Barrayar
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
"Now
is it, 'Diplomacy is the art of war pursued by other men,'"
asked Ivan, "or was it the other way around? 'War is
diplo—'"
"All diplomacy is a
continuation of war by other means," Miles intoned. "Chou
En Lai, twentieth century, Earth."
"What
are you, a walking reference library?"
"No,
but Commodore Tung is. He collects Wise Old Chinese Sayings, and
makes me memorize 'em."
"So was old
Chou a diplomat, or a warrior?"
Lieutenant
Miles Vorkosigan thought it over. "I think he must have been a
diplomat."
Miles's seat straps pressed
against him as the attitude jets fired, banking the personnel pod in
which he and Ivan sat across from each other in lonely splendor.
Their two benches lined a short fuselage. Miles craned his neck for a
glimpse past the pod pilots shoulder at the planet turning below
them.
Eta Ceta IV, the heart and homeworld of
the sprawling Cetagandan empire. Miles supposed eight developed
planets and an equal fringe of allied and puppet dependencies
qualified as a sprawl in any sane person's lexicon. Not that the
Cetagandan ghem-lords wouldn't like to sprawl a little farther, at
their neighbors' expense, if they could.
Well,
it didn't matter how huge they were, they could only put military
force through a wormhole jump one ship at a time, just like everybody
else.
It was just that some people had some
damned big
ships.
The colored fringe of night slid around
the rim of the planet as the personnel pod continued to match orbits
from the Barrayaran Imperial courier vessel they had just left, to
the Cetagandan transfer station they were approaching. The nightside
glittered appallingly. The continents were awash in a fairy dust of
lights. Miles swore he might read by the glow of the civilization, as
if from a full moon. His homeworld of Barrayar seemed suddenly a dull
vast swatch of rural darkness, with only a few sparks of cities here
and there. Eta Ceta's high-tech embroidery was downright . . . gaudy.
Yes, overdressed, like a woman weighted down with too much jewelry.
Tasteless, he tried to convince himself. I
am not some backcountry hick. I can handle this. I am Lord
Vorkosigan, an officer and a nobleman.
Of
course, so was Lieutenant Lord Ivan Vorpatril, but the fact did not
fill Miles with confidence. Miles regarded his big cousin, who was
also craning his neck, eyes avid and lips parted, drinking in their
destination below. At least Ivan looked the part of a diplomatic
officer, tall, dark-haired, neat, an easy smile permanently plastered
on his handsome face. His fit form filled his officer's undress
greens to perfection. Miles's mind slid, with the greased ease of old
bad habit, to invidious comparison.
Miles's own
uniforms had to be hand-tailored to fit, and insofar as possible
disguise, the massive congenital defects that years of medical
treatments had done so much to correct. He was supposed to be
grateful, that the medicos had done so much with so little. After a
lifetime of it he stood four-foot-nine, hunchbacked and
brittle-boned, but it beat being carried around in a bucket.
Sure.
But he could
stand, and walk, and run if need be, leg braces and all. And
Barrayaran Imperial Security didn't pay him to be pretty, thank God,
they paid him to be smart. Still, the morbid thought did creep in
that he had been sent along on this upcoming circus to stand next to
Ivan and make him look good. ImpSec certainly hadn't given him any
more interesting missions, unless you could call Security Chief
Illyan's last curt "… and stay out of trouble!" a secret
assignment.
On the other hand, maybe Ivan had
been sent along to stand next to Miles and make him sound
good. Miles brightened slightly at the thought.
And
there was the orbital transfer station, coming up right on schedule.
Not even diplomatic personnel dropped directly into Eta Ceta's
atmosphere. It was considered bad etiquette, likely to draw an
admonition administered by plasma fire. Most civilized worlds had
similar regulations, Miles conceded, if only for purposes of
preventing biological contaminations.
"I
wonder if the Dowager Empress's death was really natural?" Miles
asked idly. Ivan, after all, could hardly be expected to supply the
answer. "It was sudden enough."
Ivan
shrugged. "She was a generation older than Great Uncle Piotr,
and he was old since forever. He used to unnerve the hell out of me
when I was a kid. It's a nice paranoid theory, but I don't think
so."
"Illyan agrees with you, I'm
afraid. Or he wouldn't have let us
come. This could have been a lot less dull if it had been the
Cetagandan emperor who'd dropped, instead of some tottering little
old haut-lady."
"But then we would not
be here," Ivan pointed out logically. "We'd both be on duty
hunkering down in some defensive outpost right now, while the
prince-candidates' factions fought it out. This is better. Travel,
wine, women, song—"
"It's a State
funeral,
Ivan."
"I can hope, can't
I?"
"Anyway, we're just supposed to
observe. And report. What or why, I don't know. Illyan emphasized he
expects the reports in writing."
Ivan
groaned. "How I spent my holiday, by little Ivan Vorpatril, age
twenty-two. It's like being back in school."
Miles's
own twenty-third birthday would be following Ivan's soon. If this
tedious duty ran to schedule, he should actually be back home in time
for a celebration, for a change. A pleasant thought. Miles's eyes
glinted. "Still, it could be fun, embroidering events for
Illyan's entertainment. Why should official reports always have to be
in that dead dry style?"
"Because
they're generated by dead dry brains. My cousin, the frustrated
dramatist. Don't get too carried away. Illyan has no sense of humor,
it would disqualify him for his job."
"I'm
not so sure. . . ." Miles watched as the pod wove through its
assigned flight path. The transfer station flowed past, vast as a
mountain, complex as a circuit diagram. "It would have been
interesting to meet the old lady when she was still alive. She
witnessed a lot of history, in a century and a half. If from an odd
angle, inside the haut-lords' seraglio."
"Low-life
outer barbarians like us would never have been let near her."
"Mm,
I suppose not." The pod paused, and a major Cetagandan ship with
the markings of one of the out-planet governments ghosted past, on
and on, maneuvering its monstrous bulk to dock with exquisite care.
"All the haut-lord satrap governors—and their retinues—are
supposed to be converging for this. I'll bet Cetagandan imperial
security is having fun right now."
"If
any two governors come, I suppose the rest have to show up, just to
keep an eye on each other." Ivan's brows rose. "Should be
quite a show. Ceremony as Art. Hell, the Cetagandans make blowing
your nose an art. Just so they can sneer at you if you get the moves
wrong. One-upmanship to the nth power."
"It's
the one thing that convinces me that the Cetagandan haut-lords are
still human, after all that genetic tinkering."
Ivan
grimaced. "Mutants on purpose are mutants still." He
glanced down at his cousins suddenly stiff form, cleared his throat,
and tried to find something interesting to look at out the
canopy.
"You're so diplomatic, Ivan,"
said Miles through a tight smile. "Try not to start a war single
. . . mouthed, eh?" Civil
or otherwise.
Ivan
shrugged off his brief embarrassment. The pod pilot, a Barrayaran
tech-sergeant in black fatigues, slid his little ship neatly into its
assigned docking pocket. The view outside shrank to blank dimness.
Control lights blinked cheery greetings, and servos whined as the
flex-tube portals matched and locked. Miles snapped off his seat
straps just a shade more slowly than Ivan, pretending disinterest, or
savoir faire, or something. No Cetagandan was going to catch him with
his nose pressed to the glass like some eager puppy. He was a
Vorkosigan. His heart beat faster anyway.
The
Barrayaran ambassador would be waiting, to take his two high-ranking
guests in hand, and show them, Miles hoped, how to go on. Miles
mentally reviewed the correct greetings and salutations, and the
carefully memorized personal message from his father. The pod lock
cycled, and the hatch on the side of the fuselage to the right of
Ivan's seat dilated.
A man hurtled through,
swung himself to a sudden halt on the hatch's handlebar, and stared
at them with wide eyes, breathing heavily. His lips moved, but
whether in curses, prayers, or rehearsals Miles wasn't sure.
He
was elderly but not frail, broad-shouldered and at least as tall as
Ivan. He wore what Miles guessed was the uniform of a station
employee, cool gray and mauve. Fine white hair wisped over his scalp,
but he had no facial hair at all on his shiny skin, neither beard nor
eyebrows nor even down. His hand flew to his left vest, over his
heart.
"Weapon!" Miles yelled in
warning. The startled pod pilot was still snaking his way clear of
his seat straps, and Miles was physically ill-equipped to jump
anyone, but Ivan's reflexes had been honed by plenty of training, if
not actual combat. He was already moving, rotating around his own
hand-hold point-of-contact and into the intruders
path.
Hand-to-hand combat in free fall was
always incredibly awkward, due in part to the necessity of having to
hang on tightly to anybody one wanted to seriously hit. The two men
quickly ended up wrestling. The intruder clutched wildly, not at his
vest but at his right trouser pocket, but Ivan managed to knock the
glittering nerve disrupter from his hand.
The
nerve disruptor tumbled away and whanged off the other side of the
cabin, now a random threat to everyone aboard.
Miles
had always been terrified of nerve disrupters, but never before as a
projectile weapon. It took two more cross-cabin ricochets for him to
snatch it out of the air without accidentally shooting himself or
Ivan. The weapon was undersized but charged and deadly.
Ivan
had meanwhile worked around behind the old man, attempting to pinion
his arms. Miles seized the moment to try to nail down the second
weapon, dragging open the mauve vest and going for that lump in the
inner pocket. His hand came away clutching a short rod that he first
took for a shock-stick.
The man screamed and
wrenched violently. Greatly startled and not at all sure what he'd
just done, Miles launched himself away from the struggling pair and
ducked prudently behind the pod pilot. Judging from that mortal yell
Miles was afraid he'd just ripped out the power pack to the man's
artificial heart or something, but he continued to fight on, so it
couldn't have been as fatal as it sounded.
The
intruder shook off Ivan's grip and recoiled to the hatchway. There
came one of those odd pauses that sometimes occur in close combat,
everyone gulping for breath in the rush of adrenaline. The old man
stared at Miles with the rod in his fist; his expression altered from
fright to—was that grimace a flash of triumph? Surely not. Demented
inspiration?
Outnumbered now as the pilot joined
the fray, the intruder retreated, tumbling back out the flex tube and
thumping to whatever docking bay deck lay beyond. Miles scrambled
after Ivan's hot pursuit just in time to see the intruder, now firmly
on his feet in the stations artificial gravity field, land Ivan a
blow to his chest with a booted foot that knocked the younger man
backward into the portal again. By the time Miles and Ivan had
disentangled themselves, and Ivan's gasping became less alarmingly
disrupted, the old man had vanished at a run. His footsteps echoed
confusingly in the bay. Which exit—? The pod pilot, after a quick
look to ensure that his passengers were temporarily safe, hurried
back inside to answer his comm alarm.
Ivan
regained his feet, dusted himself off, and stared around. Miles did
too. They were in a small, dingy, dimly lit freight bay.
"Y'know,"
said Ivan, "if that was the customs inspector, we're in
trouble."
"I thought he was about to
draw on us," said Miles. "It looked like it."
"You
didn't see a weapon before you yelled."
"It
wasn't the weapon. It was his eyes. He looked like someone about to
try something that scared him to death. And he did draw."
"After
we jumped him. Who knows what he was about to do?"
Miles
turned slowly on his heel, taking in their surroundings in more
detail. There wasn't a human being in sight, Cetagandan, Barrayaran,
or other. "There's something very wrong here. Either he wasn't
in the right place, or we weren't. This musty dump can't be our
docking port, can it? I mean, where's the Barrayaran ambassador? The
honor guard?"
"The red carpet, the
dancing girls?" Ivan sighed. "You know, if he'd been trying
to assassinate you, or hijack the pod, he should have come charging
in with that nerve disrupter already in his hand."
"That
was no customs inspector. Look at the monitors." Miles pointed.
Two vid-pickups mounted strategically on nearby walls were ripped
from their moorings, dangling sadly down. "He disabled them
before he tried to board. I don't understand. Station security should
be swarming in here right now. . . . D'you think he wanted the pod,
and not us?"
"You, boy. No one would
be after me."
"He seemed more scared
of us than we were of him." Miles concealed a deep breath,
hoping his heart rate would slow.
"Speak
for yourself," said Ivan. "He sure scared me."
"Are
you all right?" asked Miles belatedly. "I mean, no broken
ribs or anything?"
"Oh, yeah, I'll
survive … you?"
"I'm all
right."
Ivan glanced down at the nerve
disrupter in Miles's right hand, and the rod in his left, and
wrinkled his nose. "How'd you end up with all the
weapons?"
"I … don't quite know."
Miles slipped the little nerve disrupter into his own trouser pocket,
and held the mysterious rod up to the light. "I thought at first
this was some land of shock-stick, but it's not. It's something
electronic, but I sure don't recognize the design."
"A
grenade," Ivan suggested. "A time-bomb. They can make them
look like anything, y'know."
"I don't
think so—"
"My lords," the pod
pilot stuck his head through the hatch. "Station flight control
is ordering us not to dock here. They're telling us to stand off and
wait clearance. Immediately."
"I
thought
we must be in the wrong place," said Ivan.
"It's
the coordinates they gave me, my lord," said the pod pilot a
little stiffly.
"Not your error, Sergeant,
I'm sure," Miles soothed.
"Flight
control sounds very forceful." The sergeant's face was tense.
"Please, my lords."
Obediently, Miles
and Ivan shuffled back aboard the pod. Miles refastened his seat
straps automatically, his mind running on overdrive, trying to
construct an explanation for their bizarre welcome to
Cetaganda.
"This section of the station
must have been deliberately cleared of personnel," he decided
aloud. "I'll bet you Betan dollars Cetagandan security is in
process of conducting a sweep-search for that fellow. A fugitive, by
God." Thief, murderer, spy? The possibilities enticed.
"He
was disguised, anyway," said Ivan.
"How
do you know?"
Ivan picked a few fine white
strands from his green sleeve. "This isn't real
hair."
"Really?" said Miles,
charmed. He examined the clump of threads Ivan extended across the
aisle to him. One end was sticky with adhesive. "Huh."
The
pod pilot finished taking up his new assigned coordinates; the pod
now floated in space a few hundred meters from the row of docking
pockets. There were no other pods locked onto the station for a dozen
pockets in either direction. "I'll report this incident to the
station authorities, shall I, my lords?" The sergeant reached
for his comm controls.
"Wait," said
Miles.
"My lord?" The pod pilot
regarded him dubiously, over his shoulder. "I think we
should—"
"Wait till they ask us.
After all, we're not in the business of cleaning up Cetagandan
security's lapses after them, are we? It's their problem."
A
small grin, immediately suppressed, told Miles the pilot was amenable
to this argument. "Yes, sir," he said, making it an
order-received, and therefore Miles s lordly officer's
responsibility, and not that of a lowly tech-sergeant. "Whatever
you say, sir."
"Miles," muttered
Ivan, "what do you think you're doing?"
"Observing,"
said Miles primly. "I'm going to observe and see how good
Cetagandan station security is at their job. I think Illyan would
want to know, don't you? Oh, they'll be around to question us, and
take these goodies back, but this way I can get more information in
return. Relax, Ivan."
Ivan settled back,
his disturbed air gradually dissipating as the minutes ticked on with
no further interruptions to the boredom in the little pod. Miles
examined his prizes. The nerve disrupter was of some exceptionally
fine Cetagandan civilian make, not military issue, in itself odd; the
Cetagandans did not encourage the dispersal of deadly anti-personnel
weapons among their general populace. But it did not bear the fancy
decorations that would mark it as some ghem-lord's toy. It was plain
and functional, of a size meant to be carried concealed.
The
short rod was odder still. Embedded in its transparent casing was a
violent glitter, looking decorative; Miles was sure microscopic
examination would reveal fine dense circuitry. One end of the device
was plain, the other covered with a seal which was itself locked in
place.
"This looks like it's meant to be
inserted in something," he said to Ivan, turning the rod in the
light.
"Maybe it's a dildo," Ivan
smirked.
Miles snorted. "With the
ghem-lords, who can say? But no, I don't think so." The indented
seal on the end-cap was in the shape of some clawed and
dangerous-looking bird. Deep within the incised figure gleamed
metallic lines, the circuit-connections. Somewhere somebody owned the
mate, a raised screaming bird-pattern full of complex encodes which
would release the cover, revealing . . . what? Another pattern of
encodes? A key for a key … It was all extraordinarily elegant.
Miles smiled in sheer fascination.
Ivan regarded
him uneasily. "You are going to give it back, aren't
you?"
"Of course. If they ask for
it."
"And if they don't?"
"Keep
it for a souvenir, I suppose. It's too pretty to throw away. Maybe
I'll take it home as a present to Illyan, let his cipher-laboratory
elves play with it as an exercise. For about a year. It's not an
amateur's bauble, even I can tell that."
Before
Ivan could come up with more objections, Miles undid his green tunic
and slipped the device into his own inner breast pocket. Out of
sight, out of mind. "Ah—you want to keep this?" He handed
the nerve disrupter across to his cousin.
Ivan
plainly did. Placated by this division of the spoils, Ivan, a partner
in crime now, made the little weapon disappear into his own tunic.
The weapon's secret and sinister presence would do nicely, Miles
calculated, to keep Ivan distracted and polite all through the
upcoming disembarkation.
At last the station
traffic control directed them to dock again. They locked onto a pod
pocket two up from the one they had been assigned before. This time
the door opened without incident. After a slight hesitation, Ivan
exited through the flex tube. Miles followed him.
Six
men awaited them in a gray chamber almost identical to the first one,
if cleaner and better lit. Miles recognized the Barrayaran ambassador
immediately. Lord Vorob'yev was a stout solid man of about
sixty-standard, sharp-eyed, smiling, and contained. He wore a
Vorob'yev House uniform, rather formal for the occasion Miles
thought, wine-red with black trim. He was flanked by four guards in
Barrayaran undress greens. Two Cetagandan station officials, in mauve
and gray garb of similar style but more complex cut than the
intruder's, stood slightly apart from the Barrayarans.
Only
two stationers? Where were the civil police, Cetagandan military
intelligence, or at least some ghem-faction's private agents? Where
were the questions, and the questioners Miles had been anticipating
dissecting?
Instead, he found himself greeting
Ambassador Vorob'yev as if nothing had happened, just as he'd first
rehearsed. Vorob'yev was a man of Miles s father's generation, and in
fact had been his appointee, back when Count Vorkosigan had still
been Regent. Vorob'yev had been holding down this critical post for
six years, having retired from his military career to take up
Imperial service on the civil side. Miles resisted an urge to salute,
and gave the ambassador a formal nod instead.
"Good
afternoon, Lord Vorob'yev. My father sends you his personal regards,
and these messages."
Miles handed across
the sealed diplomatic disk, an act duly noted by a Cetagandan
official on his report panel. "Six items of luggage?" the
Cetagandan inquiredwith a nod, as the pod pilot finished stacking
them on the waiting float pallet, saluted Miles, and returned to his
ship.
"Yes, that's all," said Ivan. To
Miles's eye, Ivan looked stuffed and shifty, intensely conscious of
the contraband in his pocket, but apparently the Cetagandan official
could not read his cousin's expression as well as Miles could.
The
Cetagandan waved a hand, and the ambassador nodded to his guards; two
of them split off to accompany the luggage on its trip through
Cetagandan inspection. The Cetagandan re-sealed the docking port, and
bore off the float-pallet.
Ivan anxiously
watched it go. "Will we get it all back?"
"Eventually.
After some delays, if things run true to form," said Vorob'yev
easily. "Did you gentlemen have a good trip?"
"Entirely
uneventful," said Miles, before Ivan could speak. "Until we
got here. Is this a usual docking port for Barrayaran visitors, or
were we redirected for some other reason?" He kept one eye on
the remaining Cetagandan official, watching for a
reaction.
Vorob'yev smiled sourly. "Sending
us through the service entrance is just a little game the Cetagandans
play with us, to re-affirm our status. You are correct, it is a
studied insult, designed to distract our minds. I stopped allowing it
to distract me some years ago, and I recommend you do the
same."
The Cetagandan displayed no reaction
at all. Vorob'yev was treating him with no more regard than a piece
of furniture, a compliment he apparently returned by acting like one.
It seemed to be a ritual.
"Thank you, sir,
I'll take your advice. Uh . . . were you delayed too? We were. They
cleared us to dock once and then sent us back out to cool."
"The
runaround today seems particularly ornate. Consider yourselves
honored, my lords. Come this way, please."
Ivan
gave Miles a pleading look as Vorob'yev turned away; Miles shook his
head fractionally, Wait.
. . .
Led
by the expressionless Cetagandan station official and flanked by the
embassy guards, the two young men accompanied Vorob'yev up several
station levels. The Barrayaran embassy's own planetary shuttle was
docked to a genuine passenger lock. It had a proper VIP lounge with
its own grav system in the flex tube so nobody had to float. There
they shed their Cetagandan escort. Once on board the ambassador
seemed to relax a little. He settled Miles and Ivan in luxuriously
padded seats arranged around a bolted-down comconsole table. At
Vorob'yev's nod a guard offered them drinks of choice while they
waited for their luggage and departure clearances. Following
Vorob'yev's lead they accepted a Barrayaran wine of a particularly
mellow vintage. Miles barely sipped, hoping to keep his head clear,
while Ivan and the ambassador made small talk about their trip, and
mutual Vorish friends back home. Vorob'yev seemed to be personally
acquainted with Ivan's mother. Miles ignored Ivan's occasional
raised-brow silent invitation to join the chat, and maybe tell Lord
Vorob'yev all about their little adventure with the intruder,
yes?
Why hadn't the Cetagandan authorities been
all over them just now, asking questions? Miles ran scenarios through
his heated brain.
It
was a setup, and I've just taken the bait, and they're letting the
line play out.
Considering what he knew of Cetagandans, Miles placed this
possibility at the head of his list.
Or
maybe it's just a time lag, and they'll be here momentarily. Or . . .
eventually.
The fugitive must first be captured, and then made to disgorge his
version of the encounter. This could take time, particularly if the
man had been, say, stunned unconscious during arrest. If he was a
fugitive. If the station authorities had indeed been sweeping the
docking area for him. If … Miles studied his crystal cup, and
swallowed a mouthful of the smoky ruby liquid, and smiled affably at
Ivan.
Their luggage and its guards arrived just
as they finished their drinks, experienced timing on Vorob'yev's
part, Miles judged. When the ambassador rose to oversee its stowage
and their departure, Ivan leaned across the table to whisper urgently
to Miles, "Aren't you going to tell him about it?"
"Not
yet."
"Why not?"
"Are
you in such a hurry to lose that nerve disrupter? The embassy'd take
it away from you as fast as the Cetagandans, I bet."
"Screw
that. What are you up to?"
"I'm . . .
not sure. Yet." This was not the scenario he'd expected to
unfold. He'd anticipated bandying sharp exchanges with assorted
Cetagandan authorities while they made him disgorge his prizes, and
trading for information, consciously or unconsciously revealed. It
wasn't his fault the Cetagandans weren't doing their job.
"We've
got to at least report this to the embassy's military
attache."
"Report it, yes. But not to
the attache. Illyan told me that if I had any problems—meaning, of
the sort our
department concerns itself with—I was to go to Lord Vorreedi. He's
listed as a protocol officer, but he's really an ImpSec colonel and
chief of ImpSec here."
"The
Cetagandans don't know?"
"Of course
they know. Just like we know who's really who at the Cetagandan
embassy in Vorbarr Sultana. It's a polite legal fiction. Don't worry,
I'll see to it." Miles sighed inwardly. He supposed the first
thing the colonel would do was cut him out of the information-flow.
And he dared not explain why Vorreedi shouldn't.
Ivan
sat back, temporarily silenced. Only temporarily, Miles was
sure.
Vorob'yev joined them again, settling down
and hunting his seat straps. "And that's that, my lords. Nothing
taken from your possessions, nothing added. Welcome to Eta Ceta Four.
There are no official ceremonies requiring your presence today, but
if you're not too tired from your journey, the Marilacan Embassy is
hosting an informal reception tonight for the legation community, and
all its august visitors. I recommend it to your
attention."
"Recommend?" said
Miles. When someone with a career as long and distinguished as
Vorob'yev's recommended, Miles felt, one attended.
"You'll
be seeing a lot of these people over the next two weeks,"
Vorob'yev said. "It should provide a useful
orientation."
"What should we wear?"
asked Ivan. Four of the six cases they'd brought were
his.
"Undress greens, please," said
Vorob'yev. "Clothing is a cultural language everywhere, to be
sure, but here it's practically a secret code. It is difficult enough
to move among the ghem-lords without committing some defined error,
and among the haut-lords it's nearly impossible. Uniforms are always
correct, or, if not exactly correct, clearly not the wearer's fault,
since he has no choice. I'll have my protocol office give you a list
of which uniforms you are to wear at each event."
Miles
felt relieved; Ivan looked faintly disappointed.
With
the usual muted clinks and clanks and hisses, the flex tubes withdrew
and the shuttle unlocked and undocked from the side of the station.
No arresting authorities had poured through the hatch, no urgent
communications had sent the ambassador hurrying forward. Miles
considered his third scenario.
Our
intruder got clean away. The Station authorities know nothing of our
little encounter. In fact, no one knows.
Except,
of course, the intruder. Miles kept his hand down, and did not touch
the concealed lump in his tunic. Whatever the device was, that fellow
knew Miles had it. And he could surely find out who Miles was. I
have a string on you, now. If I let it play out, something must
surely climb back up it to my hand, right?
This could shape up into a nice little exercise in
intelligence/counter-intelligence, better than maneuvers because it
was real. No proctor with a list of answers lurked on the fringes
recording all his mistakes for later analysis in excruciating detail.
A practice-piece. At some stage of development an officer had to stop
following orders and start generating them. And Miles wanted that
promotion to ImpSec captain, oh yes. Might he somehow persuade
Vorreedi to let him play with the puzzle despite his diplomatic
duties?
Miles's eyes narrowed with new
anticipation as they began their descent into the murky atmosphere of
Eta Ceta.
Half-dressed,
Miles wandered across the spacious bedchamber-sitting room the
Barrayaran embassy had assigned to him, turning the glittering rod in
his hand. "So if I'm meant to have this, am I meant to stash it
here, or am I meant to carry it on my person?"
Ivan,
neat and complete in the high-collared tunic, side-piped trousers,
and half-boots of fresh undress greens, rolled his eyes ceiling-ward.
"Will you quit fooling with that thing and get dressed, before
you make us late? Maybe it's a fancy curtain-weight, and it's meant
to drive you crazy trying to assign it some deep and sinister
significance. Or drive me crazy, listening to you. Some ghem-lord's
practical joke."
"A particularly
subtle practical joke, if so."
"Doesn't
rule it out," Ivan shrugged.
"No."
Miles frowned, and limped to the comconsole desk. He opened the top
drawer, and found a stylus and a pad of plastic flimsies embossed
with the embassy seal. He tore off a flimsy and pressed it against
the bird-figure on the rod's cap-lock, then traced the indentations
with the stylus, a quick, accurate, and to-scale sketch. After a
moment's hesitation, he left the rod in the drawer with the pad of
flimsies, and closed it again.
"Not much of
a hiding place," Ivan commented. "If it's a bomb, maybe you
ought to hang it out the window. For the rest of our sakes, if not
your own."
"It's not a bomb, dammit.
And I've thought of a hundred hiding places, but none of them are
scanner-proof, so there's no point. This should be in a lead-lined
blackbox, which I don't happen to have."
"I
bet they have one downstairs," Ivan said. "Weren't you
going to confess?"
"Yes, but
unfortunately Lord Vorreedi is out of the city. Don't look at me like
that, I had nothing to do with it. Vorob'yev told me the haut-lord in
charge of one of the Eta Cetan Jumppoint stations has impounded a
Barrayaran-registered merchant ship, and its captain. For importation
infractions."
"Smuggling?" said
Ivan, growing interested.
"No, some
complicated cockeyed Cetagandan regulations. With fees. And taxes.
And fines. And a level of acrimony that's going asymptotic. Since
normalizing trade relations is a current goal of our government, and
since Vorreedi is apparently good at sorting out haut-lords and
ghem-lords, Vorob'yev detailed him to take care of it while he's
stuck here with the ceremonial duties. Vorreedi will be back
tomorrow. Or the next day. Meanwhile, it won't hurt to see how far I
can get on my own. If nothing interesting turns up, I'll bounce it
over to the ImpSec office here anyway."
Ivan's
eyes narrowed, as he processed this. "Yeah? So what if something
interesting does turn up?"
"Well, then
too, of course."
"So did you tell
Vorob'yev?"
"Not exactly. No. Look,
Illyan said Vorreedi, so Vorreedi it is. I'll take care of it as soon
as the man gets back."
"In any case,
it's time"
Ivan reiterated.
"Yeah, yeah . . ."
Miles shuffled over to his bed, sat, and frowned at his leg braces,
laid out waiting. "I have to take the time to get my leg bones
replaced. I've given up on the organics, it's time to go with
plastic. Maybe I could persuade them to add a few centimeters of
length while they're at it. If only I'd known I had all this dead
time coming up, I could have scheduled surgery and been recovering
while we traveled and stood around being
decorative."
"Inconsiderate of the
dowager empress, not to send you a note and warn you she was dropping
dead," Ivan agreed. "Wear the damn things, or Aunt Cordelia
will hold me responsible if you trip over the embassy cat and break
your legs. Again."
Miles growled, not very
loudly. Ivan could read him entirely too well, too. He closed the
cool steel protection around his lumpy, discolored, too-many-times
smashed legs. At least the uniform trousers concealed his weakness.
He fastened his tunic, sealed the polished short-boots, checked his
hair in the mirror over his dresser, and followed the impatient Ivan,
already at the door. In passing he slipped the folded flimsy into his
trouser pocket, and paused in the corridor to re-key the door lock to
his own palm. A somewhat futile gesture; as a trained ImpSec agent
Lieutenant Vorkosigan knew exactly how insecure palm locks could
be.
Despite, or perhaps because of, Ivan's
prodding, they arrived in the foyer at almost the same moment as
Ambassador Vorob'yev. Vorob'yev was wearing his red and black House
uniform again. Not a man who liked making a lot of decisions about
clothing, Miles sensed. He shepherded the two younger men into the
embassy's waiting groundcar, where they sank into soft upholstery.
Vorob'yev politely took the rear-facing seat across from his official
guests. A driver and a guard occupied the front compartment. The car
ran on the city net's computer control, but the alert driver sat
ready to hit the manual override in case of some non-natural
emergency. The silvered canopies closed, and they oozed out into the
street.
"You may regard the Marilacan
embassy as neutral but non-secured territory tonight, gentlemen,"
Vorob'yev advised them. "Enjoy yourselves, but not too
much."
"Will there be many Cetagandans
present," Miles asked, "or is this party strictly for us
off-worlders?"
"No haut-lords, of
course," said Vorob'yev. "They're all at one of the late
empress's more private obsequies tonight, along with some of the
highest-ranking ghem-clan heads. The lower-ranking ghem-lords are at
loose ends, and may be out in force, as the month of official
mourning has reduced their usual social opportunities. The Marilacans
have been accepting a great deal of Cetagandan 'aid' in the past few
years, a greediness I predict they will come to regret. They think
Cetaganda won't attack an ally."
The
groundcar climbed a ramp, and swung around a corner offering a brief
vista down a glittering canyon of high buildings, strung together
with tubeways and transparent walks glowing in the dusk. The city
seemed to go on forever, and this wasn't even the main
center.
"The Marilacans aren't paying
sufficient attention to their own wormhole nexus maps,"
Vorob'yev went on. "They imagine they are at a natural border.
But if Marilac were directly held by Cetaganda, the next jump would
bring them to Zoave Twilight, with all its cross-routes, and a whole
new region for Cetagandan expansion. Marilac is in exactly the same
relationship to the Zoave Twilight crossings as Vervain is to the
Hegen Hub, and we all know what happened there."
Vorob'yev's lips twisted in irony. "But Marilac has no
interested neighbor to mount a rescue as your father did for Vervain,
Lord Vorkosigan. And provocative incidents can be manufactured so
easily."
The alert rush in Miles's chest
faded. There was no personal, secret meaning in Vorob'yev's remarks.
Everyone knew of Admiral Count Aral Vorkosigan's political and
military role in creating the swift alliance and counter-attack that
had driven off the attempted Cetagandan capture of its neighbor
Vervain s wormhole jumps to the Hegen Hub. No one knew of the role
ImpSec agent Miles Vorkosigan had played in bringing the Admiral to
the Hegen Hub in so timely a fashion. And what no one knew, no one
got credit for. Hi,
I'm a hero, but I can't tell you why. It's classified.
From Vorob'yev's and practically everybody else's point of view,
Lieutenant Miles Vorkosigan was a low-ranking ImpSec courier officer,
a nepotistic sinecure that shuffled him off into routine duties that
took him out of the way. Mutant.
"I
thought the Hegen Alliance gave the ghem-lords a bloody enough nose
at Vervain to keep them subdued for a while," said Miles. "All
the expansionist party ghem-officers in deep eclipse, ghem-General
Estanis committing suicide—it was suicide, wasn't it?"
"In
an involuntary sort of way," said Vorob'yev. "These
Cetagandan political suicides can get awfully messy, when the
principal won't cooperate."
"Thirty-two
stab wounds in the back, worst case of suicide they ever saw?"
murmured Ivan, clearly fascinated by the gossip.
"Exactly,
my lord." Vorob'yev's eyes narrowed in dry amusement. "But
the ghem-commanders' loose and shifting relationship to the assorted
secret haut-lord factions lends an unusual degree of deniability to
their operations. The Vervain invasion is now officially described as
an unauthorized misadventure. The erring officers have been
corrected, thank you."
"What do they
call the Cetagandan invasion of Barrayar in my grandfather's time?"
Miles asked. "A reconnaissance in force?"
"When
they mention it at all, yes."
"All
twenty years
of it?" asked Ivan, half-laughing.
"They
tend not to go into the embarrassing details."
"Have
you shared your views on Cetagandan ambitions toward Marilac with
Illyan?" Miles asked.
"Yes, we keep
your chief fully informed. But there are no material movements at
present to support my theory. I'm just reasoning on principle, so
far. ImpSec is watching some key indicators for us."
"I'm
. . . not in that loop," said Miles. "Need-to-know and all
that."
"But I trust you grasp the
larger strategic picture."
"Oh,
yes."
"And—upper-class gossip is not
always as guarded as it should be. You two will be in a position to
encounter some. Plan to report it all to my chief of protocol,
Colonel Vorreedi. He will be giving you daily briefings, as soon as
he returns. Let him sort out which tidbits are important."
Check.
Miles nodded to Ivan, who shrugged acquiescence.
"And,
ah … try not to give away more than you gain?"
"Well,
I'm
safe," said Ivan. "I don't know anything." He smiled
cheerily. Miles tried not to wince, nor mutter We
know, Ivan,
under his breath loud enough to be heard.
Since
the off-planet legations were concentrated in one section of Eta
Ceta's capital city, the drive was short. The groundcar descended a
street-level, and slowed. It entered the Marilacan embassy building's
garage and pulled into a brightly lit entry foyer made less
subterranean by marble surfaces and decorative plants trailing from
tiers of tubs. The car's canopy rose. Marilacan embassy guards bowed
the Barrayaran party into the lift tubes. Doubtless they also
discreetly scanned their guests—it seemed Ivan had mustered the
good sense to leave that nerve disruptor in his desk drawer,
too.
They exited the lift tube into a wide
lobby, opening in turn onto several levels of connected public areas,
already well populated with guests, the volume of their babble
invitingly high. The center of the lobby was occupied by a large
multi-media sculpture, real, not a projection. Trickling water
cascaded down a fountain reminiscent of a little mountain, complete
with impressionistic mountain-paths one could actually walk upon.
Colored flakes swirled in the air around the mini-maze, making
delicate tunnels. From their green color Miles guessed they were
meant to represent Earth tree leaves even before he drew close enough
to make out the realistic details of their shapes. The colors slowly
began to change, from twenty different greens to brilliant yellows,
golds, reds and black-reds. As they swirled they almost seemed to
form fleeting patterns, like human faces and bodies, to a background
of tinkling like wind chimes. So was it meant to be faces and music,
or was it just tricking his brain into projecting meaningful patterns
onto randomness? The subtle uncertainty attracted him.
"That's
new," commented Vorob'yev, his eye also caught. "Pretty …
ah, good evening, Ambassador Bernaux."
"Good
evening, Lord Vorob'yev." Their silver-haired Marilacan host
exchanged a familiar nod with his Barrayaran counterpart. "Yes,
we think it's rather fine. It's a gift from a local ghem-lord. Quite
an honor. It's titled 'Autumn Leaves.' My cipher staff puzzled over
the name for half a day, and finally decided it meant 'Autumn
Leaves.'"
The two men laughed. Ivan smiled
uncertainly, not quite following the in-joke. Vorob'yev formally
introduced them to Ambassador Bernaux, who responded to their rank
with elaborate courtesy, and to their age by telling them where to
find the food and pointedly turning them loose. It was the
Ivan-effect, Miles decided glumly. They mounted stairs toward a
buffet, cut off from getting to hear whatever private comments the
two older men went on to exchange. Probably just social pleasantries,
but still . . .
Miles and Ivan sampled the hors
d'oeuvres, which were dainty but abundant, and selected drinks. Ivan
chose a famous Marilacan wine. Miles, conscious of the flimsy in his
pocket, chose black coffee. They abandoned each other with a silent
wave, each to circulate after his own fashion. Miles leaned on the
railing overlooking the lift-tube lobby. He sipped from the fragile
cup and wondered where its stay-warm circuit was concealed—ah,
there on the bottom, woven into the metallic glitter of the Marilacan
embassy seal. "Autumn Leaves" was chilling down to the end
of its cycle. The water in the trickling fountains froze, or appeared
to, stilled to silent black ice. The swirling colors faded to the
sere yellow and silver-gray of a winter sunset, the figures, if
figures they were, now suggesting skeletal despair. The chime/music
faded to discordant, broken whispers. It was not a winter of snow and
celebration. It was a winter of death. Miles shivered involuntarily.
Damned
effective.
So,
how to begin asking questions without revealing anything in return?
He pictured himself buttonholing some ghem-lord, Say,
did one of your minions lose a code-key with a seal like this
. . . ? No. By far the best approach was to let his . . .
adversaries, find him, but they were being tediously slow about it.
Miles's eye swept the throng for men without eyebrows, without
success.
But Ivan had found a beautiful woman
already. Miles blinked, as he registered just how beautiful. She was
tall and slim, the skin of her face and hands as delicately smooth as
porcelain. Jeweled bands bound her blond-white hair loosely at the
nape of her neck, and again at her waist. The hair did not trail to
its silky end until halfway to her knees. Her dress concealed rather
than revealed, with layers of underslips, split sleeves, and vests
sweeping to her ankles. The dark hues of the over-garments set off
the pallor of her complexion, and a flash of cerulean silk underneath
echoed her blue eyes. She was a Cetagandan ghem-lady, without
question—she had that attenuated-elf look that suggested more than
a tinge of haut-lord genes in her family tree. True, the look could
be mimicked with surgeries and other therapies, but the arrogant arch
to her brow had to be genuine.
Miles sensed the
pheromones in her perfume while still spiraling in from three meters
away. It seemed redundant; Ivan was already on overdrive, his dark
eyes sparkling as he decanted some story featuring himself as hero,
or at least protagonist. Something about training exercises, ah, of
course, emphasizing his Barrayaran martial style. Venus and Mars,
right. But she was actually smiling at something Ivan had said.
It
wasn't that Miles enviously sought to deny Ivan his luck with women;
it would simply be nice if some of the overflow would trickle down
his way. Though Ivan claimed you had to make your own luck. Ivan's
resilient ego could absorb a dozen rejections tonight for some
smiling thirteenth payoff. Miles thought he would be dead of
mortification by Attempt Three. Maybe he was naturally
monogamous.
Hell, you had to at least achieve
monogamy before you could go on to larger ambitions. So far he had
failed to attach even one woman to his sawed-off person. Of course,
nearly three years in covert ops, and the period before that in the
all-male environs of the military academy, had limited his
opportunities.
Nice theory. So why hadn't
similar conditions stopped Ivan?
Elena
. . .
Was he still holding out for the impossible, on some level? Miles
swore he wasn't nearly as choosy as Ivan—he could hardly afford to
be—yet even this lovely ghem-blonde lacked . . . what? The
intelligence, the reserve, the pilgrim soul . . . ? But Elena had
chosen another, and probably wisely. Time and past time for Miles to
move on too, and carve out some luck of his own. He just wished the
prospect didn't feel so bleak.
Spiraling in from
the other side a moment or two after Miles came a Cetagandan
ghem-lord, tall and lean. The face rising up out of his dark and
flowing robes was young; the fellow was not much older than Ivan and
himself, Miles guessed. He was square-skulled, with prominent round
cheekbones. One cheekbone was decorated with a circular patch, a
decal, Miles realized, a stylized swirl of color identifying the
man's rank and clan. It was a shrunken version of the full face paint
a few other Cetagandans present wore, an avant-garde youth fashion
currently being disapproved of by the older generation. Was he come
to rescue his lady from Ivan's attentions?
"Lady
Gelle," he bowed slightly, and "Lord Yenaro," she
responded with a precisely graded inclination of her head, by which
Miles gathered that 1) she had a higher status in the ghem-community
than the man, and 2) he was not her husband or brother—Ivan was
probably safe.
"I see you have found some
of the galactic exotics you were longing for," said Lord Yenaro
to her.
She smiled back at him. The effect was
downright blinding, and Miles found himself wishing she'd smile at
him even though he knew better. Lord Yenaro, doubtless inoculated by
a lifetime of exposure to ghem-ladies, seemed immune. "Lord
Yenaro, this is Lieutenant Lord Ivan Vorpatril of Barrayar, and,
ah—?" Her lashes swept down over her eyes, indicating Ivan
should introduce Miles, a gesture as sharp and evocative as if she'd
tapped Ivan's wrist with a fan.
"My cousin,
Lieutenant Lord Miles Vorkosigan," Ivan supplied smoothly, on
cue.
"Ah, the Barrayaran envoys!" Lord
Yenaro bowed more deeply. "What luck to meet you."
Miles
and Ivan both returned decent nods; Miles made sure the inclination
of his head was slightly shallower than his cousin's, a fine
gradation alas probably spoiled by the angle of view.
"We
have an historical connection, Lord Vorkosigan," Yenaro went on.
"Famous ancestors."
Miles's adrenaline
level shot up. Oh,
damn, this is some relative of the late ghem-General Estanis, and
he's out to get the son of Aral Vorkosigan. . . .
"You
are
the grandson of General Count Piotr Vorkosigan, are you not?"
Ah.
Ancient
history, not recent. Miles relaxed slightly. "Indeed."
"I
am in a sense your opposite number, then. My grandfather was
ghem-General Yenaro."
"Oh, the
unfortunate commander of the, uh, what do you folks call it? The
Barrayaran Expedition? The Barrayaran Reconnaissance?" Ivan put
in.
"The ghem-general who lost the
Barrayaran War," Yenaro said bluntly.
"Really,
Yenaro, must you bring him up?" said Lady Gelle. Did she
actually want to hear the end of Ivan's story? Miles could have told
her a much funnier one, about the time on training maneuvers when
Ivan had led his patrol into gluey waist-deep mud, and they'd all had
to be winched out by hovercar. . . .
"I am
not a proponent of the hero-theory of disaster," Miles said
diplomatically. "General Yenaro had the misfortune to be the
last of five successive ghem-generals who lost the Barrayaran War,
and thus the sole inheritor of a, as it were, tontine of
blame."
"Oh, well put," murmured
Ivan. Yenaro too smiled.
"Do I understand
that thing in the lobby is yours, Yenaro?" the girl inquired,
clearly hoping to steer the conversation away from a fast downslide
into military history. "A trifle banal for your crowd, isn't it?
My mother liked it."
"It is but a
practice piece." A slightly ironic bow acknowledged this mixed
review. "The Marilacans were delighted with it. True courtesy
considers the tastes of the recipient. It has some levels of subtlety
only apparent when you walk through it."
"I
thought you were specializing in the incense contests."
"I'm
branching out into other media. Though I still maintain scent is a
subtler sense than sight. You must let me mix for you sometime. That
civet-jasmine blend you're wearing tonight absolutely clashes with
the third-level formal style of your dress, you know."
Her
smile went thin. "Does it."
Miles's
imagination supplied background music, a scrape of rapiers, and a
Take
that, varlet!
He tamped down a grin.
"Beautiful dress,"
Ivan put in earnestly. "You smell great."
"Mm,
yes, speaking of your craving for the exotic," Lord Yenaro said
to Lady Gelle, "did you know that Lord Vorpatril here is a
biological birth?"
The girl's feather-faint
brows drew in, making a tiny crease in her flawless forehead. "All
births are biological, Yenaro."
"Ah,
but no. The original sort of biology. From his mother's
body."
"Eeeuu."
Her nose wrinkled in horror. "Really,
Yenaro. You are so obnoxious tonight. Mother is right, you and your
retro-avant
crowd are going to go too far one of these days. You are in danger of
becoming someone not to know, instead of someone famous." Her
distaste was directed at Yenaro, but she shifted farther from Ivan,
Miles noticed.
"When fame eludes, notoriety
may serve," said Yenaro, shrugging.
I was
a replicator birth,
Miles thought of putting in brightly, but didn't, just
goes to show, you can never tell. Except for the brain damage, Ivan
had better luck than I
…
"Good evening,
Lord Yenaro." She tossed her head and moved off. Ivan looked
dismayed.
"Pretty girl, but her mind is so
unformed," murmured Yenaro, as if to explain why they were
better off without her company. But he looked uncomfortable.
"So,
uh . . . you chose an artistic career over a military one, did you,
Lord Yenaro?" Miles tried to fill the breach.
"Career?"
Lord Yenaro's mouth quirked. "No, I am an amateur, of course.
Commercial considerations are the death of true taste. But I hope to
achieve some small stature, in my own way."
Miles
trusted that last wasn't a double entendre of some sort. They
followed Lord Yenaro's gaze over the rail and down into the lobby, at
his fountain-thing gurgling there. "You absolutely should come
see it from the inside, you know. The view is entirely
altered."
Yenaro was really a rather
awkward man, Miles decided, his prickly exterior barely shielding a
quiveringly vulnerable artiste's
ego. "Sure," he found himself saying. Yenaro needed no
further encouragement, and, smiling anxiously, led them toward the
stairs, beginning to explain some thematic theory the sculpture was
supposed to be displaying. Miles sighted Ambassador Vorob'yev,
beckoning to him from the far side of the balcony. "Excuse me,
Lord Yenaro. Ivan, you go on, I'll catch up with you."
"Oh
. . ." Yenaro looked momentarily crushed. Ivan watched Miles
escape with a light of ire in his eye that promised later
retribution.
Vorob'yev was standing with a
woman, her hand familiarly upon his arm. She was about
forty-standard, Miles guessed, with naturally attractive features
free of artificial sculptural enhancement. Her long dress and robes
were styled after the Cetagandan fashion, though much simpler in
detail than Lady Gelle's. She was no Cetagandan, but the dark red and
cream colors and green accents of her garments worked as cleverly
with her olive skin and dark curls.
"There
you are, Lord Vorkosigan," said Vorob'yev. "I've promised
to introduce you. This is Mia Maz, who works for our good friends at
the Vervani Embassy, and who has helped us out from time to time. I
recommend her to you."
Miles snapped to
attention at the key phrase, smiled, and bowed to the Vervani woman.
"Pleased to meet you. And what do you do at the Vervani Embassy,
ma'am?"
"I'm assistant chief of
protocol. I specialize in women's etiquette."
"That's
a separate specialty?"
"It is here, or
should be. I've been telling Ambassador Vorob'yev for years that he
ought to add a woman to his staff for that purpose."
"But
we haven't any with the necessary experience," sighed Vorob'yev,
"and you won't let me hire you away. Though I have
tried."
"So start one without
experience, and let her gain it," Miles suggested. "Would
Milady Maz consider taking on an apprentice?"
"Now
there's an idea. …" Vorob'yev looked much struck. Maz's brows
rose approvingly. "Maz, we should discuss this, but I must speak
to Wilstar, whom I see just hitting the buffet over there. If I'm
lucky, I can catch him with his mouth full. Excuse me. . . ."
His mission of introduction accomplished, Vorob'yev faded—how
else?—diplomatically away.
Maz turned her
whole attention gratefully upon Miles. "Anyway, Lord Vorkosigan,
I wanted to let you know that if there's anything we at the Vervani
Embassy can do for the son or the nephew of Admiral Aral Vorkosigan
during your visit to Eta Ceta, well … all that we have is at your
disposal."
Miles smiled. "Don't make
that offer to Ivan; he might take you up on it personally."
The
woman followed his glance down over the railing, to where his tall
cousin was now being guided through the sculpture by Lord Yenaro. She
grinned impishly, making a dimple wink in her cheek. "Not a
problem."
"So, are, uh . . .
ghem-ladies really so different from ghem-lords as to make a
full-time study? I admit, most Barrayarans' views of the ghem-lords
have been through range-finders."
"Two
years ago, I would have scorned that militaristic view. Since the
Cetagandan invasion attempt we've come to appreciate it. Actually,
the ghem-lords are so much like the Vor, I'd think you'd find them
more comprehensible than we Vervani do. The haut-lords are . . .
something else. And the haut-ladies are even more something else,
I've begun to realize."
"The
haut-lords' women are so thoroughly sequestered … do they ever do
anything? I mean, nobody ever sees them, do they? They have no
power."
"They have their own sort of
power. Their own areas of control. Parallel, not competing with their
men. It all makes sense, they just never bother explaining it to
outsiders."
"To inferiors."
"That,
too." Her dimple flashed again.
"So .
. . are you well up on ghem– and haut-lord seals, crests, marks,
that sort of thing? I can recognize about fifty clan-marks by sight,
and all the military insignia and corps crests, of course, but I know
that just scratches the surface."
"I'm
fairly well up. They have layers within layers; I can't claim to know
them all by any means."
Miles frowned
thoughtfully, then decided to seize the moment. There was nothing
else going on here tonight, that was certain. He drew the flimsy from
his pocket and flattened it out against the railing. "Do you
know this icon? I ran across it … well, in an odd place. But it
smelled ghemish, or hautish, if you know what I mean.
She
gazed with interest at the screaming-bird outline. "I don't
recognize it right off. But you're correct, it's definitely in the
Cetagandan style. It's old, though."
"How
can you tell?"
"Well, it's clearly a
personal seal, not a clan-mark, but it doesn't have an outline around
it. For the last three generations people have been putting their
personal marks in cartouches, with more and more elaborate borders.
You can practically tell the decade by the border
design."
"Huh."
"If
you like, I can try to look it up in my resource
materials."
"Would you? I'd like that
very much." He folded the flimsy back up and handed it to her.
"Uh … I'd appreciate it if you wouldn't show it to anyone
else, though."
"Oh?" She let the
syllable hang there, Oh
. . . ?
"Excuse
me. Professional paranoia. I, uh . . ." He was getting in deeper
and deeper. "It's a habit."
He was
rescued from tripping further over his tongue by the return of Ivan.
Ivan's practiced eye summed up the attractions of the Vervani woman
instantly, and he smiled attentively at her, as sincerely delighted
as he had been with the last girl, and would be with the next. And
the next. The ghem-lord artiste was still glued to his elbow; Miles
perforce introduced them both. Maz seemed not to have met Lord Yenaro
before. In front of the Cetagandan, Maz did not repeat to Ivan her
message of boundless Vervani gratitude to the Vorkosigan clan, but
she was definitely friendly.
"You really
ought to let Lord Yenaro take you on the tour of his sculpture,
Miles," Ivan said ruthlessly. "It's quite a thing. An
opportunity not to be missed and all that."
I
found her first, dammit.
"Yes, it's very fine."
"Would you
be interested, Lord Vorkosigan?" Yenaro looked earnest and
hopeful.
Ivan bent to Miles's ear to whisper,
"It was Lord Yenaro's gift to the Marilacan embassy. Don't be a
lout, Miles, you know how sensitive the Cetagandans are about their
artsy, uh, things."
Miles sighed, and
mustered an interested smile for Yenaro. "Certainly.
Now?"
Miles excused himself with unfeigned
regrets to Maz the Vervani. The ghem-lordling led him down the stairs
to the lobby, and had him pause at the entrance of the walk-through
sculpture to wait for the show-cycle to begin anew.
"I'm
not really qualified to judge aesthetics," Miles mentioned,
hoping to head off any conversation in that direction.
"So
very few are," smiled Yenaro, "but that doesn't stop
them."
"It does seem to me to be a
very considerable technical achievement. Do you drive the motion with
antigrav, then?"
"No, there's no
antigrav in it at all. The generators would be bulky and wasteful of
power. The same force drives the leaves' motion as drives their color
changes—or so my technicians explained it to me."
"Technicians?
I somehow pictured you putting all this together with your own
hands."
Yenaro spread his hands—pale,
long-fingered, and thin—and stared at them as if surprised to find
them on the ends of his wrists. "Of course not. Hands are to be
hired. Design is the test of the intellect."
"I
must disagree. In my experience, hands are integral with brains,
almost another lobe for intelligence. What one does not know through
one's hands, one does not truly know."
"You
are a man capable of true conversation, I perceive. You must meet my
friends, if your schedule here permits. I'm hosting a reception at my
home in two evenings' time—do you suppose—?"
"Um,
maybe . . ." That evening was a blank as far as the funeral
formalities went. It could be quite interesting, a chance to observe
how the ghem-lordlings of his own generation operated without the
inhibitions of their elders; a glimpse into the future of Cetaganda.
"Yes, why not?"
"I'll send you
directions. Oh." Yenaro nodded toward the fountain, which was
starting up with its high-canopied summer greens again. "Now we
can go in."
Miles did not find the view
from inside the fountain-maze all that much different from the
outside. In fact, it seemed less interesting, as at close range the
illusion of forms in the flitting leaves was reduced. The music was
clearer, though. It rose to a crescendo, as the colors began to
change.
"Now you'll see something,"
said Yenaro, with evident satisfaction.
It was
all sufficiently distracting that it took another moment for Miles to
realize that he was feeling
something—tingling and heat, coming from his leg braces lying
against his skin. He schooled himself not to react, till the heat
began to rise.
Yenaro was babbling on with
artistic enthusiasm, pointing out effects, Now,
watch this—
Brilliant colors swirled before Miles's eyes. A distinct sensation of
scalding flesh crept up his legs.
Miles muffled
his scream to a less-edged yell, and managed not to jump for the
water. God knew, he might be electrocuted. The few seconds it took
him to pelt out of the maze brought the steel of his braces to a
temperature sufficient to boil water. He gave up dignity, dove for
the floor, and yanked up his trouser legs. His first snatch at the
clamps burned his hands, too. He swore, eyes watering, and tried
again. He tore off his boots, snapped loose the braces, and flung
them aside with a clatter, and curled up momentarily in overwhelming
pain. The braces had left a pattern of rising white welts surrounded
by an angry red border of flesh on shin, knees, and ankles.
Yenaro
was flapping about in distress, calling loudly for help. Miles looked
up to find himself the center of an audience of about fifty or so
shocked and bewildered people, witnessing his display. He stopped
writhing and swearing, and sat panting, his breath hissing through
clenched teeth.
Ivan and Vorob'yev shouldered
through the mob from different directions. "Lord Vorkosigan!
What has happened?" asked Vorob'yev urgently.
"I'm
all right," said Miles. He was not all right, but this was not
the time or place to go into details. He pulled his trouser legs
quickly back down, concealing the burns.
Yenaro
was yammering on in dismay, "What happened? I had no idea—are
you all right, Lord Vorkosigan? Oh dear
. .
."
Ivan bent and prodded at a cooling
brace. "Yes, what the hell . . . ?"
Miles
considered the sequence of sensations, and their possible causes. Not
antigrav, not noticeable to anyone else, and it had slid right past
Marilacan embassy security. Hidden in plain sight? Right. "I
think it was some sort of electro-hysteresis effect. The
color-changes in the display are apparently driven by a reversing
magnetic field at low level. No problem for most people. For me,
well, it wasn't quite as bad as shoving my leg braces into a
microwave, but—you get the idea." Grinning, he got to his
feet. Ivan, looking very worried, had already collected his flung
boots and the offending braces. Miles let him keep them. He didn't
want to touch them just now. He blundered rather blindly closer to
Ivan, and muttered under his breath, "Get me out of here. . . ."
He was shivering and shocky, as Ivan's hand on his shoulder could
sense. Ivan gave him a short, understanding nod, and swiftly withdrew
through the crowd of finely dressed men and women, some of whom were
already turning away.
Ambassador Bernaux hurried
up, and added his worried apologies to Yenaro's one-man chorus. "Do
you wish to stop in to the embassy infirmary, Lord Vorkosigan?"
Bernaux offered.
"No. Thank you. I'll wait
till we get home, thanks." Soon,
please.
Bernaux
bit his lip, and regarded the still-apologizing Lord Yenaro. "Lord
Yenaro, I'm afraid—"
"Yes, yes, turn
it off at once"
said Yenaro. "I will send my servants to remove it immediately.
I had no idea—everyone else seemed to be enjoying—it must be
re-designed. Or destroyed, yes, destroyed at once. I am so sorry—this
is so embarrassing—"
Yes,
isn't it?
thought Miles. A show of his physical weakness, displayed to a
maximum audience at the earliest possible moment . . .
"No,
no, don't destroy it," said Ambassador Bernaux, horrified. "But
we certainly must have it examined by a safety engineer, and
modified, or perhaps a warning posted. . . ."
Ivan
reappeared at the edge of the dispersing crowd, and gave Miles a
thumbs-up signal. After a few more minutes of excruciating social
niceties, Vorob'yev and Ivan managed to get him escorted back down
the lift tube to the waiting Barrayaran embassy groundcar. Miles
flung himself into the upholstery and sat, grinning in pain, breath
shallow. Ivan eyed his shivering form, skinned out of his tunic, and
tucked it around Miles's shoulders. Miles let him.
"All
right, let's see the damages," demanded Ivan. He propped one of
Miles's heels on his knee and rolled back the trouser leg. "Damn,
that's got to hurt."
"Quite,"
agreed Miles thinly.
"It could hardly have
been an assassination attempt, though," said Vorob'yev, his lips
compressed with calculation.
"No,"
agreed Miles.
"Bernaux told me he had his
own security people examine the sculpture before they installed it.
Looking for bombs and bugs, of course, but they cleared it."
"I'm
sure they did. This could not have hurt anyone . . . but
me."
Vorob'yev followed his reasoning
without effort. "A trap?"
"Awfully
elaborate, if so," noted Ivan.
"I'm .
. . not sure," said Miles.I'm
meant to be not-sure. That's the beauty of it.
"It had to have taken days, maybe weeks, of preparation. We
didn't even know we were coming here till two weeks ago. When did it
arrive at the Marilacan embassy?"
"Last
night, according to Bernaux," Vorob'yev said.
"Before
we even arrived." Before
our little encounter with the man with no eyebrows. It can't possibly
be connected—can it?
"How long have we been scheduled for that party?"
"The
embassies arranged the invitations about three days ago," said
Vorob'yev.
"The timing is awfully tight,
for a conspiracy," Ivan observed.
Vorob'yev
thought it over. "I think I must agree with you, Lord Vorpatril.
Shall we put it down as an unfortunate accident,
then?"
"Provisionally," said
Miles. That
was no accident. I was set up. Me, personally.
You know
there's a war on when the opening salvo arrives.
Except
that, usually, one knew why
a war had been declared. It was all very well to swear not to be
blindsided again, but who was the enemy here?
Lord
Yenaro, I bet you throw a fascinating party. I wouldn't miss it for
worlds.
"The
proper name for the Cetagandan imperial residence is the Celestial
Garden," said Vorob'yev, "but all the galactics just call
it Xanadu. You'll see why in a moment. Duvi, take the scenic
approach."
"Yes, my lord,"
returned the young sergeant who was driving. He altered the control
program. The Barrayaran embassy aircar banked, and shot through a
shining stalagmite array of city towers.
"Gently,
if you please, Duvi. My stomach, at this hour of the morning
…"
"Yes, my lord." Regretfully,
the driver slowed them to a saner pace. They dipped, wove around a
building that Miles estimated must have been a kilometer high, and
rose again. The horizon dropped away.
"Whoa,"
said Ivan. "That's the biggest force dome I've ever seen. I
didn't know they could expand them to that size."
"It
absorbs the output of an entire generating plant," said
Vorob'yev, "for the dome alone. Another for the interior."
A
flattened opalescent bubble six kilometers across reflected the late
morning sun of Eta Ceta. It lay in the midst of the city like a vast
egg in a bowl, a pearl beyond price. It was ringed first by a
kilometer-wide park with trees, then by a street reflecting silver,
then by another park, then by an ordinary street, thick with traffic.
From this, eight wide boulevards fanned out like the spokes of a
wheel, centering the city. Centering the universe, Miles gained the
impression. The effect was doubtless intended.
"The
ceremony today is in some measure a dress rehearsal for the final one
in a week and a half," Vorob'yev went on, "since absolutely
everyone will be there, ghem-lords, haut-lords, galactics and all.
There will likely be organizational delays. As long as they're not on
our part. I spent a week of hard negotiating to get you your official
rankings and place in this."
"Which
is?" said Miles.
"You two will be
placed equivalently to second-order ghem-lords." Vorob'yev
shrugged. "It was the best I could do."
In
the mob, though toward the front of it. The better to watch without
being much noticed himself, Miles supposed. Today, that seemed like a
good idea. All three of them, Vorob'yev, Ivan, and himself, were
wearing their respective House mourning uniforms, logos and
decorations of rank stitched in black silk on black cloth. Maximum
formal, since they were to be in the Imperial presence itself. Miles
ordinarily liked his Vorkosigan House uniform, whether the original
brown and silver or this somber and elegant version, because the tall
boots not only allowed but required him to dispense with the leg
braces. But getting the boots on over his swollen burns this morning
had been . . . painful. He was going to be limping more noticeably
than usual, even tanked as he was on painkillers. I'll
remember this, Yenaro.
They
spiraled down to a landing by the southernmost dome entrance, fronted
by a landing lot already crowded with other vehicles. Vorob'yev
dismissed the driver and aircar.
"We keep
no escort, my lord?" Miles said doubtfully, watching it go, and
awkwardly shifting the long polished maplewood box he
carried.
Vorob'yev shook his head. "Not for
security purposes. No one but the Cetagandan emperor himself could
arrange an assassination inside the Celestial Garden, and if he
wished to have you eliminated here, a regiment of bodyguards would do
you no good."
Some very tall men in the
dress uniforms of the Cetagandan Imperial Guard vetted them through
the dome locks. The guardsmen shunted them toward a collection of
float-pallets set up as open cars, with white silky upholstered
seats, the color of Cetagandan Imperial mourning. Each ambassadorial
party was bowed on board by what looked to be senior servants in
white and gray. The robotically-routed float-cars set off at a sedate
pace a hand-span above the white-jade-paved walkways winding through
a vast arboretum and botanical garden. Here and there Miles saw the
rooftops of scattered and hidden pavilions peeking through the trees.
All the buildings were low and private, except for some elaborate
towers poking up in the center of the magic circle, almost three
kilometers away. Though the sun shone outside in an Eta Ceta spring
day, the weather inside the dome was set to a gray, cloudy, and
appropriately mournful dampness, promising, but doubtless not
delivering, rain.
At length they wafted to a
sprawling pavilion just to the west of the central towers, where
another servant bowed them out of the car and directed them inside,
along with a dozen other delegations. Miles stared around, trying to
identify them all.
The Marilacans, yes, there
was the silver-haired Bernaux, some green-clad people who might be
Jacksonians, a delegation from Aslund which included their chief of
state—even they had only two guards, disarmed—the Betan
ambassadoress in a black-on-purple brocade jacket and matching
sarong, all streaming in to honor this one dead woman who would never
have met them face-to-face when alive. Surreal
seemed an understatement. Miles felt like he'd crossed the border
into Faerie, and when they emerged this afternoon, a hundred years
would have passed outside. The galactics had to pause at the doorway
to make way for the party of a haut-lord satrap governor. He
had an escort of a dozen ghem-guards, Miles noted, in full formal
face paint, orange, green, and white swirls.
The
decor inside was surprisingly simple—tasteful, Miles
supposed—tending heavily to the organic, arrangements of live
flowers and plants and little fountains, as if bringing the garden
indoors. The connecting halls were hushed, not echoing, yet one's
voice carried clearly. They'd done something extraordinary with
acoustics. More palace servants circulated offering food and drinks
to the guests.
A pair of pearl-colored spheres
drifted at a walking pace across the far end of one hall, and Miles
blinked at his first glimpse of haut-ladies. Sort of.
Outside
their very private quarters haut-women all hid themselves behind
personal force-shields, usually generated, Miles had been told, from
a float-chair. The shields could be made any color, according to the
mood or whim of the wearer, but today would all be white for the
occasion. The haut-lady could see out with perfect clarity, but no
one could see in. Or reach in, or penetrate the barrier with stunner,
plasma, or nerve disrupter fire, or small projectile weapons or minor
explosions. True, the force-screen also eliminated the opportunity to
fire out, but that seemed not to be a haut-lady concern. The shield
could be cut in half with a gravitic imploder lance, Miles supposed,
but the imploders' bulky power packs, massing several hundred kilos,
made them strictly field ordnance, not hand weapons.
Inside
their bubbles, the haut-women could be wearing anything. Did they
ever cheat? Slop around in old clothes and comfy slippers when they
were supposed to be dressed up? Go nude to garden parties? Who could
tell?
A tall elderly man in the pure white robes
reserved for the haut– and ghem-lords approached the Barrayaran
party. His features were austere, his skin finely wrinkled and almost
transparent. He was the Cetagandan equivalent of an Imperial
majordomo, apparently, though with a much more flowery title, for
after collecting their credentials from Vorob'yev he provided them
with exact instructions as to their place and timing in the upcoming
procession. His attitude conveyed that outlanders might be hopelessly
gauche, but if one repeated the directions in a firm tone and made
them simple enough, there was a chance of getting through this
ceremony without disgrace.
He looked down his
hawk-beak nose at the polished box. "And this is your gift, Lord
Vorkosigan?"
Miles managed to unlatch the
box and open it for display without dropping it. Within, nestled on a
black velvet bed, lay an old, nicked sword. "This is the gift
selected from his collection by my Emperor, Gregor Vorbarra, in honor
of your late Empress. It is the sword his Imperial ancestor Dorca
Vorbarra the Just carried in the First Cetagandan War." One of
several, but no need to go into that. "A priceless and
irreplaceable historical artifact. Here is its documentation of
provenance."
"Oh," the
majordomo's feathery white brows lifted almost despite themselves. He
took the packet, sealed with Gregor s personal mark, with more
respect. "Please convey my Imperial masters thanks to yours."
He half-bowed, and withdrew.
"That
worked well," said Vorob'yev with satisfaction.
"I
should bloody think so," growled Miles. "Breaks my heart."
He handed off the box to Ivan to juggle for a while.
Nothing
seemed to be happening just yet—organizational delays, Miles
supposed. He drifted away from Ivan and Vorob'yev in search of a hot
drink. He was on the point of capturing something steaming and, he
hoped, non-sedating, from a passing tray when a quiet voice at his
elbow intoned, "Lord Vorkosigan?"
He
turned, and stifled an indrawn breath. A short and rather androgynous
elderly . . . woman?—stood by his side, dressed in the gray and
white of Xanadu's service staff. Her head was bald as an egg, her
face devoid of hair. Not even eyebrows. "Yes . . .
ma'am?"
"Ba," she said in the
tone of one offering a polite correction. "A lady wishes to
speak with you. Would you accompany me, please?"
"Uh
. . . sure." She turned and paced soundlessly away, and he
followed in alert anticipation. A lady? With luck, it might be Mia
Maz of the Vervani delegation, who ought to be around somewhere in
this mob of a thousand people. He was developing some urgent
questions for her. No
eyebrows? I was expecting a contact sometime, but . . . here?
They
exited the hall. Passing out of sight of Vorob'yev and Ivan stretched
Miles's nerves still further. He followed the gliding servant down a
couple of corridors, and across a little open garden thick with moss
and tiny flowers misted with dew. The noises from the reception hall
still carried faintly through the damp air. They entered a small
building, open to the garden on two sides and floored with dark wood
that made his black boots echo unevenly in time with his limping
stride. In a dim recess of the pavilion, a woman-sized pearlescent
sphere floated a few centimeters above the polished floor, which
reflected an inverted halo from its light.
"Leave
us," a voice from the sphere directed the servant, who bowed and
withdrew, eyes downcast. The transmission through the force screen
gave the voice a low, flat timbre.
The silence
lengthened. Maybe she'd never seen a physically imperfect man before.
Miles bowed, and waited, trying to look cool and suave, and not
stunned and wildly curious.
"So, Lord
Vorkosigan," came the voice again at last. "Here I
am."
"Er . . . quite." Miles
hesitated. "And just who are you, milady, besides a very pretty
soap-bubble?"
There was a longer pause,
then, "I am the haut Rian Degtiar. Servant of the Celestial
Lady, and Handmaiden of the Star Creche."
Another
flowery haut-title that gave no clue to its function. He could name
every ghem-lord on the Cetagandan General Staff, all the satrap
governors and their ghem-officers, but this female haut-babble was
new to him. But the Celestial Lady was the polite name for the late
Empress haut Lisbet Degtiar, and that name at least he knew—
"You
are a relative of the late Dowager Empress, milady?"
"I
am of her genomic constellation, yes. Three generations removed. I
have served her half my life."
A
lady-in-waiting, all right. One of the old Empress's personal
retinue, then, the most inward of insiders. Very
high rank, probably very aged as well. "Uh . . . you're not
related to a ghem-lord named Yenaro, by chance, are you?"
"Who?"
Even through the force-screen the voice conveyed utter
bafflement.
"Never mind. Clearly not
important." His legs were beginning to throb. Getting the damn
boots back off when he returned to the embassy was going to be an
even better trick than getting them on had been. "I could not
help noticing your serving woman. Are there many folk around here
with no hair?"
"It is not a woman. It
is Ba."
"Ba?"
"The
neuter ones, the Emperor's high-slaves. In his Celestial Father's
time it was the fashion to make them smooth like that."
Ah.
Genetically engineered, genderless servants. He'd heard rumors about
them, mostly connected, illogically enough, with sexual scenarios
that had more to do with the teller's hopeful fantasies than with any
likely reality. But they were reputed to be a race utterly loyal to
the lord who had, after all, literally created them. "So . . .
not all ba are hairless, but all the hairless ones are ba?" he
worked it out.
"Yes . . ." More
silence, then, "Why have you come to the Celestial Garden, Lord
Vorkosigan?"
His brow wrinkled. "To
hold up Barrayar's honor in this circu—um, solemn procession, and
to present your late Empress's bier-gift. I'm an envoy. By
appointment of Emperor Gregor Vorbarra, whom / serve. In my own small
way."
Another, longer pause. "You mock
me in my misery."
"What?"
"What
do you want,
Lord Vorkosigan?"
"What do I want? You
called me here, Lady, isn't it the other way around?" He rubbed
his neck, tried again. "Er . . . can I help you, by
chance?"
"You?!"
Her
astonished tone stung him. "Yeah, me! I'm not as . .
."incompetent
as I look.
"I've been known to accomplish a thing or two, in my time. But
if you won't give me a clue as to what this is all about, I can't. I
will if I do know but I can't if I don't. Don't you see?"
Now
he had confused himself, tongue-tangled. "Look, can we start
this conversation over?" He bowed low. "Good day, I am Lord
Miles Vorkosigan of Barrayar. How may I assist you,
milady?"
"Thief—!"
The
light dawned at last. "Oh.
Oh, no. I am a Vorkosigan, and no thief, milady. Though as possibly a
recipient of stolen property, I may be a fence," he allowed
judiciously.
More baffled silence; perhaps she
was not familiar with criminal jargon. Miles went on a little
desperately, "Have you, uh, by chance lost an object? Rod-shaped
electronic device with a bird-crest seal on the cap?"
"You
have it!" Her voice was a wail of dismay.
"Well,
not on
me."
Her voice went low, throaty,
desperate. "You still have it. You must return it to
me."
"Gladly, if you can prove it
belongs to you. I certainly don't pretend it belongs to me," he
added pointedly.
"You would do this . . .
for nothing?"
"For the honor of my
name, and, er . . . I am
ImpSec. I'd do almost anything for information. Satisfy my curiosity,
and the deed is done."
Her voice came back
in a shocked whisper, "You mean you don't even know what it
is?"
The silence stretched for so long
after that, he was beginning to be afraid the old lady had fainted
dead away in there. Processional music wafted faintly through the air
from the great pavilion.
"Oh, shi—er, oh.
That damn parade is starting, and I'm supposed to be near the front.
Milady, how can I reach you?"
"You
can't." Her voice was suddenly breathless. "I have to go
too. I'll send for you." The white bubble rose, and began to
float away.
"Where? When—?" The
music was building toward the start-cue.
"Say
nothing of this!"
He managed a sketchy bow
at her retreating maybe-back, and began hobbling hastily across the
garden. He had a horrible feeling he was about to be very publicly
late.
When he'd wended his way back into the
reception area, he found the scene was every bit as bad as he'd
feared. A line of people was advancing to the main exit, toward the
tower buildings, and Vorob'yev in the Barrayaran delegation's place
was dragging his feet, creating an obvious gap, and staring around
urgently. He spotted Miles and mouthed silently, Hurry
up, dammit!
Miles hobbled faster, feeling as if every eye in the room was on
him.
Ivan, with an exasperated look on his face,
handed over the box to him as he arrived. "Where the hell were
you all this time, in the lav? I looked there—"
"Sh.
Tell you later. I've just had the most bizarre . . ." Miles
struggled with the heavy maplewood box, and straightened it around
into an appropriate presentational position. He marched forward
across a courtyard paved with more carved jade, catching up at last
with the delegation in front of them just as they reached the door to
one of the high-towered buildings. They all filed into an echoing
rotunda. Miles spied a few white bubbles in the line ahead, but there
was no telling if one was his old haut-lady. The game plan called for
everyone to slowly circle the bier, genuflect, and lay their gifts in
a spiral pattern in order of seniority/status/clout, and file out the
opposite doors to the Northern Pavilion (for the haut-lords and
ghem-lords), or the Eastern Pavilion (for the galactic ambassadors)
where a funereal luncheon would be served.
But
the steady procession stopped, and began to pile up in the wide
arched doorways. From the rotunda ahead, instead of quiet music and
hushed, shuffling footsteps, a startled babble poured. Voices were
raised in sharp astonishment, then other voices in even sharper
command.
"What's gone wrong?" Ivan
wondered, craning his neck. "Did somebody faint or
something?"
Since Miles's eye-level view
was of the shoulders of the man ahead of him, he could scarcely
answer this. With a lurch, the line began to proceed again. It
reached the rotunda, but then was shunted out a door immediately to
the left. A ghem-commander stood at the intersection, directing
traffic with low-voiced instructions, repeated over and over, "Please
retain your gifts and proceed directly around the outside walkway to
the Eastern Pavilion, please retain your gifts and proceed directly
to the Eastern Pavilion, all will be re-ordered presently, please
retain—"
At the center of the rotunda,
above everyone's heads on a great catafalque, lay the Dowager Empress
in state. Even in death outlander eyes were not invited to look upon
her. Her bier was surrounded by a force-bubble, made translucent;
only a shadow of her form was visible through it, as if through
gauze, a white-clad, slight, sleeping ghost. A line of mixed
ghem-guards apparently just drafted from the passing satrap governors
stood in a row from catafalque to wall on either side of the bier,
shielding something else from the passing eyes.
Miles
couldn't stand it. After
all, they can't massacre me here in front of everybody, can they?
He jammed the maplewood box at Ivan, and ducked under the elbow of
the ghem-officer trying to shoo everyone out the other door. Smiling
pleasantly, his hands held open and empty, he slipped between two
startled ghem-guards, who were clearly not expecting such a rude and
impudent move.
On the other side of the
catafalque, in the position reserved for the first, gift of the
haut-lord of highest status, lay a dead body. Its throat was cut, and
quantities of fresh red blood pooled on the shimmering green
malachite floor all around, soaking into its gray and white palace
servitor's uniform. A thin jeweled knife was clutched rigorously in
its outflung right hand. It
was exactly the term for the corpse, too. A bald, eyebrowless,
man-shaped creature, elderly but not frail . . . Miles recognized
their intruder from the personnel pod even without the false hair.
His own heart seemed to stop in astonishment.
Somebody's
just raised the stakes in this little game.
The
highest-ranking ghem-officer in the room swooped down upon him. Even
through the swirl of face paint his smile was fixed, the look of a
man constrained to be polite to someone he would more naturally have
preferred to bludgeon to the pavement. "Lord Vorkosigan, would
you rejoin your delegation, please?"
"Of
course. Who was that poor fellow?"
The
ghem-commander made little herding motions at him—the Cetagandan
was not fool enough to actually touch him, of course—and Miles
allowed himself to be moved off. Grateful, irate, and flustered, the
man was actually surprised into an unguarded reply. "It is Ba
Lura, the Celestial Lady's most senior servitor. The Ba has served
her for sixty years and more—it seems to have wished to follow on
and serve her in death as well. A most tasteless gesture, to do it
here
. .
." The ghem-commander buffeted Miles near enough to the
again-stopped line of delegates for Ivan's long arm to reach out,
grab him, and pull him in, and march him doorward with a firm fist in
the middle of his back.
"What the hell is
going on?"
Ivan bent his head to hiss in Miles's ear from behind.
And
where were you when the murder took place, Lord Vorkosigan?
Except that it didn't look like a murder, it really did look like a
suicide. Done in a most archaic manner. Less than thirty minutes ago.
While he had been off talking with the mysterious white bubble, who
might or might not have been haut Rian Degtiar, how the hell was he
to tell? The corridor seemed to be spinning, but Miles supposed it
was only his brain.
"You should not have
gotten out of line, my lord," said Vorob'yev severely. "Ah
. . . what was it you saw?"
Miles's lip
curled, but he tamped it back down. "One of the late Dowager
Empress's oldest ba servants has just cut its throat at the foot of
her bier. I didn't know the Cetagandans made a fashion of human
sacrifice. Not officially, anyway."
Vorob'yev's
lips pursed in a soundless whistle, then flashed a brief, instantly
stifled grin. "How awkward
for them," he purred. "They are going to have an
interesting scramble, trying to retrieve this
ceremony."
Yes. So if
the creature was so loyal, why did it arrange what it must have known
would be a major embarrassment for its masters? Posthumous revenge?
Admittedly, with Cetagandans that's the safest kind
….
By the time they completed an interminable
hike around the outside of the central towers to the pavilion on the
eastern side, Miles's legs were killing him. In a huge hall, the
several hundred galactic delegates were being seated at tables by an
army of servitors, all moving just a little faster than strict
dignity would have preferred. Since some of the bier-gifts the other
delegates carried were even bulkier than the Barrayarans' maplewood
box, the seating was going slowly and more awkwardly than planned,
with a lot of people jumping up and down and re-arranging themselves,
to the servitors' evident dismay. Somewhere deep in the bowels of the
building Miles pictured a squadron of harried Cetagandan cooks
swearing many colorful and obscene Cetagandan oaths.
Miles
spotted the Vervani delegation being seated about a third of the way
across the room. He took advantage of the confusion to slip out of
his assigned chair, weave around several tables, and try to seize a
word with Mia Maz.
He stood by her elbow, and
smiled tensely. "Good afternoon, m'lady Maz. I have to
talk—"
"Lord Vorkosigan! I tried to
talk with you—" they cut across each other's
greetings.
"You first," he ducked his
head at her.
"I tried to call you at your
embassy earlier, but you'd already left. What in the world happened
in the rotunda, do you have any idea? For the Cetagandans to alter a
ceremony of this magnitude in the middle—it's unheard of."
"They
didn't exactly have a choice. Well, I suppose they could have ignored
the body and just carried on around it—I think that would have been
much more impressive, personally—but evidently they decided to
clean it up first." Again Miles repeated what he was beginning
to think of as "the official version" of Ba Lura's suicide.
He had the total attention of everyone within earshot. To hell with
it, the rumors would be flying soon enough no matter what he said or
didn't say.
"Did you have any luck with
that little research question I posed to you last night?" Miles
continued. "I, uh . . . don't think this is the time or place to
discuss it, but . . ."
"Yes, and yes,"
Maz said.
And
not over any holovid transmission channel on this planet, either,
Miles thought, supposedly
secured or not.
"Can you stop by the Barrayaran Embassy, directly after this?
We'll . . . take tea, or something."
"I
think that would be very appropriate," Maz said. She watched him
with newly intensified curiosity in her dark eyes.
"I
need a lesson in etiquette," Miles added, for the benefit of
their interested nearby listeners.
Maz's eyes
twinkled in something that might have been suppressed amusement. "So
I have heard it said, my lord," she murmured.
"By—"
whom?
he choked off. Vorob'yev,
I fear.
"'Bye," he finished instead, rapped the table cheerily, and
retreated back to his proper place. Vorob'yev watched Miles seat
himself with a slightly dangerous look in his eyes that suggested he
was thinking of putting a leash on the peripatetic young envoy soon,
but he made no comment aloud.
By the time they
had eaten their way through about twenty courses of tiny delicacies,
which more than made up in numbers what they lacked in volume, the
Cetagandans had reorganized themselves. The haut-lord majordomo was
apparently one of those commanders who was never more masterly than
when in retreat, for he managed to get everyone marshaled in the
correct order of seniority again even though the line was now being
cycled through the rotunda in reverse. One sensed the majordomo would
be cutting his
throat later, in the proper place and with the proper ceremony, and
not in this dreadful harum-scarum fashion.
Miles
laid down the maplewood box on the malachite floor in the second
turning of the growing spiral of gifts, about a meter from where Ba
Lura had poured out its life. The unmarked, perfectly polished floor
wasn't even damp. And had the Cetagandan security people had time to
do a forensics scan before the cleanup? Or had someone been counting
on the hasty destruction of the subtler evidence? Damn,
I wish I could have been in charge of this, just now.
The
white float-cars were waiting on the other side of the Eastern
Pavilion, to carry the emissaries back to the gates of the Celestial
Garden. The entire ceremony had run only about an hour late, but
Miles's sense of time was inverted from his first whimsical vision of
Xanadu as Faerie. He felt as if a hundred years had gone by inside
the dome, while only morning had passed in the outside world. He
winced painfully in the bright afternoon light, as Vorob'yev's
sergeant-driver brought the embassy aircar to their pickup point.
Miles fell gratefully into his seat.
I
think they're going to have to cut these bloody boots off, when we
get back home.
"Pull,"
Miles said, and set his teeth.
Ivan grasped his
boot by the ankle and heel, braced his knee against the end of the
couch upon which Miles lay, and yanked dutifully.
"Yeow!"
Ivan
stopped. "Does that hurt?"
"Yes,
keep going, dammit."
Ivan glanced around
Miles's personal suite. "Maybe you ought to go downstairs to the
embassy infirmary again."
"Later. I am
not going to let that butcher of a physician dissect my best boots.
Pull."
Ivan put his back into it, and the
boot at last came free. He studied it in his hand a moment, and
smiled slowly. "You know, you're not going to be able to get the
other one off without me," he observed.
"So?"
"So
. . . give."
"Give what?"
"Knowing
your usual humor, I'd have thought you'd be as amused by the idea of
an extra corpse in the funeral chamber as Vorob'yev was, but you came
back looking like you'd just seen your grandfather's ghost."
"The
Ba had cut its throat. It was a messy scene."
"I
think you've seen messier corpses."
Oh,
yes.
Miles eyed his remaining booted leg, which was throbbing, and
pictured himself limping through the corridors of the embassy seeking
a less demanding valet. No. He sighed. "Messier, but no
stranger. You'd have twitched too. We met the Ba yesterday, you and
I. You wrestled with it in the personnel pod."
Ivan
glanced toward the comconsole desk drawer where the mysterious rod
remained concealed, and swore. "That does it. We've got to
report this to Vorob'yev."
"If it was
the same Ba," Miles put in hastily. "For all I know, the
Cetagandans clone their servants in batches, and the one we saw
yesterday was this one's twin or something."
Ivan
hesitated. "You think so?"
"I
don't know, but I know where I can find out. Just let me have one
more pass at this, before we send up the flag, please? I've asked Mia
Maz from the Vervani embassy to stop in and see me. If you wait . . .
I'll let you sit in."
Ivan contemplated
this bribe. "Boot!" Miles demanded, while he was thinking.
Somewhat absently, Ivan helped pull it off.
"All
right," he said at last, "but after we talk to her, we
report to ImpSec."
"Ivan, I am
ImpSec," snapped Miles. "Three years of training and field
experience, remember? Do me the honor of grasping that I may just
possibly know what I'm doing!" I
wish to hell I knew what I was doing.
Intuition was nothing but the subconscious processing of subliminal
clues, he was fairly sure, but I
feel it in my bones
made too uncomfortably thin a public defense for his actions. How
can you know something before you know it?
"Give me a chance."
Ivan departed for
his own room to change clothes without making any promises. Freed of
the boots, Miles staggered to his washroom to gulp down some more
painkillers, and skin out of his formal House mourning and into loose
black fatigues. Judging by the embassy's protocol list, Miles's
private chamber was going to be the only place he could wear the
fatigues.
Ivan returned all too soon, breezily
trim in undress greens, but before he could continue asking questions
Miles couldn't answer or demanding justifications Miles couldn't
offer, the comconsole chimed. It was the staffer from the embassy's
lobby, downstairs.
"Mia Maz is here to see
you, Lord Vorkosigan," the man reported. "She says she has
an appointment."
"That's correct. Uh .
. . can you bring her up here, please?" Was his suite monitored
by embassy security? He wasn't about to draw attention by inquiring.
But no. If ImpSec were eavesdropping, he'd certainly have had to deal
with some stiff interrogation from their offices below-stairs by now,
either via Vorob'yev or directly. They were extending him the
courtesy of privacy, as yet, in his personal space—though probably
not on his comconsole. Every public forum in the building was
guaranteed to be bugged, though.
The staffer
ushered Maz to Miles's door in a few moments, and Miles and Ivan
hastened to get her comfortably seated. She too had stopped to change
clothes, and was now wearing a formfitting jump suit and knee-length
vest suitable for street wear. Even at forty-odd her form supported
the style very nicely. Miles got rid of the staffer by sending him
off with an order for tea and, at Ivan's request, wine.
Miles
settled down on the other end of the couch and smiled hopefully at
the Vervani woman. Ivan was forced offsides to a nearby chair.
"Milady Maz. Thank you for coming."
"Just
Maz, please," she smiled in return. "We Vervani don't use
such titles. I'm afraid we have trouble taking them
seriously."
"You must be good at
keeping a straight face, or you could not function so well
here."
Her dimple winked at him. "Yes,
my lord."
Ah yes, Vervain was one of those
so-called democracies; not quite as insanely egalitarian as the
Betans, but they had a definite cultural drift in that direction. "My
mother would agree with you," Miles conceded. "She would
have seen no inherent difference between the two corpses in the
rotunda. Except their method of arriving there, of course. I take it
this suicide was an unusual and unexpected
event?"
"Unprecedented," said
Maz, "and if you know Cetagandans, you know just how strong a
term that is."
"So Cetagandan servants
do not routinely accompany their masters in death like a pagan
sacrifice."
"I suppose the Ba Lura was
unusually close to the Empress, it had served her for so long,"
said the Vervani woman. "Since before any of us were
born."
"Ivan was wondering if the
haut-lords cloned their servants."
Ivan
cast Miles a slightly dirty look, for being made the stalking horse,
but did not voice an objection.
"The
ghem-lords sometimes do," said Maz, "but not the
haut-lords, and most certainly never the Imperial Household. They
consider each servitor as much a work of art as any of the other
objects with which they surround themselves. Everything in the
Celestial Garden must be unique, if possible handmade, and perfect.
That applies to their biological constructs as well. They leave mass
production to the masses. I'm not sure if it's a virtue or a vice,
the way the haut do it, but in a world flooded with virtual realities
and infinite duplication, it's strangely refreshing. If only they
weren't such awful snobs about it."
"Speaking
of things artistic," said Miles, "you said you had some
luck identifying that icon?"
"Yes."
Her gaze flicked up to fix on his face. "Where did you say you
saw it, Lord Vorkosigan?"
"I
didn't."
"Hm." She half-smiled,
but apparently decided not to fence with him over the point just now.
"It is the seal of the Star Creche, and not something I'd expect
an outlander to run across every day. In fact, it's not something I'd
expect an outlander to run across any
day. It's most private."
Check.
"And hautish?"
"Supremely."
"And,
um . . . just what is the Star Creche?"
"You
don't know?" Maz seemed a little surprised. "Well, I
suppose you fellows have spent all your time studying Cetagandan
military matters."
"A great deal of
time, yes," Ivan sighed.
"The Star
Creche is the private name of the haut-race's gene bank."
"Oh,
that. I was dimly aware of—do they keep backup copies of
themselves, then?" Miles asked.
"The
Star Creche is far more than that. Among the haut, they don't deal
directly with each other to have egg and sperm united and the
resulting embryo deposited in a uterine replicator, the way normal
people do. Every genetic cross is negotiated and a contract drawn
between the heads of the two genetic lines—the Cetagandans call
them constellations, though I suppose you Barrayarans would call them
clans. That contract in turn must be approved by the Emperor, or
rather, by the senior female in the Emperor's line, and marked by the
seal of the Star Creche. For the last half-century, since the present
regime began, that senior female has been haut Lisbet Degtiar, the
Emperor's mother. It's not just a formality, either. Any genetic
alterations—and the haut do a lot of them—have to be examined and
cleared by the Empress's board of geneticists, before they are
allowed into the haut genome. You asked me if the haut-women had any
power. The Dowager Empress had final approval or veto over every haut
birth."
"Can the Emperor override
her?"
Maz pursed her lips. "I truly
don't know. The haut are incredibly reserved about all this. If there
are any behind-the-scenes power struggles, the news certainly doesn't
leak out past the Celestial Garden's gates. I do know I've never
heard of such a conflict."
"So . . .
who is the new senior female? Who inherits the seal?"
"Ah!
Now you've touched on something interesting." Maz was warming to
her subject. "Nobody knows, or at least, the Emperor hasn't made
the public announcement. The seal is supposed to be held by the
Emperor's mother if she lives, or by the mother of the heir-apparent
if the dowager is deceased. But the Cetagandan emperor has not yet
selected his heir. The seal of the Star Creche and all the rest of
the empress's regalia is supposed to be handed over to the new senior
female as the last act of the funeral rites, so he has ten more days
to make up his mind. I imagine that decision is the focus of a great
deal of attention right now, among the haut-women. No new genomic
contracts can be approved until the transfer is completed."
Miles
puzzled this through. "He has three young sons, right? So he
must select one of their mothers."
"Not
necessarily," said Maz. "He could hand things over to an
Imperial aunt, one of his mother's kin, as an interim move."
A
diffident rap at Miles's door indicated the arrival of the tea. The
Barrayaran embassy's kitchen had sent along a perfectly redundant
three-tiered tray of little petit fours as well. Someone had been
doing their homework, for Maz murmured, "Ooh, my
favorite."
One feminine hand dove for some
dainty chocolate confections despite the Imperial luncheon they'd
recently consumed. The embassy steward poured tea, opened the wine,
and withdrew as discreetly as he had entered.
Ivan
took a gulp from his crystal cup, and asked in puzzlement, "Do
the haut-lords marry, then? One of these genetic contracts must be
the equivalent of a marriage, right?"
"Well
. . . no." Maz swallowed her third chocolate morsel, and chased
it with tea. "There are several kinds of contracts. The simplest
is for a sort of onetime usage of one's genome. A single child is
created, who becomes the … I hesitate to use the term property
. . .
who is registered with the constellation of the male parent, and is
raised in his constellation's creche. You understand, these decisions
are not made by the principals—in fact, the two parents may never
even meet each other. These contracts are chosen at the most senior
level of the constellation, by the oldest and presumably wisest
heads, with an eye to either capturing a favored genetic line, or
setting up for a desirable cross in the ensuing generation.
"At
the other extreme is a lifetime monopoly—or longer, in the case of
Imperial crosses. When a haut-woman is chosen to be the mother of a
potential heir, the contract is absolutely exclusive—she must never
have contracted her genome previously, and can never do so again,
unless the emperor chooses to have more than one child by her. She
goes to live in the Celestial Garden, in her own pavilion, for the
rest of her life."
Miles grimaced. "Is
that a reward, or a punishment?"
"It's
the best shot at power a haut-woman can ever get—a chance of
becoming a dowager empress, if her son—and it's always and only a
son—is ultimately chosen to succeed his father. Even being the
mother of one of the losers, a prince-candidate or satrap governor,
is no bad deal. It's also why, in an apparently patriarchal culture,
the output of the haut-constellations is skewed to girls. A
constellation head—clan chief, in Barrayaran terminology—can
never become an emperor or the father of an emperor, no matter how
brightly his sons may shine. But through his daughters, he has a
chance to become the grandfather of one. Advantages, as you may
imagine, then accrue to the dowager empress's constellation. The
Degtiar were not particularly important until fifty years
ago."
"So the emperor has sons,"
Miles worked this out, "but everyone else is mad for daughters.
But only once or twice a century, when a new emperor succeeds, can
anyone win the game."
"That's about
right."
"So . . . where does sex fit
into all this?" asked Ivan plaintively.
"Nowhere,"
said Maz.
"Nowhere!"
Maz
laughed at his horrified expression. "Yes, the haut have sexual
relations, but its purely a social game. They even have long-lasting
sexual friendships that could almost qualify as marriages, sometimes.
I was about to say there's nothing formalized, except that the
etiquette of all the shifting associations is so incredibly complex.
I guess the word I want is legalized,
rather than formalized, because the rituals are intense. And weird,
really weird, sometimes, from what little I've been able to gather of
it all. Fortunately, the haut are such racists, they almost never go
slumming outside their genome, so you are not likely to encounter
those pitfalls personally."
"Oh,"
said Ivan. He sounded a little disappointed. "But . . . if the
haut don't marry and set up their own households, when and how do
they leave home?"
"They never
do."
"Ow! You mean they live with,
like, their mothers, forever?"
"Well,
not with their mothers, of course. Their grandparents or
great-grandparents. But the youth—that is, anyone under fifty or
so—do live as pensioners of their constellation. I wonder if that
is at the root of why so many older haut become reclusive. They live
apart because they finally can."
"But—what
about all those famous and successful ghem-generals and ghem-lords
who've won haut-lady wives?" asked Miles.
Maz
shrugged. "They can't all aspire to become Imperial mothers, can
they? Actually, I would point out this aspect particularly to you,
Lord Vorkosigan. Have you ever wondered how the haut, who are not
noted for their military prowess, control the ghem, who are?"
"Oh,
yes. I've been expecting this crazy Cetagandan double-decked
aristocracy to fall apart ever since I learned about it. How can you
control guns with, with, art contests? How can a bunch of perfumed
poetasters like the haut-lords buffalo whole ghem-armies?"
Maz
smiled. "The Cetagandan ghem-lords would call it the loyalty
justly due to superior culture and civilization. The fact is that
anyone who's competent enough or powerful enough to pose a threat
gets genetically co-opted. There is no higher reward in the
Cetagandan system than to be Imperially assigned a haut-lady wife.
The ghem-lords are all panting for it. It's the ultimate social and
political coup."
"You're suggesting
the haut control the ghem through these wives?" said Miles. "I
mean, I'm sure the haut-women are lovely and all, but the
ghem-generals can be such hard-bitten cast-iron bastards—I can't
imagine anyone who gets to the top in the Cetagandan Empire being
that susceptible."
"If I knew how the
haut-women do it," Maz sighed, "I'd bottle it and sell it.
No, better—I think I'd keep it for myself. But it seems to have
worked for the last several hundred years. It is not, of course, the
only
method of Imperial control, to be sure. Only the most overlooked one.
I find that, in itself, significant. The haut are nothing if not
subtle."
"Does the, uh, haut-bride
come with a dowry?" Miles asked.
Maz smiled
again, and polished off another chocolate confection. "You have
hit upon an important point, Lord Vorkosigan. She does not."
"I'd
think keeping a haut-wife in the style to which she is accustomed
could get rather expensive."
"Very."
"So
… if the Cetagandan emperor wished to depress an excessively
successful subject, he could award him a few haut-wives and bankrupt
him?"
"I … don't think it's done
quite so obviously as all that. But the element is there. You are
very acute, my lord."
Ivan asked, "But
how does the haut-lady who gets handed out like a good-conduct medal
feel about it all? I mean … if the highest haut-lady ambition is to
become an Imperial monopoly, this has got to be the ultimate
opposite. To be permanently dumped out of the haut-genome—their
descendants never marry back into the haut, do they?"
"No,"
confirmed Maz. "I believe the psychology of it all is a bit
peculiar. For one thing, the haut-bride immediately outranks any
other wives the ghem-lord may have acquired, and her children
automatically become his heirs. This can set up some interesting
tensions in his household, particularly if it comes, as it usually
does, in mid-life when his other marital associations may be of long
standing."
"It must be a ghem-lady's
nightmare, to have one of these haut-women dropped on her husband,"
Ivan mused. "Don't they ever object? Make their husbands turn
down the honor?"
"Apparently it's not
an honor one can refuse."
"Mm."
With difficulty, Miles pulled his imagination away from these
side-fascinations, and back to his most immediate worry. "That
seal of the Star Creche thing—I don't suppose you have a picture of
it?"
"I brought a number of vids with
me, yes, my lord," said Maz. "With your permission, we can
run them on your comconsole."
Ooh,
I adore competent women. Do you have a younger sister, milady Maz?
"Yes, please," said Miles.
They all
trooped over to the chamber's comconsole desk, and Maz began a quick
illustrated lecture on haut crests and the several dozen assorted
Imperial seals. "Here it is, my lord—the seal of the Star
Creche."
It was a clear cubical block,
measuring maybe fifteen centimeters on a side, with the bird-pattern
incised in red lines upon its top. Not
the mysterious rod. Miles exhaled with relief. The terror that had
been riding him ever since Maz had mentioned the seal, that he and
Ivan might have accidentally stolen a piece of the Imperial regalia,
faded. The rod was some kind of Imperial gizmo, obviously, and would
have to be returned—anonymously, by preference—but at least it
wasn't—
Maz called up the next unit of data,
"And this
object is the Great Key of the Star Creche, which is handed over
along with the seal," she went on.
Ivan
choked on his wine. Miles, faint, leaned on the desk and smiled
fixedly at the image of the rod. The original lay some few
centimeters under his hand, in the drawer.
"And,
ah—just what is
the Great Key of the Star Creche, m'la—Maz?" Miles managed to
murmur. "What does it do?"
"I'm
not quite sure. At one time in the past, I believe it had something
to do with data retrieval from the haut gene banks, but the actual
device may only be ceremonial by now. I mean, it's a couple of
hundred years old. It has to be obsolete."
We
hope.
Thank God he hadn't dropped it. Yet. "I see."
"Miles
. .
." muttered Ivan.
"Later," Miles
hissed to him out of the corner of his mouth. "I understand your
concern."
Ivan mouthed something obscene at
him, over the seated Maz's head.
Miles leaned
against the comconsole desk, and screwed up his features in a
realistic wince.
"Something wrong, my
lord?" Maz glanced up, concerned.
"I'm
afraid my legs are bothering me, a bit. I had probably better pay
another visit to the embassy physician, after this."
"Would
you prefer to continue this later?" Maz asked
instantly.
'Well … to tell you the truth, I
think I've had about all the etiquette lessons I can absorb for one
afternoon."
"Oh, there's lots
more." But apparently he was looking realistically pale, too,
for she rose, adding, "Far too much for one session, to be sure.
Are your injuries much troubling you? I didn't realize they were that
severe."
Miles shrugged, as if in
embarrassment. After a suitable exchange of parting amenities, and a
promise to call on his Vervani tutor again very soon, Ivan took over
the hostly duties, and escorted Maz back downstairs.
He
returned immediately, to seal the door behind him and pounce on
Miles. "Do you have any idea how much trouble we're in?" he
cried.
Miles sat before the comconsole,
re-reading the official, and entirely inadequate, description of the
Great Key, while its image floated hauntingly before his nose above
the vid plate. "Yes. I also know how we're going to get out of
it. Do you know as much?"
This gave Ivan
pause. "What else do you know that I don't?"
"If
you will just leave it to me, I believe I can get this thing back to
its rightful owner with no one the wiser."
"Its
rightful owner is the Cetagandan emperor, according to what Maz
said."
"Well, ultimately, yes. I
should say, back to its rightful keeper. Who, if I read the signs
right, is as chagrined about losing it as we are in finding it. If I
can get it back to her quietly, I don't think she's going to go
around proclaiming how she lost it. Although … I do wonder how she
did
lose it." Something was not adding up, just below his level of
conscious perception.
"We mugged an
Imperial servitor, that's how!"
"Yes,
but what was Ba Lura doing with the thing on an orbital transfer
station in the first place? Why had it disabled the security monitors
in the docking bay?"
"Lura was taking
the Great Key somewhere, obviously. To the Great Lock, for all I
know." Ivan paced around the comconsole. "So the poor sod
cuts its throat the next morning 'cause it lost its charge, its
trust, courtesy of us—hell, Miles. I feel like we just killed that
old geezer. And it never did us any harm, it just blundered into the
wrong place and had the bad luck to startle us."
"Is
that what happened?" Miles murmured. "Really . . . ?"
Is
that why I am so desperately determined for the story to be
something, anything, else?
The scenario hung together. The old Ba, charged with transporting the
precious object, loses the Great Key to some outlander barbarians,
confesses its disgrace to its mistress, and kills itself in
expiation. Wrap. Miles felt ill. "So … if the key was that
important, why wasn't the Ba traveling with a squadron of Imperial
ghem-guards?"
"God
Miles, I wish it had
been!"
A firm knock sounded on Miles's
door. Miles hastily shut down the comconsole and unsealed the door
lock. "Come in."
Ambassador Vorob'yev
entered, and favored him with a semi-cordial nod. He held a sheaf of
delicately colored, scented papers in his hand.
"Hello,
my lords. Did you find your tutorial with Maz useful?"
"Yes,
sir," said Miles.
"Good. I thought you
would. She's excellent." Vorobyev held up the colored papers.
"While you were in session, this invitation arrived for you
both, from Lord Yenaro. Along with assorted profound apologies for
last night's incident. Embassy security has opened, scanned, and
chemically analyzed it. They report the organic esters harmless."
With this safety pronouncement, he handed the papers across to Miles.
"It is up to you, whether or not to accept. If you concur that
the unfortunate side-effect of the sculpture's power field was an
accident, your attendance might be a good thing. It would complete
the apology, repairing face all around."
"Oh,
we'll go, sure." The apology and invitation were
hand-calligraphed in the best Cetagandan style. "But I'll keep
my eyes open. Ah . . . wasn't Colonel Vorreedi due back
today?"
Vorob'yev grimaced. "He's run
into some tedious complications. But in view of that odd incident at
the Marilacan embassy, I've sent a subordinate to replace him. He
should be back tomorrow. Perhaps … do you wish a bodyguard? Not
openly, of course, that would be another insult."
"Mm
. . . we'll have a driver, right? Let him be one of your trained men,
have backup on call, give us both comm links, and have him wait for
us nearby."
"Very
well, Lord Vorkosigan. I'll make arrangements," Vorob'yev
nodded. "And . . . regarding the incident in the rotunda earlier
today—"
Miles's heart pounded.
"Yes?"
"Please don't break ranks
like that again."
"Did you receive a
complaint?" And
from whom?
"One
learns to interpret certain pained looks. The Cetagandans would
consider it impolite to protest—but should unpleasant incidents
pile high enough, not too impolite for them to take some sort of
indirect and arcane retaliation. You two will be gone in ten days,
but I will still be here. Please don't make my job any more difficult
than it already is, eh?"
"Understood,
sir," said Miles brightly. Ivan was looking intensely
worried—was he going to bolt, pour out confessions to Vorob'yev?
Not yet, evidently, for the ambassador waved himself back out without
Ivan throwing himself at his feet.
"Nearby
doesn't cut it, for a bodyguard," Ivan pointed out, as soon as
the door sealed again.
"Oh, you're
beginning to see it my way now, are you? But if we go to Yenaro's at
all, I can't avoid risk. I have to eat, drink, and breathe—all
routes for attack an armed guard can't do much about. Anyway, my
greatest defense is that it would be a grievous insult to the
Cetagandan emperor for anyone to seriously harm a galactic delegate
to his august mother's funeral. I predict, should another accident
occur, it will be equally subtle and non-fatal." And
equally infuriating.
"Oh,
yeah? When there's been one fatality already?" Ivan stood silent
for a long time. "Do you think . . . all these incidents could
possibly be related?" Ivan nodded toward the perfumed papers
still in Miles's hand, and toward the comconsole desk drawer. "I
admit, I don't see how."
"Do you think
they could possibly all be unrelated coincidences?"
"Hm."
Ivan frowned, digesting this. "So tell me," he pointed
again to the desk drawer, "how are
you planning to get rid of the Empress's dildo?"
Miles's
mouth twitched, stifling a grin at the Ivan-diplomatic turn of
phrase. "I can't tell you." Mostly
because I don't know yet myself.
But the haut Rian Degtiar had to be scrambling, right now. He
fingered, as if absently, the silver eye-of-Horus ImpSec insignia
pinned to his black collar. "There's a lady's reputation
involved."
Ivan's eyes narrowed in scorn of
this obvious appeal to Ivan's own brand of personal affairs.
"Horseshit. Are
you running some kind of secret rig for Simon Illyan?"
"If
I were, I couldn't tell you, now could I?"
"Damned
if I know." Ivan stared at him in frustration for another
moment, then shrugged. "Well, it's your funeral."
"Stop
here," Miles instructed the groundcar's driver. The car swung
smoothly to the side of the street and with a sigh of its fans
settled to the pavement. Miles peered at the layout of Lord Yenaro's
suburban mansion in the gathering dusk, mentally pairing the visual
reality with the map he had studied back at the Barrayaran
embassy.
The barriers around the estate,
serpentine garden walls and concealing landscaping, were visual and
symbolic rather than effective. The place had never been designed as
a fortress of anything but privilege. A few higher sections of the
rambling house glimmered through the trees, but even they seemed to
focus inward rather than outward.
"Comm
link check, my lords?" the driver requested. Miles and Ivan both
pulled the devices from their pockets and ran through the codes with
him. "Very good, my lords."
"What's
our backup?" Miles asked him.
"I have
three units, arranged within call."
"I
trust we've included a medic."
"In the
lightflyer, fully equipped. I can put him down inside Lord Yenaro's
courtyard in forty-five seconds."
"That
should be sufficient. I don't expect a frontal assault. But I
wouldn't be surprised if I encountered another little 'accident' of
some sort. We'll walk from here, I think. I want to get the feel of
the place."
"Yes, my lord." The
driver popped the canopy for them, and Miles and Ivan exited.
"Is
this what you call genteel poverty?" Ivan inquired, looking
around as they strolled through open, unguarded gates and up Yenaro's
curving drive.
Ah yes. The style might be
different, but the scent of aristocratic decay was universal. Little
signs of neglect were all around: unrepaired damage to the gates and
walls, overgrown shrubbery, what appeared to be three-quarters of the
mansion dark and closed-off.
"Vorob'yev had
the embassy's ImpSec office make a background check of Lord Yenaro,"
Miles said. "Yenaro's grandfather, the failed ghem-general, left
him the house but not the means to keep it up, having consumed his
capital in his extended and presumably embittered old age. Yenaro's
been in sole possession for about four years. He runs with an artsy
crowd of young and unemployed ghem-lordlings, so his story holds up
to that extent. But that thing in the Marilacan embassy's lobby was
the first sculpture Yenaro's ever been known to produce. Curiously
advanced, for a first try, don't you think?"
"If
you're so convinced it was a trap, why are you sticking your hand in
to try and trip another one?"
"No
risk, no reward, Ivan."
"Just what
reward are you envisioning?"
"Truth.
Beauty. Who knows? Embassy security is also running a check on the
workmen who actually built the sculpture. I expect it to be
revealing."
At least he could make that
much use of the machinery of ImpSec. Miles felt intensely conscious
of the rod now riding concealed in his inner tunic pocket. He'd been
carrying the Great Key in secret all day, through a tour of the city
and an interminable afternoon performance of a Cetagandan classical
dance company. This last treat had been arranged by Imperial decree
especially for the off-planet envoys to the funeral. But the haut
Rian Degtiar had not made her promised move to contact him yet. If he
did not hear from his haut-lady by tomorrow . . . On one level, Miles
was growing extremely sorry he had not taken the local ImpSec
subordinates into his confidence on the very first day. But if he
had, he would no longer be in charge of this little problem; the
decisions would all have been hiked to higher levels, out of his
control. The
ice is thin. I don't want anyone heavier than me walking on it just
yet.
A
servant met them at the mansion's door as they approached, and
escorted them into a softly lit entry foyer where they were greeted
by their host. Yenaro was in dark robes similar to the ones he'd worn
at the Marilacan embassy's reception; Ivan was clearly correct in his
undress greens. Miles had chosen his ultra-formal House blacks. He
wasn't sure how Yenaro would interpret the message, as honor, or
reminder—I'm
the official envoy—
or warning—don't
mess with me.
But he was fairly certain it was not a nuance Yenaro would
miss.
Yenaro glanced down at Miles s black
boots. "And are your legs better now, Lord Vorkosigan?" he
inquired anxiously.
"Much better, thank
you," Miles smiled tightly in return. "I shall certainly
live."
"I'm so glad." The tall
ghem-lord led them around a few corners and down a short flight of
steps to a large semicircular room wrapped around a peninsula of the
garden, as if the house were undergoing some botanical invasion. The
room was somewhat randomly furnished, apparently with items Yenaro
had previously owned rather than to design; but the effect was
pleasantly comfortable-bachelor. The lighting here, too, was soft,
camouflaging shabbiness. A dozen ghem-types were already present,
talking and drinking. The men outnumbered the women; two bore full
face paint, most sported the cheek-decal of the younger set, and a
few radical souls wore nothing above the neck but a little eye
makeup. Yenaro introduced his Barrayaran exotics all around. None of
the ghem were anyone Miles had heard of or studied, though one young
man claimed a great-uncle on staff at Cetagandan headquarters.
An
incense burner smoked on a cylindrical stand by the garden doors; one
ghem-guest paused to inhale deeply. "Good one, Yenaro," he
called to his host. "Your blend?"
"Thank
you, yes," said Yenaro.
"More
perfumes?" inquired Ivan.
"And a bit
extra. That mixture also contains a mild relaxant suitable to the
occasion. You would perhaps not care for it, Lord
Vorkosigan."
Miles smiled stiffly. Just how
much of an organic chemist was this man? Miles was reminded that the
root word of intoxication
was toxic.
"Probably not. But I'd love to see your laboratory."
"Would
you? I'll take you up, then. Most of my friends have no interest in
the technical aspects, only in the results."
A
young woman, listening nearby, drifted up at this and tapped Yenaro
on the arm with one long fingernail glittering with patterned enamel.
"Yes, dear Yenni, results. You promised me some, remember?"
She was not the prettiest ghem-woman Miles had seen, but attractive
enough in swirling jade-green robes, with thick pale hair clipped
back and curling down to her shoulders in a pink-frosted
froth.
"And I keep my promises," Lord
Yenaro asserted. "Lord Vorkosigan, perhaps you would care to
accompany us upstairs now?"
"Certainly."
"I'll
stay and make new acquaintances, I think," Ivan bowed himself
out of the party. The two tallest and most striking ghem-women
present, a leggy blonde and a truly incredible redhead, were standing
together across the room; Ivan somehow managed to make eye contact
with both, and they favored him with inviting smiles. Miles sent up a
short silent prayer to the guardian god of fools, lovers, and madmen,
and turned to follow Yenaro and his female petitioner.
Yenaro's
organic chemistry laboratory was sited in another building; lights
came up as they approached across the garden. It proved to be a quite
respectable installation, a long double room on the second floor—some
of the money that wasn't going into home repairs was obviously ending
up here. Miles walked around the benches, eyeing the molecular
analyzers and computers while Yenaro rummaged among an array of
little bottles for the promised perfume. All the raw materials were
beautifully organized in correct chemical groupings, betraying a deep
understanding and detailed love of the subject on the owner's
part.
"Who assists you here?" Miles
inquired.
"No one," said Yenaro. "I
can't bear to have anyone else mucking about. They mess up my
orderings, which I sometimes use to inspire my blends. It's not all
science, you know."
Indeed. With a few
questions, Miles led Yenaro on to talk about how he'd made the
perfume for the woman. She listened for a while and then wandered off
to sniff at experimental bottles, till Yenaro, with a pained smile,
rescued them from her. Yenaro's expertise was less than professorial,
but fully professional; any commercial cosmetics company would have
hired him on the spot for their product development laboratory. So,
and so. How did this square with the man who'd claimed Hands
are to be hired?
Not
at all, Miles decided with concealed satisfaction. Yenaro was
unquestionably an artist, but an artist of esters. Not a sculptor.
Someone else had supplied the undoubted technical expertise that had
produced the fountain. And had that same somebody also supplied the
technical information on Miles's personal weaknesses? Let's
call him . . . Lord X.
Fact One about Lord X: he had access to Cetagandan Security's most
detailed reports on Barrayarans of military or political significance
. . . and their sons. Fact Two: he had a subtle mind. Fact Three . .
. there was no fact three. Yet.
They returned to
the party to find Ivan ensconced on a couch between the two women,
entertaining them—or at least, they were laughing encouragingly.
The ghem-women fully matched Lady Gelle in beauty; the blonde might
have been her sister. The redhead was even more arresting, with a
cascade of amber curls falling past her shoulders, a perfect nose,
lips that one might . . . Miles cut off the thought. No ghem-lady was
going to invite him
to dive into her dreams.
Yenaro departed briefly
to oversee his servant—he seemed to have only one—and expedite
the smooth arrival of fresh food and drinks. He returned with a small
transparent pitcher of a pale ruby liquid. "Lord Vorpatril,"
he nodded at Ivan. "I believe you appreciate your beverages. Do
try this one."
Miles went to alert-status,
his heart thumping. Yenaro might not be a sculptor-assassin, but he
would undoubtedly make a great poisoner. Yenaro poured from the
pitcher into three little cups on a lacquered tray, and extended the
tray to Ivan.
"Thanks," Ivan selected
one at random.
"Oh, zlati ale,"
murmured one of the junior ghem-lords. Yenaro passed the tray to him,
and took the last cup himself. Ivan sipped and raised his brows in
surprised approval. Miles watched closely to be sure Yenaro actually
swallowed. He did. Five different methods for presenting deadly
drinks with just that maneuver and still being sure the victim
received the right one, including the trick of the host consuming the
antidote first, flashed through Miles's mind. But if he was going to
be that paranoid, they ought not have come here in the first place.
Yet he'd eaten and drunk nothing himself so far. So what
are you going to do, wait and see if Ivan falls over first, and then
try it?
Yenaro
did not, this time, pause to confide to the two women bracketing Ivan
the repulsive biological history of his birth. Hell. Maybe the
incident with the fountain really had been an accident, and the man
was sorry, and trying his very best to make it up to the Barrayarans.
Nevertheless, Miles circled in, trying to get a closer look at Ivan's
cup over his shoulder.
Ivan was in the process
of the classic I'm
just resting my arm along the back of this couch
test of the redhead on his right, to see if she was going to flinch
from or invite further physical contact. Ivan swiveled his head to
repel his cousin with a toothy smile. "Go have a good time,
Miles," he murmured. "Relax. Stop breathing up my
neck."
Miles grimaced back in
non-appreciation of the height-humor, and drifted off again. Some
people just didn't want to be saved. He decided instead to try to
talk with some of Yenaro's male friends, several of whom were
clustered at the opposite end of the room.
It
wasn't hard to get them to talk about themselves. It seemed that was
all they had to talk about. Forty minutes of valiant effort in the
art of conversation convinced Miles that most of Yenaro's friends had
the minds of fleas. The only expertise they displayed was in witty
commentary upon the personal lives of their equally idle compatriots:
their clothes, various love affairs and the mismanagement thereof,
sports—all spectator, none participatory, and mainly of interest
due to wagers on the outcome—and the assorted latest commercial
feelie dreams and other offerings, including erotic ones. This
retreat from reality seemed to absorb by far the bulk of the
ghem-lordlings' time and attention. Not one of them offered a word
about anything of political or military interest. Hell, Ivan
had more mental clout.
It was all a bit
depressing. Yenaro's friends were excluded men, wasted wastrels. No
one was excited about a career or service—they had none. Even the
arts received only a ripple of interest. They were strictly feelie
dream consumers, not producers. All in all, it was probably a good
thing these youths had no political interests. They were just the
sort of people who started revolutions but could not finish them,
their idealism betrayed by their incompetence. Miles had met similar
young men among the Vor, third or fourth sons who for whatever reason
had not gained entry to a traditional military career, living as
pensioners upon their families, but even they could look forward to
some change in their status by mid-life. Given the average ghem life
span, any chance of ascent up the social ladder by inheritance was
still some eighty or ninety years off for most of Yenaro's set. They
weren't inherently stupid—their genetics did not permit it—but
their minds were damped down to some artificial horizon. Beneath the
air of hectic sophistication, their lives were frozen in place. Miles
almost shivered.
Miles decided to try out the
women, if Ivan had left any for him. He excused himself from the
group to pursue a drink—he might have left without explanation just
as easily, for all anyone seemed to care about Lord Yenaro's most
unusual, and shortest, guest. Miles helped himself at a bowl from
which everyone else seemed to be ladling their drinks, and touched
the cup to his lips, but did not swallow. He looked up to find
himself under the gaze of a slightly older woman who had come late to
the party with a couple of friends, and who had been lingering
quietly on the fringes of the gathering. She smiled at him.
Miles
smiled back, and slid around the table to her side, composing a
suitable opening line. She took the initiative from him.
"Lord
Vorkosigan. Would you care to take a walk in the garden with
me?"
"Why . . . certainly. Is Lord
Yenaro's garden a sight to see?" In
the dark?
"I
think it will interest you." The smile dropped from her face as
if wiped away with a cloth the moment she turned her back to the
room, to be replaced with a look of grim determination. Miles
fingered the comm link in his trouser pocket, and followed in the
perfumed wake of her robes. Once out of sight of the room's glass
doors among the neglected shrubbery, her step quickened. She said
nothing more. Miles limped after her. He was unsurprised when they
came to a red-enameled, square-linteled gate and found a person
waiting, a slight, androgynous shape with a dark hooded robe
protecting its bald head from the night's gathering dew.
"The
ba will escort you the rest of the way," said the woman.
"The
rest of the way where?"
"A short
walk," the ba spoke in a soft alto.
"Very
well." Miles held up a restraining hand, and drew his comm link
from his pocket, and said into it, "Base. I'm leaving Yenaro's
premises for a while. Track me, but don't interrupt me unless I call
for you."
The drivers voice came back in a
dubious tone. "Yes, my lord . . . where are you going?"
"I'm
. . . taking a walk with a lady. Wish me luck."
"Oh."
The drivers tone grew more amused, less dubious. "Good luck, my
lord."
"Thank you." Miles closed
the channel. "All right."
The woman
seated herself on a rickety bench and drew her robes around herself
with the air of one preparing for a lengthy wait. Miles followed the
ba out the gate and past another residence, across a roadway, and
into a shallow wooded ravine. The ba produced a hand-light to prevent
stumbles on rocks and roots, politely playing it before Miles's
polished boots, which were going to be a lot less polished if this
went on very far … they climbed up out of the ravine into what was
obviously the back portion of another suburban estate in an even more
neglected condition than Yenaro's.
A dark bulk
looming through the trees was an apparently deserted house. But they
turned right on an overgrown path, the ba pausing to sweep damp
branches out of Miles's way, and then back down toward the stream.
They emerged in a wide clearing where a wooden pavilion stood—some
ghem-lord's former favorite picnic spot for al
fresco
brunches, no doubt. Duckweed choked a pond, crowding out a few sad
water-irises. They crossed the pond on an arched footbridge, which
creaked so alarmingly Miles was momentarily glad he was no bigger. A
faint, familiar pearlescent glow emanated from the pavilion's
vine-veiled openings. Miles touched the Great Key hidden in his
tunic, for reassurance. Right.
This is it.
The
ba servitor pulled aside some greenery, gestured Miles inside, and
went to stand guard by the footbridge. Cautiously, Miles stepped
within the small, one-roomed building.
The haut
Rian Degtiar or a close facsimile sat, or stood, or something, the
usual few centimeters above the floor, a blank pale sphere. She had
to be riding in a float-chair. Her light seemed dimmed, stopped down
to a furtive feeble glow. Wait.
Let her make the first move.
The moment stretched. Miles began to be afraid this conversation was
going to be as disjointed as their first one, but then she spoke, in
the same breathless, transmission-flattened voice he had heard
before. "Lord Vorkosigan. I have contacted you as I said I
would, to make arrangements for the safe return of my . . .
thing."
"The Great Key," said
Miles.
"You know what it is now?"
"I've
been doing a little research, since our first chat."
She
moaned. "What do you want of me? Money? I have none. Military
secrets? I know none."
"Don't go coy
on me, and don't panic. I want very little." Miles unfastened
his tunic, and drew out the Great Key.
"Oh,
you have it here!
Oh, give it to me!" The pearl bobbed forward.
Miles
stepped back. "Not so fast. I've kept it safe, and I'll give it
back. But I feel I should get something in return. I merely want to
know exactly how it came to be delivered, or mis-delivered, into my
hands, and why."
"It's no business of
yours, Barrayaran!"
"Perhaps not. But
every instinct I own is crying out that this is some kind of setup,
of me, or of Barrayar through me, and as a Barrayaran ImpSec officer
that makes it very explicitly my business. I'm willing to tell you
everything I saw and heard, but you must return the favor. To start
with, I want to know what Ba Lura was doing with a piece of the late
Empress's major regalia on a space station."
Her
voice went low and tart. "Stealing it. Now give it back."
"A
key. A key is not of great worth without a lock. I grant it's a
pretty elegant historical artifact, but if Ba Lura was planning on a
privately funded retirement, surely there are more valuable things to
steal from the Celestial Garden. And ones less certain to be missed.
Was Lura planning to blackmail you? Is that why you murdered it?"
A completely absurd charge—the haut-lady and Miles were each
other's alibis—but he was curious to see what it would stir up in
the way of response.
The reaction was
instantaneous. "You vile little—! I did not drive Lura to its
death. If anything, you are responsible!"
God,
I hope not.
"This may be so, and if it is, I
must know.
Lady—there is no Cetagandan security within ten kilometers of us
right now, or you could have them strip this bauble off me and dump
my carcass in the nearest alleyway right now. Why not? Why
did Ba Lura steal the Great Key—for its pleasure? The Ba makes a
hobby of collecting Cetagandan Imperial regalia, does it?"
"You
are horrible!"
"Then to whom was Ba
Lura taking the thing to sell?"
"Not
sell!"
"Ha! Then you know
who!"
"Not exactly . . ." she
hesitated. "Some secrets are not mine to give. They belong to
the Celestial Lady."
"Whom you
serve."
"Yes."
"Even
in death."
"Yes." A note of pride
edged her voice.
"And whom the Ba betrayed.
Even in death."
"No! Not betrayed . .
. We had a disagreement."
"An honest
disagreement?"
"Yes."
"Between
a thief and a murderess?"
"No!"
Quite
so, but the accusation definitely had her going. Some guilt, there.
Yeah,
tell me about guilt.
"Look, I'll make it easy for you. I'll begin. Ivan and I were
coming over from the Barrayaran courier jump-ship in a personnel pod.
We docked into this dump of a freight bay. The Ba Lura, wearing a
station employee uniform and some badly applied false hair, lumbered
into our pod as soon as the lock cycled open, and reached, we
thought, for a weapon. We jumped it, and took away a nerve disrupter
and this." Miles held up the Great Key. "The Ba shook us
off and escaped, and I stuck this in my pocket till I could find out
more. The next time I saw the Ba it was dead in a pool of its own
blood on the floor of the funeral rotunda. I found this unnerving, to
say the least. Now it's your turn. You say Ba Lura stole the key from
your charge. When did you discover the Great Key was missing?"
"I
found it missing from its place . . . that day."
"How
long could it have been gone? When had you last checked it?"
"It
is not being used every day now, because of the period of mourning
for the Celestial Lady. I had last seen it when I arranged her
regalia . . . two days before that."
"So
potentially, it could have been missing for three days before you
discovered its absence. When did the Ba go missing?"
"I'm
. . . not sure. I saw Ba Lura the evening before."
"That
cuts it down a little. So the Ba could have been gone with the key as
early as the previous night. Do the ba servitors pass pretty freely
in and out of the Celestial Garden, or is it hard?"
"Freely.
They run all our errands."
"So Ba Lura
came back . . . when?"
"The night of
your arrival. But the Ba would not see me. It claimed to be sick. I
could have had it dragged into my presence, but … I did not want to
inflict such an indignity."
They
were in it together, right.
"I
went to see the Ba in the morning. The whole sorry story came out
then. The Ba was trying to take the Great Key to … someone, and
entered into the wrong docking bay."
"Then
someone
was supposed to supply a personnel pod? Then someone
was waiting on a ship in orbit?"
"I
didn't say that!"
Keep
pressing her. It's working.
Though it did make him feel faintly guilty, to be badgering the
distraught old lady so, even if possibly for her own good. Don't
let up.
"So the Ba blundered onto our pod, and—what was the rest of
its story? Tell me exactly!"
"Ba Lura
was attacked by Barrayaran soldiers, who stole the Great
Key."
"How many
soldiers?"
"Six."
Miles
s eyes widened in delight. "And then what?"
"Ba
Lura begged for its life, and head and honor, but they laughed and
ejected the Ba, and flew away."
Lies, lies
at last. And yet . . . the Ba was only human. Anyone who had screwed
up so hugely might re-tell the story so as to make themselves look
less at fault. "What exactly did it say we said?"
Her
voice grated with anger. "You insulted the Celestial
Lady."
"Then what?"
"The
Ba came home in shame."
"So . . . why
didn't the Ba call on Cetagandan security to shake us down and get
the Great Key back on the spot?"
There was
a longer silence. Then she said, "The Ba could not do that. But
it confessed to me. And I came to you. To … humble myself. And beg
for the return of my . . . charge and my honor."
'Why
didn't the Ba confess to you the night before?"
"I
don't know!"
"So while you set about
your retrieval task, Ba Lura cut its throat."
"In
great grief and shame," she said lowly.
"Yeah?
Why not at least wait to see if you could coax the key back from me?
So why not cut its throat privately, in its own quarters? Why
advertise its shame to the entire galactic community? Isn't that a
bit unusual?
Was the Ba supposed to attend the bier-gifting
ceremony?"
"Yes."
"And
you were too?"
"Yes …"
"And
you believed the Ba's story?"
"Yes!"
"Lady,
I think you are lost in the woods. Let me tell you what happened in
the personnel pod as I saw it. There were no six soldiers. Just me,
my cousin, and the pod pilot. There was no conversation, no begging
or pleading, no slurs on the Celestial Lady. Ba Lura just yelped, and
ran off. It didn't even fight very hard. In fact, it scarcely fought
us at all. Strange, don't you think, in a hand-to-hand struggle for
something so important that the Ba slit its own throat over its loss
the next day? We were left scratching our heads, holding the damned
thing and wondering what the hell? Now you know that one of us, me or
the Ba, is lying. I know which one."
"Give
the Great Key to me," was all she could say. "It's not
yours."
"But I think I was framed. By
someone who apparently wants to drag Barrayar into a Cetagandan
internal . . . disagreement. Why?
What am I being set up for?
"
Her silence might indicate that these
were the first new thoughts to penetrate her panic in two days. Or …
it might not. In any case, she only whispered, "Not
yours!"
Miles sighed. "I couldn't
agree with you more, milady, and I am glad to return your charge. But
in light of the whole situation, I would like to be able to
testify—under fast-penta, if need be—just who
I gave the Great Key back to. You could be anyone, in that bubble. My
Aunt Alys, for all I know. Or Cetagandan security, or … who knows.
I will return it to you . . . face-to-face." He held out his
hand half-open, the key resting invitingly across his palm.
"Is
that . . . the last of your price?" if
"Yes.
I'll ask no more." ff
It was a small
triumph. He was going to see a haut-woman, and Ivan wasn't. It would
doubtless embarrass the old dragon, to reveal herself to outlander
eyes, but dammit, given the runaround Miles had suffered, she owed
him something. And he was deathly serious about being able to
identify where the Great Key went. The haut Rian Degtiar, Handmaiden
of the Star Creche, was certainly not the only player in this
game.
"Very well," she whispered. The
white bubble faded to transparency, and was gone from between
them.
"Oh," said Miles, in a very
small voice.
She sat in a float-chair, clothed
from slender neck to ankle in flowing robes of shining white, a dozen
shimmering textures lying one atop another. Her hair glinted ebony,
masses of it that poured down across her shoulders, past her lap, to
coil around her feet. When she stood, it would trail on the floor
like a banner. Her enormous eyes were an ice blue of such arctic
purity as to make Lady Gelle's eyes look like mud-puddles. Skin . . .
Miles felt he had never seen skin before, just blotched bags people
wore around themselves to keep from leaking. This perfect ivory
surface . . . his hands ached with the desire to touch it, just once,
and die. Her lips were warm, as if roses pulsed with blood. . .
.
How old was she? Twenty? Forty? This was a
haut-woman. Who could tell? Who could care? Men of the old religion
had worshipped on their knees icons far less glorious, in beaten
silver and hammered gold. Miles was on his knees now, and could not
remember how he'd come to be there.
He knew now
why they called it "falling in love." There was the same
nauseating vertigo of free fall, the same vast exhilaration, the same
sick certainty of broken bones upon impact with a rapidly rising
reality. He inched forward, and laid the Great Key in front of her
perfectly shaped, white-slippered feet, and sank back, and
waited.
I
am Fortune's fool.
She
bent forward, one graceful hand darting down to retrieve her solemn
charge. She laid the Great Key in her lap, and pulled a long necklace
from beneath her layered white garments. The chain held a ring,
decorated with a thick raised bird-pattern, the gold lines of
electronic contacts gleaming like filigree upon its surface. She
inserted the ring into the seal atop the rod. Nothing
happened.
Her breath drew in. She glared down at
Miles. "What have you done to it!"
"Milady,
I, I … nothing, I swear by my word as Vorkosigan! I didn't even
drop it. What's . . . supposed to happen?"
"It
should open."
"Um . . . um . . ."
He would break into a desperate sweat, but he was too damned cold. He
was dizzy with the scent of her, and the celestial music of her
unfiltered voice. "There are only three possibilities, if
there's something wrong with it. Someone broke it—not me, I swear!"
Could that have been the secret of Ba Lura's peculiar intrusion?
Maybe the Ba had broken it, and had been seeking a scapegoat upon
whom to shuffle the blame? "—or someone's re-programmed it,
or, least likely, there's been some kind of substitution pulled. A
duplicate, or, or . . ."
Her eyes widened,
and her lips parted, moving in some subvocalization.
"Not
least likely?" Miles hazarded. "It would surely be the most
difficult, but … it crosses my mind that maybe someone didn't think
you would be getting it back from me. If it's a counterfeit, maybe it
was meant to be on its way to Barrayar in a diplomatic pouch right
now. Or … or something." No, that didn't quite make sense, but
. . .
She sat utterly still, her face tense with
panic, her hands clutching the rod.
"Milady,
talk to me. If it's a duplicate, it's obviously a very good
duplicate. You now have it, to turn over at the ceremony. So what if
it doesn't work? Who's going to check the function of some obsolete
piece of electronics?"
"The Great Key
is not obsolete. We used it every day."
"It's
some kind of data link, right? You have a time-window, here. Nine
days. If you think it's been compromised, wipe it and re-program it
from your backup files. If that thing in your hand is some kind of a
non-working dummy, you've maybe got time to make a real duplicate,
and re-program it."
But don't just sit there with death in your lovely eyes.
"Talk to me!"
"I must do as Ba
Lura did," she whispered. "The Ba was right. This is the
end."
"No, why?! It's just a, a thing,
who cares? Not me!"
She held up the rod,
her arctic-blue eyes fixing on his face at last. Her gaze made him
want to scuttle into the shadows like a crab, to hide his merely
human ugliness, but he held fast before her. "There is no
backup," she said. "This is the sole key."
Miles
felt faint, and it wasn't just from her perfume. "No backup?"
he choked. "Are you people crazy?"
"It
is a matter of … control."
"What
does the damn thing really do, anyway?"
She
hesitated, then said, "It is the data-key to the haut gene bank.
All the frozen genetic samples are stored in a randomized order, for
security. Without the key, no one knows what is where. To re-create
the files, someone would have to physically examine and re-classify
each and every sample. There are hundreds of thousands of samples—one
for every haut who has ever lived. It would take an army of
geneticists working for a generation to re-create the Great
Key."
"This is a real disaster, then,
huh?" he said brightly, blinking. His teeth gritted. "Now I
know
I was framed." He climbed to his feet, and threw back his head,
defying the onslaught of her beauty. "Lady, what is really
going on here? I'll ask you one more time, with feeling. What in
God's green ninety hells was the Ba Lura ever
doing with the Great Key on a space
station?"
"No
outlander may—"
"Somebody
made
it my business! Sucked me right into it. I don't think I could escape
now if I tried. And I think . . . you need an ally. It took you a day
and a half just to arrange this second meeting with me. Nine days
left. You don't have time
to go it alone. You need … a trained security man. And for some
strange reason, you don't seem to want to get one from your own
side."
She rocked, just slightly, in frozen
misery, in a faint rustle of fabrics.
"If
you don't think I'm worthy of being let in on your secrets,"
Miles went on wildly, "then explain to me how you think I could
possibly make things any worse
than they are right now!"
Her blue eyes
searched him, for he knew not what. But he thought if she asked him
to open his veins for her, right here and now, the only thing he'd
say would be How
wide?
"It
was my Celestial Lady's desire," she began fearfully, and
stopped.
Miles clutched at his shredded
self-control. Everything she'd spilled so far was either obviously
deducible, or common knowledge, at least in her milieu. Now she was
getting to the good stuff, and knew it. He could tell by the way
she'd stalled out.
"Milady." He chose
his words with extreme care. "If the Ba did not commit suicide,
it was certainly murdered." And
we both have good reason to prefer the second scenario.
"Ba Lura was your servitor, your colleague . . . dare I guess,
friend? I saw its body in the rotunda. A very dangerous and daring
person arranged that hideous tableau. There was … a deep mischief
and mockery in it."
Was that pain, in those
cool eyes? So hard to tell. . .
"I have old
and very personal reasons to particularly dislike being made the
unwitting target of persons of cruel humor. I don't know if you can
understand this."
"Perhaps …"
she said slowly.
Yes.
Look past the surface. See me, not this joke of a body. . . .
"And I am the one person on Eta Ceta you
know
didn't do it. It's the only certainty we share, so far. I claim a
right
to know who's doing this to us. And the only chance in hell I have to
figure out who, is to know exactly why."
Still
she sat silent.
"I already know enough to
destroy you," Miles added earnestly. "Tell me enough to
save you!"
Her sculpted chin rose in bleak
decision. When she blessed him with her outward attention at last, it
was total and terrifying. "It was a long-standing disagreement."
He strained to hear, to keep his head clear, to concentrate on the
words and not just on the enchanting melody of her voice. "Between
the Celestial Lady and the Emperor. My Lady had long thought that the
haut gene bank was too centralized, in the heart of the Celestial
Garden. She favored the dispersal of copies, for safety. My Lord
favored keeping it all under his personal protection—for safety.
They both sought the good of the haut, each in their own way."
"I
see," Miles murmured, encouraging her with as much delicacy as
he could muster. "All good guys here, right."
"The
Emperor forbade her plan. But as she neared the end of her life . . .
she came to feel that her loyalty to the haut must outweigh her
loyalty to her son. Twenty years ago, she began to have copies made,
in secret."
"A large project,"
Miles said.
"Huge, and slow. But she
brought it to fruition."
"How many
copies?"
"Eight. One for each of the
planetary satraps."
"Exact
copies?"
"Yes. I have reason to know.
I have been the Celestial Lady's supervisor of geneticists for five
years, now."
"Ah. So you are something
of a trained scientist. You know about . . . extreme care. And
scrupulous honesty."
"How else should
I serve my Lady?" she shrugged.
But
you don't know much, I'll bet, about covert ops chicanery. Hm.
"If there are eight exact copies, there must be eight exact
Great Keys, right?"
"No. Not yet. My
Lady was saving the duplication of the key to the last moment. A
matter of—"
"Control," Miles
finished smoothly. "How did I guess?"
A
faint flash of resentment at his humor sparked in her eyes, and Miles
bit his tongue. It was no laughing matter to haut Rian
Degtiar.
"The Celestial Lady knew her time
was drawing near. She made me and the Ba Lura the executors of her
will in this matter. We were to deliver the copies of the gene bank
to each of the eight satrap governors upon the occasion of her
funeral, which they would be certain to all attend together. But . .
. she died more suddenly than she had expected. She had not yet made
arrangements for the duplication of the Great Key. It was a problem
of considerable technical and cipher skill, as all of the Empire's
resources went into its original creation. Ba Lura and I had all her
instructions for the banks, but nothing for how the key was to be
duplicated and delivered, or even when she had planned this to
happen. The Ba and I were not sure what to do."
"Ah,"
Miles said faintly. He dared not offer any comment at all, for fear
of impeding the free flow, at last, of information. He hung on her
words, barely breathing.
"Ba Lura thought …
if we took the Great Key to one of the satrap governors, he might use
his resources to duplicate it for us. I thought this was a very
dangerous idea. Because of the temptation to take it exclusively for
himself."
"Ah . . . excuse me. Let me
see if I follow this. I know you consider the haut gene bank a most
private matter, but what are the political
side-effects of setting up new haut reproductive centers on each of
Cetaganda's eight satrap planets?"
"The
Celestial Lady thought the empire had ceased to grow at the time of
the defeat of the Barrayar expedition. That we had become static,
stagnant, enervated. She thought … if the empire could only undergo
mitosis, like a cell, the haut might start to grow again, become
re-energized. With the splitting of the gene bank, there would be
eight new centers of authority for expansion."
"Eight
new potential Imperial capitals?" Miles whispered.
"Yes,
I suppose."
Eight new centers . . . civil
war was only the beginning of the possibilities. Eight new Cetagandan
Empires, each expanding like killer coral at their neighbors' expense
… a nightmare of cosmic proportions. "I think I can see,"
said Miles carefully, "why perhaps the Emperor was less than
enthused by his mother's admittedly sound biological reasoning.
Something to be said on both sides, don't you think?"
"I
serve the Celestial Lady," said the haut Rian Degtiar simply,
"and the haut genome. The Empire's short-term political
adjustments are not my business."
"So
all this, ah, genetic shuffling . . . would the Cetagandan Emperor,
by chance, regard this as treason on your part?"
"How?"
said the haut Rian Degtiar. "It was my duty to obey the
Celestial Lady."
"Oh."
"The
eight satrap governors have all committed treason in it, though,"
she added matter-of-factly.
"Have
committed?"
"They all took delivery of
their gene banks last week at the welcoming banquet. Ba Lura and I
succeeded in that part of the Celestial Lady's plan, at
least."
"Treasure chests for which
none of them have keys."
"I … don't
know. Each of them, you see . . . the Celestial Lady felt it would be
better if each of the satrap governors thought that he alone was the
recipient of the new copy of the haut gene bank. Each would strive
better to keep it secret, that way."
"Do
you know—I have to ask this." I'm
just not sure I want to hear the answer.
"Do you know to which
of the eight satrap governors Ba Lura was trying to take the Great
Key for duplication, when it ran into us?"
"No,"
she said.
"Ah," Miles exhaled in pure
satisfaction. "Now, now
I know why I was set up. And why the Ba died."
Fine
lines appeared on her ivory brow as she stared at him.
"Don't
you see it too? The Ba didn't hit us Barrayarans on the way out. It
hit us on the way back.
Your
Ba was suborned. Ba Lura did
take the key to one of the satrap governors, and received in return
not a true copy, because there was no time for the extensive decoding
required, but a decoy. Which the Ba then was sent to deliberately
lose to us. Which it did, although not, I suspect, in quite the
manner it had originally planned." Almost
certainly not as planned.
He
found himself pacing, keyed up and hectic. He ought not to limp
before her, it brought attention to his deformities, but he could not
keep still. "And while everybody is off chasing Barrayarans, the
satrap governor quietly goes home with the only real copy of the
Great Key, getting a large jump-start on the haut-competition. After
first arranging the Ba's reward for its double-treason, and
incidentally eliminating the only witness to the truth. Oh. Yes. It
works. Or it would have worked, if only . . . the satrap governor had
remembered that no battle-plan survives first contact with the
enemy." Not
when the enemy is me.
He stared into her eyes, willing her to believe in him, striving not
to melt. "How soon can you analyze this Great Key, and support
or explode these theories?"
"I will
examine it immediately, tonight. But whatever has been done to it, my
examination will not tell me who
did it, Barrayaran." Her voice grew glacial with this thought.
"I doubt you could have created a true duplicate, but a
non-working forgery is certainly within your capabilities. If this
one is false—where is the real one?"
"It
seems that is just what I must discover, milady, to, to clear my
name. To redeem my honor in your eyes." The intrinsic
fascination of an intellectual puzzle had brought him to this
interview. He'd thought curiosity was his strongest driving force,
till suddenly his whole personality had become engaged. It was like
being under—no, like becoming
an avalanche. "If I can discover this, will you …" what?
Look favorably upon his suit? Despise him for
an outlander barbarian all the same? "… let me see you
again?"
"I don't . . . know."
Reminded, her hand drifted to the control on her float-chair for the
concealing force-screen.
No, no,
don't
go. … "We must have some way of communicating," he said
hastily, before she could disappear again behind that faintly humming
barrier.
Her head tilted, considering this. She
drew a small comm link from her robes. It was undecorated,
utilitarian, but like the nerve disruptor he'd taken from Ba Lura
perfectly designed in what Miles was beginning to recognize as the
haut style. She whispered a command into it. In a moment, the
androgynous ba appeared from its guard post beside the pond. Did its
eyes widen just slightly, to see its mistress without her
shell?
"Give me your comm link, and wait
outside," haut Rian Degtiar ordered.
The
little ba nodded, and turned the device over to her without question,
and withdrew silently.
She held the comm link
out to Miles. "I use this to communicate with my senior
servitors, when they run errands outside the Celestial Garden for me.
Here."
He wanted to touch her, but scarcely
dared. He instead extended his cupped hands toward her like a shy man
offering flowers to a goddess. She dropped the comm link into them
gingerly, as into the hands of a leper. Or an enemy.
"Is
it secured?" he dared to ask.
"Temporarily."
In
other words, it was the lady's private line only as long as no one in
higher-level Cetagandan security troubled to break in. Right. He
sighed. "It won't work. You can't send signals into my embassy
without causing my superiors to ask a whole lot of questions I'd
rather not answer just now. And I can't give you my comm link either.
I'm supposed to turn it in, and I don't think I can get away with
telling them I lost it." Reluctantly, he handed the link back to
her. "But we have to meet again somehow." Yes,
oh yes.
"If I'm going to be risking my reputation and maybe my life on
the validity of my reasoning, I'd like to prop it up with a few
facts." One fact was almost certain. Someone with enough wit and
nerve to murder one of the most senior Imperial servitors under the
nose of Cetaganda's own emperor would hardly balk at threatening a
decidedly un-senior female Degtiar. The thought was obscene, hideous.
A Barrayaran scion's diplomatic immunity would be an even more
useless shield, no doubt, but that was merely the price of the game.
"I think you could be in grave danger. It might be better to
play along for a bit—don't reveal to anyone you have obtained this
key from me. I have a funny feeling I'm not following his script,
y'see." He paced nervously back and forth before her. "If
you can find out anything at all about Ba Lura's real activities in
the few days before it died—don't run afoul of your own security,
though. They have to be following up on the Ba's death."
"I
will . . . contact you when and how I can, Barrayaran." Slowly,
one pale hand caressed the control pad on the arm of the float-chair,
and a dim gray mist coalesced around her like a fairy spell of
seeming.
The ba servitor returned to the
pavilion to escort not Miles but its mistress away. Miles was left to
stumble back through the dark to Yenaro's estate alone.
It
was raining.
Miles was not surprised to find
that the ghem-woman was no longer waiting on the bench by the
red-enameled gate. He let himself in quietly, and paused just outside
the lighted garden doors to brush as many of the water droplets as
possible off his formal blacks, and to wipe his face. He then
sacrificed the handkerchief to the redemption of his boots, and
quietly dropped the sodden object behind a bush. He slipped back
inside.
No one noticed his entry. The party was
continuing, a little louder, with a few new faces replacing some of
the previous ones. The Cetagandans did not use alcohol for
inebriation, but some of the guests had a late-party dissociated air
about them similar to over-indulgers Miles had witnessed at home. If
intelligent conversation had been difficult before, it was clearly
hopeless now. He felt himself no better off than the ghemlings, drunk
on information, dizzy with intrigue. Everyone
to their own secret addictions, I suppose.
He wanted to collect Ivan and escape, as swiftly as possible, before
his head exploded.
"Ah, there you are, Lord
Vorkosigan." Lord Yenaro appeared at Miles's elbow, looking
faintly anxious. "I could not find you."
"I
took a long walk with a lady," Miles said. Ivan was nowhere to
be seen. "Where is my cousin?"
"Lord
Vorpatril is taking a tour of the house with Lady Arvan and Lady
Benello," said Yenaro. He glanced through a wide archway at the
room's opposite side, which framed a spiral staircase in a hall
beyond. "They've been gone … an astonishingly long time."
Yenaro's smile attempted to be knowing, but came out oddly puzzled.
"Since before you … I don't quite . . . ah, well. Would you
care for a drink?"
"Yes, please,"
said Miles distractedly. He took it from Yenaro's hand and gulped
without hesitation. His eyes almost crossed, considering the
possibilities of Ivan plus two beautiful ghem-women. Though to his
haut-dazzled senses, all the ghem-women in the room looked as coarse
and dull as backcountry slatterns just now. The effect would wear off
with time, he hoped. He dreaded the thought of his own next encounter
with a mirror. What had the haut Rian Degtiar seen, looking at him? A
simian black-clad gnome, twitching and babbling? He pulled up a chair
and sat rather abruptly, the spiral staircase bracketed in his
sights. Ivan,
hurry up!
Yenaro
lingered by his side, and began a disjointed conversation about
proportional theories of architecture through history, art and the
senses, and the natural esters trade on Barrayar, but Miles swore the
man was as focused on the staircase as he was. Miles finished his
first drink and most of a second before Ivan appeared in the shadows
at the top of the stairs.
Ivan hesitated in the
dimness, his hand checking the fit of his green uniform, which
appeared fully assembled. Or re-assembled. He was alone. He descended
with one hand clutching the curving rail, which floated without
apparent support in echo of the stair's arc. He jerked a stiff frown
into a stiff smile before entering the main room and the light. His
head swiveled till he spotted Miles, toward whom he made a straight
line.
"Lord Vorpatril," Yenaro greeted
him. "You had a long tour. Did you see everything?"
Ivan
bared his teeth. "Everything. Even the light."
Yenaro's
smile did not slip, but his eyes seemed to fill with questions. "I'm
… so glad." A guest called to him from across the room, and
Yenaro was momentarily distracted.
Ivan bent
down to whisper behind his hand into Miles's ear, "Get us the
hell out of here. I think I've been poisoned."
Miles
looked up, startled. "D'you want to call down the
lightflyer?"
"No. Just back to the
embassy in the groundcar."
"But—"
"No,
dammit," Ivan hissed. "Just quietly. Before that smirking
bastard goes upstairs." He nodded toward
Yenaro,
who was now standing at the foot of the staircase, gazing
upward.
"I take it you don't think it is
acute."
"Oh, it was cute all right,"
Ivan snarled.
"You didn't murder anybody up
there, did you?"
"No. But I thought
they'd never
. . .
Tell you in the car." *
"You'd
better." Miles clambered to his feet. They perforce had to pass
Yenaro, who attached himself to them like a good host, and saw them
to his front door with suitably polite farewells. Ivan's good-byes
might have been etched in acid.
As soon as the
canopy sealed over their heads, Miles commanded, "Give,
Ivan!"
Ivan settled back, still seething.
"I was set up."
This
comes as a surprise to you, coz?
"By Lady Arvan and Lady Benello?"
"They
were
the setup. Yenaro was behind it, I'm sure of it. You're right about
that damned fountain being a trap, Miles, I see it now. Beauty as
bait, all over again."
"What happened
to you?"
"You know all those rumors
about Cetagandan aphrodisiacs?"
"Yes .
. ."
"Well, sometime this evening that
son-of-a-bitch Yenaro slipped me an anti-aphrodisiac."
"Urn
. . . are you sure? I mean, there are natural causes for these
moments, I'm told. . . ."
"It was a
setup.
I didn't seduce them, they seduced me! Wafted me upstairs to this
amazing room—it had to have been all arranged in advance. God, it
was, it was . . ." His voice broke in a sigh, "it was
glorious.
For a little while. And then I realized I couldn't, like,
perform."
"What
did you do?"
"It was too late to get
out gracefully. So I winged it. It was all I could do to keep 'em
from noticing." "What?"
"I
made up a lot of instant barbarian folklore—I told 'em a Vor prides
himself on self-control, that it's not considered polite on Barrayar
for a man to, you know, before his lady has. Three times. It was
considered insulting to her. I stroked, I rubbed, I scratched, I
recited poetry, I nuzzled and nibbled and—cripes, my fingers are
cramped." His speech was a bit slurred, too, Miles noticed. "I
thought they'd never
fall asleep." Ivan paused; a slow smirk displaced the snarl on
his face. "But they were smiling, when they finally did."
The smirk faded into a look of bleak dismay. "What do you want
to bet those two are the biggest female ghem-gossips on Eta
Ceta?"
"No takers here," said
Miles, fascinated. Let
the punishment fit the crime.
Or, in this case, the trap fit the prey. Someone had studied his
weaknesses. And someone just as clearly had studied Ivan's. "We
could have the ImpSec office do a data sweep for the tale, over the
next few days."
"If you breathe a word
of this I'll wring your scrawny neck! If I can find it."
"You've
got to confess to the embassy physician. Blood tests—"
"Oh,
yes. I want a chemical scan the instant I hit the door. What if the
effect's permanent?"
"Ba
Vorpatril?" Miles intoned, eyes alight.
"Dammit,
I didn't laugh at you."
"No.
That's true, you didn't," Miles sighed. "I expect the
physician will find whatever it was metabolizes rapidly. Or Yenaro
wouldn't have drunk the stuff himself."
"You
think?"
"Remember the zlati ale? I'd
bet my ImpSec silver eyes that was the vector."
Ivan
relaxed slightly, obviously relieved at this professional analysis.
After a minute he added, "Yenaro's done you now, and he's done
me. Third time's a charm. What's next, do you suppose? And can we do
him first?"
Miles was silent for a long
time. "That depends," he said at last, "on whether
Yenaro's merely amusing himself, or whether he too is being . . . set
up. And on whether there's any connection between Yenaro's backer and
the death of Ba Lura."
"Connection?
What possible connection?"
"We are the
connection, Ivan. A couple of Barrayaran backcountry boys come to the
big city, and ripe for the plucking. Somebody is using us. And I
think somebody . . . has just made a major mistake in his choice of
tools." Or
fools.
Ivan
stared at his venomous tone. "Have you got rid of that little
toy you're packing yet?" he demanded suspiciously.
"Yes
. . . and no."
"Oh, shit.
I knew
better than to trust—what the hell do you mean by Yes
and no?
Either you have or you haven't, right?"
"The
object has been returned, yes."
"That's
that, then."
"No. Not
quite."
"Miles
. . .
You had better start talking to me."
"Yes,
I think I better had," Miles sighed. They were approaching the
legation district. "After you're done in the infirmary, I have a
few confessions to make. But if—when—you talk to the ImpSec
night-duty officer about Yenaro, don't mention the other.
Yet."
"Oh?" drawled Ivan in a
tone of deep suspicion.
"Things have gotten
. . . complex."
"You think they were
simple before?"
"I mean complex beyond
the scope of mere security concerns, into genuine diplomatic ones. Of
extreme delicacy. Maybe too delicate to submit to the sort of booted
paranoids who sometimes end up running local ImpSec offices. That's a
judgment call . . . that I'll have to make myself. When I'm sure I'm
ready. But this isn't a game anymore, and it's no longer feasible for
me to run without backup." I
need help, God help me.
"We
knew that
yesterday."
"Oh, yes. But it's even
deeper than I first thought."
"Over
our heads?"
Miles hesitated, and smiled
sourly. "I don't know, Ivan. How good are you at treading
water?"
Alone in his suite's bathroom,
Miles slowly peeled off his black House uniform, now in desperate
need of attention from the embassy's laundry. He glanced at himself
sideways in the mirror, then resolutely looked away. He considered
the problem, as he stood in the shower. To the haut, all normal
humans doubtless looked like some lower life-form. From the haut Rian
Degtiar's foreshortened perspective, perhaps there was little to
choose between him and, say, Ivan.
And
ghem-lords did win haut wives, from time to time, for great deeds.
And the Vor and the ghem-lords were very much alike. Even Maz had
said so.
How great a deed? Very
great.
Well . . . he'd always wanted to save the Empire. The Cetagandan just
wasn't the empire he'd pictured, was all. Life was like that, always
throwing you curveballs.
You've
gone mad, you know. To hope, to even think it . . .
If
he defeated the late Dowager Empress's plot, might the Cetagandan
emperor be grateful enough to … give him Rian's hand? If he
advanced the late Dowager Empress's plot, might the haut Rian Degtiar
be grateful enough to … give him her love? To do both
simultaneously would be a tactical feat of supernatural
scope.
Barrayar's interests lay, unusually,
squarely with the interests of the Cetagandan emperor. Obviously, it
was his clear ImpSec duty to foil the girl and save the
villain.
Right.
My head hurts.
Reason
was returning to him, slowly, the astonishing effect of the haut Rian
Degtiar wearing off. Wasn't it? She hadn't exactly tried to suborn
him, after all. Even if Rian was as ugly as the witch Baba Yaga, he'd
still have to be following up on this. To a point. He needed to prove
Barrayar had not filched the Great Key, and the only certain way of
doingthat
was to find its real thief. He wondered if one could get a hangover
from excess passion. If so, his was apparently starting while he was
still drunk, which did not seem quite fair.
Eight
Cetagandan satrap governors had been led into treason by the late
empress. Optimistic, to think that only one
could be a murderer. But only one possessed the real Great
Key.
Lord X? Seven chances of guessing wrong,
against one of guessing right. Not favorable odds.
I'll
. . . figure something out.
Ivan
was taking a long time, downstairs in the infirmary. Miles shucked on
his black fatigues and, barefoot, fired up his comconsole for a quick
review of the eight haut-lord satrap governors.
The
satrap governors were all chosen from a pool of men who were close
Imperial relations, half-brothers and uncles and great-uncles, in
both paternal and maternal lines. Two current office-holders were of
the Degtiar constellation. Each ruled his satrapy for a set term of
only five years, then he was required to shift—sometimes to
permanent retirement back at the capital on Eta Ceta, sometimes to
another satrapy. A couple of the older and more experienced men had
cycled this way through the entire empire. The purpose of the term
limitation, of course, was to prevent the build-up of a personal
local power base to anyone who might harbor secret Imperial
pretensions. So far so sensible.
So … which
among them had been tempted into hubris by the dowager empress, and
Ba Lura? For that matter, how had she contacted them all? If she'd
been working on her plan for twenty years, she'd had lots of time . .
. still, that long ago, how could she have predicted which men would
be satrap governors on the unknown date of her death? The governors
must have all been brought into the plot quite recently.
Miles
stared narrow-eyed at the list of his eight suspects. I
have to cut this down somehow. Several somehows.
If he assumed Lord X had personally murdered the Ba Lura, he could
eliminate the weakest and most fragile elderly men … a premature
assumption. Any of the haut-lords might possess a ghem-guard both
loyal and capable enough to be delegated the task, while the satrap
governor lingered front and center in the bier-gifting ceremonies,
his alibi established before dozens of witnesses.
No
disloyalty to Barrayar intended, but Miles found himself wishing he
were a Cetagandan security man right now—specifically, the one in
charge of whatever investigation was progressing on Ba Lura's
supposed suicide. But there was no way he could insert himself
inconspicuously into that data flow. And he wasn't sure Rian had the
mind-set for it, not to mention the urgent necessity of keeping
Cetagandan security's attention as far from her as possible. Miles
sighed in frustration.
It wasn't his task to
solve the Ba's murder anyway. It was his task to locate the real
Great Key. Well, he knew in general where it was—in orbit, aboard
one of the satrap governors' flagships. How else to finger the right
one?
A chime at his door interrupted his furious
meditations. He hastily shut down the comconsole and called,
"Enter."
Ivan trod within, looking
extremely dyspeptic.
"How did it go?"
Miles asked, waving him to a chair. Ivan dragged a heavy and
comfortable armchair up to the comconsole, and flung himself across
it sideways, scowling. He was still wearing his undress
greens.
"You were right. It was taken by
mouth, and it metabolizes rapidly. Not so rapidly that our medics
couldn't get a sample, though." Ivan rubbed his arm. "They
said it would have been untraceable by morning."
"No
permanent harm done, then."
"Except to
my reputation. Your Colonel Vorreedi just blew in, I thought you
might like to know. At least he
took me seriously. We had a long talk just now about Lord Yenaro.
Vorreedi didn't strike me as a booted paranoid, by the way."
Ivan let the implication, So hadn't
you better go see him?,
hang in the air; Miles left it there.
"Good.
I think. You didn't mention, ah—?"
"Not
yet. But if you don't cough up some explanations, I'm going back to
him for another pass."
"Fair enough."
Miles sighed, and steeled himself. As briefly as the complications
permitted, he summed up his conversation with the haut Rian Degtiar
for Ivan, leaving out only a description of her incredible beauty,
and his own stunned response to it. That
was not Ivan's business. That especially
was not Ivan's business.
"… so it seems
to me," Miles ran down at last, "that the only way we can
certainly prove that Barrayar had nothing to do with it is to find
which satrap governor has the real Great Key." He pointed
orbit-ward.
Ivan's eyes were round, his mouth
screwed up in an expression of total dismay. "We?We?
Miles, we've only been here for two and a half days, how did we
get put in charge of the Cetagandan Empire? Isn't this Cetagandan
security's job?"
"Would you trust them
to clear us of blame?" Miles shrugged, and forged on into Ivan's
hesitation. "We only have nine days left. I've thought of three
strings that could maybe lead us back to the right man. Yenaro is one
of them. A few more words in our protocol officer's ear could put the
machinery of ImpSec here into tracing Yenaro's connections, without
bringing up the matter of the Great Key. Yet. The next string is Ba
Lura's murder, and I haven't figured out how I can pull that one.
Yet. The other string lies in astro-political analysis, and that I
can
do. Look." On the comconsole, Miles called up a schematic
three-dimensional map of the Cetagandan empire, its wormhole routes,
and its immediate neighbors.
"The Ba Lura
could have foisted that decoy key onto any number of outlander
delegations. Instead, it picked Barrayarans, or rather, its
satrap-governor master did. Why?"
"Maybe
we were the only ones there at the right time," Ivan
suggested.
"Mm. I'm trying to reduce
the random factors, please. If Yenaro's backer is the same as our
man, we were picked in advance to be framed. Now." He waved at
the map. "Picture a scenario where the Cetagandan empire breaks
apart and the pieces begin an attempt to expand. Which, if any,
benefit from trouble with Barrayar?"
Ivan's
brows went up, and he leaned forward, staring at the glowing array of
spheres and lines above the vid plate.
"Well
. . . Rho Ceta is positioned to expand toward Komarr, or would be, if
we weren't sitting on two thirds of the wormhole jumps between. Mu
Ceta just got a bloody nose, administered by us, when it attempted to
expand past Vervain into the Hegen Hub. Those are the two most
obvious. These other three," Ivan pointed, "and Eta Ceta
itself are all interior, I don't see any benefit to them."
"Then
there's the other side of the nexus," Miles waved at the
display. "Sigma Ceta, bordering the Vega Station groups. And Xi
Ceta, giving onto Marilac. If they were seeking to break out, it
might be expedient for them to have the empire's military resources
tied up far away against Barrayar."
"Four
out of eight. It's a start," Ivan conceded.
Ivan's
analysis matched his own, then. Well, they'd both had the same
strategic training, it stood to reason. Still Miles was obscurely
comforted. It wasn't all the hallucination of his own over-driven
imagination, if Ivan could see it too.
"It's
a triangulation," said Miles. "If I can get any of the
other lines of investigation to eliminate even part of the list, the
final overlap ought to … well, it would be nice
if it all came down to one."
"And then
what?" Ivan demanded doggedly, his brows drawn down in
suspicion. "What do you have in mind forus
to do then?"
"I'm . . . not sure. But
I do think you'd agree that a quiet conclusion to this mess would be
preferable to a splashy one, eh?"
"Oh,
yeah." Ivan chewed on his lower lip, eyeing the wormhole nexus
map. "So when do
we report?"
"Not . . . yet. But I
think we'd better start documenting it all. Personal logs." So
that anybody who came after them—Miles trusted not posthumously,
but that was the unspoken thought—would at least have a chance of
unraveling the events.
"I've been doing
that
since the first day," Ivan informed him grimly. "It's
locked in my valise."
"Oh. Good."
Miles hesitated. "When you talked to Colonel Vorreedi, did you
plant the idea that Yenaro had a high-placed backer?"
"Not
exactly."
"I'd like you to talk to him
again, then. Try to direct his attention toward the satrap governors,
somehow."
"Why don't you talk to
him?"
"I'm . . . not ready. Not yet,
not tonight. I'm still assimilating it all. And technically, he is my
ImpSec superior here, or would be, if I were on active duty. I'd like
to limit my, um …"
"Outright lies to
him?" Ivan completed sweetly.
Miles
grimaced, but did not deny it. "Look, I have an access
in this matter that no other ImpSec officer could, due to my social
position. I don't want to see the opportunity wasted. But it also
limits me—I can't get at the routine legwork, the down-and-dirty
details I need, I'm too conspicuous. I have to play to my own
strengths, and get others to play to my weaknesses."
Ivan
sighed. "All right. I'll talk to him. Just this once." With
a tired grunt, he heaved himself out of his chair, and wandered
toward the door. He looked back over his shoulder. "The trouble,
coz, with your playing the spider in the center of this web, pulling
all the strings, is that sooner or later all the interested parties
are going to converge back along those strings to you. You do realize
that, don't you? And what are you going to do then,
O Mastermind?" He bowed himself out with all-too-effective
irony.
Miles hunched down in his station chair,
and groaned, and keyed up his list again.
The
next morning, Ambassador Vorob'yev was called away from what was
becoming his customary breakfast with Barrayar's young envoys in his
private dining room. By the time he returned, Miles and Ivan had
finished eating.
The ambassador did not sit down
again, but instead favored Miles with a bemused look. "Lord
Vorkosigan. You have an unusual visitor."
Miles's
heart leapt. Rian,
here? Impossible . . .
His mind did a quick involuntary review of his undress greens, yes,
his insignia were on straight, his fly was fastened—"Who,
sir?"
"Ghem-colonel Dag Benin, of
Cetagandan Imperial Security. He is an officer of middle rank
assigned to internal affairs at the Celestial Garden, and he wants to
speak privately with you."
Miles tried not
to hyperventilate. What's
gone wrong . . . ?Maybe nothing, yet. Calm down.
"Did he say what about?"
"It
seems he was ordered to investigate the suicide of that poor ba-slave
the other day. And your, ah, erratic movements brought you to his
negative attention. I thought you'd come to regret getting out of
line."
"And . . . am I to talk to him,
then?"
"We have decided to extend that
courtesy, yes. We've shown him to one of the small parlors on the
ground floor. It is, of course, monitored. You'll have an embassy
bodyguard present. I don't suspect Benin of harboring any murderous
intentions, it will merely be a reminder of your status."
We
have decided.
So Colonel Vorreedi, whom Miles still had not met, and probably
Vorob'yev too, would be listening to every word. Oh, shit. "Very
good, sir." Miles stood, and followed the ambassador. Ivan
watched him go with the suffused expression of a man anticipating the
imminent arrival of some unpleasant form of cosmic justice.
The
small parlor was exactly that, a comfortably furnished room intended
for private tete-a-tetes between two or three persons, with the
embassy security staff as an invisible fourth. Ghem-Colonel Benin
apparently had no objection to anything he
had to say being recorded. A Barrayaran guard, standing outside the
door, swung in behind Miles and the ambassador as they entered, and
took up his post stolidly and silently. He was tall and husky even
for a Barrayaran, with a remarkably blank face. He wore a senior
sergeant's tabs, and insignia of commando corps, by which Miles
deduced that the low-wattage expression was a put-on.
Ghem-Colonel
Benin, waiting for them, rose politely as they entered. He was of no
more than middle stature, so probably not over-stocked with
haut-genes in his recent ancestry—the haut favored height. He had
likely acquired his present post by merit rather than social rank,
then, not necessarily a plus from Miles's point of view. Benin was
very trim in the dark red Cetagandan dress uniform that was everyday
garb for security staff in the Celestial Garden. He wore, of course,
full formal face paint in the Imperial pattern rather than that of
his clan, marking his primary allegiance; a white base with intricate
black curves and red accents that Miles thought of as the
bleeding-zebra look. But by association, it was a pattern that would
command instant and profound respect and total, abject cooperation on
eight planets. Barrayar, of course, was not one of them.
Miles
tried to judge the face beneath the paint. Neither youthful and
inexperienced nor aged and sly, Benin appeared to be a bit over
forty-standard, young for his rank but not unusually so. The default
expression of the face seemed to be one of attentive seriousness,
though he managed a brief polite smile when Vorob'yev introduced him
to Miles, and a brief relieved smile when Vorob'yev left them alone
together.
"Good morning, Lord Vorkosigan,"
Benin began. Clearly well trained in the social arena, he managed to
keep his glance at Miles s physique limited to one quick covert
summation. "Did your ambassador explain to you why I am
here?"
"Yes, Colonel Benin. I
understand you were assigned to investigate the death of that poor
fellow—if
fellow
is the right term—we saw so shockingly laid out on the floor of the
rotunda the other day." The
best defense is a good offense.
"Did you finally decide it was a suicide?"
Benin's
eyes narrowed. "Obviously." But an odd timbre in his voice
undercut the statement.
"Well, yes, it was
obvious from the exsanguination that the Ba died on the spot, rather
than having its throat cut elsewhere and the body transported. But it
has occurred to me that if the autopsy showed the Ba was stunned
unconscious when it died, it would rather rule out suicide. It's a
subtle test—the shock of death tends to cover the shock of
stunning—but you can find the traces if you're looking. Was such a
test done, do you know?"
"No."
Miles
was not sure if he meant it wasn't done, or—no, Benin had to know.
"Why not? If I were you, it's the first test I'd ask for. Can
you get it done now? Though two days late is not ideal."
"The
autopsy is over. The Ba has been cremated," Benin stated
flatly.
"What, already? Before the case was
closed? Who ordered that? Not you, surely."
"Not—Lord
Vorkosigan, this is not your concern. This is not what I came to talk
with you about," Benin said stiffly, then paused. "Why this
morbid interest in the Celestial Lady's late servant?"
"I
thought it was the most interesting thing I'd seen since I came to
Eta Ceta. It's in my line, you see. I've done civil security cases at
home. Murder investigations—" well, one, anyway,
"successfully, I might add." Yes, what was
this Cetagandan officer's experience in such things? The Celestial
Garden was such a well-ordered place. "Does this sort of thing
happen here often?"
"No." Benin
stared at Miles with intensified interest.
So
the man might be well read, but lacked hands-on experience, at least
since he'd been promoted to this post. He was damned quick at
catching nuances, though. "It seems awfully premature to me, to
cremate the victim before the case is closed. There are always
late-occurring questions."
"I assure
you, Lord Vorkosigan, Ba Lura was not carried unconscious into the
funeral rotunda, dead or alive. Even the ceremonial guards would have
noticed that."
Did the slight spin on his tone hint that perhaps the ceremonial
guards were chosen for beauty rather than brains?
"Well,
actually, I had a theory," Miles burbled on enthusiastically.
"You're just the man to confirm or disprove it for me, too. Has
anyone testified noticing the Ba enter the rotunda?"
"Not
exactly."
"Ah? Yes, and the spot where
it lay dead—I don't know what kind of vid coverage you have of the
building, but that area had
to have been occluded. Or it could not have been, what, fifteen,
twenty minutes before the body was discovered, right?"
Another
thoughtful stare. "You are correct, Lord Vorkosigan. Normally,
the entire rotunda is within visual scan, but because of the height
and width of the catafalque, two—well, there is some
blockage."
"Ah, ha! So how did the Ba
know exactly—no, let me rephrase that. Who all could have known
about the blind spot at the late Empress's feet? Your own security,
and who else? Just how high up did your orders come down from,
Colonel Benin? Are you by chance under pressure from above to deliver
a quick confirmation of suicide and close your case?"
Benin
twitched. "A quick conclusion to this vile interruption of a
most solemn occasion is certainly desirable. I desire it as ardently
as anyone else. Which brings me to my
questions for you,
Lord Vorkosigan. If I may be permitted!"
"Oh.
Certainly." Miles paused, then added, just as Benin opened his
mouth, "Are you doing this on your own time, then? I admire your
dedication."
"No." Benin took a
breath, and composed himself again. "Lord Vorkosigan. Our
records indicate you left the reception hall to speak privately with
a haut-lady."
"Yes. She sent a ba
servant with an invitation. I could hardly refuse. Besides … I was
curious."
"I can believe that,"
muttered Benin. "What was the substance of your conversation
with the haut Rian Degtiar?"
"Why—surely
you monitored it." Surely they had not, or this interview would
have taken place two days ago, before Miles had ever left the
Celestial Garden—and been a lot less politely conducted, too. But
Benin doubtless had a vid of Miles's exit from and entrance to the
reception area, and testimony from the little ba escort as
well.
"Nevertheless," said Benin
neutrally.
"Well—I have to admit, I found
the conversation extremely confusing. She's a geneticist, you
know."
"Yes."
"I
believe her interest in me—excuse me, I find this personally
embarrassing. I believe her interest in me was genetic. I am widely
rumored to be a mutant. But my physical disabilities are entirely
teratogenic, damage done by a poison I encountered pre-natally. Not
genetic. It's very
important
to me that be clearly understood." Miles thought briefly of his
own ImpSec eavesdroppers. "The haut-women, apparently, collect
unusual natural genetic variations for their research. The haut Rian
Degtiar seemed quite disappointed to learn I held nothing of
interest, genetically speaking. Or so I gathered. She talked all
around the subject—I'm not sure but what she perceived her own
interest as being rather, um, questionable. I'm afraid I don't find
haut motivations entirely comprehensible." Miles smiled
cheerfully. There. That was the vaguest convincing-sounding
uncheckable bullshit he could come up with on the spur of the moment,
and left a good deal of turning-room for whatever the Colonel had got
out of Rian, if anything.
"What did
interest me, though, was the haut-lady's force-bubble," Miles
added. "It never touched the ground. She had to be riding in a
float-chair in there, I figured."
"They
often do," said Benin.
"That's why I
asked you about who saw the Ba Lura enter the chamber. Can anyone use
a haut-bubble? Or are they keyed in some way to the wearer? And are
they as anonymous as they look, or do you have some way of telling
them apart?"
"They are keyed to the
wearer. And each has its own unique electronic signature."
"Any
security measure made by man can be unmade by man. If he has access
to the resources."
"I am aware of this
fact, Lord Vorkosigan."
"Hm. You see
the scenario I'm driving at, of course. Suppose the Ba was stunned
elsewhere—a theory that hurried cremation has rendered uncheckable,
alas—carried unconscious inside a haut-bubble to the blind spot,
and had its throat cut, silently and without a struggle. The bubble
glides on. It wouldn't have taken more than fifteen seconds. It
wouldn't have required great physical strength on the part of the
murderer. But I don't know enough about the specs of the bubbles to
judge the technical likelihood. And I don't know if any bubbles went
in and out—how much traffic was
there in the funeral rotunda during the time-window we're talking
about? There can't have been that
much. Did any haut-lady bubbles enter and exit?"
Benin
sat back, pursing his lips, regarding Miles with keen interest. "You
have an alert way of looking at the world, Lord Vorkosigan. Five ba
servants, four guards, and six haut-women crossed the chamber during
the time in question. The ba have duties there, tending to the
botanical arrangements and keeping the chamber perfectly clean. The
haut-women frequently come to meditate and pay respects to the
Celestial Lady. I have interviewed them all. None report noticing the
Ba Lura."
"Then . . . the last one
must be lying."
Benin tented his fingers,
and stared at them. "It is not quite that simple."
Miles
paused. "I despise doing internal investigations, myself,"
he said at last. "I trust you are documenting every breath
you're taking, at this point."
Benin almost
smiled. "That's entirely my problem, isn't it."
Miles
was actually beginning to like the man. "You are, considering
the venue, of rather low rank for an investigation of this
sensitivity, aren't you?"
"That too …
is my problem."
"Sacrificable."
Benin
grimaced. Oh, yes. Nothing Miles had said yet was anything Benin
hadn't thought of too—if he'd dared to speak it aloud. Miles
decided to continue sprinkling the favors.
"You've
won yourself quite a pretty problem, in this murder, I'd say,
ghem-Colonel," Miles remarked. Neither of them were keeping up
the pretense about the suicide anymore. "Still, if the method
was as I guess, you can deduce quite a lot about the murderer. His
rank must be high, his access to internal security great, and—excuse
me—he has a peculiar
sense of humor, for a Cetagandan. The insult to the Empress nearly
borders on disloyalty."
"So says an
examination of the method," said Benin, in a tone of complaint.
"It's motive that troubles me. That harmless old ba has served
in the Celestial Garden for decades. Revenge seems most
unlikely."
"Mm, perhaps. So if Ba Lura
is old news, maybe it's the murderer who's newly arrived. And
consider—decades of standing around sopping up secrets—the ba was
well placed to know
things about persons of extraordinarily high rank. Suppose . . . the
ba had been tempted, say, into a spot of blackmail. I would think
that a close tracing of Ba Lura's movements these last few days might
be revealing. For instance, did the Ba leave the Celestial Garden at
any time?"
"That . . . investigation
is in progress."
"If I were you, I'd
jump on that aspect. The Ba might have communicated with its
murderer." Aboard
his ship, in orbit, yes.
"The timing is peculiar, you see. To my eye, this murder shows
every sign of having been rushed. If the murderer had had months to
plan, he could have done a much better and quieter job. I think he
had to make a lot of decisions in a hurry, maybe in that very hour,
and some of them were, frankly, bad."
"Not
bad enough," sighed Benin. "But you interest me, Lord
Vorkosigan."
Miles trusted that wasn't too
much of a double entendre. "This sort of thing is meat and drink
to me. It's the first chance I've had to talk shop with anyone since
I came to Eta Ceta." He favored Benin with a happy smile. "If
you have any more questions for me, please feel free to stop by
again."
"I don't suppose you would be
willing to answer them under fast-penta?" Benin said, without
much hope.
"Ah . . ." Miles thought
fast, "with Ambassador Vorob'yev's permission, perhaps."
Which would not, of course, be forthcoming. Benin's slight smile
fully comprehended the delicacy of a refusal-without-refusing.
"In
any case, I should be pleased to continue our acquaintance, Lord
Vorkosigan."
"Any time. I'll be here
nine more days."
Benin gave Miles a
penetrating, unreadable look. "Thank you, Lord
Vorkosigan."
Miles had about a million more
questions for his new victim, but that was all he dared cram into the
opening session. He wanted to project an air of professional
interest, not frantic obsession. It was tempting, but dangerous, to
think of Benin as an ally. But he was certainly a window into the
Celestial Garden. Yeah, a window with eyes that looked back at you.
But there had to be some reasonably subtle way to induce Benin to
slap himself on the forehead and cry, Say,
I'd better take a closer look at those satrap governors!
He was definitely looking in the correct direction, up. And over his
shoulder. A most uncomfortable position in which to work.
How
much influence could the satrap governors, all near Imperial
relations, put on the Celestial Garden's security? Not too much—they
were surely regarded as potential threats. But one might have been
building up convenient contacts for a long time now. One might,
indeed, have been perfectly loyal till this new temptation. It was a
dangerous accusation; Benin had to be right the first time. He
wouldn't get a second chance.
Did anyone care
about the murder of a ba slave? How much interest did Benin have in
abstract justice? If a Cetagandan couldn't be one-up in any other
way, holier-than-thou might do. An almost aesthetic drive—the Art
of Detection. How much risk was Benin willing to run, how much did he
have to lose? Did he have a family, or was he some sort of pure
warrior-monk, totally dedicated to his career? To the ghem-Colonel's
credit, by the end of the interview Benin had been keeping his eyes
on Miles's face because he was interested in what Miles was saying,
not because he was not-looking at Miles's body.
Miles
rose along with Benin, and paused. "Ghem-Colonel . . . may I
make a personal suggestion?"
Benin tilted
his head in curious permission.
"You have
good reason to suspect you have a little problem somewhere overhead.
But you don't know where yet. If I were you, I'd go straight to the
top. Make personal contact with your Emperor. It's the only way you
can be sure you've capped the murderer."
Did
Benin turn pale, beneath his face paint? No way to tell. "That
high over—Lord Vorkosigan, I can hardly claim casual acquaintance
with my celestial master."
"This isn't
friendship. It's business, and it's his
business. If you truly mean to be useful to him, it's time you began.
Emperors are only human." Well, Emperor Gregor was. The
Cetagandan emperor was haut-human. Miles hoped that still counted.
"Ba Lura must have been more to him than a piece of the
furniture, it served him for over fifty years. Make no accusations,
merely request that he protect your investigation from being quashed.
Strike first, today, before . . . someone . . . begins to fear your
competence." If
you're going to cover your ass, Benin, by God do it right.
"I
will . . . consider your advice."
"Good
hunting," Miles nodded cheerfully, as if it wasn't his
problem. "Big game is the best. Think of the honor."
Benin
bowed himself out with a small, wry smile, to be escorted from the
building by the embassy guard.
"See you
around," Miles called.
"You may be
sure of it." Benin's parting wave was almost, but not quite, a
salute.
Miles's desire to dissolve into an
exhausted puddle on the corridor floor was delayed by the arrival of
Vorob'yev, doubtless from his listening post below-stairs, and
another man. Ivan hovered behind them with an expression of morose
anxiety.
The other man was middle-aged,
middle-sized, and wearing the loose bodysuit and well-cut robes of a
Cetagandan ghem-lord, in middle colors. They hung comfortably upon
him, but his face was free of colored paint, and the haircut he
sported was that of a Barrayaran officer. His eyes were . . .
interested.
"A very well conducted
interview, Lord Vorkosigan," said Vorob'yev, relieving Miles's
mind. Slightly. An even wager who had interviewed whom, just
now.
"Ghem-Colonel Benin obviously has a
lot on his mind," said Miles. "Ah . . ." He glanced at
Vorob'yev's companion.
"Allow me to
introduce Lord Vorreedi," said the ambassador. "Lord
Vorkosigan, of course. Lord Vorreedi is our particular expert in
understanding the activities of the ghem-comrades, in all their
multitude of arenas."
Which was
diplomatic-talk for Head
Spy.
Miles nodded careful greetings. "Pleased to meet you at last,
sir."
"And you," Vorreedi
returned. "I regret not arriving sooner. The late empress's
obsequies were expected to be rather more sedate than this. I didn't
know of your keen interest in civil security, Lord Vorkosigan. Would
you like us to arrange you a tour of the local police
organizations?"
"I'm afraid time will
not permit. But yes, if I hadn't been able to get into a military
career, I think police work might have been my next choice."
A
uniformed corporal from the embassy's ImpSec office approached, and
motioned away his civilian-clothed superior. They conferred in low
tones, and the corporal handed over a sheaf of colored papers to the
protocol officer, who in turn handed them to the ambassador with a
few words. Vorob'yev, his brows climbing, turned to Ivan.
"Lord
Vorpatril. Some invitations have arrived for you this
morning."
Ivan took the sheets, their
colors and perfumes clashing, and leafed through them in puzzlement.
"Invitations?"
"Lady Benello
invites you to a private dinner, Lady Arvin invites you to a
fire-pattern-viewing party—both tonight—and Lady Senden invites
you to observe a court-dance practice, this
afternoon."
"Who?"
"Lady
Senden," the protocol officer supplied, "is Lady Benello's
married sister, according to last night's background checks." He
gave Ivan an odd look. "Just what did you do to merit this
sudden popularity, Lord Vorpatril?"
Ivan
held the papers gingerly, smiling thinly, by which Miles deduced he
hadn't told the protocol officer quite everything
about last night's adventure. "I'm not sure, sir." Ivan
caught Miles's suffused gaze, and reddened slightly.
Miles
craned his neck. "Do any of these women have interesting
connections at the Celestial Garden, do you suppose? Or friends who
do?"
"Your
name isn't on these, coz," Ivan pointed out ruthlessly, waving
the invitations, all hand-calligraphed in assorted colored inks. A
faintly cheerful look was starting in his eyes, displacing his
earlier glum dread.
"Perhaps some more
background checks would be in order, my lord?" murmured the
protocol officer to the ambassador.
"If you
please, Colonel."
The protocol officer left
with his corporal. Miles, with a grateful parting wave to Vorob'yev,
tagged along after Ivan, who clutched the colored papers firmly and
eyed him with suspicion.
"Mine," Ivan
asserted, as soon as they were out of earshot. "You have
ghem-Colonel Benin, who is more to your taste anyway."
"There
are a lot of ghem-women here in the capital who serve as
ladies-in-waiting to the haut-women in the Celestial Garden, is all,"
Miles said. "I'd . . . like to meet that ghem-lady I went
walking with last night, for instance, but she didn't give me her
name."
"I doubt many of Yenaro's crowd
have celestial connections."
"I think
this one was an exception. Though the people I really
want to meet are the satrap governors. Face-to-face."
"You'd
have a better chance at that at one of the official
functions."
"Oh, yes. I'm planning on
it."
The
Celestial Garden was not quite so intimidating on the second visit,
Miles assured himself. This time they were not lost in a great stream
of galactic envoys, but were only a little party of three. Miles,
Ambassador Vorob'yev, and Mia Maz were admitted through a side gate,
almost privately, and escorted by a single servitor to their
destination.
The trio made a good picture. Miles
and the ambassador wore their ultra-formal House blacks again. Maz
wore black linings and pure white over-robes, combining the two
mourning colors, acknowledging the Cetagandan hue without
over-stepping the boundaries of haut-privilege. No accident that it
also displayed her own dark hair and lively complexion to advantage,
and set off her two companions as well. Her dimple flashed with her
smile of anticipation and pleasure, directed over Miles's head to
Ambassador Vorob'yev. Miles, between them, felt like an unruly lad
being escorted firmly by his two parents. Vorob'yev was taking no
chances of unauthorized violations of etiquette today.
The
offering of the elegiac poetry to the dead empress was not a ceremony
normally attended by galactic delegates, with the exception of a very
few high-ranking Cetagandan allies. Miles did not qualify on either
count, and Vorob'yev had been forced to pull every string he owned to
get them this invitation. Ivan had ducked out, pleading weariness
from the court-dance practice and the fire-viewing parties of
yesterday, and the excuse of four more invitations for this afternoon
and evening. It was a suspiciously smug weariness. Miles had let him
escape, his sadistic urge to make Ivan sit along with him through
what promised to be an interminable afternoon and evening blunted by
the reflection that his cousin could do little to contribute to what
was essentially an information-gathering expedition. And Ivan
might—just might—pick up some useful new contacts among the ghem.
Vorob'yev had substituted the Vervani woman, to her obvious delight,
and Miles's benefit.
To Miles's relief the
ceremony was not carried out in the rotunda, with all its alarming
associations, where the empress's body still lay. Neither did the
haut use anything so crass as an auditorium, with people packed in
efficient rows. Instead the servitor took them to a—dell, Miles
supposed he might call it, a bowl in the garden lined with flowers,
plants, and hundreds of little box-seat arrangements overlooking a
complex array of daises and platforms at the bottom. As befitted
their rank, or lack of it, the servitor placed the Barrayaran party
in the last and highest row, three quarters of the way around from
the best frontal view. This suited Miles—he could watch nearly the
whole audience without being over-looked himself. The low benches
were flawless wood, hand-smoothed to a high polish. Mia Maz, bowed
gallantly to her seat by Vorob'yev, patted her skirts and stared
around, bright-eyed.
Miles stared too, much less
bright-eyed—he'd spent a great deal of time the last day peering
into his comconsole display, swotting up background in hopes of
finding an end to this tangle. The haut were filtering in to their
places, men in flowing snowy robes escorting white bubbles. The dell
was beginning to resemble a great bank of white climbing roses in a
frenzy of bloom. Miles finally saw the purpose of the box seats—it
gave room for the bubbles. Was Rian among them?
"Will
the women speak first, or how do they organize this?" Miles
asked Maz.
"The women won't speak at all,
today," said Maz. "They had their own ceremony yesterday.
They'll start with the men of lowest rank and work up through the
constellations."
Ending with the satrap
governors. All of them. Miles settled himself with the patience of a
panther in a tree. The men he had come to see were filing into the
bottom of the bowl even now. If Miles had owned a tail, it would have
twitched. As it was, he stilled a tapping boot.
The
eight satrap governors, assisted by their highest-ranking
ghem-officers, sank into seats around a raised reserved dais. Miles
squinted, wishing for rangefinder binoculars—not that he could have
carried them past the tight security. With a twinge of sympathy he
wondered what ghem-Colonel Benin was doing right now, and if
Cetagandan security went as frantic behind the scenes as Barrayaran
security did at any ceremony involving Emperor Gregor. He could just
picture them.
But he had what he'd come for—all
eight of his suspects, artistically arranged on display. He studied
his top four with particular care.
The governor
of Mu Ceta was one of the Degtiar constellation, the present
emperor's half-uncle, being half-brother to the late empress. Maz too
watched closely as he settled his aged body creakily into his seat,
and brushed away his attendants with jerky, irritated motions. The
governor of Mu Ceta had been at his present post only two years,
replacing the governor who had been recalled, and subsequently
quietly exiled into retirement after the Vervain invasion debacle.
The man was very old, and very experienced, and had been chosen
explicitly to calm Vervani fears of a re-match. Not, Miles thought,
the treasonous type. Yet by haut Rian's testimony, every man in the
circle had taken at least one step over the line, secretly receiving
the unauthorized gene banks.
The governor of Rho
Ceta, Barrayar's nearest neighbor, worried Miles a great deal more.
The haut Este Rond was middle-aged and vigorous, haut-tall though
unusually heavy. His ghem-officer stood well back from his governor's
sweeping movements. Rond's general effect was bullish. And he was
bullishly tenacious in his efforts, diplomatic and otherwise, to
improve Cetaganda's trade access through the Barrayaran-controlled
Komarr wormhole jumps. The Rond was one of the more junior
haut-constellations, seeking growth. Este Rond was a hot prospect for
sure.
The governor of Xi Ceta, Maniacs neighbor,
wafted in, proud-nosed. The haut Slyke Giaja was what Miles thought
of as a typical haut-lord, tall and lean and faintly effeminate.
Arrogant, as befit a younger half-brother of the emperor. And
dangerous. Young enough to be a possibility, though older than Este
Rond.
The youngest suspect, the haut Ilsum Kety
governor of Sigma Ceta, was a mere stripling of forty-five or so. In
body type he was much like Slyke Giaja, who was in fact a cousin of
his through their mothers' who were half-sisters though of different
constellations. Haut family trees were even more confusing than the
Vors'. It would take a full-time geneticist to keep track of all the
semi-siblings.
Eight white bubbles floated into
the basin, and took up an arc to the left of the circle of satrap
governors. The ghem-officers took up a similar arc to the right.
They, Miles realized, were going to get to stand
through the entire afternoon's ceremony. Being a ghem-general wasn't
all blood and beer. But could any of those bubbles be . . . ?
"Who
are those ladies?" Miles asked Maz, nodding toward the
octet.
"They are the satrap governors'
consorts."
"I … thought the haut did
not marry."
"There's no personal
relationship implied in the title. They are appointed centrally, just
like the governors themselves."
"Not
by the governors? What's their function? Social secretaries?"
"Not
at all. They are chosen by the empress, to be her representatives in
all dealings having to do with the Star Creches business. All the
haut living on a satrap planet send their genetic contracts through
the consorts to the central gene bank here at the Celestial Garden,
where the fertilizations and any genetic alterations take place. The
consorts also oversee the return of the uterine replicators with the
growing fetuses to their parents on the outlying planets. That has to
be the strangest cargo run in the Cetagandan empire—once a year for
each planet."
"Do the consorts travel
back to Eta Ceta once a year, in that case, to personally accompany
their charges?"
"Yes."
"Ah."
Miles settled back, smiling fixedly. Now; he saw how the Empress
Lisbet had set up her scheme, the living channels she had used to
communicate with each satrap governor. If every one of those consorts
wasn't in on this plot to her eyebrows, he'd eat his boots. Sixteen.
I have sixteen suspects, not eight. Oh, God.
And he'd come here to cut down
his list. But it followed logically that Ba Lura's murderer might not
have had to borrow or steal a haut-lady's bubble. She might have
owned one already. "Do the consort-ladies work closely with
their satrap governors?"
Maz shrugged. "I
really don't know. Not necessarily, I suppose. Their areas of
responsibility are highly segregated."
A
majordomo took center stage, and made a silent motion. Every voice in
the dell went still. Every haut-lord dropped to his knees on padded
rests thoughtfully provided in front of the benches. All the white
bubbles bobbled—Miles still wondered how many of the haut-women
cheated and cut corners at these ceremonies. After an anticipatory
hush, the emperor himself arrived, escorted by guards in white and
bloodred uniforms, zebra-faced, of terrible aspect if you took them
seriously. Miles did, not for the face paint, but in certain
knowledge of just how nervous and twitchy in the trigger-finger such
an awesome responsibility could make a man.
It
was the first time in his life Miles had seen the Cetagandan emperor
in the flesh, and he studied the man as avidly as he had studied the
satrap governors. Emperor the haut Fletchir Giaja was tall, lean,
hawk-faced like his demi-cousins, his hair still untouched by gray
despite his seventy-odd years. A survivor—he had succeeded to his
rank at a fantastically young age for a Cetagandan, less than thirty,
and held on through a wobbly youth to an apparently iron-secure
mid-life. He seated himself with great assurance and grace of
movement, serene and confident. Ringed by bowing traitors. Miles's
nostrils flared, and he took a breath, dizzy with the irony. At
another signal from the majordomo, everyone regained their seats,
still in that remarkable silence.
The
presentation of the elegiac poems in honor of the late haut Lisbet
Degtiar began with the heads of the lowest-ranking constellations
present. Each poem had to fit into one of half a dozen correct formal
types, all mercifully short. Miles was extremely impressed with the
elegance, beauty, and apparent deep feeling of about the first ten
offerings. The recitation had to be one of those great formal
ordeals, like taking an oath or getting married, in which the
preparations wildly outmassed the moment of actualization. Great care
was taken with movement, voice, and imperceptible variations of what
to Miles's eye were identical white dress robes. But gradually, Miles
began to be aware of stock phrases, repeated ideas; by the thirtieth
man, his eyes were starting to glaze over. More than ever Miles
wished Ivan by his side, suffering along with him.
Maz
whispered an occasional interpretation or gloss, which helped fend
off creeping drowsiness—Miles had not slept well last night. The
satrap governors were all doing good imitations of men stuffed and
mounted, except for the ancient governor of Mu Ceta, who slumped in
open boredom, and watched through sardonic slitted eyes as his
juniors, i.e., everyone else there, performed with various degrees of
flop-sweat. The older and more experienced men, as they came on, at
least had better deliveries, if not necessarily better
poems.
Miles meditated on the character of Lord
X, trying to match it with one of the eight faces ranged before him.
The murderer/traitor was something of a tactical genius. He had been
presented with an unanticipated opportunity to gain power, had
committed rapidly to an all-out effort, evolved a plan, and struck.
How fast? The first satrap governor had arrived in person only ten
days before Miles and Ivan had, the last only four days before.
Yenaro, the embassy's ImpSec office had finally reported, had put his
sculpture together in just two days from designs delivered from an
unknown source, working his minions around the clock. Ba Lura could
only have been suborned since its mistress's death, not quite three
weeks ago.
The aged haut thought nothing of
taking on plans that took decades to mature, with can't-lose
security.
Witness the old empress herself. They
experienced time differently than Miles did, he was fairly sure. This
whole chain of events smelled . . . young. Or young at
heart.
Miles's opponent must be in an
interesting frame of mind just now. He was a man of action and
decision. But now he had to lie quiet and do nothing to draw
attention to himself, even as it began to look more and more like Ba
Lura's death was not going to pass as planned as a suicide. He had to
sit tight on his bank and the Great Key till the funeral was over,
and glide softly back to his planetary base—because he couldn't
start the revolt from here; he'd prepared nothing in advance before
he'd left home.
So would he send the Great Key
on, or keep it with him? If he'd sent it back to his satrapy already,
Miles was in deep trouble. Well, deeper trouble. Would the governor
take the risk of losing the powerful tokens in transit? Surely
not.
The droning amateur poets were getting to
Miles. He found his subconscious mind not working along with the rest
of it as it should, but going off on its own tangent. A poem of his
own in honor of the late empress formed, unbidden, in his brain.
A
Degtiar empress named Lisbet
Trapped a satrap
lord neatly in his net.
Enticed into
treason
For all the wrong reasons,
He'll
soon have a crash with his kismet.
He choked
down a genuinely horrible impulse to bounce down to the center of the
dell and declaim his poetic offering to the assembled haut multitude,
just to see what would happen.
Mia Maz glanced
aside in concern at his muffled snort. "Are you all
right?"
"Yes. Sorry," he
whispered. "I'm just having an attack of limericks."
Her
eyes widened, and she bit her lip; only her deepening dimple betrayed
her. "Shhh"
she said, with feeling.
The ceremony went on
uninterrupted. Alas, there was all too much time to evolve more
verse, of equal artistic merit. He gazed out at the banks of white
bubbles.
A beautiful lady named
Rian
Hypnotized a Vor scion.
The
little defective
Thinks he's a detective,
but
instead will be fed to the lion. . . .
How did
the haut live through these things? Had they bioengineered their
bladders to some inhuman capacity, along with all the other rumored
changes?
Fortunately, before Miles could think
of two rhymes for Vorob'yev,
the first satrap governor arose to take his place on the speaker's
dais. Miles came abruptly awake.
The satrap
governors' poems were all excellent, all in the most difficult
forms—and, Maz informed Miles in a whisper, mostly ghost-written by
the best haut-women poets in the Celestial Garden. Rank hath its
privileges. But try as he might, Miles could not read any useful
sinister double meanings into them—his suspect was not using this
moment to publicly confess his crimes, put the wind up his enemies,
or any of the other really interesting possibilities. Miles was
almost surprised. The placement of Ba Lura's body suggested Lord X
had a weakness for the baroque in his plotting, when the simple would
have done better. Making an Art of it?
The
emperor sat through it with unruffled solemn calm. The satrap
governors all received polite nods of thanks from the chief mourner
for their elegant praises. Miles wondered if Benin had taken his
advice, and spoken with his master yet. He hoped so.
And
then, abruptly, the literary ordeal was over. Miles suppressed an
impulse to applaud; that was apparently Not Done. The majordomo came
out and made another cryptic gesture, at which everyone went to their
knees again; the emperor and his guards decamped, followed by the
consort bubbles, the satrap governors, and their ghem-officers. Then
everyone else was freed—to find a bathroom, Miles trusted.
The
haut race might have divested itself of the traditional meanings and
functions of sexuality, but they were still human enough to make the
sharing of food part of life's basic ceremonies. In their own way.
Trays of meat were sculpted into flowers. Vegetables masqueraded as
crustaceans, and fruit as tiny animals. Miles stared thoughtfully at
the plate of simple boiled rice on the buffet table. Every grain had
been individually hand-arranged in an elaborate spiral pattern. He
almost tripped over his own boots, boggling at it. He controlled his
bemusement and tried to refocus on the business at hand.
The
informal—by Celestial Garden standards—refreshments were served
in a long pavilion open as usual to the garden, presently lit in a
warm afternoon glow that invited relaxation. The haut-ladies in their
bubbles had evidently gone elsewhere—someplace where they could
drop their bubbles to eat, presumably. This was the most exclusive of
several post-poetry buffet sites scattered around the Celestial
Garden. The emperor himself was somewhere at the other end of the
graceful building. Miles wasn't quite sure how Vorob'yev had got them
in, but the man deserved a commendation for extraordinary service.
Maz, eyes alight, hand on Vorob'yev's arm, was clearly in some sort
of sociologist's heaven.
"Here we go,"
murmured Vorob'yev, and Miles went heads-up. The haut Este Rond's
party was entering the crowded pavilion. The other haut, not knowing
what to do about these out-of-place outlanders, had been trying to
pretend the Barrayarans were invisible ever since they'd arrived.
Este Rond did not have that option. The beefy, white-robed satrap
governor, his painted and uniformed ghem-general by his side, paused
to greet his Barrayaran neighbors.
A white-robed
woman, unusual in this heavily male gathering, trailed the Rond's
ghem-general. Her silver-blond hair was gathered in a looping queue
down her back to her ankles, and she stood with downcast eyes, not
speaking. She was much older than Rian, but certainly a
haut-woman—God
they aged well. She must be the Rond's ghem-general's haut-wife—any
officer destined to such high planetary rank would have been expected
to win one long ago.
Maz was giving Miles some
inexplicable but urgent signal—a tiny head shake, and a No,
no!
formed silently on her lips. What was she trying to say? The
haut-wife, apparently, did not speak unless spoken to—Miles had
never seen anyone's body-language express such extraordinary reserve
and containment, not even the haut Rian's.
Governor
Rond and Vorob'yev exchanged elaborate courtesies, by which Miles
gathered that the Rond had been their ticket in. Vorob'yev culminated
his diplomatic coup by introducing Miles. "The lieutenant takes
a very gratifying interest in the finer points of Cetagandan
culture," Vorob'yev recommended him to the governor's
attention.
The haut Rond nodded cordially; when
Vorob'yev recommended someone it seemed even Cetagandan haut-lords
attended.
"I was sent to learn, as well as
serve, sir. It is my duty and my pleasure." Miles favored the
haut-governor with a precisely calculated bow. "And I must say,
I have certainly been having learning experiences." Miles tried
by his edged smile to put as much double-spin on his words as
possible.
The Rond smiled back, cool-eyed. But
then, if Este Rond was Lord X, he ought to be cool. They exchanged a
few empty pleasantries about the diplomatic life, then Miles ventured
boldly, "Would you be so kind, haut Rond, as to introduce me to
Governor haut Ilsum Kety?"
A razor-thin
smile twitched the Rond's lips, and he glanced across the room at his
fellow-governor and genetic superior. "Why, certainly, Lord
Vorkosigan." If the Rond was going to be stuck with these
outlanders, Miles gathered, he'd be happy to share the
embarrassment.
The Rond shepherded Miles over.
Vorob'yev was left talking with the Rho Cetan ghem-general, who was
taking a sincere professional interest in his potential enemies.
Vorob'yev shot Miles a warning not-quite-glower, just a slight
creasing of his eyebrows; Miles opened his hand, down at his side, in
an I'll-be-good
promise.
As soon as they were out of the
ambassador's earshot, Miles murmured to the Rond, "We know about
Yenaro, you know."
"I beg your
pardon?" said the Rond, in realistic-sounding bafflement, and
then they arrived at the haut Ilsum Kety's little group.
Close-up,
Kety seemed even taller and leaner than he had at a distance at the
poetry-readings. He had cool chiseled features very much in the haut
mold—hawk-noses had been the style ever since Fletchir Giaja had
ascended the throne. A bit of silver-gray at the temples set off his
dark hair. Since the man was only in his mid-forties, and haut to
boot … by God, yes. The touch of frost was quite perfect, but it
had to have been artificially produced, Miles realized with
well-concealed inner amusement. In a world where the old men had it
all, there was no social benefit to a youthful appearance when one
actually was
young.
Kety too was attended by his
ghem-general, who also kept a haut-wife on standby. Miles tried not
to let his eyes bug out too obviously. She was extraordinary even by
haut-standards. Her hair was a rich dark chocolate color, parted in
the middle and gathered in a thick braid that trailed down her back
to actually coil upon the floor. Her skin was vanilla cream. Her
eyes, widening slightly as she glanced down at Miles approaching by
the Rond's side, were an astonishing light cinnamon color, large and
liquid. A complete confection indeed, wholly edible and scarcely
older than Rian. Miles was quietly grateful for his previous exposure
to Rian, which helped a great deal toward keeping him on his feet and
not crawling on his knees toward her right now.
Ilsum
Kety clearly had no time for or interest in outlanders, but for
whatever reason did not care or dare to offend the Rond; Miles
managed a brief exchange of formal greetings with him. The Rond took
the opportunity to skim Miles off his hands and escape to the
buffet.
The irritated Kety was failing to
perform his social duties. Miles took matters into his own hands, and
directed a half-bow at Kety's ghem-general. The general, at least,
was of the customary Cetagandan age for his position, i.e., antique.
"General Chilian, sir. I have studied you in my history texts.
It is an honor to meet you. And your fine lady. I don't believe I
know her name." He smiled hopefully at her.
Chilian's
brows, going up, drew back down in a slight frown. "Lord
Vorkosigan," he acknowledged shortly. But he didn't take up the
hint. After a tiny glint of distaste in Miles's direction, the
haut-woman stood as if she weren't there, or at least wishing so. The
two men seemed to treat her as if she were invisible.
So
if Kety were Lord X, what must be going through his mind right now,
as he found himself cornered by his intended victim? He'd planted the
false rod on the Barrayaran party, set up the Ba Lura to tell Rian
and convince her to make accusations of theft, killed the Ba, and
waited for the results. Which had been—a resounding silence. Rian
had apparently done nothing, not said a word to anyone. Did Kety
wonder if he'd killed Lura too soon after all, before it had made a
chance to confess its loss? It must be very puzzling for the man. But
nothing, not a twitch, showed on his haut face. Which would, of
course, also be the case if the governor were totally
innocent.
Miles smiled affably at the haut Ilsum
Kety. "I understand we have a mutual hobby, governor," he
purred.
"Oh?" said Kety
unencouragingly.
"An interest in the
Cetagandan Imperial regalia. Such a fascinating set of artifacts, and
so evocative of the history and culture of the haut race, don't you
think? And its future."
Kety stared at him
blankly. "I would not regard that as a pastime. Nor a suitable
interest for an outlander."
"It's a
military officer's duty to know his enemies."
"I
would not know. Those tasks belong to the ghem."
"Such
as your friend Lord Yenaro? A slender reed for you to lean on,
governor, I'm afraid you are about to find."
Kety's
pale brow wrinkled. "Who?"
Miles
sighed inwardly, wishing he could flood the entire pavilion with
fast-penta. The haut were all so damned controlled, they looked like
they were lying even when they weren't. "I wonder, haut Kety, if
you would introduce me to Governor haut Slyke Giaja. As an Imperial
relation of sorts myself, I can't help feeling he is something of my
opposite number."
The haut Kety blinked,
surprised into honesty. "I doubt Slyke
would think so. . . ." By the look on his face he was balancing
the annoyance to Prince Slyke Giaja of inflicting the outlander on
him, versus the relief of being rid of Miles himself. Self-interest
won, up to a point; the haut Kety motioned ghem-General Chilian
nearer, and dispatched him to gain permission for the transfer. With
a polite farewell and thank-you to Kety, Miles trailed after the
ghem-general, hoping to take advantage of any indecision to press his
suit. Imperial princes were not likely to make themselves so readily
accessible as ordinary haut-governors.
"General
… if the haut Slyke cannot speak with me, would you deliver a short
message to him?" Miles tried to keep his voice even, despite his
limping stride; Chilian was not shortening his steps in favor to the
Barrayaran guest. "Just three words."
Chilian
shrugged. "I suppose I can."
"Tell
him . . . Yenaro is ours. Just that."
The
general's brows rose at this cryptic utterance. "Very
well."
The message, of course, would be
repeated later to Cetagandan Imperial Security. Miles didn't mind the
idea of Cetagandan Imperial Security taking a closer look at Lord
Yenaro.
The haut Slyke Giaja was sitting with a
small group of men, both ghem and haut, on the far side of the
pavilion. Unusually, the party also included a white bubble, hovering
near the Prince. Attendant upon it was a ghem-lady Miles recognized,
despite the voluminous formal white robes she wore today—the woman
who'd been sent to fetch him at Yenaro's party. The ghem-woman
glanced across at him approaching, stared briefly, then looked
resolutely away. So who was in the bubble? Rian? Slyke s consort?
Someone else entirely?
Kety's ghem-general bent
to murmur in his ear. Slyke Giaja glanced across at Miles, frowned,
and shook his head. Chilian shrugged, and bent to murmur again.
Miles, watching his lips move, saw his message or something very like
it being delivered—the word Yenaro
was quite distinctive. Slyke s face betrayed no expression at all. He
waved the ghem-general away.
General Chilian
returned to Miles's side. "The haut Slyke is too busy to see you
at this time," he reported blandly.
"Thank
you anyway," Miles intoned, equally blandly. The general nodded
acknowledgment, and went back to his master.
Miles
stared around, wondering how to leverage access to his next prospect.
The Mu Cetan governor was not present—he'd probably departed
directly from the garden amphitheater to take a nap.
Mia
Maz drifted up to Miles, smiling, curiosity in her eyes. "Finding
any good conversations, Lord Vorkosigan?" she asked.
"Not
so far," he admitted ruefully. "Yourself?"
"I
would not presume. I've mostly been listening."
"One
learns more that way."
"Yes. Listening
is the invisible conversational coup. I feel quite smug."
"What
have you learned?"
"The haut topic at
this party is each other's poetry, which they are slicing up along
strict lines of dominance. By some coincidence everyone is agreeing
that the men of higher rank had the better offerings."
"I
couldn't tell the difference, myself."
"Oh,
but we are not haut."
"Why were you
wagging your eyebrows at me a while ago?" Miles asked.
"I
was trying to warn you about a rare point of Cetagandan etiquette.
How you are supposed to behave when you encounter a haut-woman
outside of her bubble."
"It was . . .
the first time I'd ever seen one," he lied strategically. "Did
I do all right?"
"Hm, barely. You see,
the haut-women lose the privilege of the force-shields when they
marry out of the genome into the ghem-rank. They become as
ghem-women—sort of. But the loss of the shield is considered a
great loss of face. So the polite thing to do is to behave as if the
bubble were still there. You must never directly address a haut-wife,
even if she's standing right in front of you. Put all inquiries
through her ghem-husband, and wait for him to transmit the
replies."
"I … didn't say anything
to them."
"Oh, good. And you must
never stare directly at them, either, I'm afraid."
"I
thought the men were being rude, to close the women out of the
conversation."
"Absolutely not. They
were being most polite, Cetagandan style."
"Oh.
But the way they carry themselves, the women might as well still be
in the bubbles. Virtual bubbles."
"That's
the idea, yes."
"Do the same rules go
for … haut-women who still have the privilege of their
bubbles?"
"I have no idea. I cannot
imagine a haut-woman talking face-to-face with an
outlander."
Miles became aware of a ghostly
gray presence at his elbow, and tried not to jump. It was the haut
Rian Degtiar's little ba servant. The ba had passed into the room
without a ripple, ignored by its inhabitants. Miles's heart began to
race, a response he muffled in a polite nod at the servitor.
"Lord
Vorkosigan. My lady wishes to speak with you," said the ba.
Maz's eyes widened.
"Thank you, I would be
pleased," Miles responded.
"Ah . . ."
He glanced around for Ambassador Vorob'yev, who was still being
buttonholed by the Rho Cetan ghem-general. Good. Permissions not
requested could not be denied. "Maz, would you be so kind as to
tell the ambassador I've gone to speak with a lady. Mm … I may be
some time at it. Go on without me. I'll catch up with you back at the
embassy, if necessary."
"I don't
think—" began Maz doubtfully, but Miles was already turning
away. He shot her a smile over his shoulder and a cheerful little
wave as he followed the ba out of the pavilion.
The
little ba, its expression devoid as ever of any comment on its
mistress's affairs, led Miles on a lengthy walk through the garden s
winding paths, around ponds and along tiny, exquisite artificial
streams. Miles almost stopped to gape at an emerald-green lawn
populated by a flock of ruby-red peacocks the size of songbirds,
slowly stalking about. A sunny spot on a ledge a little further on
was occupied by something resembling a spherical cat, or perhaps a
bouquet of cat-fur, soft, white . . . yes, there was an animal in
there; a pair of turquoise-blue eyes blinked once at him from the
fuzz, and closed again in perfect indolence.
Miles
did not attempt conversation or questions. He might not have been
personally monitored by Cetagandan Imperial Security on his last trip
to the Celestial Garden, when he'd been mixed in with a thousand
other galactic delegates; this was certainly not the case today. He
prayed Rian would realize this. Lisbet would have. He could only hope
Rian had inherited Lisbet's safe zones and procedures, along with the
Great Key and her genetic mission.
A white
bubble waited in a cloistered walkway. The ba bowed to it and
departed.
Miles cleared his throat. "Good
evening, milady. You asked to see me? How may I serve you?" He
kept his greeting as general as possible. For all he knew it was
ghem-Colonel Benin and a voice-filter inside that damned blank
sphere.
Rian's voice or a good imitation
murmured, "Lord Vorkosigan. You expressed an interest in genetic
matters. I thought you would care for a short tour."
Good.
They were monitored, and she knew it. He suppressed the tiny part of
himself that had been hoping against all reason for a love-affair
cover, and answered, "Indeed, milady. All medical procedures
interest me. I feel the corrections to my own damage were extremely
incomplete. I'm always looking for new hopes and chances, whenever I
have an opportunity to visit more advanced galactic societies."
He
paced along beside her floating sphere, trying, and failing, to keep
track of the twists and turns of their route, through archways and
other buildings. He managed a suitably admiring comment or two on the
passing scenery, so their silence would not be too obvious. He'd
walked about a kilometer from the Emperor's buffet, he gauged, though
certainly not in a straight line, when they came to a long, low white
building. Despite the usual charming landscaping, it had "biocontrol"
written all over it, in the details of its window seals and
door-locks. The air lock required complicated encodations from Rian,
though once it had identified her, it admitted him under her aegis
without a murmur of protest.
She led him through
surprisingly un-labyrinthine corridors to a spacious office. It was
the most utilitarian, least artistic chamber he'd yet seen in the
Celestial Garden. One entire wall was glass, overlooking a long room
that had a lot more in common with galactic-standard bio-labs than
with the garden outside. Form follows function, and this place was
bristling with function: purpose, not the languid ease of the
pavilions. It was presently deserted, shut down, but for a lone ba
servitor moving among the benches doing some sort of meticulous
janitorial task. But of course. No haut genetic contracts were
approved or, presumably, carried out during the period of mourning
for the Celestial Lady, putative mistress of this domain. A
screaming-bird pattern decorated the surface of a comconsole, and
hovered above several cabinet-locks. He was standing in the center of
the Star Creche.
The bubble settled by one wall,
and vanished without a pop. The haut Rian Degtiar rose from her
float-chair.
Her ebony hair today was bound up
in thick loops, tumbling no farther than her waist. Her pure white
robes were only calf-length, two simple layers comfortably draped
over a white bodysuit that covered her from neck to white-slippered
toe. More woman, less icon, and yet . . . Miles had hoped repeated
exposure to her beauty might build up an immunity in him to the
mind-numbing effect of her. Obviously, he would need more exposure
than this. Lots more. Lots and lots and—stop
it. Don't be more of a idiot than you have to be.
"We
can talk here," she said, gliding to a station chair beside the
comconsole desk and settling herself in it. Her simplest movements
were like dance. She nodded to another station chair across from
hers, and Miles lurched into it with a strained smile, intensely
conscious that his boots barely touched the floor. Rian seemed as
direct as the ghem-generals' wives were closed. Was the Star Creche
itself a sort of psychological force-bubble for her? Or did she
merely consider him so sub-human as to be completely non-threatening,
as incapable as a pet animal of judging her?
"I
… trust you are correct," Miles said, "but won't there be
repercussions from your Security for bringing me in here?"
She
shrugged. "If they wish, they can request the Emperor to
reprimand me."
"They cannot, er,
reprimand you directly?"
"They?
No."
The statement was flat, factual. Miles
hoped she was not being overly optimistic. And yet … by the lift of
her chin, the set of her shoulders, it was clear that the haut Rian
Degtiar, Handmaiden of the Star Creche, firmly believed that within
these walls she was empress. For the next eight days, anyway.
"I
trust this is important. And brief. Or I'm going to emerge to find
ghem-Colonel Benin waiting for an exit-interview."
"It's
important." Her blue eyes seemed to blaze. "I know which
satrap governor is the traitor, now!"
"Excellent!
That was fast. Uh . . . how?"
"The Key
was, as you said, a decoy. False and empty. As you knew."
Suspicion still glinted in her eye, lighting upon him.
"By
reason alone, milady. Do you have evidence?"
"Of
a sort." She leaned forward intently. "Yesterday, Prince
Slyke Giaja had his consort bring him to the Star Creche. For a tour,
he pretended. He insisted I produce the Empress's regalia, for his
inspection. His face said nothing, but he gazed upon the collection
for a long time, before turning away, as if satisfied. He
congratulated me upon my loyal work, and left immediately
thereafter."
Slyke Giaja was certainly on
Miles's short list. Two data points did not quite make a
triangulation, but it was certainly better than nothing. "He
didn't ask to see the Key demonstrated, to prove it worked?"
"Key?
No."
"He knew, then." Maybe,
maybe
… "I bet we gave him food for thought, seeing his decoy
sitting there all demure. I wonder which way he's going to jump next?
Does he realize you
know it's a decoy, or does he think you've been fooled?"
"I
could not tell."
It wasn't just him, Miles
thought with glum relief, even the haut couldn't read other haut. "He
must realize he has only to wait eight days, and the truth will come
out the first time your successor tries to use the Great Key. Or if
not the truth, certainly the accusation against Barrayar. But is that
his plan?"
"I don't know what his plan
is."
"He wants to involve Barrayar
somehow, that I'm sure of. Perhaps even provoke armed conflict
between our states."
"This …"
Rian turned one hand, curled as if around the stolen Great Key,
"would be an outrage, but surely . . . not cause enough for
war."
"Mm. This may only be Part One.
This pis—angers you at us, logically Part Two ought to be something
that angers us at you." An uncomfortable new realization.
Clearly, Lord X—Slyke Giaja?—was not done yet. "Even if I'd
handed the key back in that first hour—which I don't think was in
his script—we still could not have proved we didn't switch it. I
wish we hadn't jumped the Ba Lura. I'd give anything to know what
story it was supposed
to have primed us with."
"I wish you
hadn't either," said Rian rather tartly, settling back in her
station chair and twitching her vest, the first un-purposive move
Miles had ever seen her make.
Miles's lips
twisted in brief embarrassment. "But—this is important—the
consorts, the satrap governors' consorts. You never told me about
them. They're in on this, aren't they? Why not on both sides?"
She
nodded reluctant acknowledgment. "But I do not suspect any of
them of being involved in this treason. That would be …
unthinkable."
"But surely your
Celestial Lady used them—why unthinkable? I mean, here a woman's
got a chance to make herself an instant empress, right along with her
governor. Or maybe even independently of her governor."
The
haut Rian Degtiar shook her head. "No. The consorts do not
belong to them.
They belong to us."
Miles
blinked, slightly dizzy. "Them. The men. Us. The women.
Right?"
"The haut-women are the
keepers. …" She broke off, evidently hopeless of explaining it
to an outlander barbarian. "It cannot be Slyke Giaja's
consort."
"I'm sorry. I don't
understand."
"It's … a matter of the
haut-genome. Slyke Giaja is attempting to take something to which he
has no right. It is not that he attempts to usurp the emperor. That
is his proper part. It's that he attempts to usurp the empress.
A vileness beyond . . . The haut-genome is ours and ours alone. In
this he betrays not the empire, which is nothing, but the haut, which
is everything."
"But the consorts are
in favor, presumably, of decentralizing the haut-genome."
"Of
course. They are all my Celestial Lady's appointees."
"Do
they . . . hm. Do they rotate every five years along with their
governors? Or independently of them?"
"They
are appointed for life, and removed only by the Celestial Lady's
direct order."
The consorts seemed powerful
allies in the heart of the enemy camp, if only Rian could activate
them on her behalf. But she dared not do so, alas, if one of them was
herself a traitor. Miles thought bad words to himself.
"The
empire," he pointed out, "is the support of the haut.
Hardly nothing,
even from a genetic point of view. The, er, prey to predator ratio is
quite high."
She did not smile at his weak
zoological joke. He probably ought not to treat her to a recitation
of his limericks, then, either. He tried again. "Surely the
Empress Lisbet did not mean to instantly fragment the support of the
haut."
"No. Not this fast. Maybe not
even in this generation," admitted Rian.
Ah.
That made more sense, a timing much more in an old haut-lady's style.
"But now her plot has been hijacked to another's purpose.
Someone with short-term, personal goals, someone she did not
foresee." He moistened his lips, and forged on. "I believe
your Celestial Lady's plans have fractured at their weak spot. The
emperor protects the haut-women's control of the haut-genome; in turn
you lend him legitimacy. A mutual support in both your interests. The
satrap governors have no such motive. You can't give power away and
keep it simultaneously."
Her exquisite lips
thinned unhappily, but she did not deny the point.
Miles
took a deep breath. "It's not in Barrayar's interests for Slyke
Giaja to succeed in his power-grab. So far, I can serve you in this,
milady. But it's not in Barrayar's interests for the Cetagandan
Empire to be de-stabilized in the way your empress planned, either. I
think I see how to foil Slyke. But in turn you must give up your
attempt to carry out your mistress's posthumous vision." At her
astonished look he added weakly, "At least for now."
"How
. . . would you foil Prince Slyke?" she asked
slowly.
"Penetrate his ship. Retrieve the
real Great Key. Replace it again with the decoy, if possible. If
we're lucky he might not even realize the substitution till he got
home, and then what could he do about it? You hand over the real
Great Key to your successor, and it all passes away as smoothly as if
it had never happened. Neither party can accuse the other without
incriminating himself." Or
herself.
"I think it is, in all, the best outcome that can be humanly
achieved. Any other scenario leads to disaster, of one sort or
another. If we do nothing, the plot comes out in eight days
regardless, and Barrayar gets framed. If I try and fail … at least
I can't make it any worse." Are
you sure of that?
"How
could you get aboard Slyke's ship?"
"I
have an idea or two. The governors' consorts—and their ghem-ladies,
and their servitors—can they go up and down from orbit
freely?"
One porcelain hand touched her
throat. "More or less, yes."
"So
you get a lady with legitimate access, preferably someone relatively
inconspicuous, to take me up. Not as myself, of course, I'd have to
be disguised somehow. Once I'm aboard, I can take it from there. This
gives us a problem of trust. Who could you trust? I don't suppose you
yourself could . . . ?"
"I haven't
left the capital for . . . several years."
"You
would not qualify as inconspicuous, then. Besides, Slyke Giaja has to
be keeping a close eye on you. What about that ghem-lady you sent to
meet me at Yenaro's party?"
Rian was
looking decidedly unhappy. "Someone in the consort's train would
be a better choice," she said reluctantly.
"The
alternative," he pointed out coolly, "would be to let
Cetagandan
security do the job. Nailing Slyke would automatically clear
Barrayar, and my
problem would be solved."
Well . . . not
quite. Slyke Giaja, if Lord X, was the man who'd somehow jiggered the
orbital station's traffic control, and who'd known what security
blind spot would hold Ba Lura's body. Slyke Giaja had more security
access than he bloody ought to. Was it so certain that Cetagandan
Security would be able to pull off a surprise
raid on the Imperial prince's ship?
"How
would you
disguise yourself?" she asked.
He tried to
convince himself her tone was merely taken aback, not scornful. "As
a ba servitor, probably. Some of them are as short as I am. And you
haut treat those people like they're invisible. Blind and deaf,
too."
"No man would disguise himself
as a ba!"
"So much the better, then."
He grinned ironically at her reaction.
Her
comconsole chimed. She stared at it in brief, astonished annoyance,
then touched its code pad. The face of a fit-looking middle-aged man
formed over the vid-plate. He wore a Cetagandan security officer's
ordinary uniform, but he was no one Miles recognized. Gray eyes
glinted like granite chips from freshly applied zebra-striped face
paint. Miles quailed, and glanced around quickly—he was out of
range of the vid-pickup, at least.
"Haut
Rian," the man nodded deferentially.
"Ghem-Colonel
Millisor," Rian acknowledged. "I ordered my comconsole
blocked to incoming calls. This is not a convenient time to speak."
She kept her eyes from darting to Miles.
"I
used the emergency override. I've been trying to reach you for some
time. My apologies, Haut, for intruding upon your mourning for the
Celestial Lady, but she would have been the first to wish it. We have
succeeded in tracking the lost L-X-10-Terran-C to Jackson's Whole. I
need the authorization of the Star Creche to pursue out of the Empire
with all due force. I had understood that the recovery of the
L-X-10-Terran-C was one of our late Lady's highest priorities. After
the field tests she was considering it as an addition to the
haut-genome itself."
"This was
true, ghem-Colonel, but . . . well, yes, it still should be
recovered. Just a moment." Rian rose, went to one of the
cabinets, and unlocked it with the encode-ring, fished from its chain
around her neck. She rummaged within, and removed a clear block about
fifteen centimeters on a side with the scarlet bird pattern incised
upon the top, returned to her desk, and placed it over the
comconsole's read-pad. She tapped out some codes, and a light flashed
briefly within the block. "Very well, ghem-Colonel. I leave it
entirely to your judgment. You knew our late Lady's mind on this. You
are fully authorized, and may draw your resources as needed from the
Star Creche's special fund."
"I thank
you, Haut. I will report our progress." The ghem-colonel nodded,
and keyed off.
"What was that all about?"
Miles asked brightly, trying not to look too predatory.
Rian
frowned at him. "Some old internal business of the haut-genome.
It has nothing to do with you or Barrayar, or the present crisis, I
assure you. Life does go on, you know."
"So
it does." Miles smiled affably, as if fully satisfied. Mentally,
he filed the conversation away verbatim. It might make a nice tidbit
to distract Simon Illyan with later. He had a bad feeling he was
going to need some major distractions for Illyan, when he got
home.
Rian put the Great Seal of the Star Creche
carefully away again in its locked cabinet, and returned to her
station-chair.
"So can you do it?"
Miles pursued. "Have a lady you trust meet me, with a ba
servitor's uniform and real IDs, the false rod, and some way to check
the real one? And send her up to Prince Slyke's ship on some valid
pretext, with me in her train? And when?"
"I'm
. . . not sure when."
"We have to set
the meeting in advance, this time. If I'm going to go wandering away
from my embassy's supervision for several hours, you can't just call
me away at random. I have to cover my own a—concocted a cover story
for my own security, too. Do you have a copy of my official schedule?
You must, or we could not have connected before. I think we should
rendezvous outside the Celestial Garden, this time, for starters. I'm
going to be going to something called the Bioesthetics Exhibit
tomorrow afternoon. I think I could make up an excuse to get away
from there, maybe with Ivan's help."
"So
soon . . ."
"Not soon enough, in my
view. There's not much time left. And we have to allow for the
possibility that the first attempt may have to be aborted for some
reason. You … do realize, your evidence against Prince Slyke is
suggestive only. Not conclusive."
"But
it's all I have, so far."
"I
understand. But we need all the margin we can get. In case we have to
go back for a second pass."
"Yes . . .
you're right . . ." She took a breath, frowning anxiously. "Very
well, Lord Vorkosigan. I shall help you make this attempt."
"Do
you
have any guesses where on his ship Prince Slyke might be inclined to
store the Great Key? It's a small object, and a big ship, after all.
My first guess would be his personal quarters. Once aboard, is there
any way of detecting the Great Key's location? I don't suppose we're
so fortunate as to have a screamer circuit on it?"
"Not
as such. Its internal power system is an old and very rare design,
though. At short range, it might be possible to pick it up with an
appropriate sensor. I will see that my lady brings you one, and
anything else I can think of."
"Every
little bit helps." There. They were in motion at last. He
suppressed a wild impulse to beg her to throw it all over and flee
away with him to Barrayar. Could he even smuggle her out of the
Cetagandan Empire? Surely it was no more miraculous a task than the
one now before him. Yes, and what would be the effect on his career,
not to mention his father's, of installing a refugee Cetagandan
haut-woman and close relative of Emperor Fletchir Giaja's in
Vorkosigan House? And how much trouble would trail him? He thought
fleetingly of the story of the Trojan War.
Still,
it would have been flattering, if she had indeed been trying to
suborn him, if she'd at least tried a little harder. She had not
lifted a finger to attract him; not an eyebrow arched in false
invitation. She seemed straightforward to the point of naivete, to
his own ImpSec-trained, naturally convoluted mind. When someone fell
deeply and hopelessly in love with somebody, that somebody ought at
least to have the courtesy to notice. . . .
The
key word, boy, is hopelessly. Keep it in mind.
They
shared no love, he and Rian, nor the chance of any. And no goals. But
they did share an enemy. It would have to do.
Rian
rose in dismissal; Miles scrambled up too, saying, "Has
ghem-Colonel Benin caught up with you yet? He was assigned to
investigate the death of Ba Lura, you know."
"So
I understood. He has twice requested an audience with me. I have not
yet granted his request. He seems . . . persistent."
"Thank
God. We've still got a chance to get our stories straight."
Miles quickly summed up his own interview with Benin, with special
emphasis on his fictional first conversation with Rian. "We need
to make up a consistent account of this visit, too. I think he'll be
back. I rather encouraged him, I'm afraid. I didn't guess Prince
Slyke would give himself away to you so quickly."
Rian
nodded, walked to the window-wall, and, pointing to various sites
within the laboratory, gave Miles a brief description of the tour
she'd given Prince Slyke yesterday. "Will that do?"
"Nicely,
thanks. You can tell him I asked a lot of medical questions about . .
. correcting various physical disabilities, and that you couldn't
help me much, that I'd come to the wrong store." He could not
help adding, "There's nothing wrong with my DNA, you know. All
my damage was teratogenic. Outside your purview and all that."
Her
face, always mask-like in its beauty, seemed to grow a shade more
expressionless. Rattled, he added, "You Cetagandans spend an
inordinate amount of time on appearances. Surely you've encountered
false appearances before." Stop
it, shut up now.
She
opened a hand, acknowledging without agreeing or disagreeing, and
returned to her bubble. Worn out, and not trusting his tongue any
further, Miles paced silently beside it back to the main
entrance.
They exited into a cool and luminous
artificial dusk. A few pale stars shone in the apparently boundless
dark blue hemisphere above. Sitting in a row on a bench across the
entry walk from the Star Creche were Mia Maz, Ambassador Vorob'yev,
and ghem-Colonel Benin, apparently chatting amiably. They all looked
up at Miles's appearance, and Vorob'yev's and Benin's smiles, at
least, seemed to grow a shade less amiable. Miles almost turned
around to flee back inside.
Rian evidently felt
some similar emotion, for the voice from her bubble murmured, "Ah,
your people are awaiting you, Lord Vorkosigan. I hope you found this
educational, even if not to your needs. Good evening, then," and
slipped promptly back into the sanctuary of the Star Creche.
Oh,
this whole thing is a learning experience, milady.
Miles fixed a friendly smile on his face, and trod forward across the
walkway to the bench, where his waiting watchers rose to greet him.
Mia Maz had her usual cheerful dimple. Was it his imagination, or had
Vorob'yev's diplomatic affability acquired a strained edge? Benin's
expression was less easy to read, through the swirls of face
paint.
"Hello," said Miles brightly.
"You, uh, waited, sir. Thanks, though I don't think you needed
to." Vorob'yev's brows rose in faint, ironic
disagreement.
"You have been granted an
unusual honor, Lord Vorkosigan," said Benin, nodding toward the
Star Creche.
"Yes, the haut Rian is a very
polite lady. I hope I didn't wear her out with all my
questions."
"And were all your
questions answered?" asked Benin. "You are
privileged."
One could not mistake the
bitter edge to that
comment, though one could, of course, ignore it. "Oh, yes and
no. It's a fascinating place, but I'm afraid its technologies hold no
help for my medical needs. I think I'm going to have to consider more
surgeries after all. I don't like surgeries, they're surprisingly
painful." He blinked mournfully.
Maz looked
highly sympathetic; Vorob'yev looked just a little saturnine. He's
beginning to suspect there's something screwy going on. Damn.
In
fact, both Benin and Vorob'yev looked like only the presence of the
other was inhibiting him from pinning Miles to the nearest wall and
twisting till some truth was emitted.
"If
you are finished, then, I shall escort you to the gate," said
Benin.
"Yes. The embassy car is waiting,
Lord Vorkosigan," Vorob'yev added pointedly.
They
all herded obediently after Benin down the path he indicated.
"The
real privilege today was getting to hear all that poetry, though,"
Miles burbled on. "And how are you doing, ghem-Colonel? Are you
making any progress on your case?"
Benin's
lips twitched. "It does not simplify itself," he
murmured.
I'll
bet not.
Alas, or perhaps fortunately, this was not the time or place for a
couple of security men to let their hair down and talk shop
frankly.
"Oh, my," said Maz, and they
all paused to take in the show a curve in the path presented. A
woodsy vista framed a small artificial ravine. Scattered in the dusk
among the trees and along the streamlet were hundreds of tiny,
luminous tree frogs, variously candy-colored, all singing. They sang
in chords,
pitch-perfect, one chord rising and dying away to be replaced by
another; the creatures' luminosity rose and fell as they sang, so the
progress of each pure note could be followed by the eye as well as
the ear. The ravine's acoustics bounced the not-quite music around in
a highly synergistic fashion. Miles's brain seemed to stop dead for a
full three minutes at the sheer absurd beauty of it all, till some
throat-clearing from Vorob'yev broke the spell, and the party moved
on again.
Outside the dome, the capital city's
night was warm, humid, and apricot-bright, rumbling with the vast
subliminal noise of its life. Night and the city, stretching to the
horizon and beyond.
"I am impressed by the
luxury of the haut, but then I realize the size of the economic base
that supports it," Miles remarked to Benin.
"Indeed,"
said Benin, with a small smirk. "I believe Cetaganda's per
capita tax rate is only half that of Barrayar's. The Emperor
cultivates his subjects' economic well-being as a garden, I have
heard it said."
Benin was not immune to the
Cetagandan taste for one-upmanship. Taxes were always a volatile
civil issue at home. "I'm afraid so," Miles returned. "We
have to match you militarily with less than a quarter of your
resources." He bit his tongue to keep from adding, Fortunately,
that's not hard,
or something equally snide. Benin was right, though, Miles reflected,
as the embassy's aircar rose over the capital. One was awed by the
great silver hemisphere, till one looked at the city extending for a
hundred kilometers in all directions, not to mention the rest of the
planet and the other seven worlds, and did a little math. The
Celestial Garden was a flower, but its roots lay elsewhere, in the
haut and ghem control of other aspects of the economy. The Great Key
seemed suddenly a tiny lever, with which to try to move this world.
Prince
Slyke, I think you are an optimist.
"You've
got to help me out on this one, Ivan," Miles whispered
urgently.
"Oh?" murmured Ivan, in a
tone of extreme neutrality.
"I didn't know
Vorob'yev would be sending him
along." Miles jerked his chin toward Lord Vorreedi, who had
stepped away for some under-voiced conference of his own with their
groundcar's driver, the uniformed embassy guard, and the plainclothes
guard. The uniformed man wore undress greens like Miles and Ivan; the
other two wore the bodysuits and calf-length robes of Cetagandan
street wear, the protocol officer with more comfortable practiced
ease.
Miles continued, "When I set up this
rendezvous with my contact, I thought we'd get Mia Maz as our native
guide again, what with this exhibition being the Ladies' Division or
whatever they call it. You won't just need to cover my departure. You
may need to distract them when I make my break."
The
plainclothes guard nodded and strode off. Outer-perimeter man; Miles
memorized his face and clothing. One more thing to keep track of. The
guard headed toward the entrance to the exhibition . . . hall, it was
not. When today's outing had first been described to Miles, he had
pictured some cavernous quadrangular structure like the one that
housed the District Agricultural Fair at Hassadar. Instead, the Moon
Garden Hall, as it was styled, was another dome, a miniature suburban
imitation of the Celestial Garden at the center of the city. Not too
miniature—it was over three hundred meters in diameter, arcing over
steeply sloping ground. Flocks of well-dressed ghem-types, both men
and women, funneled toward its upper entrance.
"How
the hell am I supposed to do that, coz? Vorreedi's not the
distractible sort."
"Tell him I left
with a lady, for . . . immoral purposes. You leave with immoral
ladies all the time, why not me?" Miles s lips twisted in a
suppressed snarl at Ivan's rolled eyes. "Introduce him to half a
dozen of your
girlfriends, I can't believe we won't run across some here. Tell them
he's the man who taught you all you know about the Barrayaran Art of
Love."
"He's not my type," said
Ivan through his teeth.
"So use your
initiative!"
"I don't have initiative.
I follow orders, thank you. It's much safer."
"Fine.
I order
you to use your initiative."
Ivan breathed
a bad word, by way of editorial. "I'm going to regret this, I
know I am."
"Just hold on a little
while longer. This will all be over in a few hours." One
way or another.
"That's
what you said day before yesterday. You lied."
"It
wasn't my fault. Things were a little more complicated than I'd
anticipated."
"You remember the time
down at Vorkosigan Surleau when we found that old guerrilla weapons
cache, and you talked me and Elena into helping you activate the old
hovertank? And we ran it into the barn? And the barn collapsed? And
my mother put me under house-arrest for two months?"
"We
were ten years old,
Ivan!"
"I remember it like yesterday.
I remember it like day-before-yesterday, too."
"That
old shed was practically falling down anyway. Saved the price of a
demolition crew. For God's sake Ivan, this is serious! You can't
compare it to—" Miles broke off as the protocol officer
dismissed his men and, smiling faintly, turned back to the two young
envoys. He shepherded them into the Moon Garden Hall.
Miles
was surprised to see something so crass as a sign, even if made
entirely of flowers, decorating an entry arch to a labyrinth of
descending walkways spilling down the natural slope. The
149th Annual Bioesthetics Exhibition, Class A. Dedicated to the
Memory of the Celestial Lady.
Which dedication had made it a mandatory stop on all polite funeral
envoys' social calendars. "Do the haut-women compete here?"
Miles asked the protocol officer. "I'd think this would be in
their style."
"So much so that no one
else could win if they did," said Lord Vorreedi. "They have
their own annual bash, very privately, inside the Celestial Garden,
but it's on hold till this period of official mourning is
completed."
"So . . . these ghem-women
exhibitors are, um, imitating their haut half-sisters?"
"Trying
to, anyway. That's the name of the game, here."
The
ghem-ladies' exhibits were arranged not in rows, but each set
individually in its own curve or corner. Miles wondered briefly what
kind of jockeying went on behind the scenes for favorable sites and
spaces, and what kind of status-points one could win for obtaining
the best ones, and if the competition went as far as assassinations.
Character-assassinations, anyway, he judged from a few snatches of
conversation from groups of ghem-ladies strolling about, admiring and
critiquing.
A large tank of fish caught his eye.
They were filmy-finned, their iridescent scales colored in the exact
pattern of one of the ghem-clan's face paintings: bright blue,
yellow, black and white. The fish swirled in a watery gavotte. It was
not too remarkable, genetic-engineering-wise, except that the proud
and hopeful exhibitor hovering nearby appeared to be a girl of about
twelve. She seemed to be a mascot for her clan's ladies' more serious
exhibits. Give
me six years, and watch out!
her small smile seemed to say.
Blue roses and
black orchids were so routine, they were used merely as framing
borders for the real entries. A young girl passed by, in tow of her
ghem-parents, with a unicorn about half a meter high scampering after
her on a golden leash. It wasn't even an exhibit . . . maybe a
commercial product, for all Miles knew. Unlike Hassadar's District
Agricultural Fair, utility did not seem to be a consideration. It
might even count as a defect. The competition was for art; life was
merely the medium, a bio-palette supplying effects.
They
paused to lean on a balcony railing that gave a partial over-view
down the hanging garden's slopes. A green flicker by his feet caught
Miles s eye. An array of glossy leaves and tendrils was spiraling up
Ivan's leg. Red blossoms slowly opened and closed, breathing a deep
and delicate perfume, albeit the total effect was unfortunately
mouth-like. He stared in fascination for a full minute before
murmuring, "Uh, Ivan . . . ? Don't move. But look at your left
boot."
As Miles watched, another tendril
slowly wrapped itself around Ivan's knee and began hoisting. Ivan
glanced down, lurched, and swore. "What the hell is
it? Get it off me!"
"I doubt it's
poisonous," said the protocol officer uncertainly. "But
perhaps you had better hold still."
"I
… think it's a climbing rose. Lively little thing, isn't it?"
Miles grinned, and bent nearer, cautiously checking for thorns before
extending his hands. They might be retractable or something. Colonel
Vorreedi made a hesitant restraining motion.
But
before he mustered the nerve to risk skin and flesh, a plump
ghem-lady carrying a large basket hurried up the path. "Oh,
there you are, you bad thing!" she cried. "Excuse me, sir,"
she addressed Ivan without looking up, kneeling by his boot and
commencing to unwind her quarry. "Too much nitrogen this
morning, I'm afraid . . ."
The rose let go
its last tendril from around Ivan's boot with a regretful recoil, and
was unceremoniously plunged into the basket with some other writhing
escapees, pink and white and yellow. The woman, her eyes darting here
and there at corners and under benches, hurried on.
"I
think it liked you," said Miles to Ivan. "Pheromones?"
"Get
stuffed," murmured Ivan back. "Or I'll dip you
in nitrogen, and stake you out under the . . . good God, what is
this?"
They'd rounded a corner to an open
area displaying a graceful tree, with large fuzzy heart-shaped leaves
filling two or three dozen branches that arced and drooped again,
swaying slightly with the burden of the podded fruit tipping each
branch. The fruit was mewing. Miles and Ivan stepped closer.
"Now
. . . now that
is just plain wrong,"
said Ivan indignantly.
Bundled upside down in
each fruit pod was a small kitten, long and silky white fur fluffing
out around each feline face, framing ears and whiskers and bright
blue eyes. Ivan cradled one in his hand, and lifted it to his face
for closer examination. With one blunt finger he carefully tried to
pet the creature; it batted playfully at his hand with soft white
front paws.
"Kittens like this should be
out chasing string, not glued into damned trees
to score points for some ghem-bitch," Ivan opined hotly. He
glanced around the area; they were temporarily alone and
unobserved.
"Urn . . . I'm not so sure
they're glued in," said Miles. "Wait, I don't think you'd
better—"
Trying to stop Ivan from
rescuing a kitten from a tree was approximately as futile as trying
to stop Ivan from making a pass at a pretty woman. It was some kind
of spinal reflex. By the glint in his eye, he was bent on releasing
all the tiny victims, to chase after the climbing roses
perhaps.
Ivan snapped the pod from the end of
its branch. The kitten emitted a squall, convulsed, and went
still.
"Kitty, kitty . . . ?" Ivan
whispered doubtfully into his cupped hand. An alarming trickle of red
fluid coursed from the broken stem across his wrist.
Miles
pulled back the pod-leaves around the kitten's . . . corpse, he
feared. There was no back half to the beast. Pink naked legs fused
together and disappeared into the stem part of the pod.
"…
I don't think it was ripe, Ivan."
"That's
horrible!
" Ivan's breath rasped in his throat with his outrage, but the
volume was pitched way down. By unspoken mutual consent, they sidled
quickly away from the kitten-tree and around the nearest unpeopled
corner. Ivan glanced around frantically for a place to dispose of the
tiny corpse, and so distance himself from his sin and vandalism.
"Grotesque!"
Miles said thoughtfully,
"Oh, I don't know. It's not any more grotesque than the original
method, when you think about it. I mean, have you ever watched a
mother cat give birth to kittens?"
Ivan
covered his full hand with the other, and glared at his cousin. The
protocol officer studied Ivan's dismay with a mixture of exasperation
and sympathy. Miles thought that if he had known Ivan longer, the
proportion of the first emotion to the second would be much higher,
but Vorreedi only said, "My lord . . . would you like me to
dispose of that for you . . . discreetly?"
"Uh,
yes, please," said Ivan, looking very relieved. "If you
don't mind." He hastily palmed off the inert pod of fluff onto
the protocol officer, who hid it in a pocket handkerchief.
"Stay
here. I'll be back shortly," he said, and went off to get rid of
the evidence.
"Good one, Ivan,"
growled Miles. "Want to keep your hands in your pockets after
this?"
Ivan scrubbed at the sticky
substance on his hand with his own handkerchief, spat into his palm,
and scrubbed again. Out,
out, damned spot . . .
"Don't you start making noises like my mother. It wasn't my
fault. . . . Things were a little more complicated than I'd
anticipated." Ivan stuffed his handkerchief back in his pocket,
and stared around, frowning. "This isn't fun anymore. I want to
go back to the embassy."
"You have to
hang on till I meet my contact, at least."
"And
when will that be?"
"Soon, I
suspect."
They strolled to the end of the
aisle, where another little balcony gave an enticing view of the next
lower section.
"Damn," said
Ivan.
"What do you see?" asked Miles,
tracking his gaze. He stretched to stand on tiptoe, but it wasn't
enough to spot what had caught Ivan's negative attention.
"Our
good buddy Lord Yenaro is here. Two levels down, talking to some
women."
"It . . . could be a
coincidence. This place is lousy with ghem-lords, with the award
ceremony this afternoon. The winning women gain honor for their clan,
naturally they want to cash in. And this is just the sort of artsy
stuff that tickles his fancy, I think."
Ivan
cocked an eyebrow at him. "You want to bet on
that?"
"Nope."
Ivan
sighed. "I don't suppose there's any way we can get him before
he gets us."
"Don't know. Keep your
eyes open, anyway."
"No lie."
They
stared around some more. A ghem-lady of middle-age and dignified
bearing approached them, and gave Miles an acknowledging, if not
exactly friendly, nod. Her palm turned outward briefly, displaying to
him a heavy ring, with a raised screaming-bird pattern filigreed with
complex encodes.
"Now?" Miles said
quietly.
"No." Her cultured voice was
a low-pitched alto. "Meet me by the west entrance in thirty
minutes."
"I may not be able to
achieve precision."
"I'll wait."
She passed on.
"Crap," said Ivan,
after a moment's silence. "You're really going to try to bring
this off. You will be the hell careful, won't you?"
"Oh,
yes."
The protocol officer was taking a
long time to find the nearest waste-disposal unit, Miles thought. But
just as his nerves were stretching to the point of going to look for
the man, he reappeared, walking quickly toward them. His smile of
greeting seemed a little strained.
"My
lords," he nodded. "Something has come up. I'm going to
have to leave you for a while. Stay together, and don't leave the
building, please."
Perfect.
Maybe.
"What sort of something?" asked Miles. "We spotted
Yenaro."
"Our practical joker? Yes. We
know he's here. My analysts judge him a non-lethal annoyance. I must
leave you to defend yourselves from him, temporarily. But my
outer-perimeter man, who is one of my sharpest fellows, has spotted
another individual, known to us. A professional."
The
term professional,
in
this context, meant a professional killer, or something along those
lines. Miles nodded alertly.
"We don't know
why he's here," Vorreedi went on. "I have some heavier
backup on the way. In the meanwhile, we propose to … drop in on him
for a short chat."
"Fast-penta is
illegal here for anyone but the police and the imperials, isn't
it?"
"I doubt this one would go to the
authorities to complain," murmured Vorreedi, with a slightly
sinister smile.
"Have fun."
"Watch
yourselves." The protocol officer nodded, and drifted away,
as-if-casually.
Miles and Ivan walked on,
pausing to examine a couple more rooted floral displays that seemed
less unnervingly uncertain of their kingdom and phylum. Miles counted
minutes in his head. He could break away shortly, and reach his
rendezvous right on time. . . .
"Well,
hello,
sweet thing," a musical voice trilled from behind them. Ivan
turned around a beat faster than Miles. Lady Arvin and Lady Benello
stood with arms linked. They unlinked arms and . . . oozed, Miles
decided was the term, up on either side of Ivan, capturing one side
each.
"Sweet thing?" Miles murmured in
delight. Ivan spared him a brief glower before turning to his
greeters.
"We heard you were here, Lord
Ivan," the blonde, Lady Arvin, continued. Tall Lady Benello
concurred, her cascade of amber curls bouncing with her nod. "What
are you doing afterwards?"
"Ah … no
particular plans," said Ivan, his head swiveling in an attempt
to divide his attention precisely in half.
"Ooh,"
said Lady Arvin. "Perhaps you would care to have dinner with me,
at my penthouse."
Lady Benello interrupted,
"Or, if you're not in an urban mood, I know this place not far
from here, on a lake. Each patron is rowed out to their own little
tiny island, and a picnic is served, alfresco.
It's very
private."
Each woman smiled repellingly at
the other. Ivan looked faintly hunted. "What a tough decision,"
he temporized.
"Come along and see Lady
Benello's sisters pretties, while you think about it then, Lord
Ivan," said Lady Arvin equably. Her eye fell on Miles. "You
too, Lord Vorkosigan. We've been neglecting our most senior guest
quite shamefully, I think. Upon discussion, we think this might be a
regrettable oversight." Her hand tightened on Ivan's arm, and
she peeked around his torso to give her red-haired companion a
bright, meaningful smile. "This could be the solution to Lord
Ivan's dilemma."
"In the dark all cats
are gray?" Miles murmured. "Or at any rate, all
Barrayarans?"
Ivan winced at the mention of
felines. Lady Arvin looked blank, but Miles had a bad feeling the
redhead had caught the joke. In any case, she detached herself from
Ivan—was that a flash of triumph, crossing Lady Arvin's face?—and
turned to Miles.
"Indeed, Lord Vorkosigan.
Do you have any particular plans?"
"I'm
afraid so," said Miles with a regret that was not entirely
feigned. "In fact, I have to be going now."
"Right
now? Oh, do come . . . see my sister's exhibit, at least." Lady
Benello stopped short of linking arms with him, but seemed willing to
walk by his side, even if it left her rival in temporary possession
of Ivan.
Time. It wouldn't hurt to give the
protocol officer a few more minutes to become fully engaged with his
quarry. Miles smiled thinly, and allowed himself to be dragged along
in the wake of the party, Lady Arvin in the lead towing Ivan. That
tall redhead lacked the porcelain delicacy of the haut Rian. On the
other hand, she was not nearly so … impossible.
The difficult we do at once. The impossible takes . . .
Stop
it. These women are users, you know that.
Oh,
God, let me be used. . . .
Focus,
boy, goddammit.
They
walked down the switchback pathway, arriving at the next lower level.
Lady Arvin turned in at a small circular open space screened by trees
in tubs. Their leaves were glossy and jewel-like, but they were
merely a frame for the display in the center. The display was a
little baffling, artistically. It seemed to consist of three lengths
of thick brocade, in subtle hues, spiraling loosely around each other
from the top of a man-high pole to trail on the carpet below. The
dense circular carpet echoed the greens of the bordering trees, in a
complex abstract pattern.
"Heads up,"
murmured Ivan.
"I see him," breathed
Miles.
Lord Yenaro, dark-robed and smiling, was
sitting on one of the little curving benches that also helped frame
the space.
"Where's Veda?" asked Lady
Benello.
"She just stepped out," said
Yenaro, rising and nodding greetings to all.
"Lord
Yenaro has been giving my sister Veda a little help with her entry,"
Lady Benello confided to Miles and Ivan.
"Oh?"
said Miles, staring around and wondering where the trap was this
time. He didn't see it yet. "And, uh . . . just what is her
entry?"
"I know it doesn't look very
impressive," said Lady Benello defensively, "but that's not
the point. The subtlety is in the smell. It's the cloth. It emits a
perfume that changes with the mood of the wearer. I still
wonder if we ought to have had it made up into a dress," this
last comment seemed aimed at Yenaro. "We could have had one of
the servitors stand here and model it all day."
"It
would have seemed too commercial," Yenaro said to her. "This
will score better."
"And, um … it's
alive?" asked Ivan doubtfully.
"The
scent glands in the cloth are as alive as the sweat glands in your
body," Yenaro assured him. "Nevertheless, you are right,
the display is a bit static. Step closer, and we'll hand-demonstrate
the effects."
Miles sniffed, his
paranoia-heightened awareness trying to individually check every
volatile molecule that entered his nostrils. The dome was clouded
with scents of every kind, drifting down from the displays upslope,
not to mention the perfumes of the ghem-ladies and Yenaro in their
robes. But the brocade did seem to be emitting a pleasant mixture of
odors. Ivan didn't respond to the invitation to come closer either,
Miles noticed. In addition to the perfumes, though, there was
something else, a faint, oily acridity. . . .
Yenaro
picked up a pitcher from the bench and walked toward the pole. "More
zlati ale?" Ivan murmured dryly.
Recognition
and memory zinged through Miles, followed by a wave of adrenaline
that nearly stopped his heart before it began racing. "Grab that
pitcher, Ivan! Don't let him spill it!"
Ivan
did. Yenaro gave up his hold with a surprised snort. "Really,
Lord Ivan!"
Miles dropped prone to the
thick carpet, sniffing frantically. Yes.
"What
are you doing?"
asked Lady Benello, half-laughing. "The rug isn't part of
it!"
Oh,
yes it is.
"Ivan," said Miles urgently, scrambling back to his
feet. "Hand me that—carefully—
and tell me what you smell down there."
Miles
took the pitcher much more tenderly than he would have a basket of
raw eggs. Ivan, with a look of some bewilderment, did as he was told.
He sniffed, then ran his hand through the carpet, and touched his
fingers to his lips. And turned white. Miles knew Ivan had reached
the same conclusion he had even before he turned his head and hissed,
"Asterzine!"
Miles tiptoed back well
away from the carpet, lifted the pitcher's lid, and sniffed again. A
faint odor resembling vanilla and oranges, gone slightly wrong,
wafted up, which was exactly right.
And Yenaro
had been going to dump it all, Miles was sure. At his own feet. With
Lady Benello and Lady Arvin looking on. Miles thought of the fate of
Lord X's, Prince Slyke's, last tool, the Ba Lura. No.
Yenaro doesn't know. He may hate Barrayarans, but he's not that
frigging crazy. He was set up right along with us, this time. Third
time's a charm, all right.
When
Ivan rose, his jaw set and his eyes burning, Miles motioned him over
and handed him the pitcher again. Ivan took it gingerly, stepping
back another pace. Miles knelt and tore off a few threads from the
carpet's edge. The threads parted with a gum-like stretching,
confirming his diagnosis. "Lord Vorkosigan!" Lady Arvin
objected, her brows drawn down in amused puzzlement at the
Barrayarans' bizarre barbarian behavior.
Miles
traded the threads to Ivan for the pitcher again, and jerked his head
toward Yenaro. "Bring him.
Excuse us, please, ladies. Um . . . man-talk."
Rather
to his surprise, this appeal actually worked; Lady Arvin only arched
her brows, though Lady Benello pouted slightly. Ivan wrapped one hand
around Yenaro's upper arm, and guided him out of the display area.
Ivan's grip tightened in silent threat when Yenaro tried to shrug him
off. Yenaro looked angry and tight-lipped and just a little
embarrassed.
They found an empty nook a few
spaces down. Ivan stood himself and his captive with their backs to
the path, shielding Miles from view. Miles gently set the pitcher
down, stood, jerked up his chin, and addressed Yenaro in a
low-pitched growl. "I will demonstrate what you almost did in
just a moment. What I want to know now is just what the hell you
thought
you were doing?"
"I don't know what
you're talking about," snapped Yenaro. "Let go, you
lout!"
Ivan kept his hold, frowning
fiercely. "Demonstrate first, coz."
"Right."
The paving-stones were some cool artificial marble, and did not look
flammable. Miles shook the threads off his finger, and motioned Ivan
and Yenaro closer. He waited till there were no passersby in sight
and said, "Yenaro. Take two drops on your fingers of that
harmless liquid you were waving around, and sprinkle them on
this."
Ivan forced Yenaro to kneel
alongside Miles. Yenaro, with a cold glance at his captors, dipped
his hand and sprinkled as ordered. "If you think—"
He
was interrupted by a bright flash and a wave of heat that scorched
Miles's eyebrows. The soft report, fortunately, was mostly muffled by
their shielding bodies. Yenaro froze, arrested.
"And
that was only about a gram of material," Miles went on
relentlessly. "That whole carpet-bomb massed, what, about five
kilos? You should know, I'm certain you carried it in here
personally. When the catalyst hit, it would have gone up taking out
this whole section of the dome, you, me, the ladies … it would have
been quite the high point of the show."
"This
is some sort of trick," grated Yenaro.
"Oh,
it's a trick all right. But this time the joke was on you. You've
never had any military training at all, have you? Or with your nose,
you'd have recognized it too. Sensitized asterzine. Lovely stuff.
Formable, dye-able, you can make it look like practically anything.
And totally inert and harmless, till the catalyst hits it. Then …"
Miles nodded toward the small scorched patch on the white pavement.
"Let me put the question to you another way, Yenaro. What effect
did your good friend the haut-governor tell
you this was going to have?"
"He—"
Yenaro's breath caught. His hand swept down across the dark and oily
residue, then rose to his nose. He inhaled, frowning, then sat back
rather weakly on his heels. His wide eyes lifted to meet Miles's
gaze. "Oh."
"Confession,"
said Ivan meaningfully, "is good for the soul. And
body."
Miles took a breath. "Once
more, from the top, Yenaro. What did you think
you were doing?"
Yenaro swallowed. "It
. . . was supposed to release an ester. That would simulate alcohol
poisoning. You Barrayarans are famous for that perversion. Nothing
that you don't already do to yourselves!"
"Allowing
Ivan and me to publicly stagger through the rest of the afternoon
blind drunk, or a close approximation."
"Something
like that."
"And yourself? Did you
just ingest the antidote, before we showed up?"
"No,
it was harmless! . . . supposed to be. I had made arrangements to go
and rest, till it passed off. I thought it might be … an
interesting sensation."
"Pervert,"
murmured Ivan.
Yenaro glared at him.
Miles
said slowly, "When I was burned, that first night. All that
hand-wringing on your part wasn't totally feigned, was it? You
weren't expecting it."
Yenaro paled. "I
expected … I thought perhaps the Marilacans had done something to
the power adjustment. It was only supposed to shock, not
injure."
"Or so you were
told."
"Yes," Yenaro
whispered.
"The zlati ale was your idea,
though, wasn't it," growled Ivan.
"You
knew?!"
"I'm not an idiot."
Some
passing ghem glanced in puzzlement at the three men kneeling in a
circle on the floor, though fortunately they passed on without
comment. Miles nodded to the nearest bench, in the curve of the nook.
"I have something to tell you, Lord Yenaro, and I think you had
better be sitting down." Ivan guided Yenaro to it and firmly
pushed him down. After a thoughtful moment, Ivan then poured the rest
of the pitcher of liquid into the nearest tree-tub, before settling
between Yenaro and the exit.
"This isn't
just a series of gratifying tricks played on the doltish envoys of a
despised enemy, for you to chuckle at," Miles went on lowly "You
are being used as a pawn in a treason plot against the Cetagandan
Emperor. Used, discarded, and silenced. It's beginning to be a
pattern. Your last fellow-pawn was the Ba Lura. I trust you've heard
what happened to it."
Yenaro's
pale lips parted, but he breathed no word. After a moment he licked
his lips and tried again. "This can't be. It's too crude. It
would have started a blood feud between his clan and those of … all
the innocent bystanders."
"No. It
would have started a blood feud between their clans and yours.
You were set up to take the fall for this one. Not only as an
assassin, but as one so incompetent that he blew himself up with his
own bomb. Following in your grandfather's footsteps, so to speak. And
who would be left alive to deny it? The confusion would multiply
within the capital, as well as between your Empire and Barrayar,
while his satrapy made its break for independence. No, not crude.
Downright elegant."
"The Ba Lura
committed suicide. It was said."
"No.
Murdered. Cetagandan Imperial Security is on to that one, too. They
will unravel it in time. No . . . they will unravel it eventually. I
don't trust that it will be in time."
"It
is impossible for a ba servitor to commit treason."
"Unless
the ba servitor thinks that it is acting loyally, in a deliberately
ambiguous situation. I don't think even the ba are so un-human that
they cannot be mistaken."
"…
No." Yenaro looked up at both the Barrayarans. "You must
believe, I would have no regrets whatsoever if you two fell off a
cliff. But I would not push you myself."
"I
… so I judged," said Miles. "But for my curiosity—what
were you to get out of the deal, besides a week's amusement in
embarrassing a couple of loutish barbarians? Or was this art for
art's sake on your part?"
"He promised
me a post." Yenaro stared at the floor again. "You don't
understand, what it is to be without a post in the capital. You have
no position. You have no status. You are … no one. I was tired of
being no one."
"What
post?"
"Imperial Perfumer."
Yenaro's dark eyes flashed. "I know it doesn't sound very
mighty, but it would have gained me entrance to the Celestial Garden,
maybe the Imperial Presence itself. Where I would have worked among .
. . the best in the empire. The top people. And I would have been
good."
Miles
had no trouble understanding ambition, no matter how arcane its form.
"I imagine so."
Yenaro's lips twitched
in half a grateful smile.
Miles glanced at his
chrono. "God, I'm late. Ivan-can you handle this from
here?"
"I think so."
Miles
rose. "Good day, Lord Yenaro, and a better one than you were
destined to have, I think. I may have used up a year's supply this
afternoon already, but wish me luck. I have a little date with Prince
Slyke now."
"Good luck," Yenaro
said doubtfully.
Miles paused. "It was
Prince Slyke, was it not?"
"No! I was
talking about Governor the haut Ilsum Kety!"
Miles
pursed his lips, and blew out his breath in a slow trickle. I
have just been either screwed or saved. I wonder which?
"Kety set you up … with all this?"
"Yes
. . ."
Could Kety have sent his fellow
governor and cousin Prince Slyke to scout out the Imperial Regalia
for him, a stalking horse? Certainly. Or not. For that matter, could
Slyke have set up Kety to operate Yenaro for him? Not impossible.
Back
to square one. Damn, damn, damn!
While
Miles hovered in new doubt, the protocol officer rounded the corner.
His hurried stride slowed as he spotted Miles and Ivan, and a look of
relief crossed his face. By the time he strolled into the nook he was
projecting the air of a tourist again, but he raked Yenaro with a
knife-keen glance.
"Hello, my lords."
His nod took all three in equally.
"Hello,
sir," said Miles. "Did you have an interesting
conversation?"
"Extraordinarily."
"Ah
… I don't believe you've formally met Lord Yenaro, sir. Lord
Yenaro, this is my embassy's protocol officer, Lord Vorreedi."
The
two men exchanged more studied nods, Yenaro's hand going to his chest
in a sketch of a sitting bow.
"What a
coincidence, Lord Yenaro," Vorreedi went on. "We were just
talking about you."
"Oh?" said
Yenaro warily.
"Ah …" Vorreedi
sucked his lip thoughtfully, then seemed to come to some internal
decision. "Are you aware that you seem to be in the middle of
some sort of vendetta at present, Lord Yenaro?"
"I—no!
What makes you think so?"
"Hm.
Normally, ghem-lords' personal affairs are not my business, only the
official ones. But the, ah, chance of a good deed has come up so
squarely in my path, I shall not avoid it. This time. I just had a
short talk with a, ah, gentleman who informed me he was here today
with the mission of seeing that you, in his precise phrasing, did not
leave the Moon Garden Hall alive. He was a little vague about what
method he proposed to use to accomplish this. What made him peculiar
in this venue was that he was no ghem. A purely commercial artist. He
did not know who had hired him, that information being concealed
behind several layers of screening. Do you have any
guesses?"
Yenaro listened to this recital
shocked, tight-lipped, and thoughtful. Miles wondered if Yenaro was
going through the same set of deductions he was. He rather thought
so. The haut-governor, it appeared, whichever one it was, had sent
Yenaro's ploy some backup. Just to make sure nothing went wrong. Such
as Yenaro surviving his own bombing to accuse his betrayer.
"I
… have a guess, yes."
"Would you
care to share it?"
Yenaro regarded him
doubtfully. "Not at this time."
"Suit
yourself," Vorreedi shrugged. "We left him sitting in a
quiet corner. The fast-penta should wear off in about ten minutes.
You have that much lead-time to do—whatever you decide."
"Thank
you, Lord Vorreedi," said Yenaro quietly. He gathered his dark
robes about himself, and rose. He was pale, but admirably controlled,
not shaking. "I think I will leave you now."
"Probably
a good choice," said Vorreedi.
"Keep
in touch, huh?" said Miles. Yenaro gave him a brief, formal nod.
"Yes. We must talk again." He strode away, glancing left
and right.
Ivan chewed on his fingers. It was
better than his blurting out everything to Vorreedi right here and
now, Miles's greatest fear.
'Was that all true,
sir?" Miles asked Colonel Vorreedi.
"Yes."
Vorreedi rubbed his nose. "Except that I'm not so certain that
it isn't any of our business. Lord Yenaro seems to be taking a great
deal of interest in you. One can't help wondering if there might be
some hidden connection. Sifting through that hired thug's hierarchy
would be tedious and time-consuming for my department. And what would
we find at the end?" Vorreedi's eye fell coolly on Miles. "Just
how angry were
you at getting your legs burned the other night, Lord
Vorkosigan?"
"Not that angry!"
Miles denied hastily. "Give me credit for a sense of proportion,
at least, sir! No. It wasn't me who hired the goon." Though he
had just as surely set up Yenaro for this, by attempting to play all
those cute little head-games with his possible patrons, Kety, Prince
Slyke, and the Rond. You
wanted a reaction, you got one.
"But . . . it's just a feeling, you understand. But I think
pursuing this lead might be time and resources well spent."
,fj
"A feeling, eh?"
"You
surely have trusted your intuition before, in your work,
sir."
"Used, yes. Trusted, never. An
ImpSec officer should be clear about the difference."
"I
understand, sir."
They all rose to continue
the tour of the exhibition, Miles carefully not glancing at the
scorched spot on the pavement as they passed on. As they approached
the west side of the dome, Miles searched the robed crowd for his
contact-lady. There she was, sitting near a fountain, frowning. But
he would never succeed in ditching Vorreedi now; the man was stuck
like glue. He tried anyway. "Excuse me, sir. I have to speak to
a lady."
"I'll come with you,"
said Vorreedi pleasantly.
Right. Miles sighed,
hastily composing his message. The dignified ghem-lady looked up as
he approached with his unwelcome companions. Miles realized he didn't
know the woman's name.
"Pardon me, milady.
I just wanted to let you know that I will not be able to accept your
invitation to visit, uh, this afternoon. Please convey my deepest
regrets to your mistress." Would she, and the haut Rian,
interpret this as intended, as Abort,
abort abort!?
Miles could only pray so. "But if she can arrange instead a
visit to the man's cousin, I think that would be most
educational."
The woman's frown deepened.
But she only said, "I will convey your words, Lord
Vorkosigan."
Miles nodded farewell,
mentally blessing her for avoiding the pitfall of any more
complicated reply. When he looked back, she had already swept to her
feet and was hurrying away.
Miles
had not entered the sacred confines of the Barrayaran embassy's
ImpSec offices before, having stayed discreetly upstairs in the
diplomatic corps' plusher territory. As he'd posited, it was on the
second lowest basement level. A uniformed corporal ushered him past
security scanners and into Colonel Vorreedi's office.
It
was not as austere as Miles expected, being decorated all about with
small examples of Cetagandan art objects, though the powered
sculptures were all turned off this morning. Some might be mementos,
but the rest suggested the so-called protocol officer was a collector
of excellent taste, if limited means.
The man
himself was seated at a desk cleared in utilitarian bareness.
Vorreedi was dressed as usual in the underlayers and robes of a
middle-ranking ghem-lord of painfully sober preferences, subdued
blues and grays. Except for the lack of face paint, in a crowd of
ghem Vorreedi would practically disappear, though behind a Barrayaran
ImpSec comconsole desk the effect of the ensemble was a little
startling.
Miles moistened his lips. "Good
morning, sir. Ambassador Vorob'yev told me you wanted to see
me."
"Yes, thank you, Lord
Vorkosigan." Vorreedi's nod dismissed the corporal, who withdrew
silently. The doors slid shut behind him with a heavy sealing sound.
"Do sit down."
Miles slipped into the
station chair across the desk from Vorreedi, and smiled in what he
hoped seemed innocent good cheer. Vorreedi looked across at Miles
with keen, undivided attention. Not good. Vorreedi was second in
authority here only to Ambassador Vorob'yev, and like Vorob'yev, had
been chosen as a top man for one of the most critical posts in the
Barrayaran diplomatic corps. One might count on Vorreedi to be a very
busy man, but never a stupid one. Miles wondered if Vorreedi's
meditations this past night had been one half so busy as his own.
Miles braced himself for an Illyanesque opening shot, such as What
the hell are you up to, Vorkosigan, trying to start a damned war
single-handed?!
Instead,
Colonel Vorreedi favored him with a long, thoughtful stare, before
observing mildly, "Lieutenant Lord Vorkosigan. You are an ImpSec
courier officer, by assignment."
"Yes,
sir. When I am on duty."
"An
interesting breed of men. Utterly reliable and loyal. They go here,
go there, deliver whatever is asked of them without question or
comment. Or failure, short of intervention by death itself."
"It's
not usually that dramatic. We spend a lot of time riding around in
jumpships. One catches up on one's reading."
"Mm.
And to a man, these glorified mailmen report to Commodore Boothe,
head of ImpSec Communications, Komarr. With one exception."
Vorreedi's gaze intensified. "You
are listed as reporting directly to Simon Illyan himself. Who reports
to Emperor Gregor. The only other person I know of offhand in a chain
of command that short is the Chief of Staff of the Imperial Service.
It's an interesting anomaly. How do you explain it?"
"How
do I explain it?" Miles echoed, temporizing. He thought briefly
of replying, I
never explain anything,
except that was both 1) already evident and 2) clearly not the answer
Vorreedi was looking for. "Why . . . every once in a while
Emperor Gregor needs a personal errand run for himself or his
household which is too trivial, or too inappropriate, to assign to
working military personnel. Perhaps he wants, say, an ornamental
breadfruit bush brought from the planet Pol to be planted in the
garden of the Imperial Residence. They send me."
"That's
a good explanation," Vorreedi agreed blandly. There was a short
silence. "And do you have an equally good story for how you
acquired this pleasant job?"
"Nepotism,
obviously. Since I am clearly," Miles's smile thinned,
"physically unfit for normal duties, this post was manufactured
for me by my family connections."
"Hm."
Vorreedi sat back, and rubbed his chin. "Now," he said
distantly, "if you were a covert ops agent here on a mission
from God," meaning Simon Illyan—same thing, from the ImpSec
point of view, "you should have arrived with some sort of Render
all due assistance
order. Then a poor ImpSec local man might know where he stood with
you."
If
I don't get this man under control, he can and will nail my boots to
the floor of the embassy, and Lord
X will
have no impediment at all to his baroque bid for chaos and empire.
"Yes, sir," Miles took a breath, "and so would anyone
else who saw it."
Vorreedi glanced up,
startled. "Does ImpSec Command suspect a leak in my
communications?"
"Not as far as I
know. But as a lowly courier, I can't ask questions, can I?"
By
the slight widening of his eyes, Vorreedi caught the joke. A subtle
man indeed. "From the moment you set foot on Eta Ceta, Lord
Vorkosigan, I have not noticed you stop
asking questions."
"A personal
failing."
"And … do you have any
supporting evidence for your explanation of
yourself?"
"Certainly." Miles
stared thoughtfully into the air, as if about to pull his words from
the thinnest part. "Consider, sir. All other ImpSec courier
officers have an implanted allergy to fast-penta. It renders them
interrogation-proof to illicit questioners, at fatal cost. Due to my
rank and relations, that was judged too dangerous a procedure to do
to me. Therefore, I am qualified for only the lowest-security sort of
missions. It's all nepotism."
"Very .
. . convincing."
"It wouldn't be much
good if it weren't, sir."
"True."
Another long pause. "Is there anything else you'd like to tell
me—Lieutenant?"
"When I return to
Barrayar, I will be giving a complete report of my m—excursion to
Simon Illyan. I'm afraid you'll have to apply to him. It is
definitely not within my authority to try and guess what he will wish
to tell you."
There, whew. He'd told no
lies at all, technically, even by implication. Yeah.
Be sure and point that out when they play a transcript of this
conversation at your future court-martial.
But if Vorreedi chose to construe that Miles was a covert ops agent
working on the highest levels and in utmost secrecy, it was no less
than perfectly true. The fact that his mission here was spontaneously
self-appointed and not assigned from above was . . . another order of
problem altogether.
"I … could add a
philosophical observation."
"Please
do, my lord."
"You don't hire a genius
to solve the most intractable imaginable problem, and then hedge him
around with a lot of rules, nor try to micro-manage him from two
weeks' distance. You turn him loose. If all you need is somebody to
follow orders, you can hire an idiot. In fact, an idiot would be
better suited."
Vorreedi's fingers drummed
lightly on his comconsole desk. Miles felt the man might have tackled
an intractable problem or two himself, in his past. Vorreedi's brows
rose. "And do you consider yourself a genius, Lord Vorkosigan?"
he asked softly. Vorreedi's tone of voice made Miles's skin crawl, it
reminded him so much of his father's when Count Vorkosigan was about
to spring some major verbal trap.
"My
intelligence evaluations are in my personnel file, sir."
"I've
read it. That's why we're having this conversation." Vorreedi
blinked, slowly, like a lizard. "No rules at all?"
"Well,
one rule, maybe. Deliver success or pay with your ass."
"You
have held your current post for almost three years, I see, Lieutenant
Vorkosigan. . . .Your ass is still intact, is it?"
"Last
time I checked, sir." For
the next five days, maybe.
"This
suggests astonishing authority and autonomy."
"No
authority at all. Just responsibility."
"Oh,
dear." Vorreedi pursed his lips very thoughtfully indeed. "You
have my sympathy, Lord Vorkosigan."
"Thank
you, sir. I need it." Into the all-too-meditative silence that
followed Miles added, "Do we know if Lord Yenaro survived the
night?"
"He disappeared, so we think
he has. He was last seen leaving the Moon Garden Hall with a roll of
carpet over his shoulder." Vorreedi cocked an inquiring eye at
Miles. "I have no explanation for the carpet."
Miles
ignored the broad hint, responding instead with, "Are you so
sure that disappearance equates with his survival? What about his
stalker?"
"Hm." Vorreedi smiled.
"Shortly after we left him he was picked up by the Cetagandan
Civil Police, who still have him in close custody."
"They
did this on their own?"
"Let's say
they received an anonymous tip. It seemed the socially responsible
thing to do. But I must say, the Civils responded to it with
admirable efficiency. He appears to be of interest to them for some
previous work."
"Did he have time to
report in to his employers, before he was canned?"
"No."
So,
Lord X was in an information vacuum this morning. He wouldn't like
that one bit. The misfire of yesterday's plot must make him
frantically frustrated. He wouldn't know what had gone wrong, or if
Yenaro had realized his intended fate, though Yenaro's disappearance
and subsequent non-communication would surely be a fat clue. Yenaro
was now as loose a cannon as Miles and Ivan. Which of them would be
first on Lord X's hit list after this? Would Yenaro go seeking
protection to some authority, or would the rumor of treason frighten
him off?
And what method could Lord X come up
with for disposing of the Barrayaran envoys one-half so baroque and
perfect as Yenaro had been? Yenaro was a masterpiece, as far as the
art of assassination went, beautifully choreographed in three
movements and a crescendo. Now all that elaborate effort was wasted.
Lord X would be as livid at the spoiling of his lovely pattern as at
the failure of his plot, Miles swore. And he was an anxious impatient
artist who couldn't leave well enough alone, who had to add those
clever little touches. The kind of person who, as a child given his
first garden, would dig up the seeds to see if they'd sprouted yet.
(Miles felt a tiny twinge of sympathy for Lord X.) Yes, indeed, Lord
X, playing for great stakes and losing both time and his inhibitions,
was now well and classically primed to make a major mistake.
Why
am I not so sure that's such a great idea?
"More
to add, Lord Vorkosigan?" said Vorreedi.
"Hm?
No. Just, uh, thinking." Besides,
it would only upset you.
"I
would request, as the embassy officer ultimately responsible for your
personal safety as an official envoy, that you and Lord Vorpatril end
your social contacts with a man who is apparently involved in a
lethal Cetagandan vendetta."
"Yenaro
is of no further interest to me. I wish him no harm. My real priority
is in identifying the man who supplied him with that
fountain."
Vorreedi's brows rose in mild
reproach. "You might have said so earlier."
"Hindsight,"
said Miles, "is always better."
"That's
for damned sure," sighed Vorreedi, in a voice of experience. He
scratched his nose, and sat back. "There is another reason I
called you here this morning, Lord Vorkosigan. Ghem-Colonel Benin has
requested a second interview with you."
"Has
he? Same as before?" Miles kept his voice from
squeaking.
"Not quite. He specifically
requested to speak with both you and Lord Vorpatril. In fact, he's on
his way now. But you can refuse the interview if you wish."
"No,
that's . . . that's fine. In fact, I'd like to talk to Benin again.
I, ah … shall I go fetch Ivan, then, sir?" Miles rose to his
feet. Bad, bad idea to let the two suspects consult before the
interrogation, but then, this wasn't Vorreedi's case. How fully had
Miles convinced the man of his secret clout?
"Go
ahead," said Vorreedi affably. "Though I must say . .
."
Miles paused.
"I
do not see how Lord Vorpatril fits into this. He's no courier
officer. And his records are as transparent as glass."
"A
lot of people are baffled by Ivan, sir. But … sometimes, even a
genius needs someone who can follow orders."
Miles
tried not to scamper, hustling down the corridor to Ivan's quarters.
The luxury of privacy their status had bought them was about to come
to a screeching halt, he suspected. If Vorreedi didn't turn on the
bugs in both their rooms after this, the man either had supernatural
self-control or was brain dead. And the protocol officer was the
voraciously curious type; it went with his job.
Ivan
unlocked his door with a drawl of "Enter," at Miles's
impatient knock. Miles found his cousin sitting up in bed,
half-dressed in green trousers and cream shirt, leafing through a
pile of hand-calligraphed colored papers with an abstracted and not
particularly happy air.
"Ivan. Get up. Get
dressed. We're about to have an interview with Colonel Vorreedi and
ghem-Colonel Benin."
"Confession at
last, thank God!" Ivan tossed the papers up in the air and fell
backward on his bed with a woof
of relief.
"No. Not exactly. But I need you
to let me do most of the talking, and confirm whatever I
assert."
"Oh, damn." Ivan frowned
up at the ceiling. "What now?
"
"Benin has to have been
investigating Ba Lura's movements, the day before its death. I'm
guessing he's traced the Ba to our little encounter at the pod dock.
I don't want to screw up his investigation. In fact, I want it to
succeed, at least as far as identifying the
Ba's
murderer. So he needs as many real facts as possible."
"Real
facts. As opposed to what other kind of facts?"
"We
absolutely can't bring up any mention of the Great Key, or the haut
Rian. I figure we can tell events exactly as they happened, just
leave out that one tiny detail."
"You
figure, do you? You must be using a different kind of math than the
rest of the universe does. Do you realize how pissed Vorreedi and the
Ambassador are going to be about our concealing that little
incident?"
"I've got Vorreedi under
control, temporarily. He thinks I'm on a mission from Simon
Illyan."
"That means you aren't. I
knew it!" Ivan groaned, and pulled a pillow over his face, and
squashed it tight.
Miles pulled it out of his
grasp. "I am now. Or I would be, if Illyan knew what I know.
Bring that nerve disrupter. But don't pull it out unless I tell you
to."
"I am not shooting your
commanding officer for you."
"You're
not shooting anybody. And anyway, Vorreedi's not my commander."
That could be an important legal point, later. "I may want it
for evidence. But not unless the subject comes up. We volunteer
nothing."
"Never volunteer, yes,
that's the ticket! You're catching on at last, coz!"
"Shut
up. Get up." Miles threw Ivan's undress uniform jacket across
his prostrate form. "This is important! But you have to stay
absolutely cool. I may be completely off-base, and panicking
prematurely."
"I don't think so. I
think you're panicking post-maturely. In fact, if you were panicking
any later it would be practically posthumously. I've been panicking
for days."
Miles
tossed Ivan his half-boots, with ruthless finality. Ivan shook his
head, sat up, and began pulling them on.
"Do
you remember," Ivan sighed, "that time in the back garden
at Vorkosigan House, when you'd been reading all those military
histories about the Cetagandan prison camps during the invasion, and
you decided we had to dig an escape tunnel? Except it was you who did
all the designing, and me and Elena who did all the digging?"
"We
were about eight," said Miles defensively. "The medics were
still working on my bones. I was still pretty friable then."
"—and
the tunnel collapsed on me?" Ivan went on dreamily. "And I
was under there for hours?"
"It
wasn't hours. It was minutes. Sergeant Bothari had you out of there
in practically no time."
"It seemed
like hours to me.
I can still taste the dirt. It got stuffed up my nose, too."
Ivan rubbed his nose in memory. "Mother would still be having
the fit, if Aunt Cordelia hadn't sat on her."
"We
were stupid little kids.
What has this got to do with anything?"
"Nothing,
I suppose. I just woke up thinking about it, this morning." Ivan
stood up, fastened his tunic, and pulled it straight. "I never
believed I'd miss Sergeant Bothari, but I think I do now. Who's going
to dig me out this time?"
Miles wanted to
snap out a sharp rejoinder, but shivered instead. I
miss Bothari too.
He had almost forgotten how much, till Ivan's words hit the scar of
his regret, that secret little pocket of anguish that never seemed to
drain. Major mistakes . . . Dammit, a man walking a tight-wire didn't
need someone shouting from the sidelines how far down the drop was,
or what lousy balance he had. It wasn't like he didn't know; but what
he most needed was to forget. Even a momentary loss of
concentration—of self-confidence—of forward momentum, could be
fatal. "Do me a favor, Ivan. Don't try to think. You'll hurt
yourself. Just follow orders, huh?"
Ivan
bared his teeth in a non-smile, and followed Miles out the
door.
They met with ghem-Colonel Benin in the
same little conference room as before, but this time, Vorreedi rode
shotgun personally, dispensing with the guard. The two colonels were
just finishing the amenities and sitting down as Miles and Ivan
entered, by which sign Miles hoped they'd had less time to compare
notes than he and Ivan'd had. Benin was dressed again in his formal
red uniform and lurid face paint, freshly and perfectly applied. By
the time they'd all finished going through the polite greetings once
more, and everyone was reseated, Miles had his breathing and
heartbeat under control. Ivan concealed his nerves in an expression
of blank benevolence that made him look, in Miles's opinion,
remarkably sappy.
"Lord Vorkosigan,"
ghem-Colonel Benin began. "I understand you work as a courier
officer."
"When I'm on duty."
Miles decided to repeat the party line for Benin's benefit. "It's
an honorable task, that's not too physically demanding for
me."
"And do you like your
duties?"
Miles shrugged. "I like the
travel. And, ah … it gets me out of the way, an advantage that cuts
two ways. You know about Barrayar's backward attitude to mutations."
Miles thought of Yenaro s longing for a post. "And it gives me
an official position, makes me somebody"
"I
can understand that,
" conceded Benin.
Yeah,
I thought you would.
"But
you're not on courier duty now?"
"Not
this trip. We were to give our diplomatic duties our undivided
attention, and, it was hoped, maybe acquire a little polish."
"And
Lord Vorpatril here is assigned to Operations, is that
right?"
"Desk work," Ivan sighed.
"I keep hoping for ship duty."
Not
really true, Miles reflected; Ivan adored being assigned to HQ at the
capital, where he kept up his own apartment and a social life that
was the envy of his brother-officers. Ivan just wished his mother
Lady
Vorpatril might be assigned ship duty, someplace far away.
"Hm."
Benin's hands twitched, as if in memory of sorting stacks of plastic
flimsies. He drew breath, and looked Miles straight in the eyes. "So,
Lord Vorkosigan—the funeral rotunda was not
the first time you saw the Ba Lura, was it?"
Benin
was trying for the rattling unexpected straight shot, to unnerve his
quarry. "Correct," Miles answered, with a
smile.
Expecting denial, Benin already had his
mouth open for the second strike, probably the presentation of some
telling piece of evidence that would give the Barrayaran the lie. He
had to close it again, and start over. "If … if you wished to
keep it a secret, why did you as much as flat tell me to look where I
would be sure to find you? And," his tone sharpened with baffled
annoyance, "if you didn't want to keep it a secret, why didn't
you tell me about it in the first place?"
"It
provided an interesting test of your competence. I wanted to know if
it would be worth my while to persuade you to share your results.
Believe me, my first encounter with the Ba Lura is as much a mystery
to me as I'm sure it is to you."
Even from
beneath the gaudy face paint, the look Benin gave Miles reminded him
forcibly of the look he got all too often from superiors. He even
capitalized it in his mind, The Look. In a weird backhanded way, it
made him feel quite comfortable with Benin. His smile became slightly
cheerier.
"And . . . how did
you encounter the Ba?" said Benin.
"What
do you know so far?" 'Miles countered. Benin would, of course,
keep something back, to cross-check Miles s story. That was quite all
right, as Miles proposed to tell almost the whole truth, next.
"Ba
Lura was at the transfer station the day you arrived. He left the
station at least twice. Once, apparently, from a pod docking bay in
which the security monitors were deactivated and unchecked for a
period of forty minutes. The same bay and the same period in which
you arrived, Lord Vorkosigan."
"Our
first arrival, you mean."
"…
Yes."
Vorreedi's eyes were widening and his
lips were thinning. Miles ignored him, for now, though Ivan's gaze
cautiously shifted to check him out.
"Deactivated?
Torn out of the wall, I'd call it. Very well, ghem-Colonel. But tell
me—was our encounter in the pod dock the first or second time the
Ba appeared to leave the station?"
"Second,"
Benin said, watching him closely.
"Can you
prove that?"
"Yes."
"Good.
It may be very
important
later that you can prove that." Ha, Benin wasn't the only one
who could cross-check the truth of this conversation. Benin, for
whatever reason, was being straight with him so far. Turn and
turnabout. "Well, this is what happened from our point of
view—"
In a flat voice, and with plenty
of corroborative physical details, Miles described their confusing
clash with the Ba. The only item he changed was to report the Ba
reaching for its trouser pocket before he'd yelled his warning. He
brought the tale up to the moment of Ivan's heroic struggle and his
own retrieval of the loose nerve disrupter, and bounced it over to
Ivan to finish. Ivan gave him a dirty look, but, taking his tone from
Miles, offered a brief factual description of the Ba's subsequent
escape.
Since it lacked face paint, Miles could
watch Vorreedi's face darken, out of the corner of his eye. The man
was too cool and controlled to actually turn purple or anything, but
Miles bet a blood pressure monitor would be beeping in plaintive
alarm right now.
"And why did you not
report this at our first meeting, Lord Vorkosigan?" Benin asked
again, after a long, digestive pause.
"I
might," said Vorreedi in a slightly suffused voice, "ask
you the same question, Lieutenant." Benin shot Vorreedi a
raised-brow look, almost putting his face paint in danger of
smudging.
Lieutenant,
not my
lord;
Miles took the point. "The pod pilot reported to his captain,
who will have reported to his commander." To wit, Illyan; in
fact, the report, slogging through normal channels, should be
reaching Illyan's desk right about now. Three days more for an
emergency query to arrive on Vorreedi's desk from home, six more days
for a reply and return-reply. It would all be over before Illyan
could do a damned thing, now. "However, on my authority as
senior envoy, I suppressed the incident for diplomatic reasons. We
were sent with specific instructions to maintain a low profile and
behave with maximum courtesy. My government considered this solemn
occasion an important opportunity to send a message that we would be
glad to see more normal trade and other relations, and an easing of
tensions along our mutual borders. I did not judge that it would do
anything helpful for our mutual tensions to open our visit with
charges of an unmotivated armed attack by an Imperial slave upon the
Barrayaran special representatives."
The
implied threat was obvious enough; despite Benin's face paint, Miles
could tell that one had hit home. Even Vorreedi looked like he might
be giving the pitch serious consideration.
"Can
you . . . prove your assertions, Lord Vorkosigan?" asked Benin
cautiously.
"We still have the captured
nerve disruptor. Ivan?" Miles nodded to his cousin.
Gently,
using only his fingertips, Ivan drew the weapon from his pocket and
laid it gingerly on the table, and returned his hands demurely to his
lap. He avoided Vorreedi's outraged eye. Vorreedi and Benin reached
simultaneously for the nerve disruptor, and simultaneously stopped,
frowning at each other.
"Excuse me,"
said Vorreedi. "I had not seen this before."
"Really?"
said Benin. How
extraordinary,
his tone implied. "Go ahead." His hand dropped
politely.
Vorreedi picked up the weapon and
examined it closely, among other things checking to see that the
safety lock was indeed engaged, before handing it equally politely to
Benin.
"I'd be glad to return the weapon to
you, ghem-Colonel," Miles went on, "in exchange for
whatever information you are able to deduce from it. If it can be
traced back to the Celestial Garden, that's not much help, but if it
was something the Ba acquired en route, well … it might be
revealing. This is a check that you can make more easily than I can."
Miles paused, then added, "Who did the Ba visit from the station
the first time?"
Benin glanced up from his
close contemplation of the nerve disruptor. "A ship moored
off-station."
"Can you be more
specific?"
"No."
"Excuse
me, let me re-phrase that. Could you be more specific if you chose
to?"
Benin set the disruptor down, and
leaned back, his expression of attention to Miles, if possible,
intensifying.
He was silent for a long
thoughtful moment before finally replying, "No, unfortunately. I
could not." Rats. The three haut-governors' ships moored off
that transfer station were Ilsum Kety's, Slyke Giaja's and Este
Rond's. This could have been the final line of his triangulation, but
Benin didn't have it. Yet. "I'd be particularly interested in
how traffic control, or what certainly passed for traffic control,
came to direct us to the wrong, or at any rate the first, pod
dock."
"Why do you
think the Ba entered your pod?" Benin asked in turn.
"Given
the intense confusion of the encounter, I certainly would consider
the possibility of it having been an accident. If it was
arranged, I think something must have gone very wrong."
No
shit,
said Ivan's silent morose look. Miles ignored him.
"Anyway,
ghem-Colonel, I hope this helps to anchor your time-table,"
Miles continued in a tone of finality. Surely Benin would be itching
to run and check out his new clue, the nerve disrupter.
Benin
didn't budge. "So what did you and the haut Rian really
discuss, Lord Vorkosigan?"
"For that,
I'm afraid you will have to apply to the haut Rian. She is Cetagandan
to the bone, and so all your department." Alas.
"But I think her distress at the death of the Ba Lura was quite
genuine."
Benin's eyes flicked up. "When
did you
see enough of her to gauge the depth of her distress?"
"Or
so I deduced." And if he didn't end this now
he was going to put his foot in it so deep they'd need a hand-tractor
to pull it out again. He had to play Vorreedi with the utmost
delicacy; this was not quite the case with Benin. "This is
fascinating, ghem-Colonel, but I'm afraid I'm out of time for this
morning. But if you ever find out where that nerve disruptor came
from, and where the Ba went to, I would be more than glad to continue
the conversation." He sat back, folded his arms, and smiled
cordially.
What Vorreedi should
have done was announce loudly that they had all the time in the
world, and let Benin continue to be his stalking-horse—Miles would
have, in his place—but Vorreedi himself was clearly itching to get
Miles alone. Instead, the protocol officer rose, signaling the
official end to the interview. Benin, on embassy grounds as a guest,
on sufferance—not his normal mode, Miles was sure—acceded without
comment, rising to take his farewells.
"I
will
be speaking with you again, Lord Vorkosigan," Benin promised
darkly.
"I certainly hope so, sir. Ah—did
you take my other piece of advice, too? About blocking
interference?"
Benin paused, looking
suddenly a little abstracted. "Yes, in fact."
"How
did it go?"
"Better than I would have
expected."
"Good."
Benin's
parting semi-salute was ironic, but not, Miles felt, altogether
hostile.
Vorreedi escorted his guest to the
door, but turned him over to the hall guard and was back in the
little room before Miles and Ivan could make good their
escape.
Vorreedi pinned Miles by eye. Miles felt
a momentary regret that his diplomatic immunity did not extend to the
protocol officer as well. Would it occur to Vorreedi to separate the
pair of them, and break Ivan? Ivan was practicing looking invisible,
something he did very well.
Vorreedi stated
dangerously, "I am not a mushroom, Lieutenant Vorkosigan."
To
be kept in the dark and fed on horseshit, right. Miles sighed
inwardly. "Sir, apply to my commander," meaning
Illyan—Vorreedi's commander too, in point of fact—"be
cleared, and I'm yours. Until then, my best judgment is to continue
exactly as I have been."
"Trusting
your instincts?" said Vorreedi dryly.
"It's
not as if I had any clear conclusions to share yet."
"So
… do your instincts suggest some connection between the late Ba
Lura, and Lord Yenaro?"
Vorreedi had
instincts too, oh, yes. Or he wouldn't be in this
post. "Besides the fact that both have interacted with me?
Nothing that I … trust. I'm after proof. Then I will … be
somewhere."
"Where?"
Head
down in the biggest privy you ever imagined, at the current rate.
"I guess I'll know when I get there, sir."
"We
too will speak again, Lord Vorkosigan. You can count on it."
Vorreedi gave him a very abbreviated nod, and departed
abruptly—probably to apprise Ambassador Vorob'yev of the new
complications in his life.
Into the ensuing
silence, Miles said faintly, "That went well, all things
considered."
Ivan's lip curled in
scorn.
They kept silence on the trudge back to
Ivan's room, where Ivan found a new stack of colored papers waiting
on his desk. He sorted through them, pointedly ignoring Miles.
"I
have to reach Rian somehow," Miles said at last. "I can't
afford to wait. Things are getting too damned tight."
"I
don't want anything more to do with any of this," said Ivan
distantly.
"It's too late."
"Yes.
I know." His hand paused. "Huh. Here's a new wrinkle. This
one has both our names on it."
"Not
from Lady Benello, is it? I'm afraid Vorreedi will count her
off-limits now."
"No. It's not a name
I recognize."
Miles pounced on the paper,
and tore it open. "Lady d'Har. A garden party. What does she
grow in her
garden, I wonder? Could it be a double meaning—referencing the
Celestial Garden? Hm. Awfully short notice. It could be my next
contact. God, I hate being at haut Rian's mercy for every setup.
Well, accept it anyway, just in case."
"It's
not my first choice of how to spend the evening," said
Ivan.
"Did I say anything about a choice?
It's a chance, we've got to take it." He went on nastily,
"Besides, if you keep leaving your genetic samples all over
town, your progeny could end up being featured in next year's art
show. As bushes."
Ivan shuddered. "You
don't think they would—that's not why—uh, could they?"
"Sure.
Why, when you're gone, they could re-create the operative body parts
that interest them, to perform on command, to any scale—quite the
souvenir. And you thought that kitten
tree was obscene."
"There's more to it
than that,
coz," Ivan stated with injured dignity. His voice faded in
doubt. "… you don't think they'd really do something like
that, do you?"
"There's no more
ruthless passion than that of a Cetagandan artist in search of new
media." He added firmly, "We're going to a garden party.
I'm sure it's my contact with Rian."
"Garden
party," conceded Ivan with a sigh. He stared off blankly into
space. After a minute he commented offhandedly, "Y'know, it's
too bad she can't just get the gene bank back from his ship. Then
he'd have the key but no lock. That'd
fox him up but good, I bet."
Miles sat down
in Ivan's desk chair, slowly. When he'd got his breath back, he
whispered, "Ivan—that's brilliant.
Why didn't I think of that before?"
Ivan
considered this. "'Cause it's not a scenario that lets you play
the lone hero in front of the haut Rian?"
They
exchanged saturnine looks. For once, Miles's gaze shifted first. "I
meant that as a rhetorical question," he said tightly. But he
didn't say it very loudly.
Garden
party
was a misnomer, Miles decided. He stared past Ambassador Vorob'yev
and Ivan as the three of them exited from an ear-popping ride up the
lift tube and into the apparently open air of the rooftop. A faint
golden sparkle in the air above marked the presence of a lightweight
force-screen, blocking unwanted wind, rain, or dust. Dusk here, in
the center of the capital, was a silver sheen in the atmosphere, for
the half-kilometer high building overlooked the green rings of
parkway surrounding the Celestial Garden itself.
Curving
banks of flowers and dwarf trees, fountains, rivulets, walkways, and
arched jade bridges turned the roof into a descending labyrinth in
the finest Cetagandan style. Every turn of the walkways revealed and
framed a different view of the city stretching to the horizon, though
the best views were the ones that looked to the Emperors shimmering
great phoenix egg in the city's heart. The lift-tube foyer, opening
onto it all, was roofed with arching vines and paved in an elaborate
inlay of colored stones: lapis lazuli, malachite, green and white
jade, rose quartz, and other minerals Miles couldn't even
name.
Looking around, it gradually dawned on
Miles why the protocol officer had them all wearing their House
blacks, when Miles would have guessed undress greens to be adequate.
It was not possible to be overdressed here. Ambassador Vorob'yev was
admitted on sufferance as their escort, but even Vorreedi had to wait
in the garage below, tonight. Ivan, looking around too, clutched
their invitation a little tighter.
Their
putative hostess, Lady d'Har, stood on the edge of the foyer.
Apparently being inside her home counted the same as being inside a
bubble, for she was welcoming her guests. Even at her advanced age,
her haut-beauty stunned the eye. She wore robes in a dozen fine
layers of blinding white, sweeping down and swirling around her feet.
Thick silver hair flowed to the floor. Her husband, ghem-Admiral Har,
whose bulky presence would normally have dominated any room, seemed
to fade into the background beside her.
Ghem-Admiral
Har commanded half the Cetagandan fleet, and his duty-delayed arrival
for the final ceremonies of the Empress's funeral was the reason for
tonight's welcome-home party. He wore his Imperial bloodred dress
uniform, which he could have hung with enough medals to sink him
should he chance to fall in a river. He'd chosen instead to one-up
the competition with the neck-ribbon and medallion of the deceptively
simple-sounding Order of Merit. Clearing away the other clutter made
this honor impossible for the viewer to miss. Or match. It was given,
rarely, at the sole discretion of the Emperor himself. There were few
higher awards to be had in the Cetagandan Empire. The haut-lady by
his side was one of them, though. Lord Har would have pinned her to
his tunic too, if he could, Miles felt, for all he had won her some
forty years past. The Har ghem-clan's face paint featured mainly
orange and green; the patterns lacked definition, crossing with the
man's deeply age-lined features, and clashing horribly with the red
of the uniform.
Even Ambassador Vorob'yev was
awed by ghem-Admiral Har, Miles judged by the extreme formality of
his greetings. Har was polite but clearly puzzled; Why
are these outlanders in my garden?
But he deferred to Lady d'Har, who relieved Ivan of his nervously
proffered invitation with a small, cool nod, and directed them, in a
voice age-softened to a honeyed alto, to where the food and drinks
were displayed.
They strolled on. After he
recovered from the shock of Lady d'Har, Ivan's head swiveled, looking
for the young ghem-women he knew, without success. "This place
is wall-to-wall old crusts," he whispered to Miles in dismay.
"When we walked in, the average age here dropped from ninety to
eighty-nine."
"Eighty-nine and a half,
I'd say," Miles whispered back.
Ambassador
Vorob'yev put a finger to his lips, suppressing the commentary, but
his eyes glinted in amused agreement.
Quite.
This was the real thing; Yenaro and his crowd were shabby little
outsiders indeed, by comparison, excluded by age, by rank, by wealth,
by … everything. Scattered through the garden were half-a-dozen
haut-lady bubbles, glowing like pale lanterns, something Miles had
not yet seen outside the Celestial Garden itself. Lady d'Har kept
social contact with her haut-relatives, or former relatives, it
appeared. Rian,
here?
Miles prayed so.
"I wish I could have got
Maz in," Vorob'yev sighed with regret. "How did
you do this, Lord Ivan?"
"Not me,"
denied Ivan. He flipped a thumb at Miles.
Vorob'yev's
brows rose inquiringly.
Miles shrugged. "They
told me to study the power-hierarchy. This is it, isn't it?"
Actually, he was not so sure anymore.
Where did
power lie, in this convoluted society? With the ghem-lords, he would
have said once without hesitation, who controlled the weapons, the
ultimate threat of violence. Or with the haut-lords, who controlled
the ghem, through whatever oblique means. Certainly not with the
secluded haut-women. Was their knowledge a kind of power, then? A
very fragile sort of power. Wasn't fragile
power
an oxymoron? The Star Creche existed because the Emperor protected
it; the Emperor existed because the ghem-lords served him. Yet the
haut-women had created the Emperor . . . created the haut itself . .
. created the ghem, for that matter. Power to create . . . power to
destroy … he blinked, dizzy, and munched on a canape in the shape
of a tiny swan, biting off its head first. The feathers were made
with rice flour, judging from the taste, the center a spicy protein
paste. Vat-grown swan meat?
The Barrayaran party
collected drinks, and began a slow circuit of the rooftop garden's
walks, comparing views. They also collected stares, from the elderly
ghem and haut scattered about; but none came up to introduce
themselves, or ask questions, or attempt to start a conversation.
Vorob'yev himself was only scouting, so far, Miles thought, but the
man would surely pursue the evening's opportunities for
contact-making soon. How Miles was to divest himself of the
ambassador when his own contact turned up, he was not sure. Assuming
this was where his contact was to meet him, and it wasn't all just
his hyperactive imagination, or—
Or
the next assassination attempt.
They'd rounded some greenery to see a woman in haut-white, but with
no haut-bubble, standing alone and staring out over the city. Miles
recognized her from the heavy chocolate-dark braid falling down her
back to her ankles, even at this three-quarters-turned view. The haut
Vio d'Chilian. Was ghem-General Chilian here? Was Kety
himself?
Ivan's breath drew in. Right. Except
for their elderly hostess, this was the first time Ivan had seen a
haut-woman outside her bubble, and Ivan lacked the . . . inoculation
of the haut Rian. Miles found he could view the haut Vio this time
with scarcely a tremor. Were the haut-women a disease that you could
only catch once, like the legendary smallpox, and if you survived it
you were immune thereafter, however scarred?
"Who
is
she?" whispered Ivan, enchanted.
"Ghem-General
Chilian's haut-wife," Vorob'yev murmured into his ear. "The
ghem-general could order your liver fried for breakfast. I would send
it to him. The free ghem-ladies can entertain themselves as they
please with you, but the married haut are strictly off-limits.
Understood?"
"Yes, sir," said
Ivan faintly.
The haut Vio was staring as if
hypnotized at the great glowing dome of the Celestial Garden. Longing
for her lost life, Miles wondered? She'd spent years exiled in the
hinterlands at Sigma Ceta with her ghem husband. What was she
feeling, now? Happy? Homesick?
Some movement or
sound from the Barrayarans must have broken her reverie, for her head
turned toward them. For a second, just a second, her astonishing
cinnamon eyes seemed copper-metallic with a rage so boundless,
Miles's stomach lurched. Then her expression snapped into a smooth
hauteur, as blank as the bubble she lacked, and as armored; the open
emotion was gone so fast Miles was not sure the other two men had
even seen it. But the look was not for them; it had been on her face
even as she'd turned, before she could have identified the
Barrayarans, blackly dressed in the shadows.
Ivan
opened his mouth; Please,
no,
Miles thought, but Ivan had to try. "Good evening, milady.
Wonderful view, eh?"
She hesitated a long
moment—Miles pictured her fleeing—but then answered, in a
low-pitched, perfectly modulated voice, "There is nothing like
it in the universe."
Ivan, encouraged,
brightened and moved forward. "Let me introduce myself. I'm Lord
Ivan Vorpatril, of Barrayar. . . . And, uh, this is Ambassador
Vorob'yev, and this is my cousin, Lord Miles Vorkosigan. Son of
You-know-who, eh?"
Miles winced. Watching
Ivan babble in sexual panic would normally be entertaining, if it
wasn't so excruciatingly embarrassing. It reminded Miles painfully
of—himself. Did
I look like that much of a fool, the first time I saw Rian?
He feared the answer was yes.
"Yes,"
said the haut Vio. "I know." Miles had seen people talk to
their potted plants with more warmth and expression than the haut Vio
turned on Ivan.
Give
it up, Ivan,
Miles urged silently. This
woman is married to the first officer of a guy who maybe tried to
kill us yesterday, remember?
Unless Lord X was
Prince Slyke after all—or the haut Rond, or … Miles ground his
teeth.
But before Ivan could dig himself any
deeper, a man in Cetagandan military uniform rounded the corner, his
face paint crinkling with his frown. Ghem-General Chilian. Miles
froze, his hand wrapping Ivan's forearm and biting deep in
warning.
Chilian's gaze swept the Barrayarans,
his nostrils flaring in suspicion. "Haut Vio," he addressed
his wife. "Come with me, please."
"Yes,
my lord," she said, her lashes sweeping down demurely, and she
escaped around Ivan with a bare nod of farewell. Chilian brought
himself to nod also, acknowledging the outlanders' existence; with an
effort, Miles felt. The general glanced once back over his shoulder
as he whisked his wife away. So what sin had ghem-General Chilian
committed to win her?
"Lucky
guy," sighed Ivan in envy.
"I'm not so
sure," said Miles. Ambassador Vorob'yev just smiled
grimly.
They walked on, Miles's brain whirling
around this new encounter. Was it accidental? Was it the start of a
new setup? Lord X used his human tools like long-handled forks, to
keep the heat at a distance. Surely the ghem-general and his wife
were too close to him, too obviously connected. Unless, of course,
Lord X wasn't Kety after all …
A glow ahead
brought Miles's gaze front and center. A haut-bubble was approaching
them along the evergreen-bounded walk. Vorob'yev and Ivan stood aside
to let it pass. Instead it stopped in front of Miles.
"Lord
Vorkosigan." The woman's voice was melodious even through the
filter, but it was not Rian's. "May I speak privately with
you?"
"Of course," said Miles,
before Vorob'yev could put in an objection. "Where?"
Tension shot through him. Was tonight to be his final assault
already, upon the new target of Governor Ilsum Kety's ship? Too
premature, still too uncertain . . . "And for how long?"
"Not
far. We will be about an hour."
Not nearly
long enough for a trip to orbit; this was something else, then. "Very
well. Gentlemen, will you excuse me?"
Vorob'yev
looked about as unhappy as his habitual control would allow. "Lord
Vorkosigan …" His hesitation was actually a good sign;
Vorreedi and he must have had a long and extraordinary talk. "Do
you wish a guard?"
"No."
"A
comm link?"
"No."
"You
will
be careful?" Which was diplomatic for Are
you sure you know what the hell you're doing, boy?
"Oh, yes, sir."
"What do we do if
you're not
back in an hour?" said Ivan.
"Wait."
He nodded cordially, and followed the bubble down the garden
path.
When they turned into a private nook, lit
by low colored lanterns and screened by flowering bushes, the bubble
rotated, and abruptly blinked out. Miles found himself facing another
haut beauty in white, riding in her float-chair like a throne. This
woman's hair was honey-blond, intricately woven and tucked up around
her shoulders, vaguely reminiscent of a gilt chain-mail neck guard.
He would have guessed her age as forty-standard, which meant she was
probably twice that.
"The haut Rian Degtiar
instructs me to bring you," she stated. She moved her robes from
the left side of the chair, uncovering a thickly padded armrest. "We
have not much time." Her gaze seemed to measure his height, or
shortness. "You can, um . . . perch
here, and ride."
"How . . .
fascinating." If only she were
Rian . . . But this would test certain theories he had about the
mechanical capacities of haut-bubbles, oh yes. "Uh . . .
identification, milady?" he added almost apologetically. The
last person he suspected of experiencing such a ride had ended up
with its throat cut, after all.
She nodded, as
if expecting this, and turned her hand outward, displaying the ring
of the Star Creche.
That was probably about as
good as they could do, under the circumstances. Cautiously, he
approached, and eased himself aboard, grasping the back of the chair
above her head for balance. Each was careful not to actually touch
the other. Her long-fingered hand moved over the control panel
embedded in the right armrest, and the force-field snapped on again.
The pale white light reflected off the flowered bushes, bringing out
their color, and cast a glow before them as they began to move down
the path.
Their view was quite clear, scarcely
impeded by an eggshell-thin, ghostly sphere of mist that marked the
boundary of the force-field as seen from this side. Sound too was
transmitted with high clarity, much better than the deliberately
muffled reverse effect. He could hear voices, and the clink of
glassware, from a balcony above. They passed Ambassador Vorob'yev and
Ivan again, who stared curiously, uncertain, of course, if this was
the same bubble they'd seen before. Miles squelched an absurd impulse
to wave at them, going by.
They came not to the
lift-tube foyer, as Miles had expected, but to the edge of the
rooftop garden. Their silver-haired hostess was standing waiting. She
nodded at the bubble, and coded open the force-screen, letting the
bubble pass through onto a small private landing pad. The reflected
glow off the pavement darkened, as the haut-woman blacked out her
bubble. Miles stared upward at the shimmering night sky, looking for
the lightflyer or aircar.
Instead, the bubble
moved smoothly to the edge of the building and dropped straight over
the side.
Miles clutched the seat-back
convulsively, trying not to scream, fling his arms around his
hostess-pilot's neck, or throw up all over her white dress. They were
free-falling,
and he hated
heights . . . was this his intended death, his assassin sacrificing
herself along with him? Oh,
God—!
"I
thought these things only went a meter in the air," he choked
out, his voice, despite his best efforts, going high and
squeaky.
"If you have enough initial
altitude, you can maintain a controlled glide," she said calmly.
Despite Miles's horrified first impression, they were not actually
dropping like a rock. They were arcing outward, across the boulevards
far below, and the light-sparked green rings of parks, toward the
dome of the Celestial Garden.
Miles thought
wildly of the witch Baba Yaga, from the Barrayaran folk tales, who
flew in a magic mortar. This witch didn't qualify as old and ugly.
But he was not, at this moment, totally convinced she didn't eat bad
children.
In a few minutes, the bubble
decelerated again to a smooth walking pace a few centimeters above
the pavement outside one of the Celestial Garden's minor entrances. A
movement of her finger brought back the white glow.
"Ah,"
she said, in a refreshed tone. "I haven't done that in years."
She almost cracked a smile, for a moment nearly . . . human.
Miles
was shocked when they passed through the Celestial dome's security
procedures almost as if they weren't there, except for a swift
exchange of electronic codes. No one stopped or searched the bubble.
The sort of uniformed men who'd shaken down the galactic envoys with
beady-eyed thoroughness stood back respectfully, with downcast
gaze.
"Why don't they stop us?" Miles
whispered, unable to overcome the psychological conviction that if he
could see and hear them, they could see and hear him.
"Stop
me?" repeated the haut-woman in puzzlement. "I am the haut
Pel Navarr, Consort of Eta Ceta. I live
here."
Their further progress was happily
ground-hugging, if faster than the usual walking-pace, through the
increasingly familiar precincts of the Celestial Garden to the low
white building with the bio-filters on every window. The haut Pel's
passage through its automated security procedures was almost as swift
and perfunctory as through the dome entrance itself. They passed
silently down a set of corridors, but turned in a different direction
from the labs and offices at the building's heart, and went up one
level.
Double doors parted to admit them to a
large circular room done in subdued and subduing tones of silvery
gray. Unlike any other place he'd seen in the Celestial Garden, it
was devoid of living decorations, neither plant nor animal nor any of
those disturbing creations in-between. Hushed, concentrated,
undistracting … It was a chamber in the Star Creche; he supposed he
could dub it the Star Chamber. Eight women in white awaited them,
sitting silently in a circle. His stomach should not still be turning
over, dammit, the free fall was done.
The haut
Pel brought her float-chair to a halt in a waiting empty gap in the
circle, grounded it, and switched off the force-bubble. Eight
extraordinary pairs of eyes focused on Miles.
No
one,
he thought, should
be exposed to this many haut-women at once.
It was some kind of dangerous overdose. Their beauty was varied;
three were as silver-haired as the ghem-admiral's wife, one was
copper-tressed, one was dark-skinned and hawk-nosed, with masses of
blue-black ringlets tumbling down around her like a cloak. Two were
blonde, his guide with her golden weave and another with hair as pale
as oat straw in the sun, and as straight to the floor. One dark-eyed
woman had chocolate-brown hair like the haut Vio, but in soft curling
clouds instead of bound. And then there was Rian. Their massed effect
went beyond beauty; where to, he was not sure, but terror
came close. He slipped off the arm of the float chair, and stood away
from it, grateful for the propping effect of his stiff high
boots.
"Here is the Barrayaran to testify,"
said the haut Rian.
Testify.
He was here as a witness, then, not as the accused. A Key witness, so
to speak. He stifled a slightly manic giggle. Somehow he did not
think Rian would appreciate the pun.
He
swallowed, and got his voice unlocked. "You have the advantage
of me, ladies." Though he could make a good guess who they all
were, at this point. His gaze swept the circle, and he blinked hard
against the vertigo. "I have only met your Handmaiden." He
nodded toward Rian. On a low table before her the Empress's entire
formal regalia was laid out, including the Seal and the false Great
Key.
Rian tilted her head in acknowledgment of
the reasonableness of his request, and proceeded to go around the
circle with a bewildering slug of haut names and titles—yes, here
indeed sat the consorts of the eight satrap planets. With Rian the
ninth, sitting in for the late Empress. The creative controllers of
the haut-genome, of the would-be master race, were all met here in
some extraordinary council.
The chamber was
clearly set up for just this purpose; such meetings must also occur
when the consorts journeyed home to escort the child-ships. Miles
particularly focused on the consorts of Prince Slyke, Ilsum Kety, and
the Rond. Kety's woman, the Consort of Sigma Ceta, was one of the
silver-haired ones, closer to being contemporary with the late
Empress than anyone else in the room. Rian introduced her as the haut
Nadina. The oat-straw blonde served Prince Slyke of Xi Ceta, and the
brown-curled woman was the Consort of Rho Ceta. Miles wondered anew
at the significance of their titles, which named them all consorts of
their planets, not of the men.
"Lord
Vorkosigan," said the haut Rian. "I would like you to
repeat for the consorts how you say you came into possession of the
false Great Key, and all the subsequent events."
Miles
did not blame her in the least for switching strategies from playing
all cards close to her chest to calling in reinforcements. It was not
before time, in his opinion. But he disliked being taken by surprise.
It would have been nice if she'd at least consulted
him, first. Yeah?
How?
"I
take it you understood my message to abort the infiltration of Prince
Slyke's ship," he countered.
"Yes. I
expect you will explain why, in due order."
"Excuse
me, milady. I do not mean to insult . . . anyone here. But if one of
the consorts is a traitoress, in collusion with her satrap governor,
this will pipeline everything we know straight to him. How do you
know
you are entirely among friends?"
There was
enough tension in the room to go with any number of treasons,
certainly. Rian raised a hand, as if to stem it. "He is an
outlander. He cannot understand." She gave him a slow nod.
"There is treason, we believe, yes, but not on this
level. Further down."
"Oh . . .
?"
"We have concluded that even with
the bank and Key in his hands, the satrap governor could not run the
haut-genome by himself. The haut of his satrap would not cooperate
with such a sudden usurpation, the overturning of all custom. He must
plan to appoint a new consort, one under his own control. We think
she has already been selected."
"Ah …
do you know who?"
"Not yet," Rian
sighed. "Not yet. She is someone, I fear, who does not wholly
understand the goal of haut. It is all of a piece. If we knew which
governor, we could guess which haut-woman he has suborned; if we knew
which woman . . . well."
Dammit, this
triangulation had
to break soon. Miles chewed on his lower lip, then said slowly,
"Milady. Tell me—if you can—something about how your
force-bubbles are keyed to their individual operators, and why
everyone is so damned convinced they're dead-secure. The keypad on
those control panels looks like a palm-lock, but it can't just be a
palm-lock; you can get around palm-locks."
"I
cannot give you
the technical details, Lord Vorkosigan," said Rian.
"I
don't expect you to. Just the general logic of it."
"Well
. . . they are keyed genetically, of course. One brushes one's hand
across the pad, leaving a few skin cells. These are sucked in and
scanned."
"Does it scan your entire
genome? Surely that would take a lot of time."
"No,
of course not. It runs through a tree of a dozen or so critical
markers that individually identify a haut-woman. Starting with the
presence of an X chromosome pair, and going down a branching list
until confirmation is achieved."
"How
much chance is there of duplicating the markers in two or more
individuals?"
"We do not clone
ourselves, Lord Vorkosigan."
"I mean,
just of the dozen factors, just enough to fool the
machine."
"Vanishingly
small."
"Even among closely related
members of one's own constellation?"
She
hesitated, exchanging a glance with Lady Pel, who raised her brows
thoughtfully.
"There's a reason I ask,"
Miles went on. "When ghem-Colonel Benin interviewed me, he let
slip that six haut-bubbles had entered the funeral rotunda during the
time period the Ba Lura's body must have been placed at the foot of
the bier, and that it presented him with a major puzzle. He didn't
tell me which six, but I bet you could get him to disgorge the list.
It's a brute-force triage of a major data dump, but—suppose you ran
the markers of those six through your records, and checked for
accidental duplicates among living haut-women. If the woman is
serving the satrap governor, she might have served him in that
murder, too. You might finger your traitoress without ever having to
leave the Star Creche."
Rian, momentarily
alert, sat back with a weary sigh.
"Your
reasoning is correct, Lord Vorkosigan. We could do that—if we had
the Great Key."
"Oh," said Miles.
"Yeah. That." He reverted from an eager parade-rest to a
deflated at-ease. "For what it's worth, my strategic analysis
and what little physical evidence I've wrung from ghem-Colonel Benin
so far suggests either Prince Slyke or the haut Ilsum Kety. With the
haut Rond a distant third. But as Rho Ceta and Mu Ceta would bear the
brunt of it if open conflict with Barrayar was actually engineered,
my own choice has settled pretty firmly between Slyke and Kety.
Recent . . . events point to Kety." He glanced again around the
circle. "Is there anything any of the consorts have seen or
heard, or overheard, that would help pin him more certainly?"
A
murmur of negatives; "Unfortunately, no," said Rian. "We
have discussed that problem already this evening. Please
begin."
On
your head be it, milady.
Miles took a deep breath, and launched into the full true account,
minus most of his opinions, of his experiences on Eta Ceta from the
moment the Ba Lura lurched into their personnel pod. He paused
occasionally, to give Rian a chance to hint him away from anything
she wanted to conceal. She appeared to want to conceal nothing,
instead drawing him on with skillful questions and prompts to
disgorge every detail.
Rian had seen, he slowly
realized, that the secrecy problem cut two ways. Lord X could
assassinate Miles, maybe Rian as well. But even the most megalomanic
Cetagandan politician must find it excessively challenging to try to
get away with disposing of all eight satrap consorts. His voice
strengthened.
He felt his underlying assumptions
slowly wringing inside-out. Rian seemed less and less like a damsel
in distress all the time. In fact, he was beginning to wonder if he
was trying to rescue the dragon. Well,
dragons need to be rescued too, sometimes. . . .
Nobody even blinked at his description of his near-assassination the
day before. If anything, there was a subliminal murmur of
appreciation for its elegance of form and style, and of faintly
sympathetic disappointment at its foiling. The judges had no
appreciation for the governor's originality in attempting to muscle
in on their own territory, though. The Sigma and Xi Cetan consorts
looked increasingly stony, exchanging a raised-brow glance or a nod
of understanding now and then.
There was a long
silence when he'd finished. Time to present Plan B? "I have a
suggestion," Miles said boldly. "Recall all the duplicate
gene banks from the satrap governors' ships. If they are all
returned, you will have stripped him of his ability to carry out his
larger plans. If he resists releasing it, you will have smoked him
out."
"Bring them back"
said the haut Pel in dismay. "Do you have any idea how much
trouble we had getting them up
there?"
"But he might take both bank
and Key, and flee," objected the brown-curled Consort of Rho
Ceta.
"No," said Miles. "That's
the one thing he can't
do. There are too many Imperially guarded wormhole jumps between him
and home. Speaking militarily, open flight is impossible. He'd never
make it. He cannot reveal a thing about any of this till he's safely
in orbit around . . . Something Ceta. In a weird way, we have him
cornered till the funeral is over." Which
will be all too soon, now.
"That
still leaves the problem of retrieving the real Key," said
Rian.
"Once you have the bank back, you may
be able to negotiate the Key's return, in exchange for, say, amnesty.
Or you can claim he stole it—perfectly true—and set your own
security to get it back for you. Once the other governors are freed
of the incriminating evidence they're holding, you may be able to cut
him out of the herd, so to speak, with their goodwill. In any case,
it will open up a lot of tactical options."
"He
may threaten to destroy it," worried the Consort of Sigma
Ceta.
"You must know Ilsum Kety better than
anyone else here, haut Nadina," said Miles. "Would
he?"
"He is … an erratic young man,"
she said reluctantly. "I am not yet convinced that he is guilty.
But I know nothing about him that makes your accusations
impossible."
"And your governor,
ma'am?" Miles nodded to the Consort of Xi Ceta.
"Prince
Slyke is … a determined and brilliant man. The plot you describe is
not beyond his capacities. I'm . . . not sure."
"Well
. . . you can
re-create the Great Key, eventually, can't you?" Push or shove,
the Empress's great plan would be canned for a generation. A very
desirable outcome, from Barrayar's point of view. Miles smiled
agreeably.
A faint groan went around the room.
"Recovering the Great Key undamaged is the highest priority,"
Rian said firmly.
"He still wants to frame
Barrayar," said Miles. "It may have started as cold-blooded
astro-political calculation, but I'm pretty sure it's a personal
motivation by now."
"If I recall the
banks," said Rian slowly, "we will entirely lose this
opportunity to distribute them."
The
Consort of Sigma Ceta, the silver-haired Nadina, sighed, "I had
hoped to live to see the Celestial Lady's vision of new growth
carried out. She was right, you know. I have seen the stagnation
increasing in my lifetime."
"Other
opportunities will come," said another silver-haired
lady.
"It must be done more carefully next
time," said the brown-curled Consort of Rho Ceta. "Our Lady
trusted the governors too much."
"I'm
not so sure she did," said Rian. "I was only attempting to
go as far as distributing inactive copies for backup. The Ba Lura
felt our Mistress's desires keenly, but did not understand her
subtlety. It wasn't my
idea to attempt to distribute the Key now, and I'm not convinced it
was hers, either. I don't know if the Ba had a separate understanding
with her, or just a separate misunderstanding. And now I never will."
She bowed her head. "I apologize to the Council for my failure."
Her tone of voice made Miles think of inward-turning knives.
"You
did your best, dear," said the haut Nadina kindly. But she added
more sternly, "However, you should not have attempted to handle
it all alone."
"It was my
charge."
"A little less emphasis on
the my,
and a little more emphasis on the charge,
next time."
Miles tried not to squirm at
the general applicability of this gentle correction.
A
glum silence reigned, for a time.
"We may
need to consider altering the genome to make the haut-lords more
controllable," said the Rho Cetan consort.
"For
renewed expansion, we need the opposite," objected the dark
consort. "More aggression."
"The
ghem-experiment, filtering favorable genetic combinations upward from
the general population, surely suffices for that"
said the haut Pel.
"Our Lady, in her
wisdom, aimed at less uniformity, not more," conceded
Rian.
"I believe we have long made a
mistake in leaving the haut-males so entirely to their own devices,"
said the Rho Cetan consort stubbornly.
Said the
dark one, "But how else should we select among them, if there is
no free competition to sort them out?"
Rian
held up a restraining hand. "The time for this larger debate . .
. must be soon. But not now. I myself have been convinced by these
events that further refinement must come before further expansion.
But that," she sighed, "is a new Empress's task. Now
we must decide what state of affairs she will inherit. How many favor
the recall of the gene banks?"
The ayes had
it. Several were slow in coming, but in some occult way a unanimous
vote was achieved through nothing more than an exchange of unreadable
glances. Miles breathed relief.
Rian's shoulders
slumped wearily. "Then I so order you all. Return them to the
Star Creche."
"As what?" asked
the haut Pel in a practical tone.
Rian stared
into the air a moment, and replied, "As collections of human
genomic materials from your various satrapies, requested by the Lady
before her death, and received by us in trust for the Star Creches
experimental files."
"That will do
nicely on this end," nodded the haut Pel. "And on the other
end?"
"Tell your governors . . . we
discovered a serious error in the copy, which must be corrected
before the genome can be released to them."
"Very
good."
The meeting broke up, the women
activating their float-chairs, though not yet their private bubbles,
and leaving in twos and threes in a murmur of intense discussion.
Rian and the haut Pel waited until the room emptied, and Miles
perforce waited with them.
"Do you still
want me to try and retrieve the Key for you?" Miles asked Rian.
"Barrayar remains vulnerable until we nail the satrap governor
with solid proof, data a clever man can't diddle. And I especially
don't like the toehold he seems to have in your own security."
"I
don't know," said Rian. "The return of the gene banks
cannot take less than a day. I'll . . . send someone for you, as we
did tonight."
"We'll be down to two
days left, then. Not much margin. I'd rather go sooner than
later."
"It cannot be helped."
She touched her hair, a nervous gesture despite its
grace.
Watching her, he searched his heart. The
impact of his first mad crush was surely fading, in this drought of
response, to be replaced by … what? If she had slaked his thirst
with the least little drop of affection, he would be hers body and
soul right now. In a way he was glad she wasn't faking anything,
depressing as it was to be treated like a ba servitor, his loyalty
and obedience assumed. Maybe his proposed disguise as a ba had been
suggested by his subconscious for more than practical reasons. Was
his back-brain trying to tell him something?
"The
haut Pel will return you to your point of origin," Rian
said.
He bowed. "In my experience, milady,
we can never get back to exactly where we started, no matter how hard
we try."
She returned nothing to this but
an odd look, as he rode out again on the haut Pel's
float-chair.
Pel carried him through the
Celestial Garden as before, in reverse. He wondered if she was as
uncomfortable with their compressed proximity as he was. He made a
stab at light conversation.
"Did the
haut-ladies make all this plant and animal life in the garden?
Competing, like the ghem bioesthetics fair? I was particularly
impressed by the singing frogs, I must say."
"Oh,
no," said the haut Pel. "The lower life-forms are all ghem
work. That's their highest reward, to have their art incorporated
into the Imperial garden. The haut only work in human
material."
He didn't recall seeing any
monsters around. "Where?"
"We
mostly field-test ideas in the ba servitors. It prevents the
accidental release of any genomic materials through sexual
routes."
"Oh."
"Our
highest honor is for a favorable gene complex we have developed to be
taken up into the haut-genome itself."
It
was like some golden rule in reverse—never do unto yourself what
you have not first tried on another. Miles smiled, rather nervously,
and did not pursue the subject further. A groundcar driven by a ba
servitor waited for the haut Pel's bubble at the side entrance to the
Celestial Garden, and they were returned to Lady d'Har's penthouse by
more normal routes.
Pel let him out of her
bubble in another private nook, in an unobserved moment, and drifted
away again. He pictured her reporting back to Rian—Yes,
milady, I released the Barrayaran back into the wild as you ordered.
I hope he will be able to find food and a mate out there. . . .
He sat on a bench overlooking the Celestial Garden, and meditated
upon that view until Ivan and Ambassador Vorob'yev found him.
They
looked, respectively, scared and angry. "You're late," said
Ivan. "Where the hell did you go?"
"I
almost called out Colonel Vorreedi and the guards," added
Ambassador Vorob'yev sternly.
"That would
have been . . . futile," sighed Miles. "We can go
now."
"Thank God," muttered
Ivan.
Vorob'yev said nothing. Miles rose,
wondering how soon the ambassador and Vorreedi were going to stop
taking Not
yet
for an answer.
Not
yet. Please, not yet.
There
was nothing he would have liked more than a day off, Miles reflected,
but not today.
The worst was the knowledge that he'd done this to himself. Until the
consorts completed their retrieval of the gene banks, all he could do
was wait. And unless Rian sent a car to the embassy to pick him up, a
move so overt as to be vigorously resisted by both sets of Imperial
Security, it was impossible for Miles to make contact with her again
until the Gate-song Ceremonies tomorrow morning at the Celestial
Garden. He grumbled under his breath, and called up more data on his
suite's comconsole, then stared at it unseeing.
He
wasn't sure it was wise to give Lord X an extra day either, for all
that this afternoon would contain a nasty shock for him when his
consort came to take away his gene bank. That would eliminate his
last chance of sitting tight, and gliding away with bank and Key,
perhaps dumping his old centrally appointed and controlled consort
out an airlock en route. The man must realize now that Rian would
turn him in, even if it meant incriminating herself, before letting
him get away. Assassinating the Handmaiden of the Star Creche hadn't
been part of the Original Plan, Miles was fairly sure. Rian had been
intended to be a blind puppet, accusing Miles and Barrayar of
stealing her Key. Lord X had a weakness for blind puppets. But Rian
was loyal to the haut, beyond her own self-interest. No right-minded
plotter could assume she would stay paralyzed for long.
Lord
X was a tyrant, not a revolutionary. He wanted to take over the
system, not change it. The late Empress was the real revolutionary,
with her attempt to divide the haut into eight competing sibling
branches, and may the best superman win. The Ba Lura might have been
closer to its mistress's mind than Rian allowed. You can't
give power away and keep it simultaneously.
Except posthumously.
So what would Lord X do
now? What could
he do now, but fight to the last, trying anything he could think of
to avoid being brought down for this? It was that or slit his wrists,
and Miles didn't think he was the wrist-slitting type. He would still
be searching for some way to pin it all on Barrayar, preferably in
the form of a dead Miles who couldn't give him the lie. There was
even still a faint chance he could bring that off, given the
Cetagandan lack of enthusiasm for outlanders in general and
Barrayarans in particular. Yes, this was a good day to stay
indoors.
So would the results have been any
better if Miles had publicly turned over the decoy Key and the truth
on the very first day? No . . . then the embassy and its envoys would
be mired right now in false accusations and public scandal, and no
way to prove their innocence. If Lord X had picked any other
delegation but Barrayar's upon which to plant his false Key—say,
the Marilacans, the Aslunders, or the Vervani—his plan might yet be
running along like clockwork. Miles hoped sourly that Lord X was
Very, Very Sorry that he'd targeted Barrayar. And
I'm going to make you even sorrier, you sod.
Miles's
lips thinned as he turned his attention back to his comconsole. The
satrap governors' ships were all to the same general plan, and a
general plan, alas, was all the Barrayaran embassy data bank had
available without tapping in to the secret files. Miles shuffled the
holovid display though the various levels and sections of the ship.
If
I were a satrap governor planning revolt, where would I hide the
Great Key? Under ray pillow?
Probably not.
The governor had the Key, but not
the Key's key, so to speak; Rian still possessed that ring. If Lord X
could open the Great Key, he could do a data dump, possess himself of
a duplicate of the information-contents, and maybe, in a pinch,
return the original, divesting himself of material evidence of his
treasonous plans. Or even destroy it, hah. But if the Key were easy
to get open, he should have done this already, when his plans first
began to go seriously wrong. So if he was still trying to access the
Key, it ought to be located in some sort of cipher lab. So where on
this vast ship was a suitable cipher lab . . . ?
The
chime of his door interrupted Miles's harried perusal. Colonel
Vorreedi's voice inquired, "Lord Vorkosigan? May I come
in?"
Miles sighed. "Enter." He'd
been afraid all this comconsole activity would attract Vorreedi's
attention. The protocol officer had to be monitoring from
downstairs.
Vorreedi trod in, and studied the
holovid display over Miles's shoulder. "Interesting. What is
it?"
"Just brushing up on Cetagandan
warship specs. Continuing education, officer-style, and all that. The
hope for promotion to ship duty never dies."
"Hm."
Vorreedi straightened. "I thought you might like to hear the
latest on your Lord Yenaro."
"I don't
think I own him, but—nothing fatal, I hope," said Miles
sincerely. Yenaro might be an important witness, later; upon mature
reflection Miles was beginning to regret not offering him asylum at
the embassy.
"Not yet. But an order has
been issued for his arrest."
"By
Cetagandan Security? For treason?"
"No.
By the civil police. For theft."
"It's
a false charge, I'd lay odds. Somebody's trying to use the system to
smoke him out of hiding. Can you find out who laid the charge?"
"A
ghem-lord by the name of Nevic. Does that mean anything to
you?"
"No. He's got to be a puppet.
The man who put Nevic up to it is the man we want. The same man who
supplied Yenaro with the plans and money for his fun-fountain. But
now you have two strings to pull."
"You
imagine it to be the same man?"
"Imagination,"
said Miles, "has nothing to do with it. But I need proof,
stand-up-in-court type proof."
Vorreedi's
gaze was uncomfortably level. "Why did you guess the charge
against Yenaro would be treason?"
"Oh,
well … I wasn't thinking. Theft is much better, less flashy, if
what his enemy wants is for the civil police to drag Yenaro out into
the open where he can get a clear shot at him."
Vorreedi's
brows crimped. "Lord Vorkosigan …" But he appeared to
think better of whatever he'd been about to say. He just shook his
head and departed.
Ivan wandered in later, flung
himself onto Miles's sofa, put up his booted feet on the armrest, and
sighed.
"You still here?" Miles shut
down his comconsole, which was by now making him cross-eyed. "I
thought you'd be out making hay, or rolling in it, or whatever. Our
last two days here and all. Or did you run out of invitations?"
Miles jerked his thumb ceilingward, We
may be bugged.
Ivan's
lip curled, Screw
it.
"Vorreedi has laid on more bodyguards. It kind of takes the
spontaneity out of things." He stared into the air. "Besides,
I worry about where I put my feet, now. Wasn't it some queen of Egypt
who was delivered in a rolled-up carpet? Could happen
again."
"Could indeed," Miles had
to agree. "Almost certainly will, in fact."
"Great.
Remind me not to stand next to you."
Miles
grimaced.
After a minute or two Ivan added, "I'm
bored."
Miles chased him from his
room.
The ceremony of Singing Open The Great
Gates did not entail the opening of any gates, though it did involve
singing. A massed chorus of several hundred ghem, both male and
female, robed in white-on-white, arranged themselves near the eastern
entrance inside the Celestial Garden. They planned to pass in
procession around the four cardinal directions and eventually, later
in the afternoon, finish at the north gate. The chorus stood to sing
along an undulating area of ground with surprising acoustic
properties, and the galactic envoys and ghem and haut mourners stood
to listen. Miles flexed his legs, inside his boots, and prepared to
endure. The open venue left lots of space for haut-lady bubbles, and
they were out in force—some hundreds, scattered about the glade.
How many haut-women did
live here?
Miles glanced around his little
delegation—himself, Ivan, Vorob'yev, and Vorreedi all in House
blacks, Mia Maz dressed as before, striking in black and white.
Vorreedi looked more Barrayaran, more officer-like, and, Miles had to
admit, a lot more sinister out of his deliberately dull Cetagandan
civvies. Maz rested one hand on Vorob'yev's arm and stood on tiptoe
as the music started.
Breathtaking,
Miles realized, could be a quite literal term—his lips parted and
the hairs on the backs of his arms stood on end as the incredible
sounds washed over him. Harmonies and dissonances followed one
another up and down the scale with such precision, the listener could
make out every word, when the voices were not simply wordless
vibrations that seemed to crawl right up the spine, and ring in the
back-brain in a succession of pure emotions. Even Ivan stood
transfixed. Miles wanted to comment, to express his astonishment, but
breaking into the absolute concentration the music demanded seemed
some sort of sacrilege. After about a thirty-minute performance, the
music came to a temporary close, and the chorus prepared to move
gracefully off to its next station, followed more clumsily by the
delegates.
The two groups took different routes.
Ba servitors under the direction of a dignified ghem-lord major-domo
shepherded the delegates to a buffet, to both refresh and delay them
while the chorus set up for its next performance at the southern
gate. Miles stared anxiously after the haut-lady bubbles, which
naturally did not accompany the outlander envoys, but floated off in
their own mob in yet a third direction. He was getting less
distracted by the diversions of the Celestial Garden. Could one
finally grow to take it entirely for granted? The haut certainly
seemed to.
"I think I'm getting used to
this place," he confided to Ivan, as he walked along between him
and Vorob'yev in the ragged parade of outlander guests. "Or …
I could."
"Mm," said Ambassador
Vorob'yev. "But when these pretty folks turned their pet
ghem-lords loose to pick up some cheap new real estate out past
Komarr, five million of us died. I hope that hasn't slipped your
mind, my lord."
"No," said Miles
tightly. "Not ever. But . . . even you are not old enough to
remember the war personally, sir. I'm really starting to wonder if
we'll ever see an effort like that from the Cetagandan Empire
again."
"Optimist," murmured
Ivan.
"Let me qualify that. My mother
always says, behavior that is rewarded is repeated. And the reverse.
I think . . . that if the ghem-lords fail to score any new
territorial successes in our generation, it's going to be a long time
till we see them try again. An expansionist period followed by an
isolationist one isn't a new historical phenomenon, after
all."
"Didn't know you'd taken up
political science," said Ivan.
"Can
you prove your point?" asked Vorob'yev. "In less than a
generation?"
Miles shrugged. "Don't
know. It's one of those subliminal gut-feel things. If you gave me a
year and a department, I could probably produce a reasoned analysis,
with graphs."
"I admit," said
Ivan, "it's hard to imagine, say, Lord Yenaro conquering
anybody."
"It's not that he couldn't.
It's just that by the time he ever got a chance, he'd be too old to
care. I don't know. After the next isolationist period, though, all
bets are off. When the haut are done with ten more generations of
tinkering with themselves, I don't know what they'll be." And
neither do they. That
was an odd realization. You
mean no one is in charge here?
"Universal conquest may seem like a crude dull game from their
childhood after that. Or else," he added glumly, "they'll
be unstoppable."
"Jolly thought,"
grumbled Ivan.
A delicate breakfast offering was
set up in a nearby pavilion. On the other side of it, the float-cars
with the white silk upholstery waited to convey refreshed funeral
envoys the couple of kilometers across the Celestial Garden to the
South Gate. Miles nabbed a hot drink, refused with concealed loathing
the offer of a pastry tray—his stomach was knotting with nervous
anticipation—and watched the movements of the ba servitors with
hawk-like attention. It
has to break today. There's no more time. Come on, Rian!
And how the devil was he to take Rian's next report when he had
Vorreedi glued to his hip? The man was noting his every eye-flicker,
Miles swore.
The day wore on with a repeat of
the cycle of music and food and transportation. A number of the
delegates were looking glassily over-loaded with it all; even Ivan
had stopped eating in self-defense at about stop three. When the
contact did come, at the buffet after the fourth and last choral
performance, Miles almost missed it. He was making idle chit-chat
with Vorreedi, reminiscing about Keroslav District baking styles, and
wondering how he was going to distract and ditch the man. Miles had
reached the point of desperation of fantasizing slipping Ambassador
Vorob'yev an emetic and siccing, so to speak, the protocol officer on
his superior while Miles ducked out, when he saw out of the corner of
his eye Ivan talking with a grave ba servitor. He did not recognize
this ba; it was not Rian's favorite little creature, for it was young
and had a brush of blond hair. Ivan's hands turned palm-out, and he
shrugged, then he followed the servitor from the pavilion, looking
puzzled. Ivan?
What the hell does she want Ivan for?
"Excuse
me, sir," Miles cut across Vorreedi's words, and around his
side. By the time Vorreedi had turned after him, Miles had darted
past another delegation and was halfway to the exit after Ivan.
Vorreedi would follow, but Miles would just have to deal with that
later.
Miles emerged, blinking, into the
artificial afternoon light of the dome just in time to see the dark
shadow and boot-gleam of Ivan's uniform disappear around some
flowering shrubbery, beyond an open space featuring a fountain. He
trotted after, his own boots scuffing unevenly on the colored stone
walks threading the greenery. "Lord Vorkosigan?" Vorreedi
called after him. Miles didn't turn around, but raised his hand in an
acknowledging, but still rapidly receding, wave. Vorreedi was too
polite to curse out loud, but Miles could fill in the blanks.
The
man-high shrubbery, broken up by artistic groupings of trees, wasn't
quite a maze, but nearly so. Miles's first choice of directions
opened onto some sort of unpeopled water meadow, with the stream
generated from the nearby fountain running like silver embroidery
through its center. He ran back along his route, cursing his legs and
his limp, and swung around the other end of the bushes.
In
the center of a tree-shaded circle lined with benches, a haut-chair
floated with its high back to Miles, its screen down. The blond
servitor was gone already. Ivan leaned in toward the float-chair's
occupant, his lips parted in fascination, his brows drawn down in
suspicion. A white-robed arm lifted. A faint cloud of iridescent mist
puffed into Ivan's surprised face. Ivan's eyes rolled back, and he
collapsed forward across the seated occupant's knees. The
force-screen snapped up, white and blank. Miles yelled and ran toward
it.
The haut-ladies' float-chairs were hardly
race cars, but they could move faster than Miles could run. In two
turns through the shrubbery it was out of sight. When Miles cleared
the last stand of flowers, he found himself facing one of the major
carved-white-jade-paved walkways that curved through the Celestial
Garden. Floating along it in both directions were half a dozen
haut-bubbles, all now moving at the same dignified walking pace.
Miles had no breath left to swear, but black thoughts boiled off his
brain.
He spun on his heel, and ran straight
into Colonel Vorreedi.
Vorreedi's hand descended
on his shoulder and took a good solid grip on the uniform cloth.
"Vorkosigan, what the hell is going on? And where is
Vorpatril?"
"I'm . . . just about to
go check on that right now, sir, if you'll permit me."
"Cetagandan
Security had better know. I'll light up their lives if
they've—"
"I … don't think
Security can help us on this one, sir. I think I need to talk to a ba
servitor. Immediately."
Vorreedi frowned,
trying to process this. It obviously did not compute. Miles couldn't
blame him. Until a week ago, he too had shared the universal
assumption that Cetagandan Imperial Security was in charge here. And
so they are, in some ways. But not all ways.
Speak
of the devil. As Miles and Vorreedi turned to retrace their steps to
the pavilion, a red-uniformed, zebra-faced guard appeared, striding
rapidly toward them. Sheepdog, Miles judged, sent to round up
straying galactic envoys. Fast, but not fast enough.
"My
lords," the guard, a low-ranker, nodded very politely. "The
pavilion is this way, if you please. The float-cars will take you to
the South Gate."
Vorreedi appeared to come
to a quick decision. "Thank you. But we seem to have mislaid a
member of our party. Would you please find Lord Vorpatril for
me?"
"Certainly." The guard
touched a wrist com and reported the request in neutral tones, while
still firmly herding Miles and Vorreedi pavilion-ward. Taking Ivan,
for now, as merely a lost guest; that had to happen fairly often,
since the garden was designed to entice the viewer on into its
delights. I
give Cetagandan Security maybe ten minutes to figure out he's really
disappeared, in the middle of the Celestial Garden. Then it all
starts coming apart.
The
guard split off as they climbed the steps to the pavilion. Back
inside, Miles approached the oldest bald servitor he saw. "Excuse
me, Ba," he said respectfully. The ba glanced up, nonplussed at
not being invisible. "I must communicate immediately with the
haut Rian Degtiar. It's an emergency." He opened his hands and
stood back.
The ba appeared to digest this for a
moment, then gave a half bow and motioned Miles to follow. Vorreedi
came too. Around a corner in the semi-privacy of a service area, the
ba pulled back its gray and white uniform sleeve and spoke into its
wrist-comm, a quick gabble of words and code phrases. Its
non-existent eyebrows rose in surprise at the return message. It took
off its wrist-comm, handed it to Miles with a low bow, and retreated
out of earshot. Miles wished Vorreedi, looming over his shoulder,
would do the same, but he didn't.
"Lord
Vorkosigan?" came Rian's voice from the comm—unfiltered, she
must be speaking from inside her bubble.
"Milady.
Did you just send one of your . . . people, to pick up my cousin
Ivan?"
There was a short pause. "No."
"I
witnessed this."
"Oh." Another,
much longer pause. When her voice came back again, it had gone low
and dangerous. "I know what is happening."
"I'm
glad somebody does."
"I will send my
servitor for you."
"And Ivan?"
"We
will handle that." The comm cut abruptly. Miles almost shook it
in frustration, but handed it back to the servitor instead, who took
it, bowed again, and scooted away.
"Just
what did you witness, Lord Vorkosigan?" Vorreedi
demanded.
"Ivan . . . left with a
lady."
"What, again?
Here? Now?
Does the boy have no sense of time or place? This isn't Emperor
Gregor's Birthday Party, dammit."
"I
believe I can retrieve him very discreetly, sir, if you will allow
me." Miles felt a faint twinge of guilt for slandering Ivan by
implication, but the twinge was lost in his general, heart-hammering
fear. Had that aerosol been a knockout drug, or a lethal
poison?
Vorreedi took a long, long minute to
think this one over, his eye cold on Miles. Vorreedi, Miles reminded
himself, was Intelligence, not Counter-intelligence; curiosity, not
paranoia, was his driving force. Miles shoved his hands into his
trouser pockets and tried to look calm, unworried, merely annoyed. As
the silence lengthened, he dared to add, "If you trust nothing
else, sir, please trust my competence. That's all I
ask."
"Discreet, eh?" said
Vorreedi. "You've made some interesting friends here, Lord
Vorkosigan. I'd like to hear a lot more about them."
"Soon,
I hope, sir."
"Mm . . . very well. But
be prompt."
"I'll do my best, sir,"
Miles lied. It had to be today. Once away from his guardian, he
wasn't coming back till the job was done. Or
we are all undone.
He gave a semi-salute, and slipped away before Vorreedi could think
better of it.
He went to the open side of the
pavilion and stepped down into the artificial sunlight just as a
float-car arrived that was not funerally decorated: a simple
two-passenger cart with room for cargo behind. A familiar aged little
bald ba was at the controls. The ba spotted Miles, and swung closer,
and brought its vehicle to a halt. They were intercepted by a
quick-moving red-clad guard.
"Sir. Galactic
guests may not wander the Celestial Garden unaccompanied."
Miles
opened his palm at the ba servitor.
"My
Lady requests and requires this man's attendance. I must take him,"
said the ba.
The guard looked unhappy, but gave
a short, reluctant nod. "My superior will speak to
yours."
"I'm sure." The ba's lips
twitched in what Miles swore was a smirk.
The
guard grimaced, and stepped away, his hand reaching for his comm
link. Go,
go!
thought Miles as he climbed aboard, but they were already moving.
This time, the float-car took a shortcut, rising up over the garden
and heading southwest in a straight line. They actually moved fast
enough for the breeze to ruffle Miles's hair. In a few minutes, they
descended toward the Star Creche, gleaming pale through the
trees.
A strange procession of white bubbles was
bobbing toward what was obviously a delivery entrance at the back of
the building. Five bubbles, one on each side and one above, were . .
. herding
a sixth, bumping it along toward the high, wide door and into
whatever loading bay lay beyond. The bubbles buzzed like angry wasps
whenever their force-fields touched. The ba brought its little
float-car calmly down into the tail of this parade, and followed the
bubbles inside. The door slid closed behind them and sealed with that
solid clunk and cacophony of chirps that bespoke high
security.
Except for being lined with colored
polished stone in geometric inlays instead of gray concrete, the
loading bay was utilitarian and normal in design. It was presently
empty except for the haut Rian Degtiar, standing in full flowing
white robes beside her own float-chair, waiting. Her pale face was
tense.
The five herding bubbles settled to the
floor and snapped off, revealing five of the consorts Miles had met
in the council night before last. The sixth bubble remained
stubbornly up, white and solid and impenetrable.
Miles
swung out of his cart as it settled to the pavement, and limped
hurriedly to Rian's side. "Is Ivan in there?" he demanded,
pointing at the sixth bubble.
"We think
so."
"What's happening?"
"Sh.
Wait." She made a graceful, palm-down gesture; Miles gritted his
teeth, jittering inside. Rian stepped forward, her chin
rising.
"Surrender and cooperate,"
said Rian clearly to the bubble, "and mercy is possible. Defy
us, and it is not."
The bubble remained
defiantly up and blank. Standoff. The bubble had nowhere to go, and
could not attack. But
she has Ivan in there.
"Very
well," sighed Rian. She pulled a pen-like object from her
sleeve, with a screaming-bird pattern engraved in red upon its side,
adjusted some control, pointed it at the bubble, and pressed. The
bubble winked out, and the float-chair fell to the floor with a
reverberant thump, all power dead. A yelp floated from a cloud of
white fabric and brown hair.
"I didn't know
anyone could do that," whispered Miles.
"Only
the Celestial Lady has the override," said Rian. She put the
control back in her sleeve, and stepped forward again, and
stopped.
The haut Vio d'Chilian had recovered
her balance instantly. She now half-knelt, one arm under Ivan's
black-uniformed arm, supporting his slumping form, the other hand
holding a thin knife to his throat. It looked very sharp, as it
pressed against his skin. Ivan's eyes were open, dilated, shifting;
he was paralyzed, not unconscious, then. And
not dead. Thank God.
Yet.
The
haut Vio d'Chilian, unless Miles missed his guess, would have no
inhibitions whatsoever about cutting a helpless man's throat. He
wished ghem-Colonel Benin were here to witness this.
"Move
against me," said the haut Vio, "and your Barrayaran
servitor
dies." Miles supposed the emphasis was intended as a hautish
insult. He was not quite sure it succeeded.
Miles
paced anxiously to Rian's other side, making an arc around the haut
Vio but venturing no closer. The haut Vio followed him with venomous
eyes. Now directly behind her, the haut Pel gave Miles a nod; her
float-chair rose silently into the air and slipped out a doorway to
the Creche. Going for help? For a weapon? Pel was the practical one …
he had to buy time.
"Ivan!" Miles said
indignantly. "Ivan's
not the man you want!"
The haut Vio's brows
drew down. "What?"
But of course. Lord
X always used front men, and women, for his legwork, keeping his own
hands clean. Miles had been galloping around doing the legwork;
therefore, Lord X must have reasoned that Ivan was really in charge.
"Agh!" Miles cried. "What did you think? That because
he's taller, and, and cuter, he had to be running this show? It's the
haut way, isn't it? You—you morons!
I'm
the brains of this outfit!" He paced the other way, spluttering.
"I had you spotted from Day One, don't you know? But no! Nobody
ever takes me seriously!" Ivan's eyes, the only part of him that
apparently still worked, widened at this rant. "So you went and
kidnapped the wrong
man.
You just blew your cover for the sake of grabbing the expendable
one!" The haut Pel hadn't gone for help, he decided. She'd gone
to the lav to fix her hair, and was going to take forever
in there.
Well, he certainly had the undivided
attention of everyone in the loading bay, murderess, victim,
haut-cops and all. What next, handsprings? "It's been like this
since we were little kids, y'know? Whenever the two of us were
together, they'd always talk to him
first, like I was some kind of idiot alien who needed an
interpreter—" the haut Pel reappeared silently in the doorway,
lifted her hand—Miles's voice rose to a shout, "Well, I'm sick
of it, d'you hear?!"
The haut Vio's head
twisted in realization just as the haut Pel's stunner buzzed. Vio's
hand spasmed on the knife as the stunner beam struck her. Miles
pelted forward as a line of red appeared at the blade's edge, and he
grabbed for Ivan as she slumped unconscious. The stun nimbus had
caught Ivan too, and his eyes rolled back. Miles let the haut Vio hit
the floor on her own, as hard as gravity took her. Ivan he lowered
gently.
It was only a surface cut. Miles
breathed again. He pulled out his pocket handkerchief and dabbed at
the sticky trickle of blood, then pressed it against the wound.
He
glanced up at the haut Rian, and the haut Pel, who floated over to
examine her handiwork. "She knocked him over with some kind of
drug-mist. Stun on top of that—is he in medical danger?"
"I
think not," said Pel. She dismounted from her float-chair,
knelt, and rummaged through the unconscious haut Vio's sleeves, and
came up with an assortment of objects, which she laid out in a
methodical row on the pavement. One was a tiny silvery pointed thing
with a bulb on the end. The haut Pel waved it under her lovely nose,
sniffing. "Ah. This is it. No, he's in no danger. It will wear
off harmlessly. He'll be very sick when he wakes up,
though."
"Maybe you could give him a
dose of synergine?" Miles pleaded.
"We
have that available."
"Good." He
studied the haut Rian.Only
the Celestial Lady has the override.
But Rian had used it as one entitled, and no one had blinked, not
even the haut Vio. Have
you grasped this yet, boy? Rian is the acting Empress of Cetaganda,
until tomorrow, and every move she's made has been with full, real,
Imperial authority. Handmaiden, ha.
Another one of those impenetrable, misleading haut titles that didn't
say what it meant; you had to be in the know.
Assured
of Ivan's eventual recovery, Miles scrambled to his feet and
demanded, "What's happening now? How did you find Ivan? Did you
get all the gene banks back, or not? What did you—"
The
haut Rian held up a restraining hand, to stem the flood of questions.
She nodded to the dead bubble-chair. "This is the Consort of
Sigma Ceta's float-chair, but as you see, the haut Nadina is not with
it."
"Ilsum Kety! Yes? What happened?
How'd he diddle the bubble? How'd you detect it? How long have you
known?"
"Ilsum Kety, yes. We began to
know last night, when the haut Nadina failed to return with her gene
bank. All the others were back and safe by midnight. But Kety
apparently only knew that his consort would be missed at this
morning's ceremonies. So he sent the haut Vio to impersonate her. We
suspected at once, and watched her."
"Why
Ivan?"
"That,
I do not know yet. Kety cannot
make a consort disappear without great repercussions; I suspect he
meant to use your cousin to divest himself of guilt
somehow."
"Another frame, yes, that
would fit his modus
operandi.
You realize, the haut Vio . . . must have murdered the Ba Lura. At
Kety's direction."
"Yes." Rian's
eyes, falling on the prostrate form of the brown-haired woman, were
very cold. "She too is a traitor to the haut. That will make her
the business of the Star Creches own justice."
Miles
said uneasily, "She could be an important witness, to clear
Barrayar and me of blame in the disappearance of the Great Key.
Don't, um … do anything premature, till we know if that's needed,
huh?"
"Oh, we have many
questions for her, first."
"So . . .
Kety still has his bank. And the Key. And a warning." Damn.
Whose idiot idea had it been . . . ? Oh. Yes. But
you can't blame Ivan for this one. Youthought recalling the gene
banks was a great move. And Rian bought it too. Idiocy by committee,
the finest kind. "And
he has his consort, whom he knows he cannot let live. Assuming she
still lives now. I did not think … I would be sending the haut
Nadina to her death." The haut Rian stared at the far wall,
avoiding both Miles's and Pel's eyes.
Neither
did I.
Miles swallowed sickness. "He can bury her in the chaos of his
revolt, once it gets going. But he can't start his revolt yet."
He paused. "But if, in order to arrange her death in some
artistic way that incriminates Barrayar, he needs Ivan … I don't
think she'll be dead yet. Saved, held prisoner on his ship, yes. Not
dead yet." Please,
not dead yet.
"We know one other thing, too. The haut Nadina is successfully
concealing information from him, or even actively misleading him. Or
he wouldn't have tried what he just tried." Actually, that could
also be construed as convincing evidence that the haut Nadina was
dead. Miles bit his lip. "But now Kety's made enough overt moves
to incriminate himself, for charges to stick to him and not to me,
yes?"
Rian hesitated. "Maybe. He is
clearly very clever."
Miles stared at the
inert float-chair, sitting slightly canted, and looking quite
ordinary without its magical electronic nimbus. "So are we.
Those float-chairs. Somebody here must security-key them to their
operators in the first place, right? Would I be making too silly a
wild-ass guess if I suggested that person was the Celestial
Lady?"
"That is correct, Lord
Vorkosigan."
"So you have the
override, and could encode this to anybody."
"Not
to anybody. Only to any haut-woman."
"Ilsum
Kety is expecting the return of this haut-bubble, after the
ceremonies, with a haut-woman and a Barrayaran prisoner, yes?"
He took a deep breath. "I think … we should not disappoint
him."
"I
found Ivan, sir." Miles smiled into the comconsole. The
background beyond Ambassador Vorob'yev's head was blurred, but the
sounds of the buffet winding down—subdued voices, the clink of
plates—carried clearly over the comm. "He's getting a tour of
the Star Creche. We'll be here a while yet—can't insult our hostess
and all that. But I should be able to extract him and catch up with
you before the party's over. One of the ba will bring us
back."
Vorob'yev looked anything but happy
at this news. "Well. I suppose it will have to do. But Colonel
Vorreedi does not care for these spontaneous additions to the planned
itinerary, regardless of the cultural opportunity, and I must say I'm
beginning to agree with him. Don't, ah … don't let Lord Vorpatril
do anything inappropriate, eh? The haut are not the ghem, you
know."
"Yes, sir. Ivan's doing just
fine. Never better." Ivan was still out cold, back in the
freight bay, but the returning color to his face had suggested the
synergine was starting to work.
"Just how
did he obtain this extraordinary privilege, anyway?" asked
Vorob'yev.
"Oh, well, you know Ivan.
Couldn't let me score a coup he couldn't match. I'll explain it all
later. Must go now."
"I'll be
fascinated to hear it," the ambassador murmured dryly. Miles cut
the comm before his smile fractured and fell off his face.
"Whew.
That buys us a little time. A very little time. We need to
move."
"Yes," agreed his escort,
the brown-haired Rho Cetan lady. She turned her float-chair and led
him out of the side-office containing the comconsole; he had to trot
to keep up.
They returned to the freight bay
just as Rian and the haut Pel finished re-coding the haut Nadina's
bubble-chair. Miles spared an anxious glance for Ivan, laid out on
the tessellated pavement. He seemed to be breathing deeply and
normally.
"I'm ready," Miles reported
to Rian. "My people won't come looking for us for at least an
hour. If Ivan wakes up … well, you
should have no trouble keeping him under control." He licked
lips gone dry. "If things go wrong … go to ghem-Colonel Benin.
Or to your Emperor himself. No Imperial Security middlemen.
Everything about this, especially the ways Governor Kety has been
able to diddle what everyone fondly believed were diddle-proof
systems, is screaming to me that he's suborned a connection high up,
probably very high up, in your own security who's giving him serious
aid and comfort. Being rescued by him could be a fatal experience, I
suspect."
"I understand," said
Rian gravely. "And I agree with your analysis. The Ba Lura would
not have taken the Great Key to Kety for duplication in the first
place if it had not been convinced that he was capable of carrying
out the task." She straightened from the float-chair arm, and
nodded to the haut Pel.
The haut Pel had filled
her sleeves with most of the little items she had taken from the haut
Vio. She nodded back, straightened her robes, and gracefully settled
herself aboard. The little items did not, alas, include energy
weapons, the power packs of which would set off security scanners.
Not
even a stunner,
Miles thought with morbid regret. I'm
going into orbital battle wearing dress blacks and riding boots, and
I'm totally disarmed. Wonderful.
He took his place again at Pel's left side, perched on the cushioned
armrest, trying not to feel like the ventriloquist's dummy that he
glumly fancied he resembled. The bubble's force-screen enclosed them,
and Rian stood back, and nodded. Pel, her right hand on the control
panel, spun the bubble, and they floated quickly toward the exit,
which dilated to let them pass; two other consorts exited
simultaneously, and sped off in other directions.
Miles
felt a brief pang in his heart that Pel and not Rian was his
companion in arms. In his heart, but not in his head. It was
essential not to place Rian, the most creditable witness of Kety's
treason, in Kety's power. And … he liked Pel's style. She had
already demonstrated her ability to think fast and clearly in an
emergency. He still wasn't sure that drop over the side of the
building night before last hadn't been for her amusement, rather than
for secrecy. A haut-woman with a sense of humor, almost . . . too bad
she was eighty years old, and a consort, and Cetagandan, and . . .
Give
it up, will you? Ivan you aren't nor ever will be. But one way or
another, Governor the haut Ilsum Kety's treason is not going to last
the day.
They
joined Kety's party as it was making ready to depart at the south
gate of the Celestial Garden. The haut Vio would have been sent to
collect Ivan at the last possible moment, to be sure. Kety's train
was large, as befit his governor's dignity: a couple of dozen
ghem-guards, plus ghem-ladies, non-ba servitors in his personal
livery, and rather to Miles's dismay, ghem-General Chilian. Was
Chilian in on his master's treason, or was he due to be dumped along
with the haut Nadina on the way home, and replaced with Kety's own
appointee? He had to be one or the other; the commander of Imperial
troops on Sigma Ceta could hardly be expected to stay neutral in the
upcoming coup.
Kety himself gestured the haut
Vio's bubble into his own vehicle for the short ride to the Imperial
shuttleport, the exclusive venue for all such high official arrivals
to and departures from the Celestial Garden. Ghem-General Chilian
took another car; Miles and the haut Pel found themselves alone with
Kety in a van-like space clearly designed for the
lady-bubbles.
"You're late. Complications?"
Kety inquired cryptically, settling back in his seat. He looked
worried and stern, as befit an earnest mourner—or a man riding a
particularly hungry and unreliable tiger.
Yeah,
and I should have known he was Lord X when I first spotted that fake
gray hair,
Miles decided. This was one haut-lord who didn't want to wait for
what life might bring him.
"Nothing I
couldn't handle," reported Pel. The voice-filter, set to maximum
blur, altered her tones into a fair imitation of the haut
Vio's.
"I'm sure, my love. Keep your
force-screen up till we're aboard."
"Yes."
Yep.
Ghem-General Chilian definitely has an appointment with an unfriendly
air lock,
Miles decided. Poor
sucker.
The haut Vio, perhaps, meant to get back into the haut-genome one way
or another. So was she Kety's mistress, or his master? Or were they a
team? Two brains rather than one behind this plot could account for
its speed, flexibility, and confusion all together.
The
haut Pel touched a control, and turned to Miles. "When we get
aboard, we must decide whether to look first for the haut Nadina or
the Great Key."
Miles nearly choked. "Er
. . ." He gestured toward Kety, sitting less than a meter from
his knee.
"He cannot hear us," Pel
reassured him. It seemed to be so, for Kety turned abstracted eyes to
the passing view outside the luxurious lift-van's polarized
canopy.
"The recovery of the Key," Pel
went on, "is of the highest priority."
"Mm.
But the haut Nadina, if she's still alive, is an important witness,
for Barrayar's sake. And . . . she may have an idea where the Key is
being kept. I think it's in a cipher lab, but it's a damned big ship,
and there's a lot of places Kety may have tucked a cipher
lab."
"Both it and Nadina will be
close to his quarters," Pel said.
"He
won't have her in the brig?"
"I doubt
. . . Kety will have wished many of his soldiers or servitors to know
that he holds his consort prisoner. No. She will most likely be
secreted in a cabin."
"I wonder where
Kety figures to stage whatever fatal crime he's planned involving
Ivan and the haut Nadina? The consorts move on pretty constricted
paths. He won't site it on his own ship, nor his own residence. And
he probably doesn't dare repeat the performance inside the Celestial
Garden, that would be just too
much. Something downside, I fancy, and tonight."
Governor
Kety glanced at their force bubble, and inquired, "Is he waking
up yet?"
Pel touched her lips, then her
controls. "Not yet."
"I want to
question him, before. I must know how much they know."
"Time
enough."
"Barely."
Pel
killed her outgoing sound again.
"The haut
Nadina first," Miles voted firmly.
"I
… think you're right, Lord Vorkosigan," sighed Pel.
Further
dangerous conversation with Kety was blocked by the confusion of
loading the shuttle to convey the portion of retinue that was going
to orbit; Kety himself was busied on his comm link. They did not find
themselves alone with the governor again until the whole mob had
disgorged into the shuttle hatch corridor aboard Kety's State ship,
and gone about their various duties or pleasures. Ghem-General
Chilian did not even attempt to speak with his wife. Pel followed at
Kety's gesture. From the fact that Kety had dismissed his guards,
Miles reasoned that they were about to get down to business. Limiting
witnesses limited the murders necessary to silence them, later, if
things went wrong.
Kety led them to a broad,
tastefully appointed corridor obviously dedicated to upper-class
residence suites. Miles almost tapped the haut Pel on the shoulder.
"Look. Down the hall. Do you see?"
A
liveried man stood guard outside one cabin door. He braced to
attention at the sight of his master. But Kety turned in to another
cabin first. The guard relaxed slightly.
Pel
craned her neck. "Might it be the haut Nadina?"
"Yes.
Well . . . maybe. I don't think he'd dare use a regular trooper for
the duty. Not if he doesn't control their command structure yet."
Miles felt a strong pang of regret that he hadn't figured out the
schism between Kety and his ghem-general earlier. Talk about
exploitable opportunities . . .
The door slid
closed behind them, and Miles's head snapped around to see what they
were getting into now. The chamber was clean, bare of decoration or
personal effects: an unused cabin, then.
"We
can put him here," said Kety, nodding to a couch in the
sitting-room portion of the chamber. "Can you keep him under
control chemically, or must we have some guards?"
"Chemically,"
responded Pel, "but I need a few things. Synergine. Fast-penta.
And we'd better check him for induced fast-penta allergies first.
Many important people are given them, I understand. I don't think you
want him to die here."
"Clarium?"
Pel
glanced at Miles, her eyes widening in question; she did not know
that one. Clarium was a fairly standard military interrogation
tranquilizer—Miles nodded.
"That would be
a good idea," Pel hazarded.
"No chance
of his waking up before I get back, is there?" asked Kety in
concern.
"I'm afraid I dosed him rather
strongly."
"Hm. Please be more
discreet, my love. We don't want excessive chemical residues left
upon autopsy. Though with luck, there will not be enough left to
autopsy."
"I'm reluctant to count on
luck."
"Good"
said Kety, with a peculiar exasperation. "You're learning at
last."
"I'll await you," said Pel
coolly, by way of a broad hint. As if the haut Vio would have done
anything else.
"Let me help you lay him
out," Kety said. "It must be crowded in there."
"Not
for me. I'm using him for a footrest. The float-chair is … most
comfortable. Let me … enjoy the privilege of the haut a little
longer, my love," Pel sighed. "It has been so long.
…"
Kety's lips thinned in amusement.
"Soon enough, you shall have more privileges than the Empress
ever had. And all the outworlders at your feet you may desire."
He gave the bubble a short nod, and departed, striding quickly. Where
would a haut-governor with an interrogation chemistry shopping list
go? Sickbay? Security? And how long would it take?
"Now,"
said Miles. "Back up the corridor. We have to get rid of the
guard—did you bring any of that stuff that the haut Vio used on
Ivan?"
Pel pulled the tiny bulb from her
sleeve and held it up.
"How many doses are
left?"
Pel squinted. "Two. Vio
over-prepared." She sounded faintly disapproving, as if Vio had
lost style-points by this redundancy.
"I'd
have taken a hundred, just in case. All right. Use it sparingly—not
at all if you don't have to."
Pel floated
her bubble out of the cabin again, and turned up the corridor. Miles
slid around behind the float-chair, crouching with his hands gripping
the high back and his boots slipping slightly on base which held the
power pack. Hiding
behind a woman's skirts?
It was frustrating as hell to have his transportation—and
everything else—under the control of a Cetagandan, even if the
rescue mission was
his idea. But
needs must drive.
Pel came to a halt before the liveried guard.
"Servitor,"
she addressed him.
"Haut," he nodded
respectfully to the blank white bubble. "I am on duty, and may
not assist you."
"This will not take
long." Pel flicked off her force-screen. Miles heard a faint
hiss, and a choking noise. The float-chair rocked. He popped up to
find Pel with the guard slumped very awkwardly across her
lap.
"Damn," said Miles regretfully,
"we should have done this to Kety back in the first cabin—oh,
well. Let me at that door pad."
It was a
standard palm-lock, but set to whom? Very few, maybe Kety and Vio
only, but the guard must be empowered to handle emergencies. "Move
him up a little," Miles instructed Pel, and pressed the
unconscious man's palm to the read-pad. "Ah," he breathed
in satisfaction, as the door slid aside without alarm or protest. He
relieved the guard of his stunner, and tiptoed inside, the haut Pel
floating after.
"Oh"
huffed Pel in outrage. They had found the haut Nadina.
The
old woman was sitting on a couch similar to the one in the previous
cabin, wearing only her white bodysuit. The effects of a century or
so of gravity were enough to sag even her haut body; taking away her
voluminous outer wrappings seemed a deliberate indignity only barely
short of stripping her naked. Her silver hair was clamped, half a
meter from its end, in a device obviously borrowed from engineering
and never designed for this purpose, but locked in turn to the floor.
It was not physically cruel—the length of the rest of her hair
still left her nearly two meters of turning room—but there was
something deeply offensive about it. The haut Vio's idea, perhaps?
Miles thought he knew how Ivan had felt, contemplating the kitten
tree. It seemed a Wrong Thing to do to a little old lady (even one
from a race as obnoxious as the haut) who reminded him of his Betan
grandmother—well, not really, Pel
actually seemed more like his Grandmother Naismith in personality,
but—
Pel dumped the unconscious guard
unceremoniously on the floor and rushed from her float-chair to her
sister consort. "Nadina, are you injured?"
"Pel!"
Anyone else would have fallen on her rescuers neck in a hug; being
haut, they confined themselves to a restrained, if apparently
heartfelt, handclasp.
"Oh!" said Pel
again, gazing furiously at the haut Nadina's situation. Her first
action was to skin out of her own robes and donate about six
underlayers to Nadina, who shrugged them on gratefully, and stood a
little straighter. Miles completed a fast survey of the premises to
be sure they were indeed alone, and returned to the women, who stood
contemplating the hair-lock. Pel knelt and tugged at a few strands,
which held fast.
"I've tried that,"
sighed the haut Nadina. "They won't come out even one hair at a
time."
"Where is the key to its
lock?"
"Vio had it."
Pel
quickly emptied her sleeves of her mysterious arsenal; Nadina looked
it over and shook her head.
"We'd better
cut it," said Miles. "We have to go as quickly as
possible."
Both women stared at him in
shock. "Haut-women never
cut their hair!" said Nadina.
"Um,
excuse me, but this is an emergency. If we go at once
to the ship's escape pods, I can pilot you both to safety before Kety
awakes to his loss. Maybe even get away clean. Every second's delay
costs us our very limited margin."
"No!"
said Pel. "We must retrieve the Great Key first!"
He
could not, unfortunately, send the two women off and promise to
search for the Key on his own; he was the only qualified orbital
pilot in the trio. They were going to have to stick together, blast
it. One haut-lady was bad enough. Managing two was going to be worse
than trying to herd cats. "Haut Nadina, do you know where Kety
keeps the Great Key?"
"Yes. He took me
to it last night. He thought I might be able to open it for him. He
was very upset when I couldn't."
Miles
glanced up sharply at her tone; there were no marks of violence on
her face, at least. But her movements were stiff. Arthritis of age,
or shock-stick trauma? He returned to the guard's unconscious body,
and began searching it for useful items, code cards, weapons … ah.
A folded vibra-knife. He palmed it out of sight, and returned to the
ladies.
"I've heard of animals gnawing
their legs off, to escape traps," he offered
cautiously.
"Ugh!" said Pel.
"Barrayarans."
"You don't
understand," said Nadina earnestly.
He was
afraid he did. They would stand here arguing about Nadina's trapped
haut-hair until Kety caught up with them. . . . "Look!" He
pointed at the door.
Pel jerked to her feet, and
Nadina cried, "What?"
Miles snapped
open the vibra-knife, grabbed the mass of silver hair, and sliced
through it as close to the clamp as he could. "There. Let's
go."
"Barbarian!" cried Nadina.
But she wasn't going to go over the edge into hysterics; she shrieked
her belated protest quite quietly, all things considered.
"A
sacrifice for the good of the haut," Miles promised her. A tear
stood in her eye; Pel . . . Pel looked as if she were secretly
grateful the deed had been done by him and not her.
They
all boarded the float-chair again, Nadina half across Pel's lap,
Miles clinging on behind. Pel exited the chamber and raised her
force-screen again. Float-chairs were supposed to be soundless, but
the engine whined protest at this overload. It moved forward with a
disconcerting lurch.
"Down this way. Turn
right here," the haut Nadina directed. Halfway down the hall
they passed an ordinary servitor, who stepped aside with a bow, and
did not look back at them.
"Did Kety
fast-penta you?" Miles asked Nadina. "How much does he know
of what the Star Creche suspects about him?"
"Fast-penta
does not work on haut-women," Pel informed him over her
shoulder.
"Oh? How about on
haut-men?"
"Not very
well," said Pel.
"Hm.
Nevertheless."
"Down here."
Nadina pointed to a lift tube. They descended a deck, and continued
down another, narrower corridor. Nadina touched the silver hair piled
in her lap, regarded the raggedly cut end with a deep frown, then let
the handful fall with an unhappy, but rather final-sounding, snort.
"This is all highly improper. I trust you are enjoying your
opportunity for sport, Pel. And that it will be brief."
Pel
made a non-committal noise.
Somehow, this was
not the heroic covert ops mission that Miles had envisioned in his
mind—blundering around Kety's ship in tow of a pair of prim, aging
haut-ladies—well, Pel's allegiance to the proprieties was highly
suspect, but Nadina appeared to be trying to make up for it. He had
to admit, the bubble beat the hell out of his trying to disguise his
physical peculiarities in the garb of a ba servitor, especially given
that the ba appeared to be uniformly healthy and straight. Enough
other haut-women were aboard that the sight of a passing bubble was
unremarkable to staff and crew. . . .
No.
We've just been lucky, so far.
They
came to a blank door. "This is it," said Nadina.
No
give-away guard this time; this was the little room that wasn't
there. "How do we get in?" asked Miles. "Knock?"
"I
suppose so," said Pel. She dropped her force-screen just long
enough to do so, then raised it again.
"I
meant that as a.joke"
said Miles, horrified. Surely no one was in there—he'd pictured the
Great Key kept alone in some safe or coded compartment—
The
door opened. A pale man with dark rings under his eyes, dressed in
Kety's livery, pointed a device at the bubble, read off the
electronic signature that resulted, and said, "Yes, haut
Vio?"
"I … have brought the haut
Nadina to try again," said Pel. Nadina grimaced in disapproving
editorial.
"I don't think we're going to
need her," said the liveried man, "but you can talk to the
General." He stood aside to let them pass within.
Miles,
who had been calculating how to knock the man out with Pel's aerosol
again, started his calculations over. There were three men in the
floating cipher lab, yes. An array of equipment, festooned with
temporary cables, cluttered every available surface. An even more
whey-faced tech wearing the black undress uniform of Cetagandan
military security sat before a console with the air of a man who'd
been there for days, as evidenced by the caffeinated drink containers
littered around him in a ring, and a couple of bottles of commercial
painkillers sitting atop a nearby counter. But it was the third man,
leaning over his shoulder, who riveted Miles's attention.
It
wasn't ghem-General Chilian, as his mind had first tried to assume.
This officer was a younger man, taller, sharp-faced, who wore the
bloodred dress uniform of the Celestial Garden's own Imperial
Security. He was not wearing his proper zebra-striped face paint,
though. His tunic was rumpled and hanging open. Not the Chief of
Security—Miles's mind ratcheted down the list he had memorized,
weeks ago, in mis-aimed preparation for this trip—ghem-General
Naru, yes, that was the man, third in command in that very inner
hierarchy. Kety's deduced seduced contact. Called in, apparently, to
lend his expertise in cracking the codes that protected the Great
Key.
"All right," said the whey-faced
tech, "start over with branch seven thousand, three-hundred and
six. Only seven hundred more to go, and we'll have it, I
swear."
Pel gasped, and pointed. Piled in a
disorderly heap on the table beyond the console was not one but eight
copies of the Great Key. Or one Great Key and seven copies . .
.
Could Kety be attempting to carry out the late
Empress Lisbet's vision after all? All the rest of the chaos of the
past two weeks some confused misunderstanding? No … no. This had to
be some other scam. Maybe he planned to send his fellow governors
home with bad copies, or give Cetagandan Imperial Security seven more
decoys to chase, or … a multitude of possibilities, as long as they
advanced Kety's own personal agenda and no one else's.
Firing
his stunner would set off every alarm in the place, making it a
weapon of last resort. Hell, his victims, if clever—and Miles
suspected he faced three very clever men—might jump him just to
make him fire it.
"What else
do you have up your sleeve?" Miles whispered to
Pel.
"Nadina," Pel gestured to the
table, "which one is the Great Key?"
"I'm
not sure," said Nadina, peering anxiously at the
clutter.
"Grab them all.
Check later"
urged Miles.
"But they could all be false,"
dithered Pel. "We must know, or it could all be for nothing."
She fished in her bodice, and pulled out a familiar ring on a chain,
with a raised screaming-bird pattern. . . .
Miles
choked. "For God's sake, you didn't bring that here?
Keep it out of sight! After two weeks of trying to do what that ring
does in a second, I guarantee those men wouldn't hesitate to kill you
for it!"
Ghem-General Naru wheeled from his
tech to face the pale glowing bubble. "Yes, Vio, what is it
now?" His voice was bored, and dripping with open
contempt.
Pel looked a little panicked; Miles
could see her throat move, as she sub-vocalized some practice reply,
then rejected it.
"We're not going to be
able to keep this up for much longer," said Miles. "How
about we attack, grab, and run?"
"How?"
asked Nadina.
Pel held up her hand for silence
from the on-board debating team, and essayed a temporizing reply to
the general. "Your tone of voice is most improper, sir."
Naru
grimaced. "Being back in your bubble makes you proud again, I
see. Enjoy it while it lasts. We'll have all of those damned bitches
pried out of their little fortresses after this. Their days of being
cloaked by the Emperor's blindness and stupidity are numbered, I
assure you, haut
Vio."
Well . . . Naru wasn't in on this
plot for the sake of the late Empress's vision of genetic destiny,
that was certain. Miles could see how the haut-women's traditional
privacies could come to be a deep, itching offense, to a dedicated,
properly paranoid security man. Was that the bribe Kety had offered
Naru for his cooperation, the promise that the new regime would open
the closed doors of the Star Creche, and shine light into every
secret place held by the haut-women? That he would destroy the
haut-women's strange and fragile power-base, and put it all into the
hands of the ghem-generals, where it obviously (to Naru) belonged? So
was Kety stringing Naru along, or were they near-equal co-plotters?
Equals, Miles decided. This
is the most dangerous man in the room, maybe even on the ship.
He set the stunner for low beam, in a forlorn hope of not setting off
alarms on discharge.
"Pel," Miles said
urgently, "get ghem-General Naru with your last dose of
sleepy-juice. I'll try to threaten the others, get the drop on them,
without actually firing. Tie them up, grab the Keys, and get out of
here. It may not be elegant, but it's fast, and we're out
of time."
Pel
nodded reluctantly, twitched her sleeves back, and readied the little
aerosol bulb. Nadina gripped the chair-back: Miles prepared to spring
away and take up a firing stance.
Pel dropped
her bubble and squirted the aerosol toward Naru's startled face. Naru
held his breath and ducked away, barely grazed by the iridescent
cloud of drug. His breath puffed back out on a yell of
warning.
Miles cursed, leapt, stumbled, and
fired three times in rapid succession. He dropped the two scrambling
techs; Naru nearly succeeded in rolling away again, but at least the
beam nimbus brought the ghem-general to a twitching halt.
Temporarily. Naru lumbered around on the deck like a warthog mired in
a bog, his voice reduced to a garbled groan.
Nadina
hurried to the table full of Keys, swept them into her outermost
robe, and brought them back to Pel. Pel began trying the ring-key on
each one. "Not that one . . . not that . . ."
Miles
glanced at the door, which remained closed, would remain closed until
an authorized hand pressed its palm-lock. Who would be so authorized?
Kety . . . Naru, who was already in here . . . any others? We're
about to find out.
"Not
. . ." Pel continued. "Oh, what if they're all
false? No . . ."
"Of course they are,"
Miles realized. "The real one must be, must be—" He began
tracing cables from the cipher tech's comconsole. They led to a box,
stuffed in behind some other equipment, and in the box was—another
Great Key. But this one was braced in a comm light-beam, carrying the
signals that probed its codes. "—here."
Miles yanked it from its place, and sprinted back to Pel. "We've
got the Key, we've got Nadina, we've got the goods on Naru, we've got
it all. Let's go."
The door hissed open.
Miles whirled and fired.
A stunner-armed man in
Kety's livery stumbled backward. Thumps and shouts echoed from the
corridor, as what seemed a dozen more men stood quickly out of the
line of fire. "Yes,"
cried Pel happily, as the cap of the real Great Key came off in her
hand, demonstrating its provenance.
"Not
now!" screeched Miles. "Put it back, Pel, put your
force-screen up, now!"
Miles
ducked aboard the float-chair; its force-screen snapped into place. A
blast of massed stunner fire roiled through the doorway. The stunner
fire crackled harmlessly around the sparkling sphere, only making it
glitter a bit more. But the haut Nadina had been left outside. She
cried out and stumbled backward, painfully grazed by the stun-nimbus.
Men charged through the door.
"You have the
Key, Pel!" cried the haut Nadina. "Flee!"
An
impractical suggestion, alas; as his men secured the room and the
haut Nadina, Governor Kety strolled through the door and closed it
behind him, palm-locking it.
"Well,"
he drawled, eyes alight with curiosity at the carnage before him.
"Well." He might at least have had the courtesy to curse
and stamp, Miles thought sourly. Instead he looked . . . quite
thoroughly in control. "What have we here?"
A
Kety-liveried trooper knelt by ghem-General Naru, and helped
straighten him and hold him up by his shoulders. Naru, struggling to
sit, rubbed a shaking hand over his doubtless numb and tingling
face—Miles had experienced the full unpleasantness of being stunned
himself, more than once in his past—and essayed a mumbling answer.
On the second try he managed slurred but intelligible speech. "'S
the Consorts Pel and Nadina. An' the Barray'arn. Tol' you those
damned bubbles were a secur'ty menace!" He slumped back into the
trooper's arms. "S' all right, though. We have 'em all
now."
"When that voyeur is tried for
his treasons," said the haut Pel poisonously, "I shall ask
the Emperor to have his eyes put out, before he is
executed."
Miles wondered anew at the
sequence of events here last night; how had
they extracted Nadina from her bubble? "I think you're getting a
little ahead of us, milady," he sighed.
Kety
walked around the haut Pel's bubble, studying it. Cracking this egg
was a pretty puzzle for him. Or was it? He'd done it once
before.
Escape was impossible; the bubbles
movements were physically blocked. Kety might besiege them, starve
them out, if he didn't mind waiting—no. Kety couldn't wait. Miles
grinned blackly, and said to Pel, "This float-chair has
communication link capacity, doesn't it? I'm afraid it's time to call
for help."
They had, by God, almost
brought it off, almost made the entire affair disappear without a
trace. But now that they'd identified and targeted Naru, the threat
of secret aid for Kety from inside Cetagandan Imperial Security was
neutralized. The Cetagandans should be able to unravel the rest of it
for themselves. If
I can get the word out.
Governor
Kety motioned the two men holding the haut Nadina to drag her forward
to what he apparently guessed was in front of the bubble, except that
he was actually about forty degrees offsides. He relieved one
guardsman of his vibra-knife, stepped behind Nadina, and lifted her
thick silver hair. She squeaked in terror, but relaxed again when he
only laid the knife very lightly against her throat.
"Drop
your force-screen, Pel, and surrender. Immediately. I don't think I
need to go into crude, tedious threats, do I?"
"No,"
whispered Pel in agreement. That Kety would slit the haut Nadina's
throat now, and arrange the body later, was unquestionable. He'd gone
beyond the point of no return some time ago.
"Dammit,"
grated Miles in anguish. "Now he's
got it all. Us, the Great Key …" The
Great Key.
Chock full it was of … coded information. Information the value of
which lay entirely in its secrecy and uniqueness. Everywhere else
people waded through floods of information, information to their
eyebrows, a clogging mass of data, signal and noise … all
information was transmittable and reproducible. Left to itself, it
multiplied like bacteria as long as there was money or power to be
had in it, till it choked on its own reduplication and the boredom of
its human receivers.
"The float-chair, your
comm link—it's all Star Creche equipment. Can you download the
Great Key from it?"
"Do what?
Why …" said Pel, struggling with astonishment, "I suppose
so, but the chair's comm link is not powerful enough to transmit all
the way back to the Celestial Garden."
"Don't
worry about that. Patch it through to the commercial navigation's
emergency communication net. There'll be a booster right outside this
ship on the orbital transfer station. I have the standard codes for
it in my head, they're made simple on purpose. Maximum emergency
overrides—the booster'll split the signal and dump it into the
on-board computers of every ship, commercial or military, navigating
right now through the Eta Ceta star system, and every station.
Supposed to be a cry-for-help system for ships in deep trouble, you
see. So Kety'll have the Great Key. So will a couple thousand other
people, and where is his sly little plot then? We may not be able to
win, but we can take his victory from him!"
The
look on Pel's face, as she digested this outrageous suggestion,
transformed from horror to a fey delight, but then to dismay. "That
will take—many minutes. Kety will never let—no! I have the
solution for that." Pels eyes lit with understanding and rage.
"What are those codes?"
Miles rattled
them off; Pel's fingers flashed over her control panel. A dicey
moment followed while Pel arranged the opened Great Key in the
light-beam reader. Kety cried from outside the bubble, "Now,
Pel!" His hand tightened on the knife. Nadina closed her eyes
and stood in dignified stillness.
Pel tapped the
comm link start code, dropped the bubble's force-screen, and sprang
out of her seat, dragging Miles with her. "All right!" she
cried, stepping away from the bubble. "We're out."
Kety's
hand relaxed. The bubble's screen snapped back up. The force of it
almost pushed Miles off his feet; he stumbled into the unwelcoming
arms of the haut-governor's guards.
"That,"
said Kety coldly, eyeing the bubble with the Great Key inside, "is
annoying. But a temporary inconvenience. Take them." He jerked
his head at his guards, and stepped away from Nadina. "You!"
he said in surprise, finding Miles in their grip.
"Me."
Miles's lips peeled back on a white flash of teeth that had nothing
to do with a smile. "Me all along, in fact. From start to
finish." And
you are finished. Of course, I may be too dead to enjoy the
spectacle. . . .
Kety dared not let any of the three interlopers live. But it would
take a little time yet to arrange their deaths with civilized
artistry. How much time, how many chances to—
Kety
caught himself just before his fist delivered a jaw-cracking blow to
Miles's face. "No. You're the breakable one, isn't that right,"
he muttered half to himself. He stepped back, nodded to a guard. "A
little shock-stick on him. On them all."
The
guard unshipped his standard military issue shock-stick, glanced at
the white-robed haut consorts, and hesitated. He shot a covertly
beseeching look at Kety.
Miles could almost see
Kety grind his teeth. "All right, just the
Barrayaran!"
Looking very relieved, the
guard swung his stick with a will and belted Miles three times,
starting with his face and skittering down his body to belly and
groin. The first touch made him yell, the second took his breath
away, and the third dropped him to the floor, blazing agony radiating
outward and drawing his arms and legs in. Calculation stopped,
temporarily. Ghem-General Naru, just being helped to his feet,
chuckled in a tone of one happy to see justice done.
"General,"
Kety nodded to Naru, then to the bubble, "how long to get that
open?"
"Let me see." Naru knelt
to the unconscious whey-faced tech, and relieved him of a small
device, which he pointed at the bubble. "They've changed the
codes. Half an hour, once you get my men waked up."
Kety
grimaced. His wrist comm chimed. Kety's brows rose, and he spoke into
it. "Yes, Captain?"
"Haut-governor,"
came the formal, uneasy voice of some subordinate. "We are
experiencing a peculiar communication over emergency channels. An
enormous data dump is being speed-loaded into our systems. Some kind
of coded gibberish, but it has exceeded the memory capacity of the
receiver and is spilling over into other systems like a virus. It's
marked with an Imperial override. The initial signal appears to be
originating from our
ship. Is this . . . something you intend?"
Kety's
brows drew down in puzzlement. Then his gaze rose to the white
bubble, glowing in the center of the room. He swore, one sharp,
heartfelt sibilant. "No. Ghem-General Naru! We have to get this
force-screen down now!"
Kety
spared a venomous glare for Pel and Miles that promised infinite
retribution later, then he and Naru fell to frantic consultation.
Heavy doses of synergine from the guards' med-kit failed to return
the techs to immediate consciousness, though they stirred and groaned
in a promising fashion. Kety and Naru were left to do it themselves.
Judging by the wicked light in Pel's eyes, as she and the haut Nadina
clung together, they were going to be way too late. The pain of the
shock-stick blows were fading to pins and needles, but Miles remained
curled up on the floor, the better not to draw further such
attentions to himself.
Kety and Naru were so
absorbed in their task and their irate arguments over the swiftest
way to proceed, only Miles noticed when a spot on the door began to
glow. Despite his pain, he smiled. A beat later, the whole door burst
inward in a spray of melted plastic and metal. Another beat, to wait
out anyone's hair-trigger reflexes.
Ghem-Colonel
Benin, impeccably turned out in his bloodred dress uniform and
freshly applied face paint, stepped firmly across the threshold. He
was unarmed, but the red-clad squad behind him carried an arsenal
sufficient to destroy any impediment in their path up to the size of
a pocket dreadnought. Kety and Naru froze in mid-lurch; Kety's
liveried retainers suddenly seemed to think better of drawing
weapons, opening their hands palm-outward and standing very still.
Colonel Vorreedi, equally impeccable in his House blacks, if not
quite so cool in expression, stepped in behind. Benin. In the
corridor beyond, Miles could just glimpse Ivan looming behind the
armed men, and shifting anxiously from foot to foot.
"Good
evening, haut Kety, ghem-General Naru." Benin bowed with
exquisite courtesy. "By the personal order of Emperor Fletchir
Giaja, it is my duty to arrest you both upon the serious charge of
treason to the Empire. And," contemplating Naru especially,
Benin's smile went razor-sharp, "complicity in the murder of the
Imperial Servitor the Ba Lura."
From
Miles's eye-level, the deck sprouted a forest of red boots, as
Benin's squad clumped in to disarm and arrest Kety's retainers, and
march them out with their hands atop their heads. Kety and Naru were
taken along with them, sandwiched silently between some hard-eyed men
who didn't look as though they were interested in listening to
explanations.
At a growl from Kety, the
procession paused in front of the entering Barrayarans. Miles heard
Kety's voice, icy-cold: "Congratulations, Lord Vorpatril. I hope
you may be fortunate enough to survive your victory."
"Huh?"
said Ivan.
Oh,
let him go.
It would be too exhausting to try and sort out Kety about his
confused inversion of Miles's little chain-of-command. Maybe Benin
would have it straight. At a sharp word from their sergeant the
security squad prodded their prisoners back into motion and clattered
on down the corridor.
Four shiny black boots
made their way through the mob and halted before Miles's nose.
Speaking of explanations . . . Miles twisted his head and looked up
the odd foreshortened perspective at Colonel Vorreedi and Ivan. The
deck was cool beneath his stinging cheek, and he didn't really want
to move, even supposing he could.
Ivan bent over
him, giving an upside-down view up his nostrils, and said in a
strained tone, "Are you all right?"
"Sh-sh-shock-stick.
Nothing b-broken."
"Right," said
Ivan, and hauled him to his feet by his collar. Miles hung a moment,
shivering and twitching like a fish on a hook, till he found his
unsteady balance. By necessity, he leaned on Ivan, who supported him
with an un-commenting hand under his elbow.
Colonel
Vorreedi looked him up and down. "I'll let the ambassador do the
protesting about that." Vorreedi's distant expression suggested
he thought privately that the fellow with the shock-stick had stopped
too soon. "Vorob'yev is going to need all the ammunition he can
get. You have created the most extraordinary public incident of his
career, I suspect."
"Oh, Colonel,"
sighed Miles. "I predict there's going to b-be nothing p-public
'bout this
incident. Wait 'n see."
Ghem-Colonel Benin,
across the room, was bowing and scraping to the hauts Pel and Nadina,
and supplying them with float-chairs, albeit lacking force-screens,
extra robes, and ghem-lady attendants. Arresting them in the style to
which they were accustomed?
Miles glanced up at
Vorreedi. "Has Ivan, um, explained
everything, sir?"
"I trust so,"
said Vorreedi, in a voice drenched with menace.
Ivan
nodded vigorously, but then hedged, "Um . . . all I could. Under
the circumstances."
Meaning, lack of
privacy from Cetagandan eavesdroppers, Miles presumed. All,
Ivan? Is my cover still intact?
"I
admit," Vorreedi went on, "I am still …. assimilating
it."
"What h-happened after I left the
Star Creche?" Miles asked Ivan.
"I
woke up and you were gone. I think that was the worst moment of my
life, knowing you'd gone haring off on some crazy self-appointed
mission with no backup."
"Oh, but you
were my backup, Ivan," Miles murmured, earning himself a glare.
"And a good one too, as you have just demonstrated,
yes?"
"Yeah, your favorite
kind—unconscious on the floor where I couldn't inject any kind of
sense into the proceedings. You took off to get yourself killed, or
worse, and everybody would have blamed me. The last thing Aunt
Cordelia said to me before we left was, 'And try
to keep him out of trouble, Ivan.'"
Miles
could hear Countess Vorkosigan's weary, exasperated cadences quite
precisely in Ivan's parody.
"Anyway, as
soon as I figured out what the hell was going on, I got away from the
haut-ladies—"
"How?"
"God,
Miles, they're just like my mother, only eight times over. Ugh!
Anyway, the haut Rian insisted I go through ghem-Colonel Benin, which
I was willing to do—he
at least seemed like he had his head screwed on straight—"
Perhaps
attracted by the sound of his name, Benin strolled over to listen in
on this.
"—and God be praised he paid
attention to me. Seemed to make more sense out of my gabble than I
did at the time."
Benin nodded. "I was
of course following the very unusual activities around the Star
Creche today—"
Around,
not in.
Quite.
"My own investigations had already
led me to suspect something was going on involving one or more of the
haut-governors, so I had orbital squads on alert."
"Squads,
ha," said Ivan. "There's three Imperial battle cruisers
surrounding this ship right now."
Benin
smiled slightly, and shrugged.
"Ghem-General
Chilian is a dupe, I believe," Miles put in. "Though you
will p-probably wish to question him about the activities of his
wife, the haut Vio."
"He has already
been detained," Benin assured him.
Detained,
not arrested, all right. Benin seemed exactly on track so far. But
had he realized yet that all the governors had been involved? Or was
Kety elected sole sacrifice? A Cetagandan
internal matter,
Miles reminded himself. It was not his job to straighten out the
entire Cetagandan government, tempting as it would be to try. His
duty was confined to extracting Barrayar from the morass. He smiled
at the glowing white bubble still protecting the real Great Key. The
hauts Nadina and Pel were consulting with some of Benin's men; it
appeared that rather than attempting to get the force-screen down
here they were making arrangements to transport it and its precious
contents whole and inviolate back to the Star Creche.
Vorreedi
gave Miles a grim look. "One thing that Lord Vorpatril has not
yet explained to my satisfaction, Lieutenant Vorkosigan, is why you
concealed the initial incident involving an object of such obvious
importance—"
"Kety was trying to
frame Barrayar, sir. Until I could achieve independent corroborative
evidence that—"
Vorreedi went on
inexorably, "From
your own side."
"Ah."
Miles briefly considered a relapse of shock-stick symptoms, rendering
him unable to talk. No, alas. His own motives were obscure even to
him, in retrospect. What had
he started out wanting, before the twisting events had made sheer
survival his paramount concern? Oh, yes, promotion. That was
it.
Not
this time, boy-o.
Antique but evocative phrases like damage
control
and spin
doctoring
free-floated through his consciousness.
"In
fact, sir, I did not at first recognize the Great Key for what it
was. But once the haut Rian contacted me, events slid very rapidly
from apparently trivial to extremely delicate. By the time I realized
the full depth and complexity of the haut-governor's plot, it was too
late."
"Too late for what?" asked
Vorreedi bluntly.
What with the shock-stick
residue and all, Miles did not need to feign a sick smile. But it
seemed Vorreedi had drifted back to the conviction that Miles was not
working as a covert ops agent for Simon Illyan after all. That's
what you want everybody to think, remember?
Miles glanced aside at ghem-Colonel Benin, listening in
fascination.
"You would have taken the
investigation away from me, you know you would have, sir. Everyone in
the wormhole nexus thinks I'm a cripple who's been given a cushy
nepotistic sinecure as a courier. That I might be competent for more
is something Lieutenant Lord Vorkosigan would never, in the ordinary
course of events, ever be given a chance to publicly prove."
To
the world at large, true. But Illyan knew all about the pivotal role
Miles had played in the Hegen Hub, and elsewhere, as did Miles's
father Prime Minister Count Vorkosigan, and Emperor Gregor, and
everyone else whose opinion really counted, back on Barrayar. Even
Ivan knew about that extraordinary covert ops coup. In fact, it
seemed the only people who didn't know were . . . the enemy he'd
beaten. The Cetagandans.
So did
you do all this only to shine in the haut Rian's beautiful eyes? Or
did you have a wider audience in view?
Ghem-Colonel
Benin slowly deciphered this outpouring. "You wanted to be a
hero?"
"So badly you didn't even care
for which side?"
Vorreedi added in some dismay.
"I have
done the Cetagandan Empire a good turn, it's true." Miles
essayed a shaky bow in Benin's direction. "But it was Barrayar I
was thinking of. Governor Kety had some nasty plans for Barrayar.
Those, at least, I've derailed."
"Oh,
yeah?" said Ivan. "Where would they, and you, be right now
if we hadn't shown up?"
"Oh,"
Miles smiled to himself, "I'd already won. Kety just didn't know
it yet. The only thing still in doubt was my personal survival,"
he conceded.
"Why don't you sign up for
Cetagandan Imperial Security, then, coz," suggested Ivan in
exasperation. "Maybe ghem-Colonel Benin would promote
you."
Ivan, damn him, knew Miles all too
well. "Unlikely," Miles said bitterly. "I'm too
short."
Ghem-Colonel Benin's eyebrow
twitched.
"Actually," Miles pointed
out, "if I was free-lancing for anyone, it was for the Star
Creche, not for the Empire. I have not served the Cetagandan Empire,
so much as the haut. Ask them."
He nodded toward Pel and Nadina, getting ready to exit the room with
their ghem-lady escorts fussing over their comfort.
"Hm."
Ghem-Colonel Benin seemed to deflate slightly.
Magic
words, apparently. A haut-consort's skirts made a stronger
fortification behind which to hide than Miles would have thought
possible, a few weeks ago.
The haut Nadina's
bubble was hoisted into the air by some men with hand-tractors, and
maneuvered out of the room. Benin glanced after it, turned again to
Miles, and opened his hand in front of his chest in a sketch of a
bow. "In any case, Lieutenant Lord Vorkosigan, my Celestial
master the Emperor haut Fletchir Giaja requests you attend upon him
in my company. Now."
Miles could decipher
an Imperial command when he heard one. He sighed, and bowed in
return, in proper honor of Benin's august order. "Certainly. Ah
. . ." He glanced aside at Ivan and the suddenly agitated
Vorreedi. He wasn't exactly sure he wanted witnesses for this
audience. He wasn't exactly sure he wanted to be alone,
either.
"Your . . . friends may accompany
you," Benin conceded. "With the understanding that they may
not speak unless invited to do so."
Which
inviting would be done, if at all, solely by Benin's Celestial
Master. Vorreedi nodded in partial satisfaction. Ivan began to
practice looking blank with all his might.
They
all herded out, surrounded and escorted—but not arrested, of
course, that would violate diplomatic protocol—by Benin's Imperial
guards. Miles found himself, still supported by Ivan, waiting to exit
the doorway beside the haut Nadina.
"Such a
nice young man," Nadina commented in a well-modulated undertone
to Miles, nodding at Benin, whom they could glimpse out in the
corridor directing his troopers. "So neatly turned-out, and he
understands the proprieties. We'll have to see what we can do for
him, don't you agree, Pel?"
"Oh,
quite," Pel said, and floated on through.
After
a lengthy walk through the great State ship, Miles cycled through the
air lock into the Cetagandan security shuttle in the company of Benin
himself, who had not let him out of his sight. Benin looked cool and
alert as ever, but there was an underlying . . . well, smugness
leaking through his zebra-striped facade. It must have given Benin a
moment of supreme Cetagandan satisfaction, arresting his commanding
officer for treason. The one-up high point of his career. Miles would
have bet Betan dollars to sand Naru was the man who'd assigned the
dapper and decorous Benin to close the case on the Ba Lura's death in
the first place, setting him up to fail.
Miles
ventured, "By the way, if I didn't say it before,
congratulations on cracking your very tricky murder case, General
Benin."
Benin blinked. "Colonel
Benin," he corrected.
"That's what you
think." Miles floated forward, and helped himself to the most
comfortable window seat he could find.
"I
don't believe I've seen this audience chamber before," Colonel
Vorreedi whispered to Miles, his gaze flicking around to take in
their surroundings. "It's not one ever used for public or
diplomatic ceremonies."
Unusually, they had
come not to a pavilion, but to a closed, low-lying building in the
northern quadrant of the Celestial Garden. The three Barrayarans had
spent an hour in an antechamber, cooling their heels while their
internal tension rose. They were attended by half a dozen polite,
solicitous ghem-guards, who saw to their physical comforts while
courteously denying every request for outside communication. Benin
had gone off somewhere with the hauts Pel and Nadina. In view of
their Cetagandan company, Miles had not so much reported to Vorreedi
as exchanged a few guarded remarks.
The new room
reminded Miles a bit of the Star Chamber, simple, undistracting,
deliberately serene, sound-baffled and cool in shades of blue. Voices
had a curious deadened quality that hinted that the entire chamber
was enclosed in a cone-of-silence. Patterns on the floor betrayed a
large concealed comconsole table and station-chairs that could be
raised for conferences, but for now, the supplicants
stood.
Another guest was waiting, and Miles
raised his brows in surprise. Lord Yenaro stood next to a red-clad
ghem-guard. Yenaro looked pale, with dark greenish circles under his
eyes, as if he had not slept for about two days. His dark robes, the
same clothes Miles had last seen him wearing at the bioesthetics
exhibition, were rumpled and bedraggled. Yenaro's eyes widened in
turn at the sight of Miles and Ivan. He turned his head away and
tried not to notice the Barrayarans. Miles waved cheerfully, dragging
a reluctantly polite return nod from Yenaro, and starting a very
pained crease between his eyebrows.
And here
came something to keep Miles's mind off his own lingering shock-stick
pains right now. Or rather, someone.
Ghem-Colonel
Benin entered first, and dismissed the Barrayarans' guards. He was
followed by the hauts Pel, Nadina, and Rian in their float-chairs,
shields down, who silently arranged themselves on one side of the
room. Nadina had tucked the cut ends of her hair out of sight among
her garments, the same robes Pel had shared and which Nadina had not
stopped to change. They had all obviously been closeted for the past
hour in a debriefing at the highest level, for last of all a familiar
figure strode in, shedding more guards in the corridor
outside.
Close-up, Emperor the haut Fletchir
Giaja seemed even taller and leaner than when Miles had seen him at a
distance at the elegy-reading ceremonies. And older, despite his dark
hair. He was for the moment casually dressed, by Imperial standards,
in a mere half a dozen layers of fine white robes over the usual
masculine-loose but blinding-white bodysuit, befitting his status as
chief mourner.
Emperors per
se
did not unnerve Miles, though Yenaro swayed on his feet as though he
were about to faint, and even Benin moved with the most rigid
formality. Emperor Gregor had been raised along with Miles
practically as his foster-brother; somewhere in the back of Miles's
mind the term emperor
was coupled with such identifiers as somebody
to play hide-and-seek with.
In this context those hidden assumptions could be a psychosocial land
mine.Eight
planets, and older than my father,
Miles reminded himself, trying to inculcate a proper deference to the
illusion of power Imperial panoply sought to create. One chair at the
head of the room rose from the floor to receive what Gregor would
have sardonically dubbed The Imperial Ass. Miles bit his lip.
It
was apparently going to be a most intimate audience, for Giaja
beckoned Benin over and spoke to him in a low voice, and Benin
subsequently dismissed even Yenaro's guard. That left the three
Barrayarans, the two planetary consorts and Rian, Benin, the Emperor,
and Yenaro. Nine, a traditional quorum for judgment.
Still,
it was better than facing Illyan. Maybe the haut Fletchir Giaja was
not disposed to razor-edged sarcasms. But anyone related to all those
haut-women had to be dangerously bright. Miles swallowed against a
babbling burst of explanations. Wait
for your straight lines, boy.
Rian
looked pale and grave. No clue there, Rian always looked pale and
grave. A last pang of desire banked itself to a tiny, furtive ember
in Miles's heart, secret and encysted like a tumor. But he could
still be afraid for her. His chest was cold with that dread.
"Lord
Vorkosigan," Fletchir Giaja's exquisite baritone broke the
waiting silence.
Miles suppressed a quick glance
around—it wasn't like there were any other Lords Vorkosigan
present, after all—stepped forward, and came to a precise parade
rest. "Sir."
"I am still . . .
unclear, just what your
place was in these recent events. And how you came by it."
"My
place was to have been a sacrificial animal, and it was chosen for me
by Governor Kety, sir. But I didn't play the part he tried to assign
to me."
The Emperor frowned at this
less-than-straight-forward reply. "Explain yourself."
Miles
glanced at Rian. "Everything?"
She
gave an almost imperceptible nod.
Miles closed
his eyes in a brief, diffuse prayer to whatever sportive gods were
listening, opened them again, and launched once more into the true
description of his first encounter with the Ba Lura in the personnel
pod, Great Key and all. At least it had the advantage of
simultaneously getting in Miles's overdue confession to Vorreedi in a
venue where the embassy's chief security officer was totally blocked
from making any comment or reply. Amazing man, Vorreedi, he betrayed
no emotion beyond one muscle jumping in his jaw.
"As
soon as I saw the Ba Lura in the funeral rotunda with its throat
cut," Miles went on, "I realized my then-unknown opponent
had thrown me into the logically impossible position of having to
prove a negative. There was no way, once I had been tricked into
laying hands on the false key, to prove that Barrayar had not
effected a substitution, except by the positive testimony of the one
eyewitness then lying dead on the floor. Or by positively locating
the real Great Key. Which I set out to do. And if the Ba Lura's death
was not a suicide, but rather a murder elaborately set up to pass as
a suicide, it was clear someone high in the Celestial Garden's
security was cooperating with the Ba's killers, which made
approaching Cetagandan Security for help quite dangerous at that
point. But then somebody assigned ghem-Colonel Benin to the case,
presumably with heavy hints that it would be well for his career to
bring in a quick verdict confirming suicide. Somebody who seriously
underestimated Benin's abilities," and
ambition,
"as a security officer. Was
it ghem-General Naru, by the way?"
Benin
nodded, a faint gleam in his eye.
"For . .
. whatever reason, Naru decided ghem-Colonel Benin would make a
suitable additional goat. It was beginning to be a pattern in their
operations, as you must realize if you've collected testimony from
Lord Yenaro here—?" Miles raised an inquiring eyebrow at
Benin. "I see you found Lord Yenaro before Kety's agents did. I
think I'm glad, in all."
"You should
be," Benin returned blandly. "We picked him up—along with
his very interesting carpet—last night. His account was critical in
shaping my response to your cousin's, um, sudden onslaught of
information and demands."
"I see."
Miles shifted his weight, his parade rest growing rather bent. He
rubbed his face, because it didn't seem like the time or place to rub
his crotch.
"Does your medical condition
require you to sit?" Benin inquired solicitously.
"I'll
manage." Miles took a breath. "I tried, in our first
interview, to direct ghem-Colonel Benin's attentions to the
subtleties of his situation. Fortunately, ghem-Colonel Benin is a
subtle man, and his loyalty to you," or
to the truth,
"outweighed whatever implied threats to his career Naru
presented."
Benin and Miles exchanged
guarded, appreciative nods.
"Kety tried to
deliver me into the hands of the Star Creche, accused by means of Ba
Lura's false confession to the Handmaiden," Miles continued
carefully. "But once again his pawns ad libbed against his
script. I entirely commend the haut Rian for her cool and collected
response to this emergency. The fact that she kept her head and did
not panic allowed me to continue to try to clear Barrayar of blame.
She is, um, a credit to the haut, you know." Miles regarded her
anxiously for a cue. Where
are we?
But she remained as glassily attentive as if that now-absent
force-bubble had become one with her skin. "The haut Rian acted
throughout for the good of the haut, never once for her own personal
aggrandizement or safety." Though one might argue, apparently,
over where the
good of the haut
actually lay. "Your late August Mother chose her Handmaiden
well, I'd say."
"That is hardly for
you to judge, Barrayaran," drawled the haut Fletchir Giaja,
whether in amusement, or dangerously, Miles's ear could not quite
tell.
"Excuse me, but I didn't exactly
volunteer for this mission. I was suckered into it. My
judgments
have brought us all here, one way or another."
Giaja
looked faintly surprised, even a little nonplussed, as if he'd never
before had one of his gentle hints thrown back in his face. Benin
stiffened, and Vorreedi winced. Ivan suppressed a grin, the merest
twitch, and continued his Invisible Man routine.
The
emperor took another tack. "And how did you come to be involved
with Lord Yenaro?"
"Um . . . from my
point of view, you mean?" Presumably Benin had already presented
him with Yenaro's own testimony; a cross-check was in order, to be
sure. In carefully neutral phrasing, Miles described his and Ivan's
three encounters with Yenaro s increasingly lethal practical jokes,
with a lot of emphasis on Miles's clever (once proved) theories about
Lord X. Vorreedi's face drained to an interesting greenish cast upon
Miles's description of the go-round with the carpet. Miles added
cautiously, "In my opinion, certainly proved by the incident
with the asterzine bomb, Lord Yenaro was as much an intended victim
as Ivan and myself. There is no treason in the man." Miles cut
off a slice of smile. "He hasn't the nerve for it."
Yenaro
twitched, but did not gainsay any of it. Yeah, slather on the
suggestion of Imperial mercy due all 'round, maybe some would slop
over on the one who needed it most.
At Benin's
direction, Yenaro, in a colorless voice, confirmed Miles's account.
Benin called in a guard and had the ghem-lord taken out, leaving
eight in this chamber of Imperial inquisition. Would they work their
way down to one?
Giaja sat silent for a time,
then spoke, in formally modulated cadences. "That suffices for
my appraisal of the concerns of the Empire. We must now turn to the
concerns of haut. Haut Rian, you may keep your Barrayaran creature.
Ghem-Colonel Benin. Will you kindly wait in the antechamber with
Colonel Vorreedi and Lord Vorpatril until I call you."
"Sire."
Benin saluted his way out, shepherding the reluctant
Barrayarans.
Obscurely alarmed, Miles put in,
"But don't you want Ivan too, Celestial Lord? He witnessed
almost everything with me."
"No,"
stated Giaja flatly.
That settled that. Well . .
. until Miles and Ivan were out of the Celestial Garden, indeed, out
of the Empire and halfway home, they wouldn't be any safer anyway.
Miles subsided with a faint sigh; then his eyes widened at the abrupt
change in the room's atmosphere.
Feminine gazes,
formerly suitably downcast, rose in direct stares. Without awaiting
permission, the three float-chairs arranged themselves in a circle
around Fletchir Giaja, who himself sat back with a face suddenly more
expressive; dryer, edgier, angrier. The glassy reserve of the haut
vanished in a new intensity. Miles swayed on his feet.
Pel
glanced aside at the motion. "Give him a chair, Fletchir,"
she said. "Kety's guard shock-sticked him in the best regulation
form, you know."
In her place, yes.
"As
you wish, Pel." The Emperor touched a control in his chair-arm;
a station chair near Miles's feet rose from the floor. He fell more
than sat in it, grateful and dizzy, on the edge of their
circle.
"I hope you all see now," said
the haut Fletchir Giaja more forcefully, "the wisdom of our
ancestors in arranging that the haut and the Empire shall have only
one interface. Me. Only one veto. Mine. Issues of the haut-genomemust
remain as insulated as possible from the political sphere, lest they
fall into the hands of politicians who do not understand the goal of
haut. That includes most of our gentle ghem-lords, as ghem-General
Naru has perhaps proved to you, Nadina." A flash of subtle,
savage irony there—Miles suddenly doubted his initial perception of
gender issues on Eta Ceta. What if Fletchir Giaja was haut first, and
male second, and the consorts too were haut first, female second. . .
. Who was in charge here, when Fletchir Giaja knew himself as a
product of his mother's high art?
"Indeed,"
said Nadina, with a grimace.
Rian sighed
wearily. "What can you expect from a half-breed like Naru? But
it is the haut Ilsum Kety who has shaken my confidence in the
Celestial Lady's vision. She often said that genetic engineering
could only sow, that winnowing and reaping must still be done in an
arena of competition. But Kety was not ghem, but haut.
The fact that he could try what he tried . . . makes me think we have
more work to do before the winnowing and reaping part."
"Lisbet
always did have an addiction for the most primitive metaphors,"
Nadina recalled with faint distaste.
"She
was right about the diversity issue, though," Pel said.
"In
principle," Giaja conceded. "But this generation is not the
time. The haut population can expand many times over into space
presently held by servitor classes, without need for further
territorial aggrandizement. The Empire is enjoying a necessary period
of assimilation."
"The Constellations
have been deliberately limiting their numerical expansion of late
decades, to conserve their favored economic positions," observed
Nadina disapprovingly.
"You know,
Fletchir," Pel put in, "an alternate solution might be to
require more constellation crosses by Imperial edict. A kind of
genetic self-taxation. Novel, but Nadina is right. The Constellations
have grown more miserly and luxurious with each passing
decade."
"I thought the whole point of
genetic engineering was to avoid the random waste of natural
evolution, and replace it with the efficiency of reason," Miles
piped up. All three haut-women turned to stare at him in
astonishment, as if a potted plant had suddenly offered a critique of
its fertilization routine. "Or … so it seems to me,"
Miles trailed off in a much smaller voice.
Fletchir
Giaja smiled, faint, shrewd, and wintry. Belatedly, Miles began to
wonder why he was being kept here, by Giaja's suggestion/command. He
had a most unpleasant sensation of being in a conversation with an
undertow of cross-currents which were streaming in three different
directions at once. If
Giaja wants to send a message, I wish he'd use a comconsole.
Miles's whole body was throbbing in time with the pulsing of his
headache, several hours past midnight of one of the longer days of
his short life.
"I will return to the
Council of Consorts with your veto," said Rian slowly, "as
I must. But Fletchir, you must address the diversity issue more
directly. If this generation is not the time, it is still certainly
not too soon to begin planning. And the diversification issue. The
single-copy method of security is too horrifyingly risky, as recent
events also prove."
"Hm,"
Fletchir Giaja half-conceded. His eye fell sharply upon Miles.
"Nevertheless—Pel—whatever possessed you to spill the
contents of the Great Key across the entire Eta Ceta system? As a
joke, it does not amuse."
Pel bit her lip;
her eyes, uncharacteristically, lowered.
Miles
said sturdily, "No joke, sir. As far as we knew, we were both
going to die within a few minutes. The haut Rian stated that the
highest priority was the recovery of the Great Key. The receivers got
the Key but no lock; without the gene banks themselves it was
valueless gibberish from their point of view. One way or another, we
assured you would be able to recover it, in pieces maybe, even after
our deaths, regardless of what Kety did subsequently."
"The
Barrayaran speaks the truth," affirmed Pel.
"The
best strategies run on rails like that," Miles pointed out.
"Live or die, you make your goal." He shut up, as Fletchir
Giaja's stare hinted that perhaps outlander barbarians had better not
make comments that could be construed as a slur on his late mothers
abilities, even when those abilities had been pitted against
him.
You
can't get anywhere with these people, or whatever they are. I want to
go home,
Miles thought tiredly. "What will happen to ghem-General Naru,
anyway?"
"He will be executed,"
said the Emperor. To his credit, the bald statement clearly brought
him no joy. "Security must
be … secured."
Miles couldn't argue with
that. "And the haut Kety? Will he be executed too?"
"He
will retire, immediately, to a supervised estate, due to ill health.
If he objects, he will be offered . . . suicide.
"Er
. . . forcibly, if necessary?"
"Kety
is young. He will choose life, and other days and chances."
"The
other governors?"
Giaja frowned annoyance
at the consorts. "A little pragmatic blindness in that direction
will close matters. But they will not find new appointments easy to
come by."
"And," Miles glanced at
the ladies, "the haut Vio? What about her? The others only tried
to commit a crime. She actually succeeded."
Rian
nodded. Her voice went very flat. "She too will be offered a
choice. To replace the servitor she destroyed—de-sexed, depilated,
and demoted to ba, her metabolism altered, her body thickened . . .
but returned to a life inside the Celestial Garden, as she desired
with a passion beyond reason. Or she may be permitted a painless
suicide."
"Which . . . will she
choose?"
"Suicide, I hope," said
Nadina sincerely.
A multiple standard seemed at
work in all this justice. Now that the thrill of the chase was over,
Miles felt a nauseated revulsion at the shambles of the kill. For
this I laid my life on the line?
"What
about . . . the haut Rian? And me?"
Fletchir
Giaja's eyes were cool and distant, light-years gone. "That …
is a problem upon which I shall now retire and meditate."
^
The Emperor called Benin back in to escort
Miles away, after a short murmured conference. But away to where?
Home to the embassy, or head-first down the nearest oubliette? Did
the Celestial Garden have oubliettes?
Home, it
appeared, for Benin returned Miles to the company of Vorreedi and
Ivan, and took them to the Western Gate, where a car from the
Barrayaran embassy already waited. They paused, and the ghem-Colonel
addressed Vorreedi.
"We cannot control what
goes into your official reports. But my Celestial Master . . ."
Benin paused to select a suitably delicate term, "expects
that none of what you have seen or heard will appear as social
gossip."
"That, I think I can
promise," said Vorreedi sincerely.
Benin
nodded satisfaction. "May I have your words upon your names in
the matter, please."
He'd been doing his
homework upon Barrayaran customs, it seemed. The three Barrayarans
dutifully gave their personal oaths, and Benin released them into the
dank night air. It was about two hours till dawn, Miles
guessed.
The embassy aircar was blessedly
shadowed. Miles settled into a corner, wishing he had Ivan's talent
for invisibility, but wishing most of all that they could cut
tomorrow's ceremonies and start home immediately. No. He'd come this
far, might as well see it through to the bitter end.
Vorreedi
had gone beyond emotion to silence. He spoke to Miles only once, in
chill tones.
"What did
you think you were doing, Vorkosigan?"
"I
stopped the Cetagandan Empire from breaking up into eight
aggressively expanding units. I derailed plans for a war by some of
them with Barrayar. I survived an assassination attempt, and helped
catch three high-ranking traitors. Admittedly, they weren't our
traitors, but still. Oh. And I solved a murder. That's enough for one
trip, I hope."
Vorreedi struggled with
himself for a moment, then bit out helplessly, "Are
you a special agent, or not?" On a need-to-know list . . .
Vorreedi didn't. Not really, not at this point. Miles sighed
inwardly. "Well, if not … I succeeded
like one, didn't I?"
Ivan winced. Vorreedi
sat back with no further comment, but radiating exasperation. Miles
smiled grimly, in the dark.
Miles
woke from a late, uneasy doze to find Ivan cautiously shaking him by
the shoulder.
He closed his eyes again, blocking
out the dimness of his suite and his cousin. "Go 'way."
He tried to pull the covers back up over his head.
Ivan
renewed his efforts, more vigorously. "Now I know it was a
mission," he commented. "You're having your usual
post-mission sulks."
"I am not
sulking.
I am tired."
"You
look terrific, you know. Great blotch on the side of your face that
goon left with his shock-stick. Goes all the way up to your eye.
It'll show from a hundred meters. You should get up and look in the
mirror."
"I hate people who are
cheerful in the morning. What time is it? Why are you up? Why are you
here?"
Miles lost his clutch on his bedclothes as Ivan dragged them
ruthlessly from his grip.
"Ghem-Colonel
Benin is on his way here to pick you up. In an Imperial land-cruiser
half a block long. The Cetagandans want you at the cremation ceremony
an hour early."
"What? Why?
He can't be arresting me from here, diplomatic immunity.
Assassination? Execution? Isn't it a little late for
that?"
"Ambassador Vorob'yev also
wants to know. He sent me to rustle you up as swiftly as possible."
Ivan propelled Miles toward his bathroom. "Start depilating,
I've brought your uniform and boots from the embassy laundry. Anyway,
if the Cetagandans really wanted to assassinate you, they'd hardly do
it here. They'd slip something subtle under your skin that wouldn't
go off for six months, and then would drop you mysteriously and
untraceably in your tracks."
"Reassuring
thought." Miles rubbed the back of his neck, surreptitiously
feeling for lumps. "I bet the Star Creche has some great
terminal diseases. But I pray I didn't offend them."
Miles
suffered Ivan to play valet, on fast-forward, with editorials. But he
forgave his cousin all sins, past, present, and future, in exchange
for the coffee bulb Ivan also shoved into his hand. He swallowed and
stared at his face in the mirror, above his unfastened black tunic.
The shock-stick contusion across his left cheek was indeed turning a
spectacular polychrome, crowned by a blue-black circle under his eye.
The other two hits were not as bad, as his clothing had offered some
protection. He still would have preferred to spend the day in bed. In
his cabin on the outbound ImpSec jumpship, heading home as fast as
the laws of physics would allow.
They arrived at
the embassy's lobby to find not Benin but Mia Maz waiting in her
formal black and white funeral clothing. She had been keeping
Ambassador Vorob'yev company when they'd dragged in last night—this
morning, rather—and could not have had much more sleep than Miles.
But she looked remarkably fresh, even chipper. She smiled at Miles
and Ivan. Ivan smiled back.
Miles squinted.
"Vorob'yev not here?"
"He's
coming down as soon as he's finished dressing," Maz assured
him.
"You . . . coming with me?" Miles
asked hopefully. "Or . . . no, I suppose you have to be with
your own delegation. This being the big finish and all."
"I'll
be accompanying Ambassador Vorob'yev." Maz's smile escaped into
a chipmunk grin, dimples everywhere. "Permanently. He asked me
to marry him last night. I think it was a measure of his general
distraction. In the spirit of the insanity of the moment, I said
yes."
If
you can't hire help . . .
Well, that would solve Vorob'yev's quest for female expertise on the
embassy's staff. Not to mention accounting for all that bombardment
of chocolates and invitations. "Congratulations," Miles
managed. Though perhaps it ought to be Congratulations
to Vorob'yev and Good
luck
to Maz.
"It still feels quite strange,"
Maz confided. "I mean, Lady
Vorob'yev.
How did your mother cope, Lord Vorkosigan?"
"You
mean, being an egalitarian Betan and all? No problem. She says
egalitarians adjust to aristocracies just fine, as long as they get
to be the aristocrats."
"I hope to
meet her someday."
"You'll get along
famously," Miles predicted with confidence.
Vorob'yev
appeared, still fastening his black tunic, at almost the same moment
as ghem-Colonel Benin was escorted inside by the embassy guards.
Correction. Ghem-General Benin. Miles smiled under his breath at the
glitter of new rank insignia on Benin's blood-red dress uniform. I
called that one right, did I not?
"May
I ask what this is all about, ghem-General?" Vorob'yev didn't
miss the new order.
Benin half-bowed. "My
Celestial Master requests the attendance of Lord Vorkosigan at this
hour. Ah … we will
return him to you."
"Your word upon
it? It would be a major embarrassment for the embassy were he to be
mislaid . . . again." Vorob'yev managed to be stern at Benin
while simultaneously capturing Maz's hand upon his arm and covertly
stroking it.
"My word upon it, Ambassador,"
Benin promised. At Vorobyev's reluctant nod of permission, he led
Miles out. Miles glanced back over his shoulder, lonely for Ivan, or
Maz, or somebody on his side.
The groundcar
wasn't half a block long, but it was a very fine vehicle indeed, and
not military issue. Cetagandan soldiers saluted Benin punctiliously,
and settled him and his guest in the rear compartment. When they
pulled away from the embassy, it felt something like riding in a
house.
"May I ask what all this is about,
ghem-General?" Miles inquired in turn.
Benin's
expression was almost . . . crocodilian. "I am instructed that
explanations must wait until you arrive at the Celestial Garden. It
will take only a few minutes of your time, nothing more. I first
thought that you would like it, but upon mature reflection, I think
you will hate it. Either way, you deserve it."
"Take
care your growing reputation for subtlety doesn't go to your head,
ghem-General," Miles growled. Benin merely smiled.
It
was definitely an Imperial audience chamber, if a small one, not a
conference chamber like the room last night. There was only one seat,
and Fletchir Giaja was in it already. The white robes he wore this
morning were bulky and elaborate to the point of half-immobilizing
him, and he had two ba servitors waiting to help him with them when
he rose again. He had his icon-look plastered back on his face again,
his expression so reserved it resembled porcelain. Three white
bubbles floated silently beyond his left hand. Another ba servitor
brought a small flat case to Benin, who stood upon the Emperor's
right.
"You may approach my Celestial
Master, Lord Vorkosigan," Benin informed him.
Miles
stepped forward, deciding not to kneel. He and the haut Fletchir
Giaja were almost eye to eye as he stood.
Benin
handed the case to the emperor, who opened it. "Do you know what
this is, Lord Vorkosigan?" Giaja asked.
Miles
eyed the medallion of the Order of Merit on its colored ribbon,
glittering on a bed of velvet. "Yes, sir. It is a lead weight,
suitable for sinking small enemies. Are you going to sew me into a
silk sack with it, before you throw me overboard?"
Giaja
glanced up at Benin, who responded with a Didn't
I tell you so?
shrug.
"Bend your neck, Lord Vorkosigan,"
Giaja instructed him firmly. "Unaccustomed as you may be to
doing so."
Was not Rian in one of those
bubbles? Miles stared briefly at his mirror-polished boots, as Giaja
slipped the ribbon over his head. He stepped back half a pace, tried
and failed to keep his hand from touching the cool metal. He would
not salute. "I … refuse this honor, sir.
"No,
you don't," Giaja said in an observant tone, watching him. "I
am given to understand by my keenest observers that you have a
passion for recognition. It is a . . ."
Weakness
that can be exploited—
"—
an understandable quality that puts me much in mind of our own
ghem."
Well, it was better than being
compared to the hauts' other semi-siblings, the ba. Who were not the
palace eunuchs they seemed, but rather some sort of incredibly
valuable in-house science projects—the late Ba Lura might be better
than half-sibling to Giaja himself, for all Miles knew. Sixty-eight
percent shared chromosomal material, say. Quite. Miles decided he
would have more respect for, not to mention caution of, the silent
slippered ba after this. They were all in on this haut-business
together, the putative servitors and their putative masters. No
wonder the emperor had taken Lura's murder so seriously.
"As
far as recognition goes, sir, this is hardly something that I will be
able to show around at home. More like, hide it in the bottom of the
deepest drawer I own."
"Good,"
said Fletchir Giaja in a level tone. "As long as you lay all the
matters associated with it alongside."
Ah.
That was the heart of it. A bribe for his silence. "There is
very little about the past two weeks that I shall take pleasure in
remembering, sir."
"Remember what you
will, as long as you do not recount it."
"Not
publicly. But I have a duty to report."
"Your
classified military reports do not trouble me."
"I
. . ." He glanced aside at Rian's white bubble, hovering near.
"Agree."
Giaja's pale eyelids swept
down in an accepting blink. Miles felt very strange. Was it a bribe
to accept a prize for doing exactly what he'd been going to do, or
not do, anyway?
Come to think of it … would
his own Barrayarans think he had struck some sort of bargain? The
real reason he'd been detained for that unwitnessed chitchat with the
Emperor last night began to glimmer up at last in his sleep-deprived
brain. Surely
they can't imagine Giaja could suborn me in twenty minutes of
conversation. Could they?
"You
will accompany me," Giaja went on, "on my left hand. It's
time to go." He rose, assisted by the ba, who gathered up his
robes.
Miles eyed the hovering bubbles in silent
desperation. His last chance . . . "May I speak with you one
more time, haut Rian?" he addressed them generally, uncertain
which was the one he sought.
Giaja glanced over
his shoulder, and opened his long-fingered hand in a permissive
gesture, though he himself continued on at the decorous pace enforced
by his costume. Two bubbles waited, one followed, and Benin stood
guard just outside the open door. Not exactly a private moment. That
was all right. There was very little Miles wanted to say out loud at
this point anyway.
Miles glanced back and forth
uncertainly at the pale glowing spheres. One blinked out, and there
Rian sat, much as he had first seen her, stiff white robes cloaked by
the inkfall of shining hair. She still took his breath away.
She
floated closer, and raised one fine hand to touch his left cheek. It
was the first time they had touched. But if she asked, Does
it hurt?,
he swore he'd bite her.
Rian was not a fool. "I
have taken much from you," she spoke quietly, "and given
nothing."
"It's the haut way, is it
not?" Miles said bitterly.
"It is the
only way I know."
The
prisoner's dilemma . . .
From
her sleeve, she removed a dark and shining coil, rather like a
bracelet. A tiny hank of silken hair, very long, wound around and
around until it seemed to have no end. She thrust it at him. "Here.
It was all I could think of."
That's
because it is all you have that you truly own, milady. All else is a
gift of your constellation, or the Star Creche, or the haut, or your
emperor. You live in the interstices of a communal world, rich beyond
the dreams of avarice, owning . . . nothing. Not even your own
chromosomes.
Miles
took the coil from her. It was cool and smooth in his hand. "What
does this signify? To you?"
"I …
truly do not know," she confessed.
Honest
to the end. Does the woman even know how to lie?
"Then I shall keep it. Milady. For memory. Buried very
deep."
"Yes. Please."
"How
will you remember me?" He had absolutely nothing on him that he
could give away right now, he realized, except for whatever lint the
embassy laundry had left in the bottoms of his pockets. "Or will
it please you to forget?"
Her blue eyes
glinted like sun on a glacier. "There is no danger of that. You
will see." She move'd gently away from him. Her force-screen
took form around her slowly, and she faded like perfume. The two
bubbles floated after the emperor to seek their places.
The
dell was similar in design to the one where the haut had held the
elegiac poetry recitations, only larger, a wide sloping bowl open to
the artificial sky of the dome. Haut-lady bubbles and haut– and
ghem-lords in white filled its sides. The thousand or so galactic
delegates in all their muted garbs crowded its circumference. In the
center, ringed by a respectfully unpeopled band of grass and flowers,
sat another round force dome, a dozen meters or more in diameter.
Dimly through its misted surface Miles could see a jumble of objects
piled high around a pallet, upon which lay the slight, white-clad
figure of the haut Lisbet Degtiar. Miles squinted, trying to see if
he could make out the polished maplewood box of the Barrayaran
delegation's gift, but Dorca's sword was buried somewhere out of
sight. It hardly mattered.
But he was going to
have a ringside seat, a nearly Imperial view of it all. The final
parade, down an alley cleared to the center of the bowl, was arranged
in inverse order of clout; the eight planetary consorts and the
Handmaiden in their nine white bubbles, seven—count 'em folks,
seven—ghem-governors, then the emperor himself and his honor guard.
Benin blended into ghem-General Naru's former place without a ripple.
Miles limped along in Giaja's train, intensely self-conscious. He
must present an astonishing sight, slight, short, sinister, his face
looking like he'd lost a spaceport bar fight the night before. The
Cetagandan Order of Merit made a fine show against his House blacks,
quite impossible to miss.
Miles supposed Giaja
was using him to send some kind of signal to his haut-governors, and
not a terribly friendly one. Since Giaja clearly had no plans to let
out the details of the past two weeks' events, Miles could only
conclude it was one of those catch
it if you can
things, intended to unnerve by doubt as much as knowledge, a highly
delicate species of terrorism.
Yeah.
Let 'em wonder.
Well, not them—
he passed the Barrayaran delegation near the front of the galactic
mob. Vorob'yev stared at him stunned. Maz looked surprised but
pleased, pointing at Miles's throat and saying something to her
fiance. Vorreedi looked wildly suspicious. Ivan looked . . . blank.
Thank
you for your vote of confidence, coz.
Miles
himself stared for a moment when he spotted Lord Yenaro in the back
row of ghem-lords. Yenaro was dressed in the purple and white garb of
a Celestial Garden ghem-lord-in-waiting of the tenth rank, sixth
degree, the lowest order. The lowest of the highest, Miles corrected
himself. Looks
like he got that assistant perfumers job after all.
And so the haut Fletchir Giaja brought another loose cannon under
control. Smooth.
They all took their assigned
places at the center of the bowl. A procession of young ghem-girls
laid a final offering of flowers all around the central force-bubble.
A chorus sang. Miles found himself attempting to calculate the price
in labor alone of the entire month's ceremonies if one set the time
of everyone involved at some sort of minimum wage. The sum was . . .
celestial. He became increasingly aware that he hadn't had breakfast,
or nearly enough coffee. I
will not pass out. I will not scratch my nose, or my ass. I will
not—
A
white bubble drifted up in front of the emperor. A short, familiar ba
paced alongside it, carrying a compartmented tray. Rian's voice spoke
from the bubble, ceremonial words; the ba laid the tray before
Giaja's feet. Miles, at Giaja's left hand, stared down into the
compartments and smiled sourly. The Great Key, the Great Seal, and
all the rest of Lisbet's regalia, were returned to their source. The
ba and the bubble retreated. Miles waited in mild boredom for Giaja
to call forth his new empress from somewhere in the mob of hovering
haut-bubbles.
The emperor motioned Rian and her
ba to approach again. More formal phrases, so convoluted Miles took a
full belated minute to unravel their meaning. The ba bowed and picked
up the tray again on its mistress's behalf. Miles's boredom
evaporated in a frisson of shock, muffled by intense bemusement. For
once, he wished he were shorter, or had Ivan's talent for
invisibility, or could magically teleport himself somewhere,
anywhere, out of here. A stir of interest, even astonishment, ran
through the haut and ghem audience. Members of the Degtiar
constellation looked quite pleased. Members of other constellations .
. . looked on politely.
The haut Rian Degtiar
took possession of the Star Creche again as a new Empress of
Cetaganda, fourth Imperial Mother to be chosen by Fletchir Giaja, but
now first in seniority by virtue of her genomic responsibility. Her
first genetic duty would be to cook up her own Imperial prince son.
God. Was she happy, inside that bubble?
Her new
. . . not husband, mate, the emperor—might never touch her. Or they
might become lovers. Giaja might wish to emphasize his possession of
her, after all. Though to be fair, Rian must have known this was
coming before the ceremony, and she hadn't looked like she objected.
Miles swallowed, feeling ill, and horribly tired. Low blood sugar, no
doubt.
Good
luck to you, milady. Good luck . . . good-bye.
And
Giaja's control extended itself, softly as fog. . . .
The
Emperor raised his hand in signal, and the waiting Imperial engineers
solemnly went into motion at their power station. Inside the great
central force-bubble, a dark orange glow began, turning red, then
yellow, then blue-white. Objects inside tilted, fell, then roiled up
again, their forms disintegrating into molecular plasma. The Imperial
engineers and Imperial Security had doubtless had a tense and sweaty
night, arranging the Empress Lisbet's pyre with the utmost care. If
that bubble burst now, the heat-effects would resemble a small fusion
bomb.
It really didn't take very long, perhaps
ten minutes altogether. A circle opened in the gray-clouded dome
overhead, revealing blue sky. The effect was extremely weird, like a
view into another dimension. A much smaller hole opened in the top of
the force-bubble. White fire shot skyward as the bubble vented
itself. Miles assumed the airspace over the center of the capital had
been cleared of all traffic, though the stream diffused into faint
smoke quickly enough.
Then the dome closed
again, the artificial clouds scurrying away on an artificial breeze,
the light growing brighter and cheerier. The force-bubble faded into
nothingness, leaving only an empty circle of undamaged grass. Not
even ash.
A waiting ba servitor brought the
Emperor a colorful robe. Giaja traded off his outer layer of whites,
and donned the new garment. The Emperor raised a finger, and his
honor guards again surrounded him, and the Imperial parade reversed
itself out of the bowl. When the last major figure cleared the rim,
the mourners gave a collective sigh, and the silence and rigid
pattern broke in a murmur of voices and rustle of departing
motion.
A large open float-car was waiting at
the top of the dell to take the emperor . . . away, to wherever
Cetagandan emperors went when the party was over. Would Giaja have a
good stiff drink and kick off his shoes? Probably not. The attendant
ba arranged the Imperial robes, and sat to the controls.
Miles
found himself left standing beside the car as it rose. Giaja glanced
over at him, and favored him with a microscopic nod. "Good-bye,
Lord Vorkosigan."
Miles bowed low. "Until
we meet again."
"Not soon, I trust,"
Giaja murmured dryly, and floated off, trailed by a gaggle of
force-bubbles now turned all the colors of the rainbow. None paused
as if to look back.
Ghem-General Benin, at
Miles's elbow, almost cracked an expression. Laughing? "Come,
Lord Vorkosigan. I will escort you back to your delegation. Having
given your ambassador my personal word to return you, I must
personally—redeem
it, as you Barrayarans say. A curious turn of phrase. Do you use it
in the sense of a soul in a religion, or an object in a
lottery?"
"Mm . . . more in a medical
sense. As in the temporary donation of a vital organ." Hearts
and promises, all redeemed here today.
"Ah."
They
came upon Ambassador Vorob'yev and his party, looking around as
galactic delegates boarded float-cars for a ride to one last
fantastical meal. The cars' white silk seats had all been replaced,
in the last hour, by assorted colored silks, signifying the end of
official mourning. At no discernible signal, one came promptly to
Benin. No waiting in line for them.
"If we
left now," Miles noted to Ivan, "we could be in orbit in an
hour."
"But—the ghem-ladies might be
at the buffet," Ivan protested. "Women like food,
y'know."
Miles was starving. "In that
case, definitely leave straightaway," he said firmly.
Benin,
perhaps mindful of his Celestial Master s last broad hint, supported
this with a bland, "That sounds like a good choice, Lord
Vorkosigan."
Vorob'yev pursed his lips;
Ivan's shoulders slumped slightly.
Vorreedi
nodded at Miles s throat, a glint of puzzled suspicion in his eyes.
"What was that
all about . . . Lieutenant?"
Miles fingered
his silken collar with the Cetagandan Imperial Order of Merit
attached. "My reward. And my punishment. It seems the haut
Fletchir Giaja has a low taste for high irony."
Maz,
who had obviously not yet been brought up to speed on the subtext of
the situation, protested his lack of enthusiasm. "But it's an
extraordinary honor, Lord Vorkosigan! There are Cetagandan
ghem-officers who would gladly die for it!"
Vorob'yev
explained coolly, "But rumors of it will hardly make him popular
at home, love. Particularly circulating, as they must, without any
real explanation attached. Even more particularly in light of the
fact that Lord Vorkosigan's military assignment is in Barrayaran
Imperial Security. From the Barrayaran point of view, it looks . . .
well, it looks very
strange."
Miles sighed. His headache was
coming on again. "I know. Maybe I can get Illyan to classify it
secret."
"About three thousand people
just saw it!" Ivan said.
Miles stirred.
"Well, that's your fault."
"Mine!"
"Yeah.
If you'd brought me two or three coffee bulbs this morning, instead
of only one, my brain might have been on-line, and I could've ducked
faster and avoided this. Bloody slow reflexes. The implications are
still dawning on me." For example: if he had not
bowed his head to Giaja's silk collar in polite compliance, how
dramatically would the chances have risen of his and Ivan's jumpship
meeting some unfortunate accident while exiting the Cetagandan
Empire?
Vorreedi's brows twitched. "Yes . .
." he said. "What did
you and the Cetagandans talk about last night, after Lord Vorpatril
and I were excluded?"
"Nothing. They
never asked me anything more." Miles grinned blackly. "That's
the beauty of it, of course. Let's see you
prove a negative, Colonel. Just try. I want to watch."
After
a long pause, Vorreedi slowly nodded. "I see."
"Thank
you for that, sir," breathed Miles.
Benin
escorted them all to the South Gate, and saw them out for the last
time.
The planet of Eta Ceta was fading in the
distance, though not fast enough to suit Miles. He switched off the
monitor in his bunk aboard the ImpSec courier vessel, and lay back to
nibble a bit more from his plain dry ration bar, and hope for sleep.
He wore loose and wrinkled black fatigues, and no boots at all. He
wriggled his toes in their unaccustomed freedom. If he played it
right, he might be able to finesse his way through the entire
two-week trip home barefoot. The Cetagandan Order of Merit, hung
above his head, swayed slightly on its colored ribbon, gleaming in
the soft light. He scowled meditatively at it.
A
familiar double-knock sounded on his cabin door; for a moment he
longed to feign sleep. Instead he sighed, and pushed himself up on
his elbow. "Enter, Ivan."
Ivan had
skinned out of his dress uniform and into fatigues as fast as
possible also. And friction-slippers, hah. He had a sheaf of colored
papers in his hand.
"Just thought I'd share
these with you," Ivan said. "Vorreedi's clerk handed 'em to
me just as we were leaving the embassy. Everything we're going to be
missing tonight, and for the next week." He switched on Miles's
disposal chute, in the wall. A yellow paper. "Lady Benello."
He popped it in; it whooshed into oblivion. A green one. "Lady
Arvin." Whoosh. An enticing turquoise one; Miles could smell the
perfume from his bunk. "The inestimable Veda."
Whoosh—
"I get the point, Ivan,"
Miles growled.
"And the food," Ivan
sighed. "—why
are you eating that disgusting rat bar? Even courier ship stores can
do better than that!"
"I wanted
something plain."
"Indigestion, eh?
Your stomach acting up again? No blood leakage, I hope."
"Only
in my brain. Look, why are you here?"
"I
just wanted to share my virtuous divesting of my life of decadent
Cetagandan luxury," Ivan said primly. "Sort of like shaving
my head and becoming a monk. For the next two weeks, anyway."
His eye fell on the Order of Merit, turning slowly on its ribbon.
"Want me to put that down the disposer too? Here, I'll get rid
of it for you—" He made to grab it.
Miles
came up out of his bunk in a posture of defense like a wolverine out
of its burrow. "Will you get out of here!"
"Ha!
I thought
that little bauble meant more to you than you were letting on to
Vorreedi and Vorob'yev," Ivan crowed.
Miles
stuffed the medal down out of sight, and out of reach, under his
bedding. "I frigging earned it. Speaking of blood." Ivan
grinned, and stopped circling for a swoop on Miles's possessions, and
settled down into the tiny cabin's station chair.
"I've
thought about it, you know," Miles went on. "What it's
going to be like, ten or fifteen years from now, if I ever get out of
covert ops and into a real line command. I'll have had more practical
experience than any other Barrayaran soldier of my generation, and
it's all going to be totally invisible to my brother officers.
Classified. They'll all think I spent the last decade riding in
jumpships and eating candy. How am I going to maintain authority over
a bunch of overgrown backcountry goons—like you? They'll eat me
alive."
"Well," Ivan's eye
glinted, "they'll try, to be sure. I hope I'm around to
watch."
Secretly, Miles hoped so too, but
he would rather have had his fingernails removed with pliers, in the
old-fashioned ImpSec interrogation style of a couple of generations
ago, than say so out loud.
Ivan heaved a large
sigh. "But I'm still going to miss the ghem-ladies. And the
food."
"There's ladies and food at
home, Ivan."
"True." Ivan
brightened slightly.
"S'funny." Miles
lay back on his bunk, shoving his pillow behind his shoulders to prop
himself half-up. "If Fletchir Giaja's late Celestial Father had
sent the haut-women to conquer Barrayar, instead of the ghem-lords, I
think Cetaganda would own the planet right now."
"The
ghem-lords were nothing if not crude," Ivan allowed. "But
we were cruder." He stared at the ceiling. "How many more
generations, d'you think, before we can no longer consider the
haut-lords human?"
"I think the
operative question is, how many generations till the haut-lords no
longer regard us
as human." Well,
I'm used to that even at home. Sort of a preview of things to come.
"I think . . . Cetaganda will remain potentially dangerous to
its neighbors as long as the haut are in transition to … wherever
they're going. Empress Lisbet and her predecessors," and
her heiresses,
"are running this two-track evolutionary race—the haut fully
controlled, the ghem used as a source of genetic wild cards and pool
of variations. Like a seed company keeping strains of wild plants
even when they only sell a monoculture, to permit development in the
face of the unexpected. The greatest danger to everybody else would
be for the haut to lose control of the ghem. When the ghem are
allowed to run the show—well, Barrayar knows what it's like when
half a million practicing social Darwinists with guns are let loose
on one's home planet."
Ivan grimaced.
"Really. As your esteemed late grandfather used to tell us, in
gory detail."
"But if … the ghem
fail to be consistently militarily successful in the next generation
or so—our generation—if their little expansionist adventures
continue to be embarrassing and costly, like the Vervain invasion
debacle, maybe the haut will turn to other areas of development than
the military in their quest for superiority. Maybe even peaceful
ones. Perhaps ones we can scarcely imagine."
"Good
luck," snorted Ivan.
"Luck is
something you make for yourself, if you want it." And
I want it more, oh yes.
Keeping one eye out for sudden moves from his cousin, Miles re-hung
his medallion.
"You going to wear that? I
dare you."
"No. Not unless I have a
need to be really obnoxious sometime."
"But
you're going to keep it."
"Oh,
yes."
Ivan stared off into space, or
rather, at the cabin wall, and into space beyond by implication. "The
worm-hole nexus is a big place, and constantly getting bigger. Even
the haut would have trouble filling it all, I think."
"I
hope so. Monocultures are dull and vulnerable. Lisbet knew
that."
Ivan chuckled. "Aren't you a
little short to be thinking of re-designing the universe?"
"Ivan."
Miles let his voice grow unexpectedly chill. "Why should the
haut Fletchir Giaja decide he needed to be polite to me? Do you
really
think this is just for my father's sake?" He ticked the
medallion and set it spinning, and locked eyes with his cousin. "It's
not a trivial trinket. Think again about all the things this means.
Bribery, sabotage, and real respect, all in one strange packet . . .
we're not done with each other yet, Giaja and I."
Ivan
dropped his gaze first. "You're a frigging crazy man, you know
that?" After an uncomfortable minute of silence, he hoisted
himself from Miles s station-chair, and wandered away, muttering
about finding some real food on this boat.
Miles
settled back with slitted eyes, and watched the shining circle spin
like planets.