“Alright.” Alina stood up on Samayel’s hull. She’d miss the warmth from below. She’d miss the light, and the wind, and the real air. “Real” air. “Sam? How far down to the shield layer?”
“That’s enough.” She ran toward Samayel’s edge. “Catch me at fifty!”
But she did.
The rush of vertigo, the wind and heat around her body, caressing in ways no lover could, enveloping, becoming. She spun to see Sam dropping away above her, his nacelles flickering to life as he dove after her. She swam.
The heat grew.
It was freedom; it was everything.
She laughed through the tears of that limit experience.
Falling, falling through light and heat. Falling through silence. She felt the stillness, but knew she was falling. How the senses are deceived into stasis; how the senses lie through the truth of the heart.
It seemed hours before Sam matched her descent and she landed gently on his back. He coasted along the shield layer, swept upward on an exit vector.
“I know.” She couldn’t force her grin from her face.
By the time Sam had reached the atmosphere barrier, Alina was snuggled into her command chamber, sleeping peacefully the sleep of those who had fallen into a sun.
They left Fort Myers forever.
“Mmm
“Not just any toy, Jud. Honeybear Brown.”
She picked him up and turned him over. “And this toy is important to our mission how?”
“He’s a character in both timelines. A potential Delta crossover in and of himself.”
“Paul,” her metallish eyes betraying her disbelief, “it’s a fucking
“Not to Hunter.” He took the bear from Judith’s grip. Static and shift and
The bear moved. Jud jumped.
“Honeybeeeeear, Honeybear Brown!” The toy’s eyes lit up. “I’m the nicest little bear in the whole darned town!” He looked around the room. “Where’s Windy?”
Jud looked like she was about to answer Honeybear, but she shook her head. “Paul, that thing’s god damned scary. I should know. I’m god.”
“You’re neat!” Honeybear smiled at Jud.
Paul stifled a chuckle.
“Take that talking bear and get back to work, author. Next run, you’d better bring me back a human being. No stuffed camels or ostriches, you freak.”
“Gotcha, sweetness.”
He picked up Honeybear and faded with a smirk.
She’d heard that their counterparts on the Judas side of the Delta bleed piloted vessels powered and protected by black holes, and the captains linked with their ships through mechanical gauntlets and webs of silver (not exactly
Sam draped her with
She wondered how different she was from the Alina on the other side, if there even was an Alina on the other side.
“What’s on the plate for today?”
“Frosty’s fleet?”
“Wait.. This is a frag or a bleed?”
“Oh.”
“Jim?”
“Jimbo?”
“Come on, pardner. You gotta talk to me sometime.”
“You just did.” Hank grinned from his command chamber. “Anyhow, what’s it look like out there?”
“That white, huh? That must be pretty white. You know, one time I was at a saloon in—”
Crawl, crackle.
“You feel that?”
“Looks like we ain’t alone out here, buddy.”
They fell through time.
“Hey, dude.”
I won’t lie. His voice caught me off-guard. No one had ever been with me before, not there, not in the little bubble I’d carved for myself, just for myself, deep within the registry of the Judith ME.
“What’s goin’ on?”
I’d thought people into existence before, but they’d only been characters. Whistler and Hank. Benton and West. Jacob’s voice slammed into and through me, echoed through the sphere of nothing within which I floated, and all became my parents’ living room: the old green carpet snaked with guitar cords, the bite of woodsmoke, brownies for us in the kitchen. I knew this without vision; I was too tired and broken to open my eyes.
Lithe fingers climbed over nylon strings, coaxed forgotten songs from a long-dead soul.
“I don’t know anymore.” I knew that choke in my voice.
He stopped playing.
They’d told me, of course. I’d asked to be inserted into the fourteen-seven variant, just two years into the future from which West and Benton had removed me. Hope had come with me, had stood with me behind the mourners at the burial. Wraiths. She’d held my hand between its frequent trips to my mouth, choking back sobs that no one but she could hear in that when.
When my future self placed a guitar pick on the coffin and touched it, he looked up for a moment, and in those eyes, I saw everything that I knew I must end. What tragic cycle, what series of events could inspire such madness in those once-forever eyes? The then-gaunt frame sweating under a gray suit suddenly entirely too big, the sun- burned nose a red foil to those pools of teared ash, hands and wrists shaking, scarred with
He was the madness I must end.