Family Law 2: The Long Voyage of the Little Fleet (42 page)

Read Family Law 2: The Long Voyage of the Little Fleet Online

Authors: Mackey Chandler

Tags: #Science Fiction

BOOK: Family Law 2: The Long Voyage of the Little Fleet
6.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"Really? How would you do it?"

"First, you don't have anything to drink," Lee noticed. "If you want some coffee, it has been cleared for Badgers. You can get it from the big stainless steel urn there. Just put a mug under the nozzle and pull on the black lever."

"I'll do that, I've tasted vodka and what they are calling rum, which Fargoers assure me is a pale imitation, and something called rice that didn't impress me at all." He chose a mug and filled it without being too clumsy. He returned and sat across from Lee again. He sniffed at it cautiously.

"It smells like..." he had to stop and use the pad again. "We have something you'd call a nut. It can be eaten raw, but too much of the raw will give you digestive distress. We roast it by stirring it in a heavy metal pan until it gets browned a bit and the oils start bleeding out. It is eaten out of hand or put in breads and soups. Never in a beverage to my knowledge."

"Coffee is roasted too. It's the seed inside a berry and the pulpy part is thrown away. Then it is ground up to let the water extract the flavor and color better. It is a mild stimulant too."

Talker tried to lap some up. "Nope, still too hot for me."

"Steward!" Lee called. "Do you have a minute?" A Fargoer appeared wiping his hands on an apron. "Do you have a zero G container handy? If it's buried away and going to take you too long don't bother, but Talker here isn't suited to using a mug. I should have figured out he doesn't really have lips. I think a sippy-cup would be much easier. An insulated one preferably."

"I know right where they are Ma'am," he promised her and disappeared.

"If I were hunting Mammoth I would never
surround
it like in your picture," Lee assured him. "I know I'm not going to stick a spear in it and have it fall over dead. It's going to be pissed off or scared and take off either to get away or to trample one of these little creeps irritating it. Surrounding it just guarantees no matter which way it moves
somebody
is going to get squished."

The steward returned and displayed a cup with a handle much like he already had, but of a lighter material, thick walled and having suction tube reaching to the bottom of the cup from the cover that sealed the top off. He filled it with one deft motion from the ceramic mug. The skill with which he transferred the  coffee from a mug with a rounded top edge surprised Talker. He sealed it closed so Talker would see how he did it, but offered no verbal instruction, not wanting to interrupt Lee.

"Be careful," Lee did pause to warn him. "It's easier to burn your mouth sucking it up a straw than sipping it from an open cup." He nodded an acknowledgement, thoroughly comfortable with the Human gesture now.

"If it were me, I'd send one young clueless male, who could run like crazy to stick the Mammoth with a really heavy spear, then run for his life. Something with barbs behind the head so the Mammoth couldn't rub against a tree or something and get it out. Then I'd let it get weak and slow from the wound before finishing it off. You might have to follow it a few days, but that's a lot of meat, so it would be worth it."

Lee looked at Talker funny. "OK, I'm not stupid. I know that is your amused look. Worse, I think it's your amused look but busting a gut not to show it look. You get little dimples around your whiskers even if you can keep your mouth straight," she accused. "What's so funny?"

"It's involuntary," he said smoothing his whiskers flat down both sides oh his muzzle with both hands. "I fear you'll take offense." He took a sip carefully from his cup.

"So what? You think we'll never offend each other?" Lee said with a shrug.

Talker took a deep breath. "It amused me, that you suggest getting someone to hunt young and lacking a clue? Clueless? To go recklessly in harm's way. Yet
you
are quite young. Is this an indictment of your age group or an immodest statement you are a superior specimen of your age group? You did say male. Are the males really so different?"

"I'm
told
young males my age are a hormone driven horror of recklessness." She stopped and cocked her head over and frowned, thinking. "I remember when we were on Luna, Earth's moon, Gordon got shot in the head and there was no Derf doctor to attend him. They called in a veterinarian. You understand what that is?"

"Indeed I do," Talker said checking his pad. "We also separate the treatment of Badgers and their livestock and research animals." He read a bit more and held up a finger to forestall her a moment. "We do not have what I am reading here though. Animals kept for companionship."

"Yeah, pets. It seemed weird to me at first too. I helped care for animals on our exploration ship. We kept them to test the suitability of living worlds. But this veterinarian, who seemed pretty smart to me, said her experience was that male Humans, dogs, which are Canines, and even aliens such as Derf never grow up. She wasn't joking and she was directly applying it to crazy risk taking behavior. Take that bit of folksy wisdom for whatever you think it's worth," Lee offered.

"I'd find that hard to accept since I'm male. However, Gordon was shot in the head? How is it he's still alive." Talker asked.

"If he were Human he wouldn't be alive. It was an older gun, a genuine antique, of what I'd characterize as a medium caliber. The round grazed his scalp and ricocheted off his skull with enough retained energy left to vent the corridor to vacuum. Trust me, Derf are hard headed beyond belief. If you are going to shoot a Derf use a
big
gun with a full magazine."

"Thank you, I think I am well advised on that, but it's not an action I am contemplating. But what of
you
again?"

I'm
not
typical," Lee insisted. "It's not just ego. I grew up on a spaceship, isolated socially and in the company of adults, my Human parents and Gordon. When my parents died Gordon took over for them raising and protecting me. He's not entirely done yet. It turns out I learned lot more for my age than what other kids learn back in so called 'civilization'. They weren't surrounded by things that if you 'played' thoughtlessly with them killed you. In fact I find it sort of repulsive how they are coddled and protected to the point they fail to do for themselves long after they could if properly guided."

"I like speaking with you because I felt you have a bluntness that perhaps your adults lack. But you're telling me it isn't a product of your age?" Talker asked.

"No, more likely my upbringing. I grew up with people I could trust. There was no advantage to deception. It might be fatal. Gordon had to teach me not to just blurt out anything I wanted when we visited Human society. I still see blunt honesty as safer and less trouble in the long run if you are dealing with decent honest people. I really believe if I deceive you it won't last forever and it will come back on me worse in the end than if I am forthright in the first place."

Talker sat silent for awhile, thoughtful, Lee guessed by his expression.

"And if you deceive me I won't be nearly as forgiving as people raised to regard it as a fun game to see how much they can fool you. Fair warning to you," she said lifting an index finger for emphasis.

Talker tried out the gesture, but didn't ask the meaning. He seemed to get it.

"I was sort of extrapolating from what you said, I was pretty close to figuring that out on my own. But you haven't told us everything," Talker reminded her.

"Like how we burnt the butt off the Biter ship?" Lee asked. "No, but that's not deception, we're just not ready to share that information with you. We aren't covering it up or lying about it. We value a certain amount of privacy. Look up how that word is used. There's a hundred other things we haven't shared. Some because we're embarrassed by them. Humans have done some pretty awful things. At least a lot of them were to other humans. It's not like we are just cruel to outsiders. I'm not at all happy how Earth Humans treated
me
when I visited. If you think I was unhappy, well, Gordon started a
war
over how they treated me."

"This coffee is interesting," Talker allowed, "but it has a bitter edge to it that is a little strong to me. I can't quite ignore it. Badgers aren't big on bitter tastes."

"The little paper packets there are sugar. It's been cleared too, but we already know if you eat too much it gives Badgers diarrhea. I'd suggest maybe a quarter or a third of a packet in the coffee might please you. The other stuff is cream. It
isn't
cleared and it might be dangerous. It has a lot of odd proteins and enzymes and not even all Humans can digest it. In fact it's a Human food that Derf have less trouble with than Humans. The Derf have cast iron guts."

"I find that very doubtful," Talker said frowning at his little computer.

"Hyperbole," Lee explained. "Exaggeration to make a point."

"Ah, that's a Bill thing, although we show some talent in using sarcasm.

"Human cultures vary too. Sometimes I understand Derf better than my own species," Lee said.

"This internal division...It worries me. Exactly how are you different than these other factions? Gordon has warned me that New Japan may seem as different from Fargone as Derfhome is even though they are both Human worlds. Why did you have so much trouble going to Earth? And yet we don't see you abandoning their claims system after you even fought a short war with them. That surprises me."

"You have time? It's not a short story."

Talker nodded his assent, looking attentive and genuinely interested.

"OK, this will take awhile. You might want another cup of coffee," she suggested. The one with a little sugar had gone down much quicker she noticed. "We went down to Earth to play tourist at a place in North America called California."

Talker stirred some more sugar in his fresh coffee and nodded encouragement for her to continue.

"I was stupid about local custom and hazard. I'd never been a victim of crime and wore a very expensive piece of jewelry that was a trouble magnet," she remembered, grimacing."I was terribly green about how to act in public places..."

* * *

"The Biters are boosting at two point four-three G, compared to our present one point one-one. I have no idea if that is physically easy or hard for a Biter," Einstein admitted. "My initial estimate is they could be within
our
missile range twenty two minutes before we jump. If we wish to see whether the shot is good before we jump we have to take it quickly. If we shoot later we'll be gone when they engage our fire."

"I'd really rather you not expend another missile on them," Chance said. "We've used up two already. I have no hard data on their weapons range." He was still second guessing himself for having used
two
missiles on the Biter group.
Sharp Claws
only carried six of them after all... Maybe he should have told Captain Frost to see if one missile would do the job. But he didn't want to micromanage him.

"Neither do I know their range," Captain Fussy on the
Dart
volunteered. "We've seen them fight each other, but they tend to come straight at each other with little finesse. Making a run to jump I've never seen one go more than about one point eight G, but they certainly don't look physically frail. I have no idea of their limits. We haven't seen then fire missiles at each other beyond twenty thousand kilometers. The shot they took at your drone was the longest one we've seen. But they must have to detonate much closer than yours to be effective." He didn't ask what their weapons range was.

"Thank you Captain Fussy.
Sharp Claws
, update me immediately if you refine the intercept point or if they change acceleration," Chance ordered.

"Aye sir. See to it Einstein," Frost ordered. Not offended at all that it was obvious.

* * *

"And that's how I escaped Earth, and how the war with North America ended," Lee told Talker.

"A lot of that story I can't fully understand yet," he admitted. "I just don't have the mental images for a lot of the locations. I substitute something similar from my own experience. Our courtrooms probably don't look anything like yours. We always have three judges or five, not one. I suspect our hotels may be very different from your description of the lobby. A desert may be very different. I can think of three deserts I've know that are each unique. But I certainly got the general vision of your adventure. In honesty I have to say we have divisions among Badgers. Perhaps as strong as between Earth Humans and those who left the home world. It's complicated and I'll try to tell you when it affects how we treat
you
." He looked down at his hands and seemed alarmed. They were trembling slightly.

"Are you OK?" Lee asked, concerned.

"I thought I was just caught up in your story, but I seem to feel...odd. My heart is racing a bit and I feel, not scared, but something very similar."

"How many cups of coffee did you have?"

"Four? Maybe five. I was listening and lost track. It's really quite pleasant with the sweetener."

"It has caffeine, a stimulant. Five mugs would leave me wired too."

"There is a plant the long haired race of Badgers chew that has this effect. We make fun of them for using it," he said, visibly amused at himself. "How long does it last?"

"For humans and Derf about four hours. I hope you were not planning to go sleep soon."

"You story was honestly interesting, but I don't think I could sleep now if you were reading math tables, or my favorite aunt was telling me what my cousins have been doing since I was home."

"That's the ultimate test of boredom?" Lee asked.

"The ultimate test of courtesy," Talker corrected, laughing. "I could use this coffee instead of biting my tongue to stay awake. One cousin who she dotes on is an accountant. Need I say how exciting his life is? Another writes novels for single young females. The sort of novel in which something lurid
almost
happens with predictable regularity but not quite, because that would be vulgar."

"Oh!
Romances!
" Lee realized. She was amazed.

Other books

Alpha, Delta by RJ Scott
Pariah by Fingerman, Bob
Lone Rider by Lauren Bach
Breed to Come by Andre Norton
Her Accidental Angel by Melisse Aires
Revoltingly Young by Payne, C.D.
Whispers of Murder by Cheryl Bradshaw