'I see.' Honor readjusted her eye to normal vision and straightened, feeling the gentle pressure of Nimitz's true-hand on her head as he balanced against her movement.
Like Honor's last ship,
Admiral Parks' greeting message had been perfectly correct, but she'd sensed a coolness behind it, and, under the circumstances, she would have loved to blame this on
'Well, in that case, I suppose we—'
She broke off and turned her head as boots sounded on the deck plates behind her, and her lips tightened ever so slightly as she saw the man at Mike Henke's side. He was short, the crown of his head just topping Honor's shoulder, but solid and chunky, and his dark hair, longer than current fashion decreed, was drawn back in a neat ponytail under his black beret. His cuffs bore the same four gold rings as her own, but his collar carried the four gold pips of a junior grade captain, not the single planet of a captain of the list, and Nimitz shifted on her shoulder as he sensed her sudden spurt of associative dislike—and her self-recrimination for feeling it.
'Sorry we're late, Ma'am,' Henke said formally. 'Captain Tankersley was tied up on another job when we docked.'
'No problem, Mike.' Honor's soprano was cooler than she would have preferred, but she held out her hand. 'Welcome aboard
'We'll certainly try, Milady.'
Tankersley's voice was deeper than she remembered, rumbling about in his chest, and a trickle of someone else's feelings oozed into her brain. It was Nimitz, tapping her into Tankersley's emotions as he'd learned to do since Yeltsin. She was still far from accustomed to his doing that, and she reached up to touch him in a silent injunction to stop. But even as she did, she recognized the matching discomfort in the other captain, a sense of awkward regret over the circumstances of their first meeting.
'Thank you,' she said more naturally, and gestured at the scanner. 'Commander Ravicz has just been showing me the damage. Take a look, Captain.'
Tankersley glanced at the display, then looked again, more closely, and pursed his lips in a silent whistle.
'All the way across?' He cocked an eyebrow and grimaced at Ravicz's doleful nod, then smiled wryly at Honor. 'These new alloys will be wonderful things, Milady—once we figure out exactly what we're doing with them.'
'Indeed.' Honor's lips twitched at his tone, and she tapped the generator. 'Am I right in assuming we're looking at complete replacement here?'
'I'm afraid so, Ma'am. Oh, I could try a weld, but we're talking a bead a good twenty meters long just across the outer face. This stuff's not supposed to break in the first place, and according to The Book, patching should only be considered as a last resort. The fracture cuts right through two of the central load-bearing brackets and the number two hydrogen feed channel, too, I'm afraid. Odds are we'd have to pull it anyway, and I'd rather not leave you with a repaired unit that could crap out again without warning. My people can try to patch it once we have it in the shop. If they pull it off—and if it meets specs after they do, which I doubt it will—we can put it in stores for later use. In the meantime, we can get
'You have one we can swap out?'
'Oh, yes. We're topped up with spares for almost everything.' Tankersley's pride in his newly operational base showed, and Honor felt herself thaw even further at his obvious readiness to tackle the job.
'How long are we talking, then?' she asked.
'That's the bad news, Milady,' Tankersley said more seriously. 'You don't have an access way large enough to move the spare through, so we're going to have to open up the fusion room.' He put his hands on his hips and turned slowly, surveying the huge, immaculate compartment, and his eyes were unhappy.
'If
Honor nodded in understanding. As in most merchantmen, fusion rooms in destroyers and light cruisers— and some smaller heavy cruisers—were designed with blow-out bulkheads to permit them to jettison malfunctioning reactors as an emergency last resort. But larger warships couldn't do that, unless their designers deliberately made their power plants more vulnerable than they had to.
'We're going to have to go through the armor and a lot of bulkheads, Milady, and then we're going to have to put them all back again,' Tankersley went on. 'We've got the equipment for it, but I imagine it's going to take at least two months—more probably fourteen or fifteen weeks.'
'Could
'No, Milady. Oh,
'I was afraid of that.' Honor sighed. 'Well, it seems we're in your hands. How soon can we get started?'
'I'll get my own survey people over here within the hour,' Tankersley promised. 'We're still pretty busy with expansion work, but I think I can juggle my schedules a bit and start clearing away the control runs by next watch. I've got a tin-can in Slip Two with her after impeller ring wide open, and my exterior crews will need another day or so to button her back up. As soon as they're finished,
'Outstanding,' Honor said. 'If I have to turn my ship over to someone, Captain, I'm glad it's at least someone who gets right to it.'
'Oh, I'll certainly do that, Milady!' Tankersley turned back from his study of the bulkheads with a grin. 'No mere yard dog wants a starship captain on his neck. Don't worry. We'll have you back up as quickly as possible.'
Admiral Mark Sarnow looked up and touched a stud as the admittance chime sounded.
'Yes?'
'Staff Communications Officer, Sir,' his sentry announced, and Sarnow nodded in satisfaction.
'Enter,' he said, and smiled as the hatch opened to admit a tall, gangling redhead in a lieutenant commander's uniform. 'So, Samuel. May I assume you bear word from the repair base?'
'Yes, Sir.' Lieutenant Commander Webster held out a message board. 'Captain Tankersley's estimate on
'Ah.' Sarnow accepted the board and laid it on his desk. 'I'll read it later. Just give me the bad news first.'
'It's not all that bad. Sir.' Webster's formal expression turned into a smile of his own. 'The housings definitely shot, but Captain Tankersley figures they can have a replacement-in place within fourteen weeks.'
'Fourteen weeks, eh?' Sarnow rubbed his brushy mustache, green eyes thoughtful. 'I hate to have her down that long, but you're right—it is better than I was afraid of.' He leaned back, still stroking his moustache, then nodded. 'Inform Admiral Parks I think we can allow
'Yes, Sir.' Webster braced briefly to attention and started to leave, but Sarnow raised a hand.
'Just a minute, Samuel.' The lieutenant commander paused, and the admiral gestured at a chair. 'Have a seat.'