Walking out of the deep forest monorail station, Maya looked up at the deep canopy above. It had been a week since the last Apocriax job had finished for the season and it felt strange to be back in the woods again with her memory intact this time.
"Watch out, human," a voice in her ear said quietly and she startled. Turning her head, she found herself face to face with Sperholt, her companion today. They had met months earlier at the Clinic and while they'd taken to spending a little more and more time together, it was usually in the form of lunch of drinks at one of the many cross-species restaurants that filled the trade district in the spaceport city of Breidak.
But today, the two had planned a forest hike together and Maya wondered what this meant for their friendship. Or was it more? The monkey-like native to the planet she'd moved to had taken to sitting closely and was definitely more touchy-feely and hands-on than she was accustomed to, but the Earth expat wasn't sure whether or not it was a cultural difference or... something else.
"What am I watching out for?" she replied, fake archly, and the pseudo simian native backed away with a laugh and walked alongside her as they cleared the station.
"Well, last time I saw you here, you seemed to have a little bit of an insect issue. Does that count?" The fertility technician flicked her tail in amusement and while Maya smiled, a tiny bit of uncertainty or discomfort made itself known.
The job had been profitable, immensely so, but even though the clinic had taken pains to make sure she was giving informed consent on the process (which included temporary memory redaction so her fear response to being hunted by giant sex-crazed arthropods would be genuine), she still felt something strange sometimes when she saw one of the big flying space wasps overhead back in the district where she worked and lived. She knew it was silly, but...
Something in her expression must have caught Sperholt's attention because she stopped and touched Maya's arm so she stopped as well.
"Is everything ok?" she asked through the ubiquitous translator buds.
"Oh, of course," Maya lied, forcing herself to smile bigger. "On my planet, we have small creatures that look the same and sometimes I just have to, uh," she temporized, "to remind myself not to judge a book by it's cover."
Sperholt cocked her head slightly, then nodded slowly. Maya assumed the buds would somehow translate folksy sayings into something equivalent, but she'd never asked.
"Well, let's get going!" she finally said, apparently accepting Maya's words. The two continued out of the small station and onto one of the networks of paths winding through the ancient forest. Unlike the one where she'd been 'hunted' recently as part of a contract to the Apocriax hive that maintained a community in a forest similar to the ones on their home world, this was a big piece of Feiden old growth that had survived centuries of civilization. The planet had become a vibrant hub of interstellar commerce before humans had mastered steam engines but Maya couldn't imagine humanity having the kind of restraint needed to have unspoiled land like this so close to 'civilization'. The Hazen approached things like this differently and she wondered how else they differed. Sometimes, when Sperholt snuggled up closely to speak, her curiosity was certainly sparked.
After almost a half hour of companionable walking, the two decided to take a smaller off-shoot trail without talk, it just seemed natural. The tree trunks were much closer together and reminded Maya of a visit to the Redwoods in Northern California back on Earth. The sounds of nature and birds and the occasional aircar or taxipod faded as the greenery enveloping them grew more dense and their conversation slowed.
The human woman marveled at the peaceful nature of the place. It was hard for her to truly believe the big city and spaceport where she spent so much time was so close, relatively speaking.
The two came to a small clearing covered with a floor of spongy, moss-like plants. Maya looked to her Hazen companion and raised an eyebrow. The gesture was apparently recognizable because Sperholt gestured assent with her tail and the two began to unpack. Spreading out a blanket and opening some containers, soon the two were sitting across from each other and were nibbling at some foods they'd each brought.
The two fed each other samples, laughing at the others' reaction which ranged from approval to disgust. The variety of food on Feiden needed to serve the demand of so many sentient residents and travelers was enough that one might eat something new every meal without repeating for... years, certainly. Like most residents, Maya had identified the things she liked through trial and error and would plan her shopping or restaurant visits around known good options, but seeing as how there was no structure for everyone to have the same lists, eating with friends could be an adventure and turn into taste parties quickly.
Maya had just spit out a bite of some kind of blue gelatin and Sperholt was hooting with laughter when suddenly, a buzzing sound grew then faded over the period of a few seconds as something big and alive flew overhead. She blanched and stabilized herself with both hands and closed her eyes. Her companion immediately stopped laughing and with a twist and a flip was sitting next to her with an arm wrapped around her shoulder.
"Human, Maya... what's wrong?" When Maya shuddered and looked up into the canopy above with fear, the technician followed her direction of sight and suddenly seemed to understand what was happening. "Did you just have a stress reaction to the sound of the being that overflew?" The human sat quietly, shivering a little. She continued. "Was it an association to the Apocriax contract?"
Maya opened her eyes and looked into the face of her friend and nodded but didn't speak. The Hazen technician looked mortified and concerned in equal measure somehow.
"Oh Maya, I am so sorry. Our treatments were supposed to help you process that trauma quickly into the correct context, I-"
Maya interrupted her. "No, no... it's ok, it's not like I have nightmares or anything and I know what happened and everything, I just..." She shuddered slightly. "I just get this reaction when I see one of them right now. I know I need to get over it, I'm cool, I just..." she stopped talking, trying to figure out what was upsetting her. She'd enthusiastically hired into this job. The fear had been real at the time because she'd agreed to have her short term memory redacted so her fear response would be convincing because the client had offered to pay her more for that, but the swarm had thoroughly used her body and the technicians from the fertility clinic had restored her memory, she'd felt fine about it. Why couldn't she-
The pseudosimian held her more tightly, squeezing her and wrapping its tail tightly, squeezing them together. Maya felt like she was in the universe's best possible hug and she could feel the tension slipping away. She took a deep breath, let it out, and turned to find the monkey-like girl's face inches from hers, looking into her eyes with concern. She glanced down at her mouth and back and was about to go for it when suddenly both of their tabs beeped and buzzed at the same time.
"Oh god damnit..." Maya muttered as the two released each other and reached for their tablets to check what was important enough to break their privacy blocks.
The Hazen technician finished reading the message she'd received first and looked up sharply.
"Maya, you don't need to-" she began, but the human waved her quiet, still reading. She went back up a paragraph and read it again, then gave the message a once-over.
"No, this is fine. Like I said, I know the reaction I'm having isn't reasonable and I'll just deal with it." She held up her tablet. "This, this is paying work, and it looks interesting."
The Hazen technician squinted at her, then nodded reluctant assent with her tail. "Very well, but at least let me fix the underlying issue. It's a basic fix, we just didn't realize we'd missed something when we did your post-job care."
Maya frowned. "Will it take long?"