themselves.
'Are we dreaming or something?' Minmei clung to the bucket's rail. 'What in the world is going on here?'
They were looking around them at broad streets and tall buildings, signs, lamp posts, marquees, and throngs of people. They were looking at Macross City, except that far overhead was the expanse of a spacecraft's metal 'ceiling.' A far-reaching lighting system had already been set up to give Earth-normal illumination. The crowds were pointing at them and gabbling and yelling.
'I can't believe it,' he muttered. 'The whole city's here.'
The bucket set them down to one side of the hole in the deck. Minmei was about to climb out when she gasped and pointed. 'Oh, Rick,
He remembered the corner well; he'd done enough crashing around on it in a Battloid he couldn't steer. Except these buildings all looked new, bright with fresh paint.
'The White Dragon and Aunt Lena's house are right here!' She was already clambering out of the bucket.
He felt a little woozy, and there were a lot of confusing images, one on top of another, after that. A tiny dynamo came dodging out of the crowd. Jason threw himself into Minmei's arms, and the cousins hugged each other and cried.
Mayor Tommy Luan was slapping Rick on the back and saying things like 'As you can see, m'boy, the entire city's been rebuilt! Now, we've got to get you rested up and hear what happened to you; you've been gone for almost two weeks!'
Minmei's Uncle Max had more to add, pumping Rick's hand with the powerful grip of a lifelong worker. 'I appreciate the protection you provided our baby girl!'
'Uh, don't mention it,' Rick said vaguely. He suddenly wanted very much to sit down. Then he caught other nearby voices.
People were gathered around Minmei, Macross City people who knew her and regarded her as part of their extended family, not a castaway and a stranger-not as they would regard Rick.
'Oh, it was so frightening down there,' she was telling her audience, wide-eyed. 'You have no idea!'
'Oh, I can imagine,' a woman said, while people nodded and murmured in agreement.
A godlike voice echoed through the strange, metal-boundaried world of the new Macross City, startling Rick. 'Attention! Message from the bridge!'
He thought it was a voice he'd heard before somewhere, but he was too disoriented to place it. 'The disturbance in Sector Seven-X was caused by a construction accident. There were no injuries. The damage will be cleared up very shortly. All divisions revert to normal status.'
Minmei was regaling people now; she had the crowd in the palm of her hand. 'Oh! And the
The onlookers laughed in anticipation, though they had no idea what the mice story was all about. Rick waited for her to catch his eye and draw him into the center of attention, but she was focused on her performance now.
'Well, m'boy, you must be one happy fella right now, by golly, huh?' Tommy Luan said, and slapped him on the back again in a man-to-man fashion. The mayor was built like a barrel weighted with cannonballs; the slap sent Rick teetering over to the deck.
It felt nice and comfortable there. He didn't have the strength to get up anyway and didn't think anybody would miss him if he just napped for a little while.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
There were little differences that let her know she wasn't really in the original White Dragon, but she could ignore them-ignore them happily-after her imprisonment in the deserted portion of SDF-1.
So, waiting for her uncle and aunt to return, she cleaned the place up the way she'd done back in Macross City. The furniture felt a little strange, lighter and far stronger than the wooden stuff she was used to, fabricated by Robotech equipment out of reprocessed wreckage; but it looked close enough to the original tables and chairs to make her feel like she was home again. She worked happily, humming, not realizing that the tune was the 'Wedding March.'
The front doors swept apart, just like the ones back on Macross Island, and her uncle and aunt came in. 'We wasted half the day standing on line for this,' Uncle Max was grousing, shaking a food ration package no bigger than a good-size book.
She thought again what a strange pair they made, her uncle broad and substantial as a boulder, barely coming shoulder-high to his willowy, serene wife. And yet when Minmei thought about what it meant to be completely in love, she often thought about these two.
'We're lucky to have anything,' Lena reminded him gently.
The SDF-1 had been equipped and supplied for a variety of missions, but not for feeding tens of thousands of refugees. Aeroponic and hydroponic farms and protein-growth vats were already in operation, but for the time being the dimensional fortress's stores, and the supplies salvaged from the shelters, were the extent of the food supply. Those were quite considerable, rumor had it, but rumor also had it that SDF-1 faced a very long trip back to Earth, and Captain Gloval was being careful.
'Hi, you two!' Minmei said brightly. 'Welcome home! How'd it go?'
Aunt Lena tried to put on a cheerful expression. 'About as well as could be expected, I guess.'
'I'm feeling much better now,' Minmei said, gesturing around to show them the progress she'd made toward putting the place in order. Uncle Max looked around despondently; it was so much like the White Dragon that was gone forever.
'I'm glad to hear that,' Aunt Lena said. 'And how's Rick? Is he up yet?'
When the medics released him, Aunt Lena and Uncle Max had insisted that Rick stay in a spare bedroom in the rebuilt restaurant until he was fully recovered. 'I suppose he's still in bed,' Minmei said. 'I haven't heard him moving around up there.'
'I'm not surprised.' Lena smiled. 'After watching over you for two weeks, he probably deserves a rest.'
Minmei grinned. 'I guess you're right about that. Oh, by the way, are you going to leave everything like this or will you reopen the restaurant?'
'What d'you mean reopen the restaurant?' Uncle Max exploded, though she could hear the sudden hope in his voice.
Minmei gestured around at the stacked chairs and boxed flatware and bundles of table linen. The White Dragon, which originally stood at the virtual center of Macross City, had served as a kind of field test for the engineers seeking to help the Macross City survivors rebuild their lives, an experiment to see if a piece of the city could be reproduced down to the last detail. There were working dishwashers and ovens and sinks and rest rooms, freezers and refrigerators, lighting and a sound system.