collab between Igraine and idlehands
Pauline waited several long moments for the ginger to do its work completely. The chilly sweat on her face finally began to dissipate, and she trusted her stomach wouldn’t flop completely if she dared get to her feet. Oh sure, the young woman was a touch embarrassed, no matter the sisters Ester and Naomi, each in their own way, reassured her there was precious little reason to feel so. Naomi’s shining, eternal cheer was like the warm sun on her face, and Ester’s practical, straightforward manner the solid ground beneath her feet. Pauline had rarely felt more safe or comfortable these past few months, than she did right now between these two women.
“So sorry about that,” Pauline said softly, swiping gently at her cheeks and forehead with the back of her sweater sleeve, brushing away the sheen of sweat and rubbing a bit more color into her lightly-freckled cheeks. She glanced up to Naomi with a small but genuine grin, holding her hand up for her friend to take and help her up off the bench. “Go on, tell me again please, that the morning sickness passes, that it can’t last forever!” she laughed.
“Please Naomi, give me hope for a brighter future!” Pauline laughed harder still, clasping the other woman’s hand lightly as she hauled herself to her feet. Running her fingers through the lengths of her strawberry blonde hair, she sighed contentedly, convinced her legs were going to hold her upright this time.
Naomi laughed, her white teeth flashing, “No it does not last forever, I think perhaps after the first trimester? It’s worth it though.”
She patted her belly and did not speak about the other discomforts of pregnancy that were inconvenient but mattered little in the outcome. Ester walked in silence, as was her habit, listening with one ear to their talk and keeping an eye on the gardens around them. The previous shifts had done a tremendous job in creating the biodomes as close as they could to what existed in nature. Each garden represented a climate zone and they were exiting the Mediterranean garden, a small but very important ecological zone back on Earth. Ester held the door open that separated the gardens. There was a walk way of concrete that allowed wheelbarrows and hoses to be run up and down between them the large rooms.
Ester felt strange looking up at the ship’s roof as they entered the next garden, it was a reminder that despite the computer image of the blue sky with soft clouds moving in the breeze caused by hidden fans, this was not outdoors, they were still breathing the recycled air, albeit with the addition of fresh oxygen from the plants. The sun that moved slowly overhead was just another generated image and she felt a heaviness in her heart as a moment of home sickness swept over her.
The other women chattered about the lush temperate forest they entered, with a mixture of deciduous fruit and nut trees and conifers. Along the trail were rambles of blackberry vines and raspberry bushes, near a pond cranberry and blueberries were ripening. Ester felt a smile tug at her lips looking at the bounty the ship’s gardens provided and tilted her head when she heard a familiar hum pass by her ear. A single honeybee going about it’s business and it caused her to wonder if there were beehives kept in the temperate zone. It made sense, the flowers that bloomed along the paths were the ones favored by the valuable insect. She would inquire later and she turned back when Naomi mentioned her name.
“Ester, these gardens are an oasis and lovely to behold,” she glanced at Pauline, “But they’re not the only place we get our food from.”
“No,” Ester agreed and looked at her tablet, “The labs are this way actually, I’ll probably spend most of my time there.”
She looked longingly at a path that lead up into a grove of mixed ash and oak trees. They were of little or no food value but their wood was useful and if the planet they were going to lacked anything that could be used as building material, the cedars, oaks, and ashes would play their role. Though the fast growing bamboo in the first garden hinted at what they would probably use early on as the trees matured.
Pauline had not yet seen “the labs” - they were not a part of Naomi’s bailiwick after all, and not as free to access by the Copernicus’ population as the environs of the biodomes were. Despite her curiosity, the perceptive young woman still caught the elder sister’s wistful gaze back toward the grove, and chewed her lip thoughtfully for a moment.
“Oh I’d love to see your labs Ester, but this is your day off isn’t it? You don’t have to go to work quite yet, do you?” she teased with a playful smile.
Ester looked away from the trees and glanced at her tablet, “It is a day off, though I should acquaint myself with the lab. I’m sure they left me plenty of notes to read and I must meet with my staff.”
She looked back up and caught the smiles from Pauline and Naomi and she blushed slightly, “I guess it can wait a few more minutes.”
Naomi caught her sleeve and tugged her up the path. The computer generated sky was full of cumulus clouds billowing in a sapphire sky. The fans blew off and on, in patterned intervals to not only entertain the visitors with a ‘fresh breeze’ but to simulate a real world situation for the plants. Pheromones, pollen and seed fluff all relied on the wind to carry them and the crew of the Copernicus’ botanical section tried not to overlook anything when building the gardens.
Ester walked down the path that lead through the ‘grove’ and admired the trees. They were larger than three year old saplings and were dug up from the last remaining healthy forests around the Mountain. The other plants had been part of botanical gardens in Denver and Salt Lake City, brought back when things looked dire in those cities.
“I miss the sound of birds,” Ester said finally, her hand on the silvery white bark of a young birch.
Pauline ducked just a little, catching sight of something small and roundish buzzing past her head. Though intellectually she knew very well that unless you slapped or antagonized a honey bee, you weren’t likely to be stung - but that didn’t stop the instinctual cringe when one came so close, right there in her line of sight -
She laughed, pale blue eyes widening in genuine surprise at the sight of iridescent green and blues whizzing by, to hover near a tall clump of tiger lilies on the side of the trail, closest to Ester. Pauline pointed toward the brilliant, hovering creature with a wide, playful grin, as if any of them could have missed its arrival.
“Ester look! I didn’t know you were a ‘bird whisperer!’ You’ve only to speak the words, and conjure up an avian or two!” Pauline did not stop to think whether the reference might mean a thing to Ester or not. Still, the delight on her face at the sight was unmistakable, and she might be forgiven her forgetfulness of the very literal mind of her new friend. “Though I have to admit, I have absolutely no idea if hummingbirds sing - or do you think the whirring of little tiny wings still counts?”
And as if it knew it had suddenly become the topic of mirth-filled conversation, the perfect, tiny little bird flitted upward once more, turning in midair to hover on blurred wings for a moment before the three women. The hummingbird regarded them for a moment, as if it were deciding which of them might yet provide the sweetest of nectar before disappearing back into the grand, artificial grove.
Ester caught sight of the blur of motion, the tiny bird zipping by them to investigate the lilies. A blue throated hummingbird, native to the western United States, she observed. He must have been packed along for the ride.
“I didn’t whisper anything?” Ester looked puzzled at the expression but smiled gently at the bird. “And no, they do not sing but they are beautiful. Gems on the wing and they’re helpful for pollinating flowers, of course .”
She watched as the little bird made his exit, the light glinting off the azure and emerald of his tiny head. Ester longed to look at it up close, to see the tiny scalloped feathers and bright black eyes looking back at her. Perhaps one day when she was alone and she would sit very still he might grace her with his presence.
Naomi watched with amusement at her sister’s face, “She’s always had an eye for the small things. Always looking down at the grass and flowers rather than watching where she was going.”
She put her arm around her and squeezed, “Time to look up at the stars, ac’hot.”
Ester glanced away sheepishly, remembering the teasing she would get about walking around with her head down. When she was a child, she had been short sighted and looking closely had become second nature until her parents noticed and got her glasses. She remembered the first thing that struck her was the leaves on the trees, she could see each one flutter in the breeze. That memory was vivid and she had fallen in love with plants, at their tiny details and perfections. By the time she was an adult, she had corrective surgery but she still looked closely at things, it was already ingrained in her nature.
Naomi released her and gestured to Pauline, “Does this garden remind you of where you are from?”
Pauline nodded her head slowly, her eyes gazing upward and about wistfully to the forest canopy and the bright blue “sky” overhead. “It does, some. But I don’t believe there was really any way to recreate the mountain environment inside a spaceship, no matter how vast these biodomes are.”
The young woman shrugged just a little, and smiled. “I’m not complaining though!” she continued on, that unending optimism not allowing her to leave the impression with the sisters, that she was not as entranced with these gardens as they. “Blackberries, raspberries, ash and spruce - and hummingbirds!”
Pauline’s eyes twinkled merrily as her quick thoughts roamed the last minute of conversation, and realized that… Why, had Ester just made a metaphor? Almost she burst into laughter, not at Ester in the least, but simply with the delight of recognition, of the lovely, unexplored depths of her dear friend’s elder sister.
She somehow doubted though, that Ester would see the same loveliness as she in her beautiful little turn of phrase, and might even think Pauline was poking fun at her. And so she simply filed away the gem of a moment among her more delightful memories, and continued on with the catalogue of her Earthly recollections from her once-home. “And wolves too, and eagles and rams and bear. Deer too - so many deer!”
“No mountains,” she sighed, thinking out loud. “I wonder if this new Canaan has mountains as the old one did.”
Ester glanced up at Pauline’s comment and smiled a little that she had picked that out but was perplexed at her reaction. At her mention of the animals she thought about the nervous woman she had seen at the briefing. “I think the animals are kept rather close by. The veterinarian, Dr. Albright’s office was not far from the botany labs according to the map.”
Pauline waited several long moments for the ginger to do its work completely. The chilly sweat on her face finally began to dissipate, and she trusted her stomach wouldn’t flop completely if she dared get to her feet. Oh sure, the young woman was a touch embarrassed, no matter the sisters Ester and Naomi, each in their own way, reassured her there was precious little reason to feel so. Naomi’s shining, eternal cheer was like the warm sun on her face, and Ester’s practical, straightforward manner the solid ground beneath her feet. Pauline had rarely felt more safe or comfortable these past few months, than she did right now between these two women.
“So sorry about that,” Pauline said softly, swiping gently at her cheeks and forehead with the back of her sweater sleeve, brushing away the sheen of sweat and rubbing a bit more color into her lightly-freckled cheeks. She glanced up to Naomi with a small but genuine grin, holding her hand up for her friend to take and help her up off the bench. “Go on, tell me again please, that the morning sickness passes, that it can’t last forever!” she laughed.
“Please Naomi, give me hope for a brighter future!” Pauline laughed harder still, clasping the other woman’s hand lightly as she hauled herself to her feet. Running her fingers through the lengths of her strawberry blonde hair, she sighed contentedly, convinced her legs were going to hold her upright this time.
Naomi laughed, her white teeth flashing, “No it does not last forever, I think perhaps after the first trimester? It’s worth it though.”
She patted her belly and did not speak about the other discomforts of pregnancy that were inconvenient but mattered little in the outcome. Ester walked in silence, as was her habit, listening with one ear to their talk and keeping an eye on the gardens around them. The previous shifts had done a tremendous job in creating the biodomes as close as they could to what existed in nature. Each garden represented a climate zone and they were exiting the Mediterranean garden, a small but very important ecological zone back on Earth. Ester held the door open that separated the gardens. There was a walk way of concrete that allowed wheelbarrows and hoses to be run up and down between them the large rooms.
Ester felt strange looking up at the ship’s roof as they entered the next garden, it was a reminder that despite the computer image of the blue sky with soft clouds moving in the breeze caused by hidden fans, this was not outdoors, they were still breathing the recycled air, albeit with the addition of fresh oxygen from the plants. The sun that moved slowly overhead was just another generated image and she felt a heaviness in her heart as a moment of home sickness swept over her.
The other women chattered about the lush temperate forest they entered, with a mixture of deciduous fruit and nut trees and conifers. Along the trail were rambles of blackberry vines and raspberry bushes, near a pond cranberry and blueberries were ripening. Ester felt a smile tug at her lips looking at the bounty the ship’s gardens provided and tilted her head when she heard a familiar hum pass by her ear. A single honeybee going about it’s business and it caused her to wonder if there were beehives kept in the temperate zone. It made sense, the flowers that bloomed along the paths were the ones favored by the valuable insect. She would inquire later and she turned back when Naomi mentioned her name.
“Ester, these gardens are an oasis and lovely to behold,” she glanced at Pauline, “But they’re not the only place we get our food from.”
“No,” Ester agreed and looked at her tablet, “The labs are this way actually, I’ll probably spend most of my time there.”
She looked longingly at a path that lead up into a grove of mixed ash and oak trees. They were of little or no food value but their wood was useful and if the planet they were going to lacked anything that could be used as building material, the cedars, oaks, and ashes would play their role. Though the fast growing bamboo in the first garden hinted at what they would probably use early on as the trees matured.
Pauline had not yet seen “the labs” - they were not a part of Naomi’s bailiwick after all, and not as free to access by the Copernicus’ population as the environs of the biodomes were. Despite her curiosity, the perceptive young woman still caught the elder sister’s wistful gaze back toward the grove, and chewed her lip thoughtfully for a moment.
“Oh I’d love to see your labs Ester, but this is your day off isn’t it? You don’t have to go to work quite yet, do you?” she teased with a playful smile.
Ester looked away from the trees and glanced at her tablet, “It is a day off, though I should acquaint myself with the lab. I’m sure they left me plenty of notes to read and I must meet with my staff.”
She looked back up and caught the smiles from Pauline and Naomi and she blushed slightly, “I guess it can wait a few more minutes.”
Naomi caught her sleeve and tugged her up the path. The computer generated sky was full of cumulus clouds billowing in a sapphire sky. The fans blew off and on, in patterned intervals to not only entertain the visitors with a ‘fresh breeze’ but to simulate a real world situation for the plants. Pheromones, pollen and seed fluff all relied on the wind to carry them and the crew of the Copernicus’ botanical section tried not to overlook anything when building the gardens.
Ester walked down the path that lead through the ‘grove’ and admired the trees. They were larger than three year old saplings and were dug up from the last remaining healthy forests around the Mountain. The other plants had been part of botanical gardens in Denver and Salt Lake City, brought back when things looked dire in those cities.
“I miss the sound of birds,” Ester said finally, her hand on the silvery white bark of a young birch.
Pauline ducked just a little, catching sight of something small and roundish buzzing past her head. Though intellectually she knew very well that unless you slapped or antagonized a honey bee, you weren’t likely to be stung - but that didn’t stop the instinctual cringe when one came so close, right there in her line of sight -
She laughed, pale blue eyes widening in genuine surprise at the sight of iridescent green and blues whizzing by, to hover near a tall clump of tiger lilies on the side of the trail, closest to Ester. Pauline pointed toward the brilliant, hovering creature with a wide, playful grin, as if any of them could have missed its arrival.
“Ester look! I didn’t know you were a ‘bird whisperer!’ You’ve only to speak the words, and conjure up an avian or two!” Pauline did not stop to think whether the reference might mean a thing to Ester or not. Still, the delight on her face at the sight was unmistakable, and she might be forgiven her forgetfulness of the very literal mind of her new friend. “Though I have to admit, I have absolutely no idea if hummingbirds sing - or do you think the whirring of little tiny wings still counts?”
And as if it knew it had suddenly become the topic of mirth-filled conversation, the perfect, tiny little bird flitted upward once more, turning in midair to hover on blurred wings for a moment before the three women. The hummingbird regarded them for a moment, as if it were deciding which of them might yet provide the sweetest of nectar before disappearing back into the grand, artificial grove.
Ester caught sight of the blur of motion, the tiny bird zipping by them to investigate the lilies. A blue throated hummingbird, native to the western United States, she observed. He must have been packed along for the ride.
“I didn’t whisper anything?” Ester looked puzzled at the expression but smiled gently at the bird. “And no, they do not sing but they are beautiful. Gems on the wing and they’re helpful for pollinating flowers, of course .”
She watched as the little bird made his exit, the light glinting off the azure and emerald of his tiny head. Ester longed to look at it up close, to see the tiny scalloped feathers and bright black eyes looking back at her. Perhaps one day when she was alone and she would sit very still he might grace her with his presence.
Naomi watched with amusement at her sister’s face, “She’s always had an eye for the small things. Always looking down at the grass and flowers rather than watching where she was going.”
She put her arm around her and squeezed, “Time to look up at the stars, ac’hot.”
Ester glanced away sheepishly, remembering the teasing she would get about walking around with her head down. When she was a child, she had been short sighted and looking closely had become second nature until her parents noticed and got her glasses. She remembered the first thing that struck her was the leaves on the trees, she could see each one flutter in the breeze. That memory was vivid and she had fallen in love with plants, at their tiny details and perfections. By the time she was an adult, she had corrective surgery but she still looked closely at things, it was already ingrained in her nature.
Naomi released her and gestured to Pauline, “Does this garden remind you of where you are from?”
Pauline nodded her head slowly, her eyes gazing upward and about wistfully to the forest canopy and the bright blue “sky” overhead. “It does, some. But I don’t believe there was really any way to recreate the mountain environment inside a spaceship, no matter how vast these biodomes are.”
The young woman shrugged just a little, and smiled. “I’m not complaining though!” she continued on, that unending optimism not allowing her to leave the impression with the sisters, that she was not as entranced with these gardens as they. “Blackberries, raspberries, ash and spruce - and hummingbirds!”
Pauline’s eyes twinkled merrily as her quick thoughts roamed the last minute of conversation, and realized that… Why, had Ester just made a metaphor? Almost she burst into laughter, not at Ester in the least, but simply with the delight of recognition, of the lovely, unexplored depths of her dear friend’s elder sister.
She somehow doubted though, that Ester would see the same loveliness as she in her beautiful little turn of phrase, and might even think Pauline was poking fun at her. And so she simply filed away the gem of a moment among her more delightful memories, and continued on with the catalogue of her Earthly recollections from her once-home. “And wolves too, and eagles and rams and bear. Deer too - so many deer!”
“No mountains,” she sighed, thinking out loud. “I wonder if this new Canaan has mountains as the old one did.”
Ester glanced up at Pauline’s comment and smiled a little that she had picked that out but was perplexed at her reaction. At her mention of the animals she thought about the nervous woman she had seen at the briefing. “I think the animals are kept rather close by. The veterinarian, Dr. Albright’s office was not far from the botany labs according to the map.”