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Trying to keep these charitable thoughts in her mind, she stacked the laundry on the backseat, folded up the basket, and put it in her trunk. In the background she heard a fresh screech of tires as another car arrived at the teen gathering. She looked up and saw a metallic blue Camaro--the Hinton boy's car--tearing into the far end of the parking lot at a high rate of speed, announcing its arrival with a blaring horn. He was driving too fast, way too fast. The car made a turn with a squeal of rubber and then she heard a smack! and the grinding sound of metal against metal as bits of plastic went skittering across the macadam. The fool in the Camaro had taken the corner too sharply and clipped the back end of a white pickup truck parked in front of a row of vacant storefronts at the far end.

She watched as the fellow driving the Camaro halted, got out, and bent down to examine the three-foot-long gouge in the side of his car. Didn't even bother to look at the damage to the pickup, with its taillight obliterated, the bumper pulled halfway off. She could hear his terrible curses all the way across the lot, answered by laughs and jeering from the crowd of youths. Then he got back in the Camaro and roared out of the parking lot with another screech of tires.

Mabel Fortier stared, shocked. The boy had just left the scene of an accident. And now the other boys were climbing into their cars and leaving, all of them "beating a retreat" before the police arrived.

It was outrageous. Outrageous. The Hinton boy had done thousands of dollars' worth of damage to somebody's vehicle and driven off, just like that.

This was the last straw. They wouldn't get away with it. Enough was enough. Mabel Fortier took out her cell phone and grimly dialed the police.

62

Abbey awoke in the shack to the smell of bacon and eggs on the woodstove, the sun streaming in the windows, the lapping sound of water on the cobbled beach outside. As she came into the main room, Ford was at the kitchen table, hunched over the laptop connected to the NPF drive. She could see he was paging through the pictures.

"About time!" Jackie cried from the stove. "It's the crack of noon." She pushed a coffee cup into her hands, prepared just the way she liked it, with tons of cream and sugar.

"Come outside and have breakfast."

With a glance at Ford, Abbey left the shack and walked over to a weather-beaten picnic table set up in front. A long unruly meadow sloped down to a cobbled beach. Beyond lay a scattering of spruce-clad islands with a few openings among them showing distant views of the sea horizon.

Jackie laid the breakfast in front of her and took a seat with her own cup of coffee.

"Where's the Marea?" Abbey asked, tucking into the bacon and fried eggs. She was starving.

"I moved her to the cove behind the island," Jackie said.

Abbey drank her coffee, letting her mind wake up, staring out to sea. Their island, Little Green, was tucked amidst a swarm of thirty islands, separated from the mainland by the Muscle Ridge Channel. To the south lay Muscongus Bay and to the north Penobscot Bay. It was a perfect hiding place, tucked in the middle, invisible from both sea and land, and extremely well protected from the weather. As far as she knew, no one had noted their departure from Round Pond, no one knew where they were going. Not even her father. Here they were safe. But safe from what? That was the question.

She mopped up the last of her eggs with a piece of bread and refilled her coffee from the pot sitting on the table. The ocean was calm, an easy swell falling on the rocks and withdrawing in a regular cadence. Seagulls cried overhead and a distant lobster boat chugged among the islands.

Ford came out, holding a coffee cup, and eased his lanky frame down.

"Morning!" said Jackie, giving him a big grin. "Sleep well, Mr. Ford?"

"Never better." He took a long sip of his coffee and stared out to sea.

Abbey said, "I see you've been looking over those images of Deimos."

"Yes."

"What do you think?"

Ford didn't answer right away, gazing at her steadily with pale blue eyes. He spoke slowly, in a low voice. "I think this is an extraordinary discovery."

Abbey nodded.

"It's unquestionably alien and quite likely the source of those stray gamma rays. It must be old to have gotten so pitted and worn."

"I told you it was real."

He shook his head slowly. "This is the answer to one of the deepest mysteries in the cosmos. By finding that alien construction, now we know we're not alone. My mind is just reeling."

Abbey stared at him. "You don't get it, do you?"

"What do you mean?"

She shook her head. " 'Alien construction', my ass. That's a weapon. And it just fired on the Earth."

63

"A . . . weapon," Ford repeated slowly.

Abbey glanced over at Jackie, who had been listening in silence.

"Exactly."

Ford passed his hand over his curly hair. "And what makes you think this?"

" 'When you have eliminated the impossible--.' "

"I know the quote," said Ford.

"Elementary, my dear Watson. A: the thing looks like a gun. B: it fired a miniature black hole that went through the Earth."

Ford leaned back. "That doesn't quite fit the facts. Even if it did 'fire' that thing and intended to destroy the Earth, it failed. And it hasn't tried again. If it's a weapon, it seems to have given up."

"How do you know it gave up? Maybe there's another shot coming."

Ford shook his head. "So these aggressive aliens . . . are they around somewhere? Living inside Deimos?"

Abbey snorted. "The aliens are long gone."

"Gone? How do you know?"

"Look at the picture. The thing's a derelict, all drifted up with dust and pitted. Nobody's taking care of it. Maybe the aliens left the weapon and split."

"What for?"

"Who knows? Not long before that thing took a potshot at us, the MMO made a close pass of Deimos, hitting it with radar and taking pictures. Maybe that woke it up. Maybe the aliens passed by here millions of years ago, saw a habitable planet and left a weapon to take care of any future technological civilizations that might challenge them. Hell, there could be thousands, millions of these weapons seeded throughout the galaxy."

"I hope you won't be offended if I express a candid opinion on your theories."

Abbey crossed her arms and waited.

"Great Twilight Zone plots."

"You think about it," Abbey said, "and see if you don't come to the same conclusion."

Ford sighed. "I will. But here's something you'll find interesting: according to my government sources, it wasn't a miniature black hole. It was a chunk of strange matter, or more precisely, an object known as a strangelet."

"What the heck's that?"

"A form of superdense matter," said Ford, "a bunch of particles called quarks all jammed together into a degenerate state . . . They think some apparent neutron stars might actually be strange stars or quark stars--made out of strange matter instead. You ever read Kurt Vonnegut?"

"Oh yeah," said Abbey, "I love his books."

"Remember that substance he called Ice-nine, from the story Cat's Cradle? It was a special kind of ice that when it came in contact with normal water, it converted it to ice at room temperature."