Fade Away and Radiate Page 3
I will never leave you
And she gave up trying to convince this man, who had the force of a hurricane, to do anything he didn’t want to do. She knew he wanted to kiss her, and for one night, she’d gladly take every last kiss that Billy Murphy had to give.
I’m going to take your kisses in return, Annie. Make you mine, forever. But first I want to make sure you are safe.
With a sigh, Annie did the thing she never did, and accepted things for what they were. Bit by bit, her consciousness receded from his, then with a sudden snap she was back in her body, and Billy Murphy was back in his.
They lay together in a sweaty, intertwined heap of longing. “I want you, so bad,” Annie said.
“No kidding, right?” Billy said out loud, and laughed. “But I’m not getting naked with you, no way tonight. By this time tomorrow, though…”
By this time tomorrow, if Annie had her way, Billy would be safely gone. Her desire pulled hard, deep in the base of her belly. Annie licked her lips, and tasted the sweat and tears mixed together. And she was surprised to find the taste sweet.
They turned off the lights. Instead of lying in the cot, Billy insisted they sleep behind the bed, pressed up together on the floor against the flimsy back wall of the hut.
“Trust me,” he said. “Sweet dreams.”
His voice, so everyday and cordial, such a contrast to the raw passion they had just shared.
“But what about Violet?” she asked.
“I’ll take care of that little bitch.”
She got that he didn’t trust Violet. But how could a little, unarmed lab AI do her any harm?
Annie soon found out.
#
Somehow Annie fell into sleep, tucked inside Billy’s sheltering arms. He smelled like cinnamon and musk. She dreamed of far-off gardens filled with spices and wild creatures, fierce and beautiful.
Billy’s face hovered over hers in her dream, open, finally at peace. The war was over…
Annie awoke to furious buzzing and violent curses, flailing arms, and the hoarse cries of a man fighting for his life.
She rolled under the cot to get out of the way, and the battle royal raged above. She heard the crash of furniture, the desk smashing to the ground, Billy’s angry roar, the whine of Violet’s wings.
She reached up and felt for the blaster still hidden under her pillow.
No! Annie!
And she drew her hand back just as fast. As if Billy had smacked her.
A second later silence thundered down over them, as if the battle had never happened.
“Billy?” she whispered, suddenly full of a terrible foreboding. “Billy!”
No answer, and after another minute Annie decided she was done with hiding.
She hesitated, waiting for Billy to yell into her mind again.
Nothing.
She crawled out from under the cot and flicked on the bare bulb that hung over the smashed remains of her desk.
Billy lay sprawled across the floor, utterly still. With a cry, she rushed forward and rolled him over with an adrenaline-fueled strength, searching his body for wounds.
Violet buzzed up into her face, like a fat, lost cicada in Forest Hills in August.
She slapped the insectoid AI away from her. “Stand down!” she ordered. But instead of responding, Violet buzzed away from her, drunkenly banging into the flimsy synthwood door over and over again.
As Annie watched in horrified fascination, Violet fell to the ground and crawled away through the crack between the door and the threshold.
“Billy.” She turned back to him, racking her brain, trying to figure out how a tiny AI could fell a big lug like Murphy. How could Violet have killed him without any firepower at all?
She checked for a heartbeat and found it, faint but steady. She let her hand rest against his chest. She listened to his breathing, so tentative that it seemed he might stop again at any moment.
Come back to me, she whispered inside his mind, not realizing she’d done it until he stirred under her, responding to her words with movement.
She stretched out next to him, warmed his cold body with her own, restraining her panic like a ravening dog on a leash.
“Back,” Billy said aloud a minute later, words slurring. “It was poison. Little viper.”
He opened his eyes, and Annie looked into him, disappeared into him. If he lived, she had to get him out of here.
She blinked hard to break their connection, and looked around the ruined hut. She could see beyond the circle of light shed by the bare bulb overhead.
Daylight. They’d survived the night.
“Do you…do you need an antidote?” Annie stuttered, though she didn’t have one, nor any knowledge of how to concoct one.
“Nah. The genmod. Comes in…handy.” With a groan, Billy sat up, his sides heaving. “That poison though…it woulda worked on you. Easy.”
Poison. Annie shuddered. “Violet.”
“Hells yeah, Violet. She didn’t have bullets or lasers inside her. I knew to check for that, before. But they stored poison in her. I’m not a drone specialist or I woulda known.”
With growing amazement, Annie realized he was apologizing to her. “You saved my life. You realize that, I hope.”
He shrugged. “She never woulda come after you if I hadn't showed up. Violet’s here to make sure you stay here, working. But now she realizes I'm taking you away from here, away from FortuneCorp. And her real job is to kill you rather than allow you to get offworld with that Bowman drive. If they can’t have your genius, nobody can.”
Annie's stomach did a slow flip. She'd always thought Violet worked for her.
Annie was wrong. Annie worked for Violet, and if she messed up, she'd be terminated.
For good.
“She used up her first strike on your pillow because your face wasn’t there,” Billy said. “She had to strike fast to get past me, she knew that. Didn’t have the time to register you weren’t sleeping in your usual place. But man, her reserve dose was enough to do the job, too. Ow.”
Annie stared and stared at her pillow. The cover was shredded apart, and a thick, brown liquid puddled on the synth-foam padding.
She tore her gaze away and turned her attention to Billy’s wounds. Annie could see the vicious punctures slashed into Billy’s palm.
“She got away,” Annie said and pointed to the door.
“She probably got an emergency beacon signal programmed in ‘er,” Billy said. “Time for us to get out of here, wicked fast. I hear FortuneCorp is working on a wormhole drive. If they’ve perfected it, then they can get here in two hours, not two days. Gotta go.”
A sick dismay settled over Annie like a thundercloud, a terrible certainty of doom.
The room did a slow spin, and she felt like she was going to puke. “But go where? FortuneCorp owns this whole sector. I can’t hide from them, Billy. You came all the way out here to find me, but it’s too late, no matter what Roberto told you. I think you can save yourself if you get out of here fast enough.”
Billy’s laugh shattered her. He drew to his full height, magnificent, alive, and unbroken, and she looked up from the floor at him in wonder.
“I don’t work for FortuneCorp. I don’t belong to them. Never did. The US Army broke me down and built me over as a genmod freakazoid. But FortuneCorp can go suck it.”
He reached down for her with his bitten, bloody hand. Annie held on and pulled herself to her feet.
“Remember those brothers I told you about? The ones that helped me find you? They got free of FortuneCorp, just like you’re gonna. They set up their own planet, with their own ways and their own freedom. And I’m taking you there.”
“But…” Annie’s resolve to sacrifice herself faded in the blaze of Billy’s furious stare.
“No buts. I know, I know, you want me to go and save myself. I ain’t built that way, and you know it. You wanna save me? Then come with me. Because if you’re not leaving, then I’m staying, and w
e’ll deal with FortuneCorp here, together.”
He pulled her to the door, and this time Annie didn’t hesitate. She left her past, her fear and her determination to hide, lying on the floor behind them.
“Sully’s on the way to pick us up,” Billy said. “We could use a gardener out there where we’re going, on that new planet. You’re just the woman we need.”
They walked away from the trashed hut and into the jungle that had grown out of Annie’s vision, through her patient fingers and over time, with careful tending.
After a moment’s hesitation, Annie decided to speak her last misgiving. “How is it you can talk inside my soul?” she asked. “Roberto never could do it. He tried. It seems like, I don’t know, cheating somehow. Like it wasn’t right I couldn’t commune with him like that. And here we are, you and me…”
Billy stopped walking and turned to face her. “Yeah, my bro Roberto was possessed of many gifts,” Billy said with a sigh. “You guys were good together. But, Annie girl, Roberto’s gone. And he left your protection to me.”
They stood in a clearing surrounded by gently drooping vines, along a pathway of soft moss. The sun filtered weakly through the dome, arching high above both their heads.
“I was the team leader you know, and Roberto worked under me,” Billy continued. “I called my brothers into union. That was my strength. Roberto could see ahead. But I could speak into his heart. And you can speak into mine, Annie. You know what that means.”
She did know. It meant that despite Billy’s physical strength, his horse-sense – as he called it – and his ability to survive anything, his love for Annie ruled him.
The jungle grew up around them, rich and green and fragrant.
When Annie looked around, she saw only the two of them walking alone in the garden. But she knew, despite all appearances to the contrary, they didn’t walk alone. For one thing, Violet, the killer, still hunted them out there.
But Annie reached for Billy’s hand and squeezed, and despite the terrible urgency that they get off AlphaZed3 now, he waited for her, the way he always had.
Annie closed her eyes, took a deep breath, and saw with her inner sight the place where Billy spoke to her. And she saw that in truth three of them walked in the jungle at dawn.
Goodbye, Roberto, she said inside of her, knowing that Billy could hear her too. I will love you forever.
Adios, mi corazon, Roberto replied. Anika will stay with me, Annie goes with Billy. You go on, and I will too. We will meet again, in that place beyond the edge of forever.
Annie kissed Roberto in her mind, and finally let him go. The whisper of his goodbye echoed over her as he faded away, speaking into her for the first time, and the last.
She watched him go, blinked the vision away, and took a look around. Only a moment had passed, but all had changed.
She was still in the clearing. Billy still waited for her. For the first time, Annie believed she could be free. Free of FortuneCorp, free of the past, free of herself and her fears.
“I never spoke with Roberto like that, you know, in the soul,” she whispered. “I don’t know if I really want to say goodbye to him.”
She waited for the faithful tears to appear, but for the first time, they didn’t come.
Billy spoke out loud, gently, with a sort of reverence. “Aw, you spoke to him without words, always, Annie. You have the soul of a healer. A grower of seeds, right? Anybody who could grow a world like this has the power to whisper into a heart. And what I heard was Roberto saying goodbye to you. He let you go, he wants you to go, you’re free. He still loves you.”
He took her hand and quietly pulled her forward through the little Eden she had cultivated. And she only paused to pull the Bowman eco-drive out of the ground. To take it with them, to grow a new world.
And they came to the perimeter, behind the research hut, where Billy had moved through the barrier between her fledgling paradise and the ice.
“I don’t have a cold weather suit for you,” Billy said. “You can’t go out there yet.”
They stared beyond the clear barrier between Annie’s warm, unfurling garden and the frozen hell howling outside. Dimly, she could see the landing pod Billy had used to come down to her. It was already half-buried in the swirling snow and clouded ice of the native world.
And then she saw it. The rebel ship breaking through the ice planet’s orbit, hovering over the frozen surface. She read the words painted crudely on the battered hull:
The Sullivan.
A warm cascade of light shot from the belly of the ship to Billy’s landing pod, then travelled along the ice to the permeable plexisurface of the geodome, seeking Billy.
His soul.
The light poured through the clear membrane, warming her like the sun of her childhood. Annie put her hands up against the plexi, feeling the cool membrane yielding to the pressure of her fingertips.
And then right before Annie walked through into the protective light of the Sullivan’s waybeam, Violet rose up from underfoot. Beating her wings into the ground, like a homicidal mechanical hummingbird with a hypodermic needle for a beak, stabbing Annie’s shoe again and again and again.
Her poison vial, now empty.
Billy looked down, then scraped Violet off her foot with his boot, and stomped until the AI was no more than a cluster of crushed gears.
“I bet the beacon inside the AI still works,” Billy said. “We’re getting out of here, just in time.”
With that, they pressed through the membrane and walked up the pathway of light and into the belly of the ship that waited for them.
And Annie looked back one last time, to the garden she had grown, to the illusions of safety she was leaving behind. The dome glowed in the morning sunlight, iridescent as a soap bubble, the blasted frozen whiteness surrounding it.
Roberto wasn’t there.
A huge weight suddenly rolled off her shoulders, a burden she’d never realized she carried, until it was released. After a long, barren season, she was ready. It was time for Annie to let the grief move through her, radiate and fade away, though not the love, never the love. She’d never forget him, would love him always, but now she knew she was strong enough to carry the loss forward into the future.
Annie turned, kept walking into the light. And Billy Murphy walked beside her.
She’d never run away again.
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Author’s Note
I originally wrote "Fade Away and Radiate" for the short story collection The Mammoth Book of Futuristic Romance. Those of you who've read my novel NETHERWOOD will recognize some of the same elements and setting here, though the events of this story happen before Talia's adventures in the Forest with her outlaw. If you haven't read NETHERWOOD and you liked this story, look for the novel to re-release late in 2013.
As for the title, it is inspired by an old Blondie song, and I think the mood of that song captures the longing and cosmic regrets lurking in this tale of grief and redemption.
Here is a bonus story for your reading enjoyment. “The Triumph of Arachne” first appeared in Penumbra Magazine’s June 2012 issue. I had a ton of fun writing this one, and it shares some themes with “Fade Away.” I hope that you enjoy it! ~Michele
The Triumph of Arachne
By Michele Lang
Copyright 2012 Michele Lang
Smashwords Edition
this story first appeared in the June 2012 issue of Penumbra Magazine
“You are in terrible danger,” said the spider.
Clea startled and looked up from her hologram matrix. The spider dangled in front of her, defying the sterile environment of the lab. They floated in a finely-engineered exploratory vessel, the Arachne, where spiders ironically were strictly forbidden.
Clea rubbed her eyes and looked at the spider again. The spider’s presence violated ship protocol, but Clea’s spider remained her own little secret. The spider glowed a delicate spun gold, and Clea had spotted her before, dangling from silken thr
ead over her work. As if she were studying the intricate data weaving that Clea herself performed in service to their ship.
Given their circumstances and the pressure bearing down on all of the crew, Clea could use a secret little sign of life. Of home. But the spider had never spoken before. That made Clea think maybe the pressure had finally taken its toll on her sanity.
“Hello,” Clea finally whispered, feeling like a fool even as she spoke. Her grandmother, who had raised her, had taught her to always remember her manners. Never knew who you would encounter in the vast frontiers of space. Gramma also taught her to respect the prophecies that come in dreams, and to remember that magic lurked everywhere, especially where a person least expected.
“You hear me,” the spider replied. “I can’t believe it.”
“It’s just us, you know,” Clea said. “The crew is up top, not down here in the lab. Maybe I can hear you because nobody else is around.”
She spoke softly, but still the spider swung wildly around in the wake of Clea’s breath. She folded her lips and waited for the spider to gain her bearings.
The spider unwound more silk, came closer. “If you hear me, heed my message. Before it’s too late.”
“You remember Cassandra, then,” Clea said with a smile. She only meant it as a little joke, but the spider choked back a sob. “Yes, yes. Poor girl. Her fate was worse than mine.”
Clea’s blood ran cold. She sat hidden inside the hull of the Arachne, out of Moon Port 3, headed for the copper mines on Mars. The corporation expected a lot out of this mission, and Clea stood to make a gigantic pile of money should she succeed in her quest. But this spider…the name of the ship…
It all foretold doom, hubris, the wrath of the gods. Clea gulped and forced herself to keep calm.
“I am listening, goddess,” Clea whispered, trying to say the words her grandmother would have said in these circumstances.
“I am no goddess, though I am immortal,” Arachne replied. “I was once a girl like you, clever and headstrong and maybe a little arrogant. I was never a goddess. I offended one.”