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The haut Vio was staring as if hypnotized at the great glowing dome of the Celestial Garden. Longing for her lost life, Miles wondered? She'd spent years exiled in the hinterlands at Sigma Ceta with her ghem husband. What was she feeling, now? Happy? Homesick?
Some movement or sound from the Barrayarans must have broken her reverie, for her head turned toward them. For a second, just a second, her astonis.h.i.+ng cinnamon eyes seemed copper-metallic with a rage so boundless, Miles's stomach lurched. Then her expression snapped into a smooth hauteur, as blank as the bubble she lacked, and as armored; the open emotion was gone so fast Miles was not sure the other two men had even seen it. But the look was not for them; it had been on her face even as she'd turned, before she could have identified the Barrayarans, blackly dressed in the shadows.
Ivan opened his mouth; Please, no, Miles thought, but Ivan had to try. "Good evening, milady. Wonderful view, eh?"
She hesitated a long moment-Miles pictured her fleeing-but then answered, in a low- pitched, perfectly modulated voice, "There is nothing like it in the universe."
Ivan, encouraged, brightened and moved forward. "Let me introduce myself. I'm Lord Ivan Vorpatril, of Barrayar.... And, uh, this is Amba.s.sador Vorob'yev, and this is my cousin, Lord Miles Vorkosigan. Son of You-know-who, eh?"
Miles winced. Watching Ivan babble in s.e.xual panic would normally be entertaining, if it wasn't so excruciatingly embarra.s.sing. It reminded Miles painfully of-himself. Did I look like that much of a fool, the first time I saw Rian? He feared the answer was yes.
"Yes," said the haut Vio. "I know." Miles had seen people talk to their potted plants with more warmth and expression than the haut Vio turned on Ivan.
Give it up, Ivan, Miles urged silently. This woman is married to the first officer of a guy who maybe tried to kill us yesterday, remember? Unless Lord X was Prince Slyke after all-or the haut Rond, or... Miles ground his teeth.
But before Ivan could dig himself any deeper, a man in Cetagandan military uniform rounded the corner, his face paint crinkling with his frown. Ghem-General Chilian. Miles froze, his hand wrapping Ivan's forearm and biting deep in warning.
Chilian's gaze swept the Barrayarans, his nostrils flaring in suspicion. "Haut Vio," he addressed his wife. "Come with me, please."
"Yes, my lord," she said, her lashes sweeping down demurely, and she escaped around Ivan with a bare nod of farewell. Chilian brought himself to nod also, acknowledging the outlanders' existence; with an effort, Miles felt. The general glanced once back over his shoulder as he whisked his wife away. So what sin had ghem-General Chilian committed to win her?
"Lucky guy," sighed Ivan in envy.
"I'm not so sure," said Miles. Amba.s.sador Vorob'yev just smiled grimly.
They walked on, Miles's brain whirling around this new encounter. Was it accidental? Was it the start of a new setup? Lord X used his human tools like long-handled forks, to keep the heat at a distance. Surely the ghem-general and his wife were too close to him, too obviously connected. Unless, of course, Lord X wasn't Kety after all...
A glow ahead brought Miles's gaze front and center. A haut-bubble was approaching them along the evergreen-bounded walk. Vorob'yev and Ivan stood aside to let it pa.s.s. Instead it stopped in front of Miles.
"Lord Vorkosigan." The woman's voice was melodious even through the filter, but it was not Rian's. "May I speak privately with you?"
"Of course," said Miles, before Vorob'yev could put in an objection. "Where?" Tension shot through him. Was tonight to be his final a.s.sault already, upon the new target of Governor Ilsum Kety's s.h.i.+p? Too premature, still too uncertain... "And for how long?"
"Not far. We will be about an hour."
Not nearly long enough for a trip to orbit; this was something else, then. "Very well. Gentlemen, will you excuse me?"
Vorob'yev looked about as unhappy as his habitual control would allow. "Lord Vorkosigan..." His hesitation was actually a good sign; Vorreedi and he must have had a long and extraordinary talk. "Do you wish a guard?"
"No."
"A comm link?"
"No."
"You will be careful?" Which was diplomatic for Are you sure you know what the h.e.l.l you're doing, boy? "Oh, yes, sir."
"What do we do if you're not back in an hour?" said Ivan.
"Wait." He nodded cordially, and followed the bubble down the garden path.
When they turned into a private nook, lit by low colored lanterns and screened by flowering bushes, the bubble rotated, and abruptly blinked out. Miles found himself facing another haut beauty in white, riding in her float-chair like a throne. This woman's hair was honey-blond, intricately woven and tucked up around her shoulders, vaguely reminiscent of a gilt chain-mail neck guard. He would have guessed her age as forty-standard, which meant she was probably twice that.
"The haut Rian Degtiar instructs me to bring you," she stated. She moved her robes from the left side of the chair, uncovering a thickly padded armrest. "We have not much time." Her gaze seemed to measure his height, or shortness. "You can, um... perch here, and ride."
"How... fascinating." If only she were Rian... But this would test certain theories he had about the mechanical capacities of haut-bubbles, oh yes. "Uh... identification, milady?" he added almost apologetically. The last person he suspected of experiencing such a ride had ended up with its throat cut, after all.
She nodded, as if expecting this, and turned her hand outward, displaying the ring of the Star Creche.
That was probably about as good as they could do, under the circ.u.mstances. Cautiously, he approached, and eased himself aboard, grasping the back of the chair above her head for balance. Each was careful not to actually touch the other. Her long-fingered hand moved over the control panel embedded in the right armrest, and the force-field snapped on again. The pale white light reflected off the flowered bushes, bringing out their color, and cast a glow before them as they began to move down the path.
Their view was quite clear, scarcely impeded by an eggsh.e.l.l-thin, ghostly sphere of mist that marked the boundary of the force-field as seen from this side. Sound too was transmitted with high clarity, much better than the deliberately m.u.f.fled reverse effect. He could hear voices, and the clink of gla.s.sware, from a balcony above. They pa.s.sed Amba.s.sador Vorob'yev and Ivan again, who stared curiously, uncertain, of course, if this was the same bubble they'd seen before. Miles squelched an absurd impulse to wave at them, going by.
They came not to the lift-tube foyer, as Miles had expected, but to the edge of the rooftop garden. Their silver-haired hostess was standing waiting. She nodded at the bubble, and coded open the force-screen, letting the bubble pa.s.s through onto a small private landing pad. The reflected glow off the pavement darkened, as the haut-woman blacked out her bubble. Miles stared upward at the s.h.i.+mmering night sky, looking for the lightflyer or aircar.
Instead, the bubble moved smoothly to the edge of the building and dropped straight over the side.
Miles clutched the seat-back convulsively, trying not to scream, fling his arms around his hostess-pilot's neck, or throw up all over her white dress. They were free-falling, and he hated heights... was this his intended death, his a.s.sa.s.sin sacrificing herself along with him? Oh, G.o.d--!
"I thought these things only went a meter in the air," he choked out, his voice, despite his best efforts, going high and squeaky.
"If you have enough initial alt.i.tude, you can maintain a controlled glide," she said calmly. Despite Miles's horrified first impression, they were not actually dropping like a rock. They were arcing outward, across the boulevards far below, and the light-sparked green rings of parks, toward the dome of the Celestial Garden.
Miles thought wildly of the witch Baba Yaga, from the Barrayaran folk tales, who flew in a magic mortar. This witch didn't qualify as old and ugly. But he was not, at this moment, totally convinced she didn't eat bad children.
In a few minutes, the bubble decelerated again to a smooth walking pace a few centimeters above the pavement outside one of the Celestial Garden's minor entrances. A movement of her finger brought back the white glow.
"Ah," she said, in a refreshed tone. "I haven't done that in years." She almost cracked a smile, for a moment nearly... human.
Miles was shocked when they pa.s.sed through the Celestial dome's security procedures almost as if they weren't there, except for a swift exchange of electronic codes. No one stopped or searched the bubble. The sort of uniformed men who'd shaken down the galactic envoys with beady-eyed thoroughness stood back respectfully, with downcast gaze.
"Why don't they stop us?" Miles whispered, unable to overcome the psychological conviction that if he could see and hear them, they could see and hear him.
"Stop me?" repeated the haut-woman in puzzlement. "I am the haut Pel Navarr, Consort of Eta Ceta. I live here."
Their further progress was happily ground-hugging, if faster than the usual walking-pace, through the increasingly familiar precincts of the Celestial Garden to the low white building with the bio- filters on every window. The haut Pel's pa.s.sage through its automated security procedures was almost as swift and perfunctory as through the dome entrance itself. They pa.s.sed silently down a set of corridors, but turned in a different direction from the labs and offices at the building's heart, and went up one level.
Double doors parted to admit them to a large circular room done in subdued and subduing tones of silvery gray. Unlike any other place he'd seen in the Celestial Garden, it was devoid of living decorations, neither plant nor animal nor any of those disturbing creations in-between. Hushed, concentrated, undistracting... It was a chamber in the Star Creche; he supposed he could dub it the Star Chamber. Eight women in white awaited them, sitting silently in a circle. His stomach should not still be turning over, dammit, the free fall was done.
The haut Pel brought her float-chair to a halt in a waiting empty gap in the circle, grounded it, and switched off the force-bubble. Eight extraordinary pairs of eyes focused on Miles.
No one, he thought, should be exposed to this many haut-women at once. It was some kind of dangerous overdose. Their beauty was varied; three were as silver-haired as the ghem-admiral's wife, one was copper-tressed, one was dark-skinned and hawk-nosed, with ma.s.ses of blue-black ringlets tumbling down around her like a cloak. Two were blonde, his guide with her golden weave and another with hair as pale as oat straw in the sun, and as straight to the floor. One dark-eyed woman had chocolate-brown hair like the haut Vio, but in soft curling clouds instead of bound. And then there was Rian. Their ma.s.sed effect went beyond beauty; where to, he was not sure, but terror came close. He slipped off the arm of the float chair, and stood away from it, grateful for the propping effect of his stiff high boots.
"Here is the Barrayaran to testify," said the haut Rian.
Testify. He was here as a witness, then, not as the accused. A Key witness, so to speak. He stifled a slightly manic giggle. Somehow he did not think Rian would appreciate the pun.
He swallowed, and got his voice unlocked. "You have the advantage of me, ladies." Though he could make a good guess who they all were, at this point. His gaze swept the circle, and he blinked hard against the vertigo. "I have only met your Handmaiden." He nodded toward Rian. On a low table before her the Empress's entire formal regalia was laid out, including the Seal and the false Great Key.
Rian tilted her head in acknowledgment of the reasonableness of his request, and proceeded to go around the circle with a bewildering slug of haut names and t.i.tles-yes, here indeed sat the consorts of the eight satrap planets. With Rian the ninth, sitting in for the late Empress. The creative controllers of the haut-genome, of the would-be master race, were all met here in some extraordinary council.
The chamber was clearly set up for just this purpose; such meetings must also occur when the consorts journeyed home to escort the child-s.h.i.+ps. Miles particularly focused on the consorts of Prince Slyke, Ilsum Kety, and the Rond. Kety's woman, the Consort of Sigma Ceta, was one of the silver-haired ones, closer to being contemporary with the late Empress than anyone else in the room. Rian introduced her as the haut Nadina. The oat-straw blonde served Prince Slyke of Xi Ceta, and the brown-curled woman was the Consort of Rho Ceta. Miles wondered anew at the significance of their t.i.tles, which named them all consorts of their planets, not of the men.
"Lord Vorkosigan," said the haut Rian. "I would like you to repeat for the consorts how you say you came into possession of the false Great Key, and all the subsequent events."
Miles did not blame her in the least for switching strategies from playing all cards close to her chest to calling in reinforcements. It was not before time, in his opinion. But he disliked being taken by surprise. It would have been nice if she'd at least consulted him, first. Yeah? How?
"I take it you understood my message to abort the infiltration of Prince Slyke's s.h.i.+p," he countered.
"Yes. I expect you will explain why, in due order."
"Excuse me, milady. I do not mean to insult... anyone here. But if one of the consorts is a traitoress, in collusion with her satrap governor, this will pipeline everything we know straight to him. How do you know you are entirely among friends?"
There was enough tension in the room to go with any number of treasons, certainly. Rian raised a hand, as if to stem it. "He is an outlander. He cannot understand." She gave him a slow nod. "There is treason, we believe, yes, but not on this level. Further down."
"Oh... ?"
"We have concluded that even with the bank and Key in his hands, the satrap governor could not run the haut-genome by himself. The haut of his satrap would not cooperate with such a sudden usurpation, the overturning of all custom. He must plan to appoint a new consort, one under his own control. We think she has already been selected."
"Ah... do you know who?"
"Not yet," Rian sighed. "Not yet. She is someone, I fear, who does not wholly understand the goal of haut. It is all of a piece. If we knew which governor, we could guess which haut-woman he has suborned; if we knew which woman... well."
Dammit, this triangulation had to break soon. Miles chewed on his lower lip, then said slowly, "Milady. Tell me-if you can-something about how your force-bubbles are keyed to their individual operators, and why everyone is so d.a.m.ned convinced they're dead-secure. The keypad on those control panels looks like a palm-lock, but it can't just be a palm-lock; you can get around palm-locks."
"I cannot give you the technical details, Lord Vorkosigan," said Rian.
"I don't expect you to. Just the general logic of it."
"Well... they are keyed genetically, of course. One brushes one's hand across the pad, leaving a few skin cells. These are sucked in and scanned."
"Does it scan your entire genome? Surely that would take a lot of time."
"No, of course not. It runs through a tree of a dozen or so critical markers that individually identify a haut-woman. Starting with the presence of an X chromosome pair, and going down a branching list until confirmation is achieved."
"How much chance is there of duplicating the markers in two or more individuals?"
"We do not clone ourselves, Lord Vorkosigan."
"I mean, just of the dozen factors, just enough to fool the machine."
"Vanis.h.i.+ngly small."
"Even among closely related members of one's own constellation?"
She hesitated, exchanging a glance with Lady Pel, who raised her brows thoughtfully.
"There's a reason I ask," Miles went on. "When ghem-Colonel Benin interviewed me, he let slip that six haut-bubbles had entered the funeral rotunda during the time period the Ba Lura's body must have been placed at the foot of the bier, and that it presented him with a major puzzle. He didn't tell me which six, but I bet you could get him to disgorge the list. It's a brute-force triage of a major data dump, but-suppose you ran the markers of those six through your records, and checked for accidental duplicates among living haut-women. If the woman is serving the satrap governor, she might have served him in that murder, too. You might finger your traitoress without ever having to leave the Star Creche."
Rian, momentarily alert, sat back with a weary sigh.
"Your reasoning is correct, Lord Vorkosigan. We could do that-if we had the Great Key."
"Oh," said Miles. "Yeah. That." He reverted from an eager parade-rest to a deflated at-ease. "For what it's worth, my strategic a.n.a.lysis and what little physical evidence I've wrung from ghem- Colonel Benin so far suggests either Prince Slyke or the haut Ilsum Kety. With the haut Rond a distant third. But as Rho Ceta and Mu Ceta would bear the brunt of it if open conflict with Barrayar was actually engineered, my own choice has settled pretty firmly between Slyke and Kety. Recent... events point to Kety." He glanced again around the circle. "Is there anything any of the consorts have seen or heard, or overheard, that would help pin him more certainly?"
A murmur of negatives; "Unfortunately, no," said Rian. "We have discussed that problem already this evening. Please begin."
On your head be it, milady. Miles took a deep breath, and launched into the full true account, minus most of his opinions, of his experiences on Eta Ceta from the moment the Ba Lura lurched into their personnel pod. He paused occasionally, to give Rian a chance to hint him away from anything she wanted to conceal. She appeared to want to conceal nothing, instead drawing him on with skillful questions and prompts to disgorge every detail.
Rian had seen, he slowly realized, that the secrecy problem cut two ways. Lord X could a.s.sa.s.sinate Miles, maybe Rian as well. But even the most megalomanic Cetagandan politician must find it excessively challenging to try to get away with disposing of all eight satrap consorts. His voice strengthened.
He felt his underlying a.s.sumptions slowly wringing inside-out. Rian seemed less and less like a damsel in distress all the time. In fact, he was beginning to wonder if he was trying to rescue the dragon. Well, dragons need to be rescued too, sometimes.... n.o.body even blinked at his description of his near- a.s.sa.s.sination the day before. If anything, there was a subliminal murmur of appreciation for its elegance of form and style, and of faintly sympathetic disappointment at its foiling. The judges had no appreciation for the governor's originality in attempting to muscle in on their own territory, though. The Sigma and Xi Cetan consorts looked increasingly stony, exchanging a raised-brow glance or a nod of understanding now and then.
There was a long silence when he'd finished. Time to present Plan B? "I have a suggestion," Miles said boldly. "Recall all the duplicate gene banks from the satrap governors' s.h.i.+ps. If they are all returned, you will have stripped him of his ability to carry out his larger plans. If he resists releasing it, you will have smoked him out."
"Bring them back" said the haut Pel in dismay. "Do you have any idea how much trouble we had getting them up there?"
"But he might take both bank and Key, and flee," objected the brown-curled Consort of Rho Ceta.
"No," said Miles. "That's the one thing he can't do. There are too many Imperially guarded wormhole jumps between him and home. Speaking militarily, open flight is impossible. He'd never make it. He cannot reveal a thing about any of this till he's safely in orbit around... Something Ceta. In a weird way, we have him cornered till the funeral is over." Which will be all too soon, now.
"That still leaves the problem of retrieving the real Key," said Rian.
"Once you have the bank back, you may be able to negotiate the Key's return, in exchange for, say, amnesty. Or you can claim he stole it-perfectly true-and set your own security to get it back for you. Once the other governors are freed of the incriminating evidence they're holding, you may be able to cut him out of the herd, so to speak, with their goodwill. In any case, it will open up a lot of tactical options."
"He may threaten to destroy it," worried the Consort of Sigma Ceta.
"You must know Ilsum Kety better than anyone else here, haut Nadina," said Miles. "Would he?"
"He is... an erratic young man," she said reluctantly. "I am not yet convinced that he is guilty. But I know nothing about him that makes your accusations impossible."
"And your governor, ma'am?" Miles nodded to the Consort of Xi Ceta.
"Prince Slyke is... a determined and brilliant man. The plot you describe is not beyond his capacities. I'm... not sure."
"Well... you can re-create the Great Key, eventually, can't you?" Push or shove, the Empress's great plan would be canned for a generation. A very desirable outcome, from Barrayar's point of view. Miles smiled agreeably.
A faint groan went around the room. "Recovering the Great Key undamaged is the highest priority," Rian said firmly.
"He still wants to frame Barrayar," said Miles. "It may have started as cold-blooded astro- political calculation, but I'm pretty sure it's a personal motivation by now."
"If I recall the banks," said Rian slowly, "we will entirely lose this opportunity to distribute them."
The Consort of Sigma Ceta, the silver-haired Nadina, sighed, "I had hoped to live to see the Celestial Lady's vision of new growth carried out. She was right, you know. I have seen the stagnation increasing in my lifetime."
"Other opportunities will come," said another silver-haired lady.
"It must be done more carefully next time," said the brown-curled Consort of Rho Ceta. "Our Lady trusted the governors too much."