system's territorial limit extended half a standard light-day from its primary. Technically, then, neither belligerent could attack the other within twelve light-hours of Air's primary… but Rienzi had already violated that law once, and every sensor Ajax boasted watched her carefully as she cracked on a few more gravities of acceleration.

'Hold the roof of the wedge towards her,' Nessler said. His voice over the ship's address system sounded cool, almost bored. Mincio watched from her console on the other side of the bridge as his long, aristocratic fingers moved, then glanced at Kapp with a raised eyebrow.

'We're in energy range, Ma'am,' the petty officer explained quietly, 'but the bastards can't shoot through an impeller band. They want to try ambushing us again, they'll have to use sublight weapons that can maneuver after us.'

Mincio nodded thanks and returned her attention to her own display.

'Captain, we're picking up radar and lidar!' Harpe announced sharply. 'Looks like their fire control's trying to lock us up.'

'In that case, you may launch the decoys, Bosun,' Nessler said in the same disinterested tone. He touched another control.

The Ajax 's hull twitched minutely, then rang again in a note that syncopated harmonics of the first. 'Decoys away!' the Bosun reported from the Combat Information Center.

That armored citadel at the center of the ship was properly the First Officer's station during combat. Harpe was there instead of Mincio because Harpe knew what she was doing. Edith Mincio might as well have been on the ground for all the good she was now.

She could have stayed on Air when the pinnace lifted Kapp and the spacers back to the cruiser. She would have survived that way, but she wasn't sure she could have lived with herself afterward. It didn't matter now.

Twenty-one seconds to the expiration of the deadline. Twenty… nineteen… eighteen…

'Enemy is launching missiles!' reported Petty Officer Bowen, who manned the console nearest Mincio's. His voice was higher than it had been when he showed her how to adjust the scale of her display.

Two, six, eight, fifteen miniature starships, reaching for the Ajax 's life with laser heads….

Because the ships were still within easy optical range of one another, the decoys that mimicked the cruiser's electronic signature were of no defensive value: Peep missiles could guide on the visual image of their target. Nessler had kept the Ajax close instead of gaining maneuvering room before the deadline as a calculated risk. This way the missiles would be at the start of their acceleration curves and so more vulnerable to Ajax 's point defense lasers.

If the lasers worked, that is.

'Engaging with lasers,' reported a laconic female voice that Mincio didn't recognize. The buzz of high- energy oscillators added minute notes to the vibration of a cruiser underway with all her systems live. Five missiles, then five more, tore apart or diverged in vectors from the smooth curve they'd been following. Vaporized metal expanded behind the missiles at the point they went ballistic and therefore harmless. Two more disappeared, but they only had to get to within twenty or thirty thousand kilometers and the lasers weren't going to stop them all after all and…

Ajax rang with a quick shock as a single bomb-pumped laser smashed at her sidewall. The over-aged, under-maintained Melungeon sidewall generators were no match for the power of a modern laser head, but the angle was bad. The laser smashed through the passive defenses and threadbare radiation shielding like a battering ram, but it was an ill-aimed ram that somehow missed her hull completely. Simultaneously the remaining Peep missiles failed, one in a low-order explosion instead of mere loss of guidance.

'Bosun, lock them up,' Nessler ordered. 'Radar and lidar both. I want a lock so hard you can give me a hull map.'

'Aye, aye, Sir!'

Despite her own tension, Mincio recognized the glee in Harpe's reply and darted another glance at Kapp.

'Skipper wants the Bosun to hit 'em hard enough with our fire control to burn out their threat receivers, Ma'am,' the petty officer whispered. 'Don't know if it'll do any—'

'Number Four battery down!' a voice with a Melungeon accent said. 'Five minute, five minute only say Ms. Lewis! We back in five minute!'

'Enemy launching—' said Bowen. His voice changed. 'Holy shit! Those are people! They're throwing out bodies!'

'The crew tried to mutiny!' Nessler said, at last sounding excited. 'They're throwing out mutineers!'

'Christ, that one's moving! ' Bowen said. 'They're alive!'

Mincio instinctively increased her display's magnification. She blinked at the bodies falling astern as Rienzi continued to accelerate away from them. The victims had been alive when they left the airlock without suits. It seemed very unlikely to Mincio that any of them were still alive by the time Bowen spoke. She felt a little nauseous at the thought, but this was war.

The countdown had reached zero without her noticing it. She reduced the magnification so that the drifting corpses were merely specks lost against the immensity of the Rienzi 's hull.

'Enemy launching!' Bowen said once more.

'Stand by point def—' Nessler said, professionally calm again.

'They're abandoning ship!' Bowen screamed. 'That's their boats! That's not missiles!'

'Do not fire!' Nessler said. 'I repeat, do not fire point defense!'

Ajax continued to drive outward. On the optical screen the Rienzi lost detail as Ajax 's enhancement program segued slowly from sharpening the image to creating it.

'Sir!' called Harpe. 'Sir! Those weren't mutineers going out the lock, those were the officers! Those worthless dole-swilling bastards killed their officers when we locked them up rather than fight!'

'Yes,' Nessler said. 'I rather think they did.'

Six smaller craft — pinnaces and cutters — and two great cargo lighters had left the Rienzi. As they braked away under reaction thrusters, fighting to clear the safety perimeter of their mother ship's impeller wedge, the cruiser's image started to swell, losing definition. Mincio thought something had gone wrong with her display.

Rienzi brightened into a plasma fireball. A front of stripped atoms swept inexorably across the fleeing light craft, catching them without even the protection of their own impeller wedges, buffeting them from their intended courses for a few moments before the boats' structures and all aboard them dissolved into hellfire.

The bubble of sun-hot destruction continued to expand. Air's upper atmosphere began to fluoresce in response.

'One of the officers survived long enough to scuttle her,' Nessler said. He sounded either awestruck or horrified; Mincio wasn't sure of her own emotions, either.

Bowen stood at his console. 'Guess our buddies from the Imp have an escort to Hell, now,' he said. He gave the optical screen a one-finger salute. 'And a bloody good thing it is!'

* * *

Hope was a blue-gray jewel in the main optical screen. Because Ajax was in clockwise orbit, the planet's apparent rotation was very slow. The survivors of L'Imperieuse were drawn up in a double rank across the forward bulkhead.

Nessler handed the Melungeon petty officer her wages in currency — a mixture of League and Melungeon bills, the incidental fruits of the poker game that gained him the use of the cruiser. They exchanged salutes, which in the Melungeon's case meant the eye, ear, and mouth gesture that Mincio still found unsettling.

'That's the last one, Nessler,' she said, then to be sure double-checked the database she'd created during

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