"What do you think happened here, then?" asked Javna.
"What do you mean?" I asked.
"As you say, there shouldn't be any way to know that a ship is skipping," Javna said. "The only way we can figure this ambush occurred is if someone tipped off the Rraey."
"Back to this," I said. "Look, even if we supposed the existence of a traitor, how did he do it? Even if he somehow managed to get word to the Rraey that a fleet was coming, there's no possible way he could have known where every ship was going to appear in Coral space—the Rraey were waiting for us, remember. They hit us while we were skipping into Coral space."
"So, again," Javna said. "What do you think happened here?"
I shrugged. "Maybe skipping isn't as unlikely as we thought it was," I said.
"Don't get too worked up over the interrogations," Harry said, handing me a cup of fruit juice he'd gotten for me at the medical center's commissary. "They gave us the same 'it's suspicious you survived' bit."
"How did you react?" I asked.
"Hell," Harry said. "I agreed with them. It's damn suspicious. Funny thing is, I don't think they liked that response any better. But ultimately, you can't blame them. The colonies have just gotten the rug pulled out from under us. If we don't figure out what happened at Coral, we're in trouble."
"Well, and there's an interesting point," I said. "What do you think happened?"
"I don't know," Harry said. "Maybe skipping isn't as unlikely as we thought." He sipped his own juice.
"Funny, that's what I said."
"Yeah, but I mean it," Harry said. "I don't have the theoretical physics background of Alan, God rest his soul, but the entire theoretical model on which we understand skipping has to be wrong somehow. Obviously, the Rraey have some way to predict, with a high degree of accuracy, where our ships are going to skip. How do they do that?"
"I don't think you're supposed to be able to," I said.
"That's exactly right. But they do anyway. So, quite obviously, our model of how skipping works is wrong. Theory gets thrown out the window when observation proves it isn't so. The question now is what is really going on."
"Any thoughts on it?" I said.
"A couple, although it's not really my field," Harry said. "I don't really have the math for it."
I laughed. "You know, Alan said something very much like that to me, not too long ago."
Harry smiled, and raised his cup. "To Alan," he said.
"To Alan," I said. "And all our absent friends."
"Amen," Harry said, and we drank.
"Harry, you said you were there when they brought me on board the Sparrowhawk," I said.
"I was," he said. "You were a mess. No offense."
"None taken," I said. "Do you remember anything about the squad that brought me in?"
"A little," Harry said. "But not too much. They kept us isolated away from the rest of the ship for most of the trip. I saw you in the sick bay when they brought you in. They were examining us."
"Was there a woman in my rescue party?"
"Yes," Harry said. "Tall. Brown hair. That's all I remember right off the top of my head. To be honest, I was paying more attention to you than who was bringing you in. I knew you. I didn't know them. Why?"
"Harry, one of the people who rescued me was my wife. I'd swear on it."
"I thought your wife is dead," Harry said.
"My wife is dead," I said. "But this was her. It wasn't Kathy as she was back when we were married. She was a CDF soldier, green skin and all."
Harry looked doubtful. "You were probably hallucinating, John."
"Yeah, but if I was hallucinating, why would I hallucinate Kathy as a CDF soldier? Wouldn't I just remember her as she was?"
"I don't know," Harry said. "Hallucinations, by definition, aren't real. It's not as if they follow rules. There's no reason you couldn't have hallucinated your dead wife as CDF."
"Harry, I know I sound a little nuts, but I saw my wife," I said. "I may have been chopped up, but my brain was working fine. I know what I saw."
Harry sat there for a moment. "My squad had a few days on the Sparrowhawk to stew, you know," he said. "We were crammed into a rec room with nowhere to go and nothing to do—they wouldn't even allow us access to the ship's entertainment servers. We had to be escorted to the head. So we talked about the crew of the ship, and about the Special Forces soldiers. And here's an interesting thing: None of us knew anyone who had ever entered the Special Forces from the general ranks. By itself, it doesn't mean anything. Most of us are still in our first couple of years of service. But it's interesting."
"Maybe you have to be in the service a long time," I said.
"Maybe," Harry said. "But maybe it's something else. They call them 'Ghost Brigades,' after all." He took another sip of his juice and then set it down on my bedside table. "I think I'm going to go do some digging. If I don't come back, avenge my death."
"I'll do as best as I can under the circumstances," I said.
"Do that," Harry said, grinning. "And see what you can find out, too. You have at least another couple of interrogation sessions coming up. Try a little interrogating of your own."
"What about the Sparrowhawk?" Major Javna said at our next interview session.
"I'd like to send a message to it," I said. "I want to thank them for saving my life."
"It's not necessary," Lieutenant Colonel Newman said.
"I know, but it's the polite thing to do," I said. "When someone keeps you from being eaten toe by toe by woodland animals, the least you can do is send a little note. In fact, I'd like to send the note directly to the guys who found me. How do I do that?"
"You can't," Javna said.
"Why not?" I asked, innocently.
"The Sparrowhawk is a Special Forces ship," Newman said. "They run silent. Communication between Special Forces ships and the rest of the fleet is limited."
"Well, that doesn't seem very fair," I said. "I've been in the service for over a year, and I never had a problem getting mail to my friends on other ships. You would think even Special Forces soldiers would want to hear from their friends in the outside universe."
Newman and Javna glanced at each other. "We're getting off track," Newman said.
"All I want to do is send a note," I said.
"We'll look into it," Javna said, in a tone that said, No we won't.
I sighed and then told them, for probably the twentieth time, about why I gave permission to blow the Modesto's shuttle bay doors.
"How's your jaw?" Dr. Fiorina asked.
"Fully functional and ready to chew on something," I said. "Not that I don't like soup through a straw, but it gets monotonous after a while."
"I sympathize," Fiorina said. "Now let's look at the leg." I pulled down the covers and let him take a look—the ring was now halfway down the calf. "Excellent," he said. "I want you to start walking on that. The unprocessed portion will support your weight, and it'll be good to give the leg a little exercise. I'll give you a cane to use for the next couple of days. I notice you have some friends who come to visit you. Why don't you have them take you to lunch or something."
"You don't have to tell me twice," I said, and flexed the new leg a little. "Good as new," I said.