Roll Over Vivaldi by Stephen L. Burns

Illustration by Dell Harris


The concert was going badly. The audience was getting ugly.

And I mean ugly. They were completely and indelibly redefining the word and concept in a way I hope to never see matched again.

This was about three years ago, when Triaxion was playing on a planet named Sk’rrl. The average adult sk’rrli is about two and a half meters tall, and looks like an unhappy cross between a cooked lobster and an anorexic grizzly bear. Now take several hundred of these hulking creatures and whip them into a sort of lynch mob/soccer riot/piranha smorgasbord mood. Face that with an instrument in your hand and you begin to get the sinking feeling that any encores you might perform are going to be on harp, with heavenly choir for backup.

Being sensible folks, Maire, Rube and I—a string trio who performed under the name Triaxion—were scared spitless.

The only positive aspect of our situation was that dumb embasstard we called Dork was even more terrified than we were. If we were crapping bricks, he was on the verge of filling his pants with entire buildings. He had good reason. The sk’rrli who had him in their pincered paws seemed inclined to tear him limb from limb, eat him alive, or both.

It was definitely the low point of our concert.


“You must be joking.”

Those were the ambassador’s first words as he stared across his desk at us. Not Hi, how was your trip? (after all, we had traveled two hundred and some odd light-years to get there) or even an insincere, but at least minimally polite Welcome to Sk’rrl. The expression on his long face matched this disdainful greeting. He had a lemon-sucker’s mouth, a gin-drinker’s breath, gimlet eyes, and the nostrils of his piccolo nose were flared as if smelling something bad. Nice hair though, a flowing silver mane that looked almost manufactured.

Maire, Rube and I exchanged a covert glance. Maire rolled her eyes. Rube grinned and turned to face Ambassador Dorchester Hepplewhyte, who in that moment forever became Dork in my mind.

“Three musicians meet at a bar after work,” Rube intoned as if imparting critical wisdom. “A violinist, a flautist, and a pianist. The violinist puts down a five and orders a beer. The flautist does the same. The pianist hauls out a big wad of bills, peels off a hundred, slaps it down and says, ‘Give me the best wine this dive has to offer.’ The other two musicians stare at him a moment, then drag him off his stool and beat the living hell out of him.”

Dork stared at Rube, face squinched with a mixture of bafflement and pique. “What the devil are you talking about?” he demanded.

Rube’s grin took on a crazy edge. “Pianist envy.”

Maire and I couldn’t help snickering, both at the old joke and the look that appeared on Dork’s face. He looked like a man who had just bit into something crunchy at the very moment he was noticing half a cockroach in his caviar. I knew that we had just dropped another dozen strata in his estimation. I should have cared more than I did, but I ask you, how much weight can you really give the opinion of someone with a name like Dork?

Like space itself, the system essentially sucks. Every bureaucracy by its very nature creates a vacuum into which are drawn megamounts of malingering, monotony, monomania, malfeasance, misguided machinations, and just plain muddle. The ETDS (the Extra Terrestrial Diplomatic Service) is a mind-numbingly humongous bureaucracy; the sort of human enterprise which could become truly dangerous if it ever managed to run at more than 5 percent efficiency.

Dork’s expectations had been clearly and abysmally failed by our arrival. Had been failed by the three of us. What he had done was requisition a cadre of classical musicians from the ETDS’s Cultural Assets Branch, and it was obvious that he’d thought he would get a small orchestra, or at the very minimum an octet. Now he could only conclude that his mission didn’t rate as high as he thought, because all he’d gotten was a lousy trio.

He could probably have swallowed that slight—diplomats snack on slights the way other folks munch salted peanuts—except that in a certain kind of mind the concept of a classical ensemble raised certain cliched expectations. Dork obviously had that sort of mind, and we’d missed his mental mark by even further than we’d traveled to get there. Of course it was a rather small target.

It would have been easy to adopt a screw him attitude. Actually, just meeting him made it nearly impossible not to. But like it or not, we did have to get along with him. Although all three of us were world-class musicians and products of the finest conservatories, we were basically conscripts and our future partly hung on his performance report. The only way to stop being part of the Cultural Big Stick the ETDS kept whacking poor defenseless alien races with was to gain enough plus points for a discharge. He had points to give, and reeked parsimony.

As leader of our admittedly motley troupe it was my job to make nice, mend fences, smooth ruffled feathers and kiss up. I forced a smile.

“Rupert is quite a kidder,” I said in a placating tone, “and the warpout drugs tend to make him giddy.” I offered my hand. “I’m Schlomo Kessel, first violinna and leader of Triaxion.”

Dropping my name made him blink in surprise. It even retuned his estimation upward a bit from b-flat. He leaned forward to give my hand a limp, damp squeeze, trying to hide a frisson of fazement. I have a certain fame—and infamy. I think he was almost impressed enough to write off my faded aloha shirt, patched jeans, and crusty sandals as personal eccentricity.

I went on to introduce my fellow musicians, preferring to jump over my own checkered past. “This lovely lady is Maire MacAuff Matsumi, violinna and viola la bamba. She has, among other honors, played first violin and violinna with the Glasgow, Dublin, London, and Tokyo Philharmonics.” Maire curtseyed and coyly batted her eyelashes at Dork. Their having been threed into tiny writhing snakes put a bit of hurt in her flirt, but they went with her ragged black cryptozoid weeds and white marbleized buzzcut. Dork managed a queasy smile in return.

Next I indicated Rube, his chubby body resplendent in a glittering hololame jacket, mustard paisley biballs and fluorescent puce Shooz. “Our third member is of course the famous soloist Rupert Czaro, cellotta and occasional stand-up comedy.”

“Let us hope the occasion is over,” Dork sniffed haughtily, gesturing that we should sit. We got three wobbly straightback buttnumbers facing him. He settled back into the chair behind his desk, a padded monster only a few jewels and a bit of gilding shy of being a throne.

“I’m sure it is,” I answered, shooting Rube a warning glance. He tried to look innocent with no particular success.

“Good.” Dork sighed, clasping his manicured hands before him. “My life is quite difficult enough as it is on this madhouse of a planet. Unspoiled, they said when they assigned me here.” His dour mouth twisted. “Savage would have been a better description. Beastly. Why, the natives here are so uncouth they won’t even let us have walls!” He refilled a glass from the silver pitcher at his elbow, downed half of it. A flush suffused his face and the sharp scent of gin wafted over us.

“I’d kind of wondered about that,” I admitted. The embassy had a roof and floor, but not a single interior or exterior wall. The various rooms inside it had been marked off by lines painted on the floor. The staffer who had escorted us from the pad had ignored the lines until she got close to the Dork Zone at the building’s center.

“They found the very idea of walls insulting. They are exceedingly, ah, up-front about everything in what passes for their society. They have sex in public and quite loudly. They bathe by licking each other. As for bathrooms.…” He shuddered, a pinched and haunted look misting his eyes.

“Sounds like you’ve had a hard time here,” I said commiseratingly. A little sucking up never hurts.

“You don’t know the half of it.” He let out a put upon, self-pitying sigh. “Still, this is where I was assigned, and I have to stay in this foul bedlam until my mission is considered a success. My mandate is, of course, to broker a trade treaty.”

“Of course,” I agreed in a man-of-the-world tone. Trade as in You get these nice shiny beads, and in exchange we’ll merely glom vast amounts of whatever it is you have that we want. While the ETDS is constrained by a complex set of regulations governing such transactions, few alien races have proved a match for the species who spawned EZ Payment Plans, pyramid schemes, home shopping, plagueads, service contracts, and insurance.

“But I have not been able to strike any sort of deal with these monstrous creatures.” Another consoling slug from his glass.

Maire looked up from threeding her nails cryptozoid style, making it look like weevils and centipedes were chewing their way out from her cuticles. “What is it they have we want?” she asked. When Dork looked her way and saw her handiwork he went a bud green around the gills.

“Mrr’bhg.”

“Excuse me?” I asked, thinking it might have been a gastrointestinal reaction to her artwork.

“Mrr’hhg. They’re the fuzzy, crablike creatures the sk’rrli eat. Ugly little monsters, really, and quite prone to biting. The Embassy would be crawling with the damned things, except we found that they don’t like the smell of disinfectant.” That explained why the open-air structure smelled like a public toilet.

“The sk’rrli eat the mrr’hhg, and the mrr’hhg eat, among other things, the sk’rrli’s, ah, wastes. This disgusting habit is the reason the sk’rrli are totally immune to disease. The ETDS want the vile scuttling things because they secrete a substance which I’m told is a nearly universal antibiotic.”

I knew it had to be something. It wasn’t like the ETDS contacted and embassified other races out of altruism. “I assume that ‘scientific samples’ were collected and sent to the labs on the initial covert survey.” The ETDS usually went the Trade Mission route only after filching failed.

He scowled and nodded. “That’s why I was sent. The antibiotic can’t be replicated or synthesized, and the mrr’hhg they took all died. They can’t survive without the stuff, urn, produced by the sk’rrli.”

“Who don’t want to share their lunch with their new friends.” I glanced at my troupe. Maire was probably finding this stuff fascinating, though you’d never be able to tell by looking at her. Rube had begun squirming around restlessly, showing the classic signs of the onset of the urge to play “Torment the ambassador.” I figured I’d better wrap this up.

“I’m sure you will be able to work something out, sir,” I continued, trying hard to sound like I cared. “So why have you brought us here? Morale raiser for the staff?” From what we’d seen they needed one.

“Hardly.” That word and the sniff he let out told me everything I needed to know about his concerns for staff morale, and why it was so low. “As I said, the sk’rrli are quite barbaric. They’re a brutish lot, highly excitable, absolutely impossible to bargain with, and completely bereft of any cultural achievements one would recognize as such.” He made a dismissive gesture. “Oh, they do have a rude sort of music. Dreadful stuff, even worse than the crudest gutter-class thumping and howling one would hear on Earth. Still, one must start somewhere, and I had the thought that exposure to something finer than their raucous noise would give them a civilized ideal they might emulate.”

I had heard that sort of uberkultural teach the wogs opera sort of thinking before. It’s more or less SOT (Standard Operating Thinking) in a disheartening percentage of the ETDS. Giving the natives a chance to experience our music is fine. Thumping them over the heads with it is an insult to both the audience and the music. We do what we can to soften the blow.

“OK,” I said, “We get the picture. When, where, and what do you want us to play?”

Dork brightened at my no-nonsense attitude. He’d probably been expecting arty arguments against cultural imperialism. The thing is, we love music in general and our chosen repertoire even more. We think it’s valid, valuable, and worthy of dissemination. We would present it for the audience to either like, or find not to their taste. You can’t know when art will leap the gulf between cultures and worlds. When by chance you do connect, it’s a rush better than any drug. I know, I’ve tried them all.

“We will set you up using one side of the Embassy itself as a stage. Can you be ready to perform tomorrow night?”

“We could play tonight if you wanted.” And be gone tomorrow, hopefully with some plus points notched in our instrument cases.

He shook his head. “No, tomorrow night. This must be staged most carefully for proper effect. I want these creatures awed.

I shrugged. “It’s your party. All we need are three chairs and a platform to hold them, us, and our music stands.”

He nodded, that lemon-sucker’s twist coming back to his mouth as he gave us each a critical eyeballing. “I do hope you have proper attire.”

I held back a sigh. “Orchestra drag? Cutaway jackets, boiled shirts, cummerbunds and black shoes?”

“And pants,” he added, glaring at us like he thought we were the type who wouldn’t wear any unless ordered to.

“And pants,” I promised, making it sound like a major concession. “Now did you have any particular programme in mind?”

He rubbed his soft hands together in delight, eager to demonstrate the depths of his taste. “Oh yes. I want music that is sweet and soothing, light and uplifting. So I want you to play—”

“The Four Seasons,” I finished for him.

He looked startled, then beamed in delight that I was so simpatico. “That’s it exactly! You must have read my mind!”

What there was of it. I swallowed another sigh. Sometimes a musician in my line of work has to swallow sighs the way a diplomat swallows slights. This guy was giving me a surfeit of sighs. “Anything else? Something a bit more challenging? Do you know Saint Saëns’s Danse Macabre? How about some Sibelius? Some Copland? Bach or Bartok? Or—”

“No no no,” he chided. “I want to soothe these savage beasts. Seduce them with one of Earth’s finer things.”

Or bonk them with chestnuts. Now don’t get me wrong, the Vivaldi is a wonderful piece of music, a masterpiece. But nine times out of ten the diplomats who requisition us know only three pure classical pieces by name, and The Four Seasons is two of them so it’s requested ten to one over anything else. Not that any of them could whistle it. Its name is recognizable, easily memorizable, and it doesn’t have any slippery opus numbers to remember or mispronouncable German or Italian or Russian names to mangle and thereby make them look like a nulkulturny boob. But the manglers are at least trying to reach a little more deeply into the repertoire; I will always fondly remember the poor guy who wanted us to play Whiner Miner Nacho Music.

The third piece? The Blue Danube waltzes away with that honor, of course.

You have to bear in mind that your average ETDS ambassador is basically a pirate who has gone to the Right Schools, knows a few People Who Matter, and flies a lace-trimmed Jolly Roger. Their one act of imagination—thinking that life as an envoy would be easy, glamorous, and make them rich—is long behind them. Their concepts of culture and style and good taste are a caviar-crusted, champagne-soaked hash of cliche served on a tarnished silver salver.

“We’ll soothe them into catatonia,” I promised, signaling to my cohorts that it was time to get out of there. We stood up and started to leave.

What do you think you’re doing?” he honked shrilly before we’d gone a dozen steps.

We stopped and looked back. In the instant our backs had been turned his glass had been magically refilled. “Going to practice,” I explained.

He pointed at our feet with a shaking finger. “Would you be so kind as to leave by the door?

We looked down. Sure enough, we’d gone straight through one of the walls. Well, we were escaping.

“Sorry,” I said. We recrossed the invisible wall and this time departed through the non-existent door.

“And don’t slam it after you,” Rube whispered as we went over the theoretical threshold.


We hadn’t gotten much of a look at our prospective audience on the way in from the shuttle to the Embassy, and that situation didn’t change much as a staffer escorted us back. All we saw was some indistinct activity off in the distance, like big red ants walking upright. Because of the sk’rrli Wall Ban there was no fence around the Embassy. The distance the natives kept suggested that they found something offensive about the place. Maybe it was the Eau de Disinfectantte. My money was on it being Dork.

Once we were seated in our shuttle it lifted off and headed back toward where our ship was parked on a high, all but airless plateau some 500 kilometers away—skipships are never left where the natives can get their hands, claws or tentacles on them.

“We’re not going to practice the Vivaldi, are we, Mo?” Maire asked hopefully.

I just smiled.

Rube squinted at me. “You know that we know it by heart. Hell, I bet someone could cut our heads off, hand us our instruments, and we could still play it note-perfect.”

I remained silent, but let my smile grow a bit wider.

Maire grinned and clapped her hands. “It’s Name Time!”

“Screw,” I began.

“Screw who?” Rube breathed.

“Screw Dork.”

“Dork!” Maire hooted. “Perfect!”

Rube bowed. “You, sir, remain the master.”

This was one of our many little sanity-preserving rituals. As senior member I held the baton, leading Triaxion. One of the self-imposed demands of my high office was coming up with a nickname for whatever clown had requisitioned us like were some piece of equipment: Musical Ensemble/ Trio/String/Classical.

“And as for practicing the Vivaldi…” I continued, pausing for maximum effect. Both were nodding and grinning, waiting for the word.

“Well, I think I’d rather see us die.”

They applauded. I took my bow, accepting their accolade.


Rube had been part of the trio for nearly a year at that point. Maire had come on board some four months before him. I’ve been doing this longer than I care to remember, and had held the baton for nearly eight years by the time we played Sk’rrl.

We spent weeks at a time cooped up in our ship, getting from one gig to the next. Superluminal travel takes next to no time at all compared to rockets and stuff like that, but it still takes just over two hours to sneak edgewise around a single light-year—which meant our 200+ ly trip from Driffel IV to Sk’rrl took just shy of three weeks.

That’s ample time to turn even the mildest-mannered musician into a slavering homicidal maniac. Diversion was of supreme importance, especially since sex was out—both Rube and I were purehet and Maire absolez. Over the years I’ve assembled various social mechanisms to help avoid bloodshed.

We each had our own extensive entertainment libraries. Most nights one of us would take on the mantle of EJ, programming group viewing and listening. We also took turns choosing the evening meals, and followed an arcane, complicated system of trading food and menu control privileges for small favors, game partner duty and the EJ anchorship.

And of course we practiced, practiced, practiced every day, even though each of us had indeed played Carnegie Hall. This was done both solo and as a group. To spice that up I had come up with the die.

When we got back to our ship and reached our practice space I removed the dodecahedral superbounce rubber die from the ornately carved hikkawood case we’d gotten for it on Klaaaam. Each of our names was inscribed on four faces on the die. Whoever’s name came up got the baton for that session and picked the material we would practice.

My taste ran to idiosyncratic arrangements of Bach, Mozart and Grieg, mid-20th Jazz from Ellington, Basie and Charles, and have an unending fascination with early 21st South African composer Jaan Biko’s “Uhuru” movement concertos. Maire went in for madrigals, Baroque, traditional Celtic, Middle Eastern funeral music, and Classic Pop of the late 20th. Rube’s choices were too wildly eclectic to be pigeonholed, though he’d made his concert mark with highly acclaimed interpretations of Bartok, Liszt, Rostropovich, Shostakovich, and Elvis Havel.

I tossed the die. It bounced erratically around, finally coming to rest at Maire’s feet. She bent down to read the verdict. “I guess you’re it, Rube.” she announced.

He grinned like an evil cherub. “Excellent choice, Lady Luck. Shall we?”

We took our seats and turned on our music stands. I touched the stud that turned the baton over to him, making his stand the master and ours slaves. Both Maire’s and my displays blanked while he made his selection. Every music student at some time plays “Stump the Stand,” a game that’s all but unwinnable. A Frewer Concert Grand music stand has well over 71 million pieces of music stored in its memory, and back in the home system updates are automatically done weekly. So the score to everything from the latest Aleutopop chant to the most obscure medieval madrigal like The Wart on Friar Frederick’s Fanny is there for the asking. With all that at his fingertips, Rube could present us with literally anything.

When my display cleared it showed the opening measures of Robot Spider Tarantella by Lunar composer Faisal Frick, a half-hour long virtuoso piece bursting at the seams with highspeed arpeggios and minor key contrapuntal runs. Frick was quite often called “Cyberbach” because of the extraordinarily complex mathematical structure of his work.

“This ought to be fun,” I said, picking up my violinna, powering it up and hitting autotune. Maire did the same. Rube got his cellotta in position, took a couple of sword-slashes with his bow, then regarded us with a raised eyebrow. “Are we ready?”

In the arrangement he’d chosen I had the opening notes. I answered by striking them, and away we went into that magical place where we breathe life into music, and it breathes life into us in return.


Like I said before, we were all basically conscripts. But don’t let that fool you; each of us was accomplished enough to play with the finest orchestras, and had. It was just that a combination of bad luck and certain personal disasters had put us in the contractual clutches of the ETDS. Maire had been trying to put a failed love affair behind her, wanted to see really far-off places, and so one dark night of the soul in Dubuque she’d enlisted. Rube had hanky-pankied himself into a situation where getting outsystem and thereby beyond the reach of a certain cuckolded and Colt-carrying cellisticidal Czech conductor had been prudent.

Each of us had considerable experience in performing both pure Classical and Pops repertoire, and could play literally anything on first sight. We put in a lot of practice time, and as a working trio played like we were telepathically linked. You name it and we could play the hell out of it.

As we practiced we had absolutely no idea that the very next evening we’d be giving the performance of our lives. Because we’d be playing for our lives.

Not knowing stuff like that is good, I guess. Makes getting out of bed in the morning a bit easier.


After breakfast on concert day Rube and Maire took the shuttle back to the enclave. Maire wanted to do some sightseeing and a bit of amateur exoanthropology—pursuits a bit at odds with the persona she cultivates. Rube’s sole interest outside music is sex, and it was a given that his plan was to find some female staffer who would be susceptible to his pudgy Gypsy charms.

Maire always said we were fools for not making the most of our time spent on these alien planets by experiencing and learning all we could. She was probably right. Rube always said I was a moron for not trying to make some whoopee while there were some potential whoopee-makers to be made. A little of his brand of exploration would no doubt have done me some good as well. Yet with both these options open to me, I always chose to stay behind and revel in having the whole ship to myself.

I got on extremely well with both of them and their predecessors, but I also enjoyed and truly needed solitude. This is largely because of who I am and what I used to be.

Yes, I’m that Schlomo Kessel, the child prodigy who was playing Mozart on the violinna by age four, and composing full concertos by age six. By age ten I had already been guest soloist with several of the major Philharmonics for the performance of the two symphonies I had written by then.

Classical music goes through periodic cycles of being in vogue, and then being regarded as yawno stuff strictly for fogeys and firps. I had the luck, for good or ill, to come along during a period when it was considered absovac, and I became one of its hottest stars. From the very first my family recognized my talent and treated me like a marketable commodity with a limited shelf-life. My childhood couldn’t have been stranger if I’d been raised by pimps and hammerhead sharks; I was money and meat to them. By age fourteen I was an erratic, overextended, substance-sucking burnout, and by seventeen a hopeless basket case—all this under the unblinking scrutiny of media insatiable for scandal and milking my meteoric rise and ignominious implosion for all it was worth.

Not long after my twenty-first birthday a music-loving guard at the Alabama county prison where I was residing, thanks to vagrancy and public subtoxication charges, recognized me as that Mo Kessel. Bubba X’s attempts to get me some help caught the attention of the ETDS, who are always on the lookout for beleaguered talent to dragoon. They bailed me out and had me detoxxed, a process not unlike wringing out a towel used to mop the floor after an earthquake at a pharmacy. Once I was semi-coherent one of their lawyers walked me through a proper bankruptcy (as opposed to the kind I had managed on my own), then explained that by availing myself of their services I had enlisted for a three-year minimum hitch.

I was thirty-five when we played Sk’rrl. You do the math.

My happiest, most contented moments outside of playing music come from being totally alone in a place hundreds or even thousands of light-years from the media, from my former fame, and from a family that would no doubt do their damnedest to turn me back into their meal ticket if I ever returned.


Rube and Maire returned late that afternoon. Rube wore his smug and goofy I got lucky! grin and headed straight to his compartment for a post-coital nap. Apparently the lack of privacy hadn’t put him off. I’m not sure what would.

Maire and I settled into the galley for some tea and cookies, another of our little rituals. She always felt it was her duty to report on her explorations so I’d have some vague idea as to where we were. We always made a minor event of it by having a debriefing tea.

This time there was a serious, pensive air about her that made me vaguely uneasy. I poured and asked her if the place was as bad as Dork had said.

“No,” she replied after a moment’s frowning thought. “Dork said the sk’rrli are savage, but they’re not. Not the way he meant it, anyway. Just very primitive, and totally without artifice.”

“How so?” I asked. Maire’s voice is lovely, a warm smoky alto totally at odds with the zombie cryptozoid image she cultivates. I admit I had a secret desire to have her whisper sultry suggestions in my ear in the dark, but knew that wasn’t going to happen unless I got a genbed.

“They’re like their music—which is actually quite interesting. Very direct. Simple emphatic statements with no subtext. Music made to provoke a direct response, not subtly invoke a mood or image. Think late 20th Rap or various aboriginal war chants. I recorded some if you want to hear it later.”

“Sure.” I scratched my chin. “Are they as, well, less than pretty as they looked from a distance?”

That made her laugh. “Oh yeah. The embassy staff call them lobbears, and it fits. The adults are huge, with patches of ratty red fur over shiny red chitin. Body shaped like and almost as heavy as a bear’s, thick arms and legs with exposed joints. Big paws, with these nasty looking pincers instead of claws. Lobster eyes and feelers, bearish muzzle, lots of teeth.”

I suppressed a shudder. “Well, I suppose their children are cute.”

She grinned and shook her head. “No, not really.”

“What kind of audience do you think they’ll make?”

Her grin faded and she toyed with the handle of her teacup. “I’m not sure. They do like music, and make quite a lot of it. But I’m not so sure what Dork wants us to play is the sort of thing they will appreciate.”

I shrugged. “Well, what’s the worst that can happen if we bomb? They’ll just boo—or whatever it is they do.”

“Maybe…” she replied, stretching the word out.

“What?” The look on her face was not encouraging.

“These people don’t hide their feelings, Mo. They respond to things forcefully and directly. I saw a child take a mrr’hhg away from another child. It’s mother didn’t say No no no or slap its paw. She just grabbed the kid’s hand and tore a couple of pincers off it.”

I nearly spilled my tea. “She what?”

“I know. Edwina—the staffer I met who acted as my guide—explained that the pincers will grow back, and to the sk’rrli mind the new ones will be less likely to latch on to others’ things. Like I said before, these folks are unswervingly direct. If a male and female get the hots for each other they have sex right then and there, and make as much noise as they can to let everyone else know how good it is. If they get mad at each other they fight it out. If one wants another’s nest mound, he or she goes right over and says so. Either a trade is struck, the mound-hunter accepts no for an answer, or they tussle for it. They’re a little, um, prone to violence.”

I had to ask. “What do you think they might do if they don’t like what we play?”

She met my gaze squarely, solemnly. “It could get ugly.”

Her words made me shiver then and now. Maybe it was some broguey whisper of her partially Celtic bloodlines which gave her the gift of prophecy.


We talked a little about being on our toes during the concert, then went to our respective compartments to rest up for it. Since we all grabbed a quick bite to eat while we dressed, I didn’t get a chance to talk to Rube until the shuttle ride to the enclave. I tried to make him understand what we might be facing, but didn’t get far. He was too buoyantly positive that seeing him perform on stage would drive the woman he’d found that afternoon into a frenzied hunger for an encore, and wasn’t thinking with any part of his anatomy above his cummerbund.

We arrived just after sunset, landing on the pad behind the Embassy. The wide boggy plain surrounding the place was lit with torches and cooking fires. The air was filled with the surprisingly mouthwatering smell of roasting mrr’hhg.

Maire informed us that they only cooked the things on high occasions.

Like wars. Or funerals.


The great man himself met us at the pad, puffing gin fumes and exuding his usual anticharm. In most cases the person in charge of these sorts of affairs tends toward one of two states: either they are in a fractal dither, worry sprouting from anxiety unfolding from borderline panic; or they have this smug and lofty conviction that their plans are perfect, the wogs will be wowed, and the universe will bend itself to their will. Dork was in some sour, semi-pickled state between.

He looked us up and down, pronounced our dress acceptable, then strode self-importantly off with a curt gesture that we should follow. We heaved a collective sigh, picked up our cases and fell into step behind. He led us through the maze painted on the embassy floor, snapping conflicting orders at his scurrying staff like an imperious impresario, and leaving puzzled looks, rolling eyes, and an impressive catalog of obscene gestures in his wake.

The two-meter-high stage had been set up on the opposite side of the embassy. Because of the sk’rrli prejudice against walls there was no backdrop behind it nor curtain in front.

Still, I do have to give Dork credit for trying to make the best of difficult circumstances. If nothing else, he had produced an event the likes of which the natives had surely never seen. Colored spots flooded the stage with pastel light. The front of the platform had been draped with banners in the official ETDS orange and black, and bedecked with sconces of native flowers. Most Sk’rrl plants are insectivores, so the bouquets writhed and snapped at bugs drawn by the light. Maire was enchanted with this odd snatch of the decorator’s art. I could tell she dearly wanted a corsage. Atop the stage and past the footlights were three hard chairs for us and the ornate throne from Dork’s office for him.

Normally an embassy soiree would have featured champagne—getting the visitors hammered considered a fair home team-advantage. None was being served to the guests at this bash, but a clever steward had found out that the sk’rrli did like Yummi-Ade—you know, that neon colored, sticky sweet instant drink—and even caught a modest buzz from the artificial colors and flavors. So a punch fountain had been set up, squirting gallons of the stuff into the air and then raining down to fill a huge crystal bowl. The table was mobbed with thirsty natives. It looked like Happy Hour at the Lobster Bar from Hell.

The stage was high enough to create a rare pocket of privacy behind it. “You are ready to play, aren’t you?” Dork demanded when we got there. Like we’d shown up lugging our instruments in full orchestra drag in hopes of playing volleyball.

“We’re ready,” I said soothingly. “All we have to do is unpack our instruments and stands. Oh yes, it would be helpful if one of your people could place our sound system.”

He looked annoyed. “We already have one.”

I tried to keep the pity out of my smile. “Not as good as ours. Besides, it’s already tuned to our instruments.”

“Whatever.” He snapped his fingers at a very attractive woman in a very revealing dress who had been hovering very closely by. The adoring looks she’d been beaming Rube’s way made it clear they weren’t exactly strangers. For his part, he seemed to be trying to telepathically implant urgent sexual urges in her brain. Totally focused on Rube, she didn’t hear Dork’s summons.

“Here, Thornton!” Dork barked. “Now!”

I moved in before he could order her to heel or fetch, and placed myself between her and the leering object of her desire. “Would you mind taking this,” I handed her the Klipsh-Kleinmann Sonicaster, “and placing it on the front edge of the stage, in the center, the side with the silver logo facing out?”

“Um, sure,” she murmured, hugging the breadloaf-sized, matte black sonic device to her creamy scenic bosom. Her gaze slid past me and went back to Rube.

“Now, Thornton!” Dork bawled.

“Uh, yes sir.” She fired Rube one last sultry look and undulated away. Maire and I watched her depart, both of us thinking similar unworthy thoughts.

Dork peeled back a lacy cuff and consulted his gold watch. “You go on in five minutes. I have some last minute details I must see to. Be ready by the time I return, and we’ll show these refugees from a bad batch of bisque what real culture is like.”

He stumped off. As he was leaving a steward materialized with a refreshment cart, appearing so silently it was like he too had wheels. He cut a glance toward the departing Dork, made a fist with his thumb stuck out, mimed someone drinking. Then he placed a tray with glasses and carafes of water and fruit juice within easy reach, winked and rolled silently away.

We gathered around and helped ourselves, then I began our ritual preconcert pep talk.

“OK,” I said softly. “You know and I know that this is a terrible gig. Dork is a puffed-up putz without even the innate culture of a decent cup of yogurt. We’re all seasoned pros, and know the piece so well that the challenge will be staying awake through it. Chances are our audience would be just as likely to appreciate the sound of rush hour traffic as what we’re about to offer them. But.

I looked them each in the eye. “But we are professionals, and we have our own standards to maintain. We’ve dedicated our lives to this art. We will go out there and perform wholeheartedly and brilliantly because the music deserves no less than our best. We will go out there and play with passion and precision because each of us deserves the absolute best the others have to offer. We will go out there and make our instruments sing because with luck we’ll get some plus points and be that much closer to the magic moment when we can tell the ETDS to go fuck itself.”

I put out my hand palm-down. “So how shall we play?”

“Brilliantly!” they chorused, covering my hand with theirs.

“How shall we play?” I repeated.

“We’ll kill them!” they answered, giving the ritual response.

“How shall we play?” I asked for the last time.

“Like our lives depended on it!”

We held our hands together for a moment longer, then each turned to remove our instruments and stands from their cases.

Just as we were finishing up Dork came bustling back with bright eyes, flushed cheeks and hundred proof breath.

It was showtime.

Even when you’re about to play for an audience so unfamiliar with the repertoire you could present them with a veritable clambake of muffed notes and they’d be none the wiser, there still comes a moment when you have to swallow back butterflies. When that audience is comprised of large excitable aliens known to be prone to precipitous violence the butterflies metamorphose into something more akin to agitated bats.

Applause was sparse and perfunctory when we mounted the stage. All of it came from embassy staffers who were probably just following orders. The sole exception was our pickup roadie, the luscious Ms. Thornton. She clapped in Rube’s direction with a zeal that made me slightly envious. That must have been one hell of a matinee.

As for the crowd…

Try to imagine a Whakmusik biker-punk headbanger revival concert envisioned by Bosch on heavy-duty hallucinogens. Before us were hundreds of rowdy, semi-drunk red lobbears waving their orange and black disposable cups in the air or primly dunking and munching wriggling mrr’hhg like animated scones in neon tea. A considerable number of them had their eyestalks turned our way and were clicking their finger and toe pincers impatiently. Several dozen scattered couples were having noisy writhing Yummi-Ade lubricated sex. Others were arguing politics or art with the reasoned restraint of mutant versions of the Three Stooges.

Dork gazed out over this surreal vista and paled, regrets about high attendance and low sobriety on their part, and insufficient gin on his, haunting his bloodshot eyes. Then he shook himself, adjusted his silver pompadour, forced a greasy smile and strode up to the microphone at the front of the stage.

His first attempt to address this unnerving assemblage set off a shriek of feedback that should have peeled the red fur patches of the hundred or so sk’rrli closest to the stage. Instead they ceased their pincer-snapping and gave him their undivided attention, looking peculiarly pleased.

His face gone almost as red as a lobbear’s, Dork glared at someone offstage. The feedback ceased. The audience looked disappointed, their segmented feelers drooping.

“My friends,” he began, the sound system warping his words into a shrill, loud, garbled version of the chittering and growls of sk’rrli. “As I have often told you, my world is a place of many fine things. Of wondrous objects you have never dreamed of, of goods and services you would desire if only you saw them and understood how badly you needed them. Many gifts have we brought you through our embassy, and tonight I offer yet another. Yet this gift is no mere object. It is instead a taste of one of Earth’s finest cultural treasures.”

He beamed at them like a secondhand aircar salesman about to close on a clunker with bad fans. “What I offer you tonight is an example of the cultural heights you yourselves might reach with our generous help, and through fair and honest and mutually profitable trade.”

Maire leaned toward me and whispered, “Is this joker for real?”

“Unfortunately. Just smile and remember he’s worth ten plus points to you.”

Dork had worked himself up into a fist-shaking harangue. “You can make something of your brutal lives! You can rise above your present savage, uncivilized, uncouth state!”

“You can let us have bathroom and bedroom walls!” wailed one of the embassy staff down in front.

A wistful look flitted across Dork’s patrician features, followed closely by pique at the interruption of his oration. “We are here to show you the way if only you will let us! We are here to improve your lives and prospects for the future! And we would, if only you would stop acting like a bunch of ill-tempered, uncooperative, utterly charmless excuses for sentient life who look like half-cooked lobsters and don’t have the sense to—”

He caught himself, blinked and offered an unctuous smile. “But I should leave such matters for the bargaining table. Tonight all you need do is enjoy this generous taste of what my kind have achieved. So without further ado, I present a performance of Vivaldi’s The Four Seasons.

He waited a few moments for applause. None came. A fixed smile on his face, he went to his big fancy chair and sat down. He grabbed the glass from the table beside him, drained it, then refilled it from his silver pitcher. The color that bloomed in his cheeks suggested it wasn’t mineral water.

The three of us bowed to our urso-crustacal audience. I gave Maire a nod. She activated the mike in her music stand, then growled and chittered at our listeners in their own tongue. She’d asked to do this, having taught herself a sk’rrli phrase that roughly translated as: May what we offer rend nicely and taste/feel good.

When she finished we took our seats. I called up the score on our stands. Each gave me a nod to say they were ready. I had the stands give us a downcount. When it ended we began to play.


Now we’re back to the place I started with at the beginning. The part where the crowd was getting ugly. Remember? Believe me, it wasn’t the sort of thing you’d ever forget.

We were about three minutes into the first movement, playing tightly and sweetly, our timing and phrasing immaculate. A normal audience would have been rapt. The sk’rrli weren’t a normal audience, even for us.

Immediately after the opening notes they had begun acting like a nest full of cranky hornets stirred with a stick, moving restlessly around waving their feelers and snapping their pincers in agitation. The longer we played the more aggravated they became. Before long they had started advancing on the stage, radiating enough raw menace to send the embassy staff scurrying to hide behind it. The mood grew so palpably ominous even Dork noticed it through his haze of gin and egotism. His face turned increasingly pale and waxy as the red tide surged closer.

Still playing, I leaned over toward him and hissed, “I don’t think they’re Vivaldi fans.”

He blinked uncertainly. “Maybe they just, uh—”

His voice had failed him at the sight of a dozen or so lobbears preparing to clamber up on the stage. It looked unlikely that they were coming up to hand us bouquets. A plan to hand us our own heads seemed a lot more likely.

I didn’t need the house to fall on me. “We’re going to stop playing,” I said, not much caring if he liked it or not.

I’m not sure he even heard me. Five of the lobbears were on the stage now, and they were advancing on him with snicking pincers and bared teeth. Lots of teeth. It made sense that they’d go for him first; he’d taken all the credit for our performance. Still I imagined they’d get around to us sooner or later.

I twisted around toward Maire and Rube, making a show of taking my bow away from my violinna. They did the same, looking relieved.

The lobbears were reaching for Dork by then, and seemed inclined to peel him out of his chair like a marinated prawn from its shell. He locked his hands on its arms in a death grip. “Help me!” he bawled. “Do something!”

Running seemed apropos. More of the lobbears had gained the stage and more were about to make the climb.

“MO!”

I whipped around toward Maire at her shout.

“Give me the baton! Now! Before it’s too late!”

“What—” I began, now not only terrified but confused.

“Just do it!”

Now a lobbear was stalking me like some old movie monster. But this was real. I frantically banged on my stand’s controls. Maire’s supple fingers flew across her stand’s keypads. The Vivaldi blanked.

Moments later a new piece of music appeared on its display, along with the command SLAVE MODE THREE. I stared at it for a second, then went for my violinna’s controls. Now the music stand would, cued by notations in the score, directly control the various voices our instruments’ could emulate, along with volume and a variety of effects.

There was no time to look at her or Rube, the downcount was already under way. I took a deep breath, the creature so close I could smell mrr’ggh and Yummi-Ade on its breath, and poised my bow, shiveringly aware of the pincered paws reaching for me.

The downcount ended a heartbeat before they got me.


The original instruments of violin, viola and cello were some of humankind’s greatest creations. While these fragile wooden constructs were capable of creating lush, soul-moving sound, they were also limited in range, voice and volume. Moreover, they require certain temperatures, humidity and air pressure levels, not to mention atmospheric compositions, to sound true to their design. The modern cybronic analogues, the violinna, viola la bamba, and cellotta are unfettered by such considerations.

Take range. Five performances before the one on Sk’rrl we played for a race who used ultrasound for communication and navigation. The brains in our instruments transposed what we were playing (Flight of the Bumblebee was one of their favorites) umpteen octaves up, which had us producing sounds so high-pitched even dogs couldn’t have heard us.

Or voice. My violinna can produce a sound absolutely indistinguishable from a priceless Guarneri or an Anderson laminar electric. But it isn’t limited to sounding like a violin. It can also sound like an organ, an oboe, a trumpet or tuned vacuum breach sirens; its circuitry can synthesize the sound of literally anything.

And volume? Alone its body transducers are capable of nearly ninety decibels at zero distortion. Hooked to a Klipsh-Kleinmann Sonicaster like it was that night? It can produce notes capable of pulverizing a concrete wall.

Damn good thing, too.


The opening notes of the piece Maire had put in front of us were some of the most famous and recognizable ever written, but according to my stand what we were about to play had been written by C.E.A. Berry, with arrangement by H. Pei.

I had a fraction of a second to read this, and zero time to ponder it because the downcount ended and we launched into the composition. Launch is precisely the right word. What we touched off was an explosive blast of sound that literally blew the hundred or so lobbears closest to the stage clear off their feet.

Even when you know it, even when you expect it, the bombastic, brutally simple opening notes of Beethoven’s Fifth can catch you by surprise and spike your pulse. When they’re plated with subsonics and blasted out at just a few decibels short of the Death By Sound level you have what can only be described as Weapons Grade Music.

Ta Da Da Dummmrnmmmtn! Ta Da Da Doooooomtntnmmf Rube’s cellotta thundered at earthquake intensity.

The lobbears on stage with us froze, feelers whipping straight up like antique car antennae. The front rows flattened by the first notes periscoped their eyestalks in our direction.

Rube bared his teeth and repeated the phrase, lower, louder. TA DA DA D UMMMMMMMM! TA DA DA DOOOOOOOOOM! Maire weighed in the next phrases, with what sounded like a twelve ton cast iron violin responding to her bow.

My turn. I flung myself into the blizzard of notes on my stand like my life depended on them, with only the vaguest idea what to expect. My vio-linna howled out in the shrieking voice of an electric guitar plugged directly into a multimegavolt power supply, and I finally recognized what I was playing even as a million-horse-power whirling chainsaw of music spun out and felled even more lobbears.

The three of us slammed into Roll Over Beethoven like a trio of Godzillas playing fusion-powered instruments and intent upon stomping the local Tokyo flat with sound. You must know the song, it’s been revived and redone hundreds of times in the century plus since the Immortal Mr. Berry wrote it. What we were performing was an arrangement based on the original, by way of the 1970s’ Electric Light Orchestra, the 2010s’ Brain Flug Scrapers, and the 2040s’ Hidekeo Pei. What Pei, founder of the Pop In The Eye movement, had done was distill and synthesize all the most stirringly electric parts of earlier arrangements, orchestrate them for a full Pop Polysymphony, and create a piece guaranteed to bring an audience to its feet or put them on their knees. The only reason I knew this much about it was thanks to Maire, who often while EJing showed us how a particular composition had changed over the decades or even centuries, adapting to new times, new instruments, new attitudes.

The lobbears who had hold of Dork dropped him. He clapped his hands over his ears and began to scream—not that he could be heard over us. The lobbears fell back and began to writhe ecstatically, their feelers whipping around and their pincers snapping in time.

None of us sang the lyrics, but we sawed at our instruments in such a frenzy it was a wonder our bows didn’t burst into flame. This wasn’t the sort of piece you could play sitting down. There are some solo parts (called breaks or riffs in this repertoire) where our instruments reverted to electronicized versions of their natural voices for mixed Berry/Beethoven figures. By the time they came around I was on my feet, twisting and turning, literally wrenching notes from my violinna and firing them at our audience. Maire clogged and pogoed and duck-walked, her face filled with exhilaration, her hands and fingers a blur. Rube whirled madly around the stage; at times it looked like he was wrestling his cellotta, at others having non-con-sensual sex with it.

We ended the song in full flatout overdrive, Rube recapitulating the original Beethoven with a bonecrush-ing bass cello voice that shook the ground, Maire with what sounded like an antimatter powered violin set to Destroy, and me with the sound of a shrieking guitar tuned so high that the crystal punchbowl exploded like it had been shotgunned.

The silence afterward was deafening. I know that’s an overused cliche, but it really was. The lobbears stood facing us and frozen like a single moment from a Maine fisherman’s worst boozy nightmare.

“Oh god what was that awful stuff?” Dork moaned, uncovering his ears.

“The third B,” Maire answered with a hundred kilowatt grin. “You know, Bach, Beethoven, and Berry.”

I smiled down at the huddled and miserable envoy. “It also seemed to be something of a crowd pleaser.” The lobbears had begun shaking their heads like they were working off the effects of a collective sonic lobotomy. “Now as to the plus points our performance just earned…”

Dork scowled and climbed shakily to his feet. “I hardly think that noise you just created constitutes a proper performance.”

“OK, fine,” I said brightly and turned toward Maire. “You still have the baton, of course, but this gentleman seems to have his heart set on the Vivaldi. Shall we begin where we left off?”

She bowed. “We aim to please. Natural mode please, gentlemen.” We keyed our instruments, and when she nodded picked up at the point where we’d been mobbed by furious lobbears. In a matter of seconds the crowd began growling and advancing on the stage.

“Stop!” Dork wailed. “Please!”

“Yes?” I asked. We ceased playing, but kept our bows poised like loaded weapons.

“You get points,” he hissed.

“The maximum number?”

He ground his teeth. “This is blackmail.”

“This is negotiation,” I chuckled, pulling our pointpad from my pocket and offering it to him. “If you would be so kind.” Rube cut a lovely mournful Shostakovich figure that brought the growling crowd a step or two closer.

Dork snatched the pad from my hand and did the deed.

“Thank you,” I said sweetly, taking the pad back and checking to make sure he hadn’t cheated. The day I trust an ambassador is the day I trade my violinna in on a kazoo. Back into my pocket it went, safe and sound.

Sometimes a moment comes along when you’re given the golden opportunity to do a favor that will inflict unbearable pain and suffering on someone who deserves it. One of those splendid moments had dropped into my lap, and couldn’t pass it up. “Since you’ve been so generous,” I said with heavy sarcasm, “we will be equally generous and play a few more pieces to whet these nice folks’ appetite for more.”

He stared at me aghast, a shudder of revulsion twitching his frame. “Why in the world would you want to do that?”

Life as an ETDS conscript musician means being at the beck and call of self-important knuckleheads like Dork. It was a wonderful feeling to have someone who once had power to make your life miserable at a total disadvantage. I couldn’t resist reaching out and rapping my knuckles on the top of his head, a personal liberty that made the blood drain from his face, leaving it the whey-white of processed Brie. Laughter came from around the stage. His staff were eating this up. It seemed we had improved their morale after all.

“Hello in there?” I called. “Anybody home? Don’t you get it? We just found something the sk’rrli really like. Give them more of this kind of music and I’ll bet they’ll farm all the mrr’hhg you want.”

At first he looked appalled, then his eyes narrowed in calculation.

“Ah, dawn breaks inside that murky noggin!” I grinned, preparing to really put the boot in. “The thing is, your position as ambassador asks—nay, demands that you not let them think it’s anything less than a splendid thing you’re offering.”

He shook his head, his elegant coiff now spiked in all directions. “I don’t—”

“You have to sit there, listen, and make them think you’re enjoying it as much as they do.”

He went even paler than before. “Smile through more of that ghastly noise?” he croaked.

“Smile until it hurts. After all, Dork my man, instituting a successful trade mission here is the only way to get enough points for reassignment. Someplace nice, with lots of walls, and far away from what will soon be Rock and Roll Heaven.”

“Mrr’hhg,” he said. This time I don’t think he was talking about the local wildlife.


Since music of that sort was Maire’s specialty, she picked the rest of that night’s programme. Some pieces were classics most musicians would have heard at some point, others were more obscure ones I only knew from her EJ nights. We played, and we played for keeps. When we finally left the stage a bit after local midnight we were wringing with sweat, our hands and arms numb from the workout we’d given them.

Rock/Pop In The Eye wasn’t our usual repertoire, but Triaxion gave the sk’rrli a concert they would be talking about for years. We performed take-no-prisoners, eardrum-blowing versions of such ancient masterpieces as “Pinball Wizard,” “Satisfaction,” “I Want To Hold Your Hand,” “Born To Run,” “The Red Shoes,” “Rock Around the Clock,” “Suffragette City,” “Proud Mary,” and “Don’t Fear The Reaper.” Maire sang the lyrics on some of the compositions, belting them out through the embassy’s translator mike, which produced as much feedback as comprehensible sound, which was just fine with our audience.

When it was all over Dork tottered off clutching several packets of headache remedy, a fresh bottle of gin, and an armful of pillows to wrap around his head. The embassy’s staff insisted on following us back to our ship for an after-performance bash. For just a few hours there we were the toast of Sk’rrl, and most everyone got toasted in our honor.


Late the next morning the remaining crumbs scraped themselves up and headed back to the embassy. About the time Maire and I were settling into the galley for coffee our ship lifted, taking us away from the scene of our triumph. Rube remained sacked out, done in from his encores with the apparently insatiable and insomniac Ms. Thornton.

Maire looked fairly chipper. That wasn’t any great surprise, since she and her former guide, Edwina, had equipped themselves with a split of champagne and set off toward her compartment somewhere around three. More exploring, no doubt.

I was probably in the best shape since I don’t drink anymore. Retiring to my compartment at about 3:30 with a dark-haired, dark-eyed, mocha-skinned communications officer named Clistalinda hadn’t hurt much either. She had really liked the way I played, loved the way I’d mashed Dork’s toes, and had absolutely no difficulty communicating her feelings in a clear and unmistakable manner.

After a cup of coffee to rosin my bow and tighten my pegs, I put down my mug and bowed to Maire across the table. “Congratulations,” I said solemnly.

She eyed me quizzically. “For what?”

“For your new status as holder of the baton.”

She snorted and refilled our cups. “That was only temporary.”

I took a long slug, then said, “It doesn’t have to be.”

“I think it should. You’re our leader, Mo. Rube and I wouldn’t have it any other way.”

“Some leader. You’re the one who hauled our chestnuts out of the fire last night.”

She shrugged. “I just changed the evening programme, that’s all. You’re the one who spiked Dork to the wall and made him squirm. You’re good at handling us and dealing with schmucks like him. All I want to do is see a few more sights while I serve out my time, then go back to Earth.” The way she said this rang with the unspoken statement that maybe I didn’t want to serve out or go back home. I let it slide.

“Getting out takes points, Maire. The leader gets extra plus points when we do well.”

“And extra minus points when some tin-eared, puckerbunged worshipper at the holy altar of protocol isn’t satisfied.” She picked up her cup, took a swig, then regarded me over the rim. “You know, I’ve heard rumors that there were times you juggled points around, transferring some of yours to former trio members who couldn’t handle living like this.”

I shrugged. “People tell stories.”

“People love legends. You’re out of the limelight now, but like it or not, you still are one. Tell me, how many points do you have, anyway?”

I stared down at my cup. “I haven’t really checked lately.”

She just let my admission hang there for a minute. We drained our coffees. She refilled them once more, then said, “So, are we going to practice today?”

I grinned at her, glad the subject had been changed. “Don’t you think we’ve earned a day off?”

“Probably. But just think how much Rube will bitch.”

“Good point. I suppose I could order a session.”

“You could. You’re the boss.”

I looked her in the eye. “Remember, I don’t have to be.”

She looked me right back and smiled fondly. “Actually, I think you do.”


Maire was probably right. Our concert on Sk’rrl was over three years ago. Both she and Rube reached their plus point quota and moved on, but I’m still here leading Triaxion.

But enough ancient history. How about some music?

My new partners are pretty good. We can play damn near any tune you name.

But we’d really rather you didn’t request The Four Seasons.

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