Darken the Stars - Amy A. Bartol Page 0,27

the side of the bed. “Are we eating in bed?”

“You showed such a propensity for it last night that I thought you might enjoy dining here. Afterward, I can show you the rest of the island.”

The cart opens up, jettisoning two silver-colored, floating trays. One stops in front of me. When I touch it, the lid opens, revealing a huge stack of pancakes. I glance at Kyon. He has an equal stack of pancakes on his plate. He picks up his fork and says, “You know these aren’t very good for Pretty Town.”

I nearly choke. When I can speak once more, I murmur, “I think Pretty Town can handle it.”

When we’re finished eating, Kyon shows me how to nudge the tray away. It glides to the hovercart and inserts itself inside. The hovercart floats away then, probably headed for the dishery. I head for the Commodus, and then into the shower in the lavare. From there I get made over in the dressing room. I emerge from behind the white doors wearing a black two-piece bathing suit with a matching, flowy wrap skirt and an ivory scoop neck top.

Kyon has his back to me as he stands in the archway, watching the sea. He must have showered outside or went for a swim because his hair is wet, but it’s pulled back from his face. He has changed into loose-fitting dove-gray swim shorts and a soft white shirt. Turning to face me when he hears me approach, his eyes fall on my hair. It was braided by the robotic beauty-bots.

Kyon touches the small of my back and guides me outside onto to patio. “The boathouse is this way,” he says.

Before I step onto the sand, I ask, “Is it safe?”

“For you.” He waits for me to step down on the white sand. When I do, he takes me down to the beach. I slip off my sandals and we walk along the shore together. The sand is hot, so I wade into the water and splash around to cool off.

“I’ll teach you,” he says, gesturing to the water.

“Teach me what?”

“To swim,” he says in a low tone.

I look out at the water and then back at him. “You mean you can teach me to swim in the water that you tried to drown me in?”

“Yes.”

I shiver involuntarily. “No thanks. I’m good,” I say and take a few steps.

He grips my arm. “You will learn to swim. It’s not a request. You can’t have any weaknesses.”

I can’t square him or what’s happening here. Is he serious? He’s been hunting me for months, preying on all my weaknesses. Now he wants to teach me to swim so I won’t be weak? He’s as mercurial as they come. I shrug, noncommittal.

He continues the tour of the island, taking me to the boathouse. It’s constructed of huge timber logs and steel joints. Inside, there are four boats suspended in the air on hydraulic lifts. Two of them can probably carry forty people or more, and the other two are smaller, made to be fast, judging by their aerodynamic designs. Each has the capacity to carry only three or four people. He owns two black, bullet-shaped hydrocycles that resemble hovercycles, but they travel on the surface of the water. He also has a berth where a submarine floats on the lapping waves. It resembles a stingray with undulating wings and a slippery skin with marine mammal markings on it.

“Which one do you like the most?” I ask, gesturing to the menagerie of toys before me.

“Which boat?” he asks. “This one.” He points to the long rowboat with oars that’s shelved on the wall beside us. It’s silver with black rally stripes on the hull.

“Why?” I move closer to the sleek rowboat. It’s archaic in terms of Etharian standards, a kind of boat that someone who’s well versed in rowing would use to train. There are no automated parts to it. I run my fingertips over an oarlock. It feels like steel.

“Because it requires strength,” Kyon says behind me. “It can hurt you, but it can also set you free.”

For some reason, I wonder if we’re still talking about the boat. “What would someone like you need to be free of?” I wonder.

“Questions, for one,” Kyon replies.

“What’s wrong with questions?”

“You like questions? I have one. What did you see our first night here?”

“Excuse me?”

“You left me with just your body on the beach. You projected into the future. I want to know what you saw there.”

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