eyebrow.

I shrugged. “Not like there’s anything on this menu I haven’t done a hundred times already.”

“True. And in port it’s slow, especially in the morning.”

“To tell ya the truth, it makes me feel better that he’s going ashore.”

Pip looked at me quizzically.

“Well, I’m not sure he hasn’t gone ashore in the evening, because he doesn’t talk about what he does. But I bet it has been ages since he’s gotten off this ship. I think his card game takes up a lot of his spare time.”

Pip nodded. “Yeah, me, too.”

“The never-going-ashore thing makes him seem a little…I don’t know…unnatural. This is better especially since we really don’t have enough to keep both of us busy.”

“Amen, brother. So, can I get an omelet? Lots of mushrooms and extra cheese, please.”

I chucked a towel at him. “Yeah, sure, if you’ll make the coffee for a change.”

A few ticks later we settled on the mess deck to eat. The biscuits were baking and I was ready to make omelets for anybody who wanted one. It was early yet and I had time to enjoy the fruits of my omelet pan.

“So, how many buckles?” I asked Pip.

He shrugged. “We have ten belts, we should take at least that many to match. Should we pick up some extras?”

“They’re excellent work, and not that much mass. If you get them for ten creds each, and they’re all in the two hundred gram range, that’s five per kilo. We’d burn two kilos for the first ten. What if we doubled it, how much would that be?”

Pip answered instantly, “Two hundred to three hundred depending on the price.”

“We’ve got three kilocreds…” We looked at each other and grinned in disbelief. “…but I don’t want to tie up all the cash if we don’t have a good cargo.”

“We only have about twelve kilos of available mass allotment between us, I think, maybe as many as fifteen. With twenty buckles, we’re down to around eight with some room for anything we might spot that’s small. We could get maybe forty additional buckles,” Pip rattled off in quick succession.

“But we’d be betting the farm in terms of mass,” I pointed out.

“Two things-no, three things left to consider.”

I raised my eyebrows in question.

He ticked them off on his fingers. “First, we’re almost certain to clear the first two kilos and the weight of the belts because those ten will evaporate on St. Cloud. Second, we don’t have a line on any other cargo. Third, the mass is only a problem if we find something we really want to buy.”

“Good points, tell me about St. Cloud.”

“Nice place.” Pip got the dreamy look and went into his recitation mode. “It’s one of the more established systems in the sector, owned jointly by a farming and a fishing company. The surface is about sixty percent ocean and the landmass is mostly divided into three continents. One is almost a continuous flat plain, one is mountainous, and the smallest island is near the southern pole. We’re picking up containers of grain, fish, mutton, and wool. We’re dropping machine parts and communications equipment.”

“Farmers, fishermen, and shepherds,” I summed up.

Pip blinked until his eyes focused on me again. “Yeah, sounds about right.”

“What’s with the wool? Is it raw or textiles?”

He pulled up the manifests on his tablet. “Bales. It could be either.”

“What’s the value?”

He grinned. “You’re good. Looks like bulk wool. I shoulda caught that.”

“You’re rubbing off on me. If you were living up in the mountains with a bunch of sheep, what would you do with your spare time? Besides the obvious.”

“Try to keep warm. I’d spin wool. You think the companies would let the herders keep some of it?”

“I’m pretty sure they would find ways to keep at least the odds and ends, perhaps buy it back from the company at wholesale, that kind of thing. Just like I bet they eat a lot of mutton and fish.”

Pip smiled. “Does that suggest anything to you?”

“Yeah. Let’s see if you can find a good deal on powdered dye.”

“Really?”

I nodded. “Primary colors like red, blue, yellow, maybe even black.”

“Why dye?” Pip asked, frowning in puzzlement.

“Well, sheep are almost always white. It just makes sense that a bit of color would make their goods sell better.”

“You think on a crooked path, my friend. I like that.”

“Doesn’t mean I’m right. I feel like I’m missing something.”

“What?”

“I dunno. But something.”

The entire environmental crew came in for breakfast and I had to get back to work. Pip waved as he left and I slipped into serving mode. Anyway, I had to get the biscuits out of the oven.

As expected, the pace on the mess deck was slow and spotty. I got the bread punched down around midmorning and set it to second proof. Clean up was easy and I even got a nice mushroom-barley soup going. Mr. Maxwell stopped by for coffee a couple of times and nodded to me without speaking. Cookie left some unbaked cobblers in the walk-in and I slid those into the ovens so they’d be ready for lunch. Even though I didn’t get a morning break, I confess it felt kinda nice pottering about the galley. I could see what Cookie enjoyed about it.

Around 11:00, just as I was setting up the lunch buffet, Cookie bipped me to let me know he’d be there by noon and I felt a little disappointed. I was beginning to anticipate doing lunch solo as well and the ideal appealed to me for some odd reason.

I had a lot of time to think about St. Cloud, too, in the back of my brain. I was having second thoughts about the dye idea. I was coming to the conclusion that we should just go ahead and buy up buckles for about half of the available remaining mass. That would leave some wiggle room in case they didn’t move, and give us something to sell beyond just the ten buckled belts. Something wasn’t quite right, but I just let it percolate.

The lunch set up went off without a hitch and Cookie breezed in just before noon. “Thank you, young Ishmael. Sometimes you just have to get out and about. I feel much better and you’ve done an excellent job.” He patted me on the shoulder.

“My pleasure, Cookie. It was fun.” I brought him up to speed on the lunch status.

Pip came in for a bowl of soup just before lunch prep was over with a smug look. “I found the dyes.”

“Did you buy any?”

He shook his head. “I found that thing you were missing.”

“What was it?”

“The dyes I found here came from the Erehwon Dyeworks on St. Cloud.”

We laughed. “That’s what I was missing. I bet they have roots and berries and such to dye their own wool.”

Pip shook his head. “Snails.”

“Seriously?”

“Yeah, apparently when processed they yield a really rich purple. There’s also a red and a black version. That’s in addition to the plant-based dyes.”

“So, what do we take?”

Pip shrugged. “We play it safe or we play it out. We’re out of here tomorrow afternoon. Whatever we get, we have to buy it today. Safe, we go with just the ten buckles, or maybe just a few more. Or we can fill up the mass with buckles and hope they like them as much there as we do here.”

I sighed. “You know, neither of those really appeals to me. What we need is something small that we can buy a lot of cheaply here that we can sell there at twice the price without costing an arm and a leg.”

Pip got a funny look then and fished in his pocket. “Like these?” He tossed three smooth stones onto the table. There were both flattened and round stones in natural looking, circular shapes. One looked like quartz with a silvery mineral threaded delicately through it. The second one was a rich blue that looked like the stone on Beverly’s belt buckle so it was probably lapis. The last one was a lustrous black with a fine texture showing through the

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