And if Wolfe was on his own liberty-tour, off having pork and real whiskey or whatever captains ate that the 'decks never saw, well, hell if that cold bastard was going to want to hear that Bet Yeager had the willies about Mr. Fitch.
Dammit, Orsini knows Fitch is on-ship right now, Bernie's got to know—Bernie's got to care… Bernie's got to be smart enough to figure what can happen…
Probably a stupid panic, Fitch never pushes anything that'll get shit on him, he's smarter than that, that's always the trouble. If Bernie was smart enough to get a hands-off and a no-talk order down from Wolfe, then Fitch won't dare open his mouth to NG—
Please God.
She shut the locker door again, attached the clips to the nearest ring, and sat down to work on the damn rig again, familiar feel, familiar smell that set off memories just handling it, waked up old ways of dealing with things—fond thoughts of how Fitch could just turn up dead somewhere—except, dammit, ask anybody on the ship who'd have most reason to want Fitch dead and the answer would always come up NG Ramey; and even if nobody gave a damn about Fitch taking a long fall, you couldn't axe somebody that high up unless you could really make it credibly an accident that just couldn't be anything else.
God, isn't Fitch going to come back topside?
What's going on down there?
While she sat there adjusting little damn tension screws…
And hell if that sonuvabitch mof on the bridge had ever called Orsini, just count herself lucky if maybe he wouldn't even bother to call Fitch.
Oh, God, Bernie, check back in, you know Fitch is out for blood—get your ass back on this ship, get Orsini back here—
Nothing. Just nothing, while she adjusted screws and took pieces off and put them on again, sick at her stomach, thinking and thinking of ways to get at Fitch.
Get him to hit her, maybe, get him somewhere near the safety limit in the corridor out there—
Sorry, captain, he was shoving me and I just moved—
What if he didn't die?
She heard the lift work again, heard it reach topside, and sat and patiently adjusted screws and thought, I got to have the Flexyne, shop's got to be warmer now, I can go down there and get some tubing, get a chance to talk to NG—no knowing if it was Fitch just come up, but he can't be still talking down there…
Damn, if I go down there I got to tell NG everything…
Got to find him in a decent mood, I got to—
God, I hope he didn't hit Fitch.
She hooked the left gauntlet up with the left arm, flexed the fingers—whole arm exhausted just from the resistance in the damn thing.
If I try to make up what I'm going to say I'll just screw it up—I just got to tell him, is all, whether or not Fitch's done anything, either patch it up or head it off—
She safety-clipped the sleeve, closed the lid on the tool-kit.
The door opened. She looked up at Fitch, Fitch walked in and looked over what she was doing, the scattered pieces of the rig.
"Having a problem, Ms. Yeager?"
The airlock opened, distant echo through the ship. She tried to collect herself and remember what exactly she'd said to the mof out there, said, "Mr. Orsini didn't indicate whether he wanted a patch or a fix, sir."
"How's it coming, so far?"
From Fitch, a quiet and civil question. It rattled her. She made a second try after scattered wits, got a breath. "I dunno, sir, nothing particularly wrong with the rig, except it must've hit something pretty hard, probably—"
"How much to go on this one?"
"I dunno, sir, depends on whether I go for a clean fix or a dirty one."
"How well's a dirty one hold?"
"'Bout the same. Just a matter of—"
"How long?"
—Doing it right, she had been about to say. Pride. Something like that. Fitch's attitude pissed her. But she said, "On this one… maybe eighty, a hundred hours. I want to get into the pumps, check—"
"What about the other one?"
"I dunno, sir. Longer than that."
"You need some help?"
"I don't think we got it," she said. "You know or you don't know, you go to fuckin' around with the joint screws, you can get everything out. You ever had it in adjustment, you got a chance; you ever had somebody messing with the screws, you got no starting point to depend on, you got a real mess. Sir."
Muscle in her knee started twitching from the angle she was sitting at; one in her arm was trying. Or it was the cold. Or it was Fitch standing there staring at her.
"I want this one working," Fitch said, "tonight. I want the other one working—tomorrow. Do you need any help, Ms. Yeager?"
Listen to me, you son of a bitch…
But you didn't say that.
"I can't do that, sir. Can't promise that."
"I don't care how you do it, Ms. Yeager. I want this equipment fixed, I want it fixed dirty and working, I want both working by tomorrow, you understand me, Ms. Yeager?"
"Can't do it."
"We're not talking about your getting any sleep, Ms. Yeager. Or taking any breaks. I want this thing fixed, and I want it now, Ms. Yeager."
"I don't know if the other one can work, I don't know if any of these damn pumps aren't blown, I don't know how many of the circulation lines ruptured when that rig took a hole, I got no notion whether all the motors work, or whether we got some of those damn little screws stripped out, in which case that rig may not go into adjustment, sir, until I machine something and take the damn seating apart—"
"Just do it, Yeager."
She sat there on the floor staring up at him, too mad to shake at the moment, wondering was he after getting her logged with something, was he just being a sonuvabitch, or . .
"There some kind of problem, sir?"
"Not your worry, Yeager. Say we've got a little difference of opinion with station management."
Scratch the notion of just quietly screwing it up.
"Say we've got a real problem here," Fitch said between his teeth. "Say we need that equipment, Ms. Yeager. We need it, and we may need it to work."
Pulse steadied into a slow, heavy beat, trouble-sense working on more than Fitch of a sudden.
"Mind to say, sir?"
Fitch stared at her like she was a spot on the deck. She stared back, jaw set, with this notion, this sudden notion, that she might be real important to Fitch… and that Fitch didn't like that and didn't like her and didn't like anything about it, but she was what he had.
"You fond of people in this crew, Ms. Yeager?"
"Some."
"You sleeping with Ramey, Ms. Yeager?"
She gave Fitch the long, cold stare, thinking, God, what's he after? "Happens so," she said. "Yessir."