Declarative memory, stored in the hippocampus, is memory we can talk about. We remember learning it, and we can explain why it's important. Nondeclarative memory is more complicated: it is sense memory, deep memory, the memory of what our name is and what our mother smelled like. You need declarative memory to pass exams and do your job. But you need nondeclarative memory to be human.
* * *
Lieutenant Oliviero wasn't sure, as he rolled back toward the wall, whether the prostitute would be more offended that he'd fucked her badly, or that he hadn't fucked her at all; the truth was, he was so wasted he just couldn't remember which it'd been. And to make matters worse, the naked girl was Warrant Officer Jackson, who worked in his own department. "Sorry, Jackson. Whatever happened was probably unpleasant."
She lounged on one elbow, her lidded blue eyes whore-wise above fresh young freckles and a clean, long-limbed body. She shrugged with one elbow. "It's fine, sir. No hard feelings."
Oliviero glanced sharply back at her; had she emphasized
hard?
Was she teasing him? Would she joke about his cock now, giggling with the others in the department? Her eyes gave away nothing, and that fucking pimp Terranova trained his girls carefully, but still... "I'll tip you, of course."
"Of course." Gods, she really was a confection: Oliviero found himself wishing, fervently, that he'd been able to get it done with her last night, but the alcohol had taken over as it always did. She gazed frankly down his body, dwelling on his limp cock, and shrugged again. "Whatever you want, sir. I pride myself on my professional and discreet service."
She was a really good navigator, too, which was fortunate since Oliviero was normally too drunk to handle that, too. A whiz with the fuel calculations, as well; come to think of it, she was pretty good at almost everything. "Ever think of officer candidate school, Jackson?"
She laughed in his face. "Fuck no, sir. I'm not spending any more time in Fleet than I absolutely have to." Well. At least she was honest. "Look, I'm going to get going. I've got duty at 0800. Are, um, are you going to be okay, sir?"
He knew what she meant:
are you going to get wasted again?
It was not usually a question worth asking, since the answer was almost always yes, but he sighed as he watched her nude form rise gracefully from the bunk and stretch high against the ceiling. He sighed. "I'll be fine, Jackson."
Her face told him she did not believe that, and he had to admit she was probably right: their ship held 213 souls, meaning everyone knew everyone else far better than was healthy. He could identify half of them by smell; it was how he'd known Jackson was sharing his bunk this morning in the dark of space. Now she stood there quietly, proud and tall and waiting while her clothes did themselves up, and Oliviero came slowly to his senses and scrambled for his wallet. "Mr Terranova is happy to run your tab," she said quietly as her slim, high breasts packed themselves away, "but cash is always appreciated as a tip..."
She left him, her face sour and her own wallet heavier by no more than twenty-three shekels and eleven pence, an insultingly low tip that correlated with the sum total of what Oliviero had to his name. He sat on the edge of his bunk and watched her go while he fought the daily battle: breakfast in the wardroom with the other officers, or breakfast in here with the bottle?
As usual, it was no contest.
* * *
"Wake up, Oliviero."
It was, as always, Ellie Novak, smacking his face as he lay sprawled in a tangle of bedsheets and vomit. "Go away."
"I already did," she replied bitterly. "Twice. But for some reason the captain wants you on the bridge, so wake your ass up and follow me."
"Fuck you."
"Nope." Oliviero was First Officer, meaning Novak worked for him, since he managed the whole ship. But he knew as well as she did that he couldn't even manage himself, so most of that fell to her. "Not today. Time to get up. We're falling out of lightspace in thirty minutes."
Awareness oozed back into his mind. "Already?"
Novak looked neutrally at his pale body. "You've been passed out since Jackson left you," she explained. "That was twelve hours ago." She squatted next to him, looking up like the parent of a junky well past the point of rehab; there was concern there, of a sort, because they'd served together a long time. But there was also the cynicism of despair, and for the same reason. "I need you today, Kai. You need to inspect the cargo and sign off on it. I do 90% of your job; today is your 10%. You need to get it together."
He remembered, the straggled twists of thought reassembling themselves. "The Clone Farm."
"Yup. The Clone Farm." She stood and nudged the button by the bunk, summoning his uniform. "Nasty duty, but it is what it is. I've got the manifest all ready to do; me and Chief Koster are shuttling down at 1620 local, doing the pickup, and then you need to inspect once we get back." She looked to one side. "The captain doesn't want to be bothered with it."
"Of course not." Oliviero was about to say more, but Novak's expression told him not to bother. In case he missed it, she put it into words.
"As much as you're sick of him, I'm sick of you." She turned to go. "Bridge. Now." She watched him dress, and at last she smiled her grim, distant smile. "If you want, Koster and I can grab your next liver while we're down there."
"Not necessary, Ellie. Thanks." He was on liver #3 already, and all the fault of
that woman
. He yawned, feeling like he'd just climbed out of his casket. "I'll be there."
"Promises, promises," she clucked, the hatch closing behind her.
* * *
He was staring, glaze-eyed, out the forward viewport when Schillinger nudged him. "They're all secure, sir. Ready for you in Bay Three."
"Well then. I guess that puts you in charge of the bridge, Amber." He smiled at her, feeling the whisky-sweat chilly in his armpits. "Such a big moment for you." Schillinger had slept her way up, but that didn't mean she was incompetent. She arched an eyebrow at the irony: she was far, far less useless as a watch officer than he himself was. "Well then. Steady as we go, full speed ahead, whatever. I'll send Lieutenant Novak up here to take us out of orbit." He caught the lift down to the Bays.
The bins stood open for inspection at the forward end of Bay Three, looking like a series of surgical teaching aids or perhaps off-cuts from a butcher shop. Joop Koster stood by with the inspection form, most of it already filled in. "Sir." The Chief was always quiet, even furtive. "Four full clones and assorted parts, as manifested."
"Mmm." Trips to the Clone Farm were never fun. Everyone who joined Federal Service was entitled to a free clone, kept out here at the Farm in case of catastrophic injury or technical death, tended constantly by what had to be the least motivated troops in the universe. "Tags all present? Vascular pumps installed properly?"
"Sir. Surgeon's already done his inspection."
"We're just waiting on you, sir, and then we're gone." Novak came out of the latrine, wiping her hands on her slim hips. "Off to the Cygnus hospital ship." The invasion there was said to have been massive, the slaughter impressive. Oliviero strolled along the line of bins, his count cursory, trusting that Novak and Koster and Dr January and the Clone Farmers down below couldn't possibly have missed anything, and he initialed each bin without much thought.
"Now then." The four full clones stood nude and shivering at the end of the line, reminders that four servicepeople had either died or nearly so: these were here because their originals were so ravaged by battle that it was more cost-effective to just replace their whole body. There'd be heads out there off Cygnus, or at least brains, or at the very least a frontal lobe and hippocampus combo, all waiting to be dropped into these four shivering forms that now stared blankly around them.
These had names on the manifest, and Oliviero stopped boredly before each one. He didn't notice the bodies any more than anyone else in Fleet did; nudity was not remarkable on the Fleet's ships. Though that second one, called Marie, was an absolute sexy witch. She answered, he marked her off, and then it was on to the third one. "Ling-kwan Johnson?"
"Sir." The third clone, according to the form, belonged to an encryption tech, now nothing but a head with a bloodbag attached.
"Welcome aboard. And last, but not least..." He stopped short, blinking at the name on the board, convinced there had to be some mistake; he was completely unwilling to raise his eyes to look at the last clone.
Silence, the whole Bay heavy, the various cloned body parts squirming as Novak's people lidded the bins. The dense quiet spread awkwardly. "Uh, sir?" Novak sounded curious. "What's up?"
The manifest said the last in the line was a clone of a woman whose name Oliviero had seen before, a name too uncommon to be a duplicate. And when the list went blurry Oliviero wasn't sure whether it was trembling hands or teary eyes. He dragged those eyes up to view the naked girl, only to find that it was the trembling hands. "Marcellina Brightstar?"