10
The
Mammalian Humanoid’s Tale Continued
Lunch had
been largely occupied by Dohra’s happy account of her morning and by BrTl's
discovery that the reason that Forty-Four was emanating terrific sympathy at
him was that it had read the lot.
The
immediate post-prandial period was occupied by Forty-Four’s accompanying Three
Hundred And Two to catch its connection. Since Dohra volunteered to go with
them, BrTl went, too. Given that the plasmo-blasted being was headed for a tramp-trader
on Level Yellow. Amazingly, the ship was still there when they got to its slot,
its captain didn’t look likely to murder the Thwurbullerian affine within the
next ten IG microseconds, and the cargo it was carrying was almost IG-legal.
And there was actually plenty of room on board for a Thwurbullerian, given that
it was an only-slightly-adapted Bhylloblaster.
Dohra
consented happily to using a moogletube back, since Forty-Four was taking a
Thwurbullerian-sized one. The tube opened at BrTl’s approach. Didg had come
with them: he was about to hop in by himself but BrTl stopped him.
“Ow!” he
gasped. “What are you on about, swiller?”
“It’s
something to do with the wind pressure—well, Trff could tell you. Anyway, you
have to come with me.”
“He has to
hug us and slide on his back. They don’t make moogletubes for humanoids, isn’t
it unfair?” said Dohra cheerfully.
“Uh—no,
Sweet Cheese, think maybe it really is something do with the wind pressure,” croaked
Didg.
“Yeah,”
agreed BrTl, tucking him up in one arm while he hugged Dohra with a pseudopod:
“Trff isn’t wrong about engineering muck. –Wrong about spotting avian
you-know-whats with ships on Level Platinum, but not about engineering,” he
muttered sourly. He got down on his hunkers, carefully inserted his tail
first—there was a xathpyroid saying about “tail last down the moogletube” and
he personally didn't intend to prove it—and then the rest of—WHOOSH!
“Wow!” shouted Didg as they shot out of the far end of the tube.
“Yeah. They
won’t go up, unfortunately, we’ll have to take a lift-blob from here.”
“Right. Uh,
you could put us down, swiller.”
What was this humanoid embarrassment-stuff
about being carried? He put them down, and they all returned to Level Pink
without incident.
Forty-Four
was already in the bar—the saying “the bigger the being the faster the
moogletube” seemed to be correct—and happily reminded Dohra that she’d promised
to go on with her story today.
“Oh, but I
seem to have been talking all lunchtime!” she protested.
“Almost,”
agreed Trff. “Not when you-it was masticating or swallowing, though. What?
Oh—sorry.”
“Trff, don't
you have to go back to the you-know-whats?” asked BrTl kindly.
“No, they're
simmering,” it replied happily.
“Simmering,”
growled Budg. “Yeah. –I coulda come down the moogletube with ya, swiller!” he
added.
“Tail last,
probably,” agreed BrTl drily.
“Er—yeah,”
admitted Didg, clearing his throat. “Never mind, Budg. Um—maybe next time?” he
said to BrTl.
“Sure!
–What? Oh! No, it’s your outsides that might be affected if you went by
yourselves, Didg. He’ll be all right. Next time, Budg, okay?”
“Yeah. Next
time. –Tell us a story, Dohra,” he growled.
“Yes, please
do!”—“Yes, please do!” urged the Feeny-Argyllians.
“Go on,”
said blndreL with a grin, knocking back her glass of qwlot. “Get to the being
in the turban, eh?”
“Oh, well—
That was later— I mean— Well, shall I?” said Dohra, very pink.
Since all
beings now had appropriate vessels in their appendages they all urged her to.
So she did.
Life on
board Pleasure Ship Silver-Ash Flyer
was peaceful and busy, and the transit areas on Hinnover City Spaceport on
Belraynia and Orbiting Transit Station 643 of Playfair One were fascinating.
And sometimes, if you spoke nicely to the being on duty at the gate, you were
even allowed to go in the Tourist Halls! P.O. Bates was very kind to Dohra and
when their FW R&R coincided took her on a couple of trips to Plentyville on
Playfair One, where everything was sunny and beautiful and even the public
transport bubble-trains were efficient, safe, and luxuriously comfortable. And
once they went onto Belraynia itself with Chief Engineer Chumquck, and went to
her home and met her bond-partner, a fussy-mannered, very kindly male
Belraynian who apart from the physiology reminded Dohra of no being so much as
Shohn’s Mum. He’d made a magnificent meal which they ate in company with Chief
Engineer Chumquck’s twins. Dohra hadn't understood at all about shared brains
and Belraynian twins and would have felt very ignorant, except that the
Belraynian family and the P.O. were much too kind to let her.
And so life
went on, with only the mildest upsets, like the time a culture-pan’s blob wore
out and it ruined the tourists’ vegetarian stew, or the time the crew got her
to make a nymbo cheese cake for a Nblyterian crewmember’s naming-day
anniversary and she used up the last of the nymbo cheese and then the Captain
ordered it for his next pudding! Exactly what the marvellous Yeoman
Whfflgrinnyllea did or said she never knew, but no being was hauled up on
Captain’s Report, and the Captain didn't complain about the trifle she did for
him instead.
True,
Whfflgrinnyllea insisted on showing her his horrid you-know-what as a thank you,
but as it was an unexpected bright blue colour, not turquoise like the rest of
him, Dohra gave a startled laugh and it went all limp and that was that. He
never tried to repeat the incident, so no doubt it had taught him a lesson.
Dohra was happy, and hardly noticed a whole IG year fly by.
P.O. Bates
of course kept track of everything like the crew’s leave and allowances, that
was his job, so he called her into his office and reminded her: “It’s time for
your IG-annual leave.”
Dohra nodded
hard, looking at him fearfully.
“No, it
hasn’t been cancelled, don’t be silly!” he said testily.
Bates, Andi
was hardly ever testy, so she went on looking at him fearfully. “What’s the
matter?”
“Well—uh—”
He glanced at his chrono-blob. “You can afford to get home to C’T’rea, can
you?”
Dohra nodded
hard again. “Oh, yes, P.O.! I’ve been saving up.”
“Good. How’s
young J’nno getting on at Second School?”
“Not all
that good. He’s getting behind because Gramps makes him do all these jobs. Um,
well, he makes him go fishing every weekend for jeffer crabs, J’nno doesn’t
mind that, Shohn or one of the other boys often go with him: they think
Gramps’s old creek-floater’s keen, even though it hasn’t got a blob. But then
he has to spend the rest of the weekend boiling them up and shelling them and
vacuum-freezing them, and after school Gramps makes him go round to his
customers instead of him. And then he takes all the money, the mean old cptt-rvvr,
he says it helps to pay for J’nno’s keep!”
P.O. Bates
chewed on his lip. “Look, W’ndii would love to have him, but the houseboat’s
bursting at the seams with our eight kids, and it’s a really long haul to
Second School, the bubble-boat costs an arm and a leg. Uh—sorry, Novatroonian
saying. We’d take him if we could possibly afford to, Dohra.”
“I know,”
said Dohra, pinkening and smiling. “And he’s really looking forward to coming
to see you next long holidays. It sounds like a wonderful world, with all that
water and those tiny islands! Oh: if that’s what the matter is—”
“Great galaxies,
no! Uh—no, it’s about your leave…” He drummed his fingers on the desk. “The
Captain wants you to deliver a message for him.”
“Me?” she gasped.
“Yeah. Don't
ask me the ins and outs of it. All I know is he accessed the leave-lists—well,
he does have access to everything, but he’s never blobbed onto my lists before—
Never mind that. When he saw we had a C’T’rean on board due for IG-annual
leave, he sent down Whfflgrinnyllea with a message.”
“Yes, I
see,” said Dohra numbly. “Where is it?” He looked at her blankly. “The message,
P.O.”
“Great
splintered shards of quog, the Captain isn’t gonna entrust a private message to
Whfflgrinnyllea or me! He wants you to go and see him.”
“But why
should he entrust it to me?” she
cried. “I’m not even any good at mind control!”
“No, can’t shield
worth an ig,” he agreed. “Well, I dunno, Dohra. My guess’d be it’s not any sort
of message that can be read. You’d better go, he’s expecting you.”
“Now?”
P.O. Bates
glanced at his chrono-blob. “Yes, in four IG minutes. Straighten that chef’s
hat.”
Numbly Dohra
straightened her hat.
“Go on: he
doesn’t like to be kept waiting.”
Dohra was
gone.
The P.O.
wiped his hand across his humanoid brow. “Steaming piles of mok droppings,” he
muttered. “What in Federation can the vacuum-frozen Friyrian be up to?”
An Ordinary
Spacer, spick-and-span in the Line’s uniform, was on duty outside the Captain’s
door, his blaster held at Rest.
“Cuh-can I
go in, Crewman rugelleR?” asked Dohra. “The Cuh-Captain is expecting me.”
Crewman
rugelleR came smartly to attention, shifted hands on the blaster, and saluted
her. He barred the door with the arm which was now in charge of the blaster.
“Chef W’t reporting!” he said loudly.
“Come in!”
called a cross voice.
Oh, Federation!
The door slid back, announcing: “Chef W’t
reporting, sir! and the crewman came smartly to attention at one side of
it.
“Come in,
Chef,” said Captain Ccrainchzzyllia, not looking up from his desk. “Take a
seat; I’ll be with you in a moment.”
Timidly
Dohra came and perched on the very, very edge of a chair placed in front of the
big shiny desk.
After what
seemed a very long time the Captain looked up. Dohra swallowed hard.
“I don't
think we’ve met in person, have we?” he said in a languid voice, getting up and
holding out a long, slender, pale turquoise hand. “Though of course I’ve
greatly appreciated your salads and triff’l.”
Dohra
stumbled to her feet, not daring to correct his pronunciation. She hadn't
expected him either to stand—he was the Captain and she was a Third Cook—or to
offer to shake hands, because according to the Encyclopaedia, Friyrians didn’t.
Numbly she put her hot little pink hand in the long, pale turquoise one.
“The
Encyclopaedia,” said Captain Ccrainchzzyllia with a soft tinkle, “doesn’t know
everything!”
Dohra jumped
and clutched his hand convulsively. She was used to his yeoman’s laugh, but
this was nothing like it! Dazedly she recalled something that Chef hoopnD had
once said about tinkling silver bells.
“Flattering!”
he said with another burst of tinkles. “Er—no,” he said, clearing his throat.
This time Dohra was absolutely positive it was a humanoid gesture he’d learned
up, because he was also smiling carefully. “Whfflgrinnyllea and I are not
particularly similar in that other regard, either.”
Dohra gave a
horrified gasp and went red as fire, quite involuntarily glancing at his smart,
tight uniform pants. Help! If only she could just sink through the xrillion
floor and disappear until Vvlvania froze over—or preferably longer!
“Oh, don’t
do that,” said Captain Ccrainchzzyllia smoothly, releasing his hand with some
difficulty from her grip. “It wouldn’t be good for my wtmyrian carpet.”
Numbly Dohra
looked down at it. Holey gramolee! It was! A real one!
“A C’T’rean
expression, is that?” he asked with interest. “What is gramolee?”
“Gruh-gramolee? Uh—a C’T’rean breakfast cereal,
suh-sir. Reconstituted grains in the shape of—of little circles.”
“Hence the holes,” he said primly.
“Yes,” she
agreed limply. Too late she realised she hadn't said “sir”. She stared at him
numbly, willing her gaze not to fall below the level of—not his collar, it was
very rude to stare at a Friyrian’s neck-gills! His chin. She tried to look at
his chin without looking at the wide, narrow-lipped, knowing mouth above it, or
the handsome chased xrillion gill-collar below it.
“Dear me,
the gill-collar has that effect on very few humanoid females,” said the
Friyrian in mild surprise.
This was
dreadful! He was reading everything!
Not just her thoughts but what her innards were doing and—and everything!
“Yes,” said
Captain Ccrainchzzyllia mildly. “What a very great pity that your latent
mind-powers received no encouragement when you were a child.”
“Thuh-there
are some muh-mind schuh-schools on C’T’rea, but only rich people can afford
them!” stuttered Dohra.
“Yes, I
see,” he said, the slanted eyes narrowing fractionally. His yeoman’s eyes were
a muddy fawn colour, but his were golden: Dohra looked up at him, mesmerised.
“Please allow me to offer my sincere condolences for the sad early deaths of
your parents, Chef W’t,” he said formally.
“Whuh-what?
Oh, thuh-thank you, sir!” stuttered Dohra.
“Please sit
down again,” he said with an elegant wave of his hand.
He was just
so beautiful! Numbly Dohra sank down
onto her chair again.
The Captain
didn’t retreat behind his desk: he pulled up another chair and sat beside her,
crossing his legs in the sort of way Dohra had only ever seen a male mammalian
being do on the Services, heretofore. Two
galaxies! She tried to sit politely, with her knees close together, as once, a
long time ago, Gran had tried to teach her. She’d never liked Gran, she’d been
a strict old lady, but now she thought it was a bit of a pity she’d died,
because she’d had… standards.
“Yes,” said
the Captain solemnly: “I have always believed that standards are important.”
“I can see
that, sir!” gasped Dohra earnestly.
For an
instant the Friyrian was taken aback; then he realised the little creature
wasn’t reading him at all: it was merely her instinctive impression.
Flattering. “Thank you,” he said, not allowing himself to tinkle. “Ah… I had a
task for you, Chef W’t, but now that I’ve met you…” He hesitated.
Dohra
swallowed hard. “I can do it, sir! –So long as it doesn’t need mind-powers,”
she admitted.
“No, quite
the reverse. It isn't IG-illegal, but— It could be dangerous for you.”
“I’m not
afraid!” lied Dohra stoutly.
He gave a
faint tinkle. “Yes, you are, Chef, though I respect the sentiment. Um… Well, at
least you’re mammalian, you’ll understand the concepts involved,” he muttered.
“Look,” he said with a little sigh, “I think I’d better tell you some of it,
and then you can see whether you feel up to it, all right? And then,” he said
on a firm note, as Dohra was nodding hard, “I shall decide whether or not to
let you do it. But before I start, would you do me the very great favour, as
this is an informal interview, of removing that travesty of a hat?”
Numbly Dohra
removed her chef’s hat. The Captain stared at the tumble of palest gold curls,
not saying anything. After quite some time she realised that his left hand had
clenched very hard on the arm of his chair. He still didn't speak so, not
daring to ask him if anything was wrong, she ventured: “Aren’t I
spit-and-polish enough, sir?”
“What?” he
said, jumping a little. “Oh—no—it doesn’t matter. Er, that’s a nominal
expression, not an adjectival one. I once had a being very like you.” The even
voice that in humanoid terms was a pleasant tenor here shook a little, and Dohra
looked at him in concern. There was a little pause.
“She was
stolen from me,” said Captain Ccrainchzzyllia, the chiselled nostrils
flickering a little and the gills opening and closing once within the collar,
“but never mind that.”
Dohra looked
at him expectantly, but he was staring into space, and didn’t go on. After a
while she went very red.
“I
apologise,” said the Friyrian, his high-cheekboned oval face taking on an
indigo tinge. “That picture was quite unintentional.”
And also
very, very, very rude! Well, men did that—though no man had ever actually done
it to her, W’t, Dohra B’Jn: none of the boys from their district had bothered
with that sort of thing—but she knew enough to know that! But she would never
have suspected a captain of having that sort of thought!
Trembling
slightly, she croaked: “It’s all right, sir. Muh-male beings often suh-send me
pictures a buh-bit like that, and—and you can’t help it, cuh-can you?”
The long
mouth tightened for a moment. Then he said pleasantly: “A civilised male being
can help it, Chef, and I apologise again for forgetting myself.”
In that case
there were no civilised male beings on C’T’rea, and very few amongst his crew!
“I dare say
not,” he said drily. “Where shall I start? Er… perhaps you don’t understand that
unlike humanoids, Friyrians are hermaphrodites?”
“The
Encyclopaedia said that,” admitted Dohra, frowning over it.
He saw she
was trying to imagine where everything went and had to try very hard not to show
his amusement. “Well, we are.”
“Not you!” said Dohra fervently without
stopping to think.
“Technically, yes. It’s not shocking or distressing or unnatural to us.”
“No, of
course not,” she said firmly, sticking out her chin.
He looked at
the soft, rounded chin in some amusement, though at the same time aware that
the pearly pink sheen of that skin was having the expectable effect on him.
What a Vvlvanian-cursed pity that she was a member of his crew. “No. Some of us
enjoy being male and stick with that”—she nodded hard—“and some enjoy being
female and stick with that, and others enjoy being both—not simultaneously, you
understand: that’s quite unusual, though not impossible—but in turn.”
Dohra
frowned over it, too interested to stop and reflect that he was the Captain of
the Silver-Ash Flyer and she was only
a bogus Third Cook. “I don’t think I could change, I wouldn’t feel like me—but
I see what you mean, um, intellectually.”
“Good. Well,
I have sister who’s very much younger than me: her mother is my father’s second
female bond-partner.”
Dohra looked
at him with great sympathy, not thinking to ask herself if he’d meant to send
the message he had. “I see; your own
mother died. I’m very sorry. sir.”
He gave a
little sigh. “Yes, we have something in common, Chef W’t. Well—I suppose I’d
better make it clear. My father’s had three families: the first one when s/he
was female-tended. S/he had several children in the female line when s/he was
young. Then s/he and that bond-partner decided to go their separate ways—quite
amicably—and Father took a female-tended bond-partner, and had three children
in the male line with her.”
“That was
your mother,” agreed Dohra seriously.
“Yes. I was
always strongly male-tended, my next full sibling was male-female, and the
other was strongly female-tended. We were grown up, and they had both taken
male bond-partners, when Father took a second female bond-partner.”
“Your
stepmother, we’d call her.”
“Of course. I don’t think you have quite the
same gender rôles on C’T’rea, so I should explain that on Friyria,”—he sent her
a little picture of the glorious country round Father’s country house and she
gasped in admiration—“as I was saying, gender rôles are very clearly defined on
Friyria, perhaps because of our hermaphroditism. Female-tended beings don’t
learn to be Pilots or even cooks, In my class their rôle is to keep the home
beautiful, select, train and manage the s-beings, bear the children and see
that they are educated to become cultured, sensible, well-controlled beings. In
the case of a being from Whfflgrinnyllea’s class they do learn simple
culture-pan control, but apart from that and the care of the children, they
oversee the tidy-blobs, and raise vegetables and fruit and the domestic… fowl.
Boo-birds? –Yes. Their chromosomal make-up means that they enjoy such tasks.
But there’s nothing to stop them becoming fully male-tended if they wish and
taking on different tasks. –Though in my opinion,” he added drily, “just as
boring.”
After a
moment Dohra nodded slowly. “It’s the class differences that really matter,
then, isn’t it? That’s what makes you so different from Yeoman Whfflgrinnyllea,
even though you’re both male-tended. I hadn't realised… I suppose we have
classes on C’T’rea, too, but ordinary beings like me never think about it. You
never see the rich people: they’re always in their lifters or behind their high
garden walls.”
Captain
Ccrainchzzyllia blinked slightly, as he got the whole picture. “The ordinary
people don’t have gardens on your world?”
“No. I
suppose it would be nice,” said Dohra wistfully.
“I should
say so! If I had to belong to that class, I’d certainly rather be a Friyrian!”
“So would I,
if I could have a garden, but I wouldn’t like not being allowed to be a cook.”
“But of
course you would have the freedom to be a cook! You’d just need to become
ma—Oh,” he said foolishly.
“Yes. I
can’t, you see,” said Dohra simply. “But I can see that for a Friyrian it’s a
very fair arrangement.”
“We think
so. I do have some idea what the rest of the two galaxies thinks of
Friyria,”—Dohra went very red and bit her lip—“but there’s no poverty and very
little unhappiness on our world. There are huge class distinctions which are not
easy to breach, yes, but as you’ve just admitted, those exist on other worlds.”
“Yes. I’ve
only heard of one where they don’t have any classes: that’s Bluellia.”
Captain
Ccrainchzzyllia made a little whistling noise in his throat and then gave a
slight sniff through his long, straight, handsome nose. “Aye; I tend not to
take on Bluellians as crew if I can help it: they’re plasmo-blasted
insubordinate.”
Yes, thought
Dohra, like Crewmen—Ulp!
“Crewman
R’sn Li, Crewman Wong Br’n, Crewman Ch’n Smt and the unlamented former
Crewwoman Bl’k Chu: I rest my case,” he said very coldly indeed.
“Yessir!”
gasped Dohra. “She was awful: she was
even rude to P.O. Bates!”
“Quite.
Where was I? Oh, yes: my sister Lleeayssnillia. Yes, it is a pretty name, isn’t
it?” he said with a little tinkle. “She is generally considered a very pretty
being. My step-mother, Zzpronichhichia—I know humanoids don't find that name
attractive, don’t apologise, please,” he said to the gulping Dohra, “is also a
very pretty being.” Tinkling slightly, he sent her a picture of them.
Dohra
goggled at the two tall, slender lady-beings in lovely long, flowing garments,
looped up here and there with little rainbow-like blobs. One gown was
silvery-grey, one very pale turquoise, several shades paler than her skin. The
lady in the silvery-grey was obviously older, even though her hair was a dark
indigo like the Captain’s. It was wound up in a big knot on top of her head. A
thin trickle of shining colourless stones depended from each long, close-set
turquoise ear and a single big stone flashed on one finger. Both of them had
elegant—no, the word was aristocratic—yes, aristocratic oval faces with rather
long noses, very like his. The younger lady had a mass of dead-straight, very thick
silvery hair which she wore down in a very simple style. She only had tiny
stones in her ears and none on her fingers but as she moved a little Dohra
caught sight of a toe-ring which just flashed briefly and then disappeared
again under a fold of her dress. Oddly enough they weren’t wearing
gill-collars. Dohra looked sideways at the Captain in his xrillion gill-collar
with his long, thick, straight indigo hair tied back severely in a big plait
and didn’t say anything.
“Female-tended
Friyrians don’t wear the gill-collar,” he said mildly. “In fact it’s considered
rather old-fashioned for males, these days. But then, I am old-fashioned.”
She
swallowed. “I see.” He seemed to be waiting so she added timidly: “They are
lovely, sir.”
“Thank you.
Zzpronichhichia isn't a strong being, I’m afraid, so she and Father only had
the one child.”
Dohra nodded
respectfully.
“We were all
very happy,” he said tightly, “until one of my half-brothers in Father’s female
line learned of the way Father intended to leave his property. My brother,
Rppnfeemaiyyia,”—Dohra jumped as a sneering dark turquoise face leered at
her—“sorry, didn’t mean to send that—Rppnfeemaiyyia was very, very angry when
he found out that Father intended leaving all the property which he’d inherited
in the male line—from his father—to his male-tended offspring in the male
line.”
“You,”
agreed Dohra, having worked it out.
“Yes. My
full sisters, as you would think of them, were settled happily with their male
bond-partners and didn’t look like changing. There was no particular reason for
Rppnfeemaiyyia to feel so bitter about it: his own father had plenty to leave
him—Father’s former male bond-partner,” he explained. “But then, he was never a
reasonable being. And he never liked me.”
Dohra bit
her lip. “Mm.”
“To cut a
long story short, Rppnfeemaiyyia decided to repay Father. The Meagraw of
Gr’mmeaya had shown an interest in Lleeayssnillia—”
“I’ve heard
of him!” gasped Dohra.
“Yes, I
know. He wasn’t prepared to offer her bond-partnership, even in a multiple
bond-partner arrangement, so Father rejected his suggestion.” His fists
clenched. “So about eighteen IG months ago Rppnfeemaiyyia successfully sold
poor little Lleeayssnillia to him.”
Dohra’s jaw
dropped. “Sold— Do you mean to be his
Pleasure Girl?”
“Not
precisely, though it’s little better than that. His concubine. Considerably
less than a bond-partner but considerably above a Pleasure Girl. Do you know
what a Whtyllian hareem is? –No. Uh, a chlottiu? –No. A wmboid cluster-house?
Oh. Well, just let’s say that although her life is very comfortable, she lives
in the female quarters of his palace, may not go outside the palace grounds
without the Meagraw’s express permission and an armed escort, and of course is
at his disposal any time he wishes to bestow”—the chiselled nostrils flared
with distaste—“his favours.”
Dohra’s eyes
were round with horror. “How terrible!”
“Yes.”
She
swallowed hard. “What did your father do?”
“Snapped
Rppnfeemaiyyia’s neck,” said the Captain grimly. “There is a very old law on
Friyria which allows that, in such circumstances, and if Father hadn't done it
Rppnfeemaiyyia’s own father would have. Father’s spent a very great deal of
money trying to get her back, to no avail: Gr’mmeaya is a closed world.”
Dohra took a
deep breath. “I’ll go. I’ll do whatever you want to help get her back!”
“Thank you,
Chef W’t. You'd better hear what it is, first.”
Dohra looked
at him trustingly.
“Well,
uh—You’re not a virgin, plasmo-blasted Whfflgrinnyllea was right about that,
curse his cheek,” he muttered.
“Um, no, it
isn’t really customary on my world to—to be one, when you’re grown up,” offered
Dohra. “I wouldn’t mind if had to be in the, um, cluster-house and be a
Pleasure Girl for the Meagraw.”
“We’ll hope
it won’t come to that. The family has a plan to rescue Lleeayssnillia, but we
need to get a message to her.” He gave a faint tinkle in spite of himself.
“What’s the
joke?” said Dohra, staring, and quite forgetting he was the Captain.
“Part of the
joke is that we think she ought to become male-tended: that’ll put him off:
he’s not the sort of male being that likes other males!” he said with a
clashing little series of tinkles.
Bitter
laugh, said Dohra in her head. Oh, poor being!
“Pity me if
we fail, Third Cook W’t, Dohra B’Jn of C’T’rea,” said the Friyrian coldly,
looking down his long nose at her.
“Yessir!
Sorry, sir!” she gasped, recalled to herself.
“No: I’m sorry,”
he said stiffly. “What I’d like to do is get you in as one of a party of, uh,
candidates for the hareem. –His cluster-house,” he murmured, wondering why the
term had appealed to her. Cosy? He stared at her, frowning.
“Yes, and
then I can tell her your plan!” said Dohra eagerly.
“No,
certainly not. You will know nothing of the plan. I’ve probably told you more
than I should have, as it is.”
“Then what
do you want me to do?” said Dohra in disappointment.
“Just carry
a message. You won’t know where it is or in what form.”
“Then how’ll
I get it out again when I see her?” she demanded crossly.
“You don’t
need to worry about that at all. Just get in to see her. Then—well, I’m afraid
it’ll be up to you. Make sure the Meagraw doesn’t choose you as a Pleasure
Girl, and get out of it.”
“Ye-es… I
could pretend to be really bossy and rude and, um, that other word, like
Crewwoman Bl’k Chu, Su!” she gasped.
“Insubordinate,” he said drily. “That should do it. I certainly never
had the impression the Meagraw sought that from his females. Er—not the
personal name last, for Bluellians. ‘Su Bl’k Chu’ would be correct.”
“Oh, yes, of
course; I forgot,” said Dohra, rather crestfallen.
Captain
Ccrainchzzyllia sighed. “You’re very young,” he muttered.
“I am not!”
cried Dohra indignantly.
“Young for
your IG age, perhaps. –I did think of doing it myself—changing my sex,” he said
as she looked uncertain. “But,”—he made a wry face—“I'm not young enough, and
certainly not pretty enough. One of my nieces offered but her father, uh—”
“Threw a
fit: yeah,” said Dohra comfortably. “Fathers do.”
“Yes. In
this case it was the more understandable because virginity is highly prized in
female-tended beings of our class.”
“Yes—Hang
on,” said Dohra, staring at him.
“Certainly
not!” he said with emphasis. “We’re not silly!”
“No. I was
just sort of following through the logic of it,” said Dohra humbly, “without
thinking about the sense.”
“Mm. I tend
to do that myself. We’re rather alike, Chef W’t,” he said drily. He paused.
“Though I’m a female virgin,” he noted, even more drily.
There was a
moment’s startled silence and then Dohra went into a gale of humanoid laughter.
It was a little like the sound of a flock of Whtyllian pigeons cooing in his
stepmother’s ornate dovecote, and Captain Ccrainchzzyllia tinkled gently under
his breath.
“I will do
it, sir,” she said when she'd recovered.
He drew a
deep breath. “In that case,” he said formally, “I and my family thank you, W’t,
Dohra B’Jn.” He rose, and held out his hand.
Dohra
scrambled up, very flushed, and allowed him to shake hands.
“No, it
isn't a Friyrian custom,” he murmured.
“I thought
so! So what do you do instead?” she said eagerly.
“It depends
on the class and gender-tendency of the participants. If you were a male of my
class I should do this.” He laid his right hand gently on her left shoulder.
“And you would reciprocate. It may be done formally or heartily.”
“I see! What
about ladies?”
“Two ladies
would hold out their hands like this—no, not touching,” he said, holding out
his left hand as if he were about to shake with it; uncertainly Dohra held out
hers, “and tinkle politely, and probably say ‘My dear, how lovely!’”—she
jumped, he’d positively fluted it—“and then just touch opposable digits
lightly. Like this.” He brushed her thumb with his, and managed to ignore her
start. “Close friends touch opposable digits ungloved. And if the ladies
dislike each other they not only leave their gloves on, they contrive not to
make actual contact with the gesture.”
“Help,” said
Dohra numbly.
“Yes, it is
a rather formal society. Would you care to try it again?”
No, ’cos she
might have hysterics if he said “opposable digits” again, actually! Let alone
if he touched hers again. “Nuh—um, what if it was a man and lady?”
“Hold your
left hand out again. –Oh, yes: thumb, I'd forgotten the Intergalactic word,” he
said cheerfully. “Don’t make a claw of it, just relax. That’s better. Try to
droop the hand slightly from the wrist; like this.” Dohra gave a muffled
giggle, but did her best. “Good. Now I put both my hands lightly round yours,
avoiding the thumb. There’s no need to stick it up like a claw, because I’m
trained to avoid it.”
“Mm,” said
Dohra, very red. “I see, thumbs are for ladies to touch.”
“Yes. But on
very formal occasions,” said the Captain, a twinkle in his slanted deep gold
eyes, “I might do it rather differently!”
The unsuspecting
Dohra held out her rather chapped little paw again, the thumb a little raised,
the wrist limp. The Friyrian’s long turquoise hands closed gently round it and
he bowed over it, just brushing the thumb with his lips.
“Oh!” cried Dohra, snatching her hand
away.
He tinkled
gently. “Isn’t there a very similar humanoid custom?”
“No! Oh,”
she said numbly. “Hand kissing. I’ve never seen it, I think it’s a diplo thing.
We don't do it on C’T’rea.”
“I’ve only
met two C’T’rean ladies, but they certainly—er, encouraged the practice.”
“I just bet
they did!” said Dohra fiercely. “I bet they had a huge palace with an enormous
garden and—and two silver Doodra Muh-Myhillias each!”
“I think you
mean Moodra Dyhillias.”
“Probably.
I’ve never seen one. My brother, J’nno, he’s interested in that sort of space
garbage,” said Dohra on a scornful note.
“I’ve got a
Moodra,” said Captain Ccrainchzzyllia meekly. “Coincidentally, silver, too.”
“Everybody knows
that!” replied his cook fiercely.
The Captain
shook slightly. Muffled tinkles escaped him.
“Go on,
laugh!” said Dohra fiercely. “You’re all the same!” Suddenly she realised what
she’d just said. She clapped her hand to her mouth.
“Well, yes:
it goes with the chromosomes,” he said drily.
Dohra bit
her lip. “I’m sorry: that was rude.”
“Rude but
true,” he murmured. “Shall we forget it? I won't kiss your thumb again if you
dislike it, but please rest assured of my family’s eternal gratitude.”
“Thank you,” said Dohra faintly. “What—what
shall I do, please?”
“Just come
to me when you’re ready to go on leave—in two IG days, isn't it?”
“Yes, sir.”
Yeoman! he sent sharply. Dohra had
picked him up quite clearly: after a moment she realised he must have meant her
to.
Yeoman
Whfflgrinnyllea shot in at the double. “Sir!”
“Escort Chef
W’t back to the galley, please.”
“Yessir!”
Whfflgrinnyllea wheeled about and held the door for her.
“Thank you,
Chef W’t,” said the Captain.
“Yes, sir.
Thank you, sir,” said Dohra limply. “Thank you, Yeoman Whfflgrinnyllea,"
she added, going out.
Numbly she
tottered down the companionway, not realising for quite a while that the yeoman
was accompanying her. She stopped. “You don’t really have to come with me,” she
said weakly.
“’Course I
do, Chef! Been ordered to, ain’t I? Whadd’e want?” he added curiously.
“Never mind.
Just a private matter,” said Dohra with dignity. She hurried on.
“Go on, you
can tell me!” he urged.
Dohra
stopped again and looked him firmly in the eye. “No, I can't.”
“Like that,
is it? Well, I won't breathe a word, Chef!” He gave a dirty tinkle, the
imitation humanoid smirk well in place.
She took a deep
breath. “Yeoman Whfflgrinnyllea, you’re mistaken!”
“Tell me it
never entered is ’ead and I'll go to Mullgon’ya and commit meself!”
“It didn’t!”
she snapped.
“Well,
that's a lie, for a start,” said the yeoman cheerfully. “But you can think what
you like, his ain't ’alf as big as what mine is, and if you ain't already found
that out for yourself, you will soon enough!”
“I can tell
you this much,” said Dohra furiously, “he never tried to show me his one like
you did, you rude thing!”
He tinkled
coarsely again. “That’s a real clear picture you're sending of it, if ’e
didn't!”
“I am NOT!”
shouted Dohra furiously. “And a man can’t help that!”
“No, and you
wouldn’t ’alf mind. All right, ’e’s a man and a ’alf, I'll admit that.”
“And I bet
it’s not bright blue!” shouted Dohra.
Tears of rage began to trickle down her cheeks.
“No need to
get in a state,” said Whfflgrinnyllea in alarm. “’Tisn’t actually, no, it’s a
nice deep turquoise, like all the lordship class. Well, I seen him getting
dressed, whatcher think? Anyway, it’s nothing to bawl about.”
“No!
Besides, he wuh-wouldn't, I’m only a cuh-cook!”
“Uh—yeah.
Have a senso-tissue.”
“Thanks,”
said Dohra sniffing hard and blowing her nose. She walked on slowly. The yeoman
accompanied her silently.
Once they’d
reached the galley he perched on a stool and asked: “Did he ask yer: that it?”
“No,” said
Dohra tightly.
“Well, if he
didn't ask yer and he didn’t show it to yer, what’s the matter?”
“Nothing’s
the matter except you being rude, and GO AWAY! Or I’ll tell him!” she added,
suddenly inspired.
The yeoman’s
faded turquoise cheeks went greyish and he got up quickly. “You wouldn’t, Chef!
’Ere, no ’arm meant, eh?” He edged towards the door. “The Captain wouldn’t try
nothing on, I know that! Just a bit of fun, eh?”
“Get out,”
said Dohra grimly. She picked up a ladle.
“I’m going!
’Ere, you wouldn’t really tell on me, would ya?”
“Get OUT!”
shouted Dohra furiously, hurling the ladle.
The yeoman
slid out, the door slid shut, and the ladle hit it with a clang.
Dohra sat
down all of a heap. “Help! I’m turning into Chef hoopnD!” she croaked.
The
mammalian humanoid paused for breath, to the accompaniment of a puzzled
silence.
Little tubes, mused Forty-Four.
Yes,
agreed BrTl. They seem to think they’re
very important, don’t they?
Moodra Dyhillias aren’t bad at all, noted Trff.
Don’t fancy Friyrians myself, but why make
such a fuss about it? wondered blndreL.
What happened to the brother?—What happened
to the brother?—And is the turquoise sister separated?—And is the turquoise
sister separated?
I’ve got a big blue tube, too! broadcast the Flppu proudly and untruthfully. Praise the Great United Being that we’re not
all on Friyria!
Crush him, crunch him, punch him! broadcast
Budg. Bad turkuz being!
Didg got up
abruptly. “Mok shit. I’ve got better things to do. Coming, Trff?”
“No, the
blobs have to simmer. And it has to keep an eye on BrTl, figuratively
speaking.”
“Don’t
bother, thanks,” said BrTl heavily, as Didg stamped off, scowling.
“It has to
bother, Jhl’s gonna check up on it,” it said placidly.
Yeah, right.
He leant back in his corner. “Little tubes apart, that wasn’t at all bad,
Dohra, for an introduction to a Lost Cause.”
“Ooh,
another Lost Cause!” cried the Feeny-Argyllians brightly. “What fun!”
“Yes, it was
rather like that,” admitted Dohra limply. They all seemed to have picked up a
lot of stuff she hadn’t thought she'd put in. And what was the matter with
Didg? She hadn't said hardly anything about—about anyone!
“Have a
glass of zhr’ee,” said blndreL kindly, “and then tell us about the being in the
turban.”
“Yes, why
not?” agreed the Thwurbullerian kindly. “One glass’ll do you good.”
And then perhaps there won’t be so much of
the little tubes stuff, noted BrTl.
Er—well, yes, one doesn't want to hear about
them all the time! it agreed.
Quite. There
was a saying round the two galaxies that mammalians had only one thing on their
minds. You only had to look at the scrambled mess that most of their minds
consisted of to know it wasn’t true—but at this moment he felt he knew how that
saying had arisen.
So Dohra
sipped her zhr’ee and—once Forty-Four had pointed out that that much n’nk salt
wasn’t good for Budg and Trff had removed his impulse to eat it—went on with
her story.
The second
interview with the Captain was very much shorter than the first, in fact Dohra
couldn’t remember anything really happening in it, except that he gave her some
extra tickets and explained where she had to change for Pflaumschnau’Provia IV,
where she was to meet up with the party of candidates for the Meagraw’s
cluster-house—no, harem.
The change
was accomplished without incident: there was just nice time to get a
maxi-galaxy shake and play one game of pongo-pongo while she drank it, so
whoever had ticketed her through was a very efficient being—and soon she was in
the spaceport of Pflaumschnau’Provia IV!
There was no
problem meeting up with the others because as she came down the tunnel from the
ferry she saw, in amongst all the other flashing message-blobs, a big one which
read “W’T, DOHRA B’JN! HERE, HERE, HERE!” And as soon as she came up to it, it
told her: Collect your baggage and go
through IG C&E. You’ll be met: look for a being with another sign. How
thoughtful! So she collected her bag and went up to the gate. The three-legged being
on duty was tall, she thought it might be a Ma’manker from Morphy’s Planet. She
couldn’t see much of its face because of the helmet but it looked a pretty
shade of puce, so it probably was.
“Can I go through?” she said.
“Go through
by all means. If you've got anything IG-illegal on or about you, it’s your
ending-sizzle,” it replied, so it must be a Ma’manker, she’d learned about
those ending-sizzles on the Encyclopaedia. They didn’t die as such: they just
decided to have a nice ending-sizzle, so they got together and had one, with
Ma’manker pancakes, of course. Once the being was sizzled they put the remains
into a little, um, pod, she thought, and guess what? It grew again! That had
been a very interesting Encyclopaedia entry—
“I can see
what you’re thinking, humanoid,” it warned. “And you’re not gonna get the recipe
for our pancakes! But if you’re that interested, come to Morphy’s Planet next
Galaxy Day: there’s a creased one that’s decided to go off with a real big
sizzle. There’ll be free pancakes for every being. Koo’per City, Block 692,
Level 84, Slot 840002,” it said, handing her a little blob. “It’s in the blob.”
“Oh!” gasped
Dohra. “Thank you so much! I’ll do my best to be there! Um, could I possibly
bring my little brother, too?”
“Sure, all
pancake-eaters welcome,” it said. “Go through, W’t, Dohra B’Jn.”
Beaming,
Dohra went through the gate. It tickled like anything so, not to be
anything-ist, maybe it was a Special Offer gate.
“Thank you,
Gate,” she said.
You’re welcome. Have a nice day.
Dohra looked
round carefully. There were several beings with signs, but none with her name
or anything about candidates for Gr’mmeaya or like that. There was nowhere to sit,
so she just put her bag down and prepared to wait. Three servo-mechs asked if
she wanted a porter and several beings came up and offered her tours of the
city or even the whole planet but she just said politely: “No, thank you very
much, I’m being met,” and they went away again.
And then a
panting short, fat, pale grey being rushed up. He had three blobby arms and
three fat legs and he was very smartly dressed, with one of those distinctive
little round hats with a bobble on it, so although she’d never seen one in the
flesh before, she knew he was a lorpoid. “Are you W’t, Dohra B’Jn?” he gasped.
Dohra was
just about to say she was: then she thought better of it. After all, maybe he
could read her name. “Why?” she said.
“What? Oh!”
He tried to snap his fingers but they were rather fat so it didn't work. She
could hear him sending SENSO-TISSUES!
very loudly and so she quickly opened her purse and a bunch floated out for
him.
“Thanks so
much, polly-lolly!” he gasped, mopping his brow. “The public bubbles here are
frightful! It swore it’d get us here in time—and I don’t know where the polly-lollies are, I just rushed on ahead!” He looked round
wildly.
He seemed
pretty genuine, so after a moment Dohra said: “You wouldn’t have a message-sign
for me, would you?”
“What? Oh!
Sorry, polly-lolly!” He fumbled in one of his many smart pockets—the suit was
dark grey with a deep orange trim, and the little lorpoid hat was also dark
grey, with an orange bobble, very smart—and produced a blob which flashed up a
big sign: “W’T, DOHRA B’JN, FOR GR’MMEAYA! HERE, HERE, HERE!”
“Yes that’s
me,” said Dohra in some relief.
“Of course
it is, polly-lolly! Very pretty,” he said, blinking his three bulgy round eyes
quickly at her. “We haven’t got a yellow curly one. But that horrid garment
won’t do, polly-lolly!”
“Um, I
haven’t got many dresses,” she said, realising belatedly that “polly-lolly”
must be what he called girls—well, possibly specially girls that wanted to be a
Meagraw’s Pleasure Girls—and wondering why she hadn't been given any by—by
someone, she couldn’t for the life of her think who.
“Here they
come!” said the lorpoid as a gaggle of panting girls appeared.
“Aren’t they
pretty!” cried Dohra admiringly.
Indeed they
were. There were seven of them, with Dohra that made eight, and they were due
to collect two more tomorrow morning, the lorpoid explained, mopping his brow
again. Six of them were humanoid, five being Human var. Official like her, and
one being Human var. Gilled. She had a bluish tinge to her pale skin, with
blue-painted lips, silver-green eyeshadow, and tiny glittering drops outlining
her eyebrows; more of these tiny drops appeared at her hairline, and the hair,
which was drawn tightly back off her face and then curled and twisted
fantastically, was deliciously variegated shades of pale green and pale blue
with silver streaks in amongst them.
“Qwolla,
isn't she delightful?” beamed the lorpoid, putting an arm round her waist and
giving her a squeeze. Easy to do: the waist was very slender, though what was
above and below it, especially above, wasn’t. She was dressed in a tight silver
clingo-suit delicately patterned with more of the sparkling drops and Dohra
looked at her with simple admiration.
“Now let me
see: Janna and Panna—well, they’re in there with a chance if the Meagraw likes
twins, polly-lollies!” Two red-haired girls with turned-up noses, wide,
square-jawed faces, and cheeky expressions grinned at Dohra. They were very
alike—the matching outfits, short gold jackets and very short, tight gold pants
that showed most of their mammalian thighs above knee-length jade green boots
accentuating the likeness—but, thought Dohra, not identical twins. The long red hair was worn drawn back off the
face and then draped over one shoulder in a big fat plait wound with gold
ribbon, the end allowed to frizz and curl madly just above the point of the
breast. An effect which Dohra rather thought was deliberate. Janna’s plait was
over her left shoulder and Panna’s was over her right, so they were certainly a
striking sight. Their wide eyes were a bright jade green, like their boots,
with the whites colourised gold, but Dohra had seen the sim-ads for that
effect, so she knew they’d had it done.
“She can see
we’re not twins, Jojo, so don’t bother, and while you’re at it, why don’t you
introduce yourself?” said Janna
cheerfully.
“Oops,
sorry, polly-lolly. What with the rush!”
he apologised to Dohra. “Ro-ann Ishurbitawillally doj Jorannivanorffwyallo’,
but all the polly-lollies call me Jojo.”
“Yes, um, is
that all right?” fumbled Dohra.
“Of course,
polly-lolly, we don’t want to be here till Federation Day! Where was I? Oops, I
haven’t introduced you! This is Dohra, polly-lollies, she’s been a cook, if you can believe it.”
“No wonder you want to try out for the
Meagraw’s hareem!” cried one of the other humanoids sympathetically.
“Um, yes,”
said Dohra in confusion. Why did she want to? She was sure there must be some
good reason, but she couldn’t think of it! She smiled at the girl. She was
short, only about Dohra’s own height, and very slim, with long, thick, straight,
and very shiny black hair, falling to mid-thigh in a glorious shiny flood, and
slanted black, very sparkling eyes. She smiled back, showing little opalescent
teeth within a deep cherry, deliciously curved mouth. Her skin was a dark
golden shade, the cheeks just delicately tinged with apricot. If the Meagraw of
Gr’mmeaya didn’t pick her, he was due for Mullgon’ya! The slim figure was
ornamented by very pointed little breasts, perfectly outlined, actually too
perfectly for C’T’rean tastes, by the clinging long-sleeved, full-length dress
in the same deep cherry as those perfect pouting lips.
“This is
Seetrabandlaubwau’unereean,” explained Jojo, putting a second arm round her
waist. “But the polly-lollies call her See.”
“Yeah, call
me See,” she said in a rough, scratchy voice that assorted very ill with her
dainty appearance. Dohra blinked.
“Too many
chemo-blobs,” said Jojo with a sigh. “I have to admit, polly-lollies, the voice
spoils the effect.”
“They keep
me sane,” said See composedly, withdrawing one from her garment—Dohra
swallowed: as she moved it was apparent the front of the dress was slit from
the high collar right down to the tiny waist—and sniffing at it. As she did so
the deep cherry, white-spotted orchid behind her left ear that was her only
ornament besides the gold-painted nails moved gently. Dohra gaped at it. Occasionally
the tourist ladies on the A-Class decks wore one of those to dinner when they
were invited to the Captain’s table—she’d only seen them because Steward M’Df,
Pt J’n, a C’T’rean like herself, had kindly let her look through the peephole
from the serving-room. Unfortunately the Captain himself was completely blocked
off by an ornate pillar, but there was a good view of the ladies. Different
ladies at each sitting, they all had to have a turn or there were tantrums at
Chief Purser ailgardY’s office and complaints to Head Office of the Line.
“Nah, ’s’not
an ackshuall Phang-Phangian senso-orchid,” said See regretfully to her thought.
“’S’got a blob. But it’s good, eh?”
“It’s
lovely, See!” agreed Dohra sincerely.
She smirked
complacently. “Yeah; I got it at Rashwallah’s, the Marrijullanabhad branch on
Huyajhangwania,” she said on a careless note.
“As a matter
of fact she got most of it there,”
explained Jojo, “but what being’s complaining? It’s the effect that matters,
and a girl has to make the best of herself, doesn’t she, polly-lollies? Come
on, now, Murrandr’a Kapaldi-L’All, don’t hang back!”
Dohra waited
for someone to say they called her something else for short, but no-one did.
“Hullo, Murrandr’a Kapaldi-L’All,” she said to the tall, voluptuous,
brown-haired girl. She had a dark brown skin, an oval face with a long,
straight nose, a wide, sulky mouth tinted scarlet, and huge dark brown eyes.
The glossy brown hair was wound up in a high, elaborate style. Her dress was
fascinating: Dohra had never seen anything quite like it. Underneath it seemed
to be a clingo-suit of white, um, something gauzy: the skin showed through; and
the outer layer was a flowing web of white meshes with brightly coloured
artificial flowers scattered on it here and there, at more or less strategic
places, but it was very apparent that her pubic hair had been dyed bright blue
and shaped into a heart configuration. Her open-toed sandals were the exact
same shade of blue—it could hardly be coincidence—and she wore a great many
sparkling toe-rings. She avoided the lorpoid’s third arm and said sourly to
Dohra in a deep, very musical voice: “Don’t imagine you’ll stand a chance with me in the running.”
“Nonsense,
polly-lollies, everyone stands a chance, and with a bit of luck he’ll take all
of you!” cried Jojo brightly. “Now, Dohra, you must meet my two prize exhibits!”—Dohra
winced, but none of the girls seemed to mind being called exhibits.—“This is
Josh’ryn oog pMeemeetee, and I say it as shouldn’t, but she is a princess back
home on bMeemeetee. –A bit shy,
polly-lolly,” he added to Dohra in what he might have imagined was a lowered
voice. He used his third arm to draw her forward. “Call her Josh’ryn,
polly-lolly, no ceremony here!”
Dohra smiled
uncertainly: “Hullo, Josh’ryn, it’s lovely to meet you.”
Shyly
Josh’ryn raised her extraordinary face and replied timidly in a little
bell-like voice: “Hullo, Dohra.” Then the bright blue eyes fixed themselves on
the floor again.
Jojo must
have picked up Dohra’s emanations because he explained quickly: “She is
humanoid, polly-lolly, but quite unusual, isn’t she? They’re all like that on
bMeemeetee, they say it’s something to do with the sun.”
Dohra nodded
numbly. They saw lots of humanoid varieties and sub-varieties on Silver-Ash Flyer, because of course
Playfair One was the most popular tourist venue in the two galaxies, and
Belraynia, for those who could afford it, ran it a close second, but she’d
never seen one of these! Josh’ryn’s skin was a bright pink. A very pretty
shade, yes, but very unexpected: where Dohra’s own pale skin looked a bit
pinkish, Josh’ryn’s was pink pink.
About the colour of the Novatroonian watermelon flesh that figured largely in
the fruit salads and fruit platters on the ship and that P.O. Bates always
complained he never got his fair share of, for the greedy passengers. The small
but full-lipped mouth was much darker, almost a maroon, and her cheeks were
delicately blushed with a powdery white. The thick, straight hair was also
white, cut in a fringe across her wide forehead and falling in two heavy plaits
over her shoulders to mid-thigh, the ends linked by a wide bar of gold.
Unlike the
other girls she was not dressed in figure-hugging, revealing garments. She
seemed to be wearing layers of what at home on C’T’rea would have been
dressing-gowns, garments strongly recommended for all nice girls by Dohra’s late
Gran, who had in fact given her one for every Galaxy Day until she’d died.
Josh’ryn’s
dressing-gowns, however, were much nicer than Dohra’s had ever been. The innermost
one, that just peeped at the vee-neck and again at the toes, was a bright apple
green, possibly mn-mn silk. Next was a darkly patterned one, maroon on navy
blue. A bit more of this one showed. Then came a white quilted one in a satin
fabric, scattered with tiny coloured flowers, very pretty. Quite a bit of it
showed at the neck, and there was about a hand’s-span visible above Josh’ryn’s
feet and also at her wrists. Over it the top dressing-gown was plain white:
also quilted, but not in simple lozenges like the other: in elaborate whirls
and circles. Its sleeves featured enormous cuffs turned back to the elbows. A
wide sash of heavy white satin edged with a gold and brown striped stuff was
tied in a big sort of bunched bow at the front. If anything had been needed
besides the layered dressing-gowns to obscure what sort of figure the girl had,
this sash would have done it. The bright shades of the coloured flowers of the
under-garment were picked up in the elaborate head-dress of heavy, matte gold curlicues
ornamented with flower shapes in coloured stones. Heavy earrings, also in gold,
dangled great drops of a dark blue stone almost to the shoulders of the top
dressing-gown. Showing beneath the layers of hems were white quilted boots with
thick maroon soles. Dohra didn’t really need Jojo’s assurance that this was
traditional bMeemeetee costume.
The seventh
member of the group wasn’t humanoid, she was a Nblyterian, and she’d been
standing by watching the rest of them sardonically. “Hi, Dohra,” she drawled.
“I'm wondreL. Glad to meet you.”
“Nblyterian,” said Jojo in a lowered voice. “Oh, you know them!” he
discovered in relief. “Yes, well, wondreL’s been a marvellous help in keeping
the polly-lollies in line.”
She must
have been, yes. She was tall, more than an IG fluh taller than Dohra herself, and
positively towered over the rotund Jojo. Her crest was a very bright lime
green, and instead of the usual Nblyterian yellowish shade with a bit of green
in it, her skin was a light lime. Traditional Nblyterian female dress consisted
of strips of stuff wound round the body at intervals, giving the impression
that they had been torn haphazardly, though Dohra knew from the Nblyterians on
the Silver-Ash Flyer that the effect
was deliberate. The sardonic-eyed wondreL was wearing a sort of abbreviated
version of it, in a screaming metallic purple that certainly looked its
brightest against the lime skin. The Nblyterian sandals, open-toed with the
straps wound up the legs almost to the knees, were also bright purple. She put
her hands on her hips and grinned at Dohra. “Like it? Had it done at Sh-Rn’s
Quog Cave in Hinnover City.”
Dohra nodded
dazedly: Chief Purser ailgardY uw noouweL herself had taken her round the
Belraynian capital city and shown her the outside of that beauty parlour,
specifically warning her against its prices and the beings that infested it,
her word, and called themselves beauticians.
“When she
makes up her mind to do a thing she does it properly!” said Jojo proudly.
Dohra
nodded. Yes, wondreL had done it properly, even to the bright purple stone in
the mammalian navel and the fluorescent lime-green fingernails and toenails,
which actually looked as if they’d grown that way naturally.
“Doesn’t
look like a tint at all, does it?” said wondreL proudly, holding out a hand.
“No, it
doesn’t, it’s galaxious,” said Dohra quite honestly.
“Of course
it is!” cried Jojo loudly. “You all
are, polly-lollies!”
Ignoring the
glares from Murrandr’a Kapaldi-L’All, See, and the twins, he added: “Now come
on, back to the hotel, and first one that believes a word of a public bubble’s claims about anything is a Friyrian lordship with his gill-collar on!”
He’d taken a
suite at a pleasant Business-Class hotel which, judging by its lobby, was full
of tired business-beings in transit who wouldn’t have half minded a Pleasure
Girl to cheer up their evening on Pflaumschnau’Provia IV. He bustled them onto
the lift-blob, loftily ignoring the offers being made. The suite was very
comfortable, though they had to share the large lorpoid-style round beds.
Polly-lollies
needed their beauty sleep, so they would not
go out to eat, and Jojo firmly ordered from the Room Service menu for all of
them. It was lorpoid-style food, though quite suited to the humanoid and
Nblyterian metabolisms: there was much giggling over the little pickers which
were provided instead of forks, but most of them were soon happily trying the
little cubes of fried fish and mato-meat, raw squid, assorted raw and fried
vegetables, and raw Pflaumschnau’Provia sea-jelly. All of the little cubes were
exactly the same size: Dohra wouldn’t have half minded seeing the culture-pan
that had produced those!
Only Jojo
and Qwolla could face the sea-jelly: it was the consistency of stiff agar-agar,
but very salty.
Most of the
girls, in spite of some references to figures, ate heartily; but Josh’ryn just
there staring at her plate with an expression of dismay on her lovely pink
face.
Dohra was
sitting beside her; she said in a low voice: “What’s the matter, Josh’ryn?”
“Is—is this
food?” the little bell-like voice asked timidly.
“Yes; it’s
very nice. Very nourishing. But that stuff”—she pointed with her picker to the
semitransparent bluish sea-jelly cubes—“is very salty: you might not like it.”
“But…
Where’s the meat?” she said in a tiny, tiny voice.
Oh, help!
“Um, well, this is lorpoid food. They don’t eat meat, they eat fish instead.”
“What’s
that?”
Great
steaming Vvlvanian magma pits! How in the two galaxies could she explain? “Um,
haven't you got any, um, oceans or lakes on your world?”
Josh’ryn
said nothing for a few moments. Then she said: “I’m not sure what you mean.”
“Well, um,
like on C’T’rea we’ve got land, that’s where we build our dwellings.”
“Yes.”
“Um, but as
well as land, we’ve got oceans, that’s, um, lots and lots of salty water, very
deep. Like where the land ends, it’s the ocean. Or you can call it the sea.”
“The land
doesn't end on bMeemeetee,” said the tiny bewildered voice.
Right.
Goddit. Dohra took a deep breath. “I see. Then of course you wouldn’t know
fish! Um, well, some worlds have got lots and lots of water, very deep, it
stretches for as far as you can see, and the fish, they like, um, they live in
it. They’re like meat animals from the water, geddit? Instead of from the
land.”
“So this is
fish?” she said dubiously. “It’s very square.”
“No, it
doesn’t come like this naturally!” said Dohra quickly. “All of this has been
cut up—look, this is a vegetable: see, it’s just a Bluellian squash!” she said
desperately, picking out a cube from her own plate and holding it up. “All cut
up. Lorpoids like their food to look very neat and tidy, that’s all.”
“We have
sour-squash on bMeemeetee,” she said dubiously.
“Well, there
you are!” Dohra encouraged her.
“Yes.
So which is fish?”
“That,
and that. But that stuff’s just kind of, um, reconstituted vegetable stuff,”
she said, waving her picker at Joshryn’s mato-meat.
“I see now.
Thank you, Dohra.” Dohra sagged in relief—too soon, because she added: “But who
will taste it for me?”
“Tuh—Oh, Asteroids
of Hhum! I've only seen that on the off-world Romances! You really are a
princess, aren’t you? Haven’t you had a meal with the others yet, either?”
“No. I got
here this afternoon, Father’s PlayWay Reonia Number Fifteen dropped me off.” A
tear rolled down her cheek, and she dabbed it away with the sleeve of her
dressing-gown. “He needs the money for me,” she said dolefully.
Cringing,
Dohra replied quickly: “Yes, well, never mind that now. They tell me that
everything’s completely luxurious and lovely at the Meagraw’s palace. This food
is all perfectly okay: look, all the other girls are eating it, and we’re all
mammalians like you! Fish tastes different from meat but it’s got that sort of
um, consistency. Try a bit.”
Dubiously
Josh’ryn tried a bit. She choked, coughed it into her hand and gasped: “It’s
bad!”
Right, that
was it, thought Dohra grimly: there was no reason the poor little thing
shouldn’t at least have a meal she could eat: it was bad enough being sold by
your father—and what sort of being must he be, whoever heard of—On second thoughts she could just see plasmo-blasted
Gramps doing exactly that if it came down to a choice between him and J’nno.
She got up and went over to Jojo. “Jojo, the food’s delicious, but Josh’ryn
can’t eat it, she comes from a world where there’s no fish at all. Or
mato-meat,” she added firmly.
“But
polly-lolly, a being isn’t made of
igs!” He must have picked up an emanation or two because he added quickly: “Oh,
very well, we do want her to look her best, after all. Order her something from
the menu, Dohra, polly-lolly, but do me a favour and watch the igs, will you?”
He handed her the menu-blob and Dohra returned triumphantly to her seat beside
Josh’ryn.
“We’re gonna
choose you something else instead. Tell me what meat you’d like.”
Josh’ryn
would like fricasseed e’chpowee or a small e’kmpommee steak or stewed
e’mwongee. Yeah, well. Dohra began to eat her dinner with the picker held in
her right hand while she pointed at the menu’s pictures with her left hand and
ascertained that it wasn’t that or that or— Finally Josh’ryn admitted that the
picture of sliced grpplybeast fillet steak with Whtyllian pepper sauce looked a
bit like e’kmpommee steak. Dohra was about to order her that with a green salad
but just in time thought to ask what colour were the vegetables on bMeemeetee?
Dark blue—probably be the same muck in the sun that turned humanoid skins
watermelon pink, thought Dohra uncharitably—and the sour-squash was white. That
cut out every vegetable on offer except for Whtyllian blue kale, which was
revolting: they’d almost had a mutiny the time the Purser’s Office had got a
Special Offer load of that and she’d been ordered to serve it up to the crew,
or New Rthfrdian bolos, more accurately dirt-bolos, which were about as putrid
as their name. Tasteless. The New Rthfrdians liked them fried, as chips: they
tasted like fried nothing, you had to load them with salt to make them
palatable, and why any being would choose them over yam chips—! But yams in
Dohra’s experience were either bright orange or deep puce or bright pink—rather
the shade Josh’ryn was—so they were out. She ordered her a sustaining dinner of
plain grpplybeast fillet steak, steamed Whtyllian blue kale and boiled New
Rthfrdian bolos.
Boiled bolos? echoed the menu-blob, sounding as if it was going to
expire on the spot.
“Yes. You
could put some Whtyllian cows’ butter on the side,” said Dohra, regardless of
Jojo’s bill—well, he was going to make a fortune if he sold even one of them to
the Meagraw, she was in no doubt of that—“but please don’t put it on the
bolos.” She sat back limply. “It’ll be here in a few IG minutes.”
“Thank you,
Dohra,” said Josh’ryn timidly.
“That’s all
right,” said Dohra, seizing her glass of spring water and drinking it off
thirstily. She noticed Josh’ryn watching her wistfully and glancing at her own
glass. Oh, why not? “Spring water. Ya wamme to taste it, eh?” Josh’ryn nodded.
Dohra picked up her glass and gulped a bit down. “Mm, ’licious!” she said
cheerfully. “Hey, and I’m not dead yet!”
Suddenly
Josh’ryn gave a little clear laugh. “No being ever is!” She picked up the glass
and drank thirstily.
When her
food arrived Dohra tasted it just to make her feel at home—well, and also
because the lorpoid diet was delicious but not all that filling, when you’d
been travelling all day. The blue kale was revolting, the bolos were bolos,
though the butter was excellent, and the steak was really good. She watched in
terrific relief as Josh’ryn ate it all up. Even the butter, which she spread on
the meat. Oh, well, whatever blobbed you up!
“Dohra?”
“Mm?” said
Dohra through a mouthful of cubes of caramel fudge.
“Do you
think the Meagraw of Gr’mmeaya might have that delicious kale vegetable at his
palace?”
Only if the
being was ready for Mullgon’ya! Choose Whtyllian blue kale when you could have
anything in the Known Universe? “Sure to!” she said cheerfully. “It’s a
lordship thing, isn't? Must be, it comes from Whtyll!”
Josh’ryn
smiled happily.
“Eat ya
pudding,” ordered Dohra firmly. “Every being likes caramel fudge, even cut up
into cubes.”
Meekly
Josh’ryn ate her pudding.
After dinner
they spent an IG hour watching the Services—the other girls, except for
Josh’ryn, all wanted a Romance that Dohra had never seen, The Continuing Story of Princess Ma’Bella of New Galaxia (or, No
Such Place), followed by Intergalactic Wrestling, perhaps they didn’t know that
those were all cloned beings, cultured to do that—and then Jojo ordered them
all firmly off to bed. Dohra, wondreL and Josh’ryn had to share one of the big
beds but to her tremendous relief, instead of crying once the light-blobs were
out, as she’d feared, Josh’ryn fell asleep immediately. So did wondreL, flat on
her back, snoring. Dohra sighed and closed her eyes, wondering muzzily what in
Federation she was doing here…
There was
plenty of time next morning to find something decent for Dohra to wear, so Jojo
took her firmly down to the boutiques on the ground floor of the hotel and
found something. It was a soft, dusky blue, it was clinging, it was long and
apart from the fact that it wasn't, thank the Federation, slit to the waist at
the front, it was a dead ringer for See’s cherry-red dress. It was the
loveliest dress—and incidentally the most grown-up—that she’d ever had. When
she came into the suite wearing it See clapped her hands and cried:
“Galaxious!” so her nature must be as pretty as her face, Murrandr’a
Kapaldi-L’All scowled horribly, better than a compliment, really, wondreL said
frankly: “Thank the Federation! What an improvement!” and the twins, likewise,
cried: “That’s better!”—so that Durocloth coverall must have looked pretty bad
even though she’d worn her own big pink belt with it. And Qwolla smiled her
lovely smile and said: “Oh, very pretty, Dohra!” Josh’ryn, however, looked very
dubious.
“Don't you
like it?” said Dohra with a laugh, spinning in front of her to show it off.
“It’s
wonderful, Dohra, but you don't look like you,” said the little bell-like
voice.
Actually it
had struck Dohra, as she was trying it on, that she looked more like Mum than
herself, so she took the little pink hand firmly and said: “I’m still me
underneath.”
“Yes,” said
Josh’ryn in relief. “So you are.”
And with
that, polly-lollies, they all had to bundle into a bubble and rush out to the spaceport to meet the
last two! And then it would be ho! for Gr’mmeaya!
They were in
plenty of time to meet S’draa, the girl who was coming from Plouervangornia, so
most of the girls decided they’d go and relax in the bar, leaving Jojo, Dohra
and Josh’ryn to meet S’draa. And off they went, wondreL promising firmly to see
that no-one drank too much.
“Here they
come!” said Jojo at last, as the blob-sign above the gate lit up with the
message: “Plouervangornia TRP001238 DISEMBARKING.” “And let’s hope she isn’t
fat!”
Why should
she be fat? Dohra and Josh’ryn only had time to exchange puzzled glances before
they saw why. Those must be Plouervangornians—help.
“Yes, well,
it’s the metabolism,” said the rotund Jojo.
“Yes, of
course,” agreed Dohra quickly.
“But the
diet doesn’t help,” he added.
“I see.”
They waited…
“There’s a
girl!” squeaked Josh’ryn, as she swished past them, her striped wtmyrian cloak
swinging.
“No, dear,
that’s a female business-being,” said Jojo firmly “And Federation preserve me
from the likes of it! At least my bond-partners both stay home and leave me to
run the business! No, well, G’wijjy, that’s the senior, she’s always nagging me
to bring one of you home, but as I keep telling her, that wouldn't be economic,
polly, and frankly, what do we need with a Pleasure Girl? Pau’rojjy, that’s the
junior, she thinks we might train one to oversee the tidy-blobs, given time,
but all she’s capable of is depositing the egglets, and frankly, polly-lollies,
she’s not too good at that!”
The two girls blinked as they got a strong
picture of what he meant. Josh’ryn was broadcasting dazedly: Isn’t she thin?
“Lorpoid
females are,” said the plump Jojo complacently. “It’s us males that’ve got the
tiresome job of incubating the egglets in the flap,”—he patted his tummy: the
girls nodded, their eyes very round—“not to say, producing the male cream to
start them off in the first place, and if you think that’s a sinecure, you
ought to try it, that’s all I can say! And as for feeding the lorpies while
they’re in the flap—exhausting! You better believe it!”
“I see: it’s
a bit like marsupials,” said Dohra.
“Marsupials!” he said with a scornful whistling noise. “Those beings
never had it so good! They’ve got their females trained to stay at home and do
all the incubating and feeding!”
“It must be
very tiring for you, especially when you have to work so hard,” she said kindly.
“It is,
polly-lolly, it is, and now G’wijjy, would you believe it, is agitating for
another lot. I said to her: ‘No—way, polly!’
Six is enough: two threes, see? Very nice! But she’s afraid Pau’rojjy might go
for a nine next time.”
“How many
did she have last time?” ventured Josh’ryn.
“Only
three,” he said heavily. “Got no notion of the meaning of the phrase ‘Getting
it over with in one litter,’ that female.”
“Um, so that
makes nine altogether?” said Dohra.
“Yes, a nice
round figure, and that’s enough!” he said firmly. “They’re eating us out of
house and home, as it is!” He sent them a vivid picture of a bunch of small
lorpoids, some plump, some thin, playing outside a dear little neat lorpoid
house, built low to the ground, with curved roofs and walls all in one, and set
in a pretty garden that featured a series of pools.
“See the
water?” said Dohra in a low voice to Josh’ryn.
“Yes; is
that the oceans?”
“No, just
small pools.”
“Fish
pools,” said Jojo, smirking. “I say it as shouldn’t, but you know you’ve made
it when you can afford a house with three fish pools!”
“The fish
live in the water!” cried Josh’ryn,
as one of the lorpies bent over and splashed in a pool with two of his fat arms
and a thin older lorpoid came running out of the house and snatched him away.
“That’s right, polly-lolly,” he said kindly.
“–That was G’wijjy’s idea of keeping a couple of eyes on them, if you can
believe it.” They were looking at him in horror. “Lorpies swim like fish,” he
admitted. “But wet clothes, and probably nose-colds as well—!”
“We get
those,” admitted Dohra. “There is an Oononian chemo-blob you can take, but it
doesn’t work too well.”
“Tell us
about it, polly-lolly! –Ah! Let’s hope this is her!” He held up his blob-sign.
“MR’GN, S’DRAA, FOR GR’MMEAYA! HERE, HERE, HERE!” The elegant blonde girl in
the checked wtmyrian cloak glanced at it indifferently and swept on past.
“Well, bother! Where is she?”
“There’s
lots more coming off,” said Josh’ryn kindly.
“Yes, but
polly-lolly, none of them are girls!”
This was
true. They waited…
“If this
isn’t her, I'm a turquoise Guess What with his gill-collar on!” said Jojo at
last.
It was a
tall, black-skinned, black-haired girl, draped in a cloak of spotted wtmyrians,
leaning on the arm of a Plouervangornian with “tired business-being” written
all over him. “Was she supposed to be with some being?” asked Dohra.
“On the
contrary, polly-lolly! Strictest instructions not to get off with no being!” said Jojo crossly. He waggled his blob-sign.
The tall
girl was seen to kiss the plump business-being affectionately on the blobby
ear—Jojo gave a muffled whistle—and accept something from his plump appendage.
She wiggled over towards them slowly on amazingly high orange platform-soled
shoes. “I'm S’draa! Be through the gate in two IG microseconds!” she cooed.
“If that cloak’s paid for,” muttered
Jojo. They waited…
“Here she
comes!” said Dohra in relief as the gate disgorged a giggling, wriggling
S’draa. “It must be one of those tickly gates.”
S’draa
wiggled up to them—it wasn’t just the shoes, she was definitely doing something
with her hips as well. “Hi, there.” She smiled at them and stroked her
wtmyrians.
“Ugh, it
moved!” gasped Josh’ryn, backing off.
“They,
polly-lolly, they,” corrected Jojo heavily. “Tell her about wtmyrians some
time, Dohra, polly-lolly,” he added heavily, “only spare me if you can! Now,
this is S’draa, of course, lovely to see you at last, polly-lolly,” he added on
an acid note: she and the business-being had been almost the last off and the
gate was now closed—“and this is Dohra and Josh’ryn.”
“Pink, eh?
Effective,” owned S’draa, nodding at Josh’ryn. “Got any snuhl, lorpoid?”
“No!” he
said crossly. “Any girl caught taking snuhl gets left behind, it's illegal on
Gr’mmeaya! And do not even mention the word ‘klupf’! And it’s Jojo to you.”
She shrugged. “Right: Jojo. Is this gonna be
worth my time?”
“That
depends on what you got off that business-being, doesn’t it, polly-lolly?” he
retorted acidly.
“Five
super-igs,” she said casually.
“Do not ask what she did for that!” Jojo warned
the other girls crossly. “What do you want to be in the Meagraw’s hareem for,
if you’re earning that sort of igs?”
“Thought
it’d be a nice rest. I deserve to take it easy, been doing this for—Never
mind.”
Jojo blinked
his three round bulgy eyes at her. “Done,” he said under his breath. “You do
realise the Meagraw might chuck you out if you can’t produce egglets for him?
Uh—what do you call them, again, Dohra, polly-lolly?” he added, endeavouring to
snap his fat fingers.
“Babies,” said
Dohra limply, taking another look at S’draa’s perfectly modelled features and
superbly contoured form.
“Huh!” snorted
S’draa. “Well, let him chuck me out, I’ll of had a bit of a break.”
It was now
pretty clear that this was her aim. Wondering how old she really was, Dohra
picked up one of her bags for her—they were spotted to match the cloak but only
made of lubolyon—only to be told loftily to give that to a servo-mech. And
Jojo, Dohra, Josh’ryn, S’draa and the servo-mech went off to the bar.
It was hate at first sight between Murrandr’a
Kapaldi-L’All and S’draa. Perhaps this might have been expected: the tall,
striking-looking S’draa was the only other dark-skinned candidate and thus
inevitably a rival. Murrandr’a Kapaldi-L’All looked her up and down with a
sneer, especially the spotted cloak. “Spoils of long-past victories?” she
drawled, raising her perfectly curved eyebrows.
In return
S’draa looked hard at the bright blue pubic heart and cooed: “Some of us can
afford not to be obvious, love.”
Hastily Jojo
intervened with introductions, and they all sat back with drinks. Josh’ryn
hadn't recognised anything listed by the servo-mech so Dohra had simply ordered
her a maxi-galaxy shake, caramel-flavoured, since she’d seemed to like last night’s
pudding. Then she had to show her how to use the phthyffia straw but she'd
pretty well expected that. “Nice?”
“Galaxious!”
gasped Josh’ryn, looking up from it with a beaming smile.
“Good.”
And after
Jojo had refused flatly to let S’draa drink a third shot of qwlot, and
threatened the twins with all sorts of dire penalties if they ate any more
jing-jing nuts—guaranteed to give a
humanoid polly-lolly spots, polly-lollies!—it was time to meet the last
candidate.
“Hally
Kally, but I’m not sure which is the personal name,” said Jojo, tiptoeing as he
held aloft the blob-sign: “HALLY KALLY, FOR GR’MMEAYA! HERE, HERE, HERE!”
Crowds of
beings, mostly very shabbily dressed, were coming off the ship. “Itinerant
workers,” explained Jojo as a mixed gaggle of gnarled and scarred beings and
rusty servo-mechs passed them.
Dohra
squeezed Josh’ryn’s hand comfortingly, as the bMeemeetee girl shrank. “I
haven’t seen any humanoids.”
“No-o… Think
some of those were, polly-lolly. Well, mutants.”
“I’ll hold
it up for a bit, if you like,” said Dohra kindly, as Jojo switched arms yet
again on the blob-sign. Thankfully he resigned it to her.
The crowds
had cleared the gate, some Merchant Service officers in uniform had come
through, two hoo-ing Meanker stewardesses had come through with some passing
cheeky remarks to the IG C&E being on duty at the gate, and there was no
sign of any humanoid girl!
“Are you
sure she’s humanoid, Jojo?” ventured Dohra.
“Yes! The
Meagraw only takes humanoids. Or Nblyterians, but they’re very hard to get, they don't take domination well when they’re
female-tended.”
Dohra
nodded. The lime-crested wondreL had already explained to her and the wondering
Josh’ryn that there wasn’t much opportunity back home on Nblyteria if you
didn’t have qualifications—Dohra could certainly relate to that!—and she’d
decided this was a good chance to make some igs and better herself. And the igs
were going to go into an account that her grandmother was managing, Jojo
wouldn’t have a hope of getting away with a thing! The picture of a Nblyterian
matriarch was more than enough to convince the girls of that. Dohra had
wondered what would happen if the Meagraw wanted to keep her permanently but
wondreL had winked and said: “He won’t wanna do that. In the first place I
won’t be able to breed for him, even with genetic manipulation, ’cos I've had
it turned off, see? And in the second place, if he doesn’t get rid after the
specified minimum term—only two IG years, the word is he gets bored with his
hareem girls pretty quick—I’m gonna go into my male stage.”
Jojo was
just deciding crossly to give up when a depressed-looking Bdeeg appeared,
leading a grimy braceleted object on a chain.
“Surely that
isn’t her?” croaked Dohra.
“It can’t
be! She’s dirty!” gasped Josh’ryn.
“It better
not be,” threatened Jojo. “Wave that sign, polly-lolly!”
Dohra waved
the sign and in return the Bdeeg produced a sign which flashed: “S-HALLY K_LLY,
FOR JOJO. PAY THIS BDEE_ TEN IGS FOR DE_IVERY.”
“What?” screeched the lorpoid indignantly.
“I’m not taking delivery of that!”
“Muh-maybe
if we give her a wash?” faltered Josh’ryn.
“I don’t
think we’ll have to,” admitted Dohra as the IG C&E being stepped forward
and, keeping its distance with the aid of its blaster, pointed the Bdeeg and
its grubby charge in the direction of the Decontam. units.
“I refuse to
believe,” said Jojo crossly, “that even an IG C&E Decontam. unit can do
anything for that—that matted being!”
They waited…
The recycler
next to the Bdeeg’s Decontam. unit emitted a loud burp and disgorged something.
“If that was
up the whistle, that’s that, polly-lollies,” predicted Jojo. “Oh, no: only the
blob!” he said in relief as it lay there flashing, looking much brighter than
before: “S-HALLY KALLY, FOR JOJO. PAY THIS BDEEG TEN IGS FOR DELIVERY.”
“Is she an s-being?” asked Josh’ryn.
“Well,
within the Meaning, polly-lolly, yes, since some being’s put a bracelet on her,”
he admitted. “Though not what was
quoted, I do assure you!”
They waited…
The Bdeeg
came out of its Decontam. unit. Ooh, its garment wasn’t grey at all, it was
pale yellow! It picked up its blob-sign and waved it suggestively at Dohra.
“It thinks I’m you, Jojo, you’d better have
this back,” she said on a weak note, giving him his blob-sign.
They waited.
The recycler
outside S-Hally Kally’s Decontam. unit emitted a burp and then a sort of
ding-ding noise which Dohra for one had never heard from any recycler ever, not
even on Silver-Ash Flyer, which had
huge, efficient ones. “What’s wrong?” she hissed.
“I think,”
said Jojo as the IG C&E being, clearly displeased, stamped over to the
recycler, “that those rags the creature had on couldn’t be recycled.”
The IG
C&E being stamped over to the barrier. “Oy! YOU!”
Jojo went
forward nervously. “Yes, Officer?”
“If you’re
waiting for this s-being, you’ll have to give me a garment for it, because all
the recycler could manage was this.” It held out a tiny square of material,
less than the size of a senso-tissue.
Jojo sighed.
“Dohra, polly-lolly, could you lend her your coveralls?”
They were in
her carry-on bag. Obligingly she got them out and Jojo passed them to the IG
C&E being. They waited…
“Asteroids
of Hhum!” gulped Jojo as a very pretty pale blue being appeared from the
Decontam. unit in Dohra’s coveralls.
“What is
she?” whispered Josh’ryn. “Is she another Qwolla?”
“No,
polly-lolly: that,” said Jojo with glee, “is a friymanoid! Half humanoid, half
Friyrian,” he said with relish. “Rarer than blue Faindorgean glass, and hardly ever for sale! Well, the Friyrian must
have lowered his turquoise self so far as to do it with an off-world humanoid
female, that’s all I can think, polly-lollies, and that happens about as often
as Vvlvania freezes over! Spread his lordly male cream around outside
bond-partnership? Unheard of! –HEY! Bdeeg! Come here!” The Bdeeg hurried up and
Jojo conned it into unlocking the s-girl’s bracelet before he handed over the
ten igs. The bracelet fell off, and, holding the ten igs well out of the
Bdeeg’s reach, Jojo demanded possession of it. Resignedly the Bdeeg handed it
and its key-blob over, and accepted the ten igs.
The pale
blue girl with the long, straight indigo hair was just standing there. “Go
through the gate, polly-lolly!” cried Jojo loudly.
No response.
“Federation,” he muttered. “’Scuse me, Officer, can you send the girl
through the gate?”
Sighing, the
IG C&E being pushed the girl with a gloved digit up to the gate and through
it. Jojo went up to her. “I am Jojo,” he said clearly. “Can you understand me?”
–No response.
“She hasn’t
got a translator,” noticed Dohra.
“No, and she
doesn’t speak Intergalactic, any more
news?” he said crossly. “Oh, to Blerrinbrig’s with it!” Briskly he snapped the
bracelet back on her wrist. The girl brightened, and smiled at him. “Now who’s
gonna lead her?” he grumbled.
“Could she
just take your hand?” ventured Dohra. “Or mine, if you like.”
“Very well,
Dohra, polly-lolly, but she’s your responsibility!” he warned.
“Okay. Come
on, Josh’ryn.” Dohra took the blue-faced girl’s hand with the hand that wasn’t
already holding Josh’ryn’s and said kindly: “Hullo, S-Hally Kally. I’m Dohra.”
“Hullo,
S-Hally Kally,” ventured Josh’ryn. “I’m Josh’ryn.”
S-Hally
Kally smiled and smiled, revealing perfect pearly little teeth, but didn’t
speak.
“Well, she’s
got good teeth, that a plus, that’ll be the Friyrian side,” muttered Jojo. ”I
suppose this means we’ll need a porter—Yes!”
He shouted at the servo-mech that had slid up to him. “Half an ig or nothing, geddit?”
Half an ig, it agreed smoothly, grabbing
Dohra's bag.
“Come on,”
said Jojo grimly. “’Boutiques, ho. –Polly-lollies! Polly-lollies! Come on!”
The
giggling, whispering group of the twins, wondreL, Qwolla and See dissolved,
S’draa put her mirror away, looking bored, and Murrandr’a Kapaldi-L’All glared.
And they all set off to the boutiques to buy something that would make S-Hally
Kally look like something more, if they would excuse Jojo, than a bag of New
Rthfrdian bolos!
See selected
a white, tight, long garment in a sort of furry plush fabric. Jojo vetoed it
crossly but she got S-Hally Kally into it regardless.
“Oh!” he
said. “Well, yes! I must say, See, polly-lolly, you’ve got perfect taste! It
doesn’t make her look fat at all! –No blob-driven flowers,” he added quickly,
as See was looking wistfully at a white one spotted and streaked in blue. “Come
on, girls! We have to go up five levels and cross the spaceport for the
Gr’mmeayan ferry!”
And off they
went…
“I am not,” said wondreL, flushing orangey-green,
“having a bracelet put on me!”
“Polly-lolly, you have to,” explained Jojo, mopping his brow with a
bunch of senso-tissues. There were plenty: they were in the humanoid hygiene
cabinets. The female ones, but if he wasn't worried nor were they. “They won’t
let any of you on-world without them, that's a Gr’mmeayan world law, see? It’s
a closed world: I’ve got an on-world permit, but I’m a Specially Licensed
Trader. I’ll take them off as soon as we’re on-world. Er, well, out of the
spaceport,” he conceded with a muffled whistle.
“Oh, why
not?” said S’draa. “If that’s what it takes—we’ve come this far, girls!”
They were
almost deafened during the brief trip across the concourse to the ferry by the
emanations and shouted offers. But soon they were through IG C&E—the being
in charge didn’t even glance at them—and walking up the tunnel to the ship.
Two tall
humanoid guards in giant turbans were stationed outside the ship’s hatch,
blasters on their hips “Dokko, lorpoid,” said one.
The other twirled his long black moustache and
looked the girls over. “Pink? Hey, look, Cl’v, there’s a bright pink one!”
“Ugh!”
replied the other guard frankly. “You have her. Hey, five igs for a poke at the
blue one, lorpoid!”
“She bites,”
said Jojo laconically, and the guard drew back.
“Ugh, keep
her! Not into that! I’ll have this one, then!” he suggested, fondling See’s
little pointed breasts while she wriggled and smiled.
“You and the
Meagraw both, ’ud this be?” retorted Jojo smartly, and the guard’s hand
withdrew—though he waggled his tongue at the smirking See.
Meanwhile
the other guard’s hand had got inside wondreL’s brief Nblyterian pants. “Gee,
the same as humanoid,” he reported. “Thought Nblyterians were different?”
“Ya thought
wrong, bald-crest!” she snarled.
Smile, polly-lolly, SMILE! sent Jojo. “They’re all for the Meagraw, as you can
see from this dokko, Officer, and if I was in your Service Issue boots I really
wouldn’t!”
“Space Issue!”
he snapped.
“Lorpoid,”
explained his fellow. “Can’t help himself: ignorant as mok shit. Fifty igs to
forget you ever had this one with the yellow hair and big tits,” he offered,
squeezing Dohra’s bottom.
“And fifty
igs says the Meagraw’ll remember how many he was promised!” retorted Jojo.
“Uh—yeah.
But couldn’t I just give her one?” he said, undoing his pants and getting it
out.
“Hey, yeah!
And I’ll do this yellow one!” agreed the moustachioed guard, getting his out.
“Come on, lorpoid, ten igs a poke! That’s fair!”
“Officers,
we aren’t interested, and from all I’ve heard of your Meagraw, he’d take one
look at us and read the lot,” said Jojo, quite undisturbed.
The two
members were observed to shrink, and both owners stuffed them hurriedly back
into their pants.
“Yeah,”
admitted the one called Cl’v. “All right, get on board.”
And they went
on board, See, it must be admitted, returning the moustachioed one's tongue
gesture.
“Really!”
gasped Jojo, falling into his seat. “I may have said smile, but were tongues
mentioned, See, polly-lolly?”
“Why not?
Hey, he had a good pronger on him, eh?” she said in her hoarse, rasping voice.
“They call
them that where she comes from, though not
in the nicer parts, and please: do not use the expression in front of the
Meagraw if you want to be chosen,” sighed Jojo.
“What if
he’s innerested?” See replied simply, sniffing at a chemo-blob.
“If he’s
interested he will make the first move—geddit?
Do you all get it?” he shouted. Possibly
they didn't, but they all nodded meekly.
The seats
were in blocks of four, as it was only a ferry, and wondreL had an aisle seat,
next to Dohra. “The males don’t make the first move on Nblyteria,” she
admitted. “So what’ll he do, pull his w’nger out of his pants like the guards?”
“He might,”
admitted Dohra. “Lots of humanoid males are like that, wondreL.”
“Already
stiff?” she asked incredulously.
“Um, yes,
those guards were, um, usual.”
The
Nblyterian gave a dirty chuckle, nodding happily and tapping her foot.
Dohra
cleared her throat. “Um, yes. Um, but as he’s a lordship-type being, he might
try to kiss you first.”
“Ooh! Um,
no, hang on, does that mean I take my pants off? Doesn’t that count as a first
move, for humanoids?”
“No!” she
gasped, turning considerably pinker than Josh’ryn. “Not like that! I think a
Meagraw’d only do that in his bedroom! Just on the mouth.”
“I see,
humanoid males don't do the other much,” she said, picking up her thought.
“They do, I
think, only not to me,” admitted Dohra.
“Well, ya
gotta encourage them, but on Nblyteria the males really like that. Specially if
they get to kneel, ’cos see, they like you to stand over them, specially if ya
keep telling them what to do.”
“Mm,” said
Dohra, trying not to shut her eyes and wishing she’d let Josh’ryn sit next to
the Nblyterian instead of giving her the window seat and placing S-Hally Kally
between them. “Um, I really think all you’d have to do would be, um, respond
when the Meagraw, um, does something.”
“Respond!”
she said with an incredulous laugh.
“Girls on
bMeemeetee respond if a man kisses them, I know that much,” said Josh’ryn,
leaning forward.
“Uh—yeah.
Oh, Federation, ya don't know nothing much else, do ya?” realised the
Nblyterian, staring. “Hey, she’s a virgin,” she croaked.
“I’m not
surprised, wondreL. Um, maybe you better not say any more.”
“She never
understood what I said before, what makes ya think she’s gonna—No, all right.
But I get the picture: ya think I oughta be submissive like a male, eh?”
Dohra
swallowed. “I think it wouldn’t hurt, just at first, until he gets used to
you.”
“Right.
Submissive. Well, that’ll be a new experience! But are ya sure he’ll be able to
get it up if I am?”
“Yes,”
croaked Dohra. “Pretty sure.”
“Oh, right:
Friyrian males are the same, are they? Never knew that,” she said with
interest, reading her like a text-blob. “Yeah, well, dare say little S-Bluey’s
mother could tell us all about that.
–Hey, do ya think she’s actually dumb?”
“Uh—Oh!
Can't speak! Help,” gulped Dohra. “How could we tell?”
Casually
wondreL leant across and pinched the friymanoid’s white plush arm.
“Ee-oow!”
she squeaked.
“Well, she
can make a noise,” conceded the Nblyterian, sitting back.
“Honestly!
–It’s all right, S-Hally Kally, she didn’t meant to hurt you,” said Dohra,
patting her hand.
“It’s all
right, S-Hally Kally,” Josh’ryn assured her, patting her other hand.
The s-girl
smiled uncertainly. “Garble, garble, garble S-Hally Kally,” she said.
“See!”
beamed Dohra. “She can talk! Yes,
you’re S-Hally Kally, aren’t you?”
“Yeah. Pity it’s not Intergalactic,” said
wondreL drily, picking up her free audio-blob, removing its hygienic covering,
slipping that into the disposal slot, and putting the blob in her ear.
“Gall’ay’an—Gall’ay’an—Gall’ay’an—what’s wrong
with this ship?” she demanded aggrievedly, removing the blob. “It’s all
Gall’ay’an pop!”
“Those’ll
all be sponsored channels,” said Dohra placidly.
“Well, mok
shit!”
“You could
try paying.” Dohra looked dubiously at the row of non-sponsored blobs.
“I only got a
few igs, I took my Granna’s advice,” she admitted. “Well, if this comes off I’m
not gonna need igs, am I? And if it doesn’t, we’re ticketed home, Granna got
that in quintuplicate, you bet your Space Issue lorpoid boots!"
“Yes, good. –Whtyllian pop’s good.”
“Yeah, but
how much’ll one ig pay for? Oh, why not?” She put in her ig and took the blob.
“Hey, galaxious!” she beamed.
“Uh-uh,”
said S-Hally Kally, pointing.
“Um, yeah,
it’s Gall’ay’an pop. Gall’—ay—’an,"
said Dohra carefully.
“Garble,
garble,” she said.
“Give it a
go,” Dohra decided. “You can only hate it, eh?” She picked up the s-girl’s free
audio-blob, took off its hygienic cover, disposed of that, and gave her the
blob, pointing to her ear. S-Hally Kally beamed, and put it in. “Garble,
garble, garble!”
“Yeah,
good-oh,” said Dohra with a sigh.
“What are
they?” asked Josh’ryn, leaning forward.
“Uh—Asteroids
of Hhum,” she muttered. “Audio-blobs, Josh’ryn. Hang on.” She leaned forward, picked
up Josh’ryn’s free audio-blob, took off its hygienic cover, disposed of that,
and gave her the blob, pointing to her ear. “Music.”
“Music?” she
said with a laugh. “No: beings make that, Dohra, on musical instruments!”
“Yeah, well,
I dunno how they get it in, but that blob’s got music in it. If it’s too loud,
just think ‘quiet’ at it.”
“Really? You
don’t have to shout and clap your hands?” Cautiously Josh’ryn put it in her
ear. “Ooh! Quiet!” she cried, clapping her hands. Slowly she smiled.
“I’ll go to
Mullgon’ya,” muttered Dohra. “Smarter than the average blob.” She leant back in
her seat. She didn’t have many igs with her, some being had told her not to
travel with a lot of igs. Uh—not the Captain,
what a stupid idea! Well, she could just
sit here and wonder if the Meagraw was anything like him…
She gave in, took out
an ig, and chose Whtyllian pop. Hey, wow! Dohra leaned back in her seat,
smiling…
“Poke ’em
all! Poke all the polly-lollies! Give ’em to Budg, he’ll poke ’em!” shouted the
mutant, bounding up.
“Give Budg a
big turquoise poker!” squeaked the Flppu. “He’ll show the vacuum-frozen beings
with the gill-collars!”
Before
anyone else could utter, Didg appeared from behind the large mannanna plant
that decorated, possibly not the word, the Level Pink ISLA bar, scowling. “Ya
won’t, Budg, and shut up! –You’ve got him over-excited, why in Federation did
ya have to tell him all that stuff about poking and girls talking dirty and
those vacuum-frozen guards with their pokers out?” he said angrily to Dohra.
“I never!”
she gasped.
“There was quite a lot about little tubes,”
murmured the Thwurbullerian.
“But I never
said anything about that!” she cried, very red.
“Ya sure
enough said a lot about that wondreL! Talk about knowing from nothing! Well, ya
gotta leave Nblyteria if ya wanna try the submissive stuff with a humanoid or a
Friyrian or a Meanker, I'll admit that!” said blndreL with a dirty chuckle. “Or
train them up to enjoy being dominated, contrariwise!”
“But I never
said a word about that, blndreL!” she
cried tearfully. “I wouldn't! It wasn’t—well, she didn’t realise, of course,
but it wasn’t nice!”
“Budg, will
ya shut up!” said Didg crossly to his
swiller as he growled something about blue pokers. “I tole ja not to talk about
them in spaceports, didn’t I?”
“I picked up
a lot about little tubes,” admitted One.
“And a lot
about garments,” added Two.
Certain
beings had almost forgotten the paired beings could speak independently: they
jumped slightly.
“Uh—yeah,”
admitted BrTl, blinking. “There was a
lot about garments, wasn’t there? I liked the recipes, though lorpoid food’s a
waste of time: too fiddly.”
“Oh, no,
it’s excellent!” cried the Feeny-Argyllians. “I love sea-jelly, though fish
isn't suited to the metabolism!”
“Salty!”
growled Budg. “Budg wants sea-jelly! Gimme sea-jelly!”
“NO!”
shouted Didg. “Look, I'm gonna have to take him back to the ship. And in
future, watch what ya say in front of him!” He glared at Dohra.
“There is an
expression for it,” noted BrTl, suppressing a yawn.
“Storyteller,”
said Trff with the utmost placidity.
Forty-Four
choked on its spring water. “Of course!” it gasped. “Silly me, I never
realised! Of course, that’s what she is!”
“Eh?”
croaked Didg, his jaw sagging. “But she can’t send worth an ig!”
“Oh, no, but
that’s quite different,” it said complacently. “Quite different. She can’t help
it, you know: once she embarks on a story, we get everything. There are very
few of them in the Known Universe. Of course, there are artisan-beings who’ve
been trained to do it for a living—but not so graphically.”
“Uh—yeah,
we’ve got a couple back home, they’re plasmo-blasted boring,” he admitted.
“Yes; I once
met the one who serves the Grand Prince of DorAven. I wasn’t impressed.”
“That
explains it!” said blndreL. “Hey, Dohra, if ya don’t wanna tell us the lot, I'd
stop!”
“Whuh-what
do you mean?” quavered Dohra.
“You’re a
Storyteller, Dohra!” chorused the paired beings. “How exciting! The united
beings back home will be thrilled to know I've met one!”
“’Course you
are, Dohra,” said Didg heavily. “I was an intergalactic idiot not to have
spotted it. But that means you gotta monitor yourself, or poor old Budg’ll go
crazy.”
“No, he-it
won't,” said Trff kindly, pointing an antenna at him.
“Uh—Trff,
you haven’t taken the urge away entirely, have ya?” croaked Didg.
“No, just
corrected how much he-it picks up from female mammalian humanoids.”
“Uh—good.
Thanks. I think.”
BrTl had a
look “He seems much calmer,” he offered.
He not only
seemed much calmer, he’d sat down and was sucking his opposable digit.
“Yes, he’ll
be happier now,” agreed Forty-Four.
Didg looked
at them limply. How could they possibly understand?
“I'll take
him back to my room and check him out, if ya like,” offered blndreL.
Didg was
aware that Dohra was gaping at them in horror. “No, thanks all the same, you
don’t know how rough he can get,” he said stiffly.
“But rough
stuff’s right up my moogletube!” she urged. “Come on, Budg, ya wanna come and
show me your—what does he call his w’nger, again?”
“Uh—P,O,K,E,R,” croaked Didg. “Look, are you sure?”
“Yeah! Come
on, Budg, you come with me,” she said kindly, taking the hand that wasn’t in
his mouth, “and ya can show me your w’nger—poker.”
Budg
brightened. “Dirty WORD!”
“That’s it!”
Grinning, blndreL led him off.
Didg passed
his hand over his brow. “I gotta have a drink.”
BrTl’s
attention re-focussed. “Nnru juice here! –Anyone else?”
Dohra got up
unsteadily. “If it’s all right, I think I might go back to the pod.”
And look up Storyteller in the Encyclopaedia,
agreed Trff. “It’ll come with you-it, Dohra. It’s found a friendly tran-blob
that’ll take us all the way. No: on this level: Pink. Then you-it and it’ll
take a very friendly lift-blob that’s pretending not to be in working order—no,
not a freight lift-blob, a nice being-carrier—and we’ll be right at the little
tube leading to the pod!” It caught the emanations. “Tunnel,” it corrected
itself weakly. “Small tunnel.”
“That sounds
lovely,” she admitted. “I really need to—to think.”
Something like that! it sent jauntily.
And off they went, hand-in-tentacle.
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