“ Bullshit detector? Spill it?” Marlan said.
“ She means she doesn’t believe you’re telling us everything,” Izzy said. “She thinks you’re hiding something and she wants you to tell us what it is, so the girls don’t make a mistake, because maybe if they knew everything, they might not want to go.”
“ That’s what I thought she meant,” Marlan said. Then to Lila, “I’ll make this fast.” She sighed. “We have a common ancestor, you and I, my people and yours. Eons ago a force none of us understands, a force you call God, scattered us throughout the many universes. We think we were never supposed to find each other.”
“ But you found us,” Alicia said.
“ And others,” Marlan said. “The first step was conquering what you call DNA. We developed a drug that optimizes it. You become a young adult, in your prime and it slows down the aging process. You live a very long time, hundreds of years. The drug was both a blessing and a curse.”
“ Let me guess,” Lila said. “Everybody got the drug. Nobody died and your world got overcrowded, so you had to send out spaceships and colonize other planets.”
“ No, we didn’t colonize. We found another way. Worse really, much worse.”
“ You sterilized yourselves,” Izzy whispered.
“ We tried, but failed for years. Vasectomies reversed themselves and hysterectomies also didn’t work, the uterus grew back overnight.”
“ Like my hair did when I shaved it off.”
“ Yes, if your body detected no hair, it would grow back. Hair grows as it normally does, but if you shave it all off, your body detects it and replaces it.”
“ So what did you do?” Lila said.
“ Condoms worked, but they’re messy and inconvenient, but that’s what we used till our scientists were able to come up with a birth control pill that actually worked. Take it one time and you can’t get pregnant.”
“ So nobody ever has children?” Lila said.
“ But what about you?” Izzy said. “I delivered your daughter.”
“ The birth control is reversible,” Marlan said. “Take another pill and you can get pregnant.” She sighed. “Most women are satisfied not having children. It’s like the DNA understands the problem and the urge or desire or whatever you want to call it women have to bear children is gone, but not in all of us. A very few of us still want to. It eats at us, we have to conceive. It’s like the mother instinct is stronger in us to make up for all the women who don’t have it anymore.”
“ So you took the pill to turn it off,” Alicia said.
“ Yes, but the penalty was high,” Marlan said. “The government passed a law saying all children would become wards of the state, which meant that if you had a child, they took it.”
“ Chalk up another reason why I hate government,” Alicia said.
“ All of the women who needed to conceive were urged to come forward and we were presented with a horrible choice. We could have the pill and have our children, but we’d have to leave. We were banished.”
“ From the planet?” Alicia said.
“ Yes, from the planet.”
“ How’d they do that?” Alicia said.
“ They built a starship. It took time, years. And in the meantime we lived in a special place, a city just for us, but it was really a concentration camp. Not like the ones in Germany during your World War II. It was what you would call a gilded cage, but a cage nonetheless. We were walled in, kept out of sight till the starship was finished, then we were sent away, to start over, to find a new world to live on.”
“ How long have you been traveling around in your spaceship?” Alicia said. “And how fast does it go?”
“ We can do light years in days and we’ve been living aboard for very long time. It seems there’s always a reason why we can’t settle when we find a star system like this.”
“ And why can’t you settle here?” Amy said.
“ You saw how people reacted to Dr. Eisenhower. Imagine if we moved in among you, never growing old. We would ruin your world and that’s forbidden. Besides, we’re not allowed to interfere, sort of like that Prime Directive from your Star Trek movies.
“ But you interfered with the fog and the noise thing, that engine sound, whatever it was,” Izzy said.
“ That was against all kinds of rules, but I wanted you to live and I wanted those bad people dealt with. We could never do it, not allowed, but I cheated a little and helped you. Now can we go?”
“ Not just yet,” Lila said. “When we leave here, where are we going, exactly?”
“ We’re hoping we can find a planet where the people have evolved enough to welcome us.”
“ That doesn’t sound likely,” Lila said. “Your own people weren’t evolved enough.”
“ You’re probably right,” Marlan said, “but there’s always the chance we can find an uninhabited planet that can sustain life. One with oceans, fish, animals, but no humans. But, you know, every island on earth that has fresh water, has people on it. That seems to be the way it is with planets like this.”
“ But you’re going to keep looking?” Amy said.
“ Yes, we are.”
“ How many people on your little spaceship?” Lila said.
“ We left with just over ten thousand, we’re twice that now.”
“ Wow, not so little.”
“ No,” Marlan said. “Fortunately we can cloak it, so the systems we visit never know we’ve been there.”
“ Any single men up there?” Amy said.
“ Hey, you have me,” Alicia said.
“ Yeah, yeah, I was thinking about Nana and Miss Booth.”
“ I hear sirens,” Lila said.
“ Time to choose,” Marlan said.
“ I’m going,” Alicia said.
“ Me too,” Amy said.
“ Alright then,” Marlan motioned with her hand to Amy and Alicia, “come over here by us.”
The girls obeyed.
Marlan tapped her right ear and said, “Five to beam up.”