Red Dwarf Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers by Grant Naylor Version 1.0, if you find errors, typos, whatever, fix them and increase the version number by .1 and redistribute (Yes "ageing" IS a word in Britain!) Scanned, OCRed and proofread by RastaJew. Part One Your own death, and how to cope with it ONE 'DESCRIBE. USING DIAGRAMS WHERE APPROPRIATE, THE EXACT CIRCUMSTANCES LEADING TO YOUR DEATH.' Saunders had been dead for almost two weeks now and, so far, he hadn't enjoyed a minute of it. What he wasn't enjoying at this particular moment was having to wade through the morass of forms and legal papers he'd been sent to complete by the Department of Death and Deceaseds' Rights. It was all very well receiving a five-page booklet entitled: Your Own Death and How To Cope With It. It was all very well attending counselling sessions with the ship's metaphysical psychiatrist, and being told about the nature of Being and Non-Being, and some other gunk about this guy who was in a cave, but didn't know it was a cave until he left. The thing was, Saunders was an engineer, not a philosopher - and the way he saw it, you were either dead or you were alive. And if you were dead, you shouldn't be forced to fill in endless incomprehensible forms, and other related nonsensica. You shouldn't have to return your birth certificate, to have it invalidated. You shouldn't have to send off your completed death certificate, accompanied by a passport-size photograph of your corpse, signed on the back by your coroner. When you're dead, you should be dead. The bastards should leave you alone. If Saunders could have picked something up, he would have picked something up and hurled it across the grey metal room. But he couldn't. Saunders was a hologram. He was just a computer-generated simulation of his former self; he couldn't actually touch anything, except for his own hologramatic body. He was a phantom made of light. A software ghost. Quite honestly, he'd had enough. Saunders got up, walked silently across the metal-grilled floor of his sleeping quarters and stared out of the viewport window. Far away to his right was the bright multi-coloured ball of Saturn, captured by its rainbow rings like a prize in a gigantic stellar hoop-la game. Twelve miles below him, under the plexiglass dome of the terraformed colony of Mimas, half the ship's crew were oft planet leave. No planet leave for Saunders. No R&R for the dead. He caressed his eyelids with the rough balls of his fingers, then glanced back at the pile: the mind-bogglingly complicated Hologramatic Status application form; accident claims; pension funds; bank transfers; house deeds. They all had to be completed so his wife, Carole - no, his widow, Carole - could start a new life without him. When he'd first signed up, they both understood he would be away from Earth for months on end, and, obviously, things could happen; mining in space was dangerous. That was why the money was so good. If anything happens to me,' he'd always said, I don't want you to sit around, mourning.' Protests. 'I want you to meet someone else, someone terrific, and start a new life without me.' What a stupid, fat, dumb thing to say! The kind of stupid, fat, dumb thing only a living person would ever dream of saying. Because that's what she was going to do now. Start a new life - without him. Fine, if he was dead dead. If he'd just taken delivery of his shiny new ephemeral body and was wafting around in the ether on the next plane of existence - fine. Even if there was no life after death, and he totally ceased to be - then again, absolutely fine. But this was different. He was dead, but he was still here. His personality had been stored on disc, and the computer had reproduced him down to the tiniest detail; down to his innermost thoughts. This wasn't the deal. He wanted her to start a new life when he was gone, not while he was still here. But of course, that's what she'd do. That's what she had to do. You can't stay married to a dead man. So even though she loved him dearly, she would, eventually, have to start looking for someone else. And... she would sleep with him. She would go to bed with him. And, hell, she would probably enjoy it. Even though she still loved Saunders. She would, wouldn't she? She would meet Mr Terrific and have a physical relationship. Probably in his bed. His bed! Their marital bed. His bed! Probably using the three condoms he knew for a fact he had left in the bedside cabinet. The ones he'd bought for a joke. The flavoured ones. His mind ran amok, picturing a line of lovers standing, strawberry-sheathed, outside his wife's bedroom. 'No!' screamed Saunders, involuntarily. 'Nooooooo!' Hologramatic tears of rage and frustration welled up in Saunders' eyes and rolled hologramatically down his cheeks. He smashed his fist down onto the table. The fist passed soundlessly through the grey metal desk top, and crashed with astonishing force into his testicles. As he lay in a foetal position, squealing on the floor, he wished he were dead. Then he remembered he already was. Saunders didn't know it but, twelve miles below, on the Saturnian moon of Mimas, Flight Co-ordinator George McIntyre was about to solve all his problems. TWO George McIntyre sat in the Salvador Dali Coffee Lounge of the Mimas Hilton, and stared at a painting of melting clocks while he waited for the tall, immaculately-dressed mechanoid to return with his double Bloody Mary, no ice. He couldn't stand Bloody Mary without ice, but he didn't want his shaking hand to set the cubes clanking around in the glass, advertising his nervousness when his visitors arrived. Five minutes later they did arrive, and McIntyre wished they hadn't. When he turned and caught sight of them, the heat left his body as quickly as people leave a Broadway first night party when the bad reviews come in. There were three of them. Big men. They each had the kind of build that looks stupid in a suit. Shoulders tiered from the neck. Thighs like rolls of carpet. Biceps and triceps screaming to be released from the fetters of the finely- tailored lounge suits. The kind of bodies that only look right and natural in posing pouches. In suits, no matter how expensive - and these were expensive - they looked like kids who'd been forced into their Sunday best, all starched and itching. McIntyre couldn't shake the feeling that they were yearning, aching to get nude and start oiling-up. They didn't say 'hello' and sat down at his table. One of them took up both spaces on the pink sofa, while the other two drew up chairs from a nearby table and squeezed into them. The armrests were forced out into a tired Vee, to the accompaniment of an uneasy creaking sound. McIntyre just sat there, smiling. He felt as if he was sitting in the middle of a huge barrel of sweating muscle. He was convinced that if he shook hands with any of the three, he would immediately die from an overdose of steroid poisoning. He wondered, though not too hard, why one of them was carrying a pair of industrial bolt clippers. The tall, immaculately-dressed mechanoid came up and served McIntyre his Bloody Mary. All three of the men ordered decaff coffee. While they waited for it to arrive, they chatted with McIntyre. Small talk: difficulties parking; the decor; the irritating muzak. When the coffee came, McIntyre pretended not to notice that they couldn't get their fingers through the cup handles. The man on the sofa lifted up a briefcase and fiddled clumsily with the lock. For a moment McIntyre found himself feeling sorry for the man - everything was too small for him: the briefcase, the coffee cup, the suit. Then he remembered the bolt clippers, and stopped feeling sorry for the man and started feeling sorry for himself again. The case eventually sprang open and the man took out a fold-out, three-page document and handed it to McIntyre with a pen. McIntyre explained, apologetically, that it was impossible for him to sign the document. The three men were upset. George McIntyre left the Salvador Dali Coffee Lounge of the Mimas Hilton, carrying his nose in a Mimas Hilton Coffee Lounge napkin. THREE The four astros paid the fare, leaving the smallest of small tips, and staggered through the jabbering crowd and up the steps into the Los Americanos Casino. Lister flicked on the 'For Hire' sign, and decided to take the hopper down Central and back towards Mimas docks. He slipped the gear into jump, and braced himself. The hopper leapt into the air, and landed with a spine- juddering crunch two hundred yards down Eastern Avenue. The hopper's rear legs retracted into the engine housing, then hammered into the ground, propelling him another two hundred yards. As it smacked into the tarmacadamed three-lane highway, Lister's neck was forced into the hollow at the base of his skull, further aggravating an already angry headache. The hopper's suspension was completely shot to hell. Lister began to wish he'd never stolen it. Hoppers had been introduced to Mimas thirty years previously, to combat the ludicrous congestion which had blocked the small moon's road system so badly that an average Mimian traffic jam. could last anything up to three weeks. People had been known to die of starvation in particularly bad ones. Hoppers, which could leapfrog over obstructions, and spend most of their time in the air, helped ease the problem. True, there were a fair number of mid-air collisions, and there was always the possibility of being landed on by a drunk-driven hopper, but, by and large, you reached your destination in the same season you set off. Lister watched with envy as another hopper overtook him with the easy grace of a frolicking deer. The next landing was the worst. The hopper hit a metal dram cover with such violence that Lister bit his cigarette in half, and the glowing tip fell between his thighs and rolled under the seat of his pants. Frantically, he arched his body out of the seat and tried to sweep the butt onto the floor as the hopper leapt madly down the busy highway, like a sick metallic kangaroo. Something was burning. It smelled like hair. And since he was the only thing in the hopper that had hair, it was fairly safe to assume some part of him was on fire. Some part of him that had hair. He liked all the parts of him that had hair. They were his favourite bits. His eyes searched desperately for a place to park. Forget it. In London people parked wherever it was possible. In Paris people parked even where it wasn't possible. On Mimas people parked on top of the people who'd parked where it wasn't possible. Stacks of hoppers, three, sometimes four high, lined the avenue on both sides. A typical Saturday night on Mimas. The thick air hung heavy with the smells and noises of a hundred mingling cultures. The trotters, Mimian slang for 'pavements', were obscured by giant serpents of human flesh as people wrested their way past the blinking neons of casinos and restaurants, the on-off glare of bars and clubs; shouting. screaming, laughing, vomiting. Astros and miners on planet leave going wallet- bulging crazy, desperate for a good time after months of incarceration in the giant space freighters that now hung over the moon's shuttle port. The Earth had long been purged of all its valuable mineral resources. Humankind had emptied its home planet like an enema, then turned its rapacious appetite to the rest of the solar system. The Spanish-owned Saturnian satellite of Mimas was a supply centre and stop-off point for the thousands of mining vessels which plundered the smaller planets and the larger moons and asteroids. Smoke began to plume from between Lister's legs. Still nowhere to park. Traffic blared and leapfrogged over him as he skewed across lanes, fighting to keep control. In desperation he grabbed the thermos flask lying on the passenger seat, struggled with the unfamiliar cap, and poured the contents into his smouldering lap. A hiss signalled the aid of the cigarette. There was a second of delicious relief. Then he smelted coffee. Hot coffee. Piping-hot coffee... Piping-hot coffee that covered his loins. The pain had already hit him by the time he poured the bottle of upholstery cleaner he found in the glove compartment over his thighs. The hopper, now madly out of control, caromed off the Mutual Life Assurance building, taking a large chunk out of the neon sign before Lister wrestled it back under control, and, still whimpering in pain, headed towards the docks. The man in the navy-blue officer's coat and the blatantly false moustache flagged down Lister's hopper and got in. 'A hundred-and-fifty-second and third,' he said curtly, and pressed the tash, which was hanging down on the right-hand side, back into place. 'Going to a brothel?' asked Lister amiably. 'Absolutely not,' said the man in the blue officer's coat; I'm an officer in the Space Corps' - he tapped the gold ban on his lapel - 'and I do not frequent brothels.' I just thought, what with hundred-and-fifty-second and third being slap bang in the middle of the red light area...' 'Well, you're not paid to think. You're paid to drive.' Lister flicked on the 'Hired' sign, slipped the hopper into jump and bounced off to the district the locals affectionately called 'Shag Town'. On the first landing, the officer's moustache was jolted almost clear off his face. 'What the smeg's wrong with the suspen-' his head disappeared into the soft felting of the cab's roof '-sion...!?' He bounced back down into the seat. 'It's the roads,' Lister lied. They stopped at a blue light. At right angles to them, thirty hoppers sprang forward like a herd of erratic gazelles pursued by a pack of wolves. 'What's it like?' 'What's what like?' said the man, feeling his jaw, convinced a tooth had been loosened in the last landing. 'Being in the Space Corps? Being an astro? I was sort of thinking of signing up.' 'Were you really?' Contempt. 'D'you need any qualifications?' 'Well, not exactly. But they don*t just accept any old body, I doubt whether you'd get in.' Lister felt for the fare-enhancer button he'd found concealed under the dashboard of die taxi, and added a few dollarpounds to the fare. The lights changed and they lurched off, conversation impossible. Lister had been trying to get off Mimas for nearly six months now. How he'd got there was still something of a mystery. The last thing be really remembered with any decent clarity was celebrating his birthday back on Earth. He, and six of his very closest friends, decided to usher in his twentyfifth year by going on a Monopoly board pub-crawl around London. They'd hitched a ride in a frozen-meat truck from Liverpool, and arrived at lunchtime in the Old Kent Road. A drink at each of the squares was the plan. They started with hot toddies to revive them from the ride. In Whitechapel they had pina coladas. King's Cross station, double vodkas. In Euston Road, pints of Guinness. The Angel Islington, mezcals. Pentonville Road, bitter laced with rum and blackcurrant. And so they continued around the board. By the time they'd got to Oxford Street, only four of them remained. And only two of the four still had the power of speech. His last real memory was of telling the others be was going to buy a Monopoly board, because no one could remember what the next square was, and stepping out into the cold night air clutching two-thirds of a bottle of sake. There was a vague, very vague, poorly-lit memory of an advert on the back of a cab seat; something about cheap space travel on Virgin's new batch of demi- light-speed zippers. Something about Saturn being in the heart of the solar system, and businesses were uprooting all the time. Something about it being nearer than you think, at half the speed of light. Something about two hours and ten minutes. And then a thick, black, gunky fog. He'd woken up slumped across a table in a McDonald's burger bar on Mimas, wearing a lady's pink crimplene hat and a pair of yellow fishing waders, with no money and a passport in the name of 'Emily Berkenstein'. What was more, he had a worrying rash. He was broke, diseased and 793 million miles from Liverpool. When Lister got drunk, he really got drrrrr-unk. He brought the hopper to a crunching halt on the corner of hundred-and-fifty- second and third, outside a garish neon sign promising 'Girls, Girls, Girls' and 'Sex, Sex, Sex'. 'I understand,' said the man in the navy-blue officer's coat, surreptitiously re-gluing his moustache, 'there are some excellent restaurants in this area, offering authentic Mimian cuisine.' 'Look,' said Lister as he short-changed the officer, 'd'you want me to pick you up?' He really didn't feel like cruising around in the bone-juddering hopper for another fare. I don't mind waiting.' The officer glanced down the street at the various pimpy types with poorly- concealed weaponry under their coats. 'Fine. Wait round the corner.' 'How long will you be?' 'Well, I'm led to believe the Mimian bladderfish is particularly exquisite, and I would be insane if I didn't at least try the legendary inky squid soup. Plus, of course, pudding, brandy and cigars. Say... ten minutes? Call it twenty to be on the safe side.' Lister took the hopper round the comer, and saw his fare tride purposefully towards a Mimian restaurant, pause outside, studying the menu, then turn and walk straight into the building with the neon sign boasting 'Girls, Girls, Girls' and 'Sex, Sex, Sex.' Lister locked the door of the hopper. He wasn't totally crazy about this area, safety-wise. He poured what remained of the coffee into the flask lid, and lit a cigarette. What could be nicer, he thought, than smoking Spanish tobacco and drinking real Spanish coffee? Except, possibly, having your whole body vigorously rubbed by a man with a cheese grater. He was sick of this armpit of a moon. He'd spent the last six months trying to get the eight hundred dollarpounds he needed to buy a shuttle ticket home. So far he'd saved fifty-three. And he was probably going to blow that tonight. Making money on Mimas wasn't easy. For a start you needed a work permit, and Lister didn't have a work permit because, officially, he didn't exist. Officially, Lister wasn't here. Officially, he was a space bag lady called Emily Berkenstein. Hence his problem. Which he attempted to solve by stealing taxi hoppers. Each evening, or at least each evening he felt in the mood, which turned out to be about one evening in four, he'd hang around taxi hopper ranks and wait for the drivers to converge for warmth and conversation in a single cab. When he was convinced it was safe, he'd steal the rear-most hopper and bounce around the seedier districts of the colony, where few taxi cabs and absolutely no police ever went, and pocket the night's takings before abandoning the hopper at a busy rank back at Mimas Central. If he'd set about his hopper scam in a slightly more business-like way, the chances are he'd have been off Mimas within a month. Unfortunately, he found Mimas so deeply depressing - quite the most hideous place he'd ever been, worse, even than Wolverhampton - that quite regularly he felt compelled to hit the bars and drinking clubs, and blow every single pennycent he'd saved. In some half-assed, subconscious way, he felt, if only he could get drunk enough he was sure to wake up back outside the Marie Lloyd public house, off Regent Street in London, trying to hail a cab to get a Monopoly board. Sadly, the price of alcohol on Mimas was so outrageously prohibitive, he could only ever buy enough Mimian sangria to get him in the mood to start drinking seriously, before his money ran out and he'd have to slope back to the shuttle port, where he'd hire a left-luggage locker, and sleep in it. 'Life,' thought Lister, 'sucks.' Outside the hopper two pimps were having a minor disagreement about a girl named Sandra. It was brief and, for the most part, friendly. It ended when the severed ear of the taller pimp landed with a soft, wet plop on the hopper's windscreen. Lister double-checked the door locks, and suddenly found it important to read the A to Z of Mimas with fierce concentration. He was only half-aware of the hopper rocking gently from side to side as the two men rolled on its bonnet. Suddenly there was another soft, wet plop, and a second, slightly smaller, ear joined the first on his windscreen. What the hell's happening? thought Lister. It's raining ears on my windscreen. He turned on the wipers, and used his window wash. When the windscreen cleared, the ears had gone, and so had the pimps. Saturday nights on Mimas were wild. So wild, m fact, the Mimians had instigated an eight-day calendar, so that everybody could have two Sundays to recover from Saturday night. Sunday one and Sunday two, then back to work on Monday. Lister looked at the hopper clock. Forty minutes since the man in the blue officer's coat had gone for his 'meal'. He slipped his taxi-driver's night stick up the arm of his jacket, stepped over the body of a dead, one-armed pimp, and dashed across the trotter towards the building with the 'Girls, Girls, Girls' sign. FOUR Denis and Josie were lovers. Not that they actually made love. Not any more. They hadn't made love for the last four years; neither of them had been capable of it. Denis was into Bliss, and Josie was a Game head. Denis huddled in the shop doorway, tugging the remnants of his plastic mackintosh around his knees for warmth, his hangdog eyes searching the busy Mimian street for a 'roll'. Even chough it was cold, he was sweating. His stomach had bunched itself into a fist and was trying to punch its way out of his body. He hadn't eaten for two days; his last meal had been a slice of pizza he'd stolen off a drunken astro. But it was a different kind of hunger that was gnawing at him now. He took out a long-empty polythene bag, and licked pathetically at its already well-licked insides. Denis had a second- class degree in Biochemistry. Though, if you asked him now, he probably couldn't even spell Biochemistry. Josie was sitting by his side, laughing. She'd been laughing for nearly an hour. Her long, once-blonde hair was matted into a series of whips which lashed at her pale, grimy face as she tossed her head, giggling idiotically. Of the two, she was the really smart one. Josie had a first-class degree in Pure Mathematics. Only, right now she couldn't even have counted her legs. They'd met at the New Zodiac Festival six years earlier, when the Earth's polar star had changed and the entire zodiac had to be realigned. Everybody shifted one star sign forward. Josie had moved from Libra to Scorpio, and Denis had changed from Sagittarius to Capricorn. It was a turning-point in both their lives: they both felt so much happier with their new star signs and, along with the other five thousand-or-so space beatniks who'd gathered for the four-day festival in the Sea of Tranquillity, they'd taken many, many drugs, and talked about how profoundly the shifting constellations had changed them, and how maybe the druids were the only dudes who'd ever really got it right. Now they were on their way to Neptune, for Pluto's solstice, when Pluto took over from Neptune as the outermost planet of the solar system. They'd been travelling for five years, and so far they'd only managed to bum their way up to Saturn. Still, they weren't in a particular hurry - the solstice wasn't going to happen for another fifty years. So Denis scanned the street for a roll while Josie sat beside him, laughing. Across her brow gleamed the metal band of a Game head. Underneath it, needle-thin electrodes punctured the skull and burrowed into her frontal lobes and hypothalamus. The Game started out actually as a game. It was intended to be the zenith of computer game technology. Tiny computer chips in the electrodes transmitted signals directly to the brain. No screens, no joysticks - you were really there, wherever you wanted to be. Inside your head, your fantasies were fulfilled. The Game had been marketed as 'Better Than Life'. It was only a month after its release that people realized it was addictive. 'Better Than Life' was withdrawn from the market, but illicit electronic labs began to make copies. It was the ultimate hallucinogen, with only one real major drawback. It killed you. Once you entered 'Better Than Life', once you put on the headband and the needles wormed into your mind, it was almost impossible to get out. This was partly because you weren't even aware you were in 'Better Than Life' in the first place. The Game protected itself, hid itself from your memory. Your conscious mind was totally subverted, while your body slowly withered and died. At first, well-meaning friends tried to rescue Game heads by yanking the headset out of the skull, but this always resulted in instant death from shock. The only way out of the Game was to want to leave it. But no one ever wanted to leave. Most Game heads, unable to look after themselves, died very quickly. But Josie had Denis. And Denis at least shared his food with her, and kept her alive. When Josie first bought the headset from a South African Game dealer on Callisto, she'd urged Denis to get a set too. She wanted to try 'multi-using', when two or more headsets were connected together, so the users could share the same fantasy. But Denis was into Bliss. Bliss was a unique designer drug. Unique for two reasons. The first was that you could get addicted to Bliss just by looking at it. Which made it very hard for the police to carry out drug busts. The second was its effect. It made you believe you were God. It made you feel as if you were all-seeing, all-knowing, eternal and omnipotent. Which was laughable, really, because when you were on Bliss you couldn't even lace your shoes. The Bliss high lasted fifteen minutes; after coming down, the resulting depression lasted twenty-five years. Few people could live with it, so they had to take another belt. Denis took off his boot, unrolled a second polythene bag, which contained a teaspoonful of the soil-coloured substance, and toyed with it pensively. He always saved a final belt for when he needed to roll someone for money. Which is what be was going to do right now. Lister should have known better. He'd been on Mimas long enough to know not to turn round when he heard the voice. He should have put his head down and run. But he didn't. And by the time he worked out what was happening, it was too late. 'Stop, my son!' the voice bellowed, and Lister twisted to see the Bliss freak in the plastic mackintosh swaggering towards him in a Mysterious Way. 'Dost thou knoweth who I am?' Lister's eyes darted from side to side, looking for an exit, but the Bliss freak edged him into a doorway, and there was nowhere to go. 'Dost thou knoweth who I am?' he repeated. Yes, thought Lister, you're a smegging Bliss freak. 'Yes,' he said aloud, 'you're God, right?' Denis beamed and nodded sagely. The mortal had recognized Him. Not everybody did. 'That's right. I am God. And I have cometh to thee for a mighty purpose. I need some of your mortal money.' Lister nodded. 'Look, I'm completely strapped, man. I've got absolutely nothing on me. Not a bean.' The Bliss freak sighed heavily, trying to contain His wrath. 'Would you like Me to call down a mighty plague, and lay waste this entire world?' 'No.' Lister shook his head. 'Would you like to be turned into a pillar of salt?' 'No.' Lister shook his head again. 'Then give Me some money.' 'Look, I've told you. I'm broke.' The Bliss freak stuck his right hand into die pocket of his ragged raincoat. I've got something in here that can hurt you.' Lister eyed him up and down. He wasn't that big, actually. And what did he have in his raincoat pocket that could hurt him? A lightning bolt? He decided to stand his ground. I don't believe you,' he said, smiling pleasantly. The Bliss freak took his hand out of his pocket and showed Lister what he had in there that could hurt him. It was his fist. He swung it round, hitting Lister on the side of his face. The punch had no strength, but it took Lister by surprise. He banged his head against the edge of the doorframe, and went down. When he came to, barely thirty seconds later, his fifty-three dollarpounds had gone, and so had God. FIVE Lister made his way shakily down the brothel's dusky staircase and stepped onto the red, thick-pile carpet of the main reception area. Plastic palm trees encircled a vast, artificial, heart-shaped lagoon in pink tile. Phallus-shaped diving boards cast frightening shadows onto the softly gurgling water, while Chinese chimes, bedecked with glass erotica, tinkled in the strawberry-scented breeze of the air conditioner. A black, fake marble staircase led up to a mezzanine level, where twenty-odd clam-shaped doors marked 'Love Suites' circled the room. Music, which sounded as if all its charm and energy had been surgically removed, trickled out of a number of breast-shaped speakers. Various fat men of various nationalities sat around the lagoon in white towels, sipping fake champagne cocktails. In front of Lister a small red-haired man, with a porky roll of flesh above his towel-top, was examining a line of girls. 'This one's face...' 'Jeanette's face...' The Madame followed behind him, taking notes. 'This one's breasts...' 'Candy's bosom. An excellent and most popular choice.' 'Legs: I'll have the right one from her, and the left one from her.' The Madame scribbled furiously. 'Barbie's right... Tina's left. And what would sir like, bottom-wise?' 'Uh... I think this one.' 'Mandy's derriere.' The Madame clapped her hands, and two engineers began dismantling the android girls then re-assembling them according to the client's order. Lister watched, trying to keep his lunch in his stomach, as limbs were changed and buttocks swapped, much to the apparent excitement of the small red-haired man. The Madame turned to Lister. 'Sorry to keep you waiting, sir. Would you like a pick'n'mix or an off-the-peg?' 'No, I don't want a girl...* 'That's absolutely no problem at all, sir - we have some beautiful boy- droids.' 'No, - uh, this is kind of, uh, embarrassing...' 'I understand.' She smiled. Before Lister could stop her, the Madame clapped her hands and a flock of android sheep baa-ed their way noisily into the reception area. 'No, look... listen...' 'Baa.' 'Yes, sir?' 'Baaaaaaaaa.' 'You don't understand...' One of the sheep turned, winked at him coquettishly, and wiggled off, hips swaying provocatively, towards the marble staircase. 'Oh my God, no. I'm looking for someone. I'm supposed to collect him.' Lister described his fare, and the Madame led him through to a rest room. The man with the false moustache was sitting in a Jacuzzi, having a heated conversation with a member of staff. 'I want my money back.' 'Absolutely sir. This has never happened before.' 'She nearly pulled the damned thing off.' There was a slight circuitry problem...' 'She wouldn't stop. It was like being trapped in a milking machine.' 'Well, if sir would care to make another choice, at the expense of the management -' 'Are you insane? It'll be out of commission for at least twelve months! If you hadn't heard my screams...' He looked up and saw Lister for the first time. There was an extraordinarily long pause. 'You know,' he continued, pretending he hadn't seen Lister, 'I don't think this is a restaurant at all. I haven't seen so much as a soupcon of the spicy bladderfish for which Mimas enjoys such asplendid reputation. I thought it was a bit strange the way you insisted I take off my clothes and wear this skimpy towel. In fact, if you want to know what I think: I don't think this 15 a small bijou eaterie. I think it's a smegging brothel.' The officer continued his protestations of innocence all the way back to the docks. The hopper lurched to a halt outside the shuttleport hopper rank. Lister's fare climbed painfully from the cab, paid up, and leaned conspiratorially into Lister's window. 'Look,' said the officer, his moustache still skew-whiff and curling at the edges from the heat of the Turkish bath, 'Space Corps-wise, I'm pretty much a high-flier; and career-wise' - he looked around - 'it might not be such an A1 wonderful idea if this little adventure were to go any further.' Lister held out his hand, and the man pressed one dollarpound into his palm and winked. 'Go on,' he said, 'enjoy yourself on me.' Lister let him limp up to the automatic doors in the docking port before he leaned out of the window and shouted. 'Hey, whoremonger!' The man raced back. 'Keep your voice down, for mercy's sake - people can hear.' 'You made a mistake. Instead of a hundred dollarpound tip, you've only given me a one dollarpound tip.' 'Right,' said the officer, loosening the buckle on his money belt and extracting a brown leather purse, 'it's a dirty world, and I suppose I'm going to have a pay the toll.' He handed over a stale-smelling note. 'You're very kind.' Lister took the note and stuck it behind the upturned earmuffs of his leather deerstalker. 'Very kind.' 'Just provided we understand; this is the end of the matter.' 'Sure.' 'Don't try coming back for more. Don't cross me, OK?' 'Sure.' 'Nobody crosses Christopher Todhunter and gets away with it.' He closed his purse, which was monogrammed: 'Arnold J. Rimmer, B Sc, S Sc', and walked back across the forecourt. Lister leaned out of the window. 'See you, Rimmer.' 'Yeah. 'Bye,' said Rimmer, absently. SIX George McIntyre placed the antique Smith and Wesson in his mouth and pulled the trigger. His last thought was: I bet this doesn't work. But he was wrong. The bullet passed through the back of his head, killing him instantly, before it sailed through his rubber plant and ended its brief but eventful journey in the wall of his office. The rubber plant was surprised. If the rubber plant could have spoken, it wouldn't have said anything. That's how surprised the rubber plant was. Over the last few weeks it had witnessed the gradual deterioration of McIntyre's mental health, but if the rubber plant had had a name it would have said: 'George McIntyre is not the kind of guy to commit suicide, or my name's not...' - whatever its name would have been, had it had one. Three medical orderlies duly arrived, followed by two doctors, the Captain, the Morale Officer, and the ship's Head of Security. They put McIntyre's body on a stretcher and took him away. Eight people in all passed through McIntyre's room, and not one of them, the rubber plant reflected rather bitterly, had expressed the slightest interest in the gaping bullet hole which went straight through the middle of his favourite leaf. His biggest and greenest leaf. The only leaf he was truly one hundred per cent happy with. The humans muttered darkly about why McIntyre would have done such a thing. The rubber plant knew, but it wouldn't have told them, even if it could have. Saunders lay on the brown leather couch in the medical unit. Or so it appeared to the naked eye. In actuality, he was suspended half a millimetre or so above it. The hologramatic illusion of Saunders' body was provided by a light bee. The light bee, a minute projection device the size of a pin head, hovered in the middle of his body receiving data from the Hologram Simulation Suite, which it then transmitted into a 3-D form. The effect was so convincing, so real, that all holograms bore a two-inch high, metallic-looking 'H' on their foreheads, so they could never be mistaken for living people. The stigma of the Dead. Not the mark of Cain, the killer, but the mark of Abel, the slain. And so Saunders lay suspended an infinitesimal distance above the brown leather couch in the medical unit, trying to fend off a vision of his wife's seduction of the entire offensive line of the London Jets' Zero-Gee football team. 'There was a Being,' the metaphysical psychiatrist was saying, 'and this Being was called "Frank Saunders". Now, that Being died.' 'Yes,' said Saunders, 'he was hit on the head by a four thousand kilogram demolition ball. He couldn't be deader.' The good doctor shifted in his seat, re-crossed his thin legs, and tugged thoughtfully on his long nose. 'Frank,' he said eventually, let me ask you a question. Do you believe man has an eternal soul?' 'I don't know,' Saunders said, wide-eyed with exasperation. I'm from Sidcup. I'm an engineer.' 'I do, Frank.' 'Do you?' 'Yes, I do. And I believe, as we speak, Frank, your eternal soul has passed on to the next plane of existence, where it's very happy.' "The point is,' Saunders said, 'if you have an eternal soul, then there's got to be something badly wrong when it's having a lot more fun than you.' 'Look,' the metaphysical psychiatrist continued unabashed: 'you are not the Being called Frank Saunders. The Being called Frank Saunders no longer exists in this dimension.' 'So, who's lying on this brown leather couch talking to you, then?* 'You, Frank, are a simulation of Frank Saunders. You act in the way the computer estimates Frank Saunders would probably have acted. You are a simulation of a possible Frank Saunders, or, rather more accurately, a probable Frank Saunders.' He said this very slowly, as if he were talking to a small baby who'd splattered mashed apple and apricot dessert over the jacket of his father's new suit. So Saunders was a computer simulation of a probability of a possible person. He didn't feel like a computer simulation of a probability of a possible person. He also didn't feel like listening to another philosophical discussion about the nature of Reality. What he did feel like doing was taking a small ball-peen hammer and tapping it several times on top of the balding pate of the metaphysical psychiatrist who was now twittering on about tables - in particular, tables which had a quality of 'tableness'. And then, - when Saunders was completely lost, the balding counsellor asked him if he was familiar with 'The Cartesian Principle'. 'Yes,' Saunders nodded. 'Didn't they get to number five with Baby, I want your Love Thing?' 'No, Frank. The Cartesian Principle is: "I think, therefore I am." And although you're not thinking, the computer is just making you think you're thinking, nevertheless, you think you're thinking, therefore you possibly are.' 'I possibly are?' 'Yes, Frank.' The psychiatrist smiled, believing Saunders had grasped the concept at last. For a short time Saunders listened to the relentless clicking of the clock in the corner. 'I possibly are what?' 'You possibly are!' 'Ah! I possibly are!' 'Yes!' The Counsellor beamed. 'Well, thank you for all your help.' Saunders got up and made his way to the exit hatch. If I have any other little difficulties, any other little problems I don't understand, rest assured I'll be round in a shot.' 'I really have been of help?' 'None at all.' Saunders smiled for the first time in two weeks. 'You're a useless big-nosed goit.' As Saunders turned to go, Weiner raced through his hologramatic body, and into the medical unit. 'Sorry, Frank,' she said, turning to Saunders. 'Doesn't matter, it's not as if I am - I only possibly are, anyway.' Weiner crossed into the room, her face flushed from running. 'I've got some bad news, Frank. You'd better sit down.' Saunders was a little bemused as to what could possibly constitute bad news for a dead man. As Weiner relayed the news of McIntyre's suicide, the consequences began to dawn on Saunders. McIntyre was a flight co-ordinator. He outranked Saunders. Hologram simulation of a full human personality took up forty per cent of the computer's run-time, and burned up enough energy per second to illuminate Paris for three years, which was why Red Dwarf was only able to sustain one hologram at a time. With his superior rank, McIntyre would take precedence over Saunders and become the ship hologram. 'So,' he said, slowly, 'I'm going to be turned off.' 'Maybe not,' said the psychiatrist, 'He committed suicide. Maybe he's unstable; not suitable for revival.' 'Of course he is,' Saunders said firmly. I'm going to be turned off. I'm going to die for a second time in a fortnight. He gave the air a celebratory uppercut and danced a little jig of joy. 'Smegging great!' SEVEN 'Surname?' 'David.' 'First name?' 'I told you: David.' 'Your name's David David?' 'No, it's David Lister.' Caldicott sighed and reached for the Tipp-Ex. Lister gazed out onto the busy Mimian street and tried to read the sign on the window: 'ERTNEC TNEMTIURCER NOITAROPROC GNINIM RETIPUJ'. On a poster on the wall of the newly-painted office, two crisply uniformed officers, male and female, linked arms and smilingly invited all and sundry to 'Join the Corps and see Space'. Caldicott Tipp-Exed out 'David' from the surname box on the recruitment form and, in his meticulously neat handwriting, replaced it with 'Lister'. 'Date of birth?' 'Unknown.' 'What d'you mean, unknown?' 'I was found.' 'In what way "found"?' 'In a pub. Under the pool table.' Lister paused. 'In a cardboard box.' Caldicott eyed him dubiously. Caldicott spent his entire working day sitting in his immaculate white uniform in the window of the recruitment centre, projecting the Space Corps' corporate image. Which was white and brave, strong and smiling. Once the suckers had signed up, they'd learn the truth soon enough. In the meantime, it was his job to be white and brave, strong and smiling. He looked at the object sitting opposite him, presently working some unspeakable substances from the tracks on the soles of bis boots with one of Caldicott's pencils. Four or five gangly, matted plaits dangled from under the fur-rimmed leather deerstalker atop a podgy face built for a perpetual smile. Short, fat fingers, the nails blotched white from zinc deficiency, scratched at the gap between the top of green, mud-stained combat trousers and the bottom of a T-shirt, whose original colour was long lost in the mists of time. He looked like a casualty in a catering war: as if all the world's chefs had had a gigantic food fight, and somehow he'd got caught in the middle. If his daughter had brought home this specimen, Caldicott reflected, he would have shot them both without a second's reflection. 'Do you know when you were found?' He smiled whitely. 'Some time in November. 'Fifty-five.' 'Well, I need a date of birth for the form. When do you celebrate your birthday?' 'Most of the time, actually.' 'I'll put 1st November, 2155.' 'Not November. I was about six weeks old then. It was probably some time in October.' Caldicott reached for the Tipp-Ex again. 'How about 14th October?' 'Brutal.' 'Why do you want to join the Space Corps?' Lister thought for a moment, 'I want,' he said, 'to visit strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations. To boldly go where no person has gone before.' Caldicott smiled wanly and wrote: 'Possible Attitude Problem' in the comments box. 'Qualifications?' 'Technial Drawing.' 'What level?' 'What d'you mean?' 'Master's degree, perhaps?' said Caldicott, almost imperceptibly raising his left eyebrow. 'Ph.D., maybe?' 'GCSE.' Caldicott wrote '1 GCSE, Technical Drawing'. It doesn't really count, though, that, does it?' Lister picked at a flap of rubber hanging from the sole of his boot 'Why not?' 'I failed.' Caldicott took out the Tipp-Ex again and obliterated the word 'Possible'. If you'd just like to read through this, and sign where I've indicated.' Caldicott pushed over the application papers, picked up the phone and stabbed in a ten-digit number. Lister cast his eyes over the conditions of employment. He was signing up for five years. Five long years. When he got out, he'd be pushing thirty. An old man. Ha! Want to bet? He wondered why he hadn't thought of this before. Join the Space Corps, get on an Earth-bound ship, and as soon as he got home: thank you, goodnight. Lister, David, AWOL. He signed and pocketed the pen, including its metal chain and holder. 'OK,' said Caldicott, putting down the phone, 'the situation is this: there are fourteen ships in dock, but no vacancies for anyone with your... abilities.' 'What are my abilities?' 'You haven't got any. You'll have to enter at third technician level.' 'Technician?' repeated Lister, impressed. 'That's right,' said Caldicott, smiling. A third technician's duties basically consisted of making sure the vending machines didn't run out of chicken soup, mopping floors, and a thousand-and- one other tasks considered too menial for the service droids. Caldicott didn't feel this was absolutely the best time to put Lister in the picture. 'Tech-nishern,' said Lister, putting on a pseudo-swanky voice. He glanced up at the white uniformed officer with the Burt Lancaster smile in the poster, 'I'm a bleeding technishern, don't yew know.' 'As soon as something crops up, well let you know. Leave your address.' 'Address?' Lister wondered what to put. He settled on: 'Luggage locker 4-179, Mimas Central Shuttle Station.' EIGHT 'Shuttle Flight JMC159 for White Giant now boarding at gate number five,' the tannoy announced, and proceeded to make the same announcement m Esperanto, German and three different dialects of Chinese. A group of miners stubbed out their cigarettes and finished their beers, then reluctantly swung their kit-bags over their shoulders before joining a group of white-suited officers and some grey-suited technicians in the queue to gate five. Two Shore Patrol officers strode through the milling crowds, casually swinging their argument-settlers. People pretended not to look at them. You didn't mess with the Shore Patrol. Not unless you wanted your skull rearranged to resemble a relief map of Mars, canals and all. 'This has got to be a joke.' 'This is the address we were given,' said the blonde. They stopped at the huge bank of luggage lockers and looked around, searching for number 4179. The dark-haired one banged on the door. 'This has got to be a joke,' she repeated. Lister was awakened from a dream about a pickle landwich that spoke fluent Italian by the deafening metallic clanging, as Shore Patrolwoman Henderson beat the luggage locker door with her steel truncheon. 'It's a joke. I'm telling you.' 'Hang on,' called Lister. 'Let me get dressed.' In the confined space of the locker, which was designed to accommodate two smallish suitcases, he groped around in the blackness, located his clothes, and pulled on his coffee-and- upholstery polish-stained trousers. 'Who is it?' 'Shore Patrol. We're looking for a guy called "Lister".' 'I'll see if he's in,' called out Lister, stalling for time. 'Uh... why'd you want him?' 'He's been assigned. They've found him a ship.' The door opened and Lister jumped the six feet down to the ground. He cupped his chin in one hand, placed the other on the back of his neck and snapped his head to one side, to the accompaniment of a series of stomach-churning cracks. 'Your papers have come through,' said Henderson, 'and -' "Wait a minute,' said Lister; 'I can't see yet. Give me a minute.' He biinked a few times and rubbed his eyes. Slowly, the two Shore Patrolwomen came into focus. 'Hi,' said Lister. I'd invite you in, but it's a bit of a mess. It's more of a bachelor luggage-locker than -' 'How long have you been sleeping in there?' Henderson interrupted. 'Since my second night on Mimas. I tried sleeping on a park bench, but I woke up in the middle of the night completely naked, and this old Chinese guy was licking my foot. So, compared with that, this is the Mimas Hilton.' 'No work permit, right?' 'I have, actually, but it belongs to a woman called Emily Berkenstein. It's a long story.' 'Get your stuff together.' 'I've got my stuff together.' 'Where is it?' 'In my pocket.' They walked back across the shuttle lounge towards the departure gates. 'We've got to deliver you to gate nine.' 'Time for breakfast?' 'If you make it quick.' Lister peeled off from his escort and, without ever stopping, walked through the Nice'n'Noodly Kwik-Food bar, picking up a half-eaten soya sandwich and a three-quarter finished noodle burger that people with weaker constitutions had left behind. 'You're probably thinking I'm a slob,' said Lister, finishing off a quintuple- thick milkshake and hoovering around the base with the straw. 'But I'm not - I'm just hungry, OK?' 'Hey, it's a real pity you've got to go on this ship, and everything,' said Henderson; 'because, otherwise, you could maybe have taken me out for dinner. You know, a couple of half-eaten egg rolls. Maybe root through a bin for the remnants of a Kentucky Fried Chicken. Then back to your place for half a bottle of paraffin. It could have been so romantic.' 'Well, listen,' said Lister, totally missing the irony, I'm not exactly married to this spaceship idea. Why don't we do it? Just promise not to bring your steel truncheon.' 'To Ganymede and Titan, Yes, sir, I've been around, But there ain't no place In the whole of Space, Like that good ol' toddlin' town... Lunar City Seven, You're my idea of heaven. Out of ten, you score eleven, You good ol' artificial terra-formed settlement...' Through the shuttle's tinny sound system Perry N'Kwomo, the African ballad singer, was crooning one of the many 'easy listening' hits from his best- selling album, Nice 'n' Nauseating. Lister sat in the packed shuttle with the rest of the new recruits on the twenty-five minute jag up to their assigned ship, gazing out from his window seat as Mimas dropped away below him like a bad taste he'd spat into the night. He thumbed through the shuttle's in-flight magazine, Up, Up, And Away! He stared for a brief moment at the blisteringly unpromising contents page: 'Salt - An Epicure's Delight'; 'Classic Wines of Estonia'; and 'Weaving the Traditional Way' were just some of the more fascinating articles. How is it possible, Lister wondered, to fill a hundred-and-twenty-page magazine without actually including anything remotely readable? He tucked it back into the netting of the seat in front of him, and decided to read the plastic card containing the crash-landing instructions for the second time. The shuttle buzzed slowly through the groups of gargantuan space freighters that bobbed in orbit like a bunch of clumsy balloons. Aerodynamics was never a consideration in starship design. All the ships were constructed in orbit, designed never to land, never to encounter wind resistance or gravity, and were consequently, a variety of bizarre and outlandish shapes. For five full minutes the shuttle ran alongside a supply ship called the Arthur C. Clarke: a two-mile length of dirty grey steel, orange lights dotting the huge, bulbous cargo hold, out of which sprang a long, thick, tubular nose section, curling and twisting like the stem of an oriental hookah. Eventually the shuttle reached the cusp of the star freighter's bulb, and turned. Lister's window was filled with red. And red. And red. He couldn't see where it started and he couldn't see where it finished. But it was big. No, it was BIG. A big, red, red, big clenched-fist of metal. As the shuttle accelerated towards the redness, details slowly emerged through the thick gloom of space. Gradually, Lister made out the thousands of tiny pin-pricks of windows and a tooth floss-thin line of light ringing the ship: the vessel's metro system. A huge, shadowy carbuncle jutted out a mile or so from. the red monster's belly - a small moon, torn out of orbit, had flung itself into the ship's solar plexus and was now embedded In the hull, hanging there like a giant stone leech. As the shuttle swung out to align itself for docking, the red ship's nose-cone loomed into view - six half-mile steel poles, bound by magnetic cable, as if the fist were clutching a huge shuttlecock. This was the scoop. The scoop sucked hydrogen from the currents of space and converted it into fuel, theoretically making the ship capable of travelling forever. Lister was aware of the hot whisky breath of the burly astro beside him, who was now leaning over him to share his window. 'The Dwarf,' he said in a Danish accent, ripping open another can of Glen Fujiyama. 'The what?' Lister tried not to inhale. 'Red Dwarf.' 'How big is it?' 'It could eat Copenhagen,' said the Dane, 'and have Helsingor for afters.' ' Lister accepted a belt from the whisky can, and they swapped names. 'It's got to be five miles long.' 'Something like that,' said Petersen. Lister squinted out of the window again. 'And God, is it ugly!' 'Ugly as my mother.' Petersen smiled through bar-brawl broken teeth. 'First trip?' Lister nodded. Petersen belched, crumpled up the whisky can, tossed it into the aisle, and fished in his knapsack for another. I'd offer you one,' he said apologetically, 'but I have only twelve left. Been on Mimas long?' 'Six months.' 'It's a bit of a dump, right?' 'It's a lot of a dump.' 'Wait till we get to Triton. Triton's OK.' 'Triton?' Lister's brow furrowed. 'We're going to Earth.' 'Sure, we're going to Earth. But first we've got to go to Triton to get the ore to take to Earth.' Lister closed his eyes. 'Where's Triton?' 'Round Neptune.' 'Oh,' said Lister. 'Neptune. Right.' He took a swig from Petersen's nearly- empty whisky can. 'Where's Neptune?' 'From here?' Petersen took out a calculator. I'll tell you exactly.' He punched a lot of numbers into the machine. 'It's two billion, seven hundred and seven million miles away.' Lister sighed like a burst tyre. 'How long is that going to take?' 'Say, eighteen months,' said Petersen. 'Eighteen months, not counting Customs. And Triton Immigration Control is a son-of-a-bitch. It's worse than New York.' 'Eighteen months?' 'Then twelve months' mining,' 'Twelve months' mining?' 'Then two more years to get back to Earth.' 'Four-and-a-half-years?' 'It's an old ship. It only does two hundred thousand miles an hour.' 'Four-and-a-half-years,' Lister repeated like a mantra, 'Four-and-a-half-years.' He turned and looked out of the window at the shuttle ducked into the trench cut deep into Red Dwarf's back. On either side, buildings flitted past: skyscrapers, tower blocks a hundred storeys high; monoliths of steel and glass. One minute it was as if they were flying through Manhattan; then without warning the architecture changed, and it looked like Moscow; then fluted pillars and elaborate neo-classic arches, and they could have been in New Athens: a tasteless mish-mash of styles from the decades upon decades the vast mining ship had taken to build. For a tantalizing moment, between a huge mosque-shaped dome and a line of industrial chimneys, the tiny blue light that was Earth winked and flickered invitingly in the glow of the distant Sun, then just as suddenly was gone, as they swooped towards the yawning doors of the docking bay. 'Four-and-a-half-years,' said Lister catatonically. NINE Lister pushed through the crowded docking bay, fighting his way to the Intake Clearance Zone, a now moronically drunk Petersen in tow. They'd been stopped at Red Dwarf customs and Petersen had been bag-searched. His possessions had comprised a toothbrush, one pair of underpants, three socks and eleven cans of whisky. Informed that he couldn't bring the liquor aboard without paying duty, he had stood in the green channel and downed all eleven cans, one after the other, offering Lister a sip a can. Now Petersen was walking sideways, his head cocked at a curious angle, singing a lewd Danish folk song, punctuated with appropriate gestures and slobbering leers, as Lister dragged him by his lapel towards the moving walkway. High above, dominating the ship's shuttle port, was a monitor screen the size of a football pitch, from which a disembodied head was lugubriously dispensing information. The head was a digitalized reproduction of a balding forty-year- old man, with a voice that had a slight East London twang. 'The floor's stopped moving,' said Petersen as they reached the end of the walkway; 'that's a very good thing.' Lister scanned the various name-cards that Red Dwarf induction staff were holding above the heads of the jostling crowd.' 'Hi, I'm Chomsky.' 'Chomsky? Pierre, right?' Rogerson ticked his clipboard. 'OK stand there a second. We're still looking for a Burroughs, a Petersen, a Schmidt and a Lister.' 'I'm a Lister,' said Lister. 'I'm going to be sick,' said Petersen. And he was. Exorcist sick. Yerrrrrrrrrgh. 'YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARGHHHHHH.' A pause. A sigh. 'Yuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuurh. 'Yurgh.' Petersen smacked his lips and wiped his face with the back of his sleeve. 'That's better.' Two skutters, claw-headed service droids which looked like miniature amputee giraffes on motorized bases, swept into view and cleaned up the mess. Petersen tried to tip them. 'We're still looking for a Burroughs and a Schmidt,' Rogerson said, trying to disguise his disgust. 'What's that thing?' asked Lister, pointing up to the disembodied head on the monitor screen. 'Holly, the ship's computer. He's got an IQ of six thousand. You want to ask him a question?' 'Like what?' 'Like anything at all.' Rogerson called up to the ceiling; 'Hey, Holly - this is Lister...' The huge eyes rolled down in their direction, 'I know. Lister, David. Date of birth, 14th October, 2155. Qualifications: GCSE, Technical Drawing, failed. Rank: Technician, Third Class. Ambitions: to visit strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations: to boldly go where no person has gone before. All right, Dave?' A huge eyelid rolled over the digital eye and winked at Lister. 'Ask him something,' Rogerson urged. 'Who holds the all-time record for three-dimensional yardage in a single Zero- Gee football season?' 'Jim Bexley Speed, London Jets Roof Attack, season '74-'75. Four thousand, six hundred and thirty-six square yards in the regular season.' 'And what colour tie was he wearing when be was interviewed by Mark Matheson after Megabowl 102?' 'Aquamarine, with a diagonal lemon stripe.' 'Brutal.' Lister grinned. Chomsky chipped in: 'Who was the Chinese Emperor of the Ming dynasty in 1620?' 'T'ai-ch'ang,' Holly replied immediately; 'also known as Chu Ch'ang-lo Kuang Tsung. Born 1582.' They all began shouting questions: 'Who was the...?' 'How many...?' 'When did...?' and, one by one. Holly got them right. Finally Petersen asked a question. 'Why is the room going round and round?' 'Because you're drunk,' said Holly. 'That's riiiight!' Petersen clapped, delighted. Burroughs and Schmidt finally arrived, and the ten of them were herded onto the Red Dwarf's Northern Line, one of a network of tube trains which criss- crossed the length and breadth of the ship. Spread evenly throughout the carriage were more monitors displaying the genius computer, who was capable of conducting several thousand conversations simultaneously, ranging from what was on the ship's movie channel that night to discussing the melding of quantum mechanics and general relativity. Some thirty minutes later they boarded the Xpress super lift, which whisked them up to Floor 9,172, where they were met by a ship rover - a three wheel electric buggy-bus - and driven down two miles of corridors towards the sleeping quarter. Area P. 'OK,' said Rogerson, showing Lister into his sleeping quarters. 'Make yourself at home. I'll just go and fix up the other guys.' Lister looked round the room which was going to be his home for the next four- and-a-half years. Dull, gunmetal grey walls reflected his mood. Neon strips around the walls simulated the time of day. Dirty yellow at the moment signalled the middle of the afternoon. A dirty orange would signal early evening, and a dirty blue would indicate night. Two bunk cubicles were carved into recesses in the wall, one above the other. To the right stood a simple pedestal wash basin and mirror, which, when voice- activated, swivelled on its base to reveal an antiquated chemical toilet bearing the legend: 'Now please irradiate your hands'. Lister began to wish he was in his nice, cosy luggage locker back at Mimas Central. Behind him was a bank of fitted aluminium wardrobes, and two steps led down to what was laughingly sign-posted 'Lounge Area'. The lounge area was about two metres square, with a three-seater reinforced steel settee, and a tiny coffee table welded to the floor. Nice, thought Lister. Very homely. The other occupant of the room left very little evidence of his existence. Whatever he did possess was meticulously tidied away. On the wall of his bunk, the lower one, hung a homemade revision timetable in worryingly neat handwriting, and an array of startlingly complex colour codes. Beside it were a number of certificates, neatly framed, and a series of cut-out newspaper headlines, all along the lines of: 'Arnie Does It Best'; 'Arnie Comes Out On Top'; and 'Arnold - A Living Legend'. Lister scanned the titles in the bookcase built into a recess above the video screen: Astronavigation and Invisible Number Theory Made Simple; Conceptual Foundations of Quantum Mechanics Made Simple; Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle for Beginners; An Introduction to the Liar Paradox and the Non- Mechanizabitity of Mathematics; and How to Get More Girls by Hypnosis. He opened his bunk-mate's wardrobe and peered in. Twenty pairs of identical, military blue underpants hung on coat hangers in protective cellophane sheaths, next to seven pairs of pale blue pyjamas, with dry-deaning tags pinned to the collars. Lister was disturbed to see that the pockets of the pyjamas bore an insignia of rank. Brightly polished boots stared unblinkingly in rows on the floor. A pair of monogrammed slippers on the shoe-trees stood beside them. Lister closed the wardrobe, struck a match on the 'No Smoking' sign, lit up, and sat down on the metal settee. 'Nice. Very, very nice.' Rogerson came back in. 'Oh, David, meet your bunkmate...' Lister looked up. Behind Rogerson stood a grey-suited technician; tall and rangy, flared nostrils and wide, slightly manic eyes and a hyperactive, constantly jiggling right leg that always seemed to want to be somewhere else. Even without his false moustache, there was no mistaking the 'officer' who'd hired his hopper. 'He's also your shift leader, so he's the guy who'll be showing you the ropes. Lister, this is First Technician -' 'Arnold Rimmer,' said Lister. 'We've already met.' 'No, we haven't' said Rimmer, smiling too much. 'You're a technician,' said Lister, surprised. 'I thought you said you were an officer.' 'Shut up,' said Rimmer, pumping his hand and smiling even harder. TEN On the first morning into space, Lister sat in the lecture theatre, with the other eleven members of Z Shift, in his brand new technician's uniform which made him itch in nineteen different places, while his left arm and his right buttock competed for the title 'Most Painful Appendage', following his twelve inoculation jabs. The rest of the previous morning and the whole of the afternoon had been a long process of multifarious humiliations: hours standing around in backless surgical gowns (Why backless? When did a surgeon ever need to get to your bottom in a hurry?) giving various bodily fluid samples - Petersen had, in fact, delivered rather more bodily fluid samples than was absolutely necessary, and nobody was pleased; IQ tests; genetic fingerprinting; hand-to- eye coordination work; centrifugal weightlessness simulation; then, finally, they'd all been marched like a serpent of school children down to the computer decks, where they each had their personalities recorded for storage in the hologram library. Lister had sat in the suite, a metal skull-cap bolted to his head, while his every memory and personality trait had been logged onto a depressingly small computer slug. His entire life; his whole personality copied and duplicated on a piece of computer hardware the size of a suppository. Petersen's recording had crashed three times, with an error- message which read 'Non-Human Lifeform'. In the end, they had to drip-feed him coffee and subject him to several very cold showers before his brain was functioning sufficiently well to be recorded. If, in the highly unlikely circumstance of Petersen achieving the status of 'Indispensable Personnel', and then dying, he would be retrieved as a hologram with the mater and pater of all hangovers. The lecture theatre hatchway breezed open, and Rimmer clicked up to the podium in boots so brightly polished yon could see infinity in them. The previous evening in the sleeping quarters, no mention had been made of the incident in the brothel. In fact, Rimmer had played the part of a man who'd never met Lister before very credibly indeed. He was, he had declared, not exactly in love with the idea of bunking out with a subordinate, but it was something that they both had to put up with. 'There's just one rule,' he'd maintained, polishing his boots for the third time, 'and that rule is K-I-T. D'you know what K.I.T. stands for?' 'Ken Is a Transvestite?' Lister had offered. 'Keep It Tidy. And if you K.I.T., then we'll G.O.J.F.' He'd left this hanging in the air for effect before translating: 'Get On Just Famously.' Lister spent the rest of the evening trying to take advantage of the fact that he now had a proper bed, of sorts, for the first time in six months. Though, curiously, he'd discovered he couldn't drop off to sleep until he sat up in bed and wrapped both arms around his knees, luggage locker-style. Meanwhile, Rimmer sat at his slanting architect's desk and whiled away the time until Lights Out reading a book called: How to Overcome Your Fear of Speaking in Public. Rimmer gripped the podium tightly, the inside of his wrists pointing out towards the new intake, a trick which, his book told him, would make his audience trust him, and began his speech to Z Shift. 'My name,' he said, 'is Arnold J. Rimmer. You will call me "sir" or "First Technician". I am your shift leader. This is my very first command, and I don't intend it to be my last. What I do intend is for Z Shift to become the best, the fastest, the tightest, the most efficient Routine Maintenance, Cleaning and Sanitation Unit this ship, or any other ship in the Space Corps, has ever seen.' He paused. Silence. The book said silence could be as effective as speech, if used judiciously. Use silence, it urged. Rimmer stood there, being silent. Enough silence, he decided. More speech. 'When we do something, we do it fast and we do it right.' More silence. Still more silence. No, this was a dumb place to have silence. It just made him look like he'd forgotten what he was saying. "This ship is three miles wide, four miles deep, and nearly six miles long. But...' he paused again - a most excellent and petite silence, be congratulated himself. Very telling. '...if anywhere on it a vending machine so much as runs out of chicken soup, I want a member of Z Shift to be there within four minutes.' More silence. The best silence yet. 'You used to think your mother was your best friend. Not any more. From now on, your best friend is this...' he held aloft a three-foot-long metallic tube, with a van-twist grip and seven detachable heads. It's called a sonic super mop. It washes, it steam-cleans, it mops and it vacuums. And from now on, it never leaves your side. Wherever you go, the SSM goes with you. You work with it, you eat with it, you sleep with it.' The new members of Z Shift exchanged glances. Rimmer gave them another shot of silence. It had gone well, he thought. Nice, pointy speech. Some good silences. No! Some great silences. And he was especially proud of the macho bit at the end about the sonic super mop, which he'd lifted shamelessly from his favourite movie, God, I Love This War. Lister stood up and snapped a salute. 'Sir, permission to speak, sir!' Sloppy salute, Rimmer thought. He'd have to teach them all his own salute - the one he'd invented. The one he'd drawn diagrams of and sent off to the Space Ministry, in the hope that it would replace the passe, old-fashioned standard one. It was a great salute, and one day it would make him famous. It went thus: from the standard attention pose, the saluter brought his right arm sharply out in front of him, at a perfect angle with his body. He then twirled his wrist in five circles, to symbolize the five arms of the Space Corps, then snapped his arm back, fingers rigid, to form an equilateral triangle with his forehead; he then straightened the elbow, so the arm was pointing sideways from the body, from which position it was snapped smartly back down to his side. There were also variants: the 'Double-Rimmer' for dress occasions, where the salute was performed with both arms simultaneously, and the 'Half-Rimmer', with only one arm, and only three circles for emergency situations, when there wasn't time to carry out the 'Full-Rimmer'. 'Permission granted,' said Rimmer, returning Lister's salute with a five-loop Full-Rimmer. 'Sir...' 'Yes, Lister?' 'Is it possible to get a transfer to another shift, sir?' 'Why?' 'Well, with respect, sir, I think you're mentally unstable.' 'Sit down.' Rimmer shook his head. 'There's always one, isn't there? One wag. One clown. One imbecile.' 'Yes, sir,' Lister agreed, 'but he's not usually in charge, sir.' Laughter. This was a tricky situation. Rebellion, a loss of respect. It had to be stamped on, it had to be crushed. His book on 'Poweramics' was quite clear on that. To crush a minor mutiny, you choose the leader: the toughest, the biggest, the strongest; and you humiliate him. And the rest follow like lambs. Don't look angry. Smile. Real power, true power, is unspoken - understated. Rimmer smiled. Slowly they stopped laughing. Excellent. Time to strike. Without warning be wheeled round and pointed. 'You! On your feet!' A man with a face like moon rock hauled his two hundred and fifty pound frame onto its feet. Rimmer climbed down from the podium and slowly, casually, strolled over to face him. He looked up at the small black shark eyes, the bald bullet head, the long, matted nostril hair. He was a good eighteen inches taller than Rimmer. And Rimmer was tall. 'What are you chewing?' Rimmer said, after a suitable amount of silence. 'Tobacco.' 'Tobacco?' A grin. 'Yeah.' Defiance. Rimmer smiled and nodded, looking around the lecture theatre. 'Well. I hope you brought enough along for all of us.' The others laughed. On Rimmer's side. 'Well?' 'Nope.' Slightly nonplussed. 'Nope, sir.' Victory! 'Get rid of it.' The big man chewed thoughtfully for a few seconds. Then, suddenly, a long plume of brown sputum plopped onto the polished toe-cap of Rimmer's left boot. Rimmer looked at his left boot, then slowly raised his head. 'Some people's respect I've won already. I can see with you it's going to take a little longer. Now, get on the floor and give me fifty, mister.' 'Ppt,' said the big man, and a second stream of half-chewed tobacco arrived on Rimmer's right boot. Rimmer rocked back and forth on his heels, nodding his head and still smiling. 'Right. OK,' he said, pleasantly, 'I think that's about everything. Shift dismiss.' Slowly, Z Shift began to meander out of the lecture theatre. 'Oh, by the way...' Rimmer called after the tobacco chewer. As the man half- turned, Rimmer leapt through the air and, with a kamikaze scream, wrapped his arms and legs round the big man's frame, and they crashed into a row of chairs. As Lister left the theatre, Rimmer was having his head rhythmically beaten against one of the desk tops. BONK. 'Fine,' Rimmer was saying. BONK. 'There's nothing wrong...' BONK. '...with your reactions.' BONK. 'Just checking.' BONK. 'So you like chewing tobacco, eh?' BONK. 'Well, that's absolutely fine and dandy.' BONK. 'Perhaps you'd like me to run down to Supplies and buy you some more.' BONK. 'I think I'm going to lose consciousness now.' BONK. BONK. BONK. ELEVEN Everyone agreed it was a splendid funeral, but no one enjoyed it more than the deceased himself. 'I can't tell you how great it is, being dead,' he told everyone who would listen. It's solved all my problems.' Every off-duty member of the eleven thousand, one hundred-and-sixty-nine strong crew had packed into the vast ship canteen. McIntyre sat at the top table, a huge coffin-shaped cake containing his own effigy in marzipan before him, and listened, his ego aglow, while bis fellow officers sang his praises. Saunders, much to his own personal delight, had finally been turned off, and although initially there had been some concern about hologramatically reviving a man who had killed himself, those doubts were allayed when the reasons for McIntyre's suicide were discovered. McIntyre rose to the sound of tumultuous applause, and fingered the 'H' emblazoned on his hologramatic forehead, as over eight thousand people stamped on the floor and banged wine glasses with forks and spoons. 'Well, first I want to thank the Captain for the beautiful eulogy - uh, it was very flattering and deeply moving, and it was well worth all that time I spent writing it.' A huge laugh echoed round the canteen, and McIntyre smiled happily. 'On a serious note, I know there's a rumour going around that I committed suicide. I'd like to try and explain why I did it...' McIntyre started to talk about his gambling debts. Debts he'd incurred during his ship leave in bars on Phoebe, Dione and Rhea playing 'Toot'. 'Toot' was a banned bloodsport, involving a fight to the death between two specially-bred Vernisian fighting snails. The ferocious gastropods, with hand- sharpened horns, would meet in a six-foot square pit, and bets would be taken on the eventual victor. 'Eventual' was the word; a single butt from a Venusian fighting snail could take upwards of three hours to deliver, and the whole combat often took days. Meanwhile, the baying spectators got drunker and drunker, placing bets of wilder and wilder proportions. You could lose a lot of money playing 'Toot'. And McIntyre had. McIntyre admitted it was a cruel and pointless sport, which said much about man's inhumanity to just about everything to which he could be inhuman. But the buzz from watching two killer snails charging about slowly in the concrete pit; the roaring of the crowd as one snail drew blood, and the other retreated into its shell for hours on end... well, you had to be there to believe it. Before he knew it, McIntyre had debts amounting to almost five times his annual salary. In desperation to pay off the Ganymedian Mafia who ran the snail pits, he'd taken a massive loan from the Golden Assurance Friendly and Caring Loan Society, which, as it turned out, was also run by the Ganymedian Mafia. He didn't know it when he signed, but they charged an annual percentage rate (APR) of nine thousand eight hundred per cent. The clause in the contract which specified this took the term 'small print' into a whole new dimension. The clause was concealed in a microdot, occupying the dot of the 'i' on page three of the loan agreement, in the phrase: 'Welcome, you are now a member of the Golden Assurance family.' Startled to discover his first monthly installment was some seven times more than the original loan, he gambled what was left, and lost that, too. McIntyre wrote to the Society, explaining the situation, and a number of increasingly anxious letters were exchanged during Red Dwarf's tour of the Saturnian satellites. Eventually, McIntyre agreed to meet a representative from the company's head office when the ship docked over Mimas, to discuss a repayment plan. Duly, on the first evening in orbit round Mimas, Mcintyre donned his dress uniform and went to the coffee lounge of the Mimas Hilton, where he met three gentlemen, representatives of the Golden Assurance Friendly and Caring Loan Society who arrived in Mimas's one and only five star hotel brandishing a pair of industrial cable clippers. There, before the eyes of hotel guests casually taking coffee and scones with clotted cream, McIntyre was force-fed his own nose. He needed little further persuasion before deciding to try a new repayment plan, and finally plumped for the Golden Assurance Friendly and Caring Loan Society's Pay-By-This-Evening-And-Don't-Get-Murdered Super Discount Scheme. Half-crazed with fear, he staggered back to his office aboard Red Dwarf, briefly explained his predicament to his rubber plant, and killed himself. The beauty part of this scheme was of course that, as a hologram, he was now safe from reprisals. He could continue his life, dead and untroubled. Which is why he was telling everyone who would listen how great it was to be dead, and how it had solved all his problems. McIntyre finished his speech by thanking everyone for their understanding, and kind words, and concluded by paraphrasing Mark Twain. 'Rumours of my death,' he said, 'have been greatly understated.' Out of the eight thousand assembled, only five people got this joke, and none of them laughed. Mcintyre didn't even understand it himself; he'd been told to say it by the ship's metaphysical psychiatrist who assured him it would get a 'big laugh'. After the toast, the Captain, a short, dumpy American woman who'd had the misfortune to be born with the surname 'Kirk', made a short yet very boring speech welcoming the new intake aboard and outlining the schedule for the jag to and from Triton, before sitting down and thus signalling the beginning of McIntyrc's death disco. The huge sound system vibrated and shook as it pumped out a Hip-hop-a-Billy reggae number from a band which had been red hot for two weeks, five years previously. Two thousand crew members stood on the dance floor, swaying and sweating, while the rest sat around tables, drinking and sweating. Though they'd been aboard less than two days, all the low-lifes, ne'er-do- wells and slobs in general bad somehow found each other, kindred spirits, and were sitting around in noisy, moronic pockets having drinking competitiom. Equally, all the ambitious career-types had somehow been sucked together, and were drinking low alcohol white wine, or slimline mineral water, and talking intensely about work. Except for Phil. For some reason, Phil Burroughs had accidentally got himself attached to Lister's group. Phil was a serious-minded academy undergrad on a two-year attachment. It would be a full twenty-four hours before he realized he had joined the wrong group, and had absolutely nothing in common with any of the people with whom he was presently sharing his evening. In the meantime, Petersen was pouring a pint of beer into his jacket pocket. "That's my beer! What the hell are you doing?' screamed Phil. 'It's just my way,' Petersen beamed charmingly, 'of saying it's your round, pal.' Phil got up and staggered to the bar. Although there were only five of them at the table, Lister, Petersen, Chen, Selby and himself, he'd been told to order twenty pints of beer. For some reason he couldn't understand, every round consisted of four pints each. 'Saves on shoe leather,' Petersen had pointed out. It didn't seem to matter whether or not you wanted them, either. Each round Phil had requested a low alcohol white wine, and each round he'd been delivered four pints of foaming Japanese lager. He knew for a fact Chen and Petersen were filching at least two of his four pints, but that was absolutely fine with him; his top limit was three pints a night, and he'd had seven already. Three identical barmen asked for his order. He asked for twenty pints, laid his head in a beery pool on the bar, and promptly fell asleep. Back at the table. Lister finished his story about how he'd been shanghaied aboard. He'd embellished it only slightly. In his version, for instance, both the Shore Patrolwomen had seduced him in a Photo-U-Kwik booth, and that's why he had that slightly shocked expression on his passport photograph. Petersen took his turn. He'd arrived on Mimas on a nuclear waste dump ship called Pax Vert, which had ejected its putrid load on the Saturnian moon of Tethys, and was now returning to Earth. He was trying to work his passage across the solar system to Triton, where he'd bought a house. As he explained, since Triton was on the very edge of the solar system, being over two-and-a- half billion miles away from Earth, house prices there were really reasonable. For just two thousand dollarpounds, Petersen had bought a twenty-five bedroom home dome, with twelve en-suite bathrooms and a zero-gee squash court. 'At first I thought there was something wrong with it,' he said, showing Lister a sketch he'd been sent by the estate agent, 'but look, it's beautiful.' 'They didn't send you a photograph?' said Lister, his eyes narrowing. 'No, you can't photograph in a methane atmosphere.' 'You're telling me they haven't installed an oxygen atmosphere yet?' 'No. I'll have to wander around my house in a spacesuit. But that's why it's so cheap!' He quickly downed two pints. 'You ought to move there. There's a plot of about two thousand miles right next door to me. I'm telling you - it's a great investment. Ten, twelve years, they have plans to install oxygen. Can you imagine what will happen to house prices once the atmosphere's breathable? They'll rocket, baby!' Lister looked at him. Was he serious? Yes, he was. 'No, listen,' Petersen continued. 'Do you know Triton is the only moon in the whole solar system which rotates in the opposite direction to the planet it's orbiting?' Petersen demonstrated the scientific principle by rotating his head and swooshing his beer glass around it the other way. Thin, fizzy lager cascaded onto the already sodden table. 'Maybe,' said Lister, who was seriously beginning to wonder whether Petersen was brain-damaged, 'but that's no reason to buy a house there.' 'True,' agreed Petersen, 'but if ever you have guests, it's a nice talking point.' The music changed; a Johnny Cologne number: Press Your Lumps Against Mine. It was smooch time. There was a loud scraping of chairs as people stood up and guided their partners onto the already packed dance floor. A huge, multi-limbed beast rippled, ebbing and flowing, contracting and expanding to the gentle sway of the music. Lister suddenly found himself alone at the table, the others lost in the undulating, pulsating mass of smooching bodies. He squinted drunkenly around the vast disco. So many people. People dancing, people touching, people laughing, people talking, people kissing. So many people. In just over seven months, every one of them would be dead. TWELVE Five months later. Lister stared out of the sleeping quarters' viewport window and saw nothing. Just a few, very distant stars, and an awful lot of black. It was pretty much the same view he'd had for the past twenty-one weeks. At first he'd found it awe-inspiring. Then, slowly, that had given way to just plain dull. Then very dull. Then deeply dull. And now it was something below deeply dull, and even below deeply, hideously dull: a word for which had yet to be devised. It was, he thought, even more mind-numbingly, deeply, hideously dull than an all-nighter at the Scala, watching a twelve-hour season of back-to- back Peter Greenaway movies. If you went to the British Library and changed every word in every single book to the word 'dull', and then read out all the books in a boring monotone, you would come pretty close to describing Lister's life on board Red Dwarf. He looked at his watch. 19.50 ship time. He was waiting for Petersen to show up, and they were going to go down to the Copacabana Hawaiian Cocktail Bar to spend the evening exacly in the same way they'd spent one hundred and thirty- three of the last one hundred and forty-seven evenings: drinking hugely elaborate San Francisco Earthquakes from plastic coconuts, with Chen and Selby, and failing to meet any interesting women. Or, more to the point, any interesting women who were interested in them. Dull and gruesomely monotonous as his social life was, Lister knew for a fact it was at least four hundred and seventy-four times more interesting than his working life on Z Shift under Rimmer. Rimmer was sitting at his slanting architect's desk, under the pink glow of his study lamp, with a tray of watercolours, making out a revision timetable in preparation for his astronavigation exam. In all, he'd taken the exam eleven times. Nine times, he'd got an 'F' for fail, and on two occasions he'd got an 'X' for unclassified. But he persevered. Each night be persevered, under the pink glow. Each night he nibbled away at his skyscraper-high stack of files which stored his loose- leaf revision notes. He nibbled away, trying to digest little morsels of knowledge. Little morsels that stuck in his gullet, that wouldn't go down. It was like trying to eat wads of cotton wool. But be persevered. Rimmer wanted to become an officer. He ached for it. He yearned for it. It wasn't the most important thing in his life. It was his life. Given the opportunity, he would gladly have had his eyes scooped out if it meant he could become an officer. He would happily have inserted two red hot needles simultaneously through both his ears so they met in the middle of his brain, and tap-danced the title song from 42nd Street barefoot on a bed of molten lava while giving oral sex to a male orang-utan with dubious personal hygiene, if only it meant attaining that single, elusive golden bar of an Astronavigation Officer, Fourth Class. But he had to do something much more demanding, much more impossible, and much more unpleasant. He had to pass the astronavigation exam. Born on Io, one of Jupiter's moons, thirty-one years earlier, he was the youngest of four brothers. Frank was a gnat's wing away from becoming the youngest captain in the Space Corps. John was the youngest captain in the Space Corps. Howard had graduated third in his class at the academy and was now a test pilot for the new generation of demi-light speed Zippers at Houston, Earth. 'My boys,' his mother would say, 'my clever, clever boys. Johnny the Captain, Frankie the First Officer, Howie the Test Pilot, and Arnold... Arnold, the chicken soup machine cleaner. If you could sue sperm, I'd sue the sperm that made you.' 'I'll do it, Mother. One day, I will become an officer.' 'And on that day,' his mother would say, 'Satan will be going to work in a snow plough.' If Rimmer hadn't been such a dedicated anal retentive, he would have realized the simple truth: he wasn't cut out for Space. He wasn't cut out for it. He would have realized he wasn't the slightest bit interested in astronavigation. Or quantum, mechanics. Or any of the things he needed to be interested in to pass the exams and become an officer. Three times he'd failed the entrance exam to the Academy. And so, one night after reading the life story of Horatio Nelson, he'd signed up with a merchant vessel as a lowly Third Technician, with the object of quickly working his way through the ranks and sitting the astronavigation exam independently, and thereby earning his commission: the glimmering gold bar of officerhood. That had been six years ago. Six long years on Red Dwarf, during which he'd leapt from being a lowly Third Technician to being a lowly First Technician. In the meantime, his brothers went for ever onward, up the ziggurat of command. Their success filled him with such bitterness, such bile, that even a Christmas card from one of them -just the reminder that they were alive, and successful - would reduce him to tears of jealousy. And now he sat there, under the pink glow of his student's table lamp ('Reduces eyestrain! Promotes concentration! Aids retention!' was the lamp manufacturer's proud boast), preparing to sit the astronavigarion exam for the thirteenth time. He found the process of revising so gruellingly unpleasant, so galling, so noxious, that, like most people faced with tasks they find hateful, he devised more and more elaborate ways of not doing it in a 'doing it' kind of way. In fact, it was now possible for Rimmer to revise solidly for three months and not learn anything at all. The first week of study, he would always devote to the construction of a revision timetable. At school Rimmer was always at his happiest colouring in geography maps: under his loving hand, the ice-fields of Europa would be shaded a delicate blue, the subterranean silica deposits of Ganymede would be rendered, centimetre by painstaking centimetre, a bright and powerful yellow, and the regions of frozen methane on Pluto slowly became a luscious, inviting green. Up until the age of thirteen, he was constantly head of the class in geography. After this point, it became necessary to know and understand the subject, and Rimmer's marks plunged to the murky depths of 'F' for fail. He brought his love of cartography to the making of revision timetables. Weeks of patient effort would be spent planning, designing and creating a revision schedule which, when finished, were minor works of art. Every hour of every day was subdivided into different study periods, each labelled in his lovely, tiny copperplate hand; then painted over in watercolours, a different colour for each subject, the colours gradually becoming bolder and more urgent shades as the exam time approached. The effect was as if a myriad tiny rainbows had splintered and sprinkled across the poster-sized sheet of creamwove card. The only problem was this: because the timetables often took seven or eight weeks, and sometimes more, to complete, by the time Rimmer had finished them the exam was almost on him. He'd then have to cram three months of astronavigation revision inlo a single week. Gripped by an almost deranging panic, he'd then decide to sacrifice the first two days of that final week to the making of another timetable. This time for someone who had to pack three months of revision into five days. Because five days now had to accommodate three months' work, the first thing that had to go was sleep. To prepare for an unrelenting twenty-four hours a day sleep-free schedule, Rimmer would spend the whole of the first remaining day in bed - to be extra, ultra fresh, so he would be able to squeeze three whole months of revision into four short days. Within an hour of getting up the next morning, he would feel inexplicably exhausted, and start early on his supply of Go-Double-Plus caffeine tablets. By lunchtime he'd overdose, and have to make the journey down to the ship's medical unit for a sedative to help him calm down. The sedative usually sent him off to sleep, and he'd wake up the following morning with only three days left, and an anxiety that was so crippling he could scarcely move. A month of revision to be crammed into each day. At this point he would start smoking. A lifelong non-smoker, he'd become a forty-a-day man. He'd spend the whole day pacing up and down his room, smoking three or four cigarettes at a time, stopping occasionally to stare at the titles in his bookcase, not knowing which one to read first, and popping twice the recommended dosage of dog-worming tablets, which be erroneously believed to contain amphetamine. Realizing he was getting nowhere, he'd try to get rid of his soul-bending tension by treating himself to an evening in one of Red Dwarf's quieter bars. There he would sit, in the plastic oak-beamed 'Happy Astro' pub, nursing a small beer, grimly trying to be light-hearted and totally relaxed. Two small been and three hours of stomach-knotting relaxation later, he would go back to his bunk and spend half the night awake, praying to a God he didn't believe in for a miracle that couldn't happen. Two days to go, and ravaged by the combination of anxiety, nicotine, caffeine tablets, alcohol he wasn't used to, dog-worming pills, and overall exhaustion, he would sleep in till mid-afternoon. After a long scream, he would rationalize that the day was a total writeoff, and the rest of the afternoon would be spent shopping for the three best alarm docks money could buy. This would often take five or nx hours, and he would arrive back at his sleeping quarters exhausted, but knowing be was fully prepared for the final day's revision before his exam. Waking at four-thirty in the morning, after exercising, showering and breakfasting, he would sit down to prepare a final, final revision timetable, which would condense three months of revision into twelve short hours. This done, he would give up and go back to bed. Maybe he didn't know a single thing about astronavigation, but at least he'd be fresh for the exam the next day. Which is why Rimmer failed exams. Which is why he'd received nine 'F's for fail and two 'X's for unclassified. The first 'X' he'd achieved when he'd actually managed to get hold of some real ampbetamines, gone into spasm and collapsed two minutes into the exam; and the second when anxiety got so much the better of him his subconscious forced him to deny his own existence, and he had written 'I am a fish* five hundred times on every single answer sheet. He'd even gone out for extra paper. What was more shocking than anything was that he'd thought he'd done quite well. Well, this time it was going to be different, he thought, as he sat carefully colouring all the quantum mechanics revision periods in diagonal lines of Prussian blue on a yellow ochre background, while Lister stared out of the viewport window. Petersen dumped noisily into the room and did his traditional parody of the full Double-Rimmer salute, which ended with him slapping his face several times and throwing himself onto the floor. The first time Lister had seen it, it was funny. This was the two hundred and fifty-second time, and it was beginning to lose its appeal. Lister and Petersen then went down to the Copacabana Hawaiian Cocktain Bar for the hundred and thirty-fourth time. Only, this time Lister did something incredibly stupid. He fell in love. Hopelessly and helplessly in love. THIRTEEN Third Console Officer Kristinc Kochanski had a face. That was the first thing Lister noticed about her. It wasn't a beautiful face. But it was a nice face. It wasn't a face that could launch a thousand ships. Maybe two ships and a small yacht. That was, until she smiled. When she smiled, her eyes lit up like a pinball machine when you win a bonus game. And she smiled a lot. Lister could perhaps have survived the smile. But it was when he found the smile was attached to a sense of humour that he became irretrievably lost. They were both standing at the bar, queuing to get a drink, and Lister was looking at her in a not-looking-at-her kind of way: in the bar mirror, in the reflection in his beer glass, over his shoulder, pretending to look at Petersen, at the ceiling just above her head, and occasionally, because it was permitted, directly at her. His heart sank when a tanned, white-uniformed officer, who obviously knew her, came up and touched her on the shoulder. Touched her on the shoulder - just like she was some kind of ordinary person. It really made Lister mad. The tanned, white-uniformed officer noticed a book sticking out other black jacket pocket. Lister had noticed it too. It was called Learn Japanese, by Dr P. Brewis. '"Learn Japanese"?' the officer snorted. 'Talk about pretentious!' What she said next tipped Lister over the edge. 'Pretentious?' she placed her palm on her chest, 'Watashi?' Lister didn't know any Japanese but he guessed, rightly, that it was an adaptation of the 'Pretentious? Moi?' joke. The officer just looked at her blankly. She got her drinks and went back to her seat, while Lister was still trying to think of something to say which would start a conversation. For the next hour Petersen droned on about the supply station at die Uranian moon, Miranda, where Red Dwarf was due to stop off for supplies in seven weeks. It was to be their only shore leave between Saturn and Triton, and Petersen was telling him what a great time they were going to have. But Lister wasn't listening. He was looking across the crowded cocktail bar, trying to calculate the amount of drink left in the glasses of the girl with the pinball smile and her female companion, so he could be at the bar just as she arrived, and casually offer to buy her a drink. Who was he kidding? How do you casually offer to buy someone a drink, without making it sound like 'I want you to have my babies'? If he hadn't been crazy about her, it wouldn't have been a problem. Lister never had any trouble asking women for a date, provided he wasn't too keen on them. When he was, which didn't happen too often, he had all the charm, wit, and self-possession of an Alsatian dog after a head-swap operation. She got up to go to the bar. Lister got up, too. They exchanged smiles, ordered drinks and went back to their separate tables. Damn.. Smeg. Blew it. She got up again. 'My round,' said Petersen, rising. Lister thrust him back in his chair and went to the bar. They exchanged smiles and 'Hi's this time, ordered their drinks, and went back to their separate tables. Damn. Smeg. Blew it again. She'd hardly sat down before she was getting up again. The two girls' glasses were full. She's going for peanuts, thought Lister. 'You want some peanuts?' he asked Petersen. 'No, thanks.' 'I'll go and get some.' They stood at the bar again. They exchanged smiles again. Then she introduced herself and asked him out for a date. And so it began. Lister became a walking cliche. His senses were heightened, so even the foul, recycled air of the ship tasted crisp and spring-like. He went off his food. He stopped drinking. Pop lyrics started to mean something to him. Magically, he became better-looking; he'd heard that this happened, but he'd never really believed it. He got out of bed before his alarm clock went off - unheard of. He started to marvel at the view out of the viewport window. And his face acquired three new expressions. Three expressions which he'd stolen from her. Three expressions which, on her, he found adorable. He wasn't aware of even copying them, and he certainly wasn't aware how stupid he looked when he pulled them. And even if he had been aware, he wouldn't have cared. Because Third Console Officer, Kristine Kochanski, a.k.a. 'Babes', a.k.a. 'Ange' (short for Angel), a.k.a. 'Krissie', a.k.a. 'K.K.', 'Sweetpea', and a host of others too nauseating to recount, was madly, electrically in love with him. Lister's all-time favourite movie was Frank Capra's It's A Wonderful Life, and, just to make things totally perfect, it happened to be Kochanski's too. They sat in bed - Kochanski's bunk-mate, Barbara, had been chased away to the ship's cinema yet again - eating hot dogs doused in mustard, and watching, for the third consecutive night, It's A Wonderful Life on the sleeping quarters' vid-screen. Suddenly, in the middle of the scene where Jimmy Stewart's father dies. Lister found himself for the first time in his life talking about his own father's death. It wasn't, of course, his real father, but he was only six at the time and he didn't know then that he'd been adopted. It had been a gloriously hot day in mid-summer, and the six-year-old Lister was given toys and presents by everyone. It was better than Christmas. He remembered wishing it the time that a few more people would die, so he could complete his Lego set. She held his hand and listened. 'My grandmother tried to explain. She said he'd gone away, and he wasn't coming back. So I wanted to know where, and she told me he was very happy, and he'd gone to the same place as my goldfish.' Lister toyed absently with his plaited locks. I thought they'd flushed him down the bog. I used to stand with my head down the loo, and talk to him. I thought he was just round the U-bend. In the end, they had to take me to a child psychologist, because they found me with my head down the pan, reading him the football scores.' This had never stuck Lister as being funny. But when Kochanski started roaring with laughter, he started laughing too. It was like a geyser going off. Something was exorcized. And as they lay in the crumb-laden sheets, wrapped in each other's arms, giggling like idiots - and even though they'd only been dating for three-and-a-half short weeks - Lister knew more certainly than he'd ever known anything in his life before that they'd be together, forever. FOURTEEN Seven months out into space, while Rimmer sat at his slanting architect's desk under the pink glow of his study lamp. Lister stared out of the sleeping quarters' viewport window, longing to be bored again. He'd been not going out with Kochanski now for three weeks. The whole affair, the glorious 'forever' he'd imagined, had lasted just over a month. Then one evening in her sleeping quarters, as Lister arrived to take her to a movie, she'd told him. she wanted to break it off. He'd laughed. He thought it was a joke. But it wasn't. She'd been seeing 'Tom' (or was ie 'Tim'?), a Flight Navigation Officer, for almost two years. Tom or Tim (it may have been Tony) had left her for a fling with some brunette in Catering. And Lister had been a rebound thing. She hadn't realized it at first, but when Tom, Tim, Tony or Terry, or whatever the smeg he was called, had turned up at her door, having dumped the brunette in Catering, she'd gone scurrying back. There were tears, there were apologies, and pathetic cliched platitudes: they could still be friends; if he met Trevor, he'd really like him; she wished she were two people, so she could love both of them; ad nauseum. She'd returned the blue jumper he'd left. She'd returned his DAT tapes, and offered to give back the necklace he'd bought her, which, of course, he'd declined. And that was that. Except it wasn't. Because now she was everywhere. Everything he did, he did without her. Everywhere he went, he went without her. When he went shopping, he didn't go shopping, he went shopping without Kochanski. When he went to the bar, he didn't go to the bar, he went to the bar without Kochanski, She'd infected every part of his life. His mental map of the ship now judged all distances in relation to her sleeping quarters, or the Drive Room, where she worked. He wasn't walking on such-and-such a corridor, he was walking on such- and-such a corridor which was n floors above or n floors below where she was. at that precise moment. So he lay on his bunk, staring out of the viewport window, longing for the anaesthetic of the stupifying monotony which he used to feel two short months earlier. His only relief from the Kochanski blues had been three days' planet leave on the alcohol-dry Uranian moon, Miranda, when Red Dwarf had docked for supplies. Three days drinking cola and playing video machines with Petersen. Petersen, who'd got drunk every night of his life since he was twelve, was so thrilled with the benefits of being sober, he'd gone teetotal overnight. So their excursions down to the Copacabana were a thing of the past, denying Lister his one last refuge. He sighed like a senile dog and looked down at Rimmer, hard at work. 'Do you fancy going for a drink?' he asked, knowing the answer would be 'No' even before he'd finished saying the word 'Do'. 'No,' said Rimmer, without looking up. 'That's a surprise.' 'As it happens, I am going out tonight. Just not with you.' 'What about your revision?' Rimmer had decided to change. His latest diree-month revision timetable had been constructed within two hours. And four hours a day, come what may, he read his course books, made notes, and revised in a sensible way. And revising in a sensible way obviously meant an adequate provision for leisure time. 'Well, where are you going, then?' 'Out.' 'Where?' Rimmer ignored him. He was going to spend the evening not getting any older. He was going to spend it in a stasis booth. Red Dwarf, like most of the older ships, was equipped with stasis booths for interstellar travel. A hundred years earlier, travelling to other star systems had been considered economically and philosophically interesting. But not any more. To travel the vast distances involved, even with craft which could achieve demi-lightspeed, took decades. Necessity being the mother of invention, the stasis booth was duly invented. Basically, it was a fool-proof form of suspended animation, but instead of freezing the body cryogenically, and having all the attendant revival problems, the stasis booth simply froze time. Once activated, the booth created a static field of Time; in the same way X- rays can't penetrate lead. Time couldn't penetrate a stasis field. An object caught within the field became a non-event mass with a quantum probability of zero. In other words, the object remained in exactly the same state, at exactly the same age, until it was released. Most of the important groundwork for Time- freezing and stasis theory had been done by Einstein in the 1950s. Unfortunately, just as he was on the verge of a breakthrough, he started dating Marilyn Monroe, and basically lost interest in the project. Even after their short affair was over, he found it difficult to concentrate on quantum theory, and spent much of the rest of his life taking cold showers. His notes on the theory were later discovered and developed - and the stasis booth was born. For a period, ships full of astros in stasis booths were hurled out of our solar system, and interstellar travel enjoyed its golden age. The big hope, of course, was that they'd contact intelligent life. They didn't. Not even a moderately intelligent plant. Not even a stupid plant. Nothing. And it was surmised correctly, although it wasn't confirmed for a further two thousand years, that Mankind was completely and totally and inexplicably alone. In all of the universe. In all of the universe, the planet Earth was the only planet with any life forms. That's all there was. Interstellar travel was abandoned as a total waste of time. And the returning stellarnauts tried to reintegrate into society and cope with the fact that many of them were now fifty years younger than their own children. This led to curious generation gap problems, of which the greetings cards industry took full advantage. Rimmer had a keycard to one of Red Dwarf's stasis booths, which he used whenever he could. While morons like Lister and Petersen were urinating their lives down the gutter in the Copacabana Hawaiian Cocktail Bar, he was in a stasis booth, not existing, not getting any older. It made great good sense to Rimmer. Take tonight. There was nothing he particularly wanted to do. He'd achieved all the aims on his daily goal list, and under normal circumstances he'd just lounge around, doing not very much, and eventually go to bed. As it was, when they took to their bunks that night, Rimmer would be three hours less older than Lister. Because he wouldn't have lived those three hours: he'd have saved them. Saved them for when he really needed them. True, technically, he wouldn't be living. But he didn't particularly want to live tonight. He wasn't in the mood. It was just like a bank, only, instead of saving up money, he was saving up time. He'd been doing it, on and off, for about five years, and in this way he used up most of his free leisure time. Most Sundays were spent boothing. And then, usually, three evenings a week, for three hours or so. And obviously, if there were any bank holidays, he'd take full advantage of the facility not to exist, and pinch back a few hours from Father Time. In just five years he'd saved three hundred and sixty-nine full days. Over a full Earth year. In five years, he'd only lived for four. Although his birth certificate said he was thirty-one, technically he was still only thirty. Occasionally Rimmer reflected that his boothing could possibly be the reason why he didn't have any friends, but, as he pointed out to himself, if having friends meant having to hang around and get older with them, then he wasn't sure he wanted any. Especially since the perks were so astonishing. He often looked in the full-length mirror, when Lister wasn't there, and reflected that, although he was thirty-one, he still had the body of a thirty-year-old. If he could maintain this routine, by the time his birth certificate said he was ninety he'd actually only be a very sprightly seventy-eight-year-old. Pretty a-smegging-mazing, eh? Lister slumped off to try and persuade Peterson to go for a drink. Rimmer watched him go, then showered and changed, treated himself to a little aftershave, and went off to spend the very last evening of his life not existing. FIFTEEN On the very last morning of his life, Rimmer strode into the lecture theatre to give Z Shift their work schedule for the day. 'OK, men,' he said as always, 'Listen up.' As always the whole of Z Shift inclined their beads to one side and pointed their ears at the ceiling. But, as always, Rimmer missed this as he turned his back to pull down the blackboard he'd prepared the day before. As always his schedule wasn't there. What was there was a crudely-drawn cartoon of a man making love to a kangaroo, wearing hugely exaggerated footwear covered in brown spit, and underneath, in the same crude hand, 'Old Tobacco Boots goes down under!' Nobody laughed. Rimmer looked round at a sea of blank faces. He'd long since given up referring to the blackboard insults. 'OK,' he said, consulting his notes, 'Today's schedule. Turner, Wilkinson: we've had a number of reports that machine 15455 is dispensing blackcurrant juice instead of chicken soup. While you're down there. Corridor 14: alpha 12 needs new Crunchie bars. Thereafter, I want you to go down to the reference library and hygienize all the headsets in the language lab. Saxon and Burroughs: continue painting the engineers' mess. And I want that finished today. McHullock, Schmidt, Palmer: as yesterday. Burd, Dooley, Pixon: laundrettes on East alpha 555 report no less than twenty-four driers out of commission. I want them up and drying by nightfall. Also, there's an unconfirmed rumour that the cigar machine in the officers' club is nearly empty. Now, it may be nothing, but just in case: for pity's sake, stay by a phone.' A paper dart whistled past his head. 'OK, roll out. Lister, you're with me today.' The men began to shuffle out. 'Why me?' Lister moaned. 'Because it's your turn,' As always, just before the first man reached the door, Rimmer called out his team chant, which he hoped would catch on. 'Hey, and remember: "We are tough, and we are mean - Rimmer's Z Shift gets things clean".' Z Shift shuffled out silently. Two of the three worst things that ever happened to Rimmer happened to Rimmer on this day. The worst thing that ever happened was, of course, his death. But that was a clear twelve hours away. The second worst thing that ever happened had happened thirteen months earlier and it was so horrible his subconscious had created a new sub-department to hide it from his waking thoughts. It involved a bowl of soup. The third worst thing that ever happened to Rimmer happened to Rimmer shortly after ten o'clock, as he and Lister made their way towards Corridor I: gamma 755. to check, just to put Rimmer's mind at ease, that there was enough shower gel in the women's wash-room. At first it was Lister who had a horrible thing happen to him, as he pushed his squeaky four-wheel hygiene truck along the steel mesh floor. First Technician Petrovitch rounded the corner. Rimmer didn't like Petrovitch. Petrovitch, three years his junior, was his equal in rank, and leader of A Shift - the best shift. A Shift got all the plum jobs, the serious, technical work, repairing porous circuits, and, if that weren't bad enough, Petrovitch had taken and passed the astronavigation exam the exact same time Rimmer had made his claims to fishhood, and was now merely waiting for his orders to be processed before he got his gold bar and took up the rank of Astronavigation Officer, Fourth Class. Also, he was good- looking, popular, charming and amiable. All in all, as far as Rimmer could see, there wasn't a single thing to like about Petrovitch. There'd been a wild rumour some months back that Petrovitch was a drug dealer. And Rimmer did whatever he could to spread it. He didn't know whether it was true, but, God, he hoped it was. Whenever he was feeling low, he entertained himself with visions of Petrovitch having his badges of rank ripped from his uniform, and being led away in manacles. Still, there was no evidence that it was true, so all Rimmer could do was keep spreading those malicious rumours, and hoping. 'What the smeg is wrong with your bleepers? I've been trying to get hold of you for an hour,' said Petrovitch. 'Lister, the Captain wants to see you.' Rimmer looked dumbfounded. Why should the Captain want to see Lister? In the ordinary course of things. Lister, being a lowly Third Technician, should go the whole trip without ever meeting the Captain. Unless, thought Rimmer, brightening, he's in very, very deep smegola indeed. And by the slightly sick look of Lister's smile, Rimmer confidently surmised the very same thought had occurred to him. 'Why does she want to see me?' 'I think you know why,' said Petrovitch, his usual geniality completely absent. Lister dragged himself off towards the Xpress lift. '0h dear,' said Rimmer, breezily. '0h dear, oh dear, oh dear.' He tutted and shook his head. 'Dearie me. Dearie. dearie, dearie me.' Petrovitch didn't smile; he made to follow Lister, but then stopped and turned. 'What are you doing with Lister, anyway? It's five past ten.' 'So?' said Rimmer. 'I thought you were taking the astronavigation exam.' 'That's November the twenty-seventh, you square-jawed chump,' said Rimmer, with naked contempt. 'No, it's October the twenty-seventh.' 'I think, Petrovitch, I know when my own exam is, thank you so very, very much.' 'My bunk-mate is taking it today.' 'Hollerbach?' 'Yeah. He went up at ten.' Rammer's smile remained exactly where it was, while the rest of his face sagged like a bloodhound's. He looked at his watch. 10.07. He tapped it a couple of times, and walked off without saying anything. Rimmer arrived, breathless, back at the sleeping quarters. He skidded to a halt in front of his timetable. His eyes scanned the chart for an error. He couldn't find one. He couldn't find one for a whole two minutes. Then he froze. In his haste not to dwell on the construction of the chart, somehow he'd included two Septembers. 'August, September, September, October, November', ran the new Rimmerian calendar. How could I have included September twice, and not noticed? thought Rimmer, sucking on his fist. This is what happens when you spend most of your social life not existing. He looked at his watch. 10.35. He'd missed thirty-five minutes of a three-hour exam. A strange calmness overtook him. Well, he could still get to the exam by, say, 10.45. If he kept his answers short and pertinent, it was still more than possible to pass. So far, so good. What would be slightly trickier was cramming a whole month's revision into minus thirty-five minutes. Thirty-five minutes was hard enough, but minus thirty-five minutes - well, you'd have to be Dr Who. As always at crisis times in his life, Rimmer asked himself the question: 'What would Napoleon do?' Something French, he thought. Probably munch on a croissant, and decide to invade Russia. Not realty relevant, he decided, in this particular scenario. What, then... what, then? The seconds ticked away. Then it came to him. He knew exactly what he must do. Cheat. Rimmer took out a black felt tip pen, stripped off his shirt and trousers, and began work. He had, he estimated, twenty minutes to copy as much of his textbooks onto his body as humanly possible. SIXTEEN Lister had never been up to the Drive Room before. It was enormous. Hundreds of people scurried along the network of gantries stretching above him. Banks of programmers in white officers' uniforms clacked away at computer keyboards, in front of multi-coloured flashing screens arranged in a series of horseshoe shapes around the massive chamber. Skutters, the small service droids with three-fingered clawed heads, joined to their motorized bases by triple-jointed necks, whizzed between the various computer terminals, transporting sheets of data. Occasionally a voice could be heard above the unrelenting jabber of hundreds of people talking at once. 'Stop-start oA3! Stop-start oA3! Thank you! At last! Stop-start oA4' Is anybody listening to me?!' Lister followed Petrovitch as he zigzagged through a maze of towering columns of identical hard disc drives and people pushed past them, desperate to get back to wherever they had to get back to. Up above them, Holly's bald-headed digitalized face dominated the whole of the ceiling, patiently answering questions and solving quandaries, while dispensing relevant data updates from other areas of the ship. Through the computer hardware Lister caught sight of Kochanski, expertly clicking away at a computer keyboard, happily going about her business, just as if nothing had happened. Lister didn't exactly expect her to be sobbing guiltily onto her keyboard. But smiling? Actively smiling? It was obscene. Lister remembered reading in one of Rimmer's Strange Science mags that an Earth biochemist claimed he'd isolated the virus which caused Love. According to him, it was an infectious germ which was particularly virulent for the first few weeks, but then, gradually, the body recovered. Looking at Kochanski merrily tippy-tapping away. Lister was inclined to believe the biochemist had a point. She'd shrugged him off like a bout of dysentery. She'd recovered from him like he wax a dose of 'flu. She was fine and dandy. Back to normal. They climbed the gantry steps to the Admin level, where glass-fronted offices wound round the entire chamber, like the private boxes which skirted the London Jets Zero-Gee football stadium. Five minutes later they arrived outside the Captain's office. Petrovitch knocked, and they went in. 'Lister, sir,' said Petrovitch. and left. The office looked like it had been newly-burgled and freshly-bombed. The Captain was mumbling into a phone buried beneath gigantic reams of computer print-out, surrounded by open ledgers and piles of memoranda. Lister shifted uncomfortably and waited for her to finish her call. 'Well, you see he does exactly that,' finished the Captain, and before the phone had even hit its holder, and without looking up, she said: 'Where's the cat?' 'What?' said Lister. 'Where's the cat?' repeated the Captain. 'What cat?' 'I'm going to ask you one last time,' she said, finally looking up: 'Where is the cat?' 'Let me get this straight,' said Lister. 'You think I know something about a cat, right?' 'Don't be smart.' The Captain was actually smiling with anger. 'Where is it?' 'I don't know what you're talking about.' 'Lister, not only are you so stupid you bring an unquarantined animal aboard. Not only that,' she paused, 'you have your photograph taken with the cat, and send it to be processed in the developing lab. So, let's make this the last chorus. Where's the cat?' 'What cat?' 'This one,' she shouted, pushing a photograph into Lister's face. 'This goddam cat!' Lister looked at the photograph of himself sitting in what were unmistakably his sleeping quarters, holding what was unmistakably a small black cat. 'Oh, that cat.' 'Where'd you get it? Mimas?' 'Miranda. When we stopped for supplies.' 'Don't you realize it could be carrying anything? Anything. What were you thinking of?' 'I just felt sorry for her. She was wandering the streets. Her fur was all hanging off...' 'Her fur was hanging off? Oh, this gets better and better.' Two of the Captain's phones were ringing, but she didn't answer them. 'And she had this limp, and she'd walk a few steps, then let out this scream, then walk a few more steps and scream again.' 'Well, now I'm screaming, Lister. I want that cat, and I want it now! D'you think we have quarantine regulations just for the hell of it? Just to make life a bit more unbearable? Well, we don't. We have them to safeguard the crew. A spaceship is a closed system. A contagious disease has nowhere else to go. Everybody gets it.' 'She's better now. Fur's grown back. I've fixed her leg. She's fine.' 'It's impossible to tell. You got the cat from a space colony. There are diseases out there, new diseases. The locals develop an immunity. Now, get that cat down to the lab. Double-time.' 'Sir...' 'You're still here, Lister.' 'What are you going to do with the cat?' 'I'm going to have it cut up, and run tests on it.' 'Are you going to put it back together when you've finished?' The Captain closed her eyes. 'You're not, are you?' persisted Lister. 'You're going to kill it.' 'Yes, Lister, that's exactly what I'm going to do. I'm going to kill it.' 'Well, with respect, sir,' said Lister, taking a cigarette from his hat band, 'what's in it for the cat?' Lister smiled. The Captain didn't. 'Lister, give me the cat.' Lister shook his head. 'We'll find it, anyway.' 'No, you won't.' 'Let me put it like this' - the Captain reclined back in her chair - 'give me the frigging cat.' 'Look, she's fine, there's nothing wrong with her.' 'Give me the cat.' 'Apart from anythitig else, she's pregnant.' 'She's what? I want that cat.' Lister shook his head again. 'Do you want to go into stasis for the rest of the jag and lose three years' wages?' 'No.' 'Do you want to hand over the cat?' 'No.' 'Choose.' SEVENTEEN 11.05 Rimmer hurried out of the lift and down Corridor 4: delta 799 towards the exam hall. Under his high-neck zipped flightsuit he had everything he needed to pass the exam. On his right thigh, in tiny script, were all the basic principles of quantum mechanics. Time dilation formulae covered his right calf. Heisenberg's uncertainty principle took up most of his left leg, while porous circuit theory and continuum hypotheses filled his forearms. Rimmer had never done anything illegal before. He hadn't so much as got a parking ticket on his home moon, Io. He'd never even fiddled his expenses, which, quite frankly, even the Captain did. He'd never cheated; never. Not because he was of high moral character, but simply because he was scared. He was terrified of being caught. He walked into the clinically white exam room. The adjucating officer glanced at his watch and nodded towards the one empty desk, where an exam paper lay face-down, and returned to reading his novel. He knows, thought Rimmer, his face glowing like Jupiter's Red Spot. He knows from the way I walked into the room. He knows. Rimmer ducked his body low into his chair, so just his head remained above the table top, and peered past the backs of the examinees in front of him, waiting for the adjudicator to make his move. Waiting for him to leap forward and rip off his flimsy flightsuit, exposing his shame: his illustrated body, Rimmer's cheating frame. For a full ten minutes Rimmer watched the officer quietly eading his novel. All right, thought Rimmer, play it like that. The old cat and mouse game. Another ten minutes went by. Still the officer taunted him by doing nothing. Nothing. At 11.45 Rimmer decided the adjudicator didn't know, and it was safe to begin. Safe to... cheat! He turned over the exam paper and started to read the questions. Something appeared to be sucking oxygen out of the room, and he seemed to have to take two breaths to his usual one, just to keep conscious. Buh-BUB. Buh-BUB. Buh-BUB! His heartbeat was deafening; when someone turned round, he was convinced they were going to say: 'Can you keep your heartbeat down a bit? I'm trying to concentrate.' 'ASTRONAVIGATION EXAMINATION - PART ONE,' he read. Then underneath: 'ANSWER FIVE QUESTIONS ONLY.' Just five, thought Rimmer. I'm not going to make that mistake again. 'QUESTION ONE' As he looked at the question, the letters seemed to come off the page and sway, out of focus, like distant figures disappearing in a heat haze on a desert road. He blinked. Two tears of sweat ran past his eyes and tumbled onto the page. He ran his hands through his hair and wiped the perspiration off his face with his palms, then biinked twice more, and brought the question into focus. ']D(:8[E-MD:CVF2;U60+:;;MMZC'HA^:U+UGNJ/'3<;!G' Oh God, thought Rimmer, I've forgotten how to read. He biinked several more times. 'DESCRIBE, USING FORMULAE WHERE APPROPRIATE, THE APPLICATION OF DE BURGH'S THEORY OF THERMAL INDUCTION IN POROUS CIRCUITRY.' That was his left forearm! The answer was there! The formulae were there! All he had to do was slide back his sleeve, copy it all down and he was one-fifth of his way into that officers' club. He looked at the other questions. There were three others he could do. And he could do them perfectly. Eighty per cent. He only needed forty! There was a whole hour to go. HE WAS AN OFFICER!! Arnold J. Rimmer, Astronavigation Officer, Fourth Class. Already, in his mind's eye, ticker-tape was cascading from rooftops as he sat in the open-top limousine waving to the adoring Ionian crowds. He snapped out of it. No time for complacency. Fifteen minutes per question. It was enough. Let's go-o-o-o-o! he screamed, silently. He glanced nonchalandy around. No one was watching. Casually he rested his hand on his wrist, and slowly slid back the sleeve. The adjudicating officer tamed a page in his novel. Rimmer looked down at his arm. An inky black blob stared up at him. His body had betrayed him. It had conspired to drench him in sweat; it had dissolved his best chance ever of getting that glimmering gold bar. He looked at his right hand. The answer to the question 'Describe, Using Formulae Where Appropriate, the Application of De Burgh's Theory of Thermal Induction in Porous Circuitry' was there, somewhere, hiding in the black blobby mess. Rimmer decided to take a chance in a million. It was the longest of long shots. With careful precision he placed his inky hand on the answer sheet and pressed as hard as he could. Maybe, just maybe, when he removed his hand, his riny copperplate writing would reassemble itself legibly on the page. He removed his hand. There in the middle of the page was a perfect palm print, with a single middle finger raised in mocking salute. An idiotic grin spread across Rimmer's face as he picked up his pen and signed the bottom of the page. Slowly he clambered to his feet, saluted the adjudicating officer, and woke up on a stretcher on his way to the medical bay. EIGHTEEN Petrovitch led the way and Lister followed, flanked by two unnecessary security guards. They stopped at the door to the stasis booth. 'Last chance. Lister, Where's the cat?' Lister just shook his head. 'Three years in stasis for some stupid flea-bitten moggy? Are you crazy?' Lister wasn't crazy. Far from it. He'd first heard about the stasis punishment from Petersen. Now that the booths were no longer used for interstellar travel, their only official function was penal. Lister had spent six long, boring evenings, shortly after Kochanski had finished with him, poring over the three-thousand-page ship regulation tome, and had finally tracked down the obscure clause. The least serious crime for which stasis was a statutary punishment was breaking quarantine regulations. When Red Dwarf had stopped for supplies at Miranda, he'd spent the last afternoon of his three-day ship leave and all his wages buying the smallest, healthiest animal with the best pedigree he could find. For three thousand dollarpounds he'd purchased a black longhaired cat with the show name 'Frankenstein'. He'd had her inoculated for every known disease, to ensure that she didn't actually endanger the crew, and smuggled her aboard under his hat. A week later he started to panic. The ship's security system still hadn't detected Frankenstein's presence. It was tricky. On the one hand he wanted to get caught with the cat, but he didn't want the cat to get caught and dissected. Eventually he hit on the idea of having his photograph taken with the cat, and sending off the film to be developed in the ship's lab. Finally, and much to his relief, they'd caught him. Three years in stasis was everything he'd hoped for. OK, his wages would be suspended, but it was a small price to pay for walking into a stasis booth, and walking out a subjective instant later in orbit around the Earth. He'd hidden Frankenstein in the ventilation system. The system was so vast she would be impossible to catch, and also provided her with access for foraging raids to the ship's food stores. So, all in all, as Lister stepped into the stasis booth, he was feeling pretty pleased with himself, or, at least, as pleased anyone could expect to feel who was actually as miserable as hell. Petrovitch gave him one last, last chance to surrender the cat, which Lister naturally refused. As the cold metal door slammed behind him, he sat on the cold smoothness of the booth's bench and exhaled. Suddenly a warm, green light flooded the chamber, and Lister became a non-event mass with a quantum probability of zero. He ceased, temporarily, to exist. NINETEEN 20.17. A red warning light failed to go on in the Drive Room, beginning a chain of events which would lead, in a further twenty-three minutes, to the total annihilation of the entire crew of Red Dwarf. 20.18. Rimmer was released from the medical bay, and told to take twenty-four hours' sick leave. He was halfway along Corridor 5: delta 333, on his way back to his sleeping quarters, when he changed his mind and decided to spend the evening in a stasis booth. The medical orderly had informed him of the Lister situation, and that just about capped a perfect day in the life of Arnold J. Rimmer. On top of everything, Lister was about to gain three years on him. By the time they got back to Earth, Lister would be exactly the same age, while he would be three years older. Even with his illicit stasis-boothing, Rimmer could only hope to snatch three months; four at best. So Lister would gain two-and-three-quarter whole years, and he was already younger than Rimmer to start with. It seemed totally unfair. To cheer himself up, he decided to spend the evening in a state of non-being, and vowed to begin work in the morning on an appeal against Lister's sentence, so he could get him out of the stasis booth and make him start ageing again. 20.23. Navigation officer Henri DuBois knocked his black cona coffec with four sugars over his computer console keyboard. As he mopped up the coffee, he noticed three red warning blips on his monitor screen, which he wrongly assumed were the result of his spillage. 20.24. Rimmer got out of the lift on the main stasis floor and made a decision which, in retrospect, he would regret forever. He decided to comb his hair. 20.31. The cadmium II coolant system, located deep m the bowels of the engine corridors, stopped funtioning. 20.36. Rimmer stood in the main wash-room on the stasis deck and combed his hair. He combed his hair in the usual way, then decided to see what it would look like if he parted it on the opposite side. It didn't look very good, so he combed it back again. He washed his hands and dried them on a paper towel. If be had left at this point and gone directly to a stasis booth, he wouldn't have died. But, instead, he was seized by one of his frequent superstition attacks. He rolled the paper towel into a ball and decided if he could throw it directly into the disposal unit, be would eventually become an officer. He took careful aim, decided on an overarm, shot, and tossed his paper ball. It missed by eight feet. He retrieved the paper and decided if he got it in the disposal unit three times on the run, it would make up for the miss. The miss would then be struck from the superstition record, and not only would he become an officer, but within three weeks he would get to have sex with a beautiful woman. Standing directly above the disposal unit, he dropped and retrieved the paper ball three times. Combing his hair one last time, he left the wash-room, idly wondering just who the beautiful girl might be, and headed for a stasis booth. 20.40. The cadmium II core reached critical mass and unleashed the deadly power of a neutron bomb. The ship remained structurally undamaged, but in 0.08 seconds everyone on the Engineering Level was dead. 20.40 and 2.7 seconds. Rimmer placed his band on the wheel lock of stasis booth 1344. He heard what sounded like a nuclear wind roaring down the corridor towards him. It was, in fact, a nuclear wind roaring down the corridor towards him. What now? he thought, rather irritably, and was suddenly hit full in the face by a nuclear explosion. 0.57 seconds before he expired, Rimmer realized he was going to die. His life didn't flash before him. He didn't think of his parents, or his brothers or his home. He didn't think of the failed exams or the wasted time in the stasis booths. He didn't even think about his one, brief love affair with Yvonne McGruder, the ship's female boxing champion. What he did, in fact, think of was a bowl of soup. A bowl of gazpacho soup. Then he died. Then everyone died. TWENTY Deep in the belly of Red Dwarf, safely sealed in the cargo hold, Frankenstein nibbled happily from a box of fish paste, while four tiny sightless kittens suckled noisily beneath her. Part Two Alone in a Godless universe, and out of Shake'n'Vac ONE The hatch to the stasis booth zuzz-zungged open, and a green 'Exit now' sign flashed on and off above Lister's head. Holly's digitalized faced appeared on the eight-foot-square wall monitor. 'It is now safe for you to emerge from stasis.' 'I only just got in.' 'Please proceed to the Drive Room for debriefing.' Holly's face melted into the smooth greyness of the blank screen. 'But I only just got in,' insisted Lister. He walked down the empty corridor towards the Xpress lift. What was that smell? A musty smell. Like an old attic. He knew that smell, it was just like the smell of his grandmother's cellar. He'd never noticed it before. And what was that noise? A kind of hissing buzz. The air-conditioning? Why could he hear the air-conditioning? He'd never heard it before. He suddenly realized it wasn't what he was hearing that was odd, it was what he wasn't hearing. Apart from the white noise of the air-conditioning, there was no other sound. Just the lonely squeals of his rubber soles on the corridor floor. And there was dust everywhere. Curious mounds of white dust lying in random patterns. 'Where is everybody?' Holly projected his face onto the floor in front of Lister. 'They're dead, Dave,' he said, solemnly. 'Who is?' asked Lister, absently. Softly: 'Everybody, Dave.' 'What?' Lister smiled. 'Everybody's dead, Dave.' 'What? Everybody?' 'Yes. Everybody's dead, Dave. 'What? Petersen?' 'Yes. They're all dead. Everybody is dead. Dave.' 'Burroughs?' Holly sighed. 'Everybody is dead, Dave.' 'Selby?' 'Yes.' 'Not Chen?' 'Gordon Bennet!' Holly mapped. 'Yes, Chen! Everybody. Everybody's dead, Dave.' 'Even the Captain?' 'YES! EVERYBODY.' Lister squeaked along the corridor. A tic in his left check pulled his face into staccato smiles. He wanted to laugh. Everybody was dead. Why did he want to laugh? No, they couldn't all be dead. Not everybody. Not literally everybody. 'What about Rimmer?' 'HE'S DEAD, DAVE. EVERYBODY IS DEAD. EVERYBODY IS DEAD, DAVE. DAVE, EVERYBODY IS DEAD.' Holly tried all four words in every possible permutation, with every possible inflection, finishing with: 'DEAD, DAVE, EVERYBODY IS, EVERYBODY IS, DAVE, DEAD.' Lister looked blankly in no particular direction, while his face struggled to find an appropriate expression. 'Wait,' he said, after a while. 'Are you telling me everybody's dead?' Holly rolled his eyes, and nodded. The enormous Drive Room echoed with silence. The banks of computers on autopilot whirred about their business. 'Holly,' Lister's small voice resonated in the giant chamber, 'what are these piles of dust?' The dust lay on the floors, on chain, everywhere, all arranged in small, neat dunes. Lister dipped his finger in one and tasted it. "That,' said Holly from his huge screen, 'is Console Executive Imran Sanchez.' Lister's tongue hung guiltily from his mouth, and he wiped the white particles which had once formed part of Console Executive Imran Sanchez onto his jacket cuff. 'So, what happened?' Holly told him about the cadmium II radiation leak; how the crew had been wiped out within seconds; how he'd headed the ship pell-mell out of the solar system, to avoid spreading nuclear contamination; and how he'd had to keep Lister in stasis until the radiation had reached a safe background level. 'So... How long did you keep me in stasis?' 'Three million years,' said Holly, as casually as he could. Lister acted as if he hadn't heard. Three million years? It had no meaning. If it had been thirty years, be would have thought 'What a long time.' But three million years. Three million years was just... stupid. He wandered over to the chair opposite the console he'd seen Kochanski operate. 'So, Krissie's dead,' he said, staring at the hummock of dust. 'I always...' His voice tailed away. He tried to remember her face. He tried to remember the pinball smile. 'Well, if it's any consolation,' said Holly, 'if she had survived, the age difference would be insurmountable. I mean, you're twenty-four, she's three million: it takes a lot for a relationship with that kind of age gap to work.' Lister wasn't listening, 'I always thought we'd get back together. I, ah, had this sort of plan that one day I'd have enough money to buy a farm on Fiji. It's cheap land there, and... in a half-assed kind of way, I always pictured she'd be there with me.' This was getting morbid. HoUy tried to lighten the atmosphere. 'Well,' he said, 'she wouldn't be much use to you on Fiji now.' 'No,' said Lister. 'Not unless it snowed,' said Holly, 'and you needed something to grit the path with.' Lister screwed up his face in distaste. 'Holly!' 'Sorry. I've been on my own for three million years, I'm just used to saying what I think.' For some time now, well, the last two hundred thousand years to be exact. Holly had grown increasingly concerned about himself. For a computer with an IQ of six thousand, it seems to him he was behaving in a more and more erratic way. In fact, he'd long suspected he'd gone a bit peculiar. Just as a bachelor who spends too much time on his own gradually develops quirks and eccentricities, so a computer who spends three million years alone in Deep Space can get, well, set in his ways. Become quirky. Go a little bit... odd. Holly decided not to burden Lister with this anxiety, and hoped his oddness would eventually sort itself out now he had a bit of company. Another slight concern which he tried to put to the back of his RAM was that, for a computer with an IQ of six thousand, there was a rather alarming amount of knowledge he seemed to have forgotten. It wasn't, on the whole, important things, but was nonetheless fairly disturbing. He knew, for instance, that Isaac Newton was a famous physicist, but he couldn't remember why. He couldn't remember the capital of Luxembourg. He could recall pi to thirty thousand digits, but he couldn't say for absolute certain whether port was on the left side, and starboard on the right, or whether it was the other way round. Who knocked Swansea City out of the FA Cup in 1967? He used to know. It was a mystery now. Obviously none of this missing information was absolutely vital for the smooth running of a mining ship three million years out into Deep Space. But technically he was supposed to know more-or-less everything and, frankly, there were some worrying gaps. He could remember, for instance, that in the second impression, 1959 publication of Lolita by Vladimir Nabakov, printed in Great Britain by the Shenval Press (London, Hertford and Harrow), page 60 was far and away the dirtiest page. But was Nabakov German or Russian? It totally eluded him. Maybe it wasn't important. Of course it wasn't important. Still, it was for Holly a source of perturbation. It's a source of perturbation, he thought. Then he wondered whether there was such a word as 'perturbation', or whether he'd just made it up. He didn't know that either. Oh, it was hopeless. Lister sat in the empty Copacabana Hawaiian Cocktail Bar and poured a triple whisky into his double whisky, then topped it up with a whisky. Absently, he lit the filter end of a cigarette and tried to assimilate all the information Holly had thrown at him. Everybody was dead. Everybody. He'd been in stasis three million years. Three million years. Since one drunken night outside the 'Marie Lloyd' off Regent Street, London, every step he'd taken had led him further and further from home. First it was Mimas, then Miranda, and now he was three million years away. Three million years out into Deep Space. Further than any human being had ever been before. And he was totally alone. The enormity of all this was slowly beginning to sink in when Holly dropped his final bombshell. The one about the human race being extinct. 'What d'you mean, "extinct"?' 'Well, three million years is a very good age for a species. I mean, your average genus only survives a couple of hundred thousand years, max. And that's with a clean-living species, like dinosaurs. Dinosaurs didn't totally screw up the environment. They just went around quietly eating things. And even then, they didn't get to clock up the big one mill. So the chances of the human race making it to the big three-oh-oh-oh-oh-oh-oh are practically non- existent. So I'm afraid you just have to face up to the very real possibility that your species is dead.' Much to his surprise. Lister had let out a sob. 'Were you very close?' Holly tilted his bead sympathetically. 'Well, yeah, I suppose you must have been, really.' That was a bit of an odd thing to say, he thought. Lister took out his shirt-tail and blew his nose. 'So, I'm the last human being alive?' 'Yeah. You never think it*s going to happen to your species, do you? It's always something that happens to somebody else's.' Lister spent the next few days going to pieces. There seemed little point in getting dressed, and so he wandered around naked, swigging from a bottle of whisky. He didn't know what to do. He didn't know if there was anything to do. And worst of all, he didn't much care. He slept wherever he fell, a painful, dreamless sleep. He hardly ate, and drank a small loch-worth of whisky. He didn't even like whisky, but beer was too cumbersome to carry around in sufficient quantities to achieve oblivion. He lost a stone in weight, and started shouting at people who weren't there. Every evening, at around 5 p.m. he'd stagger, stark naked, into the Drive Room and, waving his whisky bottle dangerously in the air, he'd belch incoherent obscentities at Holly's huge visage on the gigantic monitor screen. Sometimes Lister imagined he'd heard the phone ring, and he'd rush to pick it up. On the evening of the fifth day as he staggered through the Red Dwarf shopping mall, toasting invisible crowds, be keeled over and blacked out. When he woke up in the medical unit, a man with an 'H' on his forehead was looking down at him with undisguised contempt. TWO 'You're a hologram,' said Lister. 'So I am,' said Rimmer. 'You died in the accident,' said Lister. 'So I did,' said Rimmer. 'What's it like?' 'Death?' Rimmer mused. 'It's like going on holiday with a group of Germans.' He cradled his head in his hands. I'm so depressed I want to weep. To be cut down in my prime - a boy of thirty-one, with the body of a thirty-year-old. It's unbearable. All my plans; my career, my future; everything hinged on my being alive. It was mandatory.' 'What happened to me? Did I black out?' 'Excuse me. I'm talking about my being dead.' 'Sorry. I thought you'd finished.' I'm so depressed,' repeated Rimmer, 'so depressed.' Over the next couple of days. Lister slowly recovered in the medical bay. One morning, while Rimmer was off reading the How to Cope With Your Own Death booklet for the fifteenth time. Lister took the opportunity to ask Holly why he'd brought Rimmer back. 'You'd gone to pieces. You couldn't cope. You needed a companion.' 'But Rimmer??' 'I did a probability study,' lied Holly, 'and it turns out Rimmer is absolutely the best person to keep you sane.' 'Rimmer?' Holly's disembodied head tilled forward in a nod. 'Why not Petersen?' 'A man who buys a methane-filled twenty-four bedroomed bijou residence on an oxygenless moon whose only distinction is that it rotates in the opposite direction from its mother planet - you seriously expect me to bring him back to keep you sane? Gordon Beimett - he couldn't even keep himself sane, let alone anyone else.' 'Yeah, but at least we had things in common.' 'The only thing you had in common was your mutual interest in consuming ridiculous amounts of alcohol.' 'Selby? Chen?' 'Ditto.' 'What about Krissie?' 'Dave, she finished with you.' 'But Rimmer?? Anyone would have been better than Rimmer. Anyone. Hermann Goering would have been better than Rimmer. All right, he was a drug-crazed Nazi transvestite, but at least we could have gone dancing.' It was Jean-Paul Sartre,' said Holly, thinking it may very well actually have been Albert Camus, or Flaubert, or perhaps it was even Sacha Distel, 'who said hell was being trapped for eternity in a room with your friends.' 'Sure,' said Lister, 'but all Sartre's mates were French.' 'I think I'm thinking, therefore I might possibly be,' Rimmer said aloud as he padded silently around the sleeping quarters in his hologramatic slippers. Try as he might, he couldn't even begin to grapple with the metaphysics of it all. 'I think I might be thinking, therefore I may possibly be being.' It was mumbo-jumbo to Rimmer. It was worse than Emerson, Lake and Palmer lyrics. 'I'm so depressed.' He hated being dead. When he was a boy on Io, he remembered witnessing an 'Equal rights for the Dead' march, where holograms from all the moons of Jupiter had rallied for better conditions. The Dead were generally given short shrift throughout the solar system. They were banned from most hotels and restaurants. They found it almost impossible to hold down a decent job. And, even on television, although holograms featured occasionally, they were generally only included as token deads. Not a single golf club throughout known space had a dead member. The living had a very uncomfortable relationship with holograms in general, reminding them as they did of their own mortality. Also there was a natural resentment towards 'Deadies' - to become a hologram, outside of the Space Corps, you had to be one of the mega-rich. The horribly expensive computer run-time, and the massive power supply that was needed, kept hologramatic afterlife very exclusive indeed. Sitting on the shoulders of his brother. Frank, the six-year-old Rimmer had booed and jeered with the rest of the crowd. Encouraged by Frank, he'd actually personally thrown a stone, which had passed silently through the back of a hologram woman marching in line. 'Deadies! Dirty Deadies!' And now he was one of them. A dirty Deady. Well, he wasn't going to let it get him down any more. He wasn't going to let it stand in his way. He was dead, there was no use bloating about it. Was that a reason to quit? Did Napoleon quit when he was dead? Did Julius Caesar quit when he was dead? Well... yes. But that was before the hologram was invented. And that was the advantage he had over two of the greatest men in history. He may not have been the most successful person who ever lived when he was alive but, by God, he'd make up for that in his death. There was still that ziggurat to climb. There was still that gold bar to achieve. Nelson had one eye and one arm. Caesar was an epileptic. Napoleon, the man himself, suffered so badly from gonorrhoea and syphilis, he could barely pee. It seemed a veritable boon to Rimmer that the only disability he appeared to have was being dead! First thing tomorrow, he thought. I'm going to get the skutters to paint a sign to hang over my bunk. And he pictured it in his mind's eye, on polished oak: 'TOMORROW IS THE FIRST DAY OF THE REST OF YOUR DEATH.' THREE HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH A sound like a buzz-saw played through an open-air rock festival's PA system awoke Rimmer from a dream about his mother chasing him through a car-park with a sub-machine-gun. He swung his legs over the bunk, and tried to locate the sound of the buzz-saw played through an open-air rock festival's PA system. It was Lister, snoring. HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH The snore drilled into Rimmer's skull - perfectly even, up and down, followed by a catarrhy trill, and then the worst part of all: the silence. The silence that always made him think Lister had stopped snoring. One second. Two seconds. Three seconds. He has, he has stopped snoring! Four seconds. Fi... then, the snort, then the revolting semi-choking sound as the mucus shifted around his cavernous nasal system, and back onto the perfectly even snore. HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH Rimmer stood up and leaned over Lister's sleeping form. There was a half-empty metal curry tray lying on his chest, which rose and fell in rhythm with his grinding snore. Rimmer's first impulse was to reach over and pinch his nose, but, of course, he couldn't. He couldn't shake him either, or turn him on his side. He couldn't even take a thin piece of piano wire and slowly garrotte him. If he hadn't been a hologram, this would definitely have been his favourite option. He arched over, until his mouth was in whispering distance of Lister's ear. Then he screamed: 'STOP SNORING, YOU FILTHY SON OF A BASTARD'S BASTARD'S BASTARD!!!' Lister jerked awake. 'What?' 'You were snoring.' 'Eh?' 'You were snoring.' '0h,' said Lister, lying back down. 'Sorry.' Within three seconds Lister was back asleep. And within ten, he was snoring again. HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH The man was impossible to live with! He was an animal! He was an orang-utan! He was a hippo! He was like one of those little grey monkeys you see at the zoo who openly masturbate whenever you go round with your great-aunt Florrie! He was quite the most revoltingly heinous creature it had ever been Rimmer's misfortune to encounter. What further proof did you need that God did not exist? As if He'd allow this... this onion! to become the last surviving member of the human race. He symbolized everything that was cheap and low and nasty and tacky about Mankind. Why him? A man whose idea of a change of clothing was to turn his T-shirt inside out, so that the stench was on the outside! Who used orange peel and curry cartons as makeshift ashtrays. Who would frequently tug out a huge great lump of rotting, fetid meat from one of the cavities in his teeth and announce proudly that it could feed a family of four! Who bit his nails - his toenails! He would actually sit there, with his foot in his mouth, and trim his nails by biting them. And then - the most hideous thing of all - he would eat the cuttings! Eating your toenails, for God's sake! This was the Last Man. The Last Human Being. A Person who could belch La Bamba after eleven pints of lager. A man who ate so many curries he sweated Madras sauce. Revolting! His bed sheets looked like someone had just given birth to a baby on them. And he destroyed things! Not on purpose: he was just such a clumsy, slobby, ham-fisted son-of-a-prostidroid somehow he always destroyed things. Rimmer remembered once showing him a photograph of his mother and, five seconds later, turned round to see him absently using it as a toothpick! He once lent him his favourite album, and when it came back there was a footprint over James Last's face! And raspberry jam seeds buried in the groove. How is that possible? To get jam on a record? Who listens to James Last and eats raspberry jam? And the inner sleeve was missing! And there was a telephone number and a doodle on the lyric sheet! Destroyed! HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH How could anyone possibly live with this man?? HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH How could it be that here, snoring like an asthmatic warthog, was the last representative of the human race? How was it possible that this man was alive, while he was dead? How??? HOW??? HOW??? FOUR Only two days earlier Lister had finally got round to collecting all his personal belongings from Vacuum Storage, and now here he was, sitting on his bunk, packing them all up again to take them back to Vacuum Storage. He'd asked Holly to turn the ship around and head back to Earth. Maybe the human race was extinct, maybe it wasn't. Maybe they'd evolved into a race of super-beings. Maybe they'd wiped one another out in some stupid war and the ants had taken over. But where else was there to go? Earth was home. He had to find out if it still existed, even if it did take another three million years to get back. So he'd decided to go back into stasis. What else was there to do? He certainly had no intention of hanging around with only a highly neurotic dead man for company. He looked down at his vacuum storage trunk. He really did have a pretty feeble collection of belongings: four cigarette lighters, all out of gas; a copy of the Pop-up Karma Sutra - Zero gravity version; a hard ball of well-chewed gum, which he'd bought at a bar in Mimas from a guy who guaranteed it had once been chewed by Chelsea Brown, the famous actress; a pair of his adoptive grandmother's false teeth, which he'd kept for two reasons: (a) sentimental, and (b) they were just the thing for opening bottles of beer; his bass guitar with two strings (both G); three hundred and fifty Zero-Gee football magazines; and his entire collection of Rasta-Billy-Skank DAT tapes. And, of course, there were his goldfish. He wandered over to the three-foot-long oblong tank and peered into the murky green water. At first, he couldn't see a thing through the slimy silt. He flicked on the underwater illumination switch and pressed his face to the side of the tank. Gradually, through the gloom, he made out a moving silhouette. As his eyes adjusted, he saw it was Lennon, swimming happily in and out of the fake plastic Vatican. But he couldn't see McCartney. He rolled up his sleeve and swirled his arm around in the stagnant filth, releasing a pungent, evil smell. Finally he located the missing fish, lodged in the papal balcony above St Peter's Square. It was dead. He shook his head, and smacked the fish violently against the corner of Rimmer's slanting architect's desk, then held the fish to his ear and listened. Nothing. Picking up Rimmer's Space Scout knife, he flicked out a blade and opened up the fish like a watch. There was the problem! A loose battery. He prodded it back into place and snapped the fish closed. McCartney blinked back into life. He dropped the piscine droid into the water and watched as it happily swam off through the arch of the plastic Sistine Chapel, backwards. 'Ye-es,' said Lister. 'Brutal.' Rimmer walked in through the hatchway and spotted Lister's vacuum trunk. 'What are you doing?' Rimmer listened in mounting disbelief as Lister outlined his plan. 'What about me? What am I supposed to do on my own for three million years?' 'Well, I dunno. I haven't really thought about it.' 'No. Exactly.' 'Come on ~ you can't expect me to hang around here. Why don't you get Holly to turn you off till we get home?' 'Because, dingleberry brain,' Rimmer rose to his feet, 'if by some gigantic fluke the Earth still exists, and if, by an even greater stretching of the laws of probability, the human race is still alive, and if during the six million years we've been away they haven't evolved into some kind of super race, and we can still understand them; if all that comes to pass - when I get back to Earth the reasons for me being brought back as a hologram will no longer apply, and my personality disc will be neatly packed away in some dusty vault that nobody ever goes in. And that will be the end of Rimmer, Arnold J.' 'You never know. When we get back, it might turn out that they've found a cure for Death.' Rimmer sucked in his cheeks and rolled his eyes around in their sockets. 'Well, you never know,' said Lister, feebly. 'Oh yes. I expect doctors' waiting rooms are absolutely heaving with cadavers. "Ah, Mrs Harrington. Dropped dead again, eh? Never mind."' Rimmer mimed scribbling a prescription. '"Take two of these, three times a day, and try not to get run over by another bus."' 'I'm going into stasis,' said Lister, picking up his vacuum trunk, 'and that's that. You don't seriously expect me to spend the rest of my life alone here with you.' 'Why not?' 'Fifty-odd years? Alone with you?' 'What's wrong with that?' Lister stopped and put down his trunk, 'I think we should get something straight. I think there's something you don't understand.' 'What?' said Rimmer. 'The thing is,' said Lister as kindly as he could: 'I don't actually like you.' Rimmer stared, unblinking. This really was news to him. He didn't like Lister, but he always thought Lister liked him. Why on Io shouldn't he like him? What was there not to like? 'Since when?' he said, with a slight crack in his voice. 'Since the second we first met. Since a certain taxi ride on Mimas.' 'That wasn't me! That guy in the false moustache who went to an android brothel? That wasn't me!' Rimmer was outraged at Lister's accusation. Even though it was true, he felt it was so out of kilter with his own image of himself, he was able to summon up genuine indignation. As if he, Arnold J. Rimmer, would pay money to a lump of metal and plastic to have sexual intercourse with him! It just wasn't like him. True, he did it, but it wasn't like him! 'I've never been to an android brothel in my life. And if you so much as mention it again, I'll...' Rimmer faltered. He suddenly realized there wasn't very much he could do to Lister. 'I don't get it. What point are you trying to make?' 'The point I'm trying to make, you dirty son of a fetid whoremonger's bitch, is that we're friends!' Rimmer smiled as warmly as he could to help disguise the massive incongruity he'd walked straight into. 'Sniff your coffee and wake up, Rimmer, we are not friends.' 'I know what you're referring to,' Rimmer nodded his head vigorously. 'It's because I gave you a hard time since you came aboard, isn't it? But don't you see? I had to do that, to build up your character. To change the boy into a man.' 'Oh, do smeg off.' 'I always thought you saw me as a sort of big brother character. Heck - we don't always get on. But then, what brothers do? Cain didn't always get on with Abel...' 'He killed him.' 'Absolutely. But underneath all that they were still brothers, with brotherly affection. Heaven knows, I didn't always get on with my brothers - in fact once, when I was fourteen, I needed mouth-to-mouth resuscitation after all three of them held my head down a toilet for rather too long - but we laughed about it afterwards, when I'd started breathing again.' 'You're not going to persuade me not to go into stasis. I am not spending the rest of my life with a man who keeps his underpants on coat hangers.' Rimmer held up his outspread palms in a gesture of innocence. 'I'm not trying to persuade you.' 'Then what's all this about?' 'I don't know. I'm not sure what anything's about any more.' Here comes the emotional blackmail, thought Lister. 'It's not easy, you know, being... dead.' 'Uhn,' Lister grunted. 'It's so hard to come to terms with. I mean... death. Your own death. I mean, you have plans... so many things you wanted to do, and now...' 'Look - I'm sorry you're dead, 0K? It was cruddy luck. But you've got to put it behind you. You're completely obsessed by it.' 'Obsessed??' 'It's all you ever talk about.' 'Well, pardon me for dying.' Frankly, Rimmer, it's very boring. You're like one of those people who are always talking about their illnesses.' 'Well!' said Rimmer, his eyes wide in astonishment. 'It's just boring. Change the disc. Flip the channel. Death isn't the handicap it once was. For smeg's sake, cheer up.' 'Well!' said Rimmer. And he couldn't think of anything else to say. So he said 'Well!' again. 'And quite honestly, the prospect of hanging around and having to listen to you whining and moaning, and bleating and whingeing for the next three quarters of a century, because you happen to have snuffed it, docs not exactly knock me out.' 'Well!' said Rimmer. 'Fifty years alone with you? I'd rather drink a pint of my own diarrhoea.' 'Well!' 'Or a pint of somebody else's, come to that. Every hour, on the hour, for the next seventy years.' 'I can't believe' - Rimmer was shaking - 'you've just said that.' Holly faded into focus on the sleeping quarters' vid-screen. 'Oi,' he said, rather un-computerlike, I've just opened the radiation seals to the cargo decks. And there's something down there.' 'What do you mean?' 'Some kind of life-form.' 'What is it?' 'I can only see it on the heat scanner. I don't know what it is - I only know what it isn't.' 'What isn't it, then?' 'It isn't human.' FIVE Lister clutched the bazookoid - the heavy portable rock-blasting mining laser - to his chest, and checked again that the pack on his back was registering 'Full Charge'. Light flitted through the wire mesh of the rickety lift as it clumsily juddered its way down into the bowels of the ship. Three miles of lift shaft. Over five hundred floors, most of them stretching the six-mile length of the ship. These were the cargo decks, where all the supplies were stored. The tiny, exposed cage shuddered and rocked slowly past floor after floor. Down. Perhaps twenty floors of food, vacuum-sealed, tin mountains, stretching out beyond vision. Down. Four floors of wood - a million chopped trees stacked in silent pyramids. Down. Floors of mining equipment. Down. Floors of raw silicates, mined from Ganymede. Down. Floors of water, stored and still in enormous glass tanks. And down. And the only sound was the metallic squealing of the lift cable as it plunged them deeper and deeper into the gloomy abyss. 'I don't know why I'm scared. I'm a hologram. Whatever it is, it can't do anything to me.' 'Thanks. That makes me feel really secure.' The gloom enveloped them. The light on Lister's mining helmet cut only twenty feet into the darkness. Lister flipped down the helmet's night-visor and switched the beam to infra red. Down. Then, something strange. These floors were empty. Hundreds of cubic miles of supplies were missmg! Food, metal, wood, water - missing. 'It's gone!' 'What has?' Rimmer squinted blindly into the darkness. 'Everything.' 'What d'you mean, everything?' 'All the supplies. The last ten floors - they were all empty.' 'I'm so glad I'm already dead. I'm so, so glad.' 'You want to shut the smeg up?' Down. D o w n In the bottom right hand corner of Lister's visor a small green cross began to flicker. 'Oh, smeg. There is something here.' 'Where?' The cross crept up the visor. Lister wanted to say: 'The next floor,' but he couldn't. He couldn't speak. The lift coughed to a stop. The whine of the motor faded to nothing. There it was. Stretching before them, six miles in length, half-lit and desolate. A huge, impossible city. A city! The lift doors folded open - cher-chunk! - and they stepped out onto the rough cobbled street. Crudely fashioned igloo-shaped dwellings lined the roadway, hummocks of carved wood, without doorways. Each had only a slit, perhaps a yard wide and less than a foot high, cut six feet from the ground. Lister checked the charge on the bazookoid back pack, and they both started cautiously down the street. Before them was a crossroads. The igloo hummocks stretched out in every direction. The flashing cross in Lister's visor throbbed more insistently, and indicated they should turn right. 'What is this place?' Lister slung the bazookoid over his shoulder and scrambled up one of the hummocks. He poked his head through a slit and peered into the dim interior. 'Some kind of house. But it's tiny. Just enough room for two people to crouch in and peer out of the gash at the top. Whatever lived here really liked confined spaces.' Built into a tiny recess in the wall was a small bookcase containing six books. Lister reached in and managed to grab three of them. He dropped down from the hummock. Rimmer peered over his shoulder as he opened each book in turn. Every single page in every book was blank. Lister slipped the books into his haversack, grabbed the bazookoid, re-checked the charge, and they moved off again. After five minutes or so, they reached a square. Rows of benches faced a television screen attached to a video recorder. Lister ejected the disc. It bore the ship's regulation supply logo. 'What is it?' asked Rimmer. '"The Flintstones".' They turned left. More hummocks. Another square, but this time set out like a street cafe: tables with parasols; wooden chairs. And in the centre: a table, fully laid, with two gold candelabra, both lit. A meal, half-eaten, sat steaming on a plate. The blip on Lister's visor was pulsing faster than ever. 'It's here!' Lister's finger tightened on the beam button of the bazookoid. 'Whatever it is, it's right here!' A flash. A pink blur flashed from the top of a hummock, pinning Lister to the floor, and sending the weapon skittering across the cobbles. Rummer watched, half-paralysed, as the pink neon-suited man with immaculate coiffeur sniffed Lister, looked up with a puzzled expression, sniffed him more deeply, then finally got to his feet, took out a clothes brush and smoothed out his suit. 'Sorry, Man,' he said, 'I thought you were food.' SIX From the moment he discovered that the cadmium II had achieved critical mass. Holly had less than fifteen nanoseconds to act. He sealed off as much of the ship as possible - the whole cargo area, and the ship's supply bay. Simultaneously, he set the drive computer to accelerate far beyond the dull green-blue disc of Neptune in the distance, and out into the abyss of unknown space. Then he read the Bible, the Koran, and other major religious works: he covered Islam, Zoroastrianism, Mazdaism, Zarathustrianism, Dharma, Brahmanism, Hinduism, Vedanta, Jainism, Buddhism, Hinayana, Mahayana, Sikhism, Shintoism, Taoism and Confusianism. Then he read all of Marx, Engels, Freud, Jung and Einstein. And, to kill the remaining few nanoseconds, he skipped briefly through Kevin Keegan's Football - It's a Funny Old Game. At the end of this. Holly came to two conclusions. First, given the whole sphere of human knowledge, it was still impossible to determine the existence or not of Cod. And second, Kevin Keegan should have stuck to having his hair permed. In the hold, Frankenstein's four offspring began to breed. Each litter produced an average of four kittens, three times a year. At the end of the first year, the second generation of kittens started to breed too. They also produced three annual litters of three to four kittens. When Frankenstein died, at the great old age of fourteen, she left behind one hundred and ninety-eight thousand, seven hundred and thirty-two cats. 198,732 cats, who continued to breed. Still Red Dwarf accelerated. Holly witnessed at first hand phenomena which had never been witnessed before. He saw phenomena which had only been guessed at by theoretical physicists. He saw a star form. He saw another star die. He saw a black hole. He saw pulsars and quasars. He saw twin and triplet sun systems. He saw sights Copernicus would have torn out his eyes for, but all the white he couldn't stop thinking how bad that book was by Kevin Keegan. The cats continued to breed. Red Dwarf continued to accelerate. The forty-square mile cargo hold was seething with cats. A sea of cats. A sea of cats, sealed from the radiation-poisoned deck above, with nowhere to go. Only the smartest, the biggest and the strongest survived. The mutants. The mutants who had rudimentary fingers instead of claws, who stood on their hind legs, and clubbed rivals to death with crudely-made clubs. Who found the best breeding mates. And bred. Felis erectus was born. Red Dwarf, still accelerating, passed five stars in concentric orbits, performing a breathtaking, mind-boggling stellar ballet. Not that Holly noticed. He'd been on his own now for two million years and was no longer interested in mind-boggling stellar ballets. What he was really into was Netta Muskett novels. The young doctor had just told Jemma she had only three years to live, as he held her in his powerful masculine grip, his dark brooding eyes piercing her very soul. Outside, the suns danced into a perfect pentagon and span, end over end, like a gigantic Catherine wheel. But Holly didn't see it. He was too busy reading Doctor, Darling. Then there was a plague. And the plague was hunger. Less than thirty Cat tribes now survived, roaming the cargo decks on their hind legs in a desperate search for food. But the food had gone. The supplies were finished. Weak and ailing, they prayed at the supply hold's silver mountains: huge towering acres of metal rocks which, in their pagan way, the mutant Cats believed watched over them. Amid the wailing and the screeching one Cat stood up and held aloft the sacred icon. The icon which had been passed down as holy, and one day would make its use known. It was a piece of V-shaped metal with a revolving handle on its head. He look down a silver rock from the silver mountain, while the other Cats cowered and screamed at the blasphemy. He placed the icon on the rim of the rock, and turned the handle. And the handle turned. And the rock opened. And inside the rock was Alphabetti spaghetti in tomato sauce. And in the other rocks were even more delights. Sugar-free baked beans. Chicken and mushroom Toastie Toppers. Faggots in rich meaty gravy. All sealed in perfect vacuums, preserved from the ravages of Time. God had spoken. And Felis sapiens was born. Holly was gurning. He was pulling his pixelized face into the most bizarre and ludicrous expressions he could muster. He'd been gurning now for nearly two thousand years. It wasn't much of a hobby, but it helped pass the time. He was beginning to worry that he was going computer-senile. Driven crazy by loneliness. What he needed, he decided, was a companion. He would build a woman. A perfectly functioning human woman, capable of independent thought and decision-making. Identical to a real woman in the minutest detail. The problem was he didn't know how. He didn't even know what to make the nose out of. So he gave the whole scheme up as a bad idea, and started gurning again. And there was a war between the Cats. A bloody war that laid waste many of their number. But the reason was good. The cause was sensible. The principle was worth fighting over. It was a holy war. Some of the Cats believed the one true father of Catkind was a man called Cloister, who saved Frankenstein, the Holy Mother, and was frozen in time by the evil men who sought to kill her. One day Cloister would return to lead them to Bearth, the planet where they could make their home. The other Cats believed exactly the same thing, except they maintained the name of the true Father of Catkind was a man called Clister. They spent the best part of two thousand years fighting over this huge, insuperable theological chasm. Millions died. Finally, a truce was called. Commandeering the fleet of shuttles from the docking bay, half the Cats flew off in one direction, in search of Cloister and the Promised Planet, and the other half flew off in the opposite direction, in search of Clister and the Promised Planet. Behind them they left the ones who were too weak to travel: the old, the lame, the sick and the dying. And one by one, they died. Soon only two remained: one a cripple, one an idiot. They snuggled together for warmth and companionship. And one day, to the cripple and the idiot, a son was born. SEVEN So the last human being alive, a man who had died, and a creature who'd evolved from cats, stood around the metal table that was bolted to the floor of the sleeping quarters and listened to a computer with an IQ of six thousand, who couldn't remember who'd knocked Swansea City out of the 1967 FA cup, explain what the hell was happening. 'So he's a Cat,' said Lister for the fourteenth time. The Cat took a small portable steam iron out of his pocket and started pressing the sleeve of his jacket. Outwardly, at least, he was human in appearance - there was a slight flattening of his face: his ears were a little higher on his head; and two of his gleaming upper teeth hung down longer and sharper than the others, so they peeked, whitely, over his lips whenever he grinned. Which he did a lot. He didn't seem to have a trace of super-ego. He was all ego and id - monumentally self-centred and, if he'd been human, you would have described him as vain. But you couldn't apply human values to Cats - there seemed to be very little connection between the two cultures. The invention which proved the turning point in Cat history wasn't Fire or the Wheel: it was the Steam- operated Trouser Press. Getting information out of the Cat wasn't easy: if you asked him too many questions, he just got bored, and went off to take one of the five or six showers he appeared to need daily. He didn't have a name. He found it difficult to understand the idea. He was of the unshakeable conviction that he was the absolute centre of the entire universe, the reason for its being; and the notion that someone might not know who he was was beyond his comprehension. 'What about in relationships?' Lister had persisted. 'Re-la-tion-ships?' The Cat rolled the word around on his tongue. The Cats had learned English from the vast number of video discs and training films that were stored in the cargo decks, waiting for delivery to Triton. But most human concepts eluded them. 'Yeah, you know, between a man cat and a woman cat. What do you call each other?' 'Hey, you.' 'What? In the entire relationship, you never refer to each other by name?' 'You know how long a Cat relationship lasts? Three minutes. First minute's fine; second minute, you feel trapped! Third minute, you've got to leave.' The very thought of a relationship which lasted longer than three minutes brought the Cat out in a cold sweat, and he had to go and take another hot shower. And so the evening progressed. When the Cat wasn't showering or snoozing, he was preening. He appeared to have secreted about his immaculate person an arsenal of combs and brushes, none of which seemed to spoil the line of his immaculate pink suit. For the most part, details of the Cat's background remained obscure. He found the concept of 'parents' bewildering. He couldn't believe there was ever a time he wasn't born. When he put his mind to it, he did recall two other Cats who used to be around, but most of the time they'd avoided each other. One of them, he reckoned, had probably been his mother - because she wouldn't sleep with him. In fact. she'd got quite angry at his approaches and hit him on the head with a large frying pan. The other must have been his father; a deeply religiom Cat who was constantly reciting the Seven Cat Commandments: 'Thou shalt not be cool; Thou shalt not be in vain: Thou shalt not have more than ten suits; Thou shalt not partake of carnal knowledge with more than four members of the opposite sex at any one session; Thou shalt not slink; Thou shalt not hog the bathroom; and Thou shalt not steal another's hair-gel.' In the Dark Ages of religious intolerance, these laws were laid down by Cat priests to keep their race in check. It was only through denying certain lusts, certain natural urges to be cool and stylish, they said, that a Cat could find redemption. Strict punishments were meted to transgressors: Cats caught slinking in public would have their shower units removed; Cats condemned as vain would have their hair-driers confiscated, and be forced to wear fashions some two or three seasons old. 'Paisley? With thin lapels and turn-ups?? But that was last spring! Please, no! Have mercy!' The Cat finally tired of the relentless questioning and announced it was time for its main mid-evening snooze. He casually leapt up on top of Rimmer's locker, curled up in the impossibly small space and fell immediately into a deep and satisfying sleep. 'What are we going to do with him?' Rimmer asked. Lister sat at the table, playing with his locks. He was thinking. Watching Lister thinking always reminded Rimmer of a huge, old, rusty tractor trying to plough furrows in a concrete field. Finally, he looked up. 'He's coming with us. Back to Earth.' Disappointment filtered through Rimmer's brittle smile. 'You're still going into stasis then? You're taking him with you?' 'Why not?' No reason, he thought. No reason at all. So long as you don't give two short smegs about Arnold J. Rimmer. EIGHT 'Jump here, jump back... Waaaah.' The Cat slinked down the corridor, pulling a clothes rack on wheels which was packed with suits. Blue suits, green suits, red suits. Polka dots, stripes, checks. Silk suits, fur suits, plain suits. Each one he'd made himself during the years he'd been trapped down in the cargo hold. 'Jump up, jump down...' The cat spun round and did a little dance, without breaking stride. He reached the Vacuum Storage floor, where Lister was waiting impatiently. 'What are you doing?' 'I'm doing what you said do.' 'I said "Bring a few basic essentials you can't leave behind."' 'Right,' agreed the Cat, 'and this is all I'm taking. Just this and the other ten racks. Travel light, move fast. Waaaaah.' He spun on the spot. 'You can't pack all this in Vacuum Storage - it'll take ages.' The Cat's face drooped. He'd spent the last two hours trying to whittle his enormous collection down to his favourite hundred suits. He'd been cruel with himself. The yellow DJ with green piping had gone. The imitation walrus hide with the fake zebra collar was history. And his red PVC morning suit with matching top hat and cane - down the tube! 'You can take two suits,' Lister said firmly, 'and that's it.' 'Two suits?' the Cat laughed mockingly. 'Two? Then I'm staying, buddy.' 'You can't stay. When I come out, you'll be dead.' 'Two suits is dead.' 'Pick.' The Cat walked up and down the racks, then he walked up and down the racks again. Then he went behind the racks and walked up and down them on the other side. 'How many did you say it was? Ten?' 'Two.' 'Oh, man.' The Cat walked up and down the racks again. Lister walked up to the rack, grabbed two suits, and thrust them roughly into the vacuum trunk. '0K, those are the two you're taking.' The Cat picked up the arm of the first suit on the rack and shook it by the sleeve. 'Bye, man.' He tapped it on its padded shoulder and went to the next one. Lister sighed. 'I'd better say so-long to Rimmer.' 'Bye, baby,' said the Cat to his next suit; 'gonna miss you.' Lister walked off down the corridor. 'We're going into stasis in ten minutes. I'll meet you in the sleeping quarters.' 'Hey,' the Cat called, 'if I cut off my leg and leave it behind, can I take three?' It didn't make sense. As Holly flicked through the four zillion megabytes of navicomp data, and simultaneously cross-checked the information against all the sensor status databanks, he found it impossible to avoid the condusion that Red Dwarf was 0.002 seconds away from doing something completely impossible. It was about to break the light barrier. True, the average cruising speed for a vessel the size of Red Dwarf was 200,000 miles an hour. True, they had been accelerating constantly for the last three million years. True, the ship was now clocking up 669,555,000 miles an hour, which was just 45,000 miles an hour below the speed of light. And true, in 0.0019 seconds they would break the light barrier. The thing was: it wasn't possible. Light is the speed limit for the universe. Nothing travels faster than light. All of which was good. What wasn't so good was that Red Dwarf was about to do exactly that. In 0.0017 seconds. It didn't make sense. Holly reprogrammed the Drive computer to slow down. Which the Drive computer did. But because they were accelerating so fast, slowing down merely meant they were accelerating slightly less quickly than they were before. However, they were still accelerating. So they were slowing down, but still going faster. That didn't make much sense to Holly either. The only thing that was clear was that by the time they'd slowed down enough to be actually slowing down, in the sense of going slower - rather than the kind of slowing down that meant they were actually getting faster, albeit faster more slowly - they would already have broken the light barrier. Which was impossible. And they were due to do this in 0.0013 seconds. Holly hummed softly. Holly had only uncovered all this when he'd tried to chart the ship's return course to Earth. At first he'd assumed it was possible to do a three-point turn or loop the loop, but according to his calculations it would take the best part of three hundred and fifty thousand years just to do a fairly sharpish U-turn. Then Holly got his plan. If he could manoeuvre Red Dwarf into orbit around a planet, they could use the gravitational pull to slingshot out 180° later on a heading back to Earth. Brilliant! Who said he was getting computer-senile? Of course, this Fancy Dan astrobatics talk was all a tiny bit irrelevant, because they were about to break the light barrier, and Holly was fairly convinced that in so doing they would all be instantly reduced to their component atoms. And as far as he could tell this was going to happen in o.ooo seconds. Oh dear. That was now. At the same instant. Lister was everything and he was nothing. His mass was infinite and his mass was non-existent. As he watched, his legs stretched out beneath him, as if he were teetering on the top of the World Trade Centre, staring down at his tiny feet miles below. His face huckled and rippled. His eyelashes hung down over his checks like huge palm trees. He was all colours and he was no colours. Instinctively, he reached out an arm to steady himself, and it telescoped away across the now-infinite space of the sleeping quarters as if it were elastic. He turned to get his bearings, and found himself looking at the back of his own head. And then he was falling, falling into himself, and when he opened his eyes he discovered his head was in his stomach;. then just as quickly he mushroomed back out, and his head was the shape and size of an Egyptian pyramid. He tried to walk. A mistake. His legs became hopelessly tangled. He forgot how many he had, and where they should go. Each step was like trying to construct a wayward deck- chair. And then he fell over. But he didn't go down., he went up. He folded round on himself, to form a perfect cylinder, and everywhere he looked there was him. Him him him him him him him him him him him him him him him him . . . And all the hirm started screaming as they spun, cutting orbits around themselves, like electrons. And then it stopped. And he was just standing in front of the washbasin, his razor in his hand, looking at his soaped-up face in the mirror. Holly appeared on the sleeping quarters' monitor. 'Whoops!' he said: 'My fault,* and grinned contritely. •What happened?* 'We've broken the light barrier.* 'I thought that was impossible.' 'Nah/ said Holly. 'So are we travelling at light speed, now?' •Faster.' Is everyone OK?' 'Rimmer's a bit shaken up. He's still running around in circles in the technical library.' "What about the ship?' 'Well, now it's got back to its original mass, it's feeling much perkier,' said Holly, and left to devote all his available run-time to navigating a ship that was now travelling beyond measurable speed. Lister stepped into the northern hatchway of the recreation room, on his way to the technical libary to find Rammer. Down the centre of the recreation room were dozens of baize-covered tables in various shapes and sizes: pool, snooker, cuarango and flip. The walls were lined with 3-D video booths - Italian Driver was Lister's favourite: one of the most thrilling and dangerous games around, the object of which was to park a car in Rome. Rimmer stepped in through the southern hatchway. 'Rimmer, we've broken the light barrier. . .' 'What?' said Rimmer. "We're going faster than the speed of light!' 'How did I do what?* •What d'you mean: "How did I do what?"' 'Lister, don't be a gimboid.' *l'm not being a gimboid.' 'How could I? I've just been in the library, thinking. Anyway, I've decided . . .' Rimmer paused for no discernible reason, then yelled, equally inexplicably: 'Shut upt*, wheeled round r8o°, and appeared to be addressing a dartboard. 'As I was saying, before I was so rudely interrupted: I've decided when you go into stasis I want to be left on. I want to stay behind.' 'Are you all right, Rimmer?' 'What things?' said Rimmer with a puzzled expression. 'Eh?' *l said what? Rimmer turned his head slowly, following some unseen object with his eyes. 'What's going on?' Lister passed his hand in front of Rimmer's eyes. Rimmer stared blankly ahead. 'You're space crazy,* Rimmer said. 'I'm space crazy? You're the one who's space crazy.' 'Well, it probably is deja vu,' said Rimmer. 'Sounds like it.* He scratched the hologramatic 'H' on IMS forehead with his long, thin finger, shook his head, then walked across to the northern hatchway and stepped out. Simultaneously, another Rimmer stepped in through die southern hatchway. Lister whipped round just in time to sec the fir