Brett Ingram, appointed captain of the
'Mike,' said Brett, who had already adapted a policy of informality onboard his ship, 'how is your engine room crew doing at their new jobs?'
Until three days before Mike had been a senior fusion technician at the main Eden power plant. At fifty-two years old he was the oldest person aboard. A robust, jolly man with a large beer belly, the younger crewmembers had already taken to calling him 'Dad'. He gave a semi-sour look at the question. 'We need a lot more training time,' he responded. 'But I think that over the past week I've been able to teach them enough to get this thing moving. Both engines are lit and at idle right now. We can move out whenever you give the word.'
'How about emergency procedures and safety?' Brett wanted to know. 'Have you been able to cover that?'
He shrugged. 'We've mostly been focusing on basic operations. We touched on safety a bit just as a natural course of that but as far as emergency procedure, we've hardly started.'
Brett nodded. That was about par for the course on this particular ship. They were attempting to crew the Owl with less than half of its normal complement and well over three-quarters of those soon-to-be-overworked crewmembers had never been aboard a naval vessel before. Brett had interviewed each one of them personally before allowing them aboard his ship. About the only thing that they were strong in was enthusiasm. He knew that they desperately needed more training time but he also knew that time was of the essence in this particular mission. The WestHem marines were going to be shoving off from Earth any day now and if the
'Do what you can, Mike,' Brett said. 'I'm forced to have utmost faith in you.'
'The drills will continue until we achieve something like efficiency,' Mike promised. 'I'll keep them awake day and night.'
He smiled his approval at this and then turned to his weapons officer. 'Chad, how are things going on your end? Will your people accidentally blow us up with those nukes or what?'
Mike was a twenty-nine-year-old nuclear technician at Farmington Laboratories, the semi-private, semi- government operated facility that produced all nuclear material and weaponry. With his doctorate in physics, he was the best educated of the crew, indeed of most Martians in general. 'Well,' he said, 'we got those new detonators and guidance packages installed without blowing anything up.' He chuckled a little. 'Who knows? The odds are better than even that the things will even work when we fire them.'
Brett, who was experiencing stress unlike anything he'd ever imagined before, didn't find this remark all that funny. 'I trust that the actual odds of the weapons working as they're supposed to is a little higher than that,' he said, his voice somewhat icy. 'I'd hate to travel all the way inside the orbit of Mercury, sneak into a WestHem naval formation, and then fire off a torpedo only to have it fail.'
Mike's face grew more serious. 'They'll work, Brett,' he assured him. 'And my people will be tip-top at their jobs by the time we get out there. I promise.'
Brett offered a strained smile. 'As with Mike,' he said, 'I'm forced to take you at your word. I'll get us to the WestHems. You make sure those nukes do what they're supposed to when we get there.'
The pre-launch briefing continued for another ten minutes, with Brett asking for status reports from the rest of the newly frocked officers under his command. In each case the story was pretty much the same as Mike's and Chad's. Their men (and women - more than a quarter of the enlisted personnel were female) were eager to learn, eager to fight, but still quite lacking in a complete understanding of their jobs. Training would need to be intensive and frantic on the three-week trip to the interception point.
'Sleep is going to have to be a luxury on this voyage,' Brett told them. 'I want full training rotations for all departments covering every conceivable operation on this ship. I want every person on board cross-trained in at least two other department's responsibilities. And then there are the damage control and firefighting drills. Those will need to be fit in there somewhere as well. And that's not even to mention the general quarters assignments and training. We'll be working on that one at least twice a day, maybe more depending on how much they suck at it.'
His officers looked at him solemnly, none of them speaking but most of them nodding in agreement at his words.
'Okay then,' Brett said. 'We have our consumables loaded and stowed, our propellant tanks full, our reactors turning and ready to burn. What do you say we get this thing moving? Get everyone to his or her stations. I want to leave this dock in two hours.'
Thirty-two thousand kilometers away, in a high equatorial orbit of the planet, the
Commander Warren, strapped lightly into the captain's chair on the bridge to keep from floating upward in the zero gravity condition, yawned and stretched his arms, more than a little bored with this assignment, particularly since they had already been out in space for more than four months. Morale among the crew was strained to say the least, a fact that was augmented by the strict rationing of their remaining consumables. And they were also short fifteen crewmembers, mostly the cleaning and cooking staff. Those fifteen had been the Martians on the crew and they had all been confined to their quarters under guard for the duration of the mission. As such, the meager meals that were produced with the dwindling rations were now tasteless as paste and the halls and storerooms of the ship were now cluttered with debris.
'John,' Warren said to Lieutenant Commander Lovington, his executive officer, 'do you think you can handle the shots of Libby on the next orbit? I need to go to my cabin for a bit and meditate.' By which he meant that he was going to masturbate to stored pornographic pictures on his computer terminal and then take a nap.
'Sure, cap,' said Lovington, who was perhaps the most frustrated person on board. After all, it was he that was in charge of dealing with the crew problems. The numbing routine of spying on their own possession coupled with the knowledge that they would not be relieved for more than six weeks had caused more than its share of fights over petty matters. 'Are we running the full spectrum on the MPG base there again?'
'As always,' Warren told him. 'We have to see how our little greenie friends are playing with their toys, don't we?'
