Friday, June 29, 2018

Miami Pete 9

Miami Pete 9:

I don't know how long I sat there with, well, not really Pete anymore, just his body. My rescuer was dead, and it was my fault because I couldn't save him.

"Quit being stupid, when in doubt MOVE!" I heard Pete's voice say, yelling at me from my memories. He was right of course, it was time to go.

I hated leaving Pete's body there, but it was supposedly a 'rus shrine.  What better place to lay to rest than in a shrine. Better than ending up at the recyclers on Deltos.  I would have taken him with me and buried him... where? "In Space"? Maybe Pete would have liked that, maybe not. In the short term, it didn't matter. I wasn't any more able to drag a dead Pete's body out to the transport than I was a live Pete, and despite bringing extra air bottles, air was getting short enough that it couldn't be helped.

I decided to leave the tent. I don't know why. The idea of leaving Pete's body there without any protection felt wrong. I dragged the rest back to the transport and just dropped it in the back. In the back of my mind, I noticed that not securing equipment was so unlike me, but I didn't have the energy to care. What would I do without Pete?  How would I go on? Speaking of "go", just where did I think I would go anyway?

"One step in front of the other" I told myself. "One bite of the elephant" I heard Pete from my memories. He never could explain that one to me. Elepahnt? The heavy freighter built by Trans Planetary shipyard? Why? How would anyone eat one of those? They are huge and made out of metal, and not even remotely digestible. I remembered him trying to explain that an elepahnt was a large ancient earth animal with a long nose, and laughing at my confusion when I asked what they tasted like only to be told that people didn't really eat them. I found myself smiling at the memory, with tears streaking my face. I don't think I'll ever really understand the elephant thing, but it was so nice to see Pete's smiling and laughing face.

The drive back to Hauley took almost seven hours. I drove mechanically, taking risks without even noticing. I couldn't bring myself to care. It's a wonder that I survived the trip. By the time I reached Hauley, the radiation sensor on my suit was angry, red, almost black, and the alarm sound was a solid buzz rather than just the tic tic tic that would normally be the warning that things were becomming unsafe. I was weak, sick, and close to just laying there and dying. I crawled into the airlock, cycled, then dragged myself to Hauley's little sick bay and into the autodoc. The last sound I heard was the fizz of a hypo.

I awoke, feeling groggy and out of sorts. I couldn't seem to open my eyes. My nose was attacked by the scent of the worst dead thing smell ever. It took me a while to fully come awake. In that in-between groggy state I wondered where that smell was coming from with growing unease. At one point, I was convinced that zombie Pete was standing over me, breathing on me, just waiting for me to open my eyes.

When I was finally able to move, I reached up and found my eyes crusted shut with gunk. It took me a few minutes to get them open and to my horror, I found out the smell was ME!

"How long have I been out?" I asked, realizing I was alone, so no answer was coming. Then I just knew the answer by accessing my built in chronometer. Had I been accessing it all this time without realizing it? My cronometer told me that I had been out a littl over a month. The very idea opened the floodgates on another bout of crying. I thought about trying to control it, but why bother, I was alone. I was a cyborg, and would never be human again.

Hey, at least it was washing some of the crud out of my eyes.

Eventually, in spite of myself I stopped crying.  I guess it is impossible to cry forever after all. I had to start moving. I was never one to sit still for long. Realizing that a little over a month had passed with me in the autodoc was a shock. A check of the autodoc's logs showed that it had kept me in a medical coma the whole time while it purged the radiation from my system and replaced various organs that had shut down. I will admit to a few seconds of horror at the idea of having engineered artificial replacement parts, but yea... apparently I'm a cyborg. The very idea still feels wrong and alien to me, but whats the point of crying about it?  An entire month had passed, Pete had been gone for over a month.  At least that explained the smell. An autodoc is a wonderful thing. If you manage to get a sick or injured person into one, they usually have a pretty good chance of surviving, but apparently it didn't bother cleaning up after itself.

First things first, I headed for the shower. I'm usually a "but first, coffee" kind of person, yet another habit I picked up from Pete, but even at my worst on Deltos I had never gone a whole month without bathing. The water felt incredible and I was surprised that it didn't sluff of of my body in the redish brown of the 'rus world.

Then came cleanup duty in Hauley's little sick bay.  It took scrubbing everything for what seemed like hours to get the smell out.

Hauley was still in good condition.  The radiation didn't get past the outer hull, or more to the point, the gravitonic shielding built into her hull, and the diagnostic board was once again all green lights. After a few days of cleaning and maintenance, I realized what I was doing.  I was waiting for Pete to come back...  but he never would. It was time to face it.

The hatch to Pete's office never seemed like a scary thing before. I had been in and out of that doorway for years, with never a second thought, but it seemed so stark and final without the man. Don't get me wrong, Pete was a morose, hard man most of the time, but there were times, like cashing in on a particularly lucrative haul or pulling off something that someone said was impossible, that Pete would laugh heartily.  Those times usually involved mass quantities of alcohol, but hey, with a man like Pete, you take the good times when you could get them. Most importantly, he was never a cruel man. The doorway to Pete's office... that felt cruel.

"Move!" Pete's voice demanded from my memories.  He never had much patience for frailty.

The hatch was closed, which I thought was odd because Pete always liked to leave it open.  However, the hatches all close automatically in preparation for an atmospheric landing, so perhaps not too odd.  My hand print on the sensor only produced a sharp beep.  Locked then.

"Well, Pete told me to go in there, and it's not like he's going to show up and unlock it for me."  I told myself.

Out came my multi-tool, and within a few minutes the locking mechanism was in pieces. Trusting locks is for the gullable, especially when you have someone like me around. Yet, it felt like a betrayal, like I was messing with Pete's stuff as soon as his back was turned, but I pushed that aside and cranked the hatch open with the manual crank.  I would have to put it all back together later.

Pete's office was exactly as I remembered, complete with whiskey bottle with only the dregs of perhaps one last shot in the bottom.  The safe where he told me to look for paperwork was built into the floor behind his desk.  I pulled the cover away and found the safe to be locked as usual.  I sighed, what was one more thing I would have to break into? It's not like I had anywhere else to be.

My eyes landed on the whiskey bottle. Pete was big on the whole "take a shot, make a toast" thing, and since I couldn't give him a proper send off, perhaps he  would approve of a toast.  I found a shot glass, and up-ended the bottle and poured. "To Pete" I said quietly.  The shot went down rough.  As I was coughing, I imagined Pete standing there patting my back like he did the last time we took a shot together... or more like the last time Pete browbeat-ed me into taking a shot.  I've never been good at drinking hard liquor, although I found myself wishing there was more than one shot left in the bottle. Then I noticed a label on the bottom of the whiskey bottle. "639826"  the tag insisted.  How like Pete.

The safe opened with a hiss of air.  It was one of the models that depressurize a little to help keep the contents sealed in.  Inside was a large envelope, and a rack of chips. The chip in front was a holo chip that was marked "kid", which is what Pete had always called me.

It struck me then that I didn't have a name. What an odd thing to realize about oneself. I sat there for long minutes trying to remember what my name was, and came up with a blank. Pete called me "kid", but that wasn't my name. Other people had names. Pete for one, and Old Joe, Pete's friend from Alsetti had a name. I'm sure the boss monk and the other monk had names. I chided myself for not finding out what they were, tracking the monks down and killing them for betraying us was going to be awful hard if I didn't know their names.

Killing them? Where did that idea come from?

Friday, June 22, 2018

Miami Pete 8:


Our destination coordinates were a short way from the road, up a ravine.  We parked the wheeled transport off the side of the road at the mouth of the ravine. The area was as uneven and rocky as we expected from when we looked at the topigraphical scan.  I was surprised to see what appeared to be a path heading up the ravine the way we needed to go.

"Ok, we'll go ahead.  You two stay with the truck" Boss monk bossed, indicating that he intended to leave Pete and I behind.

"No doing" Pete replied. "We're going with you."

"You maybe, but that thing isn't allowed in the holy shrine." said the boss monk, pointing at me. If I hadn't gotten to the point that I seriously disliked the boss monk yet, that sure did the trick.  Thing?  He called me a THING?!

There was a dramatic few minutes of silence as Pete and the boss monk squared off. I was afraid that they would come to blows, which is not an advisable thing to do while in survival suits, especially when surrounded by such a thin, unbreathable atmosphere.  One crack or split of a suit, and the wearer would be quickly dead.  I mentally located where my tool kit was. Patch kit, third pocket from the end, right hand side, and held my breath ready to act in case something happened to Pete's suit.  The boss monk, I decided, was on his own.

"Fine," Pete finally spat, then he took a breath to calm himself and said to me "Stay with the transport."

"but..."

"Please... stay with the transport."

I was dissapointed, but surely now that we found what the monks were looking for our business arrangement with them wouldn't last too much longer.  I sure was looking forward to leaving those two behind.  Well, boss monk anyway. Other monk ignored me too, but he never seemed to put quite the same amount of disgust into it that the boss monk did.

Pete walked over to the transport waving at me to join him. "Help me make sure my pack is ready."

We went through his pack, which I thought was odd since I knew Pete had carefully packed before we left Hauley in such a way as to know what he had and where everything was. It was a trick he passed down to me shortly after I joined him on Hauley. Always know what is in your kit, and where it is in your kit, so you don't have to search for something if you need it to save your life.  Then Pete did an odd thing. He got my attention and looked me straight in the eyes through our masks, then looked down at his hand patting a locked metal container and with his other hand, pulled something out of a pocket on his suit and placed it in my hand.  Then held a finger up in front of his face mask in the universal shushing sign.  He had his back to the monks, so that they couldn't have seen what he was doing.

"Stay with the transport."

I nodded, although I didn't understand what it all meant.

Then Pete turned, donned his pack, and began the climb up the ravine path with the monks.

I waited till they climbed out of sight and looked down at what he had given me. It was a key.

I spent a couple minutes fretting over what I should do. Pete had shown me a box and then given me a key, so obviously I was intended to open it.  Also Pete had hidden the entire exchange from the monks. But why? All that time, Pete had been palling around with the monks.  Befriending them. Eating dinner with them. Why would he be keeping things from them now?

I decided I had to open the box.

Have you ever been in one of those situations where you knew you needed to do something, and that something seemed like such a simple thing, but the outcome ended up being so far outside what you expected that you just stood there like an idiot afterwards?

Inside the box was a gun.

I knew that Pete kept a small cache of weapons in his quarters on Hauley. I had even done repairs and upgrades to some of them over the years. Why did Pete have a gun here? And why had he shown it to me? Didn't he trust the monks?

I sat and waited and pondered. "Stay with the transport." Pete had said. So I did.  I stayed with the transport.

One hour.

Two hours.

Three.

That was bad. Even if Pete and the monks showed up right then we would be hard pressed to make it to the safety of Hauley before the radiation started making it's way past our surival suits. I rechecked my survival suit's indicators. Yep, it was bad.

As I was fretting and pacing back and forth, my comm finally crackled to life.

"...elp, me.... hel....eee" It was Pete. His voice was raspy and gasping. I knew it. I started running for the path, then turned around silently cursing myself and went back to grab a rescue kit that I had put together that included extra air tanks, first aid supplies, and a rescue tent. The survival suits should have had plenty of air for the complete trip, but you know me, I'm paranoid. On a quick second thought, I grabbed the gun also. I don't know what I would do with it. Those things had always made me uncomfortable. In my life before Pete and Hauley, I had seen quite a few friends gunned down by the gangs and criminals on Deltos IV.

As I climbed the path, half carrying, half dragging the rescue kit, a ways off to the side I heard, then saw as I turned, the side of one of the bigger rocky hills collapse revealing a hanger door.  Then the hanger door opened and with a roar, a 'rus ship emerged.  I had seen a few 'rus ships up to that point. Even been followed by one for a while on Hauley if you recall.  They all look a little different, but they are all unmistakably 'rus.  I stared stupidly as the 'rus ship flew over head and then blasted for space.

Then I recalled Pete. "Pete! Pete! Are you there?" I yelled into my comm unit. What I got back was static. Just background noise? Or maybe it's Pete trying to contact me? Logicly, I couldn't tell.  It was just static, but my heart told me it was Pete, and I better had better move it because he was in trouble.

Silently cursing myself for wasting time gawking, I ran on.

At the end of the path, I found a half open door.  Squeezing past, I entered a dark complex. There was a little light from the doorway, so I could see a path in the dust that Pete and the monks had come that way. I turned on my light and followed the path made by their passage.  The trail lead through an entryway, It must have been from before the planet lost it's atmosphere becuase I noticed the lack of an airlock.  The walls could only be described as 'rus-like. You know how I said that while all 'rus ships were different, there was no mistaking that a ship was 'rus? The walls, and doorways, and floor, basically everything I saw had that same 'rusy-ness to it.

The trail turned from the entryway to a grand hallway where it turned into and came out of various doorways. I peeked into some of the rooms. There were varying levels of rubbish strewn around in the rooms. Furnature, tables, and other things I couldn't identify, but it was all in pieces.  It all looked to be so old that it had just collapsed.

Just as I was about to move on after looking in a room, I saw movement. Shining my light in that direction, I saw Pete.  Lying in a pool of blood.  His suit had been torn from his head and... something... had been attached. Pete was desperately holding the mask of his survival suit to his face.

Not good.

I pulled the survival rescue tent out of the rescue kit, quickly kicked some debree out of the way to make space, and pulled the chord to activate it.  Whitin a second the tent was up.  I dragged Pete in with all my strength and sealed the door. In next to no time, we had atmosphere.

Pete didn't look so good. I pulled his survival suit away. He was barely concious, bleeding, and had a device, somewhat like a helment, on his head.  No, it was attached to his head. Mounted there. Pete didn't usually have a thing on his head, maybe he was balding a little and sometimes wore a hat, but never anything like this thing.

"kid... kid..."

"Don't talk Pete, we have to figure out how to stabilize you and get you back to Hauley and into the autodoc."  I was paniced and found myself crying.

"The monks double crossed us. They hit me from behind and tried to put this thing on me. They tried to make me like you." Pete said.  What was he talking about?

"What is this thing?" I asked crying as I tried to figure out how to get it off.  I couldn't even see out how it was attached.

"It's a cyber device. A primitive one compared to yours, but it didn't work. For some reason it didn't hook up to my brain. I don't think they knew what they were doing." Pete answered.

"Cyber device?  I don't have a cyber device! What are you talking about?" I reached up and touched my head as if to prove him wrong... but there it was.  Smaller and smoother than the clunky thing that was attached to Pete's head, but there none the less.

Pete must have seen the confusion on my face. "I found you on a refuse pile behind one of the cyber factories on Deltos IV.  They must have thought you were defective so they threw you out.  We were there to do a job, but the whole thing went south.  I was the only one who survived, and the Haul-o-caster was in real bad shape, so I was stranded.  I found you while scrounging for parts.  Took you back to the Haul-o-caster, and you started fixing things.  When you got the ship repaird enough to leave, I took you with me."

"That's silly, I'm not a cyborg.  I can't be.  Those things are clones that had no life before.  I'm a girl. I had a family."  I replied. "besides, people hate cyborgs.  They freak people out.  That's why they don't make them anymore."

"Why do you think I kept you away from people?  Why do you think our pasangers didn't want to acknowledge you?"  I could tell that Pete was fading fast.  He'd lost a lot of blood.

I was crushed. I didn't know what to say, or how to feel.  How could I be a cyborg and not know it all this time. There is this thing on my head!  How did I not notice this thing on my head? But logically it answered a lot of questions.  I fix things, but I have no memory of learning how to do that, except for the one or two shortcuts that Pete had taught me, and lets face it.  Most of those were death traps.  I didn't sleep.  I basically learned how to navigate and fly a ship in less than a week.

Soon, because I'm not a crybaby, my thoughts got back on the problem at hand.  A check of the sensors built into the rescue tent showed that we were far enough under ground that we weren't being bombarded by quite so much radiation.  It still wasn't perfectly safe, but we weren't in imminent danger of dying from it.  This was all helped by the rescue tent being resistant. I had packed a spare survival suit, and a backup to the spare for that matter, in the transport.  Hey, it's designed to haul cargo.  It wasn't like we didn't have the room.  So I could get Pete into a freash suit.  I thought I could get the suit over the big thing on his head, but I wasn't absolutely sure.  Then I could... what?  No way I could carry him down that rocky path without risking a tear in one of our suits.  Carrying Pete on a light grav space station was one thing.  Carrying him on a planet with just a bit more than standard gravity, not quite a heavy world, but more than earth normal.  Impossible.

Pete coughed, and blood came out, which caused more coughing.  Once he was able to get air "This thing is killing me.  I can feel it still digging, I won't last much longer.  Get back to the ship, it's yours.  The paperwork is in the safe in my office, it's all nice and legal.  Go, have a nice life.  Don't let anyone give you any crap."  With that, Pete went into another coughing fit.  I tried and tried to get him more air.  I tried everything I could think of.  I cussed at him to stop, to breathe.

Then he was gone.

Monday, June 18, 2018

Miami Pete 7:


While Pete and I were searching the topical scan, I sneaked a closer look at the coordinates.  It didn't look like much, the whole area was uneven and rocky.  I couldn't see anything there that distinguished it from the surrounding area.  There were very few flat places where a ship like Hauley could put down easily, and nowhere that other supposedly atmosphere capable ships could land.  Atmosphere capable, of course, only means "can land on a planet".  While the planet didn't actually have much atmosphere if any, the ability to land on a planet is still called "Atmosphere capable".

As we were talking about the planet, Pete started calling it "'rus One" which I found silly because it should have been "'rus Three" being the third planet in the system, but once Pete got spun up about something, there was no correcting him. So, "'rus One" it became.

We eventually decided upon a nice flat spot a ways away from the target coordinates.  There were a couple sites that were closer, but the one we decided in was on a wide spot in one of those lines that I had been thinking of as roads.  The topical scan, done once we arrived in orbit so it had much better grandularity, seemed to agree with my conclusion. More importantly, that "road" passed not far from our destination.  The other sites we fond didn't look to have anything connecting them to the road system or our destination. With how rocky and uneven the surface was, we decided the extra distance over the hopefully relatively flat road would be much easier than climbing over-land.  Especially since we would all have to be in heavy survival suits. As an added advantage, using the road would allow us to use wheeled transport rather than walk.  Pete had bought the wheeled transport for a haul to a colony world where the colonial government insisted that all landings take place at the space port so they could inspect the shipment for contraband. We then had to deliver it overland by truck from there. When Pete made it sound like we weren't going to take the load, the client offered to pay extra, so Pete said "Free truck" and we went with it.

The landing was uneventful. Pete took the controls himself saying that he didn't trust the Haul-o-caster to anyone when setting down on such an unknown place. I think he just loves to pilot Hauley.

The planet did have a thin atmosphere after all. It was the usual mix for a methane world but very thin, almost nonexistant. Definiteley not enough atmosphere to support life. It was cold but not as cold as methane worlds usually tended to be. Probably due to the unusual solar activity.  We certainly weren't going to see any methane snow, and I doubted we were even going to see any of those famous methane lakes that methane worlds were known for. It was just too warm for methane to condense in a liquid form.

I spent the next day checking gear, getting the wheeled transport out of cargo three, and making sure it wasn't going to break down on us.  After taking a look at the road in person, Pete figured that barring any unforseen problems we would be able to travel to the coordinates in around six hours. The survival suits were good for 24 hours, but with the cold and extra solar radiation, I figured it wouldn't be a good idea to be outside Hauley's graviton field for much more than 12 hours.  I told Pete... He told the monks, and generally we had agreement all around. Of course, the monks wouldn't take it directly from me.

I had an odd feeling as we set off in the wheeled transport. It made me realize that I hadn't been far from Hauley since I was rescued from Deltos.  Pete had all the contacts and would make the deals. I usually stayed on board except for an occasional trip to a nav data merchant which were usually right there on the docs, or on a rare occasion to a bar with Pete to make sure he came home ok. On those occasions Pete always stuck to the bars that were close. Pete always warned me to stay out of sight and not to talk to anyone. I always wore a cape with a hood pulled up to keep my features hidden.  Now I was going on an adventure to the temple of the 'rus! As much as I felt a sense of forboding as we rounded the bend and Hauley gradually creeped out of sight, I was excited!

The road was ancient and in horrid disrepair.  We drove between massive sink holes and around huge bolders in the road.  We completely lost the road at one point, but was able to pick it up again before long.  It was relatively obvious which way the road was going. A few times we had to get out and search around for a way forward, and on one occasion we had to blast some of the bolders and clear a way for ourselves.

I found myself missing Hauley more and more, which was strange since I had never been prone to sentimentality.  When you grow up on the streets like I did, you learn to let things go. This was different. The feeling was almost physical. Like there was something trying to tug me back to the ship. I didn't want to bother Pete about it, so I kept my mouth shut.

There was nothing new to me about being in a survival suit. I'd been in a survival suit on numerous occasions since I'd been on Hauley. A trip outside is occasionally required to make external repairs in space, and of course I was always the one who had to do them. I had always found time in a suit to be peaceful. I rather enjoyed it. Nothing there but me, Hauley, the stars, and my own thoughts. Occasionally Pete calling on the comm to check up on me. But those times were measured in minutes, perhaps a half hour, or in extreme cases an hour. An hour of walking outside on Hauley's hull with a welding torch fixing meteor or space debree damage, or a bag of tools to fix one of the exterior communications dishes, or a sensor array does nothing to prepare one for hours and hours of just sitting on a truck, bouncing around, isolated from everyone. Pete warned me against using the comm too much. He didn't think the monks would like it. So there wasn't even the prospect of conversation to while away the hours.

Just when I though I was going to go completely bonkers, we arrived.

Thursday, June 14, 2018

Miami Pete 6:


Always paraniod about safety, I took some extra sensor readings of our destination planet to make sure we would be safe.  I was sure we would be because Hauley's chasis had originally been part of a military ship and was built to military specifications and still had the Mil grade gravitonic shielding built in that would be like having our own little magnetosphere. We would be fine on Hauley even if we set down on the planet.

I puttered around for the few days until we reached the planet.  Studiously being ignored by the monks and by Pete whenever the Monks were around.  When the monks weren't around, Pete was a little more like his old self, only happier?  I did NOT know what to think about that, and started wondering if Pete was sneaking into some of the more recreation-applicable med supplies.

As we got closer to the planet, my sensor sweeps started paying off.  I'm not a planetary geoarcheologist or anything (is that even a thing?), but when I cranked the sensor resolution up to maximum, the readings were starting to look like the planet had indeed at one time been inhabited and presumably had once had an atmosphere.  I could find a few faint lines that might have been roads, and a couple places that might have once been cities. There was radiation everywhere, presumably from the wild solar activity. I couldn't find any evidence of that there was currently an atmosphere of any kind, but that might have been blown off by solar wind pressure.  I'd heard that could happen.

The day we reached the planet I made sure to be up on the bridge early.  I had learned in the short time the monks were aboard that if I tried to enter the bridge when Pete and the monks were up there, i was usually shut out.  However, if I managed to get there first, and I sat quietly at my station, they would act like they didn't notice I was there.  Hah!  Take that Boss Monk!  If you want to get rid of me at that point, you have to admit that I exist!

Yea, the whole ignoring me thing was starting to get to me. It was the small victories that kept me going.

Pete and the monks soon arrived, and huddled together over the central 3D display.  "Access the planetary map and put it on 3D" Pete ordered.

I complied.  I wanted to snip back that they wouldn't even have a planetary map if I hadn't taken it upon myself to use the sensor suite to ceate one, but I held my breath.  I didn't want to get kicked off the bridge.  Say what you want about me being a coward and how I should stand up for myself, I don't care.  After the last few years of constantly hauling cargo, with the recent engine refit being the most interesting thing that had happened.  I did not want to miss looking at a new planet and being in on... well... whatever they were doing. I love Hauley, make no mistake, but there hadn't even been any malfunctions to keep me entertained.  I was going stir crazy.  As it was, I had spent the sleep cycle refitting a backup to the spare secondary cargo hold three life support system.  Cargo hold three. One of the two external cargo holds that we don't usually bother running with life support activated because it's usually either empty or is carrying cargo that doesn't require life support service.  Anything that we haul that actually needs life support we would put in cargo hold one because clients get upset if you put delicate cargo, as in anything that would be harmed by not having active life support, in an external cargo hold.

Over the next hour and a half, Pete and the monks quietly conferred around the 3D display.  One or the other of the monks would quietly tell Pete something and he would yell out coordinates.  Which I would dutifully input, move the display, and highlight.  I kept watch on my workstation display, trying to figure out what they were looking for.  It all looked the same to me.  Reddish brown rock, after reddish brown rock, after reddish brown rock.

Finally, "That's it!" Boss Monk exclaimed.  Whatever he had found, it sure make him happy.  The monks were all hugging eachother and shaking Pete's hand.  Big smiles all around.  I just stayed hidden as usual at my bridge station.  I didn't want no monk hugging on me anyway.

"Prep for atmospheric landing at those coordinates." Pete ordered.

I looked.  It didn't look anything like a landing zone.  If my measurements were correct, there wasn't going to be enough of a flat spot for Hauley to fit.  Hauley isn't the biggest cargo hauler in the business, not by a long shot.  A dozen Hauleys would fit in the big cargo hold of some of the big commercial haulers, but those ships couldn't land on the surface like Hauley could.  I needed to say something, but with those monks there I didn't want to talk.  I had already gotten chewed out a few times for talking too much around the monks.

Thankfully, after a while the monks finally left. "Pete, there isn't enough room to land Hauley at those coordinates!"  I said it quickly in hope that the monks wouldn't return.

"Huh, would you look at that. I was so excited that we found it, that I didn't think to check.  Thanks."  Pete replied.

Pete and I spent the next hour going over landing places.  Just the two of us.  It was like old times.

Friday, June 1, 2018

Miami Pete 5:


Pete pulled a data chip from his pocket and pushed it into the the slot on the nav console. After a few minutes the screen on the nav console blinked to life with the image of a system. Looking at the console, I could see that the nav data that Pete had uploaded, while it wasn't very detailed, was indeed a match for the system. Where had he gotten that data chip?

Nav data chips in general are relatively easy to come by. Nearly every space port, station, fuel depot, or any other place one might dock or land a ship will have a nav merchant of some type. Sometimes in the form of an automated kiosk, sometimes an office with an actual person, where for a few creds anyone can purchase the nav data for the surrounding sector of space. Sometimes a nav merchant will have data from beyond the sector, usually gotten from people like me. Pete and I travel pretty far and wide on Hauley, going wherever a load will take us, and I've suped up our nav scanner suite to update our nav data using the sensors wherever we go. I'm sometimes able to package up that nav data for various out-of-the-way sectors and sell it to make a bit of pocket money. Pete doesn't seem to mind as long as it doesn't interfere with my duties. However, I hav no idea how Pete had gotten this particular nav data. Judging from the numbers on the screen we were WAY off the beaten path on this one. Like "Where no one has gone before" kind of off the beaten path. Only, someone had to have, since it takes being there to get the kind of data we have. You can't get accurate enough readings from a telescope to create nav data.

"If we had the nav data on a chip, why did you wait until we got here to load it?" I asked Pete.

"To keep you from selling it to the highest bidder you little pirate." Pete replied with a smile. He seemed to be in a much better mood than usual. That was odd, since Pete was usually one of the most morose people that I had ever known, and that's saying something because I grew up on Deltos where being morose was practically the favorite pass time in that gods forsaken place.  You might say that it's the "way of my people".   It was nice to see him smile for once though.

Looking at the nav display, I could see that we were positioned pretty deeply into the system, sitting near the only displayed hyper-jump point marked on the nav data.  The system's star was a hairy little thing, small-ish for a system star, but seemingly trying to make up for it by spitting out solar flares at an alarming rate.  I had never seen anything like it.  The name of the star was marked with a data tag rather than a name. This is pretty common for a star or star system that hadn't been claimed by anyone. Like one that had been cataloged by telescope, but hadn't been traveled to. That didn't make sense in this case since Pete had that nav data, scant though it was.  Stars usually only get nice friendly names when someone stakes a claim to them.

The planets in the system, of which there were six, were all named with the same data tag and a letter, which is pretty standard.  "-A" for the closest to the star, "-B" for the next and so on.  Oddly enough, the planet that would have gotten the "-C" had some squiggly lines instead.  After a few minutes, I realized where I had seen similar lines.

"You jumped us to a 'rus system!" I exclaimed.

I had seen 'rus writing here and there.  As far as I knew, no humans could read it, but the 'rus tended to mark the outsides of their black ships with nearly equally dark gray writing very similar to this.

"Very good kid. Only took you a few minutes to figure that one out" came Pete's reply. "I know you've been studying nav, so set us a course to the 'rus planet. That way!" He pointed. Which of course was silly because pointing is ridiculously imprecise.

I set the course as ordered, using the nav data not the finger point, and got us under way.  The nav system estimated a three day journey, so I informed Pete.  In the mean time, I fired up the sensor suite to get a little more information about our surroundings and our destination.  The -B and -D planets were both gas giants which we might be able to drop the siphon into to siphon off some reactor mass if we needed it, which we probably would. The other planets were bare rocky planets. None of the planets were in the Goldilocks zone; that narrow band where a planet is close enough to the system star to be warm enough to support life but not too close. You know, "just right" like in the old earth fairy tale.  Our destination was the closest to being habitable, orbiting the star just a little to closely to be considered to be in the zone. It didn't have an atmosphere that I could detect, but it did appear to have a weak magnetosphere that might have once been able to protect the planet from the solar radiation if the star was more settled. It wouldn't be enough with the current level of solar activity.