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Sophia McDougall: Mars Evacuees

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Sophia McDougall Mars Evacuees

Mars Evacuees: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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The fact that someone had decided I would be safer on Mars, where you could still only SORT OF breathe the air and SORT OF not get sunburned to death, was a sign that the war with the aliens was not going fantastically well. I’d been worried I was about to be told that my mother’s spacefighter had been shot down, so when I found out that I was being evacuated to Mars, I was pretty calm. And despite everything that happened to me and my friends afterwards, I’d do it all again. because until you’ve been shot at, pursued by terrifying aliens, taught maths by a laser-shooting robot goldfish and tried to save the galaxy, I don’t think you can say that you’ve really lived. If the same thing happens to you, this is my advice: .

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I was appalled. ‘What?’ I cried. ‘Oh my God!’ And I actually started a little out of my seat as if I could run back to Earth and get it for her.

She seemed much less worried than I was. ‘Oh well. It only had clothes in it.’

‘But – what, you’ve got nothing?’

She looked reproachful. ‘There was a lot going on,’ she said. ‘And no, I didn’t forget anything important.’ Now I saw there was a large shoulder bag slumped open on the seat beside her, the stuff inside it on the point of spilling out. So she began to take things out of it and set them on the table between us.

‘This is all you’ve got in the entire world?’

She shrugged, vastly. The shrug went all the way to the tips of her fingers and up into her hair. ‘We’re not in the world any more.’

She had: a battered tablet, which was almost the only thing that had an obvious point. A tangle of string. A magnifying glass. A gold wire star that looked as if it came from a Christmas tree. A harmonica. A square silk scarf. A thick roll of duct tape. A little round silver bottle. A small patchwork cushion, which might have started out as dark red but was now mainly grey and worn. A tiny wooden sculpture of a cat. And lots of stones, some with holes in them.

‘You have rocks,’ I pointed out. ‘In your bag. Which you’re taking into outer space. Rocks. And no clothes or a toothbrush.’

She stared at me blankly as if this was what everyone should be doing.

I did some minor flailing and said, ‘You can borrow things of mine.’

She seemed surprised, and sort of amused. ‘That’s nice of you. You don’t even know my name yet.’

‘Oh,’ I said, flustered by this point. ‘Well.’

‘It’s Josephine Jerome. Have a ginger biscuit.’

She shook a packet of them at me. Well, that was one more thing I could see the point of. ‘Alice,’ I said.

Any of my clothes would be too big on her though, I thought, looking at her. She was small and black and spindly with a pointy chin and a wide bulgy forehead. She had an explosive cloud of hair, held tightly back from her face with grips, and her large starey eyes gave her the look of being in a mild state of shock the whole time. Though just then, it occurred to me, she actually might have been.

‘What happened?’ I asked her. ‘How come you were all so late? And you’re English – why weren’t you on the same flight with us?’

Josephine slotted her thumb through the hole in one of the stones. ‘We should have been. But, uh, there were some shockray hits in London yesterday. Everything shut down.’

‘In London ?’ I said, shocked, and angry no one had told us. Despite everything the Morrors got up to, direct attacks on major cities were pretty rare. They were more about freezing everything over and zapping the hell out of anyone who tried to stop them.

Josephine nodded grimly and gripped the stone more tightly. ‘They could flatten the whole city if they wanted; they must just want people to leave . And now we are.’

I was quiet. It hadn’t quite struck me before that at this rate the whole of Britain would probably be gone by the time I came back to Earth, if I ever did.

‘So the flight out from Belgium got diverted to pick us up. Anyway, we made it in the end. And they’ll have toothbrushes,’ she added, reassuringly. ‘They couldn’t expect us to use the same ones for years and years, could they?’

At this point we were interrupted by a demonstration of what to do if the spaceship came under attack or got into an accident (though clearly the real answer was: die). And then a man came round with a register to make sure they’d got all the right people, although it was a bit late to do anything about it if they hadn’t.

‘Alice Dare,’ I said, after Josephine had given her name.

The crewman’s eyes lifted slowly from his tablet and he looked at me. He said doubtfully, ‘Alistair…?’

ALICE . DARE!’ I said, possibly rather loudly. Now, I did once know a boy called Lauren so anything is possible, but I do NOT look as if my name should be Alistair. I was wearing a skirt and as well as the pink streaks in my hair, I also had some glitter.

I always speak very clearly too, so the reason this keeps happening is that people do not listen.

A few people looked around at us and the crewman grimaced and moved on quickly.

‘I think you scared him,’ said Josephine, grinning, and she leaned forwards to study me quite blatantly in a way that some people might think a little rude. ‘Dare, huh,’ she said. ‘No relation…?’

I thought, I’ve got one second to say no and come up with a whole new identity and maybe not have to deal with any of that she-thinks-she’s-so-special-because-of-her-mum stuff . And then I realised I hadn’t got that long at all, because immediately Josephine said, ‘ Ohhh …’ and sat back in her seat with her eyes even wider than usual. In a lower voice she asked, ‘What’s that like?’

I sighed. ‘It’s like nothing at all,’ I said. ‘I haven’t seen her in over a year.’

‘But that’s why you’re here,’ she went on, relentlessly. ‘Too demoralising if people heard the Morrors got you. They’d never look at that poster the same way again.’

‘Yes, well,’ I said, rather irritably. ‘What are you in for?’

‘Oh…’ said Josephine, biting her lip. ‘I sort of… well, there was this exam, and… not that they told us why they were setting it, but…’

We looked at each other and grinned sort of shiftily. And I knew we were both thinking that there just wasn’t a reason to be chosen for this ship that wasn’t kind of dodgy and unfair, whether it was doing well in an exam or having a famous mum or even being chosen at random (because that was the other way they did it). But there wasn’t a lot we could do about it. We were twelve.

‘Is it true your mum’s seen a Morror?’ asked Josephine, because except for some singed tentacles that had been picked out of a wreck in Minnesota, and some bits of what might have been a head found floating in the Pacific, no one had seen a Morror back then. They were really good at staying invisible even when they were dead.

‘No. She’s got this… sense about them – you know, it’s been on the news. Sometimes she says it’s as if she can see their ships, like she forgets they’re invisible. But she doesn’t know what they look like or anything.’

‘I thought so,’ Josephine said. She put down her stone and looked at her collection of objects on the table for a moment, wriggling her fingers absently in the air. She picked up the bottle. ‘This is a Morror ship, right? The invisibility shield guides light all the way round it.’ She slid her forefinger over the silver surface. ‘But maybe some does scatter off. Maybe your mum is sensitive to some wavelength of light most people can’t pick up consciously.’

I thought about this. Most people – Mum included, actually – seemed to think her special Morror-finding sense was practically magic. I never said so, but secretly I had always assumed it was just good luck. I liked the idea of it being something science-y like that instead. It made it seem more likely it would go on working.

‘What’s in the bottle?’ I asked.

She squirreled the bottle away back into the bag and answered, ‘Perfume.’

I wondered why someone who evidently didn’t care about clothes at all cared about perfume, but I didn’t press it. Maybe it was her mum’s or something.

She had another look at me, and grinned again. ‘You like pink, huh?’

Yes ,’ I said, a little menacingly, because I thought she might be laughing at me.

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