Название: Galena's Gift
Автор: Rosemary Nelson
Издательство: Ingram
Жанр: Книги для детей: прочее
isbn: 9781459717176
isbn:
“No, I’m much too busy. I only pick up things that concern me,” his box answered, the intrusion making me jump.
“Your flea capacitor quit on you prematurely. Let me see it please,” Gagar’s translator box blipped. I fumbled with the chain around my neck until the clasp came apart and handed the golden grasshopper to Gagar. He stared at it intently, turning it over and over in his hand.
“Just as I suspected. This flea capacitor was not made on Ylepithon. It is of inferior quality. Our neighboring planet produces cheap imitations. Somehow this one got mixed in with ours.” He chuckled. “You were lucky to land in a haystack.
“I will replace this with our new, improved version which my mate is designing at present, and you will truly be able to fly for the rest of your life.”
I put my hand out. “No, I . . . I think I just want to keep this one to remind me of the wonderful flights I had last year.”
Gagar dropped the golden grasshopper in my hand. “But I thought you wished to fly.”
“I did . . . I do . . . but . . . but . . . I’m getting too old for it.”
Gagar stared at me for a moment. “You mean you don’t want to be different from the other kids.”
“No, I don’t mind being different—but that’s being a whole lot different. How many kids do you know who can fly around in the air?”
Gagar chuckled. “Well, they all do where I come from–once they earn their flea capacitor. But yes, here on earth, I see what you mean.”
“Besides, I had to be so careful not to be seen. The braver I got, the further I went. Who knows when I might have been picked up by radar and shot down by a missile or something.”
I put the chain around my neck again and caressed the golden grasshopper. “I’ll just keep it for the memories. It’s like an old friend.”
“Well, now you’ve put a rat in my teeth,” Gagar said in exasperation.
“Pardon?” I asked, looking closely at him to see what he meant.
“That’s an old Ylepithon saying—from a time when we had teeth. It means you’ve put an obstacle in my path. I have a problem I was hoping you would help me with, but now I have nothing to offer in return.”
“Another problem?” I asked, becoming a little annoyed. Now what did he want me to collect.
Gagar’s voice tinkled with laughter as he once again read my mind. “No, no . . . I do not want you to collect anything. This time, I have brought my daughter, Galena, for you to baby-sit!”
CHAPTER 3
I must have still been feeling guilty about letting Gagar down last summer, or maybe I was feeling full of confidence after my baby-sitting course, or . . . maybe my brain was turning to mush. Whatever the reason, I’d somehow agreed, and now a little creature in a purple space suit stood staring at me with enormous, unblinking black eyes. One of her hands tightly clasped Gagar’s, the other clutched a little furry object. Gagar’s other hand held a small silver suitcase. What had I gotten myself into now?
The colored lights on the little creature’s belt blinked and raced in different tracks. When hers stopped, Gagar’s did too.
Gagar’s voice tinkled with laughter. “Galena says you look weird, Lisa. It’s the first time she’s met a real humanoid.”
I looked weird! Except for a mass of long golden curls, and the fact that she was less than half his size, she looked exactly like Gagar. And she thought I looked weird?
“I don’t understand,” I said, perplexed. “Why do you want me to baby-sit her?”
“Galena is developing a unique power and is meant for great things in the future of Ylepithon. As you know, we lived on Earth many millennia ago. It is very important for her to get in touch with her roots, as your saying goes.” He stepped forward, pulling Galena along with him. “Besides, I’m on my way to Tular to get a shipment of their wonderful fleas. I took Galena the last time. She thought the fleas were cute and let them out of their cage. They leapt around the spaceship with such force that it threw us off course and we were much delayed getting home.”
“What about her mother?” I asked.
“My Mate is of super intelligence and is very busy designing the new flea capacitor to handle the power of these monsters. She has no time for Galena at present,” Gagar replied, prying his hand loose from Galena’s in order to gesture as he spoke.
“She must love her a lot. She will miss her,” I persisted.
The lights on both of their belts went out for a few seconds as they regarded each other in silence. Gagar turned back to me. Then the lights on his belt danced again.
“Love? I had forgotten about that ancient emotion. In order to survive, it is said our beings left that behind when they left Earth.” He looked at Galena for a moment and then back at me. “Let me think . . . love . . . mmm . . . It’s not the same as fear, or anger, is it?”
I shook my head, for once at a loss for words.
“How about embarrassment, is it similar to that feeling?” he asked, somewhat perplexed. I shook my head again.
“Ah . . . ha . . . There is another emotion we feel. Tolerance. I think that might be close. But love? No, we do not experience it.” He scratched his chin. “Do you find it useful?”
“Love? Useful? Well, I . . . I . . .” Again I found myself unable to elaborate. How could you explain love in terms of usefulness, especially to someone who had never experienced it?
In the background, the spaceship made a whirling sound and glowed brightly.
“I must be off.” He thrust the silver suitcase at me.
“But, wait, I know nothing about Galena. How am I supposed to look after her?”
“Inside the suitcase, there are instructions and a few things you’ll need. Galena is used to spending a great deal of time by herself. Besides, her only mission here is to get an education. She won’t be a lot of trouble.”
“But . . . but how long is this for anyway? Will you be back tomorrow?”
Gagar didn’t look at me. “Our time is very different than yours. Not tomorrow, but soon,” he said vaguely.
He turned to Galena, holding his hand up with fingers spread apart. She did the same and their hands met briefly.
“By СКАЧАТЬ