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Black and White

Page 25

by Mark Wandrey


  “It feels so good,” Terry said when she rejoined him. It was already warm enough that many were removing some of their extra layers. Terry set aside one of the two jackets he’d been wearing.

  “It sure does,” she agreed. “You get any food yet?”

  “Still waking up,” he said and yawned.

  “How do you feel?”

  Terry flexed his arms and nodded. “Better,” he said.

  She nodded and flexed her own arms. “Me, too. In fact, everyone seems to be getting there.”

  Their nominal medical staff had done everything they could to accelerate the acclimation process, but mostly it involved letting people adjust. Each day the pressure had gotten higher, until they were the equivalent of one kilometer down. Science had figured out how to allow people to acclimate much deeper, though it would take months. Coming up would be just as hard. The pressure would now only increase a few PSI per day.

  “Any luck with the rotten fish smell?” he asked.

  “They found a scent dispersal system,” she said.

  “You mean it stinks on purpose?” he asked. She nodded. They’d thought there must be a huge cache of rotten fish left behind by the Selroth. Now it looked like they liked the smell and had done it on purpose.

  “They’ve turned one off, but there must be another.”

  Luckily for everyone, they’d brought their own autochefs and supplies. The food was at least pretty good, even if some of the prepackaged stuff had imploded the previous day. Afterward, the cooks had taken measures to prevent any more losses until they could get local food processing properly.

  After he’d eaten, he got up. “I have to go check on Pōkole,” he said.

  “Dr. Jaehnig says he’s doing fine,” she said.

  “Yeah, he’s used to the feeding system. Little guy just misses me.”

  “Don’t forget, classes this afternoon.” Terry rolled his eyes. “Be there, young man.”

  “Fine,” he said and left. His mother yelled something after him, but Terry pretended not to hear her.

  Leaving the mess hall, he went down two levels to the main floor, where he could see the dome. Their entire habitat was built inside a dome made from a single piece of ruby formed by the Izlians deep inside a gas giant. The technicians explained it was a molecular matrix that would handle almost any pressure difference. Regardless, it was hard to believe the water pushing on it was over 100 kilograms per square centimeter.

  “One tiny crack,” he said, looking at the dome.

  Even so, the view was worth it. Thousands of lights were placed all around the dome at regular intervals, providing light during daytime hours. By projecting the light out, the brightly illuminated water created a more natural glow in the dome’s interior. Outside, a pair of orcas swam past, too far away for Terry to tell who it might be. In addition, a dizzying array of native fish swam everywhere.

  The native fish were blind, never having evolved eyes two kilometers under the ice. Instead, they possessed many varied ways of sensing their environment. These ranged from incredibly delicate pressure sensors on many, including the larger predators, to feelers. Many of the plant-eating fish sported a fan of ridiculously long feelers that reminded Terry of a mustache, used to find plant life along the many common volcanic vents.

  The dome was built on the flattened top of an extinct undersea volcano. It was within a hundred meters of the ice, which extended for two kilometers above their heads; the melt shaft another hundred meters to the side. They weren’t directly under the shaft, so if an accident happened, it wouldn’t sink directly onto the dome, which wasn’t indestructible.

  As they were still working to get the habitat fully operational, the mines weren’t yet a priority. They were scattered all around the habitat in every direction at varying depths, from a few hundred meters below them to several kilometers.

  Inside the dome, their habitat was a series of buildings, varying from the five-story living quarters he was just leaving to the ten-story administrative and control systems building whose roof met the top center of the dome. Several smaller buildings were dotted around as well. He was heading for the one tasked as cetacean care, a two-story sprawling building with one of the habitat’s three locks.

  As he walked to the building, he passed a bunch of kids playing a kickball game. They were all younger, and seemed oblivious to both the view and the fact they were under the ice on an alien moon. They were just happy to be off the starships and to have ground under their feet, even if it was volcanic stone. The group noticed him and waved. Somehow, he’d become famous among the children.

  The cetacean care building, dubbed the CC, was where Dr. Jaehnig had set up. As their sole cetacean-qualified physician, he was also their main Human doctor. Since he was forced to wear two hats, he wanted to be closer to those who would need him more.

  The doors to the building were open, though a sign proclaimed, “The Doctor is Out.” Dr. Jaehnig had a staff of five others, two fully-trained medical techs and three nurses, one of whom was learning to be a doctor. Terry knew the medical staff was one of their biggest concerns.

  Terry went in and through the small waiting area into the back of the first floor, where Dr. Jaehnig had his office. The physician looked up and smiled when he saw who his visitor was.

  “Good morning, Mr. Clark,” he said.

  Being called Mister made Terry feel strange. His father was Mr. Clark. “Morning, Dr. Jaehnig. How are your patients?”

  “They’re fine,” he said. “The robot feeder is doing its job, and the cetaceans are continuing to eat their way through everything they can find that swims.”

  Despite being thousands of meters under the ice, Hoarfrost had evolved a wide variety of marine life. Most of it was various plants feeding off large amounts of nutrients ejected from deep sea vents, tiny animals feeding on those, and on up. The largest aquatic animal was a dinosaur-looking fish a meter long, which fed on smaller dinosaur-looking fish. At least until the Selroth had come along.

  Terry caught movement out of the corner of his eye. One entire wall of the building was constructed against the ruby dome. Outside, one of the Floot flashed into view. It smashed into the wall and ricocheted off at an angle. No sound of the impact passed through the super-hard ruby wall. The Floot was classified as closest to the genus Chelonia, the green turtle. Except the Floot had six flippers and a long flexible neck, which could retreat into the shell, and a flippered tail for extra power.

  A second after the Floot swam away, one of the orcas appeared in hot pursuit. Dr. Jaehnig shook his head and made a note in one of his slates. “They haven’t figured out how to eat the Floots yet, but they keep trying.”

  Hunting the native life proved easy, since they were all blind. The Floot had been imported by the Selroth. Apparently they’d brought their own sea creatures for food and amusement. The marine biologists had been horrified to learn this fact, saying the damage to the biosphere was probably irreversible.

  Dr. Patel was working on a study of the various Selroth species they’d encountered. He’d assembled a list from the GalNet of creatures from the aliens’ home world and was marking them off as each was located. To this point they hadn’t seen an Oohobo, a large predatory species native to the Selroth planet.

  Terry looked at some of the Tri-V displayed details on Selroth marine species, noting their eyes shared similar characteristics—silvery with red rims and two irises. A strange and cool evolutionary adaptation.

  Another of Dr. Jaehnig’s Tri-Vs was showing a dissected local fish with descriptions pointing to various parts and organs. Terry could hear Dr. Patel’s voice speaking as the dissection proceeded.

  “Have they brought in any new fish today?” he asked.

  “One of the bottlenoses, Hula, did a few hours ago. It was chewed up a bit, though.” He gestured to a table, and Terry went over to look at it.

  “It’s got legs,” he said.

  “Looks like it,” Dr. Jaehnig said. “Not my special
ty. Patel will look at it this afternoon.” The scientist glanced over at another slate. “You going to handle feeding Pōkole?”

  “Yes,” Terry said. Dr. Jaehnig nodded and went back to watching the video and putting bits of fish into test tubes.

  Terry walked though several doors and down a corridor to the lock area. Of the city’s three locks, only two were currently working. One of them was the submarine bay, which was still slowly transporting equipment down from the surface at the rate of one trip a day. The other was in CC, and acted as the center of all underwater operations.

  As soon as he entered the moon pool room, he saw Doc and his crew were already there. “Hey, guys!” he said.

  “What’s up, kiddo?” Doc asked, glancing up from their project. All seven mercs were working on a series of big robots hanging from frameworks. They hadn’t been there yesterday.

  “Robots?” he asked.

  “Not quite,” Doc said. “We’ll show you soon.”

  “Aw, come on?”

  “Chill, kid,” Honcho said, flipping up a welding mask to glance at him.

  “Yeah,” Hutch said. He and Peyton weren’t helping much; they were playing cards, as usual.

  “You never said if you’ll be leaving for any other contracts,” Terry said, hoping to change course and keep his eyes on what they were doing.

  “Not sure yet,” Doc said while looking at a slate Terry couldn’t see.

  “Going to take us three days to decompress from here,” Tina said and shrugged. “Plus we have to rely on passive comms so nobody knows we’re here.”

  “Go feed the fish, kid,” Toothpick said, gesturing with his head toward the moon pool.

  Reluctantly, Terry turned and headed over toward the moon pool. He glanced back once but still couldn’t see anything. What the heck are they working on? he thought.

  He reached the pool, and Pōkole immediately surfaced and chirped at him. “Hey, buddy,” Terry said, “how you doing?” The young orca bobbed his head up and down quickly. He’d become much more expressive in the last few weeks before arriving on Hoarfrost, though Terry could tell he also missed his mom.

  A movement drew his attention, and he saw Moloko floating just outside the lock. She had part of a dead sea creature and was playing with it. The life was so abundant around their habitat, the colonists were eating the stores put back for the cetaceans, because they didn’t need it. Terry touched the transmit on his translator.

  “Good morning, Moloko.”

  “Morning, Warden Terry,” she replied. “How Pōkole?”

  “He is fine, but misses you.” Terry took the ready bottle, and the calf greedily drank.

  “How now soon?”

  “Nine days,” Terry said, after checking his slate to be sure. The pressure equalization was slower because of the Humans, which was hard for the cetaceans to understand. “Where are the rest of the orcas?” he asked.

  “They go.”

  “Where?”

  “Explore.”

  “Oh,” he said. This was the first he’d heard about them exploring. “What are they looking for?”

  “Shool!”

  They’re looking for their god? Terry thought. “How are they looking?”

  “Call into deep. Wait. Listen.”

  “Have they heard anything back?”

  “Not yet.”

  An hour later he was finished with Pōkole and headed back out. Doc and his people were nowhere in sight, and neither was their project. He made a face as he casually looked around the equipment bay, only finding random tools and testing equipment.

  He must have still been scowling a few minutes later when he ran into his mom as he was heading toward the classroom area.

  “What’s wrong?” she asked.

  “Nothing,” he lied. She gave him her stern mom face. “The orcas are looking for their god, and Doc and the guys are up to something and won’t tell me what.”

  “As for their god, that’s up to them,” she said and shrugged. “Dr. Orsage thinks it’s therapeutic for them, being isolated from the sky and Earth.”

  “I guess that makes sense,” Terry agreed.

  “Yeah, it’s probably harmless. As for Doc and his guys hiding things from you, how horrible,” she said with a smile, which did nothing to reduce his saltiness.

  “Everyone says I’m important. Why are they keeping secrets from me?”

  “Only a couple get to know everything going on, and I’m sorry to say you aren’t one of them.” He looked down, embarrassed. “You’re a huge help, but you don’t have to know everything. You’re not old enough to be responsible.”

  “I know,” he said, feeling like a grade-school kid.

  “As one of those who knows everything going on, I can guarantee you’ll be quite excited by what the guys are working on.” He brightened up, hoping she was about to spill the beans. “That said, aren’t you going to be late for your first class?”

  He checked his watch. She was right, class started in five minutes. “Yeah,” he said.

  “Get going, you’ll find out soon enough.” She continued in the direction she’d been heading.

  * * * * *

  Chapter 2

  Hoarfrost, Lupasha System, Coro Region, Tolo Arm

  January 13th, 2038

  Life gradually got better in the habitat as more and more systems were made operational. The mechanical team under Melissa spent less time racing between urgent jobs and more time concentrating on long-term goals. The temperature and humidity settled into something more to the liking of the staff, who’d spent many years in Hawaii.

  The orcas never found Shool, which was no surprise to their Human wardens. They also never stopped looking. Terry thought they were incredibly patient. If anything, they seemed more convinced Shool was out there, somewhere.

  “Maybe Shool is beyond,” the bottlenose Hula suggested one day.

  Again with hyperspace, Terry thought. “What do the orcas think of that idea?” Terry asked her.

  “They say we crazy.”

  School wasn’t as lame as Terry had feared it would be. As one of the 12 kids who were high school aged, they were largely self-paced in their studies. He was assigned objectives and could complete them as quickly as he wished. He also got to work on his pinplant research and got credit for that as well, which was cool.

  Despite missing Yui, he found himself making friends. He only recognized one of the boys from his age group; they’d played on different summer baseball teams. They all seemed to know him. Suddenly he was the cool kid, and he had absolutely no idea why.

  Some of the things they got to do was help out around the habitat on work projects. The air was no longer filled with the smell of rotting fish, but a lot of junk had been left behind by the Selroth when they’d abandoned the place. Tons of it, actually. First the kids helped gather it in assigned areas. Next they helped clean, which wasn’t as fun. Then they initiated a beautification project, which meant painting. The Selroth hadn’t bothered with anything more than priming the metal buildings. Compared to the big ruby dome, the rest of the place was lame.

  The adults handled the majority of the painting project because some heavy equipment was involved. Where the kids got involved was putting up murals on some of the buildings’ larger walls. By the end of the second week, a dozen different designs were coming to life. The high schoolers’ mural was on the side of the CC building, a stylized habitat inside its ruby dome with orcas and dolphins playing outside.

  “Reminds me of that Captain Nemo movie,” someone said. A short time later the movie in question was located. Captain Nemo and the Underwater City. Along with exabytes of data from Earth, they also had thousands of movies; the one in question was included. The same evening after dinner, a new tradition was born—movie night.

  Some popcorn was produced, and the autochef made soda pop and candy for the kids. The main administration building still had a four-story wall painted white, and the movie was projected on the wall.
/>   Terry found the special effects of the mid-20th century laughable, as you might imagine they would be. Still, having nearly the entire group together sharing snacks and watching the film together was a fun experience. Doc and his mom sat on either side of him, and he pretended not to notice when they held hands behind his chair. It felt good.

  “Hey,” Doc said about halfway through the movie. A giant manta ray was menacing a submarine. “I think we have the name of this place.”

  “What’s that?” Terry’s mom asked.

  The view on the screen changed to show the underwater city. Sure enough, it looked a lot like what Terry and his fellow high schoolers were painting. “Templemer,” he said. It was pronounced Temple-mere. She looked at him, then slowly nodded.

  “I like it,” she said, “not as pretentious as Atlantis would have been.”

  Terry had heard a few people joking about living in Atlantis. He had to think what would make Atlantis pretentious. Unable to figure it out, he decided he liked Templemer. “I think it’s a great idea,” he said. By the next morning, everyone was calling their home Templemer. The head doctors voted on it later, but there was really no need. They could’ve called it Mount Olympus, and everyone would have kept calling it Templemer. Their home had a name.

  The next morning was the 13th, and a big day. All the head doctors met Terry in the moon pool, where Pōkole was swimming excitedly, around and around. Outside the lock, his pod floated, watching and waiting. Moloko was front and center.

  Terry was already wearing his drysuit, as were his mother and Dr. Jaehnig. Both of them were already in the water trying to corral Pōkole.

  “Can you help?” his mother asked in frustration. “The little guy is all worked up.”

  “Just excited about the big day,” Terry said.

  “How would he know?” Dr. Orsage asked. “The calf is only 7 months old.”

  “Oh, he knows,” Terry assured her. “His mom wants him to get the pinplants now.”

  “We’ve been over this,” Dr. Jaehnig said. “We want to make sure the calf is acclimated to Hoarfrost before undergoing the procedure.”

 

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