- The morning came drab and dreary as always. The air outside the Inn was
thick and moist, the clouds obscuring the sky threatening rain. It was late
when Jim woke, puffy-eyed and tousle-haired. The pale light filtered through
the gossamer curtains, which were still in the stuffy air of the bedroom.
Jim lifted his head off the pillow; his father was no longer there. It was
something he was all too used to. He slid out of bed, his bare feet tingling
on the cold floor, and stood up. Stumbling forward to the chest of drawers,
he just narrowly avoided toys and storybooks left haphazard on the floor
("I'll clean them up later, before Mom throws a fit," he thought
to himself). He didn't have many toys; most were secondhand. This didn't
really bother Jim, for he wasn't a needy boy. Living on their income, he had
learned to cherish whatever he had, and that was enough for him.
- Changed into his day clothes, Jim hopped down the stairs as he put one
last stocking on, lost balance and tripped the last few steps; he hit the
landing with a painful thud. Looking up with a wince he noticed the Inn's
few guests were already up and seated around tables, and they were every one
of them staring at Jim. Flushing scarlet he smiled sheepishly, then picked
himself up and skipped to the bar. His mother was there, her long hair
pulled back into an untidy bun on her head, her arms full of cleaning rags
and glasses. Seeing her son, she gave a sigh of relief. "Jim! Thank
goodness," she said to him over the counter, fumbling as glass tried to
escape the pile. "Will you help mommy out and take these dishes to the
kitchen?" She jerked her head towards a pile of dishes in a box on the
floor, scrambling to put the glasses down before they all shattered.
- "'Kay!" Jim replied, and hobbled over to the box. Pulling up the
sleeves of his jacket he grabbed each end of the box and - with some effort,
as the box was almost as large as himself - carried it past the swinging
door to the kitchen, stepping up onto a stool and dumping the dirty dishes
into the industrial sink with a splash and a clatter. Rubbing his nose with
the sleeve of his jacket (Mommy was always telling him not to do this), he
went back out to Sarah, who was now serving breakfast to one of the Inn's
guests, a rather scrawny looking old alien lady, with a warty toad-like face
and a scowl. When Jim came up and gave his mother's apron a tug, the alien's
bulbous eyes narrowed, but she said nothing.
- "I'm done, mom." He said with a pleased grin. Sarah looked down
at Jim and his jacket now splotched with soapy water from the big sink and
rolled her eyes.
- "Thank you, Jimmy… now, will you help the other guests with
breakfast? And please, try not to spill anything else on your clothes!"
- Jim just giggled and ran off to the kitchen. He scuttled around bussing
the tables, smiling for the guests and saying "Good morning"
politely as his mother had taught him, and the guests either returned the
greeting, smiled back, or (in the nanny's case) just continued to frown and
mutter. Besides the old crone there was a rather strapping, speckled alien
with a trunk-like nose and tiny spectacles poring over thick books; and a
Benbonian family, a mother with a twin boy and girl. The kids were delighted
with Jim, though Jim had always found the frog-like aliens with their
bug-eyed stare rather disturbing. The twins brought out little musical
instruments and started a tune, crooning children's rhymes loudly, tapping
their webbed toes on the wooden seats- When I am grown to man's
estate
I shall be very proud and great
And tell the other girls and boys
Not to meddle with my toys
- With breakfast over and the tables cleared, the children danced and
giggled to the rhymes. There was call for a story and Jim found himself put
forward; soon they were all pulled up around the bar (even the nanny) and
listening to Jim's tale, who sat on the counter, feet dangling over the
edge. He gestured with his hands as he told the story, and even the bookworm
was engaged by the tale, one Jim knew by heart since he was a little boy.
- "… And then, out of nowhere, Flint and his band of blood-thirsty
pirates swooped in on the unsuspecting galleon!" He waved his arms
about, as if to swoop in and smother something small. "Flint looted the
ship, gathered up all the treasure - mountains of glittering gold and jewels
- and the pirates would get back on their ship and POOF!" Jim leaped to
his feet with the effect, and the rapt audience flinched in surprise.
"Flint, his pirates, and the treasure disappeared into the etherium
without a trace. But its said that Flint hid his plunder on Treasure Planet,
where the loot of a thousand worlds is piled high in glimmering stacks,
waiting for someone to claim it." Jim finished his tale with a smirk as
his small audience applauded, the Benbonian twins cheering and clanging
their musical toys. Sarah wrapped her arms around Jim's shoulders from
behind the bar as the clatter died. The trunk-nosed alien cleared his
throat.
- "Hrumph, a remarkable son you have, Mrs. Hawkins, and a fine
Inn if I might add." There was a murmur of assent; even the old nanny
was inclined. "Will young master Hawkins be a miner like his father? A
fine occupation for such a determined and hard-working young man."
- Jim shook his head just as his mother was about to answer for him.
"Nope! I'm going to be a spacer! I'm gonna have my own ship one day,
and I'll fly it all over the etherium with my crew… and one day, I'm gonna
find Treasure Planet." He exclaimed with a wide smile. The guests gave
a chuckle.
- "And quite an imagination, too!" The Benbonian mother chimed in.
"If only all the youth had dreams that high."
- "I wanna be a pirate!" The Benbonian boy exclaimed, one eye shut
and swiping at his sister with an imaginary cutlass.
- "You most certainly will not!" The mother cried sternly, but it
was useless; the twins were too wrapped up in their game. The morning
whittled by, and soon the guests were gone. Jim was helping tidy up the
rooms and tables with his mom, talking happily of the guests, when the door
to the Inn opened again, and Jim fell silent. A gust of chill wind swept
through the Inn as two figures, large and small, shuffled quickly into the
Inn and closed the door behind them. Both figures were wearing thick coats,
which both soaked with rain; the hoods thrown over their heads obscured
their faces. Jim stood back by the tables, apprehensive, as Sarah hurried
forward. "Here, let me help you with that," she said as she helped
them remove their coats.
- "Gracías, my lady." The tall figure said gratefully in a rather
nasal accent. Both humanoid aliens had long muzzles and faces like a
greyhound's. Tall ears sat on top of their heads, which twitched this way
and that. Their skin was a pasty steel blue, similar to Montressor at dusk,
and their round eyes were a blue as deep as the Lagoon Nebula, with a star's
twinkle. The smaller figure was actually a young boy, and the taller his
father.
- "Please, you're welcome to sit down." Sarah said to the two
guests as she put the coats neatly on a standing rack. Jim quickly pulled
out two chairs and hurried forward to take the baggage from their paws. The
youth's face split into a toothy grin when he saw Jim, and Jim smiled back
weakly.
- "We hopes you don't mind us staying a bits, senorita?" The
father inquired of Sarah as he sat at the table. The son scrambled into the
next chair, feet dangling. Jim stood and stared for a moment, luggage still
in hand. "My hijo and I, we heards of the Inn at the village docks and
we thoughts it a night place to stay while the shop is being readied?"
- "Of course, sir, you are most welcome here." Sarah replied as he
she came over behind Jim.
- The alien grinned. "Bueno! We'll only be a few nights, sí? Ah, my
name is Carlito Riley, and I'm opening a metalworking shop here with my son,
Poquito." He pulled over Poquito as he introduced him, who gave a timid
smile. Jim found it rather odd that Carlito should say he was a metalworker;
he had seem blacksmiths before, and they were usually big and burly, but
this alien was slender with long brittle hands, more of an artist than a
craftsman.
- "Nice to meet you, Mr. Riley," Sarah replied as she held out her
hand, which Riley clasped and shook gently. "I'm Sarah Hawkins, and
this here is my son, Jim."
- "Well, hola, Jimmy! You should show young Poquito around, he is in
need of a friend here in this new neighborhood." Riley said merrily to
Jim. Jim blushed and looked away.
- Sarah looked down at her own son. "Jim, will you take up the luggage
and show the Rileys to their room?" Jim nodded slowly, arms full of
baggage, and tottered towards the stairs. Poquito jumped out of the chair
and followed, all the while rattling off questions in his high-pitched
accented speech. The boy sighed as he hauled the baggage up the flight of
stairs, which seemed ever longer.