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Chapter no 6

The Giver

“Lily,ย pleaseย hold still,โ€ Mother said again.

Lily, standing in front of her, fidgeted impatiently. โ€œI can tie them myself,โ€ she complained. โ€œI always have.โ€

โ€œI know that,โ€ Mother replied, straightening the hair ribbons on the little girlโ€™s braids. โ€œBut I also know that they constantly come loose and more often than not, theyโ€™re dangling down your back by afternoon. Today, at least, we want them to be neatly tied and toย stayย neatly tied.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t like hair ribbons. Iโ€™m glad I only have to wear them one more year,โ€ Lily said irritably. โ€œNext year I get my bicycle, too,โ€ she added more cheerfully.

โ€œThere are good things each year,โ€ Jonas reminded her. โ€œThis year you get to start your volunteer hours. And remember last year, when you became a Seven, you were so happy to get your front-buttoned jacket?โ€

The little girl nodded and looked down at herself, at the jacket with its row of large buttons that designated her as a Seven. Fours, Fives, and Sixes all wore jackets that fastened down the back so that they would have to help each other dress and would learn interdependence.

The front-buttoned jacket was the first sign of independence, the first very visible symbol of growing up. The bicycle, at Nine, would be the powerful emblem of moving gradually out into the community, away from the protective family unit.

Lily grinned and wriggled away from her mother. โ€œAnd this year you get your Assignment,โ€ she said to Jonas in an excited voice. โ€œI hope you get Pilot. And that you take me flying!โ€

โ€œSure I will,โ€ said Jonas. โ€œAnd Iโ€™ll get a special little parachute that just fits you, and Iโ€™ll take you up to, oh, maybe twenty thousand feet, and open the door, andโ€”โ€

โ€œJonas,โ€ Mother warned.

โ€œI was only joking,โ€ Jonas groaned. โ€œI donโ€™t want Pilot, anyway. If I get Pilot Iโ€™ll put in an appeal.โ€

โ€œCome on,โ€ Mother said. She gave Lilyโ€™s ribbons a final tug. โ€œJonas? Are you ready? Did you take your pill? I want to get a good seat in the Auditorium.โ€ She prodded Lily to the front door and Jonas followed.

It was a short ride to the Auditorium, Lily waving to her friends from her seat on the back of Motherโ€™s bicycle. Jonas stowed his bicycle beside Motherโ€™s and made his way through the throng to find his group.

The entire community attended the Ceremony each year. For the parents, it meant two days holiday from work; they sat together in the huge hall.

Children sat with their groups until they went, one by one, to the stage.

Father, though, would not join Mother in the audience right away. For the earliest ceremony, the Naming, the Nurturers brought the newchildren to the stage. Jonas, from his place in the balcony with the Elevens, searched the Auditorium for a glimpse of Father. It wasnโ€™t at all hard to spot the Nurturersโ€™ section at the front; coming from it were the wails and howls of the newchildren who sat squirming on the Nurturersโ€™ laps. At every other public ceremony, the audience was silent and attentive. But once a year, they all smiled indulgently at the commotion from the little ones waiting to receive their names and families.

Jonas finally caught his fatherโ€™s eye and waved. Father grinned and waved back, then held up the hand of the newchild on his lap, making it wave, too.

It wasnโ€™t Gabriel. Gabe was back at the Nurturing Center today, being cared for by the night crew. He had been given an unusual and special reprieve from the committee, and granted an additional year of nurturing before his Naming and Placement. Father had gone before the committee with a plea on behalf of Gabriel, who had not yet gained the weight appropriate to his days of life nor begun to sleep soundly enough at night to be placed with his family unit. Normally such a newchild would be labeled Inadequate and released from the community.

Instead, as a result of Fatherโ€™s plea, Gabriel had been labeled Uncertain and given the additional year. He would continue to be nurtured at the Center and would spend his nights with Jonasโ€™s family unit. Each family member, including Lily, had been required to sign a pledge that they would not become attached to this little temporary guest, and that they would relinquish him without protest or appeal when he was assigned to his own family unit at next yearโ€™s Ceremony.

At least, Jonas thought, after Gabriel was placed next year, they would still see him often because he would be part of the community. If he were released, they would not see him again. Ever. Those who were releasedโ€”

even as newchildrenโ€”were sent Elsewhere and never returned to the community.

Father had not had to release a single newchild this year, so Gabriel would have represented a real failure and sadness. Even Jonas, though he didnโ€™t hover over the little one the way Lily and his father did, was glad that Gabe had not been released.

The first Ceremony began right on time, and Jonas watched as one after another each newchild was given a name and handed by the Nurturers to its new family unit. For some, it was a first child. But many came to the stage accompanied by another child beaming with pride to receive a little brother or sister, the way Jonas had when he was about to be a Five.

Asher poked Jonasโ€™s arm. โ€œRemember when we got Phillipa?โ€ he asked in a loud whisper. Jonas nodded. It had only been last year. Asherโ€™s parents had waited quite a long time before applying for a second child. Maybe, Jonas suspected, they had been so exhausted by Asherโ€™s lively foolishness that they had needed a little time.

Two of their group, Fiona and another female named Thea, were missing temporarily, waiting with their parents to receive newchildren. But it was rare that there was such an age gap between children in a family unit.

When her familyโ€™s ceremony was completed, Fiona took the seat that had been saved for her in the row ahead of Asher and Jonas. She turned and whispered to them, โ€œHeโ€™s cute. But I donโ€™t like his name very much.โ€ She made a face and giggled. Fionaโ€™s new brother had been named Bruno. It wasnโ€™t aย greatย name, Jonas thought, likeโ€”well, like Gabriel, for example.

But it was okay.

The audience applause, which was enthusiastic at each Naming, rose in an exuberant swell when one parental pair, glowing with pride, took a male newchild and heard him named Caleb.

This new Caleb was a replacement child. The couple had lost their first Caleb, a cheerful little Four. Loss of a child was very, very rare. The community was extraordinarily safe, each citizen watchful and protective of all children. But somehow the first little Caleb had wandered away unnoticed, and had fallen into the river. The entire community had performed the Ceremony of Loss together, murmuring the name Caleb throughout an entire day, less and less frequently, softer in volume, as the long and somber day went on, so that the little Four seemed to fade away gradually from everyoneโ€™s consciousness.

Now, at this special Naming, the community performed the brief Murmur-of-Replacement Ceremony, repeating the name for the first time

since the loss: softly and slowly at first, then faster and with greater volume, as the couple stood on the stage with the newchild sleeping in the motherโ€™s arms. It was as if the first Caleb were returning.

Another newchild was given the name Roberto, and Jonas remembered that Roberto the Old had been released only last week. But there was no Murmur-of-Replacement Ceremony for the new little Roberto. Release was not the same as Loss.

He sat politely through the ceremonies of Two and Three and Four, increasingly bored as he was each year. Then a break for midday mealโ€” served outdoorsโ€”and back again to the seats, for the Fives, Sixes, Sevens, and finally, last of the first dayโ€™s ceremonies, the Eights.

Jonas watched and cheered as Lily marched proudly to the stage, became an Eight and received the identifying jacket that she would wear this year, this one with smaller buttons and, for the first time, pockets, indicating that she was mature enough now to keep track of her own small belongings. She stood solemnly listening to the speech of firm instructions on the responsibilities of Eight and doing volunteer hours for the first time. But Jonas could see that Lily, though she seemed attentive, was looking longingly at the row of gleaming bicycles, which would be presented tomorrow morning to the Nines.

Next year, Lily-billy, Jonas thought.

It was an exhausting day, and even Gabriel, retrieved in his basket from the Nurturing Center, slept soundly that night.

Finally it was the morning of the Ceremony of Twelve.

Now Father sat beside Mother in the audience. Jonas could see them applauding dutifully as the Nines, one by one, wheeled their new bicycles, each with its gleaming nametag attached to the back, from the stage. He knew that his parents cringed a little, as he did, when Fritz, who lived in the dwelling next door to theirs, received his bike and almost immediately bumped into the podium with it. Fritz was a very awkward child who had been summoned for chastisement again and again. His transgressions were small ones, always: shoes on the wrong feet, schoolwork misplaced, failure to study adequately for a quiz. But each such error reflected negatively on his parentsโ€™ guidance and infringed on the communityโ€™s sense of order and

success. Jonas and his family had not been looking forward to Fritzโ€™s bicycle, which they realized would probably too often be dropped on the front walk instead of wheeled neatly into its port.

Finally the Nines were all resettled in their seats, each having wheeled a bicycle outside where it would be waiting for its owner at the end of the day. Everyone always chuckled and made small jokes when the Nines rode home for the first time. โ€œWant me to show you how to ride?โ€ older friends would call. โ€œI know youโ€™ve never been on a bike before!โ€ But invariably the grinning Nines, who in technical violation of the rule had been practicing secretly for weeks, would mount and ride off in perfect balance, training wheels never touching the ground.

Then the Tens. Jonas never found the Ceremony of Ten particularly interestingโ€”only time-consuming, as each childโ€™s hair was snipped neatly into its distinguishing cut: females lost their braids at Ten, and males, too, relinquished their long childish hair and took on the more manly short style which exposed their ears.

Laborers moved quickly to the stage with brooms and swept away the mounds of discarded hair. Jonas could see the parents of the new Tens stir and murmur, and he knew that this evening, in many dwellings, they would be snipping and straightening the hastily done haircuts, trimming them into a neater line.

Elevens. It seemed a short time ago that Jonas had undergone the Ceremony of Eleven, but he remembered that it was not one of the more interesting ones. By Eleven, one was only waiting to be Twelve. It was simply a marking of time with no meaningful changes. There was new clothing: different undergarments for the females, whose bodies were beginning to change; and longer trousers for the males, with a specially shaped pocket for the small calculator that they would use this year in school; but those were simply presented in wrapped packages without an accompanying speech.

Break for midday meal. Jonas realized he was hungry. He and his groupmates congregated by the tables in front of the Auditorium and took their packaged food. Yesterday there had been merriment at lunch, a lot of teasing and energy. But today the group stood anxiously, separate from the other children. Jonas watched the new Nines gravitate toward their waiting bicycles, each one admiring his or her nametag. He saw the Tens stroking

their new shortened hair, the females shaking their heads to feel the unaccustomed lightness without the heavy braids they had worn so long.

โ€œI heard about a guy who was absolutely certain he was going to be assigned Engineer,โ€ Asher muttered as they ate, โ€œand instead they gave him Sanitation Laborer. He went out the next day, jumped into the river, swam across, and joined the next community he came to. Nobody ever saw him again.โ€

Jonas laughed. โ€œSomebody made that story up, Ash,โ€ he said. โ€œMy father said he heard that story whenย heย was a Twelve.โ€

But Asher wasnโ€™t reassured. He was eyeing the river where it was visible behind the Auditorium. โ€œI canโ€™t even swim very well,โ€ he said. โ€œMy swimming instructor said that I donโ€™t have the right boyishness or something.โ€

โ€œBuoyancy,โ€ Jonas corrected him. โ€œWhatever. I donโ€™t have it. I sink.โ€

โ€œAnyway,โ€ Jonas pointed out, โ€œhave you ever once known of anyoneโ€”I mean really known for sure, Asher, not just heard a story about itโ€”who joined another community?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Asher admitted reluctantly. โ€œBut you can. It says so in the rules. If you donโ€™t fit in, you can apply for Elsewhere and be released. My mother says that once, about ten years ago, someone applied and was gone the next day.โ€ Then he chuckled. โ€œShe told me that because I was driving her crazy. She threatened to apply for Elsewhere.โ€

โ€œShe was joking.โ€

โ€œI know. But it was true, what she said, that someone did that once. She said that it was really true. Here today and gone tomorrow. Never seen again. Not even a Ceremony of Release.โ€

Jonas shrugged. It didnโ€™t worry him. How could someone not fit in? The community was so meticulously ordered, the choices so carefully made.

Even the Matching of Spouses was given such weighty consideration that sometimes an adult who applied to receive a spouse waited months or evenย yearsย before a Match was approved and announced. All of the factorsโ€” disposition, energy level, intelligence, and interestsโ€”had to correspond and to interact perfectly. Jonasโ€™s mother, for example, had higher intelligence than his father; but his father had a calmer disposition. They balanced each other. Their Match, which like all Matches had been monitored by the

Committee of Elders for three years before they could apply for children, had always been a successful one.

Like the Matching of Spouses and the Naming and Placement of newchildren, the Assignments were scrupulously thought through by the Committee of Elders.

He was certain that his Assignment, whatever it was to be, and Asherโ€™s too, would be the right one for them. He only wished that the midday break would conclude, that the audience would reenter the Auditorium, and the suspense would end.

As if in answer to his unspoken wish, the signal came and the crowd began to move toward the doors.

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