"Ship
duty!" chortled the ensign four ahead of Miles in line. Glee lit
his face as his eyes sped down his orders, the plastic flimsy
rattling slightly in his hands. "I'm to be junior weaponry
officer on the Imperial Cruiser Commodore
Vorhalas.
Reporting at once to Tanery Base Shuttleport for orbital transfer."
At a pointed prod he removed himself with an unmilitary skip from the
way of the next man in line, still hissing delight under his
breath.
"Ensign Plause." The aging
sergeant manning the desk managed to look bored and superior at the
same time, holding the next packet up with deliberation between thumb
and forefinger. How long had he been holding down this post at the
Imperial Military
Academy? Miles wondered. How many
hundreds—thousands—of young officers had passed under his bland
eye at this first supreme moment of their careers? Did they all start
to look alike after a few years? The same fresh green uniforms. The
same shiny blue plastic rectangles of shiny new-won rank armoring the
high collars. The same hungry eyes, the go-to-hell graduates of the
Imperial Services' most elite school with visions of military destiny
dancing in their heads. We
don't just march on the future, we charge it.
Plause
stepped aside, touched his thumbprint to the lock-pad, and unzipped
his envelope in turn.
"Well?" said
Ivan Vorpatril, just ahead of Miles inline. "Don't keep us in
suspense."
"Language school,"
said Plause, still reading.
Plause spoke all
four of Barrayar's native languages perfectly already. "As
student or instructor?" Miles inquired.
"Student."
"Ah,
ha. It'll be galactic languages, then. Intelligence will be wanting
you, after. You're bound off-planet for sure," said
Miles.
"Not necessarily," said Plause.
"They could just sit me in a concrete box somewhere, programming
translating computers till I go blind." But hope gleamed in his
eyes.
Miles charitably did not point out the
major drawback of Intelligence, the fact that you ended up working
for Chief of Imperial Security Simon Illyan, the man who remembered
everything.
But perhaps on Plause's level he would not encounter the acerb
Illyan.
"Ensign Lobachik."
Lobachik
was the second most painfully earnest man Miles had ever met; Miles
was therefore unsurprised when Lobachik zipped open his envelope and
choked, "ImpSec. The advanced course in Security and
Counter-assassination."
"Ah, palace
guard school," said Ivan with interest, kibbitzing over
Lobachik's shoulder.
"That's quite an
honor," Miles observed. "Illyan usually pulls his students
from the twenty-year men with rows of medals."
"Maybe
Emperor Gregor asked Illyan for someone nearer his own age,"
suggested Ivan, "to brighten the landscape. Those prune-faced
fossils Illyan usually surrounds him with would give me
depressive fits. Don't let on you have a sense of humor, Lubachik, I
think it's an automatic disqualification."
Lubachik
was in no danger of losing the posting if that were so, Miles
reflected.
"Will I really meet the
emperor?" Lubachik asked. He turned nervous eyes on Miles and
Ivan.
"You'll probably get to watch him eat
breakfast every day," said Ivan. "Poor sod." Did he
mean Lubachik, or Gregor? Gregor, definitely.
"You
Vorish types know him—what's he like?"
Miles
cut in before the glint in Ivan's eye could materialize into some
practical joke. "He's very straightforward. You'll get along
fine."
Lubachik moved off, looking faintly
reassured, rereading his flimsy.
"Ensign
Vorpatril," intoned the sergeant. "Ensign Vorkosigan."
Tall Ivan collected his packet and Miles his, and they moved out of
the way with their two comrades.
Ivan unzipped
his envelope. "Ha. Imperial HQ in Vorbarr Sultana for me. I am
to be, I'll have you know, aide-de-camp to Commodore Jollif,
Operations." He bowed and turned the flimsy over. "Starting
tomorrow, in fact."
"Ooh," said
the ensign who'd drawn ship duty, still bouncing slightly. "Ivan
gets to be a secretary.
Just watch out if General Lamitz asks you to sit on his lap, I hear
he—"
Ivan flipped him an amiable rude
gesture. "Envy, sheer envy. I'll get to live like a civilian.
Work seven to five, have my own apartment in town—no girls on that
ship of yours up there, I might point out." Ivan's voice was
even and cheerful, only his eyes failing to totally conceal his
disappointment. Ivan had wanted ship duty too. They all did.
Miles
did. Ship duty.
Eventually, command, like my father, his father, his, his
… A wish, a prayer, a dream . . . He hesitated for self-discipline,
for fear, for a last lingering moment of high hope. He thumbed the
lock pad and unzipped the envelope with deliberate precision. A
single plastic flimsy, a handful of travel passes. . . . His
deliberation lasted only for the brief moment it took him to absorb
the short paragraph before his eyes. He stood frozen in disbelief,
began reading again from the top.
"So
what's up, coz?" Ivan glanced down over Miles's
shoulder.
"Ivan," said Miles in a
choked voice, "have I got a touch of amnesia, or did we indeed
never have a meteorology course on our sciences
track?"
"Five-space math, yes.
Xenobotany, yes." Ivan absently scratched a remembered itch.
"Geology and terrain evaluation, yes. Well, there was aviation
weather, back in our first year."
"Yes,
but . . ."
"So what have they done to
you this time?" asked Plause, clearly prepared to offer
congratulations or sympathy as indicated.
"I'm
assigned as Chief Meteorology Officer, Lazkowski Base. Where the hell
is Lazkowski Base? I've never even heard of it!"
The
sergeant at the desk looked up with a sudden evil grin. "I have,
sir," he offered. "It's on a place called Kyril
Island, up near the arctic circle.
Winter training base for infantry. The grubs call it Camp
Permafrost."
"Infantry?"
said Miles.
Ivan's brows rose, and he frowned
down at Miles. "Infantry? You? That doesn't seem right."
"No,
it doesn't," said Miles faintly. Cold consciousness of his
physical handicaps washed over him.
Years of
arcane medical tortures had almost managed to correct the severe
deformities from which Miles had nearly died at birth. Almost. Curled
like a frog in infancy, he now stood almost straight. Chalk-stick
bones, friable as talc, now were almost strong. Wizened as an infant
homunculus, he now stood almost four-foot-nine. It had been a
trade-off toward the end, between the length of his bones and their
strength, and his doctor still opined that the last six inches of
height had been a mistake. Miles had finally broken his legs enough
times to agree with him, but by then it was too late. But not a
mutant, not … it scarcely mattered any more. If only they would let
him place his strengths in the Emperor's service, he would make them
forget his weaknesses. The deal was understood.
There
had to be a thousand jobs in the Service to which his strange
appearance and hidden fragility would make not one whit of
difference. Like aide-de-camp, or Intelligence translator. Or even a
ship's weaponry officer, monitoring his computers. It had been
understood, surely it had been understood. But infantry? Someone was
not playing fair. Or a mistake had been made. That wouldn't be a
first. He hesitated a long moment, his fist tightening on the flimsy,
then headed toward the door. "Where are you going?" asked
Ivan. "To see Major Cecil."
Ivan
exhaled through pursed lips. "Oh? Good luck." Did the desk
sergeant hide a small smile, bending his head to sort through the
next stack of packets? "Ensign Draut," he called. The line
moved up one more.
Major Cecil was leaning with
one hip on his clerk's desk, consulting about something on the vid,
as Miles entered his office and saluted.
Major
Cecil glanced up at Miles and then at his chrono. "Ah, less than
ten minutes. I win the bet." The major returned Miles's salute
as the clerk, smiling sourly, pulled a small wad of currency from his
pocket, peeled off a one-mark note, and handed it across wordlessly
to his superior. The major's face was only amused on the surface; he
nodded toward the door, and the clerk tore off the plastic flimsy his
machine had just produced and exited the room.
Major
Cecil was a man of about fifty, lean, even-tempered, watchful. Very
watchful. Though he was not the titular head of Personnel, that
administrative job belonging to a higher-ranking officer, Miles had
spotted Cecil long ago as the final-decision man. Through Cecil's
hands passed at the last every assignment for every Academy graduate.
Miles had always found him an accessible man, the teacher and scholar
in him ascendant over the officer. His wit was dry and rare, his
dedication to his duty intense. Miles had always trusted him. Till
now.
"Sir," he began. He held out his
orders in a frustrated gesture. "What is
this?"
Cecil's eyes were still bright with
his private amusement as he pocketed the mark-note. "Are you
asking me to read them to you, Vorkosigan?"
"Sir,
I question—" Miles stopped, bit his tongue, began again. "I
have a few questions about my assignment."
"Meteorology
Officer, Lazkowski Base," Major Cecil recited.
"It's
. . . not a mistake, then? I got the right packet?"
"If
that's what that says, you did."
"Are
. . . you aware the only meteorology course I had was aviation
weather?"
"I am." The major
wasn't giving away a thing.
Miles paused.
Cecil's sending his clerk out was a clear signal that this discussion
was to be frank. "Is this some kind of punishment?" What
have I ever done to you?
"Why,
Ensign," Cecil's voice was smooth, "it's a perfectly normal
assignment. Were you expecting an extraordinary one? My job is to
match personnel requests with available candidates. Every request
must be filled by someone."
"Any tech
school grad could have filled this one." With an effort, Miles
kept the snarl out of his voice, uncurled his fingers. "Better.
It doesn't require an Academy cadet."
"That's
right," agreed the major.
"Why, then?"
Miles burst out. His voice came out louder than he'd meant it
to.
Cecil sighed, straightened. "Because I
have noticed, Vorkosigan, watching you—and you know very well you
were the most closely-watched cadet ever to pass through these halls
barring Emperor Gregor himself—"
Miles
nodded shortly.
"That despite your
demonstrated brilliance in some areas, you have also demonstrated
some chronic weaknesses. And I'm not referring to your physical
problems, which everybody but me thought were going to take you out
before your first year was up—you've been surprisingly sensible
about those—"
Miles shrugged. "Pain
hurts, sir. I don't court it."
"Very
good. But your most insidious chronic problem is in the area of …
how shall I put this precisely . . . subordination. You argue too
much."
"No, I don't," Miles began
indignantly, then shut his mouth.
Cecil flashed
a grin. "Quite. Plus your rather irritating habit of treating
your superior officers as your, ah . . ." Cecil paused,
apparently groping again for just the right word.
"Equals?"
Miles hazarded.
"Cattle," Cecil
corrected judiciously. "To be driven to your will. You're a
manipulator par
excellence,
Vorkosigan. I've been studying you for three years now, and your
group dynamics are fascinating. Whether you were in charge or not,
somehow it was always your idea that ended up getting carried
out."
"Have I been . . . that
disrespectful, sir?" Miles's stomach felt cold.
"On
the contrary. Given your background, the marvel is that you conceal
that, ah, little arrogant streak so well. But Vorkosigan," Cecil
dropped at last into perfect seriousness, "the Imperial
Academy is
not the whole of the Imperial Service. You've made your comrades here
appreciate you because here, brains are held at a premium. You were
picked first for any strategic team for the same reason you were
picked last for any purely physical contest—these young hotshots
wanted to win. All the time. Whatever it took."
"I
can't be ordinary and survive, sir!"
Cecil
tilted his head. "I agree. And yet, sometime, you must also
learn how to command ordinary men. And be commanded by them!
"This
isn't a punishment, Vorkosigan, and it isn't my idea of a joke. Upon
my choices may depend not only our fledgling officers' lives, but
also those of the innocents I inflict 'em on. If I seriously
miscalculate, overmatch or mismatch a man with a job, I not only risk
him, but also those around him. Now, in six months (plus unscheduled
overruns), the Imperial Orbital Shipyard is going to finish
commissioning the Prince
Serg."
Miles's
breath caught.
"You've got it," Cecil
nodded. "The newest, fastest, deadliest thing His Imperial
Majesty has ever put into space. And with the longest range. It will
go out, and stay out, for longer periods than anything we've ever had
before. It follows that everyone on board will be in each other's
hair for longer unbroken periods than ever before. High Command is
actually paying some attention to the psych profiles on this one. For
a change.
"Listen, now," Cecil leaned
forward. So did Miles, reflexively. "If you can keep your nose
clean for just six months on an isolated downside post—bluntly, if
you prove you can handle Camp Permafrost,
I'll allow as how you can handle anything the Service might throw at
you. And I'll support your request for a transfer to the Prince.
But if you screw up, there will be nothing I or anybody else can do
for you. Sink or swim, Ensign."
Fly,
thought Miles. 7 want
to fly. "Sir
. . . just how much of a pit is this place?"
"I
wouldn't want to prejudice you, Ensign Vorkosigan," said Cecil
piously.
And
I love you too, sir.
"But . . . infantry? My physical limits . . . won't prevent my
serving if they're taken into account, but I can't pretend they're
not there. Or I might as well jump off a wall, destroy myself
immediately, and save everybody time." Dammit,
why did they let me occupy some of Barrayar's most expensive
classroom space for three years if they meant to kill me outright?
"I'd always assumed they were going to be taken into
account."
"Meteorology Officer is a
technical speciality, Ensign," the major reassured him.
"Nobody's going to try and drop a full field pack on you and
smash you flat. I doubt there's an officer in the Service who would
choose to explain your dead body to the Admiral." His voice
cooled slightly. "Your saving grace. Mutant."
Cecil
was without prejudice, merely testing. Always testing. Miles ducked
his head. "As I may be, for the mutants who come after
me."
"You've figured that out, have
you?" Cecil's eye was suddenly speculative, faintly
approving.
"Years ago, sir."
"Hm."
Cecil smiled slightly, pushed himself off the desk, came forward and
extended his hand. "Good luck, then. Lord Vorkosigan."
Miles
shook it. "Thank you, sir." He shuffled through the stack
of travel passes, ordering them.
"What's
your first stop?" asked Cecil.
Testing
again. Must be a bloody reflex. Miles answered unexpectedly. "The
Academy archives."
"Ah!"
"For
a downloading of the Service meteorology manual. And supplementary
material."
"Very good. By the way,
your predecessor in the post will be staying on a few weeks to
complete your orientation."
"I'm
extremely glad to hear that, sir," said Miles sincerely. "We're
not trying to make it impossible, Ensign." Merely
very difficult.
"I'm glad to know that too, Sir." Miles's parting salute
was almost subordinate.
Miles rode the last leg
to Kyril Island
in a big automated air-freight
shuttle with a bored backup pilot and eighty tons of supplies. He
spent most of the solitary journey frantically swotting up on
weather. Since the flight schedule went rapidly awry due to
hours-long delays at the last two loading stops, he found himself
reassuringly further along in his studies than he'd expected by the
time the air-shuttle rumbled to a halt at Lazkowski Base.
The
cargo bay doors opened to let in watery light from a sun skulking
along near the horizon. The high-summer breeze was about five degrees
above freezing. The first soldiers Miles saw were a crew of
black-coveralled men with loaders under the direction of a
tired-looking corporal, who met the shuttle. No one appeared to be
specially detailed to meet a new weather officer. Miles shrugged on
his parka and approached them.
A couple of the
black-clad men, watching him as he hopped down from the ramp, made
remarks to each other in Barrayaran Greek, a minority dialect of
Earth origin, thoroughly debased in the centuries of the Time of
Isolation. Miles, weary from his journey and cued by the
all-too-familiar expressions on their faces, made a snap decision to
ignore whatever they had to say by simply pretending not to
understand their language. Plause had told him often enough that his
accent in Greek was execrable anyway.
"Look
at that, will you? Is it a kid?"
"I
knew they were sending us baby officers, but this is a new
low."
"Hey,
that's no kid. It's a damn dwarf of some sort. The midwife sure
missed her stroke on that one. Look at it, it's a mutant!"
With
an effort, Miles kept his eyes from turning toward the commentators.
Increasingly confident of their privacy, their voices rose from
whispers to ordinary tones.
"So
what's it doing in uniform, ha?"
"Maybe
it's our new mascot."
The
old genetic fears were so subtly ingrained, so pervasive even now,
you could get beaten to death by people who didn't even know quite
why they hated you but simply got carried away in the excitement of a
group feedback loop. Miles knew very well he had always been
protected by his father's rank, but ugly things could happen to less
socially fortunate odd ones. There had been a ghastly incident in the
Old Town
section of Vorbarr Sultana just two
years ago, a destitute crippled man found castrated with a broken
wine bottle by a gang of drunks. It was considered Progress that it
was a scandal, and not simply taken for granted. A recent infanticide
in the Vorkosigan's own district had cut even closer to the bone.
Yes, rank, social or military, had its uses. Miles meant to acquire
all he could before he was done.
Miles twitched
his parka back so that his officer's collar tabs showed clearly.
"Hello, Corporal. I have orders to report in to a Lieutenant
Ahn, the base Meteorology Officer. Where can I find him?"
Miles
waited a beat for his proper salute. It was slow in coming, the
corporal was still goggling down at him. It dawned on him at last
that Miles might really be an officer.
Belatedly,
he saluted. "Excuse me, uh, what did you say, sir?"
Miles
returned the salute blandly and repeated himself in level
tones.
"Uh, Lieutenant Ahn, right. He
usually hides out—that is, he's usually in his office. In the main
administration building." The corporal swung his arm around to
point toward a two-story pre-fab sticking up beyond a rank of
half-buried warehouses at the edge of the tarmac, maybe a kilometer
off. "You can't miss it, it's the tallest building on the
base."
Also, Miles noted, well-marked by
the assortment of comm equipment sticking out of the roof. Very
good.
Now, should he turn his pack over to these
goons and pray that it would follow him to his eventual destination,
whatever it was? Or interrupt their work and commandeer a loader for
transport? He had a brief vision of himself stuck up on the prow of
the thing like a sailing ship's figurehead, being trundled toward his
meeting with destiny along with half a ton of Underwear, Thermal,
Long, 2 doz per unit crate, Style #6774932. He decided to shoulder
his dufHe and walk.
"Thank you, Corporal."
He marched off in the indicated direction, too-conscious of his limp
and the leg-braces concealed beneath his trouser legs taking up their
share of the extra weight. The distance turned out to be farther than
it looked, but he was careful not to pause or falter till he'd turned
out of sight beyond the first warehouse-unit.
The
base seemed nearly deserted. Of course. The bulk of its population
was the infantry trainees who came and went in two batches per
winter. Only the permanent crew was here now, and Miles bet most of
them took their long leaves during this brief summer breathing space.
Miles wheezed to a halt inside the Admin building without having
passed another man.
The Directory and Map
Display, according to a hand-lettered sign taped across its vid
plate, was down. Miles wandered up the first and only hallway to his
right, searching for an occupied office, any occupied office. Most
doors were closed, but not locked, lights out. An office labeled Gen.
Accounting held a man in black fatigues with red lieutenant's tabs on
the collar, totally absorbed in his holovid which was displaying long
columns of data. He was swearing under his breath.
"Meteorology
Office. Where?" Miles called in the door. "Two." The
lieutenant pointed upward without turning around, crouched more
tightly, and resumed swearing. Miles tiptoed away without disturbing
him further.
He found it at last on the second
floor, a closed door labeled in faded letters. He paused outside, set
down his duffle, and folded his parka atop it. He checked himself
over. Fourteen hours travel had rumpled his initial crispness. Still,
he'd managed to keep his green undress uniform and half-boots free of
foodstains, mud, and other unbecoming accretions. He flattened his
cap and positioned it precisely in his belt. He'd crossed half a
planet, half a lifetime, to achieve this moment. Three years training
to a fever pitch of readiness lay behind him. Yet the Academy years
had always had a faint air of pretense, We-are-only-practicing; now,
at last, he was face to face with the real thing, his first real
commanding officer. First impressions could be vital, especially in
his case. He took a breath and knocked.
A
gravelly muffled voice came through the door, words unrecognizable.
Invitation? Miles opened it and strode in.
He
had a glimpse of computer interfaces and vid displays gleaming and
glowing along one wall. He rocked back at the heat that hit his face.
The air within was blood-temperature. Except for the vid displays,
the room was dim. At a movement to his left, Miles turned and
saluted. "Ensign Miles Vorkosigan, reporting for duty as
ordered, sir," he snapped out, looked up, and saw no one.
The
movement had come from lower down. An unshaven man of about forty
dressed only in his skivvies sat on the floor, his back against the
comconsole desk. He smiled up at Miles, raised a bottle half-full of
amber liquid, mumbled, "Salu', boy. Love ya," and fell
slowly over.
Miles gazed
down on him for a long, long, thoughtful moment. The man began to
snore.
After turning down the heat, shedding his
tunic, and tossing a blanket over Lieutenant Ahn (for such he was),
Miles took a contemplative half-hour and thoroughly examined his new
domain. There was no doubt, he was going to require instruction in
the office's operations. Besides the satellite real-time images,
automated data seemed to be coming in from a dozen micro-climate
survey rigs spotted around the island. If procedural manuals had ever
existed, they weren't around now, not even on the computers. After an
honorable hesitation, bemusedly studying the snoring, twitching form
on the floor, Miles also took the opportunity to go through Ahn's
desk and comconsole files.
Discovery of a few
pertinent facts helped put the human spectacle before Miles into a
more understandable perspective. Lieutenant Ahn, it seemed, was a
twenty-year man within weeks of retirement. It had been a very, very
long time since his last promotion. It had been an even longer time
since his last transfer; he'd been Kyril Island's
only weather officer for the last fifteen years.
This
poor sod has been stuck on this iceberg since I was six years old,
Miles calculated, and shuddered inwardly. Hard to tell, at this late
date, if Ahn's drinking problem were cause or effect. Well, if he
sobered up enough within the next day to show Miles how to go on,
well and good. If he didn't, Miles could think of half a dozen ways,
ranging from the cruel to the unusual, to bring him around whether he
wanted to be conscious or not. If Ahn could just be made to disgorge
a technical orientation, he could return to his coma till they came
to roll him onto outgoing transport, for all Miles cared.
Ahn's
fate decided, Miles donned his tunic, stowed his gear behind the
desk, and went exploring. Somewhere in the chain of command there
must be a conscious, sober and sane human being who was actually
doing his job, or the place couldn't even function on this level. Or
maybe it was run by corporals, who knew? In that case, Miles
supposed, his next task must be to find and take control of the most
effective corporal available.
In the downstairs
foyer a human form approached Miles, silhouetted at first against the
light from the front doors. Jogging in precise double time, the shape
resolved into a tall, hard-bodied man in sweat pants, T-shirt, and
running shoes. He had clearly just come in off some
condition-maintaining five-kilometer run, with maybe a few hundred
push-ups thrown in for dessert. Iron-grey hair, iron-hard e
yes; he might have been a particularly dyspeptic drill sergeant. He
stopped short to stare down at Miles, startlement compressing to a
thin-lipped frown.
Miles stood with his legs
slightly apart, threw back his head, and stared up with equal force.
The man seemed totally oblivious to Miles's collar tabs. Exasperated,
Miles snapped, "Are all the keepers on vacation, or is anybody
actually running this bloody zoo?"
The
man's eyes sparked, as if their iron had struck flint; they ignited a
little warning light in Miles's brain, one mouthy moment too late.
Hi, there, sir!
cried the hysterical commenter in the back of Miles's mind, with a
skip, bow, and flourish. I'm
your newest exhibit!
Miles suppressed the voice ruthlessly. There wasn't a trace of humor
in any line of that seamed countenance looming over him.
With
a cold flare of his carved nostril, the Base Commander glared down at
Miles and growled, "I run it, Ensign."
Dense
fog was rolling in off the distant, muttering sea by the time Miles
finally found his way to his new quarters. The officers' barracks and
all around it were plunged into a grey, frost-scummed obscurity.
Miles decided it was an omen.
Oh, God, it was
going to be a long winter.
Rather
to Miles's surprise, when he arrived at Ahn's office next morning at
an hour he guessed might represent beginning-of-shift, he found the
lieutenant awake, sober, and in uniform. Not that the man looked
precisely well; pasty-faced, breathing stertoriously, he sat huddled,
staring slit-eyed at a computer-colorized weather vid. The holo
zoomed and shifted dizzyingly at signals from the remote controller
he clutched in one damp and trembling palm.
"Good
morning, sir." Miles softened his voice out of mercy, and closed
the door behind himself without slamming it.
"Ha?"
Ahn looked up, and returned his salute automatically. "What the
devil are you, ah … ensign?"
"I'm
your replacement, sir. Didn't anyone tell you I was coming?"
"Oh,
yes!" Ahn brightened right up. "Very good, come in."
Miles, already in, smiled briefly instead. "I meant to meet you
on the shuttlepad," Ahn went on. "You're early. But you
seem to have found your way all right."
"I
came in yesterday, sir."
"Oh. You
should have reported in."
"I did,
sir."
"Oh." Ahn squinted at Miles
in worry. "You did?"
"You
promised you'd give me a complete technical orientation to the office
this morning, sir," Miles added, seizing the
opportunity.
"Oh," Ahn blinked.
"Good." The worried look faded slightly. "Well, ah . .
." Ahn rubbed his face, looking around. He confined his reaction
to Miles's physical appearance to one covert glance, and, perhaps
deciding they must have gotten the social duties of introduction out
of the way yesterday, plunged at once into a description of the
equipment lining the wall, in order from left to right.
Literally
an introduction, all the computers had women's names. Except for a
tendency to talk about his machines as though they were human, Ahn
seemed coherent enough as he detailed his job, only drifting into
randomness, then hung-over silence, when he ac-cidently strayed from
the topic. Miles steered him gently back to weather with pertinent
questions, and took notes. After a bewildered brownian trip around
the room, Ahn rediscovered his office procedural disks at last, stuck
to the undersides of their respective pieces of equipment. He made
fresh coffee on a non-regulation brewer– named "Georgette"—parked
discreetly in a corner cupboard, then took Miles up to the roof of
the building to show him the data-collection center there.
Ahn
went over the assorted meters, collectors, and samplers rather
perfunctorily. His headache seemed to be growing worse with the
morning's exertions. He leaned heavily on the corrosion-proof railing
surrounding the automated station and squinted out at the distant
horizon. Miles followed him around dutifully as he appeared to
meditate deeply for a few minutes on each of the cardinal compass
points. Or maybe that introspective look just meant he was getting
ready to throw up.
It was pale and clear this
morning, the sun up—the sun had been up since two hours after
midnight, Miles reminded himself. They were just past the shortest
nights of the year for this latitude. From this rare high vantage
point, Miles gazed out with interest at Lazkowski Base and the flat
landscape beyond.
Kyril Island
was an egg-shaped lump about seventy
kilometers wide and 160 kilometers long, and over five hundred
kilometers from the next land of any description. Lumpy
and brown
described most of it, both base and island. The majority of the
nearby buildings, including Miles's officers' barracks, were dug in,
topped with native turf. Nobody had bothered with agricultural
terraforming here. The island retained its original Barrayaran
ecology, scarred by use and abuse. Long fat rolls of turf covered the
barracks for the winter infantry trainees, now empty and silent.
Muddy water-filled ruts fanned out to deserted marksmanship ranges,
obstacle courses, and pocked live-ammo practice areas.
To
the near-south, the leaden sea heaved, muting the sun's best efforts
at sparkle. To the far north a grey line marked the border of the
tundra at a chain of dead volcanic mountains.
Miles
had taken his own officers' short course in winter maneuvers in the
Black Escarpment, mountain country deep in Barrayar's second
continent; plenty of snow, to be sure, and murderous terrain, but the
air had been dry and crisp and stimulating. Even today, at high
summer, the sea dampness seemed to creep up under his loose parka and
gnaw his bones at every old break. Miles shrugged against it, without
effect.
Ahn, still draped over the railing,
glanced sideways at Miles at this movement. "So tell me, ah,
ensign, are you any relation to the
Vorkosigan? I wondered, when I saw the name on the orders the other
day."
"My father," said Miles
shortly.
"Good God." Ahn blinked and
straightened, then sagged self-consciously back onto his elbows as
before. "Good God," he repeated. He chewed his lip in
fascination, dulled eyes briefly alight with honest curiosity.
"What's he really like?"
What an
impossible question, Miles thought in exasperation. Admiral Count
Aral Vorkosigan. The colossus of Barrayaran history in this
half-century. Conqueror of Komarr, hero of the ghastly retreat from
Escobar. For sixteen years Lord Regent of Barrayar during Emperor
Gregor's troubled minority; the Emperor's trusted Prime Minister in
the four years since. Destroyer of Vordarian's Pretendership,
engineer of the peculiar victory of the third Cetagandan war,
unshaken tiger-rider of Barrayar's murderous internecine politics for
the past two decades. The
Vorkosigan.
Ihave
seen him laugh in pure delight, standing on the dock at Vorkosigan
Surleau and yelling instructions over the water, the morning I first
sailed, dumped, and righted the skimmer by myself. I have seen him
weep till his nose ran, more dead drunk than you were yesterday, Ahn,
the night we got the word Major Duvallier was executed for espionage.
I have seen him rage, so brick-red we feared for his heart, when
reports came in fully detailing the stupidities that led to the last
riots in Solstice. I have seen him wandering around Vorkosigan House
at dawn in his underwear, yawning and prodding my sleepy mother into
helping him find two matching socks. He's not
likeanything, Ahn.
He's the original.
"He
cares about Barrayar," Miles said aloud at last, as the silence
grew awkward. "He's … a hard act to follow." And,
oh yes, his only child is a deformed mutant. That, too,
"I
should think so." Ahn blew out his breath in sympathy, or maybe
it was nausea.
Miles decided he could tolerate
Ahn's sympathy. There seemed no hint in it of the damned patronizing
pity, nor, interestingly, of the more common repugnance. It's
because I'm his replacement here,
Miles decided. I
could have two heads and he'd still be overjoyed to meet me.
"That
what you're doing, following in the old man's footsteps?" said
Ahn equably. And more dubiously, looking around, "Here?"
"I'm
Vor," said Miles impatiently. "I serve. Or at any rate, I
try to. Wherever I'm put. That was the deal."
Ahn
shrugged bafflement, whether at Miles or at the vagaries of the
Service that had sent him to Kyril Island Miles could not tell.
"Well." He pushed himself up off the rail with a grunt. "No
wah-wah warnings today."
"No what
warnings?"
Ahn yawned, and tapped an array
of figures—pulled out of thin air, as far as Miles could tell—into
his report panel representing hour-by-hour predictions for today's
weather. "Wah-wah, Didn't anybody tell you about the
wah-wah?"
"No. . . ."
"They
should have, first thing. Bloody dangerous, the wah-wah." Miles
began to wonder if Ahn was trying to diddle his head. Practical jokes
could be a subtle enough form of victimization to penetrate even the
defenses of rank, Miles had found. The honest hatred of a beating
inflicted only physical pain.
Ahn leaned across
the railing again to point. "You notice all those ropes, strung
from door to door between buildings? That's for when the wah-wah
comes up. You hang onto 'em to keep from being blown away. If you
lose your grip, don't fling out your arms to try and stop yourself.
I've seen more guys break their wrists that way. Go into a ball and
roll."
"What the hell's a wah-wah?
Sir."
"Big wind. Sudden. I've seen it
go from dead calm to 160 kilometers, with a temperature drop from ten
degrees cee above freezing to twenty below, in seven minutes. It can
last from ten minutes to two days. They almost always blow up from
the northwest, here, when conditions are right. The remote station on
the coast gives us about a twenty-minute warning. We blow a siren.
That means you must never let yourself get caught without your cold
gear, or less than fifteen minutes away from a bunker. There's
bunkers all around the grubs' practice fields out there." Ahn
waved his arm in that direction. He seemed quite serious, even
earnest. "You hear that siren, you run like hell for cover. The
size you are, if you ever got picked up and blown into the sea,
they'd never find you again."
"All
right," said Miles, silently resolving to check out these
alleged facts in the base's weather records at the first opportunity.
He craned his neck for a look at Ahn's report panel. "Where did
you read off those numbers from, that you just entered on
there?"
Ahn stared at his report panel in
surprise. "Well—they're the right figures."
"I
wasn't questioning their accuracy," said Miles patiently. "I
want to know how you came up with them. So I can do it tomorrow,
while you're still here to correct me."
Ahn
waved his free hand in an abortive, frustrated gesture. "Well. .
. ."
"You're not just making them up,
are you?" said Miles in suspicion.
"No!"
said Ahn. "I hadn't thought about it, but . . . it's the way the
day smells, I guess." He inhaled deeply, by way of
demonstration.
Miles wrinkled his nose and
sniffed experimentally. Cold, sea salt, shore slime, damp and mildew.
Hot circuits in some of the blinking, twirling array of instruments
beside him. The mean temperature, barometric pressure, and humidity
of the present moment, let alone that of eighteen hours into the
future, was not to be found in the olfactory information pressing on
his
nostrils. He jerked his thumb at the meteorological array. "Does
this thing have any sort of a smell-o-meter to duplicate whatever it
is you're doing?"
Ahn looked genuinely
nonplussed, as if his internal system, whatever it was, had been
dislocated by his sudden self-consciousness of it. "Sorry,
Ensign Vorkosigan. We have the standard computerized projections, of
course, but to tell you the truth I haven't used 'em in years.
They're not accurate enough."
Miles stared
at Ahn, and came to a horrid realization. Ahn wasn't lying, joking,
or making this up. It was the fifteen years experience, gone
subliminal, that was carrying out these subtle functions. A backlog
of experience Miles could not duplicate. Nor
would I wish to,
he admitted to himself.
Later in the day, while
explaining with perfect truth that he was orienting himself to the
systems, Miles covertly checked out all of Ahn's startling assertions
in the base meteorological archives. Ahn hadn't been kidding about
the wah-wah. Worse, he hadn't been kidding about the computerized
projections. The automated system produced local predictions of 86%
accuracy, dropping to 73% at a week's long-range forecast. Ahn and
his magical nose ran an accuracy of 96%, dropping to 94% at a week's
range. When Ahn
leaves, this island is going to experience an 11 to 21% drop in
forecast accuracy. They're going to notice.
Weather
Officer, Camp Permafrost,
was clearly a more responsible position than Miles had at first
realized. The weather here could be deadly.
And
this guy is going to leave me alone on this island with six thousand
armed men, and tell me to go sniff for wah-wahs?
On
the fifth day, when Miles had just about decided that his first
impression had been too harsh, Ahn relapsed. Miles waited an hour for
Ahn and his nose to show up at the weather office to begin the day's
duties. At last he pulled the routine readings from the substandard
computerized system, entered them anyway, and went hunting.
He
ran Ahn down at last still in his bunk, in his quarters in the
officers' barracks, sodden and snoring, stinking of stale . . . fruit
brandy? Miles shuddered. Shaking, prodding, and yelling in Ahn's ear
failed to rouse him. He only burrowed deeper into his bedclothes and
noxious miasma, moaning. Miles regretfully set aside visions of
violence, and prepared to carry on by himself. He'd be on his own
soon enough anyway.
He limp-marched off to the
motor pool. Yesterday Ahn had taken him on a scheduled maintenance
patrol of the five remote-sensor weather stations nearest the base.
The outlying six had been planned for today. Routine travel around
Kyril Island
was accomplished in an all-terrain
vehicle called a scat-cat, which had turned out to be almost as much
fun to drive as an anti-grav sled. Scat-cats were ground-hugging
iridescent teardrops that tore up the tundra, but were guaranteed not
to blow away in the wah-wah winds. Base personnel, Miles had been
given to understand, had grown extremely tired of picking lost
anti-grav sleds out of the frigid sea.
The motor
pool was another half-buried bunker like most of the rest of
Lazkowski Base, only bigger. Miles routed out the corporal, what's
his name, Olney, who'd signed Ahn and himself out the previous day.
The tech who assisted him, driving the scat-cat up from the
underground storage to the entrance, also looked faintly familiar.
Tall, black fatigues, dark hair—that described eighty percent of
the men on the base—it wasn't until he spoke that his heavy accent
cued
Miles. He was one of the sotto voce
commenters Miles had overheard on the shuttlepad. Miles schooled
himself not to react.
Miles went over the
vehicle's supply check-list carefully before signing for it, as Ahn
had taught him. All scat-cats were required to carry a complete
cold-survival kit at all times. Corporal Olney watched with faint
contempt as Miles fumbled around finding everything. All
right, so I'm slow,
Miles thought irritably. New
and green. This is the only way I'm gonna get less new and green.
Step by step. He
controlled his self-consciousness with an effort. Previous painful
experience had taught him it was a most dangerous frame of mind.
Concentrate on the
task, not the bloody audience. You've always had an audience.
Probably always will.
Miles
spread out the map flimsy across the scat-cat's shell, and pointed
out his projected itinerary to the corporal. Such a briefing was also
safety SOP, according to Ahn. Olney grunted acknowledgment with a
finely-tuned look of long-suffering boredom, palpable but just short
of something Miles would be forced to notice.
The
black-clad tech, Pattas, watching over Miles's uneven shoulder,
pursed his lips and spoke. "Oh, Ensign sir.
"Again, the emphasis fell just short of irony. "You going
up to Station Nine?"
"Yes?"
"You
might want to be sure and park your scat-cat, uh, out of the wind, in
that hollow just below the station." A thick finger touched the
map flimsy on an area marked in blue. "You'll see it. That way
your scat-cat'll be sure of re-starting."
"The
power pack in these engines is rated for space," said Miles.
"How could it not re-start?"
Olney's
eye lit, then went suddenly very neutral. "Yes, but in case of a
sudden wah-wah, you wouldn't want it to blow away."
I'd
blow away before it would.
"I thought these scat-cats were heavy enough not to."
"Well,
not away,
but they have been known to blow over,"
murmured Pattas.
"Oh. Well, thank
you."
Corporal Olney coughed. Pattas waved
cheerfully as Miles drove out.
Miles's chin
jerked up in the old nervous tic. He took a deep breath and let his
hackles settle, as he turned the scat-cat away from the base and
headed cross-country. He powered up to a more satisfying speed,
lashing through the brown bracken-like growth. He had been what, a
year and a half? two years? at the Imperial Academy
proving and reproving his competence
to every bloody man he crossed every time he did anything. The third
year had perhaps spoiled him, he was out of practice. Was it going to
be like this every time he took up a new post? Probably, he reflected
bitterly, and powered up a bit more. But he'd known that would be
part of the game when he'd demanded to play.
The
weather was almost warm today, the pale sun almost bright, and Miles
almost cheerful by the time he reached Station Six, on the eastern
shore of the island. It was a pleasure to be alone for a change, just
him and his job. No audience. Time to take his time and get it right.
He worked carefully, checking power packs, emptying samplers, looking
for signs of corrosion, damage, or loose connections in the
equipment. And if he dropped a tool, there was no one about to make
comments about spastic mutants. With the fading tension, he made
fewer fumbles, and the tic vanished. He finished, stretched, and
inhaled the damp air benignly, reveling in the unaccustomed luxury of
solitude. He even took a few minutes to walk along the shoreline, and
notice the intricacies of the small sea-life washed up there.
One
of the samplers in Station Eight was damaged, a humidity-meter
shattered. By the time he'd replaced it he realized his itinerary
timetable had been overly optimistic. The sun was slanting down
toward green twilight as he left Station Eight. By the time he
reached Station Nine, in an area of mixed tundra and rocky outcrops
near the northern shore, it was almost dark.
Station
Ten, Miles reconfirmed by checking his map flimsy by pen-light, was
up in the volcanic mountains among the glaciers. Best not try to go
hunting it in the dark. He would wait out the brief four hours till
dawn. He reported his change-of-plan via comm-link to the base, 160
kilometers to the south. The man on duty did not sound terribly
interested. Good.
With no watchers, Miles
happily seized the opportunity to try out all that fascinating gear
packed in the back of the scat-cat. Far better to practice now, when
conditions were good, than in the middle of some later blizzard. The
little two-man bubble shelter, when set up, seemed almost palatial
for Miles's short and lonely splendor. In winter it was meant to be
insulated with packed snow. He positioned it downwind of the
scat-cat, parked in the recommended low spot a few hundred meters
from the weather station, which was perched on a rocky
outcrop.
Miles reflected on the relative weight
of the shelter versus the scat-cat. A vid that Ahn had shown him of a
typical wah-wah remained vivid in his mind. The portable latrine
traveling sideways in the air at a hundred kilometers an hour had
been particularly impressive. Ahn hadn't been able to tell him if
there'd been anyone in it at the time the vid was shot. Miles took
the added precaution of attaching the shelter to the scat-cat with a
short chain. Satisfied, he crawled inside.
The
equipment was first-rate. He hung a heat-tube from the roof and
touched it on, and basked in its glow, sitting cross-legged. Rations
were of the better grade. A pull tab heated a compartmentalized tray
of stew with vegetables and rice. He mixed an acceptable fruit drink
from the powder supplied. After eating and stowing the remains, he
settled on a comfortable pad, shoved a book-disk into his viewer, and
prepared to read away the short night.
He had
been rather tense these last few weeks. These last few years. The
book-disk, a Betan novel of manners which the Countess had
recommended to him, had nothing whatsoever to do with Barrayar,
military maneuvers, mutation, politics, or the weather. He didn't
even notice what time he dozed off.
He woke with
a start, blinking in the thick darkness gilded only with the faint
copper light from the heat-tube. He felt he had slept long, yet the
transparent sectors of the bubble-shelter were pitchy black. An
unreasoning panic clogged his throat. Dammit, it didn't matter if he
overslept, it wasn't like he would be late for an exam, here. He
glanced at the glowing readout on his wrist chrono.
It
ought to be broad daylight.
The flexible walls
of the shelter were pressing inward. Not one-third of the original
volume remained, and the floor was wrinkled. Miles shoved one finger
against the thin cold plastic. It yielded slowly, like soft butter,
and retained the dented impression. What the hell
. . . ?
His
head was pounding, his throat constricted; the air was stuffy and
wet. It felt just like . . . like oxygen depletion and CO2
excess in a space emergency. Here? The vertigo of his disorientation
seemed to tilt the floor.
The floor was
tilted, he realized indignantly, pulled deeply downward on one side,
pinching one of his legs. He convulsed from its grip. Fighting the
CO2
–induced panic, he lay back, trying to breathe slower and think
faster.
I'm
underground. Sunk
in some kind of quicksand. Quick-mud. Had those two bloody bastards
at the motor-pool set him up for this? He'd fallen for it, fallen
right in it.
Slow-mud, maybe. The scat-cat
hadn't settled noticeably in the time it had taken him to set up this
shelter. Or he would have twigged to the trap. Of course, it had been
dark. But if he'd been settling for hours, asleep . . .
Relax,
he told himself frantically. The tundra surface, the free air, might
be a mere ten centimeters overhead. Or ten meters … relax/He
felt about the shelter for something to use as a probe. There'd been
a long, telescoping, knife-bitted tube for sampling glacier ice.
Packed in the scat-cat. Along with the comm link. Now located, Miles
gauged by the angle of the floor, about two-and-a-half meters down
and to the west of his present location. It was the scat-cat that was
dragging him down. The bubble-shelter alone might well have floated
in the tundra-camouflaged mud-pond. If he could detach the chain,
might it rise? Not fast enough. His chest felt stuffed with cotton.
He had to break through to air soon, or asphyxiate. Womb, tomb. Would
his parents be there to watch, when he was found at last, when this
grave was opened, scat-cat and shelter winched out of the bog by
heavy hovercab … his body frozen rictus-mouthed in this hideous
parody of an amniotic sac . . . relax.
He
stood, and shoved upward against the heavy roof. His feet sank in the
pulpy floor, but he was able to jerk loose one of the bubble's
interior ribs, now bent in an overstrained curve. He almost passed
out from the effort, in the thick air. He found the top edge of the
shelter's opening, and slid his finger down the burr-catch just a few
centimeters. Just enough for the pole to pass through. He'd feared
the black mud would pour in, drowning him at once, but it only crept
in extrusive blobs, to fall with oozing plops. The comparison was
obvious and repulsive. God,
and I thought I'd been in deep shit before.
He
shoved the rib upward. It resisted, slipping in his sweating palms.
Not ten centimeters. Not twenty. A meter, a meter and a third, and he
was running short on probe. He paused, took a new grip, shoved again.
Was the resistance lessening? Had he broken through to the surface?
He heaved it back and forth, but the sucking slime sealed it
still.
Maybe, maybe a little less than his own
height between the top of the shelter and breath. Breath, death. How
long to claw through it? How fast did a hole in this stuff close? His
vision was darkening, and it wasn't because the light was going dim.
He turned the heat tube off and stuck it in the front pocket of his
jacket. The uncanny dark shook him with horror. Or perhaps it was the
CO2
. Now or never.
On an impulse, he bent and
loosened his boot-catches and belt buckle, then zipped open the burr
by feel. He began to dig like a dog, heaving big globs of mud down
into the little space left in the bubble.
He
squeezed through the opening, braced himself, took his last breath,
and pressed upward.
His chest was pulsing, his
vision a red blur, when his head broke the surface. Air! He spat
black muck and bracken bits, and blinked, trying with little success
to clear his eyes and nose. He fought one hand up, then the other,
and tried to pull himself up horizontal, flat like a frog. The cold
confounded him. He could feel the muck closing around his legs,
numbing like a witch's embrace. His toes pressed at full extension on
the shelter's roof. It sank and he rose a centimeter. The last of the
leverage he could get by pushing. Now he must pull. His hands closed
over bracken. It gave. More. More. He was making a little progress,
the cold air raking his grateful throat. The witch's grip tightened.
He wriggled his legs, futilely, one last time. All right, now.
Heave!
His legs slid out of his boots and pants,
his hips sucked free, and he rolled away. He lay spread-eagled for
maximum support on the treacherous surface, face up to the grey
swirling sky. His uniform jacket and long underwear were soaked with
slime, and he'd lost one thermal sock, as well as both boots and his
trousers.
It was sleeting.
They
found him hours later, curled around the dimming heat-tube, crammed
into an eviscerated equipment bay in the automated weather station.
His eye-sockets were hollow in his black-streaked face, his toes and
ears white. His numb purple fingers jerked two wires across each
other in a steady, hypnotic tattoo, the Service emergency code. To be
read out in bursts of static in the barometric pressure meter in
base's weather room. If and when anybody bothered to look at the
suddenly-defective reading from this station, or noticed the pattern
in the white noise.
His fingers kept twitching
in this rhythm for minutes after they pulled him free of his little
box. Ice cracked off the back of his uniform jacket as they tried to
straighten his body. For a long time they could get no words from him
at all, only a shivering hiss. Only his eyes burned.
Floating
in the heat tank in the base infirmary, Miles considered crucifixion
for the two saboteurs from the motor pool from several angles. Such
as upside-down. Dangling over the sea at low altitude from an
anti-grav sled. Better still, staked out face-up in a bog in a
blizzard. . . . But by the time his body had warmed up, and the
corpsman had pulled him out of the tank to dry, be reexamined, and
eat a supervised meal, his head had cooled.
It
hadn't been an assassination attempt. And therefore, not a matter he
was compelled to turn over to Simon Illyan, dread Chief of Imperial
Security and Miles's father's left-hand man. The vision of the
sinister officers from ImpSec coming to take those two jokers away,
far away, was lovely, but impractical, like shooting mice with a
maser cannon. Anyway, where could ImpSec possibly send them that was
worse than here?
They'd meant his scat-cat to
bog, to be sure, while he serviced the weather station, and for Miles
to have the embarrassment of calling the base for heavy equipment to
pull it out. Embarrassing, not lethal. They could not have—no one
could have—forseen Miles's inspired safety-conscious precaution
with the chain, which was in the final analysis what had almost
killed him. At most it was a matter for Service Security, bad enough,
or for normal discipline.
He dangled his toes
over the side of his bed, one of a row in the empty infirmary, and
pushed the last of his food around on his tray. The corpsman wandered
in, and glanced at the remains.
"You
feeling all right now, sir?"
"Fine,"
said Miles morosely.
"You, uh, didn't
finish your tray."
"I often don't.
They always give me too much."
"Yeah,
I guess you are pretty, um . . ." The corpsman made a note on
his report panel, leaned over to examine Miles's ears, and bent to
inspect his toes, rolling them between practiced fingers. "It
doesn't look like you're going to lose any pieces, here.
Lucky."
"Do you treat a lot of
frostbite?" Or
am I the only idiot?
Present evidence would suggest it.
"Oh,
once the grubs arrive, this place'll be crammed. Frostbite,
pneumonia, broken bones, contusions, concussions . . . gets real
lively, come winter. Wall-to-wall moro—unlucky trainees. And a few
unlucky instructors, that they take down with 'em." The corpsman
stood, and tapped a few more entries on his panel. "I'm afraid I
have to mark you as recovered now, sir."
"Afraid?"
Miles raised his brows inquiringly.
The corpsman
straightened, in the unconscious posture of a man transmitting
official bad news. That old
they-told-me-to-say-this-it's-not-my-fault look. "You are
ordered to report to the base commander's office as soon as I release
you, sir."
Miles considered an immediate
relapse. No. Better to get the messy parts over with. "Tell me,
corpsman, has anyone else ever sunk a scat-cat?"
"Oh,
sure. The grubs lose about five or six a season. Plus minor
bog-downs. The engineers get real pissed about it. The commandant
promised them next time he'd . . . ahem!" The corpsman lost his
voice.
Wonderful, thought Miles. Just great. He
could see it coming. It wasn't like he couldn't see it
coming.
Miles dashed back to his quarters for a
quick change of clothing, guessing a hospital robe might be
inappropriate for the coming interview. He immediately found he had a
minor quandry. His black fatigues seemed too relaxed, his dress
greens too formal for office Wear anywhere outside Imperial HQ at
Vorbarr Sultana. His undress greens' trousers and half-boots were
still at the bottom of the bog. He had only brought one of each
uniform style with him; his spares, supposedly in transit, had not
yet arrived.
He was hardly in a position to
borrow from a neighbor. His uniforms were privately made to his own
fit, at approximately four times the cost of Imperial issue. Part of
that cost was for the effort of making them indistinguishable on the
surface from the machine cut, while at the same time partially
masking the oddities of his body through subtleties of
hand-tailoring. He cursed under his breath, and shucked on his dress
greens, complete with mirror-polished boots to the knees. At least
the boots obviated the leg braces.
General
Stanis Metzov,
read the sign on the door, Base
Commander. Miles
had been assiduously avoiding the base commander ever since their
first unfortunate encounter. This had not been hard to do in Ahn's
company, despite the pared population of Kyril Island
this month; Ahn avoided everybody.
Miles now wished he'd tried harder to strike up conversations with
brother officers in mess. Permitting himself to stay isolated, even
to concentrate on his new tasks, had been a mistake. In five days of
even the most random conversation, someone must surely have mentioned
Kyril Island's
voracious killer mud.
A corporal manning the
comconsole in an antechamber ushered Miles through to the inner
office. He must now try to work himself back round to Metzov's good
side, assuming the general had one. Miles needed allies. General
Metzov looked across his desk unsmiling as Miles saluted and stood
waiting.
Today, the general was aggressively
dressed in black fatigues. At Metzov's altitude in the hierarchy,
this stylistic choice usually indicated a deliberate identification
with The Fighting Man. The only concession to his rank was their
pressed neatness. His decorations were stripped down to a mere modest
three, all high combat commendations. Pseudo-modest; pruned of the
surrounding foliage, they leapt to the eye. Mentally, Miles
applauded, even envied, the effect; Metzov looked his part, the
combat commander, absolutely, unconsciously natural.
A
fifty-fifty chance
with the uniform, and I had to guess wrong,
Miles fumed as Metzov's eye traveled sarcastically down, and back up,
the subdued glitter of his dress greens. All right, so Metzov's
eyebrows signaled, Miles now looked like some kind of Vorish
headquarters twit. Not that that wasn't another familiar type. Miles
decided to decline the roasting and cut Metzov's inspection short by
forcing the opening. "Yes, sir?"
Metzov
leaned back in his chair, lips twisting. "I see you found some
pants, Ensign Vorkosigan. And, ah … riding boots, too. You know,
there are no horses on this island."
None
at Imperial Headquarters, either,
Miles thought irritably. I
didn 't design the damn boots.
His father had once suggested his staff officers must need them for
riding hobbyhorses, high horses, and nightmares. Unable to think of a
useful reply to the general's sally, Miles stood in dignified
silence, chin lifted, parade rest. "Sir."
Metzov
leaned forward, clasping his hands, abandoning his heavy humor, eyes
gone hard again. "You lost a valuable, fully-equipped scat-cat
as a result of leaving it parked in an area clearly marked as a
Permafrost Inversion Zone. Don't they teach map-reading at the
Imperial Academy
any more, or is it to be all
diplomacy in the New Service—how to drink tea with the
ladies?"
Miles called up the map in his
mind. He could see it clearly. "The blue areas were labelled
P.I.Z. Those initials were not defined. Not in the key or
anywhere."
"Then I take it you also
failed to read your manual."
He'd been
buried in manuals ever since he'd arrived. Weather office
procedurals, equipment tech-specs . . . "Which one,
sir?"
"Lazkowski Base
Regulations."
Miles tried frantically to
remember if he'd ever seen such a disk. "I . . . think
Lieutenant Ahn may have given me a copy . . . night before last."
Ahn had in fact dumped an entire carton of disks out on Miles's bed
in officers' quarters. He was doing some preliminary packing, he'd
said, and was willing Miles his library. Miles had read two weather
disks before going to sleep that night. Ahn, clearly, had returned to
his own cubicle to do a little preliminary celebrating. The next
morning Miles had taken the scat-cat out. . . .
"And
you haven't read it yet?"
"No,
sir."
"Why not?"
I
was set up,
Miles's thought wailed. He could feel the highly-interested presence
of Metzov's clerk, undismissed, standing witness by the door behind
him. Making this a public, not a private, dressing-down. And if only
he'd read the damn manual, would those two bastards from the motor
pool even have been able to set him up? Will or nill, he was going to
get down-checked for this one. "No excuse, sir."
"Well,
Ensign, in Chapter Three of Lazkowski Base Regulations you will find
a complete description of all the permafrost zones, together with the
rules for avoiding them. You might look into it, when you can spare a
little leisure from . . . drinking tea."
"Yes,
sir." Miles's face was set like glass. The general had a right
to skin him with a vibra-knife, if he chose—in private. The
authority lent Miles by his uniform barely balanced the deformities
that made him a target of Barrayar's historically-grounded, intense
genetic prejudices. A public humiliation that sapped that authority
before men he must also command came very close to an act of
sabotage. Deliberate, or unconscious?
The
general was only warming up. "The Service may still provide
warehousing for excess Vor lordlings at Imperial Headquarters, but
out here in the real world, where there's fighting to be done, we
have no use for drones. Now, I fought my way up through the ranks. I
saw casualties in Vordarian's Pretendership before you were
born—"
I
WAS a casualty in Vordarian's Pretendership before I was born,
thought Miles, his irritation growing wilder. The soltoxin gas that
had almost killed his pregnant mother and made Miles what he was, had
been a purely military poison.
"—and I
fought the Komarr Revolt. You infants who've come up in the past
decade and more have no concept of combat. These long periods of
unbroken peace weaken the Service. If they go on much longer, when a
crisis comes there'll be no one left who's had any real practice in a
crunch."
Miles's eyes crossed slightly,
from internal pressure. Then
should His Imperial Majesty provide a war every five years, as a
convenience for the advancement of his officers' careers?
His mind boggled slightly over the concept of "real practice."
Had Miles maybe acquired his first clue why this superb-looking
officer had washed up on Kyril Island?
Metzov
was still expanding, self-stimulated. "In a real combat
situation, a soldier's equipment is vital. It can be the difference
between victory and defeat. A man who loses his equipment loses his
effectiveness as a soldier. A man disarmed in a technological war
might as well be a woman, useless! And you disarmed
yourself!"
Miles wondered sourly if the
general would then agree that a woman armed in a technological war
might as well be a man . . . no, probably not. Not a Barrayaran of
his generation.
Metzov's voice descended again,
dropping from military philosophy to the immediately practical. Miles
was relieved. "The usual punishment for a man bogging a scat-cat
is to dig it out himself. By hand. I understand that won't be
feasible, since the depth to which you sank yours is a new camp
record. Nevertheless, you will report at 1400 to Lieutenant Bonn of
Engineering, to assist him as he sees fit." Well, that was
certainly fair. And would probably be educational, too. Miles prayed
this interview was winding down. Dismissed,
now? But the
general fell silent, squinty-eyed and thoughtful.
"For
the damage you did to the weather station," Metzov began slowly,
then sat up more decisively—his eyes, Miles could almost swear,
lighting with a faint red glow, the corner of that seamed mouth
twitching upward, "you will supervise basic-labor detail for one
week. Four hours a day. That's in addition to your other duties.
Report to Sergeant Neuve, in Maintenance, at 0500 daily."
A
slight choked inhalation sounded from the corporal still standing
behind Miles, which Miles could not interpret. Laughter?
Horror?
But . . . unjust!
And he would lose a significant fraction of the precious time
remaining to decant technical expertise from Ahn. . . . "The
damage I did to the weather station was not a stupid accident like
the scat-cat, sir! It was necessary to my survival."
General
Metzov fixed him with a very cold eye. "Make that six hours a
day, Ensign Vorkosigan."
Miles spoke
through his teeth, words jerked out as though by pliers. "Would
you have preferred the interview you'd be having right now if I'd
permitted myself to freeze, sir?"
Silence
fell, very dead. Swelling, like a road-killed animal in the summer
sun.
"You are dismissed, Ensign,"
General Metzov hissed at last. His eyes were glittering
slits.
Miles saluted, about-faced, and marched,
stiff as any ancient ramrod. Or board. Or corpse. His blood beat in
his ears; his chin jerked upward. Past the corporal, who was standing
at attention doing a fair imitation of a waxwork. Out the door, out
the outer door. Alone at last in the Administration
Building's lower corridor.
Miles
cursed himself silently, then out loud. He really had to try to
cultivate a more normal attitude toward senior officers. It was his
bloody upbringing that lay at the root of the problem, he was sure.
Too many years of tripping over herds of generals, admirals, and
senior staff at Vorkosigan House, at lunch, dinner, all hours. Too
much time sitting quiet as a mouse, cultivating invisibility,
permitted to listen to their extremely blunt argument and debate on a
hundred topics. He saw them as they saw each other, maybe. When a
normal ensign looked at his commander, he ought to see a god-like
being, not a
> a . . . future subordinate. New ensigns were supposed to be a
subhuman species anyway.
And yet . . . What
is it about this guy Metzov?
He'd met others of the type before, of assorted political stripes.
Many of them were cheerful and effective soldiers, as long as they
stayed out of politics. As a party, the military conservatives had
been eclipsed ever since the bloody fall of the cabal of officers
responsible for the disastrous Escobar invasion, over two decades
ago. But the danger of revolution from the far right, some would-be
junta assembling to save the Emperor from his own government,
remained quite real in Miles's father's mind, he knew.
So,
was it some subtle political odor emanating from Metzov that had
raised the hairs on the back of Miles's neck? Surely not. A man of
real political subtlety would seek to use Miles, not abuse him. Or
are you just pissed because he stuck you on some humiliating garbage
detail? A man
didn't have to be politically extreme to take a certain sadistic joy
in sticking it to a representative of the Vor class. Could be Metzov
had been diddled in the past himself by some arrogant Vor lord.
Political, social, genetic . . . the possibilities were
endless.
Miles shook the static from his head,
and limped off to change to his black fatigues and locate Base
Engineering. No help for it now, he was sunk deeper than his
scat-cat. He'd simply have to avoid Metzov as much as possible for
the next six months. Anything Ahn could do so well, Miles could
surely do too.
Lieutenant Bonn prepared to probe
for the scat-cat. The engineering lieutenant was a slight man, maybe
twenty-eight or thirty years old, with a craggy face surfaced with
pocked sallow skin, reddened by the climate. Calculating brown eyes,
competent-looking hands, and a sardonic air which, Miles sensed,
might be permanent and not merely directed at himself. Bonn
and Miles squished about atop the
bog, while two engineering techs in black insulated coveralls sat
perched on their heavy hovercab, safely parked on a nearby rocky
outcrop. The sun was pale, the endless wind cold and damp.
"Try
about there, sir," Miles suggested, pointing, trying to estimate
angles and distances in a place he had only seen at dusk. "I
think you'll have to go down at least two meters."
Lieutenant
Bonn gave him a joyless look, raised his long metal probe to the
vertical, and shoved it into the bog. It jammed almost immediately.
Miles frowned puzzlement. Surely the scat-cat couldn't have floated
upward. … J
Bonn, looking unexcited, leaned his weight into the rod and twisted.
It began to grind downward. "What did you run into?" Miles
asked.
"Ice," Bonn
grunted. " 'Bout three
centimeters thick right now. We're standing on a layer of ice,
underneath this surface crud, just like a frozen lake except it's
frozen mud."
Miles stamped experimentally.
Wet, but solid. Much as it had when he had camped on it.
Bonn,
watching him, added, "The ice thickness varies with the weather.
From a few centimeters to solid-to-the-bottom. Midwinter, you could
park a freight shuttle on this bog. Come summer, it thins out. It can
thaw from seeming-solid to liquid in a few hours, when the
temperature is just right, and back again."
"I
… think I found that out."
"Lean,"
ordered Bonn laconically,
and Miles wrapped his hands around the rod and helped shove. He could
feel the scrunch as it scraped past the ice layer. And if the
temperature had dropped a little more, the night he'd sunk himself,
and the mud re-frozen, would he have been able to punch up through
the icy seal? He shuddered inwardly, and zipped his parka half-up,
over his black fatigues.
"Cold?" said
Bonn.
"Thinking."
"Good.
Make it a habit." Bonn touched
a control, and the rod's sonic probe beeped at a teeth-aching
frequency. The readout displayed a bright teardrop shape a few meters
over. "There it is." Bonn eyed
the numbers on the readout. "It's really down in there, isn't
it? I'd let you dig it out with a teaspoon, ensign, but I suppose
winter would set in before you were done." He sighed, and stared
down at Miles as though picturing the scene.
Miles
could picture it too. "Yes, sir," he said
carefully.
They pulled the probe back out. Cold
mud slicked the surface under their gloved hands. Bonn
marked the spot and waved to his
techs. "Here, boys!" They waved back, hopped down off the
hover-cab, and swung within. Bonn and
Miles scrambled well out of the way, onto the rocks toward the
weather station.
The hovercab whined into the
air and positioned itself over the bog. Its heavy-duty space-rated
tractor beam punched downward. Mud, plant matter, and ice geysered
out in all directions with a roar. In a couple of minutes, the beam
had created an oozing crater, with a glimmering pearl at the bottom.
The crater's sides began to slump inward at once, but the hovercab
operator narrowed and reversed his beam, and the scat-cat rose,
noisily sucking free from its matrix. The limp bubble shelter dangled
repellently from its chain. The hovercab set its load down delicately
in the rocky area, and landed beside it.
Bonn
and Miles trooped over to view the
sodden remains. "You weren't in that bubble-shelter, were you,
ensign?" said Bonn, prodding it with his toe.
"Yes,
sir, I was. Waiting for daylight. I … fell asleep."
"But
you got out before it sank."
"Well,
no. When I woke up, it was all the way under." Bonn's crooked
eyebrows rose.
"How far?"
Miles's
flat hand found the level of his chin. Bonn looked
startled. "How'd you get out of the suction?"
"With
difficulty. And adrenalin, I think. I slipped out of my boots and
pants. Which reminds me, may I take a minute and look for my boots,
sir?"
Bonn waved
a hand, and Miles trudged back out onto the bog, circling the ring of
muck spewed from the tractor beam, keeping a safe distance from the
now water-filling crater. He found one mud-coated boot, but not the
other. Should he save it, on the off-chance he might have one leg
amputated someday? It would probably be the wrong leg. He sighed, and
climbed back up to Bonn.
Bonn
frowned down at the ruined boot
dangling from Miles's hand. "You could have been killed,"
he said in a tone of realization. "Three times over. Smothered
in the bubble shelter, trapped in the bog, or frozen waiting for
rescue."
Bonn gave
him a penetrating stare. "Really."
He
walked away from the deflated shelter, idly, as if seeking a wider
view. Miles followed. When they were out of earshot of the techs,
Bonn stopped and
scanned the bog. Conversationally, he remarked, "I heard–
unofficially—that a certain motor-pool tech named Pattas was
bragging to one of his mates that he'd set you up for this. And you
were too stupid to even realize you'd been had. That bragging could
have been . . . not too bright, if you'd been killed."
"If
I'd been killed, it wouldn't have mattered if he'd bragged or not,"
Miles shrugged. "What a Service investigation missed, I flat
guarantee the Imperial Security investigation would have
found."
"You knew you'd been set up?"
Bonn studied the
horizon.
"Yes."
"I'm
surprised you didn't call Imperial Security in, then."
"Oh?
Think about it, sir."
Bonn's gaze returned
to Miles, as if taking inventory of his distasteful deformities. "You
don't add up for me, Vorkosigan. Why did they let you in the
Service?"
"Why d'you think?"
"Vor
privilege."
"Got it in one."
"Then
why are you here? Vor privilege gets sent to HQ."
"Vorbarr
Sultana is lovely this time of year," said Miles agreeably. And
how was his cousin Ivan enjoying it right now? "But I want ship
duty."
"And you couldn't arrange it?"
said Bonn sceptically.
"I
was told to earn it. That's why I'm here. To prove I can handle the
Service. Or … not. Calling in a wolf pack from ImpSec within a week
of my arrival to turn the base and everyone on it inside-out looking
for assassination conspiracies—where, I judge, none exist– would
not advance me toward my goal. No matter how entertaining it might
be." Messy charges, his word against their two words—even if
Miles had pushed it to a formal investigation, with fast-penta to
prove him right, the ruckus could hurt him far more in the long run
than his two tormentors. No. No revenge was worth the Prince
Serg.
"The
motor pool is in Engineering's chain of command. If Imperial Security
fell on it, they'd also fall on me." Bonn's brown eyes
glinted.
"You're welcome to fall on anyone
you please, sir. But if you have unofficial ways of receiving
information, it follows you must have unofficial ways of sending it,
too. And after all, you've only my word for what happened."
Miles hefted his useless single boot, and heaved it back into the
bog.
Thoughtfully, Bonn watched
it arc and splash down in a pool of brown melt-water. "A Vor
lord's word?"
"Means nothing, in these
degenerate days." Miles bared his teeth in a smile of sorts.
"Ask anyone."
"Huh." Bonn
shook his head, and started back
toward the hover-cab.
Next morning Miles
reported to the maintenance shed for the second half of the scat-cat
retrieval job, cleaning all the mud-caked equipment. The sun was
bright today, and had been up for hours, but Miles's body knew it was
only 0500. An hour into his task he'd begun to warm up, feel better,
and get into the rhythm of the thing.
At 0630,
the deadpan Lieutenant Bonn arrived, and delivered two helpers unto
Miles.
"Why, Corporal Olney. Tech Pattas.
We meet again." Miles smiled with acid cheer. The pair exchanged
an uneasy look. Miles kept his demeanor absolutely even.
He
then kept everyone, starting with himself, moving briskly. The
conversation seemed to automatically limit itself to brief, wary
technicalities. By the time Miles had to knock off and go report to
Lieutenant Ahn, the scat-cat and most of the gear had been restored
to better condition that Miles had received it.
He
wished his two helpers, now driven to near-twitchiness by
uncertainty, an earnest good-day. Well, if they hadn't figured it out
by now, they were hopeless. Miles wondered bitterly why he seemed to
have so much better luck establishing rapport with bright men like
Bonn. Cecil had been right, if Miles couldn't figure out how to
command the dull as well, he'd never make it as a Service officer.
Not at Camp Permafrost,
anyway.
The following morning, the third of his
official punishment seven, Miles presented himself to Sergeant Neuve.
The sergeant in turn presented Miles with a scat-cat full of
equipment, a disk of the related equipment manuals, and the schedule
for drain and culvert maintenance for Lazkowski Base. Clearly, it was
to be another learning experience. Miles wondered if General Metzov
had selected this task personally. He rather thought so.
On
the bright side, he had his two helpers back again. This particular
civil engineering task had apparently never fallen on Olney or Pattas
before either, so they had no edge of superior knowledge with which
to trip Miles. They had to stop and read the manuals first too. Miles
swotted procedures and directed operations with a good cheer that
edged toward manic as his helpers became glummer.
There
was, after all, a certain fascination to the clever drain-cleaning
devices. And excitement. Flushing pipes
with high pressure could produce some surprising effects. There were
chemical compounds that had some quite military properties, such as
the ability to dissolve anything instantly including human flesh. In
the following three days Miles learned more about the infrastructure
of Lazkowski Base than he'd ever imagined wanting to know. He'd even
calculated the point where one well-placed charge could bring the
entire system down, if he ever decided he wanted to destroy the
place.
On the sixth day, Miles and his team were
sent to clear a blocked culvert out by the grubs' practice fields. It
was easy to spot. A silver sheet of water lapped the raised roadway
on one side; on the other only a feeble trickle emerged to creep away
down the bottom of a deep ditch.
Miles took a
long telescoping pole from the back of their scat-cat; and probed
down into the water's opaque surface. Nothing seemed to be blocking
the flooded end of the culvert. Whatever it was must be jammed
farther in. Joy. He handed the pole back to Pattas and wandered over
to the other side of the road, and stared down into the ditch. The
culvert, he noted, was something over half a meter in diameter. "Give
me a light," he said to Olney. He shucked his parka and tossed
it into the scat-cat, and scrambled down into the ditch. He aimed his
light into the aperture. The culvert evidently curved slightly; he
couldn't see a damned thing. He sighed, considering the relative
width of Olney's shoulders, Pattas's, and his own.
Could
there be anything further from ship duty than this? The closest he'd
come to anything of a sort was spelunking in the Dendarii
Mountains. Earth and water, versus
fire and air. He seemed to be building up a helluva supply of yin,
the balancing yang to come had better be stupendous.
He
gripped the light tighter, dropped to hands and knees, and shinnied
into the drain.
The icy water soaked the trouser
knees of his black fatigues. The effect was numbing. Water leaked
around the top of one of his gloves. It felt like a knife blade on
his wrist.
Miles meditated briefly on Olney and
Pattas. They had developed a cool, reasonably efficient working
relationship over the last few days, based, Miles had no illusions,
on a fear of God instilled in the two men by Miles's good angel
Lieutenant Bonn. How did Bonn accomplish
that quiet authority, anyway? He had to figure that one out. Bonn
was good at his job, for starters,
but what else?
Miles scraped round the curve,
shone his light on the clot, and recoiled, swearing. He paused a
moment to regain control of his breath, examined the blockage more
closely, and backed out.
He stood up in the
bottom of the ditch, straightening his spine vertebra by creaking
vertebra. Corporal Olney stuck his head over the road's railing,
above. "What's in there, ensign?"
Miles
grinned up at him, still catching his breath. "Pair of
boots."
"That's all?" said
Olney.
"Their owner is still wearing 'em."
Miles
called the base surgeon on the scat-cat's comm link urgently
requesting his presence with forensic kit, body bag, and medical
transport Miles and his crew then blocked the upper end of the drain
with a plastic signboard forcibly borrowed from the empty practice
field beyond. Now so thoroughly wet and cold that it made no
difference, Miles crawled back into the culvert to attach a rope to
the anonymous booted ankles. When he emerged, the surgeon and his
corpsman had arrived. The surgeon, a big, balding man, peered
dubiously into the drainpipe.
"What could
you see in there, ensign? What happened?"
"I
can't see anything from this end but legs, sir," Miles
reported.
"He's got himself wedged in there
but good. Drain crud up above him I'd guess. We'll have to see what
spills out with him.
"What the hell was he
doing in there?" The surgeon scratched his freckled
scalp.
Miles spread his hands. "Seems a
peculiar way to commit suicide."
Slow and
chancy, as far as drowning yourself goes." The surgeon raised
his eyebrows in agreement. Miles and the surgeon had to lend their
weight on the rope to Olney, Pattas, and the corpsman, before the
stiff form wedged in the culvert began to scrape free.
"He's
stuck,"
observed the corpsman, grunting. The body jerked out at last with a
gush of dirty water. Pattas and Olney stared from a distance; Miles
glued himself to the surgeon's shoulder. The corpse, dressed in
sodden black fatigues, was waxy and blue. His collar tabs and the
contents of his pockets identified him as a private from Supply. His
body bore no obvious wounds, but for bruised shoulders and scraped
hands.
The surgeon spoke clipped, negative
preliminaries into his recorder. No broken bones, no nerve disrupter
blisters. Preliminary hypothesis, death from drowning or hypothermia
or both, within the last twelve hours. He flipped off his recorder
and added over his shoulder, "I'll be able to tell for sure when
we get him laid out back at the infirmary."
"Does
this sort of thing happen often around here?" Miles inquired
mildly.
The surgeon shot him a sour look. "I
slab a few idiots every year. What d'you expect, when you put five
thousand kids between the ages of eighteen and twenty together on an
island and tell 'em to go play war? I admit, this one seems to have
discovered a completely new method of slabbing himself. I guess you
never see it all."
"You think he did
it to himself, then?" True, it would be real tricky to kill a
man and then
stuff him in there.
The surgeon wandered over to
the culvert and squatted, and stared into it. "So it would seem.
Ah, would you take one more look in there, ensign, just in
case?"
"Very well, sir." Miles
hoped it was the last trip. He'd never have guessed drain cleaning
would turn out to be so … thrilling. He slithered all the way under
the road to the leaky board, checking every centimeter, but found
only the dead man's dropped hand light. So. The private had evidently
entered the pipe on purpose. With intent. What intent? Why go
culvert-crawling in the middle of the night in the middle of a heavy
rainstorm? Miles skinned back out and turned the light over to the
surgeon.
Miles helped the corpsman and surgeon
bag and load the body, then had Olney and Pattas raise the blocking
board and return it to its original location. Brown water gushed,
roaring, from the bottom end of the culvert and roiled away down the
ditch. The surgeon Paused with Miles, leaning on the road railing and
watching the water level drop in the little lake.
"Think
there might be another one at the bottom?" Miles inquired
Morbidly.
"This guy was the only one listed
as missing on the morning report," the surgeon replied, "so
probably not." He didn't look like he was willing to bet on it,
though.
The only thing that did turn up, as the
water level fell, was the private's soggy parka. He'd clearly tossed
it over the railing before entering the culvert, from which it had
fallen or blown into the water. The surgeon took it away with
him.
"You're pretty cool about that,"
Pattas noted, as Miles turned away from the back of the medical
transport and the surgeon and corps-man drove off.
Pattas
was not that much older than Miles himself. "Haven't you ever
had to handle a corpse?"
"No.
You?"
"Yes."
"Where?"
Miles
hesitated. Events of three years ago flickered through his memory.
The brief months he'd been caught in desperate combat far from home,
having accidently fallen in with a space mercenary force, was not a
secret to be mentioned or even hinted at here. Regular Imperial
troops despised mercenaries anyway, alive or dead. But the Tau Verde
campaign had surely taught him the difference between "practice"
and "real," between war and war games, and that death had
subtler vectors than direct touch. "Before," said Miles
dampingly. "Couple of times."
Pattas
shrugged, veering off. "Well," he allowed grudgingly over
his shoulder, "at least you're not afraid to get your hands
dirty. Sir."
Miles's brows crooked,
bemused. No. That's
not what I'm afraid of.
Miles
marked the drain "cleared" on his report panel, turned the
scat-cat, their equipment, and a very subdued Olney and Pattas back
in to Sergeant Neuve in Maintenance, and headed for the officers'
barracks. He'd never wanted a hot shower more in his entire
life.
He was squelching down the corridor toward
his quarters when; another officer stuck his head out a door. "Ah,
Ensign Vorkosigan?" I
"Yes?"
"You
got a vid call a while ago. I encoded the return for you."
"Call?"
Miles stopped. "Where from?"
"Vorbarr
Sultana."
Miles felt a chill in his belly.
Some emergency at home? "Thanks."
He
reversed direction, and beelined for the end of the corridor and the
vidconsole booth that the officers on this level shared.
He
slid damply into the seat and punched up the message, number was not
one he recognized. He entered it, and his chancode, and waited. It
chimed several times, then the vidplate hissed to life. His cousin
Ivan's handsome face materialized over it, and grinned at
him.
"Ah, Miles. There you are."
"Ivan!
Where the devil are you? What is this?"
"Oh,
I'm at home. And that doesn't mean my mother's. I thought you might
like to see my new flat."
Miles had the
vague, disoriented sensation that he'd somehow tapped a line into
some parallel universe, or alternate astral plane. Vorbarr Sultana,
yes. He'd lived in the capital himself, in a previous incarnation.
Eons ago.
Ivan lifted his vid pick-up, and aimed
it around, dizzyingly. "It's fully furnished. I took over the
lease from an Ops captain who was being transferred to Komarr. A real
bargain. I just got moved in yesterday. Can you see the
balcony?"
Miles could see the balcony,
drenched in late afternoon sunlight the color of warm honey. The
Vorbarr Sultana skyline rose like a fairytale city, swimming in the
summer haze beyond. Scarlet flowers swarmed over the railing, so red
in the level light they almost hurt his eyes. Miles felt like
drooling into his shirtpocket, or bursting into tears. "Nice
flowers," he choked.
"Yeah,
m'girlfriend brought 'em."
"Girlfriend?"
Ah yes, human beings had come in two sexes, once upon a time. One
smelled much better than the other. Much. "Which
one?"
"Tatya."
"Have
I met her?" Miles struggled to remember.
"Naw,
she's new."
Ivan stopped waving the vid
pick-up around, and reappeared over the vid-plate. Miles's
exacerbated senses settled slightly. "So how's the weather up
there?" Ivan peered at him more closely. "Are you wet? What
have you been doing?"
"Forensic . . .
plumbing," Miles offered after a pause.
"What?"
Ivan's brow wrinkled.
"Never mind."
Miles sneezed. "Look, I'm glad to see a familiar face and all
that," he was, actually—a painful strange gladness, "but
I'm in the middle of my duty day, here."
"I
got off-shift a couple of hours ago," Ivan remarked. "I'm
taking Tatya out for dinner in a bit. You just caught me. So just
tell me quick, how's life in the infantry?"
"Oh,
great. Lazkowski Base is the real thing, y'know." Miles did not
define what real thing. "Not a … warehouse for excess Vor
lordlings like Imperial Headquarters."
"I
do my job!" said Ivan, sounding slightly stung. "Actually,
you'd like my job. We process information. It's amazing, all the
stuff Ops accesses in a day's time. It's like being on top of the
world. It would be just your speed."
"Funny.
I've thought that Lazkowski Base would be just yours, Ivan. Suppose
they could have got our orders reversed?"
Ivan
tapped the side of his nose and sniggered. "I wouldn't tell."
His humor sobered in a glint of real concern. "You, ah, take
care of yourself up there, eh? You really don't look so
good."
"I've had an unusual morning.
If you'd sod off, I could go get a shower."
"Oh,
right. Well, take care."
"Enjoy your
dinner."
"Right-oh. 'Bye."
Voices
from another universe. At that, Vorbarr Sultana was only a couple of
hours away by sub-orbital flight. In theory. Miles was obscurely
comforted, to be reminded that the whole planet hadn't shrunk to the
lead-grey horizons of Kyril Island,
even if his part of it seemed to have.
Miles
found it difficult to concentrate on the weather, the rest of that
day. Fortunately his superior didn't much notice. Since the scat-cat
sinking Ahn had tended to maintain a guilty, nervous silence around
Miles except when directly prodded for specific information. When his
duty-day ended Miles headed straight for the infirmary.
The
surgeon was still working, or at least sitting, at his desk console
when Miles poked his head around the doorframe. "Good evening,
sir."
The surgeon glanced up. "Yes,
ensign? What is it?"
Miles took this as
sufficient invitation despite the unencouraging tone of voice, and
slipped within. "I was wondering what you'd found out about that
fellow we pulled from the culvert this morning."
The
surgeon shrugged. "Not that much to find out. His ID checked. He
died of drowning. All the physical and metabolic evidence– stress,
hypothermia, the hematomas—are consistent with his being stuck in
there for a bit less than half an hour before death. I've ruled it
death by misadventure."
"Yes, but
why?"
"Why?" The surgeon's
eyebrows rose. "He slabbed himself, you'll have to ask him,
eh?"
"Don't you want to find
out?"
"To what purpose?"
"Well
… to know, I guess. To be sure you're right."
The
surgeon gave him a dry stare.
"I'm not
questioning your medical findings, sir," Miles added hastily.
"But it was just so damn weird. Aren't you curious?"
"Not
any more," said the surgeon. "I'm satisfied it wasn't
suicide or foul play, so whatever the details, it comes down to death
from stupidity in the end, doesn't it?"
Miles
wondered if that would have been the surgeon's final epitaph on him,
if he'd sunk himself with the scat-cat. "I suppose so,
sir."
Standing outside the infirmary
afterward in the damp wind, Miles hesitated. The corpse, after all,
was not Miles's personal property. Not a case of finders-keepers.
He'd turned the situation over to the proper authority. It was out of
his hands now. And yet . . .
There were still
several hours of daylight left. Miles was having trouble sleeping
anyway, in these almost-endless days. He returned to his quarters,
pulled on sweat pants and shirt and running shoes, and went
jogging.
The road was lonely, out by the empty
practice fields. The sun crawled crabwise toward the horizon. Miles
broke from a jog back to a walk, then to a slower walk. His
leg-braces chafed, beneath his pants. One of these days very soon he
would take the time to get the brittle long bones in his legs
replaced with synthetics. At that, elective surgery might be a
quasi-legitimate way to lever himself off Kyril Island,
if things got too desperate before his six months were up. It seemed
like cheating, though.
He looked around, trying
to imagine his present surroundings in the dark and heavy rain. If he
had been the private, slogging along this road about midnight, what
would he have seen? What could possibly have attracted the man's
attention to the ditch? Why the hell had he come out here in the
middle of the night in the first place? This road wasn't on the way
to anything but an obstacle course and a firing range.
There
was the ditch . . . no, his ditch was the next one, a little farther
on. Four culverts pierced the raised roadway along this
half-kilometer straight stretch. Miles found the correct ditch and
leaned on the railing, staring down at the now-sluggish trickle of
drain water. There was nothing attractive about it now, that was
certain. Why, why, why . . . ?
Miles sloped
along up the high side of the road, examining the road surface, the
railing, the sodden brown bracken beyond. He came to the curve and
turned back, studying the opposite side. He arrived back at the first
ditch, on the baseward end of the straight stretch, without
discovering any view of charm or interest.
Miles
perched on the railing and meditated. All right, time to try a little
logic. What overwhelming emotion had led the private to wedge himself
in the drain, despite the obvious danger? Rage? What had he been
pursuing? Fear? What could have been pursuing him? Error? Miles knew
all about error. What if the man had picked the wrong culvert . . .
?
Impulsively, Miles slithered down into the
first ditch. Either the man had been methodically working his way
through all the culverts —if so, had he been working from the base
out, or from the practice fields back?—or else he had missed his
intended target in the dark and rain and got into the wrong one.
Miles would give them all a crawl-through if he had to, but he
preferred to be right the first time. Even if there wasn't anybody
watching. This culvert was slightly wider in diameter than the
second, lethal one. Miles pulled his hand light from his belt, ducked
within, and began examining it centimeter by centimeter.
"Ah,"
he breathed in satisfaction, midway beneath the road. There was his
prize, stuck to the upper side of the culvert's arc with sagging
tape. A package, wrapped in waterproof plastic. How interesting.
He slithered out and sat in the mouth of the culvert, careless of the
damp but carefully out of view from the road above.
He
placed the packet on his lap and studied it with pleasurable
anticipation, as if it had been a birthday present. Could it be
drugs, contraband, classified documents, criminal cash? Personally,
Miles hoped for classified documents, though it was hard to imagine
anyone classifying anything on Kyril Island
except maybe the efficiency reports.
Drugs would be all right, but a spy ring would be just wonderful.
He'd be a Security hero—his mind raced ahead, already plotting the
next move in his covert investigation. Following the dead man's trail
through subtle clues to some ringleader, who knew how high up? The
dramatic arrests, maybe a commendation from Simon, Illyan himself. .
. . The package was lumpy, but crackled slightly—plastic flimsies?
Heart hammering, he eased it open—and slumped in stunned I
disappointment. A pained breath, half-laugh, half-moan, puffed from
his lips. Pastries.
A couple of dozen lisettes, a kind of miniature popovers glazed and
stuffed with candied fruit, made, traditionally, for the midsummer
day celebration. Month and a half old stale pastries. What a cause to
die for. . . .
Miles's imagination, fueled by
knowledge of barracks life, sketched in the rest readily enough. The
private had received this package from some sweetheart/mother/sister,
and sought to protect it from his ravenous mates, who would have
wolfed it all down in seconds. Perhaps the man, starved for home, had
been rationing them out to himself morsel by morsel in a lingering
masochistic ritual, pleasure and pain mixed with each bite. Or maybe
he'd just been saving them for some special occasion.
Then
came the two days of unusual heavy rain, and the man had begun to
fear for his secret treasure's, ah, liquidity margin. He'd come out
to rescue his cache, missed the first ditch in the dark, gone at the
second in desperate determination as the waters rose, realized his
mistake too late. . . .
Sad. A little sickening.
But not useful.
Miles sighed, and bundled the lisettes back up, and trotted off with
the package under his arm, back to the base to turn it over to the
surgeon.
The surgeon's only comment, when Miles
caught up with him and explained his findings, was "Yep. Death
from stupidity, all right." Absently he bit into a lisette and
sniffed.
Miles's time on maintenance detail
ended the next day without his finding anything in the sewers of
greater interest than the drowned man. It was probably just as well.
The following day Ahn's office corporal arrived back from his long
leave. Miles discovered that the corporal, who'd been working the
weather office for some two years, was a ready reservoir of the
greater part of the information Miles had spent the last two weeks
busting his brains to learn. He didn't have Ahn's nose,
though.
Ahn actually left Camp
Permafrost sober,
walking up the transport's ramp under his own power. Miles went to
the shuttle pad to see him off, not certain if he was glad or sorry
to see the weatherman go. Ahn looked happy, though, his lugubrious
face almost illuminated.
"So where are you
headed, once you turn in your uniforms?" Miles asked
him.
"The equator."
"Ah?
Where on the equator?"
"Anywhere
on the equator," Ahn replied with fervor.
Miles
trusted he'd at least pick a spot with a suitable land mass under
it.
Ahn hesitated on the ramp, looking down at
Miles. "Watch out for Metzov," he advised at last.
This
warning seemed remarkably late, not to mention maddeningly vague.
Miles gave Ahn an exasperated look, up from under his raised
eyebrows. "I doubt I'll be much featured on his social
calendar."
Ahn shifted uncomfortably.
"That's not what I meant."
"What
do you mean?"
"Well … I don't know.
I once saw . . ."
"What?"
Ahn
shook his head. "Nothing. It was a long time ago. A lot of crazy
things were happening, at the height of the Komarr revolt. But it's
better that you should stay out of his way."
"I've
had to deal with old martinets before."
"Oh,
he's not exactly a martinet. But he's got a streak of … he can be a
funny kind of dangerous. Don't ever really threaten him,
huh?"
"Me, threaten Metzov?"
Miles's face screwed up in bafflement. Maybe Ahn wasn't as sober as
he smelled after all. "Come on, he can't be that bad, or they'd
never put him in charge of trainees."
"He
doesn't command the grubs. They have their own hierarchy comes in
with 'em—the instructors report to their own commander. Metzov's
just in charge of the base's permanent physical plant. You're a pushy
little sod, Vorkosigan. Just don't . . . ever push him to the edge,
or you'll be sorry. And that's all I'm going to say." Ahn shut
his mouth determinedly, and headed up the ramp.
I'm
already sorry,
Miles thought of calling after him. Well, his punishment week was
over now. Perhaps Metzov had meant the labor detail to humiliate
Miles, but actually it had been quite interesting. Sinking his
scat-cat, now, that had been humiliating. That
he had done to himself. Miles waved one last time to Ahn as he
disappeared into the transport shuttle, shrugged, and headed back
across the tarmac toward the now-familiar admin building.
It
took a full couple of minutes, after Miles's corporal had left the
weather office for lunch, for Miles to yield to the temptation to
scratch the itch Ahn had planted in his mind, and punch up Metzov's
public record on the comconsole. The mere listing of the base
commander's dates, assignments, and promotions was not terribly
informative, though a little knowledge of history filled in between
the lines.
Metzov had entered the Service some
thirty-five years ago. His most rapid promotions had occurred, not
surprisingly, during the conquest of the planet Komarr about
twenty-five years ago. The wormhole-rich Komarr system was Barrayar's
sole gate to the greater galactic wormhole route nexus. Komarr had
proved its immense strategic importance to Barrayar earlier in the
century, when its ruling oligarchy had accepted a bribe to let a
Cetagandan invasion fleet pass through its wormholes and descend on
Barrayar. Throwing the Cetagandans back out again had consumed a
Barrayaran generation. Barrayar had turned its bloody lesson around
in Miles's father's day. As an unavoidable side effect of securing
Komarr's gates, Barrayar had been transformed from backwater
cul-de-sac to a minor but significant galactic power, and was still
wrestling with the consequences.
Metzov had
somehow managed to end up on the correct side during Vordarian's
Pretendership, a purely Barrayaran attempt to wrest power from
then-five-year-old Emperor Gregor and his Regent, two decades
past—picking the wrong side in that civil affray would have been
Miles's first guess why such an apparently competent officer had
ended up marking out his later years on ice on Kyril Island. But the
dead halt to Metzov's career seemed to come during the Komarr Revolt,
some sixteen years ago now. No hint in this file as to why, but for a
cross-reference to another file. An Imperial Security code, Miles
recognized. Dead end there.
Or maybe not. Lips
compressed thoughtfully, Miles punched through another code on his
comconsole.
"Operations, Commodore Jollif's
office," Ivan began formally as his face materialized over the
comconsole vid plate, then, "Oh, hello, Miles. What's
up?"
"I'm doing a little research.
Thought you might help me out."
"I
should have known you wouldn't call me at HQ just to be sociable. So
what d'you want?"
"Ah … do you have
the office to yourself, just at present?"
"Yeah,
the old man's stuck in committee. Nice little flap—a
Barrayaran-registered freighter got itself impounded in the Hegen Hub
—at Vervain Station—for suspicion of espionage."
"Can
we get at it? Threaten rescue?"
"Not
past Pol. No Barrayaran military vessels may jump through their
wormholes, period."
"I thought we were
sort of friends with Pol."
"Sort of.
But the Vervani have been threatening to break off diplomatic
relations with Pol, so the Polians are being extra-cautious. Funny
thing about it, the freighter in question isn't even one of our real
agents. Seems to be a completely manufactured
accusation."
Wormhole route politics.
Jumpship tactics. Just the sort of challenge his Imperial
Academy courses
had trained Miles to meet. Furthermore, it was probably warm on those
spaceships and space stations. Miles sighed envy.
Ivan's
eyes narrowed in belated suspicion. "Why do you ask if I'm
alone?"
"I want you to pull a file for
me. Ancient history, not current events," Miles reassured him,
and reeled off the code-string.
"Ah."
Ivan's hand started to tap it out, then stopped. "Are you crazy?
That's an Imperial Security file. No can do!"
"Of
course you can, you're right there, aren't you?" Ivan shook his
head smugly. "Not any more. The whole ImpSec file system's been
made super-secure. You can't transfer data out of it except through a
coded filter-cable, which you must physically attach. Which I would
have to sign for. Which I would have to explain why I wanted it and
produce authorization. You got an authorization for this? Ha. I
thought not."
Miles frowned in frustration.
"Surely you can call it up on the internal system."
"On
the internal system, yes. What I can't do is connect the internal
system to any external system for a data dump. So you're out of
luck."
"You got an internal system
comconsole in that office?"
"Sure."
"So,"
said Miles impatiently, "call up the file, turn your desk
around, and let the two vids talk to each other. You can do that,
can't you?"
Ivan scratched his head. "Would
that work?"
"Try it!" Miles
drummed his fingers while Ivan dragged his desk around and fiddled
with focus. The signal was degraded but readable. "There, I
thought so. Scroll it up for me, would you?"
Fascinating,
utterly fascinating. The file was a collection of secret reports from
an ImpSec investigation into the mysterious death of a prisoner in
Metzov's charge, a Komarran rebel who had killed his guard and
himself been killed while attempting to escape. When ImpSec had
demanded the Komarran's body for an autopsy, Metzov had turned over
cremated ashes and an apology; if only he had been told a few hours
earlier the body was wanted, etc. The investigating officer hinted at
charges of illegal torture—perhaps in revenge for the death of the
guard?—but was unable to amass enough evidence to obtain
authorization to fast-penta the Barrayaran witnesses, including a
certain Tech-ensign Ahn. The investigating officer had lodged a
formal protest of his superior officer's decision to close the case,
and there it ended. Apparently. If there was any more to the story it
existed only in Simon Illyan's remarkable head, a secret file Miles
was not about to attempt to access. And yet Metzov's career had
stopped, literally, cold.
"Miles,"
Ivan interrupted for the fourth time, "I really don't think we
should be doing this. This is slit-your-throat-before-reading stuff,
here."
"If we shouldn't do it, we
shouldn't be able
to do it. You'd still have to have the cable for flash-downloading.
No real spy would be dumb enough to sit there inside Imperial HQ by
the hour and scroll stuff through by hand, waiting to be caught and
shot."
"That does it." Ivan
killed the Security file with a swat of his hand. The vid image
wavered wildly as Ivan dragged his desk back around, followed by
scrubbing noises as he frantically rubbed out the tracks in his
carpet with his boot. "I didn't do this, you hear?"
"I
didn't mean you. We're
not spies." Miles subsided glumly. "Still . . . I suppose
somebody ought to tell Illyan about the little hole they overlooked
in his Security arrangements."
"Not
me!"
"Why not you? Put it in as a
brilliant theoretical suggestion. Maybe you'll earn a commendation.
Don't tell 'em we actually did it, of course. Or maybe we were just
testing your theory, eh?"
"You,"
said Ivan severely, "are career-poison. Never darken my
vid-plate again. Except at home, of course."
Miles
grinned, and permitted his cousin to escape. He sat awhile in the
office, watching the colorful weather holos flicker and change, and
thinking about his base commander, and the kinds of accidents that
could happen to defiant prisoners.
Well, it had
all been very long ago. Metzov himself would probably be retiring in
another five years, with his status as a double-twenty-years-man and
a pension, to merge into the population of unpleasant old men. Not so
much a problem to be solved as to be outlived, at least by Miles. His
ultimate purpose at Lazkowski Base, Miles reminded himself, was to
escape Lazkowski Base, silently as smoke. Metzov would be left behind
in time.
In the next weeks Miles settled into a
tolerable routine. For one thing, the grubs arrived. All five
thousand of them. Miles's status rose on their shoulders, to that of
almost-human. Lazkowski Base suffered its first real snow of the
season, as the days shortened, plus a mild Wah-wah lasting half a
day, both of which Miles managed to predict accurately in
advance.
Even more happily, Miles was completely
displaced as the most famous idiot on the island (an unwelcome
notoriety earned by the scat-cat sinking) by a group of grubs who
managed one night to set their barracks on fire while lighting
fart-flares. Miles's strategic suggestion at the officers'
fire-safety meeting next day that they tackle the problem with a
logistical assault on the enemy's fuel supply, i.e., eliminate
red-bean stew from the menu, was shot down with one icy glower from
General Metzov. Though in the hallway later, an earnest captain from
Ordnance stopped Miles to thank him for trying. So much for the
glamour of the Imperial Service. Miles took to spending long hours
alone in the weather office, studying chaos theory, his readouts, and
the walls. Three months down, three to go. It was getting darker.
Miles
was out of bed and half dressed before it penetrated his
sleep-stunned brain that the galvanizing klaxon was not the wah-wah
warning. He paused with a boot in his hand. Not fire or enemy attack,
either. Not his department, then, whatever it was. The rhythmic
blatting stopped. They were right, silence was golden.
He
checked the glowing digital clock. It claimed midevening. He'd only
been asleep about two hours, having fallen into bed exhausted after a
long trip up-island in a snow storm to repair wind damage to Weather
Station Eleven. The comm link by his bed was not blinking its red
call light to inform him of any surprise duties he must carry out. He
could go back to bed.
Silence was
baffling.
He
pulled on the second boot and stuck his head out his door. A couple
of other officers had done the same, and were speculating to each
other on the cause of the alarm. Lieutenant Bonn emerged from his
quarters and strode down the hall, jerking on his parka. His face
looked strained, half-worry, half-annoyance.
Miles
grabbed his own parka and galloped after him. "You need a hand,
Lieutenant?"
Bonn glanced
down at him, and pursed his lips. "I might," he
flowed.
Miles fell in beside him, secretly
pleased by Bonn's implicit judgment that he might in fact be useful.
"So what's up?"
"Some sort of
accident in a toxic stores bunker. If it's the one I think, we could
have a real problem."
They exited the
double-doored heat-retaining vestibule from the officers' quarters
into a night gone crystal cold. Fine snow squeaked under Miles's
boots and swept along the ground in a faint east wind. The brightest
stars overhead held their own against the base's lights. The two men
slid into Bonn's scat-cat, their breath smoking until the
canopy-defrost cut in. Bonn headed
west out of the base at high acceleration.
A few
kilometers past the last practice fields, a row of turf-topped
barrows hunched in the snow. A cluster of vehicles was parked at the
end of one bunker—a couple of scat-cats, including the one
belonging to the base fire marshall, and medical transport.
Hand-lights moved among them. Bonn slewed
in and pulled up, and popped his door. Miles followed him, crunching
rapidly across the packed ice.
The surgeon was
directing a pair of corpsmen, who were loading a foil-blanketed shape
and a second coverall-clad soldier who shivered and coughed onto the
med transport. "All of you, put everything you're wearing into
the destruct bin when you hit the door," he called after them.
"Blankets, bedding, splints, everything. Full decontamination
showers for you all before you even start to worry about that broken
leg of his. The pain-killer will hold him through it, and if it
doesn't, ignore him and keep scrubbing. I'll be right behind you."
The surgeon shuddered, turning away, whistling dismay through his
teeth.
Bonn headed
for the bunker door. "Don't open that!" the surgeon and the
fire marshall called
together. "There's nobody left inside," the surgeon added.
"All evacuated now."
"What
exactly happened?" Bonn scrubbed
with a gloved hand at the frosted window set in the door, in an
effort to see inside.
"Couple of guys were
moving stores, to make room for a new shipment coming in tomorrow,"
the fire marshall, a lieutenant named Yaski, filled him in rapidly.
"They dumped their loader over, one got pinned underneath with a
broken leg."
"That . . . took
ingenuity," said Bonn, obviously picturing the mechanics of the
loader in his mind.
"They had to have been
horsing around," said the surgeon impatiently. "But that's
not the worst of it. They took several barrels of fetaine over with
them. And at least two broke open. The stuffs all over the place in
there. We've sealed the bunker as best we could.
Clean-up,"
the surgeon exhaled, "is your problem. I'm gone." He looked
like he wanted to crawl out of his own skin, as well as his clothes.
He waved, making quickly for his scat-cat to follow his corps-men and
their patients through medical decontamination.
"Fetaine!"
Miles exclaimed in startlement. Bonn had
retreated hastily from the door. Fetaine was a mutagenic poison
invented as a terror weapon but never, so far as Miles knew, used in
combat. "I thought that stuff was obsolete. Off the menu."
His academy course in Chemicals and Biologicals had barely mentioned
it.
"It is obsolete," said Bonn
grimly. "They haven't made any
in twenty years. For all I know this is the last stockpile on
Barrayar. Dammit, those storage barrels shouldn't have broken open
even if you'd dropped 'em out a shuttle."
"Those
storage barrels are at least twenty years old, then," the
marshall pointed out.
"Corrosion?"
"In that case,"
Bonn craned his neck,
"what about the rest of them?"
"Exactly,"
nodded Yaski.
"Isn't fetaine destroyed by
heat?" Miles asked nervously, checking to make sure they were
standing around discussing this upwind of the bunker. "Chemically
dissociated into harmless components, I heard."
"Well,
not exactly harmless," said Lieutenant Yaski. "But at least
they don't unravel all the DNA in your balls."
"Are
there any explosives stored in there, Lieutenant Bonn?" Miles
asked.
"No, only the fetaine."
"If
you tossed a couple of plasma mines through the door, would the
fetaine all be chemically cracked before the roof melted in?"
"You
wouldn't want the roof to melt in. Or the floor. If that stuff ever
got loose in the permafrost . . . But if you set the mines on slow
heat release, and threw a few kilos of neutral plas-seal in with 'em,
the bunker might be self-sealing." Bonn's lips moved in silent
calculation. ". . . Yeah, that'd work. In fact, that could be
the safest way to deal with that crap. Particularly if the rest of
the barrels are starting to lose integrity too."
"Depending
on which way the wind is blowing," put in Lieutenant Yaski,
looking back toward the base and then at Miles.
"We're
expecting a light east wind with dropping temperatures till about
0700 tomorrow morning," Miles answered his look. "Then
it'll shift around to the north and blow harder. Potential wah-wah
conditions starting around 1800 tomorrow night."
"If
we're going to do it that way, we'd better do it tonight, then,"
said Yaski.
"All right," said Bonn
decisively. "I'll round up my
crew, you round up yours. I'll pull the plans for the bunker,
calculate the charges' release-rate, and meet you and the ordnance
chief in Admin in an hour."
Bonn
posted the fire marshall's sergeant
as guard to keep everyone well away from the bunker. An unenviable
duty, but not unbearable in present conditions, and the guard could
retreat inside his scat-cat when the temperature dropped, toward
midnight. Miles rode back with Bonn to
the base Administration building to double-check his promises about
wind direction at the weather office.
Miles ran
the latest data through the weather computers, that he might present
Bonn with the most
refined possible update on predicted wind vectors over the next
26.7-hour Barrayaran day. But before he had the printout in his hand,
he saw Bonn and Yaski
out the window, down below, hurrying away from the Admin building
into the dark. Perhaps they were meeting with the ordnance chief
elsewhere? Miles considered chasing after them, but the new
prediction was not significantly different from the older one. Did he
really need to go watch them cauterize the poison dump? It could be
interesting —educational—on the other hand, he had no real
function there now. As his parents' only child—as the father,
perhaps, of some future Count Vorkosigan—it was arguable if he even
had the right to expose himself to such a vile mutagenic hazard for
mere curiosity. There seemed no immediate danger to the base, till
the wind shifted anyway. Or was cowardice masquerading as logic?
Prudence was a virtue, he had heard.
Now
thoroughly awake, and too rattled to even imagine recapturing sleep,
he pottered around the weather office, and caught up on all the
routine files he had set aside that morning in favor of the repairs
junket. An hour of steady plugging finished off everything that even
remotely looked like work. When he found himself compulsively dusting
equipment and shelves, he decided it was time to go back to bed,
sleep or no sleep. But a shifting light from the window caught his
eye, a scat-cat pulling up out front.
Ah, Bonn
and Yaski, back. Already? That had
been fast, or hadn't they started yet? Miles tore off the plastic
flimsy with the new wind readout and headed downstairs to the Base
Engineering office at the end of the corridor.
Bonn's
office was dark. But light spilled into the corridor from the Base
Commander's office. Light, and angry voices rising and falling.
Clutching the flimsy, Miles approached.
The door
was open to the inner office. Metzov sat at his desk console, one
clenched fist resting on the flickering colored surface. Bonn
and Yaski stood tensely before him.
Miles rattled the flimsy cautiously to announce his
presence.
Yaski's head swivelled around, and his
gaze caught Miles. "Send Vorkosigan, he's a mutant already,
isn't he?"
Miles gave a vaguely-directed
salute and said immediately, "Pardon me, sir, but no, I'm not.
My last encounter with a military poison did teratogenic damage, not
genetic. My future children should be as healthy as the next man's.
Ah, send me where, sir?"
Metzov glowered
across at Miles, but did not pursue Yaski's unsettling suggestion.
Miles handed the flimsy wordlessly to Bonn, who glanced at it,
grimaced, and stuffed it savagely into his trouser pocket.
"Of
course I intended them to wear protective gear," continued
Metzov to Bonn in
irritation. "I'm not mad."
"I
understood that, sir. But the men refuse to enter the bunker even
with contamination gear," Bonn reported
in a flat, steady voice. "I can't blame them. The standard
precautions are inadequate for fetaine, in my estimation. The stuff
has an incredibly high penetration value, for its molecular weight.
Goes right through permeables."
"You
can't blame
them?" repeated Metzov in astonishment. "Lieutenant, you
gave an order. Or you were supposed to."
"I
did, sir, but—"
"But—you let them
sense your own indecision. Your weakness. Dammit, when you give an
order you have to give it, not dance around it."
"Why
do we have to save this stuff?" said Yaski
plaintively.
"We've been over that. It's
our charge," Metzov grunted at him. "Our orders. You can't
ask a man to give an obedience you don't give yourself."
What,
blind? "Surely Research still has the recipe," Miles put
in, feeling he was at last getting the alarming drift of this
argument. "They can mix up more if they really want it.
Fresh."
"Shut up, Vorkosigan,"
Bonn growled
desperately out of the corner of his mouth, as General Metzov
snapped, "Open your lip tonight with one more sample of your
humor, Ensign, and I'll put you on charges."
Miles's
lips closed over his teeth in a tight glassy smile. Subordination.
The Prince Serg,
he reminded himself. Metzov could go drink the fetaine, for all Miles
cared, and it would be no skin off his nose. His clean nose,
remember?
"Have you never heard of the fine
old battlefield practice of shooting the man who disobeys your order,
Lieutenant?" Metzov went on to Bonn.
"I
… don't think I can make that threat, sir," said Bonn
stiffly.
And
besides, thought
Miles, we're not on
a battlefield. Are we?
"Techs!"
said Metzov in a tone of disgust. "I didn't say threaten, I said
shoot. Make one example, the rest will fall in line."
Miles
decided he didn't much care for Metzov's brand of humor, either. Or
was the general speaking literally?
"Sir,
fetaine is a violent mutagen," said Bonn doggedly.
"I'm not at all sure the rest would fall into line, no matter
what the threat. It's a pretty unreasonable topic. I'm … a little
unreasonable about it myself."
"So I
see." Metzov stared at him coldly. His glare passed on to Yaski,
who swallowed and stood straighter, his spine offering no concession.
Miles tried to cultivate invisibility.
"If
you're going to go on pretending to be military officers, you techs
need a lesson in how to extract obedience from your men, Metzov
decided. "Both of you go and assemble your crew in front of
Admin in twenty minutes. We're going to have a little old-fashioned
discipline parade."
"You're
not—seriously thinking of shooting anyone, are you?" said
Lieutenant Yaski in alarm.
Metzov smiled sourly.
"I doubt I'll have to." He regarded Miles. "What's the
outside temperature right now, Weather Officer?"
"Five
degrees of frost, sir," replied Miles, careful now to speak only
when spoken to.
"And the wind?"
"Winds
from the east at nine kilometers per hour, sir."
"Very
good." Metzov's eye gleamed wolfishly. "Dismissed,
gentlemen.
See if you can carry out your orders, this time."
General
Metzov stood, heavily gloved and parka-bundled, beside the empty
metal bannerpole in front of Admin, and stared down the half-lit
road. Looking for what? Miles wondered. It was pushing midnight
now. Yaski and Bonn
were lining up their tech crews in
parade for array, some fifteen thermal-coveralled and parka-clad
men.
Miles shivered, and not just from the cold.
Metzov's seamed face looked angry. And tired. And old. And scary. He
reminded Miles a bit of his grandfather on a bad day. Though Metzov
was in fact younger than Miles's father; Miles had been a child of
his father's middle age, some generational skew there. His
grandfather, the old General Count Piotr himself, had sometimes
seemed a refugee from another century. Now, the really old-fashioned
discipline parades had involved lead-lined rubber hoses. How far back
in Barrayaran history was Metzov's mind rooted?
Metzov
smiled, a gloss over rage, and turned his head at a movement down the
road. In a horribly cordial voice he confided to Miles, "You
know, Ensign, there was a secret behind that carefully-cultivated
interservice rivalry they had back on Old Earth. In the event of a
mutiny you could always persuade the army to shoot the navy, or vice
versa, when they could no longer discipline themselves. A hidden
disadvantage to a combined Service like ours."
"Mutiny!"
said Miles, startled out of his resolve to speak only when spoken to.
"I thought the issue was poison exposure."
"It
was.
Unfortunately, due to Bonn's mishandling, it's now a matter of
principle." A muscle jumped in Metzov's jaw. "It had to
happen sometime, in the New Service. The Soft Service."
Typical
Old Service talk, that, old men bullshitting each other about how
tough they'd had it in the old days. "Principle, sir, what
principle? It's waste
disposal,"
Miles choked.
"It's a mass refusal to obey
a direct order, Ensign. Mutiny by any barracks-lawyer's definition.
Fortunately, this sort of thing is easy to dislocate, if you move
quickly, while it's still small and confused." The motion down
the road resolved itself into a platoon of grubs in their
winter-white camouflage gear, marching under the direction of a Base
sergeant. Miles recognized the sergeant as part of Metzov's personal
power-net, an old veteran who'd served under Metzov as far back as
the Komarr Revolt, and who had moved on with his master.
The
grubs, Miles saw, had been armed with lethal nerve-disruptors, which
were purely anti-personnel hand weapons. For all the time they spent
learning about such things, the opportunity for even advanced
trainees such as these to lay hands on fully powered deadly weapons
was rare, and Miles could sense their nervous excitement from
here.
The sergeant lined the grubs up in a
cross-fire array around the stiff-standing techs, and barked an
order. They presented their weapons, and aimed them, the silver
bell-muzzles gleaming in the scattered light from the Admin building.
A twitchy ripple ran through Bonn's men. Bonn's face was ghastly
white, his eyes glittering like jet. "Strip," Metzov
ordered through set teeth.
Disbelief, confusion;
only one or two of the techs grasped what was being demanded, and
began to undress. The others, with many uncertain glances around,
belatedly followed suit.
"When you are
again ready to obey your orders," Metzov continued in a
parade-pitched voice that carried to every man, "you may dress
and go to work. It's up to you." He stepped back, nodded to his
sergeant, and took up a pose of parade rest. "That'll cool 'em
off," he muttered to himself, barely loud enough for Miles to
catch. Metzov looked like he fully expected to be out there no more
than five minutes; he looked like he was already thinking of warm
quarters and a hot drink.
Olney and Pattas were
among the techs, Miles noted, along with most of the rest of the
Greek-speaking cadre who had plagued Miles early on. Others Miles had
seen around, or talked to during his private investigation into the
background of the drowned man, or barely knew. Fifteen naked men
starting to shiver violently as the dry snow whispered around their
ankles. Fifteen bewildered faces beginning to look terrified. Eyes
shifted toward the nerve-disruptors trained on them. Give
in, Miles urged
silently. It's not
worth it. But more
than one pair of eyes flickered at him, and squeezed shut in
resolution.
Miles silently cursed the anonymous
clever boffin who'd invented fetaine as a terror weapon, not for his
chemistry, but for his insight into the Barrayaran psyche. Fetaine
could surely never have been used, could never be used. Any faction
trying to do so must rise up against itself and tear apart in moral
convulsions.
Yaski, standing back from his men,
looked thoroughly horrified. Bonn, his expression black and brittle
as obsidian, began to strip off his gloves and parka.
No,
no, no! Miles
screamed inside his head. If
you join them they'll never back down. They'll know they're right.
Bad mistake, bad … Bonn dropped
the rest of his clothes in a pile, marched forward, joined the line,
wheeled, and locked eyes with Metzov. Metzov's eyes narrowed with new
fury. "So," he hissed, "you convict yourself. Freeze,
then."
How had things gone so bad, so fast?
Now would be a good time to] remember a duty in the weather office,
and get the hell out of here, if only those shivering bastards would
back down, Miles could get through this night without a ripple in his
record. He had no duty, no function here. . . .
Metzov's
eye fell on Miles. "Vorkosigan, you can either take up a weapon
and be useful, or consider yourself dismissed."
He
could leave. Could he leave? When he made no move, the sergeant
walked over and thrust a nerve disrupter into Miles's hand. Miles
took it up, still struggling to think with brains gone suddenly
porridge. He did retain the wit to make sure the safety was "on"
before pointing the disrupter vaguely in the direction of the
freezing men.
This
isn't going to be a mutiny. It's going to be a massacre.
One
of the armed grubs giggled nervously. What had they been told they
were doing? What did they believe
they were doing? Eighteen-, nineteen-year-olds—could they even
recognize a criminal order? Or know what to do about it if they
did?
Could Miles?
The
situation was ambiguous, that was the problem. It didn't quite fit.
Miles knew about criminal orders, every academy man did. His father
came down personally and gave a one-day seminar on the topic to the
seniors at midyear. He'd made it a requirement to graduate, by
Imperial fiat back when he'd been Regent. What exactly constituted a
criminal order, when and how to disobey it. With vid evidence from
various historical test cases and bad examples, including the
politically disastrous Solstice Massacre, that had taken place under
the Admiral's own command. Invariably one or more cadets had to leave
the room to throw up during that part.
The other
instructors hated Vorkosigan's Day. Their classes were subtly
disrupted for weeks afterward. One reason Admiral Vorkosigan didn't
wait till any later in the year; he almost always had to make a
return trip a few weeks after, to talk some disturbed cadet out of
dropping out at almost the finale of his schooling. Only the academy
cadets got this live lecture, as far as Miles knew, though his father
talked of canning it on holovid and making it a part of basic
training Service-wide. Parts of the seminar had been a revelation
even to Miles.
But this … If the techs had
been civilians, Metzov would clearly be in the wrong. If this had
been in wartime, while being harried by some enemy, Metzov might be
within his rights, even duty. This was somewhere between. Soldiers
disobeying, but passively. Not an enemy in sight. Not even a physical
situation threatening, necessarily, lives on the base (except
theirs), though when the wind shifted that could change. I'm
not ready for this, not yet, not so soon.
What was right?
My
career . . .
Claustrophobic panic rose in Miles's chest, like a man with his head
caught in a drain. The nerve disruptor wavered just slightly in his
hand. Over the parabolic reflector he could see Bonn
standing dumbly, too congealed now
even to argue any more.
Ears were turning white
out there, and fingers and feet. One man crumpled into a shuddering
ball, but made no move to surrender.
Was there
any softening of doubt yet, in Metzov's rigid neck?
For
a lunatic moment Miles envisioned thumbing off the safety and
shooting Metzov. And then what, shoot the grubs? He couldn't possibly
get them all before they got him.
I
could be the only soldier here under thirty who's ever killed an
enemy before, in battle or out of it.
The grubs might fire out of ignorance, or sheer curiosity. They
didn't know enough not
to. What we do in
the next half hour will replay in our heads as long as we
breathe.
He
could try doing nothing. Only follow orders. How much trouble could
he get into, only following orders? Every commander he'd ever had
agreed, he needed to follow orders better. Think
you'll enjoy your ship duty, then, Ensign Vorkosigan, you and your
pack of frozen ghosts? At least you'd never be lonely. . .
.
Miles,
still holding up the nerve disruptor, faded backward, out of the
grubs' line-of-sight, out of the corner of Metzov's eye. Tears stung
and blurred his vision. From the cold, no doubt.
He
sat on the ground. Pulled off his gloves and boots. Let his parka
fall, and his shirts. Trousers and thermal underwear atop the pile,
and the nerve-disruptor nested carefully on them. He stepped forward.
His leg braces felt like icicles against his calves. I
hate passive resistance. I really, really hate it.
"What
the hell do you think you're doing, Ensign?" Metzov snarled as
Miles limped past him.
"Breaking this up,
sir," Miles replied steadily. Even now some of the shivering
techs flinched away from him, as if his deformities might be
contagious. Pattas didn't draw away, though. Nor Bonn."
"Bonn
tried that bluff. He's now
regretting it. It won't work for you either, Vorkosigan."
Metzov's voice shook too, though not from the cold.
You
should have said "Ensign."
What's in a name? Miles could see the ripple of dismay run through
the grubs, that time. No, this hadn't worked for Bonn. Miles might be
the only man here for whom this sort of individual intervention could
work. Depending on how far gone Mad Metzov was by now.
Miles
spoke now for both Metzov's benefit and the grubs. "It's
possible—barely—that Service Security wouldn't investigate the
deaths of Lieutenant Bonn and his men, if you diddled the record,
claimed some accident. I guarantee Imperial Security will investigate
mine."
Metzov grinned strangely. "Suppose
no witnesses survive to complain?"
Metzov's
sergeant looked as rigid as his master. Miles thought of Ahn, drunken
Ahn, silent Ahn. What had Ahn seen, once long ago, when crazy things
were happening on Komarr? What kind of surviving witness had he been?
A guilty one, perhaps? "S-s-sorry, sir, but I see at least ten
witnesses, behind those nerve disrupters." Silver parabolas—they
looked enormous, like serving dishes, from this new angle. The change
in point of view was amazingly clarifying. No ambiguities
now.
Miles continued, "Or do you propose to
execute your firing squad and then shoot yourself? Imperial Security
will fast-penta everyone in sight. You can't silence me. Living or
dead, through my mouth or yours—or theirs—I will testify."
Shivers racked Miles's body. Astonishing, the effect of just that
little bit of east wind, at this temperature. He fought to keep the
shakes out of his voice, lest cold be mistaken for fear.
"Small
consolation, if you—ah—permit yourself to freeze, I'd say,
Ensign." Metzov's heavy sarcasm grated on Miles's nerves. The
man still thought he was winning. Insane.
Miles's
bare feet felt strangely warm now. His eyelashes were crunchy with
ice. He was catching up fast to the others, in terms of freezing to
death, no doubt because of his smaller mass. His body was turning a
blotchy purple-blue.
The snow-blanketed base was
so silent. He could almost hear the individual snow grains skitter
across the sheet ice. He could hear the vibrating bones of each man
around him, pick out the hollow frightened breathing of the grubs.
Time stretched.
He could threaten Metzov, break
up his complacency with dark hints about Komarr, the
truth will out. . . .
He could call on his father's rank and position. He could . . .
dammit, Metzov must realize he was overextended, no matter how mad he
was. His discipline Parade bluff hadn't worked and now he was stuck
with it, stonily defending his authority unto death. He
can be a funny kind of dangerous, if you really threaten him.
… It was hard, to see through the sadism to the underlying fear.
But it had to be there, underneath. Pushing wasn't working. Metzov
was practically petrified with resistance. What about pulling . . .
?
"But consider, sir," Miles's words
stuttered out persuasively, "the advantages to yourself of
stopping now. You now have clear evidence of a mutinous, er,
conspiracy. You can arrest us all, throw us in the stockade. It's a
better revenge, 'cause you get it all and lose nothing. I lose my
career, get a dishonorable discharge or maybe prison—do you think I
wouldn't rather die? Service Security punishes the rest of us for
you. You get it all."
Miles's words had
hooked him; Miles could see it, in the red glow fading from the
narrowed eyes, in the slight bending of that stiff, stiff neck. Miles
had only to let the line out, refrain from jerking on it and renewing
Metzov's fighting frenzy, wait.
. . .
Metzov
stepped nearer, bulking in the half-light, haloed by his freezing
breath. His voice dropped, pitched to Miles's ear alone. "A
typical soft Vorkosigan answer. Your father was soft on Komarran
scum. Cost us lives. A court-martial for the Admiral's little
boy—that might bring down that holier-than-thou buggerer,
eh?"
Miles swallowed icy spit. Those
who do not know their history,
his thought careened, are
doomed to keep stepping in it.
Alas, so were those who did, it seemed. "Thermo the damned
fetaine spill," he whispered hoarsely, "and
see."
"You're all under arrest,"
Metzov bellowed out suddenly, his shoulders hunching. "Get
dressed."
The others looked stunned with
relief then. After a last uncertain glance at the nerve disrupters,
they dove for their clothes, donning them with frantic cold-clumsy
hands. But Miles had seen it complete in Metzov's eyes sixty seconds
earlier. It reminded him of that definition of his father's. A
weapon is a device for making your enemy change his mind.
The mind was the first and final battleground, the stuff in between
was just noise.
Lieutenant Yaski had taken the
opportunity afforded by Miles's attention-arresting nude arrival on
center stage to quietly disappear into the Admin building and make
several frantic calls. As a result the trainee's commander, the base
surgeon, and Metzov's second-in-command arrived, primed to persuade
or perhaps sedate and confine Metzov. But by that time Miles, Bonn,
and the techs were already dressed and being marched, stumbling,
toward the stockade bunker under the argus-eyes of the nerve
disrupters.
"Am I s-supposed to th-thank
you for this?" Bonn asked
Miles through chattering teeth. Their hands and feet swung like
paralyzed lumps; he leaned on Miles, Miles hung on him, hobbling down
the road together.
"We got what we wanted,
eh? He's going to plasma the fetaine on-site before the wind shifts
in the morning. Nobody dies. Nobody gets their nuts curdled. We win.
I think." Miles emitted a deathly cackle through numb
lips.
"I never thought," wheezed Bonn,
"that I'd ever meet anybody crazier than Metzov."
"I
didn't do anything you didn't," protested Miles. "Except I
made it work. Sort of. It'll all look different in the morning,
anyway."
"Yeah. Worse," Bonn
predicted glumly.
Miles
jerked up out of an uneasy doze on his cell cot when the door hissed
open. They were bringing Bonn back.
Miles
rubbed his unshaven face. "What time is it out there,
Lieutenant?"
"Dawn." Bonn
looked as pale, stubbled, and
criminally low as Miles felt. He eased himself down on his cot with a
pained grunt.
"What's
happening?"
"Service Security's all
over the place. They flew in a captain from the mainland, just
arrived, who seems to be in charge. Metzov's been filling his ear, I
think. They're just taking depositions, so far."
"They
get the fetaine taken care of?"
"Yep."
Bonn vented a grim
snicker. "They just had me out to check it, and sign the job
off. The bunker made a neat little oven, all right."
"Ensign
Vorkosigan, you're wanted," said the security guard who'd
delivered Bonn. "Come with me now."
Miles
creaked to his feet and limped toward the cell door. "See you
later, Lieutenant."
"Right. If you
spot anybody out there with breakfast, why don't you use your
political influence to send 'em my way, eh?"
Miles
grinned bleakly. "I'll try."
Miles
followed the guard up the stockade's short corridor. Lazkowski Base's
stockade was not exactly what one would call a high-security
facility, being scarcely more than a living quarters bunker with
doors that only locked from the outside and no windows. The weather
usually made a better guard than any force screen, not to mention the
500-kilometer-wide icewater moat surrounding the island.
The
Base security office was busy this morning. Two grim strangers stood
waiting by the door, a lieutenant and a big sergeant with the
Horus-eye insignia of Imperial Security on their sleek uniforms.
Imperial
Security, not Service Security. Miles's very own Security, who had
guarded his family all his father's political life. Miles regarded
them with possessive delight.
The Base security
clerk looked harried, his desk console lit up and blinking. "Ensign
Vorkosigan, sir, I need your palm print on this." "All
right. What am I signing?" "Just the travel orders, sir."
"What? Ah . . ." Miles paused, holding up his
plastic-mitted hands. "Which one?"
"The
right, I guess would do, sir."
With
difficulty, Miles peeled off the right mitten with his awkward left.
His hand glistened with the medical gel that was supposed to be
healing the frostbite. His hand was swollen, red-blotched and
mangled-looking, but the stuff must be working. All his fingers now
wriggled. It took three tries, pressing down on the ID pad, before
the computer recognized him.
"Now yours,
sir," the clerk nodded to the Imperial Security lieutenant. The
ImpSec man laid his hand on the pad and the computer bleeped
approval. He lifted it and glanced dubiously at the sticky sheen,
looked around futilely for some towel, and wiped it surreptitiously
on his trouser seam just behind his stunner holster. The clerk dabbed
nervously at the pad with his uniform sleeve, and touched his
intercom.
"Am I glad to see you fellows,"
Miles told the ImpSec officer. "Wish you'd been here last
night."
The lieutenant did not smile in
return. "I'm just a courier, Ensign. I'm not supposed to discuss
your case."
General Metzov ducked through
the door from the inner office, a sheaf of plastic flimsies in one
hand and a Service Security captain at his elbow, who nodded warily
to his counterpart on the Imperial side. The general was almost
smiling. "Good morning, Ensign Vorkosigan." His glance took
in Imperial Security without dismay. Dammit! ImpSec should be making
that near-murderer shake in his combat boots. "It seems there's
a wrinkle in this case even I hadn't realized. When a Vor lord
involves himself in a military mutiny, a charge of high treason
follows automatically."
"What?"
Miles swallowed, to bring his voice back down. "Lieutenant, I'm
not under arrest by Imperial
Security, am I?"
The lieutenant produced a
set of handcuffs and proceeded to attach Miles to the big sergeant.
Overholt,
read the name on the man's badge, which Miles mentally redubbed
Overkill. He had only to lift his arm to dangle Miles like a
kitten.
"You are being detained, pending
further investigation," said lieutenant formally.
"How
long?"
"Indefinitely."
The
lieutenant headed for the door, the sergeant and perforce Miles
following. "Where?" Miles asked frantically.
"Imperial
Security Headquarters."
Vorbarr
Sultana! "I
need to get my things—"
"Your
quarters have already been cleared."
"Will
I be coming back here?"
"I don't know,
Ensign."
Late dawn was streaking Camp
Permafrost with
grey and yellow when the scat-cat deposited them at the shuttlepad.
The Imperial Security sub-orbital courier shuttle sat on the icy
concrete like a bird of prey accidently placed in a pigeon cote.
Slick and black and deadly, it seemed to break the sound barrier just
resting there. Its pilot was at the ready, engines primed for
takeoff.
Miles shuffled awkwardly up the ramp
after Sergeant Overkill, the handcuff jerking coldly on his wrist.
Tiny ice crystals danced in the northeasterly wind. The temperature
would be stabilizing this morning, he could tell by the particular
dry bite of the relative humidity in his sinuses. Dear God, it was
past time to get off this island.
Miles took one
last sharp breath, then the shuttle door sealed behind them with a
snaky hiss. Within was a thick, upholstered silence that even the
howl of the engines scarcely penetrated.
At
least it was warm.
Autumn
in the city of Vorbarr Sultana was
a beautiful time of year, and today was exemplary. The air was high
and blue, the temperature cool and perfect, and even the tang of
industrial haze smelled good. The autumn flowers were not yet frosted
off, but the Earth-import trees had turned their colors. As he was
hustled out of the Security lift van and into a back entrance to the
big blocky building that was Imperial Security Headquarters, Miles
glimpsed one such tree. An Earth maple, with carnelian leaves and a
silver-grey trunk, across the street. Then the door closed. Miles
held that tree before his mind's eye, trying to memorize it, just in
case he never saw it again. The Security lieutenant produced passes
that sped Miles and Overholt through the door guards, and led them
into a maze off corridors to a pair of lift tubes. They entered the
up tube, not t down one. So, Miles was not being taken directly to
the ultra-sec cell block beneath the building. He woke to what this
meant, wished wistfully for the down tube.
They
were ushered into an office on an upper level, past a Security
captain, then into an inner office. A man, slight, bland, civilian
clothed, with brown hair greying at the temples, sat at his very
large comconsole desk, studying a vid. He glanced up at Miles's
escort. "Thank you, Lieutenant, Sergeant. You may
go."
Overholt detached Miles from his wrist
as the lieutenant asked, "Uh, will you be safe, sir?"
"I
expect so," said the man dryly.
Yeah,
but what about me?
Miles wailed inwardly. The two soldiers exited, and left Miles alone,
standing literally on the carpet. Unwashed, unshaven, still wearing
the faintly reeking black fatigues he'd flung on—only last night?
Face weather-raked, with his swollen hands and feet still encased in
their plastic medical mittens—his toes now wriggled in their
squishy matrix. No boots. He had dozed, in a jerky intermittent
exhaustion, on the two-hour shuttle flight, without being noticeably
refreshed. His throat was raw, his sinuses felt stuffed with packing
fiber, and his chest hurt when he breathed.
Simon
Illyan, Chief of Barrayaran Imperial Security, crossed his arms and
looked Miles over slowly, from head to toe and back again. It gave
Miles a skewed sense of deja
vu.
Practically
everyone on Barraryar feared this man's name, though few knew his
face. This effect was carefully cultivated by Illyan, building in
part—but only in part—on the legacy of his formidable
predecessor, the legendary Security Chief Negri. Illyan and his
department, in turn, had provided security for Miles's father for the
twenty years of his political career, and had slipped up only once,
during the night of the infamous soltoxin attack. Offhand, Miles knew
of no one Illyan feared except Miles's mother. He'd once asked his
father if this was guilt, about the soltoxin, but Count Vorkosigan
had replied, No, it was only the lasting effect of vivid first
impressions. Miles had called Illyan "Uncle Simon" all his
life until he'd entered the Service, "Sir" after
that.
Looking at Illyan's face now, Miles
thought he finally grasped the distinction between exasperation, and
utter exasperation.
Illyan finished his
inspection, shook his head, and groaned, "Wonderful. Just
wonderful."
Miles cleared his throat. "Am
I … really under arrest, sir?"
"That
is what this interview will determine," Illyan sighed, leaning
back in his chair. "I have been up since two hours after
midnight over this
escapade. Rumors are flying all over the Service, as fast as the vid
net can carry them. The facts appear to be mutating every forty
minutes, like bacteria. I don't suppose you could have picked some
more public way to self-destruct? Attempted to assassinate the
Emperor with your pocket-knife during the Birthday Review, say, or
raped a sheep in the Great Square during
rush hour?" The sarcasm melted to genuine pain. "He had so
much hope of you. How could betray him so?"
No
need to ask who "he" was. The
Vorkosigan. "I …don't think I did, sir. I don't know."
A
light blinked on Illyan's comconsole. He exhaled, with a sharp glance
at Miles, and touched a control. The second door to his office,
camouflaged in the wall to the right of his desk, slid open, and two
men in dress greens ducked through.
Prime
Minister Admiral Count Aral Vorkosigan wore the uniform as naturally
as an animal wears its fur. He was a man of no more than middle
height, stocky, grey-haired, heavy-jawed, scarred, almost a thug's
body and yet with the most penetrating grey eyes Miles had ever
encountered. He was flanked by his aide, a tall blond lieutenant
named Jole. Miles had met Jole on his last home leave. Now, there was
a perfect officer, brave and brilliant—he'd served in space, been
decorated for some courage and quick thinking during a horrendous
on-board accident, been rotated through HQ while recovering from his
injuries, and promptly been snabbled up as his military secretary by
the Prime Minister, who had a sharp eye for hot new talent.
Jaw-dropping gorgeous, to boot, he ought to be making recruiting
vids. Miles sighed in hopeless jealousy every time he ran across him.
Jole was even worse than Ivan, who while darkly handsome had never
been accused of brilliance.
"Thanks, Jole,"
Count Vorkosigan murmured to his aide, as his eye found Miles. "I'll
see you back at the office."
"Yes,
sir." So dismissed, Jole ducked back out, glancing back at Miles
and his superior with worried eyes, and the door hissed closed
again.
Illyan still had his hand pressed to a
control on his desk. "Are you officially here?" he asked
Count Vorkosigan.
"No."
Illyan
keyed something off—recording equipment, Miles realized. "Very
well," he said, editorial doubt injected into his tone.
Miles
saluted his father. His father ignored the salute and embraced him
gravely, wordlessly, sat in the room's only other chair, crossed his
arms and booted ankles, and said, "Continue, Simon."
Illyan,
who had been cut off in the middle of what had been shaping up, in
Miles's estimation, to a really classic reaming, chewed his lip in
frustration. "Rumors aside," Illyan said to Miles, "what
really happened last night out on that damned island?"
In
the most neutral and succinct terms he could muster, Miles described
the previous night's events, starting with the fetaine spill and
ending with his arrest/detainment/to-be-determined by Imperial
Security. His father said nothing during the whole recitation, but he
had a light pen in his hand which he kept turning absently around and
over, tap
against his knee, around and over.
Silence fell
when Miles finished. The light pen was driving Miles to distraction.
He wished his father would put the damned thing away, or drop it, or
anything.
His father slipped the light pen back
into his breast pocket, thank God, leaned back, and steepled his
fingers, frowning. "Let me get this straight. You say Metzov
hopscotched the command chain and dragooned trainees
for his firing squad?"
"Ten of them. I
don't know if they were volunteers or not, I wasn't there for that
part."
"Trainees." Count
Vorkosigan's face was dark. "Boys."
"He
was babbling something about it being like the army versus the navy,
back on Old Earth."
"Huh?" said
Illyan.
"I don't think Metzov was any too
stable when he was exiled to Kyril Island
after his troubles in the Komarr
Revolt, and fifteen years of brooding about it didn't improve his
grip." Miles hesitated. "Will . . . General Metzov be
questioned about his actions at all, sir?"
"General
Metzov, by your account," said Admiral Vorkosigan, "dragged
a platoon of eighteen-year-olds into what came within a hair of being
a mass torture-murder."
Miles nodded in
memory. His body still twinged with assorted agonies.
"For
that sin, there is no hole deep enough to hide him from my wrath.
Metzov will be taken care of, all right." Count Vorkosigan was
terrifyingly grim.
"What about Miles and
the mutineers?" asked Illyan.
"Necessarily,
I fear we will have to treat that as a separate matter."
"Or
two separate matters," said Illyan suggestively.
"Mm.
So, Miles, tell me about the men on the other end of the
guns."
"Techs, sir, mostly. A lot of
greekies."
Illyan winced. "Good God,
had the man no political sense at all?"
"None
that I ever saw. I thought it would be a problem." Well, later
he'd thought of it, lying awake on his cell cot after the med squad
left. The other political ramifications had spun through his mind.
Over half the slowly freezing techs had been of the Greek-speaking
minority. The language separatists would have been rioting in the
streets, had it become a massacre, sure to claim the general had
ordered the greekies into the clean-up as racial sabotage. More
deaths, chaos reverberating down the timeline like the consequences
of the Solstice Massacre? "It . . . occurred to me, that if I
died with them, at least it would be crystal clear that it hadn't
been some plot of your government or the Vor oligarchy. So that if I
lived, I won, and if I died, I won too. Or at least served. Strategy,
of sorts."
Barrayar's greatest strategist
of this century rubbed his temples, as if they ached. "Well …
of sorts, yes."
"So," Miles
swallowed, "what happens now, sirs? Will I be charged with high
treason?"
"For the second time in four
years?" said Illyan. "Hell, no. I'm not going through that
again. I will simply disappear you, until this blows over. Where to,
I haven't quite figured yet. Kyril Island
is out."
"Glad
to hear it." Miles eyes narrowed. "What about the
others?"
"The trainees?" said
Illyan. "The techs. My . . . fellow mutineers." Illyan
twitched at the term.
"It would be
seriously unjust if I were to slither up some Vor-privileged line and
leave them standing charges alone," Miles added.
"The
public scandal of your trial would damage your father's Centrist
coalition. Your moral scruples may be admirable, Miles, but I'm not
sure I can afford them."
Miles stared
steadily at Prime Minister Count Vorkosigan. "Sir?"
Count
Vorkosigan sucked thoughtfully on his lower lip. "Yes, I could
have the charges against them quashed, by Imperial fiat. That would
involve another price, though." He leaned forward intently, eyes
peeling Miles.
"You could never serve
again. Rumors will travel even without a trial. No commander would
have you, after. None could trust you, trust you to be a real
officer, not an artifact protected by special privilege. I can't ask
anyone to command you with his head cranked over his shoulder all the
time." Miles exhaled, a long breath. "In a weird sense,
they were my men. Do it. Kill the charges."
"Will
you resign your commission, then?" demanded Illyan.
Miles
felt sick, nauseous and cold. "I will." His voice was
thin.
Illyan looked up suddenly from a blank
brooding stare at his com console. "Miles, how did you know
about General Metzov's questionable actions during the Komarr Revolt?
That case was Security-classified."
"Ah
. . . didn't Ivan tell you about the little leak in the ImpSec files,
sir?"
"What?"
Damn
Ivan. "May I sit down, sir?" said Miles faintly. The room
wavering, his head thumping. Without waiting for permission, he sat
cross-legged on the carpet, blinking. His father made a worried
movement toward him, then restrained himself. "I'd been checking
upon Metzov's background because of something Lieutenant Ahn said. By
the way, when you go after Metzov, I strongly suggest you fast-penta
Ahn first. He knows more than he's told. You'll find him somewhere on
the equator, I expect."
"My
files,
Miles."
"Uh, yes, well, it turns out
that if you face a secured console to an outgoing console, you can
read off Security files from anywhere in the vid net. Of course, you
have to have somebody inside HQ who can and will aim the consoles and
call up the files for you. And you can't flash-download. But I, uh,
thought you should know, sir."
"Perfect
security," said Count Vorkosigan in a choked voice. Chortling,
Miles realized in startlement.
Illyan looked
like a man sucking on a lemon. "How did you," Illyan began,
stopped to glare at the Count, started again, "how did you
figure this out?"
"It was
obvious."
"Airtight security, you
said," murmured Count Vorkosigan, unsuccessfully suppressing a
wheezing laugh. "The most expensive yet devised. Proof against
the cleverest viruses, the most sophisticated eavesdropping
equipment. And two ensigns waft right through it?"
Goaded,
Illyan snapped, "I didn't promise it was idiot-proof!"
Count
Vorkosigan wiped his eyes and sighed. "Ah, the human factor. We
will correct the defect, Miles. Thank you."
"You're
a bloody loose cannon, boy, firing in all directions," Illyan
growled to Miles, craning his neck to see over his desk to where
Miles sat in a slumping heap. "This, on top of your earlier
escapade with those damned mercenaries, on top of it all—house
arrest isn't enough. I won't sleep through the night till I have you
locked in a cell with your hands tied behind your back."
Miles,
who thought he might kill for a decent hour's sleep right now, could
only shrug. Maybe Illyan could be persuaded to let him go to that
nice quiet cell soon.
Count Vorkosigan had
fallen silent, a strange thoughtful glow starting in his eye. Illyan
noticed the expression too, and paused.
"Simon,"
said Count Vorkosigan, "there's no doubt ImpSec will have to go
on watching Miles. For his sake, as well as mine."
"And
the Emperor's" put in Illyan dourly. "And Barrayar's. And
the innocent bystanders'."
"But what
better, more direct and efficient way for security to watch him than
if he is assigned to
Imperial Security?"
"What?" said
Illyan and Miles together, in the same sharp horrified tone. "You're
not serious," Illyan went on, as Miles added, "Security was
never on my top-ten list of assignment choices."
"Not
choice. Aptitude. Major Cecil discussed it with me at one time, as I
recall. But as Miles says, he didn't put it on his list." He
hadn't put Arctic Weatherman on his list either, Miles
recalled.
"You had it right the first
time," said Illyan. "No commander in the Service will want
him now. Not excepting myself."
"Not
that I could, in honor, lean on to take him. Excepting yourself. I
have always," Count Vorkosigan flashed a peculiar grin, "leaned
on you, Simon."
Illyan looked faintly
stunned, as a top tactician beginning to see himself
outmaneuvered.
"It works on several
levels," Count Vorkosigan went on in that same mild persuasive
voice. "We can put it about that it's an unofficial internal
exile, demotion in disgrace. It will buy off my political enemies,
who would otherwise try to stir profit from this mess. It will tone
down the appearance of our condoning a mutiny, which no military
service can afford."
"True exile,"
said Miles. "Even if unofficial and internal."
"Oh
yes," Count Vorkosigan agreed softly. "But, ah—not true
disgrace."
"Can he be trusted?"
said Illyan doubtfully. "Apparently." The count's smile was
like the gleam off a knife blade. "Security can use his talents.
Security more than any other department needs his talents."
"To
see the obvious?"
"And the less
obvious. Many officers may be trusted with the Emperor's life. Rather
fewer with his honor."
Illyan, reluctantly,
made a vague acquiescent gesture. Count Vorkosigan, perhaps
prudently, did not troll for greater enthusiasm from his Security
chief at this time, but turned to Miles and said, "You look like
you need an infirmary."
"I need a
bed."
"How about a bed in an
infirmary?"
Miles coughed, and blinked
blearily. "Yeah, that'd do."
"Come
on, we'll find one."
He stood, and
staggered out on his father's arm, his feet squishing in their
plastic bags.
"Other than that, how was
Kyril Island, Ensign
Vorkosigan?" inquired the count. "You didn't vid home much,
your mother noticed."
"I was busy.
Lessee. The climate was ferocious, the terrain was lethal, a third of
the population including my immediate superior was dead drunk most of
the time. The average IQ equalled the mean temperature in degrees
cee, there wasn't a woman for five hundred kilometers in any
direction, and the base commander was a homicidal psychotic. Other
than that, it was lovely."
"Doesn't
sound like it's changed in the smallest detail in twenty-five
years."
"You've been there?"
Miles squinted. "And yet you let me
get sent there?"
"I commanded
Lazkowski Base for five months, once, while waiting for my captaincy
of the cruiser General
Vorkraft. During
the period my career was, so to speak, in political eclipse."
So
to speak. "How'd you like it?"
"I
can't remember much. I was drunk most of the time. Everybody finds
their own way of dealing with Camp Permafrost.
I might say, you did rather better than I."
"I
find your subsequent survival . . . encouraging, sir."
"I
thought you might. That's why I mentioned it. It's not otherwise an
experience I'd hold up as an example."
Miles
looked up at his father. "Did … I do the right thing, sir?
Last night?"
"Yes," said the
count simply. "A right thing. Perhaps not the best of all
possible right things. Three days from now you may think of a
cleverer tactic, but you were the man on the ground at the time. I
try not to second-guess my field commanders."
Miles's
heart rose in his aching chest for the first time since he'd left
Kyril Island.
Miles
thought his father might take him to the great and familiar Imperial
Military Hospital
complex, a few kilometers away
across town, but they found an infirmary closer than that, three
floors down in ImpSec HQ. The facility was small but complete, with a
couple of examining rooms, private rooms, cells for treating
prisoners and guarded witnesses, a surgery, and a closed door
labeled, chillingly, Interrogation
Chemistry Laboratory.
Illyan must have called down in advance, for a corpsman was hovering
in attendance waiting to receive them. A Security surgeon arrived
shortly, a little out of breath. He straighted his uniform and
saluted Count Vorkosigan punctiliously before turning to
Miles.
Miles fancied the surgeon was more used
to making people nervous than being made nervous by them, and was
awkward about the role reversal. Was it some aura of old violence,
clinging to his father still after all these years? The power, the
history? Some personal charisma, that made erstwhile forceful men
flatten out like cowed dogs? Miles could sense that radiating heat
perfectly clearly, and yet it didn't seem to affect him the same
way.
Acclimatization, perhaps. The former Lord
Regent was the man who used to take a two-hour lunch every day,
regardless of any crisis short of war, and disappear into his
Residence. Only Miles knew the interior view of those hours, how the
big man in the green uniform would bolt a sandwich in five minutes
and then spend the next hour and a half down on the floor with his
son who could not walk, playing, talking, reading aloud. Sometimes,
when Miles was locked in hysterical resistance to some painful new
physical therapy, daunting his mother and even Sergeant Bothari, his
father had been the only one with the firmness to insist
on those ten extra agonizing leg stretches, the polite submission to
the hypospray, to another round of surgery, to the icy chemicals
searing his veins. "You are Vor. You must not frighten your
liege people with this show of uncontrol, Lord Miles." The
pungent smell of this infirmary, the tense doctor, brought back a
flood of memories. No wonder, Miles reflected, he had failed to be
afraid enough of Metzov. When Count Vorkosigan left, the infirmary
seemed altogether empty.
There did not appear to
be much going on in ImpSec HQ this week. The infirmary was numbingly
quiet, except for a trickle of headquarters staff coming down to
cadge headache or cold remedies or hangover-killers from the pliant
corpsman. A couple of techs spent three hours rattling around the lab
one evening on a rush job, and rushed off. The doctor arrested
Miles's incipient pneumonia just before it turned into galloping
pneumonia. Miles brooded, and wait for the six-day antibiotic therapy
to run its course, and plotted details of a home leave in Vorbarr
Sultana that must surely be forthcoming when the medics released
him.
"Why can't I go home?" Miles
complained to his mother on next visit. "Nobody's telling me
anything. If I'm not under arrest why can't I take home leave? If I
am under arrest, why aren't doors locked? I feel like I'm in
limbo."
Countess Cordelia Vorkosigan vented
an unladylike snort. "You are in limbo, kiddo." Her flat
Betan accent fell warmly on Miles ears, despite her sardonic tone.
She tossed her head—she wore red-roan hair pinned back from her
face and waving loose down the back today, gleaming against a rich
autumn brown jacket picked out with silver embroidery, and the
swinging skirts of a Vor-class woman. Grey-eyed, striking, her pale
face seemed so alive with flickering thought one scarcely noticed she
was not beautiful. For twenty-one years she'd passed as a Vor matron
in the wake of her Great Man, yet still seemed as unimpressed by
Barrayaran hierarchies as ever– though not, Miles thought, unmoved
by Barrayaran wounds.
So
why do I never think of my ambition as ship command like my
motherbefore me?
Captain Cordelia Naismith, Betan Astronomical Survey, had been in the
risky business of expanding the wormhole nexus jump by blind jump,
for humanity, for pure knowledge, for Beta Colony's economic
advancement, for—what had
driven her? She'd commanded a sixty-person survey vessel, far from
home and help—there were certain enviable aspects to her former
career, to be sure. Chain-of-command, for example, would have been a
legal fiction out in the farbeyond, the wishes of Betan HQ a matter
for speculation and side bets.
She moved now so
wavelessly through Barrayaran society, only her most intimate
observers realized how detached she was from it, fearing no one, not
even the dread Illyan, controlled by no one, not even the Admiral
himself. It was the casual fearlessness, Miles decided, that made his
mother so unsettling. The Admiral's Captain. Following in her
footsteps would be like firewalking.
"What's
going on out there?" Miles asked. "This place is almost as
much fun as solitary confinement, y'know? Have they decided I'm a
mutineer after all?"
"I don't think
so," said the Countess. "They're discharging the
others—your Lieutenant Bonn and the rest—not precisely
dishonorably, but without benefits or pensions or that Imperial
Liegeman status that seems to mean so much to Barrayaran
men—"
"Think of it as a funny sort
of Reservist," Miles advised. "What about Metzov and the
grubs?"
"He's being discharged the
same way. He lost the most, I think."
"They're
just turning him loose?" Miles frowned.
Countess
Vorkosigan shrugged. "Because there were no deaths, Aral was
persuaded he couldn't make a court martial with any harsher
punishment stick. They decided not to involve the trainees with any
charges."
Hm. I'm glad, I think. And, ah …
me?"
"You remain officially listed as
detained by Imperial Security. Indefinitely."
"Limbo
is supposed to be an indefinite sort of place." His hand picked
at his sheet. His knuckles were still swollen. "How
long?"
"However long it takes to have
its calculated psychological effect."
"What,
to drive me crazy? Another three days ought to do it." Her lip
quirked. "Long enough to convince the Barrayaran militarists
that you are being properly punished for your, uh, crime. As long as
you are confined in this rather sinister building, they can be
encouraged to imagine you undergoing—whatever they imagine goes on
in here. If you're allowed to run around town partying, it will be
much harder to maintain the illusion that you've been hung upside
down on the basement wall."
"It all
seems so … unreal." He hunched back into his pillow. "I
only wanted to serve."
A brief smile
flicked her wide mouth up, and vanished. "Ready to reconsider
another line of work, love?"
"Being
Vor is more than just a job."
"Yes,
it's a pathology. Obsessional delusion. It's a big galaxy out there,
Miles. There are other ways to serve, larger . . .
constituencies."
"So why do you stay
here?" he shot back. "Ah." She smiled bleakly at the
touche. "Some people's needs are more compelling than
guns."
"Speaking of Dad, is he coming
back?"
"Hm. No. I'm to tell you, he's
going to distance himself for a time. So as not to give the
appearance of endorsing your mutiny, while in fact shuffling you out
from under the avalanche. He's decided to be publicly angry with
you."
"And is he?"
"Of
course not. Yet … he was beginning to have some long-range plans
for you, in his socio-political reform schemes, based your completing
a solid military career … he saw ways of making even your
congenital injuries serve Barrayar."
"Yeah,
I know."
"Well, don't worry. He'll
doubtless think of some way to use this, too."
Miles
sighed glumly. "I want something to do.
I want my clothes
back."
His mother pursed her lips, and
shook her head.
He tried calling Ivan that
evening. "Where are you?" Ivan demanded suspiciously.
"Stuck in limbo."
"Well, I don't
want any of it stuck to me," said Ivan roughly, and punched
off-line.
The
next morning Miles was moved to new quarters. His guide led him just
one floor down, dashing Miles's hopes of seeing the sky again. The
officer keyed open a door to one of the secured apartments usually
used by protected witnesses. And, Miles reflected, certain political
nonpersons. Was it possible life in limbo was having a chameleon
effect, rendering him translucent?
"How
long will I be staying here?" Miles asked the officer. "I
don't know, Ensign," the man replied, and left him.
His
duffle, jammed with his clothes, and a hastily-packed box sat in the
middle of the apartment's floor. All his worldly goods from Kyril
Island, smelling moldy, a cold
breath of arctic damp. Miles poked through them—everything seemed
to be there, including his weather library—and prowled his new
quarters. It was a one-room it efficiency, shabbily furnished in the
style of twenty years back, with a few comfortable chairs, a bed, a
simple kitchenette, empty cupboards and shelves and closets. No
abandoned garments or objects or leftovers to hint at the identity of
any previous occupant.
There had to be bugs. Any
shiny surface could conceal a vid pickup, and the ears were probably
not even within the room. But;
were they switched on? Or, almost more of an insult, maybe Illyan
wasn't even bothering to run them?
There was a
guard in the outer corridor, and remote monitors, but Miles did not
appear to have neighbors at present. He discovered he could leave the
corridor, and walk about the few non-top-secured areas of the
building, but the guards at the outside doors, briefed as to who he
was, turned him back politely but firmly. He pictured himself
attempting escape by rappelling down from the roof—he'd probably
get himself shot, and ruin some poor guard's career.
A
Security officer found him wandering aimlessly, conducted him back to
his apartment, gave him a handful of chits for the building's
cafeteria, and hinted strongly that it would be appreciated if he
would stay in his quarters between meals. After he left Miles
morbidly counted the chits, trying to guess the expected duration of
his stay. There were an even hundred. Miles shuddered.
He
unpacked his box and bag, ran everything that would go through the
sonic laundry to eliminate the last lingering odor of Camp
Permafrost, hung up his uniforms,
cleaned his boots, arranged his possessions neatly on a few shelves,
showered, and changed to fresh undress greens.
One
hour down. How many to go?
He attempted to read,
but could not concentrate, and ended sitting in the most comfortable
chair with his eyes closed, pretending this windowless,
hermetically-sealed chamber was a cabin aboard a spaceship.
Outbound.
He was sitting in the same chair two
nights later, digesting a leaden cafeteria dinner, when the door
chimed.
Startled, Miles clambered up and limped
to answer it personally. It was probably not a firing squad, though
you never knew.
He almost changed his
assumptions about the firing squad at the sight of the hard-faced
Imperial Security officers in dress greens who stood waiting. "Excuse
me, Ensign Vorkosigan," one muttered perfunctorily, and brushed
past him to start running a scan over Miles's quarters. Miles
blinked, then saw who stood behind them in the corridor, and breathed
an "Ah" of understanding. At a mere look from the scanner
man, Miles obediently held out his arms and turned to be
scanned.
"Clear, sir," the scanner man
reported, and Miles was sure it was. These fellows never, ever cut
corners, not even in the heart of Imp-Sec itself.
"Thank
you. Leave us, please. You may wait out here," said the third
man. The ImpSec men nodded and took up parade rest flanking Miles's
door.
Since they were both wearing officers'
undress greens, Miles exchanged salutes with the third man, although
the visitor's uniform bore neither rank nor department insignia. He
was thin, of middle height, with dark hair and intense hazel eyes. A
crooked smile winked in a serious young face that lacked laugh
lines.
"Sire," Miles said
formally.
Emperor Gregor Vorbarra jerked his
head, and Miles keyed his door closed on the Security duo. The thin
young man relaxed slightly.
"Hi,
Miles."
"Hello yourself. Uh . . ."
Miles motioned toward the armchairs. "Welcome to my humble
abode. Are the bugs running?"
"I asked
not, but I wouldn't be surprised if Illyan disobeys me, for my own
good." Gregor grimaced, and followed Miles. He swung a plastic
bag from his left hand, from which came a muted clank. He flung
himself into the larger chair, the one Miles had just vacated, leaned
back, hooked a leg over one chair arm, and sighed wearily, as if all
the air were being let out of him. He held out the bag. "Here.
Elegant anesthesia."
Miles took it and
peered in. Two bottles of wine, by God, already chilled. "Bless
you, my son. I've been wishing I could get drunk for days, now. How
did you guess? For that matter, how did you get in here? I thought I
was in solitary confinement." Miles put the second bottle into
the refrigerator, found two glasses, and blew the dust out of
them.
Gregor shrugged. "They could scarcely
keep me out. I'm getting better at insisting, you know. Though Illyan
made sure my private visit was really private, you can wager. And I
can only stay till 2500." Gregor's shoulders slumped, compressed
by the minute-by-minute box of his schedule. "Besides, your
mother's religion grants some kind of good karma for visiting the
sick and prisoners, and I hear you've been the two in one."
Ah,
so Mother had put Gregor up to this. He should have guessed by the
Vorkosigan private label on the wine—heavens, she'd sent the good
stuff. He stopped swinging the bottle by its neck and carried it with
greater respect. Miles was lonely enough by now to be more grateful
for than embarrassed by this maternal intervention. He opened the
wine and poured, and by Barrayaran etiquette took the first sip.
Ambrosia. He slung himself into another chair in a posture similar to
Gregor's. "Glad to see you, anyway."
Miles
contemplated his old playmate. If they'd been even a little, closer
in age, he and Gregor, they might have fallen more into the role of
foster-brothers; Count and Countess Vorkosigan had been Gregor's
official guardians ever since the chaos and bloodshed of Vordarian's
Pretendership. The child-cohort had been thrown together anyway as
"safe" companions, Miles and Ivan and Elena near-age-mates,
Gregor, solemn even then, tolerating games a little younger than he
might have preferred.
Gregor picked up his wine
and sipped. "Sorry things didn't work out for you," he said
gruffly.
Miles tilted his head. "A short
soldier, a short career." He took a bigger gulp. "I'd hoped
to get off-planet. Ship duty."
Gregor had
graduated from the Imperial Academy
two years before Miles entered it.
His brows rose in agreement. "Don't we all."
"You
had a year on active space duty," Miles pointed out.
"Mostly
in orbit. Pretend patrols, surrounded by Security shuttles. It got to
be painful after a while, all the pretending. Pretending I was an
officer, pretending I was doing a job instead of making everyone
else's job harder just by being there . . . you at least were
permitted real risk."
"Most of it was
unplanned, I assure you."
"I'm
increasingly convinced that's the trick of it," Gregor went on.
"Your father, mine, both our grandfathers—all survived real
military situations. That's how they became real officers, not this .
. . study." His free hand made a downward chopping
motion.
"Flung into situations," Miles
disagreed. "My father's military career officially began the day
Mad Yuri's death squad broke in and blew up most of his family—I
think he was eleven, or something. I'd just as soon pass on that sort
of initiation, thanks. It's not something anybody in their right mind
would choose."
"Mm." Gregor
subsided glumly. As oppressed tonight, Miles guessed, by his
legendary father Prince Serg as Miles was by his live one Count
Vorkosigan. Miles reflected briefly on what he had come to think of
as "The Two Sergs." One—maybe the only version Gregor
knew?—was the dead hero, bravely sacrificed on the field of battle
or at least cleanly disintegrated in orbit. The other, the Suppressed
Serg: the hysteriac commander and sadistic sodomite whose early death
in the ill-fated Escobar invasion might have been the greatest stroke
of political good fortune ever to befall Barrayar . . . had even a
hint of this multi-faceted personality ever been permitted to filter
back to Gregor? Nobody who knew Serg talked about him, Count
Vorkosigan least of all. Miles had once met one of Serg's victims.
Miles hoped Gregor never would.
Miles decided to
change the subject. "So we all know what happened to me, what
have you been up to for the last three months? I was sorry to miss
your last birthday party. Up at Kyril Island
they celebrated it by getting drunk,
which made it virtually indistinguishable from any other
day."
Gregor grinned, then sighed. "Too
many ceremonies. Too much time standing up—I think I could be
replaced at half my functions by a life-sized plastic model, and no
one would notice. A lot of time spent ducking the broad marital hints
of my assorted counsellors."
"Actually,
they have a point," Miles had to allow. "If you got . . .
run over by a teacart tomorrow, the succession question goes up for
grabs in a big way. I can think offhand of at least six candidates
with arguable stakes in the Imperium, and more would come out of the
woodwork. Some without personal ambition would nevertheless kill to
see that some of the others didn't get it, which is precisely why you
still don't have a named heir."
Gregor
cocked his head. "You're in that crowd yourself, you
know."
"With this body?" Miles
snorted. "They'd have to … really hate somebody, to tag me. At
that point it really would be time to run away from home. Far and
fast. Do me a favor. Get married, settle down, and have six little
Vorbarras real quick."
Gregor looked even
more depressed. "Now there's an idea. Running away from home. I
wonder how far I'd get before Illyan caught up with me?"
They
both glanced involuntarily upward, though in fact Miles was still not
certain where the room's bugs were located.
"Better
hope Illyan caught up with you before anybody else did." God,
this conversation was getting morbid.
"I
don't know, wasn't there an emperor of China who
ended up pushing a broom somewhere? And a thousand lesser
emigrees—countesses running restaurants—escape is
possible."
"From being Vor? More like
. . . trying to run away from your own shadow." There would be
moments, in the dark, when success would seem achieved, but
then—Miles shook his head, and checked out the still-lumpy bag.
"Ah! You brought a tacti-go set." He didn't foil the least
want to play tacti-go, it had bored him by age fourteen, but anything
was better than this. He pulled it out and set it up between them
with determined good cheer. "Brings back old times."
Hideous thought.
Gregor bestirred himself, and
made an opening move. Pretending to be interested to amuse Miles, who
was simulating interest to cheer Gregor, who was feigning . . .
Miles, distracted, beat Gregor too fast on the first round, and began
to pay more attention. On the next round he kept it closer, and was
rewarded by a spark of genuine interest—blessed
self-forgetfulness—on Gregor's part. They opened the second bottle
of wine. At that point Miles began to feel the effects, going
tongue-thick and sleepy and stupid; it took hardly any effort to let
Gregor almost win the next round.
"I don't
think I've beaten you at this since you were fourteen," sighed
Gregor, concealing secret satisfaction at the low point-spread of
that last round. "You should be an officer, dammit."
"This
isn't a good war game, Dad says," commented Miles. "Not
enough random factors and uncontrolled surprises to simulate reality.
I like it that way." It was almost soothing, a mindless routine
of logic, check and counter, multiple chained moves with, always,
perfectly objective options.
"You should
know." Gregor glanced up. "I still don't understand why
they sent you to Kyril Island.
You've already commanded a real space fleet. Even if they were only a
pack of grubby mercenaries."
"Shh.
That episode is officially non-existent, in my military files.
Fortunately. It wouldn't charm my superiors. I'd commanded, I hadn't
obeyed. Anyway, I didn't so much command the Dendarii Mercenaries as
hypnotize 'em. Without Captain Tung, who decided to prop up my
pretensions for his own purposes, it would have all ended very
unpleasantly. And much sooner."
"I
always thought Illyan would do more with them, after," said
Gregor. "However inadvertently, you brought a whole military
organization secretly into the service of Barrayar."
"Yes,
without them even knowing it themselves. Now, that's
secret. Come on. Assigning them to Illyan's section was a legal
fiction, everybody knew it." And would his own assignment to
Illyan's section turn out to be a legal fiction too? "Illyan's
too careful to get drawn into intergalactic military adventuring as a
hobby. I'm afraid his main interest in the Dendarii Mercenaries is to
keep them as far away from Barrayar as possible. Mercenaries thrive
on other people's chaos.
"Plus, they're a
funny size—less than a dozen ships, three or four thousand
personnel—not your basic invisible six-man covert ops team, though
they can field such, and yet they're too little to take on Planetary
situations. Space-based, not ground troops. Wormhole blockades were
their specialty. Safe, easy on the equipment, mostly bullying unarmed
civilians—which is how I first ran into them, when our freighter
was stopped by their blockade, and the bullying went too far. I
cringe to think of the risks I ran. Though I've often wondered if,
knowing what I know now, I could have. . . ." Miles stopped,
shook his head.
"Or maybe it's like
heights. Better not to look down. You freeze, and then you fall."
Miles was not fond of heights.
"As a
military experience, how did it compare with Lazkowski Base?"
asked Gregor bemusedly.
"Oh, there were
certain parallels," Miles admitted. "Both were jobs I
wasn't trained for, both were potentially lethal, I got out of both
by my skin—lost some skin. The Dendarii episode was . . . worse. I
lost Sergeant Bothari. In a sense, I lost Elena. At least at Camp
Permafrost I
managed not to lose anyone."
"Maybe
you're getting better," Gregor suggested. Miles shook his head,
and drank. He should have put on some music. The thick silence of
this room was oppressive, when the conversation faltered. The ceiling
was probably not hydraulically arranged to descend and crush him in
his sleep; Security had far less messy ways of dealing with
recalcitrant prisoners. It only seemed to lower at him. Well,
I'm short. Maybe it'd miss me.
"I
suppose it would be . . . improper," Miles began hesitantly, "to
ask you to try and get me out of here. It's always seemed rather
embarrassing, to ask for Imperial favors. Like cheating, or
something."
"What, are you asking one
prisoner of ImpSec to rescue another?" Gregor's hazel eyes were
ironic under black brows. "It's a little embarrassing to me to
come up against the limits of my absolute Imperial Rule. Your father
and Illyan, like two parentheses around me. His cupped hands closed
in a squeezing motion.
It was a subliminal
effect of this room, Miles decided. Gregor was feeling it too.
"I
would if I could," Gregor added more apologetically. "But
Illyan's made it crystal clear he wants you kept out of sight. For a
time, anyway."
"Time," Miles
swallowed the last of his wine, and decided he better not pour
himself any more. Alcohol was a depressant, it was said. "How
much time? Dammit, if I don't get something to do I'm going to be the
first case of human spontaneous combustion recorded on vid." He
jerked a rude finger at the ceiling. "I don't need to—don't
even have to leave the building, but at least they could give me some
work.
Clerical, janitorial—I do terrific drains—anything! Dad talked
with Illyan about assigning me to Security—as the only Section left
that would take me—he must have had something more in mind than a
m-, m-, mascot." He poured and drank again, to drown the spate
of words. He'd said too much. Damn the wine. Damn the
whine.
Gregor, who had built a little tower of
tacti-go chips, toppled it with one finger. "Oh, being a mascot
isn't bad work, if you can get it." He stirred the pile slowly.
"I'll see what I can do. No promises."
Miles
didn't know if it was the Emperor, the bugs, or wheels already in
motion (grinding slowly), but two days afterwards he found himself
assigned to the job of administrative assistant to the guard
commander for the building. It was comconsole work; scheduling,
payroll, updating computer files. The job was interesting for a week,
while he was learning it, mind-numbing after that. By the end of a
month, the boredom and banality were beginning to prey on his nerves.
Was he loyal, or merely stupid? Guards, Miles now realized, had to
stay in prison all day long too. Indeed, as a guard, one of his jobs
was now to keep himself in. Damn clever of Illyan, nobody else could
have held him, if he'd been determined on escape. He did find a
window once, and looked out. It was sleeting.
Was
he going to get out of this bloody box before Winterfair? How long
did it take the world to forget him, anyway? If he committed suicide,
could he be officially listed as shot by a guard while escaping? Was
Illyan trying to drive him out of his mind, or just out of his
Section?
Another month slipped by. As a
spiritual exercise, he decided to fill his off-duty hours by watching
every training vid in the military library, in strict alphabetical
order. The assortment was truly astonishing. He was particularly
bemused by the thirty-minute vid (under "H: Hygiene")
explaining how to take a shower—well, yes, there probably were
backcountry recruits who really needed the instruction. After some
weeks he had worked his way down to "L: Laser-rifle Model D-67;
power-pack circuitry, maintenance, and repair," when he was
interrupted by a call ordering him to report to Illyan's
office.
Illyan's office was almost unchanged
from Miles's last excruciating visit—same spartan windowless inner
chamber occupied mainly by a comconsole desk that looked like it
could be used to pilot a jump ship-but now there were two chairs. One
was promisingly empty. Maybe Miles wouldn't end up so literally on
the carpet this round? The other was occupied by a man in undress
greens with captain's tabs and the Horus-eye insignia of Imperial
Security on the collar.
Interesting fellow, that
captain. Miles summed him out of the corner of his eye as he
exchanged formal salutes with Illyan. Maybe thirty-five years old, he
had something of Illyan's unmemorable bland look about the face, but
was more heavily built. Pale. He might easily pass for some minor
bureaucrat, a sedentary indoorsman. But that particular look could
also be acquired by spending a great deal of time cooped up on
spaceships.
"Ensign Vorkosigan, this is
Captain Ungari. Captain Ungari is one of my galactic operatives. He
has ten years experience gathering information for this department.
His specialty is military evaluation." Ungari favored Miles with
a polite nod by way of acknowledging the introduction. His level gaze
summed Miles right back. Miles wondered what the spy's evaluation of
the dwarfish soldier standing before him might be, and tried to stand
straighter. There was nothing obvious about Ungari's reaction to
Miles.
Illyan leaned back in his swivel chair.
"So tell me, Ensign, what have you heard lately from the
Dendarii Mercenaries?"
"Sir?"
Miles rocked back. Not
the curve he was expecting … "I . . . lately, nothing. I had a
message about a year ago from Elena Bothari—Bothari-Jesek, that is.
But it was only private, uh, birthday greetings."
"That
one I have," Illyan nodded.Do
you, you bastard. "—
Nothing since?"
"No, sir."
"Hm."
Illyan waved a hand at the spare chair. "Sit down, Miles."
His voice grew quicker and more businesslike. Meat at last?
"Let's
go over a little astrography. Geography is the mother of strategy,
they say." Illyan fiddled with a control on his comconsole.
A
wormhole nexus route map formed in three bright dimensions over the
holovid plate. It looked rather like a ball-and-stick model of some
weird organic molecule done in colored light, balls representing
local-space crossings, sticks the wormhole-space jumps between them;
schematic, compressing information, rather than to scale. Illyan
zoomed in on a portion, red and blue sparks in the center of an
otherwise empty ball, with four sticks leading out at crazy angles to
more complex balls like some skewed Celtic cross. "Look
familiar?"
"That in the center is the
Hegen Hub, isn't it, sir?"
"Good."
Illyan handed him his controller. "Give me a strategic summation
of the Hegan Hub, Ensign."
Miles cleared
his throat. "It's a double star system with no habitable
planets, a few stations and powersats, and very little reason to
linger in. Like many nexus connections, it's more route than place,
taking its value by what's around it. In this case, four adjoining
regions of local space with settled planets." Miles brightened
each part of the image as he spoke, for emphasis.
"Aslund.
Aslund is a cul-de-sac like Barrayar; the Hegen Hub is its sole gate
to the greater galactic web. The Hegen Hub is as vital to Aslund as
our gateway Komarr is to us.
"Jackson's
Whole. The Hegen Hub is just one of five gates from Jacksonian local
space; beyond Jackson's Whole lies half the explored
galaxy.
"Vervain. Vervain has two exits;
one to the Hub, the other into the nexus sectors controlled by the
Cetagandan Empire.
"And fourth, of course,
our, ah, good neighbor the Planet and Republic of
Pol. Which in turn
connects to our own multi-nexus Komarr. Also from Komarr is our one
straight jump to the Cetagandan sector, which route has been either
tightly controlled or outright barred to Cetagandan traffic ever
since we conquered it." Miles glanced at Illyan for approval,
hoping he was on the right track. Illyan glanced at Ungari, who
allowed his brows to rise fractionally. Meaning what?
"Wormhole
strategy. The devil's cat's cradle," Illyan muttered
editorially. He squinted at his glowing schematic. "Four
players, one game-board. It ought to be simple."
"Anyway,"
Illyan stretched out his hand for the controller, and sat back with a
sigh, "the Hegen Hub is more than a potential choke-point for
the four adjoining systems. Twenty-five percent of our own commercial
traffic passes through it, via Pol. And although Vervain is closed to
Cetagandan military vessels just as Pol is closed to ours, the Cetas
ship significant civilian exchange through the same slot and out past
Jackson's Whole. Anything—like a war—that blocks the Hegen Hub
would seem almost as damaging to Cetaganda as to us.
"And
yet, after years of cooperative disinterest and dull neutrality, this
empty region is suddenly alive with what I can only call an arms
race. All four neighbors seem to be creating military interests. Pol
has been beefing up the armament on all six of its jump point
stations strung toward the Hub—even pulling forces from the side
toward us, which I find a little startling, since Pol has been
extremely wary of us ever since we took Komarr. The Jackson's Whole
consortium is doing the same on its side. Vervain has hired a
mercenary fleet called Randall's Rangers.
"All
this activity is causing low-grade panic on Aslund, whose interest in
the Hegen Hub is for obvious reasons most critical. They're throwing
half this year's military budget into a major jumppoint station—hell,
a floating fortress—and to cover the gap while they prepare, they
too have hired guns. You may be familiar with them. They used to be
called the Dendarii Free Mercenary Fleet." Illyan paused, and
raised an eyebrow, watching for Miles's reaction.
Connections
at last—or were there? Miles blew out his breath. "They were
blockade specialists, at one time. Makes sense, I guess. Ah . . .
used to be called the Dendarii? Have they changed
lately?"
"They've recently reverted to
their original title of Oseran Mercenaries, it seems."
"Strange.
Why?"
"Why, indeed?" Illyan's
lips compressed. "One of many questions, though hardly the most
urgent. But it's the Cetagandan connection —or lack of it—that
bothers me. General chaos in the region would be as damaging to
Cetaganda as to us. But if, after the chaos passes, Cetaganda could
somehow end up in control of the Hegen Hub—ahl;;; Then they could
block or control Barrayaran traffic as we do theirs through Komarr.
Indeed, if you look at the other side of the Komarr-Cetaganda jump as
being under their control, that would put them across two out of our
four major galactic routes. Something labyrinthine, indirect—it
smells of Cetaganda's methods. Or would, if I could spot their sticky
hands pulling any of the strings. They must be there, even if I can't
see them yet. . . ." Brooding, Illyan shook his head. "If
the Jackson's Whole jump were cut, everyone would have' to reroute
through the Cetagandan Empire . . . profit, there. . . "
"Or
through us," Miles pointed out. "Why should Cetaganda do us
that favor?"
"I have thought of one
possibility. Actually, I've thought of several, but this one's for
you, Miles. What's the best way to capture a jump point?"
"From
both ends at once," Miles recited automatically.
"Which
is one reason Pol has been careful never to let us amass a military
presence in the Hegen Hub. But let us suppose someone on Pol stumbles
across that nasty rumor I had so much trouble scotching, that the
Dendarii Mercenaries are the private army of a certain Barrayaran Vor
lordling? What will they think?"
"They'll
think we're getting ready to jump them," said Miles. "They
might go paranoid—panic—even seek a temporary alliance with, say,
Cetaganda?"
"Very good," nodded
Illyan.
Captain Ungari, who had been listening
with the attentive patience of a man who'd been over it all before,
glanced at Miles as though faintly encouraged, and approved this
hypothesis with a nod of his head.
"But
even if perceived as an independent force," Illyan went on, "the
Dendarii are one more destabilizing influence in the region. The
whole situation is disturbing—growing tenser by the day, for no
apparent reason. Only a little more force—one mistake, one lethal
incident—could trigger turbulence, classic chaos, the real thing,
unstoppable. Reasons, Miles! I want information."
Illyan,
generally, wanted information with the same passion that a strung-out
juba freak craved a spike. He turned now to Ungari. "So what do
you think, Captain? Will he do?"
Ungari was
slow to reply. "He's . . . more physically conspicuous than I'd
realized."
"As camouflage, that's not
necessarily a disadvantage. In his company you ought to be nearly
invisible. The stalking goat and the hunter."
"Perhaps.
But can he carry the load? I'm not going to have much time for
babysitting." Ungari's voice was an urban baritone, evidently
one of the modern educated officers, though he did not wear an
Academy pin.
"The Admiral seems to think
so. Am I to argue?" Ungari glanced at Miles. "Are you sure
the Admiral's judgment is not swayed by … personal hopes?"
You
mean wishful thinking,
Miles mentally translated that delicate hesitancy.
"If
so, it's for the first time," Illyan shrugged. And
there's a first time for everything,
hung unspoken in the air. Illyan turned now to pin Miles with a gaze
of grim intensity. "Miles, do you think you would—if
required—be capable of playing the part of Admiral Naismith again,
for a short time?"
He'd seen it coming, but
the words spoken out loud were still a strange cold thrill. To
activate that suppressed persona again. . . . It
wasn't just a part, Illyan.
"I could play Naismith again, sure. It's stopping
playing Naismith that scares me."
Illyan
allowed himself a wintry smile, taking this for a joke. Miles's smile
was a little sicker. You
don't know, you don't know what it was like. . . ,
Three parts fakery and flim-flam, and one part . . . something else.
Zen, gestalt, delusion? Uncontrollable moments of alpha-state
exaltation. . . . Could he do it again? Maybe he knew too much now.
First you freeze,
and then you fall.
Perhaps it would
only be play-acting this time.
Illyan leaned
back, held up his hands palm to palm, and let them fell in a
releasing gesture. "Very well, Captain Ungari. He's all yours.
Use him as you see fit. Your mission, then, is to gather information
on the current crisis in the Hegen Hub; secondly, if possible, to use
Ensign Vorkosigan to remove the Dendarii Mercenaries from the stage.
If you decide to use a bogus contract to pull them out of the Hub,
you can draw on the covert ops account for a convincing down-payment.
You know the results I want. I'm sorry I can't make my orders more
specific in advance of the intelligence you yourself must
obtain."
"I don't mind, sir,"
said Ungari, smiling slightly.
"Hm. Enjoy
your independence while it lasts. It ends with your first mistake."
Illyan's tone was sardonic, but his eyes were confident, until he
turned them toward Miles.
"Miles, you'll be
traveling as 'Admiral Naismith,' himself traveling incognito,
returning, possibly, to the Dendarii fleet. Should Captain Ungari
decide for you to activate the Naismith role, he'll pose as your
bodyguard, so as to be always in position to control the situation.
It's a little too much to ask Ungari to be responsible for his
mission and also your safety, so you'll also have a real bodyguard.
This setup will give Captain Ungari unusual freedom of movement,
because it will account for your possession of a personal ship—we
have a jump pilot and a fast courier we obtained from—never mind
where, but it has no connection with Barrayar. It's under Jacksonian
registration at present, which fits in nicely with Admiral Naismith's
mysterious background. It's so obviously bogus, no one will look for
a second layer of, er, bogusity. Illyan paused. "You will, of
course, obey Captain Ungari's orders. That
goes without saying." Illyan's direct stare was chilly as a
Kyrfli Island
midnight.
Miles
smiled dutifully, to show he took the hint. I'll
be good, sir let me off planet!
From ghost to goat—was this a promotion?
Victor
Rotha, Procurement Agent. Sounded like a pimp. Dubiously, Miles
regarded his new persona twinned over the vid plate in his cabin.
What was wrong with a simple spartan mirror, anyway? Where
had Illyan gotten this ship?
Of Betan manufacture, it was stuffed with Betan gimmickry of a
luxurious order. Miles entertained himself with a gruesome vision of
what could happen if the programming on the elaborate sonic
tooth-cleaner ever went awry.
"Rotha"
was vaguely dressed, with respect to his supposed point-of-origin.
Miles had drawn the line at a Betan sarong, Pol Station Six was not
nearly warm enough for it. He did wear his loose green trousers held
up with a Betan sarong rope, though, and Betan style sandals. The
green shirt was a cheap synthetic silk from Escobar, the baggy cream
jacket an expensive one of like style. The eclectic wardrobe of
someone originally from Beta Colony, who'd been knocking around the
galaxy for a while, sometimes up, sometimes down. Good. He muttered
to himself aloud, warming up his disused Betan accent, he pottered
about the elaborate Owner's Cabin.
They had
docked here at Pol Six a day ago without incident. The whole
three-week trip from Barrayar had passed without incident. Ungari
seemed to like it that way. The ImpSec captain had spent most of the
journey counting things, taking pictures and counting ships, troops,
security guards both civil and military. They'd managed excuses to
stop over at four of the six jump point stations on the route between
Pol and the Hegen Hub, with Ungari counting, measuring, sectioning,
computer-stuffing, and calculating the whole way. Now they had
arrived at Pol's last (or first, depending on your direction of
travel) outpost, its toehold in the Hegen Hub itself. At one time,
Pol Six had merely marked the jump point, no more than an emergency
stop and communications transfer link. No one had yet solved the
problem of getting messages through a wormhole jump except by
physically transporting them on a jump ship. In the most developed
regions of the nexus, comm ships jumped hourly or even more often, to
emit a tight-beam burst that traveled at the speed of light to the
next jump point in that region of local space where messages were
picked up and relayed out in turn, the fastest possible flow of
information. In the less developed regions, one simply had to wait,
sometimes for weeks or months, for a ship to happen by, and hope
they'd remember to drop off your mail. J Now Pol Six didn't just
mark, it frankly guarded. Ungari had clicked his tongue in
excitement, identifying and adding up Pol Navy ships clustered in the
area around the new construction. They'd managed a spiral flight path
into dock that revealed every side of the station, and all ships both
moored and moving.
"Your main job here,"
Ungari had told Miles, "will be to giving anyone watching us
something more interesting to watch than me. Circulate. I doubt
you'll need to expend any special effort to conspicuous. Develop your
cover identity—with luck, you may even pick up a contact or two
who'll be worthy of further study. Though doubt you'll run across
anything of great value immediately; it doesn't work that
way."
Now, Miles laid his samples case open
on his bed and rechecked them. Just
a traveling salesman, that's me.
A dozen hand weapons, power packs removed, gleamed wickedly back at
him. A row of vids described larger and more interesting weapons
systems. An more interesting—you might even say,
"arresting"—collection of tiny disks nestled concealed in
Miles's jacket. Death.
I can get it for you wholesale.
Miles's
bodyguard met him at the docking hatch. Why, oh why had Illyan
assigned Sergeant Overkill to this mission? Same reason he'd sent him
to Kyril Island,
because he was trusted, no doubt, but it embarrassed Miles to be
working with a man who'd once arrested him. What did Overholt make of
Miles, by now? Happily, the big man was the silent type.
Overholt
was dressed as informally and eclectically as Miles himself, though
with safety boots in place of sandals. He looked exactly like
somebody's bodyguard trying to look like a tourist. Much the sort of
man small-time arms dealer Victor Rotha would logically employ. Both
functional and decorative, he slices, dices, and chops.
… By themselves, either Miles or Overholt would be memorable.
Together, well . . . Ungari was right. They needn't worry about being
overlooked.
Miles led the way through that
docking tube and into Pol Six. This docking spoke funneled into a
Customs area, where Miles's sample case and person were carefully
examined, and Overholt had to produce registration for his stunner.
From there they had free run of the transfer station facilities, but
for certain guarded corridors leading into the, as it were,
militarized zones. Those areas, Ungari had made clear, were his
business, not Miles's.
Miles, in good time for
his first appointment, strolled slowly, enjoying the sensation of
being on a space station. The place wasn't as free-wheeling as Beta
Colony, but without question he moved in the midst of mainstream
galactic technoculture. Not like poor half-backwards Barrayar. The
brittle artificial environment emitted its own whiff of danger, a
whiff that could balloon instantly into claustrophobic terror in the
event of a sudden depressurization emergency. A concourse lined with
shops, hostels, and eating facilities made a central meeting
area.
A curious trio idled just across the busy
concourse from Miles. A big man dressed in loose clothing ideal for
concealing weapons scanned the area uneasily. A professional
counterpart of Sergeant Overkill's, no doubt. He and Overholt spotted
each other and exchanged grim glances, carefully ignored each other
after that. The bland man he guarded faded into near-invisibility
beside his woman.
She was short, but
astonishingly intense, slight figure and white-blonde hair cropped
close to her head giving her an odd elfin look. Her black jumpsuit
seemed shot with electric sparks, flowing over her skin like water,
evening-wear in the day-cycle. Thin-heeled black shoes boosted her a
few futile centimeters. Her lips were colored wood-carmine to match
the shimmering scarf that looped across alabaster collarbones to
cascade from each shoulder, framing the bare white skin of her back.
She looked . . . expensive.
Her eye caught
Miles's fascinated stare. Her chin lifted, and she stared back
coldly.
"Victor Rotha?" The voice at
Miles's elbow made him jump. Ah … Mr. Liga?" Miles, wheeling,
hazarded in return. Rabbit-like pale features, protruding lip, black
hair; this was the man who claimed he wished to improve the armament
of his security guards at his asteroid mining facility. Sure. How—and
where—had Ungari scraped Liga up? Miles was not sure he wanted to
know.
"I've arranged a private room for us
to talk," Liga smiled, tilting his head toward a nearby hostel
entrance. "Eh," Liga added, "looks like everybody's
doing business this morning." He nodded toward the trio across
the concourse, who were now a quartet and moving off. The scarves
snapped along like banners, floating in the quick-stepping blonde's
wake.
"Who was that woman?" asked
Miles.
"I don't know," said Liga. "But
the man they're following is your; main competition here. The agent
of House Fell, the Jacksonian armaments specialists." He looked
more like a middle-aged businessman type, at least from the
back.
"Pol lets the Jacksonians operate
here?" Miles asked. "I thought tensions were
high."
"Between Pol, Aslund, and
Vervain, yes," said Liga. "The Jacksonian consortium is
loudly claiming neutrality. They hope to profit from all sides. But
this isn't the best place to talk politics. Let's go, eh?"
'
As Miles expected, Liga settled them in what
was obviously otherwise-unoccupied hostel room, rented for the
purpose, Miles began his memorized pitch, working through the
hand-weapons baffle-gabbing about available inventory and delivery
dates.
"I'd hoped," said Liga, "for
something a little more . . . authoritative."
"I
have another selection of samples aboard my ship," Miles
explained. "I didn't want to trouble Pol customs with them. But
I can give you an overview by vid."
Miles
trotted out the heavy weapons manuals. "This vid is educational
purposes only, of course, as these weapons are of a grade illegal for
a private person to own in Pol local space."
"In
Pol space, yes," Liga agreed. "But Pol's law doesn't run in
Hegen Hub. Yet. All you have to do is cast off from Pol Six and take
little run out beyond the ten-thousand-kilometer traffic control to
conduct any sort of business you want, perfectly legally. The problem
comes in delivering the cargo back in
to Pol local space."
"Difficult
deliveries are one of my specialties," Miles assured him. "For
a small surcharge, of course."
"Eh.
Good . . ." Liga flicked fast-forward through the vidilogue.
"These heavy-duty plasma arcs, now . . . how do they compare
with the cannon-grade nerve disruptors?"
Miles
shrugged. "Depends entirely upon whether you want to blow away
people alone, or people and property both. I can make you a very good
price on the nerve disruptors." He named a figure in Pol
credits.
"I got a better quote than that,
on a device of the same kilowattage, lately," Liga mentioned
disinterestedly.
"I'll bet you did,"
Miles grinned. "Poison, one credit. Antidote, one hundred
credits."
"What's that supposed to
mean, eh?" asked Liga suspiciously. Miles unrolled his lapel and
ran his thumb down the underside, and pulled out a tiny vid tab.
"Take a look at this." He inserted it into the vid viewer.
A figure sprang to life, and pirouetted. It was dressed from head to
toe– and finger-tips in what appeared to be glittering skin-tight
netting,
"A bit drafty for long underwear,
eh?" said Liga sceptically. Miles flashed him a pained smile.
"What you're looking at is what every armed force in the galaxy
would like to get their hands on. The perfected single-person nerve
disrupter shield net. Beta Colony's latest technological
card."
Liga's eyes widened. "First I'd
heard they were on the market."
"The
open market, no. These are, as it were, private advance sales."
Beta Colony only advertised its second or third latest advantages;
staying several steps ahead of everybody else in R&D had been the
harsh world's stock-in-trade for a couple of generations. In time,
Beta Colony would be marketing its new device galaxy-wide. In the
meantime . . .
Liga licked his pouty lower lip.
"We use nerve disruptors a lot." For security guards?
Right, sure. "I have a limited supply of shield nets. First
come, first served."
"The
price?"
Miles named a figure in Betan
dollars. 'Outrageous!" Liga rocked back in his float chair.
Miles shrugged. "Think about it. It could put your . . .
organization at a considerable disadvantage not to be the first to
upgrade its defenses. I'm sure you can imagine."
"I'll
. . . have to check it out. Eh . . . can I have that disk to show my
eh, supervisor?"
Miles pursed his lips.
"Don't get caught with it."
"No
way." Liga spun the demo vid through its paces one more time,
staring in fascination at the sparkling soldier-figure, before
pocketing the disk.
There. The hook was baited,
and cast upon dark waters. It was going to be very interesting to see
what nibbled, whether minnows or monstrous leviathans. Liga was a
fish of the ramora underclass, Miles judged. Well, he had to start
somewhere.
Back out on the concourse, Miles
muttered worriedly to Overholt,
"Did I do
all right?"
"Very smooth, sir,"
Overholt reassured him. Well, maybe. It had felt good, running by
plan. He could almost feel himself submerging into the smarmy
personality of Victor Rotha. For lunch, Miles led Overholt to a
cafeteria with seating open to the concourse, the better for anyone
not-watching Ungari to observe them. He munched a sandwich of
vat-produced protein, and let his tight nerves unwind a little. This
act could be all right. Not nearly as overstimulating as– "Admiral
Naismith!"
Miles nearly choked on a
half-chewed bite, his head swivelling frantically to identify the
source of the surprised voice. Overholt jerked to full-alert, though
he managed to keep his hand from flying prematurely to his concealed
stunner.
Two men had paused beside his table.
One Miles did not recognize. The other . . . damn! He knew that face.
Square-jawed, brown-skinned, too neat and fit for his age to pass as
anything but a soldier despite his Polian civilian clothes. The name,
the name . . . One of Tung's commandos, a combat-drop-shuttle squad
commander. The last time Miles had seen him they'd been suiting up
together in the Triumph
's armory, preparing for a boarding battle. Clive Chodak, that was
his name.
"I'm sorry, you're mistaken,"
Miles's denial was pure spinal reflex. "My name is Victor
Rotha."
Chodak blinked. "What? Oh!
Sorry. That is—you look a lot like somebody I used to know."
He took in Overholt. His eyes queried Miles urgently. "Uh, can
we join you?" ; "No!" said Miles sharply, panicked.
No, wait. He shouldn't throw away a possible contact. This was a
complication for which he should-have been prepared. But to activate
Naismith prematurely, without Ungari's orders. . . .
"Anyway,
not here," he amended hastily. "I … see, sir." With
a short nod, Chodak immediately withdrew drawing his reluctant
companion with him. He managed to glance back over his shoulder only
once. Miles restrained the impulse to bite his napkin in half. The
two men faded into the concourse. By their urgent gestures, they
appeared to be arguing.
"Was that smooth?"
Miles asked plaintively.
Overholt looked mildly
dismayed. "Not very." He frowned down the concourse in the
direction the two men had disappeared.
It didn't
take Chodak more than an hour to track Miles down aboard his Betan
ship in dock. Ungari was still out.
"He
says he wants to talk to you," said Overholt. He and Miles
studied the vid monitor of the hatchway, where Chodak shifted
impatiently from foot to foot. "What do you think he really
wants?"
"Probably, to talk to me,"
said Miles. "Damn me if I don't want to talk to him,
too."
"How well did you know him?"
asked Overholt suspiciously, staring at Chodak's image.
"Not
well," Miles admitted. "He seemed a competent non-com. Knew
his equipment, kept his people moving, stood his ground under fire."
In truth, thinking back, Miles's actual contacts with the man had
been brief, all in the course of business . . . but some of those
minutes had been critical, in the wild uncertainty of shipboard
combat. Was Miles's gut-feel really adequate security clearance for a
man he hadn't seen for almost four years? "Scan him, sure. But
let's let him in and see what he has to say."
"If
you so order it, sir," said Overholt neutrally.
"I
do."
Chodak did not seem to resent being
scanned. He carried only a registered stunner. Though he had also
been an expert at hand-to-hand combat, Miles recalled, a weapon no
one could confiscate. Overholt escorted him to the small ship's
wardroom/mess—the Betans would have called it the rec room.
"Mr.
Rotha," Chodak nodded, "I, uh . . . hoped we could talk
here privately." He looked doubtfully at Overholt. "Or have
you replaced Sergeant Bothari?"
"Never."
Miles motioned Overholt to follow him into the corridor, didn't speak
till the doors sighed shut, "I think you are an inhibiting
presence, Sergeant. Would you mind waiting outside?" Miles
didn't specify whom Overholt inhibited. "You can monitor, of
course."
"Bad idea," Overholt
frowned. "Suppose he jumps you?"
Miles's
fingers tapped nervously on his trouser seam. "It's a
possibility. But we're heading for Aslund next, where the Dendarii
are stationed, Ungari says. He may bear useful information."
"If
he tells the truth."
"Even lies can be
revealing." With this doubtful argument Miles squeezed back into
the wardroom, shedding Overholt. He nodded to his visitor, now seated
at a table. "Corporal Chodak."
Chodak
brightened. "You do remember,"
"Oh,
yes. And, ah … are you still with the Dendarii?"
"Yes,
sir. It's Sergeant Chodak, now."
"Very
good. I'm not surprised." "And, um . . . the Oseran
Mercenaries."
"So I understand.
Whether it's good or not remains to be seen."
"What
are you posing as, sir?"
"Victor Rotha
is an arms dealer."
"That's a good
cover," Chodak nodded, judiciously. Miles tried to put a casual
mask on his next words by punching up two coffees. "So what are
you doing on Pol Six? I thought the Den– the fleet was hired out on
Aslund."
"At Aslund Station, here in
the Hub," Chodak corrected. "It's just a couple days'
flight across-system. What there is of it, so far. Government
contractors." He shook his head.
"Behind
schedule and over cost?"
"You got it."
He accepted the coffee without hesitation, holding it between lean
hands, and took a preliminary slurp. "I can't stay long."
He turned the cup, set it on the table. "Sir, I think I may have
accidentally done you a bad turn. I was so startled to see you there.
. . . Anyway, I wanted to … to warn you, I guess. Are you on the
way back to the fleet?"
"I'm afraid I
can't discuss my plans. Not even with you."
Chodak
gave him a penetrating stare from black almond eyes. "You always
were tricky."
"As an experienced
combat soldier, do you prefer frontal assaults?"
"No,
sir!" Chodak smiled slightly.
"Suppose
you tell me. I take it you are—or are one—of the fleet
intelligence agents scattered around the Hub. There had better be
more than one of you, or the organization's fallen apart sadly in my
absence." In fact, half the inhabitants of Pol Six at the moment
were probably spies of some stripe, considering the number of
potential players in this game. Not to mention double agents—ought
they to be counted twice?
"Why have you
been gone so long,
sir?" Chodak's tone was almost accusative.
"It
wasn't my intention," Miles temporized. "For a portion of
time I was a prisoner in a … place I'd rather not describe. I
escaped about three months back." Well, that was one way of
describing Kyril Island.
"You,
sir! We could have rescued—"
"No,
you couldn't have," Miles said sharply. "The situation was
one of extreme delicacy. It was resolved to my satisfaction. But I
was then faced with . . . considerable clean-up in areas of my
operations other than the Dendarii fleet. Far-flung areas. Sorry, but
you people are not my only concern. Nevertheless, I'm worried. I
should have heard more from Commodore Jesek." Indeed, he should
have.
"Commodore Jesek no longer commands.
There was a financial reorganization and command restructuring, about
a year ago, through the committee of captain-owners and Admiral Oser.
Spearheaded by Admiral Oser."
"Where
is Jesek?"
"He was demoted to fleet
engineer."
Disturbing, but Miles could see
it. "Not necessarily a bad thing. Jesek was never as aggressive
as, say, Tung. And Tung?"
Chodak shook his
head. "He was demoted from chief-of-staff to personnel officer.
A nothing-job."
"That seems . . .
wasteful."
"Oser doesn't trust Tung.
And Tung doesn't love Oser, either. Oser's been trying to force him
out for a year, but he hangs on, despite the humiliation of … um.
It's not easy to get rid of him. Oser can't afford—yet—to
decimate his staff, and too may key people are personally loyal to
Tung."
Miles's eyebrow rose. "Including
yourself?"
Chodak said distantly, "He
got things done. I considered him a superior officer."
"So
did I."
Chodak nodded shortly. "Sir .
. . the thing is … the man who was with me in the cafeteria is my
senior here. And he's one of Oser's. I can't think of any way short
of killing him to stop him reporting our encounter."
"I
have no desire to start a civil war in my own command structure,"
said Miles mildly. Yet.
"I think it's more important that he not suspect you spoke to me
privately. Let him report. I've struck deals with Admiral Oser
before, to our mutual benefit."
"I'm
not sure Oser thinks so, sir. I think he thinks he was
screwed."
Miles barked a realistic laugh.
"What, I doubled the size of the fleet during the Tau Verde war.
Even as third officer, he ended up commanding more than he had
before, a smaller slice of a bigger pie."
"But
the side he originally contracted us to lost."
"Not
so. Both sides gained from that truce we forced. It was a win-win
result, except for a little lost face. What, can't Oser feel he's won
unless somebody else loses?"
Chodak looked
grim. "I think that may be the case, sir. He says—I've heard
him say—you ran a scam on us. You were never an admiral, never an
officer of any kind. If Tung hadn't double-crossed him, he'd have
kicked your ass to hell." Chodak's gaze on Miles was broodingly
thoughtful. "What were you really?"
Miles
smiled gently. "I was the winner. Remember?"
Chodak
snorted, half-amused. "Yee-ah."
"Don't
let poor Oser's revisionist history fog your mind. You were
there."
Chodak shook his head ruefully.
"You didn't really need my warning, did you." He moved to
stand up.
"Never assume anything. And, ah …
take care of yourself. That means, cover your ass. I'll remember you,
later."
"Sir." Chodak nodded.
Overholt, waiting in the corridor in a quasi Imperial Guardsman pose,
escorted him firmly to the shuttle hatch. Miles sat in the wardroom,
and nibbled gently on the rim of his coffee cup, considering certain
surprising parallels between command restructuring in a free
mercenary fleet and the internecine wars of the Barrayaran Vor. Might
the mercenaries be thought of as a miniature, simplified, or
laboratory version of the real thing? Oser
should have been around during the Vordarian's Pretendership, and
seen how the big boys operate.
Still, Miles had best not underestimate the potential dangers and
complexities of the situation. His death in a miniature conflict
would be just as absolute as his death in a large one. Hell, what
death? What had he to do with the Dendarii, or the Oserans, after
all? Oser was right, it had been a scam, and the only wonder was how
long it had taken the man to wake to the fact. Miles could see no
immediate need to reinvolve himself with the Dendarii at all. In
fact, he could be well-rid of a dangerous political embarrasment. Let
Oser have them, they'd been his in the first place anyway. I
have three sworn liege-people in that fleet. My own personal
politic.
How
easy
it had been to slip back into being Naismith. . . Anyway, activating
Naismith wasn't Miles decision. It was Captain Ungari's.
Ungari
was the first to point this out, when he returned later Overholt
briefed him. A controlled man, his fury showed by subtle signs, a
sharpening of the voice, deeper lines of tension around eyes and
mouth. "You violated your cover. You never
break cover. It's the first rule of survival in this
business."
"Sir, may I respectfully
submit, I didn't blow it," Miles replied steadily. "Chodak
did. He seemed to realize it, too, he's not stupid. He apologized as
best he could." Chodak indeed might be subtler than first glance
would indicate, for at this point, he had an in with both sides in
the putative Dendarii command schism, whoever came out on top.
Calculation or chance? Chodak was either smart or lucky, in either
case he could be a useful addition to Miles's side. . . . What
side, huh? Ungari isn't going to let me near the Dendarii after
this.
Ungari
frowned at the vidplate, which had just replayed the recording of
Miles's interview with the mercenary. "It sounds more and more
like the Naismith cover may be too dangerous to activate at all. If
your Oser's little palace coup is anything like what this fellow
indicates, Illyan's fantasy of you simply ordering the Dendarii to
get lost is straight out the airlock. I thought it sounded too easy."
Ungari paced the wardroom, tapping his right fist into his left palm.
"Well, we may still get some use out of Victor Rotha. Much as
I'd like to confine you to quarters—"
Strange,
how many of his superiors said that.
"—Liga
wants to see Rotha again this evening. Maybe to place an order for
some of our fictitious cargo. String it out—I want you to get past
him to the next level of his organization. His boss, or his boss's
boss."
"Who owns Liga, do you
suspect?"
Ungari stopped pacing, and turned
his hands palm-out. "The Cetagandans? Jackson's Whole? Any one
of half-a-dozen others? ImpSec is spread thin out here. But if it
were proved Liga's criminal organization are Cetagandan puppets, it
could be worth sending a full-time agent to penetrate their ranks. So
find out! Hint at more goodies in your bag. Take bribes. Blend in.
And move it along. I'm almost finished here, and Illyan particularly
wants to know when Aslund Station will be fully operational as a
defensive base."
Miles punched the door
chime of the hostel room. His chin tic'd up. He cleared his throat
and straightened his shoulders. Overholt glanced up and down the
empty corridor.
The door hissed open. Miles
blinked in astonishment.
"Ah, Mr. Rotha."
The light cool voice belonged to the brief blonde he'd seen in the
concourse that morning. Her jumpsuit was now skin-fitting red silk
with a downcurving neckline, a glittering red ruff rising from the
back of the neck to frame her sculptured head, and high-heeled red
suede boots. She favored him with a high-voltage smile.
"I'm
sorry," said Miles automatically, "I must be in the wrong
place."
"Not at all." A slim hand
opened in an expansive, welcoming gesture. "You're right on
time."
"I had an appointment with a
Mr. Liga, here."
"Yes, and I've taken
over the appointment. Do come in. My name is Livia Nu."
Well,
she couldn't possibly be carrying any concealed weapons. Miles
stepped within, and was unsurprised to see her bodyguard, idling in
one corner of the hostel room. The man nodded to Overholt, who nodded
back, both wary as two cats. And where was the third man? Not here,
evidently.
She drifted to a liquid-filled
settee, and arranged herself upon it.
"Are
you, uh, Mr. Liga's supervisor?" Miles asked. No, Liga had
denied knowing who she was. …
She hesitated
fractionally. "In a sense, yes."
One
of them was lying—no, not necessarily. If she were indeed high in
Liga's organization, he would not have identified her to Rotha.
Damn.
"—but you may think of me as a
procurement agent."
God. Pol Six really was
hip-deep in spies. "For whom?"
"Ah,"
she smiled. "One of the advantages of dealing with small
suppliers is always their no-questions-asked policy. One of the few
advantages."
"No-questions-asked is
House Fell's slogan, I believe. They have the advantage of a fixed
and secure base. I've learned to be cautious about selling arms to
people who might be shooting at me in the near future."
Her
blue eyes widened. "Who would want to shoot at
you?"
"Misguided folk," Miles
tossed off. Ye gods. He was not in control of this conversation. He
exchanged a harried look with Overholt, who was being out-blanded by
his counterpart.
"We must chat." She
patted the cushion beside her invitingly. "Do sit down, Victor.
Ah," she nodded to her bodyguard, "why don't you wait
outside."
Miles seated himself on the edge
of the settee, trying to guess woman's age. Her complexion was smooth
and white. Only the skin of her eyelids was soft and faintly
puckered. Miles thought of Ungari's orders—take bribes, blend in. .
. .
"Perhaps you should wait outsio* also,"
he said to Overholt.
Overholt looked torn, but
of the two, he clearly wanted more to keep an eye on the large armed
man. He nodded, apparently in acquiescence, actually in approval, and
followed her man out.
Miles smiled in what he
hoped was a friendly way. She looked positively seductive. Miles
eased cautiously back in the cushions, and tried to look seduceable.
A veritable espionage fantasy encounter, of the sort Ungari had told
him never happened. Maybe they just never happened to Ungari, eh? My
what sharp teeth you have, Miss.
Her
hand went to her cleavage—a riveting gesture—and withdrew a tiny,
familiar vid disk. She leaned over to insert it in the vid player on
the low table before them, and it took Miles a moment to shift his
attention to the vid. The little glittering soldier-figure went
through its stylized gestures once again. Ha. So, she really was
Liga's supervisor. Very good, he was getting somewhere now.
"This
is really remarkable, Victor. How did you come by it?"
"A
happy accident."
"How many can you
supply?"
"A strictly limited number.
Say, fifty. I'm not a manufacturer. Liga did mention the
price?"
"I thought it high."
"If
you can find another supplier who offers these for less, I will be
happy to match his price and knock off ten percent." Miles
managed to bow sitting down.
She made a faint
amused sound, down in her throat. "The volume offered is too
low."
"There are several ways you
could profit from even a small number of these, if you got into the
trade early enough. Such as selling working models to interested
governments. I mean to have a share of that profit, before the market
is saturated and the price drops. You could too."
"Why
don't you? Sell them directly to governments, that is."
"What
makes you think I haven't?" Miles smiled. "But—consider
my routes out of this area. I came in past Barrayar and Pol. I must
exit via either Jackson's Whole or the Cetagandan Empire.
Unfortunately, through either route I run a high risk of being
relieved of this particular cargo without any compensation
whatsoever." For that matter, where had Barrayar obtained its
working model of the shield-suit? Was there a real Victor Rotha, and
where was he now? Where had
Illyan gotten their ship?
"So, you carry
them with you?"
"I didn't say
that."
"Hm." She smiled. "Can
you deliver one tonight?"
"What
size?"
"Small." One long-nailed
finger traced a line down her body, from breast to thigh, to indicate
exactly how small.
Miles sighed mournfully.
"Unfortunately, these were sized for the average-to-large combat
soldier. Cutting one down is a considerable technical challenge—one
which I am in fact still working on myself."
"How
thoughtless of the manufacturer."
"I
entirely agree, Citizen Nu."
She looked at
him more carefully. Did her smile grow slightly more
genuine?
"Anyway, I prefer to sell them in
wholesale lots. If your organization isn't financially up to
it—"
"An arrangement might yet be
made."
"Promptly, I trust. I'll be
moving on soon."
She murmured absently,
"Perhaps not . . ." then looked up with a quick frown.
"What's your next stop?"
Ungari had to
file a public flight plan anyway. "Aslund."
"Hm
. . . yes, we must come to some arrangement. Absolutely." Were
those blue flickers what were called bedroom eyes? The effect was
lulling, almost hypnotic. I
finally meet a woman who's barely taller than I am, and I don't even
know which side she's on.
He of all men ought not to mistake short for weak or
helpless.
"Can I meet your boss?"
"Who?"
Her brows lowered.
"The man I saw you both
with this morning."
". . . oh. So,
you've already seen him."
"Set me up a
meeting. Let's do serious business. Betan dollars,
remember."
"Pleasure before business,
surely." Her breath puffed against his ear, a faint spicy
fog.
Was she trying to soften him up? What for?
Ungari had said, don't break cover. Surely it would be in character
for Victor Rotha to take all he could get. Plus ten percent. "You
don't have to do this," he managed to choke out. His heart was
beating entirely too fast. "I don't do everything
for business reasons," she purred. Why, indeed, should she
bother to seduce a sleazy little gun runner? What pleasure was in it
for her? What was in it besides
pleasure for her? Maybe
she likes me.
Miles winced, picturing himself offering that explanation to Ungari.
Her arm circled his neck. His hand, unwilled, rose to stroke the fine
pelt of her hair. A highly aesthetic tactile experience, just as he'd
imagined. . . .
Her hand tightened. In pure
nervous reflex, Miles leapt to his feet.
And
stood there feeling like an idiot. It had been a caress, not
incipient strangulation. The angle was all wrong for attack
leverage.
She flung herself back in the seat,
slim arm stretching along the top of the cushions. "Victor!"
Her voice was amused, her brow arched. "I wasn't going to bite
your neck."
His face was hot.
"I-have-to-go-now." He cleared his throat to bring his
voice back down to its lower register. His hand swooped to pluck the
vid disk from the player. Her hand leapt toward it, then fell back
languidly, pretending disinterest. Miles hit the door
comm.
Overholt was there at once, in the sliding
door aperture. Miles's gut eased. If his bodyguard had been gone,
Miles would have known this at once for some kind of set-up. Too
late, of course.
"Maybe later," Miles
gabbled. "After you've taken delivery. We could get together."
Delivery of a nonexistent cargo? What was he saying?
She
shook her head in disbelief. Her laugh followed him down the
corridor. It had a brittle edge.
Miles lurched
awake when the lights snapped on in his cabin. Ungari, fully dressed,
was in the doorway. Behind him their jump pilot, wearing only his
underwear and a sleep-stunned expression, jittered
uncertainly.
"Dress later," Ungari
snarled to the pilot. "Just get us free of the dock and run us
out beyond the ten-thousand-kilometer limit. I'll be up to help set
course in a few minutes." He added half to himself, "As
soon as I know where the devil we're going. Move."
The
pilot fled. Ungari strode to Miles's bedside. "Vorkosigan, what
the hell happened in that hostel room?"
Miles
squeezed his eyes against the glares of both the lights and Ungari,
and suppressed an impulse to hide under the covers from both. "Ha?"
His mouth was dry with sleep.
"I've just
gotten an advance warning—bare minutes advance warning—of an
arrest order being put out by Pol Six civil security for Victor
Rotha."
"But I never touched the
lady!" Miles protested, dizzied.
"Liga's
body was found murdered in your meeting room."
"What!"
"The
security lab has just finished timing it—to about when you met.
Were to meet. The arrest order will be on the net in minutes, and
we'll be locked in here."
"But I
didn't. I never even saw Liga, only his boss, Livia Nu. I mean—if
I'd done any such thing, I'd have reported it to you immediately,
sir!"
"Thank you," said Ungari
dryly. "I'm glad to know that." His voice harshened.
"You're being framed, of course."
"Who—"
Yes. There could have been another, grimmer way for Livia Nu to have
relieved Liga of that top secret vid disk. But if she wasn't Liga's
superior, or even a member of his Polian criminal organization at
all, who was she? "We need to know more, sir! This could be the
start of something."
"This could be
the end
of our mission. Damn! And now we can't retreat back through Pol to
Barrayar. Cut off. Where next?" Ungari paced, evidently thinking
aloud. "I want to go to Aslund. Its extradition treaty with Pol
has broken down at present, but . . . then there are your mercenary
complications. Now that they've connected Rotha to Naismith. Thanks
to your carelessness."
"From what
Chodak said, I don't think Admiral Naismith would exactly be welcomed
back with open arms," Miles agreed reluctantly.
"Jackson's
Whole's consortium station has no extradition treaty with anyone.
This cover's gone completely sour. Rotha and Naismith, both useless.
It has to be the Consortium. I'll ditch this ship there, go
underground, and double back to Aslund on my own."
"What
about me, sir?"
"You and Overholt will
have to split off and take the long way
home."
Home.
Home in disgrace. "Sir . . . running away looks bad. Suppose we
sat tight, and cleared Rotha of the charges? We wouldn't be cut off
any more, and Rotha would still be a viable cover. It's possible
we're being hustled into doing just this, cutting and running."
"I
don't see how anyone could have anticipated my information source in
Polian civil security. I think we're meant to be locked up here in
dock." Ungari tapped his right fist into his palm once, a
gesture of decision this time. "The Consortium it is." He
wheeled and exited, boots tromping down the deck. A change of
vibration and and pressure, and a few muted clanks, told Miles their
ship was now breaking from Pol Six.
Miles said
aloud to the empty cabin. "But what if they have plans for both
contingencies? I would." He shook his head doubtfully, and rose
to dress and follow Ungari.
The
Jacksonian Consortium's jump point station, Miles decided, differed
from Pol's mainly in the assortment of things its merchants offered
for sale. He stood before the book-disk dispenser in a concourse very
like Pol Six's and flicked the vid fast-forward through a huge
catalogue of pornography. Well, mostly fast-forward, his search was
punctuated by a few pauses, from bemused to stunned. Nobly resisting
curiosity, he reached the military history section only to find a
disappointingly thin collection of titles.
He
inserted his credit card and the machine dispensed three wafers. Not
that he was all that interested in The
Adumbration of Trigonial Strategy in the Wars of Minos IV,
but it was going to be a long, dull ride home, and Sergeant Overholt
did not promise to be the most sparkling of traveling companions.
Miles pocketed the disks and sighed. What a waste of time, effort,
and anticipation this mission had been.
Ungari
had arranged for the "sale" of Victor Rotha's ship, pilot,
and engineer to a front man who would deliver it, eventually, back to
Barrayaran Imperial Security. Miles's pleading suggestions to his
superior on how to make more use of Rotha, Naismith, or even Ensign
Vorkosigan had then been interrupted by an ultra-coded message from
ImpSec HQ, for Ungari's eyes only. Ungari had withdrawn to decode it,
and emerged half an hour later, dead-white around the lips.
He
had then moved his timetable up and departed within the hour on a
commercial ship to Aslund Station. Alone. Refusing to impart the
contents of the message to Miles, or even to Sergeant Overholt
Refusing to take Miles along. Refusing Miles permission to at least
continue military observations independently on the
Consortium.
Ungari left Overholt to Miles, or
vice versa. It was a little hard to tell who had been left in charge
of whom. Overholt seemed to be acting less like a subordinate and
more like a nanny all the time, discouraging Miles's attempted
explorations of the Consortium, insisting he keep safely to his
hostel room. They waited now to board an Escobaran commercial liner
slated for a nonstop run to Escobar, where they would report to the
Barrayaran Embassy which would no doubt ship them home. Home, and
with nothing to show for it.
Miles checked his
chrono. Another twenty minutes to kill before boarding. They might as
well go sit. With an irritable glance at his shadow Overholt, Miles
trudged wearily down the concourse. Overholt followed, frowning
general disapproval.
Miles brooded on Livia Nu.
In fleeing from her erotic invitation he'd surely missed the
adventure of his short lifetime. Yet that hadn't been the look of
love on her face. Anyway, he'd worry about a woman who could fall
madly in love at first sight with Victor Rotha. The light in her eyes
had been more on the order of a gourmet contemplating an unusual hors
d'oeuvre just presented by the waiter. He'd felt like he'd had
parsley sticking out of his ears. She might have been dressed like a
courtesan, moved like a courtesan, but there'd been none of the
courtesan's eagerness to please about her, nothing servile. The
gestures of power in the garments of powerlessness. Unsettling. So
beautiful.
Courtesan, criminal, spy, what was
she? Above all, who did belong to? Was she Liga's boss, or Liga's
opponent? Or Liga's. Had she killed the rabbity man herself? Whatever
else she was, he was increasingly convinced, she was a key piece in
the puzzle of Hegen Hub. They should have followed her up, not fled
from her. It wasn't the only opportunity he'd missed. The meeting
with Livia was going to bother him for a long time.
Miles
looked up to find his way blocked by a pair of Consortium goons—civil
security officers, he corrected his thought ironically. He stood,
feet planted, and lifted his chin. What now?
"Yes,
gentlemen?"
The big one looked to the
enormous one, who cleared his throat. "Mr. Victor Rotha?"
"If
I am, then what?"
"An arrest order has
been purchased for you. It charges you with the murder of one Sydney
Liga. Do you wish to outbid?"
"Probably."
Miles's lip curled in exasperation. What a development. "Who's
bidding for my arrest?"
"The name is
Cavilo."
Miles shook his head. "Don't
even know him. Is he with Polian Civil Security, by chance?"
The
officer checked his report panel. "No." He added chattily,
"The Polians almost never do business with us. They think we
ought to trade them criminals for free. As if we wanted any
back!"
"Huh. That's supply and demand
for you." Miles blew out his breath. Illyan was not going to be
thrilled aboutthis
charge on his expense account. "How much did this Cavilo offer
for me?"
The officer checked his panel
again. His brows rose. "Twenty thousand Betan dollars. He must
want you a lot."
Miles made a small leaky
noise. "I don't have that much on
me."
The officer pulled out his come-along
stick. "Well, then."
"I'll have
to make arrangements."
"You'll have to
make arrangements from Detention, sir."
"But
I'll miss my ship!"
"That's probably
the idea," the officer agreed. "Considering the timing and
all."
"Suppose—if that's all this
Cavilo wants—he then withdraws his bid?"
"He'll
lose a substantial deposit."
Jacksonian
justice was truly blind. They'd sell it to anyone. "Uh, may I
have a word with my assistant?"
The officer
pursed his lips, and studied Overholt suspiciously. "Make it
fast."
"What d'you think, Sergeant?"
Miles turned to Overholt and asked lowly. "They don't seem to
have an order for you. . . ."
Overholt
looked tense, tight mouth annoyed and eyes almost panicked. "If
we could make it to the ship. . . ."
The
rest hung unspoken. The Escobarans shared the Polian disapproval of
Jacksonian Consortium "law." Once aboard the liner, Miles
would be on Escobaran "soil"; the captain would not
voluntarily yield him up. Could, would, this Cavilo be able to bid
enough to intern the whole Escobaran liner? The sum involved would be
astronomical "Try."
Miles turned back
toward the Consortium officers, smiling, wrists held out in
surrender. Overholt exploded into action. The sergeant's first kick
sent the enormous goon's come-along stick flying. Overholt's momentum
flowed into a whirl that brought his double hands up against the
second goon's head with great force. Miles was already in motion. He
dodged a wild grab, and sprinted as best he could up the concourse.
At this point he spotted the third goon, in plainclothes. Miles could
tell who he was by the glitter of the tangle-field he tossed in front
of Miles's pistoning legs. The man snorted with laughter as Miles
pitched forward, trying to roll and save his brittle bones. Miles hit
the concourse floor with a whump that knocked the air from his lungs.
He inhaled through clenched if teeth, not crying out, as the pain in
his chest competed with the burn of the tangle-net around his ankles.
He wrenched himself around on the floor, looking back the way he had
come.
The less enormous goon was standing bent
over, hands to his head, dizzied. The other was retrieving his
come-along stick from where it had skittered to a stop. By
elimination, the stunned heap on the pavement must be Sergeant
Overholt.
The goon with the stick stared at
Overholt and shook his head, and stepped over him toward Miles. The
dizzied goon pulled out his own stick and gave the downed man a shock
to the head, and followed without a backward glance. Nobody,
apparently, wanted to buy Overholt.
"There
will be a ten percent surcharge for resisting arrest," the
spokesman-goon remarked coldly down to Miles. Miles squinted up the
shiny columns of his boots. The shock-stick came down like
club.
On the third blazing blow he began
screaming. On the seventh, he passed out. He came to consciousness
altogether too soon, while still being dragged along between the two
uniformed men. He was shivering uncontrollably. His breathing was
messed up somehow, irregular shallow gasps that didn't give him
enough air. Waves of pins-and-needles pulsed through his nervous
system. He had a kaleidoscope impression of lift tubes and corridors,
and more bare functional corridors. They jerked to a halt at last.
When the goons let his arms go he fell to hands and knees, then the
cold floor.
Another civil security officer
peered over a comconsole desk him. A hand grasped Miles's head by the
hair, and yanked it back; the red flicker of a retinal scan blinded
him momentarily. His eyes seemed extraordinarily sensitive to light.
His shaking hands were pressed hard against some sort of
identification pad; released, he fell back into his huddle. His
pockets were stripped out, stunner, IDs, tickets, cash, all dumped
pell-mell into a plastic bag. Miles emitted a muffled squeak of
dismay as they bundled the white jacket, with all its useful secrets,
into the bag as well. The lock was keyed closed with his thumbprint,
pinched against it.
The Detention officer craned
his neck. "Does he want to outbid?"
"Unh
. . ." Miles managed to respond, when his head was pulled back
again.
"He said he did," the arresting
goon said helpfully.
The Detention officer shook
his head. "We're going to have to wait till the shock wears off.
You guys overdid it, I think. He's only a little runt."
"Yeah,
but he had a big guy with him who gave us trouble. The little mutant
seemed to be in charge, so we let him take payment for
both."
"That's fair," the
Detention officer conceded. "Well, it'll be a while. Throw him
in the cooler till he stops shaking enough to talk."
"Sure
that's a good idea? Funny-looking as he is, the boy-ohs might want to
play games. He might still ransom himself."
"Mm."
The Detention officer looked Miles over judiciously. "Throw him
in the waiting room with Marda's techies, then. They're a quiet
bunch, they'll leave him alone. And they'll be gone soon."
Miles
was dragged again—his legs didn't respond at all to his will, only
jerking spasmodically. The leg braces seemed to have had some
amplifying effect on the shocks administered there, or maybe it was
the combination with the tangle-field. A long room like a barracks,
with a row of cots down each wall, swam past his vision. The goons
heaved him, not unkindly, onto an empty cot in the less-populated end
of the room. The senior one made a dim sort of effort to straighten
him out, tossed a light blanket across his still
uncontrollably-twitching form, and they left him.
A
little time passed, with nothing to distract him from the full
enjoyment and appreciation of his new array of physical sensations.
He'd thought he'd sampled every sort of agony in the catalogue, but
the goons' shock-sticks had found out nerves and synapses and
ganglial knots he'd never known he possessed. Nothing like pain, to
concentrate the attention upon the self. Practically solipsistic, it
was. But it seemed to be easing—if only his body would stop these
quasi-epileptic seizures, which were exhausting him. . . . A face
wavered into view. A familiar face.
"Gregor!
Am I glad to see you," Miles burbled inanely. He felt his
burning eyes widen. His hands shot out to clench Gregor's shirt, a
pale blue prisoner's smock. "What
the hell are you doing here?"
"It's
a long story."
"Ah! Ah!" Miles
struggled up onto his elbow and stared around wildly for assassins,
hallucinations, he knew not what. "God! Where's—"
Gregor
pushed him back down with a hand on his chest. "Calm down."
And under his breath. "And shut up! . . . You better rest a bit.
You don't look very good right now."
Actually,
Gregor didn't look so good himself, sitting on the edge of Miles's
cot. His face was pale and tired, peppered with beard stubble. His
normally military-cut and combed black hair was a tangle. His hazel
eyes looked nervous. Miles choked back panic.
"My
name is Greg Bleakman," the emperor informed Miles
urgently.
"I can't remember what my name is
right now," Miles stuttered. "Oh—yeah. Victor Rotha. I
think. But how did you get from—" Gregor looked around
vaguely. "The walls have ears, I think?"
"Yes,
maybe."
Miles subsided slightly. The man on
the next cot shook his head with a God-save-me-from-these-assholes
look, turned over and put his pillow over his head. "But, uh . .
. did you get here, like, under your own power?"
"Unfortunately,
all my own doing. You remember that time we were joking about running
away from home?"
"Yeah?"
"Well,"
Gregor took a breath, "it turned out to be a really bad
idea."
"Couldn't you have figured that
out in advance?"
"I—" Gregor
broke off, to stare up the long room as a guard stuck his head in the
door to bawl, "Five minutes!"
"Oh,
hell."
"What? What?"
"They're
coming for us."
"Who's coming for who,
what the hell is going on, Gregor—
Greg …"
"I had a berth on a
freighter, I thought, but they dumped me off here. Without pay,"
Gregor explained rapidly. "Stiffed me. I didn't have so much as
a half-mark on me. I tried to get something on an outbound ship, but
before I could, I got arrested for vagrancy. Jacksonian law is
insane," he added reflectively. ''
"I
know. Then what?"
"They were
apparently making a deliberate sweep, press-gang style. Seems some
enterpreneur is selling tech-trained work gangs to the Aslunders, to
work on their Hub station, which is running behind
schedule."
Miles blinked. "Slave
labor?"
"Of a sort. The carrot is,
when the sentence is up, we're to be discharged on Aslund Station.
Most of these techs don't seem to mind too much. No pay, but
we—they—will be fed and housed, and escape Jacksonian security,
so in the end they'll be no worse off than when they started, broke
and unemployed. Most of them seem to think they'll find berths
outbound from Aslund eventually. Being without funds is not such a
heinous crime, there."
Miles's head
pounded. "They're taking you away?"
Tension
pooled in Gregor's eyes, contained, not permitted to seep over into
the rest of his stiff face. "Right now, I think."
"God!
I can't let—"
"But how did you find
me here—" Gregor began in turn, then looked in frustration up
the room, where blue-smocked men and women were grumbling to their
feet. "Are you here to—"
Miles
stared around frantically. The blue-clad man on the cot next to his
now lay on his side, watching them with a bored glower. He wasn't
over-tall. . . .
"You!" Miles
scrambled overboard, and crouched at the man's side. "You want
to get out of this trip?"
The man looked
slightly less bored. "How?"
"Trade
clothes. Trade ID's. You take my place, I take yours."
The
man looked suspicious. "What's the catch?"
"No
catch. I got a lot of credit. I was going to buy my way out of here
in a while." Miles paused. "There's going to be a surcharge
for my resisting arrest, though."
"Ah."
A catch identified, the man looked slightly more
interested.
"Please! I have to go with—with
my friend. Right now." The babble was rising, as the techs
assembled in the room's far end by the exit. Gregor wandered around
behind the man's cot.
The man pursed his lips.
"Naw," he decided. "If whatever you're in for is worse
than this, I don't want anything to do with it." He swung to a
sitting position, preparing to rise and join the line.
Miles,
still crouched on the floor, raised his hands in supplication.
"Please—"
Gregor, perfectly placed,
pounced. He grabbed the man around the neck in a neat choke and
flipped him over the side of his cot, out of sight. Thank God the
Barrayaran aristocracy still insisted on military training for its
scions. Miles staggered to his feet, the better to obscure the view
from up the room. Some small thumping noises came from the floor. In
a few moments, a prisoner's blue smock skidded under the cot to fetch
up at Miles's sandaled feet. Miles squatted and pulled it on over his
green silks—fortunately, it was a bit oversized—then struggled
into the loose trousers that followed. Some shoving sounds, as the
man's unconscious body was pushed out of sight under the cot, and
Gregor stood, panting slightly, very white. "I can't get these
damn belt strings," Miles said. They skittered from his
trembling hands.
Gregor tied up Miles's pants,
and rolled up his overlong trouser legs. "You need his ID, or
you can't get food or register your work-credits," Gregor hissed
out of the corner of his mouth, and leaned artistically against the
end of the cot in an idle pose.
Miles checked
his pocket and found the standard computer card. "All right."
He stood next to Gregor, teeth bared in a weird grin. "I'm about
to pass out."
Gregor's hand locked his
elbow. "Don't. It'll draw attention." They walked up the
room and slipped into the end of the shuffling, complaining,
blue-clad line. A sleepy-looking guard at the door checked them out,
running a scanner over the IDs. ". . . twenty-three,
twenty-four, twenty-five. That's it. Take 'em away."
They
were turned over to another set of guards, not in the uniform of the
Consortium but some minor Jacksonian House livery, gold and black.
Miles kept his face down as they were herded out of Detention. Only
Gregor's hand kept him on his feet. They passed through a corridor,
another corridor, down a lift tube—Miles nearly threw up during the
drop—another corridor. What
if this damned ID has a locator?
Miles thought suddenly. At the next drop tube he shed it; the little
card twinkled away into the dim distance, silent and unnoticed. A
docking bay, a hatchway, the brief weightlessness of the flexible
docking tube, and they boarded a ship.Sergeant
Overholt, where are you now?
It
was clearly an intra-system carrier, not a jump ship, and not very
large. The men were separated from the women and directed down
opposite ends of a corridor lined with cabin doors leading to
four-bunk cubicles. The prisoners spread out, selecting their
quarters without apparent interference from the guards.
Miles
make a quick count and multiplication. "We can get one
toourselves, if we try," he whispered urgently to Gregor. He
ducked into the nearest, and they hit the door control quickly.
Another prisoner made to follow them in, to be met with a united
snarl of "Back off!" He withdrew hastily. The door did not
slide open again.
The cabin was dirty, and
lacked such amenities as bedding for the mattresses, but the plumbing
worked. As Miles got a drink of lukewarm water he heard and felt the
hatch close, and the ship undock. They were safe for the moment. How
long?
"When do you think that guy you
choked is going to wake up?" Miles asked Gregor, who sat on the
edge of one bunk.
"I'm not sure. I've never
choked a man before." Gregor looked sick. "I … felt
something strange, under my hand. I'm afraid I might have broken his
neck."
"He was still breathing,"
Miles said. He walked to the opposite lower bunk and prodded it. No
sign of vermin. He seated himself gingerly. The severe shakes were
passing off, leaving only a tremula, but he still felt weak in the
knees. "When he wakes up—as soon as they find him, whether he
wakes up or not—it's not going to take them long to figure out
where I went. I should have just waited, and followed you, and bought
you back. Assuming I could bid myself free. This was a stupid
idea. Why didn't you stop me?"
Gregor
stared. "I thought you knew what you were doing. Isn't Illyan
right behind you?"
"Not as far as I
know."
"I thought you were in Illyan's
department now. I thought you were sent to find me. This . . . isn't
some kind of bizarre rescue?"
"No!"
Miles shook his head, and immediately regretted the motion. "Maybe
you'd better begin at the beginning."
"I'd
been on Komarr for a week. Under the domes. High-level talks on
wormhole route treaties—we're still trying to get the Escobarans to
permit passage of our military vessels. There's some idea of letting
their inspection teams seal our weapons during passage. Our general
staff thinks it's too much, theirs thinks it's too little. I signed a
couple of agreements—whatever the Council of Ministers shoved in
front of me—"
"Dad makes you read
them, surely."
"Oh, yes. Anyway, there
was a military review that afternoon. And a state dinner in the
evening, which broke up early, a couple of the negotiators had to
catch ships. I went back to my quarters, some oligarch's old town
house. Big place at the edge of the dome, near the shuttleport. My
suite was high in this building. I went out on the balcony—it
didn't help much. Still felt claustrophobic, under the
dome."
"Komarrans don't like open air,
either," Miles noted in fairness. "I knew one who had
breathing problems—like asthma—whenever he had to go outside.
Strictly psychosomatic."
Gregor shrugged,
gazing at his shoes. "Anyway, I noticed . . . there were no
guards in sight. For a change. I don't know why the hole, there'd
been a man there earlier. They thought I was asleep, I guess. It was
after midnight. I couldn't sleep. I was leaning over the balcony, and
thinking, if I toppled off . . ." Gregor hesitated.
"It
would be quick," Miles supplied dryly. He knew that state of
mind, oh yes.
Gregor glanced up at him, and
smiled ironically. "Yes. I was a little drunk."
You
were a lot drunk.
"Quick,
yes. Smash my skull. It would hurt a lot, but not for long. Maybe
even not a lot. Maybe just a flash of heat."
Miles
shuddered, concealed in his shock-stick tremula. "I went over—I
caught these plants. Then I realized, I could climb down as easily as
up. More easily. I felt free, as if I had
died. I started walking. Nobody stopped me. All the time, I expected
someone to stop me.
"I ended up in the
freightyard end of the shuttleport. At a bar. I told this fellow, the
free trader, I was a norm-space navigator. I'd done that, on my ship
duty. I'd lost my ID, and was afraid Barrayaran Security would rough
me up. He believed me—or believed something. Anyway, he gave me a
berth. We probably broke orbit before my batman went in to wake me
that morning."
Miles chewed his knuckles.
"So from ImpSec's point of view, you evaporated from a fully
guarded room. No note, no trace—and on Komarr."
"The
ship made a straight run through to Pol—I stayed aboard-and then
nonstop to the Consortium. I didn't get along too well at first, on
the freighter. I thought I was doing better. Guess not. But I
thought, Illyan was probably right behind me anyway."
"Komarr."
Miles rubbed his temples. "Do you realize what has to be
happening back there? Illyan will be convinced it's some sort of
political kidnapping. I bet he's got every Security operative and has
the army tearing those domes apart bolt by bolt, looking for you.
You're way out ahead of them. They won't look beyond Komarr till . .
." Miles counted out days on his fingers.
"Still,
Illyan shot have alerted all his outlying agents . . . almost a week
ago. Ha! I that was the message that put Ungari up in the air, just
before he left in such a hurry. Sent to Ungari, not to me." Not
to me. Nobody's counting me.
"But it should have been all over the news—"
"It
was, sort of," Gregor offered. "There was a sententious
announcement that I'd been ill and retired to rest in seclusion at
Vorkosigan Surleau. They're suppressing."
Miles
could just picture it. "Gregor, how could you do this! They'll
be going insane back home!"
"I'm
sorry," said Gregor stiffly. "I knew it was a mistake …
almost immediately. Even before the hangover cut in."
"Why
didn't you get off at Pol, then, and go to the Barrayaran
embassy?"
"I thought I might still . .
. dammit," he broke off, "why should these people own
me?"
"Childish, stunt," Miles
gritted through his teeth.
Gregor's head jerked
up in anger, but he said nothing.
The full
realization of his position was just beginning to sink in to Miles,
like lead in his belly. I'm
the only man in the universe who knows where the Emperor of Barrayar
is right now. If anything happens to Gregor, I could be his heir. In
fact, if anything happens to Gregor, quite a lot of people will think
I . . .
And
if the Hegen Hub found out who Gregor really was, a free-for-all of
epic proportions could follow. The Jacksonians would take him for
simple ransom. Aslund, Pol, Vervain, any or all might seek some power
play. The Cetagandans most of all—if they could gain possession of
Gregor in secret, who knew what subtle psychological programming they
might attempt; if openly, what threats? And Miles and Gregor were
both trapped on a ship they didn't control—Miles might be snatched
away at any moment by Consortium goons or worse—
Miles
was an ImpSec officer, now, however junior or disgraced. And ImpSec's
sworn duty was the Emperor's safety. The Emperor, Barrayaran's
unifying icon. Gregor, unwilling flesh pressed into the mold. Icon,
flesh, which claimed Miles's allegiance? Both.
He's mine. A prisoner, on the run, trailed by God-knows-what enemies,
suicidally depressed, and all mine.
Miles
choked down a lunatic cackle.
With
a little reflection, possible now that the shock-stick reverberations
were wearing off, Miles realized that he needed to hide. Gregor, by
his place as a contract slave, would be warm, fed, and safe all the
way to Aslund Station if Miles did not endanger him. Maybe. Miles
added it to his life's lessons list. Call it Rule 27B. Never make key
tactical decisions while having electro-convulsive seizures.
Miles
began by examining the bunk cubicle. The vessel was not a prison
ship; the cabin had originally been designed as cheap transport, not
a secured cell. Empty storage cupboards beneath the two bunkstacks
were too large and obvious. A floor panel lifted for access to
between-decks control, coolant and power lines, and the grav grid
—long, narrow, flat. . . . Rough voices in the corridor propelled
Miles's decision. He squeezed himself into the slice of space, face
up arms tight to his sides, and exhaled. "You always were good
at hide-and-seek," said Gregor admiringly and pressed the panel
down.
"I was smaller then," Miles
mumbled through squashed cheeks-Pipes and circuit boxes sank into his
back and buttocks. Gregor refastened the catches, and all was dark
and silent for a few minutes. Like a coffin. Like a pressed flower.
Some kind of biological specimen anyway. Canned ensign.
The
door hissed open; footsteps passed over Miles's body, compressing him
still further. Would they notice the muffled echo from this strip of
floor?
"On your feet, Techie." A
guard's voice, directed to Gregor. Thumpings and hangings, as the
mattresses were flipped and the cupboard doors flung open. Yes, he'd
figured the cupboards for useless.
"Where
is he, Techie?" From the directions of the shufflings, Miles
placed Gregor as now near the wall, probably with an arm twisted up
behind his back.
"Where is who?" said
Gregor in a smeary tone. Face against the wall, all right. "Your
little mutant buddy."
"The weird
little guy who followed me in? He's no buddy of mine. He
left."
More shuffling—"Ow!" The
Emperor's arm had just been lifted another five centimeters, Miles
gauged. "Where'd he go?"
"I don't
know! He didn't look so good. Somebody'd worked him over with a shock
stick. Recently. I wasn't about to get involved. He took off again a
few minutes before we undocked."
Good
Gregor; depressed maybe, stupid no. Miles's lips drew back. His head
was turned, with one cheek against the floor above and the other
pressing against something that resembled a cheese grater. More
thumps. "All right! He left! Don't hit me!" Unintelligible
guard growls, the crackle of a shock stick, a sharp intake of breath,
a thump as of a body curling up on a lower bunk. A second guard's
voice, edged with uncertainty, "He must have doubled back onto
the Consortium before we cast off."
"Their
problem, good. But we'd better search the whole ship to be sure.
Detention sounded ready to chew ass on this one."
"Chew
or be chewed?"
"Hah. I'm
taking no bets."
The booted feet—four of
them, Miles estimated—stalked toward the cabin door. The door
hissed closed. Silence.
He was going to have a
truly remarkable collection of bruises on his backside, Miles
decided, by the time Gregor got around to popping the lid. He could
get about half a breath with each pulse of his lungs. He needed to
pee. Come on, Gregor. . . .
He must certainly
free Gregor from his slave labor contract as soon as possible after
their arrival at Aslund Station. Contract laborers of this order were
bound to be stuck with the dirtiest and most dangerous jobs, the most
exposure to radiation, to dubious life-support systems, to long,
exhausting, accident-prone hours. Though—true—it was also an
incognito no enemy would quickly penetrate. Once free to move they
must find Ungari, the man with the credit cards and the contacts;
after that—well, after that Gregor would be Ungari's problem, eh?
Yes, all simple, right and tight. No need to panic at all. Had they
taken Gregor away? Dare he release himself, and risk– Shuffling
footsteps; a widening line of light, as his lid was raised. "They're
gone," Gregor whispered. Miles unmolded himself, centimeter by
painful centimeter, and climbed onto the floor, a suitable staging
area. He would attempt to stand up very soon now.
Gregor
had one hand pressed to a red mark on his cheek. Selfconsciously, he
lowered his hand to his side. "They tapped me with a shock
stick. It … wasn't as bad as I'd imagined." If anything, he
looked faintly proud of himself.
"They were
using low power," Miles growled up at him. Gregor's face grew
more masked. He offered Miles a hand up. Miles took it and grunted to
his feet, and sat heavily on a bunk. He told Gregor about his plans
for finding Ungari.
Gregor shrugged, dully
acquiescent. "Very well. It will be quicker than my plan."
"Your plan?"
"I was going to
contact the Barrayaran Counsel on Aslund."
"Oh.
Good." Miles subsided. "Guess you . . . didn't really need
my rescue, at that."
"I could have
made it on my own. I got this far. But . . . then there was my other
plan."
"Oh?"
"Not
to contact the Barrayaran Consul. . . . Maybe it's just as well you
came along when you did." Gregor lay back on his bunk, staring
blindly upward. "One thing is certain, an opportunity like this
will never come again."
"To escape?
And just how many would die, back home, to buy your
freedom?"
Gregor pursed his lips. "Taking
Vordarian's Pretendership as a benchmark for palace coups—say,
seven or eight thousand."
"You're not
counting in Komarr." \
"Ah.
Yes. Adding in Komarr would inflate the figure," Gregory
conceded. His mouth twitched in an irony altogether devoid of humor.
"Don't worry, I'm not serious. I just . . . wanted to know. I
could have made it on my own, don't you think?"
"Of
course! That's not the question."
"It
was for me."
"Gregor," Miles's
fingers tapped in frustration, against his knee. "You're doing
this to yourself. You have
real power. Dad fought through the whole Regency to preserve it. Just
be more assertive!"
"And, Ensign, if
I, your supreme commander, ordered you to leave this ship at Aslund
Station and forget you ever saw me, would you?"
Miles
swallowed. "Major Cecil said I had a problem with
subordination."
Gregor almost grinned.
"Good old Cecil. I remember him." His grin faded to
nothing. He rolled up onto one elbow. "But if I can't even
control one rather short ensign, how much less an army or a
government? Power isn't the question. I've had all your Dad's
lectures on power, its illusions and uses. It will come to me in
time, whether I want it or not. But do I have the strength to handle
it? Think about the bad showing I made during Vordrozda and Hessman's
plot, four years ago."
"Will you make
that mistake again? Trust a flatterer?"
"Not
that one, no."
"Well, then."
"But
I must do better, or I might be as bad for Barrayar as no emperor at
all."
Just how unintentional had that
topple off the balcony been? Miles gritted his teeth. "I didn't
answer your question—about orders—as an ensign. I answered it as
Lord Vorkosigan. And as a friend."
"Ah."
"Look,
you don't need my rescue. Such as it is. Illyan's maybe, not mine.
But it makes me
feel better."
"It's always nice to
feel useful," Gregor agreed. They mirrored edged smiles.
Gregor's smile lost its bitter bite. "And . . . it's nice to
have company."
Miles nodded. "That,
truly."
Miles spent quite a lot of time
over the next two days squashed under the deck or crouched in the
cupboards, but their cabin was searched only once and that very early
on. Twice other prisoners Wandered in to chat with Gregor, and once,
on Miles's suggestion, Gregor returned the visit. Gregor divided his
rations with Miles automatically, without complaint or even comment,
and would not accept a larger portion although Miles urged it on
him.
Gregor was herded out with the rest of the
labor crew soon after tile ship docked at Aslund Station. Miles
waited nervously, trying to give as long as possible for the ship to
quiet down, for the crew to go off-guard, yet not so long as to risk
the ship undocking and thrusting off with him still aboard.
The
corridor, when Miles cautiously poked his head out, was dark and
deserted. The docking hatch was unguarded, on this side. Miles still
wore the blue smock and pants over his other clothes, on the
calculated risk the work gangs were treated as trustys, with the run
of the station, and he would at least blend in at a distance.
He
stepped out firmly, and nearly panicked when he found a man in the
gold and black House livery idling around the hatch's exit. His
stunner was bolstered; his hands cradled a steaming plastic cup. His
squinting red eyes regarded Miles incuriously. Miles favored him with
a brief smile, not breaking stride. The guard returned a sour
grimace. Evidently his charge was to prevent strange people from
entering, not leaving, the ship.
The
station-side loading bay beyond the hatch proved to contain half a
dozen coveralled maintenance personnel, working quietly down on one
end. Miles took a deep breath, and walked casually across the bay
without looking around, as if he knew just where he was going. Just
an errand boy. No one hailed him.
Reassured,
Miles marched off purposefully at random. A wide ramp led to a great
chamber, raucous with new construction and busy work crews in all
sorts of dress—a fighter-shuttle refueling and repairs bay, judging
by the half-assembled equipment. Just the sort of thing to interest
Ungari. Miles didn't suppose he'd be so lucky as to . . . no. No sign
of Ungari camouflaged among these crews. There were a number of men
and women in dark blue Aslunder military uniforms, but they appeared
to be overworked and absorbed engineer-types, not suspicious guards.
Miles kept walking briskly nonetheless, out another corridor.
He
found a portal, its transparent plexi bellied out to offer passers-by
a wide-angle view. He put one foot on the lower edge and leaned
out—casually—and bit back a few choice swear words. Glittering a
few kilometers off was the commercial transfer station. A tiny glint
of a ship was docking even now. The military station was apparently ,
being designed as a separate facility, or at least not connected yet.
No wonder blue-smocks could wander at will. Miles stared across the
gap in mild frustration. Well, he'd search this place first for
Ungari, the other later. Somehow. He turned and started– "Hey,
you! Little techie!"
Miles froze,
controlling a reflexive urge to sprint—that tactic hadn't worked
last time—and turned, trying for an expression of polite inquiry.
The man who'd hailed him was big but unarmed wearing tan supervisor's
coveralls. He looked harried. "Yes, sir?" said
Miles.
"You're just what I need." The
man's hand fell heavily on Miles's shoulder. "Come with
me."
Miles perforce followed, trying to
stay calm, maybe project a little bored annoyance.
"What's
your specialization?" the man asked.
"Drains,"
Miles intoned.
"Perfect!"
Dismayed,
Miles followed the man to where two half-finished corridors
intersected. An archway gaped raw and uncapped by molding, though the
molding lay ready to install.
The super pointed
to a narrow space between walls. "See this pipe?"
Sewage,
by the grey color-coding, air and grav pumped. It disappeared in
darkness. "Yeah?"
"There's a leak
somewhere behind this corridor wall. Crawl in and find it, so's we
don't have to tear out all the damn paneling we just put up."
"Got
a light?"
The man fished in his pocketed
coverall and produced a hand light.
"Right,"
sighed Miles. "Is it hooked up yet?"
"About
to be. Damn thing failed the final pressure test."
Only
air would be spewing out. Miles brightened slightly. Maybe his luck
was changing.
He slid in and inched along the
smooth round surface, listening and feeling. About seven meters in he
found it, a rush of cool air from a crack under his hands, quite
marked. He shook his head, attempted to turn in the constricted
space, and put his foot through the paneling.
He
stuck his head out the hole in astonishment, and glanced up and down
the corridor. He wriggled a chunk of paneling from the edge and
stared at it, turning it in his hands.
Two men
putting up light fixtures, their tools sparking, turned to stare.
"What the hell are you doing?" said the one in tan
coveralls, sounding outraged.
"Quality
control inspection," said Miles glibly, "and boy, do you
have a problem."
Miles considered kicking
the hole wider and just walking back to his starting point, but
turned and inched instead. He emerged by the anxiously waiting
super.
"Your leak's in section six,"
Miles reported. He handed the man his panel chunk. "If those
corridor panels are supposed to be made of flammable fiberboard
instead of spun silica on a military installation planned to
withstand enemy fire, somebody's hired a real poor designer. If
they're not—I suggest you take a couple of those big goons with the
shock sticks and go pay a visit to your supplier."
The
super swore. Lips compressed, he grasped the nearest panel edge
fronting the wall and twisted hard. A fist-sized segment cracked and
tore off. "Bitchen. How much of this stuffs been installed
already?"
"Lots," Miles suggested
cheerfully. He turned to escape before the super, worrying off
fragments and muttering under his breath, thought of another chore.
Flushed and sweating, Miles skittered off and didn't relax till he'd
rounded the second corner.
He passed a pair of
armed men in grey-and-white uniforms. One turned to stare. Miles kept
walking, teeth clenching his lower lip, and did not look
back.
Dendarii! or, Oserans! Here, aboard this
station—how many, where? Those two were the first he'd seen.
Shouldn't they be out on patrol somewhere? He wished he were back in
the walls, like a rat in the wainscotting.
But
if most of the mercenaries here were a danger to him, there was
one—Dendarii truly, not Oseran—who might be a help. If he could
make contact. If he dared make contact. Elena … he could seek out
Elena. . . . His imagination outraced him.
Miles
had left Elena four years ago as Baz Jesek's wife, as Tung's military
apprentice, as much protection as he could get her at the time. But
he hadn't had any messages from Baz since Oser's command coup—could
Oser be intercepting them? Now Baz was demoted, Tung apparently
disgraced—what position in the mercenary fleet did Elena hold
now?
What position in his heart? He paused in
grave doubt. He'd loved her passionately, once. Once, she'd known him
better than any other human being. Yet her daily hold on his mind had
passed, like his grief for her dead father Sergeant Bothari, fading
in the rush of his new life. But for an occasional twinge, like an
old bonebreak. He wanted/did not want to see her again. To talk to
her again. To touch her again. …
But more to
the practical point, she would recognize Gregor. They'd all been
playmates in their youth. A second line of defense for the Emperor?
Reopening contact with Elena might be emotionally awkward—all
right, emotionally searing. But it was better than this ineffectual
and dangerous wandering around. Now that he'd scouted the layout, he
must somehow get into position to bring his resources to bear. How
much human credit did Admiral Naismith still have? Interesting
question.
He needed to find a place to watch
without being seen. There were all sorts of ways to be invisible
while in plain sight, as his blue smock was presently demonstrating.
But his unusual height—well, shortness—made him reluctant to rely
on clothes alone. He needed—ha! —tools, such as the case a
tan-coveralled man had just set down in the corridor while he ducked
into a lavatory. Miles had the case in hand and was around the corner
in a blink.
A couple of levels away he found a
corridor leading to a cafeteria. Hm. Everyone must eat; therefore,
everyone must pass this way in time. The food smells excited his
stomach, which protested half-rations or less for the past three days
by gurgling. He ignored it. He pulled a panel off the wall, donned a
pair of protective goggles from the tool case by way of a modest
facial disguise, climbed into the wall to half-conceal his height,
and began pretending to work on a control box and some pipes,
diagnostic scanners placed decoratively to hand. His view up the
corridor was excellent.
From the wafting odors,
he judged they were serving an unusually good grade of vat-grown beef
in there, though they were also doing something nasty to vegetables.
He tried not to salivate into the beam of the tiny laser-solderer he
manipulated while he studied passers-by. Very few were
civilian-clothed, Rotha's wear would clearly have been more
conspicuous than the blue smock. Lots of color-coded coveralls, blue
smocks, some similar green smocks; not a few Aslunder military blues,
mostly lower ranks. Did the Dendarii—Oserans—mercenaries—aboard
eat elsewhere? He was considering abandoning his outpost—he'd about
repaired the control boxes to death by now—when a duo of
grey-and-whites passed. Not faces he knew, he let them go by
unhailed.
He contemplated the odds reluctantly.
Of all the couple thousand mercenaries now present around the
Aslunders' wormhole jump, he might know a few hundred by sight, fewer
by name. Only some of the mercenary fleet's ships were now docked at
this half-built military station. And of the portion of a portion,
how many people could he trust absolutely? Five? He let another
quartet of grey-and-whites pass, though he was certain that older
blonde woman was an engineering tech from the Triumph,
once loyal to Tung. Once. He was getting ravenous.
But
the leather-colored face topping the next set of grey-and-whites to
pass down the corridor made Miles forget his stomach. It was Sergeant
Chodak. His luck had turned—maybe. For himself, he'd take the
chance, but to risk Gregor . . . ? Too late to waffle now, Chodak had
spotted Miles in turn. The Sergeant's eyes widened in astonishment
before his face grew swiftly blank.
"Oh,
Sergeant," Miles caroled, tapping a control box, "would you
take a look at this, please?"
"I'll be
along in a minute," Chodak waved on his companion, a man in the
uniform of an Aslunder ranker.
When their heads
were together and their backs to the corridor, Chodak hissed, "Are
you insane? What are you doing
here?" It was a mark of his agitation that he omitted his
habitual "sir."
"It's a long
story. For now, I need your help."
"But
how did you get in here? Admiral Oser has guards all over the
transfer station, on the lookout for you. You couldn't smuggle in a
sand-flea."
Miles smirked convincingly. "I
have my methods." And his next plan had been to scheme his way
across to that very transfer station . . . Truly, God protected fools
and madmen. "For now, I need to make contact with Commander
Elena Bothari-Jesek. Urgently. Or, failing her, Engineering Commodore
Jesek. Is she here?"
"She should be.
The Triumph's
in dock. Commodore Jesek is out with the repairs tender, I
know."
"Well, if not Elena, Tung. Or
Arde Mayhew. Or Lieutenant Elli Quinn. But I prefer Elena. Tell
her—but no one else—that I have our old friend Greg with me. Tell
her to meet me in an hour in the contract-laborers quarters, Greg
Bleakman's cubicle. Can do?"
"Can do,
sir." Chodak hurried off, looking worried. Miles patched up his
poor battered wall, replaced the panel, picked up his tool box, and
marched casually away, trying not to feel like he had a flashing red
light atop his head. He kept his goggles on and his face down, and
chose the least-populated corridors he could find. His stomach
growled. Elena will
feed you, he told
it firmly. Later.
A rising population of blue and green smocks told Miles he was
nearing the contract laborer's quarters.
There
was a directory. He hesitated, then punched up "Bleakman, G."
Module B., Cubicle 8. He found the module, checked his chrono—Gregor
should be off-shift by now—and knocked. The door sighed open and
Miles slipped within. Gregor was there, sitting up sleepily on his
bunk. It was a one-man cubicle, offering privacy, though barely room
to turn around. Privacy was a greater psychological luxury than
space. Even slave-techs must be kept minimally happy, they had too
much power for potential sabotage to risk driving them over the
edge.
"We're saved," Miles announced.
"I've just made contact with Elena." He sat down heavily on
the end of the bunk, weak with the sudden release of tension in this
safe pocket.
"Elena's here?" Gregor
scrubbed a hand through his hair. "I thought you wanted your
Captain Ungari."
"Elena's the first
step to Ungari. Or, failing Ungari, to smuggling us out of here. If
Ungari hadn't been so damn insistent on the left hand not knowing
what the right was doing, it would be a lot easier. But this will
do." He studied Gregor in worry. "Have you been all
right?"
"A few hours putting up light
fixtures isn't going to break my health, I assure you," said
Gregor dryly.
"Is that what they had you
doing? Not what I'd pictured, somehow . . ."
Gregor
seemed all right, anyway. Indeed, the Emperor was acting almost
cheerful about his stint as a slave laborer, as Gregor's morose
standards of cheer went. Maybe
we ought to send him to the salt mines for two weeks every year, to
keep him happy and content with his regular job.
Miles relaxed a little.
"It's hard to
imagine Elena Bothari as a mercenary," Gregor added
reflectively.
"Don't underestimate her."
Miles concealed a moment of raw doubt. Almost four years. He knew how
much he had changed in four years. What of Elena? Her years could
have been hardly less hectic. Times
change. People change with them. . . .
No. As well doubt himself as Elena.
The
half-hour wait for his chrono to creep to the appointed moment was a
bad interval, enough to loosen Miles's driving tension and wash him
in weariness but not enough to rest or refresh him. He was miserably
conscious of losing his edge, of a crying need for alertness when
alertness and straight-thinking escaped like sand between his
fingers. He rechecked his chrono. An
hour had been too
vague. He should have named the minute. But who knew what
difficulties or delays Elena must overcome from her end?
Miles
blinked hard, realizing from his wavering and disconnected thoughts
that he was falling asleep sitting up. The door hissed open without
Gregor's having released the lock.
"Here he
is, men!"
A half-squad of grey-and-white
clad mercenaries filled the aperture and the corridor beyond. It
hardly needed the stunners and shock-sticks in their hands, the
purposive descent on his person, to tell Miles this hairy crew was
not Elena's. The surge of adrenalin scarcely cleared the fatigue-fog
from his head. And
what do I pretend to be now? A moving target?
He sagged against the wall, not even bothering, though Gregor lurched
to his feet and made a valiant try in the constricted space, an
accurate karate-kick sending a stunner flying from the hand of a
closing mercenary. Two men smashed Gregor against the wall for his
effort. Miles winced.
Then Miles himself was
jerked from the bunk to be coiled, tripled-coiled, in a tangle-net.
The field burned against him. They were using enough power to
immobilize a plunging horse. What
do you think I am, boys?
The
excited squad leader cried into his wrist comm, "I got him,
sir!"
Miles raised an ironic brow. The
squad leader flushed and straightened, his hand twitching in the
effort not to salute. Miles smiled slightly. The squad leader's lips
tightened. Ha.
Almost got you going, didn't I?
"Take
them away," ordered the squad leader.
Miles
was carried out the door between two men, his bound feet dangling
ridiculous inches from the floor. A groaning Gregor was dragged in
his wake. As they passed a cross-corridor, Miles saw Chodak's
strained face from the corner of his eye, floating in the
shadows.
He damned his own judgment then. You
thought you could read people. Your one demonstrable talent. Right.
Sure. Should have, should have, should have,
mocked his mind, like the caw of some vile scavenging bird surprised
at a carcass.
When they were dragged across a
large docking bay and through a small personnel hatch, Miles knew at
once where he was. The Triumph,
the pocket dreadnought that had occasionally served as the fleet's
flagship, was doing that duty again now. Tung of the dubious current
status had been captain-owner of the Triumph,
once, before Tau Verde. Oser had used to favor his own Peregrine
as flag—was this some deliberate political statement? The corridors
of the ship had a strange, painful, powerful familiarity. The odors
of men, metal, and machinery. That crooked archway, legacy of the
lunatic ramming that had captured her on Miles's first encounter,
still not properly straightened out . . . I
thought I had forgotten more.
They
were hustled along swiftly and secretly, a pair of squadmen going
ahead to clear the corridor of witnesses before them. This was ..
going to be a very private chat, then. Fine, that suited Miles. He
would have preferred to avoid Oser altogether, but if they must meet
again, he would simply have to find some way of turning it to use. He
ordered his persona as if adjusting his cuffs—Miles Naismith, space
mercenary and mystery entrepreneur, come to the Hegen Hub for . . .
what? And his glum if faithful sidekick Greg, of course—he would
have to think of some particularly benign explanation for
Gregor.
They clattered down the corridor past
the tactics room, the Triumph's
combat nerve center, and fetched up at the smaller of the two
briefing rooms across from it. The holovid plate in the center of the
gleaming conference table was dark and silent. Admiral Oser sat
equally dark and silent at the table's head, flanked by a pale blond
man Miles presumed to be a loyal lieutenant; not anyone Miles knew
from before. Miles and Gregor were forcibly seated in two chairs
pulled back and distanced from the table, that their hands and feet
might be unconcealed. Oser dismissed all but one guard to the
corridor outside.
Oser's appearance hadn't
changed much in four years, Miles decided. Still lean and hawk-faced,
dark hair maybe a little greyer at the temples. Miles had remembered
him as taller, but he was actually shorter than Metzov. Oser reminded
Miles somehow of the general. Was it the age, the build? The hostile
glower, the murderous pinpricks of red light in the eye?
"Miles,"
Gregor muttered out of the corner of his mouth, "what did you do
to piss this guy off?"
"Nothing!"
Miles protested back, sotto voce. "Nothing on purpose,
anyway."
Gregor looked less than
reassured.
Oser placed his palms flat on the
table before him and leaned forward, staring at Miles with predatory
intensity. If Oser'd had a tail, Miles fancied, its end would be
flicking back and forth. "What are you doing here?" Oser
opened bluntly, without preamble.
You
brought me, didn't you know?
Not the time to get cute, no. Miles was highly conscious of the fact
that he did not precisely look his best. But Admiral Naismith
wouldn't care, he was too goal-directed; Naismith would carry on
painted blue, if he had to. He answered equally bluntly. "I was
hired to do a military evaluation of the Hegen Hub for an interested
non-combatant who ships through here." There, the truth up
front, where it was sure to be disbelieved. "Since they don't
care for mounting rescue expeditions, they wanted enough warning to
clear the hub of their citizens before hostilities break out. I'm
doing a little arms dealing on the side. A cover that pays for
itself."
Oser's eyes narrowed. "Not
Barrayar . . ."
"Barrayar has its own
operatives."
"So does Cetaganda . . .
Aslund fears Cetagandan ambitions."
"As
well they should."
"Barrayar is
equidistant."
"In my professional
opinion," fighting the tangle-field, Miles favored Oser with a
small bow, sitting down—Oser almost nodded back, but caught
himself—"Barrayar is no threat to Aslund in this generation.
To control the Hegen Hub, Barrayar must control Pol. With the
terraforming of their own second continent plus the opening of the
planet Sergyar, Barrayar is rather oversupplied with frontiers at
present. And then there is the problem of holding restive Komarr. A
military adventure toward Pol would be a serious overextension of
Barrayar's human resources just now. Cheaper to be friends, or at
least neutral."
"Aslund also fears
Pol."
"They are unlikely to fight
unless attacked first. Keeping peace with Pol is cheap and easy. Just
do nothing."
"Any Vervain?"
"I
haven't evaluated Vervain yet. It's next on my list."
"Is
it?" Oser leaned back in his chair, crossing his arms. It was
not a relaxed gesture.
"As a spy, I could
have you executed."
"But I'm not an
enemy
spy," Miles answered, simulating easiness. "A friendly
neutral or—who knows?—potential ally."
"And
what is your interest in my fleet?"
"My
interest in the Denda—in the mercenaries is purely academic, I
assure you. You are simply part of the picture. Tell me, what's your
contract with Aslund like?" Miles cocked his head, talking
shop.
Oser almost answered, then his lips
thinned in annoyance. If Miles had been a ticking bomb he could not
have more thoroughly commanded the mercenary's attention.
"Oh,
come on," Miles scoffed in the lengthening silence. "What
could I do, by myself with one man?"
"I
remember the last time. You entered Tau Verde local space with a
staff of four. Four months later you were dictating terms. So what
are you planning now?"
"You
overestimate my impact. I merely helped people along in the direction
they wished to go. An expediter, so to speak."
"Not
for me. I spent three years recovering the ground I lost. In my own
fleet!"
"It's hard to please
everyone." Miles intercepted Gregor's look of mute horror, and
toned himself down. Come to think, Gregor had never met Admiral
Naismith, had he? "Even you were not seriously
damaged."
Oser's jaw compressed further.
"And who's he?" He jerked a thumb at Gregor.
"Greg?
He's just my batman," Miles cut across Gregor's opening
mouth.
"He doesn't look like a batman. He
looks like an officer."
Gregor looked
insensibly cheered at this unbiased encomium.
"You
can't go by looks. Commodore Tung looks like a wrestler."
Oser's
eyes were suddenly freezing. "Indeed. And how long have you been
in correspondence with Captain
Tung?"
By the sick lurch in his belly,
Miles realized mentioning Tung has been a major mistake. He tried to
keep his features cooly ironic, not reflecting his unease. "If
I'd been in correspondence with Tung, I should not have been troubled
with making this personal evaluation of Aslund Station."
Oser,
elbows on table, hands clasped, studied Miles in silence for a full
minute. At last one hand fell open, to point at the guard, who
straightened attentively. "Space them," Oser
ordered.
"What?!" yelped
Miles.
"You," the pointing finger
collected Oser's silent lieutenant, "go with them. See that it's
done. Use the portside access lock, it's closest. If he,"
pointing to Miles, "starts to talk, stop his tongue. It's his
most dangerous organ."
The guard released
the tangle field from Miles's legs and pulled him to his
feet.
"Aren't you even going to have me
chemically interrogated?" asked Miles, dizzied by this sudden
downturn.
"And contaminate my
interrogators? The last thing I want is to give you rein to talk, to
anyone. I can think of nothing more fatal than for the rot of
disloyalty to start in my own Intelligence section. Whatever your
planned speech, removing your air will neutralize it. You nearly
convince me."
Oser almost shuddered.
We
were getting on so well, yes. . . .
"But I—" they were hoisting Gregor to his feet too. "But
you don't need to—"
Two waiting members
of the half-squad fell in as they were bunked out the door,
frog-marching Miles and Gregor rapidly down the corridor. "But—!"
The conference room door hissed closed.
"This
is not going well, Miles," Gregor observed, his pale face a
weird compound of detachment, exasperation, and dismay. "Any
more bright ideas?"
"You're the man
who was experimenting with wingless flight. Is this any worse than,
say, plummeting?"
"At my own hand,"
Gregor began to drag his feet, to struggle, as the airlock chamber
heaved into view, "not at the whim of a bunch of . . ." it
took three guards to wrestle him now, "bloody
peasants!"
Miles
was getting seriously frantic. Screw the damn cover. "You know,"
he called out loudly, "you fellows are about to throw a fortune
in ransom out the airlock!"
Two guards kept
wrestling with Gregor, but the third paused.
"How
big a fortune?"
"Huge," Miles
promised. "Buy your own fleet." The lieutenant abandoned
Gregor and closed on Miles, drawing a vibra-knife. The lieutenant was
interpreting his orders with horrific literality, Miles realized when
the man went for a grip on his tongue. He almost got it—the evil
insect whine of the knife dopplered centimeters from Miles's
nose—Miles bit the thick thrusting fingers, and twisted against the
grip of the guard holding him. The tangle field binding Miles's arms
to his torso whined and crackled, unbreakable. Miles jammed backward
against the crotch of the man behind, who yipped at the field's bite.
His grip slipped and Miles dropped, rolling and banging into the
lieutenant's knees. It wasn't exactly a judo throw, the lieutenant
more-or-less tripped over him.
Gregor's two
opponents were distracted, as much by the bloody barbaric promise of
the vibra-knife show as by Miles's ultimately futile struggles. They
did not see the leather-faced man step out from a cross-corridor, aim
his stunner, and spray. They arched convulsively as the buzzing
charges struck their backs, and dropped heap fashion to the deck. The
man who'd been holding Miles, and was now trying to grab him again as
he flopped around evasively as a fish, whirled just in time to
intersect a beam square in the face.
Miles flung
himself across the blond lieutenant's head, pinning him—only
momentarily, alas—to the deck. Miles wriggled, to press the
tangle-field into the man's face, then was heaved off with a curse.
The lieutenant had one knee under himself, preparing to launch an
attack and wobbling around in search of his target, when Gregor
hopped over and kicked him in the jaw. A stunner charge hit the
lieutenant in the back of the head and he went down.
"Damn
fine soldiering," Miles panted to Sergeant Chodak in sudden
silence. "I don't think they even saw what hit them." So,
I called him straight the first time. Haven't lost my touch after
all. Bless you, Sergeant.
"You
two aren't so bad yourselves, for men with both hands tied behind
their backs." Chodak shook his head in harried amusement, and
trod forward to release the tangle-fields.
"What
a team," said Miles.
A
quick ring of boots from further up the corridor drew Miles's eye. He
exhaled, a long-held breath, and stood. Elena.
She
wore a mercenary officer's undress uniform, grey-and-white pocketed
jacket, trousers, ankle-topping boots gleaming on her long, long
legs. Still tall, still slim, still with pale pure skin, ember-brown
eyes, arched aristocratic nose and long sculptured jaw. She's
cut her hair,
Miles thought, stupid-stunned. Gone was the straight-shining black
cascade to her waist. Now it was clipped out over her ears, only
little dark points grace-noting her high cheekbones and forehead, a
similar point echoed at the nape of her neck; severe, practical, very
smart. Soldierly.
She strode up, eyes taking in
Miles, Gregor, the four Oserans. "Good work, Chodak." She
dropped to one knee beside the nearest body and probed its neck for a
pulse. "Are they dead?" "No, just stunned," Miles
explained.
She regarded the open inner airlock
door with some regret. "I don't suppose we can space
them."
"They were going to space us,
but no. But we probably ought to get them out of sight while we run,"
said Miles.
"Right." She rose and
nodded to Chodak, who began helping Gregor drag the stunned bodies
into the airlock. She frowned at blond lieutenant, going past
feet-first. "Not that spacing wouldn't improve
some personalities."
"Can you give us
a bolt-hole?"
"That's what we came
for." She turned to the three soldiers who had followed her
cautiously into view. A fourth stood guard at the nearest
cross-corridor. "It seems we just got lucky," she told
them. "Scout ahead and clear the aisles on our escape
route—subtly. Then disappear. You weren't here and didn't see
this."
They nodded and withdrew. Miles
heard a retreating mutter. "Was that him?"
"Yeah
. . ."
Miles, Gregor, and Elena, with the
bodies, piled cozily into the lock and closed the inner door
temporarily. Chodak stood guard outside. Elena helped Gregor pull the
boots from the Oseran nearest his size while Miles stripped off his
blue prisoner's outfit and stood, revealing Victor Rotha's wrinkled
clothing, much the worse for four days wear, sleep, and sweat. Miles
wished for boots to replace the vulnerable sandals, but none here
came close to his size.
Gregor and Elena
exchanged looks, each warily amazed at the other, as Gregor yanked on
grey-and-whites and plunged his feet into the boots.
"It's
really you." Elena shook her head in dismay. "What are you
doing here?"
"It was by mistake,"
said Gregor.
"No lie. Whose?"
"Mine,
I'm afraid," said Miles. Somewhat to his annoyance, Gregor did
not gainsay this.
A peculiar smile, her first,
quirked Elena's lips. Miles decided not to ask her to explain it.
This hurried practical exchange did not in the least resemble any of
the dozens of conversations he had rehearsed in his head for this
first, poignant meeting with her.
"The
search will be up in minutes, when these guys don't report back,"
Miles jittered. He collected two stunners, the tangle-field, and the
vibra-knife, and stuck them in his waistband. On second thought, he
swiftly relieved the four Oserans of credit cards, pass chits, IDs,
and odd cash, stuffing his pockets and Gregor's, and made sure Gregor
ditched his prisoner's traceable ID. To his secret delight, he also
found a half-eaten ration bar, and bit into it there and then. He
chewed as Elena led the way back out the lock. He conscientiously
offered a bite to Gregor, who shook his head. Gregor'd probably had
dinner in that cafeteria.
Chodak hastily
straightened Gregor's uniform, and they all marched off, Miles to the
center, half-concealed, half-guarded. Before he could go
half-paranoid at his conspicuousness they took to a drop-tube,
emerged several decks down, and found themselves at a large
cargo-lock, engaged to a shuttle. One of Elena's scout squad, leaning
as if idle against the wall, nodded. With a half-salute to Elena,
Chodak split off and they hurried away. Miles and Gregor followed
Elena across the flex-seal of the shuttle hatch and into the empty
cargo hold of one of the Triumph's
shuttles, stepping from the artificial gravity field of the mother
ship abruptly into the vertigo of free fall. They floated forward to
the pilot's compartment. Elena sealed the compartment hatch behind
them, and anxiously gestured Gregor to the vacant seat at the
engineering/comm station.
The pilot's and
co-pilot's seats were filled. Arde Mayhew grinned cheerfully over his
shoulder at Miles, and waved/saluted hello. Miles recognized the
shaved bullet-head of the second man even before he
turned.
"Hello, son." Ky Tung's smile
was far more ironic than cheerful. "Welcome back. You took your
sweet time." Tung, arms folded, did not salute.
"Hello,
Ky," Miles nodded to the Eurasian. Tung had not changed, anyway.
Still looked any age between forty and sixty. Still built like an
ancient tank. Still seemed to see more than he spoke, most
uncomfortable for the guilty of conscience.
Mayhew
the pilot spoke into his comm. "Traffic control, I've traced
that red light on my panel now. Defective pressure reading. All
fixed. We're ready to break away."
"About
time, C-2," a disembodied voice returned. "You're
clear."
The pilot's swift hands activated
hatch seal controls, aimed attitude jets. Some hissing and clanks,
and the shuttle popped away from its mothership and started on its
trajectory. Mayhew killed the comlink and breathed a long sigh of
relief. "Safe. For now."
Elena wedged
herself across the aisle behind Miles, long legs locking. Miles
hooked an arm around a handhold to anchor against Mayhew's current
mild accelerations. "I hope you're right," said Miles, "but
what makes you think so?"
"He means,
safe to talk," said Elena. "Not safe in any cosmic sense.
This is a routine scheduled run, except for us unlisted passengers.
Iknow you haven't been missed yet, or traffic control would have
stopped us. Oser will search the Triumph
and the military station for you first. We may even be able to slip
you back aboard the Triumph
after the search has passed to wider areas."
"This
is Plan B," Tung explained, swiveling around to half-face Miles.
"Or maybe Plan C. Plan A, on the assumption that your rescue was
going to be a lot noisier, was to flee at once to the Ariel,
now on picket-station, and declare the revolution. I'm grateful for
the chance to bring things off a little, er, less
spontaneously."
Miles choked. "God!
That would have been worse than the first time." Pitched into an
interlocking chain of events he did not control, drafted gonfalonier
to some mercenary military mutiny, thrust to the lead of its parade
with all the free will of a head on a pike. . . . "No. No
spontaneity, thanks. Definitely not."
"So,"
Tung steepled his thick fingers, "what is
your plan?"
"My what?"
"Plan,"
Tung pronounced the word with sardonic care. "In other words,
why are you here?"
"Oser asked me that
same question," sighed Miles. "Would you believe, I'm here
by accident? Oser wouldn't. You wouldn't happen to know why
he wouldn't, would you?"
Tung pursed his
lips. "Accident? Maybe. . . . Your 'accidents,' I once noticed,
have ways of entangling your enemies that are the green envy of
mature and careful strategists. Far too consistent for chance, I
concluded it had to be unconscious will. If only you'd stuck with me,
son, between us we could've … or maybe you are simply a supreme
opportunist. In which case I direct your attention to the opportunity
now before you to retake the Dendarii Mercenaries."
"You
didn't answer my question," Miles noted.
"You
didn't answer mine," Tung countered.
"I
don't want the Dendarii Mercenaries."
"I
do."
"Oh." Miles paused. "Why
don't you split off with the personnel who are loyal to you and start
your own, then? It's been done."
"Shall
we swim through space?" Tung imitated fish fins with his waving
fingers, and puffed his cheeks. "Oser controls the equipment.
Including my ship. The Triumph
is everything I've accumulated in a thirty-year career. Which I lost
through your machinations. Somebody owes me another. If not Oser,
then . . ."Tung glowered significantly at Miles.
"I
tried to give you a fleet in trade," said Miles, harried. "How'd
you lose control of it—old strategist?"
Tung
tapped a finger to his left breast, to indicate a touche. "Things
went well at first, for a year, year and a half after we departed Tau
Verde. Got two sweet little contracts in a row out toward the
East-net —-small-scale commando operations, sure things. Well, not
too sure– kept us on our toes. But we brought them off."
Miles
glanced at Elena. "I'd heard about those, yes."
"On
the third, we got into troubles. Baz Jesek had gotten more and more
involved with equipment and maintenance—he is a good engineer, I'll
give him that—I was tactical commander, and Oser—I thought by
default, but now I think design—took up the administrative slack.
Could have been good, each doing what he did best, if Oser'd been
working with and not against us. In the same situation, I'd have sent
assassins. Oser employed guerrilla accountants.
"We
took a bit of a beating on that third contract. Baz was up to his
ears in engineering and repairs, and by the time I got out of
sickbay, Oser'd lined up one of his no-combat specials—wormhole
guard duty work. Long-term contract. Seemed like a good idea at the
time. But it gave him a wedge. With no actual combat going on, I …"
Tung cleared his throat, "got bored, didn't pay attention.
Oser'd outflanked me before I realized there was a war on. He sprang
the financial reorganization on us—"
"I
told you not to trust him, six months before that," Elena put in
with a frown, "after he tried to seduce me."
Tung
shrugged uncomfortably. "It seemed like an understandable
temptation."
"To bang his commander's
wife?" Elena's eyes sparked. "Anyone's wife? I knew then he
wasn't level. If my oaths meant nothing to him, how little did his
own?"
"He did take no for an answer,
you said," Tung excused himself. "If he'd kept leaning on
you, I'd have been willing to step in. I thought you ought to be
flattered, ignore it, and go on."
"Overtures
of that sort contain a judgment of my character that I find anything
but flattering, thank you," Elena snapped.
Miles
bit his knuckles, hard and secretly, remembering his own longings.
"It might just have been an early move in his power-play,"
he put in. "Probing for weaknesses in his enemies' defenses. And
in this case, not finding them."
"Hm."
Elena seemed faintly comforted by this view. "Anyway, Ky was no
help, and I got tired of playing Cassandra. Naturally, I couldn't
tell Baz. But Oser's double-dealing didn't come as a complete
surprise to all
of us."
Tung frowned, frustrated. "Given
the nucleus of his own surviving ships, all he had to do was swing
the votes of half the other captain-owners. Auson voted with him. I
could have strangled the bastard. "You lost Auson yourself, with
your moaning about the Triumph,
Elena put in, still acerb. "He thought you threatened his
captaincy of it."
"Tung shrugged. "As
long as I was Chief-of-Staff/Tactical, in charge during actual
combat, I didn't think he could really hurt my ship. I was content to
let the Triumph
ride along as if owned by the fleet corporation. I could wait—till
you
got back," his dark eyes glinted at Miles, "and we found
out what was going on. And then you never came back."
"The
king will return, eh?" murmured Gregor, who had been listening
with fascination. He raised an eyebrow at Miles.
"Let
it be a lesson to you," Miles murmured back through set teeth.
Gregor subsided, less humorous.
Miles turned to
Tung. "Surely Elena disabused you of any such immediate
expectation."
"I tried," muttered
Elena. "Although … I suppose, I couldn't help hoping a bit
myself. Maybe you'd . . . quit your other project, come back to
us."
If
I flunked out of the Academy, eh?
"It wasn't a project I could quit, short of death."
"I
know that now."
"In five minutes,
max," put in Arde Mayhew, "I've either got to lock into the
transfer station traffic control for docking, or else cut for the
Ariel.
Which is it going to be, folks?"
"I
can put over a hundred loyal officers and non-coms at your back at a
word," said Tung to Miles. "Four ships."
"Why
not at your own back?"
"If I could, I
would have already. But I'm not going to tear the fleet apart unless
I can be certain of putting it back together again. All of it. But
with you as leader, with your reputation—which has grown in the
retelling—"
"Leader? Or figurehead?"
The image of that pike bobbed in Miles's mind's eye again.
Tung's
hands opened noncommittally. "As you wish. The bulk of the
officer cadre will go for the winning side. That means we must appear
to be winning quickly, if we move at all. Oser has about another
hundred personally loyal to himself, which we're going to have to
physically overpower if he insists on holding out—which suggests to
my mind that a well-timed assassination could save a lot of
lives."
"Jolly. I think you and Oser
have been working together too long, Ky. You're
starting to think alike. Again. I did not come here to seize command
of a mercenary fleet. I have other priorities." He schooled
himself not to glance at Gregor.
"What
higher priorities?"
"How about,
preventing a planetary civil war? Maybe an interstellar one?"
"I
have no professional interest in that." It almost succeeded in
being a joke.
Indeed, what were Barrayar's
agonies to Tung? "You do if you're on the doomed side. You only
get paid for winning, and only get to spend your pay if you live,
mercenary."
Tung's narrow eyes narrowed
further. "What do you know that I don't? Are
we on the doomed side?"
I
am, if I don 't get Gregor back.
Miles shook his head. "Sorry. I can't talk about that. I've got
to get to—" Pol closed to him, the Consortium station blocked,
and now Aslund become even more dangerous, "Vervain." He
glanced at Elena. "Get us both to Vervain." "You
working for the Vervani?" Tung asked.
"No."
"Who,
then?" Tung's hands twitched, so tense with his curiosity they
seemed to want to squeeze out information by main force.
Elena
noticed the unconscious gesture too. "Ky, back off," she
said sharply. "If Miles wants Vervain, Vervain he shall
have."
Tung looked at Elena, at Mayhew. "Do
you back him, or me?"
Elena's chin lifted.
"We're both oath-sworn to Miles. Baz too."
"And
you have to ask why I need you?" said Tung in exasperation to
Miles, gesturing at the pair. "What is this larger game, that
you all seem to know all about, and I, nothing?"
"I
don't know anything," chirped Mayhew. "I'm just going by
Elena."
"Is this a chain of command,
or a chain of credulity?"
"There's a
difference?" Miles grinned.
"You've
exposed us, by coming here," Tung argued. "Think! We help
you, you leave, we're left naked to Oser's wrath. There's too many
witnesses already. There might be safety in victory, none in
half-measure."
Miles looked with anguish at
Elena, picturing her, quite vividly inl light of his recent
experiences, being shoved out an airlock by evil, witless goons. Tung
noted with satisfaction the effect of his plea on Miles and sat
smugly back. Elena glared at Tung.
Gregor
stirred uneasily. "I think . . . should you become refugees on
Our behalf," (Elena, Miles saw, heard that official capital O
too, as Tung and Mayhew of course could not) "We can see that
you do not suffer. Financially, at least." '
Elena
nodded understanding and acceptance. Tung leaned toward Elena,
jerking his thumb at Gregor. "All right, who is this guy?"
Elena shook her head mutely.
Tung vented a small
hiss. "You've no means of support visible to me, son. What if we
become corpses on your behalf?"
Elena
remarked, "We've risked becoming corpses for much
less."
"Less than what?" snapped
Tung.
Mayhew, his eyes going briefly distant,
touched the communications plug in his ear. "Decision time,
folks."
"Can this ship go
across-system?" asked Miles.
"No. Not
fueled up for it," Mayhew shrugged apology.
"Not
fast enough or armored for it, either," said Tung.
"You'll
have to smuggle us out on commercial transport, past Aslunder
security," Miles said unhappily.
Tung
stared around at his recalcitrant little committee, and sighed.
"Security's tighter for incoming than outgoing. I think it can
be done. Take us in, Arde."
After Mayhew
had docked the cargo shuttle at its assigned loading niche at the
Aslunders' transfer station, Miles, Gregor, and Elena lay low, locked
in the pilot's compartment. Tung and Mayhew went off "to see
what we can do," as Tung put it, rather airily to Miles's mind.
Miles sat and nibbled his knuckles nervously, and tried not to jump
with each thump, clink, or hiss of the robotic loaders placing
supplies for the mercenaries on the other side of the bulkhead.
Elena's steady profile did not twitch at every little noise, Miles
noticed enviously. I
loved her once. Who is she now?
Could
one choose not
to fall in love all over again with this new person? A chance to
choose. She seemed tougher, more willing to speak her mind—this was
good—yet her thoughts had a bitter tang. Not good. That bitterness
made him ache.
"Have you been all right?"
he asked her hesitantly. "Apart from this command structure
mess, that is. Tung treating you right? He was supposed to be your
mentor. On-the-job, for you, the training I was getting in the
classroom . . ."
"Oh, he's a good
mentor. He stuffs me with military information, tactics, history …
I can run every phase of a combat drop patrol now, logistics,
mapping, assault, withdrawal, even emergency shuttle take-offs, and
landings, if you don't mind a few bumps. I'm almost up to really
handling my fictional rank, at least on fleet equipment. He likes
teaching."
"It seemed to me you were a
little . . . tense, with him."
She tossed
her head. "Everything is tense, just now. It's not possible to
be 'apart from' this command structure mess, thank you. Although …
I suppose I haven't quite forgiven Tung for not being infallible
about it. I thought he was, at first."
"Yeah,
well, there's a lot of fallibility going around these days,"
Miles said uncomfortably. "Uh . . . how's Baz?" Is
your husband treating you right?
he wanted to demand, but didn't.
"He's
well," she replied, not looking happy, "but discouraged.
This power struggle was alien to him, repugnant, I think. He's a tech
at heart, he sees a job that needs doing, he does it . . . Tung hints
that if Baz hadn't buried himself in Engineering he might have
foreseen —prevented—fought the takeover, but I think it was the
other way around. He couldn't lower himself to fight on Oser's
back-stabbing level, so he withdrew to where he could keep his own
standards of honesty … for a little while longer. This schism's
affected morale all up and down the line."
"I'm
sorry," said Miles.
"You should be."
Her voice cracked, steadied, harshened. "Baz felt he'd failed
you, but you failed us first, when you never came back. You couldn't
expect us to keep up the illusion forever."
"Illusion?"
said Miles. "I knew … it would be difficult, but I thought you
might . . . grow into your roles. Make the mercenaries your
own."
"The mercenaries may be enough
for Tung. I thought they might be for me, too, till we came to the
killing. … I hate Barrayar, but better to serve Barrayar than
nothing, or your own ego."
"What does
Oser serve?" Gregor asked curiously, brows raised at this mixed
declamation about their homeworld.
"Oser
serves Oser. 'The fleet,' he says, but the fleet serves Oser, so it's
just a short circuit," said Elena. "The fleet is no
home-country. No building, no children . . . sterile. I don't mind
helping out the Aslunders, though, they need it. A poor planet, and
scared."
"You and Baz—and Arde—could
have left, gone off on your own," began Miles.
"How?"
said Elena. "You gave us the Dendarii in charge.
Baz was a deserter once. Never again."
All
my fault, right,
thought Miles. Great.
Elena
turned to Gregor, who had acquired a strange guarded expression on
his face while listening to her charges of abandonment "You
still haven't said what you're doing here in the first place besides
putting your feet in things. Was this supposed to be some son of
secret diplomatic mission?"
"You
explain it," said Miles to Gregor, trying not to grit his teeth.
Tell her about the
balcony, eh?
Gregor
shrugged, eyes sliding aside from Elena's level look. "Like Baz,
I deserted. Like Baz, I found it was not the improvement I'd hoped
for."
"You can see why it's urgent to
get Gregor back home as quickly as possible," Miles put in.
"They think he's missing. Maybe kidnapped." Miles gave
Elena a quick edited version of their chance meeting in Consortium
Detention.
"God." Elena's lips pursed.
"I see why it's urgent to you to get him off your hands, anyway.
If anything happened to him in your company, fifteen factions would
cry 'Treason plot!'"
"That thought has
occurred to me, yes," growled Miles.
"Your
father's Centrist coalition government would be the first thing to
fall," Elena continued. "The military right would get
behind Count Vorinnis, I suppose, and square off with the
anti-centralization liberals. The French speakers would want
Vorville, the Russian Vor-tugalov—or has he died yet?"
"The
far-right blow-up-the-wormhole isolationist loonie faction would
field Count Vortrifrani against the anti-Vor pro-galactic faction who
want a written constitution," put in Miles glumly. "And I
do mean field."
"Count Vortrifrani
scares me," Elena shivered. "I've heard him
speak."
"It's the suave way he mops
the foam from his lips," said Miles. "The Greek minorists
would seize the moment to attempt secession—"
"Stop
it!" Gregor, who had propped his forehead on his hands, said
from behind the barrier of his arms.
"I
thought that was your
job," said Elena tartly. At his bleak look, raising his head,
she softened, her mouth twisting up. "Too bad I can't offer you
a job with the fleet. We can always use formally-trained officers, to
train the rest if nothing else."
"A
mercenary?" said Gregor. "There's a thought. . . ."
"Oh,
sure. A lot of our people are former regular military folk. Some are
even legitimately discharged."
Fantasy lit
Gregor's eye with brief amusement. He sighted down his grey-and-white
jacket sleeve. "If only you were in charge here, aye,
Miles?"
"No!" Miles cried in a
suffused voice.
The light died. "It was a
joke."
"Not funny." Miles
breathed carefully, praying it would not occur to Gregor to make that
an order. . . .
"Anyway, we're now trying to make it to the Barrayaran Consul on
Vervain Station. It's still there, I hope. I haven't heard news for
days—what's going on with the Vervani?"
"As
far as I know, it's business as usual, except for the heightened
paranoia," said Elena. "Vervain's putting its resources
into ships, not stations—"
"Makes
sense, when you've got more than one wormlike to guard," Miles
conceded.
"But it makes Aslund perceive the
Vervani as potential aggressors. There's an Aslunder faction that's
actually urging a first strike before the new Vervani fleet comes
on-line. Fortunately, the defensive strategists have prevailed so
far. Oser has set the price for a strike by us prohibitively high.
He's not stupid. He knows the Aslunders couldn't back us up. Vervain
hired a mercenary fleet as a stopgap too—in fact, that's what gave
the Aslunders the idea to hire us. They're called Randall's Rangers,
though I understand Randall is no more."
"We
shall avoid them," Miles asserted fervently.
"I
hear their new second officer is a Barrayaran. You might be able to
swing some help, there."
Gregor's brows
rose in speculation. "One of Illyan's plants? Sounds like his
work."
Was that where Ungari had gone?
"Approach with caution, anyway," Miles allowed.
"About
time," Gregor commented under his breath.
"The
Ranger's commander's name is Cavilo—"
"What?"
yelped Miles.
Elena's winged brows rose. "Just
Cavilo. Nobody seems to know if it's the given or
surname—"
"Cavilo is the person who
tried to buy me—or Victor Rotha—at the Consortium Station. For
twenty thousand Betan dollars."
Elena's
brows stayed up. "Why?"
"I don't
know why." Miles rethought their goal. Pol, the Censortium,
Aslund . . . no, it still came up Vervain. "But we definitely
avoid the Vervani's meres. We step off the ship and go straight to
the Consul, go to ground, and don't even squeak till Illyan's men
arrive to take us home, Momma. Right."
Gregor
sighed. "Right."
No more playing
secret agent. His best efforts had only served to get Gregor nearly
murdered. It was time to try less hard, Miles decided.
"Strange,"
said Gregor, looking at Elena—at the new Elena, guessed—"to
think you've had more combat experience than either of us."
"Than
both of you," Elena corrected dryly. "Yes, well . . .
actual combat … is a lot stupider than I'd imagined. If two groups
can cooperate to the incredible extent it takes to meet in battle,
why not put in a tenth that effort to talk? That's not true of
guerilla wars, though," Elena went on thoughtfully. "A
guerilla is an enemy who won't play the game. Makes more sense to me.
If you're going to be vile, why not be totally vile? That third
contract—if I ever get involved in another guerilla war, I want to
be on the side of the guerillas."
"Harder
to make peace, between totally vile enemies," Miles reflected.
"War is not its own end, except in some catastrophic slide into
absolute damnation. It's peace that's wanted. Some better peace than
the one you started with."
"Whoever
can be the most vile longest, wins?" Gregor posited. "Not .
. . historically true, I don't think. If what you do during the war
so degrades you that the next peace is worse. . . ." Human
noises from the cargo bay froze Miles in midsentence, but it was Tung
and Mayhew returning.
"Come on," Tung
urged. "If Arde doesn't keep to schedule, he'll draw
attention."
They filed into the cargo hold,
where Mayhew held the control leash of a float pallet with a couple
of plastic packing crates attached. "Your friend can pass as a
fleet soldier," Tung told Miles. "For you, I found a box.
It would have been classier to roll you up in a carpet, but since the
freighter captain is male, I'm afraid the historical reference would
be wasted."
Dubiously, Miles regarded the
box. It seemed to lack air holes. "Where are you taking
me?"
"We have a regular irregular
arrangement, for getting fleet intelligence officers in and out
quietly. Got this inner-system freighter captain, an independent
owner—he's Vervani, but he's been on the payroll three times
before. He'll take you across, get you through Vervani customs. After
that you're on your own."
"How much
danger is this arrangement to you all?" Miles worried.
"Not
a lot," said Tung, "all things considered. He'll think he's
delivering more mercenary agents, for a price, and naturally keep his
mouth shut. It'll be days before he gets back to even be questioned.
I arranged it all myself, Elena and Arde didn't appear, so he can't
give them away."
"Thank you,"
Miles said quietly.
Tung nodded, and sighed. "If
only you'd stayed on with us. What a soldier I could've made of you,
these last three years."
"If you do
find yourselves out of a job as a consequence of helping us,"
Gregor added, "Elena will know how to put you in touch."
Tung
grimaced. "In touch with what, eh?"
"Better
not to know," said Elena, helping Miles position himself in the
packing crate.
"All right," grumbled
Tung, "but … all right."
Miles found
himself face to face with Elena, for the last time till-when? She
hugged him, but then gave Gregor an identical, sisterly embrace.
"Give my love to your mother," she told Miles. "I
often think of her."
"Right. Uh . . .
give my best to Baz. Tell him, it's all right. Your personal safety
comes first, yours and his. The Dendarii are, are, were . . ."
he could not quite bring himself to say, not
important, or, a
naive dream,
or, an illusion,
though that last came closest. "A good try," he finished
lamely.
The look she gave him was cool, edged,
indecipherable—no, readily decodable, he feared. Idiot,
or stronger words to that effect. He sat down, his head to his knees,
and let Mayhew affix the lid, feeling like a zoological specimen
being crated for shipment to the lab.
The
transfer went smoothly. Miles and Gregor found themselves installed
in a small but decent cabin designed for the freighter's occasional
super-cargo. The ship undocked, free of Aslund Station and danger of
discovery, some three hours after they boarded. No Oseran search
parties, no uproars . . . Tung, Miles had to admit, still did good
work.
Miles was intensely grateful for a wash, a
chance to clean his remaining clothes, a real meal, and sleep in
safety. The ship's tiny crew seemed allergic to their corridor; he
and Gregor were left strictly alone. Safe for three days, as he
chugged across the Hegen Hub yet again, in yet another identity. Next
stop, the Barrayaran consulate of Vervain Station.
Oh,
God, he was going to have to write a report on all this when they got
there. True confessions, in the approved ImpSec official style (dry
as dust, judging from samples he'd read). Ungari, now, given the same
tour, would have produced columns of concrete, objective, data, all
ready to be reanalyzed six different ways. What had Miles counted?
Nothing, I was in a
box. He had little
to offer but gut feel based on a limited view snatched while dodging
what seemed every security goon in the system. Maybe he should center
his report on the security forces, eh? One ensign's opinion. The
general staff would be so impressed.
So what was
his opinion, by now? Well, Pol didn't seem to be the source of the
troubles in the Hegen Hub; they were reacting, not acting. The
Consortium seemed supremely uninterested in military adventures, the
only party weak enough for the eclectic Jacksonians to take on and
beat was Aslund, and there would be little profit in conquering
Aslund, a barely terraformed agricultural world. Aslund was paranoid
enough to be dangerous, but only half-prepared, and shielded by a
mercenary force waiting only the right spark to itself split into
warring factions. No sustained threat there. The action, the energy
for this destabilization, by elimination must be coming from or via
Vervain. How could one find out . . . no. He'd sworn off secret
agenting. Vervain was somebody else's problem.
Miles
wondered wanly if he could persuade Gregor to give him an Imperial
pardon from writing a report, and if Illyan would accept it. Probably
not.
Gregor was very quiet. Miles, stretched out
on his bunk, tucked his hands behind his head and smiled to conceal
worry, as Gregor– somewhat regretfully, it seemed to Miles—put
aside his stolen Dendarii uniform and donned civilian clothes
contributed by Arde Mayhew. The shabby trousers, shirt, and jacket
hung a little short and loose on Gregor's spare frame; so dressed he
seemed a down-on-his-luck drifter, with hollow eyes. Miles secretly
resolved to keep him away from high places.
Gregor
regarded him back. "You were weird, as Admiral Naismith, you
know? Almost like a different person."
Miles
shrugged himself up onto one elbow. "I guess Naismith is me with
no brakes. No constraints. He doesn't have to be a good little Vor,
or any kind of a Vor. He doesn't have a problem with subordination,
he isn't subordinate to anyone."
"I
noticed." Gregor ordered the Dendarii uniform in Barrayaran
regulation folds. "Do you regret having to duck out on the
Dendarii?"
"Yes … no … I don't
know." Deeply.
The chain of command, it seemed, pulled both ways on a middle link.
Pull hard enough, and that link must twist and snap. … "I
trust you don't regret escaping contract slavery."
"No
… it wasn't what I'd pictured. It was peculiar, that fight at the
airlock, though. Total strangers wanting to kill me without even who
I was. Total strangers trying to kill the emperor of Barrayar, I can
understand. This . . . I'm going to have to think about this
one."
Miles allowed himself a brief crooked
grin. "Like being loved for yourself, only different."
Gregor
gave him a sharp glance. "It was strange to see Elena again,
too. Bothari's dutiful daughter . . . she's changed."
"I'd
meant her to," Miles avowed.
"She
seems quite attached to her deserter husband."
"Yes,"
Miles said shortly.
"Had you meant that
too?"
"Not mine to choose. lt . . .
follows logically, from the integrity of her character. I might have
foreseen it. Since her convictions about loyalty just saved both our
lives, I can hardly . . . hardly regret them, eh?"
Gregor's
brow rose, an oblique gloss.
Miles bit down
irritation. "Anyway, I hope she'll be all right. Oser's proved
himself dangerous. She and Baz seem to be protected only by Tung's
admittedly eroding power base."
"I'm
surprised you didn't take up Tung's offer." Gregor grinned as
briefly as Miles had. "Instant admiralty. Skip all those tedious
Barrayaran intervening steps."
"Tung's
offer?" Miles snorted. "Didn't you hear him? I thought you
said Dad made you read all those treaties. Tung didn't offer command,
he offered a fight, at five to one odds against. He sought an ally,
front-man, or cannon-fodder, not a boss."
"Oh.
Hm." Gregor settled back on his bunk. "That's so. Yet I
still wonder if you'd have chosen something other than this prudent
retreat if I hadn't been along." His lids were hooded over a
sharp glance.
Miles choked on visions. A
sufficiently liberal interpretation of Illyan's vague "use
Ensign Vorkosigan to clear the Dendarii Mercenaries from the Hub"
might be stretched to include . . . no. "No. If I hadn't run
into you, I'd be on my way to Escobar with Sergeant-nanny Overholt.
You, I suppose, would still be installing lights." Depending, of
course, on what the mysterious Cavilo—Commander Cavilo?—had
planned for Miles once he'd caught up with him at Consortium
Detention.
So where was Overholt, by now? Had he
reported to HQ, tried to contact Ungari, been picked off by Cavilo?
Or followed Miles? Too bad Miles couldn't have followed Overholt to
Ungari—no, that was circular reasoning. It was all very weird, and
they were well out of it.
"We're well out
of it," Miles opined to Gregor.
Gregor
rubbed the pale grey mark on his face, fading shadow of his
shock-stick encounter. "Yeah, probably. I was getting good at
the lights, though."
Almost
over, Miles
thought as he and Gregor followed the freighter captain through the
hatch tube into the Vervain Station docking bay. Well, maybe not
quite. The Vervani captain was nervous, obsequious, clearly tense.
Still, if the man had managed this spy transfer three times before,
he should know what he was doing by now.
The
docking bay with its harsh lighting was the usual chilly echoing
cavern, arranged to the rigid grid-pattern taste of robots, not human
curves. It was in fact empty of humans, its machinery silent. Their
path had been cleared before them, Miles supposed, though if he'd
been doing it he'd have picked the busiest chaotic period of loading
or unloading to slip something past.
The
captain's eyes darted from corner to corner. Miles could not help
following his glance. They stopped near a deserted control
booth.
"We wait here," the freighter
captain said. "There are some men coming who will take you the
rest of the way." He leaned against the booth wall and kicked it
gently with one heel in an idle compulsive rhythm for several
minutes, then he stopped kicking and straightened, head
turning.
Footsteps. Half a dozen men emerged
from a nearby corridor. Miles stiffened. Uniformed men, with an
officer, judging by their posture, but they weren't wearing the garb
of either Vervani civil or military security. Unfamiliar
short-sleeved tan fatigues with black tabs and trim, and short black
boots. They carried stunners, drawn and ready. But
if it walks like an arrest squad, and talks like an arrest squad, and
quacks like an arrest squad . . .
"Miles,"
muttered Gregor doubtfully, talking in the same cues, "is this
in the script?" The stunners were pointed their way,
now.
"He's pulled this off three times,"
Miles offered in unfelt reassurance. "Why not a fourth?"
The
freighter captain smiled thinly, and stepped away from the Wall, out
of the line of fire. "I pulled it off twice," he informed
them. "The third time, I got caught."
Miles's
hands twitched. He held them carefully away from his sides, biting
back swear words. Slowly, Gregor raised his hands as well, face
wonderfully blank. Score one for Gregor's self-control, as always,
the one virtue his constrained life had surely inculcated.
Tung
had set this up. All by himself. Had Tung known? Sold by Tung?
No . . . ! "Tung
said you were reliable," Miles grated to the freighter
captain.
"What's Tung to me?" the man
snarled back. "I have a family, mister."
Under
the stunners' aim, two—God, goons again!—soldiers stepped forward
to lean Miles and Gregor hands to the wall, and shake them down,
relieving them of all their hard-won Oseran weapons, equipment, and
multiple IDs. The officer examined the cache. "Yeah, these are
Oser's men, all right." He spoke into his wrist comm.
"We
have them."
"Carry on," a thin
voice returned. "We'll be right down. Cavilo out."
Randall's
Rangers, evidently, hence the unfamiliar uniforms. But why no Vervani
in sight? "Pardon me," Miles said mildly to the officer,
"but are you people acting under the misapprehension we are
Aslunder agents?"
The officer stared down
at him and snorted. "I wonder if it might not be time to
establish our real identity," Gregor murmured tentatively to
Miles.
"Interesting dilemma," Miles
returned out of the corner of his mouth. "We better find out if
they shoot spies."
A brisk tapping of boots
heralded a new arrival. The squad braced as the sound rounded the
corner. Gregor came to attention too, in automatic military courtesy,
his straightness looking very strange hung about with Arde Mayhew's
clothes. Miles no doubt looked least military of all, with his mouth
gaping open in shock. He closed it before something flew in, such as
his foot.
Five feet tall and a bit added by
black books with higher-than-regulation heels. Cropped blonde hair
like a dandelion aureole on that sculptured head. Crisp tan-and-black
rank-gilded uniform that fit her body language in perfect complement.
Livia Nu.
The officer saluted. "Commander Cavilo, ma'am."
"Very
good, Lieutenant. . . ." her blue eyes, falling on Miles,
widened in unfeigned surprise, instantly covered. "Why, Victor,
dahling," her voice went syrupy with exaggerated amusement and
delight, "fancy
meeting you here. Still selling miracle suits to the
unwitting?"
Miles spread his empty hands.
"This is the totality of me, ma'am. You should have bought when
you could."
"I wonder." Her smile
was tight and speculative. Miles found glitter in her eyes
disturbing. Gregor, silent, looked frantically bewildered.
So,
your name wasn't Livia Nu, and you weren't a procurement agent.
So why the devil was the commandant of Vervain's mercenary force
meeting incognito on Pol Station with a representative of the most
powerful House of the Jacksonian Consortium? That
was no mere arms deal, darling.
Cavilo/Livia
Nu raised her wrist comm to her lips. "Sickbay, Kurin
's Hand. Cavilo
here. I'm sending you up a couple of prisoners for questioning. I may
sit in on this one myself." She keyed off.
The
freighter captain stepped forward, half-fearful, half-pugnacious. "My
wife and son. Now you prove they're safe."
Judiciously,
she looked him over. "You may be good for another run. All
right." She gestured to a soldier. "Take this man to the
Kurin's
brig and let him have a look on the monitors. Then bring him back to
me. You're a fortunate traitor, captain. I have another job for you
by which you may earn them—"
"Their
freedom?" the freighter captain demanded. She frowned slightly
at the interruption. "Why should I inflate your salary? Another
week of life."
He trailed off after the
soldier, hands clenched angrily, teeth clenched prudently.
What
the hell? Miles
thought. He didn't know much about Vervain, but he was pretty sure
not even their martial law made provisions for holding innocent
relatives hostage against the good behavior of unconvicted
traitors.
The freighter captain gone, Cavilo
keyed her wristcom again. "Kurin's
Hand Security? Ah,
good. I'm sending you my pet double agent. Run the recording we made
last week of Cell Six for his motivation, aye? Don't let him know
it's not real-time . . . right. Cavilo out."
So,
was the man's family free? Already dead? Being held elsewhere? What
were they getting into here?
More boots rounded
the corner, a heavy regulation tread. Cavilo smiled sourly, but
smoothed the expression into something sweeter as she turned to greet
the newcomer.
"Stanis, darling. Look what
we netted this time. It's that little renegade Betan who was trying
to deal stolen arms on Pol Station. It appears he isn't an
independent after all." The tan and black Rangers' uniform
looked just fine on General, too, Miles noted crazily. Now would be a
wonderful time to roll up his eyes and pass out, if only he had the
trick of it. General Metzov stood equally riveted, his iron-grey eyes
ablaze sudden unholy joy. "He's no Betan, Cavie."
"He's
a Barrayaran. And not just any Barrayaran. We've got to get him out
of sight, quickly," Metzov went on.
"Who
sent him, then?" Cavilo stared anew at Miles, her lip in a
dubious curl.
"God," Metzov avowed
fervently. "God has delivered him into my hand." Metzov,
that cheerful, was an unusual and alarming sight. Even Cavilo raised
her brow.
Metzov glanced at Gregor for the first
time. "We'll take him and his —bodyguard, I suppose . . ."
Metzov slowed.
The pictures on the mark-notes
didn't look much like Gregory being several years out of date, but
the emperor had appeared in enough vid-casts—not dressed like this,
of course. . . . Miles could almost see Metzov thinking. The
face is familiar, 1 just can't place the name. . . .
Maybe he wouldn't recognize Gregor. Maybe he wouldn't believe
it.
Gregor, drawn up in a dignity concealing
dismay, spoke for the first time. "Is this yet another of your
old friends, Miles?"
It was the measured,
cultured voice that triggered the connection. Metzov's face, reddened
with excitement, drained white. He looked around involuntarily—for
Illyan, Miles guessed.
"Uh, this is General
Stanis Metzov," Miles explained.
"The
Kyril Island
Metzov?"
"Yeah."
"Oh."
Gregor maintained his closed reserve, nearly
expressionless.
"Where is your security,
sir?" Metzov demanded of Gregor, his voice harsh with
unacknowledged fear.
You're
looking at it,
Miles mourned.
"Not far behind, I imagine,"
Gregor essayed, cool. "Let Us go Our way, and they will not
trouble you."
"Who is this fellow?"
Cavilo tapped a boot impatiently.
"What,"
Miles couldn't help asking Metzov, "what are you doing
here?"
Metzov went grim. "How shall a
man my age, stripped of his Imperial Pension—his life savings—live?
Did you hope I would sit down and quietly starve? Not
I."
Inopportune, to remind Metzov of his
grudge, Miles realized. "This . . . looks like an improvement
over Kyril Island,"
Miles suggested hopefully. His mind still boggled. Metzov, working
under a woman? The internal dynamics of this command chain must be
fascinating. Stanis darling?
Metzov
did not look amused.
"Who
are they?"
Cavilo demanded again.
"Power. Money.
Strategic leverage. More than you can imagine," Metzov
answered.
"Trouble," Miles put in.
"More than you can imagine."
"You
are a separate matter, mutant," Metzov said.
"I
beg to differ, General," said Gregor in his best Imperial tones.
Feeling for footing in this floating conversation, though concealing
his confusion well.
"We must take them to
the Kurin's Hand
at once. Out of sight," said Metzov to Cavilo. He glanced at the
arrest squad. "Out of hearing. We'll continue this in
private."
They marched off, escorted by the
patrol. Metzov's gaze felt like a knife blade in Miles's back,
prodding and probing. They passed through several deserted docking
bays till they arrived at a major one actively servicing a ship. The
command ship, judging by the number and formality of duty
guards.
"Take them to Medical for
questioning," Cavilo ordered the squad as they were saluted
through a personnel hatch by the officer in charge.
"Hold
on that," said Metzov. He stared around the cross-corridors,
almost jittering. "Do you have a guard who's deaf and
mute?"
"Hardly!" Cavilo stared
indignantly at her mysteriously agitated subordinate. "To the
brig, then."
"No," said Metzov
sharply. Hesitating to throw the Emperor into a cell, Miles realized.
Metzov turned to Gregor and said with perfect seriousness, "May
I have your parole, sire—sir?"
"What?"
cried Cavilo. "Have you stripped a gear, Stanis?"
"A
parole," Gregor noted gravely, "is a promise given between
honorable enemies. Your honor I am willing to assume. But are you
thus declaring yourself Our enemy?" Excellent bit of weaseling,
Miles approved.
Metzov's eye fell on Miles. His
lips thinned. "Perhaps not yours. But you have a poor choice of
favorites. Not to mention advisors." Gregor was now very hard to
read. "Some acquaintances are imposed on me. Also some
advisors."
"To my cabin," Metzov
held up his hand as Cavilo opened her mouth to object, "for now.
For our initial conversation. Without witnesses, or Security
recordings. After that, we decide, Cavie."
Cavilo,
eyes narrowing, closed her mouth. "All right, Stanis. Lead off."
Her hand curved open ironically, and gestured them onward. Metzov
posted two guards outside his cabin door, and dismissed the rest.
When the door had sealed behind them, he tied Miles with a
tangle-cord and sat him on the floor. With helplessly ingrained
deference, he then seated Gregor in the padded station chair at his
corn-console desk, the best the spartan chamber had to
offer.
Cavilo, seated cross-legged on the bed
watching the play, objected to the logic of this. "Why tie up
the little one and leave the big one loose?"
"Keep
your stunner drawn, then, if he worries you," Metzov advised.
Breathing heavily, he stood hands on hips and studied Gregor. He
shook his head, as if still not believing his eyes.
"Why
not your stunner?"
"I have not yet
decided whether to draw a weapon in his presence."
"We're
alone
now, Stanis," Cavilo said in a sarcastic lilt. "Would you
kindly explain this insanity? And it had better be good."
"Oh
yes. That—" he pointed to Miles, "is Lord Miles
Vorkosigan, the son of the Prime Minister of Barrayar. Admiral Aral
Vorkosigan—I trust you've heard of him."
Cavilo's
brows lowered. "What was he doing on Pol Six in the guise of a
Betan gunrunner, then?"
"I'm not sure.
The last I'd heard he was under arrest by Imperial Security, though
of course no one believed they were serious about
it."
"Detainment," Miles
corrected. "Technically."
"And
he—" Metzov swung to point to Gregor, "is the Emperor of
Barrayar. Gregor Vorbarra. What he's
doing here, I cannot imagine."
"Are
you sure?" Even Cavilo was taken aback. At Metzov's stern nod,
her eye lit with speculation. She looked at Gregor as if for the
first time. "Really.
How interesting."
"But
where is his security? We must tread very cautiously,
Cavie."
"What's he worth to them? Or
for that matter, to the highest bidder?"
Gregor
smiled at her. "I'm Vor, ma'am. In a sense, the
Vor. Risk in service is the Vorish trade. I wouldn't assume my value
was infinite, if I were you."
Gregor's
complaint had some truth to it, Miles thought; when he wasn't being
emperor he seemed hardly anyone at all. But he sure did the role
well.
"An opportunity, yes," said
Metzov, "but if we create an enemy we can't handle—"
"If
we hold him
hostage, we ought to be able to handle them with ease," Cavilo
commented thoughtfully.
"An alternate and
more prudent course," Miles interjected, "would be to help
us swiftly and safely on our way, and collect a lucrative and
honorable thank-you. An, as it were, win-win
strategy."
"Honorable?" Metzov's
eyes burned. He fell into a brooding silence, then muttered. "But
what are they doing here? And where's the snake Illyan? I want the
mutant, in any case. Damn! It must be played boldly, or not at all."
He stared malignantly at Miles. "Vorkosigan … so. And what is
Barrayar to me now, a Service that stabbed me in the back after
thirty-five years. . . ." He straightened decisively, but still
did not, Miles noticed, draw a weapon in the emperor's presence.
"Yes, take them to the brig, Cavie."
"Not
so fast," said Cavilo, looking newly pensive. "Send the
little one to the brig, if you like. He's nothing, you say?"
The
only son of the most powerful military leader on Barrayar kept his
mouth shut for a change. If, if, if …
"By
comparison," Metzov temporized, looking suddenly fearful of
being cheated of his prey.
"Very well."
Cavilo slid her stunner, which she had stopped aiming and started
playing with some time back, soundlessly into her holster. She moved
to unseal the door and beckon to the guards. "Put him," she
gestured to Gregor, "in Cabin Nine, G Deck. Cut the outgoing
comm, lock the door, and post a guard with a stunner. But supply him
with any reasonable comfort he may request." She added aside to
Gregor, "It's the most comfortable visiting officer's quarters
the Kurin's Hand
can supply, ah—"
"Call me Greg,"
Gregor sighed.
"Greg. Nice name. Cabin Nine
is next to my own. We will continue this conversation shortly, after
you, ah, freshen up. Perhaps over dinner. Oversee his arrival there,
will you, Stanis?" She favored both men with an impartial,
glittering smile, and wafted out, a neat trick in boots. She stuck
her head back in and indicated Miles. "Bring him
along to the brig."
Miles was removed by
the second guard with a wave of a stunner and the prod of a blessedly
inactivated shock-stick, to follow in her wake.
The
Kurin's Hand,
judging from his passing glimpses, was a much larger command ship
than the Triumph,
able to field bigger and punchier combat drop or boarding forces, but
correspondingly sluggish in maneuver. Its brig was larger too, Miles
discovered shortly, and more formidably secured. A single entrance
opened onto an elaborate guard monitor station, from which led two
dead-end cell bays.
The freighter captain was
just leaving the guard station, under the watchful eye of the
squadman detailed to escort him. He exchanged a hostile look with
Cavilo.
"As you see, they remain in good
health," Cavilo said to him. "My half of the bargain,
Captain. See that you continue to complete your own part."
Let's
see what happens.
. . . "You saw a recording," Miles piped up. "Demand
to see 'em in the flesh."
Cavilo's white
teeth clenched rigidly, but her annoyed grimace melted seamlessly
into a vulpine smile as the freighter captain jerked around. "What?
You . . ." he planted himself mulishly. "All right which of
you is lying?"
"Captain, that's all
the guarantee you get," said Cavilo, gesturing to the monitors.
"You chose to gamble, gamble you shall."
"Then
that—" he pointed to Miles, "is the last result you get."
A subtle hand motion down by her trouser seam brought the guards to
the alert, stunners drawn. "Take him out," she ordered
"No!"
"Very well," her eyes
widened in exasperation, "take him to Cell Six. And lock him
in." As the freighter captain turned, torn between resistance
and eagerness, Cavilo motioned the guard to open distance from his
prisoner. He fell away, brows rising in question. Cavilo glanced at
Miles and smiled very sourly, as if to say, All
right, Smartass, watch me.
In a cold smooth motion Cavilo flipped open her left side holster
seal, brought up a nerve disrupter, took careful aim, and fried the
back of the captain's head. He convulsed once and dropped, dead
before he hit the deck.
She walked over and
pensively prodded the body with the pointed toe of her boot, then
glanced up at Miles, whose jaw was gaping open. "You will
keep your mouth shut next time, won't you, little man?" Miles's
mouth shut with a snap. You
had to experiment.
… At least now he knew who'd killed Liga. The rabbity Polian's
reported death seemed suddenly real and vivid. The exalted look
flashing over Cavilo's face as she blew the freighter captain away
fascinated even as it horrified Miles. Who
did you really see in your gunsights, darling?
"Yes,
ma'am," he choked, trying to conceal his shakes, delayed
reaction to this shocking turn. Damn
his tongue. . . .
She stepped down to the
security monitoring station and spoke to the tech at—frozen at—her
post. "Unload the recording of General Metzov's cabin that
includes the last half-hour, and give it to me. Start a fresh one.
No, don't play it back!" She placed the disk in a breast pocket
and carefully sealed the flap. "Put this one in Cell Fourteen,"
she nodded toward Miles. "Or, ah—if it's empty, make that Cell
Thirteen." Her teeth bared briefly.
The
guards re-searched Miles, and took ID scans. Cavilo blandly informed
them that his name should be entered as Victor Rotha.
As
he was pulled to his feet, two men with medical insignia arrived with
a float-pallet to remove the body. Cavilo, watching without
expression now, remarked tiredly to Miles, "You chose to damage
my double-agent's utility. A vandal's prank. He had better uses than
as an object-lesson for a fool. I do not warehouse non-useful items.
I suggest you start thinking of how you can make yourself more useful
to me than as merely General Metzov's catnip toy." She smiled
faintly into some invisible distance. "Though he does jump for
you, doesn't he? I shall have to explore that motivation."
"What
is the use of Stanis-darling to you?" Miles dared,
pigheaded-defiant in his wash of angry guilt. Metzov as her paramour?
Revolting thought.
"He's an experienced
ground combat commander."
"What's a
fleet on all-space wormhole guard duty want with a ground
commander?"
"Well, then," she
smiled sweetly, "he amuses me."
That
was supposed to have been the first answer. "No accounting for
taste," Miles muttered inanely, careful not to be heard. Should
he warn her about Metzov? On second thought, should he warn Metzov
about her?
His head was still spinning with this new dilemma when the blank door
of his solitary cell sealed him in.
It didn't
take long for Miles to exhaust the novelties of his new quarters, a
space a little larger than two by two meters, furnished only with two
padded benches and a fold-out lavatory. No library viewer, no relief
from the wheel of his thoughts mired in the quag of his
self-recriminations.
A Ranger field-ration bar,
inserted some time later through a force-shielded aperture in the
door, proved even more repellent than the Barrayaran Imperial
version, resembling a rawhide dog chew. Wetted with spit, it softened
slightly, enough to tear off gummy shreds if your teeth were in good
health. More than a temporary distraction, it promised to last till
the next issue. Probably nutritious as hell. Miles wondered what
Cavilo was serving Gregor for dinner. Was it as scientifically
vitamin-balanced?
They'd been so close to their
goal. Even now, the Barrayaran consulate was only a few locks and
levels away, less than a kilometer. If only he could get there from
here. If a chance came . . . On the other hand, how long would Cavilo
hesitate to disregard diplomatic custom and violate the consulate, if
she saw some utility in it? About as long as she'd hesitated to shoot
the freighter captain in the back, Miles gauged. She would surely
have ordered the consulate, and all known Barrayaran agents on
Vervain Station, watched by now. Miles unstuck his teeth from a
fragment of ration-leather, and hissed.
A
beeping from the code-lock warned Miles he was about to have a
visitor. Interrogation, so soon? He'd expected Cavilo to wine, dine,
and evaluate Gregor first, then get back to him. Or was he to be
amere project for underlings? he swallowed, throat tight on a ration
blob, and sat up, trying to look stern and not scared.
The
door slid back to reveal General Metzov, still looking highly
military and efficient in the tan and black Ranger fatigues.
"Sure
you don't need me, sir?" the guard at his elbow asked as Metzov
shouldered through the opening.
Metzov glanced
contemptuously at Miles, looking low and unmilitary in Victor Rotha's
now limp and grimy green silk shirt, baggy trousers, and bare
feet—the processing guards had taken his sandals.
"Hardly.
He's
not going to jump me."
Damn
straight, Miles
agreed with regret.
Metzov tapped his wrist
comm. "I'll call you when I'm done."
"Very
well, sir." The door sighed closed. The cell seemed suddenly
very tiny indeed. Miles drew his legs up, sitting in a small
defensive ball on his pallet. Metzov stood at ease, contemplating
Miles for a long, satisfied moment, then settled himself comfortably
on the bench opposite.
"Well, well,"
said Metzov, his mouth twisting. "What a turn of fate."
"I
thought you'd be dining with the Emperor," said
Miles.
"Commander Cavilo, being female, can
get a little scattered under stress. When she calms down again,
she'll see the need for my expertise in Barrayaran matters,"
said Metzov in measured tones.
In
other words, you weren't invited.
"You left the Emperor alone
with her?" Gregor,
watch your step!
"Gregor's
no threat. I fear his upbringing has made him altogether
weak."
Miles choked.
Metzov
sat back, allowed his fingers to tap gently on his knee. "So
tell me, Ensign Vorkosigan—if it is still Ensign Vorkosigan. There
being no justice in the world, I suppose you've retained your rank
and pay. What are you doing here? With him?"
Miles
was tempted to confine himself to name, rank, and serial number,
except Metzov knew all those already. Was Metzov an enemy, exactly?
Of Barrayar, that is, not of Miles personally. Did Metzov divide the
two in his own mind? "The Emperor became separated from his
security. We hoped to regain contact with them via the Barrayaran
consulate here." There, nothing in that that wasn't perfectly
obvious.
"And where did you come
from?"
"Aslund."
"Don't
bother playing the idiot, Vorkosigan. I know Aslund. Who sent you
there in the first place? And don't bother lying, I can
cross-question the freighter captain."
"No,
you can't. Cavilo killed him."
"Oh?"
A flicker of surprise, suppressed. "Clever of her. He was the
only witness to know where you went."
Had
that been part of Cavilo's calculation, when she'd raised her nerve
disrupter? Probably. And yet . . . the freighter captain was also the
only corroborating witness who knew where they'd come from.
Maybe Cavilo was not so formidable as she seemed at first
glance.
"Again," Metzov said
patiently—Miles could see he felt he had all the time in the
world—"How did you come to be in the Emperor's
company?"
"How do you think?"
Miles countered, buying time. "Some plot, of course,"
Metzov shrugged.
Miles groaned. "Oh, of
course!" He uncurled in his indignation. "And what sane—or
insane, for that matter—chain of conspiracy do you imagine accounts
for our arrival here, alone, from Aslund? I mean, I know what it
really was, I lived it, but what does it look like?" To
a professional paranoid, that is.
"I'd just love to hear it."
"Well
. . ." Metzov was drawn out in spite of himself. "You have
somehow separated the Emperor from his security. You must either be
setting up an elaborate assassination, or planning to implement some
form of personality-control."
"That's
what just springs
to mind, huh?" Miles thumped his back against the wall with a
frustrated growl, and slumped.
"Or perhaps
you're on some secret—and therefore dishonorable– diplomatic
mission. Some sellout."
"If so,
where's Gregor's security?" Miles sang. "Better watch
out."
"So, my first hypothesis is
proved."
"In that case, where's my
security?" Miles snarled. Where, indeed?
"A
Vorkosigan plot—no, perhaps not the Admiral's. He controls Gregor
at home—"
"Thank you, I was about to
point that out."
"A twisted plot from
a twisted mind. Do you dream of making yourself emperor of Barrayar,
mutant?"
"A nightmare, I assure you.
Ask Gregor."
"It scarcely matters. The
medical staff will squeeze out your secrets as soon as Cavilo gives
the go-ahead. In a way, it's a shame fast-pente was ever invented.
I'd enjoy breaking every bone in your body till you talked. Or
screamed. You won't be able to hide behind your father's," he
grinned briefly, "skirts, out here, Vorkosigan." He grew
thoughtful. "Maybe I will anyway. One bone a day, for as long as
they last."
206
bones in the human body. 206 days. Illyan ought to be able to catch
up with us in 206 days.
Miles smiled bleakly.
Metzov looked too
comfortable to arise and initiate this plan immediately, though. This
speculative conversation scarcely constituted serious interrogation.
But if not for interrogation, nor revenge-tortures, why was the man
here? I.
His
lover threw him out, he felt lonely and strange and someone familiar
to talk to. Even a familiar enemy.
It was was understandable. But for the Komarr invasion, Metzov had
probably never set foot off Barrayar in his life. A life spent mostly
in the constrained, ordered, predictable world-within-a-world of the
Imperial military. Now the rigid man was adrift, and faced with more
freewill choices than he'd ever imagined. God.
The maniac's homesick.
Chilling insight.
"I'm beginning to think I
may have accidentally done you a good turn," Miles began. If
Metzov was in a talking mood, why not encourage him? "Cavilo's
certainly better-looking than your last commander."
"She
is that."
"Is the pay
higher?"
"Everyone pays more than the
Imperial Service," Metzov snorted.
"Not
boring, either. On Kyril Island,
every day was like every other day. Here, you don't know what's going
to happen next. Or does she confide in you?"
"I'm
essential to her plans." Metzov practically smirked.
"As
a bedroom warrior? Thought you were infantry. Switching specialties,
at your age?"
Metzov merely smiled. "Now
you're getting obvious, Vorkosigan."
Miles
shrugged. If so,
I'm the only obvious thing here.
"As I recall, you didn't think much of women soldiers. Cavilo
seems to have made you change your tune."
"Not
at all." Metzov sat back smugly. "I expect to be in command
of Randall's Rangers in six months."
"Isn't
this cell monitored?" Miles asked, startled. Not that he cared
how much trouble Metzov's mouth bought him, but still. . . .
"Not
at present."
"Cavilo planning to
retire, is she?"
"There are a number
of ways her retirement might be expedited. The fatal accident Cavilo
arranged for Randall might easily be repeated. Or I might even work
out a way to charge her with it, since she was stupid enough to brag
about murder in bed."
That
was no boast, that was a warning, dunderhead.
Miles's eyes nearly crossed, imagining pillowtalk between Metzov and
Cavilo. "You two must have a lot in common. No wonder you get on
so well."
Metzov's amusement thinned. "I
have nothing in common with that mercenary slut. I was an Imperial
officer." Metzov glowered. "Thirty-five years. And they
wasted me. Well, they'll discover their mistake."
Metzov
glanced at his chrono. "I still don't understand your presence
here. Are you sure there isn't something else you want to say to me
now, privately, before you say everything tomorrow to Cavilo under
fast-penta?"
Cavilo and Metzov, Miles
decided, had set up the old interrogation game of good-guy-bad-guy.
Except they'd gotten their signals mixed, and both accidentally taken
the part of bad-guy. "If you really want to be helpful, get
Gregor to the Barrayaran Consul. Or even just get out a message that
he's here."
"In good time, we may.
Given suitable terms." Metzov's eyes were narrowed, studying
Miles. As puzzled by Miles as Miles by him? After a stretched
silence, Metzov called the guard on his wristcom, and withdrew, with
no more violent parting threat than "See you tomorrow,
Vorkosigan." Sinister enough.
I
don't understand your presence here either,
Miles thought as the door hissed closed and the lock beeped. Clearly,
some kind of planetary ground-attack was in the planning stage. Were
Randall's Rangers to spearhead a Vervani invasion force? Cavilo had
met secretly with a high-ranking Jackson's Consortium representative.
Why? To guarantee Consortium neutrality during the coming attack?
That made excellent sense, but why hadn't the Vervani dealt directly?
So they could disavow Cavilo's arrangements if the balloon went up
too early?
And who, or what, was the target? Not
the Consortium Station, obviously, nor its distant parent Jackson's
Whole. That left Aslund and Pol. Aslund, a cul-de-sac, was not
strategically tempting. Better to take Pol first, cut Aslund off from
the Hub (with Consortium cooperation) and mop up the weak planet at
leisure. But Pol had Barrayar behind it, who would like nothing
better than an alliance with its nervous neighbor that would give the
imperium a toehold in the Hegen Hub. An open attack must drive Pol
into Barrayar's waiting arms. That left Aslund, but . . .
This
makes no sense. It
was almost more disturbing than the thought of Gregor supping
unguarded with Cavilo, or the fear of the promised chemical
interrogation. I'm
not seeing something. This makes no sense.
The
Hegen Hub turned in his head, in all its strategic complexity, all
the light-dimmed night cycle. The Hub, and pictures of Gregor. Was
Cavilo feeding him mind-altering drugs? Doggie chews, like Miles's?
Steak and champagne? Was Gregor being tortured? Being seduced?
Visions of Cavilo/Livia Nu's dramatic red evening-wear undulated in
Miles's mind's eye. Was Gregor having a wonderful time? Miles thought
Gregor'd had little more experience with women than he had, but he'd
been out of touch with the Emperor these last few years; for all he
knew Gregor was keeping a harem now. No, that couldn't be, or Ivan
would have picked up the scent, and commented. At length. How
susceptible was Gregor to a very old-fashioned form of
mind-control?
The day-cycle crept by with Miles
anticipating every moment being taken out for his very first
experience of fast-penta interrogation from the wrong end of the
hypospray. What would Cavilo and Metzov make of the bizarre truth of
his and Gregor's odyssey? Three ration-chews arrived at interminable
intervals, and the lights dimmed again, marking another ship-night.
Three meals, and no interrogation. What was keeping them out there?
No noises or subtle gravitic vibrations suggested the ship had left
dock, they were still locked to Vervain Station. Miles tried to
exercise himself weary, pacing, two steps, turn, two steps, turn, two
steps . . . but merely succeeded in increasing his personal stink and
making himself dizzy.
Another day writhed by,
and another light-dimmed "night." Another breakfast chew
fell through onto the floor. Were they artificially stretching or
compressing time, confusing his biological clock to soften him up for
interrogation? Why bother?
He bit his
fingernails. He bit his toenails. He pulled tiny green threads from
his shirt and tried flossing his teeth. Then he tried making little
green designs with tiny, tiny knots. Then he hit on the idea of
weaving messages. Could he macrame "Help, I am a prisoner . . ."
and plant it on the back of someone's jacket by static charge? If
someone ever came back, that is? He got as far as a delicate gossamer
H, E, L, caught the thread on a hangnail while rubbing his stubbled
chin, and reduced his plea to an illegible green wad. He pulled
another thread and started over.
The lock
twinkled and beeped. Miles snapped alert, realizing only then that he
had fallen into an almost hypnotic fugue in his mumbling isolation.
How much time had passed?
His visitor was
Cavilo, crisp and businesslike in her Ranger's fatigues. A guard took
up station just outside the cell door, which closed behind her.
Another private chat, it seemed. Miles struggled to pull his thoughts
together, to remember what he was about.
Cavilo
settled herself opposite Miles in the same spot Metzov had chosen, in
somewhat the same leisurely posture, leaning forward, hands clasped
loosely on her knees, attentive, assured. Miles sat cross-legged,
back to the wall, feeling distinctly at the disadvantage.
"Lord
Vorkosigan, ah . . ." she cocked her head, interrupting herself
aside, "you don't look at all well."
"Solitary
confinement doesn't suit me." His disused voice came out raspy,
and he had to stop and clear his throat. "Perhaps a library
viewer," his brain grated into gear,"—or better, an
exercise period." Which would get him out of this cell, and in
contact with subornable humans. "My medical problems compel me
to a self-disciplined lifestyle, if they're not to flare up and
impede me. I definitely need an exercise period, or I'm going to get
really sick."
"Hm. We'll see."
She ran a hand through her short hair, and refocused. "So, Lord
Vorkosigan. Tell me about your mother."
"Huh?"
A most dizzying sharp left turn, for a military interrogation.
"Why?"
She smiled ingratiatingly.
"Greg's tales have interested me." Greg's tales? Had the
Emperor been fast-penta'd? "What … do you want to
know?"
"Well … I understand Countess
Vorkosigan is an off-worlder, a Betan who married into your
aristocracy."
"The Vor are a military
caste, but yes."
"How was she
received, by the power-class—whatever they choose to call
themselves? I'd thought Barrayarans were totally provincial,
prejudiced against off-worlders."
"We
are," Miles admitted cheerfully. "The first contact most
Barrayarans—of all classes—had with off-worlders, after the end
of the Time of Isolation when Barrayar was rediscovered, was with the
Cetagandan invasion forces. They left a bad impression that lingers
even now, three, four generations after we threw them off."
"Yet
no one questioned your father's choice?" Miles jerked up his
chin in bafflement. "He was in his forties. And . . . and he was
Lord Vorkosigan."
So am I, now. Why doesn't it work for me like that?
"Her background made no difference?"
"She
was Betan. Is Betan. In the Astronomical Survey first, but then a
combat officer. Beta Colony had just helped beat us soundly in that
stupid attempt we made to invade Escobar."
"So
despite being an enemy, her military background actually helped gain
her respect and acceptance among the Vor?"
"I
guess so. Plus, she established quite a local military reputation in
the fighting of Vordarian's Pretendership, the year I was born twice.
Led loyal troops, oh, several times, when my father couldn't be two
places at once." And had been personally responsible for the
five-year-old emperor-in-hiding's safety. More successfully than her
son was doing so far for the twenty-five-year-old Gregor. Total
screw-up was the
phrase that sprang to mind, actually. "Nobody's messed with her
since."
"Hm." Cavilo sat back,
murmuring half to herself, "so, it has been done. Therefore, it
can be done."
What,
what can be done?
Miles rubbed a hand over his face, trying to wake up and concentrate.
"How is Gregor?"
"Quite
amusing."
Gregor the Lugubrious, amusing?
But then, if it matched the rest of her personality, Cavilo's sense
of humor was probably vile. "I meant his health."
"Rather
better than yours, from the look of you."
"I
trust he's been better fed."
"What, a
taste of real military life too strong for you, Lord Vorkosigan?
You've been fed the same as my troops."
"Can't
be." Miles held up a ragged half-gnawed breakfast chew. "They'd
have mutinied by now."
"Oh, dear."
She regarded the repellent morsel with a sympathetic frown. "Those.
I thought they'd been condemned. How did they end up here? Someone
must be economizing. Shall I order you a regular menu?"
"Yes,
thank you," said Miles immediately, and paused. She had neatly
misdirected his attention from Gregor to himself. He must keep his
mind, on the Emperor. How much useful
information had Gregor spilled, by now?
"You
realize," Miles said carefully, "you are creating a massive
interplanetary incident between Vervain and Barrayar."
"Not
at all," said Cavilo reasonably. "I'm Greg's friend. I've
rescued him from falling into the hands of the Vervani secret police.
He's now under my protection, until the opportunity arises to restore
him to his rightful place."
Miles blinked.
"Do the Vervani have a secret police, as such?"
"Close
enough," Cavilo shrugged. "Barrayar, of course, definitely
does. Stanis seems quite worried about them. They must be very
embarrassed, back in ImpSec, to have so thoroughly mislaid their
charge. I fear their reputation is exaggerated."
Not
quite. I'm ImpSec, and I know where Gregor is. So technically, ImpSec
is right on top of the situation.
Miles wasn't sure whether to laugh or cry. Or
right under it.
"If
we're all such good friends," said Miles, "why am I locked
in this cell?"
"For your protection
too, of course. After all, General Metzov has openly threatened to,
ah—what was it—break every bone in your body." She sighed.
"I'm afraid dear Stanis is about to lose his utility."
Miles
blanched, remembering what else Metzov had said in that conversation.
"For . . . disloyalty?"
"Not at
all. Disloyalty can be very useful at times, under proper management.
But the overall strategic situation may be about to change
drastically. Unimaginably. And after all the time I wasted
cultivating him, too. I hope all Barrayarans are not so tedious as
Stanis." She smiled briefly. "I very much hope it."
She
leaned forward, growing more intent. "Is it true that Gregor,
ah, ran away from home to evade pressure from his advisors to marry a
woman he loathed?"
"He hadn't
mentioned it to me," said Miles, startled. Wait—what was
Gregor about, out there? He'd better be careful not to step on his
lines. "Though there is … concern. If he were to die without
an heir any time soon, many fear a factional struggle would
follow."
"He has no heir?"
"The
factions can't agree. Except on Gregor."
"So
his advisors would be glad to see him marry."
"Overjoyed,
I expect. Uh . . ." Miles's unease at this turn of the
conversation bloomed into sudden light, like the flash before the
shock-wave. "Commander Cavilo—you're not
imagining you could make yourself Empress of Barrayar, are
you?"
Her smile grew sharp. "Of course
I couldn't. But Greg could." She straightened, evidently annoyed
by Miles's stunned expression. "Why not? I'm the right sex. And,
apparently, of the right military background."
"How
old are you?"
"Lord Vorkosigan,
really, what a rude question." Her blue eyes glinted. "If
we were on the same side, we could work together."
"Commander
Cavilo, I don't think you understand Barrayar. Or Barrayarans."
Actually, there'd been eras in Barrayaran history where Cavilo's
command style would have fit right in. Mad Emperor Yuri's reign of
terror, for example. But they'd spent the last twenty years trying to
get away
from all that.
"I need your cooperation,"
Cavilo said. "Or at any rate, it could be very useful. To both
of us. Your neutrality would be … tolerable. Your active
opposition, however, would be a problem. For you. But we should avoid
getting caught in negative attitude traps at this early stage, I
think?"
"Whatever did happen to that
freighter captain's wife and child? Widow and orphan, rather?"
Miles inquired through his teeth.
Cavilo
hesitated fractionally. "The man was a traitor. Of the worst
sort. Sold out his planet for money. He was caught in an act of
espionage. There is no moral difference between ordering an
execution, and carrying it out."
"I
agree. So do a lot of legal codes. How about a difference between
execution and murder? Vervain is not at war. His actions may have
been illegal, warranting arrest, trial, jail or sociopath therapy–
where did the trial part drop out?"
"A
Barrayaran, arguing legalities? How strange."
"And
what happened to his family?"
She'd had a
moment to think, blast it. "The tedious Vervani demanded their
release. Naturally, I didn't want him to know they were out of my
hands, or I'd lose my only hold on his actions at a distance."
Lie
or truth? No way to tell. But
she backpedals from her mistake. She let establishing her dominance
through terror rule her reactions, before she was sure of her ground.
Because she was unsure of her ground. I know the look that was on her
face. Homicidal paranoids are as familiar as breakfast, I had one for
a bodyguard for seventeen years.
Cavilo, for a brief instant, seemed homey and routine, if no less
dangerous. But he should strive to appear convinced, non-threatening,
even if it made him gag.
"It's true,"
he conceded, "it's rank cowardice to give an order you're not
willing to carry out yourself. And you're no coward, Commander, I'll
grant you that." There, that was the right tone, persuadable but
not changing his stance too suspiciously fast.
Her
brow rose sardonically, as if to say, Who
are you to judge?
But her tension eased slightly. She glanced at her chrono and rose.
"I'll leave you now, to think about the advantages of
cooperation. You're theoretically familiar with the mathematics of
the Prisoner's Dilemma, I hope. It will be an interesting test of
your wits, to see if you can connect theory with practice."
Miles
managed a weird return smile. Her beauty, her energy, even her
flaring ego, did exert a real fascination. Had Gregor indeed been . .
. activated, by Cavilo? Gregor, after all, hadn't watched her raise
her nerve disruptor and . . . What weapon was a good ImpSec man to
use, in the face of this personal assault on Gregor? Try and seduce
her back? To sacrifice himself for the Emperor by flinging himself on
Cavilo had about as much appeal as belly-smothering a live sonic
grenade.
Besides, he doubted he could work it.
The door slid closed, eclipsing her scimitar smile. Too late, he
raised a hand to remind her other promise to change his
rations.
But she remembered anyway. Lunch
arrived on a trolley, with an experienced, if expressionless, batman
to serve it in five elegant courses with two wines and espresso
coffee for an antidote. Miles didn't think Cavilo's troops ate like
this, either. He envisioned a platoon of smiling, replete, obese
gourmets strolling happily into battle . . . the dog chews would be
much more effective for raising aggression levels.
A
chance remark to his waiter brought a package along with the next
meal-trolley, which proved to contain clean underwear, a set of
insignialess Ranger fatigues cut down to his fit, and a pair of soft
felt slippers; also a tube of depilatory and assorted toiletries.
Miles was inspired to wash, by sections, in the fold-out lavatory
basin, and shave before dressing. He felt almost human. Ah, the
virtues of cooperation. Cavilo was not exactly subtle.
God,
where had she come from? A mercenary veteran, she had to have been
around for a while to have risen this far, even with shortcuts. Tung
might know. I think
she must have lost bad at least once,
He wished Tung were here now. Hell, he wished Illyan
were here now.
Her flamboyance, Miles
increasingly felt, was an effective act, meant to be viewed at a
distance like stage makeup, to dazzle her troops. At the right range,
it might work rather well, like the popular Barrayaran general of his
grandfather's generation who'd gained visibility by carrying a plasma
rifle like a swagger stick. Usually uncharged, Miles had heard
privately—the man wasn't stupid. Or a Vorish ensign who wore a
certain antique dagger at every opportunity. A trademark, a banner. A
calculated bit of mass psychology. Cavilo's public persona pushed the
envelope of that strategy, surely. Was she scared inside, knowing
herself for overextended?You
wish. Alas, after
a dose of Cavilo, one thought of Cavilo, fogging one's tactical
calculations. Focus, ensign. Had she forgotten Victor Rotha? Had
Gregor concocted some bullshit explanation to account for their Pol
Station encounter? Gregor seemed to be feeding Cavilo skewed facts—or
were they? Maybe there really was a loathed proposed bride, and
Gregor had not trusted Miles enough to mention it. Miles began to
regret being quite so acerbic to Gregor.
His
thoughts were still running like a hyped-up rat on an exercise wheel,
spinning to nowhere, when the door code-lock beeped again.
Yes,
he would fake cooperation, promise anything, if only she'd give him a
chance to check on Gregor.
Cavilo appeared with
a soldier in tow. The man looked vaguely familiar—one of the
arresting goons? No. . . .
The man ducked his
head through the cell door, stared at Miles a moment in bemusement,
and turned to Cavilo.
"Yeah, that's him,
all right. Admiral Naismith, of the Tau Verde Ring war. I'd recognize
the little runt anywhere." He added aside to Miles, "What
are you doing here, sir?"
Miles mentally
transmuted the man's tan and blacks to grey and white. Yeah. There'd
been several thousand mercenaries involved in the Tau Verde war. They
all had to have gone somewhere.
"Thank you,
that will be all, Sergeant." Cavilo took the man by the arm and
firmly pulled him away. The non-com's fading advice drifted back down
the cell bay, "You ought to try and hire him, ma'am, he's a
military genius. …"
Cavilo reappeared
after a moment, to stand in the aperture with her hands on her hips
and her chin outthrust in exasperated disbelief. "How many
people are
you, anyway?"
Miles opened his hands and
smiled weakly. Just as he'd been about to talk his way out of this
hole . . .
"Huh." She spun on her
heel, the closing door cutting off her sputter.
Now
what? He'd slam
his fist into the wall in frustration, but the wall was sure to slam
back with greater devastation.
However,
all three of his identities were granted an exercise period that
afternoon. A small on-board gymnasium was cleared for his exclusive
use. He studied the setup sharply for the hour as he tried out
various pieces of equipment, checking distances and trajectories to
guarded exits. He could see a couple of ways Ivan might succeed in
jumping a guard and making a break for it. Not fragile, short-legged
Miles. For a moment, he found himself actually wishing he had Ivan
along.
On the way back to Cell 13 with his
escort, Miles passed another prisoner being checked in at the guard
station. He was a shambling, wild-eyed man, his blond hair damped to
brown with sweat. Miles's shock of recognition was the greater for
the changes it had to encompass. Oser's
lieutenant. The
bland-faced killer was transformed.
He wore only
grey trousers, his torso was bare. Livid shock-stick marks dappled
his skin. Recent hypospray injection points marched like little pink
paw prints up his arm. He mumbled continuously through wet lips,
shivered and giggled. Just coming back from interrogation, it
seemed.
Miles was so startled he reached over to
grasp the man's left hand, to check—yes, there were his own
scabbed-over teeth marks across the knuckles, souvenir of last week's
fight at the Triumph
's airlock, across the system. The silent lieutenant wasn't silent
any more.
Miles's guards motioned him sternly
along. Miles almost tripped, staring back over his shoulder till the
door of Cell 13 sighed shut, imprisoning him once more.
What
are you doing here?
That had to be the most-asked, least-answered question in the Hegen
Hub, Miles decided. Though he bet the Oseran lieutenant had answered
it—Cavilo must command one of the sharpest counter-intelligence
departments in the Hub. How fast had the Oseran mercenary traced
Miles and Gregor here? How soon had Cavilo's people spotted him and
picked him up? The marks on his body were not over a day old. . .
.
Most important question of all, had the Oseran
come to Vervain Station as part of a general, systematic sweep, or
had he followed specific clues—was Tung compromised? Elena
arrested? Miles shuddered, and paced frenetically, helplessly. Have
I just killed my friends?
So,
what Oser knew, Cavilo now knew, the whole silly mix of truth, lies,
rumors and mistakes. So the identification of Miles as "Admiral
Naismith" hadn't necessarily come from Gregor as Miles had first
assumed. (The Tau Verde veteran had clearly been scrounged up as an
unbiased cross-check.) If Gregor was systematically withholding
information from her, Cavilo would now realize it. If he was
withholding anything. Maybe he was in love by now. Miles's head
throbbed, feeling on the verge of exploding.
The
guards came for him in the middle of the night-cycle, and made him
dress. Interrogation at last, eh? He thought of the drooling Oseran,
and cringed. He insisted on washing up, and adjusted every burr-seam
and cuff of his Ranger fatigues with slow deliberation, till the
guards began to shift impatiently and tap fingers suggestively on
shock sticks. He too would shortly be a drooling fool. On the other
hand, what could he possibly say under fast-penta at this point that
could make things worse? Cavilo had it all, as far as he could tell.
He shrugged off the guards' grasps, and marched out of the brig
between them with all the forlorn dignity he could muster.
They
led him through the night-dimmed ship and exited a lift-tube at
something marked "G-Deck." Miles snapped alert. Gregor was
supposed to be around here somewhere. . . . They arrived at an
otherwise-blank cabin door marked 10A, where the guards beeped the
code-lock for permission to enter. The door slid aside.
Cavilo
sat at a comconsole desk, a pool of light in the somber room making
her blond-white hair gleam and glow. They had arrived at the
Commander's personal office, apparently, adjoining her quarters.
Miles strained his eyes and ears for signs of the Emperor. Cavilo was
fully-dressed in her neat fatigues. At least Miles wasn't the only
one going short on sleep these days; he fancied optimistically that
she looked a little tired. She placed a stunner out on her desk,
ominously ready to her right hand, and dismissed the guards. Miles
craned his neck, looking for the hypospray. She stretched, and sat
back. The scent of her perfume, a greener, sharper, less musky scent
than she'd worn as Livia Nu, sublimated from her white skin and
tickled Miles's nose. He swallowed.
"Sit
down, Lord Vorkosigan."
He took the
indicated chair, and waited. She watched him with calculating eyes.
The insides of his nostrils began to itch abominably. He kept his
hands down, and still. The first question of this interview would not
catch him with his fingers shoved up his nose.
"Your
Emperor is in terrible trouble, little Vor lord. To save him, you
must return to the Oseran Mercenaries, and retake them. When you are
back in command, we will communicate further instructions."
Miles
boggled. "Danger from what?" he choked. "You?"
"Not
at all! Greg is my best friend. The love of my life, at last. I'd do
anything for him. I'd even give up my career." She smirked
piously. Miles's lip curled in repelled response; she grinned. "If
any other course of action occurs to you besides following your
instructions to the letter, well … it could land Greg in
unimaginable troubles. At the hands of worse enemies."
Worse
than you? Not possible . . . is it?
"Why do you want me in charge of the Dendarii
Mercenaries?"
"I can't tell you."
Her eyes widened, positively sparkling at her private, ironic joke.
"It's a surprise."
"What would
you give me to support this enterprise?"
"Transportation
to Aslund Station."
"What else?
Troops, guns, ships, money?"
"I'm told
you could do it with your wits alone. This I wish to see."
"Oser
will kill me. He's already tried once."
"That's
a chance I must take."
I
really like that 'I,' lady.
"You mean me to be killed," Miles deduced. "What if I
succeed instead?" His eyes were starting to water; he sniffed.
He would have to rub his madly-itching nose soon.
"The
key of strategy, little Vor," she explained kindly, "is not
to choose a
path to victory, but to choose so that all
paths lead to a victory. Ideally. Your death has one use; your
success, another. I will emphasize that any premature attempt to
contact the Barrayaran could be very counterproductive. Very."
A
nice aphorism on strategy; he'd have to remember that one. "Let
me hear my marching orders from my own supreme commander, then. Let
me talk to Gregor."
"Ah. That
will be your reward for success."
"The
last guy who bought that line got shot in the back of his head for
his credulity. What say we save steps, and you just shoot me now?"
He blinked and sniffed, tears now running down the inside of his
nose.
"I
don't wish to shoot you." She actually batted her eyelashes at
him, then straightened, frowning. "Really, Lord Vorkosigan, I
hardly expected you to dissolve into tears."
He
inhaled; his hands made a helpless pleading gesture. Startled, she
tossed him a handkerchief from her breast pocket. A green-scented
handkerchief. Without other recourse, he pressed it to his
face.
"Stop crying, you cowar—" Her
sharp order was interrupted by his first, mighty sneeze, followed by
a rapid volley of repeats.
"I'm not crying,
you bitch, I'm allergic to your goddamn perfume!" Miles managed
to choke out between paroxysms.
She held her
hand to her forehead and broke into giggles; real ones, not mannered
ploys for a change. The real, spontaneous Cavilo at last; he'd been
right, her sense of humor was vile.
"Oh,
dear," she gasped. "This gives me the most marvelous idea
for a gas grenade. A pity I'll never . . . ah, well."
His
sinuses throbbed like kettle drums. She shook her head helplessly,
and tapped out something on her comconsole.
"I
think I had best speed you on your way, before you explode," she
told him.
Bent over in his seat wheezing, his
water-clouded gaze fell on his brown felt slippers. "Can I at
least have a pair of boots for this trip?"
She
pursed her lips in a moment of thought. ". . . No," she
decided. "It will be more interesting to see you carry on just
as you are."
"In this uniform, on
Aslund, I'll be like a cat in a dog suit," he protested. "Shot
on sight by mistake."
"By mistake …
on purpose . . . goodness, you're going to have an exciting time."
She keyed the door lock open. He was still sneezing and gasping as
the guards came in to take him away. Cavilo was still
laughing.
The effects of her poisonous perfume
took half an hour to wear off, by which time he was locked in a tiny
cabin aboard an inner-system ship. They had boarded via a lock on the
Kurin 's Hand;
he hadn't even set foot on Vervain Station again. Not a chance of a
break for it He checked out the cabin. Its bed and lavatory
arrangements were highly reminiscent of his last cell. Space duty,
hah. The vast vistas of the wide universe, hah. The glory of the
Imperial Service—un-hah. He'd lost Gregor. . . . I
may be small, but I screw up big because I'm standing on the
shoulders of GIANTS.
He tried pounding on the door and screaming into the intercom. No one
came. It's a
surprise.
He
could surprise them all by hanging himself, a briefly attractive
notion. But there was nothing up high to hook his belt on.
All
right. This courier-type ship was swifter than the lumbering
freighter in which he and Gregor had taken three days to cross the
system last time, but it wasn't instantaneous. He had at least a day
and a half to do some serious thinking, he and Admiral Naismith. It's
a surprise.
God.
An officer and a guard came for him, very
close to the time Miles estimated they would arrive back at Aslund
Station's defense perimeter. But
we haven't docked yet. This seems premature.
His nervous exhaustion still responded to a shot of adrenalin; he
inhaled, trying to clear his frenzy-fogged brain back to alertness
again. Much more of this, though, and no amount of adrenalin would do
him any good. The officer led him through the short corridors of the
little ship to Nav and Com.
The Ranger captain
was present, leaning over the communication console manned by his
second officer. The pilot and flight engineer were busy at their
stations.
"If they board, they'll arrest
him, and he'll be automatically delivered as ordered," the
second officer was saying.
"If they arrest
him, they could arrest us too. She said to plant him, and she didn't
care if it was head or feet first. She didn't order us to get
ourselves interned," said the captain.
A
voice from the comm; "This is the picket ship Ariel,
Aslund Navy Contract Auxiliary, calling the C6-WG
out of Vervain Hubside Station. Cease accelerating, and clear your
portside lock for boarding for pre-docking inspection. Aslund Station
reserves the right to deny you docking privileges if you fail to
cooperate in pre-docking inspection-The voice took on a cheery tone,
"I reserve the right to open fire if you don't stand and deliver
in one minute. That's enough stalling boys." The voice, once
gone ironic, was suddenly intensely familiar. Bel?
"Cease
accelerating," the captain ordered, and motioned the second to
close the comm channel. "Hey you, Rotha," he called to
Miles. "Come over here."
So
I'm "Rotha"again.
Miles mustered a smarmy smile, and sidled closer. He eyed the viewer,
striving to conceal his hungry interest. The Ariel?
Yes, there it was in the vid display, the sleek Illyrican-built
cruiser . . . did Bel Thorne still command her? How
can I get myself onto that ship?
"Don't
throw me out there!" Miles protested urgently. "The Oserans
are after my hide. I swear, I didn't know the plasma arcs were
defective!"
"What plasma arcs?"
asked the captain.
"I'm an arms dealer. I
sold them some plasma arcs. Cheap. Turns out they had a tendency to
lock on overload and blow their user's hand off. I didn't know, I got
them wholesale."
The Ranger captain's right
hand opened and closed in sympathetic identification. He rubbed his
palm unconsciously on his trousers, back of his plasma arc holster.
He studied Miles, frowning sourly. "Headfirst it is," he
said after a moment. "Lieutenant, you and the corporal take this
little mutant to the portside personnel lock, pack him in a bod-pod,
and eject him. We're going home."
"No,"
said Miles weakly, as they each took an arm. Yes!
He dragged his
feet, careful not to offer enough resistance to risk his bones.
"You're not going to space me . . . !" The Ariel,
my God. . . .
"Oh, the Aslunder merc'll
pick you up," said the captain. "Maybe. If they don't
decide you're a bomb, and try to set you off in space with plasma
fire from their ship or something." Smiling slightly at this
vision, he turned back to the comm, and intoned in a bored
traffic-control sing-song, "Ariel,
ah, this is the C6-WG.
We chose to, ah, change our filed flight plan and return to Vervain
Station. We therefore have no need for pre-docking inspection. We are
going to leave you a, ah, small parting gift, though. Quite small.
What you choose to do with it is your problem. . . ."
The
door to Nav and Com closed behind them. A few meters of corridor and
a sharp turn brought Miles and his handlers to a personnel hatch. The
corporal held Miles, who struggled; the lieutenant opened a locker
and shook out a bod-pod.
The bod-pod was a cheap
inflatable life-support unit designed to be entered in seconds by
endangered passengers, suitable either for Pressurization emergencies
or abandoning ship. They were also dubbed idiot-balloons. They
required no knowledge to operate because they had no controls, merely
a few hours of recyclable air and a locator-beeper. Passive,
foolproof, and not recommended for claustrophobes, they were very
cost-effective in saving lives—when adequate pick-up ships arrived
in time.
Miles emitted a realistic wail as he
was stuffed into the bod-pod's dank, plastic-smelling interior. A
jerk of the rip cord, and it sealed and inflated automatically. He
had a brief, horrible flashback to the mud-sunken bubble-shelter on
Kyril Island, and
choked back a real scream. He was tumbled as his captors rolled the
pod into the airlock. A whoosh, a thump, a lurch, and he was
free-falling in pitch darkness. The spherical pod was little more
than a meter in diameter. Miles, half-doubled-up, felt around, his
stomach and inner ear protesting the spin imparted by the ejecting
kick outward, till his shaking fingers found what he hoped was a
cold-light tube. He squeezed it, and was rewarded with a nauseous
greenish glow.
The silence was profound, broken
only by the tiny hiss of the air recycler and his ragged breathing.
Well . . . it's
better than the last time somebody tried to shove me out an airlock.
He had several minutes in which to imagine all the possible courses
of action the Ariel
might take instead of picking him up. He had just discarded
skin-crawling anticipation of the ship opening fire on him in favor
of abandonment to cold dark asphyxiation, when he and his pod were
wrenched by a tractor beam.
The tractor beam's
operator, clearly, had ham hands and palsy, but after a few minutes
of juggling the return of gravity and outside sound reassured Miles
he'd been safely stowed in a working airlock. The swish of the inner
door, garbled human voices. Another moment, and the idiot balloon
began to roll. He yelped loudly, and curled up into a protective ball
to roll with the flow till the motion stopped. He sat up, and took a
deep breath, and tried to straighten his uniform. Muffled thumps
against the bod-pod's fabric. "Somebody in there?"
"Yeah!"
Miles called back.
"Just a minute. . .
."
Squeaks, clinks, and a rending grind, as
the seals were broken. The bod-pod began to collapse as the air
sighed out. Miles fought his way clear of its folds, and stood,
shakily, with all the gracelessness and indignity of a newly-hatched
chick.
He was in a small cargo bay. Three
grey-and-white uniformed soldiers stood in a circle around him,
aiming stunners and nerve disrupters at his head. A slim officer with
captain's insignia leaned with one foot on a canister, watching Miles
emerge.
The officer's neat uniform and soft
brown hair gave no clue whether one was looking at a delicate man or
an unusually determined woman. This ambiguity was deliberately
cultivated; Bel Thorne was a Betan hermaphrodite, minority descendant
of a century-past social/genetic experiment that had not caught on.
Thorne's expression melted from scepticism to astonishment as Miles
rose into view.
Miles grinned back. "Hello,
Pandora. The gods send you a gift. But there's a catch."
"Isn't
there always?" Face lighting with delight, Thorne strode forward
to grasp Miles's waist with bubbling enthusiasm. "Miles!"
Thorne held Miles away again, and gazed avidly down into his face.
"What are you doing here?"
"Somehow,
I figured that might be your first question," Miles
sighed.
"—and what are you doing in the
Ranger-suit?"
"Goodness,
I'm glad you're not of the shoot-first-and-ask-questions-later
school." Miles kicked his slippered feet clear of the deflated
bod-pod. The soldiers, somewhat uncertainly, held their aim. "Ah—"
Miles gestured toward them.
"Stand down,
men," Thorne ordered. "It's all right."
"I
wish that were true," Miles said. "Bel, we've got to
talk."
Thorne's cabin aboard the Ariel
was the same wrenching mix of familiarity and change Miles had
encountered in all the mercenary matters. The shapes, the sounds, the
smells of the Ariel's
interior triggered cascades of memory. The captain's cabin was now
overlaid with Bel's personal possessions; vid library, weapons,
campaign souvenirs including a half-melted space-armor helmet that
had been slagged saving Thorne's life, now made into a lamp; a small
cage housing an exotic pet from Earth Thorne called
ahamster.
Between
sips of a cup of Thorne's private stock of non-synthetic tea, Miles
gave Thorne the Admiral-Naismith version of reality, closely related
to the one he'd given Oser and Tung; the Hub evaluation assignment,
the mystery employer, etc. Gregor, of course, was edited out,
together with any mention of Barrayar; Miles Naismith spoke with a
pure Betan accent. Otherwise Miles stuck as close as he could to the
facts of his sojourn with Randall's Rangers.
"So
Lieutenant Lake's been
captured by our competitors," Thorne mused upon Miles's
description of the blond lieutenant he'd passed in the Kurin
's Hand's brig.
"Couldn't happen to a nicer fellow, but– we'd better change
our codes again."
"Quite." Miles
set down his cup, and leaned forward. "I was authorized by my
employer not only to observe but to prevent war in the Hegen Hub, if
possible." Well, sort of. "I'm afraid it may no longer be
possible. What does it look like from your end?"
Thorne
frowned. "We were last in-dock five days ago. That's when the
Aslunders concocted this pre-docking inspection routine. All the
smaller ships were pressed into round-the-clock service on it. With
their military station nearing completion, our employers are getting
jumpier about sabotage—bombs, biologicals . . ."
"I
won't argue with that. What about, ah, Fleet internal
matters?"
"You mean rumors of your
death, life, and/or resurrection? They're all over, fourteen garbled
versions. I'd have discounted 'em —you've been sighted before,
y'know—but then suddenly Oser arrested Tung."
"What?"
Miles bit his lip. "Only Tung? Not Elena, Mayhew,
Chodak?"
"Only Tung."
"That
makes no sense. If he'd arrested Tung, he'd have fast-penta'd him,
and he'd have to have spilled on Elena. Unless she's been left free
as bait."
"Things got real tense, when
Tung was taken. Ready to explode. I think if Oser'd moved on Elena
and Baz it would have sparked the war right then. Yet he hasn't
backed down and reinstated Tung. Very unstable. Oser's taking care to
keep the old inner circle separated, that's why I've been out here
for nearly a bloody week. But last time I saw Baz he was damn near
edgy enough to commit to fight. And that was the last thing he'd
wanted to do."
Miles exhaled slowly. "A
fight … is exactly what Commander Cavilo wants. It's why she
shipped me back gift-wrapped in that . . . undignified package. The
Bod-pod of Discord. She doesn't care if I win or lose, as long as her
enemy's forces are thrown into chaos just as she springs her
surprise."
"Have
you figured out what her surprise is, yet?"
"No.
The Rangers were setting up for some sort of ground-attack, at one
point. Sending me here suggests they're aiming for Aslund, against
all strategic logic. Or something else? The woman's mind is
incredibly twisted. Gah!" He slapped his fist gently into his
palm in nervous rhythm. "I've got to talk to Oser. And he's got
to listen this time. I've thought it over. Cooperation between us may
be the one and only course of action Cavilo doesn't expect, doesn't
have a half-sawn-through branch of her strategy-tree ready and
waiting for me. . . . Are you willing to put it all on the line for
me, Bel?"
Thorne pursed lips judiciously.
"From here, yeah. The Ariel's
the fleet's fastest ship. I can outrun retribution if I have to."
Thorne grinned.
Should
we run to Barrayar?
No—Cavilo still held Gregor. Better appear to be following
instructions. For a time yet.
Miles took a long
breath, and settled himself firmly in the station chair in the
Ariel's
Nav and Com room. He'd cleaned up, and borrowed a mercenary's
grey-and-white uniform from the smallest woman on the ship. The
rolled-up pant cuffs were stuffed neatly out of sight down boots that
almost fit. A belt covered the fastener gaping open at the too-narrow
waistband. The loose jacket looked all right, sitting down. Permanent
alterations later. He nodded to Thorne. "All right. Open your
channel."
A buzz, a glitter, and Admiral
Oser's hawk face materialized over the vid plate. "Yes, what is
it—you!" His teeth shut with a beak's snap; his hand, a vague
unfocused blur to the side, tapped on intercom keys and vid
controls.
He
can't throw me out the airlock this time, but he can cut me off.
Time to talk fast.
Miles leaned forward and
smiled. "Hello, Admiral Oser. I've completed my evaluation of
Vervani forces in the Hegen Hub. And my conclusion is, you are in
deep trouble."
"How did you get on
this secured channel?" snarled Oser. "Tight-beam,
double-encode—comm officer, trace this!"
"How,
you will be able to determine in a few minutes. You'll have to keep
me on-line till you do," said Miles. "But your enemy is at
Vervain Station, not here. Not Pol, not Jackson's Whole. And most
certainly not me. Note I said Vervain Station, not Vervain. You know
Cavilo? Your opposite number, across-system?"
"I've
encountered her once or twice." Oser's face was guarded now,
waiting for his scrambling tech team to report.
"Face
like an angel, mind like a rabid mongoose?"
Oser's
lips twitched very slightly. "You've met her."
"Oh,
yes. She and I had several heart-to-heart talks. They were . . .
educational. Information is the most valuable trade-good in the Hub
right now. At any rate, mine is. I want to deal."
Oser
held up his hand for a pause, and keyed off-line briefly. When his
face retuned, its expression was black. "Captain Thorne, this is
mutiny!"
Thorne leaned into the range of
the vid pick-up, and said brightly, "No, sir, it's not. We are
trying to save your ungrateful neck, if you will permit it. Listen to
the man. He has lines we don't."
"He
has lines, all right," and under his breath, "Damn Betans,
sticking together. . . ."
"Whether you
fight me, or I fight you, Admiral Oser, we both lose," said
Miles rapidly.
"You can't win," said
Oser. "You cannot take my fleet. Not with the Ariel."
"The
Ariel's
just a starter-set, if it comes to that. But no, I probably can't
win. What I can do is make an unholy mess. Divide your forces—screw
you with your employer—every weapon-charge you expend, every piece
of equipment that's damaged, every soldier hurt or killed is pure
loss in an
in-fight like this. Nobody wins but Cavilo, who expends nothing.
Which is precisely what she sent me back here for. How much profit do
you foresee in doing precisely what your enemy wishes you to,
eh?"
Miles waited, breathless. Oser's jaw
worked, chewing over this impassioned argument. "What's your
profit?" he asked at last.
"Ah. I'm
afraid I'm the dangerous variable in that calculation, Admiral. I'm
not in it for profit." Miles grinned. "So I don't care what
I wreck."
"Any information you had
from Cavilo is worth shit," said Oser.
He
begins to barter—he's hooked, he's hooked. . . .
Miles tamped down exultation, cultivated a serious expression.
"Anything Cavilo says must certainly be sifted with great care.
But, ah … beauty is as beauty does. And I've found her vulnerable
side."
"Cavilo has no vulnerable
side."
"Yes, she does. Her passion for
utility. Her self-interest."
"I fail
to see how that makes her vulnerable."
"Precisely
why you need to add me
to your Staff at once. You need my vision."
"Hire
you!" Oser recoiled in astonishment.
Well,
he'd achieved surprise, anyway. A military objective of sorts. "I
understand the post of Chief-of-Staff/Tactical is now
empty."
Oser's expression flowed from
astonished to stunned to a kind of amused fury. "You're
insane."
"No, just in a tearing hurry.
Admiral, there's nothing irrevocable gone wrong between us. Yet. You
attacked me—not the other way around—and now you expect me to
attack you back. But I'm not on holiday, and I don't have time to
waste on personal amusements like revenge."
Oser's
eyes narrowed. "What about Tung?"
Miles
shrugged. "Keep him locked up, for now, if you insist. Unharmed,
of course." Just
don't tell him I said so.
"Suppose
I hang him."
"Ah . . . that
would be irrevocable." Miles paused. "I will point out,
jailing Tung is like cutting off your right hand before heading into
battle."
"What battle? With
whom?"
"It's a surprise. Cavilo's
surprise. Though I've developed an idea or two on the problem, that
I'd be willing to share."
"Would you?"
Oser had that same man-sucking-a-lemon expression Miles had now and
then surprised on Illyan's face. It seemed almost homey.
Miles
continued, "As an alternative to my becoming your employee, I'm
willing to become your employer. I'm authorized to offer a bona fide
contract, all the usual perqs, equipment replacement, insurance, from
my . . . sponsor." Illyan,
hear my plea. "Not
in conflict with Aslund's interests. You can collect twice for the
same fight, and you don't even have to switch sides. A mercenary's
dream."
"What guarantees can you offer
up front?"
"It seems to me that I'm
the one who's owed a guarantee, sir. Let us begin with small steps. I
won't start a mutiny; you stop trying to thrust me out airlocks. I
will join you openly—everyone to know I've arrived—I will make my
information available to you." How thin his "information"
seemed, in the breeze of these airy promises. No numbers, no troop
movements; all intentions,
shifting mental topographies of loyalty, ambition, and betrayal. "We
will confer. You may even have an angle I lack. Then we go on from
there."
Oser thinned his lips, bemused,
half-persuaded, deeply suspicious.
"The
risk, I would point out," said Miles, "the personal risk,
is more mine than yours."
"I
think—"
Miles hung suspended on the
mercenary's words.
"I think I'm going to
regret this," Oser sighed.
The detailed
negotiations just to bring theAriel
into dock took another half day. As the initial excitement wore off,
Thorne became more thoughtful. As the Ariel
actually maneuvered into its clamps, Thorne grew positively
meditative.
"I'm still not exactly sure
what's supposed to keep Oser from bringing us in, stunning us, and
hanging us at leisure," Thorne said, buckling on a sidearm.
Thorne kept the complaint to an undertone, in care for the tender
ears of the escort squad kitting up nearby in the Ariel's
shuttle hatch corridor.
"Curiosity,"
said Miles firmly. "All right, stun, fast-penta, and hang,
then."
"If he fast-penta's me, I'll
tell him exactly the facts I was going to tell him anyway." And
a few more besides, alas.
"And he'll have fewer doubts. So much the better."
Miles
was rescued from further hollow flummery by the clank and hiss of the
flex-tubes sealing. Thorne's sergeant undogged the hatch without
hesitation, though he was also careful not to stand silhouetted in
the aperture, Miles noted.
"Squad, form
up!" the sergeant ordered. His six people checked their
stunners. Thorne and the sergeant in addition bore nerve disruptors,
a nicely-calculated mix of weapons; stunners to allow for human
error, the nerve disruptors to encourage the other side not to risk
mistakes. Miles went unarmed. With a mental salute to Cavilo– well,
a rude gesture, actually—he'd put his felt slippers back on. Thorne
at his side, he took the lead of the little procession and marched
through the flex tube into one of the Aslunder military station's
almost-finished docking bays.
True to his word,
Oser had a party of witnesses lined up and waiting. The squad of
twenty or so bore a mix of weapons almost identical to the Ariel's
group. "We're outnumbered," muttered Thorne.
"It's
all in the mind," Miles muttered in return. "March like you
had an empire at your back." And
don't look over your shoulder, they may be gaining on us. They'd
better be gaining on us.
"The more people who see me, the better."
Oser
himself stood waiting in parade rest, looking highly dyspeptic.
Elena—Elena!—
stood at his side, unarmed, face frozen. Her tight-lipped stare at
Miles was tense with suspicion, not of his motives, perhaps, but
certainly of his methods, Now
what foolishness?
her eyes asked. Miles gave her the briefest of ironic nods before
saluting Oser.
Reluctantly, Oser returned the
military courtesy. "Now—'Admiral'—let us return to the
Triumph
and get down to business," he grated.
"Indeed,
yes. But let's have a little tour of this Station on the way, eh? The
non-top-secured areas, of course. My last view was so . . . rudely
cut short, after all. After you, Admiral?" Oser gritted his
teeth. "Oh, after you, Admiral."
It
became a parade. Miles led them around for a good forty-five minutes,
including a march through the cafeteria during the dinner rush with
several noisy stops to greet by name the few old Dendarii he
recognized, and favor the others with blinding smiles. He left babble
in his wake, those in the dark demanding explanation from those in
the know.
An Aslunder work crew was busy tearing
out fiberboard paneling, and he paused to compliment them on their
labors. Elena seized an opportunity of Oser's distraction to bend
down and breathe fiercely in Miles's ear, "Where's
Gregor?"
"Thereby
hangs—me, if I fail to get him back," Miles whispered. "Too
complicated, tell you later."
"Oh,
God." She rolled her eyes.
When he had,
judging from the admiral's darkening complexion, just about reached
the limits of Oser's strained tolerance, Miles suffered himself to be
led Triumph-ward
again. There. Obedient to Cavilo's orders, Miles had made no attempt
to contact Barrayar. But if Ungari couldn't find him after this, it
was time to fire the man. A prairie bird thrumming out a mad mating
dance could scarcely have put on a more conspicuous
display.
Finishing touches on construction were
still in progress around the Triumph's
docking bay as Miles marched his parade across it. A few Aslunder
workers in tan, light blue, and green leaned over to goggle down from
catwalks. Military techs in their dark blue uniforms paused in
mid-installation to stare, then had to re-sort connections and
realign bolts. Miles refrained from smiling and waving, lest Oser's
set jaw crack. No more baiting, time to get serious. The thirty or so
mercenaries could change from honor guard to prison guard with his
next roll of the dice.
Thorne's tall sergeant,
marching beside Miles, gazed around the bay, noting new construction.
"The robotic loaders should be fully automated by this time
tomorrow," he noted. "That'll be an improvement—crap!"
His hand descended
abruptly on Miles's head, shoving him downward. The sergeant
half-spun, clawed hand arcing toward his holster, when the crackling
blue bolt of a nerve disrupter charge struck him square in the chest
at the level Miles's head had been. He spasmed, his breath stopping.
The smell of ozone, hot plastic, and blistered meat slapped Miles's
nose. Miles kept on diving, hitting the deck, rolling. A second bolt
splattered on the deck, its outwashing field stinging like twenty
wasps up Miles's outstretched arm. He jerked his hand back.
As
the sergeant's corpse collapsed, Miles grabbed at the man's jacket
and jerked himself underneath, burrowing his head and spine under
where the meat was thickest, the sergeant's torso. He drew his arms
and legs in as tight as he could. Another bolt crackled into the deck
nearby, then two struck the body in close succession. Even with the
absorbing mass between it was worse than the blow of a shock-stick on
high power.
Miles's ringing ears heard
screaming, thumping, yelling, running, chaos. The chirping buzz of
stunner fire. A voice. "He's up there! Go get him!" and
another voice, high and hoarse. "You spotted him—he's yours.
You
go get him!" Another bolt hit the decking.
The
weight of the big man, the stench of his fatal injury, pressed into
Miles's face. He wished the fellow'd massed another fifty kilos. No
wonder Cavilo had been willing to front twenty thousand Betan dollars
toward a line on a shield-suit. Of all the loathsome weapons Miles
had ever faced, this had to be the most personally terrifying. A head
injury that didn't quite kill him, but stole his humanity and left
him animal or vegetable was the worst nightmare. His intellect was
surely his sole justification for existence. Without it …
The
crackle of a nerve disrupter not
aimed his way penetrated his hearing. Miles turned his head to
scream, cloth– and meat-muffled, "Stunners! Stunners! We want
him alive for questioning!" He's
yours, you go get him. . . .
He should shove out from under this body and join the fight. But if
he was the assassin's special target, and why else pump charges into
a corpse . . . perhaps he ought to stay right here. He squirmed,
trying to draw his hands and legs in tighter.
The
shouting died down; the firing stopped. Someone kneeling beside him
tried to roll the sergeant's body off Miles. It took Miles a moment
to realize he had to unclutch the dead man's uniform jacket before he
could be rescued. He straightened his fingers with
difficulty.
Thorne's face wavered over him,
white and breathing open-mouthed, urgent. "Are you all right,
Admiral?"
"I think," Miles
panted.
"He was aiming at you," Thorne
reported. "Only."
"I noticed,"
Miles stuttered. "I'm only lightly fried." Thorne helped
him sit up. He was shaking as badly as after the shock-stick beating.
He regarded his spasming hands, lowered one to touch the corpse
beside him in morbid wonder. Every
day of the rest of my life will be your gift. And I don't even know
your name. "Your
sergeant—what was his name?"
"Collins."
"Collins.
Thanks."
"Good man."
"I
saw."
Oser came up, looking strained.
"Admiral Naismith, this was not
my doing."
"Oh?" Miles blinked.
"Help me up, Bel. . . ." That might have been a mistake,
Thorne then had to help him keep standing as his muscles twitched. He
felt weak, washed-out as a sick man. Elena–
where? She had no weapon. . . .
There
she was, with another female mercenary. They were dragging a man in
the dark blue uniform of an Aslunder ranker toward Miles and Oser.
Each woman held a booted foot; the man's arms trailed nervelessly
across the deck. Stunned? Dead? They dropped the feet with a thump
beside Miles, with the matter-of-fact air of lionesses delivering
prey to their cubs. Miles stared down at a very familiar face indeed.
General Metzov.
What are you doing here?
"Do
you recognize this man?" Oser asked an Aslunder officer who had
hurried up to join them. "Is he one of yours?"
"I
don't know him—" The Aslunder knelt to check for IDs. "He
had a valid pass. . . ."
"He could
have had me, and gotten away," said Elena to Miles, "but he
kept firing at you. You were bright to stay put."
A
triumph of wit, or a failure of nerve? "Yes. Quite." Miles
made another attempt to stand on his own, gave up, and leaned on
Thorne. "I hope you didn't kill him."
"Just
stunned," said Elena, holding up the weapon as evidence. Some
intelligent person must have tossed it to her when the melee began.
"He probably has a broken wrist."
"Who
is
he?" asked Oser. Quite sincerely, Miles judged.
"Why,
Admiral," Miles bared his teeth, "I told you I was going to
deliver you more intelligence data than your Section could collect in
a month. May I present," rather like an entree at that—he made
a gesture designed to evoke a waiter lifting a domed cover from a
silver platter, but which probably looked like another muscle spasm,
"General Stanis Metzov. Second-in-command, Randall's
Rangers."
"Since when do senior staff
officers undertake field assassinations?"
"Excuse
me, second-in-command as of three days ago. That may have changed. He
was up to his stringy neck in Cavilo's schemes. You, I, and he have
an appointment with a hypospray."
Oser
stared. "You planned this?"
"Why
do you think I spent the last hour flitting around the Station, if
not to smoke him out?" Miles said brightly. He
must have been stalking me this whole time. I think I'm going to
throw up. Have I just claimed to be brilliant, or incredibly stupid?
Oser looked like he was trying in figure out the answer to that same
question.
Miles stared down at Metzov's
unconscious form, trying to think. Had Metzov been sent by Cavilo, or
was this murder attempt entirely on his own time? If sent by
Cavilo—had she planned him to fall alive into her enemies' hands?
If not, was there a backup assassin around here somewhere, and if so
was his target Metzov, if Metzov succeeded, or Miles, if Metzov
failed? Or both? I
need to sit down and draw a flow-chart.
Medical
squads had arrived. "Yes, sickbay," said Miles faintly.
"Till my old friend here wakes up."
"I'll
agree to that," said Oser, shaking his head in something akin to
dismay.
"Better put a protective as well as
holding guard on our prisoner. I'm not sure if he was meant to
survive capture."
"Right," Oser
agreed bemusedly.
Thorne supporting one arm and
Elena the other, Miles staggered home into the Triumph's
hatchway.
Miles
sat trembling on a bench in a glassed-in cubicle normally used for
bio-isolation in the Triumph's
sickbay, and watched Elena tie General Metzov to a chair with a
tangle-cord. It would have given Miles a smug sense of turn-about, if
the interrogation upon which they were about to embark was not so
fraught with dangerous complications. Elena was disarmed again. Two
stunner-armed men stood guard beyond the soundproof transparent door,
glancing in occasionally. It had taken all Miles's eloquence to keep
the audience for this initial questioning limited to himself, Oser,
and Elena.
"How hot can this man's
information be?" Oser had inquired irritably. "They let him
go out in the field."
"Hot enough that
I think you should have a chance to think about it before
broadcasting it to a committee," Miles had argued. "You'll
still have the recording."
Metzov looked
sick and silent, tight-mouthed and unresponsive. His right wrist was
neatly bandaged. Awakening from stun accounted for the sick; the
silence was futile, and everyone knew it. It was a kind of strange
courtesy, not to badger him with questions before the fast-penta cut
in.
Now Oser frowned at Miles. "Are you up
to this yet?"
Miles glanced down at his
still-shaking hands. "As long as no one asks me to do brain
surgery, yes. Proceed. I have reason to suspect that time is of the
essence."
Oser nodded to Elena, who held up
a hypospray to calibrate the dose, and pressed it to Metzov's neck.
Metzov's eyes shut briefly in despair. After a moment his clenched
hands relaxed. The muscles of his face unlocked to sag into a loose,
idiotic smile. The transformation was most unpleasant to watch.
Without the tension his face looked aged.
Elena
checked Metzov's pulse and pupils. "All right. He's all yours,
gentlemen." She stepped back to lean against the doorframe with
folded arms, her expression almost as closed as Metzov's had
been.
Miles opened his hand. "After you,
Admiral."
Oser's mouth twisted. "Thank
you. Admiral." He walked over to stare speculatively into
Metzov's face. "General Metzov. Is your name Stanis
Metzov?"
Metzov grinned. "Yeah, that's
me."
"Presently second-in-command,
RandalFs Rangers?"
"Yeah."
"Who
sent you to assassinate Admiral Naismith?"
Metzov's
face took on an expression of sunny bewilderment.
"Who?"
"Call
me Miles," Miles suggested. "He knows me under a …
pseudonym." His chance of getting through this interview with
his identity undisclosed equalled that of a snowball surviving a
worm-hole jump to the center of a sun, but why rush the
complications?
"Who sent you to kill
Miles?"
"Cavie did. Of course. He
escaped, you see. I was the only one she could trust . . . trust . .
. the bitch. …"
Miles's brow twitched.
"In fact, Cavilo shipped me back here herself," he informed
Oser. "General Metzov was therefore set up. But to what end? My
turn, now, I think."
Oser made the
after-you gesture and stepped back. Miles tottered off his bench and
into Metzov's line-of-sight. Metzov breathed rage even through the
fast-penta euphoria, then grinned vilely.
Miles
decided to start with the question that had driven him most nuts the
longest. "Who—what target—was your ground-attack planned to
be upon?"
"Vervain," said
Metzov.
Even Oser's jaw dropped. The blood
thudded in Miles's ears in the stunned silence.
"Vervain
is your employer,"
Oser choked.
"God—God!—finally it adds
up!" Miles almost capered; it came out a stagger, which Elena
lurched away from the wall to catch. "Yes, yes, yes.
…"
"It's insane,"
said Oser. "So that's Cavilo's surprise."
"That's
not the end of it, I'll bet. Cavilo's drop forces are bigger than
ours by far, but no way are they big enough to take on a
fully-settled planet like Vervain on the ground. They can only raid
and run."
"Raid and run, right,"
smiled Metzov equably.
"What was your
particular target, then?" asked Miles urgently.
"Banks
. . . art museums . . . gene banks . . . hostages. . . ."
"That's
a pirate
raid," said Oser. "What the hell were you going to do with
the loot?"
"Drop it off on Jackson's
Whole, on the way out; they fence it."
"How
did you figure to escape the irate Vervani Navy, then?" asked
Miles.
"Hit them just before the new fleet
comes on-line. Cetagandan invasion fleet'll catch 'em in orbital
dock. Sitting targets. Easy."
The silence
this time was utter.
"That's
Cavilo's surprise," Miles whispered at last. "Yeah. That
one's worthy
of her."
"Cetagandan . . . invasion?"
Oser unconsciously began to chew a fingernail.
"God,
it fits, it fits." Miles began to pace the cubicle with uneven
steps. "What's the only way to take a wormhole jump? From both
sides at once. The Vervani aren't Cavilo's employers—the
Cetagandans
are." He turned to point at the slack-lipped, nodding general.
"And now I see Metzov's place, clear as day."
"Pirate,"
shrugged Oser.
"No—goat."
"What?"
"This
man—you apparently don't know—was cashiered from the Barrayaran
Imperial Service for brutality."
Oser
blinked. "From the Barrayaran Service? That must have taken some
doing."
Miles bit down a twinge of
irritation. "Well, yes. He, ah … took on the wrong victim. But
anyway, don't you see it? The Cetagandan invasion fleet jumps through
into Vervani local space on Cavilo's invitation—probably on
Cavilo's signal. The Rangers raid, do a fast trash of Vervain. The
Cetagandans, out of the kindness of their hearts, 'rescue' the planet
from the treacherous mercenaries. The Rangers run. Metzov is left
behind as goat—just like throwing the guy out of the troika to the
wolves," oops, that wasn't a very Betan metaphor, "to be
publicly hung by the Cetagandans to demonstrate their 'good faith.'
See, this evil Barrayaran harmed you, you need our Imperial
protection from the Barrayaran Imperial threat, and here we
are.
"And Cavilo gets paid three
times. Once by the Vervani, once by the Cetagandans, and the third
time by Jackson's Whole when she fences her loot on the way out.
Everybody profits. Except the Vervani, of course." He paused to
catch his breath.
Oser was beginning to look
convinced, and worried. "Do you think the Cetagandans plan to
punch through into the Hub? Or will they stop at Vervain?"
"Of
course they'll punch through. The Hub is the strategic target;
Vervain is just a stepping stone to it. Hence the 'bad mercenary'
setup. The Cetagandans want to expend as little energy as possible
pacifying Vervani. They'll probably label them an 'allied satrapy,'
hold the space routes, and barely touch down on the planet. Absorb
them economically over a generation. The question is, will the
Cetagandans stop at Pol? Will they try to take it on this one move,
or leave it as a buffer between them and Barrayar? Conquest or
wooing? If they can bait the Barrayarans into attacking through Pol
without permission, it might even drive the Polians into a Cetagandan
alliance—agh!" He paced again.
Oser
looked like he'd bitten into something nasty. With half a worm in it.
"I wasn't hired to take on the Cetagandan Empire. I expected to
be fighting the Vervani's mercenaries, at most, if the whole thing
didn't just fizzle out. If the Cetagandans arrive here, in force in
the Hub, we'll be … trapped. Penned up with a cul-de-sac at our
backs." And in a trailing mutter, "Maybe we ought to think
about getting out while the getting's good. . . ."
"But
Admiral Oser, don't you realize," Miles pointed to Metzov,
"she'd
never have let him out of her sight with all this in his head if it
was still an active plan. She may have meant him to die trying to
kill me, but there was always the chance he might not—that just
this sort of interrogation might result. All this is the old
plan. There must be a new
plan." And I
think I know what it is.
"There is … another factor. A new X in the equation."
Gregor.
"Unless I miss my guess, the Cetagandan invasion is now a
considerable embarrassment to Cavilo."
"Admiral
Naismith, I would believe that Cavilo would double-cross anyone you
care to name—except the Cetagandans. They'd spend a generation,
pursuing their revenge. She couldn't run far enough. She wouldn't
live to spend her profits. Incidentally, what conceivable profit
outweighs triple pay?"
But
if she expects to have the Barrayaran Empire to defend her from
retribution—all our Security resources.
… "I see one way she could expect to get away with it,"
said Miles. "If it works out like she wants, she'll have all the
protection she wants. And all the profits."
It
could work, it really could. If Gregor were indeed under her spell.
And if two embarrassingly hostile character witnesses, Miles and
General Metzov, conveniently killed each other. Abandoning her fleet,
she could take Gregor and flee before the oncoming Cetagandans,
presenting herself to Barrayar as Gregor's "rescuer" at
great personal cost; if in addition a smitten Gregor urged her as his
fiancee, worthy mother to a future scion of the military caste—the
romantic appeal of the drama could swing popular support enough to
overwhelm cooler advisors' judgments. God knew Miles's own mother had
laid the groundwork for that scenario. She
could really bring this off. Empress Cavilo of Barrayar. It even
scans. And she
could cap her career by betraying absolutely everybody,
even her own forces. . . .
"Miles, the look
on your face . . ." said Elena in worry.
"When?"
said Oser. "When will the Cetagandans attack?" He got
Metzov's wandering attention, and repeated the question.
"Only
Cavie knows." Metzov snickered. "Cavie knows
everything."
"It has to be imminent,"
Miles argued. "It may even be starting now. Guessing from
Cavilo's timing of my return here. She meant the De—the Fleet to be
paralyzed with our infighting right now."
"If
that's true," murmured Oser, "what to do … ?"
"We're
too far away. A day and a half from the action. Which will be at the
Vervain Station wormhole. And beyond, in Vervani local space. We have
to get closer. We have to move the Fleet across-system—pin Cavilo
up against the Cetagandans. Blockade her—"
"Whoa!
I'm not mounting a headlong attack against the Cetagandan Empire!"
interrupted Oser sharply.
"You must. You'll
have to fight them sooner or later. You pick the time, or they will.
The only chance of stopping them is at the worm-hole. Once they're
through, it will be impossible."
"If I
moved my fleet away from Aslund, the Vervani would think we were
attacking them."
"And mobilize, go on
the alert. Good. But in the wrong direction– not good. We would end
up being a feint for Cavilo. Damn! No doubt another branch of her
strategy-tree."
"Suppose—if the
Cetagandans are now such an embarrassment to Cavilo as you claim—she
doesn't send her code?"
"Oh, she still
needs them. But for a different purpose. She needs them to flee from.
And to mass-murder her witnesses for her. But she doesn't need them
to succeed. In fact, she now needs their invasion to bog down. If
she's really thinking as long-term as she should be, in her new
plan."
Oser shook his head, as if to clear
it. "Why?"
"Our only
hope—Aslund's only hope—is to capture Cavilo, and fight the
Cetagandans to a standstill at the Vervain Station wormhole. No,
wait—we have to hold both sides of the Hub-Vervain jump. Until
reinforcements arrive."
"What
reinforcements?"
"Aslund, Pol—once
the Cetagandans actually materialize in force, they'll see their
threat. And if Pol comes in on Barrayar's side instead of
Cetaganda's, Barrayar can pour forces through via them. The
Cetagandans can be stopped, if everything occurs in the right order."
But could Gregor be rescued alive? Not a path to victory, but all
paths. . . .
"Would the Barrayarans come
in?"
"Oh, I think so. Your
counter-intelligence must keep track of these things—haven't they
noticed a sudden increase in Barrayaran Intelligence activity here in
the Hub the last few days?"
"Now that
you mention it, yes. Their coded traffic has quadrupled."
Thank
God. Maybe relief was closer than he'd dared hope. "Have you
broken any of their codes?" Miles asked brightly, while he was
at it.
"Only the least sensitive one, so
far."
"Ah. Good. That is, too
bad."
Oser stood with his arms folded,
gnawing at his lip, intensely inward for a full minute. It reminded
Miles uncomfortably of the meditative expression the admiral'd had
just before ordering him shoved out the nearest airlock, barely more
than a week back. "No," Oser said at last. "Thanks for
the information. In return, I suppose I will spare your life. But
we're pulling out. It's not a fight we can possibly win. Only some
propaganda-blinded planetary force, with a planet's resources behind
it, can afford that sort of insane self-sacrifice. I designed my
fleet to be a fine tactical tool, not a, a damn doorstop made of dead
bodies. I'm not a—as you say—goat."
"Not
a goat, a spearhead."
"Your
'spearhead' has no spear behind it. No."
"Is
that your last word, sir?" asked Miles in a thin
voice.
"Yes." Oser reached to key his
wristcom, to call in the waiting guards. "Corporal, this party's
going to the brig. Call down and notify them."
The
guard saluted through the glass as Oser keyed off.
"But
sir," Elena approached him, her arms raised in pleading. With a
snake-strike sideways flick of her wrist, she jabbed the hypo-spray
against the side of Oser's neck. His eyes widened, his pulse beat
once, twice, three times, as his lips drew back in rage. He tensed to
strike her. His blow sagged in mid-arc.
The
guards beyond the glass snapped alert at Oser's sudden movement,
drawing their stunners. Elena caught Oser's hand and kissed it,
smiling gratefully. The guards relaxed; one nudged the other and said
something pretty nasty, judging from their grins, but Miles's wits
were too momentarily scattered to try and read lips.
Oser
swayed and panted, fighting the drug. Elena sidled up the captured
arm and slipped a hand cozily around his waist, half-turning him so
they stood with their backs to the door. The sterotypical stupid
fast-penta smile slipped across and receded from Oser's face, then
fixed itself at last.
"He acted like I was
unarmed." Elena shook her head in exasperation, and slipped the
hypospray into her jacket pocket.
"Now
what?" Miles hissed frantically as the guard-corporal bent over
the door's code-lock.
"We all go to the
brig, I guess. Tung's there," said Elena.
"Ah
. . ." Oh-hell-we'll-never-bring-this-off. Had to try. Miles
smiled cheerily at the entering guards, and helped them release
Metzov, largely getting in their way and keeping their attention off
the peculiarly happy-looking Oser. At a moment when their eyes were
elsewhere, he tripped Metzov, who staggered.
"You'd
better each take one of his arms, he's not too steady," Miles
told the guards. He was none too steady himself, but he managed to
block the doorway so the guards and Metzov led the way, himself
second, and Elena, arm-in-arm with Oser, followed last. "Come,
love, come," he heard Elena intone behind him, like a woman
coaxing a cat to her lap.
It was the longest
short walk he'd ever taken. He dropped back to growl out of the
corner of his mouth to Elena. "All right, we get to the brig, it
will be stocked with Oser's finest. What then?"
She
bit her lip. "Don't know."
"That's
what I was afraid of. Turn right here." They swung around the
next corner.
A guard looked back over his
shoulder. "Sir?"
"Carry on,
boys," Miles called. "When you've got that spy locked up,
report back to us at the Admiral's cabin."
"Very
good, sir."
"Keep walking,"
breathed Miles. "Keep smiling. . . ."
The
guards' footsteps faded. "Where now?" asked Elena. Oser
stumbled. "This is untenable."
"Admiral's
cabin, why not?" Miles decided. His grin was fixed and fey.
Elena's inspired mutinous gesture had given him the best break of the
day. He had the momentum now. He wouldn't stop till he was brought
down bodily. His head spun with the unutterable relief of at last
getting the shifting, writhing, chittering might-be-might-be-might-be
nailed to a fixed is.
This time is now. The word is go.
Maybe.
If.
They passed a few Oseran techs. Oser was
sort of nodding, Miles hoped it would pass as casual acknowledgment
of their salutes. Nobody turned and cried Hey!, anyway. Two levels
and another turn brought them to the well-remembered corridors of
officer's country. They passed the Captain's cabin (God, he'd have to
deal with Auson, and soon); Oser's palm, pressed by Elena against the
lock, admitted them to the quarters Oser had made his flag office.
When the door slipped shut behind them Miles realized he'd been
holding his breath.
"We're in it now,"
said Elena, sagging for a moment with her back to the door. "You
going to run out on us again?"
"Not
this time," Miles replied grimly. "You may have noticed one
item I didn't bring up for discussion, down in
sickbay."
"Gregor."
"Just
so. Cavilo holds him hostage aboard her flagship right now."
Elena's neck bent in dismay. "She means to sell him to the
Cetagandans for a bonus, then?"
"No.
Weirder than that. She means to marry him." Elena's lip curled
in astonishment. "What? Miles, there's no way she could have got
such an impossible notion in her head, unless—"
"Unless
Gregor planted it. Which, I believe, he did. Watered and fertilized
it, too. What I don't know is whether he was serious, or playing for
time. She was very careful to keep us separated. You knew Gregor
almost as well as I do. What do you think?"
"It's
hard to imagine Gregor love-struck to idiocy. He was always . . .
rather quiet. Almost, well, undersexed. Compared to, say,
Ivan."
"I'm not sure that's a fair
comparison."
"No, you're right. Well,
compared to you, then."
Miles wondered just
how to take that. "Gregor never had much in the way of
opportunities, when we were younger. I mean, no privacy. Security
always in his back pocket. That . . . that can inhibit a man, unless
he's a bit of an exhibitionist."
Her hand
turned, as if measuring out Gregor's smooth gripless surface. "He
was not that."
"Certainly Cavilo must
be taking care to present only her most attractive side."
Elena
licked her lips in thought. "Is she pretty?"
"Yeah,
if you happen to like blonde power-mad homicidal maniacs, I suppose
she could be quite overwhelming." His hand closed, the texture
of Cavilo's pelted hair remembered like an itch on his palm. He
rubbed it on his trouser seam.
Elena brightened
slightly. "Ah. You don't like her."
Miles
gazed up at Elena's Valkyrie face. "She's too short for my
taste."
Elena grinned. "That, I
believe." She guided the shambling Oser to a chair and sat him
down. "We're going to have to tie him up soon. Or
something."
The comm buzzed. Miles went to
Oser's desk console to answer it. "Yes?" he said in his
calmest bored voice.
"Corporal Meddis here,
sir. We've put the Vervani agent in Cell Nine."
"Thank
you, Corporal. Ah . . ."It was worth a try, "We still have
some fast-penta left. Would you two please bring Captain Tung up here
for questioning?"
Beyond range of the vid
pick-up, Elena's dark brows rose in hope.
"Tung,
sir?" The guard's voice was doubtful. "Uh, may I add a
couple of reinforcements to my squad, then?"
"Sure
. . . see if Sergeant Chodak's around, he may have some people up for
extra duties. In fact, isn't he on the extra-duty roster himself?"
He glanced up to see Elena hold up her thumb and forefinger in an
O.
"I think so, sir."
"Fine,
whatever. Carry on. Naismith out." He keyed off the comm and
stared at it, as if it had transmuted into Aladdin's lamp. "I
don't think I'm destined to die today. I must be being saved for day
after tomorrow."
"You think?"
"Oh,
yes. I'll have a much bigger, more public and spectacular chance to
blow it all away then. Be able to take thousands more lives down with
me."
"Don't you fall into one of your
stupid funks now, you haven't got time for it." She rapped the
hypospray smartly across his knuckles. "You've got to think us
out of this hole."
"Yes, ma'am,"
Miles said meekly, rubbing his hand. Whatever
happened to "my lord"? No respect, none. . . .
But he was strangely comforted. "By the way, when Oser arrested
Tung for arranging my getaway, why didn't he go on to take you and
Arde and Chodak, and the rest of your cadre?"
"He
didn't arrest Tung for that. At least, I don't think so. He was
baiting Tung, which is his habit, they were both on the bridge at the
same time—that was unusual—and Tung finally lost his temper and
tried to deck him. Did deck him, I heard, and was part way to
strangling him when security pulled him off."
"It
had nothing to do with us, then?" That was a relief.
"I'm
. . . not sure. I wasn't there. It might have been an emergency
diversion, to get Oser's attention away from making just that
connection." Elena nodded to the still-blandly-smiling Oser.
"And now?"
"Leave him loose, till
Tung is delivered. We're all just happy allies here." Miles
grimaced. "But for the love of God don't let anybody try to talk
to him."
The door comm buzzed. Elena went
to stand behind Oser's chair with one hand on his shoulder, trying to
look as allied as possible. Miles went to the door and keyed the
lock. The door slid open.
Six nervous squadmen
surrounded a hostile-looking Ky Tung. Tung wore prisoner's bright
yellow pajamas, and radiated malice like a small pre-nova sun. His
teeth clenched in utter confusion when he saw Miles.
"Ah,
thank you, Corporal," said Miles. "We will be having a
little informal staff conference after this interrogation. I'd
appreciate it if you and your squad would stand guard out here. And
in case Captain Tung gets violent again, we'd better have—oh,
Sergeant Chodak and a couple of your people inside." He
emphasized the your
with no change of voice, but only a direct look into Chodak's
eyes.
Chodak made the catch. "Yes, sir.
You, Private, come with me."
I'm
promoting you to lieutenant,
Miles thought, and stood aside to let the sergeant and his chosen man
guide Tung within. Oser, looking cheerful, was quite clearly visible
to the squad for a moment before the door hissed closed
again.
Oser was clearly visible to Tung, too.
Tung shrugged off his guards and stalked toward the admiral. "What
now, you son-of-a-bitch, do you think you—" Tung paused, as
Oser continued to smile dimly up at him. "What's wrong with
him?"
"Nothing," shrugged Elena.
"I think that dose of fast-penta made a real improvement in his
personality. Too bad it's only temporary."
Tung
threw back his head and barked a laugh, and whirled to shake Miles by
the shoulders. "You did it, you little—you came back! We're in
business!"
Chodak's man twitched, as if
uncertain which way, or whom, to jump. Chodak caught him by the arm,
shook his head silently, and indicated the wall by the door. Chodak
holstered his stunner and leaned against the doorframe with his arms
folded; after a startled moment, his man followed suit, flanking the
other side. "Fly on the wall," Chodak grinned out of the
corner of his mouth to him. "Consider it a gift."
"It
wasn't exactly voluntary," said Miles through his teeth to Tung,
only in part to keep from biting his tongue in the blast of the
Eurasian's enthusiasm. "And we're not in business yet."
Sorry, Ky.
I can't be your front man this
time. You've got to follow me. Miles
kept his face stern, and removed Tung's hands from his shoulders with
icy deliberation. "That Vervani freighter captain you found
delivered me straight to Commander Cavilo. And I've been wondering
ever since if it was an accident."
"Ah!"
Tung fell back, looking as if Miles had just hit him in the
stomach.
Miles felt like he had. No, Tung was no
traitor. But Miles dared not give up the only edge he had. "Betrayal,
or botchery, Ky?" And
have you stopped beating your wife?
"Botchery,"
whispered Tung, gone sallow-pale. "Dammit, I'm going to kill the
triple-crossing—"
"That's already
been done," said Miles coldly. Tung's brows rose in surprised
respect.
"I came to the Hegen Hub on a
contract," continued Miles, "which is now in disarray
almost beyond repair. I haven't come back here to put you in
operational combat command of the Dendarii—" a beat, as Tung's
worried features attempted to settle on an expression, "unless
you are prepared to serve my
ends. Priorities and targets are to be my choice. Only the how
is yours." And just who was going to put whom in command of the
Dendarii? As long as that question didn't occur to Tung.
"As
my ally," began Tung.
"Not ally. Your
commander. Or nothing," said Miles.
Tung
stood stockily, his brows struggling to find their level. In a mild
tone he finally said, "Daddy Ky's
little boy is growing up, it seems."
"That's
not the half of it. Are you in, or out?"
"The
other half of this is something I've got to hear." Tung sucked
on his lower lip. "In."
Miles stuck
out his hand. "Done."
Tung took it.
"Done." His grip was determined.
Miles
let out a long breath. "All right. I gave you some half-truths,
last time. Here's what's really going on." He began to pace, his
shaking not all from the nerve disruptor nimbus. "I do have a
contract with an interested outsider, but it wasn't for 'military
evaluation,' which is the smoke screen I gave Oser. The part I told
you about preventing a planetary civil war was not smoke. I was hired
by the Barrayarans."
"They don't
normally hire mercenaries," said Tung.
"I'm
not a normal mercenary. I'm being paid by Barrayaran Imperial
Security," God, at least one whole-truth, "to find and
rescue a hostage. On the side I hope to stop a now-imminent
Cetagandan invasion fleet from taking over the Hub. Our second
strategic priority will be to hold both sides of the Vervain wormhole
jump and as much else as we can till Barrayaran reinforcements
arrive."
Tung cleared his throat. "Second
priority? What if they don't arrive? There's Pol to cross. . . . And,
ah, hostage-rescue does not normally take precedence over fleetwide
strat-tac ops, eh?"
"Given the
identity of this hostage, I guarantee their arrival. The Barrayaran
emperor, Gregor Vorbarra, was kidnapped. I found him, lost him, and
now I've got to get him back. As you can imagine, I expect the reward
for his safe return to be substantial."
Tung's
face was a study in appalled enlightenment. "That skinny
neurasthenic git you had in tow before—that wasn't him,
was it?"
"Yes, it was. And between us,
you and I managed to deliver him straight to Commander
Cavilo."
"Oh. Shit." Tung rubbed
his burr-haired skull. "She'll sell him straight to the
Cetagandans."
"No. She means to
collect her reward from Barrayar."
Tung
opened his mouth, closed it, held up a finger. "Wait a minute. .
. ."
"It's complicated,"
Miles conceded helplessly. "That's why I'm going to delegate the
simple part, holding the wormhole, to you. The hostage-rescue part
will be my responsibility."
"Simple.
The Dendarii mercenaries. All five thousand of us. Single-handed.
Against the Cetagandan Empire. Have you forgotten how to count in the
last four years?"
"Think of the glory.
Think of your reputation. Think how great it'll look on your next
resume."
"On my cenotaph, you mean.
Nobody will be able to collect enough of my scattered atoms to bury.
You going to cover my funeral expenses, son?"
"Splendidly.
Banners, dancing girls, and enough beer to float your coffin to
Valhalla."
Tung sighed. "Make it plum
wine to float the boat, eh? Drink the beer. Well." He stood
silent a moment, rubbing his lips. "The first step is to put the
fleet on one-hour-alert status instead of twenty-four."
"They're
not already?" Miles frowned.
"We were
defensive. We figured we had at least thirty-six hours to study
anything coming at us across the Hub. Or, so Oser figured it. It'll
take about six hours to bring us up to one-hour readiness."
"Right
. . . that's the second step, then. Your first step will be to kiss
and make up with Captain Auson."
"Kiss
my ass!" cried Tung. "That vacuumhead—"
"Is
needed to command the Triumph
while you run Fleet Tac. You can't do both. I can't reorganize the
fleet this close to the action. If I had a week to weed out—well, I
don't. Oser's people must be persuaded to stay on their jobs. If I
have Auson," Miles's upheld hand closed cage-like, "I can
run the rest. One way or another."
Tung
growled frustrated acquiescence. "All right." His glower
faded to a slow grin. "I'd pay money to watch you make him kiss
Thorne, though."
"One miracle at a
time."
Captain Auson, a big man four years
ago, had put on a little more weight but seemed otherwise unchanged.
He stepped into Oser's cabin, took in the stunners aimed his way, and
stood, hands clenching. When he saw Miles, sitting on the edge of
Oser's comconsole desk (a psychological ploy to put his head level
with everyone else's; in the station chair Miles feared he looked
like a child in need of a booster seat at the dinner table), Auson's
expression melted from anger to horror. "Oh, hell! Not you
again!"
"But of course," shrugged
Miles. The stunner-armed flies on the wall, Chodak and his man,
suppressed grins of happy anticipation. "The action's about to
start."
"You can't take this—"
Auson broke off to peer at Oser. "What did you do to
him?"
"Let's just say, we adjusted his
attitude. As for the fleet, it's already mine." Well, he was
working on it, anyway. "The question is, will you choose to be
on the winning side? Pocket a combat bonus? Or shall I give command
of the Triumph
to—"
Auson bared his teeth to Tung in a
silent snarl.
"—Bel Thorne?"
"What?"
Auson yelped. Tung flinched, wincing. "You can't—"
Miles
cut over him. "Do you happen to recall how you graduated from
command of the Ariel
to command of the Triumph?
Yes?"
Auson pointed to Tung. "What
about him?"
"My contractor will
contribute value equal to the Triumph,
which will become Tung's vested share in the fleet corporation. In
return Commodore Tung will relinquish all claim on the ship itself. I
will confirm Tung's rank as Chief of Staff/Tactical, and yours as
captain of the flagship Triumph.
Your original contribution, equal to the value of the Ariel
less liens, will be confirmed as your vested share in the fleet
corporation. Both ships will be listed as owned by the fleet."
"Do
you go along with this?" Auson demanded of Tung.
Miles
prodded Tung with a steely look. "Yeah," said Tung
grudgingly.
Auson frowned over this. "It
isn't just the money . . ." He paused, brow wrinkling. "What
combat bonus? What combat?"
He
who hesitates, is had.
"Are you in or out?"
Auson's moon face
took on a cunning look. "I'm in—if he apologizes."
"What?
This meatmind thinks—"
"Apologize to
the man, Tung dear," Miles sang through his teeth, "and
let's get on. Or the Triumph
gets a captain who can be its own first mate. Who, among other
manifold virtues, doesn't argue
with me."
"Of course not, the little
Betan flipsider's in love," snapped Auson. "I've never been
able to figure out if it wants to get screwed or bugger
you—"
Miles smiled and held up a
restraining hand. "Now, now." He nodded toward Elena, who
had holstered her stunner in favor of a nerve disrupter. Pointed
steadily at Auson's head.
Her smile reminded
Miles unsettlingly of one of Sergeant Bothari's. Or worse, of
Cavilo's. "Have I ever mentioned, Auson, how much the sound of
your voice irritates
me?" she inquired.
"You wouldn't
fire," said Auson uncertainly.
"I
wouldn't stop her," Miles lied. "I need your ship. It would
be convenient—but not necessary—if you would command her for me."
His gaze flicked like a knife toward his putative Chief of Staff/Tac.
"Tung?"
With
ill-grace, Tung mouthed a nobly-worded, if vague, apology to Auson
for past slurs on his character, intelligence, ancestry,
appearance—as Auson's face darkened Miles stopped Tung's catalogue
in mid-list and made him start over. "Keep it simpler."
Tung
took a breath. "Auson, you can be a real shithead sometimes, but
dammit, you can fight when you have to. I've seen you. In the tight
and the bad and the crazy, I'll take you at my back before any other
captain in the fleet."
One side of Auson's
mouth curled up. "Now, that's
sincere. Thank you so much. I really appreciate your concern for my
safety. How tight and bad and crazy do you think this is going to
get?"
Tung, Miles decided, had a most
unsavory chuckle.
The captain-owners were
brought in one by one, to be persuaded, bribed, blackmailed and
bedazzled till Miles's mouth was dry, throat raw, voice hoarse. Only
the Peregrine's
captain tried to physically fight. He was stunned and bound, and his
second-in-command given the immediate choice between brevet promotion
and a long walk out a short airlock. He chose promotion, though his
eyes said, Another
day. As long as
that other day came after the Cetagandans, Miles was
satisfied.
They moved to the larger conference
chamber across from the Tactics Room for the strangest Staff
conference Miles had ever attended. Oser was fortified with a booster
shot of fast-penta and propped up at the head of the table like a
stuffed and smiling corpse. At least two others were tied to their
chairs gagged. Tung traded his yellow pajamas for undress greys,
commodore's insignia pinned hastily over his captain's tags. The
reaction of the audience to Tung's initial tactical presentation
ranged from dubious to appalled, overcome (almost) by the pelting
headlong pace of the actions demanded of them. Tung's most compelling
argument was the sinister suggestion that if they didn't set
themselves up as the wormhole's defenders, they might be required to
attack through it later against a prepared Cetagandan defense, a
vision that generated shudders all around the table. It
could be worse was
always an unassailable assertion.
Partway
through, Miles massaged his temples and leaned over to whisper to
Elena, "Was it always this bad, or have I just
forgotten?"
She pursed her lips
thoughtfully and murmured back, "No, the insults were better in
the old days." Miles muffled a grin.
Miles
made a hundred unauthorized claims and unsupported promises, and at
last things broke up, each to their duty stations. Oser and the
Peregrines
captain were marched away under guard to the brig. Tung paused only
to frown down at the brown felt slippers. "If you're going to
command my outfit, son, would you please do an old soldier a favor
and get a pair of regulation boots?" At last only Elena
remained.
"I want you to re-interrogate
General Metzov," Miles told her. "Pull out all the Ranger
tactical disposition data you can—codes, ships on-line, off-line,
last known positions, personnel oddities, plus whatever he may know
about the Vervani. Edit out any unfortunate references he may make to
my real identity, and pass it on to Ops, with the warning that not
everything Metzov thinks is true, necessarily is. It may
help."
"Right."
Miles
sighed, slumping wearily on his elbows at the empty conference table.
"You know, the planetary patriots like the Barrayarans—us
Barrayarans—have it wrong. Our officer cadre thinks that
mercenaries have no honor, because they can be bought and sold. But
honor is a luxury only a free man can afford. A good Imperial officer
like me isn't honor-bound, he's just bound.
How many of these honest people have I just lied to their deaths?
It's a strange game."
"Would you
change anything, today?"
"Everything.
Nothing. I'd have lied twice as fast if I'd had to."
"You
do talk faster in your Betan accent," she allowed.
"You
understand. Am I doing the right thing? If I can bring it off.
Failure being automatically wrong." Not
a path to disaster, but all paths. . . .
Her
brows rose. "Certainly."
His lips
twisted up. "So you," whom
I love, "my
Barrayaran lady who hates Barrayar, are the only person in the Hub I
can honestly sacrifice."
She tilted her
head in consideration of this. "Thank you, my lord." She
touched her hand to the top of his head, passing out of the
chamber.
Miles shivered.
Miles
returned to Oser's cabin for a fast perusal of the admiral's
comconsole files, trying to get a handle on all the changes in
equipment and personnel that had occurred since he'd last commanded,
and to assimilate the Dendarii/Aslunder intelligence picture of
events in the Hub. Somebody brought him a sandwich and coffee, which
he consumed without tasting. The coffee was no longer working to keep
him alert, though he was still keyed to an almost unbearable
tension.
As
soon as we undock, I'll crash in Oser's bed.
He'd better spend at least some of the thirty-six hours transit time
sleeping, or he'd be more liability than asset upon arrival. When he
would have to deal with Cavilo, who made him feel like the proverbial
unarmed man in the battle of wits even when he was at his
best.
Not to mention the Cetagandans. Miles
considered the historical three-legged-race between weapons
development and tactics.
Projectile weapons for
ship-to-ship combat in space had early been made obsolete by mass
shielding and laser weapons. Mass shielding, designed to protect
moving ships from space debris encountered at normal-space speeds up
to half-cee, shrugged off missiles without even trying. Laser weapons
in turn had been rendered useless by the arrival of the
Sword-swallower, a Betan-developed defense that actually used the
enemy fire as its own power source; a similar principle in the plasma
mirror, developed in Miles's parents' generation, promised to do the
same to the shorter-range plasma weapons. Another decade might see
plasma all phased out.
The up-and-coming weapon
for ship-to-ship fighting in the last couple of years seemed to be
the gravitic imploder lance, a modification of tractor-beam
technology; variously-designed artificial-gravity shields were still
lagging behind in protection from it. The imploder beam made ugly
twisty wreckage where it hit mass. What it did to a human body was a
horror.
But the energy-sucking imploder lance's
range was insanely short, in terms of space speeds and distances,
barely a dozen kilometers. Now, ships had to cooperate to grapple, to
slow and close up to maneuver. Given also the small scale of wormhole
volumes, fighting looked like it might suddenly become tight and
intimate once again, except that too-tight formations invited "sun
wall" attacks of massed nuclears. Round and round. It was hinted
that ramming and boarding could actually become practical popular
tactics once again. Till the next surprise arrived from the devil's
workshops, anyway. Miles longed briefly for the good old days of his
grandfather's generation, when people could kill each other from a
clean fifty thousand kilometers. Just bright sparks.
The
effect of the new imploders on concentration of firepower promised to
be curious, especially where a wormhole was involved. It was now
possible that a small force in a small area could apply as much power
per cubic whatever as a large force, which could not squeeze its
largeness down to the effective range; although the difference in
reserves still held good, of course. A large force willing to make
sacrifices could keep beating away till sheer numbers overcame the
smaller concentration. The Cetagandan ghem-lords were not allergic to
sacrifice, though generally preferring to start with subordinates, or
better still, allies. Miles rubbed his knotted neck muscles. The
cabin buzzer blatted; Miles reached across the comconsole desk to key
the door open.
A lean, dark-haired man in his
early thirties wearing mercenary grey-and-whites with tech insignia
stood uncertainly in the aperture. "My lord?" he said in a
soft voice.
Baz Jesek, Fleet Engineering
Officer. Once, Barrayaran Imperial Service deserter on the run;
subsequently liege-sworn as a private Armsman to Miles in his
identity as Lord Vorkosigan. And finally husband to the woman Miles
loved. Once loved. Still loved.
Damn. Miles
cleared his throat uncomfortably. "Come in, Commodore
Jesek."
Baz trod soundlessly across the
deck matting, looking defensive and guilty. "I just got in off
the repairs tender, and heard the word that you were back." His
Barrayaran accent was polished thin and smooth by his years of
galactic exile, significantly less pronounced than four years
ago.
"Temporarily, anyway."
"I'm
. . . sorry you didn't find things as you'd left them, my lord. I
feel like I've squandered Elena's dowry that you bestowed. I didn't
realize the implications of Oser's economic maneuvers until . . .
well … no excuses."
"The man
finessed Tung, too," Miles pointed out. He cringed inwardly, to
hear Baz apologize to him. "I gather it wasn't exactly a fair
fight."
"It wasn't a fight at all, my
lord," Baz said slowly. "That was the problem." Baz
stood to parade rest. "I've come to offer you my resignation, my
lord."
"Offer rejected," said
Miles promptly. "In the first place, liege-sworn Armsmen can't
resign, in the second place, where am I going to get a competent
fleet engineer on," he glanced at his chrono, "two hours'
notice, and in the third place, in the third place … I need a
witness to clear my name if things go wrong. Wronger. You've got to
fill me in on Fleet equipment capabilities, then help get it all in
motion. And I've got to fill you in on what's really going on. You're
the only one besides Elena I can trust with the secret half of
this."
With difficulty, Miles persuaded the
hesitant engineer to sit down. Miles poured out a speed-edited precis
of his adventures in the Hegen Hub, leaving out only mention of
Gregor's half-hearted suicide attempt; that was Gregor's private
shame. Miles was not altogether surprised to learn Elena had not
confided his earlier, brief and ignominious return, rescue, and
departure from the Dendarii; Baz seemed to think the presence of the
incognito Emperor obvious and sufficient reason for her silence. By
the time Miles finished, Baz's inner guilt was quite thoroughly
displaced by outer alarm.
"If the Emperor
is killed—if he doesn't return—the mess at home could go on for
years," Baz said. "Maybe you should let Cavilo rescue him,
rather than risk—"
"Up to a point,
that's just what I intend to do," said Miles. "If only I
knew Gregor's mind."
He paused. "If we lose both Gregor and the Wormhole battle, the
Cetagandans will arrive on our doorstep just at the point we will be
in maximum internal disarray. What a temptation to them—what a
lure—they've always wanted Komarr—we could be looking down the
throat of the second Cetagandan invasion, almost as much a surprise
to them as to us. They may prefer deep-laid plans, but they're not
above a little opportunism—not an opportunity this
overwhelming—"
Determinedly, driven by
this vision, they turned to the tech specs, Miles reminding himself
about the ancient saying about the want of a nail. They had nearly
completed an overview when the comm officer on duty paged Miles
through his comconsole.
"Admiral Naismith,
sir?" The comm officer stared with interest at Miles's face,
then went on, "There's a man in the docking bay who wants to see
you. He claims to have important information." Miles bethought
himself of the theorized backup assassin. "What's his
ID?"
"He says to tell you his name's
Ungari. That's all he'll say."
Miles caught
his breath. The cavalry at last! Or a clever ploy to gain admittance.
"Can you give me a look at him, without letting him know he's
being scanned?"
"Right, sir." The
comm officer's face was replaced on the vid by a view of the
Triumph's
docking bay. The vid zoomed down to focus on a pair of men in
Aslunder tech coveralls. Miles melted with relief. Captain Ungari.
And blessed Sergeant Overholt.
"Thank you,
comm officer. Have a squad escort the two men to my cabin." He
glanced at Baz. "In, uh, about ten minutes." He keyed off
and explained, "It's my ImpSec boss. Thank God! But—I'm not
sure I'd be able to explain to him the peculiar status of your
desertion charges. I mean, he's ImpSec, not Service Security, and I
don't imagine your old arrest order is exactly at the top of his list
of concerns right now, but it might be … simpler, if you avoid him,
eh?"
"Mm." Baz grimaced in
agreement. "I believe I have duties to attend to?"
"No
lie. Baz . . ." for a wild moment he longed to tell Baz to take
Elena and run, safe away from the coming danger, "It's going to
get real crazy soon."
"With Mad Miles
back in charge, how could it be otherwise?" Baz shrugged,
smiling. He started for the door.
"I'm not
as crazy as Tung—Good God, nobody calls me that, do
they?"
"Ah—it's an old joke. Only
among a few old Dendarii." Baz's step quickened.
And
there are very few old Dendarii.
That, unfortunately, was not a funny joke. The door hissed closed
behind the engineer.
Ungari. Ungari. Somebody in
charge at last.If
only I had Gregor with me, I could be done right now. But at least I
can find out what Our Side has been up to all this time.
Exhausted, he laid his head down on his arms on Oser's comconsole
desk, and smiled. Help. Finally.
Some wriggling
dream was fogging his mind; he snatched himself back from
too-long-delayed sleep as the cabin buzzer blatted again. He rubbed
his numb face and hit the lock control on the desk. "Enter."
He glanced at the chrono; he'd lost only four minutes, on that
downward slide of consciousness. It was definitely time for a
break.
Chodak and two Dendarii guards escorted
Captain Ungari and Sergeant Overholt into the room. Ungari and
Overholt were both dressed in tan Aslunder supervisor's coveralls, no
doubt with IDs and passes to match. Miles smiled happily at
them.
"Sergeant Chodak, you and your men
wait outside." Chodak looked sadly disappointed at this
exclusion. "And if she's finished with her current task, ask
Commander Elena Bothari-Jesek to attend on us here.
Thanks."
Ungari waited impatiently till the
door had hissed closed behind Chodak to stride forward. Miles stood
up and saluted him smartly. "Glad to see y—"
To
Miles's surprise, Ungari did not return the salute; instead his hands
clenched on Miles's uniform jacket and lifted. Miles sensed that it
was only with the greatest restraint that Ungari's grip had closed on
his lapels and not his neck. "Vorkosigan, you idiot! What the
hell kind of game have you been up to?"
"I
found Gregor, sir. I—" don't say lost
him. "I'm
mounting an expedition to recover him right now. I'm so glad you made
contact with me, another hour and you'd have missed the boat. If we
pool our information and resources—"
Ungari's
clutch did not loosen, nor did his peeled-back lips relax. "We
know you found the Emperor, we traced you both here from Consortium
Detention. Then you both vanished utterly."
"Didn't
you ask Elena? I thought you would—look sir, sit down, please,"
and put me down,
dammit— Ungari
seemed not to notice that Miles's toes were stretched to the floor,
"and tell me what all this looked like from your point of view.
It's very important."
Ungari, breathing
heavily, released Miles and sat in the indicated station chair, or at
least on its edge. At a hand signal, Overholt took up a pose of
parade rest at his shoulder. Miles gazed with some relief at
Overholt, whom he'd last seen face-down unconscious on the Consortium
Station concourse; the sergeant appeared fully recovered, if tired
and strained.
Ungari said, "When he finally
woke up, Sergeant Overholt followed you to Consortium Detention, but
by then you'd disappeared. He thought they'd
done it, they thought he'd
done it. He spent bribe-money like water, finally got the story from
the contract-slave you'd beaten up—a day later, when the man could
finally talk—"
"He lived, then,"
said Miles. "Good, Gre—we were worried about that."
"Yes,
but Overholt didn't recognize the emperor at first, in the
contract-slave records—the sergeant hadn't been on the need-to-know
list about his disappearance."
A faint
irate look passed over the sergeant's face, as if in memory of great
injustices.
"—it wasn't until he'd made
contact with me here, we dead-ended, and we retraced all the steps in
hopes of finding some clue about you we'd overlooked, that I
identified the missing contract-slave as Emperor Gregor. Days
lost."
"I was sure you'd make contact
with Elena Bothari-Jesek, sir. She knew where we'd gone. You knew she
was my sworn liegewoman, it's in my files."
Ungari
shot him a flat-lipped glare, but did not otherwise offer explanation
for this gaffe. "When the first wave of Barrayaran agents hit
the Hub, we finally had enough reinforcements to mount a serious
search—"
"Good! So they know
Gregor's in the Hub, back home. I was afraid Illyan would still be
squandering all his resources on Komarr, or worse, towards
Escobar."
Ungari's fingers clenched again.
"Vorkosigan, what
did you do with the emperor?"
"He's
safe, but in great danger." Miles thought that one over a
second. "That is, he's all right for the moment, I think, but
that will change with the tactical—"
"We
know where
he is, he was spotted three days ago by an agent in Randall's
Rangers."
"Must have been just after I
left," Miles calculated. "Not that he could have spotted
me, I was in the brig—what are we doing about it?"
"Rescue
forces are being scrambled; I don't know how large a fleet."
"What
about permission to cross Pol?"
"I
doubt they'll wait for it."
"We've got
to alert them, not to offend Pol! The—"
"Ensign,
Vervain holds the emperor!" Ungari snarled in exasperation. "I'm
not going to tell the—"
"Vervain
doesn't hold Gregor, Commander Cavilo does," Miles interrupted
urgently. "It's strictly nonpolitical, a plot for her personal
gain. I think—in fact, I'm dead certain—the Vervani government
doesn't know the first thing about her 'guest.' Our rescue forces
must be warned to commit no hostile act until the Cetagandan invasion
shows up."
"The
what?"
Miles
faltered, and said in a smaller voice, "You mean you don't know
anything about the Cetagandan invasion?" He paused. "Well,
just because you don't have the word yet, doesn't mean Illyan hasn't
figured it out. Even if we haven't spotted where they're massing,
inside the Empire, as soon as ImpSec adds up how many Cetagandan
warships have disappeared from their home bases, they'll realize
something must be up. Somebody must still be keeping track of such
things, even in the current flap over Gregor." Ungari was still
sitting there looking stunned, so Miles kept explaining. "I
expect a Cetagandan force to invade Vervani local space and continue
on to secure the Hegen Hub, with Commander Cavilo's connivance. Very
shortly. I plan to take the Dendarii fleet across-system and fight
them at the Vervani wormhole, hold it till Gregor's rescue fleet
arrives. I hope they're sending more than a diplomatic negotiation
team. … By the way, do you still have that blank mercenary contract
credit chit Illyan gave you? I need it."
"You,
mister," Ungari began when he had mastered his voice again, "are
going nowhere
but to our safe-house on Aslund Station. Where you will wait
quietly—very quietly—until Illyan's reinforcements arrive to take
you off my
hands."
Miles
politely ignored this impractical outburst. "You have to have
been collecting data for your report to Illyan. Got anything I can
use?"
"I have a complete report on
Aslund Station, it's naval and mercenary dispositions and strengths,
but—"
"I have all that, now."
Miles tapped his fingers impatiently on Oser's comconsole. "Damn.
I wish you'd spent the last two weeks on Vervain Station
instead."
Ungari gritted, "Vorkosigan,
you will stand up now, and come with Sergeant Overholt and me. Or so
help me I will have Overholt carry you bodily."
Overholt
was eyeing him with cool calculation, Miles realized.
"That
could be a serious mistake, sir. Worse than your failure to contact
Elena. If you will just let me explain the over-all strategic
situation—"
Goaded beyond endurance,
Ungari snapped, "Overholt, grab him."
Miles
hit the alarm on his comconsole desk as Overholt swooped down on him.
He dodged around his station chair, knocking it loose from its
clamps, as Overholt missed his first grab. The cabin door hissed
open. Chodak and his two guards pelted through, followed by Elena.
Overholt, chasing Miles around the end of the comconsole desk,
skidded straight into Chodak's stunner fire. Overholt dropped with a
massive thud; Miles winced. Ungari lurched to his feet and stopped,
bracketed by the aim of four Dendarii stunners. Miles felt like
bursting into tears, or possibly cackles. Neither would be useful. He
got control of his breath and voice.
"Sergeant
Chodak, take these two men to the Triumph's
brig. Put them . . . put them next to Metzov and Oser, I
guess."
"Yes, Admiral."
Ungari
went bravely silent, as befit a captured spy, and suffered himself to
be led out, though the veins in his neck pulsed with suppressed fury
as he glared back at Miles.
And
I can't even fast-penta him,
Miles thought mournfully. An agent of Ungari's level was certain to
have been implanted with an induced allergic reaction to fast-penta;
not euphoria, but anaphylactic shock and death, would result from
such a dose. In a moment two more Dendarii appeared with a float
pallet and removed the inert Overholt. As the door closed behind
them, Elena asked, "All right, what was all that
about?"
Miles sighed deeply. "That,
unfortunately, was my ImpSec superior, Captain Ungari. He was not in
a listening mood."
Elena's eye lit with a
skewed enthusiasm. "Dear God, Miles. Metzov—Oser—Ungari—all
in a row—you sure are hard on your commanding officers. What are
you going to do when the time comes to let them all out?"
Miles
shook his head mutely. "I don't know."
The
fleet disengaged from Aslund Station within the hour, maintaining
strict comm silence; the Aslunders, naturally, were thrown into a
panic. Miles sat in the Triumph's
comm center and monitored their frantic queries, resolved not to
interfere with the natural course of events unless the Aslunders
opened fire. Until he again laid hands on Gregor, he must at all
costs present the correct profile to Cavilo. Let her think she was
getting what she wanted, or at least what she'd asked for.
In
fact, the natural course of events promised to deliver more of the
results Miles wanted than he could have gained through planning and
persuasion. The Aslunders had three main theories, Miles deduced from
their comm chatter; the mercenaries were fleeing from the Hub
altogether at secret word of some impending attack, the mercenaries
were off to join one or more of Aslund's enemies, or worst of all,
the mercenaries were opening an unprovoked attack on said enemies,
with subsequent retribution to recoil on the Aslunder's heads.
Aslunder forces went to maximum alert status. Reinforcements were
called for, mobile forces shifted into the Hub, reserves brought
on-line as the sudden departure of their faithless mercenaries
stripped them of assumed defenses.
Miles
breathed relief as the last of the Dendarii fleet cleared the
Aslunders' region and headed into open space. Delayed by the
confusion, no Aslunder naval pursuit force could catch them now till
they decelerated near the Vervain wormhole. Where, with the arrival
of the Cetagandans, it should not be hard to persuade the Aslunders
to reclassify themselves as Dendarii reserves.
Timing
was, if not everything, a lot. Suppose Cavilo hadn't already
transmitted her go-code to the Cetagandans. The sudden movement of
the Dendarii fleet might well spook her into aborting the plot. Fine,
Miles decided. In that case he would have stopped the Cetagandan
invasion without a shot being fired. A perfect war of maneuver, by
Admiral Aral Vorkosigan's own definition. Of
course, I'll have political egg on my face and a lynch mob after me
from three sides, but Dad will understand. I hope.
That would leave staying alive and rescuing Gregor as his only
tactical goals, which in present contrast seemed absurdly,
delightfully simple. Unless, of course, Gregor didn't want to be
rescued. . . .
Further, finer branches of the
strategy-tree must await events. Miles decided blearily. He staggered
off to Oser's cabin to fall into bed and sleep for twelve solid,
sodden hours.
The Triumph
's comm officer woke Miles, paging him on the vid.
Miles,
in his underwear, padded across to the comconsole and slung himself
into the station chair. "Yes?"
"You
asked to be apprised of messages from Vervain Station, sir."
"Yes,
thank you." Miles rubbed amber grains of sleep from his eyes,
and checked the time. Twelve hours flight-time left till their
arrival at target. "Any signs of abnormal activity levels at
Vervain Station or their wormhole yet?"
"Not
yet, sir."
"All right. Continue to
monitor, record, and track any outbound traffic. What's the
transmission time lag from us to them at present?"
"Thirty-six
minutes, sir."
"Mm. Very well. Pipe
the message down here." Yawning, he leaned his elbows on Oser's
comconsole and studied the vid. A high-ranking Vervani officer
appeared over the plate, and demanded explanation for the
Oseran/Dendarii Fleet's movements. He sounded a lot like the
Aslunders. No sign of Cavilo. Miles keyed the comm officer. "Transmit
back that their important message was hopelessly garbled by static
and a malfunction in our de-scrambler. Urgently request a repeat,
with amplification."
"Yes, sir."
In
the ensuing seventy minutes Miles took a leisurely shower, dressed in
a properly fitting uniform (and boots) that had been provided while
he slept, and ate a balanced breakfast. He strolled into the
Triumph's
Nav and Com just in time for the second transmission. This time,
Commander Cavilo stood, arms crossed, at the Vervani officer's
shoulder. The Vervani repeated himself, literally with amplification,
his voice was louder and sharper this time around. Cavilo added,
"Explain yourselves at once, or we will regard you as a hostile
force and respond accordingly."
That was
the amplification he'd wanted. Miles settled himself in the comm
station chair and adjusted his Dendarii uniform as neatly as
possible. He made sure the admiral's rank insignia was clearly
visible in the vid. "Ready to transmit," he nodded to the
comm officer. He smoothed his features into as straight-faced and
dead-serious an expression as he could manage.
"Admiral
Miles Naismith, Commanding, Dendarii Free Mercenary Fleet, speaking.
To Commander Cavilo, Randall's Rangers, eyes only. Ma'am. I have
accomplished my mission precisely as you ordered. I remind you of the
reward you promised me for my success. What are your next
instructions? Naismith out."
The comm
officer logged the recording into the tight-beam scrambler. "Sir,"
she said uncertainly, "if that's for Commander Cavilo's eyes
only, should we be sending it on the Vervain command channel? The
Vervani will have to de-process it before sending it on. It will be
seen by a lot of eyes besides hers."
"Just
so, Lieutenant," said Miles. "Go ahead and
transmit."
"Oh. And when—if—they
respond, what do you want me to do?
Miles
checked his chrono. "By the time of their next response, our
line of travel should take us behind the twin suns' interference
corona. We should be out of communications for a good, oh, three
hours."
"I can boost the gain, sir,
and cut through—"
"No, no,
Lieutenant. The interference is going to be something terrible. In
fact, if you can stretch that to four hours, so much the better. But
make it look real. Until we're in range for a tight-beam conference
between myself and Cavilo in near-real-time, I want you to think of
yourself as a non-communications officer."
"Yes,
sir," she grinned. "Now I understand."
"Carry
on. Remember, I want maximum inefficiency, incompetence, and error.
On the Vervani channels, that is. You've worked with trainees,
surely. Be creative."
"Yes,
sir."
Miles
went off to find Tung.
He and Tung were deeply
engrossed in the tactical computer display in the Triumph's
tactics room, running projected wormhole scenarios, when the comm
officer paged again.
"Changes at Vervain
Station, sir. All outgoing commercial ship traffic has been halted.
Incoming are being denied permission to dock. Encoded transmissions
on all military channels have just about tripled. And four large
warships just jumped."
"Into the Hub,
or out to Vervain?"
"Out to Vervain,
sir."
Tung leaned forward. "Dump data
into the tactics display as you confirm it, Lieutenant."
"Yes,
sir."
"Thank you," said Miles.
"Continue to keep us advised. And monitor civilian clear-code
messages, too, any you can pick up. I want to keep tabs on the rumors
as they start to fly."
"Right, sir.
Out."
Tung keyed up what was laughingly
called the "real-time" tactics display, a colorful
schematic, as the comm officer shunted the new data. He studied the
identity of the four departing warships. "It's starting,"
he said grimly. "You called it."
"You
don't think it's something we're causing?"
"Not
those four ships. They wouldn't have moved off-station if they
weren't badly wanted elsewhere. Better get your ass over to—that
is, transfer your flag to the Ariel,
son."
Miles rubbed his lips nervously, and
eyed what he'd mentally dubbed his "Little Fleet" in the
schematic display in the Ariel's
tactics room. The equipment was now displaying the Ariel
itself plus the two next-fastest ships in the Dendarii forces. His
own personal attack-group; fast, maneuverable, amenable to violent
course-changes, requiring less turning-room than any other possible
combination. Admittedly, they were low in firepower. But if things
went as Miles projected, firing was not going to be a desirable
option anyway. The Ariel's
tac room was manned now by a mere skeleton crew; Miles, Elena as his
personal communications officer, Arde Mayhew for all other systems.
Inner Circle all, in anticipation of this next most-private
conversation. If it came to actual combat, he'd turn the chamber over
to Thorne, presently exiled to Nav and Com. And then, perhaps, retire
to his cabin and slit his belly open.
"Let's
see Vervain Station now," he told Elena in her comm station
chair. The main holovid display in the center of the room whirled
dizzyingly at her touch on the controls. The schematic representation
of their target area seemed to boil with shifting lines and colors,
representing ship movements, power shunts to various weapons systems
and shieldings, and communications transmissions. The Dendarii were
now barely a million kilometers out, a little more than three
light-seconds. The rate of closure was slowing as the Little Fleet,
fully two hours ahead of the slower ships of the main Dendarii fleet,
decelerated.
"They're sure stirred up now,"
Elena commented. Her hand went to her ear-bug. "They're
reiterating their demands that we communicate."
"But
still not launching a counter-attack," Miles observed, studying
the schematic. "I'm glad they realize where the true danger
lies. All right. Tell them that we've got our comm problems
straightened out—finally—but say again that I will speak first
only to Commander Cavilo."
"They—ah—I
think they're finally putting her through. I've got a tight-beam
coming in on the dedicated channel."
"Trace
it." Miles hung over her shoulder as she coaxed this information
from the comm net. "The source is moving. . . ."
Miles
closed his eyes in prayer, snapped them open again at Elena's
triumphant, "Got it! There. That little ship."
"Give
me its course and energy profile. Is she heading toward the
wormhole?"
"No,
away."
"Ha!"
"It's
a fast ship—small—it's a
Falcon-class
courier," Elena reported. "If her goal is Pol—and
Barrayar—she must intersect our triangle."
Miles
exhaled. "Right. Right. She waited to speak on a line her
Vervani bosses couldn't monitor. I thought she might. Wonder what
lies she's told them? She's past the point of no return, does she
know it?" He opened his arms to the new short vector line in the
schematic. "Come, love. Come to me."
Elena
raised her brow sardonically at him. "Coming through. Your
sweetheart is about to appear on Monitor Three."
Miles
swung into the indicated Station chair, settling himself before the
holovid plate, which began to sparkle. Now was the time to muster
every bit of self-control he'd ever owned. He smoothed his face to an
expression of cool ironic interest, as Cavilo's fine features formed
before him. Out of range of the vid pick-up, he rubbed his sweating
palms on his trouser knees.
Cavilo's blue eyes
were alight with triumph, constrained by her tight mouth and tense
brows as if in echo of Miles's ships constraining her flight-path.
"Lord Vorkosigan. What are you doing here?"
"Following
your orders, ma'am. You told me to go get the Dendarii. And I've
transmitted nothing to Barrayar."
A
six-second time-lag, as the tight-beam flew from ship to ship and
returned her answer. Alas that it gave her as much time to think as
it did him.
"I didn't order you to cross
the Hub."
Miles wrinkled his brow in
puzzlement. "But where else would you need my fleet except at
the point of action? I'm not dense."
Cavilo's
pause this time was longer than accounted for by the transmission
lag. "You mean you didn't get Metzov's message?" she
asked.
Damn
near. What a
fabulous array of double meanings there. "Why, did you send him
as a courier?"
Lag. "Yes!"
A
palpable lie for a palpable lie. "I never saw him. Maybe he
deserted. He must have realized he'd lost your love to another.
Perhaps he's holed up in some spaceport bar right now, drowning his
sorrows." Miles sighed deeply at this sad scenario.
Cavilo's
concerned attentive expression melted to rage when this one arrived.
"Idiot! I know you took him prisoner!"
"Yes,
and I've been wondering ever since why you allowed that to happen. If
that accident was undesired, you should have taken precautions
against it."
Cavilo's eyes narrowed; she
shifted her ground. "I feared Stanis's emotions made him
unreliable. I wanted to give him one more chance to prove himself. I
gave my backup man orders to kill him if he tried to kill you, but
when Metzov missed, the dolt waited."
Substitute
as soon
as/succeeded for
that if/tried,
and the statement was probably near-truth. Miles wished he had a
recording of that Ranger agent's field report, and Cavilo's
blistering reply. "There, you see? You do
want subordinates who can think for themselves. Like me."
Cavilo's
head jerked back. "You, for a subordinate? I'd sooner sleep with
a snake!"
Interesting image, that. "You'd
better get used to me. You're seeking entry into a world strange to
you, familiar to me. The Vorkosigans are an integral part of
Barrayar's power-class. You could use a native guide."
Lag.
"Exactly. I'm trying—I must—get your emperor to safety.
You're blocking his flight path. Out of my way!"
Miles
spared a glance for the tactics display. Yes, just so. Good,
come to me.
"Commander Cavilo, I feel certain you are missing an important
datum in your calculations about me."
Lag.
"Let me clarify my position, little Barrayaran. I hold your
emperor. I control him absolutely."
"Fine,
let me hear those orders from him, then."
Lag
. . . fractionally briefer, yes. "I can have his throat cut
before your eyes. Let me pass!"
"Go
ahead," Miles shrugged. "It'll make an awful mess on your
deck, though."
She grinned sourly, after
the lag. "You bluff badly."
"I
bluff not at all. Gregor is far more valuable alive to you than to
me. You can do nothing, where you're going, except through him. He's
your meal ticket. But has anyone mentioned to you yet that if Gregor
dies, I could become the next emperor of Barrayar?" Well,
arguably, but this was hardly time to go into the finer details of
the six competing Barrayaran succession theories.
Cavilo's
face froze. "He said … he had no heir. You said so
too."
"None named.
Because my father refuses to be named, not because he lacks the
bloodlines. But ignoring the bloodlines doesnt erase them. And I am
my father's only child. And he can't live forever. Ergo . . . So,
resist my boarding parties, by all means. Threaten away. Carry out
your threats. Give me the Imperium-I shall thank you prettily, before
I have you summarily executed. Emperor Miles the First. How does it
sound? As good as Empress Cavilo?" Miles gave it an intense
beat, "Or,
we could work together. The Vorkosigans have traditionally felt that
the substance was better than the name. The power behind the throne,
as my father before me—who has held just that power, as Gregor has
doubtless told you, for far too long—you're not going to dislodge
him
by batting your eyelashes. He's immune to women. But I know his every
weakness. I've thought it through. This could be my big chance, one
way or another. By the way—milady—do you care which emperor you
wed?"
The time lag allowed him to fully
savor her changes of expression, as his plausible calumnies thudded
home. Alarm; revulsion; finally, reluctant respect.
"I
underestimated you, it seems. Very well . . . Your ships may escort
us to safety. Where—clearly—we must confer further."
"I
will transport
you to safety, aboard the Ariel.
Where we will confer immediately."
Cavilo
straightened, nostrils flaring. "No way."
"All
right, let's compromise. I will abide by Gregor's orders, and
Gregor's orders only. As I said, milady, you'd better get used to
this. No Barrayaran will take orders from you directly at first, till
you've established yourself. If that's the game you're choosing to
play, you'd better start practicing. It only gets more complicated
after this. Or, you can choose to resist, in which case I get it
all." Play for
time, Cavilo! Bite!
"I'll
get Gregor." The vid went to the grey haze of a
holding-signal.
Miles flung himself back in his
station chair, rubbed his neck and rolled his head, trying to relieve
his screaming nerves. He was shaking. Mayhew was staring at him in
alarm.
"Damn," said Elena in a hushed
voice. "If I didn't know you, I'd think you were Mad Yuri's
understudy. The look on your face . . . am I reading too much into
all that innuendo, or did you in fact just connive to assassinate
Gregor in one breath, offer to cuckold him in the next, accuse your
father of homosexuality, suggest a patricidal plot against him, and
league yourself with Cavilo—what are you going to do for an
encore?"
"Depends on the straight
lines. I can hardly wait to find out," Miles panted. "Was I
convincing?"
"You were
scary."
"Good."
He wiped his palms on his trousers again. "It's mind-to-mind,
between Cavilo and me, before it ever becomes ship-to-ship . . She's
a compulsive plotter. If I can smoke her, wind her in with words,
with what-ifs, with all the bifurcations of her strategy-tree, just
long enough to get her eye off the one real now
…"
"Signal," Elena
warned.
Miles straightened, waited. The next
face to form over the vid plate was Gregor's. Gregor, alive and well.
Gregor's eyes widened, then his face went very still.
Cavilo
hovered behind his shoulder, just slightly out of focus. "Tell
him what we want, love."
Miles bowed
sitting down, as profoundly as physically possible. "Sire. I
present you with the Emperor's Own Dendarii Free Mercenary Fleet. Do
with us as You will."
Gregor glanced aside,
evidently as some tactical readout analogous to the Ariel's
own. "By God, you've even got them with
you. Miles, you are supernatural." The flash of humor was
instantly muffled in sere formality. "Thank you, Lord
Vorkosigan. I accept your vassal-offering of troops."
"If
you would care to step aboard the Ariel,
sire, you can take personal command of your forces."
Cavilo
leaned forward, interrupting. "And now
his treachery is made plain. Let me play a portion of his last words
for you, Greg." Cavilo reached past Gregor to touch a control,
and Miles was treated to an instant replay of his breathless
sedition, beginning with—naturally—the flim-flam about the named
heir, and ending with his offer of himself as a substitute Imperial
groom. Very nicely selected, clearly unedited.
Gregor
listened with his head in a thoughtful tilt, his face perfectly
controlled, as the Miles-image stammered to its damning conclusion.
"But does this surprise you, Cavie?" asked Gregor in an
innocent tone, taking her hand and looking over his shoulder at her.
From the expression on her face, something
was surprising her. "Lord Vorkosigan's mutations have driven him
mad, everyone knows that! He's been sulking around muttering like
that for years. Of course, I trust him no further than I can throw
him—"
Thanks,
Gregor. I'll remember that line.
"—
but as long as he feels he can further his interests by furthering
ours, he'll be a valuable ally. House Vorkosigan has always been
powerful in Barrayaran affairs. His grandfather Count Piotr put my
grandfather Emperor Ezar on the throne. They'd make an equally
powerful enemy. I should prefer us to rule Barrayar with their
cooperation."
"Their extermination
would do as well, surely," Cavilo glared at Miles.
"Time
is on our side, love. His father is an old man. He, is a mutant. His
bloodline-threat is empty, Barrayar would never accept a mutant as
emperor, as Count Aral well knows and as even Miles realizes in his
saner moments. But he can trouble us, if he chooses. An interesting
balance of power, eh, Lord Vorkosigan?"
Miles
bowed again. "I think much on it." So
have you, apparently.
He spared a quelling glance at Elena, who had fallen off her station
chair somewhere around Gregor's word-picture of Miles's mad
soliloquies, aside at state banquets no doubt, and was now sitting on
the floor with her sleeve jammed in her mouth to muffle the shrieks
of laughter. Her eyes blazed, over the grey cloth. She got control of
her stifled giggles and scrambled back into her seat. Close
your mouth, Arde.
"Then,
Cavie, let's join my would-be Grand Vizier. At that point, I will
control his ships. And your wish," he turned his head to kiss
her hand, still resting in his grasp on his shoulder, "will be
my command."
"Do you really think it's
safe? If he's as psycho as you say."
"Brilliant—nervous—skittish—but he's all right as long as
his medications are adjusted properly, I promise you. I expect his
dose is a little off at the moment, due to our irregular
travels."
The transmission time-lag was
much reduced, now. "Twenty minutes to rendezvous, sir,"
Elena reported, off-sides.
"Will you
transfer in your shuttle, or ours, sire?" Miles inquired
politely.
Gregor shrugged carelessly. "Commander
Cavilo's choice."
"Ours," said
Cavilo immediately. "I will be waiting." And
ready. Cavilo
broke transmission.
Miles
watched through the vid link as the first space-armored Ranger
stepped into the Ariel's
shuttle hatch corridor. The wary point-man was followed immediately
by four more, who scanned the empty passageway, converted into a
chamber by the closed blast doors sealing each end. No enemies, no
targets, not even automatic weapons threatened them. An utterly
deserted chamber. Bewildered, the Rangers took up a defensive stance
around the shuttle hatch.
Gregor stepped
through. Miles was unsurprised to see that Cavilo had not provided
the Emperor with space armor. Gregor wore neatly-pressed set of
Ranger fatigues, minus insignia; his only protection was his boots.
Even they would be quite inadequate, if one of those heavy-armored
monsters stepped on his toe. Battle armorwas
lovely stuff, proof against stunners and nerve disrupters, most
poisons and biologicals; resistant (to a degree) to plasma fire and
radioactivity, stuffed with clever built-in weaponry, tac comps, and
telemetry. Very suitable for a boarding expedition. Though in fact,
Miles had once captured theAriel
himself with fewer personnel, less formidably armed and totally
unarmored. He'd had surprise on his side, though.
Cavilo
came through behind Gregor. She wore space armor though for the
moment she carried her helmet tucked under her arm like a decapitated
head. She stared around the empty corridor, and frowned. "All
right, what's the trick?" she demanded loudly.
To
answer your question. . . .
Miles pressed the button on the remote-control box in his hand.
A
muffled explosion made the corridor reverberate. The flex-tube tore
violently away from the shuttle hatch. The automatic doors, sensing
the pressure drop, clapped shut instantly. A bare breath of air
escaped. Good system. Miles had made the techs make sure it was
working properly, before they'd inserted the directional mines in the
shuttle clamps. He checked his monitors. Cavilo's combat shuttle was
tumbling away from the side of the Ariel
now, thrusters and sensors damaged in the same blast that propelled
it outward, its weapons and reserve Rangers useless until the
no-doubt-frantic pilot regained attitude control. If he
could.
"Keep an eye on him, Bel, I don't
want him coming back to haunt us," Miles spoke into his comm
link to Thorne, on deck in the Ariel's
tactics room.
"I can blow him up now, if
you like."
"Wait a little. We're a
long way from sorted out, down here." God
help us now.
Cavilo
was snapping her helmet on, her startled troops in defensive
formation around her. All dressed up, and nothing to shoot. Let them
settle down for just a moment, enough to prevent spinal-reflexive
fusilades, but not enough to think. . . .
Miles
glanced around at his own space-armored troops, six in number, and
closed his own helmet. Not that numbers mattered. A million troops
with nuclears, one guy with a club; either would suffice when the
target was one unarmed hostage. Miniaturizing the situation, Miles
realized sadly, had made no qualitative difference. He could still
screw up just as big. The main difference was his plasma cannon,
sighted down the corridor. He nodded to Elena, manning the big
weapon. Not normally an indoor toy, it would stop charging space
armor. And blow out the hull beyond. Miles figured that,
theoretically, they could blow away, oh, one out of Cavilo's five at
this range, if they came on at a dead run, before all became
hand-to-hand, or glove-to-glove.
"Here we
go," Miles warned through his command channel. "Re-member
the drill." He pressed another control; the blast doors between
his group and Cavilo's began to draw back. Slowly, not suddenly, at a
rate carefully calculated to inspire dread without startling.
Pull
broadcast on all channels plus loudspeaker. It was absolutely
essential to Miles's plan that he get in the first word.
"Cavilo!"
he shouted. "Deactivate your weapons and freeze, or I'll blow
Gregor to atoms!"
Body language was a
wonderful thing. It was amazing, how much expression could come
through the blank shining surface of space armor. The littlest
armored figure stood openhanded, stunned. Bereft of words; bereft,
for precious seconds, of reactions. Because, of course, Miles had
just stolen her opening line. Now
what do you have to say for yourself, love?
It was a desperate ploy. Miles had judged the hostage-problem
logically insoluble; therefore, clearly the only thing to do was make
it Cavilo's problem instead of his own.
Well,
he'd obtained as much as the freeze
part, anyway. But he dared not let the standoff stand. "Drop it,
Cavilo! It only takes one nervous twitch to convert you from Imperial
fiancee to no one of importance at all. And then to no one at all.
And you're making mereal
tense."
"You
said he was safe," Cavilo hissed to Gregor. "His meds must
be further off-dose than I thought," Gregor replied, looking
anxious. "No, watch—he's bluffing. I'll prove it."
Hands
held out open to his sides, Gregor walked straight toward the plasma
cannon. Miles's jaw fell open, behind his faceplate. Gregor,
Gregor, Gregor . . . !
Gregor
gazed steadily into Elena's faceplate. His step never quickened or
faltered. He stopped only when his chest touched the beaded tip of
the cannon. It was an enormously dramatic and arresting moment. Miles
was so lost in appreciation, it took him that long to move his finger
an imperceptible few centimeters and hit the button on his control
box that closed the blast doors.
The shield
hadn't been programmed for slow-closure; it banged shut faster than
the eye could follow. Brief noises, from the other side, of plasma
fire, shouts; Cavilo screaming at one of her men just in time to stop
him from the fatal error of firing a mine at the wall of a closed
chamber he himself occupied. Then silence.
Miles
dropped his plasma rifle, tore off his helmet. "God almighty, I
wasn't expecting that.
Gregor, you're a genius." Gently, Gregor raised a finger and
moved the tip of the plasma cannon aside. "Don't worry,"
said Miles. "None of our weapons are charged. I didn't want to
risk any accidents."
"I was almost
certain that was the case," Gregor murmured. He stared back over
his shoulder at the blast doors. "What would you have done if
I'd been asleep on my feet?" ,,.
"Kept
talking. Tried for various compromises. I had a trick or two yet. But
behind the other blast door, there's a squad with live weapons. In
the end, if she didn't bite, I was prepared to surrender."
"That's
what I was afraid of."
Some peculiar
muffled noises penetrated the blast doors. "Elena, take over,"
said Miles. "Mop up. Take Cavilo alive if possible, but I don't
want any Dendarii to die trying. Take no chances, trust nothing she
says."
"I have the picture."
Elena waved a salute, and motioned to her squad, which broke up to
insert weapons-charges. Elena began to confer over the
command-channel headset with the leader of the twin squad waiting on
Cavilo's other side and with the commander of the Ariel's
combat shuttle, closing in from space.
Miles
motioned Gregor along the corridor, removing him as swiftly as
possible from the region of potential messiness. "To the tactics
room, and I'll fill you in. You have some decisions to make."
They
entered a lift-tube, and rose. Miles breathed easier with every meter
he increased the range between Gregor and Cavilo.
"My
biggest worry," Miles said, "till we spoke face-to-face,
was that Cavilo really had done what she thought she had, fogged your
mind. I didn't see where she could be getting her ideas except from
you. Wasn't sure what I could do in that case, except play along till
I could hand you over to higher experts on Barrayar. If I survived. I
didn't know how fast you'd see through her."
"Oh,
at once," shrugged Gregor. "She had the same hungry smile
Vordrozda used to get. And a dozen lesser cannibals, since. I can
smell a power-hungry flatterer at a thousand meters, now."
"I
yield to my master in strategy," Miles's armored hand made a
genuflecting motion. "Do you know you rescued yourself? She'd
have taken you all the way home, even if I hadn't come along."
"It
was easy." Gregor frowned. "All that was required was that
I have no personal honor at all." Gregor's eyes, Miles realized,
were deathly, devoid of triumph.
"You can't
cheat an honest man," said Miles uncertainly. "Or Woman.
What would you have done, if she'd got you home?"
"Depends."
Gregor stared into the middle distance. "If she'd managed to get
you killed, I suppose I'd have had her executed." Gregor glanced
back, as they stepped out of the tube. "This is better. Maybe .
. . maybe there's some way to give her a fair chance."
Miles
blinked. "I'd be very careful about giving Cavilo any kind of a
chance at all, if I were you. Even with tongs. Does she deserve it?
Do you realize what's going on, how many she's betrayed?"
"In
part. And yet . . ."
"Yet,
what?"
Gregor's tone was so low as to be
nearly inaudible. "I wish she had been real."
".
. . and that's the present tactical situation in the Hub and Vervain
local space, as far as my information goes," Miles concluded his
presentation to Gregor. They had the Ariel's
briefing room all to themselves; Arde Mayhew stood guard in the
corridor. Miles had begun his speed-precis as soon as Elena reported
that the hostile boarders had been successfully secured. He'd paused
only to peel out of his ill-fitting armor and back into his Dendarii
greys. The armor had been hastily borrowed from the same female
soldier who'd lent him kit before, and the plumbing perforce left
unconnected.
Miles froze the holovid display in
the center of the table. Would that he could freeze real time and
events the same way, at the touch of a keypad, that he might halt
their terrible rush. "You'll notice our biggest intelligence
holes are in precise information about the Cetagandan forces. I'm
hoping the Vervani will plug some of those gaps, if we can persuade
them we're their allies, and the Rangers may yield more. One way or
another.
"Now—sire—the decision lands
on you. Fight or flight? I can detach the Ariel
from the Dendarii right now, to run you home, with little loss to
this hot and dirty wormhole fight. Firepower and armor, not speed,
are going to be at a premium there. There's not much doubt which
course my father and Illyan would vote for."
"No."
Gregor stirred. "On the other hand, they aren't here."
"True.
Alternately, going to the opposite extreme, do you wish to be
commander-in-chief of this mess? In fact, as well as name?"
Gregor
smiled softly. "What a temptation. But don't you think there's a
certain . . . hubris, in undertaking field leadership without a prior
apprenticing in field followership?"
Miles
reddened slightly. "I—ahem!—face a similar dilemma. You've
met the solution, his name's Ky Tung. We'll be conferring with him
when we transfer back to the Triumph,
later." Miles paused. "There are a couple of other things
you might do for us. If you choose. Real things."
Gregor
rubbed his chin, watching Miles as he might a play. "Trot them
out. Lord Vorkosigan."
"Legitimatize
the Dendarii. Present them to the Vervani as the Barrayaran pickup
force. I can only bluff. Your breath is law. You can conclude a
legally binding defensive treaty between Barrayar and Vervain—Aslund
too, if we can bring them in. Your greatest value
is—sorry—diplomatic, not military. Go to Vervain Station, and
deal with these people. And I do mean deal."
"Safely
behind the lines," Gregor noted dryly.
"Only
if we win, on the other side of the jump. If we lose, the lines will
come to you."
"I would I could be a
soldier. Some lowly lieutenant, with only a handful of men to care
for."
"There's no moral difference
between one and ten thousand, I assure you. You're just as thoroughly
damned however many you get killed."
"I
want to be in on the fight. Probably the only chance I'll have in my
life for real risk."
"What, the risk
you run every day from lunatic assassins isn't enough thrill for you?
You want more?"
"Active. Not passive.
Real service."
"If—in your
judgment—the best and most vital service you can give everyone else
risking their lives here is as a minor field officer, I will of
course support you to the best of my ability," said Miles
bleakly.
"Ouch," murmured Gregor. "You
can turn a phrase like a knife, you know?" He paused. "Treaties,
eh?"
"If you would be so kind,
sire."
"Oh, stop it," Gregor
sighed. "I will play my assigned part. As always."
"Thank
you." Miles thought of offering some apology, some solace, then
thought better of it. "The other wild card is Randall's Rangers.
Who are now, unless I miss my guess, in considerable disarray. Their
second-in-command has vanished, their commander has deserted at the
start of the action—how was it the Vervani let her make an exit, by
the way?"
"She told them she was going
out to confer with you—implied she'd somehow added you to her
forces. She was going to jump her fast courier to the hot side
immediately thereafter, supposedly."
"Hm.
She may have inadvertently paved our way—is she denying involvement
with the Cetagandans?"
"I don't think
the Vervani have caught on yet about the Rangers opening the door to
the Cetagandans. At the time we left Vervain Station they were still
putting the Rangers' failures to defend the Cetagandan-side jump down
to incompetence."
"Probably with
considerable supporting evidence. I doubt the bulk of the Rangers
knew about the betrayal, or it couldn't have stayed secret this long.
And whatever inner cadre that was working with the Cetas, were left
in the dark when Cavilo took off on her Imperial tangent. You
realize, Gregor, you did this? Sabotaged the Cetagandan invasion
single-handedly?"
"Oh," breathed
Gregor, "it took both hands."
Miles
decided not to touch that one. "Anyway—if we can—we need to
lock the Rangers down. Get them under control, or at least out from
behind everyone's backs."
"Very
well."
"I suggest a round of
good-guy-bad-guy. I'll be happy to take the part of bad
guy."
Cavilo was brought in between two men
with hand tractors. She still wore her space armor, now marred and
scarred. Her helmet was gone. The armor's weapons packs had been
removed, control systems disconnected, and joints locked, turning it
into a hundred-kilo prison, tight as a sarcophagus. The two Dendarii
soldiers set her upright near the end of the conference table and
stepped back with a flourish. A statue with a live head, some
Pygmalion-like metamorphosis interrupted and horribly
incomplete.
"Thank you, gentlemen,
dismissed," said Miles. "Commander Bothari-Jesek, please
stay."
Cavilo rolled her short-cropped
blonde head in futile resistance, the limit of physically possible
motion. She glared furiously at Gregor as the soldiers exited. "You
snake," she snarled. "You bastard."
Gregor
sat with his elbows on the conference table, chin resting in his
hands. He raised his head to say tiredly, "Commander Cavilo,
both my parents died violently in political intrigue before I was six
years old. A fact you might have researched. Did you think you were
dealing with an amateur?"
"You
were out of your league from the beginning, Cavilo," said Miles,
walking slowly around her as if inspecting his prize. Her head turned
to follow him, then had to swivel to pick up his orbit on the other
side. "You should have stuck to your original contract. Or your
second plan. Or your third. You should, in fact, have stuck to
something.
Anything. Your total self-interest didn't make you strong, it made
you a rag in the wind, anybody's to pick up. Now, Gregor—though not
I—thinks you should be given a chance to earn your worthless
life."
"You haven't got the balls to
shove me out the airlock." Her eyes were slitted with her
rage.
"I wasn't planning to." Since it
clearly made her skin crawl, Miles circled her again. "No.
Looking ahead—when this is over—I thought I might give you to the
Cetagandans. A treaty tidbit that will cost us nothing, and help turn
them up sweet. I imagine they'll be looking for you, don't you?"
He fetched up before her and smiled.
Her face
drained. The tendons stood out on her slender neck.
Gregor
spoke. "But if you do as we ask, I will grant you safe passage
out of the Hegen Hub, via Barrayar, when this is over. Together with
any surviving remnant of your forces that will still follow you. It
will give you a two-month head start on the Cetagandan vengeance for
this debacle."
"In fact," put in
Miles, "if you play your part, you could even come out of this a
heroine. What fun!"
Gregor's glower at him
was not entirely feigned.
"I'll get you,"
Cavilo breathed to Miles.
"It's the best
deal you'll get today. Life. Salvage. A new start, far from here—very
far from here. That, Simon Illyan will assure. Far away, but not
unwatched."
Calculation began to edge out
the rage in her eyes. "What do you want me to do?"
"Not
much. Yield up what control you still have of your forces to an
officer of our choice. Probably a Vervani liaison, they're paying for
you, after all. You will introduce your replacement to your chain of
command, and retire to the safety of the Triumph's
brig for the duration."
"There won't
be any surviving remnant of the Rangers when this is done!"
"There
is that chance," Miles conceded. "You were going to throw
them all away. Note, please, I'm not offering a choice between this
and some better deal. It's this or the Cetagandans. Whose approval of
treason is strictly limited to those who deal in their
favor."
Cavilo looked like she wanted to
spit, but said, "Very well. I yield. You have your
deal."
"Thank you."
"But
you . . ." her eyes were chips of blue ice, her voice low and
venomous, "you will learn, little man. You're riding high today,
but time will bring you down. I'd say, just wait twenty years, but I
doubt you're going to live that long. Time will teach you how much
nothing
your loyalties will buy you. The day they finally grind you up and
spit you out, I'm just sorry I won't be there to watch, 'cause you're
gonna be hamburger."
Miles
called the soldiers back in. "Take her away." It was almost
a plea. As the door closed behind the prisoner and her porters, he
turned to find Elena's eyes upon him.
"God,
that woman makes me cold," he shivered.
"Ah?"
Gregor remarked, elbows still planted. "Yet in a weird way, you
seem to get along with each other. You think alike."
"Gregor!"
Miles protested. "Elena?" he called for a
counter-vote.
"You're both very twisty,"
said Elena doubtfully. "And, er, short." At Miles's
tight-lipped look of outrage she explained, "It's more a matter
of pattern than content. If you were power-crazy, instead of, of . .
."
"Some other kind of crazy, yes, go
on."
"—you could plot like that. You
seemed to kind of enjoy figuring her out."
"Thank-you-I-think."
He hunched his shoulders. Was it true? Could that be himself in
twenty years? Sick with cynicism and unvented rage, a shelled self
thrilled only by mastery, power games, control, armor-plate with a
wounded beast inside?
"Let's get back to
the Triumph,"
he said shortly. "We've all got work to do."
Miles
paced impatiently across the short breadth of Admiral Oser's cabin
aboard Triumph.
Gregor leaned hip-slung on the edge of the comconsole desk, watching
him oscillate.
". . . naturally the Vervani
will be suspicious, but with the Cetagandans breathing down their
necks they'll have a real will to believe. And deal. You'll want to
make it as attractive as possible, to close things up quickly, but of
course don't give away any more than you have to—"
Gregor
said dryly, "Perhaps you'd like to come along and operate my
holoprompter?"
Miles stopped, cleared his
throat. "Sorry. I know you know more about treaties than I do. I
… babble when I'm nervous, sometimes."
"Yes,
I know."
Miles managed to keep his mouth
shut, though not his feet still, until the cabin buzzer
blatted.
"Prisoners as ordered, sir,"
came Sergeant Chodak's voice over the intercom.
"Thank
you, enter." Miles leaned across the desk and hit the door
control.
Chodak and a squad marched Captain
Ungari and Sergeant Overholt into the cabin. The prisoners were
indeed just as Miles had ordered; washed, shaved, combed, and
provided with fresh pressed
Dendarii greys with
equivalent rank insignia. They also looked palpably surly and hostile
about it.
"Thank you, Sergeant, you and
your squad are dismissed."
"Dismissed?"
Chodak's eyebrows questioned the wisdom of this. "Sure you don't
want us to at least stand-to in the corridor, sir? Remember the last
time."
"It won't be necessary this
time."
Ungari's glare denied that airy
assertion. Chodak withdrew doubtfully, keeping his stunner-aim steady
on the pair until the doors closed across his view.
Ungari
inhaled deeply. "Vorkosigan! You mutinous little mutant, I'm
going to have you court-martialed, skinned, stuffed, and mounted for
this—"
They had not yet noticed quiet
Gregor, still leaning on the comconsole and also wearing courtesy
Dendarii greys, though without insignia, there being no Dendarii
equivalent for emperor.
"Uh, sir—"
Miles motioned the dark-faced captain's eye toward Gregor.
"Those
are such widely shared sentiments, Captain Ungari, that I'm afraid
you might have to stand in line and wait your turn," Gregor
remarked, smiling slightly.
The remaining air
went out of Ungari unvoiced. He braced to attention; to his credit,
the uppermost of the wildly mixed emotions on his face was profound
relief. "Sire."
"My
apologies, Captain," said Miles, "for my high-handed
treatment of you and Sergeant Overholt, but I judged my plan for
retrieving Gregor too, uh, delicate for, for—" your
nerves, "I
thought I'd better take personal responsibility." You
were happier not watching, really. And I was happier not having my
elbow jogged.
"Ensigns
don't have personal responsibility for operations of this magnitude,
their commanders do," Ungari snarled. "As Simon Illyan
would have been the first to point out to me if your plan—however
delicate—had failed. . . ."
"Well,
then congratulations, sir; you have just rescued the emperor,"
snapped Miles. "Who, as your commander-in-chief, has a few
orders for you, if you will permit him to get a word in
edgewise."
Ungari's teeth closed. With
visible effort, he dismissed Miles from his attention and focused on
Gregor. "Sire?"
Gregor spoke. "As
the only members of ImpSec within a couple million kilometers—except
for Ensign Vorkosigan, who has other chores—I'm attaching you and
Sergeant Overholt to my person, until we make contact with our
reinforcements. I may also require courier duties of you. Before we
leave the Triumph,
please share any pertinent intelligence you may possess with Dendarii
Ops; they're now my Imperial, uh . . ."
"Most
obedient servants," suggested Miles under his breath. "Forces,"
Gregor concluded. "Consider that grey suit," (Ungari
glanced down at his with loathing) "regulation wear, and respect
it accordingly. You'll doubtless get your greens back when I get
mine."
Miles put in, "I'll be
detaching the Dendarii light cruiser Ariel
and the faster of our two fast couriers to Gregor's personal service,
when you depart for Vervain Station. If you have to split off on
courier duties, I suggest you take the smaller ship and leave the
Ariel
with Gregor. Its captain, Bel Thorne, is my most trusted Dendarii
shipmaster."
"Still thinking about my
line of retreat, eh, Miles?" Gregor raised a brow at
him.
Miles bowed slightly. "If things go
very wrong, someone must live to avenge us. Not to mention to make
damn sure the Dendarii survivors get paid. We owe them that much, I
think."
"Yes," Gregor agreed
softly.
"I also have my personal report on
recent events for you to deliver to Simon Illyan," Miles went
on, "in case I—in case you see him before I do." Miles
handed Ungari a data disk.
Ungari looked dizzy
at this rapid reordering of his priorities. "Vervain Station?
Pol Six is where your safety lies, surely, sire."
"Vervain
Station is where my duty lies, Captain, and perforce yours. Come
along, I'll explain it all as we go."
"Are
you leaving Vorkosigan loose?" Ungari frowned at Miles. "With
these mercenaries? I have a problem with that, sire."
"I'm
sorry, sir," said Miles to Ungari, "that I cannot, cannot .
. ." obey you,
but Miles left that unsaid. "I have a deeper problem with
arranging a battle for these mercenaries and then not showing up for
it. A difference between myself and . . . the Rangers' former
commander. There must be some difference between us, maybe that's it.
Gre—the Emperor understands."
"Hm,"
said Gregor. "Yes. Captain Ungari, I officially detach Ensign
Vorkosigan as Our Dendarii liaison. On my personal responsibility.
Which should be sufficient even for you."
"It's
not me that it has to be sufficient for, sire!"
Gregor
hesitated fractionally. "For Barrayar's best interests, then. A
sufficient argument even for Simon. Let us go, Captain."
"Sergeant
Overholt," Miles added, "you will be the Emperor's personal
bodyguard and batman, until relieved."
Overholt
looked anything but relieved at this abrupt field promotion. "Sir,"
he whispered aside to Miles, "I haven't had the advanced
course!"
He referred to Simon Illyan's
mandatory, personally-conducted ImpSec course for the palace guard,
that gave Gregor's usual crew that hard-polished edge.
"We
all have a similar problem here, Sergeant, believe me," Miles
murmured back. "Do your best."
The
Triumph's
tactics room was alive with activity, every station chair occupied,
every holovid display bright with the flow of ship and fleet tactical
changes. Miles stood at Tung's elbow and felt doubly redundant. He
bethought of the jape back at the Academy. Rule
1: Only overrule the tactical computer if you know something it
doesn't. Rule 2: The tac comp always knows more than you do.
This
was combat? This muffled chamber, swirl of lights, these padded
chairs? Maybe the detachment was a good thing, for commanders. His
heart hammered even now. A tac room of this caliber could cause
information overload and mind-lock, if you let it. The trick was to
pick out what was important, and never, ever to forget that the map
was not the territory.
His job here, Miles
reminded himself, was not to command. It was to watch Tung command,
and learn how he did it, his alternate modes of thinking to
Barrayaran Academy Standard. Miles's only legitimate point of
overrule might come if some external political/strategic need took
precedence over internal tactical logic. Miles prayed that event
would not arise, because a shorter and uglier name for it was
betraying your
troops.
Miles's
attention sharpened as a little jumpscout winked into existence at
the throat of the wormhole. On the tactics display it was a pink
point of light in a slowly moving whirlpool of darkness. On a
telescreen, it was a slim ship against fixed and distant stars. From
its own wired-in pilot's point of view, it was some strange extension
of his own body. In yet another vid display, it was a collection of
telemetry readouts, numerology, some Platonic ideal. What
is truth? All. None.
"Sharkbait
One reporting to Fleet One," the pilot's voice came over Tung's
console. "You have ten minutes clearance. Stand by for
tight-beam burst."
Tung spoke into his
comm. "Fleet commence Jump, tight by the numbers."
The
first Dendarii ship waiting by the wormhole jockeyed into place,
glowed brightly in the tac display (though it appeared to do nothing
in the televid), and vanished. A second ship followed in thirty
seconds, pushing the safety limit of time margins between jumps. Two
ships trying to rematerialize in the same place at the same time
would result in no ships and a very large explosion.
As
the Sharkbait's tightbeam telemetry was digested by the tac comp, the
image rotated so that the dark vortex representing (but in no way
picturing) the wormhole was suddenly mirrored by an exit vortex.
Beyond that exit vortex an array of dots and specks and lines
represented ships in flight, maneuvering, firing, fleeing; the
hardened Homeside battle station of the Vervani, twin to the Hubside
station where Miles had left Gregor; the Cetagandan attackers. A view
of their destination at last. All lies, of course, it was minutes out
of date.
"Yech," Tung commented. "What
a mess. Here we go . . ."
The jump klaxon
sounded. It was the Triumph's
turn. Miles gripped the back of Tung's chair, though intellectually
he knew the feeling of motion was illusory. A whirl of dreams seemed
to cloud his mind, for a moment, for an hour; it was unmeasurable.
The wrench in his stomach and the godawful wave of nausea that
followed were anything but dreamlike. Jump over. A moment of silence
throughout the room, as others struggled to overcome their
disorientation. Then the murmur picked up where it had left off.
Welcome to Vervain.
Take a wormhole jump to hell.
The
tac display spun and shifted, shunting in new data, recentering its
little universe. Their wormhole was presently guarded by its
beleaguered Station and a thin and battered string of Vervani Navy
and Vervani-commanded Ranger ships. The Cetagandans had hit it once
already, been driven off, and now hovered out of range awaiting
reinforcements for the next strike. Cetagandan re-supply was
streaming across the Vervain system from the other wormhole.
The
other wormhole had fallen fast, the only way to fly from the
attacker's viewpoint. Even with complete surprise on the Cetagandans'
side for their massive first strike, the Vervani might have stopped
them had not three Ranger ships apparently misunderstood their orders
and broken off when they should have counterattacked. But the
Cetagandans had secured their bridgehead and begun to pour
through.
The second wormhole, Miles's wormhole,
had been better equipped for defense—until the panicked Vervani had
pulled everything that could be spared back to guard the high
orbitals of the homeworld. Miles could scarcely blame them; it was a
hard strategic choice either way. But now the Cetagandans boiled
across the system practically unimpeded, hopscotching the heavily
guarded planet, in a bold attempt to take the Hegen wormhole, if not
by surprise, at least at speed.
The first method
of choice for attacking a wormhole was by subterfuge, subornment, and
infiltration, i.e., to cheat. The second, also preferring subterfuge
in its execution, was by an end-run, sending forces around by another
route (if there was one) into the contested local space. The third
was to open the attack with a sacrifice ship laying down a "sun
wall," a massive blanket of nuclear missilettes deployed as a
unit, creating a planar wave that cleared near-space of everything
including, frequently, the attack ship; but sun walls were costly,
rapidly dissipated, and only locally effective. The Cetagandans had
attempted to combine all three methods, as the Rangers' disarray and
the filthy radioactive fog still outgassing from the vicinity of
their first conquest testified.
The fourth
approved approach for the problem of frontally attacking a guarded
wormhole was to shoot the officer who suggested it. Miles trusted the
Cetagandans would work around to that one too, by the time he was
done.
Time passed. Miles hooked a station chair
into clamps and studied the central display till his eyes watered and
his mind threatened to fall into a hypnotic fugue, then rose and
shook himself and circulated among the duty stations,
kibbitzing.
The Cetagandans maneuvered. The
sudden and unexpected arrival of the Dendarii force during the lull
had thrown them into temporary confusion; their planned final attack
on the strained Vervani must needs be converted on the fly into yet
another softening-up round of hit-and-run. Expensive. At this point
the Cetagandans had few ways of concealing their numbers or
movements. The defending Dendarii had the implication of hidden
reserves (who knew how unlimited? Not Miles, certainly) concealed on
the other side of the jump. A brief hope flared in Miles that this
threat alone might be enough to make the Cetagandans break off the
attack.
"Naw," sighed Tung when Miles
confided this optimistic thought. "They're too far into it now.
The butcher's bill's too high already for them to pretend they were
only fooling. Even to themselves. A Cetagandan commander who packed
it in now would go home to a court martial. They'll keep going long
after it's hopeless, as their brass tries desperately to cover their
bleeding asses with a flag of victory."
"That
is … vile."
"That is the system,
son, and not just for the Cetagandans. One of the system's several
built-in defects. And besides," Tung grinned briefly, "it's
not as hopeless as all that yet. A fact we will try to conceal from
them."
The Cetagandan forces began to move,
their directions and accelerations telegraphing their intention for a
pounding pass. The trick was to try for local concentrations of
force, three or four ships ganging up on one, overwhelming the
defender's plasma mirrors. The Dendarii and Vervani would attempt an
identical strategy against Cetagandan stragglers, but for a few
bravura captains on both sides equipped with the new imploder lances
playing an insane game of chicken, trying to put a target within the
weapon's short range. Miles also tried to keep one eye on the
Rangers' dispositions. Not every Ranger ship had Vervani advisors
aboard, and battle arrays that put the Rangers in front of the
Cetagandans were much to be preferred to ones that put Rangers behind
Dendarii backs.
The quiet murmur of techs and
computers within the tactics room scarcely changed pace. There ought
to be a flourish of drums, bagpipes, something to herald this dance
with death. But if reality broke in at all to this upholstered
bubble, it would be sudden, absolute, and over.
A
vid-comm message interrupted, intra-ship—yes, there was still a
real ship encasing them—a breathless officer reporting to Tung.
"Brig, sir. Watch yourselves up there. We've had a break-out.
Admiral Oser's escaped, and he let all the other prisoners out
too."
"Dammit," said Tung, glared
at Miles, and pointed to the comm. "Handle
that. Jack up Auson." He turned his attention back to his
tactics display, muttering. "This wouldn't have happened in my
day."
Miles slipped into the comm chair,
and paged the Triumph's
bridge. "Auson! Did you get the word on Oser?" Auson's
irritated face appeared, "Yeah, we're working on it."
"Order
extra commando guards to the tactics room, engineering, and your own
bridge. This is a real bad time for interruptions down
here."
"Tell me. We can see the Ceta
bastards coming." Auson punched off.
Miles
began monitoring internal security channels, pausing only to note the
arrival of well-armed guards in the corridor. Oser had clearly had
help in his escape, some loyal Oseran officer or officers, which made
Miles wonder in turn about the security of the security guards. And
would Oser try to combine with Metzov and Cavilo? A couple of
Dendarii imprisoned for disciplinary infractions were found wandering
the corridors and returned to the brig; another came back on his own.
A suspected spy was cornered in a storeroom. No sign yet of the truly
dangerous . . .
"There he goes!"
Miles
keyed in the channel. A cargo shuttle was breaking out of its clamps,
away from the side of the Triumph
and into space.
Miles overrode channels, found
fire control. "Don't, repeat, Do
not open fire on
that shuttle!"
"Uh . . ." came
the reply. "Yes, sir. Do not open fire."
Why
did Miles get the subliminal impression that tech hadn't been
planning to open fire in the first place? Clearly a well-coordinated
escape. The witch-hunt later was going to be nasty. "Patch me
through to that shuttle!" Miles demanded of the comm officer.
And, oh yes, send a
guard to the shuttle hatch corridors
. . . too late.
"I'll try, sir, but they're
not answering."
"How many
aboard?"
"Several, but we're not sure
exactly—"
"Patch me through. They've
got to listen, even if they won't reply."
"I
have a channel, sir, but I have no idea if they're
listening."
"I'll try it." Miles
took a breath. "Admiral Oser! Turn your shuttle around and come
back to the Triumph.
It's too dangerous out there, you're running headlong into a fire
zone. Return, and I will personally guarantee your safety—"
Tung
was looking down over Miles's shoulder. "He's trying to make it
to the Peregrine.
Dammit, if that ship pulls out, our defensive array will
collapse."
Miles glanced back at the tac
comp. "Surely not. I thought we put the Peregrine
in the reserve area precisely because we doubted its
reliability."
"Yes, but if the
Peregrine
pulls out I can name three other captain-owners who will follow it.
And if four ships pull out—"
"The
Rangers will break despite their Vervani commander, and we'll be
cooked, right, I see." Miles glanced again at the tac comp. "I
don't think he's going to make it—Admiral Oser! Can you read
me?"
"Yike!" Tung returned to his
seat, absorbed in the Cetagandans once again. Four Cetagandan ships
were combining against the edge of the Dendarii formation, while
another attempted to penetrate the center, clearly trying to close
the range for a lance attack. Casually, in passing, a Cetagandan
plasma gunner from it picked off the stray shuttle. Just bright
sparks.
"He didn't know the Cetagandans
were making their attack run till his stolen shuttle cleared the
Triumph,"
Miles whispered. "Good plan, rotten timing. . . . He could have
turned around, he chose to try and run for it. . . ." Oser chose
his death? Was that the comforting argument?
The
Cetagandans did not so much break off their attack run as complete
it, in depressingly good order. The score was slightly in the
Dendarii's favor. A number of Cetagandan ships had been badly chewed,
and one blown up entirely. Dendarii and Ranger damage control
channels were frantic. The Dendarii had not lost ships yet, but had
lost fire-power, engines, flight control, life support, shielding.
The next attack run would be more devastating.
They
can afford to lose three to our one. If they keep coming, keep
nibbling, they must inevitably win,
Miles reflected coldly. Unless
we are reinforced.
Hours
passed, while the Cetagandans formed up again. Miles took short
breaks in the wardroom provided for that purpose off the tactics
room, but was too keyed up to emulate Tung's amazing fifteen-minute
instant naps. Miles knew Tung wasn't faking relaxation for morale
effect; nobody could simulate such a disgusting snore.
It
was possible to watch the Cetagandan reinforcements coming on across
the Vervain system in the televid. That was the time tradeoff, the
risk. The longer the Cetas waited, the better-equipped they could be,
but the longer they waited, the better the chance that their enemies
would recover too. There was doubtless a tac comp aboard the
Cetagandan command ship that had generated a probability curve
marking the optimum intersection of Us and Them. If only the damned
Vervani would be more aggressive in attacking that supply stream from
their planetary base. . . .
And here they came
on again. Tung watched his displays, his hands unconsciously
clenching and unclenching in his lap between jerky, thick-fingered
dances on his control panel, sending orders, correcting,
anticipating. Miles's fingers twitched in tiny echoes, his mind
trying to get around Tung's thought, to absorb everything. Their
picture of reality was getting lacy with hidden holes, as data points
dropped out due to damaged sensors or senders on various ships. The
Cetagandans flew through the Dendarii formation, pounding … a
Dendarii ship blew apart, another, weapons dead, tried to scramble
out of range, three Ranger ships broke away as a unit … it looked
bad. . . .
"Sharkbait
Three reporting,"
an abrupt voice overrode all other comm channels, making Miles jump
in his seat. "Hold this wormhole clear.
Help coming."
"Not now,
"snarled Tung, but began to attempt a rapid re-deployment to
cover the tiny volume of space, keep it clear of debris, missiles,
enemy fire, and most of all enemy ships with imploder lances. Those
Cetagandan ships that were in position to respond seemed almost to
prick their ears, hesitating as Dendarii ship movements telegraphed
changes coming.
The Dendarii might be in retreat . . . some exploitable opportunity
might be about to open up. …
"Whatinhell's
that?"
Tung said, as something huge and temporarily indecipherable appeared
in the throat of the wormhole and began instantly to accelerate. He
punched up readouts. "It's too big to be that fast, k's too fast
to be that big."
Miles
recognized the energy profile even before the televiewer yielded up a
visual. What a
shakedown cruise they're having.
"It's the Prince
Serg. Our
Barrayaran Imperial reinforcements have just arrived." He took a
dizzy breath. "Did I not promise you . . ."
Tung
swore horribly, in pure aesthetic admiration. Other ships followed,
Aslunder, Polian Navy, spreading out rapidly into attack– not
defensive—formation.
The ripple in the
Cetagandan formations was like a silent cry of dismay. An
imploder-armed Cetagandan ship dove bravely at the Prince
Serg, and was
sliced in half discovering that the Serg's
imploder lances had been improved to triple the Cetagandans' range.
That was the first mortal blow.
The second came
over the commlink, a call to the Cetagandan aggressors to surrender
or be destroyed—in the name of the Hegen Alliance Navy, Emperor
Gregor Vorbarra and Admiral Count Aral Vorkosigan, Joint
Commanders.
For a moment, Miles thought Tung was
about to faint. Tung inhaled alarmingly, and bellowed with delight,
"Aral Vorkosigan! Here? Hot damn!" And in an only slightly
more private whisper, "How'd they lure him out of retirement?
Maybe I'll get to meet him!"
Tung the
military history nut was one of Miles's father's most fanatical fans,
Miles recalled, and until and unless firmly suppressed could rattle
off every public detail of the Barrayaran admiral's early campaigns.
"I'll see what I can arrange," Miles promised.
"If
you can arrange that,
son. . . ." With an effort, Tung pulled his mind away from his
beloved hobby of studying military history and back to his
(admittedly, closely related) job of making it.
The
Cetagandan ships were breaking, first in panicked singles and then in
more coordinated groups, trying to organize a properly covered
retreat. The Prince
Serg and its
support group did not waste a millisecond, but followed up instantly,
attacking and disordering attempted self-covering arrays of enemy
ships, worrying the resulting stragglers. In the ensuing hours the
retreat became a true rout when the Vervani ships protecting their
high planetary orbitals, encouraged, at last broke orbit and joined
the attack. The Vervani reserve was merciless, in the terror for
their homes the Cetagandans had instilled in them.
The
mopping-up detail, the appalling damage control problems, the
personnel rescues, were so absorbing that it took Miles those several
hours to gradually realize the war was over for the Dendarii fleet.
They had done their job.
Before
departing the tactics room, Miles prudently checked with the
Triumph's
security to determine how their roundup of escaped prisoners was
progressing. Missing and still unaccounted for remained Oser, the
Peregrine's
captain and two other loyal Oseran officers, Commander Cavilo, and
General Metzov.
Miles was fairly certain he had
witnessed Oser and his officers converted to radioactive ash in his
monitors. Had Metzov and Cavilo been aboard that fleeing shuttle too?
Fine irony, for Cavilo to die at the hands of the Cetagandans after
all. Though—admittedly—it would have been equally ironic had she
died at the hands of the Vervani, Randall's Rangers, the Aslunders,
the Barrayarans, or anyone else she'd double-crossed in her brief,
cometary career in the Hegen Hub. Her end was neat and convenient if
true, but—he didn't like to think that her last, savage remarks to
him had now acquired the prophetic weight of a dying curse. He ought
to fear Metzov more than Cavilo. He ought to, but he didn't. He
shuddered, and borrowed a commando guard for the walk back to his
cabin.
On the way, he encountered a shuttle-load
of wounded being transferred to the Triumph's
sickbay. The Triumph,
in the reserve group (such as it was) had taken no hits its shields
couldn't handle, but other ships had not been so fortunate. Space
battle casualty lists usually had the proportions reversed from
planetary, the dead outnumbering the wounded, yet in lucky
circumstances where the artificial environment was preserved,
soldiers might survive their injuries. Uncertainly, Miles changed
course and followed the procession along. What good could he do in
sickbay?
The triage people had not sent minor
cases to the Triumph.
Three hideous burns and a massive head injury went to the head of the
line, and were whisked off by the anxiously waiting staff. A few
soldiers were conscious, quietly waiting their turns, immobilized
with air bag braces on their float pallets, eyes cloudy with pain and
pain-killers.
Miles tried to say a few words to
each. Some stared uncomprehendingly, some seemed to appreciate it; he
lingered a little longer with these, giving what encouragement he
could. He then withdrew and stood dumbly by the door for several
minutes, awash in the familiar, terrifying odors of a sickbay after a
battle, disinfectants and blood, burnt meat, urine, and electronics,
until he realized exhaustion was making him thoroughly stupid and
useless, shaky and near-tears. He pushed off from the wall and
stumped out. Bed. If anyone really wanted his command presence, they
could come find him.
He hit the code lock on
Oser's cabin. Now that he'd inherited it, he supposed he ought to
change the numbers. He sighed and entered. As he stepped inside he
became conscious of two unfortunate facts. First, although he had
dismissed his commando guard upon entering sickbay, he had forgotten
to call him back, and second, he was not alone. The door closed
behind him before he could recoil into the corridor, and he banged
into it backing up.
The dusky red hue of General
Metzov's face was even more arresting to the eye than the silver
gleam of the nerve disrupter parabola in his hand, aim centered on
Miles's head.
Metzov had somehow acquired a set
of Dendarii greys, a little small for him. Commando Cavilo, standing
behind Metzov, had acquired a similar set, a little large for her.
Metzov looked huge and furious. Cavilo looked . . . strange. Bitter,
ironic, weirdly amused. Bruises marred her neck. She bore no
weapon.
"Got you," Metzov whispered
triumphantly. "At last." With a rictus smile, he advanced
stepwise on Miles till he could pin him to the wall by his neck with
one big hand. He dropped the nerve disrupter with a clatter and
wrapped the other hand around Miles's neck, not to break but to
squeeze it.
"You'll never survive—"
was all Miles managed to choke out before his air pinched off. He
could feel his trachea begin to crunch, purpling, his head felt on
the verge of dark explosion as his blood supply was cut off. No
talking Metzov out of this
murder. . . .
Cavilo slipped forward, crouching,
soundless and unnoticed as a cat, to take up the dropped nerve
disrupter, then step back, around to Miles's left.
"Stanis,
darling," she cooed. Metzov, obsessed with Miles's lingering
strangulation, did not turn his head. Cavilo, clearly imitating
Metzov's cadences, recited. " 'Open your legs to me, you bitch,
or I'll blow your brains out.' "
Metzov's
head twisted round then, his eyes widening. She blew his brains out.
The crackling blue bolt hit him square between the eyes. He almost
snapped Miles's neck, plastic-reinforced though those bones were, in
his last convulsion, before he dropped to the deck. The blistering
electrochemical smell of nerve-disruptor death slapped Miles in the
face.
Miles sagged frozen against the wall, not
daring to move. He raised his eyes from the corpse to Cavilo. Her
lips were curved in a smile of immense satisfaction, satiated. Had
Cavilo's line been a direct and recent quote? What had they been
doing, all the long hours they must have been waiting in the hunter's
blind of Oser's cabin? The silence lengthened.
"Not,"
Miles swallowed, trying to clear his bruised throat, and croaked,
"not that I'm complaining, mind you, but why aren't you going
ahead and shooting me too?"
Cavilo smirked.
"A quick revenge is better than none. A slow and lingering one
is better still, but to savor it fully I must survive it. Another
day, kid." She tilted the nerve disrupter up as if to flourish
it into a holster, then let it hang pointed down by her side in her
relaxed hand. "You've sworn you'll see me safe out of the Hegen
Hub, Vor lord. And I've come to believe you are actually stupid
enough to keep your word. Not that I'm complaining, mind you. Now, if
Oser had issued more than one weapon between us, or if he'd given the
nerve disrupter to me and the code to his cabin to Stanis and not the
other way around, or if Oser'd taken us with him as I begged . . .
things might have worked out differently."
Very
differently. Very
slowly, and very, very carefully, Miles inched over to the comconsole
and called security. Cavilo watched him thoughtfully. After a few
moments, coming up on the time they might expect the reinforcements
to storm in, she strolled over to his side. "I underestimated
you, you know."
"I never
underestimated you."
"I know. I'm not
used to that . . . thank you." Contemptuously, she tossed the
nerve disrupter onto Metzov's body. Then, with a sudden baring of her
teeth, she wheeled, wrapped an arm around Miles's neck, and kissed
him vigorously. Her timing was perfect; Security, Elena and Sergeant
Chodak in the lead, burst through the door just before Miles managed
to fight her off.
Miles stepped from the
Triumph's
shuttle through the short flex tube and on board the Prince
Serg. He stared
around enviously at the clean, spacious, beautifully-lit corridor, at
the row of smart and gleaming honor guards snapping to attention, at
the polished officers waiting in their Barrayaran Imperial dress
greens. He stole an anxious glance down at his own Dendarii
grey-and-whites. The Triumph,
key and pride of the Dendarii fleet, seemed to shrink into something
small and gritty and battered and used.
Yeah,
but you guys would not look so pretty now if we had not used
ourselves so hard,
Miles consoled himself.
Tung, Elena, and Chodak
were all goggling like tourists too. Miles called them firmly to
attention to receive and return the crisp welcoming salutes of their
hosts.
"I'm Commander Natochini, executive
officer of the Prince
Serg," the
senior Barrayaran introduced himself. "Lieutenant Yegorov, here,
will escort you and Commander Bothari-Jesek to Admiral Vorkosigan for
your meeting, Admiral Naismith. Commodore Tung, I will be personally
conducting your tour of the Prince
Serg, and will be
pleased to answer any of your questions. If the answers aren't
classified, of course."
"Of course."
Tung's broad face looked immensely pleased. In fact, if Tung grew any
smugger he might implode.
"We will join
Admiral Vorkosigan for lunch in the senior officers' mess, after your
meeting and our tour," Commander Natochini continued to Miles.
"Our last dinner guest there was the President of Pol and his
entourage, twelve days ago."
Certain that
the mercenaries understood the magnitude of the privilege they were
being granted, the Barrayaran exec led the happy Tung and Chodak off
down the corridor. Miles heard Tung chuckle under his breath, "Lunch
with Admiral Vorkosigan, heh, heh. . . ."
Lieutenant
Yegorov motioned Miles and Elena in the opposite direction. "You
are Barrayaran, ma'am?" he inquired of Elena.
"My
father was liege-sworn Armsman to the late Count Piotr for eighteen
years," Elena stated. "He died in the Count's
service."
"I see," said the
lieutenant respectfully. "You are acquainted with the family,
then." That
explains you,
Miles could almost see him thinking.
"Ah,
yes."
The lieutenant glanced down a little
more dubiously at "Admiral Naismith."
"And,
uh, I understand you are Betan, sir?"
"Originally,"
said Miles, in his flattest Betan accent.
"You
. . . may find the way we Barrayarans do things to be a little more
formal than what you're used to," the lieutenant warned. "The
Count, you understand, is accustomed to the respect and deference due
his rank."
Miles watched, delighted, as the
earnest officer sought a polite way of saying, Call
him sir, don't wipe your nose on your sleeve, and none of your damned
Betan egalitarian backchat, either.
"You may find him rather formidable," Yegorov
concluded.
"A real stuffed shirt,
eh?"
The lieutenant frowned. "He is a
great man."
"Aw, I bet if we pour
enough wine into him at lunch, he'll loosen up and tell dirty stories
with the best of 'em."
Yegorov's polite
smile became fixed. Elena, eyes dancing, leaned down and whispered
forcefully, "Admiral, behave!"
"Oh,
all right," Miles sighed regretfully.
The
lieutenant glanced gratefully at Elena, over Miles's head.
Miles
admired the spit and polish, in passing. Besides just being new, the
Prince Serg
had been designed with diplomacy as well as war in mind, a ship fit
to carry the emperor on state visits without loss of military
efficiency. He saw a young ensign, down a cross-corridor that had a
wall panel apart, directing some tech crew on minor repairs—no, by
God, it was original installation. The Prince
Serg had broken
orbit with work crews still aboard, Miles had heard. He glanced back
over his shoulder. There
but for the grace of God and General Metzov go I.
If he'd kept his nose clean on Kyril Island
for just six months … he felt an
illogical twinge of envy for that busy ensign.
They
entered officers' country. Lieutenant Yegorov led them through an
antechamber and into a spartanly-appointed flag office twice the size
of anything Miles had seen on a Barrayaran ship before. Admiral Count
Aral Vorkosigan looked up from his comconsole desk as the doors slid
silently back.
Miles stepped through, his belly
suddenly shaking inside. To conceal and control his emotion he tossed
off, "Hey, you Imperial snails are going to go all fat and soft,
lolling around in this kind of luxury, y'know?"
"Ha!"
Admiral Vorkosigan stumbled out of his chair and banged around the
corner of his desk in his haste. Well,
no wonder, how can he see with all that water standing in his eyes?
He enfolded Miles in a hard embrace. Miles grinned and blinked and
swallowed, face smashed against that cool green sleeve, and almost
had control of his features again when Count Vorkosigan held him out
at arm's length for an anxious, searching inspection. "You all
right, boy?"
"Just fine. How'd you
like your wormhole jump?"
"Just fine,"
breathed Count Vorkosigan back. "Mind you, there were moments
when certain of my advisors wanted to have you shot. And there were
moments when I agreed with 'em."
Lieutenant
Yegorov, cut off in mid-announcement of their arrival (Miles hadn't
heard him speaking, and he doubted his father had either), was
standing with his mouth still open, looking perfectly stunned.
Lieutenant Jole, suppressing a grin himself, arose from the other
side of the comconsole desk and guided Yegorov gently and mercifully
back out the door.
"Thank you, Lieutenant.
The Admiral appreciates your services, that will be all. . .
."
Jole glanced back over his shoulder,
quirked a pensive brow, and followed Yegorov out. Miles just glimpsed
the blond lieutenant drape himself across a chair in the antechamber,
head back in the relaxed posture of a man anticipating a long wait,
before the door slid closed. Jole could be supernaturally courteous
at times.
"Elena." With an effort,
Count Vorkosigan broke away from Miles to take both Elena's hands in
a firm brief grip. "You are well?"
"Yes,
sir."
"That pleases me . . . more than
I can say. Cordelia sends her love and her best hopes. If I saw you,
I was to remind you, ah—I must get the phrase exact, it was one of
her Betan cracks—'Home is where, when you have to go there, they
have to take you in.'"
"I can hear her
voice," smiled Elena. "Tell her thank you. Tell her … I
will remember."
"Good." Count
Vorkosigan pressed her no further. "Sit, sit," he waved
them at chairs, which he snugged up closed to the comconsole desk,
and sat himself. For an instant, changing gears, his features
relaxed, then concentrated with attention once again. God,
he looks tired,
Miles realized; for a split second, almost ghastly. Gregor,
you have much to answer for.
But Gregor knew that.
"What's the latest
word on the cease-fire?" Miles asked.
"Still
holding nicely, thank you. The only Cetagandan ships that haven't
jumped back where they came from, had damaged Necklin rods or control
systems or injured pilots. Or all three. We're letting them repair
two of them and jump them out with skeleton crews, the rest are not
salvageable. I estimate controlled commercial travel could resume in
six weeks."
Miles shook his head. "So
ends the Five-Day War. I never once saw a Cetagandan face-to-face.
All that effort and bloodshed, just to return to the status quo
ante."
"Not quite for everyone. A
number of Cetagandan senior officers have been recalled to their
capital, to explain their 'unauthorized adventure' to their emperor.
Their apologies are expected to be fatal."
Miles
snorted. "Expiate their failure, rather. 'Unauthorized
adventure.' Does anyone believe that? Why do they even
bother?"
"Finesse, boy. A retreating
enemy should be offered all the face he can carry off. Just don't let
him carry off anything else."
"I
understand you finessed the Polians. All this time, I expected it
would be Simon Illyan to show up in person to haul us lost boys
home."
"He longed to come, but there
was no way we could both leave home at the same time. The wobbly
cover we'd put over Gregor's absence could have collapsed at any
moment."
"How did you pull that one
off, by the way?"
"Picked out a young
officer who looked a lot like Gregor, told him there was an
assassination plot afoot against the Emperor and that he was to be
the bait. Bless him, he volunteered at once. He—and his Security,
who had the same tale told them—spent the next several weeks
leading a life of ease down at Vorkosigan Surleau, eating off the
best plates—but with indigestion. We finally sent him off on a
rustic camping trip, as inquiries from the capital were getting
pressing. People will twig soon, I'm sure, if they haven't already,
but now we've got Gregor back we can explain it away any way we like.
Any way he
likes." Count Vorkosigan frowned an odd brief frown, odd because
not wholly displeased.
"I was surprised,"
said Miles, "though very happy, that you got your forces past
Pol so fast. I was afraid they wouldn't let you through till the
Cetagandans were in the Hub. And then it would be too late."
"Yes,
well, that's the other reason you got me instead of Simon. As Prime
Minister and former Regent, it was perfectly reasonable for me to
make a state visit to Pol. We came up with a quick list of the top
five diplomatic concessions they've been wanting from us for years,
and suggested it for an agenda.
"It being
all formal and official and aboveboard, it was then perfectly
reasonable for us to combine my visit with the Prince
Serg's shakedown
cruise. We were in orbit at Pol, shuttling up and down to official
receptions and parties," (his hand unconsciously rubbed his
abdomen in a pain-warding motion) "with me still trying
desperately to talk our way into the Hub without shooting anybody,
when word of the Cetagandan surprise attack on Vervain broke. At that
point, getting permission to proceed was suddenly expedited. And we
were only days, not weeks, away from the action. Getting the
Aslunders to lie down with the Polians was a trickier matter. Gregor
astonished me, handling that. The Vervani were no problem, they were
highly motivated to seek allies by then."
"I
hear Gregor is now quite popular on Vervain."
"He's
being feted in their capital even as we speak, I believe." Count
Vorkosigan glanced at his chrono. "They've gone wild over him.
Letting him ride shotgun in the Prince
Serg's tac room
may have been a better idea that I thought. Purely from a diplomatic
standpoint." Count Vorkosigan looked rather abstracted.
"It
. . . astonished me, that you permitted him to jump with you into the
fire zone. I hadn't expected that."
"Well,
when you came down to it, the Prince
Serg's fleet tac
room had to have been among the most tightly defended few cubic
meters anywhere in Vervain local space. It was, it was . .
."
Miles watched with fascination as his
father tried to spit out the words perfectly
safe, and gagged
on them instead. Light dawned. "It wasn't your idea, was it?
Gregor ordered himself aboard!"
"He
had several good arguments to support his position," Court
Vorkosigan said. "The propaganda angle certainly seems to be
bearing fruit."
"I thought you'd be
too . . . prudent. To permit him the risk." Count Vorkosigan
studied his own square hands. "I was not in love with the idea,
no. But I once swore an oath to serve an emperor. The most morally
dangerous moment for a guardian is when the temptation to become a
puppet-master seems most rational. I always knew the moment must . .
. no. I knew that if the moment never
came, I should have failed my oath most profoundly." He paused.
"It was still a shock to the system, though. The
letting-go."
Gregor
faced you down?
Oh, to have been a fly on the wall of that
chamber. "Even with you to practice on, all these years,"
Count Vorkosigan added meditatively.
"Ah .
. . how's your ulcers?" Count Vorkosigan grimaced. "Don't
ask." He brightened slightly-"Better, the last three days.
I may actually demand food for lunch, instead of that miserable
medical mush."
Miles cleared his throat.
"How's Captain Ungari?"
Count
Vorkosigan twitched a lip. "He's not overly pleased with
you."
"I … cannot apologize. I made
a lot of mistakes, but disobeying his order to wait on Aslund Station
wasn't one of them."
"Apparently not."
Count Vorkosigan frowned at the far wall. "And yet . . . I'm
more than ever convinced the regular Service is not the place for
you. It's like trying to fit a square peg—no, worse than that. Like
trying to fit a tesseract into a round hole."
Miles
suppressed a twinge of panic. "I won't be discharged, will
I?"
Elena regarded her fingernails and put
in, "If you were, you could get a job as a mercenary. Just like
General Metzov. I understand Commander Cavilo is looking for a few
good men." Miles nearly meowed at her; she traded a smirk for
his exasperated look.
"I was almost sorry
to learn that Metzov was killed," remarked Count Vorkosigan.
"We'd been planning to try and extradite him, before things went
crazy with Gregor's disappearance."
"Ah!
Did you finally decide the death of that Komarran prisoner way back
when during their revolt was murder? I thought it might be—"
Count
Vorkosigan held up two fingers. "Two murders."
Miles
paused. "My God, he didn't try and track down poor Ahn before he
left, did he?" He'd almost forgotten Ahn.
"No,
but we tracked him down. Though not, alas, before Metzov had left
Barrayar. And yes, the Komarran rebel had been tortured to death. Not
wholly intentionally, he apparently had had some hidden medical
weakness. But it was not, as the original investigator had suspected,
in revenge for the death of the guard. It was the other way around.
The Barrayaran guard corporal, who had participated in or at least
acquiesced to the torture, though over some feeble protest, according
to Ahn—the corporal suffered a revulsion of feeling, and threatened
to turn Metzov in.
"Metzov murdered him in
one of his panic-rages, then made Ahn help him cook up and vouch for
the cover story about the escape. So Ahn was twice tainted with the
thing. Metzov kept Ahn in terror, yet was equally in Ahn's power if
the facts ever came out, a kind of strange lock on each other . . .
which Ahn at last escaped. Ahn seemed almost relieved, and
volunteered to be fast-penta'd, when Illyan's agents came for
him."
Miles thought of the weatherman with
regret. "Will anything bad happen to Ahn now?"
"We'd
planned to make him testify, at Metzov's trial . . . Illyan thought
we might even turn it to our favor, with respect to the Komarrans.
Present that poor idiot guard corporal to them as an unsung hero.
Hang Metzov as proof of the emperor's good faith and commitment to
justice for Barrayarans and Komarrans alike . . . nice scenario."
Count Vorkosigan frowned bitterly. "I think we will quietly drop
it now. Again."
Miles puffed out his
breath. "Metzov. A goat to the end. Must be some bad karma,
clinging to him . . . not that he didn't earn it."
"Beware
of wishing for justice. You might get it."
"I've
already learned that, sir."
"Already?"
Count Vorkosigan cocked an eyebrow at him. "Hm."
"Speaking
of justice," Miles seized the opening. "I'm concerned over
the matter of Dendarii pay. They took a lot of damage, more than a
mercenary fleet will usually tolerate. Their only contract was my
breath and voice. If … if the Imperium does not back me, I will be
forsworn."
Count Vorkosigan smiled
slightly. "We have already considered the matter."
"Will
Illyan's covert ops budget stretch, to cover this?"
"Illyan's
budget would burst trying to cover this. But you, ah, seem to have a
friend in a high place. We will draw you an emergency credit chit
from ImpSec, this fleet's fund, and the Emperor's privy purse, and
hope to recoup it all later from a special appropriation rammed
through the Council of Ministers and the Council of Counts. Submit a
bill."
Miles fished a data disk from his
pocket. "Here, sir. From the Dendarii fleet accountant. She was
up all night. Some damage estimates are still preliminary." He
set it on the comconsole desk.
One corner of
Count Vorkosigan's mouth twisted up. "You're learning, boy. . .
." He inserted the disk in his desk for a fast scan:
"I'll have a credit chit prepared over lunch. You can take it
with you when you depart."
"Thank you,
sir."
"Sir," Elena put in,
leaning forward earnestly, "what will happen to the Dendarii
fleet now?"
"Whatever it chooses, I
presume. Though they cannot linger, this close to Barrayar."
"Are
we to be abandoned again?" asked Elena.
"Abandoned?"
"You
made us an Imperial force, once. I thought. Baz thought. Then Miles
left us, and then . . . nothing."
"Just
like Kyril Island,"
Miles remarked. "Out of sight, out of mind." He shrugged
dolefully. "I gather they suffered a similar deterioration of
morale."
Count Vorkosigan gave him a sharp
look. "The fate of the Dendarii —like your future military
career, Miles—is a matter still under discussion."
"Do
I get to be in on that discussion? Do they?"
"We'll
let you know." Count Vorkosigan planted his hands on his
desktop, and rose. "That's all I can say now, even to you.
Lunch, officers?"
Miles and Elena perforce
rose too. "Commodore Tung knows nothing of our real relationship
yet," Miles cautioned. "If you wish to keep that covert,
I'm going to have to play Admiral Naismith when we rejoin
him."
Count Vorkosigan's smile turned
peculiar. "Illyan and Captain Ungari must certainly favor not
breaking a potentially useful cover identity. By all means. Should be
fascinating."
"I should warn you,
Admiral Naismith is not very deferential."
Elena
and Count Vorkosigan looked at each other, and both broke into
laughter. Miles waited, wrapped in what dignity he could muster, till
they subsided. Finally.
Admiral Naismith was
painfully polite during lunch. Even Lieutenant Yegorov could have
found no fault.
The Vervani government courier
handed the credit chit across the homeside station commandant's
comconsole desk. Miles testified receipt of it with thumbprint,
retina scan, and Admiral Naismith's flourishing illegible scrawl,
nothing at all like Ensign Vorkosigan's careful signature. "It's
a pleasure doing business with you honorable gentlemen," Miles
said, pocketing the chit with satisfaction and carefully sealing the
pocket.
"It's the least we can do,"
said the jumppoint station commandant. "I cannot tell you my
emotions, knowing that the next pass the Cetagandans made was going
to be their last, nerving to fight to the end, when the Dendarii
materialized to reinforce us."
"The
Dendarii couldn't have done it alone," said Miles modestly. "All
we did was help you hold the bridgehead till the real big guns
arrived."
"And if it had not been
held, the Hegen Alliance forces—the big guns, as you say—could
not have jumped into Vervani local space."
"Not
without great cost, certainly," Miles conceded.
The
station commandant glanced at his chrono. "Well, my planet will
be expressing its opinion of that in more tangible form quite
shortly. May I escort you to the ceremony, Admiral? It's
time."
"Thank you." Miles rose,
and preceded him out of his office, his hand rechecking the tangible
thanks in his pocket. Medals,
huh. Medals buy no fleet repairs.
He
paused at a transparent portal, caught half by the vista from the
jump station and half by his own reflection. Oseran/Dendarii dress
greys were all right, he decided; soft grey velvet tunic set off with
blinding white trim and silver buttons on the shoulders, matching
trousers and grey synthasuede boots. He fancied the outfit made him
look taller. Perhaps he would keep the design.
Beyond
the portal floated a scattering of ships, Dendarii, Ranger, Vervani
and Alliance. The Prince
Serg was not among
them, being now in orbit above the Vervani homeworld while
high-level—literally—talks continued, hammering out the details
of the permanent treaty of friendship, commerce, tariff reduction,
mutual defense pact, &etc, among Barrayar, Vervain, Aslund and
Pol. Gregor, Miles had heard, was being quite luminous in both the
public relations and the actual nuts and bolts part of the business.
Better you than me,
boy. The Vervani
jumppoint station was letting its own repairs schedule slacken to
lend aid to the Dendarii; Baz was working around the clock. Miles
tore himself away from the vista and followed the station
commandant.
They paused in the corridor outside
the large briefing room where the ceremony was to take place, waiting
for the attendees to settle. The Vervani apparently wished the
principals to make a grand entrance. The commandant went in to
prepare. The audience was not large—too much vital work going
on—but the Vervani had scraped up enough warm bodies to make it
look respectable, and Miles had contributed a platoon of convalescent
Dendarii to fluff up the crowd. He would accept on their behalf, in
his speech, he decided.
As Miles waited, he saw
Commander Cavilo arrive with her Barrayaran honor guard. As far as he
knew, the Vervani were not yet aware that the honor-guard's weapons
were lethally charged and they had orders to shoot to kill if their
prisoner attempted escape. Two hard-faced women in Barrayaran
auxiliary uniforms made sure Cavilo was watched both night and day.
Cavilo did a good job of ignoring their presence.
The
Ranger dress uniform was a neater version of their fatigues, in tan,
black, and white, subliminally reminding Miles of a guard dog's fur.
This bitch bites,
he reminded himself. Cavilo smiled and drifted up to Miles. She
reeked of her poisonous green-scented perfume; she must have bathed
in it.
Miles tilted his head in salute, reached
into a pocket, and took out two nose filters. He thrust one up each
nostril, where they expanded softly to create a seal, and inhaled
deeply to test them. Working fine. They would filter out much smaller
molecules than the vile organics of that damned perfume. Miles
breathed out through his mouth.
Cavilo watched
this performance with an expression of thwarted fury. "Damn
you," she muttered.
Miles shrugged, palms
out, as if to say, What
would you have of me?
"Are you and your survivors about ready to move out?"
"Right
after this idiot charade. I have to abandon six ships, too damaged to
jump."
"Sensible of you. If the
Vervani don't catch on to you soon, the Cetagandans, when they
realize they can't get at you themselves, will probably tell them the
ugly truth. You shouldn't linger in these parts."
"I
don't intend to. If I never see this place again it will be too soon.
That goes double for you, mutant. If not for you . . ." she
shook her head bitterly.
"By the way,"
Miles added, "the Dendarii have now been paid three times for
this operation. Once by our original contractors the Aslunders, once
by the Barrayarans, and once by the grateful Vervani. Each agreed to
cover all our expenses in full. Leaves a very tidy profit."
She
actually hissed. "You better pray
we never meet again."
"Goodbye,
then."
They entered the chamber to collect
their honors. Would Cavilo have the iron nerve to accept hers on
behalf of the Rangers her twisted plots had destroyed? Yes, it turned
out. Miles gagged quietly.
The
first medal I ever won,
Miles thought as the station commandant pinned his on him with
embarrassingly fulsome praise, and
I can't even wear it at home.
The medal, the uniform, and Admiral Naismith himself must soon return
to the closet. Forever? The life of Ensign Vorkosigan was not too
attractive, by comparison. And yet . . . the mechanics of soldiering
was the same, from side to side. If there was any difference between
himself and Cavilo, it must be in what they chose to serve. And how
they chose to serve it.Not
all paths, but one path. . . .
When
Miles arrived back on Barrayar for home leave, a few weeks later,
Gregor invited him for lunch at the Imperial Residence. They sat at a
wrought-iron table in the North Gardens,
which were famous for having been designed by Emperor Ezar, Gregor's
grandfather. In summer the spot would be deeply shaded; now it was
laced with light filtering through young leaves, rippling in the soft
airs of spring. The guards did their guarding out of sight, and
servants waited out of earshot unless Gregor touched his pager.
Replete with the first three courses, Miles sipped scalding coffee
and plotted an assault on a second pastry, which cowered across the
table linen under a thick camouflage of cream. Or would that
overmatch his forces? This had it all over the contract slave rations
they'd once divided, not to mention Cavilo's doggie chews.
Even
Gregor seemed to be seeing it all with new eyes. "Space stations
are really boring, y'know? All those corridors," he commented,
staring out past a fountain, eye following a curving brick path that
dove into a riot of flowers. "I stopped seeing how beautiful
Barrayar was, looking at it every day. Had to forget to remember.
Strange."
"There were moments I
couldn't remember which space station I was on," Miles agreed
around a mouthful of pastry and cream. "The luxury trade's
another matter, but the Hegen Hub stations did tend to the
utilitarian." He grimaced at the association of that last
word.
The conversation wandered over the recent
events in the Hegen Hub. Gregor brightened upon learning that Miles
had never issued an actual battle order in the Triumph's
fleet tac room either, except to handle the internal security crisis
as delegated by Tung.
"Most officers have
finished their jobs when the action begins, because the battle
transpires too rapidly for the officers to affect it," Miles
assured him. "Once you set up a good tac comp—and, if you're
lucky, a man with a magic nose—it's better to keep your hands in
your pockets. I had Tung, you had . . . ahem."
"And
nice deep pockets," said Gregor. "I'm still thinking about
it. It seemed almost unreal, till I visited sickbay afterwards. And
realized, such-and-such a point of light meant this man's arm lost,
that man's lungs frozen. . . ."
"Gotta
watch out for those little lights. They tell such soothing lies,"
Miles agreed. "If you let them." He chased another gooey
bite with coffee, paused, and remarked, "You didn't tell Illyan
the truth about your topple off the balcony, did you." It was
observation, not question.
"I told him I
was drunk, and climbed down." Gregor watched the flowers. ".
. . how did you know?"
"He doesn't
talk about you with secret terror in his eyes."
"I've
just got him . . . giving a little. I don't want to screw it up now.
You didn't tell him either—for that I thank you."
"You're
welcome." Miles drank more coffee. "Do me a favor in
return. Talk to someone."
"Who? Not
Illyan. Not your father."
"How about
my mother?"
"Hm." Gregor bit into
his torte, upon which he had been making furrows with his fork, for
the first time.
"She could be the only
person on Barrayar to automatically put Gregor the man before Gregor
the emperor. All our ranks look like optical illusions to her, I
think. And you know she can keep her own counsel."
"I'll
think about it."
"I don't want to be
the only one who … the only one. I know when I'm out of my
depth."
"You do?" Gregor raised
his brows, one corner of his mouth crooking up.
"Oh,
yes. I just don't normally let on."
"All
right. I will," said Gregor.
Miles
waited.
"My word," Gregor
added.
Miles relaxed, immeasurably relieved.
"Thank you." He eyed a third pastry. The portions were sort
of dainty. "Are you feeling better, these days?"
"Much,
thank you." Gregor went back to plowing furrows in his
cream.
"Really?"
Crosshatches.
"I don't know. Unlike that poor sod they had parading around
playing me while I was gone, I didn't exactly volunteer for
this."
"All Vor are draftees, in that
sense."
"Any other Vor could run away
and not be missed."
"Wouldn't you miss
me a little?" said Miles plaintively. Gregor snickered. Miles
glanced around the garden. "It doesn't look like such a tough
post, compared to Kyril Island."
"Try
it alone in bed at midnight, wondering when your genes are going to
start generating monsters in your mind. Like Great Uncle Mad Yuri. Or
Prince Serg." His glance at Miles was secretly sharp.
"I
… know about Prince Serg's, uh, problems," said Miles
carefully.
"Everyone seems to have known.
Except me."
So that had
been the trigger of depressive Gregor's first real suicide attempt.
Key and lock, click! Miles tried not to look triumphant at this
sudden feat of insight. "When did you find out?"
"During
the Komarr conference. I'd run across hints, before . . . put them
down to enemy propaganda."
Then, the ballet
on the balcony had been an immediate response to the shock. Gregor'd
had no one to vent it to. …
"Was it true,
that he really got off torturing—"
"Not
everything rumored about Crown Prince Serg is true," Miles cut
hastily across this. "Though the true core is … bad enough.
Mother knows. She was eyewitness to crazy things even I don't know,
about the Escobar invasion. But she'll tell you. Ask her straight,
she'll tell you straight back."
"That
seems to run in the family," Gregor allowed. "Too."
"She'll
tell you how different you are from him—nothing wrong with your
mother's blood, that I ever heard—anyway, I probably carry almost
as many of Mad Yuri's genes as you do, through one line of descent or
another."
Gregor actually grinned. "Is
that supposed to be reassuring?"
"Mm,
more on the theory that misery loves company."
"I'm
afraid of power . . ." Gregor's voice went low,
contemplative.
"You aren't afraid of power,
you're afraid of hurting people. If you wield that power," Miles
deduced suddenly.
"Huh. Close
guess."
"Not dead-on?"
"I'm
afraid I might enjoy it. The hurting. Like him."
Prince
Serg, he meant. His father.
"Rubbish,"
said Miles. "I watched my grandfather try and get you to enjoy
hunting for years. You got good, I suppose because you thought it was
your Vorish duty, but you damn near threw up every time you
half-missed and we had to chase down some wounded beastie. You may
harbor some other perversion, but not sadism."
"What
I've read . . . and heard," said Gregor, "is so horribly
fascinating. I can't help thinking about it. Can't put it out of my
mind."
"Your head is full of horrors
because the world
is full of horrors. Look at the horrors Cavilo caused in the Hegen
Hub."
"If I'd strangled her while she
slept—which I had a chance to do– none of those horrors would
have come to pass."
"If none of those
horrors had come to pass, she wouldn't have deserved to be strangled.
Some kind of time-travel paradox, I'm afraid. The arrow of justice
flies one way. Only. You can't regret not strangling her first.
Though I suppose you can regret not strangling her after. . .
."
"No … no … I'll leave that to
the Cetagandans, if they can catch her now that she has her head
start."
"Gregor, I'm sorry, but I just
don't think Mad Emperor Gregor is in the cards. It's your advisors
who are going to go crazy."
Gregor stared
at the pastry tray, and sighed. "I suppose it would disturb the
guards if I tried to shove a cream torte up your nose."
"Deeply.
You should have done it when we were eight and twelve, you could have
gotten away with it then. The cream pie of justice flies one way,"
Miles snickered.
Several unnatural and
sophomoric things to do with a tray full of pastry were then
suggested by both principals, which left them laughing. Gregor needed
a good cream pie fight, Miles judged, even if only verbal and
imaginary. When the laughter finally died down, and the coffee was
cooling, Miles said, "I know flattery sends you straight up a
wall, but dammit, you're actually good at your job. You have to know
that, on some level inside, after the Vervain talks. Stay on it,
huh?"
"I think I will." Gregor's
fork dove more forcefully into his last bite of dessert. "You're
going to stay on yours, too, right?"
"Whatever
it may be. I am to meet with Simon Illyan on just that topic later
this afternoon," said Miles. He decided to forgo that third
pastry after all.
"You don't sound exactly
excited about it."
"I don't suppose he
can demote me, there is no rank below ensign."
"He's
pleased with you, what else?"
"He
didn't look pleased, when I gave him my debriefing report. He looked
dyspeptic. Didn't say much." He glanced at Gregor in sudden
suspicion. "You know, don't you? Give!"
"Mustn't
interfere in the chain of command," said Gregor sententiously.
"Maybe you'll move up it. I hear the command at Kyril
Island is
open."
Miles shuddered.
Spring
in the Barrayaran capital city of Vorbarr Sultana was
as beautiful as the autumn, Miles decided. He paused a moment before
turning in to the front entrance to the big blocky building that was
ImpSec HQ. The Earth maple still stood, down the street and around
the corner, its tender leaves backlit to a delicate green glow by the
afternoon sun. Barrayaran native vegetation ran to dull reds and
browns, mostly. Would he ever visit Earth? Maybe.
Miles
produced proper passes for the door guards. Their faces were
familiar, they were the same crew he'd helped supervise for that
interminable period last winter—only a few months ago? It seemed
longer. He could still rattle off their pay-rates. They exchanged
pleasantries, but being good ImpSec men they did not ask the question
alight in their eyes, Where
have you been sir?
Miles was not issued a security escort to Illyan's office, a good
sign. It wasn't like he didn't know the way, by now.
He
followed the familiar turns into the labyrinth, up the lift tubes.
The captain in Illyan's outer office merely waved him through, barely
glancing up from his comconsole. The inner office was unchanged,
Illyan's oversized comconsole desk was unchanged, Illyan himself was
. . . rather tireder-looking, paler. He ought to get out and catch
some of that spring sun, eh? At least his hair hadn't all turned
white, it was still about the same brown-grey mix. His taste in
clothes was still bland to the point of camouflage.
Illyan
pointed to a seat—another good sign, Miles took it promptly
—finished whatever had been absorbing him, and at last looked up.
He leaned forward to put his elbows on the comconsole and lace his
fingers together, and regarded Miles with a kind of clinical
disapproval, as if he were a data point that messed up the curve, and
Illyan was deciding if he could still save the theory by
re-classifying him as experimental error.
"Ensign
Vorkosigan," Illyan sighed. "It seems you still have a
little problem with subordination."
"I
know, sir. I'm sorry."
"Do you ever
intend to do anything about it besides feel sorry?"
"I
can't help it, sir, if people give me the wrong orders."
"If
you can't obey my orders, I don't want you in my Section."
"Well
. . . I thought I had. You wanted a military evaluation of the Hegen
Hub. I made one. You wanted to know where the destabilization was
coming from. I found out. You wanted the Dendarii Mercenaries out of
the Hub. They'll be leaving in about three more weeks, I understand.
You asked for results. You got them."
"Lots
of them," Illyan murmured.
"I admit, I
didn't have a direct order to rescue Gregor, I just assumed you'd
want it done. Sir."
Illyan searched him for
irony, lips thinning as he apparently found it. Miles tried to keep
his face bland, though out-blanding Illyan was a major effort. "As
I recall," said Illyan (and Illyan's memory was eiditic, thanks
to an Illyrican bio-chip) "I gave those orders to Captain
Ungari. I gave you just one order. Can you remember what it was?"
This inquiry was in the same encouraging tone one might use on a
six-year-old just learning to tie his shoes. Trying to out-irony
Illyan was as dangerous as trying to out-bland him.
"Obey
Captain Ungari's orders," Miles recalled reluctantly.
"Just
so." Illyan leaned back. "Ungari was a good, reliable
operative. If you'd botched it, you'd have taken him down with you.
The man is now half-ruined."
Miles made
little negative motions with his hands. "He made the correct
decisions, for his level. You can't fault him. It's just . . . things
got too important for me to go on playing ensign when the man who was
needed was Lord Vorkosigan." Or
Admiral Naismith.
"Hm,"
Illyan said. "And yet . . . who shall I assign you to now? Which
loyal officer gets his career destroyed next?"
Miles
thought this over. "Why don't you assign me directly to
yourself, sir?"
"Thanks," said
Illyan dryly.
"I didn't mean—" Miles
began to sputter protest, stopped, detecting the oblique gleam of
humor in Illyan's brown eyes. Roasting
me for your sport, are you?
"In
fact, just that proposal has been floated. Not, needless to say, by
me. But a galactic operative must function with a high degree of
independence. We're considering making a virtue of necessity—"
a light on Illyan's comconsole distracted him. He checked something,
and touched a control. The door on the wall to the right of his desk
slid open, and Gregor stepped through. The emperor shed one guard who
stayed in the passageway, the other trod silently through the office
to take up station beyond the antechamber. All doors slid shut.
Illyan rose to pull up a chair for the emperor, and gave him a nod, a
sort of vestigial bow, before reseating himself. Miles, who had also
risen, sketched a salute and sat too.
"Did
you tell him about the Dendarii yet?" Gregor asked Illyan.
"I
was working around to it," said Illyan.
Gradually.
"What about the Dendarii?" Miles asked, unable to keep the
eagerness out of his voice, try though he might for a junior version
of Illyan's impassive surface.
"We've
decided to put them on a permanent retainer," said Illyan. "You,
in your cover identity as Admiral Naismith, will be our liaison
officer."
"Consulting mercenaries?"
Miles blinked. Naismith
lives!
Gregor
grinned. "The Emperor's Own. We owe them, I think something more
than just their base pay for their services to us—and to Us—in
the Hegen Hub. And they have certainly demonstrated the, er, utility
of being able to reach places cut off to our regular forces by
political barriers."
Miles interpreted the
expression on Illyan's face as deep mourning for his Section budget,
rather than disapproval as such.
"Simon
shall be alert for, and pursue, opportunities to use them actively,"
Gregor went on. "We'll need to justify that retainer, after
all."
"I see them as more use in
espionage than covert ops," Illyan put in hastily. "This
isn't a license to go adventuring, or worse, some kind of letter of
marque and reprisal. In fact, the first thing I want you to do is
beef up your intelligence department. I know you're in funds for it.
I'll lend you a couple of my experts."
"Not
bodyguard-puppeteers again, sir?" Miles asked
nervously.
"Shall I ask Captain Ungari if
he wants to volunteer?" inquired Illyan with a repressed ripple
of his lips. "No. You will operate independently. God help us.
After all, if I don't send you someplace else, you'll be right here.
So the scheme has that much merit even if the Dendarii never do
anything."
"I fear it is primarily
your youth, which is the cause of Simon's lack of confidence,"
murmured twenty-five-year-old Gregor. "We
feel it is time he gave up that prejudice."
Yes,
that had been an Imperial We, Miles's Barrayaran-tuned ears did not
deceive him. Illyan had heard it as clearly. The chief leaner, leaned
upon. Illyan's irony this time was tinged with underlying . . .
approval?
"Aral and I have labored twenty
years to put ourselves out of work. We may live long enough to retire
after all." He paused. "That's called 'success' in my
business, boys. I wouldn't object." And under his breath ".
. . get this hellish chip taken out of my head at last. . .
."
"Mm, don't go scouting surfside
retirement cottages just yet," said Gregor. Not caving or
backpedaling or submission, merely an expression of confidence in
Illyan. No more, no less. Gregor glanced at Miles's . . . neck? The
deep bruises from Metzov's grip were almost gone by now, surely.
"Were you still working around to the other thing, too?" he
asked Illyan.
Illyan opened a hand. "Be my
guest." He rummaged in a drawer underneath his
comconsole.
"We—and We—thought we owed
you something more, too, Miles," said Gregor.
Miles
hesitated between a shucks-t'weren't-nothin'
speech and a what-did-you-bring-me?!
and settled on an expression of alert inquiry.
Illyan
reemerged, and tossed Miles something small that flashed red in the
air. "Here. You're a lieutenant. Whatever that means to
you."
Miles caught them between his hands,
the plastic collar rectangles of his new rank. He was so surprised he
said the first thing that came into his head, which was, "Well,
that's a start on the subordination problem."
Illyan
favored him with a driven glower. "Don't get carried away. About
ten percent of ensigns are promoted after their first year of
service. Your Vorish social circle will think it's all nepotism
anyway."
"I know," said Miles
bleakly. But he opened his collar and began switching tabs on the
spot.
Illyan softened slightly. "Your
father will know better, though. And Gregor. And, er . . .
myself."
Miles looked up, to catch his eye
direct for almost the first time this interview. "Thank
you."
"You earned it. You won't get
anything from me you don't earn. That includes the
dressing-downs."
"I'll look forward to
them, sir."