decision is between her and the three of us'-he nodded to Stephen-'but it's absolutely final. Not to put too fine a point on it, the governor doesn't want her fleet and her most able captains weeks and perhaps months away when the danger to Venus is so great.'
'It's not 'months' to a Near Space world like Asuncion, not even for Federation navigators,' Piet said. 'The way to scotch, to
'
'I'll be given a squadron for operations within the Solar System?' Piet said with a grin of acquiescence. His expression sobered slightly. 'That's how the orders will be phrased, 'within the Solar System'?'
Duneen nodded. 'Yes. Much of the materiel with which the Feds are fitting out their fleet comes from Earth. You can interdict that trade.'
'Winnipeg is the major port on Earth for supplies being sent to Asuncion,' Stephen said. They'd known the governor wouldn't permit a distant operation. The choice of an alternative target was Piet's, but the two of them together had roughed out the plan. All that remained was to sell Councilor Duneen on the idea.
'Good God, man!' the councilor said. 'You can't just waltz into Winnipeg. The Feds know the risk, and they've surely increased their defenses over the past year!'
'We'll need current intelligence, that's true,' Piet agreed.
Duneen shook his head. 'The Feds are limiting the traffic that lands even on the commercial side of Winnipeg Port,' he said. 'Besides, since your last raid there's almost no direct Venus-Federation trade.'
'Stephen here is the owner of a vessel in the regular Earth trade,' Piet said. 'With the right cargo, she'll be able to land in Winnipeg. Even now.'
'What kind of cargo. .' Duneen asked cautiously.
Piet nodded. 'Venerian cannon, cast in Bahama. The arms trade from Venus to the Federation is at least as great as it ever was, because the prices Pleyal is willing to pay for first-quality guns is so high in the crisis. My father can get us a cargo from a firm who's supplied guns in the past.'
'Look, Ricimer, you can't expect to spy out the port yourself,' the councilor said, concern replacing shock on his face. 'You'd be recognized!'
'Not as a common crewman,' Piet said with a shrug. 'The rest of the crew will be folk who've been with me for a decade, folk I know can keep their mouths shut. If I'm going to plan the operation, I can't trust any other eyes than my own.'
'Good God,' Duneen said softly. 'Well, let's hope the governor doesn't hear about it. She'd flay me alive if she thought I'd let her favorite captain take a risk like that!'
Stephen Gregg thought about the risk to the
EARTH ORBIT
April 6, Year 27
0520 hours, Venus time
The Federation guardship was a blur with three distinct jags across it where the screen's raster skipped a line. Technicians had degraded the
The four plasma cannon aimed at the
'About that,' Stephen agreed in a tone of dreamy disinterest. He sat on a bunk, his hands in his lap and his eyes unfocused.
The outer airlock door squealed as the Federation inspector started to undog it manually from outside.
'Listen to me,' Piet Ricimer said crisply from where he manned the attitude-control panel with Dole and Lightbody. 'None of us need love the Feds, but anyone who causes an incident will answer to me afterwards. If we're both alive, that is. Understood?'
'Won't be a problem, sir,' Dole said mildly. 'Won't nobody make a problem.'
'Tom, the hatch,' Sal said to Harrigan. Harrigan threw the lever that retracted the dogs of the inner hatch hydraulically.
The hatch opened. The slightly higher pressure in the guardship and boarding tube popped the first of the three Fed inspectors into the cabin like a cork from a champagne bottle. Harrigan tried to grab the man. The Fed batted Harrigan's hand away, spinning himself completely around before he fetched up against supply netting on the opposite bulkhead.
'Don't you stinkballers have a pressure system?' the Fed demanded. 'And I'll tell you, if you'd taken one spin more before getting your rotation stopped, we'd have blown you to bits and inspected the pieces!'
All three inspectors were puffy-faced and run-down from too long in weightlessness. That probably accounted for some of their ill temper too, though Sal doubted the cream of the Federation military was assigned duty to the ships guarding the orbital entry windows for Winnipeg.
'Look, it's an old ship,' she said in what she hoped was a reasonable tone. 'First you make us do a slow three-sixty rotation to check for spy cameras, then you tell us to stand still for a boarding bridge. It's not that easy, you know!'
'Didn't say it was easy,' said a second inspector. 'Said the next trip back, you better learn to control this pig better or we get some target practice.'
'Where's your fucking manifest?' the third inspector, the female, demanded. Tom Harrigan gave her a sheaf of hard copy on a clipboard.
The second inspector drifted over to the navigation console. Sal thought he intended to check the resolution of their screen. Instead the man reached down to pat her breast. She doubled her right leg, then kicked him across the cabin.
The Venerian crew grew very still. The Fed caught himself on a bunk, Stephen's bunk. He laughed. 'You know, I thought it was funny you stinkballers would have a woman captain. Guess you're just a man with tits, huh, honey?'
'I own the ship, and I'm carrying you the cargo,' Sal said tight-lipped. She had to assume that the inspectors lacked the authority to reject a vessel with a cargo like the
'So I see,' said the woman with the manifest. 'Six fifteen-centimeter plasma cannon. You know, some of you people would sell their mothers, wouldn't you?'
'Look, we're sailors, we're not politicians,' Sal said. 'If President Pleyal doesn't want to do business, fine. There's a market for these, believe me,'
The second inspector stared at Stephen beside him. 'Hey,' the Fed said. 'You look like shit. Do you have something contagious, is that it?'
Stephen stared at his fingers interlaced on his lap. 'I'm here to watch things for the seller,' he said in a dead voice. 'I'd never gone through transit, and I swear to God that once I'm back on Venus I never will again. Just do your job so I can stand on firm ground again. All right?'
The female inspector scrawled her initials on the bottom of the manifest. Instead of handing the clipboard back to Harrigan, she flipped it into a corner of the cabin. 'Let's get out of this pigsty,' she said. 'The sulphur stink makes me want to puke.'
The Feds bounced out the boarding tube. They moved in weightless conditions with the skill of experience, but there was a porcine sluggishness to them. Sal wondered how long Pleyal kept his guardship crews in orbit. Too long, certainly.
Harrigan shut the airlock hatches together. Probert, a motor specialist, said in an injured tone, 'Where'd she get that stuff about sulphur? Our air's as clean as clean!'
Because Piet Ricimer was normally a flashy dresser, he stuck out like a sore thumb to his familiars now that he wore a common spacer's canvas jumpsuit. The Feds hadn't given him a second look, though.
He shrugged cheerfully. 'If she hadn't made up a problem,' he said, 'she might have tried to find a real one.