Michael pulled up the holopix of his last visit with Anna. He knew full well that the sight of her would do nothing to help his mood, but he did not care. Then there she was, and for the umpteenth time Michael marveled at her beauty, wondered at the luck that had made him the man she wanted in her life. Well, he reminded himself, so he hoped.
Anna’s face was beyond striking. It was breathtaking. Dominated by large green eyes, her geneering- enhanced face drew its classic beauty from every one of Old Earth’s major gene pools. The mix of Asian, Chinese, African, and European bloodlines had produced a result that was all of them and none of them at the same time. Michael forgot everything as he stared at a face the color of dark honey, his whole being falling helplessly into eyes framed from above by fine black hair cut unfashionably short at the sides and set wide over sharply defined pink- dusted cheekbones.
No two ways about it; Anna Cheung was some work of art.
Michael commed his neuronics to stop the holopix. If he watched any longer, he would feel even worse than he already did. With a heartfelt prayer that things would work out for the two of them, he turned over, determined this time to get to sleep.
Friday, July 2, 2399, UD
The
Michael, Aaron Stone, and the rest of
Everyone was stumped. Nobody knew why the meeting had been called. Something was up, that much was clear, but Captain Constanza was not acting normally. It was no secret that Constanza did not like face-to-face meetings; in particular, she did not like groups as large as the one that waited for her now. She much preferred to use her neuronics for virtual conferences. Why Constanza was breaking the habit of a lifetime had been the subject of an energetic debate conducted in carefully hushed tones.
Thus far, the most popular theory was that Constanza’s time as
Michael-and many more in the conference room that day, he suspected-wanted this to be the reason so badly that it hurt, if only for
Michael had a leaden feeling in his stomach. He thought he knew even if his peers had howled down his theory. Please, God, he thought, not a program change; anything but a program change. He and Anna had booked a weekend away, and more than anything else, he wanted that weekend. He would give anything to get away from
“Attention! Captain on deck.” The executive officer’s crisp tones snapped Michael and all the others to their feet.
Captain Constanza strode into the conference room and went straight to the lectern. She ignored Morrissen.
“Sit down, everyone.” Constanza paused for a moment, looking around at the mass of
“I’ll make this as short as I can.” Constanza paused again.
“Doesn’t look too comfortable,” Michael whispered to Stone, who nodded.
“The reason for this briefing is to let you all know that we have been retasked by Fleet in response to new intelligence. .”
A barely audible sigh swept through the room. No spacer liked program changes.
“. . suggesting that mership traffic on the trade routes between the Old Earth Alliance and the Federated Worlds is to be the target of significant pirate activity over the next few months. Our task will be to provide enhanced security for all ships using those routes. We will be part of Task Group 225.2 under the tactical control of Rear Admiral Chavez in
Constanza was met by a stunned silence. The personal plans of
“No? Okay. Commander Nandutu?”
“Thank you, sir. Now. .”
Michael tuned out. He would look at the detailed intelligence summary in his own time. One thing was for sure: He would not be asking any questions of Constanza, Nandutu, or anyone else. He cursed softly under his breath. His long-planned and much-anticipated weekend with Anna had been flushed down the crapper. Damn, damn, damn, he thought despairingly.
Finally Nandutu finished and sat down. Michael had taken in not a single word. Constanza came to the lectern again.
“That’s all I want to cover right now. The operations planning group will have the preliminary operations order out by Monday. .”
Bang goes their weekend, Michael thought.
“. . so I think that does it. Before we close, are there any questions?”
“Yes, sir.”
Michael peered around the officer in front of him to see who the brave soul was. “Foolhardy idiot” might be a better description. According to his neuronics, it was some lieutenant commander from navigation. Jenkins was his name. Michael had not met him yet.
“Go on,” Constanza muttered. Her body language was unmistakable. She was not interested in questions.
“Thank you, sir. As a member of the ops planning group, I had a chance to study the intelligence summary before the meeting, and I must say that while it is long on the bloodstained history of these pirates, it is short on the tactical detail we need to put together an effective operation: their order of battle, ship types, weapons systems, likely tactics, logistics arrangements, that sort of thing. Now-”
Constanza was not having any of it.
“Thank you for your insight,” she spit venomously. Jenkins blanched and quickly sat down. “I think you’ll find we have all we need to deal with what are another bunch of undisciplined, murdering crooks. If these pirates really are the Karlisle Alliance as Fleet intelligence is telling us, we whipped them back in ’92, so I don’t think we’ll have any problem doing the same thing again. In fact, I look forward to meeting them. A bunch of pirates should give us some useful live firing practice.” Constanza looked pleased at the thought.
Michael leaned over to Stone. “She should be careful what she asks for,” he whispered.
Stone nodded. “I know, I know. She might get it.”
Michael smiled. By now, Stone knew it was one of his favorite sayings, knew it well enough to finish it for him.