'But... but she's still in Yeltsin!'
'You really ought to read the 'faxes occasionally,' Ginger replied. 'She's been back for over a week. And a certain well-placed informant of mine who's
'My God,' Aubrey murmured. He warned himself not to get too excited. After all, Lady Harrington had been all but forcibly banished after her scandalous duels. It was entirely possible she was being shuffled off to exactly the sort of oblivion Aubrey had assumed this assignment must be, but he couldn't believe it. The woman the newbies had dubbed 'the Salamander' from her habit of always being where the fire was hottest was too good a combat commander for that. And it hadn't exactly been the Navy's idea to put her on half-pay to begin with. If the Fleet had her back again,
'Thought that might cheer you up a bit, Wonder Boy,' Ginger said. 'You always did want a shot at the glory, didn't you?' He blushed fiery red, but she only chuckled and patted him on the shoulder again. 'I'm sure that as soon as Lady Harrington realizes what a sterling soul you are, she'll put you to work on her own command deck.'
'Oh, give me a break, Ginger!' he said, laughing almost against his will, and she grinned.
'That's better! And...' she paused and cocked her head '...I do believe they're announcing our shuttle.'
That had been fourteen hours ago, and now Aubrey sighed gratefully as he towed his locker into his assigned temporary berthing bay on its counter-grav. He'd seen entirely too many berthing bays since joining the Navy, but at least he shouldn't have to put up with this one for long. The second-class petty officer who'd rounded up his draft on
The bay assignments had been made on an alphabetical basis, and Aubrey had been the lone overflow from the rest of his draft. He was used to finding himself at the end of any Navy list of names, but aside from himself, the bay was empty at the moment, and he missed his fellow students as he peered around the compartment. He towed his locker across to check the bulkhead chart, and his eyes brightened. There were still two bottom bunks left, and he shoved his ID chip into the slot and painted one of them for his own use. He heard feet behind him as a small knot of uniforms entered the bay, and he plucked his chip free and stepped back to clear the chart for the newcomers. He towed his locker across to his freshly assigned bunk, shoved it into the space under it, and sat on the bunk, grateful to get off his weary feet.
'You hear who's in command of this shit squadron?' someone asked, and Aubrey glanced at the men clustered around the chart, surprised by the surly tone of the question.
'Yeah,' someone else said with profound disgust. 'Harrington.'
'Oh, Christ!' the first voice groaned. 'We're all gonna die,' it went on with a sort of morbid satisfaction. 'You seen the kinds'a casualty lists she comes up with?'
'Yep,' the second voice agreed. 'They're gonna dump us right in the crapper, and she's gonna win another medal by flushing our asses down it.'
'Not if I can help it,' a third voice muttered. 'She wants to play hero, that's fine, but I got better things to do than...'
Aubrey's concentration on the grumbling conversation was abruptly interrupted when someone kicked the frame of his bunk.
'Hey, Snotnose!' a deep voice said. 'Get your ass off my rack.'
Aubrey looked up in astonishment, and the speaker glared at him. The hulking, dark-haired man was much older than Aubrey, with a tough face and scarred knuckles. There were five golden hash marks on his cuff, each indicating three Manticoran years, almost five T-years, of service, but he was only a second-class power tech. That meant Aubrey was actually senior to him, yet he felt anything but senior as cold brown eyes sneered at him.
'I think you've made a mistake,' he said as calmly as he could. 'This is my bunk.'
'Oh no it isn't, Snotnose,' the older man said unpleasantly.
'Check the chart,' Aubrey said shortly.
'I don't give a flying fuck what the
Aubrey blinked, then paled as the other clenched a large, dangerous-looking fist and buffed its knuckles on his sleeve with an ugly grin. The younger man darted a look around the bay, but aside from the small knot of six or seven who'd accompanied his tormentor, there was no one else present, and none of the others looked inclined to take his side. They were all older than him, he realized, and none seemed to hold the rates men their age should have. At least half of them were grinning as unpleasantly as the power tech in front of him, and aside from one stocky, fidgety SBA whose nervous eyes kept flitting away from the confrontation, the ones who weren't smiling seemed totally indifferent to the scene.
So far in his Navy career, Aubrey had managed to avoid anything like this, but he wasn't stupid. He knew he was in trouble, yet instinct said if he caved in now the consequences would haunt him long after this episode was over. But instinct was matched by fear, for he'd never had a violent confrontation, much less an actual fight, and the grinning power tech out-massed him by at least fifty percent.
'Look,' he said, still trying to sound calm, 'I'm sorry, but I got here first.'
'You're right, you
'I'm not moving,' Aubrey said flatly. 'Pick another bunk.'
Something ugly flashed in those brown eyes. It was almost a light of vicious joy, and the power tech licked his lips as if in anticipation of a special treat.
'You just made a
A woman stood in the berthing bay hatch, hands on hips, and her level eyes were every bit as cold as the power tech's. But that was the only similarity between them, for the woman looked as if she'd just stepped out of a recruiting poster. There were seven gold hash marks on her cuff, her shoulder carried three chevrons and rockers centered on the ancient golden anchor of a boatswains mate instead of the star other branches used to indicate a senior master chief petty officer, and her eyes swept the frozen bay like a subzero wind.
'Get your hands off him, Steilman,' she said flatly, with a pronounced Gryphon accent. The power tech looked at her for another moment, then opened his hand with a scornful flick. Aubrey half fell back across the bunk, then struggled back to his feet, pale cheeks blotched with red. He was grateful for the senior master chief's intervention and knew it had just saved him from a brutal beating, but he was also young enough to feel the shame of
'Anyone want to tell me what's going on here?' she asked with deadly calm. No one spoke, and her lip curled contemptuously. 'Talk to me, Steilman,' she said softly.
'It was just a misunderstanding,' the power tech said in the tone of a man who didn't particularly care that his audience knew he was lying. 'This snotnose took my bunk.'
'Did he, now?' The woman stepped into the bay, and the onlookers drifted out of her way as if by magic. She glanced at the chart, then looked at Aubrey. 'Your name Wanderman?' she asked in a much less threatening tone, and he nodded.
'Y-yes, Senior Master Chief,' he managed, and flushed darker as his voice broke.
'Just 'Bosun' will do, Wanderman,' she replied, and Aubrey inhaled in surprise. Only one person was called 'Bosun' by the crew of a Queen’s ship. That person was the senior noncom in its complement, and the bosun, as