Pushing away her personal concerns, she returned to the system analysis. The ship sucked energy like a vortex, draining the remaining capacitors at an alarming rate. She regulated the temperature down two degrees and dimmed the ultraviolet lights in the biodome.
The Expedition needed an alternative fuel source quickly to maintain their current living conditions. She checked on the status of Alpha Blue. Halfway to their target goal and driving the only working landrover, they provided a decent amount of hope shaded with worry. At least they’d survived the initial exposure. People on Old Earth spent years in arctic conditions, even setting up homes on the poles, but Mestasis didn’t know if the children of the Expedition were as hardy after a lifetime of light gravity and regulated conditions. Peering deep into their communications, an anomaly caught her attention. She opened her eye and turned her head to her sister.
Bysme, why did you change Alpha Blue’s mission objective?
Abysme hung tangled in the wires, reminding Mestasis of the dead pigeons caught in Old Earth’s nets. She used to curse the rich who hung the contraptions between buildings to keep them from flying into the hovercraft engines. She’d climb the escape ladders outside the buildings, risking her life to pick the birds out. By the time her nimble hands threaded their bodies free, most of them were already dead.
Bysme?
Her sister’s reticence had continued since the landing and Mestasis wondered if a part of her had given up. Abysme’s communication with Alpha Blue surprised her, sending jolts of optimism through her veins. At least her sister cared enough to check on the exploration team. But the illogical nature of the message concerned her. Why would her sister put any goal above obtaining an alternate energy source? On top of that, Abysme had given the irrational order without consulting her, thereby defying the Guide.
Bysme?
Her silence reminded Mestasis of when the mainframe froze due to information overload. She waited, each second pulling at her nerves.
Bysme’s forehead wrinkled. The beacon points directly to a matching device. Identification must be made to ensure safety of crew.
Mestasis thought upon her sister’s response. It was a phenomenal coincidence the planet they landed on had a matching alien artifact to the one on their control deck. She calculated the odds with an astonishing conclusion, making her all the more uneasy.
Yes, but we need energy. Alpha Blue’s mission cannot be compromised.
Bysme’s head jerked, wires twitching. Negative. Nature of object must be revealed before any colonization efforts are secured.
Mestasis paused. They’d never argued about mission objectives in the past. But then again, the Guide had set their course in a straight line from Old Earth to Paradise 18. The comets had forced them to break all the rules, and the lines of right and wrong had blurred.
For the thousandth time, Mestasis contemplated the threat level of the alien artifact. The orb illuminated the corner of their control chamber, bathing their torsos in mystical light. She’d never liked it, and her gut instinct had kept her close enough to keep her eye on the sparkling surface, but far enough to form a barrier, blocking its enticement. Abysme had taken control of monitoring the orb, and she hadn’t mentioned it in a long time, until after they’d landed, until she thought it was gone.
Mestasis’s mind prodded the wires connecting to the orb, traveling the path she’d long feared. She had to learn the nature of what lurked in its misty depths. Her mind crawled toward it, climbing the tendrils it had thrust into the control room floor. The presence of the light loomed like a quasar in her subconscious, its rays reaching to engulf her. Fear crossed her heart in a slash and she fought against it. She forced her mind open, allowing the warmth in.
§
Her hand reached out, fingers wiggling, all five of them, healthy and pink with heat. They moved in the air, dragging swirls of dust through a patch of sunlight. The golden swirls dispersed and she entwined her fingers in ringlets of dark hair, loosening knots, smoothing, and braiding into three thick strands. Euphoria bubbled through her as she moved again, feeling the world beyond her fingertips. Mestasis smelled the familiar scent of burnt plastic from the recycling factory mingling with a whiff of cheap, synthetic peach perfume. A lullaby drifted to her ears, sung in the alto voice, calming her like no one else ever could.
The stars are too many to count.
The stars make sixes and sevens.
The stars tell nothing—
And everything.
The stars look scattered.
Stars are so far away
They never speak when spoken to.
Regret panged in her gut, followed by a deep wave of melancholy and the urge to set things right. Mestasis ached to exist in the cosmic swirls forever, to forget her fragmented body and her cold existence attached to a computer mainframe. Just as she clung to the memory, her imaginary fingers slipped, and the fabric of light, air, and touch dissolved. The vision faltered, the orb only strong enough to hint at the world it held inside.
§
She pulled herself away, tearing her heart in the process, leaving a primary component of herself behind. The cold ship came back, regulated air blowing on her torso, wires plunging into her limbs. But Mestasis would never be the same.
The orb held a memory of her mother.
Chapter Thirteen
Ice
Gemme smoothed her fingers over Brentwood’s sleep cocoon. The thermal fabric smelled like his minty aftershave mingled with a husky, manly tinge. Curiosity overwhelmed her. She buried her face into the fabric and thought about the warmth of his arms.
Emotions swirled through her in a blizzard. The more she tried to squelch them, the more they raged inside her, and she became more obsessed with him than ever. These feelings were no simple equations to figure out or string of numbers to analyze. They made no logical sense, and that scared her more than any tentacled beast or ice planet. She wanted to dash as far away from him as possible until she regained her rational mind, but she also ached to rush into his arms and kiss the strong angles of his face.
Tech had placed her boots and coat on a container by the tent flap. An hour had passed since they’d left her, and she needed to stand up and do something. Her feet tingled with feeling and some soreness. She reached out for her boots and slipped them on, relishing the way the fur inside nestled her toes. Thankfully the beast hadn’t stolen them as well. She didn’t know what she’d do without her miniscreen, and she’d miss the picture of her and Ferris. But, thanks to Brentwood, she was alive and not some frozen chunk of ice on the ocean floor.
Gemme emerged from the tent into the brisk wind. The rest of Alpha Blue had already packed most of camp. The remnants of their fire melted a crater into the ice, and footprints littered the site like twisting footpaths to nowhere. Tech stood next to the landrover securing the cables around the mining rig. Where was Brentwood?
“Ms. Reiner, you’re up! Feeling better?” He didn’t even call her a name this time, which meant his concern outweighed his sarcasm. Gemme would have appreciated his kindness more if she hadn’t felt as though she had missed something.
She scanned the camp. With the two remaining tents fluttering in the wind, it seemed so abandoned and empty. She walked up to Tech. “Where’s the Lieutenant?”
His eyebrows rose. “I saw him go over that snow mound with Luna.�
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“Oh.” Her chest tightened. What could they possibly have to talk about again? The snow samples? Or was she still complaining about the Seers’ choices? Why did they choose such a secluded spot? Part of her wanted to climb the snow to spy, and part of her was too disgusted to care.
She tried to remain logical and conceal her disappointment. “Thanks, Tech.”
“I’m sure he’ll be back soon. If you want me to get him—”
“No, no, no.” To have Tech interrupt their private meeting just because she wanted to know where he was would be momentously embarrassing. She waved him back. “I have to pack up anyways.”
“Okey dokers. Let me know if you need any help.”
“Thanks.”
She dragged her feet to her own collapsed tent. Goop congealed in icicles on the fabric and her possessions lay scattered in the snow. Slipping on a sheet of black ice, she cursed, wondering if she’d ever get used to walking on surfaces that weren’t made out of plastic and chrome. She found her backpack under a section of tent and knelt on the ice, pulling her life back together. She kept thinking of how Brentwood had saved her. Did he merely perform his job, keeping the team safe, or did he act out of a deeper concern?
Trying to remain logical, Gemme waved the rescue off. She should focus on continuing the mission. Ferris and her parents counted on her to find the mineral source, and that’s what she’d do. Anything else distracted her from that cause.
As much as she tried to convince herself not to, Gemme stole glances at the snowdrift. Time seemed to drag on and their prolonged absence stirred up bitterness. As she zipped up the top of her backpack, Luna crested the ridge with a flushed face and windblown hair, looking like she’d just won the Lieutenant’s heart.
“My goodness, Gemme, darling. You’ve slept a good a part of the morning away. I hope you’ve recovered from your near-death experience.”
The derision in her voice made it sound as though Gemme had exaggerated the whole thing. Kicking her tent peg out of the snow, Gemme replied, “I didn’t see you chasing it.”
“I’d been running all morning.”
“Running where?” Gemme scanned the monotonous mounds of snow.
Luna gave her a defensive glare. “For samples, of course.”
“Of course.”
Gemme kicked another peg, sending the metal rod skimming over the ice. She wished there was a whole line of them to take out her frustration on. Her gaze betrayed her, scanning the top of the snowdrift again. Luna caught her staring.
“I sure the Lieutenant will be back to camp soon, dear.” She pulled down the hem of her jumpsuit so the fabric squeezed her curves. “We had important matters to discuss.”
Like what? How to avoid doing actual work? Gemme wanted to ask but knew better than to provoke her. She focused her energy on folding her goop-coated tent.
“Ms. Reiner, you’re up and walking!”
Gemme turned as Brentwood slid down the hill. He seemed thrown off by something, a faraway look haunting his eyes. She wondered what he and Luna had discussed. An illogical current of anger rose inside her and she crushed it down. What he did with his free time shouldn’t concern her. They were on the same team, nothing more.
Gemme watched him closely as he approached, trying to spy any feelings he had for Luna in his bright eyes.
“Are you okay?” His voice sounded too familiar as his brow rose with concern. Brentwood’s presence ripped a vulnerable hole in her heart and she pretended to be more interested in stuffing the tent into a holding bag.
“I’m fine.”
All that time she waited for Brentwood to show up, and now she wished he’d disappear. Gemme couldn’t trust her emotions. They changed every minute, fickle as the wind. Right now his overprotectiveness made her feel like his helpless little sister. She could take care of herself. She was an independent, smart, professional woman. She refused to let her feelings for him get in the way, or let this mission intimidate her, no matter how much it fell out of her expertise.
As her thoughts heated up, she struggled to jam the fabric in with blistery, red fingers. Brentwood took up the other end and the length of the tent slid into place.
“How are your feet?”
She wiggled her toes in her boots. Thanks to him she still had toes, but she was too frustrated with him to acknowledge it. “They’re swollen, but they’re not falling off.”
“Good.”
She zipped up one side of the tent bag as he zipped the other. Their fingers met in the middle and his hand brushed against hers.
“Sorry.” He smiled, not looking sorry at all.
Gemme’s heart thudded like a heavy drum in her chest. The snow moved underneath her feet, and she wondered how the meager beat of her heart could cause such a disturbance. The pounding grew louder, reverberating deep inside her gut, and she realized it came from the snowy hills behind them. She whirled around with Brentwood, scanning the horizon.
“What is it?”
His hand still rested on hers and he squeezed, warming her fingers. “I don’t know, but it can’t be good.”
Shapes dotted the horizon, first a few, and then a whole army. The urge to move bubbled up inside her, but she froze, watching the shapes grow larger with a morbid curiosity as the rumbling grew louder.
“It’s more of them!” Luna shouted, backing up to her tent. Gemme wondered which “them” she referred to before recognizing the now familiar hide of tentacles as the first one approached.
She turned to Brentwood. “What should we do?”
“Take cover!” he shouted over to Tech and Luna. Tech jumped into the landrover, and Luna ducked inside her tent.
Gemme looked down at her folded tent. They didn’t have enough time to reconstruct it, and she wasn’t sure it would deter the beasts anyways. She turned to run toward the landrover just as the first wave of beasts stomped through camp. As first, she thought they’d eat them alive, but as the beasts passed, it seemed they were more interested in escape.
The flow of hides eddied around the two remaining tents and the landrover, blocking them from shelter. Their jaws clacked as they ran, as if to scare away anything in their path.
“There’s nowhere to go.” Panic rippled out to Gemme’s limbs, her fingers shaking. She felt naked, vulnerable, her body fragile compared to their sheer numbers and mass of writhing appendages. Brentwood threw his arms around her and pulled her close.
“Hold on. Don’t move.”
Together they stood against the horde. Tentacles brushed her back and arms, and Gemme held on tightly, wrapping her arms around Brentwood’s torso. She’d faced the end of the world before with Brentwood by her side, and she’d do it again. Wondering how fate always threw them together, Gemme closed her eyes and held on.
At least Tech made it to the landrover. At least someone will continue on toward the hyperthium.
She tried not to think about how it would feel to be trampled by hundreds of paws. Whirring cries droned around them. The beasts plunged ahead and she wondered what they were running from.
The mass passed them quickly, leaving only a few weaker stragglers scrambling through camp. Relief weakened her knees as Gemme realized they’d made it through. She looked up at Brentwood, but he was focused on the rest of the team.
“Ms. Legacy, are you all right?”
Her tent stood with three pegs loose, the fabric on the verge of collapse. No matter how much the biologist irritated Gemme, dread stabbed her in the gut with the though
t of Luna hurt. Even though she fantasized about Luna pricking her finger to stay behind and having tentacles poke through her lush golden hair, Gemme realized the value of every life on the Expedition, including Luna’s. They couldn’t afford to lose anyone, not one strand of DNA, especially women of reproductive age. Of all people, she—the former Matchmaker—should know.
Brentwood released Gemme and sped toward the tent. Shock ran through her body as she watched and waited, smoothing over the places where the tentacles brushed her arms. Apprehension twittered inside her like the wings of a hundred moths batting against the lights in the biodome.
Brentwood threw himself down by the tent’s opening, shouting Luna’s name. As he fumbled with the zipper, the back flap popped open. Luna crawled out, eyes glazed over.
“She’s here!” Gemme shouted at him, plunging forward into the snow. “She’s all right.”
Gemme offered her arm and Luna latched on, fingers shaking. As she pulled her up, Brentwood joined them. He reached out to Luna, but when he saw Gemme holding her, he withdrew his arm. “Ms. Legacy, are you all right?”
“Fine as anyone would be after getting trampled by sticky elephant jellyfish.”
He laughed and Gemme wondered if she saw more concern in his eyes for Luna than he he’d had for her. Maybe she imagined the extra sparkle or the quirk of his lips, or maybe he really did have feelings for her.
A primal roar echoed over the hinterland, awakening a fear in Gemme that felt like centuries in the making, when the very first humans roamed prehistoric Earth. Her head jerked up, adrenaline coursing through her veins.
Luna’s head snapped up, “What’s that?”
Gemme huffed, still steaming from her thoughts. “You’re the biologist.”
“Something must have provoked their exodus.” As Brentwood spoke, Gemme realized she didn’t want to know who or what it was.
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