Wreckers: A Denver Boyd Novel George Ellis (book series for 12 year olds .TXT) š
- Author: George Ellis
Book online Ā«Wreckers: A Denver Boyd Novel George Ellis (book series for 12 year olds .TXT) šĀ». Author George Ellis
Located on the larger of Marsā two moons, about 3,400 miles off the planetās surface, Salās Parts Depot took up most of the 5-mile-wide Stickney Crater. From above, the yard looked like the final resting place of every kind of ship you could imagine, rising from the dusty moon like gravestones.
Nobody knew why it was called Salās Parts Depot. The guy who owned it was named Mike. Maybe he just liked the sound of Salās. Anyway, the process was pretty efficient. Incoming ships waited in a queue to head down to the moonās surface, where one of five rovers would meet you and follow you around as you retrieved parts from various ships.
I didnāt figure I was taking too much of a risk stopping at Salās right after my escape from Port Lauderdale. The feds on the barge werenāt there on official business, meaning they likely wouldnāt put out a bounty on me or the Stang. And even if they did, Iād be out of the neighborhood soon enough. As I waited for my number to be called so I could head to the yard and pick up a few things, I scanned the inventory available. First priority was to acquire some backup filters for the Stangās air system. Those could be purchased from Salās stock. The rest of the items on my list were likely to come from the ships on the lot.
āIām no genius ā well, actually I am ā but do you think we should maybe not stop right now?ā Gary asked. āKind of ruins the idea of a getaway when you go shopping right around the corner.
āRelax, those guys are morons and on top of that, they wonāt be following us anytime soon,ā I said. āI may or may not have unplugged a thing or two when I left the 405 unsupervised.ā
Gary said my uncle would have got a kick out of that. As much as I liked my uncle and learned a lot in the brief time we spent together, I took Garyās word for it, as he would always know my uncle better than I did.
āMustang 1, youāre cleared to enter the depot,ā an automated voice informed me. I selected the area Iād be landing in, then took the Stang down to the moonās surface.
An hour later, I walked down the gangway in my space suit. The rover driver was waiting for me at the bottom, standing next to his vehicle, which had a medium-sized cargo bed in the back for moving parts around the lot. The tag on the guyās suit said āEgon.ā Once we were in the cab of the rover, I asked him if the name had any connection to the old movie about ghosts. He said he wasnāt sure, but his mom had been Earth-born, so anything was possible.
I told him the ship I was interested in checking out, and we drove the rest of the way in silence. He cast me a few glances that suggested he didnāt get too many customers my age shopping at the depot. I was going to have to get used to that treatment, I reminded myself. He parked the rover next to a large orange ship with white paneling. The shell was covered in rust, which meant the ship had likely been on Earth or in low orbit at some point, as the relative lack of oxygen in space meant most metals didnāt really rust. I pulled up the available history of the vessel on Salās store page. According to the depotās files, the ship had been there for 10 years and still had a decent amount of parts intact.
I left the rover and went inside to search for what I needed. Walking through a still, deserted ship always kind of creeped me out. I knew there were no threats looming around the corner of any given corridor, but I still gripped my flashlight a bit harder than usual when searching for the engine room. I eventually found it and went to the auxiliary fuse box. The ship was an S-class leisure cruiser made by the now-defunct Boeing Corporation. Before going belly-up 50 years earlier, Boeing had built a variety of ships in the verse, both private and military. Their fuses were some of the more versatile around. I popped open the box and saw that all of the fuses were still there. I removed them one by one and all but two of them were intact and likely functional.
I reported the fuses to Egon when I got back to the rover. He placed them in the cargo bed and logged the items into the computer. I had a limited amount of credits I was working with, so I had to be choosy and remember to save money for the air filters. I told Egon to add the filters so I didnāt forget; Salās had a strict policy that once you removed something from a ship on the yard, you had to buy it. They didnāt take kindly to having to return merchandise to a ship because a customer couldnāt pay.
We hit a few more ships and I was about to tell Egon to head back to the Stang when he looked over and asked if I was in a tight spot with credits. I told him I wasnāt, but he must have seen that I wasnāt being totally honest, because he grinned through his visor.
āJust saying thereās a card game going back at HQ if you want to try and charge your pot,ā he said.
* * *
They were playing 8-Card Hold āEm when I walked in. Two tables of Salās employees plus a few visiting captains and crew. I didnāt spot any blue suits. Not surprising, as their first thought would be to bust up (or tax) Salās for running an illegal gambling operation. Taking their credits wasnāt worth the hassle, even if they were probably easy marks.
Salās HQ was a series of small domed structures, about
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