The Child Goddess (19 page)

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Authors: Louise Marley

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General

BOOK: The Child Goddess
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Doctor Simon was with them. He led Oa to the cradle that was to be hers, and showed her the pillowed headrest, the sheath of material that looked metallic but was quilted and soft. Slender silver wires ran through it, to keep the sleeper warm.

Doctor Simon explained all of that, and then pointed to the syrinxes that hung at the head of the cradle. “These will give you the medicine that will help you sleep, Oa. And they will monitor all the parts of your body, so that when you wake, not long before our arrival, you will be as strong and healthy as you are now.”

Oa touched one of the tubes. It was not frightening, not when Doctor Simon explained it. She curled her fingers around it, and it folded in her hand. A machine. It was only a machine.

A technician came to help Oa into her cradle, to adjust the sheath around her, to patch the syrinxes to her wrists and elbows. Doctor Simon and Isabel stood by, watching, and Oa wasn’t afraid. It wasn’t like the spider machine at all. When the technician stepped back, and nodded to Isabel, Doctor Simon said, “I guess it’s time.”

“I’ll see you soon, Simon,” Isabel said softly.

Oa couldn’t see him, but she heard his step as he left their cubicle. Doctor Simon and Jin-Li Chung had their own cubicles. All of them would sleep, kept warm by the sheaths, protected by the cradles. Isabel came into Oa’s view again, bending to press a kiss on her forehead. Her lips were smooth and cool. She murmured, “Sleep well, Oa.”

Oa repeated, “Sleep well, Isabel.”

Isabel smiled down at her. “I will.” She turned away to her own cradle, and the technician went to help her.

Around them the ship was alive with muted noise. The great drives sang a deep, bone-vibrating pitch. The many toned hum of machines melded into one bland noise, a quiet roar like the eternal song of Mother Ocean. Oa’s eyelids grew heavy. Her feet and hands felt distant somehow, as if they belonged to someone else.

Oa turned her cheek into the soft fabric of the headrest, sweetly drowsy, warm, relaxed. Something tickled beneath her chin, and she reached a hand up, surprised. It was her toy, her fuzzy toy. Her teddy bear. The technician had found it in her bag, and tucked it under the sheath.

Oa buried her fingers in the soft fur. She tried to mumble her thanks to the technician, but she was asleep before her lips could form the words.

She began a long dream of Virimund, Mother Ocean, and the island of the anchens. In her dream the anchens were waiting for her on the southern shore of the island, gathered on the sand, waving and calling her name. Calling her home. She waved back to them from her cradle. She was on her way.

20

JIN-LI WOKE TWO
weeks before the others to complete the studies barely begun on Earth. It was deeply satisfying to wear the cream-colored tunic and trousers of an officer, to access the transport’s library with only name and Port Force number, to be referred to as the archivist and treated with deference. There were long days of relative solitude to spend with the status reports from the power park, to walk the deserted corridors of the ship, to meet with the crew at meals before retiring again to the library. When the planet first became visible, Jin-Li joined the crew on the bridge to watch Virimund grow in the spacewindow.

They were too far out to see the ring of equatorial islands, but the brilliant colors of the ocean world were stunning, even from space. The polar caps glimmered with ice, and the vast seas were deeply, vibrantly green. Jin-Li stood beside a crewman, gazing in wonder at the planet.

“Bit different from Irustan, isn’t it?” the crewman said.

Jin-Li nodded. “As different as it could possibly be.” The first view of Irustan had been like looking at an old bronze coin, a yellow disk against the blackness of space, its star blazing beyond it. This was a world of abundant water, clean atmosphere, an old and temperate star. It lacked land, but ExtraSolar didn’t want land. The expansionist movement needed power, and Virimund had the resources to produce a great deal of it.

“You know what it’s like down there?” the crewman asked.

“I’ve read the reports. It’s rainforest, essentially. Moderate climate, lots of birds and insects and a few reptiles. No mammals, apparently. Not much landmass.”

“Well, you’ll be planetside before you know it. Two more days, and we wake up your group. The doctor’s waking up now, though.”

“Which one? Dr. Edwards? Waking early?”

“That’s the schedule.”

“Why?”

The crewman raised his eyebrows. “Don’t ask me what the suits are up to, Johnnie. You’re the archivist.”

“I am now, in any case.”

The crewman smiled. “I thought your tunic looked new. Not always an officer, then?”

“No. Longshoreman.” Jin-Li turned back to the spacewindow. “I got a break.”

The crewman folded his arms, and came to stand beside Jin-Li at the window. “More power to you,” he said. “Not easy to move up in Port Force.”

“No.”

“Your doctor seems like a nice guy. He was awake for two weeks into the voyage, but we didn’t mind. You know how the suits can be, but this one was easy. No care and feeding.”

“I suppose you don’t know why he stayed awake?”

“Nope. But the r-waves were sure busy. Messages back and forth every day between the power park administrator and your doctor. And he called Geneva a few times.”

“You never heard what that was about?”

The crewman looked grave. “Nope. But we know one of our guys died out there.”

“Dr. Edwards was probably trying to figure out why.”

“That’s my guess. You know anything about it?”

“Only what you do.”

“None of us thought it was too smart to leave the power park without a physician.”

“But they have medicators. And medtechs.”

“A medtech’s not the same as a doctor.”

“No. I suppose not.”

“Anyway, your Dr. Edwards went into twilight sleep twelve days into the voyage. He’s just coming out now.”

*

SIMON EDWARDS LOOKED
pale when they met in the mess hall at the next meal. Jin-Li carried a tray to his table and, with a raising of eyebrows for permission, sat across from him.

“Jin-Li,” he said, his voice rasping slightly. “When do you start to feel human again?”

Jin-Li chuckled. “It takes a day or so. Do the exercises, drink a lot of water.”

Simon reached for a glass. “I’ll do that.”

“The techs tell me you stayed awake for two weeks of the voyage.” Simon drained the glass of water. “Yes. Jacob Boyer sent me the postmortem on the hydro worker who died. I was trying to find out what happened.”

“And did you?”

Simon tried to clear his throat, unsuccessfully. Jin-Li poured him another glass of water and he lifted it in salute before drinking it down. “Thank you. No, I don’t have an answer yet. I’m working on it.” He hesitated, swirling the glass on the table, making concentric rings of condensation. “There’s an odd coincidence, though, between the postmortem scans and Oa’s.”

Jin-Li paused, holding the teacup. “Oa’s?”

Simon nodded, his lips twisting slightly. “Yes. Not a welcome discovery, is it?”

“Isabel won’t like it.”

“No, and I don’t either. But I don’t know what it means yet.”

“If you want to give me a copy of the readouts. I’ll put them into the file.”

“Oh, yes,” Simon said. “I should have thought of that. I’m not used to working with an archivist, you know. In the Victoria Desert, we kept our own records.”

Jin-Li smiled. “Not Port Force.”

Simon chuckled wearily. “Most definitely not Port Force.”

Jin-Li waited a moment, and then asked delicately, “And so—Dr. Edwards. You’ll be there when Isabel wakes up?”

His eyes slid away, up to the blank wall of the mess. “Yes. I planned on it.”

“She’ll be glad of that.”

Simon’s brows drew together and he glared at the empty wall. When he spoke, his voice was hard. “She may be, Jin-Li. I don’t know. Things are . . . Things are difficult between us.”

Jin-Li said nothing, letting a long pause stretch between them. The mess was empty except for the two of them, and the sound of the ventilation system swelled in the silence. Jin-Li stared at the table, wondering whether Simon wanted to talk, or be left alone.

“I’m not a religious man,” he said at last. “And I don’t really understand what drives Isabel to . . . to be what she is. I understand the work, her dedication to studying people, trying to understand the societies that shape them. But her calling mystifies me.”

Jin-Li supposed he was referring to the Magdalenes’ vow of celibacy. Perhaps he couldn’t bring himself to speak openly of something so close to his heart.

“I knew someone on Irustan,” Jin-Li ventured. “Someone extraordinary, rather like Isabel. Someone who felt a responsibility I could not understand.”

Simon drank more water, and waited.

With one finger, Jin-Li traced a crack in the plastic of the table. “It was something about honor. Duty.”

Simon said, “I’m not sure I would want to change Isabel, even if I could.”

Jin-Li refilled the glass. Simon sipped automatically, and then stared into the clear water. “I’m not half so honorable as she is,” he murmured. “I’ve acted in my own interest, and people have been hurt by it.”

Jin-Li waited, watching the doctor’s lean, sensitive face.

“I have so much to atone for,” Simon said, and pushed himself away from the table. “And right now, I should . . .” There was an undertone in his words, a tinge of regret, and of shame. “I should call my wife.”

*

SIMON FOUND THE
r-wave center deserted. He routed his call after checking the chronometer for Geneva, and used the speaker. He leaned back in his chair, glad there was no video feed from this far out. It was clear enough by the sound of her voice that she was tense and unhappy.

“Simon? Are you there?”

“I’m here, Anna. How are you?”

“I’m all right.” She paused. “Thank you for having Hilda check with me now and then. It’s good to see someone who’s not from school.”

“Are things okay at school?”

“Yes. But very busy. Our head count is twelve over maximum.”

“Did you tell Hilda?”

“She’s making a request at World Health for more staff.”

“Good, that’s good. Weather?”

He heard Anna’s sigh, cut off as if she had made up her mind to be cheerful. “It’s summer here, Simon.”

“I know. I guess that means it’s hot.”

“Unbearably.”

“You should get away, Anna, go up to the mountains for a weekend.”

She paused, and he could imagine her straightening, rubbing her face, determined to be pleasant. “Good idea,” she said, although he knew perfectly well she would never do it. “You’ve been sleeping all this time, then,” she said.

“I just woke up a few hours ago,” he answered. “We’re almost to Virimund.”

“What happens next?”

“The rest of the team wakes up, gets adjusted. And then we make planetfall.” He heard a noise in the corridor outside, and he shifted in his chair. “Anna, I’ll have to go now.”

“But, Simon—I haven’t spoken to you in more than a year! Can’t we—when will you call again?”

He hesitated, not certain what was the right thing to do. “Anna—I don’t know what we’ll find when we land, what the facilities are. It may be hard.”

She paused again, and when she spoke, her voice, even over the vast reaches of empty space, had an edge to it. “I’ll just wish you good luck, then, Simon.”

“Thank you, Anna. I’ll call again as soon as I can.”

“Simon—” Her voice faltered, and steadied. “I miss you.”

“Take care, Anna. Take care of yourself.”

When the call was over, Simon sat on for a few moments, listening to the hum of the ship’s machinery around him. He tried, for a few moments, to remember the young woman he had married, the shy, smiling girl whose quick mind and quiet ways had appealed to the young, preoccupied physician he had been then. He could hardly retrieve the memories. They seemed beyond his reach, as distant as Earth from Virimund, and he could see no way to recover them.

*

ISABEL HAD SPECIFIED
that she wanted to be fully awake and recovered from twilight sleep before Oa roused. Simon watched her sleeping face as the tech spoke to the medicator. Her closed eyelids and slightly parted lips were pale, her brows smooth. Her hair had grown in, fine straight dark strands that stirred in the gentle breeze from the circulation fans. Simon touched her hair with one finger to feel its texture. He knew it would be gone within an hour of her waking.

“Doctor?” the tech said. “She’ll be awake in a moment. There’s nothing more for me to do, as long as you’re going to stay here. You can buzz if you need me.” He pointed to a button on the wall beside Isabel’s cradle.

“That’s fine,” Simon said. “I’ll be right here.”

The tech nodded, gathered up a few bits of equipment, and left them. In the cradle opposite Isabel’s, the child still slept, the brown teddy bear tucked under one thin dark hand. Simon pulled a stool close to Isabel and sat down.

Her breast rose and fell, and then again, her breath coming quicker as she swam up from oblivion. Her eyelids fluttered, opened, closed again.

Her fingers, twined together over her midriff, opened and stretched, and she drew an audible breath. She muttered something Simon didn’t catch, and he bent close to her.

“Isabel,” he said gently. “Time to wake up now.”

She breathed, “Time?”

“Yes,” he said. “Time. It’s Simon, Isabel.”

“Simon?” Her hand groped, reaching out.

“Yes.” He took her hand in his, lightly. “Yes, Isabel, it’s Simon. I’m right here.”

Her lips curved. “Simon. Simon. I thought I was dreaming . . .”

He had one eye on the medicator readout, the other on her eyelids struggling to open. He chuckled softly. “You may have been dreaming, Isabel, but I’m here. It’s time to wake up. Do you feel all right?”

Her eyelids lifted slowly, reluctantly. Her eyes were blurry with sleep. “Simon,” she breathed again, smiling. “Darling Simon.” She put her hands on the sides of the cradle, trying to pull herself up. He reached to help her, his hands under her shoulders, sliding down her back as she rose to a sitting position. He glanced back at the readout, checking that her blood pressure was stabilizing, her temperature coming up, her heart rate and respiration reaching normal levels.

Startled, he felt her hand on the back of his neck, her cheek against his arm. She drew herself to him, and her slender warmth, the very aliveness of her fine-boned body, was irresistible. He put his face against her hair, and held her close.

“Where have you . . .” she began, still hoarse with sleep.

“Isabel,” he murmured. “We’re on the transport, remember? Almost to Virimund.”

He felt the stiffening of her shoulders, the slight intake of her breath. Over her shoulder, he saw the numbers on the readout screen spike, and then settle. She didn’t move, but he felt, very distinctly, how she shrank within herself. She was still in the circle of his arms, but she had, definitely and unmistakably, withdrawn.

He released her abruptly. “Isabel . . . you reached for me . . . but I didn’t mean to . . .”

She put her hands to her face and rubbed her eyes. “No, Simon, don’t. I know. I know.”

He stood, and stepped back from the cradle. “I just wanted to be here when you woke.”

A long, painful moment passed before she took her hands from her eyes, and turned her face up to him. In her habitual gesture, her palms went to her scalp. “Oh,” she said in surprise.

He managed a grin. “Oh, yes,” he said. “Mother Burke has hair.”

Her answering smile was tremulous. “Not for long.”

“I thought not.”

She looked past him, to the sleeping Oa. “Is she all right?”

He glanced at Oa’s readout, and then back to Isabel’s. “Yes, she is, and so are you. Give yourself a couple of hours, do a few exercises, and you’ll be ready to wake her.”

Isabel drew a deep, shaky breath. “Okay. Okay. Help me out of here, will you, Simon?”

He stepped back to her cradle, and extended his hand to her, keeping his grip on her hand and elbow as impersonal as he could. She swung her legs over the edge of the cradle, put her feet gingerly on the floor, grimacing.

“What is it?” he asked.

“Pins and needles,” she said briefly. She tried to stand, but had to lean on his arm. “Sorry.”

“It’s okay, Isabel,” he said. He knew his tone sounded flat, even a little angry. He tried to lighten it. “I felt the same,” he added. “Take your time.”

Her eyes were beginning to regain their usual clarity, that lighted-from-within quality that had turned his head from the instant of their first meeting. “I’m sorry about . . . about what happened just now. I wasn’t fully awake.”

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