Genesis Earth Page 4
They say that you don’t dream when you’re in cryo, but that’s a lie—they just don’t know how to explain it. Neither do I, but I can say something about the experience. The lines between the senses and your own thoughts blur together, until reality itself becomes utterly unrecognizable. Imperceptible images flash across your awareness, beyond your ability to process them. Maybe that’s what nothing itself feels like; after all, is it really possible to comprehend non-existence without thinking in terms of space and time?
I don’t know—I just know that I don’t want to go back there.
By the time you regain consciousness, the thawing process has already run most of its course. The flashes and images become brighter and more perceptible. You have a sort of falling sensation, during which you become aware of your body.
Painfully aware.
When you open your eyes, you’ve got a splitting headache and a nauseous stomach. Every time you move, another muscle cramps up on you. If you aren’t careful, you empty your bowels right there in the chamber.
The glass hisses open, the chamber tilts up to a forty five degree angle, and your limp body slides down the cold metal back until you find yourself sitting on your ankles. Your breath feels like fire in your lungs, and even though steam envelopes your body from all sides, you feel deathly cold. Too weak to stand up, you fall forward onto your hands and knees instead.
The vomiting is the worst. Forty year old bile splatters cold across the floor, followed by a good ten minutes of dry heaving. Each convulsion is so painful, it makes you feel as if you’re coughing up your own stomach.
After you’re finished, you want to do nothing but lie on the ground—in your vomit or to the side, it doesn’t really matter—and cry.
But all that passes with time. After lying on the floor for what seems like hours, your body starts to take strength. The headache dies down, and the cramps slowly diminish. When you open your eyes again, the stars fade away like some kind of ebbing soda fizz, revealing the unfamiliar room in which you have awakened. You bend your fingers, lift your arms, and slowly drag yourself away from that god-awful place.
After that, what is there to do? Wash up, get dressed in your vacuum wrapped forty year old clothes and clean up the mess.
My stomach throbbed as I stepped onto the bridge, but I ignored the pain. My aching body could wait; I had more important things to do. The instruments showed that we were approximately one point two light-hours from the central star, just inside the orbit of the fifth planet in the system. An unfamiliar starfield shone through the windows, dimmed somewhat by the presence of EB-175 even though the star was over a billion kilometers away. A quick review of the automated ship’s log showed that no significant objects had come anywhere close to the ship in the last two months. Nothing had been sent to intercept us.
I blinked and reread the log, just to make sure. If there was intelligent alien life, maybe they were waiting, watching us from a distance. Or maybe the log was wrong.
My bodily needs eventually overcame my scientific obsessions, however. I stood up from my seat on the bridge and made my way to the ship’s tiny mess hall where I could find something to satisfy my cramping stomach.
I felt nauseous and disoriented for nearly an hour. In that time, I ate some meal and downed a packet of fruit drink, doing my best to recuperate. I didn’t want to thaw Terra until I had recovered my strength.
After an hour, I was ready. At least, I thought I was.
Terra didn’t look human—she looked like a giant doll, a pale, lifeless marionette. Her skin was a whitish-blue, while her other features—fingernails, toenails, lips, nipples—stood out in high contrast shades of black and purple. Her hair was darker than I remembered, as if the cryofreezing process had sucked the color out of that, too. The glass of the chamber was cold to the touch, and the expansion of her frozen bodily fluids made her body look slightly bloated. I felt like a voyeur staring at her, but the sight was so morbidly fascinating that I could hardly turn away.
Eventually, however, I got myself together and started the thawing process. A hissing sound came from within the chamber, and a greenish mist washed over her. Gradually, almost imperceptibly, redness and color began to return to her skin. Her body deflated as the temperature in the chamber rose and her bodily fluids began to melt. A robotic arm with two suction cups fastened onto her chest and twitched as a series of quick electric shocks restarted her heart.
I periodically glanced down at the control screen, monitoring the various measures of her status. My legs felt stiff, and my hands trembled—I’d never run through this procedure before, and I barely knew what I was doing. The process was supposed to be fully automated, but cryonics is an imperfect science, and problems frequently arise.
About ten minutes in, I noticed something unusual. Little blue splotches were forming on Terra’s skin at the extremities on her hands and feet. After half a minute, they started showing up on her thighs and torso. I frowned; that didn’t seem right. I adjusted the heating pattern inside the chamber, but the blotches didn’t go away. Instead, her pulse started to drift into an unpredictable pattern.
With sweaty palms, I accelerated the thawing process. The uneven heating was probably causing blockages in her veins and arteries. I’d need to break those up soon if her heart, brain, and lungs were to fully revive their functions. She could only last so long on the machine—
Without warning, her pulse flatlined into a dull monotone.
I frantically keyed in a series of commands on my console. The robotic arm reattached the suction cups to Terra’s chest and reapplied the electric shocks. To my relief, her heart started beating again, but weaker and more erratic than before. A second later, the warning indicators on half the instruments blinked on. My heart skipped a beat as they flashed in rhythmic chorus. This was serious—very serious.
“Please, no,” I said, face paling. There was no-one on the ship to hear me, though; I was alone.
Within seconds, I figured out what the problem was. Micro-cramps in her muscles were causing uneven heating, cutting off the arteries and capillaries in various parts of her body. Her heart hadn’t recovered sufficiently to break the blockages, so they were spreading.
My hands trembled so much I doubted my fingers could type a coherent sentence. In spite of that, I worked as quickly as I could to counteract the complications, maintaining constant periodic shocks to her heart and significantly increasing the heat on her upper torso. With any luck, her blood would warm up enough to relax the contracted muscles and break the blockages. Still, most of the indicators remained in the red; the electric shocks were simply unsustainable. I waited as long as I thought I could, then crossed my fingers and shut them off. Her heart kept pumping, but the beat soon drifted back into unpredictability.
I glanced up at the cryo chamber and caught my breath. Her arms, legs, and chest twitched and convulsed at utter random, undulating in a slow motion seizure. She had no control of her body. Chills ran down my neck and arms.
She needed more than the machines could give her. I pulled out a syringe from the medical cabinet and nervously fumbled through nearly four dozen canisters of liquid drugs. The wrong injection could kill her, but if I didn’t do something right away, she didn’t have a chance. I grabbed what I thought was the correct formula and filled the syringe.
A few of the indicators were moving out of the red when I returned to the controls, but the situation was still serious. A brainwave scan showed that her body was operating 85% autonomously from the machines and that she had regained partial consciousness. I waited until the indicator reached 95% and cracked open the glass.
Steam poured out of the chamber and splashed across the ceiling, followed by the sound of violent coughing. Terra half slid, half fell to the floor. I rushed forward and caught her before she hit, and she responded by vomiting all over my shirt.
Despite the heat of the steam, her skin felt cold, and her vomit even colder. I held her off to one side and patted
her back to help her force it out. She stopped twitching and coughed a couple of times, but quickly grew weak in my arms.
“Come on, Terra!” I pleaded. Her breathing was too ragged for her to respond.
There wasn’t any time to lose. I pulled out the syringe and balled my fingers around it into a fist. It was built for a fast, emergency injection—the kind that could be jammed into someone’s leg. I brought it down on her right thigh. Her blotchy-blue skin rippled a little, and the fluid went in almost immediately.
A couple of seconds passed before the medicine took any effect. When it did, her whole body went stiff, and her eyes opened wide, revealing dilated pupils. Before I could react, she started convulsing violently, as if she were going into a seizure. I set her on the floor as gently as I could and held onto her head to make sure that she didn’t injure herself.
After about fifteen seconds, her body went limp again. I put two fingers up to her neck and felt for a pulse. To my relief, it was steady and strong. I sighed and practically collapsed from relief.
As if in response, her chest heaved and she started vomiting again. I scrambled to my knees and turned her onto her side. How much stuff did she have in there—hadn’t she followed the 24 hour no food rule? No time to worry about that—just help her get it out without choking on the stuff.
She vomited and coughed until snot dripped down her face and the hoarse sound of her dry heaving filled the room. She was still too weak to sit up, so I supported her as best I could until she stopped. Sobs of pain slowly replaced the retching.
“Are you all right?” I asked.
What a stupid thing to say!
She looked up and gave me an icy glare. “No!” she shouted, then went back to coughing.
I held her until she began to quiet down. With the worst of it gone, relief came slowly to my nervous body. Her skin was getting warmer and her heartbeat was steady now. After forty years on the threshold of death, she was alive again.
Alive and completely naked. My cheeks flushed, and I set her on the floor.
“Can you stand up yet?” I asked.
“Not… yet,” she groaned. “Cramps… everywhere.”
I grabbed a towel on the side of the control panel and draped it over her. She reached up with a hand and weakly held onto it. I waited until her breathing became less labored before asking her again.
“How about now?”
She clenched her teeth and nodded.
I stood up and took her by one hand, pulling her gently to her feet. She bent her knees carefully as she sat up, still holding onto the towel. When she was standing up, she let go of my hand and reached out for the wall. The towel fell off of one side, but she didn’t make any attempt to fix it. She still seemed fairly incoherent.
“What’s… our… status?” she asked.
“Everything is going well. We’re about two light-hours out from the system.”
“Good,” she groaned, slowly wrapping the towel back around her body. I almost reached out a hand to help, but hesitated.
“D—do you need help?” I stammered.
“No, thanks, I think I’ve got it.” She glanced up at me, then down at my chest and grinned. “Sorry about your shirt.”
“What?” I looked down and saw the vomit. “Oh, that. Don’t worry about it.”
She nodded weakly and closed her eyes.
“Are you sure you don’t need help?” I asked.
“I don’t… think so. Getting… better.” She staggered away from the wall and nearly fell over. “So… cold…”
She had stopped shivering. That was a bad sign.
“Here,” I said, taking her hand. “Follow me.”
If she wasn’t shivering, her body wasn’t generating enough heat yet and she was at serious risk for hypothermia. The best way to counteract that was to immerse her in warm water. I led her down the hall and into the narrow, cylindrical shower unit in the bathroom. She nearly passed out on the way there, and I practically carried her the last half of the way. The towel fell off in the hallway, but that no longer mattered.
I leaned her up against the smooth wall of the shower unit, and she slid down to her knees. Her skin was sickly pale, her arms limp, and she mumbled incoherently as her head flopped back against the wall, hair partially covering her face. I bit my lip and reached around the side to activate the water. Should I turn the heat up to full, or would that give her system too much shock? My heart pounded in my chest—no time to waste. I set the temperature to low-warm and hit the activate button.
Jets of lukewarm water shot out from all sides, drenching my already soiled shirt and dripping out into the room. Rivulets ran down Terra’s face and pale skin, but she didn’t move.
“Come on,” I said, ignoring the water soaking my clothes as I knelt down and put my hands on her shoulders. “Terra, are you all right? Terra!”
I pressed my fingers against her neck and found a pulse. Her body shuddered and she coughed. Nothing else to do but give her some space and let the shower do its work.
My heart still pounding, I stepped out of the unit and shut the door. My shirt was soaking wet, and Terra’s watery vomit ran down my legs and pooled on the floor. As I stood there dripping, Terra stumbled noisily to her feet, teeth chattering. The glass began to steam up, indicating that she’d turned up the heat on her own.
She was recovering.
“Your clothes are outside,” I said as I pulled out the vacuum sealed bags and put them on a shelf next to the door.
“Okay,” she groaned.
“Are you okay? Do you need any more help?”
“No… thanks,” she muttered. I left the room.
When I reached the hallway, I leaned against the wall and promptly collapsed in exhaustion. A puddle of grimy water formed around me on the floor, but I no longer cared. I sat there by myself for a long time.
* * * * *
About half an hour later, after I’d cleaned up and changed into a new set of clothes, Terra joined me on the bridge with a bowl of hot meal. Her hair was wet and uncombed, but her skin was flushed and looked much healthier. She shoveled down her food with a voracious appetite.
“You’re looking a lot better now,” I remarked.
“I guess so,” she said between bites. “Still feel like shit, though.”
I nodded. “For a while, I almost thought you wouldn’t make it.”
“Really?” She set her bowl down in her lap and stared right at me, a deadly serious expression on her face.
“Well, yeah,” I said, the sudden change in her expression making me uneasy. “Don’t you remember?”
“No, I don’t.” She leaned forward. “What happened?”
I told her everything, starting from the moment I initiated cryothaw and ending with the lukewarm shower. Her eyes grew progressively wider as I told the story.
“Wow,” she said. “You saved my life.”
The expression on her face was totally changed. She stared at me as if I were some kind of hero: an immaculate, superhuman being.
“It was part of the mission,” I said, shifting uncomfortably. “I did what I had to do.”
“It was more than that. You saved my life.”
I shrugged. “It’s okay. You’d have done the same for me.”
She nodded. She looked a lot more human now—more open and expressive, not as cold and unfeeling as she usually was.
“Well, at least we’re both okay now.”
“Yeah.”
In the brief pause that followed, I became acutely aware of the low hum coming from the ventilation system. The solitary clinking of Terra’s spoon as she returned to her food punctuated the near perfect silence, emphasizing to me that we were light-years from any other human being. Everyone we knew was forty years older and further away from us than some of the stars out the bridge window.
I shivered. Thoughts like these made the air feel chilly.
“Now that we’re both awake,” I said, “let’s get started with this mission
.”
“Sounds good to me.”
“Great,” The chilliness passed, but only for the moment.
I toggled the screens in front of us to display the summaries from the ship’s auto log. Besides basic statistics and reports, the data showed our position relative to the EB-175 system across several space maps.
“According to the log,” I said, “we began our deceleration from point nine nine cee about twenty years ago, objective time. That deceleration ended yesterday, so for the past twenty years, the radiation signature from our engines has been clearly visible. If there’s any intelligent life in this system, we have to assume they already know we’re here.”
She nodded and ate a spoonful of her cereal.
“We’ve arrived without incident,” I continued, “so that means one thing for sure—no one’s tried to contact us yet.”
“So you’re saying that there isn’t any intelligent life.”
“Not exactly,” I said. “We can’t rule anything out for sure. Perhaps the ship’s AI missed something. Perhaps they’ve only just sent someone out to meet us.”
She pulled the spoon out of her mouth and frowned.
“How is that possible? The ship’s scanners would pick up any kind of spaceship long before it reached us.”
“Not any kind,” I said. “The scanners can only pick up objects larger than five cubic meters. Anything smaller than that—say, a probe—would have passed through.”
“Yeah, but who ever heard of a spaceship smaller than five cubic meters?”
“I don’t know, but it’s not impossible, is it?”
She raised her eyebrow. “You really think something’s out there?”
“I don’t know,” I said, feeling a little defensive. “I’m just saying we need to consider the possibility.”
She swallowed another bite, then took the spoon out of her mouth and held it up.
“Give me a few hours and I’ll map every object the size of this spoon within fifty thousand kilometers of our position.”