Tundra 37
Page 18
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On the failing control deck of the Expedition Mestasis wondered if where they’d ended up was any better than staying on Old Earth.
Chapter Eighteen
Captured Star
“In case you don’t remember to chemistry class, under standard conditions, hyperthium is the lightest metal and the least dense solid element on the periodic table. Like all alkali metals, hyperthium is highly reactive and flammable, so we typically store it in mineral oil. It looks real nice when cut open, shining with a metallic luster…”
Gemme’s head bobbed up and down as Tech rambled on. The tundra spread before the sight panel in an endless slate of shiny white. At first, she watched with fascination, looking for more tentacled beasts or wiry-haired mammoths, but three hours of the same horizontal ice landscape made her drowsy.
Must. Pay. Attention. Important information, vital to the success of the mission.
Glancing back, she saw Luna cleaning her fingernails, and Brentwood fast asleep, a placid expression on his face. If only she could see what occupied his dreams. Gemme turned back around and focused on Tech’s words.
“Contact with moist air corrodes the surface quickly to a dull, silvery gray, then black tarnish. But we’ll see what it does is this frigid atmosphere…”
She didn’t get very far.
§
An ant’s head peeked out of a mound of sand. The antennae twitched as if detecting her. The insect emerged, crawled down the side in a wandering zigzag, and disappeared into the long-stemmed grasses. The sand swirled around it and Gemme wondered if it would sink into quicksand, but the ant continued on as the golden swirls spiraled out, shooting into the grasses like dust in the wind.
Had she fallen in the biodome?
“Oh my, Jenny, are you okay?”
Someone pulled her arm and she scrambled up into the searing rays of sunlight. Solaris Prime on Tundra 37 felt like a microscope light compared to this giant burning ball of gas threatening to blind her and bake her all at once.
“You went down so fast. I tried to catch you.” The familiar woman with nutmeg hair helped her brush sand off her sundress.
“It’s okay. I’m fine.” No matter where she was, she was still embarrassed to have fallen on her face. The back of her jaw throbbed with pain.
“Good. Mikey’s truck is pulling up right now.”
She followed the woman to an antique Old Earth vehicle that looked like it belonged in a junkyard heap more than on a road. The paint gleamed red as an apple in the places that weren’t eaten away with amber rust.
“We’re riding in that?”
“Yeah.” The woman ran up and scooped a pair of pink high heels from the back. “Don’t forget your shoes.”
Gemme took the pointy heels in her hands wondering how anyone could ever walk in such an absurd design. They couldn’t possibly belong to her, yet the pattern of concentric circles painted on the toe reminded her so much of something she’d once owned. Bending down, she slipped the right one on her bare foot. Her toes wiggled through in a perfect fit.
The woman had already climbed in the back. “Are you coming?”
Gemme slipped on the other shoe and walked around the pickup, making sure not to touch the rusty paint, and stuck her head in the open sight panel. A young man with curly dark hair and a nose the size of a pear stared back at her. Disappointment tinged her heart. Somehow, she thought she’d recognize him.
“Mikey?”
“Dude’s at the party waiting for you. Come on in.”
She hesitated, one hand gripping the doorframe. Had she been here before?
“What’s with you today, Jenny? You look like you ate the wrong mushrooms.”
“Don’t mind her, Walter; she’s been spacey all morning. She gets like that when she spends too much time with her numbers.”
“It’s all cool, Lisa.”
He reached over and popped the door loose. The metal squeaked as she swung it open. She climbed in, balancing precariously on her heels. The furry fabric of the seat felt strange underneath her bare legs as she sat down. A dangling cardboard peach wafted a sickly sweet scent from the rearview mirror.
She turned back to Lisa. “I thought you said Mikey was coming to pick us up.”
“All part of the plan.” She gave her a wink and mouthed, “Trust me.”
Walter flicked a knob on the front panel and a strong drumbeat vibrated the inside of the pickup. A man’s voice came on the speakers, “Ooh my little pretty one, pretty one. When you gonna give me some time, Sharona?”
Gemme covered her ears with her hands and Walter turned the knob again. The sound quieted.
“Don’t like The Knack?”
Gemme questioned him by raising her eyebrow. He shrugged and turned the wheel. The pickup lurched forward and she braced herself against the front panel.
He gave her an apologetic smile. “Forgot to remind you to buckle up.”
They rode past trees, so many of them in all shapes and sizes, making the biodome on the Expedition seem like a child’s terrarium. A lake spread on her sight panel, water rippling in blue crests with a white sailboat riding the waves. Gemme’s feet itched to stand on the sandy beach and wade in the shallows.
Walter pulled up in front of an old gabled farmhouse painted in fading lavender with beige trim. He parked behind another Old Earth antique with gold lettering that read Chevrolet.
“Last stop, gals. Thanks for flying ‘Air Walter.’”
Gemme pulled the plastic handle and the door popped open. She followed Lisa and Walter onto the covered porch. Flowers dangled from baskets hanging over her head, and a spindly tomato plant clung to a stick in an old bucket by her feet. A black cat meowed and jumped off the back of the porch as if they intruded on its nap time.
Lisa smiled at her. “You ready?”
“Ready for what?”
“You’ll see.” She opened the screen door and ushered her in.
A chorus of voices echoed, “Surprise!”
People jumped out at her from either side, holding plastic cups of golden liquid. Some crouched on the staircase, and others stood the hallway waving ribbons and lace. Gemme shrunk back, bumping into Lisa. “What’s going on?”
“Don’t look so cross! I know it’s not your birthday, Jenny. This is something much, much better.”
The crowd parted, each face beaming in a smile as if she were a queen returning to her throne. She wished she knew their collective secret. She felt like an outsider trying to play a game without knowing all the rules. It was a feeling she’d experienced a lot lately.
Lisa pushed her to the kitchen at the back, where a three-tiered chocolate cake sat on a bright yellow linoleum countertop. As if those sights didn’t surprise her enough, Brentwood stood beside the cake, wearing a loose-fitting shirt with palm trees and khaki shorts. A tan made his skin golden bronze, highlighting the blond in his wavy hair. He looked so good Gemme gasped air in, holding her breath.
His lips curled in a half-sorry, half-mischievous grin. “I wanted to surprise you with something big. Maybe then, you’ll say yes.”
She exhaled and her voice shook. “Say yes to what?”
He reached in his back pocket and brought out a velvet box. People whispered around them, poking their faces through the door. Lisa pushed them back. Brentwood lowered himself to one knee and opened the box. A teardrop-shaped diamond winked back at her like a captured star.
“We’ve had some pretty rough times, with you going away to NYU and me joining the police force, but
we’ve made it through. You always believed in me, in us. I love you, Jenny, and I want you to be my wife. Will you marry me?”
Gemme didn’t recognize half of what he said, but she knew the answer before he finished his last sentence. She placed her fingers over his hand that held the box. His skin burned like the sun. “Yes.”
Applause filled the room in contagious happiness. Walter hollered, “Mikey and Jenny forever.” But all Gemme could focus on was the warmth of Brentwood’s skin underneath her fingertips. He held out her hand and slipped on the ring. Joy welled up inside her, exploding like solar flares in her chest. She didn’t care if they were Mikey and Jenny or Miles and Gemme. All she knew was the sense of comfort he gave her just by staring into her eyes.
Brentwood stood and cupped her chin with both his hands, his touch so gentle, yet direct. He brought his face down and kissed her passionately, as if he could join their souls right then with his lips. She melted into his embrace and parted her lips against his, currents of passion stirring urges in her body. Nothing else mattered but here and now, this perfect moment in a universe of endless time.
Chapter Nineteen
Spare Parts
“Please, Rizzy. If you do it, I promise I won’t ever tell on you and Daryl again.” Vira pressed her palms together in a triangle and beat it in the air in front of Rizzy’s nose.
Rizzy looked away, leaning on her sleep pod as the fuel cell recharged. “I don’t know. You’re talking about breaking into Dad’s private workshop and stealing his equipment. Not just lifting a cookie or an extra blanket, or even sneaking a kiss.”
“It’s for my new project.”
“I don’t care what it’s for. I just don’t want to get in trouble. Thanks to you, I’m in far enough as it is.”
“I’m sorry I told on you, okay? I won’t do it again. Dad won’t even notice the parts missing. He’s too busy trying to fix things in his job.”
Rizzy bit her lips as if she was considering it, tapping her fingers on the pod’s plastic curve. Vira held her breath. Her chest threatened to burst.
“All right.” Rizzy pointed a finger at her. “But you leave my poster alone, and your days of tattletaling are over.”
Vira pretended to squirt glue over her mouth. “My lips are sealed.”
“Fine.” Rizzy pulled out her illegal ID tag, the one that had gotten her trapped in the upper levels in the first place and waved it in the air, the shiny strip on the back glistening. “Where are you going to stash all this stuff anyway?”
Vira punched the corner of one of the panels in the floor and the metal popped up. Underneath lay a rusty compartment lined with dust. She used Rizzy’s favorite expression. “I have my ways.”
Rizzy gave her an appraising look and laughed. “And they think I’m the one to look out for.”
Vira stared at the poster as she waited, wondering if the sorcerer would tell the Seers about her spying if he could spring right off the wall and talk. Besides Daryl and Rizzy, everyone else followed the Seers as if they were gods.
But they weren’t.
They were once two human girls very much like herself.
Vira wondered what they were like when they were her age. Would they have been friends?
A plastic bin of gears, gadgets, and shiny tools dropped in front of her with a rattling plop. Vira blinked and shook her head, looking up at Rizzy.
“I didn’t know what you wanted, so I grabbed everything I could.” She put her hands on her hips. “Good enough?”
“I’ll say.” Vira pulled out a motor and a rounded metal beam that she could use as a steering wheel.
“So we’re good?”
“Yup.”
“Good. Because I’m going over to see Daryl right now, and if Mom or Dad comes back you tell them I’ve gone to study for colonization tests with Derva, k?”
“Derva Legacy?” Vira’s tongue almost fell out of her mouth.
“Yeah, they won’t question that, will they?”
Vira nodded. No one got in the way of the Legacys, and Derva would be an excellent study partner. She always aced all the tests. “K. Colonization tests with Derva.”
Vira didn’t think Mom or Dad would be back anytime soon, anyway. They both worked so much now, she hardly saw them at all. Rizzy was supposed to babysit her. But, she didn’t need her sister to look after her. She was the one that ended up looking after Rizzy.
“Have fun.” Vira waved and Rizzy smiled, ducking out the door. Maybe having a sister wasn’t that bad after all.
She dug through the parts scraping the bottom with her fingertips and sighed in frustration. No wheels. How was she supposed to reproduce the concentrated bursts of air that her hovercraft engines did without a decent power source?
She threw a box of metal bolts against the wall. If she was ever going to go anywhere, she needed wheels. Slumping against the wall, she bit back tears. Everything was so much harder for her than for everyone else. She’d avoided feeling sorry for herself for so long; she deserved a good bout of crying.
A whizzing sound came from the kitchen. The cleaning droid sped in, vacuuming the mess she’d made with the bolts. Its front nozzle swelled with the bolts as blue buttons flashed on its sides. Vira picked up a screwdriver to throw at it, when she noticed the shiny wheels spurring it forward.
Using all her strength, she emptied the entire container all over the floor. Pieces of scrap metal, used light sticks, and tiny drill extensions bounced in the rug. The cleaning droid beeped and turned in her direction. She held up a curled finger and wiggled it in the air.
Chapter Twenty
Pulse
Mestasis’s mind flicked through the latest system report with casual attention, a nagging pull from her memories stealing her focus. Mr. Reiner had temporarily stabilized the fusion core, and mechanics had repaired the hull breaches. The temperature on the ship remained stable, but the crops in the biodome still withered.
Must return to my memories.
She’d read Romeo and Juliet a hundred times in her spare time while driving the Expedition. Abysme had downloaded a bunch of classics into the mainframe before they left Earth. Mestasis knew the end, but the tragedy mesmerized her, making her relive the story again and again.
Her logical mind kicked in. You can’t change the past. You can only impact the future by acting in the present.
Yet, an indulgent craving deep inside her rose up. You can see James once again.
Making sure she’d reviewed all status reports, she gave herself up to forgotten dreams.
§
Old Earth, 2446
Dr. Fields stood before a blank holoscreen, his rigidly pressed white lab coat contrasting with the meandering wisps of the remaining gray hairs on either side of his head. In the ten years she’d known him, Mestasis thought he’d aged twenty. Perhaps it was better for them to have been born into a crazy world than for him to see it crumble around him as his youth trickled away. Although he tortured them with seemingly extraneous mental exercises, he was the closest thing to a father figure that she’d ever have. Above all else, he believed in them, even when they didn’t believe in themselves.
The doctor pressed the panel and a timer appeared on the holoscreen, the numbers formed by golden swirls. “Five hovercrafts are flying in the air space over TINE. One of them carries massive amounts of uranium-235 and plutonium-239, aka a nuclear bomb. You have two minutes to detect which one before the enemy blows us to smithereens.”
Abysme stood up and pointed her finger. “Not fa
ir! We can only sense electromagnetic impulses in our building and other buildings connected to it. Not through air. It’s impossible.”
“Electromagnetic waves travel through air. Hypothetically, you should be able to detect it.” He flicked a glance over to a mirror, where they knew a research team awaited the results of the exercise: men and women with big pocketbooks and lots of credits willing to invest in TINE. His face remained stoic as he counted off. “One minute and twenty seconds left.”
“Damn.” Abysme paced back and forth while Mestasis closed her eyes, feeling vibrations in the floor under the soles of her feet. The air ionizers in the room worked on maximum, and two floors down, everyone had their holoscreen on. So much noise to filter out. She tried sensing the temperature of the air on the roof, and from there, the ebb and flow of sonic waves produced by the engines of the approaching hovercrafts. It seemed as though she tugged at threads no stronger than strands of Dr. Fields’ gray hair, the connection snapping whenever she pushed her mind through it.
A new pulse caught her attention, a distant tapping like Morse code. Her heart somersaulted in her chest. It was the rhythm she’d handed to James on the nanodisc. He was calling to her. She’d stood him up the next day at the Techno Express because of the death of their mother. Embarrassed and unwilling to talk about it, she’d avoided the café ever since. Mestasis had to choose: follow James’s signal or complete the test and time was running out.
What if he needed her?
Her mind shot to the origin of the code, traveling underneath her feet to a corridor connecting to an adjacent building. Her thoughts jumped down several levels to a credit machine on the right wall in the hall on level seventy-seven. Just as she pulled her mind back to the roof of TINE, the timer beeped.
“That’s it girls.” She opened her eyes and Dr. Fields stood with an expectant, almost pleading look in his face. “Tell me which hovercraft holds the bomb.”