Thursday, December 13, 2012

Run Like the Wind...

The next week or so is going to be hectic, and I'll probably be off the air most of that time.

I'm leaving my home at Lake Tahoe to go live in Hawaii for the winter...

;-)

TCS

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

The End of Winter -- Chapter 7


Chapter 7: Crew Rotation



August 3rd, 2808

Chimera and Misha met in Curt’s office, at his request.

“Behemoth, please turn off your listening and recording of this meeting. Return to normal recording after this meeting ends. Well, Chimera, this is one of those administrative meetings I promised you you wouldn’t have to attend!”

“Grrrr…”

“Actually, this is important. Things are changing fast, and I want to stay ahead of the curve. I want to do something…unconventional.”

You?” Misha said, “Something unconventional? I’m shocked!”

“Oh, shut up and listen. This is actually a good idea. I want to appoint Behemoth Captain of this vessel.”

“Behemoth? He’s not even a person!”

“Says who? He makes good decisions, and he has more combined space experience than a big fraction of the fleet Captains combined. You’ve talked to him. Is he a real person? Of course he is! And I’d rather have him as my commander than half the other officers I’ve met. Not that I ever said that…”

Misha thought for a bit, and then looked at Chimera and said, “He’s right, you know. This could actually work. The Council has become very fond of Curt recently. If you and I work our combined contacts…we can make this happen.”

“Fine by me,” Chimera said. “I like most machines better than I like most people anyhow!”

“Excellent! Misha, if you could take point on this, that would be great. You’re a bit more…diplomatic…than Chimera. OK, next issue. I have two more captain positions to fill. Misha, are you interested?”

Are you nuts?” Misha replied sharply “I still don’t know how you suckered Chimera into the Admiral job, but there’s no way you’re getting me into a combat command position again! I’ve done my time! Forget it!”

“OK, OK, I figured it couldn’t hurt to ask. How about Amazona? Smart, dedicated, and she would never get any lip from a crewman.”

“A bit young, don’t you think?” Misha said.

“Well, I guess I have a different perspective, but I don’t see 1500 years old as ‘young’.”

Chimera looked at Misha and said, “She would be good, you know. Like Curt said, way better than half the silly bastards we have in command now (not that I ever said that). She’s smart, she works like a demon, and she’s completely unflappable. I think it’s a good idea.”

“Works for me,” Misha said.

“OK, one more to go. Cygnus is clearly too young, even by my standards, although I may promote him to Commander. Any ideas?”

“Keri?” Misha asked.

“Nah,” Chimera said. “He’d be great, but he’s too good at what he’s doing now. Do you know how hard it is to find competent chimeran officers? Leave him where he is. He loves his job, anyhow.”

“Other thoughts?”

“Let us ponder for a bit,” Misha said.

“OK, you’ve got a day, but that’s it. All this is going to be done before that damned conference.”

“I have a couple of additional items, sir. Oooops…I guess I don’t need to call you that anymore.”

Curt Smiled “I won’t tell if you don’t!”

“You’ve promised I won’t have any admin work to do, and I have complete trust in your honesty and sincerity, but I don’t believe you. I’m going to get sucked into this crap whether I like it or not (Misha giggled). I’d like to bring Ensign Philip on board as an apprentice.”

“The kid you sliced up?”

“Yeah, he’s turned out to be really good. I want to leave Behemoth in good technical hands.”

“You’ll get no argument from me about adding good technical staff, but you’ll need to tell Keri.”

“He’ll get over it.”

“Anything else?”

“Oh, one minor thing. I’m officially promoting you to Vice-Admiral.”

What?

“I figured it would be easier for me to stick you with all the admin work and meetings that way. Besides, you deserve it. You’re one of the finest officers in the fleet, way better than most Admirals I know (not that I ever said that). Congratulations!”

“Thank you, ma’am…I guess.”

“Not in private, Admiral. None of this ma’am crap.  I want to be a real person whenever possible.”

“You got it, Chimera!”

 

August 5th, 2808

Completion day!

“Well, Captain Keri, the performance of your crew has been nothing short of stellar,” Curt remarked.  Behemoth is now fully operational, and the fastest Grand Imperial in the fleet!”

“Yeah, and you swiped my best cadet to boot!”

“Oh, you’ll get over it. Speaking of personnel issues, I need a third Captain for the new squadron that’s getting put together. Now, you can call me a racist if you want, but I’d like a chimeran if possible. We considered asking you, actually…”

What?

“But, Chimera said you were too good where you are, and that you loved your job.”

“Well, Admirals, I’m honored by the consideration, but Chimera’s right. I do love my job. I’m the senior technical officer for the entire Imperial Service. How much better can it get than that?”

Chimera said to Curt, “You know, this bastard is making me jealous.”

“Yeah, me too!” Curt said.

“OK, back to business. Captain suggestions?”

“You know,” Keri said, “there is this guy who’s a senior Commander a couple of sectors over. A bit young…less than 1000 years…”

“Watch it! Remember, I’m only 58!”

“Sorry, sir! Anyway, he’s really good. His actual name is Nimitz, but they call him Moose, because he’s abnormally large for a chimeran…about 6 feet tall and 250 lbs.”

Two hundred and fifty pounds? Jesus! You little guys are intimidating enough as it is!”

“Yeah, Moose doesn’t get a lot of grief in bar fights. Let me see if he’s available.”

“Chimera?”

“I know this guy, Curt, even though it’s been a while. First Class. You could do far worse.”

“Alright, then. Captain Keri, I will look forward to the results of your inquiry, and thank you again for your outstanding service!”

“You are more than welcome sir. It’s actually been fun working with the two of you…even if you did swipe my best cadet.”

“Oh, quit whining,” Chimera said. “You’ll get over it!”

 

August 6th , 2808

“Misha, a word please?”

“Sure, what’s up?”

“Who’s actually running this conference that’s coming up?”

“Well, it’s a little vague. There was a huge clamor of interest, and the Council agreed to the conference, but it’s a little vague as to who’s running it.”

“Great. That means no one is running it…and that means we have to run it…and that means…”

“Oh no, you don’t! We are not going there!”

“Misha, I’ve done my homework here. You are hugely respected throughout the Ancient world. More than I had even suspected, actually. Never mind your sheer technical competence, if you run this, it will work. And we need it to work. The entire political structure of the galaxy is being re-ordered, and we are at the center of it. And you are the best one possible to make this happen.”

“Grrrrrr…”

“So, you’ll do it?”

“Yes, I’ll do it, you slimy bastard! I’m starting to understand how you suckered Chimera into the Admiral job…”

Curt wandered over to the security station, and said, “Amazona, I trust you are well!”

“Well indeed, sir!”

“What’s your power level?”

“Well, with all the excess power from the Reagan, I’m up to 100%.”

“Excellent! Amazona, I have some new challenges for you.”

“Bring ‘em on, sir!”

“You know that a new Guardian/AIS squadron is being created?”

“I’d heard rumors, yes sir.”

“Well, it’s real. I’m looking for a Captain I can trust for one of the vessels. Interested?”

A very short pause, then, “Absolutely!”

“Excellent! I know you’re a little young for this by Ancient standards, but I’m only 58, so what the hell. You’ll be getting a brand new ship, the Resolution, fresh off the line. Also…”

“Sir?”

“I need you to help Misha with a project. We have this conference coming up, and if we don’t run it, it’s just going to be a mess. Intellectually, Misha could eat any of the attendees for lunch, but her physical stature is an issue. But, if the two of you worked together, the striking physical contrast would be enough to get everyone’s attention. Plus, these events can get a little rough sometimes. With you as Misha’s escort…well, let’s just say I’ll be able to sleep well at night. So, can I get you to do this, Captain?”

“Absolutely, sir! Working with Captain Misha is always an honor.”

“Excellent! I’ll leave it to the two of you to work out the details.”

 

August 7th, 2808

“Curt?”

“Yes, Misha, good morning!”

“Damn, you are always so cheerful!”

“Only when things are going well. When people are dying, I tend to get a little testy.”

“Well, OK, I get that, but I have good news! Commander Nimitz, Moose, has accepted your offer as the third Captain in the squadron!”

“Well, damn, that is good news! OK, get his furry butt out here straight away. I want us as integrated as possible before that damned conference.”

“You got it!”

It’s convenient to be able to talk to someone wherever you are, so Curt just said to the air, “Behemoth, a word please.”

“Of course, sir! What can I do for you?”

“I have an unconventional request.”

“You sir? Unconventional? I’m shocked!”

“Dammit, Misha told me the same thing just yesterday! Am I really that weird?”

“Yes sir, but I find it quite refreshing. And, after what we’ve been through together, I doubt you can surprise me much.”

“Well, we’ll see. I want to get you officially commissioned as Captain of this ship.”

“Uh…. sir?”

“Captain…in charge…you know what that means, right?”

“Well, of course, sir, but…I’m not even a corporeal being! I’m just a collection of circuits and databanks.”

“So, that makes you inferior to me how? You make good decisions. Hell, you instructed me when I first landed here.”

You could almost imagine Behemoth blushing. “I apologize for that, sir, but there just wasn’t time. I just did what had to be done.”

“Exactly. So, what do you think a Captain’s job is…making decisions, and doing what needs to be done!”

“Well, yes, sir. I guess that’s true.”

“So, you’ll do it?”

“Not up to me, sir. Nothing like this has ever happened before.”

“I already have Guardian Council approval.”

What?

“Combined, Misha and Chimera have remarkable connections. It’s a done deal, but will you do it?”

“Uh, this will be an amazing honor! Yes sir, I’ll do it!”

“Excellent! So, my command staff for the squadron is now complete.”

“If I may ask, who else do you have?”

“Amazona has agreed to command one of the ships.”

“Excellent choice! And the other?”

“There’s this Senior Commander from a nearby squadron called Moose. Real name is Nimitz. Chimeran. He comes well recommended.”

“Hmmm…I don’t really have good data, but the fragments I have about him are all positive.”

“Well, I wanted a chimeran. And, frankly, I wanted a machine, too. Call me a racist if you want to, but this is the right answer.”

“That thought would never occur to me, sir.”

“Then let’s go have fun together, shall we?”

 

August 8th, 2808

Moose arrived without any particular fanfare. Admiral Chimera met him at the airlock.

“Well, Captain Nimitz! Welcome aboard. We don’t have a lot of time, but Admiral Jackson wanted to get us together as soon as we could. You’ve heard you’re getting the Constellation, yes? New Grand Imperial Class starship, straight off the assembly line?”

“Uh, no ma’am, I hadn’t heard that…damn!”

“Yeah, well, you’ll need to get used to that. Admiral Jackson has a fundamental disrespect for what’s been done before. He makes weird shit happen. He really couldn’t care less about what’s happened in the past. And…(Chimera looked around the hall)…in private, we don’t do any of the sir/ma’am/Captain/Admiral stuff. It’s just smart folks, getting things done. You got it?”

“Yes, Chimera!”

“You learn quickly, kid. That’s good! And, Admiral Jackson is really good with the time issue, probably the best you’ve ever met among Normals. We actually had a meeting once where I sliced off one of his fingers.”

“Bullshit!”

“Fact. Ask him yourself. He finds it more amusing than annoying. Now, we’re going to introduce you to Captain Amazona, the new Captain for the Resolution. Some people find her a bit intimidating.”

Moose looked over himself, and at 6’ tall and 250 lbs, he said, “Admiral, I don’t intimidate easily.”

“Well,” Chimera said, “You haven’t met Amazona!”

“I look forward to it!”

Moose and Amazona met in the break room. Moose was clearly impressed.

“Finally,” Moose said, “someone bigger than I am!”

“And, someone who isn’t intimidated by my size!” Amazona said.

“Why should I be intimidated?” Moose said. “I could cut every one of your limbs off in less than three seconds.”

“Oh, that’s right,” Amazona said. “Well, this is great…the more power you can get in a fight, the better. Welcome aboard, Captain!”

“Thank you, ma’am!”

Curt was just beaming. These guys were clearly going to get along famously.

“Oh, and Moose…” Amazona said.

“Yes?”

“I may not be quite as slow as you seem to think I am!”

“Good to know. But, if we’re fighting together, that really isn’t a problem, is it?”

Moose and Amazona went off together to talk shop.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

The End of Winter -- Chapter 6


Chapter 6: Resurrection and Return to Space—Phase 2


July 27th, 2808

An odd sense of normalcy pervaded the ship. The air was clean and pure, and the temperature was warm and comfortable. The crew was playing cards in the lounge, and giving each other grief. Without warning, Amazona stood up, and just listened. There was no obvious reason for this.

“Fascinating,” Chimera said. “I’ve only seen this in textbooks as the Cantilian 6th Sense. I think we’re in for an interesting day.”

Seconds later, alarms sounded all over the ship. There was incoming traffic approaching!

Misha looked out the viewport and said, “My God, they sent the Royal Repair Crew! And a new engine!”

Misha immediately went looking for a private conversation with Curt. They met in the hall.

“You could have told me about this.” Curt said.

“Actually, I couldn’t. There are huge aspects of this that are classified, and I didn’t hear about this ahead of time.”

“OK, so what’s this about?”

Behemoth is going to be space worthy and battle ready before your ESF buddies arrive. Cost is no object.”

“Forgive a poor old space jockey, but I don’t know what ‘Cost is no object’ means. Help me out here.”

“Did you look outside? They have a new engine for us. NEW! That shiny ship you see is the Royal Repair Crew, with ten chimeran technicians. Do you have any idea what ten chimeran technicians can do with five terawatts running at full power? These folks are serious!

“Hmmm…looks like my life as a pilot/engineer is over, and my life as a politician has started.”

“Suck it up, kid, but I’ll be there to help every step of the way.”

Misha jumped on Curt’s neck, and they just thought for a bit.

An hour later, Curt was a little nervous as he got on the shuttle to meet Captain Keri. Chimera, who was with him, assured him the guy was great, but it was still weird. After all, he hadn’t met an Ancient at all until a couple of weeks ago! The docking went without incident, and the two were escorted to the Captain’s office.

“Chimera, you old space dog, how are you?” Keri said.

“Well, sir! Thanks to this Modern, I’m at least alive, but my ship is pretty messed up.”

“Well, maybe we can help with that. Captain Jackson, welcome aboard! I have heard amazing things about you…not all believable.”

“I do what I can, sir. I want to convey my extreme gratitude for your deployment of these resources. We were doomed otherwise.”

“Politically, that’s for sure. We’re here because your ship can’t be fixed before the conference otherwise. Oh, you didn’t know there was a conference? More on that later then. The discovery of an Ancient ship has caused quite a stir in the Modern world. With you dead in the middle of it. So, let’s cut the bullshit. Can you handle that?”

“I guess we’ll see, won’t we?” Curt said. “As always, I’ll do the best I can. But, I can say this--I don’t rattle easily.”

“OK. Chimera, give me the straight story. What’s this guy like?”

“With only a few possible exceptions, Captain Jackson is the most honest, capable, and competent officer I have served with in 2000 years.”

A long pause.

“That’s a pretty strong endorsement. How does he deal with the time issue?”

“Well, he’s only had to deal with that issue for a few weeks or so, and that under conditions when I was still pretty slow moving. He’s still shocked, but that will pass. Now, if you would help me train him…?”

“Captain Jackson,” Keri said, “You know that we Chimerans are….different…when it comes to time. You’ve had some small exposure to this. A great many Normals can’t handle it. Is this going to be a problem for you?”

Curt replied, “Chimera and I have worked together for a couple of weeks now. She plays time tricks on me at least twice a week (Chimera: Who? Me? I do not!). But she works hard, is fast beyond my comprehension, and most of the time, she’s actually entertaining. We’ll be fine.”

“Then let’s get this ship back into space! How long do we have?”

“About two weeks, sir.”

“Dammit…can’t those folks at home ever give me an easy job?”

 

July 29th, 2808

The coordination of the repair of Behemoth by the Reagan went well. Tasks were identified, problems solved, progress was made.

Until all Hell broke loose.

Every alarm in the complex went off. By coincidence, Captain Jackson and Captain Keri arrived at the site at the same time, and their simultaneous command of “Freeze!” was hugely effective. Chimera was in the center engineering stage. Bleeding slightly, but not seriously damaged. Grinning, almost. A cadet from the Reagan was on the landing, doing much less well, with three limbs missing. Jackson gave the nod to Keri to manage the incident.

“Ensign Philip.”

“Sir!”

“What’s going on here?”

“Sir, Lieutenant Chimera gave an incorrect instruction, which I refused to follow.”

“Oh, she did, now, did she? You are aware, of course, that insubordination is a terminatable offense?”

No response.

Captain Keri took his time to look at Chimera, and Capt Jackson, and just consider his options.

“Ensign Philip, do you know who you’re dealing with?”

“Uh, Lieutenant Chimera, sir?”

(A long pause, and then an even longer laugh). “You silly kid. She’s playing with you, son! She always was a smartass. She could kill you any microsecond she wanted to. Did you notice that she has six limbs attached, and you have only three? And the only reason for that is that she didn’t want to embarrass you by leaving you helpless on the ground.

“Ensign Philip, meet Senior Technical Commander Chimera, Captain rank in the Ancient Imperial Service. She outranks me by at least two grades; I’ve lost count of how many at this point. She also has battle experience you will hopefully never see. Captain Chimera, how long would it take you to kill Ensign Philip in battle? Eight nanoseconds?”

“Well, I’m getting old, sir. Probably ten nanoseconds.”

“Ensign Philip…do you get the idea? You may hurt, but she was just playing with you. You would be dead, if she wanted you dead.”

“Yes, sir!”

“Do you still want to serve in this unit?”

“Yes sir!!”

“Very well. Lieutenant Wakemen, please patch Ensign Philip back together, and assign him ten extra watches. Ensign Philip.”

“Sir!”

“This opportunity to learn from Captain Chimera only happens once in a lifetime. If I ever have to deal with you for insubordination again, you will not like the results.”

For the entire duration of the repair, there was not a single additional discipline incident.

Later, back on Behemoth, Curt said, “Captain Chimera, a word, please.”

(Chimera: Oh, shit, I knew this was coming….)

Captain Chimera?  And you were going to tell me this when? You’ve been my superior ever since I got here, and never bothered to mention it? Hell, if you outrank Keri by two grades, you’re my superior now! You were only semi-conscious for the first day or so, so I’ll give you that for free, but after that….what the hell?”

“Permission to speak freely, sir?”

“You damned well better!”

“Sir, I hate management and administration with a passion you can’t imagine. Chimerans generally suck at management. I was unconscious after the crash, and when I woke up, you had things so obviously well in hand, I figured ‘What the hell, I’ll just do what he needs done!’ I want to do things, sir. I want to make things work. I don’t want to mess with paperwork or personnel stuff.”

“You seemed to handle Ensign Philip pretty well today.”

“Punk kid. Smart kid. Smartass. He should actually do well.”

“Captain, let’s make a deal. I won’t give you any administrative assignments of any kind, if you agree to handle every personnel issue regarding a Chimeran that comes up during our mutual term in office. Agreed?”

“Agreed, sir!”

“Also, it might be a little weird for me to refer to you as Captain in public all of a sudden. Would you be offended by the term Commander instead? We’ll work up to Captain later.”

“Not in the slightest. In fact, I’d prefer it.”

“Very well, then. Back to work for both of us.”

July 30th, 2808

Lifting day!

The plans were all done, and the crews were ready.

“Captain Keri, are we ready to go?” Chimera said.

“Absolutely!”

“200,000 tons. You know that, right?”

“Not a problem. With the engines at full power, we’ll have plenty of reserve.”

“Then let’s get this done.”

(Reagan: Well, this is the big day. You ready?)
(Behemoth: Absolutely. With Chimera running the show, I couldn’t be less concerned. Your Captain Keri seems like a pretty sharp cookie as well.)
(Reagan: Yeah, I guess)
(Behemoth: You guess? How old are you, son?)
(Reagan: A little less than 1000 years)
(Behemoth: Aha! I thought that was water I saw behind your ears! Trust me, you’ve got a good one with Keri. They won’t all be that good)
(Reagan: So….what do you do with the bad ones?)
(Behemoth: You do what you’re told, and if they’re really bad, sometimes you’ll die. But you can…influence them.)
(Reagan: How?)
(Behemoth: We’ll talk later, kid. Things are about to get interesting!)

The final alarm went off throughout the complex.

“Attention all crew. Lifting is about to begin!”

“Captain Keri, are you ready?”

“Yes, ma’am!”

“Behemoth, are you ready?”

“Ready and eager, ma’am!”

“OK, to review the plan, the Reagan will ramp up to full rated power, and the tractors will lift Behemoth approximately 100 feet off the ground. The technicians will install support struts as appropriate. This whole process should take about an hour. Any questions?”

Silence.

“Then let’s do it! Reagan and Behemoth, commence now!”

From a short distance, the view was simply awesome. A 100 yard diameter ship, lifting a 200 yard ship off the ground! There was a blur of activity as the technicians installed the supports. You literally couldn’t see them. Once the supports were in place, the Reagan set Behemoth gently down on the supports, and moved away.

“Hey old man,” Chimera said. “I’m obviously going to win our bet about getting you back into space.  Want to up the ante?”

“Captain Chimera, I am never going to bet against you again.”

Don’t call me that!

“Uh, yes, ma’am. Sorry…”

Once the lifting and set down were complete, Curt went back to the bridge and said: “Behemoth?”

“Sir!

Captain Chimera?”

“Oooops…”

“Yeah, ooops. OK, I never explicitly asked, so I can’t beat you up for that, but it’s time for a no bullshit conversation. Your explicit instruction in this conversation is to give me the information you believe I would find most useful, not only the information I explicitly ask for. Are we clear?”

“Clear sir!”

“OK. Give me a quick summary of the experience of all the crew members.”

“Captain Curt Jackson, age 58, formerly of the Earth Space Force.”

“You know what? I knew that. And actually, I retain my commission in the Earth Space Force. I have a dual commission.”

“Can you do that??”

“I guess we’ll find out, won’t we? Anyway, update your records to reflect my continued commission with the ESF. Next?”

“Starship Behemoth, Grand Imperial Class, approximately 12,000 years old. Oldest operating Imperial class ship in the fleet.”

“Ahh, but what you might not know, is with this new engine, you will also be officially the fastest Grand Imperial in the fleet. You like that idea?”

“Uh, sir, this is the first I’ve heard this. Hell yes, I like the idea!”

“Well, that’s the spirit I like. Next?”

“Captain Misha, about 12,000 years old. Captain Misha supervised my initial construction. She is also a former Chairman of the Council of Guardians.”

“Damn! You two have known each other for 12,000 years? No wonder you were so happy when I told you she was still alive.”

“Sir, words can’t even begin to describe it. And then, when you brought her back to life…you have a dedication from me beyond any conceivable military obligation.”

Captain Jackson, not easily embarrassed, blushed at the response.

“OK--next?”

“Senior Technical Commander Chimera, Captain rank, 4th grade. They’ve tried to promote her to Admiral three times now, but she threatened to resign if they did. Her agreement with the service is that she gets whatever assignment she wants as long as she stays on. She chose this assignment because she wanted the oldest ship there was.”

“Why am I not shocked by that? Next?”

“Senior Lieutenant Amazona, Chief Security Officer. She took this position as a promotion to an Imperial class starship Security Officer. Bad call, huh?”

“Oh, I don’t know. Do you think so?”

“Actually, I don’t. Thank you sir! Next is Lieutenant Cygnus. New kid, but as you saw from the battle in space, very good. Any more questions, sir?”

“No, that will do for now. Thank you. But Behemoth.”

“Sir?”

“As a standing future order, your instruction is to tell me what you think I need to hear, in addition to any specific information I ask for. Are we clear?”

“Clear sir!”

 
July 31st, 2808

“Chimera! I trust you are well?”

“Very well indeed, sir! The repairs are moving along well ahead of schedule. That Royal Repair Crew is just astounding. The structural repairs are complete, and we should actually be ready for a flight test in a few days!”

“Actually, about that. I need your help, Captain.”

“Captain, eh? I don’t like the sound of that.”

“I need you to accept your promotion to Admiral.”

What? I’ve successfully resisted that for over 1000 years, and now you expect some snotty nosed Modern kid to change my mind? Forget it! Sir.”

“Chimera, I need your help.”

Chimera, shrugged, and relaxed. “Well, you did save my life after all, so, I guess I owe you something for that. But why me? And why this?”

“Captain, what’s your clearance level?”

“Level 20, sir.”

“Level 20, that’s interesting. I’m only a Level 12, so I guess that won’t be an issue here. I assume you’ve heard the Guardians and the AIS are going to become active again in this sector? The debate has gone on for centuries, but the discovery of Behemoth by the Moderns has kicked them into action.”

“I’ve heard rumors, sir, but nothing specific.”

“Well, it’s real. Working with AIS, they are going to kick off a squadron of three Grand Imperial class starships, to keep order and peace in this region of the galaxy. A squadron of that size requires an Admiral to run it, and Misha got a full ration of shit just to get me approved as a Modern to Captain an Ancient Starship. There’s no way they’ll let me run this.”

“You want me to run a squadron? Buzz off! Sir.”

“No, of course not, you don’t have to run it. I’ll deal with all that. I’ll find good Captains for all the ships. I’ll continue in daily command. You won’t have to do any admin, none of that. Just the technical work, which you’ve been doing so superbly well already. Oh, there will be some state dinners and such, but I can handle almost all of that.”

“Hmmm…no admin work?”

“None!”

“And you’ll handle all the politics?”

“Like I say, there will be a few official functions you’ll need to attend, but other than that, I’ll deal with it all.”

“Hmmm…let me think about this.”

“You’re a chimeran. That means you should need, what, about ten seconds to think about it?”

“Smartass!”

“So…you’ll do it?”

“Yes, dammit, I’ll do it! I never thought I’d get sucked into this.”

“Well, things change. Life is different for all of us now. And Chimera…thank you!”

“Grrrrrr…”

 
August 1st, 2808

“Admiral Chimera, good morning! I trust you slept well? (Captain Keri was way too cheery for Curt’s early morning disposition).”

“News travels fast, I see. Captain Keri?”

“Yes ma’am!

“Would you like to be assigned latrine duty for the next month?”

“Uhhhh, no, ma’am, that wouldn’t be my first choice.”

“Then I don’t see any need to discuss my new assignment any further, do you?”

“Uh…no ma’am.”

Chimera sat down, and relaxed. “Look guys, I just don’t want things to be different. I understand the need for public formality and all that. Curt and I talked about that before I ‘agreed’ to this assignment. But when it’s just us in private, I just want it to be us, getting things done as always. None of this Sir and ma’am crap. Can we do that?”

“Yes ma’am.” Captains Jackson and Keri said spontaneously together.

There was a brief moment of tension, and then an outburst of laughter. “We didn’t plan that, Chimera, we really didn’t. Of course you’re still one of us. Part of the engineering strike team, as always. And, I won’t hesitate to call you on it when you’re wrong,” Curt said. Then, he felt an odd tingle, and noticed that his left index finger was severed, and lying on the floor.

“Uh, sorry about that,” Captain Keri said. “We’ll get that fixed for you straight away.”

“Oh, just give it to me,” Chimera said. “No need to involve others in this.”

Curt’s finger was re-attached and working in about six seconds.

“That’s amazing!” Curt said, flexing his finger. “I knew it worked in theory but…this is real. You guys can really do this!”

“You wouldn’t want us to let you get bored, would you?” Chimera said with an evil smile.

 “OK,” Curt said, “So what’s this ‘conference’ about?”

“Well, it’s annoying,” Captain Keri said. “Some dipshit at Earth Space Force command leaked that an Ancient ship had been found, and now, every species in the damned sector wants to check it out.”

“Great. This is just great.”

“It’s worse than that. Did you know that Earth Space Force command intends to take possession of Behemoth?”

“Never happen, Captain. I’m clear on that. Although, this is going to give me more than a few political headaches.”

Chimera smiled. “Captain Jackson, your clearance level just went up to 15.”

 
August 2nd, 2808

Flight test day!

The new engine was installed, the critical flight systems all checked out, and Behemoth was ready to go. The new shields didn’t work yet, and there were numerous smaller systems that still needed to be repaired, but basically, he was ready to fly.

“So, Behemoth,” Curt said, “You ready to fly, and lose that bet with Chimera?”

“I am vibrating with anticipation, sir! If these are the results I get, I’ll need to bet against Admiral Chimera more often.”

“Remember not to call her that in public. You know she hates that.”

“Uh, yes sir!”

“Actually, I have a question for you. Where did you get your training in spacecraft design?”

“Uh, training sir?”

“Yes, the Phoenix, for example. Smoothest damned ship I’ve ever flown. Where did you learn to do that?”

“Well, sir, to be honest…I have no training in spacecraft design. The Phoenix is the first I’ve ever done. I just sort of looked at the requirements, designed it in my head, and printed out the results.”

You’ve never designed a spacecraft before?

“No sir. I just did what needed to be done.”

“Hmmm…clearly, you have too much unused capacity. We’ll speak more of this later.”

The flight test was flawless. If anything, the performance of the new engine exceeded design specs.

The Grand Imperial Starship Behemoth was back in space!

Sunday, December 2, 2012

I Love it When a Plan Comes Together!


Rick and I just tested the generator in my designed “power loss” configuration, and it performed beyond my wildest dreams! I was sure it would work to some extent. I didn’t expect it to work so thoroughly, so easily, and so quickly.

How many pulls it takes to fire up the generator is a direct function of how long it’s been since it last ran. In this case, it fired up almost instantly. We plugged in the cord, put it under a table I had moved into position on the back deck for that purpose, and ran the cord inside.

One of my biggest concerns was firing up the TV. This is a CRT, not a flat screen, and just like its Sony older brother, it literally starts with an audible “bang”. I didn’t know how much power this start-up process would draw, but apparently, the answer is almost none. I suspect the TV has an internal capacitor that buffers this, but I know for sure that it barely increased the power output from the generator at all to turn it on, and run it.

The next big test was the electric heater. It’s one of those little units that runs at either 750 or 1500 watts, but it’s pretty slick, with a rotating fan and digital thermostat control. I knew I had to limit it to the 750 setting, but when we plugged it in along with the TV, it still only drove the generator up to a little over half its full RPM.

Complete, unqualified success! What this means is that one little device can turn my family room into an extremely comfortable “lifeboat”, with climate control, communications, entertainment, and light, with some power to spare. Food and water conveniently available via the adjacent kitchen. For those of you who haven’t seen it, my family room is a medium-sized “great room”, with high ceilings, lots of windows, and a wood burning fireplace.

My house is situated near a local elevation maximum in our neighborhood, and the backyard slopes downward. The next time the power fails, we’ll literally have our own little shining city on the hill!

J

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Power Hungry


Friday Evening, November 30th 2012

This is a test of the emergency broadcast system…except that it’s not a test!

We are in the middle of a complete power failure, neighborhood wide. Sometime back, I bought a UPS, and hooked the cable modem and router into it. It’s rated to run a full computer system…including the monitor…for 10-15 minutes. Since I’m using the laptop, and the UPS is only running the modem and router, it should be good for at least an hour.

We’ll see!

Or hopefully, not. Having the power off is annoying, if for no other reason than the heater doesn’t work. I recently tested the generator, and it’s working fine, if it comes to that.

Maybe I should fire it up. That will pretty much guarantee that the power will come back up as soon as I get it running…

 
Saturday Morning, December 1st 2012

The saga continues…we’re still getting power burps this morning, which is more than a little weird. It’s not snowing; it’s barely drizzling. It’s windy, but it’s been far windier than this with no problems. Similarly for the rain. But, this is the worst stream of power failures since 2005, which was the catalyst for me buying my generator.

One thing for sure…I am sick and goddam tired or resetting clocks! The major outage yesterday evening was over two hours, but there have been numerous burps of minutes or seconds since, one just about 20 minutes ago. And, tonight is supposed to be The Big One of this sequence of three storms, so there may well be power issues tonight.

In a way, this has been a great test opportunity. I’ve done a lot of general preparation for power outages (a good thing), but I hadn’t run a full-up test of the system since doing so (a bad thing). Since the weather conditions weren’t those that I would expect to cause a power failure, I didn’t do any special preparations, or get the various pieces “staged”. That made it a true surprise, a “cold” test. So, I’ll describe what’s happened so far, which may be useful or informative to some of you, and describe some of my next steps.

For background, when the lights go out up here it gets dark. Not the wimpy dim-light condition that city-dwellers refer to as dark, but seriously dark. On a moonless night with the power off, you literally can’t see your hand in front of your face.

One consequence of this is that I keep a flashlight next to my recliner, which I use daily. So the flashlight is not an item stuck in the back of a drawer somewhere, that you can’t find when you need it, and that won’t work if you can find it. The flashlight always works, and it did last night.

I was watching the tube when darkness fell, and just sat for a few minutes, thinking it was a momentary burp. When it became clear that it was more than a burp, I fired up my computer, both to test my BCP process for communication, and for something useful to do. The process worked perfectly. As I mentioned, I have the cable modem and the wireless router hooked into the UPS. I cleared my email buffer, and then thought about what to do next.

There are a couple of non-technical background issues going on at this point in the evening. I’ve been sick all week to a greater or lesser extent, and last night was unusually bad. Also, my dog Xena was totally freaked by the power being out. I’m not sure why. I wasn’t the least bit concerned myself, so she wasn’t picking anything up from me. However, it turns out that a bunch of alarms go off in the neighborhood when the power dies. In any case, she wanted to be outside. The entire rest of the evening, she was freaked, not responding to her name…not even eating a snack I gave her. A couple of hours later when I went to bed, she got up next to me, and she was still shivering with fear. She’s better this morning, but she still wants out immediately whenever the power burps. She’s outside now. I was more worried about her than I was about the power.

I tested the generator recently (less than a month ago), so I knew it would work, but I didn’t know how much fuel it had in it, and I didn’t know if I could get to the gas cans with the garage door closed (With a mid-size SUV, four large motorcycles, and a bunch of crap in a small 2 car garage, it’s a pretty tight fit). Or how much gas, if any, was in the cans.

I decided that my first move would be to hook the inverter up to the car (in the garage) which would give me 300 watts. That may not sound like much (because it’s not), but having a single 100-watt bulb lit is remarkably better than sitting in the dark. I had to dig through the mountain of crap in the back of the car to find the inverter, but after that, hooking it up and getting some light in the house was easy.

The location of the light wasn’t ideal, however. The family room is my waking “hub” in the house, but it’s far from the garage. I have plenty of extension cords…but most of them are in a cabinet in the garage…which you can’t open with the car parked in it…and you can’t conveniently open the garage door without power. You can do it manually, but the process of disconnecting it, lifting it, and reconnecting it is such a cosmic pain in the ass that I would only do it in an emergency, which this clearly wasn’t. Finally, between extension cords and power strips, I was able to cobble together a cable long enough to bring the inverter power from the garage, to the light next to my chair in the family room.

The Bridge was no longer in darkness!

I don’t know how long a fully charged car battery will power a 100-watt light bulb through an inverter. Doing that calculation is on my action item list. But I now know for certain that running it for two hours has no discernible impact on the ability to start the car.

Feeling really crummy, I seriously considered just going to bed, but I decided to see the test through to completion as long as the power was out. My design configuration for an extended outage (which still hasn’t been tested) is to have the generator on the back deck just off the family room, run the power cord inside through a cracked window or door, and then power up…at least, whatever stuff I have enough power for with a 2000 watt generator, which probably puts out only about 1600-1700 watts at this altitude. You remember the scene from Apollo 13, where they had to come up with a power-up sequence for the CM that wouldn’t overload the system? I need to do that test. I know the generator will run the furnace, the refrigerator, or the microwave, but not two of them at the same time, never mind anything else. I may do that test in real time this evening by necessity, or earlier if I feel better later today.

So I took a small lamp out into the garage (the inverter has two 110 outlets), and determined not only that I could get to the two gas cans easily, but that one of them had gas…enough to top off the generator which, if I remember correctly, is good for 4-6 hours of operation. Checking out that endurance, and refilling both of those gas cans, is on the action list.

Just as I finished filling up the generator, the power came back on. I immediately opened up the garage door, fired up the car, and positioned it outside in such a way that I could run the power cord from it to the inverter with the garage door closed. That way, I could run the car at idle, and get continuous power to the inverter (running the car inside the attached garage would obviously be a bad idea). I set the cord in the appropriate position, and closed the garage door. So, if nothing else, I’d have at least 300 watts essentially indefinitely, if the power crapped out again.

The power burped a few times, but then stayed on, and I went to bed. I had to get up every hour or so to let Xena out or let her back in, so I ended up getting at best a few fitful hours of sleep in my recliner. I had a lot of things I wanted to get done today, but nothing that can’t wait, so it will. Hopefully the power will stay on through the Big One tonight. If not, I’ve got everything staged far, far better than I did yesterday.

Any of you have a recommendation for a UPS that can deliver 1600 watts for 5-10 minutes? That would be more than enough time for me to get the generator powered up, and once I get the “Apollo 13” configuration for my home “Bridge” figured out and set up, I’ll become reasonably indifferent to power failures, cycling the furnace and refrigerator on occasionally, as needed for climate and storage control.

A pain in the ass, to be sure, but also an adventure!

J