![]() |
| Archer - from Google Images |
Chapter Five: Archer
Archer is thrown from the
captain’s chair by the force of impact. Immediately, alarms sound on the
bridge. He pulls himself to his feet, mind locked in shock as a panel explodes
in a shower of debris. The young officer at the station is tossed aside,
collapsing to the deck with half his face charred black from the fire.
Archer throws off the fear and
scrambles back to the com even as the second officer leaves her post to check
on their fallen crew member. She looks up at him as the ship shudders. Her eyes
are filled with terror as she shakes her head.
Trying to focus, Archer doesn’t
get a chance to call for help. As he keys the com, the ship goes dead, power
crashing as the Day Wanderer comes to an abrupt halt, dead in space.
Despite being braced against the constant movement, Archer is again tossed to
the floor.
The lieutenant is crying, her
forehead bloodied by the second impact. Archer ignores her and goes to the
control console while emergency power surges to life. The spinning red light
makes the blood even more ghastly.
“What the hell was that?”
Archer demanded of her. “Where was the warning?”
“There was nothing on sensors,
nothing!” She is sobbing, her hands clutched to her wound. “I don’t know!”
Archer tries to come up with a
plan, but his training didn’t cover this.
“We need to abandon ship!” The
lieutenant’s fear flares beside him. He pushes away from her clutching
hands and reek of terror.
“We need to find out what’s
going on,” he snaps back. He hears her feet retreat, stumbling often as the
ship vibrates and shudders. He doesn’t have time to think about her. He needs
to save his father’s ship.
The consoles are unresponsive.
There isn’t enough power. Archer slams both fists onto the glass surface in frustration,
then makes a decision. Despite knowing it is the last thing he should do, he
leaves the bridge unmanned in search of some answers.
He makes his way through the
dark and the smoke, choking on the thick stuff that seems to be everywhere. Archer staggers as the ship pitches beneath him, frantic to reach his father. He was
not trained for this. None of them were.
As he rounds the last corner
that will lead him to the crew deck, he sees something up ahead in the smoke.
Legs dangle over something dark, moving with uncanny
smoothness.
Archer’s instincts take over.
He races to catch up, throwing himself at the creature, getting a grip on the
legs and pulling the captive free. The weight of the body is more than he was
prepared for and he falls with the girl he rescued on top of him. The creature
turns toward him, masked in blackness and thick smoke. All Archer can make out
are its glowing green eyes as it slithers toward them.
Before he can react there is a
flash of weapon’s fire that strikes the thing and flings it backward. It
squeals a high-pitched protest before disappearing into the haze.
Four Hours to Contact
Archer couldn’t get the beautiful
girl out of his mind for some reason. He even checked the manifest himself
out of curiosity. She was Sun Chang, daughter of two doctors relocating to
Zandia. He made a note of her billet number, grinning to himself. Might be nice
to have someone pretty to talk to on a voyage for a change.
Not that he had very much free
time. His new duties saw to that. He barely contained his joy, only doing so by
force of will and a lifetime of training, when his father approached him the
night before with a uniform and a small box.
“It’s time, I think,” Patrick
smiled at him. Archer took the shining suit without comment though he was
bursting inside. “And these. Every officer needs these.”
The silver wings were the
universal symbol for pilots, whether in atmosphere or out. His had two planets
below and a small ship orbiting signifying him as a spacer.
“Congratulations,” Patrick said.
“You passed first grade. Just heard myself this morning.”
Archer felt his shoulders go back,
his chest swell. He studied hard, worked even harder. He earned his place, but
it was still nice to know his efforts were appreciated.
“I won’t let you down, sir.” He
saluted his father.
Patrick laughed and hugged him. “I
know you won’t,” his father said. “Your mother would be so proud.”
Archer was just as overjoyed to be
asked to join Patrick and Exec Anita Shore in greeting the boarding colonists.
Anita didn’t comment on the new white and silver uniform or the wings, but her green eyes
sparkled at him.
“So was that new governor arrogant
enough for you?” Anita asked Patrick as the watched the colonists find their
way.
“Grounders,” Patrick said, as if
that were enough. It was, for Archer. Grounders thought they owned everything,
including space.
“The daughter will be a handful,”
Anita went on. “Did you see the predator in her?”
“They’re only with us a few
weeks,” Patrick said. “But put someone on her, if you would.”
“A female someone, I think,” Anita
said.
They both laughed. Archer was
fascinated. He had never been privy to their conversations before.
“Too bad we’re not a full
compliment,” Anita went on. “Two hundred colonists are hardly worth our
effort.”
Archer agreed.
“We were the closest ship,”
Patrick said, his tone telling Archer it was an old gripe. “We do our best to
serve, Anita.”
“Yes, sir,” she said. “Does this
mean we get to survey that nebulae we stumbled on the last run out?” Anita was
a fine officer, but her science background made her a sucker for new phenomena.
“I’m telling you there was something in there I couldn’t identify.”
Patrick snorted. “You and your
alien life forms,” he said. “There’s nothing out there. But I think we could
take a swing that way under the pretense of finding some other viable planets.”
“Yes, sir,” she responded with
laughter in her voice.
Archer was distracted from their
conversation by the beautiful girl at that point and lost their train of
thought by the time she blushed and ducked her head, hurrying after her
parents. By then the last of the final group were boarded.
Patrick and Anita were suddenly
facing him, grinning at him. Archer wondered if he should be nervous.
“So do you think he’s ready?”
Patrick’s green eyes danced with some secret joy.
“Maybe,” Anita shrugged, crossing
her arms over her substantial chest, her bulky body almost the same size as his
father’s. Archer had seen her bring errant spacers to their knees with just one
of her big, strong hands without disturbing a hair of her tight bun. “Still wet
behind the ears, but shows potential.”
He refused to rise to the bait.
Whatever it was, they would tell him when they were ready.
Patrick took the hint from his
son’s stoic acceptance of their teasing and gave in.
“Report to the bridge at 21:00,”
he said. “Tonight, you take the con.”
Archer was so excited he almost
cracked his professional veneer.
“Yes, sir,” he said. Then grinned.
He couldn’t help himself.
Anita laughed out loud and clapped
him on the shoulder, staggering him slightly.
“Good lad,” she said. “See you at
dinner.”
Archer didn’t watch her leave. His
whole attention was focused on his father. As she went however, Patrick’s face
sobered. He motioned for Archer to walk with him. When he spoke, his deep voice
was so low Archer had to strain to hear him.
“I need you to go find your
brother,” the big captain said.
Archer wanted to groan and
complain, but he was an officer now. A sixteen-year-old officer, but still. His
days of childishness were over and his captain had given him instructions.
“Yes, sir,” he said.
Patrick sighed. “He’s your
brother, Archer.”
Sammel was a good kid for the most
part. He just…
“Yes, sir,” Archer said again.
“You remember the promise you made
me when your mother died?” Patrick came to a halt next to the lift to the
bridge.
Archer was ten, Sammel only six
when Margarite passed away after a lengthy battle with illness. Patrick
came to his son late the night of the service and told the older boy how
important it was to take care of his brother.
“Yes, sir,” Archer said. “I do my
best.” He hoped it didn’t sound like he was complaining.
His father’s hand fell on his
shoulder. “I know you do,” Patrick said. “He’s so much like her, so impulsive
and reckless. But he needs you, Archer. Now go find him and get him cleaned up
because we both know he’s probably a mess. Bring him to supper tonight.”
“I will,” Archer answered.
He waited until the doors to the
lift closed on his father before venting his frustration with a heavy sigh. Jaw
clenched, he went in search of his brother.
Archer loved Sammel and always
took his father’s request seriously. But there was something about his younger
brother that drove him nuts. Sammel tried so hard that he was always making a
mess of things, often reflecting badly on Archer himself. Which he found doubly
frustrating. The last thing he ever wanted was to let his father down and he
felt like with every disaster Sammel stumbled into he tarnished Archer's own
successes.
He knew most of the crew had
issues with his brother including Anita and never knew what to do or say when
they criticized the boy. The trouble was he agreed with them, but his loyalty
to his family was so strong it tore him apart inside.
How can I love my brother so
much, but be embarrassed by him at the same time?
Archer was familiar with most of
Sammel’s haunts, but didn’t have a whole lot of time to go looking. Instead, he
made a few calls on the com to various departments on the ship, coming up empty
every time.
Trying to keep his temper in
check, Archer was forced to physically go looking for his brother. His mind
churned with anger. He didn’t have time for this. He needed to get himself
presentable for dinner (although the charitable part of himself knew that
required nothing more than donning his dress jacket over his immaculate
uniform) and then had to prepare for his con duty that night. The last thing he
wanted was to be chasing after Sammel to goodness knew where just so the
O’Malley family could put on a good face at dinner for a bunch of colonists
they’d never see again.
Archer’s anger rose further when
he heard his brother’s voice coming from a resident corridor. What was he doing
with the colonists? Archer stomped his way to the only open door and entered
without knocking.
Sammel stood in front of a
very large, well-dressed man and his thin, attractive companion, his dark head
hanging, shoulders slumped. But Archer recognized the tell-tale sign of his
brother’s fury as his fingers curled and uncurled into fists at his sides.
Sammel learned not to show his rebellion on the outside, but never quite
perfected the art as Archer had.
“Excuse me,” Archer interrupted
the man in mid name-calling. Angry with Sammel or not, no one treated his brother that way. “Is there a problem here?”
The man spun on Archer, red face
twisted, a shout on his lips. He took in the uniform immediately however and
pulled his attack up short.
“This porter has ruined my prize
collection of rare blown glass,” he sputtered.
Archer glanced at Sammel who
refused to look at him.
“And how did he manage that?”
Archer felt his anger transfer completely from his brother to the arrogant grounder. He
made the connection between this man and Anita’s comments about the new
governor as the man spoke again.
“He dropped a bag on top of them!”
The man was trying not to shout. Flecks of spittle flew from his mouth. “I
demand the boy be punished!”
Archer drew himself up to his full
height and regarded the grounder governor with his best flat expression, one he
learned from his father. He could see the man deflate in the face of it.
“May I ask why the second son of
Captain O’Malley, the master of the Day Wanderer, is serving as your
porter in the first place?” Archer was pleased at the chill in his tone. “I’m
sure you were informed, Mr…?”
“Governor Arthur Lamont,” the man
said, trying for a return to authority but failing.
“Ah. Yes. Mr. Lamont.” Archer
purposely left out the man’s title. He wasn’t on Zandia yet. Grounders needed
to be kept in their place when on board. “I’m sure you were informed you
would be required to care for yourself for the duration of the voyage? Spacer
crews do not serve colonists.”
Archer saw Sammel’s lip twitch.
The girl just looked speculative.
“I… we… you…” Lamont continued to
splutter, trying to gain the upper hand again. Archer let him go on for a time,
observing with curiosity, understanding his father’s tactics more than ever. It
was imminently satisfying. Then, he cut him off.
“I am First Lieutenant Archer
O’Malley,” he informed the now embarrassed Lamont, “and this is my brother.
Now, if you will excuse us, Captain O’Malley requires our attention.”
Archer spun on his heel with the
precision that had been drilled into him and strode from the room. He heard the
shuffle of feet behind him and knew Sammel followed. He continued to walk, long
legs eating up distance for a full minute before spinning and facing his
brother.
Sammel, rather than looking
grateful, was sullen. “Thanks,” he whispered.
Archer wanted to shake him and
shake him until he got some sense. Instead, he flashed his anger to the only
person he could, letting Sammel see just how furious he was before building his
wall of civility again and taking a deep breath.
“Dad wants you at dinner,” he
said, voice low and controlled. He didn’t want to yell at the boy in public
after all. “Get yourself cleaned up and go to the dining room. You have
fifteen minutes.”
Archer spun and strode off, making
it three steps before turning to look at his brother again. Sammel hadn’t
moved.
“I’m done taking care of you,”
Archer said. “No more babysitter. From now on, you’re on your own.”
And Dad’s promise be damned, Archer thought.
Happy Saturday!

0 comments:
Post a Comment