'That's correct. I expect we will be notified as to which officers and enlisted will be required to function as witnesses at the court-martial. Until such time, we still have a ship to run. Are there any further questions?'

Kris Denaldo raised one hand tentatively. 'Ma'am? If we see Captain Wakeman, what do we… um…'

'If you encounter Captain Wakeman, you will render him the military courtesies appropriate to an officer of his rank. He is no longer commanding officer of the Michaelson, however, and no longer entitled to anything that position entailed.'

'Thank you, ma'am.'

Herdez nodded to the group, then left. 'Attention on deck,' Sindh called out, quickly followed by 'At ease' after Herdez had cleared the hatch. 'Okay, boys and girls. Now we know. Let's get back to work.'

Carl looked over at Paul. 'I always imagined I'd be cheering the day Cap'n Pete Wakeman left this ship. Why don't I feel like cheering?'

'I don't know. Neither do I. He's getting what he deserves. Right?'

'I think so. You don't sound so certain.'

'How could I not be certain?'

Carl shrugged. 'I don't know. Hey, do you know where Jan Tweed is?'

Paul didn't try to disguise his automatic flinch at the question. 'No. Now what?'

'Relax. Her orders came through. I just want to make sure she knows.'

'That's great. If I see her I'll let her know.'

'Thanks. Now I have to run down Sam Yarrow.'

'Did he get orders, too?'

Carl smiled at Paul's hopeful expression. 'No. Promotion list came through. Yarrow made JG.'

'Whoopee.' Popular belief was that the average officer would be promoted from ensign to lieutenant junior grade as long as he or she could hear thunder and see lightning. But the promotion still meant a great deal as an escape from the ghetto of being an ensign. 'That means we'll get a new bull ensign, right?' Yarrow's reign as the most senior of the ensigns had been notable not for his support of his juniors but rather for their distrust of him. Now that he'd been promoted, some other ensign would be designated the bull. 'Who's next in seniority?'

'Jen Shen.'

'Jen? We'll have a female bull? She'll be great at the job, but isn't that sort of an oxymoron?'

'Are you going to tell Jen she's an oxymoron?'

'Hell, no. I value my life too much to do that.'

'You're learning, Paul. Maybe you'll make JG, too, someday.'

'Thanks.' Paul followed Carl out, then hesitated in the passageway, unable to decide his next action.

Over the ship's all-hands circuit he heard two quick bongs of the ship's bell, followed by two more, then the announcement, ' Michaelson, departing.' The captain of the ship was referred to by the ship's name when he or she arrived or departed onboard, a tradition going back who knew how long. A few minutes ago he would have known the person leaving the ship was Wakeman. Now he knew it was Herdez, doubtless reporting in person to higher authority. Odd, how quickly a universe could change.

'Is something the matter, sir?'

Paul looked up as Senior Chief Kowalski came past. 'Sorry, Senior Chief. I was sort of lost in thought.'

'Not happy thoughts, if I'm any judge.'

'Are you surprised? How's the crew taking all this, Senior Chief?'

Kowalski grimaced. 'About as you'd expect. A few want to cheer.'

'Only a few?'

'Yes, sir. Oh, Mr. Sinclair, you and I both know the Captain wasn't too popular on the mess decks. But it's hard for most folks to be happy about someone else getting hammered, even if they think he deserved it. Meaning no disrespect to Captain Wakeman, of course, sir.'

'I understand. What you say is true, Senior Chief.'

Kowalski peered closely at Paul. 'You worried, sir? About yourself?'

'About me? No. I don't think they'll try to pin anything on me. It looks like Wakeman is the only one being charged.'

'That's not what I meant, sir.'

Paul looked back at the senior chief, a man subject to his every legal order, yet also literally old enough to be his father. 'Yeah, I'm worried. I'm not sure I'm doing as well as I should. At everything.'

'Well, sir, I can't comment on everything. And there's nothing wrong with wondering if you can do better. But you're doing okay, sir. I think you're a good officer.'

Paul stared back this time. 'Really? Thanks, Senior Chief. That means a lot.'

'No problem, sir. You earned it. Just don't rest on your laurels.' Kowalski moved on down the passageway. 'By your leave, sir.'

'By all means, Senior Chief.' Paul squeezed up against the bulkhead to let Kowalski past, then decided to go in search of Jan Tweed. Telling Tweed about her orders would be a rare opportunity to give her good news once he'd run her down.

Less than twenty-four hours later, Paul found a message on his data link from a Commander John Wilkes, Judge Advocate General's Corps. 'Commander Wilkes has been appointed trial counsel in the case of the United States versus Captain Peter Wakeman.' Trial counsel. That's the prosecutor. 'Contact Commander Wilkes as soon as possible to arrange an interview. Remain available at all times as a potential witness.' Okay, that means a convening order has been issued, right?

Paul called the ship's office, where administrative issues were handled and any incoming official mail was routed to the right officers. 'Have you guys received a copy of the convening order for a court-martial against Captain Wakeman?'

'Uh, sir, that document was marked for delivery to the XO. I'm sorry, I mean acting-Captain Herdez.'

'I'm the ship's legal officer. I have a need to see it, too.'

'You weren't on distribution, sir.'

Paul shook his head, annoyed. 'Is it marked Eyes Only?' He knew it wouldn't be. Convening orders and charge sheets were matters of public record.

'No, sir. I guess there's no problem with you seeing it, then. We'll shoot a copy to your message queue.'

'Thanks.'

A moment later his data link chimed to indicate receipt of the document. Paul called up the convening order, scanning it first. It's a general court-martial, alright. A military judge and five members. He went back, reviewing the names of the members of the court-martial, then called up data on those officers, curious as to their service histories. The Military Judge is Captain Olivia Holmes. Her service history is one hundred percent JAG, but what else would you expect? President of the court-martial is Rear Admiral Charles 'Chip' Fowler. OSWO, of course. Commanded various ships, also of course. The usual service awards. Wow. His brother's an admiral, too. Talk about sibling rivalry. Okay, what about the other members? Captain Hailey Nguyen. She's also OSWO. Just came off command of the Mahan. Mahan was the ship we relieved in that patrol area. She's not likely to cut Wakeman any slack. Then Captain Jose Feres. OSWO, last command was the Farragut. That's three Space Warfare Specialists, all with command experience. Then there's Captain Pedro Valdez, Supply Corps. I bet he'll feel like a fish out of water, but they had to dig up five officers who were at least captains to serve on this court-martial, and there can't be all that many candidates on Franklin. Finally, Captain Gail Bolton. Intelligence Specialist? Oh, yeah, they pulled her off the fleet staff.

Wakeman's certainly getting a jury of his peers. I wonder if he's happy about that or scared to death?

The convening order had an attachment. The charge sheet. I guess we'll finally find out what charges they're going to try to use to hang Wakeman. Paul stared as the attachment downloaded. Why is it so long? He waited impatiently, then began running down the charges. Violation of Article 86? Leaving Place of Duty? Two specifications? Why are they bothering bringing in Article 86? Next came Article 92… 'Failure to Obey Order or Regulation… first specification… in that Captain Peter Wakeman did… fail to maintain his assigned duty within the patrol area designated by general order 245-95'… that's the same as the reason for one of the Article 86 charges… 'second specification… failed to conform to operating instructions for his patrol… third specification…

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