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Journal Entry 00916 179 000 Rats And Engineers

Rats And Engineers

Journal Entry 179 / 00916

Anar, Urim 08, 00916

David stopped at the door marked "Captain," and listened quietly for a

few seconds. Hearing nothing, he pushed the doorbell button. There was

still no sound from inside. He turned the knob and walked in.

His office was empty. He had begun checking it for occupants ever since he

had startled the chief engineer and the steward in a less than delicate

position on his desk. The memory made him smile, and then it made him

frown. He glanced down at the black armband around his bicep and with a

grimace tore it off, ignoring the small shocks of pain when he grabbed

a few strands of fur in the process.

With a sigh he walked around his desk and sat down, easing his tail

through the hold between seat and back. Damn you, Mickey, he thought. Why

did you have to go and get yourself killed like that? And now you

leave me without a chief engineer. I can't let Pat do it, she's not

nearly qualified. I need a chief engineer, not somebody with less than

a thousand hours under a chief engineer. David smiled. In Mickey's case

he was sure Patricia had spent at least a few hours literally under the

chief engineer. Mickey had always been a ladykiller.

David reached for the power switch on his terminal when the reflection in

the monitor's glass caught his attention. He .tisked. himself under his

breath. His eyes were dulled, his fur matted, his whiskers droopy. There

had been days when he had been one fine-looking rat, but this was not

going to be one of those days. The funeral and the legal administration

surrounding Mickey's death had taken their toll. He pushed the switched.

The terminal beeped as it came up. David found the familiar sound annoying

today. He sighed again as he typed in his access code and pulled up mail

for the custom-request address he had created yesterday morning. "Now

then," he said, addressing the monitor as he typed commands, "how many

people applied for the job?"

YOU HAVE MAIL WAITING (17 NEW), the monitor replied. David didn't bother

to look at the mail himself - there were other criteria he had to satisfy

before sifting through seventeen resumes. From his terminal he typed

"RESUME ASSESS."

The program ran for several seconds, then announced "RECORDS: 17.

REJECTED: 17. 0 SUITABLE APPLICANTS BY PRESENT CRITERIA DATABASE."

David blinked, then typed "RESUME ASSESS REASON FOR REJECTION."

The program ran much quicker this time-- the data it had downloaded

from various municipal facilities the first time were still in its

telecommunication buffer. "RECORDS: 17. REJECTED: 17. REASONS FOR

REJECTION: ACTIVE FELONY RECORD: 16. OTHER: 1."

David knew he was a rarity among free trader captains because he ran a

clean ship. He never carried illegal cargo, never bought questionable

papers, and never took on crew who had active felony records if he could

avoid it.

Other? He blinked at the screen for a second. He'd never seen "Other"

as a reason before. "RESUME ASSESS DOCUMENT ALL REASONS FOR REJECTION

OTHER THAN FELONY RECORD."

"RECORDS: 1. REJECTED: 1. REASONS FOR REJECTION: OTHER: 1 CODE PO"

"Prag!" David cursed. This was more annoying than cleaning out a broken

sewage line. What the hell did "CODE PO" mean? "RESUME ASSESS DATABASE

CODE EXPLANATION PO," he tried.

"PO: Planet of Origin."

That was a new one to David, too. Usually, a planet of origin warning

would come up as something else, such as interdicted species (meaning

the Sinox) or incompatible biologies (meaning the llerkin). He found

his frustration being supplanted by sudden curiosity. Where could the

applicant have come from that it wasn't one of the other categories?

"RESUME DISPLAY REJECTED RECORD CODE PO REASON PO."

"RECORD 14: Planet of Origin: PENDOR."

That, David thought, explains that. The last thing he wanted on his ship

was a Pendorian. Pendorians had their own form of justice, and if one

ever got in trouble they had their own law and the strength to enforce

it. A recent incident in which a Pendorian girl had been taken hostage

had resulted in the military occupation of a small city on Zephyr. People

had gotten hurt. As a planetary policy, they cared about nothing but

their own.

David leaned back in the chair and put the keyboard in his lap. "RESUME

DISPLAY RECORD 1 FLAG IGNORE."

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Three hours later David stood up and stretched. He had sifted through

the records and not one of the sixteen others who had applied for the

job looked at all promising. Most of the offenses were either weapon or

controlled substance related, with a scattering of violent and sexual

assaults throughout. The ones with the least amount of trouble also had

the least amount of experience.

The trouble was, he couldn't afford to pay enough to really attract

a good engineer. Times were hard recently, and he was as far off the

llerkin-Pendor-Terra trade route as he had ever been. The ones who had

applied also had to know he was in dire straits. They wanted off this

mudball and back into better-known territories just as he did, and he

presented a chance for them to get there.

He walked around his desk, stretched again, and sat down. Against his

better judgment, he typed "RESUME DISPLAY RECORD 14 FLAG IGNORE."

"NAME: Dennielle Satpulov." He read through the resume quickly, glancing

through her personal material to concentrate on her professional record.

It was more than a little impressive. Six years with Pendor Naval

Engineering, experience with a variety of FTL drives, including his own.

According to the resume, she also had experience with computers of

non-Pendor manufacture, a rarity even in Terra-controlled space, and a

skill he could use.

"Well, computer, do I hire her, or a crook?" There was no answer;

David had decided long ago that he disliked the idea of an AI running

his ship for him, especially since almost all AIs were still Pendorian

in origin and were rumored to have divided loyalties. The fact that he

had a computer of Terran manufacture sometimes earned him strange looks

at customs points because usually only pirates and smugglers used them.

After a few seconds of thought he hit the 'T' button. The telephone

light came on, and he waited.

The screen blinked, and the text of the resume was replaced with a live

picture of a tired and disheveled Mephit. "Hello?" she asked quietly.

"Dennielle Satpulov? I'm Captain David Elohim, of the Rat's Asking. You

applied for the position of chief engineer on my ship."

"Yes," the Mephit yawned, "I remember. What can I do for you?"

"I noticed on your resume you didn't put down a request for salary. I

was calling to ask you why."

"I'm not looking for a salary. I noticed that llerkin was one of your

major ports of call, and I'm looking for passage back into Pendor Treaty

Alliance space."

David paused. Work passage? It was unusual, but he had taken on crew on

a work passage basis before. Never a chief engineer, but he figured there

was a time for everything. It occurred to David then that, as a Pendorian,

this Mephit should have been able to get credit for a ride on the basis

of her name only. There was no reason for her to be looking for a job,

even this far from PTA space. He would have offered her high passage

rooms with a single flash from a Pendor-rated bankcard.

"Miss Satpulov, could you come to my ship, say, ten this morning?"

The Mephit blinked and said, "Ten's fine. I'll be there bright and early."

"Goodnight," David said.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Patricia whistled low as she looked over the record David had called up

on the terminal for her. "She's good," she said. "What's she asking for

a salary?"

David pinched the bridge of his muzzle and closed his eyes. "Work

passage."

"You're kidding," Patricia said, glancing over at him. She recognized

that gesture-- David was getting another headache. "She could command

six figures on a real starliner. What's she doing out here?"

"That's why I want you here when she shows. Tell me she's as good as

she says."

The door chimed, and David said "Come." It opened and the Mephit David

had seen the night before walked in. She was about 180 cm tall, gently

overweight, with luxurious black fur and a short muzzle. Her ears were

quite large for a Mephit-- David knew that was a trait of a sub-species

of Mephit, a racial trait, but he didn't know the name for it. She wore

a standard grey crewman's jumpsuit which did nothing to hide the fact

that she was quite buxom. Her eyes were large, oval, and colored gold,

and the only white fur he could see was a tiny shock about a centimeter

wide and four centimeters long that started just above her eyes. She

held her tail erect; he could see it over her shoulders, and what he

could see was solidly black.

"Captain Elohim?" she asked.

"You must be Dennielle Satpulov," he said. He felt uncomfortable- she

had to know he was in trouble, and her asking price was so ridiculously

low that he virtually had nothing to haggle with. He held out a hand

and she shook it in a friendly manner. "You're punctual," he observed.

"I try," she said, smiling. "So, what do you think of my resume?"

"It's impressive," he replied. "What can you tell me about my ship?"

"From the outside? It's functional. You've got a standard Terran model
Voisma Jumpdrive, six Senoph-line fusion drives for in-system maneuver,

and a standard Vienn statis net over the whole thing for emergency

defense. Your guns are either IMI or Cloudrunners, I couldn't tell which

with blast shields down. What have you got for power plants?"

"Four Morrow Industries model fives," Patricia answered.

"Four?" Dennielle asked. "That's quite a lot for a six-hundred ton

starship, isn't it?"

David shrugged. "I like having a lot of backup."

"And what computer are you running?"

"Hallmark 4000-bis plus."

Dennielle paused for a second. "That's a bit unusual, but I think I can

handle it. That's a Terran model."

"Something wrong with that?" David asked.

"Not at all. It just means I'm going to have to live without an AI for

a little longer."

David caught himself wondering what she looked like underneath the same

jumpsuit that Patricia wore everyday and almost missed what she was

saying. He heard Patricia ask Dennielle a question, but he ignored it;

his mind was more occupied with guilt and anger at himself for thinking

about either of them that way, and with frustration at not having a

choice in the matter.

"David!" he heard Patricia calling.

"Eh?" he said, looking up.

"What do you think?"

He looked flustered for a second, then sighed and said, "Miss Satpulov,

you're hired. As a rule, I don't normally hire Pendorians, but in your

case I'm going to make an exception. You start right now. Pat, you've

got the spare room. I'm sorry, but I'm going to have to ask you to give

her the space."

"I know, I know," Patricia answered. "It's okay."

"Thank you, Captain," Dennielle replied.

"On this ship, there's aren't enough people to call me Captain," he said.

"David will do fine."

"It is Day-vid, not Dah-veed?" she asked.

"Day-vid," he repeated. "Don't let the last name fool you, I'm not

particularly religious. Could you excuse us for a second, Miss Satpulov?"

"Denni," she said.

"Denni, then." He gestured for the door, and she nodded, closing it

behind her.

He turned to Patricia and said, "Well?"

"She knows her stuff, I'll give her that. She's good."

"Better than Mickey?"

"Don't ask me to make that comparison, David. I'm not going to do it."

"But she can do his job."

"That she can do."

----------------------------------------------------------------------

David's fears that Denni may have lied on her resume quickly vanished as

she rather quickly proved to be a boon to their engineering staff. The

word "staff" was another word that made David laugh when no one was around

to hear, since the staff consisted of Patricia, Marder, and now Denni.

Most of his crew was human. The only other recombinant on his crew was

Tasha, his pilot, a Katkin from Terra.

He had worked for the Rat's Asking for most of his life; being a starship

pilot had been his one and only dream since he had been born. There were

days when it got to him, the constant pressure to maintain his ship. He

had sunk a lot of cash into her, buying the best he could.

He realized now that doing so may have been a mistake. At the moment

he didn't have the capital to effect some minor repairs that, while not

critical, were necessary. He was in no danger of losing his hyperdrive,

powerplants, or basic life support, but at any moment his toilet might

back up. And some of the life support emergency circuitry was getting old.

It had been an old hull when he'd bought it, and some of the hardware

had come with the deal.

They were nine light years out from Simaj. The jumpdrive was on it's

third recycle, and at present fuel reserves they were faring better

than he had estimated. Denni was doing one hell of a job. The Fahrenheit

starsystem was two more jumps, and then it was back to BD+32 and Pendor

Treaty Alliance space.

He sat in front of the computer screen on the bridge, calculating costs

on a spreadsheet. Tasha had long ago finished any navigation checks, and

David preferred using the lag time between jumps to do his accounting

work. Bored and tired, he hit the SAVE button and said, "Tasha, I'm

going down to the galley for some coffee. Want some?"

Tasha had never been much for words or for coffee; she just waved over

her shoulder. Smiling, David rose and walked the tight catwalk to the

door when an explosion rocked his ship and threw him to the floor. "What

the hell?" he said quietly.

"Pirates!" Tasha shouted, pulling hard on the manual controls. David

swore that when she maneuvered like this he could feel the gravity

compensators making their millions of tiny changes per second. His fur

crawled with the images of hardware failure- puree of rat as his body

was forced through the grating of the catwalk.

"We lost a fusion line," Denni's voice came over the intercom.

"Tasha, tell Chico I want him on gun two, now!" David shouted.

"He's already there," she shouted back. David picked himself up off the

floor and leapt back into his chair, demanding access to gun one and

launching four racks of missiles from his console. The screen shifted

to an image of the ship, sighted along the front panel, split in two to

give as much of an image as it could.

The pirates swung around again. Pirating was a duel to death- the victim's

ship had to be completely disabled before any looting could begin. Any

maneuvering jet still functional that was capable of moving the ship

was capable of tearing airlock seals. David fired.

The pirates released glitter into the space ahead of them, an explosive

cloud moving at a higher velocity, blocking energy weapons fire.

The next time I have the money, I'm going to a Pendorian drive, he swore.

Using Jump drives made him a prime target for pirates, and he knew

it. But they were so much cheaper to buy and operate, and the Terran

model Stream drives were notoriously prone to breakdown.

"We're losing pressure!" Tasha shouted. "David, I'm showing a hole in

bottle three!"

"Damn!" he shouted, launching another rack of missiles. "Compensate!

That's what the extra fusion plant's for!"

The pirate ship came around again, this time from the underside, and in

one small second the entire battle was over. Chico managed to get a hit

on a maneuvering drive and the pirates careened wildly out of control,

disintegrating in their own spin-induced destruction.

David sat back hard in his control chair, every nerve afire with

fear and adrenaline. He wanted to do something as his body quaked in

fight-or-flight response, and he knew the only thing he could do was

wait it out.

"David?" Tasha said from the Pilot's chair.

"Huh?" he said, jerking nervously to stare in her direction.

"You okay, Captain?"

"Yeah, yeah," he said rapidly. "No," he said. "I'm gonna be sick." With

that, he ran for the head.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Still trying to quell the shaking in his hands, David walked down to

engineering. Tasha's report of what was left of the pirates vessel

had depressed him further-- there hadn't been enough left to make even

materials salvage worth the effort. He had lost a fusion plant and taken

some serious scoring along the underbelly, and even though they were

still alive they had little to show for their victory.

He wasn't within ten meters of the engineering blast-door when he heard

shouting from within. "Dammit, That's p73-RTS you've got there! It doesn't

go in the hyperdrive, it's designed for fusion plants! While you're here,

give it to me-- it'll go to repairing bottle three." He walked in to

find Marder rather sheepishly handing a large coil of room-temperature

superconductor to Denni. The scene gave David his first smile since the

attack. Marder was physically impressive for a human, and the idea of

him looking at all uncomfortable in the presence of the smaller Mephit

was almost laughable. But David, at 150cm and the shortest member of

his own crew, had long ago learned not to laugh at such differences.

"So," he said, addressing Denni, "How are things, Chief Engineer?"

She laughed tersely and said, "They could be better. Come on, I've got to

patch Morrow number three." She turned, her tail nearly hitting David in

the process. "Actually," she continued, "it could have been much worse.

You keep good hardware, David."

"Thank you," he said. "Doesn't help turn a profit nowadays."

She pulled out a power ratchet and began spinning out the eight bolts

that secured the normally sealed fusion plant to the floor. She pulled the

casing off and tossed it aside easily, landing with a clang on the floor.

David caught himself envying her the strength her creator had given her.

"Still," she said, scanning the guts quickly with a rad counter, "It

may have saved our lives. You may not buy Pendorian computers, David,

but using Parma hullmetal on your fusion plants may have saved me and

your two friends from rad poisoning."

He smiled. "Thank you." He wondered if her wording implied she was not

one of "his friends," and what that could mean to him.

Denni sighed as she reached in with a chip-puller and began throwing

individual chips and whole circuit boards to one side. "Can't believe

the processor power these things need. I'm going to have to go through

every one of those and find out what's still working."

"I can do that," David offered.

"You?"

"I'm not incompetent, Denni. I know how to fix my own ship."

"I didn't mean that. I meant, well, you're the Captain. I thought

Terran ship's captains didn't 'lower' themselves to doing repair and

maintenance."

He frowned at her very Pendorian attitude and said, "This ship's too

small for me not to." He walked out of the room and returned with a

testbed console. Sitting himself on the floor, he proceeded to type

ident numbers from various chips and plug them into the breadboard.

"You know what your problem is?" Denni said. "Your creators are still

herd animals. You put enough humans in a room together and they'll all

alpha-male each other until one's in charge, and then they'll all follow

him unquestioningly, no matter how lunatic his ideas are."

David looked up at her for a second, trying to decide how to respond to

that. She was talking about his creators, his gengineers. "At least,"

he started, "I wasn't gengineered to be a sex toy."

Denni looked up sharply, staring at him. "Hey," she said. "Don't take that

attitude with me, David. You Terrans all make those jokes about Shardik,

talk about him as if he weren't even a real person, just some thing,

and you don't really know what he did for us. You don't understand him

at all. You don't understand us at all."

"From the looks of his books, I'd say he created every single species

he's got just for so he could sleep with them." He felt the tips of his

ears getting hot. This was making him uncomfortable.

Denni smiled a strange, crooked smile and said, "You don't know, do you?"

"Don't know what?"

Denni paused for a second and said, "I can't tell you."

"Can't tell me what? What aren't you telling me?"

"Captain... David, How long are we going to stop at Fahrenheit?"

"I don't know. A day at most. Why?"

"Can I get time away from the ship?" Her smile had changed. David found

it pleasant to look at.

He thought about if for a second. In-system recycle was something Pat

could probably run by herself. "I suppose. Care to tell me why?"

"No. It's... Personal. I have to pick something up."

He shrugged and resumed digging through his chips. Every once in a while

he would look up at her with a strange mixture of longing, frustration,

and confusion. Just once, he thought he caught her looking at him. He

wondered if she felt at all like he did.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

The bell to his office rang. David rubbed the bridge of his nose again--

his headache was returning-- and said "Come." They were on their way out

of the stellar gravity well so they could effect Jump, and he'd negotiated

just half an hour ago a rather steep price for the processed deuterium

he'd taken on from the Fahrenheit station's fuel office, and he didn't

like the feeling that he was getting screwed.

Dennielle entered and said, "Hi."

"Hello," he replied. "Did you get what you were looking for?"

She nodded and said, "Yeah, I think so." She dropped a small packet

of paper on his desk. "Don't bother to read it all right now. Just the

summary on Page 5.

David picked up the sheaf with a raised eyebrow, pulled off the paperclip

and rifled through to page 5. At the bottom, boxed off, was a summary

of the document. It read:

JANUARY 16, 2655. Persuant to Article XVI of the Charter for Project

Jersey, This United Nations Ad-Hoc Committee for said Charter does agree

to revise the ultimate goal of said Project. Therefore, in agreement

with Alpha Laboratories of Pendor, Project Jersey agrees that NeoRattus

Norvegicus will be invested with full sentience, in exchange for

which Alpha Laboratories will provide the necessary technical data and

precision genetic CRX documentation required to effect full sentience.

Signitaries: Lancombe', Petre, for the United Nations. Slammas,

Arraon, for Alpha Laboratories.

David looked up with a wide-eyed expression and said, "This is real?"

"You can look it up yourself. As far as I can tell, it's not a classified

document. David, weren't you ever interested in your own creation?"

David shrugged, embarrassed. "It never occurred to me that my folks

might lie. They said they were created by Project Jersey."

"And they never told you that Shardik or one his people actually may

have gone as far as writing the very code for their brains?"

"Denni, get it straight. They probably didn't know! How do you think

the people at Project Jersey felt?"

"I know they didn't give much of a damn about NeoRattus. You were

originally intended to be slaves, you know that? You were meant to be

deltas, David, made just to follow orders. Shardik had to literally

shame them into making you full members of society."

"And how do you think they'd feel about that?" David was nearly shouting.

"How do think? He never lets up, Denni, he never lets go. He had to

embarrass them with their own lack of technical knowledge. Do you think

they appreciate that, especially when every Terran hates Pendor so? When

all we can do is envy you, your bodies, wealth, power, and technology?

When since forever we've known that you were all immortal and we only

got our own sort of immortality years later? Denni, it's no wonder my

parents hid that from me, or their gengineers hid it from them." He

sighed and sat back in his chair, his headache getting much worse.

Denni's ears lay down against her head. "I'm sorry," she said.

"For what?" David snarled. "I didn't mean that... My head is killing me."

He watched with a curious expression on his face as she walked around

the back of his chair and said, "May I?"

"Do what?" he asked.

"Give you a neckrub? My grandfather used to give me one when my head

hurt."

David closed his eyes and said, "Please."

Denni reached down placed her paws on his shoulders. She began to gently

rub, ruffling the reddish brown fur on the back of David's neck, seeking

out what she could of his tensions. "I'm sorry," she said, "for telling

you the truth. That's another thing my grandfather used to tell me, that

it's not always important to tell the truth because you lose friends that

way. What I wanted to do was show you that you're wrong about Shardik,

that he's not just interested in... boffing... his kids." David laughed

silently at her "indelicate" vocabulary. "I mean, he really wants just

to be with people. It's loneliness, and the memories of loneliness, that

drive him. I mean, if he really was just interested in mechanical sex,

he could have made us all mindless idiots. Do you think I'm a mindless

idiot?"

David shook his head, trying not to interrupt her touch. Although his

head still hurt, it wasn't nearly as bad as it had been when she had

first walked into his office. His usual turmoil in her presence was

oddly missing, and he felt good about it.

An alarm went off. David recognized it instantly. "Fire," he said,

leaping out of the chair. "Damnit, that's a fire!" He looked over the

console and consulted the map. "Level three. The galley! Let's go!"

He ran out the door, not waiting to see if Denni followed. He heard

footsteps behind him, assumed that that was her. He reached level three,

the alarms now screaming in his ears, rotating red incandescent lights

blazing every ten meters. He grabbed a fire extinguisher from the wall,

wondering where the internal AnaOx system was. He threw open the door

to the galley.

Whatever had ignited had started a blaze inside. The plastic countertop

by the ovens was burning brightly, and as he played the fire extinguisher

over it he realized he didn't have nearly enough to douse the blaze.

"Denni!" he shouted. There was no answer. Where the hell was she? Where

was the AnaOx?

The answer was immediate as a bright white gas erupted from the floor

and flooded the room. It struck the ceiling and swept over everything,

scavenging the oxygen from the room even faster than the fire. David

was standing on one of the vents, and the force of its sudden expulsion

toppled him, pushing him over. Impact with the floor made him gasp, taking

in a lungful of the gas. Fear swept over him as he realized what it was

he had breathed, and he expelled as much as he could, but already he could

feel his lungs beginning to burn. He rose and made for the door. His head

was starting to spin, and he felt sick to his stomach. The door opened.

The hallway was also full of the settling gas as he made his way for the

ladder. It was getting harder to think. He eyes teared as he grabbed at

a rung, trying to pull himself up. The effort was enormous. He pulled

another rung, and his body hurt, his arms burned. His lungs screamed

for another breath, and his fingers let go of the ladder.

He fell back to the floor, painfully, into the swirling AnaOx. It covered

his vision, and then so did blackness.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

"David?" He heard the voice from an eternity away.

There was a long silence as he was left alone, then the voice returned.

"David?" it said. He recognize the voice.

"Chico?" he asked, forcing his lips to move. They felt like they were

cast of clay.

"You're going to be just fine, David. You got a lungful of AnaOx, and

it's taken a while to purge your system. How do you feel?"

"The ship?"

"There's nothing wrong with her. Just a little kitchen fire, one we all

handled badly."

David opened his eyes. They hurt, even in the lowered light of sickbay. He

looked up into Chico's face. "Good to see you again."

Chico laughed. "Don't thank me, David. Thank that Pendorian girl. She's

the one who saved your cojones." He gestured to the other bed.

David glanced at the other bed, on which Denni sat, looking nervous. "You

saved me?" he asked.

"That she did," Chico continued, sweeping a lock of his straight,

black hair out of his eyes. "She walked right through that AnaOx like

it wasn't there and pulled you out of there. Threw you over her shoulder

and climbed the ladder like a trooper."

David looked over at her again. He held out one arm weakly in her

direction and said, "Thank you."

Denni leaned over slightly and took the hand. "You're welcome," she said.

"You Terrans, you think just because you have Zaman transformation

you're all as indestructible as we are." Shaking her head slightly, she

continued, "We know we're not immortal, but we're harder to kill than

you all are. You should have known better than to run into the kitchen

when you knew it was going to flood with fire- control."

David sighed and said, "It wasn't that, Denni. I wanted to save my ship."

"I know. Just be glad someone was there to pull you out." She leaned over

and gently kissed his throat, giving him a slight nip as she did so. He

recognized it as the Pendorian version of a kiss to the forehead. "Get

better," she said.

"I'll try." He watched her go with a wistful expression.

After the door had left he sagged back onto the bed, feeling tired. Chico

looked down at him with an amused expression. "She's quite a hot looker,

isn't she?"

David opened his eyes again to look at his chief Medical officer and

second gunner, remembering that Chico was from Mahstitutta, a colony

world that had been saved from starvation by a massive starlift of

supplies from Pendor, no conditions, no questions asked.

"Frustrated that you can't get her attentions, Chico?" he asked. Chico

rarely had trouble attracting women. His sharp, oriental features seemed

to be a tractor-field for women. Unlike Mickey, Chico just never put

any effort into his womanizing.

"Hell, no," Chico replied. "Sleep with a Pendorian, David? You know how

often that happens? Not once in a lifetime, David." He smiled. "Besides,

she seems to like you. She slept the night in that bunk, waiting for you,

my rat friend."

David looked back at the door quickly to ensure it was still closed. It

was. He sighed and lay back. "Can I get some sleep, Doc?"

Chico laughed and, in a mock-British accent, not unlike David's "London

Standard" that he'd picked up with his voice training, said "As your

doctor, it is my professional opinion that, once you have received

adequate rest, you are fit to return to duty." Chico's smile widened as

he spoke, and when he was done he broke out in a laugh.

David laughed along and said "Goodnight, Chico."

"Goodnight, Captain."

----------------------------------------------------------------------

"Pretty, isn't it?" he said, looking out the front window.

"Yah," Tasha replied. "llerkin, at last. Maybe I can get some real

chocolate here."

David laughed. "Too much of that will make you sick, Tash. Go easy on it."

"I know. And you go easy on the women, David."

David laughed again, but this time the laugh was muted by Tasha's gentle

teasing. This was his ninth trip with Tasha as a pilot. She was a good

pilot, so good David had trouble figuring out why she stayed with him

when he paid so little. "I like the company you keep," was all she had

said when he'd asked. In all that time, David had not once gone barhopping

with his CMO or his engineers, and he wasn't at all attracted to Patricia

or any of the many stewards he'd taken on in that time. He was actually

somewhat grateful that this trip his passenger holds were converted to

hold dry cargo. Passengers paid more, but it had been pleasant with just

his crew... and Denni. And if Tasha had any interest in him, he hadn't

seen it.

"Plot us a course and take us in. Fourth planet on the left." He patted

her shoulder in a friendly way and walked out, returning to his office

to look over the numbers. As it turned out, if he managed to sell his

free-trade material at 68% of commodity value as he was getting over

the intra-system Hoffman radio, he would break even. David knew he could

negotiate 80%, and at that rate... He calculated the rate and realized

that he might actually have enough to pay the crew bonuses. That made

him smile.

There was a knock at the door. He repeated the ritual "Come," and Denni

walked in again. "Can I talk to you, Captain?"

"About?"

"We've reached llerkin and unless you intend on going to Pendor, I'm

getting off in a few hours." David looked her over carefully. "I just

wanted to thank you. It was... exciting."

He laughed wryly and said, "It was terrifying, Denni, for me as well as

for you."

She nodded. "Still, you have a good crew. Thanks for the trip."

"That all?" he asked.

"That's all," she said, hesitantly. She rose and walked to the door,

putting her hand on the knob, then stopped, turned and said, "I.. uhm,

I wanted to know if you, uh, wanted me to finish that neckrub I was

giving you a few days ago."

David looked up at her, a dozen thoughts passing through his mind in

rapid succession. He tried to settle on one, found one finally and said,

"Just a neckrub...?"

She smiled, nervously, and said, "If that's all you want."

He looked up at her across his desk and nodded his head towards here, a

'come hither' gesture. She nearly ran around his desk and dropped into

his lap. He let out a "Wuff!" She was heavier than he'd expected.

Without saying a word, she leaned over him and kissed him gently. David

responded, opening his mouth slightly, feeling her tongue rove over

his two front teeth, the chisel teeth, and then against his tongue in

kind. He wrapped his arms around her and he could feel her body shifting

under the Rweave jumpsuit.

He pulled away from her slightly and said, "Denni... I want you, but I

don't understand why you would want me."

She looked down at him. "I don't either," she said. "I just want you,

David. Now?" She paused for a second. "Please?"

"Let's go into my cabin," he said. "It's more comfortable there." Except,

he told himself, I live like the bachelor I am, and the place is a mess.

They walked out into the hallway, and Denni offered her paw. David paused

for a second. This was public, and holding hands with a Pendorian in

public tended to get one talked about. Then he shook his head. This was

just his crew. If any one of them saw, so what? He doubted seriously any

one of them would turn against him just because they were holding hands.

He took the offered paw, and the two of them walked to his cabin.

"This is where you live?" Denni asked as they walked in. "MyFa, but it's

a disaster area."

David shrugged. "It's just cluttered. I don't leave food or old laundry

lying about. Nobody ever comes in here, except maybe Chico, and his room

looks like mine."

She smiled and pushed him against the bed. He sat down on. "Well, now

I'm in here. But I don't care what the room looks like. Just it's owner."

Bending over, she kissed him again.

He reached up with his hands and found the zipper securing her jumpsuit.

With an pull he eased it down past her belly until it stopped, then

slid a hand inside to touch her, to feel her thick, rich fur against the

pads of his paw. It felt silky and smooth, not at all like his coarse,

heavy fur, clipped short and tight.

Denni's hands found his jacket, tugging the small silver buckles open,

and he lowered his arms to allow her to ease it off of him. Exposed as

he was, the coolness of the room seeped in through his fur and he was

suddenly possessed with the desire to have her near him, against him. He

grabbed her by the waist and pulled her around in a circle, against

the edge of the bed until she fell down next to him. She let out a

"whoops!" as she fell.

He followed her fall and lay down by her side, snuggling close. Her arms

wrapped around him and held him close. He buried his muzzle in the crook

of her throat, nuzzling close and inhaling deep, drinking in her musky,

Mephit scent, sighing. Then an old curiosity came to him and he said,

"Denni?"

"Hmm?"

"Your ears... which Mephit racial trait is that?"

"Ictonyx," she said. "The others are Mephitis and Spilogale, if that's

what you're wondering. I got them from my father." She laughed gently.

"What makes you ask that now?"

He shrugged against her wonderful body. "Just curious. I wondered about

it the day you came on board, but I couldn't remember the names."

She chuckled, her hands stroking along the length of his body. He squirmed

at her touch, moaning softly. "Ticklish, aren't we?" she said.

"Very," he said. Actually, her touch was exciting him. "But I like it,"

he said, encouraging her.

She fulfilled his hopes, running her paws against the grain of his fur,

making the nerves in his body sing. As her paws passed over his bicep,

he exploded in moans, involuntarily squirming to get away from her,

and she wrapped her legs around his, holding him to her. He squirmed and

groaned in her grip, her one arm holding him to her chest solidly as she

tickled him, just on the arm for a short while then slowly making her

way up to the fine fur on the back of his neck. He shivered and groaned,

burying his head in her throat, trying not to scream.

She stopped. He let out a long sigh, sagging against her. "You liked that,

didn't you?" she said.

"Did I try to stop you?" he asked, still panting.

"No, but you did try to get away."

"But I didn't ask you to stop."

He felt her hand stroke against his groin, and he closed his eyes with

anticipation. "I guess you did like it," she said. He heard the gentle

ripping sound of velcro clasps giving way, and felt her paw against his

fur, his sex, gently closing her hand around it. She smiled and said,

"I know you liked it."

"Hard," he gasped, "Hard not to. Not with such a pretty partner."

"Think so?" she said. "I don't know. I don't think I'm pretty."

"You are," he said. "Oh, you are." He buried his muzzle against her neck,

rubbing his chin against her shoulder, nipping her gently. She shuddered.

"I like that," she said.

"Good," he said, the word muffled by her fur. He was falling completely in

love with her fur. He never would have fur like this. He always thought

of his own as rough, unpleasant.

She pushed against him gently, easing him away from her. He looked up,

worried for a brief instant that she was going to stop things right here,

but instead she just shrugged her way out of her jumpsuit, tossing it

aside. "How do I look?" she asked.

David's mouth went dry. Naked, she was gorgeous. Her tail splayed out

between her legs and down the bed, the tip quivering slightly. Lying

down, her breasts sank against gravity left and right into two large

mounds of fur, and the slight belly she had when standing vanished,

leaving her looking soft and lovely. "God," he breathed, "your beautiful."

She smiled and said, "I'm fat."

"No, you're beautiful, Denni. I mean it." And he did. He reached a hand

out to touch her throat, easing down between her breasts to her belly,

pressing ever so slightly just to feel the texture of her body. She

sighed with pleasure as he did, squirming almost unnoticeably.

"I'm glad you think so" She paused. "David?"

"Yeah?"

"Make love to me."

David looked along the length of her body, from her feet to her eyes,

then realized he still had his pants on. He kicked them off quickly,

trying not to look too anxious, then eased himself over her body,

between her thighs. With one easy push he slid inside her.

"So good. So long," she sighed.

He smiled, feeling his need mount as they made love. Her hips rose to

meet his, her legs pressed against his sides. He leaned over, smiling

as he searched for her nipple at what he guessed was the center of her

breast, but there was so much fur it was hard to tell.

"Feels so good," she said. "Gods, yes."

He found it, running his thin tongue around it quickly. He could feel

her bodyfur against his whiskers as he made love to her, with her. She

sighed a long "Yessss" as her body tensed and she let out a small,

deep groan of pleasure. David felt his own body responding, becoming

more tense, and when his climax hit him he closed his eyes and tried

not to scream. He didn't succeed.

He opened his eyes to look down at Denni. Her smile was happy and her

eyes were wild. "Yes, David, yes, thank you!" she said, reaching up and

pulling him down. He lay on top of her, holding her fiercely.

After they had lain together for a while he said "Turn over."

"What?"

"Turn over. I want to do something." He rolled to the side and off her

body so she could. She complied, lying on her stomach. He straddled her

thighs and leaned over, digging his fingers under her fur and rubbing

the muscles of her shoulders. He pushed her tail to his left and out of

the way. "I want to return the favor you did for me."

She sighed and said, "You're doing a good job." He took that as a good

sign and kept rubbing. As he did so, he felt his sex responding to it's

place, lying against her buttocks as it was, and his excitement returned

to him. He pivoted his hips against her and pushed, entering her. "Again?"

she asked with a whisper.

"Are you objecting?" he asked, smiling.

"Of course not, silly," she giggled, and as he stroked into her the

giggle dissolved into another sigh of pleasure.

This time he made love to her more slowly, enjoying the feeling of her

furry body against his, the tickling sensations as they rubbed against

each other. She lay her head against the pillow and he delighted in her

calm smile as he made love to her. This time she was simply passive,

letting him take his time, his pleasure. He felt that pleasure mount

again, and this time his climax wasn't quite so loud.

"Like that?" she asked.

"Better than the first time," he replied with a laugh.

"Really?" she asked. "Why?"

He shrugged, lying against her back. "Dunno. It just was. I guess I got

to concentrate more."

She chuckled. "Let me turn over?"

They shifted apart, and he reached over to shut off the cabin light. Then

he returned to her, snuggling close, lying against her side.

David tried to sort out the thoughts in his head. It was all a jumble,

and his brain didn't want to deal with a jumble just now. He was still

happy, enjoying this chance to touch and hold her, since this would be

the last time he'd see her, probably forever. And other thoughts came

to mind, thoughts he didn't want to deal with. His musing was interrupted.

"David?" she asked quietly.

"Yeah?"

"When I first came on, you said you didn't hire Pendorians. Why not?"

"Two reasons," he said quietly. Her question set a whole new train of

thoughts in motion, ones which brought to mind emotions he didn't want

to deal with. But he continued talking. "One was tradition. I mean,

even before you told me about that UN order, I tried to stick with

tradition and claimed to dislike Pendorians. Terra doesn't like Pendor

and that's that."

There was a long silence, and finally Denni asked, "And the other reason?"

Another long silence. "I don't know why I feel safe telling you this,"

he said, "but I do. When I was eleven years old-- And you have to

realize that rats grow up physically a lot faster than most species--

I met my first fur-fetishist. He couldn't have been, oh, more than

sixteen himself. And he started coming on to me, and I didn't know

how to deal with it. It was at one of those game arcades, you know,

the kind most kids go to." He felt Denni nod. "When I realized what he

was talking about, I ran away from him, ran home. And I told my mater,

and she told me that what I did was the right thing."

"But what got to me was just how angry I felt. Not frightened, angry.

Because even though I was only eleven, I knew that what that kid wanted

was wrong. Not because I was too young, or he was, or because we were

both male, but because what he wanted was just my fur. That was all he

was after. He didn't care about me. Just my fur." He paused again. "And

if that was the kind of attitude that created Pendor, I wanted no part

of Pendor, or its products."

She sighed and snuggled him close, hugging him tight. "Well I hope you

don't think of us as products."

"Not you. And probably not Pendor in general." He sighed. "I'd really

like to meet Shardik, but then I guess most people want to."

"It could be arranged."

"How so? You're just another Pendorian. There must be millions of you

who want to meet him."

"Except there aren't millions of Satpulovs."

"What do you mean?"

"Remember my grandfather I was talking about?" David nodded. "My

grandfather was Aaden Satpulov."

The name took a few seconds to register in David's brain. "Shardik's

lover? You're related to Shardik himself?"

Denni nodded. "I grew up at the Castle."

David shifted away from her and looked her in the face, carefully. "Are

you telling me your..."

"My last name is really Shardik. I don't use it, obviously."

"Obviously," David said, shuddering gently.

They were silent for a while. "You're afraid of me, aren't you?"

David looked up at her and said, "It's hard not to be, Denni. I want you

to stay, to be with you, but I know I won't be able to hold your hand

in public, because species-mixing is really considered 'cool' if it's

just sex. But I'm not allowed to fall in love with you. Especially not

if you're a Pendorian." He sighed. "And getting beyond dealing with my

people, what about yours?"

Denni sighed. "I know what you're thinking. And you're probably right. If

I were to get hurt, or wounded, Pendor would have starships to us so

fast... " She laughed. "Think of it as insurance."

"I guess," he replied. He shook his head quietly and lay against her.

Despite his misgivings, he was still fascinated by her.

"David?" she asked.

"Huh?"

"You said 'I'm not allowed to fall in love with you.' Are you?"

David felt the heat of embarrassment return to the tips of his ears. "Did

I say that?"

"Yes, you did."

David couldn't think of any diplomatic way to word it. "Then yes,

I meant it. I am falling in love with you, Denni."

She smiled. "Remember that scene over the fusion plant?"

"Yeah?"

"I wanted you then. But I couldn't come up with how to tell you. I think

I love you, too."

"You think?" he chided playfully.

"Let me keep thinking about it."

"We make dock in--" he looked over at the clock-- "forty six hours. Long

enough?"

"We'll see," she replied, snuggling him close and kissing him. David

reached down and pulled up the blankets. Rat's tails don't have fur,

and his was getting cold.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

The Journal Entries of Kennet R'yal Shardik, et. al., and Related Tales

are Copyright (c) 1989-2000 Elf Mathieu Sternberg. Distribution limited

to electronic media not-for-profit use only. All other rights are reserved

to the author.