5,99 €
'Rocket-fuelled storytelling. Highly recommended' NEW STATESMAN Book 1 in the Mars Alone Trilogy It's 2312 and Leo Fischer is a fifteen-year-old computer whizz on his first ever journey off Earth. He's heading to the moon colony to help his mother Lillian with her scientific work. But before he can reach her, she is kidnapped. Determined to find and rescue her, Leo has no choice but to accept the help of his newest friend, Skater Monroe, the daughter of a shuttle pilot and already an experienced space traveller. Their investigation leads them to an old freighter captain with a strange story about two spaceships: one a long-lost piece of junk called the Arcadian; the other, a sleek, ultra-modern ship of mysterious origin. Both craft are involved in some kind of cover-up, and Leo and Skater become convinced the conspirators are the same people who kidnapped Leo's mother. Dodging space pirates as well as a ruthless assassin in the pay of the soon-to-be president of Mars, they stumble upon a secret that could lead to all-out war in the solar system. The first instalment of Andrew Stickland's Mars Alone Trilogy is a gravity-defying thrill-ride into the human race's all-too-believable future in space.
Das E-Book können Sie in Legimi-Apps oder einer beliebigen App lesen, die das folgende Format unterstützen:
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2023
ANDREW STICKLAND is a prize-winning poet and short-story writer whose work has variously been published by the British Fantasy Society, Games Workshop, the Royal Statistical Society and The Economist. He studied law at University College London, then creative writing at the University of Jyväskylä in Finland. He lives in Cambridge.
‘A compellingly well written and intricately plotted adventure with stunning world-building details’
Kate Scott
‘Consummate storytelling that speeds along as smoothly as an interplanetary spaceship. Andrew Stickland creates a rocket-roaring space adventure with satisfyingly grounded science, full of 300-years-from-now invention, but recognisable as the world – or rather worlds – that Elon Musk envisions’
Iain Hood
‘An immersive adventure that transports the reader to space – and to new worlds that we can only imagine, but our descendants may well even experience. If you like science fiction with strong characterisation and a political edge, this is for you’
Katharine Quarmby
Published in 2023
by Lightning Books
Imprint of Eye Books Ltd
29A Barrow Street
Much Wenlock
Shropshire
TF13 6EN
www.lightning-books.com
ISBN: 9781785633485
Copyright © Andrew Stickland 2023
Cover by Ifan Bates
Typeset in Centaur and Zona Pro
The moral right of the author has been asserted. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
For James
Contents
Prologue
Part One
Part Two
Part Three
Part Four
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
PROLOGUE
It was night. And on Luna, the night lasted for fifteen days.
On the far side, away from the prying eyes of Earth, the temperature had dropped to minus 150 degrees Centigrade and the four figures bounding their way across the regolith-dusted craters of the Korolev Highlands were already beginning to feel the cold. Their environment suits were thin, flexible, designed for short-duration work, and the internal heating systems were already struggling. Another hour would see the air tanks and power cells begin to run dry and at that point, the journey would very quickly become very unpleasant.
But there was no need for worry. At the lip of the next crater the group’s destination came into view, nestled in the centre of the depression and no more than half a kilometre ahead. They paused and their leader scanned the distant structures. It was a standard-construct field camp, with a pair of expanded kevlar domes linked together at its centre. A small rover and a larger transport were backed up against the airlock of one of the domes, and off to one side was a third, smaller dome linked to a communications array. Two plasmalights set on masts at either side of the site bathed the whole area in a ghostly blue-white glow.
The four figures continued down the slope, taking long, bounding strides that allowed them to cover the distance in no more than five minutes. At the edge of the camp the leader indicated for one of his men to search the communications dome. The man drew a pistol from his holster, but the leader clamped a hand around the weapon and shook his head.
Meanwhile, one of the others set about opening the airlock door on the nearer dome, overriding its electronic locking mechanism with the microputer attached to the back of his glove. The three men squeezed themselves into the compartment, resealed the outer door, and waited while clean air was pumped in. When the process was complete and the inner door opened, they stepped cautiously into the first of the linked domes.
It was smaller on the inside, its metallic skeleton creating a room no more than three metres wide and six or seven metres long. It appeared to be part research lab and part repair shop. A makeshift table in the centre was strewn with twisted pieces of metal and broken-down electronic components. The rest of the space was taken up with tiny workstations, each crammed with stacks of equipment, monitor screens and endless trailing wires and cables.
Only one workstation was occupied. A young woman sat staring at her monitor as column after column of numbers scrolled slowly down the screen. With her back to the airlock, she was oblivious to the intruders until one of them shoved her on the shoulder. She turned, saw the looming figure and screamed, stumbling away and tugging out the ear buds that had prevented her from hearing the airlock activation alarm.
‘Sam!’ she yelled, edging back towards the end wall. ‘Sam! Get in here, quick!’
The far door slid open and a young man stumbled through, rubbing his eyes sleepily. When he saw the black-clad newcomers and their weapons he hesitated, then rushed forward to try and protect the terrified woman. She grabbed his arm, squeezed herself behind him and tried to drag him back towards the door, but already another of the intruders had cut off their escape.
‘Who the bloody hell are you?’ the young man stammered.
The group’s leader stepped forward. He was a giant of a man, broad and muscular, but without the awkwardness that often comes with such a build. He moved easily, even in the low Lunar gravity, and towered over the frightened figures, gazing at them from behind his dark visor.
‘Who…’ the young man began again, but the tall figure raised his hand and cut him off. Slowly, he reached up, unsealed his helmet and removed it.
‘Where is the professor?’ he asked. For such a large man his voice was strangely quiet. Quiet, but not soft. It was a harsh, grating whisper, more like the growl of a hungry beast than the voice of a man, and the reason for it was clear – a thick scar that began somewhere behind the dark glasses he wore even inside his helmet, and continued down his right cheek before twisting awkwardly across his throat and disappearing beneath his collar.
‘Where is the professor?’ he asked again.
‘She’s right here,’ came a new voice from the doorway, as a woman came storming into the room. She pushed her way past the others and placed herself directly in front of the giant, hands on her hips and a scowl on her face. He recognised her from the files he’d studied. An unremarkable woman, at least physically; early fifties, medium height, brown hair losing its colour, olive skin the same.
‘How dare you barge in here like this, terrifying my staff and dragging me out of bed in the middle of the night? Who the hell are you, and what the hell are you doing in my camp?’
She was a thin woman, her features drawn, the skin tight across her cheeks. But she was not frail. It was anger the man could see in her eyes, not weakness, not fear. He would have to change that.
‘Who are they?’ he asked, indicating the two people behind her. ‘Students?’
‘My research assistants,’ she snapped back. ‘Now I’ll ask you again. Who are you, and what are you doing in my camp?’
‘I am Mr Archer. I am here to collect you.’
‘Collect me? What are you talking about, collect me? The plan is for us to be out here for six more weeks, not pack up and come home now. I haven’t had time to do half the things I have planned yet, and I have absolutely no intention of going anywhere, with you, or with anyone else for that matter, until I’m good and ready to go.’
Mr Archer drew a huge knife from a sheath attached to the back of his suit. One edge was smooth and sharp, the other jagged-toothed, like a saw. He held it casually by his side. ‘It is not a request.’
The professor took an involuntary step backwards but then checked herself, took a deep breath and forced her gaze away from the huge blade and back towards the man’s scarred face. Slowly she shook her head. ‘If you’re here to collect me, then it’s because you want me to do something for you, yes? You have something particular in mind. So I don’t think you have any intention of actually using that knife, do you? It’s there for intimidation. And I am not easily intimidated, Mr Archer. So why not put it away and we can talk about this like civilised people? I’m assuming here that you are actually a civilised man, Mr Archer?’
Mr Archer grunted. ‘Nice speech. Now listen to mine.’ He stepped forward and leant down so his face was directly above the professor’s. ‘Yes,’ he hissed. ‘I need you for something. And you are right, I will not be using the knife on you.’ He brought the weapon up and let the sharp point hover between them, no more than an inch or so from her face. ‘But I am not so concerned for your…’ he glanced behind her briefly, ‘…research assistants. They will accompany us. And the first time you refuse to do exactly what I tell you to do, I will take one of them, I will slice them open from throat to groin and I will gut them like some helpless animal. And I will make you watch as they bleed slowly and painfully to death in front of you. Because no, Professor, I am not a civilised man. Do you understand?’
The woman nodded quickly, and Mr Archer was pleased to see that the fear was now firmly in control. ‘Good,’ he continued. ‘So go and put on your E-suit. You work for me now, Professor Fischer.’
1
THE SHUTTLE TO LUNA
Leo Fischer gripped the waxed paper bag, pressed the lemon-scented opening against his mouth and threw up as quietly as he could. Nothing came out. Nothing had come out last time either, and Leo began to hope his empty stomach had finally decided to settle down and stop trying to turn itself inside out. It was empty. It had been empty for the past twenty minutes, ever since the last of his strawberry and banana GalactaMax had come back up and spectacularly failed to make it into the so-called convenience bag he was now breathing in and out of. It had been awkward and embarrassing and had involved a lot of apologising to his neighbour – an overweight, middle-aged man with a permanent scowl on his face who reminded Leo of his history teacher – but at least he’d been able to collect the floating blob of pink goo and steer it into the bag before it wandered away down the compartment and caused some serious chaos. There were, Leo thought, at least some advantages to throwing up in zero gravity.
But worse than the dry heaving and the apologising and the sour-faced tutting from his neighbour was the fact that the whole messy and embarrassing performance was being watched with great delight by the girl sitting across the aisle. She was reading a book – an old-fashioned, actual paper one – but she was holding it in front of her face and peering at him around the side. Whenever he groaned into the convenience bag, the book would shake with silent laughter, just like it was doing now. Leo leant across and the face disappeared behind the book once more.
‘I know you’re not really reading that,’ he said. ‘You haven’t turned the page for at least five minutes.’
For a moment the girl didn’t respond, except to very deliberately turn the page, but then she lowered the book and left it floating by her knee. ‘Sorry,’ she said, still smiling. ‘But it is kind of funny.’
‘Hilarious,’ Leo replied. He sat back and took a deep breath of the scrubbed and faintly lemon-scented air – the only kind he would be breathing for the next few weeks, now that he’d left Earth behind – and tried to relax. It felt like his stomach was finally coming round to the idea that it was floating, and completely empty, so he sealed the half-full convenience bag and tucked it into the pouch on the side of his seat.
‘First time off-planet, huh?’ the girl asked.
‘How can you tell?’ Leo said, giving her his best attempt at a sarcastic smile. He turned away and tried to stare out of the tiny porthole window beyond his disapproving neighbour, but already Earth was behind them and all he could see was empty blackness. No planet, no stars, just his own reflection staring back at him and a single, tiny bright dot that was probably another spacecraft, too far away for him to identify.
She was right, it was his first time off-planet. And yes, he was nervous and nauseous, but hadn’t he been pretty relaxed about the whole thing on the way up? He hadn’t been pressed against the window for every second like many of the obvious first-timers, or stayed gripping the armrests with tightly shut eyes like some of the others. He’d been excited, sure. What fifteen-year-old wouldn’t be excited to spend their summer holidays on the moon? But he thought he’d been playing the seasoned space traveller pretty well – right until the moment when his stomach had betrayed him and shown him up for the hopeless newbie he really was.
‘You know,’ continued the girl, obviously failing to notice Leo’s attempt to ignore her. ‘You can get pills to help with the barfing. Didn’t they offer you some back at the station?’
‘I said I didn’t need any.’
‘Guess you’re regretting that now, huh?’ She reached into her jacket, brought out a packet of travel sickness pills and sent them spinning across to him. ‘Here. I always take some, even though I never need them.’
‘Thanks.’ Leo caught the packet, carefully read the instructions and then popped out two tablets, swallowing them with difficulty and wondering if they would stay down or come straight back up.
‘They work pretty fast. Give it five minutes and you’ll be as good as new. So, what’s your name?’
‘Leo,’ he replied. ‘Leo Fischer. And that’s Fischer with a c,’ he explained, because sooner or later he always ended up having to do it anyway.
‘Nice to meet you, Leo Leo Fischer with a c. I’m Skater.’
‘Skater?’
‘Yep, just Skater.’ She gave him a self-satisfied smile. ‘Kind of memorable, don’t you think?’
‘I suppose.’
‘So, how old are you?’
‘Fifteen.’
‘Really? Me too. Although people say I look much older. What do you think?’
Leo looked across, met her gaze and quickly looked away as he began to blush. He could feel his cheeks growing hotter and hotter, but there wasn’t anything he could do about it. It always happened at times like this, and he hated it. More than just about anything. It was so humiliating.
And anyway, he already knew exactly what she looked like, having spent a good fifteen minutes staring at her in the departure lounge before boarding the shuttle. She’d bustled in extremely late, had a brief argument with the company chaperone while emptying out and then repacking her shoulder bag, then sat with her boots resting on the table in front of her while she listened to music, read her book and ignored everything and everyone around her until it was time to board. At which point she’d grabbed her bag, pushed her way confidently to the front of the queue, right in front of him, and been almost the first through the gate.
Mostly, he was interested in her because she was interesting, Leo told himself. But she was pretty too, in a lazy, slightly chaotic sort of way, and that made her worth looking at as well. She had long blonde hair, tied up at the back with a piece of string, that kept floating up in crazy swirls whenever she leant forward in her chair. He had no idea what colour her eyes were, even though that was one of those things you were supposed to notice about people. Blue, he guessed, if the excessive eye liner was anything to go by, but it made very little difference anyway. When he looked at people, it was always their mouths, not their eyes, that he looked at, and Skater’s mouth was a lot more interesting than her eyes because for some reason she’d decided to paint her lips a really odd shade of green.
Her clothes were old-fashioned, but the way she wore them made them look stylish; tight black trousers torn at the knees, a grey top with a logo he didn’t recognise, an old uniform jacket of some sort and the clumpy boots she’d had perched on the table earlier. Leo glanced down at his own clothes – a dull blue, all-in-one under-suit he’d chosen because that was what his guidebook had suggested would be most comfortable for the shuttle, and a jacket that was clearly designed for carrying things in its pockets, not for style – and really wished he didn’t look quite so…normal.
‘So?’ Skater asked.
Leo looked up. ‘Sorry. What?’
‘So, do I look older than fifteen?’
‘Uh, yeah, I guess.’ Leo mumbled, his cheeks still burning. ‘Especially with all the make-up and stuff.’
‘Hey.’ Skater leaned out across the aisle and motioned for Leo to do the same. ‘Please tell me that’s not your dad you’re travelling with,’ she whispered, glancing across at his fat, unfriendly neighbour.
‘God, no,’ Leo exclaimed, horrified that she could have thought such a thing. ‘He’s just the guy I got stuck sitting next to. No, I’m travelling on my own.’
‘Oh right, so you’re another one of Pam’s prisoners then, like me?’
‘Who’s Pam?’
‘She’s our wonderful chaperone.’
‘The one you were arguing with, back in the spaceport?’
‘You saw that? Well, that’s her. We really don’t get on.’
‘Yeah, I got that impression. So what were you arguing about?’
‘Oh,’ Skater waved her hand dismissively. ‘You know, just stuff. It’s always the same, every time I fly.’
‘I take it you’ve been to Luna before then?’
‘Yep. I come up every six months, pretty much. This is my tenth trip so far. And I went to Mars once as well.’
‘How come? Are you seriously rich or something?’
Skater laughed. ‘Dreamland! No, my dad’s a pilot. He works for MarsMine, flying short-haul stuff out of Luna mostly, but sometimes he gets to take one of the big supply trains out to Mars or wherever. Anyway, it’s part of his contract that he can bring his family up to Luna for free twice a year, so I always make sure I’m free whenever he can arrange the flights.’
‘On your own? What about your mum?’
Skater’s smile dropped. ‘My mum and dad are divorced. Mum came up with me the first couple of times, but she hated it. She and Dad hardly spoke to each other, and she spent the whole time in the hotel room, refusing to go out and do anything, just waiting until she could go home again. Also, she was a bit like you.’ She motioned to the side of Leo’s seat, where the convenience bag was tucked away. ‘She couldn’t cope with the zero g. So now I get to travel on my own, and I try and spend as much time as I can up here – just me and Dad – and it’s absolutely beyond beyond. Every minute of it. Sometimes we go out trekking into the crater fields, camping out and stuff, or sometimes we go off to one of the other cities for a change. And whenever he can, he lets me ship out with him, like when I got to go to Mars. He had to get special permission from the company for that one, and of course Mum went totally supernova because it meant I had to miss, like, half a term of school, and in the end the only reason she let me go was because I had a complete flip-fit and told her that if she didn’t let me go, I’d go anyway and never come back, and I think she really believed I’d do it so she gave in.’
She took a deep breath and plunged straight on. ‘So what’s your story? How come you’re heading off to Luna all on your own?’
‘I’m going to meet my mum,’ Leo explained. ‘She’s been working up there for the past few weeks and she’s arranged for me to come and help out for a bit. Kind of like work experience.’
Skater grimaced. ‘Your first trip to Luna, and you’re going to be spending your time working? That’s just wrong.’
‘It won’t be for the whole trip, just for the first couple of weeks. After that the plan is to spend some time sightseeing.’
‘Just you and your mum? What about your dad?’
Leo shook his head. ‘I haven’t got one.’
‘Divorced as well?’
‘Nope, just never had one.’
‘Explain.’ Skater looked confused. ‘I mean, you must’ve had a dad at some point.’
‘Okay, well technically yes, I did have a dad for a while. But apparently he ran off with one of my mum’s bridesmaids, some time between the wedding and me being born.’
‘Harsh.’
‘I suppose.’
‘Do you ever see him?’
‘No.’
‘Do you want to?’
‘No.’
‘And your mum never remarried or anything?’
‘No.’
‘Wow. So does it bother you, not having a dad?’
‘Not really,’ Leo said with a shrug. ‘I mean, look at me. I’m not exactly the kind of person who wants to be spending all day kicking a ball around the park with their dad, or whatever it is kids are supposed to do with their dads.’
‘True, you’re really not the sporty type.’ Skater looked across and laughed.
‘What’s so funny?’
‘Sorry, it’s just…you’re not exactly the SAT type either, are you?’
‘SAT?’
‘Socially Aware Teen. And no, if you don’t even know what it means, you’re really not one of them. Nor am I, by the way. I’m way too much of a Retro to be a SAT. In fact, I’m like the ultimate anti-SAT.’
‘Well I’m not a SAT or a Retro,’ Leo admitted. ‘Or anything else with a smart name. I’m just a boring old nerd, with a boringly sensible haircut and boringly sensible clothes.’ And then, mostly to himself, he added, ‘and not many friends either.’
‘Yeah,’ Skater agreed. ‘There are a few kids like that at my school, but I honestly don’t know much about them. They always seem to be doing homework, or going to after-school clubs, and you never see them hanging out in the malls and coffee shops, or going to parties and stuff, so you never get to find out what they’re really like. And everyone hates them anyway because they always come top in all the exams. And I mean, like, all the exams.’
‘Yeah, that sounds exactly like my life all right.’
‘So are you clever?’
‘Yes,’ Leo said, without embarrassment. ‘That’s one thing I definitely am.’
‘How clever? Never mind,’ Skater added, before Leo could answer. ‘You can tell me later. Look who’s about to come and ruin our day.’
Leo looked round and saw that the chaperone, Pam, was gliding her way along the aisle towards them, a cheery grin fixed on her unpleasantly over-made-up face. When she reached their seats, she came to a graceful stop and the smile grew even wider.
‘Hi, Leo,’ she beamed. ‘And welcome to space. How are you feeling?’
‘Yeah, okay,’ Leo replied, automatically. But in actual fact, he was feeling okay. His stomach felt like it had finally remembered where it was supposed to be and actually, it was even trying to suggest he might like to put something back inside it.
‘Wonderful,’ Pam replied. ‘Wonderful. Excited?’
‘I guess.’
‘Of course you are. Now…’ She glanced at the small screen she wore on her wrist. ‘It says here that your mother will be collecting you in Atlantis. Is that correct?’
‘That’s right.’
‘Wonderful. Well then just you sit back and enjoy the trip and I’ll pop back a bit later to run through all the immigration details with you. Okay? Wonderful.’ She turned to Skater and it was clear she had to work hard to keep her smile in place. ‘And Lisa Kate. A pleasure as always. No need to ask if you need anything, is there? I’m quite sure you’re well able to look after yourself, yes?’
‘Hi, Pam,’ Skater said, returning the forced smile. ‘You know you can call me Skater if you want. Everyone else does.’
‘Well everyone else can do as they wish. But I think I’ll stick to Lisa Kate, if you don’t mind. You know where to find me if you need me. Do have a pleasant flight.’ And with that she pushed off and continued her graceful way along the cabin.
‘Lisa Kate?’ Leo asked.
‘You hungry yet?’ Skater asked, ignoring the question.
‘Yeah, I think I am, actually.’
‘Good. Let’s go find some food.’ She tucked her floating book away, unclipped her seat strap and let herself glide out into the aisle. ‘They’ve got this great viewing gallery a bit further along where you can stare out at space, and there’s a food bar there as well. Come on, it’ll be fun.’
‘Okay.’ Leo unclipped his own strap and pushed himself out of his seat. Immediately he shot upwards, crashed painfully into the roof of the cabin, spun around, and found himself back in his seat, only now it seemed to be sitting on him instead of the other way round. He could hear laughter from some of the nearby seats, and the grumpy man beside him – now upside down – began his tutting once more.
Skater reached across. ‘Come on,’ she said with a grin. ‘I’ll give you a hand.’
Blushing furiously, Leo let himself be pulled along, floating just above the other passengers. There were handholds all along what had previously been the ceiling, and Skater easily propelled the two of them the entire length of the cabin in just a few pulls.
‘I thought it would be like swimming under water,’ Leo explained. ‘But without the getting wet bit.’
‘No, everything’s a lot slower under water, because of all the resistance.’
‘Yeah, I get that now.’ He let go of Skater’s hand and floated free, watching as she effortlessly glided through the narrow entrance into the next compartment. He hesitated for a moment, took a firm grasp of the nearest handhold, and gave himself a gentle push, this time managing to control his movements much more successfully. He bounced, almost gracefully, on the floor and then floated back up to where Skater was waiting for him, standing upside down with her feet tucked into one of the handholds. ‘This is amazing,’ he told her. ‘I think I’m already beginning to get the hang of it.’
‘And how’s the stomach doing now?’
‘Pretty good, actually. I guess those tablets really do work.’
‘Supreme. Let’s go get some food then.’
They continued through the second cabin and into the viewing gallery beyond. This was wider and taller, with a domed roof filled with large triangular windows. A long, well-stocked food bar curved along one wall, and tiny tables filled the remainder of the floor area. There were no seats, but soft, stirrup-like hoops were attached to the floor so customers could tuck in their feet and stop themselves drifting away. Most of the tables were already occupied.
‘I’ll get the food,’ Skater announced, joining the small queue. ‘What they sell here is so much better than the free stuff they’ll come round with later, and Dad always tops up my credit before the flight so I can afford to blob out on whatever I want. Go find somewhere to perch. But don’t bother with the tables, try and grab us a window.’
Leo pulled himself along one of the guide wires and made for a window near the centre of the dome that a young couple had just abandoned. While he waited for Skater, he took his first proper look at the amazing view outside the ship.
The first thing he saw was Earth, huge and bright, directly behind the ship. He could clearly make out the bottom half of Africa, upside down, as it began to disappear into the darkness of its nighttime. It was incredible – so much more incredible than he’d ever imagined it would be. He’d made the journey dozens of times on his computer, zooming up from London Spaceport, through the clouds and the upper atmosphere, out into the darkness, until the Earth was far behind. But even when he’d run it through the holo-helm, it hadn’t been anything like this. ‘Wow,’ he whispered, feeling slightly foolish for saying it out loud, but too amazed to stop himself. He glanced round sheepishly, but no one was paying him the slightest bit of notice. They were all too busy doing exactly the same thing.
He’d always planned to go into space at some point, possibly even live off-planet for a while, but certainly not while he was still fifteen. Maybe only three or four other kids in his school had been up even this far, and here he was, about to spend his entire summer holidays on the moon.
He twisted round, looking for Luna itself, but the front section of the ship was blocking his view. It was a giant revolving cylinder, three times the diameter of the rest of the ship and had – in Leo’s opinion – no business being this close to the viewing gallery.
‘That’s First Class,’ Skater said, floating up next to him and eating something from a long silver package. ‘They have gravity in there.’
‘Yeah, I can see that,’ replied Leo. ‘Though I don’t really get the point. I mean, it’s only for a few hours, and I’d have thought they’d enjoy floating about for a bit. It’s a lot of fun.’ He eyed the silver package suspiciously. ‘What’s that?’
‘Heated plant protein cylinder secured inside a soft-carb envelope.’
‘Huh?’
‘Hot dog.’ Skater floated a second packet across to Leo and took another bite of her own. ‘Mop bab, apfuwee.’
‘Excuse me?’
She swallowed. ‘Not bad, actually.’
Leo opened the pack and peered inside. It really was a hot dog, complete with onions, cheese and some variety of brownish sauce. It smelt good, and as his stomach was now trying to tell him that it felt much better and hadn’t had anything solid inside it for most of the day, he took a bite. Then another. And another.
‘I think it’s mostly so they can eat and drink properly,’ Skater said, indicating the First Class section with a flick of her head. ‘You know, sit with a nice glass of wine, in a proper glass, and not have to drink it through a straw. And the whole going to the toilet thing as well, I guess. Oh – here – I got us these as well.’ She reached into her jacket and produced two cartons of Slake. ‘Sorry, they only had citrus, which is kind of meh, I know, but at least it’ll wash the dog down. And there’s chocolate as well, to take the taste away afterwards.’
Leo popped the carton and squeezed some of the drink into his mouth. It tasted fine. ‘Okay,’ he said. ‘So you were going to tell me about the Lisa Kate thing.’
‘There’s nothing to tell,’ Skater said with a shrug. ‘Lisa Kate Monroe. That’s my real name.’
‘So where does Skater come from? Are you a skater?’
‘Well, yeah, sometimes. But that’s not where I got the name. It just comes from Lisa Kate if you say it really fast. Lisakate. Lisekate. Li-skate. Skate. But Skate makes me sound like a fish, so I made it Skater instead.’
Leo laughed. ‘Good explanation.’
‘I know, right? I make it a lot.’ She finished her hot dog, finished her drink, stuffed the empty packets in one pocket and produced two bars of chocolate from the other. ‘Now my turn to interrogate you.’
‘Okay.’
‘So what’s the deal with this work experience thing you’re doing? What kind of work does your mum do anyway? And are you going to be staying in Atlantis for the whole time?’
‘Actually, we’re not staying in Atlantis at all.’
‘Oh.’ Skater sounded disappointed.
‘Well, not for the work bit, anyway. We’ve got some sightseeing planned for our last couple of days before leaving, but when I arrive, Mum’s taking me straight off to Reynes. That’s where she’s based.’
‘So, you’ll be living out on the dark side, eh? Spooky.’
Leo paused as he was about to bite his chocolate. ‘You do know there isn’t really a dark side of the moon, don’t you? We only ever see half of Luna because its rotational speed matches its orbit around Earth.’ He showed Skater what he meant by slowly orbiting his chocolate bar around his Slake carton. ‘But both faces still get just as much sun as each other.’
Skater gave him a pitying look. ‘Hands up who’s actually been to the far side of the moon?’ She raised her arm. ‘And hands up who’s actually watched a sunrise over the lip of a crater while they were on the far side of the moon? Only me? Okay, so hands up who actually has a sense of humour and knows what a joke is?’
‘Sorry. I just thought you might not know. Some people don’t.’
‘I don’t see you putting your hand up.’
Leo raised his hand. ‘There. Yes, I know what a joke is.’
‘Are you sure?’
‘Yes, I’m sure.’
‘Good, because… Oh, look!’ Skater pointed out through the window to where another ship had come into view. ‘That’s one of the Zodiacs. They’re Chinese-built super-liners, massive great cruise ships, that go between Luna and Mars. There’s four of them, but they’re building a load more so they can run to the outer colonies as well. That one’s—’ She paused for a second, staring out at the great ship. ‘The Ox. You can tell by the coloured strips along the outside. On the Ox they’re yellow. See? People call them the Canton Cartwheels – because of their shape, obviously – and Dad says they’re really, really, beyond supreme; not just for the passengers, but for the crew as well. Full gravity and everything. And fast. They can go dock to dock in under six weeks when Mars is close, like it is now.’
Leo knew most of this already. By chance he’d come across a docu-feed about the Zodiacs a few months back. It had seemed interesting, so he’d expanded it and watched the whole thing. In fact, he probably knew more about them than Skater did, but he wasn’t about to point this out and risk another round of sarcastic comments. So he let her ramble on enthusiastically while he gazed at the magnificent spaceship, spinning gracefully off on its journey. It might have been a hundred kilometres away, or it might have been several thousand. With nothing but empty blackness between the two ships, it was impossible to tell.
‘…and the outer rim is so long they have this little shuttle that runs around it. And it’s packed with shops, and eateries, and cinepods and stuff, and apparently some of the VIP cabins are like whole apartments. And the whole thing is powered by four huge Bannax-Tori ion-thrust engines that were designed especially for them.’ She sighed. ‘Sweet Sol, how I would so love to pilot one of those.’
They watched until the Ox was too small to be of any more interest, and Skater told Leo about her plan to become a pilot, working for one of the big companies until she could afford her own ship, then spend the rest of her life as a trader, travelling between the planets and stations until she’d visited every single inhabited place in the Solar System. And after that, she explained, she would turn around and do it all again.
They ate more hot dogs, drank more Slake, and continued gazing out of their window while Skater told Leo about all the places she’d been on Luna, what they were like, and which ones she would definitely be going back to this time. They talked a little bit about him as well, but after he’d explained that he loved computers, that his mother was an academic and that they would mostly be spending the next several weeks staring at screens full of numbers, Skater lost interest and went back to telling him about camping in the regolith desert.
Eventually their conversation was brought to an end by an announcement requesting that everyone return to their seats as the ship was about to commence deceleration procedures. Reluctantly Leo abandoned the window, still without having seen anything of their destination, and followed Skater back through the ship.
‘Never mind,’ she called across, as Leo strapped himself back down beside his grumpy history teacher look-alike. ‘Watching out the window is nothing compared to actually putting your feet on the surface. I guarantee that even if you’re only coming up here to work, it’s going to be beyond ultimate.’
‘I know,’ Leo agreed. ‘This is definitely going to be the best trip ever.’
2
AN UNEXPECTED MEETING
‘Look, there’s my dad!’ Skater called out, as soon as the doors into the arrivals hall hissed open. She pointed towards the large collection of waiting people and began to wave furiously. A tall, fair-haired man waved back just as enthusiastically. He looked so like Skater he couldn’t possibly have been anyone else’s father.
Skater turned to Pam, who was standing beside her two charges with the same fixed smile she’d had on her face, as far as Leo could tell, for the entire eight-hour journey. ‘There’s my dad,’ Skater repeated. ‘Okay, seeya!’ And without waiting for a response, she launched herself across the hall. She bounced once, halfway across, and was enveloped by the open arms waiting for her before she’d even hit the floor for a second time. Leo was impressed. Pam simply shook her head.
‘That girl. Honestly,’ she muttered. And then, a little louder, ‘Now then, Leo. What about you? Any sign of your mum anywhere?’
The hall was busy, but a quick scan confirmed Leo’s suspicion that his mother was not among the scores of people milling around. She was late. And honestly, he wasn’t surprised. She was the typical absent-minded professor – a genius in her own field, but little more than useless in the real world. She was always forgetting appointments, birthdays, the names of people she’d been introduced to several times. Now it looked like she’d also forgotten what time his shuttle was due in.
‘She’ll be late,’ Leo said, matter-of-factly. ‘Unless she’s completely forgotten that today’s the day of course. In which case, she’ll be really, really late.’
‘Oh, I doubt that,’ Pam said, searching around for anyone who looked like they were about to come and take Leo off her hands. ‘I’m sure she must be here somewhere. Can’t you Tracelink her?’
‘She doesn’t wear one.’
‘She…’ The smile was slipping. ‘Oh. Well, then we shall have to do it the old-fashioned way. Eyes peeled.’
Leo gave a sigh and began a more detailed examination of the arrivals hall. It was long and wide, but nothing like the glass and steel domes of the spaceport back in London that had risen for thirty storeys into the sky. Here, the roof was no more than fifteen metres above him, and even though the entire thing was covered with huge banks of natural daylight glow-lights, Leo was still very much aware that he was deep underground, with thousands of tonnes of lunar rock pressing down on him.
The place was filled with the usual shops and food stalls. Some of the names were different, but they looked the same as the ones back on Earth, with their glowing signs and adver-teaser screens, and the annoying jumbled drone of their competing welcome call-outs. And as far as he could see, his mother wasn’t in any of them. He checked again, to be sure, and then he checked once more, because he couldn’t think of anything else to do, and then he decided to check his phone, in the unlikely event that she’d actually thought to leave him a message.
He slipped the device into his ear and brought the screen round in front of his right eye. ‘Messages,’ he said. ‘Mum.’ A list of dates appeared on the tiny screen, the most recent being May 28 – just over six weeks ago. He closed the screen and tucked the phone back into his pocket.
‘…somewhere…somewhere,’ Pam was muttering, as she continued to search the room. ‘Ah-ha!’ she exclaimed after a moment. ‘Here we go. This must be for us.’
Two men were heading towards them. The first was dressed in the same purple uniform as Pam and the two clearly knew each other.
‘Evening, Pam,’ he said with a quick, nervous smile. ‘I take it this is young Mister Fischer?’
‘It is indeed,’ Pam replied. ‘But we were expecting his mother to be collecting him, not…’ She glanced down at her wrist screen. ‘I don’t seem to have any other contact listed, Mr, uh, Mr…’
The second man ignored her and held out his hand for Leo. He was small, a little shorter than Leo, with a stocky build and a strong, confident handshake. His dark hair was so short it was only just longer than the stubble covering his chin and this, together with his worn and creased jacket, gave Leo the impression he’d just woken up from a long sleep.
‘Leonard Fischer?’ he asked.
Suddenly Leo was nervous. Nobody called him Leonard unless it was for something really important. Or if he was in trouble. ‘Yes,’ he replied. ‘But everyone calls me Leo.’
‘Leo. Of course.’ The man nodded, making a mental note. ‘My name’s Aitchison. We need to talk.’
‘But—’ Pam began. The man cut her off.
‘Thank you…Pam, isn’t it? I’ll call you if I need anything else.’
‘But—’ Pam tried again. This time the uniformed man took her arm and gently steered her away. ‘It’s fine, Pam. It’s all been arranged. Come on, I’ll fill you in.’
Now Leo was really starting to get worried.
‘Right,’ the man called Aitchison said. ‘Why don’t we find somewhere to sit?’ He set off towards the nearest place with free tables, making no effort to help with the two large bags Leo had brought with him. They weren’t heavy – the low gravity saw to that – but they were awkward, and Leo lost his balance and stumbled twice before making it to where Aitchison was waiting for him.
‘Did my mum send you?’ he asked as he settled himself into the chair.
‘Not exactly, no.’
‘You don’t work with her?’
‘No.’
‘So you’re not here to take me out to Reynes?’
‘You know, usually I’m the one who gets to ask the questions.’ He gave Leo a small, humourless smile. ‘But no, I’m not here to take you out to Reynes.’
‘So who are you?’
‘I told you. My name’s Aitchison. I’m…’ He paused, searching for the right word, ‘…a policeman, if you like.’
‘A policeman?’ Leo could feel his heart pounding in his chest. His mouth had gone dry. ‘Is this something to do with my mum? Something’s happened to her, hasn’t it? That’s why she’s not here.’
‘Well.’ Aitchison sat back in his chair. ‘She’s not dead, if that’s what’s worrying you.’
Yes, that was exactly what was worrying him, and hearing the words gave him a huge sense of relief. Without realising it he’d been clenching his fists, and now he relaxed, wiping his palms down his trouser legs.
‘Or injured, in fact,’ Aitchison continued. ‘As far as we can tell.’
‘As far as you can tell? What does that mean?’
‘It means exactly that. We don’t know for sure.’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘Your mother’s gone missing, Leo.’
‘Missing?’ He didn’t understand. But before he could ask Aitchison to explain, someone behind him slapped their hands down onto his shoulders and the shock sent him shooting out of his seat with a yelp.
‘Gotcha!’ Skater said, triumphantly.
‘Holy crap!’ Leo cursed, as he picked himself up off the floor. ‘You nearly gave me a heart attack.’
‘You’ll get over it. Anyway,’ Skater continued, pulling her father forward by the arm. ‘This is my dad. He didn’t believe me when I said I’d actually made friends with somebody on the shuttle, so I told him he had to come over and say hi, to prove you were really real. Also, I thought we could make plans to meet up – you know, once you’re back in Atlantis after doing all your work stuff. But maybe you need to check that with your mum first? Where is your mum, anyway?’
‘She’s…’ he began, looking across at Aitchison expectantly. But the man said nothing. ‘Not here yet,’ Leo finished, weakly.
‘Well, whatever. Dad, this is Leo. Leo, this is my dad.’
Skater’s father stepped forward, gave Leo a broad smile and held out his hand. ‘Hi, Leo. Pete Monroe. Nice to meet you. I’m glad you and Skater got to chat on the flight up. As far as I can tell, she usually spends her time picking fights with the cabin crew.’ He turned to Aitchison, offering the man his hand and the same warm smile. ‘Pete Monroe. And you are?’
‘Having a private conversation,’ Aitchison replied, folding his arms and ignoring the outstretched hand. For a few seconds there was an awkward silence as the men stared at each other, but finally Pete drew back his hand and turned back to Leo.
‘Everything okay here, Leo?’
‘Everything’s fine,’ Aitchison said.
‘Leo?’
‘Um, yeah,’ Leo replied. ‘It’s okay. Really.’
Pete looked around the arrivals hall and nodded towards a juice bar a few shops away. ‘Skater and I are going to sit and get something to drink. Why don’t you come over and join us, when you’ve finished up here?’ He looked back at Aitchison. ‘Perhaps we can wait for your mum together.’
‘Okay,’ Leo said doubtfully, unsure if Aitchison would let him go or not.
‘Friends of yours?’ Aitchison asked, once Pete and Skater had moved off. He reached into his jacket, brought out a pocket slate, and began to tap on the tiny screen.
‘Not exactly,’ Leo replied. ‘I met Skater on the flight. We talked a lot, but I don’t really know her that well or anything. But listen, tell me what’s happened with my mum. You said she’s gone missing?’
‘Interesting,’ Aitchison said, not to Leo, but in response to what he was reading. He tapped some more. ‘When did you last speak to your mother?’
‘Actually talk to her? About two months ago, just before she came up here. We went through the arrangements for my trip and talked a bit about the work I’d be doing. That sort of thing. Then she left me a message, about two weeks after that, but it was just to let me know she’d spoken to the school and arranged for them to get me to the spaceport and stuff.’
Aitchison looked up briefly. ‘School?’
‘I go to boarding school.’
‘I know. And does your school usually arrange your holidays for you?’
‘Well, no. But this was a special case, because Mum was already up here and there was no one else who could collect me at the end of term.’ Leo paused. ‘But it’s not exactly the first time she hasn’t been there to pick me up,’ he added.
‘And you didn’t try to contact her?’
‘She was going to be out in the field, so she told me not to bother her unless it was an absolute emergency.’
‘So no contact at all for six weeks? No messages? No failed calls? Nothing?’
‘No, nothing.’
‘Hmm, pity.’ Aitchison drummed his fingers on the table. ‘Still, it was a bit of a long shot anyway. Ah well.’
‘So where is she?’ Leo asked.
‘I told you. I don’t know.’
‘Okay, so what’s happened to her then?’
‘I don’t know that either.’
‘So what do you know?’ Leo snapped. He stood up, wobbled slightly and gripped the sides of the table for support. ‘Are you going to tell me, or are you just going to sit there and ask me a whole load more stupid questions? Because if you don’t know anything, then I’m going to go and find someone who does.’
‘Sit down,’ Aitchison said, calmly. ‘You’re making a scene, and that isn’t helping either of us.’ Leo remained standing. ‘Leo, sit down.’
‘Goodbye,’ Leo said, and bent down to collect his bags.
‘Fine,’ Aitchison said with a sigh. ‘Sit down, and I’ll tell you everything I do know about your mother’s disappearance.’
‘Everything?’
‘Promise.’
Leo sat down. He was shaking so badly he probably wouldn’t have been able to walk away without falling over anyway. ‘Please,’ he said, no longer angry, just desperate. ‘What’s going on?’