Dremiks (42 page)

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Authors: Cassandra Davis

Tags: #science fiction, #space opera

BOOK: Dremiks
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O’Connell leaned over Dr. Ruger’s short frame while the doctor checked a sensor on Mangoda’s chest. The doctor turned around and snapped at her mobile patient.

“Is there some medical training of yours I’m not aware of? No? Well then, go
sit down
, and let me do my job.” For such a petite woman, she seemed rather intimidating when angry. Her raised voice was certainly having an effect on Maggie, who backed up several steps and showed the distinct signs of a pout. Catching sight of Guttmann nearby, O’Connell tried to salvage a graceful exit from the situation.

“Right then, I’ll just see what the lieutenant has for me. Let me know Mangoda’s progress please.”

Dr. Ruger rolled her eyes.

Maggie pointed to a set of chairs at a nearby work station. “Sit down, Swede, and tell me what you’ve brought me. Briefing papers? What about those new sensor logs? Any news on the gravitational storms? What about the reports from the Dremikians?”

Swede held her elbow as she gently lowered herself into the chair and then sat himself, chuckling the whole time. “Afraid I can’t help, ma’am. There’s nothing for you to worry about right now. The transfer of civilians to the surface is proceeding nicely. Just try to heal quickly so we can have you fly us down there. I’m not sure I can stand Price’s ego for much longer.”

He was dismayed to see her wince and look away. “He has right to be a bit puffed up at the moment.” She faced him again and managed a weak smile. “Insufferable, is he?”

He chuckled again and rubbed his short blond crew cut. “That’s putting it mildly, ma’am. You know, perhaps there is something you can help me with, if you’re feeling up to it.”

“Anything, please. The only danger to my health at this point is overwhelming boredom. I’ll fly a broken lander back to the surface tomorrow, if it means I can finally do something besides sit here and stare at the ceiling.”

“Well, I was wondering if you could convince the captain to allow us greater leeway with the timetables.” He rushed his next sentence, seeing her expression turn inscrutable. “I won’t rush anybody, but I really think that we can do things more efficiently.”

She shook her head, her red curls catching along her jaw. He realized, finally, why it was she looked differently. Her hair, usually pulled back so tightly it looked painful, was only loosely tied at the base of her neck. It wasn’t an unattractive sight. Shaking himself, he realized how he was thinking about his superior officer was inappropriate.

Maggie saw the emotions flicker across his expression but misread them. “Yes, as you are now realizing, there is absolutely nothing I can do to help you, Swede. Once the captain has his mind set, I’m not sure God himself could change it.” She smiled to soften her rebuke. “However, if the opportunity should arise, I’ll try to soften his views on future schedules.” She glanced over his shoulder and cursed softly. “My jailer is coming over here.” Her eyes sparkled with mirth. “Would you be a perfectly insubordinate soul and kidnap your XO, Lieutenant?”

Swede laughed as hard as he had laughed in weeks. “Mags you are a formidable opponent in combat, but I’ll take my chances with you before angering Dr. Ruger.” He smiled down at the doctor as she stopped at his side. “Good afternoon, Doctor.”

Cassie returned his smile. “Good afternoon to you, Swede. I was wondering if you would stand guard over my inmate here.” She deliberately glared at Maggie. “I have to go report to the chancellor, and I fear she’ll escape if left unsupervised.”

“Er,” he glanced at Maggie and back at the doctor. “That is a rather unusual request. That is, to say, I suppose I could stay here if—” He broke off as both women burst into giggles. Realizing the joke was on him, he gave a short, mocking, bow. “Commander, I see your mood is much improved. With your permission, I will return to my duties.”

Maggie waved her hand as she gasped for air. “Yes, yes, Swede. Thank you for the visit.” She and Dr. Ruger were still giggling as he walked away.

Cassie sobered abruptly. “As soon as Mangoda is conscious, I’ll need to transfer down to the surface. Most of my patients are down there now.”

Maggie nodded.

“I worry, though, about leaving you here alone. You are still recovering.”

“Worry about the civilians. Peterson and Mangoda, once he’s feeling better, can look after us. You won’t be that far away.”

“I am,” Cassie admitted with a soft smile, “looking forward to seeing Ben again.”

Maggie stilled. “Oh?” She cautiously asked, “Why’s that?”

“He’s a mystery. His metabolism and cellular health indicate a man closer to the age of fifty than seventy.”

God, please be careful, Cass. Don’t stir up that hornet’s nest.
Out-loud, Maggie said, “I’m sure the fact that he flirts with anything having two x chromosomes makes him seem far younger, even to your microscope.”

***

Having confronted Dwax over the acts of sabotage, and despite the lack of a satisfying resolution to that particular crisis, Captain Hill decided it was high time he stop running from another confrontation. Ryan Hill was already living on Dremiks, running the day-to-day activities of the engineers, biologists, physicists and geologists. Fortunas would be moving his base of operations to the bio-dome within the week. Dr. Ruger remained on the
Hudson
for the time being simply because her two most important patients were both still on the ship. Mangoda’s internal injuries were healing nicely enough that she was ready to bring him out of his coma. Her other patient actually counted as two separate patients and twice the headaches.

“Marissa, please.”

She smiled at him with a complete lack of sincerity. “Oh Brett, are you going to beg?” Her smile turned into a cold little giggle when his jaw clenched. “No, you won’t ever do that again, will you?” She returned to packing.

He took several deep breaths, manfully swallowing his pride and his temper. “If you won’t think of your own health and safety, think of the child. Dremiks is hardly safe for adult habitation. How can you think of taking an infant there? She’s not used to the atmosphere, the relative gravity, or anything else associated with the planet. It is completely irresponsible to subject your child to that.”

Seemingly ignoring anything he said, Marissa smiled again. “Do you know we’ve picked out a name? Virginia Dare Hill. It’s perfect, don’t you think?”

“Marissa! Virginia Dare and her entire family disappeared. Are you trying to curse the child?”

A strange look took over his sister-in-law’s face. “Think of the opportunity I’m giving her. She’ll be the first human born on another planet. She’ll be famous from the day she is born, Brett!” Seeing his look of horror, Marissa shrugged. “Besides, all of your reasons are ridiculous. Children born on Earth are not used to the air, the soil, the germs, or the relative gravity. I’m the foremost expert on sociological interactions in alien environments. Who better to raise this child?”

“Marissa,” he reached forward and gently clasped her hand. He didn’t relinquish it even when she looked coldly down at her hand in his and then back up at his face. “I know that you never had any true love for me, but please, for the love I had for you,
please
don’t do this.”

She shook off his grasp. “Get out.” Flinging her arm in the direction of the door, her voice rising to a shrill note, she shrieked again: “Get out! I never want to see you again!”

Brett left, defeat weighing heavy on his heart. Behind him, Marissa suddenly grabbed her right temple and moaned. Her headaches were getting worse.

I need to get as far from Brett Hill as I possibly can, and as quickly as possible.

The child in her belly kicked sharply.

Be still, little one. It won’t be long now. A few more weeks and your golden future will be secure.

***

In the movies, Maggie thought, she would have been beside Mangoda’s bed the exact moment he regained consciousness. They would have a friendly conversation full of sentences like “I’m so sorry” and “It’s not your fault at all”.

The movies, she thought, were full of shit.

Mangoda came out of his coma in the middle of the commander’s bridge watch. The medical specialist couldn’t speak; his throat was too dry from the ventilator tubes. Dr. Ruger, re-called to sick bay from her ship-wide rounds, ran a number of tests, conferred with two of her assistants and decided to sedate him. By the time Maggie finished her shift and made it to sick bay, her ill-fated co-pilot was sound asleep. She made Cassie swear to notify her the moment he woke back up. Unbeknownst to O’Connell, the captain had extracted a similar vow from the exasperated doctor.

When O’Connell returned to Cassie’s lair several hours later, Mangoda was awake and speaking softly with the captain. His once handsome Hispanic face was too thin and far paler than it had been the day he climbed into the co-pilot’s seat beside her. Whatever he was saying to the captain, Marty appeared to be sternly serious about. His dark eyes flitted toward the door and spotted her. The captain’s blue eyes locked on her a second later. He frowned even more ferociously than usual.

“Specialist, how are you feeling?”

“I’m afraid the doc has me on too many meds to feel much of anything, ma’am.”

“You should be in quarters, Commander.”

Maggie ignored her captain. “Too bad you can’t be your own doctor, Marty. You could discharge yourself today. Maybe I can spring you from this joint.”

He chuckled, but it was a hollow, dry, sound. “I think I’ll hold off on any more joy-rides, at least for another twenty-four hours, ma’am.”

“Proving that he’s far more intelligent about his injuries than you are, Commander.”

Green eyes narrowed in anger focused on the captain. “I’m fine, sir. Bridge watch is not a physically demanding task.”

“As a physician, ma’am, I will have to side with the captain on this. You should be resting. Your injuries were extensive and—” He left off the end of the sentence when O’Connell turned sharply on her heel and stormed out. Mangoda turned his serious gaze back to Hill. “She really doesn’t know, does she?”

“She really doesn’t, and I want to keep it that way. You will kindly keep that in mind when giving your official account of the incident to the flight review board. Which board will likely consist of just the Commander and Lieutenant Price. The civilian pilots are too busy learning how to fly in that damned atmosphere.” The captain laid a hand gently on the specialist’s shoulder. “Get some rest, Mangoda. I’ll have need of you soon.”

***

In the newly established agricultural research center on Dremiks, an odd tension reigned. Thoroughly exasperated by her superior’s constant chivying, Clara turned around and planted her small fists into the soft flesh of her hips.

“You great love-sick ox! Stop yer bleatin’ and call the woman! I’ve too much work t’ do t’ have ye followin’ me `round!”

Ben Fortunas blinked. “Oxen don’t bleat.” He quickly stepped back three large steps when Clara stalked toward him, murder in her eyes.

“They do when ye cut their knackers off! Get out of here, now!”

“You cannot order me around, woman.
I’m
the boss, here.”

Clara whipped around, obviously looking for something sharp. “Where did I leave those shears?”

Beating a hasty, strategic, retreat, Ben closed the door to the small Quonset hut that served as his office. He queued up the video link to the
Hudson
and waited for a response. He didn’t have to wait long.

“Aren’t you supposed to be out in a rover today?” Cassie Ruger pushed her hair back into its braid.

“We had a rather large meteorite fall. We’re under mandatory lock-down until
Hudson
confirms the danger is past. I
was
trying to work on my dwarf corn transplants, but Clara is quite obviously suffering from atmospheric dementia.”

Cassie, missing the joke, quickly pulled up the bio-chip data from Fortunas’ assistant. “She looks fine to me—oh. I suppose her elevated blood pressure has nothing at all to do with your fidgeting?”

“Grown men do not fidget.”

“I will be down there soon enough. Try not to drive the poor girl insane before my lab is set-up.”

A deep frown creased his face. “I don’t like the idea of you leaving O’Connell and Mangoda so soon after their wreck.”

Cassie’s head titled to the side like a curious lizard’s. “It’s not all that soon, almost three weeks now. Marty has regained consciousness. His wounds are healing fantastically. Maggie’s progress was delayed by her stubborn refusal to rest and the captain’s asinine behavior…sorry.” She looked abashed.

“No need to apologize to me. He was being rather foolish, but he’s since remedied that.”

“Oh, yes, and in the process made her spitting mad. I’m not sure a perpetually pissed off Maggie is any better than a pained, near comatose, Maggie.”

“I’m rather impressed that you can differentiate between Margaret’s typical behavior and a fugue state.”

“Years of medical training and nearly a year of close observation.” It was the medical doctor’s turn to frown. “You are feeling ok? No trouble adjusting?”

“I’m fine, liebchen. I just worry about you and your troublesome charges. Marissa Hill is still set on coming down here?”

Cassie sighed. “She is. Not even the captain could talk her out of it. Her blood pressure has been spiking lately, but nothing that I can call a medical reason to keep her on the ship.”

“You could lie.”

She gave him a repressive look. “Am I to take this sudden concern for my safety as a sign that you miss me?”

He waved a large hand dismissively. “I’m trying to restore the ecosystem of an entire planet, woman. I hardly have time for such minute details as human emotion.”

She stuck her tongue out at him. “Fine then. I won’t have dinner with you tomorrow night.”

Hiding the worry that made his stomach lurch, Ben mock-growled at the screen on his tabletop. “You
will
.”

“Maybe! Bye!” She blew a kiss at the screen and shut down the feed before he could retort. Ben sat staring at the blank device, emotions clawing at his gut.

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