We
fell for an hour before
either of us spoke, to
each other, that is.
Mike, of course, was in
constant contact with
our controllers a
thousand meters or so
topside, speaking in the
unintelligible
techno-speak that pilots
and astronauts adore.
Sitting beside him in
the co-pilot’s seat, I
was trying to figure out
why the hell I was
there.
“Well, is it a
spaceship?” I asked
eventually.
“What?”
“Is that why I’m here?”
He
looked at me with that
cute, puzzled hound dog
expression I used to
adore. Still do, truth
be told.
I
turned away to gaze out
my port at the darkness
through which we were
plummeting. The black
scene was lit by
countless flashes of
bio-luminescence from
tiny, and not so tiny,
undersea creatures
hunting and being hunted
in the dark killing
field of the deep
Pacific Ocean.
“A
movie from last
century,” I explained.
“A spaceship is found at
the bottom of the sea,
the military calls in
the scientists to study
it. It turns out
disastrously, of course,
but that’s Hollywood for
you.”
“What are you talking
about?”
I
was babbling. I blamed
it on jet lag, not
having breakfast and on
the pheromones Mike was
pumping into the
confined atmosphere of
the submersible.
When I’d first seen him
leaning against the
bright yellow sub, my
heart had leapt into my
throat. It hadn’t
occurred to me he’d be
there. I’d thought he
was still in Antarctica
exploring underneath
what was left of the
polar ice shelf.
“No spaceship,” he said.
“Then why am I here?”
“I
asked for you
especially.”
It
was just as I’d thought.
“Listen, Mike—”
He
held up his hand. “Sssh.
It’s not what you
think.”
I glared at him.
“And what do I think?”
“That I’m rekindling
an old flame.”
“Don’t flatter
yourself.” The edge in
my voice was colder than
the sea water outside. I
hadn’t meant to sound
like that and instantly
regretted it. He grinned
and, damn-it-all, a
little flutter started
somewhere just below my
breastbone and skittered
its way through my belly
and collided with the
juncture of my thighs.
“You’re here because
you, My Love, are the
world’s top exo-biologist.”
“Flattery will get
you absolutely nowhere.”
“I wouldn’t dream of
hitting on a married
woman.”
The little gasp I
gave at that point was
because in six, or was
it seven hours from now,
I wouldn’t be married
any longer. I checked my
watch; a novelty cartoon
watch Mike had bought me
many years ago to
celebrate our first
month anniversary. For
some reason I’d never
gotten around to
throwing it away. The
second hand no longer
moved, but the others
did just fine.
To be exact, I had
six and a half hours of
married life yet to
endure. Rico, my soon to
be ex-husband, had
promised to deliver the
duly signed paperwork to
my lawyers. I’d phoned
him after threatening to
do bodily harm to the
Naval officers who’d
been hustling me out of
the Capital Building.
Nothing was going to
stop me from getting
divorced, not even being
kidnapped by the
military. I was sure
Rico would deliver the
papers early, so eager
he was to be shed of me.
I glanced at Mike.
He was busy with the
controls, testing the
manipulators that
stretched out in front
of our sub like thin
skeletal arms; with
elbows, hands and two
clasping metallic
fingers.
Mike couldn’t know
about my impending
divorce, I was sure. His
reference to marriage
had just been a
throwaway line.