Honor felt the intense scrutiny his mild brown eyes hid so well. She couldn"t tell what he was thinking behind it, but she could feel his strange combination of amus.e.m.e.nt, curiosity, anger, frustration, and apprehension. She was reasonably certain the last three emotions weren"t directed at her, yet she knew she-or her squadron-were at the bottom of them, and she waited patiently for him to explain.

"Thank you for coming, Milady," the man in charge of managing the RMN"s manpower said finally. "I"m sorry we couldn"t meet sooner than this, but I"ve been beating the bushes for the personnel to man your ships."

Honor"s mental antennae tw.a.n.ged at his half-acid, half-apologetic tone, and she sat up straighter, hands buried in Nimitz"s fluffy coat, and eyed him sharply. Cortez saw it and grimaced, then leaned back in his chair and raised his hands in a throwing away gesture.

"We"ve got a problem, Milady," he sighed. "Specifically, the pressure to expedite your deployment is playing merry h.e.l.l with my manning plans."

"In what way, Sir?" Honor asked carefully.

"Essentially," Cortez replied, "we"ve been asked to deploy your ships six months ahead of schedule, and we hadn"t allowed for it in our personnel a.s.signments. No doubt you"re aware of how tightly stretched we are just now?"

"In a general way, Sir, but I have been out of the Star Kingdom-and the Queen"s uniform-for three T-years." She managed, with difficulty, to keep a residual edge of resentment out of her voice.

"I"ll summarize briefly, then." Cortez braced his elbows on the arms of his chair and steepled his fingers across his middle. "As I"m sure you do know, we have something like fifty thousand RMN officers and ratings currently on loan to the GSN, not including the purely technical support personnel we"ve a.s.signed to their Office of Shipbuilding and R&D sections. Given their own critical shortage of trained manpower, that"s barely enough for them to fully man their fleet, and the situation"s gotten worse since they started commissioning home-built SDs.

"I mention the situation in Yeltsin only as an example-one of many, I"m afraid, though certainly the largest single one-of the personnel we"ve been forced to loan out to our allies. All told, we"ve got a hundred and fifty thousand Manticorans in other people"s uniforms right now. Add in all the technical support staffs, and the number comes to about a quarter million."

He regarded Honor intently, and she nodded slowly.

"In addition to that, we have our own manpower needs. We"ve got roughly three hundred of the wall in commission, with an average crew of fifty-two hundred. That uses up another million and a half men and women. After that, we"ve got a hundred and twenty-four forts covering the Junction, with another million plus people aboard them. Then there"s all the rest of the Fleet, which uses up another two and a half million, our own shipyards, fleet bases on foreign stations like Grendelsbane, R&D, ONI, and so on and so on. Add in all the people we need for routine personnel rotations, and we"ve got something on the order of eleven million people in Navy and Marine uniforms. That"s only a bit over three-tenths of a percent of our total population, but it comes out of our most productive population segments, and our projections call for the figure to double over the next two T-years. And, of course, we have to worry about manning both the Army and the merchant marine, as well."

Honor nodded again, even more slowly, as she began to see where Cortez was headed. The Royal Manticoran Marines were specialists who held shipboard duty a.s.signments as well as providing boarding parties and emergency ground combat components. Heavy planetary combat was the role of the Royal Army, which, undistracted by the need to master shipboard systems, could concentrate solely on planetary combat hardware and techniques. In peacetime, the Army was usually severely downsized, since the Marines could handle most peacekeeping roles, but in time of war, it had to be recruited back up to strength for garrison duty, if nothing else. The Marine Corps, for example, had handed the planet Masada over to an Army commander just a T-year earlier, with a profound sigh of relief, and the Army was also currently responsible for garrisoning no less than eighteen Peep worlds. In fact, for Manticore actually to win this war, the Star Kingdom was going to have to take-and garrison-a lot of Peep planets, and that meant the Army"s appet.i.te for personnel was going to grow in direct proportion to the Navy"s successes.

That was a serious enough diversion of manpower, but the Manticoran merchant marine was the fourth largest in the galaxy. It was far larger than that of the People"s Republic-indeed, the only people with bigger merchant fleets were all members of the Solarian League. In terms of sheer ma.s.s, it dwarfed the RMN"s warship tonnage, and those merchant ships were the true foundation of the Star Kingdom"s wealth. They could be found all over known s.p.a.ce, for they dominated the carrying and pa.s.senger trades outside the League. And while most merchantmen used far smaller crews than warships of the same displacement, the aggregate of those ships also demanded an enormous number of trained s.p.a.cers.

"The reason I"ve gone into this, Milady," Cortez said, "is so that you can understand what sort of numbers BuPers has to juggle. You may not be aware that we"ve doubled cla.s.s sizes at the Academy because of our need for trained officers. Even so, we"ve been forced to recall a much larger percentage of reservists from the merchant fleet than we"d like, and in the not too distant future we"re going to have to set up OCS programs to turn merchant s.p.a.cers without previous military experience into Queen"s officers, as well. Despite that, we"re keeping up with demand, however barely, and our new training programs have been planned to keep pace with the requirements of our new construction. But our entire manpower management plan is a very carefully orchestrated-and fragile-edifice.

"Now, we incorporated Trojan Horse into our schedules, but we antic.i.p.ated six more months of lead time. As you know, your own ship-and her LACs-require twenty-five hundred officers and ratings and another five hundred Marines, and the total unit strength for Trojan Horse is projected at fifteen. That"s forty-five thousand more people, Milady, almost as many as we have on loan for GSN fleet duty, and we don"t have them. In six months we will; right now, we don"t."

He raised his hands again, and Honor bit her lip. This was an aspect of the manning problem she hadn"t considered, and she kicked herself for it. She darned well should have thought about it, and she wondered if some subconscious part of her had deliberately avoided doing so.

"Just how bad is it, Sir Lucien?" she asked finally, and he shrugged unhappily.

"Your four ships shouldn"t be that much of a problem. We"re only talking about twelve thousand people for all of them, after all. Unfortunately, it is a problem. To make up the numbers, we"re going to have to draft people from existing ships" companies. I estimate something like a third of your total strength will have to come from there, and you know no captain voluntarily gives up his better people. We"ll do our best for you, but the majority of your crews will consist of totally inexperienced newbies fresh from training or old sweats whose current skippers are delighted to be rid of them. Your Marine complements should be solid, and we"ll do the best we can to weed real troublemakers out of the drafts from other ships, but I"d be lying if I said you"ll have the sort of crews I"d want to take into action."

Honor nodded once more. She understood Cortez"s emotions now. The Fifth s.p.a.ce Lord was an experienced combat commander. He understood the implications of what he was telling her, and he felt personally responsible for them. He wasn"t, but that didn"t change the way he felt.

Her brain ticked with a curious detachment as she considered the news. No captain wanted to take an ill-prepared crew into combat, and, in a way, that was more true of a Q-ship"s CO than any other. Q-ships normally operated solitaire. There wouldn"t be anyone else to bail them out if it hit the fan, and they would live or die by how well their own people did their jobs. Worse, the rush to deploy her squadron meant there would be next to no time for the drilling misfit crews required. She felt confident of her ability to convince even the worst troublemaker to do things her way, but she"d need time to do it, and people whose sole shortcoming was lack of experience would need even more careful handling. If she didn"t have that time. . . .

"I"m sorry, Milady," Cortez said quietly. "I a.s.sure you my staff and I will do the best we can, and, frankly, I delayed this meeting as long as I could in hopes that one of my people would come up with some brilliant solution. Unfortunately, no one did, and, under the circ.u.mstances, I felt it was my duty to explain the situation to you personally."

"I understand, Sir." Honor gazed down at Nimitz for a moment, stroking his spine, then looked back up at the admiral. "All you can do is the best you can do, Sir Lucien, and every captain knows it"s up to her to kick her crew into shape, if that"s what it takes. We"ll manage."

She heard the false confidence in her own voice, but it was the only possible response, for it was a captain"s responsibility to turn whatever manpower she was given into an effective fighting force. It was also a job she"d done before-but not, a small inner voice said coldly, under quite this severe a handicap.

"Well," Cortez looked away for a moment, then met her eyes once more, "I can offer you one thing, Milady. Short as we are on experienced personnel, I"ve managed to sc.r.a.pe together a core of solid officers and NCOs. Frankly, most of them are a bit junior for the posts we"ll be a.s.signing them to, but their records are excellent, and I believe you"ll find several have served with you before." He took a data chip from his desk drawer and leaned over the desk to hand it to her. "I"ve listed them on the chip here, and if there are any other officers or ratings you"d care to specifically request, I"ll do my utmost to get them. I"m afraid it"ll be a case of whether or not they"re available, but we"ll certainly try. As far as the newbies are concerned, your squadron has first call. They may still be wet behind the ears, but at least we"ll give you the ones with the highest efficiency ratings."

"I appreciate that, Sir," Honor said, and she did.

"I have managed one other thing I think you"ll pleased to hear," Cortez said after a moment. "Well, two, actually. Alice Truman"s just made list, and we"ve a.s.signed her to command Parna.s.sus as your second in command."

Honor"s eyes lit at that, but there was an edge of concern under her delight. Despite the antic.i.p.ation she"d begun to feel over the past three days, she remembered how she"d first seen her command. An officer of Truman"s caliber, especially one who"d just made the senior captain"s list which virtually a.s.sured her of future flag rank, might well regard a.s.signment to a Q-ship as a slap in the face. Honor wouldn"t blame her, but if she held Honor responsible for it- "I think I should mention," Cortez added, as if he could read her mind, "that we explained the situation fully to her and she volunteered for the slot. She was slated to a.s.sume command of Lord Elton, but Elton"s in for a five-month overhaul. When we asked her if she"d consider a transfer to Parna.s.sus instead and explained she"d be serving with you, she accepted immediately."

"Thank you for telling me that, Sir," Honor said with a smile of mingled grat.i.tude and pleasure. "Captain Truman is one of the finest officers I"ve ever known." And, she reflected, the fact that Alice had volunteered even knowing the immense task they faced warmed her heart.

"I thought you"d be pleased," Cortez replied with a small smile of his own. "And, in addition, I think I"ve found you an executive officer you"ll like."

He pressed a b.u.t.ton on his com panel and leaned back in his chair again. A few moments later, the door opened once more and a tall, dark-haired commander walked through it. He was built on long and lean lines, with a hawk-like nose and a ready smile. The breast of his tunic bore the white-barred blue ribbon of the Order of Gallantry and the red and white ribbon of the Saganami Cross, and, like Honor herself, the blood-red stripe of the Monarch"s Thanks marked his right sleeve. He looked decidedly on the young side, even for a prolong recipient, to have acquired two of the Star Kingdom"s four top medals for valor, and even as Honor rose in pure delight, her mind"s eye could still see the awkward puppy of a junior-grade lieutenant she"d taken to Basilisk Station with her just eight years before.

"Rafe!" she cried, cradling Nimitz in the crook of her left arm to extend her right hand.

"I believe you two have met, Milady," Cortez murmured with a small smile as Commander Cardones gripped her hand fiercely.

"I didn"t get the chance to serve with you very long in Nike, Skipper," he said. "Maybe this time will work out better."

"I"m sure it will, Rafe," she said warmly, and turned to look at Cortez. "Thank you, Sir. Thank you very much."

"He was due for a stint as someone"s exec, Milady," the Fifth s.p.a.ce Lord said, waving off her thanks. "Besides, you seem to be making something of a career out of completing his training. It would be a pity to break up the team when you clearly still have so far to go."

Cardones grinned at the comment which, eight years before, would have reduced him instantly to red-faced, mumbling incoherence, and Honor smiled back at him. For all his youth, Rafael Cardones was one of the best tactical officers she"d ever seen, and he"d clearly gone right on maturing in the time she"d spent in Yeltsin.

Cortez watched her evident pleasure and Cardones" matching happiness-and respect for his new CO-and wondered if Lady Harrington realized how deliberately the younger officer had modeled himself on her. Cortez had gone to some lengths to find her the right executive officer, and a simple comparison of Cardones" record before and after first serving under her showed that his own teasing comment wasn"t far off the mark. In fact, Cortez had run similar comparisons on several officers who"d served under her, and he"d been impressed by what he"d found. Some of the RMN"s most effective combat commanders had never been good teachers; Honor Harrington was. In addition to her sterling battle record, she"d shown an almost mystic ability to pa.s.s her own dedication and professionalism on to subordinates, and to the officer commanding the Bureau of Personnel, that was almost more precious than her own combat skills.

Now he cleared his throat, recapturing their attention, and nodded to Cardones.

"The Commander has a partial roster of Wayfarer"s company, Milady. It"s very rough so far, but at least it may serve as a beginning. He"s already suggested a few other officers and petty officers to help flesh it out, and my staff is currently running a records search to see how many, if any, of them are available. I understand Admiral Georgides estimates another three weeks before you can power up and begin moving personnel aboard?"

"Approximately, Sir," Honor replied. "I think he"s being pessimistic, but I doubt he"ll be able to shave more than a few days off his estimate. Parna.s.sus and Scheherazade will complete about the same time, but it looks like Gudrid will need at least another ten days."

"All right." Cortez pursed his lips, then nodded to himself. "I"ll have at least a captain and an exec for all four of them by Thursday. By the time you can actually start putting people aboard, we should have all your commissioned personnel either on hand or designated and en route. We"ll try to have your warrant and petty officers all lined up by then, too, and General Vonderhoff a.s.sures me your Marine complements won"t present any problem. As far as your enlisted personnel are concerned, however, it"s going to be catch as catch can. I have no idea how quickly, or in what order, we"ll be able to a.s.semble them, though we"ll do our best."

"I"m sure you will, My Lord, and I appreciate it," Honor said sincerely, well aware of how unusual it was for Cortez to personally discuss the manning problems of a single squadron with the officer designated to command it.

"It"s the least we can do, Milady," Cortez replied, then grimaced again. "It"s never a good thing when partisan politics interfere in military operations, Milady, especially when it costs us the services of an officer with your record, and I regret that your return to Manticoran uniform has to take place under such circ.u.mstances. But in case no one else has told you, we"re all delighted to have you back."

"Thank you, Sir." Honor felt her cheekbones heating once more, but she met his gaze steadily and saw the approval in his eyes.

"In that case, Milady, I"ll let you and Commander Cardones get started." Cortez held out his hand once more. "You"ve got a big job ahead of you, Captain, and you"re facing some constraints you shouldn"t have to. But if anyone can get it done, I feel certain you"re the one. In case we don"t see one another again before you ship out, good luck and good hunting."

"Thank you, Sir," Honor repeated, squeezing his hand hard. "We"ll do our best."

CHAPTER SEVEN.

Honor leaned back in her chair to ma.s.sage her aching eyes.

She"d been quartered in Vulcan"s "Captains" Row" until she could move aboard Wayfarer, and her cabin was s.p.a.cious enough. Smaller than the one she would occupy aboard her Q-ship and much smaller than the one she"d given up aboard the superdreadnought Terrible, but large by Navy standards and ample for comfort. Unfortunately, she was finding little opportunity to enjoy that comfort-or, for that matter, even the time to work out in Vulcan"s senior officers" gym. The paperwork always piled a light-year deep when a new captain a.s.sumed command of a ship, and it was worse when that ship came straight from yard hands. Add the sea of doc.u.ments-electronic and hardcopy-involved in a.s.sembling any squadron, then put it all under the pressure of a rushed deployment date, and there was hardly time to breathe, much less exercise . . . or sleep.

She grinned wryly, for if she had reams of paper to deal with, Rafe Cardones had more. A captain commanded a ship and held ultimate responsibility for every aspect of its operation and safety, but the exec managed that ship. It was her job to organize its crew, stores, maintenance, training schedules, and every other aspect of its operations so smoothly her captain hardly noticed all she was doing. It was a tall order, but a necessary one . . . and it was also why a stint as exec was usually the Navy"s final test of an officer"s ability to command her own ship. That would have been enough to keep any officer busy, but the Admiralty hadn"t a.s.signed Honor a staff. It made sense, she conceded, given that her "squadron" would almost certainly be split up into divisions or individual units rather than operate as a whole, yet it meant Rafe also had to shoulder the burden of an acting flag captain"s role in addition to all the duties his post as Wayfarer"s exec imposed.

But even though the pressure-cooker urgency of getting the squadron ready for deployment added measurably to Rafe"s arduous schedule, he was doing an exemplary job. He"d taken over full responsibility for coordinating with the yard dogs, and he and Chief Archer, her yeoman, were intercepting everything they could, whether specific to Wayfarer or to the squadron as a whole, before it reached her plate. She recognized and appreciated their efforts, but she was ultimately responsible for all of it. The best they could do was to get it so organized and arranged that all she had to do was sign off on the decisions they"d already made, and, frankly, they were proving very, very good at it.

Which wasn"t going to save her from the report on her display.

She finished rubbing her eyes, took a sip of cocoa from the mug MacGuiness had left at her elbow, and returned doggedly to her duty. Archer had highlighted the summaries for each section, and it was really more Cardones" job than Honor"s to deal with most of the items. He"d entered his own solutions at most of the decision points, and though one or two weren"t quite the answers Honor would have chosen, she made herself consider each dispa.s.sionately. So far, they all looked workable, even if she might have done them differently, and some were actually better than her own first reaction would have been. What mattered most, though, was that they were Rafe"s decisions to make. She had to sign off on them, but he had a right to do things his way as long as he handed her a ship that was an efficient, functional weapon when she needed it. Under the circ.u.mstances, she had no intention of overriding him unless he screwed up in some major way, and the chance of that happening was virtually nonexistent.

She reached the bottom of the endless report at last and sighed again, this time with satisfaction. The entire half-meg doc.u.ment had required only six decisions from her, and that was far better than most captains could have antic.i.p.ated. She dashed an electronic signature across the scan pad, entered the command to save her own modifications, and dumped the entire doc.u.ment back into Archer"s queue.

One down, she thought, and punched for the next. A doc.u.ment header appeared, and she groaned. Hydroponics. She hated hydroponic inventories! Of course they were vital, but they always went on and on and on and on. She took another sip of cocoa and cast an envious glance up at Nimitz, snoring gently on his perch above her desk, then gritted her teeth to dive back in.

But her dive was interrupted as the admittance chime sounded. Her eyes-natural and cybernetic alike-lit with pleasure at the thought of a reprieve, however temporary, from nutrients, fertilizers, seed banks, and filtration systems, and she pressed the stud on her desk.

"Yes?"

"A visitor, My Lady," LaFollet"s voice said. "Your Flight Ops officer wants to pay his respects."

"Ah?" Honor rubbed her nose in surprise. Flight Ops was one slot she and Rafe had been unable to fill, and it was one of the more important ones. So if Rafe had picked her visitor for the duty without even speaking to her, the officer in question must have excellent credentials.

"Ask him to come in, Andrew," she said, and rose behind her desk as the hatch slid open. To her surprise, LaFollet didn"t precede the newcomer through it. She was quite certain she was safe from a.s.sa.s.sins aboard Vulcan, yet for Andrew to let anyone into her presence unescorted unless she specifically instructed him to const.i.tuted a shocking breach in his professional paranoia. But then she saw the young lieutenant who stepped through the hatch, and she smiled hugely.

"Lieutenant Tremaine, reporting for duty, Ma"am," Scotty Tremaine said, and braced to attention with Saganami Island precision. A burly, battered looking man in the uniform of a senior chief petty officer followed him and came to attention to his right and a half pace behind him.

"Senior Chief Gunner"s Mate Harkness, reporting for duty, Ma"am," the petty officer rumbled, and Honor"s smile became a grin.

"If it isn"t the dreadful duo!" she chuckled, moving quickly around her desk and reaching out to grasp Tremaine"s hand. "Who agreed to let you two aboard my ship?"

"Well, Commander Cardones said he was getting desperate, Ma"am," Tremaine replied with an irrepressible twinkle. "Since he couldn"t find any qualified personnel, he figured he"d just have to make do with us."

"What is the Navy coming to?" Honor gave Tremaine"s hand a final squeeze and released it to offer her own hand to Harkness in turn. The SCPO with the prizefighter"s face looked acutely embarra.s.sed for a moment, then took it in a powerful grip.

"Actually, Ma"am," Tremaine said more seriously, "I was overdue for rea.s.signment from Prince Adrian, anyway. We were in Gryphon at the time, and Captain McKeon was under orders to ship directly out to Sixth Fleet or he"d have come by in person. But when BuPers told him he had to come up with fifteen people, including an officer, for your squadron, he decided he could spare my services. As a matter of fact, he said something about getting me out of his sight and into the hands of someone he knew could "restrain my impetuosity"." The lieutenant wrinkled his brow. "I don"t have any idea what he meant," he added innocently.

"Of course not," Honor agreed with another smile. Ensign Prescott Tremaine had made his very first cruise out of the Academy with her. In fact, he"d been with her in Basilisk when it all came apart . . . and again in Yeltsin, she thought, smile fading. He"d been there when she learned what the Masadan butchers had done to the crew of HMS Madrigal, and though they"d never discussed it-and never would-he"d saved her career. Not many junior-grade lieutenants would have had the guts to physically restrain their squadron CO from an act of madness.

"Well," she said, giving herself a mental shake and turning her attention to Harkness. "I see you"ve managed to keep the extra rocker, Senior Chief."

Harkness blushed, for his had been a checkered career. He was far too good at his job for the Navy to dispense with his services, but he"d been up for chief petty officer over twenty times before he made it and kept it. His encounters with customs officers-and any Marine he met in a bar off-duty-were legendary, but he seemed to have reformed since entering Tremaine"s...o...b..t. Honor didn"t understand exactly how the make-over had worked, but wherever Tremaine went, Harkness was sure to turn up shortly. He was a good thirty years older than the lieutenant, yet the two of them seemed to const.i.tute a natural pair not even BuPers could break up. Which, she reflected, might be because BuPers recognized what a formidable pair they made.

"Uh, yes, Ma"am-I mean, Milady," Harkness said.

"I"d like to see you go on keeping it," she said a bit repressively. "I don"t antic.i.p.ate any problems with customs"- Harkness" blush deepened-"but we will have a full battalion of Marines on board. I"d appreciate your not trying to reduce their numbers if we manage to find someplace for liberty."

"Oh, the Senior Chief doesn"t do that anymore, Ma"am," Tremaine a.s.sured her. "His wife wouldn"t like it."

"His wife?" Honor blinked and looked back at Harkness, and her eyebrows rose as the petty officer turned a truly alarming shade of crimson. "You"re married now, Chief?"

"Uh, yes, Milady," Harkness mumbled. "Eight months now."

"Really? Congratulations! Who is she?"

"Sergeant Major Babc.o.c.k," Tremaine supplied while Harkness positively squirmed, and Honor giggled. She couldn"t help it. She hated it when she giggled, because she sounded like an escapee from high school, but she simply couldn"t stop herself. Harkness had married Babc.o.c.k? Impossible! But she saw the confirmation on the senior chief"s face and fought her giggles sternly into silence. She had to hold her breath a moment to be certain they were vanquished, and her voice wasn"t quite steady when she spoke again.

"T-that"s wonderful news, Senior Chief!"

"Thank you, Milady." Harkness stole a sideways look at Tremaine, then grinned almost sheepishly. "Actually, it is good news. I never thought I"d meet a Marine I even liked, but, well-" He shrugged, and Honor felt her levity ease at the glow in his blue eyes.

"I"m glad for you, Senior Chief. Really," she said softly, squeezing his shoulder, and she was. Iris Babc.o.c.k was the last person in the world she would have expected to marry Harkness, but now that she thought about it, she could see the possibilities. Babc.o.c.k"s career had been as exemplary as Harkness" had been . . . colorful, and she was one of the best combat soldiers-and pract.i.tioners of coup de vitesse-Honor had ever encountered. Honor would never even have considered Babc.o.c.k and Harkness as a pair, but the sergeant major was precisely the sort of woman who would make certain the senior chief stayed on the straight and narrow. And, Honor thought, she was also a woman who"d obviously been wise enough to look past Harkness" exterior and realize what a truly good man he was.

"Thank you, Milady," the petty officer repeated, and she nodded briskly to them both.

"Well! I see why the Exec plugged you into Flight Ops, Scotty. Have you had a chance to look over your new boat bay?"

"No, Ma"am. Not yet."

"Then why don"t you go do that-and take the Senior Chief with you. I think you"ll like what the yard dogs have done for you. You"ll be working with Major Hibson-I"m sure you remember her-for the boarding parties, and Commander Harmon, our senior LAC commander, but neither of them have reported in yet. Sergeant Major Hallowell is around somewhere, though. Page him and get him to go with you. We"ve still got a few days before the yard turns us loose, so if you see any minor changes you want, let me or the Exec know about them by supper."

"Yes, Ma"am." Tremaine braced to attention once more, returning to the attentive officer he always was on duty, and Harkness followed suit.

"Dismissed, gentlemen," Honor said, and smiled fondly as they left. She was glad she"d been able to meet them here, where she could relax the formality which would be the rule aboard ship without seeming to play favorites, and she was delighted to have them. The squadron"s crew lists were beginning to fill up, and while the officers and senior ratings looked just as solid as Admiral Cortez had promised, the junior petty officers and enlisted personnel looked just as green-or problematical-as the admiral had feared. It was good to pick up a few unantic.i.p.ated bright spots along the way.

She shook her head with another chuckle. Iris Babc.o.c.k! Lord, that must have been an interesting courtship! She considered it for another moment, then sighed, squared her shoulders, and marched back around her desk to the hydroponics report.

The waiting officers rose as Honor entered the briefing room aboard Vulcan. Cardones and LaFollet flanked her, and Jamie Candless, the number two armsman of her normal travel detachment, took up his position outside the hatch as it closed. She crossed to the data terminal at the head of the long conference table and sank into her chair. The other officers waited until she"d been seated, then sat back down themselves, and she let her eyes sweep over them.

The squadron"s personnel were still coming in, but the core of her senior officers was now in place, and Captain of the List Alice Truman faced her from the far end of the table, golden blonde and green-eyed, still the same st.u.r.dily built woman who"d been her second in command in Yeltsin six years before. Commander Angela Thurgood, Parna.s.sus" exec, sat beside Alice, and Honor suppressed a small smile, for Thurgood was just as golden-haired as Alice. Blondes weren"t all that rare in the Star Kingdom, but they weren"t especially common, either. Yet it seemed to be a tradition that whenever Honor saw Truman, her senior subordinate-male or female-would be one of them.

Captain Junior-Grade Allen MacGuire, Gudrid"s CO and the squadron"s third in command, sat to Alice"s left. MacGuire was a small man, twenty-five centimeters shorter than Honor, and another blond. He was the only one of her captains she hadn"t known previously, but she"d already discovered he had a lively sense of humor which would probably stand a Q-ship"s commander in good stead. He was also sharply intelligent, and he"d worked closely with Commander Schubert since his arrival. Between them, they"d managed to shave three more days off Gudrid"s projected completion date, which would have been enough to endear him to Honor even if she hadn"t been aware of what an a.s.set he would be in other ways.

Like Honor herself, Commander Courtney Stillman, MacGuire"s exec, was considerably taller than he was. She might be ten or twelve centimeters short of Honor"s height, but that still made her seem to tower over her CO. They were an odd-looking pair, and not just because of the alt.i.tude differential. Stillman was dark-skinned, with eyes an even darker brown than Honor"s, and she wore her close-cropped black hair at least as short as Honor had worn hers up until four years ago. She also seemed to have absolutely no sense of humor, yet she and MacGuire obviously got along together well.

And then there was Captain (JG) Samuel Houston Webster, Scheherazade"s CO. He was another officer who"d served with her in Basilisk, and he"d very nearly died of his wounds there. They"d served together again on Hanc.o.c.k Station at the start of the present war, when she"d commanded Admiral Mark Sarnow"s flagship. Webster had been on Sarnow"s staff, and it was good to see he"d gotten the promotion he deserved since. Not that the tall, gangling redhead had ever been likely not to be promoted. He had the distinctive "Webster Chin" that marked him as a scion of one of the RMN"s more powerful naval dynasties; fortunately, he also had the ability to deserve the advantages that chin brought with it.

Commander Augustus DeWitt, Webster"s exec, completed the gathering. DeWitt was another officer Honor didn"t know, but he looked competent and confident. He was brown-haired and brown-eyed, but his skin was as dark as Stillman"s, with the weathered look that seemed to mark all natives of Gryphon-otherwise known as Manticore-B V. Gryphon had the smallest population of any of the Manticore System"s inhabited planets (which, inhabitants of Sphinx and Manticore declared, was because only lunatics would live on a world with Gryphon"s climate), but it seemed to produce a disproportionate number of good officers and NCOs . . . most of whom seemed to feel a moral obligation to keep the sissies who lived on their sister worlds in line.

It was a good team, Honor thought. No doubt it was early to be making such judgments, yet she trusted her instincts. None of them thought it was going to be a picnic, but none of them seemed to see their a.s.signment as some sort of exile, either. That was good. In fact, that was very good, and she smiled at them.

"I"ve just received an update from BuPers," she said. "Another draft of five hundred personnel will be coming aboard Vulcan for us at zero-five-thirty. We don"t have complete packages on them, but it looks like we"ll at least be able to make a start on bringing your engineering section up to strength, Allen." She paused, and MacGuire nodded.

"That"s good news, Milady. Commander Schubert"s ready to test Fusion Two tomorrow, and I"d like to have a full crew section available when he does."

"It looks like you will," Honor said, then looked at Truman. "I"ve also just received our official mission brief," she said more soberly, "and it"s going to be as tough as we thought."

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