PROLOGUE:
TINKER SHIP CAPTAIN
Excerpt from Trevor Vaquero’s “Tales of my Father” Archive
I don’t remember my dad as anything more than a giant shadow with a rough beard, a ready smile, and a warm hug. He left before I turned two. My mom doesn’t like talking about him so I collect these stories, mostly recordings from travelers and war veterans. Everyone seems to have a story about my dad even if they never met him. They all have a theory about how he died and why he did what he did. This story I got from Nomie, the colony engineer for New Siberia, over a big plate of enchiladas when she came to visit my mom.
—Trevor Vaquero
So Captain turns to us and he says, “Do we die slow or just take a walk out the airlock? My money’s on the airlock.”
Seriously.
That’s what he says and he’s totally calm about it. He fixes us with that steely look and drinks his coffee. Because Captain is just that cool and that’s how life was on the tinker ships after the Spacer War, right?
In the history archives, they optimistically call them merchant ships and say we carried trade goods between the orbital colonies above Earth. But it’s a tiny bucket of bolts held together by duct tape and prayer, so everybody calls them tinker ships. We were a bit like tinkers, sailing around swapping this and that for this and that, but really the name was a rip-off Tinker Toys.
You know those old wooden toys? The ones that were so popular with kids growing up in orbital colonies? I guess because they were one of the few default toys, the ones all the manuvats had plans for.
This time I’m thinking about was almost two years after the Spacer War. Our ship was cobbled together from war wrecks and crewed mostly by soldiers too broke to go home. Most didn’t have homes to go to anymore.
Damn dirt-loving Earthers. The Spacer War was just so devastating. Not that the Earthers got out of it looking so pretty. It was a long time before they recovered too. But we got our independence so now we can enjoy all the poverty and anarchy that entails.
So we’re all freaking out, of course, but trying to play it cool because the Captain just doesn’t do freak-outs and we were all desperate to not disappoint the guy. Especially me, since we’re in these dire straights because I totally jacked up the day before. Sleeping at the console when pirates attacked, if you can believe it.
Me! The best, brightest and, if I do say so myself, cutest pilot this side of the stars. Nomie the Tinker Treasure, they called me. Sometimes. When I saved them from certain death and got them into port two days early on half a working thruster. When we were sucking on carbon dioxide and praying for a miracle, they called me all sorts of names not fit to repeat.
Of course that was years ago. Nowadays I’m just slightly less cute and instead of piloting tinkers, I spend my days running the logistics of this orbital and raising my little ankle-biters. Sure never would have guessed things would turn out this way.
So anyway, pirates attack. Life was like that back then. Only two years after the Spacer War, there were plenty of not-so-funny ways to die. Don’t get any ideas, kid. There is nothing romantic about these pirate guys. They were just a little more hungry and desperate than us and more willing to be jerks about it.
They blindsided us in a ship only slightly faster and less shoddy than our own. They’d never have gotten close to us except the portside sensors only worked some of the time and not at all that day. Also, I was taking a nap.
We escaped, mostly intact, but limping and slow. The ship was losing pressure and it was a long way to the main shipping lanes. Decompression is a nasty way to go.
So the Captain gives us a second to gulp like goldfish and then he says, “Or maybe you bright boys could come up with some other options?”
I forgave him for the two or three hundred times he called me a boy. It was his way of saying that even though I was the hottest girl pilot in the system, he wasn’t gonna try gnawing on my bra strap any time soon. You appreciate that, after a while.
How to get out of this mess? It’s not like we could call anybody for help. The Spacer Army was in shambles and a police force was just a dream to argue about over dinner, if you had any. These things hadn’t been thought about in the heady days of revolution. Earth just hung in our faces like a big ball of suck, ignoring our last gasp for life.
Finally Mike pipes up, his voice cracking a little, “There’s a Russian tether close enough.”
Mike was our lone Earther but we didn’t hold it against him. He said he’d been a Spacer soldier, but no one believed the kid. He looked about twelve years old and even the Spacer Army had standards.
The Captain winces, but the rest of us openly groan. Me, I flick on my comm and start plowing through the data like a salmon heading up river, looking for any solution that didn’t involve us flinging ourselves across the sky with a Russian tether.
“The idea is to find a way to live, not a more interesting way to die,” the tall Asian woman pointed out.
No one could pronounce her name and she never talked about her past. If we had to call her anything, we called her “Asia.” Her specialty was electronics and information. Over rounds of beer, we speculated that she’d been a spy in at least one of the Worlder Wars, but we never could agree which side. I could never keep track of who was fighting who in all those wars the Earthers fought amongst themselves before they started in on killing us.
Mike flushes.
“Tethers can work,” he insists. “They just don’t like to. I’ve used ’em before. If you got a better idea, I’d love to hear it. Only no one seems interested in our distress beacon.”
“Please? What is Russian tether?” asks Alex.
Alex had a thick Spanish accent but moved like a Spacer. I wondered where he came from, but the past just wasn’t something you ask about on a tinker ship. Sure, if you were drunk and a guy started talking, that’s one thing. But to just ask? Never.
Oh man, did I have a thing for Alex. Spanish accents are like catnip for this girl’s ears. He was very easy on the eyes too. Think dark wavy locks and full sensual lips. I loved to watch him talk just as much as I loved listening to that accent.
So Captain clears his throat and starts lecturing. “A Russian tether is like a slingshot for ships. One end is attached to a weighted motor with solar panels to charge it. The other end is attached to us. It spins us around like a dead cat before pitching us. It’s cheap energy, but if you don’t let go at the right moment, it will pitch you into Earth or out into void space so far you can’t get back. There’s a bunch of them out here. They never break, but…”
Nobody says a word. Finally Captain sighs and says, “We can last maybe another twenty hours without docking for repairs. The repairs are easy, but we need new air. No one’s answered our signal for three days. Tether’s not a good choice, but it’s our best one.”
Captain pauses, rubbing his thumb thoughtfully. No one offers any criticism so he slaps his palm against a table and says resolutely, “We do it.”
He doesn’t wait for agreement. He just flips on his comm while we throw ourselves into action. I start the docking procedures for this little suicide run, while praying to whatever gods might listen to a bunch of tinkers.
The comms were your basic ear-bud computers with retinal projector screens that operated using your finger movements. The whole thing looked like a pair of glasses with matching earplugs and bracelets. These days everybody’s got to have those cochlear implants jacked right their skulls, but I miss my old comm. It was nice to be able to unplug once in a while.
We only had three working comms on the tinker because even black market ships from Earth came practically never. So the others only get a turn when Captain, Asia and I aren’t busy keeping us all alive.
“I always did like roller coasters,” mutters Mike with a crazed gleam in his gray eyes. He straps in, rubbing the stubble on his shaved head.
We find the tether and lock in without incident. It takes a long time for the torque to spin up. We get a kick out of the brief feeling of gravity, even if it had us standing on the walls. We were cooped up for close to two weeks without grav on that run.
Ships all travel slow in the orbitals. Everything is a lot farther away than you would think. Especially after the War, fuel for speed was too expensive for Spacers. Even on Earth, everyone moved slower than they had in the past. We gave them as good as we got in the War.
Asia and me, we check and recheck the flight figures frantically. As if our lives depend on it. Because they do.
Tinkers tend to know a bit about almost everything. Knowing a million ways to jury-rig every system in the ship with a pair of boots and an old ration box will greatly extend your life span. And if you dock at a colony that doesn’t need the goods you have to sell, knowing your way around a water filtration system or a solar generator is always good for a meal and a beer. We’d been doing pretty good before the attack, all things considered.
“Here we go!” announces Captain.
Of course, he sounds dead calm, but I catch the slight tremor in his hands. His face always remained blank, no matter how insane his curly red hair got or what kind of crap we were knee-deep in. We break loose from the tether and go hurtling through the void, powerless to stop.
I would vomit, but I’m too scared. Alex closes his eyes and begins a prayer under his breath in Spanish. Captain starts telling a very unlikely story about a distant wild night with a dazzling senorita. It is momentarily distracting and that’s a blessing.
The minute the spinning stops and we are all able to gulp down a few relieved breaths, Mike practically crawls into my lap, trying to see my retinal screen. I push him away.
“Well? Nomie, where are we? Where?” they all start yelling.
“We are not exactly where we would like to be,” I say, trying to break it to them easy.
Mike weeps.
Alex starts praying more loudly and more rapidly. I think I can make out a few very strong curses concerning God and his orifices mixed in with the litany, but my Spanish is not great.
I keep working the comm, trying to get us safe or at least safer, while Asia calms them down. She doesn’t stop working her comm though, because Asia can multitask her way to hell and back.
“We are very high up, very far out of the spheres,” she tells them. There’s some sort of long official name for the part of space around Earth that the orbitals colonized, but who can remember that? We always just call them the spheres.
Sounding surprised, Asia says, “There is an orbital up here we can reach. Perhaps there are others, but we are on a course outwards into void space. If we do not stop now, we may not be able to get back.”
There is a collective sigh of relief. Just shows you how dismal our lives are. An unknown orbital, floating like a life buoy before certain death, and we actually think our luck is looking up. Alex crosses himself quickly and stops his prayer, if that’s what it was. Asia begins hurriedly pulling her long glossy curtain of black hair back into a tight bun and that’s how I know we are in trouble.
“This is not good. There is something wrong with this place,” Asia says flatly, her black eyes flickering as she reads what the comm flashes onto her retina.
I don’t want to hear that there is anything wrong. I want her to shut up and tell me everything was going to be peachy keen and they are serving ice cream in two hours, but it would never occur to Asia to sugarcoat the truth.
“This orbital is functional. It is small but there is air. There is power,” she says slowly in that precise way she had about her. “We may be able to dock and repair our ship here. But it is not geosynchronous.”
We give her a bunch of blank looks. Asia shuts her eyes and looks annoyed for a minute before explaining. “It does not revolve at a fixed point above Earth like normal orbitals with Earth standard days. This colony is heliosynchronous. It orbits the Earth at a fixed point in relation to the sun. They do not have light-dark cycles at all.” She flips off the comm and shakes her head.
Mike snorts, “So they sleep with the lights on. Big deal.”
“No, they do not. It is the opposite. They are parked on the night side of the world,” she snaps, taking off her comm glasses and frowning. “They never see daylight. It worries me.”
Mike shrugs and says, “Weirdos are still better than death by decompression. But how do they survive? The power cells, the manufacturing vats, their food foliage, even oxygen tanks—all of it needs sunlight, doesn’t it?”
Asia pops an infrared scan of this weird orbital up on the vidscreen so everyone can have a good look at it. It is a squat, round spinning hunk of post-industrial metal with various globes and cubes attached to it. It doesn’t have the solar sails or large solar panel wings normally seen on orbitals. I think it looks ugly without them.
The Captain sighs, rubbing his bright blue eyes, “Out of the frying pan and into the fire.”
What can we do, but prep to dock?
The outer doors unlock and hiss open. We suck in greedy gulps of air on the docking bay platform. Customarily, there are officials at the door with a wide variety of questions to answer and tests to pass before you can enter an orbital. Here, we are alone on a platform bristling with sensors and cameras.
“It’s just how I like my colony—dank, smelly and dark,” says Alex sarcastically. At least, I hope he’s being sarcastic.
“All colonies have their own smell. The Caribbean Coffee Conglomerate smells wonderful,” Asia remarks. “I checked the air quality here before we entered. It’s fine.”
“Maybe they are all gone,” Mike chirps hopefully.
Captain looks into the unblinking red eye of a large camera and shakes his head. “More likely they are just shy,” he says firmly. “Let’s get to work.”
We move quickly, wanting to be gone as soon as possible. Captain sends the grunts we’d picked up a few weeks before, Mingo and Fishtrap, to go look for inhabitants. I never could figure out what language those two spoke so I don’t know too much about them. Captain had some idea who they were and where they came from, though. At least, I think he did.
Anyway, recompressing the ship with air goes faster if the colony allows us to use the orbital’s pumps and paying for air is smarter than just taking it. Stealing is a good way to get blown out of the sky.
“If you can’t find people, make sure you find some food and water. Our supplies are low and we’ll have a long trip back,” Captain tells the grunts. But he says it quietly, away from the cameras.
Asia and me, we already have the breach fixed and we’re looking at the damaged solar cells when the first colonist appears. He moves like a ghost, old and pale. Even his eyes seem colorless and strange, like a giant who shriveled up in the sun. The hair on my neck prickles, just looking at him.
He lisps slightly as he attempts what might be a smile, “Welcome. I am Dr. Voctoire, the lead scientist here.” Dr. Voctoire has a decidedly thick Eastern European accent and he’s well over six feet tall.
Mike is sitting next to me, pulling up schematics for the water pumps while keeping his eyes on this strange character and cussing under his breath. I lean over to Mike and whisper, “Is he being creepy on purpose or is he for real?”
“Can’t tell and don’t care,” Mike whispers back without moving his lips.
Mike was pretty decent looking, if you liked them tall and stringy and young. Personally, I prefer big and beefy men like Captain. Not that he had an extra pound of fat on him. He is just a big guy.
Captain steps over and shakes the pale man’s hand. In his booming Captain voice, he says “Sorry to barge in on you like this. We were limping along, looking to die if we hadn’t docked here. Two of my men went in search for your people to ask properly for your help. We thank you for any hospitality you care to give us.”
Dr. Voctoire smiles eerily. “Ah yes, I met your men. Please, we do not get many visitors. We would like to make a meal with you?”
We agree, because who turns down free food? Dr. Voctoire lets us use the orbital’s pumps to repressurize the ship, saying we can haggle over the price after dinner. Captain tells Mike, Asia and me to continue with the repairs. Then he leaves with Alex, slipping a remote around his wrist so I can see and hear what goes on with them inside this place.
“Dr. Voctoire, we’ve been wondering how you guys manage in the dark like this,” Captain asks with a cheerful lack of concern while his blue eyes dart around, taking it all in. The walls are covered with a slimy bioluminescent moss. If that isn’t weird enough, the old man has two separate cochlear implant comms, one for each eye and both are activated.
I am used to cochlear implants now, the shiny metal disk with its red little light screwed right into a person’s temple, but two is just beyond weird, you know? Have you ever seen that before? Because Voctoire’s colony is the only place I ever did.
Dr. Voctoire says, “The dark? We have a series of mirrors that provide us with enough sunlight for survival. We find the dark preferable for our experiments.”
Captain asks, “So you are a research station? Wonderful. Not too many of those left. What are you researching?”
I wonder if they were using fuel cells or nuclear for power, since they obviously don’t use solar. I’m really glad I stayed behind. The tinker is a hunk of junk, but it has great radiation shielding and this guy didn’t look like he cared overmuch about frying his gonads with badly shielded nukes.
The old man says dismissively, “Computers, we work with. Technology. Electronics. It is very technical, our work. I would not bore you with details.”
Captain replies, “I see you have two comms. It’s unusual. Do you run them at the same time? I didn’t think that was possible.”
“Yes, we must. There are few of us here and much work to do. All of us use dual independent processors. It is difficult, but achievable with the right, ah, modifications.”
Captain gives one of his hearty captain laughs. “If it were me, I’d be tripping all over the place. Trying to walk and talk with just one on is bad enough and here you got two.”
That’s when I realize that Dr. Voctoire’s eyes are moving independently, like a chameleon. So creepy! Through the video feed, I spy Captain shuddering so he sees it too.
Dr. Voctoire nods, taking the meaning of Captain’s stare.
“Yes, Mr. Captain. It is unusual, what we have done, but necessary for our purposes. Our modified vision requires us to keep light to a minimum, but the computers allow us to see extremely well in the dark.”
“Well, the skies are big enough for everyone and you certainly don’t have much competition for this corner of the spheres, but you did startle me there, mister.” Captain says frankly.
The old man stares at him with one eye as they walk. “Mr. Captain, you have introduced all your crew members, but not yourself. Please, what is your name?” Dr. Voctoire asks.
Captain just smiles, “Out in the dark on our tinker ship, I forget my own name more often than I care to admit.”
That’s the kind of thing Captain says if you ask about his name. We all learned pretty quick not to ask.
Back in the ship, I am freaking out again. Mingo and Fishtrap weren’t responding on their remotes, which is bad enough.
Then Asia comes over and writes on a scrap of paper, “The colonists here can see everything on their colony, but they can’t see in this ship. They can hear us. Very advanced security. Very secretive. Not much in the Ether about this place. Almost a hundred years old.”
A hundred years make it one of the oldest orbitals still in use. That would make anybody nervous, especially after getting a look at that freak-show Voctoire.
I get on the comm and start squawking to Captain to come back. Since I know the people in the orbital are listening in, I use some of the code words we worked out beforehand. Sadly, this isn’t the first bizarre situation we’ve been in.
Captain listens for a minute and then calmly says to Voctoire, “Sir, if you will excuse me, there is a minor problem with my ship that needs my attention before I join you.”
Dr. Voctoire asks that Alex continue on with him. Captain agrees because he doesn’t want to tip his hand. Alex is experienced enough to know he needs to be on alert because things are getting strange here.
We use the pencil and paper to explain things to Captain when he gets back. We make sure to speak out loud about general things like our food and air supplies.
“Gene mod?” Asia scribbles.
Genetic modification was a fairly routine thing in orbital space by that time. Colonies have very specific requirements for plants or animals and they have to balance the water, air, food, and whatnot in their biosphere or else they all die. Gene mods are usually the easiest way to do that. A good splicer can solve three life-threatening issues with one well-designed fungus. But gene mod is still never, ever used on humans.
That’s because there were some very memorable, very horrific mistakes that no one dares repeat. While the black market thrives for all things under the sun, human mod is strictly off limits.
You’ll never find a geneticist willing to risk professional suicide followed rapidly by fatal torture. That’s the standard punishment for human gene mod. But Voctoire’s orbital is obviously a very top-secret corporate research station so just about anything could be happening here.
Captain frowns and shrugs. Then he goes and rummages around in the supply room and comes back with a bottle of green liquid.
He says loudly, “Well, I see you have the repairs under control. I’ll be back in a few hours.” He takes the bottle and leaves with Mike in tow. Asia and I watch through the feed on Captain’s wrist.
On the way, they meet another colonist. She is tall, frail and ghostly like the first. She also has the two implants jacked into her skull, glowing ominously. Both of her computers are engaged and she merely motions them to follow her as she slowly makes her way. When they reach the eating area, there are about twenty people in it, including Dr. Voctoire.
All are tall, gray and withered, like all the color has just washed out of them. When they enter the room, Mike’s hand hovers over his weapon, but it drops away when he looks them over. I know what he is thinking.
How could this congregation of elderly be a threat?
Captain says in his big hearty voice, “Well now, I have here the finest old absinthe still circulating above the stratosphere that I’d like to share with you fine folk. But where are my three crewmen? Don’t tell me they are off getting into trouble?”
Dr. Voctoire smiles formally and gestures for them sit.
“Your men are assisting us with a small problem. They are so kind to do so. We will join them shortly.”
The table is heavy with bread, cheese, and some kind of thick stew. The shots I can see of it through the bracelet video make me drool. I hear Mike and Captain talking about how great everything tastes, but strangely spiced. I’m hoping they remember to bring some back.
“We had a special breed of sheep designed for us. They do not need light and live on our moss.” Dr. Voctoire says.
He seems positively chatty now.
“So, your research isn’t genetic, then?” Mike asks quickly, moping up stew with some bread.
“Oh no. We are more concerned with technical matters. Mediboxes, specifically. There are many very interesting applications of that technology. For example, there are certain surgeries that it can perform to greatly extend the human life span.”
He sounds pretty reasonable and smart, but the thing is, you have to be a special kind of crazy to modify a medibox. You guys have a medibox on this colony, right? New Siberia does too.
They are a lot better than they used to be. Even back then a medibox could do the scans and tests necessary to diagnose almost any medical problem. They could perform surgeries too. They used a series of lasers that worked pretty well, although they left interesting scars. They also prescribed medicines, but most contained only basic antibiotics and painkillers.
A rogue medibox is everyone’s secret dread. Actually, it isn’t that secret. Mediboxes are heavily featured in horror Ether flicks.
Captain expresses polite disbelief at their research success. I can see him squirming in his seat just a little before busying himself with pouring the absinthe and insisting they all try it.
Voctoire does not take a glass and will not be deterred in his enthusiasm for the insane subject.
He says proudly, “Yes, it’s true. I myself am almost one hundred sixty years old. All of us here have had the surgery. No one here is under one hundred years old. There is no telling how long we will live. What do you think of that?”
Personally, long life as a wizened gray skeleton is something I’ll pass on.
That’s when Captain notices Mike snoring into his soup. He tries to leap to his feet, but staggers and falls instead. The food was drugged, you see.
Voctoire leaned towards him and says confidentially, “Mr. Captain, we have not had a shipment of experimental subjects in far too long and we have many new ideas to test. We are so pleased to have you here.” Dr. Voctoire cackles while the Captain slides to the floor. The last thing I see through the remote is Voctoire switching it off.
Asia and me set a new speed record as we slam the ship’s doors shut and pull away from the orbital. We don’t stop for breath until we are well away from there. Then I start scanning and I see Captain’s remote flick back on. So I pull the video feed onto the main vidscreen, hoping we can figure out what is going on in there. It’s weirdly distorted but I can make out Captain sitting up in a medibox in a room that is full of them.
They look like normal mediboxes, except they have wires trailing out to large computer interfaces. There are several of the gray colonists hovering like harpies over a medibox on the far side of the room.
Captain spies Mike in the middle of them and utters a hoarse cry. Mike is yanking tubes out of his arm and throwing punches. Luckily, they both downed hypermet tablets on the ship against the odds that someone tried drugging the food. So they were only out for a few minutes instead of hours. We’d been around the block enough times to be paranoid like that. Voctoire’s colonists certainly weren’t expecting it.
Captain bursts out of the medibox with a cry of pain tearing through him before hurling himself into the colonists around Mike like a fury. I could tell by the angry red puckered lines crisscrossing his stomach and back that surgical lasers had been working on him.
I look him over later, but we never figure out exactly what they did to him in that medibox. Didn’t seem to slow him down, whatever it was. The gray colonists scatter, bleeding and shrieking. Mike is also in working order, if covered in blood and raging, cussing up a storm.
Then they find Alex, Mingo, and Fishtrap. It’s bad.
It’s worse when they realize the poor bastards are still alive. Mike retches at the sight while Captain methodically puts his three men out of their misery, one shot to the temple apiece. Captain always had that old pistol with him. He kept it loaded with flechettes, the kind that don’t pierce a ship’s hull. I swear he slept with it strapped to his privates. There are many occasions for a reliable pistol on a tinker ship.
Then they run for the ship, Captain screaming orders into his comm and Mike just screaming. On the way, they find the dining hall from before. Captain snatches up the half empty absinthe bottle without breaking stride.
“What was in there, anyway? Some kind of toxin or drug to slow them down?” Mike gasps, taking stairs three at a time.
Captain laughs, “Just some damn fine absinthe. I figured it never hurts to be neighborly.”
They almost make it.
When they reach the docking platform, Dr. Voctoire and a crew of heavily armed colonists are waiting for them. Mike and Captain have their guns at the ready.
“Your ship escaped, but you will not, clever Mr. Captain,” laughs Voctoire cruelly.
I guess he’s feeling pretty confident on account of Mike and Captain have at least four lasers apiece pointed at them. It’s like high noon in an Ether drama.
“I’d rather stay here and kill you monsters, anyway,” Captain replies grimly.
“You will not damage any more of us.” Dr. Voctoire chuckles. “But please, it will help our experiments to know who we are vivisecting. Tell us your name and we may at least send your ashes home.”
Captain stands like stone. “My name is Cesar Vaquero.”
The laughter and jeering stop suddenly. Even Mike gives him a startled glance, though his gun never wavers. I can hear Asia gasp next to me so I know she’s listening too.
Dr. Voctoire begins to laugh again. This time, it has a more hysterical edge to it.
“Cesar the Scorcher? The Butcher of Mexico? You call me a monster for conducting important experiments on a few useless nothings? How many did you kill when you dropped that nuclear starship on Mexico City?”
It didn’t occur to him that Captain gave him a false name. No one would pretend to be Cesar Vaquero.
Captain’s face remains completely expressionless.
“Millions. I killed millions,” he says flatly as he cocks his pistol. “I ended the war. Billions would have died if the fighting continued. How many of you do you think I can kill?”
That’s when all the power goes out. Because Asia and me aren’t just sitting out there, twiddling our thumbs. We have a plan. We smash an electromagnetic pulse bomb against their hull with the power cranked up as high as we can get it. If any of their fancy electronics work after that, I’d guess they don’t work too well.
I can hear the sound of clicking triggers as the colonists fire their weapons reflexively, but it’s too late. The lasers are just so much useless junk by then. Some of them scream and claw at their computers, without power for the first time in decades apparently.
Only Mike and Captain remain calm. I switch the video to night vision just in time to see the Captain smile. It’s not a nice smile.
Captain knows immediately what Asia and I are up to. He cheerfully says to Voctoire, “I trust you ogres had the sense to run your vital systems off vacuum tubes like everyone else. No? Well isn’t that terrible? Perhaps if you are quick, you won’t lose the whole colony.”
There is the sound of scrabbling in the dark.
Our captain, Cesar Vaquero, calls out, “I hope you will all notice that our guns are not electronic. And neither are the bullets we are about to fire at you.”
It only takes a few minutes for the colonists to scatter, blind and toothless without their computers and lasers. Mike and Cesar fire a few rounds of flechettes to spur the exodus. And then I will be damned if Captain and Mike down race off into darkness after them. I thought for sure that’s the last time I’d ever see those two, but they popped back onto the docking platform with what was left of Mingo, Fishtrap, and Alex. Those poor bastards.
We have the ship docked and the doors open in no time. Before we took off, we rigged the orbital’s door to open manually. Sparing a minute to retrieve the bomb and store it for later use, we blaze away from that hellhole as fast as we can.
Only when we are sure they are not sending anything nasty after us do we stop to think about the man sitting next to us on the deck.
Cesar Vaquero, the Scorcher of Mexico, our Captain. Can you believe it? A war hero to Spacers, a genocidal maniac to the Earthers, a legend long thought dead and we’d been listening to his crazy stories and making him coffee for months. We watch him with horror and awe, but no one says a thing except for Asia. She only has one question.
“Are you sorry?” she asks.
Captain looks at his hands for a minute, and then slowly lifts his head to meet her eyes.
“The dirt-lovers were going to hit my home next. They had a bomb that could take out our whole colony with one hit. My parents, my wife, my son.” His voice breaks over that last word. “I killed eighty million people to stop a war. Truth is, I would kill billions to keep my family safe.”
He turns away from her and sets the coordinates for our next adventure.
No offense, kid, but your dad was… Well, he was your dad, wasn’t he? The Scorcher of Mexico. Everybody’s parents are crazy, but yours was always in a league of his own.
As if that weren’t strange enough, when he turns away, I see a new shock of white in his vivid red hair. It’d never been there before. Over the next few weeks, his hair turns snow white and stays that way.
We wondered what had been done to him in that medibox. That is, until the next crisis drives it out of our mind. Maybe you think I made the whole story up, but I swear I’m not smart enough to think of something as weird as that insane little world. Stay away from heliosynchronous orbitals, kid. That’s my advice.
I piloted that tinker for another few months for your dad. He was the best Captain I ever had, but then I met my man here on New Siberia and decided to settle down. Last I saw of him, your dad was headed for the Hathor Mining Colony with a ship full of drills to trade. I guess he never quite got there.
You tell your mom she’s in all our prayers. I hope they find the bastards that are giving you people so much trouble lately.