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Authors: Elizabeth Moon

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The Serrano Succession (111 page)

BOOK: The Serrano Succession
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Her eyes felt gritty with sleeplessness, but she dared not leave the bridge and try to nap. Whenever he did something, she would have to act instantly. What should she do?

 

 

 

Commodore Admiral Minor Livadhi leaned close to the scan desks; Koutsoudas could smell the faint odor of his nervous sweat. "Are you
sure
there's nothing out there?"

 

"Sir, I'm not finding anything," Koutsoudas said. The scan computers had been told that
Rascal
did not exist; every few hours they kicked up a query, and every few hours he reassured them. Nothing is there, ignore it. He'd just dealt with the query again when Livadhi came on the bridge. He hated direct lying, but evasion didn't bother him.

 

"I have a feeling," Livadhi said. "You know that itch you get between your shoulders, when you know someone's looking at you?"

 

"Yes, sir."

 

"I don't want to fall into any mutineer traps," Livadhi said.

 

"No, sir. Me, neither. And I don't see any sign of mutineer ships, or any other ships. System's clean, sir."

 

Livadhi sighed. "You're the best, Koutsoudas; if they were there, you'd know." He paused. "How long have you been on duty?"

 

"Sir, you said you were worried, so I came on early—I've been coming on at every insertion and downjump, just in case."

 

"Ah. Good man." Livadhi turned away.

 

Koutsoudas busied himself with the scan system. Suiza was still there, yes, but if Livadhi was making deals with the Benignity, he didn't want a flotilla of Black Scratch ships jumping in on top of them. He'd experienced that in the Xavier system; once was enough.

 

The hours passed, and Livadhi did not call for another jump. Instead, he paced back and forth, back and forth. He left the bridge for only moments at a time. Koutsoudas went off for a short nap, but couldn't really sleep. When he came back, he stared at the display, wondering what would happen next. He wished Livadhi would change his mind, be what he'd always thought the man was, a fine Fleet officer, pleasant and competent and thorough.

 

Then he stiffened. There, far away from the system's mapped jump point, a curious ripple in the scan, as if someone had dropped a very small pebble into the far edge of a pond. He snatched that input for his station.

 

"Sir!" he said.

 

"What?" Livadhi stayed across the bridge from him, where he'd been listening to some engineering reports, but Keller, the Exec, came over to look.

 

"Something coming in, sir, and not at the jump point. At least I think it is; it's too far away. Could be an FTL trace."

 

"Direction?" Livadhi asked, coming nearer.

 

"Unclear. It's skipping—it's definitely an FTL trace, someone with a badly tuned drive. Just sort of hitting the surface of normal space and bouncing back out."

 

"Can you tell anything about mass?"

 

"Not yet." Koutsoudas watched the screens; the two other scan techs on watch leaned toward him. He growled at them. "Benally, Vince—watch your own screens. There could always be more than one thing going on. I've got this."

 

 

 

Rascal
's scan officer, lacking Koutsoudas' personal additions to standard equipment, identified an arriving ship minutes after Koutsoudas did. "Something coming in, Captain," he said.

 

Esmay looked at the scan and saw the familiar pattern of a badly tuned FTL drive just skip-jumping through. Was it even bound for this system? It didn't come in like she thought Serrano would, a clean downjump.

 

It could be a Benignity ship, come to lead Livadhi away. She had to do something. "Bring us to red," she said to the bridge. Alarms rang out. Those sitting first at the positions raced to put on p-suits, while their seconds acted. She heard lockers opening, and Chief Humberly held her p-suit ready; she stepped backwards into it. The firsts, suited now, returned to their places and the seconds went to suit up. "Weapons, ready." That would light up
Vigilance
's scan displays. At least their shields were already active. She turned to her comm officer.

 

"Get me a tightbeam to
Vigilance
."

 

 

 

Koutsoudas, trying desperately to dissect the fluttery scan signal into something he could identify—he hoped very much it was not a Benignity ship—was shocked when the warning red flashers showed live weapons in close proximity, where scan showed no ship at all.

 

"What—?!" He and Livadhi said it almost together. Too close for the injumping ship, too close, and no ship icon—Suiza. It had to be Suiza, bringing her weapons live. But why?

 

"What have you—" began Livadhi, but the Comm officer signalled him.

 

"Commodore—there's a tightbeam message from R.S.S.
Rascal
, Suiza commanding."

 

"Suiza!" Livadhi was white to the lips, his red hair in stark contrast to his face. "That stupid—what does she think she's doing?" Then, in a furious hiss to Koutsoudas, "You are relieved—I don't know if you're just exhausted, or a liar, but you let a pissant
lieutenant
crawl up our tail! Get to your quarters; I'll deal with you later." And to the comm officer, "Pipe it to my office."

 

Koutsoudas, more shaken than he'd ever been, shook his head at the second—luckily one of the old crew—who came to relieve him. "I didn't see it," he said. "I swear I didn't see a thing. It's not there . . . ."

 

"Go on, 'Steban, you're exhausted. It'll be all right."

 

 

 

Livadhi, on the communications screen in Esmay's bridge, looked thoroughly disgusted and angry.

 

"Lieutenant Suiza, you are in big trouble. Just what do you mean by disobeying orders and gallivanting around the universe?"

 

Esmay had thought about what to say that might take suspicion away from the
Vigilance
crew.

 

"Sir, may I ask if the admiral's bridge crew had detected
Rascal
prior to the tightbeam message?"

 

"No, you may not ask. Answer my question, dammit!" This was not the suave, pleasant commander she'd met at dinner aboard.

 

"Sir, the admiral is aware that
Rascal
has been fitted out with a new suite of weapons—"

 

"Yes, what of it?"

 

"And a new suite of stealth gear, sir. Which I was told you were not aware of, and which I am under orders—secret orders—to test in a realistic situation. A ship-on-ship pursuit, in fact. So when the admiral left, I executed my other orders, and followed. Since the admiral has not commented before, I presume we were not detected."

 

"You weren't," Livadhi said, now in a growl. "Not until you brought your weapons live. Care to explain why?"

 

"Sir, we're out near the border with the Benignity. I'm assuming the admiral is aware of another ship entering the system. On the possibility that it might be hostile, I brought the weapons live, and contacted you so that you would not worry about us when we seemed to jump out of nowhere."

 

"I didn't know about any such stealth capability," Livadhi said.

 

"Of course not, sir. It was all highly secret—" So secret it didn't exist; she put that thought rapidly aside.

 

"And they gave it to a jumped-up captain with a checkered past, an Altiplanan? Somehow I doubt that, Landbride Suiza . . ."

 

"I'm not the Landbride anymore," Esmay said. "I renounced it officially, before witnesses—I told you that, sir, at the dinner."

 

"So you did. Still, I could as easily believe you somehow suborned someone in my crew to conceal your presence . . . Suiza, you are meddling in something you do not understand."

 

"You're right, Admiral," Esmay said. "I don't understand what you're doing, and I am concerned that you are out here alone, on the border—"

 

"You're not the only one who can have secret orders, Suiza. I'm not here because I decided to go for a joyride. If we end up in a full-scale war because of you—"

 

"Not because of me, Admiral," Esmay said. She dared not glance aside to see if her scan officer had identified the incoming ship. If she could just keep Livadhi engaged, keep him busy, so he didn't jump
Vigilance
out . . .

 

"Back off, Suiza. That's an order. Back off, go home, and if I were you I'd keep my mouth shut—" With every word he spoke, she became more convinced that he was, in fact, a traitor.

 

"No, sir." Esmay took a deep breath. "I don't entirely trust you, sir."

 

"You flaming idiot! Are you trying to get yourself and your crew killed? You do realize
Vigilance
could blow you apart like tissue paper, don't you?" Out of the corner of her eye she could see a sort of ripple of dismay go through her bridge crew. But she herself felt steadier, now that he'd openly threatened her.

 

"Sir, I've been yelled at by admirals senior to you—with all due respect, sir, yelling at me isn't going to work. Tell me what you're doing, and why, or I will sit right here watching you until I figure it out for myself."

 

"No, you won't, because I will run right over you and jump out of here. Dammit, Suiza, haven't you caused enough trouble in this organization? Back off or else do exactly what I tell you." He took a deep breath. "You want to know what I'm doing? I'm under orders to make an illicit jump into Benignity space to pick up a very important defector. I've been told it's of utmost importance. Now that you've stuck your nose in, you can guard my back."

 

 

 

R.S.S.
Indefatigable
, in Copper Mountain system

 

Heris Serrano was asleep in her cabin when the comm officer buzzed her. "Captain—there's an urgent message, ansible relayed, from a Captain Suiza."

 

"In code?"

 

"Yes, sir, in code."

 

Heris frowned as she shoved her feet into her boots and headed to the bridge and the decryption desk. Esmay Suiza was back in Fleet and a captain? That was good, but now what had happened?

 

She sat at the desk, inserted her command wand, entered the authorization numbers, and watched the message wriggle into clear. urgent urgent urgent . . . All right, she'd got that. petris kenvinnard aboard vigilance reports suspicious activity by admiral minor livadhi. requests rascal relay messages to you and shadow vigilance. will report via ansible.

 

"Captain, there's another from the same source, by a different relay . . . I was just downloading all messages for this ship . . ."

 

"See how many there are," Heris said. "Forward them all to this desk. We have a situation."

 

The next message gave a set of navigation coordinates. vigilance taking this course. will follow and report.

 

The third, fourth, and fifth were the same. Heris could almost see the big cruiser trailed by the little patrol, through one jump point after another, zigzagging through Familias Space. What was Livadhi up to? And why didn't he realize Suiza was back there reporting on him?

 

Petris must have convinced Koutsoudas, she realized.

 

"Navigation," she called. "I'm going to read off some jump point coordinates—throw me up a visual, and let's see if we can figure out where someone's going." She read the coordinates aloud—she didn't want the bridge crew to know the rest of this yet—and while Nav set up the visual, she wrote out her own quick report to Sector HQ. Whatever Livadhi was up to, she was sure he was not acting under orders.

 

"Captain, an urgent from HQ was down the queue—"

 

"Send it." She watched as that message came up clear. all ships, all ships, report any contact with cruiser vigilance or patrol rascal. these ships failed to report on schedule. presumed location 389.24.005. any ship jumping through that point, report debris fields or other evidence of conflict.

 

Right. Someone had noticed they weren't where they were supposed to be. She encrypted her report, told the comm officer to tightbeam it to the system ansible, and looked up to see the Nav officer's visual up on the main screen.

 

It looked like a random walk example in a math text. But something about it nagged at her mind.

 

"What kind of jump points?" she asked.

 

"All multiples. Nothing under a three. But mostly low-density systems."

 

Not random at all then, but an attempt to throw off pursuers.

 

And, except for two jumps early in the sequence, they trended toward the border with the Benignity.

 

"Damn the man!" Heris said. Heads turned. "Sorry," she said. "We have a situation, a Fleet cruiser possibly trying to abscond to the Benignity. I have just sent a message to Sector HQ, but by the time someone there figures out what to do, it'll be far too late."

 

"You're going after him?"

 

"We're going after him. Alone, because we can't strip this system of the other ships. We have evidence that the crew—or some of the crew—may be aware that something's wrong, but they don't know what. In the context of a real mutiny, they're unlikely to start trouble—" Though she could hope Meharry or Oblo would manage to knock Livadhi on the head anyway.

 

"But—" the navigation officer looked worried. "But, sir, how can we know where to find them? They could be anywhere. And we can't cross the border—that'd start a war."

BOOK: The Serrano Succession
12.57Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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