immunization records of any individuals visiting Medusa's surface. Every other department aboard this ship is contributing to those customs parties, Doctor. I'm afraid Medical will just have to carry its share of the burden, as well.'
'But I can't do it, I tell you!' Suchon more than half-snapped. 'Perhaps you don't quite understand the responsibilities Medical faces, Ma'am. We're not like oth—'
'That will be enough, Doctor.' Honor's voice had not risen, but it carried such cold, quiet venom that Suchon jerked back in her chair in shock. Icy brown eyes surveyed her with deadly dispassion, and her dark face paled.
'What you mean, Doctor,' Honor went on after a moment in that same cold voice, 'is that if I detach your attendants—and especially Montoya, who's been carrying two-thirds of your load ever since I came aboard—
Suchon's face darkened as flushed anger replaced the paleness of shock. She opened her mouth, but Honor stopped her with a raised hand and a thin smile.
'Before you explain to me that I don't understand the arcana of your profession, Commander,' she said softly, 'I should, perhaps, mention to you that both of my parents are physicians.' Suchon paled once more. 'In fact, my father was a surgeon commander himself before his retirement. Doctor Alfred Harrington—perhaps you've heard of him?'
Her smile grew even thinner as Suchon recognized the name. Alfred Harrington had been Assistant Chief of Neurosurgery at Basingford Medical Center, the Fleet's main hospital on Manticore, before his retirement.
'As a result, Doctor, I think you'll find I have quite an adequate grasp of precisely what your duties to this ship entail. And, I might add, since the topic has come up, that I'm not at all satisfied with the way you've discharged those duties since I assumed command.' Her smile vanished, and Suchon swallowed.
'If, however, the five individuals you've mentioned are, indeed, indispensable to
She held the surgeon commander's eyes with a cold, level stare, and it was Suchon who looked away.
'Was there anything else, Doctor?' Honor asked softly. The physician gave a choppy headshake, and Honor nodded.
'Dismissed, then, Doctor.' She returned her attention to her terminal, and Commander Suchon rose and walked silently from the compartment.
Lieutenant Andreas Venizelos stood with his memo board under his arm and smiled politely at the red- faced Havenite merchant skipper.
'—so you can take yourself,
'I'm afraid that won't be possible, Captain Merker,' the lieutenant replied with punctilious courtesy. 'According to Basilisk Control, you transshipped cargo at—' he consulted his memo board '—Orbital Warehouse Baker-Tango-One-Four. As I'm certain you're aware, Sir, that constitutes a materials transfer in Manticoran space. As such, under Paragraph Ten, Subsection Three, of the Commercial Regulations as amended by Parliament in 278 A.L., the senior customs officer is required to inspect your cargo before passing you for transit to the Junction's central nexus. Accordingly, I'm afraid I must insist on carrying out my duties before I can clear you for transit. I am, of course, extremely sorry for any inconvenience this may cause.'
Captain Merker had turned an alarming shade of puce and sputtered incoherently. Venizelos simply cocked his head and waited with undiminished courtesy while he got his vocal apparatus unjammed.
'Goddamn it! I've been making this run for five T-years,' the captain finally roared, 'and this is the first time some tight-assed little faggot in a pretty uniform's boarded
'Perhaps, Sir,' Venizelos said, allowing his smile to fade, 'but if you choose to refuse inspection, you will be denied transit rights.'
'And how the fuck do you think you're going to stop me, pretty boy?' Merker sneered.
'By firing into your ship if you attempt to transit,' Venizelos said, and there was no give at all in his ice-cold voice.
The merchant skipper stopped in mid-sneer and gave the slightly-built lieutenant an incredulous stare.
'That would be an act of war!'
'On the contrary, Sir, it would be a simple exercise of the municipal police power in Manticoran space in strict accordance with recognized interstellar law.'
'You wouldn't dare,' Merker said in a more conversational tone. 'You're bluffing.'
'I am an officer of the Royal Manticoran Navy, Sir—' Venizelos felt an undeniable rush of adrenalin and pleasure as he faced the burly captain squarely '—and the Royal Manticoran Navy does not `bluff.''
He held the Havenite officer's eye steadily, and the captain's choler cooled visibly. He dropped his eyes to scowl at the deck for just a moment, then shrugged angrily. 'Oh, suit yourself!'
'Uh, Captain Merker?' The freighter's purser, who had stood silent throughout the exchange, looked undeniably anxious.
'Well, what is it?' Merker growled.
'Well, Sir, it's just that I think— That is, I'm afraid there may be a few, um, errors in our manifest.' Sweat dotted the purser's forehead as his harassed captain turned his scowl on him. 'I'm, ah, certain they were, er, simple oversights,' he continued. 'I can— I mean, my staff and I can clear them up and be ready for inspection in, um, two or three hours? Sir?'
He stared at his captain appealingly, and Merker's face began to congest with fury once more. Venizelos observed its color with interest and cleared his throat.
'Ah, excuse me, Captain Merker?' The captain whirled on him with clenched fists, and the lieutenant shrugged apologetically. 'I can certainly understand how these little accidents happen, Sir, and I'm entirely willing to allow your purser time to straighten out his records. Unfortunately, that will mean that your ship will lose its place in the outbound queue, and I'm afraid we probably won't be able to get back around to you until sometime tomorrow morning.'
'
'Of course, Sir.' Venizelos clicked to attention, nodded pleasantly, and marched smartly back down the tube to his pinnace. The hatch slid shut, the tube disengaged, and his pilot hit the thrusters to carry them beyond their impeller wedge's safety perimeter before lighting off the main drive.
Venizelos deposited his memo board on his pull-out desk, flopped back into his chair, and whistled a popular ditty as the pinnace turned towards the next ship on his list, a big, battered Silesian freighter. His second pinnace hovered respectfully off the Havenite ship's flank like a pointed reminder until Merker lit off his own drive and headed back beyond the departure threshold.
'Jesus, Andreas!' Hayne Duvalier, Captain Reynaud's liaison to Venizelos's customs party, stared at him in patent disbelief. 'You wouldn't really have fired into him... would you?'
'Yep,' Venizelos said.
'But—'
'I'm only doing my job, Hayne.'
'I know, but for Chrissake, Andreas! We haven't enforced the com regs out here in— Hell, I don't think they've
'I know.' Venizelos turned his chair to face him. 'In fact, since I got here, I've started to realize that a lot of things that should have been done never have. I'm not faulting Captain Reynaud and your people, either. It's not your job—it's ours, and we haven't been doing it. Well, we're doing it now.'