Rumble rumble, rata-tat-tat. The sound of the drums carried along every deck, every corridor, into every berth and nook and cranny. The officers in their quarters to the twists in the lower holds heard it, and went to their assigned posts with a will. That sound was to be obeyed, drill or not, and there was a crackling rumor that moved cross the
Hegemony
at a speed faster than even transtelepathic message: This was no drill. In the high gilded spires of the Navigator's home, Regencia put her foot down with all the weight of the Adeptus Famulous' ancient pedigree. Millennium of authority was behind her as she looked down at her ward and said, in clear High Gothic: "Absolutely not."
Mary Belisarius, with the unassailable, bullheaded passion of a twelve year old, glared right back at her tutor and warden. She responded less with words and more with body language: Spine straight, chin up, forehead mounted cybernetic oculus glinting with purple fire. That alone was what might have prevented Regencina from simply bending Mary over one knee and spanking her as if she were a lowborn hivescummer. Mary was a member of the Navis Nobiline. Richer than Rogue Traders, more powerful than a psyker, and most importantly, rarer than starfire diamonds.
"Mary Belisarius," Regencia said, her arms crossed over her black carapace chest piece and the flue-de-leys that was her sisterhood's symbol. "You are the only navigator aboard. You
cannot
watch a battle. Not from the bridge, not from this spire, not from anywhere but the inner core shelters."
"It's my first battle. And Uncle Rementius said that
he
once slew a dozen frakking orks by himself!" Mary said, delighting in using a curse word. "With but
one
glare with his warpseye!"
"Your Uncle Rementius doesn't know when to silence his tongue and wash out his mouth with soap!" Regencia hissed.
In the large glass windows of the spire, the enemy could be seen by the naked eye. Three plumes of billowing, orange flame that streaked across the stars, torches that marked the routes of three of the pirate xebecs that made up part of a flanking attack against the
Hegemony
. The other three plumes could have only been seen if the ceiling had been transparent rather than a full color recreation of St. Erasmus' mural on Trevesalis II of His Majesty and his Sons. But if one could see through the muscular and astoundingly detailed oiled chest of the nearly nude Sanguinus (nude to represent his utter piety, St. Erasmus would claim to his dying day), one might have seen the trio of other plumes that represented two more pirate xebecs and the retrofitted Pilgrim class transport that made the waybreaker and pathfinder for the pirate flotilla.
Regencia decided to risk it. She snapped her fingers and Mary learned, with an unpleasant shock, that while she was the heir apparent of the House Belisarius, she was not actually in charge of the tall and powerfully built praetorian guard. They looped their arms underneath her slender shoulders and lifted the red robed and gold gilded twelve year old off her feet. She kicked her feet and hissed angrily, her sandal flying off and striking Regencia against her face. She walked on with a long suffering sigh.
She was sure she had the most difficult job on the ship.
In the gundecks, nearly two thousand sweating, panting, shirtless crewmen of every type labored to ready the five hundred and one main guns that filled the dorsal spine of the
Hegemony
. They were numbered by quadrant and labeled by snarled and labyrinthine system of the Administratum and the Naval Ordinance Board. There were 94 tonner gravitic carronades set beside multi-megawatt maser guns that were powered off a plasma core technology that had been long since lost to the distant mists of the past. Makeshifts were brought about by attaching multiple smaller cores together and feeding them into the gun's power slots with massed teams of rubber suited men and women who surely wished they were dead in the sweltering heat. There were 'ought fours -- named not for their barrel length or size, but for the supposed millenium of their construction, which hadn't changed since they were used to defend the battlements of Holy Mars herself. These were the oldest guns, and they had carried names from ship to ship as they were stripped off hulks and attached to fresh hulls over the centuries. A few had names scrawled on their sides in languages that not a man jack below the mizzen spoke. And so they earned new names that day. Names like Bloody Nuisence and Triple Damned Fucking Piece of Jackanapery, names bestowed by crews sweating blood and cursing mangled fingers as weighted machines slipped, ropes jerked, pulleys strained.
But through it all, the gundecks readied themselves and the crew cheered as the last of the guns was marked as cleared to fire before the
Hegemony
came without long lance range of the enemy craft. Other crew had worked just as hard. Engine plasma had to be rerouted by hand, throwing levers and twisting valves to redirect the fearsome powers of the engineerium to the triple reinforced void shield emitters on fore, aft, zenith and nadir. Those emitters crackled and hummed to life and every crewman felt something few had in their whole careers: The buzz and twist of their hairs lifting on end, a prickling tingle as the shields came to full life.
Vynn stood aboard the bridge and surveyed this chaos with a censorious eye. Aboard the
Victory
-- the ship she had served on for nearly five years before getting her step -- she'd have been whipped silly and sent to her quarters in tears and a demotion if she had overseen a bridge like this. But the
Hegemony
had spent lazy decades under a lackadaisical captain patrolling a quiet trade route for nonexistent pirates, and so the hard discipline of a crew getting ready for battle was entirely missing. She shook her head as the last of the green lights flicked on and the pale blue wash of the shields filled the vistaplates. The blue faded a moment later, the shield becoming invisible against the inky black.
"Shields at a six hundreds, ma'am!"
"The forty five microwaves register as prepped and primed."
"You there, mark time and check the chron!"
"Is the Navigator stowed?" That was Mr. Khan, his booming voice echoing loud and true.