Chameleon Ch 12
“Here’s the breakdown from our visit to Novissimus,
sir,” Zoe Stone said, handing Jackson a data pad.
“You didn’t have to come up here just to hand me
this.”
“No, Captain, but this time I thought perhaps I
should.”
“Uh-oh, what’s in here?” he asked his quartermaster.
She glanced sideways and clasped her hands behind her back in the parade rest
posture. Jackson tapped the screen until he saw what she was hesitant to speak
of. “This isn’t just an accounting.”
“No, sir. Everything is there. They didn’t miss a
thing.”
“I’ll reconcile this and call you if I have any
questions.”
“I’m sure you’ll have a couple.” She turned on her
heel and departed. Jackson shoved his hands through his hair and sighed.
“Commander Quixote, please report to the doyen’s
office.”
“Aye,
Captain, on my way.”
Jackson hadn’t wanted to start a second cup of
coffee immediately after the first, but what else was he going to do with his
anxiety but drown it. He thought about the whiskey he kept in the cupboard over
his desk. He grabbed the bottle and poured a jigger in his coffee.
Quixote reported a moment later. Jackson handed
him the data reader with the station accounting. The tangerine eyes scanned and
scrolled until several line items caught xes attention.
“In the olden days, executives would put this on
their expense accounts. However, it’s not the olden days and your mates are not
executives. This comes out of their pay; it goes on their records.
“Does it have to be put on their records, Captain?
I feel partly responsible. I encouraged them to enjoy the variety of
entertainment options on the station. This isn’t what I had in mind,
but…”
“I could look the other way if it was just breakage, but it’s what they broke that I might have to explain.”
“I will be the first to admit I don’t understand
the appeal of reproduction, but faux reproductive acts are simply, well, incomprehensible to me. Do you have any suggestions for me about approaching
them from my perspective?”
“I’ll deal with it. I have an experienced
perspective, sort of.”
“I appreciate that, Captain.”
“You owe me,” Jackson said with all seriousness.
He tapped the intercom to engineering again.
“Ron
Painter and John Chin report to the doyen’s office double time,” he called.
Symbiont humans were the worst of the bunch in
these cases. They were not artificial intelligentsia, not androids, but robots covered
with silicon, textured like skin. Some were exotically transparent, most not. These 'pleasure workers', both anatomical males and females, were advertised as fully functional,
but that was certainly open to interpretation. Not being alive, they were often mistreated, and commonly
broke down. But they were the least expensive ‘option’ available, and
subsequently, ubiquitous by popular demand on space stations.
His doorbell chirped. He had a slug of his Irish
coffee and opened the door remotely. The two engineers stepped in; the door
closed. Jackson wondered how his crew seemed to have lost their self-control.
Perhaps he needed to demand adherence to protocols. It just had never been his
way. The crew were one entity, a family with a representative from just about
every psychological category of dysfunction.
“Sit.” He paced a few steps. “I dislike hearing
from Admiral Wallace. I know I will as soon as he sees this accounting for our
visit to Novissimus.” The two men were statues but for their eyes. “Did you
think this wouldn’t show up?”
“They were malfunctioning to begin with,” Ron
muttered. “We only wanted our money back, but they refused.”
“So, you didn’t read the myriad of signs posted
around that say things like, no refunds, use at your own risk, you break you
buy, and the like?” Neither man spoke. Jackson grumbled inside his head.
“Space station or no, shore leave or no,
discretion is a virtue.” He engaged with his coffee cup. “You’re both nice,
good-looking men. You couldn’t find real dates on the entire station?”
“That takes time, or more money than either of us
had.” Jackson sighed, but had more tolerance for their actions than he had for
the officers. Maybe it was sympathy, certainly not empathy, and being crewmen,
without rank, he didn’t want to add to their humiliation.
“You do understand why your superior officer isn’t
addressing this with you?” No answer. “Draconians are facultative
parthenogenetic creatures. They don’t understand the necessity, or what the big
deal is. On the other hand, you’re not salmon and I fully expect you won’t
present me with this conundrum again.” He’d have to put a little more whiskey
in his coffee if they did.
“No, Captain.”
“You’ll be required to pay for the damages out of
your salaries. You can make arrangements with Ms. Stone to work that out. I
have to put a disciplinary action on your records since the accounting is part
of our formal records. Now, any requests?”
“I’ll take maintenance shifts,” Ron volunteered.
“I’ll take on the housekeeping for the gym,” John
said.
“Thirty days, to be done during your recreation
hours. Go down to the quartermaster and then get back to what you were doing.
Dismissed.”
The men saluted; he responded formally and the two
scattered out of his office like their butts were on fire. He wondered if his daughter Zalara
and her friend Honey were in fact the only children aboard his ship.
þ
Something chirped, but maybe it was part of his
dream. No, that was the intercom. Jackson reached for the button.
“Sorry to
wake you, Captain, but we received an urgent message from Admiral Wallace
marked ‘private’. It’s time stamped and reply requested.”
“Thank you. Please send it to my quarters.” Happy
he didn’t have to go to the bridge, Jackson slid out of bed and tiptoed to the
desk in the great room. Not wanting to turn on the lights, the glow from the
audio-visual display was enough to see by. Thankful for the light years that
prevented two-way live communication, he looked at a red, blinking icon; it
changed to green, and the video played. Admiral Wallace appeared agitated, to
put it mildly. His face was flushed red and Jackson was sure he saw smoke
coming out of the man’s ears.
"Jackson: what in hell is going on aboard your ship? Have you lost
command? I demand an explanation. The expenses at Novissimus are outrageous!”
The admiral threw his hands around in
frustration.
“Fist fights in the brewery? Infirmary expenses for injured
parties, repair bills for specialty robots? I sent you there to drop off the
mummy and pick up an A I droid. I can authorize upgrades to your com system,
and ship related business, but this is not acceptable.”
Rianya walked in and stood behind Tom. He hadn’t
told her about the escapades on the station. She had enough to deal with, from
the mummy’s DNA to carrying a baby. He stopped the playback.
“What’s going on?”
“Wallace isn’t happy about some of the problems we
had on Novi. He wants my six.” She looked at him sideways. “He’s mad.” He
started the message again and the face continued its rant.
"Hell’s bells, Jackson, you’re a married man! Anne hasn’t stopped
crying since she got home."
Tom’s stomach leaped into his throat. With his wife
behind him, he nearly wet his pants.
"Now I know it takes two, but she’s broken-hearted. Her mother’s
furious. Frankly, I’ll have your bars and stars before you walk away from my
girl. I’m no
prude, but your conduct is unbecoming of an officer, and you’ll take
responsibility for this. I don’t care if your little girl saved half the
planet. It’s no excuse for this!"
The message ended abruptly. Did he dare look at
Rianya?
“I better make some coffee for this one,” she
said, and walked away.
“Love, I don’t know exactly what Wallace is thinking, or
what he heard, but it’s not true.”
“If you don’t know what he’s talking about how can
you be sure it’s not true?”
“Whatever Anne told him, it’s not true.”
“So, you know what she told him?”
“She has been pestering me since we left Earth.
She’s mad because I gave her a cold shoulder.”
Rianya poured Tom a cup of coffee and pushed the
sugar jar at him, and a spoon. She made another for herself.
“What is a cold shoulder? I don’t know that term.”
“She’s been very pushy, disrespectful to you, out
of line, and I turned her down, of course. She’s only twenty for gawdsake.”
“What did she want?”
“Rianya, you really can’t guess?” He wasn’t sure
if she was stringing him along for the squirm factor or if she really was
clueless. She shook her head slowly. Oh, for the love of … “She wants to get me in a compromising position, probably to protect her job.”
“Oh.” She took a drink of her coffee and set it
down. “I know about that.”
Tom nearly spit his drink on the floor. As it was,
he had to choke some down.
“You knew that? What do you mean, ‘you know that’?”
“You’re easy to read. So was she.”
“Then you know I had nothing to do with her.”
“Then why is Wallace so mad?” she asked. “You have
known him a long time.”
“Anne has told him something, a lie, obviously.
She’s blackmailing me.”
“That’s another word I don’t think I’ve heard.
Black mail ing.”
“I need a minute,” he said and hurried to the lavatory
before he exploded. He glanced in the mirror and saw something he rarely did –
fear. Fear that Anne was going to ruin him because he didn’t play her game.
Innocence was on his side, however. He had to stop quaking and stand up to the
accusations, whatever they were. Calmly, he returned to the table.
“Blackmailing is exposing a person’s secret if
they don’t give you what you want. She told me if I didn't give her what she wanted, she’d simply lie to her father. From Wallace’s message, I’m
thinking that’s what she must have said.”
"That doesn't sound like you. Why would the admiral believe her?"
"She's his daughter."
“You wouldn't do that.”
Tom took a few deep breaths and calmed
himself. “But of course, you’d say that.”
“She’s not a nice person. She would watch the
girls, but I think she wanted to watch you more.” Tom wondered how Rianya could
sit there so calmly, assured in her convictions of who he was. “I watched you
on Kinnae, at the beach, and you never hit people, and they did what you asked
them to do. Sometimes you did the same things they did.”
“I’m in command, they have to do what I say.”
“No, they don’t. Maybe on the ship but not on the
beach. Is why I talked to you. You are the leader because you protect them and
make good decisions. They trust you. So, I trusted you, and I was right.”
Tom drank half his coffee. His eyes stung with
sand, and despite the coffee he was ready to go back to bed.
“I knew Wallace would be upset about what the boys
did on the station, but this thing about Anne came out of left field. He asked
that she be deployed to the station and not stay aboard Maria Mitchell. I thought
the whole incident was over.”
“Things will look different in the morning,” she
said. “Come back to bed.”
“I need to answer this right away.”
“Not right away. In the morning.” She held out one hand and pulled him along behind her, back to bed.




Oooooo, Rianya's gonna fix that bitch.
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