feed.'
'I see. Well, buzz him, would you? If he's free, I'd like to see him in my briefing room. And ask Lieutenant Cardones to come in, too, please.'
'Yes, Ma'am.' The intercom was silent for a few moments, then spoke again. 'They're on their way, Ma'am.'
'Thank you, Samuel.' Honor keyed off and looked at Santos. 'If Barney can't give us hard numbers, maybe we can make his WAGs work for us, instead.'
'How?'
'Well, it occurs to me that—'
Honor broke off as the briefing room hatch opened to admit Cardones. The lieutenant nodded just a bit shyly to Santos, then looked at Honor.
'You wanted me, Ma'am?'
'Yes. Have a seat, Guns. I've got a problem I need you and the exec to help me solve.'
'Problem, Ma'am?' Cardones sounded a trifle wary, and Honor smiled.
'Nothing to do with your department. It's just—'
She paused again as the hatch opened once more. McKeon wore coveralls over his uniform, and there was grease on them. That was one thing Honor unreservedly approved of in her prickly executive officer; he was never above getting his own hands dirty.
'You sent for me, Captain?' he asked, far more formally than Cardones. Honor nodded, feeling her own face stiffen with a chill of answering formality, and pointed at the chair opposite Santos.
'I did,' she said. McKeon sat. 'How's the missile feed problem?' she asked, trying—again—to draw him out.
'Nothing major, Captain. I think it's pretty much solved,' he replied crisply, and she hid a sigh. Behind her, Nimitz stopped crunching his celery for a moment, then resumed with more restrained gusto.
'Well,' she said, 'as I was telling Rafe, we have a problem. We're trying to spot unusual power flows, and we don't have a reliable base usage to pick them out of.' McKeon nodded, gray eyes thoughtful but cool in his expressionless face.
'What I want you and Rafe to do,' Honor went on, 'is take all the input from the solar collector taps and compare it to Major Isvarian's rough estimates. What I'm looking for is a total usage figure over several days' time for each enclave, one we can relate to his estimate on a proportional basis.'
She paused, and Cardones glanced at the first officer, as if waiting for him to ask a question. When McKeon only nodded, he cleared his own throat.
'Excuse me, Ma'am, but what good will that do us?'
'Maybe not a lot, Rafe, but I want to see how close Barney came in his original estimate. If he's close, or if he's off by the same proportion in each case, then we'll have both an indication of his numbers' reliability and some idea of what a given enclave's power needs
Cardones nodded. McKeon simply sat silently, waiting.
'In addition,' Honor went on, 'I want the changes in power demand tracked on an hourly basis. Get a feel for the pattern. In particular, I want to know if any of them use large amounts of power during local down periods —especially late at night, for instance. Compare the fluctuations in power usage between all the enclaves on a time basis. If demand drops by a lower percentage in one or two of them, I want to know about it. From what Major Isvarian and his NPA types tell me, a
Cardones nodded again, eyes bright with interest. Unlike, Honor noted, McKeon's.
'I'll get right on it, Ma'am,' the exec said after a moment. 'Will there be anything else, Captain?'
'No,' Honor said quietly, and McKeon rose with a quick nod. He beckoned to Cardones, and the two of them filed out. Honor watched the hatch close behind them and sighed.
'Skipper?' It was Santos, her voice soft, and Honor flushed. She'd forgotten the engineer's presence, and she castigated herself silently for betraying her concern over McKeon in front of one of her other officers. She made herself turn to Santos, hiding her chagrin.
'Yes, Dominica?'
'I—' The engineer paused, looking down at her hands on the edge of the table, then squared her shoulders. 'About the commander, Ma'am,' she said. 'I don't—'
'Lieutenant Commander McKeon isn't your concern,' Honor said quietly.
'I know that, Ma'am, but—' Santos drew a deep breath, disregarding her captain's clear hint to drop the subject. 'Skipper, I know you're concerned about him. For that matter,' it was her face's turn to darken, 'I know you were concerned about
'Have I complained?' Honor asked, and met Santos's eyes levelly when the engineer looked up.
'No, Ma'am. But, then, you wouldn't, would you?' Santos's voice was as level as Honor's eyes, and Honor made a tiny, uncomfortable gesture with her hand. Nimitz swarmed down into her lap, still clutching the stub of his celery stalk, and lifted the front third of his body onto the table to look back and forth between the two women.
'The thing is, Skipper, I've known Alistair McKeon for a long time,' Santos went on quietly. 'He's a friend —and I'm your next senior officer.'
Honor sighed and leaned back. She ought to shut Santos up, she thought. If there was one thing she hated, it was discussing an officer behind his back, especially with one of his juniors. But she was very nearly at the end of her rope where McKeon was concerned. She'd tried everything she could think of to reach him—to make him the true second-in-command she needed, not simply an efficient, perpetually unengaged automaton—and failed. And there was no malice or spite in Santos's voice, only concern. Besides, Dominica was right; she
The engineer's expression relaxed a bit at her captain's reaction, and she reached out to stroke Nimitz's ears, keeping her eyes on her fingers.
'Alistair is a good officer, usually, Skipper,' she said. 'More than that, he's a good man. But if you'll pardon my saying so, it's pretty obvious the two of you just aren't on the same wavelength, and I don't think it's because you haven't tried. I've never seen him like this, and I'm worried about him.'
Honor watched Santos thoughtfully. There was no self-serving edge in the engineer's voice, only concern. This was no attempt to curry favor with her commander or cut her immediate superior's throat when he was absent and unable to defend himself.
'And?' she said, unable—and unwilling—to criticize McKeon by agreeing with Santos's statement and voicing her own concern.
'I just—' Santos paused, staring down at the fingers caressing the treecat. 'I just want you to know that whatever's wrong is hurting him, too, Skipper,' she said finally. 'He tries not to show it, but I think he thinks he's letting you down—letting the
'I understand, Dominica,' Honor said softly.
'Yes, Ma'am.' Santos stood and inhaled sharply, then gave Nimitz one last caress and squared her shoulders. 'Well, I guess I'd better get back on those taps, Skipper,' she said more briskly, and followed McKeon and Cardones out the hatch.
Nimitz settled down in Honor's lap to finish his celery, and she leaned back, running her hand down his