THE CHOSEN by S.M. Stirling and David Drake

And not a moment too soon, if there’s going to be a war, he thought. The Republic’s lead in capital ships was shrinking, as the Chosen finally got their building program under way. At a fairly leisurely pace, since they’d been planning on war a decade hence, but they had some first-rate designs on their drawing boards. One in particular had struck his eye, a huge all-big-gun ship with twelve twelve-inch rifles in four superimposed triple turrets fore and aft of the central island, and a daunting turn of speed. If it worked the way John’s intelligence report said it would, nothing else on Visager’s oceans could go near it and live. Fortunately, they hadn’t even laid down the keel, and this conflict would be fought with existing fleets.

Santander’s fleet was as ready as he could make it. That left only the personal question. Am I too old? Fleet command in wartime needed a man who could make quick decisions under fatigue and stress. Maurice Farr was within a year of the mandatory retirement age. Should he be at a desk in Charsson, or at home working on the book? I’m a grandfather with teenage grandchildren. He took stock of himself. He’d kept himself in trim, and he didn’t need to shovel coal or heave propellant charges into a breech. No failure of memory and will that he could detect. No. I can do it. He spoke again, into the hush his words had made. .

“You will accordingly keep your ships on full alert at all times, with steam raised and ready to weigh anchor at one hour’s notice. All leaves are cancelled, and naval and other reservists have been notified to report to their duty stations.”

Jenkins nodded. “If I may, Admiral, how are we going to maintain a blocking squadron along the Union’s south coast? Bassin du Sud and Marsai are the only good harbors or fully equipped ports between Fursten and Sircusa.”

“The Southern Fleet”—a grand name for a collection of candidates for the knackers yard and armed civilian vessels, with only two modern cruisers—”will blockade Bassin du Sud and Marsai. At need, they can be reinforced from the Northern Fleet. Any more questions? No?”

Mess stewards entered, with trays of the traditional watered rum, one for each of the officers. The toast offered by the senior officer present was equally a matter of tradition.

“Gentlemen—the Republic and Liberty!”

“The Republic!”

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

“Dammit!”

Commodore Peter Grisson raised his binoculars again. The dawn light was painting the Chosen dirigible an attractive pink, a tiny toy airship at the limit of visibility to the north. Far out of range of anything the ships below it could do. They all had the new high-angle antiaircraft guns, but the distance was far too great.

I hate that bloody thing, he thought, wishing for a storm. You could get some monsters down here south of the main continent, with nothing but the islands between here and the antarctic ice and nothing at all all the way around the planet east or west to break the winds. His ships, some of them at least, could keep station better than that floating gasbag.

But the ocean was like a millpond, only a trace of white at the tops of the long dark blue waves. The McCormick City and the Randall steamed on, heading east-northeast for their blockade stations off the southern Union coast. They were making eight knots, well below their best cruising speed, because most of the gunboats and naval reserve yachts and whatnot around them couldn’t do any better. Certainly the pathetic hermaphrodite—wood-hulled and iron-armored—relics that made up the other six cruisers couldn’t. Neither of his two best ships were new, but at least they were steel-hulled and armored, and they’d both had extensive refits recently, virtual rebuilding.

Then a light began to flicker on the nose of the Land dirigible. Grisson smoothed his mustache with a nervous gesture. What would Uncle Maurice do? he thought, and looked at the captain of the McCormick City.

The captain lowered his own binoculars. “Coded, of course,” he said neutrally.

“Of course. But Land scout dirigibles carry wireless.” The Land’s armed forces didn’t make as much use of that on land as the Republic’s did, but they had plenty for sea service. “So whoever he’s signaling is close.”

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