construction were pretty much classified since the war had begun, and someone of his rank hardly had access to the latest, most up-to-date information. But the fact that the name didn't appear on any of the prewar lists suggested that whatever else
He grinned at his own imagination and walked briskly onward.
'Scooter!'
PO Smith looked up in astonishment as someone shouted his nickname, and then he grinned widely as a familiar face blended out of the crowd. The short, hairy, apelike, amazingly ugly man looked as if he ought to walk on his knuckles. He also wore undress coveralls like Smith's own, with the same three chevrons on his sleeve, and the name patch above his breast pocket said 'Maxwell, Richard.'
'Well, well! If it isn't the Man Who Dropped the Spanner!' Smith observed, reaching out to shake a hirsute paw, and Maxwell grimaced.
'Give me a break, Scooter! That was—what? Six damn T-years ago?'
'Really?' Smith's gray eyes glinted devilishly. 'It seems like just yesterday. Maybe that was because the results were so... spectacular. And expensive. I don't get to see a drive room main bus bar short out everyday, you know.'
'Oh, yeah? Well, one of these days I'm gonna be there when
'In your dreams, Silver Spanner. In your dreams.'
'Pride goeth, buddy,' Maxwell said darkly.
'Ha!' Smith deactivated his locker's counter-grav and let it sink to the deck, then looked around curiously. He'd expected the deck guide to lead him to
'You got any idea what it is we're up to, Maxie?' he asked much more seriously. 'I asked around, but the people I talked to knew zero-zip about it.'
'Dunno,' Maxwell admitted, removing his black beret to scratch the right side of his head. 'Friend of mine in BuShips told me the
'You neither, huh?' Smith frowned. RMN personnel orders usually contained at least a brief section on the duty slot one was to be assigned to, not just a ship name with no additional information. Leaving that out of one set of orders could have been simple bureaucratic sloppiness; leaving it out of two started sounding a lot more like a deliberate security measure. But if
'Attention Personnel Draft Seven-Seven-Six-Two,' the voice of the boat bay officer crackled suddenly from the gallery speakers. 'First call for transportation to HMS
'Guess we better get going,' Maxwell observed, and the two of them set off down the gallery, towing their lockers behind them. Smith was in the lead as they approached the designated personnel tube, and he groaned aloud as he saw what rested in the docking buffers on the other side of the thick armorplast wall.
'What?' Maxwell asked, unable to see around his taller friend, and Smith sighed.
'It's a damned trash hauler,' he said glumly. 'Crap! You'd think they could at least give us a shuttle with
'A shuttle's a shuttle,' Maxwell said with a dismissive shrug. 'I don't need windows. I've already seen a space station, and I've already seen a repair ship. All I hope is the run over is long enough for me to get a little shuteye.'
'Maxie, you're a cretin,' Smith said sourly.
''Course I am!' Maxwell agreed cheerfully, then frowned in sudden suspicion. 'What's a cretin?' he demanded.
'Ten-
Captain Alice Truman watched the remote view on her briefing room display as the knife-edged command cut through the confused hum which had filled the gallery of HMS
'Welcome aboard your new ship,' she told them in a pronounced Gryphon accent. 'My name is McBride.
A falling pin would have sounded like an anvil in the silence that answered her, and her smile became something like a grin.
'I didn't think anyone would.' She raised her right hand and snapped her fingers, and half a dozen petty officers stepped forward with memo boards under their arms. 'When you hear your name called, answer to it and fall in behind whoever called it,' she went on more briskly. 'They'll get you logged into quarters and give you your slots on the watch bill. Don't drag ass about getting yourselves squared away, either, people! There will be an orientation briefing for all new personnel at twenty-one-hundred, and I
McBride gazed out over the newcomers for another ten seconds, then nodded, and a brawny senior chief stepped up beside her and keyed his board alive.
'Abramowitz, Carla!' he read.
'Yo!' A woman near the rear of the formation raised a hand and stepped forward with her locker while people moved apart in front of her to let her pass.
'Carter, Jonathan!' the senior chief read, and Truman switched off the display and looked up as her executive officer ushered two lieutenants, one a JG, and a lieutenant commander into her briefing room.
'Our new arrivals, Ma'am.' Like the Bosun, Commander Haughton was from Gryphon, although his accent was less severe, and Truman cocked her golden-haired head as the three officers formed a line in front of the clear-topped briefing room conference table and came to attention. She could see burning curiosity in all three sets of eyes and hid a small, amused smile.
'Lieutenant Commander Barbara Stackowitz, reporting for duty, Ma'am!' the gray-eyed, brown-haired woman at the end of the line said crisply, and Truman nodded to her, then looked at the next officer in line.
'Lieutenant Michael Gearman, reporting for duty, Captain,' he said. He was dark-haired and eyed, thin and