“The Benignity ships—” She couldn’t help that, or the tone it popped out in.
“Yes. No disrespect to Commander . . . er . . . whoever it was—”
“Serrano,” murmured Margiu.
“But the Benignity performance was markedly better than expected. And there’s new data—from this very facility—well, not where we’re going but where I assume you’ve been, the Copper Mountain base—to indicate that they upgraded one of our ships they captured. For instance, the time to recharge—no. I mustn’t get onto this.” Margiu could see the effort it cost him to rein that enthusiasm back. “Tell you what, let’s talk about wet navies. Here we are, flying over a superb large ocean, and I’ll bet you’ve never studied wet-navy history, have you?”
“Only a little,” Margiu said. Her mind scrabbled frantically in search of some crumb of data to prove that she had studied it at all, but only the word Trafalgar rose up. She couldn’t remember if it had been an admiral, a ship, or a battle. “Trafalgar,” she said.
“Of course!” He beamed at her. “A mighty battle indeed, that was, but perhaps a little remote for our purposes. Are you familiar with the application of Nelson’s sail tactics to colonial naval battles?”
“Uh . . . no, sir.”
“Consider, if you will, the archipelagos of Skinner III.” He spread his hands, as if touching a particular geographic area, and Margiu wondered if she ought to admit she didn’t know what an archipelago was. She didn’t have time. “Forty thousand islands, at least. Colonized with intent to exploit its obvious advantages for aquaculture, but, as always, underfunded and subject to piracy. Abundant timber, so—”
Margiu’s com beeped; she pressed the button. Her companion watched, bright-eyed. The pilot spoke: “Ensign, Major—” She glanced back and saw the other officer sit up; he met her eyes across the plane. “There’s some kind of trouble at Stack Islands. Apparently personnel are missing, believed lost at sea—”
“What personnel?” the major asked.
“Base Three commander and a guard corporal. There’s also a life raft missing from the Three Base aircar hangar, and evidence of a struggle . . . they’re saying the corporal may have gone crazy and kidnapped the commander. But anyway—we’re to join the search; they don’t have any long-range craft, and they suspect the life raft was blown west by the storm into the North Current.”
Margiu started to say that her orders were to get those directives to the base commanders without delay, but decided not to. The pilot knew she was a courier, and if someone were down there in a raft, surely that had to come first. She hoped.
They were still at least an hour east of the Stacks, but Margiu could not help scanning below for the life raft. She had no idea how big it would look from whatever altitude they were flying.
Dark dots appeared on the sea. “Those are the Stacks,” the pilot said. Margiu stared at them . . . a scatter of tall black rocks, whose height above the water was hard to judge in this flat light. The plane lost altitude again in a sudden lurch. “We’ll be over Stack Island Three in an hour.”
The Stacks looked impossibly forbidding—too tall, too narrow on top, too bleak. Why had Fleet put bases out here at all? She’d read the cubes, but it still seemed ridiculous. The plane droned on, and the Stacks rose up and sank, appearing and disappearing . . . a total of 98 visible at high tide, 117 at low, according to the cube. Some so small that not even an aircar could land vertically on top.
They left the Stacks behind, and Margiu stared at the sea from her side of the craft with more intensity.
“Signal!” the pilot said suddenly. “I’ve got a beacon! And confirmation from upstairs.” The plane heeled on one wing, and Margiu gulped her stomach back into place. When she laid her forehead on the window, the glass felt colder than before.
The major spotted it first; Margiu heard him call out, and the pilot swung the plane around again. Now she saw the little yellow chip on the gray-green sea. Was anyone in it? Alive? She could not imagine what it must be like.
“We’re going down,” the pilot said. Margiu clamped her jaws shut. Going down? Was something wrong with the plane?
“It’s all right, Ensign,” the major said, catching her eye. “This is a seaplane, remember. It can land on the water.”
Margiu drew a shaky breath. Water, yes: in a protected lagoon, shallow and calm. She hadn’t known any aircraft could land on open ocean without sinking. She wasn’t sure she believed it.
“Hoods on,” the pilot ordered. Margiu plucked the hood of her PPU from its curl around her neck and put it on. If it was so safe, why this precaution? She put her hands into the gloves, too, and made sure the wrist and boot grapples were locked back. She peered out. They were much lower now, and she could see that the surface of the ocean heaved slowly in broad swells, reflecting the bright yellow canopy of the life raft. Through that clear, quiet water, she saw something swimming—some long, narrow shapes.
“Isn’t this exciting?” asked her seatmate. “A most excellent adventure, my first water landing in an aircraft.” He didn’t look frightened at all. Margiu was scared, though she wasn’t going to admit it. “Of course, if we come in too fast, or too steeply, we’ll be killed, which would be a shame. Let me see . . . this planet’s gravitational attraction is 1.012 that of Earth, and that means . . .”
Margiu closed her ears; she wanted to close her eyes, but she could not look away from the water’s surface . . . the smooth water looked less smooth the closer they came. Then spray fountained past the window; the safety harness dug in as the plane lurched and swayed. The plane slowed, settling in the water; she could feel the movement of the ocean take over from the movement of the air, lifting and dropping the plane in a leisurely oscillation. The inboard engine on her side stopped, and her window cleared. She remembered the briefing, that in event of an emergency landing, the craft would keep two engines going, with the ducts adjusted to minimize blast on the escape rafts. Presumably the same technique would keep the prop blast from blowing this life raft away.
As they rose on the swell, she could see the yellow canopy of the life raft in the distance. The pilot’s voice came over the roar of the engine. “We don’t have current weather data—MetSatIV’s down again—and although it looks dead calm now, I don’t trust it. We’re not going to be down one second longer than we have to be. You will all do exactly what my crew chief tells you.”
The crew chief beckoned to them. The professor climbed out and let Margiu into the aisle after the major had gone past.
“Major, you and the ensign will need to hang onto this line . . . steady . . .”
Margiu wrapped her gloved hands around the rope. Line. Whatever they wanted to call it, it was rope to her, familiar from the family farm. The major, ahead of her, blocked half her view of the outside, but she could see water not that far below, and nothing but water to the horizon. She shivered in spite of her PPU.
“Why not just tie the rope to the plane?” the major asked.
“Sir, we never secure the aircraft to something like the raft. Should it capsize—”
“It’s a life raft,” the major said. “It’s made to not capsize. I shouldn’t have to stand here holding a stupid rope.”
“Right, sir—just let me take that a moment.” The crew chief took the rope from the major, passed the slack to Margiu, and then back to the professor, who had come along without being asked.
The canopy flap opened; a head poked out, shrouded in a PPU hood.
“Who are you?” croaked a voice.
“Chief Stivers,” the chief said. “And you are . . . the missing Corporal Meharry?”
“They’ve reported me missing?” The voice sounded odd; Margiu could see the strain on that face. “I was supposed to be dead.”