TALES
FROM THE THIRD MOON
Prologue
Somewhere
In Space
When
Federation Day approached in the Federated Worlds of the Two Galaxies, beings
were apt to go silly. Large or small, high or low, didn’t matter: silly was
what they went. Given that on a goodly proportion of worlds Federation Day also
coincided with the approach of spring, some went even sillier.
“What?” groaned Captain Smt Wong, as the
comm-blob ceased relaying a very, very, very silly communication. It began
relaying it again but shut up under the scorching Vvlvanian mind-fire of its
Captain’s mind-message. “Yeah,” said the Captain through her pearly mammalian
teeth. “–BrTl! Get in here!”
Nothing.
First Officer! To the bridge! At the DOUBLE! she sent.
Her
xathpyroid First Officer lumbered in, at the double. Fortunately the ship was
pretty well solid xrillion, built to take it. Also fortunately there was
nothing moveable on the bridge to be moved by the wind, make that gale, of his
passing. Well, except her, but the ship wasn’t foolish enough to let that
happen.
“Yes, sir?”
he panted.
“I won’t ask
what in Federation you were doing when you were supposed to be on duty, because
in the first place I can see that,” said his Captain viciously through her
pearly mammalian teeth.—Lieutenant-Pilot BrTl cringed, but nodded meekly: she
wouldn’t be a Pilot worth her n’nk salt if she wasn’t able to see that, and a
lot more.—“And in the second place I don’t want to hear any more mok shit about
your bunions. I will say, Slack off when you’re on duty again and you’ll be OFF
THIS SHIP! –I mean it, BrTl.”
He could see
that. He couldn’t read her nearly as well as she could read him—well, one
reason why she was the Captain and he was only the First Officer—but he wasn’t
that bad: he could read that much. “Yes, sir,” he agreed glumly. He waited but
she didn’t volunteer anything. He couldn’t read what it was but he could see it
was something not good. So he ventured: “Um, something wrong, sir?”
“Yeah, and for Federation’s sake siddown and
stop sirring me, BrTl!”
Thankfully
he sank into the co-pilot’s seat. “What?”
“I've been
called up,” she said, taking a deep breath, “for a spot of Wavey-Spacey duty.”
“Eh?”
he croaked. Given her Service record, this hadn’t seemed to him something that
was likely to happen. Not in the next megazillion years, anyway. Though of
course she was Space Fleet Reserve—well, so was he, most qualified Pilots were.
“Yeah.” –Relay it, she ordered the comm-blob.
Obediently
it relayed it.
BrTl choked.
“You?” After quite some time he
managed to say: “Look, Jhl, don’t get me wrong, but did a certain Whtyllian
being last seen in sparf-covered Fleet Commander’s dress uniform bawling out a
raft of lesser beings wangle this?”
Jhl’s lips
tightened. “It’s not apparent. But my guess’d be, Yes.”
“I
can’t think of any other reason. I mean, you?
Seconded to some Diplo mok shit on a primmo world that’s due to come into the
Federation on Federation Day? –Must be a rich primmo, if they’ve allocated it
the actual F-Day as its F-Day,” he noted by the by.
“Something
like that, yeah. Anyway, there’ll be rafts of Federation Reppos and stupid
play-beings and Space Fleet top sparf there, and there’s no way in the two
galaxies I can get out of it,” she said grimly.
BrTl thought
it over. “Short of a trip to a Mullgon’yan nursing-home, no. And there’s no
guarantee they’d let you go, once they had you.”
“Quite.
Added to which, there aren’t sufficient igs in the ship’s account, as you might
realise if you ever did anything unrelated to bunions or eating, to pay the
fees.”
“I do know
that, actually,” he said with dignity.
Then there
was a short, glum pause.
“Will he be
there?” he ventured.
“Whadda you think? Diplomatic receptions crowded
with qwlot-soaked diplos and play-beings with time on their appendages and
megarafts of super-igs in their accounts that they can’t wait to chuck away on
games of whim-wham that they can’t play to save their pathetic existences,
plasmo-blasted spring dances crammed with lady-beings from all over the two
galaxies, all telling him how wonderful he is, troop reviews in sparf-covered
Number Ones, fly-pasts of entire squadrons at a time—he’ll be there in
quintupled 5-D triangles! And if he thinks he’s gonna talk me into anything, he’s out of his vacuum-frozen Whtyllian mind!”
BrTl was a
male-tended xathpyroid cognate, and mammalian reproduction was a closed
dendrion nut to him. Though he was quite aware that it was that sort of stuff
that was causing his Captain—well, not all
the trouble, that had mainly been before he knew her—but a large part of the
trouble, where that precise vacuum-frozen Whtyllian being was concerned. He
didn’t understand how a being could both loathe and love another being, but
that was pretty much what his Captain felt for that particular vacuum-frozen
humanoid Fleet Commander. It wasn’t just the rolling round on beds and flop couches
stuff that was in question: many beings throughout the two galaxies did that
sort of stuff and Jhl had certainly done it with many beings without ever
letting it get to her. No, it was the plasmo-blasted silly idea that this
particular Fleet Commander had got into his vacuum-frozen Whtyllian head that
Captain Jhl Smt Wong might like to chuck in her reasonably successful and
certainly interesting job as a merchant trader captain and go and live in his
plasmo-blasted nirvana garden on Playfair Two! A planet so exclusive that
beings such as BrTl and Jhl normally just dropped off a delivery at the back
door of its Orbiting Freight Station and crept away again.
“So, um, if
you see him, will you do that repro stuff with him?” he fumbled.
“Possibly,”
she said tiredly. “The repro stuff itself is okay,”—BrTl nodded, he could see
that—“but it’s the lordship-type demands that follow it that I’ve had an
intergalactic bucketful of.”
He’d got
that much right, then. “Yeah,” he agreed. “Talking of buckets—”
“No. You
know plasmo-blasted-well what a bucket of nymbo cheese’ll do to your sugar
levels, BrTl. Not on the ship, thanks.”
“But the
ship’s restrainos will—”
No, they won’t, responded the ship.
“Right,
that’s another good idea down the recycler,” he grumbled.
Jhl just
waited.
Eventually
he produced: “Well, how long is it gonna be for? And what are me and Trff gonna
do while you’re seconded?”
“A couple of
IG months,” she said sourly.
“What?” he
croaked.
“Yeah.” –STRAPS! she sent.
BrTl’s
straps closed round him, welding him to his seat, and simultaneously Jhl shot
the ship into hyper-hop.
“What was
that?” he gasped.
Jhl’s
mammalian cheeks were very pale, but her hands were steady enough. And her mind
was very firmly in control of the ship’s blobs. “It was some Vvlvanian-cursed
play-being blasting out of hyperspace into the precise co-ordinates we were
occupying at the precise IG microsecond.”
“What?” he
gasped. “I thought that was impossible!”
“Theoretically, yeah. You have to be a cursed bad pilot to accomplish
it.”
“Yeah,” he
said numbly. “Did you catch what it was?”
“A very
drunk Huyajhangwanian hypered up on snuhl, taking its brand-new ship for a
lovely spring jaunt into hyperspace,” she said grimly. “It is spring on
Huyajhangwania, and by the feel of it the whole planet’s drunk. –Some sort of
spring festival, BrTl. It’ll go on until well after Federation Day.”
“Yes,” he
said numbly. “We have those festivals at home, though it isn’t spring there
now. And no xathpyroid cognate could fly a ship that badly.”
“No.”
“Well—uh—”
BrTl found he was trembling slightly: just as well the straps were round him.
“Guh-go back and blast the being to the Third Galaxy?” he croaked.
“I can’t,”
she said tightly. “That hop pretty well drained the blobs.”
BrTl gulped.
After a
moment the ship sent, very weakly indeed: Yes,
it did. Thank you, Captain.
“Yeah:
thanks, Captain,” he croaked.
“My
pleasure,” she said tightly, feeling the blobs. BrTl was respectfully silent.
After a moment she said: “We’re gonna have to float.” As she spoke the drive
shut down.
He gulped.
“And I’m
afraid the grav will have to go off.”
He gulped
again, though it hadn't happened yet.
Trff! she sent. “Oh, there you are,
Chief Engineer,” she said as it bobbed in.
“Yes, sir.
That was a hypered-up Huyajhangwanian being in a ship it didn't know how to
control,” it reported. “Thank you-it, Captain.”
“Thank you, Chief Engineer,” replied Jhl
formally. “Never knew the blobs could do it.”
There was a
discernible pause; then it admitted: “They almost couldn’t.”
“Yeah. Grab
onto something, Trff, I’m gonna shut down the—” It had already coiled a
tentacle round one of BrTl’s shins. Practical, given that it scarcely reached
to his knee. Grav OFF! she sent.
After a moment
they all floated gently away from the surfaces on which they’d been sitting or
standing—though only to the limits of their straps, in the cases of Jhl and
BrTl.
“I’ve never
actually done this in space,” said BrTl thoughtfully, “since I was at the
Academy.”
“I’ve done
it once,” she admitted. “On his
vacuum-frozen Seeker. Don’t think there’s another captain in Space Fleet that
makes its crew perform that drill. I’ll say this for him, curse his
vacuum-frozen Whtyllian heart, he’s a cursed good commander.”
“Yeah.” He
shot out a kindly pseudopod, since Trff’s tentacle didn’t seem to be helping it
to float back to anything like its former position, and reeled in it in.
“Thanks!” it
hooted, dusting off its fluff a little. “That Whtyllian being’s heart was all
right last time it looked,” it noted.
“Figuratively speaking, Trff,” said its Captain calmly.
“Oh! Of
course.” After a moment it admitted: “It’s a bit tired after that sudden hop.”
“Uh-huh.”
They could
see she was working out co-ordinates and vectors: they waited respectfully.
“Yes,” she
said at last. “I’m sorry about this. We’ve got to get me to Ddiamphorer VI to
join the diplomatic mission that’s heading for Btcx, that’s the world that’s
about to come into the Federation.”
“Yes,”
agreed Trff, though no being had verbally communicated the fact of Jhl’s
call-up to it. “Rich deposits of hng, diamonds and weevon, and a climate suited
to the cultivation of senso-orchids, poys, glerrollis, and many other tropical
fruits and flowers prized by c-based beings throughout the two galaxies.”
“There you
are, then,” admitted BrTl. “Oy: hang on,” he said slowly.
“Yeah,”
agreed his Captain: “The third moon of Pkqwrd is the nearest place to Ddiamphorer VI offering anything like
R&R, not to mention refit shops, but as we haven’t got the igs to pay for a
refit job, we won’t be calling in for that.”
“Oh, good,”
he said, sagging, as much as the null-grav would allow of the gesture.
“Suggestions?”
Her crew was
silent.
Jhl sighed. “Trff, what conditions would you
need, to be able to get the blobs into working order again?”
“None. They
are in working order. They’ll get us to Ddiamphorer VI.”
“Yes. After
that,” she said calmly.
“There would
be a short period during which it wouldn’t need working conditions. Then it
would need it-being working conditions, Jhl. You-it would have to be on
Ddiamphorer VI or with the mission on Btcx, or anywhere else in the Known
Universe that wasn’t on the ship or didn’t require any assistance from the
ship’s blobs or from the Trff—”
“It is tired,” noted BrTl. “It isn’t usually
quite this bad.”
“Shut up,
BrTl,” she said heavily. “Go on, Trff.”
“And BrTl
would need to be off the ship and anywhere in the Known Universe that wasn’t on
the ship or didn’t require any assistance from the ship’s blobs or from it,
too. Then it could use its FW pack for its life-support functions and keep the
ship’s blobs in stasis until they recovered.”
“I've never
heard that about blobs,” admitted BrTl.
“No, well,
nor’ve I,” said his Captain, “but that’s one good reason for having a
Ju’ukrterian it-being as Chief Engineer, isn’t it?”
“Yeah.
Another one is that you-it’s our good old Trff, of course!” he assured it.
“It knows,”
it said vaguely.
“Uh, this is gonna work, is it?” he croaked.
“No being
can know that, BrTl,” it replied literally.
“Probabilities,” said Jhl laconically, directing a minatory thought or
two in BrTl’s direction.
Happily Trff
gave them the maths. Any other being in the Known Universe would have described
it as a sure thing, so BrTl cheered up immediately.
“Yeah, but
that doesn’t mean you can have a bucket of nymbo cheese,” said Jhl drily.
“No, or
anything else that’s not space rations. In fact, if you-it could manage to skip
meals until we reach Ddiamphorer VI, the blobs would be grateful.”
BrTl waited
but the ship didn’t agree, or respond at all. He quailed. “Yes,” he croaked. “I
won’t eat anything, I promise!”
“I’ll
monitor you,” promised his Captain cheerfully, “but expect to suffer!”
“Yeah,” he
muttered. He could see she was making up her mind to skip meals, too, but he
didn’t remark on it.
“The ship
barely notices the amount a humanoid eats, Jhl,” Trff assured her kindly.
Jhl’s cheeks
went very red. “Nevertheless,” she said shortly. “Let’s see: get on over to the
third moon of Pkqwrd, drop BrTl off,”—BrTl shut his eyes in anticipated
agony—“on to Ddiamphorer VI, drop me off, then you take the ship somewhere
quiet and re-blob the blobs, Trff, okay?”
“Not
precisely ‘re-blob,’ Jhl,” it murmured. It held up an antenna. “It’s computing
the relative weight and consumption of the BrTl.”—BrTl opened his eyes
indignantly, he’d never been a “the” before!—“Oh, yes: you-it’s right, Jhl, it
would be much better to drop him-it off at the third moon of Pkqwrd first.
–It’s the intergalactic dump to end all dumps: you-it’ll hate it,” it told him
kindly.
“The BrTl
knows that, Trff,” he said coldly.
“Oops!” it
replied jauntily.
BrTl could
see it was looking forward to its plasmo-blasted re-blobbing or stasis-resting
or whatever it was gonna do. He swallowed a sigh. “So what do I do next?”
Unfortunately it replied literally: “Just relax and go to sleep. That’ll
draw less power from the blobs.”
“Yeah. Go
on,” said his Captain drily. “That’s an order.”—She was setting the
co-ordinates. Drive ON! The drive
came on.—“An order, BrTl.”—Go!
Glumly BrTl
shut his eyes, as the ship limped off to the third moon of Pkqwrd…
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