and he had grown to become part of her. "I'm here, 
Papa," she said. 
"Well, good." The image receded a bit, and Fang saw that Papa wore his leather hunting 
vest and khaki pants. He was ready for action. "Had to cuff a few of these crummy 
fellows the company has working up here, but things are looking shipshape. What about 
Earthside? Catch any big fish?" 
"Yes, I think so." She decided not to actually talk about real fish, although Papa would 
have reminisced fondly about all the whoppers he'd been programmed to remember. 
She'd grown up fishing on Fathom with her Chinese grandfather who had told her that her 
bat-shaped lips brought him luck. While she no longer cared for swimming, she still 
enjoyed fishing. "I'm sure we've hooked the exobiologist we wanted, Samuel Fisher." 
"Ah, Fisher, good name. So, is he rugged enough for the job?" 
Fang grinned and bent her head back. "I wouldn't call him rugged exactly, but he's got the 
credentials, and he's one confident son of a bitch." 
"Good! Like him already. Do you like him, daughter?" 
"He's cute. I --" she began, thinking of the short curls on top of his head and the way he 
focused so entirely on a thing he became lost in it. On the other hand, he was too skinny, 
and he gesticulated too much. But his hands were big, with nimble fingers, the kind that 
could hold a woman and make her feel sexy and safe at the same time. "I think I like 
him." 
"Will you grow out your hair for him?" 
"Papa!" He was always going on about her hair or some such nonsense, and every once in 
while, like now when she was on vacation with her guard down, he almost sucked her 
into his games. There would be no time for games when they reached SS Cygni. She'd 
have to be hard, not soft like the warm sand between her toes now, sand that got walked 
all over. They had a dragon to bag. "Now, if you've got time to irritate me on my vacation, 
it sounds like you're ready for an inspection." She checked her eye clock. "I'll be boarding 
in three hours." 
"Damn it then, got to start chewing out these fellows up here. Papa out." 
Fang rose and stretched in the low sun. That nearby star, reflecting off the water to the 
west, was threatening the beach with a toasty, golden sunset. She started back down the 
beach, and called for a taxi to the airport. Her biochip acknowledged the cab's response 
and fed her an itinerary for her return. A suborbital would get her to Tanzania on time to
make a convenient connection to low Earth orbit. 
Just as she finished leaving her request with the dispatch program, a Frisbee landed at her 
feet. Fang smiled. So much had changed about the external trappings of humanity since 
she'd been born -- she tried to remember her personal age rather than her Earth-frame age 
-- but the internal was much the same: the desire for children to play, for instance. 
Fang squatted to recover the Frisbee, thinking she'd throw it back. As her hand neared the 
disk, it leapt away, kicking up sand. She heard a boy snickering. Looking up, she spotted 
him, reeling in the toy. But something wasn't right. Fang squinted, increasing her visual 
magnification. 
A thin filament connected the disk to the boy's arm. It was part of his body. A woman, 
the boy's mother she guessed, told him to stop bothering people and resumed fanning 
herself with her giant pink feathery fingers. 
A cloud crossed in front of the sun, dulling the late golden afternoon, and Fang suddenly 
felt chilled. This wasn't her world, and these weren't her people. Maybe they could have 
been a long time ago -- she wanted to believe that she was capable of belonging, at least 
at some point in Earth's history. She wanted to tackle something more tangible, more 
conquerable, than time. 
Fang jogged to meet her taxi. 
# 
Fisher stood at an observation window of the Ngorongoro space port, gazing along the 
rail launcher that punched under the Serengeti, toward the low eastern sky where only the 
upper part of Kilimanjaro was visible, floating like an island above the sea of 
atmospheric haze that hid its roots. Every minute a rider blasted under the fat 
black-maned lions sleeping on the surface, erupting from the tube off the mountain. A 
nearly invisible laser array completed sending the vehicles into low Earth orbit, providing 
the energy to release the propellants and making final trajectory adjustments. But he was 
not looking at Kilimanjaro or the flashes of exploding fuel. Riding the Forget-Me-Not he 
was looking in his mind's eye at the star dragon,    
    
		
	
	
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