“Let me finish. I told you before that you would understand when you’re an adult. My parents used to say that to me all the time when I was a kid.” He read Milo’s expression. “I know you’re not a kid, but it’s something adults say to kids when there’s something they can’t understand yet—and there are a lot of those times. This isn’t one of them. None of us wanted you to go through the portal because we would never put your life in danger before our own.”
“Why?”
“Because we’re adults, and we care about you. We’ve had a chance to grow up and become what we are. Yours is a life still to be lived, and it’s more important than ours. This isn’t a military decision, it’s about what’s right and making decisions we can live with. If we chose to put our lives before yours, none of us could live with that. Do you understand?”
“Yes,” Milo said quietly.
“Can I count on you, Milo?”
“You can, Mr. David. For anything.”
When David entered the residential pod, Kate was sitting at the small desk table, scratching her head.
“I know you’re mad at me,” she said.
“I’m not.”
She raised her eyebrows.
“Okay, I was. But I’m not now.”
“Really?”
“Seeing the debris field, this place, it’s made me realize something.”
Kate waited, still suspicious.
“If that signal really is from a potential enemy, and they have some idea where Earth is, we need to make a major move to find help. Assuming there’s anybody left on Earth to save.”
Kate looked at the floor. “I agree. What do you want to do?”
David began pulling his clothes off. “Right now, I want to rest. Then figure out a plan together. I want to start playing offense. This whole time, starting the second I found out you were sick, I’ve been hanging on, trying not to lose you and the remaining time we have. I’ve been scared. I’m still scared, but I think we need to take some risks if we have any chance of coming through this.”
“You were right about one thing,” Kate said.
“Yeah?”
“We should enjoy the time we have left.”
Paul didn’t remember going to sleep; he had been that tired. He opened his eyes and searched for the sound.
Mary stepped out of the shower and casually moved her arm up to cover her chest.
Paul shut his eyes quickly and tried to arrest his now out of control pulse.
“That shower is super weird.”
“Yep,” Paul said, his eyes still closed. “Like a one-person disco with no water.”
Paul could hear her getting her outfit out of the hamper, slipping it on, and sitting in the chair.
“Yeah. Reminded me of a tanning bed.”
He sat up and looked at her curiously.
She shrugged defensively. “I went once. In college, right before spring break. So I wouldn’t burn. And probably because of peer pressure since the other girls—”
Paul raised his hands. “Not judging. I mean, from a health stand-point, it’s an unsafe way to tan. But a small amount of sun daily is quite healthy. The UVB rays convert the cholesterol in your skin into a precursor for vitamin D, which is, in truth, a hormone, not a vitamin. Essential too. Seasonal affective disorder, autoimmune conditions, certain cancers, all dependent on healthy vitamin D levels.”
“Right. Well, I was just saying that I haven’t, you know, changed… I haven’t started tanning or dressing differently. Not that it matters. The dating pool is abysmal in Arecibo, Puerto Rico.”
“Sure. I bet. I don’t think you’ve changed a bit.”
“What does that mean?”
Paul cleared his throat. “I… you’re just the way I remembered you.”
Mary squinted.
“In a good way,” Paul added.
Paul thought the pause that followed lasted at least three or four hours.
“You still work a lot?” Mary asked.
“All the time. Especially the past few years.”
“Me too. Only place I’m happy.” She propped her elbow on the table and ran a hand through her hair. “But I think I get a little less happy every year.”
“I know the feeling. Few years ago, after…”
Mary nodded. “Did you ever get remarried?”
“Me? No. The other astronomer I met… is he, were you two…?”
“No. God, no. I’m not seeing anyone.” She paused for a moment. “Is there a woman in your life?”
Paul tried to sound casual. “Not really.” Not really?
“Oh.” Mary looked surprised.
“I mean, I live with someone, but—”
Mary reeled back.
“No, it’s not like that.”
“Right.”
“She just came home with me after work one day.”
Mary looked away. “I figured that’s how it would happen for you.”
“No, that’s not what I mean.”
Mary began chewing the inside of her lip—one of her habits Paul knew well.
Paul cleared his throat. “It’s actually quite simple. We have a kid—”
Mary’s mouth fell open.
“Well, it’s not my kid. Or it is now. He is. He’s not an it. His name is Matthew.”
“Matthew’s a good name.”
“Yes, of course, wonderful, wonderful name. But Matthew isn’t my biological offspring—well genetically we’re related, but he’s—”
“I think we should get some rest.”
Kate lay still beside David, thinking, unable to sleep. Against her will, her mind continuously pored over what she knew, searching for a clue, some string to pull that might unravel the next piece. She instinctively felt there was a detail she was missing, a key just out of reach.
David snored a bit but stopped. Kate marveled at the man’s ability to sleep—even when they were in imminent danger, as they had been for, well pretty much as long as they had known each other. To Kate, David seemed to be able to simply turn his brain off and sleep on command whenever he needed to. Was that a learned trait? From years of battling enemies in covert warfare? Or was he born that way? There was so much about him she still didn’t know. Would never know. Didn’t have the time to learn.
The thought made Kate slightly remorseful about what she knew was coming. Part of her wanted David to wake up, but more of her wanted him to rest.
She slipped out of bed, pulled some clothes on, and quietly shuffled out of the room, down the dark, ominous corridor of the military beacon to the communications bay.
Where to start? Janus: he had chosen this beacon for a reason. Why? What was special about it? A battle had happened here. Had Kate’s Atlantean counterpart seen it?
The memory archive revealed the answer: No.
In fact, the memories Janus had stored here began thousands of years after the beacon was placed here. Kate’s counterpart had never even been here.
She decided to back up. She queried the computer, seeking the historical records relating to the debris field.
All information related to the Serpentine battlefield is classified according to The Citizen Security Act.
Serpentine battlefield. Classified.
Thirty minutes of searching the computer hadn’t revealed any more information. In fact, she was almost right where she had started. This beacon was devoid of any information, and there seemed to be no clues. Was it on purpose? To protect against any enemies reaching it and accessing its data core? Was that Janus’ motive? Had he sent the memories here because there was nothing else to find? That would have been clever. And he was clever.
Kate was about to leave the bay when the screen faded, and a red box began flashing. White block letters read:
Incoming Communication
Kate gripped the table to keep herself from fainting.
CHAPTER 31
Reliving Ares’ memories had been torture for Dorian, but the Atlantean food was almost as bad.
He and Victor sat in the storage room on silver crates, consuming orange gel the Atlanteans deemed “food.”
“Stuff’s terrible,” Victor said.
“Very astute,” Dorian mumbled, finishing his bag.
“What are we gonna do?”
“Guess we’ll have to rip them a new one on the comment card.”
Victor looked confused. Actually, Dorian was beginning to think that was just how Victor looked.
“Where you going?” Victor asked as Dorian strode out into the corridor.
“Homework,” he said, closing the doors to the communications bay.
Dorian dreaded starting the next memory, but he had no choice. Learning the truth about Ares, about the enemy beyond the beacon was his world&rs