Planetbound - Cover

Planetbound

Copyright© 2026 by D M Arnold

Chapter 2: Evidence

Sukiko lay motionless on the bench. Nyk kissed her eyelids. Her finger twitched. He took her hand and patted and stroked her forearm, contemplating her yellow-brown skin. “Suki?”

“Mmmph...”

“Suki, are you all right?”

She turned her face toward him and cracked open her eyes. Nyk stroked her raven hair. “I take it we made it,” she said and started to sit.

“You lie for a while.” He took her hand.

“That stuff you gave me won’t hurt the baby, will it?”

“I told you, it’s safe for the baby. He’s apt to be out of it for a while, too.”

“What was it you gave me?”

“Three doses of a euphoriant. Do you remember?”

“I recall the first dose felt pretty good. The second felt really good. I can’t remember the third.”

“Floran recreational chemicals have a built-in safety mechanism to prevent overdoses. The formulas include a low dose of a quick-acting sedative. Before you can attain a dangerous level of the main ingredient -- the sedative kicks in and knocks you out. Based on your size and build, I figured your limit was three.” He squeezed her hand. “Well, you said you wanted to see the homeworld again. These weren’t the circumstances I was hoping for.”

She began to look around the room. “This is the house you told me about?”

“Yes -- my childhood home.”

“The house without walls ... Are we safe here?”

“I think so. We’re quite isolated. Besides -- where’s the best place to hide something? In plain sight. The enforcers are busy scouring Earth for us. Here is the last place they’ll think of looking.”

“How long can we stay here?”

“Quite a while. The structure is self-sufficient, and we have plenty of prefab meals in storage.”

She placed her hand on her abdomen. “He just woke up. I felt him stretch and yawn. I’m going to try to sit.” She swung her feet to the floor. “Maybe not.” She lay on her back again.

“Relax -- we’re in no hurry. I was taking inventory of whom we can trust. There’s Andra, of course. She’s offworld right now paying a visit to her finishing-school friend and roommate. Janna is the wife and consort to the chancellor of Lexal. You remember her.”

“Yes, Nykkyo -- I’ll never forget the word Lexal.”

“Andra will be back onworld in a few days. She’ll be using this house. That’s good -- the place will look occupied.”

“More hiding in plain sight?”

“Indeed. Andra can take care of you if I need to go out. You’ll need to stay hidden. With your Asian features, you’ll stand out in a crowd.”

“Who else can we trust?”

“Not many others.”

“So, what’s next?” she asked and attempted again to sit up. Nyk sat on the bench and held her head in his lap.

“We start looking.”

“Looking for what?”

“Evidence -- evidence I’m right.” He lifted her blouse and caressed her abdomen.

She placed her hand on his and pressed it against her skin. “Feel him move?” Nyk held his hand against her belly. “Why look here?”

“What will be -- already has been. Koichi’s birth is two hundred years in Earth’s future -- but five thousand years in this world’s past If there’s evidence to be found, it’s here.” He gazed into her dark brown eyes and stroked her face. She brushed a tear from his. “I should never have become involved with you. I couldn’t help myself, Suki -- I fell in love with you the moment I laid eyes on you. Now, I’m locked into that temporal paradox. I must replace the man who was to be your husband.”

“I never thought I’d have a husband. I don’t want any other man. You complete something in me, Nykkyo. When we’re apart, there’s a piece missing. I’ll never raise this child by myself.”

“I want you to meet Illya Kronta -- if I can arrange it. He’s a member of the oversight committee and a Kyhana scholar. It might help our cause if he could hear it from your own lips.”

“Is that why you brought me?”

“No. Seymor told me an enforcement squad was being dispatched to Earth. They would seize me and bring me here.” He looked into her eyes. “They’d seize you, too.”

“What would they do to me?”

Nyk stood and turned from her. “The enforcers will regard your knowledge of our world as temporal contamination -- that must be neutralized.”

“But, Nykkyo -- your people are so sweet and gentle. You said you were incapable of harming Earth’s population.”

“Nonetheless, they will neutralize the contamination. The survival of more than twenty-four billion is at stake. The last instance of such was ... four generations ago, I believe. The contaminated individuals were removed from Earth and ... quarantined, here -- for the rest of their lives.”

“It’s like life imprisonment.”

“It’s intended to be a deterrent. If a Floran falls in love with an Earth person, he realizes he poses a risk to his loved one as well as himself. In your case, though ... Suki, I know you have as much at stake in this as any Floran. I trust you. You’re practically an honorary Floran -- you’ve begun to learn our language. You pose no risk.”

“If I’m kept from Earth, how can...” she touched her belly. “How can he fulfill his role?”

“Exactly. In your case, preventing it will in fact cause disastrous temporal interference. That’s the case I must make, but I must find evidence to support it.”

“What are you looking for?”

“I don’t know. Anything -- I found and translated Koichi Kyhana’s journal of the early days of this world. Most of that translation I did before setting foot on Earth, so I had no experience with which to put his words into context. I’ll go back over his original journal -- line by line -- and see if I can find anything alluding to his Earth forebears. I’m grasping at straws, Suki. You’re a professional historian. Maybe you can help me in my search.”

She smiled. “That would be an interesting twist for a historian -- looking for evidence of the future. I’d fear what I might find.”

“I must be cautious. Floran Central Admin can track the whereabouts of any citizen through this.” He held up his right wrist. “I must scan my wrist to unlock doors and make purchases. I’m counting on our bureaucracy’s inefficiency. Central Admin’s so big -- one hand doesn’t know what the other is doing. Besides, they’re looking for us on Earth -- not here.”

“We’re hiding in plain sight.”

“I’m exhausted, and I need sleep. Can you stand?”

“I’ll try...” She swung her feet to the floor and sat up. “So far, so good.” He helped her to her feet and escorted her up the spiral staircase to the second floor.

“This is my childhood bedroom. My parents’ rooms were upstairs -- I’ve never been comfortable in them. Andra is using my mom’s old room. “ He stretched out on the mattress.

Suki lay beside him and he slipped his arm around her. “It always feels so good when you hold me. Bon’noka, Nykkyo.”


“Try this on,” Nyk said as he handed a tunic to Suki.

“What do you wear beneath this?”

“A pair of sandals.”

“No -- what sort of underwear?”

“Underwear? What’s that?” He kissed her forehead. “You look great in Floran clothing.”

“So do you,” she replied, stroking his bare arms. “I love seeing you in that tunic. Your legs look so good.”

“I’ll find some breakfast.”

Suki followed Nyk into the house’s storage room. He opened a cabinet to find stacks of packaged meals. “There must be a year’s supply in there,” she said.

“Yes. My mother was head of Food Service product development. Most of these are prototype meals -- some are from when I was a youth.”

“Are they still good?”

“Oh, yes. This is a stasis cabinet. The stasis fields will preserve anything indefinitely.” He selected a pair of packages and sealed the cabinet door. “Have a seat,” he said gesturing toward a table. “I’ll heat these.”


Nyk slipped his arm around Suki as he stood on the bluff looking out over the sea. “Smell that?”

“How could I miss it? It reminds me of ... an open sewer, I guess.”

“That’s the smell of our sea. The native biochemistry has significant sulphur content. Nothing native to this world is edible -- by humans, that is. Ninety-nine percent of our food is derived from Earth plants.”

“Hence the need for Agents on Earth.”

“Exactly. The rest comes from the colonies. The smell of our native life is why most Florans flock to the cities. I grew up with it and it smells like home to me.”

“Why did your family choose to live in such isolation?”

“I have no idea -- but, I’m happy they did. I loved it here as a kid.”

“It’s beautiful.”

“Let’s get to work on Koichi’s journal.” He led her into the house.

Nyk sat before a vidisplay. He picked up a datacel and inserted it. “Our family never threw anything away. My father had Koichi’s original data capsules. I arranged to have the data extracted and put onto these cels.”

“Where are the capsules?”

“At the museum in Floran City.” He began scanning the text.

“What language is this?” she asked.

“It’s Esperanto. The Centauri mission was multinational, and Esperanto was the official language.” He began translating into English. “Look here -- this was a passage I had difficulty with. He’s making Earth references I don’t understand. ‘I’d like my reader to know a bit about me. My name is Koichi Kyhana, and I am -- or, was -- the astral navigator aboard the starship Floran, which departed 3 March, 2201 for the Centauri colony; and, which arrived who-knows-where at who-knows-when. The words in this document are simply those of a man -- this is not the Torah nor the Q’uran, nor the Pentateuch.’ I don’t understand that last statement.”

“He’s advising the reader he’s only human -- not a god. Those are references to Earth sacred texts.”

“Oh. ‘As testaments go, this is far newer than the new -- although based upon our estimates, which puts our Earthbound contemporaries with square and string planning the Pyramids, it’s actually older than the old.’” Suki giggled. “What’s funny?”

“He was making a pun about the New and Old Testaments of the Bible.”

“I see ... There’s an example of the Earth context I lack.”

“Koichi must’ve understood the nature of the temporal paradox.”

“Do you understand it?” he asked.

“I think so.”

 
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