Ghost Planet (4 page)

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Authors: Sharon Lynn Fisher

BOOK: Ghost Planet
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“Murphy—”

He started up the stairs again. I followed.

“Dr.
Murphy
,” I insisted, “you’re not considering all the facts. I arrived here from Earth just this morning. How is it possible I’m a ghost? I’m not dead. I was expected. You met me at the terminal yourself. It makes no sense, Murphy.”

We reached the third floor and he paused on the landing. I stopped next to him, holding my breath while I waited for him to answer. But he exited the stairway instead.

I was regrouping for a second attempt when something occurred to me: I didn’t
need
to convince Murphy. It would all be cleared up the second I walked out of the building. I wasn’t sure I’d want to work for him after this, but under the circumstances I doubted the academy would deny me a transfer.

A door hissed open to our right. A woman with a long, chestnut ponytail and even longer legs stepped into the hallway. She was nearly as tall as Murphy.

“Irish, there you are!”

He gave a short nod. “Lex.”

“I must have sent you a dozen messages. Is something wrong with your portable?”

“I shut it off.”

“You
what
?” She studied his face. “I was trying to save you a trip to the terminal. I’m sure you’ve heard the news by now. God, how awful.”

A chill danced down between my shoulder blades. I took an unsteady step toward Murphy and his colleague.

“What are you talking about?” he asked her.

Lex’s almond eyes flickered in my direction, then fixed on my face, registering my presence for the first time. “Murphy, that woman behind you—”

“Alexis, what’s happened? Does this have something to do with our new employee?”

Her gaze pulled back to Murphy. “She’s
dead
, Irish. There was some kind of freak electrical storm. The engines on her transport failed. The thing sank to the bottom of the goddamn ocean.”

I stood dumbstruck, staring at her. This was a joke—a colossally unfunny one. Or possibly some final, elaborate test cooked up by the academy. But why now?


Who’s
dead?” I demanded.

Lex’s eyes remained trained on Murphy, seeking cues.

“You’re talking about Elizabeth, is that right?” He spoke the words in a slow, deliberate way. “Elizabeth Cole is—dead.”

Lex raised an eyebrow, nodding.

“You’re absolutely sure.”

“Braden’s already working on a statement for her family.”

“No!”
I shouted, panicking. I grabbed Murphy’s arm to pull him around, but he stiffened and stood fast. “Don’t you
do
that. This is a mistake! My mother—my mother is clinically depressed—a suicide risk. Don’t you dare tell her I’m dead!”

Murphy and Lex stood inches apart, their bodies straight as fence posts. I couldn’t see his face, but from the intensity of her expression you’d think they were having a lovers’ quarrel.

“Do you want to tell me who the hell this is, Irish?”

I waited for Murphy’s answer, hand trembling from the strain of my grip on his arm.

“Elizabeth Cole,” he replied.

Lex’s head shook slowly as she tried to understand.

“She’s a ghost, Lex. My ghost. It wasn’t making a lot of sense until now.”

Frantic, I let go of Murphy and wedged myself between them. For a moment I stood jammed against him, looking up at her. Then he stepped back.

“You have to listen to me,” I pleaded with Lex. “He’s
wrong
. Don’t let them tell my mother I’m dead!”

She cast him a doubting look over the top of my head. “It
still
doesn’t make sense, does it? You already have a ghost. And you didn’t know Elizabeth on Earth.”

“I did, actually.” His voice was low now. Softer. “Just barely. And the other one’s vanished.”

Lex stepped around me. “Jesus, Murphy, I’m sorry. Just when we thought we were getting a handle on this.”

“What is
wrong
with you people?” I shouted. “Don’t you think I would fucking
know
if I were a ghost?”

My words evaporated in the stunned silence that followed.

“I think you’re going to need help with her.”

Murphy breathed deeply, running a hand through his dark hair. “I’ll be fine. But I’m going home for a few days, until things … settle. I’ll cancel the staff meeting. Could you and Braden divide up my sessions?”

I shook my head in disbelief. I’d been seconds from walking away from both of them when they’d dragged my mother into it. Now I had to figure out some way to make Murphy listen to me.

“Don’t take this lightly,” said Lex. “You know the risks. You’ve already been interacting with her.”

He raised his eyebrows. “I assure you I’m taking this very seriously. I’ll check in with you later.”

“There’s one more thing, Irish.”

Murphy tipped his head, waiting.

“Security wants you to stop by the transport terminal to sign some papers.”

“What papers?”

“Release papers.” I heard Lex swallow. “For the remains.”

Remains?!

“Oh Jesus,” Murphy groaned, rubbing his temples. “When?”

“They said right away.”

“Brilliant. Okay, I’ll take care of it.”

Murphy turned to go, and I cobbled together a plan. I’d go to the terminal with him and talk to planet security. If anyone could help me straighten this out, they could.

After that I’d beg, borrow, or steal my way onto the next transport to Earth.

*   *   *

We retraced our steps all the way to the transport terminal and I followed him in, my hair and clothes damp from the steady, misting rain. He’d practically jogged the whole way, and I couldn’t help wondering if he had been running from me, hoping to avoid another confrontation. Even in my agitated state, I felt a pang of regret for the lost opportunity. He was bright and charming. Friendly and likable. I’d been looking forward to working with him.

Murphy stopped at the service desk, and I caught up in time to hear a terminal employee telling him, “The security team has set up on the tarmac.”

Murphy thanked him and spun toward the sliding doors.

Outside on the landing pad, the scene was a striking contrast to my first few minutes on the planet. A pair of hoverlifts swung into view, and we stopped to watch them alight like hummingbirds on the opposite end of the tarmac. At center stage was a crippled passenger transport, green-uniformed officials buzzing around its hulk. The cockpit had partially separated from the passenger compartment. I shuddered to see water trickling from the gap, collecting in an already substantial puddle below.

Somebody’s transport had most certainly gone down.

Murphy approached a cluster of people standing near the wreckage. I followed.

“I can’t answer that yet, folks,” said a harassed-looking man with a clipboard. “We know there was a storm. That’s all. Our first priority is notifying family members and making arrangements to send the victims home.”

“Is it true the ship’s emergency evac failed?”

“I can’t answer that either. You’ll know more when we do. Now if you’ll excuse me…”

As the man pushed his way through the knot of reporters, Murphy drew him aside. “I was asked to come here and sign release papers for one of the victims. Can you tell me who I should see?”

“They shouldn’t have sent you out here,” muttered the official. “They’ve set up a desk inside for processing paperwork. We’ve got our hands full prepping these people for transport.” He glanced over his shoulder and my gaze followed.

My breath stuck in my throat as I saw the neat row of dark zippered bags, inert amidst the hurricane of activity. A tunnel of silence connected me with those bags, and a pull in my chest drew me across the tarmac.

I gazed down at the first of the oblong, lumpy forms. A strip of white tape stretched across one end of the zipper. Something had been written on the tape in black marker.

A. Nakagomi.

I walked slowly down the line, my eyes moving from tag to tag. Only three more to go … and suddenly I stopped.

A voice broke through the silence. “Hey, move away from there!”

Blood surging in my ears, I bent and gave the zipper a yank, ripping the white tape in half. I peeled back the edges of the bag.

Vertigo knocked me backward onto the tarmac. I couldn’t breathe.

I’d expected blanched, waterlogged skin. Purple lips. Sunken eyes. But she looked peaceful. Like she was sleeping. I crouched over her and grazed her cheek with my thumb, then recoiled at the temperature of her skin.

Someone pulled me away from the body and started shouting in my face. I couldn’t make sense of anything coming out of his mouth. Murphy moved into view and spoke quietly to him. The official’s words froze on his lips and his gaze darted to the unzipped bag, then back to me.

He released me abruptly, like I was coated with biocontaminant, and both of them moved away.

A boxy cargo ship roared in over the trees and settled like a fat hen next to the passenger ship. Big block letters on the rear cargo door read,
COLD TRANSPORT
.

 

Shards

Elizabeth was going home.

I wanted to go home too. To drop in on my mother and drink tea in her sunny kitchen. To call Peter and tell him I’d made a mistake. Hold onto him until I stopped shaking. Let him comfort me with assurances it had all been a dream.

But I could never go home. I
was
home.

I stared at the woman who was and wasn’t me, and I felt a sudden swelling of love for her. A deep sense of grief for the life cut short. For the unfulfilled potential. Tears slid down my face and I dried them with the back of my hand.

Who’s going to cry for me?

I rose to my feet. Gazing back toward the terminal, my eyes met Murphy’s and my heart shattered. In the moment before his gaze dropped to the tarmac, I imagined I saw compassion. Regret. Sorrow, even. It was possible I hadn’t imagined it. But it couldn’t change anything.

Because Grayson Murphy had invented the Ghost Protocol, and I was Grayson Murphy’s ghost.

He turned and took a few slow steps toward the terminal.

Clenching my hands at my sides, I held my ground. What kind of world was this, where I was created in the form of a dead Earth woman and tethered to a man I barely knew? What was the point?

What if there is no point?

When the pain came it dropped me to my knees. I crawled a couple of meters toward the terminal, instinctively seeking relief. Gasping for breath, I forced myself to my feet and stumbled after Murphy.

*   *   *

About halfway between the terminal and the counseling center, Murphy veered into one of the modular buildings and started up the stairs. The stairway was open all the way to the top of the building, with skylights providing plenty of natural light even on a day like this. Fat drops splattered against the glass as the rain picked up outside.

We exited the stairs at the third floor, and he thumbed a sensor beside a door panel. Doubtful that he’d open the door for me if it happened to shut between us, I followed close behind him.

Inside, I decided I might have been better off in the hallway. Murphy headed for the kitchen, and I stood in the middle of a stranger’s apartment—cold, shaking, sick to my stomach—wondering what I was supposed to do now.

The living space was rectangular, with kitchen windows providing a view of the forest to the east, and living room windows facing the tram track and buildings on the west side of the street. Doorways on the opposite wall led to the bedroom and bathroom.

I walked into the bathroom and murmured, “Close.” The door, unlike Murphy and his colleague, acknowledged my existence. In a very small way, it was comforting.

The light blinked on and I pressed my back against the door, eyeing the woman in the glass. Everything about the face staring back at me was familiar.
Almost
.

Moving closer, I placed a trembling hand on either side of the mirror. My eyes, originally a changeable hazel, were an odd, almost buttery color—
blonde
, the same as my hair. The thin outer ring was darker, more like amber. There were small flecks of this color around the pupil as well.

Whatever I was, I wasn’t
her
. Not even an identical copy of her.

I staggered out of the bathroom, gripped with an impulse to run—down the street, back to the terminal, into the woods,
anywhere
.

But running was pointless. This would catch up with me wherever I went.

And I couldn’t run anywhere without Murphy.

Scanning the apartment, I spotted a display on a desk in the living area. Net access—a connection to Earth. A connection to
home
.

Where was Murphy? I picked up his voice, low and muffled, coming from behind the bedroom door. I eased over and leaned close to the panel.

“Yeah, I know, Lex.” He was on the phone with the counseling center.

“Okay, you’re right, but that’s not what I called about. I did some checking—the mother’s name is Caroline Cole.” My body went rigid. “She
is
depressed. Medicated, but with periods of instability. Braden needs to make sure the academy arranges for a family member to be there when they give her the news. She should be monitored.”

I braced myself against the door, feeling sick.

“Exactly. And Lex, I know Braden wouldn’t mention the ghost to her, but I don’t think he should even mention it to the academy. We don’t need that getting back to the family.”

My forehead kissed the door panel as I choked back a sob. My mother and father. Peter. My friends and colleagues from the UW. None of them would want anything to do with me—the ghost of Elizabeth.

Crossing to the computer, I woke the display and logged into my university account. Data was broadcast through the wormhole at regular intervals. It wasn’t real-time, but it was a far cry from snail mail, and I’d be very surprised not to find new messages waiting for me.

There were at least a dozen, half of them from Peter. Drying my sweating hands on my skirt, I touched the display to open the most recent message.

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