Changer of Worlds woh-3

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Changer of Worlds woh-3 Page 4

by David Weber


  Anything she said or did would be wrong, so she said nothing. Which, of course, was also the wrong thing to do.

  “Well, Ms. Harrington? If you’re bored, just say so. I’m sure Chief MacArthur has better things to do with her time as well. Are you bored?”

  “No, Sir.” She gave the only possible answer as neutrally as possible, and Santino smiled nastily.

  “Indeed? I would’ve thought otherwise, given the way you’re humming and playing with your little pet.”

  Once again, there was no possible response that would not give him another opening. She felt Bradlaugh’s unhappiness beside her, but Audrey said nothing, either. There wasn’t anything she could say, and she’d experienced sufficient of Santino’s nastiness herself. But MacArthur shifted her weight, and turned to face the lieutenant. Her non-expression was more pronounced than ever, and she cleared her throat.

  “With all due respect, Sir,” she said, “the young ladies have been very attentive this afternoon.”

  Santino turned his scowl on her.

  “I don’t recall asking your opinion of their attentiveness, Chief MacArthur.” His voice was harsh, but MacArthur never turned a hair.

  “I realize that, Sir. But again with all due respect, you just came around the corner. I’ve been working with Ms. Harrington and Ms. Bradlaugh for the last hour and a half. I just felt that I should make you aware of the fact that they’ve paid very close attention during that time.”

  “I see.” For a moment, Honor thought the lieutenant was going to chew MacArthur out as well for having the audacity to interfere. But it seemed even Elvis Santino wasn’t quite stupid enough to risk making this sort of dispute with a noncom of MacArthur’s seniority and in his own shipboard department part of the official record. He rocked up and down on the balls of his feet for several seconds then returned his glare to Honor.

  “No matter how much attention you’ve been paying, there’s no excuse for slacking off,” he told her. “I realize Regs permit you to carry that creature with you on duty, but I warn you not to abuse that privilege. And stop playing with it when you ought to be concentrating on what you’re here to learn! I trust I’ve made myself sufficiently clear?”

  “Yes, Sir,” Honor said woodenly. “Perfectly clear.”

  “Good!” Santino snapped, and strode briskly away.

  “Lord! What is his problem?” Nassios Makira groaned.

  The stocky midshipman heaved himself up to sit on the edge of his upper-tier bunk, legs dangling over the side. Honor couldn’t imagine why he liked perching up there so much. He was shorter than she was, true, but the deckhead was too low to let even Nassios sit fully upright on his bunk. Maybe it was because she was taller than he was? As a matter of fact, Nassios was one of the shortest people aboard War Maiden. So did he spend so much time climbing around like a ’cat or an Old Earth monkey because it was the only way he could get above eye level on everyone else?

  “I don’t know,” Audrey Bradlaugh replied without looking up from the boot in her lap. No names had been mentioned, but she seemed in no doubt about the object of Nassios’ plaint. “But I do know that complaining about him is only going to make it worse if it gets back to him,” the red-haired midshipwoman added pointedly, reaching for the polish on the berthing compartment table.

  “Hey, let the man talk,” Basanta Lakhia put in. The dark-skinned young midshipman with the startlingly blond hair lay comfortably stretched out on his own bunk. “No one’s gonna be tattling to Santino on him, and even if anyone did, it’s not against Regs to discuss a senior officer.”

  “Not as long as the discussion isn’t prejudicial to discipline,” Honor corrected.

  Somewhat to her surprise, she’d found herself the senior of War Maiden’s midshipmen on the basis of their comparative class standings. That, unfortunately, only seemed to make matters worse where Santino was concerned, since her seniority—such as it was—pushed him into somewhat closer proximity with her than with the other middies. It also gave her a greater degree of responsibility to provide a voice of reason in snotty bull sessions, and now she looked up to give Makira a rather pointed glance from where she sat beside Bradlaugh at the table, running a brush over Nimitz’s pelt. It was unusual for all four of them to be off-duty at once, but middies tended to be assigned to rotating watch schedules, and this time their off-watch periods happened to overlap. In fact, they had almost two more hours before Audrey and Basanta had to report for duty.

  “Honor, you know I’d never, ever want to prejudice discipline,” Nassios said piously. “Or that anything I did could possibly prejudice it as much as he does,” he added sotto voce.

  “Basanta’s right that no one is going to be carrying tales, Nassios,” Audrey said, looking up at last. “But that’s exactly the kind of crack that’s going to bring him—and the Exec—down on you like a shuttle with dead counter-grav if it gets back to them.”

  “I know. I know,” Nassios sighed. “But you’ve got to admit he’s going awful far out of his way to make himself a royal pain, Audrey! And the way he keeps picking on Honor over Nimitz… ”

  “Maybe he thinks it’s part of his job as our training officer,” Honor suggested. She finished brushing Nimitz and carefully gathered up the loose fluff for disposal someplace other than in the compartment’s air filters.

  “Huh! Sure he does!” Basanta snorted.

  “I didn’t say I agreed with him if he did,” Honor said serenely. “But you know as well as I do that there’s still the old ‘stomp on them hard enough to make them tough’ school of snotty-training.”

  “Yeah, but it’s dying out,” Nassios argued. “Most of the people you run into who still think that way are old farts from the old school. You know, the ones who think starships should run on steam plants or reaction thrusters… or maybe oars! Santino’s too young for that kind of crap. Besides, it still doesn’t explain the wild hair he’s got up his ass over Nimitz!”

  “Maybe, and maybe not,” Basanta said thoughtfully. “You may have a point, Honor—about the reason he’s such a hard ass in the first place, anyway. He’s not all that much older than we are, but if his OCTO worked that way, he could just be following in the same tradition.”

  “And the reason he keeps picking on Nimitz?” Nassios challenged.

  “Maybe he’s just one of those people who can’t get past the image of treecats as dumb animals,” Bradlaugh suggested. “Lord knows I wasn’t ready for how smart the little devil is. And I wouldn’t have believed Honor if she’d just told me about it either.”

  “That could be it,” Honor agreed. “Most people can figure out the difference between a treecat and a pet once they come face-to-face with the real thing, but that’s hardly universally true. I think it depends on how much imagination they have.”

  “And imagination isn’t something he’s exactly brimming over with,” Basanta pointed out. “Which goes back to what Honor said in the first place. If he doesn’t have much imagination—” his tone suggested that he’d had a rather more pointed noun in mind “—of his own, he probably is treating us the same way his OCTO treated him. Once he got pointed that way, he couldn’t figure out another way to go.”

  “I don’t think he needed anyone to point him in that direction,” Nassios muttered, and although she was the one who’d put the suggestion forward, Honor agreed with him. For that matter, she felt morally certain that Santino’s behavior was a natural product of his disposition which owed nothing to anyone else’s example. Not that she doubted for a moment that his defense, if anyone senior to him called him on it, would be that he was only doing it “for their own good.”

  “If he ever needed a pointer, he doesn’t need one anymore, that’s for sure,” Basanta agreed, then shook himself. “Say, has anybody seen any of the sims Commander Hirake is setting up for us?”

  “No, but PO Wallace warned me they were going to be toughies,” Audrey chimed in, supporting the change of subject, and Honor sat back down and gathered Nimi
tz into her arms while the comfortable shop talk flowed around her.

  She ought, she reflected, to be happier than she’d ever been in her life, and in many ways she was. But Elvis Santino was doing his best to keep her happiness from being complete, and he was succeeding. Despite anything she might say to the others, she was morally certain the abusive, sarcastic, belittling behavior he directed at all of them, and especially at her and Nimitz, sprang from a pronounced bullying streak. Worse, she suspected that streak was aggravated by natural stupidity.

  And he was stupid. She only had to watch him performing as War Maiden’s assistant tac officer to know that much.

  She sighed mentally and pressed her lips together, warning herself once more of the dangers inherent in allowing herself to feel contempt for anyone senior to her. Even if she never let a sign of it show outwardly, it would affect the way she responded to his orders and endless lectures on an officer’s proper duties, which could only make things even worse in the end. But she couldn’t help it. Her favorite subjects at the Academy had been tactics and ship handling, and she knew she had a natural gift in both areas. Santino did not. He was unimaginative and mentally lazy—at best a plodder, whose poor performance was shielded by Lieutenant Commander Hirake’s sheer competence as his boss and carried by Senior Chief Del Conte’s matching competence from below. She’d only had a chance to see him in the simulator once or twice, but her fingers had itched with the need to shove him aside and take over the tac console herself.

  Which might be another reason he gave her so much grief, she sometimes thought. She’d done her level best not to let her contempt show, but he had access to her Academy records. That meant he knew exactly how high she’d placed in the Tactical Department, and unless he was even stupider than she thought (possible but not likely; he seemed able to zip his own shoes), he had to know she was absolutely convinced that she could have done his job at least twice as well as he could.

  And that’s only because I’m too naturally modest to think I could do it even better than that, she thought mordantly.

  She sighed again, this time physically, pressing her face into Nimitz’s coat, and admitted, if only to herself, the real reason she detested Elvis Santino. He reminded her inescapably of Mr. Midshipman Lord Pavel Young, the conceited, vicious, small-minded, oh-so-nobly born cretin who had done his level best to destroy her and her career at Saganami Island.

  Her lips tightened, and Nimitz made a scolding sound and reached out to touch her cheek with one long-fingered true-hand. She closed her eyes, fighting against replaying the memory of that dreadful night in the showers yet again, then drew a deep breath, smoothed her expression, and lowered him to her lap once more.

  “You okay, Honor?” Audrey asked quietly, her soft voice hidden under a strenuous argument between Nassios and Basanta over the merits of the Academy’s new soccer coach.

  “Hmm? Oh, sure.” She smiled at the redhead. “Just thinking about something else.”

  “Homesickness, huh?” Audrey smiled back. “I get hit by it every so often, too, you know. Of course,” her smile grew into a grin, “I don’t have a treecat to keep me company when it does!”

  Her infectious chuckle robbed the last sentence of any implied bitterness, and she rummaged in her belt purse for a bedraggled, rather wilted stalk of celery. All of the midshipmen who shared Snotty Row with Honor had taken to hoarding celery almost from the moment they discovered Nimitz’s passion for it, and now Audrey smiled fondly as the ’cat seized it avidly and began to devour it.

  “Gee, thanks a whole bunch, Audrey!” Honor growled. “You just wrecked his appetite for dinner completely!”

  “Sure I did,” Audrey replied. “Or I would have, if he didn’t carry his own itty-bitty black hole around inside him somewhere.”

  “As any informed person would know, that’s his stomach, not a black hole,” Honor told her sternly.

  “Sure. It just works like a black hole,” Basanta put in.

  “I’ve seen you at the mess table, too, boy-oh,” Audrey told him, “and if I were you, I wouldn’t be throwing any rocks around my glass foyer!”

  “I’m just a growing boy,” Basanta said with artful innocence, and Honor joined in the laughter.

  At least if I have to be stuck with Santino, I got a pretty good bunch to share the misery with, she thought.

  HMS War Maiden moved steadily through hyperspace. The Gregor Binary System and its terminus of the Manticore Wormhole Junction lay almost a week behind; the Silesian Confederacy lay almost a month ahead, and the heavy cruiser’s company had begun to shake down. It was not a painless process. As Captain Bachfisch’s after-dinner conversation with Commander Layson had suggested, much of War Maiden’s crew was new to the ship, for the cruiser had just emerged from an extensive overhaul period, and the Bureau of Personnel had raided her pre-overhaul crew ruthlessly while she was laid up in space dock. That always happened during a refit, of course, but the situation was worse in the RMN these days due to the Navy’s expansion. Every Regular, officer and enlisted alike, knew the expansion process was actually just beginning to hit its stride… and that the situation was going to get nothing but worse if King Roger and his ministers stood by their obvious intention to build a fleet capable of resisting the Peeps. The Government and Admiralty faced the unenviable task of balancing the financial costs of new hardware—and especially of yard infrastructure—against the personnel-related costs of providing the manpower to crew and use that hardware, and they were determined to squeeze the last penny out of every begrudged dollar they could finagle out of Parliament. Which meant, down here at the sharp end of the stick, that War Maiden’s crew contained a high percentage of new recruits, with a higher percentage of newly promoted noncoms to ride herd on them than her officers would have liked, while the personnel retention problems of the Navy in general left her with several holes among her senior petty officer slots. Almost a third of her total crew were on their first long deployment, and there was a certain inevitable friction between some members of her company, without the solid core of senior noncommissioned officers who would normally have jumped on it as soon as it surfaced.

  Honor was as aware of the background tension as anyone else. She and her fellow middies could scarcely have helped being aware of it under any circumstances, but she had the added advantage of Nimitz, and she only had to watch his body language to read his reaction to the crew’s edginess.

  The ship was scarcely a hotbed of mutiny, of course, but there was a sense of rough edges and routines just out of joint that produced a general air of unsettlement, and she occasionally wondered if that hovering feeling that things were somehow out of adjustment helped explain some of Santino’s irascibility. She suspected, even as she wondered, that the notion was nonsense, nothing more than an effort to supply some sort of excuse for the way the OCTO goaded and baited the midshipmen under his nominal care. Still, she had to admit that it left her feeling unsettled. None of her relatively short training deployments from the Academy had produced anything quite like it. Of course, none of the ships involved in those deployments had been fresh from refit with crews composed largely of replacements, either. Could this sense of connections still waiting to be made be the norm and not the exception? She’d always known the Academy was a sheltered environment, one where corners were rounded, sharp edges were smoothed, and tables of organization were neatly adhered to, no matter how hard the instructors ran the middies. No doubt that same “classroom-perfect” organization had extended to the training ships homeported at Saganami Island, while War Maiden was the real Navy at last. When she thought of it that way, it was almost exciting, like a challenge to earn her adulthood by proving she could deal with the less than perfect reality of a grownup’s universe.

  Of course, Elvis Santino all by himself was more than enough to make any universe imperfect, she told herself as she hurried down the passage. The OCTO was in an even worse mood than usual today, and all of the middies knew it was going to
be impossible to do anything well enough to satisfy him. Not that they had any choice but to try, which was how Honor came to find herself bound all the way forward to Magazine Two just so she could personally count the laser heads to confirm the computer inventory. It was pure makework, an order concocted solely to keep her occupied and let Santino once more demonstrate his petty-tyrant authority. Not that she objected all that strenuously to anything that got her out of his immediate vicinity!

  She rounded a corner and turned left along Axial One, the large central passage running directly down the cruiser’s long axis. War Maiden was old enough that her lift system left much to be desired by modern standards. Honor could have made almost the entire trip from bridge to magazine in one of the lift cars, but its circuitous routing meant the journey would actually have taken longer that way. Besides, she liked Axial One. War Maiden’s internal grav field was reduced to just under .2 G in the out-sized passage, and she fell into the long, bounding, semi-swimming gait that permitted.

  More modern warships had abandoned such passages in favor of better designed and laid out lift systems, although most merchantmen retained them. Convenient though they were in many ways, they represented what BuShips had decided was a dangerous weakness in a military starship which was expected to sustain and survive damage from enemy fire. Unlike the smaller shafts lift cars required, passages like Axial One posed severe challenges when it came to things like designing in blast doors and emergency air locks, and the large empty space at the very core of the ship represented at least a marginal sacrifice in structural strength. Or so BuShips had decided. Honor wasn’t certain she agreed, but no flag officers or naval architects had shown any interest in seeking her opinion on the matter, so she simply chose to enjoy the opportunity when it presented itself.

 

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