Starship Fall

* * *

 

We climbed aboard Matt’s ground-effect vehicle and tore off down the coast to Hawk’s starship junkyard three kays out of Magenta.

 

“What do you mean, Kee’s vanished and he fears for her safety?” I asked, leaning forward between the front seats as I tried to make sense of Hawk’s communiqué.

 

Maddie bit her lip. “That was all he said. Kee’s gone. And he was afraid something might have happened to her. He said come over, then cut the connection.”

 

She looked at her wrist-com, stabbed Hawk’s code, and shook her head. “He’s not answering, damn it.”

 

Five minutes later we turned and hovered through the archway bearing the legend: HAWKSWORTH & CO. constructed from scrap metal. Hawk’s place never failed to stir in me a heady rush of emotion. I was transported back in time to my youth in Canada, when I spent long weekends staring through the perimeter fence at the starships landing and taking off from Vancouver spaceport.

 

Hawk’s yard was filled with reminders of my childhood, star-faring vessels from the dozen Lines that went out of business thirty years ago with the advent of the Telemass process, ships as small as two-person exploration vessels right up to bulky, lumbering cargo vessels; they bore the livery of their respective owners, faded now with the years.

 

Hawk was waiting for us on the balcony of the starship which doubled as his office and living quarters. He was leaning against the rail, looking down, a beer gripped in his right fist.

 

We jumped from the car and hurried up the steps.

 

Hawk is a big man, six-five, and broad across the shoulders. His pilot’s augmentations add to his stature: the cerebral implant spans his shoulders like a yoke, and the spinal jacks he had fitted a few years ago give him a severe, ramrod posture.

 

I would have said that he was the happiest person I knew, leaving aside the love-birds Matt and Maddie. He had a wonderful if odd woman in Kee, a member of the native alien Ashentay race, and a couple of times a year he took a starship full of tourists through the portal of the Yall’s golden column on a jaunt across the galaxy.

 

But he was not the world’s happiest man today.

 

“What the hell’s going on, Hawk?” I said as we reached the balcony.

 

He glared at his beer, and something in his eyes indicated that it was not his first of the day.

 

Maddie embraced him. “Kee...?” she whispered.

 

He gestured with his bottle to the ship’s entrance behind him. “Help yourself to beers,” he said.

 

Matt said, “This is hardly the time to drink – what’s happening?”

 

Hawk pushed himself away from the rail and strode into the ship. “Come in.”

 

We followed him through the cramped coms-room he used as an office and into the lounge, an amphitheatre that had once been the ship’s bridge. The sunken sofas were strewn with clothing – Kee’s flimsy wraps and leggings.

 

Hawk strode around the lounge to the sliding doors and walked onto the long balcony which overlooked the yard. He indicated a table on the balcony.

 

There was a note on the table, covered with large, childish hand-writing. Maddie picked it up, looking to Hawk for permission to read it. He nodded.

 

“I’m sorry, Hawk,” she read aloud. “Time, now. Inland for rites. Couldn’t tell you. Secret. I hope I will see you again. Kee.”

 

At this last sentence, Hawk turned a stricken gaze on us. “She’s been acting oddly for weeks, quiet, uncommunicative. I shrugged it off as Kee, as alien. She gets like that from time to time. Christ knows, it’s hard enough having a relationship with a human woman–”

 

“Tell me about it,” Matt quipped, earning an elbow in the ribs from Maddie.

 

“But Kee’s alien, and they do things differently.”

 

“Hawk,” I said gently. “You said you feared for her safety...?”

 

He took a deep breath and nodded. “In the early days, when we first got together... I wanted to know more about her, her people. I reckoned if I knew more about the Ashentay, then... I don’t know... then maybe it’d be easier to understand Kee, to work out how best to respond to her. I knew I was in love, whatever that means, and I wanted to keep her, so I quizzed her about her people, their rites and customs.”

 

He stopped there. Matt prompted, “And?”

 

“And I remember she once told me about a certain rite that each Ashentay has to undergo around the age of thirty. It’s one of the many they take part in throughout their lives.”

 

Maddie said in a small voice, “And how old is Kee, Hawk?”

 

He said, “Thirty.”

 

“And this rite?” Matt asked.

 

Hawk nodded. “It’s called smoking the bones.”

 

“Sounds… exactly like something the Ashentay would cook up,” I said. They were a strange race, with beliefs that made little sense to human observers.

 

“What does it consist of?” Maddie asked.

 

“The Ashentay are a hunter-gatherer people,” Hawk said. “They have been for hundreds of thousands of years. They hunt a certain animal... I forget what they call it. Anyway, they don’t hunt this beast for meat – it’s inedible, apparently – but for its bones.”

 

Matt echoed, “For its bones?”

 

“They kill the animal, strip it to its skeleton, dry its bones and smoke them. I don’t know whether they grind the bones to dust, or actually smoke the bones like pipes, but anyway, they smoke its bones and go into a trance. While in this trance, this altered state, Kee told me they’re granted a foretaste of the future, of their individual destinies.”

 

I said, “And Kee’s gone to take part in this ceremony?”

 

“I put two and two together: the Ashentay smoke the bones in their thirtieth year, at a sacred location inland of here: and in the note Kee said… she said she hoped she would see me again.”

 

Maddie shook her head. “But why shouldn’t she?”

 

Hawk hesitated, then said, “The effect of smoking its bones is sometimes lethal. Kee said that the fatality rate is often thirty per cent. And this is accepted by the fatalistic Ashentay as their destiny...”

 

I almost said something bigoted about primitive belief systems, but restrained myself.

 

Maddie reached out and took Hawk’s hand. Matt said, “Then there’s only one thing for it, Hawk, we’ve got to either try to stop her before she smokes the stuff... or be on hand afterwards to help her.”

 

Hawk looked bleak. He nodded. “I’ve been away almost a week, down past MacIntyre delivering a starship habitat to a rich industrialist. I don’t know when Kee set off.”

 

“Do you know where the sacred site is, Hawk?”

 

He nodded. “She’s mentioned it in the past. It’s in the central massifs, high up beyond a native village called Dar, about a hundred kilometres from here.”

 

“And was she on foot?” Maddie asked.

 

“That’s just it, I don’t know. She can drive, but rarely does. I checked, and she hasn’t hired a car locally. But she might have gone into MacIntyre and hired one there.”

 

Matt nodded and looked out across the junkyard. On the horizon, the bloated, blood-red orb of Delta Pavonis was lowering itself slowly into the ocean.

 

“It’ll be dark in an hour,” he said. “We’d never make it through the mountain pass. How about we get some provisions together, camping gear and food, and set off first thing in the morning?”

 

Hawk said, “I don’t know how Kee might take what she’d see as our interference... but we’ve got to try to find her.”

 

That’s settled, then,” Maddie said. “Right, we’re going back to the Jackeral for a meal, Hawk. Come with us, and I won’t take no for an answer.”

 

Hawk smiled, knowing better than to argue with Maddie. “That sounds like a civilised idea.”

 

As we climbed down from the ship and approached Matt’s ground-effect vehicle, Maddie said, “But David won’t be joining us, will you David?” She looked at me archly.

 

Hawk glanced my way. I’d forgotten all about my invitation for drinks from the one-time famous holo star, and I wasn’t sure I wanted to be reminded.

 

Maddie went on, “He has an assignation, don’t you, David? With a beautiful holo star.”

 

She regaled Hawk with the story as we drove back to Magenta Bay.

 

Hawk said, “That’s odd. I once knew her lover, the pilot Ed Grainger... I wonder what brought her here?”

 

“Maybe the same as what brought all of us here,” I said. “Maybe she’s fleeing the demons of her past.”

 

Maddie laughed. “Well, we’ll be relying on you to find out, David.”