won't have settled facilities there, so be sure to complete any maintenance requiring equipment we don't carry.'
The next layover would be Mocha, one of the Breach worlds. The Southerns occasionally laid over on Mocha, but there was no colony. Mocha's only permanent inhabitants were a handful of so-called Rabbits: hunter-gatherers descended from pre-Collapse settlers. Though remnant populations like Mocha's were scattered across the former human sphere, none of them had risen to the level of barbarism.
'We've gained a small success,' Ricimer said. Stephen Gregg was a bulky shadow in the hold behind the general commander, out of the light. Dole and others of Ricimer's longtime followers stood at the foot of the ramp. Not a bodyguard, precisely, but-there.
'We have also had losses,' Ricimer said, 'some of them unnecessary. Remember that success is with the Lord, but that we owe to Him and to our fellows discipline as well as courage.'
Federation prisoners listened to the general commander's address from beyond the pool of light. We'd left them unguarded since the day we landed. When we lifted off in the morning, the Feds could carry on as they had before.
I wondered if Lavonne was listening. After the hulk returned to the base, she'd been very. . 'understanding' would be the wrong word; Lavonne hadn't in the least understood my desperate need to return to
I prayed it had been enough.
'There'll be one personnel change on the next stage of the voyage,' Ricimer said. 'I'm transferring Mister Hawtry to the
'You'll do
'Mister Hawtry-' Ricimer said. Behind him, Stephen Gregg moved into the light, tall and as straight as a knifeblade.
'If you were a gentleman and not a potter's whelp,' Hawtry cried, 'I'd call you out!'
I slid forward through the crowd. My hands were flexing.
Gregg stepped in front of the general commander. He held a rifle muzzle-down along his right thigh. His face had no expression at all. 'I'm a gentleman, Mister Hawtry,' he said.
Hawtry stopped, his right foot resting on the ramp.
Gregg pointed his left index finger at Hawtry. 'And take your hat off when you address the general commander,' Gregg said. His voice had a fluting lightness, terrible to hear. 'As a mark of respect.'
'Stephen,' Ricimer said. He lifted a hand toward Gregg's shoulder but didn't touch the bigger man. 'I'll handle this.'
'Mister Hawtry,' Gregg said. He didn't shout, but his tone pierced the night like an awl. 'I won't warn you again.'
I reached the front of the assembly. Easy to do, since men were edging back and to either side. Ricimer's veterans formed a tight block in the center.
Hawtry wasn't a coward, I knew that. Hawtry stared at Gregg, and at Ricimer's tense face beyond that of the gunman. Hawtry could obey or die. It was as simple as that. As well argue with an avalanche as Gregg in this mood.
Hawtry snatched off his cap, an affair of scarlet and gold lacework. He crushed it in his hands. 'Your pardon, Mister Ricimer,' he said. The words rubbed each other like gravel tumbling.
Gregg stepped aside. He looked bored, but there was a sheen of sweat on his forehead.
'There will be no duels during this expedition,' Piet Ricimer said. His tone was fiery, but his eyes were focused on the far distance rather than the assembly before him. 'We are on the Lord's business, reopening the stars to His service. If anyone fights a duel-'
Ricimer put his hand on Gregg's shoulder and turned the bigger man to face him. Gregg was the dull wax of a candle, and his friend was a flame.
'If anyone fights a duel,' Ricimer said. 'Is that understood?'
Gregg dropped to one knee before the general commander. He rotated his right wrist so that the rifle was behind him, pointing harmlessly into the flagship's hold.
Ricimer lifted him. Gregg stepped back into the shadows again. 'If anyone fights a duel,' Ricimer repeated, but the fierceness was gone from his voice, 'then the surviving parties will be left at the landfall where the offense against the Lord occurred. There will be no exceptions.'
He looked out over us. The assembly gave a collective sigh.
Ricimer knelt down. 'Let us pray,' he said, tenting his hands before him.
Decades Station had barracks to accommodate more transients than the whole of the Venerian force. One of the blocks was brightly illuminated. In it, spacers with a flute, a tambourine, and some kind of plucked string instrument were playing to a crowd.
I sat on the porch of the administration building across the way, wondering if any of the Federation women were inside with our men.
Lavonne would be waiting for me in her quarters. I'd go to her soon. As soon as I calmed down.
'. . could stick them all in the hulk,' said a voice from the darkness. Footsteps crunched along the path. Two sailors were sauntering toward the party. 'None of them gentlemen's worth a flying fuck.'
'Well, they're not much good for real work,' said a second voice, which I thought might be Jeude's. 'Get into a fight, though, they can be something else again.'
'Gregg?' said the first voice. 'I give you that.'
'I swear the new fellow, Moore, he's as bad,' replied might-be-Jeude. The pair were past the porch now, continuing up the path. 'Straight into a dozen Molts,
'Likes to get close, huh?'
'He didn't even stop when they were dead!' the second man said, his voice growing fainter with increasing distance. 'I swear, Dorsey, you never saw anything like it in your life.'
My eyes were closed and I was shivering. After a time, I'm not sure how long, I stood shakily and began to walk toward the station's staff quarters.
MOCHA
Day 37
The mid-afternoon sun was so wan that stars were already out on the western horizon. At night they formed a sky-filling haze, too dense to be called constellations. The wind that swept across the ankle-high tundra was dank and chill.
'There's one of them,' I said. I started to raise my hand to point at the Rabbit sidling down the slope a kilometer away.
The native didn't seem to be walking directly toward the ships on the shallow valley's floor. His track would bring him there nonetheless, as a moth spirals in on a flame.
Piet Ricimer caught my arm before it lifted. 'He'll think you're trying to shoot him,' Ricimer said.
'Yeah,' Macquerie agreed. 'No point in putting the wind up the little beasts. They can fling stones farther than you'd believe.'
A pump chuffed as it filled the
'There were a dozen Rabbits in the old Southern camp when we landed,' Gregg muttered. 'Where did they go?'
Macquerie shrugged. 'Mostly they sleep in little trenches without top cover,' he said. 'Hard to see unless you step in one. Anyway, if they're gone, they aren't pilfering from us.'
'They can't take enough to harm us seriously,' Ricimer said. 'They're men like us. I won't have them treated