FISHERMAN’S HOPE DAVID FEINTUCH PART 1 August 4, in the Year of our Lord 2201 Chapter 1 "But Vasily's a Russian, and we're short on Eurasians." Lieutenant Darwin Sleak flipped through the stack of folders on the polished conference table, each an application to the United Nations Naval Academy. Sleak glanced at Commandant Kearsey for approval, squinting in the bright summer Devon sun. The Commandant tapped his folder, "Bom September 2187. Grades put him in the eleventh percentile among applicants, admission tests put him eighteenth. Low, but someone has to be near the bottom," He shrugged his unconcern, "Put him on the list, I suppose," He turned to me. "Any comment, Captain Seafort?" I blurted, "I thought the Selection Board didn't consider nationality," Damn Final Cull, anyway. My aide Edgar TolHver carefully studied his fingernails, accustomed to my outbursts. Commandant Kearsey said, "Officially, we don't. And we wouldn't take some unqualified joey simply to gain another Russian, But with a war on, we need public support from every continent, A balanced cadet class doesn't hurt." I knew he was right. The Navy's appalling losses to the fish-like aliens that had attacked our Hope Nation and Vegan colonies had to be made up, and the cost of rebuilding the fleet would be enormous. The deadly assaults had destroyed fourteen ships of the line and killed untold hundreds of crewmen, some my friends. And then we'd lost Orbit Station, where Vax Holser had died hoping to save me. I forced my thoughts into a new channel. "What if we just took the top three hundred eighty?" "We'd lose all geographical balance." My tone was acid. "So? Balance wasn't a consideration when you took Senator Boland's son," 1 shouldn't have said it, but my new shoes hurt and so did my chest; I'd grown accustomed to one-sixth gravity during my recent stay on Lunapolis. I braced myself for the Commandant's withering glare that had transfixed me as a raw cadet only fourteen years ago. Certainly my manner warranted it. But I was no longer a frightened thirteen-year-old reporting for induction; now I was the notorious Nicholas Ewing Seafort, "hero" of Hope Nation. My face scowled from a recruiting poster, and in two short weeks I was to replace Kearsey as Commandant of both U.N.N.S. Academy bases, here at Devon and at Farside, on Luna. I alone knew of the perversions on which the public's adulation was based, I, and Lord God. Someday I must face His reckoning. Commandant Kearsey concealed whatever annoyance he felt. "We can't very well turn down a U.N. Senator's son, Captain. Especially when Boland's on the Security Council's Naval Affairs Committee. Anyway, the boy's grades are acceptable." "Lower than the Russian's, I think. Who are we bumping for the Boland boy?" His staff aide, Sergeant Kinders, handed him a folder. "A Parisian. Jacques Theroux." The Commandant frowned. "It's not as if the boy will know why he's off the final list. What's more important: putting another cadet in Boland's place, or having powerful friends at appropriation time? Do you want the new ships built or not?" I stared at the door, knowing I had no answer. The Navy must be restored, to guard our far-flung colonies, and to protect home system if the fish attacked. 1 muttered, "I'd still pick the first three hundred eighty." Even TolHver and Sleak looked at me strangely. It was a moment before Commandant Kearsey answered. "Then we'd lose Final Cull. We'd be stuck with the candidates the Selection Board sent." "Yes." Lieutenant Sleak cleared his throat, waited for the Commandant's nod. "Final Cull is Academy's hard-won prerogative, and our only input into the Selection process. Would you have us give it up?" His tone was cold, despite the fact that I'd soon be his commander. Final Cull was a traditional privilege, and the Navy shouldn't surrender its traditions easily. Yet, still... "Father, can Jason stay for dinner?" At thirteen I knew better than to ask in front of the prospective guest, i hoped I could get away with it, as I'd just thrown Father's cherished obligations of hostship into the balance against his stern disapproval of my friend. Father's eyebrow raised. "He could abide our prayers?" Jason flushed, his eye on the orchestron we were updating on the creaky kitchen table. He paused, chip in hand. "I may be a freethinker, sir, but I respect the customs of your house." Quickly, as if he'd gone too far, he bent over the orchestron motherboard. Father grunted. "Respect for Lord God isn't a custom. It is life itself." Still, I knew Jason's forthrightness had gained him favor in Father's eyes, "Perhaps you too will find Him, before you consign yourself to damnation," Oh, please, not a sermon. Not In front of Jason. Father gave the gleaming teapot one last swipe with the soft cloth. "I can't Imagine why Nicholas thinks asking permission In your presence will sway me. He knows better manners than he practices," I swallowed. More verses at bedside, or worse; Father always remembered the day's sins. Still, the corners of his mouth turned up grudgingly. "Pea soup, the fresh bread, and tomatoes from the garden. Can you tolerate It?" That's fine, sir," Jason said quickly, I flashed him a grin across the table; he surreptitiously kicked my shin. Later, washing for dinner, Jason asked softly, "Heard anything yet?" I shook my head, One way or another, word had to come soon. Time was running out, "He's said you can go for sure?" "Aye." Perhaps my Imploring and tears had nothing to do with Father's consent, I suspected they'd helped, despite the switching he'd given me when I persisted, "Well, you reached the second Interview, and didn't get a washout letter. You made It to Final Cull." Uke any teener, he was familiar with Academy admission procedures. If I Final Cull I'd be admitted to Terrestrial Academy at Devon, where they'd subject me to training before shipping me to Farside for my real education, "Aye,111 wished Jason wouldn't talk ft; I'd myself that not discussing my chances somehow Improved them, At dinner Father drew himself from hi§ customary meditative silence, for Jason's sake. For the moment, Jase was Father's guest as well as mine. "Your, ah, plaything is fixed?" The orchestron? Aye, sir. But it's an instrument, not a toy." "An instrument of... electronics." He and I both knew his unspoken thought. An instrument of Satan, as all idle amusements. "And of music, Mr. Seafort. There isn't much the Welsh Philharmonic can play that we couldn't re-create on it." "By pushing buttons." But Father's tone was agreeable, as he mopped at his soup with the hot bread he'd pulled from the oven an hour before. Jason's lean face lit with the grin I cherished. "It's all in knowing what buttons to push, sir." Father looked to me, shaking his head as if in exasperation. Recklessly, I grinned back; Jason had that effect on me. He was courteous to Father, even respected him in a way, without taking Father's manner seriously. At first I'd been scandalized, then put off, but now I knew it was part of Jason's singular view of the world. Father asked, "You'll be in Third?" Two conversational gambits in an evening. He was treating Jason as an adult, and I was grateful. "Yes, sir. This year I'm taking Engineering for electlves," "Why?" "I like to build things, or fix them." "A erty and a tower, whose top may reach unto heaven," Jason looked confused. I explained, "He means the tower of Babel, Genesis Nine," Father swung to me In rebuke. Eleven. Don't pretend to learning you lack, Nicholas," "I'm sorry, sir," "Nieky could sign up for half days, Mr, Seafort, We could work on projects together." Father raised an eyebrow, "Nicholas learns best at home, where his idleness is held in check." That was like Father, to discuss my faults in front of anyone, as if I had no feelings. But to my surprise he added, "Anyway, Nicholas won't be at your school next year. I imagine he'll be at Academy." I was astonished. Father had never once hinted he thought I had a chance of being accepted. "Of course," Jason said quickly. "I just meant if he didn't — I mean, I forgot." Two days later I was on my knees pulling the stubborn weeds from our garden, knowing Father's vigilant eye would judge my work, and that my chance of parole on Saturday depended on his approval. Jason had bought us tickets to the football game with the Irish, though I hadn't told Father yet. A shadow fell across the black dirt. I looked up, a bead of sweat trickling. "I'm not done yet, sir. I'll catch the rest of that row, after." He waved it away. The post is here." The post?" Why would he interrupt my chores for— "It came?" I was on my feet. "What does it say?" "I don't know. It's yours to open," I reached out, but he shook his head, "On the kitchen table." I dashed to the door. "Mind you wash your hands!" I took enough time to rinse so I'd leave no grime on the towel. That would infuriate Father, and I wouldn't enjoy the consequences. I rushed back to the kitchen, tore open the em* bossed envelope. Father waited, leaning against ttie sink, his face grave. The Selection Board of the U.N.N.S. Naval Academy always has more qualified candidates than places. We regret to inform you that after careful consideration we are unable .,," I dropped the letter on the table, blinking away a blur. Unbelieving, I snatched It up again,",,, you are to be congratulated that you were one of the final candidates in this year's selection process. If you wish to apply again next year we would b« happy to consider..,"'" My stinging, I ran into my room, slammed tht door, i threw myself on my bed. Footsteps, The door almost instantly. "Stand up!" "Let me be alone for—* "Up!" Father's tone brooked no argument. I stumbled to my feet. He stepped back into the hall, "Close your door properly," ! I gaped. "You care more about—" His eyes narrowed and I stopped just In time. "Aye, sir." j turned the knob. tht i door quietly. Through the door Father said, "I wonl have you slamming doors In my house." "No, sir, I'm sorry." I crept back to my bed, kicked off my 8 « David Felntuch shoes. I buried my head in the pillow, determined to smother my sobs. He gave me about an hour before he came back into the room. "May I read your letter?" My voice was muffled. "You know what it says." "From your reaction, yes." He paused. "They rejected you." His phrasing reduced me to helpless tears. For a moment his hand lay on my shoulder, then it was gone, as if it had fallen by accident. "Nicholas, turn so I can see you." "I want to be alone." His tone was sharp. "Yes, to feel sorry for yourself." "Why shouldn't I?" My voice was muffled. "So you set yourself against the Lord?" «l_What?" Father pulled at my arm until I turned onto my back. Reluctantly, I looked to him, eyes red. "If Lord God wanted you to attend Naval Academy, do you think they'd not have admitted you?" I was outraged. "You're saying H© didn't want me to go?" Father was silent. "Why should He care one way or the other? It was the stupid Selection Board, not Him." Father shook his head. "He cares. About you, as about all of us," ^ ». ,,.., My tone risked a strapping, but I didn't care. Then why did He have me waste my time applying?" Father's eyes bored into mine. "Perhaps to teach you to accept failure like a man, rather than as a whining child." I closed my burning eyes. Father would never understand. "Nicholas, this is hard for you. But you must accept His will, I'll pray with you later. Perhaps we can find His consolation,11 It meant I would spend hours on the hard bedroom floor, knees aching, while I sought the relief Father himself could give, but would not. I looked up at the Commandant. "Give up Final Cull? Is that so awful?" Kearsey's fingers drummed the conference table. "The Selection Board .,. you know who's on it?" I said, "Admiralty appoints two members, the Secretary General appoints two, and three come from the Senate." "Did you know the Navy used to select its own applicants?" "Of course, all the services did, until the scandals." Seventy-five years later, the Navy hadn't forgotten its humiliation. The Commandant smiled grimly. "There was a battle royal when the changes were proposed. We lost; the Navy would no longer be allowed to choose its own candidates. Elitism, they called it, though why the Navy officers' corps shouldn't be elite, only Lord God knows. As a sop, they left us Final Cull. The politicians send us their selections, but at least we can weed through them." I stabbed at my folder. "Is that what we're doing by making sure we have proportionate Russians and Equadorians and Yanks? By making a place for the Boland boy?" He flushed, "We do the best we can. Next year you'll get to decide alone. But even though it's my responsibility, you're the one who has to take the class through Academy. Do you object to Vasily Karnyenkov? Would you rather have Jacques what's-his-name?" I'd rather not have to cull at all. "No," I said wearily. "Let it be." Under the table, my nails left marks in my creased trouser leg. Tolliver and I walked slowly across the immaculate lawn to Officers' Quarters. "Even if you did alienate him, sir, what difference does it make? Another few days and he'll be gone." "He's been the Commandant for, what, eighteen years? They'll still look to him for advice, I don't need another enemy." "You didn't make an enemy," Tolliver soothed, "He was only defending Final Cull," "It's not as if we can predict what kind of middies they'll turn into," 1 brooded. Test and couldn't reveal which of our green cadets would mature into outstanding officers after two years or more of our instruction. I parted with Tolliver at my door. As a full Captain and the Commandant-elect, I rated an apartment that was large and luxurious by Naval standards. I'd be spending much of my time here, as Commandant. 1 stripped off my jacket, loosened my tie, and sat on the of the bed with caller in hand, Two days had passed I'd last visited the clinic. Perhaps Annie was better. I waited for the connection to New York. "Dr, O'Neiirs of> flee, please," Another wait. I drummed my fingers on the bedside table. The marvels of technology. Finally he came on the line. "I'm glad you called." He sounded harried. "How is my wife?" "She's, ah, progressing as expected." I waited, but he didn't continue. "You had something to tell me, Doctor?" "Not particularly. Why?" "You said you were glad I called." "We're always glad when relatives take an interest, Captain. In general the patient's progress is more rapid—" "How is Annie, Dr. O'Neill? Do you know?" He lapsed into incomprehensible medical jargon, analyzing Annie's blood tests for each of the seventeen hormones known to be responsible for mood and behavior. I listened, trying to filter truth through his statistics. At length I could stand it no longer. "But how is she?" "She continues to stabilize. Right now she's responding to changes in her secondary meds. Taking more interest in surroundings, but her mood swings are greater." I closed my eyes. Annie, I wish 1 knew how to help you. If only I hadn't let you meet me at that gutted church, in the stricken Hope Nation city of Centraltown. But for my folly, you'd be whole, rather than languishing in a clinic undergoing hormone rebalance, to our mutual humiliation. I wondered if any of the Academy staff knew the nature of her illness. Rebalancing was seen as shameful, and discharged patients were patronized if not ostracized. I myself struggled with those very feelings. Tired, helpless, I granted vague responses to Dr. O'Neill's prattle until I could ring off. Though I hated the embattled city of New York, I yearned to chuck everything and jump on the next suborbital. Instead, I had to endure two more days of Final Cull. I supposed I could find some excuse for not attending, or tell Commandant Kearsey I didn't care whom he selected, but such an attitude approached heresy. Better to delay my visit another few days, until after Handover. Still an hour to dinner, and the silent apartment was oppressive. I thrust on my jacket, left my quarters. The Admin Building's brass door handles were polished and gleaming, the compound's walkway meticulously edged. With a start 1 real- ized it was the same path on which I'd labored for hours with hand clippers and spade, while my bunkmates were enjoying their Sunday afternoon freedom. Well, I wasn't the only one, and I hadn't earned punishment detail often. I wandered past Officers' Quarters to the wide parade ground. I kicked at the gravel track that surrounded the field where even now cadets exercised under the vigilant eye of their drill sergeants. Avoiding the squads of perspiring cadets I crossed to the classroom complex beyond. It was the first time I'd seen the classrooms since I'd returned. On impulse I entered a building, automatically smoothing my hair and tucking at my jacket. Old habits die hard. The walls held the same pictures of squads in immaculate uniforms standing at ease with their sergeant, looking directly into the camera. All so young, so innocent. As I'd been, once. All cadets were recruited young as a matter of necessity. The N-waves our Fusion drives produced could trigger melanoma-T, a deadly cancer, but exposure within five years of puberty lessened the risk. I perused the hopeful faces. Where had I turned wrong, from the eager lad in a picture lining the classroom halls? Footsteps. Two cadets turned the corner, talking softly. When they saw me their eyes widened and they snapped to rigid attention against the corridor wall. Had I been a sergeant they'd have saluted and gone about their business, though with brisker step. But an officer—not just an officer, but a full Captain—was something else again. I could have returned their salutes, growled, "As you were,** and gone on my way, Instead, embarrassed at having dis' covered mooning over old pictures, I made a show of inspecting them. Even as I did so, I knew it was a mistake. By tradition, a Captain barely noticed a midshipman, to say nothing of a cadet, Like all our charges, these two were in their middle teens. The boy was taller, with short, curly black hair. The girl's locks were somewhat longer, almost to her collar, as the regs permitted for females. Their gray uniforms were neat and clean, their shoes spit-polished to perfection. Their belt buckles shined, though the boy's tie wis slightly off-center, I scowled as I adjusted it. He bit his lip before remembering he was at attention. "Name and year?" "Omar Benghadi, sir. I'm second." His voice came too loud; he flushed with embarrassment. "And you?" "Alicia Johns, sir. First." Had it been earlier in the term I wouldn't have had to ask; a plebe was easy to spot. But later, one couldn't always tell by appearance or demeanor. Not if the drill sergeants were doing their job. "Very wel—" "May I help you, Lieutenant?" The voice was cool; not impolite, but with perhaps a touch of impatience. I turned. His eyes flickered to my insignia. "Oh, please excuse me, sir. Staff Sergeant Ramon Ibarez." He came to attention. "As you were," I said immediately. One didn't harass the Marine staff in front of their Naval charges. "Sorry, Captain Seafort. I didn't recognize you." He hesitated. "Is there a problem with these two?" His tone implied that if there were he'd eliminate it, perhaps along with the cadets. His manner wasn't lost on the blond boy, who gulped. The girl waited impassively. "No, Sarge. I was just, ah ..." I found myself searching for an excuse to explain my presence. I managed to avoid licking my lips in nervous tension. He was only a sergeant, for heaven's sake. I was long since graduated, and far outranked him. "Just an inspection," I said more firmly. "Carry on, you two." "Aye aye, sir." The cadets scurried off. The sergeant repeated, "May I help you, sir?" His manner seemed to enquire, what were you doing in my building? So barracks scuttlebutt had it right: drill sergeants were afraid of nothing, even the prospective Commandant. No wonder we'd feared them. "No thanks, Sarge." It seemed too bald a dismissal, so I added lamely, "Getting them ready for exams?" "No, sir. Not really. Just makework, mostly, and giving the plebes a head start on next semester's work, though they don't know that." He smiled; the grin went to his eyes and transformed them. "I missed you by a couple of years, sir. I got here in '94." "I left in '92." "I know." I blurted, "You do?" "Of course. You berthed in Valdez Hall, in bunk three, when you came down from Farside your second year. We give that bed as a reward to joeys who've done well." "Good Lord!" Was he pulling my leg? Not even a drill sergeant would try that on a full Captain. Would he? "Everyone who was here claims to remember you. Even if they can't, they say they do." It was absurd. I cast about to change the subject. "You're a classroom instructor?" "Yes, sir, but my kids are dispersed to Training Station and the Fusers, so I'm taking a shift at gunnery and physical defense while waiting for my incoming plebes. I was just conferring with Sergeant Vost about one of my kids. We're trying to pull him through Elementary Nav." Suddenly I liked him. "Join me for a cup of coffee, Sarge?" "I, uh ..." His composure was momentarily gone. "If you're sure you don't mind, sir." "Not at all." I hesitated. When last I'd bustled through these halls, an afternoon cup was the farthest thing from my mind. "Where can we go?" "Staff lounge is at the end of the corridor, sir." I took a seat in a comfortable battered leather chair and let him pour me a cup. "Twelve days to go." I looked up. "Pardon?" "To Handover. Then the place is yours." He paused, said cautiously, "Excuse me if I'm out of line." He was, but we weren't shipboard, and his forthrightness came as a relief. "No, not at all." I gestured at the coffee table. "Will they mind our making ourselves at home?" "Mind?" He gaped. "Mind that Captain Nicholas Seafort relaxed in their lounge?" I felt a fool. "I suppose not." He studied me, started to say something, looked away. The silence stretched. I fidgeted, anxious to finish my coffee and be gone. Sergeant Ibarez blurted, "You're not comfortable with fame." How dare he? My jaw dropped. "I beg your pardon?" He flushed. "I suppose I've just thrown away my career. I apologize, sir." I began indignantly, "Certain matters are—" I ground to a halt. I'd sought companionship with the man and I was about to blast him for offering it. Swallowing my wrath, I stood, walked to the window, watched the perspiring cadets exercising on the parade ground. "No, Sarge, I'm not. In fact I hate it." This time our silence had a different flavor. At length he said, "Odd, isn't it? Most of us would give anything to be like you." "You don't want to be like me," I said with finality. "Everyone thought you'd take another ship. Until the announcement, no one believed the rumor you'd be assigned here." In the corridor, a bell rang. In a few minutes cadet classes would be dismissed. None of the youngsters would close their books or snap off their puters until the instructors gave them leave. Doing so was an invitation to demerits. "I didn't want a ship." I didn't want to be Commandant either, but I'd finally let them persuade me. "You're needed, sir." He sounded like Senator Boland, and my resentment was kindled. "Not really." I braced myself for another lecture about the Navy's need for heroes now that we were at war. "The place has... stagnated." I turned; his eyes were on the carpet. I asked quietly, "How do you mean?" It was somewhere between an invitation and a command. "Just..." Sergeant Ibarez looked up, paused. "I don't mean to talk out of school, sir." He put down his cup. "I believe in tradition. It's a glue that binds together the elements of the Service." He crossed to the window, looked out at the field and the helipad. "And I also believe the Commandant should be a remote figure of authority. But sometimes tradition can be carried too far. The Commandant can be too remote." He studied the transplex. "Commandant Kearsey believes strongly in tradition, sir." I knew better than to press. Til keep it in mind." I looked at the clock. "Time to get ready for dinner," I offered my hand, and we shook. Four hundred twenty folders still littered the conference table. Perhaps that was what Sergeant Ibarez meant by tradition. It would be far easier to sort personnel files on puter, but the Navy had always handled admissions with hardcopy files, "Any other changes?" The Commandant looked around the table. "We have a pretty fair balance," said Lieutenant Sleak, his tone diffident. "Both ethnic and regional." Beside me, Edgar Tolliver doodled on a pad. "The age mix is about right, though we're leaning a bit heavily toward fourteens this year." "Mr. Seafort?" The Commandant glanced my way. I shook my head in frustration. How could I guess which youngsters to admit? Beside me Lieutenant Tolliver played with his pad, refusing to meet my eye. Why hadn't I rid myself of him when I had the chance? Even when we'd been cadets at Academy, I'd abhorred him. "I don't—" I paused as Tolliver slid his pad to his right. I pushed it away, but not before noticing the sentence underlined twice. "What about Theroux?" I realized I'd spoken it aloud. Kearsey wrinkled his brow. "Who's that? The Parisian?" "Yes, sir." Tolliver's voice startled me. "I suppose we could revise once more," the Commandant said. I looked up; this time Kearsey*s eye held the stem disapproval I'd feared as a cadet. All I wanted was to be gone from here, but Kearsey's annoyance triggered something in me. "I'd like to see Theroux on the list," Kearsey shrugged, "Very well. I won't deny you your selections. You'll have to live with them. Darwin, put the Theroux boy back, and drop the three hundred eightieth name." "Aye aye, sir." Sleak made a note. After the meeting broke up I strode briskly back to my apartment; I'd be leaving within the hour for New York and Annie. Tolliver hurried alongside. He'd see me to my suborbital, and then he'd be on his own for a week, "Why Theroux?" I demanded. Absentmindedly I returned the salutes of passing cadets. Tolliver panted, "Why not, sir? It makes as much sense as any other name," We turned into the Officers' Quadrangle, I stopped; he continued a couple of paces before he realized 1 wasn't following. He turned and waited, "Tell me the truth." He shrugged. "I don't know why. Because he was on the list originally, and got bumped for someone else. Because his test scores and grades were fifteenth percentile, and the Russian boy's were lower." I raised my eyebrow, "You, an idealist?" Tolliver stood his ground. "Call it what you want, sir. I thought it wasn't fair. If you disagreed, why did you go along?" I had no response to that. "Mind your manners," I growled. "Aye aye, sir. As always." Damn it, the man was hopeless. A few minutes later he watched my heli lift off for London Shuttleport. Chapter 2 The clinic had been built atop the abandoned Yankee Stadium parking lot, after New York Military Command had decreed that public team sports were ipso-facto incitements to not. It stood by itself on a huge lot long gone to weeds, not far from the crumbling stadium walls that were New York's answer to Rome's Coliseum. Incongruously, the clinic was bordered by a pleasant, manicured lawn. The only concession to its hostile environment was the high barbed-wire fence surrounding the complex. Outside the fence, squatter shacks had sprung up on all sides, but for whatever reason none stood within a stone's throw of the clinic grounds. The clinic's security arrangements were low-key but omnipresent. Closed gates, cameras, doorways with bomb sniffers concealed behind their painted trim. The usual adjuncts of urban life, not only in New York, but in all sophisticated cities. In London, just a year before, Lord Mayor Rajnee Sivat had barely escaped assassination, thanks to the bomb sniffers. My appointment with Dr. O'Neill was for two P.M., but he wasn't yet on the hospital grounds. They told me he'd be "indefinitely detained." I conferred instead with Mrs. Talbot, his nurse, who made a show of having all calls held while she escorted me to a private office. I noticed that our indirect route managed to take us past many of her co-workers. For Annie's sake I held my peace. "Of course you may see her, Captain Seafort. Doctor says visits will do her good as long as you both want them." "Tell me again about the mood swings." She waved away my concern. "They're to be expected at this stage. Your wife is undergoing a complicated course of hormone rebalancing." I tried not to flinch at the bald phrase; the fact of Annie's treatment was something we would have to live with. "She's settling into new glandular patterns, and Doctor is constantly fine-tuning, as it were, based on her blood tests." I twisted my cap in my hands. Oh, Annie. Mrs. Talbot lowered her voice. "And of course your wife had some terribly traumatic experiences, quite apart from the rebalancing." I looked up. Was there a hint of reproach? I couldn't be sure. Well, I had no right to object. Before the rape that had devastated her, Annie had endured the bombing of Centraltown and its accompanying chaos. To say nothing of abandonment and starvation on Challenger. Mrs. Talbot's tone was gentler. "She's among strangers, too. That doesn't help, especially with her background." I searched her eyes for the slur that must be there, found none. For many decades Lower New York had been abandoned to bands of ruthless transpops who roamed its broken streets. Savage gangs comprised the city's transient population, many of Asian, Hispanic, or black origins. They preyed ruthlessly on each other and on the homeless. Above, in luxurious aeries, the civilized, cultured denizens of Upper New York shielded themselves from the harsh reality below with well-armed guards and their heavily fortified buildings. The Uppies referred to the transpops below as "trannies," an insult that could cost a life, if overheard. Annie had come from those brutal streets. So had Seaman Eddie Boss, whom I'd inducted into the Navy. I'd banished him to U.N.S. Waterloo, the first ship sailing out-system, after I'd found him lying with Annie one awful Hope Nation afternoon. "You've been through terrible times, both of you. It must have been ghastly, Captain." I stiffened, brought myself under control only with effort. "It's past." "You look ever so much better without—now that you've recovered." Without my scar, she'd meant. Unnoticed, my hand crept to my cheek, where the plastic surgeons had done their work. I shifted uncomfortably. "I'd like to see my wife, if I may." "Of course." She stood, and we went out to the corridor. "Doctor says Mrs. Seafort may go anywhere on the grounds. Shall I take you to her room?" "I know the way," I said hastily. Mrs. Talbot's disappointment was obvious. "Thank you. Oh, and, uh ..." I forced down my revulsion, groped for a way. "Do you perchance have any children?" "Yes, two. Kathy and Jon." "You have their pictures?" "On my desk. Would you like to see?" "Very much." I followed her back to her tiny office outside Dr. O'Neill's larger one. They were antique-style photos, not ordinary holos. I took out a pen. "May I?" Her eyes widened in pleasure. "Oh, yes. Of course." I wrote, "To Kathy and Jon, with gratitude for all the help their mother has provided. Nicholas E. Seafort, Captain, U.N.N.S." Mrs. Talbot was breathless. She clutched the photo to her bosom. "Thank you, Captain. Thanks ever so much." I took my leave, trying to force a calm while my stomach churned with disgust. People like Mrs. Talbot would bend backward for someone whose face was blazoned across the holos. But any humiliation was to be borne, if Annie received better care. I sat with her in a sunny lounge, one hand thrown casually across the back of the sofa, the other in my jacket pocket, knuckles white, fist bunched. Annie stared sullenly at the wall. "I wonder why you bother coming, Nick." "I want to see you. I'd be here every day if I could." I debated moving closer, decided not to risk it. "I'm sorry you're angry." "I ain't angry!" She crossed her arms, turned away. I said gently, "Annie, I love you." I held my breath. When she turned, her eyes were scornful. "That ain't enough, Nicky." My hand ached, I forced my fist to relax. "What would be enough?" "Nothin'. You put me in dis—this place." "Do you want to leave?" "Yes! No! Damnit, I don't know what I want no more. You and your medicines done this to me!" I reached to her but she spun out of her seat and retreated. I watched, helpless. After a time she said quietly, "Come on, let's walk." We strolled along the footpath. Eventually she took my arm. "Nicky, I'm all mixed up. I din' mean shout at you." "I know, hon." She kicked at a small stone. "Dr. O'Neill says I be gettin' better. He's prolly right. C'n you wait it out with me?" My throat ached. "Of course. As long as it takes." "Good. 'Cause dere's somethin' I wan'." I tensed. Only at moments of stress did Annie revert to her transpop dialect. "Nicky, I be gettin' mad every time I see you. Dr. O'Neill, he say it don' have nothin' to do with you, that I'm angry at Hope Nation and the fish and all. He keeps sayin' talk about it, and I keep tellin' him dat jus' make me madder, I should shut up 'til it go away." "He's right, hon." Though the Freudian cult had long been discredited and repressed, even the Reunification Church approved of confessing sin and facing one's fear. "It don' matter if he be right or wrong, the thing is, every time I be seein' you I get all mad again. What 1 wan'..." She faltered. I steeled myself against a growing unease. "Yes?" Her tone was determined. "I wan' you not to come see me fo' a while, 'til I be feelin' okay. It just get me all confused." Despite her words she clutched my arm tighter. "Oh, Annie." She turned toward me. "1 mean it, Nicky. It ain't just what I'm feelin' dis moment." "I know." "I wanna keep lovin' you, Jus' lemme be, fo* now," "All right-Softly she wiped my cheek, and her hand came away wet, "Bes' you go now, 'fore I change my mind again." "Yes." My tone was dull. I enfolded her in my arms, kissed the top of her head. "I love you. Remember that," I hurried off. An armored cab took me to the nearest heliport. I'd planned to spend several days with my wife, but found myself cast adrift. I could go downtown to the towers of Upper New York, and look down from my hotel room to the ugly streets. That held no appeal; I'd toured New York twice and hated it, I had five days leave, and nothing to do. If I returned to Academy at Devon I'd just seem to be interfering with Captain Kearsey's final days as Commandant. Better to stay out of the way, in London. I booked myself onto a suborbital. When we landed, I arranged a room in the old and decaying West End, where were located many of the hotels that had survived the Fire of 2070. By mid-evening I'd settled into my room. Almost at once the hotel made me uneasy; wherever I went the eyes of the staff followed. Chambermaids and bellmen who never spoke to guests found occasion to talk with to me. Even the chef had come to my table, ostensibly to inquire if I liked the food. I tried going out for a walk, but was soon recognized, and had no peace thereafter. People stared. Some even pointed. Perhaps I might have avoided the worst of it by donning civilian garb, but I'd be damned if I'd skulk about as if ashamed of the Navy. I frowned at the unfortunate phrase, I was damned; Lord God would have no forgiveness for what I'd done. I paced my room, restless. I could run up to Farside, but I'd already scheduled a trip aloft a few days after Handover. No point in visiting Lunapolis, either. I'd just seen my old friend Alexi Tamarov settled in to his new post there, as assistant to the Chief of Naval Operations; after that hitch he'd surely be rotated back onto a ship. Good officers were scarcer than ever these days, Nowhere held any appeal. For years I'd lived aboard ship, occasionally taking brief jaunts ashore. It was what I knew, A vacation, then? There was nothing I wanted to see, 1 couldn't abide an hotel. I wanted to go ... Home. I jumped off the bed. A hell, or a plane, first thing in the morning; nothing would be leaving at this hour. Or I could drive, though even today the through the hills to Cardiff were difficult. The only other way was ... I snatched the caller. Moments later I thrust gear into my duffel. The would have a rooftop helicab waiting; if I raced, I could just make it, I signed for the unused room, let the bellhop carry my bag up to the cab, "Paddington Station, and hurry!" The driver smiled sourly, "Sure, and I'll hurry. One of these days bloke will get in and say, 'Tike your time, lad. I checked out early,"* He turned the ignition and the blades whirred. We lifted off. Half an hour later I settled into my railway compartment, I hauled down the bed while we rumbled through the endless suburbs of Extended London. We would pull into Cardiff in time for breakfast. I took off my shirt and pants, stretched out on the tiny bunk, relaxed at last. Father. Home. I slept. I took breakfast in the ancient railway station before ringing for a cab. I didn't bother bargaining the fare though I knew Father wouldn't approve of extravagance. I could afford it, and the cabby deserved a living. I stared out the window at the remains of the ancient foundries. Jason and I had played in these eerie vacant buildings, a lifetime ago. The cab climbed deeper into the hills, on the twisting Bridgend road. The cabby was content to follow my directions. When finally he pulled to a stop I got out, thrust bills at him, and waited until he'd disappeared before I faced the familiar cottage down the hill from the road. I hadn't called ahead, knowing with absolute certainty that there was no need. If Father had gone to market, his door would be open, and if he were at home I was welcome. Except on Sunday, he would be nowhere else. It was as it would always be. Still, I knocked, rather than entering. I was thirteen when I'd left this place, and as many years had passed. The door swung open. Father seemed older, worn. He'd been washing breakfast dishes, and still wore his apron. His eyes flickered to my uniform, to my duffel. "You'll be staying, then?" "Aye, for a while." He turned away and I followed him into the kitchen. "The tea is hot." "Thank you." I took a cup, poured the boiling water, set the ball of tea leaves in it. I held the chain and swished it in the darkening water. "I'd heard you were back. The grocer told me it was in the holozines. He wanted to give me one." I sipped at the tea. "Father, do you mind if I stay the week?" "You are home, Nicholas." "Thank you." "You can help with the fence. Garth's cows want my grass and my garden, as always." "All right." He gestured to my jacket, my crisp blue slacks. "Work will ruin them." "I have old pants. The shirt won't matter." "You'll do your old chores." I nodded. Nothing had changed, or could. I'd once pleaded: Do you love me? He hadn't answered, of course. Perhaps he didn't know himself. I took my duffel into my old room, almost unchanged after a decade of absence. I sat down on the bed. The springs still creaked. They had caused me difficulty, trying to conceal my youthful passion from Father's notice. My clothes changed, I worked at repairing the fence until Father set out a simple lunch of soup and vegetables. After, I returned to work; he rinsed the dishes before rejoining me. Later, when the gloomy sky darkened to dusk he surveyed the stretch of ragged fence we'd restored. "It's a beginning, anyway. We could have done more." "I'm sorry, Father." "Sorry builds no fences." Still, his hand brushed my side as we walked to the house. "I'll be making dinner." "I could help." "You'll have to wash first." "Aye, sir." A smile twitched the corners of my mouth. He saw it, and frowned. After grace, we ate our cold chicken, with cucumber salad. I helped Father with the washing up, and in the quiet of the evening I sat in the kitchen to read books I'd brought, in my hand-held holovid. Father appeared in the doorway. "Will you join me for prayers?" "I'd like that." I snapped off the holo, followed him into his bedroom. We knelt, and I closed my eyes. He spoke the Bible, rather than reading it. He had no doubt of the words. Somehow, the ritual brought me a modicum of comfort, though my knees ached abominably by the time we finished. Afterward, when we'd gotten to our feet, I gave him an awkward hug before going to my room. Surprised, he neither thrust me away nor responded. I undressed slowly, opened the window to the cool night air, and crept into bed. I lay on my back, arms behind my head, examining by moonlight the once-familiar icons of my childhood that Father had left in their place. A model of U.N.S. Repulse I'd built from balsa. My abandoned clothes, still hanging on the closet door. A souvenir banner for the Welsh national football team. I stared at the faded felt emblem. So long ago, and just yesterday. The game was always on Saturday. "Is he always like that?" I pedaled hard to keep up. "It's Father's way." "How can you stand It? 'Are your chores finished? Have you read your verses?1 Jeez." I changed gears, came abreast of him, wind whistling In my hair. "I'm used to it." He grimaced. Jason didn't understand that none of it mattered. Whatever work I was given—studies, memorizing verses, chores, weeding—I could still sometimes ride with Jason. Father always acknowledged that I was free to choose my friends. I suspected Father disapproved of Jason not because he was a freethinker, though that was bad enough, but because we chattered like magpies and giggled over whispered secrets. Father's house was normally silent. Jason and I locked our bikes to a rack in the parking lot and joined the crowd moving to the stadium entrance. He ventured, "We could try for beer." "No," I snapped. Some of Jason's notions were outlandish. "You know what happened to Andrew and Llewelyn." "It was their second offense." "I'm not going to prison for a tube of beer." Didn't he know the Rebellious Ages were long since past? Society didn't approve of wild children, and to tell the truth, neither did I. Sneaking out at night to meet Jason was one thing; at worst that meant chastisement from Father. Breaking public decency laws was quite another. We sat on the hard benches waiting for the game to begin, "Nicky, you gonna reapply next year?" "I don't know." I stared down at the chalk lines on the field, "You should." I couldn't keep the bitterness from my tone. "So they can turn me down again?" 'You almost made it. So much work; all the forms we filled out, and then the interviews, the recommendations we got from everyone. Don't throw it away." I kicked the bench below me. "I'd have to start all over. Who cares about being a frazzin' cadet?" He studied me. By swearing I'd revealed more than I intended. "You care. And so do I," "Sure, it means a lot to you," I jeered. "You're the on© who'd go to Devon, not me." "Nicky, sometimes you're an arse." He took a stereoplug from his shirt pocket, set it in his ear. I turned away, furious. The teams went to their benches. A moment later a hand came around my waist and squeezed my side. "Sorry." I said nothing. "I'm sorry, Nicky." I pried his fingers loose. 'You know I don't Ilka that." "Don't be pissed at me, Nicky, Please?" I glared at him, but my frown quickly faded; I couldn't stay mad at Jason for long, "Okay," Jason giggled. "Maybe your father will let you go to Third with me, and we end up In Engineering together," "I doubt he will," School was voluntary. It had been so for nearly a century. Unfortunately the choice was Father's, not mine, If I had my way, I'd have gone, I knew that by studying at home over the rickety kitchen table I learned more than other joeys, but it was lonely, sometimes, with no one but Father, And after satisfying him, a public school would be a breeze. After a time I said, "Farside would have been nice." "I know," Jason had helped me prep for the exams, and had shared my fantasies of leaving Cardiff as a local hero. He didn't know how I'd cried myself to sleep when the letter came, and again during the week that followed, I'd been so sure, after getting to Second Interview, The crowd came to Its feet with a roar when Archie Con» nelly took the field against the Dubliners, I cheered as hard as any. Maybe this time, with luck, I could, get an autograph. Once I'd been the next joey in line when Archie had turned away for the bus. By now the first group of cadets would be reporting to Devon. Rather than cope with hordes of confused plebes, the authorities had recruits show up on staggered dates. Or, as scornful middies were said to remark, the plebes came staggering in. Like most Navy-struck boys I pored over the frequent articles in the holozines. We lost, five goals to two. Archie had been shaken up in a collision that earned Riltz a yellow card, and gave no autographs after the game. Disconsolate, we trudged back to our bikes. Jason already had our tickets for next week's big game, against the Italians. The one we'd been waiting for. We stopped at McCardle's for shakes and synthos. In a glum mood, I swirled the glass back and forth, while the holovid blared overhead and Jason chattered about our side's missed goals. If only Reggie hadn't missed the easy block, if the Micks had just-Jason's fingers tightened on my arm. Annoyed, I twisted loose. We had an understanding about his affections, yet twice today he'd— "Listen!" I gaped at the holovid."... when the suborbital went down. Airport officials say the craft had lost an engine but the pilot was expected to land safely with the remaining two. Debris is scattered across several runways, and Heathrow traffic has been diverted. Among the passengers was Dr. Raphael Ten-dez, inventer of the Hodgkins vaccine. Also aboard were twenty-eight cadets reporting for admission to the U.N.N.S. Naval Academy at Devon—" "Lord God!" I was on my feet. Jason stared at me white-faced. "It would have been you, Nicky." His eyes glistened. "Come on!" I grabbed my jacket. "What's the—" "I want to go home!" "But—" "Now!" I ran outside, unchained my bike. Jason fumbled for a coin, inserted it in the holovid, waited impatiently for the chip to pop out below. I was already pumping up the hill, all my effort in the strain of the pedals, grateful for the opportunity not to think. It was several minutes until Jason, panting, began to catch up. "Wait!" Head down, I pumped madly, eyes fixed on the mottled pavement streaking below. "Nicky, slow a bit!" Reluctantly I coasted until he pulled alongside. He gasped, "What in hell is the matter with you?" "Shut up." "Nicky? Are you crying?" Deliberately, I swerved, knocking Jason onto the grassy shoulder. As he tried to right himself I smashed into him again, throwing both of us onto the soft grass. I untangled myself from the bicycle and swarmed over him, pummeling him with blows to the shoulders and sides. He threw me aside, his temper well and truly ignited. "Get off me, you frazzing arsehole!" I wrestled him down again, climbed onto his chest. He bucked and kicked. Finally he yanked free an arm and caught me a staggering blow on the side of the head. "Ow! Jesus!" He nursed his hand. "Christ, you've broken it!" "Good!" "I mean it, you stupid grade!" I loosened my grip. "Let me see." "Get off first!" I rolled aside. He kicked me in the stomach, for evenses, as he called it. I doubled over, but he made no attempt to follow up his advantage. He buried his knuckles under his arm. "Damn!" When I could breathe properly I said, "Let me look." Reluctantly he extended his wrist. "Can you move it?" He wiggled his fingers gingerly. "I think so." Then it's probably not broken. Can you ride?" "If my bike's okay." He wiped his face. "Jesus, why'd you do that?" "I don't know." "You don't—Nicky!" Ashamed, I looked down. "I'm sorry, Jase." "Sorry? You drive me into the ditch, beat me up, break my arm, and all you can say is you're sorry?" "I'm sor— " What was wrong with me? How could I have done such a thing, and to my best friend? My only friend. "I mean it, Jason." I looked up, but already he was laughing, in that way he had of changing like a summer storm. "Give me a hug, then." "I'm not a gay, Jase. You know that." "But you owe me." He held up his swelling hand. "Arghhhh!" I pulled him to his feet. Shyly, making sure no one was driving by, I embraced him. He let his head rest against my shoulder. There, you satisfied?" I drew back. "It'll do, 'til another time," I righted his bicycle. It seemed undamaged. "Let's go home and soak it in ice." "Soak my bike?" His tone was incredulous. "Your hand, you twit." Then I saw his face. "I could kill you, sometimes." "Yeah. You try, sometimes." He walked his bike to the road and hopped on. Father read the newschlp gravely while Jason sat at the table, his hand in a bucket of icy water. Father raised his head and his eyes found mine. "So, Nicholas." I studied the table, "Is that why you fought?" "Yes. No, I don't know." "I would be disturbed too, at such proof of my folly." "Folly? What did I do?" "You questioned your Lord's will. Didn't I tell you, if He'd wanted you summoned to Academy you'd have been admitted? He spared you the horror of that inferno." My voice dripped scorn. "He killed those cadets just to teach me humility?" Father slapped me, hard. "Alone with your friends you may mock Him. Not in my house." Jason drew in a sharp breath, but was silent. My hand crept to my reddened cheek. I muttered, "Aye, sir." "If it's His purpose to teach you humility, He still has work to do," I nodded. It wasn't to say anything else, "We'll pray for them tonight." My voice was barely audible, "I'd like that," Much later, after dinner, after chores, after my evening verses, in the solitude of my darkened room, I knelt at my bed and closed my eyes in the customary manner. I'm sorry, Lord, for having doubted You. I didnt understand. I still don't know why they had to die, but thank You for sparing me. Yet, I wanted so much to go to Academy. Do You understand that? Can You find me something else to want as much? Could I ask that of You? Please? My eyes roved the room, to the Captain's insignia on my jacket that hung on the chair, to the scarred desk, to the window out of which a boy had occasionally climbed, his heart pounding, knowing disobedience was sin but anticipating the glory of a night ride in the moonlight through caressing wind, tires whispering on the dark asphalt. I left my creaking bed, walked to the window. Lord God knew where my old bike might be now. And if I wanted to ride, I had but to walk out the door; I was too old to be climbing through windows. I wandered the room. My fingers stroked the desktop. No dust; Father had kept my room clean. I sat at the chair. Had everything shrunk? I felt almost a Gulliver. 1 opened the drawer. Pencils, lined neatly in a row, Old scraps of paper, a teen's doodles. A folder, neatly labeled by hand in block letters, "ACADEMY APPLICATION." The letters MU,N.N.S." had been carefully added before "ACADEMY," as if in clarification. I opened the aging file. The letter had come four days after. 1,2190, Circumstances have required the Selection Board to reopen admissions for the U.N.N.S, Naval Academy*s entering class. This is to inform you that your application has been reviewed and that you are accepted for admission as a cadet in the United Nations Naval Service, You are to acknowledge by return mail, and to report on September 10, 2190, to Academy in Devon. Lauron E, Keariey, Commandant, I closed the file, turned from the desk. I knelt at the bed. Lord, help me find that boy, the one who'd reread that letter until each word was burned into his memory. The innocent lad who'd vowed to do his best, to struggle through cadethood to the exalted rank of midshipman. You see, he's been extinguished, somehow. He left behind a vindictive, deceitful man who's broken every rule he cherishes, who disobeys orders, lies to his superiors. May I pray to You? Will You be offended, even if You don't listen? I know I've forfeited Your grace, and that You will punish me. What I don't know, Lord, is why. Why did I do those awful things? Is that what You had in mind for me when You sent me to Academy? Chapter 3 The cab waited in the lane. In the doorway Father stood gray and worn. I paused, laid my duffel at my feet. "It's been good to see you." "Aye." His blue eyes met mine, "And the fence is fixed." "That too." I shifted uncomfortably. "I'll be closer to home now, when I'm not at Farside, I could help keep it mended,** "There's always work to be done," It could have been a reproof. "I could come at Easter, if you like." "If it be His will," I knew that passed for assent, I made no effort to hug him; it wasn't his way and he'd be as embarrassed as 1.1 turned to go. He spoke suddenly. "Pray to Him." He raised a hand, as if to forestall my objection, "He may turn His head, but pray nonetheless. It is right, and it does you good," "Aye, sir." How could he know? I hadn't spoken the words aloud. "Good-bye, then." He nodded, and I hurried to the waiting cab. Struggling for an expression of polite interest, I looked down on rows of shining young faces, gleaming buckles, Immaculate gray uniforms, while Commandant Kearsey continued his interminable address. Every cadet in Academy had been brought groundside for Handover, A waste of resources in wartime, but it was an odd war. Only one fish had ever been in home system, and we had no idea where the aliens bred, or where they might next appear. A few seats from me, Lieutenant TolHver's eyes glinted with amusement; he knew how I hated the necessary ritual, Kearsey said, "Just twelve years igo Mr, Seafort was a like you, Who'd have thought that quiet youngster of thirteen would soon astound the world?" Not I, certainly. More to the point, who'd have thought that eager youngster would commit treason and damn himself? "As a midshipman, Mr. Seafort was posted to U.N.S. Helsinki." A green young middy, reporting to the bridge of a U.N. warship, trying to control the trembling of his limbs. "Mr. Seafort's next posting was to Hibernia." A starship on the Hope Nation run, sixty-nine light-years from home. We'd Fused for seventeen months, Defusing only for nav checks. "Most of Hibernia's officers were killed in an explosion of the ship's launch." It had left my friend Lieutenant Malstrom the sole commissioned line officer, until his death soon after from cancer. Kearsey said heavily, "Now Captain, Mr. Seafort brought Hi-hernia to Hope Nation, but was unable to find new officers." Lord God, would he never end? "He sailed on, but on his return from Detour he encountered the wreck of Telstar and, in it, the first alien creatures ever seen by a human being." I recalled the alien form that had quivered inches from my face. Moments later there had emerged from behind Telstar the bizarre fish that was home to the outrider I'd found. "Captain Seafort sailed home with his momentous discovery. Admiralty confirmed him as Commander and gave him U.N.S. Portia, part of Admiral Tremaine's relief squadron to Hope Nation. En route, Mr. Seafort's son was killed by fish and his wife died soon after. Then the Admiral's flagship Challenger was disabled." How would Kearsey phrase the events that followed? The Commandant said firmly, "The Admiral transferred his flag to Portia, and decided unwisely to off-load those he disapproved of to the disabled Challenger, Mr. Seafort agreed to stay with Challenger" Mr, Seafort chose to die with Challenger* but Lord God did not allow him his wish, "Despite starvation and rebellion, Mr. Seafort impressed a new crew, trained them, and fought off the aliens. In his final battle he rammed a fish just as it Fused, and by the grace of Lord God the fish Defused in our home system." I'd brought Challenger home, but at the cost of my soul. I'd sworn not to harm a rebellious sailor, then I'd killed her at the first opportunity. For that, I am damned. The Commandant paused, examining the young faces of his audience. "Even you plebes know that Captain Seafort sailed yet again to Hope Nation, and was groundside when the fish devastated Centraltown. Mr. Seafort was left in charge of the few shoreside Naval officers. "Hope Nation was again attacked, and the fleet sailed for home. Ailing and alone, Mr. Seafort managed to lure the aliens into attacking Orbit Station, where he destroyed them by detonating the Station's atomic self-destruct device." Until a few weeks before I'd planned my sabotage, even a proposal to use atomic weapons had carried a mandatory death penalty. When I'd nuked the Station, I'd thought it treason. "Captain Seafort's courage and resourcefulness need no further detail. On my retirement, I can leave the training of our cadets in no better hands. Ladies and gentlemen, I present your new Commandant, Captain Nicholas Ewing Seafort." I stood, to the sustained roar of applause. Commandant Kearsey, smiling, joined the acclamation. "Thank you." I waited for the din to cease. It did not. I raised my hand for silence, but they applauded with undiminished enthusiasm. The young fools. "Thank you. Enough," They began to rise, in a standing ovation. I couldn't allow it. If only they knew the truth ... "Be silent!" I bellowed into the mike, fists knotted at my side. The applause stopped as if turned off by a switch, I paced the stage, my crafted address scattered to the winds of rage. "When I was last here," I grated, "cadets obeyed their officers," No one moved. "As you will again, I promise you!" What was I doing? I lurched back toward my planned speech. "Commandant Kearsey, I thank you for your most generous remarks. Your tenure here has been unblemished." Unblemished mediocrity, I thought bitterly. Test scores falling, morale low ... I'd been shocked at the reports they'd given me, But the man meant well. "I hope I may accomplish as much." I nodded briefly to the outgoing Commandant, took a deep breath, turned back to the stunned cadets. "By order of the Board of Admiralty of the Government of the United Nations, I assume command of Terrestrial and Farside Academies. Dismissed," , * * * I slouched behind the desk in the luxurious office Commandant Kearsey had vacated only that morning. "I made a mess of it." Tolliver shrugged. "If you say so." I wished he'd show the respect due my rank, if not my person. But I'd done him too much harm, and he knew me too well to retain any respect for me. He was a penance I bore with as good grace as I could manage. "I made a fool of myself," I muttered, "Oh, you weren't that bad. They might as well find out you have a temper."* I growled, "Don't go too far, Tolliver." He showed surprise. "No sarcasm intended, if you can believe it. You're not one to be crossed, and the cadets are better off knowing it from the start." From the start. I grunted. As of this day. Terrestrial Academy, Farside Base, and the Naval Training Station high in Lunar orbit were all under my jurisdiction. Not for the first time, I wondered how I'd let myself be talked into my new post. After I brought Victoria home from Hope Nation I'd asked to resign my commission, but Admiral Duhaney and his colleague Senator Boland prevailed on me to stay. I should have declined, but at least I'd had the to refuse a ship. I'd already killed innocents enough. "He should be gone by now." Tolliver checked his watch, "Anytime now, sir. His aide told me they'd be out of the apartment by three.** "Edgar, I hope I've made it clear..." I fumbled for words, "Your, uh, special dispensation. I won't have an outsider overhearing you. Be warned," He smiled grimly. Til take great care, sir." "Good." Uncomfortable, I stood to pace, changing the subject, "Two days, then up to Farside." "Yes, sir, Farside's personnel files are in the puter, if you want a look. Are you aware there's no console in your apartment?" "You're joking. Have one installed." "Already ordered, sir. I assumed you'd want access," "Don't assume," I said, petulant, "I can cancel it if—" "I want the console. Just don't assume you know what I want." As always, Tolliver brought out the worst in me. He raised an eyebrow. "Aye aye, sir. Shall I cancel the order, and reinstate it now that you've told me you want it?" Damn the man. I leaned back, recalled the conversation we'd had in my Lunapolis quarters, after I'd agreed to take him as my aide. "Do I have a choice?" His tone was bleak. I gaped. "It was as a favor to you." "Of course, sir. Serving with you is a great privilege," "How dare you!" His insolence was astounding, He shrugged. "I wonder that myself, at times, I guess I've learned from you." "What do you mean?" "I just don't care anymore," He thrust his hands in his pockets. "Captain Higbee at BuPers mentioned that I was lucky to get a posting at all, after my misdeeds." I closed my eyes. I'd done that by demoting him, after he'd seized control of my heli in an effort to save our lives. "He was right. If I hadn't taken you ,,," "Should I resign, then?" His tone was bitter, "That's your decision," I hesitated, "Mr, Tolliver, it's hard for me to be fair to you; my memories of Academy are too strong, I put you back to Lieutenant. What more do you want?"^ "Nothing in your power to give." He turned away. Then, Tin sorry. 1 mean that. What I want is to go back and undo the past." "The heli?" "Among other things." He turned back with a wry smile, "We're stuck with each other. Your conscience won't let you abandon me, and if I want a career it must be with you." "I allow you to goad roe, but nonetheless, I'm your superior officer and you owe me courtesy. You seem to forget/' "Not for a minute!" His eyes burned into mine, "If I'm, urn, difficult with you, it's my resentment. Never negligence," "Do you imagine I find that reassuring?" He smiled, but his eyes were pained. "When you can't endure it, cashier me, I may hate you, but 1*11 understand,'* Why did his hurt matter to me, all we'd through? My voice was gruff, "No, I'll tolerate you. You can't help being who you are, and you remind me of what I've done," "If that's pity, I don't want it!" "Not pity, Edgar. Perhaps ... understanding." He'd let it pass. Now, in my new Academy office, I was restless. "I'm going to my apartment." He checked his watch. "Kearsey may still be there." "I don't care." But I fell back in the chair. "Tell me the schedule again." Tolliver's look was of resignation. "We start shipping most of our joeys back to Farside, some today. Those we graduated will stay groundside until their postings come through. We'll keep a few midshipmen, of course, for the scutwork." I gestured impatiently. "Get on with it." "The new class staggers in. They all begin training down here at Devon." I growled. "I was a cadet, Tolliver." "Right. I must remember that. The first batch of sixty will be here in a week, and about sixty more every five days until they're all aboard." "What am I supposed to do before they get here?" "What will you do after they get here, sir?" He shrugged. "Answer questions, I suppose. If it's anything like shipboard, they always have questions." I smiled at that. Most inquiries were trivial, and could be answered at random. "How many cadets on base this week?" "I don't know, sir; some of the upperclassmen had leave. Just a minute." He went to the caller, spoke into it, waited. "We have thirty-two graduates without families to visit, and about sixty of our plebes slated for Farside. Then there's about four hundred they brought down from Farside for the ceremony, who'll be going back." I swore under my breath. Our cadets were being moved like chess pieces, and to no real purpose. I got up, restless again. "I'm going for a walk. See you at three." "Yes, sir." "And set up a meeting after dinner with the middies who'll be staying." "Aye aye, sir." I nodded to Sergeant Kinders in the outer office, left the Admin Building, picked a direction and set off briskly. In a few minutes I found myself at the main gate. Many of the upper-classmen had been selected for graduation this day, and it was odd to see visitors strolling inside the gate, each with a cadet in crisp gray. Other than on ceremonial occasions, no civilian visitors were permitted on the grounds. Shortly, our graduates would change to their midshipman's blues, which they would wear with inordinate pride until they learned that even middies were insignificant creatures in the eyes of working Naval officers. I thrust my hands in my pockets, walked with head down. Our real task would start when our new class arrived. Shipboard, most Naval personnel served belowdecks. They were recruited in their thousands by any means available, including the enlistment bonuses that attracted so many undesirables. But officers were another matter. The Navy selected only the best, carefully evaluating test scores, school grades, interviews and recommendations. Only a fortunate few were allowed to take the oath as cadets. I reached the heavy iron gate, absently returned the salutes of the guards, and turned onto the perimeter path. Here I was virtually alone. Unlike midshipmen, deemed by act of the General Assembly to have reached majority, our cadets were minors, by law and regulation the wards of their commanding officer. As Commandant I was their legal guardian, with all the prerogatives their parents had hitherto possessed. I could punish them in any fashion I saw fit; they had virtually no rights. They were the lowest of the low, until they were appointed midshipmen. Then, as Naval officers, they'd begin the slow climb to the exalted rank of Lieutenant, and perhaps thereafter to Captain. While in an emergency it was possible to enlist a cadet aboard ship—I had done so myself—ordinarily cadets were sent to Academy for their training. As plebes, they were taught the basics of navigation, physics, radionics, electronics, gunnery, and the like. As soon as cadets could be trusted not to wander in front of the firing grid of a laser cannon or unscrew their suit helmets Outside, they were sent for a long term to Farside, the "real" Academy. There, freed from distractions and distanced from visiting busybodies, their advanced training commenced: simulated docking maneuvers, airlock security, Orbiting Station procedures, and the other skills they'd need to be set loose in the corridors of a U.N.N.S. starship. Often, they were then returned to Devon for further training. The term of enlistment was five years, and theoretically a youngster could serve the entire term as a cadet and never make middy. In practice, most were graduated after two years or so, some after only one year. Graduation was at the discretion of the Commandant. This practice was a radical departure from the military institutions of previous generations, and I was somewhat apprehensive of the responsibility it thrust upon me, but overall, the idea made sense. Though a cadet might not be ready to serve as a midshipman, that didn't necessarily mean he was failing his coursework. Further, under the Naval system, holding back a cadet for a few extra months bore little of the stigma that would attach if he failed to graduate with a scheduled class. In any event, a cadet might be pulled from classes in the middle of a term and sent to the fleet as a middy, or might be held on all or part of another year for further training. One never knew, and the eagerness to prove themselves ready for graduation spurred cadets to greater efforts. I struck across the large expanse of front lawn, toward the barracks and classrooms on the far side of the parade ground. Here, tall oaks gave welcome shade from the heat of the spacious front grounds. I followed a path worn in the grass. A pair of gray-clad legs protruded from beyond a tree trunk. As I passed, the youth jumped to his feet, stiffened to attention, I saluted, moved on, stopped. "Jerence?" "Yes, sir.H His belly was sucked in tight, spine stiff. Aboard Victoria on my flight home, I'd enlisted Jerence Branstead, of the Hope Nation Bransteads, as a cadet. Once home, he'd been transferred to Academy for proper training. 1 strolled back, pursed my lips, examined him. Though the seat of his pants was dusty from where he'd been sitting, his shoes were polished, his uniform crisp, his hair combed neatly. A far cry from the miserable boy locked in a sweaty cabin, desperate for the vial of goofjuice that lay unopened on his bed. I smiled but immediately converted it to a frown. After all, he was but a cadet, and I shouldn't deign even to speak to him, "Stand easy." "Aye aye, sir!" His shoulders relaxed; he spread his feet, clasped his hands behind him in the at-ease position. "Hasn't your leave begun?" "Yes, sir. I—" He gulped, stopped. Quite right. A cadet answered questions, but otherwise spoke only when spoken to. "Well?" "I'm being sent to Farside, but I have no place to go for leave, sir. I'm staying on grounds." He swallowed, essayed a small tremulous smile. I reddened. "Of course." Harmon and Sarah Branstead were on Hope Nation, lacking even the knowledge that their son had survived, "No Terran relatives?" "No, sir. I'm fourth generation." "Very well. Carry on." I resumed my stroll. He'd made his bed; now he could lie in it. It was he who'd begged for the opportunity to enlist, and loneliness was part of the cost. Giving him special treatment would do neither of us any good; I had to treat him like any other cadet. I crossed the parade ground, wandered toward the barracks. Yeltsin Hall was silent and empty. Beyond it was Valdez Hall. No reason to go farther. But still, Valdez ... I sauntered closer. No harm in going inside, just to look around. It had been so long. I took the steps two at a time. The door was ajar; the sergeant wouldn't have liked that. Inside, I heard voices, a gleeful shout, I swung the door wide and strode in. A pillow hurtled past my head. The girl prancing on the bunk ducked, snatched it out of the air. "You missed! Can't you even—oh, God!" She leaped off the bed, stiffened to attention, as did five other youths. A young voice shouted, "Attention!" I stared unbelieving at the disorder, Valdez, like all the barracks, held two rows of single bunks in meticulous order, one on each side of the narrow corridor, some thirty beds in all. Now, mattresses were overturned, pillows scattered everywhere. Dust motes danced in the sunshine streaming through the windows, The contents of two duffels had been dumped unceremoniously on the beds, "What is this?" No one answered, I wheeled to the boy. "You! Report!" He was in trousers and shirtsleeves. Perhaps it was his jacket that lay crumpled in the corridor. "Cadet Rafe Slater reporting, sir! We were, ah ... uh—" I snorted. "You sure were. Who's in charge here?" A small voice answered, "I guess I am, sir." I wheeled. "You guess?" "Cadet—oh, I—Midshipman Anton Thayer, sir." A slim youngster, red curly hair. I looked at his cadet grays and raised an eyebrow. "I was just promoted, sir. Today." "Ah." The place was a shambles. How many demerits to give? Two each? Four? A middy was an officer, not a child. How could he allow— Just promoted, the traditional fierce hazing of Last Night finally past. The rest of the barracks on leave. I cleared my throat, glad I'd come to my senses in time. "I see. Carry on." "Sir?" He gaped. "I mean, aye aye, sir!" I made sure to maintain my scowl until I was well outside the door. Then my grin broke loose. Children. I shook my head. They'd get enough discipline during the term. Today, graduation day, it didn't matter. Anyway, it was the sergeant's worry; I was supposed to be a remote figure, aloof from day-to-day concerns. Most of the middies had taken chairs at the burnished conference table. The others were seated uncomfortably on an over-stuffed couch, trying to appear businesslike. Seven boys, four girls. I gazed around the crowded room, saying nothing. How could midshipmen be so young? I doubted some of the boys had ever seen a razor. Surely it hadn't been so in my day. In my day! I snorted. I was but twenty-five, though I felt eons older. Several of these youngsters were from the class that had just graduated; a few had been midshipmen for more than a year. One old-timer had three years experience under her belt. I perched on the edge of my desk, letting the silence stretch. A couple of the middies shifted nervously. None dared say a word. I looked down at the curly redhead sitting in the closest chair; Midshipman Anton Thayer flushed, studied the carpet. He was in his blues now, far more presentable than when I'd surprised him in barracks. "I've already been introduced to most of the staff, and I wanted to meet the rest of my officers." Midshipman Guthrie Smith's mouth turned up in a shy smile. Officers. I knew how hard he'd labored to achieve that acknowledgment, at seventeen. "You, the lieutenants and I will be working together from now on." They sat straighten "You're no longer cadets, and you wear officers' blue. By Act of the General Assembly, you are deemed adults. On leave you may go into town and carouse, or do whatever else strikes your fancy." Some had a faraway look; I suspected they would lose little time. Time to bring them back to earth. "I want to make clear my expectations. You're here for two purposes: to help where you're needed, and to set an example for the cadets. If I find that your conduct on base is less than exemplary, you will answer to me." That got their attention, all right. Though my powers weren't as absolute as those of a Captain under weigh, my displeasure was a calamity no midshipman would enjoy. A word from me would have them over the barrel. "As you know, Academy drill sergeants are noncom Marines. When you were cadets you were required to obey them. Now you're their superior officers." I waited until the sudden grins had faded, before shattering their illusions. "In name only. The sergeants will treat you with due courtesy; if one does not, you are to report him to me at once. Nonetheless, you will treat requests from the drill sergeants as if they are orders from me. Is that clear?" They all responded, "Aye aye, sir," their voices subdued. I stood to pace, found I had no room. I eased my way around to the back of the desk. "As to the cadets." I glared at them. 'Technically you can order a cadet to do anything you wish. I suggest strongly—" I paused for effect. "I suggest strongly that you refrain. Occasional hazing is acceptable; they have to learn to cope with it. But keep it within bounds." Some of them looked crestfallen. I didn't care. A cadet's life could be hell, and I didn't need these unseasoned youngsters making it worse. Not too much worse, anyway. "As to striking them, you have every legal right to do it." After all, I had the right, and the middies acted in my behalf. "However, I forbid it. You'll be put over the barrel at the first violation, and the second will result in dismissal." During my second year on Farside there had been an incident, a nasty one. I wanted no repetitions. Time to lighten a little, perhaps. "Who's senior at the moment?" I asked. It would change, as middies were transferred from here to Farside. Academy hierarchy was less rigid than aboard ship. They didn't need to look at one another's insignia. They knew. Middies always do. "I am, sir." "Sandra Ekrit?" "Yes, sir." "Very well." The other middies would call her by her last name, as a mark of respect. Until someone with more seniority showed up, she was in charge of keeping the middies under control and out of my hair. It also meant the others could challenge her, as was Naval tradition. I wondered if the lanky young woman could hold her own against some of the burlier middies. We'd see. Like anyone else, she would sink or swim on her own. "Any questions?" A dark-haired boy raised his hand. "Midshipman Eduard Diego, sir. Will we have specific assignments?" Sandra Ekrit scowled, knowing it was better for him not to bother me with trivia. Still, I'd invited him to ask. "I don't know. I'm as new at this as you are." That brought a few startled grins. I rebuked myself silently. A fine start as their Commandant, confessing I knew nothing about the job. "We'll see. Anything else?" I waited. "Dismissed." Chapter 4 Striding with Tolliver through the concourse of Earthport Station, I tried to ignore the ache in my chest, a legacy of my recent lung replacement. I peered at the flashing signs. 'Terminal 4. G Concourse straight ahead. Shuttle to Lunapolis, turn right." After a moment I gave up. Earthport was the largest orbiting station we'd ever built, and invariably I lost myself in it. I waited patiently at a counter for the red-jacketed civilian to look up from his puter. When he did his eyes widened in recognition. "Aren't you—can I help you?" "The shuttle to Farside?" He pointed. "It leaves from the Naval wing. They can tell you the gate." "Thank you." I should have known better. Naturally the shuttle would leave from the Naval bays; no civilians could visit Farside. I hoisted my duffel, strode past the guard. "Come along, Mr. Tolliver." "Aye aye, sir." My aide was unusually silent, perhaps as a consequence of my earlier rebuffs. My mind was on our forthcoming visit. I'd never been to Farside as an officer; three days after I'd made midshipman I'd been sent onward to U.N.S. Helsinki. The Station corridor took an abrupt right angle. As I reached the turn, a midshipman tore around the bend and cannoned into me. We went down in a tangle. Tolliver thrust him aside, helped me to my feet. I bellowed, "Watch where you're going, you young pup! Haven't they taught you a thing? What's your rush?" The boy saluted, stammering. "Sorry, sir. I was trying to make it to the shuttle to meet—to meet—" He ground to a halt, paling as he realized to whom he spoke. "Yes?" I barked. His voice faltered. "You, sir. Midshipman Adam Tenere reporting, sir." He came to attention. Tolliver's expression was carefully solemn, though I detected a glint of amusement. My shoulder throbbed, and I wondered if I'd twisted my ankle. "You're from Farside?" "Yes, sir. My lieutenant sent me to escort you to base." "He told you to race through the Station as if a squadron of fish were after you?" "No, sir!" "He told you to knock me down when you found me?" "No, sir." The mortified middy could guess what was coming. "Four demerits, Mr. Tenere, Consider yourself lucky." Each demerit meant two hours of hard calisthenics. I could as easily have had him caned, and most Captains would. "Aye aye, sir. Thank you, sir, I'm sorry." 1 snorted, stooped to pick up my duffel. "Which way?" It was a foolish question. He pointed back the direction he'd come. "Down there, sir." "Very well." I limped off, "May I carry your duffel, sir?" "No." Inconsiderate children, racing like mindless idiots ... I took a cautious breath, half expecting something to grate. My chest seemed all right. "Yes. Here." Let him lug the damned thing. It was heavy, "I already offered to carry that, sir." "Shut up, Tolliver." We walked the length of the corridor in silence. In the shuttle I strapped myself in, took a deep breath, strove for calm. "Tenere, you said?" "Yes, sir. Adam Tenere." "Any relation to ... ?" "Captain Tenere? He's my father, sir. He has Freiheit, He should be home in a couple of months with the fleet." Because I'd Fused home in the fastship Victoria, I'd completed the trip in nine months, while the rest of the fleet was still hi Fusion. They'd be home shortly. Though I'd brought news of the fleet's terrible losses, the details were still not general knowledge. I made up my mind. It was his fattier; the boy should know. "Freiheit was lost. Mr. Tenere was fortunate; they found him in a lifepod." "1 didn't know that. Did his men survive?" Immediately I regretted the demerits. "Not that I know of." He bowed his head. "I'm sorry. All they told me was that he was coming home." "You're assigned to Farside?" "Yes, sir. Posted two months ago." "I'll see to it you get leave when he's here." The midshipman turned to me, his demerits forgotten. "Thank you, sir," His face lit with gratitude. "We'd both appreciate that," I flirted with canceling the demerits, but decided not to. The boy had run over me like a tank. The trip from Earthport Station to Farside took five hours, The few other passengers aboard our shuttle were techs returning from leave. When the Pilot began surfacing maneuvers I shut off my holo and watched through the porthole. The round domes of Farside stood out clearly against the ragged terrain. Of course they would, with no hazy atmosphere to impede vision. I squinted, trying to spot the Hull. Settling the shuttle onto the Lunar surface wasn't as effortless as docking at Station, but it was far less an ordeal than diving into Earth's gravity well. I waited to unstrap until the lights blinked. Young Mr, Tenere had his belts loose the moment our jets stopped squirting. The Pilot came back into the cabin as I stood carefully in the one-sixth gravity. "Welcome to Farside, sir." "Welcome back, you mean." I smiled. "I've been here before." aOh, yes. Though it's hard to imagine you a cadet." I could find no reply, so I waited, watching the airlock lights. When docking at an orbiting Station, it was the vessel's responsibility to meet the Station's lock. At a groundside installation, the lock came to the ship. Ponderously, the thick plastic and alloy tube rolled across the landing grid toward our hatch. A pause while Farside's puter negotiated its mating with the shuttle's lock. A gentle bump, another, a click. The red light flashed. The tube stiffened slightly as it pressurized. In a few moments the green airlock light flashed; the shuttle was mated. We crowded into the tiny lock while it cycled. Though shuttle and lock tube were both pressurized, as was Far-side Base itself, as a matter of course the hatches were never opened simultaneously. Doing so would court disaster. In the tube two rigid portholes, one on each side, offered a view of the unforgiving Lunar surface. It was a far cry from the manner I'd come to the base as a cadet. Fully suited, checked and rechecked by our instructors, we'd been released a few at a time from the shuttle locks and shepherded across the Lunar surface to one of the wide dome locks. I noticed my weight increasing as I neared the inner lock. It took a lot of power to maintain near-Earth gravity in a Lunar installation, but that's what our atomic generators were for. Lightlife would hinder the cadets' training to an unacceptable degree; therefore the expensive, fusion-powered gravitrons buried below the base. At Farside's inner lock Adam Tenere touched the pad; the hatch slid open. We gathered into the tiny chamber in silence, the few techs pressed against the bulkhead, the middy careful not to brush against me. The outer hatch closed. Because we were fully pressurized the inner hatch opened immediately. I stepped forward while the others held back. Quite right. The Captain was always first to enter. Several officers awaited us in the corridor. They saluted and came to attention; I released them. I said formally, "By order of the Board of Admiralty of the Government of the United Nations, I assume command of Farside Academy Base." There; that was out of the way. "Aye aye, sir. Welcome aboard." An elegant, slim figure, graying. "First Lieutenant Jent Paulson reporting, sir." Rightly, he didn't offer his hand, but I extended mine. "You're senior?" "Yes, sir, at the moment." That could change, but it was unlikely to. Admiralty tended to be sensitive to the niceties of hierarchy, where possible. My gaze traveled to the next officer. "Lieutenant Darwin Sleak reporting, sir." "Of course. Everything under control?" Sleak was our systems officer, and I'd met him at Devon. He'd gone aloft two days earlier, to make sure all was ready for the returning cadets. Here on Farside, he was responsible for our life-support systems: recycling, gravitrons, air purification. Groundside, he did little more than supervise Quartermaster Serenco. At Paulson's gesture a thin young woman stepped forward, smiled pleasantly. "Lieutenant Ngu Bien, sir. Classroom programs and training." "Very well." Paulson beckoned to one of the remaining two figures, who stepped forward. "Lieutenant Ardwell Crossburn, sir. Maintenance and control systems." I fought to keep the venom from my tone. "What are you doing here?" The short, paunchy man in his early forties drew himself up. "I've been here some years, sir. Since our cruise in Hibernia, in fact." I grunted, too disgusted to speak. Toward the end of my first fateful cruise, Ardwell Crossburn had been assigned to me as a replacement officer, by some Captain no doubt delighted to be rid of him. Crossburn had a conspiratorial turn of mind, and a habit of asking seemingly innocent questions that suggested he would in time uncover whatever misdeeds were being concealed. Worse, he claimed to have the ear of his uncle, Director of Fleet Ops Admiral Brentley. "I trust you are well, sir?" My glare caused him to drop back a pace. Paulson and Sleak exchanged glances, but of course said nothing. They couldn't know of the endless trouble Crossburn had caused on our long return voyage on Hibernia, until I'd cast all caution to the winds in dealing with him. Lieutenant Paulson hesitated, cleared his throat, moved on to the last of the group. "First Midshipman Thomas Keene, sir." "Very well." I nodded curtly, which was all the middy deserved or expected. "Our other middies are with the cadets, except for Mr. Tenere, here. Obviously he was able to locate you." "Yes. He ran into me in the Station corridor." Adam smiled weakly. "Good. Normally we don't send a middy unescorted to Earth-port Station, but Mr. Crossburn suggested it. Will there be anything else, sir?" "Yes. Come to my office. You too, Mr. Sleak. Midshipman Keene, take my duffel to my cabin. The rest of you are dismissed." I turned on my heel. It took me a moment to orient myself and set out for the Commandant's wing. My usual haunts had been far from the warren that held the Commandant's offices arid apartment, though I'd been sent there on one memorable occasion. While Sleak trailed behind, Paulson matched my pace, wise enough to keep silent. Half the trick to being a good lieutenant was knowing when to leave the Captain alone. I wished Tolliver would take note. Still seething, I stalked into my new office. The sergeant at the outer desk rose. A dark-skinned woman, somewhere around forty. She saluted. "Sergeant Kina Obutu reporting, sir." "You're my staff?" "Staff sergeant first, sir. I run your office during nominal day. At night we leave a middy in charge." "Very well." Chairs lined the outer cabin, occasionally occupied by unfortunate cadets. I crossed to my new office, took a deep breath, flung open the hatch. Rather, I tried to. It was locked. I spun around, feeling a fool. "What the devil?** "He didn't leave it open?" Sergeant Obutu raised her eyebrow. I shook my head. "Why would it be—where's the code?" "The Commandant has it, sir." Paulson. "I'm the Command—" He said quickly, "I meant Commandant Kearsey, Sorry, sir." Obutu asked, "Is there a copy in the safe?" Mr. Sleak seemed embarrassed, "I'll check right away, sir. Excuse me." "I'll look too, sir," Paulson hurried after him. I nodded, too furious for words, I paced the outer office, ignoring the sergeant, who stood alongside her desk with a placid expression. I was working myself up to withering sarcasm when a thought intervened. "Sarge, why is the hatch locked in the first place?" "The Comm—Captain Kearsey always locked it at night, sir." "Wrong question. Why does his hatch have a lock?" "All our offices have them, sir." Her expression was carefully neutral, I couldn't hide my amazement. "How long has this been going on?'* The outer hatch swung open. Lieutenant Sleak, followed by Paulson. He shook his head, "No code in the security safe, sir." Obutu answered, "Since 1 came here, sir. Five years that I know of." I glared at them both. "What else is locked around here?" Sleak said, "The mess hall, I think. That's about—and the officers' apartments, of course." "Of course?" No one responded. I snarled, "OF COURSE?" The outer hatch opened. Tolliver saw the others, saluted. "Good aftem—" "Tolliver, they lock the hatches here!" He said only, "Good heavens." Sergeant Obutu said helplessly, "Sorry, sir. I don't know what you're talking about." Sleak ventured, "I'm class of '72, sir, I remember,** "We're trying to teach them to be officers! If we expect thieves in the night, that's what we'll get. These joeys are officer candidates, not transpop crewmen! What idiot ordered the locks put on?" Sleak said evenly, "Commandant Kearsey, sir." "Yes, Um." I rubbed my eyes. "It must have been the first day they told us. 'Nothing is locked at Academy. You will conduct yourselves as gentlemen, A gentleman doesn't take things from another's home, or sneak into places where he's not welcome,'" "Second day," Tolliver said. "The first was haircuts and clothes and making beds, about twenty times." "Whatever." I prodded the hatch. "Get this bloody lock off, Torch it if you must. Take the locks off Admin and the mess hall and wherever else you find them. Do the same groundside." Sleak said, "Aye aye, sir." It was his responsibility, as systems officer. "Does that include the safes?" "Not if there are weapons or cash or confidential papers. That's going too far." "Yes, sir. I'll get right on it." "My hatch first, damn it! I'll be in my cabin!" I stormed out. I'd barely unpacked my duffel before Sergeant Obutu buzzed me on the caller, "Your office is, ah, accessible, sir," "Is Paulson still there?" "Waiting, sir." "Very well, I'll be up," Moments later I was back in the anteroom, restraining an urge to slick my hair and check the shine on my shoes, I took a deep breath, stepped through the threshold into my new office. I crossed the room crowded with furniture, eased myself into the Commandant's leather seat, behind the Commandant's desk. No lightning bolt struck me. I willed myself to relax. "Shut the hatch. Sit." I pointed to a chair. "Aye aye, sir." Lieutenant Paulson took a place near my desk. "Why is that man Crossburn here?" "I have no idea, sir. I presume he was assigned by BuPers." That meant nothing. Everyone's assignment came through BuPers. "How much trouble has he made?" Trouble?" Paulson studied me curiously. "None that 1 know of, sir. He's a trifle odd in some respects, but he carries out his duties. He spends his spare time in his cabin, writing." On Hibernia the lunatic had nearly caused a mutiny, interrogating officers and crew about the tragedies we'd suffered, writing his secret conclusions in a little black diary to show his uncle upon our return. When his inquiries had begun to imply I was an accomplice in the death of Captain Haag, I'd put a stop to it, consigning him to busywork in the ship's launch for the remainder of our cruise. I drummed my fingers on the gleaming desktop. "Does he ask questions?" "Pardon?" Paulson leaned forward. "Questions?" "About the base. About incidents that have taken place." He shrugged. "At times. He was most interested in the shuttle crash, two years ago. I believe he fancies himself something of a historian." I snorted. "I can imagine. I want him out of here." "Yes, sir. I believe you'd have to take that up with BuPers. I have no authority." I growled, "I'm no cadet. Don't lecture me on procedures." "No, sir. I'm sorry." That's all." He rose, saluted, left me. I sat, head in hands. This wouldn't do. I'd been on base a mere half an hour and already I'd alienated my first lieutenant. I stood to pace, thrusting aside a chair that blocked my path. I strode the few steps to the bulkhead, turned back, passed the desk, squeezed past the table. Finally I returned to my seat, took up the caller. "Sarge, call BuPers at Lunapolis. Get me whoever's in charge of our staffing." Waiting, I turned to the console alongside my desk. I called up a menu, explored idly. Personnel records, paymaster reports, supply logs. I'd have to learn the system, but I knew virtually all our data would be accessible from this console. I switched to cadet records, examined one at random. Everything was there, from original applications through ID photos, to the latest grades. The speaker buzzed. "Seafort." "Captain Higbee, BuPers. What can I do for you?" "I have a lieutenant I want replaced, sir." Like most Captains on the Naval list, Higbee was my senior. "For what reason?" Wasn't a Captain free to choose his staff? I tried not to let my annoyance show. "We've, ah, had problems. His name is Cross-burn." "What has he done wrong?" "Nothing at present," I said lamely. "I see." A long pause. "Captain, perhaps you're unaware of the staffing problems we've—" "The man is a time bomb. I want him off my base!" "Yes, you've made that clear. I'm afraid I can't help you. All current assignments are frozen. Though I suppose if he'll volunteer for the fleet he'll be snapped up." "Lord God, no. Keep him off a ship!" I pounded my forehead. What was I doing? I'd just muffed a chance to get rid of him. Still, I couldn't inflict Crossburn on a ship of the line. He could destroy morale in no time, and if his ship encountered the aliens... "If he's so much trouble, court-martial him," said Higbee. "I'm afraid we can't help; we're not swapping officers until the emergency is over. Better at present to keep men in jobs they know. The order comes directly from Fleet Ops. Is there anything else?" "I— No, sir." "Very well, then." "With your permission, I'd like to speak to Admiral Duhaney." It was insolent, but not as insolent as going behind his back. A pause. When he responded his tone was cool. "As you wish, Commandant." "Thank you." I rang off, stood to pace. Was I making too big an issue of Crossburn? Surely I could manage to live with him. I wondered if Farside Base had a ship's launch. Well, I could always have him polish the Hull, half buried in the Lunar dust Outside. I blundered into a coffee table, barked my shin. Cursing, I retreated to the desk. "Sergeant Oba—Ob—Sarge!" A moment later she was in the hatchway. "Obutu," she said calmly. I nursed my leg. "See if we can reach Admiral Duhaney in Fleet Ops." "Aye aye, sir." She turned to go. "And have someone get this bloody furniture out of here!" Her face was expressionless. "I beg your pardon, sir?" "Out. The furniture. Have them take it." Now 1 sounded a complete idiot. I took a deep breath. "Leave my desk and chair. The console, of course. That leather chair near the desk can stay, and the couch against the bulkhead. I want everything else gone." "Aye aye, sir. May I ask why?" "So I can walk." A Captain needed to pace. Hadn't Commandant Kearsey ever trod a bridge? Good Lord. "Very well, sir." Normally the mess hall would be full of cadets at their long plank tables, poised to leap to their feet when the officers filed in. Now, during term break, fewer than two hundred were seated, and the meal was more informal. The officers' table was round, like those in a ship's dining hall. It was the only round table in the room, perhaps to emphasize the difference between officers and cadets. Though we ate the same food as cadets, the officers' meals were served by stewards, whereas at each cadet table a designated server brought trays full of serving dishes from the line to their comrades. Our steward passed salad and bread. When he left, Lieutenant Ngu Bien nudged Paulson. "There's the Chambers boy. Looks like they let him back in." Paulson said, "I'm surprised he can walk so soon." I raised an eyebrow. "A fracas with two of his tablemates, sir. Just pushing and shoving, until Cadet Chambers lost his head and poured a pitcher of milk over them." "I see." "Caned, of course. By the Commandant himself. He's been fed on the corridor deck outside mess hall for the last two weeks." Appropriate. Cadets had to learn to conduct themselves like officers. Only in the privacy of the wardroom could middies release their natural tensions in horseplay. Certainly not in front of their betters. Though once, when Cadet Corporal Tolliver had pushed me too far... I pushed away the thought. "You've kept our troublemakers aloft, then?" "Leave was denied for the problem joeys, and the few others with no good place to go, sir." "How are we keeping them busy?" Until the new term, classes wouldn't be in session. Ms. Bien. "Bill Radz and I are taking them Outside this afternoon." "The whole lot of them?" She nodded. Well, the discipline and exercise would do them good. I remembered my own tremulous first steps with magneboots, on the Hull. "Would you like to come along, sir? We're giving some of them thrustersuits, and they've all heard about your jet into Hi-bernia's lock." I gagged on my coffee. The huge alien form had emerged from behind Telstar. Our sailors were helpless in the gig. The acid. Fuse, Vox. Fuse the ship. "Are you all right, sir?" In desperation I'd jetted my thrustersuit full bore toward Hi-hernia's lock, tried to do a fliparound as Sarge had once shown us, waited a bit too long and crashed into the airlock with bone-jarring force. Still, I'd gotten there, and Vax Holser had instantly Fused. "Of course I'm all right." I wiped coffee from my chin. Despite the later incident, the freedom of a T-suit was one of the few joys I remembered from cadet days. I looked up. "Yes, I'd like to go along." Two hours later, at the training lock, I was perspiring in my thrustersuit, trying to conceal my impatience. Suiting nearly a hundred frisky teens called for the patience of Job. The two officers assigned to the task were coping as well as could be expected. Even with the full cooperation of the eager cadets, it took time to recheck every clasp, every helmet seal. "Stand still, Johns! Is there a spider in your suit?" Sergeant Radz gave her helmet a final twist. Behind me, a youngster giggled. I snapped, "Be silent!" "Aye aye, sir." A chastened tone. "Cadet Drew always laughs, sir." Radz favored him with a withering frown. "I'm sure he and I will find something funny in barracks tonight." The boy gulped. "I'm sorry, sir." He was almost as tall as Sarge, but his voice was barely broken. I grunted, turned to the training lock. Though it was far larger than the VIP lock we'd used from the shuttle, the cadets' suits were bulky, and it had to cycle three times before we were all Outside. The officers broadcast to the cadets on one frequency, using a second to communicate among themselves. Now, as an adult, I could appreciate the logistics necessary to maintain order. While waiting for the last cadets to emerge from the lock I kicked at the Lunar dust. It spurted lazily and fell in slow motion, a foot away. I looked around with a twinge of guilt. When I was a cadet it would have brought me a rebuke, though I was never sure why. Lord God knew there was plenty of dust to kick. "By twos, now." I jumped as my radio blared. "To the Hull. Maintain your distance." I hung back with Lieutenant Bien as the troop dutifully started forward. North of the lock stretched the familiar pockmarked terrain, unchanged since Farside Base was built and for eons before. To the south sat the Hull, a life-size replica of a ship of the line, half buried in the Lunar surface, so that from stem to prow only the upper half of its length protruded. A U.N.N.S. starship was shaped like a pencil with two or three foam rubber disks slid down to its midpoint and pressed together. Forward of the disks were cargo holds; aft were the lower engine room and fusion motors, tapering to the fusion drive shaft at the very stern. The disks held cabins, crew quarters, exercise rooms, and the hydroponics and recycling that sustained our lives. Generations of cadets had clambered over the Hull, learning first the mere trick of walking, and later, how to carry tools and power packs they might need if sent Outside for repairs. At the end came the T-suit training. All of today's group had mastered at least the art of walking, though many had an ungainly lope, and a few still carefully regulated the size and timing of their steps. But none crashed into the cadet ahead, or sprawled facedown in the dust. At last the youngsters were assembled alongside the Hull. Lieutenant Bien organized most of them into squads, set them walking along the top of the Hull from one end to another. From time to time she varied the drill, sending one group into the drive shaft, another to the prow. The Hull had no jagged edges to rip their suits, but moving from one section to another, and over the disks, was tricky. Just edging past each other could be a problem for inexperienced cadets. At the stern, Sergeant Radz had a few cadets making practice hops in jumpsuits. All in all, I appreciated the training more now than I had as a participant. Radz keyed to my frequency. "Sir, would you be willing to demonstrate a jump?" "Me?" I turned in astonishment. I was hardly an expert. Like all sergeants everywhere, he was unafraid of rank. "Yes, sir, if you wouldn't mind. They'd listen far more closely than if I were demonstrating." "No, I don't—" Wasn't that what I was here for, to train cadets? True, I hadn't anticipated doing it in such hands-on fashion. I sighed. "Where would you have me jump?" "From the prow to the drive shaft, if you'd like?" "Thanks a lot," I muttered. If I missed, I'd sail past the stern of the ship and look a complete fool. "I may not be good enough, Sarge." I tried a little jump, spread my legs as I settled down. "Sure you are, sir. You passed training, didn't you?" "Barely." He took my resigned nod for approval, and keyed his mike to gather the cadets. While they assembled alongside the stern I nervously gauged my distances. Managing a thrustersuit on Luna wasn't quite so easy as on the Training Station aloft, or outside one of the eleven Training Fusers moored at its docks. Here at Farside, you had gravity to contend with. Not all that much, but enough. You had to use more propellant, and you couldn't merely aim for the point you wanted to reach. You had to aim beyond it, allow gravity to hold you back. And though gravity was far lower than on Earth, inertia was just as great. When I'd crashed into Hibernia's lock I could have broken my legs, despite the zero gravity. "... in one hop, as the Commandant will now show you. Pay attention to his angle of ascent, and the point at which he squirts his thrusters to change course. You at the end, step back another ten meters." He waited until they'd complied. "When you're ready, sir." "Very well." I keyed my mike to the general frequency. "Watch carefully. I only intend to do this once." If I could do it at all. I loped alongside the Hull in the peculiar floating gait appropriate to the Lunar surface until at last I was at the stern. Clutching my straps, I keyed the jets, felt the lift, and quickly switched them off. I sailed up onto the prow, almost overshooting it to fall down the port side. I snapped on my magnetronics, allowed my boots to grasp the Hull, stiffened my knees. I peered down the length of the Hull to the drive shaft, more than a hundred meters away. What had I gotten myself into? I groaned, then realized with dismay that my radio was on the cadets' frequency. Cursing under my breath I switched channels. Now or never. I estimated distance one last time, grasped the straps, keyed my jets. I had no intention of going ballistic; what I wanted was to maintain a relatively steady height over the Hull. That meant varying the power in minute increments. I lifted, bent forward to angle the jets, tried to maintain the ideal balance between upward and forward motion. Below, the Hull drifted past. More power, else I wouldn't have enough inertia to straighten myself and prepare for landing. Too much, damn it! Now I'd shot way above the Hull. I'd have to fire the head jets and I always hated burying my chin in my chest and firing blind. I was veering to starboard. Careful, you idiot. Keep your mind on your work. "A touch to port, I think." A quiet voice in my ear. "Straighten your legs, sir. Tuck your chin in. Fire about. . . now. Good. Let go, orient yourself to land." I had it under control. I twisted my body over, fired my back-jets to slow myself, dropped slowly toward the Hull. Time to flip forward, fire a couple of squirts so I didn't land too hard. My feet touched. Done. I flicked off the jets. They shouted their approval, until the outraged sergeant regained charge with a few crackling words. Nonchalantly I stepped off the Hull, relied on the jets to bring me down, and almost fell flat on my face. No one seemed to notice. Legs trembling with delayed reaction, I watched Lieutenant Bien help Radz get the youngsters in thrustersuits ready for practice. First she lined them up on the Lunar surface parallel to the Hull. Sergeant Radz walked behind, showing the joeys how to bend to achieve forward motion. "Now, it's just a simple hop onto the Hull. You've practiced forward motion before. The only difference is that when you come down you'll be a dozen meters higher than you started. Bronski, you're first." A nervous young voice. "Yes, sir." "Jump when you're ready." The boy took a deep breath, launched himself. He didn't do badly, though he stumbled when he landed. "Move aside a bit, and wait for Salette." He adjusted the next youngster's harness and stepped aside. I took the opportunity to touch helmets, my mike keyed off. "Thanks, Sarge." "For the backseat driving? Sorry if I interfered, sir." He winked, turned back to his charges. "Edwards, are you ready?" The boy's tone was tremulous. "I think so, sir." "Up and away, then." The cadet miscalculated his bend, launched himself straight up. A yelp of surprise. "Easy, lad. Come down and try again. Taper off your jet." "Yes, sir." Edwards turned his jet off entirely, drifted down slowly at first, then ever faster. "Squirt! A short one!" The boy complied, slowing his descent in the nick of time. He reached the ground, flipped off his jet. "I'm sorry, sir! I don't know how—" A voice whispered, "You can do it, Dustin. Hang in there." Sergeant Radz spun around, raising a tiny cloud of dust. "Who was that?" Sheepishly, a boy stepped forward. "Me, sir. Kevin Arnweil." "Two demerits, Arnweil! Maintain radio silence until you're spoken to!" "Aye aye, sir!" Radz shook his head. "Your buddy is right, Edwards. You f can do it. Go join Bronski and Salette on the Hull." ! "Aye aye, sir." The boy tensed, bent his knees. "I think—" Convulsively, he fired his jets. The propellant spewed; slowly he lifted, legs kicking wildly. He took too much height, but was smart enough to cut the jets and wait until gravity reclaimed him. He landed on the Hull, caught his balance. "I did it!" "Of course you did." Radz adjusted the next cadet's harness. Cadet Arnweil grinned, waved approval to Edwards, but was careful to say nothing. I smiled to myself. Only a twenty-foot leap, and both boys i were exultant. Wait until we took them outside the Training Sta- / tion. I "Very good, Edwards. You four, move astern a bit to make room. Drew, you're next. Then you, Arnweil." He adjusted Cadet Drew's harness. "Sir, I don't think I'm ready—" "Of course you are. You've jumped up and you've jumped forward. Now you're combining the two. Bend before you jet." "I—aye aye, sir." The boy leaned forward, lost his balance. "For God's sake, Drew! One demerit!" "I'm sorry, sir!" The youngster stumbled to his feet. "I don't think I can—" "Orient yourself first. You don't—" The anxious boy clutched his harness, keyed his jets to full. He lifted off, legs kicking. "Throttle down!" The cadet bent forward toward the Hull, jets still set at full. He hurtled across the gap. I shouted, "Cut your—" "Look out!" Sarge waved violently at the boys on the Hull. One cadet ducked more slowly than the rest. Drew sailed into him at full power. Their helmets collided. A puff of vapor. "DUSTIN!" A shriek of dismay, from below. I launched, bent forward, sailed onto the Hull. I pulled Drew off Dustin Edwards's kicking form, scooped the downed cadet under my arm, snapped my jets to full and launched. Endless seconds passed while I jetted toward the distant airlock. Below me, a cadet loped toward the waiting lock in a stride that took him meters off the ground. The form in my arms had gone still. No time to land and walk into the lock. I sailed straight in, rucked my head down, fired retros, spun about, kicked the approaching bulkhead. In slow motion I fell to the ground. I staggered to my feet, slapped shut the hatch just as Sergeant Radz sailed past to join me. As the hatch closed the boy who'd run to the lock dived through. Radz swore a blue streak without pausing for breath. The cadet who'd followed us pounded the bulkhead, shouting incoherently. I glanced at his helmet. Kevin Arnweil, who'd been demerited for calling encouragement to Edwards. What in hell was the matter with the lock? Surely recycling couldn't take forever. I keyed my radio, yelled, "Emergency medical to the Training Lock, flank! Decompression!" I should have thought of it sooner. Endless moments later the inner hatch opened. Arnweil tore off his helmet. Short-cropped black hair, the faint hint of a mustache, his eyes frantic. No med techs. I gasped, "Sickbay?" Radz grabbed Dustin Edwards's slack legs in one arm, pointed. Awkward in our suits, we dashed through the suiting room to the corridor beyond. Arnweil had the presence of mind to hold the hatches open. The med techs met us halfway along the corridor, their crash cart skidding to a halt. Radz yanked Edwards off my shoulder, laid him flat, twisted off his helmet. Blood oozed from the boy's mouth. His eyes— Arnweil moaned. The eyes would give me nightmares. A tech slapped an oxygen mask over the cadet's face, mercifully concealing them. The techs stripped off his suit, cut his shirt. The moment the paddles were secure, the techs fired. The boy's chest muscles convulsed. There was no other response. A tech straddled the inert cadet for CPR. Another whipped off the oxygen mask, fed a breathing tube down the boy's throat, switched on the respirator. Arnweil whimpered incessantly. Radz, kneeling alongside Edwards, hissed, "Stop that noise!" I stepped between the cadet and the still form on the deck. The boy darted around me, knelt at the body. "Dustin!" His voice was agonized. Sergeant Radz watched the struggling techs, saw he could do little to help, got to his feet. "Step away, Arnweil! Get hold of yourself." "Let me stay with him!" Kevin clutched Dustin's inert hand. Radz shook his head. "You're in the way." "But—" The Sergeant's voice hardened. "Obey orders, Cadet! Be a man! Stop that sniveling! Stand against the—" "BELAY THAT!" Something in my voice gave him pause, as well it might. I cleared my aching throat. "Sir, he—" "Be silent!" Had I no sense? I was putting myself between a cadet and his Sergeant. Kevin Arnweil, on his knees, leaned forward until his forehead touched his companion's still hand. He moaned. The sound pierced my suit, my soul. He wailed again. I knelt, threw my arm across his shoulder. I closed my eyes. Not this, Lord. It was the biggest game of the year, and tickets had been sold out for weeks. Lord God knew how Jason had gotten ours. For a time I'd been afraid Father would forbid my going, on account of some unfinished lesson, some chore not to his satisfaction. But at last, weak with relief, I found myself peddling down the road behind Jason's green jacket, lunch in my backpack, coins in my pocket. We would see the Italians play the Welsh home team in the big game of 2190. At the Cardiff stadium we locked our bikes, joined the crowds streaming toward the entrance. Lines of buses unloaded at the curb; men descended jabbering in fluid Italian. Other buses bore the logos of Manchester, East End London, Liverpool. Tough-looking joeys, who lived for football. Jason stopped short with a look of alarm, patted his jacket pockets. "Christ, Micky, I left the tickets home!" "Don't blaspheme. I saw you tuck them in your shirt pocket." His face lit in a grin. "Worth a try." His golden hair threw off sunshine. We passed through the turnstiles, found our seats in the upper bleachers. "You got coin for drinks?" I fished in my jacket. Two bucks." I hauled out the crumpled unidollars. "Now or later?" "I don't care." Jason shrugged, clasped his arms behind his head. "Let's wait." He studied the empty field. "New lines. Are you glad?" "What do I care about lines?" "No, you feeble snark. Glad that you're going." I hesitated. "I guess. I'd feel better if they hadn't sent the first letter." He peered across the field. They need new benches." "What about you? Are you glad?" He lowered his hands to his lap, kicked at the bench ahead. A burly man tossed back an annoyed glance. "What do you want me to say, Micky?" The truth." "Am I glad you're getting what you've always wanted? That you'll finally get to see the stars? Am I glad my best friend is about to leave while I get to take Engineering in Third?" His eyes flashed my way, spun back to the field. "Oh, Jase. I wish you could come." After a moment he shrugged. "That's life." His hand dropped for a moment to my leg. I tried not to stiffen. I reached to pry off his hand, instead clasped it for a moment in mine. It cost little to give him that. They're coming on!" I jumped to my feet as Archie Con-nelly lumbered out. Not the fastest man on the team, but it took a tank to stop him. I waited impatiently through the anthems, and joined the roar of approval as the teams lined up for the kickoff. "Nick? I'm glad for you. Really." Reggie booted the ball past Connelly, shouldered aside an Italian guard. I reluctantly tore my gaze from the field. Jason's eyes glistened. Thanks, Jase. I'll miss you." "Four days." "Aye." My bag was already packed; no change of clothes, we'd been told, no need even for a toothbrush. Just my favorite holochips, paper for writing to Father and Jason in case I couldn't get to a fax console. A few pictures. Ten minutes into the game, the Italians scored. Reggie and Archie seemed disconcerted by their opponents' sudden shifts. They played on, ignoring howls of glee from the Italian fans. "How are you getting there?" 'To Academy? Father says by train." "It's only an hour by plane." "That's what I told him. He said there's no need to race through the air." We surged to our feet as our right back intercepted the ball. He booted it to Couran in center after a lovely bit of foot-play. I wasn't looking forward to a long subdued train ride with Father, who would discourage any excitement I displayed. The period ended with the Italians ahead, 2 to 0. Jason slipped on his green jacket, ran up to the stand for our drinks. The crowd was so thick that halftime was nearly over when he returned. I unwrapped my sandwich, sipping at the softie Jason had brought. He nudged me. "Try some of mine." "I have plenty," He thrust his cup at me. I took a sip, and gagged. "Jesus, where'd you get this?" I shoved it back into his hand, "Don't blaspheme," he mimicked. Tell m©!" "Angus Terrie was up there," I drank from my own cup, "You'll get us arrested!" "Don't be such a droob," He took another swig of beer, "Have a little fun, Micky, What's life for?" He waved the cup. I hissed, "Put it down!" If h© spilled It, some busybody might smell alcohol and call the jerries, I could get booted out of Academy before even reporting there. Sometimes Jason had no sense. People brushed past to their seats. The players were taking the field. I finished my lunch, sipped nervously at my softie, "I talked to Ma. She'd loan me coin for a ticket if I wanted to go." I stared at him, "You mean, to Devon? With Father and me?" "Would he let me come?" No need to ask whether I'd want him along. The second half began. Could I convince Father? Though he didn't care for Jason, he knew I did. I'd have to pick my time, ask in just the right way. What a different trip it would be. I couldn't wait until the last minute to ask, though. I'd have to plant the idea ahead of time, "Oh, no!" The Italians had stolen the ball again, and were working it downfield. Reggie closed in on his man, who had the ball, In a daring move Archie Connelly abandoned his own man and double-teamed the Italian, Their left forward raced over to help. In the confusion Archie and the Italian ball carrier bumped together. The Italian went down. Whistles shrilled and the play stopped. On the field men were gesturing. The ref flashed a yellow card, indicated Archie, "Violent charge?" Jason was indignant. The Dago ran Into him!" The crowd didn't like It, either. Boos erupted through the stands, except in the Italian sections. The Eyties took a free kick, ran the ball to our back line, lost it. We blitzed through their defense, scored. Jeers and catcalls pelted the Italian team. "Just twenty minutes left," Jason bit his lip. The Welsh had to come out on top to make the finals. A tie wouldn't do. Ten minutes in inconclusive play. The crowd grew more fervent, Jason, thank heaven, had finished his I stashed the incriminating cup between where it could have been anyone's. A hoarse yell from behind us, "Go on, Archie! Get the frazzin' Wops!" I frowned, but somehow Archie heard the call, and waved. Our bleachers responded with a mighty roar. With a few minutes to go, Cardiff got the ball downfield. De Ville passed to Reggie, who lumbered in to kick a goal from twenty feet. We were tied. They faced off for the throw, "I'll ask Father tonight, Jase," "What if I just showed up on the train?" I considered it, "I don't know," Father would know Jason's appearance was no accident, but what could he do? I could wander the train with Jason even without Father's permission. Rebellion surged in my breast. I didn't have to do as Father said. Four minutes. The roar was deafening. The Italians lost the ball. They surged to the defense, but Archie Connelly shouldered aside all opposition. My throat was hoarse from yelling. Abruptly Archie passed to Reggie, who just as quickly passed it back. His path momentarily clear, Archie slammed down a defenseman and aimed a great kick. The ball sailed majestically into the corner of the goal. We'd won, with less than a minute to go. Jason and I danced on the benches, mad with excitement. The burly man in front of us spun round and snarled, "Snuff it, you twits! They disallowed the goal!" "What?" But it was true. They'd not only voided the goal, but red-carded Archie. On the field the Cardiff team surrounded the referee. He stood with arms crossed, shaking his head. "Fraz the Dagoes!" Across the field, joeys were chanting. Others took it up. "Kill the ref! Kill the ref!" "Wow, gonna be a donny." Jason grinned with excitement. "If Reggie doesn't watch it he'll get tossed too!" "He'd better not." But matters were already past that. An Eytie player took a swing at De Ville, who lashed back. Roars of rage from the benches opposite. Italian spectators swarmed across the field. They joined battle with Cardiff joes from the lower bleachers, well below us. Jerries waded in with their riot sticks, asserting control. "Look!" Jason pointed to the next section of bleachers. High in the next section, across the aisle, a couple of joey-boys had pried loose one end of their bench and were rocking the other end to break it free. Spectators, half amused, stood back to give them room. For a moment the bench held. Abruptly it broke loose. One of the joes took up the bench, swung it over his head as a shot-putter his shot. He spun three times until, dizzy, he let go and fell back. The bench hurtled down the stands, bowling over spectators like tenpins. Enraged bystanders leaped over benches and bodies, clawing their way upward to their attacker. Some fell or were pulled down. I grabbed Jason's wrist. "Let's get out of here!" "The closest stairs are up top!" "But—all right!" We pushed to the aisle, threaded our way up toward the exit. Abruptly the riot leaped across the aisle like a blaze across a fire lane. Our section was full of shoving, screaming fans. "Move, Micky!" Jason pushed me. Something lurched. Above us ten rows of seats suddenly disappeared. As one, the crowd turned to the safety of the ground below. Men jumped down from bench to bench, heedless where they landed. The aisle was jammed to immobility. Jason twisted to face downward, trying to squeeze through the mob. I hung on to his arm. The press lifted me off the ground, carried me ahead still clinging to Jason. Our aisle ended at a rail separating the upper and lower stands. Squeezed against the rail, a woman fought with savage intensity to free herself. At her side a man braced himself against the throng. A moment later he went down. Then the woman. The crowd drove toward the safety of the field crushing those on the bottom into the rail or down to the concrete deck. Jason's hand tightened. "Hang on, Micky!" I gripped his wrist. The crowd surged. An elbow jabbed at my side; my hand tore loose from Jason's. We parted. I clawed at the bodies between us. A man lashed out, caught me in the stomach. I doubled over, fell into a row of benches. "JASON!!" A glimpse of golden ringlets. I clawed my way back to the aisle. Below us something gave way. The crowd lurched, arms and legs flailing. I slipped on something wet, managed to right myself. "Jason, answer me!" The crowd swept me past the broken rail, catapulted me into the stands below. I landed on heads and arms, the breath knocked out of me. The joes I'd fallen onto threw me aside, cursing. I thumped onto concrete. Someone stomped on my hand. I screamed, rolled under a bench. Shouts of anger and pain. A crash, and the crack of splintering wood. Eons later, it began to subside. I lay half crushed by the broken bench. Voices. The pressure lifted. Light. A jerry. This one's alive. You all right, laddie?" I began to cry. They hauled me out. "Anything broken?" Below, jerries carried bodies on stretchers to the grassy field. I fell onto a nearby bench. "I don't think so." I looked around. "Where is he?" Most of the crowd had disappeared. Injured huddled together as if seeking solace. Some were bandaged, others were bleeding, many in shock. "Who, lad?" A jerry, riotstick tucked in his belt. "Jason." He shrugged. "He's probably out by now. If you want, look on the field. The ambulances are outside, hauling the wounded to hospital." He patted my shoulder. "Can't stay, boy. There are others." He turned away. My ribs ached. I gritted my teeth, made my way to the aisle, shut my eyes. If Jason was here, I didn't want to see him. I steeled myself, opened my eyes a crack. Nothing. Reddish brown stains on the cement steps, trampled coats and shoes strewn about. Not, praise God, a green jacket. I made my way out of the stadium. Hundreds of injured sat or lay on the curbs. An ambulance landed; techs jumped out with stretchers. I walked down the line of wounded, searching. Jason wasn't there. He'd be waiting with the bikes. I trudged across the concrete lot. Our bicycles sat locked, un-tended. No point in going back to the grisly field. I thrust my hands in my pockets, lowered my head, stared at nothing. Reluctant steps pulled me back to the stadium entrance. Just so I'd know he was in hospital. Nurses could be so severe, and if there was a mixup they'd argue with me. Better to say I knew that's where he had to be waiting. I followed the signs to the lower boxes, walked unhindered across the new-chalked playing field. A jerry intercepted me. "What are you doing, lad?" "I'm—" My tongue was thick. "I'm looking for someone." "Don't touch anything." I nodded, and he let me be. I hugged myself as I reached the first row. They'd left most of the faces uncovered. A woman stared up at me, eyes bulging, one side of her head crushed. I turned, took two steps, vomited my lunch onto the field, wiped my mouth, stomach still churning. Jason, you won't believe what I went through today. Searching through all those bodies, afraid you'd be among them. What is it, your leg? You'll be walking in a week, don't give me that. Lord Christ, you gave me a scare. Some bodies were covered entirely. I knew from the size that Jason couldn't be under the blanket. A baby, a small child. I fought not to retch again. Another body, covered with a carelessly thrown blanket. I hurried past, stopped. No, it was someone else. The sleeve sticking out from the blanket was mostly brown. Only parts of it were green. That's not you. With baby steps I inched toward the blanket. Tentatively I reached to the top, pulled it down. It wasn't Jason's face. I sobbed with relief. It wasn't anyone's face. Just a mass of congealed blood, above a green and brown collar. I pulled the blanket away, exposing the rest of the body. Any boy could have been wearing brown slacks, those jumpboots. Any boy could have had golden curls. Any boy could have been wearing that green jacket, mottled with blood from the mangled chest. Any boy. I bent almost double, took the hand, pressed it to my side. From deep inside, I made a sound. They found me there, hours later, in the dark. The med techs exchanged glances. One shook his head. Kevin AmweiFs fingers brushed the tunic of his still friend. I caught him as he sagged, pressed his locks against my chest. He wept in silence. Sergeant Radz looked on with disapproval. The corridor was filling with subdued cadets, restrained by the quiet commands of Lieutenant Bien. Kyle Drew, whose jump had caused the accident, was white with shock. I said, "Send them to barracks, Lieutenant." "Aye aye, sir. Arnweil also?" "Let him stay." A young middy hurried down the corridor, reached me and stopped. "Midshipman Keene reporting, sir. Sarge says to tell you Admiral Duhaney is returning your call." "Who? Oh. Very well, I'll—" Arnweil sobbed. I took a deep breath. "Tell him I'm busy. I'll call later." The midshipman stared in amazement, caught himself. "Aye aye, sir." He scurried off. Chapter 5 I paced my office, cursing my imprudence. One didn't spurn the Admiral in charge of Fleet Ops, if one ever again wanted his favor. Cadet Arnweil could have waited. Besides, it was Sergeant Radz's role to console him, not mine. My caller buzzed. Ms. Obutu. "Do you have time for Mr. Radz, sir?" "Very well. Send him in." He saluted, came to attention. I nodded to release him, bade him sit. "Sir, I'd like a transfer groundside. Out of Academy." "Because I overruled you in the corridor? Don't be silly." "No, sir." His eyes were pained. "I failed Cadet Edwards. And Kyle Drew will go through life remembering he killed a boy because I didn't do my job." "It was an accident." "Yes, sir. My job is to prevent accidents, especially stupid ones." "It wasn't your fault, Sarge. It was a fluke." He shook his head stubbornly. "You can say that about any accident. Drew wasn't ready; he even told me so. He made one clumsy jump, and I forced him into another." I stood to pace. "What do you want me to do?" "Send me somewhere else, sir. Get a competent instructor." "No." I held his eye until he turned away, defeated. "That's all." He had no choice. "Aye aye, sir." He stood to go. The man needed absolution. I thought quickly. "I want a report on all training accidents in the past five years, and your recommendations on improving safety. No deadline, take a couple of weeks if you need to. And one other thing." "Yes, sir?" "It's too late for the Edwards boy. But you have two walking wounded on your hands. Kyle Drew, and Arnweil. Nurse them back to health." His brow wrinkled. "How, sir?" "I don't know; that's what you're here for. Drew must be sick with guilt, and Arnweil is crushed. They need you." My tone sharpened. "You weren't responsible for the boy's death, but your conduct after was a disgrace. Arnweil and Edwards must have been close." "They enlisted together. Kevin has to learn that soldiers die, sometimes to no purpose." Unbidden, he sat again, rubbed his hands over his face. "But he's still a child, you're right about that. I expected too much of him." I was silent. Eventually he looked up. "We don't want to be nursemaids either." I said, "Find a balance." "Aye aye, sir. I'll try." He left. Late in the evening I sighed, flipped off the console. Farside statistics swam in my head. Cadet days in residence. Number of beds. Consumables per cadet. Instructor-student ratios. Charts they'd sent me before I'd assumed my post, and as meaningless now as before. I stretched, turned down the lights, shut the hatch behind me. In the outer office the midshipman came to his feet. Small, narrow-boned, a serious face. "You're here all night, Middy?" "Mr. Tenere relieves me at twelve, sir." "Very well." I peered past him to the console. "What's that?' He blushed. "Advanced Nav, sir. It's easier to read here than in my holovid." Aboard ship a middy never stood watch alone, and on the bridge he wouldn't dare study anything but his instruments. But the caller was the only instrument this lad had to watch. "Very well—who are you?" He snapped to attention. "Midshipman Tommy Tsai reporting, sir!" A glint of worry, lest I be annoyed he hadn't identified himself. "Very well, Mr. Tsai. I'll be walking about. Call on the general circuit if you need me." I left. As on any Lunar installation, the domes and warrens of Far-side were connected by a maze of corridors. All had safety hatches that would slam shut in case of decompression. The larger compartments, such as mess hall and the physical training rooms, were in the domes above, at surface level. My office was near the end of the north warren, connected by corridor to the VIP lock and the classroom chambers to the south. Other passageways branched to the dorm warrens. Below us, on Level 2, were our atomics, gravitrons, recycling, and the other machinery that allowed the base to function. And, of course, housing for the techs who serviced it all. Hands clasped behind my back, I wandered through the maze of corridors to the classrooms I remembered from my youth. Naturally, they'd be empty at this hour; the cadets would be back in their dorms, enjoying what little free time they were given before Lights Out. "... wonder why they wouldn't give him a ship." I stopped. Low voices, inside a hatchway, chatting amiably. "Maybe he didn't want one." "Adam, who'd pass up a ship of his own?" I poked my head into the classroom. A gaggle of middies. Two lounged against a bulkhead. The third was perched on a desk, legs dangling. Seeing me, they jumped to attention. "As you were," I said quickly. "What's going on?" One of them spoke. "Nothing, sir. Just talking." I gestured to the empty classroom. "Why here?" The oldest middy shrugged. "Why not, sir? It's just where we happened to stop." My fist tightened. When I'd been a cadet, we weren't allowed to wander the base at will, unsupervised. What was the place coming to? "Does your Serg—" I swallowed my angry reply. These were middies, not cadets, and off-duty. As aboard ship, they were free to go where they chose. "Sorry. Quite right. You're, ah, Keene?" "Yes, sir. First Midshipman Thomas Keene, sir. I'm sorry if we disturbed—" "No, I forgot. You see, I never served as a middy at Academy." Few cadets were chosen to stay on as midshipmen. I'd been posted to U.N.S. Helsinki, where—I bit off the thought. Keene seemed uncomfortable. I wondered if he'd ever heard a Captain apologize. Unlikely. I turned to the other middies. "Mr. Tenere I remember. And you?" "Midshipman Guthrie Smith, sir." Lean, ears that stuck out, a tentative manner. "Oh, yes. Very well, carry on." Adam Tenere blurted, "Is there something we can help you with, sir?" I turned. "What?" "I'm sorry, I didn't mean that the way it—are you looking for something, sir?" I stared. He reddened. "Pardon me, it's none of my business. I'm sorry if I—" "That's enough, Adam." Keene's voice was civil but urgent. "I mean—aye aye, Mr. Keene." Like any middy, he called his senior by his last name. I raised my eyebrow, annoyed at the youngster's effrontery. "Do continue, Mr. Tenere." "Yes, sir. I mean, aye aye. No offense, please, sir. I just thought, if there was someplace you were trying to find—I thought perhaps we could ..." Flustered, he took a deep breath. "Please excuse me, Captain Seafort." I said nothing. He squirmed, added desperately, "It being your first day here, was all I meant. I didn't know if you remembered ... Of course you would, though. I wasn't thinking, I meant no dis ..." I turned to Keene. "Is he always like this?" The first midshipman's tone was icy. "No, sir. Only when it's important he not be." Now Tenere was in for trouble. A middy was supposed to be seen and not heard, and it was the first midshipman's job to keep his juniors in line. Once, on Hibernia, a lieutenant had caught the younger middies frolicking in the corridor, and it was I, the senior, who'd paid the price. Perhaps Keene had similar thoughts. "I apologize, sir. He won't trouble you further." Adam studied the deck, miserable. Well, a couple of extra demerits wouldn't hurt him, though he'd already earned four when he'd cannoned into me in Earthport Station. Ten uncancelled demerits meant the First Lieutenant's barrel. "Very well." One way or another, Tenere would learn to be less clumsy, both physically and verbally. Yet, the boy had meant only to offer help. I sighed, relenting. How to divert Keene without interfering with his prerogatives? "Actually, Mr. Keene, I was looking for someone to walk with. It's been years since I've been on Farside. Would you gentlemen care to accompany me?" It would cost me my privacy, but I could think of no better way. "Of course, sir." There was nothing else to say. An invitation from a Captain was as a command. "This is the simulator room, sir." Guthrie Smith. "Ah, yes." The equipment was brand-new. There hadn't even been such an installation when I was a cadet; I remembered the compartment as just another study room. Now it was used to simulate battle with the fish, using puter re-creations from Hi-bernia and other vessels lucky enough to have encountered the aliens and survived. I moved on. "The nav room, sir." In this classroom I'd been introduced to Lambert and Gree-ley's Elements of Astronavigation. At the time I'd thought that with hard work I could master Nav. Now I knew better. I asked, "What was your best subject, Mr. Keene?" "Engineering, sir. This year I asked Mr. Vriese to tutor me on the new fastship drive." "Is he still here?" He'd seemed ancient twelve years ago. He must have been at least fifty. I smiled at my innocence. "And you, Mr. Tenere?" Wisely, the boy had said as little as possible during our stroll. Faced with a direct question, he had no choice but to respond. "Nav and pilotage, sir." I had to draw him out, to show there were no hard feelings. "Were you good at it?" He looked down. "First in my class, sir." "You were?" I couldn't keep the surprise from my voice. "Yes, sir." His tone was bitter. "I'm not always incompetent, sir. Though you'd have no way of knowing that." "That's quite enough, Mr. Ten—" "No, Mr. Keene. He's feeling badly. We had, um, a run-in yesterday." My shoulder was still sore from it. We left the classroom warrens. "What's down there?" "The ladder to belowdecks, sir. The gravitrons, and engineering. Off-limits to us." Adam looked hopeful. I saw no reason to take them below. I'd only been there once myself, on a failed mission with Midshipman Jeffrey Thorne. "And that way?" "The service corridor, sir. It goes to mess hall." They led me down the deserted corridor, used by sailors to wheel cleaning machines and other heavy equipment to the domes. "This way's longer, but it's faster if you're late to class," Adam Tenere confided. "No cadets allowed." I imagined an anxious midshipman sprinting to class along the service corridor to avoid the displeasure of his instructor. Running in the main corridors, on the other hand, was strictly prohibited. "Here's the mess hall, sir. The cadets enter from the far side." "Yes, I remember." We continued toward the barracks, passing an emergency hatch, open now, but ready to slam shut at decompression. "The barracks are to the right, I recall." "Yes, sir." In a few moments the warren widened. I chose a dorm at random. "Let's look in." As the hatch slid open Keene bellowed "Attention!" Cadets leaped from their bunks to form a straight line along the aisle. I'd thought the barracks would be unoccupied, during term break. "As you were. Carry on." I smiled. "This isn't an inspection." Keene shot me a dubious look, said nothing. I understood his confusion; a Commandant was explaining himself to mere cadets. I knew I'd appear even more ridiculous poking my head in and disappearing immediately. I strode down the rows of beds. I paused. A duffel lay atop an empty bunk. The bed had been stripped and remade without sheets. I asked the girl in the next bunk, "Edwards?" "Yessir." The duffel would remain overnight. In the morning the cadets would gather round, open the duffel, go through the meager belongings. Close friends would help themselves to mementos, and the duffel would be repacked for shipment home. It was the Navy way. I looked around. "Where's Mr. Arnweil?" Another boy spoke up. "With Sergeant Radz, sir." "Very well. Come along, gentlemen." We left. Keene said, "Edwards seemed a decent joey." I was brusque. "I didn't know him." "Would you like to stop at Krane Barracks?" "Why?" One barracks was like another. "You stayed there, sir." I raised an eyebrow. "Is there a bronze plaque on the head " used?" "I beg your pardon?" "Nothing." I shook my head, disgusted. Somehow I'd have to put a stop to it. "We have, let's see, sixteen barracks?" "Twenty now," Tenere blurted. Of course. I'd read that, somewhere. "Not all in use." "Not until the plebes come aloft, sir." Thirty cadets to a dorm. Housing for six hundred cadets at a time. The Training Station could take another fifty. Terrestrial Academy at Devon had barracks for another three hundred eighty. Some overcapacity was necessary; otherwise no cadet could be transferred without another cadet being shipped out. I shook my head. Logistics. I let them tour me through the exercise dome, then down the ladder to the service level. I stopped. Enough for one day. "Thank you, gentlemen. That will be all." "Aye aye, sir." I hesitated. "Mr. Tenere, I'll have a word with Mr. Keene." "Yes, sir? I mean, aye aye, sir." "Alone," I prompted. "Aye aye, sir!" Red-faced, he saluted and hurried away. "Sir, I'm sorry about—" "I was first middy, once. On Hibernia." "Yes, sir." Keene waited, puzzled. "It isn't an easy job. You might think, for example, that I'd want you to go hard on Tenere." "He's—Of course I'd—I'll do whatever you want, sir." "Will you? Good, then. Do as you'd have done if we'd never met this evening." I smiled pleasantly. "Sometimes, Mr. Keene, problems work themselves out on their own." "Aye aye, sir." He smiled back quizzically. "That's all." I found my way back to my apartment. I was undressing when the caller buzzed. "Sorry, sir." Tolliver. "Just a reminder. Senator Boland's boy will be reporting to Devon in two days." "What of it?" "Don't you want to be there, just in case?" "In case what, Edgar?" I tossed my shirt on the chair. "His father will most likely drop him off. He's on the Naval Affairs Committee, you know." Of course I knew. If Boland hadn't talked me out of it I'd have carried through with my resignation, after Victoria brought me home. "Tolliver, the Boland boy's a cadet like any other. Anyway, we're going groundside tomorrow night, after I talk over the budget with Admiralty." "Very well, sir. Sorry if I woke you." I growled a reply, rang off. If Tolliver thought I could be a politician, he was mistaken. I drifted to sleep. Once again, I waited in the crowded anteroom of Admiral Duhaney's Lunapolis office. The last time I'd been there, months before, I'd been ragged from the long hostile voyage in Victoria, and barely recovered from my lung implant. I'd stalked out of the Admiral's office in a rage, expecting court-martial and not giving a damn. Instead, they'd chosen to reward me with Academy. When the bored lieutenant called my name I passed through the hatch, saluted, came to attention with the same discipline I'd require of my cadets. "Hello, Seafort." Duhaney came to me, hand extended. I took it as permission to stand easy. He beckoned to a chair. "Sorry my call missed you yesterday." Was it a reproach? It didn't seem so. "I apologize, sir. We had an accident. A cadet died." He pursed his lips, shook his head. Still, I knew he'd received too many reports of death to be shocked by one more. As Sergeant Radz had said, soldiers die, especially in wartime. "Why did you want to see me, Commandant?" I couldn't bring up the issue of Lieutenant Crossburn; Dustin Edwards's death made that issue seem too trivial. I would cope. "I had some questions about the budget." "I can't get you any more money, Seafort. Don't even ask. We're strained tight." "No, sir, I understand that. I wasn't asking." He stared at me suspiciously. "I've heard that before. I tell you, no special appropriations!" Despite myself, I smiled. "Orders acknowledged and understood, sir. If I'd wanted more money I'd say so." "Well, then?" I fished in my pocket for a chipcase, opened it. "May I?" I slipped the chip into his holovid. "These expense columns, sir. Why do they say 'guidelines'?" He frowned. "Didn't Kearsey go over any of this with you?" "He gave me the budget to study. That's all." "Don't worry about it. The number that counts is that bottom line." He stabbed at the expense totals. "But this column, sir, that details the food expense per cadet, the uniform cost—" He waved them away. "They don't mean anything, Seafort. How often do I have to tell you?" I spoke coolly. "That depends, sir." "On what?" "On whether you want me as Commandant." He glared at me. "Don't start that again. I have too many prima donnas as it is." I held his eye; he sighed, "Very well, what don't you understand?" "How do I find out how much we're spending on food per cadet? I won't know until we exceed our budget." "You have a quartermaster to keep it straight, Seafort. Let him do his job. All you need be concerned with is that you have two point six million unidollars to spend. How you allocate them is your own business." I shook my head. "But the uniforms per cadet, training allocation per cadet—" "You have some seven hundred sixty joeys, right? We try to break costs down per cadet, because the Senate committee likes it that way. That's the only reason the columns are there." "But—" My head spun, "When we go to the Naval Affairs Committee, don't we have to assure them—" "Yes, we tell them how much we intend to spend, and on what. But the Security Council knows better than to tie us to our line estimates. Spend your allocation for the good of your cadets. Don't forget to reserve for structural repairs. Look, Seafort, it all comes down to seven hundred sixty cadets. For years we've run the number through a simple formula to pull out the guidelines. You don't have to follow them. In theory, you don't even have to account for the number of cadets." "Huh? What about Final Cull?" "Oh, the Selection Board presents your candidates, you have no choice about that. But they only go by—" The caller buzzed; he picked it up. "Duhaney. He what? Are you sure?" He Us- ' tened. "The son of a bitch! Yes, I'll be down. This afternoon. Potomac Shuttleport, Set up a meeting." He keyed the caller. "Bill, cancel this afternoon. Get me a seat on the Potomac. Bump someone if you have to." He slammed down the caller. "We had a deal with Naval Affairs, and Senator Wyvern is jumping ship. Now he wants our promise the hull components will come from North American foundries. We've already promised them to—look, Seafort, I've got to dear my calendar and be out of here in less than an hour. Let me know if you run into a problem." He popped my chip from the holovid, handed it to me. "But—" "Thanks for coming. Get out of my hair, will you? If we lose the replacement fleet, we won't need your cadets," He had a point, "Yes, sir." I paused at the hatch, "That memo I wrote about the caterwauling bomb, sir. Are you going—" "We have a team studying it. It's more complex than you think," He opened his drawer, fished for a chipcasc, thrust it in his pocket. "Sir, it's too important to—H "Damn it, man, you want us to take a puter-operated drone, send it somewhere and let it generate skewed N-waves, or caterwaul, as you call it. Not too close to home, because it will call every fish within hearing. But we've never sent a successful drone out before, not one with a fusion drive. Anyway, the drive is inherently inaccurate by one percent, so we won't even be quite sure where we're sending it** He took a leather case, stuffed papers within, "Say it cater, wauls until it attracts fish. How many fish is enough? How close would they come?" I said, "It doesn't matter if a bomb doesn't get every last—" "Let me finish, I have to catch the shuttle. At some point the bomb goes off, unless the fish destroy it first. Well, when it goes boom, how can we be sure it got all the fish? Could any surviving fish follow its trail back to us? And most important, if this caterwauling calls fish, how can we send a ship into a sector swarming with fish to find out if the bloody thing works, without risking the ship? If the fish didn't get our ship the bomb would." He paused, waved me to the hatch. "The idea has merit, Seafort, but we need to iron out the bup," He snitched up the caller. "Karl? Make sure Boland is told about this afternoon's meeting." I retrieved my duffel from the anteroom, trudged along the busy corridor toward Old Lunapolis, absentmindedly returning salutes while I pondered Duhaney's comments about my budget. Running Academy wasn't quite like commanding a ship; I couldn't execute a felon, for example. But in other respects the Navy allowed me to act as autocratically as any shipboard Captain. Here are your tools: accomplish the job. Don't bother us with details, 1 checked in with Naval Transport, learned the next shuttle was full. Three hours to kill, until I could connect through Earthport Station to London. 1 should have hitched a ride with Duhaney. Well, he'd left me ample time for a meal here in the Lunapolis warrens, where I had a better choice of restaurants and the prices were lower than on the Station. I dined alone, unaccustomed to the solitude. Though several of my officers had gone groundside for start of term, none of them had detoured with me to Lunapolis. After dinner I boarded the London shuttle. Most of the other passengers were civilians, a few Navy. There were also U.N.A.F. personnel, but we pointedly ignored each other. The Armed Forces were another service, and we had little in common. To my discomfort, the Pilot unstrapped and came back into the cabin, stopping at my seat. "Captain Seafort? My name is Stanner. I'll be flying you down tonight." He offered his hand. Resignedly, 1 took it, muttered some polite phrase. "It's an honor to meet you." He hesitated, turned back to the cockpit. "If there's anything we can do for you ., ,** Just take me home. "No thank you, Mr. Stanner," "Very well, then," Again he hesitated, "The copilot's seat is empty tonight. Would you care to ride up front?" What I wanted was to be left alone. On the other hand, I'd had one experience piloting a shuttle, a wild ride with Lieutenant Tolliver across Hope Nation's Farreach Ocean. It might be interesting to watch an expert handle the craft. Ignoring the envy of the U.N.A.F. officers, I got to my feet, "Well, if you don't mind ,.," "Of course not," He ushered me to the cockpit, I suspected it wasn't really me he wanted sitting alongside him, but my damned notoriety. Now he'd be able to say he'd flown with Nicholas Seafort as his copilot. I couldn't avoid that sort of thing unless I chose to become a hermit. I strapped in. Once the cockpit hatch slid shut the Pilot gave the checklist his full attention. I wondered if my presence had anything to do with that; flying the shuttle must be second nature to him. "Steward, confirm shuttle hatch closed, please." He wouldn't rely on the blinking light on his console. Quite right. Consoles and puters could be wrong. "Shuttle hatch is secured, Mr. Stanner." "Departure Control, London Shuttle Victor three four oh ready for breakaway, requesting clearance," The speaker crackled, "Just a moment. Pilot." Several minutes passed before flight control came back on the line. "London Shuttle Victor three four oh, you're cleared for breakaway. Have a pleasant flight." "Thank you." Stanner's hand settled over the thrusters. The shuttle's maneuvering engines, like most craft, used hydrozine as propellant. With a deft hand the Pilot squirted first his forward thrusters, then the thrusters abaft, rocking us ever so gently until the airlock seals parted. Once we drifted free of the Station he maneuvered us to a safe distance, ignited the mam engines. The hull throbbed with muted power. . I tore my eye from the receding Station to focus on Earth, looming in the starboard viewscreens, We didn't appear to be heading toward Terra, but of course we were. If the shuttle dived headfirst into the atmosphere we'd go incandescent. Instead, we'd enter at an angle, almost parallel with the planet's surface. The Pilot flipped switches on his console, watching his display closely. As the readout counted to zero he cut the power. The engines went silent. His work done for the moment, Stanner relaxed. "You're headed to groundside Academy, Captain?" "Yes," It seemed too bald a statement. "My new cadets report tomorrow." "A busy time for you, then." "I suppose," I had no idea what was expected of me. Perhaps the sergeants knew. He punched in numbers, erased the screen, ran more calculations. "Twenty-five minutes. If you'd like coffee we can—" "London Shuttle, respond to Departure Control." The pilot keyed his mike. "London Shuttle." "This is a scramble. Repeat, a scramble." The voice was edged with tension. "Steepen your glide path for immediate entry. You'll be out of position for London; divert to New York Von Walthers, or Potomac Shuttleport." The Pilot swallowed once, but his voice was calm. "London Shuttle commencing dive." He flipped switches, reignited our engines. He glanced to me, back to the console. "Something's up." "Obviously," I reached for the caller, remembered that this was his craft. "Can you get Naval frequencies?" "General comm, but not the restricted channels. Go ahead." I keyed the caller. Voices flooded the speaker. "—have a visual on him at four thousand kilometers. We're on him." "Understood, Charleston. You and Tripoli are th§ closest," "Tell the Admiral we have radio contact with Tripoli," A crisp voice. "This is Admiral Le Tour, acting as ComCine-Luna, I'm on the circuit, Captain Briggs. Are you absolutely sure?" "The puter's on full magnification, sir. He's just sitting there, plain as life. A fish, just like the training holos." My grip tightened on the console. Lord God, no, "Just one?" Briggs' laugh was harsh. "At the moment, sir." Stanner said, "Stay strapped in tight. Captain. We'll get some buffeting." I checked my belts. They couldn't go any tighter. "Just drive us home, Pilot." "We'll probably lose radio contact for a few minutes. That's natural when we're diving into the atmosphere." "I'm not a groundsider." My tone was sharp. "1 know, sir." "Sorry. Nerves," Fish, in home system? Queasy, I swallowed several times. "ComCincLuna to all ships. Execute Maneuver C. Argentine and Brunswick, hold your current positions. I'll join you with the squadron covering Earthport Station. If I'm disabled, Captain Lusanski in Waterloo is senior." A whispering, outside the hull. "Report all sightings directly to—" Static. "Confirm your positions every five minutes." "Aye aye, si—" Static, A muted roar, transmitted through the hull. "Attention all ships, Tripoli reports a second sighting, co-ordi—" The shuttle bucked. Stanner kept our nose down, used the jets to position us. "Until we have confi—" The speaker cut out. Stanner's voice was taut. "We've lost them for a while. Hang on," "Can we make it?" His jaws tightened. "Oh, we'll make it, one way or the other, I forgot to buy insurance." He took quick breaths. "Another ten thousand feet and I'll spread the wings. That'll help some." "Whatever you say." My one attempt at the controls of a shuttle had been suborbital. "Potomac Shuttleport, do you read London Shuttle Victor three four oh?" No answer. He shook his head. "Are they hit?" My voice was unsteady. "Hit? It's the static buildup. We'll have to wait to get through." I felt a complete idiot, "Yes. Of course." "Try every minute or so. My attention's on the readouts,** "Right." It would give me something to do. To my infinite relief they answered my fourth call. "London Shuttle, this is Potomac Shuttleport, we read you," Stanner keyed his caller. "We've had a scramble, Potomac, I will be approaching from the Southwest at forty thousand feet Can you take us?" I held my breath, but the answer was nonchalant. "No problem, London Shuttle, Earthport alerted us an hour ago. All outgoing traffic has been grounded. Come on in," Had it been that long? I gripped the dash while Stanner took his approach coordinates, then cursed under my breath. If we could hear Approach Control, we could hear Admiralty as well, I switched from speaker to earphones, keyed the caller. "— no, sir, I'm sure. So's the puter. No encroachments except Tripoli" "Where the he/J did he go, Charleston?" A pause from Charleston. "I couldn't say, sir." "Right. Um, sorry." Another pause. "ComcincLuna to all ships. Current status: one sighting confirmed, coordinates thirty-four, one eighty-seven, two hundred. The alien apparently Fused to safety. Current whereabouts unknown. Second sighting is unconfirmed, may be an anomaly." I snorted. The "anomaly" was probably an overexcited young officer, now shriveling under his Captain's extreme disfavor. A scream of protesting air, as Stanner eased the wings back into flight mode. The buffeting slackened. He asked, "What's it all mean, Captain?" I waved him silent, strained to hear voices through the static. Every ship of the squadron had gone to Battle Stations, waiting for further sightings. None came. At last I sighed, keyed off the caller. Stanner began a long, slow swing to port. He said nothing. Coloring, I realized I'd snubbed the man in his own cockpit. "Sorry, Mr. Stanner, I was listening. It seems there was just the one fish; the second was a false sighting." "Are they planning an attack? This is the first time they've shown up in Home System." The second. The one I'd speared with Challenger was the first. "Too early to tell. It could be a fluke, or some kind of scout. In Hope Nation ..." "Yes?" At Hope Nation the fleet had stood by for days, sometimes weeks, between sightings. "There's no way to tell." For a moment Stanner's attention was on the shuttle's long turn. Then, "Captain, I have a wife and kids. Are they safer in Lunapolis or at home?" "I haven't the faintest idea." After a moment I tried to make amends for my tone. "No one knows, Pilot. On the one hand, Lunapolis is a smaller target. But Terra has an atmosphere, and is less fragile. If I had a choice, that's where I'd want my family." He muttered, "Christ protect us." "Amen." Half an hour later we pulled up to the terminal. The engines sank into a whine. I unbuckled, made as if to stand, hesitated. I offered my hand. "Godspeed, Mr. Stanner." "And you, sir." "Thank you." I ducked through the hatchway into the cabin. He called after me, "We need you on a ship." I pretended not to hear. The steward had my duffel ready. He'd held back other passengers so I could go first. Well meant, I suppose, but I'd have preferred him to ignore me entirely. I strode along the moveway, hoping I'd find the right counter. "Captain Seafort! Wait, sir!" I turned, saw a florid lieutenant running after me. I waited. "Lieutenant Greaves, sir. Mr. Duhaney is in the Naval Liaison Office and sent me to get you." "The what? And how did he know I'm here?" "Naval Liaison Office, sir. It's really just a conference room reserved for Naval officers. Lunapolis Base reached him there while he was in a meeting. When he heard the London shuttle diverted, he knew you'd be on it." "Very well." I slung my duffel over my shoulder, followed him through the corridors. He held open the door. "Go right in, sir." Admiral Duhaney looked over his shoulder, straightened, rubbed his back. "Ah, there you are, Seafort." With him was Senator Boland and another man I didn't know. They hovered over a caller. "Have you met Senator Wyvern?" We shook hands and sat. "What's the latest, sir?" "Nothing since the son of a bitch Fused. We'll hold Battle Stations for a few hours, then stand down unless he shows again." I nodded. There was little else we could do. Richard Boland let out his breath in a long sigh. "It's one thing hearing about these adventures on the holos, Seafort. It's another to have a fish overhead." "I know." He leaned forward in his chair. "What do you think they're up to?" "Me? How should I know?" Perhaps it was the adrenaline surge. I felt a bit shaky. "You've been there, and we haven't." Duhaney and Wyvern watched me intently. "I've no idea." I stood to pace. "My guess is you won't see any more of them for a while." "Why not?" "Just a hunch. In Hope Nation we never could anticipate their patterns. And it was years between the loss of Telstar and their next attack." But once that attack started, it nearly obliterated Hope Nation and our defensive fleet. Senator Wyvern cleared his throat, as if before a speech on the General Assembly floor. "This makes it all the more important we settle where the new hulls originate." Boland said sharply, "Not now, Brett." I wasn't interested in politics. "Can you get them to speed up the caterwauling bomb, Admiral?" I sat. "This gives me an excuse to knock some heads together." Duhaney paused. "On the other hand ... Seafort, don't make any public comments on this affair, understand?" My annoyance showed. "I've never given interviews, sir." Didn't he know even that? "Say nothing. That's an order." He hesitated. "I might as well tell you; we've already agreed. Unless the fish show up before tomorrow, we're treating this as a false sighting." "You're what?" I came to my feet. "As far as the public is concerned, that is. Of course, we'll increase our vigilance." "But why?" Senator Boland's voice was soothing. "No point in causing alarm, Captain. Or panic." "You'll lie about an enemy in home waters?" "Think, Seafort. What good would the truth accomplish?" "What good—" He had a point. As long as our Home Fleet maintained its watch, publicizing dangers that were unavoidable might cause panic. Worse, it might evoke demands that our Navy stop serving the colonies, so as not to attract the fish. "It's not my decision to make, Senator." And thank Lord God of it. Duhaney cut in, "Let him be, Richard. He's as fatigued as we are. Seafort, I'll arrange a suborbital to London for you. One flight won't disrupt our ground defense." "I can wai—very well, whatever you wish." Let the Academy gates swing shut behind me, shield me from politicians and armchair Admirals. Boland got to his feet. "Mr. Duhaney, if you'll ring Naval transport, I'll walk Mr. Seafort to Departures." Smoothly done. I barely felt the dismissal. Moments later I was striding with Boland through corridors packed with frustrated travelers waiting out their delays. "We're doing the best we can, Seafort. I'll use the sighting as a club to get Brett back in line, and we'll have your new ships built. Alarming the public would only interfere with that." I grunted. For all I knew, he was right. U.N.S. Wellington was almost ready for launch, and we needed many more like her. The Senator's tone was casual. "I'm bringing Robert to Devon tomorrow." "Robert?" He frowned. "My son." "Oh, yes. Pardon me. I'm sure he'll do well." "I'm most interested in seeing that he does. Any way 1 can possibly help, please let me know." I waited for more, but he left it at that. It was late evening before a helicab finally deposited me on the Academy tarmac. The guard saluted, waved me through without showing my ID. I thought to make an issue of it, decided not to. My face was too well known to question, even without my scar. I called Admiralty in Lunapolis, checked with a staff lieutenant I knew. All was quiet in the Home Fleet. The compound was a madhouse, callers ringing off the pad. Arrival day, as if by magic, caused parents in each of the subsequent groups to verify dates, reconfirm what their cadets were allowed to bring along, and query each of the admonitions spelled out in the acceptance letter and pamphlet. Lieutenant Paulson and the sergeants had been through it before, and weren't fazed. Two middies waited in my outer office to run any needed errands, and Tolliver was out on the grounds, keeping an eye. Still, I sat in my office, expecting at least an occasional call to slip past their vigilance. After a time I conceded none might come. Restless, I paced my way past coffee tables and chairs, made a note to have the furniture thinned as I had in my Farside office. It was past lunchtime before I'd had enough. The only call I'd fielded had been from Quartermaster Serenco, asking approval for a special order of milk to replace some that had spoiled. I ran my hands through my hair, adjusted my tie, and closed the door behind me. "I'll be on the grounds." "Yes, sir." As on board ship, I didn't carry a caller. On a vessel I could be reached through any of the corridor speakers; here I could not. But on ship I might be needed instantly for an emergency, and that was not the case at Academy. In any event, I'd be damned if I'd have a caller squawking under my jacket, or be seen with a mini plugged in my ear. I might as well be a teener with a stereochip. I headed toward the barracks, hesitated, reversed my course, and strode the trimmed pathway back to Officers' Quarters and beyond to the shaded expanse of front lawn. The recruits were instructed to arrive between ten and two. Parents drove their nervous offspring to the curved drive in front of the imposing iron gates, or walked across the commons from the heliport or the train station several blocks away. Inside the gates, middies on special duty corraled the cadets-to-be, and every few minutes took a group of them to the Admin Building, where their Naval careers would commence. Once inside the Academy compound, cadets would be allowed no contact with their families, other than by letter, until their first furlough far in the future. From a safe distance I watched the tearful good-byes. One recruit spotted me among the trees and pointed excitedly. Quickly I turned away and struck out for the mess hall, between barracks and classrooms. Though formal lunch was over, I wandered into the galley. I ignored the startled cook's mates, peered into the coolers. Surely there must be something. "Would you like a sandwich, sir?" I grunted. "Whatever's easiest." "Why don't you sit down in the hall? The mess steward will bring it out." "Very well." I chose the closest cadet table, cupped my head in my hands, and brooded. The start of a year. Some of my charges were halfway through training, others about to begin. How could I help the new recruits understand what they'd embarked on? An officer did not work for the Navy, he was the Navy. Now, with the fish devastating our colonies, we needed responsible officers more than ever. My hand caressed the table's rough plank. The joeys who'd be eating their next meal here were yet children. How could they be expected—what? Initials? I rubbed at the faded marks, noticed others. I wondered which sergeant wasn't doing his job. When I'd been a cadet... Could we identify the malefactors by the letters? No, the carvers had wisely left but one initial each. "Your lunch, sir." I jumped at the unexpected voice. "Very well." The steward set down the tray. They'd gone to the trouble to heat a full meal: meat, vegetables, mashed potato. A heaping salad, steaming coffee. I sighed. I'd have made do with anything. The door flew open and a middy rushed in. He hurried to my table and came smartly to attention. "Midshipman Anton Thayer reporting, sir." His carrot-red hair was neatly brushed, his uniform in order. "Lieutenant Sleak's compliments, and Senator Boland is asking for you at the gate." "Tell him—No, wait." I got up, crossed to the caller on the wall by the doorway, keyed my office. "Seafort." "Sleak here, sir. Shall I have the Senator escorted to your office?" "What does he want?" "He's brought his son." "Yes, send him—" I hesitated. An important politician shouldn't be alienated; what did tradition matter when a member of the Naval Affairs Committee was— No. "Keep him at the gate. I'll be along." "Are you sur—aye aye, sir." I rung off. Anton waited for dismissal. I growled, "Have you no work to do?" "Yes, sir." He ran off. I hurried to the door, slowed my pace. The Commandant was no Senator's lackey to come scurrying at his call. Still, as I skirted the edge of the parade ground, my stride lengthened. Perhaps it would have been better to offer him the hospitality of my office. I crossed the front lawn to the gate. A middy, shepherding an awkward group of recruits, saluted as he passed. At the curb two cars were parked. Alongside one of them a slim youth was enduring an older woman's embrace. Senator Boland waited patiently near the guardhouse. I stepped outside the gate, tugged at my jacket. "Good to see you again, Senator." "And you, Commandant. May I present my son Robert? Robert, Commandant Seafort." The lanky fourteen-year-old smiled shyly, unsure whether to offer his hand. I clasped my hands behind my back as casually as possible, nodded politely. "I'm sure he'll make a good cadet, Mr. Boland." The byplay hadn't gone unnoticed; something in the Senator's eyes changed. Still, he said affably, "I was hoping to see Robert's barracks." "I wasn't told which one he'll be assigned. Sorry." The information could be read from the guardhouse console, a few steps away. "I'll have someone phone your office this afternoon." Surely that wasn't too great a concession to his rank. "I won't be able to place the barracks by name alone." I smiled. "They're all alike." "Yes. Well..." His eyes locked on mine. "My wife and I are most anxious that Robert justify the honor of his admission." "That's commendable." I tired of the sparring, turned to the boy. "When you're done with your good-byes, one of the middies will take you in." "Thank you." Robert's tone betrayed his uncertainty, "Is there anything else. Senator?" "Admiral Duhaney mentioned your questions about the budget. I'd be happy to go over them with you." "I suppose I—Him, well, perhaps—" I broke off, knowing I sounded a dolt. I took a deep breath, spoke more firmly. "Robert, I'll speak with your father alone for a moment." "Yes, sir." He retreated toward the car. My heart pounded. "Senator, I know what you want. It isn't possible. The Naval Affairs Committee's visit is months away. You're here privately, and parents aren't allowed to enter Academy. I won't make an exception. We'll take care of your son, as we do them all." Senator Boland's eyes were pained. "Including the boy whose helmet was smashed a few days ago? Oh, yes, I know about that." He paused. "Can you imagine how dear Robbie is to me? I'm proud, but frightened at the same time." "Yes, I think I can understand that." "He's leaving home, leaving my custody for yours. See how eager he looks? Inside he must be terrified." His voice turned bitter. "Of course, you wouldn't know about that." My eyes turned back to his. "You can't possibly . . ." My voice faded away. He couldn't know. I'd never spoken of it. I sat hugging myself, oblivious of passing fields as the train labored through the rolling English countryside. In the seat across, Father read from his Bible. Four days earlier, the jerries had brought me home from the stadium in a police wagon, a blanket thrown across my shoulders for the shock, an untouched cocoa cooling on the bench at my side. Father had come outdoors at the light flashing in the night. We had no caller; he hadn't known. When Father summoned me from the back of the wagon I dutifully followed him Into the house. Mechanically I sat at the kitchen table, staring at the faded wall until the teapot screamed its readiness. "Drink." "I can't." "Of course you can," He rested his hands on the back of my chair, turned back to the stove, made sure the burner was off, "Then you'll go to bed." I sat motionless. They hadn't let me follow Jason to the mortuary. I'd given them his mother's name; Jason had never known his host father. His tired-eyed mother would be at the mortuary, confronting the ghastly remains of her son. Would my own host mother grieve me, if she were told of my death? She'd never known me, nor I her. Still, in some sense at least, I had two parents. Clone offspring had not even that. "Leave your shirt out to be cleaned." I looked down, saw the blood on my sleeve. "Damn my shirt." He raised his hand to strike me, lowered it. "Not tonight. I understand." He sat across from me. "Though I don't approve," He searched my face, "There are times His will is hard to fathom.'1 Damn His will, I thought to say, but knew better; there were limits to Father's tolerance. I hunched over, resolved not to speak, but in a moment sobs broke through my determination. After a time Father's gnarled hand slid across the table, gripped my wrist. He waited. When still I didn't respond, he shook my arm insistently until I looked up. "Your friend didn't live in His ways. You know I didn't esteem him." "Aye." I tried to free my hand. "He wanted to lead you into... vile practices. I hope you resisted. If not, your conscience will suffer." I twisted away but Father's grip was like iron. "Yet he was your friend, and I respect your grief. He was young enough to have changed his ways, had Lord God given him time." I looked up. That's why you tolerated him? Because he might have changed?" "No, Nicholas. Because he was your friend." He released my arm. "I will pray for him, now and after. Perhaps you will join me." I said in a small voice, "Yes, please." "You'll go to the funeral?" I recoiled. "The what?" They couldn't put Jason into the stony ground. That would be too cruel. I tried to swallow; my throat was full of ache. Father, hold me. Embrace me, tell me I'll want to live again. "I imagine they'll bury him before you go." I shivered. "Go? Where would I go?" Father stood, poured himself more tea. Mine sat cooling, untouched. "Nicholas, have you forgotten Academy?" "I don't want—there's no reason to go." "There's no reason to stay." I looked up, startled. "It was your dream. Jason's death is no reason to abandon it." I cried, "How could I leave him?" If there was a grave, it would need tending. Flowers. Weeding. "He's left you already, Nicholas. The flesh is nothing." The funeral was two days later. Dressed in my ill-fitting suit, I stood between Father and Jason's dazed mother, torn between calm and fits of grief. I even bent to scoop a spadeful of dirt on the inexpensive alumalloy coffin. His mother smiled at me, squeezed my hand. I was grateful she'd allowed me to give him the balsa model of Trafalgar he'd admired, to take into the dark. When it was done we'd gone back to our silent, dreary home, where I sipped steaming tea while Father opened the Book. We read from the Psalms, and in Proverbs. Perhaps because I wasn't comforted, he turned to Luke 18. I whispered with him the memorized words. "Suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid them not: for of such is the kingdom of God." Two days later I'd closed my bag, followed Father to the cab, climbed onto the train. I sat listlessly, feet kicking under the bench, my scrubbed ears protruding from my close new haircut. Academy. The sum of all my dreams. When finally the train had stopped I clutched my bag, stepped down into the depot, waited while Father asked directions of the agent at the window. "It's near enough to walk. No need to waste coin on a bus." "Aye." I followed Father out of the station. He paused, took his bearings, struck off down the road. I clutched my bag, heavy with my uneaten lunch, the large Bible, the printed books I'd thrust in at the last moment. I gaped at the unfamiliar shops. We walked in silence. Occasionally Father's hand touched my shoulder to guide me. At a busy corner I shifted the duffel to my right hand so I could clasp his with my left, but the light changed and he strode on. We crossed the slope of the commons. I shifted the duffel to my left, reached for his hand, but Father moved to my left side. Is this good-bye, then? What will I be when next we meet? Father, what advice do you have, what comfort? Do you love me? You left your cherished Cardiff to bring me to this place; I know that is proof enough. I want to tell you I'll make you proud. I'll try hard, Father, truly I will. The great iron gate loomed. I shifted the duffel again, reached for Father's hand. It was thrust firmly in his jacket. We approached the gates, where the impassive sentries stood stiffly at their guardhouse. I turned to Father, my throat tight. He pointed to the guardhouse, put his hands on my shoulders and turned me to the waiting gates. Gently but firmly, he propelled me toward them. In a daze I passed through the gates, clutching my duffel. After a few unwilling steps I turned. Father strode toward the station. Willing him to glance my way, I waved to his back. He didn't pause, didn't once look over his shoulder before he disappeared from view. An iron ring closed itself around my neck. I blinked back the sting, and walked alone into Academy. Senator Boland gripped my arm. "Are you all right, Mr. Seafort? You've gone pale," I shook off his hand. "I'm quite well." After a moment I added, "Thank you," I beckoned to his son. "Robert, once we're within the gates I won't speak to you, or take special notice of you. You understand?" He nodded. "When you've said good-bye to your father, come inside. Remember he loves you, or he wouldn't be here." I cleared my throat. "You have nothing to fear." I nodded to the Senator, strode quickly into the compound. Chapter 6 Tolliver knocked on my door, stuck in his head. "They're ready for the oath, sir." "Very well." I stood, switched off my holo. "Care to come along?" "I wouldn't miss it for the world." His eyes danced despite my disapproving frown. As if he hadn't already gone too far he added, "I have the words on a card, sir, if you'd care to read them," "Tolliver!" "I gather you wouldn't," He fell into step beside me. As we strode down the steps he asked, "Remember your own oath, sir?" I stopped, "As if it were this morning." Something in my tone dampened his smile, "And you?" "1 could show you the spot I was standing," Somber now, we walked in silence to the Admin building, I climbed the turned to the meeting hall, "Attention!" The sergeant nearest the door stiffened as he barked the command. The other drill sergeants did likewise, along with Lieutenant Sieak and the middies. Several of the recruits made a halfhearted attempt to comply, which I ignored. "As you were." I marched to the front of the hall, wondering what to say. "Sergeant Radz, line them up in two rows." "Aye aye, sir! You, two steps forward! You, next to him. Get in line. Not so close!" In a moment, forty-seven boys and thirteen girls were in two ragged lines, arms at their sides. My words rang out. "I am Nicholas Ewing Seafort, Captain, U.N.N.S., and Commandant of the United Nations Naval Academy. The oath you are about to give is no mere promise, no formality. It is a commitment given freely to Lord God Himself, binding you to the U.N. Navy for five years, as my wards until such time as I may see fit to graduate you. The United Nations Naval Service is the finest military force ever to be assembled at any time, anywhere. "Those of you who wish to take the oath of enlistment, raise your right hands." All complied at once. I cleared my throat. "I—your name—" A murmur of voices. "Louder, please. This is not a thing you do in shame. I do swear upon my immortal soul..." "Do swear upon my immortal soul..." The voices strengthened, "To serve and protect the Charter of the General Assembly of the United Nations . .." "To serve and protect the Charter of the,.," One boy was trembling, perhaps in fear. Another lad's eyes glistened, "To give loyalty and obedience for the term of my enlistment to the Naval Service of the United Nations..." "To give loyalty and obedience for the term of my enlistment to the Naval Service of the United Nations..." Their voices, firmer now, echoed mine. "And to obey all its lawful orders and regulations, so help me Lord God Almighty." "And to obey all its lawful orders and regulations, so help me Lord God Almighty." A moment of silence, "You are now cadets in the United Nations Naval Service." I came to attention, snapped a parade ground salute, spun on my heel and marched out. Halfway to the office Tolliver caught up with me, "Jesus, son of God," "Um?" The blood coursed through my veins; my stride was swift. "Nothing I ever heard ..." He swallowed. "I've never heard the like." "Don't mock me." A moment's hesitation, then his voice came quieter, "I didn't, sir." "Hmpff, Come along, we have business to discuss," In the privacy of my office I pulled off my coat, tossed it over a coffee table. I put a chip in the holovid, spun it so*we could both see. "Our budget." "Yes, sir." I indicated the expense columns. "First, keep an eye on expenses, make sure we're staying within the guidelines." "Aye aye, sir. But doesn't the quartermaster—" "You do it. Second, I want you to spot-check that we actually receive items we're paying for." He looked at me with surprise, grinned abruptly. "A sort of inspector-general, as it were?" "That's not funny, Edgar." On Hope Nation I'd been appointed inspector-general, an escapade that ended with my relieving the commander of the Venturas Base, to my Admiral's spectacular wrath, "No, sir, of course not." I gritted my teeth, determined not to be bated. "Third, examine last year's accounts. Skip the items for which we indent, that are delivered from Naval stores. Look to all cash purchases. Verify what you can, and report any anomalies," He watched me closely. "You suspect something?" "Admiral Duhaney said we have sole discretion as to how our funds are spent. Our accounting system is bizarre. It's come about because of the Navy's cherished independence, but whoever dreamed up-—" I bit off the rest, realizing I'd been about to criticize my superiors in front of a subordinate, "Just check what you can." "Lieutenant Sleak is systems officer, and he's also my senior. He won't like my on his toes." "Try not to be obvious. If he objects, refer him to me,M "Aye aye, sir." Tolliver frowned, perusing the figures, "Does it matter whether we exceed the guidelines for each column, as long as—" "The Admiral said ..." I tried to recall his words, "He was anxious to catch a shuttle. We don't have to follow the spending guidelines. And something else: theoretically we don't have to account for the number of cadets. I had no idea what he meant, and I didn't get a chance to ask. Follow up on it. Look at the regs, ask someone in Accounting." "Aye aye, sir. Anything else?" "Not at the moment. Dismissed." By now the plebes would be lined up in front of the supply lockers, to be handed armfuls of in the age-old ritual of inductees everywhere, I leaned back, clasped my arms behind my head, rocked in the comfortable leather chair. First they'd be given gray slacks, then white shirts, then their gray jackets. Shoes and underwear on top of the pile. They would split into separate groups for each barracks, line up in single file, awkwardly carrying their loads. Surprisingly few officers were to be found in the groundside compound. Plebes were taken in hand by their drill sergeants, whom they would learn to obey without reservation. Officers, whom even the sergeants stiffened to salute, would be exalted beyond all understanding. Or so it had seemed at thirteen. Tall in! Did I say to face left? If you dropped it, pick it up, you twit!" He was six feet, two inches. He was burly; his voice had the menace of a wounded tiger. He was Marine Sergeant Darwin P. Swopes. He was God. We marched in a ragged line to Valdez Hall, a one-level alumalloy building clustered among many similar structures. Windows punctuated its clean white siding; three steps led to a wide doorway. I clutched my bundle of clothing in one arm, my bag from home in the other. "Single file. The first fifteen of you, stand at the foot of the beds to the right." He waited. 'The rest of you, to the left." I stood in front of my new bed, exchanging glances with the tousled boy to my right. His grin vanished as the sergeant entered the room. "Turn around, dump your gear on the foot of your bed, and turn back. Stand with your hands at your sides." He waited for us to comply. "You already heard my name, but some of you will be too dimwitted to remember. I am Sergeant Swopes. I will tell you how to address me. It is 'Sergeant Swopes,' or 'Sarge.'" "As you know, a sergeant is not normally called 'sir.' However, you are—" he spat the word—"children, not officers or troops. Therefore you will call me 'sir,' as in 'Yes, sir' or 'Aye aye, sir.1 In fact, you will call anything that moves 'sir' unless it is wearing gray like yourselves, or unless it is female, in which case you call it 'ma'am.' Do I make myself clear?" There was a ragged chorus of "Yes, sir." I began to sweat in my heavy flannel shirt. The correct response is 'Aye aye, sir.' If you're asked a question, the answer might be 'Yes, sir.' When you're given an instruction, the answer is 'Aye aye, sir.'" Across the aisle a hand wavered. Sergeant Swopes glared. "Well?" A tall, gawky boy whose ears stuck out at angles. "You asked if you made yourself clear. That was a question, wasn't it? So shouldn't we say 'Yes, sir1?" Sarge smiled. He sauntered to the ungainly boy. "Name?" "Von Halstein. Erich Von Halstein." "Erich Von Halstein, run around the outside of the barracks seven times. I want you back in two minutes. Move!" The boy gulped, "Yes, sir!" He scrambled to the door. Sarge roared, "Come back here!" The cadet skidded to a stop, ran back. "Was that a question or an order, boy?" "Uh, an order, sir." " 'Sarge' will do. As you so wisely pointed out, you respond to an order with ...?" "Aye aye, sir!" "Good. Since you already knew, three demerits for disobedience. You'll work off each demerit by two hours of calisthenics. Meanwhile, around the barracks! Get moving!" "Yes—aye aye, sir!" He ran out the door. As the door swung closed Sarge muttered, "I hate sea lawyers." He turned to the rest of us. "Any more questions?" After the perspiring and frantic Von Halstein had returned—and received another demerit for tardiness—Sarge had us move the items we'd brought from home to our pillows, leaving the gear the Navy had issued us at the foot of the bed. "You will now, each of you, strip off everything you are wearing, put it on your pillow, and head for the showers. Towels are on a rack in the head." I blanched. Everything, in public? Amid girls? Impossible; I couldn't do it. "After you shower I will choose two cadets at random for close physical inspection. Lord God help you if I'm not satisfied with your cleanliness. Move!" I hesitated just long enough for Sarge's eye to stray in my direction. Mortified, I began to strip. The room was absolutely silent except for the scrape of shoes and the rustle of cloth. Covering myself as best I could, I stumbled to the shower room with the rest of my squad. Most of the boys were too embarrassed to steal looks at the girls among us. I scrubbed with diligence, praying fervently that Sarge not choose me for inspection. By the time we returned to our bunks, towels tied securely around us, Sergeant was almost done with our gear. A few items remained on my pillow: my books, my chips, the paper. The clothing I'd worn was on the floor, along with my bag. "You will dress in your cadet clothing. Then you will pack the bags you brought from home with everything I put on the floor. Those items go into storage. Anything left on your pillow you will put in your duffel, which you will stow under your bed. Return the towels to the head, and when you're done, fall In outside and I'll take you for haircuts. Oh, yes. You,,. and you. Come here." He hadn't chosen me. I was dizzy with relief. Numbed and docile with shock, we followed Sarge from barber to mess hall, and back to barracks. We spent the entire evening stripping and remaking our bunks, until every bed was made to his satisfaction. "Lights Out will be in half an hour. You will be In your shorts, ready for bed. Anyone wanting to use the head must do so before then." I closed my eyes, sick with dread. The toilets were set in a row opposite the sinks, with no fronts to the stalls. I knew I'd be unable to relieve myself, perhaps for days, "I'll be back just before Lights Out." When Sarge returned, boys and girls were talking quietly across their beds. I sat alone, yearning for solitude, for my creaking bed in Father's familiar home. Sarge's voice was surprisingly gentle as he turned the lights down. "You, sit on that bed. You too. I want both of you over there." In moments he had us sitting three to a bed, apparently at random. I sat stiffly, trying not to rub shoulders with the shy girl whose arms were crossed over her short white T-shirt. "Some of you joeys were from North America. A few were from Germany, two from Lunapolis. From across the globe, and beyond. That's where you were from." He slowly walked the aisle, "But that's over and done. Now you're from Valdez. This is your home, and these are your mates." He stopped in front of our bed. "Seafort, touch her face. Both hands, she won't bite. Sanders, put your hand on his shoulder. I want all of you touching each other." Embarrassed beyond words, I raised tentative fingers to Cadet Sanders's face, while the third boy's clammy hand rested on my knee. Sarge's voice was hushed. "You are now members of the finest military force known to man. These are your brothers, your comrades. You need not be embarrassed at their touch, at their view of your bodies. Their accomplishments are your own. Your honor is theirs, and their honor yours. If you He, you shame them. If you betray them, you betray yourself, your Navy, and Lord God. "Years from now, when you sail the void between the stars, you win know that every officer In the U.N.N.S. shares your bond. For now, strive to be the best you can, for your mates' sake. From time to time you will fall, and you will be punished. Eventually, you will succeed, "This morning, you were strangers. Now you are bunk-mates, embarked on a mission to prove yourselves worthy of the Navy and of each other. Return to your beds." I crept back to my bunk. "Good night." He strode to the door, left. Within the barracks, all was still, Our cadets settled in to the whirlwind of their new lives. Five days later, I gave the oath to our group, and, from a distance, watched the rituals repeat themselves. During the week Senator Boland called three times to inquire about his son Robert; I managed to duck all his calls. The desk sergeant offered him the same rote reassurances that any other parent would receive. Furlough ended for the second-year cadets; soon every barracks space would be taken, until we began shipping youngsters back to Farside. I debated going there myself, but didn't. Here in Devon, I could be in New York within hours, should Annie call. Aloft, the Home Fleet patrolled in vain. No fish were sighted anywhere. Days passed; our third and fourth groups of cadets arrived and we processed them as we had the others. Increasingly restless, I stalked the Academy compound while exasperated sergeants taught their cadets the rudiments of calisthenics, military posture, obedience. I marveled at their patience. One evening I strolled through the barracks area, avoiding dorms I knew to be occupied. My drill sergeants had enough on their shoulders without surprise inspections by the Commandant. Musing, I stopped in front of an empty building. Our next to last group of recruits would arrive in two days. Within a week our roster would be complete. Which among the anxious youths we took into our company would become another Hugo Von Walthers, which a dismal failure? If only we knew. It all began here, in aging barracks like the one I faced. Idly, I stepped through the door, switched on the light. Thirty bare mattresses, thirty empty bunks. I wandered past the steel bed frames, ran my fingers over the dusty windows. In days this dorm would be throbbing with activity and anticipation, with fears and suffering as boys groped to become men. "Can I help—oh, pardon me, sir." I turned; Sergeant Olvira flipped an easy salute, came to attention. "As you were." Embarrassed, I thrust my hand in my pocket. "I was just—wandering." He nodded, as if encountering the Commandant in a deserted barracks were a common occurrence. "Yes, sir." "And what are you doing here, Sarge?" It wasn't much, but I had to say something. "Valdez will be my barracks, sir. I heard the door open." Sergeants were housed in apartments adjacent to their barracks, sharing a wall. They had privacy, but were on hand should need arise. Though it was questionable how much privacy they enjoyed, if Sergeant Olvira could hear my quiet step. "Sorry, Sarge. I didn't mean to intrude." "No problem, sir. I was/ looking over my paperwork, before the joeys get here." He hesitated. "I have fresh coffee, if you'd like." "No, thanks." My tone was cool. Bad enough I'd spent an hour with him in the staff lounge. It wasn't appropriate for a commander to socialize with subordinates, and worse, some would see it as favoritism. "Sorry to have disturbed you, sir. I'll leave you be." He waited for dismissal; I nodded. Alone, I sat on a bed, tried to quell my annoyance. He had to have noticed my abruptness. What had been his sin: to offer me a cup of coffee? I stood, wandered to the end of the room. Whatever enjoyment I might have had in my visit was gone. I snapped off the light, left the building. I started back to Officers' Quarters, but my pace slowed. It was only coffee. I'd been too brusque. I returned to the barracks, found the outside entrance to his apartment. "May I take you up on the drink?" Sergeant Olvira concealed any surprise at my abrupt appearance. "Of course, sir. Come in." He stood aside. I sat at his table, waited while he fetched sugar, cream. He poured my cup, warmed his own and sat. "It'll be good to get back to work again." I smiled politely. "You didn't fancy your leave?" "I'm not much for time off. I only took a week." "In a couple of days you'll have your hands full." I sipped at the steaming brew. He pushed aside the pile of folders to hunch forward, elbows on the table. One file slid down; I grabbed at it. The cover flipped open to a half-page photo of an earnest youngster. I closed the folder, tossed it back on the stack. "What are you working at?" "Putting names to faces. A head start really helps. And I like to know about the joeys when I see them." I hadn't known sergeants did that. I'd never known much about how they worked. "Find anything interesting?" "No, not really." he sighed. "This one, for example. French. Theroux. Fourteen, mother a Dosman in Paris. Father deceased. In his admissions essay he said he'd dreamed of joining in the Navy ever since he saw Celestina Voyage. Awful bilge, that holo, but I can see it inspiring a young joe. Maybe it will never help me to know that. Perhaps it may come in handy." "Theroux." "Jacques Theroux. He's just one of—" "Let me see the folder." "Aye aye, sir." Social visit or no, he immediately obeyed an order. The boy looked solemnly past me to the holocamera and beyond. But for Tolliver's intervention, he'd be languishing over a rejection letter rather than rechecking his traveling bag, counting anxious hours. Which youth had been left off the list, so Theroux could attend Academy? I hadn't even bothered to ask. I snapped shut the file. "Is something wrong, sir?" I shook myself back to reality. "No, nothing." I made small talk until I was free to escape into the night. I paused at the mess hall door, tugged at my jacket. "All right, I'm ready." Tolliver held open the door. "Attention!" The bellow rang through the room. Two hundred forty cadets stood instantly, came to attention. Most of them got it right. Hair neatly brushed, ties straight, trousers creased; their sergeants wouldn't have permitted otherwise. I strode past their benches to the circular table at the front of the hall. My officers saluted as I approached. I raised my voice. "As you were." More quietly, to my own table, "Be seated, gentlemen." Lieutenant Sleak, Edgar Tolliver, Sergeant Obutu, and several instructors without barracks took their seats. Until now, I'd had little contact with them. Perhaps I should drop in on the classrooms from time to time, though that wouldn't make the instructors' tasks any easier. "That tryout of the new gunnery simulator was great," Sergeant Olvira remarked, helping himself to soup. Sleak passed the bowl along. "How's it look, Gunnie?" Olvira grinned. "You should have seen Ramon's face when he came out. He can't wait 'til it gets here." I asked, "Ramon?" "Ramon Ibarez, sir. He's assistant gunnie." "Oh, yes." I colored, chagrined that I hadn't remembered. "He was that impressed?" "It's overpowering, sir. When we get it installed you could give it a try. You're in a cabin just like laser fire control on a ship of the line. When the fish appear you practice with the usual firing screens, but there's also a huge puter-driven simulscreen, and you actually see the fish you hit. It's more like the real thing than ... the real thing!" I tried to warm to his enthusiasm, though the idea of facing fish once again, even in simulation, was repugnant. "I'll give it a test. Though gunnery was never my best—Yes? What?" "Midshipman Sandra Ekrit reporting, sir." She paused to catch her breath. "Mr. Diego says, a call from Admiral Duhaney, and do you want to take it in your office?" I don't want it at all. "No, I'll get it by the door." I stood, waving my fellow officers back to their seats. Across the hall I took up the caller. "Seafort." "Just a moment for Admiral Duhaney." I waited. Several minutes passed. I shifted uncomfortably from foot to foot, aware of curious glances from the cadets. It wasn't good form to let them see their Commandant holding the line like an errand boy waiting for instructions. Finally the receiver crackled. "Seafort?" "Yes, sir." "Glad I reached you. Give Senator Boland a ring, would you? He's worried about his boy." "Are you serious?" The words slipped out before I could stop them. A pause I thought would never end. "Yes, I'm serious, Captain Seafort. He had trouble getting through to you, and I promised to look into it. Talk to the barracks sergeant, make sure everything's all right, and give the man a call. I'll check later to make sure he's satisfied." "I don't—aye aye, sir." There was nothing else I could say. It was an order. "You might let the boy talk to his father now and then." I stared at the caller; surely he couldn't mean it. I swallowed an unwise reply. "I'll consider it." He snapped, "Don't get on your high horse, Seafort. Boland's committee controls our purse strings." "I know that." My voice was cold. "Oh, by the way, that new puter program you brought back on Victoria. The Dosmen have gone wild over it. We're going to reprogram most of the fleet." "Is Billy all right?" I felt a fool for asking. "Billy is what you call it? Victoria's puter hasn't been powered down, if that's what you mean. It warned us that data would be irretrievably lost. The program's too complicated to unravel quickly, so we're taking no chances." I smiled. William, Orbit Station's late puter, had even thought to safeguard his son's life. Or maybe Billy had thought of it on his own. "Keep Boland happy, Seafort. One hand washes the other." "Very well, sir." He rung off. Brooding, I walked slowly to my seat. What he'd asked of me was wrong, and I'd agreed to it without protest. Tolliver looked up. "Everything all right?" "Fine." I stared at my cold meal, beckoned the steward. 'Take this away." Subdued conversation resumed while I stared at the starched white cloth. After dinner I went back to my office, closed the door, slumped in my leather chair while behind me the day turned to dusk. Just a call, a quick reassurance. No need to make so much of it. The boy needn't even know. But it was hardly customary for the Commandant to ask after the health of a cadet; the moment I spoke to Ibarez, he'd know Robert Boland was under special scrutiny. Inevitably, the boy's treatment would subtly change, and just as inevitably, it would poison the boy's relations with his fellow cadets. Yet I had no choice. I'd been given an order, and I'd assented. The caller buzzed. Tolliver. "About those figures you asked me to look into, I have some interesting—" "Not now!" I slammed down the caller. What was the point of a receptionist, if any officer on the base could harass me when—Well, Tolliver was my aide, and could bypass the middy in the outer office. Still, his calls were an annoyance; I should have them blocked. But then, what was the point of having an aide? Muttering under my breath, I stood, paced the room until my ire cooled. The caller buzzed again. I snatched it up. "No more calls!" "Aye aye, sir. Sorry." Midshipman Guthrie Smith. "I just thought, it being your wife—" Cursing, I keyed the caller, dropped back in my chair. "Annie?" "Hullo, Nicky." Her voice seemed eons away. "I talked to Dr. O'Neill and he—I wanted to call." "I'm glad. I've missed you." "How are things? You gettin' the cadets in line?" She giggled, sounding her old self. "I'm trying." I withheld my questions, determined not to press. "Nicky, I ain't felt too good, these days. Sometimes I think, if you just came, took me someplace, it'd be all right. I lie down in bed wid ... with you, you hold me tight." I took a slow breath, controlled my tone. "I could come anytime. Tonight, if you like." Even if I had to steal a training heli. "No, I don't want that." She sounded firm. "Sometimes I feel that way, like I said. But other times I don't. I wan' wait 'til it's right, alia time." I ventured, "Maybe that won't happen until we're together, all the time." "Yeah. I don't know. Thas' what I wanted ta say, I don't know. And I wanted ta hear your voice." "God, I love you, Annie." Tears were in her tone. "I love you too, Nicky. Can you understand that, and still I wanta be alone?" I hesitated, chose honesty. "No, hon. I can't. Maybe it's because I want to be with you so much." "Oh, Nicky." She sounded sad, and I felt twinges of guilt. "It's all ri—" "Lemme think about it some. I call you, maybe a few days. Maybe tomorrow." "All right, love." "Bye, now." She rang off, and I sat, desolate. After a few minutes I stood heavily, determined to get my unpleasant chore done with. Outside, the evening air was braced with the crisp tang of early fall. As I strode the white walkway a lone cadet looked up, quickly returned to his clippers. I wondered what had been his sin. I crossed the compound to barracks, found Valdez Hall. Lights Out would sound in fifteen minutes. I would wait to see Sergeant Ibarez after he came out; better that than making my mission known to his cadets. Meanwhile, I didn't want to skulk around as if spying on the barracks. I moved off, wandered in the dark past other dorms. Wright Hall; the front door swung open, a gray-clad youth dashed down the steps, ran to the comer of the building, faced the wall, assumed the at-ease position. I sauntered over. "What are you doing?" "Sir, I—" The door opened. "Go on, tell him! Good evening, sir." Sergeant Radz. Jerence Branstead said loudly, "I'm learning not to be insolent to my betters, sir." The sergeant gave no quarter. "And how long will that take, cadet?" "I—as long as you say, Sarge." "I'd guess about half the night, if you start now." "Yessir!" I'd had no business interfering, but it was too late. Well, in for a penny ... "Why are you letting him off, Sarge? We have ways of dealing with troublemakers." "Yes, sir. I'd hoped—" "Send him to my office in the morning." Jerence blanched. "If I decide he's going to be a problem I'll have a middy pick up his gear in barracks. We've plenty of candidates who'll appreciate their training." "Aye aye, sir." I would let Jerence off with a couple hours of running around the compound on errands, but the boy needn't know that yet. Let him spend the night in anticipation of a Commandant's caning; he wouldn't be so quick to irritate his sergeant in future. "Very well." The sergeant saluted; as I turned to go, he winked. Reluctantly I retraced my steps to Valdez. Lights were out, and the door shut. Swallowing my distaste I went around the side to Sergeant Ibarez's door, knocked. "I thought I told you— Oh, good evening, sir." he waited. "Is there ... did you want to come in?" "I—no." I yearned to turn on my heel, go to my apartment. But I couldn't ignore Admiral Duhaney's order. On the other hand, how would he know I hadn't really checked with Ibarez? I could tell Senator Boland all was well with Robert, as surely it was. No, I couldn't require my cadets to obey orders if I myself refused. And the Admiral had been quite specifics ask the barracks sergeant how Robert was doing, and tell his father. "Sarge, I—" Was that how Duhaney had put it? I strove to recall his words. "Talk to the barracks sergeant, make sure everything's all right and give Boland a call." Did 1 dare? Was it outright disobedience? I knew what the Admiral had meant. Was I turning into a sea lawyer, at this late date? On the other hand, for the boy's sake ... I smiled. "Is everything all right, Sarge?" Ibarez stammered, "I, um, I don't... Yes, sir." "Very well, then. Carry on." I walked with jaunty step to my office, looked up Senator Boland's number. Walking back to my apartment, I grimaced. My fatuous reassurances still rang in my ears. I'd pointedly ignored the Senator's hints about speaking directly with his son. He hadn't been satisfied, but had chosen not to press me. I buzzed Tolliver. "Are you awake?" "Yes, sir. The Navy never sleeps." "Belay that. You wanted to discuss your report?" His tone became businesslike. "Are you in your apartment? I can be right over." "I didn't mean to—" "Quite all right, sir. By morning you might be in a mood to hang up again. I'll be right there." I growled a rebuke, rang off. The man could be impossible. Still, he was conscientious, and knew me as few others. Fifteen minutes later he sat on my couch, legs crossed, scanning his notes. "I'll tell you right off I haven't found anything specific, sir. But in many cases there's nothing to find." "How do you mean?" "Fuel deliveries, for example. There's nothing in the files to show whether we've actually received them. No invoices to check, no receipts." "How does the quartermaster explain that?" "I haven't asked Sergeant Serenco, sir. You told me not to be obvious. And it's not just fuel. The uniform allowances—" I felt uneasy. "Perhaps we ought to get Sleak in on this." "Perhaps we shouldn't, sir." His eyes met mine. I grimaced. If my systems lieutenant was engaged in accounting fraud ... "Keep searching. See what else you find." "Aye aye, sir." He closed his file. "By the way, I checked with Lunapolis on that other matter. It seems—" "Other matter?" "The way expenses are broken down per cadet. It seems your expense guidelines are rather pointless. They're only valid if you assume the same number of cadets each year. But—" I was nettled. "What else can we assume? We take three hundred eighty." "Yes, sir, but apparently that's just tradition. The number of cadets is a function of the budget, not the other way around. If—" "What's that supposed to mean?" "Perhaps you might occasionally let me finish a sentence. It means that historically the number of cadets we enrolled depended on how much money they gave us. But Naval staffing, like all tradition, hardens to stone, so when we achieved three hundred eighty cadets all future budgets were based on the assumption we'd admit that number the next year. If you want to spend more on each cadet, you can reduce enrollment. There are no orders or regulations to stop you." "Good Lord." "Fascinating institution, the Navy." "Well, it's of no consequence. We're not about to cut back when a third of the fleet needs replacement. Keep tracking those expenses." "Aye aye, sir." After he left, I turned out the lights and went to bed. Chapter 7 Midafternoon. I left my office, crossed the compound to the meeting hall. "ATTENTION!" The clump of recruits tried unsuccessftilly to imitate the stiff demeanor of their sergeant. "As you were. Line them up, Sarge." Boys and girls settled into two ragged lines. "I'm Nicholas Seafort, Commandant of U.N.N.S. Naval Academy. I am about to give you the oath of enlistment into the Naval Service." I paused, trying to recall the speech I'd made to the first group, some weeks before, "By this oath you will be bound to the U.N.N.S. Navy for five years. You will be my wards until I deem you ready for graduation." One older boy sniffled, wiped his eyes. I looked awiy. A sergeant would have his hands full with that one. "The U.N. Navy is the finest fighting force in the world. You will be privileged to join it. Those of you who wish to take the oath of enlistment, raise your hands." 1 waited a solemn moment. Sixty youngsters stood with right irms raised. "I—your name—" Someone cleared his throat, loudly, I whirled, furious at the interruption. Tolliver pointed urgently to the front row. No, not sixty arms raised. Fifty-nine, I glared at a tall, ungainly joey of fifteen. "Raise your hand for the oath!" Hugging himself, he mumbled, "I changed my mind," He shuffled his feet. "I want to go home." Other youngsters stared, "I—but—" I stumbled to a halt. "Good Lord." A red-faced drill sergeant moved toward the recruit, murder in his eye. I waved him back, looked helplessly to Tolliver, who shrugged. "I don't know, sir. Has it ever happened before?*' "Sarge?" Sergeant Olvira said, "Not since I've been here. Eleven years." Someone snickered. The ceremony tottered on the verge of chaos. Take him out," I snapped. "Flank!" Two instructors converged on the miserable boy, hustled him out the door. Should I talk to him? No. A cadet had to aspire to Academy. The Navy wouldn't beg for recruits. "Raise your right hands." The gap-toothed row complied immediately, as did the row behind. Our recruits were volunteers, not draftees. We'd send the unworthy child back to his family in disgrace. "Now. I—" Damn. I ground to a halt. "Keep them in place!" I strode to the door. A drill sergeant had the boy by the collar, as if to prevent his escape. I planted myself in front of the abashed youngster "Name!" "Loren Reitzman." "Age!" He gulped. "Fifteen, last March." "Inside, I have thirteen-year-olds who know what they want. Why don't you, Reitzman?" "I'm sorry. I didn't mean—" "Answer my question!" "I don't know, sir. I wanted to be a cadet. But the soldiers, the yelling ..," He wiped his eyes. "If I go back now, Dad will..," He hugged himself tighter, "I can't ever show my face at school. But if I stay—" "Yes?" He whispered, "It's just. . . The other joeys are all smarter than me; I couldn't even understand their jokes today. I don't want to be with people like that. I get scared." I said softly, "You'd rather go home, remember all your life you gave up without trying?" He shook his head. "What if... I can't make it?" "Then you'll have failed. But you'll have tried first." He bit back a sob. "I'm afraid." "Very well, Sarge, take—" "Wait! I'll take the oath. Give me another chance," I turned his face to meet mine, "You're sure?" He swallowed. "Yes, sir," Was I doing the right thing? I couldn't know, "Sarge, take Mr, Reitzman back inside." Moments later I was intoning the familiar ritual. "To give loyalty and obedience ... to obey all its lawful orders and regulations, so help me Lord God Almighty." I waited until the last murmurs had subsided. "You are now U.N.N.S. cadets." I saluted, turned to the sergeant. "Get them out of here," I growled. I pointed at Loren Reitzman. "Except him. He's to be caned for bringing dishonor to the ceremony of enlistment." I ignored Cadet Reitzman's anguished look of betrayal. Harsh, perhaps, but necessary. He'd get over it, and he'd serve as an example to his mates that Naval traditions were not to be trifled with. After dinner I went to my apartment, loosened my tie. I sat at my newly-installed console, idly flipping through cadet files. The caller buzzed. "Yes?" "Lieutenant Sleak." His voice was tense, "I'd like to meet with you as soon as possible." "Come now, then," I rang off, perused my folders until his knock. He saluted, followed me into my living room. "Well?" "You have my resignation if you'd like, sir. Or if you prefer I'll request a transfer." I blinked, "The boy was way out of line, refusing the oath in front of all the others. If I'd known you felt that strongly about—" "What on earth are you talking about?" I ignored his acid tone. "Loren Reitzman. The cadet. I know it was his first day but—" "This isn't about a bloody cadet!" "What, then?" He faced me, hands on hips. "Your clumsy undercover examination of my accounts. Your man Tolliver sneaking about, checking serial numbers on laser rifles. His innocent questions to my quartermaster." "He's doing that at my—" "Whatever you'd like to know, ask me outright. Or, if you don't trust me, cashier me! I swore an oath just as those cadets today, and I'm not about to betray it for a few bloody unibucks!" "It's not that—" "Commandant Kearsey would never have—" "How dare you interrupt a Captain!" My voice rose, "HOW DARE YOU?" His tirade ground to a halt, "I'm sorry," "I'm sorry, sir!" "I'm sorry, sir. I apologize for interrupting. But that doesn't negate my point." My tone was icy. "Stand at attention, First Lieutenant Sleak." He complied immediately. "You'll pardon my confusion. I've spent my career on ships of the line, where a lieutenant couldn't imagine dressing down his Captain." He flushed. "So, not knowing the proper shoreside protocol, I'll respond as if we're in the real Navy. Will you go along with the pretense?" "I—yes, sir. Aye aye, sir." "Very well. Three weeks pay for insubordination, and a reprimand in your file. One more incident and I'll write you up for court-martial. Is that understood?" His look was wary, his voice under control. "Yes, sir," "Stand easy. As to my investigation, I see fit to audit the Academy accounts. They are my accounts, not yours, even though you're handling them. Since you're aware of the inquiry, you will give whatever assistance Lieutenant Tolliver may ask. Acknowledge." "Orders received and understood, sir." A surface calm, flickering anger beneath. "Is there anything else?*' "I request a transfer, sir." The man had backbone. "Under advisement. Dismissed." I waited until he'd gone, sat staring at my list of new cadets. The nerve! Even groundside, nothing could justify Sleak's conduct. What kind of commander had Captain Kearsey been, to tolerate such an attitude? Yet how was Sleak's outrage different from mine, when I'd heard of Lieutenant Crossburn's insinuating questions on Hiber-nial I flushed. At least our audit was out in the open. Tolliver would accomplish more, and faster. A knock at my door. Was there to be no peace? I flung it open. "Lieutenant Paulson reporting, sir," A sheen of perspiration on his forehead. "I, um, have a message." "Well?" "Admiral Duhaney called, and the middy transferred it to me. He—" "You should have put him through." "He asked for the duty officer. I was to give you the message, sir. He—" Paulson paused. "Get on with it!" "Aye aye, sir." Paulson seemed relieved by my order. "Mr. Duhaney said to tell you he was fed up with your prevarications." "What?" "That's the word he said to use, sir. You're to give Mr. Boland every cooperation, and stop wasting his time and tfie Admiral's. He said he recognizes that you are in charge of Academy, that you are free to act within your authority and carry out regulations as you see fit, but that Naval policy is set from above and you will comply with it," My ears burned. I closed my eyes, forced myself to respond past the humiliation, "Is there anything else. Lieutenant?" "No, sir. He ordered me to give you the message word for word, and to log it." "Very we—" He blurted, "I wish I hadn't been there. He shouldn't have— I'm sorry." "Thank you." I shut the door, paced the silent, accusing room. I'd resign, of course. Admiral Duhaney had delivered his rebuke publicly, before my subordinates. The approach conveyed the clear message I no longer held his confidence. He'd chewed me out like a rank cadet, like— The corners of my mouth twitched. Like I'd just done to Lieutenant Sleak. I'd gotten as I'd given. Still, at least I'd had the decency to censure the man in private. Well, no. By taking Sleak's pay and logging a reprimand, Td made the matter public for the world to see. I sighed. Perhaps I could withdraw-The caller buzzed, 1 whirled, snatched it from the console, "Now what?" "I—Sergeant Olvira reporting, sir, I hope I'm not intni—" "Yes, you're intruding, but that's why I'm here. What is it?" His tone stiffened. "Aye aye, sir. I apologize; perhaps I shouldn't have called. About that cadet, Reitzman, the one who refused—" "Yes?" "He's in my flat, crying and carrying on like a baby, sir. Lieutenant Sleak went hard on him, he's got a few welts on his rump, can't sit down. I can detl with it, but I thought, given he didn't even want to take the oith ..." "Yes?" "Should we cut our losses, sir? Send him home after all?" I controlled my ire, considered his suggestion. We had no room for weaklings in the wardroom. Middies had to—no, Reitzman wasn't a middy, not yet. He was a cadet until I decided he was qualified. "He made his bed, Sarge. Now let him sleep in it. Give him a little comfort, he needs that, but put him back in barracks. If he won't settle down, warn him if you send him to me in the morning, I'll have him begging to report back to Mr. Sleak." A pause. "Aye aye, sir." I shook my head with impatience. The man didn't understand. "And, Sarge, see to it that he doesn't need to be sent to me." His tone warmed noticeably. "Aye aye, sir. I'll handle it." I replaced the caller, paced anew. What was happening to the Navy? First Sleak's tantrum, then the Admiral's appalling message to my duty lieutenant, then Sarge... I shook my head. It was all my doing. If I hadn't gone behind Sleak's back, if I'd trusted him as a conscientious officer, he wouldn't have taken offense and wouldn't have been penalized. If I'd obeyed my own orders from Duhaney, the Admiral wouldn't be incensed. And if 1 had trusted my instincts and sent Reitzman home when he'd refused the oath, the boy wouldn't have been brutalized and I wouldn't be dealing with a miserable, frightened youngster, when other, more willing joeys had been denied the chance. To top it off, I now had to call Senator Boland and eat humble pie before that situation worsened. I stalked the room, whirling to pace the opposite direction. "Policy is set from above and you're to comply with it." Damn his policy. Now I was to be a lackey, supervised in every detail. I should have asked for ship duty. Was it too late? Probably, for now. The Commandant couldn't resign during his first month, it suggested scandal. None of this would have happened if Admiral Brentley still had Fleet Ops. Well, Duhaney had admitted he was more politician than Admiral. But how could I command Academy, subject to his every whim? Comply with policy, Seafort. Toady to the Senator. I flung myself into my chair. Be fair. That's not all he'd said. "You're free to act within your authority and carry out regulations as you see fit." But what did that signify, if he decided that special treatment for Senator Boland was a matter of policy? I was but a cog in the machine. Take three hundred eighty cadets chosen by others, run them through the process, spit them out the other end. Other than Final Cull, I had no say in which cadets we took, or how many, no way to ... I stared at my console. "You're free to act within your authority ..." Was there a way? I chewed on my finger, mesmerized by the console screen. A long time later I roused myself, keyed my caller, spoke to the middy on watch. "Seafort. My compliments to Lieutenants Tol-liver and Sleak, and would they meet me in my office in five— what time is it?—ten minutes." I rang off. It took only a moment to straighten my tie, thrust on my jacket. I crossed the compound, ran up the Admin Building steps, hurried into my outer office. Midshipman Thayer came to attention. They're not here yet, sir." "What's keep—very well. Is there coffee?" "It's old, sir." "That'll do." I sipped at a cup of warm sludge, grimaced. Tolliver was the first to arrive; like me, he'd recently served on ship and was used to being called at odd hours. A few moments later Sleak followed; the look he gave Tolliver was within the bounds of civility, but barely so. "Edgar, you said if I wanted to spend more on each cadet, I could reduce enrollment. Is that true?" "Yes. Are you aware what hour it is?" "Belay that." I looked to Sleak. "Are you familiar with those regs?" His tone was aloof. "I understand their import." "Does Tolliver have it right?" "Technically speaking. But—" "Very well. What if I want to spend less on each cadet?" Tolliver said, "Sir, is now the right time to cut back on training just to save money?" "Not to save it. To spend it." Like a child at Christmas I savored the moment before turning to the console. I tapped the keys, working through the menus to the screen I wanted. "Here. The list of admissions." "Yes, sir." "And this list of candidates before Final Cull. A difference of forty names." "Yes, sir?" "Send a letter, immediate delivery. 'We regret that an inadvertent miscalculation of the number of spaces available caused you to receive a notice rejecting your application. You are hereby granted admission to the United Nations Na—" "What?" Tolliver was on his feet. " '—Naval Academy. You are to confirm by return mail and report, et cetera. Signed Nicholas E. Seafort, Commandant.' You know the form." Sleak said, "But we don't have spaces for—" "We have empty beds aplenty, now that all second year cadets have been shipped aloft." "Supplies? Food?" "There's slack in the budget. Use the money set aside to entertain. Cancel staff travel perks. Cancel my liquor ration, I don't use it." Tolliver. "We'd have to open up another dorm. Who'd take it?" "Use one of the classroom instructors, or take it yourself." "Me?" "What's the matter, can't handle a few starstruck cadets?" "No, sir, I'm not—but why?" My fist struck the table. "Because I think it right." And to get even with Admiral Duhaney. 1 banished the unworthy thought. As if reading my mind Sleak said, "Perhaps you should check with Admiralty, sir?" "No. I had a message from Fleet Ops tonight." Sleak wiped off a look of satisfaction, but not before I'd seen it. So he'd already heard. Even here, scuttlebutt flew faster than a ship in Fusion. I said firmly, "Admiral Duhaney made clear that I'm free to act within my authority and carry out regulations as 1 see fit." That hadn't been the gist of his message, but the words had been included. They'd be in the Log, if I cared to look. Sleak said, "You're sure that's what you want to do, sir?" "Yes. Any objections?" He shook his head as if I hadn't spoken with sarcasm. "No, sir. We'll have to recalculate all our... The letter is first, of course. It has to go out right away." "Yes." "Mr. Tolliver, you'll help me draft it? You'll want to sign it tonight, Captain, so it will make the morning faxes. If you want to go to bed, I can have the middy knock when it's ready. Then Tolliver and I can set up staff meetings for tomorrow. Even if we open another barracks we'll have to squeeze a couple of extra cadets into each of the other dorms." I watched, amazed. Sleak was deep in logistics, as if my savage reprimand were forgotten. Perhaps for the moment, it was. I left him to his work. At breakfast Tolliver looked bleary. I said nothing, knowing he could catch up on his sleep when opportunity arose. Any middy knew how to do that. After, on the way back to my office, I crossed the parade ground, stopped to watch a squad of shirtless cadets sweating at jumping jacks, sit-ups, and push-ups under the tutelage of Sergeant Ibarez. In the front row, Robert Boland struggled diligently at sit-ups while another youngster held his ankles. I quickly looked away. He'd get no special attention. Still, on the way back to my office I braced myself for the call to his father. I perched on my desk, scanned the morning's memos. For the new dorm, Sleak had drafted a classroom instructor who'd had a barracks before; Tolliver wouldn't have to undergo the ordeal. I dawdled at my console, scrutinizing figures, approving indents, rechecking the arrival dates of our last, largest batch of cadets until at last I could leave for lunch. In the crowded mess hall I passed Cadet Reitzman's table, realized he hadn't been sent to my office. Well, I hadn't expected he would. For all their toughness, our drill sergeants usually knew when a gentle word would help. After all, their job was to help the joeys succeed, not destroy them. I looked again, noticed that the boy was absent from the hall. I assumed he'd remain so for a couple of days, until he could sit on a pillowed chair. Already I could observe improvements in the cadets' demeanor, their dress and grooming. In a few weeks they would come to look like officer trainees, instead of spoiled civilian children. I spooned my soup. The discipline, the physical exertion, the sense of brotherhood of those early days of Academy were almost too much to grasp. I stared into the bowl. Almost too much to grasp... A hand closed around my upper arm, hurled me from the bed to the cold hard floor. "One demerit, Seafort. You too, Sanders. Reveille sounded three minutes ago!" I groaned, stumbled to my feet. Arlene Sanders glanced to my shorts, grinned. Scarlet, I spun around, clawed for my pants. I couldn't help the bulge. It wasn't fair that she laugh. In ten minutes we'd be marched to breakfast. I had to hurry. I dashed into the head, waited in line for a stall. After, I grabbed a towel, ran to a sink, scrubbed myself. A few days earlier Sarge had decided Von Halstein wasn't clean enough, had hauled him back into the head, made us all watch while... I soaped my chest, under my arms. There were limits. I'd die if he did that to me. I ignored the razors sitting on the sill; I didn't need one yet. Soon, I hoped. Some boys used them every day. After breakfast, the calisthenics. I didn't mind them so much, other than push-ups. Sergeant Swopes had a way of flicking his baton if you faltered. It stung. When we were ready to drop from exhaustion he gave us two minutes rest before leading us to the track at the edge of the field. We mingled with Sergeant Tailor's squad from Renault Hall. Tailor smiled. "My turn, Darwin. Okay, joeys. Four laps today." We groaned. Tolliver, you take the lead." A tall, slim second-year cadet ran forward. "Aye aye, sir!" "I'll bring up the rear," said Sergeant Tall6r. I made a face. If he came close enough to touch you with his baton, you were caned after the run. It hadn't happened often, and they said Lieutenant Zorn went easy, but I didn't want to find out. Afterward, we ran back to the showers. Soaping up, I looked over my shoulder, found myself next to Arlene Sanders. Her hair smelled clean. She giggled, and after a moment I smiled weakly. I remained facing the wall, though, until at last I screwed up my courage, turned casually. But she was gone, thrusting her way through the steamy shower room to the door and the towels beyond. A dark-skinned Indian boy groaned theatrically. "Oh, if she were only a civilian." We laughed. After lunch and classes Sarge ran us to the training grounds, where our instructor threw suits at us from the rack. We had to stand holding them while they ran a training holo on the large screen overhead. "Okay, lads. Help each other put them on. Make sure your air is turned on before you attach your helmets. Then, one at a time, walk through the room to the left, meet me outside." "Aye aye, sir!" Our response was still ragged, but improving. Back in barracks, where we'd grown used to Sergeant Swopes's cadence, we spoke almost as one. I fumbled with the helmet clamps. No, the air tank first. I waited for the hiss. Now the helmet. The holo had said something about... clamp and turn. I twisted dutifully. The helmet seemed secure. I took my place in line. One at a time, Sergeant Swopes thrust us into the mysterious room to the left, closed the door again. When it was my turn I stumbled in, propelled by his shove. The room seemed unusally foggy. I walked to the door at the far side, my breath loud in my suit. The door was locked. I twisted at the handle, to no effect. After a long moment the door opened. I plodded out to the lawn, where several cadets were peeling off their suits. Sarge tapped at the helmet. "Off!" I fumbled for the clamps, .twisted it loose. I breathed in the cool welcome air, turned to Robbie Rovere, grinned. "If that's all it takes, I'm ready for Farside!" He smiled weakly, but suddenly his eyes bulged wide. He doubled over, vomited urgently onto the grass. "Jesus, what—" Another spasm caught him. The instructor came running over. "Get away from that suit! Around the side of the building with the other grodes!" He spun Robbie around, gave him a kick. Moaning, the boy stumbled off. He put hands on hips. "What about you, joey? You going to give back your lunch?" "I don't—" I swallowed, but I seemed okay. "No, sir. What's wrong with Robbie, Sarge?" The instructor stalked to the door, pulled out another cadet. The boy turned green, clawed at his helmet. Sarge made no move to help. Suddenly the front of the helmet was splattered; the cadet sank to his knees. They're learning how to listen," Sarge growled. Half an hour latter we were lined up alongside the building, some of us still wan and shaky. The instructor's tone was drenched with disgust. "You're the saddest, stupidest bunch of joeys Academy's ever had! In a week or two you're going to be sent aloft; didn't anyone tell you there's no air Outside the locks? This time we were watching over you, so we gave you nothing but a tummy ache. Next time you might die!" Chastened, we shuffled our feet, but he wasn't done with us. "Each of you who threw up, two demerits." Two hours per demerit, and the strenuous calisthenics made our morning exercises seem easy. I'd done them until my muscles screamed, for infractions I couldn't avoid no matter how hard I tried. This time, though, I was safe. "And the rest of you, three demerits!" I looked up, outraged, It wasn't fair. "You all watched the holo, didn't you? Your mates were going where they needed suits. Did any of you check your mates' clamps?" His voice rose. "Did you? Rovere could be dead now. So could Sanders, or any of youl And you didn't help!" His look was one of loathing; his voice soared to a scream. "Next time it will be vacuum! You ever see anyone breathe space? You disgust me, all of you! Get out of my sight!" Later that night, we lay, numbed and exhausted, in our bunks. Across the aisle someone sobbed. I buried my head in the pillow. A voice whispered, "It's all right, Robbie." If Sarge heard us ... I lay quiet. "I've got to get out of here!" Someone laughed, a harsh sound. "Crybaby!" "Mama's boy!" A loud whisper. "He cries over a little puke, like a—" It was Robbie who'd covered for me when I forgot to toss my towel in the bin. When Sarge had come into the head, the towel lay abandoned next to Robbie's sink. For some reason Robbie had said it was his own. Only one demerit, but ... My hand tightened to a fist. Leave him alone. Silence, then another strangled sob. At the end of the barracks a joker Imitated the sound. Someone else laughed. I threw off the cover, leaped out of my bunk, "Shut up, all of you!" My voice hissed. Von Halstein sneered, "Gonna make us, pretty boy?" "If I have to." My voice trembled. I shivered in my shorts. "Leave him alone. Pick on me!" "That's too easy." Someone giggled. "Keep it down, you joes. Sarge'll hear." Arlene Sanders. "Get in bed, Seafort, before we all get it." Voices murmured assent. I crossed the aisle, found Robbie's bunk. Awkwardly I pulled his blanket tight about him. "You're all right, joey," For a second my hand touched his shoulder. I thought to pull away, remembered Jason. I let my hand remain a second longer. "You're okay," I turned for my bunk, almost made it to the safety of my mattress when the voice came from the door. "What's going on here?" Silence, everywhere. My heart pounding, I forced myself back to my feet. "Cadet Seafort reporting, Sarge. I was out of my bunk." "Why?" I paused. It had to be the truth, but... "I thought I heard a noise." "Then you'd better guard us. Bring your mattress." "Aye aye, sir. Where?" "Outside." All was still while I dragged my heavy mattress across the barracks floor, "Are you finished, sir?" I looked up from my cold soup. "Yes." The bowl disappeared, a salad was put in its place. Squads of cadets came to their feet, their meal done. At each table the cadet on cleanup duty filed past the counter, depositing trays piled high with dishes. I'd dropped mine once, and was banished from mess hall for a week, I stood, stretched, walked to the door. Cadets respectfully stood aside. Among them I saw Robert Boland, cheeks flushed, his gray uniform crisp, shoes gleaming. I pretended to ignore him, as a Captain would any cadet. On the way back to my office I sighed, knowing I couldn't avoid the call any longer. I closed my door, sat at my desk, bracing myself, knowing I was about to throw away everything, for pride. I picked up the caller. "Ring Senator Boland, please." I waited, musing. Perhaps if Duhaney hadn't called me out so publicly ... It was early morning in Washington, but he was in. "Seafort? Good to hear from you." Boland could afford to be genial. My muscles tensed. "I apologize for avoiding your calls." "You don't have to—" "Oh, but I do, sir. I failed to appreciate the extent of your influence." "Thank you, Captain. I've been worried—" "Please let me finish. Admiral Duhaney ordered me to give you every cooperation, and of course I will. I checked on your son. He's quite well. If you want further information, contact me." "I'm most grateful—" My heart pounded. "Senator Boland, I underestimated you." He paused. "You what?" "Not just your committee's power, your own. You hold my career in your hands." He was wary now. "I don't understand." "It's simple. If you want information about your son, call. If you ask to speak to him, I'll put you through. Feel free to drop in anytime for a visit. I will obey Admiral Duhaney to the letter. But after your first call or visit, or if I hear you've complained again to the Admiral, I will immediately resign as Commandant, and from the Naval Service. I so swear before Lord God Himself." The speaker was silent. I added, "My future is in your hands. Forgive me for having underestimated you. You have but to reach for your caller, and my career is ended." "Jesus, Seafort." "Sir, you have a son to be proud of. Let him go, and let us do our job." "I won't have it any other way.* gently hung up the line. I listened, heard no answer, PART 2 October, in the year of our Lord 2201 Chapter 8 To my annoyance, a midshipman again met me at Earthport Station; this time they'd sent First Middy Thomas Keene. I growled at him as if it had been his fault. Henceforth I'd have to travel unannounced, or better, leave orders not to send a shepherd, I wasn't some airsick cadet who needed a chaperon, and I could carry my own duffel. Hours later, still cross, I cycled through the Farside lock to scowl at the duty officer waiting to greet me: Lieutenant Aid-well Crossburn. I returned his salute in silence, wishing I'd taken the effort to get rid of him. "Have a good trip, sir?" His tone was civil, "Yes." "If there's anything I can do—" "Dismissed." He turned to go. "Wait. Come to my office." "Very well, sir." During our long walk through the warren the stocky lieutenant was mercifully silent. In my office I set down my duffel, tossed my cap on the desk, "Do you still write your diary?" His brow wrinkled. "Yes, sir, but just for my own—'1 "You write about current events, as you used to?" "It's my way of analyzing, sir. I think about thinp and—*1 "Do you talk with other officers about your writings?" "Well, I suppose—yes, sir. Idle conversation, at mealtimes,** As I feared, "Lieutenant, I order you to desist from writing in your diary any matters that do not directly concern you. I specifically forbid you to discuss anything you write with any of my officers. No, make that any officer, crewman or cadet." No telling what the man was capable of. He shook his head stubbornly, "Sir, with all due respect, that's an infringement on my personal freedom that has nothing to do with=-" "Be silent!" I waved my finger under his nose, "Complain to Admiralty if you don't like it. You have my leave." I doubted they'd give him a hearing. "In the meantime, obey orders, or I'll —I'll—" I groped for a threat. "Yes, sir?" He seemed unafraid. I growled, "We have no ship's launch, but if I hear you've asked a single question about how things are run here, I'll make you supervisory officer of the Training Station." His chest swelled. "That would be an honor, sir. I'd be pleas—" "In permanent residence!" That brought him up short. Several months of the year the Training Station was entirely unoccupied. He could walk its lonely corridors, writing to his heart's content. I felt a pang of regret at my warning; now I couldn't banish him until I actually caught him at it. When he was gone, I paced until my anger abated. Finally I keyed the caller. "Where's Mr. Paulson?" "In his cabin, sir." "Get him." I met Paulson at the hatch, waved at a chair. "Have a good trip aloft? Everything under control, Jent?" Of course it was, or I'd have been told. "Cadets are all settled in, no problems." He hesitated. "We were a bit surprised when you shipped sixty of them early, sir." "We needed the space." Lieutenant Sleak had recommended it, and I'd agreed. Better to reward our achievers with Farside than crowd the Devon barracks unnecessarily. "Yes, I—we've heard something about that." His expression was carefully neutral. "What was Admiralty's reaction?" I leaned back. "I haven't heard from them." Not about anything. Perhaps they were debating what to do with me. In the two weeks since my spectacular display of insolence, Senator Boland had not called once. Taking pity, I considered sending a brief note, but came to my senses in time. A battle once won ought not be refought. "How long will you stay with us, sir?" "A week or so." Time to wander the base, making a nuisance of myself. Time also to revisit the Training Station, where our more advanced cadets were introduced to shipboard life. ^'Schedule a formal inspection later this week, Jent. Tell the sergeants, but not the joeys." The anxiety and excitement would be good for the cadets, but no need to harass the drill sergeants as well. "Anything else I should know?" "I sent you the forms on the Edwards boy." "I know." I'd sent on the reports to his mother, with an inadequate note of my own. "How's the other joe, Arnweil?" I'd had no contact with the dark-haired youngster since I'd guided him to his feet, led him to the comfort of his barracks. "You'd have to ask Sergeant Radz, sir. I haven't really had contact." He grimaced. "The only ones I see much of are the troublemakers, across the barrel." "Have you used it much?" "Three times since term started. Twice for cadets who didn't work off demerits fast enough, and once last week ..." He shook his head. "I can't imagine what gets into them. A cadet and a middy, fighting." Could he be serious? "Who was in charge?" "The cadet, Johan Stritz, was in Krane Barracks, with Sergeant Tripole. The middy ... well, I'm first lieutenant. It's my fault." I snorted. When the day came a lieutenant could keep track of what middies were up to... Midshipmen had a natural knack for trouble, as I could testify. Once, on Helsinki, I'd— "Which middy?" "Guthrie Smith, sir. He's seventeen, old enough to know better." I remembered a shy boy, sitting stiffly at my midshipman's meeting, cap in hand. "What happened?" "He was hazing, of course. What else?" Cadets were fair game for hazing, by middies as well as anyone else. After all, they had to learn to take it. A Captain aboard ship was an absolute dictator, and some of them were tyrants. A middy who couldn't handle unpleasantness wouldn't survive. "Go on." "There isn't much to tell. Mr. Smith had a squad emptying the dining hall for a thorough cleaning. He decided Stritz was doing a sloppy job, made him crawl to the hatch and back, pushing a chair." "Doesn't sound so bad." "Then he made him do it again. The cadet had enough, and refused. So Smith took him out to the corridor, where Bill Radz found them going at each other. He called me at once, since a middy was involved." "Good Lord." Lieutenant Paulson shook his head. "I gave Stritz a dozen, sent him crying back to his dorm. He has to learn to hold his temper." I nodded. I would have gone easy too. It sounded like the boy had spunk, if not judgment. "The truth is, I felt like giving Keene half a dozen for not knocking more sense into Guthrie Smith's head. What's a first middy for?" "Did you?" "No, but I set him against the bulkhead and reamed him so he'll remember. And four demerits. When Midshipman Smith came in, I let him have it. He ate lying on his bunk in the wardroom for a while. Damn it, he should know better." A midshipman—any officer—couldn't maintain his authority by brute force, even with a cadet. Else a crewman physically stronger than his officer would have his own way. True, we caned middies as required, but they were considered young gentlemen and ladies, adults by law, but capable of youthful indiscretions that should be chastised. Belowdecks, sailors weren't beaten. I mused, "Sometimes I wonder..." "Yes, sir?" "Whether we rely too heavily on the cane." I realized I spoke near-heresy. "I mean, a few strokes for a really serious offense is one thing, but is anything gained by making the barrel our first resort?" "Our first resort is demerits, not the barrel, but, yes, something's gained." Paulson's reply was without hesitation. "Cadets, and middies, for that matter, have to learn to obey their betters. Life on a starship is no zark." That was true. Disobedience or inattention could be fatal, and not only for the midshipman. I shrugged. I was no wild-eyed idealist. Society had finally recovered from a century or more of coddling rebellious children, and we were all the better for it. "Is there anything else, sir?" "No. See you at dinner." After Paulson left I turned to my console to review a stack of reports that had accumulated since my last visit. Then, restless, I got up to walk, glad I now had room to pace without cracking my shins on low-slung coffee tables. I sat back at my desk, flicked on the console. The trouble, I realized, was that I had no conception of what to do, either on this particular trip to Farside, or more generally as Commandant of Academy. When I'd become Hibernians Captain, my goal was obvious: guide the ship safely to Hope Nation and off-load the cargo and passengers. When I'd taken charge of Academy, I had no such aim. I had only to pass time until the cadets were ready to be graduated, until another group took their place. And, even more than as Captain, I was expected to govern as a remote, unapproachable figure, I was the wrong man for the job. Too restless to immerse myself in- minutiae better left to experienced drill sergeants, I had little to do but wander the halls, an awesome figure because of my reputation, but essentially useless. Well, so be it. If I was to be a wanderer, I might as well begin. Perhaps in the process I'd learn something. I left my office. I trudged through a deserted corridor to the classroom wing, beyond it to the barracks. Now, in nominal day, cadets were in class or in training. I stopped at Krane Hall, glanced about, saw no one. Sheepishly, I went in. Rows of empty beds, blankets taut, the deck spotless. Sergeant Tripole seemed to have his joes well in hand, despite the altercation between his Cadet Stritz and the middy. I closed my eyes, oriented myself, crossed to the port side, walked along the row of bunks. There, That one had been mine. It seemed smaller, somehow, as did the whole barracks. Had I been happy here? I reached over, ran my fingers along the bed frame. Innocent of treason to come, of betrayal of my oath, I'd striven to please my while my body and mind altered. Less and less often did my voice break unexpectedly into the higher registers; daily I ran my fingers over my upper lip, waiting for the magic moment when I could justify a shave. I sat slowly on the edge of the bed. Had I been happy? Well, innocent, perhaps. Was it not the same? I jumped out of bed, kicked at Robbie Rovere's bunk. "Get up, Sarge'll be here any second.* Robbie groaned, but sat, rubbing his eyes. "Yeah, thanks." He sat for a moment, heard the soft hiss of the hatch and had leaped to his feet before it had fully opened, Sarge snapped, "All right, you louts, listen upl" I grinned. Sergeant Trammel could call us what he wanted—and he did—but I suspected he felt something other than the professional disgust he communicated to us. There was an aspect to his look when you succeeded in a particularly difficult task; the apparently casual touch of his hand if you were on the verge of losing your temper, and your self respect... "Aye aye, Sarge," I echoed dutifully, along with the rest. 'Tomorrow we're off to the Training Station, so today you get special instruction. After classes, go with Corporal Tolliver to assembly dome. I have some holos to show you"—subdued groans: Naval holos could be excruciatingly boring— "and then a quiz or two to see if you've paid attention." He smiled grimly. "I hope some of you don't listen, like last time. That was fun." He left, shutting the hatch. Robbie lowered his voice in a rough imitation of Sarge, "Go with Corporal Tolliver to the head. I have some turds to show you—" Several bunks away Tolliver buttoned his jacket, favoring Robbie with a cold look. "Keep that up, Rovere. You make friends wherever you go." "I try to, Mr. Tolliver." Robbie subsided, knowing when to lay off. As a cadet corporal, Edgar Tolliver had considerable power to annoy us, if not make us miserable. Every barracks had a corporal, a cadet entrusted by the sergeant to make sure we got to the dome on time, or that the barracks was clean for weekly inspection. A corporal was still a cadet; he didn't rate a "sir," but like a middy was addressed by his last name only. His only recourse if we disobeyed was to report us, but a diligent corporal could exact fairly strict obedience as an alternative to a tongue lashing or worse from Sarge. Corporal Van Fleet had been nicer than Tolliver, but he'd made middy and been sent on to Pr/nce of Wales. Robbie combed his hair meticulously, hoping to garner a few more few days before Sarge sent him back to the barber. "What will the holo be this time?" I shrugged. We'd find out soon enough. I brushed my teeth, spat into the basin. Tolliver squeezed past to the next sink. As a rule, middies were nicer than corporals, perhaps because they had less to prove. Still, you didn't want to get on the middies' bad side, as their hazing could be severe. Once they'd even made me stand regs. Stripped to my shorts, I'd stood sweating on the wardroom chair groping for half-memorized passages from Naval Regulations, while below me they'd interjected scathing remarks about my physique and behavior. Rumor had it that if the middies were sufficiently irked, even the shorts were dispensed with. I hoped devoutly not to find out. Midshipman Jeff Thorne had said nothing, but he hadn't shared the amusement of my other tormentors. As second middy, he could do nothing until his senior had had enough. After making our beds we marched to breakfast. Tolliver took his place in line with the rest of us; a corporal's only authority was in the sergeant's absence. Too bad ToHiver wasn't at one of the other tables. Even at mealtime, I had to watch every word I said, so as not to attract his attention. "Hey, Nicky, why so quiet today?" Though Robbie woke slowly, once alert, he was depressingly cheerful. "Maybe because he's learning some sense?" Tolliver's tone was acid. Then he could stop polishing lockers." I flushed. That whole incident would have gone unnoticed if it hadn't been for Tolliver. My suit had flopped over the edge of the locker so my door wouldn't close. I'd have noticed if I hadn't been in a hurry to get to Nav class. And Sarge probably wouldn't have known at all if Tolliver hadn't kept staring at my locker until Sarge turned to see what was the matter. Four hours polishing alumalloy lockers had left blisters on my hands and savage hate in my heart. My emotions made me reckless. "I'm good at polishing, Mr. Tolliver," I said. "I could spit-polish your shoes, if you like." Now it was Tolliver's turn to redden. He'd had Arlene Sanders polish his shoes as penalty for some imagined slight, and had discovered too late that Sanders had deposited far more spit inside the shoes than she'd brushed off the tips. Tolliver seemed in good humor, though his eyes were sharp. "No thanks, Seafort. Where I really could use your help is getting ready for inspection tonight." I grimaced. Well, I'd brought it on myself. Now Tolliver would have me tag along as he sauntered through the barracks, and every speck of dust, every imagined blemish, would be mine to correct. I knew he'd pay particular attention to the stalls in the head, and I could do nothing about it. For much of the day I labored at Nav, listened dutifully to a lecture on the mysteries of the fusion drive, and managed in Colonial History to show Mr. Peretz I'd read at least part of the chapter. Then lunch, Off Hour, and the rigorous daily calisthenics a cadet never escaped. Later, we convened at barracks, marched to assembly dome, and settled in for holovid instruction. The first holo might have been entitled Ten Obvious Ways to Avoid Getting Killed on a Station," and the second, "In Case You Weren't Listening to the First." Admonishments ringing in my ears, resolved never to exit a Station lock without a clamped helmet or to stroll in front of a laser during fire practice, I changed for dinner. At table I kept a low profile, hoping Corporal Tolliver had forgotten my impertinence at lunch. He hadn't. After dinner I followed him through barracks, broom and dustpan in one hand, mop and bucket in the other, damp rag draped over my arm. How dirty can a barracks get that is cleaned almost every day? One might be surprised, unless one knew Edgar Tolliver. I wiped imaginary dust, swept the aisles, pretended not to know he was going to call me next into the head. "Is the shower a tad moldy? What do you think, Seafort?" There was no right answer, and we both knew it. But there were tricks to dealing with a cadet corporal, and I used one of them. I peered at the spotless bulkheads. "I think you're right, Mr. Tolliver," I said with enthusiasm. "They ought to be scrubbed down. Do you want me to get started?" He frowned, but played out the game. "Yes, I think so. Let's check the stalls first." The toilets were cleaned twice daily by those cadets who had earned Sarge's disfavor, so I knew they wouldn't be offensive. I also knew their condition wouldn't affect Tolliver's decision in the slightest. "Look at this, Seafort. Can't let Sarge see that or we'll all lose an Off Hour. Scrub them out, will you?" "Yes, Mr. Toll—" He tore off a small piece of rag. "By hand." "Of course, Mr. Tolliver." Damn him. Humiliating, and my knees and back would ache after. I smiled. The next trick was harder. It was all in the tone; the words had to be absolutely guileless, if repeated to Sarge. I said brightly, "I'm glad you point these things out, Mr. Tolliver. Not many barracks have a corporal who knows as much about dirty toilet stalls as you do." He eyed me, but I beamed pleasantly. I beamed like a cheerful imbecile. Still, he was the one about to stroll out of the head, and I was the one who'd get to scrub the barracks stalls for an hour or two. "I'll check back, Seafort," he said. "In case there's something we missed." I bent to my work, slapping at his face with every swipe of the rag. Half an hour later, he was back. "Enjoying yourself, Seafort? It's nice you've found work you're suited for. I'll try to give—" "Attention." The voice was quiet, the tone agreeable, but Tolliver leaped to attention, his back ramrod stiff. I scrambled to my feet and dropped the rag, pressing my arms to my sides. "What's up?" Tolliver said, "Nothing, Mr. Thorne. We were cleaning the head for inspection, sir." Midshipman Jeffrey Thorne clasped his hands behind his back, peered into the stall. "Very presentable. Mr. Seafort does a good job." "I was just telling him that, sir." "Yes, I heard." Thome prodded the bucket of soapy water. "We're all proud of you, Tolliver." Something in his tone made Tolliver's lips press tighter. "Yes, sir." Imprisoned at attention, he could do nothing. "I'd like your friend Seafort to read us some regs again. Mind if I take him from you?" Tolliver's look held pure malice. "No, sir, not at all." "Good." Midshipman Thorne glared at me. "Leave the bucket, Cadet. Left face. Forward march. Left face. Halt." I did as I was told, and ended up facing the entry to the head. Thorne strolled over to Tolliver, fingered the corporal's crisp gray jacket. "I'll see you again, Cadet Tolliver. You may put away the supplies. Or, if you like, finish the job yourself." He patted Tolliver's shoulder. "All right, Seafort, forward march." He marched me through the dorm to the outer hatch. The other cadets watched with sympathy. No one wanted to be singled out for a middy's hazing. The hatch closed behind us. At his orders I strode down the corridor to the first turn. That's far enough, Seafort. As you were." Thank you, sir." I eyed him, smiling tentatively. "I should have made him scrub the toilet, but I couldn't undercut him in front of you," Thorne grimaced, then brightened, "Did you see the look on his face?" "Yes, sir, in the mirror." "Belay that bit about standing regs. I'm putting together another mission. You care to volunteer?" He was my senior; he had no need to ask me, but I wouldn't have passed it up for the world. "Yes, sir!" I don't know how I'd been lucky enough to be chosen for Jeff Thorne's fabled "missions." Until the night the middies made me stand regs he'd taken no notice of me. After they'd let me go, Thorne had seen me back to barracks. In a service corridor, he'd taken me aside, said a few kind words. Wary of all midshipmen, I made no reply. As if he hadn't noticed, he strolled, hands in pockets, chatting about the Navy, his experiences as a cadet, his own hopes, until at last he'd drawn me out. I told him something of Cardiff, and Father. I'd even casually mentioned Jason. The first mission had come a week later. Others had followed. Thorne glanced both ways, whispered, "I've got Bailey from Reardon Hall and Justin Ravitz waiting by the wardroom. You know them?" "I know Justin, sir." I trotted along, trying to keep up with Jeff Thorne's long stride. "What's our mission?" Last time it had been to spy, belowdecks, on the techs manning the grav-ftrons. I'd learned it was the perennial goal of the wardroom to reach the control room unseen, bring the gravitrons slowly off-line, and enjoy the resulting havoc. They'd never succeeded. Thorne made sure the corridor was empty, lowered his voice. "Mess hall." He clapped me on the shoulder. "I don't know why we only got one slice of apple pie for dessert, when so much was left over. And there should be ice cream in the cooler." His smile was infectious; I found myself grinning like an idiot as I did my best to keep up with his stride. Mr. Thome could be firm if we didn't listen at training, but at heart he was one of us. Half an hour later Bailey, Ravitz and I girded ourselves at the cutoff for the corridor to the mess hall dome. Thorne peeked around the corner. "Gol" We sprinted down the long corridor. As an officer, Mr, Thome could go where he wished, but we cadets were a different matter. Though, if we were seen, he'd cover for us, wouldn't he? Better not to find out. At mealtimes the mess hall hatch was left open, but this late in the evening it was shut. "Is It coded, sir?" The mess hall? Don't be silly." He touched the pad, hesitated, "Let me look in first," As the hatch slid open he cautiously peered in. "All clear!" It was a whisper. We slipped inside the darkened hall. I looked up, Farside was halfway through the long Lunar night; the open filters revealed the bright cold gleam of a billion stars. We huddled at a familiar table, Thome beckoned us close, "If we're found here by the tables, I can claim I was hazing you, though I really shouldn't be in here at this hour. But if we're caught in the galley, we've all had it." He eyed his fellow conspirators, "Bailey, guard the hatch. If anyone approaches, snap your fingers loudly. Can you do that?" The boy nodded. Then duck under a table over there where it's darker, and hope no one sees you. If things go wrong, toy to get back to barracks." "Aye aye, sir." Bailey grinned with excitement "Inside the galley we won't be able to hear Bailey, so, Ravitz, you stand just behind the serving rail and relay the signal. Anyone comes, snap your fingers at us and duck down. I'll snap back to tell you we've heard." "Yes, sir." Thorne punched the cadet's shoulder. "Aye aye, sir, you meant. Don't forget your training just because you're so nervous you're wetting your pants," Ravitz said indignantly, "I'm not wet—" "Shhh. Seafort, you and I will breach the enemy's hull. I'll get plates and find the ice cream, you look in the coolers for the pie. Can you find it in the dark?" "It's not that dark, sir. The safety lights are on." "Okay, let's go." While Justin Ravitz crouched behind the rail we slipped through one of the two entryways between galley and mess hall. Thorne grinned. "Scared?" "No, sir." My pulse throbbed. "Liar. So am I. You think I want to be knocking at Mr. Zorn's hatch?" First Lieutenant Zorn was custodian of the barrel. Thorne squeezed my arm, whispered, "Hey, that's what makes it fun. I'll get the plates." I pawed through an unlocked cooler, found only vegetables from the hydroponics chambers below. I closed the cooler door harder than I'd thought; the resounding clunk brought Thorne racing over. He hissed, "Keep it down, you idiot!" I nodded, trying to apologize with a placating smile. I'd never heard that tone from Thome; his nerves must be taut. The pies were in the third cooler. I took two, put them on a tray while across the galley Thorne fished in the freezer for ice cream. A sound. I looked to Thorne; he hadn't heard. I slid the tray onto the counter. The sound came again; fingers snapping. Thorne was just turning from the freezer. The snap of fingers, one more time, lower. Ravitz must be beside himself. Thorne was still unaware; I raised my hand, snapped my fingers once. Thome looked up. I pointed desperately at the rail and beyond. His eyes widened; he nodded, beckoned. I scuttled across the deck while Thorne made for the other doorway. A voice, outside in the mess hall. "Who's under there? What are you—hey!" Running feet. "Come back here!" Thorne disappeared into the far doorway. I ducked behind the mess-hall counter. "Anyone in here? What's going—" A crunch, as if someone had caromed off a piece of furniture just outside the galley. A yelp, a crash, a cry of pain. j Racing steps. Thome, making a bid for safety. Steps fading / into the distance. The lights snapped on. I huddled behind the counter. Footsteps, approaching the cooler. Could I crawl out unnoticed? I huddled low, padded forward. The intruder muttered, "God damn frazzin' cadets, I'll have their balls in a—you!" I scrambled for safety. The voice roared, "You, Cadet!" I dashed for the hatch. "Freeze! Stand to attention!" Perhaps he hadn't seen my face, and all cadet uniforms were alike. But I couldn't help it; he'd given a direct order and I couldn't disobey. I stumbled to a halt, froze to attention, a few steps from the unattainable hatch. "Don't you move!" He came closer. My back twitched. Who had been my undoing, my ruination? They'd cashier me, surely, if not worse. Theft of Naval stores? Breaking and entering? Could they shoot me? At last he came into my field of vision. A rating, a mere seaman. Were I a middy I could disobey him with impunity, but as a cadet, every adult in my universe was my superior. My eyes flicked to the hatch. A puddle of water, an overturned mop bucket. Was that what Thorne had encountered? His fists bunched, he stepped back. For a moment I thought he was going to strike me. "Name!" "Cadet Nicholas Seafort reporting, sir!" My voice wavered. "Stay right here, joey. Understand?" He walked to the caller. I could dash for the hatch, but to what point? He'd seen my face, knew my name. I stood rock solid at attention, awaiting my fate. A few moments later the rafing pulled up a chair, sat, leaned forward, grinning. "You'll get it now, boy. Maybe they'll let me watch." I said nothing. It hadn't required a response, and I knew if I spoke my voice would break. The sailor smiled, showing gap teeth. "Anytime, now. You just wait there at attention." "Aye aye, sir." "Hungry, were you?" "I—no, sir." "God, I hate you snotty little grodes. Well, this time you up-pies'll get what's coming to you!" Sweat trickled down my sides. I was saved from a reply by steps at the hatch. I looked up. Oh, no. Oh, God, no. Sergeant Trammel growled, "What's going on here?" The seaman came to his feet. "Look at this mess! I found this boy in—" "I asked the cadet." Sarge hadn't bothered to raise his voice, but the seaman's whine halted instantly. A sergeant could do that. Lamely, I said, "Cadet Seafort reporting, sir!" "I know who you are; tell me why you're in mess hall!" Still held to attention, eyes on the bulkhead across the hall, I groped for an answer. On a mission? Being hazed by Midshipman Thorne? Sleepwalking? I took a deep breath, "I was getting pie, sir." "In the name of Lord Christ!" Sergeant Trammel's voice held such loathing that I flinched. "I thought you'd learned something by now, Seafort. Back to barracks." "Aye aye, si—" "He weren't the only one, Sarge. There were three, maybe four others. It was a regular raid. They kicked over my bucket and everything!" Sarge wheeled on me. "Is that true?" "I—yes, sir." "What were you up to?" "Stealing pie and ice cream, sir." "I din1 get a look at the others, Sarge, It was dark, and they were under tables and things. But this joey knows who—" Sergeant Trammel wheeled, "Your name?" "Lewis, sir, Elton Lewis," "Go about your business, Lewis, I'll handle this," "Yes, sir," The rating's voice held unmistakable malice. "My business is to clean up in here. Now I gotta clean up the mess they made too. The chief petty officer oughta know—" "Yes, he should, and I'll tell him. If I hear anything more from you, there's some other things I'll mention as well. Get moving!" Grumbling, the man picked up his bucket, swabbed at the mess. Sarge glowered. The rating finally dropped his eyes. "As you were, Seafort! Into the corridor! Move!" Sarge propelled me forward, slapped the hatch closed behind us. The moment it shut he grabbed my lapels, thrust me against the bulkhead. "You useless excuse for a plebe! Thanks to you, I have to toady to the damned CPO!" I'd never seen him so angry. "I'm sorry, Sarge. I didn't mean—" "Bah! Special duties, the rest of