"I, the most humble Mother
Joachima, now in the one hundred and sixteenth year of my life, in
obedience to Mother Superior's wishes, was entrusted with
chronicling the beginnings of our mission here on Terra Two and the
first hundred years of terra-forming."
"Many people would have been better suited for this task since
they are more knowledgeable and eloquent than I, but I was chosen
for I was blessed to witness many of the events first hand. Whether
I will be worthy of this task is at the mercy of the Almighty to
Whom I pray for guidance and fair resurgence of my memories."
"As I advanced in years I got set in my ways and despite the
younger sisters' attempts to teach me how to use the neural
interlink for writing I can't make the wicked thing work for me,
so after many unsuccessful attempts to transmit the first phrase of
the chapter to the central computer I gave up and used my old touch
table, a curiosity among the younger sisters and a very cherished
heirloom from my grandfather."
"Many old memories are attached to its shiny surface, polished
even more by extensive use, since in the very beginning of our
being here it was at times our only way to communicate with Earth
as we struggled to put together our energy and communication
infrastructure. Of course my grandfather intended it as a
sentimental gift and would have probably been stunned to learn how
extensively it was used (and what ingenious modifications have been
done to it in order to enhance the broadcasting range and the
battery life). Grace to sister Roberta, may the good Lord keep her
in health and happiness for He bestowed on her the sharpest mind an
engineer could ever wish for, the table is now running indefinitely
on less power than it takes to light up a LED bulb. Not exactly a
perpetual motion machine, but close. One can only mess with the
laws of physics so much..."
The words failed to migrate to her fingers, which had started
to get tired from all the typing. She looked at her hands almost
not recognizing them, with thinning skin almost translucent,
vigorous curling veins and protruding joints. They had no
embellishment aside from her ring and showed the marks of many
decades of hard labor.
It was time for Vespers and Joachima placed the bracelet on
her wrist and activated the interlink. The sisters' prayers burst
into her mind with great intensity and she realized she was late.
Mother Superior didn't tolerate tardiness, so Joachima kept her
mind very still trying to blend in the common prayer unnoticed. No
such luck, she felt Mother Superior's quick admonition and intent
to discuss this disciplinary lapse later.
Her mind slowly quieted in prayer, she set aside material
concerns and presented her heart to God. The hours passed and light
diminished gradually from the light rusty color of the day to a
deep chocolate brown. Joachima couldn't help herself and broke her
focus to look through the thick windows at the sepia gradients of
Terra Two's sunsets, amazing blends of light coffee latte, milk and
dark chocolate brown with delicate iridescences of deep wine.
She rested her eyes on the soybean fields with their imposing
plants from the land of the giants, three times the normal height
and overflowing with pods due to the lower gravity and a soil
extremely rich in nitrogen and phosphorus. They reminded Joachima
that this dirt was really blessed with every nutrient a plant would
ever need. Terra Two definitely lived up to its promise to be an
agricultural paradise, even though it had taken some time to get
used to an image of paradise with coffee colored skies.
The reason this project started in the first place was that
the probe sent from Earth to investigate the new planet, now called
Terra Two, came back with surprising and somewhat disconcerting
results to the science team. Everybody expected the report to show
great conditions for mineral extraction, rare metals and new
sources of energy. These where present indeed, as they would be on
any planet, but what the probe brought back was an ideal profile
for agricultural production: a perfect combination of nutrients and
soil consistency in the presence of water, a blend that like the
best quality flour only needed the yeast of microorganisms and
invertebrates to turn this land into the bread of life.
The science program changed on the fly from the remote
possibility of terra-forming to the active pursuit of this goal. A
decade was dedicated to creating a breathable atmosphere, a decade
during which the thrills of the hard earned successes were only
equaled by the unbelievable and almost insurmountable challenges.
It was during this decade that Mother Joachima was born, the second
child of a farmer family on the border of North Dakota and baby
sister to her brother Thomas.
She arrived on a gloomy day at the beginning of February when
wispy frozen rain knocked on the windows with ghostly little
fingers. Her parents named her Sarah, after her grandmother, Sarah
Feaherty, a little eight pound bundle of joy with strangely
luminous hair spun from candle flame. Her parents thought her
strange colored locks were just baby hair that would change but
Sarah was fated to go through her life donning these luminous
tresses that made her seem descended from a pre-raphaelite
painting. Their fire didn't dull with the passing of the years and
only recently started showing signs of age.
Shortly after her arrival the family increased again with a
Christmas gift for the Feast of Stephen, a little boy who of course
shared the name of his patron saint.
Sarah opened her eyes to life in the middle of a little
earthly Eden, learning to walk on lush grass, soft as angel's
wings, under a periwinkle sky.
Her family was huge, with numerous cousins, uncles and
great-aunts; when they got together for Thanksgiving the house was
bursting at the seams. Sarah's mother had five sisters of which two
had joined a convent a few miles away from their village. When
Sarah was little she experienced life in the convent as an
extension of her home life, a different kind of family, but a
family nevertheless. When she visited this cloistered space she was
going to her aunts' house, complete with home made ice cream and
fudge. Her aunts loved children dearly and spoiled little Sarah
with the angel hair, as they liked to call her, way too much for
the taste of her parents. The aunts disregarded any call for a
young child's need for discipline and made every one of Sarah's
visits to the convent a trip to Wonderland, a place where no rules
apply and children are spoiled rotten. Sarah especially liked to
sneak into the kitchen through the refectory because she knew she
would find some goodies waiting for her on the table: fresh baked
pastries, warm bread with lavender honey, and hot chocolate.
The kitchen door and windows opened to the herb and vegetable
garden and more often than not they were left ajar to let the
breeze through. During her visits little Sarah leaned against the
door jamb and watched the nuns tend to the plants, pluck weeds,
harvest food, and talk about their day.
The most significant part of those trips, though, was the fact
that only women were allowed on the premises, so the experience was
for Sarah and Sarah alone, something her brothers could never
enjoy. Not that they wished to, but it still made Sarah feel
special, which, come to think of it, defied the purpose of her
being there in the first place.
Sarah's dad spent almost all his time either playing with the
children or putting together a never ending assortment of seesaws,
swing sets and tree houses, to Sarah's mother's dismay. "How many
playthings can a child possibly need?" she wondered, and secretly
thought that her husband was building all these play sets for his
own indulgence rather than the children's.
Some of Sarah's most cherished memories were of walks with her
father, a self-taught botanist, who programmed the tractor to till
or harvest and took the children into the fields to give them
practical instruction about how plants develop and by what time,
what diseases and pests to look for, which plant belongs to what
family, and how to care for them.
Between her father and her aunts, by the time she was ten
Sarah became some sort of gardening expert; she never figured if it
was her early developmental years or a true passion for plant life
that pushed her in this direction, all she knew and was going to
manifest faithfully throughout her life was that nothing made her
as happy as being in the garden.
Sarah's mother was zealously devoted to her children's
education and used every resource at her disposal to further their
knowledge. Their home was less of a farm house and more of a small
lab filled with screens broadcasting information at all times, day
or night, because she thought that as long as the children were
awake they should be learning something. Since the useful life of a
computerized device was a year tops and she had to have the latest
version, always, the small sun room behind the house became an
experimental ground for the children to take electronics apart and
put them back together.
Sarah liked science just as much as the next gal but at some
point her neural pathways became so saturated with quantum theory
or new elements of the periodic table that if you shook her a
differential equation fell out. When she got overwhelmed she snuck
out with a tablet and hid in the tree house, quiet as a mouse,
until everybody forgot about her. She liked to stay up there and
watch activity unfold, unseen like a little ghost, and record her
thoughts on the tablet in a secret diary. To her chagrin she found
out many years later that her secret diary was the favorite lecture
of her brothers who followed it like a pirate novel, careful not to
miss an entry.
By the time Sarah was seventeen her family grew bigger still
once her older cousins married and had children of their own. They
visited the farm a lot and the neighbors got to watch this unreal
scene: a willowy creature with flaming hair walked slowly, almost
floating over the grass, surrounded by a large group of children,
answering their questions and smiling. This became such a habitual
image for them that after a while they expected the small group to
always be together and seeing Sarah alone alarmed them.
After long and mostly decorative debates around the kitchen
table Sarah made the obvious choice and joined the prestigious
College for Advanced Horticultural Studies in Christchurch to
further her studies in macro-biology and botanical genetics, to the
pride of her parents, her father especially, and the talk of her
neighbors and extended family. It was a dream come true for Sarah
and she suspected that her aunts must have spent some extra hours
in prayer to help it along.
CAHS was a miraculous world where every question had answers,
no idea was too outrageous and innovation came as natural as
breathing. The plants Sarah saw in the botany lab were hybrids she
couldn't even conceive of, not to mention design, plants whose
scale was controlled to the micron, diminutive pine trees and
gigantic chamomile, leaves of every shade but green processing
chlorophyll, plants without roots that could move around at will,
transparent roses, rubber trees genetically altered to secrete
aluminum, cucumber plants that changed their color like vegetal
chameleons, microscopic baobabs, sub aquatic corn fields, and a soy
bean that tasted just like steak.
If anybody took time to design Sarah's heaven it would
probably have looked like that, she had to keep pinching herself
the entire four years to make sure she wasn't dreaming. After
graduation many of her colleagues took enviable positions at the
Equatorial Horticulture Institute in Nairobi, the Green Academy of
Brasilia, or the Royal Aquatic Farms off the coast of Australia,
but Sarah decided to continue her studies at a small experimental
farm in the south of France, a very private place which offered one
scholarship every ten years to graduates with very narrowly defined
specialty studies for which Sarah just happened to be a perfect
match.