
Adele had been at school off Cinnabar when the cycle of treason and proscriptions played itself out in
blood. Distance had preserved her life; not her fortune, but she wasn't the sort to whom money meant
much one way or the other.
For that matter, Daniel sometimes suspected that life didn't mean much to Adele either; but duty did, and
craftsmanship. Daniel didn't try to remake his friends.
"She's a trim craft," Uncle Stacey said, assessing the corvette with a mind no less sharp for being
confined to a wheelchair-bound body. Commander Stacey Bergen, the finest astrogator of his day, had
opened or resurveyed half the routes in theSailing Directions for Ships of the Republic . "I've never
seen a Kostroman-built ship that wasn't as pretty as anything of her class, though some of them use
lighter scantlings than I'd have chosen for anything coming out of my yard."
The old man cocked his head over his shoulder to catch his nephew's eye with the implied question.
"The frames and hull plating are at RCN specifications, Uncle Stacey," Daniel said quickly. "The only
problem we've had in the conversion was that all the astrogational equipment is calibrated in Kostroman
AUs instead of Sol standard like us and the Alliance. Granted of course that theSissie 's a fighting
corvette, not a dedicated survey ship built to accept stresses that'd turn a battleship inside out."
ThePrincess Cecile 's hull was a rough cylinder two hundred and thirty feet long and fifty-five feet wide,
with bluntly rounded ends. Here in the graving dock she was clamped bow and stern by collars like the
chucks of a gigantic lathe. They could rotate her into any attitude, so that the antennas that lined her hull in
four rows of six each could be extended and canted throughout their range of motion.
Two twin four-inch plasma cannon provided the corvette's defensive armament in turrets offset toward
the starboard bow and sternwards to port. Their bolts of charged particles could deflect incoming
missiles by vaporizing portions of the projectile and converting that mass into slewing thrust. Offensively,
a practiced crew in thePrincess Cecile could launch her twenty missiles in pairs at one minute intervals.
The crew which Daniel had brought from Kostroma was trained very well in that and every other aspect
of war.
As a boy, Daniel had listened to Uncle Stacey and the naval friends who came to chat with him in the
shipyard he ran after retirement. They'd talked of shifts in the Matrix, of sheared antennas, torqued hulls;
of days at a time spent in the glare of Casimir radiation, picking a course where none was known before.
It was those tales, told by master astrogators to other masters of the art, that had led Daniel to join the
RCN at age sixteen after the flaming row he'd had with his father, Corder. The Learys weren't a naval
family: they were politicians, movers and shakers of the Republic, and never a one of them had risen
higher than Corder Leary, Speaker Leary, himself.
Daniel laughed, surprising Adele and his uncle both. Grinning apologetically at their surprise he
explained, "I was just thinking that six years on, there's no decision I'm more glad of than that I joined the
RCN, but it could be that my reasons for making that decision had more to do with spiting my father than
they did with making a name for myself."
"I've never noticed that the reasons people do things have much connection with how well or badly
matters turn out," Adele said. "For example, I'm confident that my parents entered the Three Circles
Conspiracy with the full intention of saving the Republic from men who couldn't be trusted with power."
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