"Vatta's War - 03 - Engaging The Enemy" - читать интересную книгу автора (Moon Elizabeth) But no. The visual record returned, as someone pulled debris off him. She recognized the faces: old George, their pilot Gaspard, someone she had seen around the office...Marin Sanlin, the implant told her. Her father looked toward the house, now a tower of flame and smoke...
Even seeing it, she could not quite believe it. Surely the comfortable sprawling house with its tall windows to catch the sea breeze, its cool tile floors, had not really gone so fast, so completely. Some walls still stood, as fire raged inside, consuming everything from her past...the long, polished dining room table, the library with its shelves of data cubes and old books, the paintings, the family rooms... The pool, its surface crusted with debris, shards of wood and ash, and then the horror of her mother's face... Ky terminated the playback, squeezed her eyes shut, and opened them again to the bland blank screen of the desk display. Her mother. Beautiful, intelligent, graceful, infuriating to a daughter who had never felt as beautiful, as intelligent, as graceful...she had been annoyed so often, rebellious so often, resistant so often to her mother's advice, and now...now she could never tell her mother how much she admired and loved the woman who had given her birth. Ky pushed away from the desk. It was real; it had really happened; her mother was really dead...no mistaking that...and she would have to find a way to cope, but not right this moment. Instead, she headed for the ship's gym. Osman had not run a slack ship, and Fair Kaleen had a superb facility for keeping a crew of pirates battle-ready, from the usual run of exercise machines to an onboard firing range. She would work some of this off and counter the effect of all those premium-grade rations at the same time. Gordon Martin was there before her. She paused a moment, watching him do a gymnastics sequence, rolls and flips. He came upright facing the hatch and nodded to her. " 'Morning, Captain." "Do you feel like sparring with me?" Ky asked. His brows raised. "Of course, Captain, but-you seem upset." She didn't want to explain; she just wanted to hit something. Somebody. "Exercise will help," she said. "You need to stretch first," he said. Ky nodded, and went through preliminary stretches as fast as she thought she could get away with. Then they squared off on the gymnastics mats. Ky forced herself to start slowly, with the basics; Gordon matched her. They had trained in the same system and they had sparred enough before to have a feel for each other's styles. She was sweaty and sore when they quit, but she felt somewhat better for it. _______ Going back to the implant's replay was hard. She wanted to skip ahead, but she knew she must not. Her mother's face-distorted by bruises, smeared with wet ash, all too obviously dead-was relieved only by the life signs readouts along the edge of the visual field. Her father had looked at her mother a long time before someone took her body away, as his own condition worsened. Blood pressure dropping, core temperature, arterial oxygen...the implant cut functions not in use, finally managing only the recording she now watched and heard. She saw her aunt Grace through her father's eyes, saw the fierce old woman not as the dotty, fussy prima donna she'd always seemed. Aunt Grace, in that hour, could have been any battlefield commander in a crisis. Any good one. The implant shut down while her father was being evacuated, apparently because his condition had deteriorated to the point that the implant could no longer get enough energy to record. There was another Urgent file, of a family meeting-Ky could not tell where or when-and then the implant shut down again. Stella'd said that her father had told Aunt Grace to take his implant. Had Grace accessed these files, marked them for urgent retrieval? Or had her father done that? She found it easier to ponder that than to think about the images she'd seen. She spent the next hour exploring the implant's capacity, though a short period wasn't enough to access all the organization in detail. A command-level implant held far more, had many more functions, than the one she'd used before she entered the Academy. The new ansible function she'd acquired in external link contact with Rafe was enclosed in its own kernel and now carried the ISC logo. She would have to ask Rafe about that, but not at the moment. Ship-related functions were actually much broader than she'd realized; she could even override any of her crew at the controls, if she wanted. Though Fair Kaleen had not been updated for decades, longer than she'd been alive, the old Vatta command datasets deep in the ship's AI had served Osman well and he had never bothered to delete them. Her implant had already interacted with the AI to bring it up to current Vatta standards. In the financial hierarchy, she had access to all her father's knowledge as of the time of the attack, everything from who held which insurance policies on what to the interstellar potential of the tik trade. Much of that was beyond her; she'd never cared much about the investment end. She'd study it later, or find someone who already understood it. Stella, maybe. "Captain...do you want something to eat?" That was Toby, tapping gently on her door. "Yes, thank you." She stood up stiffly, feeling the exercise she'd done that morning. She should eat. She should sleep. The implant informed her that she'd been working six hours-six hours? What with the earlier session, exercise, and the second session, she'd skipped one meal already. Fair Kaleen's mess had seating for twenty. Ky's crew clustered at one end of the long table. The last meal of first shift was the first meal for third shift, so all but Mitt, on bridge watch, were there. Ky sat between Alene and Lee. "I've got the inventory for all the aired-up compartments done," Gordon said. "I know what the ship's AI says are in the unaired compartments, but I don't know if it's right." "Do we have anything clearly identifiable as legally owned?" Ky asked. "Most of it's unmarked or in ordinary shipping containers, but without bills of lading. Osman didn't keep a record of the ships he stole from-at least not one I've found yet." Her father's implant had a section on laws relating to privateering. The privateer took possession of an enemy ship and its contents, and profited by selling off cargo. Open containers were presumed to belong to the ship that carried them, and went to the privateer without question, but sealed containers with bills of lading were supposed to be sequestered and put in the control of a court-appointed assessor at the next port. If they proved to be genuine shipments, then they were shipped on to the original consignee, but with a reward judgment payable to the privateer for "stolen goods recovery." Sealed containers without proper bills of lading could be tricky. Technically they should go through adjudication, but privateers opened sealed but unlabeled containers to convert them to private use. She accessed the ship's AI and downloaded the current inventory. Even richer than she'd thought at first. But what could she do with it? Wealth could not bring the dead to life. Even if she rebuilt the house on Corleigh, her father and mother would not live in it...her uncle would never sit at the head of the table in the Vatta Enterprises boardroom. And that would never happen. She forced herself back to the present. "Was Osman's version of the inventory accurate, when you checked it as far as you could?" "Yes. I was surprised, but I suppose he never expected anyone would have access to this ship's data." "Then I'm going to assume whatever's in the unaired compartments is the same as the list. It's not as if we needed all that." Which was silly, she knew as she said it. They needed much more if she was going to restore just the physical side of Vatta, let alone strike back at their attackers. After the meal, she settled into her cabin to consider what next. A year ago-was it really that long?-she had been a happy, ambitious fourth-year cadet in the Slotter Key Spaceforce Academy, looking forward to a career as a Spaceforce officer and a relationship with her fellow cadet Hal. Since then she had been kicked out of the Academy and dumped by the man she loved. Her subsequent career as a trader in the family business-which she had expected to be boring-had been marked by war, mutiny, attempted assassinations, and finally the capture-from a rogue Vatta-of this very ship. Her family and its thriving interstellar business had been almost destroyed. Her own government had sent her a clandestine letter of marque, authorizing her to act as a privateer on its behalf, shortly before refusing to defend or support her family when some enemy attacked. Now she was supposed to save what was left of the family and business, with no allies and too few assets. Too many changes too fast. She focused her attention on the ship again, checking system by system via her cranial implant. All systems nominal, and her senses told her everything felt, smelled, sounded normal as well. She had no excuse to avoid the larger issues. What was she going to do next? Where would the next attack come from? Not while they were in FTL flight, at least. She activated the sleep cycle enabler for the second time, and woke eight hours later, this time clearheaded enough to realize that the first sleep hadn't been enough. Now she felt solid out to the edges again. Ready to work. She considered another workout in the gym, but decided instead to work on what she least wanted to do, methodically go through Osman's cargo list and assign her best guess at the value, item by item. Some of it was easier than she expected, thanks to her father's implant. Some was nearly impossible-who could say what someone would pay for prohibited technology most people didn't know existed? Her stomach rumbled, reminding her that she had been up for two hours without eating. In the galley, she ignored the enticing Premium Gold Breakfast Pak-she felt bloated with all the good food they'd been enjoying-and settled for a protein bar and mug of juice. Someone had left a sticky mug and bowl in the sink; she rinsed it automatically as she considered an array of options. She had two ships now: Gary Tobai, old and slow, and this one, larger, faster, and-most usefully-very well armed. The nucleus of a fleet, albeit a very small fleet. If she was going to command a fleet, she needed a staff. Before that, she needed a full crew of capable personnel on each ship...and before that, she needed to know how much money she had to hire the capable personnel and supply the ships... "'Morning, Captain." Gordon Martin reached past her for a bowl and poured a modest serving of dry flakes into it. He looked, as always, like the veteran soldier he had been before he joined her crew. "I've finished the security survey; Osman's bad boys didn't have time to put in many traps. All disarmed." "That's good," Ky said. "Do you object to my doing some practice on the firing range today?" he asked. "I've checked the reinforcement of the target frames; it's plenty safe for what I'm using." "That's fine," she said. She should get in some practice time, too. "Martin, I wanted to talk to you about command structure, now that I have two ships-" "Think you can keep this one?" he asked, pouring milk onto his flakes. "I'm going to keep this one," Ky said. "It's a Vatta ship. I'm restoring it to its proper ownership." "Well, then. You're talking tables of organization?" One did not say I guess so to older veterans, which was Martin's identity no matter what the papers said. "Yes," Ky said instead. "Simple, but something that can scale up." "Based on Vatta tradition, or..." His voice trailed off; he eyed her as he munched on the flakes. Ky shook her head. "Until we take care of whoever's been attacking Vattas, the old protocols aren't any good. Sure, we need our tradeships back at work hauling cargo and making money, but we can't count on that until we aren't being blown up, shot at, and all the rest. I'm thinking small fleet. I have two ships now. I'm reasonably sure that not all Vatta ships have been destroyed; as we find them, we can bring them into the plan." "We. Meaning you?" "We meaning me, my cousin Stella, and you, Martin. And the rest of the crews." "But with you in command." No doubt in his voice at all. "Yes," Ky said. "I am the only Vatta I know of with the right training." "Yeah. I see that..." He ate two more spoonfuls, then put the spoon down. "See here, Captain, you have to understand: my background is supply and security. The security duties grew out of supply and inventory control. I've been in a ship in combat, in the Slotter Key System, but I don't know as much as you need about weapons and tactical things." "What about that organization stuff?" Ky asked. |
|
|