“Thank you, sir,” Ferreira said, her relief obvious.
“Okay, Jayla. What’s next?”
“Final planning meeting for our shakedown cruise in thirty, sir.”
“Okay. I’ll see you there. I’m going walkabout. Chief Bienefelt, walk with me.”
“Sir.”
With Tufayl’s coxswain in tow, Michael set off. Leaving the combat information center, he went forward to the ship’s main drop tube, which took him two decks down into the cavernous air group hangar. Michael took a look around. It was the largest compartment on board. Spanning the full width of the ship, it stretched close to 200 meters long fore and aft. Once Tufayl would have stored an entire air group there: fifty-six landers and space attack vehicles, packed in tight.
Now it hosted the diminutive shape of a single light assault lander. The sight unnerved Michael, the hangar’s emptiness a powerful reminder of how much change the disaster at Comdur had forced on the Federated Worlds Fleet.
Bienefelt broke into Michael’s thoughts with a soft cough. “Take it you didn’t bring me down here to look at all this empty space, sir?”
“Uh, no. Sorry, Matti. I know you’re busy. I just wanted a chat.”
“Knew you might, sir,” Bienefelt said with a chuckle.
“I’m that obvious, eh?” Michael replied. “Yes, two things. First, thanks for agreeing to be my coxswain. I know it’s not the best posting from a personal point of view. How does Yuri feel?”
“Well”-Bienefelt’s face reddened-“well, he, er … well, uh … he says he loves me and as long as I come back, he can wait,” she said, finishing in an embarrassed rush.
“He’s a good man, Matti. He’ll be there when this is all over.”
“I know he will, sir.”
Michael stared right at Bienefelt. “I can’t tell you how good it is to have you here. We go back a way.”
“We do, sir, we certainly do. Life is never dull with you around.”
“Seems to be that way, and something tells me all this”-he waved a hand at Tufayl-“is going to keep things interesting.”
“Don’t think that’s in any doubt.”
“No, it’s not. Second thing. The troops. What do you think of them so far?”
Bienefelt considered the question a while before responding. “With one exception, they’re solid. They’ll do the job and do it well. But …”
“Come on, Matti, Spit it out!”
“Well, sir,” Bienefelt said, measuring her words carefully. “I’m a bit reluctant to leap to judgment because it’s early days yet. But Carmellini bothers me. He’s outstanding on paper, but something’s not quite right there.”
“Carmellini. Thought it might be him. He came to us from Retribution?”
“He did, but he wasn’t onboard when the shit hit the fan at Comdur. He missed that little fiasco. He was absent on compassionate leave.”
“So, what is it? Survivor’s guilt?”
“Yes. That’s my best guess, sir. Retribution suffered the second highest casualty rate on that day. Few Retributions came home, and most of those that did will never return to active duty. You can understand why he’s feeling guilty.”
“Damn,” Michael muttered. “Something must have gone wrong. Fleet’s pretty good at treating postcombat stress”-something he knew from firsthand experience, he realized with a twinge of guilt-“and it’s had plenty of practice over the years. Carmellini must have slipped past the assessment teams.”
“Pretty sure that’s what’s happened. They had their hands full.”
“So what do we do? Send him back?”
“No, sir,” Bienefelt replied, shaking her head. “Not yet, anyway. I think I’d like to hang on to him. See if we can pull him out of it.”
Michael considered that for a moment. “Sure you don’t want to refer him to the postcombat stress people?”
“No, sir. I have spoken to them, though. They’ve done the hard work for us, and we know what we have to do to make sure he doesn’t slip back.”
“What does Lieutenant Ferreira think?”
“Actually, sir,” Bienefelt said, “the XO picked it up first. She’s already spoken to me about Carmellini. She told me to take a week and get back to her. I assume she would have briefed you if she was still worried,” she added diplomatically.
Michael smiled. It was good to find out the two key members of his crew had picked up on a problem before he had. Even better, he sensed that Bienefelt respected Ferreira. He hoped so; it meant he had the makings of a good crew and a good ship.
“I’ll leave it with you, Matti. Off you go. I’ll see you at the shakedown cruise briefing. I’m going to see if the engineers have fixed that damned heat transfer pump.”
“Sir.”
It had been a long day but a good one. Tufayl was a living ship again, back in space where she belonged, one more step along the road to the day when she would go into action against the Hammers. A welcome beer in hand, he commed Mother, the AI in charge of the hundreds of AIs-big and small-that made the dreadnought work.
“Yes, Michael?” Mother said, her face by long-standing tradition that of a middle-aged woman.
For a moment Michael was a child again, talking to his own mother, which was probably why the primary AIs of this world looked the way they did: relics from a long-lost maledominated past intended to reassure insecure and lonely male officers that however bad things might seem, there was still hope. That summed up Anna’s view and that of every female spacer he had ever met. Sadly, Michael knew that what Anna said held more than a grain of truth.
“What do you think? This going to work?”
“Tufayl or dreadnoughts?”
“Both, I suppose.”
Mother took her time before answering. “The short answer is yes,” she said finally, measuring her words carefully. “I’ve been back through every engagement this ship has ever been in, real and simulated. I’ve found only a handful where having hundreds of spacers around made a significant difference to the outcome. I hate to say this, Michael, but apart from fixing defects or repairing battle damage, all those spacers mostly just get in the way, not to mention the mass of all the systems needed to keep them alive. No, there’s no reason why they won’t work.”
Michael nodded. Admiral Jaruzelska had made the same points to him more than a few times.
“There is one caveat, though,” Mother continued. “I agree with the admiral. I’ve studied every operation since the Tufayl entered service, focusing on the interaction between the captain and the operations and threat assessment officers. One thing is obvious. Without their support, the job of command in combat is too hard.”
“Even with a warfare AI as good as ours?”
“Yes. Warfare is not there to provide advice. It is there to manage close-quarters combat, to execute command-approved plans, to do what it’s told basically. Expecting any more of it is a waste of time.”
“Don’t I know it,” Michael said. “So you think it’s a good idea, sitting two AIs alongside me?”
“Yes, I do. And you’re getting two good ones.”
Michael’s eyebrows shot up. “Oh? You know who they are?”
“I do,” Mother said a touch smugly. “Us AI’s have our ways of finding things out. Seems we are getting the operations AIs from Kuibyshev and Kaladima.”
Michael’s eyebrows lifted even farther. “Kuibyshev and Kaladima? Shit! They decommissioned them, what, ten years ago? I know the AIs are kept current, but are they up-”
“Up to it?”
“Well, yes, that, too, though I was going to say up to date. A lot has changed since they went through the Third Hammer War.”
“Not as much as you think, Michael. Space warfare is space warfare, and they’ve spent thousands of hours in Fleet’s StratSim simulator since the Kuibyshev and Kaladima were scrapped. I don’t think you’ll find them out of touch. They’ll do a good job.”