Previous Page | Next Page |
Home Page | Index Page |
A Call To Arms: Chapter Two
Last updated: Thursday, July 23, 2015 21:21 EDT
In the history of every so-called crisis, Breakwater intoned, his voice permeating every cubic centimeter of air space in the House of Lords assembly chamber, there comes a point where one doesnt quite know whether to laugh or to cry. Sadly, this is the point where I find myself regarding the Star Kingdoms massive hunt for roving bands of elusive pirates.
Seated four chairs to Breakwaters left, Winterfall eased his gaze unobtrusively around the chamber, his eyes automatically measuring faces, his brain automatically gauging the moods and attitudes behind those faces. He would never be as good at this kind of analysis as Baroness Castle Rock, say, or Breakwater himself. But ten T-years of practice had made him far better than hed once been.
Ten years.
It had been an extraordinary decade. Toiling away at the bottom of the Parliamentary power pyramid, his presence in the House of Lords due solely to the serendipity of his grandparents being one of the first fifty investors in Manticore, Limited, Winterfall had been destined to be forgotten by history, just one more nameless peer whose only contribution to society and the Star Kingdom was to vote however the more powerful and influential of the Lords ordered.
And then, out of nowhere, Breakwater had invited him into his inner circle. Had chosen Winterfall to be part of the group of Lords and Ladies standing at the Chancellors side against the resource pit that the Royal Manticoran Navy had become.
Breakwaters selection hadnt been random, of course. Winterfall knew that. Thered been subtle but good political reasons for the Chancellor and his Committee for Military Sanity to pluck the young baron out of the mass, not the least of which was that Winterfalls half-brother Travis Long had just joined that same Navy. If one had close family in an organization, after all, it must certainly follow that one would do only that which one believed to be best for that organization.
Still, at the time of Breakwaters offer, it had been clear that the Chancellor had assumed Winterfall would remain just another face and warm body to stand behind him in silent support of his policies and his convoluted bids for additional power and prestige. Breakwater and his circle had explicitly said as much.
It was a role Winterfall would have been perfectly willing to play. Reflected glory and recognition were still better than no glory and recognition at all.
But to everyones surprise, it hadnt worked out that way. Winterfall had been asked a question at a high-level meeting, hed answered the question and offered a suggestion, and suddenly he was being seen as a voice of reason and compromise by everyone from King Michael on down.
Winterfall had expected the limelight to fade away quickly. To his surprise, it hadnt.
Hed weathered the Phobos debacle. Hed survived the fallout from Dapplelakes investigation of the incident, which had implicated not only two high-level RMN officers but also three members of the Lords whod had information theyd failed to pass on to higher authority. Hed even made it through HMS Guardians return from Secour, and the subsequent surge in Navy prestige that had followed Captain Eigens report of pirate activity in the region.
In fact, hed made it through that surge better than Breakwater himself. The Chancellor and MPARS had both taken a political double-punch, and while the loss of status had largely been kept out of the public eye Breakwater had taken the Navys new popularity very, very personally.
But like the crafty politician he was, the Chancellor had bided his time, staying low and quiet and watching for signs that his opponents position was weakening. And once that erosion started, hed been more than willing to grab a shovel and help the process along.
And the shovel he was about to wield was a very hefty tool indeed. One that hed been preparing for just such a moment as this.
Because the fact of the matter is, Breakwater continued, that while I say elusive, I might just as well say nonexistent. Because, really, thats what they are. Thats what theyve always been.
No murmur of interest or excitement ran through the assembled Lords. Nor had Winterfall expected one. Breakwater railing against the Navy and Defense Ministry was so commonplace that anyone whod been here for the past ten yearswhich, with a very few exceptions, was pretty much everyoneknew what to expect whenever the Chancellor got onto this topic.
But as Winterfall continued to look around the room he noticed that a few heads which had been bowed over their tablets were starting to come back up. Breakwater had a simmering fire in his voice, a passion that had been largely absent since Guardians return from Secour. The change in tone was striking, and the more astute among the peers were taking note, wondering where Chancellor was going with this.
This isnt just my opinion, Breakwater continued. In fact, it isnt opinion at all. Ask First Lord of the Admiralty Cazenestro. Ask Defense Minister Calvingdell. Ask any of the hundreds of men and women whove gone on months-long patrols to neighboring star systems hunting in vain for signs of these alleged marauders. All of them will tell you theres not a single scrap of evidence that any pirates were ever working this region, let alone that there are pirates working here now.
Winterfall smiled to himself. As always, it was all in the wording. There were certainly hints that someone was preying on merchant ships out there. There were vanished freighters, unexplained gravitic footprints that suggested someone might be coming or going at the edges of various systems, and even a couple of possible sightings by freighters whose sensors werent adequate to the task of distinguishing between real images and hyper ghosts.
But evidence? As Breakwater said, not a scrap. No actual pirates or pirate ships had been caught in the act. No one had spotted or boarded the gutted, blood-spattered remains of captured freighters. No identifiable cargo from any of the vanished ships had turned up in local markets or, as far as anyone had heard, the more distant Haven or Solarian League ports.
Though there was always Silesia. The Confederacy had started off as idealistically as Manticore, but there were signs things werent going to stay that way. They appeared to be settling into a client-patron arrangement that favored special interests over broader based policy decisions. While Winterfall was well aware of which side of his own bread was buttered, he was also awaremore aware than certain other Peers he could have mentionedof the downsides of that sort of system. More to the point at the moment, however, the Silesian governments insularity, and disinclination to cooperate with its neighbors even when known problems reared their heads, offered little reason to believe it would have any interest in dealing with piracy. At least, not so long as that piracy was afflicting someone elses shipping. If Winterfall was a pirate, hed mused on occasion, that was where he would go to peddle his stolen merchandise.
It was even possible that someone in Silesia had set up a black-market system to buy and sell the pirated ships themselves. Certainly the ships were the most valuable part of the loot, assuming that the pirates managed to take them even partially intact.
But of course, any such thoughts would undermine Breakwaters argument, which was why he would never bring them up. What Winterfall found interesting was that no one on the other side ever brought up the Confederacy as a counter-argument. Probably they just realized that lack of proof was of no value in political arguments.
But the true, even frightening irony is that while the First Lord claims that all this is making the Star Kingdom safer, it is exactly the opposite, Breakwater went on, his voice deepening in pitch even as it rose in volume. Each needless voyage translates into many additional hours worth of maintenance, refitting, and replacement. Each useless trip into the void takes with it hundreds of men and women whose talents and skills could be used right here at home instead of locked away inside a metal tube for weeks or months on end. Each wild-goose hunt eats up resources that could be far better spent upgrading or maintaining miners, freighters, and other civilian spacecraft.
More heads were starting to come up now as Breakwaters passion began to prick the notice of even the most oblivious or cynical Lords. The Chancellor was coming out of the shadows where hed been nursing his wounds, rising again to challenge the Navy and its supporters.
Some of the Lords would be pleased by that. Others would be dismayed. Still others wouldnt much care either way, but would merely enjoy the break in the general air of legislative boredom that seemed to have settled around Parliament these past few months.
And the final paradox of all: if someday an actual pirate should by some miracle stumble upon the Star Kingdom, where will the very ships be that we would need to defend us? Breakwater intoned, lifting his hand as if in supplication to an invisible protector. Exactly. Theyll be scattered across the cosmos, completely and utterly useless.
He brought the hand down to slam the edge of his fist firmly against the top of the podium. No, My Lords. For all these reasons, and more, this situation is unacceptable.
But thats about to change. This very afternoon, I intend to meet with King Michael and First Lord Cazenestro to discuss the situation. And Im confident that well come to an understanding that will set the Star Kingdom of Manticore along a new and more sensible road.
With that, and with the entire body of the Lords finally giving him their full attention, he gave a little bow to Prime Minister Davis Harper, Duke Burgundy, and resumed his seat.
Again, Winterfall hid a smile. It was one hundred percent pure Breakwater: a strong, eloquent teasing of the audience, culminating in a smooth halt just as they were starting to hunger for more. It was a flair for the dramatic that Winterfall unfortunately didnt have, and knew he would never be able to pull off.
Breakwater had it in double handfuls. More than that, he knew when and where to bring that flair to the forefront. The entire House of Lords was now aware that something significant was in the works, and within minutes of the sessions close the media would know it, too. An hour after that, all of Manticore would know. By the time Breakwater emerged from the palace this afternoon, the entire planet would be primed and ready for whatever he had to say.
And no matter what happened in that meeting, they wouldnt be disappointed. Breakwater would make sure of that.
Winterfall almost felt sorry for First Lord Cazenestro. Almost.
By all rights, Captain Edward Winton would reflect later, he shouldnt have been at the meeting. For that matter, he shouldnt have been on Manticore at all.
As usual with such things, it was all in the timing. He and his ship, the heavy cruiser Sphinx, should have been on patrol with the rest of Green One, the nine-ship task force assigned to protect the space around Manticore and Sphinx.
But like every other ship in the Navy, Sphinx was dripping with maintenance problems, spare-parts issues, and short crews. This time it was the tuning on the Beta nodes of the aft impeller ring that had gone gunnybags, and the necessary repair work had been deemed serious enough for Admiral Carlton Locatelli to order it to be handled in space dock. Edward had brought his ship in, gotten the repair work up and running, and assigned his Executive Officer to ride herd on the operation. After that, invoking commanders prerogative, hed engineered a three-day leave for his son Richard from the Academy, then slipped off groundside to spend a couple of precious days with his wife, son, and daughter.
It was an escape he very much needed. Captaining a heavy cruiser was challenging and time-consuming enough, but Edward had the extra burden of being crown prince. That meant keeping tabs on everything that was happening in the Palace, the government, andfor that matterthe entire Star Kingdom.
At least, that was what it theoretically meant. In actual practice, Edward had been more than a little lax on that latter set of duties. His ships travel schedule often kept him away from Manticoreor even out of the system entirely, given the Navys more aggressive anti-piracy stance after Secourwhen there were meetings and Parliamentary events that he should be keeping an eye on. At the same time, his lack of anything approaching free time had forced him to mostly ignore the Palaces daily reports.
It had been a nagging sore spot between him and his father for a long time. Eventually, the King had given up trying to press Edward on the point, but Edward knew that his fathers frustration and disappointment were still there.
Every time the guilt bug bitand it bit on a fairly regular basishe promised himself he would do better. Accordingly, as he headed home for his impromptu escape he promised himself that after a few hours with his family he would head to the Palace and check in with his father. He was exactly four and a half hours into that escape when his father called one of the Kings Own security men assigned to Edward and requested the Crown Princes presence at the Palace.
Edwards first concern, that the King was having some serious medical problem that his haphazard skimming of the daily reports had missed, lasted until he reached the Royal Sanctum where his father was waiting. King Michael seemed a bit more frail than the last time Edward had seen him, but was clearly and thankfully not anywhere near deaths door.
The resulting sense of relief lasted until Edward found out that hed been summoned for a meeting with Chancellor Breakwater.
The final souring of a previously wonderful day came when he learned the precise topic of the meeting.
He couldnt let his annoyance show, of course. He was the Crown Prince, he was at the side of the King, and the need to maintain absolute solidarity in public was one of the first lessons hed been taught by his grandmother as a young child.
But years in the Navy had taught him how to seethe invisibly. He did so now, passionately, all the way to the conference room.
Hed given up an afternoon of board games with his wife, son, and daughter for this?
They reached the conference room to discover no surprises at all awaiting them. Chancellor Breakwater was there, of course, as were First Lord of the Admiralty Cazenestro, Admiral Locatelli, and Defense Minister Clara Sumner, Countess Calvingdell. Flanking Breakwater in support of his side of the issue were his two strongest allies in his ongoing anti-Navy crusade: Earl Chillon and Baron Winterfall.
Edward eyed the latter as he rounded the table toward the chair that had been reserved for him at the far end. Several years ago, in the aftermath of the Phobos debacle, King Michael had warned Edward that Winterfall was someone who needed to be watched. At the time, Edward hadnt been convinced.
But seeing Winterfall here brought back those memories. Especially since the typical service life of one of Breakwaters political sock puppets was only a couple of years. The fact that Winterfall was still around was strong indication that the young man hadnt yet outlived his usefulness to the Chancellor.
Maybe that was the real reason Edward had been so resistant to keeping up with Manticoran politics, he mused as he found his seat at the table. Not the inconvenience of distance or even the chronic lack of time, but the fact that he hated the genteel infighting and backbiting that seemed to have become a permanent part of the Star Kingdoms operational machinery.
Maybe that was one reason hed gone into the Navy, in fact. Not just to protect his home and his peoplethough those were certainly importantbut because the whole naval structure was different. There were politics, certainlyfar more than he liked. But in the end, when push came to shove, there was always a clear line of command, and a clear set of regs and standing orders that everyone followed.
And as King Michael grew steadily more frail, Edward was also increasingly aware that the day was coming when he would never again hold a space-going command. When he would be embroiled in these dirtside politics for the rest of his life.
Across the table, Breakwater was watching him, though clearly pretending to be studying his tablet, and Edward wondered yet again why the Chancellor hadnt used the Crown Princes neglect of his political duties as yet another stick with which to beat the Navy. Certainly it was an easy enough target.
The answer, unfortunately, was probably that Breakwater had decided that Edwards disengagement from the political fray suited his own purposes.
He felt his lip twist. Yet another reason for him to feel guilty.
We appreciate your time, Your Majesty, Breakwater said after the formalities and greetings had been dispensed with and everyone was once again seated. Your Highness, he added with a respectful nod to Edward.
Respectful, but with an odd half-frown to it, as if he was wondering why exactly the Crown Prince had even been invited to this get-together.
Edward wasnt offended. Breakwater liked to be in control of his environment, and adding an extra person to the group weakened that control.
Besides, Edward was wondering about that himself. With luck, maybe he and the Chancellor would find out together.
As you all knowas most of you know, Breakwater corrected himself with another nod toward Edwards end of the table, MPARS is once again in the midst of a logistics crisis. We have far too few ships to patrol the regions weve been assigned to protect, particularly the Unicorn Belt. The ships we do have are undercrewed and are forever struggling to obtain spare parts and orbital dock space.
Which wasnt exactly true, Edward knew. In fact, Breakwaters whole diatribe was edging close to outright falsehood. MPARS might not have any sizeable ships, but they had a half dozen converted ore and mining craft that had been refitted as patrol-and-repair ships. As for personnel, theyd stolen over three hundred officers and enlisted from the RMN five years ago for their ill-fated Phobos project, and as far as Edward knew theyd never given them back.
He looked over at Cazenestro, waiting for the First Lord to call him on that one. To his surprise, though, the rebuke didnt come.
Its not any better in the Navy, Cazenestro said instead. In case you hadnt noticed. If youll look to the bills you and your colleagues have passed over the past few years, youll see that the various planetary infrastructure rebuilding and expansion programs are still getting first priority in terms of resources and personnel.
Yes, thank you, I understand that, Breakwater said, just as coolly. And I would be the last person to take food from the mouths of babes.
There was, Edward knew, an opportunity there for a very sarcastic comment regarding Breakwaters policies. Fortunately, everyone present had too much class to take the easy shot.
But that same rebuilding has led to more miners than ever plying the asteroid belts, and their lives and safety are also important to the Star Kingdom, Breakwater continued. And it cannot be overemphasized how important the raw materials so obtained are to our current rebuilding
If you please, My Lord, Calvingdell interrupted in her clear soprano. I believe were all well acquainted with your views and thoughts on this matter. Can we please move to the bottom line?
If you insist, My Lady, Breakwater said, inclining his head to her even as his eyes gave a small flash of annoyance. Clearly, he still had some drawing-room oratory hed wanted to trot out. The bottom line is that the Navy has a group of ships that it really has no use for, and which MPARS desperately needs. Namely, the seven Pegasus-class corvettes.
You must be joking, Locatelli said, his voice a sort of disbelieving outrage. If youd ever bothered to study naval tactics youd have learned that corvettes are the ship of choice for flank protection and long-range triangulation.
I have studied tactics, thank you Admiral, Breakwater said, his own voice the smooth confidence of a man whos anticipated the objection and has already formulated a counter-argument. The only reason you use corvettes that way is that theres not much else you can do with them. Your Salamander-class destroyers are equally effective for that kind of duty: almost as fast, and better armed.
Except that we only have six destroyers, Cazenestro pointed out. Losing the corvettes would cut our useful flanking force in half.
That assumes you actually have need of a flanking force, Breakwater said. But that leads us to the real core of our proposal. At the moment the Navys forces are split into, I believe, three groups: Green Task Forces One and Two in the Manticore-A system, and Red Force out at Manticore-B. Distributing your forces that way means that, at any given time, only three spots in the entire Star Kingdom are truly safe. He lifted a finger. Whereas if the seven corvettes were with MPARS and patrolling other regions of our space
Just a moment, Locatelli interrupted. Are you suggesting that the corvettes would still be armed?
Of course, Breakwater said, frowning as if that was obvious. They wouldnt be much use against your roving pirates if they werent.
I thought you didnt believe in pirates, Calvingdell said mildly.
Edward focused on her. Calvingdell had taken over the Ministry four T-years ago, after the Phobos investigation came to an end and the former Defense Minister, Earl Dapplelake, had handed in the final report and his resignation. Completely unnecessarily, in Edwards opinion, especially given that the report hadnt laid even a hint of the blame at the Defense Ministers own door. But Dapplelake had considered the debacle ultimately his responsibility, and neither the Prime Minster nor the King himself had been able to talk him out of stepping down.
Calvingdell wasnt a bad choice to fill his shoes, really. She understood people and numbers, and could deal with both.
The problem was that she didnt understand the Navy. Not the way Dapplelake had understood it. Certainly not the way Cazenestro or Locatelli or Edward himself understood it.
And like a miscalibrated impeller wedge, that blind spot might end up costing them. Badly.
There are a lot of things I dont believe in, Breakwater said, his eyes focused directly on hers now. Like a Kodiak Max targeting the weak one of the herd, the irreverent thought flickered through Edwards mind. But Im willing to concede that my knowledge is imperfect, my opinions not always correct, and the future may throw some surprises our direction. Even if there are no genuine threats out there right now, diversifying the Star Kingdoms defensive capability still makes sense.
Hardly, Cazenestro said, throwing a sideways look at Calvingdell that probably wanted to be a glare but couldnt quite bring itself to cross the line of propriety. If a threat does present itself we need to be able to counter with a strong and focused response. I doubt an attacker would sportingly hold off his operation while we gathered our ships together from every corner of the Kingdom.
On top of which, MPARS has no training in the use or maintenance of such weapons, Locatelli added. It would take years to bring your people up to speed.
Which is why were not asking that all seven corvettes be transferred at once, Winterfall spoke up. Nor is there need for them to be armed. At least, not yet.
All eyes turned to him.
Explain, please, Cazenestro said, his voice cautious.
Chancellor Breakwater is looking to the future, Winterfall said. But if the past has taught us anything, its that small steps are often the prudent course. He tapped a key on his tablet, the command popping a set of diagrams and data pages onto the tablet lying on the table in front of Edward. Ive therefore taken the liberty of working up a compromise suggestion.
Edward picked up his tablet, mentally shaking his head as he skimmed through the report. Just as he had back in the early Phobos debate, Winterfall had picked the precise psychological moment to undercut the whole basis of both Breakwaters suggestion and Cazenestros objections.
So youre saying you dont want the missiles at all? Cazenestro asked warily.
As I said, perhaps in the future, Winterfall said. If and when we get solid proof that theres a threat to the Star Kingdom, well want as many armed ships as possible. Until then he gestured to the tablet I think a pair of hull-mounted rescue pods would be more useful to MPARSs primary mission of search and rescue. It would also make sense to take the opportunity to also do a complete overhaul and upgrade. If we needed to rearm them in the future, wed want to make sure all of their systems were fully serviceable and up to date. We should probably also fit them to tow other ships in an emergency.
Interesting, Calvingdell said as she scrolled down the pages. So the rescue pods would simply replace the missile box launchers?
Exactly, My Lady, Winterfall said. And the launchers could always be restored. The necessary connection points are already there, and I understand box launchers are designed for relatively easy removal and replacement.
Relatively being the key word, Locatelli rumbled. Have you run the design by anyone else?
Not the full design, Winterfall said. But everything in it is off-the-shelf technology, so I dont anticipate any major surprises.
It would certainly be a welcome sight to a distressed mining ship, Calvingdell commented.
That point, at least, was unarguable. Edward ran his eye down the list of emergency equipment, spare parts, tools, and survival gear that would make up the bulk of one of Winterfalls proposed rescue pods, all arranged so that individual sections could be split off and dropped alongside a ship in distress. The second pod, in contrast, was a last-ditch solution for when all the repair gear failed: a compact life pod where survivors of a wrecked ship could huddle together, cramped but safe, while the corvette ferried them back to port.
Im sure it would be, Cazenestro said. But it doesnt change the fact that this would pull seven vital warships out of service. He looked at the King, who had been watching the verbal duel in silence. I presume, Your Majesty, that you recognize the potentially dire situation this would leave us in.
I do, the King said. But I also recognize that Chancellor Breakwater is correct. MPARSs resources have been stretched beyond the limit, and that situation needs to be addressed.
Edward stared down the length of the table. Was his father actually agreeing with Breakwaters transparent grab for ships and power? Especially after Secour?
We would, of course, take another page from Baron Winterfalls list of small steps, the King continued. We should begin by transferring just two of the corvettes to MPARS instead of all seven. He gestured to Cazenestro. Do you have a suggestion as to which two, My Lord?
Cazenestro looked like hed just eaten something sour. But he knew an order when he heard one. Probably Ares and Taurus, he said reluctantly. Theyre currently attached to Red Force at Manticore-B, which is where the bulk of the MPARS patrols are anyway. They should feel right at home there. Though it seems to me, Your Majesty, that theres no reason to remove their box launchers or approve their transfer until its been confirmed that Baron Winterfalls modules are actually practical.
Agreed, Michael agreed. And of course, the transfer cant take place until MPARS has men and women capable of crewing them. Chancellor Breakwaters first task will be to have those crews chosen, after which youll arrange for them to be run through the Academy and Casey-Rosewood.
Cazenestro sat up a bit straighter. Theyll be coming to us, Your Majesty?
I doubt standard MPARS training includes corvettes, My Lord, Michael pointed out dryly.
Yes, Your Majesty, I understand that, Cazenestro said, floundering a bit. But theres no significant difference in the basic systems between those ships and the ones MPARS already has in service. In fact, the primary differences are all combat systems.
And the tactical training to use them, of course, Calvingdell murmured.
Of course, Cazenestro agreed. Neither of which are MPARS priorities. My thought was that I could simply detach some of my instructors on a temporary basis to handle the degree of familiarization theyd need where the core systems are required.
As Baron Winterfall said, those ships might someday be pressed into combat, Breakwater put in smoothly. In such an event, the fact that the crews had undergone military training might prove crucial to their success and survival. In fact, he went on, as if the thought had just occurred to him, it might be a good idea if all MPARS personnel underwent such training.
An interesting proposal, Michael said, turning to Cazenestro. My Lord?
Under current conditions, Im afraid that would be impossible, Your Majesty, Cazenestro said stiffly. We simply dont have the facilities to accommodate such an influx of new people. He glowered at Breakwater. Unless the Chancellor would be willing to fund an expansion for those facilities.
Unfortunately, Parliaments budget has little room for such extras at the moment, Breakwater said. But again, we can leave that for the future. Well just focus on training the corvettes future crews and leave the full regimen for another day.
I think we have a plan of action, then, the King said. Well meet again when the final details of these rescue pods have been settled and some cost estimates worked out. I presume that will be agreeable to everyone?
Yes, Your Majesty, Calvingdell said.
Very much so, Your Majesty, Breakwater confirmed.
Michael nodded and gestured to them. Then we are dismissed, he said. Thank you all for coming.
The exit formalities were shorter than the entrance ones. Edward remained standing beside his chair until all but the King had left the room. The door closed behind the last of them, and Michael turned to his son.
I trust you found that amusing? he suggested, rising from his chair and gesturing toward the more intimate circle of lounge chairs off to the side of the room.
Amusing is hardly the word I would use, Edward said, heading for the conversation circle. Are you really going to just give Breakwater those corvettes?
I assume you have an objection?
More than just one, Edward assured him, waiting for his father to sit down and then taking the chair across from him. With your permission?
Michael inclined his head. Please.
Lets start with logistics, Edward said. If we give MPARS even a single missile, well have set the precedent for two services competing for the same small stockpile of very expensive ordnance.
Seems to me I remember the exact opposite argument being made when Breakwater wanted to break up the battlecruisers, Michael pointed out mildly.
It wasnt me making that argument, Edward pointed out in return. The fact remains that we have only a limited number of missiles to go around.
We can always get more.
Not with Breakwaters death grip on the purse strings we cant, Edward countered. Remember that old Defense Ministry policy forbidding the use of missiles in non-combat situations unless its specifically authorized practice?
Which has since been rescinded, his father pointed out.
No thanks to Breakwater, Edward said. Point two: training. Breakwaters right about his people needing a full military run-through. Cazenestro is also right about the facilities for such an influx of new people not existing. Bottom line: every slot that MPARS takes is one less slot well have for a future RMN officer or spacer. Were already behind on our personnel expansion, and that would slow it down even more. As Breakwater and Winterfall no doubt had in mind the whole time.
Ahso you did note the collusion, Michael said approvingly. Despite the surface conflict in their two proposals.
Please, DadI wasnt born yesterday, Edward said with all the scorn he felt he could deliver to a sitting monarch, trying to ignore the fresh flicker of guilt over all those missed briefings. Winterfalls last fully independent act was back at the first Phobos discussion when he undercut Breakwaters original demands. Breakwater saw how well that worked and adopted the gambit, and Winterfalls been playing dagger to Breakwaters rapier ever since.
Nicely put, Michael said with a small smile. Dagger to rapier. I may steal that one. Anything else?
The biggest one of all, Edward assured him. Command and control. You may have noticed that the Navy and MPARS dont exactly get along, at least not at the top. If the Star Kingdom ever was attacked, trying to get coordinated action from two services whove been competing for everything for years would be difficult at best and impossible at worst. And impossible in a combat situation usually means catastrophic.
Good points, all. Michael leaned forward slightly, his expression more intent. My turn now. Well skip the dramatic buildup and go straight to big one. Namely, Countess Calvingdell and First Lord Cazenestro want to give those corvettes away.
Edward felt his jaw drop. They what?
No, you heard correctly, Michael said. We discussed this in detail some time back. A conversation youd have been included in had you been available. His eyes held Edwards for a moment, and the Crown Prince felt his cheekbones heat as his fathers expression mirrored his own earlier thoughts. He wondered for a moment if Michael was going to make the message more explicit, but then the king shrugged and settled back. Theyve decided they dont want them anymore.
But Edward broke off, sensing a babble coming and determined to cut it off before he sounded as stupid as he currently felt. Yes, he should have kept up with the reports, especially those that dealt with the Navy. But even so, what in the name of heaven were they all thinking?
They want to just give them to Breakwater?
So theyve told me, Michael said. And before you start wondering about their sanity, understand that no ones making a spur-of-the-moment decision here. Breakwater may have thought he was blindsiding us with this proposal, but thereve been hints coming out of the Exchequers office for a couple of weeks now. Calvingdell and Cazenestro have had plenty of time to think this through.
But why? Edward persisted. MPARS doesnt need warships.
Perhaps not, Michael said. The more salient point is that the Navy doesnt want to keep pumping resources into non-hyper-capable, under-armed, hundred-year-old ships. At the same time, it would be a shame to simply scrap themtheyre still useful, at least for certain duties. The obvious solution is to give them to Breakwater, where theyll be eating at the MPARS lunch counter instead of the Navys. As an added bonus, the transfer will free upwhat is it, forty-five?forty-five spacers per ship for reassignment elsewhere.
Edward suppressed a glower. Maybe on paper a corvettes compliment was forty-five officers and spacers. In reality, each of them was having to make do with thirty. The whole Navy was undermanned, and that wasnt going to change any time soon. Especially if Breakwater won out with his idea to poach spots in the rosters of the Navys training facilities.
Furthermore, you have to admit that having a few small armed ships wandering around the asteroid belts isnt a bad idea, Michael continued. An in-system raider looking for easy prey could do worse than a fat miner whos loaded to the gills with high-grade ore and is hours away from any military assistance. There are also the extraction facilities outside the hyper limit, which usually have modules full of refined materials ripe for the picking. A harmless-looking rescue ship that suddenly shows herself capable of sending a missile down the pirates throats would be a highly unpleasant surprise.
I thought Winterfall agreed we werent going to arm them.
Not at the start, Michael said. But we all know thats the direction Breakwater will eventually carry the discussion.
All right, Edward said slowly. But if everyones agreed, why are we fighting about it? If Calvingdell and Cazenestro want to give him the corvettes, why did we even have this meeting?
Because its never a bad idea to let Breakwater think hes won a battle, Michael said, a grim twinkle in his eye. Its an even better idea to make him think he owes the Navy a favor that can be called in somewhere down the line.
Im not convinced Breakwater thinks that way.
Possibly not, Michael conceded. But I think Winterfall could be persuaded that direction. And even if Breakwater doesnt give a damn about debts, there are times a politicianeven our Sabrepike of a Lord Chancellorhas no choice but to pay up when the debt gets called publicly and under the right circumstances. He smiled tiredly. Besides, he likes to think of himself as a visionary whose name will resonate throughout Manticoran history. People like that sometimes have to act like statesmen, whether they want to or not.
Edward wasnt convinced of that, either. But it was clear that the decision had already been made, and made far above his own position. All he could do was accept it and deal with whatever consequences arose from it.
And he could also ask one final question. So why exactly am I here?
The twinkle faded from his fathers eye. Because when it comes time to make that deal and call in that favor, he said quietly, youll probably be the one making it. Because you will be the king.
Edward stared at his father, his earlier concerns about the older mans health roaring back. What are you saying? he asked carefully.
Im saying its time for you to start looking to the future, Michael said. For years now youve been merely a naval officer. He lifted a hand. I know: thats what you wanted, and theres nothing mere about serving your kingdom. But that time is coming to an end. The Navy can no longer be allowed to completely fill your life. Youre the Crown Prince, and you need to live and act accordingly.
I understand that, Edward said through stiff lips. Can we back up a minute to the whole Ill-be-making-the-deal bit? Is there something going on I should know about?
Its all right, Edward, Michael soothed. Come, nowdont look so serious.
Dont give me that, Edward countered. Anyway, you started it. Whats going on?
Nothing you need concern yourself with right now, Michael said. If that changes youll be the first to know.
No, no, you dont get off that easy, Edward insisted. Im the Crown Prince, remember? Everything is my concern. You just said so.
Easy there, hexapuma, the king chided, a hint of the earlier twinkle coming back into his eye. Even a crown prince isnt allowed to badger his king. Im pretty sure thats in the rules someplace.
Im not a prince badgering his king, Edward said quietly. Im a son worried about his father.
And I appreciate your concern, Michael said. But for now I need to keep this quiet. And I need you to keep what you know quiet, as well.
That wont be hard, Edward growled. Given I dont actually know anything.
See? Michael said with a smile. Youre already learning how this politics thing works.
Hooray for our side, Michael said, trying hard to read his fathers expression. Was he ill? Tired? Depressed?
Was he somehow being pushed out of office?
The thought chilled Edward right down to the bone. Could Breakwater have amassed so much power in Parliament that he could actually force the king himself from the throne? Was that what this whole corvette transfer was about, that Cazenestro and Calvingdell were acceding to the Chancellors demands because they literally had no choice?
It seemed absurd on the face of it. But maybe it wasnt. The Constitution provided for the removal of a monarch by a three-quarters vote of both houses of Parliament, but that was normally only for high crimes or misdemeanors, which would be a ludicrous allegation in King Michaels case.
But he could also be removed for incapacitation. And that one was not nearly as unthinkable.
Could the Kings health be much worse than he was admitting? Could Breakwater have learned something about Michaels medical condition which hed so far managed to keep secret?
Even from his own son? If so, Edward wasnt just a crown prince. He was one half of a constitutional crisis, the like of which the Star Kingdom of Manticore hadnt seen since its formation. And he might also be a son with a father he was likely to lose far sooner than hed dreamed.
But his father clearly didnt want to talk about it. And Edward knew from long experience that a King Michael who didnt want to be moved wasnt. At all.
Good, Michael said, some of the darkness fading from his tone. And really, dont look so worried. We have very good briefing officers, even if you havent had the time to spend with them. The Kings smile might have held just a bit of a bite, Edward thought. Youll have time to get up to speed before it becomes necessary.
He stood up. And now, I believe that matters of state have taken enough of your planned family time. Get yourself home, and be sure to hug Cynthia and Sophie for me. Hows Richard doing at the Academy?
Very well, Edward assured him as he also stood up. But hes still not too old to hug.
I should hope not, Michael said with a smile. Give him a hug from me, as well. Oh, and if you get a chance, you might try to touch base with your sister before she leaves.
Half-sister, Edwards brain made the automatic edit. Elizabeth was eleven years his junior, the offspring of his father and his fathers second wife, and Edward had been wrangling with the little upstart ever since she was old enough to understand what wrangling was. Hed occasionally thought that one of the minor perks of being in the Navy was the fact that it put him out of reach of her honed and entirely too opinionated tongue.
Still, in the five years since shed married Carmichael de Quieroz, Baron New Madrid, and set up housekeeping with the widower and his three children, Edward had heard that some of her rougher edges had smoothed a bit. It would probably be worth the time and effort to check that out for himself. Where is she off to this time?
Sphinx, Michael told him. Theyre joining a peak bear hunting party.
I hope theyre not bringing the children.
Your sister may be headstrong, but shes not stupid, Michael said with a fond smile. Mary and I will be watching them.
So trading off a potential mauling versus guaranteed and unabashed spoiling?
Something like that, Michael said. Enjoy your time with your family.
I will, Edward promised.
And he did.
But before that, before even leaving the room, he made sure to first hug his father.
Home Page | Index Page |
Comments from the Peanut Gallery:
Previous Page | Next Page |