hands to me in greeting. Once I would have resented that intrusion on my own peace and quiet. Now I was desperate for a friendly face. I smiled and waved.
Still, I moved fast through the pastures. The frigid air numbed my ears even through the curtain of my hair. I couldn’t feel my nose.
Over the half-bare branches that dotted the fields, the clock bells rang out. I wondered what Abba was teaching Koen and felt a jealous wave at the thought. Mara hardly spoke to me, much less invited me for dinner.
I didn’t have to wonder for long. Koen’s voice called out to me over the soundless wind.
“Terra!”
I stopped, turned. As I saw the pale-faced boy who rushed toward me, I found myself smiling. Koen’s grin was almost obscenely broad over the knot of his scarf.
“Koen,” I said. “Hey.”
“Walking home?” he asked. “Mind some company?”
I shrugged. I didn’t mind. In fact, I felt a small, happy thrill at the thought of walking beside him, arm to arm. I was glad that our faces were both already red from cold. I didn’t want to embarrass myself.
“Not ringing the bells tonight?” I asked, groping for something to talk about as we started through the scrubby grass. The last of the chimes was just ringing out. Nineteen tolls for nineteen o’clock.
“Nah. I promised my parents I’d be home in time for dinner. You know, ‘as long as you’re under my roof’— that sort of thing.” Koen flashed his teeth at me. But I found myself frowning.
“Must be nice,” I mumbled, “that they care.”
Koen looked at me sidelong. “Terra,” he said, “your father cares.”
I let out a small white breath of laughter.
“Cares about me. Right. You see the way that he is.”
But Koen just gave his head a shake, tousling his shaggy hair.
“He talks about you all the time. I know he’s hard on you, but at least he
I thought about my parents, about how they were before Momma got sick. When I was little, she giggled and blushed at him over dinner. He’d spin her around the room when she was cooking, and bring home flowers for her when he knew she was working late. And then I thought about the sounds I sometimes heard down the hall at night, and blushed.
“My father loved my mother. He said she was his
I felt a lump rising in my throat. I swallowed hard, cast my eyes down at the dark ground in front of us.
“Terra . . .” I was surprised to feel his hand touch my hand. He pried my cold-numbed fingers straight, slipping his palm against mine. “It’s okay. It’ll be okay.”
It was the first time I’d held a boy’s hand. I looked down at his fingers. They were narrow and long, prettier than mine. My nails were caked with dirt. His were clean and trimmed short. When I stopped in the path, his eyes were big with concern.
I saw something in those eyes. Not just flecks of gold, reflecting the growing starlight. I saw how he was open to me—how he wanted me to be happy, how he wanted me to be safe. I found the words tumbling from my lips before I could even stop them.
“I saw them kill Mar Jacobi. It wasn’t an accident. The captain’s guard. They killed him. They slit his throat. Down in the engine rooms. They—”
“Terra!” Koen pulled his hand from mine as though ashamed. I didn’t know why. There was no one here but sheep, and even they slept, hunkered down in their woolen winter coats. Koen gave his head a shake. When he spoke again, his voice was ragged.
“I wish you hadn’t told me that.”
He could have balled his hand into a fist and punched me in the gut. That would have hurt me less.
“I thought . . .,” I began. But the words petered out. I didn’t know
“Oh, Terra,” he said. “It’s all right.”
To my surprise he pulled me to him in a sudden embrace. He was much taller than me. My face was smashed into the itchy front of his heavy jacket. But it felt
“It’ll be okay,” he said again. “As long as you tell no one else, we’ll be safe.”
I found myself nodding. Desperately, frantically nodding. This was what I’d wanted, wasn’t it? To trust Koen. To let him keep me safe.
Finally, satisfied, he let me go. His expression was different now—not open, like it once had been, but murky, inscrutable.
“I should go,” he said, his words coming out in almost a whisper. “My parents.”
“Sure,” I said. I stuffed my hands down into my pockets. I didn’t know what to say or how to look. So I just forced a smile. “I’ll see you later, Koen.”
He only gave a small nod, then rushed out ahead of me, disappearing into the dark.
8
Soon the first frost came. On that cold morning I rose early, bundling myself beneath layers and layers of clothes. When I arrived at the lab, I found Mara already buried in her work. She chewed on the inside of her cheek and muttered about cellular damage, while peering through the microscope.
I headed for the bookshelf, ready to grab one of the field guides and head out again. But her cool gaze snapped up at me.
“Hold on,
I turned, my hand lingering on the spine of the book.
“I’m meeting with the captain today,” she said. Then she reached into one of her pockets and pulled out a scrap of paper. I took it hesitantly—it was stained with soil and bore her cramped, tiny handwriting. Three titles, each one written in Old American. They’d taught us how to read it in school. Most of the students struggled—the letters had shifted in five hundred years; the vowels had changed, creating the language we now called Asheran. But I’d always been good with dead languages. I read the titles easily:
“I don’t understand,” I said. “Cookbooks? What’s this have to do with botany?”
“It has to do with keeping you out of my hair while I meet with Wolff.”
“Oh,” I said. I stared down at Mara’s cramped handwriting as if I could divine some sort of answer from her scratchy print. “What . . . what are you meeting with her about?”
“One of the probes we sent out to Zehava was due to return yesterday. We should be getting soil samples. Atmospheric readings. Five hundred years of building theoretical models of the plants we might sow on that damned planet. It won’t be until we get those probe results that our
“Don’t worry,” I mumbled. “I’d rather not be around for it. Captain Wolff gives me the creeps.” I grimaced,