home

search

1.27 Chief

  Chief

  Nai had been let out of the quarantine.

  The new Casti, the one that looked in charge, had appeared outside the plastic sheets sealing our quarantine section. I didn’t have a great view of the alien. I was still inside the quarantine’s sheeting. It made for a somewhat distorted view.

  But even through two layers of plastic, it was hard to mistake the Casti for another. For one, it was the only one wearing a decorated uniform. The other Casti I’d glimpsed on the base had been in jumpsuits or other rough-function uniforms.

  It was an alien in full dress. Daniel had been right; we were now the problem of someone important.

  But the important Casti hadn’t been here for me. Instead, it ushered Nai through the series of zippers and flaps that constituted the quarantine’s makeshift airlock.

  It should have been more of a heads up, but my guard was down. I didn’t connect the dots. Daniel and I were still stuck among aliens, but we’d put plenty of guns and other aliens between us and the Vorak. Given the relative safety, it was impossible not to decompress.

  Which isn’t to mean things weren’t still tense. It just didn’t feel like I might catch a Vorak bullet at any moment. There was still plenty to be worried about, like dying to an alien infection.

  But worrying about that instead of imminent bodily harm was a welcome change.

  Bonus, I’d even been patched up. It couldn’t be more obvious how alien I was to the poor alien medic in the biohazard suit, but there were still some underlying basics in medicine like ‘keep the blood on the inside’.

  My various scrapes and the one stab wound had been dressed in some bandages that stung the ever-living-daylights out of me for about ten minutes, but the chemical smell of the bandages made me confident the pain was from alcohol or some other disinfectant.

  The doctor in question was a Farnata, and I hadn’t gotten the new alien’s name yet, but I didn’t feel pressured. I was exhausted and this was the first instance of secure downtime I’d had in weeks .

  And I had a Daniel to fix. To save?

  That was pretty much the crux of the problem, wasn’t it? Something was wrong, but neither of us were sure what.

  The problem was all in my head though, so we didn’t need to be anywhere.

  Trouble was, in the time since we’d reached this Casti facility, we’d made zero progress. Not having to worry about Nai being in the same room made us only slightly more productive.

  Even after hours of exploratory prods, we were no closer to understanding what was happening inside my mind.

  

  

  I resisted the urge to throw something.

  

  

  

  

  

  While the last few hours of mental tinkering hadn’t yielded many results, some of the failures had been informative. I was getting a sense of some things in my head, where Daniel was, where he wasn’t.

  And most importantly, the state of the mysterious ‘thing’ I’d made. ‘The Phantom’ as Daniel called it. I didn’t have the mirror in my head anymore, and I wasn’t about to have Daniel risk making another. But I was beginning to get a better picture of my mind even without the tool.

  It was closing in on Daniel. He had a day, maybe two if we were lucky.

  

  I said simply.

  

  <…No, and I think I know why,> I said,

  

   I thought,

  

  I frowned,

  

  

  

  We weren’t sharing optimism, I realized.

  He was relatively positive, because I was under pressure, stress to help him—negative. But I was actually using the optimism, the hope. I was certain it was possible to save him.

  He wasn’t.

  And his memory was deteriorating enough to affect his vocabulary that he didn’t quite catch the dissonance.

  We were going to have to start taking some risks about the Phantom soon, otherwise there might not be enough Daniel left to save.

  I’d been lying down too long. Getting my blood moving would do me some good. My box inside the quarantine wasn’t large enough for anything besides stretching, but that was fine. I wasn’t in the mood to run even more.

  My wounds might have been bandaged, but I wasn’t eager to open them again.

  

  I flexed my shoulder gingerly. Daniel was right. Even small twitches should have produced shooting agony. Instead, I had mostly normal range of motion with only a persistent minor ache from my shoulder wound.

  

  

  

   Daniel mused.

  The fact that Daniel still had a sense of humor despite what could be his dying moments threatened to choke me up. He noticed my reaction.

  

  I finished stretching and plopped back down on the floor.

   I told him,

Recommended Popular Novels