Looking Glass 4 - Claws That Catch (28 page)

BOOK: Looking Glass 4 - Claws That Catch
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“Thank you, sir,” the corporal replied.

Having no clue what an officer said next, Berg surfed off to check on the teams reentering the ship. Guys did the stupidest things in the airlock, it was amazing.

 

“So that's the Old Man,” Dupras said. “ 'Good job, now get back to work.' ”

“What do you want?” Shingleton growled. “A medal? You break this thing and I'll make sure you get a medal: right up your rectum.”

“Two-Gun Berg,” Lyle said, jumping team frequencies. “Don't cross him or you'll end up in a world of hurt.”

“I've never seen him down on the troop level,” another Marine chimed in. “Not even in the gym. What's he do all the time?”

“Practices killing people and breaking things,” Sergeant Corwin said. “So like Sergeant Lurch said, don't cross him. Hell, even Top thinks he walks on water.”

“I heard that march to Richmond was his idea,” one of the Marines said. His tone was, if anything, respectful. You didn't join Force Recon if you didn't to an extent love pain and there were few things more painful than an eighty mile forced march.

“Wouldn't be surprised,” Lyle said. “He's a glutton for punishment.”

 

“Oh, grapp,” Berg said, collapsing in his bunk. “If I never have to smell the inside of my Wyvern again, it will be too soon.”

“Dude, you just oversaw more hours of space-walk than NASA has done in its entire history,” Lieutenant Morris said. “With zero incidents of any note. Hell, NASA has had more seal accidents in less time than you just had under worse conditions! As a second lieutenant, if that right there doesn't get you a walk-on-water evaluation, the CO's just got it in for you.”

“He's got it in for me, all right,” Eric said. “You're not going to believe this, but . . .”

 

“What did I tell you, sir?” First Sergeant Powell said.

“You were right, Top,” Zanella said. “That kid really can walk on water. Jesus. I was just comparing notes. In fewer man-hours, NASA had four times the level of life-threatening incidents. And they never tried to mine an asteroid with jury-rigged alien technology.”

“And, of course the penalty for a job well done . . .” First Sergeant Powell said, grinning.

“I told him to have the entire mission report on my desk by the beginning of next watch,” the Marine captain said, grinning. “Now, if he can do that, I'll give him an OER that makes him look like Jesus Christ come back to life, rapture and all . . .”

 

“So,” Captain Prael asked, first thing next shift. “When are the guns going to be back up?”

The ship had left the unnamed F type star as soon as the fabber was secured below and was back on the way to the target area. But with the destination less than a week away, and starting to enter potential Dreen territory, the CO wanted to make sure his guns were going to work.

“Oh, they're already up, sir,” Weaver said, yawning. “The fabber finished spitting out the last of the critical molycirc about an hour ago. We're continuing the run to make sure we have spares in the event of another emergency. And of course we'll need it if we take combat damage; that's not the only place that requires molycirc.”

“Wait,” the CO said, blinking. “What about the rest of the guns?”

“They were fixed before we even started mining, sir,” Bill said. “And you haven't lived until you've seen Miriam in a coverall and four-inch heels, bent over a hatch running molycirc . . .”

“Miss Moon . . .”

“Participated in the reconstruction, sir?” Bill asked. “I think that would be a yes. I had Chief Gestner log her hours and I ended up forcing her to work no more than eighteen hours at a time. I'd say that she probably did about twenty-five percent of the work herself, sir. Chief Gestner and the Eng agree on that estimate, by the way.”

“What, do I have to make an all hands announcement?” Prael asked, throwing his arms up. “Okay, I get it. She's amazing.”

“And cute,” Bill said, grinning. “Don't forget cute.”

“Fine, I want to have her love child,” the CO said, shaking his head. “I'll add that to the announcement.”

 

“ALL HANDS, ALL HANDS . . .”

 

“What the grapp?” Chief Gestner said, his eyes wide.

“Hey, Chief,” Sub Dude said, clapping him on the shoulder. “Welcome to the Space Navy. Things are different here.”

 

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

“I simply have to get some sleep,” Miriam said. “And Tiny won't leave me alone.”

“You've been so busy, lately,” Red said, sympathetically. “He misses his mommy.”

“I know, but he won't go to sleep,” Miriam said, her eyes red. “I need to finally get these contacts out. I need to sleep.”

“We'll take care of him,” Red said.

“No, he'll just come scratching at my door,” Miriam said, desperately. “Here,” she added, handing the machinist a package with Japanese kanji characters on it. “Give him some of this and he won't leave you.”

“What is it?” Red asked, looking at it dubiously.

“Japanese catnip,” Miriam said, yawning. “He likes it.”

“Shiny,” Red said, patting her on the shoulder. “Get some sleep.”

 

Miriam finally lay down and closed her eyes, glad to have the dreaded contacts out as well. Unfortunately, she was blind as a bat without either glasses or contacts and she hated doing mechanical work with her glasses on. She needed to get some safety glasses in her prescription, but they looked so dorky and she'd spent too many years being considered an ugly geek . . . 

“. . . uncertainty levels within the vacuum fluctuation will interact at causal nodes whereas metric control becomes distorted via . . .”

“Shhh! Not now, I'm tired.” Miriam told the voice. It obediently subsided as her head hit her pillow.

It occurred to her just as sleep enveloped her that she probably should have pointed out to Red that he shouldn't give Tiny too much of the Katty-Man, which was to catnip what super-concentrated hash was to marijuana. Even with his size, even one of the little silver packages could make him . . . 

But by then it was too late.

 

“Wow, he really likes this stuff,” Red said, chuckling.

“He looks really stoned.” Sub Dude laughed as the cat flopped over on his side. “How much did you give him?”

“I figured he was big,” Red said, shrugging, “so I gave him all four packages.”

“He should be out like a—” Gants started to say just as the cat leapt to its feet and let out a howl like a fire-engine. “Holy grapp!”

“Catch him!” Red shouted as the cat screamed his way out of the compartment.

“Good luck,” Gants replied. “I was not here. I have never heard of a giant, stoned, hyperactive catzilla . . .”

 

Space, the final and all that . . . 

Four of the main screens in Conn could be set to external view and Captain Prael had to admit that the view was spectacular. But there were still times he pined for the view of the inside of a sub, nothing to see but steel walls and . . . 

AND A HOWLING STREAK OF WHITE AT SHOULDER HEIGHT!

“Holy maulk!” he shouted, damned near peeing himself in surprise. For just a moment he caught a flash of feline shape at the far end of the Conn and then the thing was out the hatch headed for CIC. “COB, what did I just see?”

“That would be a Savannah, sir.”

“Not a white streak that sounds remarkably like the ship breaking up?”

“No, sir!”

“And just what is a Savannah, COB?”

“A cross between a Bengal housecat and a Cervil wildcat, sir. Males are generally docile and have doglike personalities if neutered young. In this case, it would be a Savannah named Titanus. My guess is that somebody gave him too much catnip. I will investigate the phenomenon.”

“Are you telling me that someone brought a genetic freak of a housecat onto my ship?”

“No, sir!” the Chief of Boat replied. “I would be telling you that someone brought a massively-hyper, sixty-pound genetic freak of a housecat, nicknamed Tiny, onto your ship, sir. He's for hunting down the chee-hamsters, sir.”

“Oh,” the CO said then paused. “Chee-hamsters?”

“They're pests, sir. Picked them up the first time we were on Cheerick when the ship got torn up and we had to set down for repairs. Leave droppings all over, get into the food . . .”

“I've got the picture, COB. Well . . . keep him off the Conn.”

“Will do, sir.”

“COB, I have another question.”

“Sir?”

“What else do I need to know about?” the CO asked carefully. “People covertly visiting Miss Moon to have her read tea leaves and butcher chickens so that this Hexosehr technology will work. And now a monster cat that hunts some rodent I've never heard of. Anything else?”

“Nothing any CO needs to know, sir,” the COB replied.

“That was not a No, COB.”

“Yes, sir.”

Sigh . . . 

 

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

Weaver hit save and closed the form, then opened the next. But it was the usage estimate on food consumption . . . and he'd already done that one. Copy sent to the CO.

Weekly compilation of maintenance and repairs . . . No, that's done. Sent.

Payroll . . . checked and sent to the CO.

He3 usage estimate . . . 

He looked through his to-do list, knowing that there had to be something to do. He'd been running around the ship checking on repairs, fixing personnel problems, shouting at cooks and generally killing himself for the last three weeks. There was no way that he was . . . 

“Christ,” Weaver muttered, running through the list. There wasn't anything to do. He couldn't ask the Eng for the spare parts inventory for at least another two days, there wasn't a single department issue to “mediate” or otherwise deal with . . .  “I don't have anything to do.”

So what did an XO do when he was actually caught up on paperwork? Weaver thought back and decided that what his previous XOs had done was go out and find out what was wrong that wasn't getting reported.

Which meant inspecting the entire ship until he found someone's ass to chew.

He might actually find the door to his quarters.

 

“This is why you've been restricting the cereal ration?” Bill asked, holding up the box of generic breakfast cereal. A hole had been nibbled in the side and the cereal dribbled on the floor of the galley. “I thought you said that it was pilfering?”

“I run a clean galley,” Chief Duppstadt said mulishly.

Over two weeks, by daily abuse, Weaver had gotten Duppstadt to raise the quality of food to the level of “edible” if not “pleasant.” The reality of Naval regulations was that even the CO could not relieve a chief for simple incompetence unless it was mission threatening. And after looking at Duppstadt's record, Bill figured out why Duppstadt was in the galley; it was on the one part of a ship that was not life-threatening. How he had made chief in the first place was the real question. How anyone had let him cook in the sub service, which was normally renowned for the quality of its food, was totally mind-boggling.

But now he had him dead to rights. Bill had asked him in a previous shouting session why he couldn't at least provide cereal to the sailors, spacers, whatever, and the chief had told him, point-blank, that someone was pilfering. Bill had even assigned the Master-At-Arms to investigate.

What he had found, though, going through one of the supply lockers and not-at-all looking for his door, was that rats had been at the food. Rats. In his ship. This was what he got for spending so much time doing paperwork. Rats. In his ship.

“Chief, rats in the supplies are not a reflection on your galley,” Bill said, for once kindly. “If anything, they're a reflection on me. But we need to get them tracked down. Have you set traps?”

“Yes, sir,” the chief admitted. “But they don't go for them.”

Bill almost made the comment that if the chief was putting his food down as bait he could understand that but refrained.

“How are you baiting them?” Bill asked, biting his lip.

“Leftovers, sir,” the chief said. “But they don't seem to be going for them.”

Must . . . keep . . . straight . . . face . . . 

“Try something different, Chief,” Bill said. “I hear oatmeal and peanut butter works. Maybe some cereal. Cheese is, of course, traditional. Perhaps they're not . . .” Connoisseurs? No that would be ARE connoisseurs . . . “meat eaters. And what's the point of having a cat if he's not catching the rats?”

“Won't have that filthy beast in my galley, sir,” the Chief said, stoutly. “Won't have it. Filthy things, cats. Lick their own butts.”

“Well, we need to get rid of them,” Bill said. “We only have so much food.”

He considered the problem, then shrugged.

“They can't be hiding in the walls. They have to be in the compartments. I'll get some hands down here to turn out the foodstocks and try to find them. And . . . where the food is stored away from the kitchen I'll have Tiny participate. Maybe he can catch some of them.”

 

“Okay, this is maulk,” Sub Dude said, picking up the case of cans. “We're rat-catchers, now?”

“Orders is orders,” Red said, picking up two cases with his Number Four lifting arm. “And I don't want to be eating rat droppings.”

“Well, I don't think there are any . . .” Gants said, then jumped back as a purple blur went past his feet. “What in the grapp was that?”

Tiny, though, had pounced at once, slipped a paw into a narrow crack between two boxes and fished out the creature. He flipped it out into the corridor and then chased after it.

“That wasn't no rat,” Red said, following the cat. “Tiny, bring!”

The cat caught the little beast and ran over, dropping it at the machinist's feet. But as soon as the thing hit the ground it took off, fast, faster than any rat the two had ever seen. Red never even got a good look. Tiny pounced again and brought it back over, holding the squirming thing out in his jaws.

“What the grapp is that?” Gants asked, his voice hushed.

It didn't actually look like a rat, more like a purple crab or spider.

“I'm not touching that thing,” Gants added, backing up.

“I got it,” Red said, grabbing it with his number four arm and squeezing slightly. The shell of the thing cracked and it went limp. “I think we need to report this, though.”

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