This ongoing sci-fi series will contain non-consensual elements.
***
My world was so different. I wasn't a slave anymore, my owner was dead, and my home was now a place that I could never return to. I had no friends and no real purpose in life.
I had stayed on the yacht because of Orton, but he had been blasted into the cold vacuum of space. My life at the moment seemed tied to this red moon organisation. A group of people whose sole purpose was freeing slaves.
This ship seemed different. There were new people aboard, and I felt like a stranger in a place that had seemed so comfortable only the day before. Not that they were treating me badly. They smiled every time they saw me, and asked me how I was.
Their dirty overalls had been replaced with clean outfits. Delphine had explained that they had only worn the overalls to infiltrate the ore facility. She had told me it was all been part of an elaborate plan to rescue Juno. They knew Orton had bought her, after bribing a staff member of the auction. It had then been just a case of luring him away to take his ship . An emergency at an ore facility did the trick, and the dirty outfits helped the ruse.
A room had been picked out for me. A smaller one, but that was to be expected. My large suite I had shared with Orton was in tatters.
One of the crew brought me some clothes, and other essentials. As he did, he said, that I'd have to get used to not having servants around.
This new situation became apparent at meal times. There didn't seem to be a designated cook. Everyone just helped themselves.
My ship was full of strangers, who did things differently than me, except that it had never been my ship. I never really owned anything.
Delphine had been helpful, but she was their leader. She couldn't spend all her time with me, and I started to feel lonely. Due to my memory loss, I could count the people I knew on one hand.
Maybe, I had made a mistake in not going with the other slaves to the safe haven.
Presently, we were all sat in the dinning room eating dinner. I had never been in there with so many people before.
They were joking and talking about things I couldn't join in on. One of them kept joking about the state of his hair. It made everyone howl with laughter. I couldn't see what was so funny, and I guessed it was some in-joke that I wasn't aware of.
They did try, asking my opinion from time to time, but it was hopeless. How could I integrate? They were all so easy in each other's company.
"How's the food?" Delphine asked.
"It's nice," I said, but before I could ask her the same thing, one of the men asked her a question about the navigation equipment.
As she gave him a detailed answer, I realised it was just another thing that I couldn't join in on.
They talked some more, and one of them said something about explosives being set on the ore facility. I remembered that they told me about the yacht's previous crew being sent there.
"Are you going to destroy the ore facility?" I asked him.
He nodded, cheerfully.
"But the crew, they will be killed," I said, and he just nodded again with an even bigger smile.
I couldn't believe it.
"What have they done? They are just employees," I said, with some shock.
"That's the point, what have they done?" Delphine asked, rhetorically. "They happily ferried you, a slave around. Did they ever try to free you?"
I had to shake my head. They had been kind, but not that kind.
"What about their families?" I asked.
A man from further down the table spoke up. He was quite a bit older than the rest.
"What about my family, did anyone care when they were taken," he said, and looked down at his food. His words brought a silence to the room. I had a feeling they all had similar stories. I was in the wrong, and I knew it.
Delphine gave me a half smile.
"Sorry, please excuse me," I said, quietly, and left the room.
I felt embarrassed and ashamed, and started to walk back to my room.
There were footsteps behind me. It was Delphine, she caught up to me, and put an arm around my shoulder.
"Don't worry about it," she said. "You're new, it will take time to adjust."
I turned and wrapped my arms around her.
"I don't know about starships, or guns, or explosives. I'm useless."
She laughed. "We all have to learn. How about now?" She asked, cheerfully
I shook my head, but she insisted, and said we would go to the cargo bay for some target practice.
After seeing what happened to Orton in there, it was the last place I wanted to go, but she was keen to show me.
I really wanted to spend time with her too. She was a very charismatic woman. Her way with the crew was extraordinary. There were no harsh words, or grumbling about what she asked them to do, just an ease and devotion to her leadership. It was a very attractive quality.
There was another man in there. He looked as if he was fixing something, and he stopped when we entered. After a few words, he helped Delphine set up a makeshift shooting-range, using empty oxygen canisters. There were ten in all, lined up on a storage crate.
I wasn't sure about this anymore. I remembered when Orton tried to hand me the pistol in our room, and how I dropped it.
Delphine was patient, and showed me what everything did on her lazer pistol. As she handed it to me, I felt a bit more confident.
She was a patient teacher, and gave me some more guidance on how to stand. The engineer looked on, with a grin.
"Try not to put a hole in the hull," he said, scaring me a little. Delphine chided him and told me it wasn't on a high setting.
I gripped the weapon the way she showed me and pointed it at the target.
"Legs a little more apart," she said, quietly. I did as she said.
"Squeeze the trigger."
I fired, a beam of light jumped from the gun and cut the first canister in half.
"Wow, first hit," she said, excitedly.
The engineer said, it was luck.
"Try the others," she suggested.
There were nine other canisters. I aimed and fired, hitting the next one. I didn't wait this time, and I quickly shot each of them in turn.
"Like that?" I asked.
"What the fuck." The engineer exclaimed.
Delphine was laughing. "You tricked me, you've fired a gun before."