someone who would. It’s the dirty little secret Anna X leaves out of her speech—that female scripts are just as destructive in their way.
“We’ll do anything when we think we have to have a man—trade any favor, tell any lie, take any edge. I said we weren’t angels. Most women are just like most men—trying to get what we want, trying to strike a bargain. It sounds to me as though you and Jessie just couldn’t agree on terms. Don’t wish you could make her be different than she is. If you do love her, wish that she’ll be happy.”
Christopher had been silent, amazed, through Deryn’s long unburdening. “I guess my heart’s been too small for that.”
“Hearts can grow, with proper care,” said Deryn with a gentle smile.
He nodded, lips pulled tight in a frown. “It’s almost time to take me back to the Shelter.”
“Almost,” she said, uncrossing her legs and rising gracefully to her feet. “But not quite. Come on. There’s something I want to show you.”
The Moon Chamber lay wheel-out below Spring Grotto, thirty meters of stairs and a double pressure hatch away from the corridors and compartments. Dimly lit and chapel-quiet, the chamber was a great open square bonded on all four sides by catwalk. The pale light seemed to rise up from the center space, like the glow from a fire pit.
Deryn led him by hand to the edge of the catwalk, and he looked down, unsuspecting. His breath caught, and he held her hand tightly as he swayed with sudden vertigo. Below their feet were the stairs, slipping past as the great wheel of Sanctuary turned. The transparent wall of plaz a few meters below their feet was invisible, except for the diffraction of dust pits and scratches.
“Isn’t it wonderful?” she murmured. “There’s one below every grotto—one each for Sun, Moon, Earth, and stars.”
The dark limb of the Earth had appeared, dotted with spiderstrings of fuzzy light which outlined continents. It sliced across the field of stars like a shadow.
“Look,” she said, “the forest fire in East Russia is still burning.”
Following her lead, they stretched out prone on the carpeted catwalk, heads propped on hands and peeking over the edge, like kids looking down from an upper bunk. The Earth rode past and was replaced by more stars, their glory and plenty and variety unguessed by any earthbound viewer. Ninety seconds later, the satland’s spin brought the planet into view again.
“And I didn’t think I liked riding a Ferris wheel,” he said with a breathless joy.
“No view like this one anywhere on Earth.”
“Which way is north? I should know the constellations.”
“It took me weeks to learn to spot them up here,” she said. “There’s thousands more stars to fill in the patterns and spaces. There—Orion, off to the right. Can you see it? That reddish star is the shoulder—”
“I see it. Oh, God, this is beautiful—”
They stayed as long as their time allowed, through half a dozen reruns of the panoramic movie, each fractionally different from the last as Sanctuary spun along in its orbit. Christopher left the Moon Chamber reluctantly, and part of him stayed behind, still caught in wonder. The proof of that was the smile that lingered on his face all the way to the door of Shelter 24.
“It gives you a different way to look at things, doesn’t it?” he said when he had hugged her.
Deryn did not know just what he spoke of, so she simply agreed. But when she came to get Christopher that next morning, he seemed more at peace, and his first words were to ask how he might arrange to call home. She thought that a heartening sign, never dreaming that chaos was following close on the heels of the new calm.
CHAPTER 31
—CCC—
Christopher had come to Sanctuary knowing that he would not be allowed to stay. But almost from the moment he arrived, the thought began forming that he also did not want to stay.
The suspicion was strengthened when first Deryn, then Anna X, shrugged off the Chi Sequence as inconsequential. It crystallized into a certainty in the Moon Chamber when, watching the darkened globe and the brilliant stars roll by, he suddenly understood that Anna X was right.
Earth had seemed so far away, the bustle of its billions shrunk to a pattern of lights in the night. And the stars that
It was the future of the Earth, in microcosm. He required no further proof from Daniel, Deryn, or the midwives—from Sharron’s memory or his father’s legacy. Synthesis was his art and his magic, and the synergy was clear. The twilight of the will was approaching.
That being so, what was the best use of a life? The curtain would not ring down for decades, perhaps centuries. In that time, billions would pass through the whole cycle of existence, and most of the passages would be made in pain. Against that background, what was the moral act? Was it enough to simply take a turn on the wheel and then step aside?
In a life of watching, Christopher had learned to measure his expectations. Wanting little placed the goal within reach. Wanting nothing too badly mitigated disappointment. The path of least resistance beckoned. If he could not be happy, he could at least hope to temper the pain.
But that, too, was a turning away, into emptiness, into numbness. There was a better choice at hand.
In that light, the choice was easy, inevitable. Mercifully, there was still a chance to choose. He would go home and apply what tools he had to rebuild his family and rehearse his song. There was time for a child, for the treasures of his father’s world. And then, Gaea willing, he would join Daniel on
The phone in Deryn’s apartment was a simple videocom, barely smarter than an interactive TV, meant only for local messaging. To call out required the help of a tech in the Sanctuary communications center, which required in turn the permission of both Deryn and the station censor. And though Deryn left him alone with her blessing once the arrangements were complete, the censor remained on the line.
He had been off-net long enough that skylink greeted him with almost effusive cheeriness and a subscriber- update menu when he signed in. There were a dozen messages waiting, including blue-bar mail from Loi, Daniel, and the Vernonia District of the Oregon State Police. “Too many to wade through now,” he murmured. “Give me Loi’s.”
It was so long since Christopher had seen her face that he almost failed to listen, savoring the sight of her.
“I got your message, Christopher. I’m sorry so much has come down on you,” she said. “Take what time you need and do what you need to do. Come home when you can.” There was some tenderness in her tone, if not in the words.