Inconspicuous
[tab]The swirling stripes straddling the girth of the local great Jovian (the Banded Cathedral) loomed in their entire splendor outside the transparent metal window. The planet was not close enough to present a curvature-less wall, but it nonetheless dominated what scenery there was. The station’s orbit was such that the Cathedral’s terminator made it seem gibbous, and lightning storms snaked and flickered silently across its night-side. Inter-station traffic flitted nearby on low power, and far away above the clouds of the Cathedral burned the occasional drive torch--the volatiles shipments of the acerbic Valk Irinate 45 being launched to orbit for consumption across the subsector. The station managed a rotational gravity analogue that, while not quite up to standard levels, was more comfortable than zero-g. Its orbit and rotational rate coincided to make views of the planet long and lingering.
[tab]The window composed one wall of a space dock terminal that was sparse but not entirely unpleasant, decorated in monochrome shades coupled to imitation-wood frames. The occasional splashes of color served to lighten the mood, as did the ubiquitous display panes flashing feeds and advertisements everywhere. A combination bar and café was against the wall facing the window, and between the two laid a large and orderly formation of dining tables split down the middle for easy through-access. It was a quaint all-in one job. In its totality, the feel of the place managed to vaguely resemble what had once been known as Scandinavian modern, although it was well over five millennia and going on a thousand light years removed from that relation.
[tab]The terminal was deserted except for a pair of people and a hopelessly border server.
[tab]She was of rather standard Cosmopolitan stock, albeit with a twist, her bronzed face capped by hair a straight sandy blonde rather than the typical black, and her eyes a dark hazel. She wore a no-nonsense gray tunic with honeydew accents over sage pants, and a nametag reading “Amante;” a uniform denoting her as one of the customs and immigration officers of the Chandelier Commonwealth--a truly impressive polity comprising the entirety of the station. She was rigid in a way that was all angles, and seemed intently focused on something behind the other person.
[tab]He was a trim giant of a man with a stark and sharp face beneath an effortless forward swept faux hawk, his skin was a pallid white. Occasionally what almost seemed like black lines of code would trickle across it vertically, like living tattoos. His clothing, while appearing brand new itself, was in a style tracing its roots back as far if not farther than the room’s: a deep space black suit, black tie, a shirt even whiter than his skin, and a pair of prim, rectangular sunglasses. The Cathedral’s weak red parent star of Lipsid Beta was a distant ember half a rotation away, and the windows filtered its glare even when it was up--this last fashion item was purely an affectation. He was the tip of the spear, the first multifunction liaison to visit this place on behalf of the Praxzen Bureaucracy. His pose was easy, a small durable black case in one hand.
[tab]“Your identification, please?” she asked.
[tab]There was the slightest of shudders as the inter-orbital taxi which had delivered him undocked from the terminal. He produced for her a petite datapad seemingly from nowhere without missing a beat.
[tab]She took it cautiously. It was of course not in any format she had seen before, no one from his world having ever (officially) visited the Chandelier Commonwealth. Nonetheless, it was intelligible enough and seemed to check out, noting him as an agent of the Foreign Relations Bureau, whatever that was. She copied the data--the hardline protocols were curiously ancient but serviceable—into local systems before passing the datapad back. “And the nature of your visit, Mr. Kashani?”
[tab]“Business.”
[tab]She made a note of it, adding “What sort of--”
[tab]But he cut her off, saying “This is rather quaint décor you have, quite impressive considering. I was just beginning to tire of all the neo-brutalist-functionalism. It’s quite refreshing.”
[tab]She faltered for a moment at this, and the silence that hung in the air was sufficient for him to progress onward.
[tab]“How well do your recycling systems handle excess chlorine compounds?”
[tab]“Excuse me?”
[tab]He shook his head slightly, “Sorry, you wouldn’t be the person to ask about that.”
[tab]“Sir,” she now seemed perplexed, going on suspicious, “I’m going to have to ask to scan your baggage.”
[tab]“Oh, of course,” he said, holding it out.
[tab]She took it and ran it through a miniaturized scanning device at her side, designed to peer through containers using various frequencies of electromagnetic radiation and sound, and to sniff for certain illicit or dangerous chemical traces. As it turned out, the case was opaque to all such investigations. It sat before both active and passive scanning as an inert enigma. It was concerning.
[tab]“Sir, I’m going to have to ask you to open the case.”
[tab]“Oh, no, I wouldn’t recommend that.”
[tab]“I’m sorry?” with now deeper shades of concern.
[tab]“I’m not sure the contents would respond well to a containment breach,” he said with a blasé note, apparently intensely interested in one of the dining tables.
[tab]“Sir, I must insist,” she said sternly, a hand creeping toward the security alert button on one wrist.
[tab]Although her motion was quite well practiced and natural, at this action his head slowly pivoted to face her like a turret, his brow furrowing.
[tab]Her eyes widened a fraction.
[tab]He reached a hand up and delicately held one lens of his sunglasses, pulling forward with it while also tilting his head back, sliding them off in a well-polished motion. Their absence revealed the dark patches around his closed eyes, which suddenly snapped open. They were entirely of the deepest black, and despite the lack of reference, she could tell that they seemed to be looking straight through her. He leaned in a few degrees, suddenly towering over her. “Do I
look like a two-bit terrorist to you, Ms. Amante?” he said, with slow, ireful indignation.
[tab]She found herself grasping for words.
[tab]While she struggled, he deftly replaced his sunglasses and picked up the case, keying it open with the ease that comes from rote memory before opening it and holding it open just centimeters from her face. “Sandwiches,” he said without irony, “do not touch.”
[tab]As she stared into it there did indeed seem to be various food stuffs in precisely segmented and individually sealed containers. He closed the case with a sudden snap in front of her, it hissing as it sought to reestablish its normally much lower internal pressure. He brought it back to his side and resumed his impossibly easy-going pose.
[tab]“As to your question, my business here is that I intend to lay the groundwork for a convention. Given your performance thus far in treating the representative of a foreign government far your better, I would prefer to speak with your superior about accommodations.”
[tab]She continued to struggle to comport herself, frozen for a moment.
[tab]He gave her what under any different preceding circumstances would have been an exceedingly winsome smile, and waited only a moment before adding the politest “Please,” she had ever heard.
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