Lt. Leary, Commanding

Lt. Leary, Commanding by David Drake Read Free Book Online

Book: Lt. Leary, Commanding by David Drake Read Free Book Online
Authors: David Drake
Tags: Science-Fiction
those of the older woman more room. "Lieutenant Leary assures me that almost everyone gets used to the experience of entering the Matrix," she said. "I have no evidence as yet that I'm among that fortunate majority. Apart from that, yes. The Princess Cecile and her crew performed in accordance with the traditions of the RCN."
    She permitted herself a smile to show that she wasn't trying to sell Mistress Sand on the virtues of Daniel and his temporary command. Nonetheless, what she said was literally true. Insofar as possible, everything Adele said was the literal truth.
    Sand chuckled, appreciating the subtlety of Adele's presentation. She took a conical ivory container from her sleeve and poured a dose of snuff into the cup between her clenched thumb and the back of her left hand. She didn't bother offering what Adele had refused in the past; Mistress Sand didn't waste motion—or anything else that Adele had noticed in their short acquaintance.
    "What do you know about Strymon, mistress?" Sand asked as she lifted the snuff, blocking her right nostril with that index finger.
    "I made a cursory search yesterday, before you called me to this meeting," Adele said. Her face remained calm, but her brain was racing to correlate Sand's question with Delos Vaughn's visit to the Princess Cecile . "Not a great deal."
    "There's rumors on Pleasaunce that Councillor Nunes is intriguing with the Alliance," Sand said. "Nothing from Strymon itself, though."
    She snorted the dose of snuff, grimaced, and sneezed explosively into a lacy handkerchief from the same sleeve as the snuffbox.
    "There's rarely fewer than a dozen Cinnabar-registered vessels on Strymon at any time," Adele said, ignoring Sand's satisfied dabbing at her nose. "Cursory search" in Adele's terminology was more inclusive than many people's "full briefing" would be. "Generally twenty or more. Word would get out."
    "You'd think so, wouldn't you?" Sand said, looking up again. Her eyes were mottled brown, as hard as chips of agate. "What about the rumors on Pleasaunce?"
    "The Fifth Bureau—" Guarantor Porra's personal security service "—spreads lies," Adele said. "Bureaucrats lie to make themselves look effective without anyone else's encouragement."
    "All true, all true," Sand said; her tone didn't imply agreement. "Regardless, I have a bad feeling about Strymon."
    Adele said nothing. She hadn't been asked a question, and she didn't require amplification of what she'd just been told. Mistress Sand had remained in her position too long for her intuitions to be safely disregarded.
    "The Navy's sent a squadron to Strymon to show the flag," Sand said. She eyed the snuffbox judiciously, then set it back within the sleeve of her frock coat. "Two destroyers and an old cruiser. They left Cinnabar a week ago Thursday."
    Adele smiled faintly to hear Sand, an outsider for all her rank and knowledge, speak of what Warrant Officer Adele Mundy would have referred to as "the RCN." Her smile faded. If the squadron had already set out, why had Sand called her to this meeting?
    "There was a bit of a communications failure between the Navy Office and my staff," Sand said, answering Adele's unspoken question. "It won't be repeated, at any rate not by the same people; and it's nothing that can't be remedied. A fast vessel can join the squadron en route."
    Adele had never met any member of Sand's organization except the spymaster herself. Adele couldn't imagine that Sand personally controlled all her agents, but neither did she have evidence to the contrary.
    "I'd like you to be on that vessel," Sand concluded, raising her eyebrow minutely to elicit a response.
    "The Princess Cecile , you mean?" Adele asked; a genuine question because she didn't care to assume Sand's intentions. "Under Lieutenant Leary?"
    "Both would be eminently suitable choices," Sand said mildly, her eyes on Adele's. There was nothing threatening in Sand's tone or appearance, but both commanded respect. "Cruises of this sort

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