25
Whim. And Wham
“It’s my bet the whole thing’s some sort of
shield,” said BrTl glumly, at the conclusion of Jhl’s somewhat halting
narrative. “You said yourself you can’t read him.”
“Yeah.”
“Um—these chemical things,” he said
cautiously.
Jhl’s shlaa-tinted cheeks went very red. “I
said! I checked the Encyclopaedia, and there are no known instances of
humanoids being able to control their pheromones!”
“There wouldn’t be, would there? Beings
that could, wouldn’t advertise the fact,” he said thoughtfully. “Added to
which,” he said even more thoughtfully, and in a much more lowered voice, “if
the beings that can are in the IG Y-K-W, the Encyclopaedia itself wouldn’t
advertise the fact.”
Jhl had to swallow. But managed to say:
“Shut up. You’re even more paranoid than I am.”
“Maybe that isn’t a bad thing. Um,
hormones?” he said cautiously. “Didn’t some being once tell me that if
humanoids do that mammalian repro stuff they sort of, um, wear off, or, um,
dissipate or, um… something?”
Jhl glared at him.
“I’ve got it wrong,” said BrTl humbly.
“Um—no, wait! Don’t humanoids sort of lower their defences, I mean involuntarily,
when they do repro stuff?”
“And?”
“Well, kill a pair of rr’trrs with a single
blas—No?”
“No,” said Jhl through her pearlized teeth.
“In the first place, humanoid hormones do not dissipate or wear off, whatever
you like to call it, as the result of one act of copulation—repro stuff, to
you. Not definitively.”
“All right, there’s no need to—”
“And in the second place, it’s true that
they lower their defences, yes: that’s endemic to the male humanoid state.”
Excitedly he began: “Well, then—”
“You asteroid-brain!” shouted Jhl. “What if
I’m lowering mine at the same time as he’s lowering his?”
“Uh—oh. Do you have to?” he said sadly.
She took a very deep breath. “Not
clinically speaking, no.”—BrTl looked puzzled, but she didn’t bother to elaborate:
the asteroid-brain would have forgotten it in approximately three IG
microseconds. Nothing affective to relate it to.—“On the other hand, and kindly
take my word for it, the likelihood is, with a being as attractive as him, that
I would involuntarily”—BrTl glared—“lower them, yeah. You want odds?”
“No! It was only a sugges—”
“Fifty megazillion to one,” said Jhl
through her pearlized teeth.
“All RIGHT!” he shouted.
When Lady Myr-Lah’s tasteful maxi-webs had
ceased shivering and shaking, Jhl admitted glumly: “I’m sorry, BrTl. I’m all on
edge.”
“Well, yes. That’s why I thought some repro
stuff might make you feel better.”
She sighed. “Momentarily, it would. In the
slightly longer term, say after half an IG hour, the likelihood is that the
results would be disastrous.”
“Oh.”
After a period of silence had elapsed Jhl
said heavily: “Don’t mention all this to Trff, would you mind?”
“Okay. But it’ll probably know anyway.
Well, if it bothers to look.”
Tolerantly overlooking the affective factor
that just possibly would prevent its grasping what it saw if it did look, she
admitted heavily: “True.”
Another period of silence elapsed.
“Well, what do you think of the Collector’s
genetic encoding?” said Jhl without hope.
“Um… Very humanoid,” he ventured.
“BR-TL!”
“Well, I’ve been stuck in transit on the
third moon of Pkqwrd for approximately a megazillion light-years,” he grumbled.
“Mm,” agreed Jhl, trying not to laugh: it
wasn’t the first time, poor old BrTl.
“Have you ever tried to teach the
principles of whim-wham to a pair of paired Feeny-Argyllians?”
“Stop—it!” she gasped. It wasn’t the
first time he’d been stuck on the third moon of Pkqwrd with a pair of them,
either. They were, by and large, very agreeable beings, but the only word in
her vocabulary that would accurately describe them was, not to be anything-ist,
“ladylike.” Poor old BrTl!
“Well,” he said sulkily.
“Sorry. Go on.”
“Um… Very Whtyllian, I’d say.”
“Yeah. Definitely.”
“You can stop trying not to prompt me,” he
said heavily. “Of course I've never seen Lord Y-K-W’s encoding for myself, but I’ve
thought from the first that your picture of it was horribly like the
Collector’s. And like the Regent’s. And the other cognate’s. And from
what I saw of him when he was being Whtyllian, like Captain Marvel’s, too. But
I thought it was just my limited perception of humanoid genetic encoding.”
“Mm.” After a moment she added in a very
airy voice: “The Collector’s is very like the old Whtyllian she-mok’s, too,
don’t you think?”
“No!” he said in amazement.
There was a short and rather sick silence.
“I can hear you thinking that that’s
significant in terms of humanoid repro stuff,” said BrTl on a cautious note.
“Don’t blast me, you’re broadcasting like Njneeainwearia in the season when those
crystal beings do whatever it is they do. Um—where was I? Oh, yes: don’t blast
me.”
“Um, no. Um, the thing is, you see, Shan
and Captain Marvel were half-brothers,” said Jhl without hope.
“Uh-huh. Oh, yes: like the Regent and D’ru-son
and the female son!” he said brilliantly.
“Mm. Same father,” said Jhl without hope.
“Different mothers.”
“Ye-es…”
She scratched her head. “It’s—uh—not
successive layers, exactly…”
“Would a 3-D pwm board help?” he said,
extra-meekly.
Just in time, Jhl refrained from blasting
him. “Yeah, it probably would. –Thanks,” she said as an s-being scurried in
with one. She set the pieces out carefully. “These green ones—”
“Nwhortlp,” he corrected.
She took a deep breath. “Right. These
nwhortlp ones represent—don’t touch that! Represent Shan’s genetic encoding
from his father—see?”
“Uh…”
“This nwhortlp one right at the top by
itself is his FATHER!” shouted Jhl furiously.
“Got it, got it.”
“This is half of Shan,” said Jhl, poking at
a nwhortlp piece on the middle board. She added a shlaa piece. “This is his
other half.”
“But he’s not a paired being,” he said in
confusion.
“Genetically, he IS!” shouted Jhl. “All
humanoids ARE!”
“I never knew that.”
“BrTl, you DID! Look, this shlaa one here
on the top by itself, this is the old Whtyllian she-mok!” she cried, setting a
shlaa piece at a slight distance from the lone nwhortlp piece on the top board.
“Oh.”
“Now, watch. This nwhortlp one represents
half of Shan, okay?”
“It can’t, half of a half isn’t one.”
“Great splintered shards of quog!” she
cried. “Wait!”
After a considerable amount of heavy
breathing and muttering, she had four nwhortlp pieces ranged together on the
top board, with four shlaa pieces at a distance from them. On the middle board,
Shank’yar was now represented by two nwhortlp, two shlaa.
“Two and two are four,” he ascertained
pleasedly.
“Oh, very good: go to Advanced Pilot
Training!”
“Go on,” said BrTl mildly. “Where’s the
Regent?”
Jhl placed one green piece on the bottom
board. “Nwhortlp, right?”
“It probably is, to the humanoid visual
organ,” he conceded.
Grimly she placed another nwhortlp piece at
a distance from this one. “Drouwh. Half of him, okay?”
BrTl picked up a nwhortlp piece and set it
down, carefully equidistant from the other two. “The female son.”
“Quite. Now, watch this! –Mok shit,” she
muttered. “This one looks pink to me, but does it look different from those
shlaa ones to you?”
“Yes.”
“Right, then.” Jhl set the pink piece
carefully beside the Regent’s piece. “This is the Regent. His nwhortlp half is
Shan, and his pink half is his mother. You met her, remember?”
“Y—Um, where is his mother?”
“For Federation’s sake!” Jhl set two pink
pieces close together on Shan’s board. The asteroid-brain appeared happy.
Breathing hard, she set two black pieces together on that level, and a black
one beside Drouwh.
BrTl had got the point, more or less.
Happily he set a gold piece beside the “female son” and two gold pieces on
Shank’yar’s level.
“Mm.” Jhl stared at the board, not
bothering to mention the concept of full siblings. “Now for Captain Marvel,”
she said, swallowing.
“Eh? Oh, right, mm. –Hang on: what about
the cognates? Tm-Wm and that lieutenant?”
“We are NOT TALKING ABOUT THEM!”
“All right. But they’d be part-nwhortlp,
right?”
Jhl shoved a nwhortlp piece at him. “Yes!
Part of this would be part of them, hold it and be happy!”
Emanating mild surprise, BrTl held it in a
pseudopod.
Jhl set down a nwhortlp piece at a little
distance from the paired Shan with a snap. “Captain Marvel. Half of him was
like half of Shan. –WASN’T it?”
“Definitely,” he said quickly. “I’d say
that one was more lurghple, though. Well, the lurghplish side of nwhortlp.”
“Pick a better one, then,” said Jhl through
her teeth.
BrTl picked a better one. He set the
lurghplish one down on a little side-table. “Not a cognate,” he explained to
it.
“We don’t know who Captain Marvel’s mother
was, but he had a mother—Are you LISTENING?”
“Of course! –That’s logical,” he murmured.
He set two priceless blue Faindorgean glass pieces beside Captain Marvel, added
another nwhortlp piece to his set, and placed four blue pieces together on the
top board.
“Bones of Brqa and all fourteen of its
moons, I think he’s got it,” muttered Jhl.
“Father,” he said, pointing to the four
nwhortlp pieces on the top board.
“Mm.”
He pointed at Shank’yar’s set. “Father plus
Mother One makes Y-K-W. Personally I wouldn’t have chosen nwhortlp, it’s a nice
colour.”
“BrTl!”
“Sorry. Father plus Mother Two makes
Captain Marvel.”
“Mm.”
“How can we tell,” he said, narrowing his
eyes, “that Y-K-W made these bottom ones and not Captain Marvel?”
“We KNOW that!”
“Yes, but they’re all nwhortlp.”
“BrTl, you’re sending me to Mullgon’ya,”
she warned.
“But—”
“LOOK!” shouted Jhl, at the end of her
tether. She slammed down the appropriate colours, so that Drouwh, the Regent
and A’ailh’sa all ended up with four pieces each. The common colours being
nwhortlp and shlaa. And ignoring the concept of full siblings.
“Ooh!” he said.
“YES!” shouted Jhl. “GET it?”
“Yes, now it’s logical.”
“Goody,” she said acidly.
“Ooh, look: these ones,” he said, pointing
to the bottom board, “have all got the old she-mok or Gervaynian kryy in them:
shlaa.”
“Quite,” said Jhl in an odd voice.
He looked at the middle level. “Captain
Marvel hasn’t, though.”
“No,” said Jhl in the odd voice.
BrTl waited for her to say: “Mother Two,”
but she didn’t. He looked at her cautiously.
Jhl stared hard at the pieces on the
boards, scowling.
After a moment BrTl cautiously picked up
two more nwhortlp pieces. He looked sideways at Jhl. Then he put them on
Shank’yar’s level. Then, avoiding Jhl’s eye altogether, he chose six white
Porvenian marble pieces from the pwm set’s box of priceless deep orange
fossilised namber. Four of them he set together, in a bunch, on the top board.
The remaining two he set, very cautiously indeed, next to his two nwhortlp
pieces, on Shank’yar’s level.
Jhl said nothing.
BrTl made a tuneless hooting noise, on two
different notes, down his two noses. He looked sideways at her. Jhl still said
nothing.
“Father, Mother Three, um—Collector Kadry?”
he said hoarsely.
There was a long silence.
Finally Jhl said limply: “You are quite
sure that you can’t see the old Whtyllian she-mok in him? Um, instead of Shan’s
father.”
“Shlaa instead of nwhortlp? No. Well, was I
faking my reaction, earlier? –No,” he answered himself.
“No,” she admitted.
“I’m no expert,” BrTl reminded her.
Jhl looked sourly at the boards. “How
true.”
“Um… mammalian age-wise…”
“I’ve checked. The Collector’s a bit older
than the Regent. Physically, he could be one of Shan’s, but it’s unlikely, in
terms of mammalian humanoid norms. But Shan’s father was very much alive at the
time.”
“Yes. Did you say you’d met the white
mother?”
“Uh—oh, Cousin J’nfr. Yes. Oh, I see!
Yes, let’s hang her by her tail over a magma pit until she admits her Cousin
Myr-Lah’s bond-partner got up her, BrTl!”
“You could just look.”
Jhl scowled.
“Not if you’d rather not know, of course.
–It’s no use sending all that mok sh—um, stuff, about mammalian humanoid
kinship rights and Whtyllian inheritance and lordship stuff, because it’s
beyond me. But I do get the general drift, and if we’re even halfway right
about this nwhortlp business, I’d say we’d better hoik Y-K-W out of it sooner
than yesterday. And I’d bet my tail that every last emanation you picked up on
that grassy place with the Collector was some sort of shield—”
“Shut—up.”
BrTl shut up. Jhl went on scowling.
After a sufficiently long and sick period
had elapsed BrTl ventured meekly: “Where do Tm-Wm and the other cognates fit
in, though?”
Jhl bounded to her feet. She grabbed the
nwhortlp piece he was still clutching in his pseudopod. “Watch,” she said
viciously, hurling it to the floor. She drew her blaster.
“Oy—” he began in alarm.
Jhl blasted the nwhortlp pwm piece into
smithereens. “See those?” she said through her teeth, pointing to the
smithereens, as six alarmed s-beings rushed in.
“Uh—yeah. –GET OUT,” said BrTl briefly over
his shoulder. The s-beings shot out again.
Jhl poked at a smithereen with her toe.
“That one there is Tm-Wm, GET IT?” she howled.
“Yeah. Um—you’ve killed part of that
wtmyrian colony,” he said uneasily. “The she-mok won’t be too pleased.”
“I haven’t, it was set at ‘Shatter’,
you asteroid-brain!”
“Oh, yes,” he recognised in relief, as the
carpet drew together again round the scorched place in the… “Ugh, what are
these Whtyllian lordship-type floors made of, anyway?”
“No idea.” She eyed the laden pwm boards
grimly.
“Don’t—” began BrTl.
Too late: Jhl shattered the Whtyllian
lordship-type pwm boards and all their very pretty pieces, in precious or
semi-precious stones ranging from white Porvenian marble, through nwhortlp
alabaster from H’r-Ar III, to genuine o-Jno black glass and priceless blue
Faindorgean glass, into a megazillion smithereens.
“What do you think, Trff?” he said without
hope.
There was an appreciable IG microsecond’s
pause. Then it said: “That IG M.C. being is definitely a cognate, yes.”
BrTl sighed. Pretty obviously it was about
as interested in all this 3-D mammalian repro stuff as he was. And, dare he
formulate the thought, understood about as much.
“Not a cognate of the old kryy or she-mok?”
Trff ventured doubtfully.
–Even less, in fact. Especially after eight
days fast asleep. “No,” he assured it, sighing.
Trff waved a dubious antenna at him. “Is
you-it glum?”
“Very glum, Trff. Very, very glum. In a
state of glumness bordering on depression, in fact.”
“She-it wants to do repro stuff with that
IG M.C. being,” it decided.
“N—Uh—yeah. Um—”
“It means, become his-its bond-partner,” it
corrected itself.
BrTl winced. “You can’t mean that!”
“Yes, it does, BrTl.”
“Look, they’re different: we’ve discussed
this before!”
“This it-being remembers,” it said huffily,
starting to hunch itself up within its fluff.
“Don’t do that. Anyway, I suppose it
doesn’t matter whether she wants to do repro stuff or bond-partner with him:
what I mean is, one is as bad as the other.”
“Both?” it whistled dubiously.
“Uh—oh. Yes, both, of course,” said BrTl
hurriedly, hoping it wasn’t reading him at this precise moment. Or, since he
had a fair idea it always was, that it sort of wasn’t taking much in. “Leaving that aside, is he a dangerous
being?”
“Very!” whistled Trff in surprise.
“No, um—Sorry. I didn’t phrase that quite
correctly. Is he dangerous to us, specifically in terms of this mission?”
“Or Lost Cause,” it agreed politely.
BrTl glared. It was reading him. “Is
he?”
There was one of those appreciable pauses.
“By the three-tongued blurryankers, you
can’t tell, can you?” he groaned.
“That being’s got a very efficient shield,”
it said apologetically.
“Yes. What about Jhl’s story that his story
is that he’s on our side?” he said without hope.
“It’s not impossible. He-it could be,” replied
Trff dubiously.
“Mm. But why?”
Trff just sat there like a ball of
vlohffert fluff. It was emanating bafflement, though, so BrTl concluded it was
as baffled as he was.
“Yes, well, put it like this,” he said
heavily. “In any scheme to hoik Y-K-W out of this, let’s agree to leave that
being strictly out of it: okay?”
“Very much okay, BrTl! It could tell you-it
what the scheme—”
“No,” he said, wincing. “Don’t. Just
supposing that I encountered that being in a situation, don’t get me wrong, but
in a situation where there was no handy Ju’ukrterian shield specifically
protecting this very specific brain of mine—”
“All right,” it said huffily, “it won’t
tell you-it the details. You-it can just obey Jhl’s orders.”
“Yeah. For a change.”
This time there was a very appreciable
pause indeed.
“What about a game of pwm?” said Trff
kindly.
“SHE’S VAPORISED—”
“Oh, yes. Sorry,” it said quickly.
“Whim-wham, then?”
BrTl groaned, but conceded it might
distract him from the fact that their necks were very nearly down the
hyperdrive.
They played whim-wham. Of course Trff won
every game, because it couldn’t help seeing his cards, but BrTl was past
caring.
Full Surgeon Fl’nhrr’htia’s neck-gills
opened and closed once. Then he went out like a light-blob.
“Done!” said Trff happily.
“How many messages did he get off to the
Full College while you were doing it, though?” replied its Captain nastily,
holding her blaster steady on the Friyrian’s prone form.
“None. He-it tried, but couldn’t penetrate
the Ju—”
“All right! –GET HIM!” she shouted at BrTl.
“I am,” he said glumly, picking up Fleet
C—make that Admiral Lord Shank’yar Vt R’aam, and tucking him under his arm.
“Those handy humanoid excreta-moppers that R’shn uses for S’zzie come forcibly
to mind at this moment: I wonder why?” he wondered politely.
“Shut up,” said his Captain grimly. “Grab
old S-B’rtha and let’s get going.”
There was an infinitesimal pause. Then Trff
said apologetically: “It didn’t know that you-it’d decided definitely to take
that being as well—”
“WHERE IS SHE?” she bellowed.
“It isn’t absolutely sure wh—She-it went
out in the s-beings’ old lifter with S-Wm,” it admitted glumly. “To buy some
commodities.”
“Yeah, handy humanoid excreta-moppers,
Fleet Admiral size,” noted BrTl sourly.
Jhl took a very deep breath. “The ship’ll
have to cope. Let’s go.”
“Hang on,” said BrTl in alarm. “Trff, have
you put—”
“Done,” it said.
“–the rest of ’em out like light-blobs,”
ended BrTl feebly. “Dare one ask, where’s the Collector as of this IG
microsecond?”
“At his-its old mum’s,” it said
comfortably,
“Uh—good,” he croaked. “In that case, by
all means, let’s go.”
They went.
... “And don’t wake them up until we’re in
hyperspace, there’s a good old Trff,” he said weakly, sinking into the Vt R’aam
lifter they were borrowing.
“If it waits until hyperspace,” it replied
vaguely as it tinkered with the lifter’s blobs, “it may not attain a one
hundred percent—Ah! Gotcha!”
“A one hundred percent what?” said BrTl
politely as the lifter rocketed up fifty IG fluh, apparently of its own
accord—well, he wasn’t driving, he was holding the Fleet C—Admiral, trying to
make it appear as if the position he was holding him in was humanoid-normal
whilst at the same time avoiding actual contact with parts of his own anatomy
that preferred to remain dry; and Jhl wasn’t driving, she was aiming her
blaster grimly at the totally silent and deserted Vt R’aam front sweep; and Trff
didn’t appear to be driving.
“Success rate,” it said vaguely.
“Is you-it driving?” he enquired politely.
“What? Oh—the blobs know,” it said vaguely.
BrTl shut his eyes. Though he did note:
“Then wait until we’re very nearly almost in hyperspace to wake them up,
please. And if you could manage an immobilising or two at relatively long range
of a certain IG M.C. being, I for one wouldn’t object.”
There was a relatively short silence. Then
it said: “That being’s shield is—”
“Yes. Don’t, Trff, it would be a waste of
energy,” said Jhl with a sigh.
“Good, it won’t. Though it’s not precisely
energy that’s involved.” It must have noticed something in the atmosphere
because it then added lamely: “–Captain.”
“Captain, have you thought,” asked BrTl
delicately, as the kidnapped lifter approached the spaceport, “how we’re
actually going to, so to speak, um—”
“Trff’s going to put them all to sleep. Or
such is its claim,” replied Jhl grimly.
“It’s the middle of the afternoon, isn’t it?”
he said feebly.—Local time, agreed his chrono-blob.—“Well, yes: there’ll
be one or two Whtyllians about, won’t there?”
“Shut up!” snarled his Captain.
BrTl shut up but peered uneasily out at an
all too rapidly approaching view of the spaceport.
“Do it now,” ordered their Captain grimly.
“Done,” reported Trff.
The Vt R’aam lifter drifted down like a
feather right next to the ship. No beings came rushing out with visors, not to
say shades, lowered and blasters, not to say probes, at the ready, so it must
have done it, all right.
... “I’d delay waking that lot up until
we’re out of Whtyllian space,” BrTl noted, as, having fended off an
over-excited Flppu or two and assured the ship they were not going to leave it
to the mercy of the two Flppus any longer, they took off.
“Put the Fleet C— the Admiral in a cabin,”
replied his Captain grimly.
Glumly BrTl mooched off with the Admiral.
He was drivelling: in fact he’d drivelled all down his, BrTl’s, right forearm
and some of it had got into his neck-hair: ugh!
... “WHERE IN FEDERATION HAVE YOU BEEN?”
bellowed his Captain.
“I’ve been to the hygiene cabinet to wash
the drivel off, and any being that objects—sir—can haul Y-K-W round the
ship any old time they like!”
“He-it means drib—”
“I KNOW WHAT HE-IT MEANS!”
Her crew shrank.
“Wake them up, Trff,” ordered Jhl grimly.
“It has woken the spaceport beings up,
Captain.”
Jhl goggled at it. “Oh, goody! And?”
“It miscalculated,” whistled Trff uneasily.
“Blerrinbrig’s, have you killed all the beings
on Y-K-W’s estate?” gasped BrTl.
“Not that.” It waved an antenna anxiously.
Jhl concentrated, but they were too far
away. “Well, WHAT?”
“The Collector picked up that... that
something was wrong at the palace, Jhl.”
Jhl took a very deep breath. “Action
stations!”
“He-it isn’t sending any ships after us!”
hooted Trff quickly.
She goggled at it. BrTl also goggled at
it.
“No; he’s there. At Y-K-W’s palace.”
“AND?” shouted BrTl.
“And
he-it’s waiting for it to wake the palace beings up.”
“Literal-minded—WHAT’S HE GOING TO DO?” he
bellowed.
“Gl’g?” it offered in a bewildered way.
BrTl breathed heavily, baring his
crunchers.
“I think it’s all been a bit much for it,”
said Jhl hurriedly.
“It hasn’t!” it whistled angrily. “It’s
perfectly all right, it’s just had eight Whtyllian days’ sleep! That being is
thinking of gl’g! And don’t blame it for it!” It fluffed itself up dangerously.
Jhl passed a hand over her brow. Her
fevered brow, yes. “Great steaming piles of mok droppings,” she muttered. “I
think possibly the Collector is thinking that a nice hot cup of gl’g should be
administered once the beings at the palace—particularly the older female
beings—have woken up.”
“Yes. That,” it said pleasedly.
“Then wake them up, Trff,” she sighed.
“Done, Captain!” it said quickly.
“Thank you, Trff.”
After a short silence BrTl ventured: “Look,
you two may have it all worked out, but would one of you mind explaining how
we’re going to manage to land on you-know-where? Presuming that is where we’re
heading for. Because they’re in the Federation, now: the place’ll be bristling
with—um, well, pretty much like it was when we left,” he ended glumly.
“IG Militia. Space Patrol. IG C &—”
“SHUT UP, TRFF!” When the reverberations
had died away he noted acidly: “It’s not wrong, however.”
“No. It claims,” said Jhl carefully, “that,
now that the World Shield and x’nb-web have been lowered, we can fly right in
under this Ju’ukrterian shield that’s round us and land wherever we like.”
“Oh, really? Dare one mention the point
that this might have been a useful move of which to have been aware at certain
times in the past?” he said sweetly. “Recent and not so recent, in terms of the
commonly perceived Y-K-W,” he ended, not so sweetly.
Jhl eyed her Chief Engineer somewhat
nervously. It just sat there like a ball of pale green fluff. “I’m sorry, BrTl.
I would have explained it all before, but—”
“That’s all right: I didn’t want to know
while we were still within any sort of range of a certain IG M.C. being,” he
said hurriedly,
“No, that’s what I thought. Um, well, I
think, if my humble mammalian humanoid brain got anything like the gist of it,
which I don’t claim it did, that that sort of thing takes more of whatever it
is the it-being uses than the individual Trff can—uh—supply. Though ‘supply’
probably isn’t the word.”
BrTl joined her in eyeing their Chief
Engineer somewhat nervously. It went on sitting there like a ball of pale green
fluff. Finally he said feebly: “Does it, Trff?”
“‘More’ isn’t exactly the word,” it murmured.
There was a pause.
“Nor is ‘use’,” it murmured.
They waited, but it appeared to think it
had answered them. Tacitly they agreed to give up.
“Let’s hope it works,” he sighed, creaking
to his feet. “I’ll look in on him, but don’t expect me to do anything about
anything,” he warned. “Especially not about handy humanoid excreta-moppers.”
The ship informed him brightly it was
taking care of all that, so he creaked off, feeling a bit better, to look. The
Admiral was blowing bubbles and making crowing noises and playing with his
toes. He looked clean, and as far as it was possible to tell with immature
humanoids, appeared happy, so BrTl shrugged and left him to it.
“It’s got him in a sort of nest of senso-tissues,”
he reported.
“Clean ones?” said his Captain, swallowing.
“As far as I could tell, yes.”
“Good.”
“And Fl’Oo-ooueroii and Fl’Jfaffl are in
there, sort of... cooing at him, I think’s the word.”
“Good. –Hold on: they’re not trying to feed
him, are they?” she gulped.
No, confirmed the ship.
“Oh, good,” said Jhl, sagging.
BrTl waited, but she didn’t hurry off to
check up on Admiral Vt R’aam. He eyed her sideways but didn’t say anything.
“Ow!” gasped BrTl
“Ow!” whistled Trff.
“GREAT SPLINTERED SHARDS OF QUOG!” shouted
Jhl.
Sorry, Captain.
“That’s perfectly all right. It isn’t your
fault that Old Rthfrdia’s still got a World Shield up,” said Jhl courteously to
her ship as World Shield Alarms went off all round them and Space Patrol
vessels swooped towards them from all points of the quadrant.
“How can they afford it?” croaked BrTl.
“I—” Jhl broke off, as the demand to STAND
AND DELIVER, THIS IS THE INTERGALACTIC SPACE PATROL! momentarily
immobilised, in fact nigh to crystallised, their thought processes.
“I’ve always wondered what you’re supposed
to deliver,” admitted BrTl morosely, tapping the side of his head cautiously.
“Ouch! –Given that their probes are going to find it anyway.”
The ship’s manifest, First,
explained the ship politely.
“Clears that mystery up,” he noted sourly.
“Yeah,” agreed his Captain. “–I was about to say, I don’t suppose they can
afford it, and I’d bet a raft or two of oddlis that it isn’t Old Rthfrdia
that’s paying for it.”
“Ugh,” he noted glumly.
Trff had been remarkably silent, not even
an emanation, since its initial “Ow!” Now it admitted sadly: “It should have
looked. It apologises, Captain.”
“That’s all right, Trff,” said Jhl with a
sigh. “I should have asked you to look.”
And they all fell glumly silent. Though
BrTl did mutter under his breath, as a Space Patrol Captain with her shades
lowered ascertained that their bubbling, cooing, undeclared supernumerary was
Admiral Lord Shank’yar Vt R’aam: “Whim!”
“–And wham!” he concluded sourly as they
were ushered none-too-gently at the business end of a probe into a large, grey,
featureless hangar in the quarantined section of the Old Rthfrdia spaceport and
a slim, elegant, dark-haired humanoid figure in IG M.C. Collector’s uniform
strolled unhurriedly towards them.
“Wham, indeed, Lieutenant,” agreed
Collector Athlor Raj Kadry politely, eyeing them sardonically. “Welcome to Old
Rthfrdia. Or should it be, Welcome back?”
No-one replied. There seemed very little
point in it, really.
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