CHAPTER 13: WHAT IT MEANS TO BE ALIVE
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Pamuya puts Taylor through another rough one. Everybody starts to give up. Doom and gloom all around.
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Afterwards he went straight back to the conference room. Both his mind and body were exhausted. Even though little remained of the night, he slept soundly. When he awoke, he felt refreshed and recharged. Apparently no one had noticed his disappearance during the night.
"Good morning everyone." They were met by Heaven, a little later than usual, in the conference room.
"How did the maintenance go?" Dr. Young asked. Apparently everyone else did know about it.
"The system is in sound condition," Heaven reported. "Although there would be no way to repair any mechanical damage if were to occur. The scheduled maintenance program checked out. I can assure you that the entire compound is functioning normally."
"That's good to hear," Dr. Young said.
Heaven continued, "After carefully assessing the situation, I have found a slight noise in my thought processor. Normal functions will not be compromised so no modifications are necessary."
"What does that mean?" Medea asked, voicing Kensington's question.
"Well, Medea, it means that…" Heaven paused and then started her explanation differently. "You see, sometimes certain customers want to play pranks on me. They tell lies or try to confuse me. Because of that, my memories or programmed responses get a little out of alignment. It tends to cause issues in my thought processing. Sometimes older data gets mixed with newer information, making it difficult to determine which is correct. When this problem becomes severe, it becomes necessary to fiddle with the system and overwrite the problematic data.
"However, at this time, nothing to drastic has occurred, so please don't worry."
"Okay," Medea said.
"Other than that," Heaven continued, "I have yet to complete a full check of the sensor data which was recorded throughout the compound while you all were sleeping. I doubt any new leakage has occurred but I will report back to you once I've checked the sensor data.
"By the way, thanks to the maintenance program, NeVAEH terminal response has been greatly improved. There was a slight problem concerning NeVAEH traffic, but it has been resolved. Terminal communication functions were optimized to adjust to Utopia's current status."
"What do you mean by that?" Kensington asked. "I'd like to know more about what exactly was tweaked in the terminals."
She cocked her head sideways for a moment. "Why don't we go to breakfast?" she asked.
Kensington looked at her in shock. He was surprised that she had totally ignored his question. He hoped she just hadn't heard him. The others didn't seem concerned and they all relocated to the sandwich shop.
As always, he ended up cooking breakfast for everyone. Looking at their faces, he suddenly felt relieved. They seemed so happy. Heaven stood by quietly watching them enjoy their meal. Pamuya was still nowhere to be seen.
After breakfast, they were once again faced with free time. There was, however, nothing in particular to do. Nothing had to be done. Without any reason to do anything, they all gathered in the rest area. The vases were filled with now-blossoming flowers. Heaven had apparently set the sprinkler system to periodically water the flowers. Kensington didn't see her anywhere, but assumed she was checking the sensor data. He guessed she would be in the control room. She seemed better able to concentrate on performing operations from there.
Dr. Young was strolling lazily along the top of the circular stage in the middle of the room. The other two were enjoying splashing in the water. Kensington had seen it all before. He had a good stretch and relaxed on a bench to observe the others.
Ryogo and Medea circled the stone statues. They were playing a game of chase, not really caring who was it. Without seeming to get bored, they kept running around. Just watching them, Kensington seemed to be making more effort. He had no intention of joining in.
He looked around the room, but Pamuya had still not put in an appearance. He had left her a sandwich at the kiosk, just in case. He wondered what he would say to her if he met her. She had confided her secrets to him on the gondola ride. Virus carrier. A body that never dies, never grows old. Her healed scar. It was all so hard to believe. Could her story be true? He was still unable to completely believe her.
He glanced up and noticed Medea and Ryogo had stopped running around. With a worried look on his face, Ryogo was watching Medea intently. In the middle of the rest area, there were the four stone statues. Medea was deliberately attempting to scale one of the pedestals. With a heave, she began to climb up the side. It was an odd sight. Kensington ran over to where Ryogo stood frozen watching her. Stumbling as she mounted the pedestal, Medea ended up embracing the statue. "What are you doing?" Ryogo asked her curtly.
"Standing a little higher to get a different view," she answered. "Everything looks different. Twenty-seven inches higher, to be exact." She had a strange smile on her face as she was perched atop the pedestal.
"Is that why you climbed up there?" Ryogo asked.
"Actually, no," she replied with her head cocked. "This area of the statue looks like it's missing something." Ryogo and Kensington both looked where she was pointing but neither saw anything unusual. "The statue's back needs something." Medea produced a flat-headed screwdriver in her right hand. Then another appeared in her left hand. She began to carve the back of the statue using the tips of the screwdrivers. Within moments, the statue was covered with gashes.
Kensington and Ryogo stood there a while, gazing at her with jaws dropped. "What are you doing?" Ryogo yelled.
"Carving," Medea replied enigmatically. "I'm etching some marks into the stone."
"We can tell that by watching you," Kensington said with a snort. "That's not what we mean. Why are you doing it?"
"I was feeling lonesome," she explained in a tiny voice. "I was feeling sad." She worked the tips of the screwdrivers with great dexterity. They dug into the stone, screeching and forming tiny grooves.
"Sad?" Ryogo asked her.
"Nobody's coming to rescue us," she reasoned. "We've been abandoned." Then her voice took a cheery edge. "So what's the harm in wrecking the place a little?"
Kensington and Ryogo looked at each other. Medea looked at her handiwork. The gashes had begun to take shape. It looked like she had drawn a stick figure of a person. "Who's that?" Ryogo asked.
"It's me," she said. "Over here is Charming." Kensington could see the small animal form beside the human one. "Then there's Pamuya," she pointed to the half-finished figure with a large head. "She needs to look really good." Absorbed by what she was doing, Medea continued to carve the statue's back. Kensington could easily relate to her need to throw herself into something.
"That's vandalism," Ryogo protested.
Kensington put an arm on his shoulder. "Relax, Kid. Now's not the time to worry about that. You can't blame her." Ryogo nodded in agreement and stepped back a little. At that moment, Medea lost her balance. Ryogo jumped forward and steadied her. He grabbed her hips to prevent her from slipping and carefully lowered her to sit on the pedestal.
"Watch your step," he told her.
"I will," she said. "Why don't you help me finish. That way I'll be sure I'm safe. If you take one screwdriver and do yourself and Maggie, I can finish adding Taylorpion over here. We'll each be able to hold on better with only one hand carving." She gave Ryogo one of the screwdrivers and he climbed up to join her.
"Be careful not to fall yourself," Taylor admonished him.
"Don't worry," he said. "I'll keep an eye on her." He took Medea's empty hand. While embracing the statue in a hug, the two of them steadied each other. As they marked it up, the statue stood without complaint, pointing its finger to the south. A little while later what was left in stone were the carved images of six people and one animal. It was evidence of their existence there.
That afternoon, after a light lunch, Kensington noticed that Dr. Young was missing. Ryogo told him that she had gone to the security office on the second floor to do some 'research'.
With everyone else accounted for, and Pamuya's sandwich gone, he decided to see what Dr. Young researching. With Dr. Young, Pamuya, and Heaven all having disappeared at the same time, he suspected that something was happening, something that he had somehow missed. Instead of making his way to see what Dr. Young was doing, he decided to first check on Pamuya.
He came out of the stairway by the infirmary. The door abruptly opened in his face and Pamuya came flying out and dodged right past him. She was gone in a flash, not seeming to even notice him. He whirled around to go after her, but hesitated. The events of the night before popped into his mind. He watched her back fade further away. Almost too late, he decided to follow her. "Hey, wait! Where are you going?"
He chased her to the stairwell and the emergency corridor, but she was out of sight before he entered the corridor. "Pamuya!" he yelled loudly after her, then cursed when he realized she was gone. For someone who was still supposed to be recuperating, her speed was unnatural. She did seem a little slower than when she had rescued him from the initial flood.
Not wanting her to be overdoing it, he cursed a second time and continued after her. Even though the sound of her footsteps was fading in the distance, it gave him a bearing to go by. After listening, he realized that she had re-entered a corridor on the second floor. He traced her route out to the gondola ride, but she was nowhere in sight.
He cursed a third time and decided to give up. Disappointed, he turned and headed toward the security office. It still smelled faintly of smoke. Dr. Young looked up from one of the consoles. "Hi, Taylor."
"Since I've found you, I wanted to ask you something," he said. "Ryogo said you wanted to do some research up here."
She looked startled. "The kid said that? What exactly did he tell you?"
"Nothing specific. He just said you were researching something so I decided to ask you myself."
She nodded. "Here, I'll let you in on it." Turning back to the console, Dr. Young began to type. "You may not remember, Taylor, but I've been researching Utopia for several days now." Her eyes were glued to the monitor while she spoke. "And then there's the thing about my father, or have I told you about him yet?"
Kensington thought back. On their first day at the facility, when she had startled him by starting up the carousel, she had mentioned him. "Have you found something?"
"No." She shook her head slowly. Eyeing the monitor, she hit some more keys, entering a code. "If only I could find the password, I could access all the data in NeVAEH. The system data has some kind of security protection. This would include the personal data of the development staff as well. I'm hunting for the key to unlock that protection."
"You've been doing that since we got here?"
"Yes, but I'm about to give up." She stopped typing and looked at him.
"What would happen to Heaven," he asked, "if you bypassed the security? Since she's an AI inside the system, wouldn't she be affected?"
"Oh," she said thoughtfully. "Yes. If the protections were removed, Heaven would be totally exposed. Naked, as it were." She glared at him. "Stop thinking of something kinky."
"I wasn't thinking anything like that at all," he protested good-naturedly.
"You seem pretty suspect to me," she said. "Besides, it just means that all her thoughts, memories, and various data will be accessible."
"That's quite an invasion of privacy," he whistled.
"Not really. To tell the truth, I'm not interested in that information. I've no intention of going through Heaven's data."
Kensington fell silent, searching for something to say. Dr. Young was looking downcast. "How would you expect to find something about your father here?"
"Look around," she said, her brow furrowed. "This place is too perfect for humans for someone else to have built it. He disappeared in this sector. Maybe he was working on a secret project: this place. But I know what has to be done. I know all too well. But once I break this security code, I'll know everything we need to know. I can't say if it's possible to break the code, but I know the data's there."
"At least I've made a start on it," she concluded with more enthusiasm. She turned back to the console and began talking to herself as she worked.
At least what she was doing, he thought, might give them some answers. Pamuya, he, and now Dr. Young all suspected there was more to Utopia than it seemed. She gave him a smile, then popped her neck and rotated her shoulders. "Good luck," he said encouragingly. "We've still got time left."
She began muttering to herself again. "My mother used to tell me all about my father's habits. There are clues to be found. Decoding something as inorganic as a computer is possible because programmers have habits." Dr. Young sat and stared at the monitor for a long time without looking his way. Without a word, he slipped out of the security office.
When dinner time arrived, he once again cooked for everyone and passed out their food. They gathered on the circular stage in the rest area to eat. At a wave of Heaven's hand, the sprinklers activated and a gentle rain began pouring from the ceiling sprinklers onto the flower beds. There was even a small rainbow. Smiling, Heaven watched the fresh flowers and the sparkling rainbow. Kensington wondered how long he could watch the peaceful world she had created. How long could he keep looking at her smiling face? The thought made him feel lonely.
Then again, the others were there too; one of them opening her mouth so wide it didn't seem it could open any more. Right now, Maryann Ginger Young looked happy. "I want another one please," she said enthusiastically. "Would you be so kind as to make another one and bring it here?" The tone of her request was a little too sweet. She may have been sad earlier, but she seemed to have recovered.
"You are such a slavedriver," he accused her and rose to make the sandwich.
"Did you say something?" she asked innocently.
"Nothing at all, milady." He bowed with a flourish.
"Just as long as you realize who's in charge." He trudged back to the kitchen. As he was cooking, and grumbling about it, Pamuya entered the kitchen.
"I'd like to ask for another one, if that's okay," she said. There was none of Dr. Young's teasing in her voice. He growled at her anyway. "What?" she asked, taken aback. "Did I catch you at a bad time?" Her expression was one of annoyance. "If you're not willing…"
"Oh, it's not you," he explained. "Dr. Young's already got me back here. It's okay. You just want one?"
"Yes thanks," she replied. "There might be one more thing." She turned around and looked at Medea, who had also joined them. The little kitchen was getting crowded. "What do you want?" Pamuya asked her.
"Just a little something, actually," Medea said.
"There's some bread," Pamuya observed. "How about that?"
"Perfect," Medea agreed. "Taylorpion, I'd like some bread." He gave her a signal to show her he had heard.
"By the way, Taylor," Pamuya added, "were you upset about something? Are you feeling okay, or is it…" Her voice trailed off.
"Nothing like that," he said. "I was just irritated at Dr. Young for asking for seconds."
She smiled. "So that was it. Well, don't worry, just take your time. I'll be waiting." Medea and Pamuya joined hands and started out of the kitchen.
Pamuya's smile had been so gentle. It had surprised Kensington to have her talking so normally to him. The Pamuya right there seemed like she would never talk about dying even by accident. He wondered if she had resolved her feelings. If so, then talking to her the day before had been the right thing to do. He had chased after her constantly, been hit by her, and been put down by her. The Pamuya right there was definitely part of the group.
He listened as she and Medea continued to talk just outside then kitchen. "I had a dream last night," Medea was saying. "I was riding a whale and the Kid was riding it with me. The whale was bouncing all over the place. We were back in space and met someone from planet Nognilk."
It was just a strange dream, but Pamuya was listening patiently with a smile on her face. Kensington watched their interaction quietly. Dr. Young arrived just in time to spoil the scene. "What's taking so long?"
He brought their extra food back to the rest area and distributed it there. Dr. Young continued to complain about the quality of the service. He grouchily passed her the sandwich and sat down in the center of the circle. She continued to tease him and he began to respond. Before long it had turned into a comic battle of one-upmanship about her sandwich.
Suddenly, he looked up from their banter to find Ryogo standing over him with a leaden gaze. "What's wrong, Kid?" Dr. Young asked him. "Weren't you hungry?" His sandwich was still in his hand, unopened.
"You've got to eat to stay healthy," Kensington added. "I can reheat that for you if you would like." He extended his hand.
Ryogo jerked the sandwich against his chest and backed away. He looked at Kensington with a hard expression. Then he crushed the sandwich. Sauce flew everywhere. It got on Ryogo's clothes, but he didn't seem to notice. Not finished, he took the mangled sandwich and threw it against a pillar.
"What are you doing?" Kensington asked, rising to his feet in shock.
His shoulders trembling, Ryogo looked away from Kensington. He finally dragged out some words. "Sick. I'm sick of it! That's all I can take!" He kicked forcefully at the thin layer of water about his feet. Everyone was looking at him now. "I can't stand it any more! I don't want anymore fried whatever this is sandwiches. I'm sick of them. I want to eat something else." He screamed.
Kensington's breath caught in his throat. The others seemed just as surprised as he was. Nobody said anything.
"I'm sick," Ryogo went on, "and tired. So what if we're still alive? No one is going to save us. What we're doing here, everything we're doing here… There's no point. There isn't any point to us being here." He raised a shaking fist. Not finding any direction to launch it, he lowered it again.
Kensington looked at the others again. None of them were willing to look directly at Ryogo. It seemed they were afraid of what they might see if they even looked at each other. Nobody moved. Their lips were pressed firmly together as if they dared not speak. "Stupid fool!" he exclaimed. "What the hell are you talking about? Don't ask for the impossible. Do you have any idea what you're asking? The only foods we have to eat are these sandwiches. You tell me you're sick of it? You still have to eat it! It's the only way to survive! So you'd better be thankful for it. We're all putting up with it the best we can.
"You're one of us right? You need to be more cooperative. They're all being patient. They're helping out. Even if they don't like it, they eat, and they're surviving. If we don't, then we're finished. Wake up. We're all going to get through this together. As long as we're alive, there's still hope."
As if to punctuate his statements, the building shook. A loud, blunt, metallic sound echoed through the room. They all staggered and struggled to maintain their footing.
"I know," Ryogo said. "I know that Taylor. I know. Even though I know, what can I do?" He slapped the sandwich out of Dr. Young's hand. It fell into the water with a splash and sank slowly.
"What do you think you're doing?" Kensington yelled. He grabbed Ryogo's shirt front and raised his hand. He struck Ryogo hard on the cheek. It had to have hurt him. Kensington's hand even hurt. More than the pain in his hand, his heart hurt. He released Ryogo's collar and Ryogo backed away slowly. The others watched them in silence.
"You hit me," Ryogo moaned. "Damn it, damn it."
"Look at Pamuya," Kensington ordered him, pointing at her. She stood, silent and unmoving. "She injured her leg horribly and almost drowned. She had surgery. I would have probably died from that, but she pulled through it."
Ryogo timidly raised his eyes and looked at her. Soon, however, he was staring at the floor again. "You can say that, but I'm not her. We're not all the same. I can't do it. I can't do it. I'm just not that strong. I never will be. I can't go on living. I don't want to go on living. I should just…"
Kensington didn't want to make him say the rest, but he couldn't stop him. He knew how hard it would be for Ryogo to say it. Even Kensington wouldn't have been able to say it. They all waited in silence for his next words.
"What do you want to do?" Pamuya broke the spell. She stepped in front of Ryogo. "What do you want to do?" Her eyes were unfeeling and quiet. "Come on, you can say it. I want to know what you want to do." She approached Ryogo one step at a time. The others remained where they were, silent and unmoving. "You can't say it."
He tried to speak but no words came out of his mouth. He was trapped by her, couldn't move away. Pamuya reached Ryogo and touched him. "You don't want to live?" He tried to nod, but his head didn't move. "You want to die then?" Ryogo couldn't respond. "Say something, please," Pamuya gently commanded, her tone neutral. "I don't know what you mean. Which is it? Do you want to die? Do you want to live?" After a moment in which he didn't speak, she said. "So, you can't answer. Then don't ever say that again. Do you understand?"
Ryogo put a hand to his head, then broke down in tears and fell into the water. "I'm sorry," he muttered. "I'm so sorry." Dr. Young, suddenly spurred into action, ran over and put her arms around him. Heaven, trembling, looked down and covered her face in her hands. Medea, too young to have experience with the situation, just looked from person to person speechless.
"Pamuya?" Kensington looked at her face. Her expression was unreadable.
"Taylor," she said. "Come here for a second." He looked at her in confusion, so she walked over to where he was standing. Eyebrows raised, she glared at him strongly. Her hand shot out and grasped his arm, tightly, painfully. "Come with me." He followed behind her as she walked away. Wordlessly she moved doggedly forward. Her grip was firm and she kept pulling him.
She pulled him through the corridors until they were far away from the others on the second level. Then she released him. "Just when I thought you'd finally learned to shut up." She let out a big sigh.
"What's that supposed to mean?" he asked angrily.
"Just what it sounds like. I'm so disappointed in you." Her brow remained furrowed as she looked at him. She pinched the bridge of her nose and shook her head. She looked completely fed up and he couldn't fathom why. She turned and started walking away from him.
"Wait just a second. What's with you? Did I do something to you?" He insisted that she answer him.
"No. No, it's not like that," she said in increasingly angry tones. "You don't understand anything." She threw back her shoulders and picked up her pace.
"What don’t I understand? Things were getting out of hand back there. If you hadn't said something, I don't know how it would have turned out. I'm glad you did and really am sorry and thanks." He wasn't sure, so he apologized for everything. She didn't stop or turn back or even reply. He continued to call her name as he chased after her. "You of all people should know how serious this situation is. So how come you are?
"No. That's not it. That's not it. That's not it! You're angry at ME, right? Why are you so mad? Please, tell me!"
She stopped at the entrance to Qualle, the gondola ride. "Okay. I will. It's a stupid question, but I'll answer it for you anyway." She turned and smiled at him disconcertingly. He flinched. "Do you remember what you said earlier?" she asked.
"Let me see…" He wasn't sure which earlier she meant. "I was fairly angry, so I'm not exactly sure of my words. But, you know what I said. I really don't think I said anything wrong to the kid. I am sure about that."
"I guess it looks like you weren't wrong. That's why I'm mad." She jumped onto the ride. He hurried after her and closed the door. The gondola zipped into the tube and out into the ocean.
Once he was safely trapped, she started yelling. "I get so frustrated!" She pounded the shell of the gondola with her fist. She looked annoyed once again. The gondola swayed slightly as it moved forward. "Is it really just enough to be alive? You said, 'you're one of us so you should cooperate.' That's how you kept pushing him to agree with you, and buy into all your fake ideals. I can't believe how irresponsible you can be. Who the hell do you think you are? You've really got some nerve talking like that."
"What else could I do?" he shouted back at her. "It's better than just standing by and watching him sink in despair. It's better to have a little hope than no hope at all."
"You're such a hypocrite."
"You're selfish and self-righteous. You're always pretending like you don't care about anyone! You go about hurting people on purpose and making them feel like crap. Now you're trying to make me look bad."
"I do not…" She paused and began again. Her voice was calm. "I'm not doing it on purpose. There's just a lot that I don't agree with."
"Liar," he countered. "That's not the way you want things to happen in your heart and you know it. Why do you have to lash out at everything? Why can't you just be yourself for once?"
"You're wrong," she said. "You're the one who isn't being yourself."
"I'm always myself"
"You're so twisted."
He snorted. "That's funny coming from you, but this isn't what we came here to talk about. Why are you so angry? If I did something wrong, I deserve it. If there really is a good reason, I won't complain. So, come on, tell me. I won't argue with you. Just tell me what it is."
"You really want to know?" Her voice lost all of its bluster. She sat back against the wall of the gondola.
"Of course," he said. She hesitated a moment, but then slid over next to him. Pamuya looked straight ahead. She didn't even try to look at him.
"Why?" she asked.
"Because… I want to know. Because I want to know what my friends are thinking." He put his hand lightly on her shoulder. He was becoming more and more worried. Maybe she was still trying to be stubborn. Pamuya didn't try to shake off his hand, but just sat there.
"That's right," she said. "You made me 'one of the gang' again, didn't you? If you want to know, then here goes. I tell you. It's because, in the end, I've become 'your friend'."
"Why do you have to say it like that?" he asked sharply. "You're not still…"
As he spoke, she thrust her hand into her pocket and it came out with something. "Taylor, you know what this is, right?" It was Charming, her Djungarian hamster.
"Where the heck did you pull that from?"
"My pocket."
"I know that," he replied. "That's not what I'm asking. Don't just pull him out and talk of him as a 'this'. Hamsters are delicate living creatures and you should be careful with him."
"You're right," she said softly. "But what else can I do? He doesn't have anywhere else to go." Charming stood in Pamuya's hand. He twitched his nose and looked up at both of their faces inquisitively. Pamuya stroked him softly with the tip of her finger.
She pulled the hamster up to her chest. "Taylor, do you know what will happen if I go like this?" Pamuya grasped both of her hands tightly together. In between the cracks of her fingers, he could see Charming's soft warm-looking grey fur. Soon his body disappeared entirely in her hands. "Do you know what will happen?"
"Idiot. Cut it out," he cried in alarm.
"Answer me." Her voice was just a whisper. She started to squeeze harder. Charming, the tip of whose nose was the only thing visible, turned his beady eyes toward Pamuya.
"What are you talking about?" His voice was quavering. "It's totally obvious. What a stupid question. You want to talk about stupid questions. There's one for you."
She started squeezing more. The space between her fingers got smaller and smaller. Charming twisted his body and started to struggle. "Cut it out. Pamuya, if you go on like this, Charming's going to…" The hamster looked at Pamuya and him. At the end, he thought the creature even let out a small breath.
Pamuya crushed her hands together with all her might. They pressed together. Her hands were shaking with the effort. From the cracks of her fingers, red droplets started to fall. "Well, Taylor, what do you think happened to Charming?" Her voice was also shaking. "Tell me. TELL ME!"
"No. You think I'm going to answer that? Open your hands. Pamuya, open your hands. Please, just open them up. Now!"
Her hands were shaking heavily as they opened. "Charming!" he gasped. "Pamuya, what have you done?" He was dead. His fur was slightly wet. Charming looked like an old, dirty dishrag. All the bones in his body were probably broken. All of the blood had probably been squeezed from his body. He probably hadn't had any time to wonder, it happened so fast. His life had been extinguished.
"So," she said, "Taylor, do you know?" She was near tears. "Taylor, what do you think is going to happen now?"
"Pamuya! Cut it out!" He shook her shoulders violently. He thought he would surely knock her over. He forced her to look at him. She was crying, and her lips trembled as she bit down on them.
"Taylor, why won't you answer me?" Her voice was hysterical through her tears.
"Charming is dead," he finally forced himself to say. "He won't ever move again." His eyes widened with surprise. In her hand, Charming seemed to move faintly. It was as if he had woken up suddenly. His movements were stiff and barely visible and extremely slow, but he was actually moving. His heart had started beating again, and he had started thinking again, breathing again. He shook himself of slightly, fluttered his ears, and twitched his nose. He got up on shaking legs and even tried to stand.
However, there was still blood on her hand. "So Taylor," she said, "what happened to Charming?"
Outside, he noticed the gondola was at the entrance to the ride again and was starting on another pass. They had been on the ride perhaps ten minutes. In that brief time, he had returned to normal and was sitting up on her palm, staring at the two of them inquisitively. Pamuya was petting Charming softly again with the tip of her finger.
"He's different than the kid. Different than you. You saw. That was real. Charming has the virus too. The first time I tried to pet him, he got spooked. He bit my finger and my blood got all over him. Charming's just like me now."
"No way." Taylor couldn't believe it. Even though it had happened right in front of him, he couldn't believe it.
"See," Pamuya murmured as she looked down, "this little guy's alive. He's alive. He's breathing. His heart is beating. But it hurt, didn’t' it little guy? It was painful, wasn't it? I did something terrible. I'm sorry, Charming. I'm so sorry. Forgive me. I was wrong. But, it's okay because you're alive, right?"
Kensington started shaking her shoulders again. "What the hell are you talking about? How can you say something like that? You just put him through something unimaginable, and now you say 'it's okay because you're alive!'"
"No!" She shouted violently. She brushed his hand off. "That's what YOU said! That's exactly what you said back there! It's 'enough to be alive'. You're the one who said that. So how about it? You saw what happened. You saw what happened to Charming! What I did to him? You SAW it Taylor! And you can say 'it's enough to be alive'? Well, it isn't!" She was sobbing heavily. "It isn't. No matter what you say. I won't believe it! It isn't enough to just have life. You can't say that's living!" Her voice became suddenly flat. "Do you understand? Or don't you? Taylor, tell me. How about you, Charming, do you understand?"
Her face was pointing down. He couldn't see her expression. He didn't have to. He knew what it was. Pamuya was now crying silently. Countless tears fell from her face. Like raindrops falling one by one on the red-stained floor of Qualle.
He didn't know what to say. No words were adequate. "Do you know how many times I've died?" she asked suddenly. She was trying to stay as calm as she could.
"I have no idea." He could scarcely move his lips as he replied.
"I don't remember anymore, anyway. In the beginning there were said to be only a few of us carriers. Out of all of them, I was special.
"August 2250. I was twelve at the time and my family lived in America. A friend of mine then, Julia, she and I were the same age and she had to go to the hospital. They said it was a terminal disease. She was transferred back and forth between different places, but nobody could help her.
"I kept going to see her, to keep up her spirits. Watching her smiling face, I couldn't believe that she didn't have long to live. I thought there would be a miracle. I thought if I prayed enough, she would get better. If I cared enough, her pain and suffering would be less. I believed that.
"Then one day, I got in an accident."
"Is that how you got the virus?" he asked.
"No," she replied. Right after I left the hospital I got hit by a hover-truck. Broken bones throughout my body, torn muscles everywhere. I went into a coma. I even stopped breathing. It was hopeless. But, for some reason, I didn't die. A few months later, I woke up in an unfamiliar place.
"I wondered where I was. It was a hospital. I didn't know which one. The person in the bed next to mine, a boy, didn't know either. I told him my name, but he didn't know his. I woke up next to a boy with amnesia. Outside the window was unfamiliar scenery. I was pretty sure it was still somewhere in America. But in order to find out just where I was, it would take another eight years.
"I was there the whole time. I was at that 'hospital'. I never learned the name of the physician who attended me. He said he was going to find a cure for my sickness and make me better. I wondered what he was talking about. I had been in an accident and wasn't sick. He said it was different than that. I had a new disease, one they had never seen before."
"The new disease, was that this virus?"
"Yes. I don't know how I got it or when. It was probably before I got in the accident. I was already in the process of becoming 'immortal'. The doctor took some of my blood. He said it was to research a cure. He said only a few people in the Federation had my disease, and of all of them I was special. My genetic code was being rewritten. I was the talk of the hospital. I didn't understand so I had to accept his promises that they were going to make me better.
"They came to take blood samples again and again. At the time, I didn't wonder why they would do that. The doctors kept telling me it was so they could find a cure and help me and people like me. The kid in the bed next to me, the one with amnesia, he and I talked. He didn't have what I had. He said he could see into the future.
"He told me 'You are going to have many tragedies in your life, but I don't want you to be sad. The first one in five years, then three years later, then another in five years.' He went on and on. 'But you're going to live through all of them.' It didn't take long for me to understand what he was saying, even at my young age.
"There were a cat and a mouse in the hospital too. We wondered why they were there. Their cages were so small. We let them out. Alarms sounded everywhere. The doctors were all afraid the animals would bite them. They were contagious. They caught all of the animals again. They were really mad at us. They were trapped, locked up in small cages. I wondered why.
"I slowly began to realize why. I began to understand, bit by bit, that I wasn't being kept at a hospital but at a research facility. Nobody came to see me. None of the 'patients' ever left. There were hardly ever any new patients. The whole time I never knew where I was.
"One day we came to see the animals and they were gone. We hoped the researchers had felt sorry for them and let them go. Then I overheard them talking. 'It's no good. We still haven't been able to discover the reason or mechanism behind it.' 'It happened right in front of me, but I still can't believe it.' The only explanation I can come up with is genetic transfer. It goes against everything we know about science.' 'They withstood four splicings. I think maybe they could take eight.' 'Let's keep testing.' 'There's no mistaking it. They're still alive. They might even still react at sixteen.' 'But, they're not…' 'They're not even living creatures any more, is that what you were going to say?' 'That way of thinking might have been correct under our old way of thinking. We have no idea the possibilities this entails.' 'That's insane.'
"The next time, the mice were back. There were more of them. The cats had been sealed in boxes that I couldn't open. That's the last time I was allowed in that lab. That's what my life was like for eight years, day in and day out.
"Every single day. The researcher called for me. He kept telling me 'I'm your friend'. The truth is, he wasn't. I was being forced to do all these tests and experiments. They just used me like some tool. I stopped being able to feel pain or to suffer. When I went back to bed all I could do was cry.
"Then one day, the kid next to me didn't come back. Taylor, do you know why?"
Kensington put his hand back on her shoulder. "Yeah. I mean no, but,…"
"So I don't have to explain it to you?" Her voice was almost a plea.
"Yeah. If this is too painful for you, you don't have to say anymore." Pamuya was stroking Charming with trembling fingers. He couldn't imagine what it would have been like to go through what she had been through.
"I hate it," she said. "And I hate myself for talking about it. It's funny, isn't it? Whenever I'm with you I find myself talking about the stupidest things."
"It's okay, you don't have to talk," he told her. "I'm so sorry. It was totally irresponsible what I said back there. It was careless of me to talk about being alive like it's just a given."
"I don't want your pity. It's too late."
"It isn't like that," he protested. "It isn't like that. Pamuya, I was wrong."
Suddenly she was screaming again. "You were wrong? Don't tell me that! You don't just take back what you say. Not that easily! You want irresponsible, that's irresponsible!"
He didn't know what to tell her.
"You're just like them," she said accusingly. "You don't understand anything. You throw around words like friend without really meaning it. You don't understand anything about how I'm feeling. You don't understand anything about what the kid's feeling."
She made him feel like it was a mistake just to say he was wrong. He realized that wasn't true. The truth was there was no right or wrong.
She kept on screaming at him. "People who are alive should live as long as they can. You said that didn't you? I'll survive. I'll probably die many times more and I'll still be alive. Charming here, too. Taylor, can you say you're really alive right now? Are you really there in front of me now? What's wrong? You said you'd accept everything I had to say. You said that, right Taylor?"
She bit her lip. Her shoulders were shaking. She looked bitterly disappointed. Disappointed that when she tried to live she ended up dying and when she tried to die she ended up living. It was a process that repeated itself over and over without end. It wasn't right or wrong. It was her reality. It was something she had no choice but to accept. He wasn't able to accept it.
"This is so stupid," she said. "I'm stupid. But you know what? You're way stupider than me." The gondola swayed. They had arrived again at the end of the ride. He had no idea how many times they had passed through by Qualle.
The door opened suddenly. She had quickly risen and opened the door. "Pamuya," he called out and grabbed at her hand but she swatted him away immediately.
"Don't touch me! Don't touch me." She slammed the door shut from the outside. The gondola he was riding started moving again.
"Stupid," he said to the gondola. "Stupid idiot." He said it to himself. He said it to her. He said it to nothing and to no one in particular. To everything. Outside the window was the ocean, an ocean closed off from light. When he passed under the shadow of the installation, the gondola became dark. Inside of the darkness, alone in the darkness, Captain Taylor 'Samurai' Kensington bit hard down on his lip and cried.
When he came to the conference room at night, Dr. Young, Medea, and Ryogo were waiting there. Ryogo seemed to have calmed down somewhat. Dr. Young and Medea seemed to have been able to talk some sense into him after Kensington had left. Dr. Young explained that Ryogo had probably become upset by a recurring memory and had gotten worked up in spite of himself. Kensington felt that he too had gotten out of hand and said some terrible things. He went around the table and apologized to each of them.
Soon after a report came to the conference room via the terminal to NeVAEH. Dr. Young read out the contents to all of them. The isolated section of the third floor where he had seen the whale-like creature had flooded completely. The flooding had been contained to that room only, so the generator and the pipe room were still safe. Shivering slightly from the cold, Kensington wrapped his arms around his knees. They all went to sleep.