“Have you ever asked him about the Room?”
I haven’t, mostly because I never had the chance. But I don’t tell her that. Instead, I say, “You spoke to my father.”
She nods. “He’s happy to know you’re still alive.”
I’m not sure I’m happy to know that he is. I prefer to think of myself as a person without a family, a woman without a past.
“Quite honestly,” she says, “he’s the one who recommended you for this job. I first approached him, and he says he’s too old.”
I slide my plate to the edge of the table to hide my face as I do the calculations. He turns seventy this year, which is not old at all.
“He also said you have all the skills I need for this job.” She hasn’t touched her food. “He says he doesn’t.”
That much is true. He’s never gone diving—at least that I know of. He captained a ship, but in the old-fashioned way—not as a hands-on pilot, but as a planet-bound owner who told others what to do.
We were on some kind of pleasure cruise, I think, when my mother and I wandered into the Room. Or maybe we were moving from one system to another.
I honestly don’t know. I don’t remember and I never asked him.
He wasn’t around much anyway. After Mother vanished into that Room, he dumped me with my maternal grandparents and went in search of the very thing Riya claims she found: a way to recover people from the Room of Lost Souls.
“It makes no sense that he has refused to help you,” I say as a bus tray arrives, sends out a small metal arm that sweeps my plate into its interior, and then floats away. “He’s always wanted a way into the Room.”
“He says the problem is not the way in, but the way out.” She finally picks up her fork and picks at her now-cold food.
A chill runs through me. Does my father speak with that kind of authority because he has sent people in after my mother? Or because he’s thinking of what happened to us all those years ago?
“And yet you claim you have that way out.”
A serving tray appears with an ice cream glass filled with red and black berries separated by layers of cream. My coffee steams beside it. My standing order. I shouldn’t take it, but I do.
“I do have a way out,” she says.
“But you can’t find anyone stupid enough to test it,” I say.
She lets out a small laugh. “Is that what you think? You think I need a test subject?”
I take a sip of my coffee. It’s slightly bitter, like all coffee on Longbow station. Somehow the beans grown here lack the richness I’ve found on other stations.
“The way out has been tested. Going in and returning is no longer an issue. What I need is someone with enough acumen to bring out my father.”
Something in her tone reaches me. It’s a hint of frustration, a bit of anger.
Her people have failed her. Which is why she’s coming to me.
“You’ve done this before,” I say.
She nods. “Six times. Everyone survived. Everyone is healthy. There are no residual problems.”
“Except they can’t find your father.”
“Oh,” she says. “They have found him. They just can’t recover him.”
Now I am intrigued. “Why not?”
“Because,” she says, “they can’t convince him to leave.”
I take a bite of the berries and cream. I need a few moments to think about this. I still feel as if she’s conning me, but I’m not sure how. Or why she would do so.
“Why did he leave?” I ask.
She blinks at me in surprise. She clearly didn’t expect curiosity from me.
“Leave?”
“You said he didn’t show up for the treaty signings. That he essentially missed the end of the war. Why?”
She frowns just enough so that I realize she’s never considered this question. She’s been looking at her father as someone—something—she lost, not as a person in his own right. Oh, he has history, but it’s history without her, and therefore not relevant.
“No one knows,” she says.
Someone always knows. And if that someone is no longer alive, the answer would probably be in the records. Something this modern is easy to trace; it’s the old stuff whose history gets lost to time, like the Dignity Vessels, that can be difficult to figure out.
She’s finally hooked me, and she probably doesn’t even know how. I don’t want to return to the Room for my mother—I barely remember her, and what I do remember is vague. I don’t even want to return to face my own past.
I want to solve this mystery Riya Trekov has unwittingly presented me with. I want to know why a famous man, a man who won some of the most important battles of an important war, disappears before the war ends and winds up in a place he knew better than to approach.
For the first time in years, the historian in me, the diver in me, senses a challenge. Not like the old challenges, the ones that cost me so many friends and colleagues.
But a new challenge, one that will threaten me alone.
One that has the risk I miss combined with the historical mysteries that I love.
I try not to let my sudden enthusiasm show. I ask, as coldly as I can, “What are you paying?”
Her eyes light up. She seems surprised. Maybe she thought she’d never catch me. Maybe I am her last hope.
She names a figure. It’s astoundingly high.
Still, I say, “Triple it and I’ll consider the job.”
“If you can get him out,” she says, her voice breathless with excitement, “I’ll give you one hundred times that much.”
Now I’m feeling breathless. That’s more money than I’ve earned in two decades.
But I don’t have a use for the money I have. I can’t imagine what I’d do with a sum that large.
Still, I negotiate because that too is in my blood. “I want it all up front.”
“Half,” she says. “And half when you recover him.”
That’s fair. Half would provide me a berth at Longbow and all of my expenses for the rest of my life. I’d never have to touch the rest of my money, the stuff I earned these past few years.
“Half up front,” I say, agreeing, “and half when I recover him—only if you pay all expenses for the entire investigation and journey.”
“Investigation?” She frowns, as if she doesn’t like the word.
I nod. “Before I go after him, I need to know who he is.”
“I told you—”
“I need to know him, not his reputation.”
Her frown grows. “Why?”
“Because,” I say, “in all the hundreds of theories about that Room, only one addresses the souls trapped inside.”
“So?”
“So haven’t you wondered how a man like your father got lost in there?”
I can tell from her expression that she hasn’t considered that at all.
“Or why the name of the place—in all known languages—is the Room of Lost Souls? Are the souls lost because they entered? Or were they lost before they opened the door?”
She shifts slightly in her chair. She doesn’t like what I’m saying.
“You’ve thought of this before,” she says.
“Of course I have.” I keep my voice down.
She nods. “You think he was lost before he went in?”
“I have no idea,” I say, “but I plan to find out.”
FIFTEEN
By the time I arrive at my berth, the money is in my accounts. That surprises me. I thought, after our conversation, that Riya would back out. She doesn’t want to know her father as a human being. She wants only the image of him that she built up through her lonely childhood. The war hero who vanished. The strong man who got trapped.