Bouncer was beside me in an instant, his whole body tense. He
whined, sniffing the air. Garjah held my wrist with his upper arm and swept me into
his lower pair, once again cradling me in his arms against his hard chest. It
was hard, but my exosuit protected me. My helmet jarred against his shoulder as
he ran, but I couldn’t look away from the writhing shape in my palm.
Not even when I twisted my head, frantically smacking my
helmet until it released, and vomited to one side.
The indominable cerops stayed beside us, refusing to leave
me though Garjah ran fast and silent through the sand. I didn’t know Four Arms
could move that fast. Or maybe the world was spinning around me and I’d lost
it.
Something was crawling under my skin, and the color of my
hand was changing from pale to dusky gray.
“Is that normal?” Garjah said, panting as he topped a dune.
“N-no,” I stammered. Try as I might, my hand was no longer
my own. Something slid across the pads below my fingers and they jerked in response.
“I’m gonna be sick again.”
He tilted me but didn’t stop running as the ship came into
sight. He must have somehow sent a signal ahead because Timok and another man
waited. I was just glad they didn’t think Bouncer had attacked and weren’t
shooting at him.
I tried to give Timok a rundown of what happened, but the
Four Arms ignored me as Garjah hustled me through the corridors to his lab. Gajah
carefully placed me on the table, fumbling to remove my suit.
“He’s going to need to be put out, completely.”
“What? No! Just take them out!”
“I don’t know if it will work. It didn’t before. You’ll have
to leave. Something about your presence keeps him from going into full stasis.”
Timok was readying a device I didn’t like the look of.
“Seedrah!” Garjah bellowed. The door slid open to reveal his
sweating protégé.
“Stop. Just stop.” No one was listening to me. I tried to
sit up and swing my legs over the side of the table.
“Hold him,” Timok ordered. “Garjah, go.”
“No! Don’t leave me here, Garjah, you bastard!” Seedrah grabbed
my shoulders, pulling me back down on the bed. Timok avoided my flailing arm
and injected me. The lab faded away as Garjah’s form disappeared behind the
closing door as he abandoned me.
The feeling of my hand clenching into a fist was the first
thing I noticed when I woke, along with a burning tingle in the limb. I sighed
in relief, staring up at the ceiling of the lab. I was still there. Glancing
over, I noticed Timok in a chair. He looked haggard, both sets of his hands
clasped together, and he met my gaze soberly.
“Sorry I was panicked when Garjah brought me in earlier. I
couldn’t feel my hand or move it, and that freaked me out. Where is Garjah? I
need to apologize.”
“Garjah should not have let you touch a plant infested with sindranth.”
Timok sighed. “He is very upset.”
“It’s not his fault. How was he supposed to know they’d eat
through my suit?”
Timok pursed his lips. “Your suit is inferior. He knew this.
Sindranth prefer to live in living tissue but have mouths that can bore through
almost anything because sometimes they must use other means in the desert.”
“Accidents happen. I’m okay. You got them out, right? That’s
why I can move my hand.”
Timok leaned forward. “Essell, you have not looked at your
hand once since you woke.” He shook his head. “I am sorry, but once sindranth
invade living tissue, it is impossible to remove them. They shed cells that replicate
themselves in ways we have not discovered a way to stop. Each colony
continually reproduces until all the living tissue is eaten away inside their
home, then they release through holes in the host to be picked up by a new host
or blow in their shell form across the sands and rocks until they find
something living to latch onto.”
“But—”
“The only thing I could do to save your life was remove your
hand,” he said gently.
My breath came short, and the nausea I’d felt returned. “W-what?
No!” I shook my head violently, swallowing repeatedly to keep the bile down. “No.
You didn’t. I can feel it. It’s there.”
“Essell, look down.”
I closed my eyes. “No,” I said desperately. “This can’t be
happening.”
“We will help you, Essell. You will be okay. You were
limited with just two hands, but humans seem to manage. We—”
“I cannot do my work with one hand!” This couldn’t be real.
The metal of my exosuit was state of the art. It was tested on innumerable planets.
I jumped off the table, still refusing to look down. I was only wearing a pair
of brief shorts like I’d seen some Four Arms wear, and my feet were bare. The
metal was cold, but not as cold as the chill running down my spine.
Barreling out of the lab, I ran with no plan but my feet
took me to the one place I had managed to learn how to find.
Bouncer’s cage.
He stood as I came into the hold, whining when I fumbled the
latch with my non-dominant hand. I cursed, my vision wavering, until it finally
opened. Then I feel to my knees beside him and cried. My shoulders shook, and I
hooked my arm around his neck to hold on to him as he pressed his head against
my chest. He rumbled a soothing purr and stood with me against the sorrow and
shock consuming me.
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