there's no chance anyone survived over there, and he `can't afford to divert' his efforts from areas where there may actually be someone to rescue. The resort has some people searching, but they don't have gear as good as the Navy or the Corps, and your precious Novaya Tyumen—' she made the title a mockery '—is insisting on telling
'I see.' Honor's soprano was colder than the mountain wind, and she felt Nimitz's quivering anger as he clung to her shoulder while she turned suddenly arctic eyes to sweep the area Berczi had pointed to. A part of her could follow Novaya Tyumen's argument, for they did have limited resources. But those resources would begin to grow as the emergency response teams from other resorts arrived. The three nearest ones were already here; within hours, there would be special alpine SAR units here from all over the planet. When that happened, Novaya Tyumen would probably find himself shouldered aside by the experts, and she couldn't quite help wondering if that was part of the reason for his present autocracy. Did he want to make perfectly certain that
But whatever he was thinking couldn't change reality, and the reality was that saving lives in a situation like this was enormously dependent on the speed with which victims could be found . . . and that Novaya Tyumen had chosen to organize his available personnel and equipment in a way Honor would never have accepted. She'd had personal experience of the incredible, improbable ways in which human beings could survive something like this. She'd seen men and women dug out of ten and even fifteen meters of snow, still alive and—somehow— breathing. But she also knew from that same experience how critical it was that such people be found and retrieved before hypothermia or exhaustion or untreated injuries killed them anyway.
But Novaya Tyumen didn't have her experience, and he had detailed the bulk of his Navy and Marine personnel into simple labor gangs, digging into areas where there were known survivors, whereas only a relatively small percentage of his strength was assigned to hunting for other victims. Now that she considered his operational patterns in the light of Berczi's savage comments, she realized things were even worse than she'd thought before. Even the pinnaces he had flying overhead were concentrated on a limited area, searching the portions of mountainside where the damage was less total and avoiding the areas of maximum devastation.
There was such a thing as refusing to throw away resources by reinforcing failure, Honor admitted, but now that Berczi's description had focused her thoughts and pulled them away from how Novaya Tyumen had shoved her aside, it was suddenly clear to her that he had completely written off those more devastated areas. If the resort employees wanted to divert
She tried to force herself to give him the benefit of the doubt. To remind herself that he was with BuShips —an engineering specialist more accustomed to a bureaucratic environment than finding himself at the sharp end of the stick. She even reminded herself of her own earlier thoughts about the need to avoid fragmenting command of the operation. But none of that really mattered to her any longer. Not compared to the fact that he had chosen to write off a third of the total resort area and make no effort at all to search for anyone who might be out there and alive. And not, she admitted with scathing self-honesty, now that she realized how her preoccupation with personal concerns and slights had prevented her from realizing sooner that he had.
'You mentioned the beginners' slopes, Major?' she said to Berczi.
'Yes.' Berczi's eyes were locked to Honor's face. 'There were six lift cars that I know of in the air on their way up the mountain when the slide hit. One of them, the one that was furthest up-slope when the slide hit, was discovered over there—' she pointed to a spot over five hundred meters from the demolished stump of lift tower still poking out of the churned snow '—almost immediately. Most of the people in it were kids. A third of them were dead.' She swallowed, then drew a deep breath. 'But I'm here with a field trip from the school I currently teach in, Commander, and there are at least five more lift cars out there. One of them had two of
She chopped herself off, staring at Honor in stark, simple appeal, and Honor nodded slowly. She understood Berczi's desperation now, and she supposed some people might have called it personal. Well, no doubt it was. But that made it no less valid, and Honor respected her no less for her determination to do something about it.
'I see, Major,' she said, and her lips curled in what might have been called a smile. 'I see indeed. We'll just have to see to it that they don't have to deal with that, won't we?'
'I don't know if I can, Ranjit,' Susan said in a small voice. She hated herself for admitting it—more for admitting it to
'I know it's scary, Sooze,' Ranjit said, fighting to keep his growing pain and weakness out of his voice. 'But it's the only way you can get out, and we don't have enough time to wait for them to find us.' He managed not to add '
'I know,' she said after a moment, and managed a weak smile. 'I just wish I knew how stinking far down we are.'
'I do too,' he told her, trying to match her smile while his heart wept for the courage she clung to with both hands.
'Well, at least it's not packed as hard as it could be, I guess,' she sighed. She knelt there a moment longer, then raised her voice. 'Andrea?'
'Yes?' the older girl's strained voice floated up out of the shadows.
'You take good care of Ranjit while I'm gone, hear?' Susan called, trying to smile at her brother again. 'He's a doof, but I kinda like him.'
'I'll do my best,' Andrea promised, and Ranjit blinked on tears as Susan nodded to him.
'Be back as soon as I can,' she told him quietly, and climbed out through the window, taking her ski pole with her. She pushed herself up into the hole she'd already dug, and Ranjit turned his head as far as he could, watching more snow fall through the shattered window onto the lift car's floor. It fell quickly at first, then more slowly . . . and then not at all as Susan tunneled higher into the underbelly of the avalanche, burrowing her way through it, and the snow she excavated packed the tunnel behind her. He pictured her forcing her way through the cold, terrifying darkness, all alone in her tiny, moving airspace as she burrowed towards the sun like some small, blind creature, and he closed his eyes and prayed as he had never before prayed in his life.
* * *
'Don't be stupid, Commander!' Novaya Tyumen snapped. 'Nothin' could possibly have survived over there!' He swept an angry arm at the area around the broken-off lift tower. 'If we're goin' to find
'With all due respect, Sir, I disagree,' Honor said. No one but her had to know how hard it was to keep her words level and dispassionate, but her eyes bored into Novaya Tyumen's. 'We've already recovered one lift car that was in the area in question at the time the avalanche hit, and the majority of the people aboard it were still alive. On that basis, I don't believe we can ignore the possibility that others might have survived the initial disaster, as well. And—'
'You don't believe?
'I have no desire to undermine your authority or the chain of command,' Honor said.
'Which is also true out there!' Novaya Tyumen shot back, pointing once more at his chosen area of