Author's Note
This is but a single part in a series of stories. To avoid confusion, I would advise reading the previous two parts first.
Unlike the previous stories, this one is all plot, without a single sexy interlude. None of the stories has had a particularly happy ending thus far, and this one is no different. But, this ties them all together, so there is that.
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All text copyright (c)2020 WaxPhilosophic. No unauthorized reproduction is allowed.
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Prologue
Main asteroid belt, late 21st century
The sticky-sweet strains of Barry Manilow echoed throughout the tiny space tug floating among the asteroids, bouncing off the metal walls of the inner hull and into the ears of the ship's pilot and captain. Strapped into the pilot's seat was Angie Williams, a tall and lanky young woman of Jamaican heritage, with skin as dark as midnight and eyes as bright as the stars. In zero-G, her dreadlocked hair formed a mane around her face, giving her the proud and fitting look of the mighty Lion of Judah.
Angie sent her hands dancing effortlessly over the controls, her minor adjustments keeping the ship on station, as she sang her slightly off-key rendition of 'I Write the Songs'. For all her singing, Angie's eyes stayed alert and never left the 3D image of her sister Kaleisha in the holo-term monitor.
Little cones of steam shot from Kaleisha's spacesuit here and there, as she expertly fired her maneuvering thrusters to match the attitude and rotation of the asteroid tumbling in front of her. Tucked inside the concave surface of the large rock, and hidden by shadow, was the object of interest, a derelict slab of sleek, black carbon fiber.
In the lower right corner of Angie's monitor, the numbers indicating distance between Kaleisha and the large, black rectangle of their quarry ticked steadily downward. Angie lifted the radio mike to call out for a third and final time over the universal hailing frequency.
"This is salvage ship G.G. Maragh declaring our intentions, under article thirteen of the Sol maritime convention of 2114, to board and initiate salvage operations of object adrift. Over."
No response.
Angie tapped the switch to direct communications back to the laser mic trained on her sister's helmet. The number in the corner of the monitor was in single digits now.
"Okay, Kal," she said. "I knockin' three times. Nobody home and nobody disputin'. That slab, she ours."
Angie watched the monitor as Kaleisha carefully laser etched their registered salvage number on the hull just to the right of the floating rectangular slab's entry hatch. She then shot it with a dayglow lime-green spray, laced with radium, to make it stand out even in the shadow of the asteroid.
"'kay, sis," Kaleisha's voice came through the comm link clear and bright. "Shoot me the net and I get 'er wrapped up jus' like Christmas for you."
"Not 'til you strapin' in."
"Still don' think your little sis can fly her suit, eh?" Kaleisha laughed. "Or maybe you don' think you can aim the net?"
"Jus' strap in."
"'Kay, 'kay."
On the monitor, Angie watched Kaleisha pay out an arm's length of cable and wrap it several time around one of the docking clamps designed to secure a maintenance shuttle to the slab's hull. Kaleisha secured her cable with a stout carabiner clip before giving a thumbs up.
"Here comes," said Angie, as she watched the trajectory of the net and its tow cable on the monitor.
Her present task done, Angie stretched out in the captain's chair to begin enthusiastically singing along to Copacabana while she waited. She never once took her eyes off the monitor, while Kaleisha darted this way and that, pulling the heavy netting with her.
"All secure, sis," Kaleisha announced. "Gonna open up the can now. See what inside."
Kaleisha switched her laser tool from a low-power etch setting to high-power to cut, and concentrated her efforts on the recessed hinges of the rectangular, black slab's hatch. After a few minutes, Kaleisha held tightly to the docking clamps on either side, and with a grunt, gave the hatch a swift kick. The hatch fell noiselessly inward.
"I in, no problem," Kaleisha said.
"We don't know nothin' 'bout this thing or what inside."
"Can't be much," Kaleisha said. "Ain't ver' big for a ship."
"Be safe, sis."
"Always."
Kaleisha glued a small transceiver to the outside of the slab just above where she had inscribed the salvage tag earlier. She pulled out a length of wire and glued the end to the inside wall of the derelict craft as she boarded. Angie trained the ship's laser link on the transceiver, while Kaleisha switched her suit's radio to RF.
"I hearin' dat awful music, sis," Kaleisha said. "You hear me okay?"
"Loud an' clear, rude girl."
Kaleisha laughed, and turned on her suit's helmet camera and lights.
"You seein' what I seein', sis? Ain't nothin' here but a long shaft. Long shaft wit' a ladder." Kaleisha blew out a sigh that came through the radio link as mostly static. "Good thing she not spinnin' fast. Long way for climbin' under Gs."
Angie watched from the cockpit monitor as Kaleisha made her way, hand over hand, along twenty rungs of the shaft's ladder.
"Lookin' like a maintenance hatch up 'head," Kaleisha said. She locked her feet against the ladder rungs, placed both hands on the hatch wheel, and grunted.
"Froze solid," she said. "No surprise."
Angie watched the monitor as Kaleisha adjusted her laser cutter and went to work. The resulting smoke, having nowhere to go, simply curled around inside the tunnel, making Angie's view on the monitor tenuous at best.
"Holy Armagideon," Kaleisha exclaimed.
"What? What is it? Can't see."
"There a woman in here, sis. Babylon woman. Ver' white. Ver' naked. An' ver' dead. Dead long time." Kaleisha shook her head, causing Angie's camera image to pan around the small compartment.
Angie flipped a switch on the console to mute the voice of Barry Manilow for a moment and then closed her eyes. "Jah guide, Babylon lady," she said. "Jah love."
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The Future in Our Stars, Part 3
Life's Little Perks fair-trade coffee shop, University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana
"Have you been up the gravity well before?" I asked after a sip of my latte.
Sabine Richardson cradled her own cup and studied my face for a moment. She was completely expressionless, and I hadn't know her long enough to know if she was searching her memories of past trips or thinking what a total noob I must be to ask a question like that.
"A few times," she said, finally. "My parents liked to travel. I've been to the moon twice, and even spent a week at an all-inclusive on Mars."