Swiveling his chair away from the communications console, he faced his desk once again. The jumble of papers and notepads stared back at him in unswerving accusation. He realized that he viewed the work before him with neither enthusiasm nor distaste. He was too tired to muster any reaction.
He briefly considered the possibility of a short nap, but rejected the thought. He would double-check these figures once more, then take a break. With an involuntary sigh, he reached for a pencil.
Behind him, the communications console chimed softly, signaling an incoming call.
Tambu turned from his desk and reached "for the switch to activate the mechanism. His eye fell on the call board, and he hesitated.
The incoming call was being relayed through several ships. This was the normal precaution taken to hide his exact location. The ship originating the call was the Scorpion. Egor!
Tambu scowled at the board, his hand poised over the activator switch. For a moment, he was tempted to ignore the call. Then the console chimed again, and he threw the switch. As long as Egor was one of his captains, he would be afforded the same prompt attention as any other captain, no matter how annoying it was.
"Yes, Egor?" Tambu asked, forcing his voice into a neutral tone.
"Saladin says you approved the transfer of Jocko from the Scorpion to the Ramses." Egor's snarl exploded over the speaker even before his face blinked into focus.
"That is correct," Tambu replied levelly.
"Did you know Jocko is the second-best navigator in my crew?" Egor's face was on the screen now, and his expression matched his voice.
"I knew it," Tambu admitted without apology.
"Why wasn't I consulted?" Egor demanded. "Doesn't my say matter for anything anymore?"
As Egor spoke, the door of Tambu's office opened a crack, and Ramona's head appeared. She cocked an eyebrow in silent question, and he waved her inside.
"In this case, Egor, your opinion was already known," Tambu explained patiently. "You had already turned down Jocko's transfer request. That's why he came to me directly."
"So you just countermanded my authority," Egor scowled. "Without even bothering to ask my reasons."
"As Jocko explained it to me, he was either going to transfer or leave the force." Tambu's voice had an edge to it now. "Either way, the Scorpion was going to lose him. At least this way he's still in the force. As you pointed out, he's a good navigator."
"I still don't think you should have let him blackmail you." Egor was sullen now.
"What are we supposed to do? Chain him to his bunk?" Tambu's annoyance was beginning to show. "We can't hold people against their will. Even if we could, I wouldn't. I want ships crewed by free men, not slaves."
"Well, I still think you should have talked to me," Egor grumbled.
"I was going to, Egor," Tambu apologized. "But things have been so hectic at this end I haven't had time."
"That's been happening a lot lately," Egor complained bitterly. "I always seem to be at the end of your priority list. You can find time for everybody but your old friends."
"Damn it, Egor," Tambu snapped. "I spend more time talking to you than with any three of my other captains."
"Which is less than a tenth of the time you used to have for me! Of course, now that you're a big shot, I can't expect you to waste your precious time on my problems."
Tambu drew a long breath before responding.
"Look, Egor," he said gently. "Speaking for a moment as an old friend, you might ease up a little on your crew. If you did, a lot of the problems you're having would never arise."
"Don't tell me how to run my ship! I'm allowed to do things my way as long as it doesn't go against the rules. You just worry about the fleet and keep your bloody hands off my ship!"
"Captain Egor," Tambu replied coldly. "If you wish to retain full responsibility for the running of your ship, I suggest that you be man enough to begin taking full responsibility for solving your own problems instead of whining for me to clean up your messes. Tambu out!"
"But-"
Tambu smashed his fist down on the activator switch, cutting off Egor's response.
A touch at his shoulder made him jump. He had forgotten that Ramona was in the room.
"I'm sorry, Ramona," he sighed, sinking back in his chair. "I didn't think things were going to get that hot."
"How many times do I have to tell you," she said gently, standing behind him to massage his neck and shoulders, "it's Ratso now, not Ramona. You should follow your own rules."
"I don't like the name Ratso," he complained. "I'll use it in formal communications, but privately you'll always be Ramona to me."
"Other crewmen have picked names you don't like, but you use them," she teased.
"I don't sleep with the other members of the force! I just can't accept the idea of sharing a bed with someone called Ratso."
They had drifted into an affair after several months of working together. What began as a shared moment of passion had grown into a gentle and tender partnership which neither of them questioned.
"When are you going to do something about Egor?" she asked absently.
"Egor's one of OUT oldest captains. His seniority gives him certain considerations."
"He's a braggart and a bully. Everyone in the fleet knows that."
"He has an irritating manner," Tambu admitted, "but he's a good man. You've just got to know him before you can see through his bluster."
"If so, you must be the only one who can do it. The other captains are wondering why you don't boot him out, or at least pull his command."
"Look, just drop it, huh?" Tambu winced. "Egor is my problem, so it's up to me to come up" with a solution. Okay?"
"Sure," she shrugged. "Didn't mean to get on your back. Did you get any sleep at all last night?"
"Not much," he sighed, relaxing under her skillful hands. "It seems everyone has decided that the easiest time to get through to me is the middle of the night. Then again, there's all this."
He gestured at the papers on his desk.
"What is all that, anyway?" Ramona asked. "You've been working on it nonstop for a couple of weeks now."
"I've been going over the books checking our cash flow," he explained. "I've got to check the numbers again, but if the preliminary figures hold true, we're going to be out of business by the end of the year."
"Are things that bad?"
"Actually, things are that good." Tambu laughed bitterly. "We're suffering from being too successful. There are only so many pirates for us to capture, and the ones that are left are giving us wide berth. We've been paying the crews out of the treasury for nearly a year now, and we aren't making enough in salvage and reward money to replenish it. In short, our expenses have remained constant while our income has gone down. We're in trouble."
"Actually, our expenses have gone up," Ramona commented thoughtfully. "Now that we're up to twenty-four ships..."
"Twenty-eight."
"Twenty-eight?" she echoed. "Where did the other four ships come from?"
"One captured, three joined." he recited mechanically.
"Joined?" Ramona frowned. "But you can't keep letting new ships into the fleet."
"I thought you were the one who argued for that in the first place," Tambu teased. "Most of the ships in the fleet are joiners."
"At first, yes. But we can't keep expanding if we're running out of money and targets."
"We need the extra ships and the contacts."
"But that just means more..." She broke off and looked at him suspiciously. "You've got a plan, don't you? You always have a plan."
"Not always, but most of the time."
"Well, come on," she prodded, poking him in the ribs. "What is it?"
"Nothing much," he said casually. "Just a complete reformatting of our force."