A Second Chance at Eden

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A Second Chance at Eden Page 29

by Peter F. Hamilton


  ‘But they’re ours,’ Althaea said proudly. ‘Nobody else has them. They help make Charmaine special.’

  *

  Eason walked into the ground-floor study the next morning. He was still kneading kinks out of his back; the bed in the fusty little back room they’d given him was incredibly hard. It was only for one night; Tiarella had told him he would be living in one of the grove workers’ chalets.

  The study, like the rest of the house, had dull-red clay floor tiles and whitewashed plaster walls. Several black and white prints of various sizes were hanging up. A big brass fan was spinning slowly on the ceiling.

  Tiarella was sitting behind a broad teak desk. The only objects on the polished wood surface in front of her were a century-old computer slate, and a pack of cards with a fanciful design printed on the back – from what he could see it looked like a star map.

  He sat in an austere high-backed chair facing her.

  ‘About your duties,’ she said. ‘You can start by repairing the grove worker chalets. We have a carpentry shop with a full set of tools. Ross doesn’t use them much these days. Are you any good with tools?’

  He checked the files stored in his synaptic web. ‘I couldn’t build you an ornamental cabinet, but cutting roofing timbers to length is no trouble.’

  ‘Good. After that I’d like you to start on the garden.’

  ‘Right.’

  Tiarella picked up the pack of cards and started to shuffle them absently. She had the dexterity of a professional croupier. ‘We are getting a little bit too overgrown here. Charmaine might look charmingly rustic when you sail by, but the vines are becoming a nuisance.’

  He nodded at one of the big prints on the wall. It was of three people, a formal family pose: Tiarella when she was younger, looking even more like Althaea, a bearded man in his late twenties, and a young boy about ten years old. ‘Is that your husband?’

  The cards were merged with a sharp burring sound. ‘Yes, that’s Vanstone, and Krelange, our son. They died eighteen years ago. It was a boating accident. They were outside the archipelago when a hurricane blew up. They weren’t found until two days later. There wasn’t much left. The razorsquids . . .’

  ‘It must have been tough for you.’

  ‘Yes. It was. I loved him like nobody else. Ours was a genuine till death do us part marriage. If it hadn’t been for Althaea I would probably have killed myself.’

  He glanced up sharply, meeting a hard-set smile.

  ‘Oh yes, it is possible to love someone that much. Enough so their absence is pure torture. Have you ever experienced that kind of love, Eason?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘I don’t know whether to envy you or pity you for that lack. What I felt for Vanstone was like a tidal force. It ruled my life, intangible and unbreakable. Even now it hasn’t let go. It never will. But I have my hopes for Charmaine and Althaea.’

  ‘She’s a nice girl. She should do well with this island, there’s a lot of potential here. It’s a wonderful inheritance.’

  ‘Yes, she has a beautiful future ahead of her. I read it in the cards.’

  ‘Right.’

  ‘Are you a believer in tarot, Eason?’

  ‘I like to think I can choose my own destiny.’

  ‘We all do at first. It’s a fallacy. Our lives are lived all at once, consciousness is simply a window into time. That’s how the cards work, or the tea leaves, or palmistry, or crystals for that matter. Whatever branch of the art you use, it simply helps to focus the mind.’

  ‘Yes, I think I’ve heard that already on this planet.’

  ‘The art allows me to see into the future. And, thank God, Althaea isn’t going to suffer like I have done.’

  He stirred uncomfortably, for once feeling slightly out of his depth. Bereavement and isolation could pry at a mind, especially over eighteen years.

  ‘Would you like to know what your future has in store?’ she asked. The pack of cards was offered to him. ‘Cut them.’

  ‘Maybe some other time.’

  *

  Rousseau walked him over to the chalet, following a path worn through an avenue of gloomy trees at the back of the house. The old man seemed delighted at the prospect of male company on the island. Not least because his share of the work would be considerably lessened. Probably to around about zero if he had his way, Eason guessed.

  ‘I’ve lived here nearly all my life,’ Rousseau said. ‘Even longer than Tiarella. Her father, Nyewood, he took me on as a picker in the groves when I was younger than you. About fifteen, I was, I think.’ He looked up at the tangle of interlocking branches overhead with a desultory expression pulling at his flabby lips. ‘Old Nyewood would hate to see what’s happened to the island. Charmaine’s success was all down to him, you know, building on his father’s vision. Half of these trees are varieties he spliced together, improvements on commercial breeds. Why, I planted most of them myself.’

  Eason grunted at the old man’s rambling reminiscences. But at the same time he did have a point. There was a lot of fruit forming on the boughs in this part of the jungle, oranges, lemons, and something that resembled a blue grapefruit, most of them inaccessible. The branches hadn’t been pruned for a decade, they were far too tall, even on those trees that were supposedly self-shaping. And the snarl of grass and scrub plants which made up the undergrowth was waist-high. But that was all superficial growth. It wouldn’t take too much work to make the groves productive again.

  ‘Why stay on, then?’ Eason asked.

  ‘For little Althaea, of course. Where would she be without me to take care of things? I loved Vanstone when he was alive, such a fine man. He thought of me as his elder brother, you know. So I do what I can for his daughter in honour of his memory. I have been as a father to her.’

  ‘Right.’ No one else would take on the old soak.

  There were twelve chalets forming a semicircle in their own clearing. Rousseau called it a clearing; the grass came up over Eason’s knees.

  ‘My old chalet, the best of them all,’ Rousseau said, slapping the front door of number three.

  ‘Shack, not a chalet,’ Eason mumbled under his breath. Two rooms and a shower cubicle built out of bleached planking that had warped alarmingly, a roof of thick palm thatch which was moulting, and a veranda along the front. There was no glass in the windows, they had slatted shutters to hold back the elements.

  ‘I fixed up the hinges and put in a new bed last week,’ Rousseau said, his smile showing three missing teeth. ‘Tiarella, she told me fix the roof as well. With my back! That woman expects miracles. Still, now you’re here, I’ll help you.’

  Eason paused on the threshold, a gelid tingling running down his spine. ‘What do you mean, last week?’

  ‘Last Thursday, it was, she told me. Ross, she said, get a chalet fixed up ready for a man to live in. It was a mess, you know. I’ve done a lot of work here for you already.’

  ‘Ready for me to live in?’

  ‘Yes.’ Rousseau shifted unhappily from foot to foot as Eason stared at him.

  ‘Did she mention me by name?’

  ‘No. How could she? Listen, I made sure the toilet works. You don’t have to run back to the house every time.’

  Eason reached out and grasped the front of Rousseau’s vest. ‘What did she say, exactly?’

  Rousseau gave him a sickly grin, trying to prise his hand loose. Sweat broke out on his forehead when he found just how implacable that grip was.

  ‘She said there would be a man coming. She said it was the time and we should get ready. That’s all, I swear.’

  Eason let go of his vest. ‘The time? What did she mean?’

  ‘I don’t know.’ Rousseau stroked the front of his vest down. ‘Tiarella, she’s not . . . you know. Since Vanstone’s death I have to make allowances. Half of what she says is mad. I wouldn’t worry about it.’

  *

  After Eason finished sweeping the chalet’s floor and washing fungal colonies from the walls he sa
t on the cot-style bed and opened his case. The three confinement spheres were still functioning perfectly. Of course, there were only two modes, working and not working. If one of them ever did suffer a glitch, he’d never know about it. That still didn’t stop him from checking. Their presence was heightening his sense of paranoia.

  Tiarella worried him. How the hell could she know he would be coming out to Charmaine? Unless this was all some incredibly intricate trap. Which really was crazy. More than anyone he knew how the Party members operated. Sophistication was not part of the doctrine.

  It was no good terrorizing Rousseau, that drunken fart didn’t know anything.

  ‘I brought you some cups and things,’ Althaea said. She was standing in the doorway, wearing a sleeveless mauve dress that had endured a lot of washes. A big box full of crockery was clutched to her chest. Her face crumpled into misery when he looked up, the heat of surprise in his eyes.

  He closed the case calmly and loaded an access code into its lock. ‘It’s all right, come in. I’m just putting my things away.’

  ‘I’m sorry, I didn’t think. I always walk straight in to Mother’s room.’

  ‘No trouble.’ He put the case into his flight bag and slipped the seal, then pushed the whole bundle under the bed.

  ‘I knew Ross would never think to bring anything like this for you,’ she said as she began placing the dishes and cups on a shelf above the sink. ‘He doesn’t even know how to wash up. I can bring some coffee beans over later. We still dry our own. They taste nice. Oh, you’ll need a kettle, won’t you. Is the electricity on here?’

  He reached out and touched her long bare arm. ‘Leave that. Why don’t you show me round the island?’

  ‘Yes,’ she stammered. ‘All right.’

  Charmaine’s central lagoon was a circle seven hundred metres across, with a broad beach of fine pink sand running the whole way round. Eason counted five tiny islands, each crowned with a clump of trees festooned in vines. The water was clear and warm, and firedrakes glided between the islands and the main jungle.

  It was breathtaking, he had to admit, a secret paradise.

  ‘The sand is dead coral,’ Althaea said as they walked along the beach. Her sandals dangled from her hand, she’d taken them off to paddle. ‘There’s a grinder machine which turns it to powder. Mother says they used to process a whole batch of dead chunks every year when Father was alive. It took decades for the family to make this beach.’

  ‘It was worth it.’

  She gave him a cautious smile. ‘The lagoon’s chock full of lobsters. It fills up through a vent hole, but there’s a tidal turbine at the far end to give us all our power. They can’t get past it so they just sit in there and breed. I dive to catch them, it’s so easy.’

  ‘You must have been very young when your father died.’

  ‘It happened before I was born.’ Her lower lip curled anxiously under her teeth. ‘I’m seventeen.’

  ‘Yes, I’d worked that out. Seventeen and beautiful, you must knock the boys dead when you visit Kariwak.’

  Althaea turned scarlet.

  ‘And you’ve lived here all your life?’

  ‘Yes. Mother says the family used to have a plantation on Earth, somewhere in the Caribbean. We’ve always grown exotic crops.’ She skipped up onto an outcrop of smooth yellow coral and gazed out across the lagoon. ‘I know Charmaine must look terribly ramshackle to you. But I’m going to wake it up. I’m going to have a husband, and ten children, and we’ll have teams of pickers in the groves again, and boats will call every day to be loaded with fruit and coffee beans, and we’ll have our own fishing smacks, and a new village to house everyone, and big dances under the stars.’ She stopped, drastically self-conscious again, hunching up her shoulders. ‘You must think I’m so stupid talking like that.’

  ‘No, not at all. I wish I had dreams like yours.’

  ‘What do you dream of?’

  ‘I don’t know. Somewhere small and quiet I can settle down. Definitely not an asteroid, though.’

  ‘But it could be an island?’ She sounded hopeful.

  ‘Yes. Could be.’

  *

  Starship fusion drives twinkled brighter than stars in the night sky as Eason walked across the garden to the house. Only one of Tropicana’s pair of small moons was visible, a yellow-orange globe low above the treetops and visibly sinking.

  He went into the silent house, taking the stairs two at a time. When he reached Tiarella’s bedroom door he turned the handle, ready to push until the lock tore out of the frame. It wasn’t locked.

  Moonlight shone in through the open window, turning the world to a drab monochrome. Tiarella was sitting cross-legged on the double bed, wearing a blue cotton nightshirt. The eccentric pendulum was held out at arm’s length. She didn’t show the slightest surprise at his presence.

  Eason closed the door, aroused by the scene: woman waiting calmly on a bed. ‘You have something to tell me.’

  ‘Do I?’

  ‘How did you know I was coming? Nobody could know that. It was pure chance I bumped into Althaea back in the harbour.’

  ‘Chance is your word. Destiny is mine. I read it in the cards. Now is the time for a stranger to appear.’

  ‘You expect me to believe that crap?’

  ‘How do you explain it, then?’

  He crossed the room in three quick strides, and gripped her arms. The pendulum bounced away noisily as she dropped it.

  ‘That hurts,’ she said tightly.

  He increased the pressure until she gasped. ‘How did you know I was coming?’ he demanded.

  ‘I read it in the cards,’ she hissed back.

  Eason studied her eyes, desperate for any sign of artfulness. Finding none. She was telling the truth, or thought she was. Cards! Crazy bitch.

  He shoved her down on the bed, and glared down at her, angry at himself for the growing sense of vulnerability, the suspicion he was being manipulated. All this astrology shit was too far outside his experience.

  The nightshirt had ridden up her legs. He let his eyes linger on the long provocative expanse of exposed thigh.

  ‘Take it off,’ he said softly.

  ‘Fuck off.’

  He knelt on the bed beside her, smiling. ‘You knew exactly what you were doing when you asked me out here, didn’t you? Eighteen years is a long time.’ He stroked her chin, receiving another glimpse into that steely reserve, but this time there was a spark of guilt corroding the composure. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘You knew what you were doing.’ His hand slipped down inside the nightshirt to cup her left breast. He enjoyed the fullness he found, the warmth.

  ‘Don’t push your luck,’ she said. ‘Remember, the only way off this island is the Orphée, and she’s affinity-bonded to me. If you want to clear out ahead of whoever is hunting you, you do what you’re told.’

  ‘What makes you think someone’s after me?’

  ‘Oh, please. Fresh off a starship, no money, desperate to get out of the city. I believe you’re drifting.’

  ‘And you still let me on board.’

  ‘Because you were meant to be. It’s your time.’

  ‘I’ve had enough of this crap. I think I’ll go see Althaea. How do tall handsome strangers fit into her horoscope today?’ He let go of her and stood up.

  ‘Bastard. Don’t you touch my daughter.’

  Eason laughed. ‘Give me a reason.’

  He waited until she started to unbutton the nightshirt, then tugged off his jeans and T-shirt.

  *

  Charmaine’s daily routine was insidiously somnolent. Eason soon found himself lapsing into the same unhurried rhythm Rousseau used to approach any task. After all, there was nothing which actually needed doing urgently.

  The old man showed him the outhouse which was fitted out as a carpentry shop. Its roof leaked, but the tools and bench jigs were in good condition, and there was plenty of power from the tidal turbine (Tropicana’s moons were small, but they had a close orbit, p
roducing a regular fluctuation in the ocean). It took him three days to fix up the chalet’s frame properly, and repair the thatch roof. He had to junk a lot of the planking, cutting new wood from a stack of seasoned lengths. After that, he began to survey the remaining chalets. Two of them had rotted beyond repair, but the others were salvageable. He started to measure up, surprised to find himself enjoying the prospect of restoring them.

  He decided it was because the work he was doing on Charmaine was practical. The first time in his life he had constructed rather than destroyed.

  Althaea brought him an endless supply of fruit drinks when he was working on the chalets. She was eager to hear stories of life in the Confederation, gossip about the Kulu abdication, what asteroid settlements were like, details of a starship flight, the new colony worlds, wicked old Earth. The chilled fresh juice, the sweltering heat, Rousseau’s continuing laziness, and her interest were good enough excuses to down tools.

  He accompanied her when she went across to the lagoon, and watched her dive for lobsters. It was a ridiculous way to catch the things; a couple of pots would have brought an overnight bounty. But that wasn’t the way of Charmaine. Besides, he enjoyed the sight of her stripping down to a bikini, almost unaware of her own sexuality. She was an excellent swimmer, long limbs propelling her sleekly through the water. Then she’d emerge glistening and smiling as she held up two new snapping trophies.

  Tiarella took Orphée out sailing every two or three days, visiting the neighbouring islands. She and Ross would pick a couple of crates full of fruit from the accessible trees around the lagoon to trade, returning with fish, or cloth, or flour. She told him they only visited Kariwak every couple of weeks, carrying a cargo of lobsters to sell at the harbour’s market, and buying essentials only available in the city.

  She spent most of her days working on the Orphée. A lot of effort went into keeping the boat seaworthy.

  Eason kept returning to her at night, though he was beginning to wonder why. After a week he was still no closer to understanding her. Island life had given her a great body, but she was lifeless in bed; appropriately, for she fantasized she was making love to a dead man. On the two occasions he had managed to rouse her, she called out Vanstone’s name.

 

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