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Authors: Paris Singer

The Sky Drifter (3 page)

BOOK: The Sky Drifter
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I dropped my head to look at the console, feeling it becoming hotter and hotter. I wished Ms. Photuris wouldn’t keep using me as an example. While my other classmates didn’t seem to resent me, it was still embarrassing.

I glanced up briefly to see One standing completely still, his fists clenched on his station console, and I understood that it’d probably been him whom I’d just faced. While I’d been paying attention to my own screen, it was possible for anyone to look over at anyone else’s. His reaction and evident anger toward me suggested he’d looked over at mine. He hated losing to me, and I knew later that day he’d do everything he could to make me pay.

Aside from playing Sphere, Strategy class was my favourite thing to do, and I always had the highest grade in the class, with One usually being second. Despite not being able to see the look on his face, I felt the rage still seething inside him. Even if I hadn’t been able to, however, the very colorful adjectives he’d used to describe me after class as he shoved passed me and then out of sight would have been enough of a clue.

After I walked out of class, I headed downstairs to the rumbling sounds of my stomach. I negotiated through the crowds of equally hungry students, which at times proved to be challenging.

The academy was a multi-species environment and accommodated students of all shapes and sizes. Winding around races like the Eris was easy enough, given their small size, albeit carefully due to the multitude of spikes on their backs and arms. Belluas, however, were much trickier, if not impossible, to overtake. So big were they that should two of them walk side by side the entire hallway would look like an impenetrable slow-moving, gray wall.

Once I finally managed to fight my way to the far right side of the academy, I entered the wide, high-ceilinged canteen, which was already bustling with the sounds, songs, and growls of students.

The six-legged, black Langors were already standing motionlessly in line under the nourishing light that shone from the glass above. The colorful, shapeless Pingos made their usual mess by throwing liquid globs of themselves at each other, leaving blotches of paint everywhere. And the tall Umbras, who, when sitting together, created a circular pitch darkness around them.

Pausing to scour the many circular tables around, I finally saw Iris and Pi, sitting near the back, and then headed over to them. It never ceased to amaze me how, despite his relaxed, languid way of walking (and of doing everything else), Pi was always first to reach the canteen. I’d tried various times to make it to his class on time to catch him leaving, but he had always, somehow, eluded me. Whenever I asked him how he did it, he always replied with a simple, “I was hungry.”

I reached them and sat on one of the chairs while Pi complained to Iris about something as he stuffed his face with wriggly tineas, which were a type of worm he loved.

“Mmfmf…But…mfmf…He…always pickin…mfmfm…on me.”

“Well, I don’t know, Pi,” replied Iris with slight irritation in her voice, her attention mostly directed on the hand-held Equinox console she held. “Maybe he has a point. If you keep falling asleep in his class, he’s bound not to think very highly of you, is he?”

“I was…Mfmfmf…real…mfmf…
tired
!”

Her brow furrowed. Iris was now fully immersed in the game and didn’t reply to him.

“Hi,” I said to Pi, knowing full well Iris wouldn’t hear or reply to me, so engrossed was she in the game.

“Iri…Mfmf…is mean…mfmfmf.”

“Don’t let her hear you say that,” I half-joked as I chose the lunch menu I’d have that day from the clear display screen on the table.

His bowl of tineas finished, Pi sat back, resting his hands on his stomach with a satisfied look on his face, and asked, “Sooo, did you beat No Face again?”

“Don’t I always?” I replied as I finalized my order and pressed “send.”

“He’s going to let you have it when you play Sphere later, you know.”

“This I know, Pi. This I know. He more or less told me so as we left class, using colorful language to describe exactly what he intends to do to me.”

“Don’t worry about it. All you have to do is beat him,” he replied, drumming his fingers on his stomach as he looked around the room.

“That’s easy for you to say,” I griped. “You’re not the one who’ll have a swinging metal ball thrust at him, are you?”

“Nah, you’ll be fine. You worry too much.”

“Sigh” I conceded. Pi was just too laid back to argue with.

A service bot pulled up beside me. The panel in its mid-section swished open and then a tray slid smoothly out of it, revealing my lunch. “Please take your order,” stated the bot in a metallic voice, which I rapidly did before placing the round plate onto the table. As soon as I’d done so, the service bot thanked me and hovered quickly away.

“Why won’t you
die
?” exclaimed Iris in utter frustration at the game, briefly looking up. “Oh, hi. When did you get here?”

“Just now,” I replied.

“Help me kill this guy?”

“Gladly,” I answered, plunging my hand inside my bag and then pulling out my Exodus. Just as I turned it on and found the game, I heard the all-too-familiar sound of Pi sniffing.

“Hey, what do you have there?”

“Hands off, Pi. It’s a burger. Nothing you’d like,” I told him, doubting my own words.

Still sniffing, Pi looked around again, and said, “I’m hungry.”

“How can you be hungry again?” exclaimed Iris. “You’ve had four bowls of those worm things—”

“Tineas, thank you,” interrupted Pi.

“Of those
things
,” continued Iris, obviously slightly annoyed Pi had interrupted her. “Where does it all
go
?”

“Let me tell you a little something about my species,” began Pi as I took a big bite of my chicken burger, worried he might swipe it “We need to eat a lot. It’s what makes us
strong,
” he stressed.

“If you say so.” Iris sighed, turning her attention back to the game just as I started playing.

At that moment, I heard some raised, indignant voices behind me, and as I turned, saw the two Morex I’d previously encountered clearing a path for One, who was headed straight for me. Once he reached our table, I was momentarily surprised that they stopped about three feet from it, but then I realized they’d done so because Pi was there.

“May I help you?” I asked, maybe a little more cockily than I would have allowed myself if Pi hadn’t been there.

“Do you think you’re funny, Simian? You wouldn’t be so brave if your hairy friend wasn’t sitting here,” he spat, nodding at Pi, who sat comfortably back on his chair with his eyes closed.

“You shouldn’t underestimate Iris, either,” I retorted, signalling to her with my head as she continued to play the game, oblivious as to what had happened.

“Come on, Simian,” continued One, “you think you’re so clever. Let us settle it right now. Follow me outside by yourself.”


Seven
! What are you
doing
? Are you even playing?” snapped Iris, suddenly looking up. “Oh, what do you morons want?”

“It’s okay, Iris—” I started.

“I doubt it,” she quipped. “Whatever it is you want, we don’t care, so leave.”

“Shut your mouth, princess, and know your place.”

A dark veil of disbelief fell over Iris’ face. “
What did you say?
” she spat furiously.

“Don’t talk to her like that, Imago,” I warned.

“Or what? You’ll get your twinkling girlfriend to teach us a lesson?”

Iris and I simultaneously stood as she threw her drink at One, hitting one of the Morex instead, who briefly recoiled before lunging toward me with his enormous fist. As it was almost about to land on my face, however, a bigger, hairier hand caught it, and we all turned in unified surprise to see to whom it belonged.

Pi stood, a look of grumpy sleepiness on his face, as he looked from Morex to Morex to One.

“You woke me up and insulted my friends,” he began, applying sudden pressure to the fist he gripped, making the Morex yelp in pain and crouch on one knee. “You should probably leave now.”

After releasing his grip on the Morex’s hand, Pi sat back down, keeping his gaze fixed on One as he did so.

“This isn’t over, Simian,” said One bitterly. “I’ll see you at Sphere.” With that, he turned and left the canteen with the two Morex in tow.

“Urgh, I can’t
stand
him,” exclaimed Iris, sitting back down.

“I know. I don’t know what his problem with me is,” I added.

“Guys,” started Pi, “there always has been, and there will always be, creatures like him wherever you go. There’s no point stressing about them. Just be cool, keep to yourselves and be happy,” he stated, stretching his long, muscular arms. He yawned and closed his eyes again.

“That’s easy for you to say,” mumbled Iris while she and I resumed playing.

The rest of lunch went by uneventfully. Iris and I defeated the boss in the game (thanks to my quick thinking, I might add), and Pi devoured another two bowls of slimy tineas after I scolded him for trying to steal my half-eaten burger.

Once the melodic voice over the loudspeaker announced it was the end of lunchtime, Iris and I headed to our Interplanetary Ecology class as Pi ambled sleepily away to his cooking class (this was his favourite class, and the only one he gave his full, serious attention to, so much did he love it).

We negotiated the long, shiny halls that, with the bustle of students hurriedly going to their various classes, looked like canvases splashed with living paint of every color you could imagine.

As we crossed a walkway, whose long windows exposed the picturesque purple and green gardens outside, Iris asked, “Are you excited about the day trip tomorrow? I hear the planet is one big forest! There should be so many interesting things to see!”

“Are you joking?” I asked in a pessimistic tone. “There’s never anything exciting to see in the places they take us. It’s always ‘cute’ little species or oddly-shaped trees, plants, or rocks. It’s always the same boring stuff they show us.”

I turned to face Iris, whose eyes, staring somewhere in the distance, practically shone. Her open mouth curled into a dream-like smile, no doubt relishing all the cute beings she’d probably see the following day. As tough and quick-tempered as she was, she just couldn’t resist cuteness, especially if big, “adorable” eyes were involved. I shook my head and smiled. There would be no convincing her.

Soon after, we reached the Interplanetary Ecology classroom, which was, by far, the most entertaining one of them all. Dark purple Radix clung and twisted all the way up the left wall, spreading in every direction over part of the ceiling. Its tips, like fingers, dangled above, and at the end of each, perfectly spherical, multi-colored eyeballs unblinkingly watched everything below and around them.

Yellow and burgundy leaves clung to the right and back walls with their many legs, occasionally spelling out words in various idioms or taking the shape of and mimicking our teacher, Mr. Sylva, out of boredom. Around the edges of the large, yet cramped, room there stood various glass display cabinets and cylindrical glass jars, inside which an extensive variety of flora from different planets in sundry galaxies were displayed.

In the center of the room stood the desks and chairs, which, despite technically being white, were  covered by layers of dirt and moss, some immobile, some not, which sometimes made it difficult to turn on the display screens, especially when one of them was asleep right on top of the pressure pad.

A large, round protuberance of leaves, dirt and moss with a dark hole in its center was stuck on the wall behind the teacher’s desk. Being a Nemus, Mr. Sylva had to have constant contact with soil otherwise he’d rapidly shrivel up and die. To ensure that didn’t happen, he’d built his home within the classroom itself, remaining there for the majority of the day, unless his duties required him to leave. As we all sat and I carefully lifted some orange moss from the pad to turn on my screen, Mr. Sylva’s green expansive hair (which reminded me of my native planet’s head of broccoli) popped out from the hole in the horizontal mound. Two light gray roots followed on either side, and as his fingers applied pressure to the hardened soil they gripped, he pushed himself outward until his entire body was revealed. He unceremoniously thumped to the floor, and a thin cloud of dust rose around him. The sight of the teacher dropping like that always made most of the class giggle, Iris included. Mr. Sylva slowly stood, and without a hint of expression on his face, briefly dusted himself off and then casually sat on his desk.

“The Brattean race will be the subject of today’s class,” he began in his usual gruff monotone, “whose planet, I am certain you are aware, we shall visit tomorrow.”

Rumor had it that Mr. Sylva was over twelve thousand years old, which, given his occasional loss of memory, wasn’t unthinkable. Sometimes it could be difficult to know exactly what he said because, despite there being times where he repeated himself, the light-gray, mossy roots that started on the space between his eyes and continued on to halfway down his chest muffled his words.

I think, though, that what I liked most about him were his crazy, rolling eyes. The sockets, on either side of his head, rose into stubs, inside which they rose and dropped and rolled and spun all around as though he tried to see everything at the same time.

“Now, as you know…The Brattean race will be the subject of the class today, so…turn to file seven hundred and ninety one—Bratteans, which will be the subject of today’s class.”

A rising choir of sighs came from around the room as we turned to the file. The rotating, tree-covered planet appeared on the display, above which the name “Brattea” was written. I touched the image of the planet with my index finger, and the display zoomed in until it stopped and listed just above a great sea of trees.

“Bratteans,” continued Mr. Sylva, “are sentient beings belonging to the Arbora family, much like I am. They are diminutive in size and are passive by nature.”

BOOK: The Sky Drifter
3.48Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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