“Where did Bouncer go?” Sedating
him again had not made him happy. He’d been so close to me for the last few
days, his steady presence against my thigh, it was startling for him to be
gone. I’d gotten a narrow-eyed stare when he lifted his head after we touched
down and I revived him from the sedation, but this was the first time I’d lost
sight of him.
“He’s outside.” Garjah peered
out the door of the skimmer. A vine slithered over the metal and dropped into
the space, and he brushed it aside. “Pacing.”
I didn’t blame him. The
skimmer was too small, and all the space inside was taken up by the two of us. I
would pace if I could, but there was no room. “Have you noticed how much calmer
he is?” I’d called him Bouncer, and that had been all about the way he
constantly moved. He’d been stalking the Resistance members or staring them
down from my side.
From even earlier than
that, actually. It started with the Kardoval.
“He is maturing. He was a
juvenile when you found him, or he found you. His kind are deadly predators,
ones even we avoid. It is in his nature to be less… bouncy.” Garjah turned from
the doorway to stare at the blips on the screen. “Is that moving?”
One of them was. My stomach
flipped. I gripped the arms of the chair and swallowed. “Yes. Turning on the
skimmer caught someone’s attention.” I tapped the screen, turning on the display.
The extra pair of hands was nice to keep me anchored, but I needed to work. They
could come in handy outside of bed as well.
I snorted.
“What?”
“Nothing, just thinking
stupid jokes in my head.” It wasn’t even really a joke. Just stupid. “It’s a jumper.
Capable of holding a full team, though I can’t scan for life signs. Something
about this planet seems to impact the scanning.”
“Maybe that’s why they didn’t
find your ship?” Garjah suggested.
“Maybe. This place is strange.
The gravity and the plant and animal life is just part of it.” Clearly, just
looking at me. Yes, part of what had happened to me was what Timok had done to
save my arm, but the bond I had to Garjah and even to Bouncer had affected
that.
And that bond had occurred before
Garjah saw me. He’d felt drawn to come out and find me. I should have been
scared witless, and even if I’d acted like a brainless idiot several times, I hadn’t
been nearly as terrified of an unknown alien species as I should have been.
More questions I wanted to
answer that I couldn’t focus on right then because the jumper was moving fast. I
stood. “They’ll be here soon. Let me go first. I’ll keep my helmet off.”
“Are you sure? That will
leave your head vulnerable.”
“I’m known to them.”
Garjah pinched his lips together,
his narrow nostrils flaring again. “You don’t look fully human anymore. You’ve
changed. It makes me nervous.”
“The crew is not made up of
humans; I know you only met me, but ships in the Galactic employ humans and
aliens of all different species as long as they can handle similar conditions.
I won’t stand out as the only non-human.” I wrapped an arm around his waist. “Along
with you, I mean.”
“And Bouncer. We should get
him in here.” I went to the door and called him. He stopped mid-stalk, swinging
his head around to stare at me before looking back in the direction the jumper
was coming from. I couldn’t hear it yet, but we probably would soon. “Come on,
boy. Stand with us.”
He bounded through the
small clearing, rushing toward the skimmer. I smiled. Well, maybe he wasn’t all
grown up. Safe in my suit, I grunted but didn’t push him down when he jumped up
and put his front paws on my shoulders. He rubbed his head on my neck and chin.
I rubbed the pebbled skin on the back of his neck and shoulders, scratching the
itchy spots he had a tough time reaching. He rumbled.
“It’ll be okay. Just stay
with me and Garjah, Bouncer.” Good thing he’d come in when he did because as
soon as he was with Garjah and behind me, the jumper’s thrumming engines filled
the quiet with their distinctive whumping whirr.
I swallowed hard again. “It’ll
be okay,” I whispered.
“No one will harm you.
Remember, we upgraded your suit. Just don’t let them strike your head.”
Glancing over my shoulder
at Garjah’s naked chest, I narrowed my eyes. “If you can make my suit with four
arms, what about you?”
“I have something different?”
“Machismo?” I muttered.
“I do not know what that
means. I have a shield. It will keep me safe.”
Sighing, I shook my head. “We
need to work on our communication skills.”
“We will,” Garjah promised.
I had to trust we would.
That we’d get that time. All the time. Once we faced the ships Sonez sent, and
the first contact teams, and my parents, and then everyone else.
“Here we go.” The jumper
powered down and the door opened. Soldiers filed out. They were armed, looking
around, their suits glinting dully in the sun. Then came the scientists.
How did I know the
difference? Well, they were in the same suits but they were armed with scanners
and handhelds. They spoke loudly, and their glances around were done with avid curiosity
and a desire to wander off if the cordon around them would allow it.
“The signal came from right
there. Ahh, you can see it through the vines. They must have masked the skimmer
before.” There was a scientist in the lead alongside one of the soldiers. They
were both using their handhelds, but I guessed for very different things.
Time to surprise them. “Please don’t shoot me when you realize I’m here in the skimmer too,” I said.
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