Free Read Novels Online Home

Toxic by Lydia Kang (38)

Chapter Thirty-Nine

HANA

This is what I know.

I am alive.

Cyclo is dead.

Mother is alive.

And Fenn is on the run.

But some things come before running. Like introductions.

After I can manage to stand without shaking, I gesture to Mother.

“Mother,” I say, reaching for Fenn’s hand. He squeezes it nervously. “This is Fennec Actias. He’s a thief.”

Fenn goes bright red in the face, and he closes his eyes and shakes his head. Mother goes red in the face, too, and frowns so deeply it looks like her smile is permanently broken. Was that the wrong way to introduce people?

But then Mother’s face softens, and she reaches out with her good hand. “So that’s what Fenn stands for. Well, thank you for helping me with my arm. And for helping Hana.”

“Anytime,” he says, and the offer—to be there for us, at all moments, fills me with warmth.

“And now, we need to get out of here, in case Doran and ReCOR show up.”

Mother instructs Sannu to drive carefully to avoid any debris from Cyclo’s destruction until we’re clear enough to go to hyperspace. Her wreck of a body is dark, burned in places, and no longer possesses that preternatural blue glow. A good third of her is shattered and hovering in a debris field, but it’s clear at a glance that she is lifeless.

I cry silently as we pass by her, and Mother watches, dead-eyed, at what used to be our home. She was my sky and my earth, my other parent, my world. Fenn hangs back and watches with wonder the scattered chunks of mantle and plastrix drifting by. After several minutes, he puts his hand on my shoulder.

“Look,” he says, pointing.

The Selkirk has broken off and drifts lazily about half a mile away, lights out, with that sardonic smile shape.

“Can we do a quick flyby? I need to board the Selkirk.”

Mother seems puzzled but orders Sannu to draw closer. Fenn dons one of the suits, and Sannu pushes him right through her wall. By tether, he boards the Selkirk. He returns fairly quickly holding a dark box.

Once he’s safely on board and free of his suit, I stoop by the box. It’s such a simple thing. “What is it?” I ask.

“Black titanium, but with five-XT nucleotide helix cores packed full of data. When Doran comes here, he’ll assume we’ve both died, and that Gammand was unable to load this data. But we’re going to leak it.” He grins. “Hello, truth. Get ready to meet the world.”

“But your death benefit! And Callandra. What about her?”

“She’ll be okay.” He looks wistfully out the front plastrix window of the cockpit. “I’ll still be able to help her, in another way. And I’m thinking there may be ways to help Gammand, Portia, and Miki’s beneficiaries, too. I have ideas.” He grins mischievously.

“Sannu,” Mother says. “Set a course for GP90. It’s about a week’s travel away, but it’s a neutral city, and ReCOR doesn’t have any major outposts there. We can hide for a while.”

Fenn nods. “I’ll need a new ID. DNA theft is pretty easy, actually. Huh. After all this, I’m still at my old job.”

At the word “theft,” Mother cringes a little, but then she shrugs. “I suppose I ought to get used to being on the run. I just stole Sannu, after all. And ReCOR’s data files. I’ll need a new ID, too.”

“As will I. My first ID.” I smile.

Fenn grins at all of this. “I come on this mission as a convict, and I end up bringing two criminals with me.”

This is where Sannu chimes in. “I am not a criminal.”

We all laugh at that, not knowing exactly what to say. But then I take Fenn’s hand in my own. “Fenn. You won’t be able to see your sister if you’re on the run and hiding. Or if people think you’re dead.”

“Oh, I don’t know about that,” Mother says, her hand touching the controls on the bridge here and there. Without even looking at us, she says, “I can’t imagine a little thing like faking death would stop you from seeing your sister again.”

I look wonderingly at Fenn and then his pendant. He takes it from his neck and hands it to me, and we step away to talk quietly.

“I listened to it. Finally. I should have listened to you and opened it before.”

“Well. We all make mistakes, don’t we?” I say.

Sannu intones, “I don’t.”

“Not yet, at least,” I whisper to Fenn.

“I heard that,” Sannu says again, sounding somewhat irritated. “Dr. Um, my readings tell me that you need more treatment for your arm, and these two humans are showing low levels of radioactivity. Permit me to begin therapy for all of you while we are on autopilot.”

“Permission granted,” Mother says, looking very much relieved. Her arm is wrapped up in a bandage, but I can see that her fingers have turned purple-black. I touch her hand, and Mother recoils a little. “No Hana. It’s okay. I’ve lost it, but it was worth it.”

She says nothing more, and I don’t press her. I’m finding that sometimes the space within silence is much more filling than words.

Sannu has a fully equipped laser medical-surgical program, and in a shockingly short amount of time, Mother’s arm is amputated, laser-stitched, and a healing infusion administered. Meanwhile, Fenn and I receive intravenous chelators to remove any lingering radioactivity in our bodies, plus an infusion of nutrients and vitamins we were in need of after our traumatic last few days.

It’s time to set the course to leave. I help Mother stand, and Fenn and I walk her to the bridge. Once in the chair, she looks up at me.

“Hana. Your necklace. What happened to it?”

I put my hand to the base of my throat to feel my pearl pendant there. Strange. I was sure that I’d yanked it off in a fit of anger. And also strange—my great-grandmother’s pearl was baroque. Pear-shaped. The cool, smooth pendant around my neck is spherical.

“That’s no pearl,” Fenn says.

I reach behind my neck to unclasp the chain and hold the necklace up.

It’s a brilliant, bright-blue sphere hanging from the chain like an azure glass bead. But the center looks liquid and iridescent, as if an entire galaxy and history were contained within it.

Oh. I’d forgotten that Cyclo had given it to me. She must have attached it to the chain on my neck.

“It’s a piece of Cyclo,” Mother says in astonishment.

“You are only partially correct,” Sannu says. “It is embryonic tissue composed of DNA from Amorfovita potentia, subspecies cyclonica, with fragments of humanoid DNA.”

“Wait, what?” I yell.

“What?” Fenn and my mother yell.

“The DNA of this embryo is a hybrid,” Sannu says, calm as can be.

We all go silent for a full minute.

“I thought Cyclo said it was only her,” I say.

“Cyclo isn’t capable of that type of reproduction,” my mother says. “She’s not programmed to be able to reproduce in any way.”

“She wasn’t programmed to kill, but she did,” I remind her.

“Wait, wait, wait,” Fenn says, holding his temples. “What other DNA is in this thing?”

Sannu, calmly waiting for us all to be quiet, answers.

“The humanoid DNA appears to be a mix of Argyrian, Prinniad, and Gragorian DNA.”

WHAT.

I am not sure what this all means. I’m only seventeen, and only just got out of my prison of a room two weeks ago, only just met other creatures besides Mother and Cyclo, had my first kiss, watched people murdered in front of my eyes, and experienced my first nuclear meltdown. And Cyclo has decided to live on, fiercely, by piecing her imperfect self together with the very people we are still mourning in our hearts.

This is a bit much.

I need a moment.

But in the end, we decide that…nothing needs to be decided. Fenn needs to be in hiding. Mother can no longer return to her previous position because she’s on the run after her court-martial. And apparently, they are trying to track me down, too, because, since I was never allowed to exist in the first place, the federation has the right to delete my life.

“Without incubation, this will not grow. Even if it was incubated, it may not be compatible with life,” Mother says, touching the pendant.

“Then, for now, we’ll just call it what it is. A memory of the past.” I bite my lip. “With potential.”

Memories and potential. But one thing it isn’t—destiny.

If there’s one thing I learned, it’s that a DNA code can’t determine a perfectly tailored being or future. I’m proof of that.

Finally, we sleep. Or at least we try to. Mother wants Fenn to sleep separately in the back of Sannu, while she and I sleep in the cockpit.

“No,” I say. “Fenn stays with me.”

“Hana. No. I forbid it. You’re too young. You don’t even know what you’re doing right now. You need to rest.”

“You just lost an arm. You need to rest. I’ve been working nonstop to reverse-engineer mantle cells, fool a ship so I could steal radioactive waste, and I saved you. I think I know what I’m doing.”

Mother’s mouth drops open and stays there. This is not the docile, quiet, polite daughter she knows.

“I’m staying with Fenn, and there isn’t much you can do about that.”

I’m fully shocked at my own behavior and words, too.

I kind of love it.

Mother goes a little pale in the face, and she sits limply down in the captain’s chair. I find some medicine that will help her stump heal quickly and apply it to her newly sewn wounds, then find a crinkly solar blanket and drape it over her. I kiss her cheek.

“Close your eyes and sleep. Fenn and I will see you in about ten hours.”

Her eyes are droopy with tiredness and medicine, and she nods. “Okay.”

I ask Sannu to drop a membrane of privacy between the cockpit and the back of the ship, and he complies. Fenn is waiting for me, and his mouth has dropped open in an almost exact mirror image of my mother’s previous expression of surprise.

“I think you just sent her into shock,” Fenn finally says. “She may never recover.”

“She’ll be fine. Just like you and I will be fine. Not perfect, but fine.” I curl my arm around his taut waist, and we head for a pile of gel padding beneath another solar blanket that will be our bed. “I’m still so angry at her, Fenn. I want to scream at her for hours and hours.”

“Not now. But later, yeah. Scream all you want. You have stuff to figure out.”

“Don’t we all?” I say, before lying down and letting Fenn’s arms wrap around me.

“Yes. But right now, I don’t want any of that.”

“What do you want, Fenn?” I ask as I roll to my side exactly one inch away from his face, staring at those beautiful brown and gold-flecked eyes. Staring, and waiting.

He leans in to kiss me.

It’s the answer I’d hoped for.

So while my mother slumbers in the bridge, busy healing, so am I. I may not have wounds on my body that need tending, but my heart does. Now that I don’t need to be afraid to exist, it’s easier for both of us to navigate this gaping hole that is our future.

Future. What a beautiful, large word. I love it, so I say it often to myself when no one is listening. It’s been so long since I was isolated that I’m learning again what it’s like to be alone and not be lonely. A wonderful sensation.

Tonight, I sleep on another sentient ship, wondering what it thinks of me. I slumber next to a boy who first saw me as an impediment, who taught me how to fall in love in low gravity. I am with a mother I lost and regained, who makes me so angry sometimes I could explode but who I am learning to forgive. And at an arm’s length away, I look at this tiny blue orb, in the center of which glows a being that could be everything or nothing, an end or a beginning, beauty or horror. Possibly all of it, all at once. And possibly none of it.

But I don’t want to think of that now.

What I think of when I sleep is Cyclo. Forgiving her is more difficult. I have seen things I cannot unsee. I have felt love that I cannot unfeel. I see her burning brightly in my mind’s eye, and I see all of us. We are ash and stars.

I suppose this is what they say, on those old vids from the twentieth-century, that family can be complicated. I understand what that means now. So I think and think and think at night on this long trip to who-knows-where, trying to find forgiveness where only pain rests. I won’t find the peace I’m looking for in one single night.

But then again, ahead of me, I have time. And I have a future.

Did I tell you how much I love that word?

Did you love this Entangled Teen book?
Check out more of our titles
!

Don’t miss another book by Lydia Kang.
Sign up for the Entangled Teen newsletter
!

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Flora Ferrari, Zoe Chant, Alexa Riley, Mia Madison, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Leslie North, Elizabeth Lennox, Sophie Stern, Amy Brent, Jordan Silver, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Kathi S. Barton, Madison Faye, Bella Forrest, Jenika Snow, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Penny Wylder, Michelle Love, Delilah Devlin, Piper Davenport, Sawyer Bennett,

Random Novels

Highlander's Sword: Paranormal Bear Shifter Romance (Clan Matheson Book 3) by Joanne Wadsworth

Unwrapped by The Billionaire by Joanna Nicholson

A TRULY PERFECT GENTLEMAN by Burrowes, Grace

by C.M. Stunich, Tate James

Embrace the Romance: Pets in Space 2 by S.E. Smith, M.K. Eidem, Susan Grant, Michelle Howard, Cara Bristol, Veronica Scott, Pauline Baird Jones, Laurie A. Green, Sabine Priestley, Jessica E. Subject

Sold as a Domme on Valentine's Day: A Virgin and Billionaire Romance by Juliana Conners

DEVOUR ME: A Dark Bad Boy Romance (The Wicked Angels MC) by Sophia Gray

Children of Blood and Bone (Legacy of Orisha) by Tomi Adeyemi

Blue Sage (Anne Stuart's Greatest Hits Book 3) by Anne Stuart

Next Door Daddy by Amy Brent

Not Broken: The Happily Ever After by Meka James

Fix My Fall (The Fix Series Book 3) by Carey Heywood

At Dante's Service by Chantelle Shaw

When I Saw You by Laura Branchflower

Bad Boss by Brooke Page

Second Chances by M. S. Parker, Cassie Wild

Clickbait (Off the Record Book 1) by Garett Groves

My Hot Professor: A Steamy Older Man Younger Woman Romance by Madison, Mia

Betrayed: Prequel to Unhinged by Knight, Natasha

All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven