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Drift of Night, Part One (standard:science fiction, 2610 words) | |||
Author: Vincent Collevera | Added: Apr 04 2010 | Views/Reads: 2936/2077 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Captain Katherine Rimes comes from a long line of highly skilled pilots. Being the black sheep of the family, she has opted for a career in cargo transport rather than the military like her brother, both parents, grandparents, and so on. En route to the | |||
Captain Katherine Rimes powered down the thrusters on her C class cruiser and allowed inertia to carry her into the parabolic slingshot orbit around the larger moon of some small insignificant planet near the Outer Ring. The end of that slingshot would throw her into a larger one around the planet that would put her on a vector for her final destination and allow her the acceleration needed to make a Jump. "Captain, sensors indicate a distress beacon in field quadrant seven. Would you like to send a probe?" The onboard A.I. had a calm baritone she had been looking for in a man for years now. She hated that her best friend was housed in a series of crystal wires and nanochip super computers. It figured. "Yes, send out a probe and bounce a relay message from the planet back towards Prime HQ." She sighed. Damned tourists, probably. They came out here in their Corvette Interplanetaries thinking they could copy the parabolic orbits to slingshot system to system all the way out to the Colonies. Idiots. "Captain, probe indicates no signs of life. The craft is not in the database. Would you like to-" "Yes, Beowulf. I want to swing over and deviate from course and possibly lose time and be hours or even a whole day late with this shipment of fruit and designer clothes. Deploy the arm and find me that docking hatch. And unlock the dashboard lighter, please. I just cleaned your scrubbers and I want a cigarette." "Yes, Captain." The A.I. had a distinctly disapproving tone. "I still think you should quit smoking." He said desultorily. "And why is that, Beowulf?" She asked conversationally while lighting the tip of the thin white stick in her mouth. "Because aside from clogging my scrubbers and interfering with my internal sensors, it turns your teeth yellow and makes your breath smell terrible." He replied matter-of-factly. She choked attempting to laugh with lungs full of smoke. "And it's unhealthy, obviously." Cpt. Rimes shook her head and blew the next mouthful of smoke directly into one of his video sensors at the helm. "I'll take my chances. Now, what about that hatch?" The endless night outside the cockpit resolved itself into a small craft that tumbled through the nothingness on its way into the depth of the small planet's gravity well. "Correct that tumble and clamp it in place with the arm." She spoke with authority she only felt on her ship. The little probe she'd deployed earlier shot in and attached itself to the tumbling craft and fired directional bursts of compressed gas and gradually corrected the spin to orient it with the Geatland. The small craft was like nothing she had ever seen before. For one thing, it was entirely too small to have an adequate propulsion system onboard. For another, it was likely too small to have much in the way of life support, either. It looked as though it may be some type of cryogenic life-raft. The robotic arm reached out slowly and snagged a hold on the probe with its electromagnet before pulling back alongside her ship. "Beowulf, why didn't you attach the magnet to the hull and why am I not oriented on the hatch?" She asked with a touch of annoyance in her tone. "Because, Captain; the hull is not magnetic and there is no hatch. Obviously." Came the dulcet tones over the com. She thought for a few microseconds before giving the order. "Make a seal and cut a hole, then. I want to know what's in there. And get us back on course before you get us so hopelessly behind schedule that we end up without a job." "Yes, Captain. I will correct your course corrections now. The dock will be from Bay Nine." He said calmly. He never got flustered. No matter how much she tried to prickle him. Damn computers. Especially male computers. She got up from her Captain's chair and started jogging down the long corridor to the docking bays. The muted grays, blacks, and browns of the metal bulkheads repeated monotonously through her course. Once again, she wondered fleetingly if her ship could do with a little sprucing up, maybe a dash of pink here, some pastels there. By the time she got to the docking bays, she was slightly out of breath. The ship's A.I. came over the com, "There's another reason you should quit." She made a rude gesture in the direction of the nearest video Click here to read the rest of this story (175 more lines)
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Vincent Collevera has 11 active stories on this site. Profile for Vincent Collevera, incl. all stories Email: vincentcollevera@yahoo.com |