Yeltsin System, but he couldn't. Even knowing Yu would have been doing just that—and making it look effortless— only made him more angry and restless, and fatigue wasn't helping. He hadn't slept in thirty hours, and his body cried out for rest, but he banished the temptation sternly. Sleep was out of the question.
It had taken over twelve hours to run down the circuits and find the lock-out in the command chair's arm rest. The Sword was humiliatingly certain the infidel engineers could have done it much more quickly, but Mount and Hara were dead, Valentine, Timmons, and Lindemann had escaped the ship, and that
Yu had gotten clean away by the time they'd regained control of the ship's systems, yet there'd been no possibility of aborting the attack. Seizing
Simonds paced more rapidly, unwilling to admit, even to himself, how much he'd counted on having Yu, or at least Manning, available. Lieutenant Commander Workman was doing an adequate job in Engineering, but Ash was the best tactical officer available, and his obsession with gravity anomalies at a time like this proved how poor a substitute for Manning he was.
Just as he himself was a poor substitute for Yu, a tiny, frightened voice whispered deep at the Sword's weary core.
'RD One-Seven reports another drone launch, Captain.'
'Projected course?'
'Like the others, Ma'am. They're sweeping a sixty-degree cone in front of
'Thank you, Carol.' Honor was already turning towards her com link and missed the ensign's smile of pleasure at the use of her first name.
'You're our resident expert,' she told the face on her small screen. 'How likely are they to pick up the grav pulses?'
'Almost certain to, now that they're inside our drone shell,' McKeon replied promptly, 'but I doubt they'll figure them out. Until Admiral Hemphill got involved, no one on
Honor smiled sourly, and McKeon grinned at her. Both of them had reason to remember Lady Sonja Hemphill with less than joy, but Honor had to admit that, this time, 'Horrible Hemphill' had gotten something right.
'Besides,' McKeon went on, 'the pulses are directional, and the repetition rate is so slow it's unlikely they'll get more than a few pulses off any one RD before they're out of the transmission path. Without more than that, even the best analysis won't recognize what they're actually hearing.'
'Um.' Honor rubbed the tip of her nose. No doubt Alistair was right, but if
'Well, there's nothing we can do about it.' Except hope no one over there was feeling clever. McKeon nodded as if he'd heard her mental qualifier, and she checked the time.
They were two and a half hours out of Grayson orbit; they should enter
'Sir! Sword Simonds!' Simonds whipped around at Lieutenant Ash's excited cry. 'Two impeller sources, Sir! They just popped up out of nowhere!'
Simonds crossed the bridge in a few, quick strides and peered at Ash's display. The crimson dots of hostile gravity signatures burned steadily, just under twenty-four light-minutes off
'Enemy's base velocity five-six-six-seven-two KPS, Sir.' Ash's voice was flatter as he took refuge in the mechanics of his report.
'Our velocity?'
'Six-four-five-two-eight KPS, Sir, but they're inside us. They're making up on us because their radius is so much smaller.'
Simonds clenched his jaw and scrubbed at his bloodshot eyes. How? How had the bitch
He lowered his hand from his eyes and glared at the display while he tried to think. How she'd done it didn't matter. He told himself that firmly, even while a superstitious voice whispered that it did. What mattered was that she was inside him ... and her vector was curving out towards him. The closure rate was twelve thousand KPS and growing; that meant she'd be into missile range in three hours, long before he would be able to fire on Grayson.
He had plenty of acceleration still in reserve, but not enough. All she had to do was tighten her course back down and she could turn inside him forever. He couldn't get close enough to attack the planet without entering her range, and
'Come eighty degrees to starboard and increase acceleration to four hundred eighty gravities!'
'Aye, aye, Sir,' the helmsman replied. 'Coming eight-oh degrees to starboard. Increasing acceleration to four-eight-oh gravities.'
Ash looked at his commander in surprise, and the Sword swallowed an urge to snarl at him. Instead, he turned his back and slid his aching body into the command chair. Its displays deployed smoothly, and he peered at the tactical repeater, waiting to see Harrington's response.
'I don't believe it! The sorry son-of-a—' Andreas Venizelos caught himself. 'I mean, he's breaking off, Ma'am.'
'No, he isn't. Not yet, anyway.' Honor steepled her fingers under her triangular chin. 'This is an instinct reaction, Andy. We surprised him, and he doesn't want to get any closer than he has to while he thinks it over.'
'She's accelerating directly away at four-point-seven-zero KPS squared, Ma'am,' Cardones reported, and Honor nodded. She didn't expect it to last, but for now
'Punch us up a pursuit course, Steve. I want his relative accel held to two-fifty gees or so.'
'Aye, aye, Ma'am,' DuMorne replied, and she leaned back and watched
Simonds caught himself dry-washing his hands in his lap and made himself stop.
The range had opened to over twenty-four and a half light-minutes, yet Harrington knew
No wonder she was content to let him run! He'd wasted precious time trying to evade someone who could see every move he made, and by the time he killed his present velocity and came back into missile range—assuming she
He growled under his breath and kneaded his cheeks. What Manticoran ships had already done to the