ThinksMarkedly wrote:I'm actually surprised those modules weren't supplied by the RMN itself, like they supply skinsuits for their two-leg crew. It was RMN policy not to separate treecat from two-leg person (after prodding by Queen Adrienne, the first to be adopted), so outfitting everyone in ship duty, even the treecat has no other duty, should be mandatory.
Samantha's case is in point: if Nimitz' old module wasn't available, what was she to do to survive? Are there life-support modules around the ship she could be placed before the battle, but wouldn't be in the crew's way when they performed damage control, or had to evacuate? But if those existed, why did Honor buy one for Nimitz when all she had to draw upon was her Commander's salary and her meagre yeomen family's wealth?
It doesn't appear that the RMN issues them -- and now that you bring it up they really should provide at least a basic life support module. Treecats are a recognized sentient species and one that is allowed to accompany their bonded human on RMN ships - they should have been issued emergency life support gear when their bonded human was assigned to RMN ships or stations.
Though I guess it might be possible that in an emergency someone could get a treecat closed up within a standard human rescue suit "the clumsy rescue suits which were part of any ship's lifesaving gear, could be worn by almost anyone but had limited utility [...] little more than emergency environmental envelopes designed to be towed around by rescue crews."
Also, way back in Treecat Wars we're told that Stephanie Harrington was traveling from Sphinx to Manticore with Lionheart that she had "the standard interstellar pet carrier they’d bought for him" which had "emergency life support" -- though I'd guess that those aren't shock mounted and wouldn't have the kinds of radiation shielding and EMP resistance that you'd want of life support equipment for use on a warship.
Apparently Honor's father bought her Nimitz's first life support module
Changer of Worlds: Ms. Midshipwoman Harrington wrote:Unlike the locker, which was standard Navy issue, she-or rather, her father, who had provided it as a graduation gift-had paid the better part of seventeen thousand Manticoran dollars for that unit. Which was money well spent in her opinion, since it was the life support module which would keep Nimitz alive if the compartment lost pressure.
Though OBS says she'd paid for it
On Basilisk Station wrote:Nimitz had hurtled from his perch at the first shrill of the alarm. He'd been through this same drill as often as she, and he scurried across the cabin to the boxlike affair she'd had clamped to the bulkhead below her sailplane plaque immediately after coming aboard. That box wasn't Fleet issue, and it had cost Honor a small fortune, for it was a custom-built life support module, sized to Nimitz's stature and fitted with the same search and rescue beacon as a Fleet vac suit. It was good for a hundred hours on its internal life support, and the door slammed automatically behind him as he fled into it. He couldn't open it from the inside, but unless something scored a direct hit on it, he could survive even if battle damage opened the cabin to space.
However it's possible that even as early as OBS she'd bound the new deluxe life support module mentioned in HAE - incidentally the following also says Samantha already had her own life support module - she just used Nimitz's because it was better.
Honor Among Enemies wrote:She spared time for one anguished glance at the back of her command chair, wishing desperately that she'd sent Nimitz across, as well. But he would no more leave her than Samantha would leave Harold Tschu-or than Honor would leave him. She might have had him forcibly removed, but she couldn't do it. She simply couldn't, and at least he was better off than Samantha. He had his skinsuit; Tschu hadn't been able to afford one, and he'd had to settle for a standard life support module. But that much Honor had been able to improve upon. She still had the deluxe module she'd bought Nimitz before Paul designed his suit-the one with the built in anti-radiation armor and the extended life support-and she'd insisted that Tschu take Samantha to her quarters and put her inside its greater protection.
So in this specific case Samantha would have had emergency life support -- but you're right; it shouldn't be down to the officer, sailor, or marine to have to pay out of pocket for proper emergency life support for their treecat.