Sammy shook her head.
This was not going to go well.
The other Tech if you could call him that, was a born clusterfuck that
should have never worn the badge of a Tech Guild Second Class. Hell, he shouldn’t have even been a Trainee. The trip started off okay until we were a
month into the burn. The Drega was a
class C ship used for cattle crossing. “Cattle”
were the misfits, near-do-wells, and others unlucky enough to be caught in the
round ups every few months and sent to the Wastes. That’s what we called Mars back then. Wasted land, wasted air, wasted lives, and
wasted effort. They should have all been
pushed out the air lock and saved the time and effort. You see, Mars wasn’t close to terraformed like
they claimed. The air was thin and cold,
people lived in caves they called Urbs.
Sub-urbs to be exact. Sub
(underground), urban (what a joke) cities if you could call them that. Always dirty, never enough food, never enough
water, but lots and lots of “cheap” labor.
It had better be cheap; they got spent like grains of sand.
I should introduce myself.
I was born Samantha Garcia, Hernandez, Gonzales, Vargas, Rodriquez,
Ancrew, Johnson. There would have been
more names, but there wasn’t any more room on the Birth Certificate. That’s where the Ancrew comes from. Not even a real name, just a place holder for
the ones that didn’t get their names listed.
“And Crew,” get it? You see I was
born in the parking lot of a building supply store, and these were the guys
standing outside looking for work when Ma’s water burst. We didn’t have the money for real medical
care, and the midwife we’d arranged for, hadn’t expected me for a week. So there everyone was, Ma in the bed of a
pickup truck, laid out on a paint splattered canvas drop cloth, doing quick
breaths while the day laborers looked on and cheered. Mom had wide hips and her labor was easy. Not like the labor my sister endured years
later. Yeah, I was born August 19th
2046. Heh, pickup trucks. Who’d have thought we’d still be using fossil
fuels? Anyway, life wasn’t easy, but it
was a whole lot easier for us, than those that came after. Cattle.
Those Day laborers had it good.
So there I was years later, tech first class, with a misfit tech
crew of one. I should have holed his
suit for all the grief he caused me. We
had a thousand cattle and they give me a single tech, and a worthless one at
that. That first month I had sent him
out to find out why the antenna wasn’t picking up the beamed news and he lost
the entire auxiliary sled and tool kit for it.
How the Hell do you do that?
Well, the foolish ass didn’t tie it down and the acceleration did the
rest of the work. Not that the Drega had
much acceleration. Just a fiftieth of a
G, but even a fiftieth builds up velocity when burned second after second,
minute after minute, day, after day. The
fool could have used his jump pack to grab the sled before it was too late if
he’d had anything on the ball. To make
matters worse, he’d taken the antenna half apart, and managed to lose most of
it when he finally woke up to his fuck up.
So there we were, no sled, few tools and no news feed to keep the Cattle
amused. Not that it was all that
important to keep them amused, but I’d been into season 14 of the all new Weeds
show. This would all bite us in the ass
later, but by then, it was all par for the course. The Captain wasn’t too happy, but like Tech Second
Class Clusterfuck, he was pretty much worthless too. This trip was not shaping up to be a good
one. I should have known it wasn’t going
to go well.
At the three month mark it was time to shut down the main
engine and start the turn-around where we swap ends so we could decelerate. Yeah, good ol Captain Custerfuck and Tech
second class made a great team. Now if
anyone knows much about Cattle ships, you understand you slowly back off the
engine or the length of the ship acts like a spring. Turn it off all at once, and the spring lets
go. Bad things happen because cattle
ships are set up for compressive forces from their one direction drives. Release the compression and spring! Holds number three, five, seven and eight all
lost air. Holds seven and eight didn’t
really matter as they were inert cargo.
Holds three and five however were filled with cattle. Not a pretty sight. Eh, while the Wastes would miss the moisture,
freeze dried food is freeze dried food.
It’s all good.
Once we got the mess cleared away… No scrub that. We actually didn’t bother. Cattle being what they are, we just made
structural tests to make sure things weren’t completely fragged and set about
turning the ship. Now you need to
understand Class C’s don’t like sudden moves, don’t ever see gravity, and need
to be treated gently like a maiden’s nipple.
I don’t know what the captain was thinking. I doubt he was able to think. We were four and a half days into the turn
around with just another five hours of side thrusters before we engaged the
main engine again, (main engine my ass, fiftieth G?) and good ol Captain Clusterfuck
(I swear him and Tech Second Class were brothers) had a Snail in the Control
Room. A SNAIL! What a low browed cud chewing Cattlized Snail
was doing in the control room is beyond me.
No, not beyond me. There were
stories of him and the first mate doing Snail drives through the Ward
Rooms. How did I ever get on this ship? By then, I knew things were not going to go well. I mean they hadn’t since the third week out,
right? Yeah, good ol Snail. “Captain, what does this switch do?” As she gave full power to the main engine
while we were using the side thrusters.
We folded up like a pretzel.
Understand, our main engine pushed all of Drega at a fiftieth
of a G, but the Drega was a big ship. A very
big ship. Drives, bulk storage, new
gear, replacement parts (Where I cobbled up a tool kit after Tech Clusterfuck
lost the sled), propulsion mass, Cattle, hydroponics… Christ, everything that
made Drega a cattle ship. Pretty much
broke in half. Out gassing atmosphere
pushing this way, other leaks pushing the other way, just a mess. I’d been down in the engineering section taking
readings (not much of a section, just a room with spares, some stores, and
pipes, dials, gauges, valves and what not) when the main engine cut in. Not a gradual start up, but a full on
burn. Remember that spring action from
before? Yup. Side thrusters going so there is side stress
to begin with and even though you try, the ship still gets all S shaped and
wonky. Most would look at the ship from
out there in the Void and tell you it looked straight enough. Yeah. Sure. Miss matched side to side stresses from the
thrusters, and then the Main engine kicks in at max. Not a pretty sight.
The off vector thrust threw me away from the pipe I had a toe
hold on and sent me across the room.
Sounds like total mayhem, don’t it?
Well no, more like a slow motion train wreck. It probably took a whole ten or fifteen
seconds for me to get to a hand hold and by then it was too late. I’d been stuck flailing away trying to reach
anything to no avail. When I finally
got a handhold of a pipe, I scrabbled for the hatch, then to the air lock. Didn’t care about Cattle, Captain or god, I’m
not into breathing vacuum. As I hit the
air lock the main engines cut off, but by then it was too late. The spring had sprung and we were folding,
nothing to do but hunker down and kiss it goodbye. There’s always luck though ain’t there? Yeah, always luck.
They’re talking about a movie deal. Something about some flight of the
Phoenix. Couldn’t save the Cattle, and
after they ripped the Captain apart as their air ran out, wasn’t much point trying. We’d only had the one sled anyway. There were five of us down in the aft end
with the engines and the Ponics. We had
the best half you could say. Only four
of us got back. Somehow we misplaced a
Tech Second Class Clusterfuck, but no one’s talking. I was damned sure things would go well for
once, and I was right.
4 comments:
Very good, Huck.
I'm lost
It's sci-fi, set in the future.
You've got skills... even though sci-fi is really not my genre.
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