by David Weber
But this time around, the majority of the stockholders seemed willing to at least make an attempt to restore their fortunes, and the Star Kingdom’s Dillingham Cartel had been brought onboard as a minority stockholder, with all sorts of performance incentives, to attempt to turn things back around once more. Which, in no small part, explained War Maiden’s presence in Melchor.
Dillingham had moved in Manticoran mining experts and begun a systematic upgrade of the extraction machinery which had been allowed to disintegrate under purely Silesian management. Honor suspected the cartel had been forced to pay high risk bonuses to any Manticorans who had agreed to relocate here, and she knew from the general background brief Captain Bachfisch had shared with War Maiden’s company that Dillingham had seen fit to install some truly impressive defensive systems to protect their extraction complexes and Arianna itself. They would not have been very effective against a regular naval force, but they were more than enough to give any piratical riffraff serious pause. Unfortunately, the Confederacy’s central government refused to countenance privately flagged warships in its territorial space, so Dillingham had been forced to restrict itself to orbital systems. The ban on private warships was one of the (many) stupid policies of the Confederacy, in Honor’s opinion. No doubt it was an attempt to at least put a crimp in the supply of armed vessels which seemed to find a way into pirate hands with dismal regularity, but it was a singularly ineffective one. All it really did in this case was to prevent someone who might have been able to provide the entire star system with a degree of safety which was unhappily rare in Silesia from doing so. The cartel’s fixed defenses created zones within the Melchor System into which no raider was likely to stray, but they couldn’t possibly protect merchant ships approaching or leaving the star.
Not that the Confederacy government was likely to regard that concern as any skin off its nose. The ships coming and going to Melchor these days were almost all Manticoran—aside from the handful of Andermani who still called there—and if the foreigners couldn’t take the heat, then they should get out of the kitchen. Or, as in War Maiden’s case, call in their own governments to look after their interests. Of course, the Confederacy scarcely liked to admit that it needed foreign navies to police its own domestic space, but it had learned long ago that Manticore would send its naval units to protect its commerce whatever the Silesians wanted, so it might as well let Manticore pick up the tab for Melchor. And if the Star Kingdom lost a few merchant ships and their crews in the process, well, it served the pushy foreigners right.
Honor was scarcely so innocent as to be surprised by the situation. That didn’t mean she liked it, but like anyone else who aspired to command a King’s ship, she recognized the protection of the merchant trade which was the heart, blood, and sinews of the Star Kingdom’s economic might as one of the Navy’s most important tasks. She didn’t begrudge being here to protect Manticoran lives and property, whatever she might think of the so-called local government that made her presence a necessity.
Despite all that, it was highly unlikely War Maiden would find anything exciting to do here. As Captain Courvosier had often warned, a warship’s life was ten percent hard work, eighty-nine percent boredom, and one percent sheer, howling terror. The percentages might shift a bit in a place like Silesia, but the odds in favor of boredom remained overwhelming. Honor knew that, too, but she was still just a bit on edge and not quite ready to turn in, which explained her detour by the wardroom. Besides, she was hungry. Again.
Her eyes swept the compartment with a hint of wariness as she stepped through the hatch, but then she relaxed. A middy in the wardroom was rather like a junior probationary member of an exclusive club, only less so. He or she had a right to be there, but the tradition was that they were to be seen and not heard unless one of the more senior members of the club invited them to open their mouths. In addition, they had better be prepared to run any errands any of their seniors needed run, because none of those seniors were likely to give up any of their hard-earned rest by getting up and walking across the wardroom when there were younger and more junior legs they could send instead. In fact, the tradition of sending snotties to do the scut work was one of the Navy’s longer-standing traditions, part of the semi-hazing which was part and parcel of initiating midshipmen into the tribal wisdom, and Honor didn’t really mind it particularly. For the most part, at least.
But this time she was lucky. Santino was off duty, of course, or she wouldn’t have been here in the first place, but Lieutenant Commander LaVacher, who, while an otherwise reasonably pleasant human being, had a pronounced talent for and took an unabashed delight in finding things for middies to do, was also absent. Lieutenant Saunders looked up from his contemplation of a book reader and nodded a casual welcome, while Commander Layson and Lieutenant Jeffers, the ship’s logistics officer, concentrated on the chessboard between them and Lieutenant Livanos and Lieutenant Tergesen, LaVacher’s first and second engineers, respectively, were immersed in some sort of card game with Ensign Baumann. Aside from Saunders’ offhanded greeting, no one seemed to notice her at all, and she made a beeline across the compartment towards the waiting mid-rats table. The food in the wardroom was considerably inferior to that served in the officers’ mess at normal mealtimes, but rated several more stars than the off-watch rations available to the denizens of Snotty Row. And perhaps even more important, from Honor’s perspective, there was more of it.
Nimitz perked up on her shoulder as she spotted the cheese-stuffed celery sticks and passed one up to him, then snuck an olive out of the slightly limp looking bowl of tossed salad and popped it into her own mouth to stave off starvation while she constructed a proper sandwich for more serious attention. Mayonnaise, cold cuts, mustard, Swiss cheese, sliced onion, another layer of cold cuts, dill pickle slices, another slice of Swiss cheese, some lettuce from the salad bowl, and a tomato ring, and she was done. She added a satisfying but not overly greedy heap of potato chips to her plate to keep it company, and poured herself a large glass of cold milk and snagged two cupcakes to keep it company, then gathered up a few extra celery sticks for Nimitz and found a seat at one of the unoccupied wardroom tables.
“How in God’s name did you put that thing together without counter-grav?”
She turned her head and smiled in response to Commander Layson’s question. The Exec gazed at her sandwich for a moment longer, then shook his head in bemusement, and Lieutenant Jeffers chuckled.
“I’m beginning to understand why we seem to be running a little short on commissary supplies,” he observed. “I always knew midshipmen were bottomless pits, but—”
It was his turn to shake his head, and Layson laughed out loud.
“What I don’t understand,” Lieutenant Tergesen said just a bit plaintively, looking up from her cards at the sound of the Exec’s laughter, “is how you can stuff all that in and never gain a kilo.” The dark-haired engineering officer was in her early thirties, and while she certainly wasn’t obese, she was a shade on the plump side. “I’d be as broad across the beam as a trash hauler if I gorged on half that many calories!”
“Well, I work out a lot, Ma’am,” Honor replied, which was accurate enough, if also a little evasive. People were no longer as prejudiced against “genies” as they once had been, but those like Honor who were descended from genetically engineered ancestors still tended to be cautious about admitting it to anyone they did not know well.
“I’ll say she does,” Ensign Baumann put in wryly. “I saw her and Sergeant Tausig sparring yesterday evening.” The ensign looked around at the wardroom’s occupants in general and wrinkled her nose. “She was working out full contact… with Tausig.”
“With Tausig?” Layson half-turned in his own chair to look more fully at Honor. “Tell me, Ms. Harrington. How well do you know Surgeon Lieutenant Chiem?”
“Lieutenant Chiem?” Honor frowned. “I checked in with him when I joined the ship, of course, Sir. And he was present one night when the Captai
n was kind enough to include me in his dinner party, but I don’t really know the doctor. Why? Should I, Sir?”
This time the laughter was general, and Honor blushed in perplexity as Nimitz bleeked his own amusement from the back of her chair. Her seniors’ mirth held none of the sneering putdown or condescension she might have expected from someone like a Santino, but she was honestly at a loss to account for it. Lieutenant Saunders recognized her confusion, and smiled at her.
“From your reaction, I gather that you weren’t aware that the good sergeant was the second runner-up in last year’s Fleet unarmed combat competition, Ms. Harrington,” he said.
“That he was—” Honor stopped, gawking at the lieutenant, then closed her mouth and shook her head. “No, Sir, I didn’t. He never—I mean, the subject never came up. Second runner-up in the Fleet matches? Really?”
“Really,” Layson replied for the lieutenant, his tone dry. “And everyone knows Sergeant Tausig’s theory of instruction normally involves thumping on his students until they either wake up in sick bay or get good enough to thump him back. So if you and Doctor Chiem haven’t become close personal acquaintances, you must be pretty good yourself.”
“Well, I try, Sir. And I was on the coup de vitesse demo team at the Academy, but—” She paused again. “But I’m not in the sergeant’s league by a longshot. I only get a few pops in because he lets me.”
“I beg to differ,” Layson said more dryly than ever. “I hold a black belt myself, Ms. Harrington, and Sergeant Tausig has been known to spend the odd moment kicking my commissioned butt around the salle. And he has never ‘let’ me get a hit in. I think it’s against his religion, and I very much doubt that he would decide to make an exception in your case. So if you ‘get a few pops in,’ you’re doing better than ninety-five percent of the people who step onto the mat with him.”
Honor blinked at him, still holding her sandwich for another bite. She’d known Tausig was one of the best she’d ever worked out with, and she knew he was light-years better at the coup than she was, but she would never have had the gall to ask to spar with him if she’d known he’d placed that high in the Fleet competition. He must have thought she was out of her mind! Why in the world had he agreed to let her? And if he was going to do that, why go so easy on her? Whatever Commander Layson might think, Honor couldn’t believe that—
A high, shrill, atonal shriek cut her thought off like an ax of sound, and her sandwich thumped messily onto her plate as spinal reflex yanked her from her chair. She snatched Nimitz up and was out of the wardroom with the ’cat cradled in her arms before the plate slid off the table and the disintegrating sandwich’s stuffing hit the decksole.
* * *
Lieutenant Saunders looked up from his displays and glanced at Honor over his shoulder as she arrived on the bridge, then flicked a look at the bulkhead chrono. It was only a brief glance, and then he gave her a quick, smiling nod as she crossed the command deck to him. Regs allowed her an extra five minutes to get to action stations, in order to give her time to secure Nimitz safely in his life-support module in her berthing compartment, but she’d made it in only thirteen minutes. It helped that Snotty Row was relatively close to the bridge, but it helped even more that she’d spent so many extra hours on suit drill at Saganami Island expressly because she’d known she’d have to find time to get her and Nimitz both cleared for action.
Not that even the amount of practice she’d put in could make it any less uncomfortable to make her skinsuit’s plumbing connections that rapidly, she thought wryly as she settled gingerly into the assistant astrogation officer’s chair. At the moment, Saunders occupied first chair in Astrogation, because Commander Dobrescu was with Commander Layson in Auxiliary Control. In fact, there was an entire backup command crew in AuxCon. Few modern heavy cruisers had auxiliary command decks, since more recent design theory regarded the provision of such a facility in so small a unit as a misuse of mass which could otherwise have been assigned to weapons or defensive systems. In newer ships of War Maiden’s type, an additional fire control position was provided at one end of the core hull instead, with just enough extra room for the ship’s executive officer to squeeze into alongside the Tac Department personnel who manned it. But since War Maiden was an old enough design to provide an AuxCon, Captain Bachfisch had been able to create an entirely separate command crew to back up Commander Layson if something unpleasant should happen to the bridge.
Honor was delighted to be on the bridge itself, but because she was currently assigned to astro training duties, she’d drawn the assistant astrogator’s duty here, while Basanta Lakhia filled the same duty for Dobrescu in AuxCon. The person Honor passionately envied at this moment was Audrey Bradlaugh, who sat beside Lieutenant Commander Hirake at Tactical. Honor would have given her left arm—well, a finger or two off her left hand, anyway—to sit in Audrey’s chair, but at least she was luckier than Nassios. Captain Bachfisch had given Commander Layson the more experienced astrogator, but he’d kept the senior tac officer for himself, which meant Layson was stuck with Elvis Santino… and that Nassios had found himself stuck as Santino’s assistant.
There were, Honor conceded, even worse fates than astrogation training duty.
She pushed the thought aside as she brought her own console rapidly online, and her amusement vanished and her stomach tightened when her astro plot came up and steadied. It lacked the detail of the tactical displays available to Hirake and Captain Bachfisch, but it showed enough for her to realize that this was no drill, for War Maiden’s arrival had interrupted a grim drama. The icon of a merchantman showed in her plot with the transponder code of a Manticoran vessel, but there was another vessel as well, the angry red bead of an unknown, presumably hostile ship less than four hundred kilometers from the merchie. The unknown vessel had her wedge up; the merchantman did not, and a jagged crimson ring strobed about its alphanumeric transponder code.
“Positive ID on the merchie, Skipper,” Lieutenant Commander Hirake reported crisply. “I have her on my shipping list—RMMS Gryphon’s Pride. She’s a Dillingham Cartel ship, all right. Five-point-five million tons, a pure bulk hauler with no passenger accommodations, and she’s squawking a Code Seventeen.”
An invisible breeze blew across the bridge, cold on the nape of Honor’s neck as the tac officer’s announcement confirmed what all of them had already known. Code Seventeen was the emergency transponder code which meant “I am being boarded by pirates.”
“Range to target?” Captain Bachfisch’s tenor was no longer nasal. It was clipped, cool, and clear, and Honor darted a glance over her shoulder. The Captain sat in his command chair, shoulders square yet relaxed, right leg crossed over left while he gazed intently into the tactical display deployed from the chair, and the dark eyes in his thin face no longer frowned. They were the bright, fierce eyes of a predator, and Honor turned back to her own display with a tiny shiver.
“Nine-point-three-one million klicks,” Hirake said, and if the Captain’s voice was crisp, hers was flat. “We don’t have the angle on them, either,” she went on in that same disappointed tone. “The bogey’s already gotten underway, and we’ll never be able to pull enough vector change to run him down.”
“Do you concur, Astro?”
“Aye, Sir,” Saunders said with equal unhappiness. “Our base vector is away from the merchie at almost eleven thousand KPS, Captain. It’ll take us forty-five minutes just to decelerate to relative rest to them, and according to my plot, the bogey is turning well over five hundred gravities.”
“They’re up to just over five-thirty,” Hirake confirmed from Tactical.
“Even at maximum military power, we’re twenty gravities slower than that, Sir,” Saunders said. “At normal max, they’ve got over one-point-two KPS squared on us, and they’re accelerating on a direct reciprocal of our heading.”
“I see.” Bachfisch said, and Honor understood the disappointment in his tone perfectly. The pirate ship had to be smaller than War Mai
den to pull that sort of acceleration, which meant it was certainly more lightly armed, as well, but it didn’t matter. Their relative positions and base vectors had given the pirates the opportunity to run, and their higher acceleration curve meant the heavy cruiser could never bring them into even extreme missile range.