She reached out, then, and took his hand.
Bennett stared through the viewscreen at the massive bulk of Tenebrae as it rose over the mountain peak. He felt within him something of the residuum of the love he had felt while experiencing the ultimate, and a part of him wondered at his decision, no doubt subconscious and out of his control, to forgo the way of the Ahloi. Another part of him wanted nothing more than to return to the temple, rejoin Ten Lee and Mackendrick and the others, and devote his life to the contemplation of that which he had experienced in the Chamber of Rebirth.
He wondered then if this desire to give himself to the Ahloi was merely a way of saving himself from the suffering, a way of avoiding all the usual emotional involvement that was an inevitable and irrevocable part of being human.
He helped Rana to her feet and strapped her into the copilot’s seat.
Soon, Homefall and its secret would be opened to the Expansion. Soon Mackendrick’s ships and scientists would arrive and transform the planet, and, in time, the Expansion and everyone in it would be transformed.
Rana must have been reading his thoughts. “Things will be different now,” she said. “It will never be the same. Change is on the way.”
Bennett looked into his heart and saw the truth. “For the better,” he said. “The change is for the better.”
She smiled, gazing out at Tenebrae. “And now?”
He pulled the console array towards him and began powering up the ship. “Now we return to the rebels’ valley and await the arrival of Mackendrick’s men.”
She turned to him and smiled. “And then?”
And then? He looked at Rana. “The outsiders will need guides,” he said, “people to escort them to the Ahloi temple and the Chamber of Rebirth. We know the way, Rana. We can show them the way.”
Then Bennett lifted the Cobra, turned the ship slowly on its axis and accelerated down the valley, heading through the mountains towards the stronghold of the rebels.