“But our militia—” Heris remembered the proud troops in their colorful uniforms, marching to the music of that jaunty band. How could she save their pride without costing them their existence? “I can’t recommend resistance; they’ll have trained troops and plenty of them—but if you can hide out for a few months, Fleet should be back in here. Your militia will be best used keeping order on the way, and while you’re in exile.”
“We can’t evacuate?”
“Where?” Heris paused, then went on. “You don’t have enough hulls in the system to take everyone, or time to load them. You have only the one station, and they’ll blow it. They’ll install their own, rather than risk yours being boobytrapped. Get everyone out of the station, downside, and get away from your cities and towns. It’ll still be nasty, but that will save the most lives.”
This wasn’t what they had wanted to hear, even though she had said much the same thing before Garrivay arrived. They tried to talk her into some other solutions. Heris held firm. She would do her best but she could not promise to save the planet from direct attack. And she would need control of every space-capable hull they had, once they’d evacuated the station.
“But you can’t hope to fight with shuttles!” the stationmaster said. “They don’t have shields worth speaking of.”
“No—but we can sow some traps with them. Then we can extract the crews, onto one of the warships.”
“And the shuttles?”
“They’ll be lost, one way or another. But with any luck, they’ll have made things tougher for the invaders.”
The General Secretary agreed to have the empty upbound shuttles loaded with readily available explosives. Those waiting for evacuation were kept busy shifting incoming cargo from the shuttles. A few, who had experience with explosives, helped manufacture them into crude mines.
Then she thought of Sirkin and Brun. She had realized that Sirkin, intelligent and hardworking as she was, lacked precisely what Brun had—the flair or whatever it was that picked the right choice when things got hairy. She needed to get Sirkin to such safety as was available, which meant downside, and underground. She had no safe place to stash Brun. What would her father want, given the options? His assumption that Brun would be safer with her now seemed utter folly. She was taking ships into battle against great odds, and very likely the planet would be scorched. Brun, as usual, had her own opinions, and interrupted the transmission from Sweet Delight.
“Captain Serrano, please—give me a chance. ’Steban, just a minute—please let me come with you.”
Lord Thornbuckle’s daughter on a warship? Not likely. “Why?” she asked.
“I know I’m not Fleet, and I know I’d be in the way, but it’s better than going downside. Surely there’s something simple I could do, so that someone else could help fight.”
“There may be, but you can do it onplanet. I want someone I trust with Lady Cecelia. You and Sirkin can keep an eye on her. It’s going to be rough down there when the shooting starts.” Particularly since Cecelia would be thinking more about horses than the war, she was sure.
“But—”
“I don’t have time to argue, Brun. This is one time you’ll just do what I say. Besides, you can represent the Grand Council to the General Secretary—assure him that Xavier won’t be forgotten.” She cut that connection, and found herself faced with a choice of five others. The stationmaster wanted to know what she would do about the small mining settlements on the second satellite of Blueyes, the smaller gas giant. She could do nothing but send them word of what was happening; she had no time to think of anything else. The General Secretary wanted to know if she could use elements of the local militia. (Yes, if they volunteered.) Experienced shuttle pilots? (Yes.) A local news program wanted to interview her. (No. The General Secretary’s staff would handle news.) The station’s own medical team—doctors, medics, nannies and all—volunteered to come along on one of the ships, because they were certified in space medicine. (Yes!) And what about the breakdown in the financial ansible? And . . .
Koutsoudas had come aboard with his kitbag of gadgets, and installed them while the other techs gave him startled looks.
“Some of you,” Heris said, “may have met Commander Livadhi’s senior scan tech, Esteban Koutsoudas. He’s been assisting the admiralty in this investigation.” By their reaction, they might have waited years for a chance to watch the legendary Koutsoudas in action. “By the way, someone find him a uniform—you would prefer a real uniform, wouldn’t you, ’Steban?”
“Mmm? Oh—yes, Captain. Although right now I just want to get these things installed and running.” Everyone chuckled; Heris grinned. Better and better. She noticed that Koutsoudas managed to keep a hand or his head between the watchers and what he was actually doing, most of the time. Then his scan lit, obviously sharper than the ones on either side.
“How’d you do that?” one of the youngest techs asked.
“Don’t ask,” Koutsoudas said. His fingers danced across the plain surfaces of his add-ons. Heris never had figured out how he operated them. His display changed color slightly, showing the departing Despite in a vivid arc of color that zoomed suddenly closer. Heris flinched, even though she knew it was Koutsoudas, and not the patrol craft. Along one side of the display, three sets of numbers scrolled past. “There—eighty-seven percent of her maximum acceleration, but she’s got a bobble in the insystem drive. Sloppy . . . it’s cutting their output. Weapons still cold. That’s odd. Shields . . . there goes the pre-jump shield check.”
“I never believed it,” said someone at the margin of Weapons. “I heard about him but I didn’t believe—”
“It’s impossible,” said someone else.
“Cut the chatter.” That was the grizzled senior chief poised behind Koutsoudas’s shoulder, absorbing what he could.
“Send a tightbeam,” Koutsoudas said, and gave the vector. Showoff, Heris thought. Worth it, in what he could do for you, but a showoff all the same.
“There they are.” Now his display zoomed to another vector, where three . . . five . . . seven . . . scarlet dots burned. “Tag ’em—” Beside each one, a code appeared.
“Range?” Heris asked. She leaned forward, as if she could pry more information out of the display. Numbers flickered along both edges of the screen.
“They’re in the cone,” Koutsoudas said, answering her next question first. “They’ll get whatever Despite sent—and the range is still affected by downjump turbulence. I won’t have it to any precision for an hour, Captain.”
“Three to four hours for me, Captain,” said the scan-second promptly.
“But they’re at the system edge,” Koutsoudas said. “It’s a cautious approach—very cautious. They won’t spot us for another several hours at least, even with boosted long scan; they’re blinded by their own downjump turbulence.”
“What’s Despite doing?”
“Running fast,” Koutsoudas said, flicking back over that ship’s departing signature. “Considering scan lag, I’ll bet she’s already gone into jump.”
Cecelia arrived at the shuttle port in a foul temper. It had taken forever to get a groundcar out to Marcia’s place, and she hadn’t been about to take any favors from Marcia. Not after that insult—as if she had ever failed to pay her bills! So she had endured a long, bumpy, dusty trip in to the shuttle port. Traffic crowded the road going the other way. It must be some local holiday, with early closing. But once in town, clogged streets delayed them, and she was afraid the shuttle port would be just as bad. She had tried to call Heris, but Sirkin was uncharacteristically vague about where she was, only saying she wasn’t on the yacht. Cecelia didn’t care where she was, she just wanted to be sure they could leave when she reached the station. Marcia’s last words rankled . . . “It is not our habit to haggle, Cecelia,” said with injured innocence. Stupid people. Stupid breeders of inferior horses; she would get some Singularity genes from a gene catalog if she wanted, and be damned to them. She forced a smile at the ticketing clerk, glad to find that she wasn’t at the tail of a long line.