people should be able to develop at least a little new intelligence on the Stilties' capabilities out of this. At best, they may be able to pinpoint a target outside the Delta for us. If the major can find this shaman, we might be able to stage a quick raid in battle armor and snap up his weapons—maybe even grab him—before he ever gets close enough to the enclaves to be a threat.'
'Agreed,' Honor said. 'On the other hand, we're going to have to be very careful about any moves we make in that direction. Dame Estelle is specifically barred from using the NPA to interfere with native religious matters, and I can't act unilaterally on the planet without her approval. If we can't demonstrate direct off-world interference, her hands—which means
'Understood, Captain. But just knowing where to look and what to look for makes me feel a lot better. I'd much rather catch them in open terrain that lets us use our air support, mobility, and greater weapons ranges than tangle with them inside the enclaves at pointblank.'
Honor nodded to the Marine, and he sat back. He'd contributed his bit. Anything else was a matter for the Navy to deal with, and some of the interest in his eyes faded as he waited for them to get on with it.
'You know, Skipper,' Dominica Santos said slowly, 'I've been thinking about what you said. About all this being just a part of some overall off-world scheme.' Honor cocked her head, and the engineer waved a hand.
'It seems to me the only logical suspect is Haven, Ma'am. I know we can't prove that, but I can't see anyone else who'd do something like this. And even if it isn't them, shouldn't we proceed on the assumption that it is? I mean, no one else could hurt us as badly as the Peeps, so if we assume it's them and we're wrong, we'll leave ourselves a lot less exposed. But if it
'A point, Skipper,' McKeon agreed. 'Definitely a point.'
'Agreed.' Honor drummed gently on the table, then looked back at her exec. 'Let's assume for a moment that this is a Havenite covert op, Mr. McKeon. Do you think they'd kick off something like this and then just sit back to let it develop in isolation?'
'I don't think there's any way to know,' McKeon said after a moment's thought. 'My gut reaction is that they wouldn't, but without knowing their ultimate objective I just can't say.'
'Captain?' The voice was hesitant and very young, and Honor gave the speaker a reassuring smile as she turned to him.
'Yes, Mr. Tremaine?'
'Uh, I just wanted to mention something, Ma'am. I noticed it a couple of days ago, but it didn't seem very important then. Now, though—' The ensign shrugged uncomfortably.
'Mention what, Mr. Tremaine?'
'Well, it's just that I've been sort of keeping an eye on the space-to-surface traffic patterns since you called me back aboard, Ma'am. Habit, I guess. And I noticed there doesn't seem to be any Havenite traffic at all, anymore.'
'Ah?' Honor looked at McKeon and twitched an eyebrow. The exec looked startled for a second, then grinned wryly.
'Out of the mouths of ensigns,' he said, and Tremaine blushed at the chuckle that ran around the table. Then he grinned back at the exec.
'I don't know what it means, Ma'am,' McKeon went on more in a more serious tone, 'but he's right. There's no Havenite traffic to the surface at all. Hasn't been in almost a week.'
'Now, that's interesting,' Honor murmured, tapping another note into her memo board. 'Have they pulled anyone out of their enclave? Any sign of a cautionary evacuation?'
'You'd have to ask Major Isvarian or the commissioner about that, Ma'am, but I certainly haven't noticed anything to suggest it.'
'They might not have to, Captain.' It was Tremaine again. 'Their consulate's more like a fort than most of the enclaves, and they've got an awful big security force.' The ensign paused with a frown and rubbed his chin. 'Still, Ma'am, they
'How big are they?' McKeon asked, and his gray eyes were intent.
'Well, I've only overflown them, Sir,' Tremaine said uncomfortably, 'but they're not very big. Maybe a dozen off-worlders and a native staff in each, I'd say, but it's only a guess.'
'You think their size is significant?' Honor asked Mckeon, and the exec shrugged.
'I don't know, Ma'am. But it occurs to me that if their objective is to chase us out and move in themselves, it might just suit their purposes to have a few casualties of their own. Another thing,' he added in an even more thoughtful voice. 'If we end up with some sort of bloodbath down there and they
'You may have a point.' Honor made another note and tried to hide an inner shiver at the cold-blooded calculation McKeon's hypothesis suggested. The exec nodded very slowly, then frowned and sat straighter in his chair.
'Wait a second, Skipper. I just thought of something.' He tapped on his terminal for a moment, then nodded to himself. 'I thought I remembered that.' He turned back to his captain. 'You remember when we were talking about the decline in Havenite traffic to Medusa?' Honor nodded. 'Well, the fact is that their
Honor frowned as something about the name
'Exactly,' McKeon said. 'That ship's been sitting in a parking orbit for over three months. I may be getting paranoid, but that strikes me as a mighty interesting coincidence in light of what the NPA's reporting.'
'Excuse me, Skipper, but what do we know about this
Honor gestured at McKeon. He glanced back at his screen, then looked at Santos.
'She's big—a seven-point-six m-ton
'She's what?' Santos twitched upright in her chair and frowned.
'A problem, Commander?' Honor asked.
'Well, it just seems awfully odd, Skipper. Of course, I don't know a lot about Havenite maintenance patterns, and a Warshawski flutter isn't anything to monkey around with. If she's really got one, Captain Coglin was probably right to declare an emergency. The only thing is that a fluctuation isn't something that usually creeps up on you. The tuners take more strain than any other sail component, so unless you're terminally dumb, you watch for the tiniest frequency kicks like a hawk. By the time you start showing actual flutter, you're normally well past the point at which they should've been pulled for routine refit, and the Haven government owns all Haven-flagged freighters. They're self-insured, too, so if they take a loss, they can't recover from anyone else on it. It doesn't sound to me like they'd be cutting maintenance corners the way some private owners do.'
'Another thing.' McKeon's eyes were very bright. 'A flutter is something you're more likely to notice going
'But what good would it do them to cook up a reason to keep a freighter in orbit?' Lieutenant Panowski asked a bit plaintively. Honor looked at him, and he squirmed a little. 'I mean, they've already got a courier boat in permanent orbit, Ma'am. What would a freighter do for them that a courier boat wouldn't?'
'I don't know about that,' Santos said, 'but I just thought of something else odd about