“Damn it.” She checked and rechecked the figures. “Something’s just not adding up.” Dar paged through the reports strewn over the desk and shook her head. She’d taken the performance data of the base first and dumped it into her analyzer, letting the custom-built scripts she’d written sort through the columns of figures, matching dollars spent with viable product—in this case, qualified personnel who were assigned out to various Navy installations around the world.

Something just wasn’t matching. Her scripts kept returning errors, finding discrepancies between the list of expenses and the lists of demands for payment, and so far she hadn’t been able to put her finger on the reason. It was almost as though parts of the data were misplaced, not missing, because the end result balanced, but in the wrong areas—

so that the orderly progression of bookkeeping went every which direction.

Hmm. Dar scratched her jaw. Maybe that was why her data parse on the base hadn’t brought back snips of relevant data, like who the new base commander was. Her eyebrows hiked and she dove into her briefcase, retrieving the case study she’d done before starting the project. Impatiently she flipped through the already ruffle-edged papers, her eyes darting back and forth until she found the spot she was looking for. “Ah.”

She leaned back and rested the report on her knee as a warm draft of air entered through the window and stirred the pages, bringing with it a scent of freshly cut grass and the sound of rugged chanting. Dar had requested, politely, a small office space for her use, and Commander Albert and Lieutenant Perkins had, equally politely, led her to this tiny room with its single scarred wooden desk and unpadded chair.

And no air conditioning. Dar had given them both a smile, then simply taken off her denim overshirt, leaving her comfortable in a very light tank top as she sat down and kept them standing there, answering questions in their full uniforms until they’d both turned red as beets 84 Melissa Good and started sweating.

Dar chuckled to herself and glanced out the window, watching a training group go through an obstacle course, clawing their way up a tall wooden wall and flipping over with strained grunts she could hear all the way where she was sitting. It wasn’t too different from when she and the rest of the base brats used to sneak over after dinner and try the course themselves, ending up with splinters and cuts as they struggled along.

She remembered the first time she’d made it all the way through, at age fourteen. Almost without a scratch until she came to the last hurdle, the rope ladder she’d swarmed up, sweating and almost yelling with exultation as she grabbed the top and flung herself over.

Completely forgetting the ditch on the other side. Ow. Dar winced, even all these years later, and reached down to rub her ankle, which she’d twisted so badly she almost didn’t make it home. Fortunately, her daddy had spotted her limping down the sidewalk and pulled over in their sturdy pickup halfway there.

Andrew Robert’s rugged, crew-cut head poked out the window of the pickup. “What in the hell happened t’you, young lady?”

Dar grabbed the doorframe gratefully and hung on, catching her breath.

“Nothin’...I just fell offa something.”

Andrew leaned closer. “Were you over at that monkey pit?” he accused.

Dar chewed her lip. Lying to her father was never a good idea. She’d learned that the hard way. “Yeah.”

“After I told you not to go there?” The low growl made her flinch.

“Yeah.” She looked back up into his face. “Got through this time.” She wasn’t able to help grinning, just a little, but she stopped at the scowl on his face. “You are just a pile of trouble, ain’tcha, Paladar?” Andrew shook his head. “Git your ass into this here truck.”

So she did, limping around the front and getting in on the other side, glad of the chance to sit down and get off her aching ankle, as he pulled away from the curb and started down their street. It took her a moment to realize it when he passed the house and kept going, and she gave him a startled look.

“Where’re we going?”

“Git you some ice for that leg and some water to wash the mud off yer face,” her father told her. “’Cause I ain’t bringing you in the house looking like that, little girl. Your mother’d kill me.”

Dar scowled and looked down at her mud-stained hands, her momentary happiness fading. They’d only recently returned to Florida, and the adjustment back had been tough for her. Friends were very few and far between, and Andrew was facing another six-month tour in just a few weeks.

“’Sides...you can’t eat ice cream with all that dirt down there,” Andrew muttered.

Dar looked at him sideways.


Red Sky At Morning 85

“Figure anyone stubborn enough to get through that monkey pit deserves an ice cream cone, don’t you?” Andrew stopped at a stop sign and turned, reaching over and wiping a bit of mud off Dar’s cheek. “I know I went and got me one first time I got my butt through it.” He patted her face. “Good job, Dardar. That’s a tough thing you done.”

Dar smiled so hard it hurt, making her forget her ankle completely.

“Thanks, Daddy.”

Hmm. Dar licked her lips thoughtfully. Ice cream. Now there’s a thought. She decided to take a side trip during lunch, and resettled her attention on the report she held. The date was current—as of two weeks ago, as she’d thought—but the name of the base commander she knew now was wrong.

So what else was wrong, and why? Dar switched to the laptop and typed in a query. It came back, this time with the correct information.

Was the reporting that far behind, and she just got caught in the lag?

She checked another bit of data and frowned. Okay, that came up all right now, too. So maybe she did get caught between updates. “All right, let me just run these suckers all over again.” She typed in a request and watched a long bar start across her screen. “Note to self. Self, upgrade this damn base to 100 Base-T before you do anything else. Jesus. At ten I could walk to the blasted server and get this faster.”

Her cell phone buzzed and she flipped it open. “Yeah?”

“Morning, boss.” Mark’s voice came through. “You left me a voice mail to call ya, so here I am.”

“I need a T1.” Dar flipped through another set of reports as she talked. “Even a fractional would do if we can’t get a full. I’m gonna need the big boxes to run the specs on this place, and they don’t have a pipe big enough for me to hook into.”

“Hang on. I’m GPSing you,” Mark muttered. “Yeah, yeah, yeah, shut up. Stop with the error messages, willya...Ah, shit, Dar. You’re in bumfuck.”

“I am not,” Dar protested.

“You most certainly the heck are, boss. The nearest CO to you is freaking Marathon,” Mark replied. “I’d have to piggyback on the National Defense circuits. BellSouth’s not gonna go for it, that’s for sure. They don’t have crap anywhere in the area.” He paused. “What in the hell are you doing out there in the scrub, anyway?”

Dar felt stung; irrationally, she realized, but stung nonetheless.

“I’m on a project out at the Naval base here,” she answered slowly. “The one I grew up on.”

There was a very awkward silence on the phone. “Uh...sorry, Dar,”

Mark finally stuttered. “I didn’t mean to dis the place.”

Dar sighed. “It’s okay.” She glanced around. “It is bumfuck.”

“Well, it must be a pretty cool slice of bumfuck if you’re from there,” Mark rallied gamely. “But I gotta tell you, even if I cross my legs 86 Melissa Good and squeeze, I can’t really imagine you as a kid.”

No. Dar tossed the report onto the desk. “That’s probably a good thing,” she told her MIS chief. “When can I get my T1?”

A silence filled with clicking followed. “Best I can do is Thursday.”

Dar’s eyebrows lifted. “After all that griping? You’re a damn fraud, Mark.”

Mark chuckled softly. “Yeah, well, I was checking the commercial availability; I went back and checked the governmental. They’ve got a big POP not far from there. We can zap in a pipe there. I’ll ship you down a Cisco and a mini hub.”

“Good,” Dar responded. “When it gets a completion, I want to hook up and suck everything in their main systems out and over to the mainframes. I ran an analysis on my laptop, but there’s something not jibing, and I don’t have the CPU cycles to rip it apart.”

“Sounds good to me. Oh, hey.” Mark’s voice altered and warmed.

“I was just talking to the big kahuna.”

“The big kahuna who nearly got my ass nailed to the table in a marketing meeting? That big kahuna?” Kerry’s voice echoed through the circuit. “Gimme that phone.” There was a fumbling noise. “Paladar Katherine Roberts.”

“Uh-oh.” Dar started laughing. “You sound like my mother.”

“You are so busted.” Kerry joined her in laughter. “Oh my God, Dar...you knocked me for a such a loop in that meeting. How’s it going?”

“Eh.” Dar reviewed the report now running on the laptop’s screen.

“All right, I guess. There’s so much to do, I can’t decide where to start.”

She sent the report to print. “How’s it going there?”

“Well,” Kerry exhaled, an audible rushing sound, “I’ve got a session with Jose in about an hour. Wish me luck.” She perched on Mark’s desk and winked at him, “Other than that, it’s been fine, with the slight exception of me being rendered speechless earlier. What was that all about?”

“Someone’s initials,” Dar replied succinctly.

Kerry smiled. “Oh,” she murmured. “Yeah. I don’t know what got into me. I got to use the Leatherman you got me, though.” She’d circled the small house and tried to imagine her lover and her family living in it, succeeding only when she pictured Dar out on their little island—in her scruffy cutoffs. “Well, I’ve got to get to my meeting. Here’s Mark back. See you later at home?”

“You bet.”

Kerry handed the phone back and stood, picking up the handful of requisitions she’d come to collect. She gave Mark a pat on the back and walked through the MIS command center with its semicircular desks and racks of seriously blinking lights. Just as she hit the door an alarm went off, and she paused, looking back over her shoulder to where two techs were scrambling toward a monitor. “What is it?”


Red Sky At Morning 87

“Shit.” One tech slapped buttons, then glanced up. “Sorry, ma’am.”

Kerry returned to the desk and peered over it. “What’s going on?”

“Crap...crap...crap...we just lost the Southeast.” The other tech was furiously rattling his keyboard, and now Mark approached, leaning over them. “Mark, something big just took a dump over Georgia.” He looked at Kerry. “You know what that means.”

Kerry grinned cheerfully. “Hot darn. It means I get to cancel my meeting.” She set her papers down and rolled her sleeves up.

“Okay...Mark, you start checking the access routers; I’ll call BellSouth.”

DAR MADE HER way through the labyrinth of corridors and pushed open Commander Albert’s door without ceremony or even a knock. She found him just getting off a call, and she paused, giving him a look. “You wanted a conference?”

Albert took in a breath visibly and released it. “Okay, look.” He held out both hands. “Can I raise a truce pennant here?”

’Bout goddamned time. Dar folded her arms, but relaxed her posture at the same time. “Depends on what your terms are,” she said. “This can be just as tough as you want it to be.”

“Okay.” The man sat down and motioned her to do the same.

“Look, Ms. Roberts, I really don’t mean to be such a bastard, but...” He paused.

“But I’m stomping all over your territory with spike heels,” Dar finished for him. “You think I don’t know that? Listen, Commander, if I were in your shoes, I’d be just as pissed off as you are, believe me.”

Albert relaxed a little. “Have you ever been? In my shoes?”

Dar considered the question. “Not really, no,” she admitted. “My company was taken over by ILS, but I was just a programmer then. I remember resenting the hell out of having to explain to clueless githeads what my code was, though.” She crossed an ankle over her knee. “So I do understand, but you need to understand that I’m not your enemy.”