BookKnight
Well-Known Member
Captain Muir crossed his lower pair of arms while his upper pair leaned on the command console. His ears twitched slightly as they listened beyond the ever-present buzz of electricity through the wires and circuits to the whispers of the crewmen behind him. He straightened, rolling his powerful shoulders as he did so. They had their orders. Time to carry them out. He turned, his blue-grey furred tail whipping once in agitation. "Gentlemen, we are to head to sector 55-34-97 and retrieve the citizens of the planetary colony, Therrush 7," he stated despite the fact that everyone on the bridge likely heard the radio transmission. It was only polite to pretend you hadn't until told officially. "It seems the mining vein they found there turns toxic when removed from their exact atmosphere. Scientists have determined that the costs of attempting to replicate said atmosphere even for transport to be too prohibitive to continue the operation. Therefore, it is to be shut down and the workers and their families extracted. Set a course for sector 55-34-97 and alert the crew. We should reach Therrush 7 in four cycles. We need the cargo bay cleared and temporary housing set up for fifty-seven civilians."
Announcement made, he turned and stalked toward his usual spot at the observation window. Some captains refused to leave their post at the command console, but he preferred to watch the dark skies with their brilliant pinpricks of light. His paws made no sound as they stepped on the metallic floor, finding purchase in the decorative yet functional swirls of texture built into the flooring. He stood before the rounded window, all four hands clasped behind his back, his tail twitching slightly. He didn't like the sounds of this assignment. The communications officer was too quick to move on from the whole "toxic" problem. It felt off, but he couldn't put his finger on why.
~~~~
"Okay, everything looks balanced, we're at a good level for liquidation, and the hydroponics are doing great," Gillian read off her tablet. She trotted over to the wall of readouts and scanned over them, blinking her large, black eyes at all the lights. The dim lighting in the room made the small lights glow brighter. "We should do a full physical inspection of everything over the next few rounds."
Uuril let out a burble of annoyance that the translator speakers on the side of his tank could not translate. "Physical takes time. Why don't you trust the computers?"
"Because computers only know what they are told, and if the sensors go bad, then they tell us false data," Gillian replied, She turned and trotted closer to Uuril's tank. "We'll do them one at a time and start with the food supplies those are the most import- AH!" She nearly jumped out of her suit as a warm, wet, spongey sensation splatted against her lower leg where her pants ended and her feet sheaths began. "Glumperg! Stop licking me!"
The massive, eel-like body flopped to one side so a flat-faced head could turn up toward her. A pink tongue jutted out briefly. Then it turned and loudly sloshed its wet way back toward the ramp leading into Uuril's tank. Each of its six clawed and webbed feet left splashes of water on the floor, and its long, oar-shaped tail swept the mess farther.
Gillian huffed wetly and moved over to hit the maintenance button. Somebody had to clean up this wet mess, and she didn't even know where the cleaning supplies were. "How are you so incredibly loud unless I am not paying attention?"
Uuril burbled in amusement, his tentacles waving. "All the better to taste you!"
"One of these days, that thing is going to take it too far, and then I shall enjoy eating him," Gillian warned, but she and Uuril both knew the threat was empty. Mostly empty.
Announcement made, he turned and stalked toward his usual spot at the observation window. Some captains refused to leave their post at the command console, but he preferred to watch the dark skies with their brilliant pinpricks of light. His paws made no sound as they stepped on the metallic floor, finding purchase in the decorative yet functional swirls of texture built into the flooring. He stood before the rounded window, all four hands clasped behind his back, his tail twitching slightly. He didn't like the sounds of this assignment. The communications officer was too quick to move on from the whole "toxic" problem. It felt off, but he couldn't put his finger on why.
~~~~
"Okay, everything looks balanced, we're at a good level for liquidation, and the hydroponics are doing great," Gillian read off her tablet. She trotted over to the wall of readouts and scanned over them, blinking her large, black eyes at all the lights. The dim lighting in the room made the small lights glow brighter. "We should do a full physical inspection of everything over the next few rounds."
Uuril let out a burble of annoyance that the translator speakers on the side of his tank could not translate. "Physical takes time. Why don't you trust the computers?"
"Because computers only know what they are told, and if the sensors go bad, then they tell us false data," Gillian replied, She turned and trotted closer to Uuril's tank. "We'll do them one at a time and start with the food supplies those are the most import- AH!" She nearly jumped out of her suit as a warm, wet, spongey sensation splatted against her lower leg where her pants ended and her feet sheaths began. "Glumperg! Stop licking me!"
The massive, eel-like body flopped to one side so a flat-faced head could turn up toward her. A pink tongue jutted out briefly. Then it turned and loudly sloshed its wet way back toward the ramp leading into Uuril's tank. Each of its six clawed and webbed feet left splashes of water on the floor, and its long, oar-shaped tail swept the mess farther.
Gillian huffed wetly and moved over to hit the maintenance button. Somebody had to clean up this wet mess, and she didn't even know where the cleaning supplies were. "How are you so incredibly loud unless I am not paying attention?"
Uuril burbled in amusement, his tentacles waving. "All the better to taste you!"
"One of these days, that thing is going to take it too far, and then I shall enjoy eating him," Gillian warned, but she and Uuril both knew the threat was empty. Mostly empty.
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