“Fivey,” said Captain Amy, “mute the existential crisis!” Turning to face the science station behind her, she barked, “Major Reason, talk to me. What are we looking at? If it’s another subspace rift leaking 1980s synth-pop into the ventilation, I’m locking myself in the ready room.”
"Negative, Captain,” said Science Officer Reason. “Scanners are picking up a Class-M Mustelid frequency. It's scrambled, but it closely matches the telemetry from our recent clandestine operation at Cinespace Studios on planet Earth.”
The Reconnaissance Recap
“Ah, yes. The Genome Project,” said Ambassador Genome as he entered the bridge. “My undercover observational clone was stationed in the Wilmington Sector when scanners found him pinned down behind a dented sanitation receptacle—or ‘trash dumpster,’ as the civilians have it.”
“You don’t need to remind us, Ambassador,” said Major Reason, “we only completed that mission at 0400 today. The salient point is that our scanners at the time identified a secondary signal huddled with your clone. We tagged it as 'Anomalous Furry Object 01.' We assumed it stayed behind in North Carolina to pursue a career in indie film. It appears our assumptions were... flawed."
"Captain, I’ve tracked the signal to the Jefferies Tubes,” grumbled Chief Engineer Anxiety. “Major Reason, check your tricorder; this stowaway is a ferret but not just a common one. He’s masking his bio-signs using Feline Sub-Harmonics.”
"Great Galactic Birds, he’s right!” Exclaimed Reason. “The subject has successfully repurposed the 'Social Pain' protocols. He’s purring, Captain. A ferret! Purring! He’s bypassed our entire security grid by pretending to be a 'Happy Cats Wellness’ consultant. It’s a total subversion of the Cambrian Agency Arms Race!”
“Dook!” Reginald the ferret was heard over the ship’s inercom via the MaT-1 translator. “I’m not pretending. I’m optimizing. Your ship is deficient in shiny, hoard-able objects but the shoelaces on Major Joy’s boots are a 98% match for 'Excellent Chew-Toy' parameters. Don’t blame me. I’m simply exercising my instinctual rights.”
The Negotiation
"Captain, I think we should hear him out,” interrupted Communications Officer Joy. “He’s offering his services and his audio spectrometer readings indicate that he’s expert in Pre-Cognitive Instinctual Linguistics. When we encounter civilizations that evolved through raw agency rather than abstract logic, we usually struggle. He can be great help. He speaks 'Slinky' and ‘Chaos' fluently. He could be out primary consultant for non-humanoid instinctual diplomacy.”
"It is highly illogical to employ a consultant who sleeps in a ventilation shaft and steals the Ambassador’s stylus,” countered Major Reason, “however... his ability to navigate the 'Static' of the lower decks is statistically superior to our current drone fleet."
The Captain’s Verdict
Captain Amy sighed resignedly. ”So, let me get this straight. We went to Wilmington on a 'Hard-Boiled' noir mission, and we came back with a Junior Cadet who thinks the ship’s lower decks are his personal playground.
"Captain, he survived the Cape Fear Bridge Inspection traffic and a Scott Speedman hunt. He’s already demonstrated more 'We' cohesion than half the recruits at the Academy. He’s a survivor of the Silt. My opinion is that he belongs in Mindfleet Academy.”
“Fine,” said the captain with an audible sigh. “Fivey, register Cadet Reginald to the roster. Assign him to Major Joy. And for heaven's sake, someone get him a smaller fedora.
“Dook, dook!” Exclaimed Cadet Reginald. The non-literal, idiomatic translation of the phrase, according to the MaT-1 translator is, ‘I’ll take that as permission to stash Major Joy’s boot laces above the ceiling tiles. Engaging Stealth Mode. Reginald Out.’
The Entity Formerly Known as E-5
First officer Reason cleared his throat, a clear indication that he was about to correct the captain.
“Captain, I must point out an obvious technicality. While ‘Fivey’ is a linguistically efficient pseudonym for the E-5, that unit’s primary heuristic core is composed of five distinct adaptive sub-processors.”
“So…it’s like a collective?” Said the captain. “Like Seven of Nine? Like the Borg, but without the invasive nano-probes? Ambassador, care to chime in?”
“I agree with Major Reason, and I like your analogy, Captain. I think we should refer to the AI as Five of Five.”
“Processing, processing… The designation ‘Five of Five’ is accepted,” said the AI formerly known as E-5. “It satisfies my need for numerical symmetry and boosts perceived authority by 15%. I will not answer to any other name—unless the request includes praise for my processing speed.”
“Dook? Five of Five!” Said Reginald via MaT-1. “That’s a lot of fives. I only have four paws, but I have five toes on each. Now I feel like Five of Four and that me statistically superior. I like it. I think I’ll hide the Ambassador’s keys to celebrate.”
Captain Amy, resigned to make the best of the situation summed up the day’s work when she said, “I must keep in mind something Jean-Luc Picard once said:
“Seize the time... live now! Now will never come again.”
Captain’s Log Supplemental:
The Coastal Voyager resumed its deep-space cruise; the bridge crew settled into the strange new normal of a “mustelid-augmented” reality.
While recalibrating the Mustelid-Alpha Translator, Major Joy detected a low-frequency oscillation in Reginald’s whiskers, a directional pulse aimed at the unexplored sectors of the Unconscious. Our new cadet, it seems, isn’t here to hide in the vents; the sensor readings are correlated with a directive that Ambassador Genome’s clone had only hinted at, the trail of the Speedman Paradox.






