Hi Cythia,
You only read EoH once?
Is it within easy access for you?
I'm shocked and dismayed, its one of my favorites.
Well, all of them are my favorites, with all sorts of post-it notes, as RFC knows, and I've gone through some of them again recently, when questions arise regarding exactly who did or said what etc.
From the textev of EoH, there were no Manticoran or other allies remaining behind, indeed HH's problem was finding enough navy veterans for her Elysian Space Navy, barely 6000 out of over 600,000 prisoners.
While Horace Harkness [another HH
] might have ruined the personnel files, they had to turn over control of Camp Sharon to those remaining behind including the pinnaces and shuttles to keep distributing the food until the SS etc finally showed up again, since some 217+K [~35%] remained behind.
I suspect they wanted their records intact to indicate they were worthy or repatriation etc.
While they didn't know it, Eloise's probable 'rescue and release' might have happened within 18-20 T-month's.
L
cthia wrote:SWM wrote:*quote="cthia"*
You may be right Hutch. I only vaguely remember a passage which stated that all of the passengers 'who wanted' to leave did. My memory is a bit hazy, but I thought some chose to remain behind - that were not PRH citizens. Although I couldn't guarantee it.*quote*
Many did choose to stay behind. But there was no mention of Manticorans among them, and it seems likely that all Manticorans would have wanted to leave. There weren't that many Manticorans on Hades to start with.
crewdude48 wrote:
In fact, you could make a very good case that any sailor from an Alliance navy on planet that was offered the chance to escape and didn't would be guilty of desertion and dereliction of duty. Their duty is to continue the fight to protect their home world from the PRH, regardless of danger to themselves. Furthermore, Fleet Admeral (GSN) Herrington had every right, as senior Alliance officer on planet, to order any Allied military person to participate in the escape. So they would also be guilty of disobeying a lawful order. At least two of those are capital crimes in wartime, so I doubt that any Allied personell were left on planet.
I'm sure that you're both right. My memory is fuzzy. I only read that book once. I
thought that it was Rear Admiral Style's blustering and overall lack of support and confidence in the plan that frightened some into electing to remain out of fear of StateSec reprisal. I'm probably wrong. No need to be afraid of capital crimes while forever stuck in hell.