had a new one to worry about.
The Astro-Control Service was a civil service organization, despite its uniform and naval ranks, and Reynaud was profoundly grateful for it as he gazed at the remaining cruiser's light code. He was responsible for the smooth running of the terminus' traffic, period. The rest of the Basilisk System was the Navy's concern, and the thought of what now faced that single ship's commanding officer was enough to make Reynaud shiver. Not, he thought sourly, that the stupid bastard was likely to deserve his pity. If he was, he wouldn't have been dumped here. That was a given of Basilisk Station, and the personnel of Basilisk Control regarded the dregs with which they had to contend with all the disdain they merited.
He started to turn away, but Arless's voice stopped him.
'Just a sec, Mike. We've got a couple of inbounds from that cruiser.'
'What?' Reynaud swung back to the display and frowned. Two drive sources were moving towards Control's sprawling habitat. They were far too small for full-sized ships, but the fact that they were impeller signatures indicated they were larger than most small craft. And that, in turn, suggested they must be pinnaces, but why would pinnaces be heading for his command station?
'What d'you suppose
'Damfino.' Arless shrugged. He leaned back and cracked the knuckles of his long fingers.
'You mean they didn't file a flight plan?'
'You got it. They—hold on.' The controller leaned forward and flipped a switch, shunting his com channels to Reynaud's earbug.
'—ontrol, this is Navy flight Foxtrot-Able-One. Request final approach instructions.'
Arless started to reply, but Reynaud stopped him with a raised finger and keyed his own pickup.
'Navy Foxtrot-Able-One, this is Basilisk Control. Please state your intentions.'
'Basilisk Control, we are a naval liaison mission. I have on board my recorded orders and an explanatory dispatch for your station commander.'
Reynaud and Arless stared at one another, eyebrows raised. It was certainly unorthodox. Liaison mission? What
'Very well, Navy Foxtrot-Able-One. Make your approach to—' he craned his neck to check Arless's display '—beacon Niner-Four. You'll be met by a guide. Basilisk Control clear.'
He killed the circuit and gave Arless an eloquent glance.
'Now just what the hell do you think
'Beats me, boss,' the controller replied, 'but look at that.'
He gestured at his display, and Reynaud frowned. Even as her pinnaces separated, the light cruiser had swung away from Basilisk Control to go slashing off on a vector for the system primary, and not at the eighty percent power RMN ships normally used. She was ripping along at a full five hundred gravities, and she was already fifty thousand kilometers away at a velocity of over seven hundred KPS.
The station commander scratched his bristly gray hair and sighed. Just when he'd gotten the last uniformed jackass to at least keep his ham-fisted fingers out of Control's pie, this happened. It had taken months to convince Young that his condescending attempts to rearrange Control's well-tried traffic lanes into more 'efficient' routes— so poorly designed they could only increase the workloads of Reynaud's already over-worked controllers while decreasing safety margins—were neither required nor desired. Managing wormhole junction traffic was a job for well-trained, highly experienced professionals, not twits who'd been exiled for how poorly they did their own jobs. There were lots of things the Navy could have done to facilitate ACS's routine operations if the over-bred fart had been interested in doing anything that would have required any effort on
But it appeared Young's replacement was cut from different cloth. The problem was that Reynaud didn't know what sort of cloth. Judging by the speed with which he moved, the newcomer certainly seemed to have more energy than his predecessor, but that could be good or bad. If he actually intended to assist Control, it was probably good, yet long and bitter experience made it difficult for Reynaud to visualize a senior naval officer who did more good than harm.
He shrugged. Whatever
He frowned again, but there was a speculative light in his eyes as he watched the light cruiser lope away. Whatever else that captain was, he clearly
'Do you have our sweep pattern plotted, Astrogation?'
'Yes, Ma'am.' Lieutenant Stromboli looked up at Honor's question. His fleshy face was drawn with weariness, for Santos and McKeon had kept revising their drone availability numbers on him. Every time they'd changed their figures, he'd had to recalculate almost from scratch, but tired or no, he never—ever—again meant to tell Captain Harrington he
'Good. Pass the course change to Maneuvering.' Nimitz 'bleeked' softly in her ear, and she reached up to stroke his head. The treecat always seemed to know when it was time for him to be seen and not heard, even on the bridge, but he'd started sounding far more cheerful from the moment HMS
She got one of Santos's assistants and waited patiently while the chief engineer was summoned to the com. Santos looked awful when she finally appeared. Her dark hair was gathered in a tight braid, her face was tired, and there was a smudge of grease down her right cheek.
'We'll be beginning drone deployment in approximately nine hours, Commander. What's our status?'
'The first pattern is almost ready to deploy now, Ma'am,' Santos replied wearily, 'and I think we'll have the second one by the time you need it, but I'm not sure about number three.'
'Problems, Commander?' Honor asked mildly, and saw Santos's eyes flash with anger. Good. If her officers got mad enough, they might start thinking for a change instead of simply feeling sorry for themselves. But the lieutenant commander bit back what she wanted to say and exhaled sharply.
'I'm concerned about fatigue, Captain.' Her voice was flat. 'We're already running out of beacon kits, and the kits were never intended to deploy sensor heads of this size and sensitivity. Adapting them to fit requires modifications far outside the normal repair and maintenance parameters, and that limits the utility of our servomechs. We're doing a lot of hand-wiring and grunt work down here, we only have so many sets of hands, and it's going to get worse as the kits run out.'
'Understood, Commander, but timing is critical to an orderly deployment. I advise you to expedite.'
Honor cut the circuit and leaned back in her command chair with a tiny smile, and Nimitz rubbed his head against the side of her neck while he purred.
'You're
'I said I'm your customs and security officer, Captain. I'm sure Captain Harrington's dispatch will explain everything.'
Reynaud accepted the message chip almost numbly, and Venizelos's puzzlement deepened. He couldn't understand why the ACS man looked so confused. It wasn't as if Venizelos were using any big words.
'Let me get this straight,' Reynaud said after a moment. 'Your Captain Harrington actually expects you and your people to be quartered here at Control? He means to leave you here to support our operations?'
'Yes, Sir,