
Chapter 2
"Jack? Come on, lad, rise and shine."
"Yeah, yeah," Jack Morgan muttered, turning over in his narrow bed and pulling the covers more tightly
around his thin shoulders. It felt early, and he didn't feel much like getting up.
Not much point to getting up, anyway. There was nothing to do here, not unless he wanted to sit
around outside the Essenay and pull apart pieces of the grass outside, the stuff that reminded him of
bluish-green curly fries. He'd spent part of yesterday doing that, and the thrill of it had faded mighty fast.
"Come on, lad, rise and shine," his uncle's voice came again. This time, the cabin's lights came on, too.
Jack pulled the covers up partway over his head, squeezing his eyes shut against the light and trying
hard to hold onto the quick temper that had gotten him into trouble so many times on so many different
worlds. Uncle Virgil had been on his case forever about that temper.
But then, Uncle Virgil had also been on his case about his lack of respect for authority, too. Which was
kind of funny, considering Uncle Virgil's chosen profession.
"Come on, lad, rise and shine," Uncle Virge said again.
It was insulting, too, on top of everything else. Rise and shine was how you woke up a five-year-old,
not someone who'd turned fourteen a full month ago. On some worlds out there you could be a soldier at
age fourteen, for Petey's sake. He would bet long odds that soldiers didn't get rise and shine as their
wake-up call.
"Come on, lad, rise and shine."
"Why should I?" Jack growled, trying to burrow deeper beneath his covers. "What, the cows need
milking? I'm going to be late for school? What?"
"There's something outside you need to see," Uncle Virge said. "Come on, lad, rise—"
"Okay, okay, I'm up, I'm up," Jack snapped the magic words, throwing off the covers and swinging his
legs over the edge of the bed as he sat up. The sudden change in altitude made his head go woozy, and
he sat there rubbing his eyes until the feeling passed. "You want to maybe turn the lights down a little?"
The light obediently faded from painful to merely annoying. Cautiously, he pried open his eyelids.
The first thing in his line of sight was the display screen on the far wall of his cabin. Normally, the screen
was set to show engine status or current nav data or some such ship's function. With most of the
Essenay's systems shut down since landing here two days ago, he had reset the screen to show the lush
green Iota Klestis landscape stretching out beyond the main airlock hatchway. It was sort of like having a
window in his room, though it had been so long since he'd had a normal groundside room with a normal
window that he could hardly remember what it was like.
At least, the screen was supposed to show the outside view. At the moment, all it showed was black.
He turned to look at the clock built into the bulkhead beside his bed. No wonder there was nothing to
see out there: the glowing numbers read 4:57 a.m. "Are you out of your shrink-wrapped mind?" he
demanded. "It's five o'clock in the morning!"
"Go outside," Uncle Virge said. "There's something out there—"
"Yeah, yeah, I heard you," Jack sighed, plucking his jeans from the swing-out arm where they were
hanging and pulling them on. Arguing with Uncle Virgil had never been a very rewarding pastime. Arguing
with Uncle Virge was even less so. "This had better be good."
He was retrieving a set of electronic binoculars from the airlock's storage cubbyhole when Uncle Virge
suddenly cut in again. "Uh-oh," he said, his voice coming now from the airlock intercom speaker. "Get
outside, Jack lad. Quickly."
The hatch popped and the gangway slid out to the ground below. "Where?" Jack asked, turning on the
'noes and peering cautiously out the hatch. He hadn't run into any serious predators since landing, but the
planet was bound to have some stashed away somewhere. Was that what Uncle Virge was all worked
up about?
"Not there," Uncle Virge said urgently. "Up. Go down the ramp and look up, toward the eastern