managed to keep the extra rocker, Senior Chief.'
Harkness blushed, for his had been a checkered career. He was far too good at his job for the Navy to dispense with his services, but he'd been up for chief petty officer over twenty times before he made it and kept it. His encounters with customs officers, and any Marine he met in a bar off-duty, were legendary, but he seemed to have reformed since entering Tremaine's orbit. Honor didn't understand exactly how the make-over had worked, but wherever Tremaine went, Harkness was sure to turn up shortly. He was a good thirty years older than the lieutenant, yet the two of them seemed to constitute a natural pair not even BuPers could break up. Which, she reflected, might be because BuPers recognized what a
'Uh, yes, Ma'am, I mean, Milady,' Harkness said.
'I'd like to see you go on keeping it,' she said a bit repressively. 'I don't anticipate any problems with customs,' Harkness' blush deepened, 'but we
'Oh, the Senior Chief doesn't do that anymore, Ma'am,' Tremaine assured her. 'His wife wouldn't like it.'
'His
'Uh, yes, Milady,' Harkness mumbled. 'Eight months now.'
'Really? Congratulations! Who is she?'
'Sergeant Major Babcock,' Tremaine supplied while Harkness positively squirmed, and Honor giggled. She couldn't help it. She
'T-that’s wonderful news, Senior Chief!'
'Thank you, Milady.' Harkness stole a sideways look at Tremaine, then grinned almost sheepishly. 'Actually, it
'I'm glad for you, Senior Chief. Really,' she said softly, squeezing his shoulder, and she was. Iris Babcock was the last person in the world she would have expected to marry Harkness, but now that she thought about it, she could see the possibilities. Babcock’s career had been as exemplary as Harkness' had been... colorful, and she was one of the best combat soldiers, and practitioners of
'Thank you, Milady,' the petty officer repeated, and she nodded briskly to them both.
'Well! I see why the Exec plugged you into Flight Ops, Scotty. Have you had a chance to look over your new boat bay?'
'No, Ma'am. Not yet.'
'Then why don't you go do that, and take the Senior Chief with you. I think you'll like what the yard dogs have done for you. You'll be working with Major Hibson, I'm sure you remember her, for the boarding parties, and Commander Harmon, our senior LAC commander, but neither of them have reported in yet. Sergeant Major Hallowell is around somewhere, though. Page him and get him to go with you. We've still got a few days before the yard turns us loose, so if you see any minor changes you want, let me or the Exec know about them by supper.'
'Yes, Ma'am.' Tremaine braced to attention once more, returning to the attentive officer he always was on duty, and Harkness followed suit.
'Dismissed, gentlemen,' Honor said, and smiled fondly as they left. She was glad she'd been able to meet them here, where she could relax the formality which would be the rule aboard ship without seeming to play favorites, and she was
She shook her head with another chuckle. Iris Babcock! Lord, that must have been an
The waiting officers rose as Honor entered the briefing room aboard
The squadrons personnel were still coming in, but the core of her senior officers was now in place, and Captain of the List Alice Truman faced her from the far end of the table, golden blonde and green-eyed, still the same sturdily built woman who'd been her second-in-command in Yeltsin six years before. Commander Angela Thurgood,
Captain Junior-Grade Allen MacGuire,
Like Honor herself, Commander Courtney Stillman, MacGuire’s exec, was considerably taller than he was. She might be ten or twelve centimeters short of Honor’s height, but that still made her seem to tower over her CO. They were an odd-looking pair, and not just because of the altitude differential. Stillman was dark-skinned, with eyes an even darker brown than Honor's, and she wore her close-cropped black hair at least as short as Honor had worn hers up until four years ago. She also seemed to have absolutely
And then there was Captain (JG) Samuel Houston Webster,
Commander Augustus DeWitt, Webster's exec, completed the gathering. DeWitt was another officer Honor didn't know, but he looked competent and confident. He was brown-haired and brown-eyed, but his skin was as dark as Stillman's, with the weathered look that seemed to mark all natives of Gryphon, otherwise known as Manticore-B V. Gryphon had the smallest population of any of the Manticore System's inhabited planets (which, inhabitants of Sphinx and Manticore declared, was because only lunatics would live on a world with Gryphon's climate), but it seemed to produce a disproportionate number of good officers and NCOs... most of whom seemed to feel a moral obligation to keep the sissies who lived on their sister worlds in line.
It was a good team, Honor thought. No doubt it was early to be making such judgments, yet she trusted