Jill.â
I appreciated Ken telling me that. âI want to go. Arlene and Fly wouldnât know what to do without me. Besides, they couldnât have saved me without you.â
âThatâs true,â said Fly.
Ken was sitting up in bed. Heâd wanted to see us off from his wheelchair, but heâd been working hard and had tired himself. His face was a healthy coffee color again. When he was first unwrapped, his skin had been pale and sickly. They unwrapped him in stagesso for a while he had stripes like a zebra as his color returned. Now he looked like himself again, except for the knobs and wire things that they hadnât taken out of his head yet.
âIâm grateful to all of you,â he said. âEspecially you, Jill,â he added, taking my hand. âBut youâre so young. Youâve been in so much danger already. Why not stay here where itâs safe?â
âSafe?â echoed Albert.
âI should say safer,â said Ken.
Arlene brought up a subject that Albert and I had avoided: âBefore we left Salt Lake City, there were people who thought it would be better for Jill to stay there.â
Ken coughed. He sounded really bad. I brought him a glass of water. âI feel so helpless,â he said. âYou only need Jillâs computer assistance on the first leg of the mission. If only there were some way I could help by long-distance.â
âYouâve put your finger on the problem,â Fly told him. âWe canât anticipate everything weâre going to need. Too bad Jill is the best troubleshooter for this job.â
âJust like before,â I reminded everyone. âYou should take me to space with you, too.â
âThatâs not part of the deal,â said Arlene, sounding like a mother.
âWe should be grateful for this time together,â Albert pointed out. He was right. The only people with Ken were Fly, Arlene, Albert, and me. The mission would start tomorrow morning.
âIf only they had launch capability in the islands here,â Ken complained. âThey should have been better prepared.â
âWeâre fortunate they have as much as they do,âargued Arlene. âThereâs everything here except the kitchen sink.â
âThe kitchen sink is what we need, and itâs at Point Mugu,â said Fly. âThanks to Ken, we have a launch window.â
âI never thought Iâd do windows,â Ken rasped between fits of coughing. âI always say that when you take off for a body in space itâs a good idea for your destination to be there when you arrive! Itâs also nice to have a crew to fly the ship. The primary plan to return Fly and Arlene to Phobos has all the elegance of a Rube Goldberg contraption.â
âI donât even feel homesick,â said Arlene. Everyone laughed.
Ken had paid us back big time for saving him from the spider-mind. He was smarter than I was about lots of things. I also realized he cared about me; but I donât think he realized how much I wanted to go with the others.
âThereâs a fallback plan?â Albert asked.
Ken smiled. âThe less said about that the better, at least by me. Before you depart, I want to talk to Jill some more. I have some suggestions for her return trip.â
âI want to go to Phobos,â I said.
Every time I said that, Arlene repeated the same word: âNo.â
Fly sounded like a father when he said, âBelieve me, if there were any other way, Iâd never dream of taking Jill back into danger . . . well, greater danger, anyhow. We do need her for this.â
âWeâre all needed,â said Ken in a sad voice. âWeâll all be needed for the rest of our lives, however short they may be.â He looked at me again. âBut I agree with you about one thing.â
âWhat?â
âItâs important to fight to the end. Sometimes I forget
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