military training, cadets extensively study both space and planetary mines. Noemi worked harder than most. The last moment she spent with her family was the moment before they drove over an explosive device not so different from a mine; for her, defusing bombs feels like defeating an enemy. Those diagrams come to mind as clearly as if they were still on her academy screen. “Okay,” she says as they stand at the far end of the corridor. “I’m going to crawl into the service tube and check this one out. If I can defuse it, great. If it’s too thorny, or requires equipment I don’t have, we move to the next corridor.”

“I should be the one to take the risk,” Abel insists, like she knew he would.

Noemi clasps his hands in hers. “I’ve worked with mines before. I know what I’m doing. You’re exhausted, and you’re more damaged than you’re letting on.”

“I still have full dexterity in my wrist.”

“Maybe you do. But let me handle this one, okay?” She struggles for the words. “I don’t mind letting you do more, because you are stronger than any human could ever be. You do have more info in your memory banks than any brain could hold. That doesn’t mean you automatically have to be the one who puts yourself in danger every time.” Noemi brings his hand to her lips and kisses it. His skin is terribly abraded from their icy climb through the crevasse. “Your life matters as much as any human’s, Abel. Remember that.”

“Not yours. Not to me.” He shakes his head. “You’re my priority.”

“And you’re mine.”

She can tell he wants to argue more, but he looks down at his damaged hands. If emotion won’t convince him, logic will. Sure enough, after a couple of seconds, he nods. “If you run into any difficulty whatsoever—”

“I’ll call for you.”

“And if you’re even slightly uncertain—”

“Same thing.”

Abel kisses her hand this time, then lets her go.

Noemi shimmies into the narrow opening of the service tube, pausing after a meter or two to take stock of the few tools she’s collected, and to slide a pair of night-vision goggles down into place. In the corridors, she could manage, but down here it’s nearly pitch-black. The damage of the crash is strongly apparent here, with the bent girders and collapsed struts of the Osiris naked and exposed. When she saw the useless murals and gilding, stepped over the shattered finery, she saw only the waste. Now that she’s in the belly of the thing, looking at its raw strength, Noemi realizes how splendid a ship it really was.

It was meant to be a vehicle of resurrection, she thinks. If it hadn’t been for the passengers’ greed and Remedy’s anger, this ship could’ve brought an entire planet’s worth of settlers to humanity’s next home. It really would have been a rebirth.

In the green-tinted world presented by the night-vision goggles, Noemi spots the mine almost immediately. Its wires sprawl in multiple directions, like one of the heptapod squids native to Genesis’s oceans. Still, with a mine, scale is relatively unimportant. Defuse the central mechanism, and all the arms go dead.

Still in the tunnel, she lowers herself into the broader open space beneath the mine. It’s barely high enough for her to stand in; Fouda must’ve sent someone short down here. Still, she can lean back a little, brace her shoulder against one of the walls, and be steady.

Doffing her goggles, Noemi turns on her small light again to check wire and tab coloration. The pattern clarifies and aligns with one she studied back in training, a pretty basic model that practically shows her how to defuse it.

With a grim smile, Noemi takes up the nearby emergency tool kit and gets to work.

What would Captain Baz think of her now? She’d be proud, probably—assuming she doesn’t hate Noemi for taking so damn long to help Genesis. As for Darius Akide—

What’s that noise?

She ducks, extracting her tools from the mine as she peers through the darkness of the tunnel. Seeing anything is impossible, but she knows she didn’t imagine that scraping sound. Swiftly she tugs her night-vision goggles down over her eyes and looks out—

—at Simon smiling back at her.

He whispers, “Peekaboo.”

28

ABEL ACCEPTS NOEMI’S DECISION TO TAKE ON THE mines herself. Although he considers following several paces behind her, he abandons this plan almost immediately; if he distracted her at the wrong moment, it could be dangerous to her. If she felt he didn’t trust her to handle something well within her capabilities… that could be dangerous to him.

Besides, she was right. Now that he’s sitting still with nothing to do but rest, he realizes how much his reaction times have slowed. He’s drained the reserves of his regenerative ability; he won’t be able to heal until he’s rested. Noemi recognized that even before he did.

My programming prioritizes handling problems for humans. Naturally I want to do things for Noemi. But perhaps emotional attachment programs humans to do the same.

Fresh wonder opens within his mind as he remembers that Noemi is emotionally attached to him—that she can’t imagine leading her life without—

He hears metal creak underneath. Localizing his hearing, he determines that the sound is coming from directly under his position, and that in addition to the metal, he can also make out the sound of shuffling feet.

Noemi shouldn’t be down there. That’s nowhere near the mine. Her position would be several meters ahead—

—which is where the footsteps are headed.

Instantly Abel’s on his feet, dashing to the nearest passageway. He reminds himself, This is why humans should never make the plans!

The closest hatch door is only a meter away. Lowering himself down is easy, as is moving quickly and silently through the corridor. His infrared vision allows him to glimpse a small human form—slightly too soft, with uneven footsteps—yes, it’s Simon. Confirmation comes one second later in the most chilling form possible: Simon’s voice saying, “What makes you go?”

“What do you mean?” Noemi sounds so calm, so

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