Space watch was a rotten job, and was one frequented by an assortment of hollow eyed zombies with purple-white skin and stare- locked eyes that bulged with great burrowing veins. Frequented by them… and Daeldus.
At first Daeldus tried to blend in. However, all the ‘uuuh’ing’ began to get him down and frankly, he just wasn’t up to having his limbs drop off just yet. Still, in this, his third month of consecutive night shifts, and no social life to speak off, Daeldus found he was developing an alarming tendency to dribble. This at least he thought, made him blend in a bit more, though it did wreak havoc with his console.
Despite these mutant co-workers and the nocturnal lifestyle, Daeldus found himself enjoying the night shift more and more. After all, it was a quiet time and gave him a chance to combine work with his favourite hobby, apart from pushing back the frontiers of style that is. It was a demanding hobby and one that required intense concentration and lots and lots of practice, but mainly comprised watching the backs of his eyelids; and then, preferably whilst unconscious.
Or perhaps it was because his boss worked days.
A washing machine that seemed to be on a perpetual and erratic spin dry, vibrated it’s way into the control deck and bobbed up and down in front of Daeldus. Based on the idea that little flashing lights are popular with consumers, this was an example of that concept dragged screaming to infinity. Every square inch of its body was covered, with a mesmerising collection of twinkling lights that depicted every statistical facet of its internal workings. Even the stubby feet weren’t wasted and were encrusted with deep crimson beads that pulsed the floor temperature in seventeen signalling dialects. The result was an eye singing cacophony of colour that in times of need, doubled up as a Zodmas tree. The result was called Charlie.
"Alright, Charlie, usual thing me matie. You watch yon screens over
there for the next… erm, however long I’m on shift, beep if you see
anything untoward, and I’ll… I’ll…
"YES SIR. UNTOWARD SIR."
"There’s a good boy."
Charlie glided off to light up the corner. He tilted slightly on his
repulsors and settled in for a good bit of watching.
The watch was an important duty and wasn’t generally trusted to
the robots. They had a nasty habit of doing exactly what you told them.
Ask a robot to watch out for an incoming vessel and it’ll do just that,
happily ignoring that giant meteor on collision course. Tell it to watch out
for meteors and it’ll still ignore that black-hole. Such robots hid in the
assumption that it was the silly human’s fault for not giving enough detail
in their orders; actually they secretly enjoyed bleeping up and often
searched extensively for loopholes in their instructions, just to see that
look of frustration.
Daeldus felt confident with Charlie. After all, he’d spent possibly
entire… minutes training Charlie in the complexities of his job: "if the red
light flashes, you press the green button." Perhaps not the most technical job in
the galaxy, but an unimportant one none the less. And so, an ideal
situation had been reached: Charlie did all the work, Daeldus watched it.
He could watch it all night, but often chose not to. He had more pressing
things to do. His hobby for one.
Checking for one last time that the command deck was clear,
Daeldus sighed with pleasure, shut his eyes; and began to snooze.
Space twisted, turned, swallowed itself and then in a brief flash of
ultra-black ejected the hyper-spatial hearse from in-between space and
into the orbit of one, Bluppo-ZZZ1; a small and unbelievably
insignificant world that cowered next to an equally insignificant world.
The ideal place for a hideout.
With a squeal of brakes that never was, the ship rocked violently in
sudden deceleration and amidst blooming and shimmering clouds of ice
vapour liberated from the frozen hull; and came to a stop over the little
green planet below. Actually, it could have been above, behind, left a bit or
both could have been upside down. In space, everyone’s confused.
The first rays of sunlight crept over the horizon, thought better of
it and crept back. The ship just hung there. Black, ominously black.
Small things in the jungle far below watched the hole in the stars
and gave frightened little ‘ooks."
A pinprick of light tantalisingly revealed itself.
And then, it was gone.
Unfortunately, this dream jogging had activated his legs, as Daeldus’
toes, with no prior specific training of their own, managed to deactivate
the early warning system. Well, it was only a paper cup half filed with
coffee weighing down the `ON’ button; nothing fancy here.
Charlie noticed, but pretended he hadn’t.
A lone green dot inaudibly went bleep in a rather urgent fashion.
Charlie definitely didn’t notice that either.
Daeldus stirred in his slumber, plumped up his synthaflesh jacket
and dozed off again.
This one’s came from space.
Bursting from its vapour cocoon, the seed shaped vessel, like
venom spat from the sky god, streaked for the surface. At the last
moment, it arced upwards and attained level flight, skimming bare meters
above the jungle treetops. Branches cracked and bowed, leaves scattered
high in the air and more than one small mammal leapt for cover as it
soared past, followed seconds later by a fiery shock wave that scorched
whatever remained. The jungle was gone in a flash, and now it swept
across an immense baking desert where only bleached bones bore witness
to its passage. Mountains reared and between ragged peaks of
avalanching snow it finally began to slow.
It seemed like just an ordinary valley. And it was. The craft sailed
past and onwards to a lagoon of mist that swirled in the first embers of
morning. Staggering pillars of knotted trees punctuated the mist like
swaying plesiosaurs and between these the ship sank.
A still lake where great long shadows swam, revealed itself and in
the midst of that, an island of bare rock and grass. The deep grasses
rustled as it approached and upon landing, parted.
Sinking into the ground, the craft was soon gone.
The grasses returned.
There were only two of them, but each shuddering step carried the
resounding cry of a pile-driver.. Echoing through the landing dock, they
made their way to the personnel entry gate as whistling gasps of wind
attempted to hurl themselves out of their path.
"HI GUYS!" enthused the lift personality as it saw the forms
approaching. "UP BRIGHT AND EA—"
A dark cold glove placed itself over the speaker.
"—PERHAPS I’LL JUST TAKE YOU GENTLEMEN
STRAIGHT UP."
Nothing likes the undead. Not even the undead and especially not
life insurance brokers.
"…Hey man, what’s the steam?" came the croaking reply.
"Steam? Bleepity bleep man, look at your mother bleeping console!"
Daeldus wiped the sleep from his eyes and slowly turned to face his
place of work.
A sprout-sized green dot pulsed happily. A smaller one, perhaps
pea-sized indicated that it was already present in the docking bay. Two
further red ones, flashed urgently.
"Who are they?" asked Daeldus.
"How the bleep should I know, that’s your job man!"
Daeldus shot a glance at Charlie. If he had a gun, he’d of used that
instead.
"Charlie, I thought I told you to look out for anything. Y’know, just
in case I happened to… miss the odd thing."
"YES SIR. ANYTHING UNTOWARD SIR."
"Well, why the bleep didn’t you tell me then!" he hissed.
"THE VEHICLE CAME TOWARD SIR. NOT UNTOWARD."
Charlie felt pleased with this, the slightest of plays on words. Probability
estimates reckoned this would drive the human into a frenzy of despair.
"
"Bing! Bing!" chirped the lift as it approached their level.
"Oh bleep! There here!" shouted the private.
"Daeldus, do something…"
Daeldus walked up to Charlie, looked him in what may have been
his eyes, and then after consideration, head-butted him. Daeldus
promptly fell over.
The lift doors flew open rather quicker than they usually did and
ejected its contents like an enema.
"Good evening gentlemen," spoke a deep and hollow timbre that
filled the mind and sent it cowering for cover. It was the sort of voice that
made its living in dark alleyways. By stopping yours.
"My name is irrelevant. This however, is Mr Sanguinario."
"Pleased to meet you… Mr Irrelevant" said the private.
Sod sighed. He often wondered where they went, who travelled on
them, what sorts of exotic diseases they caught and would they have
space for lonely child, keen to see the high seas. Or even the low ones.
Any would do.
In truth, all Sod wanted to do was to escape. To reach some place
where people were equal, nice to each other, and his name wasn’t part of
the lingo.
A gentle nudge in his shirt pocket brought his attention back to the
one friend he had and understood. A smallish friend admittedly and
perhaps one not given to deep thought or meaningful discussions, but a
friend. A friend who gave and didn’t ask. Except perhaps for the odd bit
of cheese.
He stroked the silky black and silver speckled hair that comprised,
Houdini, his pet rat, or personal rodent companion as Houdini preferred.
Houdini had what could only be described as a serious tail, and a nose that
could twitch with the best, but most important of all, he liked to nuzzle
in warm places, and as Sod’s shirt pocket was always handy, or chesty, the
two got on fabulously.
Sod spent hours, days, and even seconds up here. It was his place.
His, and Houdini’s, and was so peaceful that the silence that reigned
between the Slimy Bay Watchers* could almost be felt.
He would miss it dearly.
A new term was approaching and his parents had already decided
to send him away. Originally he’d been happy with the idea, but then
realised that they meant him to go somewhere specific.
"St Badger’s Military School!" he spat bitterly and with cold resentment.
His parents were poor. Not even dirt poor, they had to steal other
peoples dirt for that. But, one thing was sure. Their son, their only son
would have an ‘idukashon’ as they so eloquently put it. The mere fact that
Sod didn’t actually want one didn’t come into consideration. He would
get one. He would learn his words, and even then, how they joined
together.
The mountains were where Sod belonged, or rather, it was where
everyone else thought he belonged, up high in the peaks, watching the
world in its silent throes.
Another nudge.
"What’s up Houdini? Is it time to go?"
Houdini squeaked cutely. Squeaking is about the only line that
Houdini gets, so don’t get disappointed.
Whoosh.
The shock wave of air buffeted Sod to the ground as something
incredibly fast passed within inches of his head and then ploughed into a
nearby Juju tree. An explosion followed as burning sap and plain old bark
burst high into the air. A further shock wave of melted air ripped over
Sod’s crouched form and then… nothing.
Crackle. Fizz. Silence.
"Squeak!" went Houdini.
"You squeaked it. Phew, what a mess. But… what’s that?"
There was a faint and pulsing crocus-yellow glow from a steaming
egg shaped object, sitting, if it had a posterior, in what was now definitely
a tree-stump.
Sod stepped carefully forwards, and prodded it with ‘The Handy
Stick’ that lies nearby in such moments.
Something swirled inside.
Something with fangs.
Mr Sanguinario was a smallish man who compensated for his
vertical girth in circumference. He wore a thick double breasted coat that
ran to his shoes, and would have ran a lot further were it allowed to. Rings
encrusted both hands and the left sleeve was retracted slightly to bring
attention to a chunky and gleaming antique watch that caught the light
like a vice. It had a strap that doubled his wrist size; which was fortunate,
for the wrist was slim, skeletal slim and the taught skin about it had a lack-
lustre cadaverous quality to it, which was thankfully mostly obscured.
He had not only the air of money, but appeared to have most of
its physical manifestations also. However, one thing appeared to be ‘not
quite normal.’ It wasn’t that his clothes, although magnificent and
appeared to be of a fashion from a forgotten and dramatic period.
Neither was it the blank poker face and still listless eyes.
Burnton had it, it was his teeth.
He wasn’t smiling, far from it, but you could still discern the pair of
canines that hung just above his bottom lip.
Burnton shivered and fished for a cough sweet. The man was a
vampire, and did menthol work as well as garlic?
"As I said before, Mr Sanguinario, representative of Sanguinario
Fratelli Enterprises is here to inquire as to why your account is in arreas,"
spoke the tall spindly creature that was acting as the voice.
Burnton surveyed it and wished he hadn’t.
He’d never actually seen one before, and honestly, he hoped he
never would. It was a ghoul.
It was vaguely recognisable as human but the long curving nails,
uneven teeth and dishevelled hair gave it away. Either that or it was a
student. Skin clung to the over-long bones in tatters and were it not for
the long flowing night-black cloak that it wore and billowing pearl-white
shirt, believed that it might fall apart before him.
"Erm, I don’t actually follow you there on that one. In fact, I don’t
even know what you’re doing here or… Who actually told you we even
exist?" Burnton was feeling good now, he liked telling people off.
He continued "You see, we are a covert military organisation,
operating in one might say, certain activities against the cruel empirical
regime. We simply don’t have accounts. Period." Burnton smiled politely.
"So why don’t you and your friend here, just go away and we’ll forget you
ever came? Eh?" Burnton hoped big time that they would agree, but
managed to keep a confident face. It was a pity his quivering legs didn’t
follow the lead.
"This, my client is aware of Mr Bumton."
"Burnton."
"Whatever. Never the less, your organisation has managed to
acquire a great deal of debt. A most severe amount," the ghoul added,
baring it’s yellowed fangs in a grimace that might pass for a smile in your
worst imagined nightmare.
The ghoul looked to the impassive face of Mr Sanguinario for
instructions. A mere blink was all that passed between the two.
"My client, Mr Sanguinario, and his brother, Mr Pipistrello, who is
currently unavailable due to his extended business trip out on the rim, are
aware that your organisation is what could be loosely called, a rebellion.
And, as such, is subject to rebellion tax." Obviously prepared for an
outburst in response to this sort of statement, the ghoul paused,
permitting Burnton to burble.
"Rebellion tax! What bleeping tosh, never heard of it."
"It exists."
"Really, and I suppose, you just invented it?"
"My client informs me that the Rebellion Tax Act has now been in
enforcement from…" he checked his watch, ‘about now.’
"Bleep that! Were not paying any bleeping tax to you, you bleeping
corpses. We’re a military organisation, we don’t need to pay anyone
anything. What exactly do you think you’re going to do about that then?"
The ghoul stared serenely with the air of one that knew precisely
what would be done.
Mr Sanguinario cleared his throat of whatever nefarious substance
he collected in there.
"Well, what are you going to do!" repeated Burnton.
He turned and gave a quick smile of reassurance to his command,
which, it as to be said, were standing rather far behind. And getting
further all the time.
"Things can get broken, people hurt, starships go missing," spoke
the ghoul quietly.
"Pfah! We have over a thousand vessels, I’d like to see you try."
There was a distant explosion. The ground shook violently.
The valley next door was no more. Well, you can’t really destroy a
valley, it was possibly just deeper, that’s all.
"I’d like to see you try," repeated Burnton, not trying to sound
aghast.
Burnton looked down at his hand and wished he hadn’t.
The ghoul had hold of it with a force, not in itself uncomfortable,
but with the likely possibility that it would increase to that stage rather
soon. He hadn’t even seen it move.
"Shoot them!" screamed Burnton as he tried to push away from the
Ghoul.
There followed a variety of further explosions, seemingly distant
and getting closer.
Burnton’s personnel opened fire.
Unfortunately, it did.
Sknarf sprung from her crouched position, avoiding the fell blow,
but falling over the flailing body of her now dead companion. Sprawled
on the ground, she gazed up into the glowing eyes of her attacker,
burning with pure malice and giving off a smoke of hatred.
It raised the club high above what passed for a head in troll life and
then powered it down towards the downed woman.
Bonk!
"Grok!" cursed the troll. The club crushed the ground where she
had lain but moments before, from fine dust to slightly finer dust.
Sknarf struck back with a suitcase-sized block of flint.
The blow, though well aimed, had no effect, other than to chip off
a small chunk of troll. She tossed the rock aside in failure.
"Har! You no can hurt Gor!" it laughed heartily. The chunk was
growing back before her eyes. Damn trolls, she thought, how can you kill
something that keeps re-growing its limbs.
Turning with typical slowness for the species, it brought its great
limbs to bear.
The shadow towered and loomed over her. She had no chance, this
was the end.
Oh well, she thought, at least it’s a ticket out of this place.
Sknarf closed here eyes and waited.
Slam!
The troll lurched sideways, jolted by the impact and giving a furious
foiled roar.
Slam!
Attempting to turn and trying to face the unseen attacker, the troll
floundered. It was being pushed, unbelievably, closer to the mine
entrance.
Slam!
Now it was falling backwards.
Sknarf opened her eyes. This was not expected. Looking over at
the cheering faces of her co-workers, she followed their gaze.
And saw him.
The attacker was a young man, that although Sknarf had seen and
admired before, she didn’t know his name.
Now, the troll was down on all fours and not looking happy at all.
Possibly even slightly perturbed at the outcome of the situation.
It’s almost impossible to harm the trolls, as the miners, the last
indigenous life forms on this planet found to their peril. However, there
was one thing, above all else that they couldn’t tolerate. Actually, they
couldn’t tolerate most things, but this one really annoyed them.
"Aargh!" cried the troll, as its head, burning, was dragged further
into the early morning sun. The heat was gentle, still being spring yet it
was enough.
The young man kept going, and now, the full hideous form of the
troll guard was ablaze. He stepped back, and with a calmness that one
would have expected to be tinged with psychotic fury, but wasn’t,
impassively watched the figure.
The flames abated and the troll began to stiffen and cool rapidly
from a deep lava colour to the dark fused and unpliable rock of its bleak
homeland. It would never move again.
With any luck.
"Holy Zod!" The commotion had attracted the other guards who
thundered out from the subsurface levels, angry at having their
tormenting interrupted. They formed a half-ring, all carefully keeping
within the shade, and around the young man.
"Aright, get in ere… Now!" growled a particularly large troll, his
teeth grinding together with a hungry gravely sound and it’s sulphurous
eyes squinting into the infant daylight.
"You know, outside is guard’d, and we’d get ya anywise when ra night comes. So…
movvirt!"
Reluctantly but with chin held high, the young man stepped back
into the cool shade of the mine. And into their fists.
One troll slammed him across the shoulders whilst the other kicked
in his leg. He went down, but didn’t cry out or show any form of pain.
This undoubtedly annoyed the trolls, whose only pleasure in life is to
drain the emotion from all that meet them. Trolls aren’t very good at
parties.
Double shackles were locked about his legs and joined with those
already on his tensed arms. Dangling and clanking, the chains were taken
by one troll and held like a leash.
Regardless of the considerable weight of the chains and shackles,
the young man, blood streaking down his back and dripping onto oil
covered rocks, still managed to stand proud and faced his oppressor with
unwavering eyes.
This one’s goin’ to be a lorra trouble, thought the troll who we’ll later
discover is called Dingus.
"Take ‘im down to ra prison level. Keep ‘im there for…" Dingus
pondered this; they needed all the workers they could, but he had to
appear in authority over the human scum.
"…A week. And no food nor water neither." It wasn’t a harsh
punishment, the miners hardly ever got food and water anyway, indeed,
Dingus was silently indebted. He’d just been promoted as a result of this,
and he’d never liked Gor anyway.
Two trolls of lesser ranks picked the perpetrator up bodily with
exaggerated ease and marched past Sknarf and the other miners and
down the tunnel.
"Who are you?" called out Sknarf.
"Shurrit you," bellowed Dingus. This insolence was intolerable. They
should have rid the whole planet of this vermin.
"Spiff!" came back the distant but chirpy reply.
It had a coat of silver sparkling flecks and a long spiked and lashing
tail that wrapped itself about his finger affectionately. The young eyes
bore into Sod’s awe-struck face and formed a bond that would last far
longer than at least one of their lives.
Sod couldn’t quite believe his luck. They were mythical, or so he
had believed, and yet, here it was.
A Dragon.
He was not amused.
Neither was Burnton’s staff. But then, they were all dead and
weren’t prone to demonstrate any emotions at all.
"Holy Bleep!" croaked Burnton.
He hadn’t even seen the ghoul move. Again. Now, his staff, and
presumably a large percentage of his armed forces appeared to be…
damaged.
"As my client said Mr Burnton. Things can get hurt. Even military
forces need protection. Look what happened here now Mr Burntbum, an
easily avoidable accident. Wouldn’t you agree?"
Burnton nodded slowly with a complete lack of knowledge as to
why he was nodding.
"Accidents… happen…" he murmured.
Burnton snapped out of the intense gaze of the ghoul and
regained his composure, "This can’t be happening. It’s ludicrous!"
The ghoul grimaced; or smiled.
"Never the less, I hope you will sign here, backdated of course, and
I hope you don’t mind, but we’ve included the cost of a nice new suit for
Mr Sanguinario and a small tip for prompt service. After all, we’re
business associates now. Consider yourself part of our family!"
The ghoul produced an archaic looking piece of tea stained
parchment, unrolled it and presented it to Burnton. It appeared to be
made of skin.
"I…I… don’t have a pen."
It was a feeble way to delay the inevitable.
The ghoul took one of Burnton’s fingers, snapped it off and
handed it back to him, with a polite smile.
"SOD!" A small burst of spittle drenched the unfortunate at the
front of the class.
Unreserved sniggering and a rolled up ball bounced across Sod’s
desk.
"SOD!"
"Yessir!" Sod jumped to a start.
"What in the name of Holy Virgin Father are you doing in that
desk?"
Mr Thik marched down the aisle between the desks, cane in hand
and soaking in the power that he had over a bunch of terrified kids.
Sod gently eased the desk lit shut and took an air of assured
innocence.
"Well then…Sod!" he boomed. Mr Thik liked to speak loudly, and in
particular, the badly chosen name of his most detested pupil. It’s not that
Sod was noisy or troublesome, actually, the opposite was true. In truth,
Mr Thik just hated people who had names that sounded like words. His
own name, had often been compared to one word in particular, although
Mr Thik couldn’t see the similarity.
He was well suited to be a school teacher, having been sacked from
his job as prison warder, for acts of dubious and obscene cruelty with the
prison mascot, it was the only career that would accept them. Children
needed discipline, lots and lots of it, and in particular, young Sod.
"What do we have here then… hmm.?" Turning slowly and giving an
arrogant sneer to the children, he just kept cranking up the humiliation
dial.
"N…nothing sir," spoke Sod timidly.
"Well, I think I’ll be the judge, jury, executioner, grave digger and
body snatcher of that you detestable little bleepard!" Mr Thik grinned
wildly ad leant close to Sod’s face and spat:
"And I do hope you brought enough for everyone?"
"Oh I think so Sir… I think so." There was a slight, almost
undetectable, except to the author, sliver of a smile.
Mr Thik yanked back the lid and whilst smiling confidently at the
surrounding children, plunged his hand into the depths of the desk.
There was a snap. A not inconsiderable fireball. A muffled scream,
a thump, and then lots more of the same.
Sod left school early that day.
Return to the Aphelion main page.
Like a great black space limousine, the ship sliced it’s way through
the ether of space with a distinctive ease and elegance at odds with it’s
formidable dimensions. Its exact shape was hard to discern and could
only really be guessed at by the stars that its never-ending hulk consumed
as it oozed through the cosmos. This ship, with its provocative and
fleetingly revealed curves, ate space, gave it a good spanking and spat it
whimpering back out the other side with the lesson never to get in the
way again. In a word, it was not only cool, but sub-zero.
Daeldus twitched erratically. It was a bad dream, and simply
wouldn’t do what his subconscious wanted. He moaned discontentedly
and returned to those ladies lacking in garmental coverage that just kept
running to fast and keeping just out of reach.
Every cloud has a silver lining.
Hiss. Pressure valves pumped and the door boomed open like a
falling drawbridge. Dry ice that usually potters about eerily in low budget
graveyard scenes dared to lap the edges of the gangplank but was soon
ushered away by the incredible chill that gushed out. The chill of the
undead.
"Holy bleep! Daeldus wake up!" cried the panic stricken private.
A well placed kick and Daeldus attained the rarely attained state of
not-quite-consciousness.
The young boy calmly watched the ocean scene as a ship, it’s sails
billowing and catching the setting suns, drifted past the harbour walls and
meandered towards the horizon. Legend spoke of the boiling turmoil
where the suns met the sea each night and gave birth to the stars as
fleeing sparks and Sod, son of God yearned to see it. Yet, what chance
had he, lowly son of a clam gutter gutterer, who couldn’t even afford a
paper boat, let alone passage on a real one.
Sod regained his feet, after them having fallen off in the shock, and
hopped across the smoking ground towards the twisted dendriform
remains. If he’d been a tree, he’d probably of vomited, or perhaps shook
a few leaves in horror.
"So, Mr… Sanguinario" spoke Commander Burnton in a voice that
he hoped sounded calm and authoritative but achieved nether. "To what
do we owe this visit of yours?"
The troll’s studded club swung with a ferocity that would have
decapitated its target.
Sod held the small creature aloft and beheld it.
Mr Sanguinario surveyed the many holes in his body.
"Sod!" The shout boomed across the haze drenched classroom and
started a quiet torrent of sniggering.
Footnotes
Copyright 1997 by Neil McGill
Aphelion Letter Column A place for your opinions.