Showing posts with label Little School Friends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little School Friends. Show all posts

Monday, July 16, 2012

Science Fiction Sanity


Diners at the Memory’s End

By

Raymond Frazee





Copyright 2012, Raymond Frazee, All Rights Reserved.



Note:  this is is being written as you read it.  It is a first draft, and as such, it may be presented with typos.  Please excuse these, and remember that everything will be nice, clean, and near perfect, when you buy this story.  Remember--you get what you pay for.






Part Eight


Thursday, 2 October, 3183

Albert sprinted down the hall, checking his sensors every few seconds. He knew Shadows didn’t always show up on the suit’s sensors, but he’d been lucky for the last ten minutes, and he only needed it to hold out another ten before Meredith and he were out of this maze—
Speaking of Meredith . . . “Hey, Priss, come in.”
There was a slight giggle coming over the comm. “Why do you keep calling me Priss?”
“Habit. You see anything out of the ordinary?”
“You mean besides these damn black spider things that are trying to kill us?” He could almost see her shaking her head. “Nope. But after that nest we blew ten minutes back—”
“Pissed them off, I know.” Albert turned right at a T-junction and stopped. There was an doorway at the end of corridor, maybe thirty meters away. He turned around and look down the other way; the corridor came to a dead end twenty meters past the junction. “I gotta a choke point here.”
“Where the hell are you, by the way?” It wasn’t hard to miss the annoyance in Meredith’s voice. “I told you splitting up was a bad idea.”
Albert flipped up his map, and tried to pinpoint his location. “I think I’m about . . . here.” He transmitted the information to Meredith. “You got it?”
“Yeah, just got it.” There was a pause, then: “I think I’m about three, four minutes out. Hold tight.” The comm went dead.
“Right.” He reached down and felt the huge rifle feed into his left hand. “Fucking Shadows.” He mentally toggled another system, and two beam weapons rose from his shoulders and began scanning for targets of opportunity.
He checked his ammo count on the 20mm rounds in the rifle: 1658 rounds remained of the original 2500 in the clip. He once again thanked whomever came up with Cameron Compressor technology, then fingered the loader on the under-slung 60mm grenade launcher. “Okay, bitches,” he mumbled to himself, “Hell’s comin’ to Za’ha’dum.”
He flicked on his kinetic shielding, and took off for the opening at a full run.
Albert was pretty much aware he was going to hit the shit the moment he was through the door, and he was right: two jumped him seconds after he entered the large, dimly-lit room. The first one scuttled across the room, almost unseen in the inky light save for its fourteen glowing eyes, and slammed a very large sword against Albert’s suit. The kinetic shielding absorbed nearly all the blow, and the internal gyros kept him on his feet. Even so, the Shadow was huge, and it put all of its considerable mass behind the attack, knocking Albert to his left—
Which pushed him right into the other one running at him from left. This one wasn’t so crude as to use a weapon: no, it was going to try and rip Albert apart with its bare forelimbs. Unfortunately for it, Albert was left handed, which meant the huge rifle he was holding was in his left hand . . .
He raised his arm and fired the 60mm grenade straight into the Shadow’s head, remembering to deactivate the proximity sensor before shooting so that it wouldn’t need five meters to arm; it would cover the four meters between Albert and this black monstrosity and—
The explosion was huge. Sound dampeners cut in and muffled the noise, but the blow back was enough to shake him, regardless of the suits’ gyros. The other Shadow wrapped a forelimb around Albert’s arm and tried to pull him off-balance. He decided he didn’t want any of that, and called up the pulse laser on his right shoulder. He dialed up a dozen shots and let them fly. The Shadow screamed in that hell-born pitch that left you feeling as if someone were slowly driving an icepick through your eye and into your brain, then leapt backwards quickly—but not before smacking Albert across the helmet with its sword.
Though his head was ringing a little, and he was a bit off balance, Albert had enough wits, and was steady enough, to bring up his rifle and begin dispensing pain in five-round bursts. Most of the time he went for a head shot, as that was the quickest way to bring a Shadow down, but after this one-two bum rush, he wasn’t in the mood to finish them quickly: he wanted the black bastards to suffer.
However, twenty 20mm rounds, and a shredded Shadow later, he wondered if he should have just put the damn thing down fast and moved on, because it was obvious that in about ten seconds he was going to be up to his ass in alien spiders . . .
Five emerged from the shadows in front of him: four more were climbing down the walls above them. There was a chirp on his proximity alarm; Albert quickly checked the data and saw another four sliding down the wall directly behind him. Well, isn’t this special? he thought. They’re coming to say hi—before they gang rape me. Lets see if I can give any survivors something to remember.
He shot three grenades at the four on the wall in front of him. The explosions were enough to shake two of the Shadows lose, sending them crashing into one of their fellow creatures below. Another was partially caught in that mess before being struck by a second of wall that decided it could no longer resist gravity.
But Albert could do the math, and though there were four down, that left five rather pissed-off Shadows facing him. The remaining two hurried to the ground, leaping the last few meters to the floor. All five began to advance slowly while the other four held their positions . . .
Five Shadows suddenly became four as one exploded. Something blue landed in front of another Shadow, pointed its right arm at it, and fired into the creature’s head. It screamed as minor eruptions broke out all over its carapace. Albert knew this was the result of being hit with 10mm explosive rounds—and he knew this because he’d loaded the weapons.
He yelled into his comm, “Don’t move to your left!” then slapped three five-round bursts into one Shadow while his duel, shoulder-mounted lasers worked out on another. This time his intention wasn’t to make them suffer: it was to make them die as quickly as possible. If he took out two, and Meredith—
She’d taken down her first target, and was working on her second. Actually, second and third: the remaining Shadows had taken a bead on her and had decided to engage in hand-to-hand melee, as both produced large swords. Meredith was having none of it, though. She jumped hard, her suit giving her a powered assist as it amplified the strength in her legs, and she leapt almost seven meters up. She did a forward somersault and came down squarely on the back of one of the Shadows, its carapace cracking open. She dropped something into the crack, then jumped at the other Shadow. “Albert!” she yelled.
“Yeah?” He stood there, watching her deal with the genocidal aliens, wondering if he should step in and help.
“The ones on the all above you!” She did a quick flick with her left arm, and a long, glittering, humming sword, popped out of the suit near her wrist. “I’ve got this asshole: get those!”
While watching Meredith deal damage and death, Albert had forgot about the midnight creepers slowly approaching from behind—
He didn’t need to check his sensors: Albert knew the Shadow were almost on top of him. He also knew that there was a pretty good chance if he began shooting, they were going to fall on top of him. Which meant, he only had one course of action—
Albert jumped, just as Meredith had, and the suit amplified his muscles enough that by the time he’d spun around to face the wall the Shadow were crawling up, he was nearly five meters over the floor. He didn’t bother with subtleties: he fired three grenades as quickly as the action allowed, and let the force of the explosions wash over him as the Shadows were blasted into nothingness, or—as happened with one—were thrown from the wall to crash to the floor below.
Though he wasn’t as nimble in his suit as was Meredith in hers, Albert was able to twist enough so he bought the fallen Shadow to bear in his sights. Before it was able to get orientated, he set the rifle to full-auto fire, and sprayed the alien with close to one hundred rounds. The Shadow bucked and spasmed under the assault, squirming and screaming the entire time. By the time Albert was once more upon solid footing, the Shadow lay in pieces, shredded by his attack. “Well, that’s one more—”
“Look out!” Suddenly Meredith was sailing over Albert, one arm pulled back. He turned and watched her sail right into a Shadow that had come from out of nowhere. As she collided with the creature, she punched it right between its many eyes. There was a small burst of energy as a weapon in her hand pumped a huge electrical charge into the creature’s head; the combination of an amplified punch and electrocution put the Shadow down for good.
In the silence that followed the short battle, both Albert and Meredith stood, gazing over the carnage they’d created. Meredith flipped up the HUD visor on her helmet and shot Albert a broad smile. “Damn, I didn’t know this was going to be so much fun!”
Albert nodded inside his suit: unlike Meredith, it was impossible for him to show his face without completely pealing back the helmet and exposing his head. “Told you.” He scanned both directions of long, open space they were standing within. “So, which way should we go?”
“I came from that direction,” she said, pointing off to Albert’s left. “It’s a dead end down there. There could be another entrance, but I didn’t take the time to look for one.”
“Which means going in that direction could lead nowhere.”
“True. On the other hand . . .” Meredith turned, peering into the inky darkness to Albert’s right, and pointed at nothing. “You know what we’re going to find down there.”
“Trouble?”
“You could say that.” Though she looked a bit concerned, the smile was still etched upon Meredith’s face. “But we have to get out to of here, don’t we?”
“Yes.” He pointed his rifle in that direction. “I could be wrong, but I think we only have two hours before this place blows.”
“You don’t have a timer going inside you suit?”
The suit did the best it could to shrug. “Guess I forgot. Oops.”
Meredith’s laugh was short and sharp. “Oops, my ass.” She nodded hard, and her visor snapped shut. “Well, we best get to running then, right?”
“Right-o!” Together they both sprinted off into the darkness.
Albert knew they had the advantage. They were armored up, powered, and carrying weapons against a foe that had numbers and size, but little more. Sure, they were going to get hurt; Albert was already sort from getting knocked about, but nothing was broken or damaged badly. Even though he had the more powerful suit, he was taking it easy, pacing himself. Albert saw himself as a long distance runner, holding onto his reserves, saving something for the next two hours of hell he knew they had before them.
Meredith, on the other hand . . . Albert saw here as a sprinter. She was fast and aggressive. She didn’t wait for the battle to come to her—she took it to her opponents. The moment she’d seen her suit she felt in love with it. The first time she took out a group of Shadows, Albert saw her in such a different light. Meredith was a powered killer in heels—yes, he’d kept that attribute when he’d modeled the suit—and she couldn’t seem to get enough. The more danger they encountered, the more she threw herself into battle.
Speaking of battle . . .
Albert’s sensors were picking up a number of entities in the darkness ahead. One of the problems with the Shadows was that even though living creatures, life sensors didn’t always pick them up. They were very good at hiding, able to stand invisible in bright light, capable of bending the darkness to their will. His sensors were scanning just about everything on the electromagnetic spectrum, and with a little luck he’d pick up the creatures before they saw him—
But what he was seeing now . . . Albert knew in order to see Shadows like this . . . “Meredith.”
She already knew what he was going to say. “I’m seeing them.”
“Lots of them. You want to look for a way around them?”
There was a pause on Meredith’s end, but she never slowed. “You really want to?”
“No.”
“Neither do I.”
Albert smiled. “That’s my girl,” he whispered, hoping his comm wasn’t transmitting. Deciding he needed something a bit surreal to make this battle worth while, he threw on some music: Jimi Thing. Yeah, just the sort of thing you needed right before you started killing alien spiders.
As they saw the first of the Shadow emerge from the darkness, Meredith burst into a full run, then leapt into the air. She extended her EPM blade, then deployed the twin shoulder-mounted railguns in mid-flight. Albert set on the external speakers, and the music filled the space—along with Meredith’s yell. She kicked off a dozen rounds from the guns moments before she slammed into three Shadows and gathered them up in her deadly embrace.
Albert stood back and began unloading on the Shadow. It wasn’t that he was worried about getting in close—as a matter of fact, he was getting rushed by some of them, and one got its pincers around his arm before the lasers took it out. He felt the impact of their bodies upon him while his rifled fired, and the round counter spun down.
The music, made more for sitting in the main cabin of Liberator and watching the world float by, gave the scene a surreal quality. Albert dropped an empty cartage and slapped in a new one, then fired the grenade launcher three times, clearing out an opening. Meredith was going full-on warrior woman on the Shadows, firing the railguns and the arm mounted rifle at point blank range, then following up with a physical assault on a Shadow who was standing next to one she’d just blown to pieces. Meredith took a couple of hard hits, and went down hard once herself, but she was dealing out a lot more damage than she was taking.
Albert knew she had to be hurting, however: he’d taken the hardsuit design and upgraded it to modern tech, but even so, most of the physical damage from the Shadows was absorbed by the kinetic shields—and he was certain that, even then, some of each blow was getting though. She’s a tough girl, he thought. Though she’ll be sore in the morning . . .
Meredith jumped upon the back of one Shadow and kicked it’s head off. As he went down she yelled, “Hole!” and Albert saw that between his shooting and her attacks, they had a clear path through the mass of aliens looking to kill them. Not time to worry about it, he thought, then began running towards Meredith. “Go!”
“I got point!” She ran ahead, while Albert set the pulse lasers to blast anything behind them while he scanned left and right. Her railguns were going off every few seconds as she identified a target, fired, and turned it from a threat to goo.
Albert knew this wasn’t going to be easy, however. “The area’s closing up ahead.” He saw the walls above them beginning to narrow, and sensed the floor would do the same.
“I know.” A tried sigh came over the comm. “We can’t go back.”
“No.”
“Then no point wondering.” She suddenly held up, and Albert stopped next to her. They both peered into the murky distance—
The floor was narrowing. There was an archway maybe seventy, eight meters away. Between them and the archway were maybe fifty or sixty Shadows on the floor, and another three or four dozen clinging to the walls. And what they didn’t kill when they first encountered this mess was creeping up on their position—
“Not looking good,” Meredith said.
Albert almost laughed. No kidding, Captain Obvious, he thought. Instead, he said, “Yeah, I see that.” He softly cleared his throat. “It’s not like we have a choice on this run, though, is it?”
"We could look for another way out.”
Then came the soul-chilling rattle of the Shadows behind them, making a sound that was a cross between nails on a chalk board, and roaches scurrying off into the darkness. Albert wanted to say, “That’s not a good sound,” but he knew Meredith also knew that. “Like it’s going to do anything good.”
“Right.” She flipped up her EPM sword. “Might as well get this done.” She took two steps towards the Shadows some fifteen meters away—
And everything stopped. All sound, all movement: there was nothing.
Meredith turned to her left and right, the turned to face Albert. As she flipped up her HUD visor, she asked, “What the hell is going on?”
Pointing with his rifle in the general direction of the Shadow they were about to attack, Albert said, “Ask her.”
Stepping between the frozen Shadow, Maggie—now dressed dark blue work coveralls and tan work boots, approached. When she was only a few meters away, she raised her hand and greeted them. “How you doing?”
“We were just getting ready to waste Shadow ass,” Albert said. “What’s up?”
“CQ Draconis is starting to show signs of activity,” Maggie said. “You said you want to know.”
“Right you were.” He turned to Meredith. “The stars are finally right.”
She nodded, though she didn’t know what he was talking about. “At least one is.”
“Right.” His suit hissed as Albert’s helmet disengaged from the rest of the suit, finally exposing his face. “Okay,” he said aloud, “Shut down program.”
In an instant Albert and Meredith found themselves back in the main cabin, sitting at the V-table in front of the windows. Both took a moment to gather their wits about them and get orientated before doing anything. “What you got to show us, Maggs?”
A holodisplay, two meters by two meters, appeared against the starboard wall of the cabin. Maggie partitioned it into four separate sections, each showing a view from one of the different electromagnetic spectrums being monitored. Being astronomy students, they both instantly knew which spectrum was which without having to ask.
Meredith looked the display over. “Wow, look at the UV,” she said, pointing to the partitioned display in the lower left of the screen. “Look at it shine.”
“Oh, man.” Albert saw that it did indeed shine. There didn’t seem to be anything out of the ordinary in the visual spectrum, but infrared—the upper right—and ultraviolet—the lower left—were glowing in ways that indicated there was a lot of activity at those wavelengths. But the X-Ray display—lower right—was, as Albert might say, out of control. The x-rays were incredibly bright, and he knew what this meant: a great deal of destructive energy was being released. “Maggie, you’re gathering all this for us, right?”
“Of course, Albert.” Maggie wasn’t there in her avatar form, but here omni-present voice was in his and Meredith’s heads.
There was something that Meredith wanted to know. “Maggie, how many data channels do you have open?”
“At the moment, I’m feeding data to 6,473 channels.” Though they couldn’t see her, both Meredith and Albert could sense her smiling. “It would appear that students from all over the planet heard about what you were doing, and wanted to participate.”
Albert resisted shaking his head. When he’d made his offer to everyone in Professor Koltzer’s class, sure, he’d made the off-hand remark about getting others in on this project, but he didn’t realize so many would want to be a part of what he—and Meredith—was doing. Right now, Albert was suddenly feeling as if his “Hey, I can do this!” semi-boast in class a few hour ago had become something spectacular, and not a little wonderful.
Meredith leaned over and hugged his right arm. “You did good, Albert,” she said as she leaned her head against his shoulder. For the first time, Albert looked at Meredith and saw her in a very different way. Not like in the game, where she’d had so much fun kicking hard ass and laughing the whole time. No, now . . .
Now he was seeing her as someone who wasn’t just a study partner, or a fellow gamer. She was someone nice and . . .
Suddenly, she squinted her eyes, arching her back with a look of slight pain. “Ouch!” she moaned. “Oh, jeez, my back is suddenly killing me.”
He knew instantly what was causing her ailment. “It’s the game. You don’t realize it, but you’re mimicking movements in real life, even though they’re very small . . .” He extracted his arm from her grip, then reached behind her and gave her shoulders a quick, ineffectual rub. “Maggie.” Albert didn’t take his eyes over Meredith. “What time is it?”
“17:37,” she said immediately.
Albert slapped the table with his free hand. “I don’t know about you,” he told Meredith, “but I feel like getting comfortable.”
Looking up at him, Meredith asked, “What do you have in mind?”
He released her and slid out from the seating area. “I’m going to get into my pajamas, then have Maggie cook us something for dinner.” He two a couple of steps, then stopped. “Um, I’m just gonna grab my stuff from the bedroom, then you can go back and have Maggie auto-fac you something to wear.” He smiled. “Considering we didn’t really have time to get our shit before leaving Penningham.”
Once more a puzzled smile appeared upon Meredith’s face. “You have an auto-fac in your bedroom? Here?”
“Of course.” Albert headed for the bedroom in the back of the cabin, saying over his shoulder, “Why wouldn’t I have one? I’ve got everything else.”
Albert found a pair of gray lounging pants and a matching top, and changed quickly. “Maggie, you can fix Meredith up, right?” he asked as he slipped his top on.
“Of course. Why wouldn’t I be?”
“Um . . .” Something suddenly came to Albert, a tiny vision in his mind’s eye. “Don’t make her anything to . . . You know . . .”
Maggie may have been an artificial intelligence, but she had a very good idea where Albert was leading with this question. However, that didn’t mean she wouldn’t have a little fun with him first. “Know what? What do you mean?”
He knew his avatar far too well. “You’re just messing with me, aren’t you?”
“A little.” She paused for a second, then said, “If you’re suggesting I not allow her to ask for anything to risque, then you have nothing to worry about.”
Albert blew the wall a kiss. “Thank you, Maggs.” He pulled on a pair of slippers, then headed back into the main cabin. “Okay, all yours,” he called to Meredith.
She walked past him, looking Albert over. “Pretty plain, if you ask me.”
“Like I said, I’m getting comfortable.” He shrugged, then stopped and watched Meredith walking to the bedroom. “And I’m used to wearing this when I’m on-board.”
She quipped over her shoulder, “It shows,” before disappearing into the room, the door sealing behind her.
While he was waiting for Meredith to get kitted, Albert got things ready. He had the sitting area converted into a large bed—something he’d last done during a “Girl’s Night Out” back on Shaldibari—then ordered up a couple of simple dinners to be ready about 18:30. Then Albert crawled onto the huge bed, slipped his legs under the covers, and watched the display of CQ Draconis while waiting for Meredith to return.
He heard the door open, followed by the slap-slap of slipper on the cabin floor. He didn’t need to look around to know Meredith was changed. “Maggie get you set up okay?”
She walked to the front of the cabin, then stopped before the window. Meredith was obviously wanting to get Albert’s attention, and as soon as he looked in her direction, she had it, full and undivided.
Meredith has Maggie make her a pair of light blue pajama, tops and bottoms, embossed with light-white stars and clouds. Albert had an eye for material, and he was sure the pajamas were made out of silk. She held her arms slightly away from her body and performed a slow pirouette for Albert, so he could take her all in. She was barefoot, and this was the first time he’d noticed she had a light blue polish on her toenails. I remember the last time people were doing pedicures in here, he thought—
Meredith stopped and let her arms drop to her side. “What do you think?”
“Very pretty.” Albert nodded slowly, as if approving of her choice. “Silk, right?”
“Yeah. I’ve never had slik pajamas before.” She flexed her muscles slowly, enjoying the sensation of the material against her skin. “This is really nice.”
“Thank Maggie. She’s very good when it comes to making things.”
Meredith looked to her left at the wall. “Thanks, Maggie,” she said, and stared at the wall for a few seconds as if she expected the avatar to emerge.
While she didn’t appear, Maggie’s voice resounded throughout the cabin. “You’re welcome, Meredith.”
“Did you hear that?” Meredith seemed genuinely surprised that the response didn’t go to her internal comm.
“Yeah, I heard it. Maggie does that some times, just because, I guess.” He patted the space to his right. “Come on. Come get comfy.”
Meredith climbed onto the large sofa-bed. “Wow. You converted this!”
“Yeah. Just about everything in here is electopolymorphic. And I’ve done this area like this before. I make for a nice, large, sleeping area.”
Nodding her head slowly, Meredith drawled, “I see . . .”
Albert laughed. “Relax. You’re sleeping in the bedroom. I’m going to stay out here.”
“And you need such a large bed for just you?”
From the tone of her voice, Albert didn’t know if Meredith was actually serious, or just playing around. “I’ve camped out here a couple of times,” he said. “I like room to lay about. I can take up a lot of room if I’m not careful.”
Meredith laughed. “You don’t look that big.”
“Big enough.” He looked straight ahead as he said, “Please bring cabin lighting down to ten percent.” In an instant the cabin was nearly engulfed in darkness, with only a few running lights in the ceiling and floor, and the telescope display, acting as ambient light. “Thank you, Maggie.”
Meredith almost gasped. “Gosh, look at the stars!” she said as she pointed out the main windows. Albert had instructed Maggie to orient Liberator so the telescopes would be in shadow, and to extend a sunshade to keep out light from the system primary and the planet. As an additional precaution, Liberator’s hull, normally white, was now turned an inky black, to minimize glare.
As such, with as much light as possible filtered away from the gaze of the telescopes, the same light was filtered away from the main windows, and with their eyes now light adapted to the darkness, the many stars of the Hyades star cluster shown with unparalleled brilliance. “It’s so pretty,” Meredith said.
“Yeah, it is.” Albert had to admit he needed to spend more time looking at the stars than locking himself up in the ship and find a few moments to enjoy what was just outside the ship. “And look at ol’ CQ—” He pointed to the display, showing the cataclysmic variable in all it’s destructive glory. “It’s putting on a great show for us.”
“I don’t think that was the intention.”
“Well, it’s there for us to enjoy while Maggie collected our data.”
Meredith slowly turned to Albert. “Don’t you feel bad that we’re not doing that.”
“We are.” He sat back, getting his hands behind his head. “I mean, it’s not like we wouldn’t have a system down on University collecting these images for us—and then having the data analyzed by the same system.” He looked out the window. “We just need to apply what we wanted to do with the information, and get our results.”
“And we do that when?”
“We can start on it tomorrow.” Albert rested his head against the back of the seat-bed. “Tonight we eat and relax.”
“Um, hum.”
It turned very quiet in the cabin, neither Albert of Meredith speaking while they lingered in the dim light of Liberator’s cabin. Albert considered getting some music on before he realized he might have to explain were he’d gotten all the strange songs she was hearing. Yeah, not everyone is used to listening to thousand year-old tunes, he thought. He was about to ask her if she wanted to get back into the game when he realized—
Meredith was holding onto his right arm, with her head against his shoulder. “Um . . . what are you doing?” He kept his voice low and friendly, so it didn’t sound like he was surprised, or freaked out.
If Albert thought Meredith was going to break away and answer in an embarrassed tone, he would find himself disappointed. “Snuggling,” she said, the word coming out as an extended sigh.
“Ummm . . .” Albert didn’t know if he should pull his arm away from her, or . . . Well, it was the “or” he was having an issue with, as any “or” could lead to any number of situations . . . “Do you think you should be doing that?” he finally asked.
“Why shouldn’t I?” She looked up from where her head was resting. “Don’t you like this?”
“Sure, but . . .” A moment after he said “sure”, Albert knew he should have kept his mouth shut, and simply pulled himself away before continuing the conversation. Now, trying to qualify why Meredith’s snuggling wasn’t okay—right after he more or less said it was—was going to leave Albert looking bad no matter what he said. “I just don’t know—”
“Know what?” Meredith moved closer, turning her body so she was more or less facing Albert as she lay upon her side. “Do you like me?”
Oh, fuck . . . During their weeks together, Albert never once imagined Meredith as being any more than a study partner—okay, a very friendly lab partner, but not much beyond that. They’d never associated beyond the campus . . . though they did stop off at The Lusty Librarian for a couple of pints now and then, and stopped off at a chips shop just off the campus once before heading to the library. And there was the time Albert took her to lunch on a Friday at a small place he’d been to, over on the coastal side of the university campus, right after they were finished a project. He remembered the lunch now, because that was the day Cytheria asked him about his study partner, and how they were getting along . . .
“I think you’re a great person,” he finally said.
Meredith wasn’t disappointed by the answer. “I think you’re great, too. Do you like me?” She laid her hand over his. “I don’t mean as a classmate or study partner, or anything like that. I mean, do you like me as . . . I am?”
Albert figured he needed to tell Meredith the truth. “I like you for who you are; I’d be lying if I said I didn’t. But . . .”
“Yeah?”
“I’m with someone, Meredith.”
“Really.” She smiled. “Is that someone a she?”
“Yeah.” He smiled back. “Did you think otherwise?”
“I never heard you talk about anyone, so who knew?” She giggled. “So, they buy you Liberator?”
For some reason the question upset him slightly. “No. She’s mine.”
“You bought her.”
“Yeah.”
“So what do you do?”
Albert had dodged this question for a while, and knew he had no choice but not to answer. “You know I can’t tell you.”
“Not even a little?”
“No.”
She slid closer, placing herself along said, Albert, almost draping her right leg over his. “I think you’re fascinating. And I want to know more.”
Once again, Albert detected the faint scent of jasmine, and this time he didn’t have to lean in close to smell her. Her body is giving off heat, ‘causing her perfume to evaporate . . . damn, she smells so . . . Albert snapped his mind back to the conversation, because thinking about how nice Meredith smelled was something he didn’t need right now. “Believe me, there’s nothing to know. I’m—”
“An open book, I know.” Meredith lifted herself up, bringing her head up to where she could face Albert. “You’re so full of shit, you know that?”
“Mere—”
“Oh, enough.” Meredith rolled up and over, and was suddenly straddling Albert, who was surprised by how quickly she moved. She settled into position, resting upon his legs, his waist, his— She smiled. “I thought you were with someone else,” she gleefully whispered while rubbing herself against him. “I guess when she’s not here, the study partner will do.”
This isn’t what I wanted, he thought, but there was no denying that Albert liked Meredith, and he did find her attractive—and seeing her in her lovely silk pajamas started a reaction that Albert had never intended to take beyond an inner arousal. “It’s not like that, you know. I like you—”
“Oh, hush you.” She began unbuttoning her top. “I need something to hush you up, and . . .” She undid the last button on her top and slowly slid the top from her body. Meredith wasn’t wearing a bra, and her full, naked breasts were only centimeters from Albert’s face. “I think I have just the thing.” She cupped her breasts in both hands and gave herself a long, slow squeeze. “Make that, ‘things’.”
The things, as Meredith called her breasts, were right in Albert’s face, and while he fought the impulse to do anything with, or to, Meredith, he felt the powerful urge to do something . . . “I don’t know,” he whispered.
“You don’t know what?” She moved her right breast closer to his face, her erect, hard nipple only centimeters from his lips. “That you don’t want me? I know that’s bullshit.” Meredith pressed her nipple against his lower lip, using only the lightest of pressure. “Open up, honey. I want you to suckle me.”
As she pressed her nipple against, and then through his semi-parted lips, Albert didn’t fight Meredith’s advance. He knew it was wrong He knew he was betraying a trust. He knew—but he couldn’t fight Meredith’s advances, or that she was offering herself to him with little hesitation.
“That’s it,” she cooed as Albert began suckling her nipple, his lips warm and delectable against her breast. “I should have had Maggie make me something that would have caused me to lactate. I’d have been huge with all that milk.” She giggled, then touched him lightly on the cheek. “And I would have made you drink it all . . . up.”
As his arms went around her naked torso, and pulled her close, Meredith whispered, “That’s it, honey. Hold me close, please.” She gently ran her fingers through Albert’s hair with one hand, while her other hand began sliding her pajama bottoms off. “I don’t care if you have a girlfriend, ‘cause she’s not here: I am.” She managed to get one leg off, letting the bottoms hang off the other. “She’s not here to love you—” She slipped Albert’s penis from his pajamas. “I am.”
She positioned herself over his unbound erection. “And she’s not here to fuck you—” She took him and slid him inside her body. “I’m doing that.” Meredith rocked her hips hard against him, and Albert released her breast and moan as his hands found her hips and grabbed them hard. “I’m doing it with . . . oh, fuck!”
In the darkness, three hundred thousand kilometers from any living person, their gasps were unheard as they orgasmed together.




Did you like it?  Hate it?  Did it make you look for sharp objects?  Have you given up trying to get Maggie's number?  Would you like Meredith's instead?  Or maybe Albert's, since he'll need a place to stay?  Leave a comment and Tell Me!

Monday, July 9, 2012

Science Fiction Sanity


Diners at the Memory’s End

By
Raymond Frazee

Copyright 2012, Raymond Frazee, All Rights Reserved.

Note:  this is is being written as you read it.  It is a first draft, and as such, it may be presented with typos.  Please excuse these, and remember that everything will be nice, clean, and near perfect, when you buy this story.  Remember--you get what you pay for.


 
Part Seven

Thursday, 2 October, 3183

“How we doin’, Maggs?”
There’s an interesting question, Meredith thought. Given what she’s doing this moment, and how she’s doing it, one wonders who is going to answer . . .
Meredith had been to Penningham Spaceport before. Everyone who arrived at New Oxford came through Penningham, and she’d been no different when her shuttle touched down a year ago. But she’d disembarked the shuttle through Interplanet Customs, and then through the passenger terminal and down to the six hundred year old subway that still ran between the spaceport and New Oxford.
After leaving the campus grounds, though, Albert brought Meredith to a part of the spaceport she knew existed, but had never seen. Every private, and nearly every commercial trans kept at Penningham were stored in underground bays, and Meredith knew those bays were sunk deep and, in some cases, extended for many kilometers beyond the visible boundaries of the spaceport.
They transomed into a station somewhere within the hanger bay complex. Albert was off instantly, with Meredith close behind. The corridor they walked followed alongside one of the huge, softly-lit, ship tunnels that led to one of many lifts, which, in turn, led to the surface. Their path was near the ship tunnel’s ceiling, and she could see easily; immense space below. She hoped they’d see a ship gliding along silently on a cushion of magnetic fields on it’s way to another part of the planet—or even into orbit.
She was somewhat unnerved by the quiet; she’d half expected to find a cacophony of sound reverberating off the walls—not this all-encompassing silence. And with the low, subdued lighting, it made the area feel somewhat spooky.
None of this seemed to bother Albert, however. He didn’t look around; he didn’t pause in his forward progress. Meredith saw him checking marks here and there, he didn’t look around like he was lost; rather, it seemed as if he was checking his marks, as if confirming that he needed to turn here, watch for something there . . .
He knows where he’s going, she thought. He knows his way through this labyrinth. Once again, the question appeared in her mind: What does Albert do? She knew it was entirely possible that the ship they were headed for—this Liberator—wasn’t his, that he was using it for a few days. Which brought up the next question: If it’s not his, who are these people he knows?
They turned left and crossed over the ship tunnel, then turned right, passed two side corridors, then turned left down the third. Meredith checked the markings to the right of the passage. They were very clear: Bay 17-B. And below that a ship’s name: HMSS Liberator.
The ship has a Her Majesty’s designation? Meredith almost gasped aloud. It was one thing to register a name for your ship: everyone did. But you had to be something . . . special . . . to get a HM designation. You had to know someone, and that someone was usually in the Department of Transportation—
Albert started clapping as they neared the end of the corridor. “Winnie is true to her word,” he said. Meredith saw the large Cameron Compressor, and knew they were the telescopes Albert had requested. He punched up the inventory list. “Eight fifty centimeter scopes and—” He turned to Meredith, grinning. “And a gamma ray detector.” He activated a control and the CAM began hovering about waist-high. “Time to star gaze.”
On the other side of the large door was the bay, and in the center of the bay sat Liberator. As they took the lift to the bay floor, Meredith examined the craft. She recognized it as a Princess-class System Ship, a simple craft with an electropolymorphic hull, a powerful fusion drive capable of twenty gravities acceleration, and enough fuel and provisions to keep a couple of people happy for at least six months as they toured a solar system.
At the moment Liberator was configured as its basic hull: twenty-five meters long, six meters across, and maybe five meters high. It was easy to see the modifications to the hull: there were large viewing windows at the front of the hell, and there seemed to be a bubble in the roof about a third of the way back from the bow.
Meredith was able to see more as they approached the ship, walking around the bow and heading for the port side. The ship’s T-aileron assembly was deployed, but the wings were not. She noticed the slight flaring ten meters from the bow, and figured this was where the venting would open for the scramjets needed for hypersonic flight. But there was something a little different about this design . . . I wonder if Liberator can do atmospheric scooping? If that was true, she knew fuel would never be an issue with this craft. It also means the ship has been heavily modified; the Princess-class was never meant to have hydrogen scoop and processor. That’s all military-grade equipment
An open appeared in the port side of the craft as soon as they rounded the bow. Albert popped inside, Meredith right behind. As the door closed, Albert pushed the CAM aside. Turning to Meredith, he said, “Welcome to home for the next few days.” Before she could give him a reply, his eyes shifted to the left. “Maggie!”
A figured quickly rose out of the floor. To Meredith, she thought the avatar—because that’s what this person was—was based upon an old East Asian genotype, possibly Chinese or Japanese. She was thin, she had magnificent long, black hair, and her dark brown eyes glowed with intelligence. She was dressed in a colorful, loose-fitting top, cream colored capri pants, and very cute, pink, strappy sandals.
This was Maggie—and Meredith knew, she was also Liberator, for she was the avatar, the AI that controlled every ship-board function. Without her, this vessel wouldn’t even exist.
Albert quickly explained what they were planning—but there wasn’t actually that much that needed planning. It seemed that Albert had spent a great deal of time speaking to Maggie through their link, so by the time they arrived it was up to her to lock the scopes away, while Albert prepared for flight.
It all moved so quickly after that. Albert had Liberator moved from the bay into the tunnel, the spaceport using their automated system of levitating fields to pull the ship down the underground passages to the nearest lift tube. Once they were on the surface—and back into the rain—the wings were deployed as they moved onto the nearest runway. After a few minutes of waiting for clearance, Albert throttled up the engines, and took Liberator into the air on his own. Because gravity and inertia were being compensated, Meredith felt nothing, and only knew they were climbing by watching their progress through the main window, and any number of holo terminals Maggie made available for her.
There wasn’t much of anything to see as the cloud deck was very low, around a kilometer. They were in varying shades of gray and darkness until they reached four kilometers, then it was a nearly unlimited expanse of sunlit white as far as one could see.
There wasn’t much time to enjoy the view, as they were suddenly pitching up, and the scramjets were powering up . . .
Meredith had never been in high orbit before. In fact, the only time she’d even been in space had been during a few trans-atmospheric flight, as well as the shuttle flights to and from the ship that brought her to University. She’s never been to her own planet’s moons, so she’d never seen a planet from a few tens of thousands of kilometers away, let alone three hundred thousand. Though he wasn’t piloting the ship—Maggie was doing all the calculations and delta-v burns—Albert remained in the bubble for the entire time it took for Liberator to get into position.
Meredith suspected that Albert was up there because he was watching everything unfold through his instruments, and by “staying in the loop,” he knew what was happening at all times. As if there were something he could do, she thought. It’s not like if Maggie shut down he’d be able to pilot us back to University manually. If we had a problem, he’d contact Space Rescue . . . She looked about the cabin, looked up and saw his legs, and little else, and smiled. If anything truly bad happened, we’d never know it. We’d either get locked up in emergency status—or die.
They were in a stable orbit a little over an hour after they departed Penningham. Meredith knew the engines of the Princess-class could reach twenty gs acceleration, but she had begun to suspect there was nothing ordinary about Liberator. Besides the ram scooping, were they also changes to the engines? She’d have to do the calculations, but she thought that even a ship with a twenty g acceleration profile should have taken a little longer to reach their orbit—which, as Albert has promised, was three hundred thousand kilometers, inclined 88 degrees to the equator. She suspected Liberator could accelerate to twenty gs, and beyond.
And once they were in orbit, Maggie went to work.
A few minutes after Maggie passed the CAM through Liberator’s wall and into space, Albert called for Meredith to join him in the pilot’s bubble. Not only was there an amazing panorama of space, but from here one could watch Maggie setting up the telescopes—all at once.
She’d split herself into eight parts, and each avatar was tasked with taking one scope, securing it to the hull, and making certain it was tied into the ship’s main processor. Of course there wasn’t eight Maggie; there was only one. And each avatar was really an extension of the ship, able to walk upon the the outside of the hull because, just like the avatar Meredith had met inside the cabin, they were nothing more than an ambulatory segment of the electropolymorphic hull.
Even though each of the Maggies were working in the vacuum of space, it didn’t mean that they hadn’t decided to look stylish while doing their job . . .
Each Maggie was dressed in an outfit that looked like an exaggerated, over-styled school girl uniform. They were all very colorful, but Meredith saw they were also so . . . well, nearly all the Maggies were in heels, which she supposed didn’t matter, given that none of them were going to have to worry about twisting an ankle, or tripping and falling off the ship, to end up floating off into space. Their gloves were made more for opera and less for working, each had a choker with a tiny star positioned over their throat, and they were all wearing elaborate headbands that almost looked like tiaras.
And two of them carried scepters—no, check that. Meredith realized one carried a scepter and the other carried a long pike with a huge, curved, double-blade at the end. It’s not like she needs that weapon, she thought. So why? Is it part of her uniform? Meredith decided she didn’t want to know.
That’s was when Albert asked Maggie how she was doing . . .
The Maggie closest to the pilot’s bubble—dressed in a very light green uniform, and wearing low heels with ribbons wrapped about her ankles—turned to face them. “We’re doing fine,” she said. Albert and Meredith could hear her well, because while this Maggie’s mouth was voice the words, the avatar was really speaking to them from inside the ship. “We’re getting the scopes integrated into the hull matrix; I’ll align them so they’ll track independent of the movement of the ship, and we should be in position to accept data within seventy-five minute.”
“Did you get the request list from my account?” Albert asked.
‘Yes. I’ve got it all set up on my system. I sent a notice—in your name—that we can accommodate a lot more data channels, now that I know what I’m configuring.”
“How many more.”
“Two thousand, two hundred, forty-six.”
Albert nodded. “That’s a good deal.” He turned to Meredith, but he was still speaking to Maggie while he look at her. “We’re going to be down in the cabin. If you need us—”
“Hey!” A Maggie sanding upon the port wing and near the hull, dressed in red and wearing matching high heels, turned toward the bubble. “Who’s going to set up the gamma ray detector.” She pointed to the telescope floating next to her. “I’m already in the middle of something, if you didn’t notice.”
A Maggie on the far starboard wing, the one with the large bladed weapons, turned away from the scope she was putting into place. “Yeah, we’re all busy. Who’s going to set that up?”
“Save it for last, and one of you do.” He nodded toward the other scepter-carrying Maggie at the bow. “Or have Pluto do it; she can be in two places at the same time. Right?”
The Maggie standing next to the character Albert had called “Pluto”, dressed all in blue, including her boots, mumbled, “You could get Dumpling Head out here.”
Meredith had no idea what they were talking about, but Albert understood the conversation. She didn’t know if this was something they’d set up ahead of time for her entertainment, or if they engaged in banter like this all the time. “You go wake up that lazy Rabbit of the Moon and drag her ass out here. You can’t gonna get that gamma ray detector set up any quicker if having her do it.” He shook his head. “Have the Senshi of Time deal with it.”
Pluto Maggie was having none of it. “Making us poor girls slave away in the dark of space—”
A short-haired Maggie, now standing close to the first version of Maggie the spoke with, said, “Yeah, we should do something about this . . .”
Albert realized when he was being given an opening. “Yeah? What are you Magical Senshi Maggies gonna do?”
Each Maggie turned towards the pilot’s bubble. They struck a defiant stance, their legs spread and their feet planted. They crossed their arms across their breasts, their right hands away from their bodies with the thumb, index, and pinkie fingers extended, and the left index finger pointed in the direction of the bubble like a pistol. Simultaneously, each Maggie said, in Japanese, “Tsuku ni kawatte, oshio kiyo!”
Albert threw up his hands in surrender. “Okay, ya got me!” His laugh was loud in the bubble. “Let me know when we’re ready to go.” Albert slipped out of the pilot’s chair and went into the cabin; Meredith followed, noticing another Maggie rising out of the hull—presumably to mount the gamma ray detector.
In the cabin Albert sauntered up to the front. “We got time to relax now.” He looked out the main windows onto nothing but black and stars. “It’s been a while since I’ve been out this deep.”
“You come out here much?” Meredith asked, slowly making her way around the other side of the large V-shaped seating in front of the bubble steps.
“Usually not this far.” He shook his head, never taking his eyes off the expanse of emptiness. “I’m been up to Aula; I’ve even been out to Melling a couple of times.” He turned towards Meredith. “Not a lot to see there.”
“It’s just a small rock,” she said of University’s outer moon. “I wouldn’t imagine you’d see much.”
“No. You don’t.” Albert walked over to the V-section and sat. He turned to Meredith. “Enjoying yourself so far?”
“Oh, what girl wouldn’t?” She sat opposite Albert, the triangle-shaped table between them. “You know, it’s not every student in that class who has a study partner with their own spaceship.” Meredith stared hard at Albert. “This is yours, isn’t it?”
He nodded. “Sure.”
“What’s the acceleration profile on Liberator?” It wasn’t hard for Meredith to come across as curious, because she was.
Albert was quick with his answer. “Thirty gs.”
“The Princess-class has a maximum profile of twenty gs.”
Princess-class?” Chuckling, Albert asked, “You identified it with one look?”
Meredith pointed to herself. “Hey: hyperspace engineer, remember? I love ships. I can identify most without having to tap into the web.” She laid her hands in her lap. “So the ship is modified.”
“Yeah, she’s got a few mods.”
“Like the ram scoops?”
“You noticed those, too?”
“Need I say it?”
“No.”
A silence fell over the cabin. Meredith saw that Albert was thinking, but about what, she didn’t know. She didn’t want him to change the subject, so after almost ten seconds she said, “Those type of mods—that’s pretty much military grade tech.”
Another five seconds passed before Albert stopped twiddling this thumbs and set his hands upon the table. “I know a few people.”
“The same people got you a HM designation.”
“Yes.”
“Albert . . .” Meredith shook her head. “What do you do?”
He didn’t miss a beat. “A little bit of everything.”
“Like?”
Albert considered blurting out his secrets, everything about him that he’d told Cytheria he’d not discuss when he got into class and began interacting with other students. I so want to tell her, he thought. I so want her to know everything about me—and it’s not like she’s going to be able to get up and leave afterwords
He also knew it was impossible for him to tell her these things. Not only would he be pissing Security Service off, but he’d likely be in violation of more than a few Rules of the Empire. My just being here is a Secret of the State—and no way in hell I can tell her about my better half . . .
Meredith saved him, however. “You do things for the government, don’t you?”
“Yeah, a few things,” he said, nodding. Well, I’m not lying
“Anything you can talk about?”
“Not really.” Albert cleared his throat. “I mean, it’s not like I’m like a secret agent—”
“Who just happens to have his own spaceship!” she said, laughing. “Not a very good cover, mate!”
“No, it isn’t.” Albert joined in the laughter, the sound filling the cabin for a few more seconds. For the first time today, both Meredith and Albert looked happy and relaxed, knowing that all they had to do now was wait for Maggie to finish setting things up, getting the telescopes calibrated, and waiting for CQ Draconis to put on its show.
That was when Meredith asked the question she’d not though of until now: “How long are we going to be up here?”
Albert had that figured that out as well. “Well, this afternoon and evening, then tomorrow, and then . . .” He shrugged. “I figure most of the show will be picked up by the stuff on the ground by late Friday."
Meredith hadn’t considered how much time they were going to spend up here. She didn’t pack anything for any sort of extended stay, but then . . . With this sort of ship, if I need something, anything, Maggie can probably create it for me.
There was another issue, however— “Albert, I know we’re suppose to be observing, but we can’t do that all the time. What else are we going to do?”
Not surprisingly, he also had an answer for that question. “You ever wear powered armor?”



Did you like it?  Hate it?  Did it make you look for sharp objects?  Do you want Maggie's number?  Have you worn powered armor?  Leave a comment and Tell Me!

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Science Fiction Sanity



Diners at the Memory’s End

By

Raymond Frazee






Copyright 2012, Raymond Frazee, All Rights Reserved.









Note:  this is is being written as you read it.  It is a first draft, and as such, it may be presented with typos.  Please excuse these, and remember that everything will be nice, clean, and near perfect, when you buy this story.  Remember--you get what you pay for.







Part Six


Thursday, 2 October, 3183

The campus was seemed very much deserted, but that was to be expected this early on a rainy Thursday morning. The whole week had seen nothing but rain, day and night, but Albert knew that was nothing unusual for this time of year for the New Oxford region. It was like this in the fall and the spring, and anyone out walking around who didn’t have a brolly was going to get soaked.
Not that Albert minded. He liked walks in the rain. He liked the silence that fell over everything, save for the patter of water on the trees and ground. He loved the cool air upon his exposed skin. The way his breath left a trail of mist behind him. He’d throw on one of his waterproof coats, a hat that would keep the rain out of his hair and eyes, and set out—
Like this morning.
Rather than pop in at the transom station closest to the Science Building, Albert went to one on the edge of Madgalen College. The walk into the campus was rather deserted, but that’s what he wanted. He was looking to spend some time, walking alone with this thoughts, enjoying this dismal, damp morning—
“Hey, Albert!”
To his right and some ten meters back, Meredith was jogging quickly to catch up. Albert was surprised to see her wearing a skirt and aqua blouse under her long, brown coat, and if he wasn’t mistaken—yeah, she was wearing a very low heeled shoes. As she came along side, she adjusted her wide-brimmed hat, which seemed like a slightly feminized version of the hat he was wearing.
She expelled a huge gasp of air, then paused, slightly doubled over, before taking a cool, fresh breath. “Ahhh!” She stood straight and smiled. “I didn’t know if I’d catch you—”
“You knew I’d be out here?” Albert started to wonder if she’d tapped into the security network once more.
A puzzled look crossed her face. “I know this will sound strange, but it’s like I knew you’d decided to walk in from outside campus.”
Albert smiled softly, but his mind was going in many different directions. She’s got to be a little psychic: I wonder if she’s ever been tested? “Well, good thing your feeling was correct.” He looked about the near-deserted grounds. “Otherwise you’d be out here alone in this shit.”
Meredith started walking in the direction of the Science Center. “Wouldn’t want to do that.” As always she started in her normal gait, then slowed up so Albert could stay along side. “Besides, with all the excitement I’m feeling, I’d hate to make this walk alone.”
For a second Albert thought she might reach out and take his hand, but she held back. “We wouldn’t have wanted that to happen,” he said quickly, so neither would feel an uncomfortable silence fall between them. “Why all the excitement, by the way?”
Meredith gave Albert a very strange look. “What, haven’t you been paying attention?” She laughed loudly. “What were we planing at the library Tuesday, huh?”
After saying nothing for almost five seconds, Albert burst out laughing. “I’m just jackin’ with you, Mere,” he said. He gave her shoulder a pat. “Of course I know; later today, we get to take readings on a dying star.”
The news had consumed most of the students of Professor Koltzer’s class the last three sessions: the light from the CQ Draconis would reach the University system on 3 October, and nearly every observatory was preparing to allow students from all over the planet to access their data from their ground and space-born gatherings.
CQ Draconis was a cataclysmic variable, a binary system in the constellation of Draco, that consisted of a red giant and a white dwarf in close proximity to each other. Systems such as this were known as “cataclysmic”, because after that white dwarf had pulled in as much material as it could from the companion star, things tended to happen—fast. CQ Dra, as it was also known, had gone through these cycles ever since it was first observed.
In the last hundred years, however, astronomers had noticed that the peaks of the cycle were becoming far more energetic. The speculation was that the red giant companion was loosing far too much material now, and was in the process of being torn apart. The light curve from this most current cycle had been seen in other parts of the empire for a while, but the wave of electromagnetic energy was finally reaching this portion of the Hyades Star Cluster, and University.
Astronomy students from all over were waiting for later in the afternoon to be able to tie into the data streams, so they could conduct their own observations. Everyone was psyched—but Albert, with his usual air of pessimism, was concerned things wouldn’t go smoothly . . .
He only had to look around him to know things weren’t going to go smoothly. He’d checked the planetary weather when he got up, and, as was pretty common this time of year, the planet was covered in bad weather. There were three observatories that could watch CQ Dra over the next few days, and two of them were experiencing what one might call it “atmospheric occlusion”—a fancy name for overcast skies.
Albert expected that if viewer locations were cut because of weather, the pros here would start hogging data for their own reasons. Never mind there were already years of observations of this current cycle: scientists be scientists, and they wanted to do their own observing.
And if that meant cutting the students out of the loop, so be it.
As they entered the Science Studies Building, both Meredith and Albert shook off their hats, scattering the excess water. “Do you think there are going to be problems later today?” she asked.
“To be honest . . .” He thought about giving her a bullshit answer, but figured it was best not to be too dishonest with his study partner. “If this weather keeps up like it is, all over the planet, we’re gonna get screwed.”
Meredith didn’t seem to shocked by Albert’s response; he figured, being a bright girl, she’d already come to the same conclusion. “There’s still the orbital platforms—”
“Of which there are only two.” Albert side-stepped around two guys standing in the middle of the hall, seeming unconcerned they were hindering traffic. This was one of the few times he missed not having his telekinesis, so he could throw them against a wall and move them out of the way. “They took the third one down at the beginning of the week to re-collimate the mirror system, remember?”
“Oh, damn, right.” They bounded up the stairs towards the Melinac Lecture Hall, where Professor Koltzer held class. “It’s not looking good.”
“Nope.” They turned off the stairs onto the first floor, and trotted the few meters towards the entrance to the lecture hall. He opened the door and held it for Meredith—
Nearly the whole class was here. He checked the time: they were four minutes early. “This isn’t a good sign,” he muttered as they headed for their seats.
Some of the students in the front of the room were having a conversation with Professor Koltzer. Meredith couldn’t hear what was being said, but the general tone—and the restlessness of the room—let her to believe all was not well. “I think you’re right,” she whispered as they sat.
Albert powered up his systems. “I hate it when that happened.”
Professor Koltzer stepped up to the podium; the moment she did, her holographic image appeared before each student. “We may as well begin today’s session with an update of the upcoming observing session—”
“Here it comes,” Albert whispered.
“As the weather is questionable at all the ground-based sites, the observatories will keep us updated on a fifteen minute schedule. It is very likely that two of the observatories will be unable to collect data until tomorrow evening. If this is the case—”
“Damn, what a smash,” someone in the class blurted out.
“If that is the case—” Winfrieda’s tone changed, to let people know that she wasn’t interested in any more interruptions, “public access to their data will be limited in time shared allotments.”
“I thought—” The student held up his hand when Winfrieda’s stare slammed him hard. After she acknowledged him, he continued. “I though they could handle thousands of access channels. Why limit us?”
Winfrieda raised the same question this morning when she was told of the current situation. She felt it was important that she not relay to her students her exact words to one of the directors . . . “The original plan was to have two ground observatories collecting, and this would be supplemented by the orbital observations. With maybe only one ground station capable of active observation, they’ll rely on the orbital telescopes more.” She sighed. She knew it wasn’t a perfect answer—or even a good one—but it was the only one she had, or was about to give.
A girl in the third row yelled, “But that’s not fair!” then slapped her knee in frustration.
“There are a lot of things that aren’t fair,” Winfrieda said. “This is one of those things. We’ve argued this point for years—”
Meredith was trying to follow the conversation, but she was suddenly finding something else far more interesting: Albert looked as if he were doing something. In his head.
She knew what was happening; he was accessing his computer, at it was likely he was searching for something. Meredith turned just enough that she could see his eyes; they were slightly unfocused, darting back and forth, seeing something visible only to him. He’s doing more than searching for something, she thought. If I didn’t know better, I’d think he’s chatting with someone . . .
His eyes stopped moving, then focused upon Meredith. A smile crawled slowly across his face as he leaned towards Meredith. “You wanna see this thing?” he said softly.
She didn’t need to consider the question. “Yes.”
Meredith didn’t know what Albert meant by wanting to see the event. She wondered if he knew someone who could get them additional time on a data circuit, or perhaps even into an observatory. She’d come to understand that, with Albert, anything might be possible.
What she didn’t expect him to do, however . . . it was something she’d never seen him do since they’d started class.
He raised his hand. “Professor?”
Winfrieda turned towards the direction of the question and saw Albert with his hand raised. She knew that, up to now, he’d sat quietly and only joined in on the discussion if absolutely necessary. Obviously he wants something now, she thought. “Yes, Mr. Dahl?”
There was a slight hesitation as he lowered his arm, as if he wasn’t certain if he should speak. That didn’t last long, however. “Can you get access to ten fifty centimeter telescopes?” He looked about the lecture hall before saying, “I’d need two visual spectrum, two IR, two ultraviolet, and two X-Ray.” He shrugged. “And maybe get a hold of a gamma ray burst detector as well.” Albert cleared his throat. “Professor.”
Winfrieda wanted to shake her head and say, “What?”, but she resisted the urge—though only with great difficulty. “And what exactly would you do with said equipment?”
“Get everyone in this room as stable platform for viewing CQ Draconis.” Albert was staring straight at Professor Koltzer now. “If that’s what everyone wants.”
“I’m certain that’s what everyone in this hall wants,” Winfrieda said. “What I would like to why you believe you can offer them this chance, now, when you never mentioned it before.”
Albert never broke eye contact with Professor Koltzer. “Because it was never needed before now.”
There were murmurings around the lecture hall, and Winfrieda knew students were discussing this matter between them. She didn’t feel that Albert had disrupted the lecture, because she hadn’t begun. If anything, having him interject into the arguments over the lack of observatory time was a nice diversion, but Winfrieda was worried that the mood in the hall was going to swing towards another direction—one that she worried she wouldn’t be able to control. “That’s all well and good, Mr. Dahl—”
A student, a boy in the third row, shot a quick question in Albert’s direction. “Where are you going to put these telescopes?”
Again, there was no hesitation in Albert’s reply. “In a polar orbit, three hundred thousand kilometers high.”
The murmurings really began in earnest now. Another student, this time a girl further back in the hall, exclaimed, “Are you frizzing kidding?”
“Nope.” Albert’s tone told everyone that, if nothing else, he knew he was telling the truth.
A few students weren’t so sure, however. “There’s no way you could do that,” one boy said while looking at Professor Koltzer. “No way in hell.”
Albert turned his stare upon the disbelieving student for a moment, then stood up. Not taking his the boy, he said, “If that’s the case, then I won’t be around much longer, will I?” He addressed Professor Koltzer. “Isn’t that right, Professor? By saying this, by telling everyone here that I can do this, I’ve pretty much violated the Cannon of Ethics as laid out in the Student Handbook.” He soften his posturing, shifting his weight to one leg. “Yeah?”
Winifreda nodded. “That’s quite true, Mr. Dahl.”
“Then why would I say this if it weren’t true?” He looked down at Meredith, who was smiling back, and then turned back to the professor. “I mean, if I didn’t want to be here, I wouldn’t; I just leave. But that’s not the case. So . . .” He crossed his hands in front of his stomach. “Can you help me out? Can you get me those scopes?”
Though she was tempted to question him further, Winfrieda suddenly hear the Duchess Warington’s voice in her head. He’s going to surprise you, I promise, she said only a few weeks prior, and though he hadn’t so far, she was beginning to understand that, perhaps, Albert didn’t feel the need to “surprise” people, unless it was very, very necessary. He’s right as well, she thought. With the claims he’s just made, a student review board could censure him to the point he’d be forced to withdraw from the class. Yet, he’s still making them, and being defiant all the while.
She slowly nodded, but before Winfrieda spoke, the girl who’d exclaimed what had happened wasn’t fair, turned to Albert. “How many information channels can you set up?”
The far-way look in Albert’s eyes lasted only a section. “Right now, I’m gonna say . . . about thirty-three hundred.”
The hall fell silent as they took in this new information. “I’m in,” the girl said. She turned to Professor Koltzer. “I want to gather information on x-rays, and if you can get him those X-Ray telescopes . . .” She turned back to Albert. “I’d love so get as much information on CQ as I can.”
Albert pointed a finger at her for just as second. “You got it,” he said, smiling softly.
For Winfrieda, there was no questions remaining about what she needed to do. “Very well, Mr. Dahl. I’ll get those telescopes for you.”
“Can you have them in the next two, three hours?”
“I can have them in two hours.” She began placing the order. “Where do you want them delivered?”
“Bay 17-B, Penningham Space Port.” Albert didn’t make a move to sit. “Oh, a couple of other things—”
“What would those be, Mr. Dahl?” Winfrieda wouldn’t normally allow students to make demands of her, but then she’d never had a student offer to make her life—and the lives of everyone else in her class—very easy.
“I need an access list of everyone who needs access to my system.”
“Your system?”
“The one that will be monitoring the scopes.” He slowly ran his left hand through his dark hair. “I’ll need an access list so I know where to send the data streams.”
“I don’t see a problem with that,” Winfrieda said. “Would you like that list sent to your student account?”
“Yes, please.”
“You said you have a ‘couple of things’?”
Since he was on a roll, Albert didn’t see any reason to hold off asking. “I need to be excused from class so I can get this set up.” He nodded down at Meredith. “And I need Meredith to come with me.”
Though she found the last request a bit unusual, Winfrieda wanted to know the whys of having Meredith along for—if she was hearing Albert correctly—a ride into space, before giving approval. “And this is because . . ?”
“She’s my study partner. This is out project, too.” He came across as completely sincere as Albert said, “We were going to work on this tonight, together: we still can.”
Winfrieda didn’t need to spend any measurable time considering the request. “You’re both excused.”
“Thank you.” Albert nudged Meredith and whispered, “Come on.”
As they were leaving the hall, Winfrieda has only last question. “When can we expect to start receiving data?”
“If my updates are correct, I should be in place in six to eight hours.”
“And how long will you broadcast?”
He had one hand on the door as Albert turned and gave Professor Koltzer his best coy smile. “At least through Friday. And maybe a little after that.” With that, they pushed through the door and into the hallway beyond.
Making for the stairs at a fast walk, Albert said, “We have plenty of time to get to Penningham, but I want to take the transoms.”
“We’re really going to the spaceport?” Meredith wasn’t having problems keeping up with Albert; if anything, she felt like running to the transom station.
“Sure are.” They bounded down the stairs, almost taking them two at a time. “Maggie’s putting Liberator through preflight checks now. We should be ready to lift off in under thirty minutes. All we have to do is wait for the scopes.” They reached the main entrance and head back into the rain. “I sure hope Winnie gets us a burst detector.”
Meredith touched Albert’s arm and brought him to a quick stop. “Wait, wait . . . Maggie? Liberator?” She let out with a short, mirthful laugh. “Albert, really: what’s going to happen?”
Albert reached up and took Meredith’s hand, then gave it a gentle squeeze. “We’re going where I said we’re going.” He leaned in closer to her, never releasing her hand. In his best pickup line-suave voice, he asked, “Hey, you wanna see my spaceship?”



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