Falling Sky (11 page)

Read Falling Sky Online

Authors: Rajan Khanna

BOOK: Falling Sky
10.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Then I walk outside. Rex comes trotting up to me. I reach out to him and stroke him lightly on the head where he's thankfully free of blood. He may just be the last horse left in the world. A magnificent animal who deserves to be cared for. Only . . . I'm not the one to do it.

I step back, pull my revolver, and shoot Rex in the head.

He dies quickly. Quicker than he would by starving to death. Or getting some strange horse disease from not being cared for properly.

It's then that I do retch. I bend over, gagging, vomiting all over the ground. The truly sad thing is that in any other situation, I would have cut poor Rex up into little pieces. Packed that meat away for later eating. You don't let that much meat go.

But there's the possibility that he's got the Bug all over him. Viktor assured me that it doesn't affect horses, but it does affect humans. And I can't eat anything with the Bug all over it.

When I'm done, I walk to the ladder and leave the ground behind.

Sergei gives me a strong handshake and a pat on the back when he sees me. His face looks tired, haunted. Like he saw his home, his safe place destroyed before his eyes, which he did. I know the feeling. When there's no place to go back to.

Clay nods at me with a look like he just ate something rancid. I suppose in a way he did.

Miranda clears away some things in the gondola to make room for me. The gondola of the
Pasteur
is by no means small, but much of it has traditionally been used for research. Now it's the remaining store of the Core's data and it's covered in papers and small solar-powered devices that I have no names for.

With all that, it's suitable for about two people. Three, in a pinch. Four is pushing it. We'll be jammed up tight against one another. But we're in the air, and I'll take it.

“We lost a lot,” Miranda says. “Too much. But I have most of the latest data here. Luckily I brought it with me to review. And we have Subject Alpha. I suppose it could have been worse.” She says it nonchalantly, like she just didn't have everything taken away from her. And suddenly I feel like such a baby. But I also worry.

“Have you been in touch with any of the others?” I say. “At least two of the dirigibles got away.”

Sergei shakes his head. “We've been listening for them, but nothing. Though with everything that's happened, they may be maintaining radio silence.”

“What exactly did happen?” Clay asks. He makes it sound like an accusation. Like I was in on it somehow. But they deserve an answer.

“I was heading west and had a run-in with another airship set upon by raiders. Gastown raiders. I helped them with that particular problem, and they mentioned, after a fashion, that they saw other ships heading in the direction of the Core. I was worried, so I set back to try to warn everyone. I got there ahead of them, but . . .”

“But what?” Clay says.

“They came in soon afterward. With Ferals on hooks.” Sergei and Miranda both go pale. They were there on Gastown when the raiders attacked. They saw the horror there.

“At our place?” Miranda says. Her hand curls into a shaking fist.

I nod. “I tried to get to the
Cherub
, but . . .” I rub a hand over my face. “They took it. So I ran for the Ferrari. Took that instead.”

“Why didn't you take anyone else with you?” Clay says. “Why didn't you grab any of the data? The equipment?”

I stand up. Take a step toward him. “You weren't there, Clay, so just shut the fuck up. It was chaos. You think I'd know what to grab? Which stack of papers or which hunk of metal was important? And if I had, I'd likely be dead in the Core along with everyone else.”

“So you ran,” he says.

Pressure builds behind my eyes and I'm moving, bringing my arm up. Then Sergei has his hand on me, pulling me back, and Miranda's up off her seat and stepping between us.

“Ben's right, Clay,” she says. “Sergei and I have seen this before. There wasn't anything he could've done. And we just have to deal with the fact that we lost . . . excuse me.” She pushes away and moves to the back room of the gondola.

I follow her, pretending Clay isn't there. Because if he's there, I'm going to have to hit him.

Miranda slides to the ground and puts her face in her hands. Then her shoulders shake, and choking noises come from her throat.

I sink down next to her, and it's my turn to put my arm around her. She feels so small next to me. So fragile. I know she's not. I know that inside of her is this core of hard steel. A core I helped to harden. But right now she feels like glass and I want to pull her against me and hold her tight. But I don't. I don't move away either.

“It's all gone,” she says.

“It's not all gone. You have some stuff here. The others might have managed to salvage more. And you have that loaded gun in your cargo bay, crazy as you are.”

She cracks a thin smile at that, knowing how much it unnerves me. “What do we do now?” she asks.

I shrug. “We'll think of something. We always do.”

She looks up at me, her eyes red and wet behind her glasses. “But for how long? How long can we do this? How long can we take all of this?”

I place a hand on the side of her face. “For as long as we have to.”

“I don't know if I can.”

“I'll help you,” I say. And it surprises me. “C'mon. Let's get back in there. Figure out what we're going to do. It will make you feel better.” I stand up, help pull her to her feet. She hugs me, clinging to me, and the scent of her, that smell I can't place, is all in my nostrils. And she's warm and solid against me. And my body responds of its own accord and I gasp. We stay like that for a moment. Then we pull away. She gives me a little smile and we return back to the others.

“What now?” Sergei says.

“We should go back. See what we can salvage,” Clay says.

“No,” I say. “They may be watching the place. And if they're not there now, they will be soon. You can never stay there again. It's too vulnerable.”

“Then where are we supposed to go? We have a Feral aboard.”

“Oh, I'm aware,” I say. “I'm very fucking aware.” Then it clicks into place. I smile. “I know where we can go.”

They all look at me.

“Just before the shit went down,” I say, “I got word of a new city out there. They're not advertising their presence, of course, but I think I can get us in. We just have to head out to San Diego.”

“Not advertising is a good idea considering what's going on,” Miranda says.

“Right. But so far they've escaped notice. I ran into a couple of their people before the attack. I think they might let us hole up there. At least temporarily while we consider our next move. We can refresh our supplies, too.”

“Well, we'll need to find a place to study Alpha,” Miranda says.

“That's going to be the tricky part,” I say. “A live Feral? That's not going to be a popular addition to any community.”

“We'll just have to see what they say,” Sergei says.

“We can't lead with the fucking Feral,” I say.

“You want to lie to them?” Clay asks.

“No. But give them one big reason to turn us away and they will. We need to play it more carefully than that. They're going to want to see the thing, see how you have it contained, at the very least.”

“That's fine,” Miranda says. “He's contained and rigged so that we can test him with minimal exposure.”

“Is that all documented?” I ask.

“Not yet,” she says.

“Then get it written down. The more we have to show these people, the better.”

“If they can read,” Clay says.

“Someone will be able to read,” I say. “Just do it.”

“I'll get on that,” Sergei says.

I pause for a moment. Then I say words I didn't think I would hear come from my mouth. “You need to show me.”

“What?” Miranda says.

“The Feral.”

I don't think Miranda's eyebrows can go higher than they go right now.

“I know, I know,” I say. “I don't really want to look at this thing, but if it's staying on this ship, I want to make sure I check out its . . . accommodations.”

Miranda stands. “You're sure?”

“No. But I need to do this.”

“Let's go, then,” she says.

And she takes me into the cargo bay.

The
Pasteur
's cargo bay is a little odd. The
Cherub
was built for carrying things, and her cargo bay is secure and pressurized and you could sleep in there if you wanted to. The
Pasteur
's cargo bay has been rigged and re-rigged. Sometimes they haul equipment in it. Sometimes it's been a mobile lab. The farther you get from the gondola, the more into the superstructure you get, and the colder it gets as you're nearer the envelope. The boffins seem to like this; they can get into the guts of the ship if they need to, rig machines up to the solar cells, things like that. Once I even saw them run wind power off the outside of the ship into it. At least until it broke down.

All of this means that the Feral is closer to the gondola than I'd like. But if it were to be a bit farther out, it might not survive. Which is fine with me, but not with Miranda. And right now she's calling the shots.

They have their Feral in a cage, rigged with mesh like I'd suggested. But they were smart enough to rig the tranq gun up to the cage, behind a sliding panel so that they can easily take it down without having to dismantle anything.

“Aren't you worried that you'll have to tranq it too much?”

“That's what the cage is for,” Miranda says. “We won't need to until we land. Then we can study him more easily. I can maybe rig up some storage for his blood.”

Those words make me light-headed.

“I don't feel good about doing this, keeping him like this, but we need him.”

Leave it to Miranda to worry about the well-being of a Feral.

I move closer to the cage. “Well, Alpha,” I say. “Let me get a good look at you.”

The Feral's hair is long and messy, like most of its kind. It hangs down around its face like a bird's nest pulled to shit. Caught in its hair are leaves and other bits and pieces. I try not to think too hard about what else might be in there.

Its chest is covered with the tattered remnants of what might have been a shirt. It's little more than shredded cloth now, but it remains bound around its shoulders and neck. That's one of the weird things about Ferals. Some of them keep their clothes. Or maybe they're just not very good at getting rid of them.

I wish Alpha had kept more. He's naked below the waist, his skin smeared with dirt, his cock hanging there for all the world to see. As I move up to him, he's playing with himself, falling back on the primitive pleasures of the flesh in a time of stress, perhaps.

When he sees me, however, his attitude changes. He forgets his erection and changes from his prior lax pose into something tense and coiled. His lips roll back from his teeth and he growls at me. My hand drops to my holster out of reflex and I have to will myself to stop from pulling it out and shooting Alpha through the head.

Other books

Under Dark Sky Law by Tamara Boyens
Obsession (Year of Fire) by Bonelli, Florencia
The Lemon Tree by Helen Forrester
Abandoned by Lee Shepherd
Fire and Flame by Breton, Anya
How Not To Fall by Emily Foster
Portrait of a Girl by Binkert, Dörthe