![]() I wanted everything to stop for just a few minutes, so I could get my bearings. ![]() ![]() I like fast-paced fiction, but dang this book was busy. The only safe place left may be with Asa, Parker's guardian, but first they need to find Mina and avoid slavers and Fleet soldiers. Things quickly go very, very wrong, and the two boys find themselves on the run and in grave danger. Parker breaks Chase out, but, to Chase's frustration, he only does it so the two of them can do some shopping and sight-seeing. He doesn't even know basic things that just about anyone should know, or why he said “Guide the star” when Parker first found him.Ĭhase desperately wants to find out more about himself, but Mina, Parker's android bodyguard, seems determined to keep him locked up. ![]() Chase can't remember his own identity (they got his name from a chip in his head), how he got there, or why he was wounded. That boy turns out to be Chase, the book's primary protagonist. Parker finds and rescues an unconscious, wounded boy outside his home. Mina and Parker's relationship was entirely the wrong reason to read this, since they didn't actually have much of one. Unfortunately, it didn't work as well for me as I'd hoped. That sounded pretty cool, and the cover practically screamed “fast-paced action,” so I decided to give it a shot. Reviews told me that her name was Mina, and that she was an android who'd basically raised Parker, the boy on the lower left. ![]() While I was cataloging this for my library, I became intrigued by the girl on the lower right corner of the cover. ![]()
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