Cold Fire
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“How long has the pond been here?” she asked.
“A long time.”
“Before the Ironhearts?”
“Yeah.”
“Before the farm itself?”
“I'm sure it was.”
“Possibly forever?”
“Possibly.”
“Any local legends about it?”
“What do you mean?”
“Ghost stories, Loch Ness, that kind of stuff.”
“No. Not that I've ever heard.”
They were silent. Waiting.
Finally Holly said, “What's your theory?”
“Huh?”
“Earlier today you said you had a theory, something strange and wonderful, but you didn't want to talk about it till you'd thought it through.”
“Oh, right. Now maybe it's more than a theory. When you said you'd seen something under the pond in your dream … well, I don't know why, but I started thinking about an encounter….”
“Encounter?”
“Yeah. Like what you said. Something … alien.”
“Not of this world,” Holly said, remembering the sound of the bells and the light in the pond.
“They're out there in the universe somewhere,” he said with quiet enthusiasm. “It's too big for them not to be out there. And someday they'll be coming. Someone will encounter them. So why not me, why not you?”
“But it must've been there under the pond when you were ten.”
“Maybe.”
“Why would it be there all this tune?”
“I don't know. Maybe it's been there a lot longer. Hundreds of years. Thousands.”
“But why a starship at the bottom of a pond?”
“Maybe it's an observation station, a place where they monitor human civilization, like an outpost we might set up in Antarctica to study things there.”
Holly realized they sounded like kids sitting under the stars on a summer night, drawn like all kids to the contemplation of the unknown and to fantasies of exotic adventure. On one level she found their musings absurd, even laughable, and she was unable to believe that recent events could have such a neat yet fanciful explanation. But on another level, where she was still a child and always would be, she desperately wanted the fantasy to be made real.
Twenty minutes passed without a new development, and gradually Holly began to settle down from the heights of excitement and nervous agitation to which the lights in the pond had catapulted her. Still filled with wonder but no longer mentally numbed by it, she remembered what had happened to her just prior to the appearance of the radiant presence in the millpond: the overwhelming, preternatural, almost panic-inducing awareness of being watched. She was about to mention it to Jim when she recalled the other strange things she had found at the farmhouse.
“It's completely furnished,” she said. “You never cleaned the house out after your grandfather died.”
“I left it furnished in case I was able to rent it while waiting for a buyer.”
Those were virtually the same words she had used, standing in the house, to explain the curious situation to herself. “But you left all their personal belongings there, too.”
He did not look at her but at the walls, waiting for some sign of a superhuman presence. “I'd have taken that stuff away if I'd ever found a renter.”
“You've left it there for almost five years?”
He shrugged.
She said, “It's been cleaned more or less regularly since then, though not recently.”
“A renter might always show up.”
“It's sort of creepy, Jim.”
Finally he looked at her. “How so?”
“It's like a mausoleum.”
His blue eyes were utterly unreadable, but Holly had the feeling she was annoying him, perhaps because this mundane talk of renters and house cleaning and real estate was pulling him away from the more pleasurable contemplation of alien encounters.
He sighed and said, “Yeah, it is creepy, a little.”
“Then why … ?”
He slowly twisted the lantern control, reducing the flow of gas to the wicks. The hard white light softened to a moon-pale glow, and the shadows eased closer. “To tell you the truth, I couldn't bear to pack up my granddad's things. Together, we'd sorted through grandma's belongings only eight months earlier, when she'd died, and that had been hard enough. When he … passed away so soon after her, it was too much for me. For so long, they'd been all I had. Then suddenly I didn't even have them.”
A tortured expression darkened the blue of his eyes.
As a flood of sympathy washed through Holly, she reached across the ice chest and took his hand.
He said, “I procrastinated, kept
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