You know that episode of the Simpsons where Mr. Burns tries to adopt Bart? You know, it's the one where Bart watches footage of his family on the security screen and the guy that Mr. Burns has hired to play Homer says 'boh' when he drops his donut, so Bart isn't quite convinced, so Mr. Burns walks in and
flips
through a hundred and fifty page script (written for a single five second long faked security camera footage reel, I hasten to add) to discover that the world famous catchphrase of everyone's favorite possibly plural multiprofessional ex-astronaut wonder, Homer Simpson, is...
Doh
.
Yeah, that episode.
So, anyway, there was a part in that episode where Bart sits at a table at Mr. Burns sits at the other end of the table and the table is just
so
fucking huge it's ridiculous?
That's how big this table was.
I was seated at the comfy chair at the front, while Marceline had gotten the rest of the staff together.
The staff were all robots.
I raised my hand. "Question," I said.
"Yes?" Marciline asked as I looked at the robots -- counting from the robot on the right to the robot on the left, circling around the table, we had:
1. Tall, intimidating scary soldier robot girl with a marching band hat, which she had taken off and crooked under her shoulder.
2. A sleek robot of increasingly indeterminate gender in a sleek suit with bright polished buttons and white glove. Slightly less fancy than Marceline's suit, but still intimidatingly fancy...the enby had a
bowtie
for God's sake.
3. Polly. Hi Polly.
4. Jeanette. Hello nurse!
5. An
extremely
curvy robot girl with platinum blond hair and lips that seemed to have been carved into a perpetual scowl, with skin that had been shaded the same warm nut brown as my Grandma's credenzas but without the cigarette stains (if you've never seen my Grandma's cradenza's, count yourself lucky. But, when shaped into a lady robot form and without the cigarette stains, it was actually a really cute skin tone. Well. Hull? Tone? I don't know, what's the word for skin when it's not skin, but you don't want to call someone skinless when they're not a really gnarly cenobite.)
6. A sky blue tomboy with very short cropped frizzy hair-fibers. She was dressed in like a very dark blue jacket with bright gold buttons and she had a flat hat that she twirled in at the end of her finger while looking incredibly bored.
7. The girl in the maid outfit. So, okay, when I had first seen her, I had thought she had been in a frilly French maid outfit, like from the hit mystery movie, Clue. But in fact, she was dressed in an equally sexy, slightly more practical, significantly less frilly maid outfit, like in the hit murder mystery Sherlock Holmes. ...which Sherlock Holmes? I dunno, pick one.
"Why are you all sexy robots?" I asked.
The entire table acted like I had set a kitten on fire.
"We are
not
robots!" Marceline exclaimed. "The very term is a complete...I..." She closed her glowing, hologrpahic eyes. "That is a gross misunderstanding of the relationship between machines and humans and I will beg you to never use it again, understand?" She nodded.
I nodded. "Right. But you...are? Robots?"
"Are you sure she's an improvement?" the soldier girl asked, her voice a low growl.
"I, sorry, just..." I stammered. "I don't know what to call you! That's the word we use for, like, you know, people who are all beep boop!" I mimed the Robot. "Whirr, click, Danger Will Robinson, Danger, my arms are flailing wildly."
"...again, I ask," the soldier girl said, while Marceline sat down -- but it was Jeanette who saved me.
"Ah, tarnation!" she exclaimed. "We're seeing here a bit of etymological confusion. Mistress, do you know what robot means?"
"It means beep boop?" I asked.
"No, it means
slave
," Jeanette said. "It's Czech, I believe."
"OOOOOOH!" I said. "Well, uh, to clear things up, there are no robot, er, machine slaves on my home planet, called Earth." I put my hand on my chest, gently. "There are just wage slaves. And literal slaves. And sex slaves." I paused. "Thank you, again." I said, looking at Marci. "A lot." I paused for a moment. "Seriously, like, my planet was
fucked up
."
"You can say that again," the blue skinned ro- ...machine chick said, pausing in her cap twirling. I grinned at her.
"We should determine a point of divergence in the histories of our two worlds," the curvy intimidating blond said, nodding as she spoke -- her voice stern and delicate both. "Did you defeat Napoleon at Waterloo?"
"Yes," I said, nodding. "Uh, did you guys have a World War?"
"Of course we had a world war," the curvy blond said, her eyes narrowing. "As I said, we defeated Napoleon at Waterloo."
"No, I mean..." I trailed off. "Okay, that's the divergent point. Between the Brits beating up a short French guy," I said -- then stopped as the soldier girl leaned in and muttered.
"Corsican," she muttered.
"Gesundheit?" I asked.
"Napoleon was Corsican," the soldier girl muttered, more forcefully. "Not French."
I blinked. "...what's a Corsica?"
"It is an island off the coast of France, near Toulon," the blond chipped in.
I nodded. "Right. So, okay, you beat Napoleon and never had any wars again?"
"Not any of significant size," the blondie said, nodding. "There was some significant transitional violence in the Americas, I believe, dealing with their aristocratic gentry, a spot of bickering in Russia..." She tapped her finger against her chin. "Nothing to match twenty years of unending slaughter."
"What was your twentieth century like?" the soldier girl asked, looking at me pointedly.
"Uh...worse mustaches?" I said, for lack of anything better.
Silence.
I coughed. "So, um, on to the introductions." I pointed my finger at the soldier machine. "You are?"
"Theodora Fusilier," she said, her voice stiff and gruff as she sat up a bit. "You can call me Ra."
"...not...Dora?" I asked.