The plane reached cruising altitude, and the engine noise reduced. Sally opened her eyes. "Thanks, Amy."
Tim looked across at us. "Maybe sometime you'll tell me what's going on."
A stewardess approached us. "Can I get you something to drink?"
"Just apple juice for me, please," requested Sally.
"I'd love a glass of red wine," I said.
Tim thought for a moment. "I'll have a coffee β I'll stop at one so I can get some sleep later, though."
The stewardess served our drinks. "There'll be a meal in about half an hour, then we'll dim the lights. Of course you can use the headphones and watch a film if you'd prefer."
She moved away to serve the other passengers, and we sipped our drinks.
Tim looked at the screen in front of him. "The entertainment system looks pretty sophisticated."
He touched a control, and Sally suppressed a squeak as the screen switched to a live camera view from the tail of the aircraft, the curve of the earth clearly visible, the blue of the atmosphere fading to black.
"Actually it's beautiful," she said.
I nodded. "It is."
I thought back to the day all this was made, and the arguments about our response. Destroy it? Enslave this new race, this disgusting mixture of matter and spirit? Deceive them and twist them away from whatever idealistic purpose they'd been made for? In the end the decision was made: enslave where we could, enjoy their pain and the suffering; tempt and harass those who wouldn't yield; do everything in our power to make this pretty blue bauble self-destruct.
And it had all been going so well. On a large scale, wars, atrocities, genocide. The so-satisfying greed, injustice, the divide between the haves and the have-nots. Then murder, abuse, violence, the constant pleasing background of resentment, hatred, lust.
But then everything changed. At first it was just rumours β another young woman pregnant in dubious circumstances. So what? That usually turned out well β shame, rejection, another child with a shadow over his life. Then more rumours β stars, kings, predictions of an early death that would tear his mother's heart. A pogrom, infanticide, flight to a foreign country.
"Amy?" I heard Sally's voice calling me back to the present. "Have you decided what you want to eat?"
I glanced quickly at the menu. "Lamb sounds fine. Thanks, Sally."
I flipped the table down in front of me, and Sally passed me a tray. The food was good, and I savoured the spicy tastes. Sally tentatively sampled her couscous, and nodded. "This is OK."
We finished eating, and the stewardess took our trays. "Think I will try and sleep," said Tim. As the lights dimmed, he tilted his seat back and pulled the thin blanket over him.
"How about you?" I asked Sally.
She shook her head. "I know we're on the run, sort of, but I'm too excited. Here, put the camera view on my screen and the map on yours, and we can pretend this is the bridge of a spaceship or something."
I couldn't help smiling at her imagination. I touched the controls, and Sally traced the path of the plane on the screen with her finger. "So many countries."
We watched the track of our journey creeping across the map, and Sally turned to me.
"Amy, tell me a little more about where we're going."
I grinned. "Well, it's further east β we'll get another flight in Dubai. It'll be warm in the day, about twenty degrees, but at night it drops below ten, that's why you'll need more layers when the sun goes down."
I paused. "The place I'm taking us is beautiful, but the people really don't have much, they're struggling to survive."
I thought for a moment. "We thought that would make them an easy target, but somehow it's gone the other way. We don't know much about what's going on in there β it's hard for us to operate there now β but it seemed the obvious place to take you and your father."
Sally nodded. "So how do you know so much about this place?"
I hesitated. "Sally, if I tell you this, you'll know what I'm really capable of. I don't want you to hate me."
She shook her head. "That's in the past. I know you're changing. Tell me?"
"There was a young woman," I said. "She was engaged β her marriage was arranged for her, that's the custom there, and at first she was happy with her fiancΓ©. But she started to have second thoughts, and she told him she wanted to break off the engagement. My assignment was to cause as much trouble for her as I could, and I went to him, caught him at the lowest point emotionally, turned his disappointment in on himself."
I looked up at Sally to watch her reaction. "He killed himself β took poison."
She shuddered. "And the young woman?"
"She was devastated. And I made it worse. His family blamed her, demanded compensation from her family for his death. That's the wreckage I left."
Sally was silent for a while, and I felt the emotions running through her mind.
She looked across at me. "Amy, would you... Would you do that again?"
I felt again the nausea I'd first experienced that morning in the church, and my mind flickered back over everything that had happened since I returned. Tim's generosity, his respect for boundaries despite my efforts to tempt him, his instant action to protect me in the canyon. But most of all Sally. Accepting me, forgiving me, despite the bad influence I'd been at school. The fun we'd had together at the spa, her trust in me as we went out to the club. And finally, how easily she dismissed my part in getting her into a very ugly situation.
I took a deep breath. "Sally, I have changed. I don't know what it means, I didn't even know it was possible, but you're right."
She put her hand on mine. "Of course. I knew something was happening β I told you, it happened to me just the same."
I felt something break inside me, and suddenly I knew I was free. I looked across at Sally. "You'll have to teach me again what it is to be good."
She nodded. "Of course, darling."
She yawned. "Sorry, Amy. What time is it back home?"
I glanced at the screen. "About eleven."
"I think I will have to try and sleep for a while after all," she said.
I nodded. "We still have about five hours."
We reclined our seats, and I helped Sally arrange the blanket over her. "Sleep tight," I said.
I turned my attention back to the map, watching the distance between us and our final destination decreasing. What would we find there? Would Tim and Sally really be safe? My thoughts occupied me as the plane flew on into the night.