The atmospheric dust count was up today. Concentrations
weren't enough to bother native Graysons after almost a
thousand years of adaptive evolution, but they were more
than sufficient to worry someone from a planet with lower
levels of heavy metals.
Admiral of the Green Hamish Alexander, Thirteenth Earl of
White Haven and designated commander of Eighth Fleet
(assuming it ever got itself put together), was a native
of the planet Manticore, and the capital world of the Star
Kingdom of Manticore did not boast such levels. He felt
mildly conspicuous as the only breath-masked member of the
entourage on the landing pad, but the better part of a
century of naval service had given him a healthy respect
for environmental hazards. He was perfectly willing to
feel a little conspicuous if that was the price of
avoiding airborne lead and cadmium.
He was also the only person on the pad who wore the space-
black-and-gold of the Royal Manticoran Navy. Over half of
his companions were in civilian dress, including the two
women who wore the ankle-length skirts and long,
tabardlike vests of traditional Grayson fashion. Those in
uniform, however, were about equally divided between the
green-on-green of the Harrington Steadholder's Guard and
the blue-on-blue of the Grayson Space Navy. Even
Lieutenant Robards, White Haven's aide, was a Grayson. The
admiral had found that a little disconcerting at first. He
was much more accustomed to having members of allied
navies come to the Star Kingdom than to meeting them on
their home turf, but he'd quickly become comfortable with
the new arrangement, and he had to admit it made sense.
Eighth Fleet would be the first Allied fleet which was
actually composed of more non-Manticoran than RMN units.
Given the "seniority" of the Manticoran Navy, there'd
never been much question that the RMN would provide the
fleet commander, but a good two-thirds of its starships
would be drawn from the explosively expanding GSN and the
far smaller Erewhon Navy. As such, White Haven, as CO 8
FLT (Designate), really had no choice but to build his
staff around a Grayson core, and he'd spent the last month
and a half doing just that.
All in all, he'd been impressed by what he'd discovered in
the process. The GSN's expansion had spread its officer
corps thin-indeed, something like twelve percent of
all "Grayson" officers were actually Manticorans on loan
from the Star Kingdom-and its institutional inexperience
showed, but it was almost aggressively competent. Grayson
squadron and task force commanders seemed to take nothing
at all for granted, for they knew how quickly most of
their officers had been pushed up to their present ranks.
They drilled their subordinates mercilessly, and their
tactical and maneuvering orders spelled out their
intentions with a degree of precision which sometimes
produced results that were a little too mechanical for
White Haven's taste. He was more accustomed to the
Manticoran tradition in which officers of a certain rank
were supposed to handle the details themselves, without
specific direction from higher authority. Yet he was
willing to admit that a navy as "young" as the GSN
probably required more detailed orders... and if Grayson
fleet maneuvers were sometimes mechanical, he'd never seen
the kind of raggedness which could creep in when a flag
officer assumed-incorrectly-that his subordinates
understood what he had in mind.
But if the earl sometimes wished Grayson admirals would
grant their subordinates a little more initiative, he'd
been both astounded and delighted by the GSN's relentless
emphasis on actual shipboard drills, not just computer
simulations, and their willingness to expend munitions in
live-fire exercises. RMN tradition favored the same
approach, but the Manticoran Admiralty had always been
forced to fight Parliament tooth and nail for the funding
it required. High Admiral Matthews, the GSN's military
commander-in-chief, on the other hand, had the
enthusiastic support of Protector Benjamin and a solid
majority of the Planetary Chamber, Steadholder and Steader
alike. Perhaps that support owed something to the fact
that the current war with Haven had brought deep-space
combat to Yeltsin's Star four times in less than eight T-
years, whereas no one had dared attack the Manticore
Binary System directly in almost three centuries, but
White Haven suspected that it owed an equal debt to the
woman he and his companions had gathered to welcome home.
His lips quirked and the blue eyes which could assume the
chill of arctic ice twinkled at that thought. Lady Dame
Honor Harrington, Countess Harrington, was only a captain
of the list, as far as the RMN was concerned, and she'd
earned a reputation (among her many domestic political
enemies, at any rate) as a dangerous, hot-tempered,
undisciplined loose warhead. But here in Yeltsin she
carried the rank of a full admiral in the GSN, not to
mention the title of Steadholder Harrington. She was the
second-ranking officer of Grayson's Navy, one of the
eighty great nobles who governed the planet, the
wealthiest woman-or, for that matter-man, in Grayson
history, the only living holder of the Star of Grayson
(which also happened to make her Protector Benjamin's
official Champion), and the woman who had saved the system
from foreign conquest, not just once, but twice. White
Haven himself was deeply respected by the Grayson Navy and
people, for he was the officer who'd overseen the conquest
of their fratricidal sister world of Masada and won the
Third Battle of Grayson to open the war with Haven, but he
remained a "foreigner." Honor Harrington didn't. She had
become one of their own, and in the process, whether she
knew it or not, she'd also become the patron saint of
their fleet.
She probably didn't know it, White Haven reflected. It
wasn't the sort of thing which would occur to her... which
no doubt helped explain why it was true. But White Haven
and every other Manticoran working with the GSN certainly
knew. How could they not? The ultimate touchstone for
every Grayson training concept or tactical innovation
could be contained in the three words "Lady Harrington
says" or their companion "Lady Harrington would." The near
idolatry with which the GSN had adopted the precepts and
example of a single individual, however competent, would
have been terrifying if that individual's fundamental
philosophy had not included the need to continuously
question her own concepts. Somehow, and White Haven wasn't
certain precisely how, Honor Harrington had also managed
to transmit that portion of her personality to the navy so
enthusiastically forming itself in her image, and he was
profoundly grateful that she had.
Of course, the GSN had given her a much freer hand than
the Manticoran Admiralty had ever given any RMN admiral,
but that made her accomplishments no less impressive. High
Admiral Matthews had admitted to White Haven that he'd all
but dragooned her into GSN service expressly to pick her
brain, and that was something the earl readily understood.
Very few fleets could match the experience of the Royal
Manticoran Navy, and for all her political problems back
home, Harrington's professional reputation had been second
to none in the navy of her birth kingdom. Even if it
hadn't seen her in action itself, any navy in the GSN's
position would have been prepared to do just about
anything to get her into its uniform. And, White Haven
thought, given how intensely the Graysons had listened to
her, and how eager they'd been to utilize her as a
training resource, it would actually have been surprising
if she had realized how deeply she'd impressed her own
personality and philosophy upon them. They'd adopted her
concepts so readily that it must have seemed to her as if
she were adapting to their philosophy. Oh, yes. He
understood how it had all happened. Yet that made it no
less ironic that, in so many ways, the Grayson Space Navy
was actually closer to the ideal of the Manticoran Navy
than the RMN itself.
It also, he admitted, had offered him a new and valuable
perspective on Harrington herself. He was familiar with
the sycophantic personalities which all too often attached
themselves to a successful officer, just as he recognized
the more extreme forms of unquestioning hero worship when
he saw them, and he'd found some of both of those here on
Grayson where Harrington was concerned. But when a single,
foreign-born woman could walk into a theocratic, male-
dominated society and win the personal devotion of a group
so disparate that it contained not simply that society's
navy but old-line Grayson male supremacists like Howard
Clinkscales, Harrington Steading's regent; reformers like
Benjamin IX, the planets reigning monarch; religious
leaders like the Reverend Jeremiah Sullivan, spiritual
head of the Church of Humanity Unchained; urbane and
polished statesmen like Lord Henry Prestwick, Grayson's
Chancellor; and even ex-Havenite officers like Alfredo Yu,
now a GSN admiral, she had to be something quite out of
the ordinary. White Haven had seen that in her the very
first time he'd met her, despite the physical wounds and
the grief and sense of guilt she'd carried away from the
Second Battle of Yeltsin, but then he'd been in the
position of her senior officer, looking down a steep
gradient of rank, military and social alike. These days,
she matched his naval rank (in Grayson service, at least)
and, as a Steadholder, however new her title, took social
precedence over even one of the oldest of Manticore's
earldoms.
Hamish Alexander wasn't the sort to feel diminished by
anyone. One of the small number of people who could
address his Queen in private by her given name, he was
also the single most respected strategist of the
Manticoran Alliance. His reputation was firmly based on
achievement, and he knew it, just as he knew he truly was
the equal or superior of any serving officer in any other
navy in space. He wasn't arrogant-or he tried not to be-
yet he knew who and what he was, and it would have been
foolish to pretend he didn't. But he also knew Harrington
had begun her career without the advantage of an
aristocratic name or the family alliances and patronage
which went with it. However much White Haven might have
earned by merit, and however much he'd given back in part
payment for the opportunities he'd enjoyed by an accident
of birth, he could never forget or deny that his family's
position had given him a starting advantage Harrington had
never had. Yet here on Grayson she'd been given a chance
to show all that she could do and be, and what she had
accomplished was almost humbling to the man who was Earl
of White Haven.
She was barely half his age, and this entire section of
the galaxy had entered the dark valley of a war whose like
had not been seen in centuries. Not a war of negotiated
peaces or even conquest, but one in which the losing side
would be destroyed, not merely defeated. It had already
raged for going on six T-years, and despite the Allies'
recent successes, there was no end in sight. In a society
in which the prolong treatment stretched life spans to as
much as three hundred-plus years, advancement to the
senior ranks of any navy could be glacially slow, although
the RMN's prewar expansion had kept things from being
quite that bad, professionally speaking, for its officers.
Compared to navies like those of the Solarian League,
promotion had actually been quite rapid, and now the war
had kicked the door to senior rank wide. Even victorious
admirals sometimes died, and the Navy's expansion rate had
trebled since the start of open hostilities. Where would
someone like an Honor Harrington end this war... assuming
that she survived? What sort of mark would she make upon
it? It was obvious-to everyone but her, perhaps-that she
would figure in whatever histories were finally written,
but would she attain the exalted rank in her birth navy
which her abilities deserved? And if she did, what would
she do with it?
Those questions had come to fascinate White Haven. Perhaps
it was because, in a sense, she'd been his hostess since
his arrival in Yeltsin. She'd been generous enough to
offer him the opportunity to stay at Harrington House, the
official residence from which she governed Harrington
Steading when she was on Grayson, while he was here. It
made sense, given that Alvarez Field, the GSN's major new
planetary base and site of its new Bernard Yanakov
Tactical Simulation Center, was only thirty minutes away
by air car. At least until Eighth Fleets units were
physically assembled, most training exercises had to be
done in sims, whatever the Graysons-or White Haven-might
have preferred. That meant he had to be located someplace
handy to Alvarez's simulators, and by inviting him to stay
at Harrington House while she herself was temporarily
stuck back in the Star Kingdom, Harrington had given the
imprimatur of her approval to his relationship with the
GSN. He probably hadn't needed it, and he was quite
certain she hadn't reasoned it out in those terms, but he
was also experienced enough not to turn down any advantage
that came his way.
Yet living in her house, his needs seen to by her
servants, speaking with her fellow Grayson officers, her
regent, her security staff ... In a very real way, it had
felt sometimes as if he were uncovering facets of her
personality which could be discovered only in her absence.
It was silly, perhaps. He was ninety-three T-years old,
yet he was fascinated-almost mesmerized-by the
accomplishments of a woman to whom he'd spoken perhaps a
dozen times. In one sense, he scarcely knew her at all,
but in another, he'd come to know her as he'd known very
few people in his life, and a part of him looked forward
to somehow reconciling the difference between those two
views of her.
Honor Harrington leaned back in the pinnace seat and tried
not to smile as Major Andrew LaFollet, second-in-command
of the Harrington Steadholder's Guard and her personal
armsman, crawled as far under the seat in front of her as
he could get.
"Come on, now, Jason," he wheedled. His soft Grayson
accent was well suited to coaxing, and he was using that
advantage to the full. "We're due to hit atmosphere any
minute now. You have to come on out... please?"
Only a cheery chirp answered, and Honor heard him sigh. He
tried to crawl still further under the seat, then backed
out and sat up grumpily on the decksole. His auburn hair
was tousled and his gray eyes dared any of his
subordinates to say one word-just one-about his current,
less than dignified preoccupation, but no one accepted the
challenge.