“Have you seen my shoes?” The quarters didn’t have that many places to hide things, especially since everything seemed welded in place. Perhaps someone had taken them. But why?
She noticed a white swab sticking out from one of a myriad holes in the meaty part of his forearm. Well, where the meat would be if he had any. “What did you find in the goo?”
Doc snapped the protruding end off the swab and shut the smooth arch of skin. “I need to analyze it further.”
“Is there a problem?” Nell peered closer, looking for seams in his skin. The only thing she detected were the normal creases cutting across the joints at his elbow and wrist. If she hadn’t seen his arm open, she would never have known about the compartment. She stopped staring and looked him in the face. What did the Syn-En’s teeth hide?
“No problems.” Doc’s smile widened as he escorted her to the bathroom. “In fact, the goo as you call it, seems to have done a remarkable job of keeping you healthy, even reversing if not halting the aging process.”
“Really?” Nell faced her reflection in the bathroom mirror. Faint crow’s feet radiated from her eyes. Laugh lines bracketed her lips. The same blue eyes stared back, the same upturned nose. Her bottom lip was still too big and her top lip too small. She looked good for a hundred-sixty-year old, but not any different than when she’d entered the Save Our World’s office. Worry made quotation marks over the bridge of her nose.
“I’m not going to age rapidly now that I’m out of stasis, am I? You know like Mel Gibson did in
Forever Young
?” Nell gripped the sides of the mirror to steady herself. Good lord, wasn’t there a character on TV who measured everything in life by movies and shows? She definitely was getting her head examined. Using her fingers, she tightened the skin covering her cheeks. “I mean, I don’t look any younger than I remember. Maybe it has already started.”
Doc Cabo opened a drawer from the built-in to the left of the mirror and pulled out her boots and socks. “I doubt it. Indeed, you may stay the same relative age for the next six decades.”
“I’ll be forty for another sixty years?” Nell’s mind reeled with the implications. She’d look pretty good for a two hundred and twenty years old. Her friends would kill for such a beauty secret. Sighing, Nell felt loneliness press against her. Her friends and family didn’t care what they looked like, they were dead and given Doc’s predictions, she might outlast another generation. Damn. Perhaps this agelessness wasn’t a gift but a curse.
“Given the self-repairing capabilities of your genes, you’ll be twenty-five for the next sixty years.” Doc held out the boots to her.
God that sucked, especially since this time she’d get to watch everyone around her die of old age. Nell retrieved her shoes and, folding her knees slowly, sank to the floor. Absently, she registered that the closer she came to sitting, the faster she dropped.
It’s the magnetic attraction. The nearer you are to the current in the floor, the stronger the pull
, her mother explained.
On impulse, Nell turned the boots over. Sandwiched between layers in the one inch soles, she spied the wafer thin layers of metal. After gingerly setting the shoes on the floor, she lifted the right one up and felt the resistance along her muscles. Once again her mother/conscience was right, but Nell couldn’t quite trust it completely. “You say twenty-five. Beijing said I looked thirty-five. You guys sure are a bunch of flatterers.”
“I would judge the admiral’s assessment of your outward age to be correct.” Kneeling next to her, Doc tugged a rolled up pair of socks out of the boots. “I speak of the relative age of your telomeres. If my tests are correct, then your genetic material became younger while you slept.”
Younger, but still old. Who could have accomplished such a thing? And how did they get so advanced during the age of budget cuts and downsizing? Nell tugged the silky socks over her feet before stepping inside the boots and folding over the metal flaps, magnetically sealing her feet inside. “But I thought I’d thrown up all that blue stuff.”
“Apparently you absorbed enough of that blue stuff to trigger a response in every cell in your body.”
“How is that possible?” Nell pushed off the floor, stood up, and then lifted her right leg. Her muscles trembled as she continued to hold it up and she hopped a bit to maintain her balance. It felt the same as she remembered on Earth, although just a little bit sticky like walking on fly paper. She let her leg drop. Her foot hit the deck with a satisfying thud. Yes. She could walk again. Nell strode out of the bathroom then stopped. “Wait a minute. You said telomeres, right? Isn’t that some genetic code that shortens every time it’s copied until it breaks down?”
“Yes.” Doc Cabo smoothed his black eyebrows. “Are you medically trained?”
“No.” Nell flopped down in the barrel chair. It squeaked as it adjusted to her weight. She lifted her arm, felt the slight attraction and set it down in her lap. Never again would she curse gravity. Well, maybe she would when she had to start rolling up her breasts and stuffing them inside her bra. “I’m Science Channel trained. They had a special on Dolly.”
Doc sat on the edge of the bed. “Dolly?”
“The sheep—the first animal—cloned by scientists that survived. Even when she was a year old, her telomeres were as short as the original sheep, meaning she was as old as her mom.” Nell made quotation marks in the air with her fingers. She wasn’t exactly sure who was Dolly’s mom, the one whose udder scraping the scientists inserted into the empty egg, or the ewe who’d given birth. Not that it mattered. “Dolly died of lung cancer at six, half her anticipated lifespan. The scientists said the cancer had taken out most of the flock she’d been living with, but what kind of cancer is contagious? It had to be the telomere age thing.”
Doc shrugged. “No cancer is contagious that I’m aware. But certain factors can increase the likelihood of passing it along.”
Nell waved her hand. Facts only clouded the issue. “When Dolly was born, there were oodles of stories about cloning organs so your body wouldn’t reject them. But when she died at such a young age, everyone believed that a cloned kidney, heart or lung would be just as old and decrepit as the one a person already had.”
Doc laced his fingers together, considering her words. “So cloning replacement organs would be a waste of resources.”
Nell stared at the back of her hands, focusing on the scar running across her knuckles. Would a clone have scars? Not likely, but what did she know? This conversation had sown an unpleasant idea and her stomach churned at the thought. “Do you think I could be a clone?”
When Doc shook his head, a black curl tumbled across his forehead. “Cloning is not just illegal; it is also punishable by death.”
Nell grimaced. Her inner voice remained quiet on the subject. Obviously, she’d need to brush up on recent history. Too bad she hated the subject. “That seems a little harsh.”
Doc shrugged, but an emotion flashed across his face and left before Nell could identify it. “Those that challenge the authorities often receive harsh penalties.”
Doc remained silent and concentrated on scanning her with the green diagnostic beam shooting out of his palm.
Nodding, Nell waited for something to happen. Leaning back in her chair, she counted to ten, then twenty. At one hundred and thirty-five, she smoothed the wisps of hair floating around her head and tucked them into the metal scrunchie confining her hair. Doc watched the movement.
Nell stared back at him, drumming her fingers on the armrest as boredom built inside her. “Are you certain I don’t have any space parasites feeding information to my brain?”
His full lips quirked. “If such a thing existed, politicians would be required to be infected.”
She smiled back. At least, his sense of humor hadn’t been replaced with a computer chip. “Then why are you watching me so closely? I mean you probably have other things to do. Blue goo to analyze more thoroughly.”
Shrugging, Doc set his hand over the storage compartment in his forearm. “I’ve been ordered to watch over you. It is the least we can do to repay you for coming to save us.”
They don’t trust you
.
Like she needed her mom to tell her that.
You must get them to trust you. It is the only way to fulfill your mission.
What is my mission
? No answer. How top secret could a mission be that even those performing it were kept in the dark? And what chance did she have of fulfilling it, if she didn’t know what to do?
Instinct
.
The fine, blonde hair on Nell’s arms stood on end. Instinct was something done without thought, because it was so well ingrained in the brain. Could it cause her to do something she didn’t want to?
Make yourself useful.
What can I do? I doubt the admiral needs to dictate a letter or have copies made.
You can tend the ill. Given the damage to this ship, there are bound to be injured
.
Images flooded her consciousness. Setting bones, replacing neural nodes, rebooting Syn-En software programs. Things she’d never done but now seemed to know by rote. How was that possible? This new
instinct
went far beyond fight or flight reflex.
Doc touched her hand. His skin was hot compared to hers. “Nell? Do you need to lie down again?”
She needed to find out what was inside her head. To do so required leaving this room before she lost her mind. Maybe, she could help them and herself at the same time. “I’m fine, but I’m sure there are sick people who need you.”
A muscle ticked in Doc’s jaw and he avoided eye contact with her.
Crap. She’d been right. Like hundreds of cockroaches, guilt skittered across her skin. She would help the Syn-En after she did one teensy thing for herself. “You do have sick to tend. Go. I’ll tell the admiral I sent you away.”
Doc chuckled, but scratched the dark stubble on his chin. “The admiral is in charge.”
“So you’re not to leave me alone.” Nell managed not to flinch. Even though she knew Beijing didn’t trust her, it still hurt to hear it in so many words. How could she ever have thought he might be attracted to her? She tried to shrug it off, but couldn’t help thinking there was something between them. The familiarity of knowing someone you just met. “Okay. I’ll go with you.”
“I don’t know…” Despite Doc’s words, a spark flared in his brown eyes.
Nell shrugged off her guilt. Being a twenty-second century Rip Van Winkle, she would like to be useful and busy. “Did Beijing say I couldn’t leave his quarters?”
The admiral’s name tasted sweet on her tongue and just a little bit naughty. A carnal ache infused her at the mere thought of him. Maybe she should take a cold shower.
Doc shook his head. “You are not confined to quarters.”
Pressing her advantage, Nell pushed out of her chair and stood. “Well then, let’s go.”
Doc remained sitting.
“Look.” Irritation flared inside her. Maybe his cyborg mojo told him she wasn’t being completely honest, but she really did intend to help. Nell crossed her arms over her chest and tapped her foot, trying to distill her impatience. “I’ll feel really bad if someone’s condition gets worse because I held you up. Besides, I would like to see more of the ship. It’s my first time aboard a spaceship, you know.”
“I didn’t know.” Doc fingered the wrinkle cutting across his wrist. “Were you not told anything about your mission?”
“Nada.” Nell glanced back at the recently vacated chair. Obviously he was waiting for some sign to take her out of here. Should she try to convince him? Should she sit and wait. Nah, that would be too much like accepting defeat.
Patience. He’s waiting for permission from the admiral
.
Waiting? But she hadn’t seen Doc do anything to send a message.
Doc’s eyes darkened, the color seemed to spread to the white part. “You speak Spanish.”
He asked for permission through the WA
.
Nell shivered. No one saw radio signals either, unless they had the right receiver. Could her mom be such a thing? “I speak American. We’re known to steal catch phrases from other cultures when they can replace long-winded sentences or get straight to the point.”
Amusement twinkled in Doc’s eyes. “Except perhaps when you are anxious.”
Embarrassment heated her cheeks. Nothing helped then.
“How did you get the job with Save our World?”
Nell leaned against the wall, felt the hum of the ship against her back. Sitting back in the chair would be too much like accepting defeat. How long could it take to get an answer from Beijing? “I honestly don’t know. Heck, I didn’t even meet my interviewer. She was just a voice over the phone the first time. The second one was supposed to be face to face. I was called into the room and next thing I know I’m here.”
The whites of Doc’s eyes darkened again, then rose to his feet and walked toward the door. “We are glad that you came to save us.”
“Well, I haven’t yet.” Nell hustled to his side as the door opened. After wiping her damp hands on her pants, she gathered the courage to ask the question hovering on her lips.
Please God, let him say yes
. “Do you suppose we could stop by that room where you found me?”
Doc gestured for her to precede him down the stark hallway. “It is on the way. May I ask why?”
Nell fell into step beside Doc. Besides the futility of trying to lead when she had no idea where she was headed, she didn’t want him to think she considered herself better than him. The citizen-Syn-En world where he lived wouldn’t disappear because of a plagiarized speech, and she couldn’t afford to alienate anyone.
“I’m just hoping to find some personal effects.” She crossed her fingers and stuck both hands in her pocket. “I had pictures of my family when I went into the interview. I’m kinda hoping they made the journey.”
Doc winked, seemingly approving of her decision to walk beside him. “I understand.”
Nell wished she did. Her gut told her that somewhere in the coffin-shaped box lay answers to her questions. Only then would she decide how much she could trust her new instinct.