Original Work Exiled to Glory (Morningstar I)

Discussion in 'Survival Reading Room' started by ChrisNuttall, Jun 10, 2024.


  1. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Hi, everyone

    This is a completely new series, set in a completely new universe. I do have a fairly detailed plan for the long-term development of this universe, and this character (and the supporting cast) but this novel is intended to serve as both a stand-alone book and the launch pad for something greater.

    If you have any comments, suggestions, spelling corrections, or any other feedback please don’t hesitate to offer it. I read every piece of feedback I get and often integrate it into the final whole.

    You can find some universe details here:

    An Introduction To The Morningstar Universe

    I hope to keep a steady pace, but there will be a pause - my family and I have a lot to deal with right now.

    I’ve been working on expanding my list of ways for people to follow me. Please click on the link to sign up for my mailing list, newsletter and much - much - more.

    The Chrishanger

    Thank you

    Chris

    PS – if you want to write yourself, please check out the post here - Oh No More Updates. We are looking for more submissions.

    CGN
     
  2. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Prologue I

    From: Transcript of Remarks by Grand Senator (Admiral) Sullivan, Presented at the Daybreak Naval Academy Graduation Ceremony. Daybreak. Year 204.

    There is a question we are asked, time and time again, and that is this: why empire?

    The people who ask that question, by and large, wish to believe that our empire is evil, and that by extension we are evil, that we are building our empire for our own self-aggrandizement. They do not wish to consider that we might have good cause for reuniting the human race under our banner, nor that their former independence was doing them more harm than good. They cannot be blamed for mourning their lost freedoms, nor can they be punished for questioning our motives. But they cannot, also, be allowed to be free.

    It is a strong trait of our society that we always look truth in the face, that we do not permit the punishment of those who speak truth, no matter how unwelcome. It is not an easy standard to maintain, as no one enjoys being told something they do not wish to hear, but it has been the key to our success for so long that anyone who tries to sugar-coat the truth, or suppress it, must be counted as an enemy of civilisation.

    And it is of civilisation that I wish to speak to you tonight.

    Civilisation is a constant struggle. Those of you who have studied history will note that there have been hundreds of civilisations that had flourished, then collapsed and vanished … either through conquest, as has happened many times, or internal decay. The former is often spurred by the latter. A strong and resolute civilisation, with the ability to make best use of its manpower, technology and weapons – and develop more – is unbeatable, as long as it does not fall to internal enemies. And yet, such civilisations often have fallen? Why?

    The paradox of civilisation is this; to maintain a civilisation, one must maintain the laws that created and shaped that civilisation. Yet, as that civilisation gets more developed it starts to forget the underlying reality of human nature; they start to forget that there is nothing natural about their peace and freedom, which leads – inevitably – to the collapse of their peace and freedom. They make excuses for bad behaviour, rather than confronting it openly; they allow themselves to be shamed into passivity, rather than standing up for their rights and upholding the foundations of their civilisation; they tolerate the smart prissy intellectuals who make subtle arguments that sound good, and defy anyone to speak against them, yet have no experience of the real world and therefore make fools of themselves. A civilisation, therefore, often harbours the seeds of its own destruction.

    Maintaining civilisation requires, therefore, a certain degree of balance between too much freedom and too little. A completely free society, with no rules or customs, will collapse into chaos, either leading to extinction or the rule of the strong. A society with no personal freedom will decay from within, eventually – again – collapsing into chaos or the rule of the strong. It is not easy to strike a balance between the two points, to grant the maximum of personal – private – freedom while preventing individuals from infringing on the rights of others. Too much intrusion into private lives is often just as dangerous as too little.

    If a failure to maintain the law through upholding and enforcing it can weaken or destroy a civilisation, a failure to uphold the convents of international – and interstellar – law can destroy an entire species. The intellectuals I mentioned above spoke of international codes of conduct that would bind nations, on the assumption that all nations would consider them binding and therefore war would be civilised … and ran, hard, into the cold reality that it was, and remains, incredibly difficult to force a nation to abide by such codes. They were unenforceable, save by force, and the lack of any power with both the demonstrated ability and willingness to enforce them ensured they were worse than useless. Indeed, having proven that international convents were worthless, they spurred the decay of older convents drawn up by wiser men, ensuring that war, never civilised, became even less so.

    The great mistake of the United Nations was in launching thousands – perhaps hundreds of thousands – of colony missions without laying the groundwork for any framework of interstellar law, and enforcement, that could prevent large-scale interstellar conflict. It was a failure that would cost it dear, as jump drives improved and military operations became more than just random pirates and raiders preying on worlds too weak to defend themselves. The lack of any strong authority to keep the spacelanes open led directly to war, a series of minor conflicts that rapidly expanded into a holocaust that came far too close to destroying the entire human race. It may seem absurd, but so too did some fool thing in the Balkans that led to a war that set the entire world on fire.

    That is the reason behind our empire, our ever-expanding control over the spacelanes and our determination to ensure the human race is reunited. We are a strong, ruthlessly pragmatic power that can and will impose our will on the rest of the universe. We keep smaller conflicts under control, sometimes by enforcing a peace and sometimes by transporting one side to another world; we provide a neutral forum for debates, and courts which follow a series of simple laws, backed by naked force. We do not allow ourselves any illusions about the true nature of humanity, or the universe itself. Our goal is to prevent a second war, because – in the end – there is no guarantee there will be anyone left, after a second war, to rebuild and fight a third.

    As the old saying goes, “good times make weak men; weak men make hard times; hard times make strong men; strong men make good times.”

    We are the strong men. And we will do everything in our power to ensure weak men do not have the chance to tear down what we’ve built from within …

    You cadets have all passed through the most gruelling space naval training program known to man. You are well-versed in everything from modern engineering to history, moral philosophy, and basic interstellar law. You will go to your ships and serve the empire, and in doing so, serve the human race itself. You must never forget that you are part of a society – a ruling class - that seeks to prevent a second war, you must never let yourself get too close to local concerns and forget your duty.

    And as you advance in the ranks, as many of you will, you must never forget how the universe truly works.

    We are harsh and stern father figures. It cannot be denied. But the alternative is worse.

    You must never forget that, either.
     
  3. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Prologue II

    The young man waiting in the antechamber, Deputy Commandant Horace Valerian thought sourly, could have stepped off a recruiting poster.

    He had been on a poster, according to his file. The Daybreak Naval Academy regularly showcased the careers of talented young cadets, highlighting their struggles as they tried to become naval officers in a bid to invite others to sign up. The training program was deliberately hard, to ensure that only the best passed the four years of training they needed to become an officer and start a climb that could easily take them to the very top, and the young man had been one of the best. No, the best. He wouldn’t have become class valedictorian three years out of four if he hadn’t had the right combination of aptitude, skill and luck – and a willingness to work hard – to pass. And yet …

    Horace rubbed his eyes, cursing the young man under his breath. It was impossible to think him a fool – space was an unforgiving environment, and anyone who lacked a brain and the wisdom to use it was unlikely to survive long enough to be expelled – and yet, he’d done something incredibly foolish. Or had he? The timing was exact, almost perfect. A week earlier and the politics could have been finessed, ensuring the Academy wouldn’t have to tolerate such a cad giving the final address at graduation; a week later and it would be someone else’s problem, someone who might solve the problem by summarily busting the young idiot down to crewman or assigning him to detached duty, ensuring he’d never be troubled again. Horace had no idea if the twit had done it deliberately or not – there was no hint, in any of the overt and covert assessments he’d passed over the years, that he harboured a deep hatred for the Academy – and yet, it hardly mattered. The Academy was going to take one hell of a black eye, and it was all the fault of the young man waiting outside.

    A flash of anger ran through Horace, a reminder of the old shame that came from spending most of his career in the rear. He’d always been more of a bureaucratic administrator than a warfighter and he knew, without false modesty, that he’d never be anything more. The odds of him becoming Commandant were very low, and the odds of him ever rising high were even lower. The cadets might respect his administrative ability, how he judged schedules and balanced the egos of training officers who were often experts in their fields and complete naifs in others, but they knew better than to emulate him. They wanted to win glory, to carry the flag into the distant reaches of space, to bring new worlds and civilisations into the empire and, in doing so, boost their careers into heights even they could barely imagine. Horace had thought, privately, that the class valedictorian was just another overly-ambitious young man, one who would learn many hard lessons before he rose to the top. And instead …

    He shook his head, trying not to glance at the antique clock ticking in the corner. There were bare hours before the graduation ceremony was due to begin, when the academy would have to decide between allowing the valedictorian to give his damned speech or coming up with some excuse, no matter how absurd, to deny it. They were fucked either way, Horace thought, using words he would never say out loud. If they let the fool speak, they’d wind up with egg on their faces; if they denied him, the young man’s patron would be angry and the consequences of that were incalculable. The Grand Senator might believe his young client deserved punishment – no one reached the highest senatorial rank without a firm grasp of reality and a willingness to cut a misbehaving client loose if they became an embarrassment – but no patron could afford to be seen as abandoning a client without very good cause. A week earlier and it might have been possible to come to terms, to ensure there was good cause, but the timing simply hadn’t worked out. Horace was an old master at playing the political game and he knew there was no time. No matter what he did, the Academy was going to get a black eye …

    … And Horace was morbidly sure he’d be the one taking the blame.

    Angry boiled through him. Commandant O’Hara could not be faulted for stepping aside and allowing his deputy to handle the crisis, damn the man. No court martial board in existence would accept a man so hurt, so betrayed, passing judgement on the man who had betrayed him. Horace knew anything his superior did would be questioned savagely, perhaps overturned, by the board of inquiry. Commandant O’Hara had enemies – no one rose so high without making a few enemies along the way – and they’d gather like flies on shit, pointing out the sheer injustice and undermining his position, without a single care for the legalities of the affair. Why would they care, when they had a perfect opportunity to bring their enemy down? No, Horace could hardly fault the Commandant for passing the poisonous charge to him. But his understanding would not save his career.

    His thoughts ran in circles. The young fool cannot be allowed to give the address, because the Academy cannot afford to turn a blind eye to his conduct, or be seen to be affirming it. The young fool cannot be stripped of rank and title, because it would bring his patron down on our heads. We don’t have time to call the Grand Senator and discuss the matter and … what the hell are we going to do?

    He scowled as another message popped up on his terminal. Preparations for the ceremony were well underway. Families, patrons and journalists were already arriving in the nearest town, to watch the cadets pass out – and take their relatives out for lunch – before the young men reported to their first real duty stations. He should be out there, supervising his crew and making damn sure that everything was in order, before the crowd arrived at the Academy itself. The slightest mistake could – would – be horrifically embarrassing. The eyes of the galaxy were upon them, some looking to the benefits of empire and others watching for signs the empire’s ability to enforce its will was declining. Horace had no illusions. If something went wrong, no matter how minor, the consequences would be felt hundreds of light years away.

    And they won’t stop, he reflected ruefully, with the destruction of my career.

    He sat back in his seat, trying to think of something – anything – that could get him and the navy out of the political nightmare the young idiot had created. It was hard to remember – to force himself to believe – that the fool hadn’t intended to craft such a nightmare … in truth, Horace didn’t really believe it. The timing was just too good. It was … far too good.

    I can’t demote him, I can’t expel him, I can’t …

    Horace stopped, his mouth hanging open as a thought occurred to him. What if … his hands darted to the terminal, bringing up nearly two hundred years of naval history in a desperate search for a precedent. The idea was absurd, on paper; it was the kind of concept that, under normal circumstances, would land him in very hot water indeed. There were limits to just how much a patron, no matter how important, could boost a client’s career. And Horace wasn’t even the young fool’s patron. People would talk …

    But would it solve the problem?

    A flash of excitement ran through Horace, even as he checked and rechecked the files to make absolutely sure he wasn’t crossing a line. The precedents existed … barely. It would be one hell of a court martial, if the matter became public before it was too late, but who would discuss the issue openly? Everyone involved, even the young fool himself, had excellent reason to keep their mouths firmly shut. Horace was too old a hand to believe it would remain a secret indefinitely – the political graveyards were littered with men who believed their secrets would never be uncovered – but by the time it came out the issue would be resolved, one way or the other. It galled him to be rewarding the young man, even if it was a reward that came with a sting in the tail, yet …

    It wasn’t a perfect solution, Horace reflected as he worked his way through the paperwork with terrifying speed, then called a handful of friends in various departments to ensure the paperwork was submitted and processed. It helped that the post-graduation assignments were never revealed, not even to patrons, before the ceremony was completed. There’d be no one in a position to both notice the discrepancy and do something about it … and anyone who did, he was sure, wouldn’t realise what had really happened. Whoever heard of punishing someone by giving him a promotion?

    The terminal pinged. The orders were ready. Horace printed them – by long custom, duty assignments were always on paper – and leaned back in his chair, congratulating himself on his own cleverness. It had been a very close run thing, but he’d made it. One way or another, he told himself, the matter would be resolved to the satisfaction of all parties. And there was no way the young idiot could protest, not without sinking his entire career.

    And if nothing else, he reflected as he called his secretary and asked her to send Cadet Morningstar into his office, he would never have to see the young man again.
     
  4. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter One

    Cadet – Provisional Lieutenant - Leo Morningstar sat outside the Deputy Commandant’s office and waited.

    He was not, precisely, under arrest. The provosts who had taken custody of him, after the shore patrol had caught him in flagrante delicto, had neither handcuffed him nor stripped his rank badges from his uniform, before marching him to the outer office and ordering him to wait. Leo had spent a couple of nights in the guardhouse – it was almost a rite of passage, after completing the first year at the academy – and he knew what it was like, but this was different. He wasn’t sure just how much trouble he was in, although the fact he’d been brought to the office – rather than the guardhouse – suggested he was not on the verge of being expelled. That would be awkward, to say the least. And yet …

    His lips quirked, briefly, as he tried to force himself to relax. He had graduated. He couldn’t be expelled, not now, and he doubted he could be put in front of a court martial board. The Old Man – Commandant O’Hara – was no doubt trying to find a way to do just that, but it was a legal impossibility. The mere fact he was sitting outside the Deputy Commandant’s office suggested O’Hara agreed, although there was no way to be sure. Leo hadn’t been in naval service for long, but he was all too aware that the letter of the law could be manipulated to evade the spirit. Daybreak prided itself on keeping the law as simple as possible, to make it harder for a planet to ignore its responsibilities to the interstellar union, yet there was plenty of precedent for a legal officer finding ways to get whatever his CO wanted done with a veneer of legality. They didn’t always get away with it, when their decisions were reviewed by the Senate, but it was often too late to help the planet adversely impacted by the poor legal work. And that meant …

    He took another breath. He had gradated. And he had a powerful patron. He was safe.

    The secretary looked up. “Cadet Morningstar, you may enter the office.”

    Leo stood, keeping his irritation under tight control. A cadet who passed the first two years had the right to be addressed as Midshipman, and Leo was one of the few – the very few – cadets who had been promoted to Lieutenant before formally graduating. It was a provisional rank, and it could be lost very easily, but it was still a mark of accomplishment, as well as the faith his tutors had in him. He had promised himself that he would not lose the rank, and indeed he would strive to see it confirmed within the year. It was not unprecedented. And the few who had achieved it before had gone on to great things indeed.

    He stepped into the Deputy Commandant’s office and saluted, trying not to look around with interest. It was hardly the first time he’d met Deputy Commandant Horace Valerian, but he’d never actually been in the man’s office before and he had to admit he was a little curious. The office was surprisingly spartan – like most of the academy – but there were a handful of antiques scattered around, including a grandfather clock that ticked loudly, something that bothered Leo more than he cared to admit. The man himself wore a dress uniform carefully tailored to hide his paunch, but he still managed to give off the air of being more at home behind a desk than on a starship’s bridge. Leo wondered, idly, how he’d managed to avoid being rotated back to front-line service, a legal requirement to keep rear-area officers losing track of what was actually important. Perhaps Valerian believed he would never be promoted again. It wasn’t impossible. The Daybreak Navy was constantly expanding, but there were limits to just how many men could hold high-ranking positions at any one time. The senatorial rolls listed hundreds, perhaps thousands, of officers who would never see a combat command again.

    Valerian nodded curtly, then studied a datapad thoughtfully. Leo remained calm and composed, standing at attention and waiting to be ordered to relax. The Deputy Commandant was playing a power game by forcing him to wait, something that would have been a little more effective if Leo’s old headmaster hadn’t done the same, back when he’d been a simple schoolboy. He might have been firmly convinced that sparing the rod was spoiling the child, and he’d often put theory into practice, but making someone wait just betrayed a certain kind of insecurity. Leo knew he was young, barely twenty, and yet even he could tell the difference between someone who knew what he was talking about – and was therefore worth listening to – and someone who was faking it in the certain knowledge there was no way he could make it. The two men would have been shocked if they knew he’d compared the two, but they had a great deal in common …

    “Leo Morningstar,” Valerian said. He didn’t look up from his datapad, although there was something in his manner that suggested he’d read the file already, before summoning Leo into his office. “Born, Year 184. Father, Senior Crew Chief Davis on RSS Morningstar, who was awarded the Navy Cross by then-Captain Sullivan and took the name of his ship in thanks, as was and remains customary for recipients of the Cross. Mother, Hoshiko Davis, nee Yu, the daughter of a pair of immigrants who were granted citizenship in Year 160 and, after doing her planetary service, became a teacher, married Davis, and gave birth to six children, including you.”

    He paused, as if he were inviting comment. Leo knew better than to say a word.

    “You grew up in Cold Harbour, a suburb of Augustus City, because your mother worked in the local school. Your father died saving his commander’s life, for which he gave you and your family patronage, ensuring you would study at a very good secondary school and then enter the Naval Academy itself at sixteen, a year younger than most cadets. You did very well, in your first year, and would have probably made valedictorian if you hadn’t got into a fight with a senior cadet …”

    He looked up. “Why?”

    “He insulted my mother, sir,” Leo said.

    The Deputy Commandant cocked his head. “And that justified beating Senior Cadet Francis Blackthrone to within an inch of his life?”

    “Yes, sir,” Leo said. It had been one thing to be harassed himself – he understood he’d be put through the wringer, to make sure the men were separated from the boys before it was too late – but quite another to tolerate suggestions his mother had been a whore, earning a patron through providing sexual services to her husband’s CO. “He deserved it.”

    It was hard not to smile. Blackthrone had been an idiot. It was bad enough to make the snide accusations, time and time again, but far worse to do it when he was well within range. Leo had struck fast and hard, ramming his fist into the older cadet’s chest and then following up with a kick that had ended the fight for good. It hadn’t really been a fight, to be honest. Leo had no idea how Blackthrone had gotten through the unarmed combat course, but even he should have known to keep his distance if he was going to shout unbearable insults. But then, it was rare for a junior to try to put a senior in his place. The few who tried followed protocol and did it openly.

    “You were nearly expelled, and your career was only saved through the direct intervention of Grand Senator Sullivan,” Valerian continued. “You went on to do extremely well in your second year, which ensured you did your third year on a training ship rather than a station, and you earned a converted – if provisional – promotion to lieutenant after saving the lives of both your peers and training officers. The only black mark on your record, as you went into your fourth and final year, was that you asked the training supervisor if the incident had been faked to test you. He was not pleased.”

    “No, sir,” Leo said. The supervisor had never raised his voice, but he’d still managed to put him in his place with a sharp lecture, pointing out that the staff would never risk putting the cadets in very real danger. Not like that, certainly. “He wasn’t.”

    Valerian nodded. “You recently completed your fourth year, without losing your provisional promotion, and became – for a third time – class valedictorian, ensuring you were granted the right to give the valedictorian address at the graduation ceremony. Your classmates also voted you the Marty Sue Award, although you were denied the full honours” – his lips quirked – “because you didn’t make valedictorian during your first year. There was no reason to believe you wouldn’t give your speech, then report to your first duty station and go on to a long and honourable naval career.”

    He paused. “And then, only a few short hours ago, you were caught in bed with the Commandant’s wife.”

    “Yes, sir.”

    Valerian looked up at him. “Explain.”

    Leo said nothing. He hadn’t known who Fleur O’Hara was, when he’d met her the first time, and even after he’d realised he hadn’t abandoned the affair. She’d been bored and desperately lonely, her husband largely uninterested in her … Leo had wondered, privately, if picking up a cadet was her way of getting back at her husband, although the sex had been great and completely without any strings attached. They had both known the affair would come to an end, eventually, but … he cursed, inwardly. In hindsight, it might have been smarter to insist they went to a love hotel, rather than her apartment. But she had insisted she could not be seen anywhere near such an establishment.

    “Explain,” Valerian repeated.

    “I met her in the bar,” Leo said, keeping the details as vague as possible. He wasn’t sure how much the older man knew. “I didn’t realise who she was, at first. We had sex, which is how we were caught …”

    It was hard to hide his anger. Fleur had assured him her neighbours were discreet and yet … someone had clearly called the shore patrol. Who, and why? It was rare for cadets to visit the married quarters, certainly so close to graduation. A previous commandant had landed himself in hot water after ordering a cadet to mow his lawn, from what he’d heard, and a surprising number of military spouses thought they shared their partner’s rank. Better to stay away, the cadets had been cautioned, rather than wind up on report for ignoring orders from civilians – even citizens – who thought they had the right to issue them.

    “You are fortunate that Mrs O’Hara swore blind she seduced you, rather than insisting you picked her up … or raped her,” Valerian said, coldly. “Regardless, your actions have brought great shame on the Naval Academy, and the Commandant is insisting you be severely punished.”

    He paused. “You may not have openly broken any regulations, young man, but you certainly bent the honour code into a pretzel. You have also ensured, thanks to the mystery informant, that the incident cannot be covered up. Worse, your timing was extremely good. You cannot be punished, not easily, and yet you are unworthy to serve as valedictorian. A young naval officer is expected to be a model of pure-perfect rectitude at all times. How does that square with an illicit affair with a senior officer’s wife?”

    Leo took a breath. He had read the rules and regulations and he was fairly sure he couldn’t be given more than a slap on the wrist, not now. Any demotion – let alone expulsion – would have to be justified and doing that would be difficult, if not impossible, without provoking the wrath of his patron and – or – a public enquiry. The Commandant and his Deputy had to answer to the Board of Directors, which in turn answered to the Senate, and it would be difficult to convince all of them that their actions had been justified. His patron would certainly not be very pleased.

    “You are thinking you cannot be punished,” Valerian said, as if he’d been reading Leo’s thoughts. Leo remembered, too late, that Valerian might be a paper-pusher, rather than an officer who led from the front, but he was very far from being a fool. “In a sense, young man, you are quite right. We cannot demote or expel you, nor can we contrive an excuse to deny you the position and honours you have earned, certainly not without causing problems we cannot overcome.”

    Leo felt a flash of hope. Perhaps, just perhaps, the whole affair could be buried …

    “So we’re prompting you,” Valerian said. His lips curved into a humourless smile. “Congratulations, Lieutenant-Commander Morningstar.”

    “What?” Leo boggled. His Lieutenancy was provisional, a point that had been made clear to him time and time again. The idea of being jumped up two ranks without even a day of real starship service was just absurd. No one would take him seriously, and everyone would check his service record and ask pointed questions of the men who’d promoted him. “Sir, I …”

    Valerian’s smile grew wider. “It is a honour to be promoted so quickly,” he said. “And your new duty station has already been assigned. You will be heading there shortly, to take up your new post. Unfortunately, you will not have the time to attend your own graduation and give your planned speech, but everyone will understand that there was no choice.”

    Leo stared at him. “Sir …”

    “You are aware, of course, that we have recently started the process of incorporating several new sectors into our empire,” Valerian continued. “Those sectors have seen little law and order since the First Interstellar War, and they have suffered for it. The Senate believes it is vitally important to establish our authority, and in doing so convince the locals that they have a better future with us, rather than remaining independent and vulnerable to both pirates and predatory neighbours. They have put pressure on the navy to assign more ships to the sector, despite the massive commitments elsewhere. One of those ships is RSS Waterhen.”

    Leo frowned. He’d never heard of Waterhen.

    “It is a sad story,” Valerian said. “She was a noble ship, in her time, but now she is somewhat outdated, and would be withdrawn from service if we were not so desperate for hulls. She remains on the fleet list, yet her commanding officer is very hands-off. So hands-off, in fact, that he has managed to ensure his command remained in-system, allowing him to spend most of his time in the pleasure dens rather than doing his job. If he were not so well-connected, he would have been ordered to get on with it by now, or summarily stripped of rank, but …”

    He shrugged, expressively. “His ship remains in-system. And he remains planetside.”

    “Sir …” Leo found it hard to put his thoughts into words. “And he gets away with it?”

    “It is astonishing what someone can get away with, if they have good connections and they avoid unwanted attention,” Valerian said. “If Captain Reginald Archibald were in command of a modern starship, he would have been court-martialed by now and even his connections wouldn’t be enough to save him. As it is, Waterhen is simply too unimportant for anyone to notice. The handful of crew assigned to her are the dregs of the service – anyone with any common sense starts bucking for a transfer, the moment they realise that staying on Waterhen will kill their careers – and none, I suspect, have any inkling that they’re supposed to be preparing to leave Daybreak and make their way to their assigned posting.”

    He met Leo’s eyes. “And you will be in command.”

    Leo blinked. That was impossible. “What?”

    “Oh, not on paper,” Valerian assured him. “On paper, Captain Archibald will be in command and you will be nothing more than third-ranking officer. In practice, you will be the commander because the CO is going to remain behind and the XO managed to get herself transferred to an asteroid station. It must have seemed an improvement over Waterhen.”

    He paused. “Your promotion is quite valid, I assure you. But you won’t be back here in a hurry.”

    Leo felt a flicker of dull respect, mingled with anger and horror. The promotion was bad enough. No one would believe he’d earned it, because he hadn’t. And yet, there was no way he could refuse it either. It was vanishingly rare for anyone who declined a promotion to be offered a second chance … hell, there was no way his patron could complain. On paper, he was being rewarded … he cursed under his breath, realising just how well he’d been stitched up. He might be the de facto commander of an entire starship, but his assignment to the far edge of explored and incorporated space would limit his chances to be noticed. His unearned promotion would be the last, no matter how well he did …

    And the moment another ship was assigned to the sector, he’d find himself effectively demoted.

    Valerian passed him a folder. “Everything is in order,” he said. “Your shuttle is already arranged; you have just under an hour to grab your bags, then hurry to the pad before it’s too late. Your mother will be informed of your promotion, and we’ll arrange for her to be greeted and honoured instead of attending the graduation. I imagine you’ll have time to message her before you jump out. If you miss the shuttle, you’ll find yourself in very hot water indeed.”

    Leo swallowed, still stunned. “Sir, I …”

    “You were the most promising cadet we had over the past few years,” Valerian said, bluntly. “You knew your worth very well. And now you have thrown it all away, and risked hitting us with a scandal that could – that still might – do immense damage to the Academy and the Navy itself. If we had time to arrange it, your fate would not be so kind.”

    He met Leo’s eyes. “I hope you enjoy your new assignment. Command at such a young age will look very good on your record, even if you don’t enjoy command rank. But one way or another, young man, we will never see each other again.

    “Dismissed.”
     
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  5. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Two

    Leo was still stunned as he grabbed his bag – already packed – from his former dorm and made his way to the shuttlepad.

    He had been fairly certain he couldn’t be demoted, certainly not without causing a major political headache for all involved. There had been no coercion, nothing that could have justified summarily removing him from the graduation ceremony .. certainly, nothing that could have stood up to even a minor investigation. He’d expected a slap on the wrist at best, if the staff didn’t quietly pretend the whole affair hadn’t happened. It was in everyone’s interest, or so he’d thought, that the incident be buried as quickly as possible.

    His head spun. He’d underestimated Valerian. The old man might have been a bureaucrat with little real military experience – Leo had looked up the Deputy Commandant’s record and it was about as unimpressive as he’d expected – but he’d found a neat way to square the circle, ensuring Leo was heavily punished without making it obvious he was being punished. Leo wondered, sourly, why Valerian had never taken his tactical instincts onto the battlefield, where his –previously unproven – talent for ingenious solutions would have made him a terror. He’d been put in a neat little trap. If he accepted the promotion and the de facto command of a starship, he would spend most of his career a very long way from Daybreak; if he refused it, he’d never be offered another one. The navy would agree with his implicit assessment of his own abilities and act accordingly, ensuring he spent the remainder of his career on an asteroid mining station … if he were lucky. He ground his teeth in silent frustration. In hindsight, he should never have let himself get so close to Fleur.

    But she was so attractive, part of his mind whined. Fleur had been middle-aged, with the desires and experience – and confidence – to match. And she made the first move.

    Sure, another part of his mind retorted. And now she’s fucked you in all ways possible.

    He knew that wasn’t true, as he stepped onto the shuttlepad and made his way to the sole spacecraft resting on the pad. He hadn’t been raped, any more than her. He could have said no at any moment, before or after he discovered who she truly was. Their relationship could have been nothing more than a one-night stand, a brief night of passion before they went their separate ways … he knew, he’d never been in any doubt, that their relationship really had never been about anything more than sex, but it was still hard to acknowledge that it would have come to an end eventually anyway. He wondered, bitterly, just who had called her husband or alerted the patrolmen, then shrugged. It was unlikely he’d ever know.

    The pilot shot him a sharp look. “You the boy flying out to Waterhen?”

    “Yes.” Leo had to bite his tongue to keep from saying something sharp. He was a commissioned officer now, and his rank was not – according to the paperwork – provisional. It wasn’t a good thing. No one would hold losing a provisional rank against him – it wasn’t uncommon for a cadet to be promoted too high, then demoted so they could gain more seasoning – but a formal rank was something else and being demoted from that would be stain on his record. “Should I strap myself in, or let your stewardess buckle the straps for me?”

    The pilot snorted. “No stewardess on this flight, mate,” he said. “She’s off on leave. She’s been on leave for the last year and a half. I can’t imagine why.”

    Leo buckled himself in, checking the straps automatically. “I can’t imagine why either,” he said, dryly. There was no stewardess, although the bigger transport shuttles did have a crewman assigned to make sure the cadets had strapped themselves in before the shuttle took off. “How long to Waterhen?”

    “Couple of hours,” the pilot said. “You’re leaving early.”

    “Orders are orders,” Leo said. He had a nasty feeling the pilot had been reassigned on short notice too. “Can’t be helped.”

    “I’ll say,” the pilot said. “What happened to graduation?”

    Leo coloured as the pilot ran through a brief set of checks, then launched the shuttle into the air. He leaned forward, peering out the porthole as the Academy fell away below him, catching brief glimpses of Heinlein Town – the nearest watering hole, where he’d met Fleur – and, in the distance, Augustus City, before the shuttle passed through the clouds and headed into orbit. He swallowed hard, glancing at the chronometer. A few hours from now, his classmates would be marching onto the parade grounds to start the graduation ceremony, where their names and honours would be read to the crowd before the valedictorian – the new valedictorian – gave the final speech. He wondered, bitterly, just who’d get the coveted spot – and just what they’d think of how they’d gotten it. There had been five or six cadets who had been just below him, the difference between them practically microscopic. It would be interesting to hear, later, who’d been chosen. He guessed Valerian would choose the least controversial option and hope for the best.

    It was hard not to feel a sense of loss, even though he was honest enough to admit he’d brought the disaster on himself. He had worked hard for the last four years, making himself top of the class three years out of four, and he’d known he had a brilliant career awaiting him. There was no way to know – not now, certainly – where the navy had intended to send him, after graduation, but he was fairly sure it would have been somewhere he could show off his abilities and prove himself worthy of promotion. The youngest commanding officer in naval history had reached command rank six years after graduation and Leo had intended to beat that record … it occurred to him, in a sense, that he had ...

    He put the thought out of his mind – there was no point in brooding on things that hadn’t been, and now never would be – and forced himself to study the near-orbit display. Daybreak was surrounded by hundreds of orbital fortresses, industrial nodes, shipyards and space habitats, the latter housing thousands upon thousands of trained workers as they strove to turn the planet into the greatest concentration of industrial might in human history. Countless starships flitted about, from the powerful Home Fleet – constantly drilling to keep their skills sharp, the officers and crew all too aware they’d be reassigned to more active duty stations shortly – to thousands of freighters, courier boats and diplomatic vessels from the Autonomous Worlds, designed to look fancy even though their homeworlds only maintained a limited internal independence though Daybreak’s good grace. Leo felt a flicker of contempt as the sensors zeroed in, briefly, on a starship that was clearly from Earth. Humanity’s homeworld still claimed to be the cultural centre of the known universe – wisely, few challenged the claim – but it was clear the Earthers had no sense of practicality. Their starship looked fancy, yet if she went into battle she’d be taken apart within seconds. There were just too many vulnerabilities in her design.

    The pilot glanced back. “We’re clear of the high orbitals now,” he said. “You want a cup of tea?”

    Leo shook his head, taking his datapad from his bag and bringing it online. Valerian had ensured he had the clearance to access and download anything a regular Lieutenant-Commander could, as well as transferring files that would normally only be open to Waterhen’s commander and his XO, and Leo wasn’t fool enough to waste time when he could be studying his new posting. The cadets had been advised to read up on their postings, when they were assigned, in hopes of avoiding mistakes that would make them look like idiots in front of the crew, or – worse – senior officers. A full-sized battleship was so big and complex, they’d been told, that it was easy to get lost within the maze of corridors and maintenance tubes. Leo hadn’t believed it until the cadets had been assigned to RSS Švejk, where the crew had been trained to be as difficult as possible to handle, certainly for young and inexperienced officers, and the senior officers tyrants. The training vessel had been an eye-opening experience, for young men who’d thought two years of training had prepared them for actual shipboard duty. Leo had enjoyed the cruise, but …

    He scowled as he scanned the files, cursing under his breath. Valerian hadn’t exaggerated. RSS Waterhen was not in good shape, to the point there was something about the files that didn’t quite add up. He checked the dates and swore to himself, noting the latest maintenance report had been filed a full year ago … and it was clear, just looking at it, that the engineers had skimped on the reporting. If he could see it, why couldn’t the IG? Everyone would understand why a captain on a long deployment, hundreds of light years away, hadn’t filed his report in time, but Waterhen hadn’t left Daybreak for years. The IG should have noted the discrepancies – if Leo could see them, an inspector certainly could – and dispatched an investigative team to discover the truth. And yet, they hadn’t. It boded ill.

    His mood darkened as he scanned the personnel files. Waterhen was meant to have a fifty-man crew, but she had barely twenty-three … counting the absent Captain and reassigned XO. There was a certain vagueness about the files that suggested trouble, probably problems that didn’t quite rise to the level of meriting summarily dismissal, or early retirement instead of a court martial, but … he scowled. He’d been cautioned that some officers would try to offload problematic crewmen on other ships, rather than go through the paperwork for formal punishment, yet he’d always thought the stories exaggerated. Now, he had the feeling those unwanted crewmen had been reassigned to Waterhen, where they could spend the rest of their careers out of sight and mind.

    “Fuck,” he muttered. The files weren’t meant, he was sure, to reveal that the ship’s CO had left his command several months ago, never to return, but they did. He wasn’t even sure who was in command. The chain of command was supposed to be absolute – there were cases when a ship had taken such heavy damage that a young midshipman, ninth in the chain of command, had been forced to take the helm – but the files were vague about just who was the senior remaining officer. “How the hell did this get so badly out of hand?”

    He shook his head, knowing the answer. He’d met his fair share of officers who came from old money, their families so prominent that nothing short of complete disaster or outright criminality could get them demoted or dismissed. There’d been a couple of cadets who’d thought their family names entitled them to honours and glories and an easy ride … the tutors had been good at deflating their egos, teaching them they needed to learn to follow before they could lead, but not all – from what he’d heard – remained so capable once they left the academy and started climbing the ladder to high rank. The navy tended to make sure the worst never saw combat command, or promotion beyond a certain point, yet it wasn’t easy to keep them from getting too high unless they embarrassed themselves. Captain Reginald Archibald, a scion of a family with a long history of military and political service, had the connections he needed to survive anything, short of a major military disaster. Leo felt torn between contempt and envy. He’d never met the man, yet he already detested him.

    And the best way to embarrass him, Leo thought coldly, would be to do the job he’s supposed to do, all the while making it clear I did it.

    He smirked, then forced himself to sit back and read through the remaining files. The internal files were a mess … his earlier thoughts came back to haunt him, reminding him that memorising the official deck plans might be actively misleading. Starships were designed to allow a considerable degree of internal reconfiguration, but all such redesigns were supposed to be carefully charted and then reported to Navy HQ. It didn’t look as if anyone had bothered … no, it looked as if some reconfigurations had been reported and others left off the books. His heart sank. It was going to be a nightmare just sorting out the mess long enough to get the ship underway. And if the IG finally got its thumb out of its ass and came to investigate …

    They’d blame me for everything, he thought. He wouldn’t have been on the ship for more than a few days, at most, but it was possible they’d try to pin the blame on him. An officer could not be blamed, his instructors had said, for the situation they found when they reached their new duty posting, yet there was a very short time limit for that officer to either fix the problem or report it to higher authority before he became responsible for it. And that would be pretty bad.

    “We’re nearing your new posting,” the pilot said, with false cheer. “You want me to swing around the ship so you can get a good look at her?”

    “Yeah.” Leo unbuckled his straps and stood, making his way to the empty co-pilot’s chair. “Did they challenge us?”

    “No,” the pilot said. “That’s odd, isn’t it?”

    Leo swore under his breath as he peered into the starfield. Modern weapons could strike a target so far beyond visual range that the whole idea of waiting until you saw the whites of their eyes was not only stupid, but suicidal. They were already close enough to unleash a spread of missiles, or plasma balls, or simply push the drive to full power and ram the shuttle into the destroyer’s hull. Waterhen was supposed to be tough – she’d been built in an era where closing with the enemy was the expected tactic – yet there were limits. Her duty officer should not have allowed the shuttle to get so close without making damn sure of her bona fides. The risk was just too great.

    “Send our IFF codes,” he ordered, shortly. He’d been told bridge duty was boring, particularly when the ship rested within the most powerful fixed defences known to mankind, but it wasn’t that hard to set an automatic alert. If the duty officer – he hoped to hell there was one – was playing with himself, rather than doing his job, Leo would kick him up the arse. Literally. “Let’s see how long they take to respond.”

    His eyes narrowed as they flew closer, the dark starfield slowly revealing a dozen shipyard stripes, industrial nodes, and starships in varying states of repair or refit. Waterhen was holding position at the edge of the assembly, a dark flattened arrowhead bristling with weapons and sensor nodes. Leo frowned as he spotted the heavy phaser banks emplaced at the ship’s prow – those hadn’t been on the diagrams – and the handful of outdated sensor nodes positioned right behind them, so close that the backwash was likely to do considerable damage to the sensors, perhaps partly blinding the whole ship. There should have been two assault shuttles mounted on the hull – Waterhen was too small to have an internal shuttlebay – but they were both missing. Leo cursed under his breath. It was one thing to send the shuttle elsewhere, if there was no prospect of the ship being ordered to depart in a hurry; it was quite another to file a false readiness report. He made a mental note to report the discrepancies as soon as possible, perhaps after they were underway. It would hopefully lead to trouble for the ship’s nominal commanding officer.

    “We just got pinged.” The pilot sounded as if he were amused, but there was an edge to his tone that suggested otherwise. “You think they’re asleep over there, or dead drunk?”

    Leo shook his head in dismay. The shuttle was far too close to the hull for anyone’s peace of mind. They could ram the hull … hell, they could have mounted a primitive bomb-pumped laser on the shuttle and fired a ravening beam of destructive power into the destroyer, fired at such point-blank range that it would be impossible to miss. A lone shuttle could have taken out the entire ship … he reminded himself that, technically, he had the authority to flog his crewmen. It was rare, but it did happen. If someone really was drunk on duty, he would spend the rest of his short and miserable life being very sorry indeed.

    “I don’t know,” he said, grimly. “But I’ll find out.”

    “They’ve cleared us to dock at the upper hatch,” the pilot said. “You want to bet the hatch is crusted over through disuse?”

    “No bet.” Leo had never heard of a hatch that couldn’t be opened – they were designed to be opened manually, if the power failed – but he wasn’t prepared to bet against it. “Take us there, please.”

    He paused. “You want a job?”

    “Nah,” the pilot said. He shook his head, clearly intending to get away before Leo could have him – and his shuttle – reassigned. “I think that ship’s a death trap.”

    Leo scowled as the shuttle locked onto the hatch, a handful of alerts flashing up briefly before fading away again. He had the nasty feeling the pilot was right. The hatch seemed to be working properly, but how could they be sure? If the internal sensors were not in good shape …

    We can check and recheck everything, and replace what needs to be replaced, he told himself, as he stepped into the airlock. The ship doesn’t have to be a death trap.

    But the smell, which hit him the moment the inner hatch hissed open, suggested otherwise.
     
  6. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Three

    Leo gagged.

    It was rare, almost unknown, for a starship to smell of anything. Each planet had its own scent, he’d been told, but starships had internal life support systems that were intended to scrub the air as it circulated through the hull. A new ship, fresh out of the shipyards, might have a newish scent; an older vessel, at least in theory, shouldn’t smell of anything. And yet, there was a faint – and yet unmistakable – scent of decay in the atmosphere, a clear sign that some of the onboard air scrubbers needed to be replaced. It might not be lethal – not yet – but it suggested the crew wasn’t bothering to perform even basic maintenance. And that cautioned him that it was only a matter of time before someone more important failed.

    He sucked in his breath, looking up the corridor towards the bridge hatch. A lowly Lieutenant-Commander didn’t merit the entire senior crew mustering to meet him, but there should have been someone. Instead, Waterhen felt disturbingly quiet, almost abandoned. There should have been a slight thrumming from the drives, even at rest, but instead … he stepped forward, feeling the air brushing against his bare skin. There should have been a breeze, a sign the air was circulating properly, but there was none. The metal bulkheads looked distinctly unclean. Leo cursed under his breath. He was starting to think he should have brought a small army with him, or perhaps something heavier than his pistol. The ship felt as if it were a haunted vessel out of legend, rather than a frontline military starship.

    She isn’t really a frontline vessel, he reminded himself. Waterhen and her sisters had been amongst the best, fifty years ago, but now they were relegated to minor roles or independent navies. And yet, we are going to be on our own out there.

    The bridge hatch opened. Leo looked up, ready to tear a strip or two off the young officer who had only just come to greet him, then stopped dead as he saw a vision of female loveliness practically gliding towards him. The effect was so stunning he couldn’t make out her features, beyond a heart-shaped face, deep dark eyes and red hair that seemed to fan out around her like a halo of red light. He felt his breath catch in his throat as he swallowed hard – he’d known dozens of pretty girls and women, but none so seductive – and forced himself to take a step backwards. The aura of naked sexuality seemed to vanish a second later. Leo bit his lip, hard. The woman wore a naval uniform so carefully tailored that it left very little to the imagination.

    He gritted his teeth, trying to ignore the sudden – almost painful – erection. If the woman in front of him was a bona fide naval officer, he was a Grand Senator’s son. “Who are you?”

    The woman gave him a considering look. Leo forced himself to look back at her. Up close, she was elegant and pretty, yet not quite as beautiful as he’d thought. He recalled being cautioned about young women in the upper-class Houses of Joys – brothels, by any other name – who were trained in mystical arts designed to separate a young naval officer from his money, although he’d never been sure how seriously to take them. The woman had stunned him and yet … her sensuality was something, he noted grimly, that she could turn on and off like a flashlight. He felt a hot flash of anger, cooling his ardour. He hated being manipulated, and yet she’d done it so easily …

    “I am Flower Primrose,” the woman said. Her voice was calm and composed, but he had the feeling she could switch it to sensual warmth or ice in the blink of an eye. “I take it you’re the new officer?”

    “Yeah.” Leo’s mouth was dry. “What are you doing on this ship?”

    Flower – and her name certainly sounded as though she had come right out of a House of Joys – snorted. “Didn’t anyone tell you?”

    She turned and led the way onto the bridge. Leo followed, careful to keep his eyes on her back rather than allowing them to drift down to her perfect rear and shapely legs. She was walking straight, without allowing her hips to roll in a sensual rhythm, and yet … he reminded himself, sharply, that he’d already got into trouble with one woman and he really didn’t need to get into trouble with another. He looked around the bridge instead, cursing under his breath. It was a mishmash of technologies from at least three different eras, consoles that had have been installed fifty years ago clashing oddly with systems that were a great deal more modern. He reached out to touch the command chair, flicking the switch to activate the near-space holographic display. The image was disturbingly fuzzy. He hadn’t seen that since childhood, when his school had been last in line for new equipment.

    “You didn’t answer my question,” Leo said. There was no one else on the bridge, so he sat at the helm console and motioned for her to take the tactical seat. “Why are you here?”

    Flower said nothing for a long moment, then spoke with a bitterness that chilled him to the bone. “Reginald bought my contract from the House of Joy,” she said, confirming his earlier thoughts. “I wasn’t just trained in all the sensual arts. I was trained to assist my master in all his roles, from simple secretarial work to arranging and fixing … well, anything and everything. If he wanted something, it was my job to get it for him. It was a little boring, to be honest. He never really made use of my talents.”

    “Oh.” Leo wasn’t sure what to make of it. “And why did he leave you here?”

    “Like I said, he never really made use of my talents,” Flower said. “He went to the pleasure dens and left me here, maintaining the illusion he was in command and the ship was ready to depart at a moment’s notice. And …”

    Leo shook his head in disbelief. “And what are your talents?”

    Flower looked him in the eye. “A great many things. Administrative practices. Negotiating. Personal management. Medical care. Bodyguard skills. Emotional reading … I speak nine languages fluently, and several others with varying degrees of competence. And that, Commander Morningstar, is just the tip of the iceberg.”

    “I see,” Leo said. He wasn’t sure he did. He’d heard stories about girls trained in the Houses of Joys, but he’d never met one. “And if you know my name, I assume you know why I’m here?”

    “Your real orders are to take this ship to her duty station, while leaving her formal commander behind,” Flower said, flatly. “You have my sympathy, for what it is worth.”

    Leo cocked his head. “And how do you know about my orders?”

    “I have his codes,” Flower said. “I was well aware of the dilemma facing his family long before you were selected for the post, and how hard they were trying to cover up the Captain’s issues.”

    “You have his codes,” Leo repeated. An idea was starting to germinate in his mind. “Do you want to stay on this ship?”

    Flower grimaced. “It would be preferable to spending time with him,” she said. “He’s quite boring, in person. And he has nothing resembling ambition.”

    “Charming,” Leo said. “If you have his codes, will you assist me to prepare this ship for departure? We have a week to get ready and it isn’t going to be enough, not without help.”

    Flower smiled. There was something oddly predatory about it. “It will be my pleasure.”

    Leo smiled back. Flower was odd, no doubt about it, but he had the feeling she’d be a useful ally. She could certainly help use the captain’s codes to requisition shipyard crews, spare parts and whatever else they needed to get Waterhen into fighting trim as quickly as possible … assuming, of course, it could be done. Leo wasn’t sure it could, not yet. If what he’d seen on the hull was a sign of just how badly the ship had been refitted, they might have to rebuild the vessel from scratch and that would take months.

    “I need to speak to the Chief Engineer,” he said, shortly. “Where is he?”

    “He’s normally in his cabin,” Flower said. She reached into her pocket and produced a packet of pills. “You might need these.”

    Leo took the pills and glanced at the label. “Cleansers?”

    “Yes,” Flower said. “He is often dead drunk by this time.”

    “I see,” Leo said. Drinking on duty was a serious offense … and the Chief Engineer was meant to be on duty at all times. “I’ll deal with him.”

    He stood and left the bridge, making his way down to the engineering section. The air grew thicker, a grim reminder the air scrubbers needed to be replaced as quickly as possible; Leo felt his mood darken, along with the atmosphere, as he noted a handful of missing light fixtures and a bulkhead that had been removed, something else that hadn’t been included on the files. His skin crawled as he reached the cabin and tapped on the door, trying not to swear out loud as he realised someone had removed the buzzer and replaced it with a mishmash of components that didn’t seem to fit together. Leo wasn’t a proper engineer, but it looked as if the original system had been smashed and someone had tried to replace it with inadequate parts. The door remained firmly closed. Leo gritted his teeth, took a multitool out of his pocket, and poked the door in just the right place. The door hissed open. The interior was dark …

    A bottle flew out of the darkness and crashed against the bulkhead, narrowly missing the man in the door. Leo reached for his pistol instinctively, then tapped the light switch instead. The lights came on, revealing a wrecked cabin and a man sitting at a table, surrounded by bottles of liquid. Leo made a mental bet with himself they were alcoholic. The man looked up, blearily, then down again. A pistol rested on the table. Leo tensed. He’d never killed a man before, not really, and he didn’t want to start by killing a member of his crew. And yet …

    “Fuck off,” the man managed. He had a thick accent that suggested he was from the north, although it was hard to be sure. “I said, fuck off.”

    Leo stepped forward, keeping his eyes on the pistol. If the engineer reached for the gun, Leo would have to knock him out and hope for the best. There was supposed to be a sickbay and a doctor on Waterhen, but Leo wouldn’t have bet his life on either being where they were supposed to be.

    “That will do,” he said, pushing as much command authority into his voice as he could. “You need to sober up …”

    “Don’t take that tone with me, you arrogant young bastard,” the engineer managed. “Born with a silver spoon in your mouth …”

    Leo felt his patience snap. He yanked the man to his feet and shoved a pill into his mouth, forcing him to swallow. He had no idea how much alcohol the man had drunk, but there were so many empty bottles lying around that Leo was surprised he hadn’t drunk himself to death by now. The pistol was a bad sign, definitely. Leo took advantage of the man’s distraction to take the pistol, put the safety on, and stick it in his belt, then watched – grimly – as the man staggered into his washroom and threw up. Leo would have been sorrier for him if he hadn’t known the man was neglecting his duty, no matter who his commanding officer happened to be. Waterhen was dangerously close to being a death trap.

    “Fuck you,” the engineer managed, staggering back out of the washroom. “Bring on the court-martial.”

    Leo pointed to a chair. The engineer sat. “Name?”

    “Chief Engineer Bryon Harris,” the engineer managed. “You need my name for the paperwork?”

    “No,” Leo said. The paperwork had insisted the engineer was called Thomas Lenox, not Bryon Harris. “What happened to Lenox?”

    Harris snorted. “He got himself reassigned,” he said. “Smart guy. So did the XO. Smart bitch. She went off to an asteroid mining station. Can you imagine? Fucking captain tried to fuck her and then he did fuck her and …”

    Leo felt ice prickling down his spine. “What happened?”

    “The captain was a bastard,” he said. “Treated her like shit. He’s got that pretty bird and you’d think he’d be happy, but no. He just has to try to get into his XO’s panties too. And she volunteered for an asteroid just to get away from him.”

    “Fuck,” Leo muttered. That wasn’t just against regulations, but also thoroughly illegal. “And didn’t anyone try to report him?”

    “Fuck, no,” Harris said. “You think anyone here wanted to get a little more fucked?”

    He reached for a bottle. Leo slapped his hand away. “You little …”

    Leo took a long breath. “I have been sent here to take command,” he said. “In fact, if not in name. This ship is going to the Yangtze Sector, leaving Captain Archibald behind. You have two choices. You can do your duty, and help me get the vessel ready for departure, or I can” – he caught himself before he could threaten reassignment; he had a feeling it would be more of a reward than a punishment – “put you out the airlock, and tell the navy you had a terrible accident.”

    Harris blinked at him. “Are you for real?”

    “Yes.” Leo leaned closer, until their noses were almost touching. “I fucked up, and I was sent to this ship because I fucked up. This deployment is my one chance to prove I am not a total fuck up. If we get out there, and we do a good job, we will embarrass our dear commanding officer and prove we’re not a ship of fuck ups.”

    “Hah,” Harris said. He snorted, rudely. “Do you know how badly this ship is fucked up?”

    He went on before Leo could answer. “Where do I even start? Basic maintenance has been neglected for the last year or so, which means an awful lot of installed components are already past their active lives and are on the verge of failing, if they haven’t failed already. A couple of previous commanding officers wanted more punch, so they insisted on installing modern phaser banks that might have a lot of P-O-W, but almost no E-R. The ship’s fusion cores don’t have the output to power both the phasers and everything else. Both assault shuttles were reassigned; the only shuttle we’ve got is teetering on the brink of being unspaceworthy. Half the onboard datanodes won’t talk to the other half, and a number of our stockpiled spare components were … ah … sold onwards.”

    Leo sucked in his breath. “And if we could get the support we needed, could the ship be prepared for departure within a week?”

    “Maybe,” Harris said. He scowled at his shaking hands. It would be some time before the effects of the pill wore off. “But we couldn’t do it alone.”

    “We’ll ask for help,” Leo said. He shook his head slowly. “Is there anything else I ought to know about this ship, before we depart?”

    Harris shrugged. “It would be easier to list the things you don’t need to know,” he said. He smiled, but there was no humour in the expression. “The captain signed the engineering reports we submitted to the naval office, but …”

    “We’ll get the ship in order before the IG notices all the discrepancies and sends out an inspection team,” Leo assured him. It was going to be a hell of a job, even with Captain Archibald’s command codes and priority orders from the navy to do whatever it took to ensure they left by their planned departure date. “And whatever you have done before now …”

    He eyed the older man thoughtfully. He’d mentioned spare parts being sold … had he been responsible for selling them? There was a thriving black market in military-grade starship components, particularly ones from vessels too old to make it easy for the components to be traced back to their source. Waterhen would be a prime source, particularly with a commanding officer who took little interest in his own command and – probably – signed everything put in front of him without reading it first.

    “If you shape up and do your duty from now on, we will draw a veil over everything that happened prior to today,” he said, flatly. “Everything. Now, I want you to get a shower, change into a proper uniform and assemble the rest of the crew in the mess hall for 1700. I have a great deal to say, and not much time to say it.”

    Harris eyed him, warily. “And you think the crew will be impressed by a baby-faced officer right out of the Academy?”

    “I don’t care if they’re impressed by me or not,” Leo said. As a junior cadet, he’d wondered why senior cadets looked down on them; as a senior, he’d come to realise the juniors were dangerously ignorant of too many things, including their own ignorance. He couldn’t really blame the crew for having the same doubts about a jumped-up senior cadet, no matter how good he was on paper. “All that matters is that they start looking and acting like naval officers, before we have to head to our duty post and get to work.”

    “We shall see,” Harris said.

    “Yes,” Leo agreed. He added several more items to his list of tasks he’d need to handle before departure. They needed a marine contingent, if there was one going. “We shall.”
     
  7. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Four

    It was common, on capital ships, for the officers to eat apart from the men, something Leo suspected had as much to do with elitism than simple practicality. Waterhen was too small to host both a wardroom and a mess hall, so her CO and his officers had no choice but to share space with the enlisted crewmen. Leo had a private theory that Captain Archibald had insisted on eating his meals in his cabin – Leo hadn’t had time to check out his cabin yet – but he hadn’t bothered to ask. There were more important things to worry about, starting with imposing his authority on the crew. It wasn’t going to be easy.

    He kept his expression under tight control as four officers and fifteen crewmen filed into the mess hall, their faces reflecting a complex mixture of emotions. Some looked relieved to see him, others looked irked or outright angry … he chose to ignore the crewmen who shot him nasty glances, or the midshipwoman who looked downright scared of him. Her companion eyed Leo warily, his face determined and yet worried. Leo cursed Captain Archibald under his breath. Waterhen was not a very happy ship.

    Harris stood at the front, looking more like a naval officer than a homeless drunk. Leo hoped – prayed – the man had been smart enough not to drink anything more dangerous than coffee or tea, now they were about to start putting the vessel into fighting trim. There were some things that could be overlooked, tiny breaches of discipline that could be quietly ignored – or so he’d been told – but an engineer drinking was very definitely not one of them. Leo would not have hesitated to reassign Harris if there’d been a successor waiting in the wings … there wasn’t. Waterhen was too old a design to draw the very best talent, if only because any engineer smart enough to pass the exams would be all too aware that serving on an outdated ship would be a career-limiter in any number of ways. He made yet another mental note to see if he could find a civilian engineer who might be interested, if he had the right skill set. There was provision for hiring – or press-ganging - civilians if there were no naval personnel available. It wasn’t as if there was anything classified on a fifty-year-old destroyer.

    Leo took a step forward, wishing – for the first time – he had more experience. The enlisted men he’d commanded earlier, on the training vessel, had been very experienced indeed, trained to push buttons to test a prospective officer’s reactions when he was pushed to the limit, but nothing on that ship had been real. Here … the men and women under his command, no matter the formalities, could react in unexpected ways, making it hard or impossible for him to cope. He was mildly surprised no one had arranged an accident for their former commander, rigging something that would be very difficult to prove anything other than a genuine accident. And now …

    “I won’t waste your time,” he said, allowing his accent to reflect his lower-class origins more than he’d ever dared at the academy. “I am Lieutenant-Commander Leo Morningstar and I have received orders to prepare this ship for departure, then take her to the Yangtze Sector to assist in the process of incorporating the populated worlds into the empire. Captain Archibald will not be joining us” – he pretended not to notice the ripple of relief running through the compartment – “and I will be in command.”

    He let the words hang in the air for a long cold moment, then continued. “We have a great deal of work to do. This ship is in very poor condition and, despite the promised assistance from the local shipyards, we will all be working extremely hard over the next few days and, I’m afraid, we will probably be working hard during transit. Worse, it has become clear that standards of both training and discipline have been allowed to slip sharply, including into behaviour that is both dangerous and borderline criminal.

    “That will not be allowed to continue.

    “I am aware of the problems you have faced over the last few months, and I have a great deal of sympathy, so this is how I intend to deal with it. I will not investigate or penalise anything that happened prior to my arrival on this ship, as long as it stops. This is your one chance to put whatever you have been doing, no matter how much it breaks regulations, behind you. If you have hidden stills, destroy them. If you have stockpiles of alcohol, drugs, or feelie porn, or anything else that can render you unsuitable for duty, dispose of them. If you are gambling for real money, or anything more serious than sweets, stop it. This is your one chance, like I said, to put such things behind you.”

    He paused, again. “If you have problems caused by this edict, you can bring them to me and I will deal with them; if you try to deal with them yourselves, you will regret it. I am aware that certain kinds of behaviour are tolerated on larger ships, as long as they don’t interfere with discipline, but Waterhen is too small for anything of the sort. I hope I make myself clear.”

    His gaze flickered from face to face. “Many of you did not ask to be here. The officers who sent you here considered you the dregs of the service, the people who could not be permitted to serve on more modern ships and yet could not be reasonably charged with some offense against naval order and dismissed. I didn’t ask to be here either, but you know what? I’m going to make Waterhen the best damned ship, with the best damned crew, in the navy. If you work with me, I will make you proud. If not, you will suffer the consequences.”

    He let the words hang in the air, then nodded. “You’ll get your orders in two hours,” he finished. “I suggest you use that time to clean up your act. There will be no second chances. Dismissed.”

    Harris lingered as the rest of the crew filed out. “You think the speech will impress them?”

    Leo shrugged. “They can’t say they weren’t warned,” he said. He’d started putting together a list of maintenance tasks, but the outdated – or false – maintenance reports Harris and his predecessor had filed made it tricky. “And the most important thing, right now, is to get everyone up and working before they have a chance to object.”

    He smiled, rather coldly. “And you need to start work too,” he added. “We really don’t have very much time.”

    “I think you’re crazy,” Harris said. “Do you think the navy will give you everything you ask?”

    “We’ll see,” Leo said. “Put together a list of spare parts and other stuff we’ll need – make it a long one. We’ll be a very long way from support. Maybe we can convince them to let us borrow a freighter too.”

    Harris snorted. “Good luck.”

    Leo watched him go, then looked around the mess hall. It was strikingly bare, the food prepared well ahead of time and simply stuffed in the microwave, rather than being cooked by a dedicated kitchen staff. That would have to change, he reflected, although he had no idea how. Proper food would do wonders for morale, but there just wasn’t room for a functional kitchen unit. He made a mental note to consider the question later, then forced himself to walk back to his cabin. It had belonged to the previous XO, who had vacated it so quickly she’d left some of her possessions behind. Leo was surprised the cabin hadn’t been looted. It spoke wonders about the respect she’d enjoyed from the crew.

    He opened the hatch and stepped inside. The scent of perfume wafted across his nostrils. He tensed, one hand dropping to his pistol before he caught himself. Flower was sitting upright in a decidedly non-regulation bed, wearing a string of pearls and nothing else. Leo stared numbly at her breasts, as perfect as the rest of her, then forced himself to look at the deck as a flash of anger shot through him.

    “You …” He gathered himself with an effort. “What the fuck are you doing?”

    “Testing you,” Flower said, with a brutal honesty he couldn’t help finding a little disarming. “You passed.”

    “Oh, thank you,” Leo said, unable to keep the sarcasm out of his voice. “I take it Captain Archibald required your services at all times?”

    “Captain Archibald showed surprisingly little interest in me.” Flower stood, without a hint of self-consciousness, and started to dress. Leo had to force himself to turn his back. “I was little more than a bauble on his arm, with no opportunity to show off my skills …”

    “No, he preferred harassing the officers under his command instead,” Le snarled. “Did you know he drove away his XO? No one would volunteer for an asteroid mining post unless they were desperate!”

    “I figured as much,” Flower said. She had the grace to sound regretful. “He is not a very nice man.”

    “So I gathered,” Leo said. “Why?”

    “There is a certain mentality that enjoys pushing people around,” Flower told him. “He would never be satisfied with a woman he purchased, not when he gained pleasure from forcing others to submit to him.”

    Leo shook his head in disgust. There were rules and regulations, damn it, that even a well-connected officer should not have been able to avoid. Not forever. He promised himself he’d get a collection of testimonials together and quietly slip them to the IG, or maybe even tip off the media and let them handle it. Being a rogue was one thing, but outright sexual assault was quite another. Captain Archibald might discover his family abandoning him if the outrage grew too hot to handle. Or maybe he’d be reassigned to an asteroid mining platform.

    “Bastard,” he said.

    “Yes.” Flower sounded regretful. “You can turn around now. I’m decent.”

    Leo turned. Flower looked surprisingly … naval, he noted, as she held out a datapad. He suspected acting was part of her training too, allowing her to present herself as anything from a simple naval officer to an outright sex kitten, or anything in-between. She extruded an air of calm competence he found soothing, even though he feared it was far from genuine. It was unlikely, to say the least, that she’d had any real naval training. She’d certainly never gone to the Academy.

    “I arranged for you to get everything you wanted,” Flower said. “The first work crews, and pallets of supplies, will arrive tomorrow. You should get the rest in three to four days.”

    “I …” Leo ran his eye down the datapad. “How did you do that?”

    Flower smirked. “I’m a very good negotiator.”

    Leo eyed her, warily. “Details?”

    “A good magician never reveals her secrets,” Flower said. “Trust me.”

    “And I don’t want to be bitten in the arse by something I don’t know exists until it bites me,” Leo said, flatly. He’d always been told never to look a gift horse in the mouth, but he’d often suspected it was very bad advice. If someone was giving a horse away for free, they probably wanted something in return … or there was something very wrong with the horse. “What did you do?”

    Flower’s expression shifted, becoming alarmingly businesslike. “Well, in my role as Captain Archibald’s personal assistant – I’m entered onto the Navy Rolls as a steward, by the way – I made full use of both his command codes and his family’s extensive network of friends, clients and sub-clients. I cited the orders sent to you for some officials, and dropped extensive hints about future patronage and rewards to others. When juniors balked, I worked my way up to seniors and talked to them instead. It did help that the person who cut your orders was determined to get you on your way as quickly as possible, which made it easier to convince everyone to do as I wished.”

    Leo grinned. Valerian might come to regret sending him away so quickly. Leo would bet half his savings the Deputy Commandant had no idea just how badly Waterhen had been maintained, let alone how much work she’d need to get her ready to depart in time to meet the deadline. If they were lucky, the whole affair would bite him on the rear soon enough … and there would be no way he could blame Leo for just following orders. It was a dangerous defence at times, he’d been taught, but not here. It wasn’t as if Valerian had given him orders to commit a genuine war crime.

    He felt his mood darken, suddenly. “Are you happy to come along?”

    Flower met his eyes. “Answer me a question,” she said. “You did four years studying how to be a naval officer, learning the basics of everything from interstellar jump drive technology to military tactics and logistics. Until yesterday, you had a promising career in front of you. How would you feel if, through no fault of your own, you were told you were going to spend the rest of your life pushing paper in the Admiralty? Or maybe not even that … just some damned office a hundred light years away, without even the slightest hope of advancement. How would you feel?”

    Leo didn’t have to think. “I’d hate it.”

    “Yes,” Flower said. “I spent four years in one of the most advanced educational establishments on the planet, then another four years being tutored in the arts of the Houses of Joys, an education that covered far more than most people realise. They think of us as glorified courtesans, little better than whores, when they think of us at all. We’re property, as far as they’re concerned; our master buys our contracts and effectively owns us.”

    “It sounds horrific,” Leo said. “Do they?”

    “Yes and no.” Flower shrugged. “I thought I’d gotten lucky, when my contract was purchased by an up and coming naval officer. I would have the chance to use all the training, to see how well it held up in the real world. Instead … I wasn’t even a whore. He bought me and … it was like buying a top of the line starship and using it for nothing more than storage space. It was … disappointing.”

    Leo looked her up and down. “I see, I think,” he said. “You do understand we might be flying into danger?”

    “That was part of the training,” Flower said. “I have degrees in everything from sharpshooting and close protection skills to unarmed combat and knife fighting.”

    “And he wasted you,” Leo said. He saw her point, all too well. A question shot through his mind and he asked it before he could think better of it. “How do you switch your sex appeal on and off?”

    Flower made no pretence of being puzzled by the question. “Sexuality is more than just being nude, or revealing too much skin,” she said. “It is, at core, a way of hinting that you are sexually available, pushing buttons in your targets subconscious mind to align your presentation of yourself with his needs and desires, even the ones he won’t admit to feeling … even to himself. A woman who doesn’t wear underwear, while wearing tight trousers that reveal her lack of underwear, is hinting she’s available without making it blatantly obvious. And if she’s a good observer of the person she’s after, she’ll note the effect she’s having and adjust her tactics accordingly.”

    “I see,” Leo said. He’d never thought of it that way. It made him wonder just what Fleur had been doing, when she’d seduced him. “You make it sound calculated.”

    “It is.” Flower tapped the space between her breasts, drawing his eyes before he could pull them back. “It is all about making the right presentation, quietly steering events ... even after you’ve let yourself be taken to bed, touching them in just the right way to elicit the right reactions. Yes, it is calculated. And I want the chance to use my skills properly.”

    She smiled. “You do know I’m a trained spy?”

    “You’d get the Mary Sue award, if you were in the Academy,” Leo said. It was hard to recall he’d been in the Academy, only a few short hours ago. He tried not to yawn as tiredness threatened to catch up with him. There was too much to do, and not enough time to do it. “I want you to keep an eye on the crew, as well as help preparing for departure. Someone is going to cause trouble, and I want that person caught before they infect the rest of the crew.”

    Flower nodded. “Yes, sir,” she said. “I get on well with the crew.”

    Leo raised his eyebrows. “You do?”

    “It’s just a matter of presentation,” Flower said. There was no hint of boastfulness in her tone, which was more convincing than any insistence she could do the job. “I can be anything to anyone.”

    “Just be honest with me,” Leo said.

    “I will.” Flower met his eyes. “And if you let me, I can be very useful.”

    “Understood,” Leo said. He held out a hand. She shook it, firmly enough to assert herself without trying to crush his hand. Impressive, he noted, and slightly disconcerting. It made him wonder just how much she could tell, just by watching him. “And please don’t try to manipulate me again.”

    Flower smiled. “I won’t,” she said. There was a hint of a pout on her face, just long enough to catch his attention before vanishing again. “But what is conversation, but a form of manipulation?”

    “I have no idea,” Leo said. “But right now I have too much to do to worry about it.”
     
    mysterymet and whynot#2 like this.
  8. mysterymet

    mysterymet Monkey+++

    Good start so far! Waiting to see how this turns out.
     
  9. Wildbilly

    Wildbilly Monkey+++

    Excellent! Can't wait for the next installment! Lt. Commander Leo Morningstar might not be Capt, James T. Kirk and the Waterhen isn't the Enterprise...yet! However, I like him and I'm sure that the ship and crew will improve with time. Hell, Morningstar might set up his own competing empire!
     
  10. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Five

    Leo had expected, in all honesty, that something would go wrong over the week between his arrival and their planned departure date.

    It wasn’t as if there weren’t a hundred and one – and more – places where something could go wrong. The ship’s maintenance records were so patchy he had ordered the crews to start from scratch, inspecting every last component and logging the ones that needed replaced sooner rather than later. The lack of air scrubbers alone had caused an entire string of problems, from compartments that were distinctly unwelcoming to human life to moisture damage to sensitive equipment that would be difficult, if not impossible, to replace without a shipyard and an unlimited budget. Leo felt torn between excitement for the coming voyage – and deployment – and fear of what might happen, the moment they jumped far from civilised space. In theory, they could demand spare parts and service from any outpost; in practice, he had a nasty feeling the outposts had little to give. He drove himself to the brink of utter exhaustion checking everything he could, while doing the same to the crew. If nothing else, he told himself firmly, they’d be too busy working – and then snatching what sleep they could – to cause trouble.

    He did his best to lead by example, taking only a few short hours of sleep each day and then making sure he was seen to be doing his fair share of the work. It was something a commanding officer shouldn’t normally be doing – such work was normally tasked to the XO, who could get his hands dirty in a manner the CO could not – but Leo didn’t have a formal XO. Waterhen didn’t have the manpower, either, to allow someone to sit around doing nothing. Leo was uneasily aware he was building up one hell of a backlog of paperwork, something he’d have to tackle in transit, but … he shook his head. If they didn’t find and fix every life-threatening problem before they jumped out, the odds were good – he had no idea how good – that unfinished paperwork would be the least of his problems.

    “How the hell,” he asked one evening, “did Captain Archibald managed to get through the Academy without being kicked out?”

    “Good connections and a certain willingness to bribe his classmates into helping,” Flower answered. Her voice was as calm as always, but Leo was sure he heard tiredness under her tone. She’d been working hard too, ensuring the crew – and shipyard workers – had everything they needed to complete the job in record time. “And he still graduated right at the bottom.”

    Leo scowled. He’d been told that anyone who failed to reach a certain score, each year, would either been denied advancement to the next level or simply be advised to leave before he was expelled. It had happened, too. He could name a dozen cadets who’d been held back or simply vanished, after the yearly exams. It was incredible to think that one man’s connections would be enough to get him through the tests and training exercises, particularly the ones carefully designed to throw a cadet back on his own resources, but … he made a mental note to worry about it later. Perhaps he could drop a hint to an investigative journalist and suggest he took a look at the captain’s progress … perhaps. The Academy was supposed to judge cadets as individuals, rather than by their families or their origins. It would be a major black eye for the institution’s reputation if it allowed someone to graduate because of their connections, rather than their family name.

    “He was bloody lucky he didn’t kill himself,” Leo said. Space was an unforgiving environment – and someone stupid enough to take it for granted would either wind up dead or be kicked out by his peers, who would recognise him as a liability – and the slightest mistake could easily have ended very badly indeed. “How did you put up with him?”

    “I spent a lot of time trying not to roll my eyes,” Flower admitted. She looked down at her datapad. “There’s two pieces of news: first, we’ll be escorting a convoy to the sector and the freighters are already assembling for departure.”

    Leo made a face. “They’re that determined to get rid of us?”

    “It looks that way.” Flower shot him a sharp look. He hadn’t told her why he’d been promoted and sent into de facto exile, but she had the connections to get most of the story and the experience and insights to guess the rest. “We haven’t been told we have to be ready to go or else, yet it was very strongly implied.”

    “Charming,” Leo said. He took the datapad and skimmed it quickly. Nine bulk freighters, three lighter freighters … the latter, he suspected, more tempting targets for pirates than the bigger vessels. The manifests didn’t suggest they carried anything particularly valuable, but value was relative. A piece of colony equipment that was cheap and inexpensive near the core worlds would be worth its weight in gold, along the rim of explored space. “Can you arrange for them to carry spare parts for us too?”

    “Already underway,” Flower said. “I took the liberty of arranging for payment from Captain Archibald’s trust fund. He won’t notice.”

    Leo swore. “Are you sure?”

    Flower shrugged. “Compared to the amount he spends on his pleasures, hiring a handful of compartments on a freighter or nine is nothing.”

    She shrugged. “Technically, naval authority can be used to claim those compartments without payment, but practically … paying ensures the freighter commanders are more willing to carry our goods without complaining to their head officers, which will go crying to the navy about lost cargo space and other such things. It isn’t ideal, but it will suffice.”

    “I’ll take your word for it,” Leo said. He wasn’t sure it was a good idea, but … they needed more than grudging support, once they reached Yangtze and started their deployment in earnest. “And the other piece of news?”

    Flower looked down. “There won’t be any Marines assigned to this ship.”

    Leo cursed under his breath. “Did they give any reason?”

    “None,” Flower told him. “Reading between the lines, I suspect the Corps has too many other calls on its resources, and it has a persistent manpower shortage.”

    “And to think I thought about joining them,” Leo said. The Daybreak Marines were famed for being the best of the best, at least when it came to ground combat, and their training process was so intense that two-thirds of the volunteers washed out before they even completed the first quarter. The refusal to compromise on excellence was admirable, at least in his view, but it also meant there were never enough Marines to go around. Leo had hoped for a platoon or two, to give him a deployable military force and some muscle to back up his authority if he ran into trouble with the crew, yet … he shook his head. “Is there anything else we can call upon?”

    “Not here,” Flower said. “There are few space-rated units available and most will be too much trouble, at least until they get their space legs.”

    “And we’re too small to train them,” Leo said. A battleship could have taken a military unit and provided all the training they needed to prepare them for space, but Waterhen had neither the space nor the crew. “We’ll just have to find a way to cope.”

    He scowled. Right now, he had no idea how. He couldn’t reassign his crew to boarding parties without risking heavy, if not catastrophic, losses. In theory, he could operate the ship with five crewmen; in practice, it would be damn near impossible under any circumstances and completely impossible if they came under enemy fire. Perhaps they could recruit spacers at Yangtze, or mercenaries … no, that was a bad idea. Mercenaries simply couldn’t be trusted completely, no matter how good they looked on paper. It would be asking for trouble to let them anywhere near his ship.

    Flower cleared her throat. “You have an appointment with Lieutenant Halloran this afternoon,” she said. “Do you need help preparing for it?”

    Leo snorted. “Did Captain Archibald require you to wipe his arse for him too?”

    He sighed, inwardly. He’d taken the time to meet most of the crew, one by one, but Lieutenant Stuart Halloran was going to be a problem. Probably. If they’d been on a regular ship, Leo would have been reporting to Lieutenant Halloran … instead, Leo was his superior and Lieutenant Halloran would have to be superhuman not to feel a little resentment. He’d be smart, Leo acknowledged sourly, to doubt the jumped-up Lieutenant-Commander’s basic competence, and to wonder if Leo had been promoted through connections rather than military merit. The hell of it was that he would have a point. Leo knew he had been given a promotion he really didn’t deserve, and the crowning irony was that he’d been given it as part of a scheme to get rid of him. And no one would believe it.

    The thought nagged at his mind as he dismissed Flower, then resumed his work preparing Waterhen for departure. The tiny destroyer was heaving with crewmen and shipyard workers, the air considerably more breathable as the air scrubbers were replaced, the life support units pushed to circulate and cleanse the air, then the scrubbers pulled out and replaced again. Leo had ordered Flower to ensure the ship got the best of food too, along with everything they needed. They’d be back on shipboard rations soon enough, and recycled muck it was better not to think about too much, but getting better food had done wonders for morale. Leo couldn’t help cursing Captain Archibald as he walked the decks, silently noting the progress they’d made and how much remained to be done. A man with his connections could have done a lot for his crew …

    On the plus side, he reflected as he took a brief lunch and then returned to his cabin, it is easy to make a better impression on the crew.

    It was rare for an officer, or a crewman, to be called to the commander’s cabin, but there was nowhere else Leo could speak to individual crewmen in relative privacy. He didn’t have a ready room or even a small office; he was reluctant to take possession of the captain’s cabin, not least because he wasn’t the ship’s formal commanding officer. He hoped Lieutenant Halloran wouldn’t hold it against him, or that some of his crew wouldn’t fear the worst when they were invited. Captain Archibald had left his mark on the vessel … and it wasn’t a good one.

    The hatch chimed, then opened. Leo looked up and studied the newcomer thoughtfully. Lieutenant Halloran was only a couple of years older than himself – his file noted he’d graduated as a midshipman, rather than a provisional lieutenant – and he should have started a long career, rather than being assigned to a dead end like Waterhen. There hadn’t been anything in his file to suggest why he’d been transferred, or why his requests for reassignment had been quietly ignored. There certainly wasn’t anything to explain a stalled career. He hadn’t done much of anything, but he hadn’t had much of a chance.

    “Sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said. His tone was one step short of naked disrespect. Leo, who had been disrespected by experts, ignored it. “Lieutenant Stuart Halloran, reporting as ordered.”

    Leo motioned for the older man to sit on the chair. “Why are you here, Lieutenant?”

    Lieutenant Halloran eyed him warily. “You summoned me. Sir.”

    “You know what I meant,” Leo said, allowing a hint of irritation to seep into his tone. “Why are you on this ship?”

    He leaned forward. “You may speak freely, by the way.”

    “I told my commanding officer the truth,” Lieutenant Halloran said, flatly. “And it bit me.”

    Leo met his eyes. “How?”

    “Our ship was not ready for departure, as Captain Vladimir had ordered,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “There were a great many reasons for that, sir, but they all stemmed from the captain’s failure to issue the right orders, and put in the right requests, in time for us to depart. He was embarrassed in front of the admiral, and he asked me what went wrong. I told him.”

    His eyes narrowed. “And so I found myself reassigned to Waterhen,” he said. There was a hint of anger in his tone. Leo suspected Lieutenant Halloran had requested the transfer, after his former CO had taken his embarrassment out on him. “Does that answer your question? Sir?”

    “Yes.” Leo considered his officer for a moment, then decided to go with brutal honesty – and a certain degree of crudity. “I won’t fuck you around. I was given this assignment to get rid of me as quickly as possible, hence the instruction to meet our departure date or else. Our captain will not be returning” – he didn’t miss the relief, clearly visible for a long moment, on the other man’s face – “and I will be in de facto command. If I was in your shoes, I would be pretty pissed to see a new graduate promoted over me. Can I rely on you to be professional, regardless?”

    Lieutenant Halloran hesitated, noticeably. “Permission to speak freely, sir?”

    “Yes,” Leo said. “I told you that, did I not?”

    “You cannot possibly be worse than Captain Archibald,” Lieutenant Halloran told him, bluntly. “The way he treated Abigail …”

    Leo frowned. A lieutenant should look after the juniors under his command, and Lieutenant Halloran had a harder task than most, but there was a hint of affection in the other man’s tone that bothered him. There were regulations covering relationships between officers of different ranks, even when they weren’t in the same department, and most boiled down to don’t. If Lieutenant Halloran was too close to his subordinate … it was going to be one hell of a headache.

    “Duly noted,” he said. He’d worry about that later. “The files state you are the tactical officer. Is that true?”

    Lieutenant Halloran grimaced. On any other ship, it would be a silly question. On Waterhen, it was anything but.

    “Yes, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran told him. There was a hint of resignation in his tone, as if he expected to be penalised for not doing his job … despite a CO who didn’t allow his crew to do their jobs and an XO who had managed to get herself reassigned, leaving her post unfilled. “I am, on paper, the tactical officer.”

    “Good.” Leo suspected Lieutenant Halloran hadn’t spent much time doing his job. The crew should have been drilling constantly to keep their skills sharp, but there were no files on tactical exercises or … anything, really. “You will continue to serve as tactical officer. However” – he met the other man’s eyes – “you will also serve as my de facto XO. It will not be an easy job, not least because I will be doing a lot of tasks that would normally – unquestionably – be the XO’s responsibility, but it is one that needs doing. Can you handle it?”

    “Yes, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said.

    “I will also need you to point out issues before they become problems,” Leo told him. “I will listen to whatever you have to say, in private, and I will take it into consideration even if I don’t agree with it. I will be loyal to you, and I expect the same loyalty in return. Is that understood?”

    “Yes, sir.” Lieutenant Halloran leaned forward. “You do realise we’re being sent to the ass-end of nowhere?”

    “Yes,” Leo said. He knew it very well. “But there are very few – if any – ships patrolling the sector. There will be opportunities to make a name for ourselves, and who knows where they’ll lead?”

    Lieutenant Halloran looked unconvinced. Leo didn’t really blame him. He might be serving as de facto XO, but he wouldn’t have the formal rank and Leo didn’t have the authority, on paper, to write him a glowing officer evaluation statement. It was possible Leo – or Flower – could get Captain Archibald to sign a statement, but Lieutenant Halloran would be foolish to take that for granted. And yet, a long period so far from senior authority would have all kinds of opportunities. Who knew just how far they could go?

    “Yes, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said, finally.

    “Good.” Leo glanced at the chronometer. There were a few minutes left before they both had to return to duty, long enough to see if there were any issues his new XO wanted to raise. “While we’re here, do you have any concerns?”

    “Two things,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “First, the main phaser banks cannot be fired without diverting all power to weapons, including the life support. The weapons are simply unreliable and I would hesitate to use them in combat.”

    Leo nodded. Harris had said much the same. He’d also drawn up a possible solution.

    “And the second thing?”

    The lieutenant hesitated, again. “I won’t lie to you, sir, and I won’t sugar-coat the problem. This crew has issues. They have been stilled, for the moment, because everyone is very busy, but that will change once we get underway. You need to be prepared for problems.”

    “We’ll be exercising constantly,” Leo said, flatly. The ship’s tactical scores weren’t so much poor as non-existent. Leo had been told the IG inspectors were former cadets who had flunked out of the Academy and gone into careers where they could harass cadets who’d been better than them in every way, but it would be hard to blame an inspector who called for Captain Archibald to be court-martialled and his crew summarily dismissed from the navy. He would be right. “And we will be keeping the crew busy.”

    “Yes, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran agreed. “But will it be enough?”

    “I don’t know,” Leo said. They had four days to departure and they’d better be ready. “We’ll find out.”
     
  11. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Six

    Leo sat in his command chair – it was his, no matter what the formal chain of command stated – and forced himself to relax as they counted down the seconds to departure. The last four days had been hectic, with several weeks worth of work completed – barely – before their planned departure date, yet it had had the great advantage of keeping everyone too busy to cause trouble. That would change – he hadn’t needed Lieutenant Halloran to tell him that – but he’d deal with that problem when it reared its ugly head. If nothing else, there was a new sense of unity amongst the crew. Leo just hoped it would last long enough for him to take full advantage.

    He leaned back in his chair, trying to look as though he’d commanded the jump a hundred times before. It wasn’t true. He’d issued orders on RSS Švejk, but there had always been a sense of unreality around his commands, as if the training crews were humouring him rather than regarding him as an officer … in truth, he hadn’t been an officer and they’d been looking for ways to unnerve him, to see how he conducted himself when the crew ignored – or deliberately misinterpret – his orders. That wasn’t going to happen onboard Waterhen, he was sure, although there were a hundred other things that could go wrong. Having a crew primed to drive their nominal commander up the walls was bad enough, but at least they were playacting. A simple navigational mistake now could put Waterhen and her crew straight into a sun. They’d be dead before they knew what’d hit them.

    His eyes roamed the compartment, narrowing as he noted how many compromises the destroyer’s designers had made to fit everything they needed into the tiny bridge. There should have been separate helm and navigational consoles – there were, on bigger ships – but Midshipwoman Abigail Landor had responsibility for both, without even a navigational department to back her up. Leo told himself he should be grateful he wasn’t that long out of the Academy. His tutors had forced him to calculate jumps by hand, with the minimum of computer assistance, and he hadn’t forgotten how. Not yet. He’d heard senior officers grumbling about having to do it on the bridge, but it was better to check the calculations rather than blindly rely on the navcomp. It was difficult to be sure the computer was completely reliable.

    Lieutenant Halloran sat next to her, operating the tactical console. There was nothing wrong with his skills, according to the file, but the first set of tactical exercises suggested he’d allowed his skills to atrophy through disuse. They’d done what they could to fix that, yet Leo worried about what would happen if – when – they ran into a real target. The tactical experts back home had done everything in their power to ensure the simulations were as realistic as possible, but there were limits. There was always something that was difficult, if not impossible, to include in the exercises … Leo sighed, inwardly. Lieutenant Halloran was also doing double duty as the communications officer, something that really should have been assigned to a separate officer. It wouldn’t be a problem normally, but they were going to the rim of explored space. It was quite possible they’d run into someone who literally couldn’t speak universal. Or saw fit to pretend so.

    His console chimed. Leo was his own operations officer too, something that should have been passed to the XO … he keyed the console, cursing under his breath. He needed Lieutenant Halloran at the tactical station … and besides, he was too unpolished to be trusted to determine what needed to be passed to the CO and what he could handle himself. Leo had heard officers grumbling about micromanaging commanders, but … he understood, now, why so many captains micromanaged their crews. It was hard to be sure what was important and what wasn’t, and – at best – getting it wrong would make a CO look incompetent in a very competitive society. At worst, the ship might never be seen again.

    “Captain,” Harris said. It was a courtesy title, but it still sent a thrill down Leo’s spine. “We have completed the final set of drive tests. All units are at full operational readiness, and we are ready to begin the power-up sequence on your mark.”

    Leo took a breath. “Begin power-up sequence.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    A low shiver ran through the hull as the drives came online, the drive field taking shape around the hull. Leo kept a wary eye on the internal senses, hoping to hell they could be trusted to report any power surges, fires, or any other problems caused by a combination of poor maintenance and a CO too ignorant or short-sighted to understand the dangers. There was a reason the crew was meant to perform routine checks or replacements on each and every component, damn it. Leo had never heard of a console exploding in the middle of a battle, not outside bad movies, but he wouldn’t be surprised if one of the old consoles burst into flames if the operator pushed the wrong button. It would be tricky for a saboteur to do more damage than shoddy maintenance …

    “All systems report ready, Captain,” Lieutenant Halloran reported.

    “Helm units online, awaiting orders,” Midshipwoman Landor added.

    Leo studied his own console for a long moment, torn between excitement and fear. “Tactical, contact the convoy and inform them we will be departing in twenty minutes,” he ordered, shortly. “Helm, move us to the first jump point and recalculate the jump coordinates.”

    “Aye, Captain,” Abigail said. Another shiver ran through the hull as Waterhen started to move, getting underway for the first time in months. Leo braced himself, half-expecting a mighty explosion, as the vessel picked up speed. “We’ll take up position on the jump point in fifteen minutes.”

    “The convoy informs us they’re ready to go, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “And they’re asking where we are.”

    Leo hid his annoyance as he reached for his datapad and started to work through the jump coordinates. In theory, a starship could jump across the universe in the blink of an eye; in practice, it was vanishingly unlikely any ship that tried to jump so far would wind up anywhere near its destination, if it rematerialised at all. Leo didn’t pretend to understand the underlying equations governing FTL travel – very few did – but he know how a single gravity mass could alter their course, ensuring they’d arrive a very long way from their target coordinate. It wasn’t easy to jump past a certain range without getting hopelessly lost and most starships preferred to take it slow, jumping from one set of coordinates to the next and then recalculating before jumping again. He worked his way through the equations slowly and then checked them against the navcomp, breathing a sigh of relief as they matched. It would have been embarrassing, to say the least, if they hadn’t.

    “Jump coordinates locked,” Abigail reported. “Jump drive is online, power curves nominal.”

    “Tactical, signal Daybreak and inform them we are ready to depart,” Leo ordered. “And then inform the convoy to prepare for jump.”

    He settled back into his chair, eying the nearspace display thoughtfully. His former classmates had graduated a week ago and, after a brief day or two with their families and friends, had been sent to their new duty stations. They were midshipmen and lieutenants … he felt torn between pride in being a de facto commanding officer so quickly and envy of his peers, who would have the chance to build their careers and impress officers and potential patrons … without, he noted sourly, being responsible for twenty lives and an entire starship. Leo knew, without false modesty, that he’d done well in training – he wouldn’t have been promoted to a provisional lieutenancy, if he hadn’t – but he couldn’t help wondering what he didn’t know, and what he would learn in the heat of battle instead of being mentored by an older and far more experienced officer. Lieutenant Halloran was the closest he had to such an officer – and Flower, he supposed – and neither could issue orders to him.

    They’re probably envying me right now, he thought. The Academy would have issued some kind of explanation for his sudden departure … perhaps a little creative rescheduling combined with barefaced lying, the kind of bureaucratic double-speak Valerian and his type excelled at. They think I was jumped well ahead because of my academic brilliance, not because I fucked up.

    “The convoy is reporting ready to jump,” Lieutenant Halloran said, as Waterhen took up position at the head of the convoy. “Captain?”

    “Give the order,” Leo said. He took one final look at his inbox, breathing a sigh of relief that Captain Archibald had shown no inclination to return to his ship. It would be bloody awkward, to say the least. “Jump!”

    “Aye, Captain,” Abigail said. “Jumping … now!”

    Leo braced himself, an instant before the bridge dimmed around him. He’d been told it was like the entire universe was preparing to take a sneeze, a sensation that was incredibly difficult to put into words – it was almost as if the starship crews were imagining it and yet it was all too real – no matter how many times he travelled on a jump-capable ship. A low flicker of discomfort shot through him, an instant before the universe returned to normal … as if nothing had happened. The only sign something had changed was the nearspace display. The thousands of icons buzzing around Daybreak were gone, replaced by a handful of navigation beacons and little else. Leo felt a chill run down his spine. It was almost as if they were suddenly alone in the universe.

    “Jump completed, Captain,” Abigail said.

    “Noted.” Leo swallowed, hard. “Did we match the target coordinates?”

    “We’re well within the margin of error,” Abigail said. She sounded relieved. A CO who discovered his ship was millions of miles off course might well take it out on the navigator. Leo knew better – he’d done the maths himself – but she didn’t know it. “I’m recalculating the second jump now.”

    “Tactical, confirm the freighters have arrived safety,” Leo said. He realised his mistake a second later. “Scan local space. Confirm no threats within detection range.”

    Lieutenant Halloran worked his console. “Confirmed, Captain,” he said. His tone was so flat Leo knew he was amused. The mistake hadn’t been fatal, but it was embarrassing and – in the middle of a war – it could easily have been disastrous. It was impossible to be sure where a starship would arrive – the margin of acceptable error was surprisingly high, to groundpounder eyes – but a starship with bad intentions could easily lurk near the most likely coordinates, ready to open fire the moment its target showed itself. “Local space is clear. No potential threats within detection range.”

    He paused. “The freighters conform they have completed their jumps without issue,” he added. “They’re recharging their drives now.”

    “Good.” Leo made a mental note to run through the simulations again. That had been embarrassing. He’d have been marked down if he’d done it on a regular ship, under an officer’s watchful gaze, and here … it would call his competence into question. “Helm, take us to the second jump point. We’ll continue our voyage as quickly as possible.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo leaned back in his chair, studying the live datafeed from engineering. There had been no real problems, thankfully, and the jump drives were recharging hastily … they weren’t quite up to modern standards, he noted, but they were doing well enough. Waterhen would be fine as long as she didn’t blunder into an ambush. The research and development crews had been insisting they’d be able to put together a drive that allowed a starship to jump repeatedly, time and time again, but Leo would believe it when he saw it. The whole concept would change the face of war if it ever got off the drawing board and into cold hard reality, yet … he shook his head. There were hundreds of concepts that looked good on paper and simply didn’t work in real life. Starfighters, for one. They’d be wiped out in droves before they managed to get anywhere near their target.

    He relaxed, slightly. They were underway. There’d be no going back now.

    “Captain,” Abigail said. “We’re nearing the second jump point.”

    “Jump when ready,” Leo ordered. The second jump would be further than the first, now they were clear of Daybreak. “Tactical, ensure the freighters follow our lead.”

    “Aye, Captain.”

    Leo leaned forward as the second jump was completed, taking the time to make sure he issued the right orders upon arrival. There were no encroachments, just a growing sense that they – and the remainder of the convoy – were ever more alone in the universe. Leo would almost have welcomed a pirate attack – they were the scourge of the galaxy, and naval officers had orders to kill pirates wherever they found them – as the sense of being alone grew stronger. If nothing else, it would be a chance to test his ship against a foe that was unlikely to risk everything in a bid to destroy him. Pirates were rarely brave, when confronted by a ship that might be able to give them a decent fight. There was no point in picking a fight they might lose, leaving them unable to spend their ill-gotten gains …

    “Lieutenant Halloran, you have the bridge,” Leo said, after calling a replacement tactical officer. “Alert me if anything, and I mean anything, changes.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo stood, feeling a twinge of unease as he studied the nearspace display. The convoy was a cluster of icons, gathered behind his ship, and beyond them … nothing. He’d known, intellectually, just how vast interstellar space truly was, but it was difficult – almost impossible – to believe it on an emotional level. Waterhen wasn’t a speak of dust on such a scale. She was an atom, perhaps something even smaller. The largest starship known to mankind simply wouldn’t register, not when compared to a planet or a star. There might be plans to construct planet-sized starships, but Leo would believe that – too – when he saw it. The whole concept struck him as thoroughly absurd.

    But so would a starship, a few hundred years ago, he thought, as he left the bridge. It was harder than he’d expected. He knew he needed to let his officers have a turn at the command chair, to make sure they had the experience they needed when – if – they were promoted or the ship simply ran into trouble, but it still bothered him. It didn’t help that Lieutenant Halloran had more experience than him, even though it should. The first space explorers would have taken one look at us and dropped dead from shock.

    He pushed the thought out of his mind as he keyed the buzzer outside the captain’s cabin. He’d resisted going into the compartment earlier, partly because he’d been afraid Captain Archibald would return and partly because he hadn’t wanted to know, but now … it couldn’t be put off any longer. Flower opened the door, wearing a summer dress that made her look an idealised housewife. Leo shook his head at her smile. She was a very interesting person, and very useful, but it was difficult to know what she was really thinking, when she could present herself as anything from a simple crewwoman to a sex kitten in the blink of an eye.

    “Welcome home, sweetheart,” Flower said. She grinned, then dropped the act. “What do you think?”

    Leo surveyed the cabin. It was larger than it should have been … he scowled as he realised Captain Archibald had taken down two bulkheads to merge his cabin with the ship’s tiny conference room and a storage compartment. The interior was designed to be remodelled, but … his eyes lingered on the painting hanging from the far bulkhead, a painting that was probably worth more than his entire salary. It was also disgusting. Leo didn’t consider himself a prude – he’d done his time in the fleshpots, the honey traps for cadets and spacers on leave – but there were limits. He didn’t want to meet the painter – no, that wasn’t true. He wanted to meet the man in a dark alley, with a baseball bat in hand and no witnesses.

    “Charming,” he said. Captain Archibald had a great deal of money and absolutely no taste whatsoever. “And you had to sleep here?”

    “I had the closet,” Flower said, indicating a door. “It was … preferable.”

    Leo couldn’t disagree. “And his family found this … tolerable?”

    Flower grimaced. “I suspect they wanted him to remain firmly out of sight and out of mind,” she said. “That might change shortly, of course.”

    “Yeah.” Leo had filed a set of accurate reports, just before departure. He’d done nothing to draw them to the IG’s attention, but – as long as they weren’t asleep at their desks – they should have some pretty searching questions for Captain Archibald. The shipyard workers would probably file their own reports too. “It will be interesting to see how that works out.”

    He peered into the bedroom and shook his head. “Pack up everything that isn’t naval-issue and put it in storage,” he said. “We can offload it at Yangtze and send it back to Daybreak … he can claim it, if he wants it.”

    “That painting is worth a great deal of money,” Flower pointed out. “And technically it belongs to the navy.”

    Leo shook his head. “I’d be worried about anyone who bought it,” he said. “Just … get it all into storage. I want my conference room back.”

    Flower grinned. “Really?”

    Leo grinned back. “I can’t keep inviting junior officers and crew to my cabin,” he said, with the private thought Captain Archibald had been doing just that. “People will talk.”

    “Yeah,” Flower agreed. “They do little else.”
     
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  12. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Seven

    “I think we can install emergency power storage cells,” Harris finished, “and use them to fire the phasers.”

    “Yes,” Lieutenant Halloran agreed. “Once.”

    “Better than nothing,” Harris pointed out. “Those weapons are just dead weight right now.”

    Leo tapped the table. “We need every edge we can get,” he said. They’d been doing tactical drills time and time again over the last week, until everyone was thoroughly sick of exercises, and it had become clear that Waterhen could easily find herself outgunned. Hell, it was quite possible her enemies would assume she was more heavily armed than she was and devote more effort to destroying her, a degree of overkill they wouldn’t know was overkill until it was too late. “Install the power cells and start charging.”

    “Yes, sir,” Harris said. “We’ll get on with it at once.”

    Lieutenant Halloran looked irked, but didn’t say anything. Leo allowed himself a moment of relief. A regular XO on a regular ship would know the written and unwritten conventions of serving as his commander’s right hand, from privately arguing his decisions to serving as the interpreter between him and the crew, but Lieutenant Halloran had almost no experience at being an X and a certain awareness that Leo really had been promoted over his head. Leo had no idea if his XO thought Leo really was hot shit, or he had connections, or at least had the great advantage of not being Captain Archibald, but … he shook his head. It didn’t matter, as long as he did his job. Leo would do what he could to ensure Lieutenant Halloran was promoted later.

    He cleared his throat. “Is there anything else we should discuss?”

    “No, sir,” Harris said. “We’re as close to perfect as we can reasonably hope.”

    Lieutenant Halloran snorted. Leo couldn’t help a certain degree of private agreement. Harris had done wonders, with the help of the shipyard workers, but Waterhen was still a mishmash of components from two or three eras and not every command and control node talked to every other node. There would be problems, Harris had cautioned, if the ship took heavy damage. A modern vessel could reroute her internal datanet around any damaged sections, but Waterhen couldn’t … not without risking catastrophic datanet failure at the worst possible time. Leo suspected it would be the least of her problems – a battleship could soak up damage, a tiny destroyer could not – but it was something he had to bear in mind. A long-running engagement could easily end very badly indeed.

    Leo looked at Lieutenant Halloran. “And tactical?”

    “The crews are being cross-trained now,” Lieutenant Halloran assured him. “However, there are limits to how many billets we can fill without leaving others dangerously undermanned.”

    “Understood,” Leo said. He’d put out a request for more crew, but none had been reassigned before their departure. “We’ll do the best we can.”

    “We can requisition naval reserve personnel from merchant vessels, if necessary,” Lieutenant Halloran pointed out. “It would be legal …”

    “Unless the owners bitch up a storm,” Harris muttered. “We could get sued.”

    “I’ll keep it in mind,” Leo said. “In fact, I …”

    The intercom bleeped. “Captain,” Abigail said, nervously. “I … ah, there’s an affray on Deck Four, Bunkroom Two.”

    Leo’s eyes narrowed. “An affray?”

    “Yes, sir,” Abigail said. “Shouting and screaming, and fighting, and …”

    “I see.” Leo thought fast. Normally, the Marines and the XO would deal with whoever was having the affray and the Captain would deal with them later, once everyone had calmed down. He had no Marines and he wasn’t sure he wanted to send anyone else to deal with the crisis. “Seal off the area. I’m on my way.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    “Sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “I can go …”

    “Better me,” Leo said. He couldn’t afford to let his XO be used as the enforcer too often. It was important to prove he was a better CO than Captain Archibald. “You take the bridge.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo checked his sidearm, cursing under his breath. Trouble – real trouble – was rare on smaller ships, if only because everyone knew everyone else’s business. It was harder for problems to fester until they burst into the light, but Waterhen – once again – was an exception to the rule. Would it have killed Captain Archibald to be a good commanding officer? Or to let his XO get on with the job instead of trying to get into her pants? If the bastard had done his fucking job …

    He made his way down to the lower deck, silently assessing the situation. The crew was a little more spread out than he’d expected, the reduced manpower allowing crewmen to claim individual cabins or share bunkrooms with one or two comrades instead of five or ten. Leo hadn’t realised that could be a problem, not until it was too late. He made a mental note to deal with it later as he stopped outside the sealed hatch, and used his command authority to open it. There was no sign of trouble as he slipped through the hatch, eyes flickering from side to side. He inched down the corridor, resisting the urge to draw his sidearm. He’d never drawn his service weapon in anger before and he was damned if he was starting now.

    “I …”

    Leo tensed. Someone was talking, someone up ahead. He kept moving until he reached an open hatch and peered inside. A crewman was sitting on a bunk, playing with a collection of metal pipes and containers that had been scavenged from spare parts … Leo had never seen the specific design before, but it was clearly a very illicit still. He sucked in his breath, a hot flash of anger burning through him. He’d given orders – very specific orders – that all stills were to be destroyed. It looked as if this one had been dismantled instead. Judging by the crewman’s condition, he either couldn’t take his booze or two weeks of enforced abstinence had taken its toll. Leo shook his head in dismay. He’d known someone would challenge his authority sooner or later, but this …

    The crewman looked up. He was a mess, so much so that Leo had problems recognising him as Crewman Shields. The man’s service record was pitiful and the only reason his naval service had been extended was that he filled a billet on Waterhen, one that might otherwise have demanded a competent crewman. There’d been a long string of complaints too … Leo gritted his teeth. The training officers who’d pretended to be his subordinates had known when to stop. Shields … didn’t.

    “On your feet,” Leo snapped. “Now!

    “Captain Kid,” Shields managed. “You … you little brat …”

    He sprang, moving faster than Leo would have believed possible. Leo barely had a second to brace himself before the man crashed into him, sending them both tumbling to the ground. His breath stank of alcohol and failure, a man whose career had been dead for years before he laid hands on his commanding officer. Leo wondered what Shields was thinking, or even if he was thinking at all, as he grasped the man’s ear and pulled, hard. Assaulting a starship captain carried the death penalty. And Shields had to know it.

    Leo twisted as Shields recoiled, throwing a punch that would have put Leo’s lights out for good if it had connected. Instead, he hit the deck hard … Leo gritted his teeth and kicked the crewman in the chest, then pulled himself free and scrambled to his feet. Shields wasn’t bright enough to know he was woozy, Leo noted absently; he’d already fucked his career beyond hope of repair. Or had he … Leo shoved Shields down, then looked around for the sober-up he knew had to be somewhere within arms’ reach. Anyone fool enough to start brewing alcohol on an starship would be smart enough to have a sober-up, right? He smiled as he found the tab and shoved it against the man’s arms. Shields called him every name in the book, and a few Leo had never encountered before, as the drug worked its way through his system. It was not an improvement, Leo reflected. Shields was becoming sober enough to realise – all too clearly – just what he’d done.

    “I …” Shields coughed and sputtered. “Captain, I …”

    Leo met his eyes, refusing to show even a hint of weakness. “What were you thinking?”

    Shields said nothing for a long moment, then started to whine. “Captain Archibald never cared …”

    “I’m not Captain Archibald,” Leo snapped. “And you should be grateful. He would have nailed your underpants to your head and tossed you out the airlock, without bothering with any sort of formalities. What were you thinking?”

    “It was just a little drink …”

    Leo was temped, very tempted, to slap the older man as hard as he could. There was no such thing as a little drink. His mother had been a strict teetotaller, pointing to the drunkards who thronged the streets every weekend as clear proof of the evils of alcohol; Leo himself hadn’t gotten drunk until he’d been given two days off from his training, an experience that had convinced him his mother had a point. It was bad enough being picked up by the patrol and spending a night in the drunk tank, but getting drunk on a starship was suicidal. Shields was lucky his career hadn’t come to an end well before he’d assaulted his commanding officer.

    “There’s no such thing as a little drink,” Leo said. The still didn’t look very safe – or clean. “Give me one good reason why I shouldn’t hold a Captain’s Mast and put you out the airlock myself?”

    Shields shuddered, violently. He’d ignored direct orders, then rendered himself unfit for duty and – if that wasn’t bad enough – he’d assaulted his commanding officer. There were few grounds to avoid the first charge and none to avoid the remaining two. The IG would stamp fully approved on the execution warrant, and even if it thought otherwise and countermanded the sentence it would too late. Hell, the IG was reluctant to do anything that might call a Captain’s authority into question. It would be an interesting case – Leo was not a formal Captain – but no matter the outcome Shields wouldn’t be alive to see it.

    He swallowed. He hadn’t thrown up, suggesting he hadn’t had much in his stomach. No wonder the alcohol had affected him so badly.

    “I was drunk,” Shields managed. “I didn’t know who you were.”

    “I shall pretend to believe that,” Leo said. He knew very well that was a lie. “Tell me, Shields. What happened to your career? Why …?”

    Shields shook his head. “Does it matter? Get on with it.”

    “I’ll give you a choice,” Leo said, flatly. “You can sober up and do your fucking job, or you can walk out an airlock. If you choose the former, if you turn your career around, I’ll forget this incident ever happened. You can work your arse off as part of this crew and restart your career. You will have a chance to actually make something of yourself. Or you can die.”

    “That’s not much of a choice,” Shields said. “Sir, I …”

    “Choose,” Leo said. The report would have to be very carefully written, just to obscure how badly he was bending regulations. He had a legal duty to execute Shields – or at least imprison him – and instead he was finding a way to avoid it. “Make something of yourself. Or die.”

    “You don’t understand,” Shields protested. “Sir, I … I fucked up.”

    “Yes, you did,” Leo agreed. “And now you can recover from that mistake or you can die.”

    He stepped back and looked around the messy bunkroom. It didn’t look as if Shields was sharing the space with anyone, let alone someone with the authority – personal or positional – to tell him to shape up before he dragged everyone else down with him. That wasn’t a good sign. The senior crewmen should have dealt with Shields well before the officers got involved, something that would have happened on a bigger ship with a bigger – a much bigger – crew. Instead … Leo couldn’t afford to lose anyone, but there were limits to how far he could tolerate someone like Shields too. If he caused more trouble …

    He’ll be going out the airlock, Leo thought. It was funny how the play-acted Captain’s Masts had been so easy, how he’d handled them without a care in the world … because, at base, they hadn’t been real. There had been no way in hell the sentences he’d handed out, back then, would actually be carried out. Here … he would be killing Shields, really killing him, if he carried out an execution. If I do that, what will it do to me?

    “I’ll do my best,” Shields managed.

    “Good.” Leo helped him to his feet. “Go to sickbay. The doctor can check you over and purge your bloodstream, then the engineer can put you to work. Do as you’re told, without argument, and we can put this incident in the past.”

    He pointed Shields down the corridor, then walked after him. Harris was standing by the hatch, looking grim. He was holding a stunner in one hand. Leo met his eyes and motioned for him to remain behind, as Shields tottered to sickbay. It wasn’t idea, but it would have to do.

    “I want that cabin – this entire deck – searched from top to bottom,” Leo ordered, curtly. It was hard to keep the anger out of his voice. Someone had been asleep at the switch and the blame, when the IG inspected the records, would probably fall on him. A captain was responsible for everything that happened on his ship, even if he didn’t have the formal rank or he’d only just taken command. “The still is to be destroyed, and any others – even dismantled – are to be destroyed too.”

    Harris looked as if he wanted to argue, but didn’t dare. “Yes, sir,” he said. “I’ll see to it personally.”

    “You can get drunk on shore leave,” Leo told him. Shields hadn’t been the only drunkard on the ship. He dreaded to imagine what sort of trouble a drunken engineer could cause, when they were hundreds of light-years from home. “During flight, it’s a very bad idea.”

    “Yes, sir,” Harris said. “I’ll make sure the rest of the crew knows too.”

    “And put Shields on harsh duty,” Leo added. “He can share a bunkroom with crewmen who have a little more common sense. This could have ended very badly.”

    “Yes, sir.”

    Leo turned and headed down the corridor, heading back to the bridge. Lieutenant Halloran was sitting in the command chair, looking pale. Flower stood beside him, wearing a naval uniform in a manner that suggested she’d been a navy brat all her life. Leo wondered, idly, just what sort of life she’d had, before joining the Houses of Joy, then shrugged as Lieutenant Halloran stood. Leo filled them both in quickly as he took his seat. They had to know what had happened, and what he intended to do about it.

    “Sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said, when he’d finished. “Is that wise?”

    “I hope so,” Leo said. “We’ll keep a close eye on him, of course, and if he doesn’t shape up we’ll ditch him on Yangtze.”

    He scowled. Shields’s service record had suggested a man who couldn’t win for losing, a crewman who had had a run of bad luck early on and never recovered. The complaints had been vague, the sort of thing that might be driven by personal dislike rather than actionable evidence. It was possible Shields had messed up badly and never had a chance to catch himself; it was also possible his superior had been unwilling to press formal charges because it would have made him look bad. Leo suspected he’d never know for sure. There was no point in sending a message back to Daybreak, asking for details. It would be months before he got a reply, assuming there was one, and he wouldn’t know if he could trust it.

    “I’ll keep an eye on him too,” Flower said. “If he is an addict, it won’t be long before he’ll feel driven to start drinking again.”

    “There are treatments for alcoholic dependency,” Leo snapped. It was true that a crewman who applied for them would wind up in trouble, but Shields was in trouble anyway. “If you think he’s slipping, let me know. We can deal with him.”

    “And if you’re wrong?” Lieutenant Halloran leaned closer. “If he’s planning to cause real trouble …?”

    “Then we’ll deal with it,” Leo said. He understood Lieutenant Halloran’s concerns, but he owed it to his crew to give them a second chance. Perhaps, with a better commander and a genuine chance to prove himself, Shields would show he was worthy of the uniform. Perhaps not, but at least Leo would have given him that chance. “We’ll keep an eye on him and see what happens.”

    He leaned back in his chair. “You can get some rest,” he added. “I’ll get back to my paperwork.”

    “Yes, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said.

    “You should leave the paperwork to me,” Flower said. “I can handle it.”

    “I’m sure you can,” Leo said. He was very tempted to let her take the lead. “But I need to know what I’m signing.”

    He dismissed her, then leaned back in his chair. There was never any shortage of things to do, from paperwork to books or videos, but the journey was starting to wear him down anyway, to the point he would have been almost relieved if they encountered a pirate ship. It would have been something to do …

    Enjoy being bored, he reminded himself. His instructors had told him that naval service was long days and weeks of routine boredom, broken by moments of screaming terror, and he was starting to think they’d been right. You’ll have a great deal to do once you reach Yangtze.
     
    whynot#2 and mysterymet like this.
  13. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Eight

    “Jump completed, sir,” Abigail said.

    Leo leaned forward, feeling a thrill of excitement as Yangtze appeared on the main display. He’d half-expected an undeveloped world, all alone in the night, but Yangtze was surprisingly well-developed for her age. The original colonist-carrier starship had been converted into an orbital transit station, opening the development of the high orbitals, and the local industrial base had been able to fund and establish a handful of zero-gee industrial nodes, primitive by modern standards and yet better than most worlds, isolated from the galactic mainstream by the war, had been able to built. A number of asteroid settlements – probably mining camps – were clearly visible on the display, as was a small but perfectly functional cloudscoop. Leo couldn’t help being impressed. It was a remarkable achievement.

    “Tactical, send an IFF transmission,” Leo ordered. They’d been careful to jump into the designated emergence zones, but it was quite possible the planet would mistake them for a pirate vessel and sound the alert. The planetary authorities should have been informed of their impending arrival, yet interstellar schedules were always based on wishful thinking and no one took them for granted until the starship actually arrived. “Hel, hold us here until we we cleared to approach.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo leaned back in the command chair and watched as more data flowed into the nearspace display. Yangtze had a handful of automated orbital weapons platforms – primitive, again, but enough to deter pirates and planetary raiders – and a network of sensor beacons that was surprisingly well developed, allowing the planet to monitor nearspace with an impressive thoroughness. Leo keyed his console, noting the presence of a handful of outdated patrol ships and what looked like a pair of converted freighters, their hulls crammed with weapons in a manner that wouldn’t turn them into genuine warships, but would give any pirate fool enough to pick a fight a nasty surprise. He wondered, grimly, just how much pirate activity there was in the sector, now it was slowly being incorporated into the empire. There would be rich pickings for any pirate willing to take the risk of running afoul of Daybreak, and it wouldn’t be that risky until more warships were deployed to the sector. Leo felt his eyes narrow as he studied the orbital installations. It was hard to be sure, but he had a feeling the local naval base was not up to the task of supporting even one outdated ship.

    We’re going to have to do something about that, he mused. Waterhen was tough enough to take on most pirate ships, but she couldn’t be everywhere at once. Perhaps if we convince the locals to invest in a joint facility, one that can handle both our ships and theirs …

    Lieutenant Halloran looked up. “The planet just pinged us, sir,” he said. “We are cleared to approach.”

    “Helm, take us in,” Leo ordered. He was mildly surprised the planetary authorities hadn’t designated an orbital slot, but it wasn’t as if the high orbitals were crowded. It was unlikely they’d crash into anything unless they did it deliberately. The surface to orbit traffic was surprisingly high for a formerly-isolated world, but it was still quite low compared to Daybreak or Earth. “Tactical, maintain a light active and passive sensor scan at all times. I want to know if anything changes.”

    “Aye, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “You expect attack?”

    Leo shrugged. “An inch of prevention is better than a pound of cure,” he said, citing a lesson his instructors had drilled into him, mainly with gruesome stories about surprise attacks that had only worked because the defendant hadn’t been paying close attention to what was going on around him. “Besides, our sensor crews need the practice.”

    He frowned as a new message popped up in his inbox. Governor Brighton welcomed him to Yangtze, and invited him to visit Government House at his earliest convenience. The message was polite and friendly, but Leo knew it was an order. The governor would want to meet with him as quickly as possible, and to hell with his other commitments. Leo sent back a short reply noting he’d be on the way as soon as his ship entered orbit, then forwarded the message to Flower. She could come with him. He’d noted her observation and deduction skills were light-years ahead of his, fully on par with Sherlock Holmes.

    “Captain,” Abigail said. “We have entered orbit.”

    “Hold position,” Leo ordered. “Lieutenant Halloran, you have the bridge.”

    “Aye, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “Should I prepare the crew for shore leave?”

    “Groups of five, after I speak with the Governor,” Leo said. He didn’t expect trouble – he would have been warned by now if there was a reason not to allow his crew down to the surface – but it was well to be careful. Yangtze was so far from civilised space that there was little data on the planet’s political situation, and what there was appeared to be several years out of date. “Make sure they know it won’t be for long. We’ll have to go on patrol soon enough.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo stood, then headed to the shuttle port. Flower was already there, waiting for him. Leo nodded to her as he opened the hatch, then motioned for her to take a seat as he sat in the pilot’s chair. It wasn’t that long since he’d flown a shuttle – it had been part of his training, although he knew he was nowhere near as good a pilot as a dedicated flyer - and he’d forgotten nothing. He wondered, as he ran through the brief pre-flight sequence, if Flower knew how to fly a shuttle too. She seemed to be able to do nearly everything else.

    He glanced at her. “You look like a very capable young officer.”

    Flower smiled back. “As far as anyone knows, right now I’m just a new and naive midshipwoman,” she said. “Don’t spoil the surprise.”

    “Hah.”

    Leo started the drive, disengaged from Waterhen, and steered the shuttle down to the planet. There was a very limited ATC system, he noted absently; the network had given him permission to land and designated a landing site just outside Government House, but it wasn’t peering over his shoulder or demanding permission to take control of the flight itself. Leo wouldn’t have agreed, if it had. Most ATC systems were trustworthy, but the slightest mistake – or a hacking attack – could lead to absolute disaster. Besides, it went against the grain to allow anyone to take control of a Daybreak shuttle. It suggested the locals had a degree of authority over imperial personnel they lacked.

    He didn’t pay much attention to the surrounding landscape as he glided the shuttle to the landing pad and set her down neatly, but he was confident that Flower was paying close attention and mentally filing her observations away for later contemplation. The landing pad itself was rough and crude, although perfectly functional; he powered down the shuttle, checked his sidearm automatically, and opened the hatch to step outside. A functionary, wearing a bright uniform that suggested a certain lack of seriousness, bowed politely, then motioned for them to follow him. He made no attempt to check, peace-bond or confiscate their weapons. Leo wasn’t sure if that was courtesy, or lax security. He hoped it was the former.

    “Welcome to Government House,” the functionary said, as he led the way up the stairs and into the main door. “We hope you will enjoy your stay.”

    Leo kept his thoughts to himself. Government House looked like a palace, right out of a historical or romantic drama. The outer structure had a certain elegance that suggested it had been designed and built by a craftsman with an unlimited budget; the interior was tastefully decorated, with artworks that looked expensive mingling with portraits of men and women in fancy clothes. The staff looked fancy too: the men wore outfits that highlighted their muscles; the women wore shirts with plunging necklines and skirts that were so short they’d be in danger of revealing everything if they bent over to pick something from the floor. Leo shook his head in disbelief. Servants were rare on Daybreak, rare and expensive. And they demanded to be treated with a little dignity.

    The functionary showed them into an office that was surprisingly, almost disturbingly, roomy – and just as elegant as the rest of the mansion. “Captain Morningstar, Your Excellency.”

    Leo tensed, slightly, as Governor Brighton stood and held out his hand. “You’re a little young to be a Captain,” he said, as Leo took his hand and shook it firmly. “How did you get the post?”

    “Technically, I’m merely the senior ranking officer on Waterhen,” Leo told him. There was no point in trying to claim otherwise. The governor had full authority to request naval files from passing starships … Leo wondered, suddenly, if Governor Brighton might have been a little alarmed to discover Leo wasn’t listed in the fleet rolls. The files on Yangtze were several years out of date. It was quite possible their last update had been before Leo had even joined the navy, let alone completed his training. “The Captain is just a courtesy title.”

    The governor tapped his lips. “Don’t mention that here, young man,” he said. “This place thrives on titles of nobility, and a Daybreak officer is a noble by default.”

    He motioned for Leo to take a seat – he largely ignored Flower – and nodded to the functionary. “Please ask the Deputy to come along, when it suits him,” he said. “And have some tea and cake served at once.”

    “Yes, Your Excellency.”

    “I must say, I’m glad to see the navy is finally responding to my demands for more military and economic support,” Governor Brighton said, once a maid had brought refreshments and left as silently as she’d come. “It hasn’t been easy to keep the local sector from boiling over, not when I have very limited direct authority and hardly anything backing it up. The locals are aware of our willingness to settle issues by force, if they are unwilling to do it for themselves, but not all – I’m sorry to say – believe in it. They weren’t touched that badly by the war, either.”

    Leo frowned. “They don’t believe us?”

    “They came a very long way from Earth, and they lost contact with much of human civilisation for decades, thanks to the war, until we started establishing our authority out here,” Governor Brighton told him. “Many resent the fact we incorporated them; others think we’re not living up to our promises. They have a point, to be fair. Piracy has been on the rise, as the sector continues its development, and we haven’t done much about it. Yangtze is just too far from the core for anyone to be particularly concerned.”

    “The sector will receive more military support and economic development,” Leo said, recalling the files he’d read during the trip. “But there are many other demands on our resources.”

    “Yes,” Governor Brighton told him. “And right now, the locals feel we are making demands of them while offering nothing in return. And they have a point.”

    Leo said nothing for a long moment. The files had clearly understated the local industrial developments – and economic potential – and exaggerated the empire’s degree of control over local politics. It was true that most worlds were allowed to run their own internal affairs as they saw fit, as long as they didn’t cause interstellar trouble or otherwise break Imperial law, but … it was hard, almost impossible, for even a far-distant world to avoid a certain degree of imperial or corporate interference. It was the price of empire, he’d been told; it was a price deeply resented, from time to time, but one paid willingly because the alternative was worse.

    Flower leaned forward. “Your Excellency, how much authority do you actually have?”

    The Governor smiled. “On paper, I have complete authority over the sector,” he said, dryly. “In practice, my authority is entirely dependent on local willingness to go along with me – to accept me as a neutral arbiter, rather than their ruler – and their fear of imperial intervention. I have no way to impose my will on anyone, certainly not directly.”

    Leo sucked in his breath. “Your Excellency …”

    The door opened. Leo turned to see a middle-aged man, wearing a fancy outfit that should have been silly and somehow managed to give him an air of dignity, and a young red-haired girl wearing a long green dress that hinted at her curves without revealing anything below the neckline. She met his eyes, just briefly, and winked, before looking demurely down at the floor. There was something fresh-faced about her that called to him, in a manner Flower – or Fleur – never had. Leo couldn’t put it into words. It was just … a sense of youth and innocence, perhaps, that both older women had long lost. Or perhaps it was a form of kinship. They were the youngest people in the room.

    “Captain Morningstar, allow me to introduce Deputy Governor Hari Bridgerton, Duke of the Duchy of Northumbria, and his daughter Gayle,” Governor Brighton said. “His family were closely involved in the annexation effort, and were rewarded for their services with the role he now holds.”

    Leo held out a hand. The Deputy Governor shook it, his eyes studying Leo with almost savage intensity. There was an anger and resentment within his gaze that bothered Leo, not least because it reminded him of some of the young adults he’d known growing up. And yet, why would a Deputy Governor feel such emotions? He was easily the highest-ranking native on the planet, in a place he could easily make a name for himself …

    “It is good to see Daybreak is finally taking the problem of piracy seriously,” Bridgerton said. His voice was heavily accented, his tone hard enough to make Leo wince. “I have lost two freighters in the past five months, and so far we have yet to recover them.”

    “The Captain will begin patrolling the sector as soon as possible,” Governor Brighton said, trying to sound reassuring. “I’m sure the pirates will soon be driven out of their lairs and forced to flee, before they’re blown away.”

    Leo kept his face impassive, somehow. It wasn’t easy to locate a pirate base, let alone destroy it. The Governor was making promises Leo knew he wouldn’t be able to keep. It would be better to escort a convoy, knowing the pirates would either have to risk an engagement or let their target go, but with only one starship there was a limit to how many convoys they could escort. His mind raced, searching for a silver bullet; cold logic told him there was none to be found. The Governor meant well, Leo was sure, but he’d set Leo up to fail.

    “I shall believe it when I see it,” Bridgerton said, curtly. “We cannot keep taking these losses without serious consequences.”

    Governor Brighton leaned forward. “You’ll have the chance to meet most of the local movers and shakers at the ball tonight,” he added. “I trust you brought a dress uniform?”

    “I can arrange for a suit,” Gayle said, speaking for the first time. Her father looked as if he wanted to say something cutting and didn’t quite dare. “In fact, Captain, let me take you to the ball. I can make sure you are introduced to everyone.”

    Leo hid his amusement with an effort. Bridgerton appeared to have bitten into something sour, while Governor Brighton favoured Gayle with a brilliant and benevolent smile. Leo didn’t pretend to understand local politics, and he had no idea why her father wasn’t pleased at her suggestion, but he was sure being escorted by Gayle would be better than going alone. It would give Flower a chance to circulate too, without him cramping her style.

    “Thank you,” he said. “I accept your kind offer.”

    The Governor nodded. “We will discuss local politics later,” he said, sitting back in his chair and sipping his tea. “Captain, if there is anything you need before you start your patrols, let me know. The entire planet is at your disposal.”

    Leo suspected that was an exaggeration, but …

    “There’s a billet I need filled,” he said. “Do you have any Daybreak Marines I can borrow?”

    Governor Brighton said nothing for a long cold moment. “I have been unable to convince the government to assign even a handful of Marines – or close-protection specialists – out here,” he said. Leo blinked in surprise. He’d never heard of an imperial building that wasn’t protected by Marines. The locals might be competent or they might not, but either way they couldn’t be trusted completely. “There is a retired Marine who might be interested in taking service with you – he came out with the initial assessment team and stayed behind after completing his final mission – but you’d have to ask him personally. We’re not exactly friends.”

    Leo frowned. That was an odd way to put it.

    “I’ll ask him, if you forward the details,” he said. It wasn’t much, and it might come to nothing, but he was desperately aware he needed at least some shipboard troops. It was against regulations to recruit local troops, no matter how space-capable, or he’d have put in the request as soon as he reached Yangtze. “It’s better than nothing.”

    “That’s very true, out here,” Bridgerton muttered.

    “I also need to give my crew some leave,” Leo said. The journey had been long. The crew needed a break, even if it was just a day or two. “Can I start sending the first group down now?”

    “Of course,” Governor Brighton beamed. “The spaceport will be glad of the trade.”

    Bridgerton looked irked. “As long as they behave themselves.”

    “They will,” Leo said. He tapped his communicator, sending the message to Waterhen. It wasn’t uncommon for spacers on shore leave to get into brawls, but they tended to be confined to the red light districts surrounding spaceports. “They’re a good crew.”

    “Now that’s settled, you can tell us about developments on Daybreak,” Governor Brighton said. “Politics can wait.”

    Leo sighed, inwardly. It was going to be a long afternoon.
     
  14. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Nine

    “You look good,” Gayle said, as Leo studied himself in the mirror. “It suits you.”

    Leo shrugged. The whole idea of professional tailoring struck him as absurd – it wasn’t something he’d enjoyed, even at the Academy – but he had to admit the tailor had done a good job. The suit fitted him perfectly, without cramping his movements or being uncomfortably tight in all the wrong places. It was weirdly amusing to note that the suit looked a lot like a dress uniform, yet fitted him better than anything the navy had ever issued him. The dress uniform he’d been assigned for the graduation ceremony – the ceremony he’d been forced to skip had been so uncomfortable he’d wondered if he were being pranked.

    “Thank you,” he said. Gayle had practically dragged him into his quarters – apparently, Government House automatically assigned suites to passing starship captains – the moment the long and tedious discussion had come to an end. Leo suspected she’d found it as boring as himself, although she’d hidden it better. He’d endured far too many addresses, back during basic training, from officers who were too fond of the sound of their own voices to find it easy to hide his boredom. “You look good too.”

    Gayle spun nearly, her dress billowing around her. Leo found it hard not to stare. There was something real about her that Flower lacked, something he still couldn’t put into words. The dynamic between Gayle and her father puzzled him, and he wasn’t sure what she was playing at, but … he shrugged. It would only be a night or two, then the ship would be underway once again, escorting a handful of freighters to their final destination.

    A flicker of mischief shot through him. “Why doesn’t your father like me?”

    “It isn’t you personally,” Gayle said. “My father and grandfather concentrated much of their wealth in building an interstellar shipping empire, trying to link the sector together and make a great deal of money in the process. I think they had ambitions for eventually uniting the sector … point is, the empire came along and imposed a bunch of rules and … well, we have to follow those rules, while at the same time we’re not getting very much in return. The really big interstellar corporations have been nosing around, and no matter how much money anyone local invests in the sector the interstellars can outspend them easily.”

    She paused. “There’s even a theory that the empire is doing nothing about the pirates because they’re weakening the sector, clearing a path for the corporations to move in and take over.”

    Leo shook his head. “That’s absurd.”

    “It isn’t, not to anyone who’s lost a freighter in the last few months,” Gayle told him. “Why does the empire forbid us to send warships to other systems, without patrolling the spacelanes itself?”

    “You might make war on your neighbours,” Leo said. He’d studied history. The First Interstellar War had started because stronger worlds started trying to take over smaller worlds, and no one had had the power to stop them. “We will deal with the pirates.”

    Gayle shrugged, and held out a hand. “I’d say this isn’t a night for politics,” she said. “But in truth you’ll probably hear more about politics than anything else.”

    Leo took her hand. “Why did you ask me to the ball?”

    Gayle smirked. “It’s a social coup,” she said. “And …”

    She paused. “I want to go to Daybreak and make a good match,” she added. “I’m sick of living out here, on the frontier. I want to be presented at court.”

    Leo’s eyes narrowed. There was no such thing as a debutante ball on Daybreak, not even amongst the very oldest and well-connected family. There might be some matches arranged between scions of old families, the happy couple strongly urged to consider each other as a potential partner, but it was vanishingly rare. A man with a name could never compete with a man who had a brilliant military record, no matter how humble his origins. The idea of Gayle travelling to Daybreak and marrying a well-connected Daybreaker was just absurd. If she tried … it was rare for an offworlder to earn citizenship and climb in the ranks, although it wasn’t completely unknown. Gayle had been spun a web of lies … he wondered, suddenly, why.

    “Daybreak doesn’t work like that,” he said, finally. It was possible she might attend a social event for ambassadors, if her father was sent as a representative, but little else. “It might not be what you expect.”

    Gayle shrugged and led him through a series of doors, down a long flight of stairs and into a giant ballroom. Leo’s earlier thoughts returned to haunt him – it really was just like stepping into a historical melodrama – as the herald announced their names, putting immense stress on Leo’s provisional rank. Leo felt exposed, and completely out of place, as Gayle guided him around the floor, pointing out a handful of important men – all men – and men who thought they were important. Leo suspected he could pick out the former from the latter very easily. The latter were trying too hard …

    An odd shiver ran down his spine as he allowed his eyes to wander around the chamber. Men did all the important talking, their conversation flowing from matters of great significance to trivialities and back again, while the women either hung on their arms like trophies or gossiped amongst themselves, giggling in a manner that put Leo’s teeth on edge. It was bizarre, by his standards, and frankly disconcerting. The women were acting like silly idiots … perhaps acting was the right word. He wondered, suddenly, just how many of the female guests were listening intently, committing everything they heard to memory. All of them, perhaps. There was a certain safety, Flower had told him, that came with being constantly underestimated.

    “I trust you are going to sweep the spacelanes clear of pirates,” one aristocrat said, as they met briefly. “We can’t afford to keep taking these losses.”

    “I’ll do my best,” Leo promised. “There’s a lot of work to be done.”

    The sense of being out of place grew stronger as the evening wore on. Half the guests complained about piracy, or interstellar taxes and tariffs, or demanded he pass judgement on matters he knew nothing about; the other half extended invitations to their estates, or invited him on hunting trips, or tried to introduce him to their daughters or other female relatives, something that clearly annoyed Gayle. The Governor seemed to navigate the crowd with ease and yet he too seemed alone, an island of Daybreak within a sea of locals. Leo had had some etiquette training, back at the Academy, but it hadn’t been for anything like this …

    It didn’t improve as they sat down for dinner, enjoyed a meal that was surprisingly formal, and then returned to the hall. Leo caught sight of Flower sharing a dance with an elderly man who was clearly in his cups, wittering away in a manner that suggested he’d have forgotten all about it by the time he sobered up, and felt a brief flash of sympathy. Flower was probably enjoying herself no more than him, but at least she’d probably learn something useful. Probably.

    “I meant to ask,” he said, as Gayle led him into the garden. “How does your planet actually work? How did your father get his post?”

    Gayle shot him a thoughtful look. “My father is a direct descendent of one of the first founders,” she said. “The ones who invested in the colony mission, and were rewarded with large estates and a permanent seat on the planetary government. When the empire showed up, he was the first to pledge his allegiance. Does that answer your question?”

    “Maybe …”

    Leo kept his face impassive. He’d read the file, but he hadn’t understood the reality until now. There was no competition on Yangtze … no, there had been no competition. The aristocracy’s grip on power had ensured no one could compete on even terms, couldn’t even get off the ground without aristocratic support. Now, with Imperial Law superseding planetary law, it would be much harder for the aristocracy to suppress challenges or prevent anyone who wanted to migrate from migrating.

    Gayle shrugged. “Are you still going to look up that old sergeant tomorrow?”

    “Yeah.” Leo didn’t bother to hide his surprise at the change in subject. “I’d better get an early night.”

    “A good excuse for leaving early and missing all the speeches,” Gayle teased. She grinned at his shocked expression. “Don’t worry, no one will mind. Half will have headed home already.”

    She led Leo back to his suite, gave him a peck on the cheek, then hurried away before he could take the risk of inviting her into the room. The Academy had given a great deal of advice on romantic relationships with locals, male or female, and much had been surprisingly contradictory. It was very easy to get into trouble through romance, they’d been cautioned, and while the law might limit what a planetary government could do to an off-worlder it would be no consolation if you were beaten to death by an outraged relative. He did like Gayle, and he had a certain amount of sympathy with her desire to move elsewhere, but …

    He stepped into his room and checked his communicator. The first band of crewmen were on shore leave … so far, thankfully, there’d been no trouble. Leo would turn a blind eye to crew who were clearly the worse for wear, as long as it didn’t interfere with the smooth running of his ship, but a riot on the surface would be a major headache even if the shore patrol knew how to deal with it. Was there a shore patrol? Yangtze was hardly a backwater, by local standards, but … he made a mental note to check. There had to be something, didn’t there?

    Flower stepped into the room, twenty minutes later, and tapped her lips while wandering the floor in a manner that looked random yet was anything but. Leo didn’t think the Governor would bug his visitors, yet it was impossible to be sure his staff could be trusted. There weren’t many Daybreakers on the surface …

    “I’ll tell you one thing, the resentment is off the charts,” Flower said, sitting on his bed in a manner that clashed oddly with her dress. “The aristocrats are pissed at being unwillingly incorporated into the empire, even though the fact their world wasn’t united was largely their fault. Some think we’re just going to take over completely, others that we’re weakening them before moving in for the kill.”

    “I heard,” Leo said. “How many are trying to undermine the Governor?”

    “It’s hard to be sure,” Flower said. “Grumbling doesn’t always lead to trouble. The Governor isn’t seen as a real threat, in and of himself, and I think a lot of the local aristos have decided to ignore him as much as possible, rather than try to unseat him. They were very much in two minds about having a starship assigned to the sector, too. Some think it’s great the empire is finally living up to its promise, others fear it is just the start of a process that will end with their world losing what remains of its autonomy.”

    She paused. “The women are also far smarter than they let on,” she added. “That giggling hides a collection of very sharp minds.”

    “I guessed,” Leo said. “Why …?”

    Flower grimaced. “It isn’t uncommon for colony worlds that have to struggle to survive to fall back on a patriarchal system, with women being both protected and treated as property, at least until they develop the technology and society structures they need to ensure equality of the sexes. Women here have few rights, from what I can tell, and I suspect their male relatives can override those rights if they wish. That might explain their conduct. Lacking the ability to act openly, they resort to clandestine manoeuvres instead.”

    “Charming,” Leo said. It had never occurred to him that there might be anything inferior about his mother or sisters, still less the female cadets who’d competed with him and the female instructors who’d drilled him mercilessly. It was certainly hard to maintain such a delusion when he knew how hard his mother had worked, or when he lost a mock-battle to a female cadet who’d made better use of her resources. “That will change, won’t it?”

    “Yes, but don’t expect it to change easily,” Flower told him. “There is always resistance.”

    Leo shrugged. The Empire wouldn’t support the planetary government if it tried to crush rebels, any more than it would help the rebellion. It would try to move the rebels to a new world, if they wanted to leave; it was quite possible, he knew, that a vast number of young women would head into interstellar space, once they realised that they wouldn’t be judged poorly or treated as idiots because they had vaginas instead of penises. The local government would be annoyed, but they couldn’t do anything about it. The Empire had slapped down governments that got too big for their britches before and it would happily do it again.

    He looked at her. “And the commoners?”

    “It’s difficult to say, based on what I heard,” Flower said. “I’ll go exploring tomorrow, have a look around the city and see if I can get a sense of the local mood. Unless you want me to come with you …?”

    “I can talk to a retired Marine on my own,” Leo assured her. “If he says yes, I can bring him back to the ship and you can meet him there.”

    Flower nodded. “Be careful with Gayle,” she said. Her voice was suddenly very serious. “That girl has an agenda of her own.”

    “She said she wanted to move to Daybreak,” Leo mused. “But …”

    “Yeah,” Flower said. Her voice was flat, but Leo was sure she sounded sympathetic. It hadn’t been easy for Flower, and it would be a great deal harder for Gayle. “It won’t be easy for her if she does.”

    Leo couldn’t disagree. Daybreak was not always very kind to immigrants, particularly immigrants who refused to abandon their former cultures, do their planetary service to become citizens, and generally make an effort to integrate as much as possible. Gayle was a pretty young woman, and she was clearly smart, but she’d have little else when she arrived and started looking for employment. She might be wiser to join the navy, when – if – a recruiting station was set up on Yangtze. But she might not have time. Leo had seen the projections. It was unlikely a recruiting station would be set up in less than a decade and by then Gayle would be in her thirties, too old to start even basic training. He felt a flicker of sympathy. He had brought his own fate on himself, as had too many of his crew. Gayle had been damned to a second-class life through an accident of birth.

    “Her father’s reaction was a little odd too,” Flower added. “He might have been constrained, but also … he might not have been displeased she asked you to the ball.”

    “I can’t wait to get back into space,” Leo said. “Are all politics this … this …”

    Words failed him. He’d watched debates in the Senate, and listened to orators trying to sway Congress to vote for or against a particular law, but … he’d never really understood just how much else there was to politics. He supposed politicians needed to schmoose with their peers, even if it meant they'd wind up having more in common with their peers than the people who voted them into office. Daybreak was better at most at keeping its leaders aware of what was actually important, and the constant competition generally removed the incompetent before it was too late, but there were limits. He dreaded the day Captain Archibald – or someone like him – managed to get into high office. It would be disastrous.

    “Yes.” Flower stood and brushed down her dress. “I’ll see you tomorrow morning. Make sure you get a good night’s sleep. You’ll need to be alert tomorrow.”

    “Yes, mother,” Leo teased. Flower made a rude gesture. He couldn’t help smiling at how she managed to look elegant, despite swearing at him with one hand. “Good night.”

    He undressed quickly, showered – shower water was rationed on Waterhen – and clambered into bed. His mind wandered as he closed his eyes, wondering if Gayle would try to sneak through the corridors to his bedroom for a night of lovemaking before dismissing the idea as absurd. He wasn’t sure why the Governor and the Deputy Governor – and his daughter – shared the same mansion, unless it had belonged to the Deputy before it had been put at the Governor’s disposal, but it hardly mattered. There would be almost no privacy, no matter how much they sneaked around. The staff would notice and react, if they did. Maybe the mansion was like a historical drama, but the consequences would be all too real.

    His eyes closed, but … the bed felt wrong. It was too comfortable, too spacious … he wondered, suddenly, if they’d assumed he’d bring a bedmate back to his chambers or if the bed only felt large compared to a naval officer’s bunk. Leo had barely gotten used to sleeping alone, rather than sharing the bunkrooms with the other cadets, and now … he shook his head, keeping his eyes closed as he mentally counted sheep. The room was disturbingly quiet … there was no background hum, no ebb and flow from the air circulators … he told himself, again and again, that he needed sleep …

    … But it still felt like hours before he finally drifted away.
     
  15. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Ten

    “I trust you had a good breakfast,” Gayle said, as the aircar flew over landscape that was a mixture of farms, tiny villages, and endless forests that were a strange combination of earthly and alien trees, some reassuringly normal and others creepy enough to send a shiver of unease running down his spine. “The staff packed a picnic lunch, but we have to be careful where we set down.”

    Leo nodded, slowly. “It was better than anything I had onboard ship,” he said. It had been better than merely better, it had been fantastic. He’d expected bacon and eggs, but instead he’d been given nearly a dozen different types of food to sample, from sweet breads and fancy omelettes to something that involved fish, rice, and eggs. It made him feel oddly guilty, as well as out of place. He’d arranged for food to be shipped to Waterhen, but there was no way a naval cook could match the repast he’d been offered. “Was your father showing off?”

    “The staff enjoy showing their skills,” Gayle said. “They were chosen for their skill at cooking the best, then serving it in a manner that pleases the eyes as well as the palate.”

    “I see,” Leo said. It struck him as a waste of effort, like painting go faster stripes on a starship’s hull, but he supposed it served a certain purpose. The breakfast had cleansed his mind, after a ball he hadn’t enjoyed and a restless night, and he was ready to get on with his task before returning to the ship. “Did you grow up in such a place?”

    Gayle shrugged. “I spent my childhood on the estate,” she said. “It was a good life, but …”

    Leo met her eyes. “You want more.”

    “Yeah,” Gayle said. “Right now, I have nine men asking for my hand” – her lips quirked – “and the rest of me as well. The only reason I haven’t been married off yet is that father is playing games, manipulating my suitors to see what they’ll offer … he doesn’t want to give me away for nothing.”

    Leo muttered a word under his breath. Gayle belonged to herself. The very idea that her father could treat her as property, let alone marry her off to some inbred dim-witted idiot … no Daybreaker woman would stand for it. Leo’s sisters would flatten him if he dared to suggest they married someone he chose, let alone force them … he wondered, suddenly, if he could arrange for Gayle to leave her homeworld and travel with him, perhaps give her a minor commission. It wasn’t impossible … no, it was. Gayle lacked even the slightest hint of a useful background, the kind of training that would let him make a big show of shanghaiing her …

    He put the thought aside as the landscape grew wilder, the earthly trees struggling mightily to impose their will on the alien biosphere. It was odd to see the planet’s native life defending itself … normally, earthly plants and animals were so incredibly aggressive, compared to their native enemies, that they took over very rapidly, exterminating the local wildlife unless it managed to find a niche for itself. It made him wonder if, given time, Yangtze would develop an intelligent race of its own, although that was extremely unlikely. Humanity had been exploring space for hundreds of years and it had never encountered even a single trace of any other intelligent race, not even long-dead ruins. It was generally believed humanity was alone in the universe, although the human race had only explored a tiny fraction of the galaxy. There could be anything lurking on the other side of the universe, just waiting for them.

    “There,” Gayle said. “That’s the beacon.”

    Leo followed her finger. There was a small cabin halfway up the mountainside, surrounded by a handful of moving white dots … sheep, he realised dully. The local farmers had released vast numbers during the early settlement period, intending to let them breed and then round them up. It hadn’t worked out as well as they’d hoped, according to the files. The planet’s native wildlife had made it harder for the wild sheep to spread. In places, it had even fought back.

    “Take us down,” he said. “Please.”

    He felt his heart start to pound as the aircar flew closer, finally settling down next to the log cabin. It was astonishingly primitive and yet it managed to be more homely than Government House. Leo was no expert, but he figured that it was quite possible one man could have built and maintained the structure, intending to let it rot into nothingness after his death. Up close, the logs were smaller than he’d thought, woven together into a structure that was surprisingly strong. Leo suspected they’d be able to stand up to wind and rain, at least for a while. There was no shortage of raw material in the forests around them to replace anything damaged in the storm.

    The door opened as they clambered out, revealing a broad-shouldered man with a rifle slung over one shoulder and an axe at his belt. Leo tried not to gape. He’d met dozens of trained marines before, but this one looked both more muscular and more unkempt than the others. He was not a man to whom personal grooming was very important, Leo decided, although – to be fair – there was no reason for him to expect visitors. There was no communications gear in the hut, Leo had been told. He was surprised the man had even chosen to install a navigational beacon.

    “Good morning,” the man said. His voice was rough, but the Daybreak accent was unmistakable. “What can I do for you?”

    Leo heard the unspoken question and leaned forward. “I am Lieutenant-Commander Leo Morningstar, current commanding officer of RSS Waterhen,” he said. A retired Marine wouldn’t be impressed by a provisional title. “Are you Sergeant-Major Boothroyd?”

    Boothroyd cocked his head. “If you know my name, you know who I am.”

    “Yes,” Leo said. He mentally ran through a hundred possible approaches, then decided to be direct. “My ship needs some Marines. Can I recruit you?”

    Boothroyd made an odd noise. It took Leo a moment to realise it was a laugh. “That’s original, I’ll grant,” he said. “How did a young man like you wind up as commander of an entire starship?”

    “It’s a long story,” Leo said. “Suffice it to say my CO decided he wanted to remain behind.”

    “Really,” Boothroyd said. “And you have no Marines?”

    “None,” Leo said. “We don’t even have anyone with the skillset we need.”

    “No,” Boothroyd agreed, as he beckoned them into the hut. “You wouldn’t be trying to recruit me if there was any other choice.”

    Leo narrowed his eyes as they stepped inside. “Your service record is long and honourable,” he said, tightly. “You had twenty years in the Marine Corps, with not a single black mark.”

    “And I have been on this world for five years, after retirement,” Boothroyd said. “My knowledge is out of date. My skills likewise.”

    Leo looked around. The hut was crude, but charming. A small fire burned merrily in the fireplace, the windows carefully emplaced to allow the maximum possible light to stream into the hut. A small collection of weapons hung from the wall, above a simple wooden bed. If Boothroyd had done it all himself, with the possible exception of the glass, his skills had clearly not been allowed to fade away.

    “My ship is out of date,” he said, bluntly. Waterhen had been outdated before Boothroyd had joined the Marine Corps. “I don’t pretend it will be easy, sir, but it has to be done.”

    “Does it?” Boothroyd said nothing for a long moment, then motioned for them to sit down as he puttered around the makeshift kitchen. “I have a challenge for you.”

    He returned, carrying two mugs of a foamy white liquid. “Milk,” he said, by way of explanation. He passed them the mugs, then sat facing them. “Convince me.”

    Leo took a sip. The milk tasted richer than any he’d had before, as a child and a naval officer. It was odd to think of a battle-hardened Marine drinking milk … he suppressed the flicker of amusement quickly, before it could show on his face. He suspected Boothroyd had seen it anyway, despite his best efforts. The man’s record included several years as a platoon sergeant, where he would have had the task of convincing a green lieutenant – or two, or three - to listen to him before the ignorant young fool led his men into a killing ground and get them all killed. It wasn’t a pleasant thought. To a man like Boothroyd, Leo was a stupid greenie lieutenant too.

    He looked up. “Right now, we are the only ship assigned to the sector … the only Daybreak ship, I should say. We need to make an impact on the pirates, and we can only do that through having the ability to take their ships intact and interrogate their crews. To do that, I need men who can board enemy ships and take them … I need Marines.”

    “True,” Boothroyd agreed, mildly.

    Leo wished he knew the man a little better. It would be easier to determine which arguments might appeal to him, and which would be worse than useless.

    “You would be responsible for putting the unit together,” he continued. “You’d be recruiting possible candidates, training them, and leading them into battle. You would have a chance to put your mark on the unit, whatever happened to it, and a chance to return to the Corps on your own terms. You would have a chance to help exterminate the pirates in this sector – you know what they do to their victims – and secure the sector as it is slowly incorporated into the empire.”

    Boothroyd sipped his milk. “And you think that would appeal to me?”

    “I read your record,” Leo said. He threw out his final hope, all too aware it might not be enough to get the older man to agree. “Twenty years in the Corps, most spent where the fire was hottest. I think you’re bored here, Sergeant, and you would kill for a chance to see action again.”

    “Really?” Boothroyd sounded amused. “And why do you think I’m bored?”

    “You built this hut,” Leo said, waving a hand at the walls. “It’s done. You have some waterworks and crops outside” – a guess, but he was fairly confident in it – “and you’re supporting yourself … what else? You got all the genemods they give successful recruits, when they are formally inducted into the Corps, and that means you can look forward to at least sixty years on the mountainside, sixty years of carving wood and feeding yourself and little else. Do you even see other humans, or are we the first you’ve seen for years?”

    “There’s a small town a couple of days walk away,” Boothroyd said. “I can go there whenever I feel the need for some company, and the few things I can’t make for myself.”

    “Yes,” Leo agreed. “But does it scratch the itch for action?”

    He met the older man’s eyes. “Tell me now, if you want us to leave, and we will,” he said. “I’m not going to risk conscripting a man who doesn’t want to be here. Say the word and we’re gone.”

    “Stay here and be bored, or come with you and get my ass shot at, again,” Boothroyd said, wryly. His smile made him look younger. “Two conditions, young man.”

    He went on before Leo could say a word. “I raise and train the unit how I see fit, and you don’t interfere,” he said. “And second, you listen to me when I offer advice. The last officer I had to deal with didn’t listen, and that was part of the reason I didn’t re-up when I was offered the chance.”

    Leo looked back at him. “I will listen,” he said. “I make no promises about taking your advice.”

    “Wise,” Boothroyd said. “Give me a day, then send a shuttle to pick me up. I’ll pack up what I want to take, and leave the rest to whoever wants to take it.”

    Gayle gasped. “It’s your home!”

    “It’s just a hut,” Boothroyd said. “Don’t get too attached to anything, young lady. Maybe it looks good for you, or it offers lots of benefits, but it’ll still tie you down.”

    He shrugged. “And besides, these are the mountains. The few of us up here help each other, when we need it. They can have the hut, if they want, and what else I leave behind. It won’t be wasted.”

    “Thank you,” Leo said. “I look forward to welcoming you onboard.”

    Boothroyd nodded, then walked them back outside and waved as the aircar took off and headed south. Leo allowed himself a moment of relief as they flew onwards, although he knew it was only the beginning. It wouldn’t be easy for Boothroyd to find prospective candidates, then train them … not when they couldn’t hope to match the training facilities available on Daybreak. He wondered, idly, if they’d get into trouble for even trying. Flower had streamlined the political case as much as possible, and he had a great deal of authority for the duration of the deployment, but …

    Gayle took control of the aircar and altered course. “I’d like to show you something,” she said, quietly. “If you don’t have to be home in a hurry.”

    “I need to be back tonight,” Leo said. Lieutenant Halloran needed to go on shore leave himself, while Leo had to supervise the transfer of naval supplies to the naval station. The odds were good some would vanish along the way, if they weren’t carefully watched. It wasn’t unknown for pirates to bribe or threaten supply officers to redirect naval supplies to their ships. “We do have some time.”

    “It will suffice,” Gayle said. She steered them towards a field, on the edge of a vast estate, and landed neatly near a forest. “I grew up here.”

    Leo clambered out and looked around. The air was fresh, heavy with the scent of nature … a far cry from the apartment block that had been his first home. Daybreak was hardly as overdeveloped or polluted as Earth had been, centuries ago, but lower class lads like himself rarely got to visit the countryside. He hadn’t seen much of it until he’d joined the navy and discovered a wider world, just waiting to be explored. Something rustled in the undergrowth and he started, but Gayle simply ignored it. She was too busy getting a rug out of the aircar and laying it on the grass.

    “Very few people come up here,” Gayle said. “In summer, the hunters charge through the woods and fields in search of wild foxes, or go shooting for peasants, but right now they’re leaving the region fallow.”

    Leo took the flask she offered him and sat on the rug. “And no one knows we’re here?”

    “The staff down there” – Gayle waved a hand – “won’t bother to investigate, as long as we don’t leave a mess behind. Even if they did, they’d leave us alone once they realise who we are. I used to hike up here and …”

    She sat beside him, and opened the picnic basket. “It was a good childhood,” she added, after a moment. There was a wistfulness in her tone that suggested she didn’t exactly believe herself. “But it came with a price.”

    “I don’t know if I should envy you, or feel sorry for you,” Leo admitted. He would have loved to grow up on such a wild estate, with miles upon miles of forest to explore … he’d spotted a lake, when they’d been descending, and he was sure he’d love to swim in it too, or go fishing, or any of the hundreds of other activities that had been denied to him as a kid. “Is it worth it?”

    Gayle shrugged and passed him a drumstick. “I don’t know,” she said. “I guess we’ll see.”

    They ate together, chatting about nothing in particular as they shared food and drink. Leo found himself enjoying her company, even though it was increasingly clear she came from a very different society. She was … strange, in many ways, and he was certain she felt the same about him. And yet, there was a part of him that enjoyed the chat. She was intelligent as well as beautiful and he wished, despite himself, that he could do something for her. Perhaps if he gave the matter some thought …

    “Do you have anyone back home?” Gayle’s voice was suddenly serious. “A special someone?”

    Leo shook his head, wondering what had happened to Fleur. Her husband couldn’t beat her for adultery – Daybreak was a civilised world – let alone kill her, but it was unlikely her marriage would survive. It would be a very messy divorce, if it became public. Perhaps they’d just agree to a quiet split, then Fleur could retire to the countryside and her husband take a command somewhere on the other side of the known universe. It wouldn’t be the first time a divorce had been hidden behind routine naval redeployments, if rumour was to be believed …

    And Gayle was suddenly very close.

    Leo felt her lips press against his, lightly and yet firmly. A shiver ran down his spine, his manhood hardening as his body remembered just how long it had been since he’d lain with a woman. His affair had ended badly and there had been no one else … he kissed her back, pulling her closer gently … gently enough that she could pull back if she wished. She leaned closer instead, her arms wrapping around him, her breasts pressing into his chest …

    … And suddenly, there was no room for anything, but her.
     
    whynot#2 and mysterymet like this.
  16. mysterymet

    mysterymet Monkey+++

    His penis seems to get him into all kinds of trouble!
     
  17. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Eleven

    “I see you had a good time,” Flower teased.

    Leo blushed, helplessly. It had been a good time, long hours of making love and quietly chatting about the future … he wasn’t sure if Gayle really understood what it would be like, if she moved to Daybreak, but he had to admit she was sharp enough to recover from any early missteps and go on to build a whole new life for herself. They’d had to be a little discrete as they returned to Government House – it wasn’t the first time Leo had sneaked away from a tryst – yet … he’d boarded the shuttle and returned to Waterhen in a very good mood indeed. He was mildly surprised Flower had returned too.

    “Yes, we did,” he said, finally. He keyed a terminal, sending a command for a shuttle to pick Boothroyd up, after the older man got his affairs in order. “And we have a new Marine CO in our ranks.”

    “As long as we have some Marines too,” Flower said, more seriously. “One man, no matter how capable or confident, won’t be enough.”

    Leo nodded, stepping through the hatch onto the bridge. “I have the bridge,” he said, to Lieutenant Halloran. “Go get some shore leave, before it is too late.”

    “You have the bridge,” Lieutenant Halloran confirmed. “I’ll see you later this evening.”

    “Good.” Leo took the command chair and studied the nearspace display for a long moment. The original convoy remained in orbit, save for a couple of ships that were heading onwards, but a new convey was slowly taking shape around Waterhen. “Did you pick up anything interesting down there?”

    Flower made a show of considering her answer, although Leo was sure she already knew what she wanted to say. “The public view appears to be a little mixed,” she said. “Some appear to be quietly in favour of annexation, others are rather less so. The local media seems to be holding a neutral position, but looking at the overall picture I’d say the media is generally opposed to annexation and indeed the empire itself. It doesn’t quite cross the line into open sedition, but it does focus on the disadvantages of being part of a much larger association and raises the spectre of economic damage and exploitation.”

    She paused. “There’s also a very strong narrative that assets the sector was well on the way to solving its own problems, with economic and military links between a number of worlds, before Daybreak arrived to take control and put a stop to independent self-help projects. The rise in piracy is blamed on us, as are a number of other problems. Again, it doesn’t quite cross the line by coming out and saying it outright, but I suspect it is having an impact on public opinion.”

    Leo frowned. “How big?”

    “It’s hard to say,” Flower said. “It could be minimal, or it could be a great deal more effective. I will say the locals appear to distrust their media, for various reasons, but …”

    She shrugged. Leo understood. Daybreak’s media was generally considered trustworthy, not least because of strict laws prohibiting slander and a healthy tradition of independent journalism holding the bigger media corporations to account for their failures, but he knew that wasn’t true elsewhere. Half the problems that had led to the First Interstellar War had been fuelled by interstellar media institutions lying to their followers, either through malice or simple ignorance, and by the time the fighting had started hardly anyone believed anything the media said unquestionably. It wasn’t a new problem – the psychosis that had gripped Earth, in the early years of humanity’s expansion into interstellar space, had been fuelled by an untrustworthy media – but it was disconcerting to see it here. Or anywhere. Who knew how much trouble the media could make for him, if all hell broke loose?

    He leaned forward. “How do you think it’ll play out?”

    “Things will be rough for the next few years, before the benefits of annexation come into play,” Flower said. “I imagine the great losers will do everything in their power to slow down the process, trying to block economic expansion or offworld investment … it has never worked before, and it won’t work here, but they’ll try. They’ll have no choice.”

    “We’ll just have to see how things go,” Leo said. “Did you pick up on anything more concrete?”

    “No.” Flower shook her head. “Nothing actionable, just a great deal of grumbling.”

    Leo nodded, slowly. He’d studied the early expansion period, when Daybreak had started the great task of uniting the human race under one banner. There had been star systems – sometimes even multi-star systems – that hadn’t wanted to surrender their independence, even with the promise of local autonomy and access to the ever-growing interstellar economy. Their rulers had been big fish in tiny ponds and they’d been horrified at the mere suggestion there were bigger rules out there, let alone that they should bend the knee. Some had been smart enough to take full advantage of the opportunities that came with reunification, others had tried to fight – and been squashed – or simply worked to isolate themselves from the galactic mainstream. It never worked. Their populations saw their neighbours becoming richer and safer and grew discontented, eventually undermining their rulers and overthrowing them. It had happened before, a thousand times or more, and it would happen again.

    You can’t make an omelette without breaking a few eggs, he thought, recalling what one of his tutors had said. And you can’t unite the galaxy without cracking a few heads.

    He rubbed his forehead. He had to be more tired than he’d thought, if that was funny. It wasn’t, not really. Birth was always painful, but there was no need to make it any worse than strictly necessary … he gritted his teeth, recalling some of the case studies he’d seen only a couple of years ago. Planets ruled by religious fundamentalists, keeping their populations trapped in ignorance, hadn’t coped well when they’d been incorporated into the empire. It was astonishing how little religious dictates against modern medical treatment mattered, when serious injuries – by local standards – could be healed effortlessly and childbirth made much less painful. Daybreak wanted hegemony, demanded it, but it also make lives better right across the explored and settled universe.

    “We’ll be leaving tomorrow,” he said, checking the updates. The interstellar schedules were even worse than he’d feared. A number of ships had requested permission to join the convoy, but it looked as if they wouldn’t be ready to depart on time. Leo knew he couldn’t afford to wait for them. The sooner he started showing the flag, the better. “You see what else you can gather, before we leave.”

    He yawned. “And I really need some sleep.”

    “Good idea,” Flower said, dryly. “Tell me something … why did Gayle set her cap at you?”

    It took Leo a moment to understand what she meant. “Perhaps she found me attractive,” he said. “I can dream, can’t I?”

    Flower snorted. “Not on the bridge of a starship, you can’t.”

    Leo had to smile. A duty officer who fell asleep when he should be on watch would be lucky if the CO didn’t strangle him with his own two hands, or – more likely – didn’t get busted all the way down to midshipman and get flogged into the bargain. It was rare for any sort of corporal punishment to be used, but there were cases of officers being thrashed for falling asleep on duty. Leo had been told it was a good sign. If the CO thought the young idiot was irredeemable, he wouldn’t bother.

    “I don’t know,” he said, slowly. It hadn’t really occurred to him. Back home, a young woman could have a one-night stand with a young man, or another woman, and it was no one’s business but hers. Here … it was odd. Gayle had made sure to take them well away from watching eyes, but if someone noticed they’d returned late … “She didn’t ask me for anything.”

    “Be careful,” Flower said. “She could be using you to get back at her father. Or to get an immigrant card. Or …”

    Leo shook his head. “She’d have to marry me for that.”

    “Yeah,” Flower agreed. “Be careful.”

    She turned and left the bridge, the hatch closing behind her. Leo frowned, torn between irritation and concern. Gayle was hardly his first sexual conquest … except it had been her who had made the first move, something quite common on Daybreak and – he suspected – very rare on Yangtze. He frowned inwardly, recalling the lectures they’d been given by their tutors. An outraged father who beat a naval officer to death for defiling his daughter would be punished, sure, but it would be no comfort to the dead man. And if the Deputy Governor bitched to the Governor …

    Perhaps it would be better not to go down to the surface again, Leo thought, reluctantly. Gayle had been much less experienced than Fleur – that had been clear from the start – but she was a quick study. And she had a certain innocence that charmed him. And … he was alarmed to realise that his manhood had hardened, that he was already thinking about going back down again even though he knew it was a bad idea. There’s too much else to do.

    He gritted his teeth, then forced himself to dive into reports filed by his crew and the convoy officers. The collection of spare parts they’d brought along had been transferred to the orbiting naval station – a title the orbital structure didn’t deserve – and placed in storage until they were needed. Leo glanced at an addendum to the report and silently congratulated himself on his own foresight, noticing how little had been stockpiled to support naval operations before their arrival. It wasn’t uncommon for outposts hundreds of light years from Daybreak to run short of supplies, but the duty officers should have damn well put in a request for more if they were running low. He made a mental note to file an official complaint. The duty officers might be part-timers, and technically they were on the planetary payroll rather than the navy’s, but that was no excuse. It wasn’t as if requesting more supplies would have taken years of dedicated effort. An hour or two would have sufficed.

    Abigail relieved him, two hours later. Leo was mildly surprised she hadn’t gone down to the planet – it was possible she’d never have a second chance, not given their schedule – but he merely nodded and passed the bridge to her, before heading to his cabin to catch some sleep and a shower before Sergeant-Major Boothroyd arrived. Leo had a feeling he’d need to be alert when the new recruits arrived, if only because they wouldn’t be impressed by a too-young officer with very little real experience. It wasn’t easy to get to sleep, despite his tiredness. It was all too easy to lose himself in his imagination instead.

    You’re being silly, he told himself, as he drifted off to sleep. She probably wants nothing more than to rebel against her father.

    The thought nagged at his mind as the alarm went off, waking him from a fitful sleep. He rolled out of his bunk, checked the terminal automatically – he’d been taught to check the alarm was just a wake-up call, rather than a shipboard emergency – and hurried to the washroom, then dressed and made his way down to the lower shuttle hatch. Sergeant-Major Boothroyd was already there, wearing an outdated shipsuit that was covered in patches from a dozen different units and campaigns. Leo tried not to feel too awed. It was strictly forbidden to wear military patches, unless you’d earned them. He had known Boothroyd had had a long and distinguished career, but …

    “Captain,” Boothroyd said. “I rounded up seven recruits.”

    A dull thump echoed through the hull as the shuttle docked. Leo braced himself, hoping the recruits weren’t that far out of practice. The Marine Corps ensured that everyone who passed through the training centre spoke the same language, and understood the same military slang, but there weren’t many retired Marines on Yangtze. Boothroyd had had to cast his net very wide indeed, Leo suspected. The odds were good he’d picked up a couple of men who’d failed the training course. Normally, there was no way in hell they’d be allowed anywhere near a shipboard posting, but Leo was desperately short of manpower. And if it turned out they weren’t trustworthy …

    They’re going to have some trouble deciding what to put on the charge sheet, when they court-martial me, Leo thought. A starship commander had wide authority when his ship was underway, all alone in the inky vastness of interstellar space, but a hostile prosecutor could make a case Leo had vastly overstepped his authority. It would certainly be a very interesting legal case. Leo wanted to go down in naval history, but not like that. They might just settle for a dishonourable discharge and send me out to the Rim.

    He looked up as the seven men – no, six men and one woman – stepped through the hatch and into the ship. They looked a rough lot, their faces scarred in a manner that bore mute testament to the limited local military care. Their eyes lingered on him for a long moment, noting the combination of insignia and youth that many older and more experienced officers and men wouldn’t be able to help finding offensive. Leo tried not to let himself feel intimidated. He had done well in his martial arts classes, but the men in front of him had far more experience than him. They’d know how to best him, if push came to shove.

    “Welcome onboard,” he said, trying to project an air of confidence he didn’t feel. There had been no time to review their files, no time to do much of anything beyond trusting Boothroyd’s judgement. “I’m Captain Morningstar. My mission is to hunt down pirates and smugglers, and generally make this sector a great deal safer for everyone. This is Sergeant-Major Boothroyd, who will be your direct commanding officer.”

    Boothroyd stepped forward. “You know me,” he said, “or at least you will have accessed my public service record. You were approached because you have some training, or experience, in shipboard operations, from providing internal security to boarding enemy ships and taking control. Ideally, this ship would carry a couple of platoons of fully-trained jarheads and none of you would be needed” – Leo winced, even though the newcomers showed no signs of taking offense – “but unfortunately we have to make do with you. The good news is that you will be paid shipboard rates, and carry shipboard ranks; the bad news is that we’re going to be working our asses off, training for war. If any of you have a problem with that” – he bared his teeth in a humourless smile – “sucks to be you.”

    Leo winced, again, as Boothroyd led the new recruits into Marine Country. The title was little more than a formality – Waterhen was too small for a section to be turned completely over to the Marines – but it would help keep a barrier between the new recruits and the rest of the crew, at least until the newcomers had settled in and gone through enough training to be sure they shared the same basic understanding of how the universe worked. There were horror stories about press-ganged crews, few ending well for everyone involved. They might be spacers, with genuine experience of living and working in outer space, but that didn’t mean they could become naval officers at the drop of a hat. His earlier thoughts returned to haunt him. If the whole experiment ended badly, he’d be very lucky to escape a court-martial.

    “I read their records,” Flower said, when he returned to the bridge. “They’re rough and ready, but … they should suffice.”

    “I hope so,” Leo said. Eight Marines … no, they weren’t Marines. They’d be shipboard troops at best … there was going to be friction, quite a lot of friction, if any real Marines showed up. If they did … Leo shook his head. They were a long way from Daybreak. It was unlikely they’d get any Marines, unless all hell broke loose. And by then it would be too late to salvage the situation. “We’re very short of other options.”

    He made a point of reading their service records as Waterhen prepared for departure, taking on new supplies – and better food – as the remainder of the convoy assembled around them. The merchantmen were complaining loudly about being ordered to report well ahead of the planned departure date – Leo had made it clear he wouldn’t be waiting for any latecomers – but it would make it easier to sort out any problems before they left. The remainder of the crew reported in, and the Governor forwarded a message for their nest destination … nothing from Gayle. Leo didn’t know if he should be disappointed or relieved. It wasn’t as if he was doing anything wrong, but he doubted her father would see it that way.

    “Captain,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “The last of the freighters has reported in. They’re ready to depart.”

    Leo nodded, and checked his console. Waterhen was as ready as she’d ever be. “Helm, take us out as planned,” he ordered. “Tactical, signal the other ships to follow us and prepare to jump on my command.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    “And obscure our position a little,” Leo added, as the convoy slowly flowed out of orbit. He didn’t think it would work – the odds were good there was at least one corrupt official on Yangtze feeding convoy schedules to pirate ships – but it was worth a try. Convoys could become scattered – the formation they’d adopted was hardly worthy of the name – and it wasn’t unknown for a warship to lose touch with the merchantmen she was meant to be escorting. “Let’s see what comes calling.”

    “Aye, sir.”
     
  18. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Twelve

    The problem with travelling so far from explored space, Leo noted over the next few days, was that their charts were badly outdated, where they existed at all. It would have been easy to jump several light-years in a single bound, closer to home, but here it was difficult to plot such a jump without risking being blown far off course or simply materialising in the heart of a star, something that would kill them so quickly they’d be dead before they knew what’d hit them. It irked him to be crawling along, at least compared to travel closer to the core worlds, but he knew better than to take risks with the civilian ships. Their captains were already chafing under his command, muttering darkly – or so Flower had told him – about naval officers who were too big for their britches. Leo didn’t blame them – they risked losing bonuses, perhaps even payment, if they didn’t reach their destination in time – but he supposed they could blame it all on him. He didn’t have anyone he could blame. A CO stood alone.

    He watched the bridge, paced the decks, and buried himself in paperwork – when he wasn’t sleeping – as the convoy crawled onwards, jumping through coordinates that were supposed to be randomised and yet were disturbingly predictable. Each jump raised the spectre of losing a ship or two – he’d already delayed a set of jumps to wait for a missing vessel to catch up – or a merchantman deciding to jump ahead, leaving the rest of the convoy behind. It was technically illegal, and Leo had authority to deal with convoy-jumpers in a manner that would ensure they’d never see command again, but it would be tricky to prove the merchantman had jumped the gun. The CO might insist he’d lost touch with the rest of the convoy … hell, he might be right. The researchers kept promising a jump drive that worked with pinpoint accuracy, but Leo would believe it when he saw it. If it ever happened …

    “Captain,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “We may have something.”

    Leo looked up. The latest jump point was on the edge of a dull red star, a nameless system considered largely useless … although there were a handful of asteroids and comets that could support a hidden colony, if some of the survivalists from the First Interstellar War had made it out so far. The system had never been properly surveyed, according to the reports. The last mission – a simple fly-through, a decade ago – had been perfunctory. Leo hadn’t had to read between the lines – much – to realise the survey crew hadn’t spent more than the bare minimum of time in the system, hardly long enough to check the asteroids for hidden colonies or pirate bases. In hindsight, perhaps he would be wise to arrange a survey mission himself.

    He leaned forward. “What do you have?”

    “Possible drive signatures, approaching from the system,” Lieutenant Halloran said. A fuzzy icon appeared on the display. “They’re masked, if they’re real. It’s hard to be sure without an active scan.”

    Leo felt his heart beat faster. “Red alert,” he ordered, curtly. The signatures might be nothing more than random energy fluctuations, but they were far too close for his peace of mind. And they were on an intercept course. “How many vessels?”

    “Unsure,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “The tactical programs suggest it might be as many as five.”

    “Five,” Leo repeated. It was rare for pirate vessels to hunt in packs. If they caught a merchantmen, they’d have to share the proceeds; if they found a warship, they’d do everything they could to avoid engagement. “Time to engagement range?”

    “Seventeen minutes, assuming they’re not armed with anything new,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “Your orders?”

    Leo cursed under his breath. Waterhen had already recycled her drive – she could jump away in the blink of an eye, daring the unknowns to plunge after her – but the merchantmen hadn’t completed the recycling procedure yet. There was no way he could abandon the convoy and no way he could risk sending the modern vessels on ahead, no matter how many precautions they took to ensure their jump coordinates were randomised. If the enemy ships got a good read on their jump signatures … if there were enemy ships. It was possible they were wrong … he shook his head. The odds of the contact being nothing more than a random fluctuation were just too low. There was at least one enemy ship out there and possibly more.

    “Hold position, for the moment,” he said. He considered the tactical picture for a long moment. Did the enemy know which ship was the warship? He dared not assume they didn’t know there was a warship with the convoy. Sure, Leo could have fucked up badly and lost touch with every last ship in the fleet, but any pirate captain worthy of the name wouldn’t assume anything of the sort. “Helm, inch us over so we’re between the merchantmen and the enemy contacts.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo leaned forward. Waterhen wasn’t broadcasting her IFF. She wouldn’t be that easy to separate from the smaller merchant vessels, certainly not the freighters that had started life as military ships and later been stripped down and converted into transport vessels. It was a shame he didn’t have any modern ECM drones – he could have spoofed the enemy sensors, convinced them he’d abandoned the convoy or was simply too far away to keep the pirates from snatching a ship or two. It was an old trick. Link the hulls together, trigger the jump drive, carry both ships to a random – and safe – coordinate and then loot the captured vessel at leisure. It was almost a shame the enemy couldn’t get close enough to snatch a ship without realising they were trying to pick on a warship, rather than a helpless merchantman. That would have been hilarious.

    And also too risky to attempt outside a movie script, Leo thought. He’d seen some crazy ideas tried in the simulators – and some had worked – but the instructors had always cracked down hard on anyone who tried to be too clever. We’ll have to try something a little more conventional.

    “Captain,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “We have a clearer image now. Analysis suggests we’re dealing with two, perhaps three, enemy vessels.”

    “That’s a relief,” Leo said, dryly. It was difficult, almost impossible, to predict just what weapons might have been crammed into a pirate hull. He’d been assured it was rare for pirates to deploy anything larger than a destroyer, but quite a few warships had gone missing over the years and it was possible one or more had fallen into pirate hands. Or become pirates themselves. Not every independent space navy was happy at being turned into a local defence force and some had gone rogue, rather than submit. “Do we have any upper numbers on their hulls?”

    “Not yet, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said.

    Leo felt sweat prickling down his back. His first engagement … the first time he’d fire his ship’s weapons in anger. He’d known it would happen, but he’d always assumed he’d rotate through the helm, tactical and operations consoles – and departments – before he got his shot at an XO slot, let alone a captaincy. Now … he sucked in his breath. There were thirty men and women under his command on Waterhen alone, and several hundred scattered over the convoy. His eyes lingered on the timer, counting down the seconds to the moment all drives would be recycled and the convoy could jump. Each second felt like an hour.

    “Squadron orders,” he said, quietly. “If the engagement goes badly, the convoy is to scatter and proceed independently to its destination.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    The display sharpened as the enemy ships grew closer, revealing two destroyer-sized vessels advancing towards him. The third seemed to be holding back, watching events from a safe distance. Leo keyed his console, running a handful of tactical simulations. They could disable or destroy the first two ships, assuming they had the advantage of surprise, but hitting the third would be a problem. Leo was in two minds about even trying. The universe would be a better place if a few dozen pirates were blown to atoms – it would save the navy the trouble of executing them – but allowing one ship to flee, to carry news of the disaster to the rest of the pirate community, might serve a greater purpose. Might.

    Be careful, he told himself. You haven’t taken out the first two ships yet.

    “Helm, plot a microjump that’ll put us close to the third vessel,” Leo ordered. “If we have the chance, we’ll attempt to close the range sharply.”

    Abigail’s voice shook. “Yes, sir.”

    Leo nodded, understanding her feelings all too well. The stunt might misfire – they could easily materialise a few million kilometres from the enemy ship – or end in total disaster if they actually interpenetrated, wiping out both ships. The odds were massively against it, yet … it only had to happen once. He kept an eye on her as she plotted the microjump, working out the details. There were fewer gravity wells and eddies that might distort the FTL flux, but that didn’t make it any easier. They could easily arrive close enough to see the enemy ship and yet too far away to keep her from running …

    “Captain,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “I’m picking up a wide-angle radio signal.”

    “Put it through,” Leo ordered.

    “… Under the guns of a warship,” a cold voice said. Leo didn’t recognise the accent. “Stand down your drives and prepare to be boarded. Resistance will result in the destruction of your vessels and the slaughter of your crews.”

    Leo gritted his teeth. There was nothing to be gained – everyone knew – by surrendering to pirate scum. The best any captive could hope for was being ransomed, which was technically illegal, and even that would only come after weeks of torture, rape, and every other torment known to mankind. Pirates knew they were outlaws – even autonomous or independent worlds shunned them, and fired on their ships without warning – and they had nothing to lose by treating their captives like shit. Insurgents and freedom fighters tended to be a great deal more civilised. And yet, too many merchantmen surrendered …

    “Tactical, lock phasers,” Leo ordered. They'd only get one shot, but they could make it count. “Helm, prepare to bring up the drive and go evasive.”

    “Aye, Captain,” Abigail said. “I …”

    The display washed red. Alarms howled. Leo cursed. The enemy had run an active sensor scan, a clear sign of hostile intent and yet – also – their last chance to realise they were facing a warship and run. Leo wouldn’t blame them for activating their drives and making a random jump, once they saw Waterhen. The best they could hope for was killing his ship, at the cost of heavy damage to their ships. A mutual kill was far more likely.

    “Lieutenant Halloran, fire phasers,” Leo snapped. There was no longer any doubt about who or what they were facing. A legit warship from a system beyond the Rim would try to open communications, rather than risk coming so close without revealing itself. “Helm, evasive action!”

    The display sharpened as the active sensors came online, sweeping away the masking field and revealing the enemy ships in all their glory. Destroyers … Leo blinked in surprise as he realised they were actually older than Waterhen herself, a design that dated all the way back to the First Interstellar War. He reminded himself not to assume they hadn’t been refitted a time or two since then, as technology advanced. A modern private military contractor ship, vessels that had strict limits on their capabilities, would have no trouble wiping the floor with the enemy ships, if they hadn’t been refitted at all.

    Lieutenant Halloran kept his eyes on his console. “Direct hit on Target One’s drive structure,” he snapped. “Target Two … direct hit on her inner power core …”

    He broke off as Target Two vanished from the display, her icon replaced by an expanding shell of debris and plasma. Leo felt a surge of sudden exultation, even though he knew it would be far more effective – in the long run – to take the pirate crews alive for interrogation prior to execution. Target Two had either skimped on basic maintenance, triggering a chain reaction that had blown the ship to hell, or the phasers had cut through her armoury and detonated her missile stockpiles. Either way … she was dead. Target One was rolling to open fire, spitting missiles and plasma bolts towards Waterhen with a desperation born of fear. Her CO didn’t know there was no risk of a second phaser barrage. Waterhen needed time to recharge her batteries.

    “Target her guns and take them out,” Leo ordered. Lieutenant Halloran opened fire, plasma guns splattering their charges against the enemy hull. “Sergeant Boothroyd, you are cleared to launch. Good luck.”

    “Shuttle away, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran reported. “They should have a clear flight.”

    Leo didn’t hesitate. “Helm, bring up the microjump coordinates and jump!”

    “Aye, sir,” Abigail said. She sounded nervous as she keyed her console. A tiny mistake could put them millions of miles from their target. “Jump in three … two … one …”

    The universe darkened. Leo braced himself as the display blanked and then cleared again. The enemy ship was in front of them, strikingly close by most standards and yet too far for Waterhen to blast her at point-blank range. Leo told himself to be grateful – there had been a very real risk they’d be the ones getting blasted instead – and then snapped orders, telling Lieutenant Halloran to launch a full spread of missiles. Waterhen didn’t carry modern missiles, with modern penetration aides, but against outdated pirate ships her missiles should be enough. The enemy ship had been caught by surprise, her retaliatory fire wildly off target – Leo had no idea what they thought they were shooting at - as the missiles flashed closer to her hull. They weren’t even trying to use point defence …

    Lieutenant Halloran swore, as the icon on the display vanished. “Sir, she jumped out.”

    Leo muttered a curse under his breath. The pirate captain should have kept his jump drive stepped down, as the tiny force tried sneaking up on the convoy, but he’d clearly started cycling up for the jump the moment everything had gone to hell. Someone had refitted the outdated ship with a modern FTL drive, he guessed, or at least something reasonably close to modern. There might not have been anything like enough time to plot a set of jump coordinates, but when the only other choice was being blown to hell …

    He leaned forward. “Can you get a lock on her destination?”

    “No, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “Our sensor readings were imprecise. Our projections suggest they could be anywhere within several cubic light-months. I can’t narrow her arrival point down any further than that. We just didn’t get enough hard data.”

    “Drat,” Leo said, mildly. The enemy ship was tiny on such a scale. The odds of finding her, even if they gave chase at once, were too low. She’d have all the time she needed to recycle her drives and jump again. “Helm, take us back to Target One. Tactical, raise the boarding party.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo forced himself to wait as the destroyer picked up speed, heading back to the convoy. There was no way to know what was happening on the enemy vessel, no way to be sure the Sergeant- Major was winning or if the enemy CO was plotting to blow up his own ship, in hopes of taking the boarding party with him. The bastard knew he wasn’t going to get out alive, not really. It was rare for pirates to be offered a life sentence, let alone anything more forgiving. Their crimes were just too bad to be rewarded with anything less than death.

    “Signal from the boarding party, Captain,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “The enemy crew has been suppressed, and the vessel is in their hands.”

    “Good.” Leo tried to hide his relief. He hadn’t doubted their victory, not after watching the sergeant training the new recruits, but he’d known the operation could have gone spectacularly wrong. “Signal the convoy. Inform them that we will be underway shortly, once we have assessed the captured ship. I’ll be going over personally.”

    Lieutenant Halloran looked up. “Sir, I …”

    Leo understood. The Captain was not meant to put his life in danger. He was meant to stay on his ship, where he was safe, and let his XO take command of the boarding party and prize crew … if there was any point in assigning one. Leo knew he should remain behind, and yet he felt an urge to inspect the remnants of the enemy ship and look her crew in the eye before passing judgement. Normally, he’d have been assigned to the boarding party well before being promoted. It felt wrong to skip such an important step.

    “You will remain in command here,” Leo said. The boarding party was in control of the enemy vessel. They would have already disabled the self-destruct, if there was one, and isolated the crew from anything they could use to blow up the ship. There shouldn’t be any real risk. It felt wrong to compare the visit to a sightseeing tour, but that was – in a sense – precisely what it was. “I’ll be back shortly.”

    “Yes, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said, reluctantly. Leo knew the older man wanted to say something, to honour the XO’s responsibility of disagreeing with his CO when necessary, but he didn’t have the nerve. Or the maturity. The case studies Leo had read, of XOs respectfully debating their commander’s decisions, had focussed on men in their thirties. Lieutenant Halloran was still in his twenties. “Be careful.”

    “I will,” Leo promised. “You have the bridge.”
     
    whynot#2 and mysterymet like this.
  19. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Thirteen

    Leo felt cramped in the armoured spacesuit as the pilot steered the shuttle towards the enemy vessel and hovered just outside the gash in her hull. He’d been told that matter transmission was theoretically possible, raising the prospect of teleporters actually jumping off the silver screen and into real life, but – like so many other concepts – the scientists had not been able to actually make them work. They’d have to fly to their destination, then make their way through the damaged hull rather than risk using the ship’s airlocks. Sure, spacers were legally required to keep their hatches unlocked, allowing outer sections to be opened at any moment, but pirates already faced the death penalty. They had nothing to lose by locking their outer hatches. It might buy them a few more seconds before their vessel was boarded, giving them enough time to run and hide …

    The shuttle’s hatch hissed open. Leo took control of his spacesuit and steered himself out of the hatch and straight towards the enemy hull. It looked disturbingly like a metal honeycomb, the metal bulkheads melted by the phasers and then flash-frozen by the inky darkness of interstellar space. Judging from the sheer volume of debris – and bodies – drifting into the night, the pirates hadn’t bothered to batten down the internal hatches or keep their emergency internal systems in good order. They could have saved quite a few lives, and perhaps even saved the entire ship, if they’d closed the hatches before it was too late.

    He felt cold as he landed on the metal and made his way to the jury-rigged airlock. The gravity field was oddly light, suggesting the generator was either damaged or the crew hailed from a low-gravity world. Probably the former, he noted. It was rare to see low-gravity dwellers on modern starships, certainly ones with any sort of gravity. He stepped through the hatch quickly, careful to keep his helmet in place even though the suit’s sensors insisted the atmosphere was rapidly normalising. The inner hatch opened a moment later, revealing a muddy corridor and a long line of prisoners, lying on the decks with their hands bound behind their backs. Leo shivered, helplessly. They looked a sorry crew, but then most bullies did, after someone stood up to them. A memory drifted through his head – the fear he’d seen, clearly visible, in Francis Blackthrone’s face after Leo had beaten the shit out of him – and he smiled. Bullies always ran into something bigger and tougher than them, eventually. And they deserved everything they got.

    His radio crackled. “Captain.”

    Leo removed his helmet, then cursed under his breath as the stench hit his nostrils. The pirate crew had soiled themselves … no, it was worse than that. They hadn’t bothered to replace the atmosphere scrubbers, or clean their decks, or any of a hundred other things they needed to do to keep their ship functional. Waterhen had been poorly maintained, but she’d had the excuse of being semi-permanently stationed at Daybreak, without any expectation she’d have to leave in a hurry. The pirate ship had been raiding countless convoys and planets over the last few years. Surely, her crew could have taken better care of her.

    “It stinks, doesn’t it?” Boothroyd looked grim, his eyes never leaving the prisoners. “They always live in filth.”

    Leo resisted the urge to put his helmet back on. “We’re going to have to go through a full biological threat protocol, aren’t we?”

    “Probably.” Boothroyd didn’t sound concerned. “The good news is that we took the ship reasonably intact. The bad is that we didn’t manage to capture any of their command crew, sir, and that they succeeded in taking out their datacore before it was too late.”

    “Bugger.” Leo kept his tone mild. He’d hoped to take the datacore intact. The devices were supposed to be secure, but the navy had a small army of hackers who specialised in breaking encryption codes and unlocking sealed storage units. “Their commanders?”

    “They had suicide implants,” Boothroyd said. “It’s impossible to tell if they triggered the implants themselves, or if they were programmed to kill their bearers if the ship took a certain amount of damage, but either way there’s no way we’ll get any info from their bodies. We took biometrics, of course, yet …”

    Leo nodded. There was no registry of local spacers, no central database they could query to see who might have been moonlighting as a pirate. It was possible they’d get lucky, and they’d certainly run the biometrics against the files they had, but … he scowled inwardly. The pirate crew was unlikely to know much of anything, certainly nothing that might uncover the hidden bases or planets that were quietly supporting the pirate ships. The latter might not have much choice in the matter, he reflected sourly. A stage-one colony would be defenceless, if a pirate took control of the high orbitals. They’d be forced to pay for protection, or supplies they didn’t want, or else.

    “The prisoners fall into two categories,” Boothroyd continued. “Half are very definitely pirates, the others are prisoners …”

    “Or say they are,” Leo said. He made a face. Naval policy was absolute. Anyone who collaborated with a pirate was no better than a pirate himself, no matter their excuse. He understood the logic – pirates were a plague on all mankind – but he also suspected it was counterproductive. The pirates could push their captives into collaboration, then point out that they were pirates now – in the eyes of the law – and they’d be executed if the pirate ship was captured. “How many?”

    “Thirty-seven, half listed in the registry of missing crewmen,” Boothroyd said. “They’re not in good shape, sir. The medic has barely had a look at them, but he insists they were clearly tortured and raped before being forced into collaboration.”

    “I know what pirates do,” Leo said, more sharply than he meant. “I read the reports.”

    “Reports cannot convey the horrors,” Boothroyd told him. “You should see the prisoners.”

    Leo suspected he was right. The reports might describe the worst mankind could do to man, but they were cold and bloodless and stripped of all emotion. The words described atrocities beyond the imagination of a sane and reasonable man, in the same tone one might use to order breakfast or discuss the economic projections for the next two years. He allowed the sergeant to urge him along a smelly corridor and into a large compartment, the deck lined with men and women who had clearly been brutalised. The scars alone …

    He gagged, swallowing hard and turning away in a desperate bid to keep from throwing up. It was … he recalled complaining about one martial arts session that had left him with bruises on his face and felt a wash of shame, for bitching about something so minor when the prisoners had been suffering so intensely. It was … his stomach heaved again as he realised the former prisoners had been bound too, just to keep them from causing trouble. It was a grim reflection on the navy’s failure to protect the people, he thought. The pirates had brutalised them and now the navy was going to execute them …

    “We have to be careful,” Boothroyd was saying. Leo barely heard him. “Some will identify strongly with their captors, after being prisoners for so long. Others will fear us as much as the pirates, or feel tainted by the crimes they were forced to commit …”

    Leo swallowed, hard. He had always told himself he would rather die, than rape a woman or a child or commit some other atrocity that would see his name going down in history as one of the human race’s worse monsters. Hitler and Stalin, Bin Laden and Ozdemir, Rottemeyer and Mühlenkampf … he had always thought that, if he were given orders to slaughter vast numbers of people for being the wrong religion, or blow up an entire planet because it was inconvenient, that he would have the guts to refuse. He knew he was a brave man, yet could he say no if his captors drugged and tortured him? And would he have the nerve to wait for his chance to strike back, and take it?

    He wanted to answer yes. He feared the truth was no.

    “They should be executed,” Leo said. “Legally …”

    He took a breath. He would be well within his legal rights to punt them all into space and let God sort them out. There was no way to know how much the prisoners had collaborated, how far they had let themselves be compromised. And yet, they had suffered enough already …

    Boothroyd met his eyes. “Sir, can I offer a suggestion?”

    Leo nodded, stiffly. “Of course.”

    “We take the former prisoners with us,” Boothroyd said. “We can interrogate them over the next few days, after treating their condition, and see if any can be redeemed through military service. They can fight for us …”

    “And we have a pirate ship here,” Leo mused. The enemy ship was in terrible state, and it would take several weeks to turn her into something resembling a real warship once again, but it might be possible. Two starships, no matter how outdated, were better than one. “It might be doable.”

    His mind raced, considering the implications. “Can you be sure of separating the true collaborators from those who were forced to compromise themselves?”

    “No,” Boothroyd said, flatly. “But we can give it a very good try.”

    “Do it,” Leo said. It was a risk, but what wasn’t? The only other options were execution or a one-way ticket to a penal colony and both would be victimising people who had already been victimised enough. “Keep them isolated from each other, at least until we reach Getaway. We don’t want them sharing tips on how to fool us.”

    “Yes, sir,” Boothroyd said. “And the remaining pirates?”

    Leo looked back, shaking his head. “They’re definitely guilty?”

    “Yes, sir,” Boothroyd said. “They carried weapons, and few signs of physical abuse. A couple tried claiming to be senior officers, and trying to trade what they knew for their freedom, but the lie detector said they were lying.”

    “And did they know anything useful?”

    “No, sir,” Boothroyd said. “There was some data on how they were recruited – it seems there were recruiting operations on both Getaway and Psion Minor – but there wasn’t enough to track down the recruiting officers and deal with them. They did name a couple of planets that purchased looted goods, yet … they weren’t there and they don’t know for sure.”

    “We’ll have to investigate at some point,” Leo said. He cursed under his breath. They’d have two ships, once the pirate vessel was repaired, but they needed several more. “Right now, that’s a low-order priority.”

    He took a breath. “Take biometrics from the remaining pirates, then put them into space,” he ordered. “All of them.”

    Boothroyd gave him a considering look, then nodded. The sheer enormity of what Leo had done – what he’d ordered done – struck him a second later. It was one thing to blow away an icon on the display, even though he knew the icon represented a metal starship with a flesh and blood crew; it was quite another to order the boarding party to execute the prisoners. It was legal – if he took the prisoners to the nearest world he’d be rebuked for wasting time – and they deserved it and yet …

    He forced himself to watch as the prisoners were shoved, kicking and screaming, through the airlock. Their deaths wouldn’t be merciful, he knew, although they’d been far kinder to the pirates than the pirates had ever been to their prisoners. Leo hadn’t ordered them tortured or raped first, let alone cut them open to watch their lifeblood draining away. It was legal and civilised and he knew he had no choice, and yet he felt guilty. It felt as if he’d crossed a line.

    Boothroyd clapped him on the shoulder. “Go back to the ship, and have something to drink,” he advised. “It doesn’t get any easier.”

    Leo swallowed several nasty replies as he made his way back to the shuttle, then back to Waterhen. The reports from the engineering crew were better than he’d thought – the damage was bad, but it could be repaired with some effort – and the report from the search parties made unpleasant reading. The pirate ship was crammed with loot, from the simple to the gross; the pirates, it seemed, had a collection of pornography so vile they wouldn’t last a day in a regular prison. To call it disgusting was to cheapen the word past the point of no return.

    He keyed his communicator as soon as the shuttle docked. “Assign a freighter to carry the pirate ship to Getaway,” he ordered, curtly. “Once the search parties have finished their work, we’ll be on our way.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo shook his head as he stumbled into his cabin and sat on the bunk, feeling tired and drained and yet horrified at what he’d done. It was easy to tell himself the pirates had deserved it – they had – and yet, it was hard not to feel guilty. He was tempted to reach for the bottle … he shook his head, mentally kicking himself for having made sure that all alcohol on the ship was left behind, before they started the voyage. He wasn’t hypocrite enough to keep a bottle for himself, and besides he’d learnt that lesson a long time ago.

    “Fuck,” he muttered.

    He reached for a datapad instead and looked down at it, without seeing a single word. He knew he’d done the right thing, legally speaking, and there would be no comeback … but he still felt guilty. He told himself, again and again, that the pirates had deserved it, that he’d shown them more mercy than they deserved, and yet it wasn’t enough. The datapad slipped through his hands and fell to the deck, the dull thud reminding him that he needed to write some kind of report. It was hard to think clearly. He didn’t have to lie, or come up with an excuse, and yet … he hadn’t thought it would be so easy to end a multitude of lives.

    The intercom bleeped. “Captain,” Lieutenant Halloran said. “The search parties have returned. The enemy vessel has been secured to Doorstopper. The remainder of the convoy is ready to jump as planned, resuming our voyage …”

    Leo took a breath. “Execute jump when ready,” he ordered. He knew he should be on the bridge, but right now he didn’t have the strength. “Inform me if anything changes.”

    There was a long pause. “Aye, sir.”

    The connection closed. Leo shook his head. Had he heard a flash of doubt in Lieutenant Halloran’s voice? Or concern? Or was he just imagining it? There was no way to know. He knew he should be on the bridge, and that normally he would, but now … he hadn’t even bothered with a bullshit excuse. He wondered, numbly, how the other captains coped, when they ordered men put out the airlocks. There was blood on his hands now and ...

    They deserved it, he told himself. Pirates showed no mercy. They deserved to die.

    The hatch opened. Leo forced himself to look up as Flower marched into the room, holding herself ramrod straight. It was more striking, he noted absently, than the way she sashayed about when she wanted to catch someone’s eye, making her look like a woman on a mission rather than someone who could be interrupted at will. He told himself, sharply, to look down again. His penis had already gotten him into quite enough trouble.

    Flower sat facing him. “Do you want to talk about it?”

    Leo had no idea what to say. Captain Archibald hadn’t killed anyone … probably. His service record was surprisingly bland, suggesting either a cover-up or – more likely – a career spent doing nothing in particular, and not even doing it very well. He wondered, suddenly, if Flower had ever killed anyone? It wasn’t part of her formal duties, but who knew?

    “I sent them to their deaths,” Leo said, bluntly. “Does it get easier?”

    “Perhaps,” Flower said. “Would it help if you reviewed some of the footage they left behind?”

    “Probably not,” Leo said. “Did I do the right thing?”

    Flower took a moment to consider her answer. “The pirates committed hundreds of crimes,” she said. “They chose to join a pirate crew, or made no attempt to escape once they knew what they’d joined. There is – was – no reason to think they’d redeem themselves, if they were offered a chance, or even that they could be dropped on a penal colony without getting themselves killed very quickly. I would say yes, you did do the right thing.”

    She met his eyes. “I guarantee you their victims will say the same,” she said. “And those pirates will never harm anyone ever again.”

    “No,” Leo agreed. “But it still bothers me.”

    “It will, for a while,” Flower said. “But you did the right thing.”

    Leo stared at the deck. He’d studied history. He’d read arguments suggesting the decline in the death penalty had contributed to social unrest, and counter-arguments insisting there was no way to be completely certain of the suspect’s guilt. He could see the point of both arguments, yet … he shook his head. The latter tended to be put forward by those who were in no danger, the former argued by those who thought themselves at risk. He had grown up in a rough area. There was something to be said for making damn sure the bastards who made life hell for everyone else never had the chance to do it again.

    “Yeah,” he said, finally. He would never be easy with what he’d done, but … he knew it had to be done. And he was the man on the spot. “Thank you.”

    “You’re welcome,” Flower said. “Do you want a massage? It does help.”

    Leo blinked, then snorted. “No, thank you,” he said. The sheer absurdity of the non sequitur was enough to make him laugh. “I’ll see you tomorrow.”
     
    whynot#2 and mysterymet like this.
  20. ChrisNuttall

    ChrisNuttall Monkey+++

    Chapter Fourteen

    “Jump completed, Captain,” Abigail said. “We have arrived at Getaway.”

    Leo nodded. “Tactical, send a standard greeting,” he ordered. “Helm, take us into orbit.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    “There’s a surprising amount of orbital traffic,” Lieutenant Halloran commented. “I thought this was supposed to be an underdeveloped world.”

    Leo leaned forward, thoughtfully. Getaway had only two orbital installations, a docking station for bigger starships and a somewhat outdated industrial node, but there were nearly fifty-seven freighters passing through the system, some heading to the planet itself and others making their way from one jump coordinate to the next. He supposed it made a certain kind of sense – there were a number of spacelanes running through the system, allowing the inhabitants to boost their economy by offering services to spacers – yet it was a little odd. The locals certainly didn’t seem to be checking on in and outbound freighters, let alone searching them for smuggled goods. His eyes narrowed as he spotted a trio of medium-sized freighters jumping into the system, heading straight for the planet. It was just … odd.

    “We’ll need to search a handful of ships at random,” he said. He keyed the display, bringing up the IFF codes. Half the freighters weren’t broadcasting anything, a clear breach of interstellar rules and regulations. Leo understood their thinking – IFF codes could easily attract pirates, in a system that didn’t have any warships that could come to the aide of stricken freighters – but it was still odd. “Tactical, draw up a list of prospective candidates. We’ll start the process as soon as we hand the freighters over to the orbital station.”

    Lieutenant Halloran looked up. “There are three incoming freighters from the Bridgerton Shipping Line, sir,” he said. There was a hint of amusement in his tone, something that would have landed him in real trouble if he’d said it to a proper captain. “And their manifests are decidedly light.”

    Leo considered it. There was no way in hell he expected his brief tryst with Gayle to remain secret indefinitely, not after what had happened with Fleur. Sooner or later, word would get out and someone – probably one of her father’s political enemies – would make hay out of it, suggestion Leo was treating her family with kid gloves because they were lovers. It would be better to set a precedent that suggested otherwise, not least because he had enemies back home that would love a chance to put the boot in, if he gave it to them. He felt an odd pang of … something … at the life he’d lost, a pang he ruthlessly dismissed. Bad rolls of the dice were inevitable. The trick was to recover, learn from your mistakes, and press on.

    “Signal the freighters,” he said. “Inform them that, under interstellar law, we’ll be inspecting their hulls before they’re allowed to either start unloading or leave orbit.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo keyed his console. “Sergeant, have a search party of five men assemble at the shuttle hatch,” he ordered. “Flower and I will be joining you.”

    “Yes, sir.” Boothroyd sounded reassuringly competent. If the prospect of Leo riding along on the shuttle bothered him, it wasn’t evident in his voice. “We’ll be ready.”

    “Watch yourself, sir,” Lieutenant Halloran said, quietly. “We’re not anywhere near the core now.”

    Leo nodded, tersely. Technically, interstellar law had had primacy in the sector ever since it had been formally incorporated into Daybreak. Practically, without anything resembling effective enforcement, the local spacers had been free to ignore it, either out of ignorance or simply as a form of passive resistance. Leo suspected the latter. It was rare for a spacer to take flight, certainly not for very long, without a basic grounding in interstellar shipping law … he frowned, wondering if the local shipping lines bothered to offer such courses for its new recruits. They were a vital part of interstellar certification back home – any spacer without that certification would not be hired by a reputable shipping line, or independent captain – but here? He made a mental note to address the issue with the Governor and his Deputy. It would end badly, if a local captain took his ship to the core and discovered – too late – that hiring uncertified crew was asking for trouble.

    He waited until the convoy had exchanged handover signals with the orbital station, then stood. “You have the bridge, Lieutenant Halloran,” he said. “Put in a request for techs, if the locals have then. We need to see if we can get the pirate ship up and running.”

    “Aye, sir.”

    Leo stood and made his way down to the shuttle hatch. Flower was already there, wearing her midshipman’s outfit and a formidable expression that warned the team not to hit on her. Leo hid his amusement with an effort. Flower looked altogether too confident and composed to be a junior midshipwoman, suggesting she’d managed to get into trouble at some point and found her rank permanently frozen. That was odd, in the core worlds, but out here … Leo shrugged. It didn’t matter.

    Boothroyd met his eyes as they climbed into the shuttle, indicating he wanted to speak privately. Leo followed him to the rear as the pilot closed the hatch and cast off, heading directly to their first target. The freighter grew rapidly on the display, growing from a light set against the blue-green orb to a crude and blocky shape designed for practicality, rather than elegance. There was no way in hell the freighter could land on a planetary surface, Leo noted, unless the crew got very lucky … and if they somehow survived the landing, they’d never get the hulk off the ground again. It wasn’t an uncommon design, but … there was something about it that nagged at his mind. He wasn’t sure why.

    “There probably won’t be any open resistance,” Boothroyd said, quietly. “But the crew will resent our presence, and they may try to fuck with us in ways we’ll find it hard to call them on.”

    He paused. “And there’s no guarantee they’ll even have a proper manifest.”

    Leo shook his head. “How can they fly without a proper manifest?”

    “Depends,” Boothroyd said. “Some shipping lines will carefully refrain from asking questions, let alone inspecting the crates when they’re loaded onboard, just so they can maintain a degree of plausible deniability. Others will stop asking questions, the moment they get their cash. Still others aren’t in a position to ask any questions …”

    “Shit.” Leo had known a couple of cadets who’d grown up on independent trading ships. They’d had fantastic childhoods, compared to him, but they hadn’t concealed the reality of dealing with impudent inspectors, corporations using every trick in the book to cut the independent traders out of the market, banks and insurance companies calling in debts or raising their rates at the slightest excuse … far too many independent traders were one bad call from disaster, no matter what the law said. He could understand why so many turned to smuggling. “We’ll go lightly on them, this time.”

    “Yes, sir,” Boothroyd said.

    Leo returned to the cockpit and watched as the shuttle pilot steered his craft towards the forward hatch. The merchant crew were either stalling or mind-bogglingly incompetent, probably the former. It was rare for an incompetent crewman to last long on an independent merchant ship, not when their incompetence threatened everyone else. They tended to be dumped on the first planet the starship visited and left to make their own way home. He supposed it was why so many tended to join pirate crews. After word got around, an incompetent – no matter how much he’d improved – tended to find it impossible to get legitimate work.

    The shuttle docked with a dull clank, the hatch opening just slowly enough to annoy him and yet not slowly enough for him to file a formal complaint. Leo braced himself, checked he had his sidearm, and followed Boothroyd into the freighter. He’d expected the hatch to lead through an airlock, and then a corridor, but instead the inner airlock opened onto the bridge. The captain rose to greet him, looking thoroughly displeased.

    “This is unwarranted interference with interstellar shipping,” he said, icily. “Complaints will be filed with the Governor and the Deputy Governor, who will …”

    Leo cut him off. “Your ship has been selected for a random search, in line with interstellar law on the prevention of smuggling and piracy,” he said. “If you cooperate, we’ll make it as quick and as painless as possible; if not, we will hold your ship in orbit and inspect every last inch of the hull before permitting you to proceed.”

    The captain’s eyes burned with anger. “And are you going to compensate me for the shuttle fees? The bookings we made for suborbital transit?”

    “In line with interstellar law, you may notify the service providers that you have been delayed through no fault of your own, and therefore they must provide the contracted service when you are free to proceed,” Leo said, keeping his voice formal with an effort. He wasn’t sure if the captain was stalling or genuinely concerned. “If you require support in obtaining those services, you may contact my ship and we will provide.”

    The captain scowled. “As you wish.”

    Leo nodded. “We need your cargo and crew manifests,” he said. “We’ll inspect them both, then determine how to proceed.”

    The captain looked even more displeased, but handed over a datapad without any further argument. Leo passed it to Flower, feeling a twinge of unease. The captain couldn’t be both unaware of the legal requirements and be ready to meet them at a moment’s notice, although copying the two manifests to a datapad was the work of a few seconds … at best. No captain ever born would be happy allowing naval techs to poke through his datacores … there was probably a file or two marked NEVER SHOW TO THE NAVY that documented his real cargo and business accounts. It wasn’t unprecedented. An independent freighter captain could lie to the navy, if he wished, but it was vitally important that he didn’t start believing his own lies.

    “I’ve copied the cargo manifest to you,” Flower said to Boothroyd, in a tone that suggested she was very new and inexperienced. Leo wondered, idly, if Boothroyd had realised Flower was far more than just a pretty face. “Nothing really jumps out.”

    “Of course not,” the captain said. “We’re just shipping farming gear and colony support crap, nothing too interesting.”

    Leo shrugged and scanned the manifest. Nothing jumped out at him, although he was mildly surprised Getaway couldn’t manufacture the farming gear for itself. There was nothing on the list that required a modern fabber. It was rare for a world to be that dependent on interstellar trade, after the war. The big corporations had designed and produced devices that needed regular authorising codes to work, and forbade any kind of Jailbreaking, a tactic that had made them trillions … and condemned billions upon billions of innocent civilians to death after the collapse of interstellar trade cut the devices off from their masters. These days, putting any sort of locking code into a device, no matter how propriety, carried the death sentence.

    “Go open a handful of pods,” he ordered Boothroyd. “Pick at random, unless anything specifically calls to you.”

    “Yes, sir,” Boothroyd said.

    He departed, leaving a lone trooper behind as he led the way through the freighter’s internal maze. It wasn’t going to be easy to get at some of the pods, Leo knew. A number were sealed, their access codes known only to the sender and receiver; others were practically left in vacuum, impossible to access without spacewalking. The latter might well be more worthy of investigation, if someone was using the freighter to smuggle goods without informing the captain, but Leo suspected the captain would be more wary about taking such crates from anyone unless he was very sure of their bona fides. It was technically illegal for a freighter crew to open a crate in transit, but they knew the risks of being caught with something illicit as well as he did and they might consider opening the crates to be a minor risk, compared to being arrested for smuggling something really dangerous. Or illegal.

    Flower passed him the datapad, with a number of names highlighted. Leo’s eyes narrowed as he studied the list. There were forty-seven crewmen listed on the freighter, but he’d only seen a handful of crew and half of the listed men didn’t meet the legal qualifications to serve on an interstellar starship. That didn’t mean they were untrained, Leo knew, yet … he looked up and met the captain’s eyes. The man was pissed, not without reason. Leo wouldn’t have been too pleased if a swaggering young naval officer had come onto his ship and started nitpicking. And to him it was nitpicking …

    “Half your crew doesn’t appear to be qualified,” Leo said, keeping his voice calm. “Why didn’t you check their certifications?”

    The captain scowled at him. “You are aware, no doubt, that the crew was recruited prior to incorporation? It was agreed, at the time, that currently serving merchant crews would be grandfathered into the interstellar legal requirements, without any need to let them go and only rehire them after they passed the tests.”

    “That’s true,” Leo said, calmly. “But that agreement came at the price of the crew actually completing the tests, which they haven’t. You had a legal requirement to see they took the tests as quickly as reasonably possible, which you didn’t meet. According to your manifest, you passed through Yangtze nine times in the last five years. Why didn’t you get the tests completed then?”

    “The testing facility was overwhelmed,” the captain said. “We simply could not get a slot before we had to set out again.”

    “A convenient story,” Leo said. It might well be true – it wasn’t as if Yangtze had the facilities on Daybreak, and instructors who could prepare starship crewmen to take the test – but there was no way to verify it. “I’ll let that pass, now, but when you return to Yangtze you will put your crew though the tests. It shouldn’t be painful. Half the questions are just simple common sense.”

    The captain sneered. “And you have done the test?”

    “And a lot more besides,” Leo said. He’d seen the merchant spacer test. It had been very simple, compared to the shitload of naval rules and regulations he’d been forced to memorise, and most of the questions were easy to work out even if you lacked a background in the merchant marine. “I’ll see to it you get exam slots. But you will take those tests.”

    Or start losing crew, he added, silently. He understood the captain’s problem – it would be painful to let a crewman go, particularly if the crewman had been a decent crewer who hadn’t raised any red flags until failing the test – but there was no choice. The rules existed for a reason, and he had an obligation to enforce the rules. I can give you some leeway, but not much.

    “I’ll see to it,” the captain growled.

    Leo’s communicator bleeped. “Captain, I’m in Hold Three,” Boothroyd said. “You need to come see this.”

    “I’m on my way,” Leo said. He didn’t miss the flicker of alarm crossing the captain’s face. He might not know what his ship was carrying, if the sender had lied on the manifest, but he was still legally responsible for it. Probably. Even if he was personally blameless, it would be hard to keep his post – or get another one – if he was proven beyond all doubt to have been unaware of what he’d allowed to be brought onto his ship. “Flower?”

    Flower fell in behind him, the trooper bringing up the rear as they made their way through the modular starship and into the third hull. It was crammed from top to bottom with crates, the metal boxes so tightly pressed together – and tied with duct tape – that it was hard, almost impossible, to get at the boxes at the rear. Boothroyd had cut through the tape and pushed the crew to move the nearer boxes out the way, allowing him to open the further boxes. Leo sucked in his breath. Their contents did not match the manifest.

    “The manifest states these boxes contain farming equipment,” Boothroyd said, curtly. “So far, we have discovered thirty metal ingots. I don’t know what they are, but I’d bet good money they’re not iron or copper.”

    Leo scowled. Iron was everywhere, so easy to obtain it was incredibly cheap. The metal ingots had to be something more valuable, or there’d be no point in smuggling them. There was certainly no point in taking them from – he checked the manifest – Ingalls to Getaway. Getaway might not be the most well-developed planet in the sector, but there’d be no difficulty finding iron. No, the ingots had to be something a great deal more valuable. Platinum, maybe. That could be extracted from asteroids too, but it was a great deal less common than iron.

    The captain had followed him into the compartment. His eyes went wide, just for a second, as he saw the ingots. Leo felt a flicker of sympathy. Either the captain was a smuggler or he was a damn fool, who’d allowed a crewman – or a rogue miner – to pull the wool over his eyes. Either way, he was fucked.

    “Hold the ships in orbit and search them from top to bottom,” Leo said, quietly. If the captain cooperated, his report would suggest the man had been a fool rather than a smuggler. It might be possible to arrange for the recipient to pay dues, rather than simply have the ingots confiscated. It wasn’t as if trafficking in rare minerals was illegal. It was not paying import or export dues that would be the killer. “And see if you can determine how they got onto the ship without being searched.”

    “Aye, Captain,” Boothroyd said.
     
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