He turned, the new-kid feeling fading away like a light morning mist. Captain Harrington was standing with Andy Venizelos by the com station, consulting together over a memo pad. 'Thank you, Ma'am,' Cardones said. 'How was the tour?'
'Interesting,' the captain said. Her voice was casual, but Cardones thought he saw a flicker of something in the exec's face. 'Yours?'
'About the same,' Cardones said, matching her tone. 'Permission to resume my station?'
'Permission granted,' she said, and smiled. 'Enough lazing around, Mr. Cardones. Get back to work.'
'Yes, Ma'am,' Cardones said, smiling back. Taking another deep breath, he crossed to his station.
It was good to be home.
A SHIP NAMED FRANCIS
by John Ringo & Victor Mitchell
CHAPTER ONE
SIBERIA IS A CONCEPT
Sean Tyler tapped on the open door to the sickbay and entered at a grunt from within.
Tyler was just pushing twenty-three T-years and was on the beginning of his second hitch with the Manticoran Navy. He was dark complected and stood a bit under normal height for a Manticoran, both of which would help him blend with his new Grayson crewmates. On the other hand, he seemed nearly as broad as he was tall, a situation of being 'big boned' rather than massive. He had been assigned to the superdreadnought
A chief warrant officer in his thirties, short and dark as most Graysons were, with a lean, gray face, was sitting at a desk staring at a pad as if the message on it might leap out of the screen and bite.
'Sick Berth Attendant Third Class Sean Tyler reporting for duty!' Sean said, snapping to attention and throwing a parade ground salute. He was mildly surprised to find the warrant still on duty; it was nearly 2400 hours, ship time.
The warrant tossed the pad on his desk and made a gesture towards his forehead that might graciously have been considered a salute and waved at a chair.
'Welcome, my friend, welcome to the
Sean sat down and looked around at what was his new home, for however long he was going to be stuck here. His first impression was that the sickbay was small, less than a quarter of the size of the main sickbay on the
Not only was the
Furthermore, it looked it. No matter how many times a ship was sent into the yards for overhaul, no matter how thoroughly that overhaul was done, the ship always showed its age. It was apparent in the little patches of mold that crept out from bulkhead corners, in the worn spots on corners, even in the design of bunks, tables and other fittings, which had changed subtly over the years of war.
So there was a reason Tyler had a sour expression when the warrant finally tossed the pad on his desk.
'You don't look happy, SBA,' the warrant said, pulling open a bottom drawer on his desk and extracting a half-filled, flaccid bladder of unidentified liquid. He squirted a generous measure into a mug of tea on the desk then waved it at Tyler. 'Medicinal belt?'
'No, Sir, thank you, Sir,' Sean replied, wondering if the clear liquid was anything other than water. Then the smell hit him.
'Chief Warrant Officer Robert Kearns,' the warrant continued, putting the bladder away. 'I'm the physician's assistant on this tub. You may call me Doc.'
'Yes, Sir,' Sean said.
'Did you get stowed away? Got a locker, bunk, all that stuff?'
'Yes, Sir. The Bosun met us and assigned us quarters.'
'Good, good,' the warrant replied. 'Where'd they ship you in from? You're Manticoran, right?'
'Yes, Sir,' Tyler said.
'Wanted to come slum with the religious nuts?'
'No, Sir,' the SBA replied. 'I had applied for a transfer to the Grayson service nearly a year ago. It's considered a good move promotion-wise, working with other Alliance forces.'
'Uh, huh,' the warrant said. 'So, you're telling me you
'Well, I volunteered for Grayson service and there was a priority opening on the
'Yup,' the medic replied, taking a pull off of his reinforced tea. 'You ever have to trank anybody on your previous ship?'
'Once,' Tyler replied. 'Is that . . . a particular problem?'
'We get about one trank call a week,' the warrant admitted. 'Sometimes more on bad weeks. What we do then is put 'em in a jacket and tie 'em to their bunk. When they come around we try to decide if it was temporary or permanent. If they talk nice, we let 'em out. If they don't, we leave them in confinement until we can get a transship to a safe ground area.'
'One a
'We've got guys on this ship, I swear, are addicted to trank. Kopp, he's a missile tech, he's been tranked about six times. Cooper in Engineering, it's about once a month, like clockwork. Heck, the reason you were a priority replacement is that the other two SBAs were both medical evacs. If the timing had been different you would have met your predecessor on the way over; we transshipped him to the
'Weird,' Sean said. 'Any particular reason?'
'Oh,' the warrant said with a slight catch in his voice, 'I think you'll come to a few conclusions over time.'
'Now hear this! Now hear this! Morning prayers! All hands not on watch, uncover for morning prayers!'
Sean hadn't had a chance to meet any of his fellow compartment sharers last night; they were all on second watch and had racked out by the time he entered the compartment. Now, as the lights came up and the other three stood up and clasped their hands, he wondered what to do.
Being a Manticoran, he was not a member of the Church of Humanity Unchained, so he was under no