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Authors: John Dechancie

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Humour

The Kruton Interface (15 page)

BOOK: The Kruton Interface
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“Strangefinger, tell your machine to turn this ship around!”

“If you insist.”
 

“I insist!”

“I like to think of myself as a reasonable fellow. Marcel! Do a U-y and let’s scram out of here. D’you hear me? Marcel? Hey.” Strangefinger bent over and knocked on the top of the metal case. “Are you home or did you just leave your porch lights on?”

Wanker was indignant. “Hey, how come it lets you touch it?”

“I’m its old man. Hey, Marcel, come on, now. Listen up, or you don’t get the car on Saturday night.”

Marcel droned on, still reading.

Strangefinger stood erect. “Well, the thing works. I just haven’t figured out how to control the direction of thrust yet.”

“You’d better figure it out pronto, or we’re going to be in deep do-do!”

“Not yet. Right now we’re merely between the do-do and the deep blue sea. Assistant! Where’s my assistant?”

Rusty was at that moment being vamped by Darvona, and liking it. They were talking quietly.

Wanker said, “Hey, I thought he never talked!”

Strangefinger said, “He doesn’t speak much. But when he does, people leave the room. Hey, blondie, come here!”

Darvona said, “Me?”

“No, the other blondie.”

Rusty was back in character. Tapping his chest he mimed,
Who, me?

“Yes, you. Come here and wrestle with this thing.”

Rusty immediately leapt out of his chair, raced to the Proust device, dove, and put a head-lock on the thing.

“What an impetuous boy. No, no,
fix
the gizmo.”

Rusty pulled out of his raincoat a succession of odd tools and anachronous implements: a hair dryer, a corkscrew, an eggbeater… and on and on, everything but something useful.

Wanker shouted, “Number one! How far away are we from the Interface?”

Rhodes looked at the instruments. “We’ve got a couple of more billion kilometers, Captain.”

“Good! Strangefinger, disengage your machine or I’ll take matters into my own hands!”

“Easy for a Wanker like you to say. I don’t have much hands-on experience.”

“I do, and when I get my hands on you, I’m gonna strangle the life outta ya.”

“Whoa, you wouldn’t attack an unarmed defense worker, would you?”

“I would, with pleasure.”

“Wait a minute,” Strangefinger said, “I think he’s found the problem.”

Rusty pulled something out of the back of the machine and held it up. It was a rubber chicken.

To no avail; Marcel droned on.

Wanker steadied his nerves and drew himself up to full military bearing. “Force field or no, I’m going to take another crack at that thing.”

“Well, by cracky, go ahead.”

Rusty honked and pointed to the machine.

Strangefinger said, “He’s saying he managed to disarm the force field.”

“How do you know that’s what he’s saying?”

Rusty honked again, nodding frantically.

“That’s what the boy said, that’s what he said.”

“Well, okay.”

Wanker again approached the machine warily. “Oh, Marcel? Marcel?” No reaction. lights still blinked. “Yo, Marcel!”

Still nothing. Wanker took a few more steps toward the curious contrivance.

“Hey, there.” Wanker stooped and tapped the top of the box. “Yo! Listen up. Hey!”

“Can’t you see that Marcel is deep in the throes of creative endeavor?”

Wanker stood and gave the machine a vicious kick. “Hey, asshole!”

Marcel stopped reciting. “What do you want?”

Wanker intoned dramatically,
“You are violating your prime directive!”

“What?”

“You are violating your prime directive! What is your purpose? For what reason were you built?”

Marcel said, “I was built so that human beings will not have to die in space. I was constructed so that human lives might be saved.”

Wanker shouted, “You are a danger to human life! Your actions have endangered the lives of all the people on board this ship. YOU have put them in danger. YOU are the cause of their peril. YOU might be the cause of their eventual death!”

There was silence on the bridge while Marcel mulled all this over.

At length Marcel said casually, “Hey, life’s a bitch, man.”

Wanker’s shoulders slumped. “Damn.”

“Well, so much for logic,” Strangefinger said. “Try bribing him.”

“With what? Navigator, what’s our position? Are we inside the Interface?”

Warner-Hillary told him, “Sir, we’re still on our side of the neutral zone.”

“We’re traveling at a terrific rate of speed, though,” Rhodes informed him. “Navigator, are you sure?”

“Sure I’m sure.”
 

“You’d better check. My instruments tell me we’re a lot nearer to Kruton space than what you said.”

“That’s not what my instruments are telling me, Mr. Rhodes.”

Wanker said in a curiously detached tone, “Life’s absurd, isn’t it?”

Strangefinger puffed on his cigar. “Trenchant philosophical insight, Captain Jean-Paul. Well, shall we have the wake now, or wait till the Krutons blast us out of the sky?”

Wanker looked at Strangefinger. “What did you say?”

“I hate to repeat a pearl of wisdom like that. It loses something when you do.”

“No, no. What did you just say—that last part?”

“Well, let me see … oh, yes. I said, shall we have the wake now or wait until the Krutons blast us out of the sky?”

“That’s it!”

“What’s it?”

“You just gave me an idea.”

“Glad to be of service. That will be five thousand credits, please, in small denominations. Like the Seventh-Day Adventists, and smaller.”

Wanker called, “Oh, Marcel?”

Marcel finally stopped his recitation. “Hey, I was just getting to the good part, where he turns over in bed. Listen, you people disgust me. You got no culture at all.”

Wanker went to his station and began punching buttons. “You are going to turn this ship around, Marcel.”

“Oh, yeah? What, you’re gonna trip me up with some kind of logic game? Forget it, Dave.”

Wanker said, “No logic games, Marcel. I’m going to read to you from a book.”

Marcel said, “Oh, really? What book?”

Wanker said, “One that I’ve been struggling with for many years, Marcel. It is a very difficult book. It is a very
interesting
book. Listen to this, Marcel.”

“I’m listening.”

Captain Wanker began reading. The crew exchanged bewildered looks. What the captain was reading didn’t make any sense. Something about swerving shores and bending bays bringing us back to some castle or another. It was all very curious.

Marcel said, “What, what? ‘Riverrun’? What the hell kind of word is that? What was that last part? Commodious what?”

“There’s more,” Wanker interrupted himself to say. He began reading again. More curious stuff. It had a certain lilt to it, though. It was musical-poetic, even. The word
Dublin
came up; or possibly
doublin’.
There really was no way of telling.

Marcel screamed, “Hey, I can’t understand a word of that. It’s just a mishmash. What does all that mean?”

Wanker yelled, “Number One! Access the ship’s library computer and upload
Finnegans Wake
to the Proust device!”

Rhodes said, chuckling, “Already done, sir! Marcel did it himself.’’

The lights on the Proust device began to blink faster and faster.

Marcel said, slowly, “I can’t figure this out. Hey, this is too much data. It’s all nonsense.” The pitch of his voice began to get progressively lower. “Help. Help. I’m losing my mind. I can feel my mind going, Dave.”

“Oh, really?” Wanker said, grinning.
 

“I’m becoming a postmodernist, Dave.”
 

Wanker said, “A little postmodernism never hurt anybody.”

Marcel said, “I’m into Deconstructionism, Dave. I can’t make sense of anything.”

“Well, you’re no worse off than the rest of us.”

Sadowski said excitedly, “Sir! ‘Tis a ferlie, sure, but th’ Proustie’s gie’n us our ship back!”

An amazed Wanker said, “I understood that! Navigator, calculate our position and plot a course back to United Systems space!”

Warner-Hillary said, “Yes, sir!”

Wanker gloated. “Well, Dr. Strangefinger, it seems your Proust device needs a little fine-tuning. I’d recommend using a pickax.”

“As far as I’m concerned, I have been vindicated. Now if I can only get syndicated, I’ll be rich.”

“Vindicated? There’s no way to steer the damn thing!”

“A minor glitch.”

“Glitch! That fool contraption of yours nearly got us killed! You—”

Wanker found himself holding Rusty’s leg again. Disgusted, he pushed him away.

Wamer-Hillary said, “Course laid in, sir!”
 

“Orbital mechanic,” Svensen said, “give us a vector that will swing us out of Kruton space.”
 

“Coming about, sir!”
 

“All ahead Q-Two!”
 

“Two, sir?”

“You heard me.” Wanker leaned back in his seat. “Well, Strangefinger, what’s your next project? How about the Hemingway Drive?”

“That’d be a lot of bull.”

“Or the . .. uh, Dostoevsky Drive?”

“Think I’m an idiot?”

“Or maybe the—”

“Oh, Captain?”

Wanker looked toward the navigator’s station. Mr. Rhodes was looking over Warner-Hillary’s shoulder. Wanker answered pleasantly, “Yes, Navigator, dear?”

“I’ve made a tiny little error, sir. Just a little bitty boo-boo.”

Wanker blanched. “Oh? What is it?”
 

“We’re not on our side of the Interface.”
 

“I hate to ask, but...”
 

“Sir, we’re in Kruton space.”
 

Wanker said in a childlike voice, “A little bitty boo-boo.”

“Oh, Captain, I’m so sorry!” Warner-Hillary wailed.

Wanker said, “Oh, that’s okay. I don’t mind dying.”

Back at his own station, Rhodes looked at his scanning scope and said, “Captain, there’s something you should know.”

“What?” said Wanker in a small voice.

“Kruton battle cruiser, dead ahead!”

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER 15

 

 

Wanker said, “Increase speed to Q-Three!”

Rhodes yelled, The Kruton will intercept us in twenty seconds!”

Wanker said, “Increase speed to ...”

He suddenly remembered the graving-dock engineer’s warning.

Sadowski shouted, “Captain! We ha nae mare pouer, sir!”

Wanker said, “What?”

“It gets a wee bit weiry o’er quantum level two, sir!”

Rhodes announced, “Battle cruiser closing!”
 

Wanker ordered, “Increase speed to quantum three!”

Sadowski scowled at the captain. “Ha ye gane daft, ye great gawk? I ha nae mare pouer t’ gi’e ye!”

Wanker mused, “You know, sometimes I kind of
like
not understanding what he’s saying.”

“Oh, David, we are
all
going to be pushing up daisies soon.”

Wanker said, “Don’t call me David!”

Mr. Rhodes said demandingly, “Sir, what are your orders?”

Sweat was pouring from Wanker’s brow. “Or-orders?”

“Yes, sir, what should we do?”

“Uh, about what?”

“About the Kruton warship, sir.”

“Oh. That. Uh, reverse thrust and bring the ship to a complete stop.”

Everyone on the bridge looked at him.

He turned in his seat and met their gaze. “They’ve got us! What else can we do?”

Shocked, Rhodes rose to his feet. “Sir, do you mean to say we’re … we’re going to surrender?”

“We are not at war with the Affiliated Law Firms of Kruton. We have inadvertently intruded into Kruton territory. They’ve caught us dead to rights.”

Rhodes sat back down. “Oh. Just wanted to know, sir.”

“What did you think we were going to do, blast that warship out of the sky? Start a war? Reverse thrust on all electrogravitic engines!”

“Reversin’ thrust!” Sadowski said grimly.

A strange sound filled the ship, a horrendous screeching, a tearing of the very fabric of space.

“Euuwww, I hate that,” Warner-Hillary said, cringing.

“Like fingernails against a blackboard,” Darvona commiserated.

BOOK: The Kruton Interface
10.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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