as if he were cold.
'They were lunatics,' he said flatly. 'Most of them, we found out later, were 'security troops' for the previous regime out in the People's Republic of Haven. Apparently they actually crewed entire starships with 'security' personnel to keep an eye on their regular navy units!'
He looked at Abigail as if, even now, he found that difficult to believe, and she nodded.
'Yes, they did. We've had... quite a bit of experience with them ourselves. The previous Havenite regime wasn't noted for moderation.'
'I'll take your word for it,' Baranyai said. 'I might not have, once, but I will now, for damned sure. Somehow the 'faxes don't seem to've reported the full story on the People's Republic. Nothing I ever saw said anything about homicidal maniacs being put in charge of the asylum!'
'Not all Havenites are maniacs. We aren't too fond of them, of course, but honesty compels me to admit that the present regime genuinely seems to have done everything it can to expose and eradicate the excesses of its predecessors.' It came out sounding more stilted than Abigail had intended, but it was nothing less than the truth.
'I can believe that, too, from the way these people carried on,' Baranyai said. 'Their commander-'Citizen Commodore Clignet,' he called himself-could rant and rave for a half-hour at a time, and at the drop of the hat, about the 'recidivists' and 'class traitors' and 'enemies of the Revolution' and 'betrayers of the People' who'd conspired to overthrow the legitimate government of the People's Republic and murder somebody called Saint- Just.'
Abigail nodded again, and Baranyai looked at her helplessly.
'I thought the Havenite head of state was named Pierre,' he protested.
'He was. Saint-Just replaced him after he died in a coup attempt.'
'If you say so.'
Baranyai shook his head, and Abigail found herself smothering a smile at the way the Solly's confusion put the all-consuming importance of the war against Haven and the reasons for it into brutal perspective from a Solarian viewpoint.
'Anyway,' the merchant spacer continued, 'Clignet apparently sees himself as point man for the counterattack to 'save the Revolution.' He isn't just a common, garden variety, scum of the universe pirate, in his own eyes, at least. And he's real big on maintaining 'revolutionary discipline.'' Baranyai shivered again. 'As nearly as I can tell, that's just an excuse to indulge in torture. Anybody-and I mean
'Captain Bacon lasted about two weeks,' the lieutenant said bleakly, 'and it took him about three days to die. Sophia Abercrombie, our second engineer, went a week later. But we weren't the only ones. Actually, I think some of his people were delighted to see us because it gave them the chance to divert him to another target. As nearly as I ever managed to figure it out, Clignet and Daumier and a half dozen other senior officers have been holding things together through a combination of loot, the opportunity for their people to amuse themselves with any prisoners, and an organized reign of terror of their own. We were the bottom rung of the ladder, but anybody who even looked like getting out of step was fair game.
'I'm still not clear on what happened today,' he went on. 'They had us scattered out in working parties, as usual, when someone blew the hell out of Engineering. Was that you people?'
'I'm afraid so,' Abigail admitted soberly. 'I'm sorry if we killed any of your people, Lieutenant. But with only one hyper-capable ship and targets over a half light-hour apart-' She shrugged.
'I understand.' Baranyai closed his eyes for a moment, his face wrung with pain, but when he opened them again, they met Abigail's levelly. 'I wish it hadn't happened, but I understand. And,' he managed a crooked, infinitely bitter smile, 'if you hadn't done it, we'd probably all've been dead in a few months, anyway. Or wishing we were.'
He inhaled deeply.
'Anyway. You blew the crap out of the ship. Citizen Lieutenant Eisenhower, the prize master Clignet had assigned to
'After, of course, killing off the rest of our people so we couldn't interfere.'
He fell silent again, staring off at something only he could see. Then he gave himself a shake and his eyes refocused on Abigail.
'I guess at least a few of his people decided they didn't want to be martyrs to the Revolution, after all.
He waved both hands in a vague, yet all-inclusive gesture at the ship about them, and Abigail nodded.
'Yes, you are,' she said quietly. 'Lieutenant Baranyai, I wish you and your people hadn't had to endure everything you've been through, and I deeply regret the deaths of your fellow officers and crew. I wish we hadn't been forced to add to them. But, on behalf of
'At the moment, Lieutenant Hearns,' Baranyai said with simple, heartfelt sincerity, 'I can't think of anything we could want more than that.'
'Then let's get my pinnaces in here and lift you people off.'
Chapter Twenty-Seven
'What do you think will happen to them?' Ragnhild asked -quietly.
'To the Peeps? Or Baranyai's people?' Helen asked in reply.
All of
There'd been enough left of
'All of them, I guess,' Ragnhild said. 'But I was thinking mostly about the Peeps.'
'Fuck the Peeps,' Aikawa said, so harshly Helen glanced at him in some surprise. 'You talked to Baranyai, just like me, Ragnhild. Do you think for a minute they don't deserve whatever they get?'
'I didn't say I felt
'Whatever it is, it'll be better than they have coming,' Aikawa muttered, staring down at the hands
