I'm sipping coffee with the Commander when the alarm screams.
"Another rucking drill?" The things have worn my temper to frayed ends. Three, four times a day.
And the only time that bitching horn howls is when I have something better to do.
The Commander's pallor, as he plunges toward the hatch, is answer enough. This time is for real.
For real. I make Ops before the hatch closes, barely a limp behind the Old Man.
It is easier in operational mode.
Yanevich and Nicastro crowd Fisherman. I wriggle into the viewscreen seat. The Commander elbows up to the tachyon detector.
"Ready to Climb, First Watch Officer?"
"Ready, Commander. Engineering is ready for annihilation shift."
I hunch down, lean till I can peek between arms and elbows. The tachyon detector's screen is alive for the first time since we lost touch with the mother. It shows a tiny, intense, sideways V at three o'clock, which trails an almost flat ventral progression wave. The dorsal is boomerangshaped.
A dozen cloudy feathers of varying length lie between the two.
"One of ours," I remark. "Battle Class cruiser. Probably Mediterranean subclass. Salamis or Lepanto. Maybe Alexandria, if she's finished refitting."
Four pairs of eyes drill holes into my skull. Too wary to ask, both men are thinking, "What the hell do you know?"
Chief Canzoneri calls out, "Commander, I've got an ID on the emission pattern. Friendly. Cruiser.
Battle Class. Mediterranean subclass. Salamis or Alexandria. We'll have to move closer if you want a positive for the log. We need a finer reading in the epsilon."
"Never mind. Command can decide who it was." He continues staring holes through me. Some of the men look at me as if they've just noted my presence. "Mr. Yanevich. We'll take her up for a minute. No point them wasting time chasing us."
Making a Climb is a simple way of saying friend.
Back in the wardroom, the Old Man demands, "How did you do that?"
Why not play a little? They're always playing with me. "What?"
"ID that cruiser."
I was surprised when they stared but was more amazed that Fisherman bothered with the alarm. "The display. Any good operator can read progression lines. I saw a lot of the Mediterraneans, back when."
"Junghaus is good. I've never seen him do anything like that."
"Battle Class ships have unique tails. Usually you look at the feathers. But Battle Class has a severe arch in the dorsal line. The Meds have a top line longer than the bottom. From there it's just arithmetic. There're only three Meds out here. I can't remember the feathers or I would've told you which one. I didn't do any magic."
"I don't think Fisherman could've done it. He's good, but he doesn't worry about details. He'll argue Bible trivia from now till doomsday, but can't always tell a Main Battle from a Titan tug.
Maybe he doesn't care."
"I thought that was the point of having an operator and a screen."
"In Climbers we only need to know if something's out there. Junghaus is just cruising till he gets his ticket to the Promised Land."
"That's a harsh judgment."
"The man gets on my nerves— But they all do. They're like children. You've got to watch them every minute. You've got to wipe their noses and kiss their bruises...Sorry. Maybe we should've had a longer leave. Or a different one."
Fearless Fred wanders in. This is the first I've seen him this week. He one-eyes us, chooses my lap.
"Remember Ivan the Terrible?" I ask, scratching the cat's head and ears.
"That idiot Marine unarmed combat instructor? I hope he's getting his ass kicked from pole to pole on some outback—
"No. The other one. The cat we had in kindergarten."
"Kindergarten? I don't remember that far back." After a moment, "The mascot. The cat that had puppies."
"Kittens."
"Whatever. Yeah. I remember."
First year in Academy. Kindgergarten year. You were still human enough and child enough to rate a few live cuddly toys. Ivan the Terrible was our mascot, and less reputable than Fearless. All bones and battle scars after countless years of a litter every four months. The best that could be said for her was that she loved us kids as much as we loved her, and brought her offspring marching proudly in as soon as they could stumble. She died beneath the wheels of a runaway electric scooter, leaving battalions of descendants behind. I think her death was the first traumatic experience of the Commander's young life.
It was my biggest disappointment for years. That one shrieking moment unmasked the cruel indifference of my universe. Thereafter it was all downhill from innocence. Nothing surprised or hurt me for a long time. Nor the Commander, that I saw, though we eventually suffered worse on an adult value scale.
"I remember," the Commander says again. "Fearless, there was a lady of your own stripe."
"Bad joke."
Fred cracks an eyelid. He considers the Commander. He yawns.
"But he don't care," I say.
"That's the problem. Nobody cares. We're out here getting our asses blown off, and nobody cares.
Not the people we're protecting, not Navy, not the other firm, not even ourselves most of the time." He stares at the cat for half a minute. "We're just going through the motions, getting it over so we can go on leave again."
He's getting at purpose again, obliquely. I felt the same way during my first active-duty tour.
They hammered and hammered and hammered at us in Academy, then sent us out where nobody had a sense of mission. Where no one gave a damn. All anyone wanted was to make grade and get the retirement points in. They did only what they had to do, and not a minim more. And denied any responsibility for doing more.
Admiral Tannian, for all his shortcomings, has striven to correct that in his bailiwick. He may be going about it the wrong way, but... were the Commander suddenly deposited on one of the Inner Worlds, he'd find himself a genuine, certified hero. Tannian has made those people care.
Even the smoothest Climberman, though, would abrade the edge off his welcome. Like a pair of dress boots worn through a rough campaign, even Academy's finest lose their polish in Tannian's war.
"Don't scratch. It'll cause sores."
I find myself digging through my beard again. Is that a double entendre? "Too late now. I've got them already. The damned thing won't stop itching."
"See Vossbrink. He'll give you some ointment."
"What I want is a razor." Mine disappeared under mysterious circumstances. In a ship without hiding places it's managed to stay disappeared.
"Candy ass." The Commander uses his thin, forced smile. "Want to ruin our scurrilous image? You might start a fad."
"Wouldn't hurt, would it?" The atmosphere system never quite catches up with the stench of a crew unbathed for weeks, and of farts, for which there are interdepartmental olympiads. Hell, I didn't find those funny in Academy, when we were ten. Sour grapes, maybe. I was a second-rate athlete even in that obscene event.
Urine smells constantly emanate from the chamberpots we use when sealed hatches deny us access to the Admiral's stateroom.
Each compartment has its own auxiliary air scrubber. These people won't use them just to ease my stomach. "Feh!" I give my nose a stylish pinch.
"Wait a few months. Till we can't stop the mold anymore."
"Mold? What mold?"
"You'll see, if this goes on much longer. First time they make us stay up very long." What looked like a drift toward good humor ends as that thought hits the table. The ship will stay out as long as it takes.
"Enough piddling around. Got to write up the war log. Been letting it slide because there's nothing to say. Shitheaded Command. Want you to write twice as much, saying why, whenever there's nothing happening. Someday I'll tell them."
I've glimpsed that log. Its terse summations make our days prime candidates for expungement from the pages of history.
The minimum to get by. From bottom to top.
I clump after the Old Man and consequently reach Operations in time for a playback of the news received last beacon rendezvous.