UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE
HarperCollins Publishers
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Advance Reader’s e-proof
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CONTENTS
Cover
Disclaimer
Title
Dedication
Part I
Chapter .1
Chapter .2
Chapter .3
Chapter .4
Chapter .5
Chapter .6
Chapter .7
Chapter .8
Chapter .9
Chapter .10
Chapter .11
Chapter .12
Chapter .13
Chapter .14
Chapter .15
Chapter .16
Chapter .17
Chapter .18
Part II
Chapter .19
Chapter .20
Chapter .21
Chapter .22
Chapter .23
Chapter .24
Chapter .25
Chapter .26
Chapter .27
Chapter .28
Chapter .29
Chapter .30
Chapter .31
Chapter .32
Chapter .33
Chapter .34
Chapter .35
Chapter .36
Chapter .37
Chapter .38
About the Author
Copyright
About the Publisher
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE
HarperCollins Publishers
..................................................................
DEDICATION
Dedication TK
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE
HarperCollins Publishers
..................................................................
PART I
UNCORRECTED E-PROOF—NOT FOR SALE
HarperCollins Publishers
..................................................................
CHAPTER .1
The morning before our ship, Parastrata, docks at the skyport, I rise early. I climb over my littlest sister, Lifil, and the other smallgirls curled together like puppies on our bunk. Out in the common room, the rest of the women and girls lie sleeping in the dark, humid simulation of night. As I wind up my hair and bind it with a work rag, I mark how Modrie Reller’s—my stepmother’s—bunk is empty. She must have spent the night in my father’s quarters, even some months gone with child again as she is.
I fasten the clasps of my shift at my shoulders, step first into my light skirts, then my quilted ones, and tie them all at my waist until they hang heavy around my hips. I lean forward to check their length. Only the barest hint of toe peeks out from beneath the hem.
Right so. I smile to myself in the dark. Today will be a good day. Everything balanced, everything raveled right.
I tuck my folding fan into my pocket and make my way to the hatch. Nan and Llell and some of the other grown girls stir on the mattresses cramping the floor as I punch in the pattern code to unlock the door—circle, bar, bar, slant. Only Modrie Reller and I know the pattern. Me, since I’m so girl of our ship, and her, since she’s firstwife to the Parastrata’s captain, at least ever since a fever took my mother to the Void ten turns past. Nan tried to get me to tell the pattern one time, so she could sneak off to her cats in the livestock bay, but I told her no. My father can trust me and Modrie Reller, but it’s hardly safe if all the women and girls know.
I heave the door open on its rollers and creep out into the hallway. The faint, moon-blue light of a biolume bowl washes the walls. I think on going back and hurrying the others along so I won’t be caught alone out in the corridors, but I am the so girl and my father’s eldest daughter, besides. No one would dare say anything to me. And a few minutes by myself is too choice to pass up when I spend near every minute of the day hemmed in by other people. I roll the door partway closed behind me.
I breathe deep. Without the heat and breath of so many women pressed together in one room, the air is less close, almost cool. One of our canaries pipes a question at me from its cage in an alcove along the wall. I bend close and work the tip of my finger between the bars. The canary quirks its head at me, its eyes small, inky spots in the half light.
“Ava,” Llell hisses behind me. She leans out of the hatch, still working the tie of her outer skirt. “Wait on us, huh?”
I pull my finger from the cage, straighten up, and fold my arms in feigned impatience.
Llell squints at me, uncertain.
“Hurry on, then,” I say. Sometimes I forget Llell can’t read my looks. I have to speak aloud if I want her to do what needs doing. Her eyes are bad, like her mother’s and all her brothers’ and sisters’.
Llell nods and ducks back into the sleeping quarters.
There’s doctors on the waystations what can fix bad eyes, but Priority says it’s only for those on Flight and Fixes duty. It’s not worth the cost if you’re only assigned to the kitchens or the nurseries, much less cleaning or the dyeworks. Maybe someday Llell and her mother can share a pair of glasses like my great-grandfather’s widow Hannah has.
Across the corridor, a porthole looks out on the darkness of the Void, speckled bright with stars like a vast, black egg. A distant silver-gray moon hangs against it, and farther out, a blue planet mottled cloud white and brown-green slips into view, a bright halo circling it. Earth, the seat of all our woes.
I step up to the glass. The skyport floats somewhere above the blue planet, still some far to be seen with the naked eye. But come endday, we’ll dock our ship, and we’ll join the other crewes for our first endrun meet in five turns. A nervy, electric thrill trips through my body at the sight of the moon and its world, so impossibly near and far at once. Sometimes I forget the true, endless scope of the Void and coax myself to thinking our ship is all the universe there is. But then we pass a moon or a world, hanging lonely and luminous in the dark, and it comes to me the sheer stretch of the emptiness we live in. I touch my hand to the porthole’s cool, scored surface, and trace the curve of the Earth.
No. I tamp out the thought, tuck my hands under my arms, and look away so I see only our ship. If I’ve taken to gazing out portholes like a silly, Earthstruck girl, I truly must be in need of marrying, as Modrie Reller’s son Jerej teases. All the oldgirls say we younger ones are drawn to the Earth, even though its touch means our ruin. They say even Saeleas, our first patriarch’s wife, fell weeping when our people departed some thousand turns past, and she had seen its desolation with her own eyes. They say ever since, our women have harbored a wanting for the Earth like a soft, rotten spot in our souls.
It is our men who risk to walk it when the need comes, our men who gird themselves and shield us from its pull, who must purify themselves with oil and water after suffering its weight. And in turn, all we need do is remember how our ship is life, the true world, the pure world. I whisper a piece from the Word of the Sky to keep me raveled.
“Clean the dust from our feet,
Our hair, our clothes.
Bring us oil, bring us water,
And in the heavens
We will make a world
anew.”
“Sorry, sorry,” Nan says as she finally emerges from the sleeping quarters, followed by Llell.
I stand straight to inspect them. They’ve bound up their red hair in work rags, like mine, and their green skirts brush the floor. Well, Llell’s do. Nan needs to let out the hem of her dress. She’s grown again, and the bare tops of her feet show. If you weren’t looking close, you’d think we were sisters, all dressed alike, except my skin is dull and dark, like my mother’s was, whereas theirs holds a translucent pearl. Lell and all the boys used to tease me on my coloring before I became so girl, but not now. Everything is different now.
I nod my approval and sweep off in the direction of the livestock bay, the other girls in tow.
“Hurry on,” I call over my shoulder. “We want to be done and out of the way for the docking, right so?”
“Right so,” Llell mutters.
“Right so,” Nan chirps, Llell’s blithe echo.
The ship is still observing night, so the solar-fed lights are out. Strips of phosphorous lining the hallway bathe our bare feet in a dim blue glow, and the biolume bowls hanging from the ceiling at every turn keep us from descending into complete darkness. As we reach the bend before the gangway, the daylights buzz to life. Turrut, one of the boys near our age, barrels around the corner with an armful of dioxide canisters for the workrooms clutched to his chest. We shrink against the wall and duck our heads as one, waiting for him to pass. Sometimes Turrut will tease us, try to rouse some words out of us so he can hold it over our heads later, maybe make us do his chores, but today he’s too busy. He flies by without a word.
As he disappears around the bend, Llell hurries forward and falls into step beside me. She keeps her neck bent so our heads are even and speaks down to her feet. “You right know you shouldn’t walk out without us.”
I don’t answer. Llell’s father may head the dyeworks, but her mother is only a fourthwife and a half-blind dyegirl, a nobody.
“What if you come on some trouble?” She doesn’t look up at me. “What if Turrut or . . . or the captain catches you out alone?”
I stop in my tracks. Nan almost bumps into us.
“Llell,” I say, pulling all the sternness of Modrie Reller’s voice into my own. “I don’t need you to tell me what’s proper. Are you forgetting my place?”
Llell falls quiet. She scratches the inside arch of her foot with her big toe.
“If you and Nan and the others would rise with me, I wouldn’t need to walk out alone, would I?”
Llell makes a face but doesn’t say anything.
“How can we protect one another’s honor if you’re still asleep?”
Llell stares at the floor. “Right so,” she says quietly.
A twinge of remorse nips at me. I want to reach out and squeeze her hand, as we did when we were younger and neither of us knew what our stations meant. But I am the so girl. I lift my head and continue along the corridor.
The warm, heavy stink of offal, synthetic hay, and animal bodies hits us as I activate the doors to the livestock bay. I leave the chickens to Llell. They’re hateful and like to nip, but she doesn’t mind them so much as the rest of us. I let Nan wander off in search of the cats, even though Llell and I both know she has her pockets full of leftover bean cake from the kitchens and she’s going to spoil them for mousing. I start on the goats.
I unhook the coaxer from its peg on the bulkhead wall and lead the first of the nanny goats into the outer paddock for milking. Above me, Llell activates the pneumatic lift and rides it up to the chicken coop, filling the bay with an awful grinding sound. She coo-coos softly to the birds as it comes to a stop. I strap the first goat into the coaxer, notch the dial to the yellow setting in the middle, and go back into the paddock for another goat to milk by hand while the coaxer does its work on the first. The second one is testy. She tries to step on my feet and kick over the pail as I pull milk from her udders, but I’ve been milking every day since I was a smallgirl near five turns. I know all the goats’ tricks. I hitch in her lead and hold her back left leg still.
Beside me, the coaxer choke-rattle-grinds, and the first goat bleats in fright. She tries to bolt, but the heavy machinery weighs her down. She rears. I jump up and pull the milking pail out of the way before the second goat can bolt and knock it over. The tang of too-hot metal floods the air.
“Hshhh, hshhh.” I lay a calming hand on the goat’s neck and unstrap her. The second she’s free, she runs for the far side of the paddock in a kick of hay, flaps her ears, and stamps in annoyance. I tap the regulator face on the coaxer’s side. It’s stuck on the low setting, and trying to rev itself to catch up. I check over both shoulders to see if Llell or Nan is lurking behind me. No one. I’m alone.
I pop off the faceplate. The coaxer’s old, some turns older than me, and sometimes its belts slip. The last time this happened, we had to turn it in at the Fixes’ workshop and it took deciturns to get it back, since the coaxer’s not Priority. But now no one’s watching, so I can try one of the fixes I learned from my friend Soli at the runend meet some five turns past. I slide the faceplate away. The interlocking cogs in the coaxer’s innards have been stripped, ground completely smooth.
“No. Oh, no.” I groan softly. I could fix it, but for that I’d need parts. And if I go to the requisitions master and tell him what I need, he’ll ask how I know what the fix is. And then it’ll come out someone’s taught me fixes. So girl or no, that’s hardly proper.
Nan scurries up, brushing crumbs from her hands. I snap the faceplate back on the coaxer and drop it into my lap in one smooth movement.
“It’s bust again?” Nan asks.
I nod. “I’ll take it by the Fixes after we finish.” I have no choice.
“How many more?” she asks.
“Thirteen.” I point to the pen of waiting goats.
Nan leads out another goat, a spotted one, and we both bend our heads over our work. It’s some peaceful, the rattle of milk as it hits the pail, my knees on the warm hay, knowing Nan is beside me and the ship is extending its solar arms to the sun to power up the grids and wake everyone for the last day of our journey. I’m thinking on how maybe I could gut some of the other machines in the junk locker for salvage parts, slip around the Fixes, and get our coaxer working again. . . .
“Ava,” Nan whispers.
I glance up and see her eyes locked somewhere behind me. I look over my shoulder. Modrie Reller has crossed the gangway. She’s bearing down on us like a hawkship, her long, gray, copper-shot hair coiled in braids at the base of her skull and her fan swinging from a cord around her wrist. She moves quick and practiced, despite the round of pregnancy at her waist, like a caravel accustomed to sailing under heavy cargo. Iri, my great-grandfather’s youngest widow and Modrie Reller’s constant shadow, trails in her wake. I jump to my feet and brush the hay from my skirts.
The pneumatic lift rumbles above us. Llell is coming down, a crate of fresh brown eggs in her arms. The noise from the lift drowns out any hope of talk, but the question is all over her face. What’s happening?
“Ava,” Modrie Reller says. Her words are clear, even over the lift’s gears. “Come with us.”
I look back at Llell and Nan. They both stare openly at me, straw and muck all over their skirts. I brush myself down one last time, step out of the pen, and let the gate’s latch fall closed behind me.
Modrie Reller doesn’t speak as she leads the way through the halls. Iri and I trail in her wake with our heads bent modestly, so we don’t look on the faces of any men by mistake. We pass the open arched doorways of the main corridor, the kitchens, the hydroponic gardens, the men mixing a slurry of paste, dung, and fabric remnants for paper, the dyegirls heating urine and water in vats while the older women bend over their weaving. Along the way, the caged canaries stand sentry for bad matter in the air. We move past the men’s training room with its walking machines and pressure chamber for keeping them strong enough to bear the Earth’s weight, and throug
h the sleeping quarters, now almost empty. Modrie Reller pushes aside a heavy woven tapestry picturing Saeleas, haloed in copper-point stars.
We duck into the tiled cleanroom on the other side, where Kamak sits rubbing oil into the stretched skin of her stomach. She is pregnant with her third child. Modrie Reller gives her a tight smile and a nod as we bustle past. We cut through the narrow service corridors and stop short in a small room with a utility sink, its metal drain limed with age. Iri pulls the door shut behind us.
Now I know why we’re here. They’re going to dye my hair.
When I was born, my hair was auburn like my mother’s, not too far from my crewemates’ heads of amber and rust. But it darkened as I grew, until it was black like a canary’s eye, and the oldgirls started talking. They said it was the curse, the bad matter left on us when my grandmother married a man from Earth, a visiting so doctor who took my grandmother for his secondwife. Crewes take such marriages every few decades, like a tonic. It brings new blood into our line. The so doctor was good, the oldgirls say, took care of my grandmother and the girl that came from their union, my own mother.
But when he passed, the so doctor’s daughter by his firstwife came meddling, sending messages and even booking passage to the skyport to find us. I was only a smallgirl then, but I remember the sight of her stalking down the gangways beside our old captain, my great-grandfather Harrah, her head swathed in dark cloth and her arms covered. The deep brown of her face, brown as paper, looking out at us. How tall she was, the same height as my great-grandfather, and how she stared into everyone’s eyes—even the men—as if she were looking for someone. She walked so sure and steady, as if she weren’t tracking the Earth’s taint through our ship.
Hah and Turrut snuck into her room in the passenger’s quarters while she rested and said they saw her head uncovered. They said her hair was black like mine and teased she was a bad spirit come up after me from the Earth. Maybe she come an’ snatch you away.
I cried and ran to find Iri, who brought me to Modrie Reller. That was the day they began dyeing my hair.
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