Chair, while Mayko retained Second.
'Pilot,' came Mayko's call from the flight deck, 'have you signed the contract yet? It would be good to—'
'I haven't,' Theo admitted, 'opened the file yet. Contracts are much harder for me than doing Jump equations in my head. I'll get six hours real downtime—at least—when we reach Volmer and look it over then.'
'Pilot, when we reach Volmer we may want that done already in order to confirm—'
'Sorry, Second,' she said, 'I'm on break unless there's a ship problem.' She paused, counted to twelve, and asked, 'Is there a ship problem?'
There was muttering in the background, Theo thought, and then realized it was Tranza singing one of his silly song snippets, something about 'the ship
'Rig, you're not helping!'
Theo waited a beat, then repeated her question.
'Is there a ship problem, flight deck?'
Again she could hear Tranza, this time singing something that sounded like 'We had enough cooks for an army, and only one can of . . .'
'No, Pilot,' came the reluctant reply, 'there is not a ship problem.'
'Right, Theo,' Tranza confirmed. 'None.'
* * *
'
'Thanks for the welcome—and for the cart.'
'Cart comes gratis. Can we get our updates here on channels seven and nine?'
Theo keyed in the channels and the updates went through, showing Pilot in Command as Theo Waitley and dual seconds of Rig Tranza, Captain, and Master Pilot Mayko Ikari.
'Hey there,
Problem mail?
Theo shrugged; she wasn't in a particular hurry to look at chained landing gear.
The trip to Volmer had gone without a ship problem, though Mayko managed to dredge up a fire alarm, two false positives on engine issues, a technical question on ship's financials, assorted runs of 'what would you do if' and a really silly multilanguage drinking song that Tranza wouldn't stop humming once Mayko sang the first three verses.
Other than that—
The incoming screen lit, showing the Pilots Guild emblem.
'We have a private and confidential file for Pilot Theo Waitley, transcription through Pilots Guild encryption format. You'll need your card and certificate for this, and receive in person in the comm office.'
'Theo,' Mayko was saying, 'we need to talk about the contract . . .'
'Right, you do,' said Tranza, then saw the symbol on the screen.
'I'll do tie-down, Theo' he said, suddenly all business. 'Go!'
She went.
Finding the comm office was easy once she parked the cart and entered the Guild port area; what was hard was keeping herself calm as the rest of the process unfolded. A pinbeam message? For
The Guild staffer checked her card, checked her against her card, checked her against the ship schedule, checked—she didn't know what they checked.
'RSVP,' said the clerk neutrally. 'That's free, well—prepaid. There's a return receipt that'll go as soon as you open it. You can take it in booth four; please record because we erase as it streams. You can send your reply any time within seventy-two Terran hours of receipt.'
In the booth she inserted her card one more time, tagged her key to the connecting port, saw a series of letters go by and a warning that reading the following message without authorization was a breach of pilot ethics and . . .
She took a breath, finally realizing she'd been holding it. Win Ton. Win Ton! Oh, what could be—