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    Earth Afire (The First Formic War)

    Page 47
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    He landed soft as a kiss, the magnets in his hands and feet anchoring him to the surface. Now that he was close, he could clearly see closed apertures all over the surface of the ship. They appeared to be made of the same material as the hull, which kept them invisible from a distance. Each was the size of a dinner plate, and there were tens of thousands of them, all lined in neat rows that stretched from one end of the ship to the other.

      His destination was the place in the hull where the gun emerged, and he took a moment to orient himself and locate it. He would have to crawl across the hull a short distance to reach it, he realized. Stepping lightly, he set out. As he moved he wondered if Father had landed near here. He looked around him, searching for any signs of a struggle or a breached or repaired hull but saw nothing.

      He found the place where the gun emerged. He could see the seams in the hull where it opened or parted. It was time. He anchored the duffel bag and removed the remote control. He and Imala had deposited the decoy ten klicks away. He flipped on the control and punched the throttle. At first he saw nothing. But soon he saw a dot in the distance among the debris that was moving toward him. He increased the speed. The decoy slammed into a smaller piece of debris in its path, and the two ricocheted off each other. For a moment Victor lost control of the decoy, but he quickly regained it and righted the craft’s course.

      There was movement beneath him. Gears turning, pieces shifting, a machine coming to life. He could feel it in his feet.

      The hull opened silently. The gun extended and unfolded itself from the hole like a giant mechanical flower opening its petals and stretching outward. It was fifty times bigger than he had thought it would be, bigger than a shuttle. It had looked so small at a distance in the vids.

      The remote control was long forgotten. He was at the lip of the hole now, shining his light down into the blackness. The space was immense. There appeared to be corners and nooks and passageways down there. Perhaps one of them led into the ship. He couldn’t tell from here.

      The ground shook. The giant flower was firing. Victor looked behind him. The decoy ship was now a puff of shattered pieces. Victor turned back, working frantically. His window of opportunity was closing. He needed to keep this hole open. But how? He had envisioned a space much smaller than this. He had brought a bar to force into the hole and wedge it open to allow him to climb inside, but the bar was clearly too short. How could he have been so wrong about that?

      The giant flower began to fold in on itself, retracting, preparing to disappear back into its hiding place. Victor thought quickly, reaching out and shoving the bar between two braces that had begun to fold inward. The bar stuck, wedged tight, and the flower’s collapsing motion stopped. Victor waited. If the bar snapped free after he climbed into the hole, the flower might collapse inward and crush him.

      The flower didn’t move. The bar held firm. Victor closed the bag, threw it over his shoulder, and grabbed the lip of hole, ready to launch himself inside. He wished Father were with him all of a sudden. Father could lead out and Victor could follow, just as they had done for years on board El Cavador, moving about the ship and making repairs. Father always knew what needed to be done. Doubt was not in his DNA. His solutions weren’t always the most efficient, but they always worked, they always got the job done. Yes, Victor was the better mechanic, but Father worked better under pressure. Father never flinched. Father’s hands were always steady.

      Victor lifted his right hand and saw that it was trembling.

      Be with me, Father. Stay with me, fly with me. Somos familia. Somos uno.

      Then he lowered his hand back to the lip of the hole and pulled himself forward, shooting down deep, disappearing in the darkness.

      By Orson Scott Card from Tom Doherty Associates

      Empire

      The Folk of the Fringe

      Future on Fire (editor)

      Future on Ice (editor)

      Hidden Empire

      Invasive Procedures (with Aaron Johnston)

      Keeper of Dreams

      The Lost Gate

      Lovelock (with Kathryn Kidd)

      Maps in a Mirror: The Short Fiction of Orson Scott Card

      Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show

      Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus

      Saints

      Songmaster

      Treason

      A War of Gifts

      The Worthing Saga

      Wyrms

      THE TALES OF ALVIN MAKER

      Seventh Son

      Red Prophet

      Prentice Alvin

      Alvin Journeyman

      Heartfire

      The Crystal City

      ENDER

      Ender’s Game

      Ender’s Shadow

      Shadows in Flight

      Shadow of the Hegemon

      Shadow Puppets

      Shadow of the Giant

      Speaker for the Dead

      Xenocide

      Children of the Mind

      First Meetings

      Ender in Exile

      HOMECOMING

      The Memory of Earth

      The Call of Earth

      The Ships of Earth

      Earthfall

      Earthborn

      WOMEN OF GENESIS

      Sarah

      Rebekah

      Rachel & Leah

      THE FORMIC WARS

      Earth Unaware (with Aaron Johnston)

      From Other Publishers

      Enchantment

      Homebody

      Lost Boys

      Magic Street

      Stone Father

      Stone Tables

      Treasure Box

      How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy

      Characters and Viewpoint

      Pathfinder

      Ruins

      This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously.

      EARTH AFIRE

      Copyright © 2013 by Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston

      All rights reserved.

      Cover art by John Harris

      A Tor Book

      Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

      175 Fifth Avenue

      New York, NY 10010

      www.tor-forge.com

      Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.

      The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

      Card, Orson Scott.

      Earth Afire / Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston.—First edition.

      p. cm.

      “A Tom Doherty Associates book.”

      ISBN 978-0-7653-2905-9 (hardcover)

      ISBN 978-1-4299-4384-0 (e-book)

      1. Space warfare—Fiction. 2. Science fiction. I. Johnston, Aaron. II. Title.

      PS3553.A655E35 2013

      813'.54—dc23

      2012043815

      e-ISBN 9781429943840

      First Edition: June 2013

      Table of Contents

      Title Page

      Copyright Notice

      Dedication

      Acknowledgments

      1. Bingwen

      2. Victor

      3. Lem

      4. Ukko

      5. Mazer

      6. China

      7. Rena

      8. Beacon

      9. Announcement

      10. Mothership

      11. HERC

      12. Mud

      13. Survivors

      14. India

      15. Formics

      16. Last Chance

      17. Transmissions

      18. Rescue

      19. MOPs

      20. Post-Op

      21. Homecoming

      22. Crows

      23. Camouflage

      24. Blood and Ashes

      25. Space Junk

      26. Biomass

      27. Launch

      28. Drill Sledges

      29. Mothership

      By Orson Scott Card from Tom Doherty Associates

      Copyright

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