AntipodeanSF Issue 329

A Garden at the end of Escape

By Luke Christopher Hennessy

Astraea floated fifty kilometers above the surface of Venus, held aloft by the simplest trick in physics: air is lighter than carbon dioxide.

The city was a dirigible the size of Manhattan, stitched together with acid-resistant polymers and powered by solar energy so abundant it bordered on obscene.

It wasn’t paradise. It was survival. And it was home.

Cael and Lys were born there — second-generation cloud kids. No mutations, no enhancements. Just human beings raised in a place where stepping outside without a suit meant death by acid mist.

They were seventeen. Old enough to know better. Young enough not to care.

The Council had rules. Rules about who got to train for Earth-return missions. Rules about who stayed behind to keep the city running.

Cael had the scores. Lys had the instincts. Neither had the pedigree.

Earth was for the elite. The genetically vetted. The politically connected.

They were neither.

So they did what kids always do. They broke the rules.

The shuttle was old. A cargo hauler nicknamed Tin Widow, half-disassembled and parked in the maintenance bay like a forgotten relic.

Cael knew its systems. Lys knew its blind spots.

They spent six days rerouting power, patching hull breaches, and forging launch codes. They stole oxygen tanks, protein packs, and a digital copy of ‘I Come From A Blue Planet’ by the philosopher Eugene Mark Boyd from the library archive. He grew up on Earth.

On the seventh day, they launched.

Venus tried to kill them.

The shuttle bucked and swirled. Pressure dropped. The hull groaned. The heat shield cracked.

But they made it.

They broke through the clouds, through the gravity well, through the bureaucracy that said they didn’t belong.

They were free.

Space was quiet. Too quiet.

They drifted for weeks, rationing food, recycling water, and arguing about orbital mechanics.

Cael was methodical. Lys was impulsive. They fought. They made up. They kissed. They listened to Boyd read aloud to them in the dark.

They talked about Earth.

About forests. About rain. About freedom. They didn’t know if they’d survive re-entry. They didn’t care.

Earth was beautiful.

Blue and green and white, spinning like a promise.

The shuttle was barely holding together. The guidance system was manual. The heat shield was patched with scavenged plating.

They held hands as the sky turned to fire.

They screamed. They laughed. They rode it down like a wild ride and lived.

They woke in a forest. Real trees. Real air. Rain that didn’t burn.

The shuttle was a wreck, but they were alive.

Lys was in awe at the fresh air and tried to drink it with cupped hands and it started to rain. It was amazing.

Cael tore his suit from his torso and danced in it and they kissed in the cooling downpour.

They wandered for days, drinking from streams, eating wild berries, and dodging drones.

They found an abandoned cabin. Overgrown. Forgotten. They made it a home.

They built a garden. Learned to hunt. Learned to live. They were alone, but not lonely. They had Boyd to read to them.

Sometimes they saw satellites pass overhead. Sometimes they heard distant aircraft.

But EarthGov never found them.

They were ghosts. Myths. The cloudbreakers. Two kids who ran from the sky to find a world worth loving and in that world, they loved.

Wildly. Fiercely. On their own terms.

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About the Author

Luke Christopher Hennessy 300Luke Christopher Hennessy lives in Coffs Harbour NSW, Australia.

He has been writing stories and poetry since he was a child and has been published in anthologies and online since the 1990s. 

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Issue Contributors

Meet the Narrators

Tim Borella

tim borellaTim Borella is an Australian author, mainly of short speculative fiction published in anthologies, online and in podcasts.

He’s also a songwriter, and has been fortunate enough to have spent most of his working life doing something else he loves, flying.

Tim lives with his wife Georgie in beautiful Far

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Chuck McKenzie

chuck mckenzie 200

Chuck McKenzie was born in 1970 and still spends most of his time there. His science fiction and horror short stories have been nominated for multiple genre awards, and he hopes to one day be remembered as the sort of person neighbours later describe as seeming

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Sarah Jane Justice

Sarah Jane Justice 200Sarah Jane Justice is an Adelaide-based fiction writer, poet, musician and spoken word artist.

Among other achievements, she has performed in the National Finals of the Australian Poetry Slam, released two albums of her original music and seen her poetry

...

Brian Biswas

brian-biswasBrian Biswas lives in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.

He is the author of the short story collection,  "A Betrayal and Other Stories", published by Rogue Star Press, and the novel "The Astronomer", published by Whisk(e)y Tit Books.

A second collection, "Blister

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Merri Andrew

merri andrew 200Merri Andrew writes poetry and short fiction, some of which has appeared in Cordite, Be:longing, Baby Teeth and Islet, among other places.

She has been a featured artist for the Noted festival, won a Red Room #30in30 daily poetry challenge and was shortlisted for the

...

Carolyn Eccles

carolyn eccles 100

Carolyn's work spans devising, performance, theatre-in-education and a collaborative visual art practice.

She tours children's works to schools nationally with School Performance Tours, is a member of the Bathurst physical theatre ensemble Lingua Franca and one half of darkroom —

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Michelle Walker

michelle walker32My time at Nambucca Valley Community Radio began back in 2016 after moving into the area from Sydney.

As a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, I recognised it was definitely God who opened up the pathways for my husband and I to settle in the Valley.

Within

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Alistair Lloyd

alistair lloyd 200Alistair Lloyd is a Melbourne based writer and narrator who has been consuming good quality science fiction and fantasy most of his life.

You may find him on Twitter as <@mr_al> and online at <...

Mark English

mark english 100Mark is an astrophysicist and space scientist who worked on the Cassini/Huygens mission to Saturn. Following this he worked in computer consultancy, engineering, and high energy research (with a stint at the JET Fusion Torus).

All this science hasn't damped his love of fantasy and science fiction. It has, however, ruined his

...

Ed Errington

ed erringtonEd lives with his wife plus a magical assortment of native animals in tropical North Queensland.

His efforts at wallaby wrangling are without parallel — at least in this universe.

He enjoys reading and writing science-fiction stories set within intriguing, yet plausible contexts, and invite readers’ “willing suspension of

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Laurie Bell

lauriebell 2 200

Laurie Bell lives in Melbourne, Australia and is the author of "The Stones of Power Series" via Wyvern's Peak Publishing: "The Butterfly Stone", "The Tiger's Eye" and "The Crow's Heart" (YA/Fantasy).

She is also the author of "White Fire" (Sci-Fi) and "The Good, the Bad and the Undecided" (a

...

Emma Gill

Emma Louise GillEmma Louise Gill (she/her) is a British-Australian spec fic writer and consumer of vast amounts of coffee. Brought up on a diet of English lit, she rebelled and now spends her time writing explosive space opera and other fantastical things in

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Tara Campbell

tara campbell 150Tara Campbell is an award-winning writer, teacher, Kimbilio Fellow, fiction co-editor at Barrelhouse, and graduate of American University's MFA in Creative Writing.

Publication credits include Masters Review, Wigleaf, Electric Literature,

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Geraldine Borella

geraldine borella 200Geraldine Borella writes fiction for children, young adults and adults. Her work has been published by Deadset Press, IFWG Publishing, Wombat Books/Rhiza Edge, AHWA/Midnight Echo, Antipodean SF, Shacklebound Books, Black Ink Fiction, Paramour Ink Fiction, House of Loki and Raven & Drake

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Barry Yedvobnick

barry yedvobnick 200Barry Yedvobnick is a recently retired Biology Professor. He performed molecular biology and genetic research, and taught, at Emory University in Atlanta for 34 years. He is new to fiction writing, and enjoys taking real science a step or two beyond its known boundaries in his

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