"Dey!"
Dey sat up. Somehow, during the night, she had managed to get her panties on her face while tossing and turning. She shook her head and her panties hit the lap. She spent a few moments wondering if she should get back into bed. For the past three days, the
Enterprise
had been making its way across the Atlantic ocean, heading straight for the southern edge of the African Union. Around that cape, then up to the Indian Ocean.
It had left her and her shipmates -- an alien tourist who was way in over her head and a squid from Miami -- bouncing off one another worse than crew on a USAF light cruiser.
So, getting back into bed
would
make sense. It'd prolong the time until she had to deal with the others.
"Nazis off the starboard bow."
Okay.
That was worth getting out of bed for.
When Dey came onto the deck, she was wearing some short shorts and carrying one of the weapons she had brought with her on this madcap adventure. Though, technically, any weapon she could have bought on the civilian market paled next to her own body.
And the sexy, attractive, clever, creative, immensely intelligent-
[Humble,] Dey thought in the middle of Loki's speil.
Ah, yes, humble too. Thank you. But yes, I do help.
Dey grinned and mentally squeezed her integrated AI's butt. [You're worth ten thousand furious Englishmen, Loki. But...] She hefted up her SPAS-12. [There's something great about holding a shotgun.]
The SPAS-12 was a design that was nearly a hundred and fifty years old. That had meant it had plenty of time to get broken down and remodeled in an age of moderately cheap 3d printing. She had purchased one from a dealer with a fluxmag added. A DV emitter contained in the stock exapanded the eight slug magazine into an eight hundred slug magazine, with a flipping mechanism to bring the kind of slug she wanted. She'd loaded it with birdshot for when she wanted to just cause really fucking painful wounds and knock someone on their ass without killing them, buckshot for when she wanted to gut someone, and solid slugs for distance and armor work.
"What's a Nazi?" Xee asked.
"Bad guys," Dey said, scanning the horizon. Xee -- X'Chur N'Xok -- was a Huntress. A race that had evolved on a small, icy planet as far from their sun as Pluto was from Earth's sun. Their bodies had to maintain a core temperature that would make helium turn to liquid. On planets like Earth, they kept themselves from melting into a puddle of muscle and liquefied brain matter by using hardened environmental suits. Dey wasn't sure what Xee looked like
under
her suit. But the suit itself clung to her body so tightly that Dey could say that Huntresses had breasts, hips, and asses that did
not
quit. Firm and round and oh so spankable, Xee only compounded her curvy sexiness by being utterly clueless of the fact that her body drove Dey and Loki both
crazy
.
"What kind of bad guys?" Xee sounded nervous.
"Ones with really shitty history teachers," Dey said, spotting the ship that Skylar had spotted. Skylar was
not
an alien, even if he had eight tentacles, eight eyes, and a circular trunk of flesh instead of a torso. Squids had been introduced to humanity by several other races as 'people you just
had
to meet.' It turned out, Squids had gotten along with humanity essentially from the word go. Multiple ethnic groups, a fondness for inventing new religions and new government types, talk show radio hosts, genocides and global war? All topics of commonality between squids and humans.
With their own homeworld occupied and a desperate economic and ecological niche on Earth had made the migration of several hundred million Squids to humanity's homeworld a foregone conclusion.
But Sky had been born in New Miami.
So he was
technically
not an alien.
In the same way that the other ship wasn't
technically
a bunch of Nazis. The flag flying over the bow was bright red, had a white circle on it, but the actual symbol that filled it was a Celtic Cross. Sometimes used by the Catholic Church, sometimes used by increasingly strident and desperate white supremacists. Then Dey's brow furrowed.
The fuck?
Loki whispered.
The flag underneath the red flag was a blue one, with a circular symbol that had central line drawn through the middle with two branching lines creating a kind of three pronged line. The symbol was bright white. Under the blue flag was a green flag with a golden flower on it. Below that was a purple flag with what looked like a dragon's spreading wings.
[Okay, that's a peace symbol, isn't it?] Dey asked, managing to tear her eyes from the flags to the rest of the ship. It looked like an old style cargo hauler, the sides covered with fins and panels that thrust into the sun, tilting to soak as much rays as possible. The flat top had been covered with green. A few dozen smaller ships milled around it -- several of them lashed to the side of the ship by thin ropes.
"That's fucking weird," Sky said.
"What is it?" Xee asked.
"Okay, uh, imagine if you..." Dey dredged what little she knew of Huntress culture from her brain. "Imagine if you found a Perseus Mumbler-"
"You mean a Veil Keeper?"
Dey waved her hand. "To-may-toh, To-mah-toh," she said, shaking her head. "Imagine that, but they were also flying a Xeth peace program overhead. So, basically, one is super evil, but the rest is not so evil?"
"Huh," Xee said.
Dey walked back to the cabin. Her bed sat next to the computer systems, which she tapped on. She brought up the radio, then picked up a chunk of plastic older than first contact, and spoke into it. "This is Captain DeShane Gallagher of the
Enterprise
. Care to tell me why the
fuck
you're flying a Nazi flag? Over."
There was nothing but static.
Then her radio crackled.
"That's, like, your opinion, man."
The voice that came through the radio seemed slightly distracted. Dey's brow furrowed.
"No, you're flying a Celtic Cross on a white circle with a red field, that's basically a Nazi flag. Over," Dey said.
More static.
Then a different voice came through. "No, Cedric, go to the grass. Uh, this is the Free Ship
Peace and Love --
I am, ah, volunteer radio operator Cherry Blossom. Um. Peace be upon you, fellow traveler."
More static. Dey frowned and figured, after a minute, she was never getting an over.
"You're flying a fucking Nazi flag!" Dey growled into the radio. "What is your deal? Over."