The Writer. Danilo Clementoni
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"It was my fault," said Petri, joining in the discussion. âI thought Iâd completely deactivated it and that no terrestrial, even if somebody did find it, would be able to reactivate it.â
âAnd yet it happened,â said Jack. "Do you have any idea where it was lost?â
"We honestly thought weâd lost it while retrieving the Zenio crystal but, most probably, it must have ended up somewhere else, that was much more crowded. There was no one at all down there.â
âZak, Iâve had an idea,â said Petri standing up. "I think that if I worked on it a bit, I might be able to backtrack and trace the moment the remote control was unhooked from your belt."
"Itâs not all that important now, but I must admit I too am a little curious about it."
âGood. So first of all, letâs try and inform the Elders about our situation and as soon as we're organised a little, I'll try and retrieve this information."
âElisa,â said Azakis. "Unfortunately, the only H^COM we had was destroyed with the Theos. Would you kindly lend us the one we left you before we took off?â
"Do you mean the helmet? But of course. Iâll get it for you straight away."
"Unfortunately, the situation is serious,â whispered Azakis turning to the Colonel, as soon as Elisa had moved far enough away to be out of earshot. "Even if we do manage to contact the Elders, the chances we can get back to our own planet are virtually nil now. "
âBut canât they send someone to pick you up? Hasnât Zaneki also got a ship like yours?â
"Unfortunately, the engines installed on his ship are considerably less powerful than the ones we had on ours. Thatâs why he had to leave almost immediately after Kodonâs passage. If he hadn't, he wouldnât have been able to reach Nibiru anymore, because it was moving rapidly away. We were able to stay here much longer precisely by virtue of our experimental engines. Unfortunately, the Theos was the only ship in our fleet with that type of engine. The production and installation of two more new ones like that could take a lot of time. A lot of âourâ time."
"You mean you might have to stay here until Nibiruâs next passage?â
"Here it is," said Elisa as she came hurrying back towards them.
"Unfortunately, yes Jack," said Azakis in a whisper, as he rose to take the H^COM helmet that the archaeologist was holding out to him.
âThank you, Elisaâ said the alien as he put it on. âLetâs see if it works.â
"Actually, we tried it ourselves, but we didn't manage to talk to anyone."
"Thatâs my friendâs work," commented Azakis looking towards Petri. âNothing he does ever works.â
âNice as always,â said Petri with a serious air. "I'll remember that when you ask me to fix your bathroom.â
âOh yes,â exclaimed Elisa smiling. âI remember only too well how your bathrooms work. A truly unforgettable experience."
All four broke out into a roar of laughter at the end of which Petri slipped the helmet out of Azakisâ hands and said, "Wait, you ungrateful old thing. First, I need to change a setting. The system was programmed to call us on the poor old Theos and I donât think anybody will answer you there now.â
The alien fiddled around for a bit with the controls of the portable H^COM then, when he was satisfied with his work, he passed it back again to his companion saying "Try now. Hopefully my memory hasnât betrayed me, and Iâve been able to configure it to connect you to the right person.â
Azakis didnât doubt his friendâs memory even for one moment and put the helmet on. He pressed the start button and waited patiently. Almost a minute went by before the three-dimensional image of the bony face of his direct line Elder was projected directly onto the retina of his rather tired eyes.
âAzakis, how nice to see you,â said his white-haired contact, raising his slender right arm in greeting. "But where are you calling me from? Your picture looks a little strange and rather distorted."
"It's a long story," answered the alien. âI'm using a makeshift device for long distance communication."
"But arenât you on your ship? Donât tell me you still haven't left. You know that your time limit for reaching us has almost run out now, donât you?"
"That is exactly what I wanted to talk to you about.â He paused briefly to try and find the most appropriate words then continued saying, "Thereâs been a setback... Our spacecraftâs gone."
âGone? What do you mean?"
âIt exploded. The self-destruct system was activated, and we only just made it to safety in time, before everything exploded into thousands of pieces."
âBut only you could activate that procedure with your personal remote-control system. How could something like this happen?â asked the stunned Elder.
"Let's say there were a series of particular events, and I must have dropped it.â
"And someone else found it and activated it for you?â
"We still haven't been able to determine what really happened but that's a distinct possibility."
âAnd now? How do you plan to get back here?â
"That's exactly why we're contacting you. We could do with a nice quick solution to this little problem.â
âLittle?â replied the Elder jumping to his feet with surprising nimbleness. âDo you realize what you're saying? Your time frame is already almost at its maximum limit. You should have already left and youâre telling me that the Theos no longer exists and youâre pretty much stuck on earth. What are we supposed to do now?"
âWell, I don't really know. You're the Elders. Weâre trusting that, with your experience and your infinite wisdom, youâll be able to help us out of this unfortunate situation."
The old man sat down again, letting himself fall heavily into his soft grey chair, then he leant his elbows on the table in front of him and put his hands in his long white hair, remaining in complete silence. He remained still for a few seconds then he lifted his gaze again and said, "Iâll try summoning the Council urgently and Iâll put all our best Experts to work. I hope to be able to give you good news very soonâ and he ended the communication.
Pasadena, California â The nerd
"Is that all?" exclaimed the big, decidedly overweight guy, as he observed the strange device that the young nerd was holding in his hand. "Youâre not going to tell me that youâve made us wait more than a month just to show us this thing flashing."
"I can assure you