I grip the edge of the communication bay. I want to ask, “How?” But I cannot seem to form that simple word. Nevertheless, Colonel Martin answers.
“We found these recordings. Or, Chris here found them.” He nods to Chris, and I’m surprised to see sympathy in his look.
Colonel Martin turns on the touch screen in the communication bay, but rather than scrolling through the menus like Amy and I did, he opens a cabinet to the right of the control panel and withdraws a thin, black piece of plastic about the same length as my thumb. It reminds me eerily of the black med patches Bartie has on Godspeed, and the thought twists my stomach. Colonel Martin presses the plastic into a slot near the touch screen, and it’s only then that I realize the material is similar to the mem cards we had on Godspeed, used to store information.
“This is what we know,” Amy’s father says, punching up the screen. An image of a glass cube similar to the one Emma gave Amy appears. “Something in the soil means that any glass made here, using a specific process, will be able to easily and effectively store solar energy. The first colony discovered this, and for several years, they manufactured solar glass and shipped it back to Earth. The compound we’re currently standing in was used as a transportation center. They’d ship the glass from here to an automated space station in orbit around the planet and from there to Earth.”
“A space station!” I exclaim. “We didn’t see anything like that when we landed.”
Colonel Martin arches an eyebrow at me. “This world is rather big, you know.” He swipes the screen, and it fades to black.
“What happened to them?” I ask. “The first colony? You said they’re all dead?”
Colonel Martin looks at Chris. I get the feeling that they’re both trying to decide how much to tell me. I’m very nearly at the point of demanding answers when Colonel Martin moves over to the other side of the control panel, where the audio communication is. He turns a dial labeled ANSIBLE, and static fills the air.
But—not static. Not just. Words break through, words I can almost not understand.
“ . . . the danger too great . . . have received indication . . . human life once more on . . . Godspeed . . . survive the . . . help coming . . . ”
I strain to make out the words. Through the static and the accent of the speaker it’s hard to understand.
“It’s on a loop,” Colonel Martin says as the message starts over again.
“Sol-Earth?” I ask.
Colonel Martin nods. “It’s not the same as true communication, but it’s an indication that they know we’ve landed. And they’re sending help.”
I snort. “We can’t wait another three hundred years for help to get here.”
“We won’t have to, not if we can amplify the signal enough to get a response from Earth.” Colonel Martin turns back to the touch screen and swipes his fingers over it. “I don’t fully understand the technology being used, but Chris here has been able to explain it to me enough that I get the basic idea. Tesseracts and wormholes and some such. Means travel is so much faster now, way beyond what we had when Godspeed was built.”
“How much faster?” I ask, barely daring to breathe. We might just have a chance after all.
“A week, or maybe less. Once we manage to get a message back, I’d expect help to arrive at the station—it’s currently unmanned—within just a few days, and they’ll be able to travel to the planet from there.”
“And then we begin evacuation,” Chris says. I’ve fallen so deep into my own thoughts that I nearly forgot he was in the room with us.
Colonel Martin taps his fingers against the edge of the communication bay. I get the impression that if the room wasn’t so small, he’d start pacing. After a moment, he looks at Chris darkly. “No,” he says. “Then we wage war.”
“What?” I say. My eyes dart to Chris—he’s just as surprised as I am.
“Whatever alien being wiped out the first humans on this planet, they are, as Elder says, sentient. They are singling out my people and attacking. This isn’t random assault—they’re not defending their home or trying to find a peaceful answer to our presence. They are murdering my people. And yours, Elder.”
I think about Lorin, about Kit’s dead, empty eyes, the gaping hole in her chest where her heart should be.
“Whatever is killing my people, I will kill it first,” Colonel Martin says fiercely. He looks right at Chris. “I will avenge humanity.” His words are a threat and a promise, all wrapped in one.
41: AMY
Mom and I work in silence most of the day, too wrapped up in our sadness to focus on anything else. If I could just figure out where the Phydus is coming from, maybe that would tell us how it ended up in Dr. Gupta, Lorin, Juliana Robertson . . . and Emma.
Long after supper, there’s a knock on the gen lab door. Before I can stand up, Elder opens it.
I take one look at his face and say, “What’s wrong?”
His eyes are skittish, bouncing from me to the floor to my mom and back again. “I . . . I need to talk to you,” he mutters.
“Now?” Mom’s voice cuts across the lab. “Amy, we’re not done with our work—”
“It can wait,” I say. I drop the test tube I’d been holding onto the tray and race to the door. My mom starts to protest again, but the door zips shut, silencing her.