by Mary Weber
Miguel exhaled beside her and shifted his tall, broad physique to tap his earcom. “Vic, you there?” he whispered to his Artificial Intelligence assistant. “We’re going to need a hand.”
What? No. Sofi dipped a thick brow up at him with a single shake of her head. They needed a hand, yes, but they needed a search of this room more. “Miguel, we can’t. This room—the beds . . .” her voice faltered.
His black eyes stared down at her as if to say that was precisely why he was anxious for them to leave. As if he knew too well what this space was doing to her—what it’d already done—and he wasn’t about to let the Delonese or this place do it further.
She blinked and glanced away, and waited for his arm to drop before pulling the handscreen from her pocket and focusing on the dim display. His concern triggered that chaos of emotion she was trying to ignore. She cared about others. She didn’t need them to care about her. Particularly not him. He’d been despicable eighteen months ago and now—truly decent. She didn’t have time to process that paradox. Especially in light of the chilling reality in front of her.
She steadied her shoulders and lifted her attention to the large, lengthy medical space with its rows of shower stalls sectioned off by clear plastic curtains that had once held her and her younger brother, Shilo, strapped like animals on the med equipment.
Experiments, her mind whispered.
Child abductees. Her lungs gulped.
Shilo.
Her throat clamped down over his name as if to protect it from the very air in here.
“Hold on, guys.” Vic’s voice erupted in their earcoms. “I’m trying to pull up more specs, but the Delonese are tracing me.”
Sofi ignored the AI and moved her scrutinizing gaze to the spigots attached to the white walls beneath white halogen lights, each overlooking med beds with straps that spread out eerily, like arms waiting to embrace her and anyone else the Delonese decided on.
How long had those straps been waiting—days? Hours? And how many kids had been trapped on those med beds during the past seven years since she’d been strapped to one as well?
Avoiding the uneasy tilt of Miguel’s lavender-haired head, Sofi brushed past him farther into the room while the heat of his gaze followed her. As if he was calculating how to secure her from the trauma of what this place meant about her and everything she knew.
Or rather, the realization that they apparently knew nothing at all. Thirty-six hours spent mingling with the human-looking aliens on the surface of Delon, and her entire world and history had just been shattered by this one underground room.
“Sof?” Miguel’s tone was taut.
“It’s fine. I’m fine.”
He made a sound but didn’t argue. He didn’t have to. They both knew she wasn’t fine—wasn’t anywhere close to it. But she couldn’t just stand there in her hot mess of newly discovered not-fineness. Do it and get out, Sof.
She gritted her teeth and searched each stall—as if her brain needed proof that she and Shilo weren’t still among the ghostly whimpers the place echoed with and that there were answers to all of this. The Delonese had brought and kept her here. According to her memories, they’d destroyed a portion of her life here.
What exactly had they done to her? What other memories was she missing? How much time had she spent inside this planet through the years?
And where were the other kids who’d been taken with her and Shilo back then?
Her chest quaked as her mind drifted toward suggestions—repressed images bubbling to the surface—while her feet carried her to the metal hoverbed she’d once occupied. Then to Shilo’s stall—where the sanitized smell and the memory of him, along with the others, were enough to make her gag.
She couldn’t recall the rest of their faces, just their screams as a seven-year-gone memory erupted of her brother looking up and meeting her gaze.
“Sofi?” his small five-year-old voice had said. “I want to go home now.”
She ground her jaw as the image faded, and glanced back at Miguel, whose expression was an apologetic mix of worry and the need to hurry. He shifted from one foot to the other before tipping his soft gaze toward the door. The siren’s whir was growing louder. The boot steps and long, unblinking faces would be returning.
She nodded. Looking around wasn’t giving her anything concrete. Just hazy memories. What she needed was better access to the Delonese’s data stream.
After a last glimpse, she strode back, reaching Miguel as the alarm abruptly shut off and the wall to the right flickered and hissed.
The room gave a soft zap, and its halogen lights blacked out. Leaving her and Miguel encompassed in pitch dark.
Alone.
“Sof, we need to get out of here.” Miguel’s low voice breezed against her hair through the sudden silence. But her mind was already fading backward and a memory was exploding—unwanted, uninhibited—buried so deep she hadn’t even known it existed inside her seventeen-year-old soul until too late . . .
They had come to earth at dusk, crawling across her farm like predators in search of prey.
Sofi had been out securing the barn, as best as a ten-year-old could, to keep up the appearance she and Shilo weren’t there alone and that Papa hadn’t been dead for twenty-two hours.
Creeping sounds that began this morning among the trees at the edge of the fence were growing louder—people watching, waiting to see if it was true. And to see what they could steal. Because everyone knew kids fetched as high a price as old meds and food seeds these days, especially on the black market. And everyone around those parts knew Corp 30 CEO Inola’s kids would pull a good price indeed.
Sofi swallowed and tried not to look at the tree line from between the barn slats. Mama should’ve known not to leave them—should’ve had the coroner take them with him. Or more accurately, should’ve cared enough to come fetch them herself rather than leave them to their fate.
But what was new? The woman sat in her shiny Manhattan office building hundreds of miles away, and even more emotionally distant, as the space between their Old North Carolina farmhouse and the border to the rest of the messed-up world dissolved into nothing.
A rank smell filled Sofi’s nose.
She frowned. The scent was different from that of the scavengers or starving neighbors.
Peeking between the barn window shutters, she blinked, then froze as the smell morphed into something unmistakable. It reeked of metal and medicinal labs.
The Delonese were in the yard.
Giant, perfectly fashioned men whom Earth’s upper class found intriguingly fetching, dressed in thin gray boots and slick coats, bare of any facial hair or expression, were spread across the field and driveway. And they were coming closer.
She hadn’t even heard their craft.
Her lungs rippled. She slipped back, gripping her shaking fist around the hammer she’d been using. Keep going, she said in her head. There’s nobody here. Except the determination of their steps said they knew better.
Suddenly, a shadow passed by the shutter, throwing darkness across the slatted evening light. Sofi slid the tiny tool into her boot and scrambled for the farthest corner of the barn.
At least Shilo’s in the basement where I told him to stay ’til I finished.
A hand scraped the wall, making her jump.
Voices.
She curled into a ball—trying to clamber inside her ten-year-old skin—as if she could shrink her bones and muscles and lungs small enough to roll inside herself. Even as fear spiked a blasted signal and caused her asthma to kick in, illtimed as all get-out. No, not now, she told her lungs. You’ve got to work for me. She squished herself against the wood siding and fumbled in her pocket for an inhaler.
Not there.
Her throat tightened. She breathed in slowly. One breath, two breaths, she inhaled an infinity of breaths and focused her attention on a couple of fireflies illuminating the ceiling as fingers scratched at the barn’s sturdy door and her breathing becam
e shallow. She could almost imagine their ears listening for movement, matching it to the smell of human flesh. If they could smell at all.
You’d think they’d be dead from their own medicinal odor by now if so.
Tears filled her eyes as Sofi tried to inhale again, while her body strove not to move.
It didn’t matter. The moment they broke in, her gasping exploded and gave her away. Her chest imploded as her world shrank into that feeling that there wasn’t enough oxygen on Earth to keep her alive.
At least Shilo isn’t here. Her eyesight blurred as her lungs caught fire.
C’mon, Sofi, focus.
She couldn’t. She was going to pass out. She needed air.
At least Shilo is safe.
And then they were on her, reeking like sterile, huge plastic people that looked half doll and half human in her gasping-for-oxygen state. She shrieked but there was no sound, and then her throat collapsed somewhere between seeing their unblinking faces and having a bag stuffed over her head.
Which was when she heard him.
His tiny voice carried hesitant across the yard. “Sofi?”
Shilo?
No! Oh please no! Shilo, run!
The instantaneous boot shuffling said they were already going for him.
“Leave him alone!” she choked into the bag’s cloth. She lashed at them with the violence of one who’d recently known the taste of death. She kicked, wheezed, and mentally swore every curse word she’d been taught never to say, while her chest felt near the point of ignition.
She lunged out in her sightless state, hands trying to break free from the clammy fingers pinning her wrists. Tearing off the bracelet Shilo’d made her as she yanked at what felt like an icy void around her. Sobbing. “Fine, take me, just leave him alone, please.”
But her hands and voice moved nothing, and those two fireflies full of light and life and everything warm were the last things in her mind before the tears and suffocation took her out.
3
MIGUEL
Ambassador Miguel edwardo perez ii was about to burn this ice planet down.
When the lights in the Delonese room slowly fluttered back on—low and eerie—the first thing he looked for was Sofi’s face. The first thing he saw was the crushing horror spread across it, as whatever memory was accosting her coated her skin in sweat. His anger cracked and flared and he muttered to Vic, “On second thought, let’s just blow this place to toast.”
“Yeah, still trying to reaccess the blasted maps, dude.”
He kept his voice low. “Any idea how long that’ll take?”
“Probably faster if you’d hold on to your panties and—”
Right. Mantener la calma. He looked back at Sofi and touched her shoulder to stir her. She didn’t blink or move. His frown deepened.
“Okay, seven-point-five minutes.”
Miguel didn’t respond. Just straightened and, keeping his body between Sofi and the door, turned to mentally assess the maze of underground hallways they’d come through to reach this room. Which ones would make the best path out?
The crossway led to the other medical quarters where they’d found the group of young kids an hour ago. All drenched in terror and urine, scared out of their wits, waiting for the Delonese experiments to start. They’d snuck the poor children onto a shuttle for Earth, only to turn around as soon as it’d left and find this room—and the seven-year-old recorded video of Sofi that Vic uncovered, and her memories that went with it.
That vid . . . Sofi’d been so young. He winced. Get her out of here, Miguel.
Firming his jaw, he squeezed her shoulder again as boot steps struck metal grates somewhere down the outer hall. “Sof?”
Her face moved toward his voice.
“We’re still on Delon in the med room,” he said quietly. “I’m just not sure where you are at the moment.”
Her pupils flickered. She shifted, and a second later her eyes cleared. She connected her expression with his and nodded, her owl necklace fluttering against her damp neck. “I’m here.”
He smoothed his hair to hide his relief. “Good. You alright?”
Another nod. “Just a memory from when Shi and I were taken from the barn.” She shifted her pointy chin as if to squelch the ache in her tone, then dropped her eyes to the handscreen she held. “I need to find Shilo.”
“Sí, but I think first we need to get us out of here.” He offered Sofi her tech-bag just as the room’s white wall beside them clicked, as if it were a comp monitor turning on, and flashed static across the length of it again. It buzzed and flared through the dim room, then lit up like a telescreen.
What the—?
A Delonese voice rippled from the wallscreen into the room surrounding them. Their earcoms translated in unison: “Citizens of Delon, please give your attention to this short update.”
The buzzing wall plastered a close-up of Sofi’s face across it, followed by the camera angle panning out to show a pic of her in a tech-room three days ago at the Fantasy Fighting Games back on Earth.
Miguel recognized it. The scene was from an hour before the bombing that had taken out a good portion of the arena and contestants, including Shilo. Or so they’d believed. Miguel had been up in the stands in his cabaña—level three to be precise—with his plethora of celebrity admirers while Sofi was working down in her team’s virtual reality room. The pic changed to one overlooking the live gaming arena, where Shilo and the other players had combated.
He sniffed—This distraction is not helpful—and turned back to Sof, who must’ve caught the look on his face because she slid a hand along her bag’s strap in agreement and spun to leave just as the voice continued in its precise, unemotional tone. “One of our guests, known to all as the hugely popular gamer Sofi Snow on Earth’s FanFight field, is currently lost here on Delon. We’re asking for your assistance in locating her, both for her safety as well as your own. Her mental stability is currently questionable.”
Sofi slowed. Her eyes narrowed and her expression sharpened to anger right along with his.
Ah.
There it is.
It was the same look she’d offered at their first meeting a year and a half ago—when she politely told him off, and rightly so because he’d been a disgusting cad back then. Her initial dismissal had left such a clear impact, he’d been unable to function right for the rest of the night. And despite their now impending weird-death-by-aliens, he wouldn’t want to be with anyone else to experience such a thing. He knew what she was capable of.
What they were both capable of.
“Nice of them to get the whole hive on board,” Sofi muttered. “You ready?”
He offered her a furtive smile, which she returned before she nodded and pushed through the door to the hall. The sterile smell stung the nose and the dim glow of the lengthy white ceiling caught her dark hair as she tossed her long ponytail over her shoulder. “Alright, best-case scenario we find a tech-space to cement ourselves into their system. From there I can tag team with Vic before we search out Shilo.”
She tapped her handscreen. “Ranger, you there?”
No response.
Miguel shook his head. The hacker guy’s vid feed from Earth had shut off ten minutes ago and hadn’t reappeared since. “I couldn’t pull him up eith—”
The narrow, tall walls on each side buzzed loudly and turned on like a strobe effect, all the way down the corridor, with shadows cast at odd intervals. Floor-to-ceiling telescreens lit up, mirroring the one in the room they’d just exited. They looked like advertisements from a metropolis. Except now they were showing a vid—one from yesterday morning in which Sofi was stepping off the shuttle on Delon. It followed her entering their vetting area where she’d been quickly scanned and questioned along with Heller—Sofi’s FanFight tech friend who’d betrayed them.
The Delonese voice came back on as they turned down a second hallway. “While Girl-Sofi went through our vetting system yesterday upon entry to our planet, we
were unable to finish the process. We need to do so immediately.”
Miguel’s neck prickled. He picked up his pace to stride nearer her. At the time, he’d found yesterday’s entry process oddly swift, especially considering only he and Earth’s other ambassadors were allowed anywhere near this planet. Now, in light of everything they’d just seen . . .
He doubted very much they’d made a mistake in how they vetted her.
Miguel glanced at the medical rooms they were moving past. The Delonese hadn’t minded him bringing her here. They’d wanted her. Probably saved them a trip to retrieve her like they’d supposedly done with her brother.
The question was—why? And why now?
He tapped his earcom as they reached the hall’s end. “Vic, you ready?”
Sofi slowed and turned her wide cheekbones and delicate nose his way, triggering a muted emotion of longing in his chest. He kept his face sterile, ignoring her beauty as her dark eyes hardened. “You know what kind of further tests they’re speaking of?”
“They didn’t clarify at this morning’s meeting.” He held her gaze. They didn’t have to, was what he didn’t say.
Sofi slung her bag higher on her shoulder. “Right. In that case . . .” She moved her small hand and tapped her own earcom. “Vic, I’m on. My head’s clear and I’m gonna need—”
A sensor on the metallic door in front of them clicked. Sofi uttered a soft “You’ve got to be kidding me” as it gave a swish and slid up to open onto a balcony that overlooked the giant interior of the planet—which wasn’t a planet at all, as they’d discovered a few hours ago, but a massive spherical space station.
Sofi retreated, pushing Miguel back. “Did I mention I hate this place?” she hissed. “I say the minute we grab Shilo we leave, then light it up.”
He couldn’t agree more, but he lifted a teasing brow and looked down at his handscreen, accessing the door coding she’d created. “I seem to recall you saying that at a party once. It didn’t end well either.” He waved his comp in front of the door to shut it, but without luck.