Strangers (Stars Edge: Nel Bently Book 3)
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.
STRANGERS
Copyright © 2019 by Sara Voorhis
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher at the address below.
Amphibian Press
P.O. Box 163
West Peterborough NH
03468
www.amphibianpressbooks.com
www.vsholmes.com
ISBN : 978-1-949693-97-3
Discover the rest of Nel Bently Books:
Travelers
Drifters
Strangers
Heretics
Enjoy Fantasy? Check out my dark epic fantasy series!
Smoke and Rain
Lightning and Flames
Madness and Gods
Blood and Mercy
Join my Explorers for exclusive content, free books, and updates!
For Dad, who gave me my love of flight in all its forms
AUTHOR'S NOTE
This series combines archaeology with science fiction. Doing so is a hazardous road, particularly with the advent of television like "Ancient Aliens" and the fourth Indiana Jones film.
This book is a work of fiction, and something to be enjoyed as entertainment. I wholeheartedly believe we are far from alone in the universe. That being said, I am an archaeologist by trade and I know humans are ingenious and resourceful enough to build pyramids and other architectural wonders all on their own.
ONE
Hissing air. Squealing metal. The smell of antiseptic and silicon. Nel’s chest ached with each deep breath. Her limbs felt heavier than the simple weight of bone and muscle. She blinked, but the pulsing light overhead grew no clearer. The ceiling was a mass of greys and blacks.
“Good morning, Dr. Bently.” The voice was low, of indeterminate age or gender, but with more depth than a computer’s.
“Morning?” Nel’s voice was a rasp, as if her words were dragged over the powerline corridors after her trudging feet. The corridor! She surged upright. Her pulse hammered against bindings around her wrists and ankles. Nausea twisted and her stomach emptied itself over her lap. “Fucking great.”
“It’s a normal side effect upon waking.”
She peered at the light brown blur speaking to her. “Where am I? Who are you?”
A hand steadied her chin while a pen light flicked from one pupil to the other and back again. “Good pupillary reflex. Heart rate high, but within normal parameters. You’re on Iman. I’m Jem. I’m a medic.”
Nel gathered that the first information was not for her, and focused her attention on the last bits. “Iman?”
“A ship. You’re safe. Disorientation is also common. What’s the last thing you can remember? We’ll work forward from there.” Jem’s tone didn’t change, “Swing your legs out and we’ll get you cleaned up.”
Nel shifted her legs over the side. The room was clearer now: dim light, monochrome palette, bland design. Even her vomit smelled sterile. “My vision’s blurry.”
“Has it improved since you woke?” Jem tugged away the paper apron covering Nel’s lap and chest and dabbed away any leftover mess.
“A bit.” Nel couldn’t find energy enough to care she was naked in front of a stranger. “Everything feels slow. Heavy.”
Jem hummed in response and tapped the hollow beneath Nel’s knees. “Patelar reflex positive. You’re responding fine, Dr. Bently. Can you turn your head? Other way now.”
The room didn’t fully spin as she looked left, right, but it wanted to. Jem took her arm and checked the IV in the crook of her elbow. “You’ll feel better in a minute. I’m going to give you some stabilizers. They’ll help with the disorientation and queasiness.”
Coolness flooded her veins, followed by calm and clarity. Nel swallowed and didn’t feel like she was biting back vomit. A glance at where her frostbitten toes used to be told her whatever tech they used worked quickly—there were barely scars where she remembered bruised flesh. Jem looked about fourteen. “Aren’t you a little young to be a doctor? Medic. Whatever.”
“I’m a cryo-tech. It’s my first year. I’m 20. Well, 17 circadial, which I think it what you meant.”
“Circadial?” Is there a damn dictionary I could borrow?
“Most people up here spend years traveling in cryosleep. So while I was born twenty years ago, I have only aged 17 years. Does that make sense?”
“I’ll get there.” Nel’s stomach flipped again, but this time from horror. I would miss so much. She shivered. “Could I get dressed?”
Jem grinned. “Of course. I can bring stuff for you to wash up too. We don’t recommend showering just yet—dizziness and temperature fluctuations are rougher when you’re still cryo-sick.”
“That’d be great.” Cryo-sick? Memories were spotty after the incredible press as gravity fell away. The sight of a folded suit at the end of the exam table distracted her. Fine, black fibers were fine but tightly woven and soft. Faint copper glimmered on the interior when she twisted it in the light. This leaves nothing to the imagination. After a cursory search for underwear she tugged the suit over her naked body. Despite the thin material, it was warm.
Jem poked their head in. “Before you zip that up, let me help you place this.” They held up a sticker. It was a lattice of copper threads. “It transmits your vitals to the suit, helps it predict your needs.”
“My needs?” Nel made a show of patting her crotch. “Does it have the world’s tiniest bullet vibe somewhere?”
Jem snorted. “I see you’re already feeling better. I meant your temperature and so forth. If you’re under stress in constricts to calm you. If you’re adrenalized it will increase temperature and the fibers become more flexible to help you fight or flee.”
Nel flexed her hand. “Go, go gadget-unitard.”
Jem pressed the circuit sticker to the hollow under Nel’s left clavicle. “Now, zip up. You’ll feel a tingle, maybe a temp flux.”
Nel did as she was asked. It was snug, a more comfortable version of a wetsuit. Energy crawled over her skin, trailing goosebumps in its wake. Pairing. She glanced at Jem. “Did you say something?”
Jem’s bright smile broadened. “It’s in your head. I mean, not like it’s made up, imaginary. It’s the suit ‘talking.’ Literally, in your head.”
Nel’s lip curled. “I hate this sci-fi shit.” She took a few stumbling steps. “How do I get it to do things?”
“Talk back. Start with ‘Suit’ in a firm tone, then follow it with the command. It recognizes most iterations of simple commands, but does lack a bit of creativity. It also,” Jem fixed Nel with a pointed stare, “does not respond to cursing.”
“Well, fuck.” Nel finally answered with a grin of her own. “Neither does my mother.”
•
Spartan was a generous term for her room. And would imply more character than the black and grey walls offered. Nel glanced at the small aluminum case on the desk. All of her possessions, the ones she would use for the next who-knew-how-long. The closet above the desk held three outfits, all along the track-suit line of fashion. Weight limits made it impossible to bring enough to personalize the space. Only the necessities.
/>
“Hey.”
Nel shot to her feet with a smile. “Hey, there.” Sci-fi space fashion became Lin far more than it did her, Nel decided. The faint lines around Lin’s eyes and the familiar curl of her lip were a balm on Nel’s homesick heart. She lifted her chin for a kiss, but something in the other woman’s eyes stopped her.
Lin’s face was smooth, devoid of expression. Her eyes were the black of space. They, too, were lit with strange stars. “We need to talk.”
“I hate that phrase.”
“Like I’m going to break up with you when we’re stuck on a spaceship together.” Anxiety strained the attempt at humor.
Nel winced. She was not under the impression there was something to break up. “So what is it?”
“You’ve signed a contract. A binding one.”
Nel frowned. She remembered the thrust of lift-off, incredible exhaustion and then...waking up. “Why are you reminding me?”
“So you remember you can’t break it.”
Nel’s limbs ignited with adrenaline. “You gonna give me a reason to want to?”
Lin looked away. “Space travel is complicated. We have incredible technology. We go beyond the limits of physics. But not time. Even with our faster-than-light tech it can take a long time to get where we want to go. It took three years for us to get to Earth the first time.”
Nel looked out at the scattered balls of burning hydrogen, made pinpricks by thousands of light years. She couldn’t have drawn the sky over her parents’ house in Springfield by heart, or the starscape above the red hills of Chile from memory. But the animal parts of her, the subconscious observations that were called sixth sense, knew. The stars are all wrong. “Lin, where are we?”
“We’re approaching Odyssey, which is in deep orbit around the planet we’re studying.”
For the third time that day, Nel thought she might vomit. Already? “And Odyssey is the space station?”
Lin nodded. “Odyssey of Earth.” Her dark eyes had not met Nel’s since she first uttered “time.”
“And how far is that from Earth?”
“117.3 trillion kilometers.”
Nel didn’t know space like she knew soil and stone. She spent her life looking down, not up, digging not dreaming. She didn’t know what 117.3 trillion kilometers meant, only that her blood was a storm in her ears and the sky was not hers. “The medic said I was cryo-sick. Lin, how long was I out?”
“Two years.”
The floor pitched with a viciousness that had nothing to do with artificial gravity. “I was locked in that tube for years, asleep like all of some tinned fish in the back of a cabinet?”
“I’m sorry, Nel.”
She squeezed her eyes shut, hating how her mind, her memory betrayed her. “I can’t remember when I went under. Did I know how long it would be?”
“You signed some forms.”
She recalled her signature flashing green on a glowing screen, “The contracts. Did I read them?”
“You were distracted.”
“You didn’t fucking tell me?”
“It was discussed at length and determined this would be the least disruptive.” Her voice slid from hesitant to exasperated. “Nel, you haven’t aged. At all. You can check your baseline tests against the medscan they just ran. You are literally the same person who went under. Though your toes healed.”
“‘Least disruptive.’” Warmth bloomed over Nel’s skin as the suit responded to the emotions rampaging through her. It wasn’t just fear, or disorientation now, but fury. “You made a decision about my life, my body, my fucking future, without telling me. Without even consulting me. Because you thought you knew better? Where’s all that trust you have in the human race to not be idiots? Where’s the faith that we’re not evil? You can overlook murder, but you think I’m incapable of rational thought? Shit, Lin. If you think I’m so immature, why have me run a damn department?”
“Nel, it’s a lot more complicated than that—”
“And I don’t give a shit if my body aged a second or thirty years. I missed two years of my mother’s life! Two years of my asshole step-dad’s homophobia. Two years of Martos frowning at me over tea. Two years of Mikey’s parents grieving—” her voice shattered on her best friend’s name.
“I’ll gladly explain it all, but I’m going to have to ask you to calm down—”
“Calm down?” Nel heard the shriek in her voice as anger left her lungs.
“Sorry, I know that was stupid to say—”
Her hand slammed against the door as Lin moved to leave. “I need to talk to my mom. Did I talk to her before? What did I tell her?”
“You sent a vid. I don’t know what it contained, but you can watch it if you want. And she’s replied, I bet. You can send her another one. It’ll take a bit, but she’ll get it.”
“A bit. Like years?” She clenched her hands. “Find me a comm. Or transponder. Or tele-talk. Whatever you freaks use to communicate—despite all evidence that you don’t, actually, communicate.”
Lin looked away. “I’ll have someone send one down. Anything else?”
“Not unless you have the missing two years of my life tucked up your ass.”
Lin shook her head.
“Then get out. Save your rationalizations for when you’ve grown some empathy.”
Only after the door shut did she realize at least a dozen questions rattled in her head. I’m too angry to even see her right now. “God I wish you were here,” she addressed the space where Mikey used to be, air now emptier than the void outside.
“Excuse me, Dr. Bently.”
Nel whirled, but the voice seemingly emanated from the room itself. The voice came again, and this time she caught a faint flicker of yellow around the door frame, like Alexa on steroids. “Hello?”
“Ms. Nalawangsa informed me you might need some orientation.”
Nel ran a finger along the line of light. “You’re a computer?”
“Essentially. My name is Marisa. If you need anything, just ask.”
“I see.” She didn’t. “I want to see my video and I need to know what’s expected of me for the next few days—a briefing?”
“Your schedule can be found in your portal page on the interface at the desk. Your messages are currently downloading from the ship’s databank. You have no engagements this afternoon. If you’d like, I can order you lunch.”
Eating was the furthest thing from Nel's mind. She slumped onto the bed. Inside the sealed aluminum container lay her belongings in a vacuum packed bag. She tore it free of the protection. Two tissue-wrapped boxes waited in the front pouch. The first was plain, rich wood, nibbled by an inexperienced gouge. It was something she made in shop class, something to hold her father's cuff-links, before she realized he didn't own any. Now it held his cremains. The second box was smaller, made of bright metal. Mikey gave it to her when she helped him apply to teach at UNE. The edges dug into her palms and she pressed both to her forehead. After a breath she set them on the shelf beside her bed.
Across the room a screen flickered into being over the desk with a soothing trill.
“Your messages are ready, Dr. Bently,” Marisa explained.
Nel shoved her bag aside and sat at the desk. After a second spent looking for a keyboard, she jabbed a finger at the screen.
“Ouch!”
She whirled to stare at the door, her approximation of Marisa’s face. “I’m so sorry!”
The chuckle was tinny, lacking the reverberation of a human chest, but otherwise incredibly real. “I’m just teasing. Your charts say you have a sense of humor.”
Nel snorted. “I think they were being sarcastic. No one at IHD seems to appreciate my jokes.” The interface had multiple desktops, each one seemingly for a different purpose—a gray database, a blue map and schedule, and a green communications. The final one was a glaring red and blank. Communications, then. She tapped the “Personal” folder, and found the
single file in “Outgoing.”
Her own face bloomed on the screen, the resolution glaringly better than Earth-tech, but still choppy, as if the signal was weak. Or stretched over millions of miles. A chill shuddered down her spine. Fuck I’m so far from home.
“Hey, Mom. Sorry I didn't call sooner. We were traveling. I assume you got my text.” Video-Nel held a pen up, then let it go, watching it drift in the zero-G. “You've probably figured out where I am. I'd show you Earth, but it's on the other side of the ship right now. I love you. There's so much I want to explain, that I want to share with you, but it seems too complicated, too simple at once.” She looked away, then back at the camera, brown eyes almost gray under the stark lighting.
“It doesn't matter in the end. I'm safe. As safe as you can be orbiting Earth.” Her laugh was grating and nervous. “The job I took, it's far away. And they tell me it'll take a while to get there. I don’t have the details yet—what else is new. Plunging head first is kinda my M. O., but this is a bit much.
“I want you to know I'm doing this for a reason. I might not know exactly what it is, but you've always told me to trust my gut. My gut said to run when the cops came. And it's telling me to do this. These people might be strangers, but I gotta believe they're gonna help us.”
Nel looked away from the screen. She had never watched herself weep before. It was a strange sight, and she found herself embarrassed, like hearing her voice recorded for the first time, words lacking the reverberation from her skull. “I promise I'll be careful, I promise I'll come home when I can. I love you so, so much. Please believe this isn't easy.”
Nel closed her eyes, mouth remembering how bitter the next words tasted, “But I'll talk to you as soon as I can.”
The message clicked out, and the screen froze on Nel's tear-stained face. I'll talk to you as soon as I can. She wondered if her mother knew how long it would take, if she was told, if she knew what was happening way out here among stars she had never named. Had they lied? Had she believed them?