The Serrano Succession (82 page)

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Authors: Elizabeth Moon

Tags: #Science Fiction

BOOK: The Serrano Succession
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"Are you sure you weren't ever military?" The unspoken
sir
hovered just off the end of that question. Cecelia grinned.

 

"Not me. But it wouldn't do me or any of us any good for me to sit here howling, now would it?"

 

 

 
Chapter Thirteen

 

 

R.S.S.
Indefatigable

 

Despite Heris's sense of urgency, she took her flotilla through the intermediate jump points with all due caution, checking ansible activity along the way. Nothing more from the ansible at CX-42-h and the only word from HQ was "Proceed with caution." Heris would like to have arrived at CX-42-h in an off-axis insertion, but the erratic planetoid made that too risky. So she ordered a textbook insertion and hoped the mutineers—if they were there—hadn't had time to mine the entrance.

 

She missed Koutsoudas most at times like these, when insertion blur robbed her of eyes at the moment they were most vulnerable. But the scan finally cleared—it had been only a couple of minutes after all—and the navigation board came up with a perfect match for the chart, except that the erratic planetoid was a degree off from where it should have been.

 

"Ship?" she asked.

 

"One . . . masses a cruiser . . . no ID yet."

 

"Mutineers could have disabled the ID." No Fleet cruiser should be here; the last ansible download had given her all cruiser locations in this sector, and this wasn't one of them. "What's its course?"

 

"It's . . . zero acceleration relative to system, Captain." A worried note in that voice. "Drives appear to be shut down. They may be trying to lie doggo."

 

Thank the gods for small mercies. "Weapons?"

 

"Nothing lit, Captain."

 

"Is that the only vessel insystem?"

 

"The only thing that size—the search program's on . . ."

 

Indefatigable
continued its own deceleration, in company with its companions.

 

"Captain, I have a tentative ID—"

 

"Go ahead."

 

"It's based on just the mass data—"

 

"Go ahead!"

 

"Well . . . it's the same class as the
Bonar Tighe
. We have to get a lot closer before I can be sure."

 

"Our beacon's transmitting, isn't it?"

 

"Yes, sir."

 

"So unless they're all dead over there, they know we're here, and who we are."

 

"If their scan's working . . ."

 

"Why wouldn't it be? You want to bet our lives on the notion that they have even their passive scan shut down for some reason? I don't. When will we be in tightbeam distance, Chief?"

 

"Forty minutes, Captain. There'll still be lightlag, of course."

 

"That's all right." Heris considered. If she blew them away without hailing them—which she was inclined to do—she would have to pick up debris proving they were a mutineer ship, or she'd be in worse trouble. Officially at least; being caught by surprise would be the worst. If she hailed them by tightbeam . . .

 

"Captain! Ansible flash!"

 

Here? Now what had happened at HQ?

 

"What is it?"

 

"Local origin—this ansible—and it's . . . omigod!"

 

"The message, please."

 

"Sorry—yes, Captain. It's to be transmitted to any Fleet unit querying any ansible . . . it's on a two-hour repeat. Danger Blue, Danger Blue, Danger Blue, mutineer fleet this location on 23/4—that's today, Captain—ship names include
Bonar Tighe
,
Wingate
,
Metai
,
Saracen
,
Endeavor
 . . . attempting to disable mutineer flagship, execute code zero, repeat execute code zero."

 

Heris let herself breathe again. Someone on that ship—several someones, it would have to be—had just committed suicide, but their deaths would save many. "Weapons," she said. "Lock on to that ship—give me a solution."

 

"We're still too far out," the weapons officer said.

 

"I know. But there's some urgency. We're going to microjump closer. Any other ships in the system yet?"

 

"There might be—nothing as big as the other named ships—"

 

"They've left," Heris said. "But the loyalists don't have that information—"

 

"There's this little something—yes—it's really little, about the size of a troop shuttle."

 

Mutineers escaping a disabled cruiser, or loyalists who had managed to escape the mutineers? Either way, she'd prefer not to destroy it.

 

"Weapons, we want to take out the cruiser and not the troop carrier. Where's the best location? Nav, heads up on this, and prepare to microjump."

 

While they calculated, Heris tightbeamed her captains on the other ships and sent them out on search.

 

"Here, Captain," the Weapons officer and Navigations officer presented their plot.

 

"Do it," Heris said. "And I want a firing solution the instant we come out, and then immediate fire."

 

A split-second later, the screens blurred and cleared again as they microjumped. There was the blunt ovoid of the cruiser, showing no activity in drives or weapons or active scan. From this distance, they could get a positive ID: it was the
Bonar Tighe
, last reported on Copper Mountain.

 

 

 
Troop Shuttle Two

The combat troop shuttle was larger than the shuttle she'd taken up from the surface of Xavier that time, but the cockpit, when she reached it, looked much the same. The sergeant had chosen the right-hand seat. He gave her an anxious look as she edged past a console covered with knobs she didn't recognize and took the pilot's seat.

 

"You can fly this, right, sera?"

 

"We don't know yet. I certainly never trained in it, or anything nearly as big." At first glance the screens, buttons, dials, and controls were a confusing blur; she forced herself to look at them one by one. She recognized the rate-of-climb indicator, and then the roll-and-bank next to it, where it should be. "We're under power?"

 

"Yes, sera, just five percent. I didn't dare go faster . . ."

 

Percent power, percent fuel remaining, flying time at this fuel usage . . . all in the right relation, which meant that here—yes—would be the onboard power supply, and there would be the artificial gravity indicators and controls. Something in the right place looked like a scan screen, but it was dark. "Did you try scan?"

 

"No, sera—I don't know anything about scan."

 

So they were under power flying blind . . ."You have scan experts," she said to Chief Jones. "Get someone up here to handle scan, while I figure out the rest of this." She ignored the scan screens, found the attitude controls, and then the primary navigation system. It was off; she flicked it on, and a screen came on, showing much the same display she'd seen from her own ship . . . from a different angle, but she recognized it. There was the mass of the system's star . . . a label popped up giving its ID number in the catalog. Then another mass, then another, appeared, each with a descriptor.

 

Dusty Dirac spoke up from behind her. "Hey—need some help with scan?"

 

"We need to know who else, if anyone, is in the system," Cecelia said. "And I've got enough to do learning the rest of these controls."

 

"Gotcha. Do you need Pete right now, or can I switch places with him?"

 

Cecelia glanced over at her copilot. "Do you mind?"

 

"Not me. I'm way over my depth." He struggled out of his seat.

 

"See if you can find a manual while you're up," Cecelia said. Heris had finally convinced her of the utility of hardcopy manuals, and she hoped the rest of the military had Heris's habit of stashing useful manuals near the places they might be needed.

 

Dusty slid into the copilot's seat and started tabbing systems on. Cecelia ignored the results for the moment; she had to decide if she could really get this craft to go where she wanted it to.

 

"Uh-oh," Dusty said.

 

"What?" Chief Jones leaned into the cockpit.

 

"Something big just jumped into the system."

 

"Whose side, I wonder?"

 

"Theirs, most likely. We only just got our message out. This is probably one of their people coming to rendezvous."

 

Cecelia shut her ears to this distraction and located all the controls she was used to from her own runabout. Unfortunately, this craft was missing some she expected—it had no FTL drive, for instance—and had some she'd never seen before. Intended as it was for near-space work, mostly shuttling from orbit to surface and back, its fuel load was far less than she could have hoped. They certainly weren't going to leave the system in it.

 

"How far are we from the ship we left?" she asked.

 

"Oh . . . about ten kilometers. Why?"

 

"How far away should we be for safety if that ship blows up?"

 

"Blows up . . . why would it blow up?"

 

"Because if that's one of their allies coming in, and they can't answer—and they can't, because we destroyed their ability—it'll probably shoot them preemptively, won't it?"

 

Jones looked at her and shook her head. "Cecelia, you continue to amaze me. Let's see—a cruiser under fire, not returning fire, shields down . . . the fireball will be . . . we need to be a
lot
farther away."

 

"Their scans will still be foxed by downjump turbulence," Dusty said. "We can move
now
and they may not notice us . . ."

 

"Tell everybody to hang on," Cecelia said. "In case the artificial gravity does something I don't know how to fix. I'm going to go insystem . . ." She changed the ship's attitude, then advanced what she hoped was the throttle. The delta vee changed abruptly, and then increased.

 

"We're going
somewhere
fast," Dusty said. "Or faster, I should say."

 

 

 

"It's the
Indefatigable
," Dusty said suddenly.

 

"Can you tell if they're loyalists or mutineers?"

 

"They just blew up
Bonar Tighe
. I'd say that makes them loyalists."

 

"That could be a mistake," Jones said. "Or they may think like you, Cecelia."

 

"Whoever it is, they'll have scan that can pick us up, right?"

 

"Well . . . maybe. There's a lot of noise from the ship blowing up. If we hailed them—"

 

"And if they're the wrong ship, then we're in worse trouble."

 

"We can at least be listening," Cecelia said. Dusty turned on the receivers and the automatic tuners.

 

"—Shuttlecraft, identify yourself or we will fire upon you."

 

"Don't fire!" Dusty said quickly. "Who are you?"

 

"R.S.S.
Indefatigable
, Serrano commanding. Stand down your weapons."

 

"Weapons . . . what weapons?" Cecelia asked. "Do we have weapons?"

 

"Combat shuttles do, but I don't know anything about them. Maybe it's these switches—"

 

"Don't touch that!" Chief Jones said. "Tell them our problem."

 

"We don't have a real pilot aboard," Dusty said. "We don't know which switches are which."

 

"What do you have?"

 

"Well . . . a civilian who holds a surface-to-orbit license for a small civilian craft—we used the automatic launch to get out with."

 

"Just stay where you are—don't touch
anything
. We'll match course."

 

Cecelia sat back and took a deep breath. Against all odds, they'd escaped the mutineers, escaped the destruction of the ship they'd been on for . . . however many days . . . and she was still alive. Miranda . . . she did not want to let the others know how merciful Miranda's death had been.

 

It took hours for the
Indefatigable
to match courses and for one of the shuttle pilots aboard it to make an EVA trip across to take over and maneuver the shuttle into the other cruiser's bay. Then at last they could debark and work their way, one at a time, through the airlocks into the ship proper.

 

Cecelia, rumpled and dirty, saw across the compartment the compact dark woman she knew better than perhaps any other . . . Heris Serrano.

 

"I might have known," Heris said. The corner of her mouth twitched.

 

"What?"

 

"You . . . of course . . ."

 

Chief Jones looked from one to the other, alert and almost suspicious. Heris transferred her gaze to the Chief. "Chief Jones? I'm Commander Serrano . . . welcome aboard. I understand you're the ranking NCO?"

 

"Ranking survivor, yes, sir. Master Chief Bigalow was senior to me, but he was killed during the escape."

 

"Let's get your wounded to sickbay and get you all something to eat, then we'll need to hear the whole story.

 

* * *

 

The captain's office into which Heris ushered Cecelia looked nothing like she'd imagined. Blonde, fake wood, soft-focus pictures of desert scenery in peaches and tans . . .

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