The longer I spend in the docking bay, its enormous maw opened up to the infinite cosmos, the louder my thoughts become. The louder that distant hum. Itâs unending. It has to be the shipâs engine, no matter what Dorian said. Or some power supply, maybe even the flow of electricity through the shipâs synthetic infrastructure, its metal and rubber veins, coppery filaments, its manufactured chassis. Dorian would be used to it by now. Thatâs why he canât hear it.
Unsettled by the sound, my jaw tight and my shoulders drawn inward, I reach my limit. I donât know how much time has passed, but it feels as if Iâve been waiting for hours. And I realize I donât want to do this now; I donât want to occupy my hands and try to forget.
I want to talk to Dorian again. I want to laugh again, feel his warmth. Heâs my only anchor in this place, the only thing that keeps me afloat.
âDorian,â I say, almost a whisper in the echoing room. Iâm afraid if I speak too loudly, the cosmos just outside the docking bay will hear me and suck me out through the forcefield and into itself, digesting me whole.
Thereâs a hush of air against my neck, and Dorian is there.
I spin to face him, flushed. âYou â you startled me,â I snap, unable to keep the fear from my voice. My heart thunders.
His face falls, a perfect, loose wave of black falling over one eye as he lowers his chin deferentially. âIâm sorry.â
I try to slow my breathing. âYou didnât mean to. Itâs fine. Just⦠stop sneaking up on me like that.â
âYou called me.â
âI know,â I say, annoyed at myself for reacting. I open my mouth to explain that I was getting scared, that this docking bay fills with dread when heâs not here with me, but I donât. Instead, I say, âI changed my mind. I donât want to work on my ship right now. I thought maybe we could⦠eat together? If you even eat, I mean. All Iâve had since waking up from stasis is nutrient bars.â
âAnything you want.â His stare bores into the tender flesh of my lip, where my teeth left their mark, and heâs stone still like a gargoyle. I move away, ever so slightly. His gaze snaps up to mine. âJust tell me what you need.â
The shipâs hum pulses in my skull, like the reverberation of a strummed guitar string.
Iâm seeing things that arenât there. Nothing here is real.
âI donât know what I need, Dorian.â
He takes my hand in his, not waiting for permission. I remember the way he held me before, let me cry on him, let me break like a wave against him. I have felt this way before, in dreams. Where fear mixes with anticipation, and though the trees may bend in a gorgeous wind, the clouds may scud across a cerulean sky, a darkness lurks behind it all. A nightmare at the edges, its claws curving around the doorframe.
I have held men like this before and then fled. Iâve stayed, too. But were they different men, or was it always Dorian?
âCome with me,â he says, and I am once again trailing after him, a puppet on a string.
By the time we reach our destination, Iâm no longer stiff with fear. And the hum has lessened. I feel like Iâve woken from a dream or a long dissociation. Lily would have known. She could have explained it to me, why the brain shuts off and directs us elsewhere when reality becomes too much.
A trauma response, MiMi, I imagine her saying, her face all soft and sunlit. The way Iâd prefer to remember her â not gray and lifeless, an empty shell.
Dorian ushers me into a room, his arm held out like a butler at a five-star hotel. I drift in, allowing my senses to take it in.
This is unlike any room Iâve ever seen. Itâs an ancient Victorian ballroom, and outside its tall windows, stars and nebulae wheel past. There is something wrong with the chandelier; itâs tinged with red and appears to be suspended in midair. The floor feels uneven though it appears to be marble. At the center of the room sits a stately table set for two, and laden with food. Fruits and vegetables, loaves of bread, steaming tureens, and delicate iced cakes festoon the surface. Itâs a kingâs feast. I couldnât begin to make a dent in it.
âWhere are we?â I ask, because itâs the only reasonable question.
âThe dining room,â says Dorian. âIâve designed it for you.â
I turn to him, and he looks so painfully hopeful, almost eager. âOh.â
His face falls. âYou donât like it.â
âNo, itâsâ¦â I falter. âItâs beautiful. Iâm just surprised. Iâve never eaten in a room like this.â
He frowns. âI see.â
I donât know where to begin explaining the ancient architecture, how Earthâs 1800s occurred centuries and centuries before I was born, how thereâs no room left on the planet for even a house this big, let alone one dining room. So I donât. âItâs very beautiful,â I amend. âI mean, Iâve always wanted to visit this sort of place. Ancient homes, you know. The old, old things that no longer exist except in history books.â
âYou miss Earth,â he says and moves toward me. âI can make other rooms for you, Ami. Other places. Show you things youâve never seen before.â
His eyes are swirling pools of everything I want. I let him wrap an arm around me, let him steer me toward the table. He pulls out a chair for me, and I sit. Itâs easy to let him do these things. To let him direct me. Iâm exhausted, my emotional state hanging by a fraying thread. I donât want to take the lead. I want to let go.
He seats himself across from me, and we dine.
I donât know what I expected â that he might simply watch me eat, unable to consume human food, like some vampire, sipping a goblet of wine, waiting for his next victim to become drunk and willing. But he joins me, delicately chewing, shooting me wry smiles between sips of red wine. Itâs almost as if this is a normal meal. Itâs almost as if Iâm not shaken to my core, never to recover.
âWhat do you really look like?â I ask, midway through a list of these sorts of questions: what do you call your kind (You wouldnât comprehend the word, itâs worse than my name), where is your home planet (Billions of light-years from here), is it anything like Earth (No), how can you eat this food (By putting it in my mouth and chewing), what do you normally eat (Nothing youâd recognize as food), do you listen to music (If the vibrations of the universe count as music, yes). âI mean, really.â
He leans back in his chair, pulling at the cravat at his throat. As it loosens, my gaze falls on his neck, his pulse. A smile curves one side of his mouth. âThink of it this way. Youâre looking at me, right now. And so what you see is how I look.â
âBut youâre not human,â I persist.
âIâm not,â he agrees. âBut itâs the image Iâve chosen to project. If you touch me, I feel human. You know that.â
My stomach flutters. âShow me your true form.â Iâve had a little too much wine, so much that Iâm conveniently not thinking about the fact that itâs not real wine at all. Iâm not thinking about how warm my face is, how Dorianâs every glance is like a physical touch against shivering skin.
âIâd rather not.â
âPlease?â
âYou wouldnât like it.â
âYou donât know that.â
âYou hardly seem to like this form.â
âThatâs not true. Itâs just⦠too beautiful. I was trained for all kinds of biological oddities.â I catch myself. âNot that youâre an oddity. But the body youâve chosen, itâs⦠a lot.â
He leans forward, chin resting on folded hands, elbows on the table. âHow so?â
Heat rises in my face. Iâve driven myself into this corner. I take another swig of wine. âYouâre, well, Iâm not sure if this will make sense, but youâre my type.â
I avoid his gaze, blushing painfully. I donât know why I said it. Why Iâm flirting back.
âI read your welcome package,â he says slowly, and his tone is tinged with unspent laughter. âI know what a type is.â
âOh?â I stare at the edge of my wine glass, running a shaking finger along the crystal until it makes a faint sound. âWell, with millions of options at your disposal, you picked exactly the kind of body, and strangely, exactly the kind of clothes thatââ I stop myself, my breath hitching.
What am I doing? This is every kind of bizarre. Iâm in a Victorian ballroom inside a vast alien ship, drinking wine with the alien himself.
âExactly the kind of body that⦠what?â Dorian says, but itâs clear that he knows exactly what.
Exactly the kind of body that makes me want to lose control.
But he knew that, didnât he? He tailored himself for me.
I stand abruptly, knocking my chair over. It clatters to the floor, the sound ringing ostentatiously in that quiet room. âThank you for dinner.â Itâs a rush of words, my heart pounding against my ribs.
Dorian watches me intently but says nothing.
âIâm sorry,â I add. âIâm tired, and itâs late. Or it feels late. I donât know what time⦠anyway, I should sleep.â
He rises gracefully, showing no sign of disappointment or anger, any of the usual razor-sharp edges a man might show after a date cut short. The wine that isnât real feels sickly in my stomach. This isnât a date.
I take Dorianâs offered arm as he escorts me back to my room. Heâs steady and firm, and for a second I pretend that he is just as human as I am. When we say goodnight, he is the perfect gentleman, without a single roving hand or salacious word.
And as the door closes behind me, leaving me alone once again, I press my hands to my face, nearly suffocating against my clammy palms. All the while, somewhere deep in the ship, I feel it at the core of me: that far-off hum.