“Since I believe I’ve demonstrated my competence in the past,” Howell said in a mild tone which deceived neither of them, “I won’t dignify that last question with a response, sir. On your other points, I believe the record speaks for itself. Poltava carried out a textbook attack run, but Captain Ortiz made a poor command decision and got too close to his last opponent. Things like that happen to even the best commanders, and when they happen fifteen light-minutes from the flagship, the flag officer can’t prevent them.”
He held Control’s gaze, letting his eyes show the anger his voice did not, and saw something flicker deep under the other man’s brows. Answering anger or respect—he couldn’t tell, nor, at the moment, did he much care.
“As for the remainder of your . . . indictment, I would simply point out that your intelligence was, in fact, far from complete—and that you’d been warned success was problematical. You knew how tough it was going to be to secure GeneCorp’s files. Had the enemy actually been in the positions you assured us they intended to assume, we would have succeeded in rushing the facilities. As it was, our ground commanders walked into what turned out to be, in effect, a trap precisely because they’d been told where to expect opposition. I probably am at fault for not stressing the need for complete preparedness despite our ‘perfect’ intelligence, but I submit that it would be wiser of you not to provide tactical data unless you can confirm its accuracy. Incorrect information is worse than none—as this operation demonstrated.”
“No one can guarantee there won’t be last-minute changes, Commodore.”
“In that case, sir, it would be wise not to pretend you can,” Howell returned in that same calm voice. He paused a beat, waiting for Control to respond, but he only made a throwaway gesture, and the commodore resumed.
“Finally, sir, I would further submit that whatever happened to our ground forces and whether or not we secured the GeneCorp data, we succeeded completely in what my mission description laid down as our primary objective. No doubt you have better casualty estimates than we do, but I feel quite confident we provided the ‘atrocity’ you wanted.”
“Umph.” Control rocked gently back and forth, simultaneously swinging his chair in tiny arcs, and puffed his mustache, then shrugged.
“Point taken,” he said in a far less rancorous tone. He even smiled a bit. “As I’m sure you’re well aware, shit flows downhill. Consider yourself doused with half the bucket that hit me in the face.” His smile faded. “I assure you, however, that there was plenty to go around for both of us.”
“Yes, sir.” Howell allowed himself to relax in turn. “In fact, I already prepaid my own people for what I figured was coming my way,” he confessed. “But in all seriousness, we did succeed in our primary mission.”
“If it makes you feel any better, that’s the opinion I expressed. As for your losses—“ Control shrugged— “we’re already recruiting new ground personnel from local Rogue Worlds, though I’m afraid we can’t replace Poltava as quickly. But while you’re right about your primary objective, it seems the secondary objective was more important than either of us had been informed.”
“It was?” Howell tugged at an earlobe. “It would’ve been nice of them to let us know.”
“Agreed, agreed.” Control reached into a jacket pocket and extracted a cigar case. He selected one, clipped the end, and lit it. Howell watched, grateful for the ventilation intake directly above the desk, as Control puffed until it was drawing to his satisfaction, then waved it at him like a pointer.
“You see, Commodore, our Core World financial backers are getting a bit shaky. They’re bloodthirsty enough in the abstract, and they’re perfectly willing to contemplate heavy civilian casualties as long as someone else will be inflicting them, but they don’t have the stomach for it once the bloodshed actually starts. Not because they give a good goddamn about the people involved, but because they suddenly recognize the reality of the stakes for which they’re playing—and what’ll happen to them if it comes apart.”
Howell nodded as he heard the contempt in Control’s voice.
“They’re fat and rich, and they want to be fatter and richer, but while the wealth and power they’ve already got protect them from the consequences of most of their deals, this one’s different. Nothing will save them if the Empire discovers their involvement, and their objectives are very different from ours. They’re backing us solely in return for an immediate profit now and more concessions after we succeed, and I don’t think they really understood how much anti-pirate hysteria we were going to have to whip up to make it all work.”
He took another pull on his cigar and ejected a long, gray streamer.
“The reason I’m going into this at such length is that we don’t have a stick to beat them with, so we need to keep the carrot in plain sight. At the moment, they can see the consequences of failure all too clearly, and some of them are worried that we’re simply bringing the Fleet down on our heads by our actions. We, or course, know why we’re doing that; they don’t. This means that we need to throw them an immediate kilo of flesh if we don’t want them backing out on us, and GeneCorp’s data was supposed to be just that.”
“I realize that, sir, but Captain Alexsov and I both pointed out the high probability of failure when the target was designated?”
“Forget that.” Control waved his cigar a bit impatiently. “I jumped your shit over it, and you jumped right back. Fine. That’s done with. The point before us now is where we go from here.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Good. Did you bring Alexsov along?”
“Yes, sir. He and Commander Shu are both aboard.”
“Excellent.” Control consulted his watch and made a face. “My people groundside can only cover me for a few hours, and I’ve got to get back to work by the end of next week. Taking even a short ‘vacation’ at a time like this has already gotten me a few dirty looks, and I can’t do it again any time soon, so I want to tie up all the loose ends as quickly as possible. Let me lay it out for you, then you can bring them up to speed after I leave, right?”
“Of course.”
“All right. As I say, we need a plainly visible carrot, and we think we’ve found one at Ringbolt.”
“Ringbolt?” Howell repeated with some surprise. All of his targets to date had been imperial possessions, but Ringbolt was a Rogue World daughter colony, and the people it belonged to were nasty customers, indeed.
“Ringbolt. I know the El Grecans keep a close eye on it, but we happen to know they’re going to be involved in some pretty elaborate Fleet maneuvers late next month. I’ve brought the details in my intelligence download. The point is, the Ringbolt squadron’s being called back to El Greco in a home-defense mobilization exercise, which will leave the system uncovered for at least a week. That’s your window, Commodore.”
“I don’t know much about the Ringbolt System, sir. What are the fixed defenses like? The El Grecans have an awfully impressive tech base for a Rogue World, and I’d hate to walk into a surprise.”
“There are no fixed defenses. That’s the beauty of it.”
“None?”
“None. It makes sense when you think about it. The planet’s only been colonized for fifty years, and when they moved in the colonists, all they had to worry about were other Rogue Worlds and the occasional genuine hijack outfit. They couldn’t possibly stand off the Empire or the Sphere, so they decided not to try. As for other Rogue worlds or hijackers . . . if you were them, would you take on the El Grecans?”
“Probably not, sir,” Howell acknowledged. For that matter, he doubted he would care to go after them even if he’d been the Empire or the Rishatha. Occupation of an El Grecan colony was unlikely to prove cost effective.
El Greco had been a scholar’s world, renowned for its art academies and universities, before the League Wars. Then the Rishatha moved in during the First Human-Rish War, and alien occupation came to the groves of academe.
El Grecans might have b
een high-brows and philosophers, but that hadn’t meant they were airheads, and the Rishatha soon discovered they’d caught a tiger by the tail. The academics of El Greco warmed up their computers, set up their data searches, and turned to the study of guerrilla warfare, sabotage, and assassination as if preparing to sit their doctoral orals. Within a year, they had two divisions tied down; by the time the Sphere gave it up as a bad deal and left, the Rishatha garrison had grown to three corps . . . and was still losing ground.
The El Grecans hadn’t forgotten a thing since, and they’d decided to turn their surviving universities in a new direction. El Greco no longer produced artists, sculptors, and composers; it produced physicists, chemists, strategists, engineers, weapons specialists, and one of humanity’s most advanced R&D complexes. The best mercenary outfits in this corner of the galaxy were based on El Greco, and most of their personnel held reserve commissions in the planetary armed forces. No doubt El Greco could still be had by someone the size of the Empire or Sphere who wanted it badly enough, but the price would be far too high for the return, and no mere Rogue World—or even an alliance of them—wanted the El Grecan Navy on their necks.
More to the point, Commodore James Howell didn’t especially want the El Grecan Navy on his neck.
“Excuse me, sir, but are you certain this is something we want to do?”
Control snorted with a wry, almost compassionate amusement and drew deeply on his cigar before he responded.
“Look at it this way, Commodore. The El Grecans are good, no question, but they’re only one system. Their entire Navy and all their mercenary outfits together have less firepower than Admiral Gomez, nor do they begin to have the information sources Soissons has. Since your squadron is already completely outgunned, adding one more set of enemies to the mix shouldn’t really matter all that much, should it? After all, if we ever face a stand-up fight, we lose even if we win.”
“I realize that, sir, but we don’t have the same kind of penetration against El Greco. We know what Fleet’s going to do before it does it; we won’t have that advantage against the El Grecans.”
“Ah, but we will!” Control’s eyes glittered with true humor. “You see, we’re killing several birds with one stone here.
“First, your raid on Ringbolt will be targeted on the bio-research unit of the University of Toledo. We have reason to believe they were running close to a dead heat with GeneCorp, so we can recoup our earlier failure.
“Second, hitting a Rogue World offsets the idea that someone’s gone to war against the Empire. We have, but it’s important that no one realize that. We can get away without hitting any more of the sector’s Rogue Worlds— most of them don’t have anything worth stealing anyway—but we have to hit at least one to look like ‘real’ pirates.
“Third, the El Grecans, like the Jungians, want to demonstrate that they aren’t behind our attacks, so there’s already been a good bit of joint contingency planning—that’s now we found out about these maneuvers. Better still, they’ve accepted the principle of joint command and coordination if they do get hit. The Jungians haven’t done that, but even if your attack brings the El Grecans into the field, we’ll have good intelligence on their basic posture and operations.
“And fourth,” Control’s eyes narrowed, “a few of Gomez’s people—especially McIlheny—are getting suspicious about our operational patterns. Phase Four at Elysium nailed anyone who might’ve identified your vessels, but the ease with which you got in was a pretty clear indication you had very, very good intelligence. Even the governor general is finding it hard to ignore that evidence, and McIlheny’s got Gomez chewing the bulkheads over it. If you hit a Rogue World with the same kind of precision, it should suggest you have multiple intelligence sources, which may divert some of the heat.”
“I was afraid of that when Elysium was selected,” Howell murmured, and Control shrugged.
“You weren’t alone. It was a calculated risk because we needed an Incorporated World target. Crown Worlds have such low populations that even a total burn-off like Mathison’s World doesn’t produce the kinds of casualty figures we need to hit Core World public opinion with. Besides, most Core Worlders figure anyone willing to settle a colony world knows the odds and doesn’t have much kick coming when he craps out. But an Incorporated World is something else. Elysium has senatorial representation, and you’d better believe those senators are screaming for action after what happened to a third of their constituents!”
“I know, sir.” Howell looked down at his hands. “Does that mean we do the same thing on Ringbolt?” he asked in a neutral voice.
“I’m afraid it does, Commodore.” Even Control sounded uncomfortable, but his tone didn’t flinch. “We can’t change our pattern for the same reason we need to hit a Rogue World in the first place. It has to look like we’re treating everyone we hit in precisely the same fashion.”
“Understood, sir,” Howell sighed.
“Good.” Control tossed a small chip folio onto the desk and stood. “Here’s your intelligence packet. We don’t anticipate any problems with it, but if Commander Shu has questions, she should send them back through the usual channels. We can’t afford any more direct contact for a while.”
“Understood,” Howell said again, rising to escort his visitor from the cabin. He forbore to mention that this meeting hadn’t been his idea, partly out of diplomacy but also because he’d found it useful after all. Face-to-face discussions filled in nuances no indirect contact could convey.
They paused outside the personnel lock and Control wrung his hand again, not quite so crushingly this time.
“Good hunting, Commodore,” he said.
“Thank you, sir,” Howell replied, coming to attention but not saluting. Their eyes met one last time, and then Vice Admiral Sir Amos Brinkman nodded sharply and stepped through the hatch.
Chapter Sixteen
Lieutenant Charles Giolitti, Jungian Navy, on assignment to the MaGuire Customs Service, took the time to double-check his data as the boarding shuttle drifted towards the free trader Star Runner. He’d been intrigued when he first accessed the download—and noted the ship’s list of auxiliaries—and he wanted to be certain he’d read it correctly.
The information was unusually complete for a recent arrival, he observed cheerfully. It wasn’t unheard of for a foreign-registry vessel to arrive with absolutely no documentation, and that was always a pain. It meant its every centimeter must be scrutinized, its every crew member exhaustively med-checked, and its bona fides thoroughly established before any of its people were allowed groundside. Tempers tended to get short all round before the process was completed, but the Jung Association hadn’t lasted for four centuries without learning to keep a close eye on visitors. In this case, though, Giolitti had a full Imperial attestation from the Melville Sector, which should cut the crap to a minimum.
He screened quickly through the technical data, eyebrows quirking as he noted the rating of Star Runners Fasset drive. She was as fast as most cruisers—which, he thought wryly, coupled with her limited cargo capacity, was a glaring tip-off as to her true nature. Not that Jungians minded smugglers . . . as long as they didn’t run anything into the Association.
Um. Crew of only five. That was low, even for a merchant hull. Must indicate some pretty impressive computer support. Captain’s name Theodosia Mainwaring . . . young for her rank, from the bio, but lots of time on her flight log. The rest of her people looked equally qualified. Not a bad bunch for a merchant crew, in fact. Of course, free traders tended to attract the skilled misfits—the square pegs with the qualifications to write their own tickets—away from the military or the big lines.
No incoming manifest. He snorted, remembering the diplomatic gaps in the last few entries from the Melville data base. So Captain Mainwaring had gotten her fingers burned? Must not have been too serious—she still had a ship—but it probably meant she was hungry for a cargo.
A signal chimed, and Giolitti glanced at th
e view screen as his vessel began its docking sequence on Star Runner’s sole unoccupied shuttle rack. A somewhat battered cargo shuttle occupied one of the other two racks, not that old but clearly a veteran of hard service to collect so many dings and scrapes. Yet it wasn’t the cargo shuttle that caught his attention.
Another shuttle loomed on the number one rack—a needle-nosed craft, deadly even in repose. He was familiar with its basic stats, but he’d never seen one, and he wasn’t quite prepared for its size. Or its color scheme.
Giolitti winced as he took in the garish crimson and black hull. Some unknown artist had painted staring white eyes on either side of the stiletto prow, jagged-toothed mouths gaped hungrily about the muzzles of energy and projectile cannons, and lovingly detailed streamers of lurid flame twined about the engine pads. He had no idea how Mainwaring had gotten her hands on it, though she must have done so in at least quasi-legal fashion, since the Empies had let her keep it when they suggested she explore new frontiers, but the visual impact was . . . extreme.
He grinned as the docking arms locked. The Bengal looked out of place on its drab, utilitarian mother ship, but free traders tended to find themselves back of beyond with only their own resources, and he suspected ill-intentioned locals would think twice about harassing a cargo shuttle with that thing hovering watchfully overhead. Which, no doubt, was the idea.
The personnel tube docking collar settled into place, and Giolitti gathered up his notepad, nodded to his pilot, and opened the hatch.
Alicia watched the heavyset young customs officer step through Megarea’s port and hoped this worked. It had seemed simple enough when she was thinking it all up, but that was then.