About this ebook
A festive space queer romance that will melt your heart and warm your exosuit.
Linn and xyr crew are halfway through their long journey from Earth to Cetalla; what better time to celebrate a solstice? Bid farewell to Sol and hello to a new homestar. Traditions around mistletoe—not to mention Linn's totally non-existent crush on xyr crewmate Taye—have nothing to do with it.
Explaining paperchains to xyr alien crewmate and plotting present-giving keeps Linn busy enough, but then something goes wrong with Heron, the ship's AI.
Tracing the cause to a giant hullbreach onto needlespace, Linn and Taye have no idea what to do about it, or the stranger who came through it.
Can they save their ship and get to their new home before the pressures of needlespace damage Heron beyond repair? And is Linn ever going to get that kiss under the mistletoe?
Juliet Kemp
Juliet Kemp is a queer, genderqueer, author. They live in London with their partners, kid, and dog, and a desk with a fantastic view of the river. They write fiction and sometimes non-fiction.
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A Starbound Solstice - Juliet Kemp
Chapter 1
Imre was lying full-length on his back on the dark blue couch in the living area, the ship’s main communal space, when I came in. He had corralled a huge nest of cushions around himself, and perched another couple on his chest to make a sort of stand for his reader. He craned his head around and began to say something to me, and the reader slid off and onto the floor.
That never works properly,
I said, picking it up and handing it back to him. Maybe you should get Zoe to fab you something instead.
"I’m sure I ought to be able to do it with cushions, Imre said. He pushed his glasses up his nose, and wriggled further into his cushion-pile, balancing the reader again.
If I just try hard enough. It’s good to have goals."
Linn! Just in time. You want a tea?
Jaya called from the kitchen. Or anything else?
Tea would be lovely.
I sat down on the nearest couch to Imre, the red one, my favourite. The couches are rainbow colours, or they were, when they were installed; thirty-five years in to the ship’s journey, they’re a bit grubby, despite Heron's best efforts with the cleaner-bots. But they’re still comfy, which is good, because it would take a hell of a lot of fabricator-slab to generate another seven couches.
Earth had rainbows. I supposed Cetalla would, too, because rainbows are just what happens when sunlight shines through water, and Cetalla was at the appropriate distance from a human-visible-light-spectrum star and had water, or it wouldn’t be suitable for us. Or for the Ferolyt, who had similar requirements to us despite how different they look. It felt like Cetalla ought to have different rainbows, but that wouldn’t make sense, physics-wise. Maybe a sun-spectrum just a little bit different, would weight the rainbows differently? I guessed we would find out.
But while we were either in deep space, or in needlespace like right at that moment, there were no rainbows other than the artificial ones we’d brought with us.
Jaya came over with three mugs of tea, gave me one, put one down next to Imre, and then sat down with hers on the end of Imre’s sofa, lifting his feet to make room then dropping them down onto her lap. Imre wiggled his toes at her, sat up to give her a kiss, then fell back down into his cushion-nest.
When’s the next needledip?
I asked, since I’d started thinking about time and distance and needlespace.
Coming out of this one in two hours,
Heron said over the living-area speakers. She had speakers in most of the walls throughout the ship, and cameras and audio pickups and so on, plus all the other ship-senses that she said had no human equivalents. Then two days after that to reposition, and another ten-hour one.
From Earth to Cetall was a long, long way. In normal space it would take a few thousand years, give or take. Needlespace brought it down to about seventy. We didn’t — couldn’t — spend all that time there at once. Instead, the ship dipped in and out, at just the right angle, as calculated by Heron. Like threading a sewing-needle through fabric, but with the back of the fabric all scrunched up where the front is flat, to bring you out a lot further along even though the needle stays the same size. When you come out you have a certain amount of momentum, which you can use, carefully, with a tiny bit of fuel assistance, to reposition yourself for the next dip. Or that’s roughly it, anyway. Of the seven of us who were awake right then, only Heron and Aliax really understood it. Heron said the needle/fabric analogy was good enough for human brains. She prided herself on using the absolute minimum of fuel between dips. Not that it made much difference. However much she saves, it wouldn’t be enough to go anywhere else once we reached Cetalla. This was definitely a one-way trip.
Do you know,
I said to Jaya and Imre, that back home, on Earth, it’s December now. Christmas-time.
I’d woken up to something of a bout of homesickness. Well. Not exactly homesickness. Earth wasn’t home any more, after all. More a sudden awareness that although in experienced time, body-time, I was twenty-six, in elapsed time I was just over sixty. Time spent in coldsleep didn’t feel like it should count; but my siblings back on Earth would all be in their sixties, and my niblings who were tiny when I left (or not even born, ones I didn’t know about) would have kids of their own, maybe…And right around that moment they were back home — no, back on Earth — wrapping presents and eating mince pies and all that stuff.
Or, of course, Earth had finally and completely screwed itself over, and everyone was dead. We’d nearly been at that point when the Ferolyt had shown up, a couple of decades before I was born, and helped us to pull back from the brink. Which didn’t mean that humans hadn’t managed to bugger it up all over again, even with the assistance of the Ferolyt who were still there. We had, after all, form for that.
I looked around the living-space. It was home-like, of a sort. And slightly untidy. I envisaged a tree in the corner, tinsel, lights…
Maybe we should have Christmas,
I said. Keep us busy, and that.
We didn’t celebrate it last year,
Imre said. I don’t know about before us, though. Has someone, ever? Heron?
Christmas has been celebrated eleven times in the last thirty-five years,
Heron said over the speakers. The last time was three years ago, before the current crew were awakened. I quite enjoyed it. I made some interesting patterns of lights.
There you go,
both of us said triumphantly, then stopped and looked at one another.
"We didn’t celebrate it last year, but it has been celebrated before, I said.
There’s precedent."
Why Christmas?
Jaya asked. Why not Hanukkah? Or Kwanzaa? Why didn’t we celebrate Diwali, a couple of months ago?
She made an expansive gesture. More generally, why the hell are we bothered about an Earth calendar and Earth customs?
Other festivals have indeed been celebrated too, in the past. All the ones you mentioned,
Heron said. And some others.
Well, then, let’s,
I said. All of ‘em. Anything anyone wants to celebrate. Let’s do it. Maybe we’ve missed Diwali for the year, but we could celebrate it late.
Jaya screwed up her nose.
Solstice,
I said, with sudden inspiration. Never mind all the religious stuff.
Not that Christmas, for me, back on Earth, had ever had any religious content, but it