A #microfiction for anyone who needs a cuppa. Who would you share a âgalactic teabagâ with?
âWhat is a galactic teabag, anyway?â Asked Trel-5. âIt sounds like a sex move.â
Ada laughed so hard she spat tea through her nose. Not that it was really âteaâ, but rather the reconstituted caffeine-malt that was the closest the ship could currently manage.
It was weirdly acrid in her nostrils.
âWhat?â Trel-5 continued, her temple fronds flaring in slight embarrassment. âIt kind of does?â
Ada bunched up her command sash and wiped the teas from her eyes and 'teaâ from her nose.
âItâs an old Terran saying, from the NASA days, before they were folded into the navy.â She said, keeping one eye on the wide observation window.
Behind them, the nebula gently expanded, puffing itself up like a blowfish. Ada hoped it wouldnât prove to be poisonous like one, but this had been an unpredictable patch of space since the Grandmother Star had shined her last and gone supernova.
âSo ⌠what does it mean?â Trel-5 leaned in close, her big dark eyes spread impossibly wide to eat up every morsel of the words playing out on Adaâs lips.
âThis was back before synth boxes were a thing, right, so no 3D-printed nearly-pizzas or NATO-standard milky caffeine malt.â She raised her mug with a wry smile. âIf you wanted something, you had to vacuum pack it and bring it with you or grow it in the hydroponics bay, if you had such luxury.â
âAh. Our species perhaps had it easier in that case, our crews always carried their sustenance with them.â Trel-5 leaned in closer as if someone might overhear them. âThough you still had to deal with a closed emotional eco-system. Eating the same muffled resentment and low-level wonder for years at a time wasnât always ⌠healthy. But, go on, you were telling me about teabagsâŚâ
âSo, on long missions - as you might imagine - caffeine was at a premium. Only so much coffee concentrate was considered 'essentialâ - which, frankly, seems like a gross sentient rights violation to me - and teabags werenât exactly the most efficient caffeine vector. But youâd usually be able to find some on a satellite or space station if you were lucky. A lot of the time, though, they were from tea plants grown as part of an experiment.â
âAh, and these were the 'galactic teabagsâ?â
âOrginally. But it came about that any teabag you found in space was a 'galacticâ. A piece of home that had seen the stars. A great treasure to be shared only in greatest trouble or triumph.â
âSo if you call someone a 'galactic teabagâ you call them a great treasure?â Trel-5âs skin had taken on a rich purple glow, a smile ghosting her lips as she tasted the emotional timbre of this idea.
âKind of? Thereâs more to it than that.â Ada clicked her tongue as she aligned the ideas in her head. âAs they were so rare, actually using a 'galacticâ was a big deal. Youâd only use it when you needed it and if the person you shared it with was worth it. The kind of conversation it felt like you might not get through without it?â
âI have had those, yes.â
âWell, if you say of someone now: "theyâre a galactic teabag kind of friendâ, itâs like youâre saying theyâre someone youâd trust to have that conversation with. To help you work through hard truths, while reminding you the galaxy can still be soft and that it still loves you. That the galaxy is big and scary, but it will still share a cuppa with you.â
"That sounds like a good kind of friend to have.â
There was a brief pause as both looked out the observation window for a while, watching the young nebula try on different clouds of colour.
âItâs also a sex thing.â This time it was Trel-5âs turn to burst out laughing, specks of purple bursting from her cheeks and filling the air with a faint whiff of an emotion that was something like love and something like wonder, tinged with pain. Something hard, but wrapped carefully.
âYou know the navy. Never could leave a good innuendo well enough alone.â
They laughed for a long time. When they were done, Trel-5 said, quietly:
âYou may not believe this. But I actually do have a single teabag.â
âAnd you didnât tell me?â Ada wasnât sure if her outrage was mocking or genuine.
âI suppose that, without really knowing why, I was saving it to share with "a real galactic teabag friend.â Trel-5âs fronds flared a little again. âWould you maybe like to come back to my quarters and share it now?â