Chapter One
Megan lay in her deceleration couch and looked out of the small porthole as the Unity landing pod broke through planet’s atmosphere and headed towards a small landmass.
She was excited as only a ten-year-old could be.
She had peppered her parents with questions almost non-stop after the awakening, when she had been revived from cryosleep, as they made their way with the others of the group to the escape pods. That they had been unable to provide answers for the most part did not deter her from asking them.
And now she was watching the beginning of a new life.
The colors looked different as they came closer to the surface, a strange looking mottled mixture of brownish green and russet red, like a patchwork quilt, interspersed with swathes of aquamarine blue denoting an ocean of some sort she deduced.
As the braking thrusters engaged, she could see, by just craning her neck, where the pod was going to land.
There was a small lake, inland from an ocean, in the middle of just such a patchwork of red and green, and the escape pod was headed directly for the shores of the lake.
“Thirty seconds to impact” she heard the mechanical voice of the on-board computer.
She looked over to her mother and father, who were lying in adjacent couches, holding hands. She wished she had a hand to hold as they landed.
The pod was crowded – Megan had heard her father talking in terms of ten thousand. She had never seen ten thousand people together at once in a ship of any kind. Oh, her father had taken her to a baseball game once when he had taken her to America with him on a business trip, but they had been inside a huge park, with grandstands. She didn’t imagine the escape pod was anything like that in terms of size. She knew the colonist list had been around 70,000 in the Unity. She’d read everything she could before that day in 2060 when they had blasted off, earlier than planned, to escape the nuclear war that was about to break out.
“Ten seconds to Impact…seven…six seconds to impact...three…two..”
Megan subconsciously braced herself for the landing.
The landing pod came down heavily on its struts, shaking a little, then settled.
There was an audible sigh of relief from many of the colonists, and spontaneous applause rang out, soon taken up by most of the group.
Then the speaker crackled again, and a woman’s voice rang out:
“Welcome to Planet. The name we know this planet by is Chiron, orbiting the twin suns of Alpha Centauri. I know all of you are anxious to get out and see what your new home looks like, but bear with us. Our sensors have been supplying data for the last twelve minutes, and the Unity itself conducted some deep probes before we ejected. The atmosphere is breathable, though rich in nitrogen. They tell us that it will be like the base camps at Everest expeditions – one can survive for about fifteen minutes without an oxygen supplement or a nitrogen removal agent.
“We have a few scrubbers that have been distributed to an advance scouting party. The technicians are even now preparing several more, but for the time being we need all of us to remain in the pod.
“It has been designed to serve as an initial habitation base, and these strange noises you have been hearing in the background are the automatic deployment of some of the pod’s working and habitation modules.
“I should also tell you that we have been separated from the other colonists in the escape from the Unity, and I am Lady Deirdre Skye. I am the Chief Botanist and Xenobiologist for the Unity. In her final moments your leaders agreed that we would each take an escape pod with our respective teams and a mixed group of colonists, and found a new society on Planet.
“You are privileged to be part of a faction who shall style ourselves as ‘The Stepdaughters of Gaia.’ Respect for Planet and her ecosystem will drive everything we do.
“Now if you want you can get up and move around. It will be crowded to begin with, until we get the all-clear from our scout patrols, and, in fact, if you look towards one of the various screens scattered throughout the pod you will see that we are picking up live feed from one of the scouts on the surface.”
Megan twisted her head to look at one of the big screens, and gasped in surprise.
The scout obviously had a helmet camera, as the view was as clear as if she were looking with her own eyes. She heard his voice as it was piped into the pod:
“I’m looking now at the landing pod – it truly is a magnificent sight as it sits with its various ancillary pods now being deployed. You can see some engineers already at work testing the pressurization before opening them up to habitation.
“As you know, or maybe you don’t know, but just before firing the escape pods, the Unity fired off a succession of seed pods to the surface with technology and vehicles so that we would not be helpless when we landed. Behind the base - which by the way Lady Deirdre has christened ‘Gaia’s Landing’ - you can see the small lake, which I’m sure some of you saw during the descent. In the lake itself you can just see partly submerged one of the unity pods.
“There is another pod just a kilometer or two to the west.”
The scout turned his head and those following in the base saw in the distance a black disc resting on the surface. The scout increased the magnification and the disc zoomed into detail. Some engineers had already reached it, and it seemed to be about four times as big as a man. They were trying to prize it open, and had strung up a ladder of sorts for one of the engineers to reach the locking mechanism, which seemed to be almost on the top of the disc itself.
As he panned the view around the disc in the distance the viewers could see the huge scar mark on Planet’s surface where the pod had gouged the soil and rocks before coming to rest, tilted crazily.
Megan was getting bored, so she unstrapped herself and walked over to her parents, surprised at how sluggish she felt.
“I want to go and explore,” she said to her mother – “and I need to find a washroom of sorts.”
“I’ll come with you,” she said, unstrapping herself.
They wandered down the line of deceleration couches to a bulkhead, where they were stopped by a young man.
“Where are you going?” he asked.
“Just to look around,” said Megan’s mother. “And my daughter and I also need to find a toilet, if there is one here.”
“Oh, they’ll be deployed by now,” he said. “Just remember not to go outside yet. And keep this color in sight at all times – it leads you to and from this sector of the base.”
He pointed to the catwalk down the middle, where a broad orange stripe was painted.
“Just remember not to open any door that’s closed, and if you should, close it immediately. You’ll know it opened because a pressure alert klaxon will go off. Washrooms should be marked in the habitation module that will be to the left at the end of this dorm. Back the other way, that is.”
“Thanks,” said Megan’s mother, and they retraced their steps.
At the far end of the rows of colonists looking with great interest at the screens, was an open airlock that they went through.
They found themselves in an almost empty chamber that had a few engineers scurrying around in setting up what seemed to be cafeteria tables and to one side what looked to Megan’s untrained eye very much like a kitchen range.
A small group was standing in a huddle to one side poring over a spread out sheet. They looked up as Megan and her mother walked past looking for the washrooms.
“Heather, you made it,” said one, breaking away from the group and coming over to Megan’s mother and giving her a hug. “And Megan too, I see.”
“Deirdre,” said Heather, Megan’s mother. “It’s not quite as we planned all those years ago. Not quite the joyous colonization of another planet, if I understood your little speech right. But we’ll survive. Who are these factions you talked about?”
Oh, the usual big three – Zakharov, Yang and Lal himself. Miriam Godwinson’s got herself a small clique and one of Yang’s young officers has gotten a group of like minded people surrounding her and commandeered a pod.”
“And I suppose Captain Garland is the remaining one?” asked Heather.
Deirdre’s face looked pained.
“No, he isn’t. He sacrificed himself to get us free – the explosive bolts malfunctioned and the escape pods couldn’t break loose. He fired them manually but it cost him his life.”
“Then who’s the seventh you talked about?”
Deirdre’s face took on a look of loathing and derision.
“Nwabudike Morgan. He somehow managed to smuggle himself aboard and has quite a group of followers now as we have. He’ll be out to rape Chiron much as he raped Earth.”
“Mommy,” Megan said plaintively, tugging at her hand.
“Oh, I’m sorry, dear,” she replied. Turning to Deirdre, she said “We need to find a washroom.”
“Well, let’s find out where they are,” she said.
“Lindly, where on that floorplan of yours are the washrooms?”
The young assistant screwed up her face in concentration, then said with an air of satisfaction:
“Just a few more yards – through the next airlock and they should be on your left – they’re unisex.”
Megan released Heather’s hand and skipped to the far end of the module, and opened the airlock.
There was an ear piercing noise as the pressure leak klaxon went off.
Megan’s scream was drowned as she fell the ten feet or so to Planet’s surface.
[This message has been edited by Googlie (edited April 26, 2001).]
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