Barrayar
Lois McMaster Bujold – Miles Vorkosigan 11 – Diplomatic Immunity v2.html
CHAPTER ONE
In the image above the vid plate, the sperm
writhed in elegant, sinuous curves. Its wriggling grew more energetic
as the invisible grip of the medical micro-tractor grasped it and
guided it to its target, the pearl-like egg: round, lustrous, rich with
promise.
“Once more, dear boy, into the breach—for
England, Harry, and Saint George!” Miles murmured encouragingly. “Or at
least, for Barrayar, me, and maybe Grandfather Piotr. Ha!” With a last
twitch, the sperm vanished within its destined paradise.
“Miles, are you looking at those baby pictures again
?” came Ekaterin's voice, amused, as she emerged from their cabin's
sybaritic bathroom. She finished winding up her dark hair on the back
of her head, secured it, and leaned over his shoulder as he sat in the
station chair. “Is that Aral Alexander, or Helen Natalia?”
“Well, Aral Alexander in the making.”
“Ah, admiring your sperm again. I see.”
“And
your excellent egg, my lady.” He glanced up at his wife, glorious in a
heavy red silk tunic that he'd bought her on Earth, and grinned. The
warm clean scent of her skin tickled his nostrils, and he inhaled
happily. “Were they not a handsome set of gametes? While they lasted,
anyway.”
“Yes, and they made beautiful
blastocysts. You know, it's a good thing we took this trip. I swear
you'd be in there trying to lift the replicator lids to peek, or
shaking the poor little things up like Winterfair presents to see how
they rattled.”
“Well, it's all new to me .”
“Your
mother told me last Winterfair that as soon as the embryos were safely
implanted you'd be acting like you'd invented reproduction. And to
think I imagined she was exaggerating!”
He
captured her hand and breathed a kiss into its palm. “This, from the
lady who sat in the nursery next to the replicator rack all spring to
study? Whose assignments all suddenly seemed to take twice as long to
complete?”
“Which, of course, had nothing to do
with her lord popping in twice an hour to ask how she was going on?”
The hand, released, traced his chin in a very flattering fashion. Miles
considered proposing that they forgo the rather dull luncheon company
in the ship's passenger lounge, order in room service, get undressed
again, and go back to bed for the rest of the watch. Ekaterin didn't
seem to regard anything about their journey as boring, though.
This
galactic honeymoon was belated, but perhaps better so, Miles thought.
Their marriage had had an awkward enough commencement; it was as well
that their settling-in had included a quiet period of domestic routine.
But in retrospect, the first anniversary of that memorable, difficult,
mid-winter wedding had seemed to arrive in about fifteen subjective
minutes.
They had long agreed they would celebrate
the date by starting the children in their uterine replicators. The
debate had never been about when , just how many . He
still thought his suggestion of doing them all at once had an admirable
efficiency. He'd never been serious about twelve; he'd just figured to
start with that proposition, and fall back to six. His mother, his
aunt, and what seemed every other female of his acquaintance had all
mobilized to explain to him that he was insane, but Ekaterin had merely
smiled. They'd settled on two, to begin with, Aral Alexander and Helen
Natalia. A double portion of wonder, terror, and delight.
At
the edge of the vid recording, Baby's First Cell Division was
interrupted by a red blinking message light. Miles frowned faintly.
They were three jumps out from Solar space, in the deep interstellar on
a sub-light-speed run between wormholes expected to take four full
days. En route to Tau Ceti, where they would make orbital transfer to a
ship bound for Escobar, and there to yet another that would thread the
jump route past Sergyar and Komarr to home. He wasn't exactly expecting
any vid calls here. “Receive,” he intoned.
Aral Alexander in potentia
vanished, to be replaced by the head and shoulders of the Tau Cetan
passenger liner's captain. Miles and Ekaterin had dined at his table
some two or three times on this leg of their tour. The man favored
Miles with a tense smile and nod. “Lord Vorkosigan.”
“Yes, Captain? What can I do for you?”
“A
ship identifying itself as a Barrayaran Imperial courier has hailed us
and is requesting permission to match velocities and lock on.
Apparently, they have an urgent message for you.”
Miles's brows rose, and his stomach sank. This was not, in his experience, the way the Imperium delivered good news. On his shoulder, Ekaterin's hand tightened. “Certainly, Captain. Put them through.”
The
captain's dark Tau Cetan features vanished, to be replaced after a
moment by a man in Barrayaran Imperial undress greens with lieutenant's
tabs and Sector IV pins on his collar. Visions surged through Miles's
mind of the Emperor assassinated, Vorkosigan House burned to the ground
with the replicators inside, or, even more hideously likely, his father
suffering a fatal stroke—he dreaded the day some stiff-faced messenger
would begin by addressing him, Count Vorkosigan, sir?
The lieutenant saluted him. “Lord Auditor Vorkosigan? I'm Lieutenant Smolyani of the courier ship Kestrel
. I have a message to hand-deliver to you, recorded under the Emperor's
personal seal, after which I am ordered to take you aboard.”
“We're not at war, are we? Nobody's died?”
Lieutenant
Smolyani ducked his head. “Not so far as I've heard, sir.” Miles's
heart rate eased; behind him, Ekaterin let out her breath. The
lieutenant went on, “But, apparently, a Komarran trade fleet has been
impounded at some place called Graf Station, Union of Free Habitats.
It's listed as an independent system, out near the edge of Sector V. My
clear-code flight orders are to take you there with all safe speed, and
to wait on your convenience thereafter.” He smiled a bit grimly. “I
hope it's not a war, sir, because they only seem to be sending us.”
“Impounded? Not quarantined?”
“I gather it's some sort of legal entanglement, sir.”
I smell diplomacy
. Miles grimaced. “Well, no doubt the sealed message will make it more
plain. Bring it to me, and I'll take a look while we get packed up.”
“Yes, sir. The Kestrel will be locking on in just a few minutes.”
“Very good, Lieutenant.” Miles cut the com.
“We?” said Ekaterin in a quiet tone.
Miles hesitated. Not a quarantine, the lieutenant had said. Not, apparently, a shooting war either. Or not yet, anyway
. On the other hand, he couldn't imagine Emperor Gregor interrupting
his long-delayed honeymoon for something trivial. “I'd better see what
Gregor has to say, first.”
She dropped a kiss on the top of his head, and said simply, “Right.”
Miles raised his personal wrist com to his lips and murmured, “Armsman Roic—on duty, to my cabin, now.”
* * *
The
data disk with the Imperial Seal upon it that the lieutenant handed to
Miles a short time later was marked Personal , not Secret
. Miles sent Roic, his bodyguard-cum-batman, and Smolyani off to sort
and stow luggage, but motioned Ekaterin to stay. He slipped the disk
into the secured player that the lieutenant had also brought, set it on
the cabin's bedside table, and keyed it to life. He sat back on the
edge of the bed beside her, conscious of the warmth and solidity of her
body. For the sake of her worried eyes, he took her hand in a
reassuring grip.
Emperor Gregor Vorbarra's
familiar features appeared, lean, dark, reserved. Miles read profound
irritation in the subtle tightening of his lips.
“I'm
sorry to interrupt your honeymoon, Miles,” Gregor began. “But if this
has caught up with you, you haven't changed your itinerary. So you're
on your way home now in any case.”
Not too sorry, then.
“It's
my good luck and your bad that you happen to be the man physically
closest to this mess. Briefly, one of our Komarr-based trade fleets put
in at a deep-space facility out near Sector V, for resupply and cargo
transfer. One—or more, the reports are unclear—of the officers from its
Barrayaran military escort either deserted, or was kidnapped. Or was
murdered—the reports are unclear about that , too. The patrol
the fleet commander sent to retrieve him ran into trouble with the
locals. Shots—I phrase this advisedly—shots were fired, equipment and
structures were damaged, people on both sides were apparently seriously
injured. No other deaths reported yet, but that may have changed by the
time you get this, God help us.
“The problem—or
one of them, anyway—is that we're getting a significantly different
version of the chain of events from the local ImpSec observer on the
Graf Station side of the conflict than we're getting from our fleet
commander. Yet more Barrayaran personnel are now reported either held
hostage, or arrested, depending on which version one is to believe.
Charges filed, fines and expenses mounting, and the local response has
been to lock down all ships currently in dock until the muddle is
resolved to their satisfaction. The Komarran cargomasters are now
screaming back to us over the heads of their Barrayaran escort, with
yet a third spin on events. For your, ah, delectation, all the original
reports we've received so far from all the viewpoints are appended to
this message. Enjoy.” Gregor grimaced in a way that made Miles twitch.
“Just
to add to the delicacy of the problem, the fleet in question is about
fifty percent Toscane-owned.” Gregor's new wife, Empress Laisa, was a
Toscane heiress and a Komarran by birth, a political marriage of
enormous importance to the peace of the fragile union of planets that
was the Imperium. “The problem of how to satisfy my in-laws while
simultaneously presenting the appearance of Imperial evenhandedness to
all their Komarran commercial rivals—I leave to your ingenuity.”
Gregor's thin smile said it all.
“You know the
drill. I request and require you, as my Voice, to get yourself to Graf
Station with all safe speed and sort out the situation before it
deteriorates further. Pry all my subjects out of the hands of the
locals and get the fleet back on its way. Without starting a war, if
you please, or breaking my Imperial budget.
“And,
critically, find out who's lying. If it's the ImpSec observer, that's a
problem to bounce to their chain of command. If it's the fleet
commander—who is Admiral Eugin Vorpatril, by the way—it
becomes . . . very much my problem.”
Or
rather, very much the problem of Gregor's proxy, his Emperor's Voice,
his Imperial Auditor. Namely Miles. Miles considered the interesting
pitfalls inherent in attempting, without backup, far from home, to
arrest the ranking military officer out of the middle of his
long-standing and possibly personally loyal command. A Vorpatril, too,
scion of a Barrayaran aristocratic clan of far-flung and important
political connections within the Council of Counts. Miles's own aunt
and cousin were Vorpatrils. Oh, thank you, Gregor.
The
Emperor continued, “In matters rather closer to Barrayar, something has
stirred up the Cetagandans around Rho Ceta. No need to go into the
peculiar details here, but I would appreciate it if you would settle
this impoundment crisis as swiftly and efficiently as you can. If the
Rho Cetan business becomes any more peculiar, I'll want you safely
home. The communications lag between Barrayar and Sector V is going to
be too long to for me to breathe over your shoulder, but some
occasional status or progress reports from you would be a nice touch,
if you don't mind.” Gregor's voice did not change to convey irony. It
didn't need to. Miles snorted. “Good luck,” Gregor concluded. The image
on the viewer returned to a mute display of the Imperial Seal. Miles
reached forward and keyed it off. The detailed reports, he could study
once he was en route.
He? Or we ?
He
glanced up at Ekaterin's pale profile; she turned her serious blue eyes
toward him. He asked, “Do you want to go with me, or continue on home?”
“Can I go with you?” she asked doubtfully.
“Of course you can! The only question is, would you like to?”
Her
dark brows rose. “Not the only question, surely. Do you think I'd be of
any use, or would I just be a distraction from your work?”
“There's
official use, and there's unofficial use. Don't bet that the first is
more important than the second. You know the way people talk to you to
try to get oblique messages to me?”
“Oh, yes.” Her lips twisted in distaste.
“Well,
yes, I realize it's tedious, but you're very good at sorting them out,
you know. Not to mention the information to be obtained just from
studying the kinds of lies people tell. And, ah—not-lies. There may
well be people who will talk to you who won't talk to me, for one
reason or another.”
She conceded the truth of this with a little wave of her free hand.
“And . . . it would be a real relief for me to have someone along I can talk to freely.”
Her smile tilted a little at this. “Talk, or vent?”
“I—hem!—suspect
this one is going to entail quite a lot of venting, yes. D'you think
you can stand it? It could get pretty thick. Not to mention boring.”
“You know, you keep claiming your job is boring, Miles, but your eyes have gone all bright.”
He cleared his throat and shrugged unrepentantly.
Her amusement faded, and her brows drew down. “How long do you think this sorting out will take?”
He
considered the calculation she had doubtless just made. It would be six
more weeks, give or take a few days, to the scheduled births. Their
original travel plan would have put them back at Vorkosigan House a
comfortable month early. Sector V was in the opposite direction from
their present location to Barrayar, insofar as the network of jump
points people navigated to get from here to there could
be said to have a direction. Several days to get from here to Graf
Station, plus an extra two weeks of travel at least to get home from
there, even in the fastest of fast couriers. “If I can settle things in
less than two weeks, we can both get home on time.”
She
breathed a short laugh. “For all that I try to be all modern and
galactic, that feels so strange. All sorts of men don't make it home
for the births of their children. But My mother was out of town on the day I was born, so she missed it , just seems . . . seems like a more profound complaint, somehow.”
“If
it runs over, I suppose I could send you home on your own, with a
suitable escort. But I want to be there, too.” He hesitated. It's my first time, dammit, of course it's making me crazy,
was a statement of the obvious that he managed to stop on his lips. Her
first marriage had left her riddled with sensitive scars, none of them
physical, and this topic trod near several of them. Rephrase, O Diplomat . “Does it . . . make it any easier, that it's the second time, for you?”
Her
expression grew introspective. “Nikki was a body birth; of course
everything was harder. The replicators take away so many risks—our
children could get all their genetic mistakes corrected, they won't be
subject to damage from a bad birth—I know replicator gestation is
better, more responsible, in every way. It's not as though they are
being shortchanged . And yet . . .”
He raised her hand and touched her knuckles to his lips. “You're not shortchanging me , I promise you.”
Miles's
own mother was adamantly in favor of the use of replicators, with
cause. He was reconciled now, at age thirty-odd, with the physical
damage he had taken in her womb from the soltoxin attack. Only his
emergency transfer to a replicator had saved his life. The teratogenic
military poison had left him stunted and brittle-boned, but a
childhood's agony of medical treatments had brought him to nearly full
function, if not, alas, full height. Most of his bones had been
replaced piecemeal with synthetics thereafter, emphasis on the pieces
. The rest of the damage, he conceded, was all his own doing. That he
was still alive seemed less a miracle than that he had won Ekaterin's
heart. Their children would not suffer such traumas.
He
added, “And if you think you're having it too luxuriously easy now to
feel properly virtuous, why, just wait till they get out of those replicators.”
She laughed. “Very good point!”
“Well.”
He sighed. “I'd intended this trip to show you the glories of the
galaxy, in the most elegant and refined society. It appears I'm heading
instead to what I suspect is the armpit of Sector V, and the company of
a bunch of squabbling, frantic merchants, irate bureaucrats, and
paranoid militarists. Life is full of surprises. Come with me, my love?
For my sanity's sake?”
Her eyes narrowed in
amusement. “How can I resist such an invitation? Of course I will.” She
sobered. “Would it violate security for me to send a message to Nikki
telling him we'll be late?”
“Not at all. Send it from the Kestrel , though. It'll get through faster.”
She nodded. “I've never been away from him so long before. I wonder if he's been lonely?”
Nikki
had been left, on Ekaterin's side of the family, with four uncles and a
great-uncle plus matching aunts, a herd of cousins, a small army of
friends, and his Grandmother Vorsoisson. On Miles's side were
Vorkosigan House's extensive staff and their extensive families, with
Uncle Ivan and Uncle Mark and the whole Koudelka clan for backup.
Impending were his doting Vorkosigan step-grandparents, who had planned
to arrive after Miles and Ekaterin for the birthday bash, but who now
might beat them home. Ekaterin might have to travel ahead to Barrayar, if he couldn't cut through this mess in a timely fashion, but by no rational definition of the word, alone .
“I
don't see how,” said Miles honestly. “I expect you miss him more than
he misses us. Or he'd have managed more than that one monosyllabic note
that didn't catch up with us till Earth. Eleven-year-old boys can be
pretty self-centered. I'm sure I was.”
Her brows rose. “Oh? And how many notes have you sent to your mother in the past two months?”
“It's a honeymoon trip. Nobody expects you to . . . Anyway, she's always gotten to see the reports from my security.”
The brows stayed up. He added prudently, “I'll drop her a message from the Kestrel too.”
He
was rewarded with a League of Mothers smile. Come to think of it,
perhaps he would include his father in the address as well, not that
his parents didn't share his missives. And complain coequally about
their rarity.
* * *
An hour
of mild chaos completed their transfer to the Barrayaran Imperial
courier ship. Fast couriers gained most of their speed by trading off
carrying capacity. Miles was forced to divest all but their most
essential luggage. The considerable remainder, along with a startling
volume of souvenirs, would continue the journey back to Barrayar with
most of their little entourage: Ekaterin's personal maid, Miss Pym,
and, to Miles's greater regret, both of Roic's relief armsmen. It
occurred to him belatedly, as he and Ekaterin fitted themselves into
their new shared cabin, that he ought to have mentioned how cramped
their quarters would be. He'd traveled on similar vessels so often
during his own years in ImpSec, he took their limitations for
granted—one of the few aspects of his former career where his
undersized body had worked to his advantage.
So
while he did spend the remainder of the day in bed with his wife after
all, it was primarily due to the absence of other seating. They folded
back the upper bunk for head space and sat up on opposite ends,
Ekaterin to read quietly from a hand viewer, Miles to plunge into
Gregor's promised Pandora's box of reports from the diplomatic front.
He wasn't five minutes into this study before he uttered a Ha!
Ekaterin indicated her willingness to be interrupted by looking up at him with a reciprocal Hm?
“I just figured out why Graf Station sounded familiar. We're headed for Quaddiespace, by God.”
“Quaddiespace? Is that someplace you've been before?”
“Not
personally, no.” This was going to take more politic preparation than
he'd anticipated. “Although I actually met a quaddie once. The quaddies
are a race of bioengineered humans developed, oh, two or three hundred
years ago. Before Barrayar was rediscovered. They were supposed to be
permanent free fall dwellers. Whatever their creators' original plan
for them was, it fell through when the new grav technologies came in,
and they ended up as sort of economic refugees. After assorted travels
and adventures, they finally settled as a group in what was at the time
the far end of the wormhole Nexus. They were wary of other people by
then, so they deliberately picked a system with no habitable planets,
but with considerable asteroid and cometary resources. Planning to keep
themselves to themselves, I guess. Of course, the explored Nexus has
grown around them since then, so now they get some foreign exchange by
servicing ships and providing transfer facilities. Which explains why
our fleet came to be docked there, although not what happened
afterwards. The, ah . . .” He hesitated. “The
bioengineering included a lot of metabolic changes, but the most
spectacular alteration was, they have a second set of arms where their
legs should be. Which is really, um, handy in free fall. So to speak.
I've often wished I'd had a couple of extra hands, when I was operating
in vacuum.”
He passed the viewer across and
displayed the shot of a quaddie, dressed in bright yellow shorts and a
singlet, handing himself along a gravity-less corridor with the speed
and agility of a monkey navigating through treetops.
“Oh
,” gulped Ekaterin, then quickly regained control of her features.
“How, uh . . . interesting.” After a moment she
added, “It does look quite practical, for their environment.”
Miles
relaxed a trifle. Whatever her buried Barrayaran reflexes were
regarding visible mutations, they would be trumped by her iron grip on
good manners.
The same, unfortunately, did not
appear to be true of their fellow members of the Imperium now stranded
in the quaddies' system. The difference between deleterious mutation
and benign or advantageous modification was not readily grasped by
Barrayarans from the backcountry. Given that one officer referred to
them as horrible spider mutants right in his report, it was clear that Miles could add racial tensions to the mix of complications they were now racing toward.
“You get used to them pretty quickly,” he reassured her.
“Where did you meet one, if they keep to themselves?”
“Um . . .”
Some quick internal editing, here . . . ”It was on
an ImpSec mission. I can't talk about it. But she was a musician, of
all things. Played the hammer dulcimer with all four arms.” His attempt
to mime this remarkable sight resulted in his banging his elbow
painfully on the cabin wall. “Her name was Nicol. You would have liked
her. We got her out of a tight spot. I wonder if she ever made it
home?” He rubbed his elbow and added hopefully, “I'll bet the quaddies'
free fall gardening techniques would interest you.”
Ekaterin brightened. “Yes, indeed.”
Miles
returned to his reports with the uncomfortable certainty that this was
not going to be a good task to plunge into underprepared. He mentally
added a review of quaddie history to his list of studies for the next
few days.
CHAPTER TWO
“Is my collar straight?”
Ekaterin's
cool fingers made businesslike work upon the back of Miles's neck; he
concealed the shiver down his spine. “Now it is,” she said.
“Clothes
make the Auditor,” he muttered. The little cabin lacked such amenities
as a full-length mirror; he had to use his wife's eyes instead. This
did not seem a disadvantage. She stepped back as far as she could, a
half-pace to the bulkhead, and looked him up and down to check the
effect of his Vorkosigan House uniform: brown tunic with his family
crest in silver thread upon the high collar, silver-embroidered cuffs,
brown trousers with silver side piping, tall brown riding boots. The
Vor class had been cavalry soldiers, in their heyday. No horse within
God knew how many light-years now, that was certain.
He
touched his wrist com, mate in function to the one she wore, though
hers was made Vor-lady-like with a decorative silver bracelet. “I'll
give you a heads-up when I'm ready to come back and change.” He nodded
toward the plain gray suit she'd already laid out on the bunk. A
uniform for the military-minded, civvies for the civilians. And let the
weight of Barrayaran history, eleven generations of Counts Vorkosigan
at his back, make up for his lack of height, his faintly hunched
stance. His less visible defects, he didn't need to mention.
“What should I wear?”
“Since
you'll have to play the whole entourage, something effective.” He
smiled crookedly. “That red silk thing ought to be distractingly
civilian enough for our Stationer hosts.”
“Only
the male half, love,” she pointed out. “Suppose their security chief is
a female quaddie? Are quaddies even attracted to downsiders?”
“One
was, apparently,” he sighed. “Hence this mess. . . .
Parts of Graf Station are null-gee, so you'll likely want trousers or
leggings instead of Barrayaran-style skirts. Something you can move in.”
“Oh. Yes, I see.”
A knock sounded at the cabin door, and Armsman Roic's diffident voice, “My lord?”
“On
my way, Roic.” Miles and Ekaterin exchanged places—finding himself at
her chest height, he stole a pleasantly resilient hug in passing—and he
exited to the courier ship's narrow corridor.
Roic
wore a slightly plainer version of Miles's Vorkosigan House uniform, as
befitted his liege-sworn armsman's status. “Do you want me to pack up
your things now for transfer to the Barrayaran flagship, m'lord?” he
asked.
“No. We're going to stay aboard the courier.”
Roic
almost managed to conceal his wince. He was a young man of imposing
height and intimidating breadth of shoulder, and had described his bunk
above the courier ship's engineer as Sort of like sleeping in a coffin, m'lord, except for the snoring.
Miles
added, “I don't care to hand off control of my movements, not to
mention my air supply, to either side in this squabble just yet. The
flagship's bunks aren't much bigger anyway, I assure you, Armsman.”
Roic smiled ruefully, and shrugged. “I'm afraid you should've brought Jankowski, sir.”
“What, because he's shorter?”
“No, m'lord!” Roic looked faintly indignant. “Because he's a real veteran.”
A
Count of Barrayar was limited by law to a bodyguard of a score of sworn
men; the Vorkosigans had by tradition recruited most of their armsmen
from retiring twenty-year veterans of the Imperial Service. By
political need, in the last decades they'd mostly been former ImpSec
men. They were a keen but graying bunch. Roic was an interesting new
exception.
“When did that become a concern?”
Miles's father's cadre of armsmen treated Roic as a junior because he
was, but if they were treating him as a second-class
citizen . . .
“Eh . . .”
Roic waved somewhat inarticulately around the courier ship, by which
Miles construed that the problem lay in more recent encounters.
Miles,
about to lead off down the short corridor, instead leaned against the
wall and folded his arms. “Look, Roic—there's scarcely a man in the
Imperial Service your age or younger who's faced as much live fire in
the Emperor's employ as you have in the Hassadar Municipal Guard. Don't
let the damned green uniforms spook you. It's empty swagger. Half of
'em would fall over in a faint if they were asked to take down someone
like that murderous lunatic who shot up Hassadar Square.”
“I
was already halfway across the plaza, m'lord. It would've been like
swimming halfway across a river, deciding you couldn't make it, and
turning around to swim back. It was safer to jump him than to turn and run. He'd 'a had the same amount of time to take aim at me either way.”
“But
not the time to take out another dozen or so bystanders. Auto-needler's
a filthy weapon.” Miles brooded briefly.
“That it is, m'lord.”
For
all his height, Roic tended to shyness when he felt himself to be
socially outclassed, which unfortunately seemed to be much of the time
in the Vorkosigans' service. Since the shyness showed on his surface
mainly as a sort of dull stolidity, it tended to get overlooked.
“You're
a Vorkosigan armsman,” said Miles firmly. “The ghost of General Piotr
is woven into that brown and silver. They'll be spooked by you , I promise you.”
Roic's
brief smile conveyed more gratitude than conviction. “Wish I could've
met your grandfather, m'lord. From all the tales they told of him back
in the District, he was quite something. My great-grandfather served
with him in the mountains during the Cetagandan Occupation, m'mother
says.”
“Ah! Did she have any good stories about him?”
Roic
shrugged. “He died of t' radiation after Vorkosigan Vashnoi was
destroyed. M'grandmother would never talk about him much, so I don't
know.”
“Pity.”
Lieutenant Smolyani poked his head around the corner. “We're locked on to the Prince Xav now, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan. Transfer tube's sealed and they're ready for you to board.”
“Very good, Lieutenant.”
Miles
followed Roic, who had to duck his head through the oval doorway, into
the courier's cramped personnel hatch bay. Smolyani took up station by
the hatch controls. The control pad twinkled and beeped; the door slid
open onto the airlock and the flex tube, beyond it. Miles nodded to
Roic, who took a visible breath and swung himself through. Smolyani
braced to a salute; Miles returned him an acknowledging nod and a
“Thank you, Lieutenant,” and followed Roic.
A
meter of stomach-lifting zero-gee in the flex tube ended at a similar
hatchway. Miles grasped the handgrips and swung himself through and
smoothly to his feet in the open airlock. He stepped from it into a
very much more spacious hatch bay. On his left, Roic loomed formally,
awaiting him. The flagship's door slid closed behind him.
Before
him, three green-uniformed men and a civilian stood stiffly to
attention. Not one of them changed expression at Miles's un-Barrayaran
physique. Presumably Vorpatril, whom Miles barely recalled from a few
passing encounters in Vorbarr Sultana's capital scene, remembered him
more vividly, and had prudently briefed his staff on the mutoid
appearance of Emperor Gregor's shortest, not to mention youngest and
newest, Voice.
Admiral Eugin Vorpatril was of
middle height, stocky, white-haired, and grim. He stepped forward and
gave Miles a crisp and proper salute. “My Lord Auditor. Welcome aboard
the Prince Xav .”
“Thank you, Admiral.” He did not add Happy to be here ; no one in this group could be happy to see him, under the circumstances.
Vorpatril continued, “May I introduce my Fleet Security commander, Captain Brun.”
The
lean, tense man, possibly even grimmer than his admiral, nodded curtly.
Brun had been in operational charge of the ill-fated patrol whose
hair-trigger exploits had blown the situation from minor legal brangle
to major diplomatic incident. No, not happy at all.
“Senior Cargomaster Molino of the Komarran fleet consortium.”
Molino
too was middle-aged, and quite as dyspeptic-looking as the Barrayarans,
though dressed in neat dark Komarran-style tunic and trousers. A senior
cargomaster was the ranking executive and financial officer of the
limited-term corporate entity that was a commercial convoy, and as such
bore most of the responsibilities of a fleet admiral with a fraction of
the powers. He also had the unenviable task of being the designated
interface between a potentially very disparate bunch of commercial
interests, and their Barrayaran military protectors, which was usually
enough to account for dyspepsia even without a crisis. He murmured a
polite, “My Lord Vorkosigan.”
Vorpatril's tone took on a slightly gritty quality. “My fleet legal officer, Ensign Deslaurier.”
Tall Deslaurier, pale and wan beneath a lingering touch of adolescent acne, managed a nod.
Miles
blinked in surprise. When, under his old covert ops identity, he had
run a supposedly independent mercenary fleet for ImpSec's galactic
operations, Fleet Legal had been a major department; just negotiating
the peaceful passage of armed ships through all the varied local space
legal jurisdictions had been a full-time job of nightmarish complexity.
“Ensign.” Miles returned the nod, and chose his wording carefully.
“You, ah . . . would seem to have a considerable
responsibility, for your rank and age.”
Deslaurier
cleared his throat, and said in a nearly inaudible voice, “Our
department chief was sent home earlier in the voyage, my Lord Auditor.
Compassionate leave. His mother'd died.”
I think I'm getting the drift of this already. “This your first galactic voyage, by chance?”
“Yes, my lord.”
Vorpatril
put in, possibly mercifully, “I and my staff are entirely at your
disposal, my Lord Auditor, and are ready with our reports as you
requested. Would you care to follow me to our briefing room?”
“Yes, thank you, Admiral.”
Some
shuffling and ducking through the corridors brought the party to a
standard military briefing room: bolted-down holovid-equipped table and
station chairs, friction matting underfoot harboring the faint musty
odor of a sealed and gloomy chamber that never enjoyed sunlight or
fresh air. The place smelled military. Miles suppressed the
urge to take a long, nostalgic inhalation, for old times' sake. At his
hand signal, Roic took up an impassive guard's stance just inside the
door. The rest waited for him to seat himself, then disposed themselves
around the table, Vorpatril on his left, Deslaurier as far away as
possible.
Vorpatril, displaying a clear
understanding of the etiquette of the situation, or at least some sense
of self-preservation, began, “So. How may we serve you, my Lord
Auditor?”
Miles tented his hands on the table. “I
am an Auditor; my first task is to listen. If you please, Admiral
Vorpatril, describe for me the course of events from your point of
view. How did you arrive at this impasse?”
“From
my point of view?” Vorpatril grimaced. “It started out seeming no more
than the usual one damned thing after another. We were supposed to be
in dock here at Graf Station for five days, for contracted cargo and
passenger transfers. Since there was no reason at that time to think
that the quaddies were hostile, I granted as many station leaves as
possible, which is standard procedure.”
Miles
nodded. The purposes of Barrayaran military escorts for Komarran ships
ranged from overt to subtle to never-spoken. Overtly, escorts rode
along to repel hijackers from the cargo vessels and supply the military
part of the fleet with maneuvering experience scarcely less valuable
than war games. More subtly, the ventures provided opportunity for all
sorts of intelligence gathering—economic, political, and social, as
well as military. And it provided cadres of young provincial Barrayaran
men, future officers and future civilians, with seasoning contact with
the wider galactic culture. On the never-spoken side were the lingering
tensions between Barrayarans and Komarrans, legacy of the, in Miles's
view, fully justified conquest of the latter by the former a generation
ago. It was the Emperor's express policy to move from a stance of
occupation to one of full political and social assimilation between the
two planets. That process was proving slow and rocky.
Vorpatril continued, “The Toscane Corporation's ship Idris
put into dock for jump drive adjustments, and ran into unexpected
complications when they pulled things apart. Repaired parts failed to
pass calibration tests when reinstalled and were sent back to the
Station shops for refabrication. Five days became ten, while that
bickering was going back and forth. Then Lieutenant Solian turned up
missing.”
“Do I understand correctly that the lieutenant was the Barrayaran security liaison officer aboard the Idris
?” Miles said. Fleet beat cop, charged with maintaining peace and order
among crew and passengers, keeping an eye out for any illegal or
threatening activities or suspicious persons—not a few historic
hijackings were inside jobs—and being first line of defense in
counterintelligence. More quietly, keeping an ear out for potential
disaffection among the Emperor's Komarran subjects. Obliged to render
all possible assistance to the ship in physical emergencies,
coordinating evacuation or rescue with the military escort. Liaison
officer was a job that could shift from yawningly boring to lethally
demanding in an eyeblink.
Captain Brun spoke for the first time. “Yes, my lord.”
Miles turned to him. “One of your people, was he? How would you describe Lieutenant Solian?”
“He
was newly assigned,” Brun answered, then hesitated. “I did not have a
close personal acquaintance with him, but all his prior personnel
evaluations gave him high marks.”
Miles glanced at the cargomaster. “Did you know him, sir?”
“We met a few times,” said Molino. “I mostly stayed aboard the Rudra
, but my impression of him was that he was friendly and competent. He
seemed to get along well with crew and passengers. Quite the walking
advertisement for assimilation.”
“Excuse me?”
Vorpatril cleared his throat. “Solian was Komarran, my lord.”
“Ah.” Argh
. The reports hadn't mentioned this wrinkle. Komarrans were but lately
permitted admittance into the Barrayaran Imperial Service; the first
generation of such officers was handpicked, and on their marks to prove
their loyalty and competence. The Emperor's pets , Miles had
heard at least one Barrayaran fellow-officer describe them in covert
disgruntlement. The success of this integration was a high personal
priority of Gregor's. Admiral Vorpatril certainly knew it, too. Miles
moved the mysterious fate of Solian up a few notches in his mental list
of most-urgent priorities.
“What were the circumstances of his original disappearance?”
Brun
answered, “Very quiet, my lord. He signed off-shift in the usual
manner, and never showed up for his next watch. When his cabin was
finally checked, it seemed that some of his personal effects and a
valise were missing, although most of his uniforms were left. There was
no record of his finally leaving the ship, but
then . . . he'd know how to get out without being
seen if anyone could. Which is why I posit desertion. The ship was very
thoroughly searched after that. He has to have altered the records, or
slipped out with the cargo, or something .”
“Any sense that he was unhappy in his work or place?”
“Not—no, my lord. Nothing special.”
“Anything not special?”
“Well,
there was the usual chronic chaff about being a Komarran in this”—Brun
gestured at himself—”uniform. I suppose, where he was placed, he was in
position to get it from both sides.”
We're trying to all be one side, now.
Miles decided this was not the time or place to pursue the unconscious
assumptions behind Brun's word-choice. “Cargomaster Molino—do you have
any sidelights on this? Was Solian subject to, ah, reproof from his
fellow Komarrans?”
Molino shook his head. “The man seemed to be well liked by the crew of the Idris as far as I could tell. Stuck to business, didn't get into arguments.”
“Nevertheless, I gather that your first . . . impression, was that he had deserted?”
“It seemed possible,” Brun admitted. “I'm not casting aspersions, but he was Komarran. Maybe he'd found it tougher than he thought it would be. Admiral Vorpatril disagreed,” he added scrupulously.
Vorpatril
waved a hand in a gesture of judicious balance. “The more reason not to
think desertion. High command's been pretty careful of what Komarrans
they admit to the Service. They don't want public failures.”
“In
any case,” said Brun, “we put all our own security people on alert to
search for him, and asked for help from the Graf Station authorities.
Which they were not especially eager to offer. They just kept repeating
they'd had no sign of him in either the gravity or null-gee sections,
and no record of anyone of his description leaving the station on their
local-space carriers.”
“And then what happened?”
Admiral Vorpatril answered, “Time ran on. Repairs on the Idris
were completed and signed off. Pressure,” he eyed Molino without favor,
“grew to leave Graf Station and continue on the planned route. Me—I
don't leave my men behind if I can help it.”
Molino
said, rather through his teeth, “It made no economic sense to tie up
the entire fleet over one man. You might have left one light vessel or
even a small team of investigators to pursue the matter, to follow on
when they were concluded, and let the rest continue.”
“I also have standing orders not to split the fleet,” said Vorpatril, his jaw tightening.
“But
we haven't suffered a hijacking attempt in this sector for decades,”
argued Molino. Miles felt he was witnessing round n-plus-one of an
ongoing debate.
“Not since Barrayar began
providing you with free military escorts,” said Vorpatril, with false
cordiality. “Odd coincidence, that.” His voice grew firmer. “I don't
leave my men. I swore that at the Escobar debacle, back when I was a milk-faced ensign.” He glanced at Miles. “Under your father's command, as it happened.”
Uh-oh. This could be trouble. . . . Miles let his brows climb in curiosity. “What was your experience there, sir?”
Vorpatril
snorted reminiscently. “I was a junior pilot on a combat drop shuttle,
orphaned when our mothership was blown to hell by the Escos in high
orbit. I suppose if we'd made it back during the retreat, we'd have
been blown up with her, but still. Nowhere to dock, nowhere to run,
even the few surviving ships that had an open docking cradle not
pausing for us, a couple of hundred men on board including wounded—it
was a right nightmare, let me tell you.”
Miles felt the admiral had barely clipped off a “son,” at the end of that last sentence.
Miles
said cautiously, “I'm not sure Admiral Vorkosigan had much choice left,
by the time he inherited command of the invasion after the death of
Prince Serg.”
“Oh, none at all,” Vorpatril agreed,
with another wave of his hand. “I'm not saying the man didn't do all he
could with what he had. But he couldn't do it all, and I was among
those sacrificed. Spent almost a year in an Escobaran prison camp,
before the negotiators finally got me mustered home. The Escobarans
didn't make it a holiday for us, I can tell you that.”
It could have been worse. You might have been a female Escobaran prisoner of war in one of our camps. Miles decided not to suggest this exercise of the imagination to the admiral just now. “I would expect not.”
“All
I'm saying is, I know what it is to be abandoned, and I won't do it to
men of mine for any trivial reason.” His narrow glance at the
cargomaster made it clear that evaporating Komarran corporate profits
did not qualify as a weighty enough reason for this violation of
principle. “Events proved—” He hesitated, and rephrased himself. “For a
time, I thought events had proved me right.”
“For a time,” Miles echoed. “Not any more?”
“Now . . . well . . . what
happened next was pretty . . . pretty disturbing.
There was an unauthorized cycling of a personnel airlock in the Graf
Station cargo bay next to where the Idris was locked on. No
ship or personnel pod was sighted at it, however—the tube seals weren't
activated. By the time the Station security guard got there, the bay
was empty. But there was a quantity of blood on the floor, and signs of
something dragged to the lock. The blood came up on testing as
Solian's. It looked like he was trying to make it back to the Idris , and someone jumped him.”
“Someone who didn't leave footprints,” added Brun darkly.
At
Miles's inquiring look, Vorpatril explained, “In the gravitational
areas where the downsiders stay, the quaddies buzz around in these
little personal floaters. They operate 'em with their lower hands,
leaving their upper arms free. No footprints. No feet, for that matter.”
“Ah, yes. I understand,” said Miles. “Blood, but no body—has a body been found?”
“Not yet,” said Brun.
“Searched for?”
“Oh, yes. In all the possible trajectories.”
“I
suppose it's occurred to you that a deserter might try to fake his own
murder or suicide, to free himself from pursuit.”
“I
might have thought that,” said Brun, “but I saw the loading bay floor.
No one could lose that much blood and live. There must have been three
or four liters at least.”
Miles shrugged. “The
first step in emergency cryonic prep is to exsanguinate the patient and
replace his blood with cryo-fluid. That can easily leave several liters
of blood on the floor, and the victim—well, potentially alive.” He'd
had close personal experience of the process, or so Elli Quinn and Bel
Thorne had told him afterward, on that Dendarii Free Mercenary mission
that had gone so disastrously wrong. Granted, he didn't remember that
part, except through Bel's extremely vivid description.
Brun's brows flicked up. “I hadn't thought of that.”
“It rather sprang to my mind,” said Miles apologetically. I could show you the scars.
Brun
frowned, then shook his head. “I don't think there would have been time
before Station security arrived on the scene.”
“Even if a portable cryochamber was standing ready?”
Brun opened his mouth, then closed it again. He finally said, “It's a complicated scenario, my lord.”
“I
don't insist on it,” said Miles easily. He considered the other end of
the cryo-revival process. “Except that I'd also point out that there
are other sources of several liters of nice fresh one's-own-personal
blood besides a victim's body. Such as a revival lab's or hospital's
synthesizer. The product would certainly light up a cursory DNA scan.
You couldn't even call it a false positive, exactly. A bio-forensics
lab could tell the difference, though. Traces of cryo-fluid would be
obvious, too, if only someone thought to look for them.” He added
wistfully, “I hate circumstantial evidence. Who ran the identification
check on the blood?”
Brun shifted uncomfortably.
“The quaddies. We'd downloaded Solian's DNA scan to them when he first
went missing. But the security liaison officer from the Rudra
had gone over by then—he was right there in the bay watching their
tech. He reported the match to me as soon as the analyzer beeped.
That's when I podded across to look at it all myself.”
“Did he collect another sample to cross-check?”
“I . . . believe
so. I can ask the fleet surgeon if he received one before, um, other
events overtook us.”
Admiral Vorpatril sat looking
unpleasantly stunned. “I thought certainly poor Solian was murdered. By
some—” He fell silent.
“It doesn't sound as though
that hypothesis is ruled out either, yet,” Miles consoled him. “In any
case, you honestly believed it at the time. Have your fleet surgeon
examine his samples more thoroughly, please, and report to me.”
“And to Graf Station Security, too?”
“Ah . . . maybe
not them yet.” Even if the results were negative, the query would only
serve to stir up more quaddie suspicions about Barrayarans. And if they
were positive . . . Miles wanted to think about
that first. “At any rate, what happened next?”
“That
Solian was himself Fleet Security made his murder—apparent murder—seem
especially sinister,” Vorpatril admitted. “Had he been trying to get
back with some warning? We couldn't tell. So I canceled all leaves,
went to alert status, and ordered all ships to detach from dockside.”
“With no explanation of why ,” put in Molino.
Vorpatril
glowered at him. “During an alert, a commander does not stop to explain
orders. He expects to be instantly obeyed. Besides, the way you people
had been champing at the bit, complaining about the delays, I hardly
thought I'd need to repeat myself.” A muscle jumped in his jaw;
he inhaled and returned to his narrative. “At this point, we suffered
something of a communications breakdown.”
Here comes the smokescreen, at last.
“Our understanding was that a two-man security patrol, sent to retrieve an officer who was late reporting in—”
“That would be Ensign Corbeau?”
“Yes.
Corbeau. As we understood it at the time, the patrol and the ensign
were attacked, disarmed, and detained by quaddies. The real story as it
emerged later was more complex, but that was what I had to go on as I
was trying to clear Graf Station of all our personnel and stand off for
any contingency up to immediate evacuation from local space.”
Miles
leaned forward. “Did you believe it to be random quaddies who had
seized your men, or did you understand it to have been Graf Station
Security?”
Vorpatril didn't quite grind his teeth,
but almost. He answered nonetheless, “Yes, we knew it was their
security.”
“Did you ask your legal officer to advise you?”
“No.”
“Did Ensign Deslaurier volunteer advice?”
“No, my lord,” Deslaurier managed to whisper.
“I see. Go on.”
“I
ordered Captain Brun to send a strike patrol in to retrieve, now, three
men from a situation that I believed had just proved lethally dangerous
to Barrayaran personnel.”
“Armed with rather more than stunners, I understand?”
“I couldn't ask my men to go up against those numbers with only stunners, my lord,” said Brun. “There are a million of those mutants out there!”
Miles
let his brows climb. “On Graf Station? I thought its resident
population was around fifty thousand. Civilians.”
Brun
made an impatient gesture. “A million to twelve, fifty thousand to
twelve—regardless, they needed weapons with authority. My rescue party
needed to get in and out as quickly as possible, having to deal with as
little argument or resistance as possible. Stunners are useless as
weapons of intimidation.”
“I am familiar with the argument.” Miles leaned back and rubbed his lips. “Go on.”
“My patrol reached the place our men were being held—”
“Graf Station Security Post Number Three, was it not?” Miles put in.
“Yes.”
“Tell
me—in all the time since the fleet has been here, hadn't any of your
men on leave had close encounters with Station Security? No drunk and
disorderlies, no safety violations, nothing?”
Brun,
looking as though the words were being pulled from his mouth with
dental pliers, said, “Three men were arrested by Graf Station Security
last week for racing float chairs in an unsafe manner while inebriated.”
“And what happened to them? How did your fleet legal advisor handle it?”
Ensign
Deslaurier muttered, “They spent a few hours in lock-up, then I went
down and saw that their fines were paid, and pledged to the stationer
adjudicator that they would be confined to quarters for the duration of
our stay.”
“So you were all by then familiar with
standard procedures for retrieving men from contretemps with Station
authorities?”
“These were not drunk and
disorderlies this time. These were our own security forces carrying out
their duties,” said Vorpatril.
“Go on,” sighed Miles. “What happened with your patrol?”
“I
still don't have their own firsthand reports, my lord,” said Brun
stiffly. “The quaddies have only let one unarmed medical officer visit
them in their current place of confinement. Shots were exchanged, both
stunner and plasma fire, inside Security Post Three. Quaddies swarmed
the place, and our men were overwhelmed and taken prisoner.”
The
“swarming” quaddies had included, not unnaturally in Miles's view, most
of the Graf Station professional and volunteer fire brigades. Plasma fire. In a civilian space station. Oh, my aching head.
“So,”
said Miles gently, “after we shot up the police station and set the
habitat on fire, what did we do for an encore?”
Admiral
Vorpatril's teeth set, briefly. “I am afraid that, when the Komarran
ships in dock failed to obey my urgent orders to cast off and instead
allowed themselves to be locked down, I lost the initiative in the
situation. Too many hostages had passed into quaddie control by then,
the Komarran independent captain-owners were entirely laggard in
obeying my position orders, and the quaddies' own militia, such as it
is, was allowed to move into position around us. We froze in a standoff
for almost two full days. Then we were ordered to stand down and wait
your arrival.”
Thank all the gods for that . Military intelligence was as nothing to military stupidity. But to slide halfway to stupid and stop was rare indeed. Vorpatril deserved some credit for that, at least.
Brun
put in glumly, “Not much choice at that point. It's not as though we
could threaten to blow up the station with our own ships in dock.”
“You
couldn't blow up the station in any case,” Miles pointed out mildly.
“It would be mass murder. Not to mention a criminal order. The Emperor
would have you shot.”
Brun flinched and subsided.
Vorpatril's lips thinned. “The Emperor, or you?”
“Gregor and I would flip a coin to see who got to go first.”
A little silence fell.
“Fortunately,”
Miles continued, “it appears heads have cooled all round. For that,
Admiral Vorpatril, I do thank you. I might add, the fates of your
respective careers are a matter between you and your Ops command.” Unless
you manage to make me late for the births of my very first children, in
which case you'd better start looking for a deep, deep hole. “My
job is to talk out as many of the Emperor's subjects from quaddie
hands, at the lowest prices, as I can. If I'm really lucky, when I'm
done our trade fleets may be able to dock here again someday. You have
not given me an especially strong hand of cards to play, here,
unfortunately. Nonetheless, I'll see what I can do. I want copies of
all raw transcripts pertaining to these late events provided for my
review, please.”
“Yes, my lord,” growled
Vorpatril. “But,” his voice grew almost anguished, “that still doesn't
tell me what happened to Lieutenant Solian!”
“I
will undertake to give that question my keenest attention as well,
Admiral.” Miles met his eyes. “I promise you.”
Vorpatril nodded shortly.
“But,
Lord Auditor Vorkosigan!” Cargomaster Molino put in urgently. “Graf
Station authorities are trying to fine our Komarran vessels for the damage done by Barrayaran troops. It must be made plain to them that the military stands alone in this . . . criminal activity.”
Miles
hesitated a long moment. “How fortunate for you, Cargomaster,” he said
at last, “that in the event of a genuine attack, the reverse would not
be true.” He tapped the table and rose to his feet.
CHAPTER THREE
Miles stood on tiptoe to peer through the little port beside the Kestrel
's personnel hatch as the ship maneuvered toward its assigned docking
cradle. Graf Station was a vast jumbled aggregation, an apparent chaos
of design not surprising in an installation in its third century of
expansion. Somewhere buried in the core of the sprawling, bristling
structure was a small metallic asteroid, honeycombed for both space and
the material used in building this very oldest of the quaddies' many
habitats. Also somewhere in its innermost sections could still be seen,
according to the guidevids, actual elements from the broken-apart and
reconfigured jumpship in which the initial band of hardy quaddie
pioneers had made their historic voyage to this refuge.
Miles
stepped back and gestured Ekaterin to the port for a look. He reflected
on the political astrography of Quaddiespace, or rather, as it was
formally designated, the Union of Free Habitats. From this initial
point, quaddie groups had leapfrogged out to build daughter colonies in
both directions along the inner of the two rings of asteroids that had
made this system so attractive to their ancestors. Several generations
and a million strong later, the quaddies were in no danger whatsoever
of running out of space, energy, or materials. Their population could
expand as fast as it chose to build.
Only a
handful of their many scattered habitats maintained areas supplied with
artificial gravity for legged humans, either visitor or resident, or
even dealt with outsiders. Graf Station was one that did accept
galactics and their trade, as did the orbital arcologies dubbed
Metropolitan, Sanctuary, Minchenko, and Union Station. This last was
the seat of Quaddie government, such as it was; a variant of bottom-up
representative democracy based, Miles was given to understand, on the
work gang as its primary unit. He hoped to God he wasn't going to end
up negotiating with a committee.
Ekaterin glanced
around and, with an excited smile, motioned Roic to take a turn. He
ducked his head and nearly pressed his nose to the port, staring in
open curiosity. This was Ekaterin's first trip outside the Barrayaran
Empire, and Roic's first venture off Barrayar ever. Miles paused to
thank his habits of mild paranoia that before he'd dragged them off
world he'd troubled to send them both through a short intensive course
in space and free fall procedures and safety. He'd pulled rank and
strings to get access to the military academy facilities, albeit on a
free week between scheduled classes, for a tailored version of the
longer course that Roic's older armsmen colleagues had received
routinely in their former Imperial Service training.
Ekaterin
had been extremely startled when Miles had invited—persuaded—well,
hustled—her to join the bodyguard in the orbital school: daunted at
first, exhausted and close to mutiny partway through, proud and elated
at the finish. For passenger liners in pressurization trouble, it was
the usual method to stuff their paying customers into simple bubbles
called bod pods to passively await rescue. Miles had been stuck in a
bod pod a time or two himself. He'd sworn that no man, and most
especially no wife, of his would ever be rendered so artificially
helpless in an emergency. His whole party had traveled with their own
personally tailored quick-donning suits at hand. Regretfully, Miles had
left his old customized battle armor in storage. . . .
Roic unbent from the port, looking especially stoic, faint vertical lines of worry between his eyebrows.
Miles asked, “Has everyone had their antinausea pills?”
Roic nodded earnestly.
Ekaterin said, “Have you had yours ?”
“Oh,
yes.” He glanced down his plain gray civilian tunic and trousers. “I
used to have this nifty bio-chip on my vagus nerve that kept me from
losing my lunch in free fall, but it got blown out with the rest of my
guts in that unpleasant encounter with the needle-grenade. I should get
it replaced one of these days. . . .” Miles stepped
forward and took one more glance outside. The station had grown to
occlude most of the view. “So, Roic. If some quaddies visiting Hassadar
made themselves obnoxious enough to win a visit to the Municipal
Guard's gaol, and then a bunch more quaddies popped up and tried to
bust them out with military-grade weapons, and shot up the place and
torched it and burned some of your comrades, just how would you feel
about quaddies at that point?”
“Um . . . not too friendly, m'lord.” Roic paused. “Pretty pissed, actually.”
“That's what I figured.” Miles sighed. “Ah. Here we go.”
Clanks and thumps sounded as the Kestrel
came gently to rest and the docking clamps felt their way to a firm
grip. The flex tube whined, seeking its seal, guided by the Kestrel 's engineer at the hatch controls, and then seated itself with an audible chink. “All tight, sir,” the engineer reported.
“All right, troops, we're on parade,” Miles murmured, and waved Roic on.
The bodyguard nodded and slipped through the hatch; after a moment he called back, “Ready, m'lord.”
All
was, if not well, good enough. Miles followed through the flex tube,
Ekaterin close behind him. He stole a glance over his shoulder as he
floated forward. She was svelte and arresting in the red tunic and
black leggings, her hair in a sophisticated braid around her head. Zero
gee had a charming effect on well-developed female anatomy that he
decided he had probably better not point out to her. As an opening
move, setting this first meeting in the null-gee section of Graf
Station was clearly calculated to put the visitors off balance, to
emphasize just whose space this was. If they'd wanted to be polite, the
quaddies would have received them in one of the grav sections.
The
station-side airlock opened into a spacious cylindrical bay, its radial
symmetry airily dispensing with the concepts of “up” and “down.” Roic
floated with one hand on the grip by the hatch, the other kept
carefully away from his stunner holster. Miles craned his neck to take
in the array of half a dozen quaddies, males and females, in
paramilitary grade half-armor, floating in cross-fire positions around
the bay. Their weapons were out but shouldered, formality masking
threat. Lower arms, thicker and more muscular than their uppers,
emerged from their hips. Both sets of arms were protected by
plasma-deflecting vambraces. Miles couldn't help reflecting that here
were people who actually could shoot and reload at the same time.
Interestingly, though two bore the insignia of Graf Station Security,
the rest were in the colors and badges of the Union Militia.
Impressive
window dressing, but these were not the people he needed to be
attending to. His gaze swept on to the three quaddies and the legged
downsider waiting directly across from the hatch. Faintly startled
expressions, as they in turn took in his own nonstandard appearance,
were quickly suppressed on three out of four faces.
The
senior Graf Station Security officer was instantly recognizable by his
uniform, weapons, and glower. Another middle-aged quaddie male also
wore some sort of Stationer uniform, slate blue, in a conservative
style designed to reassure the public. A white-haired female quaddie
was more elaborately dressed in a maroon velvet doublet with slashed
upper sleeves, silky silver fabric puffing from the slits, with
matching puffy shorts and tight lower sleeves. The legged downsider
also wore the slate-blue uniform, except with trousers and friction
boots. Short, graying brown hair floated around the head that turned
toward Miles. Miles choked, trying not to swear aloud in shock.
My God. It's Bel Thorne . What the devil was the ex-mercenary Betan hermaphrodite doing here ? The question answered itself as soon as it formed. So. Now I know who our ImpSec observer on Graf Station is. Which, abruptly, raised the reliability of those
reports to a vastly higher level . . . or did it?
Miles's smile froze, concealing, he hoped, his sudden mental disarray.
The
white-haired woman was speaking, in a very chilly tone—some automatic
part of Miles's mind pegged her as senior, as well as oldest, present.
“Good afternoon, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan. Welcome to the Union of Free
Habitats.”
Miles, one hand still guiding a
blinking Ekaterin into the bay, managed a polite return nod. He left
the second handhold flanking the hatch to her for an anchor, and
managed to set himself in air, without imparting an unwanted spin,
right side up with relation to the senior quaddie woman. “Thank you,”
he returned neutrally. Bel, what the hell . . . ? Give me a sign, dammit.
The hermaphrodite returned his brief wide-eyed stare with cool
disinterest, and, as if casually, raised a hand to scratch the side of
its nose, signaling, perhaps, Wait for it. . . .
“I
am Senior Sealer Greenlaw,” the quaddie woman continued, “and I have
been assigned by my government to meet with you and provide arbitration
between you and your victims on Graf Station. This is Crew Chief Venn
of Graf Station Security, Boss Watts, who is supervisor of Graf Station
Downsider Relations, and Assistant Portmaster Bel Thorne.”
“How
do you do, madam, gentlemen, honorable herm,” Miles's mouth continued
on autopilot. He was too shaken by the sight of Bel to take exception
to that your victims , for now. “Permit me to introduce my wife, Lady Ekaterin Vorkosigan, and my personal assistant, Armsman Roic.”
All
the quaddies frowned disapprovingly at Roic. But now it was the turn
for Bel's eyes to widen, staring with sudden attention at Ekaterin. A
purely personal aspect of it all blazed across Miles's mind then, as he
realized that he was shortly, very probably, going to be in the
unsettling position of having to introduce his new wife to his old
flame. Not that Bel's oft-expressed crush on him had ever been consummated , exactly, to his retrospective sometimes-regret. . . .
“Portmaster
Thorne, ah . . .” Miles felt himself scrambling for firm
footing in more ways than one. His voice went brightly inquiring. “Have
we met?”
“I don't believe we've ever met, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan
, no,” returned Bel; Miles hoped his was the only ear that detected the
slight emphasis on his Barrayaran name and title in that familiar alto
drawl.
“Ah.” Miles hesitated. Throw out a lure, a line, something . . . “My mother was Betan, you know.”
“What a coincidence,” Bel said blandly. “So was mine.”
Bel, goddammit! “I have had the pleasure of visiting Beta Colony several times.”
“I
haven't been back but once in decades.” The faint light of Bel's
notably vile sense of humor faded in the brown eyes, and the herm
relented as far as, “I'd like to hear about the old sandbox.”
“It
would be my pleasure to discuss it,” Miles responded, praying this
exchange sounded diplomatic and not cryptic. Soon, soon, bloody soon. Bel returned him a cordial, acknowledging nod.
The
white-haired quaddie woman gestured toward the end of the bay with her
upper right hand. “If you would please accompany us to the conference
chamber, Lord and Lady Vorkosigan, Armsman Roic.”
“Certainly, Sealer Greenlaw.” Miles favored her with an after you, ma'am
half-bow in air, then uncurled to get a foot to the wall to push off
after her. Ekaterin and Roic followed. Ekaterin arrived and braked at
the round airseal door with reasonable grace, though Roic landed
crookedly with an audible thump. He'd used too much power pushing off,
but Miles couldn't stop to coach him on the fine points here. He'd come
to the right of it soon enough, or break an arm. The next series of
corridors featured a sufficiency of handgrips. The downsiders kept up
with the quaddies, who both preceded and followed; to Miles's secret
satisfaction, none of the guards had to pause and collect any
out-of-control spinning or helplessly becalmed Barrayarans.
They
came at length to a chamber with a window-wall offering a panoramic
view out across one arm of the station and into the deep, star-dusted
void beyond. Any downsider suffering from a touch of agoraphobia or
pressurization paranoia would doubtless prefer to cling to the wall on
the opposite side. Miles floated gently up to the transparent barrier,
stopping himself with two delicately extended fingers, and surveyed the
spacescape; his mouth crooked up, unwilled. “This is very fine,” he
said honestly.
He glanced around. Roic had found a
wall grip near the door, awkwardly shared with the lower hand of a
quaddie guard, who glowered at him as they both shifted fingers trying
not to touch the other. The majority of the honor guard had been shed
in the adjoining corridor, and only two, one Graf Station and one
Union, now hovered, albeit alertly. The chamber end-walls featured
decorative plants growing out of illuminated spiraling tubes that held
their roots in a hydroponic mist. Ekaterin paused by one, examining the
multicolored leaves closely. She tore her attention away, and her brief
smile faded, watching Miles, watching their quaddie hosts, watching for
cues. Her eye fell curiously on Bel, who was surveying Miles in turn,
the herm's expression—well, anyone else would see it as bland,
probably. Miles suspected it was deeply ironic.
The
quaddies took up position in a hemispherical arrangement around a
central vid plate, Bel hovering near its comrade-in-slate-blue, Boss
Watts. Arching posts of different heights featured the sort of com link
control boards usually found on station-chair arms, looking a bit like
flowers on stalks, which provided suitably spaced tethering points.
Miles picked a post with his back to open space. Ekaterin floated over
and took up a spot a little behind him. She'd gone into her silent,
highly reserved mode, which Miles had to school himself not to read as
unhappy; it might just mean that she was processing too hard to
remember to be animated. Fortunately, the ivory-carved expression also
simulated aristocratic poise.
A pair of younger quaddies, whose green shirt-and-shorts garb Miles's eye decoded as servitor
, offered drink bulbs all around; Miles selected something billed to be
tea, Ekaterin took fruit juice, and Roic, with a glance at his quaddie
opposite numbers who were offered none, declined. A quaddie could grip
a handhold and a drink bulb, and still have two hands left to draw and
aim a weapon. It hardly seemed fair.
“Senior
Sealer Greenlaw,” Miles began. “My credentials, you should have
received.” She nodded, her short, fine hair floating in a wispy halo
with the motion. He continued, “I am, unfortunately, not wholly
familiar with the cultural context and meaning of your title. Who do
you speak for, and do your words bind them in honor? That is to say, do
you represent Graf Station, a department within the Union of Free
Habitats, or some larger entity still? And who reviews your
recommendations or sanctions your agreements?” And how long does it usually take them?
She
hesitated, and he wondered if she was studying him with the same
intensity that he studied her. Quaddies were even longer-lived than
Betans, who routinely made it to one-hundred-and-twenty standard, and
might expect to see a century and a half; how old was this woman?
“I
am a Sealer for the Union's Department of Downsider Relations; I
believe some downsider cultures would term this a minister
plenipotentiary for their state department, or whatever body
administers their embassies. I've served the department for the past
forty years, including tours as junior and senior counsel for the Union
in both our bordering systems.”
The near neighbors
to Quaddiespace, a few jumps away on heavily used routes; she was
saying she'd spent time on planets. And, incidentally, that she's been doing this job since before I was born
. If only she wasn't one of those people who figured that if you'd seen
one planet, you'd seen 'em all, this sounded promising. Miles nodded.
“My
recommendations and agreements will be reviewed by my work gang on
Union Station—which is the Board of Directors of the Union of Free
Habitats.”
Well, so there was a committee, but
happily, they weren't here. Miles pegged her as being roughly the
equivalent of a senior Barrayaran minister in the Council of Ministers,
well up to his own weight as an Imperial Auditor. Granted, the quaddies
had nothing in their governmental structure equivalent to a Barrayaran
Count, though they seemed none the worse for the deprivation—Miles
suppressed a dry snort. One layer from the top, Greenlaw had a finite
number of persons to please or persuade. He permitted himself his first
faint hope for a reasonably supple negotiation.
Her white brows drew in. “They called you the Emperor's Voice. Do Barrayarans really believe their emperor's voice comes from your mouth, across all those light-years?”
Miles
regretted his inability to lean back in a chair; he straightened his
spine a trifle instead. “The name is a legal fiction, not a
superstition, if that's what you're asking. Actually, Emperor's Voice
is a nickname for my job. My real title is Imperial Auditor—a reminder
that always my first task is to listen. I answer to—and for—Emperor
Gregor alone.” This seemed a good place to leave out such complications
as potential impeachment by the Council of Counts, and other
Barrayaran-style checks and balances. Such as assassination.
The
security officer, Venn, spoke up. “So do you, or do you not, control
the Barrayaran military forces here in Union space?” He'd evidently
acquired enough experience of Barrayaran soldiers by now to have a
little trouble picturing the slightly crooked runt floating before him
dominating the bluff Vorpatril, or his no-doubt large and healthy
troopers.
Yeah, but you should see my Da . . .
Miles cleared his throat. “As the Emperor is commander-in-chief of the
Barrayaran military, his Voice is automatically the ranking officer of
any Barrayaran force in his vicinity, yes. If the emergency so demands
it.”
“So are you saying that if you ordered it, those thugs out there would shoot?” said Venn sourly.
Miles
managed a slight bow in his direction, not easy in free fall. “Sir, if
an Emperor's Voice so ordered it, they'd shoot themselves .”
This
was pure swagger—well, part swagger—but Venn didn't need to know it.
Bel remained straight-faced, somehow, thank whatever gods hovered here,
though Miles could almost see the laugh getting choked back. Don't pop your eardrums, Bel . The Sealer's white eyebrows took a moment to climb back down to horizontal again.
Miles
continued, “Nevertheless, while it's not hard to get any group of
persons excited enough to shoot at things, one purpose of military
discipline is to ensure they also stop shooting on command.
This is not a time for shooting, but for talking—and listening. I am
listening.” He tented his fingers in front of what would be his lap, if
he were sitting. “From your point of view, what was the sequence of
events that led to this unfortunate incident?”
Greenlaw
and Venn both started to speak at once; the quaddie woman opened an
upper hand in a gesture of invitation to the security officer.
Venn nodded and continued, “It started when my department received an emergency call to apprehend a pair of your men who had assaulted a quaddie woman.”
Here was a new player on stage. Miles kept his expression neutral. “Assaulted in what sense?”
“Broke
into her living quarters, roughed her up, threw her around, broke one
of her arms. They evidently had been sent in pursuit of a certain
Barrayaran officer who had failed to report for duty—”
“Ah. Would that be Ensign Corbeau?”
“Yes.”
“And was he in her living quarters?”
“Yes—”
“By her invitation?”
“Yes.”
Venn grimaced. “They had apparently, um, become friends. Garnet Five is
a premier dancer in the Minchenko Memorial Troupe, which performs live
zero-gee ballet for residents of the Station and for downsider
visitors.” Venn inhaled. “It is not entirely clear who went to whose
defense when the Barrayaran patrol came to remove their tardy officer,
but it degenerated into a noisy brawl. We arrested all the downsiders
and took them to Security Post Three to sort out.”
“By
the way,” Sealer Greenlaw broke in, “your Ensign Corbeau has lately
requested political asylum in the Union.”
This was new, too. “How lately?”
“This morning. When he learned you were coming.”
Miles
hesitated. He could imagine a dozen scenarios to account for this,
ranging from the sinister to the foolish; he couldn't help it that his
mind leapt to the sinister. “Are you likely to grant it?” he asked
finally.
She glanced at Boss Watts, who made a
little noncommittal gesture with a lower hand and said, “My department
has taken it under advisement.”
“If you want my advice, you'll bounce it off the far wall,” growled Venn. “We don't need that sort here.”
“I should like to interview Ensign Corbeau at the earliest convenience,” said Miles.
“Well, he evidently doesn't want to talk to you ,” said Venn.
“Nevertheless.
I consider firsthand observation and eyewitness testimony critical for
my correct understanding of this complex chain of events. I'll also
need to speak with the other Barrayaran—” he clipped the word hostages , and substituted, “detainees, for the same reason.”
“It's
not that complex,” said Venn. “A bunch of armed thugs came charging
onto my station, violated customs, stunned dozens of innocent
bystanders and a number of Station Security officers attempting to
carry out their duties, tried to effect what can only be called a
jailbreak, and vandalized property. Charges against them for their
crimes—documented on vid!—range from the discharge of illegal weapons
to resisting arrest to arson in an inhabited area. It's a miracle that
no one was killed.”
“That , unfortunately,
has yet to be demonstrated,” Miles countered instantly. “The trouble is
that from our point of view, the arrest of Ensign Corbeau was not
the beginning of the sequence of events. Admiral Vorpatril had reported
a man missing well before that—Lieutenant Solian. According to both
your witnesses and ours, a quantity of his blood tantamount to a body
part was found on the floor of a Graf Station loading bay. Military
loyalty runs two ways—Barrayarans do not abandon our own. Dead or
alive, where is the rest of him?”
Venn
nearly ground his teeth. “We looked for the man. He is not on Graf
Station. His body is not in space in any reasonable trajectory from Graf Station. We checked. We've told Vorpatril that, repeatedly.”
“How hard—or easy—is it for a downsider to disappear in Quaddiespace?”
“If I may answer that,” Bel Thorne broke in smoothly, “as that incident impinges on my department.”
Greenlaw motioned assent with a lower hand, while simultaneously rubbing the bridge of her nose with an upper.
“Boarding
to and from galactic ships here is fully controlled, not only from Graf
Station, but from our other nexus trade depots as well. It is, if not
impossible, at least difficult to pass through customs and immigration
areas without leaving some sort of record, including general vid
monitors of the areas. Your Lieutenant Solian does not show up anywhere
in our computer or visual records for that day.”
“Truly?” Miles gave Bel a look, Is this the straight story?
Bel returned a brief nod, Yes
. “Truly. Now, in-system travel is much less strictly controlled. It is
more . . . feasible, for someone to pass out of
Graf Station to another Union habitat without notice. If that
person is a quaddie. Any downsider, however, would stand out in the
crowd. Standard missing-person procedures were followed in this case,
including notifications of other habitat security departments. Solian
has simply not been seen, on Graf Station or any other Union habitat.”
“How do you account for his blood in the loading bay?”
“The
loading bay is on the outboard side of the station access control
points. It is my opinion that whoever created that scene came from and
returned to one of the ships in that docks-and-locks sector.”
Miles silently noted Bel's word choice, whoever created that scene , not whoever murdered Solian . Of course, Bel had been present at a certain spectacular emergency cryo-prep, too. . . .
Venn put in irritably, “All of which were ships from your fleet, at the time. In other words, you brought your own troubles with you. We are a peaceful people here!”
Miles
frowned thoughtfully at Bel, and mentally reshuffled his plan of
attack. “Is the loading bay in question very far from here?”
“It's on the other side of the station,” said Watts.
“I
think I would like to see it, and its associated areas, first, before I
interview Ensign Corbeau and the other Barrayarans. Perhaps Portmaster
Thorne would be so good as to conduct me on a tour of the facility?”
Bel glanced at Boss Watts and got an approving low sign.
“I should be very pleased to do so, Lord Vorkosigan,” said Bel.
“Next, perhaps? We could take my ship around.”
“That would be very efficient, yes,” replied Bel, eyes brightening with appreciation. “I could accompany you.”
“Thank you.” Good catch. “That would be most satisfactory.”
Wild
as Miles now was to get away and shake Bel down in private, he had to
smile his way through further formalities, including the official
presentation of the list of charges, costs, fines, and punitive fines
Vorpatril's strike force had garnered. He plucked the data disk Boss
Watts spun to him delicately out of the air and intoned, “Note, please,
I do not accept these charges. I will, however, undertake to review them fully at the earliest possible moment.”
A
lot of unsmiling faces greeted this pronouncement. Quaddie body
language was a study in its own right. Talking with one's hands was
fraught with so many more possibilities, here. Greenlaw's hands were
very controlled, both uppers and lowers. Venn clenched his lower fists
a lot, but then, Venn had helped carry out his burned comrades after
the fire.
The conference drew to an end without
achieving anything resembling closure, which Miles counted as a small
victory for his side. He was getting away without committing himself or
Gregor to anything much, so far. He didn't yet see how to twist this
unpromising tangle his way. He needed more data, subliminals, people,
some handle or lever he hadn't spotted yet. I need to talk to Bel.
That
wish, at least, looked to be granted. At Greenlaw's word, the meeting
broke up, and the honor guard escorted the Barrayarans back through the
corridors to the bay where the Kestrel waited.
CHAPTER FOUR
At the Kestrel 's lock, Boss Watts took Bel aside for a low-voiced conversation with some anxious hand waving. Bel shook its head, made calm down gestures, and finally turned to follow Miles, Ekaterin, and Roic through the flex tube and into the Kestrel
's tiny and now crowded personnel hatch deck. Roic stumbled and looked
a trifle dizzied, readjusting to the grav field, but then found his
balance again. He frowned warily at the Betan hermaphrodite in the
quaddie uniform. Ekaterin flashed a covertly curious glance.
“What was that all about?” Miles asked Bel as the airlock door slid shut.
“Watts
wanted me to take a bodyguard or three. To protect me from the brutal
Barrayarans. I told him there wouldn't be room aboard, and besides, you
were a diplomat—not a soldier.” Bel, head cocked, gave him an
indecipherable look. “Is that so?”
“It is now.
Uh . . .” Miles turned to Lieutenant Smolyani, manning
the hatch controls. “Lieutenant, we're going to take the Kestrel
around to the other side of Graf Station to another docking cradle.
Their traffic control will direct you. Go as slowly as you can without
looking odd. Take two or three tries to align with the docking clamps,
or something.”
“My lord!” said Smolyani
indignantly. ImpSec fast courier pilots made a religion out of fast,
tight maneuvering and swift, perfect dockings. “In front of these people?”
“Well,
do it however you wish, but buy me some time. I need to talk with this
herm. Go, go.” He waved Smolyani out. He drew breath, and added to Roic
and Ekaterin, “We'll take over the wardroom. Excuse us, please.” Thus
consigning her and Roic to their cramped cabins to wait. He gripped
Ekaterin's hand in brief apology. He dared not say more until he'd
decanted Bel in private. There were security angles, political angles,
personal angles—how many angles could dance on the head of a pin?—and,
as the first thrill of seeing that familiar face alive and well wore
off, the nagging memory that the last time they'd met, the purpose had
been to strip Bel of command and discharge it from the mercenary fleet
for its unfortunate role in the bloody Jackson's Whole debacle. He wanted to trust Bel. Dare he?
Roic was too well trained to ask, Are you sure you don't want me to come with you, m'lord? out loud, but from the expression on his face he was doing his best to send it telepathically.
“I'll
explain it all later,” Miles promised Roic in an under-voice, and sent
him on his way with what he hoped was a reassuring half-salute.
He led Bel the few steps to the tiny chamber that doubled as the Kestrel
's wardroom, dining room, and briefing room, shut both its doors, and
activated the security cone. A faint hum from the projector on the
ceiling and a shimmer in the air surrounding the wardroom's circular
dining/vid conference table assured him it was working. He turned to
find Bel watching him, head a little to one side, eyes quizzical, lips
quirked. He hesitated a moment. Then, simultaneously, they both burst
into laughter. They fell on each other in a hug; Bel pounded him on the
back, saying in a tight voice, “Damn, damn, damn, you sawed-off little
half-breed maniac . . .”
Miles fell back, breathless. “Bel, by God. You look good.”
“Older, surely?”
“That, too. But I don't think I'm the one to talk.”
“You look terrific. Healthy. Solid. I take it that woman's been feeding you right? Or doing something right, anyway.”
“Not fat , though?” Miles said anxiously.
“No,
no. But the last time I saw you, right after they thawed you out of
cryo-freeze, you looked like a skull on a stick. You had us all
worried.”
Bel remembered that last meeting with the same clarity as he did, evidently. More, perhaps.
“I worried about you, too. Have you . . . been all right? How the devil did you end up here ?” Was that a delicate enough inquiry?
Bel's
brows rose a trifle, reading who-knew-what expression on Miles's face.
“I suppose I was a little disoriented at first, after I parted company
with the Dendarii Mercenaries. Between Oser and you as commanders, I'd
served there almost twenty-five years.”
“I was sorry as hell about it.”
“I'd say, not half as sorry as I was, but you
were the one who did the dying.” Bel looked away briefly. “Among other
people. It wasn't as if either of us had a choice, at that point. I
couldn't have gone on. And—in the long run—it was a good thing. I'd got
in a rut without knowing it, I think. I needed something to kick me out
of it. I was ready for a change. Well, not ready, but . . .”
Miles,
hanging on Bel's words, was reminded of their place. “Sit, sit.” He
gestured to the little table; they took seats next to each other. Miles
rested his arm on the dark surface and leaned closer to listen.
Bel
continued, “I even went home for a little while. But I found that a
quarter of a century kicking around the Nexus as a free herm had put me
out of step with Beta Colony. I took a few spacer jobs, some at the
suggestion of our mutual employer. Then I drifted in here.” Bel tucked
its gray-brown bangs up off its forehead with spread fingers, a
familiar gesture; they promptly fell back again, even more
heart-catching.
“ImpSec's not my employer any more, exactly,” Miles said.
“Oh? So what are they, exactly?”
Miles
hesitated over this one. “My . . . intelligence
utility,” he chose at last. “By virtue of my new job.”
Bel's
eyebrows went up farther, this time. “This Imperial Auditor thing isn't
a cover for the latest covert ops scam, then.”
“No. It's the real thing. I'm done with scam.”
Bel's lips twitched. “What, with that funny accent?”
“This
is my real voice. The Betan accent I affected for Admiral Naismith was
the put-on. Sort of. Not that I didn't learn it at my mother's knee.”
“When
Watts told me the name of the supposedly-hot-shot envoy the Barrayarans
were sending out, I thought it had to be you. That's why I made sure to
get myself onto the welcoming committee. But this Emperor's Voice thing
sounded like something out of a fairy tale, to me. Until I got to the
fine print. Then it sounded like something out of a really gruesome fairy tale.”
“Oh, did you look up my job description?”
“Yeah,
it's pretty amazing what's in the historical databases here.
Quaddiespace is fully plugged in to the galactic information exchange,
I've found. They're almost as good as Beta, despite having only a
fraction of the population. Imperial Auditor's a pretty stunning
promotion—whoever handed you that much unsupervised power on a platter
has to be almost as much of a lunatic as you are. I want to hear your
explanation of that.”
“Yes, it can take some
explaining, to non-Barrayarans.” Miles took a breath. “You know, that
cryo-revival of mine was a little dicey. Do you remember the seizures I
was having, right after?”
“Yes . . .” said Bel cautiously.
“They
turned out to be a permanent side effect, unfortunately. Too much for
even ImpSec's version of the military to tolerate in a field officer.
As I managed to demonstrate in a particularly spectacular manner, but
that's another story. It was a medical discharge, officially. So that
was the end of my galactic covert ops career.” Miles's smile twisted.
“I had to get an honest job. Fortunately, Emperor Gregor gave me one.
Everyone assumes my appointment was high Vor nepotism at work, for my
father's sake. Over time, I trust I'll prove them wrong.”
Bel was silent for a moment, face set. “So. It seems I killed Admiral Naismith after all.”
“Don't
hog the blame. You had lots of help,” Miles said dryly. “Including
mine.” He was reminded that this slice of privacy was precious and
limited. “It's all blood over the dam now anyway, for you and me both.
We have other crises on our plate today. Quickly, from the top—I've
been assigned to straighten out this mess, to Barrayar's, if not
benefit, least-cost. If you're our ImpSec informer here—are you?”
Bel nodded.
After
Bel had handed in its resignation from the Dendarii Free Mercenaries,
Miles had seen to it that the hermaphrodite had gone on ImpSec's
payroll as a civilian informer. In part it was payback for all Bel had
done for Barrayar before the ill-conceived disaster that had ended
Bel's career directly and Miles's indirectly, but mostly it had been to
keep ImpSec from getting lethally excited about Bel wandering the
wormhole nexus with a head full of hot Barrayaran secrets. Aging, tepid
secrets now, for the most part. Miles had figured the illusion that
they held Bel's string would prove reassuring to ImpSec, and so it had
apparently proved. “Portmaster, eh? What a superb job for an
intelligence observer. Data on everyone and everything that passes in
and out of Graf Station at your fingertips. Did ImpSec place you here?”
“No, I found this job on my own. Sector Five was happy, though. Which, at the time, seemed an added bonus.”
“I'd think they damned well should be happy.”
“The
quaddies like me, too. It seems I'm good at handling all sorts of upset
downsiders, without losing my equilibrium. I don't explain to them that
after years of trailing around after you , my definition of an emergency is seriously divergent from theirs.”
Miles
grinned and made calculations in his head. “Then your most recent
reports are probably still somewhere in transit between here and Sector
Five headquarters.”
“Yeah, that's what I figure.”
“What are the most important things I need to know?”
“Well, for one, we really
haven't seen your Lieutenant Solian. Or his body. Really. Union
Security hasn't stinted on the search for him. Vorpatril—is he any
relation to your cousin Ivan, by the way?”
“Yes, a distant one.”
“I
thought I sensed a family resemblance. In more ways than one. Anyway,
he thinks we're lying. But we're not. Also, your people are idiots.”
“Yes. I know. But they're my idiots. Tell me something new.”
“All
right, here's a good one. Graf Station Security has pulled all the
passengers and crew off the Komarran ships impounded in dock and lodged
'em in station-side hostels, to prevent ill-considered actions and to
put pressure on Vorpatril and Molino. Naturally, they're none too
happy. The supercargo—non-Komarrans who just took passage for a few
jumps—are wild to get away. Half a dozen have tried to bribe me to let
them take their goods off the Idris or the Rudra , and transfer off Graf Station on somebody else's ships.”
“Have any, ah, succeeded?”
“Not
yet.” Bel smirked. “Although if the price keeps going up at the current
rate, even I could be tempted. Anyway, several of the most anxious ones
struck me as . . . potentially interesting.”
“Check. Have you reported this to your Graf Station employers?”
“I
made a remark or two. But it's only suspicion. The individuals are all
well behaved, so far—especially compared to Barrayarans—it's not like
we have any pretext for fast-penta interrogations.”
“Attempting to bribe an official,” Miles suggested.
“I hadn't actually mentioned that last part to Watts yet.” At Miles's raised eyebrows, Bel added, “Did you want more legal complications?”
“Ah—no.”
Bel
snorted. “Didn't think so.” The herm paused a moment, as if marshaling
its thoughts. “Anyway, back to the idiots. Your Ensign Corbeau, to wit.”
“Yes.
That political asylum request of his has got all my antennae quivering.
Granted, he was in some trouble for being late reporting in, but why is
he suddenly trying to desert? What connection does he have to Solian's
disappearance?”
“Not any, as far as I've been able to make out. I actually met the fellow, before all this blew up.”
“Oh? How and where?”
“Socially,
as it happens. What is it about you people who run sexually segregated
fleets that makes you all disembark insane? No, don't bother answering
that, I think we all know. But the all-male military organizations who
have that custom for religious or cultural reasons all come onto
station leave like some horrible combination of kids let out of school
and convicts let out of prison. The worst of both, actually—the
judgment of children combined with the sexual deprivation of—never
mind. The quaddies cringe when they see you coming. If you didn't spend
money with such wild abandon, I think the commercial stations in the
Union would all vote to quarantine you aboard your own ships and let
you die of blue balls.”
Miles rubbed his forehead. “Let's get back to Ensign Corbeau, shall we?”
Bel
grinned. “We hadn't left. So, this backwoods Barrayaran boy on his
first-ever trip into the glittering galaxy tumbles off his ship and,
being under instructions, as I understand it, to enhance his cultural
horizons—”
“That is actually correct.”
“Goes
off to see the Minchenko Ballet. Which is something to behold in any
case. You should take it in while you're station-side.”
“What, it isn't just, uh, exotic dancers?”
“Not
in the advertising-for-the-sex-workers sense. Or even in the Betan Orb
ultra-classy sexual smorgasbord and training academy sense.”
Miles
considered, then reconsidered, mentioning his and Ekaterin's honeymoon
layover at the Orb of Unearthly Delights, possibly the most peculiarly useful stop on their itinerary . . . Focus, my Lord Auditor.
“It's
exotic, and it's dancers, but it's real art, the real thing—it goes way
beyond craft. A two-hundred-year-old tradition, a jewel of this
culture. The fool boy ought to have fallen in love at first
sight. It was his subsequent pursuit with all guns blazing—in the
metaphorical sense, this time—that was a little out of line. Soldier on
leave falls madly in lust with local girl is not precisely a new
scenario, but what I really don't understand is what Garnet
Five saw in him. I mean, he's a nice enough looking young male, but
still . . . !” Bel smiled slyly. “Too tall for my
taste. Not to mention too young.”
“Garnet Five is this quaddie dancer, yes?”
“Yes.”
Remarkable
enough, for a Barrayaran to be attracted to a quaddie; the deeply
ingrained cultural prejudice against anything that smacked of mutation
would seem to work against it. Had Corbeau received less than the usual
indulgent understanding from his fellows and superiors that a young
officer in such a plight might ordinarily expect?
“And your connection with all this is—what?”
Did
Bel take an apprehensive breath? “Nicol plays harp and hammer dulcimer
in the Minchenko Ballet orchestra. You do remember Nicol, the quaddie
musician we rescued during that personnel pickup that almost went down
the disposer?”
“I remember Nicol vividly.” And so, apparently, had Bel. “I gather she made it home safely after all.”
“Yes.” Bel's smile grew tenser. “Not surprisingly, she also remembers you vividly—Admiral Naismith.”
Miles
went still for a moment. At last he said cautiously, “Do,
ah . . . you know her well? Can you command, or
persuade, her discretion?”
“I live with her,” said Bel briefly. “No one needs to command anything. She is discreet.”
Oh. Much becomes clear . . .
“But
she's a personal friend of Garnet Five's. Who is in a tearing panic
over all of this. She's convinced, among other things, that the
Barrayaran command wants to shoot her boyfriend out of hand. The pair
of thugs that Vorpatril sent to pick up your stray evidently—well, it
went beyond rude. They were insulting and brutal, for starters, and it
slid downhill from there. I've heard the unabridged version.”
Miles grimaced. “I know my countrymen. You can take the ugly details as read, thanks.”
“Nicol
has asked me to do what I can for her friend and her friend's friend. I
promised I'd put in a word. This is it.”
“I understand.” Miles sighed. “I can't make any promises yet. Except to listen to everyone.”
Bel
nodded and looked away. It said after a moment, “This Imperial Auditor
gig of yours—you're a big wheel in the Barrayaran machine now, huh?”
“Something like that,” said Miles.
“The Emperor's Voice sounds like it would be pretty loud. People listen, do they?”
“Well,
Barrayarans do. The rest of the galaxy”—one side of Miles's mouth
turned up—”tend to think it's some kind of fairy tale.”
Bel
shrugged apologetically. “ImpSec is Barrayarans. So. The thing is, I've
come to like this place—Graf Station, Quaddiespace. And these people. I
like them a lot. I believe you'll see why, if I get much chance to show
you around. I'm thinking of settling here permanently.”
“That's . . . nice,” said Miles. Where are you taking me, Bel?
“But if I do
take an oath of citizenship here—and I've been thinking hard about it
for a while—I want to take it honestly. I can't offer them a false
oath, or divided loyalties.”
“Your Betan citizenship never interfered with your career in the Dendarii Mercenaries,” Miles pointed out.
“You never asked me to operate on Beta Colony,” said Bel.
“And if I had?”
“I . . . would
have faced a dilemma.” Bel's hand stretched in urgent entreaty. “I want
a clean start, with no secret strings attached. You claim ImpSec is
your personal utility now. Miles—can you please fire me again?”
Miles sat back and chewed on his knuckle. “Cut you loose from ImpSec, you mean?”
“Yes. From all old obligations.”
He blew out his breath. But you're so valuable to us here! “I . . . don't know.”
“Don't know if you have the power? Or don't know if you want to use it?”
Miles
temporized, “This power business has proved a lot stranger than I
anticipated. You'd think more power would bring one more freedom, but
I've found it's brought me less. Every word that comes out of my mouth
has this weight that it never had before, when I was babbling
Mad Miles, hustler of the Dendarii. I never had to watch my mass like
this. It's . . . damned uncomfortable, sometimes.”
“I'd have thought you'd love it.”
“I'd have thought that too.”
Bel leaned back, easing off. It would not make the request again, not soon, anyway.
Miles
drummed his fingers on the cool, reflective surface of the table. “If
there is anything more behind this mess than overexcitement and bad
judgment—not that that isn't enough—it hinges on the evaporation of
that Komarran fleet security fellow, Solian—”
Miles wrist com chimed, and he raised it to his lips. “Yes?”
“M'lord,” came Roic's apologetic voice. “We're in dock again now.”
“Right.
Thanks. We'll be out directly.” He rose from the table, saying, “You
must meet Ekaterin properly, before we go back out there and have to
play dumb again. She and Roic have full Barrayaran security clearances,
by the way—they have to, to live this close to me. They both need to
know who you are, and that they can trust you.”
Bel hesitated. “Do they really need to know I'm ImpSec? Here?”
“They might, in an emergency.”
“I
would particularly like the quaddies not to know I've been selling
intelligence to downsiders, you see. Maybe it would be safer if you and
I were mere acquaintances.”
Miles stared. “But Bel, she knows perfectly well who you are. Or were, anyway.”
“What,
have you been telling covert ops war stories to your wife?” Clearly
disconcerted, Bel frowned. “Those rules always applied to someone else,
didn't they?”
“Her clearance was earned, not just
granted,” Miles said a little stiffly. “But Bel, we sent you a wedding
invitation! Or . . . did you get it? ImpSec
notified me it was delivered—”
“Oh,” said Bel, looking confused. “That. Yes. I did get it.”
“Was
it delivered too late? It should have included a travel voucher—if
someone pocketed that, I'll have his hide—”
“No,
the voucher came through all right. About a year and a half ago, yes? I
could have made it, if I'd scrambled a bit. It just arrived at an
awkward period for me. Kind of a low point. I'd just left Beta for the
last time, and I was in the middle of a little job I was doing for
ImpSec. Arranging a substitute would have been difficult. It was just
effort, at a time when more effort . . . I wished
you well, though, and hoped you'd finally got lucky.” A wry grin
flashed. “Again.”
“Finding the right Lady
Vorkosigan . . . was a bigger, rarer kind of luck
than any I'd had before.” Miles sighed. “Elli Quinn didn't come either.
Though she sent a present and a letter.” Neither especially demure.
“Hm,” said Bel, smiling a little. And added rather slyly, “And Sergeant Taura?”
“She
attended.” Miles's lips curled up, unwilled. “Spectacularly. I had a
burst of genius, and put my Aunt Alys in charge of getting her dressed
civilian-style. It kept them both happily occupied. The old Dendarii
contingent all missed you. Elena and Baz were there—with their new baby
girl, if you can imagine it—and Arde Mayhew, too. So the very beginning
of it all was fully represented. It was as well that the wedding was
small. A hundred and twenty people is small, yes? It was Ekaterin's
second, you see—she was a widow.” And profoundly stressed thereby. Her
tense, distraught state the night before the wedding had reminded Miles
forcibly of a particular species of precombat nerves he'd seen in
troops facing, not their first, but their second battle. The night
after the wedding, now—that had gone much better, thank God.
Longing
and regret had shadowed Bel's face during this recitation of old
friends lifting a glass to new beginnings. Then the herm's expression
sharpened. “Baz Jesek, back on Barrayar?” said Bel. “Someone must have
worked out his little problems with the Barrayaran military
authorities, eh?”
And if Someone could arrange
Baz's relationship with ImpSec, maybe that same Someone might arrange
Bel's? Bel didn't even need to make the point out loud. Miles said,
“The old desertion charges made too good a cover when Baz was active in
ops to allow them to be rescinded, but the need had become obsolete.
Baz and Elena are both out of the Dendarii too, now. Hadn't you heard?
We're all getting to be history.” All of us who made it out alive, anyway.
“Yes,”
sighed Bel. “There is a deal of sanity to be saved in letting the past
go, and moving on.” The herm glanced up. “If the past will let you go
too, that is. So let's keep this as simple as possible with your
people, please?”
“All right,” Miles agreed
reluctantly. “For now, we'll mention the past, but not the present.
Don't worry—they'll be, ah—discreet.” He deactivated the security cone
above the little conference table and unlocked the doors. Raising his
wrist com to his lips, he murmured, “Ekaterin, Roic, could you step
over to the wardroom, please.”
When they had both
arrived, Ekaterin smiling expectantly, Miles said, “We've had a piece
of undeserved good fortune. Although Portmaster Thorne works for the
quaddies now, the herm's an old friend of mine from an organization I
worked with in my ImpSec days. You can rely on what Bel has to say.”
Ekaterin
held out her hand. “I'm so glad to meet you at last, Captain Thorne. My
husband and his old friends have spoken highly of you. I believe you
were much missed from their company.”
Looking
decidedly bemused, but rising to the challenge, Bel shook her hand.
“Thank you, Lady Vorkosigan. But I don't go by that old rank here.
Portmaster Thorne, or just call me Bel.”
Ekaterin
nodded. “And please call me Ekaterin. Oh—in private, I suppose.” She
looked a silent inquiry at Miles.
“Ah, right,”
said Miles. His gesture took in Roic, who looked attentive. “Bel knew
me under another identity then. As far as Graf Station is concerned,
we've just met. But we've hit it off splendidly, and Bel's talent for
dealing with difficult downsiders is paying off for them.”
Roic nodded. “Got it, m'lord.”
Miles shepherded them into the hatch bay where the Kestrel
's engineer waited to pipe them back aboard Graf Station. He reflected
that yet another reason Ekaterin's security clearance needed to be as
high as his own was that, according to several persons' historical
reports and her own witness, he talked in his sleep. Until Bel grew
less nervy over the situation, he decided he'd probably better not
mention this.
* * *
Two
quaddie Station Security men waited for them in the freight loading
bay. This being the section of Graf Station supplied with artificially
generated gravitational fields for the comfort and health of its
downsider visitors and residents, the pair hovered in personal float
chairs with Station Security markings emblazoned on the sides. The
floaters were stubby cylinders, barely larger in diameter than a man's
shoulders, and the general effect was of people riding in levitating
washtubs, or maybe the Baba Yaga's magic flying mortar from Barrayaran
folklore. Bel gave the quaddie sergeant a nod and a murmured greeting
as they emerged into the echoing cavern of the loading bay. The
sergeant returned the nod, evidently reassured, and turned his close
attention to the dangerous Barrayarans. Since the dangerous Barrayarans
were frankly gawking like tourists, Miles hoped the tough-looking
fellow would soon grow less twitchy.
“This
personnel lock here,” Bel pointed back to the one by which they'd just
entered, “was the one that was opened by the unauthorized person. The
blood trail ended in it, in a smeary smudge. It started,” Bel walked
across the bay toward the wall to the right, “a few meters away, not
far from the door to the next bay. This is where the large pool of
blood was found.”
Miles walked after Bel, studying
the deck. It had been cleaned up in the several days since the
incident. “Did you see this yourself, Portmaster Thorne?”
“Yes,
about an hour after it was first found. The mob had arrived by then,
but Security had been pretty good about keeping the area
uncontaminated.”
Miles had Bel walk him around the
bay, detailing all exits. It was a standard sort of place, utilitarian,
undecorated, efficient; a few pieces of freight-handling equipment
stood silently in the opposite end, near a darkened, airsealed control
booth. Miles had Bel unlock it and give him a look inside. Ekaterin too
walked about, clearly glad to have room to stretch her legs after
several days cooped up in the Kestrel . Her expression, gazing about the cool, echoing space, was thoughtfully reminiscent, and Miles smiled in appreciation.
They
returned to the spot where the blood implied Lieutenant Solian's throat
had been cut, and discussed the details of the spatter marks and
smears. Roic observed with keen professional interest. Miles had one of
the quaddie guards give up his float tub; scooped out of his shell, he
sat up on the deck on his haunches and lower arms, looking a bit like a
large, disgruntled frog. Quaddie locomotion in a gravity field without
a floater was rather disturbing to watch. They either went on all
fours, only slightly more mobile than a person on hands and knees, or
managed a sort of forward-leaning, elbows-out, upright chicken-walk on
their lower hands. Either mode looked very wrong and ungainly, compared
to their grace and agility in zero gee.
With Bel,
whom Miles judged to be about the right size for a Komarran,
cooperatively playing the part of the corpse, they experimented with
the problem of a person in a float chair shifting seventy or so kilos
of inert meat the several meters to the airlock. Bel wasn't as slim and
athletic as formerly, either; the added, ah, masses made it harder for
Miles to fall back into his old subconscious default habit of thinking
of Bel as male. Probably just as well. Miles found it extremely
difficult, legs folded awkwardly in a seat not designed for them,
trying to keep one hand on the float chair controls at roughly crotch
level and also maintain a grip on Bel's clothing. Bel tried trailing
either an arm or a leg artistically over the side; Miles stopped short
of pouring water down Bel's sleeve to try to duplicate the smears.
Ekaterin did little better than he did, and Roic, surprisingly, worse.
His superior strength was counteracted by the awkwardness of squeezing
his greater size into the cup-like space, his knees sticking up, and
trying to work the hand controls in the constricted clearances. The
quaddie sergeant managed it handily, but glowered at Miles afterwards.
Floaters,
Bel explained, were not hard to come by, being considered shared public
property, although quaddies who spent a lot of time on the grav side
sometimes owned their own personalized models. The quaddies kept racks
of floaters by the access ports between the grav and the free fall
sections of the station, for any quaddie to grab and use, and drop off
again upon returning. They were numbered for maintenance record
purposes, but not tracked otherwise. Anyone could obtain one by simply
walking up and getting in, apparently, even drunken Barrayaran soldiers
on leave.
“When we came into that first docking
cradle around on the other side, I noticed a lot of personal craft
puttering around the outside of the station—pushers, personnel pods,
in-system flitters,” Miles said to Bel. “It occurs to me that someone
could have picked up Solian's body within a short time of its being
ejected from the airlock, and removed it damned near tracelessly. It
could be anywhere by now, including still stored in a pod airlock or
put through a disposer in one-kilo lumps or tucked away to mummify in
some random asteroid crevice. Which offers an alternate explanation of
why it hasn't been found floating out there. But that scenario requires
either two persons, with prior planning, or one spontaneous murderer
who moved very quickly. How much time would a single person have had
between the throat-cutting and the pickup?”
Bel,
straightening uniform and hair after the last drag across the loading
bay, pursed its lips. “There were maybe five or ten minutes between the
time the lock cycled, and the time the security guard arrived to check
it. Maybe twenty minutes max after that before all sorts of people were
looking around outside. In thirty
minutes . . . yes, one person could just about have
dumped the body, run to another bay and jumped in a small craft, zipped
around, and collected it again.”
“Good. Get me a
list of everything that went out a lock in that period.” For the sake
of the listening quaddie guards he remembered to add a formal, “If you
please, Portmaster Thorne.”
“Certainly, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan.”
“Seems
damned odd to go to all that trouble to remove the body but leave the
blood, though. Timing? Tried to get back to clean up, but it was too
late? Something very, very strange to hide about the body?”
Maybe
just blind panic, if the murder had not been planned in advance. Miles
could imagine someone who was not a spacer shoving a body out an
airlock, and only then realizing what poor concealment it really was.
That didn't exactly jibe with a subsequent swift and handy outside
pickup, though. And no quaddie qualified as not-a-spacer.
He sighed. “This is not getting us much forwarder. Let's go talk to my idiots.”
CHAPTER FIVE
Graf Station Security Post Three lay on the
border between the free fall and the grav sides of the station, with
access to both. Construction quaddies in yellow shirts and shorts, and
a few legged downsiders similarly dressed, were at work on repairs
around the main grav-side entrance. Miles, Ekaterin, and Roic were
escorted through by Bel and one of their quaddie outriders, the other
having been left on dour guard at the Kestrel 's docking hatch. The workers turned their heads to stare, frowning, as the Barrayarans passed.
They
wound via a couple of corridors down one level, where they found the
control booth at the portal to the grav-side detention block. A quaddie
and a downsider were just collaborating on raising a new, possibly more
plasma-fire-resistant, window into place in its frame; beyond, another
yellow-clad quaddie could be seen putting the finishing touches on a
monitor array while a uniformed quaddie in a Security floater, upper
arms crossed, watched glumly.
In the
tool-cluttered staging area in front of the booth they found Sealer
Greenlaw and Chief Venn, now supplied with floaters, awaiting them.
Venn immediately made sure to point out to Miles all the repairs
completed and still in progress, in detail, with approximate costs,
with a chronicle appended of all the quaddies who had been injured in
the imbroglio, including names, ranks, prognoses, and the distress
suffered by their family members. Miles made acknowledging yet neutral
noises, and went into a short counter-riff on the missing Solian and
the sinister testimony of the blood on the loading bay deck, with a
brief dissertation on the logistics of his ejected body being spirited
away by a possible outboard coconspirator. This last gave Venn pause,
at least temporarily; his face twinged, like a man in stomach pain.
While
Venn went to arrange Miles's entry to the cellblock with the guard in
the control booth, Miles glanced at Ekaterin, and a little doubtfully
around the less-than-inviting staging area. “Do you want to wait here,
or sit in?”
“Do you want me to sit in?” she asked,
with a lack of enthusiasm in her voice that even Miles could sense.
“Not that you don't draft anyone in sight, as needed, but surely I'm
not needed for this.”
“Well, perhaps not. But it looks like it might be a trifle boring out here.”
“I
don't have quite your allergic response to boredom, love, but to tell
the truth, I was rather hoping I could get more of a look around the
station while you were tied up here this afternoon. The glimpses we saw
on the way in seemed quite enticing.”
“But I want Roic.” He hesitated, the security triage problem turning in his head.
She
glanced across in friendly speculation at Bel, listening. “I admit I
would be glad for a guide, but do you really think I need a bodyguard
here?”
Insult seemed possible, though only from
quaddies who knew whose wife she was, but assault, Miles had to admit,
seemed unlikely. “No, but . . .”
Bel
smiled cordially back at her. “If you would accept my escort, Lady
Vorkosigan, I would be pleased to show you around Graf Station while
the Lord Auditor conducts his interviews.”
Ekaterin
brightened still further. “I would like that very much, yes, thank you,
Portmaster Thorne. If things go well, as we must hope they do, we might
not be here very long. I feel I should seize my opportunities.”
Bel
was more experienced than Roic in everything from hand-to-hand combat
to fleet maneuvers, and vastly less likely to blunder into trouble here
through ignorance. “Well . . . all right, why not?
Enjoy.” Miles touched his wrist com. “I'll call when I'm about
finished. Maybe you can go shopping.” He waved them off, smiling. “Just
don't haul home any severed heads.” He glanced up to find Venn and
Greenlaw both staring at him in some dismay. “Ah—family joke,” he
explained weakly. The dismay did not abate.
Ekaterin
smiled back, and sailed out on Bel's cheerfully proffered arm. It
occurred to Miles belatedly that Bel was notably universal in its
sexual tastes, and that maybe he ought to have warned Ekaterin that she
needn't be especially delicate in redirecting Bel's attentions, should
any be offered. But surely Bel wouldn't . . . on
the other hand, maybe they'd just take turns trying things on.
Reluctantly, he turned back to business.
The
Barrayaran prisoners were stacked three to a cell in chambers meant for
two occupants, a circumstance about which Venn half complained, half
apologized. Security Post Three, he gave Miles to understand, had been
unprepared for such an abnormal influx of recalcitrant downsiders.
Miles murmured comprehension, if not necessarily sympathy, and
refrained from observing that the quaddies' cells were larger than the
sleeping cabins housing four aboard the Prince Xav .
Miles
began by interviewing Brun's squad commander. The man was shocked to
find his exploits receiving the high-powered attention of an actual
Imperial Auditor, and as a result defaulted to a thick MilSpeak in his
account of events. The picture Miles unpacked behind such formal
phrases as penetrated the perimeter and enemy forces amassed
still made him wince. But allowing for the changed point of view, his
testimony did not materially contradict the Stationer version of the
events. Alas.
Miles spot-checked the squad
commander's story with another cell full of fellows, who added details
unfortunate but not surprising. As the squad had been attached to the Prince Xav , none of them were personally acquainted with Lieutenant Solian, posted on the Idris .
Miles
emerged and tested an argument on the hovering Sealer Greenlaw. “It is
quite improper for you to continue holding these men. The orders they
were following, though perhaps ill thought out, were not in fact
illegal in Barrayaran military definition. If their orders had been to
plunder, rape, or massacre civilian quaddies, they would have been
under a legal military obligation to resist them, but in fact they were
specifically ordered not to kill. If they had disobeyed Brun, they
could have faced court-martial. It's double jeopardy, and seriously
unfair to them.”
“I will consider this contention,” said Greenlaw dryly, with the For about ten seconds, after which I shall toss it out the nearest airlock hanging unspoken.
“And,
looking ahead,” added Miles, “you can't wish to be stuck housing these
men indefinitely. Surely it would be preferable for us to take them,”
he just managed to convert off your hands to, “with us when we leave.”
Greenlaw
looked even dryer; Venn grunted disconsolately. Miles gathered Venn
would be just as glad for the Imperial Auditor to take them away now
, except for the politics of the larger situation. Miles didn't push
the point, but stored it up for near-future reference. He entertained a
brief, wistful fantasy of trading Brun for his men, and leaving Brun
here, to the net benefit of the Emperor's Service, but did not air it
aloud.
His interview with the two service security
men who'd initially been sent to pick up Corbeau was, in its way, even
more wince-worthy. They were sufficiently intimidated by his Auditor's
rank to give full and honest, if muttered, accounts of the contretemps.
But such infelicitous phraseology as I wasn't trying to break her arm, I was trying to bounce the mutie bitch off the wall , and All those clutching hands gave me the creeps—it was like having snakes wrapping around my boot
, convinced Miles that here were two men he wouldn't care to have
testify in public, at least not in public in Quaddiespace. However, he
was able to establish the significant point that at the time of the
clash they, too, had been under the impression that Lieutenant Solian
had just been murdered by an unknown quaddie.
He
emerged from this interrogation to say to Venn, “I think I'd better
speak privately to Ensign Corbeau. Can you find us a space?”
“Corbeau
already has his own cell,” Venn informed him coolly. “As a result of
his being threatened by his comrades.”
“Ah. Take me to him, then, if you please.”
* * *
The
cell door slid aside to reveal a tall young man sitting silently on a
bunk, elbows on knees, his face propped in his hands. The metallic
contact circles of a jump pilot's neural implant gleamed at his temples
and mid-forehead, and Miles mentally tripled the young officer's recent
training costs to the Imperium. He looked up and frowned in confusion
at Miles.
He was a typical enough Barrayaran: dark
haired, brown eyed, with an olive complexion made pale by his months in
space. His regular features reminded Miles a bit of his cousin Ivan at
the same feckless age. An extensive bruise around one eye was fading,
turning yellowish green. His uniform shirt was open at the throat,
sleeves rolled up. Some paling, irregular pink scars zigzagged over his
exposed skin, marking him as a victim of the Sergyaran worm plague of
some years back; he had evidently grown up, or at least been resident,
on Barrayar's new colony planet during that difficult period before the
oral vermicides had been perfected.
Venn said,
“Ensign Corbeau, this is the Barrayaran Imperial Auditor, Lord
Vorkosigan. Your emperor sent him out as the official diplomatic envoy
to represent your side in negotiations with the Union. He wishes to
interview you.”
Corbeau's lips parted in alarm,
and he scrambled to his feet and bobbed his head nervously at Miles. It
made their height differential rather spring to the eye, and Corbeau's
brow wrinkled in increased confusion.
Venn added,
not so much kindly as punctiliously, “Due to the charges lodged against
you, as well as your petition for asylum still pending for review,
Sealer Greenlaw will not permit him to remove you from our custody at this time.”
Corbeau
exhaled a little, but still stared at Miles with the expression of a
man introduced to a poisonous snake.
Venn added, a sardonic edge in his voice, “He has undertaken not to order you to shoot yourself, either.”
“Thank you, Chief Venn,” said Miles. “I'll take it from here, if you don't mind.”
Venn took the hint, and his leave. Roic took up his silent guard stance by the cell door, which hissed closed.
Miles
gestured at the bunk. “Sit down, Ensign.” He seated himself on the bunk
across from the young man and cocked his head in brief study as Corbeau
refolded himself. “Stop hyperventilating,” he added.
Corbeau gulped, and managed a wary, “My lord.”
Miles laced his fingers together. “Sergyaran, are you?”
Corbeau
glanced down at his arms and made an abortive move to roll down his
sleeves. “Not born there, my lord. My parents emigrated when I was
about five years old.” He glanced at the silent Roic in his
brown-and-silver uniform, and added, “Are you—” then swallowed whatever
he'd been about to say.
Miles could fill in the blank. “I'm Viceroy and Vicereine Vorkosigan's son, yes. One of them.”
Corbeau managed an unvoiced Oh . His look of suppressed terror did not diminish.
“I
have just interviewed the two fleet patrollers sent to retrieve you
from your station leave. In a moment, I'd like to hear your version of
that event. But first—did you know Lieutenant Solian, the Komarran
fleet security officer aboard the Idris ?”
The
pilot's thoughts were so clearly focused on his own affairs that it
took him a moment to parse this. “I met him once or twice at some of
our prior stops, my lord. I can't say as I knew him. I never went
aboard the Idris .”
“Do you have any thoughts or theories about his disappearance?”
“Not . . . not really.”
“Captain Brun thinks he might have deserted.”
Corbeau grimaced. “Brun would.”
“Why Brun especially?”
Corbeau's
lips moved, halted; he looked still more miserable. “It would not be
appropriate for me to criticize my superiors, my lord, or to comment on
their personal opinions.”
“Brun is prejudiced against Komarrans.”
“I didn't say that!”
“That was my observation, Ensign.”
“Oh.”
“Well,
let's leave that for the moment. Back to your troubles. Why didn't you
answer your wrist com recall order?”
Corbeau
touched his bare left wrist; the Barrayarans' com links had all been
confiscated by their quaddie captors. “I'd taken it off and left it in
another room. I must have slept through the beep. The first I knew of
the recall order was when those two, two . . .” He
struggled for a moment, then continued bitterly, “thugs came pounding at Garnet Five's door. They just pushed her aside—”
“Did they identify themselves properly, and relay your orders clearly?”
Corbeau
paused, his glance at Miles sharpening. “I admit, my lord,” he said
slowly, “Sergeant Touchev announcing, 'All right, mutie-lover, this
show's over,' did not exactly convey 'Admiral Vorpatril has ordered all
Barrayaran personnel back to their ships' to my mind. Not right away, anyway. I'd just woken up, you see.”
“Did they identify themselves?”
“Not—not verbally.”
“Show any ID?”
“Well . . . they were in uniform, with their patrol armbands.”
“Did
you recognize them as fleet security, or did you think this was a
private visit—a couple of comrades taking out their racial offense on
their own time?”
“It . . . um . . . well—the
two aren't exactly mutually exclusive, my lord. In my experience.”
The kid has that one straight, unfortunately. Miles took a breath. “Ah.”
“I
was slow, still half asleep. When they shoved me around, Garnet Five
thought they were attacking me. I wish she hadn't tried
to . . . I didn't slug Touchev till he dumped her
out of her float chair. At that
point . . . everything sort of went down the
disposer.” Corbeau glowered at his feet, encased in prison-issue
friction slippers.
Miles sat back. Throw this boy a line. He's drowning.
He said mildly, “You know, your career is not necessarily cooked yet.
You aren't, technically, AWOL as long as you are involuntarily confined
by the Graf Station authorities, any more than Brun's strike patrol
here is. For a little while yet, you're in a legal limbo. Your jump
pilot's training and surgery would make you a costly loss, from
command's viewpoint. If you make the right moves, you could still get
out of this pretty cleanly.”
Corbeau's face screwed up. “I don't . . .” He trailed off.
Miles made an encouraging noise.
Corbeau
burst out, “I don't want my damned career any more. I don't want to be
part of”—he waved around inarticulately—”this . This . . . idiocy.”
Suppressing
a certain sympathy, Miles asked, “What's your present status—how far
along are you in your enlistment?”
“I signed up
for one of the new five-year hitches, with the option to reenlist or go
to reserve status for the next five. I've been in three years, two
still to go.”
At age twenty-three, Miles reminded
himself, two years still seemed a long time. Corbeau could be barely
more than an apprentice junior pilot at this stage of his career,
although his assignment to the Prince Xav implied a superior rating.
Corbeau
shook his head. “I see things differently these days, somehow.
Attitudes I used to take for granted, jokes, remarks, just the way
things are done—they bother me now. They grate. People like Sergeant
Touchev, Captain Brun—God. Were we always this awful?”
“No,” said Miles. “We used to be much worse. I can personally testify to that one.”
Corbeau stared searchingly at him.
“But
if all the progressive-minded men had opted out then, as you are
proposing to do now, none of the changes I've seen in my lifetime could
have happened. We've changed. We can change some more. Not instantly,
no. But if all the decent folks quit and only the idiots are left to
run the show, it won't be good for the future of Barrayar. About which
I do care.” It startled him to realize how passionately true that
statement had become, of late. He thought of the two replicators in
that guarded room in Vorkosigan House. I always thought my parents could fix anything. Now it's my turn. Dear God, how did this happen?
“I
never imagined a place like this.” Corbeau's jerky wave around, Miles
construed, now meant Quaddiespace. “I never imagined a woman like
Garnet Five. I want to stay here.”
Miles had a bad
sense of a desperate young man making permanent decisions for the sake
of temporary stimuli. Graf Station was attractive at first glance,
certainly, but Corbeau had grown up in open country with real gravity,
real air—would he adapt, or would the techno-claustrophobia creep up on
him? And the young woman for whom he proposed to throw his life over,
was she worthy, or would Corbeau prove a passing amusement to her? Or,
over time, a bad mistake? Hell, they'd known each other bare weeks—no
one could know, least of all Corbeau and Garnet Five.
“I want out,” said Corbeau. “I can't stand it any more.”
Miles
tried again. “If you withdraw your request for political asylum in the
Union before the quaddies reject it, it might still be folded into your
present legal ambiguity and made to disappear, without further
prejudice to your career. If you don't withdraw it first, the desertion
charge will certainly stick, and do you vast damage.”
Corbeau
looked up and said anxiously, “Doesn't this firefight that Brun's
patrol had with the quaddie security here make it in the heat? The Prince Xav 's surgeon said it probably did.”
In the heat
, desertion in the face of the enemy, was punishable by death in the
Barrayaran military code. Desertion in peacetime was punishable by long
stretches of time in some extremely unpleasant stockades. Either seemed
excessively wasteful, all things considered. “I think it would require
some pretty convoluted legal twisting to call this episode a battle.
For one thing, defining it so runs directly counter to the Emperor's
stated desire to maintain peaceful relations with this important trade
depot. Still . . . given a sufficiently hostile
court and ham-handed defense counsel . . . I
shouldn't call court-martial a wise risk, if it can possibly be
avoided.” Miles rubbed his lips. “Were you drunk, by chance, when
Sergeant Touchev came to pick you up?”
“No!”
“Hm.
Pity. Drunk is a wonderfully safe defense. Not politically or socially
radical, y'see. I don't suppose . . . ?”
Corbeau's
mouth tightened in indignation. Suggesting Corbeau lie about his
chemical state would not go over well, Miles sensed. Which gave him a
higher opinion of the young officer, true. But it didn't make Miles's
life any easier.
“I still want out,” Corbeau repeated stubbornly.
“The
quaddies don't much like Barrayarans this week, I'm afraid. Relying on
them granting your asylum to pluck you out of your dilemma seems to me
to be a grave mistake. There must be half a dozen better ways to solve
your problems, if you'd open your mind to wider tactical possibilities.
In fact, almost any other way would be better than this.”
Corbeau shook his head, mute.
“Well,
think about it, Ensign. I suspect the situation will remain murky until
I find out what happened to Lieutenant Solian. At that point, I hope to
unravel this tangle quickly, and the chance to change your mind about
really bad ideas could run out abruptly.”
He
climbed wearily to his feet. Corbeau, after a moment of uncertainty,
rose and saluted. Miles returned an acknowledging nod and motioned to
Roic, who spoke into the cell's intercom and obtained their release.
He exited, frowning thoughtfully, to encounter the hovering Chief Venn. “I want Solian
, dammit,” Miles said grouchily to him. “This remarkable evaporation of
his doesn't reflect any better on the competence of your security than
it does on ours, y'know.”
Venn glowered at him. But he didn't contradict this remark.
Miles sighed and raised his wrist com to his lips to call Ekaterin.
* * *
She insisted on having him rendezvous with her back at the Kestrel
. Miles was just as glad for the excuse to escape the depressing
atmosphere of Security Post Three. He couldn't call it moral ambiguity,
alas. Worse, he couldn't call it legal ambiguity. It was quite clear
which side was in the right; it just wasn't his side, dammit.
He
found her in their little cabin, just hanging his brown-and-silver
House uniform out on a hook. She turned and embraced him, and he tilted
his head back for a long, luxurious kiss.
“So, how did your venture into Quaddiespace with Bel go?” he inquired, when he had breath to spare again.
“Very
well, I thought. If Bel ever wants a change from being a portmaster, I
believe it could go into Union public relations. I think I saw all the
best parts of Graf Station that could be squeezed into the time we had.
Splendid views, good food, history—Bel took me deep down into the free
fall sector to see the preserved parts of the old jumpship that first
brought the quaddies to this system. They have it set up as a
museum—when we arrived it was full of quaddie schoolchildren, bouncing
off the walls. Literally. They were incredibly cute. It almost reminded
me of a Barrayaran ancestor-shrine.” She released him and indicated a
large box decorated with shiny, colorful pictures and schematics,
occupying half the lower bunk. “I found this for Nikki in the museum
shop. It's a scale model of the D-620 Superjumper, modified with the
orbital habitat configured on, that the quaddies' forebears escaped in.”
“Oh, he'll like that
.” Nikki, at eleven, had not yet outgrown a passion for spaceships of
every kind, but especially jumpships. It was still too early to guess
whether the enthusiasm would turn into an adult avocation or fall by
the wayside, but it certainly hadn't flagged yet. Miles peered more
closely at the picture. The ancient D-620 had been an amazingly
ungainly looking beast of a ship, appearing in this artist's rendition
rather like an enormous metallic squid clutching a collection of cans.
“Large-scale replica, I take it?”
She glanced
rather doubtfully at it. “Not especially. It was a huge ship. I wonder
if I should have chosen the smaller version? But it didn't come apart
like this one. Now that I have it back here I'm not quite sure where to
put it.”
Ekaterin in maternal mode was quite
capable of sharing her bunk with the thing all the way home, for
Nikki's sake. “Lieutenant Smolyani will be happy to find a place to
stow it.”
“Really?”
“You have
my personal guarantee.” He favored her with a half-bow, hand over his
heart. He wondered briefly if he ought to snag a couple more for little
Aral Alexander and Helen Natalia while they were here, but the
conversation with Ekaterin about age-appropriate toys , several
times repeated during their sojourn on Earth, probably did not need
another rehearsal. “What did you and Bel find to talk about?”
She smirked. “You, mostly.”
Belated panic came out as nothing more self-incriminating than a brightly inquiring, “Oh?”
“Bel
was wildly curious as to how we'd met, and obviously racking its brains
to figure out how to ask without being rude. I took pity and told a
little about meeting you on Komarr, and after. With all the classified
parts left out, our courtship sounds awfully odd, do you know?”
He acknowledged this with a rueful shrug. “I've noticed. Can't be helped.”
“Is it really true that the first time you met, you shot Bel with a stunner?”
The curiosity hadn't all run one way, evidently. “Well, yes. It's a long story. From a long time ago.”
Her
blue eyes crinkled with amusement. “So I understand. You were an
absolute lunatic when you were younger, by all accounts. I'm not sure,
if I'd met you back then, whether I'd have been impressed, or
horrified.”
Miles thought it over. “I'm not sure, either.”
Her
lips curled up again, and she stepped around him to lift a garment bag
from the bunk. She drew from it a heavy fall of fabric in a blue-gray
hue matching her eyes. It resolved itself into a jumpsuit of some
swinging velvety stuff gathered to long, buttoned cuffs at the wrists
and ankles, which gave the trouser legs a subtly sleeve-like look. She
held it up to herself.
“That's new,” he said approvingly.
“Yes,
I can be both fashionable in gravity and demure in free fall.” She laid
the garment back down and stroked its silky nap.
“I take it Bel blocked any unpleasantness due to your being Barrayaran, when you two were out and about?”
She straightened. “Well, I
didn't have any problems. Bel was accosted by one odd-looking fellow—he
had the longest, narrowest hands and feet. Something funny about his
chest, too, rather oversized. I wondered if he was genetically
engineered for anything special, or if it was some sort of surgical
modification. I suppose one meets all kinds, out here on the edge of
the Nexus. He badgered Bel to tell how soon the passengers were to be
let back aboard, and said there was a rumor someone had been allowed to
take off their cargo, but Bel assured him—firmly!—that no one had been
let on the ships since they were impounded. One of the passengers from
the Rudra , worrying about his goods, I gather. He implied the
seized cargoes were subject to rifling and theft by the quaddie
dockhands, which didn't go over too well with Bel.”
“I can imagine.”
“Then
he wanted to know what you were doing, and how the Barrayarans were
going to respond. Naturally, Bel didn't say who I was. Bel said if he
wanted to know what Barrayarans were doing, he'd do better to ask one
directly, and to get in line to make an appointment with you through
Sealer Greenlaw like everyone else. The fellow wasn't too happy, but
Bel threatened to have him escorted back to his hostel by Station
Security and confined there if he didn't give over pestering, so he
shut up and went scurrying to find Greenlaw.”
“Good
for Bel.” He sighed, and hitched his tight shoulders. “I suppose I'd
better deal with Greenlaw again next.”
“No, you
shouldn't,” Ekaterin said firmly. “You've done nothing but talk with
committees of upset people since the first thing this morning. The
answer, I expect, is no. The question is, did you ever stop to eat
lunch, or take any sort of break?”
“Um . . . well, no. How did you guess?”
She
merely smiled. “Then the next item on your schedule, my Lord Auditor,
is a nice dinner with your wife and your old friends. Bel and Nicol are
taking us out. And after that, we're going to the quaddie ballet.”
“We are?”
“Yes.”
“Why?
I mean, I have to eat sometime, I suppose, but my wandering off in the
middle of the case to, um, disport myself, won't thrill anyone who's
waiting on me to solve this mess. Starting with Admiral Vorpatril and
his staff, I daresay.”
“It will thrill the
quaddies. They're vastly proud of the Minchenko Ballet, and being seen
to show an interest in their culture can do you nothing but good with
them. The troupe only performs once or twice a week, depending on the
passenger traffic in port and the season—do they have seasons here?
time of year, anyway—so we might not get another chance.” Her smile
grew sly. “It was a sold-out show, but Bel had Garnet Five pull strings
and get us a box. She'll be joining us there.”
Miles blinked. “She wants to pitch her case to me about Corbeau, does she?”
“That's
what I'd guess.” At his dubiously wrinkled nose, she added, “I found
out more about her today. She's a famous person on Graf Station, a
local celebrity. The Barrayaran patrol's assault on her was news;
because she's a performing artist, breaking her arm like that has put
her out of work for a time, as well as being an awful thing in its own
right—it was extra culturally offensive, in quaddie eyes.”
“Oh, terrific.” Miles rubbed the bridge of his nose. It wasn't just his imagination; he did have a headache.
“Yes.
So the sight of Garnet Five at the ballet, chatting cordially with the
Barrayaran envoy, all forgiven and amicable, is worth what to you, in
propaganda points?”
“Ah ha!” He hesitated. “As
long as she doesn't end up flouncing out of my presence in a public
rage because I can't promise her anything yet about Corbeau. Tricky
situation, that one, and the boy's not being as smart as he could about
it.”
“She's apparently a person of strong emotions, but not stupid, or so I gather from Bel. I don't think
Bel would have coaxed me to let it arrange this in order to engineer a
public disaster . . . but perhaps you have reason to
think otherwise?”
“No . . .”
“Anyway, I'm sure you'll be able to handle Garnet Five. Just be your usual charming self.”
Ekaterin's
vision of him, he reminded himself, was not exactly objective. Thank
God. “I've been trying to charm quaddies all day, with no noticeable
success.”
“If you make it plain you like people,
it's hard for them to resist liking you back. And Nicol will be playing
in the orchestra tonight.”
“Oh.” He perked up. “That
will be worth hearing.” Ekaterin was shrewdly observant; he had no
doubt she had spent the afternoon picking up cultural vibrations that
went well beyond local fashions. The quaddie ballet it was. “Will you
wear your fancy new outfit?”
“That's why I bought
it. We honor the artists by dressing up for them. Now, skin back into
your House uniform. Bel will be along to collect us soon.”
“I'd
better stick to my dull grays. I have a feeling that parading
Barrayaran uniforms in front of the quaddies just now is a bad idea,
diplomatically speaking.”
“In Security Post Three,
probably. But there's no point in being seen enjoying their art if we
just look like any other anonymous downsiders. Tonight, I think we
should both look as Barrayaran as possible.”
His being seen with Ekaterin
was good for a few points, too, he rather fancied, although not so much
propaganda as pure swaggering one-upsmanship. He tapped his trouser
seam, where no sword hung. “Right.”
CHAPTER SIX
Bel arrived promptly at the Kestrel 's
hatch, having changed from its staid work uniform into a startling but
cheerful orange doublet with glinting, star-decorated blue sleeves,
slashed trousers bloused into cuffs at the knee, and color-coordinated
midnight-blue hose and friction boots. Variations of the style seemed
to be the local high fashion for both males and females, whether with
or without legs, judging by Greenlaw's less blinding outfit.
The
herm conducted them to a hushed and serene restaurant on the grav side
of the station with the usual transparent window-wall overlooking
station and starscape. An occasional tug or pod zipped silently past
outside, adding interest to the scene. Despite the gravitation, which
at least kept food on open plates, the place bowed to quaddie
architectural ideals by having tables set on their own private pillars
at varying heights, using all three dimensions of the room. Servers
flitted back and forth and up and down in floaters. The design pleased
everyone but Roic, who cranked his neck around in dismay, watching for
trouble in 3-D. But Bel, ever thoughtful, as well as trained in
security protocols, had provided Roic with his own perch above theirs,
with an overview of the whole room; Roic mounted to his eyrie looking
more reconciled.
Nicol was waiting for them at
their table, which commanded a superior view out the window-wall. Her
garments ran to form-fitting black knits and filmy rainbow scarves;
otherwise, her appearance was not much changed from when Miles had
first met her so many years and wormhole jumps ago. She was still slim,
graceful of movement even in her floater, with pure ivory skin and
short-clipped ebony hair, and her eyes still danced. She and Ekaterin
regarded each other with great interest, and fell at once into
conversation with very little prompting from Bel or Miles.
The
talk ranged widely as exquisite food appeared in a smooth stream,
presented by the place's well-trained and unobtrusive staff. Music,
gardening, and station bio-recycling techniques led to discussion of
quaddie population dynamics and the methods—technical, economic, and
political—for seeding new habitats in the growing necklace along the
asteroid belt. Only old war stories, by a silent, mutual agreement,
failed to trickle into the conversational flow.
When
Bel guided Ekaterin off to the lavatory between the last course and
dessert, Nicol watched her out of earshot, then leaned over and
murmured to Miles, “I am glad for you, Admiral Naismith.”
He
touched a finger briefly to his lips. “Be glad for Miles Vorkosigan. I
certainly am.” He hesitated, then asked, “Should I be equally glad for
Bel?”
Her smile crimped a little. “Only Bel knows.
I'm done with traveling the Nexus. I've found my place, home at last.
Bel seems happy here too, most of the time, but—well, Bel is a
downsider. They get itchy feet , I'm told. Bel talks about
making a commitment to the Union,
yet . . . somehow, never gets around to applying.”
“I'm sure Bel's interested in doing so,” Miles offered.
She
shrugged, and drained the last of her lemon drink; anticipating her
performance later, she had forgone the wine. “Maybe the secret of
happiness is to live for today, to never look ahead. Or maybe that's
just a habit of mind Bel got into in its former life. All that risk,
all that danger—it takes a certain sort to thrive on it. I'm not sure
Bel can change its nature, or how much it would hurt to try. Maybe too
much.”
“Mm,” said Miles. I can't offer them a false oath, or divided loyalties
, Bel had said. Even Nicol, apparently, was not aware of Bel's second
source of income—and hazard. “I do note, Bel could have found a
portmaster's berth in quite a few places. It traveled a very long way
to get one here, instead.”
Nicol's smile softened.
“That's so.” She added, “Do you know, when Bel arrived at Graf Station,
it still had that Betan dollar I'd paid you on Jackson's Whole tucked
in its wallet?”
Miles managed to stop the logical query, Are you sure it was the same one?
on his lips before it fell out of his mouth leaving room for his
downsider foot. One Betan dollar looked like any other. If Bel had
claimed it for the same one, when making Nicol's reacquaintance, who
was Miles to suggest otherwise? Not that much of a spoilsport, for damn
sure.
After dinner they made their way under Bel
and Nicol's guidance to the bubble-car system, its arteries of transit
recently retrofitted into the three-dimensional maze Graf Station had
grown to be. Nicol left her floater in a common rack on the passenger
platform. It took their car about ten minutes to wend through the
branching tubes to their destination; Miles's stomach lifted when they
crossed into the free fall side, and he made haste to slip his
antinausea meds from his pocket, swallow one, and offer them discreetly
to Ekaterin and Roic.
The entrance to the Madame
Minchenko Memorial Auditorium was neither large nor imposing, being
just one of several accessible airseal doorways on different levels of
the station here. Nicol kissed Bel and flitted off. No crowds yet
clogged the cylindrical corridors, as they'd come early to give Nicol
time to make her way backstage and change. Miles was therefore
unprepared for the vast chamber into which they floated.
It
was an enormous sphere. Nearly a third of its interior surface was a
round, transparent window-wall, the universe itself turned into
backdrop, thick with bright stars on this shaded side of the station.
Ekaterin grabbed his hand rather abruptly, and Roic made a small choked
noise. Miles had the sense of having swum inside a giant beehive, for
the rest of the wall was lined with hexagonal cells like a silver-edged
honeycomb filled with rainbow jewels. As they floated out toward the
middle the cells resolved into velvet-lined boxes for the audience,
varying in size from cozy niches for one patron to units spacious
enough for parties of ten, if the ten were quaddies, not trailing long
useless legs. Other sectors, interspersed, seemed to be dark, flat
panels of various shapes, or to contain other exits. He tried at first
to impose a sense of up and down upon the space, but then he blinked,
and the chamber seemed to rotate around the window, and then he wasn't
sure if he was looking up, down, or sideways through it. Down was a
particularly disturbing mental construction, as it gave the dizzy
impression of falling into a vast well of stars.
A
quaddie usher wearing an air-jet belt took them in tow, after they had
gawked their fill, and steered them gently wall-ward to their assigned
hexagon. It was lined with some dark, soft, sound-baffling padding and
convenient handgrips, and included its own lighting, the colored jewels
seen from afar.
A dark shape and a gleam of motion
in their generously sized box resolved itself, as they approached, as a
quaddie woman. She was slim and long-limbed, with fine white-blond hair
cut finger length and waving in an aureole around her head. It made
Miles think of mermaids of legend. Cheekbones to inspire men to duel
with each other, or perhaps scribble bad poetry, or drown in drink. Or
worse, desert their brigade. She was clothed in close-fitting black
velvet with a little white lace ruff at her throat. The cuff on the
lower right elbow of her softly pleated black velvet
pants . . . sleeve, Miles decided, not leg, had
been left unfastened to make room for a medical air-filled arm
immobilizer of a sort painfully familiar to Miles from his
fragile-boned youth. It was the only stiff, ungraceful thing about her,
a crude insult to the rest of the ensemble.
No
mistaking her for anyone other than Garnet Five, but he waited for Bel
to introduce them all properly, which Bel promptly did. They shook
hands all around; Miles found her grip athlete-firm.
“Thank you for obtaining these—” seats
did not apply, “this space for us on such short notice,” Miles said,
releasing her slim upper hand. “I understand we are to be privileged to
view some very fine work.” Work was a word with extra resonance in Quaddiespace, he had already gathered, like honor on Barrayar.
“My
pleasure, Lord Vorkosigan.” Her voice was melodious; her expression
seemed cool, almost ironic, but an underlying anxiety glowed in her
leaf-green eyes.
Miles opened his hand to indicate
her broken lower right arm. “May I convey my personal apologies for the
poor behavior of some of our men. They will be disciplined for it, when
we get them back. Please do not judge all Barrayarans by our worst
examples.” Well, she can't; we actually don't ship out our worst, Gregor be praised.
She
smiled briefly. “I do not, for I've also met your best.” The urgency in
her eyes tinged her voice. “Dmitri—what will happen to him?”
“Well,
that depends to a great extent on Dmitri.” Pitches, Miles suddenly
realized, could run two ways, here. “It could range, when he is
released and returns to duty, from a minor black mark on his record—he
wasn't supposed to remove his wrist com while on station leave, you
know, for just the sort of reason you unfortunately discovered—to a
very serious charge of attempted desertion, if he fails to withdraw his
request for political asylum before it is denied.”
Her jaw set a trifle. “Perhaps it won't be denied.”
“Even
if granted, the long-term consequences could be more complex than you
perhaps anticipate. He would at that point be plainly guilty of
desertion. He would be permanently exiled from his home, never able to
return or see his family. Barrayar might seem a world well lost now, in
the first flush of . . . emotion, but I think—I'm
sure—it's something he could come to deeply regret later.” He thought
of melancholy Baz Jesek, exiled for years over an even more badly
managed conflict. “There are other, if less speedy, ways Ensign Corbeau
might yet end up back here, if his desire to do so is true will and not
temporary whim. It would take a little more time, but be infinitely
less damaging—he's playing for the rest of his life with this, after
all.”
She frowned. “Won't the Barrayaran military have him shot, or horribly butchered, or—or assassinated?”
“We are not at war with the Union.” Yet, anyway
. It would take more heroic blundering than this to make that happen,
but he ought not to underestimate his fellow Barrayarans, he supposed.
And he didn't think Corbeau was politically important enough to
assassinate. So let's try to make sure he doesn't become so, eh? “He wouldn't be executed. But twenty years in jail is hardly better, from your point of view. You don't serve him or
yourself by encouraging him to this desertion. Let him return to duty,
serve out his hitch, get passage back. If you're both still of the same
mind then, continue your relationship without his unresolved legal
status poisoning your future together.”
Her
expression had grown still more grimly stubborn. He felt horribly like
some stodgy parent lecturing his angst-ridden teenager, but she was no
child. He'd have to ask Bel her age. Her grace and authority of motion
might be the results of her dancer's training. He remembered that they
were supposed to be looking cordial, so tried to soften his words with
a belated smile.
She said, “We wish to become partners. Permanently.”
After only two weeks of acquaintance, are you so sure?
He strangled this comment in his throat as Ekaterin's sideways glance
at him put him in mind of just how many days—or was it hours?—it had
taken him to fall in love with her. Granted, the permanently
part had taken longer. “I can certainly see why Corbeau would wish
that.” The reverse was more puzzling, of course. In both cases. He
himself did not find Corbeau lovable—his strongest emotion so far was a
deep desire to whack the ensign on the side of the head—but this woman
clearly didn't see him that way.
“Permanently?”
said Ekaterin doubtfully. “But . . . don't you
think you might wish to have children someday? Or might he?”
Garnet Five's expression grew hopeful. “We've talked about having children together. We're both interested.”
“Um, er,” said Miles. “Quaddies are not interfertile with downsiders, surely?”
“Well,
one has to make choices, before they go into the replicators, just as a
herm crossing with a monosexual has to choose whether to have the
genetics adjusted to produce a boy or a girl or a herm. Some
quaddie-downsider partnerships have quaddie children, some have
downsiders, some have some of each—Bel, show Lord Vorkosigan your baby
pictures!”
Miles's head swiveled around. “What?”
Bel
blushed and dug in its trouser pocket. “Nicol and
I . . . when we went to the geneticist for
counseling, they ran a projection of all the possible combinations, to
help us choose.” The herm held up a holocube and turned it on. Six
full-length still shots of children sprang into being above its hand.
They were all frozen in their early teens, with the sense of adult
features just starting to emerge from childhood's roundness. They had
Bel's eyes, Nicol's jawline, hair a brownish black with that familiar
swipe of a forelock. A boy, a girl, and a herm with legs; a boy, a
girl, and a herm quaddie.
“Oh,” said Ekaterin, reaching for it. “How interesting .”
“The
facial features are just an electronic blend of Nicol's and mine, not a
genuine genetic projection,” Bel explained, willingly giving the cube
to her. “For that, they'd need an actual cell from a real conceptus,
which, of course, they can't have till a real one is made for the
genetic modifications.”
Ekaterin turned the array
back and forth, examining the portraits from all angles. Miles, looking
over her shoulder, told himself firmly that it was probably just as
well that his holovid of the blandly blastular Aral Alexander and Helen
Natalia was still in his luggage back aboard the Kestrel . But maybe later he would have a chance to show Bel—
“Have you two finally decided what you want?” asked Garnet Five.
“A
little quaddie girl, to start. Like Nicol.” Bel's face softened, then,
abruptly, recovered its habitual ironic smile. “Assuming I take the
plunge and apply for my Union citizenship.”
Miles
imagined Garnet Five and Dmitri Corbeau with a string of handsome,
athletic quaddie children. Or Bel and Nicol, with a clutch of smart,
musical ones. It made his head spin. Roic, looking quietly boggled,
shook his head at Ekaterin's profferment of a closer examination of the
holo-array.
“Ah,” said Bel. “The show's about to
start.” The herm retrieved the holocube and switched it off, and
plunged it back safely deep in the pocket of its baggy blue knee
breeches, carefully fastening the flap.
The
auditorium had filled to capacity while they spoke, the honeycomb of
cells now harboring an attentive crowd including a fair smattering of
other downsiders, though whether Union citizen or galactic visitor
Miles could not always tell. No green Barrayaran uniforms tonight, in
any case. The lights dimmed; the hubbub quieted, and a few last
quaddies sped across to their boxes and settled in. A couple of
downsiders who had misjudged their momentum and were stranded in the
middle were rescued by the ushers and towed to their box, earning a
quiet snicker from the quaddies who noticed. An electric tension filled
the air, the odd blend of hope and fear that any live performance bore,
with its risk of imperfection, chance of greatness. The lights dimmed
further, till only the blue-white starshine glinted off the chamber's
array of now-crowded cells.
Lights flared, an
exuberant fountain of red and orange and gold, and from all sides, the
performers flowed in. Thundered in. Quaddie males, athletic and vastly enthusiastic, in skin-fitting ship knits made splendid with glitter. Drumming .
I wasn't expecting hand drums.
Other free fall performances Miles had seen, whether dance or
gymnastic, had been eerily silent except for the music and sound
effects. Quaddies made their own noise, and still had hands left to
play hands-across; the drummers met in the middle, clasped, gripped,
exchanged momentum, turned, and doubled back in a shifting pattern. Two
dozen men in free fall took up perfect station in the center of the
spherical auditorium, their motion so controlled as to permit no
sideways drift as the energy of their spins and duckings, twistings and
turnings, flowed through their bodies one to another and on around
again. The air pulsed with the rhythm of their drumming: drums of all
sizes, round, oblong, two-headed; not only played by each holder, but
some batted back and forth among them in an eye-and-ear-stunning cross
between music and juggling, never missing a beat or a blow. The lights
danced. Reflections spattered on the walls, picking out flashes from
the boxes of upraised hands, arms, bright cloth, jewelry, entranced
faces.
Then, from another entrance, a dozen female
quaddies all in blues and greens geysered up into the growing, geodesic
pattern and joined the dance. All Miles could think was, Whoever first brought castanets to Quaddiespace has much to answer for.
They added a laughing descant note to the percussive braid of sound:
hand drums and castanets, no other instruments. None needed. The round
chamber reverberated, fairly rocked. He stole a glance sideways;
Ekaterin's lips were parted, her eyes wide and shining, drinking in all
this booming splendor without reserve.
Miles
considered Barrayaran marching bands. It wasn't enough that humans did
something so difficult as learning to play a musical instrument. Then
they had to do it in groups . While walking around. In complicated patterns . And then they competed with one another to do it even better
. Excellence, this kind of excellence, could never have any sane
economic justification. It had to be done for the honor of one's
country, or one's people, or the glory of God. For the joy of being
human.
The piece ran for twenty minutes, until the
players were gasping and sweat spun off them in tiny drops to speed in
sparking streaks into the darkness, and still they whirled and
thundered. Miles had to stop himself from hyperventilating in sympathy,
heartbeat synchronized with their rhythms. Then, one last grand blast
of joyous noise—and somehow the shifting net of four-armed men and
women resolved itself into two chains, which flowed away into the exits
from which they had emerged a revelation ago.
Darkness
again. The silence was like a blow; behind him, Miles heard Roic exhale
reverently, longingly, like a man home from war easing himself into his
own bed for the first time.
The applause—hand-clapping, of course—rocked the room. No one in the Barrayaran party, Miles thought, had to pretend enthusiasm for quaddie culture now.
The
chamber hushed again as the orchestra emerged from four points and
filtered into positions all around the great window. The half-a-hundred
quaddies bore a more standard array of instruments—all acoustic,
Ekaterin observed to him in a fascinated whisper. They spotted Nicol,
assisted by two more quaddies who helped manage and secure her harp,
which was nearly the usual shape for a harp, and her double-sided
hammer dulcimer, appearing to be a dull oblong box from this angle. But
the piece that followed included a solo section for her with the
dulcimer, her ivory face picked out in spotlights, and the music that
poured forth between her four flashing hands was anything but dull.
Radiantly ethereal; heartbreaking; electrifying.
Bel
must have seen this dozens of times, Miles guessed, but the herm was
surely as entranced as any newcomer. It wasn't just a lover's smile
that illuminated Bel's eyes. Yes. You would not be loving her properly if you did not also love her improvident, lavish, spendthrift excellence.
No jealous lover, greedy and selfish, could hoard it all; it had to be
poured forth upon the world, or burst its wellspring. He glanced at
Ekaterin and thought of her glorious gardens, much missed back on
Barrayar. I shall not keep you away from them much longer, love, I promise.
There
was a brief pause, while quaddie stagehands arranged a few mysterious
poles and bars sticking in at odd angles around the interior of the
sphere. Garnet Five, floating sideways with respect to Miles, murmured
over her shoulder, “Coming up is the piece I usually dance. It's an
excerpt from a larger work, Aljean's classic ballet The Crossing
, which tells the story of our people's migration through the Nexus to
Quaddiespace. It's the love duet between Leo and Silver. I dance
Silver. I hope my understudy doesn't muck it up . . .”
She trailed off as the overture swelled.
Two
figures, a downsider male and a blond quaddie woman, floated in from
opposite sides of the space, picked up momentum with hand-spins around
a couple of the poles, and met in the middle. No drums this time, just
sweet, liquid sound from the orchestra. The Leo character's legs
trailed uselessly, and it took Miles a moment to realize that he was
being played by a quaddie dancer with dummy legs. The woman's use of
angular momentum, drawing in or extending various arms as she twirled
or spun, was brilliantly controlled, her changes of trajectory around
the various poles precise. Only a few indrawn breaths and critical
mutters from Garnet Five suggested anything less than perfection to
Miles's perceptions. The false-legged fellow was deliberately clumsy,
earning a chuckle from the quaddie audience. Miles shifted
uncomfortably, realizing he was watching a near-parody of how
downsiders looked to quaddie eyes. But the woman's charming gestures of
assistance made it seem more endearing than cruel. Bel, grinning,
leaned over to murmur in Miles's ear, “It's all right. Leo Graf's
supposed to dance like an engineer. He was.”
The
love angle of it all was clear enough. Affairs between quaddies and
downsiders apparently had a long and honorable history. It occurred to
Miles that certain aspects of his youth might have been rendered much
easier if Barrayar had possessed a repertoire of romantic tales
starring short, crippled heroes, instead of mutie villains. If this was
a fair sample, it was clear that Garnet Five was culturally primed to
play Juliet to her Barrayaran Romeo. But let's not enact a tragedy this time, eh?
The
enchanting piece drew to a climax, and the two dancers saluted the
enthusiastically clapping audience before making their way out. The
lights came up; break time. Performance art was fundamentally
constrained, Miles realized, by biology, in this case the capacity of
the human bladder, whether downsider or quaddie.
When
they all rendezvoused again in their box, he found Garnet Five
explaining quaddie naming conventions to Ekaterin.
“No,
it's not a surname,” said Garnet Five. “When quaddies were first made
by the GalacTech Corporation, there were only one thousand of us. Each
had just one given name, plus a numerical designation, and with so few,
each name was unique. When our ancestors fled to their freedom, they
altered what the numbers coded, but kept the system of single, unique
names, tracked in a register. With all of old Earth's languages to draw
on, it was several generations before the system really began to be
strained. The waiting lists for the really popular names were insanely
long. So they voted to allow duplication, but only if the name had a
numerical suffix, so we could always tell every Leo from every other
Leo. When you die, your name-number goes back in the registry to be
drawn again.”
“I have a Leo Ninety-nine in my
Docks and Locks crew,” said Bel. “It's the highest number I've run
across yet. Lower numbers, or none, seem to be preferred.”
“I've
never run across any of the other Garnets,” said Garnet Five. “There
were eight altogether somewhere in the Union, last time I looked it up.”
“I'll bet there will be more,” said Bel. “And it'll be your fault.”
Garnet Five laughed. “I can wish!”
The
second half of the show was as impressive as the first. During one of
the musical interludes, Nicol had an exquisite harp part. There were
two more large group dances, one abstract and mathematical, the other
narrative, apparently based on a tragic pressurization disaster of a
prior generation. The finale put everyone out in the middle, for a last
vigorous, dizzying whirl, with drummers, castanet players, and
orchestra combining in musical support that could only be described as
massive.
It felt to Miles as though the
performance ended all too soon, but his chrono told him four hours had
passed in this dream. He bade a grateful but noncommittal farewell to
Garnet Five. As Bel and Nicol escorted the three Barrayarans back to
the Kestrel in the bubble car, he reflected on how cultures
told their stories to themselves, and so defined themselves. Above all,
the ballet celebrated the quaddie body. Surely no downsider could walk
out of the quaddie ballet still imagining the four-armed people as
mutated, crippled, or otherwise disadvantaged or inferior. One might
even—as Corbeau had demonstrated—walk out having free-fallen in love.
Not
that all crippling damage was visible to the eye. All this exuberant
athleticism reminded him to check his brain chemical levels before bed,
and see how soon his next seizure was likely to be.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Miles woke from a sound sleep to tapping on his
cabin door. “M'lord?” came Roic's hushed voice. “Admiral Vorpatril
wants to talk with you. He's on the secured comconsole in the wardroom.”
Whatever
inspiration his backbrain might have floated up to his consciousness in
the drowsy interlude between sleep and waking flitted away beyond
recall. Miles groaned and swung out of his bunk. Ekaterin's hand
extended from the top bunk, and she peeked over blearily at him; he
touched it and whispered, “Go back to sleep, love.” She snuffled
agreeably and rolled over.
Miles ran his hands
through his hair, grabbed his gray jacket, shrugged it on over his
underwear, and padded out barefoot into the corridor. As the airseal
door hissed closed behind him, he checked his chrono. Since
Quaddiespace didn't have to deal with inconvenient planetary rotations,
they kept a single time zone throughout local space, to which Miles and
Ekaterin had supposedly adjusted on the trip in. All right, so it
wasn't the middle of the night, it was early morning.
Miles
sat at the wardroom table, straightened his jacket and fastened it to
the neck, and touched the control on his station chair. Admiral
Vorpatril's face and torso appeared over the vid plate. He was awake,
dressed, shaved, and had a coffee cup at his right hand, the
rat-bastard.
Vorpatril shook his head, lips tight. “How the hell did you know?” he demanded.
Miles squinted. “I beg your pardon?”
“I just got back the report on Solian's blood sample from my chief surgeon. It was manufactured, probably within twenty-four hours of its being spilled on the deck.”
“Oh.” Hell and damnation. “That's . . . unfortunate.”
“But
what does it mean? Is the man still alive somewhere? I'd have sworn he
wasn't a deserter, but maybe Brun was right.”
Like
the stopped clock, even idiots could be correct sometimes. “I'll have
to think about this. It doesn't actually prove if Solian's alive or
dead, either way. It doesn't even, necessarily, prove that he wasn't
killed there , just not by getting his throat cut.”
Armsman
Roic, God bless and keep him forever, set a cup of steaming coffee down
by Miles's elbow and withdrew to his station by the door. Miles cleared
his mouth, if not his mind, with the first sluicing swallow, and took a
second sip to buy a moment to think.
Vorpatril had
a head start on both coffee and calculation. “Should we report this to
Chief Venn? Or . . . not?”
Miles
made a dubious noise in his throat. His one diplomatic edge, the only
thing that had given him, so to speak, a leg to stand on here, had been
the possibility that Solian had been murdered by an unknown quaddie.
This was now rendered even more problematic, it seemed. “The blood had
to have been manufactured somewhere. If you have the right equipment,
it's easy, and if you don't, it's impossible. Find all such equipment
on station—or aboard ships in dock—and the place it was done has to be
one of 'em. The place plus the time should lead to the people. Process
of elimination. It's the sort of footwork . . .” Miles
hesitated, but went on, “that the local police are better equipped to
carry out than we are. If they can be trusted.”
“Trust the quaddies? Hardly!”
“What motivation do they have to lie or misdirect us?” What, indeed?
“I have to work through Greenlaw and Venn. I have no authority on Graf
Station in my own right.” Well, there was Bel, but he had to use Bel
sparingly or risk the herm's cover.
He wanted the
truth. Ruefully, he recognized that he also would prefer to have a
monopoly on it, at least until he had time to figure out how best to
play for Barrayar's interests. Yet if the truth doesn't serve us, what does that say about us, eh?
He rubbed his stubbled chin. “It does clearly prove that whatever
happened in that freight bay, whether murder or cover-up, was carefully
planned, and not spontaneous. I'll undertake to speak with Greenlaw and
Venn about it. Talking to the quaddies is my job now, anyway.” For my sins, presumably. What god did I piss off this time? “Thank you, Admiral, and thank your fleet surgeon from me for a good job.”
Vorpatril gave a grudgingly pleased nod at this acknowledgment, and Miles cut the com.
“Dammit,”
he muttered querulously, frowning into the blank space. “Why didn't
anyone pick up this information on the first pass? It's not my job to be a bloody forensic pathologist.”
“I expect,” began Armsman Roic, and stopped. “Uh . . . was that a question, m'lord?”
Miles swung around in his station chair. “A rhetorical one, but do you have an answer?”
“Well,
m'lord,” said Roic diffidently. “It's about the size of things here.
Graf Station is a pretty big space habitat, but it's really a kind of a
small city, by Barrayaran standards. And all these spacer types tend to
be pretty law-abiding, in certain ways. All those safety rules. I don't
imagine they get many murders here.”
“How
many did you used to get in Hassadar?” Graf Station boasted fifty
thousand or so residents; the Vorkosigans' District capital's
population was approaching half a million, these days.
“Maybe
one or two a month, on average. They didn't come in smoothly. Seems
there'd be a run of 'em, then a quiet period. More in the summer than
the winter, except around Winterfair. Got a lot of multiples then. Most
of 'em weren't mysteries , of course. But even in Hassadar
there weren't enough really odd ones to keep our forensics folks in
practice, y'see. Our medical people were part-timers from the District
University, mostly, on call. If we ever got anything really strange,
we'd call in one of Lord Vorbohn's homicide investigators from Vorbarr
Sultana. They must get a murder every day or so up there—all sorts,
lots of experience. I'll bet Chief Venn doesn't even have a forensics
department, just some quaddie doctors he taps once in a while. So I
wouldn't expect them to be, um, up to ImpSec standards like what you're used to. M'lord.”
“That's . . . an
interesting point, Armsman. Thank you.” Miles took another swallow of
his coffee. “Solian . . .” he said thoughtfully. “I
don't know enough about Solian yet. Did he have enemies? Damn it,
didn't the man have even one friend? Or a lover? If he was killed, was it for personal or for professional reasons? It makes a huge difference.”
Miles
had glanced through Solian's military record on the inbound leg, and
found it unexceptionable. If the man had ever been to Quaddiespace
before, it wasn't since he'd joined the Imperial service six years
previously. He'd had two prior voyages, with different fleet
consortiums and different military escorts; his experiences had
apparently included nothing more exciting than handling an occasional
inebriated crewman or belligerent passenger.
On
average, more than half the military personnel on any tour of nexus
escort duty would be new to each other. If Solian had made friends—or
enemies—in the weeks since this fleet had departed Komarr, they almost
had to have been on the Idris . If his disappearance had been
closer to the time of the fleet's arrival in Quaddiespace, Miles would
have pegged the professional possibilities to the Idris as well, but the ten days in dock was plenty of time for a nosy security man to find trouble stationside, too.
He
drained his cup and punched up Chief Venn's number on the station-chair
console. The quaddie security commander had also arrived early to work,
apparently. His personal office was evidently on the free fall side of
things. He appeared floating sideways to Miles in the vid view, a
coffee bulb clutched in his upper right hand. He murmured a polite,
“Good morning, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan,” but undercut the verbal
courtesy by not righting himself with respect to Miles, who had to
exert a conscious effort to keep from tilting out of his chair. “What
can I do for you?”
“Several things, but first, a question. When was the last murder on Graf Station?”
Venn's brows twitched. “There was one about seven years ago.”
“And, ah, before that?”
“Three years before, I believe.”
A veritable crime wave . “Did you have charge of those investigations?”
“Well,
they were before my time—I became security chief for Graf Station about
five years back. But there wasn't that much to investigate. Both
suspects were downsider transients—one killed another downsider, the
other murdered a quaddie he'd got into some stupid dispute over a
payment with. Guilt confirmed by witnesses and fast-penta
interrogation. It's almost always downsiders in these affairs, I
notice.”
“Have you ever investigated a mysterious killing before?”
Venn
righted himself, apparently in order to frown more effectively at
Miles. “I and my people are fully trained in the appropriate
procedures, I assure you.”
“I'm afraid I must
reserve judgment on that point, Chief Venn. I have some rather curious
news. I had the Barrayaran fleet surgeon reexamine Solian's blood
sample. It appears that the blood in question was artificially
produced, presumably using an initial specimen or template of Solian's
real blood or tissue. You may wish to have your forensics
people—whoever they are—retest your own archived evidence from the
freight bay and confirm this.”
Venn's frown deepened. “Then . . . he was a deserter—not murdered after all! No wonder we couldn't find a body!”
“You
run—you hurry ahead, I believe. I grant you the scenario has grown
extremely murky. My request, then, is that you locate all possible
facilities on Graf Station where such a tissue synthesis could be
carried out, and see if there is any record of such a batch being run
off, and who for. Or if it could have been slipped through off the
record, for that matter. I think we can safely assume that whoever had
it done, Solian or some unknown, was keenly interested in concealment.
The surgeon reports the blood likely was generated not much more than a
day before it was spilled, but the inquiry had better be run back to
the time the Idris first docked, to be sure.”
“I . . . follow
your logic, certainly.” Venn held his coffee bulb to his mouth and
squeezed, then transferred it absently to his lower left hand. “Yes,
certainly,” he echoed himself more faintly. “I'll see to it myself.”
Miles
felt satisfied that he'd rocked Venn off-balance to just the right
degree to embarrass him into effective action, yet not freeze him into
defensiveness. “Thank you.”
Venn added, “I believe Sealer Greenlaw wished to speak with you this morning, also, Lord Vorkosigan.”
“Very well. You may transfer my call to her, if you please.”
Greenlaw
was a morning person, it appeared, or else had drunk her coffee
earlier. She appeared in the holovid dressed in a different elaborate
doublet, stern, and fully awake. Perhaps more by diplomatic habit than
any desire to please, she twitched herself around right-side-up to
Miles.
“Good morning, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan. In
response to their petitions, I have arranged you an appointment with
the Komarran fleet's stranded passengers at ten-hundred. You may meet
with them to answer their questions at the larger of the two hostels
where they are presently housed. Portmaster Thorne will meet you at
your ship and conduct you there.”
Miles's head
jerked back at this cavalier arrangement of his time and attention. Not
to mention blatant pressure move. On the other
hand . . . this delivered him a room full
of suspects, just the people he wished to study. He split the
difference between irritation and eagerness by remarking blandly, “Nice
of you to let me know. Just what is it that you imagine I will be able
to tell them?”
“That, I must leave to you. These people came in with you Barrayarans; they are your responsibility.”
“Madam,
if that were so, they would all be on their way already. There can be
no responsibility without power. It is the Union authorities who have
placed them under this house arrest, and therefore the Union
authorities who must free them.”
“When you finish
settling the fines, costs, and charges your people have incurred here,
we will be only too happy to do so.”
Miles smiled
thinly, and laced his hands together on the tabletop. He wished the
only new card he had to play this morning were less ambiguous.
Nevertheless, he repeated to her the news about Solian's manufactured
blood sample, well-larded with complaint about quaddie Security not
having determined this peculiar fact earlier. She bounced it back
instantly, as Venn had, as evidence more supporting of desertion than
murder.
“Fine,” said Miles. “Then have Union
Security produce the man. A foreign downsider wandering about in
Quaddiespace can't be that hard for a competent police force to locate. Assuming they're actually trying.”
“Quaddiespace,” she sniffed back, “is not a totalitarian
polity. As your Lieutenant Solian may perhaps have observed. Our
guarantees of freedom of movement and personal privacy could well have
been what attracted him to separate himself here from his former
comrades.”
“So why hasn't he asked for asylum like
Ensign Corbeau? No. I greatly fear what we have here is not a missing
man, but a missing corpse. The dead cannot cry out for justice; it is a
duty of the living to do so for them. And that is a responsibility of mine for mine, madam.”
They
closed the conversation on that note; Miles could only hope he'd made
her morning as aggravating as she'd made his. He cut the com and rubbed
the back of his neck. “Gah. That ties me down for the rest of
the day, I'll bet.” He glanced up at Roic, whose guard stance by the
door had segued into at ease, his shoulders propped against the wall.
“Roic.”
Roic quickly drew himself upright. “My lord?”
“Have you ever conducted a criminal investigation?”
“Well . . . I
was just a street guard, mostly. But I got to go along and help the
senior officers on a few fraud and assault cases. And one kidnapping.
We got her back alive. Several missing persons. Oh, and about a dozen
murders, though like I said, they weren't hardly mysteries. And the
series of arsons that time that—”
“Right.” Miles
waved a hand to stem this gentle tide of reminiscence. “I want you to
do the detail work for me on Solian. First, the timetable. I want you
to find out every documented thing the man did. His watch reports,
where he was, what he ate, when he slept—and who with, if anyone—minute
by minute, or as nearly as you can come to it, from the time of his
disappearance right on back as far as you can take it. Especially any
movements off the ship, and missing time. And then I want the personal
slant—talk to the crew and captain of the Idris , try to find
out anything you can about the fellow. I take it I don't need to give
you the lecture on the difference between fact, conjecture, and
hearsay?”
“No, m'lord. But . . .”
“Vorpatril
and Brun will give you full cooperation and access, I promise you. Or
if they don't, let me know.” Miles smiled a bit grimly.
“It's
not that, m'lord. Who'll run your personal security on Graf Station if
I'm off poking around Admiral Vorpatril's fleet?”
Miles managed to swallow his airy, I won't need a bodyguard
, upon the reflection that by his own pet theory, a desperate murderer
might be floating around, possibly literally, on the station. “I'll
have Captain Thorne with me.”
Roic looked dubious.
“I can't approve, m'lord. He's—it's—not even Barrayaran. What do you
really know about, um, the portmaster?”
“Lots,” Miles assured him. Well, I used to, anyway. He placed his hands on the table and pushed to his feet. “Solian, Roic. Find me Solian. Or his trail of breadcrumbs, or something .”
“I'll try, m'lord.”
* * *
Back
in what he was starting to think of as their cabinet, Miles encountered
Ekaterin returning from the shower, dressed again in her red tunic and
leggings. They maneuvered for a kiss, and he said, “I've acquired an
involuntary appointment. I have to go stationside almost immediately.”
“You will remember to put on pants?”
He glanced down at his bare legs. “Planned to, yeah.”
Her eyes danced. “You looked abstracted. I thought it would be safer to ask.”
He grinned. “I wonder how strangely I could behave before the quaddies would say anything?”
“Judging
by some of the stories my Uncle Vorthys tells me of the Imperial
Auditors of past generations, a lot stranger than that.”
“No,
I'm afraid it would only be our loyal Barrayarans who'd have to bite
their tongues.” He captured her hand and rubbed it enticingly. “Want to
come along with me?”
“Doing what?” she asked, with commendable suspicion.
“Telling
the trade fleet's galactic passengers I can't do a damned thing for
them, they're stuck till Greenlaw shifts, thank you very much, have a
pleasant day.”
“That sounds . . . really unrewarding.”
“That would be my best guess.”
“A
Countess is by law and tradition something of an assistant Count. An
Auditor's wife, however, is not an assistant Auditor,” she said in a
firm tone, reminiscent to Miles's ear of her aunt—Professora Vorthys
was herself an Auditor's spouse of some experience. “Nicol and Garnet
Five made arrangements to take me out this morning and show me quaddie
horticulture. If you don't mind, I think I'll stick to my original
plan.” She softened this sensible refusal with another kiss.
A
flash of guilt made him grimace. “Graf Station is not exactly what we
had in mind for a honeymoon diversion, I'm afraid.”
“Oh, I'm having a good time. You're
the one who has to deal with all the difficult people.” She made a
face, and he was reminded again of her tendency to default to extreme
reserve when painfully overwhelmed. He did fancy that it happened less
often, these days. Her growing confidence and ease with the role of
Lady Vorkosigan had been his secret delight to watch develop, this past
year and a half. “Maybe, if you're free by lunch, we can rendezvous and
you can vent at me,” she added, rather in the tone of one offering a
trade of hostages. “But not if I have to remind you to chew and
swallow.”
“Only the carpet.” This won a snicker; a
good-bye kiss, as he headed off to the shower, eased his heart in
advance. He reflected that while he might feel lucky that she'd agreed
to come with him to Quaddiespace, everyone on Graf Station from
Vorpatril and Greenlaw on down was much luckier.
* * *
The
crews of all four Komarran ships now locked into their docking cradles
had been herded into one hostel, and held there under close arrest. The
quaddie authorities had feigned not to charge the passengers, an odd
lot of galactic businesspeople who, with their goods, had joined the
convoy for various segments of its route as the most economical
transport going their way. But of course, they could not be left aboard
unmanned vessels, and so perforce had been removed to two other, more
luxurious, hostels.
In theory, the erstwhile
passengers were made free of the station with no more onerous
requirement than to sign in and out with a couple of quaddie Security
guards—armed with stunners only, Miles noted in passing—watching the
hostel doors. It wasn't even that the passengers couldn't legally leave
Quaddiespace—except that the cargoes most had been shepherding were
still impounded aboard their respective ships. And so they were held on
the principle of the monkey with its hand trapped in the jar of nuts,
unwilling to let go of what they could not withdraw. The “luxury” of
the hostel translated into another quaddie punishment, since the
mandatory stay was being charged to the Komarran fleet corporation.
The
hostel's lobby was faux-grandiose, to Miles's eye, with a high domed
ceiling simulating a morning sky with drifting clouds that probably
cycled through sunrise, sunset, and night with the day-cycle. Miles
wondered which planet's constellations were displayed, or if they could
be varied to flatter the transients du jour. The large open space was
circled by a second-story balcony given over to a lounge, restaurant,
and bar where patrons could meet, greet, and eat. In the center an
array of drum-shaped fluted marble pillars, waist-high, supported a
long double-curved sheet of thick glass that in turn held a large and
complex live floral display. Where did they grow such flowers on Graf
Station? Was Ekaterin viewing the source of them even now?
In
addition to the usual lift tubes, a wide curving staircase led from the
lobby down to the conference level. Bel guided Miles down it to a more
utilitarian meeting room in the level below.
They
found the chamber crammed with about eighty irate individuals of what
seemed every race, dress, planetary origin, and gender in the Nexus.
Galactic traders with a keenly honed sense of the value of their time,
and no Barrayaran cultural inhibitions about Imperial Auditors, they
unleashed several days of accumulated frustrations upon Miles the
moment he stepped to the front and turned to face them. Fourteen
languages were handled by nineteen different brands of
auto-translators, several of which, Miles decided, must have been
purchased at close-out prices from makers going deservedly belly-up.
Not that his answers to their barrage of questions were any special tax
on the translators—what seemed ninety percent of them came up either,
“I don't know yet,” or “Ask Sealer Greenlaw.” The fourth iteration of
this latter litany was finally met with a heartrending wail, in chorus,
from the back of the room of, “But Greenlaw said to ask you !”, except for the translation device that came up a beat later with, “Lawn rule sea-hunter inquiring altitude unit!”
Miles
did get Bel to quietly point out to him the men who had attempted to
bribe the portmaster into releasing their wares. Then he asked all
passengers from the Idris who had ever met Lieutenant Solian to
stay and debrief their experiences to him. This actually seemed to
foster some illusion of Authority Doing Something, and the rest
shuffled out merely grumbling.
An exception was an
individual Miles's eye placed, after an uncertain pause, as a Betan
hermaphrodite. Tall for a herm, the age suggested by its silver hair
and eyebrows was belied by its firm posture and fluid movements. If a
Barrayaran, Miles would have pegged the individual as a healthy and
athletic sixty—which probably meant it had achieved its Betan century.
A long sarong in a dark, conservative print, a high-necked shirt and
long-sleeved jacket against what a Betan would doubtless interpret as
the station chill, and fine leather sandals completed an
expensive-looking ensemble in the Betan style. The handsome features
were aquiline, the eyes dark, liquid, and sharply observant. Such
extraordinary elegance seemed something Miles should remember, but he
could not bring his dim sense of familiarity into focus. Damn
cryo-freeze—he couldn't guess if it was a true memory, smudged as too
many had been by the neural traumas of the revival process, or a false
one, even more distorted.
“Portmaster Thorne?” said the herm in a soft alto.
“Yes?”
Bel too, unsurprisingly, studied a fellow-Betan with special interest.
Despite the herm's dignified age, its beauty drew admiration, and Miles
was amused to note Bel's glance go to the customary Betan earring
hanging in its left lobe. Disappointingly, it was of the style that
coded, Romantically attached, not looking .
“I'm afraid I have a special problem with my cargo.”
Bel's
expression returned to bland, preparing no doubt to hear yet another
woeful story, with or without bribes.
“I am a passenger on the Idris
. I'm transporting several hundred genetically engineered animal
fetuses in uterine replicators, which require periodic servicing. The
servicing is due again. I really cannot put it off much longer. If they
are not cared for, my creatures may be damaged or even die.” One
long-fingered hand pulled on the other, nervously. “Worse, they are
nearing term. I really didn't expect such a long delay in my travels.
If I am held here very much longer, they will have to be decanted or
destroyed, and I will lose all the value of my cargo and of my time.”
“What kind of animals?” Miles asked curiously.
The tall herm glanced down at him. “Sheep and goats, mostly. Some other specialty items.”
“Mm.
I suppose you could threaten to turn them loose on the station, and
force the quaddies to deal with 'em. Several hundred custom-colored
baby lambs running around the loading bays . . .” This
earned an extremely dry look from Portmaster Thorne, and Miles
continued smoothly, “But I trust it won't come to that.”
“I'll submit your petition to Boss Watts,” said Bel. “Your name, honorable herm?”
“Ker Dubauer.”
Bel bowed slightly. “Wait here. I'll return shortly.”
As
Bel moved off to make a vid call in private, Dubauer, smiling faintly,
murmured, “Thank you so much for assisting me, Lord Vorkosigan.”
“No trouble.” Brow wrinkling, Miles added, “Have we ever met?”
“No, my lord.”
“Hm. Oh, well. When you were aboard the Idris , did you encounter Lieutenant Solian?”
“The
poor young male everyone thought had deserted, but now it seems not? I
saw him going about his duties. I never spoke with him at any length,
to my regret.”
Miles considered imparting his news
about the synthetic blood, then decided to hold that close for a little
while. There might yet prove some better, cleverer thing to do with it
than unleash it with the rest of the rumors. Some half dozen other
passengers from the Idris had shuffled forward during this conversation, waiting to volunteer their own experiences of the missing lieutenant.
The
brief interviews were of dubious value. A bold murderer would surely
lie, but a smart one might simply not come forward at all. Three of the
passengers were wary and curt, but dutifully precise. The others were
eager and full of theories to share, none consonant with the blood on
the docking bay deck being a plant. Miles wistfully considered the
charms of a wholesale fast-penta interview of every passenger and crew
person aboard the Idris . Another task Venn, or Vorpatril, or
both together should have done already, dammit. Alas, the quaddies had
tedious rules about such invasive methods. These transients on Graf
Station were off-limits to the more abrupt Barrayaran interrogation
techniques; and the Barrayaran military personnel, with whose minds
Miles might make free, were much farther down his current list of
suspects. The Komarran civilian crew was a more ambiguous case,
Barrayaran subjects now on quaddie—well, not soil—and under quaddie
custody.
While this was going forth, Bel returned
to Dubauer, waiting quietly by the side of the room with its hands
folded, and murmured, “I can personally escort you aboard the Idris to service your cargo as soon as the Lord Auditor is finished here.”
Miles
cut short the last crime-theory enthusiast and sent him on his way.
“I'm done,” he announced. He glanced at the chrono in his wrist com.
Could he catch up with Ekaterin for lunch? It seemed doubtful, by this
hour, but on the other hand, she could spend unimaginable amounts of
time looking at vegetation, so maybe there was still a chance.
The
three exited the conference chamber together and mounted the broad
stairs to the spacious lobby. Neither Miles nor, he supposed, Bel ever
entered a room without running a visual sweep of every possible vantage
for aim, a legacy of years of unpleasant shared learning experiences.
Thus it was that they spotted, simultaneously, the figure on the
balcony opposite hoisting a strange oblong box onto the railing.
Dubauer followed his glance, eyes widening in astonishment.
Miles
had a flashing impression of dark eyes in a milky face beneath a mop of
brass-blond curls, staring down intently at him. He and Bel, on either
side of Dubauer, reached spontaneously and together for the startled
Betan's arms and flung themselves forward. Bright bursts from the box
chattered with a loud, echoing, tapping noise. Blood spattered from
Dubauer's cheek as the herm was yanked along; something like a swarm of
angry bees seemed to pass directly over Miles's head. Then they were,
all three, sliding on their stomachs to cover behind the wide marble
drums holding the flowers. The bees seemed to follow them; pellets of
safety glass exploded in all directions, and chips of marble fountained
in a wide spray. A vast vibrato filled the room, shook the air, the
thunderous thrumming noise sliced with screams and cries.
Miles,
trying to raise his head for a quick glance, was crushed down again by
Bel diving over the intervening Betan and landing on him in a
smothering clutch. He could only hear the aftermath: more yells, the
sudden cessation of the hammering, a heavy clunk . A woman's
voice sobbed and hiccoughed in the startling silence, then was choked
down to a spasmodic gulping. His hand jerked at a soft, cool kiss, but
it was only a few last shredded leaves and flower petals sifting gently
down out of the air to settle all around them.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Miles said in a muffled voice, “Bel, will you please get off my head?”
There
was a brief pause. Then Bel rolled away and, cautiously, sat up, head
hunched into collar. “Sorry,” said Bel gruffly. “Thought for a moment
there I was about to lose you. Again.”
“Don't
apologize.” Miles, his heart still racing and his mouth very dry,
pushed up and sat, his back pressed to a now-shorter marble drum. He
spread his fingers to touch the cool synthetic stone of the floor. A
little beyond the narrow, irregular arc of space shielded by the table
pillars, dozens of deep gouges scored the pavement. Something small and
bright and brassy rolled past, and Miles's hand reached for it, then
sprang back at its branding heat.
The elderly
herm, Dubauer, also sat up, hand going to pat its face where blood
trickled. Miles's glance took quick inventory: no other hits,
apparently. He shifted and drew his Vorkosigan-monogrammed handkerchief
from his trouser pocket, folded it, and silently handed it across to
the bleeding Betan. Dubauer swallowed, took it, and mopped at the minor
wound. It held the pad out a moment to stare at its own blood as if in
surprise, then pressed the cloth back to its hairless cheek.
In a way, Miles thought shakily, it was all rather flattering. At least someone figured he was competent and effective enough to be dangerous. Or maybe I'm onto something. I wonder what the hell it is?
Bel
placed its hands upon the shattered drum top, peered cautiously over,
then slowly pulled itself to its feet. A downsider in the uniform of
the hostel staff scurried, a little bent over, around the
ex-centerpiece and asked in a choked voice, “Are you people all right?”
“I think so,” said Bel, glancing around. “What was that?”
“It
came from the balcony, sir. The, the person up there dropped it over
the side and fled. The door guard went after him.”
Bel
didn't bother to correct the gender of the honorific, a sure sign of
distraction. Miles rose too, and nearly passed out. Still
hyperventilating, he crunched around their bulwark through the broken
glass pellets, marble chips, half-melted brass slugs, and flower salad.
Bel followed in his path. On the far side of the lobby, the oblong box
lay on its side, notably dented. They both knelt to stare.
“Automated
hot riveter,” said Bel after a moment. “He must have
disconnected . . . quite a few safety devices, to
make it do that.”
A slight understatement, Miles
felt. But it did explain their assailant's uncertain aim. The device
had been designed to throw its slugs with vast precision a matter of
millimeters, not meters. Still . . . if the
would-be assassin had succeeded in framing Miles's head for even a
short burst—he glanced again at the shattered marble—no cryo-revival
ever invented could have brought him back this time.
Ye
gods—what if he hadn't missed? What would Ekaterin have done, this far
from home and help, a messily decapitated husband on her hands before
her honeymoon trip was even over, with no immediate support but the
inexperienced Roic—If they're shooting at me, how much danger is she in?
In belated panic, he slapped his wristcom. “Roic! Roic, answer me!”
It was at least three agonizing seconds before Roic's drawl responded, “My lord?”
“Where
are—never mind. Drop whatever you're doing and go at once to Lady
Vorkosigan, and stay with her. Get her back aboard—” he clipped off the Kestrel . Would she be safer there? By now, any number of people knew that was where to look for Vorkosigans. Maybe aboard the Prince Xav , standing off a good safe distance from the station, surrounded by troops—Barrayar's finest, God help us all —”Just stay with her, till I call again.”
“My lord, what's happening?”
“Someone
just tried to rivet me to the wall. No, don't come here,” he overrode
Roic's beginning protest. “The fellow ran off, and anyway, quaddie
security is beginning to arrive.” Two uniformed quaddies in floaters
were entering the lobby even as he spoke. At a hostel employee's
gesticulations, one rose smoothly up over the balcony; the other
approached Miles and his party. “I have to deal with these people now.
I'm all right. Don't alarm Ekaterin. Don't let her out of your sight.
Out.”
He glanced up to see Dubauer unbend from
examining a rivet-chewed marble drum, face very strained. The herm,
hand still pressed to cheek, was visibly shaken as it walked over to
glance at the riveter. Miles rose smoothly to his feet.
“My apologies, honorable herm. I should have warned you never to stand too close to me.”
Dubauer stared at Miles. Its lips parted in momentary bewilderment, then made a small circle, Oh
. “I believe you two gentlepersons saved my life.
I . . . I'm afraid I didn't see anything. Until
that thing—what was it?—hit me.”
Miles bent and
picked up a loose rivet, one of hundreds, now cooled. “One of these.
Have you stopped bleeding?”
The herm pulled the pad away from its cheek. “Yes, I think so.”
“Here,
keep it for a souvenir.” He held out the gleaming brass slug. “Trade
you for my handkerchief back.” Ekaterin had embroidered it by hand, for
a present.
“Oh—” Dubauer folded the pad over the
bloodstain. “Oh, dear. Is it of value? I'll have it cleaned, and return
it to you.”
“Not necessary, honorable herm. My batman takes care of such things.”
The elderly Betan looked distressed. “Oh, no—”
Miles
ended the argument by reaching over and plucking the fine cloth from
the clutching fingers, and stuffing it back in his pocket. The herm's
hand jerked after it, and fell back. Miles had met diffident people,
but never before one who apologized for bleeding. Dubauer, unused to
personal violence on low-crime Beta Colony, was on the edge of
distraught.
A quaddie security patrolwoman hovered
anxiously in her floater. “What the hell happened here?” she demanded,
snapping open a recorder.
Miles gestured to Bel,
who took over describing the incident into the recorder. Bel was as
calm, logical, and detailed as at any Dendarii debriefing, which
possibly took the woman more aback than the crowd of witnesses who
clustered eagerly around trying to tell the tale in more excited terms.
To Miles's intense relief, no one else had been hit except for a few
minor clips from ricocheting marble chips. The fellow's aim might have
been imperfect, but he apparently hadn't intended a general massacre.
Good
for public safety on Graf Station, but not, upon reflection, so good
for Miles. . . . His children might have been orphaned,
just now, before they'd even had a chance to be born. His will was spot
up to date, the size of an academic dissertation complete with
bibliography and footnotes. It suddenly seemed entirely inadequate to
the task.
“Was the suspect a downsider or a quaddie?” the patrolwoman asked Bel urgently.
Bel
shook its head. “I couldn't see the lower half of his body below the
balcony rail. I'm not even sure it was male, really.”
A
downsider transient and the quaddie waitress who'd been serving his
drink on the lounge level chimed in with the news that the assailant
had been a quaddie, and had fled down an adjoining corridor in his
floater. The transient was sure he'd been male, although the waitress,
now that the question was raised, grew less certain. Dubauer apologized
for not having glimpsed the person at all.
Miles
prodded the riveter with his toe, and asked Bel in an under-voice, “How
hard would it be to carry something like that through Station Security
checkpoints?”
“Easy,” said Bel. “No one would even blink.”
“Local manufacture?” It looked quite new.
“Yes, that's a Sanctuary Station brand. They make good tools.”
“First job for Venn, then. Find out where the thing was sold, and when. And who to.”
“Oh, yeah.”
Miles
was nearly dizzy with a weird combination of delight and dismay. The
delight was partly adrenaline high, a familiar and dangerous old
addiction, partly the realization that having been potshotted by a
quaddie gave him a stick to beat back Greenlaw's relentless attack on
his Barrayaran brutality. Quaddies were killers too, hah. They just
weren't as good at it. . . . He remembered Solian, and took back that thought. Yeah, and if Greenlaw didn't set me up for this herself. Now there
was a nice, paranoid theory. He set it aside to reexamine when his head
had cooled. After all, a couple of hundred people, both quaddies and
transients—including all of the fleet's galactic passengers—must have
known he'd be coming here this morning.
A quaddie
medical squad arrived, and on their heels—immediately after them, Chief
Venn. The security chief was instantly deluged with excited
descriptions of the spectacular attack on the Imperial Auditor. Only
the erstwhile victim Miles was calm, standing in wait with a certain
grim amusement.
Amusement was an emotion notably lacking in Venn's face. “Were you hit, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan?”
“No.” Time to put in a good word—we may need it later.
“Thanks to the quick reactions of Portmaster Thorne, here. But for this
remarkable herm, you—and the Union of Free Habitats—would have one hell
of a mess on your hands just now.”
A babble of
confirmation solidified this view, with a couple of people breathlessly
describing Bel's selfless defense of the visiting dignitary with the
shield of its own body. Bel's eye glinted briefly at Miles, though
whether with gratitude or its opposite Miles was not just sure. The
portmaster's modest protests served only to firmly affix the picture of
this heroism in the eyewitnesses' minds, and Miles suppressed a grin.
One
of the quaddie security patrollers who had gone in pursuit of the
assailant now returned, floating back over the balcony to jerk to a
halt before Chief Venn and report breathlessly, “Lost him, sir. We've
put all duty personnel on alert, but we don't have much of a physical
description.”
Three or four people attempted to
supplement this lack, in vivid and contradictory terms. Bel, listening,
frowned more deeply.
Miles nudged the herm. “Hm?”
Bel
shook its head and murmured back, “Thought for a moment he looked like
someone I'd seen recently, but that was a downsider, so—no.”
Miles
considered his own brief impression. Bright-haired, light-skinned, a
trifle bulky, of indeterminate age, probably male—this could cover some
several hundred quaddies on Graf Station. Laboring under intense
emotion, but by that time, Miles had been too. Seen once, at that
distance, under such circumstances, Miles didn't think even he could
reliably pick the fellow out of a group of similar physical types.
Unfortunately, none of the transients had happened just then to be
doing a vid scan of the lobby dйcor or each other to show the folks
back home. The waitress and her patron weren't even quite sure when the
fellow had arrived, though they thought he'd been in position for a few
minutes, upper hands resting casually upon the balcony railing, as if
waiting for some last straggler from the passengers' meeting to mount
the stairs. And so he was.
The
still-shaken Dubauer fended off the medtechs, insisting it could treat
the clotted rivet-graze itself and, reiterating a lack of anything to
add to the testimonies, begged to be let go back to its room to lie
down.
Bel said to its fellow Betan, “Sorry about
all this. I may be tied up for a while. If I can't get away myself,
I'll have Boss Watts send another supervisor to escort you aboard the Idris to take care of your critters.”
“Thank
you, Portmaster. That would be very welcome. You'll call my room, yes?
It really is most urgent.” Dubauer withdrew hastily.
Miles
couldn't blame Dubauer for fleeing, for the quaddie news services were
arriving, in the persons of two eager reporters in floaters emblazoned
with the logo of their journalistic work gang. An array of little
vidcam floaters bobbed after them. The vidcams darted about, collecting
scans. Sealer Greenlaw followed hurriedly in their wake, and wove her
floater determinedly through the growing mob to Miles's side. She
was flanked by two quaddie bodyguards in Union Militia garb, with
serious weapons and armor. However useless against assassins, they at
least had the salutary effect of making the babbling bystanders back
off.
“Lord Auditor Vorkosigan, were you hurt?” she demanded at once.
Miles
repeated to her the assurances he'd made to Venn. He kept one eye on
the robot vidcams floating up to him and recording his words, and not
just to be sure his good side was turned to them. But none appeared to
be mini-weapons-platforms in disguise. He made sure to loudly mention
Bel's heroics again, which had the useful effect of turning them in
pursuit of the Betan portmaster, now on the other side of the lobby
being grilled in more detail by Venn's security people.
Greenlaw
said stiffly, “Lord Auditor Vorkosigan, may I convey my profound
personal apologies for this untoward incident. I assure you, all of the
Union's resources will be turned to tracking down what I am certain
must be an unbalanced individual and danger to us all.”
Danger to us all indeed . “I don't know what's going on, here,” said Miles. He let his voice sharpen. “And clearly, neither do you . This is no diplomatic chess game any more. Someone seems to be trying to start a damned war in here. They nearly succeeded.”
She took a deep breath. “I am certain the person was acting alone.”
Miles frowned thoughtfully. The hotheads are always with us, true.
He lowered his voice. “For what? Retaliation? Did any of the quaddies
injured by Vorpatril's strike force suddenly die last night?” He'd
thought they all were on the recovering list. It was hard to imagine a
quaddie relative or lover or friend taking bloody revenge for anything
short of a fatality, but . . .
“No,”
said Greenlaw, her voice slowing as she considered this hypothesis.
Regretfully, her voice firmed. “No. I would have been told.”
So, Greenlaw was wishing for a simple explanation, too. But honest enough not to fool herself, at least.
His wrist com gave its high priority beep; he slapped it. “Yes?”
“My Lord Vorkosigan?” It was Admiral Vorpatril's voice, strained.
Not
Ekaterin or Roic after all. Miles's heart climbed back down out of his
throat. He tried not to let his voice go irritable. “Yes, Admiral?”
“Oh, thank God. We received a report that you were attacked.”
“All over now. They missed. Station Security is here now.”
There
was a brief pause. Vorpatril's voice returned, fraught with
implication: “My Lord Auditor, my fleet is on full alert, ready at your
command.”
Oh, crap . “Thank you, Admiral, but stand down
, please,” Miles said hastily. “Really. It's under control. I'll get
back to you in a few minutes. Do nothing without my direct, personal
orders!”
“Very well, my lord,” said Vorpatril stiffly, still in a very suspicious tone. Miles cut the channel.
Greenlaw
was staring at him. He explained to her, “I'm Gregor's Voice. To the
Barrayarans, it's as if that quaddie had fired on the Emperor, almost.
When I said someone had nearly started a war, it wasn't a figure of
speech, Sealer Greenlaw. At home, this place would be crawling with
ImpSec's best by now.”
She cocked her head, her
frown sharpening. “And how would an attack on an ordinary Barrayaran
subject be treated? More casually, I daresay?”
“Not
more casually, but on a lower organizational level. It would be a
matter for their Count's District guard.”
“So on
Barrayar, what kind of justice you receive depends on who you are?
Interesting. I do not regret to inform you, Lord Vorkosigan, that on
Graf Station you will be treated like any other victim—no better, no
worse. Oddly enough, this is no loss for you.”
“How
salutary for me,” said Miles dryly. “And while you're proving how
unimpressed you are with my Imperial authority, a dangerous killer
remains at large. What will it be to lovely, egalitarian Graf Station
if he goes for a less personal method of disposing of me next time,
such as a large bomb? Trust me—even on Barrayar, we all die the same. Shall we continue this discussion in private?” The vidcams, evidently finished with Bel, were zooming back toward him.
His
head swiveled around at a breathless cry of, “Miles!” Also zooming
toward him was Ekaterin, Roic lumbering at her shoulder. Nicol and
Garnet Five followed in floaters. Pale of face and wide of eye,
Ekaterin strode across the detritus in the lobby, gripped his hands,
and, at his crooked smile, hugged him fiercely. Fully conscious of the
vidcams avidly circling, he hugged her back, making sure that no
journalists alive, no matter how many arms or legs they possessed,
could resist putting this one up front and center. A human-interest shot, yeah.
Roic said apologetically, “I tried to stop her, m'lord, but she insisted on coming here.”
“It's all right,” said Miles in a muffled voice.
Ekaterin murmured unhappily in his ear, “I thought this was a safe place. Itfelt safe. The quaddies seemed like such peaceful people.”
“The
majority of them undoubtedly are,” Miles said. Reluctantly, he released
her, though he still kept a firm grip on one hand. They stood back and
regarded each other anxiously.
Across the lobby,
Nicol flew to Bel with much the same look on her face as had been on
Ekaterin's, and the vidcams flocked after her.
Miles asked Roic quietly, “How far did you get on Solian?”
“Not far, m'lord. I decided to start with the Idris
, and got all the access codes from Brun and Molino all right, but the
quaddies wouldn't permit me to board her. I was about to call you.”
Miles grinned briefly. “Bet I can fix that now, by damn.”
Greenlaw
returned to invite the Barrayarans to step into the hostel management's
meeting room, hastily cleared as a refuge.
Miles
tucked Ekaterin's hand into his arm, and they followed; he shook his
head regretfully at a reporter who flitted purposefully toward them,
and one of Greenlaw's Union Militia guards made a stern warding motion.
Thwarted, the quaddie journalist pounced on Garnet Five instead. With a
performer's reflex, she welcomed him with a blinding smile.
“Did
you have a nice morning?” Miles asked Ekaterin brightly as they picked
their way over the mess on the floor.
She eyed him
in some bemusement. “Yes, lovely. Quaddie hydroponics are
extraordinary.” Her voice went dry as she glanced around the battle
zone. “And you?”
“Delightful. Well, not if we
hadn't ducked. But if I can't figure out how to use this to break our
deadlock, I should turn in my Auditor's chain.” He stifled a fox's
smile, contemplating Greenlaw's back.
“The things
one learns on a honeymoon. Now I know how to coax you out of your glum
moods. Just hire someone to shoot at you.”
“Peps
me right up,” he agreed. “I figured out years ago that I was addicted
to adrenaline. I also figured out that it was going to be toxic,
eventually, if I didn't taper off.”
“Indeed.” She
inhaled. The slight trembling in the hand tucked in the crook of his
elbow was lessening, and its clamp on his biceps was growing less
circulation-stopping. Her face was back to being deceptively serene.
Greenlaw
led them through the office corridor behind the reception area to a
cluttered workroom. Its small central vid table had been swept clean of
ringed cups, flaccid drink bulbs, and plastic flimsies, now piled
haphazardly on a credenza shoved to one wall. Miles saw Ekaterin into a
station chair and sat next to her. Greenlaw positioned her floater at
chair-height opposite. Roic and one of the quaddie guards jockeyed for
position at the door, frowning at each other.
Miles
reminded himself to be indignant and not ecstatic. “Well.” He let a
distinct note of sarcasm creep into his voice. “That was a remarkable
addition to my morning's speaking schedule.”
Greenlaw began, “Lord Auditor, you have my apologies—”
“Your
apologies are all very well, Madam Sealer, but I would happily trade
them for your cooperation. Assuming you are not behind this
incident,” he overrode her indignant splutter, continuing smoothly,
“and I don't see why you should be, despite the suggestive
circumstances. Random violence does not seem to me to be in the usual
quaddie style.”
“It certainly is not!”
“Well,
if it's not random, then it must be connected. The central mystery of
this entire imbroglio remains the neglected disappearance of Lieutenant
Solian.”
“It was not neglected—”
“I
disagree. The answer to it might—should!—have been put together days
ago, except that Tab A seems to be on one side of an artificial divide
from Slot B. If pursuing my quaddie assailant is the Union's task”—he
paused and raised his eyebrows; she nodded grimly—”then pursuing Solian
is surely mine. It's the one string I have in hand, and I intend to
follow it up. And if the two investigations don't meet in the middle
somewhere, I'll eat my Auditor's seal.”
She blinked, seeming a little surprised by this turn of discourse. “Possibly . . .”
“Good.
Then I want complete and unimpeded access for me, my assistant Armsman
Roic, and anyone else I may designate to any and all areas and records
pertinent to this search. Starting with the Idris , and starting immediately!”
“We cannot give downsiders license to roam at will over Station secure areas that—”
“Madam
Sealer. You are here to promote and protect Union interests, as I am to
promote and protect Barrayaran interests. But if there is anything at
all about this mess that's good for either Quaddiespace or the Imperium, it's not apparent to me! Is it to you?”
“No, but—”
“Then you agree, the sooner we dig to the center of it, the better.”
She
tented her upper hands, regarding him through narrowed eyes. Before she
could marshal further objections, Bel entered, having apparently
escaped Venn and the media at last. Nicol bobbed along beside in her
floater.
Greenlaw brightened, and seized on the
one auspicious point for the quaddies in the chaos of the morning.
“Portmaster Thorne. Welcome. I understand the Union owes you a debt of
thanks for your courage and quick thinking.”
Bel
glanced at Miles—a trifle dryly, Miles thought—and favored her with a
self-deprecating half salute. “All in a day's work, ma'am.”
At one time, that would have been a statement of plain fact, Miles couldn't help reflecting.
Greenlaw shook her head. “I trust not on Graf Station, Portmaster!”
“Well, I certainly thank Portmaster Thorne!” said Ekaterin warmly.
Nicol's
hand crept into Bel's, and she shot a look up from under her dark
eyelashes for which a red-blooded soldier of any gender would gladly
have traded medals, campaign ribbons, and combat bonuses all three,
high command's boring speeches thrown in gratis. Bel began to look
slightly more reconciled to being designated Heroic Person of the Hour.
“To
be sure,” Miles agreed. “To say that I'm pleased with the portmaster's
liaison services is a profound understatement. I would take it as a
personal favor if the herm might continue in this assignment for the
duration of my stay.”
Greenlaw caught Bel's eye,
then nodded at Miles. “Certainly, Lord Auditor.” Relieved, Miles
gathered, to have something to hand to him that cost her no new
concessions. A small smile moved her lips, a rare event. “Furthermore,
I shall grant you and your designated assistants access to Graf
Station records and secured areas—under the portmaster's direct
supervision.”
Miles pretended to consider this
compromise, frowning artistically. “This places a substantial demand on
Portmaster Thorne's time and attention.”
Bel put
in demurely, “I'll gladly accept the assignment, Madam Sealer, provided
Boss Watts authorizes both all my overtime hours, and another
supervisor to take over my routine duties.”
“Not a
problem, Portmaster. I'll direct Watts to add his increased
departmental costs to the Komarran fleet's docking bill.” Greenlaw
delivered this promise with a glint of grim satisfaction.
Added
to Bel's ImpSec stipend, this would put the herm on triple time, Miles
estimated. Old Dendarii accounting tricks, hah. Well, Miles would see
that the Imperium got its money's worth. “Very well,” he conceded,
endeavoring to appear stung. “Then I wish to proceed aboard the Idris immediately.”
Ekaterin didn't crack a smile, but a faint light of appreciation glimmered in her eye.
And
what if she had accepted his invitation to accompany him this morning?
And had walked up those stairs next to him—his assailant's erratic aim
would not have passed over her head. Picturing the probable
results put an unpleasant knot in his stomach, and his lingering
adrenaline high tasted suddenly very sour.
“Lady Vorkosigan,”—Miles swallowed—”I am going to arrange for Lady Vorkosigan to stay aboard the Prince Xav
until Graf Station Security apprehends the would-be killer and this
mystery is resolved.” He added in an apologetic murmur aside to her,
“Sorry . . .”
She returned him a
brief nod of understanding. “It's all right.” Not happy, to be sure,
but she possessed too much good Vor sense to argue about security
issues.
He continued, “I therefore request special
clearance for a Barrayaran personnel shuttle to dock and take her out.”
Or the Kestrel ? No, he dared not lose access to his independent transport, bolthole, and secure communications station.
Greenlaw
twitched. “Excuse me, Lord Vorkosigan, but that's how the last
Barrayaran assault arrived stationside. We do not care to host another
such influx.” She glanced at Ekaterin and took a breath. “However, I
appreciate your concern. I would be glad to offer one of our pods and
pilots to Lady Vorkosigan as a courtesy transport.”
Miles
replied, “Madam Sealer, an unknown quaddie just tried to kill me. I'll
grant I don't really think it was your secret policy, but the key word
here is unknown . We don't yet know that it wasn't some
quaddie—or group of quaddies—still in a position of trust. There are
several experiments I'd be willing to run to find out, but this isn't
one of them.”
Bel sighed audibly. “If you wish,
Lord Auditor Vorkosigan, I will undertake to personally pilot Lady
Vorkosigan out to your flagship.”
But I need you here!
Bel evidently read his look, for the herm added, “Or some pilot of my choosing?”
With
an unfeigned reluctance, this time, Miles agreed. The next step was to
call Admiral Vorpatril and inform him of his ship's new guest.
Vorpatril, when his face appeared above the vid plate on the conference
table, passed no comment at the news other than, “Certainly, my Lord
Auditor. The Prince Xav will be honored.” But Miles could read
in the admiral's shrewd glance his estimation of the increased
seriousness of the situation. Miles ascertained that no hysterical
preliminary dispatches about the incident had yet been squirted on
their several-day trip to HQ; news and reassurances would therefore
arrive, thankfully, simultaneously. Aware of their quaddie listeners,
Vorpatril made no other remark than a bland request that the Lord
Auditor bring him up to date on developments at his earliest
convenience—in other words, as soon as he could reach a private secured
comconsole.
The meeting broke up. More of
Greenlaw's Union militia guards had arrived, and they all exited back
into the hostel's lobby, well screened, belatedly, by armed outriders.
Miles made sure to walk as far from Ekaterin as possible. In the
shattered lobby, quaddie forensics techs, under Venn's direction, were
taking vid scans and measurements. Miles frowned up at the balcony,
considering trajectories; Bel, walking beside him and watching his
glance, raised its eyebrows. Miles lowered his voice and said suddenly,
“Bel, you don't suppose that loon could have been firing at you , could he?”
“Why me?”
“Well,
just so. How many people does a portmaster usually piss off, in the
normal course of business?” He glanced around; Nicol was out of
earshot, floating beside Ekaterin and engaged in some low-voiced,
animated exchange with her. “Or not-business? You haven't been, oh,
sleeping with anyone's wife, have you? Or husband,” he added
conscientiously. “Or daughter, or whatever.”
“No,”
said Bel firmly. “Nor with their household pets, either. What a
Barrayaran view of human motivations you do have, Miles.”
Miles grinned. “Sorry. What about . . . old business?”
Bel
sighed. “I thought I'd outrun or outlived all the old business.” The
herm eyed Miles sideways. “Almost.” And added after a thoughtful
moment, “You'd surely be way ahead of me in line for that one, too.”
“Possibly.” Miles frowned. And then there was Dubauer. That
herm was certainly tall enough to be a target. Although how the devil
could an elderly Betan dealer in designer animals, who'd spent most of
its time on Graf Station locked in a hostel room anyway, have annoyed
some quaddie enough to inspire him to try to blow its timid head off? Too damned many possibles, here. It was time to inject some hard data.
CHAPTER NINE
The quaddie pilot of Bel's selecting arrived and
whisked Ekaterin off, together with a couple of stern-looking Union
Militia guards. Miles watched her go in mild anguish. As she turned to
look over her shoulder, walking out the hostel door, he tapped his
wrist com meaningfully; she silently raised her left arm, com bracelet
glinting, in return.
Since they were all on their way to the Idris
anyway, Bel used the delay to call Dubauer down to the lobby again.
Dubauer, smooth cheek now neatly sealed with a discreet dab of surgical
glue, arrived promptly, and stared in some alarm at their new quaddie
military escort. But the shy, graceful herm appeared to have regained
most of its self-possession, and murmured sincere gratitude to Bel for
recollecting its creatures' needs despite all the tumult.
The
little party walked or floated, variously, trailing Portmaster Thorne
via a notably un-public back way through the customs and security zone
to the array of loading bays devoted to galactic shipping. The bay
serving the Idris, clamped into its outboard docking cradle,
was quiet and dim, unpeopled except for the two Graf Station security
patrollers guarding the hatches.
Bel presented its
authorization, and the two patrollers floated aside to allow Bel access
to the hatch controls. The door to the big freight lock slid upward,
and, leaving their Union Militia escort to help guard the entry, Miles,
Roic, and Dubauer followed Bel aboard the freighter.
The Idris , like its sister ship the Rudra
, was of a utilitarian design that dispensed with elegance. It was
essentially a bundle of seven huge parallel cylinders: the central-most
devoted to personnel, four of the outer six given to freight. The other
two nacelles, opposite each other in the outer ring, housed the ship's
Necklin rods that generated the field to fold it through jump points.
Normal-space engines behind, mass shield generators in front. The ship
rotated around its central axis to bring each outer cylinder to
alignment with the stationside freight lock for automated loading or
unloading of containers, or hand loading of more delicate goods. The
design was not without added safety value, for in the event of a
pressurization loss in one or more cylinders, any of the others could
serve as a refuge while repairs were made or evacuation effected.
As
they walked now through one freight nacelle, Miles glanced up and down
its central access corridor, which receded into darkness. They passed
through another lock into a small foyer in the forward section of the
ship. In one direction lay passenger staterooms; in the other,
personnel cabins and offices. Lift tubes and a pair of stairs led up to
the level devoted to ship's mess, infirmary, and recreation facilities,
and downward to life support, engineering, and other utility areas.
Roic glanced at his notes and nodded down the corridor. “This way to Solian's security office, m'lord.”
“I'll
escort Citizen Dubauer here to its flock,” said Bel, “and catch up with
you.” Dubauer made an abortive little bow, and the two herms passed
onward into the lock leading to one of the outboard freight sections.
Roic
counted doorways past a second connecting foyer and tapped a code into
a lock pad near the stern. The door slid aside and the light came up
revealing a tiny, spare chamber housing scarcely more than a computer
interface and two chairs, and some lockable wall cabinets. Miles fired
up the interface while Roic ran a quick inventory of the cabinets'
contents. All security-issue weapons and their power cartridges were
present and accounted for, all safety equipment neatly packed in its
places. The office was void of personal effects, no vid displays of the
girl back home, no sly—or political—jokes or encouraging slogans pasted
inside the cabinet doors. But Brun's investigators had been through
here once already, after Solian had disappeared but before the ship had
been evacuated by the quaddies following the clash with the
Barrayarans; Miles made a note to inquire if Brun—or Venn, for that
matter—had removed anything.
Roic's override codes
promptly brought up all of Solian's records and logs. Miles started
from Solian's final shift. The lieutenant's daily reports were laconic,
repetitive, and disappointingly free of comments on potential
assassins. Miles wondered if he was listening to a dead man's voice. By
rights, there ought to be some psychic frisson. The eerie silence of
the ship encouraged the imagination.
While the
ship was in port, its security system did keep continuous vid records
of everyone and everything that boarded or departed through the
stationside or other activated locks, as a routine antitheft,
antisabotage precaution. Slogging through the whole ten days' worth of
comings and goings before the ship had been impounded, even on fast
forward, was going to be a time-consuming chore. The daunting
possibility of records having been altered or deleted, as Brun
suspected Solian had done to cover his desertion, would also have to be
explored.
Miles made copies of everything that
seemed even vaguely pertinent, for further examination, then he and
Roic paid a visit to Solian's cabin, just a few meters down the same
corridor. It too was small and spare and unrevealing. No telling what
personal items Solian might have packed in the missing valise, but
there certainly weren't many left. The ship had left Komarr, what, six
weeks ago? With half a dozen ports of call between. When the ship was
in-port was the busiest time for its security; perhaps Solian hadn't
had much time to shop for souvenirs.
Miles tried
to make sense of what was left. Half a dozen uniforms, a few civvies, a
bulky jacket, some shoes and boots . . . Solian's
personally fitted pressure suit. That seemed an expensive item one
might want for a long sojourn in Quaddiespace. Not very anonymous,
though, with its Barrayaran military markings.
Finding
nothing in the cabin to relieve them of the chore of examining vid
records, Miles and Roic returned to Solian's office and began. If
nothing else, Miles encouraged himself, reviewing the security vids
would give him a mental picture of the potential dramatis
personae . . . buried somewhere in the mob of
persons who had nothing to do with anything, to be sure. Looking at
everything was a sure sign that he didn't know what the hell he was
doing yet, but it was the only way he'd ever found to smoke out the
nonobvious clue that everyone else had overlooked. . . .
He glanced up, after a time, at a movement in the office door. Bel had returned, and leaned against the jamb.
“Finding anything yet?” the herm asked.
“Not so far.” Miles paused the vid display. “Did your Betan friend get its problems taken care of?”
“Still
working. Feeding the critters and shoveling manure, or at least, adding
nutrient concentrate to the replicator reservoirs and removing the
waste bags from the filtration units. I can see why Dubauer was upset
at the delay. There must be a thousand animal fetuses in that hold.
Major financial loss, if it becomes a loss.”
“Huh.
Most animal husbandry people ship frozen embryos,” said Miles. “That's
the way my grandfather used to import his fancy horse bloodstock from
Earth. Implanted 'em in a grade mare upon arrival, to finish cooking.
Cheaper, lighter, less maintenance—shipping delays not an issue, if it
comes to that. Although I suppose this way uses the travel time for
gestation.”
“Dubauer did say time was of the essence.” Bel hitched its shoulders, frowning uncomfortably. “What do the Idris 's logs have to say about Dubauer and its cargo, anyway?”
Miles
called up the records. “Boarded when the fleet first assembled in
Komarr orbit. Bound for Xerxes—the next stop after Graf Station, which
must make this mess especially frustrating. Reservation made
about . . . six weeks before the fleet departed,
via a Komarran shipping agent.” A legitimate company; Miles recognized
the name. This record did not indicate where Dubauer-and-cargo had
originated, nor if the herm had intended to connect with another
commercial—or private—carrier at Xerxes for some further ultimate
destination. He eyed Bel shrewdly. “Something got your hackles up?”
“I . . . don't know. There's something funny about Dubauer.”
“In what way? Would I get the joke?”
“If I could say, it wouldn't bother me so much.”
“It
seems a fussy old herm . . . maybe something on the
academic side?” University, or former university, bioengineering
research and development would fit the oddly precise and polite style.
So would personal shyness.
“That might account for it,” said Bel, in an unconvinced tone.
“Funny. Right.” Miles made a note to especially observe the herm's movements on and off the Idris , in his records search.
Bel, watching him, remarked, “Greenlaw was secretly impressed with you, by the way.”
“Oh, yeah? She's certainly managed to keep it a secret from me.”
Bel's grin sparked. “She told me you appeared very task oriented
. That's a compliment, in Quaddiespace. I didn't explain to her that
you considered getting shot at to be a normal part of your daily
routine.”
“Well, not daily . By preference.” Miles grimaced. “Nor normally, in the new job. I'm supposed to be rear echelon, now. I'm getting old, Bel.”
The
grin twisted half-up in sardonic amusement. “Speaking from the vantage
of one not quite twice your age, and in your fine old Barrayaran phrase
of yore, horseshit, Miles.”
Miles shrugged. “Maybe it's the impending fatherhood.”
“Got you spooked, does it?” Bel's brows rose.
“No,
of course not. Or—well, yes, but not in that way. My father
was . . . I have a lot to live up to. And perhaps even a
few things to do differently.”
Bel tilted its
head, but before it could speak again, footsteps sounded down the
corridor. Dubauer's light, cultured voice inquired, “Portmaster Thorne?
Ah, there you are.”
Bel moved within as the tall
herm appeared in the doorway. Miles noted Roic's appraising eye flick,
before the bodyguard pretended to return his attention to the vid
display.
Dubauer pulled on its fingers anxiously and asked Bel, “Are you returning to the hostel soon?”
“No. That is, I'm not returning to the hostel at all.”
“Oh.
Ah.” The herm hesitated. “You see, with strange quaddies flying around
out there shooting at people, I didn't really want to go out on the
station alone. Has anyone heard—he hasn't been apprehended yet, has he?
No? I was hoping . . . can anyone go with me?”
Bel
smiled sympathetically at this display of frazzled nerves. “I'll send
one of the security guards with you. That all right?”
“I should be extremely grateful, yes.”
“Are you all finished, now?”
Dubauer
bit its lip. “Well, yes and no. That is, I have finished servicing my
replicators, and done what little I can to slow the growth and
metabolism of their contents. But if my cargo is to be held here very
much longer, there'll not be time to get to my final destination before
my creatures outgrow their containers. If I indeed have to destroy
them, it will be a disastrous event.”
“The Komarran fleet's insurance ought to make good on that, I'd think,” said Bel.
“Or
you could sue Graf Station,” Miles suggested. “Better yet, do both, and
collect twice.” Bel spared him an exasperated glance.
Dubauer
managed a pained smile. “That only addresses the immediate financial
loss.” After a longer pause, the herm continued, “To salvage the more
important part, the proprietary bioengineering, I wish to take tissue
samples and freeze them before disposal. I shall also require some
equipment for complete biomatter breakdown. Or access to the ship's
converters, if they won't become overloaded with the mass I must
destroy. It's going to be a time-consuming and, I fear, extremely messy
task. I was wondering, Portmaster Thorne—if you cannot obtain my
cargo's release from quaddie impoundment, can you at least get me
permission to stay aboard the Idris while I undertake its dispatch?”
Bel's
brow wrinkled at the horrific picture the herm's soft words conjured.
“Let's hope you're not forced to such extreme measures. How much time
do you have, really?”
The herm hesitated. “Not
very much more. And if I must dispose of my creatures—the sooner, the
better. I'd prefer to get it over with.”
“Understandable.” Bel blew out its breath.
“There
might be some alternate possibilities to stretch your time window,”
said Miles. “Hiring a smaller, faster ship to take you directly to your
destination, for example.”
The herm shook its head sadly. “And who would pay for this ship, my Lord Vorkosigan? The Barrayaran Imperium?”
Miles bit his tongue on either Yeah, sure!
or alternate suggestions involving Greenlaw and the Union. He was
supposed to be handling the big picture, not getting bogged down in all
the human—or inhumane—details. He made a neutral gesture and let Bel
shepherd the Betan out.
Miles spent a few more minutes failing to find anything exciting on the vid logs, then Bel returned.
Miles shut down the vid. “I think I'd like a look at that funny Betan's cargo.”
“Can't
help you there,” said Bel. “I don't have the codes to the freight
lockers. Only the passengers are supposed to have the access to the
space they rent, by contract, and the quaddies haven't bothered to get
a court order to make them disgorge 'em. Decreases Graf Station's
liability for theft while the passengers aren't aboard, y'see. You'll
have to get Dubauer to let you in.”
“Dear Bel, I
am an Imperial Auditor, and this is not only a Barrayaran-registered
ship, it belongs to Empress Laisa's own family. I go where I will.
Solian has to have a security override for every cranny of this ship.
Roic?”
“Right here, m'lord.” The armsman tapped his notation device.
“Very well, then, let's take a walk.”
Bel
and Roic followed him down the corridor and through the central lock to
the adjoining freight section. The double-door to the second chamber
down yielded to Roic's careful tapping on its lock pad. Miles poked his
head through and brought up the lights.
It was an
impressive sight. Gleaming replicator racks stood packed in tight rows,
filling the space and leaving only narrow aisles between. Each rack sat
bolted on its own float pallet, in four layers of five units—twenty to
a rack, as high as Roic was tall. Beneath darkened display readouts on
each, control panels twinkled with reassuringly green lights. For now.
Miles
walked down the aisle formed by five pallets, around the end, and up
the next, counting. More pallets lined the walls. Bel's estimate of a
thousand seemed exactly right. “You'd think the placental chambers
would be a larger size. These seem nearly identical to the ones at
home.” With which he'd grown intimately familiar, of late. These arrays
were clearly meant for mass production. All twenty units stacked on a
pallet economically shared reservoirs, pumps, filtration devices, and
the control panel. He leaned closer. “I don't see a maker's mark.” Or
serial numbers or anything else that would reveal the planet of origin
for what were clearly very finely made machines. He tapped a control to
bring the monitor screen to life.
The glowing
screen didn't contain manufacturing data or serial numbers either. Just
a stylized scarlet screaming-bird pattern on a silver
background. . . . His heart began to lump. What the
hell was this doing here . . . ?
“Miles,”
said Bel's voice, seeming to come from a long way off, “if you're going
to pass out, put your head down.”
“Between my knees,” choked Miles, “and kiss my ass good-bye. Bel, do you know what that sigil is ?”
“No,” said Bel, in a leery now-what? tone.
“Cetagandan
Star Crиche. Not the military ghem-lords, not their cultivated—and I
mean that in both senses—masters, the haut lords—not even the Imperial
Celestial Garden. Higher still. The Star Crиche is the innermost core
of the innermost ring of the whole damned giant genetic engineering
project that is the Cetagandan Empire. The haut ladies' own gene bank.
They design their emperors, there. Hell, they design the whole haut
race, there. The haut ladies don't work in animal genes. They
think it would be beneath them. They leave that to the ghem-ladies.
Not, note, to the ghem-lords . . .”
Hand
shaking slightly, he reached out to touch the monitor and bring up the
next control level. General power and reservoir readouts, all in the
green. The next level allowed individual monitoring of each fetus
contained within one of the twenty separate placental chambers. Human
blood temperature, baby mass, and if that weren't enough, tiny
individual vid spy cameras built in, with lights, to view the
replicators' inhabitants in real time, floating peacefully in their
amniotic sacs. The one in the monitor twitched tiny fingers at the soft
red glow, and seemed to scrunch up its big dark eyes. If not quite
grown to term, it—no, she—was damned close to it, Miles guessed. He
thought of Helen Natalia, and Aral Alexander.
Roic
swung on his booted heel, lips parting in dismay, staring up the aisle
of glittering devices. “D'you mean, m'lord, that all these things are
full of human babies?”
“Well, now, that's
a question. Actually, that's two questions. Are they full, and are they
human? If they are haut infants, that latter is a most debatable point.
For the first, we can at least look . . .” A dozen more
pallet monitors, checked at random intervals around the room, revealed
similar results. Miles was breathing rapidly by the time he gave it up
for proven.
Roic said in a puzzled tone, “So
what's a Betan herm doing with a bunch of Cetagandan replicators? And
just because they're Cetagandan make, how d'you know it's Cetagandans
inside 'em? Maybe the Betan bought the replicators used?”
Miles,
lips drawn back on a grin, swung to Bel. “Betan? What do you think,
Bel? How much did you two talk about the old sandbox while you were
supervising this visit?”
“We didn't talk much at
all.” Bel shook its head. “But that doesn't prove anything. I'm not
much for bringing up the subject of home myself, and even if I had, I'm
too out of touch with Beta to spot inaccuracies in current events
anyway. It wasn't Dubauer's conversation that was the trouble. There was just something . . . off, in its body language.”
“Body
language. Just so.” Miles stepped to Bel, reached up, and turned the
herm's face to the light. Bel did not flinch at his nearness, but
merely smiled. Fine hairs gleamed on cheek and chin. Miles's eyes
narrowed as he carefully revisualized the cut on Dubauer's cheek.
“You have facial down, like women. All herms do, right?”
“Sure. Unless they're using a really thorough depilatory, I suppose. Some even cultivate beards.”
“Dubauer
doesn't.” Miles made to pace down the aisle, stopped himself, turned
back, and held still with an effort. “Nary a sprout in sight, except
for the pretty silver eyebrows and hair, which I'd wager Betan dollars
to sand are recent implants. Body language, hah. Dubauer's not
double-sexed at all—what were your ancestors thinking?”
Bel smirked cheerily.
“But altogether sexless. Truly 'it.' “
“It
, in Betan parlance,” Bel began in the weary tone of one who has had to
explain this far too often, “does not carry the connotation of an
inanimate object that it does in other planetary cultures. I say this
despite a certain ex-boss of my very distant past, who did a pretty
fair imitation of the sort of large and awkward piece of furniture that
one can neither get rid of nor decorate around—”
Miles waved this aside. “Don't tell me —I got that lecture at my mother's knee. But Dubauer's not a herm. Dubauer's a ba.”
“A who what?”
“To
the casual outside eye, the ba appear to be the bred servitors of the
Celestial Garden, where the Cetagandan emperor dwells in serenity in
surroundings of aesthetic perfection, or so the haut lords would have
you believe. The ba seem the ultimate loyal servant race, human dogs.
Beautiful, of course, because everything inside the Celestial Garden
must be. I first ran into the ba about ten years back, when I was sent
to Cetaganda—not as Admiral Naismith, but as Lieutenant Lord
Vorkosigan—on a diplomatic errand. To attend the funeral of Emperor
Fletchir Giaja's mother, as it happened, the old Dowager Empress
Lisbet. I got to see a lot of ba up close. Those of a certain
age—relicts of Lisbet's youth a century ago, mainly—had all been made
hairless. It was a fashion, which has since passed.
“But the ba aren't servants, or anyway, aren't just
servants, of the Imperial haut. Remember what I said about the haut
ladies of the Star Crиche only working in human genes? The ba are where
the haut ladies test out prospective new gene complexes, improvements
to the haut race, before they decide if they're good enough to add to
this year's new model haut cohort. In a sense, the ba are the haut's
siblings. Elder siblings, almost. Children, even, from a certain angle
of view. The haut and the ba are two sides of one coin.
“A
ba is every bit as smart and dangerous as a haut lord. But not as
autonomous. The ba are as loyal as they are sexless, because they're
made so, and for some of the same reasons of control. At least it
explains why I kept thinking I'd met Dubauer someplace before. If that
ba doesn't share most of its genes with Fletchir Giaja himself, I'll
eat my, my, my—”
“Fingernails?” Bel suggested.
Miles
hastily removed his hand from his mouth. He continued, “If Dubauer's a
ba, and I'll swear it is, these replicators have to be full of
Cetagandan . . . somethings. But why here ?
Why transport them covertly, and on a ship of a once-and-future enemy
empire, at that? Well, I hope not future—the last three rounds of open
warfare we had with our Cetagandan neighbors were surely enough. If
this was something open and aboveboard, why not travel on a Cetagandan
ship, with all the trimmings? I guarantee it's not for economy's sake.
Deathly secret, this, but who from, and why? What the hell is the Star
Crиche up to, anyway?” He swung in a circle, unable to keep still. “And
what is so hellish secret that this ba would bring these live growing fetuses all this way, but then plan to kill them all to keep the secret rather than ask for help?”
“Oh,” said Bel. “Yeah, that. That's . . . a bit unnerving, when you think about it.”
Roic said indignantly, “That's horrible , m'lord!”
“Maybe
Dubauer doesn't really intend to flush them,” said Bel in an uncertain
tone. “Maybe it just said that to get us to put more pressure on the
quaddies to give it a break, let it take its cargo off the Idris .”
“Ah . . .” said Miles. There
was an attractive idea—wash his hands of this whole unholy
mess . . . ”Crap. No. Not yet, anyway. In fact, I
want you to lock the Idris back down. Don't let Dubauer—don't let anyone back on board. For once in my life, I actually want to check with HQ before I jump. And as quickly as possible.”
What
was it that Gregor had said—had talked around, rather? Something has
stirred up the Cetagandans around Rho Ceta. Something peculiar. Oh,
Sire, do we ever have peculiar here now. Connections?
“Miles ,” said Bel in aggravation, “I just jumped through hoops persuading Watts and Greenlaw to let Dubauer back on the Idris
. How am I going to explain the sudden reversal?” Bel hesitated. “If
this cargo and its owner are dangerous to Quaddiespace, I should report
it. D'you think that quaddie in the hostel might have been shooting at
Dubauer, instead of at you or me?”
“The thought has crossed my mind, yes.”
“Then it's . . . wrong, to blindside the station on what may be a safety issue.”
Miles
took a breath. “You are Graf Station's representative here; you know,
therefore the station knows. That's enough. For now.”
Bel frowned. “That argument's too disingenuous even for me .”
“I'm only asking you to wait. Depending on what information I get back from home, I could damn well end up buying Dubauer a fast ship to take its cargo away on. One not of Barrayaran registry, preferably. Just stall. I know you can.”
“Well . . . all right. For a little while.”
“I want the secured comconsole in the Kestrel . We'll seal this hold and continue later. Wait. I want to have a look at Dubauer's cabin, first.”
“Miles, have you ever heard of the concept of a search warrant ?”
“Dear
Bel, how fussy you have grown in your old age. This is a Barrayaran
ship, and I am Gregor's Voice. I don't ask for search warrants, I issue them.”
Miles
took one last turn completely around the cargo hold before having Roic
lock it back up. He didn't spot anything different, just, dauntingly,
more of the same. Fifty pallets added up to a lot of uterine
replicators. There were no decomposing dead bodies tucked in behind any
of the replicator racks, anyway, worse luck.
Dubauer's
accommodation, back in the personnel module, proved unenlightening. It
was a small economy cabin, and whatever personal effects
the . . . individual of unknown gender had
possessed, it had evidently packed and taken them all along when the
quaddies had transferred the passengers to the hostels. No bodies under
the bed or in the cabinets here, either. Brun's people had surely
searched it at least cursorily once, the day after Solian vanished.
Miles made a mental note to try to arrange a more microscopically
thorough forensics examination of both the cabin, and the hold with the
replicators. Although—by what organization? He didn't want to turn this
over to Venn yet, but the Barrayaran fleet's medical people were mainly
devoted to trauma. I'll figure something out. Never had he missed ImpSec more keenly.
“Do
the Cetagandans have any agents here in Quaddiespace?” he asked Bel as
they exited the cabin and locked up again. “Have you ever encountered
your opposite numbers?”
Bel shook its head.
“People from your region are pretty thinly spread out in this arm of
the Nexus. Barrayar doesn't even keep a full-time consul's office on
Union Station, and neither does Cetaganda. All they have is some
quaddie lawyer on retainer over there who keeps the paperwork for about
a dozen minor planetary polities, if anyone should want it. Visas and
entry permissions and such. Actually, as I recall, she handles both
Barrayar and Cetaganda. If there are any Cetagandan agents on Graf, I
haven't spotted them. I can only hope the reverse is also true. Though
if the Cetagandans do keep any spies or agents or informers in
Quaddiespace, they're most likely to be on Union. I'm only here on Graf
for, um, personal reasons.”
Before they exited the Idris
, Roic insisted Bel call Venn for an update on the search for the
murderous quaddie from the hostel lobby. Venn, clearly discommoded,
rattled off reports of vigorous activity on the part of his
patrollers—and no results. Roic was jumpy on the short walk from the Idris' s docking bay to the one where the Kestrel
was locked on, eyeing their armed quaddie escort with almost as much
suspicion as he eyed shadows and cross corridors. But they arrived
without further incident.
“How hard would it be to
get Greenlaw's permission to fast-penta Dubauer?” Miles asked Bel, as
they made their way through the Kestrel 's airlock.
“Well, you'd need a court order. And an explanation that would convince a quaddie judge.”
“Hm. Ambushing Dubauer with a hypospray aboard the Idris suggests itself to my mind as a simpler alternate possibility.”
“It
would.” Bel sighed. “And it would cost me my job if Watts found out I'd
helped you. If Dubauer's innocent of wrongdoing, it would certainly
complain to the quaddie authorities, afterward.”
“Dubauer's not innocent. At the very least, it's lied about its cargo.”
“Not necessarily. Its manifest just reads, Mammals, genetically altered, assorted . You can't say they aren't mammals.”
“Transporting
minors for immoral purposes, then. Slave trading. Hell, I'll think of
something.” Miles waved Roic and Bel off to wait, and took over the Kestrel 's wardroom again.
He
seated himself, adjusted the security cone, and took a long breath,
trying to round up his galloping thoughts. There was no faster way to
get a tightbeam message, however coded, from Quaddiespace to Barrayar
than via the commercial system of links. Message beams were squirted at
the speed of light across local space systems between wormhole jump
point stations. An hour's, or a day's, messages were collected at the
stations and loaded on either scheduled dedicated communications ships,
jumping back and forth on a regular schedule to squirt them across the
next local space region, or, on less traveled routes, on whatever ship
next jumped through. The round trip for a beamed message between
Quaddiespace and the Imperium would take several days, at best.
He
addressed the message triply, to Emperor Gregor, to ImpSec Chief
Allegre, and to ImpSec galactic operations headquarters on Komarr.
After a sketchy outline of the situation so far, including assurances
of his assailant's bad aim, he described Dubauer, in as much detail as
possible, and the startling cargo he'd found aboard the Idris .
He requested full details on the new tensions with the Cetagandans that
Gregor had alluded to so obliquely, and appended an urgent plea for
information, if any, on known Cetagandan operatives and operations in
Quaddiespace. He ran the results through the Kestrel 's ImpSec encoder and squirted it on its way.
Now what? Wait for an answer that might be entirely inconclusive? Hardly . . .
He jumped in his chair when his wrist com buzzed. He gulped and slapped it. “Vorkosigan.”
“Hello, Miles.” It was Ekaterin's voice; his heart rate slowed. “Do you have a moment?”
“Not only that, I have the Kestrel 's comconsole. A moment of privacy, if you can believe it.”
“Oh!
Just a second, then . . .” The wrist com channel closed.
Shortly, Ekaterin's face and torso appeared over the vid plate. She was
wearing that flattering slate-blue thing again. “Ah,” she said happily.
“There you are. That's better.”
“Well, not quite.”
He touched his fingers to his lips and transferred the kiss in
pantomime to the image of hers. Cool ghost, alas, not warm flesh.
Belatedly, he asked, “Where are you?” Alone, he trusted.
“In my cabin on the Prince Xav
. Admiral Vorpatril gave me a nice one. I think he evicted some poor
senior officer. Are you all right? Have you had your dinner?”
“Dinner?”
“Oh, dear, I know that look. Make Lieutenant Smolyani at least open you a meal tray before you go off again.”
“Yes, love.” He grinned at her. “Practicing that maternal drill?”
“I was thinking of it more as a public service. Have you found something interesting and useful?”
“Interesting is an understatement. Useful—well—I'm not sure.” He described his find on the Idris , in only slightly more colorful terms than the ones he'd just sent off to Gregor.
Ekaterin's
eyes grew wide. “Goodness! And here I was all excited because I thought
I'd found a fat clue for you! I'm afraid mine's just gossip, by
comparison.”
“Gossip away, do.”
“Just something I picked up over dinner with Vorpatril's officers. They seemed a pleasant group, I must say.”
I'll bet they made themselves pleasant.
Their guest was beautiful, cultured, a breath of home, and the first
female most of them had spoken to in weeks. And married to the Imperial
Auditor, heh. Eat your hearts out, boys.
“I
tried to get them to talk about Lieutenant Solian, but hardly anyone
knew the man. Except that one fellow remembered that Solian had had to
step out of a weekly fleet security officers' meeting because he'd
sprung a nosebleed. I gather that Solian was more embarrassed and
annoyed than alarmed. But it occurred to me that it might be a chronic
thing with him. Nikki had them for a while, and I had them occasionally
for a couple of years when I was a girl, though mine went away on their
own. But if Solian hadn't taken himself to his ship's medtech to get
fixed yet, well, it might be another way someone could have obtained a
tissue sample from him for that manufactured blood.” She paused.
“Actually, now I think on it, I'm not so sure that is a help to
you. Anyone might have grabbed his used nose rag out of the trash,
wherever he'd been. Although I supposed that if his nose was bleeding,
at least he had to have been alive at the time. It seemed a little
hopeful, anyway.” Her thoughtful frown deepened. “Or maybe not.”
“Thank
you,” said Miles sincerely. “I don't know if it's hopeful or not
either, but it gives me another reason to see the medtechs next. Good!”
He was rewarded with a smile. He added, “And if you come up with any
thoughts on Dubauer's cargo, feel free to share. Although only with me,
for the moment.”
“I understand.” Her brows drew
down. “It is stunningly strange. Not strange that the cargo exists—I
mean, if all the haut children are conceived and genetically engineered
centrally, the way your friend the haut Pel described it to me when she
came as an envoy to Gregor's wedding, the haut women geneticists have
to be exporting thousands of embryos from the Star Crиche all the time.”
“Not
all the time,” Miles corrected. “Once a year. The annual haut child
ships to the outlying satrapies are all dispatched at the same time. It
gives all the top haut-lady planetary consorts like Pel, who are
charged with conducting them, a chance to meet and consult with each
other. Among other things.”
She nodded. “But to
bring this cargo all the way here—and with only one handler to look
after them . . . If your Dubauer, or whoever it is,
really does have a thousand babies in tow, I don't care if they're
normal human or ghem or haut or what, it had better have several
hundred nursemaids waiting for them somewhere.”
“Truly.”
Miles rubbed his forehead, which was aching again, and not just from
the exploding possibilities. Ekaterin was right about that meal tray,
as usual. If Solian could have tossed away a blood sample anywhere, any
time . . .
“Oh, ha!” He rummaged in
his trouser pocket and pulled out his handkerchief, forgotten there
since this morning, and opened it on the heavy brown stain. Blood
sample, indeed. He didn't have to wait for ImpSec HQ to get back to him
on this identification. He would have undoubtedly remembered
this accidental specimen eventually without the prompting. Whether
before or after the efficient Roic had cleaned his clothes and returned
them ready to don again, now, that was another question, wasn't it?
“Ekaterin, I love you dearly. And I need to talk to the Prince Xav 's surgeon right now .” He made frantic kissing motions at her, which elicited that entrancing enigmatic smile of hers, and cut the com.
CHAPTER TEN
Miles made an urgent heads-up call to the Prince Xav ; a short delay followed while Bel negotiated clearance for the Kestrel
's message drone. Half a dozen armed Union Militia patrol vessels still
floated protectively between Graf Station and Vorpatril's fleet lying
in frustrated exile several kilometers off. It would not have done for
Miles's precious sample to be shot out of space by some quaddie militia
guard with a double quota of itchy trigger fingers. Miles didn't relax
until the Prince Xav reported the capsule safely retrieved and taken inboard.
He finally settled down at the Kestrel
's wardroom table with Bel, Roic, and some military-issue ration trays.
He ate mechanically, barely tasting the admittedly not-very-tasty hot
food, one eye on the vid display still fast forwarding through the Idris
's lock records. Dubauer, it appeared, had never once left the vessel
to so much as stroll about the station during the whole of the time the
ship had been in dock, until forcibly removed with the other passengers
to the stationside hostel by the quaddies.
Lieutenant
Solian had left five times, four of them duty excursions for routine
cargo checks, the fifth, most interestingly, after his work shift on
his last day. The vid showed a good view of the back of his head,
departing, and a clear shot of his face, returning about forty minutes
later. Despite freezing the image, Miles could not certainly identify
any of the spots or shadows on Solian's dark-green Barrayaran military
tunic as nose-bloodstains, even in close-up. Solian's expression was
set and frowning as he glanced up straight at the security vid pickup,
part of his charge, after all—perhaps automatically checking its
function. The young man didn't look relaxed, or happy, or as though he
were looking forward to some interesting station leave, although he had
been due some. He looked . . . intent on something.
It
was the last documented time Solian had been seen alive. No sign of his
body had been found when Brun's men had searched the Idris the
next day, and they had searched thoroughly, requiring each passenger
with cargo, including Dubauer, to unlock their cabins and holds for
inspection. Hence Brun's strongly held theory that Solian must have
smuggled himself out undetected. “So where did he go out to, during
that forty minutes he was off the ship?” Miles asked in aggravation.
“He
didn't cross my customs barriers, not unless someone rolled him in a
damned carpet and carried him,” said Bel positively. “And I don't have
a record of anyone lugging in a carpet. We looked. He had pretty free
access to the six loading bays in that sector, and any ships then in
dock. Which were all your four, at the time.”
“Well,
Brun swears he doesn't have vids of him boarding any of the other
vessels. I suppose I'd better check everyone else who entered or left
any of the ships during that period. Solian could have sat down for a
quiet, unobserved chat—or more sinister exchange—with someone in any
number of nooks in those loading bays. With or without a nosebleed.”
“The
bays aren't that closely controlled or patrolled,” Bel admitted. “We
let crew and passengers use the empty ones for exercise spaces or
games, sometimes.”
“Hm.” Someone had certainly used one to play games with that synthesized blood, later.
After
their utilitarian dinner, Miles had Bel conduct him back through the
customs checkpoints to the hostel where the impounded ships' crews were
housed. These digs were notably less luxurious and more crowded than
the ones devoted to the paying galactic passengers, and the edgy crews
had been stuck in them for days with nothing but the holovid and each
other for entertainment. Miles was instantly pounced upon by assorted
senior officers, both from the two Toscane Corporation ships and the
two independents caught up in this fracas, demanding to know how soon
he was going to obtain their release. He cut through the hubbub to
request interviews with the medtechs assigned to the four ships, and a
quiet room to conduct them in. Some shuffling produced, at length, a
back office and a quartet of nervous Komarrans.
Miles addressed the Idris 's medtech first. “How hard would it be for an unauthorized person to gain access to your infirmary?”
The
man blinked. “Not hard at all, Lord Auditor. I mean, it's not locked.
In case of an emergency, people might need to be able to get in right
away, without hunting me up. I might even be the emergency.” He
paused, then added, “A few of my medications and some equipment are
kept in code-locked drawers, with tighter inventory controls, of
course. But for the rest, there's no need. In dock, who comes on and
off the ship is controlled by ship's security, and in space, well, that
takes care of itself.”
“You haven't had trouble with theft, then? Equipment going for a walk, supplies disappearing?”
“Very little. I mean, the ship is public, but it's not that kind of public. If you see what I mean.”
The
medtechs from the two independent ships reported similar protocols when
in space, but when in dock both were required to keep their little
departments secured when they were not themselves on duty there. Miles
reminded himself that one of these people might have been bribed to
cooperate with whoever had undertaken the blood synthesis. Four
suspects, eh. His next inquiry ascertained that all four ship's
infirmaries did indeed keep portable synthesizers in inventory as
standard equipment.
“If someone snuck in to one of
your infirmaries to synthesize some blood, would you be able to tell
that your equipment had been used?”
“If they cleaned up after themselves . . . maybe not,” said the Idris 's tech. “Or—how much blood?”
“Three to four liters.”
The
man's anxious face cleared. “Oh, yes. That is, if they used my supplies
of phyllopacks and fluids, and didn't bring in their own. I'd have
noticed if that much were gone.”
“How soon would you notice?”
“Next time I looked, I suppose. Or at the monthly inventory, if I didn't have occasion to look before then.”
“Have you noticed?”
“No, but—that is, I haven't looked.”
Except
that a suitably bribed medtech ought to be perfectly capable of fudging
the inventory of such bulky and noncontrolled items. Miles decided to
turn up the heat. He said blandly, “The reason I ask is that the blood
that was found on the loading bay floor that kicked off this
unfortunate—and expensive—chain of events, while it was indeed
initially DNA typed as Lieutenant Solian's, was found to be
synthesized. Quaddie customs claim to have no record of Solian ever
crossing into Graf Station, which suggests, although it does not alas
prove, that the blood might have been synthesized on the outboard side
of the customs barrier too. I think we had better check each of your
supply inventories, next.”
The medtech from the Idris 's Toscane-owned sister ship, the Rudra , frowned suddenly. “There was—” She broke off.
“Yes?” Miles said encouragingly.
“There
was that funny passenger, who came in to ask me about my blood
synthesizer. I just figured he was one of the nervous sorts of
travelers, although when he explained himself, I also thought he
probably had good reason to be.”
Miles smiled carefully. “Tell me more about your funny passenger.”
“He'd just signed on to the Rudra
here at Graf Station. He said he was worried, if he had any accidents
en route, because he couldn't take standard blood substitutes on
account of being so heavily gengineered. Which he was. I mean, I
believed him about the blood compatibility problems. That's why we
carry the synthesizers, after all. He had the longest fingers—with
webs. He told me he was an amphibian, which I didn't quite
believe, till he showed me his gill slits. His ribs opened out in the
most astonishing fashion. He said he has to keep spraying his gills
with moisturizer, when he travels, because the air on ships and
stations is too dry for him.” She stopped, and swallowed.
Definitely not “Dubauer,” then. Hm. Another player? But in the same game, or a different one?
She
continued in a scared voice, “I ended up showing him my synthesizer,
because he seemed so worried and kept asking questions about it. I
mainly worried about what sorts of tranquilizers were going to be safe
to use on him, if he turned out to be one of those people who gets
hysterical eight days out.”
Leaping about and
whooping, Miles told himself firmly, would likely just frighten the
young woman more. He did sit up and favor her with a perky smile, which
made her shrink back in her chair only slightly. “When was this? What
day?”
“Um . . . two days before the quaddies made us all evacuate the ship and come here.”
Three days after Solian's vanishing. Better and better . “What was the passenger's name? Could you identify him again?'
“Oh, sure—I mean, webs, after all. He told me his name was Firka.”
As if casually, Miles asked, “Would you be willing to repeat this testimony under fast-penta?”
She made a face. “I suppose so. Do I have to?”
Neither panicked nor too eager; good. “We'll see. Physical inventory next, I think. We'll start with the Rudra 's infirmary.” And just in case he was being led up the path by his nose, the others to follow.
More
delays ensued, while Bel negotiated over the comconsole with Venn and
Watts for the temporary release from house arrest of the medtechs as
expert witnesses. Once those arrangements had been approved, the visit
to the Rudra 's infirmary was gratifyingly short, direct, and fruitful.
The
medtech's supply of synthetic blood base was down by four liters. A
phyllopack, with its hundreds of square meters of primed reaction
surface stacked in microscopic layers in a convenient insert, was gone.
And the blood synthesizing machine had been improperly cleaned. Miles
smiled toothily as he personally scraped a tinge of organic residue
from its tubing into a plastic bag for the delectation of the Prince Xav 's surgeon.
It all rang sufficiently true that he set Roic to collecting copies of the Rudra
's security records, with particular reference to Passenger Firka, and
sent Bel off with the techs to cross-check the other three infirmaries
without him. Miles returned to the Kestrel and handed off his new sample to Lieutenant Smolyani to convey promptly to the Prince Xav
, then settled down to run a search for Firka's present location. He
tracked him to the second of the two hostels taken up with the
impounded ships' passengers, but the quaddie on security duty there
reported that the man had signed out for the evening before dinner and
had not yet returned. Firka's prior venture out that day had been
around the time of the passengers' meeting; perhaps he'd been one of
the men in the back of the room, although Miles certainly hadn't
noticed a webbed hand raised for questions. Miles left orders with
quaddie hostel security to call him or Armsman Roic when the passenger
returned, regardless of the time.
Frowning, he
called the first hostel to check on Dubauer. The Betan/Cetagandan
herm/ba/whatever had indeed returned safely from the Idris ,
but had left again after dinner. Not in itself unusual: few of the
trapped passengers stayed in their hostel when they could vary their
evening boredom by seeking entertainment elsewhere on the station. But
hadn't Dubauer just been the person who'd been too frightened to
traverse Graf Station alone without an armed escort? Miles's frown
deepened, and he left orders to this quaddie duty guard to notify him
when Dubauer, too, came back.
He rescanned the Idris
's security vids on fast forward while waiting Roic's return. Paused
close-up views of the hands of a number of otherwise unexceptionable
visitors to the ship revealed no webs. It was nearing station midnight
when Roic and Bel checked in.
Bel was yawning.
“Nothing exciting,” the herm reported. “I think we got it in one. I
sent the medtechs back to the hostel with a security escort to tuck 'em
into bed. What's next?”
Miles chewed gently on the
side of his finger. “Wait for the surgeon to report identifications on
the two samples I sent over to the Prince Xav . Wait for Firka
and Dubauer to return to their hostels, or else go running all over the
station looking for them. Or better yet, make Venn's patrollers do it,
except that I don't really want to divert them from hunting for my
assassin till they nail the fellow.”
Roic, who had begun to look alarmed, relaxed again. “Good thinking, m'lord,” he murmured gratefully.
“Sounds like a golden opportunity to sleep, to me,” opined Bel.
Miles,
to his irritation, was finding Bel's yawns contagious. Miles had never
quite mastered their old mercenary colleague Commodore Tung's
formidable ability to sleep anywhere, any time a break in the action
permitted. He was sure he was still too keyed up to doze. “A nap,
maybe,” he granted grudgingly.
Bel, intelligently,
at once seized the chance to go home to Nicol for a time. Overriding
the herm's argument that it was a bodyguard, Miles made Bel
take a quaddie patroller along. Regretfully, Miles decided to wait
until he had heard back from the surgeon to call and wake up Chief
Venn; he could not afford mistakes in quaddie eyes. He cleaned up and
lay down himself in his tiny cabin for whatever sleep he could snatch.
If he had a choice between a good night's uninterrupted sleep, and
early news, he'd prefer news.
Venn would
presumably let him know at once if Security effected an arrest of the
quaddie with the rivet gun. Some space transfer stations were
deliberately designed to be hard to hide in. Unfortunately, Graf wasn't
one of them. Its architecture could only be described as an
agglomeration. It had to be full of forgotten crannies. Best chance of
catching the fellow would be if he attempted to leave; would he be cool
enough to go to some den and lie low, instead? Or, having missed his
target the first time—whoever his target had been—hot enough to circle
back for another pass? Smolyani had disengaged the Kestrel from its lock and taken up position a few meters off the side of the station, just in case, while the Lord Auditor slept.
Replacing
the question of who would want to shoot a harmless elderly Betan herm
shepherding, well, sheep, with the question of who would want to shoot
a Cetagandan ba smuggling a secret human—or superhuman—cargo of
inestimable value, at least to the Star
Crиche . . . opened up the range of possible
complications in an extremely disturbing fashion. Miles had already
quietly decided that Passenger Firka was due for an early rendezvous
with fast-penta, with quaddie cooperation if Miles could get it, or
without. But, upon reflection, it was doubtful that the truth drug
would work on a ba. He entertained brief, wistful fantasies of older
interrogation methods. Something from the ancestral era of Mad Emperor
Yuri, perhaps, or great-great-grandfather Count Pierre “Le Sanguinaire”
Vorrutyer.
He rolled over in his narrow bunk,
conscious of how lonely the silence of his cabin was without the
reassuring rhythmic breath of Ekaterin overhead. He had gradually
become used to that nightly presence. This marriage thing was getting
to be a habit, one of his better ones. He touched the chrono on his
wrist, and sighed. She was probably asleep by now. Too late to call and
wake her just to listen to his blither. He counted over the days to
Aral Alexander and Helen Natalia's decanting. Their travel margin was
narrowing each day he fooled around here. His brain was putting
together a twisted jingle to an old nursery tune, something about
fast-penta and puppy dog tails early in the morning, when he mercifully
drifted off.
* * *
“M'lord?”
Miles snapped alert at Roic's voice on the cabin intercom. “Yes?”
“The Prince Xav 's surgeon is on the secured comconsole. I told him to hold, you'd wish to be wakened.”
“Yes.”
Miles glanced at the glowing numerals of the wall chrono; he'd been
asleep about four hours. Plenty enough for now. He reached for his
jacket. “On my way.”
Roic, again—no, still—in uniform, waited in the increasingly familiar little wardroom.
“I thought I told you to get some sleep,” Miles said. “Tomorrow—today, it is now, could be a long one.”
“I was checking through the Rudra 's security vids, m'lord. Think I might have something.”
“All
right. Show me them after this, then.” He slid into the station chair,
powered up the security cone, and activated the com vid image.
The
senior fleet surgeon, who by the collar tabs on his green uniform held
a captain's rank, looked to be one of the young and fit New Men of
Emperor Gregor's progressive reign; by his bright, excited eyes, he
wasn't regretting his lost night's sleep much. “My Lord Auditor.
Captain Chris Clogston here. I have your blood work.”
“Excellent. What have you found?”
The
surgeon leaned forward. “The most interesting was the stain on that
handkerchief of yours. I'd say it was Cetagandan haut blood, without
question, except that the sex chromosomes are decidedly odd, and
instead of the extra pair of chromosomes where they usually assemble
their genetic modifications, there are two extra pairs.”
Miles grinned. Yes!
“Quite. An experimental model. Cetagandan haut indeed, but this one is
a ba—genderless—and almost certainly from the Star Crиche itself.
Freeze a portion of that sample and mark it top secret, and send it
along home to ImpSec's biolabs by the first available courier, with my
compliments. I'm sure they'll want it on file.”
“Yes, my lord.”
No
wonder Dubauer had tried to retrieve that bloodied handkerchief. Quite
aside from blowing its cover, high-level Star Crиche gene work was not
the sort of thing the haut ladies cared to have circulating at large,
not unless they'd released it themselves, filtered through a few select
Cetagandan ghem clans via their haut trophy wives and mothers. Granted,
the haut ladies saved their greatest vigilance for the genes they gated
in to their well-guarded genome, generations-long work of art
that it was. Miles wondered how tidy a profit one might make, offering
pirate copies of those cells he'd inadvertently collected. Or maybe
not—this ba wasn't, clearly, their latest work. A near-century out of date, in fact.
Their latest work lay in the hold of the Idris. Urk.
“The
other sample,” Clogston went on, “was Solian II—that is, Lieutenant
Solian's synthesized blood. Identical to the earlier specimen—same
batch, I'd say.”
“Good! Now we're getting somewhere.” Where, for God's sake? “Thank you, Captain. This is invaluable. Go get some sleep, you've earned it.”
The
surgeon, disappointment writ plainly on his face at this dismissal
without further explication, signed off.
Miles
turned back to Roic in time to catch him stifling a yawn. The armsman
looked embarrassed, and sat up straighter.
“So what do we have?” Miles prompted.
Roic cleared his throat. “The passenger Firka actually joined the Rudra after it was first due to leave, during that delay for repairs.”
“Huh. Suggests it wasn't part of a long-laid itinerary, then . . . maybe. Go on.”
“I've
filtered out quite a few records of the fellow passing on and off the
ship, before it was impounded and the passengers evicted. Using his
cabin as his hostel, it seems, which a lot of folks do to save money.
Two of his trips bracket times Lieutenant Solian was away from the Idris —one overlaps his last routine cargo inspection, and t'other exactly brackets that last forty minutes we can't account for.”
“Oh, very nice. So what does this self-declared amphibian look like?”
Roic fiddled a moment with the console and brought up a clear full-length shot from the Rudra 's lock vid records.
The
man was tall, with pale unhealthy-looking skin and dark hair shaved
close to his skull in a patchy, unflattering fuzz, like lichen on a
boulder. Big nose, small ears, a lugubrious expression on his rubbery
face—he looked strung out, actually, eyes dark and ringed. Long, skinny
arms and legs; a loose tunic or poncho concealed the details of his big
upper torso. His hands and feet were especially distinctive, and Miles
zoomed in for close-ups. One hand was half-concealed in a cloth glove
with the fingertips cut out, which hid the webs from a casual glance,
but the other was ungloved and half-raised, and the webs showed
distinctly, a dark rose color between the over-long fingers. The feet
were concealed in soft boots or buskins, tied at the ankles, but they
too were about double the length of a normal foot, though no wider.
Could the fellow spread his webbed toes, when in the water, as he
spread his webbed fingers, to make a broad flipper?
He
recalled Ekaterin's description of the passenger who had accosted her
and Bel on their outing, that first day—he had the longest, narrowest hands and feet
. Bel should get a look at this shortly. Miles let the vid run. The
fellow had a somewhat shambling gate when he walked, lifting and
setting down those almost clownish feet.
“Where did he come from?” Miles asked Roic.
“His documentation claims he's an Aslunder.” Roic's voice was heavy with disbelief.
Aslund
was one of Barrayar's fairly near Nexus neighbors, an impoverished
agricultural world in a local space cul-de-sac off the Hegen Hub. “Huh.
Almost our neck of the woods.”
“I dunno, m'lord.
His Graf Station customs records show him disembarking from a ship he'd
joined at Tau Ceti, which arrived here on the day before our fleet was
originally due to leave. Don't know if he originated there or not.”
“I'd
bet not.” Was there a water-world being settled somewhere on the
fringes of the Nexus, whose colonists had chosen to alter their
children instead of their environment? Miles hadn't heard of one, but
it had to happen sometime. Or was Firka a one-off project, an
experiment or prototype of some sort? He'd certainly run into a few of
those, before. Neither exactly squared with an origin on Aslund. Though
he might have immigrated there . . . Miles made a
note to request an ImpSec background search on the fellow in his next
report, even though any results were likely to trickle back too late to
be of any immediate use. At least, he certainly hoped he'd have this
mess wrapped up and shipped out before then.
“He originally tried to get a berth on the Idris , but there wasn't room,” Roic added.
“Ah!” Or maybe that ought to be, Huh?
Miles
sat back in his station chair, eyes narrowing. Reasoning in advance of
his beloved and much-longed-for fast-penta—posit that this peculiar
individual had had some personal contact with Solian before the
lieutenant went missing. Posit that he had acquired, somehow, a sample
of Solian's blood, perhaps in much the same accidental way that Miles
had acquired Dubauer's. Why, then, in the name of reason, would he have
subsequently gone to the trouble of running up a fake sample of
Solian's blood and dribbling it all over a loading bay and out the
airlock?
To cover up a murder elsewhere? Solian's
disappearance had already been put down to desertion, by his own
commanders. No cover needed: if a murder, it was already nearly the
perfect crime at that point, with the investigation about to be
abandoned.
A frame? Meant to pin Solian's murder
on another? Attractive, but in that case, shouldn't some innocent have
been tracked and accused by now? Unless Firka was the innocent, it was
a frame with no portrait in it, at present.
To
cover up a desertion? Might Firka and Solian be collaborating on
Solian's defection? Or . . . when might a desertion
not be a desertion? When it was an ImpSec covert ops scam, that's when.
Except that Solian was Service Security, not ImpSec: a guard, not a spy
or trained agent. Still . . . a sufficiently
bright, loyal, highly motivated, and ambitious officer, finding himself
in some complex imbroglio, might not wait for orders from on high to
pursue a fast-moving long shot. As Miles had reason to know.
Of course, taking risky chances like that could get such an officer killed. As Miles also had reason to know.
Regardless
of intent, what had the actual effect of the blood bait been? Or what
would it have been if Corbeau and Garnet Five's star-crossed romance
hadn't run afoul of Barrayaran prejudices and loutishness? The showy
scarlet scenario on the loading bay deck would certainly have reaffixed
official attention upon Solian's disappearance; it would almost
certainly have delayed the fleet's departure, although not as
spectacularly as the real events had. Assuming Garnet Five and
Corbeau's problems had been accidental. She was an actress of sorts,
after all. They had only Corbeau's word about his wrist com.
He
said wistfully, “I don't suppose we have a clear shot of this frog-man
lugging out half a dozen liter jugs at any point?”
“Afraid
not, m'lord. He went back and forth with lots of packages and boxes at
various times, though; they could well have been hid inside something.”
Gah
. The acquisition of facts was supposed to clarify thought. This was
just getting murkier and murkier. He asked Roic, “Has quaddie security
from either of the hostels called yet? Are Dubauer or Firka back yet?”
“No, m'lord. No calls, that is.”
Miles
called both to cross-check; neither of his two passengers of interest
had yet returned. It was over four hours after midnight, now, 0420 on
the twenty-four-hour, Earth-descended clock that Quaddiespace still
kept, generations after their ancestors' unmodified ancestors had
departed the home world.
After he'd cut the com, Miles asked querulously, “So where the hell have they gone, all night?”
Roic shrugged. “If it was t' obvious thing, I wouldn't look for them to be back till breakfast.”
Miles
considerately declined to take notice of Roic's distinct blush. “Our
frog-man, maybe, but I guarantee the ba didn't go looking for feminine
companionship. There's nothing obvious about any of this.” Decisively,
Miles reached for the call pad again.
Instead of
Chief Venn, the image of a quaddie woman in a Security gray uniform
appeared against the dizzying radial background of Venn's office. Miles
wasn't sure what her rank markings decoded to, but she looked sensible,
middle-aged, and harried enough to be fairly senior.
“Good morning,” he began politely. “Where's Chief Venn?”
“Sleeping,
I hope.” The expression on her face suggested she was going to do her
loyal best to keep it that way, too.
“At a time like this?”
“The
poor man had a double shift and a half yester . . .” She
squinted at him, and seemed to come to some recognition. “Oh. Lord
Auditor Vorkosigan. I'm Chief Venn's third-shift supervisor, Teris
Three. Is there anything I can do for you?”
“Night
duty officer, eh? Very good. Yes, please. I wish to arrange for the
detainment and interrogation, possibly with fast-penta, of a passenger
from theRudra . His name's Firka.”
“Is there some criminal charge you wish to file?”
“Material
witness, to start. I have found reason to suspect he may have something
to do with the blood on the floor of the docking bay that started this
mess. I want very much to find out for sure.”
“Sir,
we can't just go around arresting and drugging anyone we please, here.
We need a formal charge. And if the transient doesn't volunteer to be
interrogated, you'll have to get an adjudicator's order for the
fast-penta.”
That problem, Miles decided, he would
bounce to Sealer Greenlaw. It sounded like her department. “All right,
I charge him with suspected littering. Incorrect disposal of organics
has to be some kind of illegal, here.”
Despite herself, the corner of her mouth twitched. “It's a misdemeanor. Yes, that would do,” she admitted.
“Any pretext that will fix it for you is all right by me. I want
him, and I want him as quickly as you can lay hands on him.
Unfortunately, he signed out of his hostel at about seventeen-hundred
yesterday, and hasn't been seen since.”
“Our
security work gang is seriously overstretched, here, on account of
yesterday's . . . unfortunate incident. Can this
wait till morning, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan?”
“No.”
For
a moment, he thought she was going to go all bureaucratic on him, but
after screwing up her lips in a thoughtfully aggravated way for a
moment, she relented. “Very well. I'll put out a detention order on
him, pending Chief Venn's review. But you'll have to see to the
adjudicator as soon as we pick him up.”
“Thank
you. I promise you won't have any trouble recognizing him. I can
download IDs and some vid shots to you from here, if you wish.”
She allowed as how that would be useful, and the task was done.
Miles
hesitated, mulling over the even more disturbing dilemma of Dubauer.
There was not, to be sure, any obvious connection between the two
problems. Yet. Perhaps the interrogation of Firka would reveal one?
Leaving
Venn's myrmidon to get on with it, Miles cut the com. He leaned back in
his station chair for a moment, then brought up the vids of Firka and
reran them a couple of times.
“So,” he said after a time. “How the devil did he keep those long, floppy feet out of the blood puddles?”
Roic
stared over his shoulder. “Floater?” he finally said. “He'd have to be
damned near double-jointed to fold those legs up in one, though.”
“He looks
damned near double-jointed.” But if Firka's toes were as long and
prehensile as his fingers suggested, might he have been able to
manipulate the joystick controls, designed for quaddie lower hands,
with his feet? In this new scenario, Miles needn't picture the person
in the floater horsing a heavy body around, merely emptying his
gurgling liter jugs overboard and supplying some artistic smears with a
suitable rag.
After a few cross-eyed moments
trying to imagine this, Miles dumped Firka's vid shots into an image
manipulator and installed the fellow in a floater. The supposed
amphibian didn't quite have to be double-jointed or break his legs to
fit in. Assuming his lower body was rather more flexible than Miles's
or Roic's, it folded pretty neatly. It looked a bit painful, but
possible.
Miles stared harder at the image above the vid plate.
The
first question one addressed in describing a person on Graf Station
wasn't “man or woman”? It was “quaddie or downsider”? The very first
cut, by which one discarded half or more of the possibilities from
further consideration.
He pictured a blond quaddie
in a dark jacket, speeding up a corridor in a floater. He pictured that
quaddie's belated pursuers, whizzing past a shaven-headed downsider in
light garb, walking the other way. That was all it would take, in a
sufficiently harried moment. Step out of the floater, turn one's jacket
inside out, stuff the wig in a pocket, leave the machine with a couple
of others sitting waiting, stroll away . . . It
would be much harder to work it the other way around, of course, for a
quaddie to impersonate a downsider.
He stared at
Firka's hollow, dark-ringed eyes. He pulled up a suitable mop of blond
ringlets from the imager files and applied it to Firka's unhandsome
head.
A fair approximation of the dark-eyed
barrel-chested quaddie with the rivet gun? Glimpsed for a fraction of a
second, at fifteen meters range, and truth to tell most of Miles's
attention had been on the spark-spitting, chattering,
hot-brass-chucking object in his hands . . . had
those hands been webbed?
Fortunately, he could draw upon a second opinion. He called up Bel Thorne's home code from the comconsole.
Unsurprisingly, at this ungodly hour, the visual didn't come on when Nicol's sleepy voice answered. “Hello?”
“Nicol?
Miles Vorkosigan here. Sorry to drag you out of your sleep sack. I need
to talk to your housemate. Boot it out and make it come to the vid.
Bel's had more sleep than I have, by now.”
The
visual came up. Nicol righted herself and drew a fluffy lace garment
closer about her with a lower hand; this section of the apartment she
shared with Bel was evidently on the free fall side. It was too dim to
make out much beyond her floating form. She rubbed her eyes. “What?
Isn't Bel with you?”
Miles's stomach went into free fall, for all that the Kestrel 's grav was in good working order. “No . . . Bel left over six hours ago.”
Her
frown sharpened. The sleep drained from her face, to be replaced by
alarm. “But Bel didn't come home last night!”
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Graf Station Security Post One, housing most of
the security police administrative offices including Chief Venn's, lay
entirely on the free fall side of the station. Miles and Roic, trailed
by a flustered quaddie guard from the Kestrel 's lock, floated
into the post's radially arranged reception space, from which tubular
corridors led off at odd angles. The place was still night-quiet,
although shift change was surely due soon.
Nicol
had beaten Miles and Roic there, but not by much. She was still
awaiting the arrival of Chief Venn under the concerned eye of a
uniformed quaddie whom Miles took to be the equivalent of a night desk
sergeant. The quaddie officer's wariness increased when they entered,
and one lower hand moved unobtrusively to touch a pad on his console;
as if casually, and very promptly, another armed quaddie officer
drifted down from one of the corridors to join his comrade.
Nicol
wore a plain blue T-shirt and shorts, hastily donned with no artistic
touches. Her face was pale with worry. Her lower hands clenched each
other. She returned a short grateful nod to Miles's under-voiced
greeting.
Chief Venn arrived at last and gave
Miles a look unloving but resigned. He had apparently slept, if not
enough, and had pessimistically dressed for the day; no secret hope of
getting back into the sleep sack showed in his neat attire. He waved
off the armed guard and gruffly invited the Lord Auditor and company to
follow him to his office. The third-shift supervisor Miles had spoken
with a while ago—might as well start calling it last night
—brought coffee bulbs along with her end-of-shift report. Meticulously,
she handed the bulbs out to the downsiders, instead of launching them
through the air and expecting them to be caught the way she served her
crew chief and Nicol. Miles turned the bulb's thermal control to the
limit of the red zone and sucked the hot bitter brew with gratitude, as
did Roic.
“This panic may be premature,” Venn
began after his own first swallow. “Portmaster Thorne's nonappearance
may have some very simple explanation.”
And what
were the top three complicated explanations in Venn's mind right now?
The quaddie wasn't sharing, but then, neither was Miles. Bel had been
missing for over six hours, ever since it had dismissed its quaddie
guard at a bubble-car stop near its home. By now this panic might just
as easily be posthumous, but Miles didn't care to say so aloud in front
of Nicol. “I am extremely concerned.”
“Thorne
could be asleep somewhere else.” Venn glanced somewhat enigmatically at
Nicol. “Have you checked with likely friends?”
“The portmaster stated explicitly that it was heading home to Nicol to rest, when it left the Kestrel
about midnight,” said Miles. “A well-earned rest by that time, I might
add. Your own guards should be able to confirm the exact time of
Thorne's departure from my ship.”
“We will, of
course, provide you with another liaison officer to assist you in your
inquiries, Lord Vorkosigan.” Venn's voice was a little distant; buying
time to think, was how Miles read him. He might be playing deliberately
obtuse as well. Miles did not mistake him for actually obtuse, not when
he'd cut his sleep shift short and come in for this within little more
than minutes.
“I don't want another. I want
Thorne. You mislay too damned many downsiders around here. It's
beginning to seem bloody careless.” Miles took a deep breath. “It has
to have crossed your mind by now, as it has mine, that there were three
persons in the line of fire in the hostel lobby yesterday afternoon. We
all assumed that I was the obvious target. What if it was something
less obvious? What if it was Thorne?”
Teris Three
made a stemming motion at him with an upper hand, and interjected,
“Speaking of that, the trace on that hot riveter came in a few hours
ago.”
“Oh, good,” said Venn, turning to her with relief. “What have we got?”
“It
was sold for cash three days back, from an engineering supply store
near the free fall docks. Carried out, not delivered. The purchaser
didn't fill out the warranty questionnaire. The clerk wasn't sure which
customer took it, because it was a busy hour.”
“Quaddie or downsider?”
“He couldn't say. Could have been either, it seems.”
And
if certain webbed hands had been covered with gloves as in the vid
shot, they might well have been overlooked. Venn grimaced, his hopes
for a break plainly frustrated.
The night
supervisor glanced at Miles. “Lord Vorkosigan here also called, to
request that we detain one of the passengers from the Rudra .”
“Find him yet?” asked Miles.
She shook her head.
“Why do you want him?” asked Venn, frowning.
Miles
repeated his own night's news about his interrogation of the medtechs
and finding traces of Solian's synthesized blood in the Rudra 's infirmary.
“Well, that explains why we
were having no luck at the station hospitals and clinics,” grumbled
Venn. Miles imagined him totting up his department's wasted
quaddie-hours from the fruitless search, and let the grumble pass.
“I also flushed out one suspect, in the course of the conversation with the Rudra
's tech. All circumstantial speculation so far, but fast-penta is the
drug to cure that.” Miles described the unusual Passenger Firka, his
own insufficient but nagging sense of recognition, and his suspicions
about the creative use of a floater. Venn looked grimmer and grimmer.
Just because Venn reflexively resisted being stampeded by a Barrayaran
dirtsucker, Miles decided, didn't mean he wasn't listening. What he
made of it all, through his provincial Quaddiespace cultural filters,
was much harder to guess.
“But what about Bel ?” Nicol's voice was tight with suppressed anguish.
Venn
was obviously less immune to a plea from a beautiful fellow quaddie. He
met his night supervisor's inquiring look and nodded agreement.
“Well,
what's one more?” Teris Three shrugged. “I'll put out a call to all
patrollers to start looking for Portmaster Thorne, too. As well as the
fellow with the webs.”
Miles nibbled on his lower lip in worry. Sooner or later, that live cargo secreted aboard the Idris must draw the ba back to it. “Bel—Portmaster Thorne did get back to you people last night about resealing the Idris , did it not?”
“Yes,”
said Venn and the night supervisor together. Venn gave her a short
apologetic nod and continued, “Did that Betan passenger Thorne was
trying to help get its animal fetuses taken care of all right?”
“Dubauer.
Um, yes. They're fine for now. But, ah . . . I
think I'd like to have you pick up Dubauer, as well as Firka.”
“Why?”
“It
left its hostel and vanished yesterday evening close to the same time
that Firka went out, and also hasn't returned. And Dubauer was the
third of our little triumvirate of targets yesterday. Let's just call
it protective custody, for starters.”
Venn screwed
up his lips for a moment, considering this, and eyed Miles with shrewd
disfavor. He'd have to be less bright than he appeared not to suspect
Miles wasn't telling him everything. “Very well,” he said at last. He
waved a hand at Teris Three. “Let's go ahead and collect the whole set.”
“Right.”
She glanced at the chrono on her left lower wrist. “It's
oh-seven-hundred.” Shift change, presumably. “Shall I stay?”
“No,
no. I'll take over. Get the new missing-person traces started, then go
get some rest.” Venn sighed. “Tonight may be no better.”
The
night supervisor gave him an acknowledging thumbs-up with both lower
hands and slipped out of the little office chamber.
“Would
you prefer to wait at home?” Venn said suggestively to Nicol. “You'd be
more comfortable there, I'm sure. We'll undertake to call you as soon
as we find your partner.”
Nicol took a breath. “I
would rather be here,” she said sturdily. “Just in
case . . . just in case something happens soon.”
“I'll keep you company,” Miles volunteered. “For a little while, anyway.” There, let Venn try to shift his diplomatic mass.
Venn
at least managed to get them shifted out of his office by conducting
them to a private waiting space, advertising it as more undisturbed.
More undisturbed for Venn, anyway.
Miles and Nicol
were left regarding each other in troubled silence. What Miles most
wanted to know was if Bel had any other ImpSec business in train at
present that might have impinged unexpectedly last night. But he was
almost certain Nicol knew nothing of Bel's second source of income—and
risk. Besides, that was wishful thinking. If any business had impinged,
it was most probably the current mess. Which was now messy enough to
raise every hackle Miles owned to quivering attention.
Bel
had escaped its former career very nearly unscathed, despite Admiral
Naismith's sometimes-lethal nimbus. For the Betan herm to have come all
this way, to have come so close to regaining a private life and future,
only to have its past reach out like some blind fate and swat it down now
. . . Miles swallowed guilt and worry, and refrained
from blurting some ill-timed and incoherent apology to Nicol. Something
had certainly come upon Bel last night, but Bel was quick and clever
and experienced; Bel could cope. Bel had always coped before.
But even the luck you made for yourself ran out sometimes. . . .
Nicol
broke the stretched silence by asking some random question of Roic
about Barrayar, and the armsman returned clumsy but kind small talk to
distract her from her nerves. Miles glanced at his wrist com. Was it
too early to call Ekaterin?
What the bloody hell
was next on his agenda, anyway? He'd planned to spend this morning
conducting fast-penta interrogations. All the threads he'd thought he'd
had in hand, winding in nicely, had come to these disturbingly similar
cut ends; Firka vanished, Dubauer vanished, and now Bel vanished too.
And Solian, don't forget him. Graf Station, for all its maze-like
non-design, wasn't that big a place. Were they all sucked into the same
oubliette? How many oubliettes could the damned labyrinth have?
To
his surprise, his frustrated fretting was interrupted by the night
supervisor sticking her head in through one of the round doors. Hadn't
she been leaving?
“Lord Auditor Vorkosigan, may we see you for a moment?” she asked in a polite tone.
He
excused himself to Nicol and floated after her, Roic trailing
dutifully. She led the way back through a corridor to Venn's nearby
office. Venn was finishing up a comconsole call, saying, “He's here,
he's hot, and he's all over me. It's your job to handle him.”
He glanced over his shoulder and cut the com. Above the vid plate,
Miles just glimpsed Sealer Greenlaw's form, wrapped in what might be a
bathrobe, vanish with a sparkle.
When the door
hissed closed again behind them, the supervisor turned in midair and
stated, “The patroller that you detailed to escort Postmaster Thorne
last night reports that Thorne dismissed him when they got to the
Joint.”
“The what?” said Miles. “When? Why? ”
She
glanced at Venn, who opened a hand in a go-ahead gesture. “The Joint is
one of our main corridor hubs on the free fall side, with a bubble-car
transfer station and a public garden—a lot of people meet there, to eat
or whatever after their work shifts. Thorne evidently encountered
Garnet Five at about oh-one-hundred, coming the other way, and went off
to have some kind of conversation.”
“Yes? They're friends, I believe.”
Venn
shifted in what Miles recognized after a belated moment as
embarrassment, and said, “Do you happen to know how good of friends? I
didn't wish to discuss this in front of that distressed young lady. But
Garnet Five is known to, um, favor exotic downsiders, and the Betan
herm is, after all, a Betan herm. Simple explanations, after all.”
Half
a dozen mildly outraged arguments coursed through Miles's mind, to be
promptly rejected. He wasn't supposed to know Bel that well. Not that
someone who did know Bel would be in the least shocked by Venn's
delicate suggestion . . . no. Bel's sexual tastes
might be eclectic, but the herm wasn't the sort to betray the trust of
a friend. Had never been. We all change. “You might ask Boss
Watts,” he temporized. He caught Roic's rolling eye and head-jerk in
the direction of Venn's comconsole, affixed to the curving office wall.
Miles continued smoothly, “Better still, call Garnet Five. If Thorne's
there, the mystery is solved. If not, she might at least know where
Thorne was headed.” He tried to decide which would be the worse cause
for dismay. The memory of the hot rivets parting his hair inclined him
to hope for the first result, despite Nicol.
Venn
opened an upper hand in acknowledgment of the point, and half-turned to
tap out a search-code on his comconsole with a lower. Miles's heart
jumped as Garnet Five's serene face and crisp voice came on, but it was
only an answering program. Venn's brows twitched; he left a brief
request that she contact him at her earliest convenience, and cut the
com.
“She could just be asleep,” said the night-shift woman wistfully.
“Send
a patroller to check,” said Miles a little tightly. Remembering he was
supposed to be a diplomat, he added, “If you please.”
Teris
Three, looking as though a vision of her sleep sack was receding before
her eyes, departed again. Miles and Roic returned to Nicol, who turned
anxious eyes upon them as they floated back into the waiting chamber.
Miles barely hesitated before reporting the patroller's sighting to her.
“Can you think of any reason for them to have met?” he asked her.
“Lots,”
she answered without reserve, confirming Miles's secret judgment. “I'm
sure she'd want news from Bel about Ensign Corbeau, or anything
happening that might affect his chances. If she crossed trajectories
with Bel coming home through the Joint, she'd be sure to grab the
chance to try to get some news. Or she might have just wanted an ear to
vent at. Most of her other friends are not too sympathetic about her
romance, after the Barrayaran attack and the fire.”
“All right, that might account for the first hour. But no more. Bel was tired. Then what?”
She turned all four hands out in helpless frustration. “I can't imagine.”
Miles's own imagination was all too wildly active. Need data dammit
was becoming his private mantra here. He left Roic to make more
distracting small talk with Nicol and, feeling a trifle selfish, took
himself to the side of the chamber to call Ekaterin on his wrist com.
Her
voice was sleepy but cheerful, and she stoutly maintained that she'd
been awake already, and just about to get up. They exchanged a few
verbal caresses that were no one's business but their own, and he
described what he'd found as a result of the gossip she'd collected
about Solian's nosebleeds, which seemed to please her greatly.
“So where are you now, and what have you had for breakfast?” she asked.
“Breakfast
is delayed. I'm at the Station Security HQ.” He hesitated. “Bel Thorne
went missing last night, and they're putting together a search for it.”
A
little silence greeted this, and her return remark was as carefully
neutral in tone as his own. “Oh. That's very worrisome.”
“Yes.”
“You are keeping Roic with you at all times, aren't you?”
“Oh, yes. The quaddies have armed guards trailing me around now, too.”
“Good.” Her breath drew in. “Good.”
“The
situation's getting pretty murky over here. I may have to send you home
after all. We have four more days to decide, though.”
“Well. In four more days we can talk about it, then.”
Between
his desire not to alarm her further, and hers not to distract him
unduly, the conversation grew limping, and he mercifully tore himself
from the calming sound of her voice to let her go bathe and dress and
obtain her own breakfast.
He wondered if he and
Roic ought, after all, to escort Nicol home, and perhaps after that try
quartering the station themselves in the hope of some random encounter.
Now, there was a tactically bankrupt plan if ever he'd evolved one.
Roic would have a fully justifiable, painfully polite fit at the
suggestion. It would feel just like old times. But suppose there was
some way to make it less random . . .
The
night supervisor's voice floated in from the corridor. Dear God, was
the poor woman never to get home to sleep? “Yes, they're in here, but
don't you think you ought to see the medtech next to—”
“I have to see Lord Vorkosigan!”
Miles
jerked to full alertness as he identified the sharp, breathless female
voice as Garnet Five's. The blond quaddie practically tumbled through
the round door from the corridor. She was trembling and haggard, almost
greenish, an unpleasant contrast to her rumpled carmine doublet. Her
eyes, huge and dark-ringed, flicked over the waiting trio. “Nicol, oh,
Nicol!” She flew to her friend in a fierce three-armed hug, the
immobilized fourth wavering slightly.
Nicol,
looking bewildered, dutifully hugged her back, but then pushed her away
and asked urgently, “Garnet, have you seen Bel?”
“Yes.
No. I'm not sure. This is just insane. I thought we were both knocked
out together, but when I came to, Bel wasn't there any more. I thought
Bel might have waked up first and gone for help, but the security
crew”—she nodded to her escort—”says not. Haven't you heard anything?”
“Came to? Wait—who knocked you out? Where? Are you hurt?”
“I
have the most horrible headache. It was some sort of drug mist. Icy
cold. It didn't smell like anything, but it tasted bitter. He sprayed
it in our faces. Bel yelled, 'Don't breathe, Garnet!' but of course had
to breathe to yell. I felt Bel go all limp, and then everything sort of
drained away. When I woke up, I was so sick I almost threw up, ugh!”
Nicol
and Teris Three both grimaced in sympathy. Miles gathered this was the
security woman's second time through this recitation, but her focus
didn't flag.
“Garnet,” Miles interjected, “please,
take a deep breath, calm down, and begin at the beginning. A patroller
reported he saw you and Bel somewhere in the Joint last night. Is that
correct?”
Garnet Five scrubbed her pallid face
with her upper hands, inhaled, and blinked; a little returning color
relieved her gray-greenness. “Yes. I bumped into Bel coming out of the
bubble-car stop. I wanted to know if Bel had asked—if you'd said
anything—if anything had been decided about Dmitri.”
Nicol nodded in bleak satisfaction.
“I
bought us those peppermint teas that Bel likes at the Kabob Kiosk,
hoping to get it to talk to me. But we hadn't been there five minutes
when Bel went all distracted by this other pair who came in. One was a
quaddie Bel knew from the Docks and Locks crew—Bel said he was someone
it'd been keeping an eye on, because it suspected him of handling
stolen stuff from the ships. The other was this really funny-looking
downsider.”
“Tall, lanky fellow with webbed hands
and long feet, and a big barrel chest? Looks sort of like his mother
might have married the Frog Prince, but the kiss didn't quite work
out?” Miles asked.
Garnet Five stared. “Why, yes.
Well, I'm not sure about the chest—he was wearing this loose, flippy
cape-thing. How did you know?”
“This is about the
third time he's turned up in this case. You might say he's riveted my
attention. But go on, then what?”
“I couldn't get
Bel to stay on the subject. Bel made me turn around and sit facing the
pair, so Bel could keep its back to them, and made me report what they
were doing. I felt silly, like we were playing spies.”
No, not playing. . . .
“They
had some sort of argument, then the quaddie from Dock and Locks spotted
Bel and left in a hurry. The other fellow, the funny downsider, left
too, and then Bel insisted on following him.”
“And Bel left the bistro?”
“We both left together. I wasn't going to be dumped, and besides, Bel said, Oh, all right, come along, you may be useful
. I think the downsider must have been some sort of spacer, because he
wasn't as awkward as most tourists usually are on the free fall side. I
didn't think he saw us, following, but he must have, because he
wandered down Cross Corridor, weaving in and out of any shops that were
open at that hour but not buying anything. Then he suddenly zigzagged
over to the portal to the grav side. There weren't any floaters in the
rack, so Bel boosted me onto its back and kept on after the fellow. He
ducked into this utility section, where the shops on the next
corridor—over on the grav side—move freight and supplies in and out of
their back doors. He seemed to vanish around a corner, but then he just
popped out in front of us and waved this little tube in our faces, that
spit out that nasty spray. I was afraid it was a poison, and we were
both dead, but evidently not.” She hesitated in stricken doubt.
“Anyway, I woke up.”
“Where?” asked Miles.
“There.
Well, not quite there—I was all in a heap stuck to the floor inside a
recycle bin behind one of the shops, on top of a bundle of cartons. It
wasn't locked, fortunately. That horrible downsider couldn't have
stuffed me into it if it had been, I suppose. I had a bad time trying
to climb out. The stupid lid kept pressing down. It almost smashed my
fingers. I hate gravity. Bel wasn't anywhere around. I looked, and
called. And then I had to walk on three hands back to the main
corridor, till I could find help. I grabbed the first patroller I came
to, and she brought me right here.”
“You must have
been out cold for six or seven hours, then,” Miles calculated aloud.
How different were quaddie metabolisms from those of Betan herms? Not
to mention body mass, and the erratic dosage inhaled by two variously
dodging persons. “You should be seen by a physician right away, and get
a blood sample drawn while there are still traces of the drug in your
system. We might be able to identify it, and maybe its place of origin,
if it isn't just a local product.”
The night
supervisor endorsed this idea emphatically, and permitted the downsider
visitors, as well as Nicol, to whom Garnet Five still clung, to trail
along as she escorted the shaken blond quaddie to the post's infirmary.
When Miles had assured himself that Garnet Five had been taken into
competent medical hands, and plenty of them, he turned back to Teris
Three.
“It isn't just my airy theories any more,”
he told her. “You have a valid assault charge on this Firka fellow.
Can't you step up the search?”
“Oh, yes,” she answered grimly. “This one's going out on all the com channels, now. He attacked a quaddie. And he released toxic volatiles into the public air .”
Miles
left the two quaddie women safely ensconced in the security post's
infirmary. He then leaned on the night supervisor to supply him with
the patroller who'd brought in Garnet Five to take him on an inspection
of the scene of the crime, such as it was. The supervisor temporized,
more delays ensued, and Miles harassed Crew Chief Venn in a nearly
undiplomatic manner. But at length, he was issued a different quaddie
patroller who did indeed escort him and Roic to the spot where Garnet
Five had been so uncomfortably cached.
The dimly
lit utility corridor had a flat floor and squared-off walls, and while
not exactly cramped, shared its cross section with a great deal of duct
work, which Roic had to bend to avoid. Around an obliquely angled turn,
they found three quaddies, one in a Security uniform and two in shorts
and shirts, working behind a stretched-out plastic ribbon printed with
the Graf Station Security logo. Forensics techs at last, and about
time. The young male rode in a floater broadly stenciled with a Graf
Station technical school identification number. An intent-looking
middle-aged female piloted a floater that bore the mark of one of the
station clinics.
The shorts-and-shirt man in the
tech school floater, hovering carefully, finished a laser scan for
fingerprints along the edge and top of a large square bin sticking out
into the corridor at a convenient height to bang the shins of the
unwary passerby. He moved aside, and his colleague moved into place and
began to run over the surfaces with what looked to be a standard sort
of skin cell– and fiber-collecting hand-vac.
“Was that the bin where Garnet Five was hidden?” Miles asked the quaddie officer who was supervising.
“Yes.”
Miles
leaned forward, only to be waved back by the intently vacuuming tech.
After extracting promises to be informed of any interesting
cross-matches in the evidence, he strolled up and down the corridor
instead, hands scrupulously tucked in his pockets, looking
for . . . what? Cryptic messages written in blood
on the walls? Or in ink, or spit, or snot, or something . He checked the floor, ceiling, and ducts, too, at Bel-height and lower, angling his head to catch odd reflections. Nothing.
“Were
all these doors locked?” he asked the patroller who shadowed them.
“Have they been checked yet? Could someone have bunged Bel—dragged
Portmaster Thorne inside one?”
“You'll have to ask
the officer in charge, sir,” the quaddie guard replied, exasperation
leaking into his service-issue neutral tone. “I only just got here with
you.”
Miles stared at the doors and their key pads
in frustration. He couldn't very well go down the row trying them all,
not unless the scanner man was finished. He returned to the bin.
“Finding anything?” he inquired.
“Not—” The medical quaddie glanced aside at the officer in charge. “Was this area swept before I got here?”
“Not as far as I know, ma'am,” said the officer.
“Why do you ask?” Miles inquired instantly.
“Well, there isn't very much. I would have expected more.”
“Try further away,” suggested the scanner tech.
She
cast him a somewhat bemused look. “That's not quite the point. In any
case, after you.” She gestured down the corridor, and Miles hurriedly
confided his worries about the doors to the officer in charge.
The
crew dutifully scanned everything, including, at Miles's insistence,
the ductwork above, where the assailant might have braced himself in
near-concealment to drop upon his victims. They tried each door.
Fingers tapping impatiently on his trouser seam, Miles followed them up
and down the corridor as they completed their survey. All doors proved
locked . . . at least, they were now. One hissed
open as they passed, and a blinking shopkeeper with legs poked his head
through; the quaddie officer interrogated him briefly, and he in turn
helped rouse his neighbors to cooperate in the search. The quaddie
woman collected lots of little plastic bags of nothing much. No
unconscious hermaphrodite was discovered in any bin, hallway, utility
closet, or shop adjoining the passageway.
The
utility corridor ran for about another ten meters before opening
discreetly into a broader cross-corridor lined with shops, offices, and
a small restaurant. The scene would have been quieter partway into
third shift last night, but by no means reliably deserted, and just as
well lit. Miles pictured the lanky Firka lugging or dragging Bel's
compact but substantial form down the public
way . . . wrapped in something for concealment? It
would almost have to be. It would take a strong man to lug Bel far.
Or . . . someone in a floater. Not necessarily a
quaddie.
Roic, looming at his shoulder, sniffed.
The spicy smells wafting into the corridor, into which the eatery
cannily vented its bakery ovens, reminded Miles of his duty to feed his
troops. Troop. The disgruntled quaddie guard could fend for himself,
Miles decided.
The place was small, clean, and
cozy, the sort of cheap cafй where the local working people ate. It was
evidently past the breakfast rush and not yet time for lunch, because
it was occupied only by a couple of legged young men who might be shop
assistants, and a quaddie in a floater who, judging by her crowded tool
belt, was an electrician on break. They stared covertly at the
Barrayarans—more at tall Roic in his not-from-around-here
brown-and-silver uniform than at short Miles in his unobtrusive gray
civvies. Their quaddie security guard distanced himself slightly—with
their party but not of it—and ordered coffee in a bulb.
A
legged woman doubled as server and cook, assembling food on the plates
with practiced speed. The spicy breads, apparently a specialty of the
place, appeared handmade, the slices of vat protein unexceptionable,
and the fresh fruit startlingly exquisite. Miles selected a large
golden pear, its skin touched with a rose blush, unblemished; its
flesh, when he cut into it, proved pale, perfect, and dripping with
perfumed juice. If only they had more time, he'd love to sic Ekaterin
onto the local agriculture—whatever plant-like matrix this had grown
from had to have been genetically engineered to thrive in free fall.
The Empire's space stations could use such stocks—if the Komarran
traders hadn't snagged them already. Miles's plan to slip seeds into
his pocket to smuggle home was thwarted by the fruit being seedless.
A
holovid in the corner with the sound turned low had been mumbling to
itself, ignored by everyone, but a sudden rainbow of blinking lights
advertised an official safety bulletin. Heads turned briefly, and Miles
followed the stares to find being displayed the shots of Passenger
Firka from the Rudra 's locks that he had downloaded earlier to
Station Security. He didn't need the sound to guess the content of the
serious-looking quaddie woman's speech that followed: suspect wanted
for questioning, may be armed and dangerous, if you see this dubious
downsider call this code at once. A couple of shots of Bel followed, as
the putative kidnapping victim, presumably; they were taken from
yesterday's interviews after the assassination attempt in the hostel,
which a newscaster came on to re-cap.
“Can you turn it up?” Miles asked belatedly.
The
newscaster was just winding down; even as the cafй server aimed her
remote, her image was replaced with an advertisement for an impressive
selection of work gloves.
“Oh, sorry,” said the
server. “It was a repeat anyway. They've been showing it every fifteen
minutes for the past hour.” She provided Miles with a verbal summary of
the alarm, which matched Miles's guess in most particulars.
So,
on just how many holovids all over the station was this now appearing?
It would be an order of magnitude harder for a wanted man to hide, with
an order of magnitude more pairs of eyes looking for
him . . . but was Firka himself seeing this? If so,
would he panic, becoming more hazardous to anyone who crossed him? Or
perhaps turn himself in, claiming it was all some sort of
misunderstanding? Roic, studying the vid, frowned and drank more
coffee. The sleep-deprived armsman was holding up all right for the
moment, but Miles figured he would be dragging dangerously by
mid-afternoon.
Miles had an unpleasant sensation
of sinking in a quicksand of diversions and losing his grip on his
initial mission. Which had been what? Oh, yes, free the fleet. He
suppressed an internal snarl of Screw the fleet, where the hell's Bel?
But if there was any way to use this disturbing development to pry his
ships from quaddie hands, it was not apparent to him right now.
They
returned to Security Post One to find Nicol waiting for them in the
front reception space with the air of a hungry predator at a water
hole. She pounced on Miles the moment he appeared.
“Did you find Bel? Did you see any sign?”
Miles
shook his head in regret. “Neither hide nor hair. Well, there might be
hairs—we'll know when the forensics tech gets her analysis done—but
that won't tell us anything we don't already know from Garnet Five's
testimony.” The truth of which Miles didn't doubt. “I do have a better
mental picture of the possible course of events, now.” He wished it
made more sense. The first part—Firka wishing to delay or shake his
pursuers—was sensible enough. It was the blank afterward that puzzled.
“Do you think,” Nicol's voice grew smaller, “he carried Bel away to murder someplace else?”
“In
that case, why leave a witness alive?” He tossed this off instantly for
her reassurance; upon reflection, he found it reassuring too. Maybe.
But if not murder, what? What did Bel have or know that someone else
might want? Unless, like Garnet Five, Bel had come to consciousness on
its own, and gone off. But . . . if Bel had
wandered away in some state of dazed or sick confusion, it should have
been picked up by the patrollers or some solicitous fellow stationers
by now. And if it had gone in hot pursuit of something, it should have
reported in. To me, at least, dammit . . .
“If
Bel was,” Nicol began, and stopped. A startling crowd heaved through
the main entry port, and paused for orientation.
A
pair of husky male quaddies in the orange work shirts and shorts of
Docks and Locks managed the two ends of a three-meter length of pipe.
Firka occupied the middle.
The unhappy downsider's
wrists and ankles were lashed to the pipe with swathes of electrical
tape, bending him in a U, with another rectangle of tape plastered
across his mouth, muffling his moans. His eyes were wide, and rolled in
panic. Three more quaddies in orange, panting and rumpled, one with a
red bruise starting around his eye, bobbed along beside as outriders.
The
work crew took aim and floated with their squirming burden through free
fall to fetch up with a thump at the reception desk. A quartet of
uniformed security quaddies appeared from another portal to gather and
stare at this unwilling prize; the desk sergeant hit his intercom, and
lowered his voice to speak into it in a rapid undertone.
The
spokes-quaddie for the posse bustled forward, a smile of grim
satisfaction on his bruised face. “We caught him for you.”
CHAPTER TWELVE
“Where?” Miles asked.
“Number
Two Freight Bay,” the spokes-quaddie answered. “He was trying to get
Pramod Sixteen, here”—his nod indicated one of the husky quaddies
holding an end of the pipe, who nodded back in confirmation—”to take
him out in a pod around the security zone to the galactic jumpship
docks. So you can add attempted bribery of an airseal tech to violate
regs to his list of charges, I'd say.”
Ah, ha.
Another way to get around Bel's customs barriers . . .
Miles's mind jumped back to the missing Solian.
“Pramod
told him he was making arrangements, and slipped out and called me. I
rounded up the boys, and we made sure he'd come along and explain
himself to you.” The spokes-quaddie gestured to Chief Venn, who'd
floated in hastily from the office corridor and was taking in the scene
with unsurprised satisfaction.
The web-fingered
downsider made a plaintive noise, beneath his electrical tape, but
Miles took it more for protest than explanation.
Nicol put in urgently, “Did you see any sign of Bel?”
“Oh,
hi, Nicol.” The spokes-quaddie shook his head in regret. “We asked the
fellow, but we didn't get an answer. If you all don't have better luck
with him, we have a few more ideas we can try.” His scowl suggested
that these might run to the illicit utilization of airlocks, or perhaps
innovative applications of freight-handling equipment definitely not
covered in the manufacturer's warranties. “I bet we could make him stop
screaming and start talking before his air ran out.”
“I
think we can take it from here, thanks,” Chief Venn assured him. He
glanced without favor at Firka, wriggling on his pole. “Although I'll
keep your offer in mind.”
“Do you know Portmaster Thorne?” Miles asked the Docks and Locks quaddie. “Do you work together?”
“Bel's
one of our best supervisors,” the quaddie replied. “About the most
sensible downsider we've ever gotten. We don't care to lose it, eh?” He
gave Nicol a nod.
She ducked her head in mute gratitude.
The
citizens' arrest was duly recorded. The quaddie patrollers who'd
assembled looked cautiously over the long, squirming captive, and
elected to take him pole and all, for the moment. The Docks and Locks
crew, with justifiable self-satisfaction, also presented the duffel bag
Firka had been carrying.
So here was Miles's most wanted suspect, if not presented on a platter, at least en brochette . Miles itched to tear that tape off his rubbery face and start squeezing.
Sealer
Greenlaw arrived while this was going forth, accompanied by a new
quaddie man, dark-haired and fit-looking though not especially young.
He wore neat, subdued garb much like that of Boss Watts and Bel, but
black instead of slate blue. She introduced him as Adjudicator Leutwyn.
“So,”
said Leutwyn, staring curiously at the tape-secured suspect. “This is
our one-man crime wave. Do I understand he, too, came in with the
Barrayaran fleet?”
“No, Adjudicator,” said Miles. “He joined the Rudra
here on Graf Station, at the last minute. Actually, he didn't sign
aboard until after the ship had originally been due to leave. I'd very
much like to know why. I strongly suspect him of synthesizing and
planting the blood in the loading bay, of attempting to
assassinate . . . someone, in the hostel lobby
yesterday, and of attacking Garnet Five and Bel Thorne last night.
Garnet Five, at least, had a fairly close look at him, and should be
able to confirm that identification shortly. But by far the most urgent
question is, what has happened to Portmaster Thorne? Hot pursuit of a
kidnap victim in danger is sufficient pretext for nonvoluntary penta
interrogations in most jurisdictions, surely.”
“Here
as well,” the adjudicator admitted. “But a fast-penta examination is a
delicate undertaking. I've found, in the half dozen I've monitored,
that it's not nearly the magic wand most people think it is.”
Miles
cleared his throat in fake diffidence. “I am tolerably familiar with
the techniques, Adjudicator. I've conducted or sat in on over a hundred
penta-assisted interrogations. And I've had it given to me twice.” No
need to go into his idiosyncratic drug reaction that had made those two
events such dizzyingly surreal and notably uninformative occasions.
“Oh,”
said the quaddie adjudicator, sounding impressed despite himself,
possibly especially with that last detail.
“I'm
keenly aware of the need to keep the examination from being a mob
scene, but you also need the right leading questions. I believe I have
several.”
Venn put in, “We haven't even processed the suspect yet. Me, I want to see what he's got in that bag.”
The adjudicator nodded. “Yes, carry on, Chief Venn. I'd like further clarification, if I can get it.”
Mob
scene or no, they all followed the quaddie patrollers who maneuvered
the unfortunate Firka, pole and all, into a back chamber. A pair of the
patrollers, after first clapping proper restraints around the bony
wrists and ankles, recorded retinal patterns and took laser scans of
the fingers and palms. Miles had one curiosity satisfied when they also
pulled off the prisoner's soft boots; the finger-length toes,
prehensile or nearly so, flexed and stretched, revealing wide
rose-colored webs between. The quaddies scanned them, too—of course the quaddies would routinely scan all four extremities—then cut through the bulky lashings of tape.
Meanwhile
another patroller, assisted by Venn, emptied and inventoried the
duffel. They removed an assortment of clothes, mostly in dirty wads, to
find a large new chef's knife, a stunner with a dubiously corroded
discharged power pack but no stunner permit, a long crowbar, and a
leather folder full of small tools. The folder also contained a receipt
for an automated hot riveter from a Graf Station engineering supply
store, complete with incriminating serial numbers. It was at this point
that the adjudicator stopped looking so carefully reserved and started
to look grim instead. When the patroller held up something that looked
at first glance to be a scalp, but when shaken out proved a brassy
short blond wig of no particular quality, the evidence seemed almost
redundant.
Of more interest to Miles was not one,
but a dozen sets of identifying documentation. Half of them proclaimed
their bearers to be natives of Jackson's Whole; the others were from
local space systems all adjoining the Hegen Hub, a wormhole-rich,
planet-poor system that was one of the Barrayaran Empire's nearest and
most strategically important Nexus neighbors. Jump routes from Barrayar
to both Jackson's Whole and the Cetagandan Empire passed, via Komarr
and the independent buffer polity of Pol, through the Hub.
Venn
ran the handful of IDs through a holovid station affixed to the
chamber's curving wall, his frown deepening. Miles and Roic both
maneuvered to watch over his shoulder.
“So,” Venn growled after a bit, “which one really is the fellow?”
Two
sets of documentation for “Firka” included physical vid shots of a man
very different in appearance from their moaning captive: a big, bulky,
but perfectly normal human male from either Jackson's Whole, no House
affiliation, or Aslund, another Hegen Hub neighbor, depending on
which—if either—ID was to be believed. Yet a third Firka ID, the one
the present Firka seemed to have used to travel from Tau Ceti to Graf
Station, portrayed the prisoner himself. Finally, his vid shots also
matched up with the IDs of a person named Russo Gupta, also hailing
from Jackson's Whole and lacking a proper House affiliation. That name,
face, and associated retina scans came up again on a jumpship
engineer's license that Miles recognized as originating from a certain
Jacksonian organization of the sub-economy he had dealt with in his
covert ops days. Judging from the long file of dates and customs stamps
appended, it had passed as genuine elsewhere. And recently. A record of his travels, good!
Miles pointed. “That is almost certainly a forgery.”
The clustering quaddies looked genuinely shocked. Greenlaw said, “A false engineer's license? That would be unsafe .”
“If
it's from the place I think, you could get a false neurosurgeon's
license to go with it. Or any other job you cared to pretend to have,
without going through all that tedious training and testing and
certification.” Or, in this case, really have—now, there was a
disturbing thought. Although on-the-job apprenticeship and
self-teaching might cover some of the gaps over
time . . . someone had been clever enough to modify that hot riveter, after all.
Under
no circumstances could this pale, lanky mutie pass for a stout,
pleasantly ugly, red-haired woman named either Grace Nevatta of
Jackson's Whole—no House affiliation—or Louise Latour of Pol, depending
on which set of IDs she favored. Nor for a short, head-wired,
mahogany-skinned jumpship pilot named Hewlet.
“Who are all these people?” Venn muttered in aggravation.
“Why don't we just ask?” suggested Miles.
Firka—or
Gupta—had finally stopped struggling and just lay in midair, nostrils
flexing with his panting above the blue rectangle of tape over his
mouth. The quaddie patroller finished recording his last scans and
reached for a corner of the tape, then paused uncertainly. “I'm afraid
this is going to hurt a bit.”
“He's probably
sweated enough underneath the tape to loosen it,” Miles offered. “Take
it in one quick jerk. It'll hurt less in the long run. That's what I'd
want, if I were him.”
A muffled mew of
disagreement from the prisoner turned into a shrill scream as the
quaddie followed this plan. All right, so, the frog prince hadn't
sweated as much around the mouth as Miles had guessed. It was still
better to have the damned tape off than on.
But
despite the noises he'd been making the prisoner did not follow up this
liberation of his lips with outraged protests, swearing, complaints, or
raving threats. He just kept panting. His eyes were peculiarly glassy—a
look Miles recognized, of a man who'd been wound up far too tight for
far too long. Bel's loyal stevedores might have roughed him up a bit,
but he hadn't acquired that look in the brief time he'd been in quaddie hands.
Chief
Venn held up a double handful, left and left, of IDs before the
prisoner's eyes. “All right. Which one are you really? You may as well
tell us the truth. We'll be cross-checking it all anyway.”
With surly reluctance, the prisoner muttered, “I'm Guppy.”
“Guppy? Russo Gupta?”
“Yeah.”
“Who are these others?”
“Absent friends.”
Miles wasn't quite sure if Venn had caught the intonation. He put in, “Dead friends?”
“Yeah, that too.” Guppy/Gupta stared away into a distance Miles calculated as light-years.
Venn
looked alarmed. Miles was torn between anxiety to proceed and an
intense desire to sit down and study the place and date stamps on all
those IDs, real and fake, before decanting Gupta. A world of revelation
lay therein, he was fairly sure. But greater urgencies drove the
sequencing now.
“Where is Portmaster Thorne?” Miles asked.
“I told those thugs before. I never heard of him.”
“Thorne
is the Betan herm you sprayed with knockout mist last night in a
utility passage off Cross Corridor. Along with a blond quaddie woman
named Garnet Five.”
The surly look deepened. “Never seen either of 'em.”
Venn
turned his head and nodded to a patroller, who flitted off. A few
moments later she returned through one of the chamber's other portals,
ushering Garnet Five. Garnet's color looked vastly better now, Miles
was relieved to note, and she had obviously managed to obtain whatever
female grooming equipment she used to touch herself back up to her
high-visibility norm.
“Ah!” she said cheerfully. “You caught him! Where's Bel?”
Venn
inquired formally, “Is this the downsider who committed chemical
assault on you and the portmaster, and released illicit volatiles into
the public atmosphere last night?”
“Oh, yes,” said Garnet Five. “I couldn't possibly mistake him. I mean, look at the webs.”
Gupta clenched his lips, his fists, and his feet, but further pretense was clearly futile.
Venn lowered his voice to a quite nicely menacing official growl. “Gupta, where is Portmaster Thorne?”
“I
don't know where the blighted nosy herm is! I left it in the bin right
next to hers. It was all right then. I mean, it was breathing and all.
They both were. I made sure. The herm's probably still sleeping it off
in there.”
“No,” said Miles. “We checked all the bins in the passage. The portmaster was gone.”
“Well, I don't know where it went after that.”
“Would
you be willing to repeat that assertion under fast-penta, and clear
yourself of a kidnapping charge?” Venn inquired cannily, angling for a
voluntary interrogation.
Gupta's rubbery face set, and his eyes shifted away. “Can't. I'm allergic to the stuff.”
“Is
that so?” said Miles. “Let's just check, shall we?” He dug in his
trouser pocket and drew out the strip of test patches he'd borrowed
earlier from the Kestrel 's ImpSec supplies, in anticipation of
just such an opportunity. Granted, he hadn't anticipated the added
urgency of Bel's alarming vanishing act. He held up the strip and
explained to Venn and the adjudicator, who was monitoring all this with
a judicial frown, “Security-grade penta allergy skin test. If the
subject has any of the six kinds of artificially induced anaphylaxes or
even a mild natural allergy, the welt pops right up.” By way of
reassurance to the quaddie officials, he peeled off one of the
burr-like patches and slapped it on the back of his own wrist,
displaying it with a heartening wriggle of his fingers. The sleight of
hand was sufficient that no one except the prisoner protested when he
leaned over and pressed another to Gupta's arm. Gupta let out a yowl of
horror that won him only stares; he reduced it to a pitiable whimper
under the bemused eyes of the onlookers.
Miles
peeled off his own patch to reveal a distinct reddish prickle. “As you
see, I do have a slight endogenous sensitivity.” He waited a few
moments longer, to drive home the point, then reached over and peeled
the patch off Gupta. The rather sickly natural—mushrooms were natural,
right?—skin tone was unaffected.
Venn, getting
into the rhythm of the thing like an old ImpSec hand, leaned toward
Gupta and said, “That's two lies, so far, then. You can stop lying now.
Or you can stop lying shortly. Either way will do.” He raised narrowed
eyes to his fellow quaddie official. “Adjudicator Leutwyn, do you rule
that we have sufficient cause for an involuntary chemically assisted
interrogation of this transient?”
The adjudicator
looked less than wholly enthusiastic, but he replied, “In light of his
admitted connection to the worrisome disappearance of a valued Station
employee, yes, there can be no question. I do remind you that
subjecting detainees in your charge to unnecessary physical discomfort
is against regs.”
Venn glanced at Gupta, hanging miserably in air. “How can he be uncomfortable? He's in free fall.”
The
adjudicator pursed his lips. “Transient Gupta, aside from your
restraints, are you in any special discomfort at this time? Do you
require food, drink, or downsider sanitary facilities?”
Gupta
jerked his wrists against their soft bonds, and shrugged. “Naw. Well,
yes. My gills are getting dry. If you're not gonna let me loose, I need
somebody to spray them. The stuff's in my bag.”
“This?”
The female quaddie patroller held out what appeared to be a perfectly
ordinary plastic sprayer, of the sort that Miles had seen Ekaterin use
to mist some of her plants. She wriggled it, and it gurgled.
“What's in it?” asked Venn suspiciously.
“Water, mostly. And a bit of glycerin,” said Gupta.
“Go
ahead and check it,” said Venn aside to his patroller. She nodded and
floated out; Gupta watched her depart with some mistrust, but no
particular alarm.
“Transient Gupta, it appears
you're going to be our guest for a while,” said Venn. “If we remove
your restraints, are you going to give us any trouble, or are you going
to behave yourself?”
Gupta was silent a moment, then vented an exhausted sigh. “I'll behave. Much good it'll do me either way.”
A
patroller floated forward and unshackled the prisoner's wrists and
ankles. Only Roic seemed less than pleased with this unnecessary
courtesy, tensing with a hand on a wall grip and one foot planted to a
bit of bulkhead not occupied by equipment, ready to launch himself
forward. But Gupta only chafed his wrists and bent to rub his ankles,
and looked grudgingly grateful.
The patroller
returned with the bottle, handing it to her chief. “The lab's chemical
sniffer says it's inert. Should be safe,” she reported.
“Very
well.” Venn pitched the bottle to Gupta, who despite his odd long hands
caught it readily, with little downsider clumsiness, a fact Miles was
sure the quaddie noted.
“Um.” Gupta gave the crowd
of onlookers a slightly embarrassed glance, and hitched up his loose
poncho. He stretched and inhaled, and the ribs on his big barrel chest
drew apart; flaps of skin parted to reveal red slashes. The substance
beneath seemed spongy, rippling in the misting like densely laid
feathers.
God almighty. He really does have gills under there.
Presumably, the bellows-like movement of the chest helped pump water
through, when the amphibian was immersed. Dual systems. So did he hold
his breath, or did his lungs shut down involuntarily? By what mechanism
was his blood circulation switched from one oxygenating interface to
the other? Gupta pumped the bottle and sprayed mist into the red slits,
handing it back and forth from right side to left, and seemed to draw
some comfort thereby. He sighed, and the slits closed back down, his
chest appearing merely ridged and scarred. He smoothed the drifting
poncho back into place.
“Where are you from?” Miles couldn't help asking.
Gupta grew surly again. “Guess.”
“Well,
Jackson's Whole, by the weight of the evidence, but which House made
you? Ryoval, Bharaputra, another? And were you a one-off, or part of a
set? First-generation gengineered, or from a self-reproducing line of,
of water people?”
Gupta's eyes widened in surprise. “You know Jackson's Whole?”
“Let's say, I've had several painfully educational visits there.”
The surprise became edged with faint respect, and a certain lonely eagerness. “House Dyan made me. I was part of a set, once—we were an underwater ballet troupe.”
Garnet Five blurted in unflattering astonishment, “You were a dancer?”
The
prisoner hunched his shoulders. “No. They made me to be submersible
stage crew. But House Dyan suffered a hostile takeover by House
Ryoval—just a few years before Baron Ryoval was assassinated, pity that
didn't happen sooner. Ryoval broke up the troupe for other, um, tasks,
and decided he had no alternate use for me, so I was out of a job and
out of protection. Could have been worse. He mighta kept me. I drifted
around and took what tech jobs I could get. One thing led to another.”
In
other words, Gupta had been born into Jacksonian techno-serfdom, and
dumped out on the street when his original owner-creators had been
engulfed by their vicious commercial rival. Given what Miles knew of
the late, unsavory Baron Ryoval, Gupta's fate was perhaps happier than
that of his mer-cohort. By the known date of Ryoval's death, that last
vague remark about things leading to things covered at least five
years, maybe as many as ten.
Miles said thoughtfully, “You weren't shooting at me at all yesterday, then, were you. Nor at Portmaster Thorne.” Which left . . .
Gupta blinked at him. “Oh! That's
where I saw you before. Sorry, no.” His brow corrugated. “So what were
you doing there, then? You're not one of the passengers. Are you
another Stationer squatter like that officious bloody Betan?”
“No.
My name is”—he made an instant, almost subliminal decision to drop all
the honorifics—”Miles. I was sent out to look after Barrayaran concerns
when the quaddies impounded the Komarran fleet.”
“Oh.” Gupta grew uninterested.
What
the devil was keeping that fast-penta? Miles softened his voice. “So
what happened to your friends, Guppy?”
That
fetched the amphibian's attention again. “Double-crossed. Subjected,
injected, infected . . . rejected. We were all
taken in. Damned Cetagandan bastard. That wasn't the Deal.”
Something inside Miles went on overdrive. Here's the connection, finally. His smile grew charming, sympathetic, and his voice softened further. “Tell me about the Cetagandan bastard, Guppy.”
The
hovering mob of quaddie listeners had stopped rustling, even breathing
more quietly. Roic had drawn back to a shadowed spot opposite Miles.
Gupta glanced around at the Graf Stationers, and at Miles and himself,
the only legged persons now in view in the center of the circle.
“What's the use?” The tone was not a wail of despair, but a bitter
query.
“I am Barrayaran. I have a special
stake in Cetagandan bastards. The Cetagandan ghem-lords left five
million of my grandfather's generation dead behind them, when they
finally gave up and pulled out of Barrayar. I still have his bag of
ghem-scalps. For certain kinds of Cetagandans, I might know a use or
two you'd find interesting.”
The prisoner's
wandering gaze snapped to his face and locked there. For the first
time, he'd won Gupta's total attention. For the first time, he'd hinted
he might have something that Guppy really wanted. Wanted? Burned for,
lusted for, desired with mad obsessive hunger. His glassy eyes were
ravenous for . . . maybe revenge, maybe justice—in
any case, blood. But the frog prince clearly lacked personal expertise
in retribution. The quaddies didn't deal in blood.
Barrayarans . . . had a more sanguinary reputation.
Which, for the first time this mission, might actually prove some use.
Gupta took a long breath. “I don't know what kind this one was. Is. He was like nothing I'd ever met before. Cetagandan bastard. He melted us.”
“Tell me,” Miles breathed, “everything. Why you?”
“He
came to us . . . through our usual cargo agents. We
thought it would be all right. We had a ship. Gras-Grace and Firka and
Hewlet and me had this ship. Hewlet was our pilot, but Gras-Grace was
the brains. Me, I had a knack for fixing things. Firka kept the books,
and fixed regs, and passports, and nosy officials. Gras-Grace and her
three husbands, we called us. We were a collection of rejects, but
maybe we added up to one real spouse for her, I don't know. One for all
and all for one, because it was damn sure that a crew of refugee
Jacksonians, without a House or a Baron, wasn't going to get a break
from anyone else in the Nexus.”
Gupta was
getting wound up in his story. Miles, listening with utmost care,
prayed Venn would have the sense not to interrupt. Ten people hovered
around them in this chamber, yet he and Gupta, mutually hypnotized by
the increasing intensity of his confession, might almost be floating in
a bubble of time and space altogether removed from this universe. “So
where did you pick up this Cetagandan and his cargo, anyway?”
Gupta glanced up, startled. “You know about the cargo?”
“If it's the same one now aboard the Idris , yes, I've had a look. I found it rather disturbing.”
“What's he got in there, really? I only saw the outsides.”
“I'd
rather not say, at this time. What did he,” Miles elected not to go
into the confusions of ba gender just now, “tell you it was?”
“Gengineered
mammals. Not that we asked questions. We got paid extra for not asking
questions. That was the Deal, we thought.”
And if
there was anything that the ethically elastic inhabitants of Jackson's
Whole held nearly sacred, it was the Deal. “A good bargain, was it?”
“Looked like. Two or three more runs like that, we could have paid off the ship and owned it free and clear.”
Miles
took leave to doubt that, if the crew was in debt for their jumpship to
a typical Jacksonian financial House. But perhaps Guppy and his friends
had been terminal optimists. Or terminally desperate .
“The
gig looked easy enough. Just take a little mixed-freight run through
the fringes of the Cetagandan Empire. We jumped in through the Hegen
Hub, via Vervain, and skirted round to Rho Ceta. All those arrogant,
suspicious bastard inspectors who boarded us at the jump points turned
up nothing to hold against us, though they'd have liked to, because
there wasn't anything aboard but what our filed manifest said. Gave old
Firka a good chuckle. Till we were heading out for the last jumps, for
Rho Ceta through those empty buffer systems just before the route
splits to Komarr. We made one little mid-space rendezvous there that
didn't appear on our flight plan.”
“What kind of
ship did you rendezvous with? Jumpship, or just a local space crawler?
Could you tell for sure, or was it disguised or camouflaged?”
“Jumpship.
I don't know what else it might have really been. It looked like a
Cetagandan government ship. It had lots of fancy markings, anyway. Not
big, but fast—fresh and classy. The Cetagandan bastard moved his cargo
all by himself, with float pallets and hand tractors, but he sure
didn't waste any time. The moment the locks were closed, they went off.”
“Where? Could you tell?”
“Well,
Hewlet said they had an odd trajectory. It was that uninhabited binary
system a few jumps out from Rho Ceta, I don't know if you know it—”
Miles nodded in encouragement.
“They
went inbound, deeper into the grav well. Maybe they were planning to
swing around the suns and approach one of the jump points from a
disguised trajectory, I don't know. That would make sense, given all
the rest of it.”
“Just the one passenger?”
“Yeah.”
“Tell me more about him.”
“Not
much to tell—then. He kept to himself, ate his own rations in his own
cabin. He didn't talk to me at all. He had to talk to Firka, on account
of Firka was fixing his manifest. By the time we reached the first
Barrayaran jump point inspection, it had a whole new provenance. He was
somebody else by then, too.”
“Ker Dubauer?”
Venn
twitched at this first mention of the familiar name in his hearing, and
opened his mouth and inhaled, but closed it again without diverting
Guppy's flow. The unhappy amphibian was in full spate now, pouring out
his troubles.
“Not yet, he wasn't. He musta become
Dubauer during his layover on the Komarran transfer station, I figure.
I didn't track him by his identity, anyway. He was too good for that.
Fooled you Barrayarans, didn't he?”
Indeed
. An apparent Cetagandan agent of the highest caliber had passed
through Barrayar's key Nexus trade crossroad like so much smoke. ImpSec would have a seizure when this report arrived. “How did you follow him here, then?”
The
first smile-like expression Miles had seen on the rubbery face ghosted
across Gupta's lips. “I was ship's engineer. I tracked him by his
cargo's mass. It was kind of distinctive, when I went to look, later.”
The
ghastly smile faded into a black frown. “When we dumped him and his
pallets off on the Komarran transfer station's loading bay, he seemed
happy. Downright cordial. He went around to each of us for the first
time, and gave us our no-problems bonuses personally. He shook Hewlet's
and Firka's hands. He asked to see my webbing, so I spread my fingers
for him, and he leaned over and gripped my arm and seemed real
interested, and thanked me. He gave Gras-Grace a pat on her cheek, and
smiled at her in this sappy way. He smirked as he touched her. Knowing
. Since she was holding the bonus chit in her hand, she sort of smiled
back and didn't deck him, though I could see it was a near thing. And
then we bailed out. Hewlet and I wanted to take station leave and spend
some of our bonus, but Gras-Grace said we could party later. And Firka
said the Barrayaran Empire wasn't a healthy place for the likes of us
to linger in.” A distracted laugh that had nothing to do with humor
puffed from his lips. So. That startling scream when Miles had touched
the test patch to Guppy's skin hadn't been overreaction, exactly. It
had been a flashback. Miles suppressed a shudder. Sorry, sorry.
“It
was six days out from Komarr, past the jump to Pol, before the fevers
began. Gras-Grace guessed it first, from the way it started. She always
was the quickest of us. Four little pink wheals, like some kind of bug
bites, on the backs of Hewlet and Firka's hands, on her cheek, on my
arm where the Cetagandan bastard had touched me. They swelled up to the
size of eggs, and throbbed, though not as much as our heads. It only
took an hour. My head hurt so bad I could hardly see, and Gras-Grace,
who wasn't doing any better, helped me to my cabin so's I could get
into my tank.”
“Tank?”
“I'd
rigged up a big tank in my cabin, with a lid I could lock down from the
inside, because the gravity on that old ship wasn't any too reliable.
It was really comfortable to rest in, my own kind of water bed. I could
stretch all the way out, and turn around. Good filtration system on the
water, nice and clean, and extra oxygen sparkling up through it from a
bubbler I'd rigged, all pretty with colored lights. And music. I miss
my tank.” He heaved a sigh.
“You . . . appear to have lungs, as well. Do you hold your breath underwater, or what?”
Gupta
shrugged. “I have these extra sphincter muscles in my nose and ears and
throat that shut down automatically, when my breathing switches over.
That's always kind of an awkward moment, the switch; my lungs don't
always seem to want to stop. Or start again, sometimes. But I can't
stay in my tank forever, or I'd end up pissing in the water I breathe.
That's what happened then. I floated in my tank
for . . . hours, I'm not sure how many. I don't
think I was quite in my right mind, I hurt so bad. But then I had to
piss. Really bad. So I had to get out.
“I damn
near passed out when I stood. I threw up on the floor. But I could
walk. I made it to my cabin's head, finally. The ship was still
running, I could feel the right vibrations through my feet, but it had
gone all quiet. Nobody talking or arguing or snoring, no music. No
laughing. I was cold and wet. I put on a robe—it was one of hers that
Gras-Grace had given me, because she claimed being fat made her hot,
and I was always too cold. She said it was because my designers gave me
frog genes. For all I know, that might be true.
“I
found her body . . .” He stopped. The light-years-gone
look in his eyes intensified. “About five steps down the corridor. At
least, I thought it was her. It was her braid, floating on
the . . . At least, I thought it was a body. The
size of the puddle seemed about right. It stank
like . . . What kind of hell-disease liquefies bones ?”
He
inhaled, and continued unsteadily, “Firka had made it to the infirmary,
for all the good it had done him. He was all flaccid, like he was
deflating. And dripping. Over the side of the bunk. He stank worse than
Gras-Grace. And he was steaming .
“Hewlet—what
was left of him—was in his pilot's chair in Nav and Com. I don't know
why he crawled up there, maybe it was a comfort to him. Pilots are
strange that way. His pilot's headset kind of held his skull braced,
but his face . . . his
features . . . they were just sliding off. I
thought he might have been trying to send an emergency message, maybe. Help us. Biocontamination aboard
. But maybe not, because nobody ever came. Later I thought maybe he'd
sent too much, and the rescuers stayed away on purpose. Why should the
good citizens risk anything for us ? Just Jacksonian smuggler scum. Better off dead. Saves the trouble and expense of prosecution, eh?” He looked at no one, now.
Miles
feared he was falling silent, spent. But there was so much more,
desperately important, to know . . . He dared to
play out a lead—”So. No shit, there you were, trapped on a drifting
ship with three dissolving corpses including a dead jump pilot. How did
you get away?”
“The
ship . . . the ship was no good to me now, not
without Hewlet. And the others. Let the bastard financers have it,
biocontamination and all. Murdered dreams. But I figured I was
everybody's heir, by that time. Nobody had anybody else, not to speak
to. I would've wanted them to have my stuff, if it had been the other
way around. I went round and collected everybody's movables, spare
cash, credit chits—Firka had a huge cache. He would. And he had all our
doctored IDs. Gras-Grace, well, she probably gave hers away, or lost it
gambling, or spent it on toys, or let it slip through her fingers
somehow. Which made her smarter than Firka, in the long run. Hewlet, I
guess he'd drunk most of his. But there was enough. Enough to travel to
the ends of the Nexus, if I was clever about it. Enough to catch up
with that Cetagandan bastard, stern chase or no. With that heavy cargo,
I didn't figure he'd be traveling all that fast.
“I
took it all and loaded it in an escape capsule. Decontaminated it all,
and me, a dozen times first, trying to get that horrible death smell
off. I wasn't . . . I wasn't at my best and
brightest, I don't think, but I wasn't that far gone. Once I
was in the capsule, it wasn't so hard. They're designed to get injured
idiots to safety, automatically following the local space
beacons . . . I got picked up three days later by a
passing ship, and told a bullshit story about our ship coming
apart—they believed that when they looked up the Jacksonian
registry. I'd stopped crying by then.” Tears were glistening at the
corners of his eyes now. “Didn't mention the bio-shit, or they'd have
jugged me good. They dropped me at the nearest Polian jump point
station. From there I slipped away from the safety investigators and
got me on the first ship I could bound for Komarr. I tracked the
Cetagandan bastard's cargo by its mass to the Komarran trade fleet that
had just pulled out. Ran a search to find a route that would catch me
up to it at the first possible place. Which was here.” He stared
around, blinking at his quaddie audience as if surprised to find them
all still in the room.
“How did Lieutenant Solian
get sucked into it?” Miles had been waiting with nerves stretched to
twanging to ask that one.
“I thought I could just lie in wait and ambush the Cetagandan bastard as soon as he came off the Idris.
But he never came off. Stayed holed up in his cabin, I guess. Smart
scum. I couldn't get through customs or the ship's security—I wasn't a
registered passenger or a guest of one, though I tried to butter up a
few. Scared the shit out of me when the fellow I tried to bribe to get
me on board threatened to turn me in. Then I got smart and got me a
berth on the Rudra , to at least get me legal entry past
customs into those loading bays. And to be sure I'd be able to follow
along if the fleet pulled out suddenly, which it was overdue to do by
then. I wanted to kill him myself, for Gras-Grace and Firka and Hewlet,
but if he was going to get away, I thought, if I turned him in to the
Barrayarans as a Cetagandan spy,
maybe . . . something interesting might happen,
anyway. Something he wouldn't like. I didn't want to leave my trace on
the vid call record, so I caught the Idris 's security officer
in person when he was out in the loading bay. Tipped him off. I wasn't
sure if he believed me or not, but I guess he went to check.” Gupta
hesitated. “He musta run into the Cetagandan bastard. I'm sorry. I'm
afraid I got him melted. Like Gras-Grace and . . .” His
litany ended in a shaken gulp.
“Is that when Solian had the nose bleed? When you were tipping him off?” Miles asked.
Gupta stared. “What are you, some kind of psychic?”
Check . “Why the faked blood on the docking bay floor?”
“Well . . . I'd
heard the fleet was pulling out. They were saying that the poor bugger
I'd got melted was supposed to have deserted, and they were writing him
off, just like . . . like he didn't have a House or
a Baron to put up any stake for him, and nobody cared. But I was afraid
the Cetagandan bastard would pull another mid-space transfer, and I'd
be stuck on the Rudra , and he'd get away . . . I thought it would focus attention back on the Idris , and what might be on it. I didn't dream those military morons would attack the quaddie station!”
“There
were concatenating circumstances,” Miles said primly, made conscious,
for the first time in what seemed a small eternity of evoked horrors,
of the hovering quaddie officialdom. “You certainly triggered events,
but you could not possibly have anticipated them.” He, too, blinked and
looked around. “Er . . . did you have any questions,
Chief Venn?”
Venn was giving him a most peculiar stare. He shook his head, slowly, from side to side.
“Uh . . .”
A young quaddie patroller Miles had barely noticed enter during Guppy's
urgent soliloquy held out a small, glittering object to his chief. “I
have the fast-penta dose you ordered, sir . . . ?”
Venn took it and gazed over at Adjudicator Leutwyn.
Leutwyn
cleared his throat. “Remarkable. I do believe, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan,
that is the first time I've ever seen a fast-penta interrogation
conducted without the fast-penta.”
Miles glanced
at Guppy, curled around himself in air, shivering a little. Smears of
water still glistened at the corners of his eyes.
“He . . . really wanted to tell somebody his story.
He's been dying to for weeks. There was just no one in the entire Nexus
he could trust.”
“Still isn't,” gulped the prisoner. “Don't get a swelled head, Barrayaran. I know nobody's on my
side. But I missed my one shot, and he saw me. I was safe when he
thought I was melted like the others. I'm a dead frog now, one way or
another. But if I can't take him with me, maybe somebody else can.”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Chief Venn said,
“So . . . this Cetagandan bastard Gupta here is
raving about, that he says killed three of his friends and maybe your
Lieutenant Solian—you really think this is the same as the Betan
transient, Dubauer, that you wanted us to pick up last night? So is he
a herm, or a man, or what?”
“Or what,” answered
Miles. “My medical people established from a blood sample I
accidentally collected yesterday that Dubauer is a Cetagandan ba. The
ba are neither male, female, nor hermaphrodite, but a genderless
servant . . . caste, I guess is the best word, of
the Cetagandan haut lords. More specifically, of the haut ladies who
run the Star Crиche, at the core of the Celestial Garden, the Imperial
residence on Eta Ceta.” Who almost never left the Celestial Garden,
with or without their ba servitors. So what's this ba doing way out here, eh?
Miles hesitated, then went on, “This ba appears to be conducting a
cargo of a thousand of what I suspect are the latest genetically
modified haut fetuses in uterine replicators. I don't know where, I
don't know why, and I don't know who for, but if Guppy's telling us the
straight story, the ba has killed four people, including our missing
security officer, and tried to kill Guppy, to keep its secret and cover
its tracks.” At least four people .
Greenlaw's
expression had grown stiff with dismay. Venn regarded Gupta, frowning.
“I guess we'd better put out a public arrest call on Dubauer, then,
too.”
“No!” Miles cried in alarm.
Venn raised his brows at him.
Miles
explained hastily, “We're talking about a possible trained Cetagandan
agent who may be carrying sophisticated bioweapons. It's already
extremely stressed by the delays into which this dispute with the trade
fleet has plunged it. It's just discovered it's made one bad mistake at
least, because Guppy here is still alive. I don't care how superhuman
it is, it has to be rattled by now. The last thing you want to do is
send a bunch of feckless civilians up against it. Nobody should even
approach the ba who doesn't know exactly what they're doing and what
they're facing.”
“And your people brought this creature here, onto my station?”
“Believe
me, if any of my people had known what the ba was before this, it would
never have made it past Komarr. The trade fleet are dupes, innocent
carriers, I'm sure.” Well, he wasn't that sure—checking that airy assertion was going to be a high-priority problem for counterintelligence, back home.
“Carriers . . .”
Greenlaw echoed, looking hard at Guppy. All the quaddies in the room
followed her stare. “Could this transient still be carrying
that . . . whatever it was, infection?”
Miles
took a breath. “Possibly. But if he is, it's too damned late already.
Guppy has been running all over Graf Station for days, now. Hell, if
he's infectious, he's just spread a plague along a route through the
Nexus touching half a dozen planets.” And me. And my fleet. And maybe Ekaterin too. “I see two points of hope. One, by Guppy's testimony, the ba had to administer the thing by actual touch.”
The patrollers who'd handled the prisoner looked apprehensively at each other.
“And
secondly,” Miles went on, “if the disease or poison is something
bioengineered by the Star Crиche, it's likely to be highly controlled,
possibly deliberately self-limiting and self-destructing. The haut
ladies don't like to leave their trash lying around for anyone to pick
up.”
“But I got better!” cried the amphibian.
“Yes,”
said Miles. “Why? Obviously, something in your unique genetics or
situation either defeated the thing, or held it at bay long enough to
keep you alive past its period of activity. Putting you in quarantine
is about useless by now, but the next highest priority after nailing
the ba has got to be running you through the medical wringer, to see if
what you have or did can save anyone else.” Miles drew breath. “May I
offer the facilities of the Prince Xav ? Our medical people do have some specific training in Cetagandan bio-threats.”
Guppy blurted to Venn in panic, “Don't give me to them! They'll dissect me!”
Venn,
who had brightened at this offer, shot the prisoner an exasperated
look, but Greenlaw said slowly, “I know something of the ghem and the
haut, but I've never heard of these ba, or the Star Crиche.”
Adjudicator Leutwyn added warily, “Cetagandans of any stripe haven't much come in my way.”
Greenlaw continued, “What makes you think their work is so safe, so restricted?”
“Safe,
no. Controlled, maybe.” How far did he need to back up his explanation
to make the dangers clear to them? It was vital that the quaddies be
made to understand, and believe. “The
Cetagandans . . . have this two-tiered aristocracy
that is the bafflement of non-Cetagandan military observers. At the
core are the haut lords, who are, in effect, one giant genetics
experiment in producing the post-human race. This work is conducted and
controlled by the haut women geneticists of the Star Crиche, the center
where all haut embryos are created and modified before being sent back
to their haut constellations—clans, parents—on the outlying planets of
the empire. Unlike most prior historical versions of this sort of
thing, the haut ladies didn't start by assuming they'd reached the
perfected end already. They do not, at present, believe themselves to
be done tinkering. When they are—well, who knows what will happen? What
are the goals and desires going to be of the true post-human? Even the
haut ladies don't try to second-guess their great-great-great-whatever
grandchildren. I will say, it makes it uncomfortable to have them as
neighbors.”
“Didn't the haut try to conquer you Barrayarans, once?” asked Leutwyn.
“Not
the haut. The ghem-lords. The buffer race, if you will, between the
haut and the rest of humanity. I suppose you could think of the ghem as
the haut's bastard children, except that they aren't bastards. In that
sense, anyway. The haut leak selected genetic lines into the ghem via
trophy haut wives—it's a complicated system. But the ghem-lords are the
military arm of the empire, always anxious to prove their worth to
their haut masters.”
“The ghem, I've seen,” said
Venn. “We get them through here now and then. I though the haut were,
well, sort of degenerate. Aristocratic parasites. Afraid to get their
hands dirty. They don't work .” He gave a very quaddie sniff of disdain. “Or fight. You have to wonder how long the ghem-soldiers will put up with them.”
“On
the surface, the haut appear to dominate the ghem through pure moral
suasion. Overawe by their beauty and intelligence and refinement, and
by making themselves the source of all kinds of status rewards,
culminating in the haut wives. All this is true. But beneath
that . . . it is strongly suspected that the haut
hold a biological and biochemical arsenal that even the ghem find
terrifying.”
“I haven't heard of anything like that being used ,” said Venn in a tone of skepticism.
“Oh, you bet you haven't.”
“Why didn't they use it on you Barrayarans, back then, if they had it?” said Greenlaw slowly.
“That
is a problem much studied, at certain levels of my government. First,
it would have alarmed the neighborhood. Bioweapons aren't the only
kind. The Cetagandan Empire apparently wasn't ready to face a posse of
people scared enough to combine to burn off their planets and sterilize
every living microbe. More importantly, we think it was a question of
goals. The ghem-lords wanted the territory and the wealth, the personal
aggrandizement that would have followed successful conquest. The haut
ladies just weren't that interested. Not enough to waste their
resources—not resources of weapons per se, but of reputation, secrecy,
of a silent threat of unknown potency. Our intelligence services have
amassed maybe half a dozen cases in the past thirty years of suspected
use of haut-style bioweapons, and in every instance, it was a
Cetagandan internal matter.” He glanced at Greenlaw's intensely
disturbed face and added in what he hoped didn't sound like hollow
reassurance, “There was no spread or bio-backsplash from those
incidents that we know of.”
Venn looked at Greenlaw. “So do we take this prisoner to a clinic, or to a cell?”
Greenlaw
was silent for a few moments, then said, “Graf Station University
clinic. Straight to the infectious isolation unit. I think we want our
best experts in on this, and as quickly as possible.”
Gupta
objected, “But I'll be an open target! I was hunting the Cetagandan
bastard—now he—it, whatever—will be hunting me!”
“I
agree with this evaluation,” Miles said quickly. “Wherever you take
Gupta, the location should be kept absolutely secret. The fact that
he's even been taken into custody should be suppressed—dear God, this
arrest hasn't gone out on your news services already, has it?” Piping
the word of Gupta's location to every nook of the
station . . .
“Not formally,” said Venn uneasily.
It
scarcely mattered, Miles supposed. Dozens of quaddies had seen the
web-fingered man brought in, including everybody that Bel's crew of
roustabouts had passed on the way. The Docks and Locks quaddies would
certainly brag of their catch to everyone they knew. The gossip would
be all over.
“I strongly urge—beg!—you to put out
word of his daring escape, then. Complete with follow-up bulletins
asking all the citizens to keep an eye out for him again.” The ba had
killed four to keep its secret—would it be willing to kill fifty
thousand?
“A disinformation campaign?” Greenlaw's lips pursed in repugnance.
“The
lives of everyone on the station might well depend on it. Secrecy is
your best hope of safety. And Gupta's. After that, guards—”
“My people are already spread to their limit,” Venn protested. He gave Greenlaw a beseeching look.
Miles
opened a hand in acknowledgment. “Not patrollers. Guards who know what
they're doing, trained in bio-defense procedures.”
“We'll
have to draw on Union Militia specialists,” said Greenlaw in a decisive
tone. “I'll put in the request. But it will take
them . . . some time, to get here.”
“In the meanwhile,” said Miles, “I can loan you some trained personnel.”
Venn grimaced. “I have a detention block full of your personnel. I'm not much impressed with their training.”
Miles suppressed a wince. “Not them . Military medical corps.”
“I will consider your offer,” said Greenlaw neutrally.
“Some
of Vorpatril's senior medical men must have some expertise in this
area. If you won't let us take Gupta out to the safety of one of our
vessels, please, let them come aboard the station to help you.”
Greenlaw's eyes narrowed. “All right. We will accept up to four such volunteers. Unarmed. Under the direct supervision and command of our own medical experts.”
“Agreed,” said Miles instantly.
It
was the best compromise he was likely to get, for the moment. The
medical end of this problem, terrifying as it was, would have to be
left to the specialists; it was out of Miles's range of expertise.
Catching the ba before it could do any more damage,
now . . .
“The haut are not immune
to stunner fire. I . . . recommend”—he could not
order, he could not demand, most of all, he could not scream—”you quietly inform all of your patrollers that the ba—Dubauer—be stunned on sight. Once it's down, we can sort things out at our leisure.”
Venn
and Greenlaw exchanged looks with the adjudicator. Leutwyn said in a
constricted voice, “It would be against regs to so ambush the suspect
if it is not in process of a crime, resisting arrest, or fleeing.”
“Bioweapons?” muttered Venn.
The adjudicator swallowed. “Make damned sure your patrollers don't miss their first shot.”
“Your ruling is noted, sir.”
And
if the ba stayed out of sight? Which it had certainly managed to do for
most of the past twenty-four hours. . . .
What
did the ba want? Its cargo freed, and Guppy dead before he could talk,
presumably. What did the ba know, at this point? Or not know? It didn't
know that Miles had identified its cargo . . . did
it? Where the hell is Bel?
“Ambush,” Miles
echoed. “There are two places where you could set up an ambush for the
ba. Wherever you take Guppy—or better still, wherever the ba believes
you've taken Guppy. If you don't want to put it about that he's
escaped, then take him to a concealed location, with a second, less
secret one set up for bait. Then, another trap at the Idris .
If Dubauer calls in requesting permission to go aboard again, which the
last time we met, it fully intended to do, you should grant the
petition. Then nail it as it enters the loading bay.”
“That's what I
was going to do,” put in Gupta in a resentful voice. “If you people had
just let well enough alone, this could have been all over by now.”
Miles
privately agreed, but it would hardly do to say so out loud; someone
might point out just who had put on the pressure for Gupta's arrest.
Greenlaw
was looking grimly thoughtful. “I wish to inspect this alleged cargo.
It is possible that it violates enough regs to merit impoundment quite
separately from the issue of its carrier ship.”
The
adjudicator cleared his throat. “That could grow legally complex,
Sealer. More complex. Cargoes not off-loaded for transfer, even if
questionable, are normally allowed to pass through without legal
comment. They're considered to be the territorial responsibility of the
polity of registration of the carrier, unless they are an imminent
public danger. A thousand fetuses, if that's what they are,
constitute . . . what menace?”
Impounding
them could prove a horrific danger, Miles thought. It would certainly
lock Cetagandan attention upon Quaddiespace. Speaking from both
historical and personal experience, this was not necessarily a good
thing.
“I want to confirm this for myself, too,”
said Venn. “And give my guards their orders in person, and figure out
where to place my sharpshooters.”
“And you need me along, to get into the cargo hold,” Miles pointed out.
Greenlaw said, “No, just your security codes.”
Miles smiled blandly at her.
Her
jaw tightened. After a moment, she growled, “Very well. Let's go, Venn.
You too, Adjudicator. And,” she sighed briefly, “you, Lord Auditor
Vorkosigan.”
Gupta was wrapped in bio-barriers by
the two quaddies who had handled him before—a logical choice, if not
much to their liking. They donned wraps and gloves themselves and towed
him out without allowing him to touch anything else. The amphibian
suffered this without protest. He looked utterly exhausted.
Garnet
Five left with Nicol for Nicol's apartment, where the two quaddie women
planned to support each other while awaiting word of Bel. “Call me
,” Nicol pleaded in an under-voice to Miles as they floated out. Miles
nodded his promise, and prayed silently that it would not prove to be
one of those hard calls.
His brief vid call out to the Prince Xav
and Admiral Vorpatril was hard enough. Vorpatril was almost as white as
his hair by the time Miles had finished bringing him up to date. He
promised to expedite a selection of medical volunteers at emergency
speed.
The procession to the Idris finally
included Venn, Greenlaw, the adjudicator, two quaddie patrollers,
Miles, and Roic. The loading bay was as dim and quiet as—had it only
been yesterday? One of the two quaddie guards, watched bemusedly by the
other, was out of his floater and crouched on the floor. He was
evidently playing a game with gravity involving a scattering of tiny
bright metal caltrops and a small rubber ball, which seemed to consist
of bouncing the ball off the floor, catching it again, and snatching up
the little caltrops between bounces. To make it more interesting for
himself, he was switching hands with each iteration. At the sight of
the visitors, the guard hastily pocketed the game and scrambled back
into his floater.
Venn pretended not to see this,
simply inquiring after any events of note during their shift. Not only
had no unauthorized persons attempted to get past them, the
investigation committee was the first live persons the bored men had
seen since relieving the prior shift. Venn lingered with his patrollers
to make his arrangements for the stunner ambush of the ba, should it
appear, and Miles led Roic, Greenlaw, and the adjudicator aboard the
ship.
The gleaming rows of replicator racks in
Dubauer's leased cargo hold appeared unchanged from yesterday. Greenlaw
grew tense about the lips, guiding her floater around the hold on an
initial overview, then pausing to stare down the aisles. Miles thought
he could almost see her doing the multiplication in her head. She and
Leutwyn then hovered by Miles's side as he activated a few control
panels to demonstrate the replicators' contents.
It
was almost a repeat of yesterday, except . . . a
number of the readout indicators showed amber instead of green. Closer
examination revealed them as measures of an array of stressor-signals,
including adrenaline levels. Was the ba right about the fetuses
reaching some sort of biological limit in their containers? Was this
the first sign of dangerous overgrowth? As Miles watched, a couple of
the light bars dropped back on their own from amber to a more
encouraging green. He went on to call up the vid monitor images of the
individual fetuses for Greenlaw's and the adjudicator's views. The
fourth one he activated showed amniotic fluid cloudy with scarlet blood
when the lights came on. Miles caught his breath. How . . . ?
That
surely wasn't normal. The only possible source of blood was the fetus
itself. He rechecked the stressor levels—this one showed a lot of
amber—then stood on tiptoe and peered more closely at the image. The
blood appeared to be leaking from a small, jagged gash on the twitching
haut infant's back. The low red lighting, Miles reassured himself
uneasily, made it look worse than it was.
Greenlaw's voice by his ear made him jump. “Is there something wrong with that one?”
“He
appears to have suffered some sort of mechanical injury.
That . . . shouldn't be possible, in a sealed
replicator.” He thought of Aral Alexander, and Helen Natalia, and his
stomach knotted. “If you have any quaddie experts in replicator
reproduction, it might not be a bad idea to get them in here to look at
these.” He doubted this was a specialty where the military medicos from
the Prince Xav were likely to be much help.
Venn
appeared at the door of the hold, and Greenlaw repeated most of Miles's
orienting patter for his benefit. Venn's expression was most disturbed
as he regarded the replicators. “That frog fellow wasn't lying. This is
very strange.”
Venn's wrist com buzzed, and
he excused himself to float to the side of the room and engage in some
low-voiced conversation with whatever subordinate was reporting in. At
least, it began as low-voiced, until Venn bellowed, “What? When? ”
Miles abandoned his worried study of the injured haut infant and edged over to Venn.
“About 0200, sir,” a distressed voice responded from the wrist com.
“This wasn't authorized!”
“Yes,
it was, Crew Chief, duly. Portmaster Thorne authorized it. Since it was
the same passenger it had brought on board yesterday, the one who had
that live cargo to tend, we didn't think anything was odd.”
“What time did they leave ?” Venn asked. His face was a mask of dismay.
“Not
on our shift, sir. I don't know what happened after that. I went
straight home and went to bed. I didn't see the search bulletin for
Portmaster Thorne on the news stream till I got up for breakfast just a
few minutes ago.”
“Why didn't you pass this on in your end-of-shift report?”
“Portmaster Thorne said
not to.” The voice hesitated. “At least . . . the
passenger suggested we might want to leave this off the record, so that
we wouldn't have to deal with all the other passengers demanding access
too if they heard about it, and Portmaster Thorne nodded and said Yes .”
Venn
winced, and took a deep breath. “It can't be helped, Patroller. You
reported as soon as you knew. I'm glad you at least picked up the news
right away. We'll take it from here. Thank you.” Venn cut the channel.
“What was that all about?” asked Miles. Roic had strolled up to loom over his shoulder.
Venn clutched his head with his upper hands, and groaned, “My night-shift guard on the Idris just woke up and saw the news bulletin about Thorne being missing. He says Thorne came here last night about oh-two-hundred and passed Dubauer through the guards.”
“Where did Thorne go after that?”
“Escorted
Dubauer aboard, apparently. Neither of them came off while my
night-shift crew was watching. Excuse me. I need to go talk to my
people.” Venn grabbed his floater control and swung hastily out of the
cargo hold.
Miles stood stunned. How could Bel
have gone from an uncomfortable, but relatively safe, nap in a
recycling bin to this action in little more than an hour?
Garnet Five had taken six or seven hours to wake up. His high
confidence in his judgment of Gupta's account was suddenly shaken.
Roic, eyes narrowing, asked, “Could your herm friend have gone renegade, m'lord? Or been bribed?”
Adjudicator Leutwyn looked to Greenlaw, who looked sick with uncertainty.
“I
would sooner doubt . . . myself,” said Miles. And
that was slandering Bel. “Although the portmaster might have been
bribed with a nerve disruptor muzzle pressed to its spine, or something
equivalent.” He wasn't sure he wanted to even try to imagine the ba's
bioweapon equivalent. “Bel would play for time.”
“How could this ba find the portmaster when we couldn't?” asked Leutwyn.
Miles
hesitated. “The ba wasn't hunting Bel. The ba was hunting Guppy. If the
ba had been closing in last night when Guppy counterattacked his
shadowers . . . the ba might have come along
immediately after, or even been a witness. And allowed itself to be
diverted, or swapped its priorities, in the face of the unexpected
opportunity to gain access to its cargo through Bel.”
What
priorities? What did the ba want? Well, Gupta dead, certainly, doubly
so now that the amphibian was witness to both its initial clandestine
operation, and to the murders by which the ba had attempted to
completely erase its trail. But for the ba to have been so close to its
target, and yet veer off, suggested that the other priority was
overwhelmingly more important to it.
The ba had
spoken of utterly destroying its purportedly animal cargo; the ba had
also spoken of taking tissue samples for freezing. The ba had spoken
lie upon lie, but suppose this was the truth? Miles wheeled to stare
down the aisle of racks. The image formed itself in his mind: of the ba
working all day, with relentless speed and concentration. Loosening the
lid of each replicator, stabbing through membrane, fluid, and soft skin
with a sampling needle, lining the needles up, row on row, in a freezer
unit the size of a small valise. Miniaturizing the essence of its
genetic payload to something it could carry away in one hand. At the
cost of abandoning their originals? Destroying the evidence?
Maybe it has, and we just can't see the effects yet.
If the ba could make adult-sized bodies steam away their own liquids
within hours and turn to viscous puddles, what could it do with such
tiny ones?
The Cetagandan wasn't stupid. Its
smuggling scheme might have gone according to plan, but for the slipup
with Gupta. Who had followed the ba here, and drawn in Solian—whose
disappearance had led to the muddle with Corbeau and Garnet Five, which
had led to the bungled raid on the quaddie security post, which had
resulted in the impoundment of the fleet, including the ba's precious
cargo. Miles knew exactly how it felt to watch a carefully planned
mission slide down the toilet in a flush of random mischance. How would
the ba respond to that sick, heart-pounding desperation? Miles had
almost no sense of the person, despite meeting it twice. The ba was
smooth and slick and self-controlled. It could kill with a touch,
smiling.
But if the ba was paring down its payload
to a minimum mass, it certainly wouldn't saddle its escape with a
prisoner.
“I think,” said Miles, and had to stop
and clear a throat gone dry. Bel would play for time. But suppose time
and ingenuity ran out, and no one came, and no one came, and no one
came . . . ”I think Bel might still be aboard the Idris . We must search the ship. At once.”
Roic stared around, looking daunted. “All of it, m'lord?”
He started to cry Yes!
but his laggard brain converted it to, “No. Bel had no access codes
beyond quaddie control of the airlock. The ba had codes only for this
hold and its own cabin. Anything that was locked before, should still
be. For the first pass, check unsecured spaces only.”
“Shouldn't we wait for Chief Venn's patrollers?” asked Leutwyn uneasily.
“If
anyone even tries to come aboard who hasn't been exposed already, I
swear I'll stun them myself before they can get through the airlock.
I'm not fooling.” Miles's voice was husky with conviction.
Leutwyn
looked taken aback, but Greenlaw, after a frozen moment, nodded. “I
quite see your point, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan. I must agree.”
They
spread out in pairs, the intent-looking Greenlaw followed by the
somewhat bewildered adjudicator, Roic determinedly keeping to Miles's
shoulder. Miles tried the ba's cabin first, to find it as empty as
before. Four other cabins had been left unlocked, three presumably
because they had been cleared of possessions, the last apparently
through sheer carelessness. The infirmary was sealed, as it had been
left after Bel's inspection with the medtechs last evening. Nav and Com
was fully secured. On the deck above, the kitchen was open, as were
some of the recreation areas, but no cheeky Betan herm or unnaturally
decomposed remains were to be found. Greenlaw and Leutwyn passed
through, to report that all of the other holds in the huge long
cylinder shared by the ba's cargo were still properly sealed. Venn,
they discovered, had taken over a comconsole in the passenger lounge;
upon being apprised of Miles's new theory, he paled and attached
himself to Greenlaw. Five more nacelles to check.
On
the deck below the passengers' zone, most of the utility and
engineering areas remained locked. But the door to the department of
Small Repairs opened at Miles's touch on its control pad.
Three
adjoining chambers were full of benches, tools, and diagnostic
equipment. In the second chamber, Miles came upon a bench holding three
deflated bod pods marked with the Idris 's logo and serial
numbers. These tough-skinned human-sized balloons were furnished with
enough air recycling equipment and power to keep a passenger alive in a
pressurization emergency until rescue arrived. One had only to step
inside, zip it up, and hit the power-on button. Bod pods required a
minimum of instruction, mostly because there wasn't bloody much you
could do once you were trapped inside one. Every cabin, hold, and
corridor on the ship had them, stored in emergency lockers on the walls.
On
the floor beside the bench, one bod pod stood fully inflated, as if it
had been left there in the middle of testing by some tech when the ship
had been evacuated by the quaddies.
Miles stepped up to one of the pod's round plastic ports and peered through.
Bel
sat inside, cross-legged, stark naked. The herm's lips were parted, and
its eyes glazed and distant. So still was that form, Miles feared he
was looking at death already, but then Bel's chest rose and fell,
breasts trembling with the shivers racking its body. On the blank face
a fevered flush bloomed and faded.
No, God, no!
Miles lunged for the pod's seal, but his hand stopped and fell back,
clenching so hard his nails bit into his palm like knives. No . . .
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Step One. Seal the biocontaminated area.
Had the entry lock been closed behind them when their party entered the Idris ? Yes. Had anyone opened it since?
Miles
raised his wrist com to his lips and spoke Venn's contact code. Roic
stepped closer to the bod pod, but stopped at Miles's upflung hand; he
ducked his head and peered past Miles's shoulder, and his eyes widened.
The
few seconds of delay while the wrist com's search program located Venn
seemed to flow by like cold oil. Finally, the crew chief's edgy voice:
“Venn here. What now, Lord Vorkosigan?”
“We've
found Portmaster Thorne. Trapped in a bod pod in the engineering
section. The herm appears dazed and very ill. I believe we have an
urgent biocontamination emergency here, at least Class Three and
possibly as bad as Class Five.” The most extreme level, biowarfare
plague. “Where are you all now?”
“In the Number Two freight nacelle. The sealer and the adjudicator are with me.”
“No one has attempted to leave or enter the ship since we boarded? You didn't go out for any reason?”
“No.”
“You understand the necessity for keeping it that way till we know what the devil we're dealing with?”
“What, do you think I'd be insane enough to carry some hell-plague back ontomy own station ?”
Check. “Very good, Crew Chief. I see we are of one mind in this.” Step Two. Alert the medical authority in your district.
To each their own. “I'm going to report this to Admiral Vorpatril and
request medical assistance. I presume Graf Station has its own
emergency protocols.”
“Just as soon as you get off my com link.”
“Right.
At the earliest feasible moment, I also intend to break the tube seals
and move the ship a little way out of its docking cradle, just to be
sure. If you or the Sealer would warn station traffic control, plus
clear whatever shuttle Vorpatril sends, that would be most helpful.
Meanwhile—I strongly urge you seal the locks between your nacelle and
this central section until . . . until we know
more. Find the nacelle's atmosphere controls and put yourselves on
internal circulation, if you can. I
haven't . . . quite figured out what to do about
this damned bod pod yet. Nai—Vorkosigan out.”
He
cut the com and stared in anguish at the thin wall between him and Bel.
How good a biocontamination barrier was a sealed bod pod's skin?
Probably quite good, for something not purpose-built for the task. A
new and horrible idea of just where to look for Solian, or rather,
whatever organic smear of the lieutenant might now remain, presented
itself inescapably to Miles's imagination.
With
that jump of deduction came new hope and new terror. Solian had been
disposed of weeks ago, probably aboard this very vessel, at a time when
passengers and crew had been moving freely between the station and the
ship. No plague had broken out yet. If Solian had been dissolved by the
same nightmare method Gupta testified had claimed his shipmates, inside
a bod pod, which was then folded and set out of the
way . . . leaving Bel in the pod with the seals unbroken
might make everyone perfectly safe.
Everyone, of course, except Bel. . . .
It
was unclear if the incubation or latency period of the infection was
adjustable, although what Miles was seeing now suggested it was. Six
days for Gupta and his friends. Six hours for Bel? But the disease or
poison or bio-molecular device, whatever it was, had killed the
Jacksonians quickly once it became active, in just a few hours. How
long did Bel have until intervention became futile? Before the herm's
brains began turning to some bubbling gray slime along with its
body . . . ? Hours, minutes, too late already? And
what intervention could help?
Gupta survived this.
Therefore, survival is possible. His mind dug into that historical fact
like pitons into a rock face. Hang on and climb, boy.
He held his wrist com to his lips and called up the emergency channel to Admiral Vorpatril.
Vorpatril
responded almost immediately. “Lord Vorkosigan? The medical squad you
requested reached the quaddie station a few minutes ago. They should be
reporting in to you there momentarily to assist with the examination of
your prisoner. Haven't they presented themselves yet?”
“They may have, but I'm now aboard the Idris
, along with Armsman Roic. And, unfortunately, Sealer Greenlaw,
Adjudicator Leutwyn, and Chief Venn. We've ordered the ship sealed. We
appear to have a biocontamination incident aboard.” He repeated the
description of Bel he'd given Venn, with a few more details.
Vorpatril swore. “Shall I send a personnel pod to take you off, my lord?”
“Absolutely
not. If there's anything contagious loose in here—which, while not
certain, is not yet ruled out—it's um . . . already
too late.”
“I'll divert my medical squad to you at once.”
“Not
all of them, dammit. I want some of our people in with the quaddies,
working on Gupta. It is of the highest urgency to find out why he
survived. Since we may be stuck in here for a while, don't tie up more
men than required. But do send me bright ones. In Level Five biotainer
suits. You can send any equipment they want aboard with them, but
nothing and no one goes back off this ship till this thing is locked
down.” Or until the plague took them
all . . . Miles had a vision of the Idris towed away from the station and abandoned, the untouchable final tomb of all aboard. A damned expensive
sepulchre, there was that consolation. He had faced death before and,
once at least, lost, but the lonely ugliness of this one shook him
badly. There would be no cheating with cryochambers this time, he
suspected. Not for the last victims to go, certainly. “Volunteers only,
you understand me, Admiral?”
“That I do,” said Vorpatril grimly. “I'm on it, my Lord Auditor.”
“Good. Vorkosigan out.”
How
much time did Bel have? Half an hour? Two hours? How much time would it
take Vorpatril to muster his new set of medical volunteers and all
their complex cargo? More than half an hour, Miles was fairly certain.
And what could they do when they got here?
Besides his genetic engineering, what had been different from the others about Gupta?
His
tank? Breathing through his gills . . . Bel didn't
have gills, no help there. Cooling water, flowing over the froggish
body, his fan-like webs, through the blood-filled, feathery gills,
chilling his blood . . . could some of this
bio-dissolvent's hellish development be heat-sensitive or
temperature-triggered?
An ice-water bath?
The vision sprang to his mind's eye, and his lips drew back on a fierce
grin. A low-tech, but provably fast, way to lower body temperature, no
question about it. He could personally guarantee the effects. Thank you, Ivan.
“My lord?” said Roic uncertainly to his apparent transfixed paralysis.
“We
run like hell now. You go to the galley and check for ice. If there
isn't any, start whatever machine they have full blast. Then meet me in
the infirmary.” He had to move fast; he didn't have to be stupid about
it. “They may have biotainer gear there.”
By the
expression on Roic's face, he was notably not following any of this,
but at least he followed Miles, who boiled out and down the corridor.
They rose up the lift tube the two flights to the level that housed
galley, infirmary, and recreation areas. More out of breath than he
cared to reveal, Miles waved Roic on his way and galloped to the
infirmary at the far end of the central nacelle. A frustrating pause
while he tapped out the locking code, and he was through into the
little sickbay.
The facilities were scant: two
small wards, although both with at least Level Three bio-containment
capabilities, plus an examining room equipped for minor surgery that
also harbored the pharmacy. Major surgeries and severe injuries were
expected to be transported to one of the military escort ship's more
seriously equipped sickbays. Yes, one of the ward's bathrooms included
a sterilizable treatment tub; Miles pictured unhappy passengers with
skin infestations soaking therein. Lockers full of emergency equipment.
He jerked them all open. There was the blood synthesizer, there a
drawer of mysterious and unnerving objects perhaps designed for female
patients, there was a narrow float pallet for patient transport,
standing on end in a tall locker with two biotainer suits, yes! One too
large for Miles, the other too small for Roic.
He
could wear the too-large suit; it wouldn't be the first time. The other
would be impossible. He couldn't justify endangering Roic
so . . .
Roic jogged in. “Found the
ice maker, m'lord. Nobody seems to have turned it off when the ship was
evacuated. It's packed full.”
Miles pulled out his
stunner and dropped it on the examining table, then began to skin into
the smaller biotainer suit.
“What t'hell do you think you're doing, m'lord?” asked Roic warily.
“We're
going to bring Bel up here. Or at least, I am. It's where the medics
will want to do treatments anyway.” If there were any treatments. “I
have an idea for some quick-and-dirty first aid. I think Guppy might
have survived by the water in his tank keeping his body temperature
down. Head for engineering. Try to find a pressure suit that will fit
you. If—when you find the suit, let me know, and put it on at once. Then meet me back where Bel is. Move!”
Roic,
face set, moved. Miles used the precious seconds to run to the galley
and scoop a plastic waste bin full of ice, and drag it back to the
infirmary on the float pallet to dump in the tub. Then a second bin
full. Then his wrist com buzzed.
“Found a suit,
m'lord. It'll just fit, I think.” Roic's voice wavered as, presumably,
his arm moved about. Some rustling and faint grunting indicated a
successful test. “Once I'm in, I won't be able to use my secured wrist
com. I'll have to access you over some public channel.”
“We'll
have to live with that. Make contact with Vorpatril on your suit com as
soon as you're sealed in; be sure his medics can communicate when they
bring their pod to one of the outboard locks. Make sure they don't try
to come through the same freight nacelle where the quaddies have taken
refuge!”
“Right, m'lord.”
“Meet you in Small Repairs.”
“Right, m'lord. Suiting up now.” The channel went muffled.
Regretfully,
Miles covered his own wrist com with the biotainer suit's left glove.
He tucked his stunner into one of the sealable outer pockets on the
thigh, then adjusted his oxygen flow with a few taps on the suit's
control vambrace on his left arm. The lights in the helmet faceplate
display promised him he was now sealed from his environment. The slight
positive pressure within the overlarge suit puffed it out plumply. He
slopped toward the lift tube in the loose boots, towing the float
pallet.
Roic was just clumping down the corridor
as Miles maneuvered the pallet through the door of Small Repairs. The
armsman's pressure suit, marked with theIdris 's engineering
department's serial numbers, was certainly as much protection as
Miles's gear, although its gloves were thicker and more clumsy. Miles
motioned Roic to bend toward him, touching his faceplate to Roic's
helmet.
“We're going to reduce the pressure in the
bod pod to partially deflate it, roll Bel onto the float pallet, and
run it upstairs. I'm not going to unseal the pod till we're in the ward
with the molecular barriers activated.”
“Shouldn't we wait for the Prince Xav 's medics for that, m'lord?” asked Roic nervously. “They'll be here soon enough.”
“No.
Because I don't know how soon too late is. I don't dare vent Bel's pod
into the ship's atmosphere, so I'm going to try to rig a line to
another pod as a catchment. Help me look for sealing tape, and
something to use for an air pipe.”
Roic gave him a rather frustrated gesture of acknowledgment, and began a survey of benches and drawers.
Miles
peered in the port again. “Bel? Bel!” he shouted through faceplate and
bod skin. Muffled, yes, but he should be audible, dammit. “We're going
to move you. Hang on in there.”
Bel sat unchanged,
apparently, from a few minutes ago, still glazed and unresponsive. It
might not be the infection, Miles tried to encourage himself. How many
drugs had the herm been hit with last night, to assure its cooperation?
Knocked out by Gupta, stimulated to consciousness by the ba, tanked
with hypnotics, presumably, for the walk to the Idris and the
scam of the quaddie guards. Maybe fast-penta after that, and some
sedatives to keep Bel quiescent while the poison took hold, who knew?
Miles
shook out one of the other pods onto the floor nearby. If the residue
of Solian lay therein, well, this wasn't going to make it any more
contaminated, now was it? And would Bel's remains have escaped notice
for as long as Solian's, if Miles hadn't come along so soon—was that
the ba's plan? Murder and dispose of the body in one
move. . . .
He knelt to the side of
Bel's bod pod and opened the access panel to the pressurization control
unit. Roic handed down a length of plastic tubing and strips of tape.
Miles wrapped, prayed, and turned assorted valve controls. The air pump
vibrated gently. The pod's round outline softened and slumped. The
second pod expanded, after a flaccid, wrinkled fashion. He closed
valves, cut lines, sealed, wished for a few liters of disinfectant to
splash around. He held the fabric up away from the lump that was Bel's
head as Roic lifted the herm onto the pallet.
The
pallet moved at a brisk walking pace; Miles longed to run. They
maneuvered the load into the infirmary, into the small ward. As close
as possible to the rather cramped bathroom.
Miles motioned Roic to bend close again.
“All
right. This is as far as you go. We don't both need to be in here for
this. I want you to exit the room and turn on the molecular barriers.
Then stand ready to assist the medics from the Prince Xav as needed.”
“M'lord, are you sure you wouldn't rather we do it t'other way around?”
“I'm sure. Go!”
Roic
exited reluctantly. Miles waited till the lines of blue light
indicating that the barriers had been activated sprang into being
across the doorway, then bent to unzip the pod and fold it back from
Bel's tensed, trembling body. Even through his gloves, Bel's bare skin
felt scorching hot.
Edging both the pallet and
himself into the bathroom involved some awkward clambering, but at last
he had Bel positioned to shift into the waiting vat of ice and water.
Heave, slide, splash. He cursed the pallet and lunged over it to hold
Bel's head up. Bel's body jerked in shock; Miles wondered if his
shakily theorized palliative would instead give the victim heart
failure. He shoved the pallet back out the door, and out of the way,
with one foot. Bel was now trying to curl into a fetal position, a more
heartening response than the open-eyed coma Miles had observed so far.
Miles pulled the bent limbs down one by one and held them under the ice
water.
Miles fingers grew numb with the cold,
except where they touched Bel. The herm's body temperature seemed
scarcely affected by this brutal treatment. Unnatural indeed. But at
least Bel stopped growing hotter. The ice was melting noticeably.
It
had been some years since Miles had last glimpsed Bel nude, in a field
shower or donning or divesting space armor in a mercenary warship
locker room. Fifty-something wasn't old, for a Betan, but still,
gravity was clearly gaining on Bel. On all of us . In their
Dendarii days Bel had taken out its unrequited lust for Miles in a
series of half-joking passes, half-regretfully declined. Miles repented
his younger sexual reticence altogether, now. Profoundly.We should have taken our chances back then, when we were young and beautiful and didn't even know it. And Bel had been beautiful, in its own ironic way, living and moving at ease in a body athletic, healthy, and trim.
Bel's
skin was blotched, mottled red and pale; the herm's flesh, sliding and
turning in the ice bath under Miles's anxious hands, had an odd
texture, by turns swollen tight or bruised like crushed fruit. Miles
called Bel's name, tried his best old Admiral Naismith Commands You
voice, told a bad joke, all without penetrating the herm's glazed
stupor. It was a bad idea to cry in a biotainer suit, almost as bad as
throwing up in a pressure suit. You couldn't blot your eyes, or wipe
your snot.
And when someone touched you
unexpectedly on the shoulder, you jumped as though shot, and they
looked at you funny, through their faceplate and yours.
“Lord Auditor Vorkosigan, are you all right?” said the Prince Xav 's biotainer-swaddled surgeon, as he knelt beside him at the vat's edge.
Miles
swallowed for self-control. “I'm fine, so far. This herm's in a very
bad way. I don't know what they've told you about all this.”
“I
was told that I might be dealing with a possible Cetagandan-designed
bioweapon in hot mode, that had killed three so far with one survivor.
The part about there being a survivor made me really wonder about the
first assertion.”
“Ah, you didn't get a chance to
see Guppy yet, then.” Miles took a breath and ran through a brief recap
of Gupta's tale, or at least the pertinent biological aspects of it. As
he spoke, his hands never stopped shoving Bel's arms and legs back
down, or ladling watery ice cubes over the herm's burning head and
neck. He finished, “I don't know if it was Gupta's amphibian genetics,
or something he did, that allowed him to survive this hell-shit when
his friends didn't. Guppy said their dead flesh steamed . I
don't know what all this heat's coming from, but it can't be just
fever. I couldn't duplicate the Jacksonian's bioengineering, but I
thought I could at least duplicate the water tank trick. Wild-assed
empiricism, but I didn't think there was much time.”
A
gloved hand reached past him to raise Bel's eyelids, touch the herm
here and there, press and probe. “I see that.”
“It's really important
”—Miles took another gulp of air to stabilize his voice—”it's really
important that this patient survive. Thorne's not just any stationer.
Bel was . . .” He realized he didn't know the surgeon's
security clearance. “Having the portmaster die on our watch would be a
diplomatic disaster. Another one, that is.
And . . . and the herm saved my life yesterday. I
owe—Barrayar owes—”
“My lord, we'll do our best. I
have my top squad here; we'll take over now. Please, my Lord Auditor,
if you could please step out and let your man decontaminate you?”
Another
suited figure, doctor or medtech, appeared through the bathroom door
and held out a tray of instruments to the surgeon. Perforce Miles moved
aside, as the first sampling needle plunged past him into Bel's
unresponsive flesh. No room left in here even for his shortness, he had
to admit. He withdrew.
The spare ward bunk had
been turned into a lab bench. A third biotainer-clad figure was rapidly
shifting what looked a promising array of equipment from boxes and bins
piled high on a float pallet onto this makeshift surface. The second
tech returned from the bathroom and started feeding bits of Bel into
the various chemical and molecular analyzers on one end of the bunk
even as the third man arranged more devices on the other.
Roic's
tall, pressure-suited figure stood waiting just past the molecular
barriers across the ward door. He was holding a high-powered
laser-sonic decontaminator, familiar Barrayaran military issue. He
raised an inviting hand; Miles returned the acknowledgment.
Nothing
further was to be gained in here by dithering more at the medical
squad. He'd just distract them and get in their way. He suppressed his
unstrung urge to explain to them Bel's superior right, by old valor and
love, to survive. Futile. He might as well rail at the microbes
themselves. Even the Cetagandans had not yet devised a weapon that
triaged for virtue before slaughtering its victims.
I promised to call Nicol. God, why did I promise that?
Learning Bel's present status would surely be more terrifying for her
than knowing nothing. He would wait a little longer, at least till he
received the first report from the surgeon. If there was hope by then,
he could impart it. If there was none . . .
He
stepped slowly through the buzzing molecular barrier, raising his arms
to turn about beneath the even stronger sonic-scrubber/laser-dryer beam
from Roic's decontaminator. He had Roic treat every part of him,
including palms, fingers, the soles of his feet, and, nervously, the
insides of his thighs. The suit protected him from what would otherwise
be a nasty scorching, leaving skin pink and hair exploded off. He
didn't motion Roic to desist till they'd gone over each square
centimeter. Twice.
Roic pointed to Miles's control
vambrace and bellowed through his faceplate, “I have the ship's com
link relay up and running now, m'lord. You should be able to hear me
through Channel Twelve, if you'll switch over. T'medics are all on
Thirteen.”
Hastily, Miles switched on the suit com. “Can you hear me?”
Roic's voice sounded now beside his ear. “Yes, m'lord. Much better.”
“Have we blown the tube seals and pulled away from the docking clamps yet?”
Roic
looked faintly chagrined. “No, m'lord.” At Miles's chin raised in
inquiry, he added, “Um . . . you see, there's only
me. I've never piloted a jumpship.”
“Unless you're actually jumping, it's just like a shuttle,” Miles assured him. “Only bigger.”
“I've never piloted a shuttle, either.”
“Ah. Well, come on, then. I'll show you how.”
They
threaded their way to Nav and Com; Roic tapped their passage through
the code locks. All right, Miles admitted, looking around at the
various station chairs and their control banks, so it was a big
ship. It was only going to be a ten-meter flight. He was a bit out of
practice even on pods and shuttles, but really, given some of the
pilots he'd known, how hard could it be?
Roic
watched in earnest admiration while he concealed his hunt for the tube
seal controls—ah, there. It took three tries to get in touch with
station traffic control, and then with Docks and Locks—if only Bel had
been here, he would have instantly delegated this task
to . . . He bit his lip, rechecking the all-clear
from the loading bay—it would be the cap on this mission's multitude of
embarrassments to pull away from the station yanking out the docking
clamps, decompressing the loading bay, and killing some unknown number
of quaddie patrollers on guard therein. He scooted from the
communications station to the pilot's chair, shoving the jump helmet up
out of the way and clenching his gloved hands briefly before activating
the manual controls. A little gentle pressure from the side verniers, a
little patience, and a countering thrust from the opposite side left
the vast bulk of the Idris floating in space a neat stone's
throw from the side of Graf Station. Not that a stone thrown out there
would do anything but keep on going forever . . .
No bio-plague can cross that gap , he thought with satisfaction, then instantly thought of what the Cetagandans might do with spores. I hope.
It occurred to him belatedly that if the Prince Xav
's surgeon sounded an all-clear from the biocontamination alert,
docking once again was going to be a critically more delicate task. Well, if he clears the ship, we can import a pilot then . He glanced at the time on a wall digital. Barely an hour had passed since they'd found Bel. It seemed a century.
“You're a pilot, as well?” a surprised, muffled female voice sounded.
Miles
swung around in the pilot's chair to find the three quaddies in their
floaters hovering in the control room's doorway. All now wore
quaddie-shaped biotainer suits in pale medical green. His eye rapidly
sorted them out. Venn was bulkier, Sealer Greenlaw a little shorter.
Adjudicator Leutwyn brought up the rear.
“Only in an emergency,” he admitted. “Where did you get the suits?”
“My
people sent them across from the station in a drone pod,” said Venn.
He, too, wore his stunner holstered on the outside of his suit.
Miles
would have preferred to keep the civilians safely locked down in the
freight nacelle, but there was clearly no help for that now.
“Which is still attached to the lock, yes,” Venn overrode Miles's opening mouth.
“Thank you,” said Miles meekly.
He
wanted desperately to rub his face and scrub his itching eyes, but
couldn't. What was next? Had he done all he could to contain this
thing? His eye fell on the decontaminator, slung over Roic's shoulder.
It would probably be a good idea to take that back down to Engineering
and sterilize their tracks.
“M'lord?' said Roic diffidently.
“Yes, Armsman?”
“I
been thinking. The night guard saw the portmaster and the ba enter the
ship, but nobody reported anybody leaving. We found Thorne. I was
wondering how the ba got off the ship.”
“Thank you, Roic, yes. And how long ago. Good question to pursue next.”
“Whenever one of the Idris
's hatches opens, its lock vid recorders start up automatically. We
should ought to be able to access t'lock records from here, I'd think,
same as from Solian's security office.” Roic cast a somewhat desperate
eye around the intimidating array of stations. “Somewhere.”
“We
should indeed.” Miles abandoned the pilot's chair for the flight
engineer's station. A little poking among the controls, and a short
delay while one of Roic's library of override codes pacified the
lockdowns, and Miles was able to bring up a duplicate file of the sort
of airlock security records they'd found in Solian's office and spent
so many bleary-eyed hours studying. He set the search to present the
data in reverse order of time.
The most recent
usage was first up on the vid plate, a nice shot of the automated drone
pod docking at the outboard personnel lock serving the number two
freight nacelle. An anxious-looking Venn scooted into the lock in his
floater. He shuttled in and out handing back green suits folded in
plastic bags to waiting hands, plus an assortment of other objects: a
big box of first aid supplies, a tool kit, a decontaminator somewhat
resembling Roic's, and what might be some weapons with rather more
authority than stunners. Miles cut the scene short and sent the search
back in time.
Mere minutes before that was the Barrayaran military medical patrol arriving in a small shuttle from the Prince Xav
, entering via one of the number four nacelle personnel locks. The
three medical officers and Roic were all clearly identifiable, hastily
unloading equipment.
A freight lock in one of the
Necklin drive nacelles popped up next, and Miles caught his breath. A
figure in a bulky extravehicular-repairs suit marked with serial
numbers from the Idris 's engineering section lumbered heavily
past the vid pickup, and departed into the vacuum with a brief puff of
suit jets. The quaddies bobbing at Miles's shoulder murmured and
pointed; Greenlaw muffled an exclamation, and Venn choked on a curse.
The
next record back in time was of themselves—the three quaddies, Miles,
and Roic—entering the ship from the loading bay for their inspection,
however many hours ago it had been. Miles tapped instantly back to the
mystery figure in the engineering suit. What
time . . . ?
Roic exclaimed,
“Look, m'lord! He—it—was getting away not twenty minutes before we
found t'portmaster! The ba must've still been aboard when we came on!”
Even through his faceplate, his face took on a greenish tinge.
Had
Bel's conundrum in the bod pod been a fiendishly engineered delaying
tactic? Miles wondered if the knotted feeling in his stomach and
tightness in his throat could be the first sign of a bioengineered
plague. . . .
“Is that our suspect?” asked Leutwyn anxiously. “Where did he go?”
“What is the range on those heavy suits of yours, do you know, Lord Auditor?” asked Venn urgently.
“Those?
Not sure. They're meant to allow men to work outside the ship for hours
at a time, so I'd guess, if they were fully topped up with oxygen,
propellant, and power . . . damned near the range
of a small personnel pod.” The engineering repair suits resembled
military space armor, except with an array of built-in tools instead of
built-in weapons. Too heavy for even a strong man to walk in, they were
fully powered. The ba might have ridden in one around to any point on
Graf Station. Worse, the ba might have ridden out to a mid-space pickup
by some Cetagandan co-agent, or perhaps by some bribed or simply
bamboozled local helper. The ba might be thousands of kilometers away
by now, with the gap widening every second. Heading for entry to
another quaddie habitat under yet another faked identity, or even for
rendezvous with a passing jumpship and escape from Quaddiespace
altogether.
“Station Security is on full emergency
alert,” said Venn. “I have all my patrollers and all of the Sealer's
militia on duty out looking for the fellow—the person. Dubauer can't have gotten back aboard the station unobserved.” A tremor of doubt in Venn's voice undercut the certainty of this statement.
“I've
ordered the station onto a full biocontamination quarantine,” said
Greenlaw. “All incoming ships and vehicles have been waved off or
diverted to Union, and none now in dock are cleared to leave. If the
fugitive did get back aboard already—it isn't leaving.” Judging by the
sealer's congealed expression, she was by no means sure if this was a
good thing. Miles sympathized. Fifty thousand potential
hostages . . . ”If it's fled somewhere
else . . . if our people can't locate this fugitive
promptly, I'm going to have to extend the quarantine throughout
Quaddiespace.”
What would be the most important
task for the ba, now that the flag had been dropped? It had to realize
that the tight secrecy it had relied on for protection thus far was
irremediably ruptured. Did it realize how close on its heels its
pursuers had come? Would it still wish to murder Gupta to assure the
Jacksonian smuggler's silence? Or would it abandon that hunt, cut
losses, and run if it could? Which direction was it trying to move,
back in, or out?
Miles's eye fell on the vid image
of the work suit, frozen above the plate. Did that suit have the kind
of telemetry space armor did? More to the point—did it have the kind of
remote control overrides some space armor did?
“Roic!
When you were down in the engineering suit lockers hunting for that
pressure suit, did you see an automated command-and-control station for
these powered repair units?”
“I . . . there's
a control room down there, yes, m'lord. I passed it. I don't know what
all might be in it.”
“I have an idea. Follow me.”
He
levered himself from the station chair and left Nav and Com at a sloppy
jog, his biotainer suit sliding aggravatingly around him. Roic strode
after; the curious quaddies followed in their floaters.
The
control room was scarcely more than a booth, but it featured a
telemetry station for exterior maintenance and repairs. Miles slid into
its station chair, and cursed the tall person who'd fixed it at a
height that left his boots dangling in air. On permanent display were
several real-time vid shots of critical portions of the ship's outlying
anatomy, including directional antenna arrays, the mass shield
generator, and the main normal-space thrusters. Miles sorted through a
bewildering mess of data from structural safety sensors scattered
throughout the ship. Finally, the work suit control program came up.
Six
suits in the array. Miles called up visual telemetry from their helmet
vids. Five returned views of blank walls, the insides of their
respective storage lockers. The sixth returned a lighter image, but
more puzzling, of a curving wall. It remained as static as the vistas
from the suits in storage.
Miles pinged the suit
for full telemetry download. The suit was powered up but quiescent. The
medical sensors were basic, just heart rate and respiration—and turned
off. The life-support readouts claimed the rebreather was fully
functional, the interior humidity and temperature were exactly on-spec,
but the system appeared to be supporting no load.
“It
can't be very far away,” Miles said over his shoulder to his hovering
audience. “There's zero time lag in my com linkup.”
“That's a relief,” sighed Greenlaw.
“Is it?” muttered Leutwyn. “Who for?”
Miles
stretched shoulders aching with tension, and bent again to the
displays. The powered suit had to have an exterior control override
somewhere; it was a common safety feature on these civilian models, in
case its occupant should suddenly become injured, ill, or
incapacitated . . . ah. There.
“What are you doing, m'lord?” asked Roic uneasily.
“I believe I can take control of the suit via the emergency overrides, and bring it back aboard.”
“Wit' t' ba inside? Is that a good idea?”
“We'll know in a moment.”
He
gripped the joysticks, slippery under his gloves, gained control of the
suit's jets, and tried a gentle puff. The suit slowly began to move,
scraping along the wall and then turning away. The puzzling view
resolved itself—he was looking at the outside of the Idris
itself. The suit had been hidden, tucked in the angle between two
nacelles. No one inside the suit fought back at this hijacking. A new
and extremely disturbing thought crept up on Miles.
Carefully,
Miles brought the suit back around the outside of the ship to the
nearest lock to Engineering, on the outboard side of one of the Necklin
rod nacelles, the same lock from which it had exited. Opened the lock,
brought the suit inside. Its servos kept it upright. The light
reflected from its faceplate, concealing whatever was within. Miles did
not open the interior lock door.
“Now what?” he said to the room at large.
Venn
glanced at Roic. “Your armsman and I have stunners, I believe. If you
control the suit, you control the prisoner's movements. Bring it in,
and we'll arrest the bastard.”
“The suit has
manual capacities, too. Anyone in it who
was . . . alive and conscious should have been able
to fight me.” Miles cleared a throat thick with worry. “I was just
wondering if Brun's searchers checked inside these suits when they were
looking for Solian, that first day he went missing. And,
um . . . what he's like—what condition his body
might be in by now.”
Roic made a small noise, and emitted an undervoiced, plaintive protest of M'lord!
Miles wasn't sure of the exact interpretation, but he thought it might
have something to do with Roic wanting to keep his last meal in his
stomach, and not all over the inside of his helmet.
After a brief, fraught pause, Venn said, “Then we'd better go have a look. Sealer, Adjudicator—wait here.”
The two senior officials didn't argue.
“Would you like to stay with 'em, m'lord?” Roic suggested tentatively.
“We've
all been looking for that poor bastard for weeks,” Miles replied
firmly. “If this is him, I want to be the first to know.” He did allow
Roic and Venn to precede him from engineering through the locks into
the Necklin field generator nacelle, though.
At
the lock, Venn drew his stunner and took position. Roic peered through
the port on the airlock's inner door. Then his hand swept down to the
lock control, the door slid open, and he strode in. He reappeared a
moment later, half-dragging the heavy toppling work suit. He laid it
faceup on the corridor floor.
Miles ventured closer and stared down at the faceplate.
The suit was empty.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
“Don't open it!” cried Venn in alarm.
“Wasn't planning to,” Miles replied mildly. Not for any money.
Venn
floated closer, stared down over Miles's shoulder, and swore. “The
bastard's got away already! But to the station, or to a ship?” He edged
back, tucked his stunner away in a pocket of his green suit, and began
to gabble into his helmet com, alerting both Station Security and the
quaddie militia to pursue, seize, and search anything—ship, pod, or
shuttle—that had so much as shifted its parking zone off the side of
the station in the past three hours.
Miles
envisioned the escape. Might the ba have ridden the repairs suit back
aboard the station before Greenlaw had called down the quarantine? Yes,
maybe. The time window was narrow, but possible. But in that case, how
had it returned the suit to the hiding place outside the Idris
? It would make more sense for the ba to have been picked up by a
personnel pod—plenty enough of them zipping around out there at all
hours—and have prodded the suit back to its concealment with a tractor
beam, or had it towed there by someone in another powered suit and
tucked out of sight.
But the Idris , like
all the other Barrayaran and Komarran ships, was under surveillance by
the quaddie militia. How cursory was that outside guard? Surely not
that inattentive. Yet a person, a tall person, sitting in that
engineering control booth manipulating the joysticks, might well have
walked the suit out this airlock and quickly around the nacelle,
popping it away out of sight deftly enough to evade notice by the
militia guardians. Then risen from the station chair,
and . . . ?
Miles's palms
itched, maddeningly, inside his gloves, and he rubbed them together in
a futile attempt to gain relief. He'd have traded blood for the chance
to rub his nose. “Roic,” he said slowly. “Do you remember what this,”
he prodded the repair suit with his toe, “had in its hand when it went
out the airlock?”
“Um . . . nothing,
m'lord.” Roic twisted slightly and shot Miles a puzzled look, through
his faceplate.
“That's what I thought.” Right.
If
Miles was guessing correctly, the ba had turned aside from the imminent
murder of Gupta to seize the chance of using Bel to get back aboard the
Idris and do—what?—with its cargo. Destroy it? It would surely
not have taken the ba this long to inoculate the replicators with some
suitable poison. It might even have been able to do them twenty at a
time, introducing the contaminant into the support system of each rack.
Or—even more simply, if all it had wanted was to kill its charges—it
might have just turned off all the support systems, a work of mere
minutes. But taking and marking individual cell samples for freezing,
yes, that could well have taken all night, and all day too. If the ba
had risked everything to do that, would it then leave the ship without its freezer case firmly in hand?
“The ba's had over two hours to effect an escape. Surely it wouldn't linger
. . .” muttered Miles. But his voice lacked conviction. Roic,
at least, caught the quaver at once; his helmet turned toward Miles,
and he frowned.
They needed to count pressure
suits, and check every lock to see if any of the vid monitors had been
manually disabled. No, too slow—that would be a fine
evidence-collecting task to delegate if one had the manpower, but Miles
felt painfully bereft of minions just now. And in any case, so what if
another suit was found to be gone? Pursuing loose suits was a job that
the quaddies around the station were already turning to, by Venn's
order. But if no other suit was gone . . .
And Miles himself had just turned the Idris into a trap.
He
gulped. “I was about to say, we need to count suits, but I've a better
idea. I believe we should return to Nav and Com, and shut the ship down
in sections from there. Collect all the weapons at our disposal, and do
a systematic search.”
Venn jerked around in his float chair. “What, do you think this Cetagandan agent could still be aboard?”
“M'lord,” said Roic in an uncharacteristically sharp voice, “what t'matter with your gloves ?”
Miles
stared down, turning up his hands. His breath congealed in his chest.
The thin, tough fabric of his biotainer gloves was shredding away,
hanging loose in strings; beneath the lattice, his palms showed red.
Their itching seemed to redouble. His breath let loose again in a snarl
of “Shit! ”
Venn bobbed closer, took in the damage with widening eyes, and recoiled.
Miles
held his hands up, and apart. “Venn. Go collect Greenlaw and Leutwyn
and take over Nav and Com. Secure yourselves and the infirmary, in that
order. Roic. Go ahead of me to the infirmary. Open the doors for me.”
He choked back an unnecessary scream of Run! ; Roic, with an indrawn breath audible over the suit com, was already moving.
He
dodged through the half-dark ship in Roic's long-legged wake, touching
nothing, expecting every lumping heartbeat to rupture inside him. Where
had he collected this hellish contamination? Was anyone else affected?
Everyone else?
No. It had to have been the
power-suit control joysticks. They'd slid greasily under his gloved
hands. He had gripped them tighter, intent upon the task of bringing
the suit back inboard. He'd taken the
bait . . . Now, more than ever, he was certain the
ba had walked an empty suit out the airlock. And then set a snare for
any smartass who figured it out too soon.
He
plunged through the door to the infirmary, past Roic, who stood aside,
and straight on through the blue-lit inner door to the bio-sealed ward.
A medtech's suited form jumped in surprise. Miles called up Channel 13
and rapped out, “Someone please . . .” then stopped.
He'd meant to cry, Turn on the water for me! and hold his hands under the sluice of a sink, but where did the water then go ? “Help,” he finished in a smaller voice.
“What
is it, my Lord Audi—” the chief surgeon began, stepping from the
bathroom; then his glance took in Miles's upraised hands. “What happened? ”
“I
think I hit a booby trap. As soon as you have a free tech, have Armsman
Roic take him down to Engineering and collect a sample from the repair
suit remote controller there. It appears to have been painted with some
powerful corrosive or enzyme and . . . and I don't
know what else.”
“Sonic scrubber,” Captain
Clogston snapped over his shoulder to the tech monitoring the makeshift
lab bench. The man hastened to rummage among the stacks of supplies. He
turned back, powering on the device; Miles held out both his burning
hands. The machine roared as the tech ran the directed beam of
vibration over the afflicted areas, its powerful vacuum sucking the
loosened detritus both macroscopic and microscopic into the sealed
collection bag. The surgeon leaned in with a scalpel and tongs, slicing
and tearing away the remaining shreds of gloves, which were also sucked
into the receptacle.
The scrubber seemed
effective; Miles's hands stopped feeling worse, though they continued
to throb. Was his skin breached? He brought his now-bare palms closer
to his faceplate, impeding the surgeon, who hissed under his breath.
Yes. Red flecks of blood welled in the creases of the swollen tissue. Shit. Shit. Shit. . . .
Clogston
straightened and glanced around, lips drawn back in a grimace. “Your
biotainer suit's compromised all to hell, my lord.”
“There's another pair of gloves on the other suit,” Miles pointed out. “I could cannibalize them.”
“Not
yet.” Clogston hurried to slather Miles's hands with some mystery goo
and wrap them in biotainer barriers, sealed to his wrists. It was like
wearing mittens over handfuls of snot, but the burning pain eased.
Across the room, the tech was scraping fragments of contaminated glove
into an analyzer. Was the third man in with Bel? Was Bel still in the
ice bath? Still alive?
Miles took a deep, steadying breath. “Do you have any kind of a diagnosis on Portmaster Thorne yet?”
“Oh,
yes, it came up right away,” said Clogston in a somewhat absent tone,
still sealing the second wrist wrap. “The instant we ran the first
blood sample through. What the hell we can do about it is not
yet obvious, but I have some ideas.” He straightened again, frowning
deeply at Miles's hands. “The herm's blood and tissues are crawling
with artificial—that is, bioengineered—parasites.” He glanced up. “They
appear to have an initial, latent, asymptomatic phase, where they
multiply rapidly throughout the body. Then, at some point—possibly
triggered by their own concentration—they switch over to producing two
chemicals in different vesicles within their own cellular membrane. The
vesicles engorge. A rise in the victim's body temperature triggers the
bursting of the sacs, and the chemicals in turn undergo a violently
exothermic reaction with each other—killing the parasite, damaging the
host's surrounding tissues, and stimulating more nearby parasites to go
off. Tiny, pin-point bombs all through the body. It's”—his tone went
reluctantly admiring—”extremely elegant. In a hideous sort of way.”
“Did—did my ice-water bath treatment help Thorne, then?”
“Yes,
absolutely. The drop in core temperature stopped the cascade in its
tracks, temporarily. The parasites had almost reached critical
concentration.”
Miles's eyes squeezed shut in brief gratitude. And opened again. “Temporarily?”
“I
still haven't figured out how to get rid of the damned things. We're
trying to modify a surgical shunt into a blood filter to both
mechanically remove the parasites from the patient's bloodstream, and
chill the blood to a controlled degree before returning it to the body.
I think I can make the parasites respond selectively to an applied
electrophoresis gradient across the shunt tube, and pull them right on
out of the bloodstream.”
“Won't that do it, then?”
Clogston
shook his head. “It doesn't get the parasites lodged in other tissues,
reservoirs of reinfection. It's not a cure, but it might buy time. I
think. The cure must somehow kill every last one of the parasites in
the body, or the process will just start up again.” His lips twisted.
“Internal vermicides could be tricky. Injecting something to kill
already-engorged parasites within the tissues will just release their
chemical loads. A very little of that micro-insult will play hell with
circulation, overload repair processes, cause intense
pain—it's . . . it's tricky.”
“Destroy brain tissue?” Miles asked, feeling sick.
“Eventually.
They don't seem to cross the blood-brain barrier very readily. I
believe the victim would be conscious to a, um, very late phase of the
dissolution.”
“Oh.” Miles tried to decide whether that would be good, or bad.
“On
the bright side,” offered the surgeon, “I may be able to downgrade the
biocontamination alarm from Level Five to Level Three. The parasites
appear to need direct blood-to-blood contact to effect transference.
They don't seem to survive long outside a host.”
“They can't travel through the air?”
Clogston hesitated. “Well, maybe not until the host starts coughing blood.”
Until , not unless
. Miles noted the word choice. “I'm afraid talk of a downgrade is
premature anyway. A Cetagandan agent armed with unknown
bioweapons—well, unknown except for this one, which is getting too
damned familiar—is still on the loose out there.” He inhaled,
carefully, and forced his voice to calm. “We've found some evidence
suggesting that the agent still may be hiding aboard this ship. You
need to secure your work zone from a possible intruder.”
Captain Clogston cursed. “Hear that, boys?” he called to his techs over his suit com.
“Oh, great,” came a disgusted reply. “Just what we need right now.”
“Hey, at least it's something we can shoot ,” another voice remarked wistfully.
Ah, Barrayarans. Miles's heart warmed. “On sight,” he confirmed. These were military medicos; they all bore sidearms, bless them.
His
eye flicked over the ward and the infirmary chamber beyond, summing
weak points. Only one entry, but was that weakness or strength? The
outer door was definitely the vantage to hold, protecting the ward
beyond; Roic had taken up station there quite automatically. Yet
traditional attack by stunner, plasma arc, or explosive grenade
seemed . . . insufficiently imaginative. The place
was still on ship's air circulation and ship's power, but this of all
sections had to have its own emergency reservoirs of both.
The
military-grade Level Five biotainer suits the medicos wore also doubled
as pressure suits, their air circulation entirely internal. The same
was not true of Miles's cheaper suit, even before he'd lost his gloves;
his atmosphere pack drew air from the environs, through filters and
cookers. In the event of a pressurization loss, his suit would turn
into a stiff, unwieldy balloon, perhaps even rupture at a weak point.
There were bod pod lockers on the walls, of course. Miles pictured
being trapped in a bod pod while the action went on without him.
Given
that he was already exposed to . . . whatever,
peeling out of his biotainer suit long enough to get into something
tighter couldn't make things any worse, could it? He stared at his
hands and wondered why he wasn't dead yet. Could the glop he'd touched
have been only a simple corrosive?
Miles clawed
his stunner out of his thigh pocket, awkwardly with his mittened hand,
and walked back through the blue bars of light marking the bio-barrier.
“Roic. I want you to dash back down to Engineering and grab me the
smallest pressure suit you can find. I'll guard this point till you get
back.”
“M'lord,” Roic began in a tone of doubt.
“Keep
your stunner out; watch your back. We're all here, so if you see
anything move that isn't quaddie green, shoot first.”
Roic swallowed manfully. “Yes, well, see that you stay here, m'lord. Don't go haring off on your own without me!”
“I wouldn't dream of it,” Miles promised.
Roic
departed at the gallop. Miles readjusted his awkward grip on the
stunner, made sure it was set to maximum power, and took a stance
partly sheltered by the door, staring up the central corridor at his
bodyguard's retreating form. Scowling.
I don't understand this.
Something
didn't add up, and if he could just get ten consecutive minutes not
filled with lethal new tactical crises, maybe it would come to
him. . . . He tried not to think about his stinging
palms, and what ingenious microbial sneak assault might even now be
stealing through his body, maybe even making its way into his brain.
An
ordinary imperial servitor ba ought to have died before abandoning a
charge like those haut-filled replicators. And even if this one had
been trained as some sort of special agent, why spend all that critical
time taking samples from the fetuses that it was about to desert or
maybe even destroy? Every haut infant ever made had its DNA kept on
file back in the central gene banks of the Star Crиche. They could make
more, surely. What made this batch so irreplaceable?
His
train of thought derailed itself as he imagined little gengineered
parasites multiplying frenetically through his bloodstream, blip-blip-blip-blip .Calm down, dammit. He didn't actually know if he'd even been inoculated with the same evil disease as Bel. Yeah, it might be something even worse
. Yet surely some Cetagandan designer neurotoxin—or even some quite
ordinary off-the-shelf poison—ought to cut in much faster than this. Although if it's a drug to drive the victim mad with paranoia, it's working really well.
Was the ba's repertoire of hell-potions limited? If it had any, why not
many? Whatever stimulants or hypnotics it had used on Bel need not have
been anything out of the ordinary, by the norms of covert ops. How many
other fancy bio-tricks did it have up its sleeve? Was Miles about to
personally demonstrate the next one?
Am I going to live long enough to say good-bye to Ekaterin?
A good-bye kiss was right out, unless they pressed their lips to
opposite sides of some really thick window of glass. He had so much to
say to her; it seemed impossible to find where to start. Even more
impossible by voice alone, over an open, unsecured public com link. Take
care of the kids. Kiss them for me every night at bedtime, and tell
them I loved them even if I never saw them. You won't be alone—my
parents will help you. Tell my parents . . . tell
them . . .
Was this damned
thing starting up already, or were the hot panic and choking tears in
his throat entirely self-induced? An enemy that attacked you from the
inside out—you could try to turn yourself inside out to fight it, but
you wouldn't succeed—filthy weapon! Open channel or not, I'm calling her now. . . .
Instead,
Venn's voice sounded in his ear. “Lord Vorkosigan, pick up Channel
Twelve. Your Admiral Vorpatril wants you. Badly.”
Miles hissed through his teeth and keyed his helmet com over. “Vorkosigan here.”
“Vorkosigan,
you idiot—!” The admiral's syntax had shed a few honorifics sometime in
the past hour. “What the hell is going on over there? Why don't you
answer your wrist com?”
“It's inside my biotainer
suit and inaccessible right now. I'm afraid I had to don the suit in a
hurry. Be aware, this helmet link is an open access channel and
unsecured, sir.” Dammit, where did that sir drop in from?
Habit, sheer old bad habit. “You can ask for a brief report from
Captain Clogston over his military suit's tight-beam link, but keep it short . He's a very busy man right now, and I don't want him distracted.”
Vorpatril swore—whether generally or at the Imperial Auditor was left nicely ambiguous—and clicked off.
Faintly
echoing through the ship came the sound Miles had been waiting for—the
distant clanks and hisses of airseal doors shutting down, sealing the
ship into airtight sections. The quaddies had made it to Nav and Com,
good! Except that Roic wasn't back yet. The armsman would have to get
in touch with Venn and Greenlaw and get them to unseal and reseal his
passage back up to—
“Vorkosigan.” Venn's voice sounded again in his ear, strained. “Is that you?”
“Is what me?”
“Shutting off the compartments.”
“Isn't it,” Miles tried, and failed, to swallow his voice back down to a more reasonable pitch. “Aren't you in Nav and Com yet ?”
“No, we circled back to the Number Two nacelle to pick up our equipment. We were just about to leave it.”
Hope flared in Miles's hammering heart. “Roic,” he called urgently. “Where are you?”
“Not in Nav and Com, m'lord,” Roic's grim voice returned.
“But if we're here and he's there, who's doing this ?” came Leutwyn's unhappy voice.
“Who do you think
?” Greenlaw ripped back. Her breath huffed out in anguish. “Five
people, and not one of us thought to see the door locked behind us when
we left—dammit!”
A small, bleak grunt, like a man being hit with an arrow, or a realization, sounded in Miles's ear: Roic.
Miles
said urgently, “Anyone who holds Nav and Com has access to all these
ship-linked com channels, or will, shortly. We're going to have to
switch off.”
The quaddies had independent links to
the station and Vorpatril through their suits; so did the medicos.
Miles and Roic would be the ones plunged into communications limbo.
Then,
abruptly, the sound in his helmet went dead. Ah. Looks like the ba has
found the com controls. . . .
Miles
leapt to the environmental control panel for the infirmary to the left
of the door, opened it, and hit every manual override in it. With this
outer door shut, they could retain air pressure, although circulation
would be blocked. The medicos in their suits would be unaffected; Miles
and Bel would be at risk. He eyed the bod pod locker on the wall
without favor. The bio-sealed ward was already functioning on internal
circulation, thank God, and could remain so—as long as the power stayed
on. But how could they keep Bel cold if the herm had to retreat to a
pod?
Miles hurried back into the ward. He
approached Clogston, and yelled through his faceplate, “We just lost
our ship-linked suit coms. Keep to your tight-beam military channels
only.”
“I heard,” Clogston yelled back.
“How are you coming on that filter-cooler?”
“Cooler
part's done. Still working on the filter. I wish I'd brought more
hands, although there's scarcely room in here for more butts.”
“I've
almost got it, I think,” called the tech, crouched over the bench.
“Check that, will you, sir?” He waved in the direction of one of the
analyzers, a collection of lights on its readout now blinking for
attention.
Clogston dodged around him and bent to the machine in question. After a moment he murmured, “Oh, that's clever.”
Miles, crowding his shoulder close enough to hear this, did not find it reassuring. “What's clever?”
Clogston
pointed at his analyzer readout, which now displayed incomprehensible
strings of letters and numbers in cheery colors. “I didn't see how the
parasites could possibly survive in a matrix of that enzyme that ate
your biotainer gloves. But they were microencapsulated.”
“What?”
“Standard
trick for delivering drugs through a hostile environment—like your
stomach, or maybe your bloodstream—to the target zone. Only this time,
used to deliver a disease. When the microencapsulation passes out of
the unfriendly environment into the—chemically speaking—friendly zone,
it pops open, releasing its load. No loss, no waste.”
“Oh. Wonderful. Are you saying I now have the same shit Bel has?”
“Um.” Clogston glanced up at a chrono on the wall. “How long since you were first exposed, my lord?”
Miles followed his glance. “Half an hour, maybe?”
“They might be detectable in your bloodstream by now.”
“Check it.”
“We'll have to open your suit to access a vein.”
“Check it now. Fast .”
Clogston
grabbed a sampler needle; Miles peeled back the biotainer wrap from his
left wrist, and gritted his teeth as a biocide swab stung and the
needle poked. Clogston was pretty deft for a man wearing biotainer
gloves, Miles had to concede. He watched anxiously as the surgeon
delicately slipped the needle into the analyzer.
“How long will this take?”
“Now
that we have the template of the thing, no time at all. If it's
positive, that is. If this first sample shows negative, I'd want a
recheck every thirty minutes or so to be sure.” Clogston's voice
slowed, as he studied his readout. “Well. Um. A recheck won't be
necessary.”
“Right,” Miles snarled. He yanked open
his helmet and pushed back his suit sleeve. He bent to his secured
wrist com and snapped, “Vorpatril!”
“Yes!” Vorpatril's voice came back instantly. Riding his com channels—he must be on duty in either the Prince Xav
's own Nav and Com, or maybe, by now, its tactics room. “Wait, what are
you doing on this channel? I thought you had no access.”
“The situation has changed. Never mind that now. What's happening out there?”
“What's happening in there ?”
“The
medical team, Portmaster Thorne, and I are holed up in the infirmary.
For the moment, we're still in control of our environment. I believe
Venn, Greenlaw, and Leutwyn are trapped in the Number Two freight
nacelle. Roic may be somewhere in Engineering. And the ba, I believe,
has seized Nav and Com. Can you confirm that last?”
“Oh,
yes,” groaned Vorpatril. “It's talking to the quaddies on Graf Station
right now. Making threats and demands. Boss Watts seems to have
inherited their hot seat. I have a strike team scrambling.”
“Patch it in here. I have to hear this.”
A
few seconds delay, then the ba's voice sounded. The Betan accent was
gone; the academic coolness was fraying. “—name does not matter. If you
wish to get the Sealer, the Imperial Auditor, and the others back
alive, these are my requirements. A jump pilot for this ship, delivered
immediately. Free and unimpeded passage from your system. If either you
or the Barrayarans attempt to launch a military assault against the Idris , I will either blow up the ship with all aboard, or ram the station.”
Boss Watts's voice returned, thick with tension, “If you attempt to ram Graf Station, we'll blow you up ourselves .”
“Either way will do,” the ba's voice returned dryly.
Did the ba know how
to blow up a jumpship? It wasn't exactly easy. Hell, if the Cetagandan
was a hundred years old, who know what all it knew how to do? Ramming,
now—with a target that big and close, any layman could manage it.
Greenlaw's
stiff voice cut in; her com link presumably was patched through to
Watts in the same way that Miles's was to Vorpatril. “Don't do it,
Watts. Quaddiespace cannot let a plague-carrier like this pass through to our neighbors. A handful of lives can't justify the risk to thousands.”
“Indeed,”
the ba continued after a slight hesitation, still in that same cool
tone. “If you do succeed in killing me, I'm afraid you will win
yourselves another dilemma. I have left a small gift aboard the
station. The experiences of Gupta and Portmaster Thorne should give you
an idea of what sort of package it is. You might find it before it ruptures, although I'd say your odds are poor. Where are your thousands now? Much closer to home.”
True
threat or bluff? Miles wondered frantically. It certainly fit the ba's
style as demonstrated so far—Bel in the bod pod, the booby trap with
the suit-control joysticks—hideous, lethal puzzles tossed out in the
ba's wake to disrupt and distract its pursuers. It sure worked on me, anyway.
Vorpatril
cut in privately on the wrist com, in an unnecessarily lowered, tense
tone, overriding the exchange between the ba and Watts. “Do you think
the bastard's bluffing, m'lord?”
“Doesn't matter if it's bluffing or not. I want it alive . Oh, God do I ever want it alive. Take that as a top priority and an order in the Emperor's Voice, Admiral.”
After a small and, Miles hoped, thoughtful pause, Vorpatril returned, “Understood, my Lord Auditor.”
“Ready
your strike team, yes . . .” Vorpatril's best strike
force was locked in quaddie detention. What was the second best one like? Miles's heart quailed. “But hold
it. This situation is extremely unstable. I don't have any clear sense
yet how it will play out. Put the ba's channel back on.” Miles returned
his attention to the negotiation in progress—no—winding up?
“A
jump pilot.” The ba seemed to be reiterating. “Alone, in a personnel
pod, to the Number Five B lock. And, ah—naked.” Horribly, there seemed
to be a smile in that last word. “For obvious reasons.”
The ba cut the com.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Now what?
Delays, Miles
guessed, while the quaddies on Graf Station either readied a pilot or
ran the risks of stalling about delivering one into such a hazard, and
suppose none volunteered? While Vorpatril marshaled his strike team,
while the three quaddie officials trapped in the freight nacelle—well,
didn't sit on their hands, Miles bet—while this infection gains on me , while the ba did—what?
Delay is not my friend.
But
it was his gift. What time was it, anyway? Late evening—still the same
day that had started so early with the news of Bel's disappearance?
Yes, though it hardly felt possible. Surely he had entered some time
warp. Miles stared at his wrist com, took a deep, terrified breath, and
called up Ekaterin's code. Had Vorpatril told her anything of what was
happening yet, or had he kept her comfortably ignorant?
“Miles!” she answered at once.
“Ekaterin, love. Where, um . . . are you?”
“The tactics room, with Admiral Vorpatril.”
Ah.
That answered that question. In a way, he was relieved that he didn't
have to deliver the whole litany of bad news himself, cold. “You've
been following this, then.”
“More or less. It's been very confusing.”
“I'll
bet. I . . .” He couldn't say it, not so baldly. He
dodged, while he mustered courage. “I promised to call Nicol when I had
news of Bel, and I haven't had a chance. The news, as you may know, is
not good; we found Bel, but the herm has been deliberately infected
with a bioengineered Cetagandan parasite that
may . . . may prove lethal.”
“Yes, I understand. I've been hearing it all, here in the tactics room.”
“Good.
The medics are doing their best, but it's a race against time and now
there are these other complications. Will you call Nicol and redeem my
word for me? There's not no hope,
but . . . she needs to know it doesn't look so good
right now. Use your judgment how much to soften it.”
“My
judgment is that she should be told plain truth. The whole of Graf
Station is in an uproar now, what with the quarantine and
biocontamination alert. She needs to know exactly what's going on, and
she has a right to know. I'll call her at once.”
“Oh. Good. Thank you. I, um . . . you know I love you.”
“Yes. Tell me something I don't know.”
Miles
blinked. This wasn't getting easier; he rushed it in a breath. “Well.
There's a chance I may have screwed up pretty badly, here. Like, I may
not get out of this one. The situation here is pretty unsettled, and,
um . . . I'm afraid my biotainer suit gloves were
sabotaged by a nasty little Cetagandan booby trap I triggered. I seem
to have got myself infected with the same biohazard that's taken Bel
down. The stuff doesn't appear to act very quickly, though.”
In
the background, he could just hear Admiral Vorpatril's voice, cursing
in choice barracks language not at all consonant with the respect due
to one of His Majesty Gregor Vorbarra's Imperial Auditors. From
Ekaterin, silence; he strained to hear her breathing. The sound
reproduction on these high-grade com links was so excellent, he could
hear when she let her breath out again, through those pursed, exquisite
warm lips he could not see or touch.
He began
again. “I'm . . . I'm sorry
that . . . I wanted to give you—this wasn't what
I—I never wanted to bring you grief—”
“Miles. Stop that babbling at once.”
“Oh . . . uh, yes?”
Her voice sharpened. “If you die on me out here, I will not be grieved, I will be pissed. This is all very fine, love, but may I point out that you don't have time to indulge in angst right now. You're the man who used to rescue hostages for a living. You are not allowed
to not get out of this one. So stop worrying about me and start paying
attention to what you are doing. Are you listening to me, Miles
Vorkosigan? Don't you dare die! I won't have it!”
That
seemed definitive. Despite everything, he grinned. “Yes, dear,” he sang
back meekly, heartened. This woman's Vor ancestoresses had defended
bastions in war, oh, yes.
“So stop talking to me and get back to work. Right?”
She almost kept the shaken sob out of that last word.
“Hold the fort, love,” he breathed, with all the tenderness he knew.
“Always.” He could hear her swallow. “Always.”
She cut her link. He took it as a hint.
Hostage rescue, eh? If you want something done right, do it yourself
. Come to think of it, did this ba have any idea of what Miles's former
line of work had been? Or did it assume Miles was just a diplomat, a
bureaucrat, another frightened civilian? The ba could not know which of
the party had triggered its booby trap on the repair suit remote
controls, either. Not that this biotainer suit hadn't been useless for
space assault purposes even before it had been buggered all to hell.
But what tools were available here in this infirmary that might be put
to uses their manufacturers had never envisioned? And what personnel?
The
medical crew had military training, right enough, and discipline. They
also were up to their collective elbows in other tasks of the highest
priority. Miles's very last desire was to pull them away from their
cramped, busy lab bench and critical patient care to go play commando
with him. Although it may come to that. Thoughtfully, he began
walking about the infirmary's outer chamber, opening drawers and
cupboards and staring at their contents. A muddy fatigue was beginning
to drag at his edgy, adrenaline-pumped high, and a headache was
starting behind his eyes. He studiously ignored the terror of it.
He
glanced through the blue light bars into the ward. The tech hurried
from the bench, heading toward the bathroom with something in his hands
that trailed looping tubes.
“Captain Clogston!” Miles called.
The second suited figure turned. “Yes, my lord?”
“I'm
shutting your inner door. It's supposed to close on its own in the
event of a pressure change, but I'm not sure I trust any
remote-controlled equipment on this ship at the moment. Are you
prepared to move your patient into a bod pod, if necessary?”
Clogston
gave him a sketchy salute of acknowledgment with a gloved hand.
“Almost, my lord. We're starting construction on the second blood
filter. If the first one works as well as I hope, we should be ready to
rig you up very soon, too.”
Which would tie him
down to a bunk in the ward. He wasn't ready to lose mobility yet. Not
while he could still move and think on his own. You don't have much time then. Regardless of what the ba does . “Thank you, Captain,” Miles called. “Let me know.” He slid the door shut with the manual override.
What
could the ba know, from Nav and Com? More importantly, what were its
blind spots? Miles paced, considering the layout of this central
nacelle: a long cylinder divided into three decks. This infirmary lay
at the stern on the uppermost deck. Nav and Com was far forward, at the
other end of the middle deck. The internal airseal doors of all levels
lay at the three evenly spaced intersections to the freight and drive
nacelles, dividing each deck longitudinally into quarters.
Nav
and Com had security vid monitors in all the outer airlocks, of course,
and safety monitors on all the inner section doors that closed to seal
the ship into airtight compartments. Blowing out a monitor would blind
the ba, but also give warning that the supposed prisoners were on the
move. Blowing out all of them, or all that could be reached,
would be more confusing . . . but still left the
problem of giving warning. How likely was the ba to carry out its
harried, or perhaps insane, threat of ramming the station?
Dammit, this was so unprofessional . . . Miles halted, arrested by his own thought.
What
were the standard operating procedures for a Cetagandan agent—anyone's
agent, really—whose covert mission was going down the toilet? Destroy
all the evidence: try to make it to a safe zone, embassy, or neutral
territory. If that wasn't possible, destroy the evidence and then sit
tight and endure arrest by the locals, whoever the locals might be, and
wait for one's own side to either bail or bust one out, depending. For
the really, really critical missions, destroy the evidence and commit
suicide. This last was seldom ordered, because it was even more seldom
carried out. But the Cetagandan ba were so conditioned to loyalty to
their haut masters—and mistresses—Miles was forced to consider it a
more realistic possibility in the present case.
But splashy hostage-taking among neutrals or neighbors, blaring the mission all over the news, most of all—most
of all, the public use of the Star Crиche's most private
arsenal . . . This wasn't the modus operandi of a
trained agent. This was goddamned amateur work. And Miles's superiors used to accuse him
of being a loose cannon—hah! Not any of his most direly inspired messes
had ever been as forlorn as this one was shaping up to be—for both
sides, alas. This gratifying deduction did not, unfortunately, make the
ba's next action more predictable. Quite the reverse.
“M'lord?” Roic's voice rose unexpectedly from Miles's wrist com.
“Roic!”
cried Miles joyfully. “Wait. What the hell are you doing on this link?
You shouldn't be out of your suit.”
“I might ask
you the same question, m'lord,” Roic returned rather tartly. “If I had
time. But I had to get out of t' pressure suit anyway to get into this
work suit. I think . . . yes. I can hang the com
link in my helmet. There.” A slight chink, as of a faceplate closing.
“Can you still hear me?”
“Oh, yes. I take it you're still in Engineering?”
“For
now. I found you a real nice little pressure suit, m'lord. And a lot of
other tools. Question is how to get it to you.”
“Stay away from all the airseal doors—they're monitored. Have you found any cutting tools, by chance?”
“I'm, uh . . . pretty sure that's what these are, yes.”
“Then
move as far to the stern as you can get, and cut straight up through
the ceiling to the middle deck. Try to avoid damaging the air ducts and
grav grid and control and fluid conduits, for now. Or anything else
that would make the boards light up in Nav and Com. Then we can place
you for the next cut.”
“Right, m'lord. I was thinking something like that might do.”
A
few minutes ran by, with nothing but the sound of Roic's breathing,
broken with a few under-voiced obscenities as, by trial and error, he
discovered how to handle the unfamiliar equipment. A grunt, a hiss, a
clank abruptly cut off.
The rough-and-ready
procedure was going to play hell with the atmospheric integrity of the
sections, but did that necessarily make things any worse, from the
hostages' point of view? And a pressure suit, oh bliss! Miles wondered
if any of the powered work suits had been sized extra-small. Almost as
good as space armor, indeed.
“All right, m'lord,”
came the welcome voice from his wrist com. “I've made it to the middle
deck. I'm moving back now . . . I'm not exactly
sure how close I am under you.”
“Can you reach up
to tap on the ceiling? Gently. We don't want it to reverberate through
the bulkheads all the way to Nav and Com.” Miles threw himself prone,
opened his faceplate, tilted his head, and listened. A faint banging,
apparently from out in the corridor. “Can you move farther toward the
stern?”
“I'll try, m'lord. It's a question of
getting these ceiling panels apart . . .” More heavy
breathing. “There. Try now.”
This time, the
rapping seemed to come from nearly under Miles's outstretched hand. “I
think that's got it, Roic.”
“Right, m'lord. Be
sure you're not standing where I'm cutting. I think Lady Vorkosigan
would be right peeved with me if I accidentally lopped off any of your
body parts.”
“I think so too.” Miles rose, ripped
up a section of friction matting, skittered to the side of the
infirmary's outer chamber, and held his breath.
A
red glow in the bare deck plate beneath turned yellow, then white. The
dot became a line, which grew, wavering in an irregular circle back to
its beginning. A thump, as Roic's gloved paw, powered by his suit,
punched up through the floor, tearing the weakened circle from its
matrix.
Miles nipped over and stared down, and
grinned at Roic's face staring up in worry through the faceplate of
another repair suit. The hole was too small for that hulking figure to
squeeze through, but not too small for the pressure suit he handed up
through it.
“Good job,” Miles called down. “Hang on. I'll be right with you.”
“M'lord?”
Miles
tore off the useless biotainer suit and crammed himself into the
pressure suit in record time. Inevitably, the plumbing was female, and
he left it unattached. One way or another, he didn't think he would be
suited up for very long. He was flushed and sweating, one moment too
hot, the next too cold, though whether from incipient infection or just
plain overdriven nerves he scarcely knew.
The
helmet supplied no place to hang his wrist com, but a bit of medical
tape solved that problem in a moment. He lowered the helmet over his
head and locked it into place, breathing deeply of air that no one
controlled but him. Reluctantly, he set the suit's temperature to
chilly.
Then he slid to the hole and dangled his
legs through. “Catch me. Don't squeeze too hard—remember, you're
powered.”
“Right, m'lord.”
“Lord Auditor Vorkosigan,” came Vorpatril's uneasy voice. “What are you doing?”
“Reconnoitering.”
Roic
caught his hips, lowering him with exaggerated gentleness to the middle
deck. Miles glanced up the corridor, past the larger hole in its floor,
to the airseal doors at the far end of this sector. “Solian's security
office is in this section. If there's any control board on this bloody
ship that can monitor without being monitored in turn, it'll be in
there.”
He tiptoed down the corridor, Roic
lumbering in his wake. The deck creaked beneath the armsman's booted
feet. Miles tapped out the now-familiar code to the office door; Roic
barely squeezed through behind him. Miles slid into the late Lieutenant
Solian's station chair and flexed his fingers, contemplating the
console. He drew a breath and bent forward.
Yes,
he could siphon off views from the vid monitors of every airlock on the
ship—simultaneously, if desired. Yes, he could tap into the safety
sensors on the airseal doors. They were designed to take in a good view
of anyone near—as in, frantically pounding on—the doors. Nervously, he
checked the one for this middle rear section. The vista, if the ba was
even looking at it with so much else going on, did not extend as far as
Solian's office door. Whew. Could he bring up a view of Nav and Com,
perhaps, and spy secretly upon its current occupant?
Roic said apprehensively, “What are you thinking of doing, m'lord?”
“I'm
thinking that a surprise attack that has to stop to bore through six or
seven bulkheads to get to the target isn't going to be surprising
enough. Though we may come to that. I'm running out of time.” He
blinked, hard, then thought to hell with it and opened his
faceplate to rub his eyes. The vid image unblurred in his vision, but
still seemed to waver around the edges. Miles didn't think the problem
was in the vid plate. His headache, which had started as a stabbing
pain between his eyes, seemed to be spreading to his temples, which
throbbed. He was shivering. He sighed and closed the faceplate again.
“That bio-shit—the admiral said you got t' same bio-shit the herm has. The crap that melted Gupta's friends.”
“When did you talk to Vorpatril?”
“Just before I talked to you.”
“Ah.”
Roic said lowly, “I should've been t' one to run those remote controls. Not you.”
“It had to be me. I was more familiar with the equipment.”
“Yes.” Roic's voice went lower. “You should've brought Jankowski, m'lord.”
“Just
a guess—based on long experience, mind you . . .” Miles
paused, frowning at the security display. All right, so Solian didn't
have a monitor in every cabin, but he had to have private access to Nav
and Com if he had anything . . . ”But I suspect
there will be enough heroism before this day is done to go around. I
don't think we're going to have to ration it, Roic.”
“ 'S not what I meant,” said Roic, in a dignified tone.
Miles
grinned blackly. “I know. But think of how hard it would have been on
Ma Jankowski. And all the not-so-little Jankowskis.”
A
soft snort from the com link taped inside Miles's helmet apprised him
that Ekaterin was back, listening in. She would not interrupt, he
suspected.
Vorpatril's voice sounded suddenly,
breaking his concentration. The admiral was sputtering. “The spineless
scoundrels! The four-armed bastards! My Lord Auditor!” Ah, Miles was
promoted again. “The goddamn little mutants are giving this sexless
Cetagandan plague-vector a jump pilot!”
“What?”
Miles's stomach knotted. Tighter. “They found a volunteer? Quaddie, or
downsider?” There couldn't be that large a pool of possibilities to
choose from. The pilots' surgically installed neuro-controllers had to
fit the ships they guided through the wormhole jumps. However many jump
pilots were currently quartered—or trapped—on Graf Station, chances
were that most would be incompatible with the Barrayaran systems. So
was it the Idris 's own pilot or relief pilot, or a pilot from one of the Komarran sister ships . . . ?
“What makes you think he's a volunteer?” snarled Vorpatril. “I can't bloody believe they're just handing . . .”
“Maybe the quaddies are up to something. What do they say?”
Vorpatril
hesitated, then spat, “Watts cut me out of the loop a few minutes ago.
We were having an argument over whose strike team should go in, ours or
the quaddie militia's, and when. And under whose orders. Both at once
with no coordination struck me as a supremely bad idea.”
“Indeed.
One perceives the potential hazards.” The ba was beginning to seem a
trifle outnumbered. But then there were its
bio-threats . . . Miles's nascent sympathy died as
his vision blurred again. “We are guests in their polity . . . hang on. Something seems to be happening at one of the outer airlocks.”
Miles
enlarged the security vid image from the lock that had suddenly come
alive. Docking lights framing the outer door ran through a series of
checks and go-aheads. The ba, he reminded himself, was probably looking
at this same view. He held his breath. Were the quaddies, under the
mask of delivering the demanded jump pilot, about to attempt to insert
their own strike force?
The airlock door slid
open, giving a brief glimpse of the inside of a tiny, one-person
personnel pod. A naked man, the little silver contact circles of a jump
pilot's neural implant gleaming at mid-forehead and temples, stepped
through into the lock. The door slid shut again. Tall, dark-haired,
handsome but for the thin pink scars running, Miles could now see, all
over his body in a winding swathe. Dmitri Corbeau. His face was pale
and set.
“The jump pilot has just arrived,” Miles told Vorpatril.
“Dammit . Human or quaddie?”
Vorpatril
was really going to have to work on his diplomatic
vocabulary. . . . ”Downsider,” Miles answered, in
lieu of any more pointed remark. He hesitated, then added, “It's
Lieutenant Corbeau.”
A stunned silence: then Vorpatril hissed, “Son-of-a-bitch . . . !”
“H'sh.
The ba is finally coming on.” Miles adjusted the volume, and opened his
faceplate again so that Vorpatril could overhear too. As long as Roic
kept his suit sealed, it was . . . no worse than
ever. Yeah, and how bad is that, again?
“Turn
toward the security module and open your mouth,” the ba's voice
instructed coolly and without preamble over the lock vid monitor.
“Closer. Wider.” Miles was treated to a fair view of Corbeau's tonsils.
Unless Corbeau harbored a poison-filled tooth, no weapons were
concealed therein.
“Very
well . . .” The ba continued with a chill series of
directions for Corbeau to go through a humiliating sequence of
gyrations which, while not as thorough as a body cavity search, gave at
least some assurance that the jump pilot carried nothing there , either. Corbeau obeyed precisely, without hesitation or argument, his expression rigid and blank.
“Now release the pod from the docking clamps.”
Corbeau
rose from his last squat and stepped through the lock to the personnel
hatch entry area. A chink and a clank—the pod, released but unpowered,
drifted away from the side of the Idris.
“Now
listen to these instructions. You will walk twenty meters toward the
bow, turn left, and wait for the next door to open for you.”
Corbeau
obeyed, still almost expressionless, except for his eyes. His gaze
darted about, as if he searched for something, or was trying to
memorize his route. He passed out of sight of the lock vids.
Miles
considered the peculiar pattern of old worm scars across Corbeau's
body. He must have rolled, or been rolled, across a bad nest. A story
seemed written in those fading hieroglyphs. A young colonial boy,
perhaps the new boy in camp or town—tricked or dared or maybe just
stripped and pushed? To rise again from the ground, crying and
frightened, to the jangle of some cruel mockery . . .
Vorpatril swore, repetitively, under his breath. “Why Corbeau? Why Corbeau ?”
Miles, who was frantically wondering the same thing, hazarded, “Perhaps he volunteered.”
“Unless
the bloody quaddies bloody sacrificed him. Instead of risking one of
their own. Or . . . maybe he's figured out another
way to desert.”
“I . . .” Miles
held his words for a long moment of thought, then let them out on a
breath, “think that would be doing it the hard way.” It was a sticky
suspicion, though. Just whose ally might Corbeau prove?
Miles
caught Corbeau's image again as the ba walked him through the ship
toward Nav and Com, briefly opening and closing airseal doors. He
passed through the last barrier and out of vid range, straight-backed,
silent, bare feet padding quietly on the deck. He
looked . . . cold.
Miles's
attention was jerked aside by the flicker of another airlock sensor
alarm. Hastily, he called up the image of another lock—just in time to
see a quaddie in a green biotainer suit whap the vid monitor mightily
with a spanner while beyond, two more green figures sped past. The
image shattered and went dark. He could still hear, though—the beep of
the lock alarm, the hiss of a lock door opening—but no hiss when it
closed. Because it did not close, or because it closed on vacuum? Air,
and sound, returned as the lock cycled. The lock, therefore, had opened
on vacuum; the quaddies had made their getaway into space around the
station.
That answered his question about their biotainer suits—unlike the Idris
's cheaper issue, they were vacuum-rated. In Quaddiespace, that made
all kinds of sense. Half a dozen station locks offered refuge within
little more than a few hundred meters; the fleeing quaddies would have
their pick, in addition to whatever pods or shuttles hovered nearby
able to swoop down on them and take them inboard.
“Venn and Greenlaw and Leutwyn just escaped out an airlock,” he reported to Vorpatril. “Good
timing.” Shrewd timing, to go just when the ba was both distracted by
the arrival of its pilot and, with the real possibility of a getaway
now in hand, less inclined to carry out the station-ramming threat. It
was exactly the right move, to leak hostages from the enemy's grip at
every opportunity. Granted, this use of Corbeau's arrival was
ruthlessly calculated in the extreme. Miles could not be sorry. “Good.
Excellent! Now this ship is entirely cleared of civilians.”
“Except
for you, m'lord,” Roic pointed out, started to say something else,
intercepted the dark look Miles cast over his shoulder, and ran down in
a mumble.
“Ha,” muttered Vorpatril. “Maybe this
will change Watts's mind.” His voice lowered, as if directed away from
his audio pickup, or behind his hand. “What, Lieutenant?” Then
murmured, “Excuse me,” Miles was not certain to whom.
So,
only Barrayarans left aboard now. Plus Bel—on the ImpSec payroll,
therefore an honorary Barrayaran for all mortal accounting purposes.
Miles smiled briefly despite it all as he considered Bel's probable
outraged response to such a suggestion. The best time to insert a
strike force would be before the ship started to move, rather than to
attempt to play catch-up in mid-space. At some point, Vorpatril was
probably going to stop waiting for quaddie permission to launch his
men. At some point, Miles would agree.
Miles
returned his attention to the problem of spying on Nav and Com. If the
ba had knocked out the monitor the way the passing quaddies just had,
or even merely thrown a jacket over the vid pickup, Miles would be out
of luck . . . ah. Finally. An image of Nav and Com
formed over his vid plate. But now he had no sound. Miles gritted his teeth and bent forward.
The
vid pickup was apparently centered over the door, giving a good view
over the half dozen empty station chairs and their dark consoles. The
ba was there, still dressed in the Betan garb of its discarded alias,
jacket and sarong and sandals. Although a pressure suit—one—abstracted
from the Idris 's supplies lay nearby, flung over the back of a
station chair. Corbeau, still vulnerably naked, was seated in the
pilot's chair, but had not yet lowered his headset. The ba held up a
hand, said something; Corbeau frowned fiercely, and flinched, as the ba
pressed a hypospray briefly against the pilot's upper arm and stepped
back with a flash of satisfaction on its strained face.
Drugs?
Surely even the ba was not mad enough to drug a jump pilot upon whose
neural function it would shortly be betting its life. Some disease
inoculation? The same problem applied, although something latent might
do—Cooperate, and later I will let you have the antidote . Or
pure bluff, a shot of water, perhaps. The hypospray seemed altogether
too crude and obvious as a Cetagandan drug administration method; it
hinted at bluff to Miles's mind, though perhaps not to Corbeau's. One
had no choice but to turn control over to the pilot when he lowered his
headset and plugged the ship into his mind. It made pilots hard to
effectively threaten.
It did rather put paid to
Vorpatril's paranoid fear that Corbeau had turned traitor, volunteering
for this as a way to get a free ride out of his quaddie detention cell
and his dilemmas. Or did it? Regardless of prior or secret agreements,
the ba would not simply trust when it could, it would think, guarantee.
Over
his wrist com, muffled as from a distance, Miles heard a sudden,
startling bellow from Admiral Vorpatril: “What? That's impossible. Have they gone mad? Not now . . .”
After
a few more moments passed without further enlightenment, he murmured,
“Um, Ekaterin? Are you still there?”
Her breath drew in. “Yes.”
“What's going on?”
“Admiral
Vorpatril was called away by his communications officer. Some sort of
priority message from Sector Five headquarters just arrived. It seems
to be something very urgent.”
On the vid image in
front of him, Miles watched as Corbeau began to run through preflight
checks, moving from station to station under the hard, watchful eyes of
the ba. Corbeau made sure to move with disproportional care;
apparently, from the movement of his rather stiff lips, explaining each
move before he touched a console. And slowly, Miles noted. Rather more
slowly than necessary, if not quite slowly enough to be obvious about
it.
Vorpatril's voice, or rather, Vorpatril's
heavy breathing, returned at last. The admiral appeared to have run out
of invective. Miles found that considerably more disturbing than his
previous naval bellowing.
“My lord.” Vorpatril
hesitated. His voice dropped to a sort of stunned growl. “I have just
received Priority One orders from Sector Five HQ to marshal my escort
ships, abandon the Komarran fleet, and head for fleet rendezvous off
Marilac at maximum possible speed.”
Not with my wife, you don't , was Miles's first gyrating thought.
Then he blinked, freezing in his seat.
The other
function of the military escorts Barrayar donated to the Komarran trade
fleets was to quietly and unobtrusively maintain an armed force
dispersed through the Nexus. A force that could, in the event of a
truly dire emergency, be collected rapidly so as to present a
convincing military threat at key strategic points. In a crunch it
might otherwise be too slow, or even diplomatically or militarily
impossible, to get any force from the homeworlds through the wormhole
jumps of intervening local space polities to the mustering places where
it could do Barrayar some good. But the trade fleets were out there
already.
The planet of Marilac was a Barrayaran
ally at the back door of the Cetagandan Empire, from Barrayar's point
of view, in the complex web of wormhole jump routes that strung the
Nexus together. A second front, as Rho Ceta's immediate neighborly
threat to Komarr was considered the first front. Granted, the
Cetagandans had the shorter lines of communication and logistics
between the two points of contact. But the strategic pincer still beat
hell out of the sound of one hand clapping, particularly with the
potential addition of Marilacan forces. The Barrayarans would only be
marshaling at Marilac in order to offer a threat to Cetaganda.
Except
that, when Miles and Ekaterin had left Barrayar on this belated
honeymoon trip, relations between the two empires had been about
as—well, cordial was perhaps not quite the right term—about as
unstrained as they had been in years. What the hell could have changed that, so profoundly, and so quickly?
Something has stirred up the Cetagandans around Rho Ceta, Gregor had said.
A
few jumps out from Rho Ceta, Guppy and his smuggler friends had
off-loaded a strange live cargo from a Cetagandan government ship, one
with lots of fancy markings. A screaming-bird pattern, perhaps? Along
with one, and only one person—one survivor? After which the ship had
tilted away, on a dangerous in-bound course for the system's suns. What
if that trajectory hadn't been a swing around? What if it had been a
straight dive, with no return?
“Sonuvabitch,” breathed Miles.
“My lord?” said Vorpatril. “If—”
“Quiet ,” snapped Miles.
The admiral's silence was shocked, but it held.
Once
a year, the most precious cargoes of the haut race left the Star Crиche
on the capital world of Eta Ceta. Eight ships, bound each for one of
the planets of the Empire so curiously ruled by the haut. Each carrying
that year's cohort of haut embryos, genetically modified and certified
results of all the contracts of conception so carefully negotiated, the
prior year, between the members of the great constellations, the clans,
the carefully cultivated gene-lines of the haut race. Each load of a
thousand or so nascent lives conducted by one of the eight most
important haut ladies of the Empire, the planetary consorts who were
the steering committee of the Star Crиche. All most private, most
secret, most never-to-be-discussed with outsiders.
How
was it that a ba agent could not go back for more copies, if it lost
such a cargo of future haut lives in transit?
When it wasn't an agent at all. When it was a renegade .
“The crime isn't murder,” Miles whispered, his eyes widening. “The crime is kidnapping .”
The
murders had come subsequently, in an increasingly panicked cascade, as
the ba, with good reason, attempted to bury its trail. Well, Guppy and
his friends had surely been planned to die, as eyewitnesses to the fact
that one person had not gone down with the rest on the doomed ship. A
ship hijacked, if briefly, before its destruction—all the best
hijackings were inside jobs, oh, yes. The Cetagandan government must be
going insane over this.
“My lord, are you all right—?”
Ekaterin's
voice, in a fierce whisper: “No, don't interrupt him. He's thinking. He
just makes those funny leaking noises when he's thinking.”
From
the Celestial Garden's point of view, a Star Crиche child-ship had
disappeared on what should have been a safe route to Rho Ceta. Every
rescue force and intelligence agent the Cetagandan empire owned
would have been flung into the case. If it were not for Guppy, the
tragedy might have passed as some mysterious malfunction that had sent
the ship tumbling, out of control and unable to signal, to its fiery
doom. No survivors, no wreckage, no loose ends. But there was Guppy. Leaving a messy trail of wildly suggestive evidence behind him with every flopping footfall.
How
far behind could the Cetagandans be, by now? Too close for the ba's
comfort, obviously; it was a wonder, when Guppy had popped up on the
hostel railing, that the ba hadn't just died of heart failure without
any need for the rivet gun. But the ba's trail, marked by Guppy with
blazing flares, led straight through from the scene of the crime to the
heart of a sometimes-enemy empire—Barrayar. What were the Cetagandans
making of it all?
Well, we have a clue now, don't we?
“Right,”
breathed Miles, then, more crisply, “Right. You're recording all this,
I trust. So my first order in the Emperor's Voice, Admiral, is to
countermand your rendezvous orders from Sector Five. That was what you
were about to ask for, yes?”
“Thank you, my Lord
Auditor, yes,” said Vorpatril gratefully. “Normally, that would be a
call I would rather die than disregard,
but . . . given our present situation, they are
going to have to wait a little.” Vorpatril wasn't self-dramatizing;
this was delivered as a plain statement of fact. “Not too long, I hope.”
“They are going to have to wait a lot. This is my next order in the Emperor's Voice. Clear copy everything—everything
—you have on record here from the past twenty-four hours and squirt it
back on an open channel, at the highest priority, to the Imperial
Residence, to the Barrayaran high command on Barrayar, to ImpSec HQ,
and to ImpSec Galactic Affairs on Komarr. And,” he took a breath, and
raised his voice to override Vorpatril's outraged cry of Clear copy! At a time like this?
“marked from Lord Auditor Miles Vorkosigan of Barrayar to the most
urgent, personal attention of ghem-General Dag Benin, Chief of Imperial
Security, the Celestial Garden, Eta Ceta, personal, urgent, most
urgent, by Rian's hair this one's real, Dag. Exactly those words.”
“What?
” screamed Vorpatril, then hastily lowered his tone to an anguished
repeat, “What? A rendezvous at Marilac can only mean imminent war with
the Cetagandans! We can't hand them that kind of intelligence on our
position and movements—gift-wrapped!”
“Obtain the
complete, unedited Graf Station Security recording of the interrogation
of Russo Gupta and send it along too, as soon as you possibly can.
Sooner.”
New terror shook Miles, a vision like a
fever dream: the grand faзade of Vorkosigan House, in the Barrayaran
capital of Vorbarr Sultana, with plasma fire raining down upon it, its
ancient stone melting like butter; two fluid-filled canisters exploding
in steam. Or a fog of plague, leaving all the House's protectors dead
in heaps in the halls, or fled to die in the streets; two almost ripe
replicators running down unattended, stopping, slowly chilling, their
tiny occupants dying for lack of oxygen, drowning in their own amniotic
fluid. His past and his future, all destroyed
together . . . Nikki, too—would he be swept up with
the other children in some frantic rescue, or left uncounted, unmissed,
fatally alone? Miles had fancied himself growing into a good stepfather
to Nikki—that was called into deep question now, eh? Ekaterin, I'm sorry . . .
It
would be hours—days—before the new tight-beam could get back to
Barrayar and Cetaganda. Insanely upset people could make fatal mistakes
in mere minutes. Seconds . . . ”And if you are a
praying man, Vorpatril, pray that no one will do anything stupid before
it gets there. And that we will be believed.”
“Lady Vorkosigan,” Vorpatril whispered urgently. “Could he be hallucinating from the disease?”
“No,
no,” she soothed. “He's just thinking too fast, and leaving out all the
intervening steps. He does that. It can be very frustrating. Miles,
love, um . . . for the rest of us, would you mind unpacking that a little more?”
He
took a breath—and two or three more—to stop his trembling. “The ba.
It's not an agent on a mission. It's a criminal. A renegade. Perhaps
insane. I believe it hijacked the annual haut child-ship to Rho Ceta,
sent the vessel into the nearest sun with all aboard—probably murdered
already—and made off with its cargo. Which trans-shipped through
Komarr, and which left the Barrayaran Empire on a trade ship belonging
to Empress Laisa personally —and just how incriminating that particular detail is going to look to certain minds inside the Star Crиche, I shrink to imagine. The Cetagandans think we stole their babies, or colluded in the theft, and, dear God, murdered a planetary consort , and so they are about to make war on us bymistake !”
“Oh,” said Vorpatril blankly.
“The
ba's whole safety lay in perfect secrecy, because once the Cetagandans
got on the right trail they would never rest till they tracked this
crime down. But the perfect plan cracked when Gupta didn't die on
schedule. Gupta's frantic antics drew Solian in, drew you in, drew me
in . . .” His voice slowed. “Except, what in the world
does the ba want those haut infants for ?”
Ekaterin offered hesitantly, “Could it be stealing them for someone else?”
“Yes, but the ba aren't supposed to be subornable.”
“Well, if not for pay or some bribe, maybe blackmail or threat? Maybe threat to some haut to whom the ba is loyal?”
“Or
maybe some faction in the Star Crиche,” Miles supplied.
“Except . . . the ghem-lords do factions. The haut
lords do factions. The Star Crиche has always moved as one—even when it
was committing arguable treason, a decade ago, the haut ladies took no
separate decisions.”
“The Star Crиche
committed treason?” echoed Vorpatril in astonishment. “This certainly
didn't get out! Are you sure? I never heard of any mass executions that
high in the Empire back then, and I should have.” He paused, and added
in a baffled tone, “How could a bunch of haut-lady baby-makers commit
treason, anyway?”
“It didn't quite come off. For various reasons.” Miles cleared his throat.
“Lord
Auditor Vorkosigan. This is your com link, yes? Are you there?” a new
voice, and a very welcome one, broke in.
“Sealer Greenlaw!” Miles cried happily. “Have you made it to safety? All of you?”
“We are back aboard Graf Station,” replied the Sealer. “It seems premature to call it safety. And you?”
“Still trapped aboard the Idris . Although not totally without resources. Or ideas.”
“I urgently need to speak to you. You can override that hothead Vorpatril.”
“Ah,
my com link is sustaining an open audio link with Admiral Vorpatril
now, ma'am. You can speak to both of us at once, if you like,” Miles
put in hastily, before she could express herself even more freely.
She hesitated only fractionally. “Good. We absolutely need Vorpatril to hold, repeat, hold any strike force of his. Corbeau confirms the ba does
have some sort of a remote control or deadman switch on his person,
apparently linked back to the biohazard it has hidden aboard Graf
Station. The ba is not bluffing.”
Miles glanced up
in surprise at his silent vid of Nav and Com. Corbeau was seated now in
the pilot's station chair, the control headset lowered over his skull,
his expressionless face even more absent. “Corbeau confirms! How? He was stark naked—the ba is watching him every second! Subcutaneous com link?”
“There
was no time to find and insert one. He undertook to blink the ship's
running lights in a prearranged code.”
“Whose idea was that?”
“His.”
Quick
colonial boy. The pilot was on their side. Oh, but that was good to
know. . . . Miles's shivering was turning to
shudders.
“Every adult quaddie on Graf Station not
on emergency duty is out looking for the bio-bomb now,” Greenlaw
continued, “but we have no idea what it looks like, or how big it is,
or if it is disguised as something else. Or if there is more than one.
We are trying to evacuate as many children as possible into what ships
and shuttles we have on hand, and seal them off, but we can't even be
sure of them , really. If you people do anything to set this
mad creature off—if you launch an unauthorized strike force before this
vicious threat is found and safely neutralized—I swear I will give our
militia the order to shoot them out of space myself. Do you copy,
Admiral? Confirm.”
“I hear you,” said Vorpatril
reluctantly. “But ma'am—the Imperial Auditor himself has been infected
with one of the ba's lethal bio-agents. I cannot—I will not—if I have
to sit here and do nothing while listening to him die—”
“There are fifty thousand
innocent lives on Graf Station, Admiral—Lord Auditor!” Her voice failed
for a second; returned stiffly. “I am sorry, Lord Vorkosigan.”
“I'm
not dead yet,” Miles replied rather primly. A new and most unwelcome
sensation struggled with the tight fear grinding in his belly. He
added, “I'm going to switch off my com link for just a moment. I'll be
right back.”
Motioning Roic to keep still, Miles
opened the door to the security office, stepped into the corridor,
opened his faceplate, leaned over, and vomited onto the floor. No help for it.
With an angry swipe, he turned his suit temperature back up. He blinked
back the green dizziness, wiped his mouth, went back inside, seated
himself again, and called his link back on. “Continue.”
He
let Vorpatril's and Greenlaw's arguing voices fade from his attention,
and studied his view of Nav and Com more closely. One object had to be
there, somewhere . . . ah. There it was, a small,
valise-sized cryo-freezer case, set carefully down next to one of the
empty station chairs near the door. A standard commercial model, no
doubt bought off the shelf from some medical supplier here on Graf
Station sometime in the past few days. All of this , this
entire diplomatic mess, this extravagant trail of deaths winding across
half the Nexus, two empires teetering on the verge of war, came down to
that . Miles was reminded of the old Barrayaran folktale, about
the evil mutant magician who kept his heart in a box to hide it from
his enemies.
Yes . . .
“Greenlaw,” Miles broke in. “Do you have any way to signal back to Corbeau?”
“We
designated one of the navigation buoys that broadcasts to the channels
of the pilots on cyber-neuro control. We can't get voice communication
through it—Corbeau wasn't sure how it would emerge, in his perceptions.
We are certain we can get some kind of simple code blink or beep
through it.”
“I have a simple message for him.
Urgent. Get it through if you possibly can, however you can. Tell him
to open all the inner airseal doors in the middle deck of the central
nacelle. Kill the security vids there, too, if he can.”
“Why?” she asked suspiciously.
“We
have personnel trapped there who are going to die shortly if he
doesn't,” Miles replied glibly. Well, it was true.
“Right,” she rapped back. “I'll see what we can do.”
He
cut his outgoing voice link, turned in his station chair, and made a
throat-cutting motion for Roic to do the same. He leaned forward. “Can
you hear me?”
“Yes, m'lord.” Roic's voice was
muffled, through the work suit's thicker faceplate, but sufficiently
audible; they neither of them had to shout, in this quiet, little space.
“Greenlaw
will never order or permit a strike force to be launched to try to
capture the ba. Not hers, not ours. She can't. There are too many
quaddie lives up for grabs. Trouble is, I don't think this placating
approach will make her station any safer. If this ba really murdered a
planetary consort, it'll not even blink at a few thousand quaddies.
It'll promise cooperation right up to the last, then hit the release
switch on its bio-bomb and jump, just for the off chance that the chaos
in its wake will delay or disrupt pursuit an extra day or three. Are
you with me so far?”
“Yes, m'lord.” Roic's eyes were wide.
“If
we can get as close as the door to Nav and Com unseen, I think we have
a chance of jumping the ba ourselves. Specifically, you will
jump the ba; I will supply a distraction. You'll be all right. Stunner
and nerve disruptor fire will pretty much bounce off that work suit.
Needler spines wouldn't penetrate immediately either, if it comes to
that. And it would take longer than the seconds you'll need to cross
that little room for plasma arc fire to burn through it.”
Roic's lips twisted. “What if he just fires at you? That pressure suit's notthat good.”
“The
ba won't fire at me. That, I promise you. The Cetagandan haut, and
their siblings the ba, are physically stronger than anyone but the
dedicated heavy-worlders, but they're not stronger than a power suit.
Go for his hands. Hold them. If we get that far, well, the rest will
follow.”
“And Corbeau? The poor bastard's starkers. Nothing's gonna stop anything fired at him.”
“Corbeau,”
said Miles, “will be the ba's last choice of targets. Ah!” His eyes
widened, and he whirled about in his station chair. At the edge of the
vid image, half a dozen tiny images in the array were quietly going
dark. “Get to the corridor. Get ready to run. As silently as you can.”
From
his com link, Vorpatril's volume-reduced voice pleaded heartrendingly
for the Imperial Auditor to please reopen his outgoing voice contact.
He urged Lady Vorkosigan to request the same.
“Leave him alone,” Ekaterin said firmly. “He knows what he's doing.”
“What is he doing?” Vorpatril wailed.
“Something.” Her voice fell to a whisper. Or perhaps it was a prayer. “Good luck, love.”
Another
voice, somewhat offsides, broke in: Captain Clogston. “Admiral? Can you
reach Lord Auditor Vorkosigan? We've finished preparing his blood
filter and are ready to try it, but he's disappeared out of the
infirmary. He was right here a few minutes ago . . .”
“Do
you hear that, Lord Vorkosigan?” Vorpatril tried somewhat desperately.
“You are to report to the infirmary. Now.”
In ten
minutes—five—the medics could have their way with him. Miles pushed up
from his station chair—he had to use both hands—and followed Roic into
the corridor outside Solian's office.
Up ahead in
the dimness, the first airseal door across the corridor hissed quietly
aside, revealing the cross-corridor to the other nacelles beyond. On
the far side, the next door began to slide.
Roic
started trotting. His steps were unavoidably heavy. Miles half-jogged
behind. He tried to think how recently he had used his
seizure-stimulator, how much at risk he was right now for falling down
in a fit from a combination of bad brain chemistry and terror. Middling
risky, he decided. No automatic weapons for him this trip anyway. No
weapons at all, but for his wits. They seemed a meager arsenal, just at
the moment.
The second pair of doors opened for
them. Then the third. Miles prayed they were not walking into another
clever trap. But he didn't think the ba would have any way of tapping,
or even guessing, this oblique line of communication. Roic paused
briefly, stepping behind the last door edge, and peered ahead. The door
to Nav and Com was shut. He gave a short nod and continued forward,
Miles in his shadow. As they drew closer, Miles could see that the
control panel to the left of the door had been burned out by some
cutting tool, cousin, no doubt, to the one Roic had used. The ba had
gone shopping in Engineering, too. Miles pointed at it; Roic's face
lightened, and a corner of his mouth turned up. Someone hadn't forgotten to lock the door behind them when they'd last left after all, it appeared.
Roic
pointed to himself, to the door; Miles shook his head and motioned him
to bend closer. They touched helmets.
“Me first. Gotta grab that case before the ba can react. 'Sides, I need you to pull back the door.”
Roic looked around, inhaled, and nodded.
Miles motioned him back down to touch helmets one more time. “And, Roic? I'm glad I didn't bring Jankowski.”
Roic smiled. Miles stepped aside.
Now. Delay was no one's friend.
Roic
bent, splayed his gloved hands across the door, pressed, and pulled.
The servos in his suit whined at the load. The door creaked unwillingly
aside.
Miles slipped through. He didn't look back,
or up. His world had narrowed to one goal, one object. The freezer
case—there, still on the floor beside the absent communication
officer's station chair. He pounced, grabbed, lifted it up, clutched it
to his chest like a shield, like the hope of his heart.
The
ba was turning, yelling, lips drawn back, eyes wide, its hand snaking
for a pocket. Miles's gloved fingers felt for the catches. If locked,
toss the case toward the ba. If unlocked . . .
The case snapped open. Miles yanked it wide, shook it hard, swung it.
A
silver cascade, the better part of a thousand tiny tissue-sampling
cryo-storage needles, arced out of the case and bounced randomly across
the deck. Some shattered as they struck, making tiny crystalline
singing noises like dying insects. Some spun. Some skittered,
disappearing behind station chairs and into crevices. Miles grinned
fiercely.
The yell became a scream; the ba's hands
shot out toward Miles as if in supplication, in denial, in despair. The
Cetagandan began to stumble toward him, gray face working in shock and
disbelief.
Roic's power-suited hands locked down
over the ba's wrists and hoisted. Wrist bones crackled and popped;
blood spurted between the tightening gloved fingers. The ba's body
convulsed as it was lifted up. Wild eyes rolled back. The scream
transmuted into a weird wail, trailing away. Sandal-clad feet kicked
and drummed uselessly at the heavy shin plating of Roic's work suit;
toenails split and bled, without effect. Roic stood stolidly, hands up
and apart, racking the ba helplessly in the air.
Miles
let the freezer case fall from his fingers. It hit the deck with a
thump. With a whispered word, he called back the outgoing audio in his
com link. “We've taken the ba prisoner. Send relief troops. In
biotainer suits. They won't need their guns now. I'm afraid the ship's
an unholy mess.”
His knees were buckling. He sank
to the deck himself, giggling uncontrollably. Corbeau was rising from
his pilot's chair; Miles motioned him away with an urgent gesture.
“Stay back, Dmitri! I'm about to . . .”
He
wrenched his faceplate open in time. Barely. The vomiting and spasms
that wrung his stomach this time were much worse. It's over. Can I please die now?
Except
that it wasn't over, not nearly. Greenlaw had played for fifty thousand
lives. Now it was Miles's turn to play for fifty million.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
Miles arrived back in the Idris 's
infirmary feet first. He was carried by two of the men from Vorpatril's
strike force, which had been hastily converted to, mostly, a medical
relief team, and as such cleared by the quaddies. His porters almost
fell down the unsightly hole Roic had left in the floor. Miles seized
back personal control of his locomotion long enough to stand up, under
his own power, and lean rather unsteadily against the wall by the door
to the bio-isolation ward. Roic followed, carefully holding the ba's
remote trigger in a biotainer bag. Corbeau, stiff-faced and pale,
brought up the rear dressed in a loose medical tunic and drawstring
pants, and shepherded by a medtech with the ba's hypospray in another
biotainer sack.
Captain Clogston came out through
the buzzing blue barriers and looked over his new influx of patients
and assistants. “Right,” he announced, glowering at the gap in the
deck. “This ship is so damned befouled, I'm declaring the whole thing a
Level Three Biocontamination Zone. So we may as well spread out and get
comfortable, boys.”
The techs made a human chain
to pass the analyzing equipment quickly to the outer chamber. Miles
snared the chance for a few brief, urgent words with the two men with
medical markings on their suits who stood apart from the rest—the Prince Xav 's military interrogation officers. Not really in disguise, merely discreet—and, Miles had to allow, they were medically trained.
The
second ward was declared a temporary holding cell for their prisoner,
the ba, who followed in the procession, bound to a float pallet. Miles
scowled as the pallet drifted past, towed on its control lead by a
watchful, muscular sergeant. The ba was strapped down tightly, but its
head and eyes rolled oddly, and its saliva-flecked lips writhed.
Above
almost anything else, it was essential to keep the ba in Barrayaran
hands. Finding where the ba had hidden its filthy bio-bomb on Graf
Station was the first priority. The haut race had some genetically
engineered immunity to the most common interrogation drugs and their
derivatives; if fast-penta didn't work on this one, it would give the
quaddies very little in the way of interrogation procedures to fall
back upon that would pass Adjudicator Leutwyn's approval. In this
emergency, military rules seemed more appropriate than civilian ones. In other words, if they'll just leave us alone we'll pull out the ba's fingernails for them.
Miles caught Clogston by the elbow. “How is Bel Thorne doing?” he demanded.
The
fleet surgeon shook his head. “Not well, my Lord Auditor. We thought at
first the herm was improving, as the filters cut in—it seemed to return
to consciousness. But then it became restless. Moaning and trying to
talk. Out of its head, I think. It keeps crying for Admiral Vorpatril.”
Vorpatril? Why? Wait– “Did Bel say Vorpatril?” Miles asked sharply. “Or just, the Admiral ?”
Clogston
shrugged. “Vorpatril's the only admiral around right now, although I
suppose the portmaster could be hallucinating altogether. I hate to
sedate anyone so physiologically distressed, especially when they've
just fought their way out of a drug fog. But if that herm doesn't calm down, we'll have to.”
Miles
frowned and hurried into the isolation ward. Clogston followed. Miles
pulled off his helmet, fished his wrist com back out of it, and
clutched the vital link safely in his hand. A tech was making up the
hastily cleared second bunk, readying it for the infected Lord Auditor,
presumably.
Bel now lay on the first bunk, dried
off and dressed in a pale green Barrayaran military-issue patient
tunic, which seemed at first heartening progress. But the herm was
gray-faced, lips purple-blue, eyelids fluttering. An IV pump, not
dependent upon potentially erratic ship's gravity, infused yellow fluid
rapidly into Bel's right arm. The left arm was strapped to a board;
plastic tubing filled with blood ran from under a bandage and into a
hybrid appliance bound around with quantities of plastic tape. A second
tube ran back again, its dark surface moist with condensation.
“ 'S balla,” Bel moaned. “ 'S balla.”
The
fleet surgeon's lips pursed in medical displeasure behind his
faceplate. He edged forward to glance at a monitor. “Blood pressure's
way up, too. I think it's time to knock the poor bugger back out.”
“Wait.”
Miles elbowed to the edge of Bel's bunk to put himself in Bel's line of
sight, staring down at the herm in wild hope. Bel's head jerked. The
eyelids flickered up; the eyes widened. The blue lips tried to move
again. Bel licked them, took a long inhalation, and tried once more.
“Adm'ral! Portent. 'S basti'd hid it in the balla. Tol' me. Sadist'c
basti'd.”
“Still going on about Admiral Vorpatril,” Clogston muttered in dismay.
“Not
Admiral Vorpatril. Me,” breathed Miles. Did that witty mind still
exist, in the bunker of its brain? Bel's eyes were open, shifting to
try to focus on him, as if Miles's image wavered and blurred in the
herm's sight.
Bel knew a portent. No. Bel was
trying to say something important. Bel wrestled death for the
possession of its own mouth to try to get the message out. Balla?
Ballistic? Balalaika? No—ballet!
Miles said
urgently, “The ba hid its bio-bomb at the ballet—in the Minchenko
Auditorium? Is that what you're trying to say, Bel?”
The straining body sagged in relief. “Yeh. Yeh. Get 's word out. In the lights, I thin'.”
“Was there only one bomb? Or were there more? Did the ba say, could you tell?”
“Don' know. 'S homemade, I thin'. Check. Purch'ses . . .”
“Right, got it! Good work, Captain Thorne.” You always were the best, Bel
. Miles turned half away and spoke forcefully into his wrist com,
demanding to be patched through to Greenlaw, or Venn, or Watts, or somebody in authority on Graf Station.
A ragged female voice finally replied, “Yes?”
“Sealer Greenlaw? Are you there?”
Her voice steadied. “Yes, Lord Vorkosigan? Do you have something?”
“Maybe.
Bel Thorne reports the ba said that it hid the bio-bomb somewhere in
the Minchenko Auditorium. Possibly behind some lights.”
Her breath drew in. “Good. We'll concentrate our trained searchers in there.”
“Bel
also thinks the bomb was something the ba rigged itself, recently. It
may have made purchases on Graf Station in the persona of Ker Dubauer
that could give you a clue as to how many it could have devised.”
“Ah! Right! I'll get Venn's people on it.”
“Note, Bel's in pretty bad shape. Also, the ba could have been lying. Get back to me when you know something.”
“Yes.
Yes. Thank you.” Hastily, she cut her com. It occurred to Miles to
wonder if she was locked down in protective bio-isolation right now
too, as he was about to be, trying to shape the critical moment at a
similar frustrating remove.
“Basti'd,” Bel muttered. “Paralyzed me. Put me in s' damn bod pod. Tol' me. Then
zipped it up. Left me to die, 'magining . . .
Knew . . . it knew about Nicol 'n me. Saw my vid
cube. Where's m' vid cube?”
“Nicol is safe,” Miles
assured Bel. Well, as much as any quaddie on Graf Station at the
moment—if not safe, at least warned . Vid cube? Oh, the little
imager full of Bel's hypothetical children. “Your vid cube is put away
safely.” Miles had no idea if this last was true or not—the cube might
be still in Bel's pocket, destroyed with the herm's contaminated
clothes, or stolen by the ba. But the assertion gave Bel ease. The
exhausted herm's eyes closed again, and its breathing steadied.
In a few hours, I'm going to look like that.
Then you'd better not waste any time now, eh?
With
a vast distaste, Miles suffered a hovering tech to help him off with
his pressure suit and underwear—to be taken away and incinerated, Miles
supposed. “If you're tying me down here, I want a comconsole set up by
my bunk immediately. No, you can't have that.” Miles fended off the
tech, who was now trying to pry loose his com link, then paused to
swallow. “And something for nausea. All right, put it around my right arm, then.”
Horizontal
was scarcely better than vertical. Miles smoothed down his own pale
green tunic and gave up his left arm to the surgeon, who personally
attended to piercing his vein with some medical awl that felt the size
of a drinking straw. On the other side a tech pressed a hypospray
against his right shoulder—a potion that would kill the dizziness and
the cramping in his stomach, he hoped. But he didn't yelp until the
first spurt of filtered blood returned to his body. “Crap , that's cold. I hate cold.”
“Can't
be helped, my Lord Auditor,” Clogston murmured soothingly. “We have to
lower your body temperature at least three degrees. It will buy time.”
Miles
hunched, uncomfortably reminded that they didn't have a fix for this
yet. He stifled a gush of terror, escaping under pressure from the
place he'd kept it locked for the past hours. Not for one second would
he allow himself to believe that there was no cure to be had, that this
bio-shit would drag him under and this time he wouldn't come back
up . . . ”Where's Roic?” He raised his right wrist
to his lips. “Roic?”
“I'm in the outer chamber,
m'lord. I'm afraid to carry this triggering device through the
bio-barrier till we're sure it's disarmed.”
“Right,
good thinking. One of those fellows out there should be the bomb
disposal tech I requested. Find him and give it to him. Then ride herd
on the interrogation for me, will you?”
“Yes, m'lord.”
“Captain Clogston.”
The doctor glanced down from where he fiddled with the jury-rigged blood filter. “My lord?”
“The
moment you have a medtech—no, a doctor. The moment you have some
qualified men free, send them to the cargo hold where the ba has the
replicators. I want them to run samples, try to see if the ba has
contaminated or poisoned them in any way. Then make sure the
equipment's all running all right. It's very important that the haut infants all be kept alive and well.”
“Yes, Lord Vorkosigan.”
If
the haut babies were inoculated with the same vile parasites presently
rioting through his own body, might the replicators' temperature be
turned down to chill them all, and slow the disease process? Or would
such cold stress the infants, damage them . . . he
was borrowing trouble, reasoning in advance of his data. A trained
agent, conditioned to the correct disconnect between action and
imagination, might have performed such an inoculation, cleaning up
every bit of incriminating high-haut DNA before abandoning the scene.
But this ba was an amateur. This ba had another sort of conditioning
altogether. Yes, but that conditioning must have gone very wrong somehow, or this ba wouldn't have got this far . . .
Miles
added as Clogston turned away, “And give me word on the condition of
the pilot, Corbeau, as soon as you have it.” The retreating suited
figure raised a hand in acknowledgment.
In a few
minutes, Roic entered the ward; he had doffed the bulky powered work
suit, and now wore more comfortable military-issue Level Three
biotainer garb.
“How's it going over there?”
Roic
ducked his head. “Not well, m'lord. T' ba has gone into some sort of
strange mental state. Raving, but nothing to the point, and the
intelligence fellows say its physiological state is all out of kilter
as well. They're trying to stabilize it.”
“The ba must
be kept alive!” Miles struggled half-up, a vision of having himself
carried into the next chamber to take charge running through his head.
“We have to get it back to Cetaganda. To prove Barrayar is innocent.”
He
sank back and eyed the humming device filtering his blood hung by his
left side. Pulling out parasites, yes, but also draining the energy the
parasites had stolen from him to create themselves. Siphoning off the
mental edge he desperately needed right now.
He
remarshaled his scattering thoughts, and explained to Roic the news Bel
had imparted. “Return to the interrogation room and give them the word
on this development. See if they can get any cross-confirmation on the
hiding place in the Minchenko Auditorium, and especially see if they
can get anything that would suggest if there is more than one device.
Or not.”
“Right.” Roic nodded. He glanced over
Miles's growing array of medical attachments. “By the way, m'lord. Had
you happened to mention your seizure disorder to the surgeon yet?”
“Not yet. There hasn't been time.”
“Right.”
Roic's lips screwed up thoughtfully, in an editorial fashion that Miles
chose to ignore. “I'll see to it then, shall I, m'lord?”
Miles hunched. “Yeah, yeah.”
Roic trod out of the ward on both his errands.
The
remote comconsole arrived; a tech swung a tray across Miles's lap, laid
the vid plate frame upon it, and helped him sit mostly up, with extra
pillows at his back. He was starting to shiver again. All right, good,
the device was Barrayaran military issue, not just scavenged from the Idris . He had a securable visual link again now. He entered codes.
Vorpatril's face was a moment or two coming up; riding herd on all this from the Prince Xav 's tactics room, the admiral no doubt had a few other demands on his attention at the moment. He appeared at last with a, “Yes
, my lord!” His eyes searched the image of Miles on his vid display. He
apparently was not reassured by the view. His jaw tightened in dismay.
“Are you all—” he began, but edited this fatuity on the fly to, “How
bad is it?”
“I can still talk. And while I can
still talk, I need to record some orders. While we're waiting on the
quaddies' search for the bio-bomb—are you following the latest on
that?” Miles brought the admiral up to the moment on Bel's intelligence
about the Minchenko Auditorium, and went on. “Meanwhile, I want you to
select and prepare the fastest ship in your escort that has a
sufficient capacity for the load it's going to be carrying. Which will
be me, Portmaster Thorne, a medical team, our prisoner the ba and
guards, Guppy the Jacksonian smuggler if I can pry him out of quaddie
hands, and a thousand working uterine replicators. With qualified
medical attendants.”
“And me,” put in Ekaterin's
voice firmly from offsides. Her face leaned briefly into range of
Vorpatril's vid pickup, and she frowned at him. She'd seen her husband
looking like death on a plate more than once before, though; perhaps
she wouldn't be as disturbed as the admiral clearly was. Having an
Imperial Auditor get melted to steaming slime on his watch would be a
notable black mark, not that Vorpatril's career wasn't in a shambles
over this episode already.
“My courier ship will
travel in convoy, carrying Lady Vorkosigan.” He cut across Ekaterin's
beginning objection: “I may well need one spokesperson along who isn't in medical quarantine.”
She settled back with a dubious “Hm.”
“But
I want to make damned sure we're not impeded by any hassles along the
way, Admiral, so have your fleet department start working immediately
on our passage clearances in all the local space polities we're going
to have to cross. Speed. Speed is of the essence. I want to get away
the moment we're sure the ba's devil-device has been cleared from Graf
Station. At least with us carrying all these biohazards, no one is
going to want to stop and board us for inspections.”
“To Komarr, my lord? Or Sergyar?”
“No. Calculate the shortest possible jump route directly to Rho Ceta.”
Vorpatril's
head jerked back in startlement. “If the orders I received from Sector
Five HQ mean what we think, you'll hardly get passage there . Reception by plasma fire and fusion shells the moment you pop out of the wormhole, would be what I'd expect.”
“Unpack , Miles,” Ekaterin's voice drifted in.
He
grinned briefly at the familiar exasperation in her voice. “By the time
we arrive there, I will have arranged our clearances with the
Cetagandan Empire.” I hope . Or else they were all going to be
in more trouble than Miles ever wanted to imagine. “Barrayar is
bringing their kidnapped haut babies back to them. On the end of a long
stick. I get to be the stick.”
“Ah,” said Vorpatril, his gray brows rising in speculation.
“Give
a head's-up to my ImpSec courier pilot. I plan to start the moment we
have everyone and everything transferred aboard. You can start on the
everything part now.”
“Understood, my lord.”
Vorpatril rose and vanished out of vid range. Ekaterin moved back in,
and smiled at him.
“Well, we're making some
progress at last,” Miles said to her, with what he hoped seemed good
cheer, and not suppressed hysteria.
Her smile
twisted up on one side. Her eyes were warm, though. “Some progress?
What do you call an avalanche, I wonder?”
“No
arctic metaphors, please. I'm cold enough. If the medicos get
this . . . infestation under control en route,
perhaps they'll clear me for visitors. We'll want the courier ship
later, anyway.”
A medtech appeared, drew a blood
sample from the outbound tube, added an IV pump to the array, raised
the bed rails, then bent and began tying down the left arm board.
“Hey,” objected Miles. “How am I supposed to unravel all this mess with one hand tied behind my back?”
“Captain
Clogston's orders, m'lord Auditor.” Firmly, the tech finished securing
his arm. “Standard procedure for seizure risk.”
Miles gritted his teeth.
“Your seizure-stimulator is with the rest of your things aboard the Kestrel ,” Ekaterin observed dispassionately. “I'll find it and send it across as soon as I transfer back aboard.”
Prudently,
Miles limited his response to, “Thank you. Check back with me before
you dispatch it—there may be a few other things I'll need. Let me know
when you're safely aboard.”
“Yes, love.” She
touched her fingers to her lips and held them up, passing them through
his image before her. He returned the gesture. His heart chilled a
little as her image winked out. How long before they dared touch flesh
to warm flesh again? What if it's never . . . ? Damn, but I'm cold.
The
tech departed. Miles hunched down in his bed. He supposed it would be
futile to ask for blankets. He imagined little tiny bio-bombs set to go
off all through his body, sparking like a Midsummer fireworks display
seen at a distance out over the river in Vorbarr Sultana, cascading to
a grand, lethal finale. He imagined his flesh decomposing into
corrosive ooze while he yet lived in it. He needed to think about
something else.
Two empires, both alike in
indignation, maneuvering for position, massing deadly force behind a
dozen wormhole jumps, each jump a point of contact, conflict,
catastrophe . . . that was no better.
A
thousand almost-ripe haut fetuses, turning in their little chambers,
unaware of the distance and dangers they had passed through, and the
hazards still to come—how soon would they have to be decanted?
The picture of a thousand squalling infants dropped upon a few harried
Barrayaran military medicos was almost enough to make him smile, if
only he wasn't so primed to start screaming.
Bel's breath, in the next bunk, was thick and labored.
Speed.
For every reason, speed. Had he set in motion everyone and everything
that he could? He ran down checklists in his aching head, lost his
place, tried again. How long had it been since he'd slept? The minutes
crawled by with tortuous slowness. He imagined them as snails, hundreds
of little snails with Cetagandan clan markings coloring their shells,
going past in procession, leaving slime-trails of lethal
biocontamination . . . a crawling infant, little
Helen Natalia, cooing and reaching for one of the pretty, poisonous
creatures, and he was all tied up and pierced with tubes and couldn't
get across the room fast enough to stop her . . .
A bleep from his lap link, thank God, snapped him awake before he could find out where that
nightmare was going. He was still pierced with tubes, though. What time
was it? He was losing track altogether. His usual mantra—I can sleep when I'm dead —seemed a little too apropos.
An image formed over the vid plate. “Sealer Greenlaw!” Good news, bad news? Good . Her lined face was radiant with relief.
“We found it,” she said. “It's been contained.”
Miles blew out his breath in a long exhalation. “Yes. Excellent. Where?”
“In
Minchenko Auditorium, just as the portmaster said. Attached to the wall
in a stage light cell. It did seem to have been put together hastily,
but it was deadly clever for all of that. Simple and clever. It was
scarcely more than a little sealed plastic balloon, filled with some
sort of nutrient solution, my people tell me. And a tiny charge, and
the electronic trigger for it. The ba had stuck it to the wall with
ordinary packing tape, and sprayed it with a little flat black paint.
No one would notice it in the ordinary course of events, not even if
they had been working on the lights, unless they put a hand right on
it.”
“Homemade, then. On the spot?”
“It
would seem so. The electronics, which were off-the-shelf items—and the
tape, for that matter—are all quaddie-make. They match with the
purchases recorded to Dubauer's credit chit the evening after the
attack in the hostel lobby. All the parts are accounted for. There
seems to have been only the one device.” She ran her upper hands
through her silver hair, massaging her scalp wearily, and squeezed shut
eyes bounded beneath by little dark half-moons of shadow.
“That . . . fits
with the timetable as I see it,” said Miles. “Right up until Guppy
popped up with his rivet gun, the ba evidently thought it had gotten
away clean with its stolen cargo. And with Solian's death. Everything
calm and perfect. Its plan was to pass through Quaddiespace quietly,
without leaving a trace. It would not have had any reason before then
to rig such a device. But from that botched murder attempt on, it was
running scared, having to improvise rapidly. Curious bit of foresight,
though. It can't have planned to be trapped on the Idris the way it was, surely.”
She
shook her head. “It planned something. The explosive charge had two
leads to its trigger. One was a receiver for the signal device the ba
had in its pocket. The other was a simple sound sensor. Set to a fairly
high decibel level. That of an auditorium full of applause, for
example.”
Miles's teeth snapped shut. Oh, yes.
“Thus masking the pop of the charge, and blowing out contaminant to the
maximum number of people at once.” The vision was instant, and
horrifying.
“So we think. People come in from
other stations all over Quaddiespace to see performances of the
Minchenko Ballet. The contagion could have spread back out with them
through half the system before it became apparent.”
“Is
it the same—no, it can't be what the ba gave to me and Bel. Can it? Was
it lethal, or merely something debilitating, or what?”
“The sample is in the hands of our medical people now. We should know soon.”
“So
the ba set up its bio-bomb . . . after it knew real
Cetagandan agents would be following, after it knew it would be
compelled to abandon the utterly incriminating replicators and their
contents . . . I'll bet it put the bomb
together and slapped it out there in a hurry.” Maybe it was revenge.
Revenge upon the quaddies for all the forced delays that had so wrecked
the ba's perfect plan . . . ? By Bel's report, the
ba was not above such motivations; the Cetagandan had displayed a cruel
humor, and a taste for bifurcating strategies. If the ba hadn't run
into the troubles on the Idris , would it have retrieved the
device, or would it simply have quietly left the bomb behind to go off
on its own? Well, if Miles's own men couldn't get the whole story out
of their prisoner, he damned well knew some people who could.
“Good,” he breathed. “We can go now.”
Greenlaw's weary eyes opened. “What?”
“I
mean—with your permission, Madame Sealer.” He adjusted his vid pickup
to a wider angle, to take in his sinister medical setting. Too late to
adjust the color balance toward a more sickly green. Also, possibly,
redundant. Greenlaw's mouth turned down in dismay, looking at him.
“Admiral
Vorpatril has received an extremely alarming military communiquй from
home . . .” Swiftly, Miles explained his deduction about
the connection of suddenly increased tensions between Barrayar and its
dangerous Cetagandan neighbor to the recent events on Graf Station. He
talked carefully around the tactical use of trade fleet escorts as
rapid-deployment forces, although he doubted the sealer missed the
implications.
“My plan is to get myself, the ba,
the replicators, and as much evidence as I can amass of the ba's crimes
back to Rho Ceta, to present to the Cetagandan government, to clear
Barrayar of whatever accusation of collusion is driving this crisis. As
fast as possible. Before some hothead—on either side—does something
that, to put it bluntly, makes Admiral Vorpatril's late actions on Graf
Station look like a model of restraint and wisdom.”
That
won a snort from her; he forged on. “While the ba and Russo Gupta both
committed crimes on Graf, they committed crimes in the Cetagandan and
Barrayaran empires first. I submit we have clear prior claim. And
worse—their mere continued presence on Graf Station is dangerous,
because, I promise you, sooner or later their furious Cetagandan
victims will be following them up. I think you've had enough of a taste
of their medicine to make the prospect of a swarm of real
Cetagandan agents descending upon you unwelcome indeed. Cede us both
criminals, and any retribution will chase after us instead.”
“Hm,” she said. “And your impounded trade fleet? Your fines?”
“Let . . . on my authority, I am willing to transfer of ownership of the Idris to Graf Station, in lieu of all fines and expenses.” He added prudently, “As is.”
Her eyes sprang wide. She said indignantly, “The ship's contaminated .”
“Yes.
So we can't take it anywhere anyway. Cleaning it up could be a nice
little training exercise for your biocontrol people.” He decided not to
mention the holes. “Even with that expense, you'll come out ahead. I'm
afraid the passengers' insurance will have to eat the value of any of
their cargo that can't be cleared. But I'm really hopeful that most of
it will not need to be quarantined. And you can let the rest of the
fleet go.”
“And your men in our detention cells?”
“You
let one of them out. Are you sorry? Can you not allow Lieutenant
Corbeau's courage to redeem his comrades? That has to be one of the
bravest acts I've ever witnessed, him walking naked and knowing into
horror to save Graf Station.”
“That . . . yes.
That was remarkable,” she conceded. “By any people's standards.” She
regarded him thoughtfully. “You went in after the ba too.”
“Mine doesn't count,” Miles said automatically. “I was already . . .” he cut the word, dead. He was not, dammit, dead yet. “I was already infected.”
Her brows rose in bemused curiosity. “And if you hadn't been, what would you have done?”
“Well . . . it was the tactical moment. I have a kind of gift for timing, you see.”
“And for doubletalk.”
“That, too. But the ba was just my job.”
“Has anyone ever told you that you are quite mad?”
“Now
and then,” he admitted. Despite everything, a slow smile turned his
lips. “Not so much since I was appointed an Imperial Auditor, though.
Useful, that.”
She snorted, very softly.
Softening? Miles trotted out the next barrage. “My plea is
humanitarian, too. It is my belief—my hope—that the Cetagandan haut
ladies will have some treatment up their capacious sleeves for their
own product. I propose to take Portmaster Thorne with us—at our
expense—to share the cure that I now so desperately seek for myself.
It's only justice. The herm was, in a sense, in my service when it took
this harm. In my work gang, if you like.”
“Huh. You Barrayarans do look after your own, at least. One of your few saving graces.”
Miles
opened his hands in an equally ambiguous acknowledgment of this mixed
compliment. “Thorne and I both now labor under a deadline that waits on
no committee debate, I'm afraid, and no one's permission. The present
palliative,” he gestured awkwardly at the blood filter, “buys a little
time. As of this moment, no one knows if it will buy enough.”
She
rubbed her brow, as if it ached. “Yes, certainly . . .
certainly you must . . . oh, hell.” She took a
breath. “All right. Take your prisoners and your evidence and the whole
damned lot—and Thorne—and go.”
“And Vorpatril's men in detention?”
“Them, too. Take them all away. Your ships can all go, bar the Idris
.” Her nose wrinkled in distaste. “But we will discuss the residue of
your fines and expenses further, after the ship is evaluated by our
inspectors. Later. Your government can send someone for the task. Not
you, by preference.”
“Thank you, Madame
Sealer,” Miles sang in relief. He cut the com, and collapsed back on
his pillows. The ward seemed to be spinning around his head, very
slowly, in short jerks. It wasn't, he decided after a moment, a problem
with the room.
* * *
Captain
Clogston, who had been waiting by the door for the Auditor to complete
this high-level negotiation, advanced to glower at his cobbled-together
blood filter some more. He then transferred his glower to Miles.
“Seizure disorder, eh? I'm glad someone told me.”
“Yes,
well, we wouldn't want you to mistake it for an exotic new Cetagandan
symptom. It's pretty routine. If it happens, don't panic. I come up on
my own in about five minutes. Usually gives me a sort of hangover,
afterwards, not that I'd be able to tell the difference at the moment.
Never mind. What can you tell me about Lieutenant Corbeau?”
“We checked the ba's hypospray. It was filled with water.”
“Ah!
Good! I thought so.” Miles smiled in wolfish satisfaction. “Can you
pronounce him clear of bio-horrors, then?”
“Given
that he's been running around this plague-ship bare-ass naked, not
until we're sure we have identified all possible hazards that the ba
might have released. But nothing came up on the first blood and tissue
samples we took.”
A hopeful—Miles tried not to think, overly optimistic —sign. “Can you send the lieutenant in to me? Is it safe? I want to talk to him.”
“We
now believe that what you and the herm have isn't virulently contagious
through ordinary contact. Once we're sure the ship's clear of anything
else, we'll all be able to get out of these suits, which will be a
relief. Although the parasites might transfer sexually—we'll have to
study that.”
“I don't like Corbeau that much. Send him in, then.”
Clogston
gave Miles an odd look, and moved off. Miles wasn't sure if the captain
had missed the feeble joke, or merely considered it too feeble to merit
a response. But that transfer sexually theory kicked off a
whole new cascade of unpleasant, unwelcome speculation in Miles's mind.
What if the medicos found they could keep him alive indefinitely, but
not get rid of the damned things? Would he never be able to touch any
more of Ekaterin than her holovid image for the rest of his
life . . . ? It also suggested a new set of
questions to put to Guppy about his recent travels—well, the quaddie
doctors were competent, and receiving copies of the Barrayarans'
medical downloads; their epidemiologists were doubtless already on it.
Corbeau
pushed through the bio-barriers. He was now somewhat desultorily
arrayed in a disposable mask and gloves, in addition to the medical
tunic and some patient slippers. Miles sat up, pushed away his tray,
and unobtrusively twitched open his own tunic, letting the paling
spiderweb of old needle-grenade scars silently suggest whatever they
might to Corbeau.
“You asked for me, my Lord Auditor?” Corbeau ducked his head in a nervous jerk.
“Yes.”
Miles scratched his nose thoughtfully with his one free hand. “Well,
hero. That was a very good career move you just made.”
Corbeau
hunched a little, mulishly. “I didn't do it for my career. Or for
Barrayar. I did it for Graf Station, and the quaddies, and Garnet Five.”
“And
glad I am of it. Nevertheless, people will doubtless be wanting to pin
gold stars on you. Cooperate with me, and I won't make you receive them
in the costume you were wearing when you earned them.”
Corbeau gave him a baffled, wary look.
What
was the matter with all his jokes today, anyway? Flat, flatter,
flattest. Maybe he was violating some sort of unwritten Auditor
protocol, and messing up everyone else's lines.
The lieutenant said, in a notably uninviting voice, “What do you want me to do? My lord.”
“More
urgent concerns—to put it mildly—are going to compel me to leave
Quaddiespace before my assigned diplomatic mission is quite complete.
Nevertheless, with the true cause and course of our recent disasters
here finally dragged out into the light, what follows should be
easier.” Besides, there's nothing like the threat of imminent death to force one to delegate.
“It is very plain that Barrayar is overdue to have a full-time
diplomatic consulate officer assigned to the Union of Free Habitats. A
bright young man who . . .” is shacked up with a quaddie girl , no, married to , wait, that wasn't what they called it here, is partners with
, yes, very likely, but it hadn't happened yet. Although Corbeau was
thrice a fool if he didn't grab this opportunity to fix things with
Garnet Five for good and all. “Likes quaddies,” Miles continued
smoothly, “and has earned both their respect and gratitude by his
personal valor, and has no objection to a long assignment away from
home—two years, was it? Yes, two years. Such a young man might be
particularly well placed to argue effectively for Barrayar's interests
in Quaddiespace. In my personal opinion.”
Miles couldn't tell if Corbeau's mouth was open, behind his medical mask. His eyes had grown rather wide.
“I
can't imagine,” said Miles, “that Admiral Vorpatril would have any
objection to releasing you to this detached duty. Or at any rate, to
not having to deal with you in his command structure after all
these . . . complex events. Not that I'd planned to
give him a Betan vote in my Auditorial decrees, mind you.”
“I . . . I don't know anything about diplomacy. I was trained as a pilot.”
“If
you went through military jump pilot training, you have already shown
that you can study hard, learn fast, and make confident, rapid
decisions affecting other people's lives. Objection overruled. You
will, of course, have a consulate budget to hire expert staff to assist
you in specialized problems, in law, in the economics of port fees, in
trade matters, whatever. But you'll be expected to learn enough as you
go to judge whether their advice is good for the Imperium. And if, at
the end of two years, you do decide to muster out and stay here, the
experience would give you a major boost into Quaddiespace
private-sector employment. If there's any problem with all this from
your point of view—or from Garnet Five's, very level-headed woman, by
the way, don't let her get away—it's not apparent to me.”
“I'll”—Corbeau swallowed—”think about it. My lord.”
“Excellent.”
And not readily stampeded, either, good. “Do so.” Miles smiled and
waved dismissal; warily, Corbeau withdrew. As soon as he was out of
earshot, Miles murmured a code into his wrist com.
“Ekaterin, love? Where are you?”
“In my cabin on the Prince Xav . The nice young yeoman is getting ready to help carry my things to the shuttle. Yes, thank you, that too . . .”
“Right.
I've just about cracked us loose from Quaddiespace. Greenlaw was
reasonable, or at least, too exhausted to argue any more.”
“She has all my sympathy. I don't think I have a functional nerve left, right now.”
“Don't
need your nerves, just your usual grace. The moment you can get to a
comconsole, call up Garnet Five. I want to appoint that heroic young
idiot Corbeau to be Barrayaran consul here, and make him clean up all
this mess I have to leave in my wake. It's only fair; he certainly
helped create it. Gregordid specifically ask that I assure that
Barrayaran ships could dock here again someday. The boy is wobbling,
however. So pitch it to Garnet Five, and make sure that she makes sure Corbeau says yes.”
“Oh! What a splendid idea, love. They would make a good team, I think.”
“Yep. Her for beauty, and um . . . her for brains.”
“And
him for courage, surely. I think it might work out. I must think what
to send them for a wedding present, to convey my personal thanks.”
“Partnering
present? I don't know, ask Nicol. Oh. Speaking of Nicol.” Miles glanced
aside at the sheeted figure in the next bunk. Crucial message
delivered, Thorne had fallen back into what Miles hoped was sleep and
not incipient coma. “I'm thinking that Bel really ought to have someone
to ride along and take care of it. Or of things for it. Some kind of
support trooper, anyway. I expect the Star Crиche will have a fix for
their own weapon—they'd have to, lab accidents, after all.” If we get there in time
. “But this looks like something that's going to involve a certain
amount of really unpleasant convalescence. I'm not exactly looking
forward to it myself.” But consider the alternative . . . ”Ask her if she's willing. She could ride in the Kestrel with you, be some company, anyway.” And if neither he nor Bel got out of this alive, mutual support.
“Certainly. I'll call her from here.”
“Call me again when you're safe aboard the Kestrel , love.” Often and often .
“Of
course.” Her voice hesitated. “Love you. Get some rest. You sound like
you need it. Your voice has that down-in-a-well sound it gets
when . . . There will be time.” Determination flashed through her own audible fatigue.
“I
wouldn't dare die. There's this fierce Vor lady who threatened she'd
kill me if I did.” He grinned weakly and cut the com.
* * *
He
drowsed for a time in dizzy exhaustion, fighting the sleep that tried
to overtake him, because he couldn't be sure it wasn't the ba's
hell-disease gaining on him, and he might not wake up. He marked a
subtle change in the sounds and voices that penetrated from the outer
chamber, as the medical team switched over to evacuation-mode. In time,
a tech came and took Bel away on a float pallet. In a little more time,
the pallet was returned, and Clogston himself and another medtech
shifted the Imperial Auditor and all his growing array of life-support
trappings aboard.
One of the intelligence officers reported to Miles, during a brief delay in the outer chamber.
“We
finally found the remains of Lieutenant Solian, my Lord Auditor. What
there was of them. A few kilograms of . . . well.
Inside a bod pod, folded up and put back in its wall locker in the
corridor just outside the cargo hold where the replicators were.”
“Right.
Thank you. Bring it along. As is. For evidence, and
for . . . the man died doing his job. Barrayar owes
him . . . debt of honor. Military burial. Pension,
family . . . figure it all out
later . . .”
His pallet rose again, and the corridor ceilings of the Idris flowed past his blurred gaze for the last time.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
“Are we there yet?” Miles mumbled muzzily.
He
blinked open eyes that were not, oddly enough, gluey and sore. The
ceiling above him didn't waver and bend in his vision as though seen
mirage-like through rising desert heat. Breath drawn through his
flaring nostrils flowed in coolly and without clogging impediment. No
phlegm. No tubes. No tubes?
The ceiling was
unfamiliar. He groped for memory. Fog. Biotainered angels and devils,
tormenting him; someone demanding he piss. Medical indignities,
mercifully vague now. Trying to talk, to give orders, till some
hypospray of darkness had shut him down.
And
before that: near desperation. Sending frantic messages racing ahead of
his little convoy. The return stream of days-old accounts of wormholes
blockaded, outlanders interned by both sides, assets seized, ships
massing, telling its own tale to Miles's mind, worse for the details.
He knew too damned much about the details. We can't have a war now, you fools! Don't you know there are children almost present?
His left arm jerked, encountering no resistance except for a smooth
coverlet beneath his clutching fingers.
“ . . . there yet?”
Ekaterin's
lovely face bent over him from the side. Not half-hidden behind
biotainer gear. He feared for a moment that this was only a holovid
projection, or some hallucination, but the real warm kiss of breath
from her mouth, carried on a puff of laughter, reassured him of her
present solidity even before his hesitant hand touched her cheek.
“Where's your mask?” he asked thickly. He heaved up on one elbow, fighting off a wave of dizziness.
He
certainly wasn't in the Barrayaran military ship's crowded, utilitarian
sickbay to which he'd been transferred from the Idris . His bed
was in a small but elegantly appointed chamber that screamed of
Cetagandan aesthetics, from the arrays of live plants through the
serene lighting to the view out the window of a soothing seashore.
Waves creamed gently up a pale sandy beach seen through strange trees
casting delicate fingers of shade. Almost certainly a vid projection,
since the subliminals of the atmosphere and sounds of the room also
murmured spaceship cabin to him. He wore a loose, silky garment
in subdued gray hues, only its odd accessibilities betraying it as a
patient gown. Above the head of his bed, a discreet panel displayed
medical readouts.
“Where are we? What's happening? Did we stop the war? Those replicators they found on their end—it's a trick, I know it—”
The
final disaster—his speeding ships intercepting tight-beamed news from
Barrayar of diplomatic talks broken off upon the discovery, in a
warehouse outside Vorbarr Sultana, of a thousand empty replicators
apparently stolen from the Star Crиche, their occupants gone. Supposed
occupants? Even Miles hadn't been sure. A baffling nightmare of
implications. The Barrayaran government had of course hotly denied any
knowledge of how they came to be there, or where their contents were
now. And was not believed . . .
“The ba—Guppy, I promised—all those haut babies—I've got to—”
“You have got to lie still.” A firm hand to his chest pushed him back down. “All the most urgent matters have been taken care of.”
“Who by?”
She
colored faintly. “Well . . . me, mostly.
Vorpatril's ship captain probably shouldn't have let me override him,
technically, but I decided not to point that out to him. You're a bad
influence on me, love.”
What? What? “How?”
“I
just kept repeating your messages, and demanding they be put through to
the haut Pel and ghem-General Benin. Benin was brilliant. Once he had
your first dispatches, he figured out that the replicators found in
Vorbarr Sultana were decoys, smuggled out of the Star Crиche by the ba
a few at a time over a year ago in preparation for this.” She frowned.
“It was apparently a deliberate sleight of hand by the ba, meant to
cause just this sort of trouble. A backup plan, in case anyone figured
out that not everyone had died on the child-ship, and traced the trail
as far as Komarr. It almost worked. Might have worked, if Benin hadn't
been so painstaking and levelheaded. I gather that the internal
political circumstances of his investigation were extremely difficult
by then. He really put his reputation on the line.”
Possibly even his life, if Miles read between these simple lines. “All honor unto him, then.”
“The
military forces—theirs and ours—have all gone off alert and are
standing down, now. The Cetagandans have declared it an internal, civil
matter.”
He eased back, vastly relieved. “Ah.”
“I don't think I could have gotten through to them without the haut Pel's name.” She hesitated. “And yours.”
“Ours.”
Her lips curved up at that. “Lady Vorkosigan
did seem a title to conjure with. It gave both sides pause. That, and
yelling the truth over and over. But I couldn't have held it together
without the name.”
“May I suggest that the name
couldn't have held it together without you?” His free hand tightened
around hers, on the coverlet. Hers tightened back.
He started up again. “Wait—shouldn't you be in biotainer gear?”
“Not any more. Lie down , drat it. What's the last thing you remember?”
“My last clear memory is of being on the Barrayaran ship about four days out from Quaddiespace. Cold.”
Her
smile didn't change, but her eyes grew dark with memory. “Cold is
right. The blood filters fell behind, even with four of them running at
once. We could see the life just draining out of you; your
metabolism couldn't keep up, couldn't replace the resources being
siphoned off even with the IVs and nutrient tubes running flat out, and
multiple blood transfusions. Captain Clogston couldn't think of any
other way to suppress the parasites but to put you, Bel, and them into stasis. A cold hibernation. The next step would have been cryofreeze.”
“Oh, no. Not again . . . !”
“It
was the ultimate fallback, but it wasn't needed, thank heavens. Once
you and Bel were sedated and chilled enough, the parasites stopped
multiplying. The captains and crews of our little convoy were very good
about rushing us along as fast as was safe, or a little faster. Oh—yes,
we're here; we arrived in orbit around Rho
Ceta . . . yesterday, I guess it was.”
Had
she slept since then? Not much, Miles suspected. Her face, though
cheerful now, was drawn with fatigue. He reached for it again, to
lightly touch her lips with two fingers as he habitually did her
holovid image.
“I remember that you wouldn't let me say good-bye to you properly,” he complained.
“I figured it would give you more motivation to fight your way back to me. If only for the last word.”
He
snorted a laugh, and let his hand fall back to the coverlet. The
artificial gravity probably wasn't turned up to two gees in this
chamber, despite his arm feeling as though it were hung with lead
weights. He had to admit, he didn't feel exactly . . .
chipper. “What, then, am I all clear of those hell-parasites?”
Her
smile returned. “All better. Well, that is, that frightening Cetagandan
lady doctor the haut Pel brought with her has pronounced you cured. But
you're still very debilitated. You're supposed to rest.”
“Rest, I can't rest! What else is happening? Where's Bel?”
“Sh,
sh. Bel's alive too. You can see Bel soon, and Nicol too. They're in a
cabin just down the corridor. Bel took . . .” She
frowned hesitantly. “Took more damage from this than you did, but is
expected to recover, mostly. In time.”
Miles didn't quite like the sound of that.
Ekaterin
followed his glance around. “Right now we're aboard the haut Pel's own
ship—that is, her Star Crиche ship, that she brought from Eta Ceta. The
women from the Star Crиche had you and Bel carried across to treat you
here. The haut ladies wouldn't let any of our men aboard to guard you,
not even Armsman Roic at first, which caused the most stupid argument;
I was ready to slap everybody concerned, till they finally decided that
Nicol and I could come with you. Captain Clogston was very upset that
he wouldn't be allowed to attend. He wanted to hold back giving them
the replicators till they cooperated, but you can bet I put my foot
down on that idea.”
“Good!” And not just
because Miles had wanted those little time bombs off Barrayaran hands
at the earliest possible instant. He could not imagine a more
psychologically repugnant or diplomatically disastrous ploy, at this
late hour. “I remember trying to calm down that idiot Guppy, who was
hysterical about being carried back to the Cetagandans. Making
promises . . . I hope I wasn't lying through my
chattering teeth. Was it true he was still harboring a reservoir of
parasites? Did they fix him, too? Or . . . not? I
swore on my name that if he'd cooperate in testifying, Barrayar would
protect him, but I expected to be conscious when we
arrived. . . .”
“Yes, the
Cetagandan doctor treated him, too. She claims the latent residue of
parasites wouldn't have fired up again, but really, I don't think she
was sure. Apparently, no one has ever survived this bioweapon before. I
gathered the impression that the Star Crиche wants Guppy for research
purposes even more than Cetagandan Imperial Security does for criminal
charges, and if they have to arm wrestle for him, the Star Crиche will
win. Our men did carry out your order; he's still being held on the
Barrayaran ship. Some of the Cetagandans aren't too pleased about that,
but I told them they'd have to deal with you on the subject.”
He
hesitated, and cleared his throat. “Um . . . I also
seem to remember recording some messages. To my parents. And Mark and
Ivan. And to little Aral and Helen. I hope you
didn't . . . you didn't send them off already, did
you?”
“I set them aside.”
“Oh, good. I'm afraid I wasn't very coherent by then.”
“Perhaps not,” she admitted. “But they were very moving, I thought.”
“I put it off too long, I guess. You can erase them now.”
“Never,” she said, quite firmly.
“But I was babbling.”
“Nevertheless,
I'm going to save them.” She stroked his hair, and her smile twisted.
“Perhaps they can be recycled someday. After
all . . . next time, you might not have time.”
The
door to the chamber slid aside, and two tall, willowy women entered.
Miles recognized the senior of them at once.
The
haut Pel Navarr, Consort of Eta Ceta, was perhaps the number-two woman
in the strange secret hierarchy of the Star Crиche, after the Empress,
haut Rian Degtiar herself. In appearance, she was unchanged from when
Miles had first met her a decade ago, except perhaps for her hairstyle.
Her immensely long, honey-blond hair was gathered today into a dozen
braids, hanging from a level running around the back of her head from
one ear to the other, their decorated ends swinging around her ankles
along with her skirt hem and draperies. Miles wondered if the
unsettling, faintly Medusa-like effect was intended. Her skin was still
pale and perfect, but she could not, even for an instant, be mistaken
for young. Too much calm, too much control, too much cool
irony . . .
Outside the innermost
sanctuaries of the Celestial Garden, the high haut women normally moved
in the privacy and protection of personal force bubbles, screened from
unworthy eyes. The fact that she strode here unveiled was alone enough
to tell Miles that he now lay in a Star Crиche reserve. The dark-haired
woman beside her was old enough to have streaks of silver in the hair
looping down her back among her long robes, and skin that, while
unblemished, was distinctly softened with age. Chill, deferential,
unknown to Miles.
“Lord Vorkosigan.” The haut Pel
gave him a relatively cordial nod. “I am pleased to find you awake. Are
you quite yourself again?”
Why, who was I before? He was afraid he could guess. “I think so.”
“It
was quite a surprise to me that we should meet again this way, although
not, under the circumstances, an unwelcome one.”
Miles
cleared his throat. “It was all a surprise to me, too. Your babies in
their replicators—you have them back? Are they all right?”
“My
people completed their examinations last night. All seems to be well
with them, despite their horrific adventures. I'm sorry that the same
was not so for you.”
She gave a nod to her
companion; the woman proved to be a physician, who, with a few brusque
murmurs, completed a brief medical examination of their Barrayaran
guest. Signing off her work, Miles guessed. His leading questions about
the bioengineered parasites met polite evasion, and then Miles wondered
if she were physician—or ordnance designer. Or veterinarian, except
that most veterinarians he'd met showed signs of actually liking their
patients.
Ekaterin was more determined. “Can you
give me any idea of what long-term side-effects we should watch for
from this unfortunate exposure, for the Lord Auditor and Portmaster
Thorne?”
The woman motioned for Miles to refasten his garment, and turned to speak over his head. “Your husband
,” she made the term sound utterly alien, in her mouth, “does suffer
some muscular and circulatory micro-scarring. Muscle tone should
recover gradually over time to near his prior levels. However, added to
his earlier cryo-trauma, I would expect greater chance of circulatory
mishaps later in his life. Although as short-lived as you people are,
perhaps the few decades difference in life expectancy will not seem
significant.”
Quite the reverse, madam .
Strokes, thromboses, blood clots, aneurysms, Miles supposed was what
this translated to. Oh, joy. Just add them to the list, along with
needler guns, sonic grenades, plasma fire, and nerve disruptor beams.
And hot rivets and hard vacuum.
And seizures. So,
what interesting synergies might be expected when this circulatory
micro-scarring crossed paths with his seizure disorder? Miles decided
to save that question for his own physicians, later. They could use a
challenge. He was going to be a damned research project, again.
Military as well as medical, he realized with a chill.
The
haut woman continued to Ekaterin, “The Betan suffered notably more
internal damage. Full recovery of muscle tone may never occur, and the
herm will need to be on guard against circulatory stress of all kinds.
A low– or zero-gravity environment might be the safest for it during
its convalescence. I gathered from its partner, the quaddie female,
that this may actually be easy to provide.”
“Whatever
Bel needs will be arranged,” Miles vowed. For such a debilitating
injury in the Emperor's service, it shouldn't even take an Imperial
Auditor to get ImpSec off Bel's neck, and maybe rustle up a little
medical pension in the bargain.
The haut Pel gave
a tiny jerk of her chin. The physician favored the planetary consort
with an obeisant bow, and excused herself.
Pel
turned back to Miles. “As soon as you feel sufficiently recovered, Lord
Auditor Vorkosigan, ghem-General Benin begs the opportunity to speak
with you.”
“Ah! Dag Benin's here? Good! I want to
talk to him, too. Does he have the ba in his custody yet? Has it been
made crystal clear that Barrayar was an innocent dupe in your ba's
illicit travels?”
Pel replied, “The ba was of the
Star Crиche; the ba has been returned to the Star Crиche. It is an
internal matter, although we are, of course, grateful to ghem-General
Benin for his assistance dealing with any persons outside our purview
who may have aided the ba in its . . . mad flight.”
So,
the haut ladies had their stray back. Miles suppressed a slight twinge
of pity for the ba. Pel's quelling tone of voice did not invite further
questions from outlander barbarians. Tough. Pel was the most
venturesome of the planetary consorts, but his likelihood of ever
getting her alone, face-to-face, after this moment was slight, and her
likelihood of discussing the matter frankly in front of anyone else
even slighter.
He forged on. “I finally deduced
the ba must be a renegade, and not, as I'd first thought, an agent of
the Star Crиche. I'm most curious about the mechanics of this bizarre
kidnapping. Guppy—the Jacksonian smuggler, Russo Gupta—could only give
me an exterior view of events, and that only from his first point of
contact, when the ba off-loaded the replicators from what I assume was
the annual child-ship to Rho Ceta, yes?”
Pel
inhaled, but conceded stiffly, “Yes. The crime was long planned and
prepared, it now appears. The ba slew the Consort of Rho Ceta, her
handmaidens, and the crew of the ship by poison just after their last
jump. They were all dead by the time of the rendezvous. It set the
ship's auto-navigation to take the vessel into the sun of the system
thereafter. To the ba's credit, this was intended as a befitting pyre,
of sorts,” she conceded grudgingly.
Given his
prior exposure to the arcana of haut funeral practices, Miles could
almost follow this evident point in the prisoner's favor without his
brain cramping. Almost. But Pel spoke of the ba's intention as fact,
not conjecture; therefore, the haut ladies had already had more luck in
their interrogation of the deranged ba in one night than Miles's
security people had gained on their whole voyage here. Luck, I suspect, has nothing to do with it
. “I thought the ba should have been carrying a greater variety of
bioweapons, if it had any time to loot the child-ship before the vessel
was abandoned and destroyed.”
Pel was normally rather sunny, as haut planetary consorts went, but this elicited a freezing frown. “These matters are altogether not for discussion outside the Star Crиche.”
“Ideally,
no. But unfortunately, your . . . private items
managed to travel quite a way outside the Star Crиche indeed. As I can
personally testify. They became a source of very public concern for us,
when apprehending the ba on Graf Station. At the time I left there, no
one was certain if we'd identified and neutralized every contagion, or
not. “
Reluctantly, Pel admitted, “The ba had
planned to steal the complete array. But the haut lady in charge of the
consort's . . . supplies, although dying, managed to
destroy them before her death. As was her duty.” Pel's eyes narrowed. “She will be remembered among us.”
The
dark-haired woman's opposite number, perhaps? Did the chilly physician
guard a similar arsenal on Pel's behalf, perhaps aboard this very ship?
Complete array , eh. Miles filed that tacit admission silently
away, for later sharing with ImpSec's highest echelons, and swiftly
redirected the conversation.
“But what was the ba
actually trying to do? Was it acting alone? If it was, how did it
defeat its loyalty programming?”
“That is an internal matter, too,” she repeated darkly.
“Well, I'll tell you my
guesses,” Miles burbled on, before she could turn away and end the
exchange. “I believe this ba to be very closely related to Emperor
Fletchir Giaja, and therefore, to his late mother. I'm guessing this ba
was one of the old Dowager Empress Lisbet's close confidants during her
reign. Her bio-treason, her plan to split the haut into competing
subgroups, was defeated after her death—”
“Not treason ,” haut Pel objected faintly. “As such.”
“Unsanctioned
unilateral redesign, then. For some reason, this ba was not purged with
the others of her inner cadre after her death—or maybe it was, I don't
know. Demoted, perhaps? But anyway, I'm guessing this whole escapade
was some sort of misguided effort to complete its dead mistress's—or
mother's—vision. Am I close?”
The haut Pel eyed
him with extreme distaste. “Close enough. It is truly done now, in any
case. The emperor will be pleased with you—again. Some token of his
gratitude may well be forthcoming at the child-ship landing ceremonies
tomorrow, to which you and your lady-wife are invited. The first
outlanders—ever—to be so honored.”
Miles waved aside this little distraction. “I'd trade all the honors for some scrap of understanding.”
Pel snorted. “You haven't changed, have you? Still insatiably curious. To a fault,” she added pointedly.
Ekaterin smiled dryly.
Miles
ignored Pel's hint. “Bear with me. I don't think I've quite got it,
yet. I suspect the haut—and the ba—are not so post-human yet as to be
beyond self-deception, all the more subtle for their subtlety. I saw
the ba's face, when I destroyed that freezer case of genetic samples in
front of it. Something shattered. Some last,
desperate . . . something.” He had slain men's
bodies, and bore the mark, and knew it. He did not think he'd ever
before slain a soul, yet left the body breathing, bereft and accusing. I have to understand this .
Pel
was clearly not pleased to go on, but she understood the depth of a
debt that could not be paid off with such trivialities as medals and
ceremonies. “The ba, it seems,” she said slowly, “desired more than
Lisbet's vision. It planned a new empire—with itself as both emperor and
empress. It stole the haut children of Rho Ceta not just as a core
population for its planned new society, but
as . . . mates. Consorts. Aspiring to even more
than Fletchir Giaja's genetic place, which, while part of the goal of
haut, does not imagine itself the whole. Hubris,” she sighed. “Madness.”
“In
other words,” breathed Miles, “the ba wanted children. In the only way
it could . . . conceive.”
Ekaterin's hand, which had drifted to his shoulder, tightened.
“Lisbet . . . should
not have told it so much,” said Pel. “She made a pet of this ba.
Treated it almost as a child , instead of a servitor. Hers was
a powerful personality, but not always . . . wise.
Perhaps . . . self-indulgent in her old age, as
well.”
Yes—the ba was Fletchir Giaja's sibling,
perhaps the Cetagandan emperor's near-clone. Elder sibling. Test run,
and the test judged successful—and decades of observant service in the
Celestial Garden thereafter, with the question always hovering—so why
was not the ba, instead of its brother, given all that honor, power,
wealth, fertility?
“One last question. If you will. What was the ba's name?”
Pel's lips tightened. “It shall be nameless now. And forevermore.”
Erased. Let the punishment fit the crime.
Miles shivered.
* * *
The
luxurious lift van banked over the palace of the Imperial Governor of
Rho Ceta, the sprawling complex shimmering in the night. The vehicle
began to drop into the vast dark garden, laced with veins of lights
along its roads and paths, which lay to the east of the buildings.
Miles stared in fascination out his window as they swooped down, then
up over a small range of hills, trying to guess if the landscape was
natural, or artificially carved out of Rho Ceta's surface. Partly
carved, at any rate, for on the opposite side of the rise a grassy bowl
of an amphitheater sheltered in the slope, overlooking a silky black
lake a kilometer across. Beyond the hills on the lake's other side, Rho
Ceta's capital city made the night sky glow amber.
The
amphitheater was lit only by dim, glowing globes lavishly spread across
its width: a thousand haut lady force bubbles, set to mourning white,
damped to the barest visible luminosity. Among them, other pale figures
moved softly as ghosts. The view turned from his sight as the driver of
the van swung it about and brought it down to a gentle landing a few
meters inward from the lake shore at one edge of the amphitheater.
The
van's internal lighting brightened just a little, in red wavelengths
designed to help maintain the passengers' dark adaptation. In the aisle
across from Miles and Ekaterin, ghem-General Benin turned from his
window. It was hard to read his expression beneath the formalized
swirls of black-and-white face paint that marked him as an Imperial
ghem-officer, but Miles took it for pensive. In the red light, his
uniform glowed like fresh blood.
All in all, and
even taking into account his sudden close personal introduction to Star
Crиche bioweapons, Miles wasn't sure if he'd have cared to trade recent
nightmares with Benin. The past weeks had been exhausting for the
senior officer of the Celestial Garden's internal security. The
child-ship, carrying Star Crиche personnel who were his special charge,
vanishing en route without a trace; garbled reports leaking back from
Guppy's scrambled trail hinting not only at breathtaking theft, but
possible biocontamination from the Crиche's most secret stores; the
disappearance of that trail into the heart of an enemy empire.
No
wonder that by the time he had arrived in Rho Cetan orbit last night to
interrogate Miles in person—with exquisite courtesy, to be sure—he'd
looked as tired, even under the face paint, as Miles felt. Their
contest for the possession of Russo Gupta had been brief. Miles
certainly sympathized with Benin's strong desire, with the ba plucked
from his hands by the Star Crиche, for someone to take his
frustrations out on—but, first, Miles had given his Vor word, and
secondly, he discovered, he could apparently do no wrong on Rho Ceta
this week.
Nevertheless, Miles wondered where to
drop Guppy when this was all over. Housing him in a Barrayaran jail was
a useless expense to the Imperium. Turning him loose back on Jackson's
Whole was an invitation for him to return to his old haunts, and
employment—no benefit to the neighbors, and a temptation to Cetagandan
vengeance. He could think of one other nicely distant place to deposit
a person of such speckled background and erratic talents, but was it
fair to do that to Admiral Quinn . . . ? Bel had
laughed, evilly, at the suggestion, till it had to stop to breathe.
Despite
Rho Ceta's key place in Barrayaran strategic and tactical
considerations, Miles had never set foot on the world before. He didn't
now, either, at least not right away. Grimacing, he allowed Ekaterin
and ghem-General Benin to help him from the van into a floater. In the
ceremony to come, he planned to stand on his feet, but a very little
experimentation had taught him that he had better conserve his
endurance. At least he wasn't alone in his need for mechanical aid.
Nicol hovered, shepherding Bel Thorne. The herm sat up and managed its
own floater controls, only the oxygen tube to its nose betraying its
extreme debilitation.
Armsman Roic, his Vorkosigan
House uniform pressed and polished, took up station behind Miles and
Ekaterin, at his very stiffest and most silent. Spooked half to death,
Miles gauged. Miles couldn't blame him.
Deciding
he represented the whole of the Barrayaran Empire tonight, and not just
his own House, Miles had elected to wear his plain civilian gray.
Ekaterin seemed tall and graceful as a haut in some flowing thing of
gray and black; Miles suspected under-the-table female sartorial help
from Pel, or one of Pel's many minions. As ghem-General Benin led the
party forward, Ekaterin paced beside Miles's floater, her hand resting
lightly upon his arm. Her faint, mysterious smile was as reserved as
ever, but it seemed to Miles as though she walked with a new and firm
confidence, unafraid in the shadowed dark.
Benin
stopped at a small group of men, glimmering up out of the murk like
specters, who were gathered a few meters from the lift van. Complex
perfumes drifted from their clothing through the damp air, distinct,
yet somehow not clashing. The ghem-general meticulously introduced each
member of the party to the current haut governor of Rho Ceta, who was
of the Degtiar constellation, cousin in some kind to the present
Empress. The governor, too, was dressed, as were all the haut men
present, in the loose white tunic and trousers of full mourning, with a
multilayered white over-robe that swept to his ankles.
The
former occupant of this post, whom Miles had once met, had made it
plain that outlander barbarians were barely to be tolerated, but this
man swept a low and apparently sincere bow, his hands pressed formally
together in front of his chest. Miles blinked, startled, for the
gesture more resembled the bow of a ba to a haut than the nod of a haut
to an outlander.
“Lord Vorkosigan. Lady
Vorkosigan. Portmaster Thorne. Nicol of the Quaddies. Armsman Roic of
Barrayar. Welcome to Rho Ceta. My household is at your service.”
They all returned suitably civil murmurs of thanks. Miles considered the wording—my household , not my government , and was reminded that what he was seeing tonight was a private
ceremony. The haut governor was momentarily distracted by the lights on
the horizon of a shuttle dropping from orbit, his lips parting at he
peered up into the glowing night sky, but the craft banked
disappointingly away toward the opposite side of the city. The governor
turned back, frowning.
A few minutes of polite
small talk between the haut governor and Benin—formal wishes for the
continued health of the Cetagandan emperor and his empresses, and
somewhat more spontaneous-sounding inquiries after mutual
acquaintances—was broken off again as another shuttle's lights appeared
in the wide predawn dark. The governor swung around to stare again.
Miles glanced back over the silent crowd of haut men and haut lady
bubbles scattered like white flower petals across the bowl of the
hillside. They emitted no cries, they scarcely seemed to move, but
Miles felt rather than heard a sigh ripple across their ranks, and the
tension of their anticipation tighten.
This time,
the shuttle grew larger, its lights brightening as it boomed down
across the lake, which foamed in its path. Roic stepped back nervously,
then forward again nearer to Miles and Ekaterin, watching the bulk of
it loom almost above them. Lights on its sides picked out upon the
fuselage a screaming-bird pattern, enameled red, that glowed like
flame. The craft landed on its extended feet as softly as a cat, and
settled, the chinks and clinks of its heated sides contracting sounding
loud in the breathless, waiting stillness.
“Time
to stand up,” Miles whispered to Ekaterin, and grounded his floater.
She and Roic helped hoist him out of it to his feet, and step forward
to stand at attention. The close-cut grass, beneath his booted soles,
felt like thick fine carpeting; its scent was damp and mossy.
A
wide cargo hatch opened, and a ramp extended itself, illuminated from
beneath in a pale, diffuse glow. First down it drifted a haut lady
bubble—its force field not opaque, as the others, but transparent as
gauze. Within, its float chair could be seen to be empty.
Miles murmured to Ekaterin, “Where's Pel? Thought this was all her . . . baby.”
“It's
for the Consort of Rho Ceta who was lost with the hijacked ship,” she
whispered back. “The haut Pel will be next, as she conducts the
children in the dead consort's place.”
Miles had
met the murdered woman, briefly, a decade ago. To his regret, he could
remember little more of her now than a cloud of chocolate-brown hair
that had tumbled down about her, stunning beauty camouflaged in an
array of other haut women of equal splendor, and a ferocious commitment
to her duties. But the float chair seemed suddenly even emptier.
Another
bubble followed, and yet more, and ghem-women and ba servitors. The
second bubble drew up beside the haut governor's group, grew
transparent, and then winked out. Pel in her white robes sat regally in
her float chair.
“Ghem-General Benin, as you are
charged, please convey now the thanks of Emperor the haut Fletchir
Giaja to these outlanders who have brought our Constellations' hopes
home to us.”
She spoke in a normal tone, and Miles
didn't see the voice pickups, but a faint echo back from the grassy
bowl told him their words were being conveyed to all assembled here.
Benin
called Bel forward; with formal words of ceremony, he presented a high
Cetagandan honor to the Betan, a paper bound in ribbon, written in the
Emperor's Own Hand, with the odd name of the Warrant of the Celestial
House. Miles knew Cetagandan ghem-lords who would have traded their own
mothers to be enrolled on the year's Warrant List, except that it
wasn't nearly that easy to qualify. Bel dipped its floater for Benin to
press the beribboned roll into its hands, and though its eyes were
bright with irony, murmured thanks to the distant Fletchir Giaja in
return, and kept its sense of humor, for once, under full control. It
probably helped that the herm was still so exhausted it could barely
hold its head upright, a circumstance for which Miles had not expected
to be grateful.
Miles blinked, and suppressed a
huge grin, when Ekaterin was next called forward by ghem-General Benin
and bestowed with a like beribboned honor. Her obvious pleasure was not
without its edge of irony either, but she returned an elegantly worded
thank you.
“My Lord Vorkosigan,” Benin spoke.
Miles stepped forward a trifle apprehensively.
“My
Imperial Master, the Emperor the haut Fletchir Giaja, reminds me that
true delicacy in the giving of gifts considers the tastes of the
recipient. He therefore charges me only to convey to you his personal
thanks, in his own Breath and Voice.”
First prize, the Cetagandan Order of Merit, and what an embarrassment that medal had been, a decade ago. Second prize, two
Cetagandan Orders of Merit? Evidently not. Miles breathed a sigh of
relief, only slightly tinged with regret. “Tell your Imperial Master
from me that he is entirely welcome.”
“My Imperial
Mistress, the Empress the haut Rian Degtiar, Handmaiden of the Star
Crиche, also charged me to convey to you her own thanks, in her own
Breath and Voice.”
Miles bowed perceptibly lower. “I am at her service in this.”
Benin
stepped back; the haut Pel moved forward. “Indeed. Lord Miles Naismith
Vorkosigan of Barrayar, the Star Crиche calls you up.”
He'd
been warned about this, and talked it over with Ekaterin. As a
practical matter, there was no point in refusing the honor; the Star
Crиche had to have about a kilo of his flesh on private file already,
collected not only during his treatment here, but from his memorable
visit to Eta Ceta all those years back. So with only a slight
tightening of his stomach, he stepped forward, and permitted a ba
servitor to roll back his sleeve and present the tray with the gleaming
sampling needle to the haut Pel.
Pel's own white,
long-fingered hand drove the sampling needle into the fleshy part of
his forearm. It was so fine, its bite scarcely pained him; when she
withdrew it, barely a drop of blood formed on his skin, to be wiped
away by the servitor. She laid the needle into its own freezer case,
held it high for a moment of public display and declaration, closed it,
and set it away in a compartment in the arm of her float chair. The
faint murmur from the throng in the amphitheater did not seem to be
outrage, though there was, perhaps, a tinge of amazement. The highest
honor any Cetagandan could achieve, higher even than the bestowal of a
haut bride, was to have his or her genome formally taken up into the
Star Crиche's banks—for disassembly, close examination, and possible
selective insertion of the approved bits into the haut race's next
generation.
Miles, rolling his sleeve back down, muttered to Pel, “It's prob'ly nurture, not nature, y'know.”
Her exquisite lips resisted an upward crook to form the silent syllable, Sh .
The
spark of dark humor in her eye was veiled again as if seen through the
morning mist as she reactivated her force shield. The sky to the east,
across the lake and beyond the next range of hills, was turning pale.
Coils of fog curled across the waters of the lake, its smooth surface
growing steel gray in reflection of the predawn luminescence.
A
deeper hush fell across the gathering of haut as through the shuttle's
door and down its ramp floated array after array of replicator racks,
guided by the ghem-women and ba servitors. Constellation by
constellation, the haut were called forth by the acting consort, Pel,
to receive their replicators. The Governor of Rho Ceta left the little
group of visiting dignitaries/heroes to join with his clan, as well,
and Miles realized that his humble bow, earlier, had not been any kind
of irony after all. The white-clad crowd assembled were not the whole
of the haut race residing on Rho Ceta, just the fraction whose genetic
crosses, arranged by their clan heads, bore fruit this day, this year.
The
men and women whose children were here delivered might never have
touched or even seen each other till this dawn, but each group of men
accepted from the Star Crиche's hands the children of their getting.
They floated the racks in turn to the waiting array of white bubbles
carrying their genetic partners. As each constellation rearranged
itself around its replicator racks, the force screens turned from dull
mourning white to brilliant colors, a riotous rainbow. The rainbow
bubbles streamed away out of the amphitheater, escorted by their male
companions, as the hilly horizon across the lake silhouetted itself
against the dawn fire, and above, the stars faded in the blue.
When
the haut reached their home enclaves, scattered around the planet, the
infants would be given up again into the hands of their ghem nurses and
attendants for release from their replicators. Into the nurturing
crиches of their various constellations. Parent and child might or
might not ever meet again. Yet there seemed more to this ceremony than
just haut protocol. Are we not all called on to yield our children back to the world, in the end? The Vor did, in their ideals at least. Barrayar eats its children , his mother had once said, according to his father. Looking at Miles.
So , Miles thought wearily. Are we heroes here today, or the greatest traitors unhung?
What would these tiny, high haut hopefuls grow into, in time? Great men
and women? Terrible foes? Had he, all unknowing, saved here some future
nemesis of Barrayar—enemy and destroyer of his own children still
unborn?
And if such a dire precognition or
prophecy had been granted to him by some cruel god, could he have acted
any differently?
He sought Ekaterin's hand with
his own cold one; her fingers wrapped his with warmth. There was enough
light for her to see his face, now. “Are you all right, love?” she
murmured in concern.
“I don't know. Let's go home.”
EPILOGUE
They said good-bye to Bel and Nicol at Komarr orbit.
Miles
had ridden along to the ImpSec Galactic Affairs transfer station
offices here for Bel's final debriefing, partly to add his own
observations, partly to see that the ImpSec boys did not fatigue the
herm unduly. Ekaterin attended too, both to testify and to make sure
Miles didn't fatigue himself. Miles was hauled away before Bel was.
“Are
you sure you two don't want to come along to Vorkosigan House?” Miles
asked anxiously, for the fourth or fifth time, as they gathered for a
final farewell on an upper concourse. “You missed the wedding, after
all. We could show you a very good time. My cook alone is worth the
trip, I promise you.” Miles, Bel, and of course Nicol hovered in
floaters. Ekaterin stood with her arms crossed, smiling slightly. Roic
wandered an invisible perimeter as if loath to give over his duties to
the unobtrusive ImpSec guards. The armsman had been on continuous alert
for so long, Miles thought, he'd forgotten how to take a shift off.
Miles understood the feeling. Roic was due at least two weeks of
uninterrupted home leave when they returned to Barrayar, Miles decided.
Nicol's brows twitched up. “I'm afraid we might disturb your neighbors.”
“Stampede the horses, yeah,” said Bel.
Miles
bowed, sitting; his floater bobbed slightly. “My horse would like you
fine. He's extremely amiable, not to mention much too old and lazy to
stampede anywhere. And I personally guarantee that with a Vorkosigan
liveried armsman at your back, not the most benighted backcountry hick
would offer you insult.”
Roic, passing nearby in his orbit, added a confirming nod.
Nicol smiled. “Thanks all the same, but I think I'd rather go someplace where I don't need a bodyguard.”
Miles drummed his fingers on the edge of his floater. “We're working on it. But look, really, if you—”
“Nicol
is tired,” said Ekaterin, “probably homesick, and she has a
convalescing herm to look after. I expect she'll be glad to get back to
her own sleepsack and her own routine. Not to mention her own music.”
The two exchanged one of those League of Women looks, and Nicol nodded gratefully.
“Well,” said Miles, yielding with reluctance. “Take care of each other, then.”
“You,
too,” said Bel gruffly. “I think it's time you gave up those hands-on
ops games, hey? Now that you're going to be a daddy and all. Between
this time and the last time, Fate has got to have your range bracketed.
Bad idea to give it a third shot, I think.”
Miles
glanced involuntarily at his palms, fully healed by now. “Maybe so. God
knows Gregor probably has a list of domestic chores waiting for me as
long as a quaddie's arms all added together. The last one was
wall-to-wall committees, coming up with, if you can believe it, new
Barrayaran bio-law for the Council of Counts to approve. It took a
year. If he starts another one with, 'You're half Betan, Miles, you'd
be just the man'– I think I'll turn and run.”
Bel
laughed; Miles added, “Keep an eye on young Corbeau for me, eh? When I
toss a protйgй in to sink or swim like that, I usually prefer to be
closer to hand with a life preserver.”
“Garnet
Five messaged me, after I sent to tell her Bel was going to live,” said
Nicol. “She says they're doing all right so far. At any rate,
Quaddiespace hasn't declared all Barrayaran ships non grata forever or anything yet.”
“That
means there's no reason you two couldn't come back someday,” Bel
pointed out. “Or at any rate, stay in touch. We are both free to
communicate openly now, I might observe.”
Miles brightened. “If discreetly. Yes. That's true.”
They
exchanged some un-Barrayaran hugs all around; Miles didn't care what
his ImpSec lookouts thought. He floated, holding Ekaterin's hand, to
watch the pair progress out of sight toward the commercial ship docks.
But even before they'd rounded the corner he felt his face pulled
around, as if by a magnetic force, in the opposite direction—toward the
military arm of the station, where the Kestrel awaited their pleasure.
Time ticked in his head. “Let's go.”
“Oh, yes,” said Ekaterin.
He had to speed his floater to keep up with her lengthening stride up the concourse.
Gregor
waited to greet Lord Auditor and Lady Vorkosigan upon their return, at
a special reception at the Imperial Residence. Miles trusted whatever
reward the Emperor had in mind would be less disturbingly arcane than
that of the haut ladies. But Gregor's party was going to have to be put
off a day or two. The word from their obstetrician back at Vorkosigan
House was that the children's sojourn in their replicators was
stretched to nearly its maximum safe extension. There had been enough
oblique medical disapproval in the tone of the message, it didn't even
need Ekaterin's nervous jokes about ten-month twins and how glad she
was now for replicators to get him aimed in the right direction, and no
more damned interruptions.
* * *
He'd
undergone these homecomings what seemed a thousand times, yet this one
felt different than any before. The groundcar from the military
shuttleport, Armsman Pym driving, pulled up under the porte-cochиre of
Vorkosigan House, looming stone pile that it ever was. Ekaterin bustled
out first and gazed longingly toward the door, but paused to wait for
Miles.
When they'd left Komarr orbit five days ago
he'd traded in the despised floater for a slightly less despised cane,
and spent the journey hobbling incessantly up and down what limited
corridors the Kestrel provided. His strength was returning, he
fancied, if more slowly than he'd hoped. Maybe he would look into
getting a swordstick like Commodore Koudelka's for the interim. He
pulled himself to his feet, swung the cane in briefly jaunty defiance,
and offered Ekaterin his arm. She rested her hand lightly upon it,
covertly ready to grab if needed. The double doors swung open on the
grand old black-and-white paved entry hall.
The
mob was waiting, headed by a tall woman with roan-red hair and a
delighted smile. Countess Cordelia Vorkosigan actually hugged her
daughter-in-law first. A white-haired, stocky man advanced from the
antechamber to the left, face luminous with pleasure, and stood in line
for his chance with Ekaterin before turning to his son. Nikki clattered
down the sweeping stairway and into his mother's arms, and returned her
tight hug with only a tinge of embarrassment. The boy had grown at
least three centimeters in the past two months. When he turned to
Miles, and copied the Count's handshake with dauntingly grown-up
resolve, Miles found himself looking up into his stepson's face.
A
dozen armsmen and servants stood around grinning; Ma Kosti, the
peerless cook, pressed a splendid bunch of flowers on Ekaterin. The
Countess handed off an awkwardly worded but sincere message of
felicitation for their impending parenthood from Miles's brother Mark,
at graduate school on Beta Colony, and a rather more fluent one from
his Grandmother Naismith there. Ekaterin's older brother, Will
Vorvayne, unexpectedly present, took vids of it all.
“Congratulations,”
Viceroy Count Aral Vorkosigan was saying to Ekaterin, “on a job well
done. Would you like another? I'm sure Gregor can find you a place in
the diplomatic corps after this, if you want it.”
She
laughed. “I think I have at least three or four jobs already. Ask me
again in, oh, say about twenty years.” Her glance went to the staircase
leading to the upper floors, and the nursery.
Countess Vorkosigan, who caught the look, said, “Everything is waiting and ready as soon as you are.”
After
the briefest of washups in their second-floor suite, Miles and Ekaterin
made their way down a servitor-crowded hallway to rendezvous with the
core family again in the nursery. With the addition of the birth
team—an obstetrician, two medtechs, and a bio-mechanic—the small
chamber overlooking the back garden was as full as it could hold. It
seemed as public a birth as those poor monarchs' wives in the old
histories had ever endured, except that Ekaterin had the advantage of
being upright, dressed, and dignified. All of the cheerful excitement,
none of the blood or pain or fear. Miles decided that he approved.
The
two replicators, released from their racks, stood side by side on a
table, full of promise. A medtech was just finishing fiddling with a
cannula on one. “Shall we proceed?” inquired the obstetrician.
Miles glanced at his parents. “How did you all do this, back then?”
“Aral
lifted one latch,” said his mother, “and I lifted the other. Your
grandfather, General Piotr, lurked menacingly, but he came around to a
wider way of thinking later.” His mother and his father exchanged a
private smile, and Aral Vorkosigan shook his head wryly.
Miles looked to Ekaterin.
“It sounds good to me,” she said. Her eyes were brilliant with joy. It lifted Miles's heart to think that he had given her that happiness.
They
advanced to the table. Ekaterin went around, and the techs scrambled
out of her way; Miles hooked his cane over the edge, supported himself
with one hand, and raised the other to match Ekaterin's. A double snap
sounded from the latches. They moved down and repeated the gesture with
the second replicator.
“Good,” Ekaterin whispered.
Then
they had to stand out of the way, watching with irrational anxiety as
the obstetrician popped the first lid, swept the exchange tube matting
aside, slit the caul, and lifted the pink squirming infant out into the
light. A few heart-stopping moments clearing air passages, draining and
cutting the cord; Miles breathed again when little Aral Alexander did,
and blinked his blurring lashes. He felt less self-conscious when he
noticed his father wipe his eyes. Countess Vorkosigan gripped her
skirts at her sides, forcibly making hungry grandmotherly hands wait
their turn. The Count's hand on Nikki's shoulder tightened, and Nikki
in his front-and-center viewpoint lifted his chin and grinned. Will
Vorvayne bobbed around trying to get better vid angles, until his
little sister put on her firmest Lady Ekaterin Vorkosigan voice and
quashed his attempts at stage directing. He looked startled, but backed
off.
By some tacit assumption, Ekaterin got first
dibs. She held her new son and watched as the second replicator yielded
up her very first daughter. Miles leaned on his cane at her elbow, his
eyes devouring the astonishing sight. A baby. A real baby. His
. He'd thought his children had seemed real enough, when he'd touched
the replicators in which they grew. That was nothing like this. Little
Aral Alexander was so small. He blinked and stretched. He breathed,
actually breathed, and placidly smacked his tiny lips. He had a notable
amount of black hair. It was wonderful. It
was . . . terrifying.
“Your turn,” said Ekaterin, smiling at Miles.
“I . . . I
think I'd better sit down, first.” He half-fell into an armchair
brought hastily forward for him. Ekaterin tucked the blanket-wrapped
bundle into his panicked arms. The Countess hovered over the back of
the chair like some maternal vulture.
“He seems so small.”
“What,
four point one kilos!” chortled Miles's mother. “He's a little bruiser,
he is. You were half that size when you were taken out of the
replicator.” She continued with an unflattering description of Miles at
that moment that Ekaterin not only ate up, but encouraged .
A
lusty yowl from the replicator table made Miles start; he looked up
eagerly. Helen Natalia announced her arrival in no uncertain terms,
waving freed fists and howling. The obstetrician completed his
examination and pressed her rather hastily into her mother's reaching
arms. Miles stretched his neck. Helen Natalia's dark, wet wisps of hair
were going to be as auburn as promised, he fancied, when they dried.
With
two babies to go around, all the people lined up to hold them would
have their chances soon enough, Miles decided, accepting Helen Natalia,
still making noise, from her grinning mother. They could wait a few
more moments. He stared at the two bundles more than filling his lap in
a kind of cosmic amazement.
“We did it,” he
muttered to Ekaterin, now perching on the chair arm. “Why didn't
anybody stop us? Why aren't there more regulations about this sort of
thing? What fool in their right mind would put me in charge of a baby? Two babies?”
Her
brows drew together in quizzical sympathy. “Don't feel bad. I'm sitting
here thinking that eleven years suddenly seems longer that I realized.
I don't remember anything about babies.”
“I'm sure it'll all come back to you. Like, um, like flying a lightflyer.”
He had been the end point of human evolution. At this moment he abruptly felt more like a missing link. I thought I knew everything. Surely I knew nothing.
How had his own life become such a surprise to him, so utterly
rearranged? His brain had whirled with a thousand plans for these tiny
lives, visions of the future both hopeful and dire, funny and fearful.
For a moment, it seemed to come to a full stop. I have no idea who these two people are going to be .
Then
it was everyone else's turn, Nikki, the Countess, the Count. Miles
watched enviously his father's sure grip of the infant on his shoulder.
Helen Natalia actually stopped screaming there, reducing the noise
level to one of more generalized, desultory complaint.
Ekaterin
slipped her hand into his and gripped tightly. It felt like free
falling into the future. He squeezed back, and soared.