"Captain"s orders," she said crisply to the officer on watch, "You received an IFTL a short time ago?"
"Yes, ma"am, to the captain"s address with encryption."
Sa.s.sinak could not tell if the com officer"s tension was normal or not. "The contents of that message require me to sit com watch myself for two hours." This was unusual, but not unheard of: sometimes extremely sensitive information was sent this way. "I expect incoming IFTL signals, encrypted, and by these orders," and she waved the paper, "only the ship"s captain can receive them."
"Yes, ma"am. Will the captain need any a.s.sistance?"
Sa.s.sinak let herself glare, and the com officer vanished onto the bridge. What she was going to do was both illegal and dangerous... but so was what Dupaynil had done, and what the enemy had done. She logged onto the board and engaged her private comlink to the Ssli interface.
So far, normal procedure. But now... her fingers danced on the board, calling up the file of the original encrypted message. And there it was, the quadruple header code she had never forgotten, not in all the years. Idiots, she thought; they should have changed that long since, as she had changed from a naive ensign standing communications watch to an experienced and powerful ship captain.
With the right header code, it was easy to prepare an incoming message Dupaynil would have to believe was genuine. The other "incoming" message would be in regular Fleet fashion, Ford"s detachment on "family compa.s.sionate leave"... but it would not arrive until Dupaynil was gone.
Where to send Dupaynil? Where would he be safely out of her way, and also, in his own mind, doing something reasonable? She wished she could send him to a Thek, preferably a large, old, very slow one... but that wouldn"t work. Fleet Security had nothing to do with the pacifist Bronthins, or the Mrouxt.
Suddenly it came to her, and she fought back a broad grin which anyone glancing into the alcove might notice (why would the captain be grinning to herself in the com shack?): Ford would dig up dirt on the Paraden family"s dealings, and Lunzie would find what she could on Diplo... and that, according to what they"d found on Ireta, left the alien Setis without an investigator. That would be Dupaynil"s ch.o.r.e.
He had done a lot of diplomatic work, he"d said. He had bragged after dinner, once, about his ability to get along with any of the alien members of the Federation, and even said the Seti weren"t as bad as everyone thought.
So, quickly, carefully, Sa.s.sinak wrote the orders. The Ssli had always shown her special considerations, above and beyond their usual shipboard duties. She owed her life to the sessile Ssli communications officer on her first tour of duty when Hssrho had located her in deep s.p.a.ce after she"d had a "misadventure" in an evac pod. In grat.i.tude she had always taken care to cultivate the Ssli communications officers on every other posting. Now she consulted the resident Ssli. She could not simply pretend that an IFTL had come in; the computer records would show it had not and Dupaynil probably had subverted computer security to some degree. But Dupaynil"s actual shipboard experience was limited and Sa.s.sinak knew that he had never bothered to introduce himself to Dhrossh. Her favorite Wefts, such as Gelory, had mentioned in pa.s.sing that Dupaynil"s mind was not the right sort for direct contact. Whatever they meant by that.
The Ssli thought her scheme was delightful... an odd choice of adjective, Sa.s.sinak thought, and wondered if the speech synthesizer software was working correctly. She had never suspected the Ssli of any remotely human emotions. Ssli syntax tended toward the mathematical. But she entered her encrypted message, and the Ssli initiated IFTL communication with another Ssli on another Fleet vessel. Which one she would never know.
The Ssli, her own had informed her, felt no compunction about concealing such communications from human crew. Her own message bounced back, and appeared as a true incoming message on the computer and the board. Sa.s.sinak routed it to the decryption computer, peeled a copy for Dupaynil"s file, and leaned out to call to the com watch officer, who had taken a seat on the bridge.
"Get me Dupaynil," she said, letting herself glower a bit.
Ford glanced at her but did not even let his brows rise. Dupaynil arrived in a suspiciously short time; this time Sa.s.sinak"s glower was not faked at all.
"You," she said, pointing a finger at him. The rest of the bridge crew became very busy at their own boards. "You have an incoming IFTL, which not only requires decryption and states that I do not have access, but in addition to that, it carries initiation codes I remember all too well!"
He would have to know that, or he could find out- and perhaps her flare of anger would distract him from the unlikeliness of his own orders. At the moment, he f.o.o.ked confused, as well he might.
"This!" Sa.s.sinak pointed to the display she"d frozen onscreen. "The last time I saw that initiation code, that very one, in quad like that, someone smacked me over the head and dumped me in an evac pod. If you think you"re going to do something like that, Major-take me out and take over my ship-you are very much mistaken!" She could hear the anger in her own voice, and the bridge was utterly silent.
"I... Commander Sa.s.sinak, I"m sorry, but I don"t know what you"re talking about. That code is known to me, yes-it"s from the IG"s office. But..."
"I don"t like secrets on my ship, Dupaynil! I don"t like junior officers receiving IFTL messages to which the captain is forbidden access. And encrypted messages at that. I don"t like people going over my head to the IG"s office. What"s your gripe, eh?"
Dupaynil, she was sure, was not as upset as he looked. He was too smart by half. But he was responding to her obvious anger and had lost some of his gloss. "Commander, the IG"s office might have reason to contact me about the Security work I"ve done here-if nothing else, about that-you know..." His voice lowered. Sa.s.sinak let herself calm down.
"I still don"t like it," she grumbled, but softly. Someone smothered a cough, over in Weapons, and nearly choked from the effort. "All right. I see what you mean, and from what Lunzie said that whole thing was cla.s.sified. Maybe there is a reason. But I don"t Tike secrets. Not like this, at a time when we"re all..." She let her voice trail away. Dupaynil"s lids drooped slightly. Was he convinced? "Take your d.a.m.ned message, and unless you Uke causing me grief, tell me what"s so important I can"t even read it."
Dupaynil moved to the decryption computer and entered his pa.s.sword.
Sa.s.sinak turned to the communications watch officer, and said, "Take over. And make sure I know about any incoming or outgoing messages. From anyone." This last with a sidelong glance at Dupaynil.
The Security officer was staring at the screen as if it had grown tentacles; Sa.s.sinak controlled an impulse to laugh at him. He glanced at her, a shrewd, calculating look, and she spoke immediately.
"Well? Are you supposed to clap me in irons, or what?" He shook his head, and sighed.
"No, Commander, it"s nothing like that. It is... odd... that is all. May we speak in your office? Privately?"
Sa.s.sinak nodded shortly and left the bridge with a final glower for everyone. She could feel the support of her crew-her own crew-like a warm blanket around her shoulders. In her office, she put her formal desk between herself and Dupaynil. His brows rose, recognizing that for what it was, and he sighed again.
"Captain, I swear to you..."
"Don"t bother." Sa.s.sinak turned away, briefly, to glance at the hardcopy he offered her, then met his dark eyes squarely. "If you don"t know what I"m talking about, then you don"t-but I cannot ignore anything like that. It nearly cost me my life twenty years ago."
"I"m sorry. Truly sorry. But just as you received unwelcome orders a short while ago, I have now received unwelcome orders to leave this ship-unwelcome and even stranger than yours."
"Oh? And where are you supposed to go?" She saw Dupaynil wince at the unbending ice in that tone. She could care less, as long as she rid herself of a potential traitor.
"To the Seti-to the Sek of Fomalhaut, in fact. One of my past sins come to haunt me, I suppose. Apparently there"s some kind of diplomatic problem with the new human amba.s.sador to the High Court, and I"m supposed to know someone who might be of a.s.sistance."
"But you can"t," Sa.s.sinak said sharply. "You can"t leave: we"re all under orders to proceed to Federation Central, you most of all. You were in on all of it; your testimony..."
"Can be recorded, and will have to be. I"m sorry. Truly sorry, as I said, but these orders take precedence. Have to." His finger tapped the authorizing seals and codes; in the labyrinthine regulations of Fleet and FSP, the IG"s signature outweighed even the Judge Advocate General"s. "Besides, I might still be of use to you. The Thek hinted that the Seti were involved, but they had no solid data, or none they pa.s.sed to us. That"s something I can look into, with my contacts in the Seti diplomatic subculture. They estimate the a.s.signment proper will take me only about six standard months; I can be back in time to share what I"ve learned, and testify if called,"
Sa.s.sinak heaved a dramatic sigh. "Well. I suppose, if you have to, you have to. And maybe you can find something useful, although the Seti are the least likeable bunch of bullies I"ve ever met."
"They do require careful handling," Dupaynil murmured, almost demurely.
Sa.s.sinak wondered what he was up to now. She did not trust him one hairsbreadth. "Very well. Where are we supposed to drop you off?"
"It says your orders will be in shortly and I"m to leave at the next transfer point. Wherever that is."
"Somebody"s entirely too clever," Sa.s.sinak growled. She hoped she hadn"t been clever enough to trip herself with this-but so for Dupaynil seemed convinced.
Just then the junior com officer tapped timidly on her door, and offered a hardcopy of her second faked IFTL message, the one telling her to drop out of FTL drive, and proceed to the nearest Fleet station. The nearest Fleet station was a resupply center with only monthly tanker traffic and the occasional escort or patrol craft dropping by. She remembered it well, from her one previous visit fifteen years before. She showed Dupaynil the orders.
"Supply Center 64: says there"s an escort in dock. You"ll take that, I imagine?" At his nod, she said, "I"ll expect you back at 1500, to give your deposition; we"ll have the equipment set up by then, and an ETA for the supply center."
The rest of that day Sa.s.sinak hardly dared look at Ford; she would have burst out laughing. Dupaynil came back, gave his testimony while she asked every question she could think of before she sent him off to pack his gear.
They popped out of FTL s.p.a.ce within a few hours of the supply center. Sa.s.sinak had already dispatched messages to it and the escort vessel (whose pilot had been planning an unauthorized three-day party with the supply center"s crew). Escorts, not large enough to house a Ssli, were out of the IFTL links. Once aboard, Dupaynil would have only sublight ways of checking up on his orders.
Docking the Zaid-Dayan at the supply station was simple: the station had equipment to handle large transports of all shapes, and the small escort took up only a minute s.p.a.ce at the far end of the station. Sa.s.sinak indulged herself, as she rarely could anymore, and brought the cruiser in herself, easing it to the gantry so gently that no one detected contact until the status tights changed color.
"Nice job!" said the station Dockmaster, a Weft. "We"ll have air up in the tubes in a few minutes. Is your pa.s.senger ready to transfer?"
"Ready when you are."
Dupaynil would leave by one of the small hatches, an airlock on the second flight deck. Even with a Fleet facility, Sa.s.sinak didn"t like opening up real interior s.p.a.ce to a possible pressure loss. She glanced at Dupaynil, visible on one of the side screens, and flicked a switch to put him on-channel.
"They"re airing up the tube. Sure you don"t want a pressure suit?"
"No thank you."
He had already explained how he felt about pressure suits. Sa.s.sinak was tempted to teach him a lesson about that, but under the circ.u.mstances she wanted their parting to be as friendly as possible.
"Fine... we"re standing by for your departure signal." She could see, in the monitor, the light above the hatch come on, flick twice, and steady to green.
"On my way," said Dupaynil. Then he paused, and faced the monitor-cam squarely. "Commander? I did not intend to cause you trouble and I have no idea what that initiation code means to you. You may not believe me, but I have no desire to see you hurt."
And I have a great desire to see your back going off my ship, thought Sa.s.sinak, but she smiled for his benefit. "I"d like to believe you, and if that"s true, I hope we serve together again someday. Have a good trip. Don"t let those Seti use you for nest padding."
When the status lights confirmed that Dupaynil was safely off the ship and into the station, Sa.s.sinak breathed a sigh of relief. Now she could tell Ford what she was up to-or enough for him to help her with the last of Dupaynil"s maneuver. That involved a bit of straight talking to the escort captain, on the need for immediate departure, and the importance of keeping his mouth firmly shut. Sa.s.sinak kept the Zaid-Dayan linked to the station until the escort broke away.
"And just how did you manage that?" Ford had waited just long enough for her to engage her office"s privacy circuits. Sa.s.sinak grinned at him. "And don"t bother to look innocent," he went on. "I don"t know how you did it, but you must have."
"Let"s just say that someone who"s spent her career on ships knows a bit more about them than a Security office rat."
"And you"re not going to explain, eh?"
"Not entirely. Would you trust Dupaynil to have undipped whatever bugs he"s set out on this ship?"
"Mmm. I see."
"And you are smart enough to figure out everything you need to know. You can think about it while looking up your remarkable relative."
"But what about the depositions? I can"t leave now!" His face changed expression suddenly. "Oh. The only one who knew about those orders is... G.o.ds above, Captain, what did you do?"
"Used the resources available to make appropriate dispositions of personnel in a situation of extreme delicacy," said Sa.s.sinak crisply. "And that"s all I"m going to say about it. Your a.s.signment is to uncover whatever links you can between the suspect merchant families and planet piracy and the slave trade. On my orders, by my a.s.sessment that this need overrides any other orders you may have heard about."
"Ummm... yes, ma"am."
"Good. Dupaynil, meanwhile, is supposed to be investigating the Seti and their connection with all this nastiness. I have heard, from time to time, that the Seti expressed sympathy with the heavyworlders for having been the victims of genetic engineering. You remember that they believe all such activity is wrong and refuse any kind of bioengineering on their own behalf. They"re also known to hate Wefts, although no one seems to know why, and the Wefts won"t comment."
"I"ve never understood why the Seti came into the Federation at all," Ford said. He seemed glad enough of a detour.
"Let Dupaynil worry about that," Sa.s.sinak said. "Now, d"you think a direct call to your family will locate your great aunt?"
"No, probably not. Let me think. The family hears at least once a standard year at Homefaring, but that"s five months away. And she travels, you know; she"s supposed to have one of the most luxurious yachts in s.p.a.ce. We might find her in one of the society papers."
"Society papers!"
Ford flushed. "She"s that fend; I told you. Minor aristocracy, but considers herself well up there. Once we locate her, I can fake-I mean arrange-a message from the family to justify a visit."
Sa.s.sinak did not even know the names of the papers Ford called up on their next shift down into normal s.p.a.ce. She glanced at the sheets as he pa.s.sed them over: even in flat copy, the photographs fairly glittered with wealth. Women in jewels and glistening gowns, men in formal Court dress, ribbons streaming from one knee. The sumptuous interiors of "gracious homes" as they were called, homes that existed merely to show off their owners" wealth. Sa.s.sinak could not imagine actually sleeping in one of the beds shown, a "sculpted masterpiece" with a stream of moving water actually running through it. She could feel her lip curling.
"Ah! Here she is." Ford had his finger on the place. "Among the notable guests at the wedding-would you look at that so-called bride!-is my very own n.o.ble relative. Will travel on to partic.i.p.ate in the Season at the usual Rainbow Arc events... which means she"s somewhere between Zalaive and the Rainbow Arc. Permission to initiate search?"
"Go ahead." Sa.s.sinak was deep in a discussion of the reasons why cuulinda was destined to replace folsath as the newest sporting rage among the n.o.bility. She hadn t heard of either, and the article didn"t mention whether they were played with teams, animals, or computers. Ford busied himself at the terminal, checking Fleet"s comprehensive database on vessel ownership and movement on the lowlink.
"Ah! She"s en route to Colles, ETA two weeks, and there"s a... Oh snarks!"
"A what?" asked Sa.s.sinak, looking up at his tone.
"Well. I can get to her by her next planetfall, but it means. .h.i.tching a ride on a tanker-transport."
Sa.s.sinak grinned at him. Tankers had a reputation as bare-bones tranportation, and they played out that game on visitors.
"It"ll make the contrast all the greater." She looked at the route he"d found. "I"ll cut your orders, get you on that patrol-cla.s.s. Don"t forget to arrange that family message somehow."
"I won"t."
His routing didn"t give them much time, but, with Lunzie and Dupaynil both out of the way, they enjoyed a last festive evening in Sa.s.sinak"s cabin. Then he was gone, and Sa.s.sinak had the final planning to do as they approached the crowded inner sector of the Federation.
She wondered how Aygar would react to the publicity and culture shock of FedCentral. He had been using the data banks on the Zaid-Dayan several hours a day. Ford kept a record of his access. He"d talked to both Marines and Fleet enlisted personnel and word of that trickled back to Sa.s.sinak by channels she doubted Aygar knew about. He had asked to take some of the basic achievement tests, to gauge for himself where he stood educationally. Sa.s.sinak had given permission, even though Dr. Mayerd thought "the boy," as she called him, should have professional advice.
The test results lay in the computer files. Sa.s.sinak had not accessed them, out of respect for the little privacy Aygar had, but from his demeanor he seemed well pleased with himself. She was less certain.
He was a striking young man, attractive if you liked muscles and regular features, and she admitted to herself that she did. But except for that subtle sense of rivalry with Lunzie, she would not have been drawn to him. She liked men of experience, men with whom she could share her broad background. Fleet officers of her own rank, or near it. It was all very well to impress youngsters like that ensign Timran. No woman minded starry-eyed boys as long as they stayed respectful. But Aygar did not fit that category, or any other.
"Commander? Central Docks wants a word."
That brought her out of her reverie, and across the pa.s.sage onto the bridge. She had never brought a ship in to Federation Central"s Docking Station before. Few did; Fleet protected the center of Federation government services, but was not entirely welcome here in force. Some races, and some humans, feared military rebellion and takeover. Hence the slow approach, dropping to sublight drive well outside the system, zigging and zagging (at high cost in fuel and time) to make unhandy checkpoints where defense satellites scrutinized their appearance and orders.
"Commander Sa.s.sinak, FSP cruiser Zaid-Dayan," said Sa.s.sinak.
"Ah... Commander... ah... procedures for securing armament, as required by the Federation for all incoming warships, must be complete before your vessel pa.s.ses the outer sh.e.l.l."
Sa.s.sinak frowned, catching Arly"s eye. The Zaid-Dayan could, in fact, take on most planetary defenses; she could understand why the more nervous members of the Federation would not want a human-crewed, fully armed heavy cruiser over their heads. But her trust in.Federation Security right now was severely limited. She did not want her ship vulnerable.
"Securing," she said, with a nod to Arly.
Arly was scowling, but more with concentration than discontent. They had already discussed what to do; it remained to see if it would work. As a technical problem, Sa.s.sinak thought, watching Arly"s hands rove her control board, it was interesting.
The Federation had only one telepathic race, the Wefts. Since the Wefts usually got along with humans, and had nothing to gain by disarming Fleet ships, any Wefts were unlikely to complain. The Seti would certainly complain of anything they recognized, and the pacifist members of the Federation, the Bronthin, would drop their foals if they knew. But would they know? Would they consider weaponry the same way Sa.s.sinak and Arly did?
The more obvious armament, items specified in the ship"s Fleet cla.s.sification, had to be secured. In this context, that meant control circuits patched out, projectile weapons unloaded and projectiles secured in locked compartments, power detached from EM projectors and opticals. A FedCentral Insystem Security team would be aboard, guarding access to these areas, to prevent anyone from launching a missile, or frying something with a laser.
But the ZaidrDayaris power did not reside only in its named armaments. The most dangerous weapon you will ever control, one of her instructors had said back in the Academy, is right here: between your ears. The weapons you can see, or hold in your hand, are only chunks of metal and plastic.
Arly and Sa.s.sinak together had worked out ways of bypa.s.sing the patchouts, producing readouts that looked clean, while the systems involved still functioned. Not the projectiles. Someone could look and actually see whether or not a launcher had anything in the tube. But the EM and opticals, and the locks on the missile and ammunitions storage bins, could appear to be locked.
"Admiral CoromeU"s office," said Sa.s.sinak, facing the ident screen squarely. She had no idea where on this planet the Admiral would be, but the comcomp would take care of that. Surely there was only one Admiral Coromell at this time.
"Admiral CoromeU"s office, Lieutenant. Commander Dollish speaking." Dallish looked like most Lieutenant Commanders stuck with sh.o.r.e duty: slightly bored but wary. When he"d had a moment to take in Sa.s.sinak"s rank, his eyes brightened. "Commander Sa.s.sinak! A pleasure, ma"am. We"ve heard about your exciting tour!"
Sa.s.sinak let herself smile. She should have realized that, of course, rumor would have spread so far. Fleet kept no secrets from itself. "Not entirely my idea. Is the Admiral available?"
Dallish looked genuinely disappointed. "No, Commander, he"s not. He"s gone rhuch hunting over on Six and won"t be back for several weeks Standard. You could go and-"
Sa.s.sinak shook her head. "No, worse luck. Orders say to deliver my prisoner and stand by for pre-trial depositions and hearings."
"Kipling"s copper corns! Sorry, Commander. That"s too bad. This is no port for a cruiser."