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Orange Castle Climber
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My hallucinations seem really intent on trying to stay with Ira beyond this trip. I've known this woman for maybe two and a half hours, and it doesn't sound like she has a place on Earth. To leave Earth behind forever and run off with someone I barely know for the rest of my life is asking a lot of me, and that's even assuming she'd be interested in taking me with her in the first place.
"Dinner is served," Ira says, placing two plates, two cups of water, and some silverware on the table.
I wander over to the table and sit across from her. Before me is a layered concoction of what looks like tortillas, beans, cheese, and some sort of sauce, topped with avocado and sour cream. My mouth starts watering immediately. "Thank you," I say, "I'm not guessing we need to say grace or anything?"
"Say grace?" Ira asks. "Like, pray? No, I don't think so, unless you want to. Are you...religious?"
I shake my head in the negative and start scooping up a bite of the food. "No, not anymore. My family raised me Presbyterian, but I stopped believing in that stuff in high school." I take a bite of the food, which is every bit as warm and delicious as the soup was. The sauce has a slight spiciness to it, which is more than offset by the sour cream and avocado. It's the first thing I've eaten with any spice in over a year, which I didn't realize I had missed until now. "This is really good!" I exclaim.
"Thanks," Ira replies, deep in thought. She takes her own bite before continuing. "My mother had a pretty serious...I guess you would say 'disdain' for religion. I don't think I've adopted that necessarily, but it's just not a thing I really think about. I don't even think I could make myself believe in that stuff now if I wanted to."
I'm surprised to hear her mention a family. "Yeah, I guess I'm the same way. I have two siblings, too. A younger brother and an older sister. I haven't really asked them directly about religion in a long time, but they seem to have dropped it. Do you have any siblings?"
Ira shakes her head in the negative. "No," she replies, quickly. "I'm an only child. What do your siblings do? Whole family of astronauts?"
"Hah, no. One is...I guess you would call him human resources. He works for Felicidad, the tech company?" Ira shrugs. "They do contract work for Microsoft, mostly. He lives up in California now with his husband. The other has four kids, stay-at-home mom. She stayed back in Texas, with the rest of my family. I guess I'm the only one who hasn't 'settled down.'"
"Why's that?" she asks.
The question sort of takes me by surprise. "Why haven't I settled down? Never found the right person, I guess. I...uh...I was in this long-term thing with a girl I met at a convention a few years ago. Got pretty serious, moved in together, but it got too hard to balance that with work and we split up. Nothing serious since then." Why am I spilling all of this to her? I pause. "I thought you said you weren't a psychologist?" I say. She just laughs, so I decide to press further. "How about you? Settled down with anyone else out in the cosmos?"
Ira rolls her eyes. "No, it's just me. I guess we're spilling the beans on our romantic histories? My last entry in that book was a long time ago, with a TA in college. But he was quite a bit older than I was, so there was this whole layer of secrecy, and I think he always felt a little guilty about it. It just sort of fell apart."
"How much older are we talking here?"
Ira winces, as if she knows I'm not going to like the answer. "When it started, I was 16, and he was 23."
I raise my eyebrows. "Yeah, that'll do it."
Ira waves her hands. "Don't blame the guy, I started it." She looks suddenly shocked with herself and blushes. "Anyway, enough about me. So, you're from Texas? I'm dropping you off close to your family."
I laugh. Her embarrassment is somehow adorable, but I decide not to push it and just answer her question. "Yeah. My parents even live in Houston. Maybe they'll be there to see me land." Ira smiles. "How about you? Was your family originally from Nevada, too?"
Ira shrugs. "My mother didn't like talking about her past."
"Hm. What about your father?"
Ira smirks knowingly at me. "You're trying to guess again."
I hold up my hands and lean back. "Hey, I don't know where the line is. You weren't mentioning him; it seemed like a reasonable question to ask. Obviously your whole past isn't off-limits. I know why you don't talk about your tech, but I don't know why you're not talking about your history. I'm not asking you to explain it; I'm sure you have your reasons. Just, don't be surprised if I bump up against sensitive topics when I don't know what they are."
Ira frowns and sighs. "Fair enough. I bet you can figure out why I don't want to tell you too much about my past, if you think about it-" she shakes her head and holds up her hand in a "stop" motion. "Actually, ignore that. If you haven't figured that out yet, no need to stress you out. As for my tech, I guess...I don't mind telling you what it's doing, as long as I don't have to tell you how it does it. Like, what I told you about my force field was fine, because all you'd be able to tell someone is that it keeps particles out and you shouldn't touch it."
"Oh!" I say, thinking. "So, what's with this gravity? Is it artificial, or are we just accelerating that fast?"
She looks a little surprised. "Oh, I didn't go over the flight plan? Yes, we're just accelerating that fast. About halfway through the trip, there'll be a quick break in the gravity while I flip the ship around, then we'll start accelerating the other way so we're not going too fast when we get to Earth. I'll let you know well before that happens so you'll have time to stow stuff and get ready."
That's what I thought was happening, but I'm still dumbfounded by the amount of energy it would take to do a 4-day continuous burn. "Wait, could I ask what your reactionless propulsion is doing, but not how it's doing it?"
Ira pauses and thinks for several seconds, slowly and deliberately chewing a bite of food. She swallows and looks me directly in the eye, expressionless. "It works by dribbling a bunch of bowling balls tied to the chain of a spinning chainsaw on a trampoline. Figuratively."
I stare back, matching her deadpan demeanor. At the same time, we both crack into a smile. "You made that sound fucking awesome and I still know nothing about how it works. I'll call you next time I need help writing a request for a research grant."
She shakes her head. "No way. You should consider the benefits of being a post-scarcity spacefarer. It really cuts down on the paperwork." Was that an offer? Before I get a chance to respond, she gestures to my bowl. "All done?"
I look down and am a little surprised to see I've scarfed it all down already. "Yeah, I guess so. Do you think you could fab me up a banana bag? I know I might purge if I get too many solids, but I assume IV nutrients would be okay."
Ira shrugs and starts dropping dishes into the slot by the sink. "Banana bag? I'm guessing that's either some kind of IV drip, or a tiny yellow thong."
I laugh, but that's not an encouraging answer. "Yeah, it's the first one."
"Hm. I know what goes in the second one, but not the first. I think the main concern isn't you losing your lunch all over my nice clean ship, it's something about your body not being able to handle insulin as well anymore? This is half-remembered stuff from literally decades ago. I'm not confident enough one way or the other to start injecting chemicals into you. Though...well, I suppose I have all the raw data about what's going on in your bloodstream, at least from the shoulders up...I guess I could compare it to a full scan of myself..."
"The NASA nutrition guys kept sending me stuff. Maybe that would help?" I offer. I get up and wander over to inspect the games while we talk.
"I already read it. Remember? I'm a creepy stalker. I even reverse-engineered the new Excel format to read the spreadsheets. It didn't really explain much." Looking suddenly determined, she walks back by the table, and the scanner panel pops back out of the wall. "Excel can't be too much harder to reverse-engineer than the entirety of medical science, right?" The panel directs itself towards her body and the high-pitched whirring kicks off again.
"I have no idea if you're joking," I say.
The whirring ends and the panel closes up again. Ira smirks. "Good. Something for me to pass the time, in case you're really boring."
A game in the drawer catches my eye. "I don't want to bore you. Wanna Smash?"
"Yeah, I'm down oh you meant the video game," Ira replies in one breath, still completely deadpan.
"I...still have no idea if you're joking."
She snickers. "Get used to that. Let me see, where's my Wii U...?" The TV turns itself on and seems to flicker between different screens completely unprompted.
I take a closer look at the case. "Wii U version? This is ancient. I mean, I remember playing Smash with my brother when I was younger, and I played it with my sister's kid a couple years ago, but those were newer versions than this."
Ira shrugs. "I haven't exactly dropped by a GameStop in a while," she replies. "I've been busy."
"GameStop's been out of business for like 20 years," I respond.
Ira pauses. "Well then it's a good thing I didn't try dropping by one, huh?"
"Touche," I reply.
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