Hutch
Vice Admiral
Posts: 1831
Joined: Fri Nov 26, 2010 12:40 pm
Location: Huntsville, Alabama y'all
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Well, I'm back. (30 days in Australia, New Caledonia and New Zealand didn't give me much chance to post). Researching another issue for another thread, I bumped into this passage and think it's worth recording. Honor Harrington meets a Commander who will play a critical role in her future.. From the Honor of the Queen: Yet it was the major’s prisoner who interested her. He looked far more composed than he could possibly be, and she felt an unwilling respect for him as he gazed levelly back at her. He’d done an outstanding job—better, she suspected, than she could have done under the circumstances—yet she sensed an odd sort of strain under his self-possessed surface and wondered if it had anything to do with his request for this interview with her.
The commander tucked his cap under his arm and braced to attention.
“Commander Thomas Theisman, Navy of the Faithful, Ma’am,” he said crisply—in an accent that had never come from Masada.
“Of course you are, Commander.” Honor’s irony was impaired by her persistently slurred speech, and she saw his eyes widen as he took in her dead, ravaged face and bandaged left eye. But though she waited expectantly, he refused to rise to the bait of her response, and she shrugged.
“What was it you wished to see me about, Commander?”
“Ma’am, I—"
Theisman glanced at Ramirez, then back at her, his appeal for privacy as eloquent as it was silent. The major stiffened, but Honor regarded the Havenite thoughtfully as he closed his mouth tight and stared back at her.
“That will be all for the moment, Major,” she said at last, and Ramirez bristled for an instant, then clicked to attention and withdrew in a speaking silence. “And now, Commander?” she invited. “Was there something you wanted to tell me about why the People’s Republic attacked Her Majesty’s Navy?”
“Captain Harrington, I’m a registered Masadan citizen,” Theisman replied. “My vessel is—was—the Masadan Naval Ship Principality.”
“Your ship was the destroyer Breslau, built by the Gunther Yard for the People’s Republic of Haven,” Honor said flatly. His eyes widened a fraction, and the mobile corner of her mouth smiled thinly. “My boarding parties found her builder’s plaque, as well as her splendidly official Masadan registry, Commander Theisman.” Her smile vanished. “Shall we stop playing games now?”
He was silent for a moment, then replied in a voice as flat as hers.
“My ship was purchased by the Masadan Navy, Captain Harrington. My personnel are all legally Masadan citizens.” He met her eye almost defiantly, and she nodded. This man knew his duty as well as she knew hers, and he was under orders to maintain his cover story, patently false or not.
“Very well, Commander,” she sighed. “But if you intend to stick to that, may I ask why you wanted to see me?” “Yes, Ma’am,” Theisman replied, yet for the first time he appeared clearly uncomfortable. “I—" He clenched his jaw, then went on steadily. “Captain, I don’t know what you intend to do about the base on Blackbird, but I thought you should know. There are Manticoran personnel down there.”
“What?!” Honor half-stood before she could stop herself. “If this is some kind of—" she began ominously, but he interrupted her.
“No, Ma’am. Captain Y—" He cleared his throat. “One of my superiors,” he went on carefully, “insisted that the survivors from HMS Madrigal be picked up. They were. Thereafter, they were delivered to Blackbird to be held by . . . the appropriate local authorities.”
Honor sank back into her chair, and his painstaking choice of words sounded a warning deep in her brain. She had no doubt Masada would have happily abandoned any of Madrigal’s survivors to their fate—indeed, she’d assumed that was what had happened and tried not to think of the deaths they must have died. Now she knew some of them had lived, instead, but something about the way Theisman had said “appropriate local authorities” chilled her instant surge of joy. He was distancing himself from those authorities, at least as much as his cover story allowed.
Why?
She started to ask him, but the plea in his eyes was even stronger than before, and she changed her question.
“Why are you telling me this, Commander?”
“Because—" Theisman started sharply, then stopped and looked away. “Because they deserve better than getting nuked by their own people, Captain.”
“I see.” Honor studied his profile and knew there was more—much more—to it than that. He’d started to reply too angrily, and his anger frightened her when she added it to the distaste with which he’d first referred to “local authorities.”
“And if we simply leave the base for the moment, Commander, do you feel they would be endangered?” she asked softly.
“I—" Theisman bit his lip. “I must respectfully decline to answer that question, Captain Harrington,” he said very formally, and she nodded.
“I see,” she repeated. His face reddened as her tone accepted that he had answered it, but he met her gaze stubbornly. This man had integrity as well as ability, she thought, and hoped there weren’t many more like him in Haven’s service. Or did she?
“Very well, Commander Theisman, I understand.” She touched a stud and looked past Theisman as the hatch behind him opened to readmit Ramirez.
“Major, please return Commander Theisman to his quarters.” Honor held the major’s gaze. “You are to hold yourself personally responsible for seeing to it that he and his personnel are treated with the courtesy of their rank.” Ramirez’s eyes flashed, but he nodded, and she looked back at Theisman. “Thank you for your information, Commander.”
“Yes, Ma’am.” Theisman came back to attention.
“When you’ve returned the Commander to his quarters, Major, return straight here. Bring your company commanders with you.”
*********************************************** No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow.
What? Look, somebody's got to have some damn perspective around here! Boom. Sooner or later. BOOM! -LT. Cmdr. Susan Ivanova, Babylon 5
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