.
    Every step sapped her energy.
    Blake was easier to stand up to when he was a couple miles away.
    Kasia shoved open the cafeteria door and stepped inside. She took a moment to collect herself beside a small palmetto, transplanted into these South Carolina mountains just like her and her Polish family. Chatter and laughter ricocheted off the marble floor and walls around her as she bent to wring out her hair over the soil of the potted plant.
    The clock on the stucco wall mocked her. Quarter after one. Blake might not have waited. Her sneakers squeaked across the floor and into the warmly lit cafeteria. The smell of garlic and oven fresh bread pulled her in as she scanned the room, spotting him right away.
    Appetite decimated.
    He eased back in his chair, hands clasped behind his head. Surveyor of the world.
    Willing her heart to match the steady cadence of her footsteps, she prayed a calm façade would hide her discomfort. Under the surface, her mind composed a discordant symphony of flat explanations and sharp words.
     Blake greeted her with a squint and a smirking once-over. “Drowned rat isn’t your best look, Kosh. Good thing the lunch rush is over.”
    Maybe. She nodded and shifted her weight, balling her toes in her soggy shoes. She might welcome the distraction a crowd could offer.
    He eyed his prized Armani watch. “It started raining at quarter ‘til. If you’d been here on time, you’d be dry.”
    Kasia tightened her ponytail. “I needed a walk to clear my head.”
    “Hope it worked. You’ve been off lately.”
    She scraped at the hem of her shorts. All that had mattered was the climb—conquering something rather than being the one to lose again. Lifting her gaze, she noticed an empty plate smeared with tomato sauce near his elbow. “You ate already?”
    “Well, I wasn’t going to wait for you indefinitely.” He brushed his bangs out of his eyes.
    “Sorry.” She touched the hard, angular stone on her finger, holding the ring firmly in place. “You plan to stay though?”
    He pointed to a chair. “Sit down, Kosh. I’ll go get you some lunch.”
    She blinked in surprise, and he was gone.
    (Click here to continue)



    Yvonne Anderson writes fiction that takes you out of this world.

    Check out what readers are saying about her space fantasy series, Gateway to Gannah. Book 1: The Story in the Stars “…captivates readers from exciting start to satisfying finish…”
    Book 2: Words in theWind is “…a thoughtful and nuanced piece… remarkably solid…”




    Thursday, November 04, 2010

    The Breakout


    THE BREAKOUT
    by
    Rachelle Harp

    Chapter 1
    “This will hurt if you don’t hold still.” I grab Zinnia’s wrist, but she tries to wriggle free. I hold firm, and she relaxes for about two seconds. There. I manage to prick her thumb with the lancet and steal a drop of blood.
    Zinnia trembles on the stainless steel table. Her eyes widen. Small hands crush the hem of her white dress. Bright red seeps from the thumb prick, staining the fabric.
    “That wasn’t so bad, was it?” I pat her arm.
    Zinnia glares at me.
    She’ll get over it. I drop the scarlet bead of blood onto the gold chip and shove it into my scanner’s data port. When I press the button, the laser comes to life and pulses across the sample.
    “You don’t have to be afraid,” I say. “You can call me Trina if you like.”
    Zinnia’s mouth clamps shut, and she bows her sun-kissed head as though her prayer will somehow change the results. I almost ask her why she’s so scared. What would make her feel better. But then I remember my own Counting and shudder.
    “I was five, too, when I was Counted.”
    Zinnia peeks at me. “Did you get that then?” She points at the scrolled, metallic tattoo, dark against the pale skin of my right wrist.
    “Sure did. When I finish your test, you’ll get one, too.” Everyone is marked. Chosen and Defect alike. I suppose the tracking tattoos are the Union’s way of making sure we don’t run away, though I don’t know why anyone ever would. “Can you guess what your results will be?”
    “I don’t wanna be Chosen.”
    “What are you talking about?” I say. “Everyone wants to be Chosen. It’s a privilege.”
    Zinnia scrunches her nose.
    The scanner clicks and trills a mix of high-pitched notes. I expect to see another common reading in Zinnia’s test results, that she’ll be a Tradesman or a Laborer – just another Defect. But I’m surprised when the number pops on the screen.
    “You’ve got a Selectee Index number of 7.9831,” I say. Zinnia gives me a blank stare, so I smile. “That’s good news. You’re Chosen to be an Engineer one day.”
    “What’s an engineer?”
    “Someone who builds great big buildings, like the Chief Administrator’s Palace.”
    She makes a sour face. “I don’t want to build things. I want to dance.”
    I laugh at her desire to choose her future. It doesn’t matter what she wants. The scanner has already decided for her, like it did for me twelve years ago. And like it does for every citizen of the Union. That’s the way of the Genetic Census.
    “Hold out your wrist,” I say in a firm voice and pull the tagging bracelet out of my lab coat pocket. “This may sting.”
    Zinnia squirms as I slide the device over her wrist, but she doesn’t cry like the other children this morning. I key in the code, wait five seconds and remove it. A metallic tattoo smiles back. I wave the scanner over her wrist to activate the tracking code and genetic classification.
    “You’re all set. Time to go.” I lift her off the table, noting the fresh scent of soap nestled in her hair.
    “Where are we going?” Zinnia’s voice is so small, like an echo.
    “To find your mother.”
    Zinnia traces the curve on her wrist as she shuffles down the narrow, white corridor of the Counting Center. The camera eye follows us. A blinking red light seems to keep time with our pace. Zinnia squints at the lens and slows her pace. Glass doors swish open and shut as we pass a labyrinth of rooms, each one hinting at the smell of blood.
    When we reach the Separation Room, a laser eye blinks and a steel-framed door glides open. A cold jet of air rushes over my exposed skin. I’m struck by the sharp antiseptic scent, stronger than usual. I’d much rather skip this part of the Census, but I can only do my job. The one I was Chosen for.
    In the middle of the room, Zinnia’s mother sits at a steel table, her face cradled in bony hands, as though lost in silence. When we enter, she stands, and Zinnia pushes me aside to run into her mother’s arms. The mother leans down. Her coal black braid swings like a tail over the white lace collar of her dress. With trembling hands, she strokes Zinnia’s hair.
    There is no easy way to do this, so I blurt it out. “You’ve got five minutes to say good-bye.”
    The mother stares at me. Her eyes are splintered with red cracks as though she’s been crying, and her bottom lip twitches. No one in the Census training sessions mentioned this look. It’s not the look of a mother doing her patriotic duty. It’s the look of a desperate woman. A woman on the edge.
    Zinnia tilts her head. “Why are you crying?”
    “Be a good girl,” her mother says in a choked voice. She clutches Zinnia tight, and they sway back and forth as though they are alone in the room. A strange sensation flickers through me, seizing my stomach. I try to brush it away – bury it even – but it squeezes tighter. It’s not right for the Chosen to feel such things.
    Zinnia’s eyes swell into pink puffs. “I want to go home.”
    My voice lowers, almost a whisper now. “The Union is your home now, Zinnia.”
    As soon as I say it, I want to take it back. Zinnia hides her face in the folds of her mother’s skirt, shutting me out. I stand motionless for the passing minutes, hammered by the blow of Zinnia’s tears and the jab of her cries. What can I do? This is not the scene they showed me on the training videos.
    The crimson glow of the communication panel blinks on and off. I exhale slowly and tap the button. “It’s time,” I say into the speaker. My voice cracks on the last word.
    “Acknowledged,” the guard on the other side says.
    In an instant, the mother transforms into a vicious creature, not at all the same quivering dove I’ve spent the last few minutes watching. Her arms coil around Zinnia’s leaf thin frame. “No, you can’t take her.” She shoves Zinnia behind her body, a fortress wall.
    My tongue lodges in the back of my throat. The flickering sensation reaches up my spine, my mind racing. After the devastation of the War, the Census brought stability back to our way of life. It gave us peace, order from chaos, and prosperity once again. Which is why parents give their children to the Union. Willingly. Not in defiance.
    This woman is poised to strike at me…I don’t understand. Why won’t she let Zinnia be Chosen? I rub my forehead. My Testing Station will be safe. The only place I’m sure I won’t have to witness the gruesome scene I fear is about to take place.
    But I’m too late.
    The guard marches into the room, led by the stiff crease in his pants leg. The gold eagle of the Military Guard blazes on his gray uniform. With an unsteady finger, I point at Zinnia. He nods his shorn head and grabs Zinnia’s hand. Each movement is carried out with precision, a mathematical equation worked out step by step.
    Only the answer to this equation has more than one outcome.
    Zinnia grabs a fist full of her mother’s skirt. The guard steps between the pair and wrenches them apart. She flails in his arms. Each kick of Zinnia’s foot stings me, as though I’m the one carrying her out, stealing her away from her mother. Her screams pierce like ice picks, and all I can do is turn away.
    I’m left holding the scanner, staring at Zinnia’s mother.
    The mother plunges to her knees and claws my leg. “Have mercy,” she cries, each gasp another sting.
    What am I supposed to do? Zinnia’s already been Chosen. Her classification already uploaded. The Genetic Census must be completed…right? Without it, what will prevent another war from breaking out?
    I rub the back of my neck. I can’t deal with this right now. As I turn to leave, her hands grab my ankle, shackling me to the ground. I try to break free, but she pulls harder, causing my arm to snap forward. Something hard hits my leg. The tranquilizer. It’s standard procedure to carry one, though I never understood why until this moment.
    The mother’s grip tightens, a vise around my ankle. There is no choice now. With a sigh, I thrust my hand into the pocket of my lab coat. The smooth metal handle is cool inside my clenched fist, which is odd because my fingers are already ice.
    She loosens her hold on me and lowers her voice into a rasping whisper. “For honor and union.”
    It’s like someone kicks the air out of my lungs. The day of my Counting floods back to me as if it were yesterday. I’m standing by the window of my childhood home. Sunlight searches through the dust speckled panes of our small compartment. The scent of freshly baked bread spirals through my nostrils. And my mother is next to me, humming.
    She brushes my hair in soft, deep strokes, not pulling a single strand too tight. Her fingers dance as she weaves the strands into a thick, copper braid. I look just like her, only a smaller version. Same smooth skin. Same pale blue eyes.
    “Hold still, Trina,” she says as I wriggle. Then she spins me around and speaks the exact words Zinnia’s mother spoke. “This is for honor and union.”
    Only they were the last words she ever said to me. She never came to the Separation Room to say good-bye that day. In a flicker, the images are gone. I’m left alone again.
    I stand shivering, let the tranquilizer drop to the floor.
    In front of me, Zinnia’s mother doubles over, sobbing uncontrollably. An unseen hand locks around my chest, squeezing, as she melts down. Even if I stop Zinnia’s selection, it won’t keep the dozens of others from being Chosen this year. All sent to a life of privilege, wanting for nothing. But they’d still be alone, with no one to love them the way a mother or father could. I shudder. Who will I separate next? A son and father? Another daughter and mother? I shock myself that I harbor such forbidden thoughts.
    “Get up,” I say.
    I can’t be responsible for her pain. Not today. She looks up, tears streak her face like tea stains. Red patches blot her cheeks. She looks as though she hasn’t slept in weeks. What I’m about to do could get me punished. Really, I don’t want to think about that right now because if I do, I’ll probably change my mind.
    I pull out the scanner. The genetic status window pops up. I glance at the mother. She’s trembling, clutching her hands close to her heart. My finger twitches as I scroll past Chosen and select Defect.
    I buzz the guard station. “There’s been a mistake,” I say into the speaker. “That last little girl…” The mother stares at me, eyes reborn with hope. I swallow hard. “Her name is Zinnia. It was merely a false reading on the scanner. Sorry about that. Bring the Defect back.”
    “Sure thing,” the guard replies.
    The woman lunges for me, but I pull away, shake my head. “There’s no honor in defiance.”
    In the heavy silence that passes between us, I begin to wonder what I’ve just done.