An Excerpt from a Second Work-in-Progress

Another scene from a different work-in-progress. I’d love to know your opinions!


From miles away, incandescent light glowed from the City of Glass. Beautiful, glittering light sparkled in the inky blue-black twilight. A horse detached itself from a carousel and galloped into the dark, leaving a scintillating gilded trail shimmering behind him. The horse was as black as midnight with golden constellations on his back, desperate to leave his post.

No one was around to see except the young girl who hid behind a twisty and gnarled tree. She did not speak but watched as the bars that had speared the horse separated. The horse had wriggled through and the girl continued to stare at the gold glittering in his wake. She thought she should warn someone in the city, but even here, even now, she had no voice.

It felt like the horse was seeking freedom, and the girl understood the need for freedom, too. But her voice was empty. She had no words.

Under the hollow of the moon, she opened her mouth and screamed. The scream was the only voice she had. And the scream separated the City of Glass and the carousel horse from where she lay, thrashing in a bed.

The shrieking awoke her younger sister who was only a few feet away. She ran to her, bridging the distance. “Evelyn,” the silent girl’s sister cried out, shaking her. She continued to throttle her sister to wake the girl, to stop the screaming.

Tears flowed down both sisters’ cheeks but for vastly different reasons. When Evelyn awoke, her hazel eyes were unfocused. The horse, the horse, she thought, but the words would never come out.

Ella knew better than to expect Evelyn to speak. Everyone did. Yet Ella stared, expectant, hopeful.

But then, as she watched, Evelyn’s demeanor changed. She began to gasp, to clutch at the thin air, clenching and unclenching her fingers. Evelyn’s face paled, the color of paper in the dim moonlight. She lunged forward, grasping at nothing.

Ella gnawed on her lip, helpless. Frightened.

Then, as though all the life-wind had been sucked out of her, Evelyn collapsed backwards on the thin mattress, shuddering. Her frail chest rose and fell. Ella couldn’t help but think how fragile her sister looked. How weak her bones.

At Wyndhurst Academy, the other children often kept to themselves, and that autumn night as the wind whipped against the shutters and the rain pelted the roof, as the girl tossed and turned, they slept. Or at least pretended to.

Ella, Evelyn’s sister, crouched beside her sister’s bed and stroked her hair, coaxing her back to sleep with a quiet lullaby. As Evelyn started to lightly breathe again, Ella pried her sister’s hand open. The fist she had formed held something. Not empty as Ella suspected.

The fingers parted contained a ceramic horse as black as midnight with golden constellations on his back. Its painting was slightly faded, yet Ella was transfixed.

Where had the carousel horse come from, she wondered, and why was Evelyn clutching it like it was a dead man’s treasure?

Isabelle Palerma

A Peek into a Sleepless City

Sleeping is illegal. Dreaming is monetized. They said it was for our safety. But it wasn’t.

The city never sleeps. Why should it…?

The Regime is watching. Always watching…


Interested in more?

Wait until the official blurb comes out.

Maybe you’ll just have to stay awake to find out. 😉

Isabelle Palerma

An Excerpt from my WIP

Hey y’all,

Long time no updates. So, while I’m still working on GP, I’m also working on a few other projects – a chapbook and a couple of novels. One is a dark fantasy novel; the other of them is dystopian sci-fi.

I thought some of you might be interested in seeing an excerpt from it while I continue to work on my other projects.


I need to see you. It’s urgent. The words shimmer before dissolving into an array of scintillating pixels and vanish from my screen. As I yank my starched lab coat off and tug my scuffed-up leather jacket on, my thoughts splinter between the contents of the message and its sender, my best friend, Nahia Winters.

Meet at my place? I text back, scrunching up my eyebrows.

As the laboratory doors slide open, the chatter of my colleagues escalates, echoing against the linoleum. Most of them are headed to a downtown zone-out café. Some hipster joint with the hottest headsets, most up-to-date Dream technology, and most recently uploaded dreams.

After a fourteen-hour stint at the lab, I don’t blame them, but the word “urgent” buzzes through my veins like a stimulant. It makes the concept of rest impossible. Anyway, Nahia’s a Tier-1A Dreamer. Worst case scenario, she can lend me a headset and upload a dream for me.

“You coming, Simon?” Jonathan calls, glancing over his shoulder at me.

I wave him on, flashing him a small but genuine smile. “Got some personal stuff I’m dealing with,” I admit, “but thanks, anyway, bro.”

He nods. “Sure thing.”

I watch as he catches up to the rest of the group, grateful he doesn’t ask any follow-up questions.

A ping as Nahia reply comes through. I’m already there. Our texts glimmer: individual letters become dancing dots, then disappear before sending me back to my home screen. All evidence of our exchange disintegrates rapidly. Pinching the bridge of my nose, I shake my head in disbelief. “How does she have access to my phone?” I mutter, rolling my eyes. She’s the Dreamer, and I’m the scientist, and I can’t operate basic tech like she does.

Shit. It occurs to me. Nahia might be in trouble. I sprint out of the sterile space and hurry to the Aeroline station. Once I am at the station, I gnaw on my lower lip, contemplating how to ask Nahia if she’s in trouble without rousing suspicion of the monitors.

I loathe the monitors. They’re the ones who capture the outspoken ones.

I’m certain they’ll capture everyone who speaks out against the Regime one of these days – the way they surveil our phones and emails and now, how they check the Dreamers’ dream content for any signs of unrest or revolutionary thought.

Focus, Simon, I remind myself as I slide into the seat and flash my pass at the scanner. My heart begins to hammer in my chest as it dawns on me that Nahia’s probably already in trouble with the monitors if she’s showing up at my apartment during peak Dreamer hours. So, as we begin our ascent through the clouds, I start scheming.


Interested in reading more? Let me know! I’m always looking for more readers.

Isabelle Palerma