Reading the Wind (Silver Ship) (11 page)

BOOK: Reading the Wind (Silver Ship)
10.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

We’d need the luck to survive the night in the open with no perimeter.

10
  
A TEMPORARY HOME

I
took first watch, sitting with the fire at my back. Kayleen lay close to me, curled in a ball with her head on her pack and one hand clutching Windy’s lead. Liam stretched out on my other side, periodically moving restlessly.

Grass rustled in front of me.

Something large, given away by the silence that surrounded it. My laser was in my left hand, and I curled my right hand around a rock nearly the size of my fist.

The grass rustled again, about five meters in front of me, a shivering in the moonlight. Windy’s head went up and Kayleen pushed herself to a seated position, watching me. She, too, seemed to hear whatever was out there. As she turned toward it, I burst into a stand and threw the rock. Something large raced away. Just one, so more likely a cat than dogs, or something new.

Kayleen gave me a thumbs up, and stayed seated. She held up a rock in her fist, the firelight glinting on a vein of something bright and metallic in the rock. I gestured her toward me, and she came and sat near by, pulling Windy as close to the fire as the hebra was willing to come.

We sat in silence, listening carefully to the night noises of the valley: the rustle of small birds gathered in the trees near the river, the screech of big hunting birds over the grasses, the skitter of small mammal feet, and, twice, high nervous calls that may have been the normal sounds of the beautiful, big animals I’d seen in the valley.

The sky clouded over, and before it was time to wake Liam great drops of rain splattered and hissed on the fire.

Dawn found all of us awake, dripping wet, standing together near a firepit soaked in rainwater. The sky had cleared again, and mist rose from the damp grass as the heat of the day kissed it awake. I rubbed at tired, stinging eyes and said, “I guess the three-moon promise was luck if you count not being eaten.”

Liam grunted. “Every day of being alive here is luck.” He handed out meat we’d cooked the night before. “We might as well find out more about this valley before we head back to the skimmer.” He pointed down toward the sea, a blue line an hour’s walk or so away, with nothing but grass, river, and rocks between us and it. “There’s probably no shelter that way. We’d best go up-valley and see if we get lucky and find a cave or something.”

We shouldered our wet packs and chose a faint animal path near the tree-lined river and followed that up, watching for a good ford. Liam and I stopped regularly and recorded information about the various tracks we saw, while Kayleen stuck close to Windy and kept watch.

We rounded a long slow corner of the path by a bend in the river, coming upon a gush of white steam-clouds pouring up from a crevice between two rocks. The sour-egg sulphur smell became so strong as we neared the steam that I started breathing through my mouth, which was only slightly better. It left an aftertaste. As we neared the steam, heat turned our faces red, and Windy pranced and threw her head up and down. We stopped a few meters from the source, unwilling to get closer. “What is that?” I asked.

Liam looked at it. “Akashi told me it probably means there’s magma—hot, liquid rock like the fire river, down there. And water. The molten rock and water fight—hence the steam.”

I looked down at my feet, shifting uneasily. The rock I stood on felt firm, but how far down was the hot rock? I’d seen the Fire River, at least from the air. Could I slip and fall into a fire stream?

Liam caught my look and elaborated. “This whole continent was made from active volcanoes. I guess they both were, but Islandia is geologically younger. We’ve found hot springs—warm water pools—and steam vents like this all along one of Rage’s flanks.” He eyed the
hole in the rocks, his lower lip twitching. “Akashi worries about them and doesn’t let us camp near them, although I’ve never seen any noticeable changes, and we haven’t recorded any as far as I know.”

Kayleen asked, “What does Akashi mean by ‘near?’”

We’d noticed a few of these from the top of the ridge, so the valley must be pockmarked with them. “We won’t be able to stay far away if we decide to live here,” I said.

“There might not be anyplace here that doesn’t have any,” Liam mused.

The idea of standing on something like the Fire River made me nervous. “We don’t have to camp right by one.”

Liam laughed. “We won’t.”

We worked our way around the hole in the ground and kept going north.

Near the head of the valley, the ground became rockier. The river narrowed and deepened, rushing through a shallow gorge. The trees clustering around the river towered over our heads. The brush grew longer thorns, so we had to pick our way more slowly.

“Should we turn back yet?” I asked.

Liam, just ahead of me, stopped and turned around. “No. Hear that?”

I listened. A low rush of sound spilled from the trees above and in front of us. “Waterfall,” I said.

Liam grinned. “I bet that’s worth seeing.”

The sound called me, too, and I picked up speed. We clambered up a slender trail between several large boulders, Liam ahead, then Kayleen and Windy, then me. The waterfall filled the air with sound, so I lost track of the tap of Windy’s feet and even my own breathing. The air felt damp, and tiny sun-sparkled water droplets gathered on the ends of my hair. At the top of the biggest boulder, Liam turned and grinned. We scrambled up, all four of us standing on a slightly damp, slightly slippery, but thankfully flattish gray rock. Ahead and above us, the river thundered off the top of a cliff and fell a hundred meters in a long, slightly curved arc to land in a pool of water at our feet. Across from us, the same herd of tall herbivores I’d seen the day before grazed in a clearing.

I breathed out slowly, soaking in the beauty of the waterfall and the
beasts. Vines covered with red flowers plunged down the cliff opposite us, like a second fall of flowers rather than water. The lush green of early spring growth screamed from every corner. It was a pocket valley of its own, a few hundred meters long and almost as wide.

Liam looked at Kayleen, his eyes sparkling. He pointed at the wide clearing the herd grazed in. “They think it’s relatively safe.”

Kayleen’s face shone. “Then perhaps we’ve found a home.”

Liam looked down at her, his lips pursed. “A temporary home. You’re taking us back. In time for the roamers’ fall visit to town.”

She blinked up at him. “If we get the skimmer free.”

“When we get the skimmer free.” He looked back at the waterfall and the secret little valley, his eyes, too, alight. “It sure is beautiful.”

Maybe this was what the three moons had promised us. But I still shivered inside, remembering the golden cat, the demon dogs, the sleepless night in the rain. The three of us were small and fragile compared to those, or even to the powerful waterfall in front of us.

PART TWO
JOSEPH GOES HOME
11
  
THE DEAD, WAKING

M
etallic air seared my nostrils. Pain, bringing me back from someplace very far away, someplace past memory. I tried to say my name—Joseph—but my mouth wouldn’t move. I couldn’t even feel it, much less control it. I felt my right little toe. Just my right little toe, tingling. I reached out with it, struggling to touch something. It moved, but found only empty space. My heel touched the hard bed below me. Dampness filled my toe, the top of my foot, my ankle, a slow pulsing wave of blessed water anointing me with life from inside. I gasped. My chest jerked involuntarily.

I was … this was … the
New Making
. My reawakening.

Water crept into my fingers and the pads of my palms, filling them. Dry eyes and nose and mouth told me how much freezing had parched my cells. Grit glued my eyelids shut. I struggled to open them and failed.

Memories returned. I’d tricked Jenna before I slept, dipping into the ship’s systems, changing when the
New Making’s
med-bots would wake me. I should have three days alone.

There were things I needed to know. My parents had been on this ship; traces of them lived in its databanks. But Jenna had refused all my questions, driving us through getting the ship in order after we took off, and then insisting on cold sleep. I couldn’t risk having no time before we landed.

I gave up on my eyelids after one more struggle and settled for moving both of my index fingers.

Had I been caught? Was Jenna awake? If so, was she angry?

I sensed the deep thrum of ship’s data just outside my skin, hovering separate from my consciousness. I felt so dry. If I had enough water, would data surge inside my skin and fill me?

Chelo would disapprove of me tricking Jenna. I could see Chelo’s face now, her dark hair pulled back tightly so her dark eyes looked bigger than normal, glaring at me, her stare a combination of anger and big-sister concern. Chelo’s lips would be tight against each other, and she’d have one hand on her hip. And yet there’d be a smile trying to get out. Knowing how Chelo would hate it, tricking Jenna didn’t feel good.

But Chelo wasn’t here. I closed away the missing part of me she represented. She’d made her choice. I understood, but understanding and accepting weren’t the same.

I wiped my eyes, clearing away junk, ripping eyelashes, blinking at the small, spare room. A groan escaped me as I reached my right arm out, grabbing my pilot’s coat from the chair nearby, draping it across my chest. What I needed, direct contact. My fingers found a strip of threaded conductor. Finally, data filled my blood, as good as water. Better. Data raced through my being, spoke to my heart.

Something scraped on the floor near me; adrenaline surged. I turned my head. Leo. My pet maintenance bot, adopted at Jenna’s insistence to keep me safe on the ship. Waiting where I’d told it to, ripping a small smile from my cracked lips.

My eyes slid closed again. I descended into the shipsong, riding it, building it back into my body. Bots reporting. Mostly well: enough well. A miracle, given we had no human roboticist. Food enough in the tiny garden, freezers still working, air breathable everywhere. Engines clean and silent, still running fast: three weeks from landing on Silver’s Home.

Where was Jenna?

Asleep in her frozen bed. Maybe far away, like I had been.

I experimented with a long stretch. My toes touched cool metal, my back arched into the stretch, my torso rose. Everything slow, a half-beat behind the time I thought the commands to move.

Alicia. Sweet, dark, dangerous Alicia. I licked my lips. Her frozen signature showed proper, complete stasis. I imagined Alicia’s dark eyelashes framing her violet eyes. Maybe I should wake her? I wanted her
with me, but it was doubtful that I could control her. Best not wake her yet; Jenna would already be mad.

The vast emptiness of the ship surrounded me, and I sent my senses into the lullaby of the shipsong, the test:report, test:report, test:report of sliding successfully through space.

Some time later I blinked easily and felt normal, except for a driving urge to stretch every muscle in my body at once. I did my best to manage the feat, ending up seated cross-legged with my coat across my lap.

Thirst drove me to the tiny sink in the corner. I downed three glasses of water, shaking fingers splashing it onto my shirt. Each glass made me feel freshly alive, more able to move. Water like oil for my joints.

I let the data flows fall to a soft cadence, something I would hear only when trouble or change happened. Jenna had taught me that trick in the three months we spent awake, alone. She was as deaf to data as Chelo, but also like Chelo, she knew how to get me started, how to steady me. Jenna also knew what tools to provide. She encouraged me to learn the ship’s computer, which she called Starteller, even though she told me it wasn’t a true autonomous intelligence. But she talked to it all the time through her voice and her fingers, or with a far tinier and more elegant earset than the simple ones used by Fremont’s colonists.

I spoke to it in gulps, in ideas, in floods of information.

Starteller was smarter than anything on Fremont. Heck, the ship’s galley was smarter than anything on Fremont. I laughed, my lips cracking. Maybe smarter than anyone. What a strange waking thought.

I rested, checking on the other three again: not breathing, maybe not being. Leo sat next to me as if it were a dog instead of a robot. In fact, Leo was the same size as some of the roamers’ smaller dogs, except round and silver with six spidery legs. From time to time I reached a hand out and ran it over Leo’s slick surface. It felt like oil more than metal, except hard. I told it, “Good Leo. I’m glad you’re here.” It had no visible ears, but it heard me.

Leo read data much like me, pulling it from the air, and so it followed my silent commands and knew to step aside when a person or another robot moved in its path, as if it were omniscient. But really,
Leo was fairly stupid, with a small set of a few thousand commands it could perform on its own in response to its original job as a simple maintenance and patrol bot.

I was glad for its company, even if it was stupid.

Even though a map of the
New Making
lived inside me, I asked Leo to lead the way to my parents’ quarters. With six appendages, it walked upright along the corridors on four, using two to balance on the handholds. When it got ahead of me, it stopped and waited for me. It never chided; like all robots it simply waited, emotionless. Nevertheless, I took each stop as encouragement to move faster.

My body grew less clumsy the more I made it move. It felt different on the ship than at home—lighter—but Jenna maintained what she called “living gravity” everywhere except in the ship’s nose, so I climbed easily up or down levels, and walked through horizontal corridors.

In my head,
New Making
lived like ten buildings stacked on top of each other. The bottom two were engines and workrooms, the next one a storage hold full both of things to colonize Fremont but never used, and of the scientific fruit of Fremont, gathered mostly before the war. Rocks, minerals, seeds, and some of the glass, weavings, and jewelry made on long winter nights in town. Things my people had brought, things my people had made; I had ties to both people, to both sides of the war I am too young to remember.

Other books

Anne Frank and Me by Cherie Bennett
Free Woman by Marion Meade
The Tamarind Seed by Evelyn Anthony