
Alien Secrets by Annette Klause, 1993.
Robin Goodfellow, nicknamed Puck (her parents were fond of Shakespeare), is a human girl from Earth in the future. When the story begins, she has been kicked out of boarding school on Earth and is traveling by space ship to join her parents, who are scientists who have been working on another planet. They left Robin with her grandmother on Earth, who enrolled her in an English boarding school in order to give her some discipline and some friends her own age, but she was expelled for failing her classes (not to mention throwing a fit and burning her books when she discovered that she had failed). Puck dreads what her parents will say when she arrives on the planet where they are now living because they had always hoped that Puck would also become a scientist and work with them, but this journey will change Puck’s life.
Before the ship she will be traveling on leaves Earth, Robin witnesses a man attacking someone else, possibly killing him. Robin does not report the attack because she doesn’t know whether or not the other person was killed, and she doesn’t think that anyone will believe her anyway. She witnessed this attack while sneaking around a place where she wasn’t supposed to be, and she is being sent to her parents in disgrace after being expelled, so she doesn’t sound like a very credible witness. However, the man in the fight, Mizzer Cubuk (“Mizzer” is how they say “Mister” in the book), turns out to be traveling on the same ship as Puck. All Puck can think of to do is to try to avoid him on the ship and hope that he didn’t get a very good look at her after she ran away from his fight.
To Puck’s surprise, the captain of the ship she is traveling on, Captain Cat Biko, asks her if she could make friends with an alien who is also traveling on the ship. The alien is one of the Shoowa, who were enslaved by another group of aliens called the Grakk. Now, he is free and finally traveling home to Aurora, the same planet where Puck is going. The captain feels sorry for him and thinks that he might appreciate a friend and that he might find a human child less intimidating than an adult.
Later, Puck and other passengers are woken out of their sleep by the sounds of wailing and moaning. One of the women on board, Leesa, says that she saw something that looked like a ghost that walked straight through her. Other people, who didn’t see or hear it, assume that it was nightmares or imagination, but Puck knows that it wasn’t. One of the crew members, Michael, tells Puck that there have been rumors that the ship is haunted and that other people have seen and heard strange things.
Strange things are happening on the ship, and some of the passengers seem to be hiding something. Who can Puck trust, and who isn’t who they seem to be?
The alien who is traveling on board the ship understands Puck’s feeling of failure. The alien, called Hush, says that he carries shame because he lost something important, something that his people were counting on him to take home to their planet. Puck and Hush discuss how people from Earth had fought the Grakk and sought to learn about Grakk technology from Shoowa slaves who were freed after the war. Even the ship they are now traveling on was once a Grakk ship. The Earth people kept delaying sending the slaves home because they wanted to pump them for more information and because they were trying to decide if they could really trust them more than the Grakk. After negotiating with the Earth people about returning home, the Earth people agreed, with some provisions. They arranged for some of the Shoowa to stay on the Grakk home planet, still working with humans. Some of them would travel on ships with Earth people, and some others could go home to their own planet. Hush is the first one to head home, and he was entrusted carrying home an important symbol of his people that his family had protected for generations: a statue that represents a child because children are the future and a source of freedom, according to an ancient Shoowa prophecy. Unfortunately, the statue was stolen from Hush before he could return it to its rightful home. He reported the theft to the Earth security personnel at the station, but they didn’t take him seriously. They thought that he probably just lost it by accident.
The haunting is real in this book. On a tour of the ship, Puck learns that the ship’s navigator has also seen the ghost aliens. One of the characteristics of a ship’s navigator is the ability to see hyperspace, something that not everyone has the ability to do, although even scientists in Puck’s future time don’t seem to know why some people can do that and others can’t. Slowly, it becomes evident that people who are able to see hyperspace are also able to see the ghosts.
On the journey to Aurora, Puck also learns that she is one of the rare people who are able to see hyperspace, giving her a possible future in navigating a space ship, something that she would really enjoy learning. When she arrives at Aurora and is greeted by her parents, who have missed her while they were apart, Puck also comes to realize that her parents will always love her, even in spite of failing her classes. Even Hush’s people tell him that, although they are happy to have the statue back, his safe arrival was always the most important thing, and they wanted him to come home, whether he successfully brought the statue or not. Both Hush and Puck come to realize that their families will always love and value them even with their imperfections and failings. With parents who love her and a new vision of the future ahead of her, Puck is ready to make a new life on Aurora.
The book is available to borrow and read for free online through Internet Archive.




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