“Sounds like the laundro machines on overdrive.” Luna released Gemme’s arm and cringed behind the tent, leaving her to face whatever came at them. The pounding accelerated, rumbling the earth so hard an icicle fell off of Luna’s tent and shattered in the snow.
“Grab what you can!” Brentwood urged Gemme in the direction of the landrover. “Let’s get out of here.”
“What about my tent?” Luna complained as Gemme jogged to her backpack and tent bag. “All my things, my samples—”
“Leave them.” The finality in Brentwood’s voice made Gemme’s heart skip and she quickened her pace.
Thankfully, she’d already packed her belongings. As Gemme stuck her arm through the straps of her backpack and tent bag, another pounding racked the snow beneath their feet, making her stumble. This time it came in rhythmic thuds, like four giant hooves clomped down on the tundra. Another thunderous wail resounded over the mountains behind them.
Brentwood shouted, “Go!”
Gemme sprinted to the landrover, looking back over her shoulder to make sure Brentwood and Luna followed. Her gear weighed her down, but she had a head start and reached the hatch before they did. She threw her bags in and turned around. Her knees gave out as a mountainous shape claimed the horizon.
She squinted, making out massive, hairy shoulders, a crown of tusks poking the sky and trailing down between two enormous black eyes to a curved snout. The beast was four times bigger than their landrover and closing the distance to them fast.
“Run!” Gemme screeched.
Luna stumbled over her own feet, bringing Brentwood down with her. Gemme watched in agony as she slowed their progress and Brentwood pulled her forward, half carrying her to the landrover. The alien-mammoth charged behind them, stirring up a cloud of snow in its wake.
Strong hands pulled her backward and she realized Tech yanked her in.
“We’ve got to wait for them.” She batted his hands away, but his grip held firm.
“I know. But we’ve got to save time. And you’re safer inside.”
Judging from the size of one of the beast’s legs, she didn’t think so. But she took Tech’s advice all the same. She wished she could make Brentwood and Luna run faster. Waiting, nerves on a razor edge, precious seconds dragged like hours.
Tech climbed over the seat and revved the engines. The landrover roared, then sputtered out.
“Damn prototype.” Tech hit the dashboard with his fist and tried again. The engines screamed as the tires lurched forward. Gemme grabbed his shoulder. “You have to wait!”
“I’m just gaining momentum. This hunk of junk’s sat in the loading bay for a hundred years. Who knows if it will work when we need it to?”
“Looks like it’s working now.” As the vehicle accelerated, Gemme held out her hand.
“Come on!”
Brentwood handed Luna to her. Gemme grabbed Luna’s arm and the biologist teetered on the platform, her toes on and her heels dangling. Gemme tugged with all her weight and pulled her in, thinking Luna weighed more than she looked. Luna collapsed on the floor, heaving as the landrover gained speed and Brentwood sprinted to catch up.
“You’re going too fast!” But even as Gemme yelled at Tech, she knew it was the only way to keep them and the mining equipment safe.
She reached out for Brentwood, stretching so far she thought her arm would rip off in the wind. Her fingers brushed his, and he fell back. Behind him, the lumbering beast gained, its steaming breath pluming at Brentwood’s neck.
If he stumbled and fell, the clawed paws would squash him to death. Gemme’s heart sped against her chest as if it would burst through her skin and run away. She shoved her boot underneath the seat and leaned out over the rushing snow, bracing herself against the landrover’s hull.
“Grab my arm!”
The hairs on the alien-mammoth’s back moved of their own accord, twirling through the air toward Brentwood. His chest heaved as he leaped forward to stay out of their grasp. He grasped Gemme’s arm and she clamped her fingers down around his wrist. The beast’s stench overwhelmed the landrover, smelling of musky sweat and dank, moldy fur. The hairs on its back extended like a thousand arms and Brentwood ducked. The strands missed his head by millimeters.
“Pull me back in!” Gemme shouted over her shoulder, doubting Luna could hear anything over the engines. She’d lost feeling in her boot, and she wondered how long her ankle would hold before it snapped.
Brentwood grabbed her torso with his other arm. He clung to her, his legs skidding against the snow. She wrapped her arms around him and held him tightly as the mammoth hair wrapped itself around his ankles, traveling up his legs. The beast yanked and Brentwood rose up, slipping from her grasp.
Gemme shot him a fierce glance, daring him not to give up. “Hold on.”
His grip tightened around her as he kicked at the strands. A piece of thermal fabric from his leg ripped off, freeing him.
Gemme yelled, “Now!”
Luna pulled her in, and Gemme gained footing in the landrover. She yanked, every muscle in her arms screaming. Brentwood fell on top of her on the floor, his weight pressing against her chest. Behind them, the hairs probed the air where he’d hung. Luna yelled at Tech, “Close the hatch!”
Tech slammed his fist down and the hatch lowered, blocking out the raging wind. She looked up at Brentwood, silence ringing in her ears. “You okay?”
He nodded, panting. “You saved my life.”
Gemme smiled and quirked an eyebrow, trying to disregard the fact that he lay on top of her. “Guess we’re even now, huh?”
“Yeah, but it’s not over yet.” Brentwood pulled himself off her and raised his voice, addressing Tech. “Open the upper hatch.”
“What?” Luna shouted as she belted herself in the seat next to Tech. “Are you crazy?”
“We’re not going to outrun it.”
Luna twisted in her seat to confront him. “What are you going to do, ask it politely to leave us alone?”
“No.” He pulled two lasers from his belt, handing one to Gemme. “We’re going to drive it back.”
The laser felt heavy and cold in Gemme’s hand as she wrapped her fingers around it. She’d never used one in her life. Ferris had always wanted to take her to the firing range, but she’d told him a data analyst would have no use for it.
Boy was she wrong.
The hatch lifted and Brentwood climbed the seat. He stood on the head cushions, his torso poking out of the vehicle. Gemme joined him, emerging from the safety of the cabin back into the furious wind. Her hair whipped around her face and her eyes watered so much the snowflake-filled sky blurred. The beast towered over them, hairs squirming wildly. The strands rose up above their heads as its tusked snout snapped, teeth grating.
Brentwood started firing. Gemme gripped the laser in her hand and shouted, “Where do I aim?”
“Anywhere.”
She clicked the safety off and pulled the trigger just as Tech swerved. The landrover bumped her backward. A shaft of light careened over the ice, nowhere near the beast. She flailed her arms, clutching onto the hatch.
“Nice shot!”
She couldn’t tell if Brentwood was being sarcastic or encouraging. After all, she was a computer analyst turned ice world explorer. For someone that had sat at a desk her whole life, she thought she was doing pretty well.
She regained her footing and fired again. Each shot disappeared into the beast’s gigantic hide as if they fired water drops at a lake. She aimed for its black eyes, its tusks, its toothy mouth, but nothing seemed to slow it down. The beast roared and the sound rever�
�berated in her stomach, curdling the soy wafer she’d stuffed down that morning.
Gemme shouted over the wind, “We’re making it mad.”
Brentwood continued to fire. “We’ve got to do something.”
The mammoth’s head swung sideways and the beast hit the mining equipment with its crown of tusks, ivory piercing metal. The wheels on the right side came off the ground, and for a moment, Gemme thought they’d all crash into one big heap. Brentwood pulled her over to his side.
“Shift your weight.”
Somehow, Tech rebalanced, and the wheels fell back onto the ice.
“That’s it. I have another plan.” Brentwood stopped firing and climbed on top of the landrover.
“What are you doing?” Gemme screamed her voice hoarse, scrambling to catch his arm.
He slipped from her grip. “I’m going to stop it. Just keep firing.”
She watched in terror as Brentwood balanced on the metal bridge connecting the landrover with the platform of the mining rig. The landrover hit a bump, and he pitched forward, sprawling in the air before landing on the drill.
Gemme yelled down into the landrover, “Watch where you’re driving. Brentwood’s on the drill.”
“Damned snow mounds come up outta nowhere,” Tech yelled back.
She heard Luna ask him, “Are you trained to drive this thing?”
Tech didn’t reply, or she didn’t hear him. Either way, Gemme guessed his answer was no.
She poked her head back out, chancing a peek. Brentwood clung to the drill, pressing open the control panel and Gemme realized what he planned to do. His fingers flew over the touchscreen and Gemme waited for the drill to spin, but nothing happened. Someone tugged her leg and she ducked her head back in.
“He needs the key.” Tech handed Luna a plastic card and Luna slipped it to Gemme.
“What am I supposed to do?” Gemme thought about throwing it to him, but with the wind, they’d probably lose it forever.
“You’ll have to climb on there with him.” Luna spoke as if she suggested Gemme join him for afternoon tea.
Biting a retort, Gemme stuck her head back out of the upper hatch. The hairs had wrapped around the drill, and the beast pulled, slowing the landrover down. The tires skidded against the friction.
Gemme slipped the card into her pocket and took a deep breath.
You can do this.
She climbed on the roof and crawled toward the bridge using the top luggage bars as handholds. Underneath her, the snow sped away, crushed by the gigantic tires of the mining rig. If she slipped, she’d be a pancake.
Brentwood waved her back, but she lowered herself down the curve of the rear and cajoled herself into taking the first step on the bridge. Narrow enough to only walk one foot in front of the other, she balanced by holding out both arms.
She felt as though she flew on thin air as she lifted one foot, precariously poised on the other like some Old Earth tight-rope walker. A layer of ice had formed on the metal, and she probed each step with her boot before placed her full weight down. Tears froze on her cheeks, and her ears throbbed. Her lower lip split open, warm blood trickling down her chin.
You’re halfway there. Keep going.
She’d never been the most graceful in her class, and now each step counted. The wind ripped through her and she leaned into it, hoping the gale wouldn’t blow her away. Her breath hitched in her throat as she ran the last few steps and collapsed on the mining platform, bruising both her shins.
“What are you doing out here?” Brentwood shouted, clinging to the control console and firing up at the alien-mammoth’s head.
Gemme reached in her pocket and brought out the keytag. Brentwood’s eyes widened with recognition. Ignoring her aching muscles, she climbed toward him, grasping any hold she could find. He reached out and grabbed her hand, pulling her toward him. Together they gripped the keytag as if it were humanity’s last hope and stuck it in the console.
The screen below them lit up as the mammoth-hair tightened its grip. The mammoth slammed down its hind legs and the engines revved as the tires screeched. The smell of burnt rubber tainted the air. A sense of sickening dread spread over Gemme as she fell into the mammoth’s shadow. The beast would pummel their equipment and swallow them whole.
Gemme grabbed his shoulder. “Quickly, before we stop.”
Brentwood pressed the code and the drill hummed to life, turning slowly at first. The hairs stretched until the drill ripped them out and blue-black blood sprayed over them. The beast roared, its foul breath steaming the air around Gemme. The landrover took off and she and Brentwood fell backward onto the metal grating.
He shot up and raised his laser to fire, but the mammoth collapsed on its front legs, a bald patch where the hair had been seeping blood onto the snow. It clawed at the ground, trying to gain footing, but it was losing too much blood. After a few staggering steps, the beast fell on its side.
Even though the alien-mammoth would have killed them and jeopardized the entire mission of the Expedition, Gemme felt sorry for its death. This planet was its home, and they were the alien invaders. Heck, they’d probably send the entire species into extinction in the next hundred years if they followed the ways of Old Earth.
“Good job, Ms. Reiner. Although I’m sad to see such a majestic animal dead, it was necessary.” Brentwood shut off the drill and offered his hand and helped her up. The intensity in his eyes made her cheeks burn against the frigid air and she looked away.
“Nothing any ordinary data analyst wouldn’t do.”
“Trained for this in your graduate classes along with differential quantitative analysis?”
“Certainly, didn’t you?” She couldn’t believe the humor in her voice, especially after such a dangerous turn of events. Brentwood coaxed it out of her, calming her. With him she wasn’t a boring, uptight computer analyst.
They watched in silence as the landrover circled the beast. As the vehicle ground to a halt, Gemme jumped off the platform. Covering her nose from the metallic reek of blood, she studied the beast. Some of the remaining hairs still twitched, spiraling out into the snow around it. She stared at its black eye, the pupil larger than her head. How many years had it lived on this planet before the beast met its end with humans? Did she really want to know?
Brentwood followed her, still holding up his laser. When she gave him a questioning look, he shrugged. “You can never be too careful.”
Luna and Tech stumbled out of the landrover, gawking.
Gemme gestured to Luna. “How’s that for a specimen?”
Chapter Fourteen
Priorities
Vira’s sleep pod opened before her alarm went off, revealing her dad’s smiling face haloed in the automatic wake-up light.
“Rise and shine, peaches.”
She rubbed her eyes, feeling as though her head was still stuck in dreams. “What time is it?”
He checked the digital clock on the lid of her pod. “I have an hour before I need to go to work. Let’s see what we can do about getting you a new hoverchair.”
“Really?” Excitement bubbled inside her. A new hoverchair would mean not asking Rizzy to lug her around all the time or having raw elbows from spending so much time on the carpet. Plus, she loved spending time with her dad alone.
“You bet.”
He bent down and she climbed on his back, wrapping her arms around his neck. “Mom’s made some breakfast if you want to take a minute to eat.”
Eagerness rushed through her as if the world would end before she got her chair. “No. Let’s
go now. I’ll eat when I come home.”
“Okay.” Her dad bounced her on his back, making her giggle as he carried her into the kitchen.
Her mom looked up from stirring some awful, sludgy oatmeal. “Who needs a chair when you have a ride like that, eh?”
Vira laughed, but her dad responded in a serious tone, “She needs her independence, Natalie. When I was her age, it would have driven me crazy to sit in the same spot all day.”
“You were a little hellion.”
He kissed her mom on the cheek. “I still am.”
Laughing, they took off toward the engineering bay.
Dim emergency lights lit the corridor, and the air stung even colder than in their family unit. Vira tightened her grip, glad for her dad’s warmth underneath her. She didn’t feel like laughing any more. The ship was spookier than the last time she’d gone out, tracking Rizzy and Daryl before the crash. At least then the lights shone brightly, and the temperature was a steady seventy-two degrees. “When will the regular lights come back on?”
“As soon as the away team finds an alternate energy source. Don’t worry; they’re working on it right now. Pretty soon things will be back to normal.”
Vira didn’t think anything would be normal ever again. Not only were they not in space, but the Seers weren’t the people she thought they were. Her dad’s blind faith disturbed her.
“What if the Seers didn’t want to help?”
“Nonsense.” He craned his neck to see her eye to eye. “They’re doing the best they can. It’s their job to keep everyone safe.”
And scare little girls while they were at it?
Vira opened her mouth to disagree when her dad pointed up ahead. “Here we are, Engineering Bay Six.”
They passed flickering lights and ventilation tubes wheezing stale air. The portal to the engineering bay lay open, the panel fizzling like it had short-circuited. As they walked in, her stomach sank like the ship when it crashed. A line of people wrapped all the way around the room while workers scrambled behind the desk taking requests. Some of them looked like they hadn’t changed clothes in days. The man standing in front of them wore a bandage around his head. Vira squirmed as she thought about his wound.
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