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Angela inspired Ramses to alter his plans for their new pocket dimension
habitat. He was still using a belt as a form factor, but instead of only
having one central location where they would all live, they would have seven
total. This helped a little with power management, which was important, even
though they already had an advantage that not everyone trying something like
this would. A temporal battery this small would not be good enough for most
people’s use, but they only ever needed the pocket dimension to be active
while they were in the timestream. During their interim year, it could be
recharging simply by the passage of time. And if one of them lost power, the
others might still be okay, and available. Each one of them would wear their
own belt, which housed its own independent pocket. These would be connected
to one another, though, allowing them to cross back and forth between each
other’s territories seamlessly. And of course, each individual would be able
to control access to their own pocket. They were in the middle of a tour to
learn more about it.
“So, whose pocket is this?” Olimpia asked. “If it’s a common area, does one
of us wear two belts?”
“No, this is just mine,” Marie revealed. “I figured, since I don’t have a
love interest, or a laboratory, I might as well serve as the main hub.”
“Your personal quarters does lock, though,” Ramses explained, pointing to
one of the doors. This was a room of mostly doors. “So you do have some
privacy.”
“Well, thank you for doing that,” Leona said to Marie. “And thank you,
Ramses, for building this. It’s quite lovely. Do the other pockets look like
this, architecturally speaking?”
Ramses nodded. “Yes, same aesthetic, but it can be redecorated, or even
remodeled, if you have your own vision. I designed them with forty-two
square meters of space, though if you’re feeling claustrophobic, we can talk
about expanding. It would just take a little more power...”
“That’s more than enough in the modern era,” Mateo noted. “The three of us
are gonna be sharing our spaces.” He wrapped an arm around each of his
wives.
“Uh, slow down there, cowpoke,” Leona said, brushing him off of her
shoulder. “You’re gonna need to buy me dinner first, and it better be fancy.
I’m talking laminated menus with multiple pages, and lighting so dim, you
can’t read it.”
“Well, all right then. And you?” he posed to Olimpia.
“I’m easy. Just slap my ass and call me sweetheart.” They kissed.
“Gross,” Romana said.
Ramses laughed a little. “Like Marie said, this is the common area, but
everyone has an antechamber like this one, but with only six doors, and
smaller. You can enter each other’s domains directly, instead of going
through the common area. So, Matics, you could just leave your doors open
all the time, and it will feel like the same big house. Now,” he began as he
was walking towards a door that was separate from the others. When he opened
it, they saw a staircase. “This goes down to the basement where your
respective tandem slingdrives are, along with other necessary equipment,
like life support and power control. Don’t...” he hesitated. “Don’t come
down here unless I ask you to, or if you really think there’s a reason. I
don’t know what that reason might be, but you’re all adults, so I don’t want
to make a blanket statement that it’s off-limits, or straight up lock you
out. I just want you to be careful. In the past, you have not had physical
access to the machinery, and I never heard any complaints, so even though
you technically have access now, you really shouldn’t need it. I have
direct doors to all of them, and you cannot lock those from your side, so
fair warning.”
“Yeah, you’re our little basement troll.” Mateo put Ramses in a headlock and
mussed up his hair. “Who’s our little basement troll?”
“I am,” Ramses admitted. He pulled himself out of the headlock, and
straightened back up. “So, that’s about all I’m gonna show you. You can
explore on your own. I mostly only put the basic amenities in there, like
Alaskan king beds, VR connectors, stasis pods, emergency supplies. You can
synthesize more, if you want. Everyone does have a giant hot tub, though. No
amount of transhumanistic enhancement can replicate the relaxing feeling of
hot water jets on your bare skin, lemme tell ya.”
“Gross,” Romana repeated.
“Oh, I almost forgot. One more thing,” Ramses said, leading them towards the
back. He drew the curtains apart to reveal a glass sliding door. On the
other side was what looked like the outside. It wasn’t just an illusion. He
opened the door, and walked right out. The ground before them was only soil,
but it was a sizable backyard. The landscape stretched for miles and miles,
though that probably was all just holographic. At present, the sun was
setting, so they stood there to watch it. “I didn’t plant anything, because
I thought we might turn this into a little community garden. Wherever we go,
we’ll be able to bring nature with us, even in the emptiness of
intergalactic space.”
“This is really nice, Ramses,” Leona said again. “You did a great job.”
“You didn’t help?” Angela asked her.
“Not much,” Leona replied. “I ran some calculations, but the design was all
him.”
“I needed a win,” Ramses told her. “I needed it to be my win, if that
doesn’t sound too selfish and rude.”
“I understand,” she assured him. “It really is great. We finally have a
home.”
“Is there a name for it?” Marie asked. “Like Willow Heights or Paradiso?”
Ramses started to look a little bashful now. “Well, we can come up with a
different name, if you’d like, but in the base coding, I’ve just been
calling it Silhefa. It’s kind of hard to pronounce in Egyptian Arabic, so
that’s an anglicized approximation.
“What does it mean?” Mateo asked him.
“Turtle,” Ramses answered.
They all smiled. “It’s perfect.”
Mateo looked over, though, and noticed that there was a hint of sadness in
Romana’s eyes. She was still going through a rough time, and she probably
wasn’t talking to anybody about it. He slid over to her, and took her hand.
She was a little surprised, but didn’t think of it as an opening to a
conversation. She just smiled at him wider, and looked back at the scenery.
He gently pulled her away.
“What is it?”
“Let’s talk,” he requested. He unlocked the door to his private pocket, and
pulled her into it.
“About what?”
“Lie down with me.” He plopped down on the bed.
“That’s a little weird, dad.”
“You’re still my little girl. Lie down, come on.”
She sighed and lay down beside him.
“When you were just a tiny baby—I don’t know if your mother told you
this—the Dardieti had built us this special bed.” He scooted over so there
was more space between them that he could point to. “There was this hole in
the bed which was just big enough for you. Your mom and I weren’t together,
obviously, but for that brief period of time, we both slept in that bed with
you. We felt like a family. It was in that bed that I made a commitment to
protect you, which I was only able to do by letting you go.”
“We just talked about this on that scout ship. I’m not leaving the team.”
“I’m not asking you to. There are things I know you need that a father can’t
give to his daughter. That would actually be weird. All I can do is
be there for you while you figure it out. There’s something I
might be able to give you, though. It won’t be easy, nor safe, but I
can promise to try. I think it might help, though you would have to decide
how you feel about it. The truth is, even though I didn’t know well, I miss
her a little, and would not hate seeing her again.” He drew from his memory
of over a hundred realtime years ago, and used it to generate a hologram of
Karla Nieman above them.
Romana teared up, and quickly started crying at the sight of her mom.
“We’re time travelers. Let’s take advantage of that. Let’s go see your
mother.”
“Getting into the Third Rail is not easy. Mom didn’t say anything about the
baby bed, but she told me how hard it was to find refuge.”
“Then you know what to do.”
“Not exactly. She didn’t give me a map.”
“She gave you a way out, didn’t she? You made your way to
Castlebourne somehow.”
“That was after the Reconvergence. I got out of the Sixth Key.”
“Well. We’ll find a way. Would you like that? Would you like to see her
again?”
“Yes.”
“Come here. Come on,” he urged when she didn’t accept the hug right away.
She did lay her head upon his chest and cried into her shirt. “I have to
admit something. I’ve been trying to Weird Science myself a
boyfriend, using the Varkas Reflex computers. They know how to create
characters, ya know. It’s not working, though. I keep trying to set very
vague parameters, so he feels more like a real person that I didn’t come up
with myself, but then he’s always a weirdo who I don’t really like. I
thought maybe it was fate, because I thought of the idea, and then Ramses
navigated us here, and it just made sense, but it’s not working out, and I
feel like such a loser. I shouldn’t need an AI boyfriend. I’m
just...desperate.”
Mateo sighed, not entirely sure what to say. “You had a boyfriend...once.”
“You mean Boyd?”
“Yeah.”
“You hated Boyd.”
“Well, he was an antagonist.”
She sighed.
“Until he wasn’t,” Mateo acknowledged.
“Why are you bringing that up?”
“Well. If we’re going to go back to the past to visit your mother, I don’t
see why we can’t visit your ex too.”
“Really? You would do that?”
“You are my little girl. I don’t know how long it’s going to take for
us to reach either destination.”
“I’m gonna need to print out a new bra.”
“Don’t push it.”