Chapter Two: La Belle Dame Sans Merci“Carl!” Buncle heard as he pushed his maintenance cart past the entrance to the HR Coordination Nexus. It was Alan, standing in the door with the usual stimjuice cup in his hand and enthusiastic look in his eye. Carl slowed, “Evening, Lieutenant.” Like Buncle, Alan Covell was, though truly by nature a civilian, technically crew and as management personnel, held a commission; Carl habitually went out of his way to show deference to anyone he could. It seemed to disarm people.
“Are you coming to the party tomorrow?” Covell asked eagerly.
‘This again,’ Buncle thought. Alan was bright and funny off-duty; good company as long as he didn’t talk about his work –in which case he lapsed into incomprehensible bureaucratic gibberish- or drink heavily, in which case he became far, far too friendly to Carl. It was a flattering, but quite uncomfortable thing that always hurt Buncle’s enjoyment of his friend’s company. It was constantly in the back of his mind that Alan might get too forward or say something embarrassing even when he was cold sober.
He hated the thought of having to turn anyone down and hurt their feelings. In that, it was a small mercy that Alan seemed to never remember the times he’d drunkenly cornered Carl into doing just that. It was doubly bothersome to be continuously, subliminally, offered something Carl wanted so much by someone from whom he didn’t want it. Still, it was a small community awake on the ship, and diversions were spare; company was company.
“Yessir; I’ll be there,” Carl said, “But I have to get to work; there’s trouble in the Commons. See you.” He turned back to his cart and bustled away.
…

In the Rec Commons he found a mop unit bumping endlessly into the wall near the entrance, with Maarifa Angavu sitting at a table nearby looking amused. It was an old story and a simple fix; he picked up the heavy bot and turned it around. Before it could reorient and move away, he hit the hold button and turned to the equipment on his cart to begin a diagnostic.
“Comrade, I’ve seen you do that a million times,” he heard Angavu say, “They resume function as soon as you turn them. Why bother with a check?”
“Well, Dr. Angavu,” he said, turning, “It wastes a lot of my time, Ma’am. I have to drop what I’m doing to go turn a stuck bot around. There ought to be a better way. I wish I was better with programming; these things seem to have a lot of glitchy floor-plans in their databases and I wish I knew how to head it off.”
She smiled and rose, her mismatched blue and green cybernetic eye-filters glittering. “I AM good with programming,” she said, moving to stoop beside the bot. “A simple algorithm to make a 90 degree turn after three bumps against any obstruction ought to do it. I’ll need a cable to jack in.”
As Carl watched her plug the cable into a port behind one ear, he considered the woman. Storytelling had become a high art among a voyage crew struggling to stay sane; almost everyone awake knew everyone else’s life story in pretty fine resolution by now, but hers had its mysterious elements. She’d had a pretty average Tanzanian middle class childhood. Something very bad that she wouldn’t talk about had clearly happened in her adolescence, but she’d gone on to become a physician researching mental prosthetics for the brain damaged. A mysterious smile was all the answer any inquiries about her own cyborgization ever got.
Carl thought her endlessly fascinating. Maarifa was unusually sharp-witted even in the company of the cream of humanity. She wasn’t a terribly young woman and not pretty, exactly; but there was intensity to her slender dark face and blue-green gaze that he found compelling. She made him feel like he had her total attention whenever they spoke; he was more used to being ignored or dismissed. Of the women awake, she seemed to be the only one who had had no romantic liaisons in all the lonely years of the trip. The joke around the ship was that she was the only computer aboard with no porn. Buncle thought it less funny than a crying shame.
Maarifa rose after a minute. “Fixed. I’ve instructed it to go recharge, and the patch should be uploaded to the supervisor nexus and sent to every floorclean bot on the ship within the day.”
“Doctor, I don’t how to thank you,” Carl said, “You’ve added years to my life.”
She stood close, a strange expression on her face, “Carl, you can keep your mouth shut. I like that,” she took his hand, turning, “I know exactly how you can thank me. Come on, Comrade.”
As she began to pull him towards the storeroom behind the bar, he wondered what job she wanted done and why she always called him comrade; the People’s Republic of Greater Australia had fallen when he was five; it was nothing to do with him.
When she closed the door behind them, turned and kissed him deeply, his mind couldn’t process the shock. When she began undressing, it shut down entirely.
The timeless animal interval that followed was the most intense experience of his life to date. He felt like an explosion the universe couldn’t possibly contain.
After, as she rose and dressed, he remained prone and motionless on the floor, feeling like he’d been rendered permanently hollow. “Comrade?” was all he could croak out.
She smiled one of her warm-icy smiles, “Thank you, Carl; I needed that.” She opened the door to leave, “Are you coming to the party tomorrow?”