Seth said something no gentleman should say to a lady.
When Jordan had hurried off to attend to a million duties, Seth drank soup and brooded over the news. In theory the trip back to Earth should take only a few days, retracing the jumps they had made on the way here. In practice, space was never still, and
When
Seth was a made man. He would have his plog edited into shape by then and royalties would come pouring in for years. Meredith might work up hers from Galactic’s records, but it would not be as complete or as dramatic as Seth’s. She would have a cast-iron legal case against Galactic for attempted murder, so in the end she would be rich also.
But the others? They would be famous and broke.
After eating, he decided to pay a call on his fellow sufferer. Wrapping himself in a bed sheet-since no one had yet thought to bring him any clothes-he floated along the Gut to the biologist’s cabin to visit with Meredith. Even in free fall, he felt weak, tending to bounce off walls. He found her alert, reading text on the monitor, and wearing very little more than he was. She was barely recognizable as the bedraggled, starving, poisoned, wreck he had known on the planet. Now she was a dream of womankind, her hair clean and shiny, her eyes bright. The way they lit up at the sight of him was flattering.
“How are you feeling?” he asked.
“Great, thanks to you. I’ve watched dozens of replays of me being carried by that team of stretcher-bearers you organized. It’s incredible! However did you do it?”
“Out of desperation. They’re smart little critters.”
“Well I can’t thank them, but I am eternally grateful to you.”
“No need. I’d have done it for anyone, even JC. It wasn’t just because you’re a red-hot sex bomb.”
“I bet that helped.” Golden eyebrows rose.
“You bet,” he admitted.
“So you do hope to cash in your IOU’s some time?”
His denial died stillborn. He nodded.
She said, “There is never any time like the present.”
Testosterone receptors started flashing in Seth’s limbic area.
“I’m still as weak as a newborn kitten.”
“I can fix that.”
He floated a little closer. “Sounds dangerous. I ought to get into shape first.”
“We must begin your training at once.”
He had to kiss her then. Her response was anything but sisterly, and for the next thirty minutes or so conversation was brief and incoherent.
“Mm,” she murmured. “That was very nice. What’s your turnaround time?”
“Usually an hour or so, but after that epic, I feel like I’ll need a month.”
“Dylan used to manage a lap every twenty minutes.”
“Screw Dylan.”
“I did. I bet I can bring you up to speed too.”
“You have my permission to try.”
Meredith was not only an enthusiast, she was an expert. She came close−twenty-seven minutes.
Paradise was short-lived though. Two days later, Control reported that the convalescents should now be able to return to standard atmospheric pressure, and they both reported for duty. Everyone else except Jordan had succumbed to the mysterious plague. Reese had been first to go and ought to be first to recover.