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Rascal’s insystem drives, upgraded to the power of a small cruiser, nudged her out of Station space efficiently, and made short work of the run out to the first maneuver site. Most patrol class took 18 hours . . . Rascal made it in fifteen and a half, on the same power setting.

“Makes me wonder if some of those supply crates are empty.” Esmay’s executive officer, Jig Turner, had a dry sense of humor she already enjoyed.

“Hope not,” she said now. “I was planning on feeding everyone regularly for the next several months.”

Commander Kessler, on the supply ship Plexus, ran the maneuver region with an iron hand, not hampered at all by being in a fat, slow, cargo vessel. Esmay reported in promptly: “R.S.S. Rascal, Suiza commanding, permission to engage in maneuver . . .”

Rascal, note traffic in Sector Yellow: patrol craft Sitra, Scamp, and Salute. Confirm ID match, return signal.” Esmay’s senior scan highlighted the blips on his screen; the beacon IDs came up correctly, and he transmitted his match to Plexus for confirmation. “Traffic IDs confirmed. No microjumping in Sector Yellow. You will proceed as follows . . .” Up on the main screen came the course they were to match. The first part of maneuver practice was simply designed to ensure that the ships could follow a designated course solo. Then they’d begin to practice in formation.

The first day’s work went well; Esmay’s crew knew their business, and Rascal answered the helm neatly, once they’d figured out the corrective function for their velocity under the new engines. Esmay forced herself to go to bed, but woke up at least once an hour.

The next day, they were assigned to microjump practice, in the far reaches of the system, light hours from anyone else. Esmay found it less nerve-wracking than she expected, with a navigational computer that wasn’t shot full of holes, as Despite’s had been. She could feel the rising morale of the bridge crew, as Rascal hit one designated set of coordinates after another. When they had finished the set of sixteen jumps, and recalibrated all the instruments, she grinned at them. “Well done, people! I don’t have to wait for our scores to know we aced that test.”

That ship’s night, with Rascal on insystem drive working its way back to the area for the next day’s formation maneuvers, she slept well. Formation maneuvers tested the bridge crew almost as much as microjumping practice. Fleet had not used formal convoys in decades, with the result that no one was familiar with the formations needed. Commodore Admiral Minor Livadhi, who would command their convoy, wanted to try out first one, then another, formation. Should the escorts be farther away? Closer in? Should the patrols be alternated with escorts, or bunched together?

When they finally finished (and the commodore still hadn’t made up his mind, apparently), and headed back for the Station for a final resupply, Esmay felt that only one thing was certain: She had a good crew which was rapidly getting better.

Admiral Livadhi invited the captains of all the ships that would be in his convoy to dinner aboard his flagship. Esmay, who had last seen Vigilance under Heris Serrano’s command, wondered how many of Heris’s crew were aboard. Livadhi himself impressed her as a competent officer much like her own father; he had a pleasant comment for each officer as he shook hands.

“You’re the most recent arrival from Castle Rock,” Livadhi said, after they were seated. “Tell us, Lt. Suiza, about the latest gossip.”

“I’m sure you know all the Fleet news, sir, but had you heard about the fugitive from the Benignity?”

“A fugitive? No, tell us.”

“He was on the ship I took from Trinidad to Castle Rock,” Esmay said. “A merchanter. He told the strangest story—” She paused. “I don’t think there’s anything wrong with telling you—not now that he’s reached Castle Rock.”

“Don’t torture us, Lieutenant,” Livadhi said. He sipped his wine.

“Yes, sir—well, I don’t know the whole story, but he claimed to be a priest in the Benignity, who had to flee. He said they claimed he was a heretic, and he wasn’t—”

“Do they kill heretics in the Benignity?” someone else asked.

“I’d believe it,” said another.

“It wasn’t just being a heretic. I’m not sure I understand it—it’s his religion anyway—but he claimed he was the last confessor for someone important, and his government was afraid—because he was a heretic—that he’d reveal what he heard.”

“Did you believe him?” Livadhi asked.

Esmay considered, remembering her conversations with the colorless but nonetheless passionate little man. “I think he believed what he said. He wanted to talk to me because I’m from Altiplano, and he thought maybe we had useful religious archives.”

“But do you think he had any state secrets to reveal?” Livadhi said it lightly, and several people chuckled.

“I don’t know,” Esmay said. “He said he wouldn’t tell what he knew anyway, because—heretic or not—he still considered himself bound by his oath not to.”

“But he’s at Castle Rock, you said. Surely Fleet Intelligence will get it out of him?”

Esmay shrugged. “He’s a civilian, a priest with a monomania about some cult or something they have in the Benignity, something to do with swords or something. Why would they be that interested in him? And anyway, they were shipping him out to the Guernesi on a diplomatic ship; he may be gone by now.”

“They did assassinate our Speaker . . .” someone else said thoughtfully. “Maybe that was his big secret.”

“When did you meet up with him, Lieutenant?” Livadhi asked. Esmay tried to calculate and failed.

“Sir, I’ve been hopping around so, I really don’t know. I didn’t really notice him aboard the merchant ship for some time after I came aboard . . . and then we stopped at Zenebra . . . I’m sorry, sir, but I can’t remember whether it was before or after that.”

“It doesn’t matter, I suppose,” Livadhi said. “But just supposing he were the confessor for their head of state, and bolted immediately for our borders, he might have reached Familias Space before the assassination took place.”

“But they’ve said they did it,” Esmay said. “It’s not a secret now.”

“Not now . . . but it could have been then. And who knows what other bombshells he has to drop?”

“Well . . . I had to have my security clearances reinstated, so I was stuck at HQ for a couple of hours, and I did hear somebody speculating about whether he might have a complete list of Benignity agents or something, but I can’t imagine that. Having planted spies might be a sin, but a list of names wouldn’t be.”

“Are they concerned about Benignity penetration, do you think?”

Esmay nodded. “Under the circumstances, with the mutiny and the assassination coming so close, I’d say they have reason to worry. The combination certainly made things easier for the Benignity. They deny having anything to do with the mutiny, but someone’s come forward to say that Bacarion and Drizh had said favorable things about discipline in the Benignity Space Forces.” She chuckled. “Of course, there were people saying that I had expressed treasonous ideas when it was to their benefit.”

“So you don’t believe it?”

“Sir, I haven’t the data on which to form an opinion. I know that, unfortunately, gossip and rumor can be taken as truth—with dire consequences for the subjects of it. On the other hand, what I learned about the Benignity while talking to Simon—to the priest—certainly makes a connection sound more possible. The mutineers say the rest of us are undisciplined, soft, self-indulgent: that’s what the Benignity says about the Familias, too. I haven’t heard of the mutineers being religious, particularly, and Simon says the Benignity would not sanction anything like that hunting business, but—the mutineers might think it did.”