'That just leaves the ammo pallets for Pinnace Two,' Jenkins went on cheerfully as the three of them headed down the access tube from the pinnace airlock, and Tremaine swallowed a moan. He'd been hoping to leave that till next watch, and the look on Harkness's face said he'd hoped the same thing. The ensign started to object, then bit his lip. No one could have called Jenkins's expression a
'Of course, Gunny,' he said even more cheerfully. 'If you'll step right this way? PO?'
'My pleasure, Mr. Tremaine,' Harkness said sourly, and Jenkins waved for his work party to fall in astern as they headed across the boat bay towards the stacked pallets.
'—so the pinnaces are combat-loaded if we have to drop them.'
McKeon finished his report and switched off his memo pad, and Honor nodded. It was late, by
'I think we're about as ready as we're going to get, then,' she said finally.
'I only wish we knew what we're ready
'We've had the better part of two whole weeks since Hauptman's visit with no alarms and excursions at all,' she pointed out.
'Which only makes me think something extra nasty is sneaking up on us.' McKeon sighed, then produced a wry smile of his own and stood. 'Well, whatever happens will happen, I suppose, Ma'am. Good night.'
'Good night, Mr. McKeon.'
He gave her a small nod, and she watched him leave. Quite a change there, she told herself with undeniable satisfaction. Quite a change.
She stood herself and reached for the sadly depleted bowl of salad. Nimitz's head came up instantly, his green eyes bright, and she smiled.
'Here, Greedy Guts,' she told him. She handed over the celery stalk and turned towards her private head. She could already feel the luxury of a long, hot shower.
The raucous sound of a buzzer woke her.
Honor's eyes popped open as the buzzer snarled a second time. She was a heavy sleeper by nature, but her first tenure in command of a Queen's ship had changed that, and Nimitz complained sleepily as she sat up quickly. The 'cat half-slid and half-rolled down into her lap from his favorite sleeping perch on her chest, and she set him gently aside with one hand as she turned and punched the com key with the other.
The buzzer stopped snarling at her acknowledgment, and she ran her hands quickly through her short hair. That was one advantage of wearing it like a man. There was no point pretending she was a beauty, anyway, and at least this way she didn't have to waste time making it look pretty when someone woke her in the middle of the night. She snatched the kimono her mother had given her for her last birthday from the bedside chair and slipped into it, then hit the com key a second time, accepting the call with full vision.
The screen was painfully bright in the dark cabin. It was also a split-image conference call, and Dame Estelle looked out of one side of it.
'Sorry to wake you, Honor, but it's important.' The commissioner sounded almost frightened, and Honor sat straighter as she finished belting her kimono.
'What is it, Dame Estelle?'
'Two pieces of information. One came in two days ago, but it was so vague I decided to sit on it a while before I passed it on to you. Barney just screened me with the second, and it changes the one I already had.'
Honor nodded and cocked her head, inviting the commissioner to continue.
'I had a visit from Gheerinatu, one of the Medusan nomad clan chiefs, Wednesday,' Matsuko said. 'He doesn't like the Delta city-states any better than any other nomad, but we helped his clan out two years back. Given the weather here, the nomads tend to migrate from hemisphere to hemisphere—or at least to the equatorial zone and back—with the seasons, but Gheerinatu's clan got caught in an early storm while it was crossing the Delta. We pulled most of his clansmen and about half their herds out of a flash flood with NPA counter-grav just before they all drowned, and that makes us friends of his.'
She paused, eyebrow quirked as if to ask if Honor was with her, and Honor nodded.
'All right. Gheerinatu's from the north—his clan's part of the Hyniarch ... well, I guess we'd call it a clan federation. Anyway, he's heading south for the winter, but he's got relatives all over the northern hemisphere, and he dropped by to tell me that one of those relatives from up near the Mossybacks sent him a message. It wasn't a very specific message, but Gheerinatu thought we should hear about it. Roughly translated, it was a warning that the Delta would be an unwise place for Gheerinatu and his herds to pass the winter.'
Honor's face tightened, and Dame Estelle nodded.
'Exactly what I was thinking, but it's the first whisper we've heard from the native side, and, as I say, it was pretty darn unspecific. That's why I didn't pass it on to you—until this other thing came up.' The commissioner nodded at her own pickup, her eyes turning to the side of her screen which held Isvarian's image. 'You want to take it from here, Barney?'
'Yes, Ma'am.' Isvarian shifted in his chair and looked straight at Honor. 'I'm over in the clinic we run up by Dauguaar on the Three Forks, Captain,' he said. Honor thought for a moment, summoning up a mental map of the Delta, then nodded. The Three Forks River was well up to the north, and Dauguaar was about the farthest north of all the city-states. Which meant it was also closest to the Mossybacks.
'We got a call late this morning,' Isvarian went on, once she had the geography in mind. 'A nomad had staggered up to the city gates and collapsed, and the city guard had dragged him to the clinic and turned him over to us. The duty medic recognized the symptoms immediately —
'He had a powder horn, too,' Isvarian resumed grimly. 'No one saw any sign of a rifle, but that was enough to sound all the alarms and get me out here as fast as I could move an aircar. Fritz here—' he gestured at Montoya, who gave his captain a tired smile '—wanted to come with me to see
The NPA man shrugged, and his eyes were unhappy.
'He was pretty far gone.
'Oh, crap,' Honor whispered before she could stop herself, and Isvarian nodded.
'It gets worse, Ma'am,' he warned. 'That was enough to confirm this shaman—whoever the hell he is—has some direct link both to the people who built the lab