hapter ine
usanna led their strange visitor
through to the rear of the ship and paused. She was used to
the layout of the Pride of Plymouth and was
confused by the design of the old galleon. More worryingly, the
tilt of the vessel was rather more obvious inside than on the
deck.
"Let's try this one," said Susanna, opening
a door at random. Inside was a bare room—dark, wet and dingy. They
moved on, trying more doors, until they reached the back of the
ship and found a much larger, brighter cabin with several windows
at the back.
"Ah, this must be it," said Susanna. Inside
the cabin was a screen, some cupboards and drawers and a huge
chest. She approached the chest, swung back the heavy lid and
gasped at the huge range of old dresses and shoes shoved into the
wooden box. "This is definitely it," she said as she pulled out a
dark blue velvet dress and held it in front of her. "What do you
think?" she asked Mechatronic.
"I think it is an item of clothing," replied
the silver woman.
Susanna looked carefully at her companion
and saw no sarcasm was intended—Mechatronic was clearly bemused by
the question.
"I mean, do you think it will suit
me?"
"I do not know. I have little experience of
clothes."
"Yes, well," coughed Susanna, going red in
the face, "that much is clear from your, ahem, natural
state."
"I wear clothes," clarified Mechatronic,
"but for functional purposes only. What do you look for when
dressing?"
"Something pretty, something stylish," said
Susanna eagerly, who was something of a fashion slave despite her
independent spirit. "Something to emphasize my eyes and
figure."
"In that case, the blue dress is too heavy
and severe," said Mechatronic. "It will hang off your frame and
disguise your figure."
"What of this one?" asked Susanna, as happy
and as unselfconscious as a child as she rummaged through the chest
and pulled out another dress.
"Better. Perhaps you should try it
on."
"I shall." Susanna blushed again as she
realized that Mechatronic was waiting for her to begin dressing.
"I'll go behind the screen," she said shyly.
Mechatronic again looked bemused as Susanna
dashed behind the heavy wooden screen and began undressing. She
turned to the chest and began pulling clothes out at random,
uncertain regarding their form and function.
"So," asked Susanna from the safety of the
screen, "why do you wear only functional clothes?"
"It is the way of things where I come from,"
said the silver woman, looking at a flouncy creation trimmed with
much lace. She couldn't imagine how to begin getting into such a
garment.
"And where is that, if you don't mind me
asking?"
"A long way away."
"China?"
"I do not know China. I come from
another world."
"The world below?" asked Susanna slowly,
pausing as she shrugged off her wet dress.
"No, from above."
"Above? I don't understand."
"Neither does the crew out there."
"Were they talking earlier? I'm sorry about
that if they were, but I never heard them."
"Why should you be sorry?"
"Well, it's not very nice, is it, being
spoken about?"
"Isn't it? I would not know. But they did
not talk about me earlier, apart from exclamations of surprise when
they saw me. They are talking about me now."
"How can you know that?" asked Susanna,
resuming her dressing.
"I can hear them."
"You mean you can hear the crew from here?"
gasped Susanna, striding out from behind the screen despite the
dress falling around her body.
"Of course," replied Mechatronic in
surprise. "Can't you?"
"No."
"Have you a problem with your audio system?
Perhaps you need to reinstall your source files?"
"Source? Audio? I don't understand what you
mean." Susanna looked in turmoil at the silver woman, who was
looking equally confused at Susanna's ignorance.
"You don't have cybernetic
implants?"
"I don't know what that means,
either."
"Of course, I should have realized from the
lack of technological advancement evident on this vessel," said
Mechatronic, to Susanna's further bafflement. "I have landed on a
grade two planet."
"Grade two? Landed?" wailed Susanna, feeling
completely lost.
Mechatronic saw she was upsetting the young
girl, the girl who had smiled openly and genuinely at her and she
felt a strange stab of remorse. She crossed the cabin and took
Susanna's face in her hands.
"I'm sorry," she whispered. "I didn't mean
to upset you. I should not burden you with concepts you cannot
comprehend." She gently wiped Susanna's face with her thumbs. "Your
brother held me much like this just after rescuing me from the
sea," she observed.
"And did it make you feel safe and wanted?"
asked Susanna, smiling at the strange woman in front of
her.
Mechatronic hesitated, chewing on her lip.
"It made me feel… something," she said finally. "But what, I cannot
say. I am uncertain. I… I…"
"I think my brother felt the same way,"
blurted Susanna before going red once again. "No, I'm sorry. I
should not have said that."
"Why ever not?"
"I should not presume to speak for his
feelings or to make presumptions about yours."
"Feelings are irrelevant," said Mechatronic,
a look of bitterness on her face. "They cannot affect me now. Maybe
at one time, but not after… No, never mind. Quickly, let us finish
dressing. I believe the argument outside has abated and we are
about to begin our journey once more."