Saturday, March 20, 2010

The Beggar And The Merchant's Daughter





The boy is always hungry.

It's a reliable part of Aza's life, the boy's hunger, like the alarm's oh-six-hundred chirruping that wakes her for morning prayer, or her father's daily grumbling at the unfairness of the circumstances that left a faithful, pious family stranded here, at the mercy of the godless brutes who owned Sahtogas, now.

Aza taps the alarm button without looking at it, nods agreement to her father without listening to him, hides a thick slice of bread and a hunk of casein protein in her pocket to slip to the boy when she sees him without thinking too hard about the fact that she's taking food from her family's table when she does it.

Her father never spends enough time in the kitchen to know how much food there should be; her mother, Aza thinks, must at least suspect.  Still, her mother keeps her eyes on the soapy dishes in the basin every morning as Aza's hand steals into the 'chiller, and there's always just a little bit extra there on the shelves.

Usually, Aza sees the boy when she steps out the back door of her father's shop to pile the empty boxes from the day's delivery in the service corridor for reclamation to pick up.  He waits for her, these days, lurking just far enough away to escape if it's Aza's father instead who opens that door. Her father threw a shoe at the boy, once, with the strong arm and good aim of a man who played daz-ball for his town in his youth, and the boy is rightfully wary.

When he sees it's Aza, the boy scoots closer, snatches the food from her outstretched hand with an expression that manages to combine hunger and disdain.  He never says thank you. Indeed, Aza thinks his manner is more that of a holder deigning to lower himself to accept a gift from an eager supplicant.   It offended her, at first, that lack of becoming gratitude, until she realized that even a poor scrap of a tunnel urchin has his dignity: acknowledging his dependence on her charity is more than he can bear.

If he has a name, he isn't willing to tell her what it is.  Aza passes idle moments in the shop speculating what it might be, or what she'd name him if it was up to her. Some days he looks like a Jered to her, especially if one of her father's occasional absences from the shop has let her sneak the boy inside to wash himself at the basin in the comfort room. A little soap and water quickly reveals the pallor of Sebiestor heritage.  Other times, sitting on the pile of boxes outside the back door with one foot tucked up, rolling a cigarette out of stubs he's scavenged, he looks exactly like a smaller, dirtier version of the portraits of Khanid the Second, and she can't think of him as anything other than Ishuniel.

He never uses her name, either, even though she's told it to him. One more way he insists on their equal footing, in those few minutes of snatched conversation in the narrow corridor, the beggar boy and the merchant's daughter.

He told her once that his father is a capsuleer. It's clearly a lie: he's not nearly young enough, for one thing, and for another, even a well-brought-up Amarr girl knows pod-pilots are infertile. Aza's mother says it's because God won't permit the abominable living dead to reproduce. Aza herself has done some reading and suspects it has something to do with the technology.

God permits a great deal, in her experience. She can't imagine He'd draw the line at capsuleers breeding like fedos.

The boy's podder paternity is, Aza suspects, like her own fervent conviction at the age of fourteen that she had been adopted and any day now her rich, beautiful, and most definitely not store-keeper real parents would appear and whisk her away from a life which already promised to have little room for anything outside cranky customers, dilatory suppliers and a dutiful marriage to a suitable boy.

The boy is not suitable, would not be even if a capsuleer father did show up to shower him with wealth. He is not pious, for one thing, and Aza suspects from his wry sideways grin when one of her mother's platitudes trips off her tongue that he's not likely to become so. And even if God filled his heart with the light of revelation, he still wouldn't be Amarr: Sebiestor and something is Aza's best guess.

The something could be pure House Sarum, and it still wouldn't change Aza's father's mind. Filthy animals is the kindest thing she's ever heard him say about the Minmatar, even before the Tribal Liberation Fleet swept through the Bleak Lands, rolled up the Crusade's resistance and became the new rulers of this and countless other systems.  Amarr bowing to Brutor, to Vherokior, to Sebiestor? It's more than just offensive to Aza's father: it breaks the rules of Divine order.

No, the boy is not and never will be suitable.  Aza knows it. The boy knows it too, legging it along the cramped corridor if a noise inside heralds interruption.  

He's always there the next day, though, with his stories of parts of the station Aza's never been, will never be.

The docks, where great pressure doors hide the vast ships of the capsuleers, where the bustling throng of crew and dockhands, people and vehicles, weave around and past each other in a chaotic dance, only to part miraculously when a man or woman with metal plugs at the back of their neck and a distant, dead-eyed stare strides through.

The euphemistically-named 'Recreation Row', a tangle of tunnels not far from the docks where scantily-clad men and women lean seductively in doorways, where fourteen different songs can be heard all at once blaring from bars, and the unwary passer-by can find themselves flattened by an unwanted customer sent flying by the impassive thugs who keep order where station security won't go.

The hollow at the station's heart where the rules of God and gravity do not run, where a single step can send you soaring through the air in a tumbling arc.

The wide corridor close to the reactors where the heat all but makes the walls themselves sweat, where the shaman on the station gather their people together for the prayers and rituals of their people, handed down through generations of exile.

Or made up on the spot, the boy says with a matter-of-factness that horrifies Aza.

No, he is not pious, even by the standards of his own heretic people.

He goes on being impious and grimy, Sebiestor and something, and always, always hungry, day after day, until the day Aza opens the back door to the shop with her foot, arms full of boxes now empty of their electronic gadgets and her pocket full of food, and he is not there.

She waits for him, as long as she dares, that day, the next, the day after.

The day after that.

It's a dangerous life, in the tunnels, living off-register. She's seen the boy's bruises, from time to time, lips cut by a fist crushing them against his teeth, eye swollen and purple and the white turned bright red from leaking blood.

It's a dangerous life, in the tunnels, and he's just a boy, not much older than she is.

She goes on taking food every morning, although her heart gives a painful shiver every time she closes her fingers around a lump of chilled protein. She goes on waiting for him, every day.

He might come back, she thinks. And if I'm not here, he'll think I've forgotten him.


And never come again.

She cries every night, in the darkness of her bedroom, face pressed to the pillow to muffle the shuddering gasp of her sobs, fists clenched so tightly her nails score bloody marks in the palms of her hands.


She keeps the face she turns to her parents carefully blank.

Her mother tells her, one day, that they have found a husband for her. Morabah Hiela, his name is, a good match, and most importantly he's from Ahala. Aza will go to live with him there. Unspoken is the fact that after a little while, she will be able to prevail on her just a little bit older new husband to bring her parents to join them.  

Yes, Mater, Aza says. Her mother takes indifference to be obedience, and kisses the top of her head. You've always been a good girl.

Aza makes herself smile, and when her mother turns back to the dishes, tucks a hunk of bread in her pocket.

The boy doesn't come for it that day, either. 

She waits for him until her father's raised voice summons her back inside.  They have customers, which is good, but these are not ones her father wants to deal with himself.  Half of them are Brutor, each Brutor taking up twice as much space as an ordinary person, heads brushing the ceiling, shoulders so wide it seems a deep breath would see them burst the walls. They loom over her father, trying to buy something in a language her father has always called jibber-jabber and refused to learn.  Aza has to take a second glance to realize there are others there as well, Sebiestor, a Vherokior, almost invisible among their giant comrades. 

All their jackets have the logo of the TLF.

It's less shameful for a girl to deal with Minmatar as equals than it is for a man, in Aza's father's way of reasoning, so as always when they have that kind of customers, Aza's father lets Aza serve them.   They want data-pads, mostly, the bulk of the family's business: it's cheaper to buy them here in the Bleaks than in more civilized places and ships' crews can be very popular with friends and family with a bag full of electronics.    Aza shows them the different types, letting her nose wrinkle with confected disdain when she takes the cheaper models out from the display case. As usual, they opt for their best-selling, mid-range model. She puts through the sales and wraps up the boxes for them, keeping her eyes on her busy hands as one particularly tall Brutor tries to get her comm ID and suggests dinner at The Mexallon Meal. 

"Leave her alone,  Alger," one of the Sebbies says. "Can't you see she's Amarr?"

Aza does look up at that, a hot retort almost on her lips. 

It dies when the young Sebiestor man with capsuleer implants on his neck smiles, and adds, "Besides, if she's hungry, I bet she has a slice of bread in her pocket."

Not Sebiestor, at that, Aza can see now. Sebiestor and something.

Her hand moves without her conscious thought, slipping into her pocket and taking out the crumbling, slightly warm hunk of bread, and she holds it out to him, to her boy, a beggar no longer.

His hand closes around hers, not to take the bread, his fingers pale and soft with clean and shining nails, and he smiles.

"This is Aza," he says, not to her, because after all she knows her own name.  "I told you about her, father."

Someone is saying something about Thank you and trying to get back here for a long time and the war. Aza thinks it must be the father, must be one of the other Sebiestor, one who also wears the mark of capsuleers on his neck. After all, he never claimed his father was a capsuleer when he was born. And they say the aptitude runs in the genes. 

She cannot tear her gaze away to turn and see, can't stop looking at the boy, her boy, taller than she'd last seen him, cleaner, too, smiling at her with his warm hand still closed around hers.

My boy. My unsuitable, beautiful boy.

For all the times she's thought about what she'd say to him if he ever came back, the words that come out of her mouth are ones she'd never planned. 

"I'm getting married," she tells him.

She doesn't expect him to smile at that, but he does. "Then you're not married yet?" he says.

Aza smiles back, shaking her head, scattering tears over the top of the display case. "No," she says. "I'm not married yet."

"I have to go back to Ammold," he tells her. "I've only just started my training. I have to go back tomorrow."

She wants to die, then, wants the station to explode, wants the sun to go nova, wants the whole Cluster to convulse and suck itself through a wormhole into the impossible space beyond. The bread crumbles in her hand, and she takes a deep breath and manages to say on a rush of tears, "I will miss you."

His hand tightens on hers. "Come with me."

To Ammold, deep in Republic space.  With a capsuleer, damned for eternity.  "I can't."

"Aza," he says, with that familiar, sideways grin. "I can steer ships with my thoughts. You can do anything, if you put your mind to it."

The last crumbs slip from her fingers and patter gently to the floor.

"Goodbye," she says, and the boy's smile fades, and then returns at full wattage when she adds, "Pater. I'll write."

Aza steps around the counter, holding the boy's hand tightly in hers. Her father's protest dies away half-spoken as the hulking Brutor close around her.

"Don't be frightened," the boy says to her. "It'll be fine, I promise."

It will be many things, Aza knows already. Terrifying, dangerous, wonderful, lonely, exciting, nerve-wracking, amazing  ...

It will not be fine.

They are outside the shop. 

They are walking down the corridor in the direction of the docks. 

They are already further from home than Aza has ever been. 

Aza holds the hand of her beautiful boy and goes into exile without looking back. 


Friday, March 12, 2010

Conversations on the Fortune's Firefly: Nineteen

"Camille," Sella Rammiode said. "Should you be doing that?"

The little girl's feet in their bright green boots - the only part of her not hidden by the control console of the simulator - wiggled. "Yes!" she said. "I should!"

Sella crouched down and peered under the console. "And what exactly is the that that you're doing?"

"Fixing the inertial compensators!"

"I didn't know they were broken," Sella said.

"They aren't broken!" Camille said. "They're just not sensitive enough!"

"Uh-huh," Sella said. She lowered herself onto her back and pulled herself under the console to lie side-by-side with Camille. "How sensitive should they be?"

Camille turned her head and grinned. "So your stomach goes whoosh!"

Sella couldn't help smiling. "Most pilots don't want their stomachs to go whoosh, Cami."

"Most pilots don't know how to have fun with a ship!" Camille said.

"Mmmhmm," Sella said, studying the wiring Camille was working on. "You know, we did talk about how you weren't going to make any changes to the hardware without talking to me about it first."

"Um," Camille said, studying the wiring intently.

"Camille," Sella said. "Didn't we talk about that? It was one of Pilot's rules, wasn't it? For you having this sim set up here in the hangar in the first place."

"Well," Camille said. "This doesn't count. It's not really hardware."

Sella had to turn her head to hide her smile. "I think it maybe is really hardware, Camille."

"Oh."  The little girl stared at the wiring, biting her lip. "You don't have to tell Cia, do you?"

"Mmnm.  Well," Sella said. "How about if I check over what you've done and we make a deal that next time you really will remember to talk to me first. I mean, I'm your engineer, right? Real pilots would never make systems changes without telling their engineers about it."

"Oh," Camille said thoughtfully.

"You sister wouldn't,"  Sella said, pressing her advantage. "And Captain Night certainly wouldn't. If you ask him, I bet that's what he'd tell you."

Camille narrowed her eyes. "I will ask him, you know."

Sella smiled. "You do that, Cami. And now, let's have a look at what you've done here."

Drones, I expected, Sella thought as she studied the wiring. Warp cores, afterburners, juggling grids ... all part of the chief engineer's job. 


But void take me and spit me out, I never expected to be making a simulator more 'whooshy' for an eight year old kid.


"Hold that for me, Cami, will you?" Cross-link that and maybe ... "There we go. That should work."

"Thanks, Sella!"

Sella wriggled out from under the console. "No problem, sweetness.  I don't mind giving you a hand, so long as you ask first, okay?"

And strangely enough, Sella found she didn't mind, much as she'd thought she would when Pilot installed the simulator and told her that its safety was the chief engineer's personal responsibility.

The Cluster, Sella thought, it's a funny old place.


Not a bad one.


Just ... unexpected. 



Thursday, March 11, 2010

An Acquired Taste

It was yellow and it was almost round and it smelt a little bit like the laundry powder Eli's mother used to use, and a little bit like the juice Jules used to insist on for breakfast.

But better than either.

Capitaine Elienne Desorlay looked from the object that had just appeared on her desk to the man who'd put it there, and back. "What is it?"

Lieutenant  Charles Etay smiled at her, bland and innocent. "It's a rimpon."

"Baise moi." Eli sniffed again. Yes, definitely laundry.  Maybe with a little bit of that flavoring they put in the double-price coffee at that place on Rue Gervain. "And what's a rimpon when it's at home?"

"It's a fruit," Etay said calmly.

Eli snorted. "I can see it's a fucking fruit, farmboy. Where did you get it?"  Merde, there's some sort of fruit black-market and Charlie's the mastermind. It's the only explanation.


Etay pulled out the chair from his desk and turned it around, sinking into it to rest his arms on her desk and his chin on his arms, staring at the golden not-quite-globe with a faint smile. "Someone gave it to me."

"Someone gave you a rinpond," Eli said flatly.

"Rimpon," he corrected. "Yes."

"For what?" Eli eyed him suspiciously. "You selling that fine body of yours for produce, farmboy?"

The smile turned into a laugh, almost soundless. "She said I was too pretty for her."

Eli poked the rimpon with one finger. "I bet you don't hear that too often."

"No," Charlie admitted.  "Not too often."

"So she gave you this as a consolation prize? Who's she, anyway?"

"Amieta.  And I think it was more of a reward," Etay said thoughtfully. "Or something."

Eli narrowed her eyes. "Reward? For what?"

Etay shrugged. ""Dunno. I got her sister to confess to murder and arrested her CTO on an outstanding warrant, and she gave me that."

Now it makes sense. "Have you tested it? For poison?"

"Poison?" Etay said, sounding shocked. "She wouldn't poison it, Eli. It's fruit!"

"Fortune fuck me and save me from innocent boys," Eli picked up her handset. "Yeah, connect me through to the lab. I have a - "

Etay reached out one long arm and pushed the button to cut the connection. "There won't be anything left of it by the time they run their tests. Or at least, that's what they'll tell us. And it isn't poisoned." He smiled. "Amieta wouldn't do that, Eli. She'd just throw me out an airlock or something. And not waste the rimpon."

"Uh-huh."  Eli folded her arms. "Well, you eat it then."

He picked up the rimpon in one hand and studied it. "I will."

Eli shook her head. "I'll make sure and tell a lot of nice lies about you at your funeral. So, you made a couple of arrests? They must be happy with you upstairs."

"One arrest," Etay corrected. "And I don't think they're miserable, no."

"One?" Eli asked. "You said ... what, the sister was the CTO too?"

"The CTO is a CTO," Etay said. "Sarakai Voutelen, you can look her up. Warrant made out, oh, years ago.  Nasty little incident at a colony. Lot of deaths."

"And that's who you went looking for?"

Etay shook his head, smiling. "No. M'selle Voutelen was a bonus. Like the rimpon. No, I was looking for the sister. M'selle Ciarente Roth."

Eli scratched her nose. "And you found her."

Etay tossed the rimpon into the air and caught it. "Yeah."

Fortune fuck me, it's like getting Jules to tell me about his day at school. "And she confessed, this Ciarente Roth."

Etay nodded.

"But you didn't arrest her."

"No." Etay's gaze traveled from the rimpon to Eli, and then back. "She's a podder."

"Baise moi."


"Exactly."  Etay set the fruit down.

"And you met her? The podder?"

"I did."

There were a dozen questions that Eli knew she should be asking. Questions like What fucking murder, farmboy? and Is this connected to all those files from the University of Caille? But ordinary human curiosity won over all of them.  "What was she like, when you met her?"

The corner of Etay's mouth twitched up. "She had a whole bowl of apples on her kitchen counter."

"Well, sure," Eli said. "Podders are rich, aren't they? Like, crazy rich?"

"Guess so."  

"So," Eli said, and shrugged.  "I'd have a whole bowl of apples on my kitchen counter, if I was crazy rich.  I'd have a kitchen counter big enough for a bowl, too. So what was she like besides rich?"

"Not what I expected," Etay said thoughtfully.

"What did you expect, then?'

He gave her a rueful smile. "You know. Like the holos. Master of the cluster? Or mistress, I suppose.  Guns and dangerous stares and so on. But she was ... "

"What?"

Etay shrugged. "Soft. Gentle, you know?"

Uh oh. Eli hadn't raised three sons without knowing the signs. "Pretty?"

Etay shrugged again, but his fair complexion betrayed him, the faint color clear in his cheeks. "I suppose you could say that. I didn't really notice."

"Sure you didn't," Eli said dryly. "Very pretty?"

"I guess." Etay looked intently at the rimpon, rolling it back and forth with one finger.

"Mmmhmm." Eli folded her arms. "Farmboy. This woman, this capsuleer. She might look sweet, like that rimpon. But she's poison."

"Rimpon isn't sweet," Etay corrected her. "An acquired taste, I was told. Some people eat them with sugar." He picked up the fruit and studied it. "And Ciarente Roth is just a girl, Eli."

"Charlie," Eli said flatly. "She's a podder."

"She's still just a girl," Etay told the rimpon.

Just a girl, yeah, right. Fortune fuck me, there's no way this ends well.


She looked at him, SCID's literal and figurative golden-haired boy, slouched in his chair with the easy grace of a man who'd never made a clumsy movement in his life, and her heart ached the way it had when she'd found Tomas crying in the cupboard beneath the stairs and had no good answer for his tearful question But Maman, why doesn't Jacques like me the way I like him?


Pretty as he was, her farmboy had nothing to catch a podder's jaded glance, used to the best eye candy the cluster could offer, and better for him that it's so, bad as that'll hurt.  The air was thin where capsuleers lived, up in the rarefied heights, too thin for mere mortals to breathe long and live. 


Oh, Charlie.  


Why did she have to be pretty?


The silence stretched out, thinner and thinner, until finally Eli shook her head, and sighed.


"What?" Etay asked.


Eli nodded at the rimpon. "Are you going to eat all of that?"  she asked.


Etay gave her a small, slow smile. "You want some?"


"We're partners, aren't we?" Eli said. "What's yours is mine."


Etay nodded. "That's the rules," he said.

"That's the rules," Eli agreed.

What's yours is mine, all right, she thought as Etay turned back to his desk and rummaged in a drawer for a knife. 

What's yours is mine.


Poisoned fruit, podders and all.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

An Excellent Day

Lieutenant Charles Etay carefully wiped the last of the beard-suppressant cream from his neck and dropped the towelette in the waste-chute.

The spotted glass of the unbreakable but not unrustable mirror showed him a grey version of himself, pocked with brown.  Charlie smoothed his hair and made a note to tell Eli in his next message that, at least in the Lustrevik Local Lease hotel, he was no longer too pretty to be a policeman.

He hoped Eli had enjoyed the orange he'd given her as a part-bribe, part-apology for leaving her to cover their caseload alone while he was on the other side of the Cluster.

Of course she enjoyed it, he thought as he took the single step that took him out of the 'fresher. It's an orange.


He had to step up onto the bed to make enough room to close the 'fresher door, and he had to bend double as he did so to avoid cracking his head on the roof of the room. The mirror in the 'fresher was the only one, and it wasn't big enough to show him more than half his face at a time, but from what he could see when he looked down at himself the mattress had done a better job of pressing his shirt and suit over night than it had of giving him a decent night's sleep. His shoes were as polished as paper towelette and water could make them, and his nails were clean.


Good as it gets, given the circumstances.


He could have afforded a better room, even a better hotel.  Selling the second of the two oranges from his carefully nurtured tree, or tree-let, really, had netted him enough for a return Interbus ticket to Heimatar and a fair bit left over, but a more expensive room would have meant fewer nights here.

It would be another year before he had two more oranges to trade and to sell: Charlie intended to make the most of things while he was here.

Perhaps it wouldn't be too much longer.  The Caldari podder who said she wasn't a pilot,  Amieta Invelen, had said she'd talk to the pilot he was interested in. Her sister, although Charlie knew every relative Ciarente Roth had and none of them were Caldari.  

No promises, Amieta'd said. But I'll see what I can do. Get it over with, see what I can do to get you off the station as quickly as possible.


And promised him a rimpon, as well. If things work out okay.

As respectable as he could make himself, Lieutenant Charles Etay tucked what was left of his meager bankroll in an inside pocket, locked the flimsy door behind him, and headed down the corridor towards the docks.


A possible end to his investigation, and fruit as well.

There was every chance it was going to be an excellent day.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Priceless

He wasn't that old, for an old man.

In fact, he wasn't that old at all, despite the layers of wool that wrapped his skinny limbs, the half-moon glasses either propped on the end of his slightly bulbous nose or being fussily polished on the end of his scarf , the endless supply of cough lozenges tucked away in a waist-coat pocket, and the hunch-shouldered posture that spoke of decades hunched over books and terminals.


That Micha Krenshaw, they used to say when he was a gangly child, already so short-sighted he had to hold a book right at the end of his nose to read it, born fifty years old.


Which, Micha reckoned to himself as he hoisted his satchel a little higher on his shoulder and pushed through the crowd at the Interbus terminal, made him nearly eighty now.

"Watch where'ya goin', grandpa!" snapped a girl with this year's fashion of lime-green eye-shades and hair a brilliant chartreuse as the jostling crowd pushed them together.

"Sorry, terribly sorry," Micha said hastily, clutching his bag more tightly. Not that a petty thief would find anything in it worth their time and trouble - the data pad was one of the cheapest, the information stored on the dozens of memory sticks worth nothing to any corporate spy, the personal belongings stuffed down the bottom the sort sold at stalls at every Interbus hub.

If only they knew, Micha thought to himself.

To those who understood, the contents of that bag were  priceless.

He pushed his way through the crowd until it spat him out at the front of the terminal.  Although he'd memorized the directions he'd been given word-for-word, they had been less than precise, and it was forty minutes and several wrong turns later that Micha found himself outside the red door with the green crescent that he'd been told was his destination.

His satchel held protectively against his chest, Micha pressed the buzzer by the door.

The door hissed open almost immediately and Micha found himself looking down at a woman so short he thought for a second he'd stumbled into one of the old stories about the little people.

When she spoke, though, the flat twang of her pure Ohkunun accent put paid to any fanciful thoughts. "Mr Krenshaw?" Her gaze settled on the bag he held. "Is that it? You brought it?"

"Yes," Micha said, trying to sound matter-of-fact,but unable to keep a note of pride out of his voice.

"Come in! Come in!"  She took his arm, urging him over the threshold, raising her voice to call out, "He's here! Mr Krenshaw is here! Everyone, he's here! And he brought it!"

The house was small, even by local standards, small and crowded. Micha stood motionless in the middle of the front room, trying not to knock over any of the piles of papers and datachips stacked on tables, chairs, shelves, even on the floor in places, as the room rapidly filled with people. Introductions were hastily made, Micha filing the names away with the ease of long practice. Luisa is Little, Das is Dark haired, Khoratay looks Choleric ...


He knew they didn't care if he remembered their names, of course. The introductions were a necessary formality, a brief nod to social expectations, as were the inquiries about his journey, his health, and whether he'd like a cup of tea.  No-one in the room could keep their gaze from his satchel, not for very long, even if they were too polite to ask.

Finally, he interrupted them. "Do you want to see it?"

"Yes!" Das cleared room on the table, shoving books and papers aside recklessly, as Luisa hastily pulled a chair over.

Micha opened his satchel and took out his data pad, setting it on the table. Everyone crowded around him, peering over his shoulder, as he flicked the power-on button and tapped keys to bring up the file.

The display glowed to life, the image slowly forming as the data pad's old and well-worn circuitry struggled to initialize.

The woman in the picture was clearly very old, her eyes a pale, milky blue and her skin papery thin.  Micha touched another key and her faded, crackly voice whispered out of the speakers.

"Are you sure you want to waste your time with this?" she asked.

Micha mouthed yes as, off-screen, his recorded voice gave the same response.

"Well, all right then. This story was told to me by my grandmother, who heard it from her grandfather. It's about a girl who had a brother, and, being a man, he was the sort to have his head turned by every pretty face he saw. Probably just like you, huh? Anyway, one day he was out walking and he saw ..."

It took an effort to look away from the screen, even after the tenth viewing, but Micha turned in his chair. No-one noticed - everyone else in the room was staring at the data pad with rapt attention.

"It's the Golden Cow!" Das said in awe.  "You found the story of the Golden Cow! In Domain!"

The other members of the New Eden Folkloric Society murmured amazed agreement.

Micha smiled, permitting himself just a moment of smugness.

He had been right.

Priceless.

Monday, March 1, 2010

Conversations On The Fortune's Firefly: Eighteen

"Should you be doing that?"

Nerila finished fitting the new filter into the scrubber-drone and flicked the power switch before she looked up. Pilot stood watching her, arms tightly folded across her stomach and an upright line of worry between her blue eyes.

"I'm not sick," Nerila pointed out, setting the drone down and getting to her feet. "And it's not exactly heavy lifting, is it?"

"I guess not," Pilot said, her voice softer than usual.

The scrubber ran industriously into the nearest wall and stuck there, whining.   Nerila sighed, and nudged it in the right direction with her foot. "Can we maybe take this conversation as read, Pilot? I have to herd these little fuckers all the way around to Section C before shift change."

Pilot watched the drone as it found a smudge of grease on the floor and started polishing it away, the low note of its engine changing tone to a happier-sounding hum. "As read?"

"Yeah, you know. You're going to ask me if I've changed my mind, I'm going to tell you I haven't, you're going to ask me to wait another day and since you're the one the marines at the security checkpoint answer to, I'm going to let you pretend you're not keeping me locked up here and say, okay, Pilot, one more day. Right?"

"Oh."  The blue eyes showed hurt now, as well as worry, and Nerila looked away and then forced herself to look back. It's not like I care if her feelings are hurt, is it?  

"So let's not, and say we did, all right?"  Another scrubber got itself struck on lip of the section seal, and Nerila dislodged it with her toe and then started down the corridor after it, at the ambling pace she'd found kept her just about in sync with the drones.

Pilot turned and fell into step beside her. Shit.  Nerila glanced down at her, about to say Fuck off already, and swallowed it back as the shift in light showed her for the first time how dark the shadows beneath Pilot's eyes had gotten.

She opened her mouth to ask, How are you feeling? or You not sleeping well? or Let's make an appointment for you, Pilot.  Swallowed all those back as well.


It's not like I care, is it?


"It's not what I was going to say, anyway," Pilot said quietly.  "It's, you know. Dr Iorthan said, with the dates and everything."

"I thought that was your plan," Nerila said.  "One more day, Nerila, one more -  for another six months, maybe?"

"No," Pilot said, softly but firmly.

"No? You're so fucking sure you know what I ought to be doing, isn't it?" Nerila kicked one of the drones forward harder than necessary and Pilot winced as it bounced off a wall with an indignant bleep. "Changed your mind?"

"No," Pilot said again, the same quiet certainty in her voice. "But if you're not going to change yours, not much I can do, really, is there?"  She looked up at Nerila. "You don't really think I'd keep you locked up for the rest of the time, do you, like some sort of ... breeding stock?"

Well, no, Nerila had to admit, if only to herself. I didn't really think she would.

"It's not what I'd do," Pilot went on. "'And not what I think you'd do, if things were ... different. But whatever you chose, you know I'll do what I can to make it easy on you. Right?"

"So I can make the appointment?" Nerila asked. "Security will let me out of the hangar?"

"Oh, you don't need to go anywhere," Pilot said. "I checked with Dr Iorthan and there's no reason you can't have the termination in medical here."

"Right," Nerila said.

"We could go now, if you want," Pilot went on.  She stooped to coax one of the little scrubber drones forward to keep up with the others.

"I can't go now," Nerila said immediately. "I have to get this done."

"Later, then. After shift change," Pilot suggested, straightening again.

Nerila shook her head. "Medical runs main-and-alterday shifts like everybody else. Night shift's no time for elective procedures."

"Mmmhmm," Pilot said. "Then I should get security to escort you around to station medical after all. Straight after shift-change suit you?"

"Sure," Nerila said. "But, you know, there's no need to put security to the trouble. I can go up to medical tomorrow, maybe."

"Tomorrow?"


Nerila shrugged. "A day's not going to make any real difference, is it?"

Pilot nudged one of the drones with her foot. "It isn't?"

"Nah."  Nerila took another clean filter from her belt pack and knelt down as a scrubber dashed over to her, beeping piteously.  "Just a day, after all."

"Sure," Pilot said. She knelt down beside Nerila and picked up the drone, holding it for Nerila to change the filter. "Just a day."

"That's right." The filter snapped in neatly and Pilot let the scrubber go. Nerila watched it race off to join the others as they polished their way along the corridor, leaving the floor pale and clean behind them.


She turned to meet Pilot's level gaze. "Just a day, Pilot. That's all."

"Sure," Pilot said again.  She got to her feet and held out her hand. "Not like it makes any real difference."

Nerila hesitated, and then put her hand in Pilot's, her own long, square-tipped fingers a dark contrast to Pilot's pale, clone-soft skin.  Soft or not, Nerila thought, as Pilot pulled her to her feet, stronger than you'd expect.


"Thanks," she muttered, taking her hand back.

Pilot smiled a little. "You're welcome, Nerila," she said softly.  "You're welcome."