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“I see, sir.” The response wasn’t as whole-hearted as he would have liked. “The crew will be glad to get out of dock and into space again. Does the admiral think the new admiral will agree?”

“I expect so,” Arash said. “Why not? A few months behind a desk doesn’t make me overqualified for ship command.”

“Of course, sir.”

“In any case, whoever gets her will probably use her for his flagship. We should be putting the extra communications gear aboard and making sure there’s space for the admiral’s staff.”

The lieutenant commander grinned. “Sir, we anticipated that she might become a flagship, and most of that’s in place. If the admiral has time, he might want to come aboard and look over the changes.”

“I’ll make the time,” Arash said.

Converting any ship to flag service meant squeezing in the extra staff and their equipment as well as their supplies. Arash noted that Vigilance’s crew had put the flag functions some distance aft of the bridge, but in line with it, displacing the senior officers’ wardroom. This was one of the two commonest configurations for large cruisers; the other put the flag space directly across the port corridor from the bridge access, but that was a busier area, and most admirals preferred the aft location. With duplication of bridge readouts and communications, it was just as convenient. Arash approved.

Not entirely to his surprise, Vida Serrano arrived to take her own office back. Arash did his best to conceal the chagrin with which he noticed her staff’s burst of enthusiasm. They had worked well for him, but he had never had the kind of warm reception they showed her. The Serrano mystique, he thought sourly, and wondered for a moment if his request to take over Heris Serrano’s ship was such a good idea as it had seemed before. But Admiral Serrano brought up the topic before he could sheer away. It was clear she thought admirals minor with combat experience should be out there in fighting ships.

“I’d be commanding from a ship myself if my orders didn’t specifically prohibit it,” she said. “You’d better take Vigilance—Heris’s exec will make you a good flag captain, I don’t doubt—”

“That’ll be fine, Admiral,” Arash said. “But actually, I was thinking of Commander Burleson. He’s been with me quite awhile; we’re used to working together. He has combat experience; he was my XO on Firedrake and then again on Emperor Roy.”

“Well . . . someone you’re used to could be a real help. I was hoping to keep Burleson on staff here, but you’ll be the one under fire.”

“Thank you, sir.” Arash managed not to heave an audible sigh of relief. He was sure Heris’s exec was capable, or more, but the man’s coolness towards him would make it just that bit more difficult to work together. Would the man resent being displaced?

“In that case, I think I’ll give Mackay a ship. You can find someone for your exec, can’t you?”

“Of course, Admiral.” With Burleson and . . . Keller, yes . . . he would have two people who were comfortable with him. And Mackay wouldn’t see himself as shunted aside if he were given a ship. “Thank you, sir.”

“You’re quite welcome. I’m just sorry more of Heris’s crew isn’t available.”

It would work out, he told himself. He told himself that again when he packed up his things and had them taken over to Vigilance, and when he went aboard. Heris’s crew—his now—certainly gave every evidence of superb training. They rendered the honors due an admiral minor coming aboard a flagship with precision and enthusiasm.

“Welcome aboard, Admiral,” Lt. Commander Mackay said. “We’re looking forward to some action.”

“Congratulations on your new command,” Arash said. “I hear your ship’s in transit, due in a few days.”

“Yes, sir.” Mackay grinned. “I hate to leave old Vigilance, but—my own ship—”

“You’ve earned it,” Arash said. Inspiration struck. “Look here—we’re all dealing with scratch crews—if you’d like to take a few people you know along with you, I’m sure we can work something out.”

Mackay looked relieved. “Are you sure, sir? Admiral Serrano said they still hadn’t found me an exec, and there’s a fine young fourth officer aboard. He’s a bit junior, but—”

“Go ahead,” Arash said. “You ought to have someone you’re comfortable with, on your first ship. I’ll take a replacement—with the rest of this crew as experienced as they are, it’s not a problem.”

“Thanks, sir. When will Captain Burleson be coming aboard?”

“Tomorrow morning, I think. He had a dental checkup—tried to get out of it, but the surgeons grabbed him.”

He seemed enthusiastic, and Arash—who had met the ships’ officers frequently in the past few days—now felt the same warmth from all of them. He relaxed a little. Serrano mystique was one thing, but the Livadhis knew something about command as well. Admiral Serrano had already complimented him on doing a good job under difficult conditions.

The ones who worried him most, the ones who had been imprisoned on false charges when Heris left Fleet, seemed as cordial as the rest. He made a point of searching them out and greeting them, but he saw nothing in their eyes but respect. Several were now officers, and if mustangs, they were capable mustangs. Heris would have insisted on that, he knew. The ship felt good, the way a happy ship should. Burleson reported the same, once he took over.

He was waiting for the arrival of a light cruiser and some patrol craft that would form his combat group, when word came that mutineer ships had begun hitting commercial vessels as they made the long insystem crawl from jump point to orbital Station.

“Something’s cut them off from their supply base,” was Admiral Serrano’s analysis. “They’ve hit ships carrying Fleet resupply, including weaponry.” She looked at the group in her office. “We’re going to start using convoys; I’m not waiting for HQ on this one. We need the cargos, and we don’t want the mutineers to have them. Admiral Livadhi, there’s a supply run heading next week. You’ll direct the convoy. We’re not announcing it; they’ll find out soon enough.”

Organizing the convoy took several days. The civilian captains of the ships involved did not like the restrictions which a convoy would place on them; they argued that Fleet should simply have enough patrols in any system to protect them. Arash wore his voice out explaining why this wouldn’t work and finally had to ask Admiral Serrano to intervene. They had Fleet contracts for some of their cargo, and therefore, she said, they were under Fleet control until those cargos were delivered.

“Might as well be mutineers,” muttered one of the captains.

“Think again,” Vida Serrano said. “They take ears.”

“Uh?”

“Ears cut from the bodies they leave behind. Take a look.” She handed out flatpics of the carnage the mutineers had left behind on the Saffron Dynasty and the Settis III. The captains blenched and gave in.

The convoy moved out toward the jump point in a ragged formation flanked by four patrol ships and two escorts, with Vigilance in the lead. Arash had read that in wet navies ships could zigzag to avoid raiders, but zigzags were impractical in space, especially for ships which lacked the ability to microjump. He did insist on their practicing some maneuvers in formation, but Eliza Garnerin came within 1300 meters of Haboob, and so terrified both captains that it took all Arash’s persuasive skill to keep them from dropping out altogether. “We know there aren’t any mutineers in this system,” one of them said. “We could just stay here . . .”