down inside. And the
'You're thinking of taking some of the Northern and Diaspran forces with us?' The prince chuckled. 'Her Majesty's Own Mardukan Sepoys?'
'I cannot secure your person with thirty-six Marines, Your Highness,' the captain said in a much more formal tone than usual, meeting the prince's gaze levelly. 'Certainly not in this environment. I could barely manage with a full company . . . and I don't have a company anymore. As Sergeant Julian just said, I have a platoon. That simply isn't enough, and that means I have to do it through some other means.'
Roger's chuckle died, and he nodded soberly.
'I hadn't intended to make light of your predicament, Sir. Or your losses. I was simply anticipating Mother's reaction.'
'Indeed,' Pahner said, and shook his head with a sudden grunting Mardukan-style chuckle of his own. 'I can see our return now. Her Majesty will be most . . . amused.'
'Her Majesty,' O'Casey said, 'after she reads the reports, will be most . . . amazed. There's never been a saga to equal this one, Captain. At the least, you've placed your name in the military history books.'
'Only if I get him back to Her Majesty,' Pahner pointed out. 'Which requires crossing the ocean, making our way through whatever political zone we hit on the far side, and recapturing the spaceport with only thirty-six Marines and a half dozen suits of problematical powered armor. And that's why I would like to take a unit of
'Which means how many ships?' Roger asked.
'Six,' the Pinopan answered. 'Six thirty, thirty-five-meter schooners. Lots of sail area, pretty good cargo volume, good sea legs, an' weatherly. Maybe topsail schooners. Square sails on tee main an' fore won' help much on tee trip over, but t'ey be good for tee trip back wit' tee prevailing winds behind you.'
'You can build one of t'ose—those?' Pahner asked.
'Wit' a little help. T'ey gots most of tee techniques we need, they jus' use 'em all wrong. T'ese ships t'ey make are tubs—not all t'at bad for what t'ey does, but t'ey don' do much. Never sail out o' sight o' land, run for shore whenever a storm blow up, t'ings like t'at. T'at's why I don't t'ink nobody's gonna make it 'cross tee ocean in one o' t'ese toy boats. But smooth out tee lines, give some deadrise an' some more dept' of hull, lower tee freeboard fore an' aft an' bring it up some in between, an' you gots you'self a real tiddly ship. On'y real problem is, t'ey don' use buildin' drafts—t'ey designs by eye an' uses half-models to fair tee lines.'
'Do you have any idea at all what he's talking about?' Roger asked O'Casey plaintively, and the chief of staff laughed.
'No, but it certainly sounds like
'It not so dif'rent from some o' tee little yards back home,' the Pinopan said, 'on'y we use 'puter wire drawings, instead. You build you'self a model—tee scummies, t'ey do it out o' wood, 'cause t'ey gots no computers—an' t'en you takes tee lines direct from tee model to tee finished ship wit'out detailed plans. 'Course, tee scummies, t'ey don' know nothin' 'bout displacement an' stability calc'lations, an' t'eir mouldin' lofts suck, but I can handle t'at no sweat.'
'All of which means?' Pahner pressed.
'I wanna make a half-scale model to test my numbers,' Poertena told him. 'T'at take about a month. T'en, if it good an ever't'ing go smooth, t'ree months for tee rest.'
'
'Can't do it no faster, Sir,' the sergeant said apologetically. 'T'at's as fast as we can go, an' t'at's after we gets tee materials. I can start on tee model as soon as I gets some funds. Talked to a pretty good shipbuilder today, an' I t'ink we can work wit' him. But we gotta get timbers, an' more important, we gotta get a dozen or so masts—an' spare masts an' spars, too, an' sails, now I t'ink about it—from somewheres.'
'You were prophetic, Your Highness,' Pahner said sourly. 'This shipbuilder, Poertena—he didn't happen to have anything to do with a fellow named Wes Til, did he?'
'Don' know, Sir. Is t'at important?'
'Maybe, but not for the model, I think. Okay, you're authorized to draw funds as necessary. If it isn't terribly expensive, buy a small craft to unstep the mast for the model. And get that shipyard to work. I want the model completed in three weeks.'
'I try, Sir,' the Pinopan said mournfully, 'but I don' t'ink it gonna happen in t'ree weeks. I only say a mont' 'cause I know you not gonna let me have two. But I try.'
A quiet knock at the door interrupted the discussion, and PFC Kyrou poked his head into the room.
'Captain Pahner, Sir, we have two Mardukan gentlemen out here with what I think are dinner invitations.'
Pahner raised one eyebrow and made a pointing gesture with the index finger and cocked thumb of his gun hand. The private shook his head in reply, indicating that neither seemed to be armed, and the captain nodded to let them in.
Both of the Mardukans wore enough jewelry to open a shop, but to Pahner's admittedly inexpert eye, it didn't appear to be of very high quality.
'I'm Captain Pahner. And you are?'
'I am Des Dar,' the first said, bowing slightly in the local fashion with clenched fists brought into shoulders. 'I bring Prince Roger an invitation to a personal dinner with my employer, Wes Til.' The messenger proffered a tied and sealed scroll. 'The location and time are within. May I tell my employer that you accept?'
'
* * *
Kyrou saw three more functionaries, scrolls in hand, approaching the prince's room and judiciously turned off his toot's translator function. Then he leaned back in through the door and caught Captain Pahner's eye.
'Three more scummy flunkies inbound, Sir.'
Cord, who'd learned enough English to recognize the untranslated human term for the locals, turned a grunt of laughter into a cough.
'Sorry,' he said when Des Dar and Tal Fer looked at him. 'Age is catching up with these old lungs.'
Pahner frowned at the private and gave the old shaman a very speaking glance, then turned back to the first two messengers.
'Sirs, please convey to your employers our delight at their invitations and—'
He stopped, out of both polite phrases and his depth, and looked appealingly at Roger's chief of staff. O'Casey's eyes creased in a smile as she looked back at him, but she took over smoothly.
'However, we are unable to respond immediately,' she told the messengers. 'Please convey that to your employers, along with the fact that we will reply to them as soon as possible.'
The messengers jockeyed for position as they handed their scrolls to the chief of staff. She took them smoothly, with a courteous refusal to give either precedence, then gave the same message to the trio Kyrou had spotted when they arrived. Two more turned up after those, and at that point Pahner ordered Kyrou to repeat the mantra for O'Casey and closed the door. Firmly.
'We need some local input on these,' O'Casey said, as she perused the documents. The text was readable, thanks to her toot, and the invitations were not only from Council members, but also from major merchants. She suspected that some of those might be more important in the long run than the Council members themselves.
'Cord, could you pass the word for Rastar, please?' Roger said. 'We're going to need to get his input on these invitations and some sort of stronger feel for whether or not his forces really intend to accompany us overseas.'
'Yes, My Lord,' the shaman said obsequiously, and climbed to his feet. 'Your