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Authors: Christian Schoon

Tags: #Mystery, #Science Fiction, #Young Adult, #Adventure

Zenn Scarlett (12 page)

BOOK: Zenn Scarlett
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Afterwards, as far as Zenn knew, all of her mother’s in-soma insertions went flawlessly. Except, of course, the last one.

As the truck rattled down the canyon road that led from Gil’s back to the cloister, Zenn again consoled herself that she’d done all she could to prep for the upcoming test. And the news of her successfully completing her first in-soma run was one message she’d be eager to put on a ship headed to Enchara and Warra Scarlett.

She rubbed at her eyes, held her hands out in front of her – they still trembled. She quickly grabbed Katie, sat the rikkaset on her lap and kept her hands on the animal for the rest of the ride home.

They were about to turn into the cloister drive when another vehicle came around the curve just down the road, a plume of dust swirling up behind it. It was Ren Jakstra’s half-track. Almost as dinged, bolted-together and beat up as Otha’s truck, Ren’s vehicle had regular tires in the front and tank-like treads in the back. Recently, Ren had cut off the front half of the roof to make it a convertible of sorts. It pulled up next to them and an arm waved from the driver’s side to flag them down.

“Otha, glad I caught you,” the constable said, pushing his dirty goggles up on his forehead. Clean pink circles of skin outlined his eyes where the goggles had sat, the rest of his face powdered with a coating of red road dust.

“This about the mortgage?” Otha said. “I told the bank in Zubrin I’d get back to them next week, see what we can work out.”

“This ain’t about the mortgage.”

“Then what can I do for you, Ren?”

“Afraid it ain’t me you can do for,” Ren said. “It’s the council. They want you there for the vote next week. Want to hear your side of things.”

Otha groaned softly, squinting his eyes shut.

“Ren, why do they want me to waste a day doing that? You know the renewal is just a formality.”

“Not this time,” Ren told him. “Folks are tired of the situation. You may not have the votes you need.”

“Why? What’ve you heard?”

“Just that this time, there might be a majority who think maybe you’re sitting on some of the best land in this valley. Land that could be put to the common good, instead of… you know…”

“Instead of what? Instead of taking care of animals that don’t have anyone else to turn to? Instead of doing what the Ciscan Order has done for over a century on Mars? And let’s say they don’t vote to renew, then what?”

“Then you lose your lease, Otha,” Ren said flatly. “After that, you know how it works: once I serve notice, you got thirty days to appeal. If your appeal fails, your place will be declared illegal. Then the lawyers up in Zubrin get their teeth into it, and… well, who knows how that works out in the end?”

“Now what damn good would that do anybody, Ren?” Otha thumped his big hands on the steering wheel. “They come shut us down, sell off the clinic equipment and property and then what? What about the animals? Sick animals? What’s the Arsia City council gonna do with them? They gonna house and feed and tend them while they wait for the owners to come get them? I’d like to see that.”

“Hey,” Ren held up one hand to silence Otha. “Your creatures would be the least of their concerns. Look, I don’t say it’s right. But they’d have to do whatever was most… expeditious.”

“Put them all down, you mean?” Otha said, his voice dropping to a growl, shoulder muscles going tense.

Zenn jerked forward in her seat to look past Otha at Ren. “They’d kill them?” she said, incredulous. “Otha, could they do that?”

Otha glanced at her, eyes narrowed. He was grinding his teeth now, breathing hard through his nose. “No. They couldn’t,” he told her. “No one’s going to do that.” He turned back to Ren. “And I gotta say... seems to me this whole thing with the council coming up just now, it smells bad. I mean, now that people have abused their own land, poisoned the soil with chemicals and enzymes, depleted their wells? Well, it’s quite a coincidence the lease on
our
land all the sudden might not get renewed, eh? Very coincidental.”

Ren shrugged again, sucked at his dusty mustache and spit. “Wouldn’t know about that. But I do know people are hurting. And mad. Mad as I’ve seen ’em. So, you show up at the council, or you don’t. It’s your call. I’m just doin’ my job here.”

“Yeah, I’ll think about it.”

Ren pulled his goggles back down over his eyes and put the truck into gear. “Like I say. Show up or don’t. Your call.” The half-track rumbled backwards into the cloister drive, came out again and drove away.

Otha watched the constable’s truck clatter off down the road.

“I’m no good with this stuff,” he said, eyes down, the heat gone from his voice. “Warra always handled the council meetings, mortgage details, the damn taxes. Your father was the main reason we stayed afloat these past few years. I mean, before he left.” He gave her a quick look, then turned away and stared out through the dust-streaked windshield.

“Maybe that’s what we should ask dad about, when we send the shard,” she said tentatively.

Instead of the part about me talking to animals and generally messing things up…
 

“Yes, maybe.” He patted her leg. “We’ll get it sorted out. Nothing to worry about.” But for the first time, Zenn could hear the doubt in her uncle’s voice, and for the first time, felt a new kind of fear rise inside her; fear that maybe this was more than even Otha could handle. And it had to be handled. The alternative didn’t bear thinking about. She thought of her father instead, but that really didn’t offer any encouragement either.

If he was here, this wouldn’t be happening. Fine. We’ll fix it ourselves. Somehow.
 

Otha nodded at the closed gates ahead of them, and Zenn started to get out to go and pull the bell rope to alert those inside that they were back. Just then, the gate doors creaked open. It was Hamish. He rattled one claw at them in greeting.

Zenn sat back again, the unthinkable thought burning in her mind: the clinic closed, the pens and enclosures empty. The only home she’d ever known, lost. Where would they go? And the animals,
her
animals…

Otha drove into the cloister yard and killed the engine. Holding Katie, she got out of the truck and headed in. Echoing off the high cliff walls on either side of the compound, the distant calls of the clinic’s creatures ebbed and flowed through the afternoon air.

 

ELEVEN

It was midmorning the next day when Otha informed Zenn their supply of dried rhina grub was running low. The grub was the larval stage of the giant Tanduan rhina moth. When dried, the concentrated aroma and flavor made it irresistible to swamp sloos. As such, it was an integral part of Zenn’s upcoming in-soma pod insertion test.

So it was just past noon when Zenn again found herself in Otha’s venerable pickup. But this time, she was at the wheel, concentrating hard, attempting to avoid the fragments of old, shattered pavement that littered the road from the cloister into Arsia City.

In the passenger seat next to her, Liam Tucker lounged, offering occasional irritating comments regarding her driving skills, while in the cargo bed behind them Hamish crouched on top of half a dozen crates of freshly shucked gen-soy beans. She was to barter the gen-soy for rhina grub at Wilson Ndinga’s grocery store.

While truck-driving wasn’t part of the test, making sure that the pod and the other elements of the in-soma run were ready was her responsibility. So, in a way, the trip to town was part of the whole process. Plus, Zenn had gotten the impression from Otha it was high time for her to take over the periodic supply runs into Arsia. Despite her general aversion to towners, this was fine with her; she liked driving the truck. And, after a few practice drives in the open field between the infirmary and the southwest compound wall, she was now at the point where she no longer ground the gears each time she shifted.

Wilson Ndinga’s little store on Arsia’s main street carried a hodge-podge of off-world herbs and a few other hard-to-get foodstuffs along with his standard fare, and Otha had arranged with him to occasionally obtain exotic animal feed for the cloister. Wilson knew Otha would pay – or, would promise to pay – especially well for the grub, so Wilson had a standing order with orbital ferry pilots to bring some back to Mars whenever a starship returned from a visit to the Tandua system.

After her initial attack of nerves at having Liam along for the ride, Zenn was finally beginning to relax and enjoy herself at the wheel. The feeling of speed and freedom, even on a dirt road never intended for fast travel, was exhilarating. It made her wonder about what lay at the far reaches of the road, what it would be like to just keep driving and driving, over the next hill, around the next curve in the canyon wall. Her momentary lapse in focus was broken by a vicious jolt when they hit a good-sized chunk of pavement.

“Nice aim, Scarlett,” Liam said, bracing himself with one leg against the dashboard. “You hit that one dead-on.”

“You think you could do better?” she shot back.

“Whoa,” he raised his hands defensively. “Just trying to be helpful.”

“Right,” she told him, swerving hard to avoid the next fragment. “Well, I can do without the help, thanks.”

Hamish’s presence on the drive into town made sense: he could lift the gen-soy crates with one arm; that would come in handy when they unloaded. Liam, Zenn assumed, had just attached himself to the trip to avoid being put to work back at the cloister.

As they neared the first sorry-looking huts of the shantytown ringing Arsia, Zenn down-shifted and they slowed. The scent of campfires wafted through the truck’s open windows. An old man with a blanket draped around his shoulders huddled beneath a tarp he’d stretched from the top of a large shipping container to form a sort of lean-to. He didn’t look up as they passed. Ahead, there was what appeared to be an entire family walking in a group at the side of the road, two adults and four children, the adults in their mid-thirties, the children young. The man pushed a wheelbarrow piled high with what looked like all their worldly possessions. As Zenn pulled up alongside them, the woman moved to herd her children away from the road, and Zenn saw her face.

“That’s Sindri Govinda,” she whispered to Liam. He leaned forward to see. Zenn called out, “Sindri?”

The woman stopped when she saw who it was. The rest of the family stopped too, and Zenn braked to a halt. The woman wore a tired, empty expression, and said nothing, but just stood as the smallest child, a girl, came and put her arms around her mother’s waist. The whole family was dressed in multiple layers of clothing, and they all shared the same coffee complexions, black hair and dark eyes.

“What are you… Are you alright?” Zenn asked.

“We’re moving into town,” Sindri said, speaking as if describing the death of a loved one. “We couldn’t stay at the farm.” She lifted one arm to indicate the wheelbarrow. “This is all we had time to save.”

“The bary-gens go off-line out at your place?” Liam asked.

“Yes,” Sindri said. “The generators. They all failed at once. Not just our place. The whole canyon. We were lucky to get the kids and escape before the entire valley decompressed. Now…” She raised her gaze to survey the grim prospect of the shantytown, but she had no further words. Her husband came up behind her.

“Zenn, Liam,” the man greeted them, put his hands on the shoulders of his wife and child. Dangling from his belt on a leather thong was a wooden club. Zenn wondered if that was their only protection during the family’s long trek into town.

“Hello, Dharm,” Zenn said. “I’m so sorry. About the farm. Do you have a place to go? In town?”

“Brin Daws offered us his spare room,” Dharm Govinda said. “We’ll be fine. We just need… We’ll get settled in at Brin’s and take things from there.” It was clear he was trying to sound more optimistic than he felt. “One day at a time, right?”

“Well, please let us know if we can help,” Zenn said. But she knew there was really nothing they could do for the Govindas. Or for the dozens of other families who’d been forced into town over the past year. There were empty rooms in the dorm at the cloister, of course, and they’d made it clear to everyone the Ciscans were willing to take people in. But for those from outside the cloister, even life in the shantytown was apparently preferable to living alongside the Ciscan’s alien animals.

“No, no, that’s alright,” Dharm said, looking away. “Like I say. We’ll be fine.” He motioned to his family and took up the wheelbarrow handles, and the little group set out again. Zenn put the truck into gear and drove on.

“Nine Hells,” Liam muttered. “If they’re right, all of Tartarus just bit the dust.”

“Can that be true? All of Tartarus Canyon?” Zenn didn’t want to believe this. “If they lost pressure out there, what about the McCalls? The Stoyanovas? All those families?”

There were seven or eight farmsteads strung along the depths of Tartarus Canyon. If all of the barymetric generators protecting the valley really had failed, Arsia’s shantytown would be seeing a serious influx of new residents.

Zenn adjusted the rearview mirror to look back at the bedraggled family.

“At least Sindri and Dharm have somewhere to… Oh!” She stomped hard on the brakes, throwing Liam hard against the dash. The truck screeched to a halt a few feet from a group of men bent over something in the road.

“Nine Hells, Scarlett,” Liam growled at her, recovering himself and rubbing his forehead.

“Well, what are they doing in the middle of road?” Zenn asked.

The half-dozen towner men were attempting to raise up a frame of some sort off the surface of the roadway. It was as wide as the road, maybe ten feet tall. The framework was constructed of lengths of rusty pipe, forming a rectangular opening with old chain link fencing stretched across it. Strands of barbed wire ran along the top.

“They’re putting up a gate,” Liam said. “Unless you run them all down, that is.”

“A gate? To block the road?” she frowned at him.

“You don’t get out much, do ya, Scarlett?” Liam smirked at her. “It’s the gate for this north checkpoint. They’ve put them on all four roads entering town.”

BOOK: Zenn Scarlett
12.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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