The Corporal wasn't sure what to do with a scruffy-looking Pylosian who was asking directions to a non-existent Consulate. So she did what soldiers have done throughout history: she kicked me up to her Captain. The Captain passed me to a Major.
They had a discussion about how long ago the Pylosians had left. The Corporal had said 15 years ago; the Captain thought 12, while the Major thought it was more like 10.
At this stage, I was more than stunned; I have to admit, I was losing hope.
The Major looked me over, and even sniffed the air close to me. She didn't appear to know what to do with me. But the Major had an adjutant, and after a whispered conversation between the two of them, a possible solution was found.
- "There is a Pylosian who lives in Cercen. Not too far from here, as it happens. My adjutant will escort you there."
The Major graciously allowed me to wash, and change into the better of my two shirts. After weeks of riding in the back of a wagon, I wasn't looking my best. Three Westron soldiers then took me for a walk through the streets of the capital. They didn't seem altogether sure whether I was a VIP or a prisoner.
The adjutant stopped, and knocked at the door of a modest house, painted bright green.
A female Westron opened the door. She had jet-black hair, and lovely features.
- "How may I help you?" she said. Then she saw me, and her eyes went wide. "Oh dear!" Then she turned, and called out: "Talley? Could you come here for a moment?"
- "What is it, love? said a male voice. Then he appeared behind her in the doorway, and spotted me.
"SON OF A BITCH!" he swore - in standard Terran.
Talley was human.
"Who are you? What are you doing here?"
The female touched him on the arm. "Isn't this one of your countrymen? We should invite him in, don't you think?"
The man called Talley didn't seem too thrilled with that idea, but the adjutant was quick to seize the opportunity offered.
- "May we leave this Pylosian in your keeping, then? He was seeking your Consulate."
- "We will take responsibility for him." said the female, while Talley glowered at me.
I had the good manners to remove my shoes and stockings, and to wash my feet just outside their door. Talley grudgingly allowed me inside. The moment the door had closed behind us, though, he turned on me.
- "Who are you? Where did you come from?"
- "Our guest must be tired, after a long journey." said the female. She didn't directly reprimand the man for his impolite behavior - but he got the message.
"Please sit." she said, with a smile. "You must be hungry, too, Sir ...?"
- "Cook. My name is Cook. I'm sorry to arrive like this, unannounced. I don't wish to inconvenience you."
- "Not at all." said the female. It's a pleasure to meet one of my husband's countrymen again, after so many years. I'm sure the girls will be delighted, too. My name is Tisucha."
She broke out a bottle of white wine, and a pair of small glasses. Then she glided about her kitchen, before returning with a loaf of bread and a hunk of cheese. She saw my look of surprise - this was hardly common fare in a Westron household.
"Ah - I learned, early on, that Pylosians cannot live on meat alone." she said. "Should I give you a moment, love?" That question was directed at Talley.
- "If you please, my dear."
- "I'll see what the girls are doing. Their curiosity must be killing them." With that, she went up the stairs.
Talley waited only a few seconds before he leaned forward, and spoke - in Terran.
- "What are you
doing
here? How did you even
get
here?" he hissed.
- "I was posted to the Consulate on CW144 -"
- "You mean CWD144?"
- "Wait - CWD? I know what the CW stands for. What's the 'D'?"
- "Discontinued." said Talley. "The mission ended 11 years ago."
- "But ... but
you're
still here." I was grasping at straws. Discontinued?
- "I fell in love." he said. "We have two daughters. I wasn't about to leave them. Damn - you have no idea where you are, do you?"
- "No - that much I know." I said. Talley's expression softened a little. He could see how shocked I was. He gently slid one glass towards me. It was a light white wine, which tasted faintly of pine resin, like a Retsina. It was quite pleasant.
"Now, explain to me, from the beginning - how did you get here?"
It only took me a moment to decide. I was marooned, stuck on an alien planet. I had no money, and just two shirts. I needed Talley's help, rather desperately, to find my feet. So I told him the truth. I told him everything he needed to know about how I'd ended up here.
When I'd finished, I looked him in the eye. "There's no relief coming, is there? I'm here for good."
Talley nodded. "I'm sorry. That's the most unbelievable story I could ever imagine."
Something occurred to me. "What about Rosencrantz and Guildenstern? How do they get off the planet? And ... isn't it a bit much, to send them on an 8-year journey, just to screw me over?"
Talley shook his head. "There are humans on the planet. All the time. Prospectors for Masebium and Caranolites. University research teams. Biologists and Xeno-Biologists. But they won't come anywhere near Cercen - or the Westron Kingdom, for that matter."
- "I'm here to stay, then."
Talley sighed. "I'm sorry, Cook. Here - eat some of this."
I heard Tisucha's voice from the top of stairs.
- "If you two are finished talking in Pylosian, can I bring the girls down to meet our guest?"
- "
You alright
?" Talley whispered to me.
I nodded, and stood up, as the ladies came down the stairs.
Seeing his wife again, I could understand why Talley would want to stay behind when the Mission ended. Tisucha must have been in her 30s or 40s, but Westrons aged remarkably well. Her hair was still shiny, her exotic features and perfect skin unchanged. The ravages of time seemed to have missed this address.
Talley wasn't ugly, by any means, but he wasn't even remotely in her league. Their daughters, thankfully, took after their mother. They were hybrids, obviously - yet my untrained eye couldn't see any significant differences.