Sojourn

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Sojourn Page 24

by S. H. Jucha


  After retiring to the traveler, Franz and Suntred ate and then rested, while Julien and Z chatted with their respective partners aboard the Freedom.

  Alex sent from his suite,

  Julien replied.

  Z woke Franz and Suntred, and the group exited the bay.

  Julien asked.

  Alex asked.

  Julien replied.

  Z interjected.

  Franz sent.

  Alex asked.

  Z replied.

  Black space, Alex thought, which transmitted.

  Franz sent.

  Alex sent, his emotions roiling.

  Julien suggested.

  Alex replied.

  Z suggested.

  Alex replied.

  Julien sent.

  Alex requested.

  Z accessed the battleship’s comm panel, selected the comm ID of the leader’s ship, and called.

  “This is Julien. I’m requesting to speak to Leader Di-Orsoo.”

  “This is the captain, Julien. The leader is momentarily indisposed,” Sa-Foosee replied. “It will take some time to make him available.”

  “We’ll wait,” Julien replied.

  -22-

  First Aid

  Di-Orsoo hurried from his pool and quickly donned his suit. Faster than Gotlians had ever observed, the leader appeared on the bridge. He’d been hoping for and dreading this call at the same time. The humans represented a unique opportunity. Yet, they might deny this world to his race.

  “I’m here, Julien,” Di-Orsoo announced.

  “We have matters to discuss,” Julien said.

  Di-Orsoo experienced an emotional lift. “What would you like to know, Julien?”

  “Do you have concerns about the safe return of your ship from your home world?” the SADE inquired.

  “We have expectations,” Di-Orsoo replied cryptically.

  “But no concerns?” Julien pursued.

  “No, we have those too,” Di-Orsoo admitted.

  “Our leader believes your circumstances risk the viable transfer of your race,” Julien said.

  “We haven’t a choice, Julien. Our race can’t survive on our home world. We must relocate, and this is the only water planet available to us. Obtaining these ships emptied our reserves to acquire them. We must make do with them.”

  Alex requested.

  “Our leader wishes to know if you’ll allow us to repair the ship that we’re presently aboard,” Julien said.

  “My engineers have told me that it’s irreparable. I suppose if you make it operational, you’ll have the right to claim it,” Di-Orsoo replied. He deflated, believing he’d been mistaken about the purpose of the call.

  “We’d recondition the ship to aid your purpose,” Julien explained.

  “Why would you do this for us?” Di-Orsoo asked. His tentacles twisted in confusion, echoing the actions of those around him.

  “We want to be good neighbors,” Julien replied.

  Di-Orsoo didn’t recognize the Omnian term, and he glanced at Or-Deebaa and Sa-Foosee. Their entwined tentacles indicated they didn’t either.

  “Do good neighbors require a contract or agreement?” the leader inquired.

  “No,” Julien replied. “It asks that we allow each other to live in peace and extend a helping hand, when it’s needed or requested.”

  “We’ve always been amenable to the races who visited us,” Di-Orsoo replied enthusiastically. “We would receive you in the same manner.”

  Alex asked.

  “Our leader wishes to know if your ships exhibit the same level of preparedness as this one,” Julien relayed.

  “We sent our best ship to Gotl,” Di-Orsoo replied. He embellished the name of the home world with a peculiar burp. “The ship you’re aboard was one of our better conditioned vessels.”

  “It’s possible we could help you with the quality of your ships’ operations,” Julien offered. “Would you allow us to investigate?”

  Julien heard the Gotlian’s consternation, and he waited patiently for a response.

  “Our appearance is disruptive to most races, Julien,” Di-Orsoo replied. “Your efforts would be valuable, but not if it cost us your desire to aid us.”

  “I’m an Omnian, Di-Orsoo, and I’m also a SADE. We are sentient digital entities who’ve chosen to live and work among humans. The SADEs could perform the evaluations and repairs to your ships’ systems. To our minds, all races are just different forms of biology. One shape is as good as another.”

  “How do you appear?” Or-Deebaa asked.

  “And you are?” Julien inquired.

  “Fleet Commander Or-Deebaa,” the commander replied.

  “Commander Or-Deebaa, we can inhabit any avatar, a body, that we can design and construct, but we choose to appear as humans, when we work beside them. You might not find our appearances any more appealing than humans,” Julien said.

  “Julien, it would be better if you first examined and tested your skills on the ship you inhabit. It might be that your services are incompatible with the ship’s systems,” Di-Orsoo suggested.

  “We will need to move our great ship, called the Freedom, and our freighters close to this battleship. In that case, our leader will insist on the fleet’s warships accompanying them,” Julien warned.

  “A wise precaution,” Di-Orsoo allowed. “We’ll move our fleet away. Good neighbors must prove themselves.”

  Julien agreed, and Z closed the comm.

  Alex, at Tatia’s urging, waited to sail until the Gotlian ships were underway. Then the Omnian fleet moved to take up stations around the abandoned ship.

  Mickey, his engineering teams, and freighter crews swarmed aboard the battleship. On Alex’s orders, the armament was checked first.

  Mickey sent, after a brief inspection.

  Alex said curtly. He wasn’t in a good mood. His partner and staff had denied him access to the Gotlian ship. Instead, he received his information via the SADEs, whose comms could reach the traveler in the battleship’s lower bay.

  Mickey replied. He was sympathetic to Alex’s plight and his resulting temper. It had been suggested to him that he not board the ship, and he’d threatened to resign. Unfortunately, Alex had no such option.

  Alex sent.

  <
Correct,> Mickey replied.

  Alex ordered.

  Freighter crews discovered hull plating and beams in a bay, and they used their cargo loaders to ferry the material from the bay to the damaged hull area. The loaders held the beams in position, while crews in suits welded them in place. Then plates were applied inside and outside the hull. It wasn’t a pretty patch, but it was serviceable.

  When pressure in the engine control room was returned, Mickey and his teams investigated the damage. Suntred provided a fairly good summary of the equipment that had been destroyed and its purposes.

  “Mickey, a traveler’s controller could perform these operations with less than ten percent of its capability,” Miriam pronounced.

  “According to Suntred, four pieces of equipment were destroyed, in addition to the master controller,” Luther added, while examining the fused structures. “They were ancillary controllers. Ours can replace them all.”

  Mickey nodded his agreement, and said, “Assign a work team to cut away this junk and pile it in a bay. Get another group working on the controller. After installation and programming, we’ll test it on the ancillary equipment before we try it on the engines. Do we have reaction mass?”

  “Plenty,” Luther replied.

  Mickey glanced at Suntred. “We check the environmental systems next,” he said, and Miriam translated.

  After a thorough inspection, Mickey called Alex. he sent.

  Alex replied.

  Mickey replied.

 

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