Beyond: Space Opera
Page 4
"My daughter believes their heads are like wheels, spinning as they fly through Deep Space." After another friendly laugh, Banjeree finally seemed to notice that Medda wasn't laughing with him. He placed a hand on her forearm. "The crew are prepared, Captain. The Exceptional itself is prepared. There has never been a better constructed vessel. It can withstand all the pressure issues. And it is stocked with every imaginable medication, piece of equipment, and byte of info that we might require to survive."
"I know you're right," Medda conceded. "However, some things can't be foreseen."
Banjeree squinted at her. "But we've studied all the data, prepared for every possible outcome."
"That's my point exactly," said Medda. "This is Deep Space. The impossible can happen here."
Ndu
"Goodbye, Milky Way," sighed Police Officer Ndu Francia, gazing out the aft window of the Exceptional's observation deck. His K-9 partner, a German Shepherd named Ba'al, whimpered slightly and swished her tail. The Milky Way Galaxy stretched like a membrane of organic tissue across black space. "Are we gonna make it?" he asked the universe, not really concerned about it.
He liked the idea of two years of quiet before he had to enter the new colony. People wore him out.
Noticing a red light flashing on his wrist band, he said to Ba'al, "Too bad this ship is full of people, eh, girl?" He balled his fast and raised it to his mouth. "Report location and incident type," he commanded.
"Location: Q-4, U-27. Incident: Assault," the wrist monitor recited.
"That's us," Ndu told Ba'al. He tapped the "Officer Responding" button and bolted up the stairs two at a time. Ba'al yipped happily and trotted by his side. Although they passed by the entryway to the trans-ship monorail, Ndu decided not to ride it. "Not far. The run will do us good."
The incident location was a large storage closet. "Some jerks fighting over TP rations, probably," Ndu grumbled, drawing his stun gun. "You go easy, girl," he whispered to Ba'al. "These pathetic types deserve to live with dirty bums, but not necessarily get their arms torn off."
Hearing a scuffle behind the closed door, Ndu planted his feet wide and pressed his back to the adjacent wall. "Get ready. Three. Two. One." Swinging around, he pulled the door open. "Police!"
It wasn't toilet paper thieves. A middle-aged man lay on his back between two shelving units. A young woman knelt on top of him, hands to his throat.
"Hey. Hey!" Ndu shouted. "Stop it now." When she ignored him, he holstered his gun and rushed forward. It took very little effort to slip his arm around the woman's slender waist and lift her off her victim. Although she struggled and squirmed, Ndu handcuffed her to a vertical support on a metal shelf. "Now you just hang tight," he commanded awkwardly. Her fury embarrassed him. He was glad when Ba'al growled, making him seem tougher than he felt.
"You okay, sir?" He helped the man sit up. "You look familiar."
The man coughed and tried to speak, but it was the woman who said, "He's famous. Doctor Leung Chao-Lin." She spat onto the concrete floor. "Deep Space expert." The last word was tinged with acid.
Ndu shook his finger at the woman. "Hush. I'll tell you when it's your turn." To Ba'al he said, "If she talks, bite her." Ba'al sat and panted; the woman growled, as if she were the dog.
"Are you really a doctor?" Ndu asked, patting the man on the back.
"What that, er, lady says is true. I was just walking down the corridor. She jumped me. Pulled me in here. Started strangling me for no reason."
"Ha," said the woman. Ba'al let that word go.
Dr. Leung glared at the woman. "I'm not hurt. But you should lock that person up. She's unstable."
"We'll review the case. Here." Ndu handed the doctor a small tab screen. "Enter your ID and you'll be sent a statement form to fill out."
While Dr. Leung typed, Ndu unlocked one side of his perp's handcuffs and attached it to his own wrist.
The doctor got to his feet and handed back the screen. "Thank you, officer. I'll see myself out." He left, slamming the storeroom door behind him.
Ndu turned to the woman. "Now, what's your story? Name first."
"Karin Rosen."
He read her her rights, but she wasn't impressed. "Wish I'd killed that bastard Leung."
"Well, you'll get locked up if you're convicted, so you should probably stop talking."
Ndu opened the door, pushing her out. Ba'al trailed behind. "What'd that doctor do to deserve getting his windpipe squashed?" he asked Karin.
"He lied."
"What'd he lie to you about?"
She stopped short. "He lied to all of us. About Deep Space."
Zulaikha
"And the donkey, the kitty, and the rooster lived together in that house forever after. The end."
Zulaikha Akhami closed the story book. The children on the floor around her clapped and giggled. "Did you like that one?" Zulaikha asked them.
A clever boy named Danny said, "That was nice, Miss. But we want to hear about the hero kids."
"Yeah!" agreed little Yuko through her bucktoothed smile. "Hero kids on Ethepthal." The name of their ship, Exceptional, came out full of lisps and spittle. "That story again, Miss!"
The other kids joined in, begging and clapping. Zulaikha hoped the expression she used to mask her annoyance seemed gentle enough. She certainly wasn't annoyed at the kids―never that!―but at some of their parents.
Last time she'd made up a story about kids having an adventure in Deep Space, there'd been complaints. "You'll scare them," claimed one officious idiot in a raw silk hakama worth more than Zulaikha's entire wardrobe. "Your job is to soothe them, obfuscate their fear of the unknown. They'd be better off taking Daxapril, aware of nothing, than heightening their terror with your cheap attempts at entertainment. Stick with nursery rhymes and coloring books, Miss Akhami."
As much as Zulaikha loved to make up tales, she feared for her job. "Let's read The Stars of Benkin Fields," she offered lamely. It wasn't a very good story, but it fulfilled her mandate to prepare the pupils for their new life in the new galaxy.
"What's the name of our planet?" she asked the class as she pulled the picture book from the shelf.
"Alendara," they answered in a bored chorus.
"That's right!" Zulaikha tried to fill the room with excitement that she didn't feel. Not convinced, the kids squirmed as she read.
It was a quiet boy named Ven who started the revolt. "The Exceptional kids went down the hall," he dared to say, interrupting the official story. Everyone turned to him, even Zulaikha, waiting.
When he looked back at them silently, the girl called Maria jumped in. "They went up to a big door. They opened the door. Inside was a big, scary, um ..."
"Penguin!" shouted a girl in the back. The class squealed with giggles.
"Okay, now. Settle down," Zulaikha commanded kindly, as only an elementary schoolteacher can.
"Tell us about the penguin," begged Danny.
Zulaikha wove her fingers together and nodded. No point in resisting. The kids quieted down. An adventure about a penguin loose on the Exceptional began to take shape in Zulaikha's mind. She saw flashes of the plot: the penguin waddling around the ship's swimming pool with the kids following; the penguin stumbling outside the gravitational zone and finally getting a chance to fly as the children cheered.
"Once upon a time," she said to the wide-eyed kids, "the animals in the Bio-Preserve on a Deep Space ship called Exceptional decided to go exploring." She reached over to pull Maria's fingers out of her mouth as she continued. "The chimpanzees, being very smart, watched the attendants enter the door code. They put bits of banana peel in the latches of their cages so they would slide right open."
"And they got out?" asked Danny.
"Sshh!" warned his classmates, and they turned their bright eyes back to their teacher.
"They did get out," she told them. "And they opened the cages of the weasel, the skunk―," a pause for giggles―, "and the lion."
"Did it eat people?"
Yuko asked in a whisper. The children gasped.
Zulaikha could already hear their parents complain, so she soothed them quickly. "No, no. The lion went to the laundry room and fell asleep on a pile of warm sheets just out of the dryer." Her audience relaxed.
"But the most adventurous of all the animals was the penguin, named Mister Po. Mister Po knew ..."
A strange sensation came over Zulaikha, a mild numbness crawling up the back of her skull. She knew clearly what she wanted to say, that Mr. Po had heard he was flying through space, but he didn't believe penguins could fly. Zulaikha did not say this. Her tongue lay dead in her mouth.
The children kneeled up, begging her to continue, but she could not form a single word.
Medda
"Deep Space systems check," Medda commanded.
"We've already done three today," mumbled Banjeree.
Medda snapped her head toward him. "I wasn't asking you to do anything. As usual." She couldn't understand why she'd felt so infuriated all day.
Banjeree stood before her, his tireless grin spread across his face and his hands folded over his belly. "Captain," he began, "a full systems check is recommended only once in two weeks. With twenty-four months left before we reach the Benkin Fields Galaxy, I would most respectfully point out that such frequent checks might overtax a system that must last two years without recourse to ..."
"I will not tolerate this insubordination!" As soon as she'd barked those words, Medda slapped her hand over her mouth. She'd never before spoken like that to Banjeree. Also, she knew his warning was the reasonable advice of a systems expert concerned for the mission's viability.
The shock on Banjeree's face mirrored what she felt. "I do apologize, Captain," he said hoarsely.
Having no idea how to make up for her outburst, Medda simply said, "Dismissed." Once Banjeree had left the room, she told the computer, "Cancel Deep Space systems scan." The other crew members on the bridge were staring at her, so she pretended to be busy.
Two hours later―two empty hours of staring into the nothingness on the outer monitors―Medda paged Banjeree.
He shuffled in, offering up a weak smile under red-rimmed eyes. "Yes, Captain?"
Medda swallowed a lump of guilt in her throat. She was determined to get their work back on track. "Anomalies report?" she asked, as she did every afternoon.
Banjeree stepped to his work station and keyed in a code. On his screen appeared a chart of colored bars. "Medical," he replied.
The answer surprised Medda. "What sort of medical anomaly?"
"I don't know, Captain. I can see that the medical databases are being used in an unusual way, but can't tell in what way."
Clenching her jaw at the pointless fury pulsing through her, Medda growled, "Then call in Dr. Markel."
Mario Markel was head of Health Services on the Exceptional. That he and Medda weren't well acquainted yet was a sign of how smoothly health services was running.
"You wished to see me, Captain?" Dr. Markel said politely when he showed up on the bridge. He had the lean, leathered look of a man who took excellent care of himself and might be expected to outlive the century mark.
Still jumpy, Medda saw no reason for diplomacy. "Is there a medical problem on this ship?" she demanded loudly.
It took a while for Dr. Markel to answer. He seemed to look through her. Medda watched a bead of sweat form just above his uniform's mandarin collar. Absorbing his tension, she felt her own blood pressure rise. "The truth, Doctor, now."
He nodded, resigned. "There has been an uptick in psych complaints."
The back of Medda's neck prickled. "What kind of psych complaints?"
"A wide array," the doctor replied. "We don't know if they're related. But they all might be loosely categorized as problems with communication and personality."
Medda's vision darkened and the angles in the room sharpened, as if the space were being pressed together. "Explain," she demanded. Dr. Markel rubbed his chin. Medda was sure his slow thoughtfulness would drive her mad. "I need to know," she snapped.
"Er, well." He took a step away from her, which only made her angrier. "A number of people have lost their ability to speak. With some, it happens all at once. In others, the condition is preceded by uncharacteristic emotional displays. One laughed constantly. One sobbed for two hours before going silent. Several suffered from irrational floods of anger or paranoia."
At that moment, Medda caught Banjeree staring at her. "What the hell is your problem?" she shrieked.
Ndu
Ba'al lay under Ndu's desk at Police Central, her long snout resting across her master's foot. Karin Rosen sat cuffed to a chair a few feet away.
Trying to ignore the way Karin's black, curly hair emphasized her brown eyes, Ndu filled out his arrest report. He never had any luck with women, and over the years he'd decided that staying away from them was the best course of action. His job sometimes made that difficult.
He focused on her arrest report. "You're seriously calling this self-defense?" he asked her. "Are you saying Dr. Leung jumped you first or something? There's video coverage everywhere on this ship, so we'll know for sure real soon."
"He attacked all of us," she answered morosely. "I was defending all of us. Defending our honor and our health."
Ndu shook his head. He felt a little sorry for this woman, who seemed unbalanced. "I can give you a number for a lawyer," he reminded her quietly so his colleagues wouldn't hear. It wasn't protocol to encourage a perp to lawyer up and clam up.
"No point in a lawyer," Karin said, slouching low in her chair. "There won't be time for a trial."
"Why you say that? You got an appointment off-ship in the middle of Deep Space?"
It was meant as a joke, but Karin answered seriously. "It's starting already. We'll all be affected soon."
Annoyed but curious, Ndu glanced up from his screen, then down again when Karin's stray lock of hair sent a jolt of desire through him. "What's starting?" he asked as gruffly as he could manage.
"The breakdown."
Ndu rubbed his tired eyes. "Meaning what?"
"Ask Dr. Leung," challenged Karin. "He thinks Deep Space will shut down our brains."
Looking enviously at Ba'al licking her paw without a care in the world, Ndu tried to reason with his prisoner. "That can't be true. We wouldn't be here."
"Soon we won't be," the mysterious young woman said.
Fear compelled Ndu to argue. "Two other ships've gone through to Belkin Fields, and two from there back to Earth. They had all kinds of problems, but shut-down brains? No way."
Karin leaned forward, ready to share a secret. "It's different this time."
"What is?" Ndu asked as he ticked the "Psych issues" box on her form.
Her voice wobbled. "Something's out here in Deep Space. I don't think anyone knows what. I'm just a junior architect, not a scientist. But my dad was an astroneurologist, stationed on the Venture."
Ndu's ears perked up. There would be no Exceptional without research from the space station Venture. "Your dad lived at the edge of the Milky Way?" He looked at Karin. "And you?"
"I grew up on Earth, thanks for asking. Didn't see Dad much." After an uncomfortable silence, she continued. "Anyway, Dad reported to Dr. Leung. And one of the things he reported was a phenomenon they called photic axonal diffusion."
"What?"
"Particles of light acting in a way that affect the nervous system. They had evidence that some kind of damaging light particles, like radiation, was seeping out the edge of the Milky Way. It showed up in both the probes and manned pods they sent out. My father reported that pilots experienced stress on the hippocampus section of the brain, affecting communication, motor skills, personality. Something had changed how those light particles behaved since the previous ships made the journey to and from Belkin Fields."
All the scientific words gave Ndu a headache. "Lady, tell your crazy story to a judge. I just work here."
"You're going to die here, and
it's Dr. Leung's fault. Daddy told Dr. Leung, but he hid the findings. Too much sponsor money at stake. Soon after his report was filed, my dad died on the Venture in mysterious circ—"
Ndu didn't hear the rest of her sentence because a disturbance across the room distracted him. Assuming someone needed help with an unruly prisoner, he hurried toward Lieutenant Baker's office, where a bunch of cops had gathered.
"What's wrong with her?" someone asked. "Call medical."
Pushing his way to the center, Ndu found the Lieutenant herself down on the floor. She was crying openly. With both hands she reached out to the people staring.
"What's wrong, Lieu?" Ndu asked.
"She can't talk," explained another officer. "She just started crying like that. Then down she went, like she forgot how to stand."
"What should we do until medic gets here?" Ndu asked.
"There's nothing you can do."
They all turned to see Karin Rosen straining at her handcuffs. "We're all going to turn into that. And there's no way to stop it." She glared at them fiercely. "We've gone too far."
Zulaikha
Zulaikha stared hopelessly at the crowd of children around her. Twenty-four six-year-olds, and she the only adult. They understood she was sick. They whispered and cried. Some stroked her hair. But none of them knew how to help, and she couldn't tell them.
Her mouth refused to do anything but gape. It was no use trying to point at the emergency intercom to give them the suggestion to call for medical. She'd lost control of her arm. Although it wasn't paralyzed, it seemed to decide how to move, independent of her wishes.
"I'll look at the intercom in an obvious way," she thought, remembering a docu she'd seen about a woman with cerebral palsy who'd "talked" by looking at images. Unfortunately, Zulaikha's eyes had become as unwieldy as her arms. Try as she might to turn them toward the intercom near the door, all she managed was to roll them painfully up into her head.