Runaway to the Stars: Page 204

Bip is a shoes-off household.

Transcript

Talita looks around the airlock chamber, bewildered, as the interior hatch opens.

Talita: Is this gas mix breathable?

Bip: Yep! I pinched some O₂ from the electrolysis plant.

Talita starts to walk out of the chamber, but the swarm of worms frantically rears up, grabbing her feet.

Bip: HEY HEY HEY! Suit off! I don’t want you tracking regolith in here!

Talita rolls her eyes and unclips the oxygen lines off her helmet so she can remove it.

Talita: Sigh… this better not kill me.

Bip: Trust me, I have no interest in dragging more bodies out of here with the worms.

Talita finishes pulling her helmet and pauses in stunned horror, considering the implications. Slowly her shock condenses into sadness as she takes off the rest of her suit, leaving it in the airlock chamber. She steps out of the interior airlock door into the large, cross-shaped docking module room.

Talita: You... could have asked for my help.

Bip: Furniture removal is one thing, but I felt undertaker services was a bit too far.

Talita: But doing it alone seems so—

She looks at the overhead surface of the room and stops, staring. Bip's avatar climbs around the edge of the opening between the docking module and the habitat like a moving painting on the wall. The worms crawl through the opening and the avatar points for her to follow them, where lights are turning on and hatches are opening in sequence down the long elevator shaft of the spine.

Bip: This way. Watch your step!

Talita: ...Alright.

Runaway to the Stars: Page 204

Bip is a shoes-off household.

Transcript

Talita looks around the airlock chamber, bewildered, as the interior hatch opens.

Talita: Is this gas mix breathable?

Bip: Yep! I pinched some O₂ from the electrolysis plant.

Talita starts to walk out of the chamber, but the swarm of worms frantically rears up, grabbing her feet.

Bip: HEY HEY HEY! Suit off! I don’t want you tracking regolith in here!

Talita rolls her eyes and unclips the oxygen lines off her helmet so she can remove it.

Talita: Sigh… this better not kill me.

Bip: Trust me, I have no interest in dragging more bodies out of here with the worms.

Talita finishes pulling her helmet and pauses in stunned horror, considering the implications. Slowly her shock condenses into sadness as she takes off the rest of her suit, leaving it in the airlock chamber. She steps out of the interior airlock door into the large, cross-shaped docking module room.

Talita: You... could have asked for my help.

Bip: Furniture removal is one thing, but I felt undertaker services was a bit too far.

Talita: But doing it alone seems so—

She looks at the overhead surface of the room and stops, staring. Bip's avatar climbs around the edge of the opening between the docking module and the habitat like a moving painting on the wall. The worms crawl through the opening and the avatar points for her to follow them, where lights are turning on and hatches are opening in sequence down the long elevator shaft of the spine.

Bip: This way. Watch your step!

Talita: ...Alright.

110 thoughts on “Runaway to the Stars: Page 204

  1. well… that answers that question. i had been wondering if there had been anyone onboard still, or if they’d all gotten spaced. Sorry, Bip 😔

  2. not the centaur beds :'(

  3. I’m playing the Silent Hill 2 remake on this all-around jumbo ship screen. It’s ~*immersive*~

    1. It’s all fun and giggles until someone superimposes SFX imagery of a hull breach over it.

  4. Tsk tsk Ms. Dirtypaws, didn’t your father teach you anything about not tracking moondust anywhere?

  5. … so I guess Bip is doing the AI-version of dissociating tf away from having to deal with what happened, huh?

    Wasn’t there a kid on board as well for a few years? In Bip’s stead I would have lost it by now.

    1. bip may have lost it already

  6. Talita in socks is so cute

  7. I’m not sure, is there a screen on the wall? Is Bip’s avatar projected on the wall by robot worms? Or is that just a convention?

    1. The walls are mostly made of a kind of LCD screen where Bip can move around. Kind of like how they were in Talita’s wall clock earlier

      1. So, you can watch cartoons from any wall and change the room’s wallpaper every five minutes? Sounds pretty expensive, but cool. On the other hand, in the visually impoverished environment of a spaceship, it might be a justifiable expense to keep from going crazy.

        1. I mean, you cant exactly compromise the hull by nailing a picture on the wall, and I wouldn’t trust no space-command-hooks (I barely trust them in a gravity rich environment) xD

      2. It would be interesting to see how different characters decorate such spaces.

  8. Is there a reason the bodies didn’t get removed when the ship went to the scrapyard???? I feel like the families of the centaurs might want the bodies back. (Granted Bip has implied they were doing very illegal things so maybe they didn’t have records of who to go back to.)

    1. because of the way clans structures work, this was the whole family

    2. If I had to guess, I’d say it has to do with the nature of talita’s job – bip and crew were assumedly scooped up by some galactic tow service/clean up service then deposited straight to dirtball for processing past running plates. Talita was the first to look in the hull and discover the phones even, Im going to assume that means she was the first to inspect inside probably. Bip as a ship basically read as an abandoned car to authorities, dirtball is essentially a junkyard and legally no bodies should end up there. of course bip and crew were not legal! ….the impetus would be on bip to expose themselves and risk, who knows what, to bring the centaur families closure…… tbh theres no saying bip /hasnt/ passed the information on to the familes at least, if not the remains. but….. chances are they havent or cant maybe…… much to think about

      1. Considering the bounty of cell phones and Bip calling themselves a “pirate ship”, the crew was likely an all-worker-female bandit clan. Not sure if any other centaurs would even be looking for them…

        1. Thats probably true, the entirety of the centaur family clan was probably aboard! theres also maybe reasons they left their homeplanet, so who knows what extended relations remain at home for the bip clan members… Maybe none of them wanted to be found as badly as Bip doesnt want to be found, and the wishes were to remain secret. I was also speculating a bit last night that the bodies couldnt have been obvious on first inspection as the reason they werent immediately found – if they had been in the airlock this would be a different story. Maybe they were in the emergency ship, strapped in but they didnt escape on time…. It’s hard to say. As far as Talita not having explored inside at first when she discovered the phones – the mechanics of the doors werent working before so all talita could discover were the phones. so maybe it was just because there was no way inside to the main compartments without power and repair (or being dismantled by heavy equipment).

  9. The amount of trust she’s putting in Bip right now is a lot, glad to see they’re friends :]
    And Bip having to see the bodies is.. I’m sorry little dude, no one should ever have to go through that

  10. “You… could have asked for my help”

    I’m sorry Talita but I don’t think you’re mentally prepared for that.

  11. I like talita’s capri pants, they’re cute

    1. Talita is just cute in general 🥰 i love seeing her in new outfits

  12. Since the crew died from a hull breech in space, their bodies would have been a nightmare to look at. Boiled and frozen, and the deaths wouldn’t have been instant. It had to be a horrifying thing for Bip to see AS THE SHIP THAT WAS SUPPOSED TO PROTECT THEM. Dealing with the bodies alone had to have been difficult but there’s no way something that private could have been done around an alien of the same species who would have her own struggles from seeing the corpses of a race she feels so distant from. This was definitely the least stressful and emotional option

    1. yeaaah. like this would have been a psychological nightmare for bip. but with talita’s body/species dysmorphia, seeing warped contorted corpses as some of the few in-person instances of bodies that look like her? god fucking knows if she’d ever recover from that. it sucks that the desicion was made for her, in a way. but i think it was the right thing to do.

  13. I love how Bip always immediately changing the subject when it comes to the previous crew says so much without saying anything at all.

    Also I think this might be the first time Talita is entering a space designed with centaurs in mind. Wonder how she’s going to feel about it!

  14. Ngl, at first I thought he was making a joke implying that he killed people who came snooping around

    But then I remembered what happened to this ship…

  15. Somewhere between the last page’s final panel and Talita walking out the airlock here, she and Bip must’ve changed from radio comms to normal speech (atmospheric sound). I see Talitas speech bubbles losing the spikes (= radio static?), but Bips seem mostly unchanged. Granted, Bips “normal speech” is still getting transmitted from someplace else in the ship, but should that be audible (= for us, visible) … ?

    1. Idk, I’m just using the spikes to represent speech coming from a mechanical source. AI speech is always coming from a speaker (spikes), and sounds faintly to very artificial (square box). Just kind of vibes based.

      1. Fair enough, thanks. Thinking some more about it, in a universe where even main characters have ninute tells in their pronunciation (not to mention Idrisahs … equipment), why would AIs make much of an effort to sound “perfectly natural” in the first place … well, unless they’re running the (phone services of an) administration of a mostly-single-species planet maybe …

        1. It varies depending on the AI, as well. Calcery had a pretty realistic voice with lower “flexibility” when it came to naturalistic interjections and tone changes. Bip’s voice is much more obviously artificial but has way more tone freedom and spontaneity.

  16. Huh. I consider that for Bip, as an AI, having to handle/dispose of / take apart(???) their previous crew’s bodies might not be as emotionally difficult as it would be for an organic being. Bip’s sense of self is physically transferrable- they can inhabit any body their programming is compatible with. So, they could have a strong innate sense that one’s “code” is independent of one’s “chassis.” I’m sure they’re sad about losing their crew, their friends and companions. But disposing of their crew’s empty bodies? It’s just another task to do.

    1. Bip repeatedly has been blowing off emotional moments for jokes or straight up ignoring offers of empathy, except for, perhaps, the moment they asked about the escape pod, which still seemed like Bip holding back. While I’m sure that some AI in this setting take on the kind of view you’re talking about, I honestly doubt Bip feels that way, or at least they have made it extremely difficult to tell. With how much they’re pushing Talita to move on from the topic, I feel like they did find body removal upsetting. I think they just don’t like being emotionally vulnerable in front of someone who they’re still getting to know, even if she isn’t a complete stranger anymore.

    2. Much better Bip handled that, than Talita having to go full “CSS Hunley” after the first sinking.
      Hint : Saw , knives and axe.

    3. They might not have the same kind of death themselves but they still can understand how biological death works enough to be upsetting. And considering how Bip avoids the topic I suppose they were close to the crew while for Talita they were complete strangers.
      That makes me wonder if Talita has to occasionaly deal with/see bodies considering the nature of her job

    4. I think if Bip was as unfazed as they want everyone to think they are, they wouldn’t change the subject every time someone mentions their former crew.

  17. Even feathered Talita is not safe from helmet hair. Great touch!

  18. Where did… he put the bodies….?

    1. Light_In_The_Fog

      Given the nature of their work, i wouldn’t be that surprised if Dirtball has solid precedent for body disposal. The question is, how did Bip deliver the bodies without notice?

      Or maybe they just buried them idk

  19. Talita helping with the bodies might also pose the problem of transmissible diseases or whatnot

    1. Talita reportedly did catch some bugs every time centaurs visited Nexus Jovia, even if she didn’t meet them directly (and they supposedly weren’t formally ill themselves).

      But on the other hand, there’s lucky coincidence, the former crew died as healthy as they could be, their bodies being exposed to hard vacuum should have done some superficial disinfection at least, and corpses generally aren’t as much of a health hazard as us humans tend to believe.

      If there were a notable danger of contagion to her, I’d hope that Bip would know and not let Talita open her suit inside the ship, much less haul any (contaminated) “furniture” around … not to even think of having her become new crew and live off the ship’s centaur mini-ecosystem …

  20. Oh poor Bip… They just explained that they can’t carry anything heavier than 25 kilos with the machines, and centaurs are probably at least 500… Those bodies couldn’t have left in one piece. How terrible. (Unless I misunderstood.)

    Bip’s situation is so tragic but in a really understated way because of how they don’t really bring it up and seem so chipper despite it.

    1. Oh that’s a lot worse… I was just thinking that furniture is bulky and rigid while a body is easier to maneuver through a complex environment, or that moving anything more with the worms would be too much effort and that Talita would help.

    2. Worms together strong

      1. New heraldic motto accepted

        1. Now, where’s that crylaughing emoji when I need it?

        2. > where’s that crylaughing emoji when I need it?

          Over here.

    3. Dragging something is a lot easier than carrying something, but a lot of furniture isn’t really designed for dragging. Bip may have also been able to work each body onto something like a makeshift sled to make dragging them even easier, while that may not be as much of an option for rigid furniture. There’s also the fact that a lot of the centaur’s weight would have been water, while they’re at the end of an incidental freeze-drying (which one does by freezing something and exposing it to vacuum) – centaur mummies are going to weigh a lot less than the original corpses.

      Suffice to say, while it’s certainly possible Bip had to carve up the bodies to get them out, I suspect the worms were able to drag them out more-or-less intact.

    4. Also the bodies are probably basically freeze-dried at this point. Unsure what happens to biomass when it’s exposed to hard vacuum over a long time.

  21. Is Bip’s avatar diegetic here? or a tool for readers? Also poor poor Bip…

    1. I think it’s intended to be diegetic, but isn’t portrayed realistically. It’s not possible to project black color onto a white surface. The only way their image could be this crisp is if every lamp is a projector.

      1. it’ll be explained later… 🙂

        1. [pictures worms electrostatically clinging to the ceiling, carrying a 20-kg-or-less bucket of black paint and brushes] 😉

          “Well, it was either this, or redecorating with MBHs!”

          (… yes, I do know what e-paper is.)

        2. Ooooh, interesting. Is it E-ink walls? That could be both technically feasible and not absurdly expensive.

        3. I was thinking that, but IDK if the explanation applies to those floors. (remember, the ship is on it’s side)

      2. Or if the wall has some kind of screen implemented

    2. It’s described in the transcript (which if you normally don’t read is worth it as it gives prose descriptions of what’s going on) as “Bip’s avatar climbs around the edge of the opening between the docking module and the habitat like a moving painting on the wall.” So I’d say it’s what’s really going on, implying the surfaces of the walls/floors/ceilings of the ship, at least in this section of it, double as digital displays. Which is probably pretty dang useful.

  22. Oh damn, i guess people were right about the bodies of the previous crew still being in there…. poor Bip.

  23. I was wondering if the bodies would ever be mentioned after it was confirmed the previous crew didnt escape. Props for including that!
    Though now one has to wonder where and how Bip disposed of them without being overly suspicious. Also did this centaur crew have any burial practices that might have been considered?

  24. … say, Bip, how do those worms avoid “tracking regolith in” again? Solely by virtue of riding steering wheels well above Dirtball’s surface all the time?

    1. In my headcanon, the worms have a cleaning routine much like insects do. It looks very cute. Also, maybe the Runaway possesses a vacuum cleaner or two?

    2. It didn’t look like any worms followed her from the outside, it’s possible Bip has been keeping some worms strictly for inside usage, possibly after cleaning them up themself. Kinda like having indoor shoes vs outdoor shoes, only it’s remote robot bodies.

      1. If I were Bip, I’d have a frontloader waiting outside the airlock to receive the bodies. The worms just have to Nac Mac Feegle the bodies (sorry!) through the interior. We’ve also seen Bip use robotic arms in the ship, in old short comics and the preliminary work.

  25. I am absolutely baffled that nobody checked the ship for bodies. That’s, like, the very first thing you should do with a derelict.
    The only reason I can come up with is that it’s a deliberate murder and cover-up, with the sellers involved. But if it was a rival pirate gang, they’d probably loot the valuables and there’d be no phones to find. And if they just wanted Runaway gone, not caring about profits, then they’d leave it adrift, not capture and sell.

    1. Technically, nobody has said that the bodies were still out in the open when the salvagers came aboard the Runaway. The actual attackers stuffing them into a closet or somesuch way-back-when would also explain why Talita, rummaging through the ship while Bip was still confined to the phones, didn’t see them. Why they would want to do that instead of pushing them out into open space, never to be found again, is another question, however. Maybe they thought they knew who would find the ship, and wanted to send them a message. Or maybe they did know and Bip is who they wanted to find the remains?

      And then there’s the possibility that Bip is not exactly truthful and there actually were no bodies to remove anymore …

      1. I have to imagine the crew were hiding themselves in a last ditch effort to survive

        1. Against hull-puncturing missiles? To cut a long and depressing train of thoughts short, their best bet would have been to board the “emergency boat”, which seems to serve the purpose of being an escape pod when needed, and thus equipped with independent life support systems. But that is still docked to one of the airlocks.

    2. honestly you would absolutely hope so, but bodies have turned up in scrapyards and dumps enough times to make it plausible. theres a case where a woman was found in a car trunk 2 years after her murder after the new owner bought it from the scrapyard- having never been searched in that time. or a body found in a freezer that had been removed and transported to the dump – removals never looked inside, probably because it smelt awful. things slip through gaps all the time, through human laziness and oversight. dirtball’s shown to be poorly managed and if the original system is almost entirely automated it makes things like that easy to miss

      what i’m more curious about is how Bip disposed of the bodies. i guess total incineration is really the only subtle option, presumably using some metal furnance or even Bip’s own engines

  26. On an unrelated note, the Ag on dirtball has been doing quite well lately.

    1. On a somewhat more related note, the Runaway has a mini centaur ecosystem to get up and running again, too. Note that Bip didn’t say that ALL of the bodies went out …

  27. Oh, bip..

  28. That’s… a daunting task to do alone, specially with the remains of your friends/family.

    On a more cheerful note, the worm committee holding back Talita is adorable.

    1. I wonder how many electrician worms Bip would need for a total pull of 1800 kg … 😉

      1. After a lot of time in a vacuum they would probably dry up and not weigh as much. Still, a terrible task.

        1. … I’m referring to the 1800 kg it’d take to forcefully keep Talita (as stated on the previous page) from walking in sans undressing …

  29. Yeah, shoes off! You’re an engineer, you know full well how horrible regolith dust is, Talita!

    1. Pretty sure she even chastises a temp over it in chapter 1

      1. or maybe I’m thinking of her getting chastised over wheeling those phones through the office later on

        1. Yes, Ohwitiil yelled at her about it. But really, Talita ought to know that herself. Regolith also has effects on human lungs much like asbestos, and it reportedly stinks, too.

        2. > it reportedly stinks, too.

          The exact reason of which has not yet proceeded beyond a mere theory, though.

  30. wait. what did bip do with the bodies

    1. Dehydrate them (water is precious) and bury the remains next to the slag field?

      Wait. The Runaway’s interior spent quite some time in vacuum or near vacuum conditions. They’re probably already dehydrated, so just burying the remains next to the slag field sounds like the way to go. If Bip’s a romantic, maybe bury them by the beginning of the space loop, so that their souls may run among the stars eternally?
      Also, poor Bip. That must’ve been rough, even though they did not expect any of their crew to survive.

      1. Oh, poor Bip. And they don’t want to talk about it…

        I guess I assumed that Bip’s crew were… sucked out… in the decompression. Even though I know decompression doesn’t always work like that.

        Okay. So, without water, the bodies would be significantly lighter, mummified. Don’t think about that too hard. Definitely don’t try to visualize it.

        I think we might find out, eventually, a bit more about what happened. I just wish Bip would *open up* about their crew. Even if Talita has no frame of reference, she’s seemed… curious… about Bip’s crew.

        Or don’t sentient AIs take emotional damage, get traumatized? I guess we don’t know.

        1. I suppose it’s a good thing talita didn’t explore any further into the ship when she found those phones.

        2. Yeah, I also thought that the explosive decompression swept the crew into space. But that’s only true for the ones in the part of the habitat with the big ol’ hole in it, no? If anyone was elsewhere behind a closed door or even a bulkhead when the “fast moving object” hit, they’d still be killed by the loss of atmosphere but not sucked out.

        3. Responding to Arcstone:
          I think I just figured out where the bodies were.

          So, a thing that’s bugged me for a while is that there’s a lot of debris in the punctured hab, along with the phones. A hole that large should have sucked out a lot of stuff, especially the lightweight phones (some would have bounced off a wall and stayed inside). Also, on page 8, some of the phones are still in a box on the “floor” (left wall), which implies that they spilled out afterward.

          But… not if the ship was under thrust. Especially if it was under high (much more than a 1 G) thrust: the “gravity” would have been stronger than the wind for anything but the smallest objects.

          In which case, the crew was probably in crash couches at the time. It also explains why they wouldn’t be in the escape shuttle: there’s certainly no couches in there.

      2. > bury the remains next to the slag field?

        Nah – given that stuff is dropped onto the slag field from orbit, there’d be a chance of a slight miscalculation “digging” some parts back up that workers could subsequently find as they reclaim metals from the slag.

        Hiding the bodies where no biologicals will ever look would probably be best, but there shouldn’t be any actually radioactivity-contaminated parts to the hydrolysis plant, as deuterium is a stable isotope. And without some kind of no-go area effect to “protect” it, whichever part of the derelict mining ops’ infrastructure might get selected for dismantling+recycling Any Day Now™.

        There’s an outer side of the berm protecting the near launch loop terminal with no rails running along it, with a chance that the berm hides it even from the eyes of someone riding the launch loop itself, that’d be my choice of a burial site …

        1. Good point. Adjacent to the launch loop is the more appealing location anyway, and can easily be reached by the vehicles without anyone thinking too much about some extra tire tracks.

          Unless… Ixion does have a rather Mars-like atmosphere. How often do dust storms coat everything liberally in regolith, I wonder? That might rather have the effect of a single track on freshly fallen snow… At least until the next dust storm blows in.

        2. > How often do dust storms coat everything liberally in regolith, I wonder?

          I don’t think that the resident feather duster would keep all those scrap heaps dust free if that were the case, and the rat’s non-canon, unfortunately. 😉

        3. The rat is absolutely real and also has a cleaning compulsion, forcing it to dust all those piles of space scrap. You can’t convince me otherwise.

    2. Assuming Bip is not lying about what he can lug out of an airlock, they got removed in at least forty pieces each.

    3. very likely that they cremated the bodies. there’s a few options one could do for something like that, too. water cremation uses just lye and heat, and dissolves remains into nothing but chemicals, for example. there’s also the classic funeral pyre, but fire needs an oxygenated atmosphere to work, and i dont think bip would be too keen on trying to start a fire inside themself or in the dome. too risky. maybe if they put the bodies near their thrusters and then briefly turned them on, that’d do enough to incinerate them, and then bip could bury the ashes.

      no matter what, though, i cant imagine going through the grief of losing so many friends, AND recovering from a near-death experience, AND having to handle the bodies and funerals all on your own, AND having to negotiate your own survival in secret

      1. > maybe if they put the bodies near their thrusters and then briefly turned them on

        Which brings us back to the fact that the Runaway was lowered into that pit with the main engines, which emit lots of radiation, pointed towards the port’s habitat

  31. BIP ON THE WALLS I REPEAT BIP ON THE WALLS

    1. Yeah, the emotional impact is sort of distracting us from the fact that Bip has the ship rigged up to project themself on the walls. I wonder if we’ll actually see much of the screens-with-arms that appear on Patreon and in short comics…

      1. I suspect that Bip projecting themself on the walls might be distracting Talita from the emotional impact. Deliberately. “Yeah it was bad but HEY look what I can do!”

  32. Missing the zillion spacedollars’ worth of phones is one thing, but the fact that a salvage company sold a spaceship still full of DEAD BODIES OF PEOPLE as bulk scrap to a recycling plant seems like… criminal negligence? I realize Bip seems extremely unwilling to engage with the legal system right now, but the righteous claims are piling up. So I guess those centaurs are… just buried on Dirtball now? Probably the only people to be buried there?

    1. Yeah what the heck would happen if those bodies were discovered?? Talita might find herself in deep water if she were associated with the area…

      1. I’m extra sure those bodies won’t cause any problems with the centaurs Mel is inviting too……

        1. Unless said (possible, until we lay eyes upon them we’re all still just speculating) centaurs go digging up random spots for no real reason, they won’t even know the spacefarers’ remains are there. Seriously, dirtball is BIG if all you’re looking for is some horse-sized bodies. And if you don’t even know there’s anything to find (Bip sure isn’t telling! They’ll not even talk to people if they can help it!), why dig at all?

        2. > dirtball is BIG if all you’re looking for is some horse-sized bodies.

          The planet’s also quite big for someone whose only means to transport those bodies to a nondescript place are the exact same battery-powered frontloaders everyone else uses to get around, especially with the extra disadvantage (compared to the “seekers” later) that there’s no atmosphere to obscure the tracks they leave in the process.

          Part of why I’m favoring the “dark side” of the launch loop berm is that it has tapered ends and rails running along the entire inside, so that the rails-running crane that lowered the Runaway into the pit might manage to lower a frontloader onto an out-of-view flat surface on the berm’s outside to begin with.

      2. Do centaurs care about that?

        1. whether they care or not, finding several unidentified bodies on a worksite is not great optics for anyone

    2. Oh, right… wasn’t there something in Chapter 1 about the salvage company getting rid of the bodies? Maybe someone just made an assumption… Or maybe the crew were *hiding* somewhere?

  33. Awww poor Bip.

    This is the first real look at the interior of the Runaway right? I wonder why the ladders are right in front of the airlock, that seems like a massive pain for Cargo/boarding in gravity environments.

    1. There’s four airlocks.

      1. Gul Madred: 5 actually.

      2. Still seems like a flawed design. If you have four airlocks it might be better to position the ladder diagonally.

        1. Agreed, but: The ship is not designed for experiencing (pseudo)gravity in the current direction in the first place. In the two nominal modes (zero-g and 1 g towards the engine section), Talita/longshoremen could choose the one airlock not blocked by either a ladder or the emergency boat. (Yes, the dinghy’s docked to one of the airlocks not encumbered by the ladders, logical choice IMHO.)

          The part that surprises me is that the ladders’ beams are not segmented so as to allow the hatches to close in an airtight fashion.

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