'Yes, Ma'am. He sort of, um, convinced the Peeps he'd gone over to them, got access to one of their minicomputers, I'll let him give you the details later, and hacked into their main system. He set up the entire breakout... and just as an encore, he managed to arrange things so the Peeps think we're all dead.'
'I don't...' Honor began, then stopped. There was too much going on here, and she wasn't in shape to assimilate all of it. That would have to come later, and she suspected it was going to take quite a while for them to tell her everything, but for now...
'I want to hear all about it when I'm in shape to understand it all,' she told her subordinates. 'But for now, what I really need is a status report.'
'Yes, Ma'am,' McKeon said, and rubbed his eyebrow for a moment, as if marshaling his thoughts. 'Basically, Ma'am, we're on the surface of the planet Hades. Thanks to the fact that Harkness here is probably the most devious hacker outside a maximum security prison, excuse me; outside any
'He...?' Honor blinked, then looked at Harkness. 'You blew the ship
'Uh, yes, Ma'am,' Harkness mumbled, turning an alarming shade of red. 'Actually, ah, I sort of, well...'
'He demonstrated what happens when a pinnace brings its wedge up
'I see,' she said, and then the right side of her mouth twitched. 'Remind me to never, ever get you angry at
Harkness went an even darker crimson as she used his first name for the first time in the eleven years they'd known one another. He started to mumble something, then stopped, looked at her, and shrugged helplessly.
'He also pulled a lot of information on Hades out of
'Oh?' Honor returned her gaze to him with renewed attentiveness.
'Yes, Ma'am. Its simple enough: there's not a single thing on the entire planet which a human can metabolize.' Honor's eye narrowed, and he nodded. 'You've got it, Skipper. They don't need to lock anyone
'I see.' Honors fingers stroked Nimitz's ears, and she frowned. 'How big is the garrison?'
'Again, we don't have precise figures, but I'd estimate there're around a thousand or fifteen hundred of them. Their main facility is on an island in the middle of Hades' biggest ocean, it's covered by satellite reconnaissance, and according to
'I see,' Honor repeated, then flicked her hand at the bulkheads around them. 'But now?' she suggested.
'Now that might just change,' McKeon agreed with an unpleasant smile. 'Thanks to Harkness here, we've got a pair of heavy assault shuttles with almost full loads of external ordnance, full small arms racks, and a fair amount of unpowered armor.'
Honor felt both eyebrows rise and gave Harkness another respectful look.
'We're also pretty sure the Peeps don't know we're here,' McKeon went on. 'From what Harkness pulled out of
'All right,' Honor said after a moment. 'It sounds to me like you're right about that part of it, but where do we go from here?'
'That's up to you, Ma'am, and frankly, I'm just as happy it is,' McKeon said candidly. 'We're down and concealed for the moment, and we've got some hardware to work with and enough emergency rations to carry us for up to five months if we're careful. But there are only eighteen of us, twenty, if we count Warner and Nimitz...' he nodded to the Peep officer with a wryly apologetic grin '...and the bad guys have a hell of a lot more firepower than we do. Not to mention an established base, at least a dozen armed pinnaces of their own, and those damned satellites to watch their backs. Any way you look at it, Ma'am, we're pretty damned outnumbered!'
'Outnumbered, Alistair?' Honor leaned back, her thin fingers buried in Nimitz’s warm, soft fur. She looked more like a gaunt, half-starved wolf than ever, with her shaved hair, half-dead face, and amputated arm, but the feral gleam of a pack leader glittered in her remaining eye. She swept that eye over the men around her, and the right side of her upper lip curled back to bare her teeth.
'You people got us out of
She held McKeon's eyes until he nodded, then swept her gaze over the others once more, and she could not have defined or described the wild, fierce flow of her emotions if her soul had depended upon it. But it didn't matter. She didn't
'If anyone's outnumbered here,' Lady Dame Honor Harrington told her friends softly, 'it's the Peeps.'