Showing posts with label Kryten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kryten. Show all posts

Thursday 13 October 2022

I've Come from The Future to Rescue You.


“Where Superman’s cape was plain, 
adorned with only his S-brand
Marvel’s was flamboyantly decorated 
with gold trim and fleur-de-lys. 

He was wearing 
The Military Dress Uniform 
of A Regiment of 
Future Men and Women.




KRYTEN
Sir, we really must get down to the storage bay.  
Now, remember my message to us -- 
that is where we meet the Inquisitor 
for the final confrontation.

CAT
That's your plan?  We go out there and face him?  
Nice plan. Shall I paint a bullseye on my face?

LISTER
Listen, Kryten, I've been thinkin' about this, 
I've come up with  somethin'.

KRYTEN
Yes, sir?

LISTER
I'm gonna use my brains 
for the first time in my life.

KRYTEN
Considering the circumstances, sir, 
do you really believe that's wise?

LISTER
Gimme the time gauntlet.

KRYTEN gives it to him.

KRYTEN: 
But you don't know how to use it, sir!

LISTER: 
You'll have to shout out instructions, won't ya?

KRYTEN
Wouldn't it be simpler if I wore it?

LISTER
You can't wear it, Kryten!

KRYTEN
Why not?

LISTER
You're programmed not to Kill.




“Billy Batson, Good and True, has been selected to take the place of the retiring wizard, who has used his powers to protect humankind for the last three thousand years and wants a break. The transfer of power is accomplished when Billy speaks the wizard’s name — “Shazam!” — triggering a thunderclap and flash of lightning. In the swirling smoke of the ultimate conjuring trick stands a tall man in a cape. He wears a red militarystyle tunic with a chunky yellow lightning bolt on the chest. His cape is white with a high collar and braided yellow trim. He has a yellow sash around his waist, red tights, and yellow boots. (He wisely steers clear of the underpants-on-the-outside look.) With his slicked-back brilliantined hair, he looks like the boy Billy grown up, perfected. He looks, in actual fact, almost exactly like the actor Fred McMurray, upon whose features Charles Clarence Beck based those of his hero. His final task complete, the wizard slumps back in his throne, and the immense block of stone drops to smash his body flat. His spirit form haunts the panel like Obi-Wan Kenobi dispensing postmortem advice to the fledgling superhero.

  It’s a heady brew and it extends the potential of the superhero in the way that “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds” pushed the prevailing idea of popular music into something unforeseen.

  The magic word was a concept that connected the hero to the basis of human speech; language, storytelling. Captain Marvel’s power came not from years in the gym or from his alien biology or his royal blood. His power came from a spell. He was a magician.

  I remember walking alone as a child, chanting every word in the dictionary in the hope of finding my own Shazam

Eventually, everybody searches for his or her own magic word: the diet, the relationship, the wisdom that might liberate us from the conventional into the extraordinary. That eternal human hope for transcendence gave the Captain Marvel strip rocket fuel.

  Shazam! has entered the culture as an Abracadabra or Hey Presto!—an all-purpose magical incantation. It was a word of enlightenment and personal transformation that accomplished, in a white-hot instant, what decades of Buddhist meditation could only point toward. His powers were the siddhis claimed by ultimate yogins. In the language of ceremonial magic, Shazam! summoned the holy guardian angel— the exalted future self — to come to one’s aid. When Billy’s natural curiosity got him into trouble, the word could summon Captain Marvel to deal with any and all consequences”














INQUISITOR
(In The INQUISITOR Voice) 
Enough!

The INQUISITOR opens 
The Mask again to reveal 
LISTER's face.

INQUISITOR: 
Well! Get out of THIS one, smeghead!

LISTER: 
What're you talkin' about?

INQUISITOR: 
You know what you coulda made 
of Your Life, if you tried.
What you coulda become.

LISTER: 
So?

INQUISITOR: 
You've got brains, man! 
Brains you've never used!

LISTER:
So?

INQUISITOR: 
So, then justify yourself!

LISTER: 
Spin on it!

The INQUISITOR closes his mask again 
and returns to his own voice.

INQUISITOR
The Inquisition is over. 
I have reached My Verdict.

LISTER, RIMMER, KRYTEN and CAT 
are now back standing together in The Hall.

INQUISITOR
Two of you have failed to become 
that which you might so easily have been. 
You have lived without merit, 
and so not lived at all!

The INQUISITOR zaps RIMMER and CAT 
with the green light, and they disappear.

LISTER
You scum!  You've wiped them out!


KRYTEN
(holding LISTER back) 
Sir!

LISTER: 
He's crazy, Kryten!
He's erased The Cat and Rimmer!

INQUISITOR
They are quite safe.

KRYTEN: 
Sir... I'm afraid it is we 
who are to be erased.

LISTER
Ah.
The INQUISITOR does something on his gauntlet, and chains appear linking KRYTEN and LISTER 
together at the ankles and the wrists.

LISTER
The Cat has lead a more worthwhile life 
than either of us?

INQUISITOR
He is a Shallow and Selfish Creature, 
as is The Hologram. 
By their own low standards, 
they have acquitted themselves.

Whereas you and the mechanoid 
could have been so much more.

The INQUISITOR surrounds them 
with the red-orange energy bubble.

LISTER: 
What's this?

KRYTEN: 
Best Guess: We are being surgically 
removed from time.  
Every memory of us, every action 
we ever performed is being dissolved.  
Our Lives are being undone.

INQUISITOR
It is Complete 
The time-lines are knitted.
Causality is healed.  
All that remains is to remove 
your physical forms from existence.

LISTER
Well, if you've got some amazing 
secret plan up your sleeve, Kryten, 
now's the time to mention it.

KRYTEN
No plan, sir.  
(Indicating his mechanoid arms
No sleeves.

Another KRYTEN appears 
behind The INQUISITOR.  

He is wearing A Gauntlet
like The INQUISITOR's.

FUTURE KRYTEN
Perfect!  Ah, now, What Do I Do Next?

FUTURE KRYTEN revs up a chainsaw 
and cuts off The INQUISITOR's Hand 
with The Gauntlet.  

While The INQUISITOR staggers around in pain, 
FUTURE KRYTEN kicks The Gauntlet 
to LISTER and KRYTEN.

FUTURE KRYTEN: 
Now, hurry! Take The Gauntlet and Go!

LISTER
What the smeg is goin' on?

FUTURE KRYTEN
I don't have time to explain!
I've come from The Future to rescue you.
Now you must go!  Hurry!

KRYTEN
What about me?  I mean... you... 
I mean... us?

FUTURE KRYTEN
I'm afraid we get killed.

KRYTEN: 
Killed?  How?

FUTURE KRYTEN
While I'm standing here explaining this to you, 
The Inquisitor jumps me 
from behind, like this : --

The INQUISITOR jumps FUTURE KRYTEN from behind and starts to crush his head against the wall.

FUTURE KRYTEN: 
I forgot to say, before you reach 
The Final Confrontation in The Storage Bay, 
you must have decoded The Gauntlet's controls.

LISTER
How? Can you give us a clue?

FUTURE KRYTEN: 
Well, I cannot explain --
For some bizarre reason 
My Final Words are "Enig."

LISTER
"Enig?!"

FUTURE KRYTEN
Yeah, enig--

There is a crunching noise as the INQUISITOR 
finally crushes FUTURE KRYTEN's head.  
The remaining KRYTEN begins 
to pull LISTER away down the corridor.

KRYTEN
Come on sir, we have to go!

LISTER: 
He's just killed you, Kryten!

KRYTEN
Sir! We have got to go!




Monday 25 April 2022

Kryten






'Come on, everyone - they're here! They're in orbit! Heavens! There's so much to do.' Kryten rushed down the sloping corridor, pausing only to water a lusciously green plastic pot plant.


Things were going very well. Very well indeed. The Girls had been quiet and really most forlorn of late. Being marooned light years from home with scant hope of rescue had been very trying, to say the least. He'd done his best to keep them entertained, to keep their spirits high, but over the last few weeks, he'd felt intuitively that they were losing hope.


Even his Friday night concert parties, usually the highlight of the week, had begun to be greeted with growing apathy. Miss Yvette was especially guilty of this. She hadn't particularly enjoyed them from the beginning, and had told him so.


The concert parties always began in the same way. After baths and supper Kryten would clear the decks while the girls played cards, or read. At nine sharp the lights would be dimmed, and Kryten would tap-dance onto a makeshift stage in the engine-room, singing I'm a Yankee Doodle Dandy, juggling two cans of beeswax.


And then he'd go into his impressions. His best one was of Parkur, the mechanoid aboard the Neutron Star' but none of the girls knew him, so it never went down that well. Then there were the magic tricks. Or, to put it more accurately, the magic trick. He would lie in a box and saw himself in half. It wasn't much of a trick because he actually did saw himself in half. And then the evening suffered a slight hiatus while they waited the forty minutes it took for Kryten to reconnect his circuitry.


Then he'd round off the evening with a selection of hits from The Student Prince. And then they'd play prize bingo. The prize in the prize bingo was always a can of jiffy WindoKleen. Nobody ever wanted a can of Jiffy WindoKleen, so Kryten always got it back and was able to use it as the next week's prize.



In an odd kind of way Kryten was grateful for the accident. His life had taken on a new vitality. He was needed. The girls depended on him. His days were full. There was the cooking, the changing of the bandages, the physiotherapy, the concert parties. And, of course, there was the cleaning.


Kryten took almost orgasmic delight in housework. Piles of dirty dishes thrilled him. Mounds of unwashed laundry filled him with rapture. An unmopped floor left him drymouthed with lust. He loved cleaning things even more than he loved things being clean. And things being clean sent him into a frenzy of ecstasy.


And at night, when everyone was safely tucked in bed and all the chores were done and there was absolutely nothing left to clean, then, and only then, he'd sink into his favourite chair, cushions aplump, and watch Androids.


Androids was a soap opera, aimed at the large mechanoid audience who had huge buying power when it came to household goods. Kryten had all one thousand, nine hundred and seventy-four episodes on disc. He'd seen them all many times, but he still winced when Karstares was killed in the plane crash. He still wept when Roze left Benzen. He still laughed and slapped his metal knee when Hudzen won the mechanoid lottery and hired his human master as a servant. And he always cheered when Mollee took on the android brothels, put the pimps into prison and set the prostidroids free.


Androids, he told himself, was his one vice. That, and the single chocolate he allowed himself each viewing, to conserve supplies. When he watched Androids he wasn't just a mechanoid, marooned light years from nowhere, with three demanding dependants and a never-ending schedule of work He was somewhere different. Somewhere glamorous. Somewhere else.


He was Hudzen, winning the lottery and hiring a human to serve him. He was Jaysee, swinging the mega-quidbuck deals, dining in the best restaurants, living in his vast penthouse atop the Juno Hilton.


He was someone else.


***


Kryten rushed down the slope and onto the main service deck, where the girls were breakfasting.


'Come on! They're here!' He clapped his hands.


Richards, Schuman and Fantozi didn't move. They hadn't moved, in fact, for almost three million years.


The three skeletons sat round the table, in freshly-laundered uniforms, and grinned.


'I don't know what's so funny,' said Kryten. 'They'll be here any moment, and there's so much to do!' He clucked and shook his head. 'Miss Elaine, honestly: you haven't even made an effort. Look at your hair.'


He fussed over to the table' and took out a hairbrush.


'What a mess you look.' He hummed Stay Young And Beautiful, and combed her long blonde wig with smooth, gentle strokes. When her hair was just so, he stood back and eyed her critically. He wasn't quite satisfied. He took out a lipstick that matched her uniform and touched up her makeup.


'Dazzling. You could go straight on the cover of Vogue.'


He shuffled down the table.


'Miss Yvette! You haven't touched your soup. It's no wonder you're looking so pasty. He patted her gingerly on the shoulder. There was a long, slow creaking noise, and the skeleton slumped face down into the bowl of tomato soup. Kryten threw up his hands in horror. 'Eat nicely, Miss Yvette! What will that nice Captain Rimmer think if he sees you eating like that?' He hoisted the skeleton back onto the chair, sprayed her with a squirt of windo-Kleen, and gave her head a quick polish.


'Now then, Miss Kirsty.' He waddled over to the remaining skeleton and looked her up and down: the trendy knee length boots, the chic, deep red mini-skirt and the peaked velvet cap cocked at a racy angle.


'No,' he beamed, putting the hairbrush away. 'You look absolutely perfect!'


EIGHTEEN



The Cat slinked down the docking bay gantry in his gold, hand-stitched flightsuit, carrying a two-feet-high, cone-shaped matching space helmet under his arm.


He climbed up the boarding steps into Blue Midget, where Lister and Rimmer were sitting in the drive seats waiting for him. He jumped into the cramped cabin, struck a pose like King of the Rocket Men, legs splayed, chest puffed out, hand on one hip, and said: 'Put your shades on, guys. You're looking at a nuclear explosion in lurex.' He gleamed a smile at them and fluttered his eyes.


'You're looking good,' said Lister' craning round.


'Looking good?? Did I hear the man say, "Looking only good??" Buddy, I am a plastic surgeon's nightmare. Throw away the scalpel; improvements are impossible.'


'A spacesuit,' said Rimmer, 'with cufflinks?'


'Listen,' said the Cat, dusting the console scat before arranging himself on it, 'you've got to guarantee me we don't pass any mirrors. If we do, I'm there for the day.'


Lister flicked on the remote link with Holly.


Holly appeared on the screen looking somehow different. Lister scrutinised the image. He couldn't quite work out what it was.


'All right, then, dudes? Everybody set?'


Lister twigged. 'Holly, why are you wearing a toupee?, Holly was upset. He spent some considerable time corrupting his digital image to give himself a fuller head of hair. 'So it's not undetectable, then? It doesn't blend in naturally and seemlessly with my own natural hair?'


'It looks,' said Lister, 'like you've got a small, furry animal nesting on top of your head.'


'What is wrong with everybody?' Rimmer straightened his cap. 'Three million years without a woman, and you all go crazy.'


He's right, thought Holly, who am I trying to impress? I'm a computer! How humiliating to have that pointed out by a hologram! Out of spite he instantly simulated a large and painful boil on the back of Rimmer's neck, and made it start to throb.


***


Blue Midget, the powerful haulage transporter originally designed to carry ore and silicates to and from the ship, looked strangely graceful as it flickered between the red and blue lights of the twin sun system above the howling icy green wasteland of the moon that had become Nova 5's graveyard.


Lister peered through the furry dice dangling from the windscreen. 'Nice place for a skiing holiday.'


Rimmer stared unblinkingly at the tracking monitor. 'Nothing yet,' he said helpfully. He slipped his finger down the collar of his shirt where a large boil was really beginning to hurt.


Lister struggled hopelessly with the twelve gear levers. Each provided five gears, making it sixty gears in all, and Lister hadn't yet been in the right one throughout the twenty-minute jag.


The tracking monitor started delivering a series of rapid bleeps.


'We've got it!' Rimmer cried. 'Lat. twenty-seven, four, Long. seventeen, seven.'


Lister looked at him like he was speaking Portuguese.


'Left a bit, and round that glacier.'


'Oh' right.'


***


Lister landed appallingly in forty-seventh gear. Blue Midget stalled, bounced and rocked, before settling to rest with an exhausted sigh. Lister pushed in the button marked 'C'. The caterpillar tracks' telescoped out of their housing, rotated down to the icy emerald surface and hoisted the transporter ten feet above the ground.


'Hey,' said the Cat' impressed, 'You really can drive this thing.'


'Actually,' said Lister, 'I thought that was the cigarette lighter.'


The red-hot wiper blades melted green slush from the windscreen as Blue Midget rose and fell over a series of icy dunes. As they reached the peak of the next range, they saw, in the hollow below, the broken wreck jutting out of the landscape like a child's discarded toy.


The gearbox groaned and rattled as they made their slippery descent down into the crater.


'Yoo-hoo!' the Cat squealed in falsetto, and waved madly out of the port side window.


***


'Ah, come in, come in.' Kryten ushered them in from the airlock. 'How lovely to meet you,' he said, and bowed deeply.


'Cârmita,' said Rimmer' speaking too loudly. 'What a delightful craft - reminds me of my first command.' He turned and hissed to Lister: 'Call me Ace.'


Lister pretended not to understand and walked off down the spotless, newly painted white corridor after Kryten, who was chattering banalities about the weather.


'Green slush again. Tut tut, tut.'


The Cat flossed his teeth one last time, and followed them.


Kryten, used to the strange tilt, walked speedily down the thin corridor, listing at an odd angle.


He went through a large pear-shaped hatchway, and they followed him across what must have been the ship's Engine Room. Even Lister, who knew next to nothing about these things, could tell Nova 5's technology was far in advance of Red Dwarf's. Taking up three-quarters of the room was the strangest piece of machinery Lister had ever seen: it was like a huge series of merry-go-rounds stacked one on top of the other and turned on their sides. Each of these was filled with silver discs joined by thick gold rods, and at the end was what looked like an enormous cannon.


'What's that?' asked Lister.


'It's the ship's Drive,' Kryten replied. 'It's the Duality Jump.'


'What's a Duality Jump?'


'Don't be thick, Lister. Everybody knows what a Duality Jump is,' said Rimmer, lying.


Kryten scurried through the pear-shaped exit, and Lister practically had to sprint out of the engine-room to catch up with them two corridors later.


Suddenly, the Cat swivelled, as they passed a full-length mirror recessed in the wall. His heart pounded, his pulse quickened. He felt silly and giddy. He was in love.


'You're a work of Art, baby,' he crooned softly at his reflection.


Lister turned and shouted: 'Come on!'


'I can't. You're going to have to help me.'


Lister picked up his golden-booted foot and started to yank him down the corridor. Unable to help himself, the Cat hung on to the mirror. His gloved fingers squeaked across the glass surface as Lister pulled him free.


'Thanks, Man,' the Cat said gratefully. 'That was a bad one.'


***


'I'm so excited,' said Kryten, shuffling along and absently dusting a completely clean fire-extinguisher. 'We all are. The girls can hardly stop themselves from jumping up and down.'


'Ha ha haaa,' brayed Rimmer' falsely. 'Cârmita, Cârmita'


'Ah!' said Kryten, 'Ii parolas Esperanton, Kapitano Rimmer?'


'I'm sorry?'


'Vi parolas Esperanton, Kapitano Rimmer?'


'Come again?'


'You speak Esperanto' Captain Rimmer?'


'Ah, oui, oui, oui. Jawol. Si, si.' Rimmer searched desperately through his memory for the appropriate phrase. Mercifully it came to him. 'Bonvolu alsendi la pordiston laiisajne estas rano en mia bideo.'


'A frog?' said Kryten. 'In which bidet?'


'Ha ha haaaaa,' brayed Rimmer, even less convincingly. 'It doesn't matter. I'll deal with in myself.'


***


Kryten walked round the corner and down the ramp on to the service deck.


'Well, here they are,' he said.


Without looking where Kryten was beckoning, Rimmer bent down on one knee and swept his cap 'in a smooth arc. 'Cârmita!' he purred.


Lister and the Cat tumbled in behind him.


Their eyes met the hollow sockets of the three grinning skeletons sitting around the table.


There was a very, very long silence.


It was followed by another very, very long silence.


'Well,' said Kryten, a little upset 'isn't anybody going to say "Hello"?'


'Hi.' said Lister, weakly. 'I'm Dave. This is the Cat. And this here is Ace.'


Rimmer still hadn't closed his mouth from forming the final vowel of Cârmita.


Lister leaned over and whispered to him conspiratorially: 'I think that little blonde one's giving you the eye, Cap.'


'Now,' Kryten clapped his hands, 'you all get to know one another, and I'll run off and fetch some tea.' He staggered off up the slope.


'I don't believe this,' said Rimmer, massaging the 'H' on his forehead.


Lister looked at him. 'Be strong, Big Man.'


'Our one contact with intelligent life in over three million years, and he turns out to be an android version of Norman Bates.'


'So, they're a little on the skinny side,' said the Cat, ever hopeful. 'A few hot dinners, and who knows?'


Lister walked up to the table and put his arms around two of the skeletons' shoulders.


'I know this may not be the time or the place to say this, girls, but my mate, Ace here, is incredibly' incredibly brave ...'


'Smeg off' dogfood face!'


'And he's got tons and tons of girlfriends.'


'I'm warning you Lister.


Kryten raced back down the slope' carrying a tray which held several plates of triangular-shaped sandwiches, a pot of steaming tea and a plate with seven of his precious chocolates on it. As he laid out the cups on the table' he looked up, suddenly aware of the lack of conversation.


'Is there something wrong?' he asked.


'Something wrong??' said Rimmer' aghast. 'They're dead.'


'Who's dead?' asked Kryten, pouring some milk into the cups.


'They're dead,' Rimmer waved at the three skeletons. 'They're all dead.'


'My God!' Kryten stepped back in horror. 'I was only away two minutes!'


'They've been dead for centuries.'


'No!'


'Yes!'


'Are you a doctor?'


'You only have to look at them,' Rimmer whined. 'They've got less meat on them than a chicken nugget!'


'Whuh ... whuh ... well, what am I going to do?' Kryten stammered. 'I'm programmed to serve them.'


'Well, the first thing we should do is, you know ... bury them,' said Lister quietly.


'You're that sure they're dead?'


'Yes!' Rimmer shouted.


Kryten waddled over to Richards's leering skeleton. 'What about this one?'


Rimmer sighed. 'Look. There's a very simple test.' He walked up to the head of the table. 'All right,' he said, 'hands up any of you who are alive.'


Kryten looked on anxiously. To his dismay there was no response. He made frantic signals, coaxing the girls to raise their hands.


'OK?' said Rimmer finally.


Kryten's shoulders buckled' and he dropped limply into a chair' totally defeated.


'I thought they might be ... but I wouldn't allow myself ... I didn't want to admit ... I ... I'm programmed to serve them ... It's all I can do ... I let them down so badly ... I...'


Lister shuffled uncomfortably.


'What am I to do?' Kryten said plaintively. A buzzer went off in Kryten's head.


It was his internal alarm clock telling him it was time for Miss Yvette's bath.


Automatically he raised himself and then remembering, sank back down again. He took a sonic screwdriver from his top pocket, flipped a series of release catches on his neck, removed his head and plonked it down unceremoniously on to the table.


'What are you doing?' said the Cat.


'I'm programmed to serve,' said Kryten's head. 'They're dead. The programme is finished. I'm activating my shutdown disc.'


'Woah!' said Lister. 'Slow down.'


Kryten's hands twisted the right ear off his disembodied head and pressed a latch which flipped open his skull.


'Kryten - listen to me ...'


Kryten started removing the minute circuit boards from inside his brain' and stacking them neatly on the table.


'Kryten ...'


He tugged out several batches of interface leads' neatly wrapped them up and placed them tidily beside the rest of his mind.


Finally he located his shutdown programme. 'Sorry about the mess he said, and switched himself off.


His eyes rotated back into the plastic of his skull; his body slumped forward in his seat and crashed onto the floor.


NINETEEN



'It's driving me batty. Must you do it here?' Rimmer surveyed the array of android organs spread higgledy piggledy all over the sleeping quarters. 'What's this on my pillow? It's his eyes!'


'I'm trying to fix him,' said Lister, holding Kryten's nose in one hand and poking a pipe cleaner soaked in white spirit up his nostril with the other.


It had taken them a week to transport the two broken halves of the Nova 5 back to Red Dwarf. They had needed all six of the remaining transporter craft, operating on auto pilot, to wrench the ship free of the centuries-old methane ice, but after five days of maximum thrust the small transporters had finally yanked the wreck clear, and hauled it slowly and precariously up to the orbiting Red Dwarf.


The Drive section of Nova 5 held few surprises - Kryten had meticulously updated the inventory every Tuesday evening for two million years. Most of the food was still vacuum stored. Lister had been delighted to discover they had twenty-five thousand spicy poppadoms and a hundred and thirty tons of mango chutney; enough, he pointed out at the time, to keep him happy for the best part of a month.


There was, thankfully, nearly two thousand gallons of irradiated cow's milk, and Lister had insisted the dog's milk be flushed out into the vacuum of space, where it had instantly frozen, leaving a huge dog-milk asteroid for some future species to ponder over.


'Why d'you have to keep his bits all over my bunk?'


'So I know where they are.'


'Yes, well, I'm sorry, but I refuse to have somebody else's eyes on my pillow.'


'Look - I'll have him finished by this afternoon.'


'You've been saying that, for two months. What's this in my coffee mug? It's a big toe.'


'Rimmer, will you just smeg off and leave me to it?'


'What the smeg do you want to repair him for anyway? He's just a mechanoid. A mechanoid that's gone completely barking mad.'


'I want to find out about that duality drive - I want to know if we can fix it.


And. I... I dunno ... I feel sorry for him.'


'Sorry for him? He's a machine. It's like feeling sorry for a tractor.'


'It's not. He's got a personality.'


'Yes, a personality that should be severely sedated, bound in a metal straightjacket and locked in a rubber room with a stick between his teeth.'


'I think I can fix that.'


'You think it's just like repairing your bike, don't you? Spot of grease, clean all his bits, re-bore his carburettor, and bang! He's as good as new.'


'Same principle.'


'He's got a defect in his artificial intelligence. You'd need a degree in Advanced Mental Engineering from Caltech to set him to rights.'


Lister prodded one of Kryten's circuit boards with a soldering iron. The noseless head fizzed momentarily into life...'


'Ah-ha,' it said, in rapid falsetto, 'elephant rain dingblat VietNam.' The eyes on Rimmer's pillow rotated and blinked. 'Telephone sandwich kerplunk armadillo Rumplestiltskin purple.'


'Well,' said Rimmer. 'Once again you've proved me wrong.'


***


HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhHHHHHHH


HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH


Rimmer looked at his bunkside clock. 2.34 a.m.


HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH


HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH


Rimmer clambered down from his bunk and looked over at Lister's sleeping body.


He was still holding one of Kryten's circuit boards in one hand, and a sonic screwdriver in the other.


And I'm supposed to keep you sane? he thought. Who the smeg is supposed to keep ME sane?


Rimmer closed his eyes and tried to sleep.


HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH HNNNnnnnNNNNNKRHHhhhhhhhHHHHHH


It was useless. He got Holly to simulate his red, black, white, blue, yellow and orange striped skiing anorak, and decided to check out the salvage operation in the shuttle bay.