In the first thousand years of its existence, the headquarters of the Starship Corps was known by the significantly more prosaic name as FORCE: Space. But after the FORCE program was reorganized into less of a military endeavor and more of a general purpose disaster and emergency response system, the old FORCE space station -- with its bristling defense arrays and heavy duty armor and shielding -- was taken apart and replaced, piece by piece, with the equally prosaically named DIRT Headquarters.
Disaster Immediate Response Team Headquarters.
Catchy.
But when the first developments in altering Starships from kilometer long battleships with thousands of crew to the smaller, sleeker, more efficent platforms started to pay dividends, and Starships became smaller and smaller, the name of the organization morphed over time to simply refer to the Starships that were their bread and butter. Eventually, DIRT became nothing more than a subdivision of the vast intergalactic bureaucracy built around maintaining and running the Starships until...eventually...it was just the Starship Corps.
But the prosaic original station endured. In a galaxy with spheroid and noodle structures, with agrav systems that could produce castles that drifted on clouds of ferrogel and impossible Escher buildings that required constant low-level E-space warping to even exist, the Starship Headquarters looked downright primitive. Consisting of a pair of counter-rotating armored tori, each one approximately a kilometer in diameter, the station was shrouded by a haze of microgravriy scaffolds and free-floating constructions, all of which held the berths for the Starship Corps rocket fleet.
Hornet watched the scaffolds drift by as her cramped transport pod flew towards the axial docking airlock of the station, where the rotational gravity was nill and they could just socket in. She glanced back at her crew, and tried to give each of them an encouraging smile, even as the alarming thumps and crashes of the pod berthing into the airlock filled the small space. When the doorway opened, she was the last one out, letting everyone drift through -- Hugh requiring the most help with his quadrupedal form and Rotting Caracas needing the least as his support-dish had several cold gas thrusters concealing along its rim.
At last, Hornet was out and in the axial corridor of Starship Headquarters. It was, like the outside, a bit of a let down.
Until you noticed the Starships.
Heinlein whispered, very softly. "As your ops officer, I suggest you, uh, close your mouth, Hornet?"
Hornet closed her mouth. But she noticed that even Heinlein was looking blown away, his eyes watching the Starships flit by. There were almost fifty of them just in this corridor, though a great many of them had left by the time Hornet had blinked, and even more had arrived afterwards. The central axis corridor had many doors leading off into the tori, and it seemed that every single one of the ships preferred to use the central corridor to get anywhere -- so the whole middle of the station was this buzzing nexus of brightly colored, glittering, metallic forms.
"Yeah, we usually have about a hundred Starships here at any one time -- we're not just good for blowing up space pirates and punching tin pot dictators," Sting said, having entered through...Hornet glanced around, but didn't see how the Starship had gotten into the station. "Our computer cores are actually faster than most of the automation on this station -- and we can carry digitized consciousnesses in style and comfort. A lot of these visiting Starships aren't even here for their personalities -- they're here because they're carrying people who the Corps needs to talk to, or use, or even fork."
Hornet nodded, slightly. "Right. W-Where do we go?"
"Well, your crew is going to go to the digitization chambers for their preps. You?" Sting took her arm. "You're coming with me."
"Good luck, Nettie!" Hugh called out.
"We're pulling for you, dame!" Heinlien added.
"Don't get killed," K'iren shouted last of all, which caused Hornet to jerk her head back as Sting carried her through the axis of the station.
"How the heck can I get killed in the starship headquarters?" Hornet's voice was more bemused than irritated. K'iren's tail flicked a playful salute up after her -- the momentum imparting just a bit of spin to the slender Trisk.
"I have faith that you can find a way, Abernathy!"
Sting chuckled. "They like you, huh?" She smiled, enigmatically. "Don't worry, your crew's going to be just fine. Digitizing is way easier than building a ship the right way."
Hornet's brow furrowed. "That...the right way? Wait, I'm...not..." She trailed off as they reached the airlock at the end of the station's main axis. The door there opened to space, from the other direction. Sting, though, didn't stop. She pushed Hornet into the airlock, while Hornet started to wonder if maybe there
was
a way for her to get killed during this part of her training. As the airlock door cycled shut behind Sting, the slender blue starship caressed Hornet's cheek.
"It's better if you just let things happen," she said. "It gets harder if you struggle, or freak out. So, do you promise to
not
freak out?"
Hornet gulped. The feeling of the other woman's fingers against her cheek was causing her gooseflesh to pop to life. Her nipples were growing achingly hard under her shirt and she found it remarkably hard to think of anything but how very
naked
Sting was. Sting's thumb brushed, comfortingly along her skin -- and Hornet realized how very easy it would be to turn her head, to take that thumb between her lips and suck on her gently, to nibble her impossibly tough hull material. To let herself...
Hornet shivered from her toes to her head, then shook herself and mumbled out: "Promise."
"The transfer process from sophont to starship doesn't involve digitization," Sting said. "You are the only part of the starship that
can't
be digitized -- because starships need to be core hardened. That means some of the automation
has
to be biological." She smiled, slightly. "The human brain might age and get distracted and damaged if you bump it to hard, but it has an advantage over all other computers. All biological sentients do: Their quantum functions are innately core hardened. If they weren't, there wouldn't
be
any sentience in the galaxy, considering how many of us evolved within the slow zone."