9
Interlude:
A Morning On The Third Moon
BrTl and
Dohra were having breakfast together: Trff had got up very early and gone over
to Didg’s ship, since yesterday’s preliminary look at the blobs had revealed
there was a lot of work to do there.
“Shuha
hu-ectuh uh,” noted BrTl through his meaty and substantial breakfast.
“Pardon?”
replied Dohra weakly.
He
swallowed. “You should have expected it.” She looked blank. “What you were
thinking about just then: that story of S-Fl’Chuyilleea’s that embarrassed you.
The average Flppu mind’s rather like...” He sought for a simile, and failed.
Then he caught sight of Dohra’s steaming mug. “Steaming-spaceport-muck. Why in
Federation did you order that? Ya do know what it’s like!”
“I was
cold,” she said timidly. BrTl of course had loped down the tubes and tunnels
from the pod, and her FW pack hadn't coped too well with the combination of the
gale of his passing and the minimal o-breather mixture on Level Green, which
was almost entirely devoted to tran-blob trains transporting luggage or
freight, and much larger bubble-trains—cosy bubble-trains—transporting
o-breather beings between ships or levels or both.
“Oh—sorry.
But those bubble-trains aren’t as cosy as all that.”
“Um, no. Um, it’s a pretty green, though,” she
offered.
BrTl
brightened. “Yes, isn’t it pretty! Not a
green, though: all different shades of green! What’s the word… No, not splodgy,
Dohra. Um… variegated!” he produced proudly. “I know you wouldn’t call it that,
but that’s because you can only see four shades of green in it,” he added
complacently.
“Well, how
many are there?”
BrTl began
to count. Finally he said: “At least thirty-five. I can’t name them in
Intergalactic but I could tell you the words for them in my Slaetho-Xathpyrian
dialect.—Ignore that,” he said cheerfully as she glanced dubiously at her
translator. “Special Offer.—Shall I?”
“Yes,
please.”
BrTl began
listing shades of green. They came over as Slaetho-Xathpyrian, all right.
Eventually a frilled Maudur got up from the next table and came over and said
politely: “I say, xathpyroid cognate, would you mind awfully not making that
noise at breakfast? We’ve got an Old One with us and it’s disturbing it.”
“Oh—sorry,
Young Maudur. No offence meant—got carried away, listing the shades of green on
Level Green.”
“None taken.
We feel the same about Level Red, in fact the Old One’s been kicking up a fuss
about being on Level Pink, even though most of us can see a fair number of
shades here, too. But its eyesight’s failing a bit, y’see?” And with a friendly
shake of its elbow frills, it returned to its table.
“Which would
be the Old One?” said Dohra in a very low voice.
“Huh? Oh,
haven’t you seen a Maudur before? They are more impressive in real life than on
the Services, yeah. Well, to me the Old Ones look like younger ones: they’re
smaller and sort of, uh, not so wrinkled in the area of the head and neck. Look
sort of peeled. Well, they are peeled, I suppose you’d say: they shed layers of
their skin when they age.”
“That smooth
one?”
“In the red
and white clingo-jamas, yeah.”
“More a
clingo-suit,” she said firmly.
“Whatever
blobs you up. Oh, you have to call the adults ‘Young’ if you’re being polite.”
“I noticed
that.” Dohra looked cautiously at the Old One again. “How thick is their skin?”
“Uh…” His
glance fell on her plate. “About twice the thickness of that grapefruit’s
skin.”
“That’s a
lot to lose.”
“Mm?
Oh—yeah.” He finished his basin of spring water and reported aggrievedly: “I
think that Meanker spiked my qwlot with nnru juice yesterday afternoon.”
“Yeah? What
did he spike your nnru juice with, BrTl?” retorted Dohra.
He gave a
bark of laughter and hurriedly stopped: the Old One at the next table had
fallen off its chair. Very sorry! he
sent.
That’s all right! replied the members of
its extended yoggr valiantly. It’s
brightened it up!
“Is a yoggr
like an affinity group?” he asked thoughtfully.
“What? Oh,
is that a Maudur group? Um, I think it would be. I know they’re not mammals,
and I don’t think they’re marsupials…They’re very pretty,” she said in a
lowered voice.
“You like
frills, do you?” he said tolerantly. “Like on that Meanker’s head, if I remember rightly,” he added,
less tolerantly.
“Yes, um, I
just like the look of them! –I wonder why they like red so much when they’re
those lovely shades of tan themselves?”
“I like
green, and I’m not green,” he noted. “Oh, yeah: they’ve got red seas and a red
sky on ZembZ, that’s their home planet—that’ll explain it. It is more or less
o-breather, must be why they’re here, though the mixture on Level Red’d suit
them better: much more nitrogen in it. But it’s all tourist halls.”
“Isn’t that
discrimination against non-tourist beings that want a nitrogen-rich
atmosphere?” said Dohra, frowning over it.
“Yes,”
replied BrTl simply. “Well, wanna see how Trff’s getting on with the swiller’s
blobs?”
Dohra
reddened. “They won’t let me look!”
“Down the
hyperdrive? I should hope not! Trff only lets me look when—” He broke off.
“What?” said
Dohra innocently.
“Whatever
that Meanker spiked those drinks with, it’s gone straight to the zortifac
hgayllep’w+w,” he noted crossly. “Oh, sorry, didn’t that come over?” He blinked
casually at her translator. “To the cerebral cortex,” he said kindly.
“Um, I see,”
said Dohra, wondering if that sort of burp between the two sort of “w” sounds
had been meant to be there.
“Yes,” he
said calmly. “It’s a Slaetho-Xathpyrian post-dental stop.” He looked down at
her hopefully. “You’d probably find it quite easy, with a bit of practice.”
“I’m afraid
I’m not much good at languages,” Dohra admitted. “What were you going to say
about the hyperdrive?”
“I wasn’t,”
said BrTl firmly. “Trff doesn’t even let me look down it.”
“What about
when it’s off?”
“You mean
inactive. It’s never off, that’s IG-illegal,” he explained smoothly. She was
now trying not to laugh. “Come on,” he said, carefully closing one eye at her.
Dohra didn’t
actually want to see Didg again so soon, especially after the Flppu’s extremely
embarrassing depiction of her in its story. But on the whole it seemed easier
not to try to explain this to BrTl; so she took the pseudopod he extended and
accompanied him meekly to a very convenient lift-blob which descended at the
speed of a Seeker going into hyperdrive to a view of splodgy green lubolyon.
“Variegated,” he said firmly. “It’ll be easier if we go most of the way
on this level.”
“Yes,” agreed
Dohra, looking wistfully up as a bubble-train whooshed across the immense
concourse of Level Green about two hundred IG fluh above them.
“Come on,
hop up, the place is full of tourists busy wondering if they’re gonna miss
their connections and beings in transit like us that don’t give a cptt-rvvr’s
fart what you do.” He held out a hand invitingly.
Oh, well, if
he didn’t mind, what did it matter? She let him help her onto his back. Her
feet stuck out in the most ridiculous way—his back was much too broad for her
to be able to grip his sides with her legs—so she used the shoulder-flaps of
his coveralls as stirrups.
“That’s
right,” said BrTl mildly. “Doesn’t matter: not in Space Fleet any more.”
“No. Aren’t
these Service Issue, though?”
“No, those lieutenant’s bars on the flaps are
Merchant Service. Oh: the Durocloth? It’s not Service greige, it’s grey-green: we
happened across a load of it, uh, halfway between somewhere else,” he said
airily.
“I get it!”
“Good. Set?”
“Yes, thanks,
BrTl. Um, don’t gallop in the concourse, will you?”
“Gallop? You
haven’t seen me gallop! But I won’t lope, either,” he conceded. “Off we go!”
And he set off at a brisk—er, not so brisk as all that, walk.
“NO!” she
said sharply as they reached the tunnels and tubes.
“But all the
xathpyroids use moogletubes to slide—All right, I’ll lope,” he groaned.
As he spoke,
another xathpyroid came up, sent airily: Having
a lovely ride, Br-cognate? And disappeared down the indicated tube with a
terrifying whoosh!
“See? –All
right, all right, don’t get off, we’ll take a nice wide tunnel. –That’ll mean
we’ll have to take another lift-blob to get down to Level Yellow,” he warned.
“I know
that! Just go, BrTl, for Federation’s sake!”
Sometimes
she did put you forcibly in mind of his Captain, after all. Glumly he turned
for the tunnel…
“Are we
here? Where’s the ship?” she gasped as he lifted her off his back.
“I think
it’s still there. I think there’s some sort of a vacuum-frozen Ju’ukrterian
something around it.” TRFF!
Come aboard, it replied happily.
COME ABOARD WHAT?
Oops! it replied happily. Suddenly the
ship’s hatch appeared.
BrTl was
just going to send OPEN! very crossly
indeed when it opened.
“Come on,”
he groaned. “This is either Didg’s ship, or a T,R,A,P set by the IG
You-Know-What or the other IG-You-Know-What or even the Full College of
You-Know-Whats, and in short, do we have an option?”
“Stop it!”
said Dohra with a loud laugh, scrambling aboard. “It’s a bit high, you have
to—Oh,” she said, realising he didn’t, as he stepped aboard. “It’s plain, isn’t
it?” she said in a lowered voice. “Workmanlike, of course.”
“Eh? It’s
not a plasmo-blasted pleasure cruiser, you know. They’re down with the
drive—come on.” He set off. After a moment he stopped, let her catch up with
him, detached the paw from the—ouch!—Durocloth coveralls and a piece of his
leg, and grasped it with a pseudopod. “There’s nothing to be afraid of,” he
said mildly. “Trff might be a plasmo-blasted engineer, but it won’t let
anything happen to you.”
“No,” said
Dohra in a small voice. “I’m not scared.”
“Uh—so
what’s Didg done?” he asked foggily as visions of castles and lady-beings in
strange headgear and three-legged Slgrs and bracelets—was that a Nblyterian
captain, and if so what in Federation was she doing in that lot?—swirled before
his dazed mind’s eye.
“Nothing. I
thought he was just ordinary,” said Dohra grimly.
“I’d call
him pretty ordinary.”
“He isn’t!”
she hissed crossly. “His father’s one of those chiefs from DorAven!”
“Ye-es… Um,
father? Something to do with his yoggr?” he groped.
“What? Oh:
you’re thinking of Maudur groups. His family. It is like a Maudur yoggr, yes.”
“Oh, right:
like the being with the gold helmet in his story! I thought that castle looked
draughty, actually,” he said mildly.
Suddenly
Dohra squeezed his pseudopod hard. “Yes, it did. What a nice being you are,
BrTl!”
“Thanks,” he
said foggily. “Isn’t it good to have a father that’s a chief?”
“Not to
ordinary beings.”
“Oh.” Her
thoughts were so scrambled and there were so many strange concepts in there,
not to say stories, that he gave up, and merely answered what seemed like—well,
could have been—the essential point. “I think Didg likes you.”
“I dare say
he even likes me well enough for a
fling,” said Dohra tightly.
BrTl knew
what those were: Jhl was always having them. Sometimes in twos, sometimes in
threes, or fours or fives.
“Fives?”
said Dohra dazedly to his broadcast.
“Yes. When
there are more than five she calls it something else, not a number. Something
that she thinks is funny, but I think you have to be a mammalian to appreciate
the joke.”
Orgy,
sent Trff mildly. You-it does know that
word, BrTl, it’s a thing that rich play-beings have when they all roll round on
wtmyrian carpets or in whllubbly-gell baths or fluorogas baths or that sort of
stuff, usually doing things with little tubes. Not to make other beings, just
for fun.
“Did you
catch that?” he said: Dohra had given a startled laugh and clapped her free
hand to her mammalian mouth.
“Yes!” she
gasped.
“Is it
right?”
“Of course!”
she said in astonishment.
“It isn’t
always, you know,” he said happily, carefully closing one eye at her. “It just
believes it is. –Here we are,” he said as they came up to a large hatch.
“Open!”
Nothing.
“In two IG
microseconds,” threatened BrTl through the crunchers, “I am going to send—”
You-it already has, it replied, allowing
the hatch to open.
Dohra shrank.
“It’s all
right: this isn’t the drive proper, this is just the place where they go when
they want to brood over it. I’ll go first: spacers’ etiquette,” said BrTl
kindly.
Cautiously
Dohra stepped in after him. It was a plain chamber, not very big but more than
big enough to hold several beings the size of BrTl, and like the ships’
companionways gave the strong impression that it was made from a tube of
xrillion. Not polished xrillion.
“It is,”
said Trff, suddenly popping out of a smaller tube. “This is the drive. You-it
can look down it if you-it likes, Dohra: it’s put a little shield round
your-its head.”—Cautiously Dohra felt her head but she couldn’t feel anything
there.—“You-it can’t feel it, no. And in any case the blobs are—you-it’d think
of it as asleep. So would you-it, BrTl.”
“Have you
had any breakfast?’ replied BrTl on a grim note.
“What? Oh,
is it morning?” it replied as Dohra peered cautiously into the hyperdrive.
Helpfully
BrTl’s chrono-blob told it the time, IG-time.
“So it is,”
it said placidly. “What? Oh, yes: it ingested some fluid before it left the
pod.”
“Would this
be Jhl-approved, nourishment-like fluid—”
“Plain laa,”
it said hurriedly.
“Yeah, well,
you-it can plasmo-blasted well come to lunch with us today, all the same.”
“It has to—”
“Trff,” said
BrTl clearly, bending down to it: “it doesn’t have to anything, because it is not that DorAvenian’s ship’s engineer,
it is our ship’s engineer and in case it’s forgotten, in Jhl’s absence the BrTl
is ACTING CAPTAIN! –Vvlvanian curses,” he muttered as it shot across to the
other side of the drive-chamber. “Sorry Trff, didn’t mean to, um, puff.”
“And huff!”
it replied jauntily, picking itself up and dusting off its fluff a
bit—unnecessarily, the drive-chamber was spotless, so that mutant couldn't be
as hopeless as he looked, well, knew enough to keep the ship’s tidy-blobs at
it, anyway. “It sees: that ‘the BrTl’ rankled.”
“Actually it
rankled in quintupled 5-D triangles, if we’re gonna be strictly accurate.”
“Yes. Sorry.
When Jhl shot the ship into hyper-hop it was very… called upon,” it ended
lamely.
Very called
upon. BrTl swallowed a sigh. “Yeah, all right, Trff. But just remember, you-it
doesn’t skip meals. Goddit?”
“Yes, sir,”
it agreed, not the suggestion of an emanation about it. “Goddit.”
Meanwhile
Dohra was goggling down the hyperdrive. It looked…
“Cosy,” said
BrTl from behind her.
“Yes!”
she gasped. “Ooh!” she gulped as he suddenly stuck his head into the tube.
“See all
these?” he said, looking around at the blobs nestled cosily in—not boxes, or
nests, exactly, but kind of, um, dimples, thought Dohra dazedly—dimples in the
drive walls, which were not made of xrillion or anything like it.
“Yes,” she
agreed.
“In that
case it’s letting you see them. Can you see that some of them look sort of, um,
different?”
“Yes. More…
blobby?”
“Puts it
well,” approved BrTl. “More blobby and almost more important, though that’s an
exaggeration. They’re the hyperblobs.”
“Great
splintered shards of quog,” said Dohra in awe. There were megazillions of them!
“It is quite
a big ship. I wouldn’t ask what that mutant’s doing down there, if I were you.”
“No,”
she agreed. Quite some way down the drive tube, Budg was lying comfortably on
his back, emitting a kind of buzzing noise.
“It is a
happy noise, though a being could be excused for not perceiving that,” conceded
BrTl.
“I think
it’s his version of a hum.”
“It’s
nothing like a Slaetho-Xathpyrian hum, but I’ll take your word for it. Well,
that’s the drive!” he said cheerily. “Sometimes—oy, Trff! If I mention
something to Dohra, is she gonna broadcast it to the whole of the IG
You-Know-What and their swillers in the IG ditto and the plasmo-blasted Full
You-Know-Whats and get us all sent to the magma pits on Vvlvania for life?”
“No, she-it
isn’t even going to remember it.”
“What?” cried Dohra indignantly.
“Good,” said
BrTl simply. “Sometimes when it’s doing something highly IG-illegal like
selecting choice blobbed-out blobs for recycling it lets me help pick them out
of the drive: I can do it quite delicately with my teeth, see, and pouch them
in my cheeks. You need to have a long neck to do it. Our drive isn’t quite as
roomy as this one, mind you.”
“Help! Don’t
they do something to you?”
“I’m not on
Vvlvania yet! Oh, you didn’t mean Them. Sorry, that was my xathpyroid paranoia
speaking. The blobs? No, Trff knows when it’s safe to pick them out. You can
carry them in your pockets quite safely.”
Yes. That's a good story, BrTl, but come
out now.
“Come on,”
he said, withdrawing his neck.
Regretfully
Dohra followed suit. “If you carry them in your pocket don’t you run the risk
of—” She stopped.
“The risk of
what?” said BrTl mildly.
“What?” she
replied blankly.
That was quick. Well done, that
Ju’ukrterian engineer! “So, can you do
something with them in the time-frame available, that is, before Jhl’s due
back?” he asked it genially.
“It can
ginger them up a bit. But that mutant hasn’t got the mind-power to keep them
gingered up, so Didg is gonna have to get a refit job quite soon.”
“Quite
soon?” replied BrTl smoothly.
“Within the
next IG year.”
“You do
surprise me.”
“The thing
is,” said Trff glumly. “that DorAvenian doesn’t respect his-its blobs. They’re
very fond of the mutant”—here BrTl eyed Dohra’s stunned expression with some
amusement—“but it’s all he-it can do to nurse them along. They were tired when
those two beings bought the ship.”
“Uh-huh.
–It’s all figures of speech when it goes on about blobs,” he said genially to
Dohra, “but believe you me, that’s as clear as it’s gonna get. And at that,
that’s only because Trff’s a Ju’ukrterian it-being that’s used to travelling
round the galaxies with us. You wouldn’t get nearly that much sense out of any
other engineer. Come on, I’d like to take a look at the bridge.”
“Um, yes. Is
Didg there, Trff?”
“What?
Oh—yes, he-it is. He-it and Budg have had breakfast,” it added to BrTl.
“Not a
need-to-know. We’ll see you-it when it’s time for lunch, and whatever you’re
doing, be prepared to drop it.”
“Not drop—Oh, figure of speech, very funny,
hah, hah,” it said severely, pointing an antenna at him.
At this
point Dohra collapsed in agonised giggles, so BrTl propelled her shaking but
apologising form bodily out of the drive-chamber.
“It’s when
it points its antenna!” she gasped apologetically.
“I know.
Lots of beings find it funny. Especially when it’s me it’s pointing it at. But
you don’t need to apologise, it doesn’t mind if you laugh,” he said mildly.
“Eh?” he said as she was waving an appendage at him. “Oh!” He shot out a pseudopod
and let her hold it. Why she was emanating strong approval of him he wasn’t
quite sure, but so long as she was happy—
On the
bridge Didg was discovered with his head in the Encyclopaedia. The entry under
“Ju’ukrterian it-being.”
“Oh, hullo,”
he said foolishly, sending Off.
“We’ve all
been there, done that, in our time,” said BrTl mildly. “Enlightening, isn’t
it?”
“It doesn’t
say anything about their ability with
blobs!” he said dazedly. “Not a thing!”
“No. Me and
Jhl think that may be because it’s only the individual Trff that’s got that.”
“But if one
has, surely they all have? I mean, according to—” He waved feebly at the
receiver.
“Who knows?
Another theory,” said BrTl cautiously, though with a Ju’ukrterian shield round
the ship there was no need for caution, “is that the it-being has prevented the
minds that own the Encyclopaedia, whoever They
might be—don’t all speak at once—from perceiving that it’s got the slightest
interest in blobs.”
After a
moment’s reflection Didg replied: “Good one.”
“And so say
all of us. May I?” He gestured at the co-pilot’s seat.
Dohra
gasped: “That seat’s too small—” And then saw it wasn’t.
“This is a
bridge you’re on,” BrTl reproved her mildly. “Ah; very sensible, Didg.”
“Eh? Oh.”—BrTl
had immediately read the restrictions, and the one course allowed.—“Uh, yeah.
Well, better safe than sorry.”
“Yeah. Could
ask Trff to do some tinkering?” he suggested delicately.
Didg
blenched. “Can it, with humanoids?”
“Mutants, isn’t
it? Well, dunno. It’s done this and that with various beings, but that was
because me or it or Jhl or all of us were in mortal danger from the beings in
question. But afterwards they didn’t remember a thing!” he said happily.
Didg
swallowed and glanced at Dohra. “I see. Um, well, I’ll speak to Trff about
Budg. So did you have a nice look at the drive, Dohra?”
“Well, I saw
the room, but of course I wasn’t allowed to look down the drive!” she said
happily. “It’s all very neat and clean, isn’t it?”
Didg rolled
an enquiring eye at BrTl.
Expunged, sent the xathpyroid happily.
Uh-huh. He took a look. It was expunged,
all right. And—was it his imagination, or did everything seem a little brighter
and clearer and—
“Stop that!”
said Dohra indignantly.
Yeah,
brighter was the word. What’s it done to
her? he asked BrTl frantically.
Expu—Oh. Don’t know that I'd say she had a
mind like a boo-bird, exactly, Didg, swiller. I’d say it’s tinkered—um, cleaned
her up a bit—brought out some potential. It likes her because she relates to
her culture-pans, you see. Eh? Not ethical? Well, no, Didg, me and Jhl realised
light-years back that it hasn't really got an ethical sense. Usually it
pretends to, though. “That’s better, isn't it, Dohra?” he said kindly.
“I seem to
be picking you both up a lot more than before,” she said dazedly.
“Yeah. If
you practise that a bit you’ll be much safer in spaceport bars and sim-lounges
and so forth,” he said kindly.
“It isn’t a
matter of reading beings’ thoughts!” she retorted scornfully. “I can tell if
someone’s horrid!”
“Mostly,
yeah. Not if they’re real good at hiding it though, Sweet Cheese. And spaceport
bars are usually full of beings who specialise in just that,” said Didg. “Take
that Friyrian sitting with that blue-crested Nblyterian merchant service C.P.O.
in the bar last night, that you were admiring.”
She
reddened. “I merely thought they looked very striking! And you don't often see
a blue-crested Nblyterian. And our C.P.O.’s a Nblyterian, too, that’s why I was
interested.”
“Yeah.
Anyway, the Friyrian’s a slave-trader, and in between wondering what the
Feeny-Argyllians’d let their Flppu go for and if he could manage to get it off
them—and slitting paired throats in lift-blobs did come into it, yeah—he was
wondering what he’d get for you, Sweet Cheese. And before you start, the
Nblyterian was reading him, and far from being horrified or wanting to do
anything to protect you, she was merely amused. I know you thought they looked
respectable: that’s my point.”
“All right,
you know everything!” said Dohra in a very annoyed voice.
“No, but I
know a fair bit about the sort of beings that hang round spaceport bars. —Did
they seem to be making progress with the drive, BrTl?”
“Dunno. Budg
was in there, buzzing—asleep. The blobs were asleep, too.”
“Um, yeah,
Trff did that a while back. Think you’d call it a mind-symb, though I never
thought the swiller had anything you could call a mind in the first place. Trff
assured me the blobs like him, and he was helping. Anything else?”
“Not really.
The blobs looked sort of placid,” he offered.
“That sounds
better! First time it looked down there it sort of tut-tutted, well, more
hooting—oh, ya know that noise,” he recognised in some relief. “Yeah. And it
said the blobs were very tired and I oughta have more consideration for them.”
“Don’t
worry, it tells Jhl that all the time!” said BrTl breezily. “Engineers are all
like that: if they had their druthers we’d sit round admiring our tails while
they communed with the blobs in a state of total no-go!”
“Uh—right.”
“Sorry.
Forgot you haven’t got a tail, swiller!”
Didg grinned
at him. “That’s a compliment! ‘Lie round twiddling our toes,’ we say on
DorAven.”
“Really? We
say ‘sit round playing on our nose-flutes’ on C’T’rea,” said Dohra. “Um, it’s
an old C’T’rean instrument. These days only the kids make them; out of, um,
reeds. That’s like a plant with kind of tubes for leaves,” she added, as they
were both emanating total blankness. “Green,” she added for BrTl’s benefit,
though without hope.
“Oh!
Tube-grass, why didn’t you say so in the first place! I see, it’s smaller on
your world,” he added, getting the picture. “Have you got it on DorAven, Didg?”
“Ye-ah. Sort
of. Turquoise. Ours must be tougher, we use it for arrows. Yuell rushes, not
reeds or tube-grass,” he said, grinning at them. “Nothing new in the Known
Universe, right?”
“Right!”
they agreed.
Then a sort
of silence fell. BrTl looked happily round the bridge, apparently not picking
up the fact that his humanoid companions were feeling uncomfortable. Didg got
out a shin-knife and inspected its blade very carefully. Dohra fidgetted a bit.
Eventually, since no-one else seemed to be to
about to utter, Didg said weakly: “So, um, whatcha got planned for this
morning?”
BrTl
twitched slightly and came out of the daze in which he’d been planning exactly
how to improve it if it was his ship. “Eh? Oh! Well, uh, this.”
“Um, yes,”
agreed Dohra in a small voice. “I suppose we couldn’t look at the hold?”
Didg smiled
weakly. “I’ve had it decontaminated but it still stinks. I don’t think you’d
like it.”
“Dead
plush-moss? I should think not!” said
BrTl forcefully, shuddering. “Oops!” he gasped as the seat’s straps snapped
closed round him like a dendrion nut.
“Sorry,
swiller,” said Didg on a weak note. “Set for Budg.” Straps off!
“Thanks.
–I’d say the hold’s out, Dohra. For about half an IG year, if the smell’s even
a fraction as bad as the time a load of plush-moss died on me. Well, um, nice
wander round the boutiques?”
Dohra waited
but Didg didn't say anything about it’d be nicer if she stayed here, or anything. “Yes,” she said grimly.
“That’d be nice, BrTl; that’s really thoughtful of you.”
Didg cleared
his throat. “Look, I can’t come. I know
Trff could do it all by itself with all appendages tied behind it—that isn’t
the point; it’s my ship.”
“Yeah, the
captain can’t desert his ship when a strange engineer’s tinkering with its
blobs,” said BrTl mildly, getting up. “Or his swiller, when it’s flat out down
the drive. See you at lunchtime, then, swiller. Or put it like this: if you
haven’t hoiked Trff out of the drive and hauled it along for lunch by ten IG
minutes past IG midday, I’ll be right back here. I’ve told it that it’s not to
skip meals just because it’s out from under Jhl’s eye. –Come on, Dohra.”
And the two
departed, hand-in-pseudopod, before Didg could gather his wits and say he’d
escort them to the hatch.
“Mok shit,”
he muttered sourly.
Dohra was
very silent during the journey back to the concourse and didn't even remark on
BrTl’s taking a short detour via a moogletube. Eventually it penetrated that
something was up. He looked cautiously. Was that all? Why make such a fuss
about a bit of repro stuff? Jhl usually just told the other being that she
wanted to do it—if it hadn’t already told her.
“All right,
I’m dim,” she said grimly.
“Sorry: didn’t
mean to send. But it’s always seemed pretty simple to me.”
“It is if
that’s all you want,” said Dohra grimly.
“Oh, I see:
bond-partnership?” he said on a horrified note.
“Not
necessarily. Well, not necessarily with him,”
said Dohra, scowling horribly. BrTl didn’t react and she added defiantly: “And
what’s so awful about bond-partnership?”
“Uh—well,
xathpyroids don't go in for it. But in Jhl’s mind the concept’s down there just
above Vvlvanian magma pits and rr’trrs tied to the tail, and such-like. Sort of
next to confinement on Mullgon’ya for life.”
“Yes, well,
she’s a captain!” said Dohra angrily. “I’m not!”
“Um, well,
you could learn to do a bit more with your mind-powers, you know. And to be a
bit more adventurous with blobs.”
“I like
being a cook,” she warned.
“Aim at
being a First Cook?” he offered.
“Um, you
have to do the Advanced Training Course,” said Dohra in a small voice.
“Well, you
could aim at that. I mean, you did the Basic Cuh—Oh, no, of course not.
Galloping grqwary gizzards! This Shohn-being’s a bit of a blob-wizard, isn’t
he?” he said admiringly. “Never seen a prettier job outside Turgilor’s Bar
& Grill in Thrbsh City on Sfthnyxer.”
“Is that a
joke?” demanded Dohra dangerously.
“No! Old
Turgilor’s a Slgr—well, crookedness of any kind comes naturally to ’em, maybe
it goes with the three legs, not to be anything-ist—and it sells the best fake
IG ID in the Known Universe.”
“Oh. Sorry.
I would quite like to be a First Cook, but would my credentials be good enough
to get me in?”
BrTl
repressed an urge to tug at his collar while simultaneously scratching that
itch behind his right shoulder-blade with a hind leg. The spaceport tunnels of
the third moon of Pkqwrd were spacious enough, but it wouldn’t be advisable
with her sitting up there. “They might not look at them that closely.”
“And
Mklontia might not stink!” retorted Dohra smartly.
“Hah, hah,”
he said limply. “No, but look at it logically. What’s the betting that a being
would want to fake cook’s credentials, and then, having secured itself a nice
job on a pleasure-cruiser, risk the lot by—Ya see?”
“Um, yes. I
suppose it’s worth a try. I mean, what can they do to me, after all?”
Well, it
wouldn’t be suspended by the tail head-first over a Vvlvanian magma pit,
because she didn’t have a tail. Apart from that, almost anything went. “Er,
well, a fair few things, if you read up on the relevant Act,” he admitted.
“Maybe if I
save up my pay I could afford to do a commercial advanced cook’s course. From a
really good college,” she said on a wistful note.
Really good
colleges were apt to look at one’s dokko, but at least the beings that got told
off to look weren’t IG Militia or Space Patrol. “Yeah. Good one,” he agreed in
relief.
“Look,
there’s a lift-blob: shall we take that one?” said Dohra eagerly.
BrTl helped
her down, eyeing its sign cautiously.
Public Lift-Blob. FREE Inter-Level Transport. (IG.
Reg. Approved. ISLA Standard.) Choose Your Level Before Entering. Entry Onto
This Blob Constitutes a Waiver of Your Personal/Group Rights under the
Intergalactic Personal/Group Being Physical Safety Rights Act. Available
Levels: PURPLE (CHARGES APPLY), INDIGO (CHARGES APPLY), Red, SILVER (VIP PASS
OR TOURIST PASS MANDATORY), BLUE, TURQUOISE, PINK, APRICOT, GREEN
“It’ll
be slow,” he said temperately.
“Wanna go back to Level Pink and look at the Tourist Halls again?”
“Not really.
Could we go up to Level Blue?”
“It isn’t an
o-breather level,” he warned.
“I know. But
won’t my FW pack cope with it?”
”Uh—just
come behind this nice green pillar for a moment.”
The pillar
appeared to be holding up Level Green’s ceiling, so it was quite substantial.
Meekly Dohra followed him. BrTl stood her between his bulk and the pillar and
had a really good look at her FW
pack.
“Ooh!” she
gasped. “That tickles!”
“Just stand
still. –Vacuum-frozen piece of space junk,” he muttered. “Hang on.” He felt in
a pocket of his coveralls.
Suddenly Dohra gave a desperate cough.
“Oh,
morning, Sar’t-Major,” he said easily to the large being in the distinctive
red-trimmed white IG Militia uniform with its visor down.
“Morning to
you, xathpyroid cognate,” it replied drily. “I’ll see your dokko. Huh.
Lieutenant-Pilot, eh? Where’s your captain?”
“On a
Wavey-Spacey secondment to a pluh—to a diplo thing on, um, a world that’s
coming into Fed. B-something. Um… Btcx?”
“Oh, yeah?
And where’s your ship?”
“Like that
says, Sar’t-Major,” said BrTl, trying to sound both firm and respectful. “In
tow. Headed for the refit shops on Sfthnyxer.”
“Yeah. Well,
try to stay out of the cells.” It turned to Dohra. “Third Cook, eh? What are
you doing on Level Green?”
“I’m with
him,” said Dohra in a small voice. “Um, he’s very kindly been letting me sleep
on his pod, and, um, we’re just going upstairs.”
“See ya do,
this mixture isn’t suitable for humanoids,” it said severely. “Get up to Level
Pink, that’s safe.”
“Yes, sir,”
said Dohra meekly.
“Don’t ‘sir’
me, humanoid, I’m a sergeant-major,” it said very drily indeed. “Go on, here’s
the lift-blob.”
Meekly Dohra
and BrTl got onto the lift-blob.
“Whuh-what
was it?” she quavered.
“Sar’t-Major, like it said. IG Militia. Red trim on the uniform.”
“Yes, um,
not that!” she gasped.
“Not sure,”
he admitted. “Well, it was bigger than me, it was IG Militia, it had its visor
down and a blaster on what was possibly its hip, and that thing on its other
side wasn’t a jolly-lolly on a stick: that was more than enough for me!”
“Was it a
probe?” she croaked.
“What else?”
Dohra
gulped.
“Think it
might have been a Mullannakwai. They’re about as big as Thwurbullerians without
the superior mind-powers, and thank the Federation for it!”
Dohra nodded
fervently.
Level Pink, announced the lift-blob. O-breather. Sim-lounges, bar, ISLA
Kiddy-Kinder—charges apply—fine selection of boutiques. Access to Tourist Halls
by Tourist Pass only.
“We’ll get
off here, shall we?” he said politely.
“Yeah,” she
agreed glumly, following him off.
You’re welcome. Have a nice day.
“Thank you,
Lift-blob,” said Dohra glumly.
You’re welcome. Have a nice day.
BrTl waited
until it had risen s-l-o-w-l-y to the level of his ear before explaining
kindly: “That was a ruse, just in case that Sar’t-Major checks up. Come on,
we’ll just duck into that humanoid boutique: you can try stuff on and I’ll come
into the changing room with you!”
“I think its
ceiling might be a bit low, BrTl.”
“I'll
stoop.” Happily he led the way.
The boutique
was called With-Its Of Whtyll, though as BrTl pointed out there was very little
that was Whtyllian about it: the being in charge was a humanoid, true, but if
he was a Whtyllian then he, BrTl, was a Kr-cognate with his crunchers fallen
out. There was nothing feminine about it, either, it stocked only male humanoid
wear, but when the whiskered sales-being tried to point this out Dohra said
firmly: “There’s an IG law against that, isn’t it called discrimination?” And
the being shut up like a dendrion nut.
“That one
wasn’t even humanoid,” noted BrTl as they retired to the changing rooms. He
bared his teeth politely at a small humanoid that came out of one as he spoke.
Water immediately poured from its eyes, and it rushed out of the boutique,
wailing.
“You scared
that boy,” noted Dohra dispassionately.
“Yeah, I
tend to have that effect on immature beings. Never mind, it’s already deciding
to boast about it to its yoggr members.” He squeezed into the changing room. It
was just about big enough to hold him, provided he bent his neck
excruciatingly—ow! However, he couldn’t turn round, and there was no room for
Dohra. But this didn’t really matter, as the sales-being was now lying on the
floor with its four appendages in the air, and the being in charge was sobbing
into a large bunch of senso-tissues. Green—quite a nice shade. “I'll back
out—look out.” He backed out. “You go in.”
“I get it!”
Happily Dohra went in and BrTl, still with his neck bent excruciatingly, and
effectively blocking the view of the changing room, should the weeping owner or
its supine assistant have wished to look, produced a hyperblob from a pocket of
his coveralls and applied it to her FW pack. Immediately she gave a shriek and
went into a terrific giggling fit. –The boutique owner was still sobbing but
also broadcasting: “Ugh, they’re doing it.” “It” not defined verbally but the
concept was clearly repro stuff.
“That tickled like anything!” she gasped.
“Yeah.
That’ll do you.”
“Thank you very much!” said Dohra, beaming.
“Any time.”
He backed off with due caution. “Thanks, sobbing being,” he said, unlocking his
weeny change purse. “Have a—Oh. Well, thanks anyway.”
“Thank you
so much. I won’t take these pants after all: I think the pockets might be
uncomfortable to sit on, but they are lovely: they’re the most pockety pants I
ever saw!” said Dohra kindly, holding them out.
Still
sobbing, the owner took them numbly.
“It’s all
right, we’re going. Oh: did any being ever tell you that Whtyllians don’t
actually wear pants like— Never mind,” he said as Dohra’s mind-message reached
him. “They’re rather nice. Pity you haven’t got them in my size: those
pockets’d be useful. Thanks anyway.”
“You’re
welcome. Have a nice day,” the being croaked automatically.
“He was
humanoid, wasn’t he?” said Dohra in a low voice as they retreated to the
lift-blobs.
“Maybe a bit
of something else, but pretty much. Not Whtyllian, though.”
“I see. What
about the one that fell down?”
“It was a
tweaked being. I think, though I could be wrong, that it was a tweaked Whtyllian
cat—talking of Whtyllian beings.”
“Like, a
mutant?” she fumbled.
“Not like
Budg: that happened to him before he left the culture-pod. Um, whatever it is
you use. No, that being had been tweaked by some being that fancied itself as a
Full Surgeon, if you ask me. It’d be a black-market one, but tweaking is IG-legal
if you’ve got the right permit. They do a lot of it on Little Fester. You won’t
have heard of it, it’s out beyond Blerrinbrig’s System. Completely owned and
operated by Custom Critters Incorporated, a guess what? Friyrian-Mklontian
consortium.”
“Fester,”
said Dohra grimly, “is a good name for it.”
“Yeah,” he
agreed mildly, taking her paw in a pseudopod.
After a few
moments she admitted: “That’d explain the whiskers.”
“Eh? Oh, the
Whtyllian cat-being! Yeah.”
“It didn’t
have a bracelet, though.”
“You’re
right. Well, that boutique owner can’t be all bad, then.”
“No. What a
pity I couldn’t afford a pair of those pants, J'nno’d really like them.”
“Yeah, the
pockets were good,” he agreed comfortably.
And they got
onto a free public lift-blob and rode s-l-o-w-l-y up to Level Blue in a state
of perfect harmony.
“Isn’t it exotic?” said Dohra pleasedly.
“Um—yeah.
Well, blue.”
“Yes, it’s
very blue! I didn’t expect it to be this bright blue: I thought it’d be
paler—more like a Wynonian Bugler.” Dohra tilted her head back and looked up
into the wide blue spaces of Level Blue’s concourse. “The bubble-trains up
there seem to sort of glow,” she said admiringly. “It almost looks like
sunlight coming through over there—see?”
BrTl looked
in some alarm, fearing a Spaceport Emergency was about to happen. “Oh—yeah, it
is,” he said weakly. “That’s a kind of port, um, window, and that’d be KG2976A.
Pkqwrd’s sun, geddit?”
“Yes,”
said Dohra, looking at him in awe.
“It is my
subject,” he said mildly. “That sort of ledge up there under the window, that’s
a kind of mezzanine, with a bar on it, but since this is an ISLA spaceport,
it’s a mega-expensive bar for A-Class tourists, I’m afraid, Dohra.”
“Oh, well!
Let’s go up there and have a Thwurbullerian-size basin of nnru juice each!”
“Yeah,” he
agreed, squeezing her paw gently with his pseudopod. “Never mind, there’s a
nice plain blue ISLA bar, too.”
“Of course.
But let’s look at the boutiques first!” Eagerly she headed off into the blue
h-breather atmosphere of Level Blue. It wasn’t very busy: BrTl followed slowly
in her wake. His neck-hair was really enjoying filtering h-breather atmosphere
for a change. What with Jhl being an o-breather, he’d almost forgotten he was
o/h. He didn’t bother to point out that the boutiques wouldn’t be essentially
different from those on Level Pink; she was gonna find that out for herself
soon enough.
“Ooh, what’s
this?” she gasped.
What its
sign said, in a flowing yellow script
that was just on the far side of nauseating, was “Teetl Tae Toppers, Your
Freindly Franchise, Iicensed Prop. Anje’pp-Fdawqi’ G,” but BrTl's guess would
have been that if rendered into something more nearly approaching Standard
Intergalactic it would have read “Teetl Toe Toppers” and “Friendly Franchise.”
And quite possibly “Licensed,” though on second thoughts that one could well be
a deliberate misspelling.
“That's ‘Toe
Toppers’,” he explained tolerantly. “It’s a toe-cropping joint.”
“That’s
really weak!” said Dohra indignantly.
“No, honest!
It’s for Honnoyers—see?” he said as a couple of thin, deep indigo beings went
in.
Dohra was
transfixed. “Aren’t they knobby?” she
hissed.
“Yeah, good
word for them. See, their toes are like that, too: very knobby, and they keep
growing, and when they get too long they trip over them. So they have to have
them cropped.”
“Asteroids
of Hhum! Does it hurt?”
“Uh—dunno.
They have it done quite often, so maybe it doesn’t. Well, it hurt like
Federation when I had a toe-cropper have a go at my bunions once—well, the
being made me a really good offer, and the credit account was looking really
sick, so—Anyway, Jhl was furious,” he ended glumly.
“When she
found you couldn’t walk? I'm not surprised!”
“I could
walk. The bunions were only on two of my feet. But they wouldn’t heal and—Well,
we ended up going to Oononia—you’d like it, actually, it’s very smelly—I don’t
mean that, I mean, uh—scented! Yes, a very scented world.”
“Ooh, from
all the flowers they grow for their perfumes and chemo-blobs and stuff! Of
course!”
“Yeah,
that’s it.”
“So did you
buy a chemo-blob to fix them?”
“Yuh—uh, think
it was a chemo-blob; anyway, an Oononian blob, and it cost an Oononian fortune.
It fixed them, all right, only then it blobbed out and even Trff couldn’t
re-blob it: Jhl wasn’t too pleased. So she said that if one of the plasmo-blobs
that we use for emergencies in space wouldn’t do the job next time they started
playing me up, I could plasmo-blasted-well suffer.”
“I’m sure
she didn't mean it,” said Dohra kindly.
“Of course
she meant it! Another toe started playing up not two IG days before she got her
Wavey-Spacey call-up and I got no sympathy at all!”
“Was that
something about soaking your bunions when you were supposed to be on duty?”
“You are
getting better at reading me,” he said gloomily. “Yeah. Tore a strip off me.”
“It served
you right.”
“Yeah, yeah.
Wanna look at another boutique?”
Dohra looked
hopefully at the toe-cropping boutique but its window remained veiled in a
misty yellow glow. “Well, um, how long does it take?”
“Depends on
what sort of jelly snake the Iicensed Prop’s offering today, really. Not a real
snake, Dohra, it’s a thing Honnoyers like to chew. It’s not bad: savoury. You
wouldn’t like it, it’s an h-breather thing. But chewing it’s a social activity,
you see. They may be quite a while.”
“Come on,
then!” she said cheerfully.
And they
moved on…
“Worms?”
said Dohra dazedly, peering into the window of a small food boutique. “Need A
Noodle Now, ISLA Licence 742Z 169,723,894,571,” so it was probably—well,
possibly—a safe place for a being to eat, provided the food was suited to the
metabolism. The window was entirely filled with smallish metal containers
of—well, worms. They were certainly wriggling. They ranged in colour from pale
yellow through to a deep tan, apart from a row of inky black ones that were
wider and fatter than the others.
“Joddum
noodles. Quite a delicacy. I don’t like them, but Jhl says they’re good. Lots
of different sizes, see? They serve them with little bowls of sauce and, um,
something bluish, some sort of vegetable. No, not cooked, Dohra: as they are.
From W’nntrania Two, it’s in Athlor Kadry’s System. This IG year’s a bad year
to go, though, Wo-J’n Dymman’s Comet’s due, and the place’ll be crammed with
tourists.”
“I see,”
said Dohra, watching with interest as a masked and gloved being reached into
the window and delicately spooned a helping of thin bright orange Joddum
noodles into the small bowl it was carrying, topping them up with a few
medium-sized black ones.
“The trick
there,” said BrTl, flattening his noses to the window, “is to eat them before
the black ones can eat the others.”
“Ugh!”
“Yeah, well,
not to every being’s taste, but whatever blobs you up.”
“Ye-es… Jhl
eats them?”
“Mm? Yes.
–Bother, I once saw a sales-being accidentally drop a black one into a bowl of
yellow ones without noticing what it’d done. It was really exciting.” He stood
back, sighing. “Never mind. Come on, let’s see what’s next.”
They
strolled on. Garment boutiques. Slightly different physiologies were involved
but all the claims were lies, just like back on Level Pink, and even though
this wasn’t the Tourist Hall all the prices were outrageous. Beverage bars.
Dead ringers for Bevvi’s Bevvies. Fortunately Dohra’s blobbed-up FW pack told
her that fluorogas shakes were not suited to her metabolism, so BrTl didn't
have to. She watched with breathless interest as, having ascertained it was
real fluorogas, he raised a madly bubbling and smoking glassful of pale green…
“Aah!” he
sighed. “Haven’t had a good fluorogas shake since Athlor Kadry was a pup!”
“No… Um,
does Jhl let you have them?”
“Let!” he said indignantly. “She’s not my
keeper, you know!”—BURP!—“Pardon,” he said lamely. “They do tend to have that
effect. Er, well I admit they're not awfully popular on the ship, no.” BURP!
“I see.”
BURP!
Dohra began
to shake helplessly.
BURP!
“Stop!” she
gasped. Tears oozed out of her eyes.
BURP! “I
can’t stop,” he admitted. BURP!
“Thank—you!”
gasped Dohra as the sales-being rushed up with a bunch of senso-tissues.
“Xathpyroids
always do that!” it assured her in a very high-pitched voice.
BURP! BURP!
“I see!
Sorry!” she gasped, blowing her nose.
“We once had
a xathpyroid customer that made that noise forty-four times after a fluorogas
shake,” it said proudly.
“Don’t!”
howled Dohra.
BURP! BrTl
got up. “Don’t mind her: she’s a humanoid, she can’t help it. That was a great
shake: set me up for the next IG-month! Thanks, shake-seller!”
“Thank you, xathpyroid cognate!” it squeaked.
BURP! BURP!
BrTl grabbed Dohra’s elbow with a pseudopod. “Come on.” BURP!
“Thank you!
Sorry!” she gasped, allowing him to lead her out.
“It’s not
that”—BURP!—“funny,” he said crossly.
“I can
see—why Jhl—doesn’t encourage them—on the ship!” she gasped.
“Yeah, hah, hah.”
BURP! “Come on, there’s a clutch of guessing-games down here—and need I warn
you,”—BURP!—“pardon me—need I warn you, don’t play any of them?”
“No!” gasped
Dohra helplessly.
The first
little guessing-game booth was attended by a plump being in a striped garment
which matched its booth’s awning. Red and green, quite a contrast to the bright
blue surroundings. It appeared to be asleep.
“A
BonkoDong: strictly nocturnal,” said BrTl tolerantly, perceiving she’d never
come across one before.
That’s
a pity, I like its ears, she sent carefully.
BURP!
“Vvlvanian curses, thought they’d worn off. Uh—ears, was that?”
“Mm,” she
said, nodding hard. EARS!
“Don’t roar,
I can pick you up!” He looked dubiously at the BonkoDong’s ears. Round, rather
furry, the fur very fringed at the outer edges—oh. Her frills thing again.
“No! They’re
round and—and lovely! But not frilled!” said Dohra indignantly.
“All right,
not frilled. But nothing short of a Spaceport Emergency’ll wake it up, so come
on.”
The next
booth-holder was awake, though without customers. She was a Lirriot from
McAlpine’s Planet, and Dohra, who had learnt about the mammalian humanoid
McAlpine and his legendary space explorations in Final-Year First School,
looked at her with great interest. Sure enough, she had the round, binocular,
black-nosed, blue-grey furred face and the small greyish antennae shown in the
school text-blob, and on her sweeping blue-grey tail there was a clutch of
young ones. Unlike the Lirriot in the text-blob, however, she was extremely
well dressed and wore an ingratiating smirk on the wide Lirriot mouth.
That’s a mammalian myth. Xathpyroids were on
that world IG millennia before humanoids ever set a mammalian toe there.
“Just looking, thanks, Lirriot Queen,” said BrTl quickly.
“Why not
chance your luck, xathpyroid cognate?” she replied ingratiatingly. –Dohra
jumped slightly: she had a very harsh, grating voice.
It’s even worse, not to be anything-ist,
without your translator. “Not today, thanks,” he said cheerfully.
“What sort
of game is it?” asked Dohra shyly. In front of the Lirriot was a small counter
with a series of bowl-shaped depressions in it. Each of these contained one
coloured bead.
Doesn’t matter, you’re not gonna win! sent BrTl drily.
“Guess which
bead will hit the dooney-lolla first, little humanoid queen!” replied the
Lirriot brightly, the smile becoming even more ingratiating.
Dohra
blushed and smiled. “I’m not a queen, though thank you for the compliment, Lirriot
Queen.”
“What?
Haven’t reproduced your species?” replied the Lirriot in shocked tones. “But
you are a mature being, aren’t you? Well! Tt-tt-tt-tt!”
That isn’t a tut-tut like you're thinking,
that’s a laugh, warned BrTl. Uh—titter?
Stop sending, BrTl, what if she picks you
up? “No, um, not yet,” she said politely to the stall-holder. “Pardon me,
but what is a dooney-lolla?”
“This, of
course,” replied the Lirriot, holding up a strange instrument made of silver
wire and strung with many little shiny beads.
It’s got a blob in it that’ll pick up your
guess and—
Shut UP, BrTl! “How much is it for one go, please?”
“Only half
an ig, little sterile female. If your bead wins, you get two igs!”
Dohra went
very red but didn’t try to explain that she wasn’t sterile or that humanoid
reproductive customs were a bit different from Lirriot ones. “Oh, well, I can
afford that! I’d like one go, please.”
“Choose your
bead on this blob, please—don’t show it to me!” warned the Lirriot in a sprightly
manner, handing over a small blob on which the coloured beads in the bowls were
marked.
That there blob’ll be sending your choice
to that other blob in that instru—
I’m not listening! Carefully Dohra,
shielding the blob from his sardonic gaze with one hand, prodded the yellow
bead choice.
“Now, watch!”
grated the Lirriot. “I raise the dooney-lolla! Come to the dooney-lolla, little
beads! Let the little sterile humanoid female’s choice be the first bead!”
Nothing
happened. Dohra stared hard at the beads in the bowls.
“Concentrate, little sterile female! Send your bead to the
dooney-lolla!”
This is a complete load of mok shit.
Shut
UP, BrTl! Dohra concentrated fiercely.
“The beads
are rising—the beads are rising—Oops! Concentrate, little sterile female! Send
your bead to the dooney-lolla!”
Dohra
concentrated fiercely on the beads, ignoring the fact that another being had
come up to BrTl’s other side and was also sending This is a complete load of mok shit.
“The beads
are rising—the beads are rising!”
Dohra
watched, mesmerised, as the beads rose a little, fell a little, rose a little
more—“My bead’s winning!” she cried. “Come on, bead!”
The yellow
bead approached the dooney-lolla, about two bead-lengths in front of the pink
one. The red one was gaining—it had overtaken the pink one—No, the blue one was
rising fast—the blue one was overtaking the yellow one—the yellow one was going
backwards! Dohra’s face fell as the blue bead touched the dooney-lolla, there
was a loud PING! and all the other beads fell back into their bowls.
“The blob,
please,” said the Lirriot briskly. “Yellow,” she ascertained pleasedly, holding
it so they could see it. “Sorry, you lose!”
“Just
fancy,” said BrTl.
“Don’t be
such a grouch, it was fun!” said Dohra with a laugh.
“It was a
crock, you mean,” said the newcomer.
“Yeah. A
crock of mok shit,” agreed BrTl.
“Pooh! For
half an ig, it was worth it!” said Dohra forcefully. “Thank you so much,
Lirriot Queen,” she added politely.
“Have
another go, little sterile female; your luck could change,” she grated
ingratiatingly, removing the blue bead from the dooney-lolla and dropping it
back into its bowl.
“Thank you
very much, but I don’t think I will.”
In
that case, sent BrTl drily, she’s
gonna try to sell you a pup.
“Then
perhaps I can interest you in a delightful Lirriot lirrilop?”—Yeah: lirrilop, that’s it, agreed BrTl
smugly.—“Or half a dozen?” She waved at the six lirrilops snugly ensconced on
her beautiful sweeping tail.—“I’ve got plenty.”
“Nuh—uh—I
couldn't deprive you of your children!” gasped Dohra in horror.
For the appropriate number of igs, you
could deprive her of her tail,
sent the newcomer sardonically.
“I’m due to
have another lot. Only ten igs each,” grated the Lirriot ingratiatingly.
Cheap, noted the newcomer.
While Dohra,
now bright red, was gasping desperately: “No, really! I mean, they’re lovely,
but I couldn’t!” a second Lirriot appeared through the colourful curtain that
veiled the inner recesses of the stall. This one was much smaller and had only
a thin, rather mangy-looking tail, and in sharp contrast to the Lirriot Queen,
who was dressed in a lovely multicoloured garment, elaborately wound and looped
up with beautiful little silver blobs, it was wearing grimy coveralls.
“That’s too
cheap for these beautiful lirrilops, my Queen,” it chirped in a little, high
voice.
“Keep out of
this, Consort!” she snapped. “Get back in there and finish that cleaning!”
Veiling its
face with an appendage in what was pretty clearly a gesture of submission, the
second Lirriot vanished behind the curtain.
Dohra had
clapped her hand to her mouth: the mangy-looking Lirriot must be the
stall-holder’s bond-partner!
“Useful for
one thing only,” she grated harshly. “Like all males.” She directed what Dohra
didn’t kid herself wasn’t a baleful look at BrTl and the being on his farther
side. “Nothing to stop you putting bracelets on these lirrilops, little sterile
female, if you like! And one of them’s a female: she’s useless at the moment,
but when she matures she could be your heir!”
“Um, no, I’m
very sorry, but humanoid customs are different,” croaked Dohra. BrTl, do something! she sent
desperately.
Um, what? Ten igs is cheap, are you sure
you don’t—Oh. No. Sorry. “Shall we move on?”
he suggested.
“Yes,
let’s!” she gasped. “Thank you so much! Good-bye!” she gasped.
“Nine and a
half igs each—a real bargain!” urged the Lirriot.
Don’t
reply, warned BrTl, grabbing her with a pseudopod and dragging her away.
The other
being, a thin, dark, tall bipedal being with what Dohra now saw were wings, not
the black cloak she had at first assumed them to be, was strolling along beside
them. “Mind if I join you? It’s quite a new experience, seeing the
guessing-games through humanoid eyes.”
“Innocent
humanoid eyes, I think you mean, Hawtree,” said BrTl heavily. He’d already had
a quick check, and for beings encountered casually in front of guessing-game
booths this male Hawtree was all right. Well, had quite a decent shield up, and
was a qualified Pilot, having been kicked out of Space Fleet not long after he
graduated for trying to—make that for getting caught trying to—wager his IG ID
in a game of pkwr in a spaceport dive on Huyajhangwania. Gorbolliwchz’s H/O Bar
& Grill: BrTl knew it quite well. “Join us by all means.”
“Thanks. I’m
Fweee-ah, nest name Weee-ah, flight name Zwheee; call me Fweee-ah,” said the
Hawtree amiably.
“Thanks, Fweee-ah.
I’m BrTl. Call me BrTl. This humanoid is W’t, Dohra B’Jn.”
“Hullo,
Fweee-ah!” gasped Dohra. “Please call me Dohra!”
“Glad to
meet you, Dohra,” he said, looking at her with what, even though his facial
expression didn't change, Dohra felt very strongly was considerable curiosity
mixed with amusement. “I’m a Hawtree. Avian. Oviparous, not viviparous like
you.”
Dohra hadn’t
known she was. “Am I?” she said lamely.
BrTl took a
look. “Ugh, yeah, so you are: like that Lirriot, how disgus—Forget I said
that!”
“Yes, of
course, only what is it?” she asked.
“Uh—” He
looked desperately at Fweee-ah.
“We lay
eggs—not me personally, I’m a male,” he said amiably to Dohra. “But your
nestlings are laid without eggshells.”
“Y—Oh! Of
course, how stupid of me. I've just never had to use the word before.”
“Viviparous,” repeated the Hawtree.
“Mm.”
“You are a
female, are you, Dohra?”
“Yes, that’s
right,” she agreed, smiling at him.
“And are you
sterile?”
“No!” she
gasped, turning very red. “That was just that Lirriot Queen’s assumption,
because I—I’m mature and I haven’t got my children with me! I mean, I haven’t
got any children but I could have— I mean, I’m not sterile!” she gulped.
“No, I can
see that now,” agreed Fweee-ah kindly. “That was a typical Lirriot assumption.”
“Humanoids
are all like that inside,” BrTl contributed somewhat glumly. “My Captain’s a
humanoid.”
“Yeah, I
know! Jhl Smt Wong, personal name Jhl, nest name Smt, flight name Wong—right?
We went through the Academy together.”
“Yeah. Well,
that is her name, though I’m not sure how the bits fit together.”
“Seconded to
a what?” replied the Hawtree with a
shrill crow.
–Dohra had
jumped. Now she reddened, realising it was just his version of a laugh.
“Yeah. Don't
worry, I’m never gonna let her live it down!” BrTl assured him happily.
“I
wouldn’t!” agreed Fweee-ah with another crow. “Look, Dohra, shall we try this
game?”
“Not if it’s
got a dooney-lolla in it,” advised BrTl drily.
“I don't
think it will have,” replied Fweee-ah with relish, “because actually, I think
if you’ll consult the Encyclopaedia you’ll find there’s no such thing as a
dooney-lolla: that Lirriot Queen made it up.”
BrTl
collapsed in a terrific shaking fit. Very fortunately Level Blue’s concourse
was built to take it, though a trio of Qooners that had been approaching with
their appendages held out staggered and then retreated hurriedly.
“Yeah!” said
Fweee-ah with a pleased crow. “Would you like to, Dohra? On me!”
“I can see
perfectly well,” replied Dohra with dignity, “that you’re just waiting for me
to make a fool of myself, Fweee-ah—the same as BrTl,” she noted severely. “But
actually, I don’t mind, see? ’Cos the point about these games is a being’s not meant to take them seriously! They’re
just fun.”
“I've known
innocent young spacers lose an IG month’s pay on them all the same,” replied
the Hawtree drily, letting her see a picture of them.
“I’m sure
they did! They may not all be male, and of course they’re not humanoids, but
the only difference between them and my little brother J’nno is that he hasn’t
left Second School yet!” retorted Dohra swiftly. “And if you really want to
pay, I’ll have one go, thanks, so long as it isn’t more than half an ig.”
“Half an ig
to you, gracious Muu,” wheezed the
stall-holder ingratiatingly.
Dohra looked
dubiously at the small being—what was visible of it for the face-mask, extra
antennae which she didn’t think were
part of its physical being, and metal, um, not armour, more like a casing, with
tubes and things going in and out of it. The rest of its physiology was veiled
by a closely-woven fabric in a bright shade of blue, about two shades lighter
than that of Level Blue’s flooring and walls, apart from the flexible, um, not
digits, and thinner than tentacles—tendrils, perhaps, which protruded from
three blue sleeves at the ends of three of the metal tubes.
Let it call you a Muu, it can’t tell the
difference, sent Fweee-ah.
It’s a Bgly-Aaimer from Meevaimia and it’s
not an h-breather: that’s why the face mask and the protective casing, though
their bodies are pretty soft and floppy,
supplied BrTl helpfully. “Isn’t this level a bit h-breather for you,
Bgly-Aaimer?” he said genially.
“Oh, yes,
gracious xathpyroid cognate, but a most salubrious atmosphere all the same!
Wanna find the admiral?” Swiftly the tendrils shuffled a small pile of cards.
“Come on,
gracious Muu!” it urged Dohra. “Only half an ig! Guess where the admiral is!”
“What do I
get if I win?” she asked cautiously.
“One of
these delightful prizes, gracious Muu!” It gestured at the shelves behind it.
Dohra had thought this might be a game like she and J’nno had often played at
the shows at home, where you threw a small blob on a string at the prizes, and
whichever one you managed to wind the blob around was yours. She was rather
disappointed: she liked that game. And these prizes looked intriguingly odd.
“Calculated
to appeal to very young asteroid-brained h-breather spacers, mostly,” explained
Fweee-ah with a muffled crow. He held out his left wing and pointed.
“Those are chrono-balancers on the top row:
that tube is supposed to draw in h-breather atmosphere and send the bead in it
up to the right time on the scale. I’ve never seen one that actually worked,
though when I served on a Seeker the crew’s quarters were full of them. Let’s
see, that’s a row of empty boxes—oh, you think they’re pretty? Well, whatever
blobs you up. You’d know chewing-taffy—it’s only the wrapping that’s blue or
green, it’s just ordinary chewing-taffy.”
“H-breather,” BrTl reminded him.
“Oh, right:
h-breather variety: thanks, BrTl—not suited to your metabolism, Dohra. Those
toy Seekers and Destroyers are made of recycled lubolyon, as you can see;
there’s another booth further along run by this one’s cognate—no, beg your
pardon, BrTl, not cognate, but I’m not sure what they call them—as I say,
another booth that’ll imprint it with the name of your choice if you win one.
Those are fluorogas storm-bubbles, they’re quite amusing when they work, but if
you shake them up too hard the cheap ones are apt to explode. And those shapes
on the bottom row are all balloons—the skins are just elasticized lubolyon—and
the selection of one of those has been known to cause a riot, given the right
company!” he ended with a crow.
“Rude
shapes,” elaborated BrTl helpfully. “They will float in o-breather atmosphere,
though, so if you want one—”
Dohra
wouldn’t have minded a rude one, actually, but they all looked completely
harmless to her! “Um, maybe not,” she said regretfully. “So how do I play,
please?”
It wasn’t
easy to tell, with the face mask and the tubes, but her companions had the
strong impression that the booth-holder was giving her an incredulous look. But
it said smoothly: “First I shuffle the cards, gracious Muu. Then I lay them out
face down and you choose the admiral!”
Ho, ho, ho, and Many Happy Galaxy Days to
you, too! sent BrTl.
In quintupled 5-D-triangles! agreed
Fweee-ah.
“Good,” said
Dohra grimly. “That sounds easy. May I have half an ig, please, Fweee-ah?”
“Certainly,”
he replied courteously, handing one over. Dohra gave it to the Bgly-Aaimer.
“Let me show
you how, first. Watch the admiral, gracious Muu!” Dohra watched keenly. The
slender tendrils shuffled the cards. “You don’t know where the admiral’s gone,
do you, gracious Muu?”
“Yes, of
course I do, it’s that one!” said Dohra with a laugh. There were only seven
cards and the Bgly-Aaimer had shuffled them quite slowly.
“Yes, so it
is,” it said sadly, displaying the hand.
One produced from the culture-pod every IG
microsecond, sent BrTl heavily to the Hawtree.
Yes? Oh! Yeah, one laid every IG
microsecond! agreed Fweee-ah happily. Wait for it!
“Try again
for a lovely prize. Now I shuffle again—there!” Dohra blinked. Rapidly the
Bgly-Aaimer laid the cards out face down. “Where’s the admiral, gracious Muu?”
“Help!” said
Dohra, smiling. “I think… No, hang on. Um…” She moved her hands back and forth
over the cards. “You put it—No, first it was over there, and when you laid them down— No, that’s wrong.”
Wanna bet? Ten igs says she’s wrong? sent the Hawtree snidely.
Hah, hah, hah, replied BrTl.
Dohra’s eyes
narrowed. “It’s… that one!”
“Turn it
over, gracious Muu, no deception here!” wheezed the Bgly-Aaimer.
She turned
the card over. It was the two of circles.
“And Happy
Galaxy Day to you, too!” said BrTl cheerfully. “Come on, no more goes, no being
in the Known Universe has ever won at Find The Admiral.”
“It was fun,
though,” said Dohra on a wistful note as he grabbed her hand and bore her
inexorably away. “Thank you so much!” she called.
“Any time,
gracious Muu!” wheezed the Bgly-Aaimer.
Dohra then
lost half an ig of BrTl’s at Guess The Weight Of The Giant Taffy Ball. She
watched eagerly as two youngish Honnoyers in Ordinary Spacers’ uniforms with
Gunnery flashes up also failed to guess its weight, and as a Dupproh in
Engineer’s Assistant’s uniform equally failed to guess its weight. After that
she lost half an ig of her own at Guess The Number of Beads In The Wottlii
Jar—hardly surprisingly: the being in charge of that booth was another Lirriot
Queen. Hurriedly BrTl dragged her away, it wasn’t gonna take those two young
Honnoyer Gunners long to fail to guess the number of beads and they didn't want
a repetition of the pup-vending scene. Or he
didn’t: he could feel that Fweee-ah did.
“But they
might guess!” she cried.
“And
Vvlvania might freeze over, Dohra, but it won’t be in either of our lifetimes!
Uh—what about Guess How High The Huyajhangwanian Oddli Can Bounce?”
“Um—no, they
have that game at the shows on C’T’rea, and I always lose,” she said
regretfully.
“I'll give
it a go,” offered Fweee-ah. “How much, Honnoyer?”
The Honnoyer
in charge of the booth raised its speaking tube. It blenched. “Not available to
qualified Pilots, Hawtree,” it said quickly.
“There’s no
notice that says that,” noticed Dohra.
“Closing
down!” said the Honnoyer quickly. As it spoke the yellow and white spotted
awning over the booth came right down and closed both the booth and its owner
off.
“I can see
why you wanted to come with us,” conceded BrTl. “Come on, then, let’s find one
that you’d like to play, Dohra.”
The one that
Dohra would like to play was Guess Which Leaping Ll’gyrian Lizard Will Win The
Race. She should have had a chance at that: there were only three lizards. …No.
“There is a
sure-fire way to win,” noted BrTl thoughtfully as the booth-holder stowed away
Fweee-ah’s half-ig.
“Yes, we
could all bet,” she agreed. “And then we’d lose one and a half igs and win
one!”
“You’re
catching on,” he admitted. “Come on: ’nother one? On me.”
She chose
Guess What’s Under The Cup. As no clues were offered, there was no way in the
Known Universe of guessing this unless one could read the booth-holder’s
mind—but as the booth-holder was a lubo-bot there was no mind to read. BrTl
hadn't been going to let her play at all but he noticed in time that she was
feeling sorry for the lubo-bot because it wasn’t a being. Oh, well, what was
half an ig?
Dohra had
guessed, smiling, a blue bead. The raising of the cup had revealed a small
toe-ring with a probably-not-even-semi-precious orange stone in it. She watched
with interest as the counter-top sank smoothly out of sight and rose again to
reveal another upside-down cup.
“That won’t
be a toe-ring with an orange stone,” noted BrTl idly.
“Ssh!” she
hissed. “Let’s watch!”
They
watched.
A small,
pink-crested Nblyterian in her/s male stage, wearing Ordinary Spacer’s uniform,
came up. He was wearing a face-mask which observedly was doing nothing to help
his FW pack, but if he was happy with it—he’d bought it at a nearby
boutique—BrTl for one wasn’t gonna disabuse him. And Fweee-ah for two—right.
“One guess
for only half an ig, respected Space Fleet being!” grated the lubo-bot.—Does that lubo-bot’s voice remind you of any
being? BrTl asked the Hawtree idly.—Five’ll
get ya ten that Lirriot Queen owns this booth as well, replied Fweee-ah.—Uh-huh.
The Spacer
paid over his half-ig and made a great show of racking his brains over what
could be under the cup. –Reading Dohra,
sent Fweee-ah laconically.—Right. And
trying to read us, the cheeky young Vvlvanian toad! added BrTl.
Fweee-ah
took a step forward, the wings rising slightly, the beak about to open—
No, don’t, more fun not to! sent BrTl hurriedly.
You’re right, he agreed, relaxing.
“Um, could
it possibly be a… No, it couldn’t! Um, we-ell…
My guess is a toe-ring with an orange stone in it!” produced the Spacer.
Silently the
lubo-bot pointed at the cup, and it rose, revealing a small blue bead.
Fweee-ah
gave a crow and flapped his wings in glee, and BrTl gave a roar of laughter and
went into a shaking fit. The more so because of the young Vvlvanian toad’s
cheek, of course. And also because that trio of Qooners had come up yet again with their appendages stretched
out, why was there never an IG Militia being in sight when you needed one?
“What’s the
JOKE?” shouted the young spacer angrily, standing his ground.
“In the
first place, the joke’s on you, ’cos you read that it was a toe-ring with an
orange stone last time, didn’t you? But I guessed a blue bead: see? And,” said
Dohra with relish, “I rather think that in the second place the joke’s on you
’cos these two beings are both qualified Pilots.”—The Nblyterian gasped and
took a step backwards.—“Yes, I thought you were trying to read them. The
lift-blobs are thataway, if you were feeling like looking for an exit.”
The
Nblyterian scrambled off.
“Thanks. I
enjoyed that: tell your mistress so. Or master, of course,” said Fweee-ah
smoothly, tipping the lubo-bot ten igs.
“It wasn’t
that good,” protested BrTl weakly.
“Yes, it
was, BrTl,” he said happily. “Come on: one more game, maybe? Then I’d like to
treat you both to a drink, if I may?”
“Thank you
very much, Fweee-ah, that sounds lovely,” said Dohra politely. “Only I should
just mention that he's already had, um, hiccups once this morning from a
fluorogas shake.”
“Wind,”
admitted BrTl, patting his chest cautiously. “It seems to have gone.”
“All part of
the fun!” said Fweee-ah breezily, flapping the wings a little. “Come on,
there’s a tinker-tanker booth down here, you’ll love it, Dohra!”
“Um, is it
anything like pongo-pongo?” asked Dohra, following him obediently.
“I don’t
know: never played that. Tinker-tanker’s really easy!”
“That’s
good, I’m not much good at complicated games,” she admitted cheerfully.
BrTl began: Never, EVER play—But then realised the
Hawtree had picked it up long since.
The being in
charge of the tinker-tanker booth looked very much like the Hawtree. BrTl eyed
it askance.
“No,” said
Fweee-ah with a smothered cackle: “Not a cognate, BrTl, or even a fellow-nestling.
He’s a Bzzree. We do come from the same world: yes.”—Only just sentient within the Meaning, he explained.—“What’s
your name, Bzzree?”
The Bzzree
gave a gratified crow, and croaked: “Personal name Craaa, nest name Crr-Craaa,
flight name Bzz-Craaa, Great Hawtree! Fancy a little game of tinker-tanker?”
“Sure! We’ll
all have a go! –On me: I insist! I’ll show you, Dohra,” he said, giving the
Bzzree a half-ig. “See all these little balls?”
“Yes,” she
said, bending eagerly over the booth’s counter, which had a covering of
transparent lubolyon under which myriads of tiny coloured balls in little
channels could be observed. Or in other words, reflected BrTl heavily: “APPLY
HERE, SUCKERS” emblazoned on it in lumo-blobs half an IG glp high.
“You take
this blob,” said Fweee-ah, suiting the action to the word, “and give them a
jab, and if you manage to get one in each of those little holes—see?”—Dohra
nodded eagerly: there were many more balls than little holes—“you win a prize.”
Casually he activated the blob. The little coloured balls ran about crazily in
their channels, to an accompaniment of Dohra’s excited squeaks, then headed
straight for the little holes and dropped down them. The booth emitted a series
of hoarse CLANG, CLANG, CLANG noises, a bright blue-white lumo-blob lit up on
top of it, flashing madly, and the Bzzree cried: “Huzza! You win, Great
Hawtree! Choose any prize you like!”
BrTl felt
rather as if a bright blue-white lumo-blob had lit up on top of him. Never mind that Pilot’s qualification,
the plasmo-blasted Hawtree must be shilling for the Bzzree! A being could be
reduced to worse, if down on its luck. Stealthily his hand approached his
blaster—
“Thought I
told you two beings to get onto Level Pink and stay there?” said a horribly
familiar voice from just behind his right ear.
Gasping,
BrTl stood up very straight. “’Lo, Sar’t-Major,” he croaked.
The giant
Sergeant-Major of Militia straightened. “Don’t make me stoop again,” it warned.
“No. Sorry,”
he muttered. “Um, well, I’m o/h-breather, Sar’t-Major.”
“And?”
“And her FW
pack’s working really good and we really aren’t gonna stay much longer!” he
blurted.
“Come here,
W’t, Dohra B’Jn, viviparous humanoid,” said the Sergeant-Major heavily.
Dohra stepped
forward and looked up at it shrinkingly.
“Any being
been annoying you? This Hawtree here?”
“Oh, no,
sir—Sar’t-Major!” she gasped. “He’s been very kind: he’s paid for me at lots of
the games!”
“Huh.
Breathing all right, are you?”
“Yes, fine,”
said Dohra limply.
The giant
being fumbled at her FW pack with its sufficiently large digit. Dohra
suppressed a gasp: the FW pack was rather near the mammary glands. “Jab of
hyperblob, or I’m a Friyrian lordship with his gill-collar on,” it finally
pronounced. –“I’m not asking,” it noted. “You’ve got until I do my next check,
that’ll be at zero six hundred hours IG time, and then if I catch you up here
again—either of you, xathpyroid cognate—you’re for it. Goddit? For—it.”
“Yes,
Sar’t-Major! Thank you very much!” gasped Dohra.
“Goddit,
Sar’t-Major,” allowed BrTl, not daring to thank it.
“Huh.” It
turned away but turned back and noted: “That Hawtree isn’t shilling, but you
needn’t trust him further than you can see him. And it’s IG-illegal to offer
money or nourishment to any plasmo-blasted Qooners that might try to beg:
goddit?”
No-one was
sure which being was being addressed, so they all replied smartly: “Goddit,
Sar’t-Major!” Even the Bzzree.
“Huh!” it
said, turning away and moving off ponderously.
There was
dead silence at the tinker-tanker booth.
BrTl began
to clear his throat but thought better of it.
“Did you or
did you not,” asked Fweee-ah in a dreamy tone that put BrTl in mind of some of
his Captain’s dreamy tones, “send for an IG Militia being, xathpyroid cognate?”
“N—Uh—I
didn’t send! I mean—Oh, mok shit,” he
muttered. “It was those plasmo-blasted Qooners. I just thought casually there
was never one of those beings around when you need one—” He stopped: Fweee-ah
had gone into a great cackling fit, flapping his wings madly. Immediately the
Bzzree joined in, flapping his wings much as he could behind his counter.
“All right,”
said BrTl crossly: “I’ll spend the next IG month polishing my shield!”
“I would,”
admitted Dohra faintly.
“Yes,”
agreed Fweee-ah weakly. “I don't know when I've laughed so much! –Well, come
on, Craaa, what’ve I won?”
“Oh! You’ve
won any prize you care to choose, Great Hawtree! No being gets all the little balls in!” he said
admiringly.
“I've been
playing tinker-tanker since I was just out of the egg," the Hawtree replied
mildly, looking at the prizes. “Uh—well, like to choose one for me, Dohra?”
“Well, I
don’t know what you’d like,” she said shyly. “They’re all lovely,” she said
kindly to the Bzzree.
He gave a
gratified croak, and preened the chest-feathers displayed under his shabby
ex-Service Issue jacket.
Dohra
dithered over the prizes for some time, finally choosing a little lubolyon disc
with tiny coloured balls inside because it was a miniature tinker-tanker game
that she thought Fweee-ah might like, and was then very disconcerted when he
presented it to her.
She then had
a go at tinker-tanker, grasping the blob fiercely. The little coloured balls ran
about crazily in their tubes, to an accompaniment of her excited squeaks, then
trickled down to the corners of the counter top and stayed there. Not a single
one had reached a little hole.
“Oh!” she
cried sadly.
“You lose,
Humanoid Friend of Great Hawtree!” croaked the Bzzree happily. “Have a go,
Xathpyroid Friend of Great Hawtree?”
“On me!”
said Fweee-ah with a slight cackle.
BrTl
shrugged very slightly. “If you insist—thanks.” He took the blob. Casually he
activated it. The little coloured balls ran about crazily in their channels, to
an accompaniment of Dohra’s excited squeaks, then headed straight for the
little holes and—then trickled down to the corners of the counter top and
stayed there.
“What? Mok shit!” he cried.
“You
resigned control of the blob too soon,” said Fweee-ah with a cackle.
“I did not,” said BrTl through his crunchers.
He gave the Bzzree an ig. “I'm gonna have two goes and win two prizes or know
the reason why.” Grimly he activated the blob. The little coloured balls ran
about crazily in their channels, to an accompaniment of Dohra’s excited
squeaks, then headed straight for the little holes and— trickled down to the
corners of the counter top and stayed there.
“I don't believe—” Grimly he activated the blob.
The little coloured balls ran about crazily in their channels, to an
accompaniment of Dohra’s excited squeaks, then headed straight for the little
holes and—Go in! Go in! One went in! HURRAY! Then the others trickled down to
the corners of the counter top and stayed there.
“Sorry, you
lose!” chirped the Bzzree happily, stowing the ig away. “One ball in each
little hole, that’s the rule!”
“Yes, it
is,” agreed Dohra sympathetically. “You’re getting better, though, BrTl!”
“Look,
I am a qualified—Oh, forget it,” he said tiredly. “There’s a fix on that blob,
and forgive me for mentioning it, but it’s something that’ll only relax its
grip for oviparous h-breather beings from a certain planet.”
“No, there
isn’t,” said Fweee-ah drily, while the Bzzree gave an indignant caw of denial.
“You made the elementary mistake every young cadet does on his first leave from
the Academy.”
“Really? Do
tell,” he said politely.
“No, honest,
BrTl!” he said with a smothered cackle. “Work it out: what were you
concentrating on when the little balls were racing around like crazy?”
BrTl thought
about it. Slowly the tip of his tail began to twitch.
“Yeah,” said
the Hawtree sympathetically. “Have this one on me.”
BrTl took a
deep breath. He accepted the half-ig. ”Thank you, that’s very generous,” he
said, through the crunchers but at least managing to get it out. Grimly he
activated the blob. The little coloured balls ran about crazily in their channels,
to an accompaniment of Dohra’s excited squeaks. BrTl concentrated his mind on
the blob. The little balls headed straight for the little holes and dropped
down them. The booth emitted a series of hoarse CLANG, CLANG, CLANG noises, the
blue-white lumo-blob lit up on top of it, flashing madly, and the Bzzree cried:
“He's done it! Huzza! Well done,
Great Xathpyroid Friend! You must have Hawtree blood! Choose any prize you
like!”
“Hurray!”
cried Dohra, jumping up and down and clapping her hands madly.
“Humanoid
gesture of great appreciation,” said BrTl quickly to the Hawtree, realising he
was backing off and that his swiller was in a state of frozen horror.
“Oh. It’s a
shoo-ing gesture at home,” he said weakly. “It’s all right, Craaa. She’s
happy.”
“It takes
all sorts to make a Known Universe, doesn’t it?” croaked the feathered one
valiantly, pulling himself together with a visible effort. “Choose any prize,
Great Xathpyroid.”
“Actually I
wouldn’t mind one of those miniature games,” he admitted.
“Not blob-driven,”
said Fweee-ah with a smothered cackle, as the Bzzree passed one over.
Dohra looked
from one to the other of them uncertainly. “What is the trick?”
BrTl cleared
his throat carefully. “Just to concentrate on the blob, Dohra, instead of getting
carried away by the excitement of seeing the little balls run round and
concentrating on them.”
“Oh.”
“Wanna try?”
asked the Bzzree eagerly, holding out the blob.
“Yes,
please!” she beamed. “Oh, no, please let me pay this time!” she said to the
Hawtree, passing over a half-ig. “I’m not very good at blob-control, mind you,
but if it’s anything like a culture-pan blob, I might manage it! –Hullo, Blob,”
she said to it. “I’m awfully sorry I thought you didn’t matter, before.”
Cheerfully
BrTl advised the stunned avians: Just
don’t let it worry you!
Dohra
grasped the blob and concentrated on it. The little coloured balls ran about
crazily in their channels, to an accompaniment of her heavy breathing. They
began to head for the little holes. BrTl found he was concentrating on the blob
with her and hurriedly stopped—not fair, after all the game was the Bzzree’s
living. The little balls gave the appearance of having lost their way and
rolled about purposelessly. Dohra had her eyes shut. A ball approached a hole:
yes, no, yes—It dropped in! The other little balls were losing vigour. They
began to trickle towards the sides… No, wait! Another little ball was
approaching a hole! Yes—No—Yes!! Hurray! Only two, four—uh, eight more to go,
help. The little balls were definitely losing momentum, now. None of them were
near the little holes… No. They trickled down to the bottom of the counter and
then rolled slowly into the corners. Dohra opened her eyes, panting. “How many
did I get?”
“Two,”
admitted BrTl.
“Was that
all? It really takes it out of you, doesn’t it?” she beamed.
“Never mind:
two’s really good for a mammalian that’s never flown a ship, Great Humanoid,”
said the Bzzree comfortingly. “Have a prize from the bottom shelf.” Kindly he
passed her a wheeper-flooper.
“Oh, can I
really? But it isn’t fair, I didn’t really win!” she protested.
“No, you
deserve it!” he croaked. –Yeah, reflected BrTl, she probably did. All up the
being had had—lessee, half an ig out of her, two whole igs out of the Hawtree,
and one ig out of him, Br-Sucker-Tl, for which it had shelled out two small
lubolyon games, worth at a generous estimate one tenth of an ig each, though
he’d seen them for sale on the streets of Plentyville on Playfair One for a
tenth of an ig for three. And wheeper-floopers were normally sold wholesale for
a hundredth of an ig, that was, one IG hunnert, an amount so insignificant that
few beings bothered to carry hunnerts at all. They were said to be made of
recycled senso-tissue and brightly coloured dye.
Dohra had
allowed the being to force the thing on her and was now, with super optimism,
blowing into it.
Whee-eee-eee—per-flooo-ooo-per, it
moaned. Whee-eee-eee—per-fluh!
“Oops!” said
Dohra with a happy laugh. “Worn out! It was a good one, though! I’ll keep it as
a souvenir, Craaa!” she beamed. “I’ll put it on my dressing-table with this
dear little tinker-tanker game! –I bet I could really learn tinker-tanker, if I
tried.”
Wincing,
BrTl took her hand firmly in a pseudopod. “We can’t stay that long, we’ve got
to get going—remember?”
“Oh, yes.
What a pity; I was hoping there might be time for a game of pongo-pongo.”
Get snaffled
by that large IG Militia being for a game of vacuum-frozen pongo-pongo? Great splintered shards of quog!
“We can play
that any old time down on Level Pink,” he said firmly. “It’s no different up
here, ya know.”
“Come and
have a drink, anyway!” urged the Hawtree. “Thanks, Craaa,” he added casually,
tipping him ten igs, was the being made
of igs?”
“Thank you, Great Hawtree! My pleasure!”
croaked the Bzzree, stowing the igs away in the blink of an eye.
And with an
amiable cackle, the Hawtree led his guests off to the Level Blue ISLA bar.
On due consideration
BrTl conceded he wouldn’t have another fluorogas shake at this juncture—no. Oh,
well, a shot of qwlot, then, it was always the same. She’d better have something that won’t explode, Fweee-ah.
Or give her wind? That narrows it down!
–It’s all right, I'll get her some spring water. He ordered. The result
came in a small sealed bubble with a straw attached whose end dissolved once it
was in Dohra's mouth.
“I’ve lapped up water on h-breather worlds,”
said BrTl in some confusion. “It was lying around in pools. It might have had a
few different minerals and stuff in it but it was water.”
“It’s
something to do with IG Regs,” explained Fweee-ah. “This atmosphere isn't
natural to her, so anything that’s supplied for her to drink has to be in a sealed
container—geddit?”
“I get it,
but it’s mad! –How’s it taste?” he asked.
Dohra made a
glugging noise round the straw. They watched her uneasily. Finally she set the
bubble down, gasped for breath, and explained: “It wouldn’t let me stop until
I’d finished!”
“Yeah, it
might float out of that bubble-thing and contaminate the atmosphere,” agreed
BrTl snidely. “Joke, Dohra,” he said. “H-breather mixture’s really light; can't
you feel the difference?”
“Um, no.”
“Really
light,” confirmed the Hawtree placidly. “I can fly in o-breather atmospheres,
so long as the grav’s IG normal or less, but slighter h-breather avians like
Bzzrees can’t. Have another?”
BrTl
wouldn’t have minded, but time was getting on and—Well, better safe than sorry.
“Come down with us. Have one on me.”
“Yes!”
beamed Dohra. “Do come, Fweee-ah! Then I can show you how to play pongo-pongo!”
The Hawtree
agreeing amiably, the trio adjourned to the public lift-blobs. Once they were
on one and it was s-l-o-w-l-y descending BrTl noticed the avian was emanating
discomfort. “What’s up, Fweee-ah? Look, if the atmosphere’s gonna be too heavy
for you, don’t feel you have to come just to be polite—”
“No,” he
said, wriggling his shoulders slightly. “Hate being carried up and down, that’s
all.”
“Of course!”
gasped Dohra. “You wouldn’t need lift-blobs at home!”
“No,” he
agreed, sending her a picture of his home-world.
“Ooh!” she
gasped. “Can you see, BrTl? How wonderful!”
It was
pretty average for an avian world. They weren’t primmos, they lived in very
civilized nests high up on the pinnacles of their rocky world, or on the tops
of very tall trees in the case of suburbanite Hawtrees, or on the tops of crags
on rocky islands—there was quite a lot of sea on their world. It was very dark
blue and the sky was also a deep blue, and in fact their sun was bluish, too.
“This is my
place,” said Fweee-ah, sending a picture of a positive avian palace: built of
shards of some shimmering pink stuff, not something that a xathpyroid would
have called a dwelling, but nevertheless recognisable as having large
windows—with large maxi-webs over them, just by the by—and large entrances that
must be doorways, well, fair enough, they didn't need to have them at
floor-level, so why should they, and a big private pool, not deep, but a pretty
shade of green, and a very pleasant garden. “This is my bond-partner,
Chweee-ah,”—she was very like him, but dark brown, not black—“and these are the
nestlings—quite big, now.”
“Oh, thank you for showing us!” said Dohra,
her eyes shining.
“You’re very
welcome, Dohra,” he said as they reached Level Pink and the lift-blob
announced: Level Pink. O-breather. Sim-lounges, bar, ISLA
Kiddy-Kinder—charges apply—fine selection of boutiques. Access to Tourist Halls
by Tourist Pass only.
Just
coincidentally, as they got off the lift-blob the giant IG Militia being was
leaning on a nearby pink pillar. It eyed them sardonically, but said nothing.
BrTl would have headed blindly for the bar and the qwlot but the pongo-pongo
lounge was on their way. So they looked in.
“It’s free
to get in, and if you play, you get a free drink,” explained Dohra. “They
charge a whole ig if you want to play, so I’ll just explain it, shall I?”
However muddled it gets, sent BrTl on a
desperate note, just—uh—try to accept it,
will you, Fweee-ah?
Of course. She's rather like my Chweee-ah, he replied happily.
They sat
down in the back row and Dohra began to explain.
“You see,
you have a little, um, like a blob, and you choose your numbers, like, in rows.
You can poke your numbers into it, or say them to it, if it’s more convenient.”
Or
send them, added BrTl resignedly, but
few beings capable of that bother to play pongo-pongo.
Ye— “What’s that?” croaked the Hawtree
in alarm, as the roomful of beings bounded out of their chairs shouting:
“Pongo-pongo-pongo! Pongo-pongo-pongo! Pongo-pongo-pongo!”
“It’s a
Pongo-pongo-pongo!” cried Dohra in delight. “Look! Pongo-pongo-pongo!
Pongo-pongo-pongo!” she cried, leaping up.
BrTl didn’t
bother to get up: he could see quite well, though this wasn’t actually a factor
in his decision, but the puzzled Hawtree stood up. At the front of the room a
large coloured display of numbers was flashing madly, a being in bright
garments was leaping up and down on a little stage in front of this display,
and above it a large blob-sign was flashing the rune “Pongo-pongo-pongo.” It was a
Pongo-pongo-pongo, all right. He sank back down onto his seat.
“Yeah,”
noted BrTl.
“Some being
got all the numbers!” explained Dohra, sitting down again.
“But—oh. Its
numbers matched those fifteen at the front?” croaked Fweee-ah.
Got it in fifteen, sent BrTl
sardonically.
It would be very easy to control that,
the poor being replied dazedly.
Wouldn’t it, just.
The Hawtree
watched numbly as another game commenced, beings put new rows of numbers into
their blobs—it was incredibly easy to pick them up, you wouldn’t need the blobs
to do it, they were all broadcasting like crazy—and the being at the front of
the room began manipulating a blob which ostensibly lit up numbers on the
display behind it. That isn’t a blob that
that being’s got, he sent dazedly to BrTl.
Ya don’t say.
Suddenly a
being from the crowd broadcast: PONGO-PONGO!
Then a being shouted: “Pongo-pongo!”
“There!”
hissed Dohra. “Pongo-pongo! Some being’s got a row of matching numbers!”
The odds against that—
You said it, Hawtree, agreed BrTl as
several beings in the neighbourhood of the putative winner cried loudly: “Pongo-pongo
here!” and the being at the front had an attack of hysterics. But at an ig a game—they last on average as
long as that one did—they can afford to let an occasional being win. Encourages
the suckers, see?
Yeah, he admitted.
A
controller-being in a strange uniform was marching down the aisle towards the
claimant. Verified, it sent sourly.
“Pongo-pongo!” it shouted.
“Yay!” cried
the winner, more simply.
“Pongo-pongo!” cried the being at the front. “Pay ten igs! Pay ten igs!”
Sixteen more
games went by in rapid succession with no winners. Then there was another
claim: “Pongo-pongo! I’ve got a pongo-pongo!” This was duly verified.
“Pay eight
igs!” shouted the being at the front madly. “Pay eight igs!”
“Why eight?”
hissed the Hawtree frantically.
“I don’t
know,” admitted Dohra with her sunny smile. “The regs are in the blobs, but
it’s awfully complicated. All these beings know, though.”
Look,
sent BrTl sardonically.
He looked. Great splintered shards of quog, so they do,
he confirmed dazedly.
Yep, it’s in there amongst the slush
somewhere! BrTl agreed. Had enough?
I think she’d like a game.
So Dohra had
a game of pongo-pongo on Fweee-ah. Gee, her numbers didn’t win.
After that
they definitely needed a drink, so they adjourned to the bar. There the
Feeny-Argyllians were discovered drinking feverfew tea. They were thrilled to
meet the Hawtree. Their Flppu wasn't: it shot off to the other side of the room
and hid behind a large couch. Fweee-ah was pressed to stay for lunch but
declined very nicely: the food wouldn’t be quite suited to his metabolism, he
thought he’d go back upstairs and have a bowl of noodles for lunch. And he went
off rather slowly: pretty clearly the heavier o-breather atmosphere was having
its effect.
“What a
charming being!”—“What a charming being!”
Dohra leant
forward eagerly: “Yes, isn't he? He showed me a picture of his home—he calls it
a nest, but it’s like a real house, with proper rooms, it’s lovely!” She sent
them a confused picture of it and they tootled kindly. “And we had the loveliest
morning, didn’t we, BrTl?” She began to tell them about it all in great detail.
BrTl just leaned back in his corner and allowed his eyes gently to…
BrTl! BrTl!
“Uh— You’re
early,” he said, blinking at Trff. “Who hoiked you out of your plasmo-blasted
you-know-whats?”
“Jhl,” it
replied simply.
BrTl began
to look round eag—
“No,” it
said regretfully.
–Eagerly.
“Well, bother! Well, how?”
“Comm-blob
message.”
“You weren’t
on the pod, you were on—”
“Yes, but it
was carrying this comm-blob,” it said, holding it out. “She-it’s going to call
you-it in… five IG minutes.”
“Why?
What’ve I done?” he whined.
“Dunno,
BrTl. Something plasmo-blasted stupid,” it said cheerfully. “It’s time for
lunch. Does it have to go now?”
Does it have
to go now! Vacuum-frozen asteroid-brain! “No, you can stay and listen to her
bawl me out,” he said resignedly. “Yeah, okay, see you in a bit,” he said to
the others. And they went off to grab their usual table, Dohra telling the
Feeny-Argyllians in great detail about the tinker-tanker game.
“Tinker-tanker?” Trff hooted incredulously.
“Don’t dare
to say it’s—”
“That female
humanoid wouldn’t be able to master the blob!”
–Easy. “No,
you’re right,” he said, cheering up. “It’s a plasmo-blasted cunning game, mind
you.”
It waved an
antenna around a bit. “It depends on the quality of the blob.”
Er—yeah.
Something like that. Perhaps fortunately the comm-blob at that precise IG
microsecond announced: Incoming.
“Yes! I’m
here!” he said crossly.
Incoming.
“Stop that!
I’m here! This is BrTl!”
The
comm-blob stopped talking and he could then hear his Captain’s voice shouting:
“BrTl! What in FEDERATION have you been up to?”
Oops.
“Nothing,” he croaked. “Nothing to
get up to on the third muh—”
“I’ve just
had a sim-call from Fweee-ah Weee-ah Zwheee!”
she bellowed.
Now what was she on about?—This habit of
putting the cognate-name last was very confusing to a xathpyroid, though quite
a few species did it.—“Uh—yeah, he said he knew you at the Academy,” he groped.
“Knew me at
the Academy?” she shouted. “Knew me at the Academy in quintupled 5-D triangles!
BrTl, this is Fweee-ah Weee-ah Zwheee we’re talking about!”
“Ye-ah…
Quite a decent being. Uh—are you mad about the tinker-tanker?” he groped. “I
only lost one i—”
“Tinker-tanker NOTHING!” she bellowed. “BrTl, this is Fweee-ah Weee-ah
Zwheee! PIRATE Weee-ah Zwheee!”
Steaming
Vvlvanian magma pits!
BrTl felt as
if all his legs had given way at once, so it was just as plasmo-blasted well he
was sitting down.
Jhl took a
deep breath. “Are you telling me you trailed all round Level Blue with him in
the company of a dim young female humanoid?”
“Ye—Uh, he
was very decent—”
“BrTl, he
EATS young beings like that!” she shouted.
He could see
that, now: Trff had done a really nice job on this comm-blob, or not nice,
depending on your point of view. “Yeah. Stop sending, I get it,” he said
glumly. “Ugh, lirrilops as well? No wonder he knew they were chea—Sorry, Jhl. I
didn’t know.”
“You didn’t know,” returned his Captain evilly,
“because whatever you once had between those thick ears of yours”—Trff was
pointing a puzzled antenna at his near ear—“has turned to MUSH!”
“I’ve been stuck
on the third moon of Pkqwrd for a light-year with no-one to—Yeah, I will spend
some time polishing my shield,” he said humbly. “All right, I’ll do the
plasmo-blasted Academy First-Year mind exercises if you really think—Yeah.
Okay. Sorry. But, um, actually I do think he was on his best behaviour.”
He heard her
sigh heavily, so possibly she was calming down. “Yeah. He can be very
charming—he is very charming. But he
doesn’t much care what he does or who he hurts so long as his bond-partner and
the nestlings are safe, warm and very, very rich. Geddit?”
“Mm.”
“You were
putting that pink being at risk, BrTl,” she said heavily.
“Yes. Um,
sorry, didn’t mean to think of her as a pink being.”
“She is,”
said Jhl heavily. “In every sense of the word. You’re plasmo-blasted lucky—the
both of you are—that he thought the whole thing was funny.”
“Did he?”
said BrTl glumly. “Good.”
“Yeah. Well,
you won’t see him again, he's en route to Playfair Two—which, just by the by, is where that plasmo-blasted pink palace of
his, not on the Hawtree home world—so
count yourself lucky, and START POLISHING THAT SHIELD!”
“Yes, I
will, Jhl, I prom—”
“Off!” said
Jhl angrily.
End communi—The comm-blob must have
caught BrTl’s emanations, or perhaps it was because he had approached his
crunchers very, very closely to it: it shut up like a dendrion nut. Glumly he
handed it back to Trff.
“Thanks,” it
said glumly.
Then they
both just sat there glumly for a bit.
“Well, how
was I to know?” he said aggrievedly.
“His names are the wrong way round!”
“She-it tore
a strip off it, too,” it admitted sadly.
Gulp.
“Sorry, Trff.”
“It was monitoring you-it,” it said sadly.
“She-it doesn’t mind if it tinkers with the swiller’s you-know-whats, but…
Something about priorities,” it explained sadly.
Priorities?
BrTl hadn't known the word was in its vocabulary.
“It is now,”
it reported sadly.
Yeah.
“That
avian’s ship’s on Level Platinum, it’s a Moodra Dy—” Trff stopped.
“It’s all
right, you-it didn’t grasp the significance of what you-it sensed. Oh, well.
Lunch?”
“That’ll
make you-it feel better!” it agreed, cheering up. The slight tinge of mauve
that had crept into the tips of its fluff vanished.
Better.
Something like that—yeah.
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