The magazine's a total write-off; Laser Three and Missile Four are on line in local control, and we're repressurizing and rigging new runs to them now, but we lost thirty-one people, including Dr. McFee and two sick berth attendants, and we've got wounded.'
His voice was harsh with pain, and Honor's eyes were dark as she nodded, but for all that, they both knew
'I came in too fat and stupid,' McKeon went on bitterly. 'If I'd only had my sidewalls up, maybe—'
'Not your fault,' Honor interrupted. 'We didn't have any reason to expect Grayson to open fire on us, and even if we had, it was
McKeon's lips tightened, but he said no more, and Honor was glad. Whatever was happening, one thing they didn't need was for both of them to blame themselves for it.
'I'll have Fritz Montoya over there in five minutes,' Honor went on when she was certain he'd dropped it. 'We'll transfer your wounded to our sickbay once he's sure they're stabilized.'
'Thank you, Ma'am.' There was less self-blame in McKeon's voice, but no less anger.
'But why in God's name did they fire?' Alice Truman asked from her quadrant of the split screen, green eyes baffled as she voiced the question for them all. 'It's crazy!'
'Agreed.' Honor leaned back, her own eyes hard, but Alice was right. Even if negotiations had broken down completely, the Graysons must be insane to fire on her. They were already worried over the Masadans—surely they must realize what the Fleet would do to them for this!
'It seems crazy to me, too,' she went on after a moment, her voice grim, 'but as of right now, this squadron is on a war footing. I intend to enter attack range of Grayson and demand an explanation and the stand- down of their fleet. I also intend to demand to speak to our people planet-side. If any of my demands is refused, or if our delegation has been harmed in any way, we will engage and destroy the Grayson Navy. Is that understood?'
Her subordinates nodded.
'Commander Truman, your ship will take point. Commander McKeon, I want you tucked in astern. Stay tight and tie into
'Yes, Ma'am,' her captains replied in unison.
'Very well, then, people. Let's be about it.'
'Captain? I have a transmission from Grayson,' Lieutenant Metzinger said, and the tension on
But Metzinger wasn't finished.
'It's from Ambassador Langtry,' she added, and Honor's eyebrows rose.
'From Sir Anthony?'
'Yes, Ma'am.'
'Put it on my screen.'
Honor felt a surge of relief as Sir Anthony's face appeared before her, for the wall of his embassy office was clearly visible behind him, and Reginald Houseman stood beside the ambassador's chair. She'd been afraid the entire diplomatic staff was in Grayson custody; if they were still in the safety of their own embassy, the situation might not be totally out of control after all. But then the ambassador's grim, almost frightened expression registered. And where was Admiral Courvosier?
'Captain Harrington.' The ambassador's voice was taut. 'Grayson Command Central has just picked up a hyper footprint which I assume—hope—is your squadron. Be advised Masadan warships are patrolling the Yeltsin System.' Honor stiffened. Could it be those LACs
But the prerecorded message was still playing, and the ambassador's next words shattered her train of thought like a hammer on crystal.
'Assume any ship encountered is hostile, Captain, and be advised there are at least two—I repeat, at least
Every drop of blood drained from Honor's face. No! The Admiral
'We're in serious trouble down here, Captain,' Langtry's recorded voice went on. 'I don't know why they've held off this long, but nothing Grayson has left can possibly stop them. Please advise me of your intentions as soon as possible. Langtry clear.'
The screen blanked, and she stared at it, frozen in her command chair. It was a lie. A cruel, vicious lie! The Admiral was alive. He was
But Ambassador Langtry had no reason to lie.
She closed her eyes, feeling Nimitz at her shoulder, and remembered Courvosier as she'd left him. Remembered that impish face, the twinkle in those blue eyes. And behind those newer memories were others, twenty-seven
And behind the loss, honing the agony, was her guilt. She'd run out on him. He'd wanted her to stay and let her go only because she insisted, and because
It was her fault. He'd needed her, and she hadn't been there ... and that had killed him.
Silence enfolded
'Orders, Captain?' Andreas Venizelos broke the crew's silence at last, and more than one person flinched as his quiet voice intruded upon their captain's grief.
Honor's nostrils flared. The sound of her indrawn breath was harsh, and the heel of her hand scrubbed angrily, brutally, at her wet face as she squared her shoulders.
'Record for transmission, Lieutenant Metzinger,' she said in a hammered-iron voice none of them had ever heard, and the communications officer swallowed.
'Recording, Ma'am,' she said softly.
'Ambassador Langtry,' Honor said in that same, deadly voice. 'Your message is received and understood. Be advised that my squadron has already been engaged by and destroyed three LACs I now presume to have been Masadan. We've suffered casualties and damage, but my combat power is unimpaired.'
She inhaled again, feeling her officers' and ratings' eyes on her.
'I will continue to Grayson at my best speed. Expect my arrival in Grayson orbit in—' she checked her astrogation readout '—approximately four hours twenty-eight minutes from now.'
She stared into the pickup, and the corner of her mouth twitched. There was steel in her brown eyes, smoking from anger's forge and tempered by grief and guilt, and her voice was colder than space.
'Until I have complete information, it will be impossible to formulate detailed plans, but you may inform the