"I am afraid I do not quite follow. I know that navigators are queerly helpful aboard ships - they cannot seem to sail without them. Further, I know that the navigator families own quite a deal of wealth. Navis Nobiline, the saying goes, never a day without a golden throne for the pocket and for the loo. But, well, I don't see the connection between them and your cruise and the sailing and such." Jon paused in his conversation to move a piece on the Regicide board set between him and Vynn. Vynn shook her head, her normally cheery face drawn into lines of concentration and reflection more befitting a priest or a schola student or one suffering exceptionally from consumption.
"So, I suppose it falls on me to ask: Exactly what
do
navigators navigate?" Jon asked.
"My good man," Vynn said. "I believe you moved that piece wrong."
Jon picked up his spectacles - normally used to read the small, spidery writing so many apothecaries used for their physics and their chemical extracts and their pharmacological delights. He leaned forward and examined the Regicide board. "This is Spinward style, is it not?"
"Spinward style doesn't allow for Astartes to jump Cardinals, move it back, be a good chap. The warp, by the way. It is the warp navigators navigate, and it is why we are becalmed, Jon, why my crew sits on their palms, why my new 'ought fours and cannonades and blasted great megawattage microwave guns are going to rot out their power conduits before I take a single prize!" Vynn smashed her fist down on the table, causing it to leap and bounce.
There was something about having a Navigator that made a ship tick just slightly better. With Mary Belisarius firmly ensconced within her personal spire and her maidservants setting everything to her whims, the Magos Yelnets had taken it upon himself to be removed from office. Vynn didn't know if it was her showing him up on the field of political assignments and distribution of resources or if it was some internal squabble within the Adeptus Mechanicus. All she knew was the new Magos in charge of the orbital foundries had taken up her position with a quick eye and a smooth, silver-plated smile.
Ought fours? Why. Commander Vynn, we can surely give you more firepower than that for the
Hegemony
,
the Magos Su'Chen had said. And lo, within two days, great hauling craft had come from the foundries of Tempestus bearing the macrocannons that would push the
Hegemony
from being merely a lazy sloop to a proper man-o-war. Now rated as a 501, the addition of a ninety two guns had brought with it a desperate need for crew. Knocking a few dozen coves from chartist shipping that had chosen a poor fortuned time to stop in port had given the warm bodies for the 'ought fours, whose design hadn't changed since the Great Crusade, so any proper voidsman or space dog would know how to serve them. But the cannonades themselves were newfangled Voss technology, and the Voss forge worlds adored themselves gravitic trickery, leaving most the crew muddled as to how to fire the bloody things.
The masers - the five nine five megawatt microwave lasers, to be specific - were another pile of fish all together. They lacked the great focusing apertures that made them true lances. So too did they lack the power supply to allow them to fire the great cutting arcs that made lances so terrible when fixed to Firestorm frigates or to the great capital ships that filled Vynn's nights with envious longing (when she was not, of course, dreaming of the fine Doctor Balthezar, but that was another matter entirely.) But while they were not properly class as lances, they could still cut through armor quick as winking, making them quite excellent for followup to a proper shield popping barrage.
Metal, then heat, that was the watchword of the long-gun Admirals who disdained fighter-craft and torpedoes. Vynn herself had little use for torpedoes, having never seen one in use properly, but fighter-craft were another issue entire. But she had little enough room on the
Hegemony
for her newly enlarged crew to run out boats and cutters, let alone stock bombers and interceptors. But that was
also
beside the point.
The point being that even with crew who could man the gravitic cannonades, and even with able hands to run to the great masers, and even with plasma conduits not like to explode when put under stress or pressure, the
Hegemony
remained trapped by the terrible weight of politics. According to Belisarius, oh, no, according to the Belisarius
tutor
, a hideous woman by the name of Regencia, the navigatrix was not yet ready to set sail.
"In other words," Vynn said, eyeing the new move that Jon had made. It was entirely legal and still left her with few choices as to her own counter move. "She doesn't wish to risk her tender hearted ward on anything less than a clearest shot. And in
this
part of space, so near the great Warp storms of the Expanse, there ain't likely to be a perfectly clear day of sailing until the Emperor steps off his throne. So, we must either wait until I contrive to get a proper navigator, or until she grows up and that's all there is to it." She moved an Imperial Guardsman piece into a flanking position.
Jon, as expected, took it with the Astartes.
She took the Astartes with her Inquisitor.
So, too, the Inquisitor was checked by Inquisitor.
And with that Vynn laughed, slapped her palm on her thigh, and exclaimed: "You're dished, as slain as the Arch-Heretic! Ha ha!"
Jon frowned - but then Vynn moved her Emperor piece, and placed his Emperor within a cage created by the position not only of her pieces but of Jon's own defense. Unable to escape, Jon regarded the board with sullen irritation before tipping his Emperor over. Sharing port over Vynn's victory, Jon rubbed his chin and watched the vast orb of Tempestus turn below the window in her state room. His mind drifted from point to point. He thought of the game, the fine taste of his port, the fact that the ship's character had already begun to faintly follow - ape, even - the character of her new captain. The fact that Vynn was a
commander
, and yet somehow by the magic of the military mind, she was referred to eternally as Captain whilst on the deck. But most of all, he considered this issue of their political becalming.
"She's how old, eighteen, sixteen?" he asked, absently.