Chapter 4: Bon Voyage
co-written with Rachel-Vardys (Sully's player):
March 18, 2514
Departing Deadwood
Blue Sun Cluster
This had to be one of the stranger meals Sully had ever sat down to, he thought to himself as he took a slice of bread and passed the plate on to the stranger next to him. Less than an hour ago, he had ducked aboard this ship while dodging bullets and sticks of dynamite; shortly thereafter, he had found a gun pointed in his face and had been forced to kill a man or be killed himself. Now here he was, with a one-way ticket to Persephone, being told he was working a passage he had not signed up for and, oh yeah, just maybe life-support would last the long, long three weeks it would take for the battered ship to get where it was taking them. One hoped the life-support lasted. One dearly, sincerely hoped so.
Captain Cooper had settled in a seat at the head of the table; Hoss, the big mechanic, had sat down at the opposite end. âDonât be shy,â Hoss told everyone cheerfully, putting down a second plate of sliced bread and taking several pieces for himself. âThereâs lots more, enough for seconds and thirds for everybody.â
The two womenfolk had settled in chairs across from Sully; his fellow pilot, âHaloâ Williams, sat to his right, and the systems man sat to his left. âThis is good!â the systems man said -- Chang was the name, Marcus Chang. Chang was attacking his steaming bowl of soup with a healthy appetite. âReally good!â Chang said around his mouthful, making an effort to balance his manners and an evident hunger.
Everyone else around the table began applying themselves to the meal with equal sincerity, except for the lawyer, who was simply pushing her spoon around in her bowl. Sully was glad enough for the meal -- he had not eaten since arriving on Deadwood yesterday morning. And the bean soup was good, thick with onions, garlic, big burgundy beans and chunky red tomatoes which might have been recently fresh. There was even some sort of bits of meat it in -- probably really protein paste, but if so, it had been ground up fine and fried up just right so that it forgot what it was and had assumed a new identity. His mother had had a trick for that which Sully himself had never been able to duplicate. He had spent years surviving on protein paste, and had ruined many a skillet trying to make the stuff edible.
âWhat are the ingredients in the soup?â the lawyer -- Abigail Baldwin was her name -- asked suspiciously, still poking at the contents of the bowl like something might come crawling out of it.
Captain Cooper looked up from her own meal and eyed the other woman with an expression that suggested she had consciously decided not to take insult. âKidney beans, butter beans, a carrot, canned tomatoes, some protein curd fried up with onions and garlic, some pepper, vegetable broth, some salt, a pinch of herbs.â
âAnd the bread?â Baldwin asked, still looking dubious.
âItâs just a quick bread. Whole wheat flour, some salt, half a cup of sugar, a quart of buttermilk and a few teaspoons baking soda.â
The lawyer finally risked tasting the soup. âI do not mean to come across as needlessly finicky,â she apologized in the cultured tones of the Core, while dipping up a second spoonsful. âI am just sensitive to erythrosine and azodicarbonamide and a handful of artificial sulfides that are common in a great many processed foods. So if the meal incorporates any of those additives, preservatives or colorings, Iâll wind up experiencing some unfortunate digestive distress.â
The big mechanic, Hoss, sat at the other end of the table. He chuckled at that. âIf itâs processed, itâs probably too expensive for us. Gotta get closer in to the border worlds for that stuff. Almost everything weâve got to eat on board is local, straight from the farm. Lots of the neighbors owed Cooper for her doctoring, and out here barteringâs a whole lot more common than cash-creds. Iâm not sure how long itâll take us to go through the root vegetables, but weâve got bags and bags of beans and bags and bags of flour. Weâll run out of fuel before we run out of food.â He reached for the soup pot and refilled his bowl. âAnyone else want seconds yet?â
Sully was not shy about helping himself as the soup pot made another round. Folks went quiet again, intent still on eating -- evidently everyone had missed breakfast, at the very least, and the sweet cream butter on the chewy homemade bread was a novelty that had a certain seductive power to it. Even the lawyer was making up for lost time now, and evidently found the fresh bread and butter particularly to her liking, while the quiet little mouse beside her was tucking into a third serving of soup as if she had literally been starved.
Sully tried not to watch the two ladies too closely, although it was a challenge not to stare. Fatima Nahas, shrouded in her flowing yellow robe and veil, navigated her spoon deftly beneath the fabric and to her hidden mouth, not spilling a drop of soup or a crumb of bread as she ate. He could not help but wonder what the woman looked like under that robe -- burqas always had that effect on his curiosity, which always struck him as contrary to their intended purpose. There were faint henna markings on her delicate hands -- or maybe permanent tattoos? -- and her shy eyes were a smoky shade of green. Beside her, Abigail Baldwin was tall, strong-boned and curvy by comparison, with a thick braid of mahogany hair and strikingly blue eyes. She wore no make-up on her pale skin, and the more Sully looked at that lovely freckled face, the more convinced he was that he knew her from somewhere.
âHavenât we met somewhere before, Ms. Baldwin?â Sully broke the general silence to ask her. Those blue eyes flickered up to his face and down again to her half-empty bowl with a curious reluctance.
âNo,â she said, definitively.
âYou do look an awful lot like someone I know,â said Halo, sounding equally perplexed.
âI know!â supplied Marcus Chang. âClarissa Bow! You look just like the holovid star! Just like her, but younger. And with freckles.â
Baldwin gave the three men a sour look, and her milky complexion was growing flushed. âThank you, I hear that from time to time,â she said, in a tone which did not welcome further discussion.
The social cue sailed over the systems manâs head. âThat must make it easy to dress up for costume parties,â Chang said cheerfully, in a nervous rush that suggested that maybe young Marcus didnât often find the opportunity to speak with a pretty lady. âAll you need is a little red dress just like the one from that flick Companionâs Kiss, and a statue painted gold -- and bingo! There you are, a screen goddess!â
âYes. Just like that,â Baldwin said, in a voice which dripped sarcasm. Chang caught it this time, and blinked rapidly as if searching his memory banks for how he might have erred.
âSo youâre a lawyer?â Sully asked her, slipping in to Changâs rescue. âI overheard you talking with the captain before all hell broke loose. You said you were a lawyer from Oxford-on-Carthage? Thatâs on Epeuva, isnât it? How does a solicitor from the Jewelerâs Moon find herself in the filthy outback of the Blue Cluster?â
Baldwin glanced down the table toward the captain, obviously weighing her words. âI have a degree in law,â she said. âBut I never sat for the bar. I grew disillusioned with the shallowness of it all. I wanted to do something much more useful with my life than writing torts and arguing obscure clauses in court. So after school, I went searching for something more meaningful.â
âThen how did you wind up serving in the Alliance?â Halo asked.
Baldwin hesitated in answering -- there were a lot of bitter losers at this end of the âVerse, and she was obviously trying to parse whether the pilot was one of them or not. âThe Alliance made the war look very glamorous, so yes, I enlisted. As a medic,â she added, with a stress on that last word. âI was honored to care for patients on either side of the conflict.â
âHonored.â Cooper repeated the word drily.
Baldwinâs chin went up defensively. âYes. Honored,â she repeated in a firm tone. Between them, the shy creature in the burqa seemed to shrink away within her robes, while at the other end of the table, the mechanic made a deliberate clatter as he refilled his bowl from the soup pot.
âCan I get more for anyone?â Hoss offered.
âIâll take more,â Chang said, happy to pass down his bowl for a refill.
There was another uneasy silence. A look passed between the captain and the mechanic -- those two were practically eloquent with their eye-language, like a pair of old-marrieds. Or a pair of foxhole-buddies. âYou two know each other from the war?â Sully asked, wondering which was which.
Cooper looked at him then, a dark, analytical stare, while Hoss did the talking. âWe served together on a Firefly,â the mechanic replied happily enough. Not a shy bone in that one, Sully supposed. âThe ISF Diamondback. She was a medevac ship,â Hoss added, with a hopeful look toward Baldwin as though making a goodwill offering.
âWhat about you?â Cooper asked, her dark eyes still fixed on Sully. âWhich side did you serve on?â
âMe? Oh, I didnât serve.â Sully presented up what he knew was a charming smile, glad to avoid that particular patch of quicksand. In some places, owning up to serving for the wrong side was a sure way to get your throat cut. âSome of us had to remain civilians.â
Cooperâs eyes narrowed and her expression of permanent suspicion grew darker. âYou?â she snorted. âA civ? Like hell.â
Sully raised both hands as if she had a gun on him. âReally. I have always been just a civilian. Thatâs not to say that I didnât have any private alligences⊠just that I had other priorities. The family business needed me, and I probably contributed more to the war effort as a civ than I would have in uniform.â He gave Baldwin a sympathetic smile. âI delivered a great deal of medicines and other necessary items to both sides during the War. I wager bringing comfort to our fine lads and lasses in uniform regardless of what flag they served under was a kindness, and the money I got in return was certainly equally spendable.â
âYou worked the black market?â Chang asked.
âI prefer the term âgray marketâ,â Sully replied, with a fixedly deliberate good cheer. âBetter yet, unorthodox entrepreneurship. Thatâs my favorite. And it paid good. I provided quality goods at fair prices, and as a result, all of my little nieces and nephews have shoes on their feet and school books in their hands.â
âNo shame in that,â Hoss agreed, trading more eye-language with the captain across the length of the table. âThere were a whole lot of times when we were grateful to the black market.â
âBest booze I ever tasted was thanks to the black market,â Halo offered.
Another uneasy silence settled. Sully buttered himself another slice of bread, very alert to the current running lengthwise down the table between the captain and the mechanic. The big, muscle-bound wrench-monkey had enough tatts on display to decorate the population of half a tong. He was the one of the pair who, on the surface at least, looked danger walking. But all of the danger-vibes Sully was picking up on came from the opposite end of the dining table. Cooper was a quarter of Hossâs size, but her dark eyes were hard and she had a frown like a thunderstorm. Of the two of them, she was the one most likely to carry a knife, and never flinch to use it.
âSo,â Sully asked, weighing good sense against curiosity. He knew which had killed the tomcat, yet he had been unable to resist. âSo. You said this ship will be running cargo for its owner. Van Hooven, right? This is just about my first visit out here to the Blue Sun Cluster. Whatâs Van Hooven got worth running halfway across the âVerse to Persephone twice a year, that wouldnât sell just as well somewhere closer to home?â
Eyes like black ice regarded him sharply. âOre ingots are what weâve got in the hold. Van Hooven has friends on the Eavesdown docks he wants the load delivered to. All I need to know is that itâs a guaranteed profit and we arenât breaking any laws in delivering it. That good enough for you? Or do you only like black market jobs?â
âAw, no, wouldnât go so far as to say that,â Sully replied, keeping his voice light and easy. âJust curious.â He could see the uneasy looks around him; they had all been dodging bullets and boom-sticks just an hour ago, and clearly no one was comfortable with the chance of renewed hostilities. But hÇo yĂ©! Heâd been shot at and had had to kill a man today -- and Sully wanted to know why. âYou warned us that we donât want to get this Van Hooven fellow upset. I respect that. I respect that heâs the owner of this ship, and that youâre representing his business interests. I got no problem with that. I just think itâs a fair question what weâre getting ourselves into, seeing as his business interests took a few shots over the deck at us today. Is that going to be the regular way of things for this ship and crew? Yâknow, in case I need to find myself a bigger gun.â
A cold, cold stare -- and a thinking one, as well. âFair enough question,â Cooper allowed, a tight chill in her voice. âAnd no, thatâs not how I intend to continue doing business.â
Sully took a sip of tea, then regarded the captain again. âYou say Van Hooven has friends offworld. What about his opposition? Does the opposition have friends weâll need to be watching our backs against?â
Hossâs expression was outright dread -- the big man either was an excellent actor putting on a fine show, or else the big mechanic had not thought the situation through far enough to ask himself that question yet. Cooperâs stare did not waver, but the scowl had deepened even further.
âNot that I know of,â she answered. âI think if Darius had friends that far afield, heâd have deeper pockets. And if he had deeper pockets, his ploy to destroy this ship would have met with more success. But do I know that for sure? No. I donât. If it scares you, well -- weâll be at Persephone in three weeks. You can collect your reference and walk, no skin off my teeth. Lots of ships come and go at the Eavesdown Docks. Lots of other jobs to be had.â
âTrue enough,â Sully agreed with a single nod, eyes back to the tea leaves he swirled lazily in the dregs of his cup. Depending on the crazy here, that might be a fine alternative. He was adventuresome enough, but even he had his limits.
âThat pistolero down in the hold, he said that this Darius was paying to have you brought back to him,â Chang asked, sounding anxious about the question. âWhat was that about?â
âI disrupted a business scheme of his and wound up costing the man some money,â Cooper answered. âDarius is little more than a backwoods gangster. He thinks heâs a dragonhead. Heâs not. Heâs just a petty sadist with delusions of grandeur. Chances are Van Hooven has already finished him, and the laundry womanâs pigs are even now flat on their backs in the mud, bellies swollen, kicking their little feet in the air and belching up clouds of Darius-fumes. Iâm not worried about him.â
The lady doth protest too much, Sully thought. Either that, or she really, really detests the son-of-a-bitch.
âIf the guy is such a peon, howâd he get the Foxbat?â asked Chang.
âHow? Or from who?â Halo echoed.
Cooper shrugged off that concern. âHell if I know. But if Darius had had the resources, he would have made a move against Van Hooven before today, and it would have been more decisive. Van Hooven has always tolerated Darius as a blunt-handed petty distraction: Darius makes enemies faster than friends and Van Hooven has been using that to his advantage, since Darius makes him look respectable by comparison. Darius would have had to have made some fresh connections in Yankton for that skiff -- and you tell me. Did that little maneuver you pulled destroy that skiff in our backdraft?â Cooper paused until she saw Haloâs nod of confirmation. Then she gave them all a tight, humorless smile. âGood. Then whoever Darius got the bird from isnât going to be happy with him, are they?â
Sully considered that, He thought of the gray market price for an armed Alliances skiff, and found himself chuckling ruefully. âGood point,â he allowed.
âIâm not going to tell you this ship doesnât have enemies,â Cooper continued. âThe blunt truth is: I donât know. I donât know what business the previous crew was into. All I do know is that none of it followed them home to Van Hooven. I donât know who Van Hoovenâs business partners are offworld. I just have code words and have been told that theyâll contact us. So I wonât lie to you and promise rainbows and flowers and bank accounts overflowing with credit. I can only pledge to be straight up.â Cooperâs dark eyes traveled from face to face, her expression as sober as her words. âThereâs a lot I donât know. I wouldnât be surprised if this ship finds some rude surprises waiting for us at some ports. The only thing I am confident of is that this shipâs finances will be extremely tight. Extremely so. A Fireflyâs hold is too small for a high enough volume of goods to guarantee profitable runs, and there may be times when I canât even afford to pay salary, because fuel and cargo will always be the priority. It is going to be hard work to keep this ship running. Hard work. But personally, Iâd rather some hard work than none at all.â With that, she shoved herself back from the table. âStack dishes in the galley sink for now. Iâll see to them. Cleaning supplies are in that storage cabinet right there, and youâll find the laundry beneath the stairs opposite the lower-deck loo. Hoss, Iâll need your help below, join me when youâve finished.â
âWait,â said Baldwin, as the captain carefully picked up her cane, pushing off the bandana-sling to do so. âYou were shot, you need medical care for that.â
âSeen to it already,â the captain replied as she limped for the port shuttle access hatch. âFinish your lunch and see to your quarters.â Cooper left through the aft hatch, heading for the lowerdeck stairs.
âDonât worry about the captain,â Hoss said. âShe was a trauma surgeon during the war. If she says sheâs fine, she is. Sheâll push herself harder than anyone, but she wonât be stupid about it.â
Sully refilled his tea, wondering if the big mechanic had any concept of just how contradictory that sounded. âSo youâve known the captain for a long while, then?â he asked, not afraid to fish for more information.
âYeah,â came Hossâs bass rumble of a reply. âYears and years. I was with the Greenleaf 4th Volunteers and got shot at that action at Starling Base on Paquin. I was evacced on the Diamondback, but she hit a mine and was crippled. Their mechanic couldnât get the engines and grav drive restarted, but I crawled back there and got her up and purring like a kitten. Commander Sung was impressed and he and his XO got me requisitioned to their crew. The crew was packed pretty tight, four to a cabin, and Cooper had the rack above me. She helped fudge my medical records to keep me aboard at first, and taught me what I need to know to be a good orderly. She always looked out after me. She pulled strings to have me transferred with her after the Diamondback was decommissioned, and sheâs the only reason I got out of Serenity Valley alive. Our unit got bombed two days after she smuggled me out, and sheâs the only one in the whole unit who survived it. Cooperâs always been a tough cookie and she doesnât much care what people think. Sheâll be the first to bite your head off if youâve done something dumb. But sheâs fair and sheâs wicked smart, and Iâd follow her to hell and back if she told me thatâs where she wanted to go.â Hoss gave them a sheepish grin. âI know things on the ship are a mess right now, but itâs way, way better than it was even when I got here a week ago. The Jin Dui is a good old girl, and sheâll get us to Persephone just fine. I hope youâll not hold all of the shooting and everything Darius did against us -- and that youâll give the captain and the ship a fair chance over the next three weeks until we reach the Eavestown Docks.â He finished off his last bite of bread and stood up from the table. Hoss took his dirty dishes over to the galley sink and put them on the counter beside it. âOne of you pilots needs to sit the boards after lunch, but as soon as the captain and I are done with what needs doing below-decks, the captain will come spell you at helm.â
âIâll take her for now,â Halo volunteered quickly. There was a sudden general clearing of the table, as everyone else decided they were done as well. Sully acquiesced to Fatimaâs silent offer to take his dirty dishes, while Chang cleared away the soup pot and the butter dish. âChang and I will follow you down to the lower deck,â Baldwin said to Hoss, and those three went off down the aft corridor, while Sully reached the supplies locker which Captain Cooper had indicated held the cleaning supplies. He pulled out a battered metal pail, some rags, a handful of cheap vinyl gloves, a scrub brush and a broom, and was spritzing his wrist with the cleaning spray when Fatima and Halo joined him.
âAh, the lovely perfume of vinegar,â he smiled as he handed a second bottle to Fatima. âDo either of you have a preference for where you will bunk?â he asked.
Fatima shook her head no, while Halo shrugged the question off. âI donât care, as long as there is a bunk. My last rack was a hammock that smelled like cat piss.â
Sully chuckled at that. âWell, if my memory of the Firefly deck plan serves, that door there to your left,â he said as he led them up the steps and into the bridgeward corridor, âthis first one will be roomiest -- lots of closet space to be had, if you want to hang your closet. Fatima, letâs consider it yours. You just shove like this -- good, itâs not locked -- and the hatch swings open just so, and you climb down the ladder to your room. Thereâs a door down there thatâll open to the mid-deck gangway, and a shared shower. Halo -- why donât you take the middle cabin, and Iâll go with the one up front? Unless theyâve modified the ship from its regular configuration, thatâs the smallest of the cabins, so I know Iâm making a sacrifice.â
âSome sacrifice,â Williams laughed, while Fatima disappeared down into her cabin. âYou just want the smallest room, knowing weâve got to clean âm!â
Sully laughed along, as if that were a joke and not the base truth. Williams continued on up onto the bridge, while Sully gave the hatch to his new cabin a shove. It opened after a bit of resistance, and Sully wrinkled his nose in distaste at the stench that wafted out. The smell alone was amazing. Rot and unwashed human, and a distinct coppery twang that made his brain alarm a little.
âOnce more, into the breach,â he told himself, before climbing on down.
The cabinâs single bare overhead bulb hung dark, leaving the cabin unlit except for the blue glow from the comm display just aft of the ladder alcove. Sully hit the lights panel, and when that failed to work, he reached up and physically gave the bulb a half twist, so that the connections were made and the light flared on. When it revealed the room, he kind of wished it hadnât.
Sully had made his livelihood aboard junked vessels. He had seen abandoned crew cabins aplenty. Possibly some of them had even been worse than this⊠but this was still pretty awful bad.
At first glance, all he saw was the trash. Layers of it -- generations of it -- heaped in piles with a single narrow footpath tracking through it between the ladder alcove and a bunk which was pressed up against the far aft corner. It looked as though the cabinâs previous resident had collected cardboard boxes and booze bottles for sport, except for the layer of scum coating everything. Sully was glad he had gloves. Crusty pin-up girls decorated the wall, along with a single, lonely wire hanger suspended from a bare shelf rack. Hanging from a heavy chain from the ceiling struts was a clear plastic bubble chair, its foam cushions liberally patched with duct tape. The narrow bunk itself was a metal cot with what looked like an unzipped sleeping bag for a blanket; a stowage trunk had been upended over the top of it, spilling out a sizable collection of porn. The debris on the table might include a partial set of gun-cleaning tools, but Sully would have to separate out all of the empty pill containers, pizza crust ends, a very nice scale model of an Alliance A-48 aerospace gunship, discarded tissues, a dead potted cactus, and what might prove to be a fossilized sandwich. A wallet sat there as well, with the colorful edges of some bills poking out of it. A lot of the empty food wrappers and pizza boxes bore a common design advertising âThe Meaty Yeastyâ off of McCall Alley at New Canaan spaceport. Sully stopped in his tracks when something crunched ominously underfoot. He kicked aside empty soy packets, something petrified that might have been a rag (or might have been filthy underwear -- he didnât want to pick it up to find out), and what he was afraid was a used condom to find that he had stepped on a pair of reading glasses, breaking the right lens.
Sully fished the glasses up cautiously and held the lenses before his own eyes. Pretty moderate near-sightedness -- these werenât just reading glasses. Scowling, Sully pocketed the glasses, then took the final strides over to the bunk. Hetero-boy was here, the porn mags proclaimed, with an interest in hefty-sized trim. Sully up-ended the trunk and pushed it to the end of the cot, and began to toss the magazine collection back into it. It was then that he found the blood stain to match the morgue odor.
The indigo plaid of the sleeping bag had absorbed an enormous amount of blood in about a one-third-of-the-Shroud-of-Turin fashion. âPoor bastard had his throat cut,â Sully thought, his nose wrinkling with distaste. He looked at the wall beside the bunk and saw the spray pattern that supported his theory, dappling the various smiling centerfolds taped there. Sully collected another handful of magazines, but didnât see any bloodstained pages in what he rifled through. Huh. So the body laid here for a while before being moved⊠and then it looked like whomever had moved it had tossed the storage trunk, searching for something. Sully frowned a little harder and looked back toward the crowded junk on the desk, where the wallet sat unmolested. He reached after the wallet and pocketed it himself, then finished stacking the magazines back into the trunk.
âQuite the collection,â he mused as he hauled the trunk off the cot and onto the floor. He stripped the two layers of sleeping bag from the bunk and bundled them together, then trekked back through the debris field for the ladder topside.
TRANSLATIONS:
HÇo yĂ© = Good Lord (Mandarin)
The laundry unit was crammed into the narrow gap behind the stairs up to mid-deck and was already thumping away, with a growing pile of dirty linens in front of it. Sully dropped his bundle onto the pile, listening to the banter being traded by Chang and Baldwin as they were swabbing out the cabins theyâd chosen. Apparently they had fast-forwarded through the various stages of horror at their surroundings and had reached the âeverything is funny as all hellâ phase of dealing with the mess.
âI just stepped on something,â called Chang, from the forward port-side berth. âI swear, it squeaked!â
âJiÄo gÄo,â Baldwin wailed in reply. Her voice was very close -- apparently she had chosen one of the two starboard passenger berths âCome look at this! There are rows and rows of partially-filled vodka bottles here, and I am afraid they are not full of vodka!â
âWhatever you do, donât open one for a taste-test,â Chang warned heartily.
âHorrors!â Baldwin was practically fizzing with laughter; she sounded like she were on the shaky-edge of hysteria, a feeling Sully could well sympathize with. âBut steady on⊠oh dear, if these are lined up from oldest to freshest, I do believe Mr. Former Occupant either started eating a great deal of beets, or he began to pass blood in his urine. I would advise him to consult his physician, if I could -- chances are heâs developing a terrible case of kidney stones.â
Baldwin and Chang were both laughing uproariously at that. âChances are, Mr. Former Occupant no longer has to worry about passing those stones,â Sully thought to himself. He chose not to share that observation, or to interrupt their hilarity as he walked past the gutted Infirmary bay and on toward the hatch to the cargo bay.
Just past the hatch, was a cargo pod which had apparently been re-purposed as a stable. The top half of the stable-pod door was open and the two resident goats inside stood there, floppy-eared, heads over the bottom door, watching everything with their golden devil-eyes as they chewed their cud. The pale one made a snorting noise and backed away with a scuff of hooves as Sully stepped through the cargo bay hatch and down the steps. The other goat, the spotted black one, held its ground and continued to stare at him as he walked past. He wasnât about to offer it a hand, preferring to keep all of his fingers, thank you kindly.
Hoss and Cooper were working at the far end of the cargo bay. A line of naked dead bodies was lined up alongside the bomb bay doors, and Cooper was finishing stripping the last of them, adding to the heap which nearly overflowed the striped red horse blanket the cast-offs were piled on. âI just donât think itâs right,â Hoss was saying. âWe should at least wrap them in sheets.â
âWe donât have extra sheets,â Cooper replied. âHell, I doubt we have enough sheets for racks for the temp crew.â
âWe shouldnât take their clothes, then.â
âWe took a hell of a lot more than their clothes during the War,â Cooper muttered in reply. âTheyâre dead. They donât need âm anymore. And we will.â
âA dead manâs clothes? No we wonât!â
âNone of this will fit you, sure, but the rest of us may find use for âm. And if we donât, we just patch âm and resell them.â
âBut it just isnât right!â Hoss continued miserably.
âWhat wonât be right is for us to run out of fuel somewhere in the deep black, or for that C02 scrubber to burn out before we can get those algae tanks back up stabilized and outputting! Hoss, we need every two-bit we can rub together to afford repairs, and whatever creds we earn from this cargo Van Hooven has sent us is going to vanish like air out the lock.â Cooperâs voice sounded weary and on the edge of anxiety -- Sully felt anxious enough himself, hearing that nugget about the algae tanks being out of operation. Ai ya! A three weeks on C02 scrubbers alone? Are they crazy?
âYou wonât get much for second hand clothing on Persephone,â Sully said, startling them both. He gave them an apologetic shrug as he joined them. âToo much new available on the market there. A better bet is to hang on to any surplus and wait until youâre back out on a Rim world like Deadwood, where thereâs not much new to be had. Youâd be surprised what you can get in barter for a good pair of boots.â
Hoss still looked pained, while Cooper regarded him coolly. âBut who am I to lecture a resident of a Rim world about barter rates on the Rim?â Sully said with some amusement, figuring he could practically read her mind on that. âCaptainâs right,â he said to Hoss. âIf youâre going to just jettison the bodies, youâre wasting resources to send them out clothed. You could use heavy garbage bags --â
âIf we had them. Which we donât.â Cooper said grimly. âAnd if we did have them, itâd be a waste.â
âWell, those will be much cheaper at Persephone, if you decide to lay in a supply for next time.â Sully shook his head in dark amusement. âMore immediate of a question should be -- where and when will you dump them?â
Cooper and Hoss eyed each other again. By Alliance law, it was illegal to dump anything (much less bodies) in a space lane, because of the hazard posed to passing traffic. âMidway to Persephone, at the clusterâs edge,â Cooper replied. She scowled further, eyeing the disordered cargo bay around them. âWe need to shift the bodies onto that cargo netting, then secure them down in the bomb bay airlock. Open the lock and freeze them solid, without letting them drift off.â
âIâll do it,â Hoss said. âBut only if you get up to the bridge and sit a watch at helm. You got shot. I know youâre hurting,â he said, bulling over the top of Cooperâs objection. âYou gotta sit down for at least a little while now. I can see that arm is hurting you, and you know the strain youâre putting on your leg.â
That earned a deeper scowl from the captain, but the little fact that the stubborn woman did not dismiss her friendâs concerns outright left Sully thinking she was likely hurting worse than she let on. âIâll go sit a shift, but Iâll clean the galley on my way there,â she responded. Cooperâs tone suggested it was all the agreement Hoss was going to get, while Hoss grinned at her concession like he was taking a victory lap.
âFreeze them in the lock, just like we were back aboard the Diamondback,â Hoss said cheerfully, walking off to collect the cargo netting.
âIâll help, Hossâll need another set of hands with that,â Sully offered. He began to follow after Hoss, then stopped and turned back to the captain. He fished the leather wallet from his coat pocket and handed it over. Cooper looked at it for a moment before taking it, but did so without any questions.
âWhat happened to the other bodies?â he asked, remembering her earlier remark to Hoss. 'We took a hell of lot more than their clothing during the War,â she had said.
âOther bodies?â she prompted him.
âThe former occupant of my cabin died in there. From the stains and splatter, Iâm guessing someone cut his throat.â
Cooper winced, but did not look shocked⊠or even decently surprised. âVan Hoovenâs man Earl is famous for his bladework. From what I overheard, he came aboard at night, while the previous crew were sleeping. The bodies were gone when I got here, maybe a week or so later. But there were enough puddles left behind to see how it went down.â
Sully considered the wording of his next question very carefully before asking it. âDid Van Hooven ask you to keep your eyes open for anything left onboard?â
Cooper had been opening the wallet Sully had found. She stopped in mid-count of the bills, and looked up at him with an expression that shifted fluidly from questioning to flinty assessment. âDid you find something else I should know about?â
Sully shrugged. âIâve only just skimmed the surface of the cabin -- but it looks to me like the room was tossed after the killing.â
âAnd whatever Earl was looking for, it wasnât a loose wad of cash?â Cooper eyed him grimly for another moment. âNo,â she said then, in answer to his original question. âIf Van Hooven was looking for something aboard, I was not included in that information loop. Chances are, whatever it was, Earl found it.â
âOr Van Hooven doesnât trust you enough to tell you about it, whatever it might be; if they didnât find it and we do, itâll be a loyalty test to see whether or not you hand it over to him,â was the other thought in Sullyâs head, but he did not share that one. Cooper seemed a sharp enough blade to be thinking it for herself already -- certainly her scowl had gone deeper in the last few seconds.
âIt sounds like Hoss has his hands full with repairs,â Sully said. âAs a boy, I was apprenticed to my Uncle Slimâs scrapyard business. Iâve worked on a number of Fireflies over the years. I can be of help.â
Another sharply assessing glance from the captain. âScrap yards and black markets, huh? So just how did you find yourself on Deadwood as a hire-on?â
âMy uncle is still in business on Beylix. I decided to go independent. I had my own ship -- the Carolyn Jane. She was a little Gnat class -- but she was beautiful and she was all mine. I was making a delivery to the terraforming station at Seventh Circle when I ran afoul of pirates. Carolyn managed to get me away with my skin on one piece, but her engines were mortally wounded. I wound up adrift in the Uroborus belt. Some asteroid miners caught my life pod signal before my air ran out, and ever since that, Iâve been working my way from job to job through the Blue Cluster.â
The captain stared at him in reply. She seemed to have three expressions: frown, scowl, and deeper scowl. And Cooper was damn good at absorbing data-flow without returning signal of her own. It kept him busy trying to figure out what might be going on in that pretty head. Sully rubbed the back of his neck and gave her a sheepish smile, beginning to think that if he were in her boots, heâd worry someone like him might be in the oppositionâs pocket. A good little backstory combined with such a helpful skillset, almost too good to be true, right? Damn right heâd worry, based on what little heâd heard so far of the rivalry between Van Hooven and Darius. Those dark eyes studied him and, like black holes and card sharks the âVerse over, gave him nothing back in return.
âHow long you keep your Carolyn Jane in operation?â she asked, as Hoss came back to them with the bundle of Tex-Flex in his arms.
âSix and a half years,â Sully replied, with no little pride in that accomplishment.
Cooper nodded brusquely at that. âHoss, Sully here says he knows Firefly systems. When the two of you have finished with those bodies, show him your to-do list, and your list of prioritized repairs. Suss him out.â
âSure thing,â Hoss replied. âYou gonna go sit that watch now, captain?â
âYes, mother,â she retorted. Cooper limped away, heading for the lower deck hatch, and it seemed to Sully that she was leaning more heavily on her cane than she had before.
âThe captain gonna be okay?â Sully asked Hoss, hoping the friendly mechanic would spill.
Hoss was clambering down into the open bomb bay. He unfurled the roll of cargo netting like he was spreading out a picnic blanket. âSheâs going to be fine,â Hoss replied, with a knowing glance back at Sully -- big and friendly though Hoss might be, that look said he wasnât entirely naive. âThe Diamondback had a modified coldbox instead of a port side shuttle,â he said conversationally, refusing to gossip about the captain. âWe had stacks and stacks of patients in here, so we bagged the ones who died and took them out to the coldbox through the mid-deck airlock. I used to hate that walk.â
âIâll bet.â Sully dragged the first of the bodies over to the edge of the bomb bay, and Hoss hefted it in turn pretty effortlessly. âThe captain find much of value on the bodies?â Sully asked.
âNot much in terms of pocket-stuff, but almost 500 all in all in credits,â Hoss said, laying the deceased out and then standing to receive the next.
âThen I suppose piracy does pay, after all,â Sully said. âHoss, you strike me as the honest sort. So tell me the truth -- how straight and narrow is Cooper going to be?â
That earned an unhappy look from Hoss. âHow honest a ship is the Jin Dui going to be? Is that what youâre asking?â
Sully rolled another body to the edge and into Hossâs reach. âItâs a fair enough question. I know who owns the ship, and itâs not every honest ship that has to dispose of near a dozen bodies quite so blithely. Cooper sounds like she has some economic grasp of what sheâs getting into: a Firefly is a hard-working little ship, but she doesnât mass enough cargo to compete easily against all of the big corporate freight haulers out there. What kind of business venture is it here that we are all being asked to sign onto?â
Hoss was frowning mightily by the time Sully had finished that question. The big mechanic seemed like a nice, decent, fundamentally good sort of guy. It was exactly the just too damn nice aura that Hoss radiated that made Sully want to ask the question -- because Sully had had his fill in life of being shot at, and of losing the things he cared for. It was a big damn âVerse, and there would be other jobs aplenty waiting to be found at the Eavesdown Docks. A smart man would would keep his head down, would stop asking questions -- hell, a smart man damn well would not want know any single damn thing more about this ship, the owner of this ship, her captain, or any other detail of the Jin Duiâs business dealings. Damn no. Sully would be happy to play deaf, mute and stupid, exceptâŠ
⊠exceptâŠ
The Van Hoovens and the Dariuses of the âVerse did not pull into their orbits the nice, fundamentally decent sorts like Hoss. Sully had seen enough scummy sorts in his time, and neither Hoss nor Cooper seemed skuz. Yeah, the captain had her own set of issues. She was clearly cautious enough not to show her hand, but it wasnât a shifty sort of caution, it was the hard-won kind.
Hoss was still chewing on the question. âDo you mean -- are we going to be bad guys?â
âYeah, pretty much,â Sully replied.
Hoss was still frowning deeply, as if that question hadnât been something heâd sunk much consideration into. âVan Hooven owns the ship, and heâs a criminal. But Cooperâs not. Iâm not, either. But⊠â Hoss paused in his work to rub the back of his neck, his thick black dreads swinging. âWe may have to take some jobs that are iffy, but weâre not going to be pirates. Weâre not thieves. And weâre not killers.â
âI wouldnât take you for one,â Sully said with a chuckle, feeling pretty confident Hossâs dockside-scary look was no more than a superficial, defensive armor. âIâll be honest with you -- and I know whatever I say to you will eventually go straight to the captainâs ears, as it should,â Sully said. âIf I were in the captainâs boots, Iâd be damn worried just about now. Everyone on board is a stranger, none of us necessarily are her choice of hire-ons, and any one of us could possibly be working for the enemy. Sheâs damn right to worry -- though just sayinâ, maybe only time will tell, but I donât think any of the others on board strike me as dangerous types. If any of us were plants, my money would be on the burqa lady -- because can you get any more obvious than that? She might not even be a lady under those robes.â
Hossâs frown had turned into a sheepish sort of smile. âThe captain already said as much,â he agreed. âThough she was more worried about you, except for the fact that Dariusâs hireling had you under a gun with the rest of us, and that you then killed one of them.â
Sully had to laugh aloud at that. âYeah, well, I do hope weâre all just what we appear to be. Because if this Darius fellow didnât think the ship could take off in the first place, why would he bother with contingency operations? If he didnât think she would fly, stealing her wasnât an option. Am I right?â
Hoss nodded. âI think so. And I think the captain thinks so, too. She just worries, though.â
âYeah, well, a little worry is a good thing. It keeps you on your toes.â They were shifting the next-to-last of the dead bodies down into the bomb bay, and Sully wanted to shower. It was an ugly reminder of just how close he himself had come to death, only an hour and a half or so past. He considered himself to have a broad range of tolerance, but dying was a smidgen outside his comfort zone. What he really wanted was a decent, honest piloting job -- not some chancey position aboard a dubious merchanter where body-disposal was ever included on the duties list. Yet where on the Rim could he go, and find a straight-up job which was both honest and safe? There was always farming, Sully supposed. And heâd had more than enough of that already in life, thank you very much.
They were down to the last body. Sully grasped cold hands and dragged the dead, boneless weight as far as necessary to get it within Hossâs wide reach. âAll right. Listen -- the captain says weâre all working passage to Persephone, and that sheâll make her hire-on decisions then. But Iâll tell you this. The more I look around this boat, the more I am sure of something. You and the captain are going to need me.â
Hoss gave him the look that statement deserved, before setting the last body down with the rest and beginning the chore of wrapping the bodies securely in the excess netting. Sully jumped down into the bomb bay itself and began to clip the colorful carabiners to the regularly-spaced safety rings, testing each one to make sure none of them were damaged and would give way at the shock exposure to vacuum. âI can do general fix-it, no problem. I intend to start with the gorram lights in my quarters, and after that, I bet I could work 20 hours a day, every day, on this ship till we get to Persephone, and even then, you and I both will still be finding little crap needs fixinâ. Am I right?â
Hoss chuckled at that. âI bet youâre right.â
âSo thereâs work aplenty onboard for me -- if I decide I want to stay on. Iâm still making my mind up on that point, because I did just find a large pool of blood in my cabin, obvious evidence of the previous occupantâs having parted ways with the management short of a healthy severance package, dong ma? I would kinda like to avoid dying in the near future, and if dyingâs a high possibility, Iâd like to know so I can factor that into my decision to stick around or not.â
Hoss had finished. He climbed out of the bomb bay, and reached down a massive paw to offer Sully a hand up. âI donât want to die either, and the captain is looking out for us. Sheâs the one who will deal directly with Van Hooven, and sheâs gonna keep him happy.â
Sully accepted Hossâs hand and jumped; Hoss effortlessly lifted him out of the chest-deep bay and onto his feet on the deck. âGlad to hear that,â he said. âAnd Iâll have you know -- I have a real soft spot for Fireflies, Iâve been on a bunch of them since I was a kid and I got to know âem pretty intimately. This girlâs seen some hard time, but she feels mostly still sound. Iâd love to get under the panels and see what she really looks like under these dirty skirts. There are about a dozen standard smuggling holes that custom agents might think to check -- and I know an easy half-dozen others which they wonât.â
âCaptain will appreciate that,â Hoss said.
âIâm being frank here -- I think your captain is going to find she needs me. I know how to keep a ship operational in the chancy business out here on the Rim. I donât want to work as a full-time smuggler again. Itâs a hazardous business. Iâve burned out seven of my nine lives already, which was why I came here looking to interview for what was advertised as a straight-up flying job. So, long story short, Iâm less concerned about staying above-the-board, because I know in order to keep operational at this size, thereâs a lot of competition at that level, and you have to go into the gray market level to keep solvent. So my question here is more -- you seem to know Cooper pretty well -- how far outside the lines do you think sheâd color, even desperate?â
Hoss stood and thought that over some. âWe might smuggle a little if the captain thinks the gain greatly outweighs the risks. But she doesnât take foolish risks. I know her. I know how she thinks. Thereâs whatâs right and whatâs wrong, and then thereâs the Law. The Law is all very well and good for the Core, and even for much of the Border. But out here on the Rim, you gotta survive, and sometimes that means being a little grey around the edges. Do you understand what Iâm trying to say?â the big man said earnestly.
âAye,â Sully said. He let go a breath he hadnât been aware of holding. He liked what he heard. And despite himself -- he really liked this big, puppy-dog eyed lug of a mechanic. Sully couldnât help think⊠having lost his own ship, if he really had to settle for working for someone else again, then he wanted a job on a ship with folk like Hoss. Hoss was exactly the sort of nice guy youâd want as a shipmate during long, lonely hauls in between ports. Straightforward, friendly, maybe entertaining if he was lucky, and -- dared Sully even hope? -- potentially capable of baking up the chocolate cake Hoss had earlier promised? And if Hoss was devotedly loyal to a flinty-eyed creature like Captain Cooper, well, that said something in the womanâs scowling favor. Sully found himself suddenly, whole-heartedly, wanting this berth, no matter how bloodily the last crew might have left it.
He clapped the big mechanic on the arm. âI hear what youâre saying, and thatâs good enough for me. For now, at least. So. Did I overhear the captain saying something about the algae tanks being offline? Do you mind if we get started there?â he asked.
Hoss grinned a happy smile, and picked up a blanket-wrapped bundle to deposit at laundry on their way back through the lower-decks. âRight this way,â he said. âJust follow me.â
TRANSLATIONS:
JiÄo gÄo = what a mess (literally - âspoiled cakeâ) (Mandarin)
dong ma = understand? (Mandarin)
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