31 stories in 31 days Challenge, this is #4!
Boardwalk on Noir
“Life's not fair, you know” Matt
told the floppy-eared goofy-looking guy next to him on the bar who
nodded, exaggerated like a puppet.
“Meeno, Meeno” the guy answered
thoughtfully.
Matt looked at his glass, he couldn't
even tell what color the liquid was. He was seeing in black and white
so it might be Noir. He doesn't remember what he ordered any way.
“I've got nothing to show for my
life, nothing” he said to the alien
“Ohlifeisasaddeed” it said, taking
its own drink. Matt tapped the translator embedded behind his ear, of
all the rotten luck it would go out too.
“Nothing?” the robot bartender
asked
“I can pay for the drinks,
bot-tender!” Matt told it, waving it off like it was a fly hovering
over his soup. “When it rains it pours” he muttered.
The alien answered
“Itdoobutlifegoungotdaliveno?”
Matt nodded, throwing come interstellar
currency units at the bot-tender and going outside for a walk, on the
boardwalk where he could listen to the ocean waves crashing against
the beach. It was dark outside so he was still seeing mostly in black
and white.
The signs were no longer readable. The
alien languages on the neon and lit-up signs were no longer being
translated for him. His device had failed. He walked away from the
buildings and the alien signs and tightened his collar against the
cooling breeze.
It was quiet and lonely out near the
water. Matt never thought he would end up a loser like this, his life
had certainly stunk. He kept going, thinking his day would come, his
turn would be just around the corner. Nothing doing. The footprints
behind him were wiped out in the next wave, but they were as lasting
as his impact on society had been.
Life stinks. Especially his. He
wondered if the two suns and moons and the five and a half hour day
and five and a half hour nights were causing his mood swings.
Matt thought about standing there until
one of the suns came up, he'd be able to watch the green and purple
sea. It had a calming effect on him, it always had. Some people might
just walk out there and end it all. Nobody swims in these waters,
especially humans, they would be fish food immediately here.
Matt shook his head. To much of a
coward to even kill himself, he mused. He walked back to the
boardwalk and watched the signs in the alien languages as he walked
past. The translator was definitely not working. Some of them didn't
even look like a language, some of them looked like bird droppings.
He stopped. One of the signs was
written in a human language at least. Not his language, for sure, but
he could sound it out. Matt didn't know he could even do that.
“Kee-op-ee” he sounded out the syllables and he knew “A coffee
shop”, because it wouldn't make sense to have a copy shop on the
beach just before first night ended.
He entered the shop. Coffee. He stood
there in the doorway a moment and just breathed in the smell and the
color in his vision started returning. The Noir he had been drinking
was starting to wear off and his mood was already changing.
This is my life, I will write the
script. No more floating around waiting for someone else to do it for
me.
“Ann-yeong ha-sayo” the short,
smiling human woman in the apron said with a curt bow. He bowed back
and she showed him to a table. “Coffee” he said, of course, what
else would he order here? The woman was cute, he wondered if she was
single out here so far from home. Earth, he meant Earth not home.
Maybe. He took the coffee she delivered with his best smile.
Matt had a lot of thinking to do. Maybe
he should scrounge up funds for a ride back to Earth, but he didn't
really like that idea. It was a dirty, crowded mindless place now.
Let the fools keep it, he wasn't going to change 9 billion people, it
was pointless to try. So if it wasn't that, then what was it? Matt
needed a plan, a goal... or was it a dream.
He definitely had thinking to do.
The woman's name tag, somewhere in his
brain he deciphered the symbols of her name and it came to him.
“Young Mee-Hee” he pronounced it in a whisper, probably badly.
Not that it mattered, her translator is probably working. She might
be lonely too, a human running a coffee shop on an alien seashore.
Coffee was poison to some of the aliens.
He saw a thin-as-a-rod alien laying on
a table, limp. Seeti's found coffee intoxicating. He rolled his eyes.
He would definitely talk to her, yep. Maybe. He wouldn't understand
her answers, likely, if she didn't speak his language. Matt laughed
at the idea that she would assume his translator was working.
Really need to get that fixed sometime
today, he thought “or maybe wait until after second night”
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