Normally, I loved eating with Nola’s family. Her parents would tell stories about all the different techniques people used to use to look for exoplanets. They explained the Drake equation—the likelihood of making contact with other intelligent life. They told us about rogue planets floating alone and starless throughout space, or about what kinds of biomarkers we might use for life that isn’t carbon-based, like all the living creatures from Earth are.
Plus, members of the science team got better rations. My family ate the same flavored protein-and-vitamin paste three times a day. What exactly the flavor was supposed to be, none of us were sure. Scientists got protein paste molded into the shapes of real food, and the flavors were actually pretty good.
But tonight, dinner felt like a condemned prisoner’s last meal. Our parents were painfully polite. Nola kept her eyes on her food, chewing robotically.
“Could you pass the salt, please, Miriam?” my mom asked Nola’s in a forced, cheerful voice.
I couldn’t hold it in anymore. “I saw something on patrol,” I blurted. Nola stopped chewing. Her mom froze, clutching the salt pack.
Nola’s dad cleared his throat. “What’s that, Yuki?”
“I saw something,” I repeated. I knew how my voice sounded. Pleading and urgent and desperate. But they had to know. “A flashing blue light. Too regular to be natural. I think it was a signal.”
“Did you see it too?” Nola’s mom asked her.
Nola shook her head, not meeting my eyes.
“Yuki,” her dad said gently. “The Base would’ve intercepted anything that was a signal. It was just—”
“It wasn’t an ice mirage!” I yelled. “I saw something! I know you don’t believe me but it’s true!”
There was a long awkward silence. My parents exchanged glances. I knew what was coming next.
“We know how badly you want Nola and her family to stay, honey,” my mom said. “But the Mission’s over.”
“I’m not making it up to keep the Mission here.” But I could see it in their faces. They didn’t believe me. “I’m not lying,”
“Nobody says you’re lying, Yuki,” Nola’s mom said. “Now, how about dessert?” She was looking at me with the same pity Nola had out on the ice. I wanted to crawl under the table. Or scream. Or run away. But this was the last meal I’d ever have with Nola. So instead I sat up straight and smiled.
“You’re probably right,” I said. “Dessert sounds great.”