First Impressions Kira Bacal Smashwords Edition Copyright 2003 Kira Bacal First Publication in Another Realm, 2003 Smashwords Edition License Notes Thank you for downloading this free ebook. You are welcome to share it with your friends. This book may be reproduced, copied and distributed for non-commercial purposes, provided the book remains in its complete original form. If you enjoyed this book, please return to Smashwords.com to discover other works by this author. Thank you for your support. I knew I was in trouble when I won the hand at poker. I’d programmed the computer myself and while I might be a rotten card player, I’m a very good programmer. I shouldn’t have won. Not seven hands straight. For one thing, my luck’s not that good. So when the computer bleeped in defeat yet again, I got nervous. I was in a singleship running cargo between two forsaken colonies far from everywhere in the known galaxy. If my computer had a problem, I was a long, long way from help. Four hours of hacking later, I knew what was wrong. Eight hours later, I knew I couldn’t fix it. At that point, my options narrowed to the intolerable and the unbearable. I briefly considered hopping out the airlock – why prolong the inevitable? -- but my mother had taught me never to give up. Of course, that sage bit of advice had earned me more lumps than anything else the old bat had ever counseled, but it was too late for me to change the habits of a lifetime now. Especially when that lifetime appeared to be drawing to a rapid close. In the end, I gritted my teeth and activated the communications system. Eventually the view screen flickered into life. A heavyset face, complete with blue-tinged jowls, scowled out of it. “What do you want?” “It’s nice to see you too,” I cooed sweetly. “Drop the pleasantries and tell me what you want. I’ve got enough problems already without your demands on top of them.” I suppressed a sigh. It was depressing to think this was the person who’d most mourn my death. I obviously needed to widen my social circle. “If you think you’ve got problems now, wait until I’ve finished. The computer suffered a fractal cascade, and it got to the core. All the protected archives are dead and the cascade is spreading. I can’t reinitialize because the core files are gone, and within a few hours, all the higher computer functions will be gone.” His eyes had bugged out during my litany. I’d like to think it was due to his concern for my person, but his first words quickly laid that notion to rest. “The cargo! How’s the cargo?” “It’s fine,” I snarled, resentful that he couldn’t even feign a fleeting interest in my welfare. “I told you – only the computer’s higher functions are affected.” He glared at me. “What the grik does that mean?” Hard to believe he’s not a throwback to some earlier era, isn’t it? How anyone could survive today with so little understanding of basic technology? “It means,” I told him with exaggerated patience, “that pretty soon the computer will be reduced to the level of a blithering idiot. It will