Terralthra wrote:I like your analysis threads. I was just having a bit of fun.

And I was having fun back. Seriously, that's frustrating, but far from the stupidest thing I've said on this board. It's probably the stupidest thing this year, though, so I guess there's that. But the year is young. Heck, the last Honor thread I messed up the Protector's family right below the quote describing their relationships.
Seriously, you guys are making me blush. And feel like I was somehow acting a prima donna to get this response.
Batman wrote:Personally I welcome the excuse to revisit the Honorverse so I can keep up with the discussion, and I actually think this is the first time the Honorverse as a whole is under scrutiny rather than select aspects of the technology used therein. Personally, I like having a place where I can air my thoughts and complaints about a universe I still enjoy to a not inconsiderable extent, even if they turn out to be so much baseless garbage.
Can't speak for any of the other analysis threads on account of knowing jack all about the universes involved but if they're like this one, the percentage of people who do enjoying them I expect to be pretty damn high.
Most of my analysis threads are pretty different from each other. In my more pretentious moments I like to make out like it's a deliberate stylistic choice to treat each universe as it's own thing. To tell the truth, it's informed a lot by circumstances surrounding each series, and some by getting easily bored and tinkering with basic format things. For instance, with stuff from the Baen free library I can copy-paste arbitrarily large blocks of text and comment on every little detail, but for the Animorphs thread I went largely by memory, thumbing through the books to check my recollections and essentially just summarized the books with whatever bits interested me.
And sometimes I feel a trifle discouraged when I go a long time posting things without hearing from anyone good, bad or indifferent, but the Honorverse stuff has been completely different, so many people commenting I was worried for a bit I couldn't handle that. It did require an adjustment in thinking, including giving up on keeping anything quiet until it happened, like the Haven Revolution or Project Ghost Rider. Which is part of the appeal to me, it's always different, always new.
Speaking of, got a new batch from Flag in Exile.
Peep EW systems were inferior to those of the RMN. Getting comparable performance out of them required much more massive installations, and the Grayson Navy hadn't been able to resist the temptation of all that available volume when they refitted their prize vessels. They'd gutted their new SDs' original EW sections and then filled the same space with Manticoran systems, which meant Terrible boasted almost the same electronic warfare capabilities as a sixteen-million-ton orbital fortress, and that was just fine with Honor. If someone was going to be shooting at her flagship, she wanted all the nasty tricks she could get to play on that someone's fire control.
Still, she had been a bit surprised to learn that Grayson's new-build warships were also more heavily equipped with EW systems than their Manticoran counterparts. Not by as great a margin as the SDs, perhaps, but they carried considerably more capable suites on a class-for-class basis, though the GSN hadn't yet learned to use the potential of its systems to full effect.
Grayson has learned a lot about the value of electronic warfare, and devote even more internal space on each ship class to it than Manticore. Plus, on the refitted SDs they ripped out the vast Haven ECM and EW systems and doubled up on Manticoran equivalents.
The discovery of all that capability had inspired Honor, and her formation for the exercise had looked like a standard deployment, with her SDs in tight and her escorts covering its flanks while a squadron of battlecruisers screened its line of advance. Only the "battlecruisers" had actually been superdreadnoughts, using their EW to mask the true power of their emissions, and the "superdreadnoughts" had actually been battlecruisers using their EW to augment their emissions. It should have been impossible for Henries to detect at anything over four million klicks, which should have let Honor flush her towed missile pods and get in the first, devastating broadsides from her SDs before his own ships of the wall even realized where the fire was coming from.
Unfortunately, Sir Alfred's wiliness had taken most of the punch out of her surprise, and that was her own fault. She'd deliberately come in on a completely predictable course to help him see what she wanted him to. But that had also given him the opportunity to deploy recon drones from beyond the range at which her own sensors could detect their drives. He'd accelerated them up to speed, then shut down their impellers and let them coast straight down her nice, predictable line of approach to such close range that no EW could fool them, and the RDs' lack of power, coupled with their built-in stealth features, had caused her people to miss them even when one physically penetrated her formation.
I wouldn't say it lasts long, or is consistent, enough or to be called a pattern, but both SVW and FIE have Honor try out a sneaky thing she does near the end in a wargame early on. Nice way of setting it up, and it makes perfect sense. In SVW it was a detached flight of EW drones, here it's having her superdreadnoughts impersonate battlecruisers. It doesn't work this time, but only because the opposition was cautious enough to slip a recon drone in to confirm things.
In a total of four exercises, BatRon One had won one hands down, two had been draws, and Henries had won the last one by a narrow, if respectable, margin. No doubt he was pleased by yesterday's outcome, but she knew he hadn't expected things to be quite so hard. Oh, he'd been polite, but there'd been a certain confidence, almost an arrogance, about him at the initial conferences.
She snorted in memory, and Nimitz bleeked a laugh on her shoulder. She was becoming more Grayson than Manticoran, she thought wryly, and wondered whether the Graysons had thought she was arrogant when they first met? She knew Henries hadn't meant anything by it. He probably hadn't even realized he had what Honor's mother had always called "an attitude." The RMN had a tradition of victory, after all, and it had done very well so far in this war. Its officers expected to be better than anyone they met, and it had showed.
Yeah, Sir Alfred Henries is taking an SD squadron forward from Manticore (maybe the new construction mentioned earlier?) to reinforce White Haven at the front. But he was time for five days of wargames against the GSN, which they do for training, even with a war on. I take this as circumstantial evidence for the new construction theory, if they're a newer unit and still working up, getting used to working together.
Oh, and the darker side to the RMN's "tradition of victory," they can come off as arrogant, even to their close allies and former members.
"If it is a raid, Sir Alfred," Honor said quietly. Henries looked at her, and she shrugged. "You're right. They've sent a good seven percent of their total surviving wall a hundred-plus light-years behind the front and used it to take two systems that aren't especially vital to us. That seems like an awfully stupid diversion when they have to be aware of what will happen to them if Admiral White Haven breaks through to Trevor's Star." Henries' grunt of agreement held an interrogative note, as if asking what her point was, and she shrugged again. "I don't object to the enemy doing stupid things, Sir Alfred, but when it's something this stupid, I have to wonder if there's something behind it that we just haven't seen yet."
Haven seizes Minette and Casca as part of their Operation Stalking Horse (i.e. plan "draw ships away from Grayson") with 30 wallers between the two. This is seven percent of the Haven wall of battle, or roughly 1/14th hmm. Carry the point-two-eight-five, I get 428 (.5!) capital ships. Appreciably close to the pre-war figure of 460, on the other hand Haven's lost 70, captured or destroyed, since the war began. Honor may be using the pre-war figures, or just not care too much about accuracy on this one point.
Oh, and again we see that when Haven manages to shake loose several ships and launches raids on relatively unimportant backwaters, the RMN and Grayson's first response is to wonder what they're planning, what they know that we don't know, as opposed to simply assuming their enemies are morons like many Haven and almost all Sollie officers would.
Honor and Henries nodded. The Peeps had to realize Trevor's Star was the true target of Earl White Haven's campaign, for the Republic's possession of the system constituted a direct threat to the Manticore Binary System. Trevor's Star was over two hundred light-years from Manticore. It would take a superdreadnought over a month to make the hyper-space voyage between them, but Trevor's Star also contained one terminus of the Manticore Worm Hole Junction, and a battle fleet could make the same trip effectively instantaneously via the Junction.
Relieving that threat was one of Manticore's primary strategic goals, but the Star Kingdom had more than one motive. If White Haven could take the system, its Junction terminus would become a direct link to Manticore for the Alliance. Developed into a forward base inside the Republic, Trevor's Star would represent a secure bridgehead, a springboard for future offensives. Transit times between the Star Kingdom's shipyards and home-system fleet bases would become negligible. There wouldn't even be any need to detach convoy escorts to protect the long, vulnerable logistical chain between Manticore and a base like Thetis; unescorted merchantmen could pop through to Trevor's Star with total impunity, whenever they chose.
The importance of Trevor's Star, as long as Haven holds it they have the option of attacking the Manticore system directly. It'd be a suicide mission with the orbital forts, but one with a more favorable exchange rate in tonnage and lives than the war has held so far. In short, it's a game of attrition that Haven could eventually win by running out of bodies slower, where the tech advantage would mean less. Though sending multiple waves of suicide missions isn't really Rob Pierre's style. If Manticore claims the system, they can ship supplies closer to the frontline in months less time with absolute security. I mentioned this before.
What interests me is the mention of 200 light-years being over a month's journey for a superdreadnought. I did not think they appreciably slower in hyper than any other ship, is that a sign that they are, a generic example of a warship's capability or something else?
"I realize your orders are to report to Admiral White Haven, Sir Alfred, but I'm countermanding them. Battle Squadron Two will combine with your command and depart within three hours for Casca. At the same time, I'll send dispatches to Admiral Koga and Admiral Truman, instructing them to join us there at their best speed. If the Peeps haven't already pinched the system out from Candor, you and I should have enough strength to discourage them from making the attempt. Once the other divisions join us, we'll move in and throw them out of Candor, then advance on Minette. With any luck, we can coordinate with Admiral Hemphill to take that system back, as well, and do it without diverting a single ship from Thetis."
Stalking Horse is going well, they're sending out GSN BatRon Two with Henries' squadron to hook up with other local forces and retake Casca. The whole plan was based on the idea of provoking more-or-less these deployments, based on the forces the Peeps know are there, forcing them in
these specific circumstances to react in a highly predictable way and empty Grayson of wallers. Of course, the Peeps don't know about Henries.
Don't you just hate an
almost perfect plan?
Honor nodded. The Endicott picket had nothing heavier than a battlecruiser, and, if Endicott was less strategically important than Yeltsin's Star, Masada also lacked Grayson's heavy orbital fortifications. More to the point, perhaps, even the briefest of raids could have catastrophic consequences if the Peeps only realized it. If they managed just to drive out the pickets and pick off the relatively weak orbital bases the Star Kingdom had placed in Masada orbit, General Marcel's ground forces would be hopelessly inadequate to police the planet. The Peeps wouldn't have to get involved in ground combat at all; all they'd have to do would be isolate the planet from outside relief, then sit back and watch the fanatics dirt-side swamp Marcel's people. The resultant massacre of the "infidel occupiers" and the government of moderates Marcel had managed to put in place would force Manticore to mount a punitive expedition and, all too probably, produce a long, bloody, ugly guerrilla war before control could be reasserted.
The effect of that on the Star Kingdom's domestic opinion could be catastrophic to public support for the war and the Cromarty Government, and that didn't even count the price in blood and suffering, Masadan as well as Manticoran, it would entail.
There's not a huge force sitting around Masada, but they apparently have some orbital fortresses capable of a degree of support for the ground-pounders. It would take very little to remove that and start an uprising/bloodbath of the Masadan fanatics. Which is half of Operation Dagger.
"Yep," Foraker replied cheerfully, but then her smile faded. "Problem is, Skip, that these're the only two I'm sure about. I've got the computers trying to run a correlation between impeller strength and acceleration, but we know the Manties are refitting across the board with the new inertial compensator. We're still guessing how much that improves their efficiency, and these birds are taking it mighty easy, so I don't have max power signatures to work with, but it may give us something on their masses." She shrugged. "Our SDs are smaller than theirs are. If I can get an idea—"
Meet Shannon Foraker, tac witch and eventual counterpart to Horrible Hemphill. She can figure out what your ships are, hiding in the system periphery, just from your radar emissions and some spurious wedge data. In this case, they're watching the inbound at Casca, looking for evidence that Grayson has been drained.
"Well, whatever they are, they came in on a heading from Yeltsin, as you say. For that matter, Intelligence only gives about a sixty percent chance that even the Manticorans could have gotten all eleven prizes back into service this quickly. The Graysons are probably a bit slower than that, so it's possible we're looking at two divisions of Manty SDs, not one, and they're more likely to have been moving a half-squadron independently than they are to move a single division."
Caslet nodded thoughtfully. That was a possibility he hadn't considered, and it made sense.
"At any rate," Jourdain went on, "if at least five of them are Grayson ships, it seems likely they brought everything Yeltsin could spare." The citizen commissioner sounded a bit as if he were trying to convince himself of that, Caslet noted, and said nothing. A brief silence stretched out between them once more, and then Jourdain nodded sharply to himself.
"All right," he said. "If we've gotten all the information we can from this range, then I suppose that's the best we can do, Citizen Commander. Let's pull out for the rendezvous."
Shannon IDs five of theirs by mass (she can't tell absolutely how big they are, but can estimate in relation to each other and since it's pretty much certain there's at least one SD, the biggest ship gives her a baseline) and radar as theirs. They know Grayson got 11 SDs in at least repairable condition last year, but not how badly they were damaged or how fast Grayson could get them back in service. Confidence is reasonably high that the GSN has been stripped to the bone, because they aren't sure about Henries (though it looks like they picked p some extra ships) and they underestimate GLORIOUS KERBAL GRAYSONS!!
"If you don't mind an infidel's opinion, I particularly liked today's hymns, Abraham. Especially the one after the second lesson."
"I never mind compliments, My Lady," the chaplain replied, "and I'm rather fond of that one myself."
"It didn't sound much like the other Grayson hymns I've heard, though," Honor observed.
"That's because it's much older than most of our sacred music, My Lady. I believe the original version was written back in the nineteenth century—ah, the third century Ante Diaspora, that is—on Old Earth by a man named Whiting. Of course, that predated space travel. In fact, it predated manned aircraft, and it's been revised and updated several times since. Still, I think the original feeling comes through, and you're right: it is beautiful. And appropriate to naval service, I think."
Just a bit that I remember sticking out the first time I read it, Grayson saved the Navy Hymn.
May as well note the date again, 3rd century Ante Diaspora, the song was written in 1861, seems consistent.
"You know," she said slowly, "it still feels . . . odd to me to hold official church services on a warship." Jackson quirked an eyebrow, and she shook her head quickly. "Not wrong, Abraham, just odd. Manticoran warships do have services, and any captain always tries to adjust her duty schedules around them, but they're purely voluntary, and the people who conduct them usually have other duties, as well. The RMN doesn't have a Chaplain's Corps, you know."
"Well, fair's fair, My Lady," Jackson said after a moment. "A Grayson would find the notion that any Navy could survive without chaplains equally odd. Of course, we've made some concessions—and rightfully so, I think—since we started 'borrowing' so many Manticoran personnel. Attendance at service used to be compulsory, not optional, which would hardly be suitable now. Besides, even when everyone in uniform belonged to the Church, I always felt conscripting worshipers probably wasn't exactly what God had in mind."
Grayson has done away with compulsory services since filling out the ranks with so many Manticoran loaners, while the RMN has too many religions to consider a Chaplain's Corps. Similar, but different.
"I was saying Manticoran ships don't have official chaplains. Of course, we've got so many religions and denominations that providing a chaplain for each of them would be the next best thing to impossible even if we tried." She smiled suddenly. "On the first SD I ever served in, the captain was a Roman Catholic—Second Reformation, I think; not the Old Earth denomination—the exec was an Orthodox Jew, the astrogator was a Buddhist, and the com officer was a Scientologist Agnostic. If I remember correctly, the tac officer—my direct superior—was a Mithran, and Chief O'Brien, my tracking yeoman, was a Shinto priest. All of that, mind you, just on the command deck! We had another six thousand odd people in the ship's company, and God only knows how many different religions they represented."
"Merciful Tester!" Jackson murmured in a voice that was only half humorous. "How do any of you manage to keep things straight?"
"Well, Manticore was settled by a bunch of secularists," Honor pointed out. "I hope you won't take this wrongly, but I sometimes think that what Grayson actually has is a church which spawned a state as a sort of accidental appendage. I realize things have changed, especially since the Civil War, but the very notion of a church-dominated state would have been anathema to the Manticoran colonists. They'd had too much historical experience with state churches back home."
See what I mean? Considering the Graysons started as religious pilgrims, I'd say it's fair to consider their society a church that felt the need to grow a government and learned after getting burned badly to keep it's mitts off of government, as opposed to Manticore which, in the American tradition had separation of church and state from the word go.
Oh, and six thousand souls on Honor's first SD posting, the good ol'
King Roger give or take a few.
"Two-thirds of Manticore's colonists were from Europe, and Europe had a history of sectarian violence and religious conflict that went back to, oh, the sixth century Ante Diaspora, at least. Whole nations had spent centuries trying to kill each other over religious differences—like your own Civil War. The colonists didn't want anything like that happening to them, so they adopted the traditions of those of their numbers who came from North America, where separation between church and state had been part of the fundamental law. In the Star Kingdom, the state is legally prohibited from interfering in religious matters, and vice versa."
Sutton blinked. The notion of an explicit split between church and state seemed so alien that he looked at Jackson as if seeking confirmation that such a thing was even possible.
Again, it's been centuries since the Sacristy tried to involve itself in secular government in any meaningful way, why is this so shocking? Granted, each Protector and Steadholder still swears to uphold and defend the church, and I suppose Reverend Hanks does regularly attend Conclave and Council meetings.
The primary supports were all in, and Adam Gerrick stood on the scaffolding which crowned what would become the dome's number one access annex and watched huge, glittering panes of crystoplast rising delicately into place. Although the crystoplast was barely three millimeters thick and far lighter than an equal volume of glass, the smallest panel was over six meters on a side, and while Grayson's gravity was less than that of Lady Harrington's home world, it was seventeen percent higher than Old Earth's. Only four years before, the men maneuvering them into place would have relied upon grunting, snorting cranes and brute force; now they used counter-grav to nudge the shimmering, near-invisible panes into position with cautious ease, and Gerrick felt a thrill of pride he hadn't yet learned to take for granted.
Lot of trivia here, Grayson has 1.17 Gs, not that I expect it to ever come up again. Cool to see counter-grav used in construction, oh and crystoplast sheets 3 mm thick can withstand everything the environment can throw at it, and whatever stresses of the dome they may be subject to while weighing less than a similar mass of glass.
Gerrick smiled at the familiar thought and looked down as the high, clear sound of a child's voice cut through the work site's noise. A group of kids—students-to-be in the middle school—had asked permission to watch the completion of the main dome, and their teachers, after checking with the site supervisors, had organized a field trip. Needless to say, the Sky Domes' staff had impressed them with the dangers the construction equipment represented, and Grayson children learned early to take adults' warnings to heart. They were well back under the completed eastern wall, and they were staying there, but that didn't mute their avid interest. He could see their excitement even from here as they watched the panels drifting upward on their counter-grav like some sort of impossibly beautiful seed pods and chattered to one another, and he smiled. He'd talked to some of those youngsters himself this morning, and two or three had looked like they had the making of good engineers.
When he says children learn from a young age to take adults seriously when they say things are dangerous, he means it.
It started almost gently, as the most terrible accidents so often do. The first movement was tiny, so slight he thought he'd imagined it, but he hadn't. One of the primary load-bearing supports—a solid shaft of alloy orders of magnitude stronger than titanium set in a hole bored fourteen meters into solid bedrock and sealed with over a hundred tons of ceramacrete—swayed like a young tree in a breeze. But that support was no sapling. It was a vital component of the dome's integrity, and even as Gerrick stared at it in disbelief it was turning, twisting in its socket as if it had been tamped into place with so much sand and not sealed into the densest, hardest mineral building material known to man. It couldn't happen. It wasn't just unlikely, it was impossible, and Gerrick knew it, for he was the man who'd designed it . . . but it was also happening.
His eyes whipped unerringly to the supports which shared that shaft's component of the dome's weight. An untrained eye wouldn't even have known which ones to look at; to Gerrick, it was as obvious as if he'd spent hours pouring over the schematics that very morning, and his heart leapt into his throat with horror as he saw one of them shifting as well!
He stared at it for one terrible, endless instant, his engineer's mind leaping ahead to the disaster to come. It was only a moment, no more than four seconds—possibly five; certainly not more than six—yet that moment of stunned inactivity would haunt Adam Gerrick. It didn't make any difference. He knew that—didn't think it, but knew it. Too much mass was in motion. The inevitable chain of events was beyond the control of any man, and nothing he did or didn't do could make the slightest difference, yet Gerrick would never forgive himself for that moment of stasis.
A soft, almost inaudible groan came from the moving supports, and a pane of crystoplast popped free. The glittering panel dropped, no longer drifting and lovely in its counter-grav supports but slashing downward like a gleaming guillotine, and Adam Gerrick began to run.
He flung himself down the scaffolding, screaming a warning, running straight towards the collapsing horror of his dream. It was madness—a race which could end only in his own death if he won it—but he didn't think about that. He thought only of the children, standing in what was supposed to be the safest part of the entire site . . . directly under those creaking, groaning, treacherously shifting supports.
Perhaps, he told himself later, if he'd reacted faster, if he'd started running sooner, if he'd screamed a louder warning, perhaps it would have made a difference. The engineer in him, the part of his brain and soul which manipulated numbers and load factors and vectors of force knew better, but Gerrick had two children of his own, and the father in him would never, ever, forgive himself for not having made it make a difference.
He saw one of the kids turn and look at him. It was a girl, no more than eleven, and Adam Gerrick saw her smile, unaware of what was happening. He saw her wave at him, happy and excited by all the activity . . . and then he saw eighty thousand metric tons of alloy and crystoplast and plunging horror come crashing down and blot that smile away forever.
Say whatever you want about Weber's skills as a writer, this scene is really intense. The sabotage we saw before comes to fruition, and a school-dome collapses, killing fifty workers and thirty schoolchildren.
"Your Grace," Prestwick said heavily, "the Mueller inspectors have sent ceramacrete samples to the Sword laboratories here in Austin. I've seen the preliminary reports. The final product did not meet code standards."
Benjamin stared at him, trying to understand, but the scale of such a crime was too vast to comprehend. To use substandard materials for a school's dome was unthinkable. No Grayson would put children at risk! Their entire society—their whole way of life—was built on protecting their children!
Capital F Family men, coming from a tradition of a staggeringly painful infant mortality rate Graysons are extremely protective of their young. Their tradition is you sacrifice anything you can afford to lose for the sake of the next generation, hence that desperate rush to space, with so many deaths.
"Dear Tester, what have we done?" William Fitzclarence whispered. He, too, sat staring at an HD, and Samuel Mueller and Edmond Marchant sat on either side of him. "Children," Lord Burdette groaned. "We've killed children!"
"No, My Lord," Marchant said. Burdette looked at him, blue eyes dark with horror, and the defrocked priest shook his head, his own eyes dark with purpose, not shock. "We killed no one, My Lord," he said in a soft, persuasive voice. "It was God's will that the innocent perish, not ours."
"God's will?" Burdette repeated numbly, and Marchant nodded.
-snip-
"I know, My Lord, yet it was God's will. We had no way to know children would be present, but He did. Would He have allowed the dome to collapse when it did if it wasn't part of His plan? Terrible as their deaths were, their souls are with Him now—innocent of sin, untouched by the world's temptations—and their deaths have multiplied the effect of our plan a thousand fold. Our entire world now sees the consequences of embracing Manticore and the Protector's 'reforms,' and nothing, My Lord, nothing, could have driven that lesson home as this has. Those children are the Lord's martyrs, fallen in His service as surely as any martyr ever perished for his Faith."
"He's right, William," Mueller said quietly. Burdette turned to his fellow Steadholder, and Mueller raised one hand. "My inspectors have already found the substandard ceramacrete. I'll wait a day or so before announcing it—long enough for us to check and recheck the analyses, so that no one can possibly question our conclusions—but the proof is there. The proof, William. There's no way that harlot or the Protector can weasel their way around it. We didn't pick the moment it would collapse; God did that, and in doing so he made our original plan enormously more successful than we'd ever dared hope."
"Maybe . . . maybe you're right," Burdette said slowly. The horror had faded in his eyes, replaced by the supporting self-righteousness of his faith . . . and a cold light of calculation. "It's her fault," he murmured, "not ours. She's the one who drove us to this."
Even the bad guys are shocked and horrified at what their scheming has done. Only takes them about a minute to justify it though.
"Records no one will believe." Howard Clinkscales' voice was harsh as he spoke at last, and every eye turned to him. "We may know they're accurate, but who's going to take our word? If Adam saw substandard materials, then there are substandard materials on the site. We don't know how they got there, but we can't dispute their existence, and our Steadholder is Sky Domes' majority stockholder. If we make our records public, all we'll do is destroy any last vestige of trust in her. Burdette and his supporters will scream that we doctored them—that her inspectors signed off on their falsification because she told them to—and we can't prove that didn't happen. Not with physical proof of wrongdoing sitting right there in Mueller."
He looked around the table, and his heart felt old and frozen as he saw the understanding on the engineers' faces. But Adam Gerrick shook his head, and there was no surrender in his eyes.
"You're wrong, Lord Clinkscales," he said flatly. The regent blinked at him, unaccustomed to being contradicted in such a hard, certain voice. "You're not an engineer, Sir. No doubt you're right about what will happen if we turn Fred's records over to the press, but we can prove what happened."
"How?" Clinkscales's desire to believe showed in his voice, but there was little hope behind it.
"Because we—" Gerrick waved at the men around the table "—are engineers. The best damned engineers on this damned planet, and we know our records are accurate. More than that, we have a complete visual record of everything that happened at that site, including the collapse itself. And on top of that, we've got not just the plans and the final specs that went into them, we've got all the original calculations, from the first rough site survey through every step of the process."
"And?"
"And that means we have all the pieces, My Lord. If Fred's right about the quality of the materials we shipped to that site, then someone, somewhere, made that dome collapse, and we've got the data we need to figure out how the bastard did it."
"Made it collapse?" Clinkscales stared at the younger man. "Adam, I know you don't want to believe it was our fault—dear God, I don't want to believe it!—but if it wasn't a simple case of materials theft, what else could it be? Surely you're not suggesting someone wanted it to collapse!"
"When you eliminate all the impossible factors, whatever's left must be the truth. And I am telling you, My Lord, that if that dome was built with the materials we specified and if the plans we provided were followed, then the collapse I saw this morning could not happen."
Honor's company had everything triple-checked, and updated records on-site making it impossible to skim off the top without a massive conspiracy, leading Adam the engineer to suspect sabotage. And he'll prove it with math. "There was a duplicate key to the wardroom, I proved it using geometric logic" Bonus points to whoever gets the reference, no cheating now.
"Adam," Clinkscales said with a cold, frightening smile, "you're an engineer. I used to be a policeman, and, I like to think, a pretty good one. If there's a who and a why, I'll find them." He turned his gaze on another man, at the far end of the table. "Chet, I want the personnel records on that work crew. While you start your analysis of what happened, I'm going to be looking at every single human being who had a hand in the construction. If this was deliberate, then somewhere, somebody left a fingerprint. When you people can tell me what they did and how they did it, I'll know where to look for the person or persons behind it. And when I find them, Adam," he said with an even more terrifying smile, "I promise you'll have that front row seat you wanted."
And while Adam pursues that angle, Howard Clinkscales is going to dust off his deerstalker cap and investigate all the workers on that site. I really, really hope his torturing people for information days are behind him.
Okay, mostly I didn't want to end the night on the downer note of a stack of children's corpses.