She poked her head through the ferns covering the door. Riley leaned on the tree, arms crossed. He gave the device a hesitant look, reminding Eri of their distrust for technology.
“It’s meant to heal, not kill.”
“I’m sure it is.” Carven narrowed his eyes and turned before she could interpret the change in his features. “Come, I’ll take you to your friend.”
He led her across a bridge to another tree hut toward the back of the village. “We’ve segregated him from the rest of the population, just in case he’s contagious. I hope you understand.”
“Of course.”
Eri pushed aside the ferns and entered the tree hut, her sight adjusting from the bright daylight to the dimly lit room. Light trickled out of a small triangular hole in the thatched ceiling, shining on Litus’s long legs. He slumped on top of a bed, propped up by the wall at his back. His eyes were closed, and Eri’s heart sped. I hope I’m not too late.
His chest rose and fell, and she took in a deep breath, clicking on the screen. Carven joined her, watching with skepticism in his gaze.
READY TO SCAN SUBJECT.
Eri stood above Litus and pressed her finger to the screen. A loud beep rang out.
INCOMPATIBLE SUBJECT.
What? What if it had broken during landing? Eri flipped the regenerator over. Caked mud covered the screen. For the Guide’s sake! She wiped the bottom on the blanket beside Litus and tried again.
The device cast a fluorescent blue light across his body.
SCANNING MODE ACTIVATED.
She held the light over his lungs, his stomach, and his lower body, waiting for readings.
“What’s it doing?” Carven whispered behind her.
Eri didn’t know exactly, but she’d listened to enough of the regenerator lectures to give him some sort of answer. “Searching for damaged cells or infection.”
The device beeped.
INCREASE IN LYMPHOCYTES DUE TO A VIRAL OR FUNGAL INFECTION. DIAGNOSIS: PNEUMONIA.
She read it out loud to Carven.
“Sounds bad,” Carven muttered.
“Not at all.” Eri clicked a few buttons on the screen and the light changed from blue to green. The device buzzed in her hands. She held the scanner steady as the light moved from Litus’s throat to his waist. “It will take a few moments.”
“To do what?”
“Kill the infection. Make him well.”
Carven jumped up and joined her at the side of Litus’s bed. “Amazing. Does that thing work for arrow wounds as well?”
“It depends on how bad it is.” Eri watched as the oxygen levels in Litus’s blood rose and the color came back to his face. “It can heal and regenerate cells, but it can’t bring people back from the dead.”
“How does it work?”
Eri shrugged. Where to start? She had no idea how educated these people were. They seemed to know enough about technology, so she leveled with Carven. “I’m not a doctor, but I think it has to do with the radiation waves. They enter his body and the device monitors the radiation given off as a result. Once the diagnosis is complete, the waves change the structure of the damaged cells.”
Carven’s face dropped as he stepped back. “Will it affect us?”
“No. The regenerator emits nonionizing radiation, which is considered harmless at low powers and doesn’t produce a significant temperature rise.”
Carven nodded as though he were considering her words, then he shook his head. “It still seems dangerous.”
“Not when you use it properly.”
The device clicked off and Litus stirred, taking in a deep breath. His eyes flickered and opened. Eri hovered over him, holding her breath.
“Eri?”
Her knees weakened with relief. “How do you feel?”
Litus rubbed his eyes and squinted into the dim sunlight where she stood. “Much better. Where am I? What happened?”
“You’re in one of the tree huts, segregated from the rest of the village in case you were contagious. Striver’s tribe recovered some of our supplies from the crash site. I went through the containers and found the regenerator.”
He tried to sit up, but her hand rested firmly on his chest. “You need to rest. You had pneumonia. I killed the infection with the regenerator, but the process will leave you feeling weak.”
“I know the side effects. I was at the class myself, remember?”
She pulled her hand away. As the second in command, she should concede to him. “I’m just reminding you.”
He pushed himself up and blinked, offering an apologetic smile. “Eri, thank you for all that you’ve done.” His features hardened as he looked to Carven. “I need to talk with the commander.”
Anxiety ricocheted through Eri. By saving Litus, did she condemn Striver’s village? She stared into his eyes, beseeching him. “I need to talk with you first. In private.”
Carven eyed them both and nodded his head, suspicion stirring in his gaze. “I’ll leave you two. Please join us tonight for the celebration.”
“We will.” Eri waited until Carven’s footsteps faded before speaking. “Careful what you tell the commander.” Her voice dropped to a whisper. “She’s planning to annihilate these people. All she needs are numbers and a plan of attack.”
Litus’s lips tightened. “I’m only trying to do my job. What the commander does with the information is not for me to decide.”
“How can you give her information against them after all they’ve done for us?”
Litus rubbed his temples as if the argument reared a headache he wasn’t ready for. “Because I’m a team expedition leader, Eri. I believe in the Guide and the commander. She has our best interests at heart.”
“She might have our best interests, but what about the others here on Refuge?”
“Did you see what they did to our team? To Mars and me? I have to tell the commander of the dangers here, along with the people who are friendly. My job is to look out for those on the Heritage—and especially for Aquaria.”
Frustration boiled inside her. “Don’t you see? Your single-mindedness is keeping you and Aquaria apart. She doesn’t speak to you because she’s afraid she’ll say something against the Guide and you’ll turn her in.”
Litus’s eyes widened. “I’d never do that. I love her.”
The word love struck a resonant chord in Eri’s heart. Maybe there was hope for Litus after all. Love—something that didn’t happen all that often on the decks of the Heritage. And Litus felt that way about her sister. “Learn to think for yourself. A leader with a spine would impress Aquaria more than a blind follower who doggedly sticks to the Guide.”
“Are you sure?”
“Believe me. I’ve known her all my life.”
“Why didn’t you say something back at camp?”
“I tried to, but we were attacked. Now it’s even more important, not just to impress Aquaria but to do the right thing. Our actions influence a great deal of people: humans like us who have lived here for hundreds of years, along with a new species—the first alien contact humankind has ever known. Isn’t that worth fighting for?”
Litus’s shoulders slumped forward. Eri felt like she’d beaten him with a tree branch all afternoon, but she pushed the guilt away. He needed to step up if Striver and the others were to have any chance. “I have to report back,” he said. “We can’t ignore the commander forever.”
“All I’m saying is consider what you tell her, what our mission here should be.”
/> “If she sees these Lawless people posing any threat to our colonization efforts, nothing I can say will change her mind. I’ll put in a good word for Striver and his village, but I can’t promise you anything.”
Eri nodded, weariness from all the frustration and anxiety bogging her down. She felt like she’d thrown herself at a wall and hadn’t even made a crack.
“I’m glad you were chosen for this team, Eri.” Litus’s voice grew soft and gentle. He stood with his whole body creaking like an old man after a long nap and put a hand on her shoulder. He looked like he’d aged ten years in three days. Eri only hoped he’d gained wisdom as well.
“At least try to save us all from a war we don’t need.”
Litus squeezed her shoulder. “I’ll do my best.”
Chapter Twenty
Hope
Guards paced around the circumference of one of the back storage huts, bows cocked and ready to fire. Mixed feelings of hope and fear comingled in Striver’s heart as he walked across the hanging bridge connecting the center of town from the residential offshoots to the storage huts in the back. The sun sunk low in the forest and the celebration loomed. Villagers had already lit the candle boxes dangling from low branches, making their own tiny galaxy with golden twinkling stars.
Despite the decorations, Striver felt anything but festive.
Beckon hunched over his walking stick, watching the guards like an eagle surveying his brood. The old man turned and gauged Striver’s approach with a keen eye and a crescent frown.
Of course the council would supervise Weaver’s return.
Striver knew it was only fair, but part of him dreaded butting heads with the close-minded elders doggedly adhering to custom and outdated laws. Talking to them was like talking to the rocks by the riverside.
Striver bowed before the village elder, then stood and met his gaze. “I want to see him.”
Beckon didn’t move, rooted to his spot like an ancient tree with his long gray beard stirring in the breeze. “Save your voice. He won’t listen to you.”
Striver’s jaw tightened as he took in a deep breath. “I have to try.”
“Tend to the others in the village. Their spirits are low. They need a leader to show them these visitors bring no harm.”
“We don’t know that yet,” Striver corrected him with a tilt of his head. “In my opinion, we celebrate too soon.”
Beckon nodded his head slightly. “You may be right. Still, if a war is upon us, we will need strength, courage, and unity. Our spirits should be unbreakable.”
“Five minutes,” Striver commanded him with strength in his voice.
Beckon nodded. Resignation weighed his voice down. “If anything, one conversation will quell your hopes.”
Refusing to believe him, Striver walked past the guards and entered the hut, heart pounding. Weaver sat on a tweed chair, bent over like a rag doll. A plate of half-eaten trotter rested beside his bound feet. They’d tied his hands to the chair with just enough give to reach the food and water.
At least he’s eating.
Weaver looked up, hair falling around his face. He frowned in disappointment as if Striver were the last person on Refuge he wanted to see.
Striver swallowed the hurt down. “It’s good to have you home with us.”
Weaver cleared his throat. “So you’re going to keep me here, like a pet?”
“I’m hoping, in time, you’ll want to stay.”
Silence. Weaver’s gaze stared to a place Striver could never go, even if he wanted to. Striver stepped forward, the floorboards creaking under his feet. This shelter will not hold him forever, no matter how many guards stand at attention.
“You have nowhere else to go. Jolt won’t take you back. You failed him, and he’ll kill you for it. He’s got a reputation.”
Weaver flicked his eyes up under heavy, brooding lids. “You have no idea what my arrangement with Jolt is.”
“Weaver, whatever it is, it can’t be good. That man is evil. He’s out for power and to sate his own greed.”
“I’m not planning on submitting to Jolt forever.”
“What are you planning to do, then?”
Again, silence. Silence so sharp it cut Striver in pieces. Did his brother have a plan at all, or would his reckless behavior only lead him to a dead end?
Striver spread his hands. “You could have a great life here with us.”
Weaver laughed bitterly. “Always living in your shadow? Watching Mom slowly waste away? Suffering as Riptide throws herself at your feet?”
Striver resisted cringing at Riptide’s name. “I don’t have feelings for her, and I never have.”
Weaver’s eyes glittered with bitterness. “That doesn’t stop her from having feelings for you.”
If only he could wish her feelings away. Striver spread his hands in helplessness. “I’m sorry, Weaver.”
“What do you have to be sorry about? You’re perfect. Heck, you even look like the legendary Striker, savior of our people and the Guardians. A spitting image. Who wouldn’t want to follow you?”
Striver crumbled inside. He couldn’t win. Weaver had nothing, and he had it all.
Holy Refuge, I don’t even want half of it.
Striver wished he could hand the world to Weaver on a plate, but one had to earn the admiration Striver had. Respect only came with time, and Weaver had failed everyone he loved.
“This is why I won’t let Mom see you. You’d break her heart all over again.” Striver shook his head in disappointment.
“Her heart was broken a long time ago, when Dad left.”
Weaver always knew how to spread the blame, and there was no sense arguing with him. In his head, he did no wrong; everyone else in the world wronged him. Striver turned toward the door. “I’m always here if you need me. Let me know if you change your mind.”
Weaver spoke to his back, his words sharp as thorns. “You can’t make the world perfect, like you. Refuge will always be divided. It’s human nature.”
Striver paused. Now three factions battled for their planet: the Lawless, his village, and the ship in the sky. Was there a way to bring all three together? If so, he’d find it.
“Not if I can help it.” The crackling of torchlight followed Striver out.
…
Striver’s failure with his brother ripped a hole in his heart, and the pain of reporting Weaver’s recklessness to their mother heightened the hurt tenfold. He stood outside her hut, searching for words that weren’t there. He hadn’t seen her since his return, but Carven had given her the news of his homecoming, along with Weaver, as Striver made arrangements for Mars and Litus and answered the villagers’ questions.
Now he had to face her with bad news.
The candlelight shimmered from inside, calming and welcoming him. Whenever he spent time with his mother he felt centered, focused. She taught him what was really important in this world. He needed her to ground him again.
He parted the ferns and stepped in. His mother lay in her bed, arms and legs thin as twigs. His heart broke all over again.
“Striver, it’s good to see you.” A smile touched her thin lips.
“How are you feeling?”
She shrugged, propping herself up on her knobby elbows. “The same.”
Her condition was worsening. He could see the listlessness in her body, the pain in her tensed muscles. Eri’s regenerator flashed in his mind. Carven had told him how she’d saved Litus, eradicating the sickness tearing through his body. Could she do the same for his mother?
“What of Weaver?” Her question br
ought his thoughts back.
He came over by her bed, took her hand in his, and kissed the back of her palm. “He’s home, Mom. He’s safe.” For now.
“Is he going to the celebration?”
“No.” Striver ran a hand over his hair. “They’ve locked him up.”
“Has he harmed anyone in the village?”
“No, but the council sees him as a threat. They think he’ll run away again. He shared our secrets with the Lawless in return for shelter.”
Her hand tensed underneath his fingers. This information was not good for her, especially in her weakened condition. He wished he had good news to cheer her up, but the recklessness of her son eclipsed her world.
She met his gaze. “Look after him, will you?”
“I’ll do my best. I tried to talk to him, but he won’t listen to reason. He’s jealous of me and everything I’ve become. I can’t blame him.”
She patted the back of his hand. “Anyone would be. You’ve turned into a handsome young man and a brilliant leader. You’ve made me proud.”
Heat spread through his chest. He loved his mother so much, he was willing to take a chance, even if his actions defied everything he’d ever learned. “If you could heal as a result of technology, would you give it a try?”
His mother blinked and shook her head. “I have no idea. I’ve never thought of such a thing. Why?”
“Eri has a device able to regenerate cells. She used it on her teammate, and he healed right before Carven’s eyes.” Anxiety bubbled up in Striver’s veins. “Will you try it?”
She swallowed, looking like she was drowning in her bed sheets. “What will the villagers think of you?”
He suspected she’d argue as much. “A new age is upon us—if anyone argues that, all they have to do is turn their heads to the sky. Perhaps this will bring our peoples closer together. We can’t continue to live in the old ways. The Lawless are strengthening, and that ship in the sky isn’t going to go away.”
“Yes, but is it the best way? Accepting the visitors’ technology?”
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