His laugh echoed harshly in the almost empty compartment. “Wouldn’t that be nice?”
“Wouldn’t it. Of course, some people who do attain such power believe the same thing. They get to do whatever they want.” Rione eyed him steadily. “You know I feared Black Jack would be such a person. I was wrong. But now you want to know whether any of the former prisoners are cut from that cloth?”
“There have already been some attempts to interfere with the running of the fleet,” Geary said. “I’m sure you’re already aware of them.”
“Unfortunately, I’m aware of nothing else. If their plots continue, they do not include me or anyone who reports to me in their confidence.”
“Can you tell me anything about Admiral Lagemann? His record is spotless. Battlefield promotions got him to the rank of admiral, not politics.”
Her gaze grew briefly puzzled. “Then why ask me about him? I know of nothing negative about the man. His name never appeared in any of the internal-security reports I’ve read in the past. Apparently he was too busy actually fighting the war to spend time politicking for advancement or maneuvering against the government.”
“That was my assessment of him,” Geary said. “But I’ve been wrong before, and if there was any dirty laundry in his past, I thought you would know of it.”
“That hurts, Admiral.” She almost sounded truly wounded by the suggestion.
“My apologies,” he replied, letting the sarcasm come out clearly before finally activating his controls.
A few moments later, the figure of Admiral Lagemann appeared from
“Got any good ones?” Geary asked.
“Not a one.”
“There’s something else I need looked into besides the current situation here,” Geary explained. “Something critically important. You and your fellow veterans gave me a very important heads-up about what tactics the enigmas might employ at Alihi. I would be very grateful if you could now assess what the enigmas will do knowing that we jumped to this star.”
“You mean aside from celebrating that we jumped into this briar patch?” Lagemann asked.
“Exactly.”
“That’s a really interesting question.” Lagemann stood silent for a moment, his eyes hooded with thought, then nodded. “We’ll see what we can come up with. May I ask you something, Admiral?” Lagemann accompanied the question with a subtle glance toward Rione.
“Go ahead.”
“Are we really heading back, or is that for public consumption to keep morale from heading for the nearest black hole?”
“We’re really going back,” Geary said. “And then all of you guys will be the government’s problem.”
“Not me. Get me home, and I’ll retire and find a nice, quiet job on my home world.” Lagemann paused again, thinking. “Something where I work inside at night. I’ve seen enough stars for one lifetime.”
AS Geary departed, leaving Rione alone in the room, Desjani stood away from the bulkhead where she had been waiting and walked at his elbow. “Did you have a nice chat, Admiral?”
“Yes, Tanya.” They walked in silence for a while. “She says she’s going to help get the fleet home.”
“Oh, how wonderful,” Desjani declared in perfectly flat tones. “That witch is still trying to use you for her own purposes. ‘Don’t do this because
“I don’t think she wanted us to come out here, Tanya,” Geary said. “I think she was forced as much as we were.”
“You’ve said that before. You can go on believing what you want. I’ll keep an eye and a weapon on
“Gullible?” Geary asked.
“Trusting. I said trusting, not gullible.”
“You mean when you weren’t commenting?”
Desjani turned a glare his way. “Someone has to watch your back. Admiral.”
“And there’s no one I trust more than you. But she wants the fleet to get home, too.”
“When did that change of heart occur?” Still keeping step with him, Desjani gave him a sidelong glance. “Or is she just trying to distract you when you should be bore-sighted on resolving our current situation with the bear-cows?”
Geary waved one hand in frustration. “I’m going to refocus on that as soon as we’re done talking. She said something about finding another alien species. Maybe whoever wanted to sabotage this mission put a higher priority on learning about another potential threat.”
Desjani smiled. “Oh, darling, you admitted that someone is trying to sabotage this mission.”
“I never denied the possibility.” Had he? “And watch your language, Captain.”
“Yes, Admiral.”
“I think Rione is also worried about her husband.”
“So am I. I still think he’ll commit sabotage someday.”