Navy.
'Not a bad strategic decision,' White Haven complimented him now, and took a sip from his own glass. Then he set it down and looked up at Lieutenant Robards. 'Is Captain Albertson ready for that briefing, Nathan?'
'Yes, My Lord. At your convenience.'
'Um.' White Haven looked down into his glass for several seconds, then nodded at something no one else could see. 'Would you go and tell him that we’ll be—oh, another thirty or forty minutes or so?'
'Of course, My Lord.' It was a moderately abrupt change in plans, but Robards’ brown eyes didn’t even flicker at his dismissal. He simply drained his own glass, bowed to his admiral’s guests, and vanished almost as unobtrusively as Chief Jamieson had.
'A well-trained young man,' William Alexander observed as the hatch closed behind him, then looked at his brother. 'May I assume there was a reason you sent him on his way?'
'There was,' White Haven agreed. He looked up from his wine and gazed at both his guests. 'Actually, there were two, but the more pressing is my feeling that there have to be more reasons for the two of you to come out here than the official communique listed. I also have an unhappy suspicion about what one of those reasons might be. Under the circumstances, I thought I’d clear the decks, as it were, so we could discuss my suspicion from a purely Manticoran viewpoint.'
'Ah?' William sipped wine once more, regarded his brother with a half-quizzical, half-wary expression, then crooked an eyebrow, inviting him to continue.
'I’ve been trying to assemble Eighth Fleet for the better part of a T-year now,' White Haven said flatly. 'The process was supposed to be complete over nine standard months ago, and I still haven’t received the strength my original orders specified. More to the point, perhaps, I have received the units I was promised by Grayson, Erewhon, and the other Allied navies. What I
He paused, and Caparelli and William looked at one another, then turned back to him.
'You should,' Caparelli said quietly after a moment, 'and they aren’t. Going to turn up tomorrow I mean, My Lord. We won’t have them to send you for at least another two T-months.'
'That’s too long, My Lord,' White Haven said in an equally quiet voice. 'We’ve already waited too long. Have you seen last month’s estimates on the Peep strength at Barnett?'
'I have,' Caparelli admitted.
'Then you know Theisman’s numbers are going up faster than mine are. We’re giving them
'We don’t know how free McQueen is to make her own calls,' Caparelli pointed out. 'Pat Givens is still working on that. Her analysts don’t have a lot to go on, but they make it no more than a twenty-five percent chance that the Committee would give any naval officer the authority to build her own strategy. They’re still too afraid of a military coup.'
'With all due respect, Sir Thomas, Pat is wrong on this one,' White Haven replied flatly. 'I’ve fought McQueen, and in my personal opinion, she’s the best CO they have left. I think they know that, too, but everything ONI has ever picked up on her has also emphasized her personal ambition. If we know about that, then Saint-Just and State Security know about it, as well. Given that, I can’t see the Peeps picking her to head their war office unless they intended all along to give her at the very least a major role in determining their strategy.'
'I don’t quite see your logic, Ham,' William said after a moment.
'Think it through, Willie. If you know someone is a threat to your regime, and you go ahead and put him —or, in this case, her—in a position of power anyway, then you have to have some overriding motive—something which you consider more important than the potential danger she represents. If the Committee of Public Safety called McQueen home and made her Secretary of War, it was because they figured their military situation was so screwed up they needed a professional...
White Haven shrugged.
'If they followed that logic, then they’d be not simply fools but
'I can’t fault your reasoning,' Caparelli admitted, rubbing a big, weary hand across his face and leaning back in his chair. 'Pat’s analysts have followed the same trail, and it may be that they’re double-thinking themselves into mistakes. They share your opinion as to the reason the Committee recalled her to Haven; they just question whether or not a PRH run by the Committee of Public Safety and the Office of State Security is institutionally
'Maybe officially, but it’s obvious some of their fleet commanders and commissioners have already made some informal changes,' White Haven argued. 'Theisman, for example. His tactics at Seabring—and, for that matter, his decision to release their version of the missile pod for use at Adler—all indicate that he, at least, figures he can count on his commissioner to back him up. That’s dangerous, Sir. A divided Peep command structure works in our favor; one in which the political and military commanders work together and trust one another is another matter entirely. But the point where McQueen is concerned, is that the Committee may choose to allow an exception—another ‘special relationship’—between her and
'You may be right, Ham,' William said, 'but there’s only so much blood in the turnip. Whatever we’d like, we simply don’t have the ships to send you right now. We’re trying, but we’re tapped out.'
'But—' White Haven began, only to stop as Caparelli raised a hand.
'I know what you’re going to say, My Lord, but Lord Alexander is right. We simply don’t have them. Or, rather, we have too many other commitments and we ran our maintenance cycles too far into the red in the push to get as deep into Peep territory as we are now.'
'I see.' White Haven sat back, drumming his fingers on the desk in narrow-eyed thought. As a fleet commander, he lacked access to the comprehensive, Navy-wide kind of data Caparelli saw regularly, but the availability numbers must be even worse than he’d thought.
'How bad is it?' he asked after a moment.
'Not good,' Caparelli admitted. 'As the officer who took Trevor’s Star, you must have been aware of how we were deferring regular overhauls on the ships under your command to let you maintain the numbers to capture the system.'
He paused, and White Haven nodded. Almost twenty percent of the ships he’d taken into the final engagement had been long overdue for regular maintenance refits... and it had shown in their readiness states.
'It hasn’t gotten any better,' the First Space Lord told him. 'In fact, for your private information, we’ve had no choice but to pull in just over a quarter of our total ships of the wall.'
'A
'A quarter,' Caparelli confirmed. 'And if we could, I’d have made it thirty percent. We worked the Fleet too hard to get to where we are now, My Lord. We’ve