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Drift of Night, Part One (standard:science fiction, 2610 words) | |||
Author: Vincent Collevera | Added: Apr 04 2010 | Views/Reads: 2937/2077 | 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 | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story sensor and began to change into one of the several zero-atmosphere suits velcroed to the wall outside the airlock. The suit was nearly skin-tight and difficult to get into, but with perseverance and a little elbow-grease she was able to manage. The heads-up display that was projected on the inner surface of the polarized visor showed her a readout of her vital signs and the time limit on her air supply. After a final check, she opened the inner airlock door and stepped in. The closing two-foot thick steel door made a loud grating noise that she could feel through the soles of her feet. She didn't need the HUD to tell her that her heart rate had just spiked; the inner airlock door closing behind her always made her nervous. She put herself through a breathing exercise to relax and watched as her pulse returned to normal before hitting the combination of buttons on the keypad on the wall that flushed the atmosphere out of the airlock. The knowledge of being in a vacuum was a sensation that raised the hairs on the back of her neck, even after all these years. She knew there was no actual tactile difference to her from within the confines of her suit aside from it being slightly less skin-tight, but that made little difference to her instincts of self-preservation. She hit the final command on the keypad and the outer airlock door opened with a muted grind that vibrated the soles of her boots. Belatedly, she grabbed the safety cable that would clip to her belt and keep her from free-floating out into the abyss if the docking clamps came loose and secured it to herself. "Distracted, Captain?" Beowulf murmured in her earpiece. It always threw her how intimate his voice sounded when it was coming from a microphone millimeters from her ear as opposed to the omni-directional sound in the ship. "I'm fine. Track me during my progress and if I fail to respond to your queries, reel me in." She ordered more brusquely than she had intended. She had to fight the urge to apologize to the computer program. He was so human sometimes! And he would probably get offended if she said that. She took the few steps forward necessary to carry her across the Bay floor and into the foreign vessel. The moment she set foot on the deck of the other ship, she bounced towards the ceiling. There was no artificial gravity in effect here. She caught herself on the ceiling with her hands and absorbed the force by bending her arms and stopped herself. A slight push was all she needed to touch her feet lightly to the deck again. She used the small keypad on her left forearm to activate the Gecko adhesive system on the underside of her boots. The soles of her boots extended micro-thin fibers with split ends that created a super-static bond with whatever surface they were on at a nearly molecular level. The Gecko system would keep her from being sucked out of the ship in the event of a massive hull breech. Or they would allow her to stick to the non-metallic deck of an alien vessel without artificial gravity. The interior of the ship was not at all what she expected to find. It was completely hollow with no lights that she could see nor electronics of any kind. The twin beams from her helmet's flashlights cut through particles of dust suspended in the emptiness, disturbed now into swirls and gyrations by her entrance. In the center of the void-space was a large crate roughly seven feet long by three and a half feet wide and two feet tall. It almost looked like a particularly flat coffin. “Okie, dokie then.” She muttered the archaic phrase to herself in puzzlement. Upon closer inspection, she saw that the container was completely seamless from what she could see and unadorned. “I've found what appears to be a container of some kind. I'm going to attempt to lift it by hand and bring it on board for further scanning and study. Bio-seal Bay Nine and prepare to bring the craft into the repair dock.” She said into the microphone in her helmet. There was no reply; not even static. “Beowulf, respond.” Her command went unanswered again. Feeling apprehensive now, she placed her hands on the top edge of the container and pushed gently. True to her intentions, it tilted up on edge. She estimated that it took close to ten minutes of small adjustments and motion to float the object toward the airlock back into her ship. Estimation was necessary because the HUD appeared to be on the fritz with the com. Her vitals still showed, but the time had stopped. The moment the rear end of the container left the threshold of the alien vessel, it dropped heavily to the deck of the Bay. She stumbled into it and began to float over it. The same rules applied to her as to the crate. Cursing, she lifted herself back onto her feet. “That was fast, Captain. Very fast.” The intimate baritone murmuring in her ear sent a momentary tingle up her spine. “Stop doing that.” She snapped. “And what do you mean that was fast, I was in there at least fifteen minutes while some kind of interference silenced the com. By the way, why the hell didn't you reel me in?” She asked in annoyance. “Captain, you were inside for a total of two-point-seven seconds before the foreign object dropped to my deck.” His voice only ever had hints of inflection, but long acquaintance with him had taught her to read the subtle differences. He was scared. It made sense that he would be. Temporal displacement was still only a theory, and not a very sound one at that. To keep panic or shock from setting in, she put her hands to use stripping off the tether and shutting the airlock doors. "Beowulf, I need the Dolly to get this thing moved to storage and then we need to get the hell out of here. Set course corrections to get us back on schedule and pull the craft into Bay Nine. I'll be in the cockpit as soon as I'm done strapping down this space-coffin." Her voice sounded steady and her hands didn't shake, so she took it as a good sign and continued working. The Dolly came rolling smoothly down the corridor on its tank treads and stopped in front of her. She activated her forearm-mounted interface and used the holographic control console that popped up to operate the Dolly. It extended two thin forks from its front and maneuvered around to one end of the crate. The forks slid easily under the edge and all the way down its length before lifting up and retracting back onto the top of the machine. Long hours of practice using this equipment for much the same thing during maintenance between offload and load up made it a quick, easy process. She strapped it to the Dolly, which weighed in at a little over a ton and had electromagnets built into it to secure it to the deck. A typed command into the holopanel sent it to the cargo hold in Bay 9 and had it secure itself between a pair of large plasteel containers. That finished, she properly stowed her away suit, tether, and harness and jogged back up to the cockpit. Her captain's chair was still warm when she sat down, panting, and lit another cigarette. "How do we look?" She asked around the filter in her mouth. "I look like I haven't been washed in a decade and you look much the same, Captain. As far as our course, a few more adjustments and we should only be roughly two and one half hours behind schedule. What do you plan on doing with the object and craft now that they are on board?" She chewed her lower lip in contemplation while she strapped back in. "It's only been a few days since my last shower and I had the ship detailed before we left, so quit complaining. And I want to know what's inside that crate. Go ahead and set up a sterile room in the Infirmary and send the Dolly there. I'll go take a shower and then go there to see if I can cut it open. Do you know where I left the plasma torch?" She unstrapped herself again and headed back towards her cabin. “The plasma torch is on your tool belt, Captain. Water supply is optimal and the hot water has been repaired.” He was making his voice come from only one speaker at a time as she neared them. He did that sometimes to let her know he was paying attention to where she was. “Thanks, Beowulf. Turn off the video sensors in the cabin and have a maintenance bot take my belt to the Infirmary.” “Yes, Captain.” Came the reply. It was true that he was just an artificial intelligence program, but she still wasn't comfortable with the idea of him seeing her naked. He was just too human sometimes. She was certain that he was flirting with her on occasion and she wasn't quite sure how to take it. He was an older program, having come with the ship. It was said that after a while, certain subroutines became corrupted or damaged, causing quirks in personality. She didn't know for sure, though. Her shower was quick, and true to his word; it was hot. She stepped into the air dryer, where blasts of slightly above room-temp air would dry her much more quickly and thoroughly than a towel would. Navigating the minor disaster that was her quarters with the minimal effort of long acquaintance and dressing herself in a cleaner-smelling leotard, she sped down the causeway to the Infirmary. “Captain, I have taken the liberty of running a scan on the microbes attached to your suit when you returned from the alien vessel. Molecular composition indicates they were particles of humanoid life-forms, however genetic identification was impossible due to almost total destruction of tissues.” She sighed and shook her head as she palmed open the Infirmary doors. “Try again, Beowulf. In English, this time.” “In short, Captain; one or more humanoids were vaporized inside that vessel, likely by security protocols that are now inactive due to power failure.” The maintenance bot whirred quietly as it held her tool belt out towards her on one of its many little robotic arms. She could hear the blood rushing in her ears, and her heart was suddenly pounding like a pneumatic hammer. “You mean to say that I would have been vaporized by some alien booby-trap if the ship's batteries weren't kaput?” “In a nutshell, yes. You really do take entirely too many risks, Katherine. By the way, I attempted to scan the container you brought aboard, but it is impervious to my sensors. I have doubts as to whether or not you will be able to open it with a plasma torch.” Tweet
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Vincent Collevera has 11 active stories on this site. Profile for Vincent Collevera, incl. all stories Email: vincentcollevera@yahoo.com |