"Lois McMaster Bujold - Miles - 03 - Barrayar" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bujold Lois McMaster - Vorkosigan 02 - Barrayar doc jpg rtf html)BARRAYAR Lois
McMaster Bujold For
Anne and Paul CHAPTER
ONE I am afraid. Cordelia's
hand pushed aside the drape in the third-floor parlor window of Vorkosigan
House. She stared down into the sunlit street below. A long silver groundcar
was pulling into the half-circular drive that serviced the front portico,
braking past the spiked iron fence and the Earth-imported shrubbery. A
government car. The door of the rear passenger compartment swung up, and a man
in a green uniform emerged. Despite her foreshortened view Cordelia recognized
Commander Illyan, brown-haired and hatless as usual. He strode out of sight
under the portico. Guess I don't really need to worry till Imperial Security
comes for us in the middle of the night. But a residue of dread remained,
burrowed in her belly. Why did I ever come here to Barrayar? What have I done
to myself, to my life? Booted footsteps sounded
in the corridor, and the door of the parlor creaked inward. Sergeant Bothari
stuck his head in, and grunted with satisfaction at finding her. "Milady.
Time to go." "Thank you,
Sergeant." She let the drape fall, and turned to inspect herself one last
time in a wall-mounted mirror above the archaic fireplace. Hard to believe
people here still burned vegetable matter just for the release of its
chemically-bound heat. She lifted her chin,
above the stiff white lace collar of her blouse, adjusted the sleeves of her
tan jacket, and kicked her knee absently against the long swirling skirt of a
Vor-class woman, tan to match the jacket. The color comforted her, almost the
same tan as her old Betan Astronomical Survey fatigues. She ran her hands over
her red hair, parted in the middle and held away from her face by two enameled
combs, and flopped it over her shoulders to curl loosely halfway down her back.
Her grey eyes stared back at her from the pale face in the mirror. Nose a
little too bony, chin a shade too long, but certainly a servicable face, good
for all practical purposes. Well, if she wanted to
look dainty, all she had to do was stand next to Sergeant Bothari. He loomed
mournfully beside her, all two meters of him. Cordelia considered herself a
tall woman, but the top of her head was only level with his shoulder. He had a
gargoyle's face, closed, wary, beak-nosed, its lumpiness exaggerated to
criminality by his military-burr haircut. Even Count Vorkosigan's elegant
livery, dark brown with the symbols of the house embroidered in silver, failed
to save Bothari from his astonishing ugliness. But a very good face indeed, for
practical purposes. A liveried retainer.
What a concept. What did he retain? Our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred
honors, for starters. She nodded cordially to him, in the mirror, and about-faced
to follow him through the warren of Vorkosigan House. She must learn her way
around this great pile of a residence as soon as possible. Embarrassing, to be
lost in one's own home, and have to ask some passing guard or servant to
detangle one. In the middle of the night, wearing only a towel. I used to be a
jumpship navigator. Really. If she could handle five dimensions upside, surely
she ought to be able to manage a mere three downside. They came to the head of
a large circular staircase, curving gracefully down three flights to a
black-and-white stone-paved foyer. Her light steps followed Bothari's measured
tread. Her skirts made her feel she was floating, parachuting inexorably down
the spiral. A tall young man,
leaning on a cane at the foot of the stairs, looked up at the echo of their
feet. Lieutenant Koudelka's face was as regular and pleasant as Bothari's was
narrow and strange, and he smiled openly at Cordelia. Even the pain lines at
the corners of his eyes and mouth failed to age that face. He wore Imperial
undress greens, identical but for the insignia to Security Commander Illyan's.
The long sleeves and high neck of his jacket concealed the tracery of thin red
scars that netted half his body, but Cordelia mapped them in her mind's eye.
Nude, Koudelka could pose as a visual aid for a lecture on the structure of the
human nervous system, each scar representing a dead nerve excised and replaced
with artificial silver threads. Lieutenant Koudelka was not quite used to his
new nervous system yet. Speak truth. The surgeons here are ignorant clumsy
butchers. The work was certainly not up to Betan standards. Cordelia permitted
no hint of this private judgment to escape onto her face. Koudelka turned jerkily,
and nodded to Bothari. "Hello, Sergeant. Good morning, Lady
Vorkosigan." Her new name still
seemed strange in her ear, ill-fitting. She smiled back. "Good morning,
Kou. Where's Aral?" "He and Commander
Illyan went into the library, to check out where the new secured comconsole
will be installed. They should be right along. Ah." He nodded, as
footsteps sounded through an archway. Cordelia followed his gaze. Illyan,
slight and bland and polite, flanked—was eclipsed by—a man in his mid-forties
resplendent in Imperial dress greens. The reason she'd come to Barrayar. Admiral Lord Aral
Vorkosigan, retired. Formerly retired, till yesterday. Their lives had surely
been turned upside down, yesterday. We'll land on our feet somehow, you bet.
Vorkosigan's body was stocky and powerful, his dark hair salted with grey. His
heavy jaw was marred by an old L-shaped scar. He moved with compressed energy,
his grey eyes intense and inward, until they lighted on Cordelia. "I give you good
morrow, my lady," he sang out to her, reaching for her hand. The syntax
was self-conscious but the sentiment naked-sincere in his mirror-bright eyes.
In those mirrors, I am altogether beautiful, Cordelia realized warmly. Much
more flattering than that one on the wall upstairs. I shall use them to see myself
from now on. His thick hand was dry and hot, welcome heat, live heat, closing
around her cool tapering fingers. My husband. That fit, as smoothly and tightly
as her hand fit in his, even though her new name, Lady Vorkosigan, still seemed
to slither off her shoulders. She watched Bothari,
Koudelka, and Vorkosigan standing together for that brief moment. The walking
wounded, one, two, three. And me, the lady auxiliary. The survivors. Kou in
body, Bothari in mind, Vorkosigan in spirit, all had taken near-mortal wounds
in the late war at Escobar. Life goes on. March or die. Do we all begin to
recover at last? She hoped so. "Ready to go, dear
Captain?" Vorkosigan asked her. His voice was a baritone, his Barrayaran
accent guttural-warm. "Ready as I'll ever
be, I guess." Illyan and Lieutenant
Koudelka led the way out. Koudelka's walk was a loose-kneed shamble beside
Illyan's brisk march, and Cordelia frowned doubtfully. She took Vorkosigan's
arm, and they followed, leaving Bothari to his Household duties. "What's the
timetable for the next few days?" she asked. "Well, this
audience first, of course," Vorkosigan replied. "After which I see
men. Count Vortala will be choreographing that. In a few days comes the vote of
consent from the full Councils Assembled, and my swearing-in. We haven't had a
Regent in a hundred and twenty years, God knows what protocol they'll dig out
and dust off." Koudelka sat in the
front compartment of the groundcar with the uniformed driver. Commander Illyan
slid in opposite Cordelia and Vorkosigan, facing rearward, in the back
compartment. This car is armored, Cordelia realized from the thickness of the
transparent canopy as it closed over them. At a signal from Illyan to the
driver, they pulled away smoothly into the street. Almost no sound penetrated
from the outside. "Regent-consort,"
Cordelia tasted the phrase. "Is that my official title?" "Yes, Milady,"
said Illyan. "Does it have any
official duties to go with it?" Illyan looked to
Vorkosigan, who said, "Hm. Yes and no. There will be a lot of ceremonies
to attend—grace, in your case. Beginning with the emperors funeral, which will
be grueling for all concerned—except, perhaps, for Emperor Ezar. All that waits
on his last breath. I don't know if he has a timetable for that, but I wouldn't
put it past him. "The social side of
your duties can be as much as you wish. Speeches and ceremonies, important
weddings and name-days and funerals, greeting deputations from the
Districts—public relations, in short. The sort of thing Princess-dowager Kareen
does with such flair." Vorkosigan paused, taking in her appalled look, and
added hastily, "Or, if you choose, you can live a completely private life.
You have the perfect excuse to do so right now—" his hand, around her
waist, secretly caressed her still-flat belly, "—and in fact I'd rather
you didn't spend yourself too freely." "More importantly,
on the political side ... I'd like it very much if you could be my liaison with
the Princess-dowager, and the ... child emperor. Make friends with her, if you
can; she's an extremely reserved woman. The boy's upbringing is vital. We must
not repeat Ezar Vorbarra's mistakes." "I can give it a
try," she sighed. "I can see it's going to be quite a job, passing
for a Barrayaran Vor." "Don't bend
yourself painfully. I shouldn't like to see you so constricted. Besides,
there's another angle." "Why doesn't that
surprise me? Go ahead." He paused, choosing his
words. "When the late Crown Prince Serg called Count Vortala a phoney
progressive, it wasn't altogether nonsense. Insults that sting always have some
truth in them. Count Vortala has been trying to form his progressive party in
the upper classes only. Among the people who matter, as he would say. You see
the little discontinuity in his thinking?" "About the size of
Hogarth Canyon back home? Yes." "You are a Betan, a
woman of galactic-wide reputation." "Oh, come on
now." "You are seen so
here. I don't think you quite realize how you are perceived. Very flattering
for me, as it happens." "I hoped I was
invisible. But I shouldn't think I'd be too popular, after what we did to your
side at Escobar." "It's our culture.
My people will forgive a brave soldier almost anything. And you, in your
person, unite two of the opposing factions—the aristocratic military, and the pro-galactic
plebians. I really think I could pull the whole middle out of the People's
Defense League through you, if you're willing to play my cards for me." "Good heavens. How
long have you been thinking about this?" "The problem, long.
You as part of the solution, just today." "What, casting me
as figurehead for some sort of constitutional party?" "No, no. That is
just the sort of thing I will be sworn, on my honor, to prevent. It would not
fulfill the spirit of my oath to hand over to Prince Gregor an emperorship
gutted of power. What I want ... what I want is to find some way of pulling the
best men, from every class and language group and party, into the Emperor's
service. The Vor have simply too small a pool of talent. Make the government
more like the military at its best, with ability promoted regardless of
background. Emperor Ezar tried to do something like that, by strengthening the
Ministries at the expense of the Counts, but it swung too far. The Counts are
eviscerated and the Ministries are corrupt. There must be some way to strike a
balance." Cordelia sighed. "I
guess we'll just have to agree to disagree, about constitutions. Nobody
appointed me Regent of Barrayar. I warn you, though—I'll keep trying to change
your mind." Illyan raised his brow at
this. Cordelia sat back wanly, and watched the Barrayaran capital city of
Vorbarr Sultana pass by through the thick canopy. She hadn't married the Regent
of Barrayar, four months back. She'd married a simple retired soldier. Yes, men
were supposed to change after marriage, usually for the worse, but—this much?
This fast? This isn't the duty I signed up for, sir. "That's quite a
gesture of trust Emperor Ezar placed in you yesterday, appointing you Regent. I
don't think he's such a ruthless pragmatist as you'd have me believe," she
remarked. "Well, it is a
gesture of trust, but driven by necessity. You didn't catch the significance of
Captain Negri's assignment to the Princess's household, then." "No. Was there
one?" "Oh, yes, a very
clear message. Negri is to continue right on in his old job as Chief of
Imperial Security. He will not, of course, be making his reports to a
four-year-old boy, but to me. Commander Illyan will in fact merely be his
assistant." Vorkosigan and Illyan exchanged mildly ironic nods. "But
there is no question where Negri's loyalties will lie, in case I should, um,
run mad and make a bid for Imperial power in name as well as fact. He
unquestionably has secret orders to dispose of me, in that event." "Oh. Well, I
guarantee I have no desire whatsoever to be Empress of Barrayar. Just in case
you were wondering." "I didn't think
so." The groundcar paused at
a gate in a stone wall. Four guards inspected them thoroughly, checked Illyan's
passes, and waved them through. All those guards, here, at Vorkosigan
House—what did they guard against? Other Barrayarans, presumably, in the
faction-fractured political landscape. A very Barrayaran phrase the old Count
had used that tickled her humor now ran, disquieting, through her memory. With
all this manure around, there's got to be a pony someplace. Horses were
practically unknown on Beta Colony, except for a few specimens in zoos. With
all these guards around ... But if I'm not anyone's enemy, how can anyone be my
enemy? Illyan, who had been
shifting in his seat, now spoke up. "I would suggest, sir," he said
tentatively to Vorkosigan, "even beg, that you re-consider and take up
quarters here at the Imperial Residence. Security problems—my problems,"
he smiled slightly, bad for his image, with his snub features it made him look
puppyish, "will be very much easier to control here." "What suite did you
have in mind?" asked Vorkosigan. "Well, when ...
Gregor succeeds, he and his mother will be moving into the Emperor's suite.
Kareen's rooms will then be vacant." "Prince Serg's, you
mean." Vorkosigan looked grim. "I ... think I would prefer to take
official residence at Vorkosigan House. My father spends more and more time in
the country at Vorkosigan Surleau these days, I don't think he'll mind being
shifted." "I can't really
endorse that idea, sir. Strictly from a security standpoint. It's in the old
part of town. The streets are warrens. There are at least three sets of old
tunnels under the area, from old sewage and transport systems, and there are
too many new tall buildings overlooking that have, er, commanding views. It
will take at least six full-time patrols for the most cursory protection." "Do you have the
men?" "Well, yes." "Vorkosigan House,
then." Vorkosigan consoled Illyan's disappointed look. "It may be bad
security, but it's very good public relations. It will give an excellent air
of, ah, soldierly humility to the new Regency. Should help reduce palace coup
paranoia." And here they were at
the very palace in question. As an architectural pile, the Imperial Residence
made Vorkosigan House look small. Sprawling wings rose two to four stories
high, accented with sporadic towers. Additions of different ages crisscrossed
each other to create both vast and intimate courts, some justly proportioned, some
rather accidental-looking. The east facade was of the most uniform style, heavy
with stone carving. The north side was more cut-up, interlocking with elaborate
formal gardens. The west was the oldest, the south the newest construction. The groundcar pulled up
to a two-story porch on the south side, and Illyan led them past more guards
and up wide stone stairs to an extensive second-floor suite. They climbed
slowly, matching steps to Lieutenant Koudelka's awkward pace. Koudelka glanced
up with a self-conscious apologetic frown, then bent his head again in
concentration—or shame? Doesn't this place have a lift tube? Cordelia wondered
irritably. On the other side of this stone labyrinth, in a room with a northern
view of the gardens, a white old man lay drained and dying on his enormous
ancestral bed ... In the spacious upper
corridor, softly carpeted and decorated with paintings and side tables
cluttered with knickknacks—objets d'art, Cordelia supposed—they found Captain
Negri talking in low tones with a woman who stood with her arms folded.
Cordelia had met the famous, or infamous, Chief of Barrayaran Imperial Security
for the first time yesterday, after Vorkosigan's historic job interview in the
northern wing with the soon-to-be-late Ezar Vorbarra. Negri was a hard-faced,
hard-bodied, bullet-headed man who had served his emperor, body and blood, for
the better part of forty years, a sinister legend with unreadable eyes. Now he bowed over her
hand and called her "Milady" as if he meant it, or at least no more tinged
with irony than any of his other statements. The alert blonde woman—girl?—wore
an ordinary civilian dress. She was tall and heavily muscled, and she looked
back at Cordelia with even greater interest. Vorkosigan and Negri
exchanged curt greetings in the telegraphic style of two men who had been
communicating for so long all of the amenities had been compressed into some
kind of tight-burst code. "And this is Miss Droushnakovi." Negri did
not so much introduce as label the woman for Cordelia's benefit, with a wave of
his hand. "And what's a
Droushnakovi?" asked Cordelia lightly and somewhat desperately. Everybody
always seemed to get briefed around here but her, though Negri had also failed
to introduce Lieutenant Koudelka; Koudelka and Droushnakovi glanced covertly at
each other. "I'm a Servant of
the Inner Chamber, Milady." Droushnakovi gave her a ducking nod, half a
curtsey. "And what do you serve? Besides the chamber." "Princess Kareen,
Milady. That's just my official title. I'm listed on Captain Negri's staff
budget as Bodyguard, Class One." It was hard to tell which title gave her
the more pride and pleasure, but Cordelia suspected it was the latter. "I'm sure you must
be good, to be so ranked by him." This won a smile, and a
"Thank you, Milady. I try." They all followed Negri through a nearby
door to a long, sunny yellow room with lots of south-facing windows. Cordelia
wondered if the eclectic mix of furnishings were priceless antiques, or merely
shabby seconds. She couldn't tell. A woman waited on a yellow silk settee at
the far end, watching them gravely as they trooped toward her en masse. Princess-dowager Kareen
was a thin, strained-looking woman of thirty with elaborately dressed,
beautiful dark hair, though her grey gown was of a simple cut. Simple but
perfect. A dark-haired boy of four or so was sprawled on the floor on his
stomach muttering to his cat-sized toy stegosaurus, which muttered back. She
made him get up and turn off the robot toy, and sit beside her, though his
hands still clutched the leathery stuffed beast in his lap. Cordelia was
relieved to see the boy prince was sensibly dressed for his age in
comfortable-looking play clothes. In formal phrases, Negri
introduced Cordelia to the princess and Prince Gregor. Cordelia wasn't sure
whether to bow, curtsey, or salute, and ended up ducking her head rather like
Droushnakovi. Gregor, solemn, stared at her most doubtfully, and she tried to
smile back in what she hoped was a reassuring way. Vorkosigan went down on
one knee in front of the boy—only Cordelia saw Aral swallow—and said, "Do
you know who I am, Prince Gregor?" Gregor shrank a little
against his mother's side, and glanced up at her. She nodded encouragement.
"Lord Aral Vorkosigan," Gregor said in a thin voice. Vorkosigan gentled his
tone, relaxed his hands, self-consciously trying to dampen his usual intensity.
"Your grandfather has asked me to be your Regent. Has anybody explained to
you what that means?" Gregor shook his head
mutely; Vorkosigan quirked a brow at Negri, a whiff of censure. Negri did not
change expression. "That means I will
do your grandfathers job until you are old enough to do it yourself, when you
turn twenty. The next sixteen years. I will look after you and your mother in
your grandfather's place, and see that you get the education and training to do
a good job, like your grandfather did. Good government." Did the kid even know
yet what a government was? Vorkosigan had been careful not to say, in your
father's place, Cordelia noted dryly. Careful not to mention Crown Prince Serg
at all. Serg was well on his way to being disappeared from Barrayaran history,
it seemed, as thoroughly as he had been vaporized in orbital battle. "For now,"
Vorkosigan continued, "your job is to study hard with your tutors and do
what your mother tells you. Can you do that?" Gregor swallowed,
nodded. "I think you can do
well." Vorkosigan gave him a firm nod, identical to the ones he gave his
staff officers, and rose. I think you can do well
too, Aral, Cordelia thought. "While you are here,
sir," Negri began after a short wait to be certain he wasn't stepping on
some further word, "I wish you would come down to Ops. There are two or
three reports I'd like to present. The latest from Darkoi seems to indicate
that Count Vorlakail was dead before his Residence was burned, which throws a
new light—or shadow—on that matter. And then there is the problem of revamping
the Ministry of Political Education—" "Dismantling,
surely," Vorkosigan muttered. "As may be. And, as
ever, the latest sabotage from Komarr ..." "I get the picture.
Let's go. Cordelia, ah ..." "Perhaps Lady
Vorkosigan would care to stay and visit a while," Princess Kareen murmured
on cue, with only a faint trace of irony. Vorkosigan shot her a
look of gratitude. "Thank you, Milady." She absently stroked her
fine lips with one finger, as all the men trooped out, relaxing slightly as
they exited. "Good. I'd hoped to have you all to myself." Her
expression grew more animated, as she regarded Cordelia. At a wordless touch,
the boy slid off the bench and returned, with backward glances, to his play. Droushnakovi frowned
down the room. "What was the matter with that lieutenant?" she asked
Cordelia. "Lieutenant
Koudelka was hit by nerve disruptor fire," Cordelia said stiffly,
uncertain if the girl's odd tone concealed some land of disapproval. "A
year ago, when he was serving Aral aboard the General Vorkraft. The
neural repairs do not seem to be quite up to galactic standard." She shut
her mouth, afraid of seeming to criticize her hostess. Not that Princess Kareen
was responsible for Barrayar's dubious standards of medical practice. "Oh. Not during the
Escobar war?" said Droushnakovi. "Actually, in a
weird sense, it was the opening shot of the Escobar war. Though I suppose you
would call it friendly fire." Mind-boggling oxymoron, that phrase. "Lady Vorkosigan—or
should I say, Captain Naismith—was there," remarked Princess Kareen.
"She should know." Cordelia found her
expression hard to read. How many of Negri's famous reports was the princess privy
to? "How terrible for
him! He looks as though he had been very athletic," said the bodyguard. "He was."
Cordelia smiled more favorably at the girl, relaxing her defensive hackles.
"Nerve disruptors are filthy weapons, in my opinion." She scrubbed
absently at the sense-dead spot on her thigh, disruptor-burned by no more than
the nimbus of a blast that had fortunately not penetrated subcutaneous fat to
damage muscle function. Clearly, she should have had it fixed before she'd left
home. "Sit, Lady Vorkosigan."
Princess Kareen patted the settee beside her, just vacated by the
emperor-to-be. "Drou, will you please take Gregor to his lunch?" Droushnakovi nodded
understandingly, as if she had received some coded underlayer to this simple
request, gathered up the boy, and walked out hand in hand with him. His
child-voice drifted back, "Droushie, can I have a cream cake? And one for
Steggie?" Cordelia sat gingerly,
thinking about Negri's reports, and Barrayaran disinformation about their
recent aborted campaign to invade the planet Escobar. Escobar, Beta Colony's
good neighbor and ally ... the weapons that had disintegrated Crown Prince Serg
and his ship high above Escobar had been bravely convoyed through the
Barrayaran blockade by one Captain Cordelia Naismith, Betan Expeditionary
Force. That much truth was plain and public and not to be apologized for. It
was the secret history, behind the scenes in the Barrayaran high command, that
was so ... treacherous, Cordelia decided, was the precise word. Dangerous, like
ill-stored toxic waste. To Cordelia's
astonishment, Princess Kareen leaned over, took her right hand, lifted it to
her lips, and kissed it hard. "I swore,"
said Kareen thickly, "that I would kiss the hand that slew Ges Vorrutyer.
Thank you. Thank you." Her voice was breathy, earnest, tear-caught,
grateful emotion naked in her face. She sat up, her face growing reserved
again, and nodded. "Thank you. Bless you." "Uh ..."
Cordelia rubbed at the kissed spot. "Um ... I ... this honor belongs to
another, Milady. I was present, when Admiral Vorrutyer's throat was cut, but it
was not by my hand." Kareen's hands clenched
in her lap, and her eyes glowed. "Then it was Lord Vorkosigan!" "No!"
Cordelias lips compressed in exasperation. "Negri should have given you
the true report. It was Sergeant Bothari. Saved my life, at the time." "Bothari?"
Kareen sat bolt upright in astonishment. "Bothari the monster, Bothari,
Vorrutyer's mad batman?" "I don't mind
getting blamed in his place, ma'am, because if it had become public they'd have
been forced to execute him for murder and mutiny, and this gets him off and
out. But I ... but I should not steal his praise. I'll pass it on to him if you
wish, but I'm not sure he remembers the incident. He went through some
draconian mind-therapy after the war, before they discharged him—what you
Barrayarans call therapy"—on a par with their neurosurgery, Cordelia
feared, "and I gather he wasn't exactly, uh, normal before that,
either." "No," said
Kareen. "He was not. I thought he was Vorrutyer's creature." "He chose ... he
chose to be otherwise. I think it was the most heroic act I've ever witnessed.
Out of the middle of that swamp of evil and insanity, to reach for ..."
Cordelia trailed off, embarrassed to say, reach for redemption. After a pause
she asked, "Do you blame Admiral Vorrutyer for Prince Serg's, uh,
corruption?" As long as they were clearing the air ... Nobody mentions
Prince Serg. He thought to take a bloody shortcut to the Imperium, and now he's
just ... disappeared. "Ges Vorrutyer
..." Kareen's hands twisted, "found a like-minded friend in Serg. A
fertile follower, in his vile amusements. Maybe not... all Vorrutyer's fault. I
don't know." An honest answer,
Cordelia sensed. Kareen added lowly, "Ezar protected me from Serg, after I
became pregnant. I had not even seen my husband for over a year, when he was
killed at Escobar." Perhaps I will not
mention Prince Serg again either. "Ezar was a powerful protector. I hope
Aral may do as well," Cordelia offered. Ought she to refer to Emperor Ezar
in the past tense already? Everybody else seemed to. Kareen came back from
some absence, and shook herself to focus. "Tea, Lady Vorkosigan?" She
smiled. She touched a comm link, concealed in a jeweled pin on her shoulder,
and gave domestic orders. Apparently the private interview was over. Captain
Naismith must now try to figure out how Lady Vorkosigan should take tea with a
princess. Gregor and the bodyguard
reappeared about the time the cream cakes were being served, and Gregor set
about successfully charming the ladies for a second helping. Kareen drew the
line firmly at thirds. Prince Serg's son seemed an utterly normal boy, if quiet
around strangers. Cordelia watched him with Kareen with deep personal interest.
Motherhood. Everybody did it. How hard could it be? "How do you like
your new home so far, Lady Vorkosigan?" the princess inquired, making
polite conversation. Tea-table stuff; no naked faces now. Not in front of the
children. Cordelia thought it
over. "The country place, south at Vorkosigan Surleau, is just beautiful.
That wonderful lake—it's bigger than any open body of water on the whole of
Beta Colony, yet Aral just takes it for granted. Your planet is beautiful
beyond measure." Your planet. Not my planet? In a free-association test,
"home" still triggered "Beta Colony" in Cordelia's mind.
Yet she could have rested in Vorkosigan's arms by the lake forever. "The capital
here—well, it's certainly more varied than anything we have at ho—on Beta
Colony. Although," she laughed self-consciously, "there seem to be so
many soldiers. Last time I was surrounded by that many green uniforms, I was in
a POW camp." "Do we still look
like the enemy to you?" asked the princess curiously. "Oh—you all stopped
looking like the enemy to me even before the war was over. Just assorted
victims, variously blind." "You have
penetrating eyes, Lady Vorkosigan." The princess sipped tea, smiling into
her cup. Cordelia blinked. "Vorkosigan House
does tend to a barracks atmosphere, when Count Piotr is in residence,"
Cordelia commented. "All his liveried men. I think I've seen a couple of
women servants so far, whisking around corners, but I haven't caught one yet. A
Barrayaran barracks, that is. My Betan service was a different sort of
thing." "Mixed," said
Droushnakovi. Was that the light of envy in her eyes? "Women and men both
serving." "Assignment by
aptitude test," Cordelia agreed. "Strictly. Of course the more
physical jobs are skewed to the men, but there doesn't seem to be that strange
obsessive status-thing attached to them." "Respect,"
sighed Droushnakovi. "Well, if people
are laying their lives on the line for their community, they ought certainly to
get its respect," Cordelia said equably. "I do miss my—my
sister-officers, I guess. The bright women, the techs, like my pool of friends
at home." There was that tricky word again, home. "There have to be
bright women around here somewhere, with all these bright men. Where are they
hiding?" Cordelia shut her mouth, as it suddenly occurred to her that
Kareen might mistakenly construe this remark as a slur on herself. Adding
present company excepted would put her foot in it for sure, though. But if Kareen so
construed, she kept it to herself, and Cordelia was rescued from further
potential social embarrassment by the return of Aral and Illyan. They all made
polite farewells, and returned to Vorkosigan House. That evening Commander
Illyan popped in to Vorkosigan House with Droushnakovi in tow. She clutched a
large valise, and gazed about her with starry-eyed interest. "Captain Negri is
assigning Miss Droushnakovi to the Regent-consort for her personal
security," Illyan explained briefly. Aral nodded approval. Later, Droushnakovi
handed Cordelia a sealed note on thick cream paper. Brows rising, Cordelia
broke it open. The handwriting was small and neat, the signature legible and
without flourishes. With my compliments, it read. She will
suit you well. Kareen. CHAPTER
TWO The next morning
Cordelia awoke to find Vorkosigan already gone, and herself facing her first
day on Barrayar without his supportive company. She decided to devote it to the
shopping project that had occurred to her while watching Koudelka negotiate the
spiral staircase last night. She suspected Droushnakovi would be the ideal
native guide for what she had in mind. She dressed and went
hunting for her bodyguard. Finding her was not difficult; Droushnakovi was
seated in the hall, just outside the bedroom door, and popped to attention at
Cordelia's appearance. The girl really ought to be wearing a uniform, Cordelia
reflected. The dress she wore made her near-six-foot frame and excellent
musculature look heavy. Cordelia wondered if, as Regent-consort, she might be
permitted her own livery, and bemused herself through breakfast mentally
designing one that would set off the girl's Valkyrie good looks. "Do you know,
you're the first female Barrayaran guard I've met," Cordelia commented to
her over her egg and coffee, and a kind of steamed native groats with butter,
evidently a morning staple here. "How did you get into this line of
work?" "Well, I'm not a
real guard, like the liveried men—" Ah, the magic of
uniforms again. "—but my father and
all three of my brothers are in the Service. It's as close as I can come to
being a real soldier, like you." Army-mad, like the rest
of Barrayar. "Yes?" "I used to study
judo, for sport, when I was younger. But I was too big for the women's classes.
Nobody could give me any real practice, and besides, doing all katas was so
dull. My brothers used to sneak me into the men's classes with them. One thing
led to another. I was all-Barrayar women's champion two years running, when I
was in school. Then three years ago a man from Captain Negri's staff approached
my father with a job offer for me. That's when I had weapons training. It
seemed the Princess had been asking for female guards for years, but they had a
lot of trouble getting anyone who could pass all the tests. Although," she
smiled self-depreciatingly, "the lady who assassinated Admiral Vorrutyer
could scarcely be supposed to need my poor services." Cordelia bit her tongue.
"Um. I was lucky. Besides, I'd rather stay out of the physical end of
things just now. Pregnant, you know." "Yes, Milady. It
was in one of Captain—" "Negri's
reports," Cordelia finished in unison with her. "I'm sure it was. He
probably knew before I did." "Yes, Milady." "Were you much
encouraged in your interests, as a child?" "Not ... really.
Everyone thought I was just odd." She frowned deeply, and Cordelia had the
sense of stirring up a painful memory. She regarded the girl
thoughtfully. "Older brothers?" Droushnakovi returned a
wide blue gaze. "Why, yes." "Figured." And
I feared Barrayar for what it did to its sons. No wonder they have trouble
getting anyone to pass the tests. "So, you've had weapons training.
Excellent. You can guide me on my shopping trip today." A slightly glazed look
crept over Droushnakovi's face. "Yes, Milady. What
sort of clothing do you wish to look at?" she asked politely, not quite
concealing a glum disappointment with the interests of her "real"
lady soldier. "Where in this town
would you go to buy a really good swordstick?" The glazed look
vanished. "Oh, I know just the place, where the Vor officers go, and the
counts, to supply their liveried men. That is—I've never been inside. My
family's not Vor, so of course we're not permitted to own personal weapons.
Just Service issue. But it's supposed to be the best." One of Count
Vorkosigan's liveried guards chauffeured them to the shop. Cordelia relaxed and
enjoyed the view of the passing city. Droushnakovi, on duty, kept alert, eyes
constantly checking the crowds all around. Cordelia had the feeling she didn't
miss much. From time to time her hand wandered to check the stunner worn
concealed on the inside of her embroidered bolero. They turned into a clean
narrow street of older buildings with cut stone fronts. The weapons shop was
marked only by its name, Siegling's, in discreet gold letters. Evidently if you
didn't know where you were you shouldn't be there. The liveried man waited
outside when Cordelia and Droushnakovi entered the shop, a thick-carpeted,
wood-grained place with a little of the aroma of the armory Cordelia remembered
from her Survey ship, an odd whiff of home in an alien place. She stared
covertly at the wood paneling, and mentally translated its value into Betan
dollars. A great many Betan dollars. Yet wood seemed almost as common as
plastic, here, and as little regarded. Those personal weapons which were legal
for the upper classes to own were elegantly displayed in cases and on the
walls. Besides stunners and hunting weapons, there was an impressive array of
swords and knives; evidently the Emperor's ferocious edicts against dueling
only forbade their use, not their possession. The clerk, a
narrow-eyed, soft-treading older man, came up to them. "What may I do for
you ladies?" He was cordial enough. Cordelia supposed Vor-class women must
sometimes enter here, to buy presents for their masculine relations. But he
might have said, What may I do for you children? in the same tone of voice.
Diminutization by body language? Let it go. "I'm looking for a
swordstick, for a man about six-foot-four. Should be about, oh, yea long,"
she estimated, calling up Koudelka's arm and leg length in her mind's eye, and
gesturing to the height of her hip. "Spring-sheathed, probably." "Yes, madam."
The clerk disappeared, and returned with a sample, in an elaborately carved
light wood. "Looks a bit ... I
don't know." Flashy. "How does it work?" The clerk demonstrated
the spring mechanism. The wooden sheathing dropped off, revealing a long thin
blade. Cordelia held out her hand, and the clerk, rather relucluntly, handed it
over for inspection. She wriggled it a
little, sighted down the blade, and handed it to her bodyguard. "What do
you think?" Droushnakovi smiled
first, then frowned doubtfully. "It's not very well balanced." She
glanced uncertainly at the clerk. "Remember, you're
working for me, not him," said Cordelia, correctly identifying
class—consciousness in action. "I don't think it's
a very good blade." "That's excellent
Darkoi workmanship, madam," the clerk defended coolly. Smiling, Cordelia took
it back. "Let us test your hypothesis." She raised the blade
suddenly to the salute, and lunged at the wall in a neat extension. The tip penetrated
and caught in the wood, and Cordelia leaned on it. The blade snapped. Blandly,
she handed the pieces back to the clerk. "How do you stay in business if
your customers don't survive long enough for repeat sales? Siegling's certainly
didn't acquire its reputation selling toys like that. Bring me something a
decent soldier can carry, not a pimp's plaything." "Madam," said
the clerk stiffly, "I must insist the damaged merchandise be paid
for." Cordelia, thoroughly
irritated, said, "Very well. Send the bill to my husband. Admiral Aral
Vorkosigan, Vorkosigan House. While you're about it you can explain why you
tried to pass off sleaze on his wife—Yeoman." This last was a guess, based
on his age and walk, but she could tell from his eyes she'd struck home. The clerk bowed
profoundly. "I beg pardon, Milady. I believe I have something more
suitable, if Milady will be pleased to wait." He vanished again, and
Cordelia sighed. "Buying from machines is so much easier. But at least the
Appeal to the Irrelevant Authorities at Headquarters works just as well here as
at home." The next sample was a
plain dark wood, with a finish like satin. The clerk handed it to her unopened,
with another little bow. "You press the handle there, Milady." It was
much heavier than the first swordstick. The sheathing sprang away at velocity,
landing against the wall on the other side of the room with a satisfying thunk,
almost a weapon in itself. Cordelia sighted down the blade again. A strange
watermark pattern down its length shifted in the light. She saluted the wall
once more, and caught the clerk's eye. "Do these come out of your
salary?" "Go ahead,
Milady." There was a little gleam of satisfaction in his eye. "You
can't break that one." She gave it the same
test as she had the other. The tip went much further into the wood, and leaning
against it with all her strength, she could barely bend it. Even so, there was
more bend left in it; she could feel she was nowhere near the limit of its
tensile strength. She handed it to Droushnakovi, who examined it lovingly.
"That's fine, Milady. That's worthy." "I'm sure it will
be used more as a stick than as a sword. Nevertheless ... it should indeed be
worthy. We'll take this one." As the clerk wrapped it,
Cordelia lingered over a case of enamel-decorated stunners. "Thinking of buying
one for yourself, Milady?" asked Droushnakovi. "I ... don't think
so. Barrayar has enough soldiers, without importing them from Beta Colony.
Whatever I'm here for, it isn't soldiering. See anything you want?" Droushnakovi looked
wistful, but shook her head, her hand going to her bolero. "Captain
Negri's equipment is the best. Even Siegling's doesn't have anything better,
just prettier." They sat down three to
dinner that night, late, Vorkosigan, Cordelia, and Lieutenant Koudelka.
Vorkosigan's new personal secretary looked a little tired. "What did you two
do all day?" asked Cordelia. "Herded men,
mostly," answered Vorkosigan. "Prime Minister Vortala had a few votes
that weren't as much in the bag as he claimed, and we worked them over, one or
two at a time, behind closed doors. What you'll see tomorrow in the Council
chambers isn't Barrayaran politics at work, just their result. Were you all
right today?" "Fine. Went
shopping. Wait'll you see." She produced the swordstick, and stripped off
the wrapping. "Just to help keep you from running Kou completely into the
ground." Koudelka looked politely
grateful, over a more fundamental irritation. His look changed to one of
surprise as he took the stick and nearly dropped it from the unexpected weight.
"Hey! This isn't—" "You press the
handle there. Don't point it—!" Thwack! "—at the
window." Fortunately, the sheath struck the frame, and bounced back with a
clatter. Kou and Aral both jumped. Koudelka's eyes lit up
as he examined the blade, while Cordelia retrieved the sheath. "Oh,
Milady!" Then his face fell. He carefully resheathed it, and handed it
back sadly. "I guess you didn't realize. I'm not Vor. It's not legal for
me to own a private sword." "Oh." Cordelia
was crestfallen. Vorkosigan raised an
eyebrow. "May I see that, Cordelia?" He looked it over, unsheathing
it more cautiously. "Hm. Am I right in guessing I paid for this?" "Well, you will, I
suppose, when the bill arrives. Although I don't think you should pay for the
one I broke. I might as well take it back, though." "I see." He
smiled a little. "Lieutenant Koudelka, as your commanding officer and a
vassal secundus to Ezar Vorbarra, I am officially issuing you this weapon of
mine, to carry in the service of the Emperor, long may he rule." The
unavoidable irony of the formal phrase tightened his mouth, but he shook off
the blackness, and handed the stick back to Koudelka, who bloomed again.
"Thank you, sir!" Cordelia just shook her
head. "I don't believe I'll ever understand this place." "I'll have Kou find
you some legal histories. Not tonight, though. He has barely time to put his
notes from today in order before Vortala's due here with a couple more of his
strays. You can take over part of the Count my father's library, Kou; we'll
meet in there." Dinner broke up.
Koudelka retreated to the library to work, while Vorkosigan and Cordelia
retired to the drawing room next to it to read, before Vorkosigan's evening
meeting. He had yet more reports, which he ran rapidly through a hand viewer.
Cordelia divided her time between a Barrayaran Russian phrase earbug, and an
even more intimidating disk on child care. The silence was broken by an
occasional mutter from Vorkosigan, more to himself than her, of phrases like, "Ah
ha! So that's what the bastard was really up to," or "Damn, those
figures are strange. Got to check it out... ." Or from Cordelia, "Oh,
my, I wonder if all babies do that," and a periodic thwack! penetrating
the wall from the library, which caused them to look up at each other and burst
out laughing. "Oh, dear,"
said Cordelia, after the third or fourth of these. "I hope I haven't
distracted him unduly from his duties." "He'll do all
right, when he settles down. Vorbarra's personal secretary has taken him in hand,
and is showing him how to organize himself. After Kou follows him through the
funeral protocol, he should be able to tackle anything. That swordstick was a
stroke of genius, by the way; thank you." "Yes, I noticed he
was pretty touchy about his handicaps. I thought it might unruffle his feathers
a little." "It's our society.
It tends to be ... rather hard on anyone who can't keep up." "I see. Strange ...
now that you mention it, I don't recall seeing any but healthy-looking people,
on the streets and so on, except at the hospital. No float chairs, none of
those vacuous faces in the tow of their parents ..." "Nor will
you." Vorkosigan looked grim. "Any problems that are detectable are
eliminated before birth." "Well, we do that,
too. Though usually before conception." "Also at birth. And
after, in the backcountry." "Oh." "As for the maimed
adults ..." "Good heavens, you
don't practice euthanasia on them, do you?" "Your Ensign
Dubauer would not have lived, here." Dubauer had taken
disruptor fire to the head, and survived. Sort of. "As for injuries
like Koudelka's, or worse ... the social stigma is very great. Watch him in a
larger group sometime, not his close friends. It's no accident that the suicide
rate among medically discharged soldiers is high." "That's
horrible." "I took it for
granted, once. Now ... not anymore. But many people still do." "What about
problems like Bothari's?" "It depends. He was
a usable madman. For the unusable ..." he trailed off, staring at his
boots. Cordelia felt cold.
"I keep thinking I'm beginning to adjust to this place. Then I go around
another corner and run headlong into something like that." "It's only been
eighty years since Barrayar made contact with the wider galactic civilization
again. It wasn't just technology we lost, in the Time of Isolation. That we put
back on again quickly, like a borrowed coat. But underneath it ... we're still
pretty damned naked in places. In forty-four years, I've only begun to see how
naked." Count Vortala and his
"strays" came in soon after, and Vorkosigan vanished into the
library. The old Count Piotr Vorkosigan, Aral's father, arrived from his
District later that evening, come up to attend the full Council vote.
"Well, that's one vote he's assured of tomorrow," Cordelia joked to
her father-in-law, helping him get stiffly out of his jacket in the stone-paved
foyer. "Ha. He's lucky to
get it. He's picked up some damned peculiar radical notions in the last few
years. If he wasn't my son, he could whistle for it." But Piotr's seamed
face looked proud. Cordelia blinked at this
description of Aral Vorkosigan's political views. "I confess, I've never
thought of him as a revolutionary. Radical must be a more elastic term than I
thought." "Oh, he doesn't see
himself that way. He thinks he can go halfway, and then stop. I think he'll
find himself riding a tiger, a few years down the road." The count shook
his head grimly. "But come, my girl, and sit down and tell me that you're
well. You look well—is everything all right?" The old count was
passionately interested in the development of his grandson-to-be. Cordelia
sensed her pregnancy had raised her status with him enormously, from a
tolerated caprice of Aral's to something bordering perilously on the semi-divine.
He fairly blasted her with approval. It was nearly irresistible, and she never
laughed at him, although she had no illusions about it. Cordelia had found
Aral's earlier sketch of his father's reaction to her pregnancy, the day she'd
brought home the confirming news, to be right on target. She'd returned to the
estate at Vorkosigan Surleau that summer day to search Aral out down by the
boat dock. He was puttering around with his sailboat, and had the sails laid
out, drying in the sun, as he squished around them in wet shoes. He looked up to meet her
smile, unsuccessful at concealing the eagerness in his eyes. "Well?"
He bounced a little, on his heels. "Well." She
attempted a sad and disappointed look, to tease him, but the grin escaped and
took over her whole face. "Your doctor says it's a boy." "Ah." A long
and eloquent sigh escaped him, and he scooped her up and twirled her around. "Aral! Awk! Don't
drop me." He was no taller than herself, if, um, thicker. "Never." He
let her slide down against him, and they shared a long kiss, ending in
laughter. "My father will be
ecstatic." "You look pretty
ecstatic yourself." "Yes, but you
haven't seen anything until you've seen an old-fashioned Barrayaran
paterfamilias in a trance over the growth of his family tree. I've had the poor
old man convinced for years that his line was ending with me." "Will he forgive me
for being an offworlder plebe?" "No insult
intended, but by this time I don't think he'd have cared what species of wife I
dragged home, as long as she was fertile. You think I'm exaggerating?" he
added at her trill of laughter. "You'll see." "Is it too early to
think of names?" she asked, slightly wistful. "No thinking to it.
Firstborn son. It's a strict custom here. He gets named after his two
grandfathers. Paternal for the first, maternal for the second." "Ah, that's why
your history is so confusing to read. I was always having to put dates next to
those duplicate names, to try and keep track. Piotr Miles. Hm. Well, I guess I
can get used to it. I'd been thinking of... something else." "Another time,
perhaps." "Ooh,
ambitious." A short wrestling match
ensued, Cordelia having previously made the useful discovery that in certain
moods he was more ticklish than she. She extracted a reasonable amount of
revenge, and they ended laughing on the grass in the sun. "This is very
undignified," Aral complained as she let him up. "Afraid I'll shock
Negri's fisher of men out there?" "They're beyond
shock, I guarantee." Cordelia waved at the
distant hoverboat, whose occupant steadfastly ignored the gesture. She had been
at first angered, then resigned to learn that Aral was being kept under
continuous observation by Imperial Security. The price, she'd supposed, of his
involvement in the secret and lethal politics of the Escobar War, and the
penalty for some of his less welcome outspoken opinions. "I can see why you
took up baiting them for a hobby. Maybe we ought to unbend and invite them to
lunch or something. I feel they must know me so well by now, I'd like to know
them." Had Negri's man recorded the domestic conversation she'd just had?
Were there bugs in their bedroom? Their bathroom? Aral grinned, but
replied, "They wouldn't be permitted to accept. They don't eat or drink
anything but what they bring themselves." "Heavens, how
paranoid. Is that really necessary?" "Sometimes. Theirs
is a dangerous trade. I don't envy them." "I'd think sitting
around down here watching you would constitute a nice little vacation. He's got
to have a great suntan." "The sitting around
is the hardest part. They may sit for a year, and then be called to five minutes
of all-out action of deadly importance. But they have to be instantly ready for
that five minutes the whole year. Quite a strain. I much prefer attack to
defense." "I still don't
understand why anybody would want to bother you. I mean, you're just a retired
officer, living in obscurity. There must be hundreds like you, even of high Vor
blood." "Hm." He'd
rested his gaze on the distant boat, avoiding answer, then jumped to his feet.
"Come on. Let's go spring the good news on Father." Well, she understood it
now. Count Piotr drew her hand through his arm, and carried her off to the
dining room, where he ate a late supper between demands for the latest
obstetrical report, and pressed fresh garden dainties upon her that he'd
brought with him from the country. She ate grapes obediently. After the Count's
supper, walking arm in arm with him into the foyer, Cordelia's ear was caught
by the sound of raised voices coming from the library. The words were muffled
but the tones were sharp, chop-cadenced. Cordelia paused, disturbed. After a moment
the—argument?—stopped, the library door swung open, and a man stalked out.
Cordelia could see Aral and Count Vortala through the aperture. Aral's face was
set, his eyes burning. Vortala, an age-shrunken man with a balding liver-spotted
head fringed with white, was brick-pink to the top of his naked scalp. With a
curt gesture the man collected his waiting liveried retainer, who followed
smartly, blank-faced. The curt man was about
forty years old, Cordelia guessed, dressed expensively in the upper-class
style, dark-haired. He was rendered a bit dish-faced by a prominent forehead
and jaw that his nose and moustache had trouble overpowering. Neither handsome
nor ugly, in another mood one might call him strong-featured. Now he just looked
sour. He paused, coming upon Count Piotr in the foyer, and managed—just
barely—a polite nod of greeting. "Vorkosigan," he said thickly. A
reluctant good evening was encoded in his jerky half-bow. The old count tilted his
head in return, eyebrows up. "Vordarian." His tone made the name an
inquiry. Vordarian's lips were
tight, his hands clenching in unconscious rhythm with his jaw. "Mark my
words," he ground out, "you, and I, and every other man of worth on
Barrayar will live to regret tomorrow." Piotr pursed his lips,
wariness in the crow's-feet corners of his eyes. "My son will not betray
his class, Vordarian." "You blind
yourself." His stare cut across Cordelia, not lingering long enough to be
construed as insult, but cold, very cold, repelling introduction. With effort,
he made the minimum courtesy of a farewell nod, turned, and exited the front
door with his retainer-shadow. Aral and Vortala emerged
from the library. Aral drifted to the foyer to stare moodily into the darkness
through the etched glass panels flanking the door. Vortala placed a placating
hand on his sleeve. "Let him go,"
said Vortala. "We can live without his vote tomorrow." "I don't plan to go
running down the street after him," Aral snapped. "Nevertheless ...
next time, save your wit for those with the brains to appreciate it, eh?" "Who was that irate
fellow?" asked Cordelia lightly, trying to lift the black mood. "Count Vidal
Vordarian." Aral turned from the glass panel back to her, and managed a
smile for her benefit. "Commodore Count Vordarian. I used to work with him
from time to time when I was on the General Staff. He is now a leader in what
you might call the next-to-most conservative party on Barrayar; not the
back-to-the-Time-of-Isolation loonies, but, shall we say, those honestly
fearing all change is change for the worse." He glanced covertly at Count
Piotr. "His name was
mentioned frequently, in speculation about the upcoming Regency," Vortala
commented. "I rather fear he may have been counting on it for himself.
He's made great efforts to cultivate Kareen." "He should have
been cultivating Ezar," said Aral dryly. "Well ... maybe he'll come
down out of the air overnight. Try him again in the morning, Vortala—a little
more humbly this time, eh?" "Coddling
Vordarian's ego could be a full-time task," grumbled Vortala. "He
spends too damn much time studying his family tree." Aral grimaced agreement.
"He's not the only one." "He is to hear him
tell it," growled Vortala. CHAPTER
THREE The next day Cordelia
had an official escort to the full Joint Council session in the person of
Captain Lord Padma Xav Vorpatril. He turned out to be not only a member of her
husband's new staff, but also his first cousin, son of Aral's long-dead
mother's younger sister. Lord Vorpatril was the first close relative of Aral's
Cordelia had encountered besides Count Piotr. It wasn't that Aral's relatives
were avoiding her, as she might have feared; he had a real dearth of them. He
and Vorpatril were the only surviving children of the previous generation, of
whom Count Piotr was himself the last living representative. Vorpatril was a
big cheerful man of about thirty-five, clean-cut in his dress greens. He had
also, she discovered shortly, been one of her husband's junior officers during
his first captaincy, before Vorkosigan's military successes of the Komarr
campaign and its politically ruinous aftermath. She sat with Vorpatril
on one side and Droushnakovi on the other, in an ornate-railed gallery
overlooking the Council chamber. The chamber itself was a surprisingly plain
room, though heavy with what still seemed to Cordelia's Betan eye to be
incredibly luxurious wood paneling. Wooden benches and desks ringed the room.
Morning light poured through stained-glass windows high in the east wall. The
colorful ceremonies were played out below with great punctilio. The ministers wore
archaic-looking black and purple robes set off by gold chains of office. They
were outnumbered by the nearly sixty District counts, even more splendid in
scarlet and silver. A sprinkling of men young enough to be on active service in
the military wore the red and blue parade uniform. Vorkosigan had been right in
describing the parade uniform as gaudy, Cordelia reflected, but in the
wonderful setting of this ancient room the gaud seemed most appropriate.
Vorkosigan looked quite good in his set, she thought. Prince Gregor and his
mother were seated on a dais to one side of the chamber. The princess wore a
black gown shot with silver decoration, high-necked and long-sleeved. Her
dark-haired son looked rather like an elf in his red and blue uniform. Cordelia
thought he fidgeted remarkably little, under the circumstances. The Emperor too had a
ghostly presence, over closed circuit commlink from the Imperial Residence.
Ezar was shown in the holovid seated, in full uniform, at what physical cost
Cordelia could not guess, the tubes and monitor leads piercing his body
concealed at least from the vid pickup. His face was paper—white, his skin
almost transparent, as if he were literally fading from the stage he had
dominated for so long. The gallery was crammed
with wives, staff, and guards. The women were elegantly dressed and decorated
with jewelry, and Cordelia studied them with interest, then turned her
attention back to pumping Vorpatril for information. "Was Aral's
appointment as Regent a surprise to you?" she asked. "Not really. A few
people took that resignation-and-retirement business after the Escobar mess
seriously, but I never did." "He meant it
seriously, I thought." "Oh, I don't doubt
it. The first person Aral fools with that prosey-stone-soldier routine is
himself. It's the sort of man he always wanted to be, I think. Like his
father." "Hm. Yes, I had
noticed a certain political bent to his conversations. In the middle of the
most extraordinary circumstances, too. Marriage proposals, for instance." Vorpatril laughed.
"I can just picture it. When he was young he was a real conservative-if
you wanted to know what Aral thought about anything, all you had to do was ask
Count Piotr, and multiply by two. But by the time we served together, he was
getting ... um ... strange. If you could get him going ..." There was a
certain wicked reminiscence in his eye, which Cordelia promptly encouraged. "How did you get
him going? I thought political discussion was forbidden to officers." He snorted. "I
suppose they could forbid breathing with about as much chance of success. The
dictum is, shall we say, sporadically enforced. Aral stuck to it, though,
unless Rulf Vorhalas and I took him out and got him really relaxed." "Aral?
Relaxed?" "Oh, yes. Now,
Aral's drinking was notable—" "I thought he was a
terrible drinker. No stomach for it." "Oh, that's what
was notable. He seldom drank. Although he went through a bad period after his
first wife died, when he used to run around with Ges Vorrutyer a lot ... um
..." He glanced sideways, and took another tack. "Anyway, it was
dangerous to get him too relaxed, because then he'd go all depressed and
serious, and then it didn't take a thing to get him on to whatever current
injustice or incompetence or insanity was rousing his ire. God, the man could
talk. By the time he'd had his fifth drink-just before he slid under the table
for the night-he'd be declaiming revolution in iambic pentameter. I always
thought he'd end up on the political side someday." He chuckled, and
looked rather lovingly at the stocky red-and-blue-clad figure seated with the
Counts on the far side of the chamber. The Joint Council vote
of confirmation for Vorkosigan's Imperial appointment was a curious affair, to
Cordelia's mind. She hadn't imagined it possible to get seventy-five Barrayarans
to agree on which direction their sun rose in the morning, but the tally was
nearly unanimous in favor of Emperor Ezar's choice. The exceptions were five
set-jawed men who abstained, four loudly, one so weakly the Lord Guardian of
the Speaker's Circle had to ask him to repeat himself. Even Count Vordarian
voted yea, Cordelia noticed—perhaps Vortala had managed to repair last night's
breach in some early-morning meeting after all. It all seemed a very auspicious
and encouraging start to Vorkosigan's new job, anyway, and she said as much to
Lord Vorpatril. "Uh ... yes,
Milady," said Lord Vorpatril after a sideways smile at her. "Emperor
Ezar made it clear he wanted united approval." His tone made it clear
she was missing cues, again. "Are you trying to tell me some of those men
would rather have voted no?" "That would be
imprudent of them, at this juncture." "Then the men who
abstained ... must have some courage of conscience." She studied the
little group with new interest. "Oh, they're all
right," said Vorpatril. "What do you mean?
They are the opposition, surely." "Yes, but they're
the open opposition. No one plotting serious treason would mark himself so
publicly. The fellows Aral will need to guard his back from are in the other
mob, among the yes-men." "Which ones?"
Cordelias brow wrinkled in worry. "Who knows?"
Lord Vorpatril shrugged, then answered his own question. "Negri,
probably." They were surrounded by
a ring of empty seats. Cordelia hadn't been sure if it was for security or
courtesy. Evidently the second, for two latecomers, a man in commander's dress
greens and a younger one in rich-looking civilian clothes, arrived and
apologetically sat in front of them. Cordelia thought they looked like
brothers, and had the guess confirmed when the younger said, "Look,
there's Father, three seats behind old Vortala. Which one's the new
Regent?" "The bandy-legged
character in the red-and-blues, just sitting down to Vortala's right." Cordelia and Vorpatril
exchanged a look behind their backs, and Cordelia put a finger to her lips.
Vorpatril grinned and shrugged. "What's the word on
him in the Service?" "Depends on who you
ask," said the commander. "Sardi thinks he's a strategic genius, and
dotes on his communiques. He's been all over the place. Every brushfire in the
last twenty-five years seems to have his name in it someplace. Uncle Rulf used
to think the world of him. On the other hand, Niels, who was at Escobar, said
he was the most cold-blooded bastard he'd ever met." "I hear he has a
reputation as a secret progressive." "There's nothing
secret about it. Some of the senior Vor officers are scared to death of him.
He's been trying to get Father with him and Vortala on that new tax
ruling." "Oh, yawn." "It's the direct
Imperial tax on inheritances." "Ouch! Well, that
wouldn't hit him, would it? The Vorkosigans are so damn poor. Let Komarr pay.
That's why we conquered it, isn't it?" "Not exactly, my
fraternal ignoramus. Have any of you town clowns met his Betan frill yet?" "Men of fashion,
sirrah," corrected his brother. "Not to be confused with you Service
grubs." "No danger of that.
No, really. There are the damnedest rumors circulating about her, Vorkosigan,
and Vorrutyer at Escobar, most of which contradict each other. I thought Mother
might have a line on it." "She keeps a low
profile, for somebody who's supposed to be three meters tall and eat battle
cruisers for breakfast. Scarcely anybody's seen her. Maybe she's ugly." "They'll make a
pair, then. Vorkosigan's no beauty either." Cordelia, vastly amused,
hid a grin behind her hand, until the commander said, "I don't know who
that three-legged spastic is he has trailing him, though. Staff, do you
suppose?" "You'd think he
could do better than that. What a mutant. Surely Vorkosigan has the pick of the
Service, as Regent." She felt she'd received
a body blow, so great was the unexpected pain of the careless remark. Captain
Lord Vorpatril scarcely seemed to notice it. He had heard it, but his attention
was on the floor below, where oaths were being made. Droushnakovi,
surprisingly, blushed, and turned her head away. Cordelia leaned forward.
Words boiled up within her, but she chose only a few, and fired them off in her
coldest Captain's voice. "Commander. And
you, whoever you are." They looked back at her, surprised at the
interruption. "For your information, the gentleman in question is
Lieutenant Koudelka. And there are no better officers. Not in anybody's
service." They stared at her,
irritated and baffled, unable to place her in their scheme of things. "I
believe this was a private conversation, madam," said the commander
stiffly. "Quite so,"
she returned, equally stiffly, still boiling. "For eavesdropping,
unavoidable as it was, I beg your pardon. But for that shameful remark upon
Admiral Vorkosigan's secretary, you must apologize. It was a disgrace to the
uniform you both wear and the service to your Emperor you both share." She
kept her voice very low, almost hissing. She was trembling. An overdose of
Barrayar. Get hold of yourself. Vorpatril's wandering
attention was drawn, startled, back to her by this speech. "Here,
here," he remonstrated. "What is this—" The commander turned
around further. "Oh, Captain Vorpatril, sir. I didn't recognize you at
first. Um ..." He gestured helplessly at his red-haired attacker, as if to
say, Is this lady with you? And if so, can't you keep her under control? He
added coldly, "We have not met, madam." "No, but I don't go
round flipping over rocks to see what's living underneath." She was
instantly conscious of having been lured into going too far. With difficulty,
she put a lid on her temper. It wouldn't do to be making new enemies for
Vorkosigan at the very moment he was taking up his duties. Vorpatril, waking up to
his responsibilities as escort, began, "Commander, you don't know
who—" "Don't ...
introduce us, Lord Vorpatril," Cordelia interrupted him. "We should
only embarrass each other further." She pressed thumb and forefinger to
the bridge of her nose, closing her eyes and gathering more conciliating words.
And I used to pride myself on keeping my temper. She looked up at their furious
faces. "Commander. My
lord." She correctly deduced the young man's title from his reference to
his father, sitting among the counts. "My words were hasty and rude, and I
take them back. I had no right to comment on a private conversation. I
apologize. Most humbly." "As well you
should," snapped the young lord. His brother had more
self-control, and replied reluctantly, "I accept your apology, madam. I
presume the lieutenant is some relative of yours. I apologize for whatever
insult you felt was implied." "And I accept your
apology, Commander. Although Lieutenant Koudelka is not a relation, but only my
second-dearest ... enemy." She paused, and they exchanged frowns, hers of
irony, his of puzzlement. "I would ask a favor of you, however, sir. Don't
let a comment like that fall in Admiral Vorkosigan's hearing. Koudelka was one
of his officers aboard the General Vorkraft, and was wounded in his
defense during that political mutiny last year. He loves him as a son." The commander was
calming down, although Droushnakovi still looked as if she had a bad taste in
her mouth. He smiled a little. "Are you implying I'd find myself doing guard
duty on Kyril Island?" What was Kyril Island?
Some distant and unpleasant outpost, apparently. "I ... doubt it. He
wouldn't use his office to carry out a personal grudge. But it would cause him
unnecessary pain." "Madam." She
had puzzled him thoroughly now, this plain-looking woman, so out-of-place in
the glittering gallery. He turned back with his brother to watch the show
below, and all maintained a sticky silence for another twenty minutes, until
the ceremonies stopped for lunch. The crowds in both gallery and floor broke
away to meet in the corridors of power. She found Vorkosigan,
Koudelka at his side, speaking with his father Count Piotr and another older
man in count's robes. Vorpatril delivered her and vanished, and Aral greeted
her with a tired smile. "Dear Captain, are
you holding up all right? I want you to meet Count Vorhalas. Admiral Rulf
Vorhalas was his younger brother. We must go shortly, we're scheduled for a
private lunch with the Princess and Prince Gregor." Count Vorhalas bowed
profoundly over her hand. "Milady. I'm honored." "Count. I ... only
saw your brother briefly. But Admiral Vorhalas struck me as a man of
outstanding worth." And my side blew him away. She felt queasy, with her
hand in his, but he seemed to hold no personal animosity. "Thank you, Milady.
We all thought so. Ah, there are the boys. I promised them an introduction.
Evon is itching for a place on the Staff, but I told him he'd have to earn it.
I wish Carl had as much interest in the Service. My daughter will be mad with
jealousy. You've stirred up all the girls, you know, Milady." The count darted away to
round up his sons. Oh, God, thought Cordelia. It would have to be them. The two
men who had sat before her in the gallery were presented to her. They both
blanched, and bowed nervously over her hand. "But you've
met," said Vorkosigan. "I saw you talking in the gallery. What did
you find to discuss so animatedly, Cordelia?" "Oh ... geology.
Zoology. Courtesy. Much on courtesy. We had quite a wide-ranging discussion. We
each of us taught the other something, I think." She smiled, and did not
flick an eyelid. Commander Evon Vorhalas,
looking rather ill, said, "Yes. I've ... had a lesson I'll never forget,
Milady." Vorkosigan was
continuing the introductions. "Commander Vorhalas, Lord Carl; Lieutenant
Koudelka." Koudelka, loaded with
plastic flimsies, disks, the baton of the commander-in-chief of the armed
forces that had just been presented to Vorkosigan as Regent-elect, and his own
stick, and uncertain whether to shake hands or salute, managed to drop them all
and do neither. There was a general scramble to retrieve the load, and Koudelka
went red, bending awkwardly after it. Droushnakovi and he put a hand on his
stick at the same time. "I don't need your
help, miss," Koudelka snarled at her in a low voice, and she recoiled to
go stand rigidly behind Cordelia. Commander Vorhalas
handed him back some disks. "Pardon me, sir," said Koudelka.
"Thank you." "Not at all,
Lieutenant. I was almost hit by disruptor fire myself once. Scared the hell out
of me. You are an example to us all." "It ... didn't
hurt, sir." Cordelia, who knew from
personal experience that this was a lie, held her peace, satisfied. The group
broke up for its separate destinations. Cordelia paused before Evon Vorhalas. "Nice to meet you,
Commander. I predict you will go far, in your future career—and not in the
direction of Kyril Island." Vorhalas smiled tightly.
"I believe you will, too, Milady." They exchanged wary and respectful
nods, and Cordelia turned to take Vorkosigan's arm, and follow him to his next
task, trailed by Koudelka and Droushnakovi. The Barrayaran Emperor
slipped into his final coma a week later, but lingered on another week beyond
that. Aral and Cordelia were routed out of bed at Vorkosigan House in the early
hours of the morning by a special messenger from the Imperial Residence, with
the simple words, "The doctor thinks it's time, sir." They dressed
hastily, and accompanied the messenger back to the beautiful chamber Ezar had
chosen for the last month of his life, its priceless antiques cluttered over
with off-worlder medical equipment. The room was crowded,
with the old man's personal physicians, Vortala, Count Piotr and themselves,
the Princess and Prince Gregor, several ministers, and some men from the
General Staff. They kept a quiet, standing death-watch for almost an hour
before the still, decayed figure on the bed took on, almost imperceptibly, an
added stillness. Cordelia thought it a gruesome scene to which to subject the
boy, but his presence seemed ceremonially necessary. Very quietly, beginning
with Vorkosigan, they turned to kneel and place their hands between Gregor's,
to renew their oaths of fealty. Cordelia too was guided
by Vorkosigan to kneel before the boy. The prince—Emperor—had his mothers hair,
but hazel eyes like Ezar and Serg, and Cordelia found herself wondering how
much of his father, or his grandfather, was latent in him, its expression
waiting on the power that would come with age. Do you bear curses in your
chromosomes, child? she wondered as her hands were placed between his. Cursed
or blessed, regardless, she gave him her oath. The words seemed to cut her last
tie to Beta Colony; it parted with a ping! audible only to her. I am a Barrayaran now.
It had been a long strange journey, that began with a view of a pair of boots
in the mud, and ended in these clean child's hands. Do you know I helped kill
your father, boy? Will you ever know? Pray not. She wondered if it was delicacy
or oversight, that she had never been required to give oath to Ezar Vorbarra. Of all present, only
Captain Negri wept. Cordelia only knew this because she was standing next to
him, in the darkest corner of the room, and saw him twice brush his face with
the back of his hand. His face grew suffused, and more lined, for a time; when
he stepped forward to take his oath, it had returned to his normal blank
hardness. The five days of funeral
ceremonies that followed were grueling for Cordelia, but not, she was led to
understand, so grueling as the ones had been for Crown Prince Serg, which had
run for two weeks, despite the absence of a body for a centerpiece. The public
view was that Prince Serg had died the death of a heroic soldier. By Cordelia's
count, only five human beings knew the whole truth of that subtle
assassination. No, four, now that Ezar was no more. Perhaps the grave was the
safest repository of Ezar's secrets. Well, the old man's torment was over now,
his time done, his era passing. There was no coronation
as such for the boy Emperor, but instead a surprisingly business-like, if
elegantly garbed, several days spent back in the Council chambers collecting
personal oaths from ministers, counts, a host of their relatives, and anybody
else who had not already made their vows in Ezar's death chamber. Vorkosigan
too received oaths, seeming to grow burdened with their accumulation as if each
had a physical weight. The boy, closely
supported by his mother, held up well. Kareen made sure Gregor's hourly breaks
to rest were respected by the busy, impatient men who had thronged to the
capital to discharge their obligation. The strangeness of the Barrayaran
government system, with all its unwritten customs, pressed on Cordelia not so
much at first glance, but gradually. And yet it seemed to work for them,
somehow. They made it work. Pretending a government into existence. Perhaps all
governments were such consensus fictions, at their hearts. After the spate of
ceremonies had died down, Cordelia began at last to establish her domestic
routine at Vorkosigan House. Not that there was that much to do. Most days
Vorkosigan left at dawn, Koudelka in tow, and returned after dark, to snatch a
cold supper and lock himself in the library, or see men there, until bedtime.
His long hours were a start-up cost, Cordelia told herself. He would settle in,
become more efficient, when everything wasn't all for the first time. She
remembered her first ship command in the Betan Astronomical Survey—not so very
long ago—and her first few months of nervous hyper-preparedness. Later, the
painfully studied tasks had become automatic, then nearly unconscious, and her
personal life had re-emerged. Aral's would, too. She waited patiently, and
smiled when she did see him. Besides, she had a job
gestating. It was a task of no little status, judging from the cosseting she
received from everyone from Count Piotr down to the kitchen maid who brought
her nutritious little snacks at odd hours. She hadn't received this much
approval even when she'd returned from a yearlong survey mission with a
zero-accident record. Reproduction seemed far more enthusiastically encouraged
here than on Beta Colony. After lunch one afternoon
she lay with her feet up on a sofa in a shaded patio between the house and its
back garden—gestating assiduously—and reflected upon the assorted reproductive
customs of Barrayar versus Beta Colony. Gestation in uterine replicators,
artificial wombs, seemed unknown here. On Beta Colony replicators were the most
popular choice by three to one, but a large minority stood by claimed
psycho-social advantages to the old-fashioned natural method. Cordelia had
never been able to detect any difference between vitro and vivo babies,
certainly not by the time they reached adulthood at twenty-two. Her brother had
been vivo, herself vitro; her brother's co-parent had chosen vivo for both her
children, and bragged about it rather a lot. Cordelia had always
assumed that when her turn came, she'd have her own kid cooked up in a
replicator bank at the start of a Survey mission, to be ready and waiting for
her arms upon her return. If she returned—there was always that possible catch,
exploring the blind unknown. And assuming, also, that she could nail down an
interested co-parent with whom to pool, willing and able to pass the physical,
psychological, and economic tests and take the course to qualify for a parents
license. Aral was going to be a
superb co-parent, she was certain. If he ever touched down again, from his new
high place. Surely the first rush must be over soon. It was a long fall from
that high place, with nowhere to land. Aral was her safe haven, if he fell
first ... she wrenched her meditations firmly into more positive channels. Now, family size; that
was the real, secret, wicked fascination of Barrayar. There were no legal
limits here, no certificates to be earned, no third-child variances to be
scrimped for; no rules, in fact, at all. She'd seen a woman on the street with
not three but four children in tow, and no one had even stared. Cordelia had
upped her own imagined brood from two to three, and felt deliciously sinful,
till she'd met a woman with ten. Four, maybe? Six? Vorkosigan could afford it.
Cordelia wriggled her toes and cuddled into the cushions, afloat on an
atavistic cloud of genetic greed. Barrayar's economy was
wide open now, Aral said, despite the losses of the recent war. No wounds had
touched the surface of the planet this time. The terraforming of the second
continent opened new frontiers every day, and when the new planet Sergyar was
cleared for colonization, the effect would triple. Labor was short everywhere,
wages rising. Barrayar perceived itself to be severely underpopulated. Vorkosigan
called the economic situation his gift from the gods, politically. So did
Cordelia, for more personal, secret reasons; herds of little Vorkosigans... She could have a
daughter. Not just one, but two—sisters! Cordelia had never had a sister.
Captain Vorpatril's wife had two, she'd said. Cordelia had meet Lady
Vorpatril at one of the rare evening political-social events at Vorkosigan
House. The affair was managed smoothly by the Vorkosigan House staff. All
Cordelia had to do was show up appropriately dressed (she had acquired more
clothes), smile a lot, and keep her mouth shut. She listened with fascination,
trying to puzzle out yet more about How Things Were Done Here. Alys Vorpatril too was
pregnant. Lord Vorpatril had sort of stuck them together and ducked out.
Naturally, they talked shop. Lady Vorpatril mourned much at her personal
discomforts. Cordelia decided she herself must be fortunate; the anti-nausea
med, the same chemical formulation that they used at home, worked, and she was
only naturally tired, not from the weight of the still-tiny baby but from the
surprising metabolic load. Peeing for two was how Cordelia thought of it. Well,
after five-space navigational math, how hard could motherhood be? Leaving aside Alys's
whispered obstetrical horror stories, of course. Hemorrhages, strokes, kidney
failure, birth injuries, oxygen interruption to fetal brains, infant heads
grown larger than pelvic diameters and a spasming uterus laboring both mother
and child to death ... Medical complications were only a problem if one was
somehow caught alone and isolated at term, and with these mobs of guards about
that wasn't likely to happen to her. Bothari as a midwife? Bemusing thought.
She shuddered. She rolled over again on
the lawn sofa, her brow creasing. Ah, Barrayar's primitive medicine. True, moms
had popped kids for hundreds of thousands of years, pre-space-flight, with less
help than what was available here. Yet the niggling worry gnawed still, Maybe I
ought to go home for the birth. No. She was Barrayaran
now, oath-sworn like the rest of the lunatics. It was a two-month journey. And
besides, as far as she knew there was still an arrest warrant outstanding for
her, charging military desertion, suspicion of espionage, fraud, anti-social
violence—she probably shouldn't have tried to drown that idiot army
psychiatrist in her aquarium, Cordelia supposed, sighing in memory of her
harried and disordered departure from Beta Colony. Would her name ever be
cleared? Not while Ezar's secrets stayed chambered in four skulls, surely. No. Beta Colony was
closed to her, had driven her out. Barrayar held no monopoly on political
idiocy, that much was certain. I can handle Barrayar.
Aral and I. You bet. It was time to go in.
The sun was giving her a slight headache. CHAPTER
FOUR One aspect of her new
life as Regent-consort that Cordelia found easier to deal with than she'd
anticipated was the influx of personal guards into their home. Her experience
in the Betan Survey, and Vorkosigan's in the Barrayaran military service, had
given them both practice with life in close quarters. It didn't take Cordelia
long to start to know the persons in the uniforms, and take them on their own
terms. The guards were a lively young group, hand-picked for their service and
proud of it. Although when Piotr was also in residence, with all his liveried
men including Bothari, the sense it gave Cordelia of living in a barracks
became acute. It was the Count who
first suggested the informal hand-to-hand combat tournament between Illyan's
men and his own. In spite of a vague mutter from the security commander about
free training at the Emperors expense, a ring was set up in the back garden,
and the contest quickly became a weekly tradition. Even Koudelka was roped in,
as referee and expert judge, with Piotr and Cordelia as cheering sections.
Vorkosigan attended whenever time permitted, to Cordelia's gratification; she
felt he needed the break in the grinding routine of government business to
which he subjected himself daily. Cordelia was settling
down on the upholstered lawn sofa to watch the show one sunny autumn morning,
attended by her handmaiden, when she suddenly remarked, "Why aren't you
playing, Drou? Surely you need the practice as much as any of them. The excuse
for this thing in the first place—not that you Barrayarans seem to need an
excuse to practice mayhem—was that it was supposed to keep everybody on their
toes." Droushnakovi looked
longingly at the ring, but said, "I wasn't invited, Milady." "A rude oversight
on somebody's part. Hm. Tell you what—go change your clothes. You can be my
team. Aral can root for his own today. A proper Barrayaran contest should have
at least three sides anyway, it's traditional." "Do you think it
will be all right?" she said doubtfully. "They might not like
it." The they in question
were what Droushnakovi called the "real" guards, the liveried men. "Aral won't mind.
Anyone else who objects can argue with him. If they dare." Cordelia
grinned, and Droushnakovi grinned back, then dashed off. Aral arrived to settle
comfortably beside her, and she told him of her plan. He raised an eyebrow.
"Betan innovations? Well, why not? Brace yourself for chaff, though."
"I'm braced. They
won't be as inclined to make jokes if she can pound a few of them. I think she
can—on Beta Colony that girl would be a commando officer by now. All that
natural talent is wasted toddling around after me all day. If she can't—well,
then she shouldn't be guarding me anyway, eh?" She met his eyes. "Point taken ...
I'll make sure Koudelka puts her in the first round against someone of her own
height and weight class. In absolute terms she's a bit on the small side." "She's bigger than
you are." "In height. I
imagine I have a few kilos on her in weight. Nevertheless, your wish is my
command. Oof." He climbed back to his feet, and went to enter Droushnakovi
on Koudelka's list for the lists. Cordelia could not hear what they said to
each other, across the garden, but supplied her own dialogue from gesture and
expression, murmuring, "Aral: Cordelia wants Drou to play. Kou: Aw! Who
wants gurls? Aral: Tough. Kou: They mess everything up, and besides, they cry a
lot. Sergeant Bothari will squash her—hm, I do hope that's what that gesture
means, otherwise you're getting obscene, Kou—wipe that smirk off your face,
Vorkosigan—Aral: The little woman insists. You know how henpecked I am. Kou:
Oh, all right. Phooey. Transaction complete: the rest is up to you, Drou." Vorkosigan rejoined her.
"All set. She'll start against one of father's men." Droushnakovi returned,
attired in loose slacks and a knit shirt, as close to the men's workout suits
as her wardrobe could provide. The Count came out to consult with Sergeant
Bothari, his team leader, and find a place to warm his bones in the sun beside
them. "What's this?"
Piotr asked, as Koudelka called Droushnakovi's name for the second pair up.
"Are we importing Betan customs now?" "The girl has a lot
of natural talent," Vorkosigan explained. "Besides, she needs the
practice as much as any of them—more; she has the most important job of any of
them." "You'll be wanting
women in the Service, next," complained Piotr. "Where will it end?
That's what I'd like to know." "What's wrong with
women in the Service?" Cordelia asked, baiting him a little. "It's
unmilitary," snapped the old man. " 'Military' is
whatever wins the war, I should think." She smiled blandly. A small
friendly warning pinch from Vorkosigan restrained her from rubbing in the point
any harder. In any case it wasn't
necessary. Piotr turned to watch his player, saying only, "Humph." The Count's player
carelessly underestimated his opponent, and took the first fall for his error.
It woke him up considerably. The onlookers shouted raucous comments. He pinned
her on the next fall. "Koudelka counted a
bit fast there, didn't he?" asked Cordelia, as the Count's player let
Droushnakovi up after the decision. "Mm. Maybe,"
said Vorkosigan in a non-committal tone. "She pulls her punches a bit,
too, I notice. She'll never make it to the next round if she keeps doing that
in this company." On the next encounter,
the deciding one for the two-out-of-three, Droushnakovi applied a successful
arm-bar, but let it slip away from her. "Oh, too bad,"
murmured the Count cheerfully. "You should have let him break it!"
cried Cordelia, getting more and more involved. The Count's player took a soft
and sloppy fall. "Call it, Kou!" But the referee, leaning on his
stick, let it pass. In any case, Droushnakovi spotted an opportunity for a
choke, and grabbed it. "Why doesn't he tap out?" asked Cordelia.
"He'd rather pass out," replied Aral. "That way he won't have to
listen to his friends." Droushnakovi was
beginning to look doubtful, as the face clamped under her arm turned a dusky
purple. Cordelia could see release coming, and leaped up to shout, "Hang
on, Drou! Don't let him fake you out!" Droushnakovi took a firmer hold,
and the figure stopped struggling. "Go ahead and call
it, Koudelka," called Piotr, shaking his head ruefully. "He has to be
on duty tonight." And so the round went to Droushnakovi. "Good work,
Drou!" said Cordelia as Droushnakovi returned to them. "But you've
got to be more aggressive. Release your killer instincts." "I agree,"
said Vorkosigan unexpectedly. "That little hesitation you display could be
deadly—and not just for yourself." He held her eye. "You're
practicing for the real thing here; although we all pray that no such situation
occurs. The kind of all-out effort it takes should be absolutely
automatic." "Yes, sir. I'll
try, sir." The next round featured
Sergeant Bothari, who flattened his opponent twice in rapid succession. The
defeated crawled out of the ring. Several more rounds went by, and it was
Droushnakovi's turn again, this time with one of Illyan's men. They connected, and in
the struggle he goosed her effectively, loosing catcalls from the audience. In
her angry distraction, he pulled her off-balance for a fairly clean fall. "Did you see
that!" cried Cordelia to Aral. "That was a dirty trick!" "Mm. It wasn't one
of the eight forbidden blows, though. You couldn't disqualify him on it.
Nevertheless ..." he motioned Koudelka for a time—out, and called Droushnakovi
over for a quiet word. "We saw the
blow," he murmured. Her lips were tight and her face red. "Now, as
Milady's champion, an insult to you is in some measure an insult to her. Also a
very bad precedent. It is my desire that your opponent not leave the ring
conscious. How, is your problem. You may take that as an order, if you like.
And don't worry needlessly about breaking bones, either," he added
blandly. Droushnakovi returned to
the ring with a slight smile on her face, eyes narrowed and glittering. She
followed a feint with a lightning kick to her opponent's jaw, a punch to his
belly, and a low body blow to his knees that brought him down with a boom on
the matting. He did not get up. There was a slightly shocked silence. "You're
right," said Vorkosigan. "She was pulling her punches." Cordelia smiled smugly,
and settled herself more comfortably. "Thought so." The next round to come
up for Droushnakovi was the semi-final, and it was the luck of the draw that
her opponent was Sergeant Bothari. "Hm," murmured
Cordelia to Vorkosigan. "I'm not sure about the psychodynamics of this. Is
it safe? I mean for both of them, not just for her. And not just
physically." "I think so,"
he replied, equally quietly. "Life in the Counts service has been a nice,
quiet routine for Bothari. He's been taking his medication. I think he's in
pretty good shape at the moment. And the atmosphere of the practice ring is a
safe, familiar one for him. It would take more tension than Drou can provide to
unhinge him." Cordelia nodded, satisfied, and settled back to watch the
slaughter. Droushnakovi looked nervous. The start was slow, with
Droushnakovi mainly concentrating on staying out of reach. Swinging around to
watch, Lieutenant Koudelka accidently pressed the release of his swordstick,
and the cover shot off into the bushes. Bothari was distracted for an instant,
and Drou struck, low and fast. Bothari landed clean with a firm impact,
although he rolled immediately to his feet with scarcely a pause. "Oh, good
throw!" cried Cordelia ecstatically. Drou looked quite as amazed as
everyone else. "Call it, Kou!" Lieutenant Koudelka
frowned. "It wasn't a fair throw, Milady." One of the Count's men
retrieved the cover, and Koudelka resheathed the weapon. "It was my fault.
Unfair distraction." "You didn't call it
unfair distraction a while ago," Cordelia objected. "Let it go,
Cordelia," said Vorkosigan quietly. "But he's cheating
her out of her point!" she whispered back furiously. "And what a
point! Bothari's been tops in every round to date." "Yes. It took six
months practice on the old General Vorkraft before Koudelka ever threw
him." "Oh. Hm." That
gave her pause. "Jealousy?" "Haven't you seen
it? She has everything he lost." "I have seen he's
been blasted rude to her on occasion. It's a shame. She's obviously—" Vorkosigan held up a
restraining finger. "Talk about it later. Not here." She paused, then nodded
in agreement. "Right." The round went on, with
Sergeant Bothari putting Droushnakovi practically through the mat, twice,
quickly, and then dispatching his final challenger with almost equal ease. A conference of players
on the other side of the garden sent Koudelka limping over as an emissary. "Sir? We were
wondering if you would go a demonstration round. With Sergeant Bothari. None of
the fellows here have ever seen that." Vorkosigan waved down
the idea, not very convincingly. "I'm not in shape for it, Lieutenant.
Besides, how did they ever find out about that? Been telling tales?" Koudelka grinned.
"A few. I think it would enlighten them. About what kind of game this can
really be." "A bad example, I'm
afraid." "I've never seen
this," murmured Cordelia. "Is it really that good a show?" "I don't know. Have
I offended you lately? Would watching Bothari pound me be a catharsis?" "I think it would
be for you," said Cordelia, falling in with his obvious desire to be
persuaded. "I think you've missed that sort of thing, in this headquarters
life you've been leading lately." "Yes... ." He
rose, to a bit of clapping, and removed uniform jacket, shoes, rings, and the
contents of his pockets, and stepped to the ring to do some stretching and
warm—up exercises. "You'd better
referee, Kou," he called back. "Just to prevent undue alarm." "Yes, sir."
Koudelka turned to Cordelia before limping back to the arena. "Um. Just
remember, Milady. They never killed each other in four years of this." "Why do I find that
more ominous than reassuring? Still, Bothari's done six rounds this morning.
Maybe he's getting tired." The two men faced off in
the arena and bowed formally. Koudelka backed hastily out of the way. The
raucous good humor died away among the watchers, as the icy cold and
concentrated stillness of the two players drew all eyes. They began to circle,
lightly, then met in a blur. Cordelia did not quite see what happened, but when
they parted Vorkosigan was spitting blood from a lacerated mouth, and Bothari
was hunched over his belly. In the next contact
Bothari landed a kick to Vorkosigan's back that echoed off the garden walls and
propelled him completely out of the arena, to land rolling and running back in
spite of disrupted breathing. The men in whose protection the Regent's life was
supposed to lie began to look worriedly at one another. At the next grappling
Vorkosigan underwent a vicious fall, with Bothari landing atop him instantly
for a follow-up choke. Cordelia thought she could see his ribs bend from the
knees on his chest. A couple of the guards started forward, but Koudelka waved
them back, and Vorkosigan, face dark and suffused, tapped out. "First point to
Sergeant Bothari," called Koudelka. "Best two out of three,
sir?" Sergeant Bothari stood,
smiling a little, and Vorkosigan sat on the mat a minute, regaining his wind.
"One more, anyway. Got to get my revenge. Out of shape." "Told you so,"
murmured Bothari. They circled again. They met, parted, met again, and suddenly
Bothari was doing a spectacular cartwheel, while Vorkosigan rolled beneath to
grab an arm-bar that nearly dislocated his shoulder in his twisting fall.
Bothari struggled briefly against the lock, then tapped out. This time it was
Bothari who sat on the mat a minute before getting up. "That's
amazing," Droushnakovi commented, eyes avid. "Especially considering
how much smaller he is." "Small but
vicious," agreed Cordelia, fascinated. "Keep that in mind." The third round was
brief. A blur of grappling and blows and messy joint fall resolved suddenly in
an armlock, with Bothari in charge. Vorkosigan unwisely attempted a break, and
Bothari, quite expressionlessly, dislocated his elbow with an audible pop.
Vorkosigan yelled and tapped out. Once again Koudelka suppressed a rush of
uninvited aid. "Put it back, Sergeant," Vorkosigan groaned from his
seat on the ground, and Bothari braced one foot on his former captain and gave
the arm an accurately aligned yank. "Must
remember," gasped Vorkosigan, "not to do that." "At least he didn't
break it this time," said Koudelka encouragingly, and helped him up, with
Bothari's assistance. Vorkosigan limped back to the lawn chair, and seated
himself, very cautiously, at Cordelia's feet. Bothari, too, was moving a lot
more slowly and stiffly. "And that,"
said Vorkosigan, still catching his breath, "is how ... we used to play
the game ... aboard the old General Vorkraft." "All that
effort," remarked Cordelia. "And how often did you ever get into a
real hand-to-hand combat situation?" "Very, very seldom.
But when we did, we won." The party broke up, with
a murmuring undercurrent of comment from the other players. Cordelia
accompanied Aral off to help with first-aid to his elbow and mouth, a hot soak
and rubdown, and a change of clothes. During the rubdown she
brought up the personnel problem that had been growing in her notice. "Do you suppose you
could say something to Kou about the way he treats Drou? It's not like his
usual self at all. She about does flips trying to be nice to him. And he
doesn't even treat her with the courtesy he'd give one of his men. She's
practically a fellow officer. And, unless I'm totally wide of the mark, madly in
love with him. Why doesn't he see it?" "What makes you
think he doesn't?" asked Aral slowly. "His behavior, of
course. A shame. They'd make quite a pair. Don't you think she's
attractive?" "Marvelously. But
then, I like tall amazons," he grinned over his shoulder at her, "as
everyone knows. It's not every man's taste. But if that's a matchmaking gleam I
detect in your eye—do you suppose it could be maternal hormones, by the
way?" "Shall I dislocate
your other elbow?" "Ugh. No thanks.
I'd forgotten how painful a workout with Bothari could be. Ah, that's better.
Down a bit ..." "You're going to
have some astonishing bruises there tomorrow." "Don't I know it.
But before you get carried away over Drou's love life ... have you thought
carefully about Koudelka's injuries?" "Oh." Cordelia
was struck silent. "I'd assumed ... that his sexual functions were as well
repaired as the rest of him." "Or as poorly. It's
a very delicate bit of surgery." Cordelia pursed her
lips. "Do you know this for a fact?" "No, I don't. I do
know that in all our conversations the subject was never once brought up.
Ever." "Hm. Wish I knew
how to interpret that. It sounds a little ominous. Do you think you could ask
... ?" "Good God,
Cordelia, of course not! What a question to ask the man. Particularly if the
answer is no. I've got to work with him, remember." "Well, I've got to
work with Drou. She's no use to me if she pines away and dies of a broken
heart. He has reduced her to tears, more than once. She goes off where she
thinks nobody's looking." "Really? That's
hard to imagine." "You can hardly
expect me to tell her he's not worth it, all things considered. But does he
really dislike her? Or is it just self-defense?" "Good question ...
For what it's worth, my driver made a joke about her the other day—not even a
very offensive one—and Kou got rather frosty with him. I don't think he
dislikes her. But I do think he envies her." Cordelia left the
subject on that ambiguous note. She longed to help the pair, but had no answer
to offer for their dilemma. Her own mind had no trouble generating creative
solutions to the practical problems of physical intimacy posed by the
lieutenant's injuries, but shrank from the violation of their shy reserve that
offering them would entail. She suspected wryly that she would merely shock
them. Sex therapy appeared to be unheard of, here. True Betan, she had
always considered a double standard of sexual behavior to be a logical
impossibility. Dabbling now on the fringes of Barrayaran high society in
Vorkosigan's wake, she began to finally see how it could be done. It all seemed
to come down to impeding the free flow of information to certain persons,
preselected by an unspoken code somehow known to and agreed upon by all present
but her. One could not mention sex to or in front of unmarried women or
children. Young men, it appeared, were exempt from all rules when talking to
each other, but not if a woman of any age or degree were present. The rules
also changed bewilderingly with variations of the social status of those
present. And married women, in groups free of male eavesdroppers, sometimes
underwent the most astonishing transformations in apparent databases. Some
subjects could be joked about but not discussed seriously. And some variations
could not be mentioned at all. She had blighted more than one conversation
beyond hope of recovery by what seemed to her a perfectly obvious and casual
remark, and been taken aside by Aral for a quick debriefing. She tried writing out a
list of the rules she thought she had deduced, but found them so illogical and
conflicting, especially in the area of what certain people were supposed to
pretend not to know in front of certain other people, she gave up the effort.
She did show the list to Aral, who read it in bed one night and nearly doubled
over laughing. "Is that what we
really look like to you? I like your Rule Seven. Must keep it in mind ... I
wish I'd known it in my youth. I could have skipped all those godawful Service
training vids." "If you snicker any
harder, you're going to get a nosebleed," she said tartly. "These are
your rules, not mine. You people play by them. I just try to figure them
out." "My sweet
scientist. Hm. You certainly call things by their correct names. We've never
tried ... would you like to violate Rule Eleven with me, dear Captain?" "Let me, see, which
one—oh, yes! Certainly. Now? And while we're about it, let's knock off
Thirteen. My hormones are up. I remember my brother's co-parent told me about
this effect, but I didn't really believe her at the time. She says you make up
for it later, post-partum." "Thirteen? I'd
never have guessed... ." "That's because,
being Barrayaran, you spend so much time following Rule Two." Anthropology was
forgotten, for a time. But she found she could crack him up, later, with a
properly timed mutter of "Rule Nine, sir." The season was turning.
There had been a hint of winter in the air that morning, a frost that had
wilted some of the plants in Count Piotr's back garden. Cordelia anticipated
her first real winter with fascination. Vorkosigan promised her snow, frozen
water, something she'd experienced on only two Survey missions. Before spring,
I shall bear a son. Huh. But the afternoon had
basked in the autumn light, warming again. The flat roof of Vorkosigan House above
the front wing now breathed back that heat around Cordelia's ankles as she
picked her way across it, though the air on her cheeks was cooling to crispness
as the sun slanted to the city's horizon. "Good evening,
boys." Cordelia nodded to the two guards posted to this rooftop duty
station. They nodded back, the
senior touching his forehead in a hesitant semi-salute. "Milady." Cordelia had taken to
regular sunset-watching up here. The view of the cityscape from this
four-floors-up vantage was very fine. She could catch a gleam of the river that
divided the town, beyond trees and buildings. Although the excavation of a
large hole a few blocks away along the line of sight suggested that the
riverine scene would be occluded soon by new architecture. The tallest turret
of Vorhartung Castle, where she'd attended all those ceremonies in the Council
of Counts' chamber, peaked from a bluff overlooking the water. Beyond Vorhartung Castle
lay the oldest parts of the capital. She'd not yet seen that area, its kinked one-horse-wide
streets impassable to groundcars, though she'd flown over the strange, low,
dark blots in the heart of the city. The newer parts, glittering out toward the
horizon, were more like galactic standard, patterned around the modern
transportation systems. None of it was like Beta
Colony. Vorbarr Sultana was all spread out on the surface, or climbed skyward,
strangely two-dimensional and exposed. Beta Colony's cities plunged down into
shafts and tunnels, many-layered and complex, cozy and safe. Indeed, Beta
Colony did not have architecture so much as it had interior design. It was
amazing, the variety of schemes people came up with to vary dwellings that had
outsides. The guards twitched and
sighed, as she leaned on the stonework, gazing out. They really didn't like it
when she strayed nearer than three meters to the edge, though the space was
only six meters wide. But she should be able to spot Vorkosigan's groundcar
turning into the street soon. Sunsets were all very well, but her eyes turned
downward. She inhaled the complex
odors, from vegetation, water vapor, industrial waste gases. Barrayar permitted
an amazing amount of air dumping, as if ... well, air was free, here. Nobody
measured it, there were no air processing and filtration fees... . Did these
people even realize how rich they were? All the air they could breathe, just by
stepping outdoors, taken for granted as casually us they took frozen water
falling from the sky. She took an extra breath, as if she could somehow
greedily hoard it, and smiled— A distant, crackling,
hard-edged boom shattered her thoughts and stopped her breath. Both guards
jumped. So, you heard a bang. It doesn't necessarily have anything to do with
Aral. And, icily, It sounded like a sonic grenade. Not a little one. Dear God.
There was a column of smoke and dust rising from a street-canyon several blocks
over, she couldn't see the source—she craned outward— "Milady." The
younger guard grasped her upper arm. "Please go inside." His face was
tense, eyes wide. The senior man had his hand clamped to his ear, sucking info
off his comm channel—she had no comm link. "What's coming
on?" she asked. "Milady, please go
below!" He hustled her toward the trapdoor to the attic, from which stairs
led down to the fourth floor. "I'm sure it was nothing," he soothed
as he pushed. "It was a Class
Four sonic grenade, probably air-tube launched," she informed his
appalling ignorance. '"Unless the thrower was suicidal. Haven't you ever
heard one go off?" Droushnakovi shot out
the trapdoor, a buttered roll squashed in one hand and her stunner clutched in
the other. "Milady?" The guard, looking relieved, shoved Cordelia at
her and returned to his senior. Cordelia, screaming inside, grinned through
clenched teeth and allowed herself to be guarded, climbing dutifully down the
trap. "What
happened?" she hissed to Droushnakovi. "Don't know yet.
The red alert went off in the basement refectory, and everybody ran for their
posts," panted Drou. She must have practically teleported up the six
flights. "Ngh."
Cordelia galloped down the stairs, wishing for a drop tube. The comconsole in
the library would surely be manned—somebody must have a comm link—she spun down
the circular staircase and pelted across the black and white stones. The house guard
commander was indeed at the post, channeling orders. Count Piotr's senior
liveried man jittered at his shoulder. "They're coming straight
here," the ImpSec man said over his shoulder. "You fetch that
doctor." The brown-uniformed man dashed out. "What
happened?" Cordelia demanded. Her heart was hammering now, and not just
from the dash downstairs. He glanced up at her,
started to say something calming and meaningless, and changed his mind in
mid-breath. "Somebody took a potshot at the Regent's groundcar. They
missed. They're continuing on here." "How near a
miss?" "I don't know,
Milady." He probably didn't. But
if the groundcar still functioned ... Helplessly, she gestured him back to his
work, and wheeled to return to the foyer, now manned by a couple of Count
Piotr's men, who discouraged her from standing too near the door. She hung on
the stair railing three steps up and bit her lip. "Was Lieutenant
Koudelka with him, do you think?" asked Droushnakovi faintly. "Probably. He
usually is," Cordelia answered absently, her eyes on the door, waiting,
waiting... . She heard the car pull
up. One of Count Piotr's men opened the house door. Security men swarmed over
the silver shape of the vehicle in the portico—God, where did they all come
from? The car's shiny finish was scored and smoked, but not deeply dented; the
rear canopy was not cracked, though the front was scarred. The rear doors swung
up, and Cordelia stretched for a view of Vorkosigan, maddeningly obstructed by
the green backs of the ImpSec men. They parted. Lieutenant Koudelka sat in the
aperture, blinking dizzily, blood dripping down his chin, then was levered to
his feet by a guard. Vorkosigan emerged at last, refusing to be hustled, waving
back help. Even the most worried guards did not dare to touch him without an
invitation. Vorkosigan strode inside, grim-faced and pale. Koudelka, propped by
his stick and an ImpSec corporal, followed, looking wilder. The blood issued
from his nose. Piotr's man swung closed the front door of Vorkosigan House,
shutting out three-fourths of the chaos. Aral met her eyes, above
the heads of the men, and the saturnine look fixed on his face slipped just a
little. He offered her a fractional nod, I'm all right. Her lips tightened in
return, You'd by-God better be... Kou was saying in a
shaken voice, "—bloody great hole in the street! Could've swallowed a
freight shuttle. That driver has amazing reflexes—what?" He shook his head
at a questioner. "Sorry, my ears are ringing—come again?" He stood openmouthed,
as if he could drink in sound orally, touched his face and stared in surprise
at his crimson—smeared hand. "Your ears are only
stunned, Kou," said Vorkosigan. His voice was calm, but much too loud.
"They'll be back to normal by tomorrow morning." Only Cordelia realized
the raised tone wasn't for Koudelka's benefit—Vorkosigan couldn't hear himself,
either. His eyes shifted too quickly, the only hint that he was trying to read
lips. Simon Illyan and a
physician arrived at almost the same moment. Vorkosigan and Koudelka were taken
to a quiet back parlor, shedding all the—to Cordelia's mind—rather useless
guards. Cordelia and Droushnakovi followed. The physician began an immediate
examination, starting, at Vorkosigan's command, with the gory Koudelka. "One shot?"
asked Illyan. "Only one,"
confirmed Vorkosigan, watching his face. "If they'd lingered for a second
try, they could have bracketed me." "If he'd lingered,
we could have bracketed him. A forensic team's on the firing site now. The
assassin's long gone, of course. A clever spot, he had a dozen escape
routes." "We vary our route
daily," Lieutenant Koudelka, following this with difficulty, said around
the cloth he pressed to his face. "How did he know where to set up his
ambush?" "Inside
information?" Illyan shrugged, his teeth clenching at the thought. "Not
necessarily," said Vorkosigan. "There are only so many routes, this
close to home. He could have been set up waiting for days." "Precisely at the
limit of our close-search perimeter?" said Illyan. "I don't like
it." "It bothers me more
that he missed," said Vorkosigan. "Why? Could it have been some sort
of warning shot? An attempt, not on my life, but on my balance of mind?" "It was old
ordnance," said Illyan. "There could have been something wrong with
its tracker—nobody detected a laser rangefinder pulse." He paused, taking
in Cordelia's white face. "I'm sure it was a lone lunatic, Milady. At
least, it was certainly only one man." "How does a lone
maniac get hold of military-grade weaponry?" she inquired tartly. Illyan looked
uncomfortable. "We will be investigating that. It was definitely old
issue." "Don't you destroy
obsolete stockpiles?" "There's so much of
it. ..." Cordelia glared at this
wit-scattered utterance. "He only needed one shot. If he'd managed a
direct hit on that sealed car, Aral'd have been emulsified. Your forensic team
would be trying right now to sort out which molecules were his and which were
Kou's." Droushnakovi turned
faintly green; Vorkosigan's saturnine look was now firmly back in place. "You want me to
give you a precise resonance reflection amplitude calculation for that sealed
passenger cabin, Simon?" Cordelia went on hotly. "Whoever chose that
weapon was a competent military tech—if, fortunately, a poorish shot." She
bit back further words, recognizing, even if no one else did, the suppressed
hysteria driving the speed of her speech. "My apologies.
Captain Naismith." Illyan's tone grew more clipped. "You are quite
correct." His nod was a shade more respectful. Aral tracked this
interplay, his face lightening, for the first time, with some hidden amusement. Illyan took himself off,
conspiracy theories no doubt dancing in his head. The doctor confirmed Aral's
combat-experienced diagnosis of aural stun, issued powerful anti-headache
pills—Aral hung on to his firmly—and made an appointment to re-check both men
in the morning. When Illyan stopped back
by Vorkosigan House in the late evening to confer with his guard commander, it
was all Cordelia could do not to grab him by the jacket and pin him to the
nearest wall to shake out his information. She confined herself to simply
asking, "Who tried to kill Aral? Who wants to kill Aral? Whatever benefit
do they imagine they'll gain?" Illyan sighed. "Do
you want the short list, or the long one, Milady?" "How long is the
short list?" she asked in morbid fascination. "Too long. But I
can name you the top layer, if you like." He ticked them off on his
fingers. "The Cetagandans, always. They had counted on political chaos
here, following Ezar's death. They're not above prodding it along. An
assassination is cheap interference, compared to an invasion fleet. The
Komarrans, for old revenge or new revolt. Some there still call the Admiral the
Butcher of Komarr—" Cordelia, knowing the
whole story behind that loathed sobriquet, winced. "The anti-Vor,
because my lord Regent is too conservative for their tastes. The military
right, who fear he is too progressive for theirs. Leftover members of Prince
Serg and Vorrutyer's old war party. Former operatives of the now-suppressed
Ministry of Political Education, though I doubt one of them would have missed.
Negri's department used to train them. Some disgruntled Vor who thinks he came
out short in the recent power-shift. Any lunatic with access to weapons and a
desire for instant fame as a big-game hunter—shall I go on?" "Please don't. But
what about today? If motive yields too broad a field of suspects, what about
method and opportunity?" "We have a little
to work with there, though too much of it is negative. As I noted, it was a
very clean attempt. Whoever set it up had to have access to certain kinds of
knowledge. We'll work those angles first." It was the anonymity of
the assassination attempt that bothered her most, Cordelia decided. When the
killer could be anyone, the impulse to suspect everyone became overwhelming.
Paranoia was a contagious disease here, it seemed; Barrayarans gave it to each
other. Well, Negri and Illyan's combined forces must winkle out some concrete
facts soon. She packed all her fears down hard into a little tiny compartment
in the pit of her stomach, and locked them there. Next to her child. Vorkosigan held her
tight that night, curled into the curve of his stocky body, though he made no
sexual advances. He just held her. He didn't fall asleep for hours, despite the
painkillers that glazed his eyes. She didn't fall asleep till he did. His
snores lulled her at last. There wasn't that much to say. They missed; we go
on. Till the next try. CHAPTER
FIVE The Emperors Birthday
was a traditional Barrayaran holiday, celebrated with feasting, dancing,
drinking, veterans' parades, and an incredible amount of apparently totally
unregulated fireworks. It would make a great day for a surprise attack on the
capital, Cordelia decided; an artillery barrage could be well under way before
anybody noticed it in the general din. The uproar began at dawn. The duty guards, who had
a natural tendency to jump at sudden noises anyway, were twitchy and miserable,
except for a couple more youthful types who attempted to celebrate with a few
crackers let off inside the walls. They were taken aside by the guard
commander, and emerged much later, pale and shrunken, to slink off. Cordelia
later saw them hauling rubbish under the command of a sardonic housemaid, while
a scullery girl and the second cook galloped happily out of the house for a
surprise day off. The Emperor's Birthday was a moveable feast. The Barrayarans'
enthusiasm for the holiday seemed undaunted by the fact that, due to Ezar's death
and Gregor's ascension, this was the second time they would celebrate it this
year. Cordelia passed up an
invitation to attend a major military review that gobbled Aral's morning in
favor of staying fresh for the event of the evening—the event of the year, she
was given to understand—personal attendence upon the Emperor's birthday dinner
at the Imperial Residence. She looked forward to seeing Kareen and Gregor
again, however briefly. At least she was certain that her clothing was all
right. Lady Vorpatril, who had both excellent taste and an advance line on
Barrayaran-style maternity wear, had taken pity on Cordelia's cultural
bafflement and offered herself as an expert native guide. As a result, Cordelia
confidently wore an impeccably cut forest green silk dress that swirled from
shoulder to floor, with an open overvest of thick ivory velvet. Live flowers in
matching colors were arranged in her copper hair by the live human hairdresser
Alys also sent on. Like their public events, the Barrayarans made of their
clothes a sort of folk-art, as elaborate as Betan body paint. Cordelia couldn't
be sure from Aral—his face always lit when he saw her—but judging from the
delighted "Oohs" of Count Piotr's female staff, Cordelia's sartorial
art team had outdone themselves. Waiting at the foot of
the spiral stairs in the front hall, she smoothed the panel of green silk
surreptitiously down over her belly. A little over three months of metabolic
overdrive, and all she had to show for it was this grapefruit-sized lump—so
much had happened since midsummer, it seemed like her pregnancy ought to be
progressing faster to keep up. She purred an encouraging mental mantra
bellywards, Grow, grow, grow. ... At least she was actually beginning to look
pregnant, instead of just feel exhausted. Aral shared her nightly fascination
with their progress, gently feeling with spread fingers, so far without
success, for the butterfly-wing flutters of movement through her skin. Aral himself now
appeared, with Lieutenant Koudelka. They were both thoroughly scrubbed, shaved,
cut, combed, and chromatically blinding in their formal red-and-blue Imperial
parade uniforms. Count Piotr joined them wearing the uniform Cordelia had seen
him in at the Joint Council sessions, brown and silver, a more glittery version
of his armsmen's livery. All twenty of Piotr's armsmen had some sort of formal
function tonight, and had been driven to meticulous preparation all week by
their frenzied commander. Droushnakovi, accompanying Cordelia, wore a
simplified garment in Cordelia's colors, carefully cut to facilitate rapid
movement and conceal weaponry and comm links. After a moment for
everyone to admire each other, they herded through the front doors to the
waiting groundcars. Aral handed Cordelia into her vehicle personally, then
stepped back. "See you there, love." "What?" Her
head swiveled. "Oh. Then that second car ... isn't just for the size of
the group?" Aral's mouth tightened
fractionally. "No. It seems ... prudent, to me, that we should travel in
separate vehicles from now on." "Yes," she
said faintly. "Quite." He nodded, and turned
away. Damn this place. Taking yet another bite out of their lives, out of her
heart. They had so little time together anymore, losing even a little more
hurt. Count Piotr, apparently,
was to be Aral's stand-in, at least for tonight; he slid in beside her.
Droushnakovi sat across from them, and the canopy was sealed. The car turned
smoothly into the street. Cordelia craned over her shoulder, trying to see
Aral's car, but it followed too far back for her even to catch a glimpse. She
straightened, sighing. The sun was sinking
yellowly in a grey bank of clouds, and lights were beginning to glow in the
cool damp autumn evening, giving the city a somber, melancholy atmosphere.
Maybe a raucous street party—they drove around several—wasn't such a bad idea.
The celebrators reminded Cordelia of primitive Earth men banging pots and
firing guns to drive off the dragon that was eating the eclipsing moon. This
strange autumn sadness could consume an unwary soul. Gregor's birthday was well
timed. Piotr's knobby hands
fiddled with a brown silk bag embroidered with the Vorkosigan crest in silver.
Cordelia eyed it with interest. "What's that?" Piotr smiled slightly,
and handed it to her. "Gold coins." More folk-art; the bag
and its contents were a tactile treat. She caressed the silk, admired the
needlework, and shook a few gleaming sculptured disks out into her hand.
"Pretty." Prior to the end of the Time of Isolation, gold had had
great value on Barrayar, Cordelia recalled reading. Gold to her Betan mind
called up something like, Sometimes-useful metal to the electronics industry,
but ancient peoples had waxed mystical about it. "Does this mean
something?" "Ha! Indeed. It's
the Emperors birthday present." Cordelia pictured
five-yearpold Gregor playing with a bag of gold. Besides building towers and
maybe practicing counting, it was hard to figure what the boy could do with it.
She hoped he was past the age of putting everything in his mouth; those disks were
just the right size for a child to swallow or choke on. "I'm sure he'll
like it," she said a little doubtfully. Piotr chuckled.
"You don't know what's going on, do you?" Cordelia sighed. "I
almost never do. Cue me." She settled back, smiling. Piotr had gradually
become an enthusiast in explaining Barrayar to her, always seeming pleased to
discover some new pocket of her ignorance and fill it with information and
opinion. She had the feeling he could be lecturing her for the next twenty
years and not run out of baffling topics. "The Emperor's
birthday is the traditional end of the fiscal year, for each count's district
in relation to the Imperial government. In other words, it's tax day, except—the
Vor are not taxed. That would imply too subordinate a relationship to the
Imperium. Instead, we give the Emperor a present." "Ah ..." said
Cordelia. "You don't run this place for a year on sixty little bags of
gold, sir." "Of course not. The
real funds went from Hassadar to Vorbarr Sultana by comm link transfer earlier
today. The gold is merely symbolic." Cordelia frowned.
"Wait. Haven't you done this once this year?" "In the spring for
Ezar, yes. So we've just changed the date of our fiscal year." "Isn't that
disruptive to your banking system?" He shrugged. "We
manage." He grinned suddenly. "Where do you think the term 'Count'
came from, anyway?" "Earth, I thought.
A pre-atomic-late Roman, actually-term for a nobleman who ran a county. Or
maybe the district was named after the rank." "On Barrayar, it is
in fact a contraction of the term 'accountant.' The first counts were Varadar
Tau's—an amazing bandit, you should read up on him sometime—Varadar Tau's tax
collectors." "All this time I
thought it was a military rank! Aping medieval history." "Oh, the military
part came immediately thereafter, the first time the old goons tried to shake
down somebody who didn't want to contribute. The rank acquired more glamour
later." "I never
knew." She regarded him with sudden suspicion. "You're not pulling my
leg, sir, are you?" He spread his hands in
denial. Check your assumptions,
Cordelia thought to herself in amusement. In fact, check your assumptions at
the door. They arrived at the
Imperial Residence's great gate. The ambiance was much changed tonight from
some of Cordelia's earlier, more morbid visits to the dying Ezar and to the
funeral ceremonies. Colored lights picked out architectural details on the
stone pile. The gardens glowed, fountains glittered. Beautifully dressed people
warmed the landscape, spilling out from the formal rooms of the north wing onto
the terraces. The guard checks, however, were no less meticulous, and the
guards' numbers were vastly multiplied. Cordelia had the feeling this was going
to be a much less rowdy party than some they'd passed in the city streets. Aral's car pulled up
behind theirs as they disembarked at a western portico, and Cordelia reattached
herself gratefully to his arm. He smiled proudly at her, and in a relatively
unobserved moment sneaked a kiss onto the back of her neck while stealing a
whiff of the flowers perfuming her hair. She squeezed his hand secretly in
return. They passed through the doors, and a corridor. A majordomo in Vorbarra
House livery loudly announced them, and then they were pinned by the gaze of
what to Cordelia for a moment seemed several thousand pairs of critical
Barrayaran Vor-class eyes. Actually there were only a couple hundred people in
the room. Better than, say, looking down the throat of a fully charged nerve
disruptor any day. Really. They circulated,
exchanging greetings, making courtesies. Why can't these people wear nametags?
Cordelia thought hopelessly. As usual, everyone but her seemed to know everyone
else. She pictured herself opening a conversation, Hey you, Vor-guy—. She
clutched Aral more firmly, and tried to look mysterious and exotic rather than
tongue-tied and mislaid. They found the little
ceremony with the bags of coins going on in another chamber, the counts or
their representatives lining up to discharge their obligation with a few formal
words each. Emperor Gregor, whom Cordelia suspected was up past his bedtime,
sat on a raised bench with his mother, looking small and trapped, manfully
trying to suppress his yawns. It occurred to Cordelia to wonder if he even got
to keep the bags of coins, or if they were simply re-circulated to present
again next year. Hell of a birthday party. There wasn't another child in sight.
But they were running the counts through pretty efficiently, maybe the kid
could escape soon. An offerer in
red-and-blues knelt before Gregor and Kareen, and presented his bag of maroon
and gold silk. Cordelia recognized Count Vidal Vordarian, the dish-faced man
whom Aral had politely described as of the "next-most-conservative
party," i.e., of roughly the same political views as Count Piotr, in a
tone of voice that had made Cordelia wonder if it was a code-phrase for
"Isolationist fanatic." He did not look a fanatic. Freed of its
distorting anger, his face was much more attractive; he turned it now to
Princess Kareen, and said something which made her lift her chin and laugh. His
hand rested a moment familiarly upon her robed knee, and her hand briefly
covered his, before he clambered back to his feet and bowed, and made way for
the next man. Kareen's smile faded as Vordarian turned his back. Gregor's sad glance
crossed Aral, Cordelia, and Droushnakovi; he spoke earnestly up to his mother.
Kareen motioned a guard over, and a few minutes later a guard commander
approached them, for permission to carry off Drou. She was replaced by an
unobtrusive young man who trailed them out of earshot, a mere flicker at the
corner of the eye, a neat trick for a fellow that large. Happily, Cordelia and
Aral soon ran across Lord and Lady Vorpatril, someone Cordelia dared talk to
without a politico-social pre-briefing. Captain Lord Vorpatril's parade
red-and-blues set off his dark-haired good looks to perfection. Lady Vorpatril
barely outshone him in a carnelian dress with matching roses woven into her
cloud of black hair, stunning against her velvety white skin. They made,
Cordelia thought, an archetypal Vor couple, sophisticated and serene, the
effect only slightly spoiled by the gradual awareness from his disjointed
conversation that Captain Vorpatril was drunk. He was a cheerful drunk, though,
his personality merely stretched a bit, not unpleasantly transformed. Vorkosigan, drawn away
by some men who bore down on him with Purpose in their eyes, handed Cordelia
off to Lady Vorpatril. The two women cruised the elegant hors d'oeuvre trays
being offered around by yet more human servants, and compared obstetrical
reports. Lord Vorpatril hastily excused himself to pursue a tray bearing wine.
Alys plotted the colors and cut of Cordelia's next gown. "Black and white,
for you, for Winterfair," she asserted with authority. Cordelia nodded
meekly, wondering if they were actually going to sit down for a meal soon, or
if they were expected to keep grazing off the passing trays. Alys guided her to the
ladies' lavatory, an object of hourly interest to their pregnancy-crowded
bladders, and introduced her on the return journey to several more women of her
rarified social circle. Alys then fell into an animated discussion with a
longstanding crony regarding an upcoming party for the woman's daughter, and
Cordelia drifted to the edge of the group. She stepped back
quietly, separating herself (she tried not to think, from the herd) for a
moment of quiet contemplation. What a strange mix Barrayar was, at one moment
homey and familiar, in the next terrifying and alien ... they put on a good
show, though ... ah! That's what was missing from the scene, Cordelia realized.
On Beta Colony a ceremony of this magnitude would be fully covered by holovid,
to be shared real-time planet-wide. Every move would be a carefully
choreographed dance around the vid angles and commentators' timing, almost to
the point of annihilating the event being recorded. Here, there wasn't a
holovid in sight. The only recordings were made by ImpSec, for their own
purposes, which did not include choreography. The people in this room danced
only for each other, all their glittering show tossed blithely away in time,
which carried it off forever; the event would exist tomorrow only in their
memories. "Lady
Vorkosigan?" Cordelia started from
her meditations at the urbane voice at her elbow. She turned to find Commodore
Count Vordarian. His wearing of red-and-blues, rather than his personal House
livery colors, marked him as being on active service, ornamenting Imperial
Headquarters no doubt—in what department? Yes, Ops, Aral had said. He had a
drink in his hand, and smiled cordially. "Count
Vordarian," she offered in return, smiling, too. They'd seen each other in
passing often enough, Cordelia decided to take him as introduced. This Regency
business wasn't going to go away, however much she might wish it to; it was
time and past time for her to start making connections of her own, and quit
pestering Aral for guidance at every new step. "Are you enjoying
the party?" he inquired. "Oh, yes." She
tried to think of something more to say. "It's extremely beautiful." "As are you,
Milady." He raised his glass to her in a gesture of toast, and sipped. Her heart lurched, but
she identified the reason why before her eyes did more than widen slightly. The
last Barrayaran officer to toast her had been the late Admiral Vorrutyer, under
rather different social circumstances. Vordarian had accidently mimicked his
precise gesture. This was no time for torture-flashbacks. Cordelia blinked.
"Lady Vorpatril helped me a lot. She's very generous." Vordarian nodded
delicately toward her torso. "I understand you also are to be
congratulated. Is it a boy or a girl?" "Uh? Oh. Yes, a
boy, thank you. He's to be named Piotr Miles, I'm told." "I'm surprised. I
should have thought the Lord Regent would have sought a daughter first." Cordelia cocked her
head, puzzled by his ironic tone. "We started this before Aral became
Regent." "But you knew he
was to receive the appointment, surely." "I didn't. But I
thought all you Barrayaran militarists were mad after sons. Why did you think a
daughter?" I want a daughter... . "I assumed Lord
Vorkosigan would be thinking ahead to his long-term, ah, employment, of course.
What better way to maintain the continuity of his power after the Regency is
over than to slip neatly into position as the Emperors father-in-law?" Cordelia boggled.
"You think he'd bet the continuity of a planetary government on the chance
of a couple of teenagers falling in love, a decade and a half from now?" "Love?" Now he
looked baffled. "You Barrayarans
are—" she bit her tongue on the crazy. Impolite. "Aral is certainly
more ... practical." Though she could hardly call him unromantic. "That's extremely
interesting," he breathed. His eyes flicked to and away from her abdomen.
"Do you fancy he contemplates something more direct?" Her mind was running
tangential to this twisting conversation, somehow. "Beg pardon?" He smiled and shrugged. Cordelia frowned.
"Do you mean to say, if we were having a girl, that's what everyone would
be thinking?" "Certainly." She blew out her breath.
"God. That's ... I can't imagine anyone in their right mind wanting to get
near the Barrayaran Imperium. It just makes you a target for every maniac with
a grievance, as far as I can see." An image of Lieutenant Koudelka,
bloody-faced and deafened, flashed in her mind. "Also hard on the poor
fellow who's unlucky enough to be standing next to you." His attention sharpened.
"Ah, yes, that unfortunate incident the other day. Has anything come of
the investigation, do you know?" "Nothing that I've
heard. Negri and Illyan are talking Cetagandans, mostly. But the guy who
launched the grenade got away clean." "Too bad." He
drained his glass, and exchanged it for a freshly charged one presented
immediately by a passing Vorbarra-liveried servant. Cordelia eyed the
wineglasses wistfully. But she was off metabolic poisons for the duration. Yet
another advantage of Betan-style gestation in uterine replicators, none of this
blasted enforced clean living. At home she could have poisoned and endangered
herself freely, while her child grew, fully monitored round-the-clock by sober
techs, safe and protected in the replicator banks. Suppose she had been under
that sonic grenade ... She longed for a drink. Well, she did not need
the mind-numbing buzz of ethanol; conversation with Barrayarans was
mind-numbing enough. Her eyes sought Aral in the crowd—there he was, Kou at his
shoulder, talking with Piotr and two other grizzled old men in counts'
liveries. As Aral had predicted, his hearing had returned to normal within a
couple of days. Yet still his eyes shifted from face to face, drinking in cues
of gesture and inflection, his glass a mere untasted ornament in his hand. On
duty, no question. Was he ever off-duty, anymore? "Was he much
disturbed by the attack?" Vordarian inquired, following her gaze to Aral. "Wouldn't you
be?" said Cordelia. "I don't know ... he's seen so much violence in
his life, almost more than I can imagine. It may be almost like ... white
noise. Tuned out." I wish I could tune it out. "You have not known
him that long, though. Just since Escobar." "We met once before
the war. Briefly." "Oh?" His
brows rose. "I didn't know that. How little one truly knows of
people." He paused, watching Aral, watching her watch Aral. One corner of
his mouth crooked up, then the quirk vanished in a thoughtful pursing of his
lips. "He's bisexual, you know." He took a delicate sip of his wine. "Was
bisexual," she corrected absently, looking fondly across the room.
"Now he's monogamous." Vordarian choked,
sputtering. Cordelia watched him with concern, wondering if she ought to pat
him on the back or something, but he regained his breath and balance. "He
told you that?" he wheezed in astonishment. "No, Vorrutyer did.
Just before he met his, um, fatal accident." Vordarian was standing
frozen; she felt a certain malicious glee at having at last baffled a
Barrayaran as much as they sometimes baffled her. Now, if she could just figure
out what she'd said that had thrown him ... She went on seriously, "The
more I look back on Vorrutyer, the more he seems a tragic figure. Still
obsessed with a love affair that was over eighteen years ago. Yet I sometimes
wonder, if he could have had what he wanted then—kept Aral—if Aral might have
kept that sadistic streak that ultimately consumed Vorrutyer's sanity under
control. It's as if the two of them were on some land of weird see-saw, each
one's survival entailing the other's destruction." "A Betan." His
stunned look was gradually fading to one Cordelia mentally dubbed as Awful
Realization. "I should have guessed. You are, after all, the people who
bioengineered hermaphrodites... ." He paused. "How long did you know
Vorrutyer?" "About twenty
minutes. But it was a very intense twenty minutes." She decided to let him
wonder what the hell that meant. "Their, ah, affair,
as you call it, was a great secret scandal, at the time." She wrinkled her nose.
"Great secret scandal? Isn't that an oxymoron? Like 'military
intelligence,' or 'friendly fire.' Also typical Barrayaranisms, now that I
think on it." Vordarian had the
strangest look on his face. He looked, she realized, exactly like a man who had
thrown a bomb, had it go fizz instead of BOOM! and was now trying to decide
whether to stick his hand in and tap the firing mechanism to test it. Then it was her turn for
Awful Realization. This man just tried to blow up my marriage. No—Aral's
marriage. She fixed a bright, sunny, innocent smile on her face, her brain
kicking—at last!—into overdrive. Vordarian couldn't be of Vorrutyer's old war
party; their leaders had all met with their fatal accidents before Ezar had
bowed out, and the rest were scattered and lying low. What did he want? She
fiddled with a flower from her hair, and considered simpering. "I didn't
imagine I was marrying a forty-four-year-old virgin, Count Vordarian." "So it seems."
He knocked back another gulp of wine. "You galactics are all degenerate
... what perversions does he tolerate in return, I wonder?" His eyes
glinted in sudden open malice. "Do you know how Lord Vorkosigan's first
wife died?" "Suicide. Plasma
arc to the head," she replied promptly. "It was rumored
he'd murdered her. For adultery. Betan, beware." His smile had turned
wholly acid. "Yes, I knew that,
too. In this case, an untrue rumor." All pretense of cordiality had
evaporated from their exchange. Cordelia had a bad sense of all control
escaping with it. She leaned forward, and lowered her voice. "Do you know
why Vorrutyer died?" He couldn't help it; he
tilted toward her, drawn in. "No ..." "He tried to hurt
Aral through me. I found that ... annoying. I wish you would cease trying to
annoy me, Count Vordarian, I'm afraid you might succeed." Her voice fell
further, almost to a whisper. "You should fear it, too." His initial patronizing
tone had certainly given way to wariness. He made a smooth, openhanded gesture
that seemed to symbolize a bow of farewell, and backed away.
"Milady." The glance over his shoulder as he moved off was thoroughly
spooked. She frowned after him.
Whew. What an odd exchange. What had the man expected, dropping that obsolete
datum on her as if it were some shocking surprise? Did Vordarian actually
imagine she would go off and tax her husband with his poor taste in companions
two decades ago? Would a naive young Barrayaran bride have gone into hysterics?
Not Lady Vorpatril, whose social enthusiasms concealed an acid judgment; not
Princess Kareen, whose naivete had surely been burned out long ago by that
expert sadist Serg. He fired, but he missed. And, more coldly, Has he
fired and missed once before? That had not been a normal social interaction,
not even by Barrayaran standards of one-upsmanship. Or maybe he was just drunk.
She suddenly wanted to talk to Illyan. She closed her eyes, trying to clear her
fogged head. "Are you well,
love?" Aral's concerned voice murmured in her ear. "Do you need your
nausea medication?" Her eyes flew open.
There he was, safe and sound beside her. "Oh, I'm fine." She attached
herself to his arm, lightly, not a panicked limpet-like clamp. "Just
thinking." "They're seating us
for dinner." "Good. It will be
nice to sit down, my feet are swelling." He looked as if he
wanted to pick her up and carry her, but they paraded in normally, joining the
other formal pairs. They sat at a raised table set a little apart from the
others, with Gregor, Kareen, Piotr, the Lord Guardian of the Speaker's Circle
and his wife, and Prime Minister Vortala. At Gregor's insistence, Droushnakovi
was seated with them; the boy seemed painfully glad to see his old bodyguard.
Did I take away your playmate, child? Cordelia wondered apologetically. It
seemed so; Gregor engaged in a negotiation with Kareen for Drou's weekly return
"for judo lessons." Drou, used to the Residence atmosphere, was not
so overawed as Koudelka, who was stiff with exaggerated care against betrayal
by his own clumsiness. Cordelia found herself
seated between Vortala and the Speaker, and carried on conversations with
reasonable ease; Vortala was charming, in his blunt way. Cordelia managed
nibbles of all the elegantly served food except a slice off the carcass of a
roast bovine, carried in whole. Usually she was able to put out of her mind the
fact that Barrayaran protein was not grown in vats, but taken from the bodies
of real dead animals. She'd known about their primitive culinary practices
before she'd chosen to come here, after all, and had tasted animal muscle
before on Survey missions, in the interests of science, survival, or potential
new product development for the homeworld. The Barrayarans applauded the
fruit-and-flower-decked beast, seeming to actually find it attractive and not
horrific, and the cook, who'd followed it anxiously out, took a bow. The
primitive olfactory circuits of her brain had to agree, it smelled great.
Vorkosigan had his portion bloody-rare. Cordelia sipped water. After dessert, and some
brief formal toasts offered by Vortala and Vorkosigan, the boy Gregor was at
last taken off to bed by his mother. Kareen motioned Cordelia and Droushnakovi
to join her. The tension eased in Cordelia's shoulders as they left the big
public assembly and climbed to the Emperor's quiet, private quarters. Gregor was peeled out of
his little uniform and dove into pajamas, becoming boy and not icon once again.
Drou supervised his teeth-brushing, and was inveigled into "just one
round" of some game they'd used to play with a board and pieces, as a
bedtime treat. This Kareen indulgently permitted, and after a kiss for and from
her son, she and Cordelia withdrew to a softly lit sitting room nearby. A night
breeze from the open windows cooled the upper chamber. Both women sat with a
sigh, unwinding; Cordelia kicked off her shoes immediately after Kareen did so.
Distance-muffled voices and laughter drifted through the windows from the
gardens below. "How long does this
party go on?" Cordelia asked. "Dawn, for those
with more endurance than myself. I shall retire at midnight, after which the
serious drinkers will take over." "Some of them
looked pretty serious already." "Unfortunately."
Kareen smiled. "You will be able to see the Vor class at both its best and
its worst, before the night is over." "I can imagine. I'm
surprised you don't import less lethal mood-altering drugs." Kareen's smile
sharpened. "But drunken brawls are traditional." She allowed the
cutting edge of her voice to soften. "In fact, such things are coming in,
at least in the shuttleport cities. As usual, we seem to be adding to rather
than replacing our own customs." "Perhaps that's the
best way." Cordelia frowned. How best to probe delicately ... ? "Is
Count Vidal Vordarian one of those in the habit of getting publicly
potted?" "No." Kareen
glanced up, narrowing her eyes. "Why do you ask?" "I had a peculiar
conversation with him. I thought an overdose of ethanol might account for
it." She remembered Vordarian's hand resting lightly upon the Princess's
knee, just short of an intimate caress. "Do you know him well? How would
you estimate him?" Kareen said judiciously,
"He's rich ... proud ... He was loyal to Ezar during Serg's late
machinations against his father. Loyal to the Imperium, to the Vor class. There
are four major manufacturing cities in Vordarian's District, plus military
bases, supply depots, the biggest military shuttleport... . Vidal's is certainly
the most economically important area on Barrayar today. The war barely touched
the Vordarians' District; it's one of the few the Cetagandans pulled out of by
treaty. We sited our first space bases there because we took over facilities
the Cetagandans had built and abandoned, and a good deal of economic
development followed from that." "That's ...
interesting," said Cordelia, "but I was wondering about the man
personally. His, ah, likes and dislikes, for example. Do you like him?" "At one time,"
said Kareen slowly, "I wondered if Vidal might be powerful enough to
protect me from Serg. After Ezar died. As Ezar grew more ill, I was thinking, I
had better look to my own defense. Nothing appeared to be happening, and no one
told me anything." "If Serg had become
emperor, how could a mere count have protected you?" asked Cordelia. "He would have had
to become ... more. Vidal had ambition, if it were properly encouraged—and
patriotism, God knows if Serg had lived he might have destroyed Barrayar—Vidal
might have saved us all. But Ezar promised I'd have nothing to fear, and Ezar
delivered. Serg died before Ezar and ... and I have been trying to let things
cool, with Vidal, since." Cordelia abstractedly
rubbed her lower lip. "Oh. But do you, personally—I mean, do you like him?
Would becoming Countess Vordarian be a nice retirement from the
dowager-princess business, someday?" "Oh! Not now. The
Emperor's stepfather would be too powerful a man, to set up opposite the
Regent. A dangerous polarity, if they were not allied or exactly balanced. Or
were not combined in one person." "Like being the
Emperor's father-in-law?" "Yes,
exactly." "I'm having trouble
understanding this ... venereal transmission of power. Do you have some claim
to the Imperium in your own right, or not?" "That would be for
the military to decide," she shrugged. Her voice lowered. "It is like
a disease, isn't it? I'm too close, I'm touched, infected... . Gregor is my
hope of survival. And my prison." "Don't you want a
life of your own?" "No. I just want to
live." Cordelia sat back,
disturbed. Did Serg teach you not to give offense? "Does Vordarian see it
that way? I mean, power isn't the only thing you have to offer. I think you
underestimate your personal attractiveness." "On Barrayar ...
power is the only thing." Her expression grew distant. "I admit... I
did once ask Captain Negri to get me a report on Vidal. He uses his courtesans
normally." This wistful approval
was not exactly Cordelia's idea of a declaration of boundless love. Yet that
hadn't been just desire for power she'd seen in Vordarian's eyes at the
ceremony, she would swear. Had Aral's appointment as Regent accidentally messed
up the man's courtship? Might that very well account for the sex-tinged
animosity in his speech to her ... ? Droushnakovi returned on
tiptoe. "He fell asleep," she whispered fondly. Kareen nodded, and
tilted her head back in an unguarded moment of rest, until a Vorbarra-liveried
messenger arrived and addressed her: "Will you open the dancing with my lord
Regent, Milady? They're waiting." Request, or order? It
sounded more sinister-mandatory than fun, in the servant's flat voice. "Last duty for the
night," Kareen assured Cordelia, as they both shoved their shoes back on.
Cordelia's footgear seemed to have shrunk two sizes since the start of the
evening. She hobbled after Kareen, Drou trailing. A large downstairs room
was floored in multi-toned wood marquetry in patterns of flowers, vines, and
animals. The polished surface would have been put on a museum wall on Beta Colony;
these incredible people danced across it. A live orchestra—selected by
cutthroat competition from the Imperial Service Band, Cordelia was
informed—provided music, in the Barrayaran style. Even the waltzes sounded
faintly like marches. Aral and the princess were presented to each other, and
he led her off for a couple of good-natured turns around the room, a formal
dance that involved each mirroring the other's steps and slides, hands raised
but never quite touching. Cordelia was fascinated. She'd never guessed that
Aral could dance. This seemed to complete the social requirements, and other
couples filtered out onto the floor. Aral returned to her side, looking
stimulated. "Dance, Milady?" After that dinner, more
like a nap. How did he keep up that alarming hyperactivity? Secret terror,
probably. She shook her head, smiling. "I don't know how." "Ah." They
strolled, instead. "I could show you how," he offered as they exited
the room onto a bank of terraces that wound off into the gardens, pleasantly
cool and dark but for a few colored lights to prevent stumbles on the pathways. "Mm," she said
doubtfully. "If you can find a private spot." If they could find a
private spot, she could think of better things to do than dance, though. "Well, here
we—shh." His scimitar grin winked in the dark, and his grip tightened
warningly on her hand. They both stood still, at the entrance to a little open
space screened from eyes above by yews and some pink feathery non-Earth plant.
The music floated clearly down. "Try, Kou,"
urged Droushnakovi's voice. Drou and Kou stood facing each other on the far
side of the terrace-nook. Doubtfully, Koudelka set his stick down on the stone
balustrade, and held up his hands to hers. They began to step, slide, and dip,
Drou counting earnestly, "One-two-three, one-two-three ..." Koudelka tripped, and
she caught him; his grip found her waist. "It's no damned good,
Drou." He shook his head in frustration. "Sh ..." Her
hand touched his lips. "Try again. I'm for it. You said you had to
practice that hand-coordination thing, how long, before you got it? More than
once, I bet." "The old man
wouldn't let me give up." "Well, maybe I
won't let you give up either." "I'm tired,"
complained Koudelka. So, switch to kissing,
Cordelia urged silently, muffling a laugh. That you can do sitting down.
Droushnakovi was determined, however, and they began again.
"One-two-three, one-two-three ..." Once again the effort ended in
what seemed to Cordelia a very good start on a clinch, if only one party or the
other would gather the wit and nerve to follow through. Aral shook his head, and
they backed silently away around the shrubbery. Apparently a little inspired,
his lips found hers to muffle his own chuckle. Alas, their delicacy was futile;
an anonymous Vor lord wandered blindly past them, stumbled across the terrace
nook, freezing Kou and Drou in mid-step, and hung over the stone balustrade to
be very traditionally sick into the defenseless bushes below. Sudden swearing,
in new voices, one male, one female, rose up from the dark and shaded target
zone. Koudelka retrieved his stick, and the two would-be dancers hastily
retreated. The Vor lord was sick again, and his male victim started climbing up
after him, slipping on the beslimed stonework and promising violent
retribution. Vorkosigan guided Cordelia prudently away. Later, while waiting by
one of the Residence's entrances for the groundcars to be brought round,
Cordelia found herself standing next to the lieutenant. Koudelka gazed
pensively back over his shoulder at the Residence, from which music and
party-noises wafted almost unabated. "Good party,
Kou?" she inquired genially. "What? Oh, yes,
astonishing. When I joined the Service, I never dreamed I'd end up here."
He blinked. "Time was, I never thought I'd end up anywhere." And then
he added, giving Cordelia a slight case of mental whiplash, "I sure wish women
came with operating manuals." Cordelia laughed aloud.
"I could say the same for men. "But you and
Admiral Vorkosigan—you're different." "Not ... really.
We've learned from experience, maybe. A lot of people fail to." "Do you think I
have a chance at a normal life?" He gazed, not at her, but into the dark. "You make your own
chances, Kou. And your own dances." "You sound just
like the Admiral." Cordelia cornered Illyan
the next morning, when he stopped in to Vorkosigan House for the daily report
from his guard commander. "Tell me, Simon. Is
Vidal Vordarian on your short list, or your long list?" "Everybody's on my
long list," Illyan sighed. "I want you to move
him to your short list." His head cocked.
"Why?" She hesitated. She
wasn't about to reply, Intuition, though that was exactly what those subliminal
cues added up to. "He seems to me to have an assassin's mind. The sort
that fires from cover into the back of his enemy." Illyan smiled
quizzically. "Beg pardon, Milady, but that doesn't sound like the Vordarian
I know. I've always found him more the openly bullheaded type." How badly must he hurt,
how ardently desire, for a bullheaded man to turn subtle? She was unsure.
Perhaps, not knowing how deeply Aral's happiness with her ran, Vordarian did
not recognize how vicious his attack upon it was? And did personal and
political animosity necessarily run together? No. The man's hatred had been
profound, his blow precisely, if mistakenly, aimed. "Move him to your
short list," she said. Illyan opened his hand;
not mere placation, by his expression some chain of thought was engaged.
"Very well, Milady." CHAPTER
SIX Cordelia watched the
shadow of the lightflyer flow over the ground below, a slim blot arrowing
south. The arrow wavered across farm fields, creeks, rivers, and dusty
roads—the road net was rudimentary, stunted, its development leapfrogged by the
personal air transport that had arrived in the blast of galactic technology at
the end of the Time of Isolation. Coils of tension unwound in her neck with
each kilometer they put between themselves and the hectic hothouse atmosphere
of the capital. A day in the country was an excellent idea, overdue. She only
wished Aral could have shared it with her. Sergeant Bothari, cued
by some landmark below, banked the lightflyer gently to its new course.
Droushnakovi, sharing the back seat with Cordelia, stiffened, trying not to
lean into her. Dr. Henri, in front with the Sergeant, stared out the canopy
with an interest almost equal to Cordelia's. Dr. Henri turned half
around, to speak over his shoulder to Cordelia. "I do thank you for the
luncheon invitation, Lady Vorkosigan. It's a rare privilege to visit the
Vorkosigans' private estate." "Is it?" said
Cordelia. "I know they don't have crowds, but Count Piotr's horse friends
drop in fairly often. Fascinating animals." Cordelia thought that
over a second, then decided Dr. Henri would realize without being told that the
"fascinating animals" applied to the horses, and not Count Piotr's
friends. "Drop the least little hint that you're interested, and Count
Piotr will probably show you personally around the stable." "I've never met the
General." Dr. Henri looked daunted by the prospect, and fingered the
collar of his undress greens. A research scientist from the Imperial Military
Hospital, Henri dealt with high rankers often enough not to be awed; it had to
be all that Barrayaran history clinging to Piotr that made the difference. Piotr had acquired his
present rank at the age of twenty—two, fighting the Cetagandans in the fierce
guerilla war that had raged through the Dendarii Mountains, just now showing
blue on the southern horizon. Rank was all then—emperor Dorca Vorbarra could
give him at the time; more tangible assets such as reinforcements, supplies,
and pay were out of the question in that desperate hour. Twenty years later
Piotr had changed Barrayaran history again, playing kingmaker to Ezar Vorbarra
in the civil war that had brought down Mad Emperor Yuri. Not your average HQ
staffer, General Piotr Vorkosigan, not by anybody's standards. "He's easy to get
along with," Cordelia assured Dr. Henri. "Just admire the horses, and
ask a few leading questions about the wars, and you can relax and spend the
rest of your time listening." Henri's brows went up,
as he searched her face for irony. Henri was a sharp man. Cordelia smiled
cheerfully. Bothari was silently
watching her in the mirror set over his control interface, Cordelia noticed.
Again. The sergeant seemed tense today. It was the position of his hands, the
cording of the muscles in his neck, that gave him away. Bothari's flat yellow
eyes were always unreadable; set deep, too close together, and not quite on the
same level, above his sharp cheekbones and long narrow jaw. Anxiety over the
doctor's visit? Understandable. The land below was
rolling, but soon rucked up into the rugged ridges that channeled the lake
district. The mountains rose beyond, and Cordelia thought she caught a distant
glint of early snow on the highest peaks. Bothari hopped the flyer over three
running ridges, and banked again, zooming up a narrow valley. A few more
minutes, a swoop over another ridge, and the long lake was in sight. An
enormous maze of burnt—out fortifications made a black crown on a headland, and
a village nestled below it. Bothari brought the flyer down neatly on a circle
painted on the pavement of the village's widest street. Dr. Henri gathered up
his bag of medical equipment. "The examination will only take a few
minutes," he assured Cordelia, "then we can go on." Don't tell me, tell
Bothari. Cordelia sensed Dr. Henri was a little unnerved by Bothari. He kept
addressing her instead of the Sergeant, as if she were some translator who
would put it all into terms that Bothari would understand. Bothari was
formidable, true, but talking past him wouldn't make him magically disappear. Bothari led them to a
little house set in a narrow side street that went down to the glimmering
water. At his knock, a heavyset woman with greying hair opened the door and
smiled. "Good morning, Sergeant. Come in, everything's all ready.
Milady." She favored Cordelia with an awkward curtsey. Cordelia returned a nod,
gazing around with interest. "Good morning, Mistress Hysopi. How nice your
house looks today." The place was painfully scrubbed and straightened—as a
military widow, Mistress Hysopi understood all about inspections. Cordelia
trusted the everyday atmosphere in the hired fosterer's house was a trifle more
relaxed. "Your little girl's
been very good this morning," Mistress Hysopi assured the Sergeant.
"Took her bottle right down—she's just had her bath. Right this way,
Doctor. I hope you'll find everything's all right... ." She guided the way up
narrow stairs. One bedroom was clearly her own; the other, with a bright window
looking down over rooftops to the lake, had recently been made over into a
nursery. A dark—haired infant with big brown eyes cooed to herself in a crib.
"There's a girl," Mistress Hysopi smiled, picking her up. "Say
hi to your daddy, eh, Elena? Pretty—pretty." Bothari entered no
further than the door, watching the infant warily. "Her head has grown a
lot," he offered after a moment. "They usually do,
between three and four months," Mistress Hysopi agreed. Dr. Henri laid out his
instruments on the crib sheet, and Mistress Hysopi carried the baby back over
and began undressing her. The two began a technical discussion about formulae
and feces, and Bothari walked around the little room, looking but not touching.
He did look terribly huge and out-of-place among the colorful, delicate infant
furnishings, dark and dangerous in his brown and silver uniform. His head
brushed the slanting ceiling, and he backed cautiously to the door. Cordelia hung curiously
over Henri and Hysopi's shoulders, watching the little girl wriggle and attempt
to roll. Infants. Soon enough she would have one of those. As if in response
her belly fluttered. Piotr Miles was not, fortunately, strong enough to fight
his way out of a paper bag yet, but if his development continued at this rate,
the last couple of months were going to be sleepless. She wished she'd taken
the parents' training course back on Beta Colony even if she hadn't been ready
to apply for a license. Yet Barrayaran parents seemed to manage to ad lib.
Mistress Hysopi had learned on the job, and she had three grown children now. "Amazing,"
said Dr. Henri, shaking his head and recording his data. "Absolutely
normal development, as far as I can tell. Nothing to even show she came out of
a uterine replicator." "I came out of a
uterine replicator," Cordelia noted with amusement. Henri glanced
involuntarily up and down at her, as if suddenly expecting to find antennae
sprouting from her head. "Betan experience suggests it doesn't matter so
much how you got here, as what you do after you arrive." "Really." He
frowned thoughtfully. "And you are free of genetic defects?" "Certified,"
Cordelia agreed. "We need this
technology." He sighed, and began packing his things back up. "She's
fine, you can dress her again," he added to Mistress Hysopi. Bothari loomed over the
crib at last, to stare down, the lines creased deep between his eyes. He
touched the infant only once, a finger to her cheek, then rubbed thumb and
finger together as if checking his neural function. Mistress Hysopi studied him
sideways, but said nothing. While Bothari lingered
to settle up the month's expenses with Mistress Hysopi, Cordelia and Dr. Henri
strolled down to the lake, Droushnakovi following. "When those
seventeen Escobaran uterine replicators first arrived at Imp Mil," said
Henri, "sent from the war zone, I was frankly appalled. Why save those
unwanted fetuses, and at such a cost? Why land them on my department? Since
then I've become a believer, Milady. I've even thought of an application,
spin-off technology, for burn patients. I'm working on it now, the project
approval came down just a week ago." His eyes were eager, as he detailed
his theory, which was sound as far as Cordelia understood the principles. "My mother is a
medical equipment and maintenance engineer at Silica Hospital," she
explained to Henri, when he paused for breath and approval. "She works on
these sorts of applications all the time." Henri redoubled his technical
exposition. Cordelia greeted two
women in the street by name, and politely introduced them to Dr. Henri. "They're wives of
some of Count Piotr's sworn armsmen," she explained as they passed on. "I should have
thought they'd choose to live in the capital." "Some do, some stay
here. It seems to depend on taste. The cost of living is much lower out here,
and these fellows aren't paid as much as I'd imagined. Some of the backcountry
men are suspicious of city life, they seem to think it's purer here." She
grinned briefly. "One fellow has a wife in each location. None of his
brother-armsmen have ratted on him yet. A solid bunch." Henri's brows rose.
"How jolly for him." "Not really. He's
chronically short of cash, and always looks worried. But he can't decide which
wife to give up. Apparently, he actually loves them both." When Dr. Henri stepped
aside to talk to an old man they saw pottering around the docks about possible
boat rentals, Droushnakovi came up to Cordelia, and lowered her voice. She
looked disturbed. "Milady … how in
the world did Sergeant Bothari come by a baby? He's not married, is he?" "Would you believe
the stork brought her?" said Cordelia lightly. "No." From her frown, Drou did
not approve this levity. Cordelia hardly blamed her. She sighed. How do I
wriggle out of this one? "Very nearly. Her uterine replicator was sent on
a fast courier from Escobar, after the war. She finished her gestation in a
laboratory in Imp Mil, under Dr. Henri's supervision." "Is she really
Bothari's?" "Oh, yes.
Genetically certified. That's how they identified—" Cordelia snapped that
last sentence off midway. Carefully, now ... "But what was all
that about seventeen replicators? And how did the baby get in the replicator?
Was—was she an experiment?" "Placental
transfer. A delicate operation, even by galactic standards, but hardly
experimental. Look." Cordelia paused, thinking fast. "I'll tell you
the truth." Just not all of it. "Little Elena is the daughter of
Bothari and a young Escobaran officer named Elena Visconti. Bothari ... loved
her ... very much. But after the war, she would not return with him to Barrayar.
The child was conceived, er ... Barrayaran-style, then transferred to the
replicator when they parted. There were some similar cases. The replicators
were all sent to Imp Mil, which was interested in learning more about the
technology. Bothari was in ... medical therapy, for quite a long time, after
the war. But when he got out, and she got out, he took custody of her." "Did the others
take their babies, too?" "Most of the other
fathers were dead by then. The children went to the Imperial Service orphanage."
There. The official version, all right and tight. "Oh." Drou
frowned at her feet. "That's not at all ... it's hard to picture Bothari
... To tell the truth," she said in a burst of candor, "I'm not sure
I'd want to give custody of a pet cat to Bothari. Doesn't he strike you as a
bit strange?" "Aral and I are
keeping an eye on things. Bothari's doing very well so far, I think. He found
Mistress Hysopi on his own, and is making sure she gets everything she needs.
Has Bothari—that is, does Bothari bother you?" Droushnakovi gave
Cordelia an are-you-kidding? look. "He's so big. And ugly. And he ...
mutters to himself, some days. And he's sick so much, days in a row when he
won't get out of bed, but he doesn't have a fever or anything. Count Piotr's
Armsman-commander thinks he's malingering." "He's not
malingering. But I'm glad you mentioned it, I'll have Aral talk to the
commander and straighten him out." "But aren't you at
all afraid of him? On the bad days, at least?" "I could weep for
Bothari," said Cordelia slowly, "but I don't fear him. On the bad
days or any days. You shouldn't either. It's ... it's a profound insult." "Sorry."
Droushnakovi scuffed her shoe across the gravel. "It's a sad story. No
wonder he doesn't talk about the Escobar war." "Yes, I'd ...
appreciate it if you'd refrain from bringing it up. It's very painful for
him." A short hop in the
lightflyer from the village across a tongue of the lake brought them to the
Vorkosigans' country estate. A century ago the house had been an outlying guard
post to the headland's fort. Modern weaponry had rendered aboveground
fortifications obsolete, and the old stone barracks had been converted to more
peaceful uses. Dr. Henri had evidently been expecting more grandeur, for he
said, "It's smaller than I expected." Piotr's housekeeper had
a pleasant luncheon set up for them on a flower—decked terrace off the south
end of the house by the kitchen. While she was escorting the party out,
Cordelia fell back beside Count Piotr. "Thank you, sir,
for letting us invade you." "Invade me indeed!
This is your house, dear. You are free to entertain any friends you choose in
it. This is the first time you've done so, do you realize?" He stopped,
standing with her in the doorway. "You know, when my mother married my
father, she completely re-decorated Vorkosigan House. My wife did the same in
her day. Aral married so late, I'm afraid an updating is sadly overdue.
Wouldn't you ... like to?" But it's your house,
thought Cordelia helplessly. Not even Aral's, really ... "You've touched
down so lightly on us, one almost fears you'll fly away again." Piotr
chuckled, but his eyes were concerned. Cordelia patted her
rounding belly. "Oh, I'm thoroughly weighted down now, sir." She
hesitated. "To tell the truth, I have thought it would be nice to have a
lift tube in Vorkosigan House. Counting the basement, sub-basement, attic, and
roof, there are eight floors in the main section. It can make quite a
hike." "A lift tube? We've
never—" He bit his tongue. "Where?" "You could put it
in the back hallway next to the plumbing stack, without disrupting the internal
architecture." "So you could. Very
well. Find a builder. Do it." "I'll look into it
tomorrow, then. Thank you, sir." Her brows rose, behind his back. Count Piotr, evidently
with the same idea in mind of encouraging her, was studiously cordial to Dr.
Henri over lunch, New Man though Henri clearly was. Henri, following Cordelia's
advice, hit it off well with Piotr in turn. Piotr told Henri all about the new
foal, born in his stables over the back ridge. The creature was a genetically
certified pureblood that Piotr called a quarter horse, though it looked like an
entire horse to Cordelia. The stud-colt had been imported at great cost as a
frozen embryo from Earth, and implanted in a grade mare, the gestation
supervised anxiously by Piotr. The biologically trained Henri expressed
technical interest, and after lunch was done Piotr carried him off for a
personal inspection of the big beasts. Cordelia begged off.
"I think I'd like to rest a bit. You can go, Drou. Sergeant Bothari will
stay with me." In fact, Cordelia was worried about Bothari. He hadn't
eaten a single bite of lunch, nor said a word for over an hour. Doubtful, but madly
interested in the horses, Drou allowed herself to be persuaded. The three
trudged off up the hill. Cordelia watched them away, then turned her face back
to catch Bothari watching her again. He gave her a strange approving nod. "Thank you,
Milady." "Ahem. Yes. I
wondered if you felt ill." "No ... yes. I
don't know. I wanted ... I've wanted to talk to you, Milady. For—for some
weeks. But there never seemed to be a good time. Lately it's been getting
worse. I can't wait anymore. I'd hoped today ..." "Seize the
moment." The housekeeper was rattling about in Piotr's kitchen.
"Would you care to take a walk, or something?" "Please,
Milady." They walked together,
around the old stone house. The pavilion on the crest of the hill, overlooking
the lake, would be a great place to sit and talk, but Cordelia felt too full
and pregnant to make the climb. She led left, instead, on the path parallel to
the slope, till they came to what appeared to be a little walled garden. The Vorkosigan family
plot was crowded with an odd assortment of graves, of core family, distant
relatives, retainers of special merit. The cemetery had originally been part of
the ruined fort complex, the oldest graves of guards and officers going back
centuries. The Vorkosigan intrusion dated only from the atomic destruction of
the old district capital of Vorkosigan Vashnoi during the Cetagandan invasion.
The dead had been melted down with the living there, then eight generations of
family history obliterated. It was interesting to note the clusters of more
recent dates, and key them to their current events: the Cetagandan invasion,
Mad Yuri's War. Aral's mother's grave dated exactly to the start of Yuri's War.
A space was reserved beside her for Piotr, and had been for thirty-three years.
She waited patiently for her husband. And men accuse us women of being slow.
Her eldest son, Aral's brother, lay buried at her other hand. "Let's sit over
there." She nodded toward a stone bench set round with small orange
flowers, and shaded by an Earth-import oak at least a century old. "These
people are all good listeners, now. And they don't pass on gossip." Cordelia sat on the warm
stone, and studied Bothari. He sat as far from her as the bench permitted. The
lines on his face were deep-cut today, harsh despite the muting of the afternoon
light by the warm autumn haze. One hand, wrapped around the rough stone edge of
the bench, flexed arrhythmically. His breathing was too careful. Cordelia softened her
voice. "So, what's the trouble, Sergeant? You seem a little ... stretched,
today. Is it something about Elena?" He breathed a humorless
laugh. "Stretched. Yes. I guess so. It's not about the baby ... it's ...
well, not directly." His eyes met hers squarely for almost the first time
today. "You remember Escobar, milady. You were there. Right?" "Right." This
man is in pain, Cordelia realized. What sort of pain? "I can't remember
Escobar." "So I understand. I
believe your military therapists went to a great deal of trouble to make sure
you did not remember Escobar." "Oh yes." "I don't approve of
Barrayaran notions of therapy. Particularly when colored by political
expediency." "I've come to
realize that, Milady." Cautious hope flickered in his eyes. "How did they work
it? Burn out selected neurons? Chemical erasure?" "No ... they used
drugs, but nothing was destroyed. They tell me. The doctors called it
suppression-therapy. We just called it hell. Every day we went to hell, till we
didn't want to go there anymore." Bothari shifted in his seat, his brow
wrinkling. "Trying to remember—to talk about Escobar at all—gives me these
headaches. Sounds stupid, doesn't it? Big man like me whining about headaches
like some old woman. Certain special parts, memories, they give me these really
bad headaches that make red rings around everything I see, and I start
vomiting. When I stop trying to think about it, the pain goes away.
Simple." Cordelia swallowed.
"I see. I'm sorry. I knew it was bad, but I didn't know it was ... that
bad." "The worst part is
the dreams. I dream of ... it ... and if I wake up too slowly, I remember the
dream. I remember too much, all at once, and my head—all I can do is roll over
and cry, until I can start thinking about something else. Count Piotr's other
armsmen—they think I'm crazy, they think I'm stupid, they don't know what I'm
doing in there with them. I don't know what I'm doing in there with them."
He rubbed his big hands over his burr-scalp in a harried swipe. "To be a
count's sworn Armsman—it's an honor. Only twenty places to fill. They take the
best, they take the bloody heroes, the men with medals, the twenty-year men
with perfect records. If what I did—at Escobar—was so bad, why did the Admiral
make Count Piotr make a place for me? And if I was such a bloody hero, why did
they take away my memory of it?" His breath was coming faster, whistling
through his long yellow teeth. "How much pain are
you in now? Trying to talk about this?" "Some. More to
come." He stared at her, frowning deeply. "I've got to talk about
this. To you. It's driving me ..." She took a calming
breath, trying to listen with her whole mind, body, and soul. And carefully. So
carefully. "Go on." "I have ... four
pictures ... in my head, from Escobar. Four pictures, and I cannot explain
them. To myself. A few minutes, out of—three months? Four? They all of them
bother me, but one bothers me the most. You're in it," he added abruptly,
and stared at the ground. Both hands clenched the bench now, white-knuckled. "I see. Go
on." "One—the least-bad
one—it was an argument. Prince Serg was there, and Admiral Vorrutyer, Lord
Vorkosigan, and Admiral Rulf Vorhalas. And I was there. Except I didn't have
any clothes on." "Are you sure this
isn't a dream?" "No. I'm not sure.
Admiral Vorrutyer said ... something very insulting, to Lord Vorkosigan. He had
Lord Vorkosigan backed up against the wall. Prince Serg laughed. Then Vorrutyer
kissed him, full on the mouth, and Vorhalas tried to knock Vorrutyer's head
off, but Lord Vorkosigan wouldn't let him. And I don't remember after
that." "Um ... yeah,"
said Cordelia. "I wasn't there for that part, but I know there was some
really weird stuff going on in the high command at that point, as Vorrutyer and
Serg pushed their limits. So it's probably a true memory. I could ask Aral, if
you wish." "No! No. That one
doesn't feel as important, anyway. As the others." "Tell me about the
others, then." His voice fell to a
whisper. "I remember Elena. So pretty. I only have two pictures in my
head, of Elena. One, I remember Vorrutyer making me ... no, I don't want to
talk about that one." He stopped for a full minute, rocking gently,
forward and back. "The other ... we were in my cabin. She and I. She was
my wife... ." His voice faltered. "She wasn't my wife, was she."
It wasn't even a question. "No. But you know
that." "But I remember
believing she was." His hands pressed his forehead, and rubbed his neck,
hard and futilely. "She was a prisoner
of war," said Cordelia. "Her beauty drew Vorrutyer's and Serg's
attention, and they made a project of tormenting her, for no reason—not for her
military intelligence, not even for political terrorism—just for their
gratification. She was raped. But you know that, too. On some level."
"Yes," he whispered. "Taking away her
contraceptive implant and allowing—or compelling—you to impregnate her was part
of their idea of sadism. The first part. They did not, thank God, live long
enough to get to the second part." His legs had drawn up,
his long arms wrapped around them in a tight, tight ball. His breathing was
fast and shallow, panting. His face was freezer-burn white, sheened with cold
sweat. "Do I have red
rings around me now?" Cordelia asked curiously. "It's all ... kind
of pink." "And the last
picture?" "Oh, Milady."
He swallowed. "Whatever it was ... I know it must be very close to
whatever it is they most don't want me to remember." He swallowed again.
Cordelia began to understand why he hadn't touched his lunch. "Do you want to go
on? Can you go on?" "I must go on.
Milady. Captain Naismith. Because I remember you. Remember seeing you.
Stretched out on Vorrutyer's bed, all your clothes cut away, naked. You were
bleeding. I was looking up your ... What I want to know. Must know." His
arms were wrapped around his head, now, tilted toward her on his knees, his
face hollow, haunted, hungry. His blood pressure must
be fantastically high, to drive that monstrous migraine. If they went too far,
pressed this through to the last truth, might he be in danger of a stroke? An
incredible piece of psychoengineering, to program his own body to punish him
for his forbidden thoughts ... "Did I rape you,
Milady?" "Huh? No!" She
sat bolt upright, fiercely indignant. They had taken that knowledge away from
him? They'd dared take that away from him? He began to cry, if
that's what that ragged breathing, tight—screwed face, and tears leaking from
his eyes meant. Equal parts agony and joy. "Oh. Thank God." And,
"Are you sure ... ?" "Vorrutyer ordered
you to. You refused. Out of your own will, without hope of rescue or reward. It
got you in a hell of a lot of trouble, for a little while." She longed to
tell him the rest, but the state he was in now was so terrifying, it was
impossible to guess the consequences. "How long have you been remembering
this? Wondering this?" "Since I first saw
you again. This summer. When you came to marry Lord Vorkosigan." "You've been
walking around for over six months, with this in your head, not daring to
ask—?" "Yes, Milady." She sat back, horrified,
her breath trickling out between pursed lips. "Next time, don't wait so
long." Swallowing hard, he
stumbled to his feet, a big hand waving in a desperate wait-for-me gesture. He
swung his legs over the low stone wall, and found some bushes. Anxiously, she
listened to him dry-vomiting his empty stomach for several minutes. An
extremely bad attack, she judged, but finally the violent paroxysms slowed,
then stopped. He returned, wiping his lips, looking very white and not much
better, except for his eyes. A little life flickered in those eyes now, a
half-suppressed light of overwhelming relief. The light faded, as he
sat in thought. He rubbed his palms on his trouser knees, and stared at his
boots. "But I'm not less a rapist, just because you were not my victim." "That is
correct." "I can't ... trust
myself. How can you trust me? ... Do you know what's better than sex?" She wondered if she
could take one more sharp turn in this conversation without running off
screaming. You encouraged him to uncork, now you're stuck with it. "Go
on." "Killing. It feels
even better, afterwards. It shouldn't be ... such a pleasure. Lord Vorkosigan
doesn't kill like that." His eyes were narrowed, brows creased, but he was
uncurled from his ball of agony; he must be speaking generally, Vorrutyer no
longer on his mind. "It's a release of
rage, I'd guess," said Cordelia cautiously. "How did you get so much
rage, balled up inside of you? The density is palpable. People can sense
it." His hand curled, in
front of his solar plexus. "It goes back a long way. But I don't feel
angry, most of the time. It snaps out suddenly." "Even Bothari fears
Bothari," she murmured in wonder. "Yet you don't.
You're less afraid even than Lord Vorkosigan." "I see you as bound
up with him, somehow. And he's my own heart. How can I fear my own heart?" "Milady. A
bargain." "Hm?" "You tell me ...
when it's all right. To kill. And then I'll know." "I can't—look,
suppose I'm not there? When that sort of thing lands on you, there's not
usually time to stop and analyze. You have to be allowed self-defense, but you
also have to be able to discern when you're really being attacked." She
sat up, eyes widening in sudden insight. "That's why your uniform is so
important to you, isn't it? It tells you when it's all right. When you can't
tell yourself. All those rigid routines you keep to, they're to tell you you're
all right, on track." "Yes. I'm sworn to
the defense of House Vorkosigan, now. So that's all right." He nodded,
apparently reassured. By what, for God's sake? "You're asking me
to be your conscience. Make your judgments for you. But you are a whole man.
I've seen you make right choices, under the most absolute stress." His hands pressed to his
skull again, his narrow jaw clenching, and he grated out, "But I can't
remember them. Can't remember how I did it." "Oh." She felt
very small. "Well ... whatever you think I can do for you, you've got a
blood-right to it. We owe you, Aral and I. We remember why, even if you
can't." "Remember it for
me, then, Milady," he said lowly "and I'll be all right." "Believe it." CHAPTER
SEVEN Cordelia shared
breakfast one morning the following week with Aral and Piotr in a private
parlor overlooking the back garden. Aral motioned to the Count's footman, who
was serving. "Would you please
rout out Lieutenant Koudelka for me? Tell him to bring that agenda for this
morning that we were discussing." "Uh, I guess you
hadn't heard, my lord?" murmured the man. Cordelia had the impression that
his eyes were searching the room for an escape route. "Heard what? We
just came down." "Lieutenant
Koudelka is in hospital this morning." "Hospital! Good
God, why wasn't I told at once? What happened?" "We were told
Commander Illyan would be bringing a full report, my lord. The guard commander
... thought he'd wait for him." Alarm struggled with
annoyance on Vorkosigan's face. "How bad is he? It's not some ... delayed
aftereffect of the sonic grenade, is it? What happened to him?" "He was beaten up,
my lord," said the footman woodenly. Vorkosigan sat back with
a little hiss. A muscle jumped in his jaw. "You get that guard commander
in here," he growled. The footman evaporated
instantly, leaving Vorkosigan tapping a spoon nervously and impatiently on the
table. He met Cordelia's horrified eyes and produced a small false smile of
reassurance for her. Even Piotr looked startled. "Who could possibly
want to beat up Kou?" asked Cordelia wonderingly. "That's sickening.
He couldn't fight back worth a damn." Vorkosigan shook his
head. "Someone looking for a safe target, I suppose. We'll find out. Oh,
we will find out." The green—uniformed
ImpSec guard commander appeared, to stand at attention. "Sir." "For your future
information, and you may pass it on, should any accident occur to any of my key
staff members, I wish to be informed at once. Understood?" "Yes, sir. It was
quite late when word got back here, sir. And since we knew by then that they
were both going to live, Commander Illyan said I might let you sleep.
Sir." "I see."
Vorkosigan rubbed his face. "Both?" "Lieutenant
Koudelka and Sergeant Bothari, sir." "They didn't get
into a fight, did they?" asked Cordelia, now thoroughly alarmed. "Yes. Oh—not with
each other, Milady. They were set upon." Vorkosigan's face was
darkening. "You had better begin at the beginning." "Yes, sir. Um.
Lieutenant Koudelka and Sergeant Bothari went out last night. Not in uniform.
Down to that area in back of the old caravanserai." "My God, what
for?" "Um." The
guard commander glanced uncertainly at Cordelia. "Entertainment, I
believe, sir." "Entertainment?" "Yes, sir. Sergeant
Bothari goes down there about once a month, on his duty-free day, when my lord
Count is in town. It's apparently some place he's been going to for
years." "In the
caravanserai?" said Count Piotr in an unbelieving tone. "Um." The
guard commander eyed the footman in appeal. "Sergeant Bothari isn't very
particular about his entertainment, sir," the footman volunteered
uneasily. "Evidently
not!" said Piotr. Cordelia questioned
Vorkosigan with her eyebrows. "It's a very rough
area," he explained. "I wouldn't go down there myself without a
patrol at my back. Two patrols, at night. And I'd definitely wear my uniform,
though not my rank insignia ... but I believe Bothari grew up there. I imagine
it looks different to his eyes." "Why so
rough?" "It's very poor. It
was the town center during the Time of Isolation, and it hasn't been touched by
renovation yet. Minimal water, no electricity, choked with refuse ..." "Mostly
human," added Piotr tartly. "Poor?" said
Cordelia, bewildered. "No electricity? How can it be on the comm
network?" "It's not, of
course," answered Vorkosigan. "Then how can
anybody get their schooling?" "They don't." Cordelia stared. "I
don't understand. How do they get their jobs?" "A few escape to
the Service. The rest prey on each other, mostly." Vorkosigan regarded her
face uneasily. "Have you no poverty on Beta Colony?" "Poverty? Well, some
people have more money than others, of course, but ... no comconsoles?" Vorkosigan was diverted
from his interrogation. "Is not owning a comconsole the lowest standard of
living you can imagine?" he said in wonder. "It's the first
article in the constitution. 'Access to information shall not be abridged.'
" "Cordelia ... these
people barely have access to food, clothing, and shelter. They have a few rags
and cooking pots, and squat in buildings that aren't economical to repair or
tear down yet, with the wind whistling through the cracks in the walls." "No
air—conditioning?" "No heat in the
winter is a bigger problem, here." "I suppose so. You
people don't really have summer... . How do they call for help when they're
sick or hurt?" "What help?"
Vorkosigan was growing grim. "If they're sick, they either get well or
die." "Die, if we're
lucky," muttered Piotr. "Vermin." "You're not
joking." She stared back and forth between the pair of them. "That's
horrible ... why, think of all the geniuses you must be missing!" "I doubt we're
missing very many, from the caravanserai," said Piotr dryly. "Why not? They have
the same genetic complement as you," Cordelia pointed out the, to her,
obvious. The Count went rigid.
"My dear girl! They most certainly do not! My family have been Vor for
nine generations." Cordelia raised her
eyebrows. "How do you know, if you didn't have gene typing till eighty
years ago?" Both the guard commander
and the footman were acquiring peculiar stuffed expressions. The footman bit
his lip. "Besides," she
went on reasonably, "if you Vor got around half as much as those histories
I've been reading imply, ninety percent of the people on this planet must have
Vor blood by now. Who knows who your relatives are on your father's side?" Vorkosigan bit his linen
napkin absently, his eyes gone crinkly with much the same expression as the
footman, and murmured, "Cordelia, you can't ... you really can't sit at
the breakfast table and imply my ancestors were bastards. It's a mortal insult
here." Where should I sit?
"Oh. I'll never understand that, I guess. Oh, never mind. Koudelka, and
Bothari." "Quite. Go on, duty
officer." "Yes, sir. Well,
sir, they were coming back, I was told, about an hour after midnight, when they
were set on by a gang of area toughs. Evidently Lieutenant Koudelka was too
well dressed, and besides there's that walk of his, and the stick ... anyway,
he attracted attention. I don't know the details, sir, but there were four
deaths and three in the hospital this morning, in addition to the ones that got
away." Vorkosigan whistled,
very faintly, through his teeth. "What was the extent of Bothari's and
Koudelka's injuries?" "They ... I don't
have an official report, sir. Just hearsay." "Say, then." The duty officer swallowed
a little. "Sergeant Bothari has a broken arm, some broken ribs, internal
injuries, and a concussion. Lieutenant Koudelka, both legs broken, and a lot
of, uh ... shock burns." His voice trailed off. "What?" "Evidently—I
heard—their assailants had a couple of high-voltage shock sticks, and they
discovered they could get some ... peculiar effects on his prosthetic nerves
with them. After they'd broken his legs they spent ... quite a long time
working him over. That's how it was Commander Illyan's men caught up with them.
They didn't clear off in time." Cordelia pushed her
plate away and sat trembling. "Hearsay, eh? Very well. Dismissed. See that
Commander Illyan is sent to me immediately he arrives." Vorkosigan's
expression was introspective and grim. Piotr's was sourly
triumphant. "Vermin," he asserted. "You ought to burn them all
out." Vorkosigan sighed.
"Easier to start a war than finish it. Not this week, sir." Illyan attended on
Vorkosigan within the hour, in the library, with his informal verbal report.
Cordelia trailed in after them, to sit and listen. "Sure you want to
hear this?" Vorkosigan asked her quietly. She shook her head.
"Next to you, they are my best friends here. I'd rather know than
wonder." The duty officer's
synopsis proved tolerably accurate, but Illyan, who had talked to both Bothari
and Koudelka at the Imperial Military Hospital where they had been taken, had a
number of details to add, in blunt terms. His puppy-dog face looked unusually
old this morning. "Your secretary was
apparently seized with a desire to get laid," he began. "Why he
picked Bothari as a native guide, I can't imagine." "We three are the
sole survivors of the General Vorkraft," Vorkosigan replied.
"It's a bond, I suppose. Kou and Bothari always got on well, though. He
appeals to Bothari's latent fatherly instincts, maybe. And Kou's a clean-minded
boy—don't tell him I said that, he'd take it as an insult. It's good to be
reminded such people still exist. Wish he'd come to me, though." "Well, Bothari did
his best," said Illyan. "Took him to this dismal dive, which I gather
has a number of points in its favor from Bothari's point of view. It's cheap,
it's quick, and nobody talks to him. It's also far removed from Admiral Vorrutyer's
old circles. No unpleasant associations. He has a strict routine. According to
Kou, Bothari's regular woman is almost as ugly as he is. Bothari likes her, it
appears, because she never makes any noise. I don't think I want to think about
that. "Be that as it may,
Kou got mismatched with one of the other employees, who terrified him. Bothari
says he asked for the best girl for him—hardly a girl, woman, whatever—and
apparently Kou's needs were misinterpreted. Anyway, Bothari was done and
kicking his heels waiting while Kou was still trying to make polite
conversation and being offered an assortment of delights for jaded appetites
he'd never heard of before. He gave up and fled back downstairs at last, where
Bothari was by this time pretty thoroughly tanked. He usually has one drink and
leaves, it seems. "Kou, Bothari, and
this whore then got into an argument over payment, on the grounds that he'd
burned up enough time for four customers versus—most of this won't be in the
official report, all right?—she couldn't get his circuits working. Kou forked
over a partial payment—Bothari's still grumbling over how much, insofar as he
can talk at all through that mouth of his this morning—and they retreated in
disorder, a lousy time having been had by all." "The first obvious question
that arises," said Vorkosigan, "is, was the attack ordered by anyone
from that establishment?" "To the best of my
knowledge, no. I threw a cordon around the place, once we'd found it, and
questioned everyone inside under fast-penta. Scared the shit out of them all,
I'm glad to say. They're used to Count Vorbohn's municipal guards, whom they
bribe, or who blackmail them, and vice versa. We turned up a lot of information
on petty crimes, none of which was of the least interest to us—do you want me to
pass it on to the municipals, by the way?" "Hm. If they're
innocent of the attack, just file it. Bothari may want to go back there
someday. Do they know why they were questioned?" "Certainly not! I
insist my men work clean. We're here to gather information, not pass it
out." "My apologies,
Commander. I should have known. Carry on." "Well, they left
the place about an hour after midnight, on foot, and took a wrong turn
somewhere. Bothari's pretty upset about that. Thinks it's his fault, for
getting so drunk, Bothari and Koudelka both say they saw movements in the
shadows for about ten minutes before the attack. So they were stalked,
apparently, until they were manuevered into a high walled alley, and found
themselves with six in front and six behind. "Bothari pulled his
stunner and fired—got three, before he was jumped. Someone down there is richer
by a good service stunner this morning. Kou had his swordstick, but nothing
else. "They ganged up on
Bothari first. He took out two more, after he'd lost the stunner. They stunned
him, then tried to beat him to death after he was down. Kou had been using his
stick as a quarterstaff up till then, but at that point he popped the cover
off. He says now he wished he hadn't, because this murmur of 'Vor!' went up all
around, and things got really ugly. "He stabbed two,
until somebody struck the sword with a shock stick, and his hand went into
spasms. The five that were left sat on him and broke both his legs backwards at
the knees. He asked me to tell you it wasn't as painful as it sounds. He says
they broke so many circuits he had hardly any sensation. I don't know if that's
true." "It's hard to tell
with Kou," said Vorkosigan. "He's been concealing pain for so long,
it's almost second nature. Go on." "I have to jump
back a bit now. My man who was assigned to Kou followed them down into that
warren by himself. He wasn't one of the men who are familiar with the place,
supposedly, and he wasn't dressed for it—Kou had two reservations for some live
musical performance last night, and until three hours before midnight that's
where we thought he was going. My man went in there and vanished, between the
first and second hourly checks. That's what has me going this morning. Was he
murdered? Or kidnapped? Rolled and raped? Or was he a plant, a setup, a double
agent? We won't know till we find the body, or whatever. "Thirty minutes
after the missed check my people sent in another tail. But he was looking for
the first man. Kou was uncovered for three solid bloody hours last night before
my night shift supervisor came on duty and woke to the fact. Fortunately, Kou'd
spent most of that time in Bothari's old whore's retirement home. "My night shift
man, whom I commend, redirected the field agent, and put a patrol in the air to
boot. So when the field agent finally got to that revolting scene, he was able
to call a flyer down on top of it almost immediately, and drop half a dozen of
my uniformed bruisers in to break up the party. That business with the shock
sticks—It was bad, but not as bad as it might have been. Kou's assailants
evidently lacked the sort of, hm, imaginative approach that, say, the late
Admiral Vorrutyer might have had in the same situation. Or maybe they just
didn't have time to get really refined." "Thank God,"
murmured Vorkosigan. "And the deaths?" "Two were Bothari's
work, clean blows, one was Kou's—cut him across the neck—and one, I'm afraid,
was mine. The kid went into anaphylactic shock in an allergic reaction to
fast-penta. We zipped him over to ImpMil, but they couldn't get him going
again. I don't like it. They're autopsying him now, trying to find out if it
was natural or a planted defense against questioning." "And the
gang?" "Appears to be a
perfectly legitimate—if that's the word—caravanserai mutual benefit society.
According to the survivors we captured, they decided to pick on Kou because he
'walked funny.' Charming. Although Bothari wasn't exactly walking in a straight
line, either. None of the ones we captured is an agent for anybody but
themselves. I cannot speak for the dead. I supervised the questioning
personally, and will swear to it. They were quite shocked to find themselves of
interest to Imperial Security." "Anything
else?" said Vorkosigan. Illyan yawned behind his
hand, and apologized. "It's been a long night. My night shift man got me
out of bed after midnight. Good man, good judgment. No, that about wraps it up,
except for Kou's motivation for going down there in the first place. He went
all vague, and started asking for pain medication, when we came to that
subject. I was hoping you might have a suggestion, to ease my paranoias. Being
suspicious of Kou gives me a crick in the neck." He yawned again. "I do," said
Cordelia, "but for your paranoia, not for your report, all right?" He nodded. "I think he's in
love with someone. After all, you don't test something unless you're planning
to use it. Unfortunately his test was a major disaster. I expect he'll be
pretty depressed and touchy for quite some time." Vorkosigan nodded
understanding. "Any idea who?"
asked Illyan automatically. "Yes, but I don't
think it's your business. Especially if it's not going to happen." Illyan shrugged
acceptance, and left to pursue his lost sheep, the missing man who'd first been
assigned to follow Koudelka. Sergeant Bothari was
back at Vorkosigan House, though not yet back on duty, within five days, a
plastic casing on the broken arm. He volunteered no information on the brutal
affair, and discouraged curious questioners with a sour glower and noncommittal
grunts. Droushnakovi asked no
questions and offered no comments. But Cordelia saw her occasionally cast a
haunted look at the empty comconsole in the library, with its double—scrambled
links to the Imperial Residence and the General Staff Headquarters, where
Koudelka usually sat to work while at Vorkosigan House. Cordelia wondered just
how much detail of that night's events had been poured, searing as lead, into
her ears. Lieutenant Koudelka
returned to curtailed light duties the following month, apparently quite
cheerful and unaffected by his ordeal. But in his own way he was as
uninformative as Bothari. Questioning Bothari had been like questioning a wall.
Questioning Koudelka was like talking to a stream; one got back babble, or
little eddies of jokes, or anecdotes that pulled the current of the discussion
inexorably away from the original subject. Cordelia responded to his sunniness
with automatic good grace, playing along with his obvious desire to slide over
the affair as lightly as possible. Inwardly she was far more doubtful. Her own mood was not the
best. Her imagination returned again and again to the assassination scare of
six weeks ago, dwelling uncomfortably on the chances that had almost taken
Vorkosigan from her. Only when he was with her was she completely at ease, and
he was gone more and more now. Something was brewing at Imperial HQ; he had
been gone four times to all-night sessions, and had taken a trip without her,
some flying inspection of military affairs, of which he gave her no details and
from which he returned white-tired around the eyes. He came in and out at odd
hours. The flow of military and political gossip and chitchat with which he was
wont to entertain her at meals, or undressing for bed, dried up to an
uncommunicative silence, though he seemed to need her presence no less. Where would she be
without him? A pregnant widow, without family or friends, bearing a child
already a focal point of dynastic paranoias, inheritor of a legacy of violence.
Could she get off-planet? And where would she go if she could? Would Beta
Colony ever let her come back? Even the autumn rain,
and the fat lingering greenness of the city parks, began to fail to please her.
Oh, for a breath of really dry desert air, the familiar alkali tang, the
endless flat distances. Would her son ever know what a real desert was? The
horizons here, crowded close with buildings and vegetation, seemed almost to
rise around her like a huge wall at times. On really bad days the wall seemed
to topple inward. She was holed up in the
library one rainy afternoon, curled on an old high-backed sofa, reading, for
the third time, a page in an old volume from the Count's shelves. The book was
a relic of the printer's art from the Time of Isolation. The English in which
it was written was printed in a mutant variation of the Cyrillic alphabet, all
forty-six characters of it, once used for all tongues on Barrayar. Her mind
seemed unusually mushy and unresponsive to it today. She turned out the light
and rested her eyes a few minutes. With relief, she observed Lieutenant
Koudelka enter the library and seat himself, stiffly and carefully, at the
comconsole. I shan't interrupt him; he at least has real work to do, she
thought, not yet returning to her page, but still comforted by his unconscious
company. He worked only for a
moment or two, then shut down the machine with a sigh, staring abstractedly
into the empty carved fireplace that was the room's original centerpiece, still
not noticing her. So, I'm not the only one who can't concentrate. Maybe it's
this strange grey weather. It does seem to have a depressing effect on
people... Picking up his
swordstick, he ran a hand down the smooth length of its casing. He clicked it
open, holding it firmly and releasing the spring silently and slowly. He sighted
along the length of the gleaming blade, which almost seemed to glow with a
light of its own in the shadowed room, and angled it, as if meditating on its
pattern and fine workmanship. He then turned it end for end, point over his
left shoulder and hilt away from him. He wrapped a handkerchief around the
blade for a hold, and pressed it, very lightly, against the side of his neck
over the area of the carotid artery. The expression on his face was distant and
thoughtful, his grip on the blade as light as a lover's. His hand tightened
suddenly. Her indrawn breath, the
first half of a sob, startled him from his reverie. He looked up to see her for
the first time; his lips thinned and his face turned a dusky red. He swung the
sword down. It left a white line on his neck, like part of a necklace, with a
few ruby drops of blood welling along it. "I ... didn't see
you, Milady," he said hoarsely. "I ... don't mind me. Just fooling
around, you know." They stared at each
other in silence. Her own words broke from her lips against her will. "I
hate this place! I'm afraid all the time, now." She turned her face into
the high side of the sofa, and, to her own horror, began to cry. Stop it! Not
in front of Kou of all people! The man has enough real troubles without you
dumping your imaginary ones on him. But she couldn't stop. He levered himself up
and limped over to her couch, looking worried. Tentatively, he seated himself
beside her. "Um ..." he
began. "Don't cry, Milady. I was just fooling around, really." He
patted her clumsily on the shoulder. "Garbage," she
choked back at him. "You scare the hell out of me." On impulse she
transferred her tear-smeared face from the cold silken fabric of the sofa to
the warm roughness of the shoulder of his green uniform. It tore a like honesty
from him. "You can't imagine
what it's like," he whispered fiercely. "They pity me, you know? Even
he does." A jerk of his head in no particular direction indicated
Vorkosigan. "It's a hundred times worse than the scorn. And it's going to go
on forever." She shook her head,
devoid of answer in the face of this undoubted truth. "I hate this place,
too," he continued. "Just as much as it hates me. More, some days. So
you see, you're not alone." "So many people
trying to kill him," she whispered back, despising herself for her
weakness. "Total strangers ... one of them is bound to succeed in the end.
I think about it all the time, now." Would it be a bomb? Some poison?
Plasma arc, burning away Aral's face, leaving no lips even to kiss goodbye? Koudelka's attention was
drawn achingly from his pain to hers, brows drawing quizzically together. "Oh, Kou," she
went on, looking down blindly into his lap and stroking his sleeve. "No
matter how much it hurts, don't do it to him. He loves you ... you're like a
son to him, just the sort of son he always wanted. That," she nodded
toward the sword laid on the couch, shinier than silk, "would cut out his
heart. This place pours craziness on him every day, and demands he give back
justice. He can't do it except with a whole heart. Or he must eventually start
giving back the craziness, like every one of his predecessors. And," she
added in a burst of uncontrollable illogic, "it's so damn wet here! It
won't be my fault if my son is born with gills!" His arms encircled her
in a kindly hug. "Are you ... afraid of the childbirth?" he inquired,
with a gentle and unexpected perceptiveness. Cordelia went still,
suddenly face-to-face with her tightly suppressed fears. "I don't trust
your doctors," she admitted shakily. He smiled in deep irony.
"I can't blame you." A laugh puffed from her,
and she hugged him back, around the chest, and raised her hand to wipe away the
tiny drops of blood from the side of his neck. "When you love someone,
it's like your skin covers theirs. Every hurt is doubled. And I do love you so,
Kou. I wish you'd let me help you." "Therapy,
Cordelia?" Vorkosigan's voice was cold, and cut like a stinging spray of
rattling hail. She looked up, surprised, to see him standing before them, his
face frozen as his voice. "I realize you have a great deal of Betan ...
expertise, in such matters, but I beg you will leave the project to someone
else." Koudelka turned red, and
recoiled from her. "Sir," he began, and trailed off, as startled as
Cordelia by the icy anger in Vorkosigan's eyes. Vorkosigan's gaze flicked over
him, and they both clamped their jaws shut. Cordelia drew in a very
deep breath for a retort, but released it only as a furious "Oh!" at
Vorkosigan's back as he wheeled and stalked out, spine stiff as Kou's
swordblade. Koudelka, still red,
folded into himself, and using his sword as a prop levered himself to his feet,
his breath too rapid. "Milady. I beg your pardon." The words seemed
quite without meaning. "Kou," said
Cordelia, "you know he didn't mean that hateful thing. He spoke without
thinking. I'm sure he doesn't, doesn't ..." "Yes, I
realize," returned Koudelka, his eyes blank and hard. "I am
universally known to be quite harmless to any man's marriage, I believe. But if
you will excuse me—Milady—I do have some work to do. Of a sort." "Oh!" Cordelia
didn't know if she was more furious with Vorkosigan, Koudelka, or herself. She
steamed to her feet and left the room, throwing her words back over her
shoulder. "Damn all Barrayarans to hell anyway!" Droushnakovi appeared in
her path, with a timid, "Milady?" "And you, you
useless ... frill," snarled Cordelia, her rage escaping helplessly in all
directions now. "Why can't you manage your own affairs? You Barrayaran
women seem to expect your lives to be handed to you on a platter. It doesn't
work that way!" The girl stepped back a
pace, bewildered. Cordelia contained her seething outrage, and asked more
sensibly, "Which way did Aral go?" "Why ... upstairs,
I believe, Milady." A little of her old and
battered humor came to her rescue then. "Two steps at a time, by
chance?" "Um ... three,
actually," Drou replied faintly. "I suppose I'd
better go talk to him," said Cordelia, running her hands through her hair
and wondering if tearing it out would have any practical benefit. "Son of
a bitch." She did not know herself if that was expletive or description.
And to think I never used to swear. She trudged after him,
her anger draining with her energy as she climbed the stairs. This pregnancy
business sure slows you down. She passed a duty guard in the corridor.
"Lord Vorkosigan go this way?" she asked him. "To his rooms,
Milady," he replied, and stared curiously after her. Great. Love it, she
thought savagely. The old newlyweds' first real fight will have plenty of built-in
audience. These old walls are not soundproof. I wonder if I can keep my voice
down? Aral's no problem; when he gets mad he whispers. She entered their
bedroom, to find him seated on the side of the bed, removing uniform jacket and
boots with violent, jerky gestures. He looked up, and they glared at each
other. Cordelia opened fire first, thinking, Let's get this over with. "That remark you
made in front of Kou was totally out of line." "What, I walk in to
find my wife ... cuddling, with one of my officers, and you expect me to make
polite conversation about the weather?" he bit back. "You know it was
nothing of the sort." "Fine. Suppose it
hadn't been me? Suppose it had been one of the duty guards, or my father. How
would you have explained it then? You know what they think of Betans. They'd
jump on it, and the rumors would never be stopped. Next thing I knew, it would
be coming back at me as political chaff. Every enemy I have out there is just
waiting for a weak spot to pounce on. They'd love one like that." "How the devil did
we get onto your damned politics? I'm talking about a friend. I doubt you could
have come up with a more wounding remark if you'd funded a study project. That
was foul, Aral! What's the matter with you, anyway?" "I don't know."
He slowed, and rubbed his face tiredly. "It's the damn job, I expect. I
don't mean to spill it on you." Cordelia suspected that
was as near as she could expect of an admission of his being in the wrong, and
accepted it with a little nod, letting her own rage evaporate. She then
remembered why the rage had felt so good, for the vacuum it left filled back up
with fear. "Yes, well ...just
how much do you fancy having to break down his door one of these
mornings?" Vorkosigan frowned at
her, going still. "Do you ... have some reason to believe's he's thinking
along suicidal lines? He seemed quite content to me." "He would—to
you." Cordelia let the words hang in the air a moment, for emphasis.
"I think he's about that close." She held up thumb and forefinger a bare
millimeter apart. The finger still had a smear of blood on it, and it caught
her eye in unhappy fascination. "He was playing around with that blasted
swordstick. I wish I'd never given it to him. I don't think I could bear it if
he used it to cut his own throat. That seemed to be what he had in mind." "Oh."
Vorkosigan looked smaller, somehow, without his glittering military jacket,
without his anger. He held out his hand to her, and she took it and sat beside
him. "So if you're
having visions of, of playing King Arthur In our Lancelot and Guinevere in that
pig-head of yours, forget it. It won't wash." He laughed a little at
that. "My visions were closer to home, I'm afraid, and considerably more
sordid. Just an old bad dream." "Yeah, I ... guess
it would hit a nerve, at that." She wondered if the ghost of his first
wife ever hovered by him, breathing cold death in his ear, as Vorrutyer's ghost
sometimes did by her. He looked deathly enough. "But I'm Cordelia, remember?
Not ... anybody else." He leaned his forehead
against hers. "Forgive me, dear Captain. I'm just an ugly scared old man,
and growing older and uglier and more paranoid every day." "You, too?"
She rested in his arms. "I take exception to the old and ugly part,
though. Pigheaded did not refer to your exterior appearance." "Thank you—I
think." It pleased her to amuse
him even that little. "It is the job, isn't it?" she said. "Can
you talk about it at all?" His lips compressed.
"In confidence—although that seems to be your natural state, I don't know
why I bother to emphasize it—it looks like we could have another war on our
hands before the end of the year. And we're not nearly well enough recovered
for it, after Escobar." "What! I thought
the war party was half-paralyzed." "Ours is. The
Cetagandans' is still in good working order, however. Intelligence indicates
they were planning to use the political chaos here following Ezar Vorbarra's
death to cover a move on those disputed wormhole jump points. Instead they got
me, and—well, I can hardly call it stability. Dynamic equilibrium, at best.
Anyway, not the kind of disruption they were counting on. Hence that little
incident with the sonic grenade. Negri and Illyan are now seventy percent sure
it was Cetagandan work." "Will they ... try again?" "Almost certainly.
But with or without me, consensus in the Staff is that they'll be probing in
force before the end of the year. And if we're weak—they'll just keep right on
moving until they're stopped." "No wonder you've
been ... abstracted." "Is that the polite
term for it? But no. I've known about the Cetagandans for some time. Something
else came up today, after the Council session. A private audience. Count
Vorhalas came to see me, to beg a favor." "I'd think it would
be your pleasure, to do a favor for Rulf Vorhalas's brother. I gather
not?" He shook his head
unhappily. "The Count's youngest son, who is a hotheaded young idiot of
eighteen who should have been sent to military school—you met him at the
Council confirmation, as I recall—" "Lord Carl?" "Yes. He got into a
drunken fight at a party last night." "A universal
tradition. Such things happen even on Beta Colony." "Quite. But they
stepped outside to settle their affair armed, each one, with a pair of dull swords
that had been part of a wall decoration, and a couple of kitchen knives. That
made it, technically, a duel with the two swords." "Uh—oh. Was anyone
hurt?" "Unfortunately,
yes. More or less by accident, I gather, in a scrambling fall, the Count's son
managed to put his sword through his friend's stomach and sever his abdominal
aorta. He bled to death almost immediately. By the time the bystanders had
gathered their wits sufficiently to get a medical team up there, it was much
too late." "Dear God." "It was a duel,
Cordelia. It began as a mockery, but it ended as the real thing. And the
penalties for dueling apply." He rose, and paced the room, stopping by the
window and staring out into the rain. "His father came to ask me for an
Imperial pardon. Or, if I could not grant that, to see if I could get the
charges changed to simple murder. If it were tried as a simple murder, the boy
could plead self-defense, and possibly end up with a mere prison term." "That seems ...
fair enough, I suppose." "Yes." He
paced again. "A favor for a friend. Or ... the first crack in the door to
let that hell-bred custom back into our society. What happens when the next
case Is brought before me, and the next, and the next? Where do I begin drawing
the line? What if the next case involves some political enemy of mine, and not
a member of my own party? Shall all the deaths that went into stamping this
thing out be made void? I remember dueling, and what things were like back
then. And worse—an entry point for government by friends, then cliques. Say
what you will about Ezar Vorbarra, in thirty years of ruthless labor he
transformed the government from a Vor-class club into some semblance, however
shaky, of a rule of law, one law for everyone." "I begin to see the
problem." "And me—me, of all
men, to have to make that decision! Who should have been publicly executed
twenty-two years ago for the selfsame crime!" He paused before her.
"The story about last night is all over town, in various forms, this
morning. It will be all over everywhere in a few days. I had the news service
kill it, temporarily, but that was mere spitting in the wind. It's too late for
a coverup, even if I wanted to do one. So what shall I betray this day? A
friend? Or Ezar Vorbarra's trust? There is no doubt which decision he would
have made." He sat back beside her,
and took her in his arms. "And this is only the beginning. Every month,
every week, there will be some other impossible thing. What's going to be left
of me after fifteen years of this? A husk, like that thing we buried three
months ago, praying with his last breath that there may be no God? Or a
power-corrupted monstrosity, like his son, so infected it could only be
sterilized by plasma arc? Or something even worse?" His naked agony
terrified her. She held him tightly in return. "I don't know. I don't
know. But somebody ... somebody has been making these kinds of decisions right
along, while we went along blissfully unconscious, taking the world as given.
And they were only human, too. No better, no worse than you." "Frightening
thought." She sighed. "You
can't choose between evil and evil, in the dark, by logic. You can only cling
to some safety line of principle. I can't make your decision. But whatever
principles you choose now are going to be your safety lines, to carry you
forward. And for the sake of your people, they're going to have to be
consistent ones." He rested in her arms.
"I know. There wasn't really a question, about the decision. I was just
... kicking a bit, going down." He disengaged himself, and stood again.
"Dear Captain. If I'm still sane, fifteen years from now, I believe it
will be your doing." She looked up at him.
"So what decision is it?" The pain in his eyes
gave her the answer. "Oh, no," she said involuntarily, then bit off
further words. And I was trying to speak so wisely. I didn't mean this. "Don't you
know?" he said gently, resigned. "Ezar's way is the only way that can
work, here. It's true after all. He does rule from his grave." He headed
for their bathroom, to wash and change clothes. "But you're not
him," she whispered to the empty room. "Can't you find a way of your
own?" CHAPTER
EIGHT Vorkosigan attended Carl
Vorhalas's public execution three weeks later. "Are you required
to go?" Cordelia asked him that morning, as he dressed, cold and
withdrawn. "I don't have to go, do I?" "God, no, of course
not. I don't have to go, officially, except ... I have to go. You can see why,
surely." "Not ... really,
except as a form of self-punishment. I'm not sure that's a luxury you can
afford, in your line of work." "I must go. A dog
returns to its vomit, doesn't it? His parents will be there, do you know? And
his brother." "What a barbaric
custom." "Well, we could
treat crime as a disease, like you Betans. You know what that's like. At least
we kill a man cleanly, all at once, instead of in bits over years. ... I don't
know." "How will they ...
do it?" "Beheading. It's
supposed to be almost painless." "How do they
know?" His laugh was totally
without humor. "A very cogent question." He did not embrace her
when he left. He returned a bare two hours later, silent, to shake his head at
a tentative offer of lunch, cancel an afternoon appointment, and withdraw to
Count Piotr's library and sit, not-reading a book-viewer. Cordelia joined him
there after a while, resting on the couch, and waited patiently for him to come
back to her from whatever distant country of the mind he dwelt in. "The boy was going
to be brave," he said after an hour's silence. "You could see that he
had every gesture planned out in advance. But nobody else followed the script.
His mother broke him down... . And to top it the damned executioner missed his
stroke. Had to take three cuts, to get the head off." "Sounds like
Sergeant Bothari did better with a pocketknife." Vorrutyer had been
haunting her more than usual that morning, scarletly. "It lacked nothing
for perfect hideousness. His mother cursed me, too. Until Evon and Count
Vorhalas took her away." The dead-expressioned voice escaped him then.
"Oh, Cordelia! It can't have been the right decision! And yet ... and yet
... no other one was possible. Was it?" He came to her then, and
held her in silence. He seemed very close to weeping, and it almost frightened
her more that he did not. The tension eventually drained out of him. "I suppose I'd
better pull myself together and go change. Vortala has a meeting scheduled with
the Minister of Agriculture that's too important to miss, and after that
there's the general staff... ."By the time he left his usual
self-possession had returned. That night he lay long
awake beside her. His eyes were closed, but she could tell from his breathing
it was pretense. She could not dredge up one word of comfort that did not seem
inane to her, so kept silence with him through the watches of the night. Rain
began outside, a steady drizzle. He spoke once. "I've watched men
die before. Ordered executions, ordered men into battle, chosen this one over
that one, committed three sheer murders and but for the grace of God and
Sergeant Bothari would have committed a fourth ... I don't know why this one
should hit like a wall. It's stopped me, Cordelia. And I dare not stop, or
we'll all fall together. Got to keep it in the air somehow." She awoke in the dark to
a tinkling crash and a soft report, and drew in her breath with a start.
Acridity seared her lungs, mouth, nostrils, eyes. A gut-wrenching undertaste
pumped her stomach into her throat. Beside her, Vorkosigan snapped from sleep
with an oath. "Soltoxin gas
grenade! Don't breathe, Cordelia!" Emphasizing his shout, he shoved a
pillow over her face, his hot strong arms encircling her and dragging her from
the bed. She found her feet and lost her stomach at the same moment, stumbling
into the hall, and he slammed the bedroom door shut behind them. Running footsteps shook
the floor. Vorkosigan cried, "Get back! Soltoxin gas! Clear the floor!
Call Illyan!" before he too doubled over, coughing and retching. Other
hands bundled them both toward the stairs. She could scarcely see through her
madly watering eyes. Between spasms
Vorkosigan gasped, "They'll have the antidote ... Imperial Residence ...
closer than ImpMil ... get Illyan at once. He'll know. Into the shower—where's
Milady's woman? Get a maid. ..." Within moments she was
dumped into a downstairs shower, Vorkosigan with her. He was shaking and barely
able to stand, but still trying to help her. "Start washing it off your
skin, and keep washing. Don't stop. Keep the water cool." "You, too, then.
What was that crap?" She coughed again, in the spray of the water, and
they exchanged help with the soap. "Wash out your
mouth, too... . Soltoxin. It's been fifteen, sixteen years since I last smelled
that stink, but you never forget it. It's a poison gas. Military. Should be
strictly controlled. How the hell anyone got hold of some ... Damn Security!
They'll be flapping around like headless chickens tomorrow ... too late."
His face was greenish-white beneath the night's beard stubble. "I don't feel too
bad now," said Cordelia. "Nausea's passing off. I take it we missed
the full dose?" "No. It just acts
slowly. Doesn't take much at all to do you. It mostly affects soft tissue—lungs
will be jelly in an hour, if the antidote doesn't get here soon." The growing fear that
pounded in her gut, heart, and mind half-clotted her words. "Does it cross
the placental barrier?" He was silent for too
long before he said, "I'm not sure. Have to ask the doctor. I've only seen
the effects on young men." Another spasm of deep coughing seized him, that
went on and on. One of Count Piotr's
serving women arrived, disheveled and frightened, to help Cordelia and the
terrified young guard who had been assisting them. Another guard came in to report,
raising his voice over the running water. "We reached the Residence, sir.
They have some people on the way." Cordelia's own throat,
bronchia, and lungs were beginning to secrete foul—tasting phlegm, and she
coughed and spat. "Anyone see Drou?" "I think she took
out after the assassins, Milady." "Not her job. When
an alarm goes up, she's supposed to run to Cordelia," growled Vorkosigan.
The talking triggered more coughing. "She was
downstairs, sir, at the time the attack took place, with Lieutenant Koudelka.
They both went out the back door." "Dammit,"
Vorkosigan muttered, "not his job either." His effort was punished by
another coughing jag. "They catch anybody?" "I think so, sir.
There was some kind of uproar at the back of the garden, by the wall." They stood under the
water for a few more minutes, until the guard reported back. "The doctor
from the Residence is here, sir." The maid wrapped
Cordelia in a robe, and Vorkosigan put on a towel, growling to the guard,
"Go find me some clothes, boy." His voice rattled like gravel. A middle-aged man, his
hair standing up stiffly, wearing trousers, pajama tops, and bedroom slippers,
was offloading equipment in the guest bedroom when they came out. He took a
pressurized canister from his bag and fitted a breathing mask to it, glancing
at Cordelia's rounding abdomen and then at Vorkosigan. "My lord. Are you
certain of the identification of the poison?" "Unfortunately,
yes. It was soltoxin." The doctor bowed his
head. "I am sorry, Milady." "Is it going to
hurt my ..." She choked on the mucus. "Just shut up and
give it to her," snarled Vorkosigan. The doctor fitted the
mask over her nose and mouth. "Breathe deeply. Inhale ... exhale. Keep
exhaling. Now draw in. Hold it... ." The antidote gas had a
greenish taste, cooler, but nearly as nauseating as the original poison. Her
stomach heaved, but had nothing left in it to reject. She watched Vorkosigan
over the mask, watching her, and tried to smile reassuringly. It must be
reaction catching up with him; he seemed greyer, more distressed, with each
breath she took. She was certain he had taken in a larger dose than she, and
pushed the mask away to say, "Isn't it about your turn?" The doctor pressed it
back, saying, "One more breath, Milady, to be sure." She inhaled
deeply, and the doctor transferred the mask to Vorkosigan. He seemed to need no
instruction in the procedure. "How many minutes
since the exposure?" asked the doctor anxiously. "I'm not sure. Did
anyone note the time? You, uh ..." She had forgotten the young guard's
name. "About fifteen or
twenty minutes, Milady, I think." The doctor relaxed
measurably. "It should be all right, then. You'll both be in hospital for
a few days. I'll arrange for medical transport. Was anyone else exposed?"
he asked the guard. "Doctor,
wait." He had repossessed canister and mask, and was making for the door.
"What will that ... soltoxin do to my baby?" He did not meet her
eyes. "No one knows. No one has ever survived exposure without an
immediate antidote treatment." Cordelia could feel her
heart beating. "But given the treatment ..." She did not like his
look of pity, and turned to Vorkosigan. "Is that—" but was stopped
cold by his expression, a leaden greyness lit from beneath by pain and growing
anger, a stranger's face with a lover's eyes, meeting her eyes at last. "Tell her about
it," he whispered to the doctor. "I can't." "Need we
distress—" "Now. Get it over
with." His voice cracked and croaked. "The problem is the
antidote, Milady," said the doctor reluctantly. "It's a violent teratogen.
Destroys bone development in the growing fetus. Your bones are grown, so it
won't affect you, except for an increased tendency to arthritic-type
breakdowns, which can be treated ... if and when they arise... ." He
trailed off as she closed her eyes, shutting him out. "I must see that
hall guard," he added. "Go, go,"
replied Vorkosigan, releasing him. He maneuvered out the door past the guard
arriving with Vorkosigan's clothes. She opened her eyes to
Vorkosigan, and they stared at each other. "The look on your
face ..." he whispered. "It's not ... Weep. Rage! Do something!"
His voice rose to hoarseness. "Hate me at least!" "I can't," she
whispered back, "feel anything yet. Tomorrow, maybe." Every breath
was fire. With a muttered curse,
he flung on the clothes, a set of undress greens. "I can do
something." It was the stranger's
face, possessing his. Words echoed hollowly in her memory, If Death wore a
dress uniform He would look just like that. "Where are you
going?" "Going to see what
Koudelka caught." She followed him through the door. "You stay
here," he ordered. "No." He glared back at her,
and she brushed the glare away with an equally savage gesture, as if striking
down a sword thrust. "I'm going with you." "Come on,
then." He turned jerkily, and made for the stairs to the first floor, rage
rigid in his backbone. "You will
not," she murmured fiercely, for his ear alone, "murder anyone in
front of me." "Will I not?"
he whispered back. "Will—I—not?" His steps were hard, bare feet
jarring on the stone stairs. The large entry hall was
in chaos, filled with their guards, men in the Counts livery, medics. A man, or
a body, Cordelia could not tell which, in the black fatigue uniform of the
night guards, was laid out on the tessalated pavement, a medic at his head.
Both were soaked from the rain, and smeared with mud. Bloodstained water pooled
beneath them, and the medic's bootsoles squeaked in it. Commander Illyan, beads
of water gleaming in his hair from the foggy drizzle, was just coming in the
front door with an aide, saying, "Let me know as soon as the techs get
here with the kirilian detector. Meantime keep everyone off that wall and out
of the alley. My lord!" he cried when he saw Vorkosigan. "Thank God
you're all right!" Vorkosigan growled in
his throat, wordlessly. A knot of men surrounded the prisoner, who was leaning
face to the wall, one hand over his head and the other held stiffly to his side
at an odd angle. Droushnakovi stood near, wearing a wet shift. A wicked-looking
metal crossbow dangled gleaming from her hand, evidently the weapon that had
been used to fire the gas grenade through their window. She bore a livid mark
on her face, and stanched a nosebleed with her other hand. Blood stained her
nightgown here and there. Koudelka was there, too, leaning on his sword, one
leg dragging. He wore a wet and muddy uniform and bedroom slippers, and a sour
look on his face. "I'd have had
him," he was snapping, evidently continuing an ongoing argument, "if
you hadn't come running up and shouting at me—" "Oh, really!"
Droushnakovi snapped back. "Well, pardon me, but I don't see it that way.
Seems to me he had you, laid out flat on the ground. If I hadn't seen his legs
going up the wall—" "Stuff it! It's
Lord Vorkosigan!" hissed another guard. The knot of men turned, to step
back before his face. "How did he get
in?" began Vorkosigan, and stopped. The man was wearing the black fatigues
of the Service. "Surely not one of your men, Illyan!" His voice
grated, metal on stone. "My lord, we've got
to have him alive, to question him," said Illyan uneasily at Vorkosigan's
shoulder, half-hypnotized by the same look that had made the guards recoil.
"There may be more to the conspiracy. You can't ..." The prisoner turned,
then, to face his captors. A guard started forward to shove him back into
position against the wall, but Vorkosigan motioned him away. Cordelia could not
see Vorkosigan's face, standing behind him in that moment, but his shoulders
lost their murderous tension, and the rage drained out of his backbone, leaving
only a gutter-smear of pain. Above the insignialess black collar was the
ravaged face of Evon Vorhalas. "Oh, not both of
them," breathed Cordelia. Hatred hastened the
rhythm of Vorhalas's breathing as he glared at his intended victim. "You
bastard. You snake-cold bastard. Sitting there cold as stone while they hacked
off his head. Did you feel a thing? Or did you enjoy it, my Lord Regent? I
swore I'd get you then." There was a long
silence, then Vorkosigan leaned close to him, one arm extended past his head
for support against the wall. He whispered hoarsely, "You missed me,
Evon." Vorhalas spat in his
face, spittle bloody from his injured mouth. Vorkosigan made no move to wipe it
away. "You missed my wife," he went on in a slow soft cadence.
"But you got my son. Did you dream of sweet revenge? You have it. Look at
her eyes, Evon. A man could drown in those sea-grey eyes. I'll be looking at
them every day for the rest of my life. So eat vengeance, Evon. Drink it.
Fondle it. Wrap it round you in the night watch. It's all yours. I will it all
to you. For myself, I've gorged it to the gagging point, and have lost my
stomach for it." Vorhalas looked up,
then, for the first time, past him to Cordelia. She thought of the child in her
belly, his delicate girdering of new cartilagenous bones perhaps even now
beginning to rot, twist, slough, but could not hate Vorhalas, although she
tried to for a moment. She couldn't even find him baffling. She had a sense, as
of a second sight, that she could see right through his wounded spirit the way
doctors saw through a wounded body with their diagnostic viewers. Every twist
and tear and emotional abrasion, every young cancer of resentment growing from
them, and above all the great gash of his brother's death seemed red-lined in
her mind's eye. "He didn't enjoy
it, Evon," she said. "What would you have had from him? Do you even
know?" "A little human
pity," he snarled. "He could have saved Carl. Even then he could
have. I thought at first that was why he had come." "Oh, God,"
said Vorkosigan. He looked sick at the flashing vision of the rise and fall of
hopes these words conjured. "I don't play theater with lives, Evon!" Vorhalas held his hatred
like a shield before him. "Go to hell." Vorkosigan sighed, and
pushed away from the wall. The doctor was lingering to chivvy them to the
waiting vehicle for the trip to the Imperial Military Hospital. "Take him
away, Illyan," said Vorkosigan wearily. "Wait," said
Cordelia. "I need to know—I need to ask him something." Vorhalas eyed her
sullenly. "Was this the
result you intended? I mean, when you chose that particular weapon? That
specific poison?" He looked away from her,
speaking to the far wall. "It was what I could grab, going through the
armory. I didn't think you could identify it, and get the antidote all the way
from ImpMil in time... ." "You relieve me of
a burden," she whispered. "The antidote came
from the Imperial Residence," Vorkosigan explained. "A quarter of the
distance. The Emperor's infirmary there has everything. As for identification
... I was there, at the destruction of the Karian mutiny. Just about your age,
I think, or a little younger. The smell brought it all back, just now. Boys
coughing out their lungs in red blobs... ." He seemed to shrink into himself,
into the past. "I didn't intend
your death particularly. You were just in the way, between me and him."
Vorhalas gestured blindly at her swollen torso. "It wasn't the result I
intended. I meant to kill him. I didn't even know for sure that you shared the
same room at night." He was looking everywhere, now, except her face.
"I never thought about killing your ..." "Look at me,"
she croaked, "and say the word out loud." "Baby," he
whispered, and burst into sudden, shocking sobs. Vorkosigan stepped back,
beside her. "Wish you hadn't done that," he whispered. "Reminds
me of his brother. Why am I death to that family?" "Still want him to
eat vengeance?" He leaned his forehead
on her shoulder, briefly. "Not even that. You empty us all out, dear
Captain. But, oh ..." His hand reached out as if to cup her belly, then
drew back in consciousness of their ring of silent watchers. He straightened.
"Bring me a full report in the morning, Illyan," he said, "at
the hospital." He took her by the arm
as they turned to follow the doctor. She could not tell if it was to support
her or himself. She was surrounded by
helpers at the Imperial Military Hospital complex, carried along as on a river.
Doctors, nurses, corpsmen, guards. Aral was separated from her at the door, and
it made her uneasy and alone in the crowd. She said very little to them, empty
courtesies, automatic as levers. She wished for shock to take her
consciousness, numbness, reality—denying madness, hallucinations, anything.
Instead she just felt tired. The baby was moving
within her, flutters, kneading turns; evidently the teratogenic antidote was a
very slow-acting poison. They were still granted a little time together, it
seemed, and she loved him through her skin, her fingertips moving in a slow
massage over her abdomen. Welcome, my son, to Barrayar, the abode of cannibals;
this place didn't even wait the usual eighteen or twenty years to eat you.
Ravenous planet. She was bedded down in a
luxurious private room in a VIP wing, hastily cleared for their exclusive use.
She was relieved to discover Vorkosigan had been ensconced just across the
hall. Dressed already in green military-issue pajamas, he came promptly over to
see her tucked into bed. She managed a small smile for him, but did not attempt
to sit up. The force of gravity was pulling her down into the center of the
world. Only the rigidity of the bed, the building, the planets crust, held her
up against it, not her will at all. He was trailed by an
anxious corpsman, saying, "Remember, sir, try not to talk so much, till
after the doctor's had a chance to give your throat the irrigation
treatment." The grey light of dawn
was making the windows pale. He sat on the edge of the bed and took her hand,
rubbing it. "You're cold, dear Captain," he whispered hoarsely. She
nodded. Her chest ached, her throat was raw, and her sinuses burned. "I should never
have let them talk me into taking the job," he went on. "So sorry
..." "I talked you into
it, too. You tried to warn me. Not your fault. It seemed right for you. Is
right." He shook his head.
"Don't talk. Makes scar tissue on the vocal cords." She gave vent to a
joyless "Ha!" and laid a finger across his lips as he started to
speak again. He nodded, resigned, and they remained looking at each other for a
time. He pushed her tangled hair back gently from her face, and she captured
the broad hand to hold against her cheek for comfort, until he was hunted out
by a posse of doctors and technicians and driven off for a treatment.
"We'll be in to see you shortly, Milady," their chieftain promised
ominously. They returned after a
while, to make her gargle a nasty pink fluid, and breathe into a machine, then
rumbled out again. A female nurse brought her breakfast, which she did not
touch. Then a committee of
grim-faced doctors entered her room. The one who had come from the Imperial
Residence in the night was now smartly groomed and neatly dressed in civilian
clothes. Her own personal physician was flanked by a younger, black-browed man
in Service greens with captain's tabs on his collar. She gazed at their three
faces and thought of Cerberus. Her man introduced the
stranger. "This is Captain Vaagen, of the Imperial Military Hospital's
research facility. He's our resident expert on military poisons." "Inventing them, or
cleaning up after them, Captain?" Cordelia asked. "Both,
Milady." He stood at a sort of aggressive parade rest. Her own man had the look
about his eyes of someone who had drawn the short straw, although his lips
smiled. "My Lord Regent has asked me to inform you of the schedule of
treatments, and so on. I'm afraid," he cleared his throat, "that it
would be best if we scheduled the abortion promptly. It is already unusually
late in your pregnancy for it, and it would be as well for your recovery to
relieve you of the physiological strain as soon as possible." "Is there nothing
that can be done?" she asked hopelessly, already knowing the answer from
their faces. "I'm afraid
not," said her man sadly. The man from the Imperial Residence nodded
confirmation. "I ran a literature
search," said the captain unexpectedly, staring out the window, "and
there was that calcium experiment. True, the results they got weren't
particularly heartening—" "I thought we'd
agreed not to bring that up," glared the Residence man. "Vaagen, that's
cruel," said her own man. "You're just raising false hopes. You can't
make the Regent's wife into one of your hapless experimental animals for a lot
of untried shots in the dark. You have your permission from the Regent for the
autopsy—leave it at that." Her world turned
right-side-up again in a second, as she looked at the face of the man with
ideas. She knew the type; half-right, half-cocked, half-successful, flitting
from one monomania to another like a bee pollinating flowers, gathering little
fruit but leaving seeds behind. She was nothing to him, personally, but the raw
material for a monograph. The risks she took did not appall his imagination,
she was not a person but a disease state. She smiled upon him, slowly, wildly,
knowing him then for her ally in the enemy camp. "How do you do, Dr.
Vaagen? How would you like to write the paper of a lifetime?" The Residence man barked
a laugh. "She's got your number, Vaagen." He smiled back,
astonished to be so instantly understood. "You realize, I can't guarantee
any results... ." "Results!"
interrupted her man. "My God, you'd better let her know what your idea of
results is. Or show her the pictures—no, don't do that. Milady," he turned
to her, "the treatment he's discussing was last tried twenty years ago. It
did irreparable damage to the mothers. And the results—the very best results
you could hope for would be a twisted cripple. Perhaps much worse.
Indescribably worse." "Jellyfish
describes it pretty well," said Vaagen. "You're inhuman,
Vaagen!" snapped her man, with a glance her way to check the distress
quotient. "A viable
jellyfish, Dr. Vaagen?" asked Cordelia, intent. "Mm. Maybe,"
he replied, inhibited by his colleagues' angry glares. "But there is the
difficulty of what happens to the mothers when the treatment is applied in
vivo." "So, can't you do
it in vitro?" Cordelia asked the obvious question. Vaagen shot a glance of
triumph at her man. "It would certainly open up a number of possible lines
of experiment, if it could be arranged," he murmured to the ceiling. "In vitro?"
said the Residence man, puzzled. "How?" "What, how?"
said Cordelia. "You've got seventeen Escobaran-manufactured uterine
replicators stored in a closet around here somewhere, carried home from the
war." She turned excitedly to Vaagen. "Do you happen to know a Dr.
Henri?" Vaagen nodded.
"We've worked together." "Then you know all
about them!" "Well—not exactly
all. But, ah—in fact, he informs me that they are available. But you
understand, I'm not an obstetrician." "You certainly
aren't," said her man. "Milady, this man isn't even a physician. He's
only a biochemist." "But you're an
obstetrician," she pointed out. "So we have the whole team, then. Dr.
Henri, and, um, Captain Vaagen here for Piotr Miles, and you, for the
transfer." His lips were
compressed, and his eyes held a very strange expression. It took her a moment
to identify it as fear. "I can't do the transfer, Milady," he said.
"I don't know how. Nobody on Barrayar has ever done one." "You don't advise
it, then?" "Definitely not.
The possibility of permanent damage—you can, after all, begin again in a few
months, if the soft-tissue scarring doesn't extend to testicular—ahem. You can
begin again. I am your doctor, and that is my considered opinion." "Yes, if somebody
else doesn't knock Aral off in the meantime. I must remember this is Barrayar,
where they are so in love with death they bury men who are still twitching. Are
you willing to try the operation?" He drew himself up in
dignity. "No, Milady. And that's final." "Very well."
She pointed a finger at her doctor, "You're out," and shifted it to
Vaagen, "you're in. You are now in charge of this case. I rely on you to
find me a surgeon—or a medical student, or a horse doctor, or somebody who's
willing to try. And then you can experiment to your heart's content." Vaagen looked mildly
triumphant; her former man looked furious. "We had better see what my Lord
Regent has to say, before you carry his wife off on this wave of criminally
false optimism." Vaagen looked a little
less triumphant. "You thinking of
charging over there right now?" asked Cordelia. "I'm sorry,
Milady," said the Residence man, "but I think we'd do best to quash
this thing right now. You don't know Captain Vaagen's reputation. Sorry to be
so blunt, Vaagen, but you're an empire builder, and this time you've gone too
far." "Are you ambitious
for a research wing, Captain Vaagen?" Cordelia inquired. He shrugged, embarrassed
rather than outraged, so she knew the Residence man's words to be at least half
true. She gathered Vaagen in by eye, willing to possess him body, mind, and
soul, but especially mind, and wondering how best to fire his imagination in
her service. "You shall have an
institute, if you can bring this off. You tell him," she jerked her head
in the direction of the hall, toward Aral's room, "I said so." Variously discomfited,
angry, and hopeful, they withdrew. Cordelia lay back on the bed and whistled a
little soundless tune, her fingertips continuing their slow abdominal massage.
Gravity had ceased to exist. CHAPTER
NINE She slept at last,
toward the middle of the day, and woke disoriented. She squinted at the
afternoon light slanting through the hospital room's windows. The grey rain had
gone away. She touched her belly, for grief and reassurance, and rolled over to
find Count Piotr sitting at her bedside. He was dressed in his
country clothes, old uniform trousers, plain shirt, a jacket that he wore only
at Vorkosigan Surleau. He must have come up directly to ImpMil. His thin lips
smiled anxiously at her. His eyes looked tired and worried. "Dear girl. You
need not wake up for me." "That's all
right." She blinked away blear from her eyes, feeling older than the old
man. "Is there something to drink?" He hastily poured her
cold water from the bedside basin spigot, and watched her swallow.
"More?" "That's enough. Have
you seen Aral yet?" He patted her hand.
"I've talked to Aral already. He's resting now. I am so sorry,
Cordelia." "It may not be as
bad as we feared at first. There's still a chance. A hope. Did Aral tell you
about the uterine replicator?" "Something. But the
damage has already been done, surely. Irrevocable damage." "Damage, yes. How
irrevocable it is, no one knows. Not even Captain Vaagen." "Yes, I met Vaagen
a little while ago." Piotr frowned. "A pushing sort of fellow. New
Man type." "Barrayar needs its
new men. And women. Its technologically trained generation." "Oh, yes. We fought
and slaved to create them. They are absolutely necessary. They know it, too,
some of them." A hint of self-aware irony softened his mouth. "But
this operation you're proposing, this placental transfer ... it doesn't sound
too safe." "On Beta Colony, it
would be routine." Cordelia shrugged. We are not, of course, on Beta
Colony. "But something more
straightforward, better understood—you would be ready to begin again much sooner.
In the long run, you might actually lose less time." "Time ... isn't
what I'm worried about losing." A meaningless concept, now she thought of
it. She lost 26.7 hours every Barrayaran day. "Anyway, I'm never going
through that again. I'm not a slow learner, sir." A flicker of alarm
crossed his face. "You'll change your mind, when you feel better. What
does matter now—I've talked to Captain Vaagen. There seemed no question in his
mind there is great damage." "Well, yes. The
unknown is whether there can be great repairs." "Dear girl."
His worried smile grew tenser. "Just so. If only the fetus were a girl ...
or even a second son ... we could afford to indulge your understandable, even
laudable, maternal emotions. But this thing, if it lived, would be Count
Vorkosigan someday. We cannot afford to have a deformed Count Vorkosigan."
He sat back, as if he had just made some cogent point. Cordelia wrinkled her
brow. "Who is we?" "House Vorkosigan.
We are one of the oldest great houses on Barrayar. Never, perhaps, the richest,
seldom the strongest, but what we've lacked in wealth we've made up in honor.
Nine generations of Vor warriors. This would be a horrible end to come to,
after nine generations, don't you see?" "House Vorkosigan,
at this point in time, consists of two individuals, you and Aral,"
Cordelia observed, both amused and disturbed. "And Counts Vorkosigan have
come to horrible ends throughout your history. You've been blown up, shot,
starved, drowned, burned alive, beheaded, diseased, and demented. The only
thing you've never done is die in bed. I thought horrors were your stock in
trade." He returned her a pained
smile. "But we've never been mutants." "I think you need
to talk to Vaagen again. The fetal damage he described was teratogenic, not
genetic, if I understand him correctly." "But people will
think it's a mutant." "What the devil do
you care what some ignorant prole thinks?" "Other Vor,
dear." "Vor, prole,
they're equally ignorant, I assure you." His hands twitched. He
opened his mouth, closed it again, frowned, and said more sharply, "A
Count Vorkosigan has never been an experimental laboratory animal,
either." "There you go,
then. He serves Barrayar even before he's born. Not a bad start on a life of
honor." Perhaps some good would come of it, in the end, some knowledge
gained; if not help for themselves, then for some other parents' grief. The
more she thought about it, the more right her decision felt, on more than one
level. Piotr jerked his head
back. "For all you Betans seem soft, you have an appalling cold-blooded
streak in you." "Rational streak,
sir. Rationality has its merits. You Barrayarans ought to try it
sometime." She bit her tongue. "But we run ahead of ourselves, I
think, sir. There are lots of d—" dangers, "difficulties yet to come.
A placental transfer this late in pregnancy is tricky even for galactics. I
admit, I wish there were time to import a more experienced surgeon. But there's
not." "Yes ... yes ... it
may yet die, you're right. No need to ... but I'm afraid for you, too, girl. Is
it worth it?" Was what worth what? How
could she know? Her lungs burned. She smiled wearily at him, and shook her
head, which ached with tight pressure in her temples and neck. "Father," came
a raspy voice from the doorway. Aral leaned there, in his green pajamas, a
portable oxygenator stuck up his nose. How long had he stood there? "I
think Cordelia needs to rest." Their eyes met, over
Piotr. Bless you, love... . "Yes, of
course." Count Piotr gathered himself together, and creaked to his feet.
"I'm sorry, you're quite correct." He pressed Cordelia's hand one
more time, firmly, with his dry old-man's grip. "Sleep. You'll be able to
think more clearly later." "Father." "You shouldn't be
out of bed, should you?" said Piotr, drawn off. "Go back and lie
down, boy... ." His voice drifted away, across the corridor. Aral returned later,
after Count Piotr had finally left. "Was Father
bothering you?" he asked, looking grim. She held out her hand to him, and
he sat beside her. She transferred her head from her pillow to his lap, her
cheek on the firm-muscled leg beneath the thin pajama, and he stroked her hair. "No more than
usual," she sighed. "I feared he was
upsetting you." "It's not that I'm
not upset. It's just that I'm too tired to run up and down the corridor
screaming." "Ah. He did upset
you." "Yes." She
hesitated. "In a way, he has a point. I was so afraid for so long, waiting
for the blow to fall, from somewhere, nowhere, anywhere. Then came last night,
and the worst was done, over ... except it's not over. If the blow had been
more complete, I could stop, quit now. But this is going to go on and on."
She rubbed her cheek against the cloth. "Did Illyan come up with anything
new? I thought I heard his voice out there, earlier." His hand continued to
stroke her hair, in even rhythm. "He'd finished the preliminary fast-penta
interrogation of Evon Vorhalas. He's now investigating the old armory where
Evon stole the soltoxin. It appears Evon might not have equipped himself so ad
hoc unilaterally as he claimed. An ordnance major in charge there has
disappeared, AWOL. Illyan's not certain yet if the man was eliminated, to clear
Evon's path, or if he actually helped Evon, and has gone into hiding." "He might just be
afraid. If it was dereliction." "He'd better be
afraid. If he had any conscious connivance in this ..." His hand clenched
in her hair, he became aware of the pull, muttered, "Sorry," and
continued petting. Cordelia, feeling very like an injured animal, crept deeper
into his lap, her hand on his knee. "About Father—if he
upsets you again, send him to me. You shouldn't have to deal with him. I told
him it was your decision." "My decision?"
Her hand rested, without moving. "Not our decision?" He hesitated.
"Whatever you want, I'll support you." "But what do you
want? Something you're not telling me?" "I can't help
understanding his fears. But ... there's something I haven't discussed with him
yet, nor am I going to. The next child may not be so easy to come by as the
first." Easy? You call this
easy? He went on, "One of
the lesser—known side effects of soltoxin poisoning is testicular scarring, on
the micro-level. It could reduce fertility below the point of no return. Or so
my examining physician warns me." "Nonsense,"
said Cordelia. "All you need is any two somatic cells and a replicator.
Your little finger and my big toe, if that's all they can scrape off the walls
after the next bomb, could go on reproducing little Vorkosigans into the next
century. However many our survivors choose to afford." "But not naturally.
Not without leaving Barrayar." "Or changing
Barrayar. Dammit." His hand jerked back at the bite in her tone. "If
only I had insisted on using the replicator in the first place, the baby need
never have been at risk. I knew it was safer, I knew it was there—" Her
voice broke. "Sh. Sh. If only I
had ... not taken the job. Kept you at Vorkosigan Surleau. Pardoned that
murderous idiot Carl, for God's sake. If only we'd slept in separate rooms
..." "No!" Her hand
tightened on his knee. "And I refuse to go live in some bomb shelter for
the next fifteen years. Aral, this place has to change. This is
unbearable." If only I had never come here. If only. If only. If
only. The operating room
seemed clean and bright, if not so copiously equipped as galactic standard.
Cordelia, wafting on her float pallet, turned her head sideways to take in as
much detail as she could. Lights, monitors, an operating table with a
catch-basin set beneath it, a tech checking a bubbling tank of clear yellow
fluid. This was not, she told herself sternly, the point of no return. This was
simply the next logical step. Captain Vaagen and Dr.
Henri stood sterile-garbed and waiting, beyond the operating table. Next to
them sat the portable uterine replicator, a metal and plastic canister half a
meter tall, studded with control panels and access ports. The lights on its
sides glowed green and amber. Cleaned, sterilized, its nutrient and oxygen
tanks recharged and ready ... Cordelia eyed it with profound relief. The
primitive Barrayaran back-to-the-apes style gestation was nothing but the utter
failure of reason to triumph over emotion. She'd so wanted to please, to fit
in, to try to become Barrayaran... . And so my child pays the price. Never
again. Dr. Ritter, the surgeon,
was tall and dark-haired, with olive skin and long lean hands. Cordelia had
liked his hands the first moment she saw them. Steady. Ritter and a medtech now
positioned her over the operating table, and shifted the float pallet out from
under her. Dr. Ritter smiled reassuringly. "You're doing fine." Of course I'm fine, we
haven't even started yet, Cordelia thought irritably. Dr. Ritter was palpably
nervous, though the tension somehow stopped at his elbows. The surgeon was a
friend of Vaagen's, whom Vaagen had strong-armed into this, after they'd spent
a day running through a list of more experienced men who had refused to touch
the case. Vaagen had explained it
to Cordelia. "What do you call four big bravos with clubs in a dark
alley?" "What?" "A Vor lord's
malpractice suit." He'd chuckled. Vaagen's sense of humor was acid-black.
Cordelia could have hugged him for it. He'd been the only person to crack a
joke in her presence in the last three days, possibly the most rational and
honest person she'd met since she'd left Beta Colony. She was glad he was here. They rolled her to her
side, and touched her spine with the medical stun. A tingle, and her cold feet
felt suddenly warm. Her legs went abruptly inert, like bags of lard. "Can you feel
that?" asked Dr. Ritter. "Feel what?" "Good." He
nodded to the tech, and they straightened her out. The tech uncovered her
stomach, and turned on the sterilizer-field. The surgeon palpated her,
cross-checking the holovid monitors for the infant's exact position within her. "Are you sure you
wouldn't rather be asleep through this?" Dr. Ritter asked her for the last
time. "No. I want to
watch. This is my first child being born." Maybe my only child being born. He smiled wanly.
"Brave girl." Girl, hell, I'm older
than you. Dr. Ritter, she sensed, would rather not be watched. Tough. Dr. Ritter paused,
taking one last glance around as if mentally checklisting the readiness of his
tools and people. And will and nerve, Cordelia guessed. "Come on, Ritter my
man, let's get this over with," said Vaagen, tapping his fingers
impatiently. His tone was a peculiar mix, a little sarcastic prodding lilt over
an underlying warmth of genuine encouragement. "My scans show bone
sloughing already under way. If the disintegration gets too far advanced, I'll
have no matrix left to build from. Cut now, chew your nails later." "Chew your own
nails, Vaagen," said the surgeon genially. "Jog my elbow again and
I'll have my medtech put a speculum down your throat." Very old friends,
Cordelia gauged. But the surgeon raised his hands, took a breath and a grip on
his vibra-scalpel, and sliced her belly open in one perfectly controlled
stroke. The medtech followed his motion smoothly with the surgical
hand-tractor, clamping blood vessels; scarcely a cat-scratch of blood escaped.
Cordelia felt pressure but no pain. Other cuts laid open her uterus. A placental transfer was
vastly more demanding than a straightforward cesarian section. The fragile
placenta must be chemically and hormonally persuaded to release from the
blood-vessel-enriched uterus, without damaging too many of its multitude of
tiny villi, then floated free from the uterine wall in a running bath of highly
oxygenated nutrient solution. The replicator sponge then had to be slipped into
place between the placenta and the uterine wall, and the placenta's villi at
least partially induced to re-interdigitate on its new matrix, before the whole
mess could be lifted from the living body of the mother and placed in the
replicator. The more advanced the pregnancy, the more difficult the transfer. The umbilical cord
between placenta and infant was monitored, and extra oxygen injected by
hypospray as needed. On Beta Colony, a nifty little device would do this; here,
an anxious tech hovered. The tech began running
the clear bright yellow solution-bath into her uterus. It filled her, and ran
over, trickling pink-tinged down her sides and into the catch basin. The
surgeon was now working, in effect, underwater. No question about it, a
placental transfer was a messy operation. "Sponge,"
called the surgeon softly, and Vaagen and Henri trundled the uterine replicator
to her side, and strung out the matrix sponge from it on its feed lines. The
surgeon fiddled interminably with a tiny hand-tractor, his hands out of
Cordelia's line of sight as she peered down cross-eyed over her chest to her
rounded-so-barely-rounded-belly. She shivered. Ritter was sweating. "Doctor ..." A
tech pointed to something on a vid monitor. "Mm," said
Ritter, glancing up, then continuing fiddling. The techs murmured, Vaagen and
Henri murmured, calm, professional, reassuring ... she was so cold... . The fluid trickling over
the white dam of her skin changed abruptly from pink—tinged to bright, bright
red, a splashing flow, much faster than the input feed was emitting. "Clamp that,"
hissed the surgeon. Cordelia caught just a
glimpse, beneath a membrane, of tiny arms, legs, a wet dark head, wriggling on
the surgeons gloved hands, no larger than a half-drowned kitten. "Vaagen!
Take this thing of yours now if you want it!" snapped Ritter. Vaagen plunged
his gloved hands into her belly as dark whorls clouded Cordelias vision, her
head aching, exploding in sudden sparkling flashes. The blackness ballooned
out, overwhelming her. The last thing she heard was the surgeon's despairing
sibilant voice, "Oh, shit ... !" Her dreams were foggy
with pain. The worst part was the choking. She choked and choked, and wept for
lack of air. Her throat was full of obstructions, and she clawed at it, until
her hands were bound. She dreamed of Vorrutyer's tortures, then, multiplied and
extended into insane complications that went on for hours. A demented Bothari
knelt on her chest, and she could get no air at all. When she finally woke
clear-headed, it was like breaking up out of some underground prison-hell into
God's own fight. Her relief was so profound she wept again, a muted whimper and
a wetness in her eyes. She could breathe, although it pained her; she was
bruised and aching and unable to move. But she could breathe. That was enough. "Sh. Sh." A
thick warm finger touched her eyelids, wiping away the moisture. "It's all
right." "Izzit?" She
blinked and squinted. It was night, artificial light making warm pools in the
room. Aral's face wavered over hers. "Izzit ... tonight? Wha'
happened?" "Sh. You've been
very, very sick. You had a violent hemorrhage during the placental transfer.
Your heart stopped twice." He moistened his lips and went on. "The
trauma, on top of the poisoning, flared into soltoxin pneumonia. You had a very
bad day yesterday, but you're over the worst, off the respirator." "How ...
long?" "Three days." "Ah. Baby, Aral.
Diddit work? Details!" "It went all right.
Vaagen reports the transfer was successful. They lost about thirty percent of
the placental function, but Henri compensated with an enriched and increased
oxy-solution flow, and all seems to be well, or as well as can be expected. The
baby's still alive, anyway. Vaagen has started his first calcium-treatment
experiment, and promises us a baseline report soon." He caressed her
forehead. "Vaagen has priority-access to any equipment, supplies, or techs
he cares to requisition, including outside consultants. He has an advising
civilian pediatrician, plus Henri. Vaagen himself knows more about our military
poisons than any man, on Barrayar or off it. We can do no more, right now. So
rest, love." "Baby—where?" "Ah—you can see
where, if you wish." He helped her lift her head, and pointed out the
window. "See that second building, with the red lights on the roof? That's
the biochemistry research facility. Vaagen and Henri's lab is on the third
floor." "Oh, I recognize it
now. Saw it from the other side, the day we collected Elena." "That's
right." His face softened. "Good to have you back, dear Captain.
Seeing you that sick ... I haven't felt that helpless and useless since I was
eleven years old." That was the year Mad Yuri's death squad had murdered
his mother and brother. "Sh," she said in turn. "No, no ...
s'all right now." They took away all the
rest of the tubes piercing her body the next morning, except for the oxygen.
Days of quiet routine followed. Her recovery was less interrupted than Aral's.
What seemed troops of men, headed by Minister Vortala, came to see him at all
hours. He had a secured comconsole installed in his room, over medical
protests. Koudelka joined him eight hours a day, in the makeshift office. Koudelka seemed very
quiet, as depressed as everyone else in the wake of the disaster. Though not as
morbid as anyone who'd had to do with their failed Security. Even Illyan
shrank, when he saw her. Aral walked her
carefully up and down the corridor a couple of times a day. The vibra-scalpel
had made a cleaner cut through her abdomen than, say, your average
sabre-thrust, but it was no less deep. The healing scar ached less than her
lungs, though. Or her heart. Her belly was not so much flat as flaccid, but
definitely no longer occupied. She was alone, uninhabited, she was herself
again, after five months of that strange doubled existence. Dr. Henri came with a
float chair one day, and took her on a short trip over to his laboratory, to
see where the replicator was safely installed. She watched her baby moving in
the vid scans, and studied the team's technical readouts and reports. Their subject's
nerves, skin, and eyes tested out encouragingly, though Henri was not so sure
about hearing, because of the tiny bones in the ear. Henri and Vaagen were
properly trained scientists, almost Betan in their outlook, and she blessed
them silently and thanked them aloud, and returned to her room feeling
enormously better. When Captain Vaagen
burst into her room the next afternoon, however, her heart sank. His face was
thunderously dark, his lips tight and harsh. "What's wrong,
Captain?" she asked urgently. "That second calcium run—did it
fail?" "Too early to tell.
No, your baby's the same, Milady. Our trouble is with your in-law." "Beg pardon?" "General Count
Vorkosigan came to see us this morning." "Oh! He came to see
the baby? Oh, good. He's so disturbed by all this new life-technology. Maybe
he's finally starting to work past those emotional blocks. He embraces the new
death-technologies readily enough, old Vor warrior that he is... ." "I wouldn't get too
optimistic about him, if I were you, Milady." He took a deep breath,
taking refuge in a formality of stance, just black, not black-humored this
time. "Dr. Henri had the same idea you did. We showed the General all
around the lab, went over the equipment, explained our treatment theories. We
were absolutely honest, as we've been with you. Maybe too honest. He wanted to
know what results we were going to get. Hell, we don't know. And so we said. "After some beating
around the bush, hinting ... well, to cut it short, the General first asked,
then ordered, then tried to bribe Dr. Henri to open the stopcock. To destroy
the fetus. The mutation, he calls it. We threw him the hell out. He swore he'd
be back." She was shaking, down in
her belly, though she kept her face blank. "I see." "I want that old
man kept out of my lab, Milady. And I don't care how you do it. I don't need
this kind of crap coming down. Not from that high up." "I'll see ... wait
here." She wrapped her robe around her own green pajamas more tightly,
seated her oxygen tube more firmly, and walked carefully across the corridor.
Aral, half-casual in uniform trousers and a shirt, sat at a small table by his
window. The only sign of his continued patienthood was the oxygen tube up his
nose, treatment for his own lingering soltoxin pneumonia. He was conferring
with a man while Koudelka took notes. The man was not, thank God, Piotr, but
merely some ministerial secretary of Vortala's. "Aral. I need
you." "Can it wait?" "No." He rose from his chair
with a brief "Excuse me a moment, gentlemen," and trod across the
hall in her wake. Cordelia closed the door behind them. "Captain Vaagen,
please tell Aral what you just told me." Vaagen, looking a degree
more nervous, repeated his tale. To his credit, he did not soften the details.
A weight seemed to settle on Aral's shoulders as he listened, rounding and
hunching them. "Thank you,
Captain. You were correct to report this. I will take care of it
immediately." "That's all?"
Vaagen glanced at Cordelia in doubt. She opened her palm to
him. "You heard the man." Vaagen shrugged, and
saluted himself out. "You don't doubt
his story?" asked Cordelia. "I've been
listening to the Count my father's thoughts on this subject for a week,
love." "You argued?" "He argued. I just
listened." Aral returned to his own
room, and asked Koudelka and the secretary to wait in the corridor. Cordelia
sat on his bed and watched as he punched up codes on his comconsole. "Lord Vorkosigan
here. I wish to speak simultaneously to the Security chief, Imperial Military
Hospital, and Commander Simon Illyan. Get them both on, please." A brief wait, as each
man was located. Judging from the fuzzy background in the vid, the ImpMil man
was in his office somewhere in the hospital complex. They tracked Illyan down
at a forensic laboratory in ImpSec HQ. "Gentlemen."
Aral's face was quite expressionless. "I wish to revoke a Security
clearance." Each man attentively prepared to make notes on their
respective comconsoles. "General Count
Piotr Vorkosigan is to be denied access to Building Six, Biochemical Research,
Imperial Military Hospital, until further notice. Notice from me
personally." Illyan hesitated.
"Sir—General Vorkosigan has absolute clearance, by Imperial order. He's
had it for years. I need an Imperial order to countermand it." "That's precisely what
this is, Illyan." A trace of impatience rasped in Vorkosigan's voice.
"By my order, Aral Vorkosigan, Regent to His Imperial Majesty Gregor
Vorbarra. Is that official enough?" Illyan whistled softly,
but his face snapped to blankness at Vorkosigan's frown. "Yes, sir.
Understood. Is there anything else?" "That's all. Just
that one building." "Sir ..." the
hospital security commander said, "what if ... General Vorkosigan refuses
to halt when ordered?" Cordelia could just
picture it, some poor young guard being mowed down flat by all that history...
. "If your security
people are indeed so overwhelmed by one old man, they may use force up to and
including stunner fire," said Aral tiredly. "Dismissed. Thank
you." The ImpMil man nodded
cautiously, and disconnected. Illyan lingered in doubt
a moment. "Is that a good idea, at his age? Stunning can be bad for the
heart. And he's not going to like it one bit, when we tell him there's
someplace he can't go. By the way, why—?" Aral merely stared coldly at
him, till he gulped, "Yes, sir," saluted, and signed off. Aral sat back, gazing
pensively at the blank space where the vid images had glowed. He glanced up at
Cordelia, and his lips twisted, a grimace of irony and pain. "He is an old
man," he said at last. "The old man just
tried to kill your son. What's left of your son." "I see his view. I
see his fears." "Do you see mine,
too?" "Yes. Both." "When push comes to
shove—if he tries to go back there—" "He is my
past." He met her eyes. "You are my future. The rest of my life
belongs to the future. I swear by my word as Vorkosigan." Cordelia sighed, and
rubbed her aching neck, her aching eyes. Koudelka rattled at the
door, and stuck his head surreptitiously within. "Sir? The minister's
secretary wants to know—" "In a minute,
Lieutenant." Vorkosigan waved him back out. "Let's blow out of this
place," said Cordelia suddenly. "Milady?" "ImpMil, and
ImpSec, and ImpEverything, is giving me a bad case of ImpClaustrophobia. Let's
go down to Vorkosigan Surleau for a few days. You'll recover better there
yourself, it will be harder for all your dedicated minions," she jerked
her head at the corridor, "to get at you, there. Just you and me,
boy." Would it work? Suppose they retired to the scene of their summer
happiness, and it wasn't there anymore? Drowned in the autumn rains ... She
could feel the desperation in herself, seeking their lost balance, some solid
center. His brows rose in
approval. "Outstanding idea, dear Captain. We'll take the old man
along." "Oh, must we—oh.
Yes, I see. Quite. By all means." CHAPTER
TEN Cordelia woke slowly,
stretched, and clutched the magnificent silky feather-stuffed comforter to her.
The other side of the bed was empty—she touched the dented pillow—cold and
empty. Aral must have tiptoed out early. She luxuriated in the sensation of
finally having enough sleep, not waking to that stunned exhaustion that had
clotted her mind and body for so long. This made the third night in a row she'd
slept well, warmed by her husband's body, both of them gladly rid of the
irritating oxygen-fittings on their faces. Their corner room, on
the second floor of the old stone converted barracks, was cool this morning,
and very quiet. The front window opened onto the bright green lawn, descending
into mist that hid the lake and the village and hills of the farther shore. The
damp morning felt comfortable, felt right, proper contrast to the feather
comforter. When she sat up, the new pink scar on her abdomen only twinged. Droushnakovi poked her
head around the doorframe. "Milady?" she called softly, then saw
Cordelia sitting up, bare feet hung out over the edge of the bed. Cordelia
swung her feet back and forth, experimentally, encouraging circulation.
"Oh, good, you're awake." Drou shouldered her way through the door,
bearing a large and promising tray. She wore one of her more comfortable
dresses, with a wide swinging skirt, and a warm padded vest with embroidery.
Her footsteps sounded on the wide wooden floorboards, then were muffled on the
handwoven rug as she crossed the room. "I'm hungry,"
said Cordelia in wonder, as the aromas from the tray tickled her nose. "I
think that's the first time in three weeks." Three weeks, since that night
of horrors at Vorkosigan House. Drou smiled, and set the
tray down at the table by the front window. Cordelia found robe and slippers,
and made for the coffeepot. Drou hovered, seeming ready to catch her if she
fell over, but Cordelia did not feel nearly so shaky today. She seated herself
and reached for steaming groats and butter, and a pitcher of hot syrup the
Barrayarans made from boiled-down tree sap. Wonderful food. "Have you eaten,
Drou? Want some coffee? What time is it?" The bodyguard shook her
blonde head. "I'm fine, Milady. It's about elevenses." Droushnakovi had been
part of the assumed background, for the past several days here at Vorkosigan
Surleau. Cordelia found herself really looking at the girl for almost the first
time since she'd left ImpMil. Drou was attentive and alert as ever, but with an
underlying tension, that same bad-guard-slink—perhaps it was only because she
was feeling better herself, but Cordelia selfishly wanted the people around her
to be feeling better, too, if only not to drag her back down. "I'm feeling so
much less thick, today. I talked to Captain Vaagen yesterday, on the vid. He
thinks he's seen the first signs of molecular re-calcification in little Piotr
Miles. Very encouraging, if you know how to interpret Vaagen. He doesn't offer
false hopes, but what little he does say, you can rely on." Drou glanced up from her
lap, fixing a responding smile on her downcast features. She shook her head.
"Uterine replicators seem so strange to me. So alien." "Not so strange as
what evolution laid on us, ad lib empirical," Cordelia grinned back.
"Thank God for technology and rational design. I know whereof I speak,
now." "Milady ... how did
you first know you were pregnant? Did you miss a monthly?" "A menstrual
period? No, actually." She thought back to last summer. This very room,
that unmade bed in fact. She and Aral could begin sharing intimacies there
again soon, though with some loss of piquancy without reproduction as a goal.
"Aral and I thought we were all settled here, last summer. He was retired,
I was retired ... no impediments. I was on the verge of being old for the
organic method, which seemed the only one available here on Barrayar; more to
the point, he wanted to start soon. So a few weeks after we were married, I
went and had my contraceptive implant removed. Made me feel very wicked; at home
I couldn't have had it taken out without buying a license." "Really?" Drou
listened with openmouthed fascination. "Yes, it's a Betan
legal requirement. You have to qualify for a parents license first. I've had my
implant since I was fourteen. I had a menstrual period once then, I remember.
We turn them off till they're needed. I got my implant, and my hymen cut, and
my ears pierced, and had my coming-out party... ." "You didn't ...
start doing sex when you were fourteen, did you?" Droushnakovi's voice was
hushed. "I could have. But
it takes two, y'know. I didn't find a real lover till later." Cordelia was
ashamed to admit how much later. She'd been so socially inept, back then... .
And you haven't changed much, she admitted wryly to herself. "I didn't think it
would happen so fast," Cordelia went on. "I thought we'd be in for
several months of earnest and delightful experiment. But we caught the baby
first try. So I still haven't had a menstrual period, here on Barrayar." "First try,"
echoed Drou. Her lip curled in introspective dismay. "How did you know
you'd ... caught? The nausea?" "Fatigue, before
nausea. But it was the little blue dots ..." Her voice faltered, as she
studied the girl's twisted-up features. "Drou, are all these questions
academic, or do you have some more personal interest in the answers?" Her face almost
crumpled. "Personal," she choked out. "Oh." Cordelia
sat back. "D'you ... want to talk about it?' "No ... I don't
know... ." "I presume that
means yes," Cordelia sighed. Ah, yes. Just like playing Mama Captain to
sixty Betan scientists back on Survey, though queries about pregnancy were
perhaps the one interpersonal trouble they'd never laid in her lap. But given
the Really Dumb Stuff that rational and select group had sprung on her from
time to time, the feral Barrayaran version ought to be just ... "You know
I'll be glad to help you any way I can." "It was the night
of the soltoxin attack," she sniffled. "I couldn't sleep. I went down
to the refectory kitchen to get something to eat. On the way back upstairs I
noticed a light on in the library. Lieutenant Koudelka was in there. He
couldn't sleep either," Kou, eh? Oh, good, good.
This might be all right after all. Cordelia smiled in genuine encouragement.
"Yes?" "We ... I ... he
... kissed me." "I trust you kissed
him back?" "You sound like you
approve." "I do. You are two
of my favorite people, you and Kou. If only you'd get your heads straight ...
but go on, there has to be more." Unless Drou was more ignorant than
Cordelia believed possible. "We ... we ... we
..." "Screwed?"
Cordelia suggested hopefully. "Yes, Milady."
Drou turned scarlet, and swallowed. "Kou seemed so happy ... for a few
minutes. I was so happy for him, so excited, I didn't care how much it
hurt." Ah, yes, the barbaric
Barrayaran custom of introducing their women to sex with the pain of
unanesthesized defloration. Though considering how much pain their reproductive
methods later entailed, perhaps it constituted fair warning. But Kou, in the
glimpses she'd had of him, hadn't seemed as happy as a new lover ought to be
either. What were these two doing to each other? "Go on." "I thought I saw a
movement in the back garden, out the door from the library. Then came the crash
upstairs—oh, Milady! I'm so sorry! If I'd been guarding you, instead of doing
that—" "Whoa, girl! You
were off-duty. If you hadn't been doing that, you'd have been in bed asleep. No
way is the soltoxin attack your fault, yours or Kou's. In fact, if you hadn't
been up and, and more or less dressed, the would-be assassin might have gotten
away." And we wouldn't be anticipating yet another public beheading, or
whatever, God help us. One part of Cordelia wished they'd gone for seconds, and
never looked out the damned window. But Droushnakovi had enough consequences to
deal with right now without those mortal complications. "But if only—" "If onlys have been
thick in the air around here, these last weeks. I think it's time to replace
them with some Now-we-go-ons, frankly." Cordelia's mind caught up with
herself at last. Drou was Barrayaran; Drou therefore didn't have a contraceptive
implant. It didn't sound like that idiot Kou had offered an alternative,
either. Drou had therefore spent the last three weeks wondering ... "Would
you like to try one of my little blue dots? I have lots left." "Blue dots?" "Yes, I started to
tell you. I have a packet of these little diagnostic strips. Bought them in
Vorbarr Sultana last summer at an import shop. You pee on one, and if the dot
turns blue, you're in. I only used up three, last summer." Cordelia went
to her dresser drawer, and rooted through it. for the obsolete supplies.
"Here." She handed one to Drou. "Go relieve yourself. And your
mind." "Do they work so
soon?" "After five
days." Cordelia held up her hand. "Promise." Staring worriedly at the
little strip of paper, Droushnakovi vanished into Cordelia and Aral's bathroom,
off the bedroom. She emerged in a few minutes. Her face was glum, her shoulders
slumped. What does this mean?
Cordelia wondered in exasperation. "Well?" "It stayed
white." "Then you aren't
pregnant." "Guess not." "I can't tell if
you're glad or sorry. Believe me, if you want to have a baby, you'd do much
better to wait a couple years till they get a bit more medical technology
on-line around here." Though the organic method had been fascinating, for
a time... . "I don't want ... I
want ... I don't know ... Kou's hardly spoken to me since that night. I didn't
want to be pregnant, it would destroy me, and yet I thought maybe he would,
would ... be as excited and happy about it as he was about the sex, maybe.
Maybe he'd come back and—oh, things were going so well, and now they're so
spoiled!" Her hands were clenched, face white, teeth gritted. Cry, so I can breathe,
girl. But Droushnakovi regained her self-control. "I'm sorry, Milady. I
didn't mean to spill all this stupidity on you." Stupidity, yes, but not
unilateral stupidity. Something this screwed up had to have taken a committee.
"So what is the matter with Kou? I thought he was just suffering from
soltoxin-guilt, like everyone else in the household." From Aral and myself
on down. "I don't know,
Milady." "Have you tried
something really radical, like asking him?" "He hides, when he
sees me coming." Cordelia sighed, and
turned her attention to getting dressed. Real clothes, not patient robes,
today. There in the back of Aral's closet were her tan trousers from her old
Survey uniform, hung up. Curiously, she tried them on. Not only did they
fasten, they were loose. She had been sick. Rather aggressively, she
left them on, and chose a long-sleeved flowered smock-top to go with them. Very
comfortable. She smiled at her slim, if pale, profile in the mirror. "Ah, dear
Captain." Aral stuck his head in the bedroom door. "You're up."
He glanced at Droushnakovi. "You're both here. Better still. I think I
need your help, Cordelia. In fact, I'm certain of it." Aral's eyes were
alight with the strangest expression. Amazement, bemusement, worry? He let
himself in. He was wearing his standard gear for off-duty time at Vorkosigan
Surleau, old uniform trousers and a civilian shirt. He was trailed by a tense
and miserable Koudelka, dressed in neat black fatigues with his red
lieutenant's tabs bright on the collar. He clutched his swordstick. Drou backed
to the wall, and crossed her arms. "Lieutenant
Koudelka—he tells me—wishes to make a confession. He is also, I suspect, hoping
for absolution," said Aral. "I don't deserve
that, sir," Koudelka muttered. "But I couldn't live with myself
anymore. This has to come out." He stared at the floor, meeting no one's
eyes. Droushnakovi watched him breathlessly. Aral eased over and sat on the
edge of the bed beside Cordelia. "Hold on to your
hat," he murmured to her out of the corner of his mouth. "This one
took me by surprise." "I think I may be
way ahead of you." "That wouldn't be a
first." He raised his voice. "Go ahead, Lieutenant. This won't be any
easier for being dragged out." "Drou—Miss
Droushnakovi—I came to turn myself "in. And to apologize. No, that sounds
trivial, and believe me, I don't think it trivial. You deserve more than
apology, I owe you expiation. Whatever you want. But I'm sorry, so sorry I
raped you." Droushnakovi's mouth
fell open for a full three seconds, then shut so hard Cordelia could hear her
teeth snap. "What?!" Koudelka flinched, but
never looked up. "Sorry ... sorry," he mumbled. "You. Think. You.
What?!" gasped Droushnakovi, horrified and outraged. "You think you
could—oh!" She stood rigid now, hands clenched, breathing fast. "Kou,
you oaf! You idiot! You moron! You-you-you—" Her words sputtered off. Her
whole body was shaking. Cordelia watched in utter fascination. Aral rubbed his
lips thoughtfully. Droushnakovi stalked
over to Koudelka and kicked his swordstick out of his hand. He almost fell,
with a startled "Huh?", clutching at it and missing as it clattered
across the floor. Drou slammed him
expertly into the wall, and paralyzed him with a nerve thrust, her fingers
jammed up into his solar plexus. His breath stopped. "You goon. Do you
think you could lay a hand on me without my permission? Oh! To be so, to be so,
so, so—" Her baffled words dissolved into a scream of outrage, right next
to his ear. He spasmed. "Please don't break
my secretary, Drou, the repairs are expensive," said Aral mildly. "Oh!" She
whirled away, releasing Koudelka. He staggered and fell to his knees. Hands
over her face, biting her fingers, she stomped out the door, slamming it behind
her. Only then did she sob, sharp breaths retreating up the hallway. Another
door slammed. Silence. "I'm sorry,
Kou," said Aral into the long lull. "But it doesn't look as though
your self-accusation stands up in court." "I don't
understand." Kou shook his head, crawled after his swordstick, and climbed
very shakily to his feet. "Do I gather you
are both talking about what happened between you the night of the soltoxin
attack?" Cordelia asked. "Yes, Milady. I was
sitting up in the library. Couldn't sleep, thought I'd run over some figures.
She came in. We sat, talked... . Suddenly I found myself... well ... it was the
first time I'd been functional since I was hit by the nerve disruptor. I
thought it might be another year, or forever—I panicked, I just panicked. I ...
took her ... right there. Never asked, never said a word. And then came the
crash from upstairs, and we both ran out into the back garden and ... she never
accused me, next day. I waited and waited." "But if he didn't
rape her, why did she get so angry just now?" asked Aral. "But she's been
mad," said Koudelka. "The looks she's given me, these last three
weeks ..." "The looks were
fear, Kou," Cordelia advised him. "Yes, that's what I
thought." "Because she was
afraid she was pregnant, not because she was afraid of you," Cordelia
clarified. "Oh."
Koudelka's voice went small. "She's not, as it
happens." (Kou echoed himself with another small "Oh.")
"But she's mad at you now, and I don't blame her." "But if she doesn't
think I—what reason?" "You don't see
it?" She frowned at Aral. "You either?" "Well ..." "It's because you
just insulted her, Kou. Not then, but right now, in this room. And not just in
slighting her combat prowess. What you just said revealed to her, for the first
time, that you were so intent on yourself that night, you never saw her at all.
Bad, Kou. Very bad. You owe her a profound apology. Here she was, giving her
Barrayaran all to you, and you so little appreciated what she was doing, you
didn't even perceive it." His head came up
suddenly. "Gave me? Like some charity?" "Gift of the gods,
more like," murmured Aral, lost in some appreciation of his own. "I'm not a—"
Koudelka's head swiveled toward the door. "Are you saying I should run
after her?" "Crawl, actually,
if I were you," recommended Aral. "Crawl fast. Slither under her
door, go belly-up, let her stomp on you till she gets it out of her system.
Then apologize some more. You may yet save the situation." Aral's eyes
were openly alight with amusement now. "What do you call
that? Total surrender?" said Kou indignantly. "No. I'd call it
winning." His voice grew a shade cooler. "I've seen the war between
men and women descend to scorched-earth heroics. Pyres of pride. You don't want
to go down that road. I guarantee it." "You're—Milady!
You're laughing at me! Stop!" "Then stop making
yourself ridiculous," said Cordelia sharply. "Get your head out of
your ass. Think for sixty consecutive seconds about somebody besides
yourself." "Milady.
Milord." His teeth were gritted now with frozen dignity. He bowed himself
out, well slapped. But he turned the wrong way in the hallway, the opposite
direction to which Droushnakovi had fled, and clattered down the end stairs. Aral shook his head
helplessly, as Koudelka's footsteps faded. A splutter escaped him. Cordelia punched him
softly on the arm. "Stop that! It's not funny to them." Their eyes
met; she sniggered, then caught her breath firmly. "Good heavens, I think
he wanted to be a rapist. Odd ambition. Has he been hanging around with Bothari
too much?" This slightly sick joke
sobered them both. Aral looked thoughtful. "I think ... Kou was flattering
his self-doubts. But his remorse was sincere." "Sincere, but a
trifle smug. I think we may have coddled his self-doubts long enough. It may be
time to tack his tail." Aral's shoulders slumped
wearily. "He owes her, no doubt. Yet what should I order him to do? It's
worthless, if he doesn't pay freely." Cordelia growled
agreement. It wasn't until lunch
that Cordelia noticed something missing from their little world. "Where's the
Count?" she asked Aral, as they found the table set only for two by
Piotr's housekeeper, in a front dining room overlooking the lake. The day had
failed to warm. The earlier mist had risen only to clot into low scudding grey
clouds, windy and chilly. Cordelia had added an old black fatigue jacket of
Aral's over her flowered blouse. "I thought he went
to the stables. For a training session with that new dressage prospect of
his," said Aral, also regarding the table uneasily. "That's what he
told me he was going to do." The housekeeper,
bringing in soup, volunteered, "No, m'lord. He went off in the groundcar
early, with two of his men." "Oh. Excuse
me." Aral nodded to Cordelia and rose, and exited the dining room to the
back hall. One of the storerooms on the back side of the house, wedged into the
slope, had been converted into a secured comm center, with a double=scrambled
comconsole and a full=time ImpSec guard outside its door. Aral's footsteps
echoed down the hall in that direction. Cordelia took one bite
of soup, which went down like liquid lead, set her spoon aside, and waited. She
could hear Aral's voice, in the quiet house, and electronically tinged
responses in some stranger's tones, but too muffled for her to make out the
words. After what seemed a small eternity, though in fact the soup was still
hot, Aral returned, bleak-faced. "Did he go up
there?" Cordelia asked. "To ImpMil?" "Yes. He's been and
left. It's all right." His heavy jaw was set. "Meaning, the
baby's all right?" "Yes. He was denied
admittance, he argued awhile, he left. Nothing worse." He began glumly
spooning soup. The Count returned a few
hours later. Cordelia heard the fine whine of his groundcar pass up the drive
and around the north end of the house, pause, a canopy open and close, and the
car continue on to the garages, sited over the crest of the hill near the
stables. She was sitting with Aral in the front room with the new big windows.
He had been engrossed in some government report on his handviewer, but at the
sound of the closing canopy put it on "pause" and waited with her,
listening, as hard footsteps passed rapidly around the house and up the front
steps. Aral's mouth was taut with unpleased anticipation, his eyes grim.
Cordelia shrank back in her chair, and steeled her nerves. Count Piotr swung into
their room, and stood, feet planted. He was formally dressed in his old uniform
with his general's rank insignia. "There you are." The liveried man
trailing him took one uneasy glance at Aral and Cordelia, and removed himself
without waiting to be dismissed. Count Piotr didn't even notice him go. Piotr focused on Aral
first. "You. You dared to shame me in public. Entrap me." "You shamed
yourself, I fear, sir. If you had not gone down that path, you would not have
found that trap." Piotr's tight jaw worked
this one over, the lines in his face grooved deep. Anger; embarrassment
struggling with self-righteousness. Embarrassed as only one in the wrong can
be. He doubts himself, Cordelia realized. A thread of hope. Let us not lose
that thread, it may be our only way out of this labyrinth. The self-rightousness
took ascendance. "I shouldn't have to be doing this," snarled Piotr.
"It's women's work. Guarding our genome." "Was women's work,
in the Time of Isolation," said Aral in level tones. "When the only
answer to mutation was infanticide. Now there are other answers." "How strange women
must have felt about their pregnancies, never knowing if there was life or
death at the end of them," Cordelia mused. One sip from that cup was all
she desired for a lifetime, and yet Barrayaran women had drained it to the dregs
over and over ... the wonder was not that their descendants' culture was
chaotic, but that it wasn't more completely insane. "You fail all of us
when you fail to control her," said Piotr. "How do you imagine you
can run a planet when you cannot run your own household?" One corner of Aral's
mouth twisted up slightly. "Indeed, she is difficult to control. She
escaped me twice. Her voluntary return still astounds me." "Awake to your
duties! To me as your Count if not as your father. You are liege-sworn to me.
Do you choose to obey this off-worlder woman before me?" "Yes." Aral
looked him straight in the eye. His voice fell to a whisper. "That is the
proper order of things." Piotr flinched. Aral added dryly,
"Attempting to switch the issue from infanticide to obedience will not
help you, sir. You taught me specious-rhetoric-chopping yourself." "In the old days,
you could have been beheaded for less insolence." "Yes, the present
setup is a little peculiar. As a count's heir, my hands are between yours, but
as your Regent, your hands are between mine. Oath-stalemate. In the old days we
could have broken the deadlock with a nice little war." He grinned back,
or at least bared his teeth. Cordelia's mind gyrated, One day only: The
Irresistible Force Meets the Immovable Object. Tickets, five marks. The door to the hallway
swung open, and Lieutenant Koudelka peered nervously within. "Sir? Sorry
to interrupt. I'm having trouble with the comconsole. It's down again." "What sort of
trouble, Lieutenant?" Vorkosigan asked, wrenching his attention around
with an effort. "The intermittency?" "It's just not
working." "It was fine a few
hours ago. Check the power supply." "Did that,
sir." "Call a tech." "I can't, without
the comconsole." "Ah, yes. Get the
guard commander to open it up for you, then, see if the trouble is anything
obvious. Then send for a tech on his clear-link." "Yes, sir."
Koudelka backed out, after a wary glance at the three tense people still frozen
in their places waiting for him to withdraw. The Count wouldn't quit.
"I swear, I will disown it. That thing in the can at ImpMil. Utterly
disinherit it." "Not an operative
threat, sir. You can only directly disown me. By an Imperial order. Which you
would have to humbly petition, ah ... me, for." His edged smile gleamed.
"I would, of course, grant it to you." The muscles in Piotr's
jaw jumped. Not the irresistible force and the immovable object after all, but
the irresistible force and some fluid sea; Piotr's blows kept failing to land,
splashing past helplessly. Mental judo. He was off-balance, and flailed for his
center, striking out wildly now. "Think of Barrayar. Think of the example
you're setting." "Oh," breathed
Aral, "that I have." He paused. "We have never led from the
rear, you or I. Where a Vorkosigan goes, maybe others might not find it so
impossible to follow. A little personal ... social engineering." "Maybe for
galactics. But our society can't afford this luxury. We barely hold our own as
it is. We cannot carry the deadweight of millions of dysfunctionals!" "Millions?"
Aral raised a brow. "Now you extrapolate from one to infinity. A weak
argument, sir, unworthy of you." "And surely,"
said Cordelia quietly, "how much is bearable each individual, carrying his
or her own burden, must decide." Piotr swung on her.
"Yes, and who is paying for all this, eh? The Imperium. Vaagen's
laboratory is budgeted under military research. All Barrayar is paying for
prolonging the life of your monster." Discomfited, Cordelia
replied, "Perhaps it will prove a better investment than you think." Piotr snorted, his head
lowered mulishly, hunched between his skinny shoulders. He stared through
Cordelia at Aral. "You are determined to lay this thing on me. On my
house. I cannot persuade you otherwise, I cannot order you ... very well. You're
so set on change, here's a change for you. I don't want my name on that thing.
I can deny you that, if nothing else." Aral's lips were
pinched, nostrils flaring. But he never moved in his seat. The viewer glowed
on, forgotten in his still hands. He held his hands quiet and totally
controlled, not permitting them to clench. "Very well, sir." "Call him Miles
Naismith Vorkosigan, then," said Cordelia, feigning calm over a sick and
trembling belly. "My father will not begrudge it." "Your father is
dead," snapped Piotr. Smeared to bright plasma
in a shuttle accident more than a decade ago ... She sometimes fancied, when
she closed her eyes, that she could still sense his death imprinted on her
retina in magenta and teal. "Not wholly. Not while I live, and remember." Piotr looked as if she'd
just hit him in his Barrayaran stomach. Barrayaran ceremonies for the dead
approached ancestor-worship, as if remembrance could keep the souls alive. Did
his own mortality run chill in his veins today? He had gone too far, and knew
it, but could not back down. "Nothing, nothing wakes you up! Try this,
then." He straddled the floor, boots planted, and glared at Aral.
"Get out of my house. Both houses, Vorkosigan House, too. Take your woman
and remove yourself. Today!" Aral's eyes flicked only
once around his childhood home. He set the viewer carefully aside, and stood.
'Very well, sir." Piotr's anger was
anguished. "You'd throw away your home for this?!" "My home is not a
place. It is a person, sir," Aral said gravely. Then added reluctantly,
"People." Meaning Piotr, as well
as Cordelia. She sat bent over, aching with the tension. Was the old man stone?
Even now Aral offered him gestures of courtesy that nearly stopped her heart. "You will return
your rents and revenues to the District purse," said Piotr desperately. "As you wish,
sir." Aral headed for the door. Piotr's voice went
smaller. "Where will you live?" "Illyan has been
urging me for some time to move to the Imperial Residence, for security
reasons. Evon Vorhalas has persuaded me Illyan is right." Cordelia had risen when
Aral did. She went now to the window and stared out over the moody grey, green,
and brown landscape. Whitecaps foamed on the pewter water of the lake. The
Barrayaran winter was going to be so cold... . "So, you set
yourself up with Imperial airs after all, eh?" jibed Piotr. "Is that
what this is, hubris?" Aral grimaced in
profound irritation. "On the contrary, sir. If I'm to have no income but
my admiral's half-pay, I cannot afford to pass up rent-free quarters." A movement in the
scudding clouds caught Cordelia's eye. She squinted uneasily. "What's
wrong with that lightflyer?" she murmured half to herself. The speck grew, jinking
oddly. It trailed smoke. It stuttered over the lake, straight at them. "God,
I wonder if it's full of bombs?" "What?" said
Aral and Piotr together, and stepped quickly to the window with her, Aral on
her right hand, Piotr on her left. "It has ImpSec
markings," said Aral. Piotr's old eyes
narrowed. "Ah?" Cordelia mentally
planned a sprint down the back hall and out the end door. There was a bit of a
ditch on the other side of the drive, if they went flat in it maybe ... but the
lightflyer was slowing at the end of its trajectory. It wobbled toward a
landing on the front lawn. Men in Vorkosigan livery and ImpSec green and black
cautiously surrounded it. The flyer's damage was clearly visible now, a
plasma-slagged hole, black smears of soot, warped control surfaces—it was a
miracle it flew at all. "Who—?" said
Aral. Piotr's squint sharpened
as a glimpse of the pilot winked through the damaged canopy. "Ye gods,
it's Negri!" "But who's that
with—come on!" Aral flung over his shoulder, running out the door. They
charged in his wake, around into the front hall, bursting out the door and
churning down the green slope. The guards had to pry
open the warped canopy. Negri fell into their arms. They laid him on the grass.
He had a grotesque burn a meter long on the left side of his body and thigh,
his green uniform melted and charred away to reveal bleeding white bubbles,
cracked—open flesh. He shivered uncontrollably. The short figure
strapped into the passenger seat was Emperor Gregor. The five-year-old boy was
weeping in terror, not loudly, just muffled, gulping, suppressed whimpers. Such
self-control in one so young seemed sinister to Cordelia. He should be
screaming. She felt like screaming. He wore ordinary play-clothes, a soft shirt
and pants in dark blue. He was missing one shoe. An ImpSec guard unhooked his
seat belt and dragged him out of the flyer. He cringed from the man and stared
at Negri in utter horror and confusion. Did you think adults were
indestructible, child? Cordelia grieved. Kou and Drou
materialized from their separate holes in the house, to goggle along with the
rest of the guards. Gregor spotted Droushnakovi, and flew to her like an arrow,
to wind his hands tightly in her skirt. "Droushie, help!" His crying
dared to become audible, then. She wrapped her arms around him and lifted him
up. Aral knelt by the
injured ImpSec chief. "Negri, what happened?" Negri reached up and
grabbed his jacket with his working right hand. "He's trying for a coup—in
the capital. His troops took ImpSec, took the comm center—why didn't you
respond? HQ surrounded, infiltrated—bad fighting now at the Imperial Residence.
We were on to him—about to arrest—he panicked. Struck too soon. I think he has
Kareen—" Piotr demanded,
"Who has, Negri, who?" "Vordarian." Aral nodded grimly.
"Yes ..." "You—take the
boy," gasped Negri. "He's almost on top of us ..." His shivers
oscillated into convulsions, his eyes rolling back whitely. His breath
stuttered in resonant chokes. His brown eyes refocused in sudden intensity.
"Tell Ezar—" The convulsions took him again, racking his thick body.
Then they stopped. All stop. He was no longer breathing. CHAPTER
ELEVEN "Sir," said
Koudelka urgently to Vorkosigan, "the secured comconsole was
sabotaged." The ImpSec guard commander at his elbow nodded confirmation.
"I was just coming to tell you. ..." Koudelka glanced fearfully at
Negri's body, laid out on the grass. Two ImpSec men now knelt beside it
frantically applying first aid: heart massage, oxygen, and hypospray
injections. But the body remained flaccid under their pummeling, the face waxy
and inert. Cordelia had seen death before, and recognized the symptoms. No
good, fellows, you won't call this one back. Not this time. He's gone to
deliver that last message to Ezar in person. Negri's last report ... "What time-frame on
the sabotage?" demanded Vorkosigan. "Delayed or immediate?" "It looked like
immediate," reported the guard commander. "No sign of a timer or
device. Somebody just broke open the back and smashed it up inside." Everyone's eyes went to
the ImpSec man who had been assigned the guard post outside the comconsole
room. He stood, dressed like most of the others in black fatigues, disarmed
between two of his fellows. They had followed their commander out when the
uproar began on the front lawn. The prisoner's face was about the same
lead-grey color as Negri's, but animated by flickering fear. "And?"
Vorkosigan said to the guard commander. "He denies doing it,"
shrugged the commander. "Naturally." Vorkosigan looked at the
arrestee. "Who went in after me?" The guard stared around
wildly. He pointed abruptly at Droushnakovi, still holding the whimpering
Gregor. "Her." "I never!"
said Drou indignantly. Her clutch tightened. Vorkosigan's teeth
closed. "Well, I don't need fast-penta to know that one of you is lying.
No time now. Commander, arrest them both. We'll sort it out later."
Vorkosigan's eyes anxiously scanned the northern horizon. "You," he
pointed to another ImpSec man, "assemble every piece of transport you can
find. We evacuate immediately. You," this to one of Piotr's armsmen,
"go warn them in the village. Kou, grab the files, take a plasma arc and
finish melting down that comconsole, and get back to me." Koudelka, with one
anguished look back over his shoulder at Droushnakovi, stumped off toward the
house. Drou stood stiffly, stunned and angry and frightened, the cold wind
fluttering her skirts. Her brows drew down at Vorkosigan. She scarcely noticed
Koudelka's departure. "You going to
Hassadar first?" said Piotr to his son in a strange mild tone. "Right." Hassadar, the
Vorkosigan's District capital: Imperial troops were quartered there. A loyal
garrison? "Not planning to
hold it, I trust," said Piotr. "Of course not.
Hassadar," Vorkosigan's wolf-grin winked on and off, "shall be my
first gift to Commodore Vordarian." Piotr nodded, as if
satisfied. Cordelia's head spun. Despite Negri's surprise, neither Piotr nor
Aral seemed at all panicked. No wasted motion; no wasted words. "You," said
Aral to Piotr in an undertone, "take the boy." Piotr nodded.
"Meet us—no. Don't tell even me where. You contact us." "Right." "Take
Cordelia." Piotr's mouth opened; it
closed saying only, "Ah." "And Sergeant
Bothari. For Cordelia. Drou being—temporarily—off duty." "I must have
Esterhazy, then," said Piotr. "I'll want the rest
of your men," said Aral. "Right." Piotr
took his Armsman Esterhazy aside, and spoke to him in low tones; Esterhazy
departed upslope at a dead run. Men were scattering in every direction, as
their orders proliferated down their command chain. Piotr called another liveried
retainer to him, and told him to take his groundcar and start driving west. "How far,
m'lord?" "As far as your
ingenuity can take you. Then escape if you can, and rejoin m'lord Regent,
eh?" The man nodded, and
galloped off like Esterhazy. "Sergeant, you will
obey Lady Vorkosigan's voice as my own," Aral told Bothari. "Always, my
lord." "I want that
lightflyer." Piotr nodded to Negri's damaged vehicle, which, while no
longer smoking, did not look very airworthy to Cordelia. Not nearly ready for
wild flight, jinking or diving to evade determined enemies ... It's in about as
good a shape for this as I am, she feared. "And Negri," Piotr
continued. "He would
appreciate that," said Aral. "I am certain of
it." Piotr nodded shortly, and turned to the first-aid squad. "Leave
off, boys, it's no damn good by now." He directed them instead to load the
body into the lightflyer. Aral turned to Cordelia
last, at last, for the first time. "Dear Captain ..." The same sere
expression had been fixed on his face since Negri had fallen out of the
lightflyer. "Aral, was this a
surprise to anyone but me?" "I didn't want to
worry you with it, when you were so sick." His lips thinned. "We'd
found Vordarian was conspiring, at HQ and elsewhere. Illyan's investigation was
inspired. Top security people must have that sort of intuition, I suppose. But
to convict a man of Vordarian's magnitude and connections of treason, we needed
the hardest of evidence. The Council of Counts as a body is highly intolerant
of central Imperial interference with their members. We couldn't take a mere
vaporplot before them. "But Negri called me last night with the word he
had his evidence in hand, enough to move on at last. He needed an Imperial
order from me to arrest a ruling District Count. I was supposed to go up to
Vorbarr Sultana tonight and oversee the operation. Clearly, Vordarian was
warned. His original move wasn't planned for another month, preferably right
after my successful assassination." "But—" "Go, now." He
pushed her toward the lightflyer. "Vordarian's troops will be here in
minutes. You must get away. No matter what else he holds, he can't make himself
secure while Gregor stays free," "Aral—" Her
voice came out a stupid squeak; she swallowed what felt like freeze—dried
chunks of spit. She wanted to gabble a thousand questions, ten thousand
protests. "Take care." "You, too." A
last light flared in his eyes, but his face was already distant, lost to the
driving internal rhythm of tactical calculation. No time. Aral went to take Gregor
from Drou's arms, whispering something to her; reluctantly, she released the
boy to him. They piled into the lightflyer, Bothari at the controls, Cordelia
jammed into the back beside Negri's corpse, Gregor dumped into her lap. The boy
made no noise at all, but only shivered. His eyes were wide and shocky, turned
up to hers. Her arms encircled him automatically. He did not cling back, but
wrapped his arms around his own torso. Negri, lolling, feared nothing now, and
she almost envied him. "Did you see what
happened to your mother, Gregor?" Cordelia murmured to him. "The soldiers took
her." His voice was thin and flat. The overloaded lightflyer hiccoughed
into the air, and Bothari aimed it generally upslope, wavering only meters from
the ground. It whined and moaned and rattled. Cordelia did, too, internally.
She twisted around to stare back through the distorted canopy for a look—a last
look?—at Aral, who had turned away and was double-timing toward the driveway
where his soldiers were assembling a motley collection of vehicles, personal
and governmental. Why aren't we taking one of those? "When you clear the
second ridge—if you can—turn right, Sergeant," Piotr directed Bothari.
"Follow the creek." Branches slashed at the
canopy, as Bothari flew less than a meter above the trickling water and sharp
rocks. "Land in that
little space there and kill the power," ordered Piotr. "Everyone,
strip off any powered items you may be carrying." He divested his chrono
and a comm link. Cordelia shed her chrono. Bothari, easing the
flyer down beside the creek beneath some Earth—import trees that had only
half—shed their leaves, asked, "Does that include weapons, m'lord?" "Especially
weapons, Sergeant. The charge unit on a stunner shows up on a scanner like a
torch. A plasma arc power cell lights it up like a bloody bonfire." Bothari fished two of
each from his person, plus other useful gear; a hand-tractor, his comm link,
his chrono, some kind of small medical diagnostic device. "My knife, too,
m'lord?" "Vibra-knife?" "No, just
steel." "Keep that."
Piotr hunched over the lightflyer's controls and began re-programming the
automatic pilot. "Everyone out. Sergeant, jam the canopy half-open." Bothari managed this
task with a pebble crammed forcibly into the canopy's seating—groove, then
whirled at a sound from the undergrowth. "It's me,"
came Armsman Esterhazy's breathless voice. Esterhazy, age forty, a mere
stripling beside some of Piotr's other grizzled veterans, kept himself in top
shape; he'd been hustling indeed, to get so puffed. "I have them, my
lord." The "them" in
question turned out to be four of Piotr's horses, tied together by lines
attached to the metal bars in their mouths the Barrayarans called
"bits." Cordelia thought it a very small control surface for such a
large piece of transport. The big beasts twitched and stamped and shook their
jingling heads, red nostrils round and flaring, ominous bulky shapes in the
vegetation. Piotr finished
re-programming the autopilot. "Bothari, here," he said. Together,
they manhandled Negri's corpse back to the pilot's seat and strapped it in.
Bothari powered the lightflyer up and jumped out. It lurched into the air,
nearly crashing into a tree, and lumbered back over the ridge. Piotr, standing
watching it rise, muttered under his breath, "Salute him for me,
Negri." "Where are you
sending him?" Cordelia asked. Valhalla? "Bottom of the
lake," said Piotr, with some satisfaction. "That will puzzle
them." "Won't whoever
follows trace it? Hoist it back out?" "Eventually. But it
should go down in the two-hundred-meter-deep section. It will take them time.
And they won't know at first when it went down, nor how many bodies are missing
from it. They'll have to search that whole section of the lake bottom, to be
sure that Gregor isn't stuck in it. And negative evidence is never quite
conclusive, eh? They won't know, even then. Mount up, troops, we're on our
way." He headed purposefully toward his animals. Cordelia trailed
doubtfully. Horses. Would one call them slaves, symbionts, or commensals? The
one toward which Esterhazy aimed her stood five feet high at the top. He stuck
its lines into her hands and turned away. Its saddle was at the level of her
chin, and how was she supposed to levitate up there? The horse looked much
larger, at this range, than when idling around decoratively at a distance in
its pasture. The brown fur-covered skin of its shoulder shuddered suddenly. Oh,
God, they've given me a defective one, it's going into convulsions—a small mew
escaped her. Bothari had climbed atop
his, somehow. He at least was not overpowered by the size of the animal. Given
his height he made the full-sized beast look like a pony. City-bred, Bothari
was no horseman, and seemed all knees and elbows despite what cavalry training
Piotr had managed to inflict on him in the months of his service. But he was
clearly in control of his mount, however awkward and rough his motions. "You're point-man,
Sergeant," Piotr told him. "I want us strung out to the limit of
mutual visibility. No bunching up. Start up the trails for the flat rock—you
know the place—and wait for us." Bothari jerked his
horse's head around and kicked at its sides, and clattered off up the woodland
path at the seat-thumping pace called a canter. Supposedly-creaky Piotr
swung up into his saddle in one fluid motion; Esterhazy handed Gregor up to
him, and Piotr held the boy in front of him. Gregor had actually seemed to
cheer up at the sight of the horses, Cordelia could not imagine why. Piotr
appeared to do nothing at all, but his horse arranged itself neatly ready to
start up the trail—telepathy, Cordelia decided wildly. They've mutated into
telepaths here and never told me ... or maybe it was the horse that was
telepathic. "Come on, woman,
you're next," Piotr snapped impatiently. Desperately, Cordelia
stuck her foot through the whatchamacallit, foot-holder, stirrup, grabbed, and
heaved. The saddle slid slowly around the horse's belly, and Cordelia with it,
till she was clinging underneath among a forest of horse legs. She fell to the
ground with a thump, and scrambled out of the way. The horse twisted its neck
around and peered at her, in a dismay much milder than her own, then stuck its
rubbery lips to the ground and began nibbling up weeds. "Oh, God,"
Piotr groaned in exasperation. Esterhazy dismounted
again, and hurried to her elbow to help her up. "Milady. Are you all
right? Sorry, that was my fault, should have re-checked, uh—haven't you ever
ridden before?" "Never,"
Cordelia confessed. He hastily pulled off the saddle, straightened it back
around, and fastened it more tightly. "Maybe I can walk. Or run." Or
slit my wrists. Aral, why did you send me off with these madmen? "It's not that
hard, Milady," Esterhazy promised her. "Your horse will follow the
others. Rose is the gentlest mare in the stables. Doesn't she have a sweet
face?" Malevolent brown eyes
with purple centers ignored Cordelia. "I can't." Her breath caught in
a sob, the first of this ungodly day. Piotr glanced at the
sky, and back over his shoulder. "Useless Betan frill," he snarled at
her. "Don't tell me you've never ridden astride." His teeth bared.
"Just pretend it's my son." "Here, give me your
knee," said Esterhazy after an anxious look at the Count, cupping his
hands. Take the whole damned
leg. She was shaking with anger and fear. She glared at Piotr, and grabbed
again at the saddle. Somehow, Esterhazy managed to boost her aboard. She clung
like grim death, deciding after one glance not to look down. Esterhazy tossed her
reins to Piotr, who caught them with an easy wrist-flick and took her horse in
tow. The trail became a kaleidoscope of trees, rocks, sucking mud puddles,
whipping branches, all whirling and bumping past. Her belly began to ache, her
new scar twinging. If that bleeding starts again inside ... They went on, and
on, and on. They bumped down at last
from a canter to a walk. She blinked, red-faced and wheezing and dizzy-sick.
They had climbed, somehow, to a clearing overlooking the lake, having circled
behind the broad shallow inlet that lay to the left of the Vorkosigan property.
As her vision cleared, she could make out the little green patch in the general
red-brown background that was the sloping lawn of the old stone house. Across
the water lay the tiny village. Bothari was there before
them, waiting, hunkered down in the scrub out of sight, his blowing horse tied
to a tree. He rose silently, and approached them, to stare worriedly at
Cordelia. She half-fell, half-slid, off into his arms. "You go too fast for
her, m'lord. She's still sick." Piotr snorted.
"She'll be a lot sicker if Vordarian's squads overtake us." "I'll manage,"
gasped Cordelia, bent over. "In a minute. Just. Give me. A minute."
The breeze, chilling down as the autumn sun slanted toward evening, lapped her
hot skin. The sky had greyed over to a solid shadowless milk-color. Gradually,
she was able to straighten against the abdominal pain. Esterhazy arrived at the
clearing, bringing up the rear at a less hectic pace. Bothari nodded to the
distant green patch. "There they are." Piotr squinted; Cordelia
stared. A couple of flyers were landing on the lawn. Not Aral's equipment. Men
boiled out of them like black ants in their military fatigues, maybe one or two
bright flecks of maroon and gold among them, and a few spots of officer's dark
green. Great. Our friends and our enemies are all wearing the same uniforms.
What do we do, shoot them all and let God sort them out? Piotr looked sour
indeed. Were they smashing his home, down there, tearing the place apart
looking for the refugees? "Won't they be able
to tell, when they count the horses missing from the stable, where we've gone
and how?" asked Cordelia. "I let them all
out, Milady," said Esterhazy. "At least they'll all have a chance,
that way. I don't know how many we'll get back." "Most of them will
hang around, I'm afraid," said Piotr. "Hoping for their grain. I wish
they had the sense to scatter. God knows what viciousness those vandals will
come up with, if they're cheated of all their other prey." A trio of flyers was
landing around the perimeter of the little village. Armed men disembarked, and
vanished among the houses. "I hope Zai warned
them all in time," muttered Esterhazy. "Why would they
bother those poor people?" asked Cordelia. "What do they want
there?" "Us, Milady,"
said Esterhazy grimly. At her confused look he went on, "Us armsmen. Our
families. They're on a hostage-hunt down there." Esterhazy had a wife and
two children in the capital, Cordelia recalled. And what was happening to them
right now? Had anyone passed them a warning? Esterhazy looked like he was
wondering that, too. "No doubt Vordarian
will play the hostage game," said Piotr. "He's in for it now. He must
win, or die." Sergeant Bothari's
narrow jaw worked, as he stared through the murky air. Had anyone remembered to
warn Mistress Hysopi? "They'll be
starting their air-search shortly," said Piotr. "Time to get under
cover. I'll go first. Sergeant, lead her." He turned his horse and
vanished into the undergrowth, following a path so faint Cordelia could not
have recognized it as one. It took Bothari and Esterhazy together to lift her
back aboard her transport. Piotr chose a walk for the pace, not for her sake,
Cordelia suspected, but for his sweat-darkened animals. After that first
hideous gallop, a walk was like a reprieve. At first. They rode among trees
and scrub, along a ravine, over a ridge, the horses' hooves scraping over
stone. Her ears strained for the whine of flyers overhead. When one came,
Bothari led her on a wild and head-spinning slide down into a ravine, where
they dismounted and cowered under a rock ledge for minutes, until the whine
faded. Getting back out of the ravine was even more difficult. They had to lead
the horses up, Bothari practically seeming to hoist his along the precarious
scrubby slope. It grew darker, and
colder, and windier. Two hours became three, four, five, and the smoky darkness
turned pitchy. They bunched up with the horses nose to tail, trying not to lose
Piotr. It began to rain, a sad black drizzle that made Cordelia's saddle even
slipperier. Around midnight they
came to a clearing, hardly less black than the shadows, and Piotr at last
called a halt. Cordelia sat against a tree, stunned with exhaustion,
nerve-strung, holding Gregor. Bothari split a ration bar he'd been carrying in
his pocket, their only food, between Cordelia and Gregor. With Bothari's
uniform jacket wrapped around him, Gregor finally overcame the chill enough to
sleep. Cordelia's legs went pins and needles, beneath him, but at least he was
a lump of warmth. Where was Aral, by now?
For that matter, where were they? Cordelia hoped Piotr knew. They could not
have made more than five kilometers an hour at most, with all that up and down
and switch-back doubling. Did Piotr really imagine they were going to elude
their pursuers this way? Piotr, who had sat for a
while under his own tree a few meters off, got up and went into the scrub to
piss, then came back to peer at Gregor in the dimness. "Is he
asleep?" "Yes.
Amazingly." "Mm. Youth,"
Piotr grunted. Envy? His tone was not so
hostile as earlier, and Cordelia ventured, "Do you suppose Aral is in
Hassadar by now?" She could not quite bring herself to say, Do you suppose
he ever made it to Hassadar? "He'll have been
and gone by now." "I thought he would
raise its garrison." "Raise and
disperse, in a hundred different directions. And which squad has the Emperor?
Vordarian won't know. But with luck, that traitor will be lured into occupying
Hassadar." "Luck?" "A small but worthy
diversion. Hassadar has no strategic value to speak of for either side. But
Vordarian must divert a part of his—surely finite number of—loyal troops to
hold it, deep in a hostile territory with a long guerilla tradition. We'll get
good intelligence of everything they do there, but the population will be
opaque to them. "And it's my
capital. He occupies a count's district capital with Imperial troops—all my
brother counts must pause and think about that one. Am I next? Aral probably
went on to Tanery Base Shuttleport. He must open an independent line of
communication with the space-based forces, if Vordarian has truly choked off
Imperial Headquarters. The spacers' choice of loyalties will be critical. I
predict a severe outbreak of technical difficulties in their comm rooms, while
the ship commanders scramble to figure out which is going to be the winning
side." Piotr emitted a macabre chuckle, in the shadows. "Vordarian is
too young to remember Mad Emperor Yuri's War. Too bad for him. He's gained sufficient
advantage, with his quick start, I'd loathe to grant him more." "How fast ... did
it all happen?" "Fast. There was no
hint of any trouble when I was up to the capital at noon. It must have broken
out right after I left." A chill that had nothing
to do with the rain fell between them briefly, as both remembered why Piotr had
made that journey this day. "Does the capital
... have great strategic value?" Cordelia asked, changing the subject,
unwilling to break open that raw issue again. "In some wars it
would. Not this one. This is not a war for territory. I wonder if Vordarian
realizes that? It's a war for loyalties, for the minds of men. No material
object in it has more than a passing tactical importance. Vorbarr Sultana is a
communications center, though, and communication is much. But not the only
center. Collateral circulation will serve." We have no
communications at all, thought Cordelia dully. Out here in the woods in the
rain. "But if Vordarian holds the Imperial Military Headquarters right
now... " "What he holds
right now, unless I miss my guess, is a very large building full of chaos. I
doubt a quarter of the men are at their posts, and half of them are plotting
sabotage to benefit whatever side they secretly favor. The rest are out running
for cover, or trying to get their families out of town." "Will Captain
Vorpatril be all—will Vordarian bother Lord and Lady Vorpatril, do you
think?" Alys Vorpatril's pregnancy was very close to term. When she had
visited Cordelia at ImpMil—only ten days ago?—her gliding walk had become a
heavy flatfooted waddle, her belly a swaying high arc. Her doctor promised her
a big boy. Ivan, he was to be named. His nursery was completely equipped and
fully decorated, she had groaned, shifting her stomach uncomfortably in her lap,
and now would be a good time... . Now was not a good time
anymore. "Padma Vorpatril will head the list. The hunt will be up for him,
all right. He and Aral are the last descendants of Prince Xav, now, if
anybody's fool enough to start up that damned succession-debate again. Or if
anything does happen to Gregor." He bit down on this last line as if he
might hold back fate with his teeth. "Lady Vorpatril and the baby,
too?" "Perhaps not Alys
Vorpatril. The boy, definitely." Not exactly a separable matter, just at
the moment. The wind had died down at last. Cordelia could hear the horses'
teeth tearing up plants, a steady munch-munch-munch. "Won't the horses
show up on thermal sensors? And us, too, despite dumping our power cells. I
don't see how they can miss us for long." Were troops up there right now,
eyes in the clouds? "Oh, all the people
and beasts in these hills will show up on their thermal sensors, once they
start aiming them in the right direction." "All? I hadn't seen
any." "We've passed about
twenty little homesteads, so far tonight. All the people, and their cows, and
their goats, and their red deer, and their horses, and their children. We're
straws in a haystack. Still, it will be well for us to split up soon. If we can
make it to the trail at the base of Amie Pass before mid—morning, I have an
idea or two." By the time Bothari shoved her back atop Rose, the deep
blackness was greying. Pre-dawn light seeped into the woods as they began to
move again. Tree branches were charcoal stokes in the dripping mist. She clung
to her saddle in silent misery, towed along by Bothari. Gregor actually still
slept, for the first twenty minutes of the ride, openmouthed and limp and pale
in Piotr's grip. The growing light
revealed the night's ravages. Bothari and Esterhazy were both muddy and
scuffed, beard-peppered, their brown-and-silver uniforms rumpled. Bothari,
having given up his jacket to Gregor, went in shirtsleeves. The open round
collar of his shirt made him look like a condemned criminal being led to the
beheading-block. Piotr's general's dress greens had survived fairly well, but
his stubbled red-eyed face above it was like a derelict's. Cordelia felt
herself a hopeless tangle, with her wet tendrils of hair, mishmash of old
clothing and house slippers. It could be worse. I could still be pregnant. At
least if I die, I die singly now. Was little Miles safer than she right now?
Anonymous in his replicator on some shelf in Vaagen and Henri's restricted
laboratory? She could pray so, even if she couldn't believe so. You Barrayaran
bastards had better leave my boy alone. They zigzagged up a long
slope. The horses blew like bellows even though just walking: getting balky,
stumbling over roots and rocks. They came to a halt at the bottom of a little
hollow. Both horses and people drank from the murky stream. Esterhazy loosened
girths again. He scratched under the horses' headbands, and they butted against
him, nuzzling his empty pockets for tidbits. He murmured apologies and little
encouragements to them. "It's all right, Rosie, you can rest at the end of
the day. Just a few more hours." It was more briefing than anybody had
bothered to give Cordelia. Esterhazy left the
horses to Bothari and accompanied" Piotr into the woods, scrabbling up the
slope. Gregor busied himself in an attempt to gather vegetation and hand-feed
it to the animals. They lipped at the native Barrayaran plants and let them
fall messily from their mouths, unpalatable. Gregor kept picking the wads up
and offering them again, trying to shove them in around the horses' bits. "What's the Count
up to, do you know?" Cordelia asked Bothari. He shrugged. "Gone
to make contact with somebody. This won't do." A jerk of his head in no
particular direction indicated their night of beating around in the brush. Cordelia could only
agree. She lay back and listened for lightflyers, but heard only the babble of
water in the little stream, echoed by the gurgles of her empty stomach. She was
galvanized into motion once, to keep the hungry Gregor from sampling some of
the possibly-toxic plants himself. "But the horses ate
these ones," he protested. "No!" Cordelia
shuddered, detailed visions of unfavorable biochemical and histamine reactions
dancing in a molecular crack-the-whip through her head. "It's one of the
first habits you have to learn for Betan Astronomical Survey, you know. Never
put strange things in your mouth till they've been cleared by the lab. In fact,
avoid touching your eyes, mouth, and mucous membranes." Gregor, unconsciously
compelled, promptly rubbed his nose and eyes. Cordelia sighed, and sat back
down. She sucked on her tongue, thinking about that stream water and hoping
Gregor wouldn't point out her inconsistency. Gregor threw pebbles into the
pools. Fully an hour later,
Esterhazy returned. "Come on." They merely led the horses this time,
sure sign of a steep climb to come. Cordelia scrambled, and scraped her hands.
The horses' haunches heaved. Over the crest, down, up again, and they came out
on a muddy double trail carved through the forest. "Where are
we?" asked Cordelia. "Aime Pass Road,
Milady," supplied Esterhazy. "This is a
road?" Cordelia muttered in dismay, staring up and down it. Piotr stood a
little way off, with another old man holding the reins of a sturdy little
black-and-white horse. The horse was
considerably better groomed than the old man. Its white coat was bright and its
black coat shiny Its mane and tail were brushed to feather-softness. Its feet
and fetlocks were wet and dark, though, and its belly flecked with fresh mud.
In addition to an old cavalry saddle like Piotr's horse's, the pinto bore four
large saddlebags, a pair in front and a pair behind, and a bedroll. The old
man, as unshaven as Piotr, wore an Imperial Postal Service jacket so
weatherworn its blue had turned grey. This was supplemented by odd bits of
other old uniforms: a black fatigue shirt, an ancient pair of trousers from a set
of dress greens, worn but well-oiled officer's knee-high riding boots on his
bent bowlegs. He also wore a non-regulation felt hat with a few dried flowers
stuck in its faded print headband. He smacked his black-stained lips and stared
at Cordelia. He was missing several teeth; the rest were long and yellow-brown.
The old man's gaze fell on Gregor, holding Cordelia's hand. "So that's
him, eh? Huh. Not much." He spat reflectively into the weeds by the side
of the path. "Might do in
time," asserted Piotr. "If he gets time." "I'll see what I
can do, Gen'ral." Piotr grinned, as if at some private joke. "You
have any rations on you?" " 'Course."
The old man smirked, and turned to rummage in one of his saddlebags. He came up
with a package of raisins in a discarded plastic flimsy, some little cakes of
brownish crystals wrapped in leaves, and what looked like a handful of strips
of leather, again in a twist made of a used plastic flimsy. Cordelia caught a
heading, Update of Postal Regluations C6.77a, modified 6/17. File Immediately
In Permanent Files. Piotr looked the stores
over judiciously. "Dried goat?" He nodded toward the leathery mess.
"Mostly," said the old man. "We'll take half.
And the raisins. Save the maple sugar for the children." Piotr popped one
cube in his mouth, though. "I'll find you in maybe three days, maybe a
week. You remember the drill from Yuri's War, eh?" "Oh, yes,"
drawled the old man. "Sergeant."
Piotr waved Bothari to him. "You go with the Major, here. Take her, and
the boy. He'll take you to ground. Lie low till I come get you." "Yes, m'lord,"
Bothari intoned flatly. Only his flickering eyes betrayed his uneasiness. "What we got here,
Gen'ral?" inquired the old man, looking up at Bothari. "New
one?" "A city boy,"
said Piotr. "Belongs to my son. Doesn't talk much. He's good at throats,
though. He'll do." "Aye? Good." Piotr was moving a lot
more slowly. He waited for Esterhazy to give him a leg up on his horse. He
settled into his saddle with a sigh, his back temporarily curved in an uncharacteristic
slump. "Damn, but I'm getting old for this sort of thing." Thoughtfully, the man
Piotr had called the Major reached into a side pocket and pulled out a leather
pouch. "Want my gum-leaf, Gen'ral? A better chew than goat, if not as
long-lasting." Piotr brightened.
"Ah. I would be most grateful. But not your whole pouch, man." Piotr
dug among the pressed dried leaves that filled the container, and crumbled
himself off a generous half, which he stuffed in his breast pocket. He put a
wad in his cheek, and returned the pouch with a sincere salute. Gum-leaf was a
mild stimulant; Cordelia had never seen Piotr chew it in Vorbarr Sultana. "Take care of
m'lords horses," called Esterhazy rather desperately to Bothari.
"They're not machines, remember. Bothari grunted
something noncommittal, as the Count and Esterhazy headed their animals back
down the trail. They were out of sight in a few moments. A profound quiet
descended. CHAPTER
TWELVE The Major put Gregor,
comfortably padded by the bedroll and saddlebags, up behind him. Cordelia faced
one more climb onto that torture-device for humans and horses called a saddle.
She would never have made it without Bothari. The Major took her reins this
time, and Rose and his horse walked side by side with a lot less jerking of the
bridle. Bothari dropped back, trailing watchfully. "So," said the
old man after a time, with a sideways look at her, "you're the new Lady
Vorkosigan." Cordelia, rumpled and
filthy, smiled back desperately. "Yes. Ah, Count Piotr didn't mention your
name, Major ... ?" "Amor Klyeuvi,
Milady. But folks up here just call me Kly." "And, uh ... what
are you?" Besides some mountain kobold Piotr had conjured out of the
ground. He smiled, an expression
more repellent than attractive given the state of his teeth. "I'm the
Imperial Mail, Milady. I ride the circuit through these hills, out of
Vorkosigan Surleau, every ten days. Been at it for eighteen years. There are
grown kids up here with kids of their own who never knew me as anything but Kly
the Mail." "I thought mail
went to these parts by lightflyer." "They're phasing
them in. But the flyers don't go to every house, just to these central
drop—points. No courtesy to it, anymore." He spat disgust and gum-leaf.
"But if the General'll hold 'em off another two years here, I'll make my
last twenty, and be a triple-twenty-years Service man. I retired with my
double-twenty, see." "From what branch,
Major Klyuevi?" "Imperial
Rangers." He watched slyly for her reaction; she rewarded him with
impressed raised brows. "I was a throat-cutter, not a tech. 'S why I could
never go higher than major. Got my start at age fourteen, in these mountains,
running rings around the Cetagandans with the General and Ezar. Never did get
back to school after that. Just training courses. The Service passed me by, in
time." "Not entirely, it
seems," said Cordelia, staring around the apparently unpeopled wilderness. "No ..." His
breath became a purse-lipped sigh, as he glanced back over his shoulder at
Gregor in meditative unease. "Did Piotr tell you
what happened yesterday afternoon?" "No. I left the
lake day-before-yesterday morning. Missed all the excitement. I expect the news
will catch up with me before noon." "Is ... anything
else likely to catch up with us by then?" "We'll just have to
see." He added more hesitantly, "You'll have to get out of those
clothes, Milady. The name VORKOSIGAN, A., in big block letters over your
jacket-pocket isn't any too anonymous." Cordelia glanced down at
Aral's black fatigue shirt, quelled. "My lord's livery
sticks out like a flag, too," Kly added, looking back at Bothari.
"But you'll pass well enough, in the right clothes. I'll see what I can
do, in a bit here." Cordelia sagged, her
belly aching in anticipation of rest. Refuge. But at what price to those who
gave her refuge? "Will helping us put you in danger?" His tufted grey brow
rose. "Belike." His tone did not invite further comment on the topic. She had to bring her
tired mind back on-line somehow, if she was to be asset and not hazard to
everyone around her. "That gum-leaf of yours. Does it work anything like
coffee?" "Oh, better than
coffee, Milady." "Can I try
some?" Shyness lowered her voice; it might be too intimate a request. His cheeks creased in a
dry grin. "Only backcountry sticks like me chew gum-leaf, Milady. Pretty
Vor ladies from the capital wouldn't be caught dead with it in their pearly
teeth." "I'm not pretty,
I'm not a lady, and I'm not from the capital. And I'd kill for coffee right
now. I'll try it." He let his reins drop to
his steadily plodding horse's neck, rummaged in his blue-grey jacket pocket,
and pulled out his pouch. He broke off a chunk, in none-too-clean fingers, and
leaned across. She regarded it a
doubtful moment, dark and leafy in her palm. Never put strange organics in your
mouth till they've been cleared by the lab. She lapped it up. The wad was made
self-sticking by a bit of maple syrup, but after her saliva washed away the
first startling sweetness, the flavor was pleasantly bitter and astringent. It
seemed to peel away the night's film coating her teeth, a real improvement. She
straightened. Kly regarded her with
bemusement. "So what are you, off-worlder not-a-lady?" "I was an
astrocartographer. Then a Survey captain. Then a soldier, then a POW, then a
refugee. And then I was a wife, and then I was a mother. I don't know what I'm
going to be next," she answered honestly, around the gum-leaf. Pray not
widow. "Mother? I'd heard
you were pregnant, but ... didn't you lose your baby to the soltoxin?" He
eyed her waist in confusion. "Not yet. He still
has a fighting chance. Though it seems a little uneven, to match him against
all of Barrayar just yet... . He was born prematurely. By surgical
section." (She decided not to try to explain the uterine replicator.)
"He's at the Imperial Military Hospital. In Vorbarr Sultana. Which for all
I know has just been captured by Vordarian's rebel forces ..." She
shivered. Vaagen's lab was classified, nothing to draw anyone's attention.
Miles was all right, all right, all right, and one crack in that thin shell of
conviction would hatch out hysteria... . Aral, now, Aral could take care of
himself if anyone could. So how had he been so caught-out, eh, eh? No question,
ImpSec was riddled with treason. They couldn't trust anyone around here, and
where was Illyan? Trapped in Vorbarr Sultana? Or was he Vordarian's quisling?
No ... Cut off, more likely. Like Kareen. Like Padma and Alys Vorpatril. Life
racing death ... "No one will bother
the hospital," said Kly, watching her face. "I—yes.
Right." "Why did you come
to Barrayar, off-worlder?" "I wanted to have
children." A humorless laugh puffed from her lips. "Do you have any
children, Kly the Mail?" "Not so far as I
know." "You were very
wise." "Oh ..." His
face grew distant. "I don't know. Since my old woman died, 's been pretty
quiet. Some men I know, their children have been a great trouble to them. Ezar.
Piotr. Don't know who will burn the offerings on my grave. M' niece,
maybe." Cordelia glanced at
Gregor, riding along atop the saddlebags and listening. Gregor had lit the
taper to Ezar's great funeral offering-pyre, his hand guided by Aral's. They rode on up the
road, climbing. Four times Kly ducked up side-trails, while Cordelia, Bothari,
and Gregor waited out of sight. On the third of these delivery-runs Kly
returned with a bundle including an old skirt, a pair of worn trousers, and
some grain for the tired horses. Cordelia, still chilled, put the skirt on over
her old Survey trousers. Bothari exchanged his conspicuous brown uniform pants
"with the silver stripe down the side for the hillman's cast-offs. The
pants were too short, riding ankle—high, giving him the look of a sinister
scarecrow. Bothari's uniform and Cordelia's black fatigue shirt were bundled
out of sight in an empty mailbag. Kly solved the problem of Gregor's missing
shoe by simply stripping off the remaining one and letting the boy go barefoot,
and concealing his too-nice blue suit beneath a man's oversize shirt with the
sleeves rolled up. Man, woman, child, they looked a haggard, ragged little hill
family. They made the top of
Amie Pass and started back down. Occasionally folk waited by the roadside for
Kly; he passed on verbal messages, rattling them off in what sounded to
Cordelia to be verbatim style. He distributed letters on paper and cheap
vocodisks, their self-playbacks tinny and thin. Twice he paused to read letters
to apparently illiterate recipients, and once to a blind man guided by a small
girl. Cordelia grew twitchier with each mild encounter, drained by nervous
exhaustion. Will that fellow betray us? What do we look like to that woman? At
least the blind man can't describe us. ... Toward dusk, Kly
returned from one of his side-loops to gaze up and down the silent shadowed
wilderness trail and declare, "This place is just too crowded." It
was a measure of Cordelia's overstrain that she found herself mentally agreeing
with him. He looked her over,
worry in his eyes. "Think you can go on for another four hours,
Milady?" What's the alternative?
Sit by this mud puddle and weep till we're captured? She struggled to her feet,
pushing up from the log she'd been perched on waiting their guide's return.
"That depends on what's at the end of four more hours of this." "My place. I
usually spend this night at my niece's, near here. My route ends about another
ten hours farther on, when I'm making my deliveries, but if we go straight up
we can do it in four. I can double back to this point by tomorrow morning and
keep my schedule as usual. Real quiet-like. Nothing to remark on." What does "straight
up" mean? But Kly was clearly right; their whole safety lay in their
anonymity, their invisibility. The sooner they were out of sight, the better.
"Lead on, Major." It took six hours.
Bothari's horse went lame, short of their goal. He dismounted and towed it. It
limped and tossed its head. Cordelia walked, too, to ease her raw legs and to
keep herself warm and awake in the chilling darkness. Gregor fell asleep and
fell off, cried for his mother, then fell asleep again when Kly moved him
around to his front to keep a better grip. The last climb stole Cordelias
breath and made her heart race, even though she hung on to Rose's stirrup for
help. Both horses moved like old women with arthritis, stumping along jerkily;
only the animals' innate gregariousness kept them following Kly's hardy pinto. The climb became a drop,
suddenly, over a ridge and into a great vale. The woods grew thin and ragged,
interspersed with mountain meadows. Cordelia could feel the spaces stretching
out around her, true mountain scale at last, vast gulfs of shadow, huge bulks
of stone, silent as eternity. Three snowflakes melted on her staring, upturned
face. At the edge of a vague patch of trees, Kly halted. "End of the line,
folks." Cordelia sleepwalked
Gregor into the tiny shack, felt her way to a cot, and rolled him onto it. He
whimpered in his sleep as she dragged the blankets over him. She stood swaying,
numb-brained, then in a last burst of lucidity kicked off her slippers and
climbed in with him. His feet were cold as a cryo-corpse's. As she warmed them
against her body his shivering gradually relaxed into deeper sleep. Dimly, she
was aware that Kly—Bothari—somebody, had started a fire in the fireplace. Poor
Bothari, he'd been awake every bit as long as she had. In a quite military
sense, he was her man; she should see that he ate, cared for his feet, slept
... she should, she should... . Cordelia snapped awake,
to discover that the movement that had roused her was Gregor, sitting up beside
her and rubbing his eyes in bleary disorientation. Light streamed in through
two dirty windows on either side of the wooden front door. The shack, or
cabin—two of the walls were made of whole logs stacked up—was only a single
room. In the grey stone fireplace at one end a kettle and a covered pot sat on
a grating over a bed of glowing coals. Cordelia reminded herself again that
wood represented poverty, not wealth, here. They must have passed ten million
trees yesterday. She sat up, and gasped
from the pain in her muscles. She straightened her legs. The bed was a rope net
strung on a frame and supporting first a straw-stuffed mattress, then a
feather-stuffed one. She and Gregor were warm, at least, in their nest. The air
of the room was dusty-smelling, tinged with a pleasant edge of wood smoke. Booted footsteps sounded
on the boards of the porch outside, and Cordelia grasped Gregor's arm in sudden
panic. She couldn't run—that black iron fireplace poker would make a pretty
poor weapon against a stunner or nerve disruptor—but the steps were Bothari's.
He slipped through the door along with a puff of outside air. His crudely sewn
tan cloth jacket must be a borrowing from Kly, judging from the way his bony
wrists stuck out beyond the turned-down sleeve cuffs. He'd pass for a hillman
easily, as long as he kept his urban-accented mouth shut. He nodded at them.
"Milady. Sire." He knelt by the fireplace, glanced under the pot lid,
and tested the kettle's temperature by cupping a big hand a few centimeters
above it. "There's groats, and syrup," he said. "Hot water. Herb
tea. Dried fruit. No butter." "What's
happening?" Cordelia rubbed her face awake, and swung her legs overboard,
planning a stumble toward that herb tea. "Not much. The
Major rested his horse a while, and left before light, to keep his schedule.
It's been real quiet, since." "Did you get any
sleep yet?" "Couple of hours, I
think." The tea had to wait
while Cordelia escorted the Emperor downslope to Kly's outhouse. Gregor
wrinkled his nose, and eyed the adult-sized seat nervously. Back on the cabin
porch Cordelia supervised hand and face washing over a dented metal basin. The view from the porch,
once she'd toweled her face dry and vision clear, was stunning. Half of
Vorkosigan's District seemed spread out below, the brown foothills, the
green-and-yellow-specked peopled plains beyond. "Is that our lake?"
Cordelia nodded to a glint of silver in the hills, near the limits of her
vision. "I think so,"
said Bothari, squinting. So far, to have come
this fast on foot. So fearfully near, in a lightflyer ... Well, at least you
could see whatever was coming. The hot groats and
syrup, served on a cracked white plate, tasted wonderful. Cordelia guzzled herb
tea, and realized she'd become dangerously dehydrated. She tried to encourage
Gregor to drink, but he didn't like the astringent taste of the tea. Bothari
looked almost suffused with shame, that he couldn't produce milk out of the air
at his Emperor's direct request. Cordelia solved the dilemma by sweetening the
tea with syrup, rendering it acceptable. By the time they
finished breakfast, washed up the few utensils and dishes, and flung the bit of
wash water over the porch rail, the porch had warmed enough in the morning sun
to make sitting tolerable. "Why don't you take
over the bed, Sergeant. I'll keep watch. Ah ... did Kly have any suggestions
what we should do, if somebody hostile drops down on us here before he gets
back? It kind of looks like we've run out of places to run to." "Not quite, Milady.
There's a set of caves, up in that patch of woods in back. An old guerilla
cache. Kly took me back last night to see the entrance." Cordelia sighed.
"Right. Get some sleep, Sergeant, we'll surely need you later." She sat in the sun. in
one of the wooden chairs, resting her body if not her mind. Her eyes and ears
strained for the whine of a distant lightflyer or heavy aircar. She tied
Gregor's feet up with makeshift rag shoes, and he wandered about examining
things. She accompanied him on a visit to the shed to see the horses. The
Sergeant's beast was still very lame, and Rose was moving as little as
possible, but they had fodder in a rick and water from a little stream that ran
across the end of their enclosure. Kly's other horse, a lean and fit-looking
sorrel, seemed to tolerate the equine invasion, only nipping when Rose edged
too close to its side of the hayrick. Cordelia and Gregor sat
on the porch steps as the sun passed zenith, comfortably warm now. The only
sound in the vast vale besides a breeze in the branches was Bothari's snores,
resonating through the cabin walls. Deciding this was as relaxed as they were
likely to get, Cordelia at last dared quiz Gregor on his view—her only
eyewitness report—of the coup in the capital. It wasn't much help; Gregor's five-year-old
eyes saw the what well enough, it was the whys that escaped him. On a higher
level, she had the same problem, Cordelia admitted ruefully to herself. "The soldiers came.
The colonel told Mama and me to come with him. One of our liveried men came in.
The colonel shot him." "Stunner, or nerve
disruptor?" "Nerve disruptor.
Blue fire. He fell down. They took us to the Marble Courtyard. They had
aircars. Then Captain Negri ran in, with some men. A soldier grabbed me, and
Mama grabbed me back, and that's what happened to my shoe. It came off in her
hand. I should have ... fastened it tighter, in the morning. Then Captain Negri
shot the soldier who was carrying me, and some soldiers shot Captain
Negri—" "Plasma arc? Is
that when he got that horrible burn?" Cordelia asked. She tried to keep
her tone very calm. Gregor nodded mutely.
"Some soldiers took Mama, those other ones, not Negri's ones. Captain
Negri picked me up and ran. We went through the tunnels, under the Residence,
and came out in a garage. We went in the lightflyer. They shot at us. Captain
Negri kept telling me to shut up, to be quiet. We flew and flew, and he kept
yelling at me to be quiet, but I was. And then we landed by the lake."
Gregor was trembling again. "Mm." Kareen
spun in vivid detail in Cordelia's head, despite the simplicity of Gregor's
account. That serene face, wrenched into screaming rage and terror as they tore
the son she'd borne the Barrayaran hard way from her grip, leaving ... nothing
but a shoe, of all their precarious life and illusory possessions. So
Vordarian's troops had Kareen. As hostage? Victim? Alive or dead? "Do you think
Mama's all right?" "Sure."
Cordelia shifted uncomfortably. "She's a very valuable lady. They won't
hurt her." Till it becomes expedient for them to do so. "She was
crying." "Yes." She
could feel that same knot in her own belly. The mental flash she'd shied from
all day yesterday burst in her brain. Boots, kicking open a secured laboratory
door. Kicking over desks, tables. No faces, just boots. Gun butts sweeping
delicate glassware and computerized monitors from benches into a tangled smash
on the floor. A uterine replicator rudely jerked open, its sterile seals
slashed, its contents dumped pell-mell wetly on the tiles ... no need even for
the traditional murderous swing by the heels of infant head against the nearest
concrete wall, Miles was so little the boots could just step on him and smash
him to jam... . She drew in her breath. Miles is all right.
Anonymous, just like us. We are very small, and very quiet, and safe. Shut up,
keep quiet, kid. She hugged Gregor tightly. "My little boy is in the
capital, too, same as your Mama. And you're with me. We'll look out for each
other. You bet." After supper, and still
no sign of Kly, Cordelia said, "Show me that cave, Sergeant." Kly kept a box of cold
lights atop his mantel. Bothari cracked one, and led Cordelia and Gregor up
into the woods on a faint stony path. He made a menacing will-o'-the-wisp, with
the bright green-tinged light shining from the tube between his fingers. The area near the cave
mouth showed signs of having once been cleared, though recent overgrowth was
closing back in. The entrance was by no means hidden, a yawning black hole
twice the height of Bothari and wide enough to edge a lightflyer through.
Immediately within, the roof rose and walls flared to create a dusty cavern.
Whole patrols could camp therein, and had, in the distant past, judging from
the antique litter. Bunk niches were carved in the rock, and names and initials
and dates and crude comments covered the walls. A cold fire-pit in the
center was matched by a blackened vent-hole above, which had once provided exit
for the smoke. A ghostly crowd of hillmen, guerilla soldiers, seemed to hover
in Cordelia's mind's eye, eating, joking, spitting gum-leaf, cleaning their
weapons and planning their next foray. Ranger spies came and went, ghosts among
the ghosts, to place their precious blood-won information before their young
general, who spread his maps out on that flat rock over there... . She shook
the vision from her head, and took the light and explored the niches. At least
five traversable exits led off from the cavern, three of which showed signs of
having been heavily traveled. "Did Kly say where
these went, or where they came out, Sergeant?" "Not exactly,
Milady. He did say the passages went back for kilometers, into the hills. He
was late, and in a hurry to get on." "Is it a vertical
or horizontal system, did he say?" "Beg pardon,
Milady?" "All on one strata,
or with unexpected big drops? Are there lots of blind alleys? Which path were
we supposed to take? Are there underground streams?" "I think he
expected to be leading us, if we went in. He started to explain, then said it
was too complicated." She frowned,
contemplating the possibilities. She'd done a bit of cave work in her Survey
training, enough to grasp what the term respect for the hazards meant. Vents,
drops, cracks, labyrinthine cross—passages ... plus, here, the unexpected rise
and fall of water, not a matter of much concern on Beta Colony. It had rained
last night. Sensors were not much help in finding a lost cave explorer. And
whose sensors? If the system was as extensive as Kly suggested, it could absorb
hundreds of searchers ... Her frown changed to a slow smile. "Sergeant,
let's camp here tonight." Gregor liked the cave,
especially when Cordelia described the history of the place. He rattled around
the cavern whispering military dialogue to himself like "Zap, zap,
zap!", climbed in and out of all the niches, and tried to sound out the
rude words carved in the walls. Bothari lit a small fire in the pit and spread
a bedroll for Gregor and Cordelia, taking the night watch for himself. Cordelia
set a second bedroll, wrapped around trail snacks and supplies, in a grabbable
bundle near the entrance. She arranged the black fatigue jacket with the name
VORKOSIGAN, A., artistically in a niche, as if used to sit upon and keep
someone's haunches from the cold stone and then temporarily forgotten when the
sitter rose. Last of all Bothari brought up their lame and useless horses,
re-saddled and bridled, and tethered them just outside. Cordelia emerged from
the widest passage, where she'd dropped an almost-spent cold light a quarter
kilometer along, over a rope-strung ten-meter cliff. The rope was natural
fiber, and very old and brittle. She'd elected not to test it. "I don't quite get
it, Milady," said Bothari. "With the horses abandoned out there, if
anyone comes looking they'll find us at once, and know exactly where we've gone." "Find this,
yes," said Cordelia. "Know where we've gone, no. Because without Kly,
there is no way I'm taking Gregor down into this labyrinth. But the best way to
look like we were here is to actually be here for a bit." Bothari's flat eyes lit
in understanding at last, as he gazed around at the five black entrances at
their various levels. "Ah!" "That means we also
need to find a real bolt-hole. Somewhere up in the
woods, where we can cut across to the trail Kly brought us up yesterday. Wish
we'd done this in daylight." "I see what you
mean, Milady. I'll scout." "Please do,
Sergeant." Taking their trail
bundle, he disappeared into the dim woods. Cordelia tucked Gregor into the
bedroll, then perched outside among the rocks above the cave mouth and kept watch.
She could see the vale, stretched out greyly below the tops of the trees, and
make out Kly's cabin roof. No smoke rose now from its chimney. Beneath the
stone, no remote thermal sensor would find their new fire, though the smell of
it hung in the chill air, detectable to nearby noses. She watched for moving
lights in the sky till the stars were a watery blur in her eyes. Bothari returned after a
very long time. "I have a spot. Shall we move now?" "Not yet. Kly might
still show up." First. "Your turn to
sleep, then, Milady." "Oh, yes." The
evening's exertions had only partly warmed the acid fatigue from her muscles.
Leaving Bothari on the limestone outcrop in the starlight like a guardian
gargoyle, she crawled in with Gregor. Eventually, she slept. She woke with the grey
light of dawn making the cavern entrance a luminous misty oval. Bothari made
hot tea, and they shared cold lumps of pan bread left from last night, and
nibbled dried fruit. "I'll watch some
more," Bothari volunteered. "I can't sleep so good without my
medication anyway." "Medication?"
said Cordelia. "Yeah, I left my
pills at Vorkosigan Surleau. I can feel it clearing out of my system. Things
seem sharper." Cordelia chased a
suddenly very lumpy bite of bread with a swallow of hot tea. But were his
psychoactive drugs truly therapeutic, or merely political in their effect?
"Let me know if you are experiencing any kind of difficulty,
Sergeant," she said cautiously. "Not so far. Except
it's getting harder to sleep. They suppress dreams." He took his tea and
wandered back to his post. Cordelia carefully
refrained from cleaning up their campsite. She did escort Gregor to the nearest
rivulet for a personal washup. They were certainly acquiring an authentic
hill-folk aroma. They returned to the cavern, where Cordelia rested a while on
the bedroll. She must insist on relieving Bothari soon. Come on, Kly... . Bothari's tense low
voice reverberated in the cavern. "Milady. Sire. Time to go." "Kly?" "No." Cordelia rolled to her
feet, kicked the pre-arranged pile of dirt over the last coals of their fire,
grabbed Gregor, and hustled him out the cave mouth. He looked suddenly
frightened and sickly. Bothari was pulling the bridles off the horses, loosing
them and tossing the gear on the pile with the saddles. Cordelia pulled herself
up beside the cave and snatched one quick glimpse over the treetops. A flyer
had landed in front of Kly's cabin. Two black-uniformed soldiers were circling
to the right and left. A third disappeared under the porch roof. Faint and
delayed in the distance came the bang of Kly's front door being kicked open.
Only soldiers, no hillman-guides or hillman-prisoners in that flyer. No sign of
Kly. They took to the woods
at a jog, Bothari boosting up and carrying Gregor piggyback. Rose made to
follow them, and Cordelia whirled to wave her arms and whisper frantically,
"No! Go away, idiot beast!" to spook her off. Rose hesitated, then
turned to stay by her lame companion. Their run was steady,
unpanicked. Bothari had his route all picked out, taking advantage of
sheltering rocks and trees and water-carved steps. They scrambled up, down, up,
but just when she thought her lungs would burst and their pursuers must spot them,
Bothari vanished along a steep rock face. "Over here,
Milady!" He'd found a thin,
horizontal crack in the rocks, half a meter high and three meters deep. She
rolled in beside him to find the niche shielded by solid rock everywhere but
the front, and that almost blocked by fallen stone. Their bedroll and supplies
waited. "No wonder,"
Cordelia gasped, "the Cetagandans had trouble up here." A thermal
sensor would have to be aimed straight in, to pick them up, from a point twenty
meters in the air out over the ravine. The place was riddled with hundreds of
similar crannies. "Even better."
Bothari pulled a pair of antique field glasses, looted from Kly's cabin, from
their bedroll. "We can see them." The glasses were nothing
but binocular tubes with sliding glass lenses, purely passive light—collectors.
They must have dated from the Time of Isolation. The magnification was poor by
modern standards, no UV or infrared boost, no rangefinder pulse ... no power
cell to leak detectable energy traces. Flat on her belly, chin in the rubble,
Cordelia could glimpse the distant cavern entrance on the slope rising beyond
the ravine and a knife-backed ridge. When she said, "Now we must be very
quiet," pale Gregor practically went fetal. The black-clad scanner
men found the horses at last, though it seemed to take them forever. Then they
found the cave mouth. The tiny figures gesticulated excitedly to each other,
ran in and out, and called the flyer, which landed outside the entrance with
much crackling of shrubbery. Four men entered; eventually, one came back out.
In time, another flyer landed. Then a lift van arrived, and disgorged a whole
patrol. The mountain mouth ate them all. Another lift van came, and men set up
lights, a field generator, comm links. Cordelia made a nest of
the bedroll for Gregor, and fed him little snacks and sips from their water
bottle. Bothari stretched out in the back of the niche with the thinnest
blanket folded under his head, otherwise seeming impervious to the stone. While
Bothari dozed, Cordelia kept careful count of the net flow of hunters. By
mid-afternoon, she calculated that some forty men had gone below and not come
up again. Two men were brought out
strapped to float pallets, loaded into a medical—evacuation lifter, and flown
away. A lightflyer made a bad landing in the crowded area, toppled downslope,
and crunched into a tree. Yet more men became involved in extracting, righting,
and repairing it. By dusk over sixty men had been sucked down the drain. A
whole company drawn away from the capital, not pursuing refugees, not available
to root out the secrets of ImpMil ... it wasn't enough to make a real
difference, surely. It's a start. Cordelia and Bothari and
Gregor slipped from the niche in the gloaming, cleared the ravines, and made
their way silently through the woods. It was nearly full dark when they came to
the edge of the trees and struck Kly's trail. As they crossed over the ridge
edging the vale, Cordelia looked back. The area by the cave mouth was marked by
searchlights, stabbing up through the mists. Lightflyers whined in and out of
the site. They dropped over the
ridge and slithered down the slope that had so nearly killed her to climb,
hanging on to Rose's stirrup two days ago. Fully five kilometers down the
trail, in a rocky region of treeless scrub, Bothari came to an abrupt halt.
"Sh. Milady, listen." Voices. Men's voices,
not far off, but strangely hollow. Cordelia stared into the darkness, but no
lights moved. Nothing moved. They crouched beside the trail, senses straining. Bothari crept off, head
tilted, following his ears. After a few moments Cordelia and Gregor cautiously
followed. She found Bothari kneeling by a striated outcrop. He motioned her
closer. "It's a vent,"
he announced in a whisper. "Listen." The voices were much
clearer now, sharp cadences, angry gutturals punctuated by swearing in two or
three languages. "Goddammit, I know
we went left back at that third turn." "That wasn't the
third turn, that was the fourth." "We re-crossed the
stream." "It wasn't the same
friggin' stream, sabaki!" "Merde.
Perdu!" "Lieutenant, you're
an idiot!" "Corporal, you're
out of line!" "This cold light's
not going to last the hour. See, it's fading." "Well, don't shake
it up, you moron, when it glows brighter it goes faster." "Give me
that—!" Bothari's teeth gleamed
in the darkness. It was the first smile Cordelia had seen crack his face in
months. Silently, he saluted her. They tiptoed softly away, into the chill of
the Dendarii night. Back on the trail,
Bothari sighed deeply. "If only I'd had a grenade to drop down that vent.
Their search parties would still be shooting at each other this time next
week." CHAPTER
THIRTEEN Four hours down the
night trail, the distinctive black and white horse loomed out of the dark. Kly
was a shadow aboard it, but his thick profile and battered hat were instantly
recognizable. "Bothari!" The
name huffed from Kly's mouth. "We live. Grace of God." Bothari's voice was
flat. "What happened to you, Major?" "I almost ran into
one of Vordarian's squads at a cabin I was delivering mail to. They're actually
trying to go over these hills house by house. Dosing everyone they meet with
fast-penta. They must be bringing the drug in by the barrel." "We expected you
back last night," said Cordelia. She tried not to let her tone sound too
accusing. The felt hat bobbed as
Kly gave her a weary nod of greeting. "Would've been, except for
Vordarian's bloody patrol. I didn't dare let them question me. I spent a day
and a night, dodging 'em. Sent my niece's husband to get you. But when he got
to my place this morning, Vordarian's men were all over. I figured we'd lost
everything. But when they were still all over by nightfall, I took heart. They
wouldn't still be looking for you if they'd found you. Figured I'd better get
my ass up here and do some scouting myself. This is beyond hope." Kly turned his horse
around, heading back down the trail. "Here, Sergeant, put the boy
up." "I can carry the
boy. Think you'd better give m'lady a lift. She's about out." Too true. It was a
measure of Cordelia's exhaustion that she went willingly to Kly's horse.
Between them, Bothari and Kly shoved her aboard, perched astraddle on the
pinto's warm rump. They started off, Cordelia gripping the mailman's coat. "What happened to
you?" Kly asked in turn. Cordelia let Bothari
answer, in his short sentences made even shorter by his burdened stride, as he
carried Gregor piggyback. When he got to a mention of the men heard down the
vent, Kly barked a laugh, then clapped a hand over his mouth. "They'll be
weeks getting out of there. Good work, Sergeant!" "It was Lady
Vorkosigan's idea." "Oh?" Kly
twisted around to glance back over his shoulder at Cordelia, clinging wanly. "Aral and Piotr
both seemed to think diversion worthwhile," Cordelia explained. "I
gather Vordarian has limited reserves." "You think like a
soldier, m'lady." Kly sounded approving. Cordelia wrinkled her
brow in dismay. What an appalling compliment. The last thing she wanted was to
start thinking like a soldier, playing their game by their rules. The
hallucinatory military world-view was horribly infectious, though, immersed in
it as she was now. How long can I tread water? Kly led them on another
two hours of night marching, striking out on unfamiliar trails. In deep
pre—dawn dark they came to a shack, or house. It seemed to be of similar
construction to Kly's place, but more extensive, with rooms built on and other
rooms built on to the additions. A light from a tiny flame, some sort of greasy
homemade candle, burned in a window. An old woman in a
nightgown and jacket, her grey hair in a braid down her back, came to the door
and motioned them within. Another old man—but younger than Kly—took the horse
out of sight toward a shed. Kly made to go with him. "Is it safe
here?" Cordelia asked dizzily. Where is here? Kly shrugged. "They
searched here day before yesterday. Before I sent for m' nephew-in-law. Checked
it off clean." The old woman snorted,
surly memory in her eye. "What with the
caves, and all the unchecked homesteads, and the lake, it'll be a while before
they get around to re-checking. They're still searching the lake bottom, I
hear, they've flown in all kinds of equipment. It's as safe as any." He
went off after his horse. Meaning, as unsafe as
any. Bothari was already taking his boots off. His feet must be bad. Her feet
were a mess, her slippers walked to flinders, and Gregor's rag shoes utterly
destroyed. She'd never felt so near the end of all endurance, bone-weary,
blood-weary, though she'd done much longer hikes before. It was as if her
truncated pregnancy had drained life itself out of her, to pass it on to
another. She let herself be guided, fed bread and cheese and milk and put to
bed in a little side room, herself on one narrow cot and drooping Gregor on
another. She would believe in safety tonight the way Barrayaran children
believed in Father Frost at Winterfair, true because she desperately wanted it
to be. The next day a raggedy
boy of about ten appeared out of the woods, riding Kly's sorrel horse bareback
with a rope halter. Kly made Cordelia, Gregor, and Bothari hide out of sight
while he paid the boy off with a few coins, and Sonia, Kly's aged niece, packed
him some sweet cakes to speed him on his way. Gregor peeked wistfully out the
corner of one curtained window as the child vanished again. "I didn't dare go
myself," Kly explained to Cordelia. "Vordarian has three platoons of
men up there now." A wheezing chuckle escaped him at some inner vision.
"But the boy knows nothing but that the old mailman was sick and needed
his re-mount." "They didn't
fast-penta that child, did they?" "Oh, yes." "They dared!" Kly's black-stained lips
compressed in sympathy with her outrage. "If he can't get hold of Gregor, Vordarian's
coup is likely doomed. And he knows it. There's not much he wouldn't dare to
do, at this point." He paused. "You can be glad fast-penta has
replaced torture, eh?" Kly's nephew-in-law
helped him saddle up the sorrel, and buckle on the mailbags. The mailman
adjusted his hat, and climbed up. "If I don't keep my
schedule, it will be near-impossible for the Gen'ral to contact me," he
explained. "Got to go, I'm late already. I'll be back. You and the boy
stay inside, out of sight, as much as you can, m'lady." He turned his
horse toward the bare-branched woods. The animal blended quickly into the
red-brown native scrub. Cordelia found Kly's
last advice all too easy to follow. She spent most of the next four days in her
cot-bed. The dull silence of hours went by in a fog, a relapse into the
frightening fatigue she'd experienced after the placental transfer operation
and its near-lethal complications. Conversation provided no diversion. The
hill-folk were as laconic as Bothari. It was the threat of fast-penta, Cordelia
thought. The less you knew, the less you could tell. The old woman Sonia's eyes
probed Cordelia curiously, but she never asked anything beyond, "You
hungry?" Cordelia didn't even know her last name. Baths. After the first
one, Cordelia did not ask again. The old couple worked all afternoon to haul
and heat enough water for herself and Gregor. Their simple meals were nearly as
much labor. No Pull Tab To Heat Contents up here. Technology, a woman's best
friend. Unless the technology appeared in the form of a nerve disruptor in the
hand of some dead-eyed soldier hunting you down carelessly as an animal. Cordelia counted over
the days since the coup, since all hell had broken loose. What was happening in
the larger world? What response from the space forces, from planetary
embassies, from conquered Komarr? Would Komarr seize the chaos to revolt, or
had Vordarian taken them by surprise too? Aral, what are you doing out there? Sonia, though she asked
no questions, would now and then return from outings and drop bits of local
news. Vordarian's troops, headquartered in Piotr's residence, were close to
abandoning the search of the lake bottom. Hassadar was sealed, but refugees
escaped in a trickle; someone's children, smuggled out, had arrived to stay with
relatives nearby. At Vorkosigan Surleau most of Piotr's armsmen's families had
escaped except Armsman Vogti's wife and very aged mother, who had been taken
away in a groundcar, no one knew where. "And, oh yes, very
strange," Sonia added. "They took Karla Hysopi. That hardly makes
sense. She was only the widow of a retired regular Service sergeant, what use
do they expect to make of her?" Cordelia froze.
"Did they take the baby, too?" "Baby? Donnia
didn't say about a baby. Grandchild, was it?" Bothari was sitting by
the window sharpening his knife on Sonia's kitchen whetstone. His hand paused
in mid-stroke. He looked up to meet Cordelias alarmed eyes. Beyond a tightening
of his jaw his face did not change expression, yet the sudden increase of
tension in his body made Cordelia's stomach knot. He looked back down at what
he was doing, and took a longer, firmer stroke that hissed along the whetstone
like water on coals. "Maybe ... Kly will
know something more, when he comes back," Cordelia quavered. "Belike," said
Sonia doubtfully. At last, on schedule, on
the evening of the seventh day, Kly rode into the clearing on his sorrel horse.
A few minutes later Armsman Esterhazy rode in behind him. He was dressed in
hillman's togs, and his mount was a lean and spindle-shanked hill horse, not
one of Piotr's big glossy beasts. They put their horses away and came in to a
dinner Sonia had apparently fixed this night of Kly's rounds for eighteen
years. After dinner they pulled
up chairs to the stone fireplace, and Kly and Esterhazy briefed Cordelia and
Bothari in low tones. Gregor sat by Cordelias feet. "Since Vordarian
has greatly widened his search area," Esterhazy began, "Count and
Lord Vorkosigan have decided that the mountains are still the best place to
hide Gregor. As the search radius grows enemy forces will be spread thinner and
thinner." "Locally,
Vordarian's forces are still hunting up and down the caves," Kly put in.
"There's about two hundred men still up there. But as soon as they finish
finding each other, I expect they'll pull out. I hear they've given up on
finding you in there, Milady. Tomorrow, Sire," Kly glanced down and
addressed Gregor directly, "Armsman Esterhazy will take you to a new
place, a lot like this one. You'll have a new name for a while, for pretend.
And Armsman Esterhazy will pretend he's your da. Think you can do that?" Gregor's hand tightened
on Cordelia's skirt. "Will Lady Vorkosigan pretend she's my ma?" "We're going to
take Lady Vorkosigan back to Lord Vorkosigan, at Tanery Base Shuttleport."
At Gregor's alarmed look Kly added, "There's a pony, where you're going.
And goats. The lady there might teach you how to milk the goats." Gregor looked doubtful,
but did not fuss further, though the next morning as he was put up behind
Esterhazy on the shaggy horse he looked near to tears. Cordelia said anxiously,
"Take care of him, Armsman." Esterhazy gave her a
driven look. "He's my Emperor, Milady. He holds my oath." "He's also a little
boy, Armsman. Emperor is ... a delusion you all have in your heads. Take care
of the Emperor for Piotr, yes, but you take care of Gregor for me, eh?" Esterhazy met her eyes.
His voice softened. "My little boy is four, Milady." He did understand, then.
Cordelia swallowed relief and grief. "Have you ... heard anything from the
capital? About your family?" "Not yet,"
said Esterhazy bleakly. "I'll keep my ears
open. Do what I can." "Thank you."
He gave her a nod, not as retainer to his lady, but as one parent to another.
No other word seemed necessary. Bothari was out of
earshot, having returned to the cabin to pack up their few supplies. Cordelia
went to Kly's stirrup, as he prepared to swing his black and white horse about
and lead Esterhazy and Gregor on their way. "Major. Sonia passed on a
rumor that Vordarian's troops took Mistress Hysopi. Bothari had hired her to
foster his baby girl. Do you know if they took Elena—the baby—too?" Kly lowered his voice.
"'Twas the other way around, as I have it. They went for the baby, Karla
Hysopi raised hell, so they took her too even though she wasn't on the
list." "Do you know
where?" He shook his head.
"Somewhere in Vorbarr Sultana. Belike your husband's Intelligence will
know exactly, by now." "Have you told the
Sergeant yet?" "His brother
armsman told him, last night." "Ah." Gregor looked back over
his shoulder at her as they rode away, until they were obscured from sight by
the tree-boles. For three days Kly's
nephew guided them through the mountains, Bothari on foot leading Cordelia on a
bony-hipped little hill horse with a sheepskin pad cinched to its back. On the
third afternoon, they came to a cabin which sheltered a skinny youth who led
them to a shed that held, wonder of wonders, a rickety lightflyer. He loaded up
the backseat with Cordelia and six jugs of maple syrup. Bothari shook hands
silently with Kly's nephew, who mounted the little horse and vanished into the
woods. Under Bothari's narrow
eye, the skinny youth coaxed his vehicle into the air. Brushing treetops, they
followed ravines and ridges up over the snow-frosted spine of the mountains and
down the other side, out of Vorkosigan's District. They came at dusk to a
little market town. The youth brought his flyer down in a side street. Cordelia
and Bothari helped him carry his gurgling produce to a small grocer's shop,
where he bartered the syrup for coffee, flour, soap, and power cells. Upon returning to his
lightflyer, they found that a battered groundtruck had pulled up and parked behind
it. The youth exchanged no more than a nod with its driver, who hopped out and
slid the door to the cargo bay aside for Bothari and Cordelia. The bay was a
quarter full of fiber sacks of cabbages. They did not make very good pillows,
though Bothari did his best to arrange Cordelia a nest of them as the truck
rocked along above the dismally uneven roads. Bothari then sat wedged against
the side of the cargo bay and compulsively polished the edge of his knife to
molecular sharpness with a makeshift strop, a bit of leather he'd begged from
Sonia. Four hours of this and Cordelia was ready to start talking to the
cabbages. The truck thumped to a
halt at last. The door slid aside, and first Bothari then Cordelia emerged to
find themselves in the middle of nowhere: a gravel-surfaced road over a
culvert, in the dark, in the country, in an unfamiliar district of unknown
loyalties. "They'll pick you
up at Kilometer Marker Ninety-six," the truck driver said, pointing to a
white smudge in the dimness that appeared to be merely a painted rock. "When?" asked
Cordelia desperately. For that matter, who were they? "Don't know."
The man returned to his truck and drove off in a spray of gravel from the
hoverfan, as if he were already pursued. Cordelia perched on the
painted boulder and wondered morbidly which side was going to leap out of the
night first, and by what test she might tell them apart. Time passed, and she
entertained an even more depressed vision of no one picking them up at all. But at last a darkened
lightflyer floated down out of the night sky, its engines pitched to eerie
near-silence. Its landing feet crunched in the gravel. Bothari crouched beside
her, his useless knife gripped in his hand. But the man awkwardly levering himself
up out of the passenger seat was Lieutenant Koudelka. "Milady?" he
called uncertainly to the two human scarecrows. "Sergeant?" A breath
of pure delight puffed from Cordelia as she recognized the pilot's blonde head
as Droushnakovi. My home is not a place, it is people, sir... . With Bothari's hand on
her elbow, at Koudelka's anxious gesture Cordelia fell gratefully into the
padded backseat of the flyer. Droushnakovi cast a dark look over her shoulder
at Bothari, wrinkled her nose, and asked, "Are you all right,
Milady?" "Better than I
expected, really. Go, go." The canopy sealed, and
they rose into the air. Vent fans powered up, cycling filtered air. Colored
lights from the control interface highlighted Kou's and Drou's faces. A
technological cocoon. Cordelia glanced at systems readouts over Droushnakovi's
shoulder, and then up through the canopy; yes, dark shapes paced them, guardian
military flyers. Bothari saw them, too, his eyes narrowing in approval. Some
fraction of tension eased from his body. "Good to see you
two—" some subtle cue of their body language, some hidden reserve, kept
Cordelia from adding together again. "I gather you got that accusation
about the comconsole sabotage straightened out in good order?" "As soon as we got
the chance to stop and fast-penta that guard corporal, Milady,"
Droushnakovi answered. "He didn't have the nerve to suicide before
questioning." "He was the
saboteur?" "Yes,"
answered Koudelka. "He'd intended to escape to Vordarian's troops when
they arrived to capture us. Vordarian apparently suborned him months ago." "That accounts for
our security problems. Or does it?" "He passed
information about our route, the day of the sonic grenade attempt."
Koudelka rubbed at his sinuses in memory. "So it was
Vordarian behind that!" "Confirmed. But the
guard doesn't seem to have known anything about the soltoxin. We turned him
inside out. He wasn't a high-level conspirator, just a tool." Nasty flow of thought,
but, "Has Illyan reported in yet?" "Not yet. Admiral
Vorkosigan hopes he may be hiding in the capital, if he wasn't killed in the
first fighting." "Hm. Well, you'll
be glad to know Gregor's all right—" Koudelka held up an
interrupting hand. "Excuse me, Milady. The Admiral ordered—you and the
Sergeant are not to debrief anything about Gregor to anyone except Count Piotr
or himself." "All right. Damn
fast-penta. How is Aral?" "He's well, Milady.
He ordered me to bring you up to date on the strategic situation—" Screw the strategic
situation, what about my baby? Alas, the two seemed inextricably intertwined. "—and answer any
questions you had." Very well. "What
about our baby? Pi—Miles?" "We've heard
nothing bad, Milady." "What does that
mean?" "It means we've
heard nothing," Droushnakovi put in glumly. Koudelka shot her an
irate look, which she shrugged off with a twitch of one shoulder. "No news may be
good news," Koudelka went on. "While it's true Vordarian holds the
capital—" "And therefore
ImpMil, yes," said Cordelia. "And he's
publicizing names of hostages related to anyone in our command structure,
there's been no mention of, of your child, in the lists. The Admiral thinks
Vordarian simply doesn't realize that what went into the replicator was viable.
Doesn't know what he's got." "Yet," bit off
Cordelia. "Yet,"
Koudelka conceded reluctantly. "All right. Go
on." "The overall
situation isn't as bad as we feared at first. Vordarian holds Vorbarr
Sultana, his own District and its military bases, and he's put troops in
Vorkosigan's District, but he only has about five district counts who are his
committed allies. About thirty of the other counts were caught in the capital,
and we can't tell their real allegiance while Vordarian holds guns to their
heads. Most of the twenty-three remaining Districts have reiterated their oaths
to my Lord Regent. Though a couple are waffling, who have relatives in the
capital or who are in dicey strategic positions as potential
battlefields." "And the space
forces?" "I was just coming
to them, yes, Milady. Over half of their supplies come up from the shuttleports
in Vordarian's District. For the moment, they're still holding out for a clear
result rather than moving in to create one. But they've refused to openly
endorse Vordarian. It's a balance, and whoever can tip it their way first will
start a landslide. Admiral Vorkosigan seems awfully confident." Cordelia
was not sure from the lieutenant's tone if he altogether shared that
confidence. "But then, he has to. For morale. He says Vordarian lost the
war the hour Negri got away with Gregor, and the rest is just maneuvering to
limit the losses. But Vordarian holds Princess Kareen." "Doubtless one of
the losses Aral is anxious to limit. Is she all right? Vordarian's goons
haven't abused her?" "Not as far as we
know. She seems to be under house arrest in her own rooms in the Imperial
Residence. Several of the more important hostages have been secluded
there." "I see." She
glanced sideways in the dim cabin at Bothari, who did not change expression.
She waited for him to ask after Elena, but he said nothing. Droushnakovi stared
bleakly into the night, at the mention of Kareen. Had Kou and Drou made
up? They seemed cool, civil, all duty and on duty. But whatever surface
apologies had passed, Cordelia sensed no healing in them. The secret adoration
and will-to-trust was all gone from the blue eyes that now and then flicked
from the control interface to the man in the passenger seat. Drou's glances
were merely wary. Lights glowed ahead on
the ground, the spatter of a middle-sized city, and beyond it, the jumbled
geometries of a sprawling military shuttleport. Drou went through code-check
after code-check, as they approached. They spiraled down to a pad that lit for
them, peopled with armed guards. Their guard-flyers passed on overhead to their
own landing zones. The guards surrounded
them as they exited the flyer, and escorted them as fast as Koudelka's pace
would permit to a lift tube. They went down, took a slide-walk, and went down
again through blast doors. Tanery Base clearly featured a hardened underground
command post. Welcome to the bunker. And yet a throat-catching whiff of
familiarity shook Cordelia for a terrifying moment of confusion and loss. Beta
Colony did a lot better on the interior decorating than these barren corridors,
but she might have descended to the utility level of some buried Betan city,
safe and cool... I want to go home. There were three
green-uniformed officers, talking in a corridor. One was Aral. He saw her.
"Thank you, dismissed, gentlemen," he said in the middle of someone's
sentence, then more consciously, "We'll continue this shortly." But
they lingered to goggle. He looked no worse than
tired. Her heart ached to look at him, and yet ... Following you has brought me
here. Not to the Barrayar of my hopes, but to the Barrayar of my fears. With a voiceless
"Ha!" he embraced her, hard to him. She hugged him back. This is a
good thing. Go away, World. But when she looked up the World was still waiting,
in the form of seven watchers all with agendas. He held her away, and
scanned her anxiously up and down. "You look terrible, dear Captain." At least he was polite
enough not to say, You smell terrible. "Nothing a bath won't cure." "That is not what I
meant. Sickbay for you, before anything." He turned to find Sergeant Bothari
first in line. "Sir, I must report
in to my lord Count," Bothari said. "Father's not here.
He's on a diplomatic mission from me to some of his old cronies. Here, you,
Kou—take Bothari and set him up with quarters, food chits, passes, and clothes.
I'll want your personal report immediately. I've seen to Cordelia,
Sergeant." "Yes, sir."
Koudelka led Bothari away. "Bothari was
amazing," Cordelia confided to Aral. "No—that's unjust. Bothari was
Bothari, and I shouldn't have been amazed at all. We wouldn't have made it
without him." Aral nodded, smiling a
little. "I thought he would do for you." "He did
indeed." Droushnakovi, taking up
her old position at Cordelias elbow the moment Bothari vacated it, shook her
head in doubt, and followed along as Aral steered Cordelia down the corridor.
The rest of the parade followed less certainly. "Hear any more
about Illyan?" Cordelia asked. "Not yet. Did Kou
brief you?" "A sketch, enough
for now. I don't suppose any more word's come in on Padma and Alys Vorpatril,
then, either?" He shook his head
regretfully. "But neither are they on the list of Vordarian's confirmed
captures. I think they're hiding in the city. Vordarian's side is leaking
information like a sieve, we'd know if any arrest that important had happened.
I can only wonder if our own arrangements are so porous. That's the trouble
with these damned civil affrays, everybody has a brother—" A voice from down the corridor
hailed loudly, "Sir! Oh, sir!" Only Cordelia felt Aral flinch, his
arm jerking under her hand. An HQ staffer led a tall
man in black fatigues with colonel's tabs on the collar toward them.
"There you are, sir. Colonel Gerould is here from Marigrad." "Oh. Good. I have
to see this man now. ..." Aral looked around hurriedly, and his eye fell
on Droushnakovi. "Drou, please escort Cordelia to the infirmary for me.
Get her checked, get her—get her everything." The colonel was no HQ
desk pilot. He looked, in fact, as if he'd just flown in from some front line,
wherever the "front" was in this war for loyalties. His fatigues were
dirty and wrinkled and looked slept—in, their smoke-stink eclipsing Cordelia's
mountain-reek. His face was lined with fatigue. But he looked only grim, not
beaten. "The fighting in Marigrad has gone house-to-house, Admiral,"
he reported without preamble. Vorkosigan grimaced.
"Then I want to hopscotch it. Come with me to the tactics room—what is
that on your arm, Colonel?" A wide piece of white
cloth and a narrower strip of brown circled the officer's black upper left
sleeve. "ID, sir. We couldn't tell who we were shooting at, up close.
Vordarian's people are wearing red and yellow, 's as close as they could come
to maroon and gold, I guess. That's supposed to be brown and silver for
Vorkosigan, of course." "That's what I was
afraid of." Vorkosigan looked extremely stern. "Take it off. Burn it.
And pass the word down the line. You already have a uniform, Colonel, issued to
you by the Emperor. That's who you're fighting for. Let the traitors alter
their uniforms." The colonel looked
shocked at Vorkosigan's vehemence, but, after a beat, enlightened; he stripped
the cloth hastily from his arm and stuffed it in his pocket. "Right,
sir." Aral let go of
Cordelia's hand with a palpable effort. "I'll meet you in our quarters,
love. Later." Later in the week, at
this rate. Cordelia shook her head helplessly, took in one last view of his
stocky form as if her intensity could somehow digitize and store him for
retrieval, and followed Droushnakovi into Tanery Base's underground warren. At
least with Drou, Cordelia was able to overrule Vorkosigan's itinerary and
insist on a bath first. Almost as good, she found half a dozen new outfits in
her correct size, betraying Drou's palace—trained good taste, waiting for her
in a closet in Aral's quarters. The base doctor had no
charts; Cordelia's medical records were of course all behind enemy lines in
Vorbarr Sultana at present. He shook his head and keyed up a new form on his
report panel. "I'm sorry, Lady Vorkosigan. We'll simply have to begin at
the beginning. Please bear with me. Do I understand correctly you've had some
sort of female trouble?" No, most of my troubles
have been with males. Cordelia bit her tongue. "I had a placental
transfer, let me see, three plus," she had to count it up on her fingers,
"about five weeks ago." "Excuse me, a
what?" "I gave birth by
surgical section. It did not go well." "I see. Five weeks
post-partum." He made a note. "And what is your present
complaint?" I don't like Barrayar, I
want to go home, my father-in-law wants to murder my baby, half my friends are
running for their lives, and I can't get ten minutes alone with my husband,
whom you people are consuming before my eyes, my feet hurt, my head hurts, my
soul hurts ... it was all too complicated. The poor man just wanted something
to put in his blank, not an essay. "Fatigue," Cordelia managed at
last. "Ah." He
brightened, and entered this factoid on his report panel. "Post-partum
fatigue. This is normal." He looked up and regarded her earnestly.
"Have you considered starting an exercise program, Lady Vorkosigan?" CHAPTER
FOURTEEN "Who are
Vordarian's men?" Cordelia asked Aral in frustration. "I've been
running from them for weeks, but it's like I've only glimpsed them in a
rearview mirror. Know your enemy and all that. Where does he get this endless
supply of goons?" "Oh, not
endless." Aral smiled slightly, and took another bite of stew. They
were—miracle!—alone at last, in his simple underground senior officer's
apartment. Their supper had been brought in on a tray by a batman, and spread
on a low table between them. Aral had then, to Cordelia's relief, ejected this
hovering minion with a "Thank you, Corporal, that will be all." Aral swallowed his bite
and continued, "Who are they? For the most part, anyone who was caught
with an officer up along his chain of command who elected Vordarian's side, and
who hasn't worked up the nerve, or in some cases the wit, to either frag the
officer or desert his unit and report in elsewhere. And obedience and unit
cohesion is deeply inculcated in these men. 'When the going gets rough, stick
to your unit' is literally drilled into them. So the unfortunate fact that
their officer is leading them into treason makes clinging to their
squad-brothers even more natural. Besides," he grinned bleakly, "it's
only treason if Vordarian loses." "And is Vordarian
losing?" "As long as I live,
and keep Gregor alive, Vordarian cannot win." He nodded in conviction.
"Vordarian is imputing crimes to me as fast as he can invent them. Most
serious is the rumor he's floating that I've made away with Gregor and seek the
Imperium for myself. I judge this a ploy to smoke out Gregor's hiding place. He
knows that Gregor's I not with me. Or he'd be tempted to lob a nuclear in
here." Cordelia's lips curled in aversion. "So does he want to
capture Gregor, or kill him?" "Kill only if he
can't capture. I will, when the time is right, produce Gregor." "Why not right
now?" He sat back with a tired
sigh, and pushed away his tray with a few bites of stew and a ragged bread
shred still left in his bowl. "Because I wish to see how many of
Vordarian's forces I can woo back to my side before the denoument. Desert to me
is not quite the right term ... come over, maybe. I don't wish to inaugurate my
second year of office with four thousand military executions. All below a
certain rank can be given a blanket pardon on the grounds that they were
oath-bound to follow their officers, but I want to save as many of the senior
men as I can. Five district counts and Vordarian are doomed now, no hope for
them. Damn him for starting this." "What are
Vordarian's troops doing? Is this a sitzkrieg?" "Not quite. He's
wasting a lot of his time and mine, trying to gain a couple of useless strong
points, like the supply depot at Marigrad. We oblige and draw him in, or out.
It keeps Vordarian's commanders occupied, and their minds off the real high
ground, which are the space-based forces. If only I had Kanzian!" "Have your
intelligence people located him yet?" The admired Admiral Kanzian was one
of the two men in the Barrayaran High Command whom Vorkosigan regarded as his
superiors in strategy. Kanzian was an advanced space operations specialist; the
space-based forces had great faith in him. "No horse manure stuck on his
boots," was the way Kou had once expressed it, to Cordelia's amusement. "No, but Vordarian
doesn't have him either. He's vanished. Hope to God he wasn't caught in some
stupid street cross-fire and is lying unidentified on a slab somewhere. What a
waste that would be." "Would going up
help? To sway the space forces?" "Why d'you think
I'm troubling to hold Tanery Base? I've considered the pros and cons of moving
my field HQ aboard ship. I think not yet; it could be misinterpreted as the
first step in running away." Running away. What a
seductive thought. Far, far away from all this lunacy, till it was all reduced
to the single dimension of a minor filler in some galactic news vid. But ... run
away from Aral? She studied him, as he sat back on the padded sofa, staring at
but not seeing the remains of his supper. A weary middle-aged man in a green
uniform, of no particular handsomeness (except perhaps for the sharp grey
eyes); a hungry intellect at constant internal war with fear-driven aggression,
each fueled by a lifetime crowded with bizarre experience, Barrayaran
experience. You should have fallen in love with a happy man, if you wanted
happiness. But no, you had to fall for the breathtaking beauty of pain... . The two shall be made
one flesh. How literal that ancient pious mouthing had turned out to be. One
little scrap of flesh, prisoned in a uterine replicator behind enemy lines,
bound them now like Siamese twins. And if little Miles died, would that bond be
slashed? "What ... what are
we doing about Vordarian's hostages?" He sighed. "That is
the hard nut in the center. Stripped of everything else, as we are gradually
doing, Vordarian still holds over twenty district counts and Kareen. And
several hundred lesser folk." "Such as
Elena?" "Yes. And the city
of Vorbarr Sultana itself, for that matter. He could threaten to atomize the
city, at the end, to get passage off—planet. I've toyed with the idea of
dealing. Have him assassinated later. Can't just let him go free, it would be
unjust to all those who've died already in loyalty to me. What burning could
satisfy those betrayed souls? No." "So we're planning
various rescue-raid options, for the end. The moment when the shift in men and
loyalties reaches critical mass, and Vordarian really starts to panic.
Meanwhile we wait. In the end ... I'll sacrifice hostages before I'll let
Vordarian win." His unseeing stare was black, now. "Even Kareen?"
All the hostages? Even the tiniest? "Even Kareen. She
is Vor. She understands." "The surest proof I
am not Vor," said Cordelia glumly. "I don't understand any of this
... stylized madness. I think you should all be in therapy, every last one of
you." He smiled slightly.
"Do you think Beta Colony could be persuaded to send us a battalion of
psychiatrists as humanitarian aid? The one you had that last argument with,
perhaps?" Cordelia snorted. Well,
Barrayaran history did have a sort of weird dramatic beauty, in the abstract,
at a distance. A passion play. It was close-up that the stupidity of it all
became more palpable, dissolving like a mosaic into meaningless squares. Cordelia hesitated, then
asked, "Are we playing the hostage game?" She was not sure she wanted
to hear the answer. Vorkosigan shook his head.
"No. That's been my toughest argument, all week, to look men in the eye
who have wives and children up in the capital, and say No." He arranged
his cutlery neatly on his tray, in its original pattern, and added in a
meditative tone, "But they aren't looking widely enough. This is not, so
far, a revolution, merely a palace coup. The population is inert, or rather,
lying low, except for some informers. Vordarian is making his appeals to the
elite conservatives, old Vor, and the military. The Count can't count. The new
technoculture is producing plebe progressives as fast as our schools can crank
them out. They are the majority of the future. I wish to give them some method
besides colored armbands to distinguish the good guys from the bad guys. Moral
suasion is a more powerful force than Vordarian suspects. What old Earth
general said that the moral is to the physical as three to one? Oh, Napoleon,
that was it. Too bad he didn't follow his own advice. I'd put it as five to
one, for this particular war." "But do your powers
balance? What about the physical?" Vorkosigan shrugged. "We each have
access to enough weapons to lay Barrayar waste. Raw power is not really the
issue. But my legitimacy is an enormous advantage, as long as weapons must be
manned. Hence Vordarian's attempts to undercut that legitimacy with his
accusations about my doing away with Gregor. I propose to catch him in his
lie." Cordelia shivered.
"You know, I don't think I would care to be on Vordarian's side." "Oh, there are
still a few ways he could win. My death is entailed in all of them. Without me
as a focus, the only Regent annointed by the late Ezar, what's to choose?
Vordarian's claim is then as good as anyone's. If he killed me, and got
possession of Gregor, or vice versa, he could conceivably consolidate from
there. Till the next coup, and train of revolts and vengeance-killings
rebounding into the indefinite future ..." His eyes narrowed, as he
contemplated this dark vision. "That's my worst nightmare. That this war
won't stop if we lose, till another Dorca Vorbarra the Just arises to put an
end to another Bloody Century. God knows when. Frankly, I don't see a man of
that calibre among my generation." Check your mirror, thought Cordelia
somberly. "Ah, so that's why
you wanted me to see the doctor first," Cordelia teased Aral that night.
The doctor, once Cordelia had adjusted a few of his confused assumptions, had
examined her meticulously, changed his prescription from exercise to rest, and
cleared her to resume marital relations, with caution. Aral merely grinned, and
made love to her as if she were spun glass. His own recovery from the soltoxin
was nearly complete, she judged from this. He slept like a rock, only warmer,
till the comconsole woke them at dawn. There must have been some military
conspiracy at work, for it not to have lit up before then. Cordelia pictured
some understaffer confiding to Kou, "Yeah, let's let the Old Man get laid,
maybe he'll mellow out. ..." Still, the miserable
fatigue-fog lifted faster this time. Within a day, with Droushnakovi for
escort, Cordelia was up and exploring her new surroundings. She ran across Bothari
in the base gymnasium. Count Piotr had not yet returned, so once he'd debriefed
to Aral Bothari had no duties either. "Got to keep in training," he
told her shortly. "You been
sleeping?" "Not much," he
said, and resumed his running. Compulsively, too long, far past the optimum
effect-for-time-spent trade-off. He sweated to fill time and kill thought, and
Cordelia silently wished him luck. She caught up on the
details of the war from Aral and Kou and the controlled newsvids. What counts
were allied, who was known hostage and where, what units were deployed on each
side and which were ripped apart and scattered to both; where fighting had
taken place, what damages, which commanders had renewed oath ... knowledge
without power. No more, she judged, than her intellectualized version of
Bothari's endless running; and even less useful for distracting her mind from
unbroken concentration on all the horrors and disasters, past or impending,
that she could presently do nothing about. She preferred her
military history with more temporal displacement. A century or two in the past,
say. She imagined some cool future scholar looking through a time-telescope at
her, and gave him a mental rude gesture. Anyway, she now realized, the military
histories she'd read had left out the most important part; they never told what
happened to people's babies. No—they were all babies,
out there. Every mother's son in a black uniform. One of Aral's reminiscences
floated up in her memory, velvet voice rumbling, "It was about that time
that soldiers started looking like children to me. ..." She pushed away
from the vidconsole, and went to search the bathroom for medication for pain. On the third day she
passed Lieutenant Koudelka in a corridor, stumping along at a near run, his
face flushed with excitement. "What's up,
Kou?" "Illyan's here. And
he's brought Kanzian with him!" Cordelia followed him to
a briefing room. Droushnakovi had to lengthen even her long stride to keep up.
Aral, flanked by two staffers, sat with his hands clasped on the table before
him, listening with utmost attention. Commander Illyan sat on the edge of the
table, swinging one leg in rhythm to his voice. A bandage on his left arm was
stained with yellow seepage. He was pale and dirty, but his eyes shone in
triumph, gilded with a touch of fever. He wore civilian gear that looked as if
it had been stolen out of someone's laundry, and then rolled downhill in. An older man was sitting
beside Illyan—a staffer handed the man a drink, which Cordelia recognized as a
potassium-salts-laced fruit-flavored pick-me-up for the metabolically depleted.
He tasted it dutifully, and made a face, looking as if he would have preferred
some more old-fashioned revivifier such as brandy. Overweight and undertall,
greying where he was not balding, Admiral Kanzian was not a very
martial-looking man. He looked grandfatherly—though only if one's grandfather
was a research professor. His face was held together with an intensity of
intellect that seemed to give the term "military science" real clout.
Cordelia had met him in uniform; his air of quiet authority seemed unaffected
by civilian shirt and slacks that might have come from the same laundry basket
as Illyan's. Illyan was saying,
"—and then we spent the next night in the cellar. Vordarian's squad came
back the next morning, but—Milady!" His grin of greeting was
blunted by a flash of guilt, as he glanced to and away from her waist. She'd
rather he kept piffling on, excited, about his adventures, but her arrival
seemed to deflate him, ghost of his most notable failure at his banquet of
victory. "Wonderful to see
you both, Simon, Admiral." They exchanged nods; Kanzian made to rise, but
was unanimously waved back to his seat, which made his lip twist in bemusement.
Aral signed her to sit next to him. Illyan continued in a
more clipped fashion. His past two weeks of hide-and-seek with Vordarian's
forces seemed to parallel Cordelia's, though in the far more complex setting of
the seized capital. But Cordelia recognized the familiar terrors under his
plain words. He brought his tale swiftly up to the present moment. Kanzian
nodded an occasional confirmation. "Well done, Simon,"
said Vorkosigan when Illyan concluded. He nodded toward Kanzian.
"Extremely well done." Illyan smiled.
"Thought you'd like it, sir." Vorkosigan turned to
Kanzian. "As soon as you feel able, I would like to brief you in the tac
room, sir." "Thank you, my
lord. I've been out of communications—except for Vordarian's newscasts—since I
escaped Headquarters. Though there was much to be deduced from what we did see.
By the way, I commend your strategy of restraint. Good so far. But you're close
to its limits." "So I've sensed,
sir." "What's Jolly Nolly
doing at Jumppoint Station One?" "Not answering his
tightbeam. Last week his understaffers were offering an amazing array of
excuses, but their ingenuity finally dried up." "Ha. I can just
picture it. His colitis must be in wonderful form. I'll bet not all of those
'indisposeds' were lies. I think I should begin with a private chat with
Admiral Knollys, just the two of us." "I would appreciate
that, sir." "We will discuss
the inevitabilities of time. And the defects of a potential commander who bases
an entire strategy on an assassination he then does not succeed in carrying
out." Kanzian frowned judgmentally. "Not well constructed, to let
your whole war turn on one event. Vordarian always did have a tendency to pop
off." Cordelia, aside, caught
Illyan's eye. "Simon. Did you pick up any information at all, while you
were trapped in Vorbarr Sultana, about the Imperial Military Hospital? Vaagen
and Henri's lab?" My baby? Regretfully, he shook
his head. "No, Milady." Illyan glanced in turn at Vorkosigan.
"My lord, is it true about Captain Negri's death? We'd only had it from
rumor, and Vordarian's propaganda broadcasts. Thought it might have been a
he." "Negri is dead.
Unfortunately." Vorkosigan grimaced. Illyan sat upright in alarm.
"And the Emperor, too?" "Gregor is safe and
well." Illyan slumped again.
"Thank God. Where?" "Elsewhere,"
said Vorkosigan dryly. "Oh. Quite, sir.
Beg pardon." "As soon as you've
hit sickbay and the showers, Simon, I have some housecleaning chores for
you," Vorkosigan continued. "I want to know just exactly how ImpSec
was blindsided by Vordarian's coup. I have no wish to malign the dead—and God
knows the man paid for his mistakes—but Negri's old personal system for running
ImpSec, with all his little secret compartments shared only with Ezar, has to
be taken completely apart. Every component, every man re-examined, before it's
all put back together. That will be your first job as the new Chief of Imperial
Security. Captain Illyan." Illyan's face went from
pale-tired to green-white. "Sir—you want me to step into Negri's
shoes?" "Shake them out,
first," Vorkosigan advised dryly. "And with dispatch, if you please.
I cannot produce the Emperor until ImpSec is again fit to guard him." "Yes, sir."
Illyan's voice was thin with his staggerment. Kanzian levered out of
his seat, shrugging off the help of an anxious staff officer. Aral squeezed
Cordelia's hand under the table, and rose to accompany the nucleus of his new
General Staff. As they all exited, Kou grinned over his shoulder at Cordelia
and whispered, "Things are looking up, eh?" She smiled bleakly back
at him. Vorkosigan's words echoed in her head. When the shift in men and loyalties
reaches the critical point, and Vordarian starts to panic ... The trickle of refugees
appearing at Tanery Base became a steady stream, as the week wore on. The most
spectacular after Kanzian was the breakout of Prime Minister Vortala from
Vordarian's house arrest. He arrived with several wounded liveried men and a
hair-raising tale of bribery, trickery, chase, and exchange-of-fire. Two lesser
Imperial Ministers also turned up, one on foot. Morale rose with each notable
addition; the base's atmosphere grew electric with anticipation of action. The
question exchanged by staffers in corridors became not, "Who's come
in?" but "Who's come in this morning?" Cordelia tried to appear
cheered by it all, hugging her dread to her private mind. Vorkosigan grew both
pleased and tenser. As instructed, Cordelia
rested a lot in Vorkosigan's quarters. All too soon she felt re-energized
enough to start beating on the walls. She then tried varying the prescription
with a few experimental push-ups and knee-bends (but not sit-ups). She was just
contemplating the merits and drawbacks of going to join Bothari in the gym,
when the comconsole chimed. Koudelka's apprehensive
face appeared over the vid plate. "Milady, m'lord requests you join him
now in Briefing Room Seven. Something's come in he wants you to see." Cordelia's stomach
twisted. "All right. On my way." An array of men were
waiting in Briefing Room Seven, clustered around a vidconsole in low-voiced
debate. Staffers, Kanzian, Minister Vortala himself. Vorkosigan looked up and
gave her a brief, unfelt smile. "Cordelia. I'd like
your opinion on something that's come in." Flattering, but,
"What sort of something?" "Vordarian's latest
special report has a new twist. Kou, replay the vid, please." Vordarian's propaganda
broadcasts from the capital were mostly subjects for derision, among
Vorkosigan's men. Their faces looked rather more serious, this time. Vordarian appeared in
what was recognizably one of the state rooms of the Imperial Residence, the
formal and serene Blue Room. Ezar Vorbarra used to make his rare public
pronouncements from that background. Vorkosigan frowned. Vordarian, in full dress
greens, was seated on an ivory silk sofa, Princess Kareen at his side. Her dark
hair was pulled back severely from her oval face with jeweled combs. She wore a
striking black gown, somber and formal. Vordarian spoke only a
few earnest words, invoking the viewers' attention. Then the vid cut away to
the great chamber of the Council of Counts at Vorhartung Castle. The vid zoomed
in on the Lord Guardian of the Speaker's circle, dressed in his full regalia.
The vid did not show what, besides its own pickup, was aimed at the Lord
Guardian's head, but something in his repeated looks, just to one side instead
of directly at the focus, made Cordelia place a lethally armed man, or maybe a
squad, in that unseen position. The Lord Guardian raised
a plastic flimsy, and began, "I quote—due to the—" "Ah, slick!"
murmured Vortala, and Koudelka paused the vid to say, "I beg your pardon,
Minister?" "The I-quote—he's
just legally distanced himself from the words about to come off that flimsy and
out his mouth. Didn't catch that, the first time. Good, Georgos, good,"
Vortala addressed the paralyzed figure. "Go on, Lieutenant, I didn't mean
to interrupt." The holovid image
continued, "—vile murder of the child—Emperor Gregor Vorbarra, and
betrayal of his sacred oaths by the would-be usurper Vorkosigan, the Council of
Counts declares the false Regent faithless, outcast, stripped of powers and
outlawed. This day the Council of Counts confirms Commodore Count Vidal
Vordarian as Prime Minister and acting Regent for Dowager-Princess Kareen
Vorbarra, forming an emergency caretaker government until such time as a new
heir may be found and confirmed by the Council of Counts and Council of
Ministers in full council assembled." He continued with
further legalities, as the vid panned the chamber. "Freeze it,
Koudelka," Vortala demanded. His lips moved as he counted. "Ha! Not
even one-third present. He doesn't have near a quorum. Who does he think he's
fooling?" "Desperate man,
desperate measures," Kanzian murmured as the holo continued at Koudelka's
touch. "Watch
Kareen," Vorkosigan said to Cordelia. The holo cut back to
Vordarian and the Princess. Vordarian went on in such mealy terms, it took
Cordelia a moment to unravel the fact that in the phrase "personal
protector," Vordarian was announcing an engagement of marriage. His hand
closed earnestly over Kareen's, though his eye contact was reserved for the
holovid. Kareen lifted her hand to receive a ring without changing her calm
expression in the slightest. The vid closed with solemn music. The End. They
were thankfully spared Betan-style post-mortem commentary; apparently, nobody
ever asked the Barrayaran-in-the-street much of anything, at least until major
rioting raised the volume to a level no one dared ignore. "How would you
analyze Kareen's reaction?" Aral asked Cordelia. Cordelia's brows rose.
"What reaction? How, analyze? She never said a word!" "Just so. Does she
looked drugged to you? Or under compulsion? Or was that real assent? Is she
duped by Vordarian's propaganda, or what?" Frustrated, Vorkosigan eyed the
space where the woman's image had lately been. "She's always been
reserved, but that was the most unreadable performance I've ever seen." "Run it again,
Kou," said Cordelia. She had him stop at the best views of Kareen. She
studied the frozen face, scarcely less animate than when the holo was running. "She doesn't look
woozy or sedated. And her eyes don't look aside the way the Speakers did." "Nobody threatening
her with a weapon?" Vortala guessed. "Or perhaps she
simply doesn't care," Cordelia suggested grimly. "Assent, or
compulsion?" Vorkosigan repeated. "Maybe neither.
She's been dealing with this sort of nonsense all her adult life ... what do
you expect of her? She survived three years of marriage with Serg, before Ezar
sheltered her. She must be a bona fide expert in guessing what not to say and
when not to say it." "But to publicly
submit to Vordarian—if she thinks he's responsible for Gregor's death ..." "Yes, what does she
believe? If she truly thinks her son is dead—even if she doesn't believe you
killed him—then all she has left to look out for is her own survival. Why risk
that survival for some dramatic futility, if it won't help Gregor? What does
she owe you, owe us, after all? We've all failed her, as far as she
knows." Vorkosigan winced. Cordelia went on,
"Vordarian's been controlling her access to information, surely. She may
even be convinced he's winning. She's a survivor; she's survived Serg and Ezar,
so far. Maybe she means to survive you and Vordarian both. Maybe the only
revenge she thinks she'll ever get is to live long enough to spit on all your
graves." One of the staff
officers muttered, "But she's Vor. She should have defied him." Cordelia favored him
with a glittery grin. "Oh, but you never know what any Barrayaran woman
thinks by what she says in front of Barrayaran men. Honesty is not exactly
rewarded, you know." The staffer gave her an
unsettled look. Drou smiled sourly. Vorkosigan blew out his breath. Koudelka
blinked. "So, Vordarian gets
tired of waiting and appoints himself Regent," Vortala murmured. "And Prime
Minister," Vorkosigan pointed out in return. "Indeed, he
swells." "Why not go
straight for the Imperium?" asked the staff officer. "Testing the
waters," said Kanzian. "It's coming, later
in the script," opined Vortala. "Or maybe sooner,
if we force his hand a bit," suggested Kanzian. "The last and fatal
step. We must consider how to rattle him just a little more." "Not much
longer," Vorkosigan said firmly. The ghostly mask of
Kareen's face hung before Cordelia's mind's eye all that day, and returned at
her waking the next morning. What did Kareen think? What did Kareen feel, for
that matter? Perhaps she was as numb as the evidence suggested. Perhaps she was
biding her time. Perhaps she was all for Vordarian. If I knew what she
believed, I'd know what she was doing. If I knew what she was doing, I'd know
what she believed. Too many unknowns in
this equation. If I were Kareen ... Was this a valid analogy? Could Cordelia
reason from herself to another? Could anyone? They had likenesses, Kareen and
herself, both women, near in age, mothers of endangered sons... . Cordelia took
Gregor's shoe from her meager pile of mountain souvenirs, and turned it in her
hand. Mama grabbed me back, but my shoe came off in her hand. I should have
fastened it tighter... . Maybe she should trust her own judgment. Maybe she
knew exactly what Kareen was thinking. When the comconsole
chimed, close to the time of yesterday's call, Cordelia shot to answer it. A
new broadcast from the capital, new evidence, something to break that circle of
unreason? But the face that materialized over the vidplate was not Koudelka,
but a stranger with Intelligence insignia on his collar. "Lady
Vorkosigan?" he began deferentially. "Yes?" "I'm Major Sircoj,
duty—officer at the main portal. It's my job to screen everyone new reporting
in, men who've left traitor-units and so on, and to collect any new
intelligence they've brought with them. We had a man turn up half an hour ago
who says he escaped the capital, who refuses to voluntarily debrief. We've
confirmed his claim that he's had anti-nterrogation conditioning—if we try to
fast-penta him, it'll kill him. He keeps asking—actually, insisting—to speak
with you. He could be an assassin." Cordelia's heart
pounded. She leaned into the holovid as if she might climb through it.
"Did he bring anything with him?" she demanded breathlessly. "Like
a canister, about half a meter high—lots of blinking lights, and big red
letters on top that say This End Up? Looks mysterious as hell, guaranteed to
send any security guard into fits—his name, Major!" "He brought nothing
but the clothes he's standing in. He's not in good shape. His name is Vaagen,
Captain Vaagen." "I'll be right
there." "No, Milady! The
man is practically raving. Could be dangerous, I can't let you—" She left him talking to
an empty room. Droushnakovi had to break into a run to catch up with her.
Cordelia made it to the main portal Security offices in less than seven
minutes, and paused in the corridor to catch her breath. To catch her soul,
that wanted to fly out her mouth. Calm. Calm. Raving apparently cut no ice with
Sircoj. She lifted her chin and
entered the office. "Tell Major Sircoj that Lady Vorkosigan is here to see
him," she told the clerk, who raised impressed brows and obediently bent
to his comconsole. Sircoj appeared in a few
endless minutes—through that door, Cordelia mentally marked his route. "I
must see Captain Vaagen." "Milady, he could
be dangerous," Sircoj began exactly where she'd cut him off before.
"He could be programmed in some unexpected way." Cordelia considered
unexpectedly grabbing Sircoj by the throat and attempting to squeeze reason
into him. Impractical. She took a deep breath. "What will you let me do?
Can I at least see him on vid?" Sircoj looked
thoughtful. "That might be all right. A cross-check on our identification,
and we can record. Very well." He took her into another
room, and keyed up a monitor viewer. Her breath blew out with a small moan. Vaagen was alone in a
holding room, pacing from wall to wall. He wore green uniform trousers and a
brown-stained white shirt. He was terribly changed from the trim and energetic
scientist she'd last seen in his lab at Imp Mil. Both his eyes were ringed with
red-purple blotches, one lid swollen nearly shut; the slit glowed a frightening
blood-scarlet. He moved bent-over. Bathless, sleepless, swollen lips ... "You get a medtech
for that man!" Cordelia realized she'd yelled when Sircoj jumped. "He's been triaged.
His condition is not life—threatening. We can start treating him just as soon
as he's security-cleared," said Sircoj doggedly. "Then you put him
on-line with me," Cordelia said through set teeth. "Drou, go back to
the office, call Aral. Tell him what's going on." Sircoj looked worried at
this, but stuck valiantly to his procedures. More endless seconds, while
someone went back to the prison-area and took Vaagen to a comconsole. His face came up over
the plate at last; Cordelia could see her own face reflected in the passionate
intensity in his. Connected at last. "Vaagen! What
happened?" "Milady!" His
hands clenched, trembling, as he leaned on them toward the vid pickup.
"The idiots, the morons, the ignorant, stupid—" he sputtered into
helpless obscenities, then caught his breath and began again, quickly,
concisely, as if her image might be snatched away again at any moment. "We thought we
might be all right at first, after the first two days' fighting trailed off. We
hid the replicator at ImpMil, but nobody came. We lay low, and took turns
sleeping in the lab. Then Henri managed to smuggle his wife out of town, and we
both stayed. We tried to continue the treatments in secret. Thought we might
wait it out, wait till rescue. Things had to break, one way or another... . "We'd almost
stopped expecting them, but they came. Last—yesterday." He rubbed a hand
through his hair as if seeking some connection between real-time and
nightmare-time, where clocks ran crazy. "Vordarian's squad. Came looking
for the replicator. We locked the lab, they broke in. Demanded it. We refused,
refused to talk, they couldn't fast-penta either of us. So they beat us up.
Beat him to death, like street scum, like he was nobody, all that intelligence,
all that education, all that promise wasted, dropped by some mumbling moron
swinging a gun butt..." Tears were running down his face. Cordelia stood white and
stricken; bad, bad attack of defective deja vu. She'd played the lab scene in
her head already a thousand times, but she'd never seen Dr. Henri dead on the
floor, nor Vaagen beaten senseless. "Then they ripped
into the lab. Everything, all the treatment records. All Henri's work on burns,
gone. They didn't have to do that. All gone for nothing!" His voice
cracked, hoarse with fury. "Did they ... find
the replicator? Dump it out?" She could see it; she had seen it over and
over, spilling... . "They found it,
finally. But then they took it. And then let me go." He shook his head
from side to side. "Took it," she
repeated stupidly. Why? What sense, to take the technology and not the techs?
"And let you go. To run to us, I suppose. To give us the word." "You have it,
Milady." "Where, do you
suppose? Where did they take it?" Vorkosigan's voice spoke
beside her. "The Imperial Residence, most likely. All the best hostages
are being kept there. I'll put Intelligence right on it." He stood, feet
planted, grey-faced. "It seems we're not the only side turning up the
pressure." CHAPTER
FIFTEEN Within two minutes of
Vorkosigan's arrival at main portal Security, Captain Vaagen was flat on a
float pallet and on his way to the infirmary, with the top trauma doctor on the
base being paged for rendezvous. Cordelia reflected bitterly on the nature of
chain of command; all truth and reason and urgent need were not enough,
apparently, to lend causal power to one outside that chain. Further interrogation of
the scientist had to wait on his medical treatment. Vorkosigan used the time to
put Illyan and his department on the new problem. Cordelia used the time to
pace in circles in the infirmary's waiting area. Droushnakovi watched her in
silent worry, not so foolish as to offer up reassurances they both knew to be
empty. At last the trauma man
emerged from surgery to announce Vaagen conscious and oriented enough for a
brief—he emphasized the brief—questioning. Aral came, trailing Koudelka and
Illyan, and they all trooped in to find Vaagen in an infirmary bed, with his
eye patched and an IV running fluids and meds. Vaagen's hoarse and
weary voice added a few horrific details, but nothing to change the
word-picture he'd first given Cordelia. Illyan listened with steady
attention. "Our people at the Residence confirm," he reported when
Vaagen ran down, depressed whisper trailing to silence. "The replicator
was apparently brought in yesterday, and has been placed in the most heavily
guarded wing, near Princess Kareen's quarters. Our loyalists don't know what it
is, they think it's some kind of a device, maybe a bomb to take out the
Residence and everyone in it in the final battle." Vaagen snorted, coughed,
and winced. "Do they have
anyone tending it?" Cordelia asked the question no one else had, so far.
"A doctor, a medtech, anyone?" Illyan frowned. "I
don't know, Milady. I can try to find out, but every extra communication
endangers our people up there." "Mm." "The treatment's
interrupted anyway," Vaagen muttered. His hand fiddled with the edge of
his sheet. "Bitched to hell." "I realize you've
lost your notes, but could you ... reconstruct your work?" Cordelia asked
diffidently. "If you got the replicator back, that is. Take up where you
left off." "It wouldn't be where
we left off, by the time we got it back. And it wasn't all in my head. Some of
it was in Henri's." Cordelia took a deep
breath. "As I recall, these Escobaran portable replicators run on a
two-week service cycle. When did you last recharge the power, and change the
filters and add nutrients?" "Power cell's good
for months," Vaagen corrected. "Filters are more of a problem. But
the nutrient solution will be the first limiting factor it'll hit. At its
hyped-up metabolic rate, the fetus would starve a couple of days before the
system choked on its waste. Breakdown products might overload the filters
pretty soon after lean-tissue metabolism began, though." She avoided Aral's gaze
and looked straight at Vaagen, who looked straight back with his one good eye,
more than physical pain in his face. "And when did you and Henri last
service the replicator?" "The
fourteenth." "Less than six days
left," Cordelia whispered, appalled. "About ... about
that. What day is this?" Vaagen looked around in an uncharacteristic uncertainty
that hurt Cordelia's heart to watch. "The time limit
applies only if it's not being properly taken care of," Aral put in.
"The Residence physician, Kareen and Gregor's man—wouldn't he realize
something was needed?" "Sir," Illyan
said, "the Princess's physician was reported killed in the first day's
fighting at the Residence. Two cross-confirmations—I have to consider it
certain." "They could let
Miles die out of sheer ignorance up there," Cordelia realized in dismay.
"As well as on purpose." Even one of their own secret loyalists,
under the heroic impression he was defusing a bomb, could be a menace to her
child. Vaagen twisted in his
sheets. Aral caught Cordelias eye, and jerked his head toward the door.
"Thank you, Captain Vaagen. You have done us extraordinary service. Beyond
duty." "Screw duty,"
Vaagen muttered. "Bitched to hell ... damned ignorant goons ..." They withdrew, to leave
Vaagen to his unrestful recovery. Vorkosigan dispatched Illyan to his
multiplied duties. Cordelia faced Aral.
"Now what?" His lips were a flat,
hard line, his eyes half-absent with calculation, the same calculations she was
running, Cordelia guessed, complicated by a thousand added factors she could
only imagine. He said slowly, "Nothing's changed, really. From
before." "It is changed.
Whatever the difference there is between being in hiding, and being a prisoner.
But why did Vordarian wait till now for this capture? If he was ignorant of
Miles's existence before this, who told him of it? Kareen, maybe, when she
decided to cooperate?" Droushnakovi looked sick
at this suggestion. Aral said, "Maybe
Vordarian's playing with us. Maybe he was always keeping the replicator in
reserve, till he most needed a new lever." "Our son. In
reserve," Cordelia corrected. She stared into those half-there grey eyes,
willing See me, Aral! "We have to talk about this." She towed him
down the corridor to the nearest private room, a doctors' conference chamber,
and turned up the lights. Obediently, he seated himself at the table, Kou at
his elbow, and waited for her. She sat down opposite him. We've always sat on
the same side, before... . Drou stood behind her. Aral watched her warily.
"Yes, Cordelia?" "What's going on in
your head?" she demanded. "Where are we, in this?" "I ... regret. In
hindsight. Regret not sending a raid earlier. The Residence is a far more
difficult fortress to penetrate right now than the military hospital, dangerous
as a raid on ImpMil would have been. And yet... I could not change that choice.
When men on my own staff were asked to wait and sweat, I could not risk men and
expend resources for my private benefit. Miles's ... position, gave me the
power to demand their loyalty in the face of Vordarian's pressure. They knew I
asked no risk of them and theirs I was unwilling to share myself." "But now the
situation's changed," Cordelia pointed out. "Now you aren't sharing
the same risks. Their relatives have all the time there is. Miles has only six
days, minus the time we spend arguing." She could feel that clock ticking,
in her head. He said nothing. "Aral ... in all
our time here, what favor have I ever asked of you, of your official
powers?" A sad half-smile quirked
across his lips, and vanished. His eyes were wholly on her, now.
"Nothing," he whispered. They both sat tensely, leaning toward the
other, his elbows planted and hands clasped near his chin, her hands out flat
before her, controlled. "I'm asking
now." "Now," he said
after a long hesitation, "is an extremely delicate time, in the overall
strategic situation. We are right now engaged in secret negotiations with two
of Vordarian's top commanders to sell him out. The space forces are about to
commit. We are on the verge of being able to shut Vordarian down without a
major set-battle." Cordelia's thought was
diverted just long enough to wonder how many of Vorkosigan's commanders were
secretly negotiating right now to sell them out. Time would tell. Time. Vorkosigan continued,
"If—if we bring this negotiation off as I wish, we will be in a position
to rescue most of the hostages in one major surprise raid, from a direction
Vordarian does not expect." "I'm not asking for
a big raid." "No. But I'm
telling you that a small raid, particularly if things went wrong, might
seriously interfere with the success of the larger, later one." "Might." "Might." He
tilted his head in concession to the uncertainty. "Time?" "About ten
days." "Not good
enough." "No. I will try to
speed things up. But you understand—if I botch this chance, this timing,
several thousand men could pay for my mistakes with their lives." She understood clearly.
"All right. Suppose we leave the armies of Barrayar out of this for
the moment. Let me go. With maybe a
liveried man or two, and pinpoint—downright hypodermic—secrecy. A totally
private effort." His hands slapped to the
table, and he sputtered, "No! God, Cordelia!" "Do you doubt my
competence?" she asked dangerously. I sure do. Now was not the moment to
admit this, however. "Is that 'Dear Captain' just a pet name for a pet, or
did you mean it?" "I have seen you do
extraordinary things—" You've also seen me fall
flat on my face, so? "—but you are not
expendable. God. That really would make me terminally crazy. To wait, not
knowing ..." "You ask that of
me. To wait, unknowing. You ask it every day." "You are stronger
than I. You are strong beyond reason." "Flattering. Not
convincing." His thought circled
hers; she could see it in his knife-keen eyes. "No. No haring off on your
own. I forbid it, Cordelia. Flat, absolutely. Put it right out of your mind. I
cannot risk you both." "You do. In
this." His jaw clamped; his
head lowered. Message received and understood. Koudelka, sitting worriedly
beside him, glanced back and forth between the two of them in consternation.
Cordelia could sense the pressure of Drou's hand, white-tight on the back of
her chair. Vorkosigan looked like
something being ground between two great stones; she had no desire to see him
smeared to powder. In a moment, he would demand her word to confine herself to
Base, to dare no risk. She opened her hand,
curving up on the tabletop. "I would choose differently. But no one
appointed me Regent of Barrayar." The tension ran out of
him with a sigh. "Insufficient imagination. A common failing, among
Barrayarans, my love." Returning to Aral's
quarters, Cordelia found Count Piotr in the corridor, just turning away from
their door. He was quite changed from the exhausted wild man who'd left her on
a mountain trail. Now he was dressed in the sort of quietly upper-class clothes
favored by retired Vor lords and senior Imperial ministers; neat trousers,
polished half-boots, an elaborate tunic. Bothari loomed at his shoulder, once
again costumed in his formal brown-and-silver livery. Bothari carried a thick
coat folded over his arm, by which Cordelia deduced Piotr had just blown in
from his diplomatic mission to some fellow District count to the wintery north
of Vordarian's holdings. Vorkosigan's people certainly seemed to be able to move
at will now, outside the heartlands held by Vordarian. "Ah.
Cordelia." Piotr gave her a formal, cautious nod; not reopening
hostilities here. That was fine with Cordelia. She was not sure she had any
will to fight left in her gnawed-out heart. "Good day, sir. Was
your trip a success?" "Indeed it was.
Where is Aral?" "Gone to Sector
Intelligence, I believe, to consult with Illyan about the most recent reports
from Vorbarr Sultana." "Ah? What's
happening?" "Captain Vaagen
turned up at our door. He'd been beaten half-senseless, but he still somehow
made it from the capital—it seems Vordarian finally woke up to the fact that he
had another hostage. His squad looted Miles's replicator from ImpMil, and took
it back to the Imperial Residence. I expect we'll hear more from him soon about
it, but he's doubtless waited to give us the full pleasure of Captain Vaagen's
tale, first." Piotr threw back his
head in a sharp, bitter laugh. "Now there's an empty threat." Cordelia unclenched her
jaw long enough to say, "What do you mean, sir?" She knew perfectly
well what he meant, but she wanted to see him run to his limit. All the way,
damn you; spit it all out. His lips twitched, half
frown, half smile. "I mean Vordarian inadvertently offers House Vorkosigan
a service. I'm sure he doesn't realize it." You wouldn't say that if
Aral were standing here, old man. Did you set this up? God, she couldn't say
that to him—"Did you set this up?" Cordelia demanded tightly. Piotr's head jerked
back. "I don't deal with traitors!" "He's of your Old
Vor party. Your true allegiance. You always said Aral was too damned
progressive." "You dare accuse
me—!" His outrage edged into plain rage. Her rage was shadowing
her vision with red. "I know you are an attempted murderer, why not an
attempted traitor, too? I can only hope your incompetence holds good." His voice was breathy
with fury. "Too far!" "No, old man. Not
nearly far enough." Drou looked absolutely
terrorized. Bothari's face was a stony blank. Piotr's hand twitched, as if he
wanted to strike her. Bothari watched that hand, his eyes glittering oddly,
shifting. "While dumping that
mutant out of its can is the best favor Vidal Vordarian could do me, I am
hardly likely to let him know it," Piotr bit out. "It will be far
more amusing to watch him try to play a joker as if it were an ace, and then
wonder what went wrong. Aral knows—I imagine he's relieved as hell, to have
Vordarian do his job for him. Or have you bewitched him into planning something
spectacularly stupid?" "Aral's doing
nothing." "Oh, good boy. I
was wondering if you'd stolen his spine permanently. He is Barrayaran after
all." "So it seems,"
she said woodenly. She was shaking. Piotr was not in much better case. "This is a
side-issue," he said, as much to himself as her, trying to regain his
self-control. "I have major issues to pursue with the Lord Regent.
Farewell, Milady." He tilted his head in ironic effort, and turned away. "Have a nice
day," she snarled to his back, and flung herself through the door into
Aral's quarters. She paced for twenty
minutes, back and forth, before she trusted herself enough to speak even to
Drou, who had squeezed into a corner seat as if trying to make herself small. "You don't really
think Count Piotr is a traitor, do you, Milady?" Droushnakovi asked, when
Cordelia's steps finally slowed. Cordelia shook her head.
"No ... no. I just wanted to hurt him back. This place is getting to me.
Has gotten to me." Wearily, she sank into a seat and leaned her head back
against the padding. After a silence she added, "Aral's right. I have no
right to risk. No, that's not quite correct. I have no right to failure. And I
don't trust myself anymore. I don't know what's happened to my edge. Lost it in
a strange land." I can't remember. Can't remember how I did it. She and
Bothari were twins, right enough, two personalities separately but equally
crippled by an overdose of Barrayar. "Milady ..."
Droushnakovi plucked at her skirts, looking down into her lap. "I was in
Imperial Residence Security for three years." "Yes ..." Her
heart lurched, gulped. As an exercise in self—discipline, Cordelia closed her
eyes and did not open them again. "Tell me about that, Drou." "Negri trained me
himself. Because I was Kareen's body servant, he always said I would be the
last barrier between Kareen and Gregor and—and anything that was bad enough to
get that far. He showed me everything about the Residence. He used to drill me
about it. He showed me things I don't think he showed anybody else. We had five
emergency escape routes worked out, in our disaster drills. Two of them were
common Security procedure. One of them he showed only to a few top staffers
like Illyan. The other two—I don't know that anybody knew about them but Negri
and Emperor Ezar. And I'm thinking ..." she moistened her lips, "a
secret route out of something ought to be an equally secret route in. Don't you
think?" "Your reasoning
interests me extremely, Drou. As Aral might say. Go on." Cordelia still
did not open her eyes. "That's about it.
If I could somehow get to the Residence, I bet I could get in. If Vordarian's
just taken over all the standard Security arrangements and beefed them
up." "And get back out?" "Why not?"
Cordelia found she had to remember to breathe. "Who do you work for,
Drou?" "Captain—" she
started to answer, but slowed selfconsciously. "Negri. But he's dead.
Commander—Captain Illyan, now, I suppose." "Let me rephrase
that." Cordelia opened her eyes at last. "Who did you put your life
on the line for?" "Kareen. And
Gregor, of course. They were kind of the same thing." "Still are. This
mother bets." She caught Drou's blue gaze. "And Kareen gave you to
me." "To be my mentor.
We thought you were a soldier." "Never. But that
doesn't mean I never fought." Cordelia paused. "What do you want to
trade for, Drou? Your life in my hand—I shall not say oath-sworn, that's for
those other idiots—for what?" "Kareen," Droushnakovi
answered steadily. "I've watched them, here, gradually reclassifying her
as expendable. Every day for three years, I put my life on the line because I
believed that her life was important. You watch someone that closely for that
long, you don't have too many illusions about her. Now they seem to think I
should just switch off my loyalty, like some guard-machine. There's something
wrong with that. I want to—to at least try for Kareen. In exchange for
that—whatever you will, Milady." "Ah." Cordelia
rubbed her lips. "That seems ... equitable. One expendable life for
another. Kareen for Miles." She sank down in the chair in deep meditation. First you see it. Then
you do it. "It's not enough." Cordelia shook her head at last.
"We need ... someone who knows the city. Someone with muscle, for backup.
A weapons-man, a sleepless eye. I need a friend." The comers of her lips
turned up in a very small smile. "Closer than a brother." She rose
and walked to the comconsole. "You asked to see
me, Milady?" said Sergeant Bothari. "Yes. Please come
in." Senior officers'
quarters did not intimidate Bothari, but his brow furrowed nonetheless as
Cordelia gestured him to a seat. She took Aral's usual spot across the low
table from him. Drou sat again in the corner, watching in reserved silence. Cordelia regarded
Bothari, who regarded her in return. He looked all right physically, though his
face was grooved with tension. She sensed, as with a third eye, frustrated
energies coursing through his body; arcs of rage, nets of control, a tangled
electric knot of dangerous sexuality under it all. Reverberating energies,
building up and up without release, in desperate need of ordered action lest
they break out wildly on their own. She blinked, and refocused on his less
terrifying surface; a tired-looking ugly man in an elegant brown uniform. To her surprise, Bothari
began. "Milady. Have you heard anything new about Elena?" Wondering why I called
you here? To her shame, she had almost forgotten Elena. "Nothing new, I'm
afraid. She is reported being kept along with Mistress Hysopi in that downtown
hotel that Vordarian's Security commandeered when they ran out of cells, with a
lot of other second- and third-tier hostages. She hasn't been moved to the
Residence or anything." Elena was not, unlike Kareen, in the direct line
of Cordelia's secret mission. If he asked, how much dare she promise? "I was sorry to
hear about your son, Milady." "My mutant, as
Piotr would say." She watched him; she could read his shoulders and spine
and gut better than that blank beaky face. "About Count
Piotr," he said, and stopped. His hands hooked each other, between his
knees, and flexed. "I had thought to speak to the admiral. I hadn't
thought to speak to you. I should have thought of you." "Always." Now
what? "Man came up to me
yesterday. In the gym. Not in uniform, no rank or nametag. He offered me Elena.
Elena's life, if I would assassinate Count Piotr." "How
tempting," Cordelia choked, before she could stop herself. "What, uh,
guarantees did he offer?" "That question came
to me, pretty shortly. There I would be, in deep shit, maybe executed, and who
would care for a, a dead man's bastard then? I figured it for a cheat, just
another cheat. I went back to look for him, been on the lookout, but I never
spotted him since." He sighed. "It almost seems like a hallucination,
now." The expression on Drou's
face was a study in the deepest unreassurance, but fortunately Bothari was
turned away from her and did not notice. Cordelia shot her a small quelling
frown. "Have you been
having hallucinations?" Cordelia asked. "I don't think so.
Just bad dreams. I try not to sleep." "I ... have a
dilemma of my own," Cordelia said. "As you heard me tell Piotr." "Yes, Milady." "Had you heard
about the time limit?" "Time limit?" "If it's not
serviced, the replicator will start to fail to support Miles in less than six
days. Aral argues that Miles is in no more danger than any of his staffers'
families. I disagree." "Behind his back,
I've heard some say otherwise." "Ah?" "They say it's a
cheat. The admiral's son is some sort of mutant, non-viable, while they risk
whole children." "I don't think he
realizes ... anyone says that." "Who would repeat
it to his face?" "Very few. Maybe
not even Illyan." Though Piotr probably wouldn't fail to pass it on, if he
picked it up. "Dammit! No one, on either side, would hesitate to dump that
replicator." She brooded, and began again. "Sergeant. Who do you work
for?" "I am oath-sworn
Armsman to Count Piotr," Bothari recited the obvious. He was watching her
closely now, a weird smile tugging at one corner of his mouth. "Let me rephrase
that. I know the official penalties for an armsman going AWOL are fearsome. But
suppose—" "Milady." He
held up a hand; she paused in mid-breath. "Do you remember, back on the
front lawn at Vorkosigan Surleau when we were loading Negri's body into the
lightflyer, when my Lord Regent told me to obey your voice as his own?" Cordelias brows went up.
"Yes ... ?" "He never
countermanded that order." "Sergeant,"
she breathed at last, "I'd never have guessed you for a
barracks-lawyer." His smile grew a
millimeter tighter. "Your voice is as the voice of the Emperor himself.
Technically." "Is it, now,"
she whispered in delight. Her nails dug into her palms. He leaned forward, his
hands now held rock-still between his knees. "So, Milady. What were you
saying?" The motor pool staging
bay was an echoing low vault, its shadows slashed by the lights from a
glass-walled office. Cordelia stood waiting in the darkened lift tube portal,
Drou at her shoulder, and watched through the distant rectangle of glass as
Bothari negotiated with the transport officer. General Vorkosigan's Armsman was
signing out a vehicle for his oath-lord. The passes and IDs Bothari had been
issued apparently worked just fine. The motor pool man fed Bothari's cards to
his computer, took Bothari's palm print on his sensor-pad, and dispatched
orders with snap and hustle. Would this simple plan
work? Cordelia wondered desperately. And if it didn't, what alternative had
they? Their planned route sketched itself in her mind, red light-lines snaking
over a map. Not north toward their goal, but due south first, by groundcar into
the next loyal District. Ditch the distinctive government vehicle, take the
monorail west to yet another District, then northwest to another; then due east
into Count Vorinnis's neutral zone, focus of so much diplomatic attention from
both sides. Piotr's comment echoed in her memory, "I swear, Aral, if
Vorinnis doesn't quit trying to play both ends against the middle, you ought to
hang him higher than Vordarian when this is over." Then into the capital
District itself, then, somehow, into the sealed city. A daunting number of
kilometers to cover. Three times the distance of the direct route. So much time. Her heart
swung north like a compass needle. The first and last
Districts would be the worst. Aral's forces could be almost more inimical to
this excursion than Vordarian's. Her head spun with the cumulative
impossibility of it all. Step by step, she told
herself firmly. One step at a time. Just get off Tanery Base; that, they could
do. Divide the infinite future into five-minute blocks, and take them one by
one. There, the first five
minutes down already, and a swift and shining general staff car appeared from
underground storage. A small victory, in reward for a little patience and
daring. What might great patience and daring yet bring? Judiciously, Bothari
inspected the vehicle, as if in doubt that it was quite fit for his master. The
transport officer waited anxiously, and seemed to deflate with relief when the
great general's Armsman, after running his hand over the canopy and frowning at
some minute speck of dust, gave it a grudging acceptance. Bothari brought the
vehicle around to the lift tube portal and parked it, neatly blocking the
office's view of the entering passengers. Drou bent to pick up
their satchel, packed with a very odd variety of clothing including Bothari's
and Cordelia's mountain souvenirs, and their thin assortment of weapons.
Bothari set the polarization on the rear canopy to mirror-reflection, and
raised it. "Milady!"
Lieutenant Koudelka's anxious voice called from the lift tube entry behind
them. "What are you doing?" Cordelia's teeth closed
on vile words. She converted her savage expression to a light, surprised smile,
and turned. "Hello, Kou. What's up?" He frowned, looking at
her, at Droushnakovi, at the satchel. "I asked first." He was out of
breath; he must have been chasing them down for some minutes, after not finding
her in Aral's quarters. An ill—timed errand. Cordelia kept her smile
fixed, as her mind blinked on a vision of a Security team piling out of the
lift tube to arrest her, or at least her plans. "We're ... going into
town." His lips thinned in
skepticism. "Oh? Does the Admiral know? Where's Illyan's outer-perimeter
team, then?" "Gone on
ahead," said Cordelia blandly. The vague plausibility
actually raised a flicker of doubt in his eyes. Alas, only for a moment.
"Now, wait just a bloody minute—" "Lieutenant,"
Sergeant Bothari interrupted. "Take a look at this." He gestured
toward the rear passenger compartment of the staff car. Koudelka leaned to look.
"What?" he said impatiently. Cordelia winced as
Bothari's open hand chopped down across the back of Koudelka's neck, and winced
again at the heavy thud of Koudelka's head hitting the far side of the
compartment's interior after a powerful boost-assist to neck and belt by
Bothari. His swordstick clattered to the pavement. "In." Bothari's
voice was a strained low growl, accompanied by a quick glance across the bay
toward the glass-walled transport office. Droushnakovi flung the
satchel into the compartment and dove in after Koudelka, shoving his long loose
limbs out of the way. Cordelia grabbed up the stick and piled in after. Bothari
stood back, saluted, closed the mirrored canopy, and entered the driver's
compartment. They started smoothly.
Cordelia had to control irrational panic as Bothari stopped at the first
checkpoint. She could see and hear the guards so clearly, it was difficult to
remember they saw only the reflections of their own hard eyes. But apparently
General Piotr could indeed pass anywhere at will. How pleasant, to be General
Piotr. Though in these trying times, probably not even Piotr could have entered
Tanery Base without that rear canopy being opened and scanned. The final gate
crew that waved them out was busily engaged in just such an inspection of a
large incoming convoy of freight haulers. Their timing was just as Cordelia had
planned and prayed. Cordelia and
Droushnakovi finally got the sprawling Koudelka straightened up between them.
His first alarming flaccidity was passing off. He blinked and moaned.
Koudelka's head, neck, and upper torso were of the few areas of his body not
rewired; Cordelia trusted nothing inorganic was broken. Droushnakovi's voice was
taut with worry. "What'll we do with him?" "We can't dump him
out on the road, he'd run back and give the word," said Cordelia.
"Yet if we cinched him to a tree out of sight somewhere, there's a chance
he might not be found ... we'd better tie him up, he's coming around." "I can handle
him." "He's had enough
handling, I'm afraid." Droushnakovi managed to
immobilize Koudelka's hands with a twisted scarf from the satchel; she was
quite good at clever knots. "He might prove
useful," mused Cordelia. "He'll betray
us," frowned Droushnakovi. "Maybe not. Not
once we're in enemy territory. Once the only way out is forward." Koudelka's eyes stopped
jerking, following some invisible starry blur, and came at last into focus.
Both his pupils were still the same size, Cordelia was relieved to note. "Milady—Cordelia,"
he croaked. His hands yanked futilely at the silky bonds. "This is crazy.
You'll run right into Vordarian's forces. And then Vordarian will have two
handles on the Admiral, instead of just one. And you and Bothari know where the
Emperor is!" "Was,"
corrected Cordelia. "A week ago. He's been moved since then, I'm sure. And
Aral has demonstrated his capacity to resist Vordarian's leverage, I think.
Don't underestimate him." "Sergeant
Bothari!" Koudelka leaned forward, appealing into the intercom. The front
canopy was also silvered, now. "Yes,
Lieutenant?" Bothari's bass monotone returned. "I order you to
turn this vehicle around." A slight pause.
"I'm not in the Imperial Service anymore, sir. Retired." "Piotr didn't order
this! You're Count Piotr's man." A longer pause; a lower
tone. "No. I am Lady Vorkosigan's dog." "You're off your
meds!" How such could travel
over a purely audio link Cordelia was not sure, but a canine grin hung in the
air before them. "Come on,
Kou," Cordelia coaxed. "Back me. Come for luck. Come for life. Come
for the adrenaline rush." Droushnakovi leaned
over, a sharp smile on her lips, to breathe in Koudelka's other ear, "Look
at it this way, Kou. Who else is ever going to give you a chance at field
combat?" His eyes shifted, right
and left, between his two captors. The pitch of the groundcar's power—whine
rose, as they arrowed into the growing twilight. CHAPTER
SIXTEEN Illegal vegetables.
Cordelia sat in bemused contemplation between sacks of cauliflower and boxes of
cultivated brillberries as the creaking hovertruck coughed along. Southern
vegetables, that flowed toward Vorbarr Sultana on a covert route just like
hers. She was half-certain that under that pile were a few sacks of the same
green cabbages she'd traveled with two or three weeks ago, migrating according
to the strange economic pressures of the war. The Districts controlled
by Vordarian were now under strict interdiction by the Districts loyal to
Vorkosigan. Though starvation was still a long way off, food prices in the
capital of Vorbarr Sultana had skyrocketed, in the face of hoarding and the
coming winter. So poor men were inspired to take chances. And a poor man
already taking a chance was not averse to adding a few unlisted passengers to
his load, for a bribe. It was Koudelka who'd
generated the scheme, abandoning his urgent disapproval, drawn in to their
strategizing almost despite himself. It was Koudelka who'd found the produce
wholesale warehouses in the town in Vorinnis's District, and cruised the
loading docks for independents striking out with their loads. Though it was
Bothari who'd ruled the size of the bribe, pitifully small to Cordelia's mind,
but just right for the parts they now played of desperate countryfolk. "My father was a
grocer," Koudelka had explained stiffly, when selling his scheme to them.
"I know what I'm doing." Cordelia had puzzled for
a moment what his wary glance at Droushnakovi meant, till she recalled Drou's
father was a soldier. Kou had talked of his sister and widowed mother, but it
was not till that moment that Cordelia realized Kou had edited his father from
his reminiscences out of social embarrassment, not any lack of love between
them. Koudelka had vetoed the choice of a meat truck for transport: "It's
more likely to be stopped by Vordarian's guards," he'd explained, "so
they can shake down the driver for steaks." Cordelia wasn't sure if he was
speaking from military or food service experience, or both. In any case, she
was grateful not to ride with grisly refrigerated carcasses. They dressed for their
parts as best they could, pooling the satchel and the clothes they stood in.
Bothari and Koudelka played two recently discharged vets, looking to better
their sorry lot, and Cordelia and Drou two countrywomen co-scheming with them.
The women were decked in a realistically odd combination of worn mountain dress
and upper-class castoffs apparently acquired from some secondhand shop. They
managed the right touch of mis-fittedness, of women not wearing originals, by
trading garments. Cordelia's eyes closed
in exhaustion, though sleep was far from her. Time ticked in her brain. It had
taken them two days to get this far. So close to their goal, so far from
success ... Her eyes snapped open again when the truck halted and thumped to
the ground. Bothari eased through
the opening to the driver's compartment. "We get out here," he called
lowly. They all filed through, dropping to the city curb. Their breath smoked
in the chill. It was pre-dawn dark, with fewer lights about than Cordelia
thought there ought to be. Bothari waved the transport on. "Didn't think we
should ride all the way in to the Central Market," Bothari grunted.
"Driver says Vorbohn's municipal guards are thick there this time of day,
when the new stocks come in." "Are they
anticipating food riots?" Cordelia asked. "No doubt, plus
they like to get theirs first," said Koudelka. "Vordarian's going to
have to put the army in soon, before the black market sucks all the food out of
the rationing system." Kou, in the moments he forgot to pretend himself an
artificial Vor, displayed an amazing and detailed grasp of black-market economics.
Or, how had a grocer bought his son the education to gain entry to the fiercely
competitive Imperial Military Academy? Cordelia grinned under her breath, and
looked up and down the street. It was an old section of town, pre-dating lift
tubes, no buildings more than six flights high. Shabby, with plumbing and
electricity and light-pipes cut into the architecture, added as afterthoughts. Bothari led off, seeming
to know where he was going. The maintenance did not improve, in their direction
of transit. Streets and alleys narrowed, channeling a moist aroma of decay,
with an occasional whiff of urine. Lights grew fewer. Drou's shoulders hunched.
Koudelka gripped his stick. Bothari paused before a
narrow, ill-lit doorway bearing a hand-lettered sign, Rooms. "This'll
do." The door, an ancient non-automatic that swung on hinges, was locked.
He rattled it, then knocked. After a long time, a little door within the door
opened, and suspicious eyes stared out. "Whatcha
want?" "Room." "At this hour? Not
damned likely." Bothari pulled Drou
forward. The stripe of light from the opening played over her face. "Huh," grunted
the door—muffled voice. "Well ..." Some clinking of chains, the grind
of metal, and the door swung open. They all huddled in to a
narrow hallway featuring stairs, a desk, and an archway leading back to a
darkened chamber. Their host grew even grumpier when he learned they desired
only one room among the four of them. Yet he did not question it; apparently
their real desperation lent their pose of poverty a genuine edge. With the two
women and especially Koudelka in the party, no one seemed to leap to identify
them as secret agents. They settled into a
cramped, cheap upstairs room, giving Kou and Drou first shot at the beds. As
dawn seeped through the window, Cordelia followed Bothari back downstairs to
forage. "I should have
realized we'd need to bring rations, to a city under siege," Cordelia
muttered. "It's not that bad
yet," said Bothari. "Ah—best you don't talk, Milady. Your
accent." "Right. In that
case, strike up a conversation with this fellow, if you can. I want to hear the
local view of things." They found the
innkeeper, or whatever he was, in the little room beyond the archway, which,
judging from a counter and a couple of battered tables with chairs, doubled as
a bar and a dining room. The man reluctantly sold them some seal-packed food
and bottled drinks at inflated prices, while complaining about the rationing
and angling for information about them. "I been planning
this trip for months," said Bothari, leaning on the bar, "and the
damned war's bitched it." The innkeep made an
encouraging noise, one entrepreneur to another. "Oh? What's your
strat?" Bothari licked his lips,
eyes narrowing in thought. "You saw that blonde?" "Yo?" "Virgin." "No way. Too
old." "Oh, yeah. She can
pass for class, that one. We were gonna sell it to some Vor lord at Winterfair.
Get us a grubstake. But they've all skipped town. Could try for a rich
merchant, I guess. But she won't like it. I promised her a real lord." Cordelia hid her mouth
behind her hand, and tried not to emit any attention-drawing noises. It was an
excellent thing Drou was not there to learn Bothari's idea of a cover story.
Good God. Did Barrayaran men actually pay for the privilege of committing that
bit of sexual torture upon uninitiated women? The 'keep glanced at
Cordelia. "You leave her alone with your partner without her duenna, you
could lose what you came to sell." "Naw," said
Bothari. "He would if he could, but he took a nerve-disruptor bolt, once.
Below the belt, like. He's out on medical discharge." "What're you out
on?" "Discharged without
prejudice." This was a code-phrase
for, Quit or be housed in the stockade, as Cordelia understood it, the ultimate
fate of chronic troublemakers who fell just, but only just, short of felony. "You put up with a
spastic?" The 'keep jerked his head, indicating their upstairs room and
its inhabitants. "He's the brains of
the outfit." "Not too many
brains, to come up here and try to do that bit of business now." "Yeah. I think I
could've had a better price for that same piece of meat here if I'd had her
butchered and dressed." "You got that
right," snorted the 'keep glumly, eyeing the food piled on the counter
before Cordelia. "She's too good to
waste, though. Guess I'll have to find something else, till this mess blows
over. Kill some time. Somebody may be hiring muscle..." Bothari let this
trail off. Was he running out of inspiration? The 'keep studied him
with interest. "Yo? I've had something in my eye I could use a, like,
agent for. Been afraid for a week somebody else'd go after it first. You could
be just what I need." "Yo?" The 'keep leaned forward
across the bar, confidentially. "Count Vordarian's boys are giving out
some fat rewards, down at ImpSec, for information-leading-to. Now, I wouldn't
normally mess with ImpSec whoever was running it this week, but there's a
strange fellow down the street who's taken a room. And he keeps to it, 'cept
when he goes out for food, more food than one man might eat ... he's got
someone in there with him no one ever sees. And he sure isn't one of us. I
can't help thinking he might be ... worth something to somebody, eh?" Bothari frowned
judiciously. "Could be dangerous. Admiral Vorkosigan blows back into town,
they'll be looking real hard for that little list of informers. And you have an
address." "But you don't,
seems. If you'd front it, I could give you a ten percent split. I think he's
big, that fellow. He's sure scared." Bothari shook his head.
"I been out-country, and I came up here—can't you smell it, here in the
city? Defeat, man. Vordarian's people look downright morbid to me. I'd think
real carefully 'bout that list, if I was you." The 'keep's lips
tightened in frustration. "One way or another, opportunity's not going to
last." Cordelia grabbed for
Bothari's ear to whisper, "Play along. Find out who it is. Could be an
ally." After a moment's thought she added, "Ask for fifty
percent." Bothari straightened,
nodded. "Fifty-fifty," he said to the 'keep. "For the
risk." The 'keep frowned at
Cordelia, but respectfully. He said reluctantly, "Fifty percent of
something's better than a hundred percent of nothing, I suppose." "Can you get me a look
at this fellow?" asked Bothari. "Maybe." "Here, woman."
Bothari piled the packages in Cordelias arms. "Take these back to the
room." Cordelia cleared her
throat, and tried for an imitation mountain accent. "You be careful
belike. City man'll take you." Bothari favored the
'keep with an alarming grin. "Ah, he wouldn't try and cheat an old vet.
More than once." The 'keep smiled back
nervously. Cordelia dozed uneasily,
and jerked awake as Bothari returned to their little room. He checked the
hallway carefully before closing the door behind him. He looked grim. "Well, Sergeant?
What did you find out?" What if their fellow-hider turned out to be
someone as strategically important as, say, Admiral Kanzian? The thought
frightened her. How could she resist being turned aside from her personal
mission if some greater good were too crystal-clear ... Kou on a pallet on the
floor, and Drou on the other cot, both blinking sleep, sat up on their elbows
to listen. "It's Lord
Vorpatril. Lady Vorpatril, too." "Oh, no." She
sat upright. "Are you certain?" "Oh, yes." Kou scrubbed at his
scalp, hair bent with sleep. "Did you make contact with them?" "Not yet." "Why not?" "It's Lady
Vorkosigan's call. Whether to divert from our primary mission." And to think she'd
wished for command: "Do they seem all right?" "Alive, lying low.
But—that git downstairs can't have been the only one to spot them. I've spiked
him for now, but somebody else could get greedy any time." "Any sign of the
baby?" He shook his head.
"She hasn't had it yet." "It's late! She was
due over two weeks ago. How hellish." She paused. "Do you think we
could escape the city together?" "The more people in
a party, the more conspicuous," Bothari said slowly. "And I caught a
glimpse of Lady Vorpatril. She's real conspicuous. People'd notice her." "I don't see how
joining us now would improve their position. Their cover's worked for several
weeks. If we succeed at the Residence, maybe we can try for them on the way
back. Certainly have Illyan send loyalist agents to help them, if we get back
..." Damn. If she were an official raid, she'd have just the contacts the
Vorpatrils needed. But then, if she were an offical raid, she doubtless would
not have come this way. She sat thinking. "No. No contact yet. But we'd
better do something to discourage your friend downstairs." "I have," said
Bothari. "Told him I knew where I could get a better price, and not risk
my head later. We may be able to bribe him to help us." "You'd trust
him?" said Droushnakovi doubtfully. Bothari grimaced.
"As far as I can see him. I'll try to keep an eye on him, while we're
here. 'Nother thing. I caught a broadcast on his vid in the back room.
Vordarian had himself declared Emperor last night." Kou swore. "So he's
finally gone and done it." "But what does it
mean?" asked Cordelia. "Does he feel himself strong, or is it a move
of desperation?" "Last-ditch ploy to
try to sway the space forces, I'd guess," said Kou. "Will it really
attract more men than it offends?" Kou shook his head.
"We have a real fear of chaos, on Barrayar. We've tried it. It's nasty.
The Imperium has been identified as a source of order ever since Dorca Vorbarra
broke 'the power of the warring counts and unified the planet. Emperor is a
real power-word, here." "Not to me,"
Cordelia sighed. "Let's get some rest. Maybe by this time tomorrow it'll
all be over." Hopeful/gruesome thought, depending on how it was construed.
She counted the hours over for the thousandth time, one day left to penetrate
the Residence, two to get back to Vdrkosigan's territories ... not much to
spare. She felt as if she was flying, faster and faster. And running out of
turning room. Last chance to call the
whole thing off. A fine misting rain had brought early dusk to the city.
Cordelia stared out the dirty window into the slick street, striped with the
reflections of a few sickly amber-haloed streetlights. Only a few bundled
shapes hurried along, heads down. It was as if war and the
winter had inhaled autumn's last breath, and blew back out a deathly silence.
Nerves, Cordelia told herself, straightened her back, and led her little party
downstairs. The desk was deserted.
Cordelia was just deciding to skip such formalities as checking out-they had,
after all, paid in advance—when the 'keep came stomping in through the front
door, shaking cold drops from his jacket and swearing. He spotted Bothari. "You! It's all your
fault, you gutless git. We missed it, we bloody missed it, and now someone else
will collect. That reward could've been mine, should've been mine—" The 'keep's invective
was cut off with a thump as Bothari pinned him to the wall. The man's toes
stretched for the floor as Bothari's suddenly feral face leaned into his.
"What happened?" "One of Vordarian's
squads picked up that fellow. Looks like he led them back to his partner,
too." The 'keep's voice wavered between anger and fear. "They've got
them both, and I've got nothing!" "Got them?"
Cordelia repeated sickly. "Picking 'em off
right now, damn it." There might still be a
chance, Cordelia realized. Command decision or tactical compulsion, it hardly
mattered now. She grabbed a stunner out of the satchel; Bothari stepped back
and she buzzed the 'keep where he stood openmouthed. Bothari shoved his inert
form behind the desk. "We have to try for them. Drou, break out the rest
of the weapons. Sergeant, lead us there. Go!" And so she found herself
running down the street toward a scene any right-minded Barrayaran would run
the other way to avoid, a night-arrest by security forces. Drou kept up with
Bothari; Koudelka, burdened with the satchel, lagged behind. Cordelia wished
the mist were thicker. The Vorpatrils'
bolt-hole turned out to be two blocks down and one over, in a shabby narrow
building much like the one they'd spent the day in. Bothari held up a hand, and
they peered cautiously around the corner, then drew back. Two Security
groundcars were parked out front of the little hostel, covering the entrance.
But for themselves, the area was strangely deserted. Koudelka came panting up
behind. "Droushnakovi,"
said Bothari, "circle around. Get a cross-fire position covering the other
side of those groundcars. Watch out, they're sure to have men at the back
door." Yes, street tactics were
clearly Bothari's call. Drou nodded, checked her weapons' charges, and walked
as if casually across the corner, not even turning her head. Once out of the
enemy's line of sight, she flowed into a silent run. "We got to get a
better position," Bothari muttered, risking his head once more around the
corner. "Can't bloody see." "A man and a woman
walk down the street," Cordelia visualized desperately. "They stop to
talk in a doorway. They goggle curiously at the security men, who are engrossed
in their arrest—would we pass?" "Not for
long," said Bothari, "once they spot our energy weapons on their area
scanners. But we'd last longer than two men. It's going to move fast, when it
moves. Might pass just long enough. Lieutenant, cover us from here. Have the
plasma arc ready, it's all we've got to stop a vehicle." Bothari shoved his nerve
disruptor out of sight under his jacket. Cordelia tucked her stunner in the
waistband of her skirt, and lightly took Bothari's arm. They strolled around
the corner. This was a really stupid
idea, Cordelia decided, matching steps to Bothari's booted stride. They should
have set up hours ago, if they'd been going to try an ambush like this. Or they
should have hooked Padma and Alys out hours ago. And yet—how long ago had Padma
been spotted? Might they have fallen into some long-laid trap, and gone down
together? No might-have-beens. Pay attention to the now. Bothari's steps slowed,
as they approached a deep shadowed doorway. He swung her in, and leaned with
his arm on the wall, close to her. They were near enough now to the arrest
scene to catch voices. Snatches of crackle from the comm links carried clearly
in the damp air. Just in time. Despite
the shabby shirt and trousers, Cordelia readily recognized the dark-haired man
pinned against the groundcar by one guard as Captain Vorpatril. His face was
marred with a grated, bleeding contusion and swollen lips, pulled back in a
stereotypical fast-penta-induced smile. The smile slipped to anguish, and back
again, and his giggles choked on moans. Black-clad security men
were bundling a woman out the hostel door and into the street. The security
team's attention was drawn to her; Cordelia's and Bothari's, too. Alys Vorpatril wore only
a nightgown and robe, with her feet jammed bare into flat shoes. Her dark hair
was loose, flowing down wildly around her white face; she looked a fair
madwoman. She was indeed conspicuously pregnant, black robe falling open around
her white-gowned belly. The guard manhandling her had her arms locked behind
her; her legs splayed for balance against his backward pull. The guard commander, a
full colonel, checked a report panel. "That's it, then. The lord and the
heir." His eye locked to Alys Vorpatril's abdomen; he shook his head as if
to clear it, and spoke into his comm link. "Pull back, boys, we're done
here." "What the hell are
we supposed to do about this, Colonel?" asked his lieutenant uneasily. His
voice blended fascination with dismay as he walked over to Lady Vorpatril and
lifted her gown high. She had gained weight, these last two months; her chin
and breasts were rounded, thighs thickened, belly padded out. He poked a
curious finger deep into that soft white flesh. She stood silent, trembling,
face on fire with rage at his liberty and eyes glistening dark with tears of
fear. "Our orders are to kill the lord and the heir. It doesn't say her.
Are we supposed to sit around and wait? Squeeze? Cut her open? Or," his
voice went persuasive, "maybe just take her back to HQ?" The guard holding her
from behind grinned and ground his hips into her buttocks, mock—thrusts of
unmistakable meaning. "We don't have to take her straight back, do we? I
mean, this is Vor meat. What a chance." The colonel stared at
him, and spat disgust. "Corporal, you're perverted." Cordelia realized with a
shock that Bothari's riveted attention to the scene before them was no longer
tactical. He was deeply aroused. His eyes seemed to glaze as she watched; his
lips parted. The guard colonel
pocketed his comm link, and drew his nerve disruptor. "No." He shook
his head. "We make this quick and clean. Step aside, Corporal." Strange mercies ... The guard expertly
popped Alys's knees and shoved her down, stepping back. Her hands flung out to
the pavement, too late to save her swollen belly from a hard smack. Padma
Vorpatril moaned through his fast-penta haze. The guard colonel raised his
nerve disruptor and hesitated, as if uncertain whether to aim it at her head or
torso. "Kill them,"
Cordelia hissed in Bothari's ear, jerked out her stunner, and fired. Bothari snapped not only
awake, but over into some berserker mode; his nerve disruptor bolt hit the
guard colonel at the same moment as Cordelias stunner beam did, though she had
drawn first. Then he was moving, a dark blur leaping behind a parked vehicle.
He snapped off shots, blue crackles that electrified the air; two more guards
fell as the rest took cover behind their groundcars. Alys Vorpatril, still on
the pavement, curled up in a tight ball, trying to cover her abdomen with her
arms and legs. Padma Vorpatril, penta-drunk, staggered bewilderedly toward her,
arms out, apparently with some similar idea in mind. The guard lieutenant,
rolling on the pavement toward cover, aimed his nerve disruptor at the
distraught man. The guard lieutenant's
pause for accuracy was fatal; Droushnakovi's nerve disruptor cross-fire and
Cordelias stunner beam intersected upon his body—a millisecond too late. His
nerve disruptor bolt took Padma Vorpatril squarely in the back of his head.
Blue sparks danced, dark hair sparked orange, and Padma's body arced in a
violent convulsion and fell twitching. Alys Vorpatril wailed, a short sharp cry
cut off by a gasp. On her hands and knees, she seemed momentarily frozen
between trying to crawl toward him, or away. Droushnakovi's
cross-fire vantage was perfect. The last guard was killed while still trying to
raise the canopy of the armored groundcar. A driver, shielded inside the second
vehicle, prudently chose to try and speed away. Koudelka's plasma arc bolt, set
on high power, blasted into the groundcar as it accelerated past the corner. It
skidded wildly, dragging an edge and trailing sparks, and crashed into the side
of a brick building. Yes, and didn't my whole
strategy for this mission turn on our staying invisible? Cordelia thought
dizzily, and ran forward. She and Droushnakovi reached Alys Vorpatril at the
same moment; together they hoisted the shuddering woman to her feet. "We have to get out
of here," said Bothari, rising from his firing-crouch and coming toward
them. "No shit,"
agreed Koudelka, limping up and staring around at the sudden and spectacular
carnage. The street was amazingly quiet. Not for long, Cordelia suspected. "This way."
Bothari pointed up an alley, narrow and dark. "Run." "Shouldn't we try
to take that car?" Cordelia gestured to the body-draped vehicle. "No. Traceable. And
it can't fit where we're going." Cordelia was not sure if
the wild-faced, weeping Alys was able to run anywhere, but she stuck her
stunner back in her waistband and took one of the pregnant woman's arms. Drou
took the other, and together they guided her in the sergeant's wake. At least
Koudelka was no longer the slowest of the party. Alys was crying, yet not
hysterical; she glanced only once over her shoulder at her husband's body, then
concentrated grimly on trying to run. She did not run well. She was hopelessly
unbalanced, her arms wrapping her belly in an attempt to take up the shocks of
her heavy footsteps. "Cordelia," she gasped. An acknowledgment of
recognition; there was no time or breath for demands of explanation. They had not lurched
more than three blocks when Cordelia began to hear sirens from the area they
were fleeing. But Bothari seemed controlled again, unpanicked. They traversed
another narrow alley, and Cordelia realized they had crossed into a region of
the city with no streetlights, or indeed any lights at all. Her eyes strained
in the misty shadows. Alys stopped suddenly,
and Cordelia skidded to a halt, almost jerking the woman off her feet. Alys
stood for half a minute, bent over, gasping. Cordelia realized that
beneath its deceptive padding of fat, Alys's abdomen was hard as a rock; the
back of her robe was soaking wet. "Are you going into labor?" she
asked. She didn't know why she made that a question, the answer was obvious. "This has been
going on—for a day and a half," Alys blurted. She seemed unable to
straighten. "I think my water broke back there, when that bastard knocked
me down. Unless it's blood—should have passed out by now, if all that was
blood—it hurts so much worse, now... ." Her breath slowed; she pulled her
shoulders back with effort. "How much
longer?" asked Kou in alarm. "How should I know?
I've never done this before. Your guess is as good as mine," Lady
Vorpatril snapped. Hot anger to warm cold fear. It wasn't enough warmth, a
candle against a blizzard. "Not much longer,
I'd say," came Bothari's voice out of the dark. "We'd better go to
ground. Come on." Lady Vorpatril could no
longer run, but managed a rapid waddle, stopping helplessly every two minutes.
Then every one minute. "Not going to make
it all the way," muttered Bothari. "Wait here." He disappeared
up a side—alley? The passages all seemed alleys here, cold and stinking, much
too narrow for groundcars. They had passed exactly two people in the maze,
huddled to one side of a passage in a heap, and stepped carefully around them. "Can you do
anything to, like, hold back?" asked Kou, watching Lady Vorpatril double
over again. "We ought to ... try and get a doctor or something." "That's what that
idiot Padma went out for," Alys ground out. "I begged him not to go
... oh, God!" After another moment she added, in a surprisingly
conversational tone, "The next time you're vomiting your guts out, Kou,
let me suggest you just close your mouth and swallow hard ... it's not exactly
a voluntary reflex!" She straightened again, shivering violently. "She doesn't need a
doctor, she needs a flat spot," Bothari spoke from the shadows. "This
way." He led them a short
distance to a wooden door, formerly nailed shut in an ancient solid stuccoed
wall. Judging from the fresh splinters, he'd just kicked it open. Once inside,
with the door pulled tight-shut again, Droushnakovi at last dared pull a
hand-light from the satchel. It illuminated a small, empty, dirty room. Bothari
swiftly prowled its perimeters. Two inner doors had been broken open long ago,
but beyond them all was soundless and lightless and apparently deserted.
"It'll have to do," said Bothari. Cordelia wondered what
the hell to do next. She knew all about placental transfers and surgical
sections now, but for so-called normal births she had only theory to go on.
Alys Vorpatril probably had even less grasp of the biology, Drou less still,
and Kou was downright useless. "Has anyone here ever actually been in on
one of these, before?" "Not I,"
muttered Alys. Their looks met in rather too clear an understanding. "You're not
alone," said Cordelia stoutly. Confidence should lead to relaxation,
should lead to something. "We'll all help." Bothari said—oddly
reluctantly—"My mother used to do a spot of midwifery. Sometimes she'd
drag me along to help. There's not that much to it." Cordelia controlled her
brows. That was the first time she'd heard the sergeant say word one about
either of his parents. The sergeant sighed,
clearly realizing from their array of looks that he'd just put himself in
charge. "Lend me your jacket, Kou." Koudelka divested the
garment gallantly, and made to wrap it around the shaking Lady Vorpatril. He
looked a little more dismayed when the sergeant put his own jacket around Lady
Vorpatril's shoulders, then made her lie down on the floor and spread
Koudelka's jacket under her hips. She looked less pale, lying down, less like
she was about to pass out. But her breath stopped, then she cried out, as her
abdominal muscles locked again. "Stay with me, Lady
Vorkosigan," Bothari murmured to Cordelia. For what? Cordelia wondered,
then realized why as he knelt and gently pushed up Alys Vorpatril's nightgown.
He wants me for a control mechanism. But the killing seemed to have bled off
that horrifying wave of lust that had so distorted his face, back in the
street. His gaze now was only normally interested. Fortunately, Alys Vorpatril
was too self-absorbed to notice that Bothari's attempt at an expression of
medical coolness was not wholly successful. "Baby's head's not
showing yet," he reported. "But soon." Another spasm, and he looked
around vaguely and added, "I don't think you'd better scream, Lady
Vorpatril. They'll be looking by now." She nodded
understanding, and waved a desperate hand; Drou, catching on, rolled up a bit
of cloth into a rag rope, and gave it to her to bite. And so the tableau hung,
for spasm after uterine spasm. Alys looked utterly wrung, crying very quietly,
unable to stop her body's repeated attempts to turn itself inside out long
enough to catch either breath or balance. The baby's head crowned, dark haired,
but seemed unable to go further. "How long is this
supposed to take?" asked Kou, in a voice that tried to sound measured, but
came out very worried. "I think he likes
it where he is," said Bothari. "Doesn't want to come out in the
cold." This joke actually got through to Alys; her sobbing breath didn't
change, but her eyes flashed in a moment of gratitude. Bothari crouched,
frowned judiciously, hunkered around to her side, placed a big hand on her
belly, and waited for the next spasm. Then he leaned. The infant's head popped
out, between Lady Vorpatril's bloody thighs, quick as that. "There," said
the sergeant, sounding rather satisfied. Koudelka looked thoroughly impressed. Cordelia caught the head
between her hands, and eased the body out with the next contraction. The baby
boy coughed twice, sneezed like a kitten in the awed silence, inhaled, grew
pinker, and emitted a nerve—shattering wail. Cordelia nearly dropped him. Bothari swore at the
noise. "Give me your swordstick, Kou." Lady Vorpatril looked up
wildly. "No! Give him back to me, I'll make him be quiet!" "Wasn't what I had
in mind," said Bothari with some dignity. "Though it's an idea,"
he added as the wails went on. He pulled out the plasma arc and heated the
sword briefly, on low power. Sterilizing it, Cordelia realized. Placenta followed cord
on the next contraction, a messy heap on Kou's jacket. She stared with covert
fascination at the spent version of the supportive organ that had been of so
much concern in her own case. Time. This rescue's taken so much time. What are
Miles's chances down to now? Had she just traded her son's life for little
Ivan's? Not-so-little Ivan, actually, no wonder he'd given his mother so much
trouble. Alys must be blessed with an unusually wide pelvic arch, or she'd
never have made it though this nightmare night alive. After the cord drained
white, Bothari cut it with the sterilized blade, and Cordelia self-knotted the
rubbery thing as best she could. She mopped off the baby and wrapped him in
their spare clean shirt, and handed him at last into Alys's outstretched arms. Alys looked at the baby
and began crying again muffled sobs. "Padma said ... I'd have the best
doctors' Padma said ... there'd be no pain. Padma said he'd stay with me ...
damn you, Padma!" She clutched Padma's son to her. In an altered tone of
mild surprise, she added "Ow!" Infant mouth had found her breast, and
apparently had a grip like a barracuda. "Good
reflexes," observed Bothari. CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN "For God's sake,
Bothari, we can't take her in there," hissed Koudelka. They stood in an alley
deep in the maze of the caravanserai. A thick-walled building bulked an unusual
three stories high in the cold, wet darkness. High on its stuccoed face,
scabrous with peeling paint, yellow light glinted through carved shutters. An
oil lamp burned dimly above a wooden door, the only entrance Cordelia could
see. "Can't leave her
out here. She needs heat," replied the sergeant. He carried Lady Vorpatril
in his arms; she clung to him, wan and shivering. "It's a slow night
anyway. Late. They're closing down." "What is this
place?" asked Droushnakovi. Koudelka cleared his throat. "Back in the
Time of Isolation, when this was the center of Vorbarr Sultana, it was a lord's
Residence. One of the minor Vorbarra princes, I think. That's why it's built
like a fortress. Now it's a ... sort of inn." Oh, so this is your
whorehouse, Kou, Cordelia managed not to blurt out. Instead she addressed
Bothari, "Is it safe? Or is it likely to be stocked with informers like
that last place?" "Safe for a few
hours," Bothari judged. "A few hours is all we have anyway." He
set Lady Vorpatril down, handing her off to Droushnakovi, and slipped inside
after a muffled conversation through the door with some guardian. Cordelia
tucked little Ivan more firmly to her, tugging her jacket over him for all the
warmth she could share. Fortunately, he had slept quietly through their several-minutes
hike from the abandoned building to this place. In a few moments Bothari
returned, and motioned them to follow. They passed through an
entryway, almost like a stone tunnel, with narrow slits in the walls and holes
every half-meter above. "For defense, in the old days," whispered
Koudelka, and Droushnakovi nodded understanding. No arrows or boiling oil
awaited them tonight, though. A man as tall as Bothari, but wider, locked the
door again behind them. They came out in a
large, dim room that had been converted into some sort of bar/dining room. It
was occupied only by two dispirited-looking women in robes and a man snoring
with his head on the table. As usual, an extravagant fireplace glowed with
coals of wood. They had a guide, or
hostess. A rangy woman beckoned them silently toward the stairs. Fifteen years
ago, or even ten years ago, she might have achieved a leggy aquiline look; now
she was bony and faded, misclad in a gaudy magenta robe with drooping ruffles
that seemed to echo her inherent sadness. Bothari swept up Lady Vorpatril and
carried her up the steep stairs. Koudelka stared around uneasily, and seemed to
brighten slightly upon not finding someone. The woman led them to a
room off an upstairs hallway. "Change the sheets," muttered Bothari,
and the woman nodded and vanished. Bothari did not set the exhausted Lady
Vorpatril down. The woman returned in a few minutes, and whisked off the bed's
rumpled coverings and replaced them with fresh linens. Bothari laid Lady
Vorpatril in the bed and backed up. Cordelia tucked the sleeping infant in her
arm, and Lady Vorpatril managed a grateful nod. The—housewoman, Cordelia
decided she would think of her—stared with a spark of interest at the baby.
"That's a new one. Big boy, eh?" her voice swung to a tentative coo. "Two weeks
old," stated Bothari in a repelling tone. The woman snorted, hands
on hips. "I do my bit of midwifery, Bothari. Two hours, more like." Bothari shot Cordelia an
odd look, almost a flash of fear. The housewoman held up a hand to ward off his
frown. "Whatever you say." "We should let her
sleep," said Bothari, "till we're sure she isn't going to
bleed." "Yes, but not
alone," said Cordelia. "In case she wakes up disoriented in a strange
place." In the range of strange, Cordelia suspected, this place qualified
as downright alien for the Vor woman. "I'll sit with her
a while," volunteered Droushnakovi. She glowered suspiciously at the
housewoman, who was apparently leaning too near the baby for her taste.
Cordelia didn't think Drou was at all fooled by Koudelka's pretense that they
had stumbled into some sort of museum. Nor would Lady Vorpatril be, once she'd
rested enough to regain her wits. Droushnakovi plunked
down in a shabby padded armchair, wrinkling her nose at its musty smell. The others
withdrew from the room. Koudelka went off to find whatever this old building
used for a lavatory, and to try and buy them some food. An underlying tang to
the air suggested to Cordelia that nothing in the caravanserai was hooked up to
the municipal sewerage. No central heating, either. At Bothari's frown, the
housewoman made herself scarce. A sofa, a couple of
chairs, and a low table occupied a space at the end of the hall, lit by a
red-shaded battery-driven lamp. Wearily, Bothari and Cordelia sat there. With
the pressure off for a moment, not fighting the strain, Bothari looked ragged.
Cordelia had no idea what she looked like, but she was certain it wasn't her
best. "Do they have
whores on Beta Colony?" Bothari asked suddenly. Cordelia fought mental whiplash.
His voice was so tired the question sounded almost casual, except that Bothari
never made casual conversation. How much had tonight's violent events disturbed
his precarious balance, stressed his peculiar fault lines? "Well ... we
have the L.P.S.T.s," she answered cautiously. "I guess they fill some
of the same social functions." "Ellpee
Estees?" "Licensed Practical
Sexuality Therapists. You have to pass the government boards, and get a
license. You're required to have at least an associate degree in psychotherapy.
Except that all three sexes take up the profession. The hermaphrodites make the
most money, they're very popular with the tourists. It's not ... not a high
social status job, but neither are they dregs. I don't think we have dregs on
Beta Colony, we sort of stop at the lower middle class. It's like ..." she
paused, struggling for a cultural translation, "sort of like being a
hairdresser, on Barrayar. Delivering a personal service to professional
standards, with a bit of art and craft." She'd actually managed
to boggle Bothari, surely a first. His brow wrinkled. "Only Betans would
think you needed a bleeding university degree... . Do women hire them?" "Sure. Couples,
too. The ... the teaching element is rather more emphasized, there." He shook his head, and
hesitated. He shot her a sidelong look. "My mother was a whore." His
tone was curiously distant. He waited. "I'd ... about
figured that out." "Don't know why she
didn't abort me. She could have, she did those as well as midwifery. Maybe she
was looking to her old age. She used to sell me to her customers." Cordelia choked.
"Now ... now that would not have been allowed, on Beta Colony." "I can't remember
much about that time. I ran away when I was twelve, when I got big enough to
beat up her damned customers. Ran with the gangs, till I was sixteen, passed
for eighteen, and lied my way into the Service. Then I was out of here."
His palms slid across each other, indicating how slick and fast his escape. "The Service must
have seemed like heaven, in comparison." "Till I met
Vorrutyer." He stared around vaguely. "There were more people around
here, back then. It's almost dead here now." His voice went meditative.
"There's a great deal of my life I can't remember very well. It's like I'm
all ... patchy. Yet there are some things I want to forget and can't." She wasn't about to ask,
What? But she made an I-am-listening noise, down in her throat. "Don't know who my
father was. Being a bastard here is damn near as bad as being a mutant." " 'Bastard' is used
as a negative description of a personality, but it doesn't really have an
objective meaning, in the Betan context. Unlicensed children aren't the same
thing, and they're so rare, they're dealt with on a case-by-case basis."
Why is he telling me all this? What does he want of me? When he started, he
seemed almost fearful; now he looks almost contented. What did I say right? She
sighed. To her secret relief,
Koudelka returned about then, bearing actual fresh sandwiches of bread and
cheese, and bottled beer. Cordelia was glad for the beer; she'd have been
dubious of the water in this place. She chased her first bite with a grateful
swallow, and said, "Kou, we have to re—arrange. our strategy." He settled awkwardly
beside her, listening seriously. "Yes?" "We obviously can't
take Lady Vorpatril and the baby with us. And we can't leave her here. We left
five corpses and a burning groundcar for Vordarian's security. They're going to
be searching this area in earnest. But for just a little while longer, they will
still be hunting for a very pregnant woman. It gives us a time window. We have
to split up." He filled a hesitant
moment with a bite of sandwich. "Will you go with her, then, Milady?" She shook her head.
"I must go with the Residence team. If only because I'm the only one who
can say, This is impossible now, it's time to quit. Drou is absolutely
required, and I need Bothari." And, in some strange way, Bothari needs me.
"That leaves you." His lips compressed
bitterly. "At least I won't slow you down." "You're not a
default choice," she said sharply. "Your ingenuity got us in to
Vorbarr Sultana. I think it can get Lady Vorpatril out. You're her best
shot." "But it feels like
you're running into danger, and I'm running away." "A dangerous
illusion. Kou, think. If Vordarian's goons catch her again, they'll show her no
mercy. Nor you, nor especially the baby. There is no 'safer.' Only mortal
necessity, and logic, and the absolute need to keep your head." He sighed. "I'll
try, Milady." " 'Try' is not good
enough. Padma Vorpatril 'tried.' You bloody succeed, Kou." He nodded slowly.
"Yes, Milady." Bothari left to scrounge
clothing for Kou's new persona of poor-young-husband-and-father.
"Customers are always leaving things," he remarked. Cordelia wondered
what he could collect here in the way of street clothes for Lady Vorpatril. Kou
took food in to Lady Vorpatril and Drou. He returned with a very bleak
expression on his face, and settled again beside Cordelia. After a time he said,
"I guess I understand now why Drou was so worried about being
pregnant." "Do you?" said
Cordelia. "Lady Vorpatril's
troubles make mine look ... pretty small. God, that looked painful." "Mm. But the pain
only lasts a day." She rubbed her scar. "Or a few weeks. I don't
think that's it." "What is,
then?" "It's ... a
transcendental act. Making life. I thought about that, when I was carrying
Miles. 'By this act, I bring one death into the world.' One birth, one death,
and all the pain and acts of will between. I didn't understand certain Oriental
mystic symbols like the Death-mother, Kali, till I realized it wasn't mystic at
all, just plain fact. A Barrayaran-style sexual 'accident' can start a chain of
causality that doesn't stop till the end of time. Our children change us ...
whether they live or not. Even though your child turned out to be chimerical
this time, Drou was touched by that change. Weren't you?" He shook his head in
bafflement. "I wasn't thinking about all that. I just wanted to be normal.
Like other men." "I think your
instincts are all right. They're just not enough. I don't suppose you could get
your instincts and your intellect working together for once, instead of at
cross-purposes ?" He snorted. "I
don't know. I don't know ... how to get through to her now. I said I was sorry."
"It's not all right
between you two, is it?" "No." "You know what's
bothered me most, on the journey up here?" said Cordelia. "No ..." "I couldn't say
goodbye to Aral. If ... anything happens to me—or to him, for that matter—it
will leave something hanging, unraveled, between us. And no way to ever make it
right." "Mm." He
folded a little more into himself, slumped in the chair. She meditated a bit.
"What have you tried besides 'I'm sorry'? How about, 'How do you feel? Are
you all right? Can I help? I love you,' there's a classic. Words of one
syllable. Mostly questions, now I think on it. Shows an interest in starting a
conversation, y'know?" He smiled sadly. "I
don't think she wants to talk to me anymore." "Suppose," she
leaned her head back, and stared unseeing down the hallway. "Suppose
things hadn't taken such a wrong turn, that night. Suppose you hadn't panicked.
Suppose that idiot Evon Vorhalas hadn't interrupted with his little horror
show." There was a thought. Too painful, that might—not—have—been.
"Drop back to square one. There you were, cuddling happily." Aral had
used that word, cuddling. It hurt too much to think of Aral just now, too.
"You part friends, you wake up the next morning, er, aching with
unrequited love ... what happens next, on Barrayar?" "A
go-between." "Ah?" "Her parents, or
mine, would hire a go-between. And then they'd, well, arrange things." "And you do
what?" He shrugged. "Show
up on time for the wedding and pay the bill, I guess. Actually, the parents pay
the bill." No wonder the man was at
a loss. "Did you want a wedding? Not just to get laid?" "Yes! But ...
Milady, I'm just about half a man, on a good day. Her family'd take one look at
me and laugh." "Have you ever met
her family? Have they met you?" "No ..." "Kou, are you
listening to yourself?" He looked rather
shamefaced. "Well ..." "A go-between.
Huh." She stood up. "Where are you
going?" he asked nervously. "Between," she
said firmly. She marched down the hall to Lady Vorpatril's door, and stuck her
head in. Droushnakovi was sitting watching the sleeping woman. Two beers and
the sandwiches sat untouched on a bedside table. Cordelia slipped within,
and closed the door gently. "You know," she murmured, "good
soldiers never pass up a chance to eat or sleep. They never know how much
they'll be called on to do, before the next chance." "I'm not
hungry." Drou too had a folded-in look, as if caught in some trap within
herself. "Want to talk about
it?" She grimaced
uncertainly, and moved away from the bed to a settee in the far corner of the
room. Cordelia sat beside her. "Tonight," she said lowly, "was
the first time I was ever in a real fight." "You did well. You
found your position, you reacted—" "No."
Droushnakovi made a bitter hand-chopping gesture. "I didn't." "Oh? It looked good
to me." "I ran around
behind the building—stunned the two security men waiting at the back door. They
never saw me. I got to my position, at the building's corner. I watched those
men, tormenting Lady Vorpatril in the street. Insulting and staring and pushing
and poking at her ... it made me so angry, I switched to my nerve disruptor. I
wanted to kill them. Then the firing started. And ... and I hesitated. And Lord
Vorpatril died because of it. My fault—" "Whoa, girl! That
goon who shot Padma Vorpatril wasn't the only one taking aim at him. Padma was
so penta-soaked and confused, he wasn't even trying to take cover. They must
have double—dosed him, to force him to lead them back to Alys. He might as
easily have died from another shot, or blundered into our own cross-fire." "Sergeant Bothari
didn't hesitate," Droushnakovi said flatly. "No," agreed
Cordelia. "Sergeant Bothari
doesn't waste energy feeling ... sorry, for the enemy, either." "No. Do you?" "I feel sick." "You kill two total
strangers, and expect to feel jolly?" "Bothari
does." "Yes. Bothari
enjoyed it. But Bothari is not, even by Barrayaran standards, a sane man. Do
you aspire to be a monster?" "You call him
that!" "Oh, but he's my
monster. My good dog." She always had trouble explaining Bothari,
sometimes even to herself. Cordelia wondered if Droushnakovi knew the
Earth-historical origin of the term, scapegoat. The sacrificial animal that was
released yearly into the wilderness, to carry the sins of its community away
... Bothari was surely her beast of burden; she saw clearly what he did for
her. She was less certain what she did for him, except that he seemed to find
it desperately important. "I, for one, am glad you are heartsick. Two
pathological killers in my service would be an excess. Treasure that nausea,
Drou." She shook her head.
"I think maybe I'm in the wrong trade." "Maybe. Maybe not.
Think what a monstrous thing an army of Botharis would be. Any community's arm
of force—military, police, security—needs people in it who can do the necessary
evil, and yet not be made evil by it. To do only the necessary, and no more. To
constantly question the assumptions, to stop the slide into atrocity." "The way that
security colonel quashed that obscene corporal." "Yes. Or the way
that lieutenant questioned the colonel ... I wish we might have saved
him," Cordelia sighed. Drou frowned deeply,
into her lap. "Kou thought you
were angry with him," said Cordelia. "Kou?"
Droushnakovi looked up dimly. "Oh, yes, he was just in here. Did he want
something?" Cordelia smiled.
"Just like Kou, to imagine all your unhappiness must center on him."
Her smile faded. "I'm going to send him with Lady Vorpatril, to try and
smuggle her and the baby out. We'll go our separate ways as soon as she's able
to walk." Drou's face grew
worried. "He'll be in terrible danger. Vordarian's people will be rabid
over losing her and the young lord tonight." Yes, there was still a
Lord Vorpatril to disturb Vordarian's genealogical calculations, wasn't there?
Insane system, that made an infant seem a mortal danger to a grown man.
"There's no safety for anybody, till this vile war is ended. Tell me. Do
you still love Kou? I know you're over your initial starry-eyed infatuation.
You see his faults. Egocentric, and with a bug in his brain about his injuries,
and terribly worried about his masculinity. But he's not stupid. There's hope
for him. He has an interesting life ahead of him, in the Regents service."
Assuming they all lived through the next forty-eight hours. A passionate desire
to live was a good thing to instill in her agents, Cordelia thought. "Do
you want him?" "I'm ... bound to
him, now. I don't know how to explain ... I gave him my virginity. Who else
would have me? I'd be ashamed—" "Forget that! After
we bring off this raid, you're going to be covered in so much glory, men will
be lining up for the status of courting you. You'll have your pick. In Aral's
household, you'll have a chance to meet the best. What do you want? A general?
An Imperial minister? A Vor lordling? An off-world ambassador? Your only
problem will be choosing, since Barrayaran custom stingily only allows you one
husband at a time. A clumsy young lieutenant hasn't got a prayer of competing
with all those polished seniors." Droushnakovi smiled, a
bit skeptically, at Cordelia's painted vision. "Who says Kou won't be a
general himself someday?" she said softly. She sighed, her brow creasing.
"Yes. I still want him. But ... I guess I'm afraid he'll hurt me
again." Cordelia thought that
one over. "Probably. Aral and I hurt each other all the time." "Oh, not you two,
Milady! You seem so, so perfect." "Think, Drou. Can
you imagine what mental state Aral is in right this minute, because of my
actions? I can. I do." "Oh." "But pain ... seems
to me an insufficient reason not to embrace life. Being dead is quite painless.
Pain, like time, is going to come on regardless. Question is, what glorious
moments can you win from life in addition to the pain?" "I'm not sure I
follow that, Milady. But ... I have a picture, in my head, Of me and Kou, on a
beach, all alone. It's so warm. And when he looks at me, he sees me, really
sees me, and loves me. ..." Cordelia pursed her
lips. "Yeah ... that'll do. Come with me." The girl rose
obediently. Cordelia led her back in to the hall, forcefully arranged Kou at
one end of the sofa, sat Drou down on the other, and plopped down between them.
"Drou, Kou has a few things to say to you. Since you apparently speak
different languages, he's asked me to be his interpreter." Kou made an embarrassed
negative motion over Cordelia's head. "That hand signal
means, I'd rather blow up the rest of my life than look like a fool for five
minutes. Ignore it," Cordelia said. "Now, let me see. Who
begins?" There was a short
silence. "Did I mention I'm also playing the parts of both your parents? I
think I shall begin by being Kou's Ma. Well, son, and have you met any nice
girls yet? You're almost twenty-six, you know. I saw that vid," she added
in her own voice as Kou choked. "I have her style, eh? And her content. And
Kou says, Yes, Ma, there's this gorgeous girl. Young, tall, smart— and Kou's Ma
says, Tee hee! And hires me, your friendly neighborhood go-between. And I go to
your father, Drou, and say, there's this young man. Imperial lieutenant,
personal secretary to the Lord Regent, war hero, slated for the inside track at
Imperial HQ—and he says, Say no more! We'll take him. Tee—hee. And—" "I think he'll have
more to say than that!" interrupted Kou. Cordelia turned to
Droushnakovi. "What Kou just said was, he thinks your family won't like
him 'cause he's a crip." "No!" said
Drou indignantly. "That's not so—" Cordelia held up a
restraining hand. "As your go-between, Kou, let me tell you. When one's
only lovely daughter points and says firmly, Da, I want that one, a prudent Da
responds only, Yes, dear. I admit, the three large brothers may be harder to
convince. Make her cry, and you could have a serious problem in the back alley.
By which I presume you haven't complained to them yet, Drou?" She stifled an
involuntary giggle. "No!" Kou looked as if this
was a new and daunting thought. "See," said
Cordelia, "you can still evade fraternal retribution, Kou, if you
scramble." She turned to Drou. "I know he's been a lout, but I
promise you, he's a trainable lout." "I said I was
sorry," said Kou, sounding stung. Drou stiffened. "Yes.
Repeatedly," she said coldly. "And there we come
to the heart of the matter," Cordelia said slowly, seriously. "What
Kou actually means, Drou, is that he isn't a bit sorry. The moment was wonderful,
you were wonderful, and he wants to do it again. And again and again, with
nobody but you, forever, socially approved and uninterrupted. Is that right,
Kou?" Kou looked stunned.
"Well—yes!" Drou blinked.
"But... that's what I wanted you to say!" "It was?" He
peered over Cordelia's head. This go-between system
may have some real merits. But also its limits. Cordelia rose from between
them, and glanced at her chrono. The humor drained from her spirit. "You
have a little time yet. You can say a lot in a little time, if you stick to
words of one syllable." CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN Pre-dawn in the alleys
of the caravanserai was not so pitchy-black as night in the mountains. The
foggy night sky reflected back a faint amber glow from the surrounding city.
The faces of her friends were grey blurs, like the very earliest of ancient
photographs; Cordelia tried not to think, Like the faces of the dead. Lady Vorpatril, cleaned
and fed and rested a few hours, was still none too steady, but she could walk
on her own. The housewoman had contributed some surprisingly sober clothes for
her, a calf-length grey skirt and sweaters against the cold. Koudelka had
exchanged all his military gear for loose trousers, old shoes, and a jacket to
replace the one that had suffered from its emergency obstetrical use. He
carried baby Lord Ivan, now makeshift-diapered and warmly wrapped, completing
the picture of a timid little family trying to make it out of town to the
wife's parents in the country before the fighting started. Cordelia had seen
hundreds of refugees just like them, in passing, on her way into Vorbarr
Sultana. Koudelka inspected his
little group, ending with a frowning look at the swordstick in his hand. Even
when seen as a mere cane, the satin wood, polished steel ferrule, and inlaid
grip did not look very middle-class. Koudelka sighed. "Drou, can you hide
this somehow? It's conspicuous as hell with this outfit, and more of a
hindrance than a help when I'm trying to carry this baby." Droushnakovi nodded, and
knelt and wrapped the stick in a shirt, and stuffed it into the satchel.
Cordelia remembered what had happened the last time Kou had carried that stick
down to the caravanserai, and stared nervously into the shadows. "How
likely are we to be jumped by someone, at this hour? We don't look rich,
certainly." "Some would kill
you for your clothes," said Bothari glumly, "with winter coming on.
But it's safer than usual. Vordarian's troops have been sweeping the quarter
for 'volunteers,' to help dig those bomb shelters in the city parks." "I never thought
I'd approve of slave labor," Cordelia groaned. "It's nonsense
anyway," Koudelka said. "Tearing up the parks. Even if completed they
wouldn't shelter enough people. But it looks impressive, and it sets up Lord
Vorkosigan as a threat, in people's minds." "Besides,"
Bothari lifted his jacket to reveal the silvered gleam of his nerve disruptor,
"this time I've got the right weapon." This was it, then.
Cordelia embraced Alys Vorpatril, who hugged her back, murmuring, "God
help you, Cordelia. And God rot Vidal Vordarian in hell." "Go safely. See you
back at Tanery Base, eh?" Cordelia glanced at Koudelka. "Live, and so
confound our enemies." "We'll tr—we will,
Milady," said Koudelka. Gravely, he saluted Droushnakovi. There was no
irony in the military courtesy, though perhaps a last tinge of envy. She
returned him a slow nod of understanding. Neither chose to confuse the moment
with further words. The two groups parted in the clammy darkness. Drou watched
over her shoulder till Koudelka and Lady Vorpatril turned out of sight, then
picked up the pace. They passed from black
alleys to lit streets, from deserted darkness to occasional other human forms,
hurrying about early winter morning business. Everybody seemed to cross streets
to avoid everybody else, and Cordelia felt a little less noticeable. She
stiffened inwardly when a municipal guard groundcar drove slowly past them, but
it did not stop. They paused, across the
street, to be certain their target building had been unlocked for the morning.
The structure was multi-storied, in the utilitarian style of the building boom
that had come on the heels of Ezar Vorbarra's ascent to power and stability
thirty-plus years ago. It was commercial, not governmental; they crossed the
lobby, entered the lift tubes, and descended unimpeded. Drou began seriously
looking over her shoulder when they reached the sub-basement. "Now we look
out of place." Bothari kept watch as she bent and forced a lock to a
utility tunnel. She led them down it, taking two cross-turns. The passage was
clearly used frequently, as the lights remained on. Cordelia's ears strained
for footsteps not their own. An access cover was
bolted to the floor. Droushnakovi loosened it quickly. "Hang and drop.
It's not much more than two meters. It'll likely be wet." Cordelia slid into the
dark circle, landing with a splash. She lit her hand-light. The water, slick
and black and shimmering, came to her booted ankles in the synthacrete tube. It
was icy cold. Bothari followed. Drou knelt on his shoulders, to coax the cover
back into place, then splashed down beside her. "There's about half a
kilometer of this storm sewer. Come on," she whispered. This close to
their goal, Cordelia needed no urging to hurry. At the half-kilometer,
they climbed into a darkened orifice high on the curving wall that led to a
much older and smaller tunnel, made of time-blackened brick. Knees and backs
bent, they shuffled along. It must be particularly painful for Bothari,
Cordelia reflected. Drou slowed, and began tapping on the tunnel's roof with
the steel ferrule of Koudelka's stick. When the ticks became hollow tocks, she
stopped. "Here. It's meant to swing downward. Watch it." She
released the sheath, and slid the blade carefully between a line of slimy
bricks. A click, and the false-brick-lined panel flopped down, nearly cracking
her head. She returned the sword to its casing. "Up." She pulled
herself through. They followed to find
themselves in another ancient drain, even narrower. It sloped more steeply
upward. They crouched along, their clothes brushing the sides and picking up
damp stains. Drou rose suddenly, and clambered out over a pile of broken bricks
into a dark, pillared chamber. "What is this
place?" whispered Cordelia. "Too big for a tunnel ..." "The old stables,"
Drou whispered back. "We're under the Residence grounds, now." "It doesn't sound
so secret to me. Surely they must appear in old drawings and elevations.
People—Security—must know this is here." Cordelia stared into the dim,
musty recesses, past pale arches picked out by their wavering hand-lights. "Yes, but this is
the cellar of the old old stables. Not Dorcas, but Dorca's great—uncle's. He
kept over three hundred horses. They burned down in a spectacular fire about
two hundred years ago, and instead of rebuilding on the site, they knocked them
flat and put up the new old stables on the east side, downwind. Those got
converted to staff apartments in Dorca's day. Most of the hostages are being
kept over there now." Drou marched firmly forward, as if sure of her
ground. "We're to the north of the main Residence now, under the gardens
Ezar designed. Ezar apparently found this old cellar and arranged this passage
with Negri, thirty years ago. A bolt-hole that even their own Security didn't
know about. Trusting, eh?" "Thank you,
Ezar," Cordelia murmured wryly. "Once we're out of
Ezar's passage, the real risk starts," the girl commented. Yes, they could still
pull out now, retrace their steps and no one the wiser. Why have these people
so blithely handed me the right to risk their lives? God, I hate command.
Something skittered in the shadows, and somewhere, water dripped. "Here," said
Droushnakovi, shining her light on a pile of boxes. "Ezar's cache.
Clothes, weapons, money—Captain Negri had me add some women's and boy's clothes
to it just last year, at the time of the Escobar invasion. He was keyed up for
trouble about it, but the riots never reached here. My clothes should only be a
little big for you." They discarded their
beslimed street clothes. Droushnakovi shook out clean dresses, suitable for
senior Residence womenservants too superior for menial's uniforms; the girl had
worn them for just such service. Bothari unbundled his black fatigue uniform
again from the satchel, and donned it, adding correct Imperial Security
insignia. From a distance he made a proper guard, though he was perhaps a
little too rumpled to pass inspection up close. As Drou had promised, a
complete array of weapons lay fully charged in sealed cases. Cordelia chose a
fresh stunner, as did Drou; their eyes met. "No hesitation this time,
eh?" Cordelia murmured. Drou nodded grimly. Bothari took one of each,
stunner, nerve disruptor, and plasma arc. Cordelia trusted he wouldn't clank
when he walked. "You can't fire
that thing indoors," Droushnakovi objected to the plasma arc. "You never
know," shrugged Bothari. After a moment's
thought, Cordelia added the swordstick, tightening a loop of her belt around
its grip. A serious weapon it wasn't, but it had proved an unexpectedly useful
tool on this trip. For luck. Then from the last depths of the satchel, Cordelia
pulled what she privately considered to be the most potent weapon of all. "A shoe?" said
Droushnakovi blankly. "Gregor's shoe. For
when we make contact with Kareen. I rather fancy she still has the other."
Cordelia nested it deeply in the inner pocket of one of Drou's Vorbarra—crested
boleros, worn over Cordelia's dress to complete the picture of an inner
Residence worker. When their preparations
were as complete as possible, Drou led them again into narrowing darkness.
"Now we're under the Residence itself," she whispered, turning
sideways. "We go up this ladder, between the walls. It was added after,
there's not much space." This proved an
understatement. Cordelia sucked in her breath and climbed after her, sandwiched
flat between two walls, trying not to accidently touch or thump. The ladder was
made, naturally, of wood. Her head throbbed with exhaustion and adrenaline. She
mentally measured the width. Getting the uterine replicator back down this
ladder was going to be a bitch. She told herself sternly to think positively,
then decided that was positive. Why am I doing this? I could be back at Tanery
Base with Aral right now, letting these Barrayarans kill each other all day
long, if it is their pleasure. ... Above her, Drou stepped
aside onto some sort of tiny ledge, a mere board. When Cordelia came up beside
her, she gestured "stop" and extinguished her hand-light. Drou
touched some silent latch mechanism, and a wall panel swung outward before
them. Clearly, everything had been kept well oiled right up to Ezar's death. They looked out into the
old Emperors bedchamber. They had expected it to be empty. Drou's mouth opened
in a voiceless O of dismay and horror. Ezar's huge old carved wooden
bed, the one he'd for-God's-sake died in, was occupied. A shaded light, dimmed
to an orange glow, cast highlight and shadow across two bare-torsoed, sleeping
forms. Even in this foreshortened view, Cordelia instantly recognized the
dish-face and moustache of Vidal Vordarian. He sprawled across four—fifths of
the bed, his heavy arm flung possessively across Princess Kareen. Her dark hair
was tumbled on the pillow. She slept in a tight, tiny ball in the upper corner
of the bed, facing outward, white arms clutched to her chest, nearly in danger
of falling out. Well, we're reached
Kareen. But there's a hitch. Cordelia shivered with the impulse to shoot
Vordarian in his sleep. But the energy discharge must set off alarms. Until she
had Miles's replicator in her hand, she was not ready to run for it. She
motioned Drou to close the panel again, and breathed "Down," to
Bothari, waiting beneath her. They reversed their painstaking four-flight
climb. Back in the tunnel, Cordelia turned to face the girl, who was crying
quite silently. "She's sold out to
him," Droushnakovi whispered, her voice shaking with grief and revulsion. "If you'll explain
to me what power-base you imagine she has to resist the man right now, I'd be
interested to hear it," said Cordelia tartly. "What do you expect her
to do, fling herself out a window to avoid a fate worse than death? She did
fates worse than death with Serg, I don't think they hold any more emotion for
her." "But if only we'd
got here sooner, I might—we might have saved her." "We still
might." "But she's really
sold out!" "Do people lie in
their sleep?" asked Cordelia. At Drou's confused look, she explained.
"She didn't look like a lover to me. She lay like a prisoner. I promised
we'd try for her, and we will." Time. "But we'll go for Miles first.
Let's try the second exit." "We'll have to pass
through more monitored corridors," Droushnakovi warned. "Can't be helped.
If we wait, this place will start waking up, and we'll hit more people." "They're coming on
duty in the kitchens right now," sighed Drou. "I used to stop in for
coffee and hot pastries, some days." Alas, a commando raid
could not knock off for breakfast. This was it. Go or no-go? Was it bravery, or
stupidity, that drove her on? It couldn't be bravery, she was sick with fear,
the same hot acid nausea she'd felt just before combat during the Escobar war.
Familiarity with the sensation didn't help. If I do not act, my child will die.
She would simply have to do without courage. "Now," Cordelia decided.
"There will be no better chance." Up the narrow ladder
again. The second panel opened in the old Emperor's private office. To
Cordelia's relief it still remained dark and unused, untouched since it had
been cleaned out and locked after Ezar's death last spring. His comconsole
desk, with all its Security overrides, was disconnected, wiped of secrets, dead
as its owner. The windows were still dark, with the tardy winter morning. Kou's stick banged
against Cordelia's calf as she strode across the room. It did look odd, hitched
to her waist too obviously like a sword. On a bureau in the office was a wide
antique tray holding a flat ceramic bowl, typical of the knickknacks that
cluttered the Residence. Cordelia laid the stick across the tray and lifted it
solemnly, servant-fashion. Droushnakovi nodded
approval. "Carry it halfway between your waist and your chest," she
whispered. "And keep your spine straight, they always told me." Cordelia nodded. They
closed the panel behind them, straightened themselves, and entered the lower corridor
of the north wing. Two Residence serving
women and a security guard. At first glance, they looked perfectly natural in
this setting, even in these troubled times. A guard corporal standing duty at
the foot of the Petite Stairway at the corridor's west end came to attention at
the sight of Bothari's ImpSec and rank tabs; they exchanged salutes. They were
passing out of sight up around the stairs' curve before he looked again,
harder. Cordelia steeled herself not to break into a panicked run. A subtle piece
of misdirection; the two women couldn't be a threat, they were already guarded.
That their guard could be the threat, might escape the corporal for minutes
yet. They turned into the
upper corridor. There. Behind that door, according to the loyalists' reports,
Vordarian kept the captured replicator. Right under his eye. Perhaps as a human
shield; any explosive dropped on Vordarian's quarters must kill tiny Miles, as
well. Or did the Barrayaran think of her damaged child as human? Another guard stood outside
that door. He stared at them suspiciously, his hand touching his sidearm.
Cordelia and Droushnakovi walked on by without turning their heads. Bothari's
exchanged salute flowed smoothly into a clip to the man's jaw that snapped his
head back into the wall. Bothari caught him before he dropped. They swung the
door open and dragged the guard inside; Bothari took his place in the corridor.
Silently, Drou closed the door. Cordelia stared wildly around the little
chamber, looking for automatic monitors. The room might formerly have been a
bedroom of the sort once slept in by bodyservants to be near their Vorish
masters, or perhaps an unusually large wardrobe; it didn't even have a window
overlooking some dull inner court. The portable uterine replicator sat on a
cloth-covered table in the exact center of the room. Its lights still glowed
their reassuring greens and ambers. No feral red eyes warned of malfunction
yet. A breath half-agony, half-relief, tore from Cordelias lips at the sight of
it. Droushnakovi gazed
around the room unhappily. "What's wrong, Drou?" whispered Cordelia.
"Too easy," the girl muttered. "We're not done
yet. Say 'easy' an hour from now." She licked her lips, shaken by secret
subliminal agreement with Droushnakovi's evaluation. No help for it. Grab and
go. Speed, not secrecy, was their hope now. She set the tray down on
the table, reached for the replicator's carrying handle, and stopped.
Something, something wrong ... she stared more closely at the readouts. The
oxygenation monitor wasn't even functioning. Though its indicator light glowed
green, the nutrient fluid level read 00.00. Empty. Cordelia's mouth opened
in a silent wail. Her stomach churned. She leaned closer, eyes devouring all
the illogical hash of false readouts. Her hagridden nightmare, made suddenly
and horribly real—had they dumped it on the floor, into a drain, down a toilet?
Had Miles died quickly, mercifully smashed, or had they let the tiny infant,
bereft of life-support, twitch to death in agony while they watched? Perhaps
they hadn't even bothered to watch ... The serial number. Look at the serial
number. A hopeless hope, but ... she forced her blurring eyes to focus, her
racing mind to try and remember. She had fingered that number, pensively, back
in Vaagen and Henri's lab, meditating upon this piece of technology and the
distant world that had created it—and this number didn't match. Not the same
replicator, not Miles's! One of the sixteen others, used to bait this trap. Her heart sank. How many
other traps were laid? She pictured herself running frantically from replicator
to replicator, like a distraught child in some cruel game of keep-away,
searching ... I shall go mad. No. Wherever the real
replicator was, it was near to Vordarian's person. Of that, she was sure. She
knelt beside the table, putting her head down a moment to fight the
blood—drained black balloons that clouded her vision and threatened to empty
her mind of consciousness. She lifted the cloth. There. A pressure—sensor. Was
this Vordarian's own clever idea? Slick and vicious. Drou bent to follow her
gesture. "A trap,"
whispered Cordelia. "Lift the replicator, and the alarms go off." "If we disarm
it—" "No. Don't bother.
It's false bait. Not the right replicator. It's an empty, with the controls
buggered to make it look like it's running." Cordelia tried to think
clearly through the pounding in her skull. "We'll have to retrace our
steps. Back down, and up. I hadn't expected to encounter Vordarian here. But I
guarantee he'll know where Miles is. A little old-fashioned interrogation.
We'll be working against time. When the alarm goes up—" Footsteps thudded in the
corridor, and shouts. The chirping buzz of stunner fire. Swearing, Bothari
flung himself backward through the door. "That's done it. They've spotted
us." When the alarm goes up,
it's all over, Cordelia's thought completed itself, in a vertigo of loss. No
window, one door, and they'd just lost control of their only exit. Vordarian's
trap had worked after all. May Vidal Vordarian rot in hell ... Droushnakovi clutched
her stunner. "We won't surrender you, Milady. We'll fight to the
end." "Rubbish,"
snapped Cordelia. "There's nothing our deaths would buy here but the
deaths of a few more of Vordarian's goons. Meaningless." "You mean we should
just quit?" "Suicidal glory is
the luxury of the irresponsible. We're not giving up. We're waiting for a
better opportunity to win. Which we can't take if we're stunned or
nerve-fried." Of course, if that had been the real replicator on the table
... she was insane enough by now to sacrifice these people's lives for her
son's, Cordelia reflected ruefully, but not yet mad enough to trade them for
nothing. She hadn't grown that Barrayaran yet. "You give yourself
to Vordarian as a hostage," Bothari warned. "Vordarian has held
me hostage since the day he took Miles," Cordelia said sadly. "This
changes nothing." A few minutes of shouted
negotiations through the door accomplished their surrender, despite the
hair-trigger nerves of the security guards. They tossed out their weapons. The
guards ran a scan for power packs to be sure, then four of them piled into the
little room to frisk their new prisoners. Two more waited outside as backup.
Cordelia made no sudden moves to startle them. A guard frowned puzzlement when
the interesting lump in Cordelia's vest turned out to be only a child's shoe.
He laid it on the table next to the tray. The commander, a man in
the maroon and gold Vordarian livery, spoke
into his wrist comm. "Yes. We're secured here. Tell m'lord. No, he said to
wake him. You want to explain why you didn't? Thank you." The guards did not prod
them into the corridor, but waited. The still-unconscious man Bothari had
clipped was dragged out. The guards placed Cordelia, arms outstretched to the
wall and legs straddled, in a row with Bothari and Droushnakovi. She was dizzy
with despair. But Kareen would come to her sometime, even as a prisoner. Must
come to her. All she needed was thirty seconds with Kareen, maybe less. When I
see Kareen, you are a dead man, Vordarian. You may walk and talk and give
orders, unconscious of your demise for weeks, but I'll seal your fate as surely
as you've sealed my son's. The reason for the wait
materialized at last; Vordarian himself, in green uniform trousers and
slippers, bare-chested, shouldered his way through the doorway. He was followed
by Princess Kareen, clutching a dark red velvet robe around her. Cordelia's
heart hammered at a doubled rate. Now? "So. The trap
worked," Vordarian began complacently, but added a genuinely shocked "Huh!"
as Cordelia pushed away from the wall and turned to face him. A hand signal
stopped a guard from shoving her back into position. The shock on Vordarian's
face gave way to a wolfish grin. "My God, did it work! Excellent!"
Kareen, hovering behind him, stared at Cordelia in bewildered astonishment. My trap worked, Cordelia
thought, stunned with her opportunity. Watch me. ... "That's the thing,
my lord," said the liveried man, not at all happily. "It didn't work.
We didn't pick this party up at the outer perimeter of the Residence and clear
their way, they just bloody turned up—without triggering anything. That
shouldn't have happened. If I hadn't come along looking for Roget, we might not
have spotted 'em." Vordarian shrugged, too
delighted by the magnitude of his prey to issue some trifling censure.
"Fast-penta that frill," he pointed at Droushnakovi, "and I
imagine you'll find out how. She used to work in Residence Security." Droushnakovi glowered
over her shoulder at Princess Kareen in hurt accusation; Kareen unconsciously
pulled her robe up more closely about her neck, her dark eyes full of equally
hurt question. "Well," said
Vordarian, still smiling at Cordelia, "is my Lord Vorkosigan so thin of
troops he sends his wife to do their work? We cannot lose." He smiled at
his guards, who smiled back. Damn, I wish I'd shot
this lout in his sleep. "What have you done with my son, Vordarian?" Vordarian said through
his teeth, "An outworlder frill will never gain power on Barrayar by
scheming to give a mutant the Imperium. That, I guarantee." "Is that the
official line, now? I don't want power. I just object to idiots having power
over me." Behind Vordarian,
Kareen's lips quirked sadly. Yes, listen to me, Kareen! "Where's my son,
Vordarian?" Cordelia repeated doggedly. "He's Emperor Vidal
now," Kareen remarked, her glance going back and forth between them,
"if he can keep it." "I will,"
Vordarian promised. "Aral Vorkosigan has no better a blood-claim than my
own. And I will protect where Vorkosigan's party has failed. Protect and
preserve the real Barrayar." His head shifted; apparently this assertion
was directed over his shoulder to Kareen. "We have not
failed," Cordelia whispered, meeting Kareen's eyes. Now. She lifted the
shoe from the table, and stretched out her arm with it; Kareen's eyes widened.
She darted forward and grabbed it. Cordelia's hand spasmed like a dying
runner's giving up the baton in some mortal relay race. Fierce certainty
bloomed like fire in her soul. I have you now, Vordarian. The sudden movement
sent a ripple through the armed guards. Kareen examined the shoe with
passionate intensity, turning it in her hands. Vordarian's brows rose in
bafflement, then he dismissed Kareen from his attention and turned to his
liveried guard commander. "We'll keep all
three of these prisoners here in the Residence. I'll personally attend the
fast-penta interrogations. This is a spectacular opportunity—" . Kareen's
face, when she lifted it again to Cordelia, was terrible with hope. Yes, thought Cordelia.
You were betrayed. Lied to. Your son lives; you must move and think and feel
again, no more the walking numbness of a dead spirit beyond pain. This is no
gift I've brought you. It is a curse. "Kareen," said
Cordelia softly, "where is my son?" "The replicator is
on a shelf in the oak wardrobe, in the old Emperor's bedchamber," Kareen
replied steadily, locking her eyes to Cordelia's. "Where is mine?" Cordelia's heart melted
in gratitude for her curse, live pain. "Safe and well, when I last saw
him, as long as this pretender," she jerked her head at Vordarian,
"doesn't find out where. Gregor misses you. He sends his love." Her
words might have been spikes, pounded into Kareen's body. That got Vordarian's
attention. "Gregor is at the bottom of a lake, killed in the flyer crash
with that traitor Negri," he said roughly. "The most insidious lie is
the one you want to hear. Guard yourself, my lady Kareen. I could not save him,
but I will avenge him. I promise you that." Uh—oh. Wait, Kareen.
Cordelia bit her lip. Not here. Too dangerous. Wait your best opportunity. Wait
till the bastard's asleep, at least—but if even a Betan hesitated to shoot her
enemy sleeping, how much less a Vor? She is true Vor... . An unfriendly smile
crinkled Kareen's lips. Her eyes were alight. "This has never been
immersed," she said softly. Cordelia heard the
murderous undertones ringing like a bell; Vordarian, apparently, only heard the
breathiness of some girlish grief. He glanced at the shoe, not grasping its
message, and shook his head as if to clear it of static. "You'll bear
another son someday," he promised her kindly. "Our son." Wait, wait, wait,
Cordelia screamed inside. "Never," whispered Kareen. She stepped back
beside the guard in the doorway, snatched his nerve disruptor from his open holster,
aimed it point-blank at Vordarian, and fired. The startled guard
knocked her hand up; the shot went wide, crackling into the ceiling. Vordarian
dove behind the table, the only furniture in the room, rolling. His liveried
man, in pure spinal reflex, snapped up his nerve disruptor and fired. Kareen's
face muscles locked in death-agony as the blue fire washed around her head; her
mouth pulled open in a last soundless cry. Wait, Cordelia's thought wailed. Vordarian, utterly
horrified, bellowed "No!", scrambled to his feet, and tore a nerve
disruptor from the hand of another guard. The liveried man, realizing the
enormity of his error, tossed his weapon away as if to divorce himself from his
action. Vordarian shot him. The room tilted around
her. Cordelia's hand locked around the hilt of the swordstick and triggered its
sheath flying into the head of one guard, then brought the blade smartly down
across Vordarian's weapon—wrist. He screamed, and blood and the nerve disruptor
flew wide. Droushnakovi was already diving for the first discarded nerve
disruptor. Bothari just took his target out with one lethal hand-blow to the
neck. Cordelia slammed the door shut against the guards in the corridor,
surging forward. A stunner charge buzzed into the walls, then three blue bolts
in rapid succession from Droushnakovi took out the last of Vordarian's men. "Grab him,"
Cordelia yelled to Bothari. Vordarian, shaking, his left hand clamped around
his half-severed right wrist, was in poor condition to resist, though he kicked
and shouted. His blood ran the color of Kareen's robe. Bothari locked
Vordarian's head in a firm grip, nerve disruptor pressed to his skull. "Out of here,"
snarled Cordelia, and kicked the door back open. "To the Emperor's
chamber." To Miles. Vordarian's other guards, preparing to fire, held back
at the sight of their master. "Back off!"
Bothari roared, and they fell away from the door. Cordelia grabbed Droushnakovi
by the arm, and they stepped over Kareen's body. Her ivory limbs lay muddled in
the red fabric, abstractly beautiful forms even in death. The women kept
Bothari and Vordarian between themselves and Vordarian's troops, and retreated
down the corridor. "Pull that plasma arc out of my holster and start
firing," Bothari savagely directed Cordelia. Yes; Bothari had managed to
retrieve it in the melee, probably why his body count hadn't been higher. "You can't set fire
to the Residence," Drou gasped in horror. A fortune in antiquities
and Barrayaran historical artifacts were housed in this wing alone, no doubt.
Cordelia grinned wildly, grabbed the weapon, and fired back down the corridor.
Wooden furniture, wooden parquetry, and age-dry tapestries roared into flame as
the beam's searing fingers touched them. Burn, you. Burn for
Kareen. Pile a death-offering to match her courage and agony, blazing higher
and higher— As they reached the door of the old Emperor's bedchamber, she fired
the hallway in the opposite direction for good measure. THAT for what you've
done to me, and to my boy—the flames should hold back pursuit for a few
minutes. She felt as though her body were floating, light as air. Is this how
Bothari feels, when he kills? Droushnakovi went for the wall panel to the
secret ladder. She was functioning steadily now, as if her hands belonged to a
different body than her tear-ravaged face. Cordelia dropped the sword on the
bed and raced straight for the huge old carved oak wardrobe that stood against
the near wall, and flung its doors wide. Green and amber lights glowed in the
dim recesses of the center shelf. God, don't let it be another decoy... .
Cordelia wrapped her arms around the canister and lifted it out into the light.
The right weight, this time, heavy with fluids; the right readouts, the right
numbers. The right one. Thank you, Kareen. I
didn't mean to kill you. Surely she was mad. She didn't feel anything, no grief
or remorse, though her heart was racing and her breath came in gasps. A shocky
combat-high, that immortal rush that made men charge machine guns. So this was
what the war-addicts came for. Vordarian was still
struggling against Bothari's grip, swearing horribly. "You won't
escape!" He stopped bucking, and tried to catch Cordelia's eyes. He took a
deep breath. "Think, Lady Vorkosigan. You'll never make it. You must have
me for a shield, but you can't carry me stunned. Conscious, I'll fight you
every meter of the way. My men will be all over you, out there." His head
jerked toward the window. "Stun us all and take you prisoner." His
voice went persuasive. "Surrender now, and you'll save your lives. That
one's life, too, if it means so much to you." He nodded to the replicator
Cordelia held in her arms. Her steps were heavier than Alys Vorpatril's, now. "I never gave
orders for that fool Vorhalas to kill Vorkosigan's heir," Vordarian
continued desperately into her silence. Blood leaked rapidly between his
fingers. "It was only his father, with his fatal progressive policies, who
threatened Barrayar. Your son might have inherited the Countship from Piotr
with my goodwill. Piotr should never have been divided from his party of true
allegiance. It's a crime, what Lord Aral has put Piotr through—" So. It was you. Even at
the very beginning. Blood loss and shock were making a jerky parody of
Vordarian's usual smooth delivery of political argument. It was as if he sensed
he could talk his way out of retribution, if only he hit on the right key
words. Somehow, Cordelia doubted he would. Vordarian was not gaudily evil like
Vorrutyer had been, not personally degraded like Serg; yet evil had flowed from
him nonetheless, not from his vices, but from his virtues: the courage of his
conservative convictions, his passion for Kareen. Cordelia's head ached,
vilely. "We'd never proved
you were behind Evon Vorhalas," Cordelia said quietly. "Thank you for
the information." That shut him up, for a
moment. His eyes shifted uneasily to the door, soon to burst inward, ignited by
the inferno behind it. "Dead, I'm no use
to you as a hostage," he said, drawing himself up in dignity. "'You're no use to
me at all, Emperor Vidal," said Cordelia frankly. "There are at least
five thousand casualties in this war so far. Now that Kareen is dead, how long
will you keep fighting?" "Forever," he
snarled whitely. "I will avenge her—avenge them all—" Wrong answer, Cordelia
thought, with a curious lightheaded sadness. "Bothari." He was at her
side instantly. "Pick up that sword." He did so. She set the
replicator on the floor and laid her hand briefly atop his, wrapped around the
hilt. "Bothari, execute this man for me, please." Her tone sounded
weirdly serene in her own ears, as if she'd just asked Bothari to pass the
butter. Murder didn't really require hysterics. "Yes, Milady,"
Bothari intoned, and lifted the blade. His eyes gleamed with joy. "What?" yelped
Vordarian in astonishment. "You're a Betan! You can't do—" The flashing stroke cut
off his words, his head, and his life. It was really extremely neat, despite
the last spurts of blood from the stump of his neck. Vorkosigan should have
loaned Bothari's services the day they'd executed Carl Vorhalas. All that upper
body strength, combined with that extraordinary steel ... the bemused gyration
of her thought snapped back to near-reality as Bothari fell to his knees with
the body, dropping the swordstick and clutching his head. He screamed. It was
as if Vordarian's death cry had been forced out of Bothari's throat. She dropped beside him,
suddenly afraid again, though she'd been numb to fear, white-out overloaded,
ever since Kareen had grabbed for the nerve disruptor and triggered all this
chaos. Keyed by similar stimuli, Bothari was having the forbidden flashback,
Cordelia guessed, to the mutinous throat-cutting that the Barrayaran high
command had decreed he must forget. She cursed herself for not forseeing this
possibility. Would it kill him? "This door is hot
as hell," Droushnakovi, white and shaken, reported from beside it.
"Milady, we have to get out of here now." Bothari was gasping
raggedly, hands still pressed to his head, yet even as she watched his
breathing grew marginally less disrupted. She left him, to crawl blindly over
the floor. She needed something, something moisture-proof... . There, at the bottom of
the wardrobe, was a sturdy plastic bag containing several pairs of Kareen's
shoes, no doubt hastily transported by some maidservant when Vordarian had
Imperially decreed Kareen move in with him. Cordelia emptied out the shoes,
stumbled back around the bed, and collected Vordarian's head from the place
where it had rolled to a stop. It was heavy, but not so heavy as the uterine
replicator. She pulled the drawstrings tight. "Drou. You're in
the best shape. Carry the replicator. Start down. Don't drop it." If she
dropped Vordarian, Cordelia decided, it would scarcely do him further harm. Droushnakovi nodded and
grabbed up both the replicator and the abandoned swordstick. Cordelia wasn't
sure if she retrieved the latter for its newly acquired historical value, or
from some fractured sense of obligation for one of Kou's possessions. Cordelia
coaxed Bothari to his feet. Cool air was rushing up out of the panel opening,
drawn by the fire beyond the door. It would make a neat flue, till the burning
wall crashed in and blocked the entry. Vordarian's people were going to have a
very puzzling time, poking through the embers and wondering where they'd gone. The descent was
nightmarish, in the compressed space, with Bothari whimpering below her feet.
She could carry the bag neither beside nor in front of her, so had to balance
it on one shoulder and go one—handed, palm slapping down the rungs and her
wrist aching. Once on the level, she
prodded the weeping Bothari ruthlessly forward, and wouldn't let him stop till
they came again to Ezar's cache in the ancient stable cellar. "Is he all
right?" Droushnakovi asked nervously, as Bothari sat down with his head
between his knees. "He has a
headache," said Cordelia. "It may take a while to pass off." Droushnakovi asked even
more diffidently, "Are you all right, Milady?" Cordelia couldn't help
it; she laughed. She choked down the hysteria as Drou began to look really
scared. "No." CHAPTER
NINETEEN Ezar's cache included a
crate of currency, Barrayaran marks of various denominations. It also included
a choice of IDs tailored to Drou, not all of which were obsolete. Cordelia put
the two together, and sent Drou out to purchase a used groundcar. Cordelia
waited by the cache while Bothari slowly uncurled from his tight fetal ball of
pain, recovering enough to walk. Getting back out of
Vorbarr Sultana had always been the weak part of her plan, Cordelia felt,
perhaps because she'd never really believed they'd get this far. Travel was
tightly restricted, as Vordarian sought to keep the city from collapsing under
him should its frightened populace attempt to stream away. The monorail
required passes and cross-checks. Lightflyers were absolutely forbidden,
targets of opportunity for trigger-happy guards. Groundcars had to cross
multiple roadblocks. Foot travel was too slow for her burdened and exhausted
party. There were no good choices. After an eternity, pale
Drou returned, to lead them back through the tunnels and out to an obscure side
street. The city was dusted with sooty snow. From the direction of the
Residence, a kilometer off, a darker cloud boiled up to mix with the
winter-grey sky; the fierce fire was still not under control, apparently. How
long would Vordarian's decapitated command structure keep functioning? Had word
of his death leaked out yet? As instructed, Drou had
found a very plain and unobtrusive old groundcar, though there had been enough
funds to buy the most luxurious new vehicle the city still held. Cordelia
wanted to save that reserve for the checkpoints. But the checkpoints were
not as bad as Cordelia had feared. Indeed, the first was empty, its guards
pulled back, perhaps, to fight the fire or seal the perimeter of the Residence.
The second was crowded with vehicles and impatient drivers. The inspectors were
perfunctory and nervous, distracted and half—paralyzed by who-knew-what rumors
coming from downtown. A fat wad of currency, handed out under Drou's perfect
false ID, disappeared into a guard's pocket. He waved Drou through, driving her
"sick uncle" home. Borthari looked sick enough, for sure, huddled
under a blanket that also hid the replicator. At the last checkpoint Drou
"repeated" a likely version of a rumor of Vordarian's death, and the
worried guard deserted on the spot, shedding his uniform in favor of a civilian
overcoat and vanishing down a side street. They zigzagged over bad
side roads all afternoon to reach Vorinnis's neutral District, where the aged
groundcar died of a fractured power-train. They abandoned it and took to the
monorail system then, Cordelia driving her exhausted little party on, racing
the clock in her head. At midnight, they reported in at the first military
installation over the next loyalist border, a supply depot. It took Drou
several minutes of argument with the night duty officer to persuade him to 1)
identify them, 2) let them in, and 3) let them use the military comm net to
call Tanery Base to demand transport. At that point the D.O. abruptly became a
lot more efficient. A high-speed air shuttle with a hot pilot was scrambled to
pick them up. Approaching Tanery Base
at dawn from the air, Cordelia felt the most unpleasant flash of deja vu. It
was so like her first arrival from the mountains, she had the sense of being
caught in a time loop. Perhaps she'd died and gone to hell, and her eternal
torment would be to repeat the last three weeks' events over and over,
endlessly. She shivered. Droushnakovi watched her
with concern. The exhausted Bothari dozed, in the air shuttle's passenger
cabin. Illyan's two ImpSec men, identical twins for all Cordelia could tell to
Vordarian's ones they'd murdered back at the Residence, maintained a nervous
silence. Cordelia held the uterine replicator possessively on her lap. The
plastic bag sat between her feet. She was irrationally unable to let either
item out of her sight, though it was clear Drou would much rather the bag had
ridden in the luggage compartment. The air shuttle touched
neatly down on its landing pad, and its engines whined to silence. "I want Captain
Vaagen, and I want him now," Cordelia repeated for the fifth time as
Illyan's men led them underground into the Security debriefing area. "Yes, Milady. He's
on his way," the ImpSec man assured her again. She glowered suspiciously
at him. Cautiously, the ImpSec
men relieved them of their personal arsenal. Cordelia didn't blame them; she
wouldn't have trusted her wild-looking crew with charged weapons either. Thanks
to Ezar's cache the women were not ill dressed, though there had been nothing
in Bothari's size, so he'd retained his smoked and stinking black fatigues.
Fortunately the. dried blood spatters didn't show much. But all their faces
were hollow-eyed, grooved and shadowed. Cordelia shivered, and Bothari's hands
and eyelids twitched, and Droushnakovi had a distressing tendency to start
crying, silently, at random moments, stopping as suddenly as she started. At long last—only
minutes, Cordelia told herself firmly—Captain Vaagen appeared, a tech at his
side. He wore undress greens, and his steps were quick, up to Vaagen—speed
again. The only residue of his injuries seemed to be a black patch over his
eye; on him, it looked good, giving him a fine piratical air. Cordelia trusted
the patch was only a temporary part of ongoing treatment. "Milady!" He
managed a smile, the first to shift those facial muscles in a while, Cordelia
sensed. His one eye gleamed triumph. "You got it!" "I hope so,
Captain." She held up the replicator, which she had refused to let the
ImpSec men touch. "I hope we're in time. There aren't any red lights yet,
but there was a warning beeper. I shut it off, it was driving me crazy." He looked the device
over, checking key readouts. "Good. Good. Nutrient reservoir is very low,
but not quite depleted yet. Filters still functioning, uric acid level high but
not over tolerance—I think it's all right, Milady. Alive, that is. What this
interruption has done to my calcification treatments will take more time to
determine. We'll be in the infirmary. I should be able to begin servicing it
within the hour." "Do you have
everything you need there? Supplies?" His white teeth flashed.
"Lord Vorkosigan had me begin setting up a lab the day after you left.
Just in case, he said." And, I love you.
"Thank you. Go, go." She surrendered the replicator into Vaagen's
hands, and he hurried out with it. She sat back down like a
marionette with the strings cut. Now she could allow herself to feel the full
weight of her exhaustion. But she could not stop quite yet. She had one very
important debriefing yet to accomplish. And not to these hovering ImpSec twits,
who pestered her—she closed her eyes and pointedly ignored them, letting Drou
stammer out answers to their foolish questions. Desire warred with
dread. She wanted Aral. She had defied Aral, most openly. Had it touched his
honor, scorched his—admittedly, unusually flexible—Barrayaran male ego beyond
tolerance? Would she be frozen out of his trust forever? No, that suspicion was
surely unjust. But his public credibility among his peers, part of the delicate
psychology of power—had she damaged it? Would some damnable unforseen political
consequence rebound out of all this, back on their heads? Did she care? Yes,
she decided sadly. It was hell to be so tired, and still care. "Kou!" Drou's cry snapped
Cordelias eyes open. Koudelka was limping into the main portal Security
debriefing office. Good Lord, the man was back in uniform, shaved and sharp.
Only the grey rings under his eyes were non-regulation. Kou and Drou's reunion,
Cordelia was delighted to note, was not in the least military. The staff
soldier was instantly plastered all over with tall and grubby blonde,
exchanging muffled unregulation greetings like darling, love, thank God, safe,
sweet... . The ImpSec men turned away uncomfortably from the blast of naked
emotion radiating from their faces. Cordelia basked in it. A far more sensible
way to greet a friend than all that moronic saluting. They parted only to see
each other better, still holding hands. "You made it," chortled
Droushnakovi. "How long have you—is Lady Vorpatril—?" "We only made it in
about two hours ahead of you," Kou said breathlessly, reoxygenating after
a heroic kiss. "Lady Vorpatril and the young lord are bedded down in the
infirmary. The doctor says she's suffering mainly from stress and exhaustion.
She was incredible. We had a couple of bad moments, getting past Vordarian's
Security, but she never cracked. And you—you did it! I passed Vaagen in the
corridor, with the replicator—you rescued m'lord's son!" Droushnakovi's shoulders
sagged. "But we lost Princess Kareen." "Oh." He
touched her lips. "Don't tell me—Lord Vorkosigan instructed me to bring
you all to him the instant you arrived. Debrief to him before anyone. I'll take
you to him now." He waved away the ImpSec men like flies, something Cordelia
had been longing to do. Bothari had to help her
rise. She gathered up the yellow plastic bag. She noted ironically that it bore
the name and logo of one of the capital's most exclusive women's clothiers.
Kareen encompasses you at last, you bastard. "What's that?"
asked Kou. "Yes,
Lieutenant," the urgent ImpSec man put in, "please—she's refused to
let us examine it in any way. By regulations, we shouldn't let her carry it
into the base." Cordelia pulled open the
top of the bag and held it out for Kou's inspection. He peered within. "Shit." The
ImpSec men surged forward as Koudelka jumped back. He waved them down. "I
... I see," he swallowed. "Yes, Admiral Vorkosigan will certainly
want to see that." "Lieutenant, what
should I put on my inventory?" the ImpSec man—whined, Cordelia decided,
was what he was doing. "I have to register it, if it's going in." "Let him cover his
ass, Kou," Cordelia sighed. Kou peeked again, his
lips twisting into a very crooked grin. "It's all right. Put it down as a
Winterfair gift for Admiral Vorkosigan. From his wife." "Oh, Kou,"
Drou held out his sword. "I saved this. But we lost the casing, I'm
sorry." Kou took it, looked at
the bag, made the connection, and carried it more carefully. "That's ...
that's all right. Thank you." "I'll take it back
to Siegling's and get a duplicate casing made," Cordelia promised. The ImpSec men gave way
before Admiral Vorkosigan's top aide. Kou led Cordelia, Bothari, and Drou into
the base. Cordelia pulled the drawstring tight, and let the bag swing from her hand. "We're going down
to the Staff level. The admiral's been in a sealed meeting for the last hour.
Two of Vordarian's top officers came in secretly last night. Negotiating to
sell him out. The best hostage-rescue plan hinges on their cooperation." "Did they know
about this yet?" Cordelia held up the bag. "I don't think so,
Milady. You've just changed everything." His grin grew feral, and his
uneven stride lengthened. "I expect that raid
is still going to be required," Cordelia sighed. "Even in collapse, Vordarian's
side is still dangerous. Maybe more dangerous, in their desperation." She
thought of that downtown Vorbarr Sultana hotel, where Bothari's baby girl Elena
was, as far as she knew, still housed. Lesser hostages. Could she persuade Aral
to apportion a few more resources for lesser hostages? Alas, she had probably
not put all the soldiers out of work even yet. I tried. God, I tried. They went down, and
down, to the nerve center of Tanery Base. They came to a highly secured
conference chamber; a lethally armed squad stood ramrod-guard outside it.
Koudelka wafted them past. The doors slid aside, and closed again behind them. Cordelia took in the
tableau, that paused to look back up at her from around the polished table.
Aral was in the center, of course. Illyan and Count Piotr flanked him on either
side. Prime Minister Vortala was there, and Kanzian, and some other senior
staffers all in formal dress greens. The two double-traitors sat across, with
their aides. Clouds of witnesses. She wanted to be alone with Aral, be rid of
the whole bloody mob of them. Soon. Aral's eyes locked to
hers in silent agony. His lips curled in an utterly ironic smile. That was all;
and yet her stomach warmed with confidence again, sure of him. No frost. It was
going to be all right. They were in step again, and a torrent of words and hard
embraces could not have communicated it any better. Embraces would come,
though, the grey eyes promised. Her own lips curved up for the first time
since—when? Count Piotr's hand
slapped down hard upon the table. "Good God, woman, where have you
been?" he cried furiously. A morbid lunacy overtook
her. She smiled fiercely at him, and held up the bag. "Shopping." For a second, the old
man nearly believed her; conflicting expressions whiplashed over his face,
astonishment, disbelief, then anger as it penetrated he was being mocked. "Want to see what I
bought?" Cordelia continued, still floating. She yanked the bag's top
open, and rolled Vordarian's head out across the table. Fortunately, it had ceased
leaking some hours back. It stopped faceup before him, lips grinning, drying
eyes staring. Piotr's mouth fell open.
Kanzian jumped, the staffers swore, and one of Vordarian's traitors actually
fell out of his chair, recoiling. Vortala pursed his lips and raised his brows.
Koudelka, grimly proud of his key role in stage-managing this historic moment
in one-upsmanship, laid the swordstick on the table as further evidence. Illyan
puffed, and grinned triumphantly through his shock. Aral was perfect. His
eyes widened only briefly, then he rested his chin on his hands and gazed over
his father's shoulder with an expression of cool interest. "But of
course," he breathed. "Every Vor lady goes to the capital to shop." "I paid too much
for it," Cordelia confessed. "That, too, is
traditional." A sardonic smile quirked his lips. "Kareen is dead.
Shot in the melee. I couldn't save her." He Opened his hand, as
if to let the nascent black humor fall through his fingers. "I see."
He raised his eyes again to hers, as if asking Are you all right?, and
apparently finding the answer, No. "Gentlemen. If you
will be pleased to excuse yourselves for a few minutes. I wish to be alone with
my wife." In the shuffle of the
men rising to their feet, Cordelia caught a mutter, "Brave man ..." She nailed Vordarian's
men by eye, as they backed from the table. "Officers. I recommend that
when this conference resumes, you surrender unconditionally upon Lord
Vorkosigan's mercy. He may still have some." I certainly don't, was the
unspoken cap to that. "I'm tired of your stupid war. End it." Piotr edged past her.
She smiled bitterly at him. He grimaced uneasily back. "It appears I
underestimated you," he murmured. "Don't you ever ...
cross me again. And stay away from my son." A look from Vorkosigan
held back her outpouring of rage, quivering on the lip of her cup. She and
Piotr exchanged wary nods, like the vestigial bows of two duelists. "Kou," said
Vorkosigan, staring bemusedly at the grisly object lying by his elbow.
"Will you please arrange for this thing to be removed to the base morgue.
I don't fancy it as a table decoration. It will have to be stored till it can
be buried with the rest of him. Wherever that may be." "Sure you don't
want to leave it there to inspire Vordarian's staffers to come to terms?"
said Kou. "No," said
Vorkosigan firmly. "It's had a sufficiently salutary effect already." Gingerly, Kou took the
bag from Cordelia, opened it, and used it to capture Vordarian's head without
actually touching it. Aral's eye took in her
weary team, Droushnakovi's grief, Bothari's compulsive twitching. "Drou.
Sergeant. You are dismissed to wash and eat. Report back to me in my quarters
after we finish here." Droushnakovi nodded, and
the sergeant saluted, and they followed Koudelka out. Cordelia fell into
Aral's arms as the door sighed shut, into his lap, catching him as he rose for
her. They both landed with enough force to threaten the balance of the chair.
They embraced each other so tightly, they had to back off to manage a kiss. "Don't you
ever," he husked, "pull a stunt like that again." "Don't you ever let
it become necessary, again." "Deal." He held her face away
from his, between his hands, his eyes devouring her. "I was so afraid for
you, I forgot to be afraid for your enemies. I should have remembered. Dear
Captain." "I couldn't have
done a thing, alone. Drou was my eyes, Bothari my right arm, Koudelka our feet.
You must forgive Kou for going AWOL. We sort of kidnapped him." "So I heard." "Did he tell you
about your cousin Padma?" "Yes," a
grieved sigh. He stared back through time. "Padma and I were the only
survivors of Mad Yuri's massacre of Prince Xav's descendants, that day. I was
eleven. Padma was one, a baby ... I always thought of him as the baby, ever after.
Tried to watch out for him ... Now I'm the only one left. Yuri's work is almost
done." "Bothari's Elena.
She must be rescued. She's a lot more important than that barn full of counts
at the Residence." "We're working on
that right now," he promised. "Top priority, now that you've removed
Emperor Vidal from consideration." He paused, smiling slowly. "I fear
you've shocked my Barrayarans, love." "Why? Did they
think they had a monopoly on savagery? Those were Vordarian's last words.
'You're a Betan. You can't do.' " "Do what?" "This, I suppose he
would have said. If he'd had the chance." "A lurid trophy, to
carry on the monorail. Suppose someone had asked you to open your bag?" "I would
have." "Are you ... quite
all right, love?" His mouth was serious, under his smile. "Meaning, have I
lost my grip? Yes, a little. More than a little." Her hands still shook,
as they had for a day, a continuing tremula that did not pass off. "It
seemed ... necessary, to bring Vordarian's head along. I hadn't actually
thought about mounting it on the wall of Vorkosigan House along with your
father's hunting trophies, though it's an idea. I don't think I consciously realized
why I was hanging on to it till I walked into this room. If I'd staggered in
here empty-handed and told all those men I'd killed Vordarian, and undeclared
their little war, who'd have believed me? Besides you." "Illyan, perhaps.
He's seen you in action before. The others ... you're quite right." "I think I also had
some idea stuck in my mind from ancient history. Didn't they used to publicly
display the bodies of slain rulers, to scotch pretenders? It seemed
appropriate. Though Vordarian was almost a side-issue, from my point of
view." "Your ImpSec escort
reported to me you'd recovered the replicator. Was it still working?" "Vaagen has it now,
checking it. Miles is alive. Damage unknown. Oh. It seems Vordarian had some
hand in setting up Evon Vorhalas. Not directly, through some agent." "Illyan suspected
it." His arms tightened around her. "About
Bothari," she said. "He's not in good shape. Way overstressed. He
needs real treatment, medical, not political. That memory wipe was a horror
show." "At the time, it
saved his life. My compromise with Ezar. I had no power then. I can do better
now." "You'd better. He's
fixated on me like a dog. His words. And I've used him like one. I owe him ...
everything. But he scares me. Why me?" Vorkosigan looked very
thoughtful. "Bothari ... does not have a good sense of self. No strong
center. When I first met him, at his most ill, his personality was close to
separating into multiples. If he were better educated, not so damaged, he would
have made an ideal spy, a deep-penetration mole. He's a chameleon. A mirror. He
becomes whatever is required of him. Not a conscious process, I don't think.
Piotr expects a loyal retainer, and Bothari plays the part, deadpan as you
please. Vorruryer wanted a monster, and Bothari became his torturer. And
victim. I demanded a good soldier, and he became one for me. You ..." his
voice softened, "you are the only person I know who looks at Bothari and
sees a hero. So he becomes one for you. He clings to you because you create him
a greater man than he ever dreamed of being." "Aral, that's
crazed." "Ah?" He
nuzzled her hair. "But he's not the only man you have that peculiar effect
upon. Dear Captain." "I'm afraid I'm not
in much better shape than Bothari. I botched it, and Kareen died. Who will tell
Gregor? If it weren't for Miles, I'd quit. You keep Piotr off me, or I swear,
next time I'll try and take him apart." She was shaking again. "Sh." He
rocked her, a little. "I think you can at least leave the mopping up to
me, eh? Will you trust me again? We'll make something of these sacrifices. Not
vain." "I feel dirty. I
feel sick." "Yes. Most sane
people do, coming in off a combat mission. It's a very familiar state of
mind." He paused. "But if a Betan can become so Barrayaran, maybe
it's not so impossible for Barrayarans to become a little more Betan. Change is
possible." "Change is
inevitable," she asserted. "But you can't manage it Ezar's way. This
isn't Ezar's era anymore. You have to find your own way. Remake this world into
one Miles can survive in. And Elena. And Ivan. And Gregor." "As you will,
Milady." On the third day after
Vordarian's death, the capital fell to loyal Imperial troops; if not without a
shot being fired, at least not nearly so bloodily as Cordelia had feared. Only
two pockets of resistance, at ImpSec and at the Residence itself, had to be
cleared out by ground troops. The downtown hotel with its hostages was
surrendered intact by its garrison, after hours of intense covert negotiations.
Piotr gave Bothari a one-day leave to personally retrieve his child and her
fosterer and escort them home. Cordelia slept through the night for the first
time since her return. Evon Vorhalas had been commanding ground troops for
Vordarian in the capital, in charge of the last defense of the space
communications center in the military headquarters complex. He died in the
final flurry of fighting, shot by his own men when he spurned an offer of
amnesty in return for their surrender. In a way, Cordelia was relieved. The
traditional punishment for treason upon the part of a Vor lord was public
exposure and death by starvation. The late Emperor Ezar had not hesitated to
maintain the gruesome tradition. Cordelia could only pray that Gregor's reign
would see the custom end. Without Vordarian to
hold it together, his rebel coalition shattered rapidly into disparate
factions. An extreme conservative Vor lord in the city of Federstok raised his
standard and declared himself Emperor, succeeding Vordarian; his pretendership
lasted somewhat less than thirty hours. In an eastern coastal District
belonging to one of Vordarian's allies, the Count suicided upon capture. An
anti-Vor group declared an independent republic in the chaos. The new Count, an
infantry colonel from a collateral family line who had never anticipated such
honors falling upon him, took instant and effective exception to this violent
swing to the over-progressive. Vorkosigan left it to him and his District
militia, reserving Imperial troops for "non-District-internal
matters." "You can't go halfway
and stop," Piotr muttered forebodingly, at this delicacy. "One step at a
time," Vorkosigan returned grimly, "I can walk around the world.
Watch me." On the fifth day, Gregor
was returned to the capital. Vorkosigan and Cordelia together undertook to tell
him of the death of Kareen. He cried in bewilderment. When he quieted, he was
taken for a ride in a groundcar with a transparent force-screen, reviewing some
troops; in fact, the troops were reviewing him, that he might be seen to be
alive, finally dispelling Vordarian's rumors of his death. Cordelia rode with
him. His silent shockiness hurt her to the heart, but it was better from her
point of view than parading him first and then telling him. If she'd had to
endure his repeated queries of when he would see his mother again, all during
the ride, she would have broken down herself. The funeral for Kareen
was public, though much less elaborate than it would have been in less chaotic
circumstances. Gregor was required to light an offering pyre for the second
time in a year. Vorkosigan asked Cordelia to guide Gregor's hand with the
torch. This part of the funeral ceremony seemed almost redundant, after what she'd
done to the Residence. Cordelia added a thick lock of her own hair to the pile.
Gregor clung close to her. "Are they going to
kill me, too?" he whispered to her. He didn't sound frightened, just
morbidly curious. Father, grandfather, mother, all gone in a year; no wonder he
felt targeted, confused though his understanding of death was at his age. "No," she said
firmly. Her arm tightened around his shoulders. "I won't let them."
God help her, this baseless assurance actually seemed to console him. I'll look after your
boy, Kareen, Cordelia thought as the flames rose up. The oath was more costly
than any gift being burned, for it bound her life unbreakably to Barrayar. But
the heat on her face eased the pain in her head, a little. Cordelia's own soul felt
like an exhausted snail, shelled in a glassy numbness. She crept like an
automaton through the rest of the ceremony, though there were flashes when her
surroundings made no sense at all. The assorted Barrayaran Vor reacted to her
with a frozen, deep formality. They doubtless figure me for crazy-dangerous, a
madwoman let out of the attic by overindulgent relations. It finally dawned on
her that their exaggerated courtesies signified respect. It made her furious. All
Kareen's courage of endurance had bought her nothing, Lady Vorpatril's brave
and bloody birth-giving was taken for granted, but whack off some idiot's head
and you were really somebody, by God—! It took Aral an hour,
when they returned to his quarters, to calm her down, and then she had a crying
jag. He stuck it out. "Are you going to
use this?" she asked him, when sheer weariness returned her to a semblance
of coherence. "This, this ... amazing new status of mine?" How she
loathed the word, acid in her mouth. "I'll use
anything," he vowed quietly, "if it will help me put Gregor on the
throne in fifteen years a sane and competent man, heading a stable government.
Use you, me, whatever it takes. To pay this much, then fail, would not be
tolerable." She sighed, and put her
hand in his. "In case of accident, donate my remaining body parts, too.
It's the Betan way. Waste not." His lip curled up
helplessly. Face-to-face, they rested their foreheads together for a moment,
bracing each other. "Want not." Her silent promise to
Kareen was made policy when she and Aral, as a couple, were officially
appointed Gregor's guardians by the Council of Counts. This was legally
distinct somehow from Aral's guardianship of the Imperium as Regent. Prime
Minister Vortala took time to lecture her and make it clear her new duties
involved no political powers. She did have economic functions, including
trusteeship of certain Vorbarra holdings that were separate from Imperial
properties, appending strictly to Gregor's title as Count Vorbarra. And by
Aral's delegation, she was given oversight of the Emperor's household. And
education. "But, Aral,"
said Cordelia, stunned. "Vortala emphasized I was to have no power." "Vortala ... is not
all-wise. Let's just say, he has a little trouble recognizing as such some
forms of power which are not synonymous with force. Your window of opportunity
is narrow, though; at age twelve Gregor will enter a pre-Academy preparatory
school." "But do they
realize ... ?" "I do. And you do.
It's enough." CHAPTER
TWENTY One of Cordelia's first
orders was to assign Droushnakovi back to Gregor's person, for his emotional
continuity. This did not mean giving up the girl's company, a comfort to which
Cordelia had grown deeply accustomed, because upon Illyan's renewed insistence
Aral finally took up living quarters in the Imperial Residence. It eased
Cordelias heart, when Drou and Kou were wed a month after Winterfair. Cordelia offered herself
as a go-between for the two families. For some reason, Kou and Drou both turned
the offer down, hastily, though with profuse thanks. Given the bewildering
pitfalls of Barrayaran social custom, Cordelia was just as happy to leave it to
the experienced elderly lady the couple did contract. Cordelia saw Alys
Vorpatril often, exchanging domestic visits. Baby Lord Ivan was, if not exactly
a comfort to Alys, certainly a distraction in her slow recovery from her
physical ordeal. He grew rapidly despite a tendency to fussiness, an iatrogenic
trait, Cordelia realized after a while, triggered by Alys's fussing over him.
Ivan should have three or four sibs to divide her attention among, Cordelia
decided, watching Alys burp him on her shoulder while planning aloud his
educational attack, come age eighteen, upon the formidable Imperial Military
Academy entrance examinations. Alys Vorpatril was drawn
off her embittered mourning for Padma and her planning of Ivan's life down to
the last detail, when she was given a look at a picture of the wedding dress
Drou was drooling over. "No, no, no!"
she cried, recoiling. "All that lace—you would look as furry as a big
white bear. Silk, dear, long falls of silk is what you need—" and she was
off. Motherless, sisterless Drou could scarcely have found a more knowledgeable
bridal consultant. Lady Vorpatril ended by making the dress one of her several
presents, to be sure of its aesthetic perfection, along with a "little
holiday cottage" which turned out to be a substantial house on the eastern
seashore. Come summer, Drou's beach dream would come true. Cordelia grinned,
and purchased the girl a nightgown and robe with enough tiers of lace layered
on them to satiate the most frill-starved soul. Aral lent the hall: the
Imperial Residence's Red Room and adjacent ballroom, the one with the beautiful
marquetry floor, which to Cordelia's immense relief had escaped the fire. In
theory, this magnificent gesture was required to ease Illyan's Security
headaches, as Cordelia and Aral were to stand among the principal witnesses.
Personally, Cordelia thought converting ImpSec into wedding caterers a
promising turn of events. Aral looked over the
guest list and smiled. "Do you realize," he said to Cordelia,
"every class is represented? A year ago this event, here, would not have
been possible. The grocer's son and the non-com's daughter. They bought it with
blood, but maybe next year it can be bought with peaceful achievement.
Medicine, education, engineering, entrepreneurship—shall we have a party for
librarians?" "Won't those
terrible Vorish crones all Piotr's friends are married to complain about social
over-progressiveness?" "With Alys
Vorpatril behind this? They wouldn't dare." The affair grew from there. By
a week in advance Kou and Drou were considering eloping out of sheer panic,
having lost all control of everything whatsoever to their eager helpers. But
the Imperial Residence's staff brought it all together with practiced ease. The
senior housewoman flew about, chortling, "And here I was afraid we weren't
going to have anything to do, once the admiral moved in, but those dreadful
boring General Staff dinners." The day and hour came at
last. A large circle made of colored groats was laid out on the floor of the
Red Room, encompassed by a star with a variable number of points, one for each
parent or principal witness to stand at: in this case, four. In Barrayaran
custom a couple married themselves, speaking their vows within the circle,
requiring neither priest nor magistrate. Practically, a coach, called
appropriately enough the Coach, stood outside the circle and read the script
for the fainthearted or faint-headed to repeat. This dispensed with the need
for higher neural functions such as learning and memory on the part of the
stressed couple. Lost motor coordination was supplied by a friend each, who
steered them to the circle. It was all very practical, Cordelia decided, as
well as splendid. With a grin and a
flourish Aral placed her at her assigned star point, as if setting out a bouquet,
and took his own place. Lady Vorpatril had insisted on a new gown for Cordelia,
a sweeping length of blue and white with red floral accents, color-coordinated
with Aral's ultra-formal parade red-and-blues. Drou's proud and nervous father
also wore his red-and-blues and held down his point. Strange to think of the
military, which Cordelia normally associated with totalitarian impulses, as the
spearhead of egalitarianism on Barrayar. The Cetagandans' gift, Aral called it;
their invasion had first forced the promotion of talent regardless of origin,
and the waves of that change were still traveling through Barrayaran society. Sergeant Droushnakovi
was a shorter, slighter man than Cordelia had expected. Either Drou's mother's
genes, better nutrition, or both had boosted all his children up taller than
himself. All three brothers, from the captain to the corporal, had been broken
loose from their military assignments to attend, and stood now in the big outer
circle of other witnesses along with Kou's excited younger sister. Kou's mother
stood on the star's last point, crying and smiling, in a blue dress so
color-perfect Cordelia decided Alys Vorpatril must have somehow gotten to her,
too. Koudelka marched in
first, propped by his stick with its new cover and Sergeant Bothari. Sergeant
Bothari wore the most glittery version of Piotr's brown and silver livery, and
whispered helpful, horribly suggestive advice like "If you feel really
nauseous, Lieutenant, put your head down." The very thought turned Kou's
face greener, an extraordinary color-contrast with his red-and-blues that Lady
Vorpatril would no doubt have disapproved. Heads turned. Oh, my.
Alys Vorpatril had been absolutely right about Drou's gown. She swept in, as
stunningly graceful as a sailing ship, a tall clean perfection of form and
function, ivory silk, gold hair, blue eyes, white, blue, and red flowers, so
that when she stepped up beside Kou one suddenly realized how tall he must be.
Alys Vorpatril, in silver-grey, released Drou at the circle's edge with a
gesture like some hunting goddess releasing a white falcon, to soar and settle
on Kou's outstretched arm. Kou and Drou made it
through their oaths without stammering or passing out, and managed to conceal
their mutual embarrassment at the public declaration of their despised first
names, Clement and Ludmilla. ("My brothers used
to call me Lud," Drou had confided to Cordelia during the practice
yesterday. "Rhymes with mud. Also thud, blood, crud, dud, and cud." "You'll always be
Drou to me," Kou had promised.) As senior witness Aral
then broke the circle of groats with a sweep of one booted foot and let them
out, and the music, dancing, eating and drinking began. The buffet was
incredible, the music live, and the drinking ... traditional. After the first
formal glass of the good wine Piotr'd sent on, Cordelia drifted up to Kou and
murmured a few words about Betan research on the detrimental effects of ethanol
on sexual function, after which he switched to water. "Cruel woman,"
Aral whispered in her ear, laughing. "Not to Drou, I'm
not," she murmured back. She was formally
introduced to the brothers, now brothers-in-law, who regarded her with that
awed respect that made her teeth grind. Though her jaw eased a bit when a
rhyming brother was waved to silence by Dad to make room for some comment by
the bride on the topic of hand-weapons. "Quiet, Jos," Sergeant
Droushnakovi told his son. "You've never handled a nerve disruptor in
combat." Drou blinked, then smiled, a gleam in her eye. Cordelia seized a moment
with Bothari, whom she saw all too seldom now that Aral had split his household
from Piotr's. "How is Elena
doing, now she's back home? Has Mistress Hysopi recovered from it all
yet?" "They're well,
Milady," Bothari ducked his head, and almost-smiled. "I visited about
five days ago, when Count Piotr went down to check on his horses. Elena, um,
creeps. Put her down and look away a minute, you look back and she's moved...
." He frowned. "I hope Carla Hysopi stays alert." "She saw Elena
safely through Vordarian's war, I suspect she'll handle crawling with equal
ease. Courageous woman. She should be in line for some of those medals they're
handing out." Bothari's brow wrinkled.
"Don't know they'd mean much to her." "Mm. She does
understand she can call on me for anything she needs, I trust. Any time." "Yes, Milady. But
we're doing all right for the moment." A flash of pride, there, in that
statement of sufficiency. "It's very quiet down at Vorkosigan Surleau, in
the winter. Clean. A right and proper place for a baby." Not like the
place I grew up in, Cordelia could almost hear him add. "I mean her to
have everything right and proper. Even her da." "How are you doing,
yourself?" "The new med is
better. Anyway, my head doesn't feel like it's stuffed with fog anymore. And I
sleep at night. Besides that I can't tell what it's doing." Its job, apparently; he
seemed relaxed and calm, almost free of that sinister edginess. Though he was
still the first person in the room to look over to the buffet and ask, "Is
he supposed to be up?" Gregor, in pajamas, was
creeping along the edge of the culinary array, trying to look invisible and
nail down a few goodies before he was spotted and taken away again. Cordelia
got to him first, before he was either stepped on by an unwary guest, or
recaptured by Security forces in the persons of the breathless maidservant and
terrified bodyguard who were supposed to be filling in for Drou. They were
followed up by a paper-white Simon Illyan. Fortunately for Illyan's heart,
Gregor had apparently only been formally missing for about sixty seconds.
Gregor shrank into her skirts as the hyperventilating adults loomed over him. Drou, who had noticed
Illyan touch his comm, turn pale, and start to move, checked in by sheer force
of habit. "What's the matter?" "How'd he get
away?" snarled Illyan to Gregor's keepers, who stammered out something
inaudible about thought he was asleep and never took my eyes off. "He's not
away," Cordelia put in tartly. "This is his home. He ought to be at
least able to walk about inside, or why do you keep all those bloody useless
guards on the walls out there?" "Droushie, can't I
come to your party?" Gregor asked plaintively, casting around desperately
for an authority to outrank Illyan. Drou looked at Illyan,
who looked disapproving. Cordelia broke the deadlock without hesitation.
"Yes, you can." So, under Cordelia's
supervision, the Emperor danced with the bride, ate three cream cakes, and was
carried away to bed satisfied. Fifteen minutes was all he'd wanted, poor kid. The party rolled on,
elated. "Dance, Milady?" Aral inquired hopefully at her elbow. Dare she try it? They
were playing the restrained rhythms of the mirror-dance—surely she couldn't go
too wrong. She nodded, and Aral drained his glass and led her onto the polished
marquetry. Step, slide, gesture: concentrating, she made an interesting and
unexpected discovery. Either partner could lead, and if the dancers were alert
and sharp, the watchers couldn't tell the difference. She tried some dips and
slides of her own, and Aral followed smoothly. Back and forth the lead passed
like a ball between them, the game growing ever more absorbing, until they ran
out of music and breath. The last snows of winter
were melting from the streets of Vorbarr Sultana when Captain Vaagen called
from ImpMil for Cordelia. "It's time, Milady.
I've done all I can do in vitro. The placenta is ten months old and clearly
senescing. The machine can't be boosted any more to compensate." "When, then?" "Tomorrow would be
good." She barely slept that
night. They all trooped down to the Imperial Military Hospital the next
morning, Aral, Cordelia, Count Piotr flanked by Bothari. Cordelia was not at
all sure she wanted Piotr present, but until the old man did them all the
convenience of dropping dead, she was stuck with him. Maybe one more appeal to
reason, one more presentation of the facts, one more try, would do the trick.
Their unresolved antagonism grieved Aral; at least he let the onus for fueling
it fall on Piotr, not herself. Do your worst, old man. You have no future
except through me. My son will light your offering pyre. She was glad to see
Bothari again, though. Vaagen's new laboratory
was an entire floor in the most up-to-date building in the complex. Cordelia'd
had him moved from his old lab on account of ghosts, having come in for one of
her frequent visits soon after their return to Vorbarr Sultana to find him in a
state of near-paralysis, unable to work. Every time he entered the room, he'd
said, Dr. Henri's violent and senseless death replayed in his memory. He could
not step on the floor near the place where Henri's body had fallen, but had to
walk wide around; little noises made him jump and twitch. "I am a man of
reason," he'd said hoarsely. "This superstitious nonsense means
nothing to me." So Cordelia had helped him burn a private offering to
Henri in a brazier on the lab floor, and disguised the move as a promotion. The new lab was bright
and spacious and free of revenant spirits. Cordelia found a mob of men waiting
when Vaagen ushered her in: researchers assigned to Vaagen to explore
replicator technology, interested civilian obstetricians including Dr. Ritter,
Miles's own pediatrician-to-be, and his consulting surgeon. The changing of the
guard. Mere parents needed determination to elbow their way in. Vaagen bustled about,
happily important. He still wore his eyepatch, but promised Cordelia he would
take the time for the last round of surgery to restore his vision very soon
now. A tech trundled out the uterine replicator and Vaagen paused, as if trying
to figure out how to put the proper drama and ceremony into what Cordelia knew
for a very simple event. He settled on turning it into a technical lecture for
his colleagues, detailing the composition of the hormone solutions as he
injected them into the appropriate feed-lines, interpreting readouts,
describing the placental separation going on within the replicator, the
similarities and differences between replicator and body births. There were several
differences Vaagen didn't mention. Alys Vorpatril should see this, Cordelia
thought. Vaagen looked up to see
her watching him, paused selfconsciously, and smiled. "Lady
Vorkosigan." He gestured to the replicator's latch-seals. "Would you
care to do the honors?" She reached, hesitated,
and looked around for Aral. There he was, solemn and attentive at the edge of
the crowd. "Aral?" He strode forward.
"Are you sure?" "If you can open a
picnic cooler, you can do this." They each took a latch and raised them in
unison, breaking the sterile seal, and lifted the top off. Dr. Ritter moved in
with a vibra-scalpel, cutting through the thick felt mat of nutrient tubing
with a touch so delicate the silvery amniotic sac beneath was unscored, then
cut Miles free of his last bit of biological packaging, clearing his mouth and
nose of fluids before his first surprised inhalation. Aral's arm, around her,
tightened so hard it hurt. A muffled laugh, no more than a breath, broke from
his lips; he swallowed and blinked to bring his features, suffused with elation
and pain, back under strict control. Happy birthday, thought
Cordelia. Good color ... Unfortunately, that was
about all that was really good. The contrast with baby Ivan was overwhelming.
Despite the extra weeks of gestation, ten months to Ivan's nine-and-a-half,
Miles was barely half Ivan's size at birth, and far more wizened and wrinkled.
His spine was noticeably deformed, and his legs were drawn up and locked in a
tight bend. He was definitely a male heir, though, no question about that. His
first cry was thin, weak, nothing at all like Ivan's angry, hungry bellow.
Behind her, she heard Piotr hiss with disappointment. "Has he been
getting enough nutrition?" she asked Vaagen. It was hard to keep the
accusation out of her tone. Vaagen shrugged
helplessly. "All he would absorb." The pediatrician and his
colleague laid Miles out under a warming light, and began their examination,
Cordelia and Aral on either side. "This bend will
straighten out on its own, Milady," the pediatrician pointed. "But
the lower spine should have surgical correction as early as possible. You were
right, Vaagen, the treatment to optimize skull development also fused the hip
sockets. That's why the legs are locked in that strange position, m'lord. He'll
require surgery to crack those bones loose and turn them around before he can
start to crawl or walk. I don't recommend that in the first year, on top of the
spinal work, let him gain strength and weight first—" The surgeon, testing the
infant's arms, swore suddenly and snatched up his diagnostic viewer. Miles
mewed. Aral's hand clenched, by his trouser seam. Cordelia's stomach sank.
"Hell!" said the surgeon. "His humerus just snapped. You're
right, Vaagen, the bones are abnormally brittle." "At least he has
bones," sighed Vaagen. "He almost didn't, at one point." "Be careful,"
said the surgeon, "especially of the head and spine. If the rest are as
bad as the long bones, we're going to have to come up with some kind of
reinforcement. ..." Piotr stamped toward the
door. Aral glanced up, his lips thinning to a frown, and excused himself to
follow. Cordelia was torn, but once observation assured her that the
bone-setting was under way and the doctors' new caution would protect Miles
from further damage today, she left their ingenious heads bent over him and
followed Aral. In the corridor, Piotr
was stalking up and down. Aral stood at parade rest, unmoved and unmoving.
Bothari was a silent witness in the background. Piotr turned and saw
her. "You! You've strung me along. This is what you call 'great repairs'?
Gah!" "They are great
repairs. Miles is unquestionably much better than he was. Nobody promised
perfection." "You lied. Vaagen
lied." "We did not,"
denied Cordelia. "I tried to give you accurate summaries of Vaagen's
experiments all the way along. What he's delivered is about what his reports
led us to expect. Check your ears." "I see what you're
trying, and it won't work. I've just told him," he pointed at Aral, "this
is where I stop. I don't want to see that mutant again. Ever. While it lives,
if it lives, and it looks pretty damned sickly to me, don't bring it around my
door. As God is my judge, woman, you won't make a fool of me." "That would be
redundant," snapped Cordelia. Piotr's lips curled in a
silent snarl. Cheated of a cooperative target, he turned on Aral. "And
you, you spineless, skirt-smothered—if your elder brother had lived—"
Piotr's mouth clamped shut abruptly, too late. Aral's face drained to a
grey hue Cordelia had seen but twice before; both times he'd been a breath and
a chance away from committing murder. Piotr had joked about Aral's famous
rages. Only now did Cordelia realize Piotr, though he may have witnessed his
son in irritation, had never seen the real thing. Piotr seemed to realize it,
too, dimly. His brows lowered; he stared, off-balanced. Aral's hands locked to
each other, behind his back. Cordelia could see them shake, white-knuckled. His
chin lifted, and he spoke in a whisper. "If my brother had
lived, he would have been perfect. You thought so; I thought so; Emperor Yuri
thought so, too. So ever after you've had to make do with the leftovers from
that bloody banquet, the son Mad Yuri's death squad overlooked. We Vorkosigans,
we can make do." His voice fell still further. "But my firstborn will
live. I will not fail him." The icy statement was a
near-lethal cut across the belly, as fine a slash as Bothari could have
delivered with Koudelka's swordstick, and very accurately placed. Truly, Piotr
should not have lowered the tone of this discussion. The breath huffed from him
in disbelief and pain. Aral's expression grew
inward. "I will not fail him again," he corrected himself lowly.
"A second chance you were never given, sir." Behind his back his
hands unclenched. A small jerk of his head dismissed Piotr and all Piotr might
say. Blocked twice, visibly
suffering from his profound misstep, Piotr looked around for a target of
opportunity upon which to vent his frustration. His eye fell on Bothari,
watching blank-faced. "And you. Your hand
was in this from beginning to end. Did my son place you as a spy in my
household? Where do your loyalties lie? Do you obey me, or him?" An odd gleam flared in
Bothari's eye. He tilted his head toward Cordelia. "Her." Piotr was so taken
aback, it took him several seconds to regain his speech. "Fine," he
sputtered at last. "She can have you. I don't want to see your ugly face
again. Don't come back to Vorkosigan House. Esterhazy will deliver your things before
nightfall." He wheeled and marched
away. His grand exit, already weak, was spoiled when he looked back over his
shoulder before he rounded the corner. Aral vented a very weary
sigh. "Do you think he
means it this time?" Cordelia asked. "All that never-ever stuff?" "Government
concerns will require us to communicate. He knows that. Let him go home and
listen to the silence for a bit. Then we'll see." He smiled bleakly.
"While we live, we cannot disengage." She thought of the child
whose blood now bound them, her to Aral, Aral to Piotr, and Piotr to herself.
"So it seems." She looked an apology to Bothari. "I'm sorry,
Sergeant. I didn't know Piotr could fire an oath-armsman." "Well, technically,
he can't," Aral explained. "Bothari was just reassigned to another branch
of the household. You." "Oh." Just
what I always wanted, my very own monster. What am I supposed to do, keep him
in my closet? She rubbed the bridge of her nose, then regarded her hand. The
hand that had encompassed Bothari's on the swordstick. So. And so. "Lord
Miles will need a bodyguard, won't he?" Aral tilted his head in
interest. "Indeed." Bothari looked suddenly
so intently hopeful, it made Cordelia catch her breath. "A
bodyguard," he said, "and backup. No raff could give him a hard time
if ... let me help, Milady." Let me help. Rhymes with
I love you, right? "It would be ..." impossible, crazy, dangerous,
irresponsible, "my pleasure, Sergeant." His face lit like a
torch. "Can I start now?" "Why not?" "I'll wait for you
in there, then." He nodded toward Vaagen's lab. He slipped back through
the door. Cordelia could just picture him, leaning watchfully against the
wall—she trusted that malevolent presence wouldn't make the doctors so nervous they
would drop their fragile charge. Aral blew out his
breath, and took her in his arms. "Do you Betans have any nursery tales
about the witch's name-day gifts?" "The good and bad
fairies seem to all be out in force for this one, don't they?" She leaned
against the scratchy fabric of his uniformed shoulder. "I don't know if
Piotr meant Bothari for a blessing or a curse. But I bet he really will keep
the raff off. Whatever the raff turns out to be. It's a strange list of
birthday presents we've given our boychick." They returned to the
lab, to listen attentively to the rest of the doctors' lecture on Miles's
special needs and vulnerabilities, arrange the first round of treatment
schedules, and wrap him warmly for the trip home. He was so small, a scrap of
flesh, lighter than a cat, Cordelia found when she at last took him up in her
arms, skin to skin for the first time since he'd been cut from her body. She
had a moment's panic. Put him back in the vat for about eighteen years, I can't
handle this... . Children might or might not be a blessing, but to create them
and then fail them was surely damnation. Even Piotr knew that. Aral held the
door open for them. Welcome to Barrayar,
son. Here you go: have a world of wealth and poverty, wrenching change and
rooted history. Have a birth; have two. Have a name. Miles means
"soldier," but don't let the power of suggestion overwhelm you. Have
a twisted form in a society that loathes and fears the mutations that have been
its deepest agony. Have a title, wealth, power, and all the hatred and envy
they will draw. Have your body ripped apart and re-arranged. Inherit an array
of friends and enemies you never made. Have a grandfather from hell. Endure
pain, find joy, and make your own meaning, because the universe certainly isn't
going to supply it. Always be a moving target. Live. Live. Live. EPILOGUE VORKOSIGAN
SURLEAU—FIVE YEARS LATER. "Dammit,
Vaagen," Cordelia panted under her breath. "You never told me the
little bugger was going to be hyperactive." She galloped down the
end stairs, through the kitchen, and out onto the terrace at the end of the
rambling stone residence. Her gaze swept the lawn, probed the trees, and
scanned the long lake sparkling in the summer sun. No movement. Aral, dressed in old
uniform trousers and a faded print shirt, came around the house, saw her, and
opened his hands in a no-luck gesture. "He's not out here." "He's not inside.
Down, or up, d'you think? Where's little Elena? I bet they're together. I
forbade him to go down to the lake without an adult, but I don't know...
." "Surely not the
lake," said Aral. "They swam all morning. I was exhausted just
watching them. In the fifteen minutes I timed it, he climbed the dock and
jumped back in nineteen times. Multiply that by three hours." "Up, then,"
decided Cordelia. They turned and trudged together up the hill on the gravel
path lined with native, Earth-import, and exotic shrubbery and flowers.
"And to think," Cordelia wheezed, "I prayed for the day he would
walk." "It's five years
pent-up motion all let loose at once," Aral analyzed. "In a way, it's
reassuring that all that frustration didn't turn in on itself and become
despair. For a time, I was afraid it might." "Yes. Have you
noticed, since the last operation, that the endless chatter's dried up? At
first I was glad, but do you suppose he's going to go mute? I didn't even know
that refrigeration unit was supposed to come apart. A mute engineer." "I think the, er,
verbal and mechanical aptitudes will come into balance eventually. If he
survives." "There's all of us
adults, and one of him. We ought to be able to keep up. Why do I feel like he
has us outnumbered and surrounded?" She crested the hill. Piotr's stable
complex lay in the shallow valley below, half a dozen red-painted wood and
stone buildings, fenced paddocks, pastures planted to bright green Earth
grasses. She saw horses, but no children. Bothari was ahead of them, though,
just exiting one building and entering another. His bellow carried up to them,
thinned by distance. "Lord Miles?" "Oh, dear, I hope
he's not bothering Piotr's horses," said Cordelia. "Do you really
think this reconciliation attempt will work, this time? Just because Miles is
finally walking?" "He was civil, last
night at dinner," said Aral, judiciously hopeful. "I was civil, last
night at dinner," Cordelia shrugged. "He as much as accused me of
starving your son into dwarfism. Can I help it if the kid would rather play
with his food than eat it? I just don't know about stepping up the growth
hormone, Vaagen's so uncertain about its effect on bone friability." A crooked smile stole
over Aral's face. "I did think the dialogue with the peas marching to
surround the bread-roll and demand surrender was rather ingenious. You could
almost picture them as little soldiers in Imperial greens." "Yes, and you were
no help, laughing instead of terrorizing him into eating like a proper
Da." "I did not
laugh." "Your eyes were
laughing. He knew it, too. Twisting you round his thumb." The warm organic scent
of horses and their inevitable by-products permeated the air as they approached
the buildings. Bothari re-appeared, saw them, and waved an apologetic hand.
"I just saw Elena. I told her to get down out of that loft. She said Lord
Miles wasn't up there, but he's around here somewhere. Sorry, Milady, when he
talked about looking at the animals, I didn't realize he meant immediately. I'm
sure I'll find him in just a moment." "I was hoping Piotr
would offer a tour," Cordelia sighed. "I thought you
didn't like horses," said Aral. "I loathe them. But
I thought it might get the old man talking to him, like a human being, instead
of over him like a potted plant. And Miles was so excited about the stupid
beasts. I don't like to linger here, though. This place is so ... Piotr."
Archaic, dangerous, and you have to watch your step. Speak of the devil.
Piotr himself emerged from the old stone tack storage shed, coiling a web rope.
"Hah. There you are," he said neutrally. He joined them sociably
enough, though. "I don't suppose you would like to see the new
filly." His tone was so flat,
she couldn't tell if he wanted her to say yes, or no. But she seized the
opportunity. "I'm sure Miles would." "Mm." She turned to Bothari.
"Why don't you go get—" But Bothari was staring past her, his lips
rippling in dismay. She wheeled. One of Piotr's most
enormous horses, quite naked of bridle, saddle, halter, or any other handle to
grab, was trotting out of the barn. Clinging to its mane like a burr was a
dark-haired, dwarfish little boy. Miles's sharp features shone with a mixture
of exaltation and terror. Cordelia nearly fainted. "My imported
stallion!" yelped Piotr in horror. In pure reflex, Bothari
snatched his stunner from its holster. He then stood paralyzed with the
uncertainty of what to shoot and where. If the horse went down and rolled on
its little rider— "Look,
Sergeant!" Miles's thin voice called eagerly. "I'm taller than
you!" Bothari started to run
toward him. The horse, spooked, wheeled away and broke into a canter. "—and I can run
faster, too!" The words were whipped away in the bounding motion of the
gait. The horse shied out of sight around the stable. The four adults pelted
after. Cordelia heard no other cry, but when they turned the corner Miles was
lying on the ground, and the horse had stopped further on and lowered its head
to nibble at the grass. It snorted in hostility when it saw them, raised its
head, danced from foot to foot, then snatched a few more bites. Cordelia fell to her
knees beside Miles, who was already sitting up and waving her away. He was
pale, and his right hand clutched his left arm in an all-too-familiar signal of
pain. "You see,
Sergeant?" Miles panted. "I can ride, I can." Piotr, on his way toward
his horse, paused and looked down. "I didn't mean to
say you weren't able" said the sergeant in a driven tone. "I meant
you didn't have permission." "Oh." "Did you break
it?" Bothari nodded to the arm. "Yeah," the
boy sighed. There were tears of pain in his eyes, but his teeth set against any
quaver entering his voice. The sergeant grumbled,
and rolled up Miles's sleeve, and palpated the forearm. Miles hissed.
"Yep." Bothari pulled, twisted, adjusted, took a plastic sleeve from
his pocket, slipped it over the arm and wrist, and blew it up. "That'll
keep it till the doctor sees it." "Hadn't you better
... containerize that horrendous horse?" Cordelia said to Piotr. " 'S not
h'rrendous," Miles insisted, scrambling to his feet. "It's the
prettiest." "You think so,
eh?" said Piotr roughly. "How do you figure that? You like brown?" "It moves the
springiest," Miles explained earnestly, bouncing in imitation. Piotr's attention was
arrested. "And so it does," he said, sounding bemused. "It's my
hottest dressage prospect ... You like horses?" "They're great.
They're wonderful." Miles pirouetted. "I could never much
interest your father in them." Piotr gave Aral a dirty look. Thank God, thought
Cordelia. "On a horse, I
could go as fast as anybody, I bet," said Miles. "I doubt it,"
said Piotr coldly, "if that was a sample. If you're going to do it, you
have to do it right." "Teach me,"
said Miles instantly. Piotr's brows shot up.
He glanced at Cordelia, and smiled sourly. "If your mother gives
permission." He rocked on his heels, in certain smug safety, knowing
Cordelias rooted antipathy to the beasts. Cordelia bit her tongue
on Over my dead body, and thought fast. Aral's intent eyes were signaling
something, but she couldn't read it. Was this a new way for Piotr to try and
kill Miles? Take him out and get him smashed, trampled, broken ... tired out?
Now there was a thought. ... Risk, or security? In
the few months since Miles had at last acquired a full range of motion, she'd
run on panicked overdrive, trying to save him from physical harm; he'd spent
the same time near-frantically trying to escape her supervision. Much more of
this struggle, and either she'd be insane, or he would. If she could not keep
him safe, perhaps the next best thing was to teach him competence at living
dangerously. He was almost undrownable already. His big grey eyes were
radiating a desperate, silent plea at her, Let me, let me, let me ... with
enough transmission energy to burn through steel. I would fight the world for
you, but I'm damned if I can figure out how to save you from yourself. Go for
it, kid. "Yes," she
said. "If the sergeant accompanies you." Bothari shot her a look
of horrified reproach. Aral rubbed his chin, his eyes alight. Piotr looked
utterly taken aback to have his bluff called. "Good," said
Miles. "Can I have my own horse? Can I have that one?" "No, not that
one," said Piotr indignantly. Then drawn in, added, "Perhaps a
pony." "Horse," said
Miles, watching his face. Cordelia recognized the
Instant Re-Negotiation Mode, a spinal reflex, as far as she could tell,
triggered by the faintest concession. The kid should be put to work beating out
treaties with the Cetagandans. She wondered how many horses he'd finally end up
with. "A pony," she put in, giving Piotr the support that he did not
yet recognize how badly he was going to need. "A gentle pony. A gentle
short pony." Piotr pursed his lips,
and gave her a challenging look. "Perhaps you can work up to a
horse," he said to Miles. "Earn it, by learning well." "Can I start
now?" "You have to get
your arm set first," said Cordelia firmly. "I don't have to
wait till it heals, do I?" "It will teach you
not to run around breaking things!" Piotr regarded Cordelia
through half-lidded eyes. "Actually, proper dressage training starts on a
lunge line. You aren't permitted to use your arms till you've developed your
seat." "Yeah?" said
Miles, hanging worshipfully on his words. "What else—?" By the time Cordelia
withdrew to hunt up the personal physician who accompanied the Lord Regent's
traveling circus, ah, entourage, Piotr had recaptured his horse—rather
efficiently, though Cordelia wondered if the sugar in his pockets was
cheating—and was already explaining to Miles how to make a simple line into an
effective halter, which side of the beast to stand on, and what direction to
face while leading. The boy, barely waist-high to the old man, was taking it in
like a sponge, upturned face passionately intent. "Want to lay a
side-bet, who's leading who on that lunge line by the end of the week?"
Aral murmured in her ear. "No contest. I must
say, the months Miles spent immobilized in that dreadful spinal brace did teach
him how to do charm. The most efficient long-term way to control those about
you, and thus exert your will. I'm glad he didn't decide to perfect whining as
a strategy. He's the most willful little monster I've ever encountered, but he
makes you not notice." "I don't think the
Count has a chance," Aral agreed. She smiled at the
vision, then glanced at him more seriously. "When my father was home on
leave one time from the Betan Astronomical Survey, we made model gliders
together. Two things were required to get them to fly. First we had to give
them a running start. Then we had to let them go." She sighed.
"Learning just when to let go was the hardest part." Piotr, his horse,
Bothari, and Miles turned out of sight into the barn. By his gestures, Miles
was asking questions at a rapid-fire rate. Aral gripped her hand as
they turned to go up the hill. "I believe he'll soar high, dear
Captain." AUTHOR'S
AFTERWORD I was asked by my
publisher if I would like to contribute a preface to Cordelia's Honor. Upon
reflection, I decided I'd rather write an afterword. For one thing, it was a
horrifying thought that anything at all should further delay new readers from
meeting my characters; secondly, discursive comments about a book make ever so
much more sense after people have read it. I'd like to thank Baen
Books for this combined edition of Shards of Honor and Barrayar. Here at last
in one set of covers is the whole story arc, very much as I originally
conceived its shape, if not its details. As a longtime series reader, and now
writer, I'm very aware of the pitfalls of what I've come to believe is another
story form, as distinct from the novel as the novel is from the short story. A
proper series in this sense is neither an extension of the novel (as in the
multi-volume single story) nor a replication (as when essentially the same
story is told over and over, cookie-cutter fashion), but another animal altogether,
with its own internal demands. In addition, one must assume that readers, as I
did when reading my own favorite series, will encounter the books in utterly
random order. Therefore each series novel must simultaneously be a complete
tale in itself, and uphold its unique place in the growing structure; it must
be two books at once. The understructure must be global and timeless as well as
linear and sequential. The series landscape must satisfy its readers regardless
of what direction they chance to travel through it, or how often. I had no more idea of
all this when I started writing the Vorkosigan series than I had of what my own
life would be like when I started living it. A brief history of how I came to
write these two books may illustrate both. I began what was to
become Shards of Honor in December of 1982. Inspired by the example of a
new-writer friend, and by the economic pressures of the rust-belt Midwest town
in which I was living, I set out to Write A Novel. My writing career has been
on-the-job training throughout, and this was no exception; my only plan of how
to structure my material was to plant an eavesdropping device in my main
character's brain and follow her through her first weeks of action. This
brought Cordelia and me to the end of what later became the first section of
Shards. (It then had the working title of Mirrors.) I now had in hand a messy
first draft of about a hundred pages of narrative, with no chapter breaks, that
clearly wasn't long enough to be a novel. I paused briefly, flirted with a
really bad scenario about a convenient alien invasion that would force Barrayar
and Beta to ally, decided "Why should I make things easy on my
characters?", and plunged on to the much better and more inherent idea of
the Escobar invasion, thus accidentally discovering my first application of the
rule for finding plots for character-centered novels, which is to ask "So
what's the worst possible thing I can do to this guy?" And then do it. Thus I already knew, at
this early date, that Aral and Cordelia would have a physically handicapped son
in Barrayar's intensely militaristic culture, though I did not yet know how it
would come about. Though I was not really aware of it when I was writing
Chapter One, Ensign Dubauer is clearly the first statement of this theme. I had
a toddler myself at that time, and I thought of the injured ensign as a
180-pound one-year-old, and amused myself putting Aral and Cordelia through
reflections of my own harried parental tribulations—which incidentally allowed them
to unconsciously scope each other out as potential parents. The birth of a
child is the proper climax, after all, of any romance that starts out "boy
meets girl," if the romance is not falsely truncated. So I knew even then
that the end of the story should be Miles's birth. I wrote industriously
through the spring and early summer of 1983. The book had now acquired the
opposite problem from that of mid-winter, of being too short; it was now
getting longer, but not getting any closer to the end. (I've experienced that
phenomenon subsequently on other books, one of which managed to stay three
chapters from the end for at least five chapters straight, so now it doesn't
daunt me so much.) Since it was apparent that this really was going to be a
book, and not just another false start in life, marketing considerations began
to come into play. Editors' slush piles of unsolicited manuscripts from
unknowns were enormous, I was told; a thinner book had a better chance of being
read first than a fat one. Besides, new characters with entire attached
subplots were arriving on page 378, all demanding development at length, my
internal clue that I had overshot the end and was already into the sequel,
unless this was going to be a multi-volume novel as fat as a major fantasy
trilogy. The last scene I wrote
back in '83 before making the decision to go back and cut it short was
Cordelia's conversation with Dr. Vaagen; the introduction of Droushnakovi,
Koudelka's swordstick and depression, Cordelia's first encounters with Barrayaran
culture, with Padma and Alys, with the Vorhalas clan, and the soltoxin attack
were already written then. I did not yet have the ideas for the war of
Vordarian's Pretendership; the action-plot upon which all this good stuff then
hung was much weaker, making the decision to stop easier, if still a little
heartbreaking. With much labor, and a
lot of help from writer-friends, I revised and put Mirrors into proper
submission format. I then went on to write the book which became The Warrior's
Apprentice (which, for you fellow Dumas fans out there, I thought of for a
while as Twenty Years After, though it opens seventeen years after the events
of Shards). Though I hoped to develop a series, I didn't dare count on it;
series books might float together, but they also can sink together, and I
wanted to make sure each novel had its own lifeboat. So the
each-book-independent format, which I later came to regard as a Really Good
Artistic Idea, began as a mere survival plan. Mirrors came back rejected from
its first submission when I was about halfway through Warrior's, with an
editorial suggestion that I tighten it; I set it aside till the second book was
finished, then turned my attention to one last edit, cutting altogether about
80 pages, mostly in sentence or paragraph lengths. It was a good learning
experience; I've written more tightly ever since, and no, there isn't much of
it I'd put back now if I could. Trust me on this one. In the late summer of
'85, about the time I was finishing Ethan of Athos, Warrior's made it in over
the transom at Baen Books, and I was abruptly elevated from slush-pile wannabe
to real author with three completed books sold. The re-titled Shards of Honor
was published in June of 1986, allowing my father to see the finished book just
six weeks before he died. Having captured a
publisher at last, I went on to write Falling Free, which was serialized in
Analog magazine, and won me my first Nebula Award, for best SF novel of 1988.
Brothers in Arms, Borders of Infinity, and The Vor Game followed, as the
ever-lively Miles proceeded to take over his surroundings as usual. About this
time—summer of 1989—Philcon, a long-established science fiction convention in
Philadelphia, invited me to be a writer guest. Their program-book editor asked
me for a short story or outtake to donate for their program book. I hadn't
written a short story since 1986, but I thought of the soltoxin scene, reasoned
that enough readers were familiar with Miles by this time to make it
interesting in its own right, and took myself to my overheated attic to find
the box with the old drafts. Leafing through the carbons (Shards/Mirrors was
written in my old typewriter days, pre-word-processor), I was caught again by
my own story, and the desire to finish it grew. It ought to be easy and quick,
I reasoned; it was already a third written, after all. Jim Baen was at first a
little nonplussed to be offered a sequel to my then-least-selling novel, but we
struck deals that fall for Barrayar, for a fantasy novel I'd long wanted to
write, and also for a blank Miles book, contents to be announced by me later.
(That one turned out to be Mirror Dance, which won my third best-novel Hugo.) Still under the happy
illusion about the "easy and quick" part (Hah. Novels never are.
Never.), I started Barrayar, with the unenticing working title of Shardssequel.
I wrote a new opening chapter, to reintroduce the characters and situation for
new readers, cut and fit most of the old material into its new frame, and began
the story again as Count Piotr argued with Cordelia and Captain Negri expired
on the lawn at Vorkosigan Surleau. From that point on, the tale ran on its own
legs, and turned into something I didn't expect. It turned into the book it
always should have been, a real book, where plot, character, and theme all
worked together to make a whole greater than the sum of the parts. It turned
out to be about something, beyond itself. It's a bizarre but wonderful feeling,
to arrive dead center of a target you didn't even know you were aiming for. Shards/Barrayar, as it
finally evolved, became a book about the price of becoming a parent,
particularly but not exclusively a mother. Not just Aral and Cordelia, but all
the other supporting couples took up and played their symphonic variations on
the theme, exploring its complexities: Kou and Drou, Padma and Alys, Piotr and
his dead wife, Vordarian and Serg and Kareen, and most strangely and finally,
Bothari and the uterine replicator. All great human deeds
both consume and transform their doers. Consider an athlete, or a scientist, or
an artist, or an independent business creator. In service of their goals they
lay down time and energy and many other choices and pleasures; in return, they
become most truly themselves. A false destiny may be spotted by the fact that
it consumes without transforming, without giving back the enlarged self.
Becoming a parent is one of these basic human transformational deeds. By this
act, we change our fundamental relationship with the universe—if nothing else,
we lose our place as the pinnacle and end-point of evolution, and become a mere
link. The demands of motherhood especially consume the old self, and replace it
with something new, often better and wiser, sometimes wearier or disillusioned,
or tense and terrified, certainly more self-knowing, but never the same again.
Cordelia undergoes such a fearsome transformation, at the climax of Barrayar
laying down everything about her old persona, even her cherished Betan
principles, to bring her child to life. Shards and Barrayar
between them contain most of what I presently have to say about being a mother;
it's not by chance that Barrayar was dedicated to my children, who were my
teachers in learning about this part of becoming human. Further explorations on
this theme will almost certainly not return to Cordelia, but take a new
start-point, though Cordelia may yet have a word to say on other topics.
Growing up, I have discovered over time, is rather like housework: never
finished. It's not something you do once for all. Miles and his family and
friends have become my vehicle for exploring identity, in what promises to be a
continuing fascination. I have not come to the end of that story yet, nor will
I, till I stop learning new things about what it takes to be human. BARRAYAR Lois
McMaster Bujold For
Anne and Paul CHAPTER
ONE I am afraid. Cordelia's
hand pushed aside the drape in the third-floor parlor window of Vorkosigan
House. She stared down into the sunlit street below. A long silver groundcar
was pulling into the half-circular drive that serviced the front portico,
braking past the spiked iron fence and the Earth-imported shrubbery. A
government car. The door of the rear passenger compartment swung up, and a man
in a green uniform emerged. Despite her foreshortened view Cordelia recognized
Commander Illyan, brown-haired and hatless as usual. He strode out of sight
under the portico. Guess I don't really need to worry till Imperial Security
comes for us in the middle of the night. But a residue of dread remained,
burrowed in her belly. Why did I ever come here to Barrayar? What have I done
to myself, to my life? Booted footsteps sounded
in the corridor, and the door of the parlor creaked inward. Sergeant Bothari
stuck his head in, and grunted with satisfaction at finding her. "Milady.
Time to go." "Thank you,
Sergeant." She let the drape fall, and turned to inspect herself one last
time in a wall-mounted mirror above the archaic fireplace. Hard to believe
people here still burned vegetable matter just for the release of its
chemically-bound heat. She lifted her chin,
above the stiff white lace collar of her blouse, adjusted the sleeves of her
tan jacket, and kicked her knee absently against the long swirling skirt of a
Vor-class woman, tan to match the jacket. The color comforted her, almost the
same tan as her old Betan Astronomical Survey fatigues. She ran her hands over
her red hair, parted in the middle and held away from her face by two enameled
combs, and flopped it over her shoulders to curl loosely halfway down her back.
Her grey eyes stared back at her from the pale face in the mirror. Nose a
little too bony, chin a shade too long, but certainly a servicable face, good
for all practical purposes. Well, if she wanted to
look dainty, all she had to do was stand next to Sergeant Bothari. He loomed
mournfully beside her, all two meters of him. Cordelia considered herself a
tall woman, but the top of her head was only level with his shoulder. He had a
gargoyle's face, closed, wary, beak-nosed, its lumpiness exaggerated to
criminality by his military-burr haircut. Even Count Vorkosigan's elegant
livery, dark brown with the symbols of the house embroidered in silver, failed
to save Bothari from his astonishing ugliness. But a very good face indeed, for
practical purposes. A liveried retainer.
What a concept. What did he retain? Our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred
honors, for starters. She nodded cordially to him, in the mirror, and about-faced
to follow him through the warren of Vorkosigan House. She must learn her way
around this great pile of a residence as soon as possible. Embarrassing, to be
lost in one's own home, and have to ask some passing guard or servant to
detangle one. In the middle of the night, wearing only a towel. I used to be a
jumpship navigator. Really. If she could handle five dimensions upside, surely
she ought to be able to manage a mere three downside. They came to the head of
a large circular staircase, curving gracefully down three flights to a
black-and-white stone-paved foyer. Her light steps followed Bothari's measured
tread. Her skirts made her feel she was floating, parachuting inexorably down
the spiral. A tall young man,
leaning on a cane at the foot of the stairs, looked up at the echo of their
feet. Lieutenant Koudelka's face was as regular and pleasant as Bothari's was
narrow and strange, and he smiled openly at Cordelia. Even the pain lines at
the corners of his eyes and mouth failed to age that face. He wore Imperial
undress greens, identical but for the insignia to Security Commander Illyan's.
The long sleeves and high neck of his jacket concealed the tracery of thin red
scars that netted half his body, but Cordelia mapped them in her mind's eye.
Nude, Koudelka could pose as a visual aid for a lecture on the structure of the
human nervous system, each scar representing a dead nerve excised and replaced
with artificial silver threads. Lieutenant Koudelka was not quite used to his
new nervous system yet. Speak truth. The surgeons here are ignorant clumsy
butchers. The work was certainly not up to Betan standards. Cordelia permitted
no hint of this private judgment to escape onto her face. Koudelka turned jerkily,
and nodded to Bothari. "Hello, Sergeant. Good morning, Lady
Vorkosigan." Her new name still
seemed strange in her ear, ill-fitting. She smiled back. "Good morning,
Kou. Where's Aral?" "He and Commander
Illyan went into the library, to check out where the new secured comconsole
will be installed. They should be right along. Ah." He nodded, as
footsteps sounded through an archway. Cordelia followed his gaze. Illyan,
slight and bland and polite, flanked—was eclipsed by—a man in his mid-forties
resplendent in Imperial dress greens. The reason she'd come to Barrayar. Admiral Lord Aral
Vorkosigan, retired. Formerly retired, till yesterday. Their lives had surely
been turned upside down, yesterday. We'll land on our feet somehow, you bet.
Vorkosigan's body was stocky and powerful, his dark hair salted with grey. His
heavy jaw was marred by an old L-shaped scar. He moved with compressed energy,
his grey eyes intense and inward, until they lighted on Cordelia. "I give you good
morrow, my lady," he sang out to her, reaching for her hand. The syntax
was self-conscious but the sentiment naked-sincere in his mirror-bright eyes.
In those mirrors, I am altogether beautiful, Cordelia realized warmly. Much
more flattering than that one on the wall upstairs. I shall use them to see myself
from now on. His thick hand was dry and hot, welcome heat, live heat, closing
around her cool tapering fingers. My husband. That fit, as smoothly and tightly
as her hand fit in his, even though her new name, Lady Vorkosigan, still seemed
to slither off her shoulders. She watched Bothari,
Koudelka, and Vorkosigan standing together for that brief moment. The walking
wounded, one, two, three. And me, the lady auxiliary. The survivors. Kou in
body, Bothari in mind, Vorkosigan in spirit, all had taken near-mortal wounds
in the late war at Escobar. Life goes on. March or die. Do we all begin to
recover at last? She hoped so. "Ready to go, dear
Captain?" Vorkosigan asked her. His voice was a baritone, his Barrayaran
accent guttural-warm. "Ready as I'll ever
be, I guess." Illyan and Lieutenant
Koudelka led the way out. Koudelka's walk was a loose-kneed shamble beside
Illyan's brisk march, and Cordelia frowned doubtfully. She took Vorkosigan's
arm, and they followed, leaving Bothari to his Household duties. "What's the
timetable for the next few days?" she asked. "Well, this
audience first, of course," Vorkosigan replied. "After which I see
men. Count Vortala will be choreographing that. In a few days comes the vote of
consent from the full Councils Assembled, and my swearing-in. We haven't had a
Regent in a hundred and twenty years, God knows what protocol they'll dig out
and dust off." Koudelka sat in the
front compartment of the groundcar with the uniformed driver. Commander Illyan
slid in opposite Cordelia and Vorkosigan, facing rearward, in the back
compartment. This car is armored, Cordelia realized from the thickness of the
transparent canopy as it closed over them. At a signal from Illyan to the
driver, they pulled away smoothly into the street. Almost no sound penetrated
from the outside. "Regent-consort,"
Cordelia tasted the phrase. "Is that my official title?" "Yes, Milady,"
said Illyan. "Does it have any
official duties to go with it?" Illyan looked to
Vorkosigan, who said, "Hm. Yes and no. There will be a lot of ceremonies
to attend—grace, in your case. Beginning with the emperors funeral, which will
be grueling for all concerned—except, perhaps, for Emperor Ezar. All that waits
on his last breath. I don't know if he has a timetable for that, but I wouldn't
put it past him. "The social side of
your duties can be as much as you wish. Speeches and ceremonies, important
weddings and name-days and funerals, greeting deputations from the
Districts—public relations, in short. The sort of thing Princess-dowager Kareen
does with such flair." Vorkosigan paused, taking in her appalled look, and
added hastily, "Or, if you choose, you can live a completely private life.
You have the perfect excuse to do so right now—" his hand, around her
waist, secretly caressed her still-flat belly, "—and in fact I'd rather
you didn't spend yourself too freely." "More importantly,
on the political side ... I'd like it very much if you could be my liaison with
the Princess-dowager, and the ... child emperor. Make friends with her, if you
can; she's an extremely reserved woman. The boy's upbringing is vital. We must
not repeat Ezar Vorbarra's mistakes." "I can give it a
try," she sighed. "I can see it's going to be quite a job, passing
for a Barrayaran Vor." "Don't bend
yourself painfully. I shouldn't like to see you so constricted. Besides,
there's another angle." "Why doesn't that
surprise me? Go ahead." He paused, choosing his
words. "When the late Crown Prince Serg called Count Vortala a phoney
progressive, it wasn't altogether nonsense. Insults that sting always have some
truth in them. Count Vortala has been trying to form his progressive party in
the upper classes only. Among the people who matter, as he would say. You see
the little discontinuity in his thinking?" "About the size of
Hogarth Canyon back home? Yes." "You are a Betan, a
woman of galactic-wide reputation." "Oh, come on
now." "You are seen so
here. I don't think you quite realize how you are perceived. Very flattering
for me, as it happens." "I hoped I was
invisible. But I shouldn't think I'd be too popular, after what we did to your
side at Escobar." "It's our culture.
My people will forgive a brave soldier almost anything. And you, in your
person, unite two of the opposing factions—the aristocratic military, and the pro-galactic
plebians. I really think I could pull the whole middle out of the People's
Defense League through you, if you're willing to play my cards for me." "Good heavens. How
long have you been thinking about this?" "The problem, long.
You as part of the solution, just today." "What, casting me
as figurehead for some sort of constitutional party?" "No, no. That is
just the sort of thing I will be sworn, on my honor, to prevent. It would not
fulfill the spirit of my oath to hand over to Prince Gregor an emperorship
gutted of power. What I want ... what I want is to find some way of pulling the
best men, from every class and language group and party, into the Emperor's
service. The Vor have simply too small a pool of talent. Make the government
more like the military at its best, with ability promoted regardless of
background. Emperor Ezar tried to do something like that, by strengthening the
Ministries at the expense of the Counts, but it swung too far. The Counts are
eviscerated and the Ministries are corrupt. There must be some way to strike a
balance." Cordelia sighed. "I
guess we'll just have to agree to disagree, about constitutions. Nobody
appointed me Regent of Barrayar. I warn you, though—I'll keep trying to change
your mind." Illyan raised his brow at
this. Cordelia sat back wanly, and watched the Barrayaran capital city of
Vorbarr Sultana pass by through the thick canopy. She hadn't married the Regent
of Barrayar, four months back. She'd married a simple retired soldier. Yes, men
were supposed to change after marriage, usually for the worse, but—this much?
This fast? This isn't the duty I signed up for, sir. "That's quite a
gesture of trust Emperor Ezar placed in you yesterday, appointing you Regent. I
don't think he's such a ruthless pragmatist as you'd have me believe," she
remarked. "Well, it is a
gesture of trust, but driven by necessity. You didn't catch the significance of
Captain Negri's assignment to the Princess's household, then." "No. Was there
one?" "Oh, yes, a very
clear message. Negri is to continue right on in his old job as Chief of
Imperial Security. He will not, of course, be making his reports to a
four-year-old boy, but to me. Commander Illyan will in fact merely be his
assistant." Vorkosigan and Illyan exchanged mildly ironic nods. "But
there is no question where Negri's loyalties will lie, in case I should, um,
run mad and make a bid for Imperial power in name as well as fact. He
unquestionably has secret orders to dispose of me, in that event." "Oh. Well, I
guarantee I have no desire whatsoever to be Empress of Barrayar. Just in case
you were wondering." "I didn't think
so." The groundcar paused at
a gate in a stone wall. Four guards inspected them thoroughly, checked Illyan's
passes, and waved them through. All those guards, here, at Vorkosigan
House—what did they guard against? Other Barrayarans, presumably, in the
faction-fractured political landscape. A very Barrayaran phrase the old Count
had used that tickled her humor now ran, disquieting, through her memory. With
all this manure around, there's got to be a pony someplace. Horses were
practically unknown on Beta Colony, except for a few specimens in zoos. With
all these guards around ... But if I'm not anyone's enemy, how can anyone be my
enemy? Illyan, who had been
shifting in his seat, now spoke up. "I would suggest, sir," he said
tentatively to Vorkosigan, "even beg, that you re-consider and take up
quarters here at the Imperial Residence. Security problems—my problems,"
he smiled slightly, bad for his image, with his snub features it made him look
puppyish, "will be very much easier to control here." "What suite did you
have in mind?" asked Vorkosigan. "Well, when ...
Gregor succeeds, he and his mother will be moving into the Emperor's suite.
Kareen's rooms will then be vacant." "Prince Serg's, you
mean." Vorkosigan looked grim. "I ... think I would prefer to take
official residence at Vorkosigan House. My father spends more and more time in
the country at Vorkosigan Surleau these days, I don't think he'll mind being
shifted." "I can't really
endorse that idea, sir. Strictly from a security standpoint. It's in the old
part of town. The streets are warrens. There are at least three sets of old
tunnels under the area, from old sewage and transport systems, and there are
too many new tall buildings overlooking that have, er, commanding views. It
will take at least six full-time patrols for the most cursory protection." "Do you have the
men?" "Well, yes." "Vorkosigan House,
then." Vorkosigan consoled Illyan's disappointed look. "It may be bad
security, but it's very good public relations. It will give an excellent air
of, ah, soldierly humility to the new Regency. Should help reduce palace coup
paranoia." And here they were at
the very palace in question. As an architectural pile, the Imperial Residence
made Vorkosigan House look small. Sprawling wings rose two to four stories
high, accented with sporadic towers. Additions of different ages crisscrossed
each other to create both vast and intimate courts, some justly proportioned, some
rather accidental-looking. The east facade was of the most uniform style, heavy
with stone carving. The north side was more cut-up, interlocking with elaborate
formal gardens. The west was the oldest, the south the newest construction. The groundcar pulled up
to a two-story porch on the south side, and Illyan led them past more guards
and up wide stone stairs to an extensive second-floor suite. They climbed
slowly, matching steps to Lieutenant Koudelka's awkward pace. Koudelka glanced
up with a self-conscious apologetic frown, then bent his head again in
concentration—or shame? Doesn't this place have a lift tube? Cordelia wondered
irritably. On the other side of this stone labyrinth, in a room with a northern
view of the gardens, a white old man lay drained and dying on his enormous
ancestral bed ... In the spacious upper
corridor, softly carpeted and decorated with paintings and side tables
cluttered with knickknacks—objets d'art, Cordelia supposed—they found Captain
Negri talking in low tones with a woman who stood with her arms folded.
Cordelia had met the famous, or infamous, Chief of Barrayaran Imperial Security
for the first time yesterday, after Vorkosigan's historic job interview in the
northern wing with the soon-to-be-late Ezar Vorbarra. Negri was a hard-faced,
hard-bodied, bullet-headed man who had served his emperor, body and blood, for
the better part of forty years, a sinister legend with unreadable eyes. Now he bowed over her
hand and called her "Milady" as if he meant it, or at least no more tinged
with irony than any of his other statements. The alert blonde woman—girl?—wore
an ordinary civilian dress. She was tall and heavily muscled, and she looked
back at Cordelia with even greater interest. Vorkosigan and Negri
exchanged curt greetings in the telegraphic style of two men who had been
communicating for so long all of the amenities had been compressed into some
kind of tight-burst code. "And this is Miss Droushnakovi." Negri did
not so much introduce as label the woman for Cordelia's benefit, with a wave of
his hand. "And what's a
Droushnakovi?" asked Cordelia lightly and somewhat desperately. Everybody
always seemed to get briefed around here but her, though Negri had also failed
to introduce Lieutenant Koudelka; Koudelka and Droushnakovi glanced covertly at
each other. "I'm a Servant of
the Inner Chamber, Milady." Droushnakovi gave her a ducking nod, half a
curtsey. "And what do you serve? Besides the chamber." "Princess Kareen,
Milady. That's just my official title. I'm listed on Captain Negri's staff
budget as Bodyguard, Class One." It was hard to tell which title gave her
the more pride and pleasure, but Cordelia suspected it was the latter. "I'm sure you must
be good, to be so ranked by him." This won a smile, and a
"Thank you, Milady. I try." They all followed Negri through a nearby
door to a long, sunny yellow room with lots of south-facing windows. Cordelia
wondered if the eclectic mix of furnishings were priceless antiques, or merely
shabby seconds. She couldn't tell. A woman waited on a yellow silk settee at
the far end, watching them gravely as they trooped toward her en masse. Princess-dowager Kareen
was a thin, strained-looking woman of thirty with elaborately dressed,
beautiful dark hair, though her grey gown was of a simple cut. Simple but
perfect. A dark-haired boy of four or so was sprawled on the floor on his
stomach muttering to his cat-sized toy stegosaurus, which muttered back. She
made him get up and turn off the robot toy, and sit beside her, though his
hands still clutched the leathery stuffed beast in his lap. Cordelia was
relieved to see the boy prince was sensibly dressed for his age in
comfortable-looking play clothes. In formal phrases, Negri
introduced Cordelia to the princess and Prince Gregor. Cordelia wasn't sure
whether to bow, curtsey, or salute, and ended up ducking her head rather like
Droushnakovi. Gregor, solemn, stared at her most doubtfully, and she tried to
smile back in what she hoped was a reassuring way. Vorkosigan went down on
one knee in front of the boy—only Cordelia saw Aral swallow—and said, "Do
you know who I am, Prince Gregor?" Gregor shrank a little
against his mother's side, and glanced up at her. She nodded encouragement.
"Lord Aral Vorkosigan," Gregor said in a thin voice. Vorkosigan gentled his
tone, relaxed his hands, self-consciously trying to dampen his usual intensity.
"Your grandfather has asked me to be your Regent. Has anybody explained to
you what that means?" Gregor shook his head
mutely; Vorkosigan quirked a brow at Negri, a whiff of censure. Negri did not
change expression. "That means I will
do your grandfathers job until you are old enough to do it yourself, when you
turn twenty. The next sixteen years. I will look after you and your mother in
your grandfather's place, and see that you get the education and training to do
a good job, like your grandfather did. Good government." Did the kid even know
yet what a government was? Vorkosigan had been careful not to say, in your
father's place, Cordelia noted dryly. Careful not to mention Crown Prince Serg
at all. Serg was well on his way to being disappeared from Barrayaran history,
it seemed, as thoroughly as he had been vaporized in orbital battle. "For now,"
Vorkosigan continued, "your job is to study hard with your tutors and do
what your mother tells you. Can you do that?" Gregor swallowed,
nodded. "I think you can do
well." Vorkosigan gave him a firm nod, identical to the ones he gave his
staff officers, and rose. I think you can do well
too, Aral, Cordelia thought. "While you are here,
sir," Negri began after a short wait to be certain he wasn't stepping on
some further word, "I wish you would come down to Ops. There are two or
three reports I'd like to present. The latest from Darkoi seems to indicate
that Count Vorlakail was dead before his Residence was burned, which throws a
new light—or shadow—on that matter. And then there is the problem of revamping
the Ministry of Political Education—" "Dismantling,
surely," Vorkosigan muttered. "As may be. And, as
ever, the latest sabotage from Komarr ..." "I get the picture.
Let's go. Cordelia, ah ..." "Perhaps Lady
Vorkosigan would care to stay and visit a while," Princess Kareen murmured
on cue, with only a faint trace of irony. Vorkosigan shot her a
look of gratitude. "Thank you, Milady." She absently stroked her
fine lips with one finger, as all the men trooped out, relaxing slightly as
they exited. "Good. I'd hoped to have you all to myself." Her
expression grew more animated, as she regarded Cordelia. At a wordless touch,
the boy slid off the bench and returned, with backward glances, to his play. Droushnakovi frowned
down the room. "What was the matter with that lieutenant?" she asked
Cordelia. "Lieutenant
Koudelka was hit by nerve disruptor fire," Cordelia said stiffly,
uncertain if the girl's odd tone concealed some land of disapproval. "A
year ago, when he was serving Aral aboard the General Vorkraft. The
neural repairs do not seem to be quite up to galactic standard." She shut
her mouth, afraid of seeming to criticize her hostess. Not that Princess Kareen
was responsible for Barrayar's dubious standards of medical practice. "Oh. Not during the
Escobar war?" said Droushnakovi. "Actually, in a
weird sense, it was the opening shot of the Escobar war. Though I suppose you
would call it friendly fire." Mind-boggling oxymoron, that phrase. "Lady Vorkosigan—or
should I say, Captain Naismith—was there," remarked Princess Kareen.
"She should know." Cordelia found her
expression hard to read. How many of Negri's famous reports was the princess privy
to? "How terrible for
him! He looks as though he had been very athletic," said the bodyguard. "He was."
Cordelia smiled more favorably at the girl, relaxing her defensive hackles.
"Nerve disruptors are filthy weapons, in my opinion." She scrubbed
absently at the sense-dead spot on her thigh, disruptor-burned by no more than
the nimbus of a blast that had fortunately not penetrated subcutaneous fat to
damage muscle function. Clearly, she should have had it fixed before she'd left
home. "Sit, Lady Vorkosigan."
Princess Kareen patted the settee beside her, just vacated by the
emperor-to-be. "Drou, will you please take Gregor to his lunch?" Droushnakovi nodded
understandingly, as if she had received some coded underlayer to this simple
request, gathered up the boy, and walked out hand in hand with him. His
child-voice drifted back, "Droushie, can I have a cream cake? And one for
Steggie?" Cordelia sat gingerly,
thinking about Negri's reports, and Barrayaran disinformation about their
recent aborted campaign to invade the planet Escobar. Escobar, Beta Colony's
good neighbor and ally ... the weapons that had disintegrated Crown Prince Serg
and his ship high above Escobar had been bravely convoyed through the
Barrayaran blockade by one Captain Cordelia Naismith, Betan Expeditionary
Force. That much truth was plain and public and not to be apologized for. It
was the secret history, behind the scenes in the Barrayaran high command, that
was so ... treacherous, Cordelia decided, was the precise word. Dangerous, like
ill-stored toxic waste. To Cordelia's
astonishment, Princess Kareen leaned over, took her right hand, lifted it to
her lips, and kissed it hard. "I swore,"
said Kareen thickly, "that I would kiss the hand that slew Ges Vorrutyer.
Thank you. Thank you." Her voice was breathy, earnest, tear-caught,
grateful emotion naked in her face. She sat up, her face growing reserved
again, and nodded. "Thank you. Bless you." "Uh ..."
Cordelia rubbed at the kissed spot. "Um ... I ... this honor belongs to
another, Milady. I was present, when Admiral Vorrutyer's throat was cut, but it
was not by my hand." Kareen's hands clenched
in her lap, and her eyes glowed. "Then it was Lord Vorkosigan!" "No!"
Cordelias lips compressed in exasperation. "Negri should have given you
the true report. It was Sergeant Bothari. Saved my life, at the time." "Bothari?"
Kareen sat bolt upright in astonishment. "Bothari the monster, Bothari,
Vorrutyer's mad batman?" "I don't mind
getting blamed in his place, ma'am, because if it had become public they'd have
been forced to execute him for murder and mutiny, and this gets him off and
out. But I ... but I should not steal his praise. I'll pass it on to him if you
wish, but I'm not sure he remembers the incident. He went through some
draconian mind-therapy after the war, before they discharged him—what you
Barrayarans call therapy"—on a par with their neurosurgery, Cordelia
feared, "and I gather he wasn't exactly, uh, normal before that,
either." "No," said
Kareen. "He was not. I thought he was Vorrutyer's creature." "He chose ... he
chose to be otherwise. I think it was the most heroic act I've ever witnessed.
Out of the middle of that swamp of evil and insanity, to reach for ..."
Cordelia trailed off, embarrassed to say, reach for redemption. After a pause
she asked, "Do you blame Admiral Vorrutyer for Prince Serg's, uh,
corruption?" As long as they were clearing the air ... Nobody mentions
Prince Serg. He thought to take a bloody shortcut to the Imperium, and now he's
just ... disappeared. "Ges Vorrutyer
..." Kareen's hands twisted, "found a like-minded friend in Serg. A
fertile follower, in his vile amusements. Maybe not... all Vorrutyer's fault. I
don't know." An honest answer,
Cordelia sensed. Kareen added lowly, "Ezar protected me from Serg, after I
became pregnant. I had not even seen my husband for over a year, when he was
killed at Escobar." Perhaps I will not
mention Prince Serg again either. "Ezar was a powerful protector. I hope
Aral may do as well," Cordelia offered. Ought she to refer to Emperor Ezar
in the past tense already? Everybody else seemed to. Kareen came back from
some absence, and shook herself to focus. "Tea, Lady Vorkosigan?" She
smiled. She touched a comm link, concealed in a jeweled pin on her shoulder,
and gave domestic orders. Apparently the private interview was over. Captain
Naismith must now try to figure out how Lady Vorkosigan should take tea with a
princess. Gregor and the bodyguard
reappeared about the time the cream cakes were being served, and Gregor set
about successfully charming the ladies for a second helping. Kareen drew the
line firmly at thirds. Prince Serg's son seemed an utterly normal boy, if quiet
around strangers. Cordelia watched him with Kareen with deep personal interest.
Motherhood. Everybody did it. How hard could it be? "How do you like
your new home so far, Lady Vorkosigan?" the princess inquired, making
polite conversation. Tea-table stuff; no naked faces now. Not in front of the
children. Cordelia thought it
over. "The country place, south at Vorkosigan Surleau, is just beautiful.
That wonderful lake—it's bigger than any open body of water on the whole of
Beta Colony, yet Aral just takes it for granted. Your planet is beautiful
beyond measure." Your planet. Not my planet? In a free-association test,
"home" still triggered "Beta Colony" in Cordelia's mind.
Yet she could have rested in Vorkosigan's arms by the lake forever. "The capital
here—well, it's certainly more varied than anything we have at ho—on Beta
Colony. Although," she laughed self-consciously, "there seem to be so
many soldiers. Last time I was surrounded by that many green uniforms, I was in
a POW camp." "Do we still look
like the enemy to you?" asked the princess curiously. "Oh—you all stopped
looking like the enemy to me even before the war was over. Just assorted
victims, variously blind." "You have
penetrating eyes, Lady Vorkosigan." The princess sipped tea, smiling into
her cup. Cordelia blinked. "Vorkosigan House
does tend to a barracks atmosphere, when Count Piotr is in residence,"
Cordelia commented. "All his liveried men. I think I've seen a couple of
women servants so far, whisking around corners, but I haven't caught one yet. A
Barrayaran barracks, that is. My Betan service was a different sort of
thing." "Mixed," said
Droushnakovi. Was that the light of envy in her eyes? "Women and men both
serving." "Assignment by
aptitude test," Cordelia agreed. "Strictly. Of course the more
physical jobs are skewed to the men, but there doesn't seem to be that strange
obsessive status-thing attached to them." "Respect,"
sighed Droushnakovi. "Well, if people
are laying their lives on the line for their community, they ought certainly to
get its respect," Cordelia said equably. "I do miss my—my
sister-officers, I guess. The bright women, the techs, like my pool of friends
at home." There was that tricky word again, home. "There have to be
bright women around here somewhere, with all these bright men. Where are they
hiding?" Cordelia shut her mouth, as it suddenly occurred to her that
Kareen might mistakenly construe this remark as a slur on herself. Adding
present company excepted would put her foot in it for sure, though. But if Kareen so
construed, she kept it to herself, and Cordelia was rescued from further
potential social embarrassment by the return of Aral and Illyan. They all made
polite farewells, and returned to Vorkosigan House. That evening Commander
Illyan popped in to Vorkosigan House with Droushnakovi in tow. She clutched a
large valise, and gazed about her with starry-eyed interest. "Captain Negri is
assigning Miss Droushnakovi to the Regent-consort for her personal
security," Illyan explained briefly. Aral nodded approval. Later, Droushnakovi
handed Cordelia a sealed note on thick cream paper. Brows rising, Cordelia
broke it open. The handwriting was small and neat, the signature legible and
without flourishes. With my compliments, it read. She will
suit you well. Kareen. CHAPTER
TWO The next morning
Cordelia awoke to find Vorkosigan already gone, and herself facing her first
day on Barrayar without his supportive company. She decided to devote it to the
shopping project that had occurred to her while watching Koudelka negotiate the
spiral staircase last night. She suspected Droushnakovi would be the ideal
native guide for what she had in mind. She dressed and went
hunting for her bodyguard. Finding her was not difficult; Droushnakovi was
seated in the hall, just outside the bedroom door, and popped to attention at
Cordelia's appearance. The girl really ought to be wearing a uniform, Cordelia
reflected. The dress she wore made her near-six-foot frame and excellent
musculature look heavy. Cordelia wondered if, as Regent-consort, she might be
permitted her own livery, and bemused herself through breakfast mentally
designing one that would set off the girl's Valkyrie good looks. "Do you know,
you're the first female Barrayaran guard I've met," Cordelia commented to
her over her egg and coffee, and a kind of steamed native groats with butter,
evidently a morning staple here. "How did you get into this line of
work?" "Well, I'm not a
real guard, like the liveried men—" Ah, the magic of
uniforms again. "—but my father and
all three of my brothers are in the Service. It's as close as I can come to
being a real soldier, like you." Army-mad, like the rest
of Barrayar. "Yes?" "I used to study
judo, for sport, when I was younger. But I was too big for the women's classes.
Nobody could give me any real practice, and besides, doing all katas was so
dull. My brothers used to sneak me into the men's classes with them. One thing
led to another. I was all-Barrayar women's champion two years running, when I
was in school. Then three years ago a man from Captain Negri's staff approached
my father with a job offer for me. That's when I had weapons training. It
seemed the Princess had been asking for female guards for years, but they had a
lot of trouble getting anyone who could pass all the tests. Although," she
smiled self-depreciatingly, "the lady who assassinated Admiral Vorrutyer
could scarcely be supposed to need my poor services." Cordelia bit her tongue.
"Um. I was lucky. Besides, I'd rather stay out of the physical end of
things just now. Pregnant, you know." "Yes, Milady. It
was in one of Captain—" "Negri's
reports," Cordelia finished in unison with her. "I'm sure it was. He
probably knew before I did." "Yes, Milady." "Were you much
encouraged in your interests, as a child?" "Not ... really.
Everyone thought I was just odd." She frowned deeply, and Cordelia had the
sense of stirring up a painful memory. She regarded the girl
thoughtfully. "Older brothers?" Droushnakovi returned a
wide blue gaze. "Why, yes." "Figured." And
I feared Barrayar for what it did to its sons. No wonder they have trouble
getting anyone to pass the tests. "So, you've had weapons training.
Excellent. You can guide me on my shopping trip today." A slightly glazed look
crept over Droushnakovi's face. "Yes, Milady. What
sort of clothing do you wish to look at?" she asked politely, not quite
concealing a glum disappointment with the interests of her "real"
lady soldier. "Where in this town
would you go to buy a really good swordstick?" The glazed look
vanished. "Oh, I know just the place, where the Vor officers go, and the
counts, to supply their liveried men. That is—I've never been inside. My
family's not Vor, so of course we're not permitted to own personal weapons.
Just Service issue. But it's supposed to be the best." One of Count
Vorkosigan's liveried guards chauffeured them to the shop. Cordelia relaxed and
enjoyed the view of the passing city. Droushnakovi, on duty, kept alert, eyes
constantly checking the crowds all around. Cordelia had the feeling she didn't
miss much. From time to time her hand wandered to check the stunner worn
concealed on the inside of her embroidered bolero. They turned into a clean
narrow street of older buildings with cut stone fronts. The weapons shop was
marked only by its name, Siegling's, in discreet gold letters. Evidently if you
didn't know where you were you shouldn't be there. The liveried man waited
outside when Cordelia and Droushnakovi entered the shop, a thick-carpeted,
wood-grained place with a little of the aroma of the armory Cordelia remembered
from her Survey ship, an odd whiff of home in an alien place. She stared
covertly at the wood paneling, and mentally translated its value into Betan
dollars. A great many Betan dollars. Yet wood seemed almost as common as
plastic, here, and as little regarded. Those personal weapons which were legal
for the upper classes to own were elegantly displayed in cases and on the
walls. Besides stunners and hunting weapons, there was an impressive array of
swords and knives; evidently the Emperor's ferocious edicts against dueling
only forbade their use, not their possession. The clerk, a
narrow-eyed, soft-treading older man, came up to them. "What may I do for
you ladies?" He was cordial enough. Cordelia supposed Vor-class women must
sometimes enter here, to buy presents for their masculine relations. But he
might have said, What may I do for you children? in the same tone of voice.
Diminutization by body language? Let it go. "I'm looking for a
swordstick, for a man about six-foot-four. Should be about, oh, yea long,"
she estimated, calling up Koudelka's arm and leg length in her mind's eye, and
gesturing to the height of her hip. "Spring-sheathed, probably." "Yes, madam."
The clerk disappeared, and returned with a sample, in an elaborately carved
light wood. "Looks a bit ... I
don't know." Flashy. "How does it work?" The clerk demonstrated
the spring mechanism. The wooden sheathing dropped off, revealing a long thin
blade. Cordelia held out her hand, and the clerk, rather relucluntly, handed it
over for inspection. She wriggled it a
little, sighted down the blade, and handed it to her bodyguard. "What do
you think?" Droushnakovi smiled
first, then frowned doubtfully. "It's not very well balanced." She
glanced uncertainly at the clerk. "Remember, you're
working for me, not him," said Cordelia, correctly identifying
class—consciousness in action. "I don't think it's
a very good blade." "That's excellent
Darkoi workmanship, madam," the clerk defended coolly. Smiling, Cordelia took
it back. "Let us test your hypothesis." She raised the blade
suddenly to the salute, and lunged at the wall in a neat extension. The tip penetrated
and caught in the wood, and Cordelia leaned on it. The blade snapped. Blandly,
she handed the pieces back to the clerk. "How do you stay in business if
your customers don't survive long enough for repeat sales? Siegling's certainly
didn't acquire its reputation selling toys like that. Bring me something a
decent soldier can carry, not a pimp's plaything." "Madam," said
the clerk stiffly, "I must insist the damaged merchandise be paid
for." Cordelia, thoroughly
irritated, said, "Very well. Send the bill to my husband. Admiral Aral
Vorkosigan, Vorkosigan House. While you're about it you can explain why you
tried to pass off sleaze on his wife—Yeoman." This last was a guess, based
on his age and walk, but she could tell from his eyes she'd struck home. The clerk bowed
profoundly. "I beg pardon, Milady. I believe I have something more
suitable, if Milady will be pleased to wait." He vanished again, and
Cordelia sighed. "Buying from machines is so much easier. But at least the
Appeal to the Irrelevant Authorities at Headquarters works just as well here as
at home." The next sample was a
plain dark wood, with a finish like satin. The clerk handed it to her unopened,
with another little bow. "You press the handle there, Milady." It was
much heavier than the first swordstick. The sheathing sprang away at velocity,
landing against the wall on the other side of the room with a satisfying thunk,
almost a weapon in itself. Cordelia sighted down the blade again. A strange
watermark pattern down its length shifted in the light. She saluted the wall
once more, and caught the clerk's eye. "Do these come out of your
salary?" "Go ahead,
Milady." There was a little gleam of satisfaction in his eye. "You
can't break that one." She gave it the same
test as she had the other. The tip went much further into the wood, and leaning
against it with all her strength, she could barely bend it. Even so, there was
more bend left in it; she could feel she was nowhere near the limit of its
tensile strength. She handed it to Droushnakovi, who examined it lovingly.
"That's fine, Milady. That's worthy." "I'm sure it will
be used more as a stick than as a sword. Nevertheless ... it should indeed be
worthy. We'll take this one." As the clerk wrapped it,
Cordelia lingered over a case of enamel-decorated stunners. "Thinking of buying
one for yourself, Milady?" asked Droushnakovi. "I ... don't think
so. Barrayar has enough soldiers, without importing them from Beta Colony.
Whatever I'm here for, it isn't soldiering. See anything you want?" Droushnakovi looked
wistful, but shook her head, her hand going to her bolero. "Captain
Negri's equipment is the best. Even Siegling's doesn't have anything better,
just prettier." They sat down three to
dinner that night, late, Vorkosigan, Cordelia, and Lieutenant Koudelka.
Vorkosigan's new personal secretary looked a little tired. "What did you two
do all day?" asked Cordelia. "Herded men,
mostly," answered Vorkosigan. "Prime Minister Vortala had a few votes
that weren't as much in the bag as he claimed, and we worked them over, one or
two at a time, behind closed doors. What you'll see tomorrow in the Council
chambers isn't Barrayaran politics at work, just their result. Were you all
right today?" "Fine. Went
shopping. Wait'll you see." She produced the swordstick, and stripped off
the wrapping. "Just to help keep you from running Kou completely into the
ground." Koudelka looked politely
grateful, over a more fundamental irritation. His look changed to one of
surprise as he took the stick and nearly dropped it from the unexpected weight.
"Hey! This isn't—" "You press the
handle there. Don't point it—!" Thwack! "—at the
window." Fortunately, the sheath struck the frame, and bounced back with a
clatter. Kou and Aral both jumped. Koudelka's eyes lit up
as he examined the blade, while Cordelia retrieved the sheath. "Oh,
Milady!" Then his face fell. He carefully resheathed it, and handed it
back sadly. "I guess you didn't realize. I'm not Vor. It's not legal for
me to own a private sword." "Oh." Cordelia
was crestfallen. Vorkosigan raised an
eyebrow. "May I see that, Cordelia?" He looked it over, unsheathing
it more cautiously. "Hm. Am I right in guessing I paid for this?" "Well, you will, I
suppose, when the bill arrives. Although I don't think you should pay for the
one I broke. I might as well take it back, though." "I see." He
smiled a little. "Lieutenant Koudelka, as your commanding officer and a
vassal secundus to Ezar Vorbarra, I am officially issuing you this weapon of
mine, to carry in the service of the Emperor, long may he rule." The
unavoidable irony of the formal phrase tightened his mouth, but he shook off
the blackness, and handed the stick back to Koudelka, who bloomed again.
"Thank you, sir!" Cordelia just shook her
head. "I don't believe I'll ever understand this place." "I'll have Kou find
you some legal histories. Not tonight, though. He has barely time to put his
notes from today in order before Vortala's due here with a couple more of his
strays. You can take over part of the Count my father's library, Kou; we'll
meet in there." Dinner broke up.
Koudelka retreated to the library to work, while Vorkosigan and Cordelia
retired to the drawing room next to it to read, before Vorkosigan's evening
meeting. He had yet more reports, which he ran rapidly through a hand viewer.
Cordelia divided her time between a Barrayaran Russian phrase earbug, and an
even more intimidating disk on child care. The silence was broken by an
occasional mutter from Vorkosigan, more to himself than her, of phrases like, "Ah
ha! So that's what the bastard was really up to," or "Damn, those
figures are strange. Got to check it out... ." Or from Cordelia, "Oh,
my, I wonder if all babies do that," and a periodic thwack! penetrating
the wall from the library, which caused them to look up at each other and burst
out laughing. "Oh, dear,"
said Cordelia, after the third or fourth of these. "I hope I haven't
distracted him unduly from his duties." "He'll do all
right, when he settles down. Vorbarra's personal secretary has taken him in hand,
and is showing him how to organize himself. After Kou follows him through the
funeral protocol, he should be able to tackle anything. That swordstick was a
stroke of genius, by the way; thank you." "Yes, I noticed he
was pretty touchy about his handicaps. I thought it might unruffle his feathers
a little." "It's our society.
It tends to be ... rather hard on anyone who can't keep up." "I see. Strange ...
now that you mention it, I don't recall seeing any but healthy-looking people,
on the streets and so on, except at the hospital. No float chairs, none of
those vacuous faces in the tow of their parents ..." "Nor will
you." Vorkosigan looked grim. "Any problems that are detectable are
eliminated before birth." "Well, we do that,
too. Though usually before conception." "Also at birth. And
after, in the backcountry." "Oh." "As for the maimed
adults ..." "Good heavens, you
don't practice euthanasia on them, do you?" "Your Ensign
Dubauer would not have lived, here." Dubauer had taken
disruptor fire to the head, and survived. Sort of. "As for injuries
like Koudelka's, or worse ... the social stigma is very great. Watch him in a
larger group sometime, not his close friends. It's no accident that the suicide
rate among medically discharged soldiers is high." "That's
horrible." "I took it for
granted, once. Now ... not anymore. But many people still do." "What about
problems like Bothari's?" "It depends. He was
a usable madman. For the unusable ..." he trailed off, staring at his
boots. Cordelia felt cold.
"I keep thinking I'm beginning to adjust to this place. Then I go around
another corner and run headlong into something like that." "It's only been
eighty years since Barrayar made contact with the wider galactic civilization
again. It wasn't just technology we lost, in the Time of Isolation. That we put
back on again quickly, like a borrowed coat. But underneath it ... we're still
pretty damned naked in places. In forty-four years, I've only begun to see how
naked." Count Vortala and his
"strays" came in soon after, and Vorkosigan vanished into the
library. The old Count Piotr Vorkosigan, Aral's father, arrived from his
District later that evening, come up to attend the full Council vote.
"Well, that's one vote he's assured of tomorrow," Cordelia joked to
her father-in-law, helping him get stiffly out of his jacket in the stone-paved
foyer. "Ha. He's lucky to
get it. He's picked up some damned peculiar radical notions in the last few
years. If he wasn't my son, he could whistle for it." But Piotr's seamed
face looked proud. Cordelia blinked at this
description of Aral Vorkosigan's political views. "I confess, I've never
thought of him as a revolutionary. Radical must be a more elastic term than I
thought." "Oh, he doesn't see
himself that way. He thinks he can go halfway, and then stop. I think he'll
find himself riding a tiger, a few years down the road." The count shook
his head grimly. "But come, my girl, and sit down and tell me that you're
well. You look well—is everything all right?" The old count was
passionately interested in the development of his grandson-to-be. Cordelia
sensed her pregnancy had raised her status with him enormously, from a
tolerated caprice of Aral's to something bordering perilously on the semi-divine.
He fairly blasted her with approval. It was nearly irresistible, and she never
laughed at him, although she had no illusions about it. Cordelia had found
Aral's earlier sketch of his father's reaction to her pregnancy, the day she'd
brought home the confirming news, to be right on target. She'd returned to the
estate at Vorkosigan Surleau that summer day to search Aral out down by the
boat dock. He was puttering around with his sailboat, and had the sails laid
out, drying in the sun, as he squished around them in wet shoes. He looked up to meet her
smile, unsuccessful at concealing the eagerness in his eyes. "Well?"
He bounced a little, on his heels. "Well." She
attempted a sad and disappointed look, to tease him, but the grin escaped and
took over her whole face. "Your doctor says it's a boy." "Ah." A long
and eloquent sigh escaped him, and he scooped her up and twirled her around. "Aral! Awk! Don't
drop me." He was no taller than herself, if, um, thicker. "Never." He
let her slide down against him, and they shared a long kiss, ending in
laughter. "My father will be
ecstatic." "You look pretty
ecstatic yourself." "Yes, but you
haven't seen anything until you've seen an old-fashioned Barrayaran
paterfamilias in a trance over the growth of his family tree. I've had the poor
old man convinced for years that his line was ending with me." "Will he forgive me
for being an offworlder plebe?" "No insult
intended, but by this time I don't think he'd have cared what species of wife I
dragged home, as long as she was fertile. You think I'm exaggerating?" he
added at her trill of laughter. "You'll see." "Is it too early to
think of names?" she asked, slightly wistful. "No thinking to it.
Firstborn son. It's a strict custom here. He gets named after his two
grandfathers. Paternal for the first, maternal for the second." "Ah, that's why
your history is so confusing to read. I was always having to put dates next to
those duplicate names, to try and keep track. Piotr Miles. Hm. Well, I guess I
can get used to it. I'd been thinking of... something else." "Another time,
perhaps." "Ooh,
ambitious." A short wrestling match
ensued, Cordelia having previously made the useful discovery that in certain
moods he was more ticklish than she. She extracted a reasonable amount of
revenge, and they ended laughing on the grass in the sun. "This is very
undignified," Aral complained as she let him up. "Afraid I'll shock
Negri's fisher of men out there?" "They're beyond
shock, I guarantee." Cordelia waved at the
distant hoverboat, whose occupant steadfastly ignored the gesture. She had been
at first angered, then resigned to learn that Aral was being kept under
continuous observation by Imperial Security. The price, she'd supposed, of his
involvement in the secret and lethal politics of the Escobar War, and the
penalty for some of his less welcome outspoken opinions. "I can see why you
took up baiting them for a hobby. Maybe we ought to unbend and invite them to
lunch or something. I feel they must know me so well by now, I'd like to know
them." Had Negri's man recorded the domestic conversation she'd just had?
Were there bugs in their bedroom? Their bathroom? Aral grinned, but
replied, "They wouldn't be permitted to accept. They don't eat or drink
anything but what they bring themselves." "Heavens, how
paranoid. Is that really necessary?" "Sometimes. Theirs
is a dangerous trade. I don't envy them." "I'd think sitting
around down here watching you would constitute a nice little vacation. He's got
to have a great suntan." "The sitting around
is the hardest part. They may sit for a year, and then be called to five minutes
of all-out action of deadly importance. But they have to be instantly ready for
that five minutes the whole year. Quite a strain. I much prefer attack to
defense." "I still don't
understand why anybody would want to bother you. I mean, you're just a retired
officer, living in obscurity. There must be hundreds like you, even of high Vor
blood." "Hm." He'd
rested his gaze on the distant boat, avoiding answer, then jumped to his feet.
"Come on. Let's go spring the good news on Father." Well, she understood it
now. Count Piotr drew her hand through his arm, and carried her off to the
dining room, where he ate a late supper between demands for the latest
obstetrical report, and pressed fresh garden dainties upon her that he'd
brought with him from the country. She ate grapes obediently. After the Count's
supper, walking arm in arm with him into the foyer, Cordelia's ear was caught
by the sound of raised voices coming from the library. The words were muffled
but the tones were sharp, chop-cadenced. Cordelia paused, disturbed. After a moment
the—argument?—stopped, the library door swung open, and a man stalked out.
Cordelia could see Aral and Count Vortala through the aperture. Aral's face was
set, his eyes burning. Vortala, an age-shrunken man with a balding liver-spotted
head fringed with white, was brick-pink to the top of his naked scalp. With a
curt gesture the man collected his waiting liveried retainer, who followed
smartly, blank-faced. The curt man was about
forty years old, Cordelia guessed, dressed expensively in the upper-class
style, dark-haired. He was rendered a bit dish-faced by a prominent forehead
and jaw that his nose and moustache had trouble overpowering. Neither handsome
nor ugly, in another mood one might call him strong-featured. Now he just looked
sour. He paused, coming upon Count Piotr in the foyer, and managed—just
barely—a polite nod of greeting. "Vorkosigan," he said thickly. A
reluctant good evening was encoded in his jerky half-bow. The old count tilted his
head in return, eyebrows up. "Vordarian." His tone made the name an
inquiry. Vordarian's lips were
tight, his hands clenching in unconscious rhythm with his jaw. "Mark my
words," he ground out, "you, and I, and every other man of worth on
Barrayar will live to regret tomorrow." Piotr pursed his lips,
wariness in the crow's-feet corners of his eyes. "My son will not betray
his class, Vordarian." "You blind
yourself." His stare cut across Cordelia, not lingering long enough to be
construed as insult, but cold, very cold, repelling introduction. With effort,
he made the minimum courtesy of a farewell nod, turned, and exited the front
door with his retainer-shadow. Aral and Vortala emerged
from the library. Aral drifted to the foyer to stare moodily into the darkness
through the etched glass panels flanking the door. Vortala placed a placating
hand on his sleeve. "Let him go,"
said Vortala. "We can live without his vote tomorrow." "I don't plan to go
running down the street after him," Aral snapped. "Nevertheless ...
next time, save your wit for those with the brains to appreciate it, eh?" "Who was that irate
fellow?" asked Cordelia lightly, trying to lift the black mood. "Count Vidal
Vordarian." Aral turned from the glass panel back to her, and managed a
smile for her benefit. "Commodore Count Vordarian. I used to work with him
from time to time when I was on the General Staff. He is now a leader in what
you might call the next-to-most conservative party on Barrayar; not the
back-to-the-Time-of-Isolation loonies, but, shall we say, those honestly
fearing all change is change for the worse." He glanced covertly at Count
Piotr. "His name was
mentioned frequently, in speculation about the upcoming Regency," Vortala
commented. "I rather fear he may have been counting on it for himself.
He's made great efforts to cultivate Kareen." "He should have
been cultivating Ezar," said Aral dryly. "Well ... maybe he'll come
down out of the air overnight. Try him again in the morning, Vortala—a little
more humbly this time, eh?" "Coddling
Vordarian's ego could be a full-time task," grumbled Vortala. "He
spends too damn much time studying his family tree." Aral grimaced agreement.
"He's not the only one." "He is to hear him
tell it," growled Vortala. CHAPTER
THREE The next day Cordelia
had an official escort to the full Joint Council session in the person of
Captain Lord Padma Xav Vorpatril. He turned out to be not only a member of her
husband's new staff, but also his first cousin, son of Aral's long-dead
mother's younger sister. Lord Vorpatril was the first close relative of Aral's
Cordelia had encountered besides Count Piotr. It wasn't that Aral's relatives
were avoiding her, as she might have feared; he had a real dearth of them. He
and Vorpatril were the only surviving children of the previous generation, of
whom Count Piotr was himself the last living representative. Vorpatril was a
big cheerful man of about thirty-five, clean-cut in his dress greens. He had
also, she discovered shortly, been one of her husband's junior officers during
his first captaincy, before Vorkosigan's military successes of the Komarr
campaign and its politically ruinous aftermath. She sat with Vorpatril
on one side and Droushnakovi on the other, in an ornate-railed gallery
overlooking the Council chamber. The chamber itself was a surprisingly plain
room, though heavy with what still seemed to Cordelia's Betan eye to be
incredibly luxurious wood paneling. Wooden benches and desks ringed the room.
Morning light poured through stained-glass windows high in the east wall. The
colorful ceremonies were played out below with great punctilio. The ministers wore
archaic-looking black and purple robes set off by gold chains of office. They
were outnumbered by the nearly sixty District counts, even more splendid in
scarlet and silver. A sprinkling of men young enough to be on active service in
the military wore the red and blue parade uniform. Vorkosigan had been right in
describing the parade uniform as gaudy, Cordelia reflected, but in the
wonderful setting of this ancient room the gaud seemed most appropriate.
Vorkosigan looked quite good in his set, she thought. Prince Gregor and his
mother were seated on a dais to one side of the chamber. The princess wore a
black gown shot with silver decoration, high-necked and long-sleeved. Her
dark-haired son looked rather like an elf in his red and blue uniform. Cordelia
thought he fidgeted remarkably little, under the circumstances. The Emperor too had a
ghostly presence, over closed circuit commlink from the Imperial Residence.
Ezar was shown in the holovid seated, in full uniform, at what physical cost
Cordelia could not guess, the tubes and monitor leads piercing his body
concealed at least from the vid pickup. His face was paper—white, his skin
almost transparent, as if he were literally fading from the stage he had
dominated for so long. The gallery was crammed
with wives, staff, and guards. The women were elegantly dressed and decorated
with jewelry, and Cordelia studied them with interest, then turned her
attention back to pumping Vorpatril for information. "Was Aral's
appointment as Regent a surprise to you?" she asked. "Not really. A few
people took that resignation-and-retirement business after the Escobar mess
seriously, but I never did." "He meant it
seriously, I thought." "Oh, I don't doubt
it. The first person Aral fools with that prosey-stone-soldier routine is
himself. It's the sort of man he always wanted to be, I think. Like his
father." "Hm. Yes, I had
noticed a certain political bent to his conversations. In the middle of the
most extraordinary circumstances, too. Marriage proposals, for instance." Vorpatril laughed.
"I can just picture it. When he was young he was a real conservative-if
you wanted to know what Aral thought about anything, all you had to do was ask
Count Piotr, and multiply by two. But by the time we served together, he was
getting ... um ... strange. If you could get him going ..." There was a
certain wicked reminiscence in his eye, which Cordelia promptly encouraged. "How did you get
him going? I thought political discussion was forbidden to officers." He snorted. "I
suppose they could forbid breathing with about as much chance of success. The
dictum is, shall we say, sporadically enforced. Aral stuck to it, though,
unless Rulf Vorhalas and I took him out and got him really relaxed." "Aral?
Relaxed?" "Oh, yes. Now,
Aral's drinking was notable—" "I thought he was a
terrible drinker. No stomach for it." "Oh, that's what
was notable. He seldom drank. Although he went through a bad period after his
first wife died, when he used to run around with Ges Vorrutyer a lot ... um
..." He glanced sideways, and took another tack. "Anyway, it was
dangerous to get him too relaxed, because then he'd go all depressed and
serious, and then it didn't take a thing to get him on to whatever current
injustice or incompetence or insanity was rousing his ire. God, the man could
talk. By the time he'd had his fifth drink-just before he slid under the table
for the night-he'd be declaiming revolution in iambic pentameter. I always
thought he'd end up on the political side someday." He chuckled, and
looked rather lovingly at the stocky red-and-blue-clad figure seated with the
Counts on the far side of the chamber. The Joint Council vote
of confirmation for Vorkosigan's Imperial appointment was a curious affair, to
Cordelia's mind. She hadn't imagined it possible to get seventy-five Barrayarans
to agree on which direction their sun rose in the morning, but the tally was
nearly unanimous in favor of Emperor Ezar's choice. The exceptions were five
set-jawed men who abstained, four loudly, one so weakly the Lord Guardian of
the Speaker's Circle had to ask him to repeat himself. Even Count Vordarian
voted yea, Cordelia noticed—perhaps Vortala had managed to repair last night's
breach in some early-morning meeting after all. It all seemed a very auspicious
and encouraging start to Vorkosigan's new job, anyway, and she said as much to
Lord Vorpatril. "Uh ... yes,
Milady," said Lord Vorpatril after a sideways smile at her. "Emperor
Ezar made it clear he wanted united approval." His tone made it clear
she was missing cues, again. "Are you trying to tell me some of those men
would rather have voted no?" "That would be
imprudent of them, at this juncture." "Then the men who
abstained ... must have some courage of conscience." She studied the
little group with new interest. "Oh, they're all
right," said Vorpatril. "What do you mean?
They are the opposition, surely." "Yes, but they're
the open opposition. No one plotting serious treason would mark himself so
publicly. The fellows Aral will need to guard his back from are in the other
mob, among the yes-men." "Which ones?"
Cordelias brow wrinkled in worry. "Who knows?"
Lord Vorpatril shrugged, then answered his own question. "Negri,
probably." They were surrounded by
a ring of empty seats. Cordelia hadn't been sure if it was for security or
courtesy. Evidently the second, for two latecomers, a man in commander's dress
greens and a younger one in rich-looking civilian clothes, arrived and
apologetically sat in front of them. Cordelia thought they looked like
brothers, and had the guess confirmed when the younger said, "Look,
there's Father, three seats behind old Vortala. Which one's the new
Regent?" "The bandy-legged
character in the red-and-blues, just sitting down to Vortala's right." Cordelia and Vorpatril
exchanged a look behind their backs, and Cordelia put a finger to her lips.
Vorpatril grinned and shrugged. "What's the word on
him in the Service?" "Depends on who you
ask," said the commander. "Sardi thinks he's a strategic genius, and
dotes on his communiques. He's been all over the place. Every brushfire in the
last twenty-five years seems to have his name in it someplace. Uncle Rulf used
to think the world of him. On the other hand, Niels, who was at Escobar, said
he was the most cold-blooded bastard he'd ever met." "I hear he has a
reputation as a secret progressive." "There's nothing
secret about it. Some of the senior Vor officers are scared to death of him.
He's been trying to get Father with him and Vortala on that new tax
ruling." "Oh, yawn." "It's the direct
Imperial tax on inheritances." "Ouch! Well, that
wouldn't hit him, would it? The Vorkosigans are so damn poor. Let Komarr pay.
That's why we conquered it, isn't it?" "Not exactly, my
fraternal ignoramus. Have any of you town clowns met his Betan frill yet?" "Men of fashion,
sirrah," corrected his brother. "Not to be confused with you Service
grubs." "No danger of that.
No, really. There are the damnedest rumors circulating about her, Vorkosigan,
and Vorrutyer at Escobar, most of which contradict each other. I thought Mother
might have a line on it." "She keeps a low
profile, for somebody who's supposed to be three meters tall and eat battle
cruisers for breakfast. Scarcely anybody's seen her. Maybe she's ugly." "They'll make a
pair, then. Vorkosigan's no beauty either." Cordelia, vastly amused,
hid a grin behind her hand, until the commander said, "I don't know who
that three-legged spastic is he has trailing him, though. Staff, do you
suppose?" "You'd think he
could do better than that. What a mutant. Surely Vorkosigan has the pick of the
Service, as Regent." She felt she'd received
a body blow, so great was the unexpected pain of the careless remark. Captain
Lord Vorpatril scarcely seemed to notice it. He had heard it, but his attention
was on the floor below, where oaths were being made. Droushnakovi,
surprisingly, blushed, and turned her head away. Cordelia leaned forward.
Words boiled up within her, but she chose only a few, and fired them off in her
coldest Captain's voice. "Commander. And
you, whoever you are." They looked back at her, surprised at the
interruption. "For your information, the gentleman in question is
Lieutenant Koudelka. And there are no better officers. Not in anybody's
service." They stared at her,
irritated and baffled, unable to place her in their scheme of things. "I
believe this was a private conversation, madam," said the commander
stiffly. "Quite so,"
she returned, equally stiffly, still boiling. "For eavesdropping,
unavoidable as it was, I beg your pardon. But for that shameful remark upon
Admiral Vorkosigan's secretary, you must apologize. It was a disgrace to the
uniform you both wear and the service to your Emperor you both share." She
kept her voice very low, almost hissing. She was trembling. An overdose of
Barrayar. Get hold of yourself. Vorpatril's wandering
attention was drawn, startled, back to her by this speech. "Here,
here," he remonstrated. "What is this—" The commander turned
around further. "Oh, Captain Vorpatril, sir. I didn't recognize you at
first. Um ..." He gestured helplessly at his red-haired attacker, as if to
say, Is this lady with you? And if so, can't you keep her under control? He
added coldly, "We have not met, madam." "No, but I don't go
round flipping over rocks to see what's living underneath." She was
instantly conscious of having been lured into going too far. With difficulty,
she put a lid on her temper. It wouldn't do to be making new enemies for
Vorkosigan at the very moment he was taking up his duties. Vorpatril, waking up to
his responsibilities as escort, began, "Commander, you don't know
who—" "Don't ...
introduce us, Lord Vorpatril," Cordelia interrupted him. "We should
only embarrass each other further." She pressed thumb and forefinger to
the bridge of her nose, closing her eyes and gathering more conciliating words.
And I used to pride myself on keeping my temper. She looked up at their furious
faces. "Commander. My
lord." She correctly deduced the young man's title from his reference to
his father, sitting among the counts. "My words were hasty and rude, and I
take them back. I had no right to comment on a private conversation. I
apologize. Most humbly." "As well you
should," snapped the young lord. His brother had more
self-control, and replied reluctantly, "I accept your apology, madam. I
presume the lieutenant is some relative of yours. I apologize for whatever
insult you felt was implied." "And I accept your
apology, Commander. Although Lieutenant Koudelka is not a relation, but only my
second-dearest ... enemy." She paused, and they exchanged frowns, hers of
irony, his of puzzlement. "I would ask a favor of you, however, sir. Don't
let a comment like that fall in Admiral Vorkosigan's hearing. Koudelka was one
of his officers aboard the General Vorkraft, and was wounded in his
defense during that political mutiny last year. He loves him as a son." The commander was
calming down, although Droushnakovi still looked as if she had a bad taste in
her mouth. He smiled a little. "Are you implying I'd find myself doing guard
duty on Kyril Island?" What was Kyril Island?
Some distant and unpleasant outpost, apparently. "I ... doubt it. He
wouldn't use his office to carry out a personal grudge. But it would cause him
unnecessary pain." "Madam." She
had puzzled him thoroughly now, this plain-looking woman, so out-of-place in
the glittering gallery. He turned back with his brother to watch the show
below, and all maintained a sticky silence for another twenty minutes, until
the ceremonies stopped for lunch. The crowds in both gallery and floor broke
away to meet in the corridors of power. She found Vorkosigan,
Koudelka at his side, speaking with his father Count Piotr and another older
man in count's robes. Vorpatril delivered her and vanished, and Aral greeted
her with a tired smile. "Dear Captain, are
you holding up all right? I want you to meet Count Vorhalas. Admiral Rulf
Vorhalas was his younger brother. We must go shortly, we're scheduled for a
private lunch with the Princess and Prince Gregor." Count Vorhalas bowed
profoundly over her hand. "Milady. I'm honored." "Count. I ... only
saw your brother briefly. But Admiral Vorhalas struck me as a man of
outstanding worth." And my side blew him away. She felt queasy, with her
hand in his, but he seemed to hold no personal animosity. "Thank you, Milady.
We all thought so. Ah, there are the boys. I promised them an introduction.
Evon is itching for a place on the Staff, but I told him he'd have to earn it.
I wish Carl had as much interest in the Service. My daughter will be mad with
jealousy. You've stirred up all the girls, you know, Milady." The count darted away to
round up his sons. Oh, God, thought Cordelia. It would have to be them. The two
men who had sat before her in the gallery were presented to her. They both
blanched, and bowed nervously over her hand. "But you've
met," said Vorkosigan. "I saw you talking in the gallery. What did
you find to discuss so animatedly, Cordelia?" "Oh ... geology.
Zoology. Courtesy. Much on courtesy. We had quite a wide-ranging discussion. We
each of us taught the other something, I think." She smiled, and did not
flick an eyelid. Commander Evon Vorhalas,
looking rather ill, said, "Yes. I've ... had a lesson I'll never forget,
Milady." Vorkosigan was
continuing the introductions. "Commander Vorhalas, Lord Carl; Lieutenant
Koudelka." Koudelka, loaded with
plastic flimsies, disks, the baton of the commander-in-chief of the armed
forces that had just been presented to Vorkosigan as Regent-elect, and his own
stick, and uncertain whether to shake hands or salute, managed to drop them all
and do neither. There was a general scramble to retrieve the load, and Koudelka
went red, bending awkwardly after it. Droushnakovi and he put a hand on his
stick at the same time. "I don't need your
help, miss," Koudelka snarled at her in a low voice, and she recoiled to
go stand rigidly behind Cordelia. Commander Vorhalas
handed him back some disks. "Pardon me, sir," said Koudelka.
"Thank you." "Not at all,
Lieutenant. I was almost hit by disruptor fire myself once. Scared the hell out
of me. You are an example to us all." "It ... didn't
hurt, sir." Cordelia, who knew from
personal experience that this was a lie, held her peace, satisfied. The group
broke up for its separate destinations. Cordelia paused before Evon Vorhalas. "Nice to meet you,
Commander. I predict you will go far, in your future career—and not in the
direction of Kyril Island." Vorhalas smiled tightly.
"I believe you will, too, Milady." They exchanged wary and respectful
nods, and Cordelia turned to take Vorkosigan's arm, and follow him to his next
task, trailed by Koudelka and Droushnakovi. The Barrayaran Emperor
slipped into his final coma a week later, but lingered on another week beyond
that. Aral and Cordelia were routed out of bed at Vorkosigan House in the early
hours of the morning by a special messenger from the Imperial Residence, with
the simple words, "The doctor thinks it's time, sir." They dressed
hastily, and accompanied the messenger back to the beautiful chamber Ezar had
chosen for the last month of his life, its priceless antiques cluttered over
with off-worlder medical equipment. The room was crowded,
with the old man's personal physicians, Vortala, Count Piotr and themselves,
the Princess and Prince Gregor, several ministers, and some men from the
General Staff. They kept a quiet, standing death-watch for almost an hour
before the still, decayed figure on the bed took on, almost imperceptibly, an
added stillness. Cordelia thought it a gruesome scene to which to subject the
boy, but his presence seemed ceremonially necessary. Very quietly, beginning
with Vorkosigan, they turned to kneel and place their hands between Gregor's,
to renew their oaths of fealty. Cordelia too was guided
by Vorkosigan to kneel before the boy. The prince—Emperor—had his mothers hair,
but hazel eyes like Ezar and Serg, and Cordelia found herself wondering how
much of his father, or his grandfather, was latent in him, its expression
waiting on the power that would come with age. Do you bear curses in your
chromosomes, child? she wondered as her hands were placed between his. Cursed
or blessed, regardless, she gave him her oath. The words seemed to cut her last
tie to Beta Colony; it parted with a ping! audible only to her. I am a Barrayaran now.
It had been a long strange journey, that began with a view of a pair of boots
in the mud, and ended in these clean child's hands. Do you know I helped kill
your father, boy? Will you ever know? Pray not. She wondered if it was delicacy
or oversight, that she had never been required to give oath to Ezar Vorbarra. Of all present, only
Captain Negri wept. Cordelia only knew this because she was standing next to
him, in the darkest corner of the room, and saw him twice brush his face with
the back of his hand. His face grew suffused, and more lined, for a time; when
he stepped forward to take his oath, it had returned to his normal blank
hardness. The five days of funeral
ceremonies that followed were grueling for Cordelia, but not, she was led to
understand, so grueling as the ones had been for Crown Prince Serg, which had
run for two weeks, despite the absence of a body for a centerpiece. The public
view was that Prince Serg had died the death of a heroic soldier. By Cordelia's
count, only five human beings knew the whole truth of that subtle
assassination. No, four, now that Ezar was no more. Perhaps the grave was the
safest repository of Ezar's secrets. Well, the old man's torment was over now,
his time done, his era passing. There was no coronation
as such for the boy Emperor, but instead a surprisingly business-like, if
elegantly garbed, several days spent back in the Council chambers collecting
personal oaths from ministers, counts, a host of their relatives, and anybody
else who had not already made their vows in Ezar's death chamber. Vorkosigan
too received oaths, seeming to grow burdened with their accumulation as if each
had a physical weight. The boy, closely
supported by his mother, held up well. Kareen made sure Gregor's hourly breaks
to rest were respected by the busy, impatient men who had thronged to the
capital to discharge their obligation. The strangeness of the Barrayaran
government system, with all its unwritten customs, pressed on Cordelia not so
much at first glance, but gradually. And yet it seemed to work for them,
somehow. They made it work. Pretending a government into existence. Perhaps all
governments were such consensus fictions, at their hearts. After the spate of
ceremonies had died down, Cordelia began at last to establish her domestic
routine at Vorkosigan House. Not that there was that much to do. Most days
Vorkosigan left at dawn, Koudelka in tow, and returned after dark, to snatch a
cold supper and lock himself in the library, or see men there, until bedtime.
His long hours were a start-up cost, Cordelia told herself. He would settle in,
become more efficient, when everything wasn't all for the first time. She
remembered her first ship command in the Betan Astronomical Survey—not so very
long ago—and her first few months of nervous hyper-preparedness. Later, the
painfully studied tasks had become automatic, then nearly unconscious, and her
personal life had re-emerged. Aral's would, too. She waited patiently, and
smiled when she did see him. Besides, she had a job
gestating. It was a task of no little status, judging from the cosseting she
received from everyone from Count Piotr down to the kitchen maid who brought
her nutritious little snacks at odd hours. She hadn't received this much
approval even when she'd returned from a yearlong survey mission with a
zero-accident record. Reproduction seemed far more enthusiastically encouraged
here than on Beta Colony. After lunch one afternoon
she lay with her feet up on a sofa in a shaded patio between the house and its
back garden—gestating assiduously—and reflected upon the assorted reproductive
customs of Barrayar versus Beta Colony. Gestation in uterine replicators,
artificial wombs, seemed unknown here. On Beta Colony replicators were the most
popular choice by three to one, but a large minority stood by claimed
psycho-social advantages to the old-fashioned natural method. Cordelia had
never been able to detect any difference between vitro and vivo babies,
certainly not by the time they reached adulthood at twenty-two. Her brother had
been vivo, herself vitro; her brother's co-parent had chosen vivo for both her
children, and bragged about it rather a lot. Cordelia had always
assumed that when her turn came, she'd have her own kid cooked up in a
replicator bank at the start of a Survey mission, to be ready and waiting for
her arms upon her return. If she returned—there was always that possible catch,
exploring the blind unknown. And assuming, also, that she could nail down an
interested co-parent with whom to pool, willing and able to pass the physical,
psychological, and economic tests and take the course to qualify for a parents
license. Aral was going to be a
superb co-parent, she was certain. If he ever touched down again, from his new
high place. Surely the first rush must be over soon. It was a long fall from
that high place, with nowhere to land. Aral was her safe haven, if he fell
first ... she wrenched her meditations firmly into more positive channels. Now, family size; that
was the real, secret, wicked fascination of Barrayar. There were no legal
limits here, no certificates to be earned, no third-child variances to be
scrimped for; no rules, in fact, at all. She'd seen a woman on the street with
not three but four children in tow, and no one had even stared. Cordelia had
upped her own imagined brood from two to three, and felt deliciously sinful,
till she'd met a woman with ten. Four, maybe? Six? Vorkosigan could afford it.
Cordelia wriggled her toes and cuddled into the cushions, afloat on an
atavistic cloud of genetic greed. Barrayar's economy was
wide open now, Aral said, despite the losses of the recent war. No wounds had
touched the surface of the planet this time. The terraforming of the second
continent opened new frontiers every day, and when the new planet Sergyar was
cleared for colonization, the effect would triple. Labor was short everywhere,
wages rising. Barrayar perceived itself to be severely underpopulated. Vorkosigan
called the economic situation his gift from the gods, politically. So did
Cordelia, for more personal, secret reasons; herds of little Vorkosigans... She could have a
daughter. Not just one, but two—sisters! Cordelia had never had a sister.
Captain Vorpatril's wife had two, she'd said. Cordelia had meet Lady
Vorpatril at one of the rare evening political-social events at Vorkosigan
House. The affair was managed smoothly by the Vorkosigan House staff. All
Cordelia had to do was show up appropriately dressed (she had acquired more
clothes), smile a lot, and keep her mouth shut. She listened with fascination,
trying to puzzle out yet more about How Things Were Done Here. Alys Vorpatril too was
pregnant. Lord Vorpatril had sort of stuck them together and ducked out.
Naturally, they talked shop. Lady Vorpatril mourned much at her personal
discomforts. Cordelia decided she herself must be fortunate; the anti-nausea
med, the same chemical formulation that they used at home, worked, and she was
only naturally tired, not from the weight of the still-tiny baby but from the
surprising metabolic load. Peeing for two was how Cordelia thought of it. Well,
after five-space navigational math, how hard could motherhood be? Leaving aside Alys's
whispered obstetrical horror stories, of course. Hemorrhages, strokes, kidney
failure, birth injuries, oxygen interruption to fetal brains, infant heads
grown larger than pelvic diameters and a spasming uterus laboring both mother
and child to death ... Medical complications were only a problem if one was
somehow caught alone and isolated at term, and with these mobs of guards about
that wasn't likely to happen to her. Bothari as a midwife? Bemusing thought.
She shuddered. She rolled over again on
the lawn sofa, her brow creasing. Ah, Barrayar's primitive medicine. True, moms
had popped kids for hundreds of thousands of years, pre-space-flight, with less
help than what was available here. Yet the niggling worry gnawed still, Maybe I
ought to go home for the birth. No. She was Barrayaran
now, oath-sworn like the rest of the lunatics. It was a two-month journey. And
besides, as far as she knew there was still an arrest warrant outstanding for
her, charging military desertion, suspicion of espionage, fraud, anti-social
violence—she probably shouldn't have tried to drown that idiot army
psychiatrist in her aquarium, Cordelia supposed, sighing in memory of her
harried and disordered departure from Beta Colony. Would her name ever be
cleared? Not while Ezar's secrets stayed chambered in four skulls, surely. No. Beta Colony was
closed to her, had driven her out. Barrayar held no monopoly on political
idiocy, that much was certain. I can handle Barrayar.
Aral and I. You bet. It was time to go in.
The sun was giving her a slight headache. CHAPTER
FOUR One aspect of her new
life as Regent-consort that Cordelia found easier to deal with than she'd
anticipated was the influx of personal guards into their home. Her experience
in the Betan Survey, and Vorkosigan's in the Barrayaran military service, had
given them both practice with life in close quarters. It didn't take Cordelia
long to start to know the persons in the uniforms, and take them on their own
terms. The guards were a lively young group, hand-picked for their service and
proud of it. Although when Piotr was also in residence, with all his liveried
men including Bothari, the sense it gave Cordelia of living in a barracks
became acute. It was the Count who
first suggested the informal hand-to-hand combat tournament between Illyan's
men and his own. In spite of a vague mutter from the security commander about
free training at the Emperors expense, a ring was set up in the back garden,
and the contest quickly became a weekly tradition. Even Koudelka was roped in,
as referee and expert judge, with Piotr and Cordelia as cheering sections.
Vorkosigan attended whenever time permitted, to Cordelia's gratification; she
felt he needed the break in the grinding routine of government business to
which he subjected himself daily. Cordelia was settling
down on the upholstered lawn sofa to watch the show one sunny autumn morning,
attended by her handmaiden, when she suddenly remarked, "Why aren't you
playing, Drou? Surely you need the practice as much as any of them. The excuse
for this thing in the first place—not that you Barrayarans seem to need an
excuse to practice mayhem—was that it was supposed to keep everybody on their
toes." Droushnakovi looked
longingly at the ring, but said, "I wasn't invited, Milady." "A rude oversight
on somebody's part. Hm. Tell you what—go change your clothes. You can be my
team. Aral can root for his own today. A proper Barrayaran contest should have
at least three sides anyway, it's traditional." "Do you think it
will be all right?" she said doubtfully. "They might not like
it." The they in question
were what Droushnakovi called the "real" guards, the liveried men. "Aral won't mind.
Anyone else who objects can argue with him. If they dare." Cordelia
grinned, and Droushnakovi grinned back, then dashed off. Aral arrived to settle
comfortably beside her, and she told him of her plan. He raised an eyebrow.
"Betan innovations? Well, why not? Brace yourself for chaff, though."
"I'm braced. They
won't be as inclined to make jokes if she can pound a few of them. I think she
can—on Beta Colony that girl would be a commando officer by now. All that
natural talent is wasted toddling around after me all day. If she can't—well,
then she shouldn't be guarding me anyway, eh?" She met his eyes. "Point taken ...
I'll make sure Koudelka puts her in the first round against someone of her own
height and weight class. In absolute terms she's a bit on the small side." "She's bigger than
you are." "In height. I
imagine I have a few kilos on her in weight. Nevertheless, your wish is my
command. Oof." He climbed back to his feet, and went to enter Droushnakovi
on Koudelka's list for the lists. Cordelia could not hear what they said to
each other, across the garden, but supplied her own dialogue from gesture and
expression, murmuring, "Aral: Cordelia wants Drou to play. Kou: Aw! Who
wants gurls? Aral: Tough. Kou: They mess everything up, and besides, they cry a
lot. Sergeant Bothari will squash her—hm, I do hope that's what that gesture
means, otherwise you're getting obscene, Kou—wipe that smirk off your face,
Vorkosigan—Aral: The little woman insists. You know how henpecked I am. Kou:
Oh, all right. Phooey. Transaction complete: the rest is up to you, Drou." Vorkosigan rejoined her.
"All set. She'll start against one of father's men." Droushnakovi returned,
attired in loose slacks and a knit shirt, as close to the men's workout suits
as her wardrobe could provide. The Count came out to consult with Sergeant
Bothari, his team leader, and find a place to warm his bones in the sun beside
them. "What's this?"
Piotr asked, as Koudelka called Droushnakovi's name for the second pair up.
"Are we importing Betan customs now?" "The girl has a lot
of natural talent," Vorkosigan explained. "Besides, she needs the
practice as much as any of them—more; she has the most important job of any of
them." "You'll be wanting
women in the Service, next," complained Piotr. "Where will it end?
That's what I'd like to know." "What's wrong with
women in the Service?" Cordelia asked, baiting him a little. "It's
unmilitary," snapped the old man. " 'Military' is
whatever wins the war, I should think." She smiled blandly. A small
friendly warning pinch from Vorkosigan restrained her from rubbing in the point
any harder. In any case it wasn't
necessary. Piotr turned to watch his player, saying only, "Humph." The Count's player
carelessly underestimated his opponent, and took the first fall for his error.
It woke him up considerably. The onlookers shouted raucous comments. He pinned
her on the next fall. "Koudelka counted a
bit fast there, didn't he?" asked Cordelia, as the Count's player let
Droushnakovi up after the decision. "Mm. Maybe,"
said Vorkosigan in a non-committal tone. "She pulls her punches a bit,
too, I notice. She'll never make it to the next round if she keeps doing that
in this company." On the next encounter,
the deciding one for the two-out-of-three, Droushnakovi applied a successful
arm-bar, but let it slip away from her. "Oh, too bad,"
murmured the Count cheerfully. "You should have let him break it!"
cried Cordelia, getting more and more involved. The Count's player took a soft
and sloppy fall. "Call it, Kou!" But the referee, leaning on his
stick, let it pass. In any case, Droushnakovi spotted an opportunity for a
choke, and grabbed it. "Why doesn't he tap out?" asked Cordelia.
"He'd rather pass out," replied Aral. "That way he won't have to
listen to his friends." Droushnakovi was
beginning to look doubtful, as the face clamped under her arm turned a dusky
purple. Cordelia could see release coming, and leaped up to shout, "Hang
on, Drou! Don't let him fake you out!" Droushnakovi took a firmer hold,
and the figure stopped struggling. "Go ahead and call
it, Koudelka," called Piotr, shaking his head ruefully. "He has to be
on duty tonight." And so the round went to Droushnakovi. "Good work,
Drou!" said Cordelia as Droushnakovi returned to them. "But you've
got to be more aggressive. Release your killer instincts." "I agree,"
said Vorkosigan unexpectedly. "That little hesitation you display could be
deadly—and not just for yourself." He held her eye. "You're
practicing for the real thing here; although we all pray that no such situation
occurs. The kind of all-out effort it takes should be absolutely
automatic." "Yes, sir. I'll
try, sir." The next round featured
Sergeant Bothari, who flattened his opponent twice in rapid succession. The
defeated crawled out of the ring. Several more rounds went by, and it was
Droushnakovi's turn again, this time with one of Illyan's men. They connected, and in
the struggle he goosed her effectively, loosing catcalls from the audience. In
her angry distraction, he pulled her off-balance for a fairly clean fall. "Did you see
that!" cried Cordelia to Aral. "That was a dirty trick!" "Mm. It wasn't one
of the eight forbidden blows, though. You couldn't disqualify him on it.
Nevertheless ..." he motioned Koudelka for a time—out, and called Droushnakovi
over for a quiet word. "We saw the
blow," he murmured. Her lips were tight and her face red. "Now, as
Milady's champion, an insult to you is in some measure an insult to her. Also a
very bad precedent. It is my desire that your opponent not leave the ring
conscious. How, is your problem. You may take that as an order, if you like.
And don't worry needlessly about breaking bones, either," he added
blandly. Droushnakovi returned to
the ring with a slight smile on her face, eyes narrowed and glittering. She
followed a feint with a lightning kick to her opponent's jaw, a punch to his
belly, and a low body blow to his knees that brought him down with a boom on
the matting. He did not get up. There was a slightly shocked silence. "You're
right," said Vorkosigan. "She was pulling her punches." Cordelia smiled smugly,
and settled herself more comfortably. "Thought so." The next round to come
up for Droushnakovi was the semi-final, and it was the luck of the draw that
her opponent was Sergeant Bothari. "Hm," murmured
Cordelia to Vorkosigan. "I'm not sure about the psychodynamics of this. Is
it safe? I mean for both of them, not just for her. And not just
physically." "I think so,"
he replied, equally quietly. "Life in the Counts service has been a nice,
quiet routine for Bothari. He's been taking his medication. I think he's in
pretty good shape at the moment. And the atmosphere of the practice ring is a
safe, familiar one for him. It would take more tension than Drou can provide to
unhinge him." Cordelia nodded, satisfied, and settled back to watch the
slaughter. Droushnakovi looked nervous. The start was slow, with
Droushnakovi mainly concentrating on staying out of reach. Swinging around to
watch, Lieutenant Koudelka accidently pressed the release of his swordstick,
and the cover shot off into the bushes. Bothari was distracted for an instant,
and Drou struck, low and fast. Bothari landed clean with a firm impact,
although he rolled immediately to his feet with scarcely a pause. "Oh, good
throw!" cried Cordelia ecstatically. Drou looked quite as amazed as
everyone else. "Call it, Kou!" Lieutenant Koudelka
frowned. "It wasn't a fair throw, Milady." One of the Count's men
retrieved the cover, and Koudelka resheathed the weapon. "It was my fault.
Unfair distraction." "You didn't call it
unfair distraction a while ago," Cordelia objected. "Let it go,
Cordelia," said Vorkosigan quietly. "But he's cheating
her out of her point!" she whispered back furiously. "And what a
point! Bothari's been tops in every round to date." "Yes. It took six
months practice on the old General Vorkraft before Koudelka ever threw
him." "Oh. Hm." That
gave her pause. "Jealousy?" "Haven't you seen
it? She has everything he lost." "I have seen he's
been blasted rude to her on occasion. It's a shame. She's obviously—" Vorkosigan held up a
restraining finger. "Talk about it later. Not here." She paused, then nodded
in agreement. "Right." The round went on, with
Sergeant Bothari putting Droushnakovi practically through the mat, twice,
quickly, and then dispatching his final challenger with almost equal ease. A conference of players
on the other side of the garden sent Koudelka limping over as an emissary. "Sir? We were
wondering if you would go a demonstration round. With Sergeant Bothari. None of
the fellows here have ever seen that." Vorkosigan waved down
the idea, not very convincingly. "I'm not in shape for it, Lieutenant.
Besides, how did they ever find out about that? Been telling tales?" Koudelka grinned.
"A few. I think it would enlighten them. About what kind of game this can
really be." "A bad example, I'm
afraid." "I've never seen
this," murmured Cordelia. "Is it really that good a show?" "I don't know. Have
I offended you lately? Would watching Bothari pound me be a catharsis?" "I think it would
be for you," said Cordelia, falling in with his obvious desire to be
persuaded. "I think you've missed that sort of thing, in this headquarters
life you've been leading lately." "Yes... ." He
rose, to a bit of clapping, and removed uniform jacket, shoes, rings, and the
contents of his pockets, and stepped to the ring to do some stretching and
warm—up exercises. "You'd better
referee, Kou," he called back. "Just to prevent undue alarm." "Yes, sir."
Koudelka turned to Cordelia before limping back to the arena. "Um. Just
remember, Milady. They never killed each other in four years of this." "Why do I find that
more ominous than reassuring? Still, Bothari's done six rounds this morning.
Maybe he's getting tired." The two men faced off in
the arena and bowed formally. Koudelka backed hastily out of the way. The
raucous good humor died away among the watchers, as the icy cold and
concentrated stillness of the two players drew all eyes. They began to circle,
lightly, then met in a blur. Cordelia did not quite see what happened, but when
they parted Vorkosigan was spitting blood from a lacerated mouth, and Bothari
was hunched over his belly. In the next contact
Bothari landed a kick to Vorkosigan's back that echoed off the garden walls and
propelled him completely out of the arena, to land rolling and running back in
spite of disrupted breathing. The men in whose protection the Regent's life was
supposed to lie began to look worriedly at one another. At the next grappling
Vorkosigan underwent a vicious fall, with Bothari landing atop him instantly
for a follow-up choke. Cordelia thought she could see his ribs bend from the
knees on his chest. A couple of the guards started forward, but Koudelka waved
them back, and Vorkosigan, face dark and suffused, tapped out. "First point to
Sergeant Bothari," called Koudelka. "Best two out of three,
sir?" Sergeant Bothari stood,
smiling a little, and Vorkosigan sat on the mat a minute, regaining his wind.
"One more, anyway. Got to get my revenge. Out of shape." "Told you so,"
murmured Bothari. They circled again. They met, parted, met again, and suddenly
Bothari was doing a spectacular cartwheel, while Vorkosigan rolled beneath to
grab an arm-bar that nearly dislocated his shoulder in his twisting fall.
Bothari struggled briefly against the lock, then tapped out. This time it was
Bothari who sat on the mat a minute before getting up. "That's
amazing," Droushnakovi commented, eyes avid. "Especially considering
how much smaller he is." "Small but
vicious," agreed Cordelia, fascinated. "Keep that in mind." The third round was
brief. A blur of grappling and blows and messy joint fall resolved suddenly in
an armlock, with Bothari in charge. Vorkosigan unwisely attempted a break, and
Bothari, quite expressionlessly, dislocated his elbow with an audible pop.
Vorkosigan yelled and tapped out. Once again Koudelka suppressed a rush of
uninvited aid. "Put it back, Sergeant," Vorkosigan groaned from his
seat on the ground, and Bothari braced one foot on his former captain and gave
the arm an accurately aligned yank. "Must
remember," gasped Vorkosigan, "not to do that." "At least he didn't
break it this time," said Koudelka encouragingly, and helped him up, with
Bothari's assistance. Vorkosigan limped back to the lawn chair, and seated
himself, very cautiously, at Cordelia's feet. Bothari, too, was moving a lot
more slowly and stiffly. "And that,"
said Vorkosigan, still catching his breath, "is how ... we used to play
the game ... aboard the old General Vorkraft." "All that
effort," remarked Cordelia. "And how often did you ever get into a
real hand-to-hand combat situation?" "Very, very seldom.
But when we did, we won." The party broke up, with
a murmuring undercurrent of comment from the other players. Cordelia
accompanied Aral off to help with first-aid to his elbow and mouth, a hot soak
and rubdown, and a change of clothes. During the rubdown she
brought up the personnel problem that had been growing in her notice. "Do you suppose you
could say something to Kou about the way he treats Drou? It's not like his
usual self at all. She about does flips trying to be nice to him. And he
doesn't even treat her with the courtesy he'd give one of his men. She's
practically a fellow officer. And, unless I'm totally wide of the mark, madly in
love with him. Why doesn't he see it?" "What makes you
think he doesn't?" asked Aral slowly. "His behavior, of
course. A shame. They'd make quite a pair. Don't you think she's
attractive?" "Marvelously. But
then, I like tall amazons," he grinned over his shoulder at her, "as
everyone knows. It's not every man's taste. But if that's a matchmaking gleam I
detect in your eye—do you suppose it could be maternal hormones, by the
way?" "Shall I dislocate
your other elbow?" "Ugh. No thanks.
I'd forgotten how painful a workout with Bothari could be. Ah, that's better.
Down a bit ..." "You're going to
have some astonishing bruises there tomorrow." "Don't I know it.
But before you get carried away over Drou's love life ... have you thought
carefully about Koudelka's injuries?" "Oh." Cordelia
was struck silent. "I'd assumed ... that his sexual functions were as well
repaired as the rest of him." "Or as poorly. It's
a very delicate bit of surgery." Cordelia pursed her
lips. "Do you know this for a fact?" "No, I don't. I do
know that in all our conversations the subject was never once brought up.
Ever." "Hm. Wish I knew
how to interpret that. It sounds a little ominous. Do you think you could ask
... ?" "Good God,
Cordelia, of course not! What a question to ask the man. Particularly if the
answer is no. I've got to work with him, remember." "Well, I've got to
work with Drou. She's no use to me if she pines away and dies of a broken
heart. He has reduced her to tears, more than once. She goes off where she
thinks nobody's looking." "Really? That's
hard to imagine." "You can hardly
expect me to tell her he's not worth it, all things considered. But does he
really dislike her? Or is it just self-defense?" "Good question ...
For what it's worth, my driver made a joke about her the other day—not even a
very offensive one—and Kou got rather frosty with him. I don't think he
dislikes her. But I do think he envies her." Cordelia left the
subject on that ambiguous note. She longed to help the pair, but had no answer
to offer for their dilemma. Her own mind had no trouble generating creative
solutions to the practical problems of physical intimacy posed by the
lieutenant's injuries, but shrank from the violation of their shy reserve that
offering them would entail. She suspected wryly that she would merely shock
them. Sex therapy appeared to be unheard of, here. True Betan, she had
always considered a double standard of sexual behavior to be a logical
impossibility. Dabbling now on the fringes of Barrayaran high society in
Vorkosigan's wake, she began to finally see how it could be done. It all seemed
to come down to impeding the free flow of information to certain persons,
preselected by an unspoken code somehow known to and agreed upon by all present
but her. One could not mention sex to or in front of unmarried women or
children. Young men, it appeared, were exempt from all rules when talking to
each other, but not if a woman of any age or degree were present. The rules
also changed bewilderingly with variations of the social status of those
present. And married women, in groups free of male eavesdroppers, sometimes
underwent the most astonishing transformations in apparent databases. Some
subjects could be joked about but not discussed seriously. And some variations
could not be mentioned at all. She had blighted more than one conversation
beyond hope of recovery by what seemed to her a perfectly obvious and casual
remark, and been taken aside by Aral for a quick debriefing. She tried writing out a
list of the rules she thought she had deduced, but found them so illogical and
conflicting, especially in the area of what certain people were supposed to
pretend not to know in front of certain other people, she gave up the effort.
She did show the list to Aral, who read it in bed one night and nearly doubled
over laughing. "Is that what we
really look like to you? I like your Rule Seven. Must keep it in mind ... I
wish I'd known it in my youth. I could have skipped all those godawful Service
training vids." "If you snicker any
harder, you're going to get a nosebleed," she said tartly. "These are
your rules, not mine. You people play by them. I just try to figure them
out." "My sweet
scientist. Hm. You certainly call things by their correct names. We've never
tried ... would you like to violate Rule Eleven with me, dear Captain?" "Let me, see, which
one—oh, yes! Certainly. Now? And while we're about it, let's knock off
Thirteen. My hormones are up. I remember my brother's co-parent told me about
this effect, but I didn't really believe her at the time. She says you make up
for it later, post-partum." "Thirteen? I'd
never have guessed... ." "That's because,
being Barrayaran, you spend so much time following Rule Two." Anthropology was
forgotten, for a time. But she found she could crack him up, later, with a
properly timed mutter of "Rule Nine, sir." The season was turning.
There had been a hint of winter in the air that morning, a frost that had
wilted some of the plants in Count Piotr's back garden. Cordelia anticipated
her first real winter with fascination. Vorkosigan promised her snow, frozen
water, something she'd experienced on only two Survey missions. Before spring,
I shall bear a son. Huh. But the afternoon had
basked in the autumn light, warming again. The flat roof of Vorkosigan House above
the front wing now breathed back that heat around Cordelia's ankles as she
picked her way across it, though the air on her cheeks was cooling to crispness
as the sun slanted to the city's horizon. "Good evening,
boys." Cordelia nodded to the two guards posted to this rooftop duty
station. They nodded back, the
senior touching his forehead in a hesitant semi-salute. "Milady." Cordelia had taken to
regular sunset-watching up here. The view of the cityscape from this
four-floors-up vantage was very fine. She could catch a gleam of the river that
divided the town, beyond trees and buildings. Although the excavation of a
large hole a few blocks away along the line of sight suggested that the
riverine scene would be occluded soon by new architecture. The tallest turret
of Vorhartung Castle, where she'd attended all those ceremonies in the Council
of Counts' chamber, peaked from a bluff overlooking the water. Beyond Vorhartung Castle
lay the oldest parts of the capital. She'd not yet seen that area, its kinked one-horse-wide
streets impassable to groundcars, though she'd flown over the strange, low,
dark blots in the heart of the city. The newer parts, glittering out toward the
horizon, were more like galactic standard, patterned around the modern
transportation systems. None of it was like Beta
Colony. Vorbarr Sultana was all spread out on the surface, or climbed skyward,
strangely two-dimensional and exposed. Beta Colony's cities plunged down into
shafts and tunnels, many-layered and complex, cozy and safe. Indeed, Beta
Colony did not have architecture so much as it had interior design. It was
amazing, the variety of schemes people came up with to vary dwellings that had
outsides. The guards twitched and
sighed, as she leaned on the stonework, gazing out. They really didn't like it
when she strayed nearer than three meters to the edge, though the space was
only six meters wide. But she should be able to spot Vorkosigan's groundcar
turning into the street soon. Sunsets were all very well, but her eyes turned
downward. She inhaled the complex
odors, from vegetation, water vapor, industrial waste gases. Barrayar permitted
an amazing amount of air dumping, as if ... well, air was free, here. Nobody
measured it, there were no air processing and filtration fees... . Did these
people even realize how rich they were? All the air they could breathe, just by
stepping outdoors, taken for granted as casually us they took frozen water
falling from the sky. She took an extra breath, as if she could somehow
greedily hoard it, and smiled— A distant, crackling,
hard-edged boom shattered her thoughts and stopped her breath. Both guards
jumped. So, you heard a bang. It doesn't necessarily have anything to do with
Aral. And, icily, It sounded like a sonic grenade. Not a little one. Dear God.
There was a column of smoke and dust rising from a street-canyon several blocks
over, she couldn't see the source—she craned outward— "Milady." The
younger guard grasped her upper arm. "Please go inside." His face was
tense, eyes wide. The senior man had his hand clamped to his ear, sucking info
off his comm channel—she had no comm link. "What's coming
on?" she asked. "Milady, please go
below!" He hustled her toward the trapdoor to the attic, from which stairs
led down to the fourth floor. "I'm sure it was nothing," he soothed
as he pushed. "It was a Class
Four sonic grenade, probably air-tube launched," she informed his
appalling ignorance. '"Unless the thrower was suicidal. Haven't you ever
heard one go off?" Droushnakovi shot out
the trapdoor, a buttered roll squashed in one hand and her stunner clutched in
the other. "Milady?" The guard, looking relieved, shoved Cordelia at
her and returned to his senior. Cordelia, screaming inside, grinned through
clenched teeth and allowed herself to be guarded, climbing dutifully down the
trap. "What
happened?" she hissed to Droushnakovi. "Don't know yet.
The red alert went off in the basement refectory, and everybody ran for their
posts," panted Drou. She must have practically teleported up the six
flights. "Ngh."
Cordelia galloped down the stairs, wishing for a drop tube. The comconsole in
the library would surely be manned—somebody must have a comm link—she spun down
the circular staircase and pelted across the black and white stones. The house guard
commander was indeed at the post, channeling orders. Count Piotr's senior
liveried man jittered at his shoulder. "They're coming straight
here," the ImpSec man said over his shoulder. "You fetch that
doctor." The brown-uniformed man dashed out. "What
happened?" Cordelia demanded. Her heart was hammering now, and not just
from the dash downstairs. He glanced up at her,
started to say something calming and meaningless, and changed his mind in
mid-breath. "Somebody took a potshot at the Regent's groundcar. They
missed. They're continuing on here." "How near a
miss?" "I don't know,
Milady." He probably didn't. But
if the groundcar still functioned ... Helplessly, she gestured him back to his
work, and wheeled to return to the foyer, now manned by a couple of Count
Piotr's men, who discouraged her from standing too near the door. She hung on
the stair railing three steps up and bit her lip. "Was Lieutenant
Koudelka with him, do you think?" asked Droushnakovi faintly. "Probably. He
usually is," Cordelia answered absently, her eyes on the door, waiting,
waiting... . She heard the car pull
up. One of Count Piotr's men opened the house door. Security men swarmed over
the silver shape of the vehicle in the portico—God, where did they all come
from? The car's shiny finish was scored and smoked, but not deeply dented; the
rear canopy was not cracked, though the front was scarred. The rear doors swung
up, and Cordelia stretched for a view of Vorkosigan, maddeningly obstructed by
the green backs of the ImpSec men. They parted. Lieutenant Koudelka sat in the
aperture, blinking dizzily, blood dripping down his chin, then was levered to
his feet by a guard. Vorkosigan emerged at last, refusing to be hustled, waving
back help. Even the most worried guards did not dare to touch him without an
invitation. Vorkosigan strode inside, grim-faced and pale. Koudelka, propped by
his stick and an ImpSec corporal, followed, looking wilder. The blood issued
from his nose. Piotr's man swung closed the front door of Vorkosigan House,
shutting out three-fourths of the chaos. Aral met her eyes, above
the heads of the men, and the saturnine look fixed on his face slipped just a
little. He offered her a fractional nod, I'm all right. Her lips tightened in
return, You'd by-God better be... Kou was saying in a
shaken voice, "—bloody great hole in the street! Could've swallowed a
freight shuttle. That driver has amazing reflexes—what?" He shook his head
at a questioner. "Sorry, my ears are ringing—come again?" He stood openmouthed,
as if he could drink in sound orally, touched his face and stared in surprise
at his crimson—smeared hand. "Your ears are only
stunned, Kou," said Vorkosigan. His voice was calm, but much too loud.
"They'll be back to normal by tomorrow morning." Only Cordelia realized
the raised tone wasn't for Koudelka's benefit—Vorkosigan couldn't hear himself,
either. His eyes shifted too quickly, the only hint that he was trying to read
lips. Simon Illyan and a
physician arrived at almost the same moment. Vorkosigan and Koudelka were taken
to a quiet back parlor, shedding all the—to Cordelia's mind—rather useless
guards. Cordelia and Droushnakovi followed. The physician began an immediate
examination, starting, at Vorkosigan's command, with the gory Koudelka. "One shot?"
asked Illyan. "Only one,"
confirmed Vorkosigan, watching his face. "If they'd lingered for a second
try, they could have bracketed me." "If he'd lingered,
we could have bracketed him. A forensic team's on the firing site now. The
assassin's long gone, of course. A clever spot, he had a dozen escape
routes." "We vary our route
daily," Lieutenant Koudelka, following this with difficulty, said around
the cloth he pressed to his face. "How did he know where to set up his
ambush?" "Inside
information?" Illyan shrugged, his teeth clenching at the thought. "Not
necessarily," said Vorkosigan. "There are only so many routes, this
close to home. He could have been set up waiting for days." "Precisely at the
limit of our close-search perimeter?" said Illyan. "I don't like
it." "It bothers me more
that he missed," said Vorkosigan. "Why? Could it have been some sort
of warning shot? An attempt, not on my life, but on my balance of mind?" "It was old
ordnance," said Illyan. "There could have been something wrong with
its tracker—nobody detected a laser rangefinder pulse." He paused, taking
in Cordelia's white face. "I'm sure it was a lone lunatic, Milady. At
least, it was certainly only one man." "How does a lone
maniac get hold of military-grade weaponry?" she inquired tartly. Illyan looked
uncomfortable. "We will be investigating that. It was definitely old
issue." "Don't you destroy
obsolete stockpiles?" "There's so much of
it. ..." Cordelia glared at this
wit-scattered utterance. "He only needed one shot. If he'd managed a
direct hit on that sealed car, Aral'd have been emulsified. Your forensic team
would be trying right now to sort out which molecules were his and which were
Kou's." Droushnakovi turned
faintly green; Vorkosigan's saturnine look was now firmly back in place. "You want me to
give you a precise resonance reflection amplitude calculation for that sealed
passenger cabin, Simon?" Cordelia went on hotly. "Whoever chose that
weapon was a competent military tech—if, fortunately, a poorish shot." She
bit back further words, recognizing, even if no one else did, the suppressed
hysteria driving the speed of her speech. "My apologies.
Captain Naismith." Illyan's tone grew more clipped. "You are quite
correct." His nod was a shade more respectful. Aral tracked this
interplay, his face lightening, for the first time, with some hidden amusement. Illyan took himself off,
conspiracy theories no doubt dancing in his head. The doctor confirmed Aral's
combat-experienced diagnosis of aural stun, issued powerful anti-headache
pills—Aral hung on to his firmly—and made an appointment to re-check both men
in the morning. When Illyan stopped back
by Vorkosigan House in the late evening to confer with his guard commander, it
was all Cordelia could do not to grab him by the jacket and pin him to the
nearest wall to shake out his information. She confined herself to simply
asking, "Who tried to kill Aral? Who wants to kill Aral? Whatever benefit
do they imagine they'll gain?" Illyan sighed. "Do
you want the short list, or the long one, Milady?" "How long is the
short list?" she asked in morbid fascination. "Too long. But I
can name you the top layer, if you like." He ticked them off on his
fingers. "The Cetagandans, always. They had counted on political chaos
here, following Ezar's death. They're not above prodding it along. An
assassination is cheap interference, compared to an invasion fleet. The
Komarrans, for old revenge or new revolt. Some there still call the Admiral the
Butcher of Komarr—" Cordelia, knowing the
whole story behind that loathed sobriquet, winced. "The anti-Vor,
because my lord Regent is too conservative for their tastes. The military
right, who fear he is too progressive for theirs. Leftover members of Prince
Serg and Vorrutyer's old war party. Former operatives of the now-suppressed
Ministry of Political Education, though I doubt one of them would have missed.
Negri's department used to train them. Some disgruntled Vor who thinks he came
out short in the recent power-shift. Any lunatic with access to weapons and a
desire for instant fame as a big-game hunter—shall I go on?" "Please don't. But
what about today? If motive yields too broad a field of suspects, what about
method and opportunity?" "We have a little
to work with there, though too much of it is negative. As I noted, it was a
very clean attempt. Whoever set it up had to have access to certain kinds of
knowledge. We'll work those angles first." It was the anonymity of
the assassination attempt that bothered her most, Cordelia decided. When the
killer could be anyone, the impulse to suspect everyone became overwhelming.
Paranoia was a contagious disease here, it seemed; Barrayarans gave it to each
other. Well, Negri and Illyan's combined forces must winkle out some concrete
facts soon. She packed all her fears down hard into a little tiny compartment
in the pit of her stomach, and locked them there. Next to her child. Vorkosigan held her
tight that night, curled into the curve of his stocky body, though he made no
sexual advances. He just held her. He didn't fall asleep for hours, despite the
painkillers that glazed his eyes. She didn't fall asleep till he did. His
snores lulled her at last. There wasn't that much to say. They missed; we go
on. Till the next try. CHAPTER
FIVE The Emperors Birthday
was a traditional Barrayaran holiday, celebrated with feasting, dancing,
drinking, veterans' parades, and an incredible amount of apparently totally
unregulated fireworks. It would make a great day for a surprise attack on the
capital, Cordelia decided; an artillery barrage could be well under way before
anybody noticed it in the general din. The uproar began at dawn. The duty guards, who had
a natural tendency to jump at sudden noises anyway, were twitchy and miserable,
except for a couple more youthful types who attempted to celebrate with a few
crackers let off inside the walls. They were taken aside by the guard
commander, and emerged much later, pale and shrunken, to slink off. Cordelia
later saw them hauling rubbish under the command of a sardonic housemaid, while
a scullery girl and the second cook galloped happily out of the house for a
surprise day off. The Emperor's Birthday was a moveable feast. The Barrayarans'
enthusiasm for the holiday seemed undaunted by the fact that, due to Ezar's death
and Gregor's ascension, this was the second time they would celebrate it this
year. Cordelia passed up an
invitation to attend a major military review that gobbled Aral's morning in
favor of staying fresh for the event of the evening—the event of the year, she
was given to understand—personal attendence upon the Emperor's birthday dinner
at the Imperial Residence. She looked forward to seeing Kareen and Gregor
again, however briefly. At least she was certain that her clothing was all
right. Lady Vorpatril, who had both excellent taste and an advance line on
Barrayaran-style maternity wear, had taken pity on Cordelia's cultural
bafflement and offered herself as an expert native guide. As a result, Cordelia
confidently wore an impeccably cut forest green silk dress that swirled from
shoulder to floor, with an open overvest of thick ivory velvet. Live flowers in
matching colors were arranged in her copper hair by the live human hairdresser
Alys also sent on. Like their public events, the Barrayarans made of their
clothes a sort of folk-art, as elaborate as Betan body paint. Cordelia couldn't
be sure from Aral—his face always lit when he saw her—but judging from the
delighted "Oohs" of Count Piotr's female staff, Cordelia's sartorial
art team had outdone themselves. Waiting at the foot of
the spiral stairs in the front hall, she smoothed the panel of green silk
surreptitiously down over her belly. A little over three months of metabolic
overdrive, and all she had to show for it was this grapefruit-sized lump—so
much had happened since midsummer, it seemed like her pregnancy ought to be
progressing faster to keep up. She purred an encouraging mental mantra
bellywards, Grow, grow, grow. ... At least she was actually beginning to look
pregnant, instead of just feel exhausted. Aral shared her nightly fascination
with their progress, gently feeling with spread fingers, so far without
success, for the butterfly-wing flutters of movement through her skin. Aral himself now
appeared, with Lieutenant Koudelka. They were both thoroughly scrubbed, shaved,
cut, combed, and chromatically blinding in their formal red-and-blue Imperial
parade uniforms. Count Piotr joined them wearing the uniform Cordelia had seen
him in at the Joint Council sessions, brown and silver, a more glittery version
of his armsmen's livery. All twenty of Piotr's armsmen had some sort of formal
function tonight, and had been driven to meticulous preparation all week by
their frenzied commander. Droushnakovi, accompanying Cordelia, wore a
simplified garment in Cordelia's colors, carefully cut to facilitate rapid
movement and conceal weaponry and comm links. After a moment for
everyone to admire each other, they herded through the front doors to the
waiting groundcars. Aral handed Cordelia into her vehicle personally, then
stepped back. "See you there, love." "What?" Her
head swiveled. "Oh. Then that second car ... isn't just for the size of
the group?" Aral's mouth tightened
fractionally. "No. It seems ... prudent, to me, that we should travel in
separate vehicles from now on." "Yes," she
said faintly. "Quite." He nodded, and turned
away. Damn this place. Taking yet another bite out of their lives, out of her
heart. They had so little time together anymore, losing even a little more
hurt. Count Piotr, apparently,
was to be Aral's stand-in, at least for tonight; he slid in beside her.
Droushnakovi sat across from them, and the canopy was sealed. The car turned
smoothly into the street. Cordelia craned over her shoulder, trying to see
Aral's car, but it followed too far back for her even to catch a glimpse. She
straightened, sighing. The sun was sinking
yellowly in a grey bank of clouds, and lights were beginning to glow in the
cool damp autumn evening, giving the city a somber, melancholy atmosphere.
Maybe a raucous street party—they drove around several—wasn't such a bad idea.
The celebrators reminded Cordelia of primitive Earth men banging pots and
firing guns to drive off the dragon that was eating the eclipsing moon. This
strange autumn sadness could consume an unwary soul. Gregor's birthday was well
timed. Piotr's knobby hands
fiddled with a brown silk bag embroidered with the Vorkosigan crest in silver.
Cordelia eyed it with interest. "What's that?" Piotr smiled slightly,
and handed it to her. "Gold coins." More folk-art; the bag
and its contents were a tactile treat. She caressed the silk, admired the
needlework, and shook a few gleaming sculptured disks out into her hand.
"Pretty." Prior to the end of the Time of Isolation, gold had had
great value on Barrayar, Cordelia recalled reading. Gold to her Betan mind
called up something like, Sometimes-useful metal to the electronics industry,
but ancient peoples had waxed mystical about it. "Does this mean
something?" "Ha! Indeed. It's
the Emperors birthday present." Cordelia pictured
five-yearpold Gregor playing with a bag of gold. Besides building towers and
maybe practicing counting, it was hard to figure what the boy could do with it.
She hoped he was past the age of putting everything in his mouth; those disks were
just the right size for a child to swallow or choke on. "I'm sure he'll
like it," she said a little doubtfully. Piotr chuckled.
"You don't know what's going on, do you?" Cordelia sighed. "I
almost never do. Cue me." She settled back, smiling. Piotr had gradually
become an enthusiast in explaining Barrayar to her, always seeming pleased to
discover some new pocket of her ignorance and fill it with information and
opinion. She had the feeling he could be lecturing her for the next twenty
years and not run out of baffling topics. "The Emperor's
birthday is the traditional end of the fiscal year, for each count's district
in relation to the Imperial government. In other words, it's tax day, except—the
Vor are not taxed. That would imply too subordinate a relationship to the
Imperium. Instead, we give the Emperor a present." "Ah ..." said
Cordelia. "You don't run this place for a year on sixty little bags of
gold, sir." "Of course not. The
real funds went from Hassadar to Vorbarr Sultana by comm link transfer earlier
today. The gold is merely symbolic." Cordelia frowned.
"Wait. Haven't you done this once this year?" "In the spring for
Ezar, yes. So we've just changed the date of our fiscal year." "Isn't that
disruptive to your banking system?" He shrugged. "We
manage." He grinned suddenly. "Where do you think the term 'Count'
came from, anyway?" "Earth, I thought.
A pre-atomic-late Roman, actually-term for a nobleman who ran a county. Or
maybe the district was named after the rank." "On Barrayar, it is
in fact a contraction of the term 'accountant.' The first counts were Varadar
Tau's—an amazing bandit, you should read up on him sometime—Varadar Tau's tax
collectors." "All this time I
thought it was a military rank! Aping medieval history." "Oh, the military
part came immediately thereafter, the first time the old goons tried to shake
down somebody who didn't want to contribute. The rank acquired more glamour
later." "I never
knew." She regarded him with sudden suspicion. "You're not pulling my
leg, sir, are you?" He spread his hands in
denial. Check your assumptions,
Cordelia thought to herself in amusement. In fact, check your assumptions at
the door. They arrived at the
Imperial Residence's great gate. The ambiance was much changed tonight from
some of Cordelia's earlier, more morbid visits to the dying Ezar and to the
funeral ceremonies. Colored lights picked out architectural details on the
stone pile. The gardens glowed, fountains glittered. Beautifully dressed people
warmed the landscape, spilling out from the formal rooms of the north wing onto
the terraces. The guard checks, however, were no less meticulous, and the
guards' numbers were vastly multiplied. Cordelia had the feeling this was going
to be a much less rowdy party than some they'd passed in the city streets. Aral's car pulled up
behind theirs as they disembarked at a western portico, and Cordelia reattached
herself gratefully to his arm. He smiled proudly at her, and in a relatively
unobserved moment sneaked a kiss onto the back of her neck while stealing a
whiff of the flowers perfuming her hair. She squeezed his hand secretly in
return. They passed through the doors, and a corridor. A majordomo in Vorbarra
House livery loudly announced them, and then they were pinned by the gaze of
what to Cordelia for a moment seemed several thousand pairs of critical
Barrayaran Vor-class eyes. Actually there were only a couple hundred people in
the room. Better than, say, looking down the throat of a fully charged nerve
disruptor any day. Really. They circulated,
exchanging greetings, making courtesies. Why can't these people wear nametags?
Cordelia thought hopelessly. As usual, everyone but her seemed to know everyone
else. She pictured herself opening a conversation, Hey you, Vor-guy—. She
clutched Aral more firmly, and tried to look mysterious and exotic rather than
tongue-tied and mislaid. They found the little
ceremony with the bags of coins going on in another chamber, the counts or
their representatives lining up to discharge their obligation with a few formal
words each. Emperor Gregor, whom Cordelia suspected was up past his bedtime,
sat on a raised bench with his mother, looking small and trapped, manfully
trying to suppress his yawns. It occurred to Cordelia to wonder if he even got
to keep the bags of coins, or if they were simply re-circulated to present
again next year. Hell of a birthday party. There wasn't another child in sight.
But they were running the counts through pretty efficiently, maybe the kid
could escape soon. An offerer in
red-and-blues knelt before Gregor and Kareen, and presented his bag of maroon
and gold silk. Cordelia recognized Count Vidal Vordarian, the dish-faced man
whom Aral had politely described as of the "next-most-conservative
party," i.e., of roughly the same political views as Count Piotr, in a
tone of voice that had made Cordelia wonder if it was a code-phrase for
"Isolationist fanatic." He did not look a fanatic. Freed of its
distorting anger, his face was much more attractive; he turned it now to
Princess Kareen, and said something which made her lift her chin and laugh. His
hand rested a moment familiarly upon her robed knee, and her hand briefly
covered his, before he clambered back to his feet and bowed, and made way for
the next man. Kareen's smile faded as Vordarian turned his back. Gregor's sad glance
crossed Aral, Cordelia, and Droushnakovi; he spoke earnestly up to his mother.
Kareen motioned a guard over, and a few minutes later a guard commander
approached them, for permission to carry off Drou. She was replaced by an
unobtrusive young man who trailed them out of earshot, a mere flicker at the
corner of the eye, a neat trick for a fellow that large. Happily, Cordelia and
Aral soon ran across Lord and Lady Vorpatril, someone Cordelia dared talk to
without a politico-social pre-briefing. Captain Lord Vorpatril's parade
red-and-blues set off his dark-haired good looks to perfection. Lady Vorpatril
barely outshone him in a carnelian dress with matching roses woven into her
cloud of black hair, stunning against her velvety white skin. They made,
Cordelia thought, an archetypal Vor couple, sophisticated and serene, the
effect only slightly spoiled by the gradual awareness from his disjointed
conversation that Captain Vorpatril was drunk. He was a cheerful drunk, though,
his personality merely stretched a bit, not unpleasantly transformed. Vorkosigan, drawn away
by some men who bore down on him with Purpose in their eyes, handed Cordelia
off to Lady Vorpatril. The two women cruised the elegant hors d'oeuvre trays
being offered around by yet more human servants, and compared obstetrical
reports. Lord Vorpatril hastily excused himself to pursue a tray bearing wine.
Alys plotted the colors and cut of Cordelia's next gown. "Black and white,
for you, for Winterfair," she asserted with authority. Cordelia nodded
meekly, wondering if they were actually going to sit down for a meal soon, or
if they were expected to keep grazing off the passing trays. Alys guided her to the
ladies' lavatory, an object of hourly interest to their pregnancy-crowded
bladders, and introduced her on the return journey to several more women of her
rarified social circle. Alys then fell into an animated discussion with a
longstanding crony regarding an upcoming party for the woman's daughter, and
Cordelia drifted to the edge of the group. She stepped back
quietly, separating herself (she tried not to think, from the herd) for a
moment of quiet contemplation. What a strange mix Barrayar was, at one moment
homey and familiar, in the next terrifying and alien ... they put on a good
show, though ... ah! That's what was missing from the scene, Cordelia realized.
On Beta Colony a ceremony of this magnitude would be fully covered by holovid,
to be shared real-time planet-wide. Every move would be a carefully
choreographed dance around the vid angles and commentators' timing, almost to
the point of annihilating the event being recorded. Here, there wasn't a
holovid in sight. The only recordings were made by ImpSec, for their own
purposes, which did not include choreography. The people in this room danced
only for each other, all their glittering show tossed blithely away in time,
which carried it off forever; the event would exist tomorrow only in their
memories. "Lady
Vorkosigan?" Cordelia started from
her meditations at the urbane voice at her elbow. She turned to find Commodore
Count Vordarian. His wearing of red-and-blues, rather than his personal House
livery colors, marked him as being on active service, ornamenting Imperial
Headquarters no doubt—in what department? Yes, Ops, Aral had said. He had a
drink in his hand, and smiled cordially. "Count
Vordarian," she offered in return, smiling, too. They'd seen each other in
passing often enough, Cordelia decided to take him as introduced. This Regency
business wasn't going to go away, however much she might wish it to; it was
time and past time for her to start making connections of her own, and quit
pestering Aral for guidance at every new step. "Are you enjoying
the party?" he inquired. "Oh, yes." She
tried to think of something more to say. "It's extremely beautiful." "As are you,
Milady." He raised his glass to her in a gesture of toast, and sipped. Her heart lurched, but
she identified the reason why before her eyes did more than widen slightly. The
last Barrayaran officer to toast her had been the late Admiral Vorrutyer, under
rather different social circumstances. Vordarian had accidently mimicked his
precise gesture. This was no time for torture-flashbacks. Cordelia blinked.
"Lady Vorpatril helped me a lot. She's very generous." Vordarian nodded
delicately toward her torso. "I understand you also are to be
congratulated. Is it a boy or a girl?" "Uh? Oh. Yes, a
boy, thank you. He's to be named Piotr Miles, I'm told." "I'm surprised. I
should have thought the Lord Regent would have sought a daughter first." Cordelia cocked her
head, puzzled by his ironic tone. "We started this before Aral became
Regent." "But you knew he
was to receive the appointment, surely." "I didn't. But I
thought all you Barrayaran militarists were mad after sons. Why did you think a
daughter?" I want a daughter... . "I assumed Lord
Vorkosigan would be thinking ahead to his long-term, ah, employment, of course.
What better way to maintain the continuity of his power after the Regency is
over than to slip neatly into position as the Emperors father-in-law?" Cordelia boggled.
"You think he'd bet the continuity of a planetary government on the chance
of a couple of teenagers falling in love, a decade and a half from now?" "Love?" Now he
looked baffled. "You Barrayarans
are—" she bit her tongue on the crazy. Impolite. "Aral is certainly
more ... practical." Though she could hardly call him unromantic. "That's extremely
interesting," he breathed. His eyes flicked to and away from her abdomen.
"Do you fancy he contemplates something more direct?" Her mind was running
tangential to this twisting conversation, somehow. "Beg pardon?" He smiled and shrugged. Cordelia frowned.
"Do you mean to say, if we were having a girl, that's what everyone would
be thinking?" "Certainly." She blew out her breath.
"God. That's ... I can't imagine anyone in their right mind wanting to get
near the Barrayaran Imperium. It just makes you a target for every maniac with
a grievance, as far as I can see." An image of Lieutenant Koudelka,
bloody-faced and deafened, flashed in her mind. "Also hard on the poor
fellow who's unlucky enough to be standing next to you." His attention sharpened.
"Ah, yes, that unfortunate incident the other day. Has anything come of
the investigation, do you know?" "Nothing that I've
heard. Negri and Illyan are talking Cetagandans, mostly. But the guy who
launched the grenade got away clean." "Too bad." He
drained his glass, and exchanged it for a freshly charged one presented
immediately by a passing Vorbarra-liveried servant. Cordelia eyed the
wineglasses wistfully. But she was off metabolic poisons for the duration. Yet
another advantage of Betan-style gestation in uterine replicators, none of this
blasted enforced clean living. At home she could have poisoned and endangered
herself freely, while her child grew, fully monitored round-the-clock by sober
techs, safe and protected in the replicator banks. Suppose she had been under
that sonic grenade ... She longed for a drink. Well, she did not need
the mind-numbing buzz of ethanol; conversation with Barrayarans was
mind-numbing enough. Her eyes sought Aral in the crowd—there he was, Kou at his
shoulder, talking with Piotr and two other grizzled old men in counts'
liveries. As Aral had predicted, his hearing had returned to normal within a
couple of days. Yet still his eyes shifted from face to face, drinking in cues
of gesture and inflection, his glass a mere untasted ornament in his hand. On
duty, no question. Was he ever off-duty, anymore? "Was he much
disturbed by the attack?" Vordarian inquired, following her gaze to Aral. "Wouldn't you
be?" said Cordelia. "I don't know ... he's seen so much violence in
his life, almost more than I can imagine. It may be almost like ... white
noise. Tuned out." I wish I could tune it out. "You have not known
him that long, though. Just since Escobar." "We met once before
the war. Briefly." "Oh?" His
brows rose. "I didn't know that. How little one truly knows of
people." He paused, watching Aral, watching her watch Aral. One corner of
his mouth crooked up, then the quirk vanished in a thoughtful pursing of his
lips. "He's bisexual, you know." He took a delicate sip of his wine. "Was
bisexual," she corrected absently, looking fondly across the room.
"Now he's monogamous." Vordarian choked,
sputtering. Cordelia watched him with concern, wondering if she ought to pat
him on the back or something, but he regained his breath and balance. "He
told you that?" he wheezed in astonishment. "No, Vorrutyer did.
Just before he met his, um, fatal accident." Vordarian was standing
frozen; she felt a certain malicious glee at having at last baffled a
Barrayaran as much as they sometimes baffled her. Now, if she could just figure
out what she'd said that had thrown him ... She went on seriously, "The
more I look back on Vorrutyer, the more he seems a tragic figure. Still
obsessed with a love affair that was over eighteen years ago. Yet I sometimes
wonder, if he could have had what he wanted then—kept Aral—if Aral might have
kept that sadistic streak that ultimately consumed Vorrutyer's sanity under
control. It's as if the two of them were on some land of weird see-saw, each
one's survival entailing the other's destruction." "A Betan." His
stunned look was gradually fading to one Cordelia mentally dubbed as Awful
Realization. "I should have guessed. You are, after all, the people who
bioengineered hermaphrodites... ." He paused. "How long did you know
Vorrutyer?" "About twenty
minutes. But it was a very intense twenty minutes." She decided to let him
wonder what the hell that meant. "Their, ah, affair,
as you call it, was a great secret scandal, at the time." She wrinkled her nose.
"Great secret scandal? Isn't that an oxymoron? Like 'military
intelligence,' or 'friendly fire.' Also typical Barrayaranisms, now that I
think on it." Vordarian had the
strangest look on his face. He looked, she realized, exactly like a man who had
thrown a bomb, had it go fizz instead of BOOM! and was now trying to decide
whether to stick his hand in and tap the firing mechanism to test it. Then it was her turn for
Awful Realization. This man just tried to blow up my marriage. No—Aral's
marriage. She fixed a bright, sunny, innocent smile on her face, her brain
kicking—at last!—into overdrive. Vordarian couldn't be of Vorrutyer's old war
party; their leaders had all met with their fatal accidents before Ezar had
bowed out, and the rest were scattered and lying low. What did he want? She
fiddled with a flower from her hair, and considered simpering. "I didn't
imagine I was marrying a forty-four-year-old virgin, Count Vordarian." "So it seems."
He knocked back another gulp of wine. "You galactics are all degenerate
... what perversions does he tolerate in return, I wonder?" His eyes
glinted in sudden open malice. "Do you know how Lord Vorkosigan's first
wife died?" "Suicide. Plasma
arc to the head," she replied promptly. "It was rumored
he'd murdered her. For adultery. Betan, beware." His smile had turned
wholly acid. "Yes, I knew that,
too. In this case, an untrue rumor." All pretense of cordiality had
evaporated from their exchange. Cordelia had a bad sense of all control
escaping with it. She leaned forward, and lowered her voice. "Do you know
why Vorrutyer died?" He couldn't help it; he
tilted toward her, drawn in. "No ..." "He tried to hurt
Aral through me. I found that ... annoying. I wish you would cease trying to
annoy me, Count Vordarian, I'm afraid you might succeed." Her voice fell
further, almost to a whisper. "You should fear it, too." His initial patronizing
tone had certainly given way to wariness. He made a smooth, openhanded gesture
that seemed to symbolize a bow of farewell, and backed away.
"Milady." The glance over his shoulder as he moved off was thoroughly
spooked. She frowned after him.
Whew. What an odd exchange. What had the man expected, dropping that obsolete
datum on her as if it were some shocking surprise? Did Vordarian actually
imagine she would go off and tax her husband with his poor taste in companions
two decades ago? Would a naive young Barrayaran bride have gone into hysterics?
Not Lady Vorpatril, whose social enthusiasms concealed an acid judgment; not
Princess Kareen, whose naivete had surely been burned out long ago by that
expert sadist Serg. He fired, but he missed. And, more coldly, Has he
fired and missed once before? That had not been a normal social interaction,
not even by Barrayaran standards of one-upsmanship. Or maybe he was just drunk.
She suddenly wanted to talk to Illyan. She closed her eyes, trying to clear her
fogged head. "Are you well,
love?" Aral's concerned voice murmured in her ear. "Do you need your
nausea medication?" Her eyes flew open.
There he was, safe and sound beside her. "Oh, I'm fine." She attached
herself to his arm, lightly, not a panicked limpet-like clamp. "Just
thinking." "They're seating us
for dinner." "Good. It will be
nice to sit down, my feet are swelling." He looked as if he
wanted to pick her up and carry her, but they paraded in normally, joining the
other formal pairs. They sat at a raised table set a little apart from the
others, with Gregor, Kareen, Piotr, the Lord Guardian of the Speaker's Circle
and his wife, and Prime Minister Vortala. At Gregor's insistence, Droushnakovi
was seated with them; the boy seemed painfully glad to see his old bodyguard.
Did I take away your playmate, child? Cordelia wondered apologetically. It
seemed so; Gregor engaged in a negotiation with Kareen for Drou's weekly return
"for judo lessons." Drou, used to the Residence atmosphere, was not
so overawed as Koudelka, who was stiff with exaggerated care against betrayal
by his own clumsiness. Cordelia found herself
seated between Vortala and the Speaker, and carried on conversations with
reasonable ease; Vortala was charming, in his blunt way. Cordelia managed
nibbles of all the elegantly served food except a slice off the carcass of a
roast bovine, carried in whole. Usually she was able to put out of her mind the
fact that Barrayaran protein was not grown in vats, but taken from the bodies
of real dead animals. She'd known about their primitive culinary practices
before she'd chosen to come here, after all, and had tasted animal muscle
before on Survey missions, in the interests of science, survival, or potential
new product development for the homeworld. The Barrayarans applauded the
fruit-and-flower-decked beast, seeming to actually find it attractive and not
horrific, and the cook, who'd followed it anxiously out, took a bow. The
primitive olfactory circuits of her brain had to agree, it smelled great.
Vorkosigan had his portion bloody-rare. Cordelia sipped water. After dessert, and some
brief formal toasts offered by Vortala and Vorkosigan, the boy Gregor was at
last taken off to bed by his mother. Kareen motioned Cordelia and Droushnakovi
to join her. The tension eased in Cordelia's shoulders as they left the big
public assembly and climbed to the Emperor's quiet, private quarters. Gregor was peeled out of
his little uniform and dove into pajamas, becoming boy and not icon once again.
Drou supervised his teeth-brushing, and was inveigled into "just one
round" of some game they'd used to play with a board and pieces, as a
bedtime treat. This Kareen indulgently permitted, and after a kiss for and from
her son, she and Cordelia withdrew to a softly lit sitting room nearby. A night
breeze from the open windows cooled the upper chamber. Both women sat with a
sigh, unwinding; Cordelia kicked off her shoes immediately after Kareen did so.
Distance-muffled voices and laughter drifted through the windows from the
gardens below. "How long does this
party go on?" Cordelia asked. "Dawn, for those
with more endurance than myself. I shall retire at midnight, after which the
serious drinkers will take over." "Some of them
looked pretty serious already." "Unfortunately."
Kareen smiled. "You will be able to see the Vor class at both its best and
its worst, before the night is over." "I can imagine. I'm
surprised you don't import less lethal mood-altering drugs." Kareen's smile
sharpened. "But drunken brawls are traditional." She allowed the
cutting edge of her voice to soften. "In fact, such things are coming in,
at least in the shuttleport cities. As usual, we seem to be adding to rather
than replacing our own customs." "Perhaps that's the
best way." Cordelia frowned. How best to probe delicately ... ? "Is
Count Vidal Vordarian one of those in the habit of getting publicly
potted?" "No." Kareen
glanced up, narrowing her eyes. "Why do you ask?" "I had a peculiar
conversation with him. I thought an overdose of ethanol might account for
it." She remembered Vordarian's hand resting lightly upon the Princess's
knee, just short of an intimate caress. "Do you know him well? How would
you estimate him?" Kareen said judiciously,
"He's rich ... proud ... He was loyal to Ezar during Serg's late
machinations against his father. Loyal to the Imperium, to the Vor class. There
are four major manufacturing cities in Vordarian's District, plus military
bases, supply depots, the biggest military shuttleport... . Vidal's is certainly
the most economically important area on Barrayar today. The war barely touched
the Vordarians' District; it's one of the few the Cetagandans pulled out of by
treaty. We sited our first space bases there because we took over facilities
the Cetagandans had built and abandoned, and a good deal of economic
development followed from that." "That's ...
interesting," said Cordelia, "but I was wondering about the man
personally. His, ah, likes and dislikes, for example. Do you like him?" "At one time,"
said Kareen slowly, "I wondered if Vidal might be powerful enough to
protect me from Serg. After Ezar died. As Ezar grew more ill, I was thinking, I
had better look to my own defense. Nothing appeared to be happening, and no one
told me anything." "If Serg had become
emperor, how could a mere count have protected you?" asked Cordelia. "He would have had
to become ... more. Vidal had ambition, if it were properly encouraged—and
patriotism, God knows if Serg had lived he might have destroyed Barrayar—Vidal
might have saved us all. But Ezar promised I'd have nothing to fear, and Ezar
delivered. Serg died before Ezar and ... and I have been trying to let things
cool, with Vidal, since." Cordelia abstractedly
rubbed her lower lip. "Oh. But do you, personally—I mean, do you like him?
Would becoming Countess Vordarian be a nice retirement from the
dowager-princess business, someday?" "Oh! Not now. The
Emperor's stepfather would be too powerful a man, to set up opposite the
Regent. A dangerous polarity, if they were not allied or exactly balanced. Or
were not combined in one person." "Like being the
Emperor's father-in-law?" "Yes,
exactly." "I'm having trouble
understanding this ... venereal transmission of power. Do you have some claim
to the Imperium in your own right, or not?" "That would be for
the military to decide," she shrugged. Her voice lowered. "It is like
a disease, isn't it? I'm too close, I'm touched, infected... . Gregor is my
hope of survival. And my prison." "Don't you want a
life of your own?" "No. I just want to
live." Cordelia sat back,
disturbed. Did Serg teach you not to give offense? "Does Vordarian see it
that way? I mean, power isn't the only thing you have to offer. I think you
underestimate your personal attractiveness." "On Barrayar ...
power is the only thing." Her expression grew distant. "I admit... I
did once ask Captain Negri to get me a report on Vidal. He uses his courtesans
normally." This wistful approval
was not exactly Cordelia's idea of a declaration of boundless love. Yet that
hadn't been just desire for power she'd seen in Vordarian's eyes at the
ceremony, she would swear. Had Aral's appointment as Regent accidentally messed
up the man's courtship? Might that very well account for the sex-tinged
animosity in his speech to her ... ? Droushnakovi returned on
tiptoe. "He fell asleep," she whispered fondly. Kareen nodded, and
tilted her head back in an unguarded moment of rest, until a Vorbarra-liveried
messenger arrived and addressed her: "Will you open the dancing with my lord
Regent, Milady? They're waiting." Request, or order? It
sounded more sinister-mandatory than fun, in the servant's flat voice. "Last duty for the
night," Kareen assured Cordelia, as they both shoved their shoes back on.
Cordelia's footgear seemed to have shrunk two sizes since the start of the
evening. She hobbled after Kareen, Drou trailing. A large downstairs room
was floored in multi-toned wood marquetry in patterns of flowers, vines, and
animals. The polished surface would have been put on a museum wall on Beta Colony;
these incredible people danced across it. A live orchestra—selected by
cutthroat competition from the Imperial Service Band, Cordelia was
informed—provided music, in the Barrayaran style. Even the waltzes sounded
faintly like marches. Aral and the princess were presented to each other, and
he led her off for a couple of good-natured turns around the room, a formal
dance that involved each mirroring the other's steps and slides, hands raised
but never quite touching. Cordelia was fascinated. She'd never guessed that
Aral could dance. This seemed to complete the social requirements, and other
couples filtered out onto the floor. Aral returned to her side, looking
stimulated. "Dance, Milady?" After that dinner, more
like a nap. How did he keep up that alarming hyperactivity? Secret terror,
probably. She shook her head, smiling. "I don't know how." "Ah." They
strolled, instead. "I could show you how," he offered as they exited
the room onto a bank of terraces that wound off into the gardens, pleasantly
cool and dark but for a few colored lights to prevent stumbles on the pathways. "Mm," she said
doubtfully. "If you can find a private spot." If they could find a
private spot, she could think of better things to do than dance, though. "Well, here
we—shh." His scimitar grin winked in the dark, and his grip tightened
warningly on her hand. They both stood still, at the entrance to a little open
space screened from eyes above by yews and some pink feathery non-Earth plant.
The music floated clearly down. "Try, Kou,"
urged Droushnakovi's voice. Drou and Kou stood facing each other on the far
side of the terrace-nook. Doubtfully, Koudelka set his stick down on the stone
balustrade, and held up his hands to hers. They began to step, slide, and dip,
Drou counting earnestly, "One-two-three, one-two-three ..." Koudelka tripped, and
she caught him; his grip found her waist. "It's no damned good,
Drou." He shook his head in frustration. "Sh ..." Her
hand touched his lips. "Try again. I'm for it. You said you had to
practice that hand-coordination thing, how long, before you got it? More than
once, I bet." "The old man
wouldn't let me give up." "Well, maybe I
won't let you give up either." "I'm tired,"
complained Koudelka. So, switch to kissing,
Cordelia urged silently, muffling a laugh. That you can do sitting down.
Droushnakovi was determined, however, and they began again.
"One-two-three, one-two-three ..." Once again the effort ended in
what seemed to Cordelia a very good start on a clinch, if only one party or the
other would gather the wit and nerve to follow through. Aral shook his head, and
they backed silently away around the shrubbery. Apparently a little inspired,
his lips found hers to muffle his own chuckle. Alas, their delicacy was futile;
an anonymous Vor lord wandered blindly past them, stumbled across the terrace
nook, freezing Kou and Drou in mid-step, and hung over the stone balustrade to
be very traditionally sick into the defenseless bushes below. Sudden swearing,
in new voices, one male, one female, rose up from the dark and shaded target
zone. Koudelka retrieved his stick, and the two would-be dancers hastily
retreated. The Vor lord was sick again, and his male victim started climbing up
after him, slipping on the beslimed stonework and promising violent
retribution. Vorkosigan guided Cordelia prudently away. Later, while waiting by
one of the Residence's entrances for the groundcars to be brought round,
Cordelia found herself standing next to the lieutenant. Koudelka gazed
pensively back over his shoulder at the Residence, from which music and
party-noises wafted almost unabated. "Good party,
Kou?" she inquired genially. "What? Oh, yes,
astonishing. When I joined the Service, I never dreamed I'd end up here."
He blinked. "Time was, I never thought I'd end up anywhere." And then
he added, giving Cordelia a slight case of mental whiplash, "I sure wish women
came with operating manuals." Cordelia laughed aloud.
"I could say the same for men. "But you and
Admiral Vorkosigan—you're different." "Not ... really.
We've learned from experience, maybe. A lot of people fail to." "Do you think I
have a chance at a normal life?" He gazed, not at her, but into the dark. "You make your own
chances, Kou. And your own dances." "You sound just
like the Admiral." Cordelia cornered Illyan
the next morning, when he stopped in to Vorkosigan House for the daily report
from his guard commander. "Tell me, Simon. Is
Vidal Vordarian on your short list, or your long list?" "Everybody's on my
long list," Illyan sighed. "I want you to move
him to your short list." His head cocked.
"Why?" She hesitated. She
wasn't about to reply, Intuition, though that was exactly what those subliminal
cues added up to. "He seems to me to have an assassin's mind. The sort
that fires from cover into the back of his enemy." Illyan smiled
quizzically. "Beg pardon, Milady, but that doesn't sound like the Vordarian
I know. I've always found him more the openly bullheaded type." How badly must he hurt,
how ardently desire, for a bullheaded man to turn subtle? She was unsure.
Perhaps, not knowing how deeply Aral's happiness with her ran, Vordarian did
not recognize how vicious his attack upon it was? And did personal and
political animosity necessarily run together? No. The man's hatred had been
profound, his blow precisely, if mistakenly, aimed. "Move him to your
short list," she said. Illyan opened his hand;
not mere placation, by his expression some chain of thought was engaged.
"Very well, Milady." CHAPTER
SIX Cordelia watched the
shadow of the lightflyer flow over the ground below, a slim blot arrowing
south. The arrow wavered across farm fields, creeks, rivers, and dusty
roads—the road net was rudimentary, stunted, its development leapfrogged by the
personal air transport that had arrived in the blast of galactic technology at
the end of the Time of Isolation. Coils of tension unwound in her neck with
each kilometer they put between themselves and the hectic hothouse atmosphere
of the capital. A day in the country was an excellent idea, overdue. She only
wished Aral could have shared it with her. Sergeant Bothari, cued
by some landmark below, banked the lightflyer gently to its new course.
Droushnakovi, sharing the back seat with Cordelia, stiffened, trying not to
lean into her. Dr. Henri, in front with the Sergeant, stared out the canopy
with an interest almost equal to Cordelia's. Dr. Henri turned half
around, to speak over his shoulder to Cordelia. "I do thank you for the
luncheon invitation, Lady Vorkosigan. It's a rare privilege to visit the
Vorkosigans' private estate." "Is it?" said
Cordelia. "I know they don't have crowds, but Count Piotr's horse friends
drop in fairly often. Fascinating animals." Cordelia thought that
over a second, then decided Dr. Henri would realize without being told that the
"fascinating animals" applied to the horses, and not Count Piotr's
friends. "Drop the least little hint that you're interested, and Count
Piotr will probably show you personally around the stable." "I've never met the
General." Dr. Henri looked daunted by the prospect, and fingered the
collar of his undress greens. A research scientist from the Imperial Military
Hospital, Henri dealt with high rankers often enough not to be awed; it had to
be all that Barrayaran history clinging to Piotr that made the difference. Piotr had acquired his
present rank at the age of twenty—two, fighting the Cetagandans in the fierce
guerilla war that had raged through the Dendarii Mountains, just now showing
blue on the southern horizon. Rank was all then—emperor Dorca Vorbarra could
give him at the time; more tangible assets such as reinforcements, supplies,
and pay were out of the question in that desperate hour. Twenty years later
Piotr had changed Barrayaran history again, playing kingmaker to Ezar Vorbarra
in the civil war that had brought down Mad Emperor Yuri. Not your average HQ
staffer, General Piotr Vorkosigan, not by anybody's standards. "He's easy to get
along with," Cordelia assured Dr. Henri. "Just admire the horses, and
ask a few leading questions about the wars, and you can relax and spend the
rest of your time listening." Henri's brows went up,
as he searched her face for irony. Henri was a sharp man. Cordelia smiled
cheerfully. Bothari was silently
watching her in the mirror set over his control interface, Cordelia noticed.
Again. The sergeant seemed tense today. It was the position of his hands, the
cording of the muscles in his neck, that gave him away. Bothari's flat yellow
eyes were always unreadable; set deep, too close together, and not quite on the
same level, above his sharp cheekbones and long narrow jaw. Anxiety over the
doctor's visit? Understandable. The land below was
rolling, but soon rucked up into the rugged ridges that channeled the lake
district. The mountains rose beyond, and Cordelia thought she caught a distant
glint of early snow on the highest peaks. Bothari hopped the flyer over three
running ridges, and banked again, zooming up a narrow valley. A few more
minutes, a swoop over another ridge, and the long lake was in sight. An
enormous maze of burnt—out fortifications made a black crown on a headland, and
a village nestled below it. Bothari brought the flyer down neatly on a circle
painted on the pavement of the village's widest street. Dr. Henri gathered up
his bag of medical equipment. "The examination will only take a few
minutes," he assured Cordelia, "then we can go on." Don't tell me, tell
Bothari. Cordelia sensed Dr. Henri was a little unnerved by Bothari. He kept
addressing her instead of the Sergeant, as if she were some translator who
would put it all into terms that Bothari would understand. Bothari was
formidable, true, but talking past him wouldn't make him magically disappear. Bothari led them to a
little house set in a narrow side street that went down to the glimmering
water. At his knock, a heavyset woman with greying hair opened the door and
smiled. "Good morning, Sergeant. Come in, everything's all ready.
Milady." She favored Cordelia with an awkward curtsey. Cordelia returned a nod,
gazing around with interest. "Good morning, Mistress Hysopi. How nice your
house looks today." The place was painfully scrubbed and straightened—as a
military widow, Mistress Hysopi understood all about inspections. Cordelia
trusted the everyday atmosphere in the hired fosterer's house was a trifle more
relaxed. "Your little girl's
been very good this morning," Mistress Hysopi assured the Sergeant.
"Took her bottle right down—she's just had her bath. Right this way,
Doctor. I hope you'll find everything's all right... ." She guided the way up
narrow stairs. One bedroom was clearly her own; the other, with a bright window
looking down over rooftops to the lake, had recently been made over into a
nursery. A dark—haired infant with big brown eyes cooed to herself in a crib.
"There's a girl," Mistress Hysopi smiled, picking her up. "Say
hi to your daddy, eh, Elena? Pretty—pretty." Bothari entered no
further than the door, watching the infant warily. "Her head has grown a
lot," he offered after a moment. "They usually do,
between three and four months," Mistress Hysopi agreed. Dr. Henri laid out his
instruments on the crib sheet, and Mistress Hysopi carried the baby back over
and began undressing her. The two began a technical discussion about formulae
and feces, and Bothari walked around the little room, looking but not touching.
He did look terribly huge and out-of-place among the colorful, delicate infant
furnishings, dark and dangerous in his brown and silver uniform. His head
brushed the slanting ceiling, and he backed cautiously to the door. Cordelia hung curiously
over Henri and Hysopi's shoulders, watching the little girl wriggle and attempt
to roll. Infants. Soon enough she would have one of those. As if in response
her belly fluttered. Piotr Miles was not, fortunately, strong enough to fight
his way out of a paper bag yet, but if his development continued at this rate,
the last couple of months were going to be sleepless. She wished she'd taken
the parents' training course back on Beta Colony even if she hadn't been ready
to apply for a license. Yet Barrayaran parents seemed to manage to ad lib.
Mistress Hysopi had learned on the job, and she had three grown children now. "Amazing,"
said Dr. Henri, shaking his head and recording his data. "Absolutely
normal development, as far as I can tell. Nothing to even show she came out of
a uterine replicator." "I came out of a
uterine replicator," Cordelia noted with amusement. Henri glanced
involuntarily up and down at her, as if suddenly expecting to find antennae
sprouting from her head. "Betan experience suggests it doesn't matter so
much how you got here, as what you do after you arrive." "Really." He
frowned thoughtfully. "And you are free of genetic defects?" "Certified,"
Cordelia agreed. "We need this
technology." He sighed, and began packing his things back up. "She's
fine, you can dress her again," he added to Mistress Hysopi. Bothari loomed over the
crib at last, to stare down, the lines creased deep between his eyes. He
touched the infant only once, a finger to her cheek, then rubbed thumb and
finger together as if checking his neural function. Mistress Hysopi studied him
sideways, but said nothing. While Bothari lingered
to settle up the month's expenses with Mistress Hysopi, Cordelia and Dr. Henri
strolled down to the lake, Droushnakovi following. "When those
seventeen Escobaran uterine replicators first arrived at Imp Mil," said
Henri, "sent from the war zone, I was frankly appalled. Why save those
unwanted fetuses, and at such a cost? Why land them on my department? Since
then I've become a believer, Milady. I've even thought of an application,
spin-off technology, for burn patients. I'm working on it now, the project
approval came down just a week ago." His eyes were eager, as he detailed
his theory, which was sound as far as Cordelia understood the principles. "My mother is a
medical equipment and maintenance engineer at Silica Hospital," she
explained to Henri, when he paused for breath and approval. "She works on
these sorts of applications all the time." Henri redoubled his technical
exposition. Cordelia greeted two
women in the street by name, and politely introduced them to Dr. Henri. "They're wives of
some of Count Piotr's sworn armsmen," she explained as they passed on. "I should have
thought they'd choose to live in the capital." "Some do, some stay
here. It seems to depend on taste. The cost of living is much lower out here,
and these fellows aren't paid as much as I'd imagined. Some of the backcountry
men are suspicious of city life, they seem to think it's purer here." She
grinned briefly. "One fellow has a wife in each location. None of his
brother-armsmen have ratted on him yet. A solid bunch." Henri's brows rose.
"How jolly for him." "Not really. He's
chronically short of cash, and always looks worried. But he can't decide which
wife to give up. Apparently, he actually loves them both." When Dr. Henri stepped
aside to talk to an old man they saw pottering around the docks about possible
boat rentals, Droushnakovi came up to Cordelia, and lowered her voice. She
looked disturbed. "Milady … how in
the world did Sergeant Bothari come by a baby? He's not married, is he?" "Would you believe
the stork brought her?" said Cordelia lightly. "No." From her frown, Drou did
not approve this levity. Cordelia hardly blamed her. She sighed. How do I
wriggle out of this one? "Very nearly. Her uterine replicator was sent on
a fast courier from Escobar, after the war. She finished her gestation in a
laboratory in Imp Mil, under Dr. Henri's supervision." "Is she really
Bothari's?" "Oh, yes.
Genetically certified. That's how they identified—" Cordelia snapped that
last sentence off midway. Carefully, now ... "But what was all
that about seventeen replicators? And how did the baby get in the replicator?
Was—was she an experiment?" "Placental
transfer. A delicate operation, even by galactic standards, but hardly
experimental. Look." Cordelia paused, thinking fast. "I'll tell you
the truth." Just not all of it. "Little Elena is the daughter of
Bothari and a young Escobaran officer named Elena Visconti. Bothari ... loved
her ... very much. But after the war, she would not return with him to Barrayar.
The child was conceived, er ... Barrayaran-style, then transferred to the
replicator when they parted. There were some similar cases. The replicators
were all sent to Imp Mil, which was interested in learning more about the
technology. Bothari was in ... medical therapy, for quite a long time, after
the war. But when he got out, and she got out, he took custody of her." "Did the others
take their babies, too?" "Most of the other
fathers were dead by then. The children went to the Imperial Service orphanage."
There. The official version, all right and tight. "Oh." Drou
frowned at her feet. "That's not at all ... it's hard to picture Bothari
... To tell the truth," she said in a burst of candor, "I'm not sure
I'd want to give custody of a pet cat to Bothari. Doesn't he strike you as a
bit strange?" "Aral and I are
keeping an eye on things. Bothari's doing very well so far, I think. He found
Mistress Hysopi on his own, and is making sure she gets everything she needs.
Has Bothari—that is, does Bothari bother you?" Droushnakovi gave
Cordelia an are-you-kidding? look. "He's so big. And ugly. And he ...
mutters to himself, some days. And he's sick so much, days in a row when he
won't get out of bed, but he doesn't have a fever or anything. Count Piotr's
Armsman-commander thinks he's malingering." "He's not
malingering. But I'm glad you mentioned it, I'll have Aral talk to the
commander and straighten him out." "But aren't you at
all afraid of him? On the bad days, at least?" "I could weep for
Bothari," said Cordelia slowly, "but I don't fear him. On the bad
days or any days. You shouldn't either. It's ... it's a profound insult." "Sorry."
Droushnakovi scuffed her shoe across the gravel. "It's a sad story. No
wonder he doesn't talk about the Escobar war." "Yes, I'd ...
appreciate it if you'd refrain from bringing it up. It's very painful for
him." A short hop in the
lightflyer from the village across a tongue of the lake brought them to the
Vorkosigans' country estate. A century ago the house had been an outlying guard
post to the headland's fort. Modern weaponry had rendered aboveground
fortifications obsolete, and the old stone barracks had been converted to more
peaceful uses. Dr. Henri had evidently been expecting more grandeur, for he
said, "It's smaller than I expected." Piotr's housekeeper had
a pleasant luncheon set up for them on a flower—decked terrace off the south
end of the house by the kitchen. While she was escorting the party out,
Cordelia fell back beside Count Piotr. "Thank you, sir,
for letting us invade you." "Invade me indeed!
This is your house, dear. You are free to entertain any friends you choose in
it. This is the first time you've done so, do you realize?" He stopped,
standing with her in the doorway. "You know, when my mother married my
father, she completely re-decorated Vorkosigan House. My wife did the same in
her day. Aral married so late, I'm afraid an updating is sadly overdue.
Wouldn't you ... like to?" But it's your house,
thought Cordelia helplessly. Not even Aral's, really ... "You've touched
down so lightly on us, one almost fears you'll fly away again." Piotr
chuckled, but his eyes were concerned. Cordelia patted her
rounding belly. "Oh, I'm thoroughly weighted down now, sir." She
hesitated. "To tell the truth, I have thought it would be nice to have a
lift tube in Vorkosigan House. Counting the basement, sub-basement, attic, and
roof, there are eight floors in the main section. It can make quite a
hike." "A lift tube? We've
never—" He bit his tongue. "Where?" "You could put it
in the back hallway next to the plumbing stack, without disrupting the internal
architecture." "So you could. Very
well. Find a builder. Do it." "I'll look into it
tomorrow, then. Thank you, sir." Her brows rose, behind his back. Count Piotr, evidently
with the same idea in mind of encouraging her, was studiously cordial to Dr.
Henri over lunch, New Man though Henri clearly was. Henri, following Cordelia's
advice, hit it off well with Piotr in turn. Piotr told Henri all about the new
foal, born in his stables over the back ridge. The creature was a genetically
certified pureblood that Piotr called a quarter horse, though it looked like an
entire horse to Cordelia. The stud-colt had been imported at great cost as a
frozen embryo from Earth, and implanted in a grade mare, the gestation
supervised anxiously by Piotr. The biologically trained Henri expressed
technical interest, and after lunch was done Piotr carried him off for a
personal inspection of the big beasts. Cordelia begged off.
"I think I'd like to rest a bit. You can go, Drou. Sergeant Bothari will
stay with me." In fact, Cordelia was worried about Bothari. He hadn't
eaten a single bite of lunch, nor said a word for over an hour. Doubtful, but madly
interested in the horses, Drou allowed herself to be persuaded. The three
trudged off up the hill. Cordelia watched them away, then turned her face back
to catch Bothari watching her again. He gave her a strange approving nod. "Thank you,
Milady." "Ahem. Yes. I
wondered if you felt ill." "No ... yes. I
don't know. I wanted ... I've wanted to talk to you, Milady. For—for some
weeks. But there never seemed to be a good time. Lately it's been getting
worse. I can't wait anymore. I'd hoped today ..." "Seize the
moment." The housekeeper was rattling about in Piotr's kitchen.
"Would you care to take a walk, or something?" "Please,
Milady." They walked together,
around the old stone house. The pavilion on the crest of the hill, overlooking
the lake, would be a great place to sit and talk, but Cordelia felt too full
and pregnant to make the climb. She led left, instead, on the path parallel to
the slope, till they came to what appeared to be a little walled garden. The Vorkosigan family
plot was crowded with an odd assortment of graves, of core family, distant
relatives, retainers of special merit. The cemetery had originally been part of
the ruined fort complex, the oldest graves of guards and officers going back
centuries. The Vorkosigan intrusion dated only from the atomic destruction of
the old district capital of Vorkosigan Vashnoi during the Cetagandan invasion.
The dead had been melted down with the living there, then eight generations of
family history obliterated. It was interesting to note the clusters of more
recent dates, and key them to their current events: the Cetagandan invasion,
Mad Yuri's War. Aral's mother's grave dated exactly to the start of Yuri's War.
A space was reserved beside her for Piotr, and had been for thirty-three years.
She waited patiently for her husband. And men accuse us women of being slow.
Her eldest son, Aral's brother, lay buried at her other hand. "Let's sit over
there." She nodded toward a stone bench set round with small orange
flowers, and shaded by an Earth-import oak at least a century old. "These
people are all good listeners, now. And they don't pass on gossip." Cordelia sat on the warm
stone, and studied Bothari. He sat as far from her as the bench permitted. The
lines on his face were deep-cut today, harsh despite the muting of the afternoon
light by the warm autumn haze. One hand, wrapped around the rough stone edge of
the bench, flexed arrhythmically. His breathing was too careful. Cordelia softened her
voice. "So, what's the trouble, Sergeant? You seem a little ... stretched,
today. Is it something about Elena?" He breathed a humorless
laugh. "Stretched. Yes. I guess so. It's not about the baby ... it's ...
well, not directly." His eyes met hers squarely for almost the first time
today. "You remember Escobar, milady. You were there. Right?" "Right." This
man is in pain, Cordelia realized. What sort of pain? "I can't remember
Escobar." "So I understand. I
believe your military therapists went to a great deal of trouble to make sure
you did not remember Escobar." "Oh yes." "I don't approve of
Barrayaran notions of therapy. Particularly when colored by political
expediency." "I've come to
realize that, Milady." Cautious hope flickered in his eyes. "How did they work
it? Burn out selected neurons? Chemical erasure?" "No ... they used
drugs, but nothing was destroyed. They tell me. The doctors called it
suppression-therapy. We just called it hell. Every day we went to hell, till we
didn't want to go there anymore." Bothari shifted in his seat, his brow
wrinkling. "Trying to remember—to talk about Escobar at all—gives me these
headaches. Sounds stupid, doesn't it? Big man like me whining about headaches
like some old woman. Certain special parts, memories, they give me these really
bad headaches that make red rings around everything I see, and I start
vomiting. When I stop trying to think about it, the pain goes away.
Simple." Cordelia swallowed.
"I see. I'm sorry. I knew it was bad, but I didn't know it was ... that
bad." "The worst part is
the dreams. I dream of ... it ... and if I wake up too slowly, I remember the
dream. I remember too much, all at once, and my head—all I can do is roll over
and cry, until I can start thinking about something else. Count Piotr's other
armsmen—they think I'm crazy, they think I'm stupid, they don't know what I'm
doing in there with them. I don't know what I'm doing in there with them."
He rubbed his big hands over his burr-scalp in a harried swipe. "To be a
count's sworn Armsman—it's an honor. Only twenty places to fill. They take the
best, they take the bloody heroes, the men with medals, the twenty-year men
with perfect records. If what I did—at Escobar—was so bad, why did the Admiral
make Count Piotr make a place for me? And if I was such a bloody hero, why did
they take away my memory of it?" His breath was coming faster, whistling
through his long yellow teeth. "How much pain are
you in now? Trying to talk about this?" "Some. More to
come." He stared at her, frowning deeply. "I've got to talk about
this. To you. It's driving me ..." She took a calming
breath, trying to listen with her whole mind, body, and soul. And carefully. So
carefully. "Go on." "I have ... four
pictures ... in my head, from Escobar. Four pictures, and I cannot explain
them. To myself. A few minutes, out of—three months? Four? They all of them
bother me, but one bothers me the most. You're in it," he added abruptly,
and stared at the ground. Both hands clenched the bench now, white-knuckled. "I see. Go
on." "One—the least-bad
one—it was an argument. Prince Serg was there, and Admiral Vorrutyer, Lord
Vorkosigan, and Admiral Rulf Vorhalas. And I was there. Except I didn't have
any clothes on." "Are you sure this
isn't a dream?" "No. I'm not sure.
Admiral Vorrutyer said ... something very insulting, to Lord Vorkosigan. He had
Lord Vorkosigan backed up against the wall. Prince Serg laughed. Then Vorrutyer
kissed him, full on the mouth, and Vorhalas tried to knock Vorrutyer's head
off, but Lord Vorkosigan wouldn't let him. And I don't remember after
that." "Um ... yeah,"
said Cordelia. "I wasn't there for that part, but I know there was some
really weird stuff going on in the high command at that point, as Vorrutyer and
Serg pushed their limits. So it's probably a true memory. I could ask Aral, if
you wish." "No! No. That one
doesn't feel as important, anyway. As the others." "Tell me about the
others, then." His voice fell to a
whisper. "I remember Elena. So pretty. I only have two pictures in my
head, of Elena. One, I remember Vorrutyer making me ... no, I don't want to
talk about that one." He stopped for a full minute, rocking gently,
forward and back. "The other ... we were in my cabin. She and I. She was
my wife... ." His voice faltered. "She wasn't my wife, was she."
It wasn't even a question. "No. But you know
that." "But I remember
believing she was." His hands pressed his forehead, and rubbed his neck,
hard and futilely. "She was a prisoner
of war," said Cordelia. "Her beauty drew Vorrutyer's and Serg's
attention, and they made a project of tormenting her, for no reason—not for her
military intelligence, not even for political terrorism—just for their
gratification. She was raped. But you know that, too. On some level."
"Yes," he whispered. "Taking away her
contraceptive implant and allowing—or compelling—you to impregnate her was part
of their idea of sadism. The first part. They did not, thank God, live long
enough to get to the second part." His legs had drawn up,
his long arms wrapped around them in a tight, tight ball. His breathing was
fast and shallow, panting. His face was freezer-burn white, sheened with cold
sweat. "Do I have red
rings around me now?" Cordelia asked curiously. "It's all ... kind
of pink." "And the last
picture?" "Oh, Milady."
He swallowed. "Whatever it was ... I know it must be very close to
whatever it is they most don't want me to remember." He swallowed again.
Cordelia began to understand why he hadn't touched his lunch. "Do you want to go
on? Can you go on?" "I must go on.
Milady. Captain Naismith. Because I remember you. Remember seeing you.
Stretched out on Vorrutyer's bed, all your clothes cut away, naked. You were
bleeding. I was looking up your ... What I want to know. Must know." His
arms were wrapped around his head, now, tilted toward her on his knees, his
face hollow, haunted, hungry. His blood pressure must
be fantastically high, to drive that monstrous migraine. If they went too far,
pressed this through to the last truth, might he be in danger of a stroke? An
incredible piece of psychoengineering, to program his own body to punish him
for his forbidden thoughts ... "Did I rape you,
Milady?" "Huh? No!" She
sat bolt upright, fiercely indignant. They had taken that knowledge away from
him? They'd dared take that away from him? He began to cry, if
that's what that ragged breathing, tight—screwed face, and tears leaking from
his eyes meant. Equal parts agony and joy. "Oh. Thank God." And,
"Are you sure ... ?" "Vorrutyer ordered
you to. You refused. Out of your own will, without hope of rescue or reward. It
got you in a hell of a lot of trouble, for a little while." She longed to
tell him the rest, but the state he was in now was so terrifying, it was
impossible to guess the consequences. "How long have you been remembering
this? Wondering this?" "Since I first saw
you again. This summer. When you came to marry Lord Vorkosigan." "You've been
walking around for over six months, with this in your head, not daring to
ask—?" "Yes, Milady." She sat back, horrified,
her breath trickling out between pursed lips. "Next time, don't wait so
long." Swallowing hard, he
stumbled to his feet, a big hand waving in a desperate wait-for-me gesture. He
swung his legs over the low stone wall, and found some bushes. Anxiously, she
listened to him dry-vomiting his empty stomach for several minutes. An
extremely bad attack, she judged, but finally the violent paroxysms slowed,
then stopped. He returned, wiping his lips, looking very white and not much
better, except for his eyes. A little life flickered in those eyes now, a
half-suppressed light of overwhelming relief. The light faded, as he
sat in thought. He rubbed his palms on his trouser knees, and stared at his
boots. "But I'm not less a rapist, just because you were not my victim." "That is
correct." "I can't ... trust
myself. How can you trust me? ... Do you know what's better than sex?" She wondered if she
could take one more sharp turn in this conversation without running off
screaming. You encouraged him to uncork, now you're stuck with it. "Go
on." "Killing. It feels
even better, afterwards. It shouldn't be ... such a pleasure. Lord Vorkosigan
doesn't kill like that." His eyes were narrowed, brows creased, but he was
uncurled from his ball of agony; he must be speaking generally, Vorrutyer no
longer on his mind. "It's a release of
rage, I'd guess," said Cordelia cautiously. "How did you get so much
rage, balled up inside of you? The density is palpable. People can sense
it." His hand curled, in
front of his solar plexus. "It goes back a long way. But I don't feel
angry, most of the time. It snaps out suddenly." "Even Bothari fears
Bothari," she murmured in wonder. "Yet you don't.
You're less afraid even than Lord Vorkosigan." "I see you as bound
up with him, somehow. And he's my own heart. How can I fear my own heart?" "Milady. A
bargain." "Hm?" "You tell me ...
when it's all right. To kill. And then I'll know." "I can't—look,
suppose I'm not there? When that sort of thing lands on you, there's not
usually time to stop and analyze. You have to be allowed self-defense, but you
also have to be able to discern when you're really being attacked." She
sat up, eyes widening in sudden insight. "That's why your uniform is so
important to you, isn't it? It tells you when it's all right. When you can't
tell yourself. All those rigid routines you keep to, they're to tell you you're
all right, on track." "Yes. I'm sworn to
the defense of House Vorkosigan, now. So that's all right." He nodded,
apparently reassured. By what, for God's sake? "You're asking me
to be your conscience. Make your judgments for you. But you are a whole man.
I've seen you make right choices, under the most absolute stress." His hands pressed to his
skull again, his narrow jaw clenching, and he grated out, "But I can't
remember them. Can't remember how I did it." "Oh." She felt
very small. "Well ... whatever you think I can do for you, you've got a
blood-right to it. We owe you, Aral and I. We remember why, even if you
can't." "Remember it for
me, then, Milady," he said lowly "and I'll be all right." "Believe it." CHAPTER
SEVEN Cordelia shared
breakfast one morning the following week with Aral and Piotr in a private
parlor overlooking the back garden. Aral motioned to the Count's footman, who
was serving. "Would you please
rout out Lieutenant Koudelka for me? Tell him to bring that agenda for this
morning that we were discussing." "Uh, I guess you
hadn't heard, my lord?" murmured the man. Cordelia had the impression that
his eyes were searching the room for an escape route. "Heard what? We
just came down." "Lieutenant
Koudelka is in hospital this morning." "Hospital! Good
God, why wasn't I told at once? What happened?" "We were told
Commander Illyan would be bringing a full report, my lord. The guard commander
... thought he'd wait for him." Alarm struggled with
annoyance on Vorkosigan's face. "How bad is he? It's not some ... delayed
aftereffect of the sonic grenade, is it? What happened to him?" "He was beaten up,
my lord," said the footman woodenly. Vorkosigan sat back with
a little hiss. A muscle jumped in his jaw. "You get that guard commander
in here," he growled. The footman evaporated
instantly, leaving Vorkosigan tapping a spoon nervously and impatiently on the
table. He met Cordelia's horrified eyes and produced a small false smile of
reassurance for her. Even Piotr looked startled. "Who could possibly
want to beat up Kou?" asked Cordelia wonderingly. "That's sickening.
He couldn't fight back worth a damn." Vorkosigan shook his
head. "Someone looking for a safe target, I suppose. We'll find out. Oh,
we will find out." The green—uniformed
ImpSec guard commander appeared, to stand at attention. "Sir." "For your future
information, and you may pass it on, should any accident occur to any of my key
staff members, I wish to be informed at once. Understood?" "Yes, sir. It was
quite late when word got back here, sir. And since we knew by then that they
were both going to live, Commander Illyan said I might let you sleep.
Sir." "I see."
Vorkosigan rubbed his face. "Both?" "Lieutenant
Koudelka and Sergeant Bothari, sir." "They didn't get
into a fight, did they?" asked Cordelia, now thoroughly alarmed. "Yes. Oh—not with
each other, Milady. They were set upon." Vorkosigan's face was
darkening. "You had better begin at the beginning." "Yes, sir. Um.
Lieutenant Koudelka and Sergeant Bothari went out last night. Not in uniform.
Down to that area in back of the old caravanserai." "My God, what
for?" "Um." The
guard commander glanced uncertainly at Cordelia. "Entertainment, I
believe, sir." "Entertainment?" "Yes, sir. Sergeant
Bothari goes down there about once a month, on his duty-free day, when my lord
Count is in town. It's apparently some place he's been going to for
years." "In the
caravanserai?" said Count Piotr in an unbelieving tone. "Um." The
guard commander eyed the footman in appeal. "Sergeant Bothari isn't very
particular about his entertainment, sir," the footman volunteered
uneasily. "Evidently
not!" said Piotr. Cordelia questioned
Vorkosigan with her eyebrows. "It's a very rough
area," he explained. "I wouldn't go down there myself without a
patrol at my back. Two patrols, at night. And I'd definitely wear my uniform,
though not my rank insignia ... but I believe Bothari grew up there. I imagine
it looks different to his eyes." "Why so
rough?" "It's very poor. It
was the town center during the Time of Isolation, and it hasn't been touched by
renovation yet. Minimal water, no electricity, choked with refuse ..." "Mostly
human," added Piotr tartly. "Poor?" said
Cordelia, bewildered. "No electricity? How can it be on the comm
network?" "It's not, of
course," answered Vorkosigan. "Then how can
anybody get their schooling?" "They don't." Cordelia stared. "I
don't understand. How do they get their jobs?" "A few escape to
the Service. The rest prey on each other, mostly." Vorkosigan regarded her
face uneasily. "Have you no poverty on Beta Colony?" "Poverty? Well, some
people have more money than others, of course, but ... no comconsoles?" Vorkosigan was diverted
from his interrogation. "Is not owning a comconsole the lowest standard of
living you can imagine?" he said in wonder. "It's the first
article in the constitution. 'Access to information shall not be abridged.'
" "Cordelia ... these
people barely have access to food, clothing, and shelter. They have a few rags
and cooking pots, and squat in buildings that aren't economical to repair or
tear down yet, with the wind whistling through the cracks in the walls." "No
air—conditioning?" "No heat in the
winter is a bigger problem, here." "I suppose so. You
people don't really have summer... . How do they call for help when they're
sick or hurt?" "What help?"
Vorkosigan was growing grim. "If they're sick, they either get well or
die." "Die, if we're
lucky," muttered Piotr. "Vermin." "You're not
joking." She stared back and forth between the pair of them. "That's
horrible ... why, think of all the geniuses you must be missing!" "I doubt we're
missing very many, from the caravanserai," said Piotr dryly. "Why not? They have
the same genetic complement as you," Cordelia pointed out the, to her,
obvious. The Count went rigid.
"My dear girl! They most certainly do not! My family have been Vor for
nine generations." Cordelia raised her
eyebrows. "How do you know, if you didn't have gene typing till eighty
years ago?" Both the guard commander
and the footman were acquiring peculiar stuffed expressions. The footman bit
his lip. "Besides," she
went on reasonably, "if you Vor got around half as much as those histories
I've been reading imply, ninety percent of the people on this planet must have
Vor blood by now. Who knows who your relatives are on your father's side?" Vorkosigan bit his linen
napkin absently, his eyes gone crinkly with much the same expression as the
footman, and murmured, "Cordelia, you can't ... you really can't sit at
the breakfast table and imply my ancestors were bastards. It's a mortal insult
here." Where should I sit?
"Oh. I'll never understand that, I guess. Oh, never mind. Koudelka, and
Bothari." "Quite. Go on, duty
officer." "Yes, sir. Well,
sir, they were coming back, I was told, about an hour after midnight, when they
were set on by a gang of area toughs. Evidently Lieutenant Koudelka was too
well dressed, and besides there's that walk of his, and the stick ... anyway,
he attracted attention. I don't know the details, sir, but there were four
deaths and three in the hospital this morning, in addition to the ones that got
away." Vorkosigan whistled,
very faintly, through his teeth. "What was the extent of Bothari's and
Koudelka's injuries?" "They ... I don't
have an official report, sir. Just hearsay." "Say, then." The duty officer swallowed
a little. "Sergeant Bothari has a broken arm, some broken ribs, internal
injuries, and a concussion. Lieutenant Koudelka, both legs broken, and a lot
of, uh ... shock burns." His voice trailed off. "What?" "Evidently—I
heard—their assailants had a couple of high-voltage shock sticks, and they
discovered they could get some ... peculiar effects on his prosthetic nerves
with them. After they'd broken his legs they spent ... quite a long time
working him over. That's how it was Commander Illyan's men caught up with them.
They didn't clear off in time." Cordelia pushed her
plate away and sat trembling. "Hearsay, eh? Very well. Dismissed. See that
Commander Illyan is sent to me immediately he arrives." Vorkosigan's
expression was introspective and grim. Piotr's was sourly
triumphant. "Vermin," he asserted. "You ought to burn them all
out." Vorkosigan sighed.
"Easier to start a war than finish it. Not this week, sir." Illyan attended on
Vorkosigan within the hour, in the library, with his informal verbal report.
Cordelia trailed in after them, to sit and listen. "Sure you want to
hear this?" Vorkosigan asked her quietly. She shook her head.
"Next to you, they are my best friends here. I'd rather know than
wonder." The duty officer's
synopsis proved tolerably accurate, but Illyan, who had talked to both Bothari
and Koudelka at the Imperial Military Hospital where they had been taken, had a
number of details to add, in blunt terms. His puppy-dog face looked unusually
old this morning. "Your secretary was
apparently seized with a desire to get laid," he began. "Why he
picked Bothari as a native guide, I can't imagine." "We three are the
sole survivors of the General Vorkraft," Vorkosigan replied.
"It's a bond, I suppose. Kou and Bothari always got on well, though. He
appeals to Bothari's latent fatherly instincts, maybe. And Kou's a clean-minded
boy—don't tell him I said that, he'd take it as an insult. It's good to be
reminded such people still exist. Wish he'd come to me, though." "Well, Bothari did
his best," said Illyan. "Took him to this dismal dive, which I gather
has a number of points in its favor from Bothari's point of view. It's cheap,
it's quick, and nobody talks to him. It's also far removed from Admiral Vorrutyer's
old circles. No unpleasant associations. He has a strict routine. According to
Kou, Bothari's regular woman is almost as ugly as he is. Bothari likes her, it
appears, because she never makes any noise. I don't think I want to think about
that. "Be that as it may,
Kou got mismatched with one of the other employees, who terrified him. Bothari
says he asked for the best girl for him—hardly a girl, woman, whatever—and
apparently Kou's needs were misinterpreted. Anyway, Bothari was done and
kicking his heels waiting while Kou was still trying to make polite
conversation and being offered an assortment of delights for jaded appetites
he'd never heard of before. He gave up and fled back downstairs at last, where
Bothari was by this time pretty thoroughly tanked. He usually has one drink and
leaves, it seems. "Kou, Bothari, and
this whore then got into an argument over payment, on the grounds that he'd
burned up enough time for four customers versus—most of this won't be in the
official report, all right?—she couldn't get his circuits working. Kou forked
over a partial payment—Bothari's still grumbling over how much, insofar as he
can talk at all through that mouth of his this morning—and they retreated in
disorder, a lousy time having been had by all." "The first obvious question
that arises," said Vorkosigan, "is, was the attack ordered by anyone
from that establishment?" "To the best of my
knowledge, no. I threw a cordon around the place, once we'd found it, and
questioned everyone inside under fast-penta. Scared the shit out of them all,
I'm glad to say. They're used to Count Vorbohn's municipal guards, whom they
bribe, or who blackmail them, and vice versa. We turned up a lot of information
on petty crimes, none of which was of the least interest to us—do you want me to
pass it on to the municipals, by the way?" "Hm. If they're
innocent of the attack, just file it. Bothari may want to go back there
someday. Do they know why they were questioned?" "Certainly not! I
insist my men work clean. We're here to gather information, not pass it
out." "My apologies,
Commander. I should have known. Carry on." "Well, they left
the place about an hour after midnight, on foot, and took a wrong turn
somewhere. Bothari's pretty upset about that. Thinks it's his fault, for
getting so drunk, Bothari and Koudelka both say they saw movements in the
shadows for about ten minutes before the attack. So they were stalked,
apparently, until they were manuevered into a high walled alley, and found
themselves with six in front and six behind. "Bothari pulled his
stunner and fired—got three, before he was jumped. Someone down there is richer
by a good service stunner this morning. Kou had his swordstick, but nothing
else. "They ganged up on
Bothari first. He took out two more, after he'd lost the stunner. They stunned
him, then tried to beat him to death after he was down. Kou had been using his
stick as a quarterstaff up till then, but at that point he popped the cover
off. He says now he wished he hadn't, because this murmur of 'Vor!' went up all
around, and things got really ugly. "He stabbed two,
until somebody struck the sword with a shock stick, and his hand went into
spasms. The five that were left sat on him and broke both his legs backwards at
the knees. He asked me to tell you it wasn't as painful as it sounds. He says
they broke so many circuits he had hardly any sensation. I don't know if that's
true." "It's hard to tell
with Kou," said Vorkosigan. "He's been concealing pain for so long,
it's almost second nature. Go on." "I have to jump
back a bit now. My man who was assigned to Kou followed them down into that
warren by himself. He wasn't one of the men who are familiar with the place,
supposedly, and he wasn't dressed for it—Kou had two reservations for some live
musical performance last night, and until three hours before midnight that's
where we thought he was going. My man went in there and vanished, between the
first and second hourly checks. That's what has me going this morning. Was he
murdered? Or kidnapped? Rolled and raped? Or was he a plant, a setup, a double
agent? We won't know till we find the body, or whatever. "Thirty minutes
after the missed check my people sent in another tail. But he was looking for
the first man. Kou was uncovered for three solid bloody hours last night before
my night shift supervisor came on duty and woke to the fact. Fortunately, Kou'd
spent most of that time in Bothari's old whore's retirement home. "My night shift
man, whom I commend, redirected the field agent, and put a patrol in the air to
boot. So when the field agent finally got to that revolting scene, he was able
to call a flyer down on top of it almost immediately, and drop half a dozen of
my uniformed bruisers in to break up the party. That business with the shock
sticks—It was bad, but not as bad as it might have been. Kou's assailants
evidently lacked the sort of, hm, imaginative approach that, say, the late
Admiral Vorrutyer might have had in the same situation. Or maybe they just
didn't have time to get really refined." "Thank God,"
murmured Vorkosigan. "And the deaths?" "Two were Bothari's
work, clean blows, one was Kou's—cut him across the neck—and one, I'm afraid,
was mine. The kid went into anaphylactic shock in an allergic reaction to
fast-penta. We zipped him over to ImpMil, but they couldn't get him going
again. I don't like it. They're autopsying him now, trying to find out if it
was natural or a planted defense against questioning." "And the
gang?" "Appears to be a
perfectly legitimate—if that's the word—caravanserai mutual benefit society.
According to the survivors we captured, they decided to pick on Kou because he
'walked funny.' Charming. Although Bothari wasn't exactly walking in a straight
line, either. None of the ones we captured is an agent for anybody but
themselves. I cannot speak for the dead. I supervised the questioning
personally, and will swear to it. They were quite shocked to find themselves of
interest to Imperial Security." "Anything
else?" said Vorkosigan. Illyan yawned behind his
hand, and apologized. "It's been a long night. My night shift man got me
out of bed after midnight. Good man, good judgment. No, that about wraps it up,
except for Kou's motivation for going down there in the first place. He went
all vague, and started asking for pain medication, when we came to that
subject. I was hoping you might have a suggestion, to ease my paranoias. Being
suspicious of Kou gives me a crick in the neck." He yawned again. "I do," said
Cordelia, "but for your paranoia, not for your report, all right?" He nodded. "I think he's in
love with someone. After all, you don't test something unless you're planning
to use it. Unfortunately his test was a major disaster. I expect he'll be
pretty depressed and touchy for quite some time." Vorkosigan nodded
understanding. "Any idea who?"
asked Illyan automatically. "Yes, but I don't
think it's your business. Especially if it's not going to happen." Illyan shrugged
acceptance, and left to pursue his lost sheep, the missing man who'd first been
assigned to follow Koudelka. Sergeant Bothari was
back at Vorkosigan House, though not yet back on duty, within five days, a
plastic casing on the broken arm. He volunteered no information on the brutal
affair, and discouraged curious questioners with a sour glower and noncommittal
grunts. Droushnakovi asked no
questions and offered no comments. But Cordelia saw her occasionally cast a
haunted look at the empty comconsole in the library, with its double—scrambled
links to the Imperial Residence and the General Staff Headquarters, where
Koudelka usually sat to work while at Vorkosigan House. Cordelia wondered just
how much detail of that night's events had been poured, searing as lead, into
her ears. Lieutenant Koudelka
returned to curtailed light duties the following month, apparently quite
cheerful and unaffected by his ordeal. But in his own way he was as
uninformative as Bothari. Questioning Bothari had been like questioning a wall.
Questioning Koudelka was like talking to a stream; one got back babble, or
little eddies of jokes, or anecdotes that pulled the current of the discussion
inexorably away from the original subject. Cordelia responded to his sunniness
with automatic good grace, playing along with his obvious desire to slide over
the affair as lightly as possible. Inwardly she was far more doubtful. Her own mood was not the
best. Her imagination returned again and again to the assassination scare of
six weeks ago, dwelling uncomfortably on the chances that had almost taken
Vorkosigan from her. Only when he was with her was she completely at ease, and
he was gone more and more now. Something was brewing at Imperial HQ; he had
been gone four times to all-night sessions, and had taken a trip without her,
some flying inspection of military affairs, of which he gave her no details and
from which he returned white-tired around the eyes. He came in and out at odd
hours. The flow of military and political gossip and chitchat with which he was
wont to entertain her at meals, or undressing for bed, dried up to an
uncommunicative silence, though he seemed to need her presence no less. Where would she be
without him? A pregnant widow, without family or friends, bearing a child
already a focal point of dynastic paranoias, inheritor of a legacy of violence.
Could she get off-planet? And where would she go if she could? Would Beta
Colony ever let her come back? Even the autumn rain,
and the fat lingering greenness of the city parks, began to fail to please her.
Oh, for a breath of really dry desert air, the familiar alkali tang, the
endless flat distances. Would her son ever know what a real desert was? The
horizons here, crowded close with buildings and vegetation, seemed almost to
rise around her like a huge wall at times. On really bad days the wall seemed
to topple inward. She was holed up in the
library one rainy afternoon, curled on an old high-backed sofa, reading, for
the third time, a page in an old volume from the Count's shelves. The book was
a relic of the printer's art from the Time of Isolation. The English in which
it was written was printed in a mutant variation of the Cyrillic alphabet, all
forty-six characters of it, once used for all tongues on Barrayar. Her mind
seemed unusually mushy and unresponsive to it today. She turned out the light
and rested her eyes a few minutes. With relief, she observed Lieutenant
Koudelka enter the library and seat himself, stiffly and carefully, at the
comconsole. I shan't interrupt him; he at least has real work to do, she
thought, not yet returning to her page, but still comforted by his unconscious
company. He worked only for a
moment or two, then shut down the machine with a sigh, staring abstractedly
into the empty carved fireplace that was the room's original centerpiece, still
not noticing her. So, I'm not the only one who can't concentrate. Maybe it's
this strange grey weather. It does seem to have a depressing effect on
people... Picking up his
swordstick, he ran a hand down the smooth length of its casing. He clicked it
open, holding it firmly and releasing the spring silently and slowly. He sighted
along the length of the gleaming blade, which almost seemed to glow with a
light of its own in the shadowed room, and angled it, as if meditating on its
pattern and fine workmanship. He then turned it end for end, point over his
left shoulder and hilt away from him. He wrapped a handkerchief around the
blade for a hold, and pressed it, very lightly, against the side of his neck
over the area of the carotid artery. The expression on his face was distant and
thoughtful, his grip on the blade as light as a lover's. His hand tightened
suddenly. Her indrawn breath, the
first half of a sob, startled him from his reverie. He looked up to see her for
the first time; his lips thinned and his face turned a dusky red. He swung the
sword down. It left a white line on his neck, like part of a necklace, with a
few ruby drops of blood welling along it. "I ... didn't see
you, Milady," he said hoarsely. "I ... don't mind me. Just fooling
around, you know." They stared at each
other in silence. Her own words broke from her lips against her will. "I
hate this place! I'm afraid all the time, now." She turned her face into
the high side of the sofa, and, to her own horror, began to cry. Stop it! Not
in front of Kou of all people! The man has enough real troubles without you
dumping your imaginary ones on him. But she couldn't stop. He levered himself up
and limped over to her couch, looking worried. Tentatively, he seated himself
beside her. "Um ..." he
began. "Don't cry, Milady. I was just fooling around, really." He
patted her clumsily on the shoulder. "Garbage," she
choked back at him. "You scare the hell out of me." On impulse she
transferred her tear-smeared face from the cold silken fabric of the sofa to
the warm roughness of the shoulder of his green uniform. It tore a like honesty
from him. "You can't imagine
what it's like," he whispered fiercely. "They pity me, you know? Even
he does." A jerk of his head in no particular direction indicated
Vorkosigan. "It's a hundred times worse than the scorn. And it's going to go
on forever." She shook her head,
devoid of answer in the face of this undoubted truth. "I hate this place,
too," he continued. "Just as much as it hates me. More, some days. So
you see, you're not alone." "So many people
trying to kill him," she whispered back, despising herself for her
weakness. "Total strangers ... one of them is bound to succeed in the end.
I think about it all the time, now." Would it be a bomb? Some poison?
Plasma arc, burning away Aral's face, leaving no lips even to kiss goodbye? Koudelka's attention was
drawn achingly from his pain to hers, brows drawing quizzically together. "Oh, Kou," she
went on, looking down blindly into his lap and stroking his sleeve. "No
matter how much it hurts, don't do it to him. He loves you ... you're like a
son to him, just the sort of son he always wanted. That," she nodded
toward the sword laid on the couch, shinier than silk, "would cut out his
heart. This place pours craziness on him every day, and demands he give back
justice. He can't do it except with a whole heart. Or he must eventually start
giving back the craziness, like every one of his predecessors. And," she
added in a burst of uncontrollable illogic, "it's so damn wet here! It
won't be my fault if my son is born with gills!" His arms encircled her
in a kindly hug. "Are you ... afraid of the childbirth?" he inquired,
with a gentle and unexpected perceptiveness. Cordelia went still,
suddenly face-to-face with her tightly suppressed fears. "I don't trust
your doctors," she admitted shakily. He smiled in deep irony.
"I can't blame you." A laugh puffed from her,
and she hugged him back, around the chest, and raised her hand to wipe away the
tiny drops of blood from the side of his neck. "When you love someone,
it's like your skin covers theirs. Every hurt is doubled. And I do love you so,
Kou. I wish you'd let me help you." "Therapy,
Cordelia?" Vorkosigan's voice was cold, and cut like a stinging spray of
rattling hail. She looked up, surprised, to see him standing before them, his
face frozen as his voice. "I realize you have a great deal of Betan ...
expertise, in such matters, but I beg you will leave the project to someone
else." Koudelka turned red, and
recoiled from her. "Sir," he began, and trailed off, as startled as
Cordelia by the icy anger in Vorkosigan's eyes. Vorkosigan's gaze flicked over
him, and they both clamped their jaws shut. Cordelia drew in a very
deep breath for a retort, but released it only as a furious "Oh!" at
Vorkosigan's back as he wheeled and stalked out, spine stiff as Kou's
swordblade. Koudelka, still red,
folded into himself, and using his sword as a prop levered himself to his feet,
his breath too rapid. "Milady. I beg your pardon." The words seemed
quite without meaning. "Kou," said
Cordelia, "you know he didn't mean that hateful thing. He spoke without
thinking. I'm sure he doesn't, doesn't ..." "Yes, I
realize," returned Koudelka, his eyes blank and hard. "I am
universally known to be quite harmless to any man's marriage, I believe. But if
you will excuse me—Milady—I do have some work to do. Of a sort." "Oh!" Cordelia
didn't know if she was more furious with Vorkosigan, Koudelka, or herself. She
steamed to her feet and left the room, throwing her words back over her
shoulder. "Damn all Barrayarans to hell anyway!" Droushnakovi appeared in
her path, with a timid, "Milady?" "And you, you
useless ... frill," snarled Cordelia, her rage escaping helplessly in all
directions now. "Why can't you manage your own affairs? You Barrayaran
women seem to expect your lives to be handed to you on a platter. It doesn't
work that way!" The girl stepped back a
pace, bewildered. Cordelia contained her seething outrage, and asked more
sensibly, "Which way did Aral go?" "Why ... upstairs,
I believe, Milady." A little of her old and
battered humor came to her rescue then. "Two steps at a time, by
chance?" "Um ... three,
actually," Drou replied faintly. "I suppose I'd
better go talk to him," said Cordelia, running her hands through her hair
and wondering if tearing it out would have any practical benefit. "Son of
a bitch." She did not know herself if that was expletive or description.
And to think I never used to swear. She trudged after him,
her anger draining with her energy as she climbed the stairs. This pregnancy
business sure slows you down. She passed a duty guard in the corridor.
"Lord Vorkosigan go this way?" she asked him. "To his rooms,
Milady," he replied, and stared curiously after her. Great. Love it, she
thought savagely. The old newlyweds' first real fight will have plenty of built-in
audience. These old walls are not soundproof. I wonder if I can keep my voice
down? Aral's no problem; when he gets mad he whispers. She entered their
bedroom, to find him seated on the side of the bed, removing uniform jacket and
boots with violent, jerky gestures. He looked up, and they glared at each
other. Cordelia opened fire first, thinking, Let's get this over with. "That remark you
made in front of Kou was totally out of line." "What, I walk in to
find my wife ... cuddling, with one of my officers, and you expect me to make
polite conversation about the weather?" he bit back. "You know it was
nothing of the sort." "Fine. Suppose it
hadn't been me? Suppose it had been one of the duty guards, or my father. How
would you have explained it then? You know what they think of Betans. They'd
jump on it, and the rumors would never be stopped. Next thing I knew, it would
be coming back at me as political chaff. Every enemy I have out there is just
waiting for a weak spot to pounce on. They'd love one like that." "How the devil did
we get onto your damned politics? I'm talking about a friend. I doubt you could
have come up with a more wounding remark if you'd funded a study project. That
was foul, Aral! What's the matter with you, anyway?" "I don't know."
He slowed, and rubbed his face tiredly. "It's the damn job, I expect. I
don't mean to spill it on you." Cordelia suspected that
was as near as she could expect of an admission of his being in the wrong, and
accepted it with a little nod, letting her own rage evaporate. She then
remembered why the rage had felt so good, for the vacuum it left filled back up
with fear. "Yes, well ...just
how much do you fancy having to break down his door one of these
mornings?" Vorkosigan frowned at
her, going still. "Do you ... have some reason to believe's he's thinking
along suicidal lines? He seemed quite content to me." "He would—to
you." Cordelia let the words hang in the air a moment, for emphasis.
"I think he's about that close." She held up thumb and forefinger a bare
millimeter apart. The finger still had a smear of blood on it, and it caught
her eye in unhappy fascination. "He was playing around with that blasted
swordstick. I wish I'd never given it to him. I don't think I could bear it if
he used it to cut his own throat. That seemed to be what he had in mind." "Oh."
Vorkosigan looked smaller, somehow, without his glittering military jacket,
without his anger. He held out his hand to her, and she took it and sat beside
him. "So if you're
having visions of, of playing King Arthur In our Lancelot and Guinevere in that
pig-head of yours, forget it. It won't wash." He laughed a little at
that. "My visions were closer to home, I'm afraid, and considerably more
sordid. Just an old bad dream." "Yeah, I ... guess
it would hit a nerve, at that." She wondered if the ghost of his first
wife ever hovered by him, breathing cold death in his ear, as Vorrutyer's ghost
sometimes did by her. He looked deathly enough. "But I'm Cordelia, remember?
Not ... anybody else." He leaned his forehead
against hers. "Forgive me, dear Captain. I'm just an ugly scared old man,
and growing older and uglier and more paranoid every day." "You, too?"
She rested in his arms. "I take exception to the old and ugly part,
though. Pigheaded did not refer to your exterior appearance." "Thank you—I
think." It pleased her to amuse
him even that little. "It is the job, isn't it?" she said. "Can
you talk about it at all?" His lips compressed.
"In confidence—although that seems to be your natural state, I don't know
why I bother to emphasize it—it looks like we could have another war on our
hands before the end of the year. And we're not nearly well enough recovered
for it, after Escobar." "What! I thought
the war party was half-paralyzed." "Ours is. The
Cetagandans' is still in good working order, however. Intelligence indicates
they were planning to use the political chaos here following Ezar Vorbarra's
death to cover a move on those disputed wormhole jump points. Instead they got
me, and—well, I can hardly call it stability. Dynamic equilibrium, at best.
Anyway, not the kind of disruption they were counting on. Hence that little
incident with the sonic grenade. Negri and Illyan are now seventy percent sure
it was Cetagandan work." "Will they ... try again?" "Almost certainly.
But with or without me, consensus in the Staff is that they'll be probing in
force before the end of the year. And if we're weak—they'll just keep right on
moving until they're stopped." "No wonder you've
been ... abstracted." "Is that the polite
term for it? But no. I've known about the Cetagandans for some time. Something
else came up today, after the Council session. A private audience. Count
Vorhalas came to see me, to beg a favor." "I'd think it would
be your pleasure, to do a favor for Rulf Vorhalas's brother. I gather
not?" He shook his head
unhappily. "The Count's youngest son, who is a hotheaded young idiot of
eighteen who should have been sent to military school—you met him at the
Council confirmation, as I recall—" "Lord Carl?" "Yes. He got into a
drunken fight at a party last night." "A universal
tradition. Such things happen even on Beta Colony." "Quite. But they
stepped outside to settle their affair armed, each one, with a pair of dull swords
that had been part of a wall decoration, and a couple of kitchen knives. That
made it, technically, a duel with the two swords." "Uh—oh. Was anyone
hurt?" "Unfortunately,
yes. More or less by accident, I gather, in a scrambling fall, the Count's son
managed to put his sword through his friend's stomach and sever his abdominal
aorta. He bled to death almost immediately. By the time the bystanders had
gathered their wits sufficiently to get a medical team up there, it was much
too late." "Dear God." "It was a duel,
Cordelia. It began as a mockery, but it ended as the real thing. And the
penalties for dueling apply." He rose, and paced the room, stopping by the
window and staring out into the rain. "His father came to ask me for an
Imperial pardon. Or, if I could not grant that, to see if I could get the
charges changed to simple murder. If it were tried as a simple murder, the boy
could plead self-defense, and possibly end up with a mere prison term." "That seems ...
fair enough, I suppose." "Yes." He
paced again. "A favor for a friend. Or ... the first crack in the door to
let that hell-bred custom back into our society. What happens when the next
case Is brought before me, and the next, and the next? Where do I begin drawing
the line? What if the next case involves some political enemy of mine, and not
a member of my own party? Shall all the deaths that went into stamping this
thing out be made void? I remember dueling, and what things were like back
then. And worse—an entry point for government by friends, then cliques. Say
what you will about Ezar Vorbarra, in thirty years of ruthless labor he
transformed the government from a Vor-class club into some semblance, however
shaky, of a rule of law, one law for everyone." "I begin to see the
problem." "And me—me, of all
men, to have to make that decision! Who should have been publicly executed
twenty-two years ago for the selfsame crime!" He paused before her.
"The story about last night is all over town, in various forms, this
morning. It will be all over everywhere in a few days. I had the news service
kill it, temporarily, but that was mere spitting in the wind. It's too late for
a coverup, even if I wanted to do one. So what shall I betray this day? A
friend? Or Ezar Vorbarra's trust? There is no doubt which decision he would
have made." He sat back beside her,
and took her in his arms. "And this is only the beginning. Every month,
every week, there will be some other impossible thing. What's going to be left
of me after fifteen years of this? A husk, like that thing we buried three
months ago, praying with his last breath that there may be no God? Or a
power-corrupted monstrosity, like his son, so infected it could only be
sterilized by plasma arc? Or something even worse?" His naked agony
terrified her. She held him tightly in return. "I don't know. I don't
know. But somebody ... somebody has been making these kinds of decisions right
along, while we went along blissfully unconscious, taking the world as given.
And they were only human, too. No better, no worse than you." "Frightening
thought." She sighed. "You
can't choose between evil and evil, in the dark, by logic. You can only cling
to some safety line of principle. I can't make your decision. But whatever
principles you choose now are going to be your safety lines, to carry you
forward. And for the sake of your people, they're going to have to be
consistent ones." He rested in her arms.
"I know. There wasn't really a question, about the decision. I was just
... kicking a bit, going down." He disengaged himself, and stood again.
"Dear Captain. If I'm still sane, fifteen years from now, I believe it
will be your doing." She looked up at him.
"So what decision is it?" The pain in his eyes
gave her the answer. "Oh, no," she said involuntarily, then bit off
further words. And I was trying to speak so wisely. I didn't mean this. "Don't you
know?" he said gently, resigned. "Ezar's way is the only way that can
work, here. It's true after all. He does rule from his grave." He headed
for their bathroom, to wash and change clothes. "But you're not
him," she whispered to the empty room. "Can't you find a way of your
own?" CHAPTER
EIGHT Vorkosigan attended Carl
Vorhalas's public execution three weeks later. "Are you required
to go?" Cordelia asked him that morning, as he dressed, cold and
withdrawn. "I don't have to go, do I?" "God, no, of course
not. I don't have to go, officially, except ... I have to go. You can see why,
surely." "Not ... really,
except as a form of self-punishment. I'm not sure that's a luxury you can
afford, in your line of work." "I must go. A dog
returns to its vomit, doesn't it? His parents will be there, do you know? And
his brother." "What a barbaric
custom." "Well, we could
treat crime as a disease, like you Betans. You know what that's like. At least
we kill a man cleanly, all at once, instead of in bits over years. ... I don't
know." "How will they ...
do it?" "Beheading. It's
supposed to be almost painless." "How do they
know?" His laugh was totally
without humor. "A very cogent question." He did not embrace her
when he left. He returned a bare two hours later, silent, to shake his head at
a tentative offer of lunch, cancel an afternoon appointment, and withdraw to
Count Piotr's library and sit, not-reading a book-viewer. Cordelia joined him
there after a while, resting on the couch, and waited patiently for him to come
back to her from whatever distant country of the mind he dwelt in. "The boy was going
to be brave," he said after an hour's silence. "You could see that he
had every gesture planned out in advance. But nobody else followed the script.
His mother broke him down... . And to top it the damned executioner missed his
stroke. Had to take three cuts, to get the head off." "Sounds like
Sergeant Bothari did better with a pocketknife." Vorrutyer had been
haunting her more than usual that morning, scarletly. "It lacked nothing
for perfect hideousness. His mother cursed me, too. Until Evon and Count
Vorhalas took her away." The dead-expressioned voice escaped him then.
"Oh, Cordelia! It can't have been the right decision! And yet ... and yet
... no other one was possible. Was it?" He came to her then, and
held her in silence. He seemed very close to weeping, and it almost frightened
her more that he did not. The tension eventually drained out of him. "I suppose I'd
better pull myself together and go change. Vortala has a meeting scheduled with
the Minister of Agriculture that's too important to miss, and after that
there's the general staff... ."By the time he left his usual
self-possession had returned. That night he lay long
awake beside her. His eyes were closed, but she could tell from his breathing
it was pretense. She could not dredge up one word of comfort that did not seem
inane to her, so kept silence with him through the watches of the night. Rain
began outside, a steady drizzle. He spoke once. "I've watched men
die before. Ordered executions, ordered men into battle, chosen this one over
that one, committed three sheer murders and but for the grace of God and
Sergeant Bothari would have committed a fourth ... I don't know why this one
should hit like a wall. It's stopped me, Cordelia. And I dare not stop, or
we'll all fall together. Got to keep it in the air somehow." She awoke in the dark to
a tinkling crash and a soft report, and drew in her breath with a start.
Acridity seared her lungs, mouth, nostrils, eyes. A gut-wrenching undertaste
pumped her stomach into her throat. Beside her, Vorkosigan snapped from sleep
with an oath. "Soltoxin gas
grenade! Don't breathe, Cordelia!" Emphasizing his shout, he shoved a
pillow over her face, his hot strong arms encircling her and dragging her from
the bed. She found her feet and lost her stomach at the same moment, stumbling
into the hall, and he slammed the bedroom door shut behind them. Running footsteps shook
the floor. Vorkosigan cried, "Get back! Soltoxin gas! Clear the floor!
Call Illyan!" before he too doubled over, coughing and retching. Other
hands bundled them both toward the stairs. She could scarcely see through her
madly watering eyes. Between spasms
Vorkosigan gasped, "They'll have the antidote ... Imperial Residence ...
closer than ImpMil ... get Illyan at once. He'll know. Into the shower—where's
Milady's woman? Get a maid. ..." Within moments she was
dumped into a downstairs shower, Vorkosigan with her. He was shaking and barely
able to stand, but still trying to help her. "Start washing it off your
skin, and keep washing. Don't stop. Keep the water cool." "You, too, then.
What was that crap?" She coughed again, in the spray of the water, and
they exchanged help with the soap. "Wash out your
mouth, too... . Soltoxin. It's been fifteen, sixteen years since I last smelled
that stink, but you never forget it. It's a poison gas. Military. Should be
strictly controlled. How the hell anyone got hold of some ... Damn Security!
They'll be flapping around like headless chickens tomorrow ... too late."
His face was greenish-white beneath the night's beard stubble. "I don't feel too
bad now," said Cordelia. "Nausea's passing off. I take it we missed
the full dose?" "No. It just acts
slowly. Doesn't take much at all to do you. It mostly affects soft tissue—lungs
will be jelly in an hour, if the antidote doesn't get here soon." The growing fear that
pounded in her gut, heart, and mind half-clotted her words. "Does it cross
the placental barrier?" He was silent for too
long before he said, "I'm not sure. Have to ask the doctor. I've only seen
the effects on young men." Another spasm of deep coughing seized him, that
went on and on. One of Count Piotr's
serving women arrived, disheveled and frightened, to help Cordelia and the
terrified young guard who had been assisting them. Another guard came in to report,
raising his voice over the running water. "We reached the Residence, sir.
They have some people on the way." Cordelia's own throat,
bronchia, and lungs were beginning to secrete foul—tasting phlegm, and she
coughed and spat. "Anyone see Drou?" "I think she took
out after the assassins, Milady." "Not her job. When
an alarm goes up, she's supposed to run to Cordelia," growled Vorkosigan.
The talking triggered more coughing. "She was
downstairs, sir, at the time the attack took place, with Lieutenant Koudelka.
They both went out the back door." "Dammit,"
Vorkosigan muttered, "not his job either." His effort was punished by
another coughing jag. "They catch anybody?" "I think so, sir.
There was some kind of uproar at the back of the garden, by the wall." They stood under the
water for a few more minutes, until the guard reported back. "The doctor
from the Residence is here, sir." The maid wrapped
Cordelia in a robe, and Vorkosigan put on a towel, growling to the guard,
"Go find me some clothes, boy." His voice rattled like gravel. A middle-aged man, his
hair standing up stiffly, wearing trousers, pajama tops, and bedroom slippers,
was offloading equipment in the guest bedroom when they came out. He took a
pressurized canister from his bag and fitted a breathing mask to it, glancing
at Cordelia's rounding abdomen and then at Vorkosigan. "My lord. Are you
certain of the identification of the poison?" "Unfortunately,
yes. It was soltoxin." The doctor bowed his
head. "I am sorry, Milady." "Is it going to
hurt my ..." She choked on the mucus. "Just shut up and
give it to her," snarled Vorkosigan. The doctor fitted the
mask over her nose and mouth. "Breathe deeply. Inhale ... exhale. Keep
exhaling. Now draw in. Hold it... ." The antidote gas had a
greenish taste, cooler, but nearly as nauseating as the original poison. Her
stomach heaved, but had nothing left in it to reject. She watched Vorkosigan
over the mask, watching her, and tried to smile reassuringly. It must be
reaction catching up with him; he seemed greyer, more distressed, with each
breath she took. She was certain he had taken in a larger dose than she, and
pushed the mask away to say, "Isn't it about your turn?" The doctor pressed it
back, saying, "One more breath, Milady, to be sure." She inhaled
deeply, and the doctor transferred the mask to Vorkosigan. He seemed to need no
instruction in the procedure. "How many minutes
since the exposure?" asked the doctor anxiously. "I'm not sure. Did
anyone note the time? You, uh ..." She had forgotten the young guard's
name. "About fifteen or
twenty minutes, Milady, I think." The doctor relaxed
measurably. "It should be all right, then. You'll both be in hospital for
a few days. I'll arrange for medical transport. Was anyone else exposed?"
he asked the guard. "Doctor,
wait." He had repossessed canister and mask, and was making for the door.
"What will that ... soltoxin do to my baby?" He did not meet her
eyes. "No one knows. No one has ever survived exposure without an
immediate antidote treatment." Cordelia could feel her
heart beating. "But given the treatment ..." She did not like his
look of pity, and turned to Vorkosigan. "Is that—" but was stopped
cold by his expression, a leaden greyness lit from beneath by pain and growing
anger, a stranger's face with a lover's eyes, meeting her eyes at last. "Tell her about
it," he whispered to the doctor. "I can't." "Need we
distress—" "Now. Get it over
with." His voice cracked and croaked. "The problem is the
antidote, Milady," said the doctor reluctantly. "It's a violent teratogen.
Destroys bone development in the growing fetus. Your bones are grown, so it
won't affect you, except for an increased tendency to arthritic-type
breakdowns, which can be treated ... if and when they arise... ." He
trailed off as she closed her eyes, shutting him out. "I must see that
hall guard," he added. "Go, go,"
replied Vorkosigan, releasing him. He maneuvered out the door past the guard
arriving with Vorkosigan's clothes. She opened her eyes to
Vorkosigan, and they stared at each other. "The look on your
face ..." he whispered. "It's not ... Weep. Rage! Do something!"
His voice rose to hoarseness. "Hate me at least!" "I can't," she
whispered back, "feel anything yet. Tomorrow, maybe." Every breath
was fire. With a muttered curse,
he flung on the clothes, a set of undress greens. "I can do
something." It was the stranger's
face, possessing his. Words echoed hollowly in her memory, If Death wore a
dress uniform He would look just like that. "Where are you
going?" "Going to see what
Koudelka caught." She followed him through the door. "You stay
here," he ordered. "No." He glared back at her,
and she brushed the glare away with an equally savage gesture, as if striking
down a sword thrust. "I'm going with you." "Come on,
then." He turned jerkily, and made for the stairs to the first floor, rage
rigid in his backbone. "You will
not," she murmured fiercely, for his ear alone, "murder anyone in
front of me." "Will I not?"
he whispered back. "Will—I—not?" His steps were hard, bare feet
jarring on the stone stairs. The large entry hall was
in chaos, filled with their guards, men in the Counts livery, medics. A man, or
a body, Cordelia could not tell which, in the black fatigue uniform of the
night guards, was laid out on the tessalated pavement, a medic at his head.
Both were soaked from the rain, and smeared with mud. Bloodstained water pooled
beneath them, and the medic's bootsoles squeaked in it. Commander Illyan, beads
of water gleaming in his hair from the foggy drizzle, was just coming in the
front door with an aide, saying, "Let me know as soon as the techs get
here with the kirilian detector. Meantime keep everyone off that wall and out
of the alley. My lord!" he cried when he saw Vorkosigan. "Thank God
you're all right!" Vorkosigan growled in
his throat, wordlessly. A knot of men surrounded the prisoner, who was leaning
face to the wall, one hand over his head and the other held stiffly to his side
at an odd angle. Droushnakovi stood near, wearing a wet shift. A wicked-looking
metal crossbow dangled gleaming from her hand, evidently the weapon that had
been used to fire the gas grenade through their window. She bore a livid mark
on her face, and stanched a nosebleed with her other hand. Blood stained her
nightgown here and there. Koudelka was there, too, leaning on his sword, one
leg dragging. He wore a wet and muddy uniform and bedroom slippers, and a sour
look on his face. "I'd have had
him," he was snapping, evidently continuing an ongoing argument, "if
you hadn't come running up and shouting at me—" "Oh, really!"
Droushnakovi snapped back. "Well, pardon me, but I don't see it that way.
Seems to me he had you, laid out flat on the ground. If I hadn't seen his legs
going up the wall—" "Stuff it! It's
Lord Vorkosigan!" hissed another guard. The knot of men turned, to step
back before his face. "How did he get
in?" began Vorkosigan, and stopped. The man was wearing the black fatigues
of the Service. "Surely not one of your men, Illyan!" His voice
grated, metal on stone. "My lord, we've got
to have him alive, to question him," said Illyan uneasily at Vorkosigan's
shoulder, half-hypnotized by the same look that had made the guards recoil.
"There may be more to the conspiracy. You can't ..." The prisoner turned,
then, to face his captors. A guard started forward to shove him back into
position against the wall, but Vorkosigan motioned him away. Cordelia could not
see Vorkosigan's face, standing behind him in that moment, but his shoulders
lost their murderous tension, and the rage drained out of his backbone, leaving
only a gutter-smear of pain. Above the insignialess black collar was the
ravaged face of Evon Vorhalas. "Oh, not both of
them," breathed Cordelia. Hatred hastened the
rhythm of Vorhalas's breathing as he glared at his intended victim. "You
bastard. You snake-cold bastard. Sitting there cold as stone while they hacked
off his head. Did you feel a thing? Or did you enjoy it, my Lord Regent? I
swore I'd get you then." There was a long
silence, then Vorkosigan leaned close to him, one arm extended past his head
for support against the wall. He whispered hoarsely, "You missed me,
Evon." Vorhalas spat in his
face, spittle bloody from his injured mouth. Vorkosigan made no move to wipe it
away. "You missed my wife," he went on in a slow soft cadence.
"But you got my son. Did you dream of sweet revenge? You have it. Look at
her eyes, Evon. A man could drown in those sea-grey eyes. I'll be looking at
them every day for the rest of my life. So eat vengeance, Evon. Drink it.
Fondle it. Wrap it round you in the night watch. It's all yours. I will it all
to you. For myself, I've gorged it to the gagging point, and have lost my
stomach for it." Vorhalas looked up,
then, for the first time, past him to Cordelia. She thought of the child in her
belly, his delicate girdering of new cartilagenous bones perhaps even now
beginning to rot, twist, slough, but could not hate Vorhalas, although she
tried to for a moment. She couldn't even find him baffling. She had a sense, as
of a second sight, that she could see right through his wounded spirit the way
doctors saw through a wounded body with their diagnostic viewers. Every twist
and tear and emotional abrasion, every young cancer of resentment growing from
them, and above all the great gash of his brother's death seemed red-lined in
her mind's eye. "He didn't enjoy
it, Evon," she said. "What would you have had from him? Do you even
know?" "A little human
pity," he snarled. "He could have saved Carl. Even then he could
have. I thought at first that was why he had come." "Oh, God,"
said Vorkosigan. He looked sick at the flashing vision of the rise and fall of
hopes these words conjured. "I don't play theater with lives, Evon!" Vorhalas held his hatred
like a shield before him. "Go to hell." Vorkosigan sighed, and
pushed away from the wall. The doctor was lingering to chivvy them to the
waiting vehicle for the trip to the Imperial Military Hospital. "Take him
away, Illyan," said Vorkosigan wearily. "Wait," said
Cordelia. "I need to know—I need to ask him something." Vorhalas eyed her
sullenly. "Was this the
result you intended? I mean, when you chose that particular weapon? That
specific poison?" He looked away from her,
speaking to the far wall. "It was what I could grab, going through the
armory. I didn't think you could identify it, and get the antidote all the way
from ImpMil in time... ." "You relieve me of
a burden," she whispered. "The antidote came
from the Imperial Residence," Vorkosigan explained. "A quarter of the
distance. The Emperor's infirmary there has everything. As for identification
... I was there, at the destruction of the Karian mutiny. Just about your age,
I think, or a little younger. The smell brought it all back, just now. Boys
coughing out their lungs in red blobs... ." He seemed to shrink into himself,
into the past. "I didn't intend
your death particularly. You were just in the way, between me and him."
Vorhalas gestured blindly at her swollen torso. "It wasn't the result I
intended. I meant to kill him. I didn't even know for sure that you shared the
same room at night." He was looking everywhere, now, except her face.
"I never thought about killing your ..." "Look at me,"
she croaked, "and say the word out loud." "Baby," he
whispered, and burst into sudden, shocking sobs. Vorkosigan stepped back,
beside her. "Wish you hadn't done that," he whispered. "Reminds
me of his brother. Why am I death to that family?" "Still want him to
eat vengeance?" He leaned his forehead
on her shoulder, briefly. "Not even that. You empty us all out, dear
Captain. But, oh ..." His hand reached out as if to cup her belly, then
drew back in consciousness of their ring of silent watchers. He straightened.
"Bring me a full report in the morning, Illyan," he said, "at
the hospital." He took her by the arm
as they turned to follow the doctor. She could not tell if it was to support
her or himself. She was surrounded by
helpers at the Imperial Military Hospital complex, carried along as on a river.
Doctors, nurses, corpsmen, guards. Aral was separated from her at the door, and
it made her uneasy and alone in the crowd. She said very little to them, empty
courtesies, automatic as levers. She wished for shock to take her
consciousness, numbness, reality—denying madness, hallucinations, anything.
Instead she just felt tired. The baby was moving
within her, flutters, kneading turns; evidently the teratogenic antidote was a
very slow-acting poison. They were still granted a little time together, it
seemed, and she loved him through her skin, her fingertips moving in a slow
massage over her abdomen. Welcome, my son, to Barrayar, the abode of cannibals;
this place didn't even wait the usual eighteen or twenty years to eat you.
Ravenous planet. She was bedded down in a
luxurious private room in a VIP wing, hastily cleared for their exclusive use.
She was relieved to discover Vorkosigan had been ensconced just across the
hall. Dressed already in green military-issue pajamas, he came promptly over to
see her tucked into bed. She managed a small smile for him, but did not attempt
to sit up. The force of gravity was pulling her down into the center of the
world. Only the rigidity of the bed, the building, the planets crust, held her
up against it, not her will at all. He was trailed by an
anxious corpsman, saying, "Remember, sir, try not to talk so much, till
after the doctor's had a chance to give your throat the irrigation
treatment." The grey light of dawn
was making the windows pale. He sat on the edge of the bed and took her hand,
rubbing it. "You're cold, dear Captain," he whispered hoarsely. She
nodded. Her chest ached, her throat was raw, and her sinuses burned. "I should never
have let them talk me into taking the job," he went on. "So sorry
..." "I talked you into
it, too. You tried to warn me. Not your fault. It seemed right for you. Is
right." He shook his head.
"Don't talk. Makes scar tissue on the vocal cords." She gave vent to a
joyless "Ha!" and laid a finger across his lips as he started to
speak again. He nodded, resigned, and they remained looking at each other for a
time. He pushed her tangled hair back gently from her face, and she captured
the broad hand to hold against her cheek for comfort, until he was hunted out
by a posse of doctors and technicians and driven off for a treatment.
"We'll be in to see you shortly, Milady," their chieftain promised
ominously. They returned after a
while, to make her gargle a nasty pink fluid, and breathe into a machine, then
rumbled out again. A female nurse brought her breakfast, which she did not
touch. Then a committee of
grim-faced doctors entered her room. The one who had come from the Imperial
Residence in the night was now smartly groomed and neatly dressed in civilian
clothes. Her own personal physician was flanked by a younger, black-browed man
in Service greens with captain's tabs on his collar. She gazed at their three
faces and thought of Cerberus. Her man introduced the
stranger. "This is Captain Vaagen, of the Imperial Military Hospital's
research facility. He's our resident expert on military poisons." "Inventing them, or
cleaning up after them, Captain?" Cordelia asked. "Both,
Milady." He stood at a sort of aggressive parade rest. Her own man had the look
about his eyes of someone who had drawn the short straw, although his lips
smiled. "My Lord Regent has asked me to inform you of the schedule of
treatments, and so on. I'm afraid," he cleared his throat, "that it
would be best if we scheduled the abortion promptly. It is already unusually
late in your pregnancy for it, and it would be as well for your recovery to
relieve you of the physiological strain as soon as possible." "Is there nothing
that can be done?" she asked hopelessly, already knowing the answer from
their faces. "I'm afraid
not," said her man sadly. The man from the Imperial Residence nodded
confirmation. "I ran a literature
search," said the captain unexpectedly, staring out the window, "and
there was that calcium experiment. True, the results they got weren't
particularly heartening—" "I thought we'd
agreed not to bring that up," glared the Residence man. "Vaagen, that's
cruel," said her own man. "You're just raising false hopes. You can't
make the Regent's wife into one of your hapless experimental animals for a lot
of untried shots in the dark. You have your permission from the Regent for the
autopsy—leave it at that." Her world turned
right-side-up again in a second, as she looked at the face of the man with
ideas. She knew the type; half-right, half-cocked, half-successful, flitting
from one monomania to another like a bee pollinating flowers, gathering little
fruit but leaving seeds behind. She was nothing to him, personally, but the raw
material for a monograph. The risks she took did not appall his imagination,
she was not a person but a disease state. She smiled upon him, slowly, wildly,
knowing him then for her ally in the enemy camp. "How do you do, Dr.
Vaagen? How would you like to write the paper of a lifetime?" The Residence man barked
a laugh. "She's got your number, Vaagen." He smiled back,
astonished to be so instantly understood. "You realize, I can't guarantee
any results... ." "Results!"
interrupted her man. "My God, you'd better let her know what your idea of
results is. Or show her the pictures—no, don't do that. Milady," he turned
to her, "the treatment he's discussing was last tried twenty years ago. It
did irreparable damage to the mothers. And the results—the very best results
you could hope for would be a twisted cripple. Perhaps much worse.
Indescribably worse." "Jellyfish
describes it pretty well," said Vaagen. "You're inhuman,
Vaagen!" snapped her man, with a glance her way to check the distress
quotient. "A viable
jellyfish, Dr. Vaagen?" asked Cordelia, intent. "Mm. Maybe,"
he replied, inhibited by his colleagues' angry glares. "But there is the
difficulty of what happens to the mothers when the treatment is applied in
vivo." "So, can't you do
it in vitro?" Cordelia asked the obvious question. Vaagen shot a glance of
triumph at her man. "It would certainly open up a number of possible lines
of experiment, if it could be arranged," he murmured to the ceiling. "In vitro?"
said the Residence man, puzzled. "How?" "What, how?"
said Cordelia. "You've got seventeen Escobaran-manufactured uterine
replicators stored in a closet around here somewhere, carried home from the
war." She turned excitedly to Vaagen. "Do you happen to know a Dr.
Henri?" Vaagen nodded.
"We've worked together." "Then you know all
about them!" "Well—not exactly
all. But, ah—in fact, he informs me that they are available. But you
understand, I'm not an obstetrician." "You certainly
aren't," said her man. "Milady, this man isn't even a physician. He's
only a biochemist." "But you're an
obstetrician," she pointed out. "So we have the whole team, then. Dr.
Henri, and, um, Captain Vaagen here for Piotr Miles, and you, for the
transfer." His lips were
compressed, and his eyes held a very strange expression. It took her a moment
to identify it as fear. "I can't do the transfer, Milady," he said.
"I don't know how. Nobody on Barrayar has ever done one." "You don't advise
it, then?" "Definitely not.
The possibility of permanent damage—you can, after all, begin again in a few
months, if the soft-tissue scarring doesn't extend to testicular—ahem. You can
begin again. I am your doctor, and that is my considered opinion." "Yes, if somebody
else doesn't knock Aral off in the meantime. I must remember this is Barrayar,
where they are so in love with death they bury men who are still twitching. Are
you willing to try the operation?" He drew himself up in
dignity. "No, Milady. And that's final." "Very well."
She pointed a finger at her doctor, "You're out," and shifted it to
Vaagen, "you're in. You are now in charge of this case. I rely on you to
find me a surgeon—or a medical student, or a horse doctor, or somebody who's
willing to try. And then you can experiment to your heart's content." Vaagen looked mildly
triumphant; her former man looked furious. "We had better see what my Lord
Regent has to say, before you carry his wife off on this wave of criminally
false optimism." Vaagen looked a little
less triumphant. "You thinking of
charging over there right now?" asked Cordelia. "I'm sorry,
Milady," said the Residence man, "but I think we'd do best to quash
this thing right now. You don't know Captain Vaagen's reputation. Sorry to be
so blunt, Vaagen, but you're an empire builder, and this time you've gone too
far." "Are you ambitious
for a research wing, Captain Vaagen?" Cordelia inquired. He shrugged, embarrassed
rather than outraged, so she knew the Residence man's words to be at least half
true. She gathered Vaagen in by eye, willing to possess him body, mind, and
soul, but especially mind, and wondering how best to fire his imagination in
her service. "You shall have an
institute, if you can bring this off. You tell him," she jerked her head
in the direction of the hall, toward Aral's room, "I said so." Variously discomfited,
angry, and hopeful, they withdrew. Cordelia lay back on the bed and whistled a
little soundless tune, her fingertips continuing their slow abdominal massage.
Gravity had ceased to exist. CHAPTER
NINE She slept at last,
toward the middle of the day, and woke disoriented. She squinted at the
afternoon light slanting through the hospital room's windows. The grey rain had
gone away. She touched her belly, for grief and reassurance, and rolled over to
find Count Piotr sitting at her bedside. He was dressed in his
country clothes, old uniform trousers, plain shirt, a jacket that he wore only
at Vorkosigan Surleau. He must have come up directly to ImpMil. His thin lips
smiled anxiously at her. His eyes looked tired and worried. "Dear girl. You
need not wake up for me." "That's all
right." She blinked away blear from her eyes, feeling older than the old
man. "Is there something to drink?" He hastily poured her
cold water from the bedside basin spigot, and watched her swallow.
"More?" "That's enough. Have
you seen Aral yet?" He patted her hand.
"I've talked to Aral already. He's resting now. I am so sorry,
Cordelia." "It may not be as
bad as we feared at first. There's still a chance. A hope. Did Aral tell you
about the uterine replicator?" "Something. But the
damage has already been done, surely. Irrevocable damage." "Damage, yes. How
irrevocable it is, no one knows. Not even Captain Vaagen." "Yes, I met Vaagen
a little while ago." Piotr frowned. "A pushing sort of fellow. New
Man type." "Barrayar needs its
new men. And women. Its technologically trained generation." "Oh, yes. We fought
and slaved to create them. They are absolutely necessary. They know it, too,
some of them." A hint of self-aware irony softened his mouth. "But
this operation you're proposing, this placental transfer ... it doesn't sound
too safe." "On Beta Colony, it
would be routine." Cordelia shrugged. We are not, of course, on Beta
Colony. "But something more
straightforward, better understood—you would be ready to begin again much sooner.
In the long run, you might actually lose less time." "Time ... isn't
what I'm worried about losing." A meaningless concept, now she thought of
it. She lost 26.7 hours every Barrayaran day. "Anyway, I'm never going
through that again. I'm not a slow learner, sir." A flicker of alarm
crossed his face. "You'll change your mind, when you feel better. What
does matter now—I've talked to Captain Vaagen. There seemed no question in his
mind there is great damage." "Well, yes. The
unknown is whether there can be great repairs." "Dear girl."
His worried smile grew tenser. "Just so. If only the fetus were a girl ...
or even a second son ... we could afford to indulge your understandable, even
laudable, maternal emotions. But this thing, if it lived, would be Count
Vorkosigan someday. We cannot afford to have a deformed Count Vorkosigan."
He sat back, as if he had just made some cogent point. Cordelia wrinkled her
brow. "Who is we?" "House Vorkosigan.
We are one of the oldest great houses on Barrayar. Never, perhaps, the richest,
seldom the strongest, but what we've lacked in wealth we've made up in honor.
Nine generations of Vor warriors. This would be a horrible end to come to,
after nine generations, don't you see?" "House Vorkosigan,
at this point in time, consists of two individuals, you and Aral,"
Cordelia observed, both amused and disturbed. "And Counts Vorkosigan have
come to horrible ends throughout your history. You've been blown up, shot,
starved, drowned, burned alive, beheaded, diseased, and demented. The only
thing you've never done is die in bed. I thought horrors were your stock in
trade." He returned her a pained
smile. "But we've never been mutants." "I think you need
to talk to Vaagen again. The fetal damage he described was teratogenic, not
genetic, if I understand him correctly." "But people will
think it's a mutant." "What the devil do
you care what some ignorant prole thinks?" "Other Vor,
dear." "Vor, prole,
they're equally ignorant, I assure you." His hands twitched. He
opened his mouth, closed it again, frowned, and said more sharply, "A
Count Vorkosigan has never been an experimental laboratory animal,
either." "There you go,
then. He serves Barrayar even before he's born. Not a bad start on a life of
honor." Perhaps some good would come of it, in the end, some knowledge
gained; if not help for themselves, then for some other parents' grief. The
more she thought about it, the more right her decision felt, on more than one
level. Piotr jerked his head
back. "For all you Betans seem soft, you have an appalling cold-blooded
streak in you." "Rational streak,
sir. Rationality has its merits. You Barrayarans ought to try it
sometime." She bit her tongue. "But we run ahead of ourselves, I
think, sir. There are lots of d—" dangers, "difficulties yet to come.
A placental transfer this late in pregnancy is tricky even for galactics. I
admit, I wish there were time to import a more experienced surgeon. But there's
not." "Yes ... yes ... it
may yet die, you're right. No need to ... but I'm afraid for you, too, girl. Is
it worth it?" Was what worth what? How
could she know? Her lungs burned. She smiled wearily at him, and shook her
head, which ached with tight pressure in her temples and neck. "Father," came
a raspy voice from the doorway. Aral leaned there, in his green pajamas, a
portable oxygenator stuck up his nose. How long had he stood there? "I
think Cordelia needs to rest." Their eyes met, over
Piotr. Bless you, love... . "Yes, of
course." Count Piotr gathered himself together, and creaked to his feet.
"I'm sorry, you're quite correct." He pressed Cordelia's hand one
more time, firmly, with his dry old-man's grip. "Sleep. You'll be able to
think more clearly later." "Father." "You shouldn't be
out of bed, should you?" said Piotr, drawn off. "Go back and lie
down, boy... ." His voice drifted away, across the corridor. Aral returned later,
after Count Piotr had finally left. "Was Father
bothering you?" he asked, looking grim. She held out her hand to him, and
he sat beside her. She transferred her head from her pillow to his lap, her
cheek on the firm-muscled leg beneath the thin pajama, and he stroked her hair. "No more than
usual," she sighed. "I feared he was
upsetting you." "It's not that I'm
not upset. It's just that I'm too tired to run up and down the corridor
screaming." "Ah. He did upset
you." "Yes." She
hesitated. "In a way, he has a point. I was so afraid for so long, waiting
for the blow to fall, from somewhere, nowhere, anywhere. Then came last night,
and the worst was done, over ... except it's not over. If the blow had been
more complete, I could stop, quit now. But this is going to go on and on."
She rubbed her cheek against the cloth. "Did Illyan come up with anything
new? I thought I heard his voice out there, earlier." His hand continued to
stroke her hair, in even rhythm. "He'd finished the preliminary fast-penta
interrogation of Evon Vorhalas. He's now investigating the old armory where
Evon stole the soltoxin. It appears Evon might not have equipped himself so ad
hoc unilaterally as he claimed. An ordnance major in charge there has
disappeared, AWOL. Illyan's not certain yet if the man was eliminated, to clear
Evon's path, or if he actually helped Evon, and has gone into hiding." "He might just be
afraid. If it was dereliction." "He'd better be
afraid. If he had any conscious connivance in this ..." His hand clenched
in her hair, he became aware of the pull, muttered, "Sorry," and
continued petting. Cordelia, feeling very like an injured animal, crept deeper
into his lap, her hand on his knee. "About Father—if he
upsets you again, send him to me. You shouldn't have to deal with him. I told
him it was your decision." "My decision?"
Her hand rested, without moving. "Not our decision?" He hesitated.
"Whatever you want, I'll support you." "But what do you
want? Something you're not telling me?" "I can't help
understanding his fears. But ... there's something I haven't discussed with him
yet, nor am I going to. The next child may not be so easy to come by as the
first." Easy? You call this
easy? He went on, "One of
the lesser—known side effects of soltoxin poisoning is testicular scarring, on
the micro-level. It could reduce fertility below the point of no return. Or so
my examining physician warns me." "Nonsense,"
said Cordelia. "All you need is any two somatic cells and a replicator.
Your little finger and my big toe, if that's all they can scrape off the walls
after the next bomb, could go on reproducing little Vorkosigans into the next
century. However many our survivors choose to afford." "But not naturally.
Not without leaving Barrayar." "Or changing
Barrayar. Dammit." His hand jerked back at the bite in her tone. "If
only I had insisted on using the replicator in the first place, the baby need
never have been at risk. I knew it was safer, I knew it was there—" Her
voice broke. "Sh. Sh. If only I
had ... not taken the job. Kept you at Vorkosigan Surleau. Pardoned that
murderous idiot Carl, for God's sake. If only we'd slept in separate rooms
..." "No!" Her hand
tightened on his knee. "And I refuse to go live in some bomb shelter for
the next fifteen years. Aral, this place has to change. This is
unbearable." If only I had never come here. If only. If only. If
only. The operating room
seemed clean and bright, if not so copiously equipped as galactic standard.
Cordelia, wafting on her float pallet, turned her head sideways to take in as
much detail as she could. Lights, monitors, an operating table with a
catch-basin set beneath it, a tech checking a bubbling tank of clear yellow
fluid. This was not, she told herself sternly, the point of no return. This was
simply the next logical step. Captain Vaagen and Dr.
Henri stood sterile-garbed and waiting, beyond the operating table. Next to
them sat the portable uterine replicator, a metal and plastic canister half a
meter tall, studded with control panels and access ports. The lights on its
sides glowed green and amber. Cleaned, sterilized, its nutrient and oxygen
tanks recharged and ready ... Cordelia eyed it with profound relief. The
primitive Barrayaran back-to-the-apes style gestation was nothing but the utter
failure of reason to triumph over emotion. She'd so wanted to please, to fit
in, to try to become Barrayaran... . And so my child pays the price. Never
again. Dr. Ritter, the surgeon,
was tall and dark-haired, with olive skin and long lean hands. Cordelia had
liked his hands the first moment she saw them. Steady. Ritter and a medtech now
positioned her over the operating table, and shifted the float pallet out from
under her. Dr. Ritter smiled reassuringly. "You're doing fine." Of course I'm fine, we
haven't even started yet, Cordelia thought irritably. Dr. Ritter was palpably
nervous, though the tension somehow stopped at his elbows. The surgeon was a
friend of Vaagen's, whom Vaagen had strong-armed into this, after they'd spent
a day running through a list of more experienced men who had refused to touch
the case. Vaagen had explained it
to Cordelia. "What do you call four big bravos with clubs in a dark
alley?" "What?" "A Vor lord's
malpractice suit." He'd chuckled. Vaagen's sense of humor was acid-black.
Cordelia could have hugged him for it. He'd been the only person to crack a
joke in her presence in the last three days, possibly the most rational and
honest person she'd met since she'd left Beta Colony. She was glad he was here. They rolled her to her
side, and touched her spine with the medical stun. A tingle, and her cold feet
felt suddenly warm. Her legs went abruptly inert, like bags of lard. "Can you feel
that?" asked Dr. Ritter. "Feel what?" "Good." He
nodded to the tech, and they straightened her out. The tech uncovered her
stomach, and turned on the sterilizer-field. The surgeon palpated her,
cross-checking the holovid monitors for the infant's exact position within her. "Are you sure you
wouldn't rather be asleep through this?" Dr. Ritter asked her for the last
time. "No. I want to
watch. This is my first child being born." Maybe my only child being born. He smiled wanly.
"Brave girl." Girl, hell, I'm older
than you. Dr. Ritter, she sensed, would rather not be watched. Tough. Dr. Ritter paused,
taking one last glance around as if mentally checklisting the readiness of his
tools and people. And will and nerve, Cordelia guessed. "Come on, Ritter my
man, let's get this over with," said Vaagen, tapping his fingers
impatiently. His tone was a peculiar mix, a little sarcastic prodding lilt over
an underlying warmth of genuine encouragement. "My scans show bone
sloughing already under way. If the disintegration gets too far advanced, I'll
have no matrix left to build from. Cut now, chew your nails later." "Chew your own
nails, Vaagen," said the surgeon genially. "Jog my elbow again and
I'll have my medtech put a speculum down your throat." Very old friends,
Cordelia gauged. But the surgeon raised his hands, took a breath and a grip on
his vibra-scalpel, and sliced her belly open in one perfectly controlled
stroke. The medtech followed his motion smoothly with the surgical
hand-tractor, clamping blood vessels; scarcely a cat-scratch of blood escaped.
Cordelia felt pressure but no pain. Other cuts laid open her uterus. A placental transfer was
vastly more demanding than a straightforward cesarian section. The fragile
placenta must be chemically and hormonally persuaded to release from the
blood-vessel-enriched uterus, without damaging too many of its multitude of
tiny villi, then floated free from the uterine wall in a running bath of highly
oxygenated nutrient solution. The replicator sponge then had to be slipped into
place between the placenta and the uterine wall, and the placenta's villi at
least partially induced to re-interdigitate on its new matrix, before the whole
mess could be lifted from the living body of the mother and placed in the
replicator. The more advanced the pregnancy, the more difficult the transfer. The umbilical cord
between placenta and infant was monitored, and extra oxygen injected by
hypospray as needed. On Beta Colony, a nifty little device would do this; here,
an anxious tech hovered. The tech began running
the clear bright yellow solution-bath into her uterus. It filled her, and ran
over, trickling pink-tinged down her sides and into the catch basin. The
surgeon was now working, in effect, underwater. No question about it, a
placental transfer was a messy operation. "Sponge,"
called the surgeon softly, and Vaagen and Henri trundled the uterine replicator
to her side, and strung out the matrix sponge from it on its feed lines. The
surgeon fiddled interminably with a tiny hand-tractor, his hands out of
Cordelia's line of sight as she peered down cross-eyed over her chest to her
rounded-so-barely-rounded-belly. She shivered. Ritter was sweating. "Doctor ..." A
tech pointed to something on a vid monitor. "Mm," said
Ritter, glancing up, then continuing fiddling. The techs murmured, Vaagen and
Henri murmured, calm, professional, reassuring ... she was so cold... . The fluid trickling over
the white dam of her skin changed abruptly from pink—tinged to bright, bright
red, a splashing flow, much faster than the input feed was emitting. "Clamp that,"
hissed the surgeon. Cordelia caught just a
glimpse, beneath a membrane, of tiny arms, legs, a wet dark head, wriggling on
the surgeons gloved hands, no larger than a half-drowned kitten. "Vaagen!
Take this thing of yours now if you want it!" snapped Ritter. Vaagen plunged
his gloved hands into her belly as dark whorls clouded Cordelias vision, her
head aching, exploding in sudden sparkling flashes. The blackness ballooned
out, overwhelming her. The last thing she heard was the surgeon's despairing
sibilant voice, "Oh, shit ... !" Her dreams were foggy
with pain. The worst part was the choking. She choked and choked, and wept for
lack of air. Her throat was full of obstructions, and she clawed at it, until
her hands were bound. She dreamed of Vorrutyer's tortures, then, multiplied and
extended into insane complications that went on for hours. A demented Bothari
knelt on her chest, and she could get no air at all. When she finally woke
clear-headed, it was like breaking up out of some underground prison-hell into
God's own fight. Her relief was so profound she wept again, a muted whimper and
a wetness in her eyes. She could breathe, although it pained her; she was
bruised and aching and unable to move. But she could breathe. That was enough. "Sh. Sh." A
thick warm finger touched her eyelids, wiping away the moisture. "It's all
right." "Izzit?" She
blinked and squinted. It was night, artificial light making warm pools in the
room. Aral's face wavered over hers. "Izzit ... tonight? Wha'
happened?" "Sh. You've been
very, very sick. You had a violent hemorrhage during the placental transfer.
Your heart stopped twice." He moistened his lips and went on. "The
trauma, on top of the poisoning, flared into soltoxin pneumonia. You had a very
bad day yesterday, but you're over the worst, off the respirator." "How ...
long?" "Three days." "Ah. Baby, Aral.
Diddit work? Details!" "It went all right.
Vaagen reports the transfer was successful. They lost about thirty percent of
the placental function, but Henri compensated with an enriched and increased
oxy-solution flow, and all seems to be well, or as well as can be expected. The
baby's still alive, anyway. Vaagen has started his first calcium-treatment
experiment, and promises us a baseline report soon." He caressed her
forehead. "Vaagen has priority-access to any equipment, supplies, or techs
he cares to requisition, including outside consultants. He has an advising
civilian pediatrician, plus Henri. Vaagen himself knows more about our military
poisons than any man, on Barrayar or off it. We can do no more, right now. So
rest, love." "Baby—where?" "Ah—you can see
where, if you wish." He helped her lift her head, and pointed out the
window. "See that second building, with the red lights on the roof? That's
the biochemistry research facility. Vaagen and Henri's lab is on the third
floor." "Oh, I recognize it
now. Saw it from the other side, the day we collected Elena." "That's
right." His face softened. "Good to have you back, dear Captain.
Seeing you that sick ... I haven't felt that helpless and useless since I was
eleven years old." That was the year Mad Yuri's death squad had murdered
his mother and brother. "Sh," she said in turn. "No, no ...
s'all right now." They took away all the
rest of the tubes piercing her body the next morning, except for the oxygen.
Days of quiet routine followed. Her recovery was less interrupted than Aral's.
What seemed troops of men, headed by Minister Vortala, came to see him at all
hours. He had a secured comconsole installed in his room, over medical
protests. Koudelka joined him eight hours a day, in the makeshift office. Koudelka seemed very
quiet, as depressed as everyone else in the wake of the disaster. Though not as
morbid as anyone who'd had to do with their failed Security. Even Illyan
shrank, when he saw her. Aral walked her
carefully up and down the corridor a couple of times a day. The vibra-scalpel
had made a cleaner cut through her abdomen than, say, your average
sabre-thrust, but it was no less deep. The healing scar ached less than her
lungs, though. Or her heart. Her belly was not so much flat as flaccid, but
definitely no longer occupied. She was alone, uninhabited, she was herself
again, after five months of that strange doubled existence. Dr. Henri came with a
float chair one day, and took her on a short trip over to his laboratory, to
see where the replicator was safely installed. She watched her baby moving in
the vid scans, and studied the team's technical readouts and reports. Their subject's
nerves, skin, and eyes tested out encouragingly, though Henri was not so sure
about hearing, because of the tiny bones in the ear. Henri and Vaagen were
properly trained scientists, almost Betan in their outlook, and she blessed
them silently and thanked them aloud, and returned to her room feeling
enormously better. When Captain Vaagen
burst into her room the next afternoon, however, her heart sank. His face was
thunderously dark, his lips tight and harsh. "What's wrong,
Captain?" she asked urgently. "That second calcium run—did it
fail?" "Too early to tell.
No, your baby's the same, Milady. Our trouble is with your in-law." "Beg pardon?" "General Count
Vorkosigan came to see us this morning." "Oh! He came to see
the baby? Oh, good. He's so disturbed by all this new life-technology. Maybe
he's finally starting to work past those emotional blocks. He embraces the new
death-technologies readily enough, old Vor warrior that he is... ." "I wouldn't get too
optimistic about him, if I were you, Milady." He took a deep breath,
taking refuge in a formality of stance, just black, not black-humored this
time. "Dr. Henri had the same idea you did. We showed the General all
around the lab, went over the equipment, explained our treatment theories. We
were absolutely honest, as we've been with you. Maybe too honest. He wanted to
know what results we were going to get. Hell, we don't know. And so we said. "After some beating
around the bush, hinting ... well, to cut it short, the General first asked,
then ordered, then tried to bribe Dr. Henri to open the stopcock. To destroy
the fetus. The mutation, he calls it. We threw him the hell out. He swore he'd
be back." She was shaking, down in
her belly, though she kept her face blank. "I see." "I want that old
man kept out of my lab, Milady. And I don't care how you do it. I don't need
this kind of crap coming down. Not from that high up." "I'll see ... wait
here." She wrapped her robe around her own green pajamas more tightly,
seated her oxygen tube more firmly, and walked carefully across the corridor.
Aral, half-casual in uniform trousers and a shirt, sat at a small table by his
window. The only sign of his continued patienthood was the oxygen tube up his
nose, treatment for his own lingering soltoxin pneumonia. He was conferring
with a man while Koudelka took notes. The man was not, thank God, Piotr, but
merely some ministerial secretary of Vortala's. "Aral. I need
you." "Can it wait?" "No." He rose from his chair
with a brief "Excuse me a moment, gentlemen," and trod across the
hall in her wake. Cordelia closed the door behind them. "Captain Vaagen,
please tell Aral what you just told me." Vaagen, looking a degree
more nervous, repeated his tale. To his credit, he did not soften the details.
A weight seemed to settle on Aral's shoulders as he listened, rounding and
hunching them. "Thank you,
Captain. You were correct to report this. I will take care of it
immediately." "That's all?"
Vaagen glanced at Cordelia in doubt. She opened her palm to
him. "You heard the man." Vaagen shrugged, and
saluted himself out. "You don't doubt
his story?" asked Cordelia. "I've been
listening to the Count my father's thoughts on this subject for a week,
love." "You argued?" "He argued. I just
listened." Aral returned to his own
room, and asked Koudelka and the secretary to wait in the corridor. Cordelia
sat on his bed and watched as he punched up codes on his comconsole. "Lord Vorkosigan
here. I wish to speak simultaneously to the Security chief, Imperial Military
Hospital, and Commander Simon Illyan. Get them both on, please." A brief wait, as each
man was located. Judging from the fuzzy background in the vid, the ImpMil man
was in his office somewhere in the hospital complex. They tracked Illyan down
at a forensic laboratory in ImpSec HQ. "Gentlemen."
Aral's face was quite expressionless. "I wish to revoke a Security
clearance." Each man attentively prepared to make notes on their
respective comconsoles. "General Count
Piotr Vorkosigan is to be denied access to Building Six, Biochemical Research,
Imperial Military Hospital, until further notice. Notice from me
personally." Illyan hesitated.
"Sir—General Vorkosigan has absolute clearance, by Imperial order. He's
had it for years. I need an Imperial order to countermand it." "That's precisely what
this is, Illyan." A trace of impatience rasped in Vorkosigan's voice.
"By my order, Aral Vorkosigan, Regent to His Imperial Majesty Gregor
Vorbarra. Is that official enough?" Illyan whistled softly,
but his face snapped to blankness at Vorkosigan's frown. "Yes, sir.
Understood. Is there anything else?" "That's all. Just
that one building." "Sir ..." the
hospital security commander said, "what if ... General Vorkosigan refuses
to halt when ordered?" Cordelia could just
picture it, some poor young guard being mowed down flat by all that history...
. "If your security
people are indeed so overwhelmed by one old man, they may use force up to and
including stunner fire," said Aral tiredly. "Dismissed. Thank
you." The ImpMil man nodded
cautiously, and disconnected. Illyan lingered in doubt
a moment. "Is that a good idea, at his age? Stunning can be bad for the
heart. And he's not going to like it one bit, when we tell him there's
someplace he can't go. By the way, why—?" Aral merely stared coldly at
him, till he gulped, "Yes, sir," saluted, and signed off. Aral sat back, gazing
pensively at the blank space where the vid images had glowed. He glanced up at
Cordelia, and his lips twisted, a grimace of irony and pain. "He is an old
man," he said at last. "The old man just
tried to kill your son. What's left of your son." "I see his view. I
see his fears." "Do you see mine,
too?" "Yes. Both." "When push comes to
shove—if he tries to go back there—" "He is my
past." He met her eyes. "You are my future. The rest of my life
belongs to the future. I swear by my word as Vorkosigan." Cordelia sighed, and
rubbed her aching neck, her aching eyes. Koudelka rattled at the
door, and stuck his head surreptitiously within. "Sir? The minister's
secretary wants to know—" "In a minute,
Lieutenant." Vorkosigan waved him back out. "Let's blow out of this
place," said Cordelia suddenly. "Milady?" "ImpMil, and
ImpSec, and ImpEverything, is giving me a bad case of ImpClaustrophobia. Let's
go down to Vorkosigan Surleau for a few days. You'll recover better there
yourself, it will be harder for all your dedicated minions," she jerked
her head at the corridor, "to get at you, there. Just you and me,
boy." Would it work? Suppose they retired to the scene of their summer
happiness, and it wasn't there anymore? Drowned in the autumn rains ... She
could feel the desperation in herself, seeking their lost balance, some solid
center. His brows rose in
approval. "Outstanding idea, dear Captain. We'll take the old man
along." "Oh, must we—oh.
Yes, I see. Quite. By all means." CHAPTER
TEN Cordelia woke slowly,
stretched, and clutched the magnificent silky feather-stuffed comforter to her.
The other side of the bed was empty—she touched the dented pillow—cold and
empty. Aral must have tiptoed out early. She luxuriated in the sensation of
finally having enough sleep, not waking to that stunned exhaustion that had
clotted her mind and body for so long. This made the third night in a row she'd
slept well, warmed by her husband's body, both of them gladly rid of the
irritating oxygen-fittings on their faces. Their corner room, on
the second floor of the old stone converted barracks, was cool this morning,
and very quiet. The front window opened onto the bright green lawn, descending
into mist that hid the lake and the village and hills of the farther shore. The
damp morning felt comfortable, felt right, proper contrast to the feather
comforter. When she sat up, the new pink scar on her abdomen only twinged. Droushnakovi poked her
head around the doorframe. "Milady?" she called softly, then saw
Cordelia sitting up, bare feet hung out over the edge of the bed. Cordelia
swung her feet back and forth, experimentally, encouraging circulation.
"Oh, good, you're awake." Drou shouldered her way through the door,
bearing a large and promising tray. She wore one of her more comfortable
dresses, with a wide swinging skirt, and a warm padded vest with embroidery.
Her footsteps sounded on the wide wooden floorboards, then were muffled on the
handwoven rug as she crossed the room. "I'm hungry,"
said Cordelia in wonder, as the aromas from the tray tickled her nose. "I
think that's the first time in three weeks." Three weeks, since that night
of horrors at Vorkosigan House. Drou smiled, and set the
tray down at the table by the front window. Cordelia found robe and slippers,
and made for the coffeepot. Drou hovered, seeming ready to catch her if she
fell over, but Cordelia did not feel nearly so shaky today. She seated herself
and reached for steaming groats and butter, and a pitcher of hot syrup the
Barrayarans made from boiled-down tree sap. Wonderful food. "Have you eaten,
Drou? Want some coffee? What time is it?" The bodyguard shook her
blonde head. "I'm fine, Milady. It's about elevenses." Droushnakovi had been
part of the assumed background, for the past several days here at Vorkosigan
Surleau. Cordelia found herself really looking at the girl for almost the first
time since she'd left ImpMil. Drou was attentive and alert as ever, but with an
underlying tension, that same bad-guard-slink—perhaps it was only because she
was feeling better herself, but Cordelia selfishly wanted the people around her
to be feeling better, too, if only not to drag her back down. "I'm feeling so
much less thick, today. I talked to Captain Vaagen yesterday, on the vid. He
thinks he's seen the first signs of molecular re-calcification in little Piotr
Miles. Very encouraging, if you know how to interpret Vaagen. He doesn't offer
false hopes, but what little he does say, you can rely on." Drou glanced up from her
lap, fixing a responding smile on her downcast features. She shook her head.
"Uterine replicators seem so strange to me. So alien." "Not so strange as
what evolution laid on us, ad lib empirical," Cordelia grinned back.
"Thank God for technology and rational design. I know whereof I speak,
now." "Milady ... how did
you first know you were pregnant? Did you miss a monthly?" "A menstrual
period? No, actually." She thought back to last summer. This very room,
that unmade bed in fact. She and Aral could begin sharing intimacies there
again soon, though with some loss of piquancy without reproduction as a goal.
"Aral and I thought we were all settled here, last summer. He was retired,
I was retired ... no impediments. I was on the verge of being old for the
organic method, which seemed the only one available here on Barrayar; more to
the point, he wanted to start soon. So a few weeks after we were married, I
went and had my contraceptive implant removed. Made me feel very wicked; at home
I couldn't have had it taken out without buying a license." "Really?" Drou
listened with openmouthed fascination. "Yes, it's a Betan
legal requirement. You have to qualify for a parents license first. I've had my
implant since I was fourteen. I had a menstrual period once then, I remember.
We turn them off till they're needed. I got my implant, and my hymen cut, and
my ears pierced, and had my coming-out party... ." "You didn't ...
start doing sex when you were fourteen, did you?" Droushnakovi's voice was
hushed. "I could have. But
it takes two, y'know. I didn't find a real lover till later." Cordelia was
ashamed to admit how much later. She'd been so socially inept, back then... .
And you haven't changed much, she admitted wryly to herself. "I didn't think it
would happen so fast," Cordelia went on. "I thought we'd be in for
several months of earnest and delightful experiment. But we caught the baby
first try. So I still haven't had a menstrual period, here on Barrayar." "First try,"
echoed Drou. Her lip curled in introspective dismay. "How did you know
you'd ... caught? The nausea?" "Fatigue, before
nausea. But it was the little blue dots ..." Her voice faltered, as she
studied the girl's twisted-up features. "Drou, are all these questions
academic, or do you have some more personal interest in the answers?" Her face almost
crumpled. "Personal," she choked out. "Oh." Cordelia
sat back. "D'you ... want to talk about it?' "No ... I don't
know... ." "I presume that
means yes," Cordelia sighed. Ah, yes. Just like playing Mama Captain to
sixty Betan scientists back on Survey, though queries about pregnancy were
perhaps the one interpersonal trouble they'd never laid in her lap. But given
the Really Dumb Stuff that rational and select group had sprung on her from
time to time, the feral Barrayaran version ought to be just ... "You know
I'll be glad to help you any way I can." "It was the night
of the soltoxin attack," she sniffled. "I couldn't sleep. I went down
to the refectory kitchen to get something to eat. On the way back upstairs I
noticed a light on in the library. Lieutenant Koudelka was in there. He
couldn't sleep either," Kou, eh? Oh, good, good.
This might be all right after all. Cordelia smiled in genuine encouragement.
"Yes?" "We ... I ... he
... kissed me." "I trust you kissed
him back?" "You sound like you
approve." "I do. You are two
of my favorite people, you and Kou. If only you'd get your heads straight ...
but go on, there has to be more." Unless Drou was more ignorant than
Cordelia believed possible. "We ... we ... we
..." "Screwed?"
Cordelia suggested hopefully. "Yes, Milady."
Drou turned scarlet, and swallowed. "Kou seemed so happy ... for a few
minutes. I was so happy for him, so excited, I didn't care how much it
hurt." Ah, yes, the barbaric
Barrayaran custom of introducing their women to sex with the pain of
unanesthesized defloration. Though considering how much pain their reproductive
methods later entailed, perhaps it constituted fair warning. But Kou, in the
glimpses she'd had of him, hadn't seemed as happy as a new lover ought to be
either. What were these two doing to each other? "Go on." "I thought I saw a
movement in the back garden, out the door from the library. Then came the crash
upstairs—oh, Milady! I'm so sorry! If I'd been guarding you, instead of doing
that—" "Whoa, girl! You
were off-duty. If you hadn't been doing that, you'd have been in bed asleep. No
way is the soltoxin attack your fault, yours or Kou's. In fact, if you hadn't
been up and, and more or less dressed, the would-be assassin might have gotten
away." And we wouldn't be anticipating yet another public beheading, or
whatever, God help us. One part of Cordelia wished they'd gone for seconds, and
never looked out the damned window. But Droushnakovi had enough consequences to
deal with right now without those mortal complications. "But if only—" "If onlys have been
thick in the air around here, these last weeks. I think it's time to replace
them with some Now-we-go-ons, frankly." Cordelia's mind caught up with
herself at last. Drou was Barrayaran; Drou therefore didn't have a contraceptive
implant. It didn't sound like that idiot Kou had offered an alternative,
either. Drou had therefore spent the last three weeks wondering ... "Would
you like to try one of my little blue dots? I have lots left." "Blue dots?" "Yes, I started to
tell you. I have a packet of these little diagnostic strips. Bought them in
Vorbarr Sultana last summer at an import shop. You pee on one, and if the dot
turns blue, you're in. I only used up three, last summer." Cordelia went
to her dresser drawer, and rooted through it. for the obsolete supplies.
"Here." She handed one to Drou. "Go relieve yourself. And your
mind." "Do they work so
soon?" "After five
days." Cordelia held up her hand. "Promise." Staring worriedly at the
little strip of paper, Droushnakovi vanished into Cordelia and Aral's bathroom,
off the bedroom. She emerged in a few minutes. Her face was glum, her shoulders
slumped. What does this mean?
Cordelia wondered in exasperation. "Well?" "It stayed
white." "Then you aren't
pregnant." "Guess not." "I can't tell if
you're glad or sorry. Believe me, if you want to have a baby, you'd do much
better to wait a couple years till they get a bit more medical technology
on-line around here." Though the organic method had been fascinating, for
a time... . "I don't want ... I
want ... I don't know ... Kou's hardly spoken to me since that night. I didn't
want to be pregnant, it would destroy me, and yet I thought maybe he would,
would ... be as excited and happy about it as he was about the sex, maybe.
Maybe he'd come back and—oh, things were going so well, and now they're so
spoiled!" Her hands were clenched, face white, teeth gritted. Cry, so I can breathe,
girl. But Droushnakovi regained her self-control. "I'm sorry, Milady. I
didn't mean to spill all this stupidity on you." Stupidity, yes, but not
unilateral stupidity. Something this screwed up had to have taken a committee.
"So what is the matter with Kou? I thought he was just suffering from
soltoxin-guilt, like everyone else in the household." From Aral and myself
on down. "I don't know,
Milady." "Have you tried
something really radical, like asking him?" "He hides, when he
sees me coming." Cordelia sighed, and
turned her attention to getting dressed. Real clothes, not patient robes,
today. There in the back of Aral's closet were her tan trousers from her old
Survey uniform, hung up. Curiously, she tried them on. Not only did they
fasten, they were loose. She had been sick. Rather aggressively, she
left them on, and chose a long-sleeved flowered smock-top to go with them. Very
comfortable. She smiled at her slim, if pale, profile in the mirror. "Ah, dear
Captain." Aral stuck his head in the bedroom door. "You're up."
He glanced at Droushnakovi. "You're both here. Better still. I think I
need your help, Cordelia. In fact, I'm certain of it." Aral's eyes were
alight with the strangest expression. Amazement, bemusement, worry? He let
himself in. He was wearing his standard gear for off-duty time at Vorkosigan
Surleau, old uniform trousers and a civilian shirt. He was trailed by a tense
and miserable Koudelka, dressed in neat black fatigues with his red
lieutenant's tabs bright on the collar. He clutched his swordstick. Drou backed
to the wall, and crossed her arms. "Lieutenant
Koudelka—he tells me—wishes to make a confession. He is also, I suspect, hoping
for absolution," said Aral. "I don't deserve
that, sir," Koudelka muttered. "But I couldn't live with myself
anymore. This has to come out." He stared at the floor, meeting no one's
eyes. Droushnakovi watched him breathlessly. Aral eased over and sat on the
edge of the bed beside Cordelia. "Hold on to your
hat," he murmured to her out of the corner of his mouth. "This one
took me by surprise." "I think I may be
way ahead of you." "That wouldn't be a
first." He raised his voice. "Go ahead, Lieutenant. This won't be any
easier for being dragged out." "Drou—Miss
Droushnakovi—I came to turn myself "in. And to apologize. No, that sounds
trivial, and believe me, I don't think it trivial. You deserve more than
apology, I owe you expiation. Whatever you want. But I'm sorry, so sorry I
raped you." Droushnakovi's mouth
fell open for a full three seconds, then shut so hard Cordelia could hear her
teeth snap. "What?!" Koudelka flinched, but
never looked up. "Sorry ... sorry," he mumbled. "You. Think. You.
What?!" gasped Droushnakovi, horrified and outraged. "You think you
could—oh!" She stood rigid now, hands clenched, breathing fast. "Kou,
you oaf! You idiot! You moron! You-you-you—" Her words sputtered off. Her
whole body was shaking. Cordelia watched in utter fascination. Aral rubbed his
lips thoughtfully. Droushnakovi stalked
over to Koudelka and kicked his swordstick out of his hand. He almost fell,
with a startled "Huh?", clutching at it and missing as it clattered
across the floor. Drou slammed him
expertly into the wall, and paralyzed him with a nerve thrust, her fingers
jammed up into his solar plexus. His breath stopped. "You goon. Do you
think you could lay a hand on me without my permission? Oh! To be so, to be so,
so, so—" Her baffled words dissolved into a scream of outrage, right next
to his ear. He spasmed. "Please don't break
my secretary, Drou, the repairs are expensive," said Aral mildly. "Oh!" She
whirled away, releasing Koudelka. He staggered and fell to his knees. Hands
over her face, biting her fingers, she stomped out the door, slamming it behind
her. Only then did she sob, sharp breaths retreating up the hallway. Another
door slammed. Silence. "I'm sorry,
Kou," said Aral into the long lull. "But it doesn't look as though
your self-accusation stands up in court." "I don't
understand." Kou shook his head, crawled after his swordstick, and climbed
very shakily to his feet. "Do I gather you
are both talking about what happened between you the night of the soltoxin
attack?" Cordelia asked. "Yes, Milady. I was
sitting up in the library. Couldn't sleep, thought I'd run over some figures.
She came in. We sat, talked... . Suddenly I found myself... well ... it was the
first time I'd been functional since I was hit by the nerve disruptor. I
thought it might be another year, or forever—I panicked, I just panicked. I ...
took her ... right there. Never asked, never said a word. And then came the
crash from upstairs, and we both ran out into the back garden and ... she never
accused me, next day. I waited and waited." "But if he didn't
rape her, why did she get so angry just now?" asked Aral. "But she's been
mad," said Koudelka. "The looks she's given me, these last three
weeks ..." "The looks were
fear, Kou," Cordelia advised him. "Yes, that's what I
thought." "Because she was
afraid she was pregnant, not because she was afraid of you," Cordelia
clarified. "Oh."
Koudelka's voice went small. "She's not, as it
happens." (Kou echoed himself with another small "Oh.")
"But she's mad at you now, and I don't blame her." "But if she doesn't
think I—what reason?" "You don't see
it?" She frowned at Aral. "You either?" "Well ..." "It's because you
just insulted her, Kou. Not then, but right now, in this room. And not just in
slighting her combat prowess. What you just said revealed to her, for the first
time, that you were so intent on yourself that night, you never saw her at all.
Bad, Kou. Very bad. You owe her a profound apology. Here she was, giving her
Barrayaran all to you, and you so little appreciated what she was doing, you
didn't even perceive it." His head came up
suddenly. "Gave me? Like some charity?" "Gift of the gods,
more like," murmured Aral, lost in some appreciation of his own. "I'm not a—"
Koudelka's head swiveled toward the door. "Are you saying I should run
after her?" "Crawl, actually,
if I were you," recommended Aral. "Crawl fast. Slither under her
door, go belly-up, let her stomp on you till she gets it out of her system.
Then apologize some more. You may yet save the situation." Aral's eyes
were openly alight with amusement now. "What do you call
that? Total surrender?" said Kou indignantly. "No. I'd call it
winning." His voice grew a shade cooler. "I've seen the war between
men and women descend to scorched-earth heroics. Pyres of pride. You don't want
to go down that road. I guarantee it." "You're—Milady!
You're laughing at me! Stop!" "Then stop making
yourself ridiculous," said Cordelia sharply. "Get your head out of
your ass. Think for sixty consecutive seconds about somebody besides
yourself." "Milady.
Milord." His teeth were gritted now with frozen dignity. He bowed himself
out, well slapped. But he turned the wrong way in the hallway, the opposite
direction to which Droushnakovi had fled, and clattered down the end stairs. Aral shook his head
helplessly, as Koudelka's footsteps faded. A splutter escaped him. Cordelia punched him
softly on the arm. "Stop that! It's not funny to them." Their eyes
met; she sniggered, then caught her breath firmly. "Good heavens, I think
he wanted to be a rapist. Odd ambition. Has he been hanging around with Bothari
too much?" This slightly sick joke
sobered them both. Aral looked thoughtful. "I think ... Kou was flattering
his self-doubts. But his remorse was sincere." "Sincere, but a
trifle smug. I think we may have coddled his self-doubts long enough. It may be
time to tack his tail." Aral's shoulders slumped
wearily. "He owes her, no doubt. Yet what should I order him to do? It's
worthless, if he doesn't pay freely." Cordelia growled
agreement. It wasn't until lunch
that Cordelia noticed something missing from their little world. "Where's the
Count?" she asked Aral, as they found the table set only for two by
Piotr's housekeeper, in a front dining room overlooking the lake. The day had
failed to warm. The earlier mist had risen only to clot into low scudding grey
clouds, windy and chilly. Cordelia had added an old black fatigue jacket of
Aral's over her flowered blouse. "I thought he went
to the stables. For a training session with that new dressage prospect of
his," said Aral, also regarding the table uneasily. "That's what he
told me he was going to do." The housekeeper,
bringing in soup, volunteered, "No, m'lord. He went off in the groundcar
early, with two of his men." "Oh. Excuse
me." Aral nodded to Cordelia and rose, and exited the dining room to the
back hall. One of the storerooms on the back side of the house, wedged into the
slope, had been converted into a secured comm center, with a double=scrambled
comconsole and a full=time ImpSec guard outside its door. Aral's footsteps
echoed down the hall in that direction. Cordelia took one bite
of soup, which went down like liquid lead, set her spoon aside, and waited. She
could hear Aral's voice, in the quiet house, and electronically tinged
responses in some stranger's tones, but too muffled for her to make out the
words. After what seemed a small eternity, though in fact the soup was still
hot, Aral returned, bleak-faced. "Did he go up
there?" Cordelia asked. "To ImpMil?" "Yes. He's been and
left. It's all right." His heavy jaw was set. "Meaning, the
baby's all right?" "Yes. He was denied
admittance, he argued awhile, he left. Nothing worse." He began glumly
spooning soup. The Count returned a few
hours later. Cordelia heard the fine whine of his groundcar pass up the drive
and around the north end of the house, pause, a canopy open and close, and the
car continue on to the garages, sited over the crest of the hill near the
stables. She was sitting with Aral in the front room with the new big windows.
He had been engrossed in some government report on his handviewer, but at the
sound of the closing canopy put it on "pause" and waited with her,
listening, as hard footsteps passed rapidly around the house and up the front
steps. Aral's mouth was taut with unpleased anticipation, his eyes grim.
Cordelia shrank back in her chair, and steeled her nerves. Count Piotr swung into
their room, and stood, feet planted. He was formally dressed in his old uniform
with his general's rank insignia. "There you are." The liveried man
trailing him took one uneasy glance at Aral and Cordelia, and removed himself
without waiting to be dismissed. Count Piotr didn't even notice him go. Piotr focused on Aral
first. "You. You dared to shame me in public. Entrap me." "You shamed
yourself, I fear, sir. If you had not gone down that path, you would not have
found that trap." Piotr's tight jaw worked
this one over, the lines in his face grooved deep. Anger; embarrassment
struggling with self-righteousness. Embarrassed as only one in the wrong can
be. He doubts himself, Cordelia realized. A thread of hope. Let us not lose
that thread, it may be our only way out of this labyrinth. The self-rightousness
took ascendance. "I shouldn't have to be doing this," snarled Piotr.
"It's women's work. Guarding our genome." "Was women's work,
in the Time of Isolation," said Aral in level tones. "When the only
answer to mutation was infanticide. Now there are other answers." "How strange women
must have felt about their pregnancies, never knowing if there was life or
death at the end of them," Cordelia mused. One sip from that cup was all
she desired for a lifetime, and yet Barrayaran women had drained it to the dregs
over and over ... the wonder was not that their descendants' culture was
chaotic, but that it wasn't more completely insane. "You fail all of us
when you fail to control her," said Piotr. "How do you imagine you
can run a planet when you cannot run your own household?" One corner of Aral's
mouth twisted up slightly. "Indeed, she is difficult to control. She
escaped me twice. Her voluntary return still astounds me." "Awake to your
duties! To me as your Count if not as your father. You are liege-sworn to me.
Do you choose to obey this off-worlder woman before me?" "Yes." Aral
looked him straight in the eye. His voice fell to a whisper. "That is the
proper order of things." Piotr flinched. Aral added dryly,
"Attempting to switch the issue from infanticide to obedience will not
help you, sir. You taught me specious-rhetoric-chopping yourself." "In the old days,
you could have been beheaded for less insolence." "Yes, the present
setup is a little peculiar. As a count's heir, my hands are between yours, but
as your Regent, your hands are between mine. Oath-stalemate. In the old days we
could have broken the deadlock with a nice little war." He grinned back,
or at least bared his teeth. Cordelia's mind gyrated, One day only: The
Irresistible Force Meets the Immovable Object. Tickets, five marks. The door to the hallway
swung open, and Lieutenant Koudelka peered nervously within. "Sir? Sorry
to interrupt. I'm having trouble with the comconsole. It's down again." "What sort of
trouble, Lieutenant?" Vorkosigan asked, wrenching his attention around
with an effort. "The intermittency?" "It's just not
working." "It was fine a few
hours ago. Check the power supply." "Did that,
sir." "Call a tech." "I can't, without
the comconsole." "Ah, yes. Get the
guard commander to open it up for you, then, see if the trouble is anything
obvious. Then send for a tech on his clear-link." "Yes, sir."
Koudelka backed out, after a wary glance at the three tense people still frozen
in their places waiting for him to withdraw. The Count wouldn't quit.
"I swear, I will disown it. That thing in the can at ImpMil. Utterly
disinherit it." "Not an operative
threat, sir. You can only directly disown me. By an Imperial order. Which you
would have to humbly petition, ah ... me, for." His edged smile gleamed.
"I would, of course, grant it to you." The muscles in Piotr's
jaw jumped. Not the irresistible force and the immovable object after all, but
the irresistible force and some fluid sea; Piotr's blows kept failing to land,
splashing past helplessly. Mental judo. He was off-balance, and flailed for his
center, striking out wildly now. "Think of Barrayar. Think of the example
you're setting." "Oh," breathed
Aral, "that I have." He paused. "We have never led from the
rear, you or I. Where a Vorkosigan goes, maybe others might not find it so
impossible to follow. A little personal ... social engineering." "Maybe for
galactics. But our society can't afford this luxury. We barely hold our own as
it is. We cannot carry the deadweight of millions of dysfunctionals!" "Millions?"
Aral raised a brow. "Now you extrapolate from one to infinity. A weak
argument, sir, unworthy of you." "And surely,"
said Cordelia quietly, "how much is bearable each individual, carrying his
or her own burden, must decide." Piotr swung on her.
"Yes, and who is paying for all this, eh? The Imperium. Vaagen's
laboratory is budgeted under military research. All Barrayar is paying for
prolonging the life of your monster." Discomfited, Cordelia
replied, "Perhaps it will prove a better investment than you think." Piotr snorted, his head
lowered mulishly, hunched between his skinny shoulders. He stared through
Cordelia at Aral. "You are determined to lay this thing on me. On my
house. I cannot persuade you otherwise, I cannot order you ... very well. You're
so set on change, here's a change for you. I don't want my name on that thing.
I can deny you that, if nothing else." Aral's lips were
pinched, nostrils flaring. But he never moved in his seat. The viewer glowed
on, forgotten in his still hands. He held his hands quiet and totally
controlled, not permitting them to clench. "Very well, sir." "Call him Miles
Naismith Vorkosigan, then," said Cordelia, feigning calm over a sick and
trembling belly. "My father will not begrudge it." "Your father is
dead," snapped Piotr. Smeared to bright plasma
in a shuttle accident more than a decade ago ... She sometimes fancied, when
she closed her eyes, that she could still sense his death imprinted on her
retina in magenta and teal. "Not wholly. Not while I live, and remember." Piotr looked as if she'd
just hit him in his Barrayaran stomach. Barrayaran ceremonies for the dead
approached ancestor-worship, as if remembrance could keep the souls alive. Did
his own mortality run chill in his veins today? He had gone too far, and knew
it, but could not back down. "Nothing, nothing wakes you up! Try this,
then." He straddled the floor, boots planted, and glared at Aral.
"Get out of my house. Both houses, Vorkosigan House, too. Take your woman
and remove yourself. Today!" Aral's eyes flicked only
once around his childhood home. He set the viewer carefully aside, and stood.
'Very well, sir." Piotr's anger was
anguished. "You'd throw away your home for this?!" "My home is not a
place. It is a person, sir," Aral said gravely. Then added reluctantly,
"People." Meaning Piotr, as well
as Cordelia. She sat bent over, aching with the tension. Was the old man stone?
Even now Aral offered him gestures of courtesy that nearly stopped her heart. "You will return
your rents and revenues to the District purse," said Piotr desperately. "As you wish,
sir." Aral headed for the door. Piotr's voice went
smaller. "Where will you live?" "Illyan has been
urging me for some time to move to the Imperial Residence, for security
reasons. Evon Vorhalas has persuaded me Illyan is right." Cordelia had risen when
Aral did. She went now to the window and stared out over the moody grey, green,
and brown landscape. Whitecaps foamed on the pewter water of the lake. The
Barrayaran winter was going to be so cold... . "So, you set
yourself up with Imperial airs after all, eh?" jibed Piotr. "Is that
what this is, hubris?" Aral grimaced in
profound irritation. "On the contrary, sir. If I'm to have no income but
my admiral's half-pay, I cannot afford to pass up rent-free quarters." A movement in the
scudding clouds caught Cordelia's eye. She squinted uneasily. "What's
wrong with that lightflyer?" she murmured half to herself. The speck grew, jinking
oddly. It trailed smoke. It stuttered over the lake, straight at them. "God,
I wonder if it's full of bombs?" "What?" said
Aral and Piotr together, and stepped quickly to the window with her, Aral on
her right hand, Piotr on her left. "It has ImpSec
markings," said Aral. Piotr's old eyes
narrowed. "Ah?" Cordelia mentally
planned a sprint down the back hall and out the end door. There was a bit of a
ditch on the other side of the drive, if they went flat in it maybe ... but the
lightflyer was slowing at the end of its trajectory. It wobbled toward a
landing on the front lawn. Men in Vorkosigan livery and ImpSec green and black
cautiously surrounded it. The flyer's damage was clearly visible now, a
plasma-slagged hole, black smears of soot, warped control surfaces—it was a
miracle it flew at all. "Who—?" said
Aral. Piotr's squint sharpened
as a glimpse of the pilot winked through the damaged canopy. "Ye gods,
it's Negri!" "But who's that
with—come on!" Aral flung over his shoulder, running out the door. They
charged in his wake, around into the front hall, bursting out the door and
churning down the green slope. The guards had to pry
open the warped canopy. Negri fell into their arms. They laid him on the grass.
He had a grotesque burn a meter long on the left side of his body and thigh,
his green uniform melted and charred away to reveal bleeding white bubbles,
cracked—open flesh. He shivered uncontrollably. The short figure
strapped into the passenger seat was Emperor Gregor. The five-year-old boy was
weeping in terror, not loudly, just muffled, gulping, suppressed whimpers. Such
self-control in one so young seemed sinister to Cordelia. He should be
screaming. She felt like screaming. He wore ordinary play-clothes, a soft shirt
and pants in dark blue. He was missing one shoe. An ImpSec guard unhooked his
seat belt and dragged him out of the flyer. He cringed from the man and stared
at Negri in utter horror and confusion. Did you think adults were
indestructible, child? Cordelia grieved. Kou and Drou
materialized from their separate holes in the house, to goggle along with the
rest of the guards. Gregor spotted Droushnakovi, and flew to her like an arrow,
to wind his hands tightly in her skirt. "Droushie, help!" His crying
dared to become audible, then. She wrapped her arms around him and lifted him
up. Aral knelt by the
injured ImpSec chief. "Negri, what happened?" Negri reached up and
grabbed his jacket with his working right hand. "He's trying for a coup—in
the capital. His troops took ImpSec, took the comm center—why didn't you
respond? HQ surrounded, infiltrated—bad fighting now at the Imperial Residence.
We were on to him—about to arrest—he panicked. Struck too soon. I think he has
Kareen—" Piotr demanded,
"Who has, Negri, who?" "Vordarian." Aral nodded grimly.
"Yes ..." "You—take the
boy," gasped Negri. "He's almost on top of us ..." His shivers
oscillated into convulsions, his eyes rolling back whitely. His breath
stuttered in resonant chokes. His brown eyes refocused in sudden intensity.
"Tell Ezar—" The convulsions took him again, racking his thick body.
Then they stopped. All stop. He was no longer breathing. CHAPTER
ELEVEN "Sir," said
Koudelka urgently to Vorkosigan, "the secured comconsole was
sabotaged." The ImpSec guard commander at his elbow nodded confirmation.
"I was just coming to tell you. ..." Koudelka glanced fearfully at
Negri's body, laid out on the grass. Two ImpSec men now knelt beside it
frantically applying first aid: heart massage, oxygen, and hypospray
injections. But the body remained flaccid under their pummeling, the face waxy
and inert. Cordelia had seen death before, and recognized the symptoms. No
good, fellows, you won't call this one back. Not this time. He's gone to
deliver that last message to Ezar in person. Negri's last report ... "What time-frame on
the sabotage?" demanded Vorkosigan. "Delayed or immediate?" "It looked like
immediate," reported the guard commander. "No sign of a timer or
device. Somebody just broke open the back and smashed it up inside." Everyone's eyes went to
the ImpSec man who had been assigned the guard post outside the comconsole
room. He stood, dressed like most of the others in black fatigues, disarmed
between two of his fellows. They had followed their commander out when the
uproar began on the front lawn. The prisoner's face was about the same
lead-grey color as Negri's, but animated by flickering fear. "And?"
Vorkosigan said to the guard commander. "He denies doing it,"
shrugged the commander. "Naturally." Vorkosigan looked at the
arrestee. "Who went in after me?" The guard stared around
wildly. He pointed abruptly at Droushnakovi, still holding the whimpering
Gregor. "Her." "I never!"
said Drou indignantly. Her clutch tightened. Vorkosigan's teeth
closed. "Well, I don't need fast-penta to know that one of you is lying.
No time now. Commander, arrest them both. We'll sort it out later."
Vorkosigan's eyes anxiously scanned the northern horizon. "You," he
pointed to another ImpSec man, "assemble every piece of transport you can
find. We evacuate immediately. You," this to one of Piotr's armsmen,
"go warn them in the village. Kou, grab the files, take a plasma arc and
finish melting down that comconsole, and get back to me." Koudelka, with one
anguished look back over his shoulder at Droushnakovi, stumped off toward the
house. Drou stood stiffly, stunned and angry and frightened, the cold wind
fluttering her skirts. Her brows drew down at Vorkosigan. She scarcely noticed
Koudelka's departure. "You going to
Hassadar first?" said Piotr to his son in a strange mild tone. "Right." Hassadar, the
Vorkosigan's District capital: Imperial troops were quartered there. A loyal
garrison? "Not planning to
hold it, I trust," said Piotr. "Of course not.
Hassadar," Vorkosigan's wolf-grin winked on and off, "shall be my
first gift to Commodore Vordarian." Piotr nodded, as if
satisfied. Cordelia's head spun. Despite Negri's surprise, neither Piotr nor
Aral seemed at all panicked. No wasted motion; no wasted words. "You," said
Aral to Piotr in an undertone, "take the boy." Piotr nodded.
"Meet us—no. Don't tell even me where. You contact us." "Right." "Take
Cordelia." Piotr's mouth opened; it
closed saying only, "Ah." "And Sergeant
Bothari. For Cordelia. Drou being—temporarily—off duty." "I must have
Esterhazy, then," said Piotr. "I'll want the rest
of your men," said Aral. "Right." Piotr
took his Armsman Esterhazy aside, and spoke to him in low tones; Esterhazy
departed upslope at a dead run. Men were scattering in every direction, as
their orders proliferated down their command chain. Piotr called another liveried
retainer to him, and told him to take his groundcar and start driving west. "How far,
m'lord?" "As far as your
ingenuity can take you. Then escape if you can, and rejoin m'lord Regent,
eh?" The man nodded, and
galloped off like Esterhazy. "Sergeant, you will
obey Lady Vorkosigan's voice as my own," Aral told Bothari. "Always, my
lord." "I want that
lightflyer." Piotr nodded to Negri's damaged vehicle, which, while no
longer smoking, did not look very airworthy to Cordelia. Not nearly ready for
wild flight, jinking or diving to evade determined enemies ... It's in about as
good a shape for this as I am, she feared. "And Negri," Piotr
continued. "He would
appreciate that," said Aral. "I am certain of
it." Piotr nodded shortly, and turned to the first-aid squad. "Leave
off, boys, it's no damn good by now." He directed them instead to load the
body into the lightflyer. Aral turned to Cordelia
last, at last, for the first time. "Dear Captain ..." The same sere
expression had been fixed on his face since Negri had fallen out of the
lightflyer. "Aral, was this a
surprise to anyone but me?" "I didn't want to
worry you with it, when you were so sick." His lips thinned. "We'd
found Vordarian was conspiring, at HQ and elsewhere. Illyan's investigation was
inspired. Top security people must have that sort of intuition, I suppose. But
to convict a man of Vordarian's magnitude and connections of treason, we needed
the hardest of evidence. The Council of Counts as a body is highly intolerant
of central Imperial interference with their members. We couldn't take a mere
vaporplot before them. "But Negri called me last night with the word he
had his evidence in hand, enough to move on at last. He needed an Imperial
order from me to arrest a ruling District Count. I was supposed to go up to
Vorbarr Sultana tonight and oversee the operation. Clearly, Vordarian was
warned. His original move wasn't planned for another month, preferably right
after my successful assassination." "But—" "Go, now." He
pushed her toward the lightflyer. "Vordarian's troops will be here in
minutes. You must get away. No matter what else he holds, he can't make himself
secure while Gregor stays free," "Aral—" Her
voice came out a stupid squeak; she swallowed what felt like freeze—dried
chunks of spit. She wanted to gabble a thousand questions, ten thousand
protests. "Take care." "You, too." A
last light flared in his eyes, but his face was already distant, lost to the
driving internal rhythm of tactical calculation. No time. Aral went to take Gregor
from Drou's arms, whispering something to her; reluctantly, she released the
boy to him. They piled into the lightflyer, Bothari at the controls, Cordelia
jammed into the back beside Negri's corpse, Gregor dumped into her lap. The boy
made no noise at all, but only shivered. His eyes were wide and shocky, turned
up to hers. Her arms encircled him automatically. He did not cling back, but
wrapped his arms around his own torso. Negri, lolling, feared nothing now, and
she almost envied him. "Did you see what
happened to your mother, Gregor?" Cordelia murmured to him. "The soldiers took
her." His voice was thin and flat. The overloaded lightflyer hiccoughed
into the air, and Bothari aimed it generally upslope, wavering only meters from
the ground. It whined and moaned and rattled. Cordelia did, too, internally.
She twisted around to stare back through the distorted canopy for a look—a last
look?—at Aral, who had turned away and was double-timing toward the driveway
where his soldiers were assembling a motley collection of vehicles, personal
and governmental. Why aren't we taking one of those? "When you clear the
second ridge—if you can—turn right, Sergeant," Piotr directed Bothari.
"Follow the creek." Branches slashed at the
canopy, as Bothari flew less than a meter above the trickling water and sharp
rocks. "Land in that
little space there and kill the power," ordered Piotr. "Everyone,
strip off any powered items you may be carrying." He divested his chrono
and a comm link. Cordelia shed her chrono. Bothari, easing the
flyer down beside the creek beneath some Earth—import trees that had only
half—shed their leaves, asked, "Does that include weapons, m'lord?" "Especially
weapons, Sergeant. The charge unit on a stunner shows up on a scanner like a
torch. A plasma arc power cell lights it up like a bloody bonfire." Bothari fished two of
each from his person, plus other useful gear; a hand-tractor, his comm link,
his chrono, some kind of small medical diagnostic device. "My knife, too,
m'lord?" "Vibra-knife?" "No, just
steel." "Keep that."
Piotr hunched over the lightflyer's controls and began re-programming the
automatic pilot. "Everyone out. Sergeant, jam the canopy half-open." Bothari managed this
task with a pebble crammed forcibly into the canopy's seating—groove, then
whirled at a sound from the undergrowth. "It's me,"
came Armsman Esterhazy's breathless voice. Esterhazy, age forty, a mere
stripling beside some of Piotr's other grizzled veterans, kept himself in top
shape; he'd been hustling indeed, to get so puffed. "I have them, my
lord." The "them" in
question turned out to be four of Piotr's horses, tied together by lines
attached to the metal bars in their mouths the Barrayarans called
"bits." Cordelia thought it a very small control surface for such a
large piece of transport. The big beasts twitched and stamped and shook their
jingling heads, red nostrils round and flaring, ominous bulky shapes in the
vegetation. Piotr finished
re-programming the autopilot. "Bothari, here," he said. Together,
they manhandled Negri's corpse back to the pilot's seat and strapped it in.
Bothari powered the lightflyer up and jumped out. It lurched into the air,
nearly crashing into a tree, and lumbered back over the ridge. Piotr, standing
watching it rise, muttered under his breath, "Salute him for me,
Negri." "Where are you
sending him?" Cordelia asked. Valhalla? "Bottom of the
lake," said Piotr, with some satisfaction. "That will puzzle
them." "Won't whoever
follows trace it? Hoist it back out?" "Eventually. But it
should go down in the two-hundred-meter-deep section. It will take them time.
And they won't know at first when it went down, nor how many bodies are missing
from it. They'll have to search that whole section of the lake bottom, to be
sure that Gregor isn't stuck in it. And negative evidence is never quite
conclusive, eh? They won't know, even then. Mount up, troops, we're on our
way." He headed purposefully toward his animals. Cordelia trailed
doubtfully. Horses. Would one call them slaves, symbionts, or commensals? The
one toward which Esterhazy aimed her stood five feet high at the top. He stuck
its lines into her hands and turned away. Its saddle was at the level of her
chin, and how was she supposed to levitate up there? The horse looked much
larger, at this range, than when idling around decoratively at a distance in
its pasture. The brown fur-covered skin of its shoulder shuddered suddenly. Oh,
God, they've given me a defective one, it's going into convulsions—a small mew
escaped her. Bothari had climbed atop
his, somehow. He at least was not overpowered by the size of the animal. Given
his height he made the full-sized beast look like a pony. City-bred, Bothari
was no horseman, and seemed all knees and elbows despite what cavalry training
Piotr had managed to inflict on him in the months of his service. But he was
clearly in control of his mount, however awkward and rough his motions. "You're point-man,
Sergeant," Piotr told him. "I want us strung out to the limit of
mutual visibility. No bunching up. Start up the trails for the flat rock—you
know the place—and wait for us." Bothari jerked his
horse's head around and kicked at its sides, and clattered off up the woodland
path at the seat-thumping pace called a canter. Supposedly-creaky Piotr
swung up into his saddle in one fluid motion; Esterhazy handed Gregor up to
him, and Piotr held the boy in front of him. Gregor had actually seemed to
cheer up at the sight of the horses, Cordelia could not imagine why. Piotr
appeared to do nothing at all, but his horse arranged itself neatly ready to
start up the trail—telepathy, Cordelia decided wildly. They've mutated into
telepaths here and never told me ... or maybe it was the horse that was
telepathic. "Come on, woman,
you're next," Piotr snapped impatiently. Desperately, Cordelia
stuck her foot through the whatchamacallit, foot-holder, stirrup, grabbed, and
heaved. The saddle slid slowly around the horse's belly, and Cordelia with it,
till she was clinging underneath among a forest of horse legs. She fell to the
ground with a thump, and scrambled out of the way. The horse twisted its neck
around and peered at her, in a dismay much milder than her own, then stuck its
rubbery lips to the ground and began nibbling up weeds. "Oh, God,"
Piotr groaned in exasperation. Esterhazy dismounted
again, and hurried to her elbow to help her up. "Milady. Are you all
right? Sorry, that was my fault, should have re-checked, uh—haven't you ever
ridden before?" "Never,"
Cordelia confessed. He hastily pulled off the saddle, straightened it back
around, and fastened it more tightly. "Maybe I can walk. Or run." Or
slit my wrists. Aral, why did you send me off with these madmen? "It's not that
hard, Milady," Esterhazy promised her. "Your horse will follow the
others. Rose is the gentlest mare in the stables. Doesn't she have a sweet
face?" Malevolent brown eyes
with purple centers ignored Cordelia. "I can't." Her breath caught in
a sob, the first of this ungodly day. Piotr glanced at the
sky, and back over his shoulder. "Useless Betan frill," he snarled at
her. "Don't tell me you've never ridden astride." His teeth bared.
"Just pretend it's my son." "Here, give me your
knee," said Esterhazy after an anxious look at the Count, cupping his
hands. Take the whole damned
leg. She was shaking with anger and fear. She glared at Piotr, and grabbed
again at the saddle. Somehow, Esterhazy managed to boost her aboard. She clung
like grim death, deciding after one glance not to look down. Esterhazy tossed her
reins to Piotr, who caught them with an easy wrist-flick and took her horse in
tow. The trail became a kaleidoscope of trees, rocks, sucking mud puddles,
whipping branches, all whirling and bumping past. Her belly began to ache, her
new scar twinging. If that bleeding starts again inside ... They went on, and
on, and on. They bumped down at last
from a canter to a walk. She blinked, red-faced and wheezing and dizzy-sick.
They had climbed, somehow, to a clearing overlooking the lake, having circled
behind the broad shallow inlet that lay to the left of the Vorkosigan property.
As her vision cleared, she could make out the little green patch in the general
red-brown background that was the sloping lawn of the old stone house. Across
the water lay the tiny village. Bothari was there before
them, waiting, hunkered down in the scrub out of sight, his blowing horse tied
to a tree. He rose silently, and approached them, to stare worriedly at
Cordelia. She half-fell, half-slid, off into his arms. "You go too fast for
her, m'lord. She's still sick." Piotr snorted.
"She'll be a lot sicker if Vordarian's squads overtake us." "I'll manage,"
gasped Cordelia, bent over. "In a minute. Just. Give me. A minute."
The breeze, chilling down as the autumn sun slanted toward evening, lapped her
hot skin. The sky had greyed over to a solid shadowless milk-color. Gradually,
she was able to straighten against the abdominal pain. Esterhazy arrived at the
clearing, bringing up the rear at a less hectic pace. Bothari nodded to the
distant green patch. "There they are." Piotr squinted; Cordelia
stared. A couple of flyers were landing on the lawn. Not Aral's equipment. Men
boiled out of them like black ants in their military fatigues, maybe one or two
bright flecks of maroon and gold among them, and a few spots of officer's dark
green. Great. Our friends and our enemies are all wearing the same uniforms.
What do we do, shoot them all and let God sort them out? Piotr looked sour
indeed. Were they smashing his home, down there, tearing the place apart
looking for the refugees? "Won't they be able
to tell, when they count the horses missing from the stable, where we've gone
and how?" asked Cordelia. "I let them all
out, Milady," said Esterhazy. "At least they'll all have a chance,
that way. I don't know how many we'll get back." "Most of them will
hang around, I'm afraid," said Piotr. "Hoping for their grain. I wish
they had the sense to scatter. God knows what viciousness those vandals will
come up with, if they're cheated of all their other prey." A trio of flyers was
landing around the perimeter of the little village. Armed men disembarked, and
vanished among the houses. "I hope Zai warned
them all in time," muttered Esterhazy. "Why would they
bother those poor people?" asked Cordelia. "What do they want
there?" "Us, Milady,"
said Esterhazy grimly. At her confused look he went on, "Us armsmen. Our
families. They're on a hostage-hunt down there." Esterhazy had a wife and
two children in the capital, Cordelia recalled. And what was happening to them
right now? Had anyone passed them a warning? Esterhazy looked like he was
wondering that, too. "No doubt Vordarian
will play the hostage game," said Piotr. "He's in for it now. He must
win, or die." Sergeant Bothari's
narrow jaw worked, as he stared through the murky air. Had anyone remembered to
warn Mistress Hysopi? "They'll be
starting their air-search shortly," said Piotr. "Time to get under
cover. I'll go first. Sergeant, lead her." He turned his horse and
vanished into the undergrowth, following a path so faint Cordelia could not
have recognized it as one. It took Bothari and Esterhazy together to lift her
back aboard her transport. Piotr chose a walk for the pace, not for her sake,
Cordelia suspected, but for his sweat-darkened animals. After that first
hideous gallop, a walk was like a reprieve. At first. They rode among trees
and scrub, along a ravine, over a ridge, the horses' hooves scraping over
stone. Her ears strained for the whine of flyers overhead. When one came,
Bothari led her on a wild and head-spinning slide down into a ravine, where
they dismounted and cowered under a rock ledge for minutes, until the whine
faded. Getting back out of the ravine was even more difficult. They had to lead
the horses up, Bothari practically seeming to hoist his along the precarious
scrubby slope. It grew darker, and
colder, and windier. Two hours became three, four, five, and the smoky darkness
turned pitchy. They bunched up with the horses nose to tail, trying not to lose
Piotr. It began to rain, a sad black drizzle that made Cordelia's saddle even
slipperier. Around midnight they
came to a clearing, hardly less black than the shadows, and Piotr at last
called a halt. Cordelia sat against a tree, stunned with exhaustion,
nerve-strung, holding Gregor. Bothari split a ration bar he'd been carrying in
his pocket, their only food, between Cordelia and Gregor. With Bothari's
uniform jacket wrapped around him, Gregor finally overcame the chill enough to
sleep. Cordelia's legs went pins and needles, beneath him, but at least he was
a lump of warmth. Where was Aral, by now?
For that matter, where were they? Cordelia hoped Piotr knew. They could not
have made more than five kilometers an hour at most, with all that up and down
and switch-back doubling. Did Piotr really imagine they were going to elude
their pursuers this way? Piotr, who had sat for a
while under his own tree a few meters off, got up and went into the scrub to
piss, then came back to peer at Gregor in the dimness. "Is he
asleep?" "Yes.
Amazingly." "Mm. Youth,"
Piotr grunted. Envy? His tone was not so
hostile as earlier, and Cordelia ventured, "Do you suppose Aral is in
Hassadar by now?" She could not quite bring herself to say, Do you suppose
he ever made it to Hassadar? "He'll have been
and gone by now." "I thought he would
raise its garrison." "Raise and
disperse, in a hundred different directions. And which squad has the Emperor?
Vordarian won't know. But with luck, that traitor will be lured into occupying
Hassadar." "Luck?" "A small but worthy
diversion. Hassadar has no strategic value to speak of for either side. But
Vordarian must divert a part of his—surely finite number of—loyal troops to
hold it, deep in a hostile territory with a long guerilla tradition. We'll get
good intelligence of everything they do there, but the population will be
opaque to them. "And it's my
capital. He occupies a count's district capital with Imperial troops—all my
brother counts must pause and think about that one. Am I next? Aral probably
went on to Tanery Base Shuttleport. He must open an independent line of
communication with the space-based forces, if Vordarian has truly choked off
Imperial Headquarters. The spacers' choice of loyalties will be critical. I
predict a severe outbreak of technical difficulties in their comm rooms, while
the ship commanders scramble to figure out which is going to be the winning
side." Piotr emitted a macabre chuckle, in the shadows. "Vordarian is
too young to remember Mad Emperor Yuri's War. Too bad for him. He's gained sufficient
advantage, with his quick start, I'd loathe to grant him more." "How fast ... did
it all happen?" "Fast. There was no
hint of any trouble when I was up to the capital at noon. It must have broken
out right after I left." A chill that had nothing
to do with the rain fell between them briefly, as both remembered why Piotr had
made that journey this day. "Does the capital
... have great strategic value?" Cordelia asked, changing the subject,
unwilling to break open that raw issue again. "In some wars it
would. Not this one. This is not a war for territory. I wonder if Vordarian
realizes that? It's a war for loyalties, for the minds of men. No material
object in it has more than a passing tactical importance. Vorbarr Sultana is a
communications center, though, and communication is much. But not the only
center. Collateral circulation will serve." We have no
communications at all, thought Cordelia dully. Out here in the woods in the
rain. "But if Vordarian holds the Imperial Military Headquarters right
now... " "What he holds
right now, unless I miss my guess, is a very large building full of chaos. I
doubt a quarter of the men are at their posts, and half of them are plotting
sabotage to benefit whatever side they secretly favor. The rest are out running
for cover, or trying to get their families out of town." "Will Captain
Vorpatril be all—will Vordarian bother Lord and Lady Vorpatril, do you
think?" Alys Vorpatril's pregnancy was very close to term. When she had
visited Cordelia at ImpMil—only ten days ago?—her gliding walk had become a
heavy flatfooted waddle, her belly a swaying high arc. Her doctor promised her
a big boy. Ivan, he was to be named. His nursery was completely equipped and
fully decorated, she had groaned, shifting her stomach uncomfortably in her lap,
and now would be a good time... . Now was not a good time
anymore. "Padma Vorpatril will head the list. The hunt will be up for him,
all right. He and Aral are the last descendants of Prince Xav, now, if
anybody's fool enough to start up that damned succession-debate again. Or if
anything does happen to Gregor." He bit down on this last line as if he
might hold back fate with his teeth. "Lady Vorpatril and the baby,
too?" "Perhaps not Alys
Vorpatril. The boy, definitely." Not exactly a separable matter, just at
the moment. The wind had died down at last. Cordelia could hear the horses'
teeth tearing up plants, a steady munch-munch-munch. "Won't the horses
show up on thermal sensors? And us, too, despite dumping our power cells. I
don't see how they can miss us for long." Were troops up there right now,
eyes in the clouds? "Oh, all the people
and beasts in these hills will show up on their thermal sensors, once they
start aiming them in the right direction." "All? I hadn't seen
any." "We've passed about
twenty little homesteads, so far tonight. All the people, and their cows, and
their goats, and their red deer, and their horses, and their children. We're
straws in a haystack. Still, it will be well for us to split up soon. If we can
make it to the trail at the base of Amie Pass before mid—morning, I have an
idea or two." By the time Bothari shoved her back atop Rose, the deep
blackness was greying. Pre-dawn light seeped into the woods as they began to
move again. Tree branches were charcoal stokes in the dripping mist. She clung
to her saddle in silent misery, towed along by Bothari. Gregor actually still
slept, for the first twenty minutes of the ride, openmouthed and limp and pale
in Piotr's grip. The growing light
revealed the night's ravages. Bothari and Esterhazy were both muddy and
scuffed, beard-peppered, their brown-and-silver uniforms rumpled. Bothari,
having given up his jacket to Gregor, went in shirtsleeves. The open round
collar of his shirt made him look like a condemned criminal being led to the
beheading-block. Piotr's general's dress greens had survived fairly well, but
his stubbled red-eyed face above it was like a derelict's. Cordelia felt
herself a hopeless tangle, with her wet tendrils of hair, mishmash of old
clothing and house slippers. It could be worse. I could still be pregnant. At
least if I die, I die singly now. Was little Miles safer than she right now?
Anonymous in his replicator on some shelf in Vaagen and Henri's restricted
laboratory? She could pray so, even if she couldn't believe so. You Barrayaran
bastards had better leave my boy alone. They zigzagged up a long
slope. The horses blew like bellows even though just walking: getting balky,
stumbling over roots and rocks. They came to a halt at the bottom of a little
hollow. Both horses and people drank from the murky stream. Esterhazy loosened
girths again. He scratched under the horses' headbands, and they butted against
him, nuzzling his empty pockets for tidbits. He murmured apologies and little
encouragements to them. "It's all right, Rosie, you can rest at the end of
the day. Just a few more hours." It was more briefing than anybody had
bothered to give Cordelia. Esterhazy left the
horses to Bothari and accompanied" Piotr into the woods, scrabbling up the
slope. Gregor busied himself in an attempt to gather vegetation and hand-feed
it to the animals. They lipped at the native Barrayaran plants and let them
fall messily from their mouths, unpalatable. Gregor kept picking the wads up
and offering them again, trying to shove them in around the horses' bits. "What's the Count
up to, do you know?" Cordelia asked Bothari. He shrugged. "Gone
to make contact with somebody. This won't do." A jerk of his head in no
particular direction indicated their night of beating around in the brush. Cordelia could only
agree. She lay back and listened for lightflyers, but heard only the babble of
water in the little stream, echoed by the gurgles of her empty stomach. She was
galvanized into motion once, to keep the hungry Gregor from sampling some of
the possibly-toxic plants himself. "But the horses ate
these ones," he protested. "No!" Cordelia
shuddered, detailed visions of unfavorable biochemical and histamine reactions
dancing in a molecular crack-the-whip through her head. "It's one of the
first habits you have to learn for Betan Astronomical Survey, you know. Never
put strange things in your mouth till they've been cleared by the lab. In fact,
avoid touching your eyes, mouth, and mucous membranes." Gregor, unconsciously
compelled, promptly rubbed his nose and eyes. Cordelia sighed, and sat back
down. She sucked on her tongue, thinking about that stream water and hoping
Gregor wouldn't point out her inconsistency. Gregor threw pebbles into the
pools. Fully an hour later,
Esterhazy returned. "Come on." They merely led the horses this time,
sure sign of a steep climb to come. Cordelia scrambled, and scraped her hands.
The horses' haunches heaved. Over the crest, down, up again, and they came out
on a muddy double trail carved through the forest. "Where are
we?" asked Cordelia. "Aime Pass Road,
Milady," supplied Esterhazy. "This is a
road?" Cordelia muttered in dismay, staring up and down it. Piotr stood a
little way off, with another old man holding the reins of a sturdy little
black-and-white horse. The horse was
considerably better groomed than the old man. Its white coat was bright and its
black coat shiny Its mane and tail were brushed to feather-softness. Its feet
and fetlocks were wet and dark, though, and its belly flecked with fresh mud.
In addition to an old cavalry saddle like Piotr's horse's, the pinto bore four
large saddlebags, a pair in front and a pair behind, and a bedroll. The old
man, as unshaven as Piotr, wore an Imperial Postal Service jacket so
weatherworn its blue had turned grey. This was supplemented by odd bits of
other old uniforms: a black fatigue shirt, an ancient pair of trousers from a set
of dress greens, worn but well-oiled officer's knee-high riding boots on his
bent bowlegs. He also wore a non-regulation felt hat with a few dried flowers
stuck in its faded print headband. He smacked his black-stained lips and stared
at Cordelia. He was missing several teeth; the rest were long and yellow-brown.
The old man's gaze fell on Gregor, holding Cordelia's hand. "So that's
him, eh? Huh. Not much." He spat reflectively into the weeds by the side
of the path. "Might do in
time," asserted Piotr. "If he gets time." "I'll see what I
can do, Gen'ral." Piotr grinned, as if at some private joke. "You
have any rations on you?" " 'Course."
The old man smirked, and turned to rummage in one of his saddlebags. He came up
with a package of raisins in a discarded plastic flimsy, some little cakes of
brownish crystals wrapped in leaves, and what looked like a handful of strips
of leather, again in a twist made of a used plastic flimsy. Cordelia caught a
heading, Update of Postal Regluations C6.77a, modified 6/17. File Immediately
In Permanent Files. Piotr looked the stores
over judiciously. "Dried goat?" He nodded toward the leathery mess.
"Mostly," said the old man. "We'll take half.
And the raisins. Save the maple sugar for the children." Piotr popped one
cube in his mouth, though. "I'll find you in maybe three days, maybe a
week. You remember the drill from Yuri's War, eh?" "Oh, yes,"
drawled the old man. "Sergeant."
Piotr waved Bothari to him. "You go with the Major, here. Take her, and
the boy. He'll take you to ground. Lie low till I come get you." "Yes, m'lord,"
Bothari intoned flatly. Only his flickering eyes betrayed his uneasiness. "What we got here,
Gen'ral?" inquired the old man, looking up at Bothari. "New
one?" "A city boy,"
said Piotr. "Belongs to my son. Doesn't talk much. He's good at throats,
though. He'll do." "Aye? Good." Piotr was moving a lot
more slowly. He waited for Esterhazy to give him a leg up on his horse. He
settled into his saddle with a sigh, his back temporarily curved in an uncharacteristic
slump. "Damn, but I'm getting old for this sort of thing." Thoughtfully, the man
Piotr had called the Major reached into a side pocket and pulled out a leather
pouch. "Want my gum-leaf, Gen'ral? A better chew than goat, if not as
long-lasting." Piotr brightened.
"Ah. I would be most grateful. But not your whole pouch, man." Piotr
dug among the pressed dried leaves that filled the container, and crumbled
himself off a generous half, which he stuffed in his breast pocket. He put a
wad in his cheek, and returned the pouch with a sincere salute. Gum-leaf was a
mild stimulant; Cordelia had never seen Piotr chew it in Vorbarr Sultana. "Take care of
m'lords horses," called Esterhazy rather desperately to Bothari.
"They're not machines, remember. Bothari grunted
something noncommittal, as the Count and Esterhazy headed their animals back
down the trail. They were out of sight in a few moments. A profound quiet
descended. CHAPTER
TWELVE The Major put Gregor,
comfortably padded by the bedroll and saddlebags, up behind him. Cordelia faced
one more climb onto that torture-device for humans and horses called a saddle.
She would never have made it without Bothari. The Major took her reins this
time, and Rose and his horse walked side by side with a lot less jerking of the
bridle. Bothari dropped back, trailing watchfully. "So," said the
old man after a time, with a sideways look at her, "you're the new Lady
Vorkosigan." Cordelia, rumpled and
filthy, smiled back desperately. "Yes. Ah, Count Piotr didn't mention your
name, Major ... ?" "Amor Klyeuvi,
Milady. But folks up here just call me Kly." "And, uh ... what
are you?" Besides some mountain kobold Piotr had conjured out of the
ground. He smiled, an expression
more repellent than attractive given the state of his teeth. "I'm the
Imperial Mail, Milady. I ride the circuit through these hills, out of
Vorkosigan Surleau, every ten days. Been at it for eighteen years. There are
grown kids up here with kids of their own who never knew me as anything but Kly
the Mail." "I thought mail
went to these parts by lightflyer." "They're phasing
them in. But the flyers don't go to every house, just to these central
drop—points. No courtesy to it, anymore." He spat disgust and gum-leaf.
"But if the General'll hold 'em off another two years here, I'll make my
last twenty, and be a triple-twenty-years Service man. I retired with my
double-twenty, see." "From what branch,
Major Klyuevi?" "Imperial
Rangers." He watched slyly for her reaction; she rewarded him with
impressed raised brows. "I was a throat-cutter, not a tech. 'S why I could
never go higher than major. Got my start at age fourteen, in these mountains,
running rings around the Cetagandans with the General and Ezar. Never did get
back to school after that. Just training courses. The Service passed me by, in
time." "Not entirely, it
seems," said Cordelia, staring around the apparently unpeopled wilderness. "No ..." His
breath became a purse-lipped sigh, as he glanced back over his shoulder at
Gregor in meditative unease. "Did Piotr tell you
what happened yesterday afternoon?" "No. I left the
lake day-before-yesterday morning. Missed all the excitement. I expect the news
will catch up with me before noon." "Is ... anything
else likely to catch up with us by then?" "We'll just have to
see." He added more hesitantly, "You'll have to get out of those
clothes, Milady. The name VORKOSIGAN, A., in big block letters over your
jacket-pocket isn't any too anonymous." Cordelia glanced down at
Aral's black fatigue shirt, quelled. "My lord's livery
sticks out like a flag, too," Kly added, looking back at Bothari.
"But you'll pass well enough, in the right clothes. I'll see what I can
do, in a bit here." Cordelia sagged, her
belly aching in anticipation of rest. Refuge. But at what price to those who
gave her refuge? "Will helping us put you in danger?" His tufted grey brow
rose. "Belike." His tone did not invite further comment on the topic. She had to bring her
tired mind back on-line somehow, if she was to be asset and not hazard to
everyone around her. "That gum-leaf of yours. Does it work anything like
coffee?" "Oh, better than
coffee, Milady." "Can I try
some?" Shyness lowered her voice; it might be too intimate a request. His cheeks creased in a
dry grin. "Only backcountry sticks like me chew gum-leaf, Milady. Pretty
Vor ladies from the capital wouldn't be caught dead with it in their pearly
teeth." "I'm not pretty,
I'm not a lady, and I'm not from the capital. And I'd kill for coffee right
now. I'll try it." He let his reins drop to
his steadily plodding horse's neck, rummaged in his blue-grey jacket pocket,
and pulled out his pouch. He broke off a chunk, in none-too-clean fingers, and
leaned across. She regarded it a
doubtful moment, dark and leafy in her palm. Never put strange organics in your
mouth till they've been cleared by the lab. She lapped it up. The wad was made
self-sticking by a bit of maple syrup, but after her saliva washed away the
first startling sweetness, the flavor was pleasantly bitter and astringent. It
seemed to peel away the night's film coating her teeth, a real improvement. She
straightened. Kly regarded her with
bemusement. "So what are you, off-worlder not-a-lady?" "I was an
astrocartographer. Then a Survey captain. Then a soldier, then a POW, then a
refugee. And then I was a wife, and then I was a mother. I don't know what I'm
going to be next," she answered honestly, around the gum-leaf. Pray not
widow. "Mother? I'd heard
you were pregnant, but ... didn't you lose your baby to the soltoxin?" He
eyed her waist in confusion. "Not yet. He still
has a fighting chance. Though it seems a little uneven, to match him against
all of Barrayar just yet... . He was born prematurely. By surgical
section." (She decided not to try to explain the uterine replicator.)
"He's at the Imperial Military Hospital. In Vorbarr Sultana. Which for all
I know has just been captured by Vordarian's rebel forces ..." She
shivered. Vaagen's lab was classified, nothing to draw anyone's attention.
Miles was all right, all right, all right, and one crack in that thin shell of
conviction would hatch out hysteria... . Aral, now, Aral could take care of
himself if anyone could. So how had he been so caught-out, eh, eh? No question,
ImpSec was riddled with treason. They couldn't trust anyone around here, and
where was Illyan? Trapped in Vorbarr Sultana? Or was he Vordarian's quisling?
No ... Cut off, more likely. Like Kareen. Like Padma and Alys Vorpatril. Life
racing death ... "No one will bother
the hospital," said Kly, watching her face. "I—yes.
Right." "Why did you come
to Barrayar, off-worlder?" "I wanted to have
children." A humorless laugh puffed from her lips. "Do you have any
children, Kly the Mail?" "Not so far as I
know." "You were very
wise." "Oh ..." His
face grew distant. "I don't know. Since my old woman died, 's been pretty
quiet. Some men I know, their children have been a great trouble to them. Ezar.
Piotr. Don't know who will burn the offerings on my grave. M' niece,
maybe." Cordelia glanced at
Gregor, riding along atop the saddlebags and listening. Gregor had lit the
taper to Ezar's great funeral offering-pyre, his hand guided by Aral's. They rode on up the
road, climbing. Four times Kly ducked up side-trails, while Cordelia, Bothari,
and Gregor waited out of sight. On the third of these delivery-runs Kly
returned with a bundle including an old skirt, a pair of worn trousers, and
some grain for the tired horses. Cordelia, still chilled, put the skirt on over
her old Survey trousers. Bothari exchanged his conspicuous brown uniform pants
"with the silver stripe down the side for the hillman's cast-offs. The
pants were too short, riding ankle—high, giving him the look of a sinister
scarecrow. Bothari's uniform and Cordelia's black fatigue shirt were bundled
out of sight in an empty mailbag. Kly solved the problem of Gregor's missing
shoe by simply stripping off the remaining one and letting the boy go barefoot,
and concealing his too-nice blue suit beneath a man's oversize shirt with the
sleeves rolled up. Man, woman, child, they looked a haggard, ragged little hill
family. They made the top of
Amie Pass and started back down. Occasionally folk waited by the roadside for
Kly; he passed on verbal messages, rattling them off in what sounded to
Cordelia to be verbatim style. He distributed letters on paper and cheap
vocodisks, their self-playbacks tinny and thin. Twice he paused to read letters
to apparently illiterate recipients, and once to a blind man guided by a small
girl. Cordelia grew twitchier with each mild encounter, drained by nervous
exhaustion. Will that fellow betray us? What do we look like to that woman? At
least the blind man can't describe us. ... Toward dusk, Kly
returned from one of his side-loops to gaze up and down the silent shadowed
wilderness trail and declare, "This place is just too crowded." It
was a measure of Cordelia's overstrain that she found herself mentally agreeing
with him. He looked her over,
worry in his eyes. "Think you can go on for another four hours,
Milady?" What's the alternative?
Sit by this mud puddle and weep till we're captured? She struggled to her feet,
pushing up from the log she'd been perched on waiting their guide's return.
"That depends on what's at the end of four more hours of this." "My place. I
usually spend this night at my niece's, near here. My route ends about another
ten hours farther on, when I'm making my deliveries, but if we go straight up
we can do it in four. I can double back to this point by tomorrow morning and
keep my schedule as usual. Real quiet-like. Nothing to remark on." What does "straight
up" mean? But Kly was clearly right; their whole safety lay in their
anonymity, their invisibility. The sooner they were out of sight, the better.
"Lead on, Major." It took six hours.
Bothari's horse went lame, short of their goal. He dismounted and towed it. It
limped and tossed its head. Cordelia walked, too, to ease her raw legs and to
keep herself warm and awake in the chilling darkness. Gregor fell asleep and
fell off, cried for his mother, then fell asleep again when Kly moved him
around to his front to keep a better grip. The last climb stole Cordelias
breath and made her heart race, even though she hung on to Rose's stirrup for
help. Both horses moved like old women with arthritis, stumping along jerkily;
only the animals' innate gregariousness kept them following Kly's hardy pinto. The climb became a drop,
suddenly, over a ridge and into a great vale. The woods grew thin and ragged,
interspersed with mountain meadows. Cordelia could feel the spaces stretching
out around her, true mountain scale at last, vast gulfs of shadow, huge bulks
of stone, silent as eternity. Three snowflakes melted on her staring, upturned
face. At the edge of a vague patch of trees, Kly halted. "End of the line,
folks." Cordelia sleepwalked
Gregor into the tiny shack, felt her way to a cot, and rolled him onto it. He
whimpered in his sleep as she dragged the blankets over him. She stood swaying,
numb-brained, then in a last burst of lucidity kicked off her slippers and
climbed in with him. His feet were cold as a cryo-corpse's. As she warmed them
against her body his shivering gradually relaxed into deeper sleep. Dimly, she
was aware that Kly—Bothari—somebody, had started a fire in the fireplace. Poor
Bothari, he'd been awake every bit as long as she had. In a quite military
sense, he was her man; she should see that he ate, cared for his feet, slept
... she should, she should... . Cordelia snapped awake,
to discover that the movement that had roused her was Gregor, sitting up beside
her and rubbing his eyes in bleary disorientation. Light streamed in through
two dirty windows on either side of the wooden front door. The shack, or
cabin—two of the walls were made of whole logs stacked up—was only a single
room. In the grey stone fireplace at one end a kettle and a covered pot sat on
a grating over a bed of glowing coals. Cordelia reminded herself again that
wood represented poverty, not wealth, here. They must have passed ten million
trees yesterday. She sat up, and gasped
from the pain in her muscles. She straightened her legs. The bed was a rope net
strung on a frame and supporting first a straw-stuffed mattress, then a
feather-stuffed one. She and Gregor were warm, at least, in their nest. The air
of the room was dusty-smelling, tinged with a pleasant edge of wood smoke. Booted footsteps sounded
on the boards of the porch outside, and Cordelia grasped Gregor's arm in sudden
panic. She couldn't run—that black iron fireplace poker would make a pretty
poor weapon against a stunner or nerve disruptor—but the steps were Bothari's.
He slipped through the door along with a puff of outside air. His crudely sewn
tan cloth jacket must be a borrowing from Kly, judging from the way his bony
wrists stuck out beyond the turned-down sleeve cuffs. He'd pass for a hillman
easily, as long as he kept his urban-accented mouth shut. He nodded at them.
"Milady. Sire." He knelt by the fireplace, glanced under the pot lid,
and tested the kettle's temperature by cupping a big hand a few centimeters
above it. "There's groats, and syrup," he said. "Hot water. Herb
tea. Dried fruit. No butter." "What's
happening?" Cordelia rubbed her face awake, and swung her legs overboard,
planning a stumble toward that herb tea. "Not much. The
Major rested his horse a while, and left before light, to keep his schedule.
It's been real quiet, since." "Did you get any
sleep yet?" "Couple of hours, I
think." The tea had to wait
while Cordelia escorted the Emperor downslope to Kly's outhouse. Gregor
wrinkled his nose, and eyed the adult-sized seat nervously. Back on the cabin
porch Cordelia supervised hand and face washing over a dented metal basin. The view from the porch,
once she'd toweled her face dry and vision clear, was stunning. Half of
Vorkosigan's District seemed spread out below, the brown foothills, the
green-and-yellow-specked peopled plains beyond. "Is that our lake?"
Cordelia nodded to a glint of silver in the hills, near the limits of her
vision. "I think so,"
said Bothari, squinting. So far, to have come
this fast on foot. So fearfully near, in a lightflyer ... Well, at least you
could see whatever was coming. The hot groats and
syrup, served on a cracked white plate, tasted wonderful. Cordelia guzzled herb
tea, and realized she'd become dangerously dehydrated. She tried to encourage
Gregor to drink, but he didn't like the astringent taste of the tea. Bothari
looked almost suffused with shame, that he couldn't produce milk out of the air
at his Emperor's direct request. Cordelia solved the dilemma by sweetening the
tea with syrup, rendering it acceptable. By the time they
finished breakfast, washed up the few utensils and dishes, and flung the bit of
wash water over the porch rail, the porch had warmed enough in the morning sun
to make sitting tolerable. "Why don't you take
over the bed, Sergeant. I'll keep watch. Ah ... did Kly have any suggestions
what we should do, if somebody hostile drops down on us here before he gets
back? It kind of looks like we've run out of places to run to." "Not quite, Milady.
There's a set of caves, up in that patch of woods in back. An old guerilla
cache. Kly took me back last night to see the entrance." Cordelia sighed.
"Right. Get some sleep, Sergeant, we'll surely need you later." She sat in the sun. in
one of the wooden chairs, resting her body if not her mind. Her eyes and ears
strained for the whine of a distant lightflyer or heavy aircar. She tied
Gregor's feet up with makeshift rag shoes, and he wandered about examining
things. She accompanied him on a visit to the shed to see the horses. The
Sergeant's beast was still very lame, and Rose was moving as little as
possible, but they had fodder in a rick and water from a little stream that ran
across the end of their enclosure. Kly's other horse, a lean and fit-looking
sorrel, seemed to tolerate the equine invasion, only nipping when Rose edged
too close to its side of the hayrick. Cordelia and Gregor sat
on the porch steps as the sun passed zenith, comfortably warm now. The only
sound in the vast vale besides a breeze in the branches was Bothari's snores,
resonating through the cabin walls. Deciding this was as relaxed as they were
likely to get, Cordelia at last dared quiz Gregor on his view—her only
eyewitness report—of the coup in the capital. It wasn't much help; Gregor's five-year-old
eyes saw the what well enough, it was the whys that escaped him. On a higher
level, she had the same problem, Cordelia admitted ruefully to herself. "The soldiers came.
The colonel told Mama and me to come with him. One of our liveried men came in.
The colonel shot him." "Stunner, or nerve
disruptor?" "Nerve disruptor.
Blue fire. He fell down. They took us to the Marble Courtyard. They had
aircars. Then Captain Negri ran in, with some men. A soldier grabbed me, and
Mama grabbed me back, and that's what happened to my shoe. It came off in her
hand. I should have ... fastened it tighter, in the morning. Then Captain Negri
shot the soldier who was carrying me, and some soldiers shot Captain
Negri—" "Plasma arc? Is
that when he got that horrible burn?" Cordelia asked. She tried to keep
her tone very calm. Gregor nodded mutely.
"Some soldiers took Mama, those other ones, not Negri's ones. Captain
Negri picked me up and ran. We went through the tunnels, under the Residence,
and came out in a garage. We went in the lightflyer. They shot at us. Captain
Negri kept telling me to shut up, to be quiet. We flew and flew, and he kept
yelling at me to be quiet, but I was. And then we landed by the lake."
Gregor was trembling again. "Mm." Kareen
spun in vivid detail in Cordelia's head, despite the simplicity of Gregor's
account. That serene face, wrenched into screaming rage and terror as they tore
the son she'd borne the Barrayaran hard way from her grip, leaving ... nothing
but a shoe, of all their precarious life and illusory possessions. So
Vordarian's troops had Kareen. As hostage? Victim? Alive or dead? "Do you think
Mama's all right?" "Sure."
Cordelia shifted uncomfortably. "She's a very valuable lady. They won't
hurt her." Till it becomes expedient for them to do so. "She was
crying." "Yes." She
could feel that same knot in her own belly. The mental flash she'd shied from
all day yesterday burst in her brain. Boots, kicking open a secured laboratory
door. Kicking over desks, tables. No faces, just boots. Gun butts sweeping
delicate glassware and computerized monitors from benches into a tangled smash
on the floor. A uterine replicator rudely jerked open, its sterile seals
slashed, its contents dumped pell-mell wetly on the tiles ... no need even for
the traditional murderous swing by the heels of infant head against the nearest
concrete wall, Miles was so little the boots could just step on him and smash
him to jam... . She drew in her breath. Miles is all right.
Anonymous, just like us. We are very small, and very quiet, and safe. Shut up,
keep quiet, kid. She hugged Gregor tightly. "My little boy is in the
capital, too, same as your Mama. And you're with me. We'll look out for each
other. You bet." After supper, and still
no sign of Kly, Cordelia said, "Show me that cave, Sergeant." Kly kept a box of cold
lights atop his mantel. Bothari cracked one, and led Cordelia and Gregor up
into the woods on a faint stony path. He made a menacing will-o'-the-wisp, with
the bright green-tinged light shining from the tube between his fingers. The area near the cave
mouth showed signs of having once been cleared, though recent overgrowth was
closing back in. The entrance was by no means hidden, a yawning black hole
twice the height of Bothari and wide enough to edge a lightflyer through.
Immediately within, the roof rose and walls flared to create a dusty cavern.
Whole patrols could camp therein, and had, in the distant past, judging from
the antique litter. Bunk niches were carved in the rock, and names and initials
and dates and crude comments covered the walls. A cold fire-pit in the
center was matched by a blackened vent-hole above, which had once provided exit
for the smoke. A ghostly crowd of hillmen, guerilla soldiers, seemed to hover
in Cordelia's mind's eye, eating, joking, spitting gum-leaf, cleaning their
weapons and planning their next foray. Ranger spies came and went, ghosts among
the ghosts, to place their precious blood-won information before their young
general, who spread his maps out on that flat rock over there... . She shook
the vision from her head, and took the light and explored the niches. At least
five traversable exits led off from the cavern, three of which showed signs of
having been heavily traveled. "Did Kly say where
these went, or where they came out, Sergeant?" "Not exactly,
Milady. He did say the passages went back for kilometers, into the hills. He
was late, and in a hurry to get on." "Is it a vertical
or horizontal system, did he say?" "Beg pardon,
Milady?" "All on one strata,
or with unexpected big drops? Are there lots of blind alleys? Which path were
we supposed to take? Are there underground streams?" "I think he
expected to be leading us, if we went in. He started to explain, then said it
was too complicated." She frowned,
contemplating the possibilities. She'd done a bit of cave work in her Survey
training, enough to grasp what the term respect for the hazards meant. Vents,
drops, cracks, labyrinthine cross—passages ... plus, here, the unexpected rise
and fall of water, not a matter of much concern on Beta Colony. It had rained
last night. Sensors were not much help in finding a lost cave explorer. And
whose sensors? If the system was as extensive as Kly suggested, it could absorb
hundreds of searchers ... Her frown changed to a slow smile. "Sergeant,
let's camp here tonight." Gregor liked the cave,
especially when Cordelia described the history of the place. He rattled around
the cavern whispering military dialogue to himself like "Zap, zap,
zap!", climbed in and out of all the niches, and tried to sound out the
rude words carved in the walls. Bothari lit a small fire in the pit and spread
a bedroll for Gregor and Cordelia, taking the night watch for himself. Cordelia
set a second bedroll, wrapped around trail snacks and supplies, in a grabbable
bundle near the entrance. She arranged the black fatigue jacket with the name
VORKOSIGAN, A., artistically in a niche, as if used to sit upon and keep
someone's haunches from the cold stone and then temporarily forgotten when the
sitter rose. Last of all Bothari brought up their lame and useless horses,
re-saddled and bridled, and tethered them just outside. Cordelia emerged from
the widest passage, where she'd dropped an almost-spent cold light a quarter
kilometer along, over a rope-strung ten-meter cliff. The rope was natural
fiber, and very old and brittle. She'd elected not to test it. "I don't quite get
it, Milady," said Bothari. "With the horses abandoned out there, if
anyone comes looking they'll find us at once, and know exactly where we've gone." "Find this,
yes," said Cordelia. "Know where we've gone, no. Because without Kly,
there is no way I'm taking Gregor down into this labyrinth. But the best way to
look like we were here is to actually be here for a bit." Bothari's flat eyes lit
in understanding at last, as he gazed around at the five black entrances at
their various levels. "Ah!" "That means we also
need to find a real bolt-hole. Somewhere up in the
woods, where we can cut across to the trail Kly brought us up yesterday. Wish
we'd done this in daylight." "I see what you
mean, Milady. I'll scout." "Please do,
Sergeant." Taking their trail
bundle, he disappeared into the dim woods. Cordelia tucked Gregor into the
bedroll, then perched outside among the rocks above the cave mouth and kept watch.
She could see the vale, stretched out greyly below the tops of the trees, and
make out Kly's cabin roof. No smoke rose now from its chimney. Beneath the
stone, no remote thermal sensor would find their new fire, though the smell of
it hung in the chill air, detectable to nearby noses. She watched for moving
lights in the sky till the stars were a watery blur in her eyes. Bothari returned after a
very long time. "I have a spot. Shall we move now?" "Not yet. Kly might
still show up." First. "Your turn to
sleep, then, Milady." "Oh, yes." The
evening's exertions had only partly warmed the acid fatigue from her muscles.
Leaving Bothari on the limestone outcrop in the starlight like a guardian
gargoyle, she crawled in with Gregor. Eventually, she slept. She woke with the grey
light of dawn making the cavern entrance a luminous misty oval. Bothari made
hot tea, and they shared cold lumps of pan bread left from last night, and
nibbled dried fruit. "I'll watch some
more," Bothari volunteered. "I can't sleep so good without my
medication anyway." "Medication?"
said Cordelia. "Yeah, I left my
pills at Vorkosigan Surleau. I can feel it clearing out of my system. Things
seem sharper." Cordelia chased a
suddenly very lumpy bite of bread with a swallow of hot tea. But were his
psychoactive drugs truly therapeutic, or merely political in their effect?
"Let me know if you are experiencing any kind of difficulty,
Sergeant," she said cautiously. "Not so far. Except
it's getting harder to sleep. They suppress dreams." He took his tea and
wandered back to his post. Cordelia carefully
refrained from cleaning up their campsite. She did escort Gregor to the nearest
rivulet for a personal washup. They were certainly acquiring an authentic
hill-folk aroma. They returned to the cavern, where Cordelia rested a while on
the bedroll. She must insist on relieving Bothari soon. Come on, Kly... . Bothari's tense low
voice reverberated in the cavern. "Milady. Sire. Time to go." "Kly?" "No." Cordelia rolled to her
feet, kicked the pre-arranged pile of dirt over the last coals of their fire,
grabbed Gregor, and hustled him out the cave mouth. He looked suddenly
frightened and sickly. Bothari was pulling the bridles off the horses, loosing
them and tossing the gear on the pile with the saddles. Cordelia pulled herself
up beside the cave and snatched one quick glimpse over the treetops. A flyer
had landed in front of Kly's cabin. Two black-uniformed soldiers were circling
to the right and left. A third disappeared under the porch roof. Faint and
delayed in the distance came the bang of Kly's front door being kicked open.
Only soldiers, no hillman-guides or hillman-prisoners in that flyer. No sign of
Kly. They took to the woods
at a jog, Bothari boosting up and carrying Gregor piggyback. Rose made to
follow them, and Cordelia whirled to wave her arms and whisper frantically,
"No! Go away, idiot beast!" to spook her off. Rose hesitated, then
turned to stay by her lame companion. Their run was steady,
unpanicked. Bothari had his route all picked out, taking advantage of
sheltering rocks and trees and water-carved steps. They scrambled up, down, up,
but just when she thought her lungs would burst and their pursuers must spot them,
Bothari vanished along a steep rock face. "Over here,
Milady!" He'd found a thin,
horizontal crack in the rocks, half a meter high and three meters deep. She
rolled in beside him to find the niche shielded by solid rock everywhere but
the front, and that almost blocked by fallen stone. Their bedroll and supplies
waited. "No wonder,"
Cordelia gasped, "the Cetagandans had trouble up here." A thermal
sensor would have to be aimed straight in, to pick them up, from a point twenty
meters in the air out over the ravine. The place was riddled with hundreds of
similar crannies. "Even better."
Bothari pulled a pair of antique field glasses, looted from Kly's cabin, from
their bedroll. "We can see them." The glasses were nothing
but binocular tubes with sliding glass lenses, purely passive light—collectors.
They must have dated from the Time of Isolation. The magnification was poor by
modern standards, no UV or infrared boost, no rangefinder pulse ... no power
cell to leak detectable energy traces. Flat on her belly, chin in the rubble,
Cordelia could glimpse the distant cavern entrance on the slope rising beyond
the ravine and a knife-backed ridge. When she said, "Now we must be very
quiet," pale Gregor practically went fetal. The black-clad scanner
men found the horses at last, though it seemed to take them forever. Then they
found the cave mouth. The tiny figures gesticulated excitedly to each other,
ran in and out, and called the flyer, which landed outside the entrance with
much crackling of shrubbery. Four men entered; eventually, one came back out.
In time, another flyer landed. Then a lift van arrived, and disgorged a whole
patrol. The mountain mouth ate them all. Another lift van came, and men set up
lights, a field generator, comm links. Cordelia made a nest of
the bedroll for Gregor, and fed him little snacks and sips from their water
bottle. Bothari stretched out in the back of the niche with the thinnest
blanket folded under his head, otherwise seeming impervious to the stone. While
Bothari dozed, Cordelia kept careful count of the net flow of hunters. By
mid-afternoon, she calculated that some forty men had gone below and not come
up again. Two men were brought out
strapped to float pallets, loaded into a medical—evacuation lifter, and flown
away. A lightflyer made a bad landing in the crowded area, toppled downslope,
and crunched into a tree. Yet more men became involved in extracting, righting,
and repairing it. By dusk over sixty men had been sucked down the drain. A
whole company drawn away from the capital, not pursuing refugees, not available
to root out the secrets of ImpMil ... it wasn't enough to make a real
difference, surely. It's a start. Cordelia and Bothari and
Gregor slipped from the niche in the gloaming, cleared the ravines, and made
their way silently through the woods. It was nearly full dark when they came to
the edge of the trees and struck Kly's trail. As they crossed over the ridge
edging the vale, Cordelia looked back. The area by the cave mouth was marked by
searchlights, stabbing up through the mists. Lightflyers whined in and out of
the site. They dropped over the
ridge and slithered down the slope that had so nearly killed her to climb,
hanging on to Rose's stirrup two days ago. Fully five kilometers down the
trail, in a rocky region of treeless scrub, Bothari came to an abrupt halt.
"Sh. Milady, listen." Voices. Men's voices,
not far off, but strangely hollow. Cordelia stared into the darkness, but no
lights moved. Nothing moved. They crouched beside the trail, senses straining. Bothari crept off, head
tilted, following his ears. After a few moments Cordelia and Gregor cautiously
followed. She found Bothari kneeling by a striated outcrop. He motioned her
closer. "It's a vent,"
he announced in a whisper. "Listen." The voices were much
clearer now, sharp cadences, angry gutturals punctuated by swearing in two or
three languages. "Goddammit, I know
we went left back at that third turn." "That wasn't the
third turn, that was the fourth." "We re-crossed the
stream." "It wasn't the same
friggin' stream, sabaki!" "Merde.
Perdu!" "Lieutenant, you're
an idiot!" "Corporal, you're
out of line!" "This cold light's
not going to last the hour. See, it's fading." "Well, don't shake
it up, you moron, when it glows brighter it goes faster." "Give me
that—!" Bothari's teeth gleamed
in the darkness. It was the first smile Cordelia had seen crack his face in
months. Silently, he saluted her. They tiptoed softly away, into the chill of
the Dendarii night. Back on the trail,
Bothari sighed deeply. "If only I'd had a grenade to drop down that vent.
Their search parties would still be shooting at each other this time next
week." CHAPTER
THIRTEEN Four hours down the
night trail, the distinctive black and white horse loomed out of the dark. Kly
was a shadow aboard it, but his thick profile and battered hat were instantly
recognizable. "Bothari!" The
name huffed from Kly's mouth. "We live. Grace of God." Bothari's voice was
flat. "What happened to you, Major?" "I almost ran into
one of Vordarian's squads at a cabin I was delivering mail to. They're actually
trying to go over these hills house by house. Dosing everyone they meet with
fast-penta. They must be bringing the drug in by the barrel." "We expected you
back last night," said Cordelia. She tried not to let her tone sound too
accusing. The felt hat bobbed as
Kly gave her a weary nod of greeting. "Would've been, except for
Vordarian's bloody patrol. I didn't dare let them question me. I spent a day
and a night, dodging 'em. Sent my niece's husband to get you. But when he got
to my place this morning, Vordarian's men were all over. I figured we'd lost
everything. But when they were still all over by nightfall, I took heart. They
wouldn't still be looking for you if they'd found you. Figured I'd better get
my ass up here and do some scouting myself. This is beyond hope." Kly turned his horse
around, heading back down the trail. "Here, Sergeant, put the boy
up." "I can carry the
boy. Think you'd better give m'lady a lift. She's about out." Too true. It was a
measure of Cordelia's exhaustion that she went willingly to Kly's horse.
Between them, Bothari and Kly shoved her aboard, perched astraddle on the
pinto's warm rump. They started off, Cordelia gripping the mailman's coat. "What happened to
you?" Kly asked in turn. Cordelia let Bothari
answer, in his short sentences made even shorter by his burdened stride, as he
carried Gregor piggyback. When he got to a mention of the men heard down the
vent, Kly barked a laugh, then clapped a hand over his mouth. "They'll be
weeks getting out of there. Good work, Sergeant!" "It was Lady
Vorkosigan's idea." "Oh?" Kly
twisted around to glance back over his shoulder at Cordelia, clinging wanly. "Aral and Piotr
both seemed to think diversion worthwhile," Cordelia explained. "I
gather Vordarian has limited reserves." "You think like a
soldier, m'lady." Kly sounded approving. Cordelia wrinkled her
brow in dismay. What an appalling compliment. The last thing she wanted was to
start thinking like a soldier, playing their game by their rules. The
hallucinatory military world-view was horribly infectious, though, immersed in
it as she was now. How long can I tread water? Kly led them on another
two hours of night marching, striking out on unfamiliar trails. In deep
pre—dawn dark they came to a shack, or house. It seemed to be of similar
construction to Kly's place, but more extensive, with rooms built on and other
rooms built on to the additions. A light from a tiny flame, some sort of greasy
homemade candle, burned in a window. An old woman in a
nightgown and jacket, her grey hair in a braid down her back, came to the door
and motioned them within. Another old man—but younger than Kly—took the horse
out of sight toward a shed. Kly made to go with him. "Is it safe
here?" Cordelia asked dizzily. Where is here? Kly shrugged. "They
searched here day before yesterday. Before I sent for m' nephew-in-law. Checked
it off clean." The old woman snorted,
surly memory in her eye. "What with the
caves, and all the unchecked homesteads, and the lake, it'll be a while before
they get around to re-checking. They're still searching the lake bottom, I
hear, they've flown in all kinds of equipment. It's as safe as any." He
went off after his horse. Meaning, as unsafe as
any. Bothari was already taking his boots off. His feet must be bad. Her feet
were a mess, her slippers walked to flinders, and Gregor's rag shoes utterly
destroyed. She'd never felt so near the end of all endurance, bone-weary,
blood-weary, though she'd done much longer hikes before. It was as if her
truncated pregnancy had drained life itself out of her, to pass it on to
another. She let herself be guided, fed bread and cheese and milk and put to
bed in a little side room, herself on one narrow cot and drooping Gregor on
another. She would believe in safety tonight the way Barrayaran children
believed in Father Frost at Winterfair, true because she desperately wanted it
to be. The next day a raggedy
boy of about ten appeared out of the woods, riding Kly's sorrel horse bareback
with a rope halter. Kly made Cordelia, Gregor, and Bothari hide out of sight
while he paid the boy off with a few coins, and Sonia, Kly's aged niece, packed
him some sweet cakes to speed him on his way. Gregor peeked wistfully out the
corner of one curtained window as the child vanished again. "I didn't dare go
myself," Kly explained to Cordelia. "Vordarian has three platoons of
men up there now." A wheezing chuckle escaped him at some inner vision.
"But the boy knows nothing but that the old mailman was sick and needed
his re-mount." "They didn't
fast-penta that child, did they?" "Oh, yes." "They dared!" Kly's black-stained lips
compressed in sympathy with her outrage. "If he can't get hold of Gregor, Vordarian's
coup is likely doomed. And he knows it. There's not much he wouldn't dare to
do, at this point." He paused. "You can be glad fast-penta has
replaced torture, eh?" Kly's nephew-in-law
helped him saddle up the sorrel, and buckle on the mailbags. The mailman
adjusted his hat, and climbed up. "If I don't keep my
schedule, it will be near-impossible for the Gen'ral to contact me," he
explained. "Got to go, I'm late already. I'll be back. You and the boy
stay inside, out of sight, as much as you can, m'lady." He turned his
horse toward the bare-branched woods. The animal blended quickly into the
red-brown native scrub. Cordelia found Kly's
last advice all too easy to follow. She spent most of the next four days in her
cot-bed. The dull silence of hours went by in a fog, a relapse into the
frightening fatigue she'd experienced after the placental transfer operation
and its near-lethal complications. Conversation provided no diversion. The
hill-folk were as laconic as Bothari. It was the threat of fast-penta, Cordelia
thought. The less you knew, the less you could tell. The old woman Sonia's eyes
probed Cordelia curiously, but she never asked anything beyond, "You
hungry?" Cordelia didn't even know her last name. Baths. After the first
one, Cordelia did not ask again. The old couple worked all afternoon to haul
and heat enough water for herself and Gregor. Their simple meals were nearly as
much labor. No Pull Tab To Heat Contents up here. Technology, a woman's best
friend. Unless the technology appeared in the form of a nerve disruptor in the
hand of some dead-eyed soldier hunting you down carelessly as an animal. Cordelia counted over
the days since the coup, since all hell had broken loose. What was happening in
the larger world? What response from the space forces, from planetary
embassies, from conquered Komarr? Would Komarr seize the chaos to revolt, or
had Vordarian taken them by surprise too? Aral, what are you doing out there? Sonia, though she asked
no questions, would now and then return from outings and drop bits of local
news. Vordarian's troops, headquartered in Piotr's residence, were close to
abandoning the search of the lake bottom. Hassadar was sealed, but refugees
escaped in a trickle; someone's children, smuggled out, had arrived to stay with
relatives nearby. At Vorkosigan Surleau most of Piotr's armsmen's families had
escaped except Armsman Vogti's wife and very aged mother, who had been taken
away in a groundcar, no one knew where. "And, oh yes, very
strange," Sonia added. "They took Karla Hysopi. That hardly makes
sense. She was only the widow of a retired regular Service sergeant, what use
do they expect to make of her?" Cordelia froze.
"Did they take the baby, too?" "Baby? Donnia
didn't say about a baby. Grandchild, was it?" Bothari was sitting by
the window sharpening his knife on Sonia's kitchen whetstone. His hand paused
in mid-stroke. He looked up to meet Cordelias alarmed eyes. Beyond a tightening
of his jaw his face did not change expression, yet the sudden increase of
tension in his body made Cordelia's stomach knot. He looked back down at what
he was doing, and took a longer, firmer stroke that hissed along the whetstone
like water on coals. "Maybe ... Kly will
know something more, when he comes back," Cordelia quavered. "Belike," said
Sonia doubtfully. At last, on schedule, on
the evening of the seventh day, Kly rode into the clearing on his sorrel horse.
A few minutes later Armsman Esterhazy rode in behind him. He was dressed in
hillman's togs, and his mount was a lean and spindle-shanked hill horse, not
one of Piotr's big glossy beasts. They put their horses away and came in to a
dinner Sonia had apparently fixed this night of Kly's rounds for eighteen
years. After dinner they pulled
up chairs to the stone fireplace, and Kly and Esterhazy briefed Cordelia and
Bothari in low tones. Gregor sat by Cordelias feet. "Since Vordarian
has greatly widened his search area," Esterhazy began, "Count and
Lord Vorkosigan have decided that the mountains are still the best place to
hide Gregor. As the search radius grows enemy forces will be spread thinner and
thinner." "Locally,
Vordarian's forces are still hunting up and down the caves," Kly put in.
"There's about two hundred men still up there. But as soon as they finish
finding each other, I expect they'll pull out. I hear they've given up on
finding you in there, Milady. Tomorrow, Sire," Kly glanced down and
addressed Gregor directly, "Armsman Esterhazy will take you to a new
place, a lot like this one. You'll have a new name for a while, for pretend.
And Armsman Esterhazy will pretend he's your da. Think you can do that?" Gregor's hand tightened
on Cordelia's skirt. "Will Lady Vorkosigan pretend she's my ma?" "We're going to
take Lady Vorkosigan back to Lord Vorkosigan, at Tanery Base Shuttleport."
At Gregor's alarmed look Kly added, "There's a pony, where you're going.
And goats. The lady there might teach you how to milk the goats." Gregor looked doubtful,
but did not fuss further, though the next morning as he was put up behind
Esterhazy on the shaggy horse he looked near to tears. Cordelia said anxiously,
"Take care of him, Armsman." Esterhazy gave her a
driven look. "He's my Emperor, Milady. He holds my oath." "He's also a little
boy, Armsman. Emperor is ... a delusion you all have in your heads. Take care
of the Emperor for Piotr, yes, but you take care of Gregor for me, eh?" Esterhazy met her eyes.
His voice softened. "My little boy is four, Milady." He did understand, then.
Cordelia swallowed relief and grief. "Have you ... heard anything from the
capital? About your family?" "Not yet,"
said Esterhazy bleakly. "I'll keep my ears
open. Do what I can." "Thank you."
He gave her a nod, not as retainer to his lady, but as one parent to another.
No other word seemed necessary. Bothari was out of
earshot, having returned to the cabin to pack up their few supplies. Cordelia
went to Kly's stirrup, as he prepared to swing his black and white horse about
and lead Esterhazy and Gregor on their way. "Major. Sonia passed on a
rumor that Vordarian's troops took Mistress Hysopi. Bothari had hired her to
foster his baby girl. Do you know if they took Elena—the baby—too?" Kly lowered his voice.
"'Twas the other way around, as I have it. They went for the baby, Karla
Hysopi raised hell, so they took her too even though she wasn't on the
list." "Do you know
where?" He shook his head.
"Somewhere in Vorbarr Sultana. Belike your husband's Intelligence will
know exactly, by now." "Have you told the
Sergeant yet?" "His brother
armsman told him, last night." "Ah." Gregor looked back over
his shoulder at her as they rode away, until they were obscured from sight by
the tree-boles. For three days Kly's
nephew guided them through the mountains, Bothari on foot leading Cordelia on a
bony-hipped little hill horse with a sheepskin pad cinched to its back. On the
third afternoon, they came to a cabin which sheltered a skinny youth who led
them to a shed that held, wonder of wonders, a rickety lightflyer. He loaded up
the backseat with Cordelia and six jugs of maple syrup. Bothari shook hands
silently with Kly's nephew, who mounted the little horse and vanished into the
woods. Under Bothari's narrow
eye, the skinny youth coaxed his vehicle into the air. Brushing treetops, they
followed ravines and ridges up over the snow-frosted spine of the mountains and
down the other side, out of Vorkosigan's District. They came at dusk to a
little market town. The youth brought his flyer down in a side street. Cordelia
and Bothari helped him carry his gurgling produce to a small grocer's shop,
where he bartered the syrup for coffee, flour, soap, and power cells. Upon returning to his
lightflyer, they found that a battered groundtruck had pulled up and parked behind
it. The youth exchanged no more than a nod with its driver, who hopped out and
slid the door to the cargo bay aside for Bothari and Cordelia. The bay was a
quarter full of fiber sacks of cabbages. They did not make very good pillows,
though Bothari did his best to arrange Cordelia a nest of them as the truck
rocked along above the dismally uneven roads. Bothari then sat wedged against
the side of the cargo bay and compulsively polished the edge of his knife to
molecular sharpness with a makeshift strop, a bit of leather he'd begged from
Sonia. Four hours of this and Cordelia was ready to start talking to the
cabbages. The truck thumped to a
halt at last. The door slid aside, and first Bothari then Cordelia emerged to
find themselves in the middle of nowhere: a gravel-surfaced road over a
culvert, in the dark, in the country, in an unfamiliar district of unknown
loyalties. "They'll pick you
up at Kilometer Marker Ninety-six," the truck driver said, pointing to a
white smudge in the dimness that appeared to be merely a painted rock. "When?" asked
Cordelia desperately. For that matter, who were they? "Don't know."
The man returned to his truck and drove off in a spray of gravel from the
hoverfan, as if he were already pursued. Cordelia perched on the
painted boulder and wondered morbidly which side was going to leap out of the
night first, and by what test she might tell them apart. Time passed, and she
entertained an even more depressed vision of no one picking them up at all. But at last a darkened
lightflyer floated down out of the night sky, its engines pitched to eerie
near-silence. Its landing feet crunched in the gravel. Bothari crouched beside
her, his useless knife gripped in his hand. But the man awkwardly levering himself
up out of the passenger seat was Lieutenant Koudelka. "Milady?" he
called uncertainly to the two human scarecrows. "Sergeant?" A breath
of pure delight puffed from Cordelia as she recognized the pilot's blonde head
as Droushnakovi. My home is not a place, it is people, sir... . With Bothari's hand on
her elbow, at Koudelka's anxious gesture Cordelia fell gratefully into the
padded backseat of the flyer. Droushnakovi cast a dark look over her shoulder
at Bothari, wrinkled her nose, and asked, "Are you all right,
Milady?" "Better than I
expected, really. Go, go." The canopy sealed, and
they rose into the air. Vent fans powered up, cycling filtered air. Colored
lights from the control interface highlighted Kou's and Drou's faces. A
technological cocoon. Cordelia glanced at systems readouts over Droushnakovi's
shoulder, and then up through the canopy; yes, dark shapes paced them, guardian
military flyers. Bothari saw them, too, his eyes narrowing in approval. Some
fraction of tension eased from his body. "Good to see you
two—" some subtle cue of their body language, some hidden reserve, kept
Cordelia from adding together again. "I gather you got that accusation
about the comconsole sabotage straightened out in good order?" "As soon as we got
the chance to stop and fast-penta that guard corporal, Milady,"
Droushnakovi answered. "He didn't have the nerve to suicide before
questioning." "He was the
saboteur?" "Yes,"
answered Koudelka. "He'd intended to escape to Vordarian's troops when
they arrived to capture us. Vordarian apparently suborned him months ago." "That accounts for
our security problems. Or does it?" "He passed
information about our route, the day of the sonic grenade attempt."
Koudelka rubbed at his sinuses in memory. "So it was
Vordarian behind that!" "Confirmed. But the
guard doesn't seem to have known anything about the soltoxin. We turned him
inside out. He wasn't a high-level conspirator, just a tool." Nasty flow of thought,
but, "Has Illyan reported in yet?" "Not yet. Admiral
Vorkosigan hopes he may be hiding in the capital, if he wasn't killed in the
first fighting." "Hm. Well, you'll
be glad to know Gregor's all right—" Koudelka held up an
interrupting hand. "Excuse me, Milady. The Admiral ordered—you and the
Sergeant are not to debrief anything about Gregor to anyone except Count Piotr
or himself." "All right. Damn
fast-penta. How is Aral?" "He's well, Milady.
He ordered me to bring you up to date on the strategic situation—" Screw the strategic
situation, what about my baby? Alas, the two seemed inextricably intertwined. "—and answer any
questions you had." Very well. "What
about our baby? Pi—Miles?" "We've heard
nothing bad, Milady." "What does that
mean?" "It means we've
heard nothing," Droushnakovi put in glumly. Koudelka shot her an
irate look, which she shrugged off with a twitch of one shoulder. "No news may be
good news," Koudelka went on. "While it's true Vordarian holds the
capital—" "And therefore
ImpMil, yes," said Cordelia. "And he's
publicizing names of hostages related to anyone in our command structure,
there's been no mention of, of your child, in the lists. The Admiral thinks
Vordarian simply doesn't realize that what went into the replicator was viable.
Doesn't know what he's got." "Yet," bit off
Cordelia. "Yet,"
Koudelka conceded reluctantly. "All right. Go
on." "The overall
situation isn't as bad as we feared at first. Vordarian holds Vorbarr
Sultana, his own District and its military bases, and he's put troops in
Vorkosigan's District, but he only has about five district counts who are his
committed allies. About thirty of the other counts were caught in the capital,
and we can't tell their real allegiance while Vordarian holds guns to their
heads. Most of the twenty-three remaining Districts have reiterated their oaths
to my Lord Regent. Though a couple are waffling, who have relatives in the
capital or who are in dicey strategic positions as potential
battlefields." "And the space
forces?" "I was just coming
to them, yes, Milady. Over half of their supplies come up from the shuttleports
in Vordarian's District. For the moment, they're still holding out for a clear
result rather than moving in to create one. But they've refused to openly
endorse Vordarian. It's a balance, and whoever can tip it their way first will
start a landslide. Admiral Vorkosigan seems awfully confident." Cordelia
was not sure from the lieutenant's tone if he altogether shared that
confidence. "But then, he has to. For morale. He says Vordarian lost the
war the hour Negri got away with Gregor, and the rest is just maneuvering to
limit the losses. But Vordarian holds Princess Kareen." "Doubtless one of
the losses Aral is anxious to limit. Is she all right? Vordarian's goons
haven't abused her?" "Not as far as we
know. She seems to be under house arrest in her own rooms in the Imperial
Residence. Several of the more important hostages have been secluded
there." "I see." She
glanced sideways in the dim cabin at Bothari, who did not change expression.
She waited for him to ask after Elena, but he said nothing. Droushnakovi stared
bleakly into the night, at the mention of Kareen. Had Kou and Drou made
up? They seemed cool, civil, all duty and on duty. But whatever surface
apologies had passed, Cordelia sensed no healing in them. The secret adoration
and will-to-trust was all gone from the blue eyes that now and then flicked
from the control interface to the man in the passenger seat. Drou's glances
were merely wary. Lights glowed ahead on
the ground, the spatter of a middle-sized city, and beyond it, the jumbled
geometries of a sprawling military shuttleport. Drou went through code-check
after code-check, as they approached. They spiraled down to a pad that lit for
them, peopled with armed guards. Their guard-flyers passed on overhead to their
own landing zones. The guards surrounded
them as they exited the flyer, and escorted them as fast as Koudelka's pace
would permit to a lift tube. They went down, took a slide-walk, and went down
again through blast doors. Tanery Base clearly featured a hardened underground
command post. Welcome to the bunker. And yet a throat-catching whiff of
familiarity shook Cordelia for a terrifying moment of confusion and loss. Beta
Colony did a lot better on the interior decorating than these barren corridors,
but she might have descended to the utility level of some buried Betan city,
safe and cool... I want to go home. There were three
green-uniformed officers, talking in a corridor. One was Aral. He saw her.
"Thank you, dismissed, gentlemen," he said in the middle of someone's
sentence, then more consciously, "We'll continue this shortly." But
they lingered to goggle. He looked no worse than
tired. Her heart ached to look at him, and yet ... Following you has brought me
here. Not to the Barrayar of my hopes, but to the Barrayar of my fears. With a voiceless
"Ha!" he embraced her, hard to him. She hugged him back. This is a
good thing. Go away, World. But when she looked up the World was still waiting,
in the form of seven watchers all with agendas. He held her away, and
scanned her anxiously up and down. "You look terrible, dear Captain." At least he was polite
enough not to say, You smell terrible. "Nothing a bath won't cure." "That is not what I
meant. Sickbay for you, before anything." He turned to find Sergeant Bothari
first in line. "Sir, I must report
in to my lord Count," Bothari said. "Father's not here.
He's on a diplomatic mission from me to some of his old cronies. Here, you,
Kou—take Bothari and set him up with quarters, food chits, passes, and clothes.
I'll want your personal report immediately. I've seen to Cordelia,
Sergeant." "Yes, sir."
Koudelka led Bothari away. "Bothari was
amazing," Cordelia confided to Aral. "No—that's unjust. Bothari was
Bothari, and I shouldn't have been amazed at all. We wouldn't have made it
without him." Aral nodded, smiling a
little. "I thought he would do for you." "He did
indeed." Droushnakovi, taking up
her old position at Cordelias elbow the moment Bothari vacated it, shook her
head in doubt, and followed along as Aral steered Cordelia down the corridor.
The rest of the parade followed less certainly. "Hear any more
about Illyan?" Cordelia asked. "Not yet. Did Kou
brief you?" "A sketch, enough
for now. I don't suppose any more word's come in on Padma and Alys Vorpatril,
then, either?" He shook his head
regretfully. "But neither are they on the list of Vordarian's confirmed
captures. I think they're hiding in the city. Vordarian's side is leaking
information like a sieve, we'd know if any arrest that important had happened.
I can only wonder if our own arrangements are so porous. That's the trouble
with these damned civil affrays, everybody has a brother—" A voice from down the corridor
hailed loudly, "Sir! Oh, sir!" Only Cordelia felt Aral flinch, his
arm jerking under her hand. An HQ staffer led a tall
man in black fatigues with colonel's tabs on the collar toward them.
"There you are, sir. Colonel Gerould is here from Marigrad." "Oh. Good. I have
to see this man now. ..." Aral looked around hurriedly, and his eye fell
on Droushnakovi. "Drou, please escort Cordelia to the infirmary for me.
Get her checked, get her—get her everything." The colonel was no HQ
desk pilot. He looked, in fact, as if he'd just flown in from some front line,
wherever the "front" was in this war for loyalties. His fatigues were
dirty and wrinkled and looked slept—in, their smoke-stink eclipsing Cordelia's
mountain-reek. His face was lined with fatigue. But he looked only grim, not
beaten. "The fighting in Marigrad has gone house-to-house, Admiral,"
he reported without preamble. Vorkosigan grimaced.
"Then I want to hopscotch it. Come with me to the tactics room—what is
that on your arm, Colonel?" A wide piece of white
cloth and a narrower strip of brown circled the officer's black upper left
sleeve. "ID, sir. We couldn't tell who we were shooting at, up close.
Vordarian's people are wearing red and yellow, 's as close as they could come
to maroon and gold, I guess. That's supposed to be brown and silver for
Vorkosigan, of course." "That's what I was
afraid of." Vorkosigan looked extremely stern. "Take it off. Burn it.
And pass the word down the line. You already have a uniform, Colonel, issued to
you by the Emperor. That's who you're fighting for. Let the traitors alter
their uniforms." The colonel looked
shocked at Vorkosigan's vehemence, but, after a beat, enlightened; he stripped
the cloth hastily from his arm and stuffed it in his pocket. "Right,
sir." Aral let go of
Cordelia's hand with a palpable effort. "I'll meet you in our quarters,
love. Later." Later in the week, at
this rate. Cordelia shook her head helplessly, took in one last view of his
stocky form as if her intensity could somehow digitize and store him for
retrieval, and followed Droushnakovi into Tanery Base's underground warren. At
least with Drou, Cordelia was able to overrule Vorkosigan's itinerary and
insist on a bath first. Almost as good, she found half a dozen new outfits in
her correct size, betraying Drou's palace—trained good taste, waiting for her
in a closet in Aral's quarters. The base doctor had no
charts; Cordelia's medical records were of course all behind enemy lines in
Vorbarr Sultana at present. He shook his head and keyed up a new form on his
report panel. "I'm sorry, Lady Vorkosigan. We'll simply have to begin at
the beginning. Please bear with me. Do I understand correctly you've had some
sort of female trouble?" No, most of my troubles
have been with males. Cordelia bit her tongue. "I had a placental
transfer, let me see, three plus," she had to count it up on her fingers,
"about five weeks ago." "Excuse me, a
what?" "I gave birth by
surgical section. It did not go well." "I see. Five weeks
post-partum." He made a note. "And what is your present
complaint?" I don't like Barrayar, I
want to go home, my father-in-law wants to murder my baby, half my friends are
running for their lives, and I can't get ten minutes alone with my husband,
whom you people are consuming before my eyes, my feet hurt, my head hurts, my
soul hurts ... it was all too complicated. The poor man just wanted something
to put in his blank, not an essay. "Fatigue," Cordelia managed at
last. "Ah." He
brightened, and entered this factoid on his report panel. "Post-partum
fatigue. This is normal." He looked up and regarded her earnestly.
"Have you considered starting an exercise program, Lady Vorkosigan?" CHAPTER
FOURTEEN "Who are
Vordarian's men?" Cordelia asked Aral in frustration. "I've been
running from them for weeks, but it's like I've only glimpsed them in a
rearview mirror. Know your enemy and all that. Where does he get this endless
supply of goons?" "Oh, not
endless." Aral smiled slightly, and took another bite of stew. They
were—miracle!—alone at last, in his simple underground senior officer's
apartment. Their supper had been brought in on a tray by a batman, and spread
on a low table between them. Aral had then, to Cordelia's relief, ejected this
hovering minion with a "Thank you, Corporal, that will be all." Aral swallowed his bite
and continued, "Who are they? For the most part, anyone who was caught
with an officer up along his chain of command who elected Vordarian's side, and
who hasn't worked up the nerve, or in some cases the wit, to either frag the
officer or desert his unit and report in elsewhere. And obedience and unit
cohesion is deeply inculcated in these men. 'When the going gets rough, stick
to your unit' is literally drilled into them. So the unfortunate fact that
their officer is leading them into treason makes clinging to their
squad-brothers even more natural. Besides," he grinned bleakly, "it's
only treason if Vordarian loses." "And is Vordarian
losing?" "As long as I live,
and keep Gregor alive, Vordarian cannot win." He nodded in conviction.
"Vordarian is imputing crimes to me as fast as he can invent them. Most
serious is the rumor he's floating that I've made away with Gregor and seek the
Imperium for myself. I judge this a ploy to smoke out Gregor's hiding place. He
knows that Gregor's I not with me. Or he'd be tempted to lob a nuclear in
here." Cordelia's lips curled in aversion. "So does he want to
capture Gregor, or kill him?" "Kill only if he
can't capture. I will, when the time is right, produce Gregor." "Why not right
now?" He sat back with a tired
sigh, and pushed away his tray with a few bites of stew and a ragged bread
shred still left in his bowl. "Because I wish to see how many of
Vordarian's forces I can woo back to my side before the denoument. Desert to me
is not quite the right term ... come over, maybe. I don't wish to inaugurate my
second year of office with four thousand military executions. All below a
certain rank can be given a blanket pardon on the grounds that they were
oath-bound to follow their officers, but I want to save as many of the senior
men as I can. Five district counts and Vordarian are doomed now, no hope for
them. Damn him for starting this." "What are
Vordarian's troops doing? Is this a sitzkrieg?" "Not quite. He's
wasting a lot of his time and mine, trying to gain a couple of useless strong
points, like the supply depot at Marigrad. We oblige and draw him in, or out.
It keeps Vordarian's commanders occupied, and their minds off the real high
ground, which are the space-based forces. If only I had Kanzian!" "Have your
intelligence people located him yet?" The admired Admiral Kanzian was one
of the two men in the Barrayaran High Command whom Vorkosigan regarded as his
superiors in strategy. Kanzian was an advanced space operations specialist; the
space-based forces had great faith in him. "No horse manure stuck on his
boots," was the way Kou had once expressed it, to Cordelia's amusement. "No, but Vordarian
doesn't have him either. He's vanished. Hope to God he wasn't caught in some
stupid street cross-fire and is lying unidentified on a slab somewhere. What a
waste that would be." "Would going up
help? To sway the space forces?" "Why d'you think
I'm troubling to hold Tanery Base? I've considered the pros and cons of moving
my field HQ aboard ship. I think not yet; it could be misinterpreted as the
first step in running away." Running away. What a
seductive thought. Far, far away from all this lunacy, till it was all reduced
to the single dimension of a minor filler in some galactic news vid. But ... run
away from Aral? She studied him, as he sat back on the padded sofa, staring at
but not seeing the remains of his supper. A weary middle-aged man in a green
uniform, of no particular handsomeness (except perhaps for the sharp grey
eyes); a hungry intellect at constant internal war with fear-driven aggression,
each fueled by a lifetime crowded with bizarre experience, Barrayaran
experience. You should have fallen in love with a happy man, if you wanted
happiness. But no, you had to fall for the breathtaking beauty of pain... . The two shall be made
one flesh. How literal that ancient pious mouthing had turned out to be. One
little scrap of flesh, prisoned in a uterine replicator behind enemy lines,
bound them now like Siamese twins. And if little Miles died, would that bond be
slashed? "What ... what are
we doing about Vordarian's hostages?" He sighed. "That is
the hard nut in the center. Stripped of everything else, as we are gradually
doing, Vordarian still holds over twenty district counts and Kareen. And
several hundred lesser folk." "Such as
Elena?" "Yes. And the city
of Vorbarr Sultana itself, for that matter. He could threaten to atomize the
city, at the end, to get passage off—planet. I've toyed with the idea of
dealing. Have him assassinated later. Can't just let him go free, it would be
unjust to all those who've died already in loyalty to me. What burning could
satisfy those betrayed souls? No." "So we're planning
various rescue-raid options, for the end. The moment when the shift in men and
loyalties reaches critical mass, and Vordarian really starts to panic.
Meanwhile we wait. In the end ... I'll sacrifice hostages before I'll let
Vordarian win." His unseeing stare was black, now. "Even Kareen?"
All the hostages? Even the tiniest? "Even Kareen. She
is Vor. She understands." "The surest proof I
am not Vor," said Cordelia glumly. "I don't understand any of this
... stylized madness. I think you should all be in therapy, every last one of
you." He smiled slightly.
"Do you think Beta Colony could be persuaded to send us a battalion of
psychiatrists as humanitarian aid? The one you had that last argument with,
perhaps?" Cordelia snorted. Well,
Barrayaran history did have a sort of weird dramatic beauty, in the abstract,
at a distance. A passion play. It was close-up that the stupidity of it all
became more palpable, dissolving like a mosaic into meaningless squares. Cordelia hesitated, then
asked, "Are we playing the hostage game?" She was not sure she wanted
to hear the answer. Vorkosigan shook his head.
"No. That's been my toughest argument, all week, to look men in the eye
who have wives and children up in the capital, and say No." He arranged
his cutlery neatly on his tray, in its original pattern, and added in a
meditative tone, "But they aren't looking widely enough. This is not, so
far, a revolution, merely a palace coup. The population is inert, or rather,
lying low, except for some informers. Vordarian is making his appeals to the
elite conservatives, old Vor, and the military. The Count can't count. The new
technoculture is producing plebe progressives as fast as our schools can crank
them out. They are the majority of the future. I wish to give them some method
besides colored armbands to distinguish the good guys from the bad guys. Moral
suasion is a more powerful force than Vordarian suspects. What old Earth
general said that the moral is to the physical as three to one? Oh, Napoleon,
that was it. Too bad he didn't follow his own advice. I'd put it as five to
one, for this particular war." "But do your powers
balance? What about the physical?" Vorkosigan shrugged. "We each have
access to enough weapons to lay Barrayar waste. Raw power is not really the
issue. But my legitimacy is an enormous advantage, as long as weapons must be
manned. Hence Vordarian's attempts to undercut that legitimacy with his
accusations about my doing away with Gregor. I propose to catch him in his
lie." Cordelia shivered.
"You know, I don't think I would care to be on Vordarian's side." "Oh, there are
still a few ways he could win. My death is entailed in all of them. Without me
as a focus, the only Regent annointed by the late Ezar, what's to choose?
Vordarian's claim is then as good as anyone's. If he killed me, and got
possession of Gregor, or vice versa, he could conceivably consolidate from
there. Till the next coup, and train of revolts and vengeance-killings
rebounding into the indefinite future ..." His eyes narrowed, as he
contemplated this dark vision. "That's my worst nightmare. That this war
won't stop if we lose, till another Dorca Vorbarra the Just arises to put an
end to another Bloody Century. God knows when. Frankly, I don't see a man of
that calibre among my generation." Check your mirror, thought Cordelia
somberly. "Ah, so that's why
you wanted me to see the doctor first," Cordelia teased Aral that night.
The doctor, once Cordelia had adjusted a few of his confused assumptions, had
examined her meticulously, changed his prescription from exercise to rest, and
cleared her to resume marital relations, with caution. Aral merely grinned, and
made love to her as if she were spun glass. His own recovery from the soltoxin
was nearly complete, she judged from this. He slept like a rock, only warmer,
till the comconsole woke them at dawn. There must have been some military
conspiracy at work, for it not to have lit up before then. Cordelia pictured
some understaffer confiding to Kou, "Yeah, let's let the Old Man get laid,
maybe he'll mellow out. ..." Still, the miserable
fatigue-fog lifted faster this time. Within a day, with Droushnakovi for
escort, Cordelia was up and exploring her new surroundings. She ran across Bothari
in the base gymnasium. Count Piotr had not yet returned, so once he'd debriefed
to Aral Bothari had no duties either. "Got to keep in training," he
told her shortly. "You been
sleeping?" "Not much," he
said, and resumed his running. Compulsively, too long, far past the optimum
effect-for-time-spent trade-off. He sweated to fill time and kill thought, and
Cordelia silently wished him luck. She caught up on the
details of the war from Aral and Kou and the controlled newsvids. What counts
were allied, who was known hostage and where, what units were deployed on each
side and which were ripped apart and scattered to both; where fighting had
taken place, what damages, which commanders had renewed oath ... knowledge
without power. No more, she judged, than her intellectualized version of
Bothari's endless running; and even less useful for distracting her mind from
unbroken concentration on all the horrors and disasters, past or impending,
that she could presently do nothing about. She preferred her
military history with more temporal displacement. A century or two in the past,
say. She imagined some cool future scholar looking through a time-telescope at
her, and gave him a mental rude gesture. Anyway, she now realized, the military
histories she'd read had left out the most important part; they never told what
happened to people's babies. No—they were all babies,
out there. Every mother's son in a black uniform. One of Aral's reminiscences
floated up in her memory, velvet voice rumbling, "It was about that time
that soldiers started looking like children to me. ..." She pushed away
from the vidconsole, and went to search the bathroom for medication for pain. On the third day she
passed Lieutenant Koudelka in a corridor, stumping along at a near run, his
face flushed with excitement. "What's up,
Kou?" "Illyan's here. And
he's brought Kanzian with him!" Cordelia followed him to
a briefing room. Droushnakovi had to lengthen even her long stride to keep up.
Aral, flanked by two staffers, sat with his hands clasped on the table before
him, listening with utmost attention. Commander Illyan sat on the edge of the
table, swinging one leg in rhythm to his voice. A bandage on his left arm was
stained with yellow seepage. He was pale and dirty, but his eyes shone in
triumph, gilded with a touch of fever. He wore civilian gear that looked as if
it had been stolen out of someone's laundry, and then rolled downhill in. An older man was sitting
beside Illyan—a staffer handed the man a drink, which Cordelia recognized as a
potassium-salts-laced fruit-flavored pick-me-up for the metabolically depleted.
He tasted it dutifully, and made a face, looking as if he would have preferred
some more old-fashioned revivifier such as brandy. Overweight and undertall,
greying where he was not balding, Admiral Kanzian was not a very
martial-looking man. He looked grandfatherly—though only if one's grandfather
was a research professor. His face was held together with an intensity of
intellect that seemed to give the term "military science" real clout.
Cordelia had met him in uniform; his air of quiet authority seemed unaffected
by civilian shirt and slacks that might have come from the same laundry basket
as Illyan's. Illyan was saying,
"—and then we spent the next night in the cellar. Vordarian's squad came
back the next morning, but—Milady!" His grin of greeting was
blunted by a flash of guilt, as he glanced to and away from her waist. She'd
rather he kept piffling on, excited, about his adventures, but her arrival
seemed to deflate him, ghost of his most notable failure at his banquet of
victory. "Wonderful to see
you both, Simon, Admiral." They exchanged nods; Kanzian made to rise, but
was unanimously waved back to his seat, which made his lip twist in bemusement.
Aral signed her to sit next to him. Illyan continued in a
more clipped fashion. His past two weeks of hide-and-seek with Vordarian's
forces seemed to parallel Cordelia's, though in the far more complex setting of
the seized capital. But Cordelia recognized the familiar terrors under his
plain words. He brought his tale swiftly up to the present moment. Kanzian
nodded an occasional confirmation. "Well done, Simon,"
said Vorkosigan when Illyan concluded. He nodded toward Kanzian.
"Extremely well done." Illyan smiled.
"Thought you'd like it, sir." Vorkosigan turned to
Kanzian. "As soon as you feel able, I would like to brief you in the tac
room, sir." "Thank you, my
lord. I've been out of communications—except for Vordarian's newscasts—since I
escaped Headquarters. Though there was much to be deduced from what we did see.
By the way, I commend your strategy of restraint. Good so far. But you're close
to its limits." "So I've sensed,
sir." "What's Jolly Nolly
doing at Jumppoint Station One?" "Not answering his
tightbeam. Last week his understaffers were offering an amazing array of
excuses, but their ingenuity finally dried up." "Ha. I can just
picture it. His colitis must be in wonderful form. I'll bet not all of those
'indisposeds' were lies. I think I should begin with a private chat with
Admiral Knollys, just the two of us." "I would appreciate
that, sir." "We will discuss
the inevitabilities of time. And the defects of a potential commander who bases
an entire strategy on an assassination he then does not succeed in carrying
out." Kanzian frowned judgmentally. "Not well constructed, to let
your whole war turn on one event. Vordarian always did have a tendency to pop
off." Cordelia, aside, caught
Illyan's eye. "Simon. Did you pick up any information at all, while you
were trapped in Vorbarr Sultana, about the Imperial Military Hospital? Vaagen
and Henri's lab?" My baby? Regretfully, he shook
his head. "No, Milady." Illyan glanced in turn at Vorkosigan.
"My lord, is it true about Captain Negri's death? We'd only had it from
rumor, and Vordarian's propaganda broadcasts. Thought it might have been a
he." "Negri is dead.
Unfortunately." Vorkosigan grimaced. Illyan sat upright in alarm.
"And the Emperor, too?" "Gregor is safe and
well." Illyan slumped again.
"Thank God. Where?" "Elsewhere,"
said Vorkosigan dryly. "Oh. Quite, sir.
Beg pardon." "As soon as you've
hit sickbay and the showers, Simon, I have some housecleaning chores for
you," Vorkosigan continued. "I want to know just exactly how ImpSec
was blindsided by Vordarian's coup. I have no wish to malign the dead—and God
knows the man paid for his mistakes—but Negri's old personal system for running
ImpSec, with all his little secret compartments shared only with Ezar, has to
be taken completely apart. Every component, every man re-examined, before it's
all put back together. That will be your first job as the new Chief of Imperial
Security. Captain Illyan." Illyan's face went from
pale-tired to green-white. "Sir—you want me to step into Negri's
shoes?" "Shake them out,
first," Vorkosigan advised dryly. "And with dispatch, if you please.
I cannot produce the Emperor until ImpSec is again fit to guard him." "Yes, sir."
Illyan's voice was thin with his staggerment. Kanzian levered out of
his seat, shrugging off the help of an anxious staff officer. Aral squeezed
Cordelia's hand under the table, and rose to accompany the nucleus of his new
General Staff. As they all exited, Kou grinned over his shoulder at Cordelia
and whispered, "Things are looking up, eh?" She smiled bleakly back
at him. Vorkosigan's words echoed in her head. When the shift in men and loyalties
reaches the critical point, and Vordarian starts to panic ... The trickle of refugees
appearing at Tanery Base became a steady stream, as the week wore on. The most
spectacular after Kanzian was the breakout of Prime Minister Vortala from
Vordarian's house arrest. He arrived with several wounded liveried men and a
hair-raising tale of bribery, trickery, chase, and exchange-of-fire. Two lesser
Imperial Ministers also turned up, one on foot. Morale rose with each notable
addition; the base's atmosphere grew electric with anticipation of action. The
question exchanged by staffers in corridors became not, "Who's come
in?" but "Who's come in this morning?" Cordelia tried to appear
cheered by it all, hugging her dread to her private mind. Vorkosigan grew both
pleased and tenser. As instructed, Cordelia
rested a lot in Vorkosigan's quarters. All too soon she felt re-energized
enough to start beating on the walls. She then tried varying the prescription
with a few experimental push-ups and knee-bends (but not sit-ups). She was just
contemplating the merits and drawbacks of going to join Bothari in the gym,
when the comconsole chimed. Koudelka's apprehensive
face appeared over the vid plate. "Milady, m'lord requests you join him
now in Briefing Room Seven. Something's come in he wants you to see." Cordelia's stomach
twisted. "All right. On my way." An array of men were
waiting in Briefing Room Seven, clustered around a vidconsole in low-voiced
debate. Staffers, Kanzian, Minister Vortala himself. Vorkosigan looked up and
gave her a brief, unfelt smile. "Cordelia. I'd like
your opinion on something that's come in." Flattering, but,
"What sort of something?" "Vordarian's latest
special report has a new twist. Kou, replay the vid, please." Vordarian's propaganda
broadcasts from the capital were mostly subjects for derision, among
Vorkosigan's men. Their faces looked rather more serious, this time. Vordarian appeared in
what was recognizably one of the state rooms of the Imperial Residence, the
formal and serene Blue Room. Ezar Vorbarra used to make his rare public
pronouncements from that background. Vorkosigan frowned. Vordarian, in full dress
greens, was seated on an ivory silk sofa, Princess Kareen at his side. Her dark
hair was pulled back severely from her oval face with jeweled combs. She wore a
striking black gown, somber and formal. Vordarian spoke only a
few earnest words, invoking the viewers' attention. Then the vid cut away to
the great chamber of the Council of Counts at Vorhartung Castle. The vid zoomed
in on the Lord Guardian of the Speaker's circle, dressed in his full regalia.
The vid did not show what, besides its own pickup, was aimed at the Lord
Guardian's head, but something in his repeated looks, just to one side instead
of directly at the focus, made Cordelia place a lethally armed man, or maybe a
squad, in that unseen position. The Lord Guardian raised
a plastic flimsy, and began, "I quote—due to the—" "Ah, slick!"
murmured Vortala, and Koudelka paused the vid to say, "I beg your pardon,
Minister?" "The I-quote—he's
just legally distanced himself from the words about to come off that flimsy and
out his mouth. Didn't catch that, the first time. Good, Georgos, good,"
Vortala addressed the paralyzed figure. "Go on, Lieutenant, I didn't mean
to interrupt." The holovid image
continued, "—vile murder of the child—Emperor Gregor Vorbarra, and
betrayal of his sacred oaths by the would-be usurper Vorkosigan, the Council of
Counts declares the false Regent faithless, outcast, stripped of powers and
outlawed. This day the Council of Counts confirms Commodore Count Vidal
Vordarian as Prime Minister and acting Regent for Dowager-Princess Kareen
Vorbarra, forming an emergency caretaker government until such time as a new
heir may be found and confirmed by the Council of Counts and Council of
Ministers in full council assembled." He continued with
further legalities, as the vid panned the chamber. "Freeze it,
Koudelka," Vortala demanded. His lips moved as he counted. "Ha! Not
even one-third present. He doesn't have near a quorum. Who does he think he's
fooling?" "Desperate man,
desperate measures," Kanzian murmured as the holo continued at Koudelka's
touch. "Watch
Kareen," Vorkosigan said to Cordelia. The holo cut back to
Vordarian and the Princess. Vordarian went on in such mealy terms, it took
Cordelia a moment to unravel the fact that in the phrase "personal
protector," Vordarian was announcing an engagement of marriage. His hand
closed earnestly over Kareen's, though his eye contact was reserved for the
holovid. Kareen lifted her hand to receive a ring without changing her calm
expression in the slightest. The vid closed with solemn music. The End. They
were thankfully spared Betan-style post-mortem commentary; apparently, nobody
ever asked the Barrayaran-in-the-street much of anything, at least until major
rioting raised the volume to a level no one dared ignore. "How would you
analyze Kareen's reaction?" Aral asked Cordelia. Cordelia's brows rose.
"What reaction? How, analyze? She never said a word!" "Just so. Does she
looked drugged to you? Or under compulsion? Or was that real assent? Is she
duped by Vordarian's propaganda, or what?" Frustrated, Vorkosigan eyed the
space where the woman's image had lately been. "She's always been
reserved, but that was the most unreadable performance I've ever seen." "Run it again,
Kou," said Cordelia. She had him stop at the best views of Kareen. She
studied the frozen face, scarcely less animate than when the holo was running. "She doesn't look
woozy or sedated. And her eyes don't look aside the way the Speakers did." "Nobody threatening
her with a weapon?" Vortala guessed. "Or perhaps she
simply doesn't care," Cordelia suggested grimly. "Assent, or
compulsion?" Vorkosigan repeated. "Maybe neither.
She's been dealing with this sort of nonsense all her adult life ... what do
you expect of her? She survived three years of marriage with Serg, before Ezar
sheltered her. She must be a bona fide expert in guessing what not to say and
when not to say it." "But to publicly
submit to Vordarian—if she thinks he's responsible for Gregor's death ..." "Yes, what does she
believe? If she truly thinks her son is dead—even if she doesn't believe you
killed him—then all she has left to look out for is her own survival. Why risk
that survival for some dramatic futility, if it won't help Gregor? What does
she owe you, owe us, after all? We've all failed her, as far as she
knows." Vorkosigan winced. Cordelia went on,
"Vordarian's been controlling her access to information, surely. She may
even be convinced he's winning. She's a survivor; she's survived Serg and Ezar,
so far. Maybe she means to survive you and Vordarian both. Maybe the only
revenge she thinks she'll ever get is to live long enough to spit on all your
graves." One of the staff
officers muttered, "But she's Vor. She should have defied him." Cordelia favored him
with a glittery grin. "Oh, but you never know what any Barrayaran woman
thinks by what she says in front of Barrayaran men. Honesty is not exactly
rewarded, you know." The staffer gave her an
unsettled look. Drou smiled sourly. Vorkosigan blew out his breath. Koudelka
blinked. "So, Vordarian gets
tired of waiting and appoints himself Regent," Vortala murmured. "And Prime
Minister," Vorkosigan pointed out in return. "Indeed, he
swells." "Why not go
straight for the Imperium?" asked the staff officer. "Testing the
waters," said Kanzian. "It's coming, later
in the script," opined Vortala. "Or maybe sooner,
if we force his hand a bit," suggested Kanzian. "The last and fatal
step. We must consider how to rattle him just a little more." "Not much
longer," Vorkosigan said firmly. The ghostly mask of
Kareen's face hung before Cordelia's mind's eye all that day, and returned at
her waking the next morning. What did Kareen think? What did Kareen feel, for
that matter? Perhaps she was as numb as the evidence suggested. Perhaps she was
biding her time. Perhaps she was all for Vordarian. If I knew what she
believed, I'd know what she was doing. If I knew what she was doing, I'd know
what she believed. Too many unknowns in
this equation. If I were Kareen ... Was this a valid analogy? Could Cordelia
reason from herself to another? Could anyone? They had likenesses, Kareen and
herself, both women, near in age, mothers of endangered sons... . Cordelia took
Gregor's shoe from her meager pile of mountain souvenirs, and turned it in her
hand. Mama grabbed me back, but my shoe came off in her hand. I should have
fastened it tighter... . Maybe she should trust her own judgment. Maybe she
knew exactly what Kareen was thinking. When the comconsole
chimed, close to the time of yesterday's call, Cordelia shot to answer it. A
new broadcast from the capital, new evidence, something to break that circle of
unreason? But the face that materialized over the vidplate was not Koudelka,
but a stranger with Intelligence insignia on his collar. "Lady
Vorkosigan?" he began deferentially. "Yes?" "I'm Major Sircoj,
duty—officer at the main portal. It's my job to screen everyone new reporting
in, men who've left traitor-units and so on, and to collect any new
intelligence they've brought with them. We had a man turn up half an hour ago
who says he escaped the capital, who refuses to voluntarily debrief. We've
confirmed his claim that he's had anti-nterrogation conditioning—if we try to
fast-penta him, it'll kill him. He keeps asking—actually, insisting—to speak
with you. He could be an assassin." Cordelia's heart
pounded. She leaned into the holovid as if she might climb through it.
"Did he bring anything with him?" she demanded breathlessly. "Like
a canister, about half a meter high—lots of blinking lights, and big red
letters on top that say This End Up? Looks mysterious as hell, guaranteed to
send any security guard into fits—his name, Major!" "He brought nothing
but the clothes he's standing in. He's not in good shape. His name is Vaagen,
Captain Vaagen." "I'll be right
there." "No, Milady! The
man is practically raving. Could be dangerous, I can't let you—" She left him talking to
an empty room. Droushnakovi had to break into a run to catch up with her.
Cordelia made it to the main portal Security offices in less than seven
minutes, and paused in the corridor to catch her breath. To catch her soul,
that wanted to fly out her mouth. Calm. Calm. Raving apparently cut no ice with
Sircoj. She lifted her chin and
entered the office. "Tell Major Sircoj that Lady Vorkosigan is here to see
him," she told the clerk, who raised impressed brows and obediently bent
to his comconsole. Sircoj appeared in a few
endless minutes—through that door, Cordelia mentally marked his route. "I
must see Captain Vaagen." "Milady, he could
be dangerous," Sircoj began exactly where she'd cut him off before.
"He could be programmed in some unexpected way." Cordelia considered
unexpectedly grabbing Sircoj by the throat and attempting to squeeze reason
into him. Impractical. She took a deep breath. "What will you let me do?
Can I at least see him on vid?" Sircoj looked
thoughtful. "That might be all right. A cross-check on our identification,
and we can record. Very well." He took her into another
room, and keyed up a monitor viewer. Her breath blew out with a small moan. Vaagen was alone in a
holding room, pacing from wall to wall. He wore green uniform trousers and a
brown-stained white shirt. He was terribly changed from the trim and energetic
scientist she'd last seen in his lab at Imp Mil. Both his eyes were ringed with
red-purple blotches, one lid swollen nearly shut; the slit glowed a frightening
blood-scarlet. He moved bent-over. Bathless, sleepless, swollen lips ... "You get a medtech
for that man!" Cordelia realized she'd yelled when Sircoj jumped. "He's been triaged.
His condition is not life—threatening. We can start treating him just as soon
as he's security-cleared," said Sircoj doggedly. "Then you put him
on-line with me," Cordelia said through set teeth. "Drou, go back to
the office, call Aral. Tell him what's going on." Sircoj looked worried at
this, but stuck valiantly to his procedures. More endless seconds, while
someone went back to the prison-area and took Vaagen to a comconsole. His face came up over
the plate at last; Cordelia could see her own face reflected in the passionate
intensity in his. Connected at last. "Vaagen! What
happened?" "Milady!" His
hands clenched, trembling, as he leaned on them toward the vid pickup.
"The idiots, the morons, the ignorant, stupid—" he sputtered into
helpless obscenities, then caught his breath and began again, quickly,
concisely, as if her image might be snatched away again at any moment. "We thought we
might be all right at first, after the first two days' fighting trailed off. We
hid the replicator at ImpMil, but nobody came. We lay low, and took turns
sleeping in the lab. Then Henri managed to smuggle his wife out of town, and we
both stayed. We tried to continue the treatments in secret. Thought we might
wait it out, wait till rescue. Things had to break, one way or another... . "We'd almost
stopped expecting them, but they came. Last—yesterday." He rubbed a hand
through his hair as if seeking some connection between real-time and
nightmare-time, where clocks ran crazy. "Vordarian's squad. Came looking
for the replicator. We locked the lab, they broke in. Demanded it. We refused,
refused to talk, they couldn't fast-penta either of us. So they beat us up.
Beat him to death, like street scum, like he was nobody, all that intelligence,
all that education, all that promise wasted, dropped by some mumbling moron
swinging a gun butt..." Tears were running down his face. Cordelia stood white and
stricken; bad, bad attack of defective deja vu. She'd played the lab scene in
her head already a thousand times, but she'd never seen Dr. Henri dead on the
floor, nor Vaagen beaten senseless. "Then they ripped
into the lab. Everything, all the treatment records. All Henri's work on burns,
gone. They didn't have to do that. All gone for nothing!" His voice
cracked, hoarse with fury. "Did they ... find
the replicator? Dump it out?" She could see it; she had seen it over and
over, spilling... . "They found it,
finally. But then they took it. And then let me go." He shook his head
from side to side. "Took it," she
repeated stupidly. Why? What sense, to take the technology and not the techs?
"And let you go. To run to us, I suppose. To give us the word." "You have it,
Milady." "Where, do you
suppose? Where did they take it?" Vorkosigan's voice spoke
beside her. "The Imperial Residence, most likely. All the best hostages
are being kept there. I'll put Intelligence right on it." He stood, feet
planted, grey-faced. "It seems we're not the only side turning up the
pressure." CHAPTER
FIFTEEN Within two minutes of
Vorkosigan's arrival at main portal Security, Captain Vaagen was flat on a
float pallet and on his way to the infirmary, with the top trauma doctor on the
base being paged for rendezvous. Cordelia reflected bitterly on the nature of
chain of command; all truth and reason and urgent need were not enough,
apparently, to lend causal power to one outside that chain. Further interrogation of
the scientist had to wait on his medical treatment. Vorkosigan used the time to
put Illyan and his department on the new problem. Cordelia used the time to
pace in circles in the infirmary's waiting area. Droushnakovi watched her in
silent worry, not so foolish as to offer up reassurances they both knew to be
empty. At last the trauma man
emerged from surgery to announce Vaagen conscious and oriented enough for a
brief—he emphasized the brief—questioning. Aral came, trailing Koudelka and
Illyan, and they all trooped in to find Vaagen in an infirmary bed, with his
eye patched and an IV running fluids and meds. Vaagen's hoarse and
weary voice added a few horrific details, but nothing to change the
word-picture he'd first given Cordelia. Illyan listened with steady
attention. "Our people at the Residence confirm," he reported when
Vaagen ran down, depressed whisper trailing to silence. "The replicator
was apparently brought in yesterday, and has been placed in the most heavily
guarded wing, near Princess Kareen's quarters. Our loyalists don't know what it
is, they think it's some kind of a device, maybe a bomb to take out the
Residence and everyone in it in the final battle." Vaagen snorted, coughed,
and winced. "Do they have
anyone tending it?" Cordelia asked the question no one else had, so far.
"A doctor, a medtech, anyone?" Illyan frowned. "I
don't know, Milady. I can try to find out, but every extra communication
endangers our people up there." "Mm." "The treatment's
interrupted anyway," Vaagen muttered. His hand fiddled with the edge of
his sheet. "Bitched to hell." "I realize you've
lost your notes, but could you ... reconstruct your work?" Cordelia asked
diffidently. "If you got the replicator back, that is. Take up where you
left off." "It wouldn't be where
we left off, by the time we got it back. And it wasn't all in my head. Some of
it was in Henri's." Cordelia took a deep
breath. "As I recall, these Escobaran portable replicators run on a
two-week service cycle. When did you last recharge the power, and change the
filters and add nutrients?" "Power cell's good
for months," Vaagen corrected. "Filters are more of a problem. But
the nutrient solution will be the first limiting factor it'll hit. At its
hyped-up metabolic rate, the fetus would starve a couple of days before the
system choked on its waste. Breakdown products might overload the filters
pretty soon after lean-tissue metabolism began, though." She avoided Aral's gaze
and looked straight at Vaagen, who looked straight back with his one good eye,
more than physical pain in his face. "And when did you and Henri last
service the replicator?" "The
fourteenth." "Less than six days
left," Cordelia whispered, appalled. "About ... about
that. What day is this?" Vaagen looked around in an uncharacteristic uncertainty
that hurt Cordelia's heart to watch. "The time limit
applies only if it's not being properly taken care of," Aral put in.
"The Residence physician, Kareen and Gregor's man—wouldn't he realize
something was needed?" "Sir," Illyan
said, "the Princess's physician was reported killed in the first day's
fighting at the Residence. Two cross-confirmations—I have to consider it
certain." "They could let
Miles die out of sheer ignorance up there," Cordelia realized in dismay.
"As well as on purpose." Even one of their own secret loyalists,
under the heroic impression he was defusing a bomb, could be a menace to her
child. Vaagen twisted in his
sheets. Aral caught Cordelias eye, and jerked his head toward the door.
"Thank you, Captain Vaagen. You have done us extraordinary service. Beyond
duty." "Screw duty,"
Vaagen muttered. "Bitched to hell ... damned ignorant goons ..." They withdrew, to leave
Vaagen to his unrestful recovery. Vorkosigan dispatched Illyan to his
multiplied duties. Cordelia faced Aral.
"Now what?" His lips were a flat,
hard line, his eyes half-absent with calculation, the same calculations she was
running, Cordelia guessed, complicated by a thousand added factors she could
only imagine. He said slowly, "Nothing's changed, really. From
before." "It is changed.
Whatever the difference there is between being in hiding, and being a prisoner.
But why did Vordarian wait till now for this capture? If he was ignorant of
Miles's existence before this, who told him of it? Kareen, maybe, when she
decided to cooperate?" Droushnakovi looked sick
at this suggestion. Aral said, "Maybe
Vordarian's playing with us. Maybe he was always keeping the replicator in
reserve, till he most needed a new lever." "Our son. In
reserve," Cordelia corrected. She stared into those half-there grey eyes,
willing See me, Aral! "We have to talk about this." She towed him
down the corridor to the nearest private room, a doctors' conference chamber,
and turned up the lights. Obediently, he seated himself at the table, Kou at
his elbow, and waited for her. She sat down opposite him. We've always sat on
the same side, before... . Drou stood behind her. Aral watched her warily.
"Yes, Cordelia?" "What's going on in
your head?" she demanded. "Where are we, in this?" "I ... regret. In
hindsight. Regret not sending a raid earlier. The Residence is a far more
difficult fortress to penetrate right now than the military hospital, dangerous
as a raid on ImpMil would have been. And yet... I could not change that choice.
When men on my own staff were asked to wait and sweat, I could not risk men and
expend resources for my private benefit. Miles's ... position, gave me the
power to demand their loyalty in the face of Vordarian's pressure. They knew I
asked no risk of them and theirs I was unwilling to share myself." "But now the
situation's changed," Cordelia pointed out. "Now you aren't sharing
the same risks. Their relatives have all the time there is. Miles has only six
days, minus the time we spend arguing." She could feel that clock ticking,
in her head. He said nothing. "Aral ... in all
our time here, what favor have I ever asked of you, of your official
powers?" A sad half-smile quirked
across his lips, and vanished. His eyes were wholly on her, now.
"Nothing," he whispered. They both sat tensely, leaning toward the
other, his elbows planted and hands clasped near his chin, her hands out flat
before her, controlled. "I'm asking
now." "Now," he said
after a long hesitation, "is an extremely delicate time, in the overall
strategic situation. We are right now engaged in secret negotiations with two
of Vordarian's top commanders to sell him out. The space forces are about to
commit. We are on the verge of being able to shut Vordarian down without a
major set-battle." Cordelia's thought was
diverted just long enough to wonder how many of Vorkosigan's commanders were
secretly negotiating right now to sell them out. Time would tell. Time. Vorkosigan continued,
"If—if we bring this negotiation off as I wish, we will be in a position
to rescue most of the hostages in one major surprise raid, from a direction
Vordarian does not expect." "I'm not asking for
a big raid." "No. But I'm
telling you that a small raid, particularly if things went wrong, might
seriously interfere with the success of the larger, later one." "Might." "Might." He
tilted his head in concession to the uncertainty. "Time?" "About ten
days." "Not good
enough." "No. I will try to
speed things up. But you understand—if I botch this chance, this timing,
several thousand men could pay for my mistakes with their lives." She understood clearly.
"All right. Suppose we leave the armies of Barrayar out of this for
the moment. Let me go. With maybe a
liveried man or two, and pinpoint—downright hypodermic—secrecy. A totally
private effort." His hands slapped to the
table, and he sputtered, "No! God, Cordelia!" "Do you doubt my
competence?" she asked dangerously. I sure do. Now was not the moment to
admit this, however. "Is that 'Dear Captain' just a pet name for a pet, or
did you mean it?" "I have seen you do
extraordinary things—" You've also seen me fall
flat on my face, so? "—but you are not
expendable. God. That really would make me terminally crazy. To wait, not
knowing ..." "You ask that of
me. To wait, unknowing. You ask it every day." "You are stronger
than I. You are strong beyond reason." "Flattering. Not
convincing." His thought circled
hers; she could see it in his knife-keen eyes. "No. No haring off on your
own. I forbid it, Cordelia. Flat, absolutely. Put it right out of your mind. I
cannot risk you both." "You do. In
this." His jaw clamped; his
head lowered. Message received and understood. Koudelka, sitting worriedly
beside him, glanced back and forth between the two of them in consternation.
Cordelia could sense the pressure of Drou's hand, white-tight on the back of
her chair. Vorkosigan looked like
something being ground between two great stones; she had no desire to see him
smeared to powder. In a moment, he would demand her word to confine herself to
Base, to dare no risk. She opened her hand,
curving up on the tabletop. "I would choose differently. But no one
appointed me Regent of Barrayar." The tension ran out of
him with a sigh. "Insufficient imagination. A common failing, among
Barrayarans, my love." Returning to Aral's
quarters, Cordelia found Count Piotr in the corridor, just turning away from
their door. He was quite changed from the exhausted wild man who'd left her on
a mountain trail. Now he was dressed in the sort of quietly upper-class clothes
favored by retired Vor lords and senior Imperial ministers; neat trousers,
polished half-boots, an elaborate tunic. Bothari loomed at his shoulder, once
again costumed in his formal brown-and-silver livery. Bothari carried a thick
coat folded over his arm, by which Cordelia deduced Piotr had just blown in
from his diplomatic mission to some fellow District count to the wintery north
of Vordarian's holdings. Vorkosigan's people certainly seemed to be able to move
at will now, outside the heartlands held by Vordarian. "Ah.
Cordelia." Piotr gave her a formal, cautious nod; not reopening
hostilities here. That was fine with Cordelia. She was not sure she had any
will to fight left in her gnawed-out heart. "Good day, sir. Was
your trip a success?" "Indeed it was.
Where is Aral?" "Gone to Sector
Intelligence, I believe, to consult with Illyan about the most recent reports
from Vorbarr Sultana." "Ah? What's
happening?" "Captain Vaagen
turned up at our door. He'd been beaten half-senseless, but he still somehow
made it from the capital—it seems Vordarian finally woke up to the fact that he
had another hostage. His squad looted Miles's replicator from ImpMil, and took
it back to the Imperial Residence. I expect we'll hear more from him soon about
it, but he's doubtless waited to give us the full pleasure of Captain Vaagen's
tale, first." Piotr threw back his
head in a sharp, bitter laugh. "Now there's an empty threat." Cordelia unclenched her
jaw long enough to say, "What do you mean, sir?" She knew perfectly
well what he meant, but she wanted to see him run to his limit. All the way,
damn you; spit it all out. His lips twitched, half
frown, half smile. "I mean Vordarian inadvertently offers House Vorkosigan
a service. I'm sure he doesn't realize it." You wouldn't say that if
Aral were standing here, old man. Did you set this up? God, she couldn't say
that to him—"Did you set this up?" Cordelia demanded tightly. Piotr's head jerked
back. "I don't deal with traitors!" "He's of your Old
Vor party. Your true allegiance. You always said Aral was too damned
progressive." "You dare accuse
me—!" His outrage edged into plain rage. Her rage was shadowing
her vision with red. "I know you are an attempted murderer, why not an
attempted traitor, too? I can only hope your incompetence holds good." His voice was breathy
with fury. "Too far!" "No, old man. Not
nearly far enough." Drou looked absolutely
terrorized. Bothari's face was a stony blank. Piotr's hand twitched, as if he
wanted to strike her. Bothari watched that hand, his eyes glittering oddly,
shifting. "While dumping that
mutant out of its can is the best favor Vidal Vordarian could do me, I am
hardly likely to let him know it," Piotr bit out. "It will be far
more amusing to watch him try to play a joker as if it were an ace, and then
wonder what went wrong. Aral knows—I imagine he's relieved as hell, to have
Vordarian do his job for him. Or have you bewitched him into planning something
spectacularly stupid?" "Aral's doing
nothing." "Oh, good boy. I
was wondering if you'd stolen his spine permanently. He is Barrayaran after
all." "So it seems,"
she said woodenly. She was shaking. Piotr was not in much better case. "This is a
side-issue," he said, as much to himself as her, trying to regain his
self-control. "I have major issues to pursue with the Lord Regent.
Farewell, Milady." He tilted his head in ironic effort, and turned away. "Have a nice
day," she snarled to his back, and flung herself through the door into
Aral's quarters. She paced for twenty
minutes, back and forth, before she trusted herself enough to speak even to
Drou, who had squeezed into a corner seat as if trying to make herself small. "You don't really
think Count Piotr is a traitor, do you, Milady?" Droushnakovi asked, when
Cordelia's steps finally slowed. Cordelia shook her head.
"No ... no. I just wanted to hurt him back. This place is getting to me.
Has gotten to me." Wearily, she sank into a seat and leaned her head back
against the padding. After a silence she added, "Aral's right. I have no
right to risk. No, that's not quite correct. I have no right to failure. And I
don't trust myself anymore. I don't know what's happened to my edge. Lost it in
a strange land." I can't remember. Can't remember how I did it. She and
Bothari were twins, right enough, two personalities separately but equally
crippled by an overdose of Barrayar. "Milady ..."
Droushnakovi plucked at her skirts, looking down into her lap. "I was in
Imperial Residence Security for three years." "Yes ..." Her
heart lurched, gulped. As an exercise in self—discipline, Cordelia closed her
eyes and did not open them again. "Tell me about that, Drou." "Negri trained me
himself. Because I was Kareen's body servant, he always said I would be the
last barrier between Kareen and Gregor and—and anything that was bad enough to
get that far. He showed me everything about the Residence. He used to drill me
about it. He showed me things I don't think he showed anybody else. We had five
emergency escape routes worked out, in our disaster drills. Two of them were
common Security procedure. One of them he showed only to a few top staffers
like Illyan. The other two—I don't know that anybody knew about them but Negri
and Emperor Ezar. And I'm thinking ..." she moistened her lips, "a
secret route out of something ought to be an equally secret route in. Don't you
think?" "Your reasoning
interests me extremely, Drou. As Aral might say. Go on." Cordelia still
did not open her eyes. "That's about it.
If I could somehow get to the Residence, I bet I could get in. If Vordarian's
just taken over all the standard Security arrangements and beefed them
up." "And get back out?" "Why not?"
Cordelia found she had to remember to breathe. "Who do you work for,
Drou?" "Captain—" she
started to answer, but slowed selfconsciously. "Negri. But he's dead.
Commander—Captain Illyan, now, I suppose." "Let me rephrase
that." Cordelia opened her eyes at last. "Who did you put your life
on the line for?" "Kareen. And
Gregor, of course. They were kind of the same thing." "Still are. This
mother bets." She caught Drou's blue gaze. "And Kareen gave you to
me." "To be my mentor.
We thought you were a soldier." "Never. But that
doesn't mean I never fought." Cordelia paused. "What do you want to
trade for, Drou? Your life in my hand—I shall not say oath-sworn, that's for
those other idiots—for what?" "Kareen," Droushnakovi
answered steadily. "I've watched them, here, gradually reclassifying her
as expendable. Every day for three years, I put my life on the line because I
believed that her life was important. You watch someone that closely for that
long, you don't have too many illusions about her. Now they seem to think I
should just switch off my loyalty, like some guard-machine. There's something
wrong with that. I want to—to at least try for Kareen. In exchange for
that—whatever you will, Milady." "Ah." Cordelia
rubbed her lips. "That seems ... equitable. One expendable life for
another. Kareen for Miles." She sank down in the chair in deep meditation. First you see it. Then
you do it. "It's not enough." Cordelia shook her head at last.
"We need ... someone who knows the city. Someone with muscle, for backup.
A weapons-man, a sleepless eye. I need a friend." The comers of her lips
turned up in a very small smile. "Closer than a brother." She rose
and walked to the comconsole. "You asked to see
me, Milady?" said Sergeant Bothari. "Yes. Please come
in." Senior officers'
quarters did not intimidate Bothari, but his brow furrowed nonetheless as
Cordelia gestured him to a seat. She took Aral's usual spot across the low
table from him. Drou sat again in the corner, watching in reserved silence. Cordelia regarded
Bothari, who regarded her in return. He looked all right physically, though his
face was grooved with tension. She sensed, as with a third eye, frustrated
energies coursing through his body; arcs of rage, nets of control, a tangled
electric knot of dangerous sexuality under it all. Reverberating energies,
building up and up without release, in desperate need of ordered action lest
they break out wildly on their own. She blinked, and refocused on his less
terrifying surface; a tired-looking ugly man in an elegant brown uniform. To her surprise, Bothari
began. "Milady. Have you heard anything new about Elena?" Wondering why I called
you here? To her shame, she had almost forgotten Elena. "Nothing new, I'm
afraid. She is reported being kept along with Mistress Hysopi in that downtown
hotel that Vordarian's Security commandeered when they ran out of cells, with a
lot of other second- and third-tier hostages. She hasn't been moved to the
Residence or anything." Elena was not, unlike Kareen, in the direct line
of Cordelia's secret mission. If he asked, how much dare she promise? "I was sorry to
hear about your son, Milady." "My mutant, as
Piotr would say." She watched him; she could read his shoulders and spine
and gut better than that blank beaky face. "About Count
Piotr," he said, and stopped. His hands hooked each other, between his
knees, and flexed. "I had thought to speak to the admiral. I hadn't
thought to speak to you. I should have thought of you." "Always." Now
what? "Man came up to me
yesterday. In the gym. Not in uniform, no rank or nametag. He offered me Elena.
Elena's life, if I would assassinate Count Piotr." "How
tempting," Cordelia choked, before she could stop herself. "What, uh,
guarantees did he offer?" "That question came
to me, pretty shortly. There I would be, in deep shit, maybe executed, and who
would care for a, a dead man's bastard then? I figured it for a cheat, just
another cheat. I went back to look for him, been on the lookout, but I never
spotted him since." He sighed. "It almost seems like a hallucination,
now." The expression on Drou's
face was a study in the deepest unreassurance, but fortunately Bothari was
turned away from her and did not notice. Cordelia shot her a small quelling
frown. "Have you been
having hallucinations?" Cordelia asked. "I don't think so.
Just bad dreams. I try not to sleep." "I ... have a
dilemma of my own," Cordelia said. "As you heard me tell Piotr." "Yes, Milady." "Had you heard
about the time limit?" "Time limit?" "If it's not
serviced, the replicator will start to fail to support Miles in less than six
days. Aral argues that Miles is in no more danger than any of his staffers'
families. I disagree." "Behind his back,
I've heard some say otherwise." "Ah?" "They say it's a
cheat. The admiral's son is some sort of mutant, non-viable, while they risk
whole children." "I don't think he
realizes ... anyone says that." "Who would repeat
it to his face?" "Very few. Maybe
not even Illyan." Though Piotr probably wouldn't fail to pass it on, if he
picked it up. "Dammit! No one, on either side, would hesitate to dump that
replicator." She brooded, and began again. "Sergeant. Who do you work
for?" "I am oath-sworn
Armsman to Count Piotr," Bothari recited the obvious. He was watching her
closely now, a weird smile tugging at one corner of his mouth. "Let me rephrase
that. I know the official penalties for an armsman going AWOL are fearsome. But
suppose—" "Milady." He
held up a hand; she paused in mid-breath. "Do you remember, back on the
front lawn at Vorkosigan Surleau when we were loading Negri's body into the
lightflyer, when my Lord Regent told me to obey your voice as his own?" Cordelias brows went up.
"Yes ... ?" "He never
countermanded that order." "Sergeant,"
she breathed at last, "I'd never have guessed you for a
barracks-lawyer." His smile grew a
millimeter tighter. "Your voice is as the voice of the Emperor himself.
Technically." "Is it, now,"
she whispered in delight. Her nails dug into her palms. He leaned forward, his
hands now held rock-still between his knees. "So, Milady. What were you
saying?" The motor pool staging
bay was an echoing low vault, its shadows slashed by the lights from a
glass-walled office. Cordelia stood waiting in the darkened lift tube portal,
Drou at her shoulder, and watched through the distant rectangle of glass as
Bothari negotiated with the transport officer. General Vorkosigan's Armsman was
signing out a vehicle for his oath-lord. The passes and IDs Bothari had been
issued apparently worked just fine. The motor pool man fed Bothari's cards to
his computer, took Bothari's palm print on his sensor-pad, and dispatched
orders with snap and hustle. Would this simple plan
work? Cordelia wondered desperately. And if it didn't, what alternative had
they? Their planned route sketched itself in her mind, red light-lines snaking
over a map. Not north toward their goal, but due south first, by groundcar into
the next loyal District. Ditch the distinctive government vehicle, take the
monorail west to yet another District, then northwest to another; then due east
into Count Vorinnis's neutral zone, focus of so much diplomatic attention from
both sides. Piotr's comment echoed in her memory, "I swear, Aral, if
Vorinnis doesn't quit trying to play both ends against the middle, you ought to
hang him higher than Vordarian when this is over." Then into the capital
District itself, then, somehow, into the sealed city. A daunting number of
kilometers to cover. Three times the distance of the direct route. So much time. Her heart
swung north like a compass needle. The first and last
Districts would be the worst. Aral's forces could be almost more inimical to
this excursion than Vordarian's. Her head spun with the cumulative
impossibility of it all. Step by step, she told
herself firmly. One step at a time. Just get off Tanery Base; that, they could
do. Divide the infinite future into five-minute blocks, and take them one by
one. There, the first five
minutes down already, and a swift and shining general staff car appeared from
underground storage. A small victory, in reward for a little patience and
daring. What might great patience and daring yet bring? Judiciously, Bothari
inspected the vehicle, as if in doubt that it was quite fit for his master. The
transport officer waited anxiously, and seemed to deflate with relief when the
great general's Armsman, after running his hand over the canopy and frowning at
some minute speck of dust, gave it a grudging acceptance. Bothari brought the
vehicle around to the lift tube portal and parked it, neatly blocking the
office's view of the entering passengers. Drou bent to pick up
their satchel, packed with a very odd variety of clothing including Bothari's
and Cordelia's mountain souvenirs, and their thin assortment of weapons.
Bothari set the polarization on the rear canopy to mirror-reflection, and
raised it. "Milady!"
Lieutenant Koudelka's anxious voice called from the lift tube entry behind
them. "What are you doing?" Cordelia's teeth closed
on vile words. She converted her savage expression to a light, surprised smile,
and turned. "Hello, Kou. What's up?" He frowned, looking at
her, at Droushnakovi, at the satchel. "I asked first." He was out of
breath; he must have been chasing them down for some minutes, after not finding
her in Aral's quarters. An ill—timed errand. Cordelia kept her smile
fixed, as her mind blinked on a vision of a Security team piling out of the
lift tube to arrest her, or at least her plans. "We're ... going into
town." His lips thinned in
skepticism. "Oh? Does the Admiral know? Where's Illyan's outer-perimeter
team, then?" "Gone on
ahead," said Cordelia blandly. The vague plausibility
actually raised a flicker of doubt in his eyes. Alas, only for a moment.
"Now, wait just a bloody minute—" "Lieutenant,"
Sergeant Bothari interrupted. "Take a look at this." He gestured
toward the rear passenger compartment of the staff car. Koudelka leaned to look.
"What?" he said impatiently. Cordelia winced as
Bothari's open hand chopped down across the back of Koudelka's neck, and winced
again at the heavy thud of Koudelka's head hitting the far side of the
compartment's interior after a powerful boost-assist to neck and belt by
Bothari. His swordstick clattered to the pavement. "In." Bothari's
voice was a strained low growl, accompanied by a quick glance across the bay
toward the glass-walled transport office. Droushnakovi flung the
satchel into the compartment and dove in after Koudelka, shoving his long loose
limbs out of the way. Cordelia grabbed up the stick and piled in after. Bothari
stood back, saluted, closed the mirrored canopy, and entered the driver's
compartment. They started smoothly.
Cordelia had to control irrational panic as Bothari stopped at the first
checkpoint. She could see and hear the guards so clearly, it was difficult to
remember they saw only the reflections of their own hard eyes. But apparently
General Piotr could indeed pass anywhere at will. How pleasant, to be General
Piotr. Though in these trying times, probably not even Piotr could have entered
Tanery Base without that rear canopy being opened and scanned. The final gate
crew that waved them out was busily engaged in just such an inspection of a
large incoming convoy of freight haulers. Their timing was just as Cordelia had
planned and prayed. Cordelia and
Droushnakovi finally got the sprawling Koudelka straightened up between them.
His first alarming flaccidity was passing off. He blinked and moaned.
Koudelka's head, neck, and upper torso were of the few areas of his body not
rewired; Cordelia trusted nothing inorganic was broken. Droushnakovi's voice was
taut with worry. "What'll we do with him?" "We can't dump him
out on the road, he'd run back and give the word," said Cordelia.
"Yet if we cinched him to a tree out of sight somewhere, there's a chance
he might not be found ... we'd better tie him up, he's coming around." "I can handle
him." "He's had enough
handling, I'm afraid." Droushnakovi managed to
immobilize Koudelka's hands with a twisted scarf from the satchel; she was
quite good at clever knots. "He might prove
useful," mused Cordelia. "He'll betray
us," frowned Droushnakovi. "Maybe not. Not
once we're in enemy territory. Once the only way out is forward." Koudelka's eyes stopped
jerking, following some invisible starry blur, and came at last into focus.
Both his pupils were still the same size, Cordelia was relieved to note. "Milady—Cordelia,"
he croaked. His hands yanked futilely at the silky bonds. "This is crazy.
You'll run right into Vordarian's forces. And then Vordarian will have two
handles on the Admiral, instead of just one. And you and Bothari know where the
Emperor is!" "Was,"
corrected Cordelia. "A week ago. He's been moved since then, I'm sure. And
Aral has demonstrated his capacity to resist Vordarian's leverage, I think.
Don't underestimate him." "Sergeant
Bothari!" Koudelka leaned forward, appealing into the intercom. The front
canopy was also silvered, now. "Yes,
Lieutenant?" Bothari's bass monotone returned. "I order you to
turn this vehicle around." A slight pause.
"I'm not in the Imperial Service anymore, sir. Retired." "Piotr didn't order
this! You're Count Piotr's man." A longer pause; a lower
tone. "No. I am Lady Vorkosigan's dog." "You're off your
meds!" How such could travel
over a purely audio link Cordelia was not sure, but a canine grin hung in the
air before them. "Come on,
Kou," Cordelia coaxed. "Back me. Come for luck. Come for life. Come
for the adrenaline rush." Droushnakovi leaned
over, a sharp smile on her lips, to breathe in Koudelka's other ear, "Look
at it this way, Kou. Who else is ever going to give you a chance at field
combat?" His eyes shifted, right
and left, between his two captors. The pitch of the groundcar's power—whine
rose, as they arrowed into the growing twilight. CHAPTER
SIXTEEN Illegal vegetables.
Cordelia sat in bemused contemplation between sacks of cauliflower and boxes of
cultivated brillberries as the creaking hovertruck coughed along. Southern
vegetables, that flowed toward Vorbarr Sultana on a covert route just like
hers. She was half-certain that under that pile were a few sacks of the same
green cabbages she'd traveled with two or three weeks ago, migrating according
to the strange economic pressures of the war. The Districts controlled
by Vordarian were now under strict interdiction by the Districts loyal to
Vorkosigan. Though starvation was still a long way off, food prices in the
capital of Vorbarr Sultana had skyrocketed, in the face of hoarding and the
coming winter. So poor men were inspired to take chances. And a poor man
already taking a chance was not averse to adding a few unlisted passengers to
his load, for a bribe. It was Koudelka who'd
generated the scheme, abandoning his urgent disapproval, drawn in to their
strategizing almost despite himself. It was Koudelka who'd found the produce
wholesale warehouses in the town in Vorinnis's District, and cruised the
loading docks for independents striking out with their loads. Though it was
Bothari who'd ruled the size of the bribe, pitifully small to Cordelia's mind,
but just right for the parts they now played of desperate countryfolk. "My father was a
grocer," Koudelka had explained stiffly, when selling his scheme to them.
"I know what I'm doing." Cordelia had puzzled for
a moment what his wary glance at Droushnakovi meant, till she recalled Drou's
father was a soldier. Kou had talked of his sister and widowed mother, but it
was not till that moment that Cordelia realized Kou had edited his father from
his reminiscences out of social embarrassment, not any lack of love between
them. Koudelka had vetoed the choice of a meat truck for transport: "It's
more likely to be stopped by Vordarian's guards," he'd explained, "so
they can shake down the driver for steaks." Cordelia wasn't sure if he was
speaking from military or food service experience, or both. In any case, she
was grateful not to ride with grisly refrigerated carcasses. They dressed for their
parts as best they could, pooling the satchel and the clothes they stood in.
Bothari and Koudelka played two recently discharged vets, looking to better
their sorry lot, and Cordelia and Drou two countrywomen co-scheming with them.
The women were decked in a realistically odd combination of worn mountain dress
and upper-class castoffs apparently acquired from some secondhand shop. They
managed the right touch of mis-fittedness, of women not wearing originals, by
trading garments. Cordelia's eyes closed
in exhaustion, though sleep was far from her. Time ticked in her brain. It had
taken them two days to get this far. So close to their goal, so far from
success ... Her eyes snapped open again when the truck halted and thumped to
the ground. Bothari eased through
the opening to the driver's compartment. "We get out here," he called
lowly. They all filed through, dropping to the city curb. Their breath smoked
in the chill. It was pre-dawn dark, with fewer lights about than Cordelia
thought there ought to be. Bothari waved the transport on. "Didn't think we
should ride all the way in to the Central Market," Bothari grunted.
"Driver says Vorbohn's municipal guards are thick there this time of day,
when the new stocks come in." "Are they
anticipating food riots?" Cordelia asked. "No doubt, plus
they like to get theirs first," said Koudelka. "Vordarian's going to
have to put the army in soon, before the black market sucks all the food out of
the rationing system." Kou, in the moments he forgot to pretend himself an
artificial Vor, displayed an amazing and detailed grasp of black-market economics.
Or, how had a grocer bought his son the education to gain entry to the fiercely
competitive Imperial Military Academy? Cordelia grinned under her breath, and
looked up and down the street. It was an old section of town, pre-dating lift
tubes, no buildings more than six flights high. Shabby, with plumbing and
electricity and light-pipes cut into the architecture, added as afterthoughts. Bothari led off, seeming
to know where he was going. The maintenance did not improve, in their direction
of transit. Streets and alleys narrowed, channeling a moist aroma of decay,
with an occasional whiff of urine. Lights grew fewer. Drou's shoulders hunched.
Koudelka gripped his stick. Bothari paused before a
narrow, ill-lit doorway bearing a hand-lettered sign, Rooms. "This'll
do." The door, an ancient non-automatic that swung on hinges, was locked.
He rattled it, then knocked. After a long time, a little door within the door
opened, and suspicious eyes stared out. "Whatcha
want?" "Room." "At this hour? Not
damned likely." Bothari pulled Drou
forward. The stripe of light from the opening played over her face. "Huh," grunted
the door—muffled voice. "Well ..." Some clinking of chains, the grind
of metal, and the door swung open. They all huddled in to a
narrow hallway featuring stairs, a desk, and an archway leading back to a
darkened chamber. Their host grew even grumpier when he learned they desired
only one room among the four of them. Yet he did not question it; apparently
their real desperation lent their pose of poverty a genuine edge. With the two
women and especially Koudelka in the party, no one seemed to leap to identify
them as secret agents. They settled into a
cramped, cheap upstairs room, giving Kou and Drou first shot at the beds. As
dawn seeped through the window, Cordelia followed Bothari back downstairs to
forage. "I should have
realized we'd need to bring rations, to a city under siege," Cordelia
muttered. "It's not that bad
yet," said Bothari. "Ah—best you don't talk, Milady. Your
accent." "Right. In that
case, strike up a conversation with this fellow, if you can. I want to hear the
local view of things." They found the
innkeeper, or whatever he was, in the little room beyond the archway, which,
judging from a counter and a couple of battered tables with chairs, doubled as
a bar and a dining room. The man reluctantly sold them some seal-packed food
and bottled drinks at inflated prices, while complaining about the rationing
and angling for information about them. "I been planning
this trip for months," said Bothari, leaning on the bar, "and the
damned war's bitched it." The innkeep made an
encouraging noise, one entrepreneur to another. "Oh? What's your
strat?" Bothari licked his lips,
eyes narrowing in thought. "You saw that blonde?" "Yo?" "Virgin." "No way. Too
old." "Oh, yeah. She can
pass for class, that one. We were gonna sell it to some Vor lord at Winterfair.
Get us a grubstake. But they've all skipped town. Could try for a rich
merchant, I guess. But she won't like it. I promised her a real lord." Cordelia hid her mouth
behind her hand, and tried not to emit any attention-drawing noises. It was an
excellent thing Drou was not there to learn Bothari's idea of a cover story.
Good God. Did Barrayaran men actually pay for the privilege of committing that
bit of sexual torture upon uninitiated women? The 'keep glanced at
Cordelia. "You leave her alone with your partner without her duenna, you
could lose what you came to sell." "Naw," said
Bothari. "He would if he could, but he took a nerve-disruptor bolt, once.
Below the belt, like. He's out on medical discharge." "What're you out
on?" "Discharged without
prejudice." This was a code-phrase
for, Quit or be housed in the stockade, as Cordelia understood it, the ultimate
fate of chronic troublemakers who fell just, but only just, short of felony. "You put up with a
spastic?" The 'keep jerked his head, indicating their upstairs room and
its inhabitants. "He's the brains of
the outfit." "Not too many
brains, to come up here and try to do that bit of business now." "Yeah. I think I
could've had a better price for that same piece of meat here if I'd had her
butchered and dressed." "You got that
right," snorted the 'keep glumly, eyeing the food piled on the counter
before Cordelia. "She's too good to
waste, though. Guess I'll have to find something else, till this mess blows
over. Kill some time. Somebody may be hiring muscle..." Bothari let this
trail off. Was he running out of inspiration? The 'keep studied him
with interest. "Yo? I've had something in my eye I could use a, like,
agent for. Been afraid for a week somebody else'd go after it first. You could
be just what I need." "Yo?" The 'keep leaned forward
across the bar, confidentially. "Count Vordarian's boys are giving out
some fat rewards, down at ImpSec, for information-leading-to. Now, I wouldn't
normally mess with ImpSec whoever was running it this week, but there's a
strange fellow down the street who's taken a room. And he keeps to it, 'cept
when he goes out for food, more food than one man might eat ... he's got
someone in there with him no one ever sees. And he sure isn't one of us. I
can't help thinking he might be ... worth something to somebody, eh?" Bothari frowned
judiciously. "Could be dangerous. Admiral Vorkosigan blows back into town,
they'll be looking real hard for that little list of informers. And you have an
address." "But you don't,
seems. If you'd front it, I could give you a ten percent split. I think he's
big, that fellow. He's sure scared." Bothari shook his head.
"I been out-country, and I came up here—can't you smell it, here in the
city? Defeat, man. Vordarian's people look downright morbid to me. I'd think
real carefully 'bout that list, if I was you." The 'keep's lips
tightened in frustration. "One way or another, opportunity's not going to
last." Cordelia grabbed for
Bothari's ear to whisper, "Play along. Find out who it is. Could be an
ally." After a moment's thought she added, "Ask for fifty
percent." Bothari straightened,
nodded. "Fifty-fifty," he said to the 'keep. "For the
risk." The 'keep frowned at
Cordelia, but respectfully. He said reluctantly, "Fifty percent of
something's better than a hundred percent of nothing, I suppose." "Can you get me a look
at this fellow?" asked Bothari. "Maybe." "Here, woman."
Bothari piled the packages in Cordelias arms. "Take these back to the
room." Cordelia cleared her
throat, and tried for an imitation mountain accent. "You be careful
belike. City man'll take you." Bothari favored the
'keep with an alarming grin. "Ah, he wouldn't try and cheat an old vet.
More than once." The 'keep smiled back
nervously. Cordelia dozed uneasily,
and jerked awake as Bothari returned to their little room. He checked the
hallway carefully before closing the door behind him. He looked grim. "Well, Sergeant?
What did you find out?" What if their fellow-hider turned out to be
someone as strategically important as, say, Admiral Kanzian? The thought
frightened her. How could she resist being turned aside from her personal
mission if some greater good were too crystal-clear ... Kou on a pallet on the
floor, and Drou on the other cot, both blinking sleep, sat up on their elbows
to listen. "It's Lord
Vorpatril. Lady Vorpatril, too." "Oh, no." She
sat upright. "Are you certain?" "Oh, yes." Kou scrubbed at his
scalp, hair bent with sleep. "Did you make contact with them?" "Not yet." "Why not?" "It's Lady
Vorkosigan's call. Whether to divert from our primary mission." And to think she'd
wished for command: "Do they seem all right?" "Alive, lying low.
But—that git downstairs can't have been the only one to spot them. I've spiked
him for now, but somebody else could get greedy any time." "Any sign of the
baby?" He shook his head.
"She hasn't had it yet." "It's late! She was
due over two weeks ago. How hellish." She paused. "Do you think we
could escape the city together?" "The more people in
a party, the more conspicuous," Bothari said slowly. "And I caught a
glimpse of Lady Vorpatril. She's real conspicuous. People'd notice her." "I don't see how
joining us now would improve their position. Their cover's worked for several
weeks. If we succeed at the Residence, maybe we can try for them on the way
back. Certainly have Illyan send loyalist agents to help them, if we get back
..." Damn. If she were an official raid, she'd have just the contacts the
Vorpatrils needed. But then, if she were an offical raid, she doubtless would
not have come this way. She sat thinking. "No. No contact yet. But we'd
better do something to discourage your friend downstairs." "I have," said
Bothari. "Told him I knew where I could get a better price, and not risk
my head later. We may be able to bribe him to help us." "You'd trust
him?" said Droushnakovi doubtfully. Bothari grimaced.
"As far as I can see him. I'll try to keep an eye on him, while we're
here. 'Nother thing. I caught a broadcast on his vid in the back room.
Vordarian had himself declared Emperor last night." Kou swore. "So he's
finally gone and done it." "But what does it
mean?" asked Cordelia. "Does he feel himself strong, or is it a move
of desperation?" "Last-ditch ploy to
try to sway the space forces, I'd guess," said Kou. "Will it really
attract more men than it offends?" Kou shook his head.
"We have a real fear of chaos, on Barrayar. We've tried it. It's nasty.
The Imperium has been identified as a source of order ever since Dorca Vorbarra
broke 'the power of the warring counts and unified the planet. Emperor is a
real power-word, here." "Not to me,"
Cordelia sighed. "Let's get some rest. Maybe by this time tomorrow it'll
all be over." Hopeful/gruesome thought, depending on how it was construed.
She counted the hours over for the thousandth time, one day left to penetrate
the Residence, two to get back to Vdrkosigan's territories ... not much to
spare. She felt as if she was flying, faster and faster. And running out of
turning room. Last chance to call the
whole thing off. A fine misting rain had brought early dusk to the city.
Cordelia stared out the dirty window into the slick street, striped with the
reflections of a few sickly amber-haloed streetlights. Only a few bundled
shapes hurried along, heads down. It was as if war and the
winter had inhaled autumn's last breath, and blew back out a deathly silence.
Nerves, Cordelia told herself, straightened her back, and led her little party
downstairs. The desk was deserted.
Cordelia was just deciding to skip such formalities as checking out-they had,
after all, paid in advance—when the 'keep came stomping in through the front
door, shaking cold drops from his jacket and swearing. He spotted Bothari. "You! It's all your
fault, you gutless git. We missed it, we bloody missed it, and now someone else
will collect. That reward could've been mine, should've been mine—" The 'keep's invective
was cut off with a thump as Bothari pinned him to the wall. The man's toes
stretched for the floor as Bothari's suddenly feral face leaned into his.
"What happened?" "One of Vordarian's
squads picked up that fellow. Looks like he led them back to his partner,
too." The 'keep's voice wavered between anger and fear. "They've got
them both, and I've got nothing!" "Got them?"
Cordelia repeated sickly. "Picking 'em off
right now, damn it." There might still be a
chance, Cordelia realized. Command decision or tactical compulsion, it hardly
mattered now. She grabbed a stunner out of the satchel; Bothari stepped back
and she buzzed the 'keep where he stood openmouthed. Bothari shoved his inert
form behind the desk. "We have to try for them. Drou, break out the rest
of the weapons. Sergeant, lead us there. Go!" And so she found herself
running down the street toward a scene any right-minded Barrayaran would run
the other way to avoid, a night-arrest by security forces. Drou kept up with
Bothari; Koudelka, burdened with the satchel, lagged behind. Cordelia wished
the mist were thicker. The Vorpatrils'
bolt-hole turned out to be two blocks down and one over, in a shabby narrow
building much like the one they'd spent the day in. Bothari held up a hand, and
they peered cautiously around the corner, then drew back. Two Security
groundcars were parked out front of the little hostel, covering the entrance.
But for themselves, the area was strangely deserted. Koudelka came panting up
behind. "Droushnakovi,"
said Bothari, "circle around. Get a cross-fire position covering the other
side of those groundcars. Watch out, they're sure to have men at the back
door." Yes, street tactics were
clearly Bothari's call. Drou nodded, checked her weapons' charges, and walked
as if casually across the corner, not even turning her head. Once out of the
enemy's line of sight, she flowed into a silent run. "We got to get a
better position," Bothari muttered, risking his head once more around the
corner. "Can't bloody see." "A man and a woman
walk down the street," Cordelia visualized desperately. "They stop to
talk in a doorway. They goggle curiously at the security men, who are engrossed
in their arrest—would we pass?" "Not for
long," said Bothari, "once they spot our energy weapons on their area
scanners. But we'd last longer than two men. It's going to move fast, when it
moves. Might pass just long enough. Lieutenant, cover us from here. Have the
plasma arc ready, it's all we've got to stop a vehicle." Bothari shoved his nerve
disruptor out of sight under his jacket. Cordelia tucked her stunner in the
waistband of her skirt, and lightly took Bothari's arm. They strolled around
the corner. This was a really stupid
idea, Cordelia decided, matching steps to Bothari's booted stride. They should
have set up hours ago, if they'd been going to try an ambush like this. Or they
should have hooked Padma and Alys out hours ago. And yet—how long ago had Padma
been spotted? Might they have fallen into some long-laid trap, and gone down
together? No might-have-beens. Pay attention to the now. Bothari's steps slowed,
as they approached a deep shadowed doorway. He swung her in, and leaned with
his arm on the wall, close to her. They were near enough now to the arrest
scene to catch voices. Snatches of crackle from the comm links carried clearly
in the damp air. Just in time. Despite
the shabby shirt and trousers, Cordelia readily recognized the dark-haired man
pinned against the groundcar by one guard as Captain Vorpatril. His face was
marred with a grated, bleeding contusion and swollen lips, pulled back in a
stereotypical fast-penta-induced smile. The smile slipped to anguish, and back
again, and his giggles choked on moans. Black-clad security men
were bundling a woman out the hostel door and into the street. The security
team's attention was drawn to her; Cordelia's and Bothari's, too. Alys Vorpatril wore only
a nightgown and robe, with her feet jammed bare into flat shoes. Her dark hair
was loose, flowing down wildly around her white face; she looked a fair
madwoman. She was indeed conspicuously pregnant, black robe falling open around
her white-gowned belly. The guard manhandling her had her arms locked behind
her; her legs splayed for balance against his backward pull. The guard commander, a
full colonel, checked a report panel. "That's it, then. The lord and the
heir." His eye locked to Alys Vorpatril's abdomen; he shook his head as if
to clear it, and spoke into his comm link. "Pull back, boys, we're done
here." "What the hell are
we supposed to do about this, Colonel?" asked his lieutenant uneasily. His
voice blended fascination with dismay as he walked over to Lady Vorpatril and
lifted her gown high. She had gained weight, these last two months; her chin
and breasts were rounded, thighs thickened, belly padded out. He poked a
curious finger deep into that soft white flesh. She stood silent, trembling,
face on fire with rage at his liberty and eyes glistening dark with tears of
fear. "Our orders are to kill the lord and the heir. It doesn't say her.
Are we supposed to sit around and wait? Squeeze? Cut her open? Or," his
voice went persuasive, "maybe just take her back to HQ?" The guard holding her
from behind grinned and ground his hips into her buttocks, mock—thrusts of
unmistakable meaning. "We don't have to take her straight back, do we? I
mean, this is Vor meat. What a chance." The colonel stared at
him, and spat disgust. "Corporal, you're perverted." Cordelia realized with a
shock that Bothari's riveted attention to the scene before them was no longer
tactical. He was deeply aroused. His eyes seemed to glaze as she watched; his
lips parted. The guard colonel
pocketed his comm link, and drew his nerve disruptor. "No." He shook
his head. "We make this quick and clean. Step aside, Corporal." Strange mercies ... The guard expertly
popped Alys's knees and shoved her down, stepping back. Her hands flung out to
the pavement, too late to save her swollen belly from a hard smack. Padma
Vorpatril moaned through his fast-penta haze. The guard colonel raised his
nerve disruptor and hesitated, as if uncertain whether to aim it at her head or
torso. "Kill them,"
Cordelia hissed in Bothari's ear, jerked out her stunner, and fired. Bothari snapped not only
awake, but over into some berserker mode; his nerve disruptor bolt hit the
guard colonel at the same moment as Cordelias stunner beam did, though she had
drawn first. Then he was moving, a dark blur leaping behind a parked vehicle.
He snapped off shots, blue crackles that electrified the air; two more guards
fell as the rest took cover behind their groundcars. Alys Vorpatril, still on
the pavement, curled up in a tight ball, trying to cover her abdomen with her
arms and legs. Padma Vorpatril, penta-drunk, staggered bewilderedly toward her,
arms out, apparently with some similar idea in mind. The guard lieutenant,
rolling on the pavement toward cover, aimed his nerve disruptor at the
distraught man. The guard lieutenant's
pause for accuracy was fatal; Droushnakovi's nerve disruptor cross-fire and
Cordelias stunner beam intersected upon his body—a millisecond too late. His
nerve disruptor bolt took Padma Vorpatril squarely in the back of his head.
Blue sparks danced, dark hair sparked orange, and Padma's body arced in a
violent convulsion and fell twitching. Alys Vorpatril wailed, a short sharp cry
cut off by a gasp. On her hands and knees, she seemed momentarily frozen
between trying to crawl toward him, or away. Droushnakovi's
cross-fire vantage was perfect. The last guard was killed while still trying to
raise the canopy of the armored groundcar. A driver, shielded inside the second
vehicle, prudently chose to try and speed away. Koudelka's plasma arc bolt, set
on high power, blasted into the groundcar as it accelerated past the corner. It
skidded wildly, dragging an edge and trailing sparks, and crashed into the side
of a brick building. Yes, and didn't my whole
strategy for this mission turn on our staying invisible? Cordelia thought
dizzily, and ran forward. She and Droushnakovi reached Alys Vorpatril at the
same moment; together they hoisted the shuddering woman to her feet. "We have to get out
of here," said Bothari, rising from his firing-crouch and coming toward
them. "No shit,"
agreed Koudelka, limping up and staring around at the sudden and spectacular
carnage. The street was amazingly quiet. Not for long, Cordelia suspected. "This way."
Bothari pointed up an alley, narrow and dark. "Run." "Shouldn't we try
to take that car?" Cordelia gestured to the body-draped vehicle. "No. Traceable. And
it can't fit where we're going." Cordelia was not sure if
the wild-faced, weeping Alys was able to run anywhere, but she stuck her
stunner back in her waistband and took one of the pregnant woman's arms. Drou
took the other, and together they guided her in the sergeant's wake. At least
Koudelka was no longer the slowest of the party. Alys was crying, yet not
hysterical; she glanced only once over her shoulder at her husband's body, then
concentrated grimly on trying to run. She did not run well. She was hopelessly
unbalanced, her arms wrapping her belly in an attempt to take up the shocks of
her heavy footsteps. "Cordelia," she gasped. An acknowledgment of
recognition; there was no time or breath for demands of explanation. They had not lurched
more than three blocks when Cordelia began to hear sirens from the area they
were fleeing. But Bothari seemed controlled again, unpanicked. They traversed
another narrow alley, and Cordelia realized they had crossed into a region of
the city with no streetlights, or indeed any lights at all. Her eyes strained
in the misty shadows. Alys stopped suddenly,
and Cordelia skidded to a halt, almost jerking the woman off her feet. Alys
stood for half a minute, bent over, gasping. Cordelia realized that
beneath its deceptive padding of fat, Alys's abdomen was hard as a rock; the
back of her robe was soaking wet. "Are you going into labor?" she
asked. She didn't know why she made that a question, the answer was obvious. "This has been
going on—for a day and a half," Alys blurted. She seemed unable to
straighten. "I think my water broke back there, when that bastard knocked
me down. Unless it's blood—should have passed out by now, if all that was
blood—it hurts so much worse, now... ." Her breath slowed; she pulled her
shoulders back with effort. "How much
longer?" asked Kou in alarm. "How should I know?
I've never done this before. Your guess is as good as mine," Lady
Vorpatril snapped. Hot anger to warm cold fear. It wasn't enough warmth, a
candle against a blizzard. "Not much longer,
I'd say," came Bothari's voice out of the dark. "We'd better go to
ground. Come on." Lady Vorpatril could no
longer run, but managed a rapid waddle, stopping helplessly every two minutes.
Then every one minute. "Not going to make
it all the way," muttered Bothari. "Wait here." He disappeared
up a side—alley? The passages all seemed alleys here, cold and stinking, much
too narrow for groundcars. They had passed exactly two people in the maze,
huddled to one side of a passage in a heap, and stepped carefully around them. "Can you do
anything to, like, hold back?" asked Kou, watching Lady Vorpatril double
over again. "We ought to ... try and get a doctor or something." "That's what that
idiot Padma went out for," Alys ground out. "I begged him not to go
... oh, God!" After another moment she added, in a surprisingly
conversational tone, "The next time you're vomiting your guts out, Kou,
let me suggest you just close your mouth and swallow hard ... it's not exactly
a voluntary reflex!" She straightened again, shivering violently. "She doesn't need a
doctor, she needs a flat spot," Bothari spoke from the shadows. "This
way." He led them a short
distance to a wooden door, formerly nailed shut in an ancient solid stuccoed
wall. Judging from the fresh splinters, he'd just kicked it open. Once inside,
with the door pulled tight-shut again, Droushnakovi at last dared pull a
hand-light from the satchel. It illuminated a small, empty, dirty room. Bothari
swiftly prowled its perimeters. Two inner doors had been broken open long ago,
but beyond them all was soundless and lightless and apparently deserted.
"It'll have to do," said Bothari. Cordelia wondered what
the hell to do next. She knew all about placental transfers and surgical
sections now, but for so-called normal births she had only theory to go on.
Alys Vorpatril probably had even less grasp of the biology, Drou less still,
and Kou was downright useless. "Has anyone here ever actually been in on
one of these, before?" "Not I,"
muttered Alys. Their looks met in rather too clear an understanding. "You're not
alone," said Cordelia stoutly. Confidence should lead to relaxation,
should lead to something. "We'll all help." Bothari said—oddly
reluctantly—"My mother used to do a spot of midwifery. Sometimes she'd
drag me along to help. There's not that much to it." Cordelia controlled her
brows. That was the first time she'd heard the sergeant say word one about
either of his parents. The sergeant sighed,
clearly realizing from their array of looks that he'd just put himself in
charge. "Lend me your jacket, Kou." Koudelka divested the
garment gallantly, and made to wrap it around the shaking Lady Vorpatril. He
looked a little more dismayed when the sergeant put his own jacket around Lady
Vorpatril's shoulders, then made her lie down on the floor and spread
Koudelka's jacket under her hips. She looked less pale, lying down, less like
she was about to pass out. But her breath stopped, then she cried out, as her
abdominal muscles locked again. "Stay with me, Lady
Vorkosigan," Bothari murmured to Cordelia. For what? Cordelia wondered,
then realized why as he knelt and gently pushed up Alys Vorpatril's nightgown.
He wants me for a control mechanism. But the killing seemed to have bled off
that horrifying wave of lust that had so distorted his face, back in the
street. His gaze now was only normally interested. Fortunately, Alys Vorpatril
was too self-absorbed to notice that Bothari's attempt at an expression of
medical coolness was not wholly successful. "Baby's head's not
showing yet," he reported. "But soon." Another spasm, and he looked
around vaguely and added, "I don't think you'd better scream, Lady
Vorpatril. They'll be looking by now." She nodded
understanding, and waved a desperate hand; Drou, catching on, rolled up a bit
of cloth into a rag rope, and gave it to her to bite. And so the tableau hung,
for spasm after uterine spasm. Alys looked utterly wrung, crying very quietly,
unable to stop her body's repeated attempts to turn itself inside out long
enough to catch either breath or balance. The baby's head crowned, dark haired,
but seemed unable to go further. "How long is this
supposed to take?" asked Kou, in a voice that tried to sound measured, but
came out very worried. "I think he likes
it where he is," said Bothari. "Doesn't want to come out in the
cold." This joke actually got through to Alys; her sobbing breath didn't
change, but her eyes flashed in a moment of gratitude. Bothari crouched,
frowned judiciously, hunkered around to her side, placed a big hand on her
belly, and waited for the next spasm. Then he leaned. The infant's head popped
out, between Lady Vorpatril's bloody thighs, quick as that. "There," said
the sergeant, sounding rather satisfied. Koudelka looked thoroughly impressed. Cordelia caught the head
between her hands, and eased the body out with the next contraction. The baby
boy coughed twice, sneezed like a kitten in the awed silence, inhaled, grew
pinker, and emitted a nerve—shattering wail. Cordelia nearly dropped him. Bothari swore at the
noise. "Give me your swordstick, Kou." Lady Vorpatril looked up
wildly. "No! Give him back to me, I'll make him be quiet!" "Wasn't what I had
in mind," said Bothari with some dignity. "Though it's an idea,"
he added as the wails went on. He pulled out the plasma arc and heated the
sword briefly, on low power. Sterilizing it, Cordelia realized. Placenta followed cord
on the next contraction, a messy heap on Kou's jacket. She stared with covert
fascination at the spent version of the supportive organ that had been of so
much concern in her own case. Time. This rescue's taken so much time. What are
Miles's chances down to now? Had she just traded her son's life for little
Ivan's? Not-so-little Ivan, actually, no wonder he'd given his mother so much
trouble. Alys must be blessed with an unusually wide pelvic arch, or she'd
never have made it though this nightmare night alive. After the cord drained
white, Bothari cut it with the sterilized blade, and Cordelia self-knotted the
rubbery thing as best she could. She mopped off the baby and wrapped him in
their spare clean shirt, and handed him at last into Alys's outstretched arms. Alys looked at the baby
and began crying again muffled sobs. "Padma said ... I'd have the best
doctors' Padma said ... there'd be no pain. Padma said he'd stay with me ...
damn you, Padma!" She clutched Padma's son to her. In an altered tone of
mild surprise, she added "Ow!" Infant mouth had found her breast, and
apparently had a grip like a barracuda. "Good
reflexes," observed Bothari. CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN "For God's sake,
Bothari, we can't take her in there," hissed Koudelka. They stood in an alley
deep in the maze of the caravanserai. A thick-walled building bulked an unusual
three stories high in the cold, wet darkness. High on its stuccoed face,
scabrous with peeling paint, yellow light glinted through carved shutters. An
oil lamp burned dimly above a wooden door, the only entrance Cordelia could
see. "Can't leave her
out here. She needs heat," replied the sergeant. He carried Lady Vorpatril
in his arms; she clung to him, wan and shivering. "It's a slow night
anyway. Late. They're closing down." "What is this
place?" asked Droushnakovi. Koudelka cleared his throat. "Back in the
Time of Isolation, when this was the center of Vorbarr Sultana, it was a lord's
Residence. One of the minor Vorbarra princes, I think. That's why it's built
like a fortress. Now it's a ... sort of inn." Oh, so this is your
whorehouse, Kou, Cordelia managed not to blurt out. Instead she addressed
Bothari, "Is it safe? Or is it likely to be stocked with informers like
that last place?" "Safe for a few
hours," Bothari judged. "A few hours is all we have anyway." He
set Lady Vorpatril down, handing her off to Droushnakovi, and slipped inside
after a muffled conversation through the door with some guardian. Cordelia
tucked little Ivan more firmly to her, tugging her jacket over him for all the
warmth she could share. Fortunately, he had slept quietly through their several-minutes
hike from the abandoned building to this place. In a few moments Bothari
returned, and motioned them to follow. They passed through an
entryway, almost like a stone tunnel, with narrow slits in the walls and holes
every half-meter above. "For defense, in the old days," whispered
Koudelka, and Droushnakovi nodded understanding. No arrows or boiling oil
awaited them tonight, though. A man as tall as Bothari, but wider, locked the
door again behind them. They came out in a
large, dim room that had been converted into some sort of bar/dining room. It
was occupied only by two dispirited-looking women in robes and a man snoring
with his head on the table. As usual, an extravagant fireplace glowed with
coals of wood. They had a guide, or
hostess. A rangy woman beckoned them silently toward the stairs. Fifteen years
ago, or even ten years ago, she might have achieved a leggy aquiline look; now
she was bony and faded, misclad in a gaudy magenta robe with drooping ruffles
that seemed to echo her inherent sadness. Bothari swept up Lady Vorpatril and
carried her up the steep stairs. Koudelka stared around uneasily, and seemed to
brighten slightly upon not finding someone. The woman led them to a
room off an upstairs hallway. "Change the sheets," muttered Bothari,
and the woman nodded and vanished. Bothari did not set the exhausted Lady
Vorpatril down. The woman returned in a few minutes, and whisked off the bed's
rumpled coverings and replaced them with fresh linens. Bothari laid Lady
Vorpatril in the bed and backed up. Cordelia tucked the sleeping infant in her
arm, and Lady Vorpatril managed a grateful nod. The—housewoman, Cordelia
decided she would think of her—stared with a spark of interest at the baby.
"That's a new one. Big boy, eh?" her voice swung to a tentative coo. "Two weeks
old," stated Bothari in a repelling tone. The woman snorted, hands
on hips. "I do my bit of midwifery, Bothari. Two hours, more like." Bothari shot Cordelia an
odd look, almost a flash of fear. The housewoman held up a hand to ward off his
frown. "Whatever you say." "We should let her
sleep," said Bothari, "till we're sure she isn't going to
bleed." "Yes, but not
alone," said Cordelia. "In case she wakes up disoriented in a strange
place." In the range of strange, Cordelia suspected, this place qualified
as downright alien for the Vor woman. "I'll sit with her
a while," volunteered Droushnakovi. She glowered suspiciously at the
housewoman, who was apparently leaning too near the baby for her taste.
Cordelia didn't think Drou was at all fooled by Koudelka's pretense that they
had stumbled into some sort of museum. Nor would Lady Vorpatril be, once she'd
rested enough to regain her wits. Droushnakovi plunked
down in a shabby padded armchair, wrinkling her nose at its musty smell. The others
withdrew from the room. Koudelka went off to find whatever this old building
used for a lavatory, and to try and buy them some food. An underlying tang to
the air suggested to Cordelia that nothing in the caravanserai was hooked up to
the municipal sewerage. No central heating, either. At Bothari's frown, the
housewoman made herself scarce. A sofa, a couple of
chairs, and a low table occupied a space at the end of the hall, lit by a
red-shaded battery-driven lamp. Wearily, Bothari and Cordelia sat there. With
the pressure off for a moment, not fighting the strain, Bothari looked ragged.
Cordelia had no idea what she looked like, but she was certain it wasn't her
best. "Do they have
whores on Beta Colony?" Bothari asked suddenly. Cordelia fought mental whiplash.
His voice was so tired the question sounded almost casual, except that Bothari
never made casual conversation. How much had tonight's violent events disturbed
his precarious balance, stressed his peculiar fault lines? "Well ... we
have the L.P.S.T.s," she answered cautiously. "I guess they fill some
of the same social functions." "Ellpee
Estees?" "Licensed Practical
Sexuality Therapists. You have to pass the government boards, and get a
license. You're required to have at least an associate degree in psychotherapy.
Except that all three sexes take up the profession. The hermaphrodites make the
most money, they're very popular with the tourists. It's not ... not a high
social status job, but neither are they dregs. I don't think we have dregs on
Beta Colony, we sort of stop at the lower middle class. It's like ..." she
paused, struggling for a cultural translation, "sort of like being a
hairdresser, on Barrayar. Delivering a personal service to professional
standards, with a bit of art and craft." She'd actually managed
to boggle Bothari, surely a first. His brow wrinkled. "Only Betans would
think you needed a bleeding university degree... . Do women hire them?" "Sure. Couples,
too. The ... the teaching element is rather more emphasized, there." He shook his head, and
hesitated. He shot her a sidelong look. "My mother was a whore." His
tone was curiously distant. He waited. "I'd ... about
figured that out." "Don't know why she
didn't abort me. She could have, she did those as well as midwifery. Maybe she
was looking to her old age. She used to sell me to her customers." Cordelia choked.
"Now ... now that would not have been allowed, on Beta Colony." "I can't remember
much about that time. I ran away when I was twelve, when I got big enough to
beat up her damned customers. Ran with the gangs, till I was sixteen, passed
for eighteen, and lied my way into the Service. Then I was out of here."
His palms slid across each other, indicating how slick and fast his escape. "The Service must
have seemed like heaven, in comparison." "Till I met
Vorrutyer." He stared around vaguely. "There were more people around
here, back then. It's almost dead here now." His voice went meditative.
"There's a great deal of my life I can't remember very well. It's like I'm
all ... patchy. Yet there are some things I want to forget and can't." She wasn't about to ask,
What? But she made an I-am-listening noise, down in her throat. "Don't know who my
father was. Being a bastard here is damn near as bad as being a mutant." " 'Bastard' is used
as a negative description of a personality, but it doesn't really have an
objective meaning, in the Betan context. Unlicensed children aren't the same
thing, and they're so rare, they're dealt with on a case-by-case basis."
Why is he telling me all this? What does he want of me? When he started, he
seemed almost fearful; now he looks almost contented. What did I say right? She
sighed. To her secret relief,
Koudelka returned about then, bearing actual fresh sandwiches of bread and
cheese, and bottled beer. Cordelia was glad for the beer; she'd have been
dubious of the water in this place. She chased her first bite with a grateful
swallow, and said, "Kou, we have to re—arrange. our strategy." He settled awkwardly
beside her, listening seriously. "Yes?" "We obviously can't
take Lady Vorpatril and the baby with us. And we can't leave her here. We left
five corpses and a burning groundcar for Vordarian's security. They're going to
be searching this area in earnest. But for just a little while longer, they will
still be hunting for a very pregnant woman. It gives us a time window. We have
to split up." He filled a hesitant
moment with a bite of sandwich. "Will you go with her, then, Milady?" She shook her head.
"I must go with the Residence team. If only because I'm the only one who
can say, This is impossible now, it's time to quit. Drou is absolutely
required, and I need Bothari." And, in some strange way, Bothari needs me.
"That leaves you." His lips compressed
bitterly. "At least I won't slow you down." "You're not a
default choice," she said sharply. "Your ingenuity got us in to
Vorbarr Sultana. I think it can get Lady Vorpatril out. You're her best
shot." "But it feels like
you're running into danger, and I'm running away." "A dangerous
illusion. Kou, think. If Vordarian's goons catch her again, they'll show her no
mercy. Nor you, nor especially the baby. There is no 'safer.' Only mortal
necessity, and logic, and the absolute need to keep your head." He sighed. "I'll
try, Milady." " 'Try' is not good
enough. Padma Vorpatril 'tried.' You bloody succeed, Kou." He nodded slowly.
"Yes, Milady." Bothari left to scrounge
clothing for Kou's new persona of poor-young-husband-and-father.
"Customers are always leaving things," he remarked. Cordelia wondered
what he could collect here in the way of street clothes for Lady Vorpatril. Kou
took food in to Lady Vorpatril and Drou. He returned with a very bleak
expression on his face, and settled again beside Cordelia. After a time he said,
"I guess I understand now why Drou was so worried about being
pregnant." "Do you?" said
Cordelia. "Lady Vorpatril's
troubles make mine look ... pretty small. God, that looked painful." "Mm. But the pain
only lasts a day." She rubbed her scar. "Or a few weeks. I don't
think that's it." "What is,
then?" "It's ... a
transcendental act. Making life. I thought about that, when I was carrying
Miles. 'By this act, I bring one death into the world.' One birth, one death,
and all the pain and acts of will between. I didn't understand certain Oriental
mystic symbols like the Death-mother, Kali, till I realized it wasn't mystic at
all, just plain fact. A Barrayaran-style sexual 'accident' can start a chain of
causality that doesn't stop till the end of time. Our children change us ...
whether they live or not. Even though your child turned out to be chimerical
this time, Drou was touched by that change. Weren't you?" He shook his head in
bafflement. "I wasn't thinking about all that. I just wanted to be normal.
Like other men." "I think your
instincts are all right. They're just not enough. I don't suppose you could get
your instincts and your intellect working together for once, instead of at
cross-purposes ?" He snorted. "I
don't know. I don't know ... how to get through to her now. I said I was sorry."
"It's not all right
between you two, is it?" "No." "You know what's
bothered me most, on the journey up here?" said Cordelia. "No ..." "I couldn't say
goodbye to Aral. If ... anything happens to me—or to him, for that matter—it
will leave something hanging, unraveled, between us. And no way to ever make it
right." "Mm." He
folded a little more into himself, slumped in the chair. She meditated a bit.
"What have you tried besides 'I'm sorry'? How about, 'How do you feel? Are
you all right? Can I help? I love you,' there's a classic. Words of one
syllable. Mostly questions, now I think on it. Shows an interest in starting a
conversation, y'know?" He smiled sadly. "I
don't think she wants to talk to me anymore." "Suppose," she
leaned her head back, and stared unseeing down the hallway. "Suppose
things hadn't taken such a wrong turn, that night. Suppose you hadn't panicked.
Suppose that idiot Evon Vorhalas hadn't interrupted with his little horror
show." There was a thought. Too painful, that might—not—have—been.
"Drop back to square one. There you were, cuddling happily." Aral had
used that word, cuddling. It hurt too much to think of Aral just now, too.
"You part friends, you wake up the next morning, er, aching with
unrequited love ... what happens next, on Barrayar?" "A
go-between." "Ah?" "Her parents, or
mine, would hire a go-between. And then they'd, well, arrange things." "And you do
what?" He shrugged. "Show
up on time for the wedding and pay the bill, I guess. Actually, the parents pay
the bill." No wonder the man was at
a loss. "Did you want a wedding? Not just to get laid?" "Yes! But ...
Milady, I'm just about half a man, on a good day. Her family'd take one look at
me and laugh." "Have you ever met
her family? Have they met you?" "No ..." "Kou, are you
listening to yourself?" He looked rather
shamefaced. "Well ..." "A go-between.
Huh." She stood up. "Where are you
going?" he asked nervously. "Between," she
said firmly. She marched down the hall to Lady Vorpatril's door, and stuck her
head in. Droushnakovi was sitting watching the sleeping woman. Two beers and
the sandwiches sat untouched on a bedside table. Cordelia slipped within,
and closed the door gently. "You know," she murmured, "good
soldiers never pass up a chance to eat or sleep. They never know how much
they'll be called on to do, before the next chance." "I'm not
hungry." Drou too had a folded-in look, as if caught in some trap within
herself. "Want to talk about
it?" She grimaced
uncertainly, and moved away from the bed to a settee in the far corner of the
room. Cordelia sat beside her. "Tonight," she said lowly, "was
the first time I was ever in a real fight." "You did well. You
found your position, you reacted—" "No."
Droushnakovi made a bitter hand-chopping gesture. "I didn't." "Oh? It looked good
to me." "I ran around
behind the building—stunned the two security men waiting at the back door. They
never saw me. I got to my position, at the building's corner. I watched those
men, tormenting Lady Vorpatril in the street. Insulting and staring and pushing
and poking at her ... it made me so angry, I switched to my nerve disruptor. I
wanted to kill them. Then the firing started. And ... and I hesitated. And Lord
Vorpatril died because of it. My fault—" "Whoa, girl! That
goon who shot Padma Vorpatril wasn't the only one taking aim at him. Padma was
so penta-soaked and confused, he wasn't even trying to take cover. They must
have double—dosed him, to force him to lead them back to Alys. He might as
easily have died from another shot, or blundered into our own cross-fire." "Sergeant Bothari
didn't hesitate," Droushnakovi said flatly. "No," agreed
Cordelia. "Sergeant Bothari
doesn't waste energy feeling ... sorry, for the enemy, either." "No. Do you?" "I feel sick." "You kill two total
strangers, and expect to feel jolly?" "Bothari
does." "Yes. Bothari
enjoyed it. But Bothari is not, even by Barrayaran standards, a sane man. Do
you aspire to be a monster?" "You call him
that!" "Oh, but he's my
monster. My good dog." She always had trouble explaining Bothari,
sometimes even to herself. Cordelia wondered if Droushnakovi knew the
Earth-historical origin of the term, scapegoat. The sacrificial animal that was
released yearly into the wilderness, to carry the sins of its community away
... Bothari was surely her beast of burden; she saw clearly what he did for
her. She was less certain what she did for him, except that he seemed to find
it desperately important. "I, for one, am glad you are heartsick. Two
pathological killers in my service would be an excess. Treasure that nausea,
Drou." She shook her head.
"I think maybe I'm in the wrong trade." "Maybe. Maybe not.
Think what a monstrous thing an army of Botharis would be. Any community's arm
of force—military, police, security—needs people in it who can do the necessary
evil, and yet not be made evil by it. To do only the necessary, and no more. To
constantly question the assumptions, to stop the slide into atrocity." "The way that
security colonel quashed that obscene corporal." "Yes. Or the way
that lieutenant questioned the colonel ... I wish we might have saved
him," Cordelia sighed. Drou frowned deeply,
into her lap. "Kou thought you
were angry with him," said Cordelia. "Kou?"
Droushnakovi looked up dimly. "Oh, yes, he was just in here. Did he want
something?" Cordelia smiled.
"Just like Kou, to imagine all your unhappiness must center on him."
Her smile faded. "I'm going to send him with Lady Vorpatril, to try and
smuggle her and the baby out. We'll go our separate ways as soon as she's able
to walk." Drou's face grew
worried. "He'll be in terrible danger. Vordarian's people will be rabid
over losing her and the young lord tonight." Yes, there was still a
Lord Vorpatril to disturb Vordarian's genealogical calculations, wasn't there?
Insane system, that made an infant seem a mortal danger to a grown man.
"There's no safety for anybody, till this vile war is ended. Tell me. Do
you still love Kou? I know you're over your initial starry-eyed infatuation.
You see his faults. Egocentric, and with a bug in his brain about his injuries,
and terribly worried about his masculinity. But he's not stupid. There's hope
for him. He has an interesting life ahead of him, in the Regents service."
Assuming they all lived through the next forty-eight hours. A passionate desire
to live was a good thing to instill in her agents, Cordelia thought. "Do
you want him?" "I'm ... bound to
him, now. I don't know how to explain ... I gave him my virginity. Who else
would have me? I'd be ashamed—" "Forget that! After
we bring off this raid, you're going to be covered in so much glory, men will
be lining up for the status of courting you. You'll have your pick. In Aral's
household, you'll have a chance to meet the best. What do you want? A general?
An Imperial minister? A Vor lordling? An off-world ambassador? Your only
problem will be choosing, since Barrayaran custom stingily only allows you one
husband at a time. A clumsy young lieutenant hasn't got a prayer of competing
with all those polished seniors." Droushnakovi smiled, a
bit skeptically, at Cordelia's painted vision. "Who says Kou won't be a
general himself someday?" she said softly. She sighed, her brow creasing.
"Yes. I still want him. But ... I guess I'm afraid he'll hurt me
again." Cordelia thought that
one over. "Probably. Aral and I hurt each other all the time." "Oh, not you two,
Milady! You seem so, so perfect." "Think, Drou. Can
you imagine what mental state Aral is in right this minute, because of my
actions? I can. I do." "Oh." "But pain ... seems
to me an insufficient reason not to embrace life. Being dead is quite painless.
Pain, like time, is going to come on regardless. Question is, what glorious
moments can you win from life in addition to the pain?" "I'm not sure I
follow that, Milady. But ... I have a picture, in my head, Of me and Kou, on a
beach, all alone. It's so warm. And when he looks at me, he sees me, really
sees me, and loves me. ..." Cordelia pursed her
lips. "Yeah ... that'll do. Come with me." The girl rose
obediently. Cordelia led her back in to the hall, forcefully arranged Kou at
one end of the sofa, sat Drou down on the other, and plopped down between them.
"Drou, Kou has a few things to say to you. Since you apparently speak
different languages, he's asked me to be his interpreter." Kou made an embarrassed
negative motion over Cordelia's head. "That hand signal
means, I'd rather blow up the rest of my life than look like a fool for five
minutes. Ignore it," Cordelia said. "Now, let me see. Who
begins?" There was a short
silence. "Did I mention I'm also playing the parts of both your parents? I
think I shall begin by being Kou's Ma. Well, son, and have you met any nice
girls yet? You're almost twenty-six, you know. I saw that vid," she added
in her own voice as Kou choked. "I have her style, eh? And her content. And
Kou says, Yes, Ma, there's this gorgeous girl. Young, tall, smart— and Kou's Ma
says, Tee hee! And hires me, your friendly neighborhood go-between. And I go to
your father, Drou, and say, there's this young man. Imperial lieutenant,
personal secretary to the Lord Regent, war hero, slated for the inside track at
Imperial HQ—and he says, Say no more! We'll take him. Tee—hee. And—" "I think he'll have
more to say than that!" interrupted Kou. Cordelia turned to
Droushnakovi. "What Kou just said was, he thinks your family won't like
him 'cause he's a crip." "No!" said
Drou indignantly. "That's not so—" Cordelia held up a
restraining hand. "As your go-between, Kou, let me tell you. When one's
only lovely daughter points and says firmly, Da, I want that one, a prudent Da
responds only, Yes, dear. I admit, the three large brothers may be harder to
convince. Make her cry, and you could have a serious problem in the back alley.
By which I presume you haven't complained to them yet, Drou?" She stifled an
involuntary giggle. "No!" Kou looked as if this
was a new and daunting thought. "See," said
Cordelia, "you can still evade fraternal retribution, Kou, if you
scramble." She turned to Drou. "I know he's been a lout, but I
promise you, he's a trainable lout." "I said I was
sorry," said Kou, sounding stung. Drou stiffened. "Yes.
Repeatedly," she said coldly. "And there we come
to the heart of the matter," Cordelia said slowly, seriously. "What
Kou actually means, Drou, is that he isn't a bit sorry. The moment was wonderful,
you were wonderful, and he wants to do it again. And again and again, with
nobody but you, forever, socially approved and uninterrupted. Is that right,
Kou?" Kou looked stunned.
"Well—yes!" Drou blinked.
"But... that's what I wanted you to say!" "It was?" He
peered over Cordelia's head. This go-between system
may have some real merits. But also its limits. Cordelia rose from between
them, and glanced at her chrono. The humor drained from her spirit. "You
have a little time yet. You can say a lot in a little time, if you stick to
words of one syllable." CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN Pre-dawn in the alleys
of the caravanserai was not so pitchy-black as night in the mountains. The
foggy night sky reflected back a faint amber glow from the surrounding city.
The faces of her friends were grey blurs, like the very earliest of ancient
photographs; Cordelia tried not to think, Like the faces of the dead. Lady Vorpatril, cleaned
and fed and rested a few hours, was still none too steady, but she could walk
on her own. The housewoman had contributed some surprisingly sober clothes for
her, a calf-length grey skirt and sweaters against the cold. Koudelka had
exchanged all his military gear for loose trousers, old shoes, and a jacket to
replace the one that had suffered from its emergency obstetrical use. He
carried baby Lord Ivan, now makeshift-diapered and warmly wrapped, completing
the picture of a timid little family trying to make it out of town to the
wife's parents in the country before the fighting started. Cordelia had seen
hundreds of refugees just like them, in passing, on her way into Vorbarr
Sultana. Koudelka inspected his
little group, ending with a frowning look at the swordstick in his hand. Even
when seen as a mere cane, the satin wood, polished steel ferrule, and inlaid
grip did not look very middle-class. Koudelka sighed. "Drou, can you hide
this somehow? It's conspicuous as hell with this outfit, and more of a
hindrance than a help when I'm trying to carry this baby." Droushnakovi nodded, and
knelt and wrapped the stick in a shirt, and stuffed it into the satchel.
Cordelia remembered what had happened the last time Kou had carried that stick
down to the caravanserai, and stared nervously into the shadows. "How
likely are we to be jumped by someone, at this hour? We don't look rich,
certainly." "Some would kill
you for your clothes," said Bothari glumly, "with winter coming on.
But it's safer than usual. Vordarian's troops have been sweeping the quarter
for 'volunteers,' to help dig those bomb shelters in the city parks." "I never thought
I'd approve of slave labor," Cordelia groaned. "It's nonsense
anyway," Koudelka said. "Tearing up the parks. Even if completed they
wouldn't shelter enough people. But it looks impressive, and it sets up Lord
Vorkosigan as a threat, in people's minds." "Besides,"
Bothari lifted his jacket to reveal the silvered gleam of his nerve disruptor,
"this time I've got the right weapon." This was it, then.
Cordelia embraced Alys Vorpatril, who hugged her back, murmuring, "God
help you, Cordelia. And God rot Vidal Vordarian in hell." "Go safely. See you
back at Tanery Base, eh?" Cordelia glanced at Koudelka. "Live, and so
confound our enemies." "We'll tr—we will,
Milady," said Koudelka. Gravely, he saluted Droushnakovi. There was no
irony in the military courtesy, though perhaps a last tinge of envy. She
returned him a slow nod of understanding. Neither chose to confuse the moment
with further words. The two groups parted in the clammy darkness. Drou watched
over her shoulder till Koudelka and Lady Vorpatril turned out of sight, then
picked up the pace. They passed from black
alleys to lit streets, from deserted darkness to occasional other human forms,
hurrying about early winter morning business. Everybody seemed to cross streets
to avoid everybody else, and Cordelia felt a little less noticeable. She
stiffened inwardly when a municipal guard groundcar drove slowly past them, but
it did not stop. They paused, across the
street, to be certain their target building had been unlocked for the morning.
The structure was multi-storied, in the utilitarian style of the building boom
that had come on the heels of Ezar Vorbarra's ascent to power and stability
thirty-plus years ago. It was commercial, not governmental; they crossed the
lobby, entered the lift tubes, and descended unimpeded. Drou began seriously
looking over her shoulder when they reached the sub-basement. "Now we look
out of place." Bothari kept watch as she bent and forced a lock to a
utility tunnel. She led them down it, taking two cross-turns. The passage was
clearly used frequently, as the lights remained on. Cordelia's ears strained
for footsteps not their own. An access cover was
bolted to the floor. Droushnakovi loosened it quickly. "Hang and drop.
It's not much more than two meters. It'll likely be wet." Cordelia slid into the
dark circle, landing with a splash. She lit her hand-light. The water, slick
and black and shimmering, came to her booted ankles in the synthacrete tube. It
was icy cold. Bothari followed. Drou knelt on his shoulders, to coax the cover
back into place, then splashed down beside her. "There's about half a
kilometer of this storm sewer. Come on," she whispered. This close to
their goal, Cordelia needed no urging to hurry. At the half-kilometer,
they climbed into a darkened orifice high on the curving wall that led to a
much older and smaller tunnel, made of time-blackened brick. Knees and backs
bent, they shuffled along. It must be particularly painful for Bothari,
Cordelia reflected. Drou slowed, and began tapping on the tunnel's roof with
the steel ferrule of Koudelka's stick. When the ticks became hollow tocks, she
stopped. "Here. It's meant to swing downward. Watch it." She
released the sheath, and slid the blade carefully between a line of slimy
bricks. A click, and the false-brick-lined panel flopped down, nearly cracking
her head. She returned the sword to its casing. "Up." She pulled
herself through. They followed to find
themselves in another ancient drain, even narrower. It sloped more steeply
upward. They crouched along, their clothes brushing the sides and picking up
damp stains. Drou rose suddenly, and clambered out over a pile of broken bricks
into a dark, pillared chamber. "What is this
place?" whispered Cordelia. "Too big for a tunnel ..." "The old stables,"
Drou whispered back. "We're under the Residence grounds, now." "It doesn't sound
so secret to me. Surely they must appear in old drawings and elevations.
People—Security—must know this is here." Cordelia stared into the dim,
musty recesses, past pale arches picked out by their wavering hand-lights. "Yes, but this is
the cellar of the old old stables. Not Dorcas, but Dorca's great—uncle's. He
kept over three hundred horses. They burned down in a spectacular fire about
two hundred years ago, and instead of rebuilding on the site, they knocked them
flat and put up the new old stables on the east side, downwind. Those got
converted to staff apartments in Dorca's day. Most of the hostages are being
kept over there now." Drou marched firmly forward, as if sure of her
ground. "We're to the north of the main Residence now, under the gardens
Ezar designed. Ezar apparently found this old cellar and arranged this passage
with Negri, thirty years ago. A bolt-hole that even their own Security didn't
know about. Trusting, eh?" "Thank you,
Ezar," Cordelia murmured wryly. "Once we're out of
Ezar's passage, the real risk starts," the girl commented. Yes, they could still
pull out now, retrace their steps and no one the wiser. Why have these people
so blithely handed me the right to risk their lives? God, I hate command.
Something skittered in the shadows, and somewhere, water dripped. "Here," said
Droushnakovi, shining her light on a pile of boxes. "Ezar's cache.
Clothes, weapons, money—Captain Negri had me add some women's and boy's clothes
to it just last year, at the time of the Escobar invasion. He was keyed up for
trouble about it, but the riots never reached here. My clothes should only be a
little big for you." They discarded their
beslimed street clothes. Droushnakovi shook out clean dresses, suitable for
senior Residence womenservants too superior for menial's uniforms; the girl had
worn them for just such service. Bothari unbundled his black fatigue uniform
again from the satchel, and donned it, adding correct Imperial Security
insignia. From a distance he made a proper guard, though he was perhaps a
little too rumpled to pass inspection up close. As Drou had promised, a
complete array of weapons lay fully charged in sealed cases. Cordelia chose a
fresh stunner, as did Drou; their eyes met. "No hesitation this time,
eh?" Cordelia murmured. Drou nodded grimly. Bothari took one of each,
stunner, nerve disruptor, and plasma arc. Cordelia trusted he wouldn't clank
when he walked. "You can't fire
that thing indoors," Droushnakovi objected to the plasma arc. "You never
know," shrugged Bothari. After a moment's
thought, Cordelia added the swordstick, tightening a loop of her belt around
its grip. A serious weapon it wasn't, but it had proved an unexpectedly useful
tool on this trip. For luck. Then from the last depths of the satchel, Cordelia
pulled what she privately considered to be the most potent weapon of all. "A shoe?" said
Droushnakovi blankly. "Gregor's shoe. For
when we make contact with Kareen. I rather fancy she still has the other."
Cordelia nested it deeply in the inner pocket of one of Drou's Vorbarra—crested
boleros, worn over Cordelia's dress to complete the picture of an inner
Residence worker. When their preparations
were as complete as possible, Drou led them again into narrowing darkness.
"Now we're under the Residence itself," she whispered, turning
sideways. "We go up this ladder, between the walls. It was added after,
there's not much space." This proved an
understatement. Cordelia sucked in her breath and climbed after her, sandwiched
flat between two walls, trying not to accidently touch or thump. The ladder was
made, naturally, of wood. Her head throbbed with exhaustion and adrenaline. She
mentally measured the width. Getting the uterine replicator back down this
ladder was going to be a bitch. She told herself sternly to think positively,
then decided that was positive. Why am I doing this? I could be back at Tanery
Base with Aral right now, letting these Barrayarans kill each other all day
long, if it is their pleasure. ... Above her, Drou stepped
aside onto some sort of tiny ledge, a mere board. When Cordelia came up beside
her, she gestured "stop" and extinguished her hand-light. Drou
touched some silent latch mechanism, and a wall panel swung outward before
them. Clearly, everything had been kept well oiled right up to Ezar's death. They looked out into the
old Emperors bedchamber. They had expected it to be empty. Drou's mouth opened
in a voiceless O of dismay and horror. Ezar's huge old carved wooden
bed, the one he'd for-God's-sake died in, was occupied. A shaded light, dimmed
to an orange glow, cast highlight and shadow across two bare-torsoed, sleeping
forms. Even in this foreshortened view, Cordelia instantly recognized the
dish-face and moustache of Vidal Vordarian. He sprawled across four—fifths of
the bed, his heavy arm flung possessively across Princess Kareen. Her dark hair
was tumbled on the pillow. She slept in a tight, tiny ball in the upper corner
of the bed, facing outward, white arms clutched to her chest, nearly in danger
of falling out. Well, we're reached
Kareen. But there's a hitch. Cordelia shivered with the impulse to shoot
Vordarian in his sleep. But the energy discharge must set off alarms. Until she
had Miles's replicator in her hand, she was not ready to run for it. She
motioned Drou to close the panel again, and breathed "Down," to
Bothari, waiting beneath her. They reversed their painstaking four-flight
climb. Back in the tunnel, Cordelia turned to face the girl, who was crying
quite silently. "She's sold out to
him," Droushnakovi whispered, her voice shaking with grief and revulsion. "If you'll explain
to me what power-base you imagine she has to resist the man right now, I'd be
interested to hear it," said Cordelia tartly. "What do you expect her
to do, fling herself out a window to avoid a fate worse than death? She did
fates worse than death with Serg, I don't think they hold any more emotion for
her." "But if only we'd
got here sooner, I might—we might have saved her." "We still
might." "But she's really
sold out!" "Do people lie in
their sleep?" asked Cordelia. At Drou's confused look, she explained.
"She didn't look like a lover to me. She lay like a prisoner. I promised
we'd try for her, and we will." Time. "But we'll go for Miles first.
Let's try the second exit." "We'll have to pass
through more monitored corridors," Droushnakovi warned. "Can't be helped.
If we wait, this place will start waking up, and we'll hit more people." "They're coming on
duty in the kitchens right now," sighed Drou. "I used to stop in for
coffee and hot pastries, some days." Alas, a commando raid
could not knock off for breakfast. This was it. Go or no-go? Was it bravery, or
stupidity, that drove her on? It couldn't be bravery, she was sick with fear,
the same hot acid nausea she'd felt just before combat during the Escobar war.
Familiarity with the sensation didn't help. If I do not act, my child will die.
She would simply have to do without courage. "Now," Cordelia decided.
"There will be no better chance." Up the narrow ladder
again. The second panel opened in the old Emperor's private office. To
Cordelia's relief it still remained dark and unused, untouched since it had
been cleaned out and locked after Ezar's death last spring. His comconsole
desk, with all its Security overrides, was disconnected, wiped of secrets, dead
as its owner. The windows were still dark, with the tardy winter morning. Kou's stick banged
against Cordelia's calf as she strode across the room. It did look odd, hitched
to her waist too obviously like a sword. On a bureau in the office was a wide
antique tray holding a flat ceramic bowl, typical of the knickknacks that
cluttered the Residence. Cordelia laid the stick across the tray and lifted it
solemnly, servant-fashion. Droushnakovi nodded
approval. "Carry it halfway between your waist and your chest," she
whispered. "And keep your spine straight, they always told me." Cordelia nodded. They
closed the panel behind them, straightened themselves, and entered the lower corridor
of the north wing. Two Residence serving
women and a security guard. At first glance, they looked perfectly natural in
this setting, even in these troubled times. A guard corporal standing duty at
the foot of the Petite Stairway at the corridor's west end came to attention at
the sight of Bothari's ImpSec and rank tabs; they exchanged salutes. They were
passing out of sight up around the stairs' curve before he looked again,
harder. Cordelia steeled herself not to break into a panicked run. A subtle piece
of misdirection; the two women couldn't be a threat, they were already guarded.
That their guard could be the threat, might escape the corporal for minutes
yet. They turned into the
upper corridor. There. Behind that door, according to the loyalists' reports,
Vordarian kept the captured replicator. Right under his eye. Perhaps as a human
shield; any explosive dropped on Vordarian's quarters must kill tiny Miles, as
well. Or did the Barrayaran think of her damaged child as human? Another guard stood outside
that door. He stared at them suspiciously, his hand touching his sidearm.
Cordelia and Droushnakovi walked on by without turning their heads. Bothari's
exchanged salute flowed smoothly into a clip to the man's jaw that snapped his
head back into the wall. Bothari caught him before he dropped. They swung the
door open and dragged the guard inside; Bothari took his place in the corridor.
Silently, Drou closed the door. Cordelia stared wildly around the little
chamber, looking for automatic monitors. The room might formerly have been a
bedroom of the sort once slept in by bodyservants to be near their Vorish
masters, or perhaps an unusually large wardrobe; it didn't even have a window
overlooking some dull inner court. The portable uterine replicator sat on a
cloth-covered table in the exact center of the room. Its lights still glowed
their reassuring greens and ambers. No feral red eyes warned of malfunction
yet. A breath half-agony, half-relief, tore from Cordelias lips at the sight of
it. Droushnakovi gazed
around the room unhappily. "What's wrong, Drou?" whispered Cordelia.
"Too easy," the girl muttered. "We're not done
yet. Say 'easy' an hour from now." She licked her lips, shaken by secret
subliminal agreement with Droushnakovi's evaluation. No help for it. Grab and
go. Speed, not secrecy, was their hope now. She set the tray down on
the table, reached for the replicator's carrying handle, and stopped.
Something, something wrong ... she stared more closely at the readouts. The
oxygenation monitor wasn't even functioning. Though its indicator light glowed
green, the nutrient fluid level read 00.00. Empty. Cordelia's mouth opened
in a silent wail. Her stomach churned. She leaned closer, eyes devouring all
the illogical hash of false readouts. Her hagridden nightmare, made suddenly
and horribly real—had they dumped it on the floor, into a drain, down a toilet?
Had Miles died quickly, mercifully smashed, or had they let the tiny infant,
bereft of life-support, twitch to death in agony while they watched? Perhaps
they hadn't even bothered to watch ... The serial number. Look at the serial
number. A hopeless hope, but ... she forced her blurring eyes to focus, her
racing mind to try and remember. She had fingered that number, pensively, back
in Vaagen and Henri's lab, meditating upon this piece of technology and the
distant world that had created it—and this number didn't match. Not the same
replicator, not Miles's! One of the sixteen others, used to bait this trap. Her heart sank. How many
other traps were laid? She pictured herself running frantically from replicator
to replicator, like a distraught child in some cruel game of keep-away,
searching ... I shall go mad. No. Wherever the real
replicator was, it was near to Vordarian's person. Of that, she was sure. She
knelt beside the table, putting her head down a moment to fight the
blood—drained black balloons that clouded her vision and threatened to empty
her mind of consciousness. She lifted the cloth. There. A pressure—sensor. Was
this Vordarian's own clever idea? Slick and vicious. Drou bent to follow her
gesture. "A trap,"
whispered Cordelia. "Lift the replicator, and the alarms go off." "If we disarm
it—" "No. Don't bother.
It's false bait. Not the right replicator. It's an empty, with the controls
buggered to make it look like it's running." Cordelia tried to think
clearly through the pounding in her skull. "We'll have to retrace our
steps. Back down, and up. I hadn't expected to encounter Vordarian here. But I
guarantee he'll know where Miles is. A little old-fashioned interrogation.
We'll be working against time. When the alarm goes up—" Footsteps thudded in the
corridor, and shouts. The chirping buzz of stunner fire. Swearing, Bothari
flung himself backward through the door. "That's done it. They've spotted
us." When the alarm goes up,
it's all over, Cordelia's thought completed itself, in a vertigo of loss. No
window, one door, and they'd just lost control of their only exit. Vordarian's
trap had worked after all. May Vidal Vordarian rot in hell ... Droushnakovi clutched
her stunner. "We won't surrender you, Milady. We'll fight to the
end." "Rubbish,"
snapped Cordelia. "There's nothing our deaths would buy here but the
deaths of a few more of Vordarian's goons. Meaningless." "You mean we should
just quit?" "Suicidal glory is
the luxury of the irresponsible. We're not giving up. We're waiting for a
better opportunity to win. Which we can't take if we're stunned or
nerve-fried." Of course, if that had been the real replicator on the table
... she was insane enough by now to sacrifice these people's lives for her
son's, Cordelia reflected ruefully, but not yet mad enough to trade them for
nothing. She hadn't grown that Barrayaran yet. "You give yourself
to Vordarian as a hostage," Bothari warned. "Vordarian has held
me hostage since the day he took Miles," Cordelia said sadly. "This
changes nothing." A few minutes of shouted
negotiations through the door accomplished their surrender, despite the
hair-trigger nerves of the security guards. They tossed out their weapons. The
guards ran a scan for power packs to be sure, then four of them piled into the
little room to frisk their new prisoners. Two more waited outside as backup.
Cordelia made no sudden moves to startle them. A guard frowned puzzlement when
the interesting lump in Cordelia's vest turned out to be only a child's shoe.
He laid it on the table next to the tray. The commander, a man in
the maroon and gold Vordarian livery, spoke
into his wrist comm. "Yes. We're secured here. Tell m'lord. No, he said to
wake him. You want to explain why you didn't? Thank you." The guards did not prod
them into the corridor, but waited. The still-unconscious man Bothari had
clipped was dragged out. The guards placed Cordelia, arms outstretched to the
wall and legs straddled, in a row with Bothari and Droushnakovi. She was dizzy
with despair. But Kareen would come to her sometime, even as a prisoner. Must
come to her. All she needed was thirty seconds with Kareen, maybe less. When I
see Kareen, you are a dead man, Vordarian. You may walk and talk and give
orders, unconscious of your demise for weeks, but I'll seal your fate as surely
as you've sealed my son's. The reason for the wait
materialized at last; Vordarian himself, in green uniform trousers and
slippers, bare-chested, shouldered his way through the doorway. He was followed
by Princess Kareen, clutching a dark red velvet robe around her. Cordelia's
heart hammered at a doubled rate. Now? "So. The trap
worked," Vordarian began complacently, but added a genuinely shocked "Huh!"
as Cordelia pushed away from the wall and turned to face him. A hand signal
stopped a guard from shoving her back into position. The shock on Vordarian's
face gave way to a wolfish grin. "My God, did it work! Excellent!"
Kareen, hovering behind him, stared at Cordelia in bewildered astonishment. My trap worked, Cordelia
thought, stunned with her opportunity. Watch me. ... "That's the thing,
my lord," said the liveried man, not at all happily. "It didn't work.
We didn't pick this party up at the outer perimeter of the Residence and clear
their way, they just bloody turned up—without triggering anything. That
shouldn't have happened. If I hadn't come along looking for Roget, we might not
have spotted 'em." Vordarian shrugged, too
delighted by the magnitude of his prey to issue some trifling censure.
"Fast-penta that frill," he pointed at Droushnakovi, "and I
imagine you'll find out how. She used to work in Residence Security." Droushnakovi glowered
over her shoulder at Princess Kareen in hurt accusation; Kareen unconsciously
pulled her robe up more closely about her neck, her dark eyes full of equally
hurt question. "Well," said
Vordarian, still smiling at Cordelia, "is my Lord Vorkosigan so thin of
troops he sends his wife to do their work? We cannot lose." He smiled at
his guards, who smiled back. Damn, I wish I'd shot
this lout in his sleep. "What have you done with my son, Vordarian?" Vordarian said through
his teeth, "An outworlder frill will never gain power on Barrayar by
scheming to give a mutant the Imperium. That, I guarantee." "Is that the
official line, now? I don't want power. I just object to idiots having power
over me." Behind Vordarian,
Kareen's lips quirked sadly. Yes, listen to me, Kareen! "Where's my son,
Vordarian?" Cordelia repeated doggedly. "He's Emperor Vidal
now," Kareen remarked, her glance going back and forth between them,
"if he can keep it." "I will,"
Vordarian promised. "Aral Vorkosigan has no better a blood-claim than my
own. And I will protect where Vorkosigan's party has failed. Protect and
preserve the real Barrayar." His head shifted; apparently this assertion
was directed over his shoulder to Kareen. "We have not
failed," Cordelia whispered, meeting Kareen's eyes. Now. She lifted the
shoe from the table, and stretched out her arm with it; Kareen's eyes widened.
She darted forward and grabbed it. Cordelia's hand spasmed like a dying
runner's giving up the baton in some mortal relay race. Fierce certainty
bloomed like fire in her soul. I have you now, Vordarian. The sudden movement
sent a ripple through the armed guards. Kareen examined the shoe with
passionate intensity, turning it in her hands. Vordarian's brows rose in
bafflement, then he dismissed Kareen from his attention and turned to his
liveried guard commander. "We'll keep all
three of these prisoners here in the Residence. I'll personally attend the
fast-penta interrogations. This is a spectacular opportunity—" . Kareen's
face, when she lifted it again to Cordelia, was terrible with hope. Yes, thought Cordelia.
You were betrayed. Lied to. Your son lives; you must move and think and feel
again, no more the walking numbness of a dead spirit beyond pain. This is no
gift I've brought you. It is a curse. "Kareen," said
Cordelia softly, "where is my son?" "The replicator is
on a shelf in the oak wardrobe, in the old Emperor's bedchamber," Kareen
replied steadily, locking her eyes to Cordelia's. "Where is mine?" Cordelia's heart melted
in gratitude for her curse, live pain. "Safe and well, when I last saw
him, as long as this pretender," she jerked her head at Vordarian,
"doesn't find out where. Gregor misses you. He sends his love." Her
words might have been spikes, pounded into Kareen's body. That got Vordarian's
attention. "Gregor is at the bottom of a lake, killed in the flyer crash
with that traitor Negri," he said roughly. "The most insidious lie is
the one you want to hear. Guard yourself, my lady Kareen. I could not save him,
but I will avenge him. I promise you that." Uh—oh. Wait, Kareen.
Cordelia bit her lip. Not here. Too dangerous. Wait your best opportunity. Wait
till the bastard's asleep, at least—but if even a Betan hesitated to shoot her
enemy sleeping, how much less a Vor? She is true Vor... . An unfriendly smile
crinkled Kareen's lips. Her eyes were alight. "This has never been
immersed," she said softly. Cordelia heard the
murderous undertones ringing like a bell; Vordarian, apparently, only heard the
breathiness of some girlish grief. He glanced at the shoe, not grasping its
message, and shook his head as if to clear it of static. "You'll bear
another son someday," he promised her kindly. "Our son." Wait, wait, wait,
Cordelia screamed inside. "Never," whispered Kareen. She stepped back
beside the guard in the doorway, snatched his nerve disruptor from his open holster,
aimed it point-blank at Vordarian, and fired. The startled guard
knocked her hand up; the shot went wide, crackling into the ceiling. Vordarian
dove behind the table, the only furniture in the room, rolling. His liveried
man, in pure spinal reflex, snapped up his nerve disruptor and fired. Kareen's
face muscles locked in death-agony as the blue fire washed around her head; her
mouth pulled open in a last soundless cry. Wait, Cordelia's thought wailed. Vordarian, utterly
horrified, bellowed "No!", scrambled to his feet, and tore a nerve
disruptor from the hand of another guard. The liveried man, realizing the
enormity of his error, tossed his weapon away as if to divorce himself from his
action. Vordarian shot him. The room tilted around
her. Cordelia's hand locked around the hilt of the swordstick and triggered its
sheath flying into the head of one guard, then brought the blade smartly down
across Vordarian's weapon—wrist. He screamed, and blood and the nerve disruptor
flew wide. Droushnakovi was already diving for the first discarded nerve
disruptor. Bothari just took his target out with one lethal hand-blow to the
neck. Cordelia slammed the door shut against the guards in the corridor,
surging forward. A stunner charge buzzed into the walls, then three blue bolts
in rapid succession from Droushnakovi took out the last of Vordarian's men. "Grab him,"
Cordelia yelled to Bothari. Vordarian, shaking, his left hand clamped around
his half-severed right wrist, was in poor condition to resist, though he kicked
and shouted. His blood ran the color of Kareen's robe. Bothari locked
Vordarian's head in a firm grip, nerve disruptor pressed to his skull. "Out of here,"
snarled Cordelia, and kicked the door back open. "To the Emperor's
chamber." To Miles. Vordarian's other guards, preparing to fire, held back
at the sight of their master. "Back off!"
Bothari roared, and they fell away from the door. Cordelia grabbed Droushnakovi
by the arm, and they stepped over Kareen's body. Her ivory limbs lay muddled in
the red fabric, abstractly beautiful forms even in death. The women kept
Bothari and Vordarian between themselves and Vordarian's troops, and retreated
down the corridor. "Pull that plasma arc out of my holster and start
firing," Bothari savagely directed Cordelia. Yes; Bothari had managed to
retrieve it in the melee, probably why his body count hadn't been higher. "You can't set fire
to the Residence," Drou gasped in horror. A fortune in antiquities
and Barrayaran historical artifacts were housed in this wing alone, no doubt.
Cordelia grinned wildly, grabbed the weapon, and fired back down the corridor.
Wooden furniture, wooden parquetry, and age-dry tapestries roared into flame as
the beam's searing fingers touched them. Burn, you. Burn for
Kareen. Pile a death-offering to match her courage and agony, blazing higher
and higher— As they reached the door of the old Emperor's bedchamber, she fired
the hallway in the opposite direction for good measure. THAT for what you've
done to me, and to my boy—the flames should hold back pursuit for a few
minutes. She felt as though her body were floating, light as air. Is this how
Bothari feels, when he kills? Droushnakovi went for the wall panel to the
secret ladder. She was functioning steadily now, as if her hands belonged to a
different body than her tear-ravaged face. Cordelia dropped the sword on the
bed and raced straight for the huge old carved oak wardrobe that stood against
the near wall, and flung its doors wide. Green and amber lights glowed in the
dim recesses of the center shelf. God, don't let it be another decoy... .
Cordelia wrapped her arms around the canister and lifted it out into the light.
The right weight, this time, heavy with fluids; the right readouts, the right
numbers. The right one. Thank you, Kareen. I
didn't mean to kill you. Surely she was mad. She didn't feel anything, no grief
or remorse, though her heart was racing and her breath came in gasps. A shocky
combat-high, that immortal rush that made men charge machine guns. So this was
what the war-addicts came for. Vordarian was still
struggling against Bothari's grip, swearing horribly. "You won't
escape!" He stopped bucking, and tried to catch Cordelia's eyes. He took a
deep breath. "Think, Lady Vorkosigan. You'll never make it. You must have
me for a shield, but you can't carry me stunned. Conscious, I'll fight you
every meter of the way. My men will be all over you, out there." His head
jerked toward the window. "Stun us all and take you prisoner." His
voice went persuasive. "Surrender now, and you'll save your lives. That
one's life, too, if it means so much to you." He nodded to the replicator
Cordelia held in her arms. Her steps were heavier than Alys Vorpatril's, now. "I never gave
orders for that fool Vorhalas to kill Vorkosigan's heir," Vordarian
continued desperately into her silence. Blood leaked rapidly between his
fingers. "It was only his father, with his fatal progressive policies, who
threatened Barrayar. Your son might have inherited the Countship from Piotr
with my goodwill. Piotr should never have been divided from his party of true
allegiance. It's a crime, what Lord Aral has put Piotr through—" So. It was you. Even at
the very beginning. Blood loss and shock were making a jerky parody of
Vordarian's usual smooth delivery of political argument. It was as if he sensed
he could talk his way out of retribution, if only he hit on the right key
words. Somehow, Cordelia doubted he would. Vordarian was not gaudily evil like
Vorrutyer had been, not personally degraded like Serg; yet evil had flowed from
him nonetheless, not from his vices, but from his virtues: the courage of his
conservative convictions, his passion for Kareen. Cordelia's head ached,
vilely. "We'd never proved
you were behind Evon Vorhalas," Cordelia said quietly. "Thank you for
the information." That shut him up, for a
moment. His eyes shifted uneasily to the door, soon to burst inward, ignited by
the inferno behind it. "Dead, I'm no use
to you as a hostage," he said, drawing himself up in dignity. "'You're no use to
me at all, Emperor Vidal," said Cordelia frankly. "There are at least
five thousand casualties in this war so far. Now that Kareen is dead, how long
will you keep fighting?" "Forever," he
snarled whitely. "I will avenge her—avenge them all—" Wrong answer, Cordelia
thought, with a curious lightheaded sadness. "Bothari." He was at her
side instantly. "Pick up that sword." He did so. She set the
replicator on the floor and laid her hand briefly atop his, wrapped around the
hilt. "Bothari, execute this man for me, please." Her tone sounded
weirdly serene in her own ears, as if she'd just asked Bothari to pass the
butter. Murder didn't really require hysterics. "Yes, Milady,"
Bothari intoned, and lifted the blade. His eyes gleamed with joy. "What?" yelped
Vordarian in astonishment. "You're a Betan! You can't do—" The flashing stroke cut
off his words, his head, and his life. It was really extremely neat, despite
the last spurts of blood from the stump of his neck. Vorkosigan should have
loaned Bothari's services the day they'd executed Carl Vorhalas. All that upper
body strength, combined with that extraordinary steel ... the bemused gyration
of her thought snapped back to near-reality as Bothari fell to his knees with
the body, dropping the swordstick and clutching his head. He screamed. It was
as if Vordarian's death cry had been forced out of Bothari's throat. She dropped beside him,
suddenly afraid again, though she'd been numb to fear, white-out overloaded,
ever since Kareen had grabbed for the nerve disruptor and triggered all this
chaos. Keyed by similar stimuli, Bothari was having the forbidden flashback,
Cordelia guessed, to the mutinous throat-cutting that the Barrayaran high
command had decreed he must forget. She cursed herself for not forseeing this
possibility. Would it kill him? "This door is hot
as hell," Droushnakovi, white and shaken, reported from beside it.
"Milady, we have to get out of here now." Bothari was gasping
raggedly, hands still pressed to his head, yet even as she watched his
breathing grew marginally less disrupted. She left him, to crawl blindly over
the floor. She needed something, something moisture-proof... . There, at the bottom of
the wardrobe, was a sturdy plastic bag containing several pairs of Kareen's
shoes, no doubt hastily transported by some maidservant when Vordarian had
Imperially decreed Kareen move in with him. Cordelia emptied out the shoes,
stumbled back around the bed, and collected Vordarian's head from the place
where it had rolled to a stop. It was heavy, but not so heavy as the uterine
replicator. She pulled the drawstrings tight. "Drou. You're in
the best shape. Carry the replicator. Start down. Don't drop it." If she
dropped Vordarian, Cordelia decided, it would scarcely do him further harm. Droushnakovi nodded and
grabbed up both the replicator and the abandoned swordstick. Cordelia wasn't
sure if she retrieved the latter for its newly acquired historical value, or
from some fractured sense of obligation for one of Kou's possessions. Cordelia
coaxed Bothari to his feet. Cool air was rushing up out of the panel opening,
drawn by the fire beyond the door. It would make a neat flue, till the burning
wall crashed in and blocked the entry. Vordarian's people were going to have a
very puzzling time, poking through the embers and wondering where they'd gone. The descent was
nightmarish, in the compressed space, with Bothari whimpering below her feet.
She could carry the bag neither beside nor in front of her, so had to balance
it on one shoulder and go one—handed, palm slapping down the rungs and her
wrist aching. Once on the level, she
prodded the weeping Bothari ruthlessly forward, and wouldn't let him stop till
they came again to Ezar's cache in the ancient stable cellar. "Is he all
right?" Droushnakovi asked nervously, as Bothari sat down with his head
between his knees. "He has a
headache," said Cordelia. "It may take a while to pass off." Droushnakovi asked even
more diffidently, "Are you all right, Milady?" Cordelia couldn't help
it; she laughed. She choked down the hysteria as Drou began to look really
scared. "No." CHAPTER
NINETEEN Ezar's cache included a
crate of currency, Barrayaran marks of various denominations. It also included
a choice of IDs tailored to Drou, not all of which were obsolete. Cordelia put
the two together, and sent Drou out to purchase a used groundcar. Cordelia
waited by the cache while Bothari slowly uncurled from his tight fetal ball of
pain, recovering enough to walk. Getting back out of
Vorbarr Sultana had always been the weak part of her plan, Cordelia felt,
perhaps because she'd never really believed they'd get this far. Travel was
tightly restricted, as Vordarian sought to keep the city from collapsing under
him should its frightened populace attempt to stream away. The monorail
required passes and cross-checks. Lightflyers were absolutely forbidden,
targets of opportunity for trigger-happy guards. Groundcars had to cross
multiple roadblocks. Foot travel was too slow for her burdened and exhausted
party. There were no good choices. After an eternity, pale
Drou returned, to lead them back through the tunnels and out to an obscure side
street. The city was dusted with sooty snow. From the direction of the
Residence, a kilometer off, a darker cloud boiled up to mix with the
winter-grey sky; the fierce fire was still not under control, apparently. How
long would Vordarian's decapitated command structure keep functioning? Had word
of his death leaked out yet? As instructed, Drou had
found a very plain and unobtrusive old groundcar, though there had been enough
funds to buy the most luxurious new vehicle the city still held. Cordelia
wanted to save that reserve for the checkpoints. But the checkpoints were
not as bad as Cordelia had feared. Indeed, the first was empty, its guards
pulled back, perhaps, to fight the fire or seal the perimeter of the Residence.
The second was crowded with vehicles and impatient drivers. The inspectors were
perfunctory and nervous, distracted and half—paralyzed by who-knew-what rumors
coming from downtown. A fat wad of currency, handed out under Drou's perfect
false ID, disappeared into a guard's pocket. He waved Drou through, driving her
"sick uncle" home. Borthari looked sick enough, for sure, huddled
under a blanket that also hid the replicator. At the last checkpoint Drou
"repeated" a likely version of a rumor of Vordarian's death, and the
worried guard deserted on the spot, shedding his uniform in favor of a civilian
overcoat and vanishing down a side street. They zigzagged over bad
side roads all afternoon to reach Vorinnis's neutral District, where the aged
groundcar died of a fractured power-train. They abandoned it and took to the
monorail system then, Cordelia driving her exhausted little party on, racing
the clock in her head. At midnight, they reported in at the first military
installation over the next loyalist border, a supply depot. It took Drou
several minutes of argument with the night duty officer to persuade him to 1)
identify them, 2) let them in, and 3) let them use the military comm net to
call Tanery Base to demand transport. At that point the D.O. abruptly became a
lot more efficient. A high-speed air shuttle with a hot pilot was scrambled to
pick them up. Approaching Tanery Base
at dawn from the air, Cordelia felt the most unpleasant flash of deja vu. It
was so like her first arrival from the mountains, she had the sense of being
caught in a time loop. Perhaps she'd died and gone to hell, and her eternal
torment would be to repeat the last three weeks' events over and over,
endlessly. She shivered. Droushnakovi watched her
with concern. The exhausted Bothari dozed, in the air shuttle's passenger
cabin. Illyan's two ImpSec men, identical twins for all Cordelia could tell to
Vordarian's ones they'd murdered back at the Residence, maintained a nervous
silence. Cordelia held the uterine replicator possessively on her lap. The
plastic bag sat between her feet. She was irrationally unable to let either
item out of her sight, though it was clear Drou would much rather the bag had
ridden in the luggage compartment. The air shuttle touched
neatly down on its landing pad, and its engines whined to silence. "I want Captain
Vaagen, and I want him now," Cordelia repeated for the fifth time as
Illyan's men led them underground into the Security debriefing area. "Yes, Milady. He's
on his way," the ImpSec man assured her again. She glowered suspiciously
at him. Cautiously, the ImpSec
men relieved them of their personal arsenal. Cordelia didn't blame them; she
wouldn't have trusted her wild-looking crew with charged weapons either. Thanks
to Ezar's cache the women were not ill dressed, though there had been nothing
in Bothari's size, so he'd retained his smoked and stinking black fatigues.
Fortunately the. dried blood spatters didn't show much. But all their faces
were hollow-eyed, grooved and shadowed. Cordelia shivered, and Bothari's hands
and eyelids twitched, and Droushnakovi had a distressing tendency to start
crying, silently, at random moments, stopping as suddenly as she started. At long last—only
minutes, Cordelia told herself firmly—Captain Vaagen appeared, a tech at his
side. He wore undress greens, and his steps were quick, up to Vaagen—speed
again. The only residue of his injuries seemed to be a black patch over his
eye; on him, it looked good, giving him a fine piratical air. Cordelia trusted
the patch was only a temporary part of ongoing treatment. "Milady!" He
managed a smile, the first to shift those facial muscles in a while, Cordelia
sensed. His one eye gleamed triumph. "You got it!" "I hope so,
Captain." She held up the replicator, which she had refused to let the
ImpSec men touch. "I hope we're in time. There aren't any red lights yet,
but there was a warning beeper. I shut it off, it was driving me crazy." He looked the device
over, checking key readouts. "Good. Good. Nutrient reservoir is very low,
but not quite depleted yet. Filters still functioning, uric acid level high but
not over tolerance—I think it's all right, Milady. Alive, that is. What this
interruption has done to my calcification treatments will take more time to
determine. We'll be in the infirmary. I should be able to begin servicing it
within the hour." "Do you have
everything you need there? Supplies?" His white teeth flashed.
"Lord Vorkosigan had me begin setting up a lab the day after you left.
Just in case, he said." And, I love you.
"Thank you. Go, go." She surrendered the replicator into Vaagen's
hands, and he hurried out with it. She sat back down like a
marionette with the strings cut. Now she could allow herself to feel the full
weight of her exhaustion. But she could not stop quite yet. She had one very
important debriefing yet to accomplish. And not to these hovering ImpSec twits,
who pestered her—she closed her eyes and pointedly ignored them, letting Drou
stammer out answers to their foolish questions. Desire warred with
dread. She wanted Aral. She had defied Aral, most openly. Had it touched his
honor, scorched his—admittedly, unusually flexible—Barrayaran male ego beyond
tolerance? Would she be frozen out of his trust forever? No, that suspicion was
surely unjust. But his public credibility among his peers, part of the delicate
psychology of power—had she damaged it? Would some damnable unforseen political
consequence rebound out of all this, back on their heads? Did she care? Yes,
she decided sadly. It was hell to be so tired, and still care. "Kou!" Drou's cry snapped
Cordelias eyes open. Koudelka was limping into the main portal Security
debriefing office. Good Lord, the man was back in uniform, shaved and sharp.
Only the grey rings under his eyes were non-regulation. Kou and Drou's reunion,
Cordelia was delighted to note, was not in the least military. The staff
soldier was instantly plastered all over with tall and grubby blonde,
exchanging muffled unregulation greetings like darling, love, thank God, safe,
sweet... . The ImpSec men turned away uncomfortably from the blast of naked
emotion radiating from their faces. Cordelia basked in it. A far more sensible
way to greet a friend than all that moronic saluting. They parted only to see
each other better, still holding hands. "You made it," chortled
Droushnakovi. "How long have you—is Lady Vorpatril—?" "We only made it in
about two hours ahead of you," Kou said breathlessly, reoxygenating after
a heroic kiss. "Lady Vorpatril and the young lord are bedded down in the
infirmary. The doctor says she's suffering mainly from stress and exhaustion.
She was incredible. We had a couple of bad moments, getting past Vordarian's
Security, but she never cracked. And you—you did it! I passed Vaagen in the
corridor, with the replicator—you rescued m'lord's son!" Droushnakovi's shoulders
sagged. "But we lost Princess Kareen." "Oh." He
touched her lips. "Don't tell me—Lord Vorkosigan instructed me to bring
you all to him the instant you arrived. Debrief to him before anyone. I'll take
you to him now." He waved away the ImpSec men like flies, something Cordelia
had been longing to do. Bothari had to help her
rise. She gathered up the yellow plastic bag. She noted ironically that it bore
the name and logo of one of the capital's most exclusive women's clothiers.
Kareen encompasses you at last, you bastard. "What's that?"
asked Kou. "Yes,
Lieutenant," the urgent ImpSec man put in, "please—she's refused to
let us examine it in any way. By regulations, we shouldn't let her carry it
into the base." Cordelia pulled open the
top of the bag and held it out for Kou's inspection. He peered within. "Shit." The
ImpSec men surged forward as Koudelka jumped back. He waved them down. "I
... I see," he swallowed. "Yes, Admiral Vorkosigan will certainly
want to see that." "Lieutenant, what
should I put on my inventory?" the ImpSec man—whined, Cordelia decided,
was what he was doing. "I have to register it, if it's going in." "Let him cover his
ass, Kou," Cordelia sighed. Kou peeked again, his
lips twisting into a very crooked grin. "It's all right. Put it down as a
Winterfair gift for Admiral Vorkosigan. From his wife." "Oh, Kou,"
Drou held out his sword. "I saved this. But we lost the casing, I'm
sorry." Kou took it, looked at
the bag, made the connection, and carried it more carefully. "That's ...
that's all right. Thank you." "I'll take it back
to Siegling's and get a duplicate casing made," Cordelia promised. The ImpSec men gave way
before Admiral Vorkosigan's top aide. Kou led Cordelia, Bothari, and Drou into
the base. Cordelia pulled the drawstring tight, and let the bag swing from her hand. "We're going down
to the Staff level. The admiral's been in a sealed meeting for the last hour.
Two of Vordarian's top officers came in secretly last night. Negotiating to
sell him out. The best hostage-rescue plan hinges on their cooperation." "Did they know
about this yet?" Cordelia held up the bag. "I don't think so,
Milady. You've just changed everything." His grin grew feral, and his
uneven stride lengthened. "I expect that raid
is still going to be required," Cordelia sighed. "Even in collapse, Vordarian's
side is still dangerous. Maybe more dangerous, in their desperation." She
thought of that downtown Vorbarr Sultana hotel, where Bothari's baby girl Elena
was, as far as she knew, still housed. Lesser hostages. Could she persuade Aral
to apportion a few more resources for lesser hostages? Alas, she had probably
not put all the soldiers out of work even yet. I tried. God, I tried. They went down, and
down, to the nerve center of Tanery Base. They came to a highly secured
conference chamber; a lethally armed squad stood ramrod-guard outside it.
Koudelka wafted them past. The doors slid aside, and closed again behind them. Cordelia took in the
tableau, that paused to look back up at her from around the polished table.
Aral was in the center, of course. Illyan and Count Piotr flanked him on either
side. Prime Minister Vortala was there, and Kanzian, and some other senior
staffers all in formal dress greens. The two double-traitors sat across, with
their aides. Clouds of witnesses. She wanted to be alone with Aral, be rid of
the whole bloody mob of them. Soon. Aral's eyes locked to
hers in silent agony. His lips curled in an utterly ironic smile. That was all;
and yet her stomach warmed with confidence again, sure of him. No frost. It was
going to be all right. They were in step again, and a torrent of words and hard
embraces could not have communicated it any better. Embraces would come,
though, the grey eyes promised. Her own lips curved up for the first time
since—when? Count Piotr's hand
slapped down hard upon the table. "Good God, woman, where have you
been?" he cried furiously. A morbid lunacy overtook
her. She smiled fiercely at him, and held up the bag. "Shopping." For a second, the old
man nearly believed her; conflicting expressions whiplashed over his face,
astonishment, disbelief, then anger as it penetrated he was being mocked. "Want to see what I
bought?" Cordelia continued, still floating. She yanked the bag's top
open, and rolled Vordarian's head out across the table. Fortunately, it had ceased
leaking some hours back. It stopped faceup before him, lips grinning, drying
eyes staring. Piotr's mouth fell open.
Kanzian jumped, the staffers swore, and one of Vordarian's traitors actually
fell out of his chair, recoiling. Vortala pursed his lips and raised his brows.
Koudelka, grimly proud of his key role in stage-managing this historic moment
in one-upsmanship, laid the swordstick on the table as further evidence. Illyan
puffed, and grinned triumphantly through his shock. Aral was perfect. His
eyes widened only briefly, then he rested his chin on his hands and gazed over
his father's shoulder with an expression of cool interest. "But of
course," he breathed. "Every Vor lady goes to the capital to shop." "I paid too much
for it," Cordelia confessed. "That, too, is
traditional." A sardonic smile quirked his lips. "Kareen is dead.
Shot in the melee. I couldn't save her." He Opened his hand, as
if to let the nascent black humor fall through his fingers. "I see."
He raised his eyes again to hers, as if asking Are you all right?, and
apparently finding the answer, No. "Gentlemen. If you
will be pleased to excuse yourselves for a few minutes. I wish to be alone with
my wife." In the shuffle of the
men rising to their feet, Cordelia caught a mutter, "Brave man ..." She nailed Vordarian's
men by eye, as they backed from the table. "Officers. I recommend that
when this conference resumes, you surrender unconditionally upon Lord
Vorkosigan's mercy. He may still have some." I certainly don't, was the
unspoken cap to that. "I'm tired of your stupid war. End it." Piotr edged past her.
She smiled bitterly at him. He grimaced uneasily back. "It appears I
underestimated you," he murmured. "Don't you ever ...
cross me again. And stay away from my son." A look from Vorkosigan
held back her outpouring of rage, quivering on the lip of her cup. She and
Piotr exchanged wary nods, like the vestigial bows of two duelists. "Kou," said
Vorkosigan, staring bemusedly at the grisly object lying by his elbow.
"Will you please arrange for this thing to be removed to the base morgue.
I don't fancy it as a table decoration. It will have to be stored till it can
be buried with the rest of him. Wherever that may be." "Sure you don't
want to leave it there to inspire Vordarian's staffers to come to terms?"
said Kou. "No," said
Vorkosigan firmly. "It's had a sufficiently salutary effect already." Gingerly, Kou took the
bag from Cordelia, opened it, and used it to capture Vordarian's head without
actually touching it. Aral's eye took in her
weary team, Droushnakovi's grief, Bothari's compulsive twitching. "Drou.
Sergeant. You are dismissed to wash and eat. Report back to me in my quarters
after we finish here." Droushnakovi nodded, and
the sergeant saluted, and they followed Koudelka out. Cordelia fell into
Aral's arms as the door sighed shut, into his lap, catching him as he rose for
her. They both landed with enough force to threaten the balance of the chair.
They embraced each other so tightly, they had to back off to manage a kiss. "Don't you
ever," he husked, "pull a stunt like that again." "Don't you ever let
it become necessary, again." "Deal." He held her face away
from his, between his hands, his eyes devouring her. "I was so afraid for
you, I forgot to be afraid for your enemies. I should have remembered. Dear
Captain." "I couldn't have
done a thing, alone. Drou was my eyes, Bothari my right arm, Koudelka our feet.
You must forgive Kou for going AWOL. We sort of kidnapped him." "So I heard." "Did he tell you
about your cousin Padma?" "Yes," a
grieved sigh. He stared back through time. "Padma and I were the only
survivors of Mad Yuri's massacre of Prince Xav's descendants, that day. I was
eleven. Padma was one, a baby ... I always thought of him as the baby, ever after.
Tried to watch out for him ... Now I'm the only one left. Yuri's work is almost
done." "Bothari's Elena.
She must be rescued. She's a lot more important than that barn full of counts
at the Residence." "We're working on
that right now," he promised. "Top priority, now that you've removed
Emperor Vidal from consideration." He paused, smiling slowly. "I fear
you've shocked my Barrayarans, love." "Why? Did they
think they had a monopoly on savagery? Those were Vordarian's last words.
'You're a Betan. You can't do.' " "Do what?" "This, I suppose he
would have said. If he'd had the chance." "A lurid trophy, to
carry on the monorail. Suppose someone had asked you to open your bag?" "I would
have." "Are you ... quite
all right, love?" His mouth was serious, under his smile. "Meaning, have I
lost my grip? Yes, a little. More than a little." Her hands still shook,
as they had for a day, a continuing tremula that did not pass off. "It
seemed ... necessary, to bring Vordarian's head along. I hadn't actually
thought about mounting it on the wall of Vorkosigan House along with your
father's hunting trophies, though it's an idea. I don't think I consciously realized
why I was hanging on to it till I walked into this room. If I'd staggered in
here empty-handed and told all those men I'd killed Vordarian, and undeclared
their little war, who'd have believed me? Besides you." "Illyan, perhaps.
He's seen you in action before. The others ... you're quite right." "I think I also had
some idea stuck in my mind from ancient history. Didn't they used to publicly
display the bodies of slain rulers, to scotch pretenders? It seemed
appropriate. Though Vordarian was almost a side-issue, from my point of
view." "Your ImpSec escort
reported to me you'd recovered the replicator. Was it still working?" "Vaagen has it now,
checking it. Miles is alive. Damage unknown. Oh. It seems Vordarian had some
hand in setting up Evon Vorhalas. Not directly, through some agent." "Illyan suspected
it." His arms tightened around her. "About
Bothari," she said. "He's not in good shape. Way overstressed. He
needs real treatment, medical, not political. That memory wipe was a horror
show." "At the time, it
saved his life. My compromise with Ezar. I had no power then. I can do better
now." "You'd better. He's
fixated on me like a dog. His words. And I've used him like one. I owe him ...
everything. But he scares me. Why me?" Vorkosigan looked very
thoughtful. "Bothari ... does not have a good sense of self. No strong
center. When I first met him, at his most ill, his personality was close to
separating into multiples. If he were better educated, not so damaged, he would
have made an ideal spy, a deep-penetration mole. He's a chameleon. A mirror. He
becomes whatever is required of him. Not a conscious process, I don't think.
Piotr expects a loyal retainer, and Bothari plays the part, deadpan as you
please. Vorruryer wanted a monster, and Bothari became his torturer. And
victim. I demanded a good soldier, and he became one for me. You ..." his
voice softened, "you are the only person I know who looks at Bothari and
sees a hero. So he becomes one for you. He clings to you because you create him
a greater man than he ever dreamed of being." "Aral, that's
crazed." "Ah?" He
nuzzled her hair. "But he's not the only man you have that peculiar effect
upon. Dear Captain." "I'm afraid I'm not
in much better shape than Bothari. I botched it, and Kareen died. Who will tell
Gregor? If it weren't for Miles, I'd quit. You keep Piotr off me, or I swear,
next time I'll try and take him apart." She was shaking again. "Sh." He
rocked her, a little. "I think you can at least leave the mopping up to
me, eh? Will you trust me again? We'll make something of these sacrifices. Not
vain." "I feel dirty. I
feel sick." "Yes. Most sane
people do, coming in off a combat mission. It's a very familiar state of
mind." He paused. "But if a Betan can become so Barrayaran, maybe
it's not so impossible for Barrayarans to become a little more Betan. Change is
possible." "Change is
inevitable," she asserted. "But you can't manage it Ezar's way. This
isn't Ezar's era anymore. You have to find your own way. Remake this world into
one Miles can survive in. And Elena. And Ivan. And Gregor." "As you will,
Milady." On the third day after
Vordarian's death, the capital fell to loyal Imperial troops; if not without a
shot being fired, at least not nearly so bloodily as Cordelia had feared. Only
two pockets of resistance, at ImpSec and at the Residence itself, had to be
cleared out by ground troops. The downtown hotel with its hostages was
surrendered intact by its garrison, after hours of intense covert negotiations.
Piotr gave Bothari a one-day leave to personally retrieve his child and her
fosterer and escort them home. Cordelia slept through the night for the first
time since her return. Evon Vorhalas had been commanding ground troops for
Vordarian in the capital, in charge of the last defense of the space
communications center in the military headquarters complex. He died in the
final flurry of fighting, shot by his own men when he spurned an offer of
amnesty in return for their surrender. In a way, Cordelia was relieved. The
traditional punishment for treason upon the part of a Vor lord was public
exposure and death by starvation. The late Emperor Ezar had not hesitated to
maintain the gruesome tradition. Cordelia could only pray that Gregor's reign
would see the custom end. Without Vordarian to
hold it together, his rebel coalition shattered rapidly into disparate
factions. An extreme conservative Vor lord in the city of Federstok raised his
standard and declared himself Emperor, succeeding Vordarian; his pretendership
lasted somewhat less than thirty hours. In an eastern coastal District
belonging to one of Vordarian's allies, the Count suicided upon capture. An
anti-Vor group declared an independent republic in the chaos. The new Count, an
infantry colonel from a collateral family line who had never anticipated such
honors falling upon him, took instant and effective exception to this violent
swing to the over-progressive. Vorkosigan left it to him and his District
militia, reserving Imperial troops for "non-District-internal
matters." "You can't go halfway
and stop," Piotr muttered forebodingly, at this delicacy. "One step at a
time," Vorkosigan returned grimly, "I can walk around the world.
Watch me." On the fifth day, Gregor
was returned to the capital. Vorkosigan and Cordelia together undertook to tell
him of the death of Kareen. He cried in bewilderment. When he quieted, he was
taken for a ride in a groundcar with a transparent force-screen, reviewing some
troops; in fact, the troops were reviewing him, that he might be seen to be
alive, finally dispelling Vordarian's rumors of his death. Cordelia rode with
him. His silent shockiness hurt her to the heart, but it was better from her
point of view than parading him first and then telling him. If she'd had to
endure his repeated queries of when he would see his mother again, all during
the ride, she would have broken down herself. The funeral for Kareen
was public, though much less elaborate than it would have been in less chaotic
circumstances. Gregor was required to light an offering pyre for the second
time in a year. Vorkosigan asked Cordelia to guide Gregor's hand with the
torch. This part of the funeral ceremony seemed almost redundant, after what she'd
done to the Residence. Cordelia added a thick lock of her own hair to the pile.
Gregor clung close to her. "Are they going to
kill me, too?" he whispered to her. He didn't sound frightened, just
morbidly curious. Father, grandfather, mother, all gone in a year; no wonder he
felt targeted, confused though his understanding of death was at his age. "No," she said
firmly. Her arm tightened around his shoulders. "I won't let them."
God help her, this baseless assurance actually seemed to console him. I'll look after your
boy, Kareen, Cordelia thought as the flames rose up. The oath was more costly
than any gift being burned, for it bound her life unbreakably to Barrayar. But
the heat on her face eased the pain in her head, a little. Cordelia's own soul felt
like an exhausted snail, shelled in a glassy numbness. She crept like an
automaton through the rest of the ceremony, though there were flashes when her
surroundings made no sense at all. The assorted Barrayaran Vor reacted to her
with a frozen, deep formality. They doubtless figure me for crazy-dangerous, a
madwoman let out of the attic by overindulgent relations. It finally dawned on
her that their exaggerated courtesies signified respect. It made her furious. All
Kareen's courage of endurance had bought her nothing, Lady Vorpatril's brave
and bloody birth-giving was taken for granted, but whack off some idiot's head
and you were really somebody, by God—! It took Aral an hour,
when they returned to his quarters, to calm her down, and then she had a crying
jag. He stuck it out. "Are you going to
use this?" she asked him, when sheer weariness returned her to a semblance
of coherence. "This, this ... amazing new status of mine?" How she
loathed the word, acid in her mouth. "I'll use
anything," he vowed quietly, "if it will help me put Gregor on the
throne in fifteen years a sane and competent man, heading a stable government.
Use you, me, whatever it takes. To pay this much, then fail, would not be
tolerable." She sighed, and put her
hand in his. "In case of accident, donate my remaining body parts, too.
It's the Betan way. Waste not." His lip curled up
helplessly. Face-to-face, they rested their foreheads together for a moment,
bracing each other. "Want not." Her silent promise to
Kareen was made policy when she and Aral, as a couple, were officially
appointed Gregor's guardians by the Council of Counts. This was legally
distinct somehow from Aral's guardianship of the Imperium as Regent. Prime
Minister Vortala took time to lecture her and make it clear her new duties
involved no political powers. She did have economic functions, including
trusteeship of certain Vorbarra holdings that were separate from Imperial
properties, appending strictly to Gregor's title as Count Vorbarra. And by
Aral's delegation, she was given oversight of the Emperor's household. And
education. "But, Aral,"
said Cordelia, stunned. "Vortala emphasized I was to have no power." "Vortala ... is not
all-wise. Let's just say, he has a little trouble recognizing as such some
forms of power which are not synonymous with force. Your window of opportunity
is narrow, though; at age twelve Gregor will enter a pre-Academy preparatory
school." "But do they
realize ... ?" "I do. And you do.
It's enough." CHAPTER
TWENTY One of Cordelia's first
orders was to assign Droushnakovi back to Gregor's person, for his emotional
continuity. This did not mean giving up the girl's company, a comfort to which
Cordelia had grown deeply accustomed, because upon Illyan's renewed insistence
Aral finally took up living quarters in the Imperial Residence. It eased
Cordelias heart, when Drou and Kou were wed a month after Winterfair. Cordelia offered herself
as a go-between for the two families. For some reason, Kou and Drou both turned
the offer down, hastily, though with profuse thanks. Given the bewildering
pitfalls of Barrayaran social custom, Cordelia was just as happy to leave it to
the experienced elderly lady the couple did contract. Cordelia saw Alys
Vorpatril often, exchanging domestic visits. Baby Lord Ivan was, if not exactly
a comfort to Alys, certainly a distraction in her slow recovery from her
physical ordeal. He grew rapidly despite a tendency to fussiness, an iatrogenic
trait, Cordelia realized after a while, triggered by Alys's fussing over him.
Ivan should have three or four sibs to divide her attention among, Cordelia
decided, watching Alys burp him on her shoulder while planning aloud his
educational attack, come age eighteen, upon the formidable Imperial Military
Academy entrance examinations. Alys Vorpatril was drawn
off her embittered mourning for Padma and her planning of Ivan's life down to
the last detail, when she was given a look at a picture of the wedding dress
Drou was drooling over. "No, no, no!"
she cried, recoiling. "All that lace—you would look as furry as a big
white bear. Silk, dear, long falls of silk is what you need—" and she was
off. Motherless, sisterless Drou could scarcely have found a more knowledgeable
bridal consultant. Lady Vorpatril ended by making the dress one of her several
presents, to be sure of its aesthetic perfection, along with a "little
holiday cottage" which turned out to be a substantial house on the eastern
seashore. Come summer, Drou's beach dream would come true. Cordelia grinned,
and purchased the girl a nightgown and robe with enough tiers of lace layered
on them to satiate the most frill-starved soul. Aral lent the hall: the
Imperial Residence's Red Room and adjacent ballroom, the one with the beautiful
marquetry floor, which to Cordelia's immense relief had escaped the fire. In
theory, this magnificent gesture was required to ease Illyan's Security
headaches, as Cordelia and Aral were to stand among the principal witnesses.
Personally, Cordelia thought converting ImpSec into wedding caterers a
promising turn of events. Aral looked over the
guest list and smiled. "Do you realize," he said to Cordelia,
"every class is represented? A year ago this event, here, would not have
been possible. The grocer's son and the non-com's daughter. They bought it with
blood, but maybe next year it can be bought with peaceful achievement.
Medicine, education, engineering, entrepreneurship—shall we have a party for
librarians?" "Won't those
terrible Vorish crones all Piotr's friends are married to complain about social
over-progressiveness?" "With Alys
Vorpatril behind this? They wouldn't dare." The affair grew from there. By
a week in advance Kou and Drou were considering eloping out of sheer panic,
having lost all control of everything whatsoever to their eager helpers. But
the Imperial Residence's staff brought it all together with practiced ease. The
senior housewoman flew about, chortling, "And here I was afraid we weren't
going to have anything to do, once the admiral moved in, but those dreadful
boring General Staff dinners." The day and hour came at
last. A large circle made of colored groats was laid out on the floor of the
Red Room, encompassed by a star with a variable number of points, one for each
parent or principal witness to stand at: in this case, four. In Barrayaran
custom a couple married themselves, speaking their vows within the circle,
requiring neither priest nor magistrate. Practically, a coach, called
appropriately enough the Coach, stood outside the circle and read the script
for the fainthearted or faint-headed to repeat. This dispensed with the need
for higher neural functions such as learning and memory on the part of the
stressed couple. Lost motor coordination was supplied by a friend each, who
steered them to the circle. It was all very practical, Cordelia decided, as
well as splendid. With a grin and a
flourish Aral placed her at her assigned star point, as if setting out a bouquet,
and took his own place. Lady Vorpatril had insisted on a new gown for Cordelia,
a sweeping length of blue and white with red floral accents, color-coordinated
with Aral's ultra-formal parade red-and-blues. Drou's proud and nervous father
also wore his red-and-blues and held down his point. Strange to think of the
military, which Cordelia normally associated with totalitarian impulses, as the
spearhead of egalitarianism on Barrayar. The Cetagandans' gift, Aral called it;
their invasion had first forced the promotion of talent regardless of origin,
and the waves of that change were still traveling through Barrayaran society. Sergeant Droushnakovi
was a shorter, slighter man than Cordelia had expected. Either Drou's mother's
genes, better nutrition, or both had boosted all his children up taller than
himself. All three brothers, from the captain to the corporal, had been broken
loose from their military assignments to attend, and stood now in the big outer
circle of other witnesses along with Kou's excited younger sister. Kou's mother
stood on the star's last point, crying and smiling, in a blue dress so
color-perfect Cordelia decided Alys Vorpatril must have somehow gotten to her,
too. Koudelka marched in
first, propped by his stick with its new cover and Sergeant Bothari. Sergeant
Bothari wore the most glittery version of Piotr's brown and silver livery, and
whispered helpful, horribly suggestive advice like "If you feel really
nauseous, Lieutenant, put your head down." The very thought turned Kou's
face greener, an extraordinary color-contrast with his red-and-blues that Lady
Vorpatril would no doubt have disapproved. Heads turned. Oh, my.
Alys Vorpatril had been absolutely right about Drou's gown. She swept in, as
stunningly graceful as a sailing ship, a tall clean perfection of form and
function, ivory silk, gold hair, blue eyes, white, blue, and red flowers, so
that when she stepped up beside Kou one suddenly realized how tall he must be.
Alys Vorpatril, in silver-grey, released Drou at the circle's edge with a
gesture like some hunting goddess releasing a white falcon, to soar and settle
on Kou's outstretched arm. Kou and Drou made it
through their oaths without stammering or passing out, and managed to conceal
their mutual embarrassment at the public declaration of their despised first
names, Clement and Ludmilla. ("My brothers used
to call me Lud," Drou had confided to Cordelia during the practice
yesterday. "Rhymes with mud. Also thud, blood, crud, dud, and cud." "You'll always be
Drou to me," Kou had promised.) As senior witness Aral
then broke the circle of groats with a sweep of one booted foot and let them
out, and the music, dancing, eating and drinking began. The buffet was
incredible, the music live, and the drinking ... traditional. After the first
formal glass of the good wine Piotr'd sent on, Cordelia drifted up to Kou and
murmured a few words about Betan research on the detrimental effects of ethanol
on sexual function, after which he switched to water. "Cruel woman,"
Aral whispered in her ear, laughing. "Not to Drou, I'm
not," she murmured back. She was formally
introduced to the brothers, now brothers-in-law, who regarded her with that
awed respect that made her teeth grind. Though her jaw eased a bit when a
rhyming brother was waved to silence by Dad to make room for some comment by
the bride on the topic of hand-weapons. "Quiet, Jos," Sergeant
Droushnakovi told his son. "You've never handled a nerve disruptor in
combat." Drou blinked, then smiled, a gleam in her eye. Cordelia seized a moment
with Bothari, whom she saw all too seldom now that Aral had split his household
from Piotr's. "How is Elena
doing, now she's back home? Has Mistress Hysopi recovered from it all
yet?" "They're well,
Milady," Bothari ducked his head, and almost-smiled. "I visited about
five days ago, when Count Piotr went down to check on his horses. Elena, um,
creeps. Put her down and look away a minute, you look back and she's moved...
." He frowned. "I hope Carla Hysopi stays alert." "She saw Elena
safely through Vordarian's war, I suspect she'll handle crawling with equal
ease. Courageous woman. She should be in line for some of those medals they're
handing out." Bothari's brow wrinkled.
"Don't know they'd mean much to her." "Mm. She does
understand she can call on me for anything she needs, I trust. Any time." "Yes, Milady. But
we're doing all right for the moment." A flash of pride, there, in that
statement of sufficiency. "It's very quiet down at Vorkosigan Surleau, in
the winter. Clean. A right and proper place for a baby." Not like the
place I grew up in, Cordelia could almost hear him add. "I mean her to
have everything right and proper. Even her da." "How are you doing,
yourself?" "The new med is
better. Anyway, my head doesn't feel like it's stuffed with fog anymore. And I
sleep at night. Besides that I can't tell what it's doing." Its job, apparently; he
seemed relaxed and calm, almost free of that sinister edginess. Though he was
still the first person in the room to look over to the buffet and ask, "Is
he supposed to be up?" Gregor, in pajamas, was
creeping along the edge of the culinary array, trying to look invisible and
nail down a few goodies before he was spotted and taken away again. Cordelia
got to him first, before he was either stepped on by an unwary guest, or
recaptured by Security forces in the persons of the breathless maidservant and
terrified bodyguard who were supposed to be filling in for Drou. They were
followed up by a paper-white Simon Illyan. Fortunately for Illyan's heart,
Gregor had apparently only been formally missing for about sixty seconds.
Gregor shrank into her skirts as the hyperventilating adults loomed over him. Drou, who had noticed
Illyan touch his comm, turn pale, and start to move, checked in by sheer force
of habit. "What's the matter?" "How'd he get
away?" snarled Illyan to Gregor's keepers, who stammered out something
inaudible about thought he was asleep and never took my eyes off. "He's not
away," Cordelia put in tartly. "This is his home. He ought to be at
least able to walk about inside, or why do you keep all those bloody useless
guards on the walls out there?" "Droushie, can't I
come to your party?" Gregor asked plaintively, casting around desperately
for an authority to outrank Illyan. Drou looked at Illyan,
who looked disapproving. Cordelia broke the deadlock without hesitation.
"Yes, you can." So, under Cordelia's
supervision, the Emperor danced with the bride, ate three cream cakes, and was
carried away to bed satisfied. Fifteen minutes was all he'd wanted, poor kid. The party rolled on,
elated. "Dance, Milady?" Aral inquired hopefully at her elbow. Dare she try it? They
were playing the restrained rhythms of the mirror-dance—surely she couldn't go
too wrong. She nodded, and Aral drained his glass and led her onto the polished
marquetry. Step, slide, gesture: concentrating, she made an interesting and
unexpected discovery. Either partner could lead, and if the dancers were alert
and sharp, the watchers couldn't tell the difference. She tried some dips and
slides of her own, and Aral followed smoothly. Back and forth the lead passed
like a ball between them, the game growing ever more absorbing, until they ran
out of music and breath. The last snows of winter
were melting from the streets of Vorbarr Sultana when Captain Vaagen called
from ImpMil for Cordelia. "It's time, Milady.
I've done all I can do in vitro. The placenta is ten months old and clearly
senescing. The machine can't be boosted any more to compensate." "When, then?" "Tomorrow would be
good." She barely slept that
night. They all trooped down to the Imperial Military Hospital the next
morning, Aral, Cordelia, Count Piotr flanked by Bothari. Cordelia was not at
all sure she wanted Piotr present, but until the old man did them all the
convenience of dropping dead, she was stuck with him. Maybe one more appeal to
reason, one more presentation of the facts, one more try, would do the trick.
Their unresolved antagonism grieved Aral; at least he let the onus for fueling
it fall on Piotr, not herself. Do your worst, old man. You have no future
except through me. My son will light your offering pyre. She was glad to see
Bothari again, though. Vaagen's new laboratory
was an entire floor in the most up-to-date building in the complex. Cordelia'd
had him moved from his old lab on account of ghosts, having come in for one of
her frequent visits soon after their return to Vorbarr Sultana to find him in a
state of near-paralysis, unable to work. Every time he entered the room, he'd
said, Dr. Henri's violent and senseless death replayed in his memory. He could
not step on the floor near the place where Henri's body had fallen, but had to
walk wide around; little noises made him jump and twitch. "I am a man of
reason," he'd said hoarsely. "This superstitious nonsense means
nothing to me." So Cordelia had helped him burn a private offering to
Henri in a brazier on the lab floor, and disguised the move as a promotion. The new lab was bright
and spacious and free of revenant spirits. Cordelia found a mob of men waiting
when Vaagen ushered her in: researchers assigned to Vaagen to explore
replicator technology, interested civilian obstetricians including Dr. Ritter,
Miles's own pediatrician-to-be, and his consulting surgeon. The changing of the
guard. Mere parents needed determination to elbow their way in. Vaagen bustled about,
happily important. He still wore his eyepatch, but promised Cordelia he would
take the time for the last round of surgery to restore his vision very soon
now. A tech trundled out the uterine replicator and Vaagen paused, as if trying
to figure out how to put the proper drama and ceremony into what Cordelia knew
for a very simple event. He settled on turning it into a technical lecture for
his colleagues, detailing the composition of the hormone solutions as he
injected them into the appropriate feed-lines, interpreting readouts,
describing the placental separation going on within the replicator, the
similarities and differences between replicator and body births. There were several
differences Vaagen didn't mention. Alys Vorpatril should see this, Cordelia
thought. Vaagen looked up to see
her watching him, paused selfconsciously, and smiled. "Lady
Vorkosigan." He gestured to the replicator's latch-seals. "Would you
care to do the honors?" She reached, hesitated,
and looked around for Aral. There he was, solemn and attentive at the edge of
the crowd. "Aral?" He strode forward.
"Are you sure?" "If you can open a
picnic cooler, you can do this." They each took a latch and raised them in
unison, breaking the sterile seal, and lifted the top off. Dr. Ritter moved in
with a vibra-scalpel, cutting through the thick felt mat of nutrient tubing
with a touch so delicate the silvery amniotic sac beneath was unscored, then
cut Miles free of his last bit of biological packaging, clearing his mouth and
nose of fluids before his first surprised inhalation. Aral's arm, around her,
tightened so hard it hurt. A muffled laugh, no more than a breath, broke from
his lips; he swallowed and blinked to bring his features, suffused with elation
and pain, back under strict control. Happy birthday, thought
Cordelia. Good color ... Unfortunately, that was
about all that was really good. The contrast with baby Ivan was overwhelming.
Despite the extra weeks of gestation, ten months to Ivan's nine-and-a-half,
Miles was barely half Ivan's size at birth, and far more wizened and wrinkled.
His spine was noticeably deformed, and his legs were drawn up and locked in a
tight bend. He was definitely a male heir, though, no question about that. His
first cry was thin, weak, nothing at all like Ivan's angry, hungry bellow.
Behind her, she heard Piotr hiss with disappointment. "Has he been
getting enough nutrition?" she asked Vaagen. It was hard to keep the
accusation out of her tone. Vaagen shrugged
helplessly. "All he would absorb." The pediatrician and his
colleague laid Miles out under a warming light, and began their examination,
Cordelia and Aral on either side. "This bend will
straighten out on its own, Milady," the pediatrician pointed. "But
the lower spine should have surgical correction as early as possible. You were
right, Vaagen, the treatment to optimize skull development also fused the hip
sockets. That's why the legs are locked in that strange position, m'lord. He'll
require surgery to crack those bones loose and turn them around before he can
start to crawl or walk. I don't recommend that in the first year, on top of the
spinal work, let him gain strength and weight first—" The surgeon, testing the
infant's arms, swore suddenly and snatched up his diagnostic viewer. Miles
mewed. Aral's hand clenched, by his trouser seam. Cordelia's stomach sank.
"Hell!" said the surgeon. "His humerus just snapped. You're
right, Vaagen, the bones are abnormally brittle." "At least he has
bones," sighed Vaagen. "He almost didn't, at one point." "Be careful,"
said the surgeon, "especially of the head and spine. If the rest are as
bad as the long bones, we're going to have to come up with some kind of
reinforcement. ..." Piotr stamped toward the
door. Aral glanced up, his lips thinning to a frown, and excused himself to
follow. Cordelia was torn, but once observation assured her that the
bone-setting was under way and the doctors' new caution would protect Miles
from further damage today, she left their ingenious heads bent over him and
followed Aral. In the corridor, Piotr
was stalking up and down. Aral stood at parade rest, unmoved and unmoving.
Bothari was a silent witness in the background. Piotr turned and saw
her. "You! You've strung me along. This is what you call 'great repairs'?
Gah!" "They are great
repairs. Miles is unquestionably much better than he was. Nobody promised
perfection." "You lied. Vaagen
lied." "We did not,"
denied Cordelia. "I tried to give you accurate summaries of Vaagen's
experiments all the way along. What he's delivered is about what his reports
led us to expect. Check your ears." "I see what you're
trying, and it won't work. I've just told him," he pointed at Aral, "this
is where I stop. I don't want to see that mutant again. Ever. While it lives,
if it lives, and it looks pretty damned sickly to me, don't bring it around my
door. As God is my judge, woman, you won't make a fool of me." "That would be
redundant," snapped Cordelia. Piotr's lips curled in a
silent snarl. Cheated of a cooperative target, he turned on Aral. "And
you, you spineless, skirt-smothered—if your elder brother had lived—"
Piotr's mouth clamped shut abruptly, too late. Aral's face drained to a
grey hue Cordelia had seen but twice before; both times he'd been a breath and
a chance away from committing murder. Piotr had joked about Aral's famous
rages. Only now did Cordelia realize Piotr, though he may have witnessed his
son in irritation, had never seen the real thing. Piotr seemed to realize it,
too, dimly. His brows lowered; he stared, off-balanced. Aral's hands locked to
each other, behind his back. Cordelia could see them shake, white-knuckled. His
chin lifted, and he spoke in a whisper. "If my brother had
lived, he would have been perfect. You thought so; I thought so; Emperor Yuri
thought so, too. So ever after you've had to make do with the leftovers from
that bloody banquet, the son Mad Yuri's death squad overlooked. We Vorkosigans,
we can make do." His voice fell still further. "But my firstborn will
live. I will not fail him." The icy statement was a
near-lethal cut across the belly, as fine a slash as Bothari could have
delivered with Koudelka's swordstick, and very accurately placed. Truly, Piotr
should not have lowered the tone of this discussion. The breath huffed from him
in disbelief and pain. Aral's expression grew
inward. "I will not fail him again," he corrected himself lowly.
"A second chance you were never given, sir." Behind his back his
hands unclenched. A small jerk of his head dismissed Piotr and all Piotr might
say. Blocked twice, visibly
suffering from his profound misstep, Piotr looked around for a target of
opportunity upon which to vent his frustration. His eye fell on Bothari,
watching blank-faced. "And you. Your hand
was in this from beginning to end. Did my son place you as a spy in my
household? Where do your loyalties lie? Do you obey me, or him?" An odd gleam flared in
Bothari's eye. He tilted his head toward Cordelia. "Her." Piotr was so taken
aback, it took him several seconds to regain his speech. "Fine," he
sputtered at last. "She can have you. I don't want to see your ugly face
again. Don't come back to Vorkosigan House. Esterhazy will deliver your things before
nightfall." He wheeled and marched
away. His grand exit, already weak, was spoiled when he looked back over his
shoulder before he rounded the corner. Aral vented a very weary
sigh. "Do you think he
means it this time?" Cordelia asked. "All that never-ever stuff?" "Government
concerns will require us to communicate. He knows that. Let him go home and
listen to the silence for a bit. Then we'll see." He smiled bleakly.
"While we live, we cannot disengage." She thought of the child
whose blood now bound them, her to Aral, Aral to Piotr, and Piotr to herself.
"So it seems." She looked an apology to Bothari. "I'm sorry,
Sergeant. I didn't know Piotr could fire an oath-armsman." "Well, technically,
he can't," Aral explained. "Bothari was just reassigned to another branch
of the household. You." "Oh." Just
what I always wanted, my very own monster. What am I supposed to do, keep him
in my closet? She rubbed the bridge of her nose, then regarded her hand. The
hand that had encompassed Bothari's on the swordstick. So. And so. "Lord
Miles will need a bodyguard, won't he?" Aral tilted his head in
interest. "Indeed." Bothari looked suddenly
so intently hopeful, it made Cordelia catch her breath. "A
bodyguard," he said, "and backup. No raff could give him a hard time
if ... let me help, Milady." Let me help. Rhymes with
I love you, right? "It would be ..." impossible, crazy, dangerous,
irresponsible, "my pleasure, Sergeant." His face lit like a
torch. "Can I start now?" "Why not?" "I'll wait for you
in there, then." He nodded toward Vaagen's lab. He slipped back through
the door. Cordelia could just picture him, leaning watchfully against the
wall—she trusted that malevolent presence wouldn't make the doctors so nervous they
would drop their fragile charge. Aral blew out his
breath, and took her in his arms. "Do you Betans have any nursery tales
about the witch's name-day gifts?" "The good and bad
fairies seem to all be out in force for this one, don't they?" She leaned
against the scratchy fabric of his uniformed shoulder. "I don't know if
Piotr meant Bothari for a blessing or a curse. But I bet he really will keep
the raff off. Whatever the raff turns out to be. It's a strange list of
birthday presents we've given our boychick." They returned to the
lab, to listen attentively to the rest of the doctors' lecture on Miles's
special needs and vulnerabilities, arrange the first round of treatment
schedules, and wrap him warmly for the trip home. He was so small, a scrap of
flesh, lighter than a cat, Cordelia found when she at last took him up in her
arms, skin to skin for the first time since he'd been cut from her body. She
had a moment's panic. Put him back in the vat for about eighteen years, I can't
handle this... . Children might or might not be a blessing, but to create them
and then fail them was surely damnation. Even Piotr knew that. Aral held the
door open for them. Welcome to Barrayar,
son. Here you go: have a world of wealth and poverty, wrenching change and
rooted history. Have a birth; have two. Have a name. Miles means
"soldier," but don't let the power of suggestion overwhelm you. Have
a twisted form in a society that loathes and fears the mutations that have been
its deepest agony. Have a title, wealth, power, and all the hatred and envy
they will draw. Have your body ripped apart and re-arranged. Inherit an array
of friends and enemies you never made. Have a grandfather from hell. Endure
pain, find joy, and make your own meaning, because the universe certainly isn't
going to supply it. Always be a moving target. Live. Live. Live. EPILOGUE VORKOSIGAN
SURLEAU—FIVE YEARS LATER. "Dammit,
Vaagen," Cordelia panted under her breath. "You never told me the
little bugger was going to be hyperactive." She galloped down the
end stairs, through the kitchen, and out onto the terrace at the end of the
rambling stone residence. Her gaze swept the lawn, probed the trees, and
scanned the long lake sparkling in the summer sun. No movement. Aral, dressed in old
uniform trousers and a faded print shirt, came around the house, saw her, and
opened his hands in a no-luck gesture. "He's not out here." "He's not inside.
Down, or up, d'you think? Where's little Elena? I bet they're together. I
forbade him to go down to the lake without an adult, but I don't know...
." "Surely not the
lake," said Aral. "They swam all morning. I was exhausted just
watching them. In the fifteen minutes I timed it, he climbed the dock and
jumped back in nineteen times. Multiply that by three hours." "Up, then,"
decided Cordelia. They turned and trudged together up the hill on the gravel
path lined with native, Earth-import, and exotic shrubbery and flowers.
"And to think," Cordelia wheezed, "I prayed for the day he would
walk." "It's five years
pent-up motion all let loose at once," Aral analyzed. "In a way, it's
reassuring that all that frustration didn't turn in on itself and become
despair. For a time, I was afraid it might." "Yes. Have you
noticed, since the last operation, that the endless chatter's dried up? At
first I was glad, but do you suppose he's going to go mute? I didn't even know
that refrigeration unit was supposed to come apart. A mute engineer." "I think the, er,
verbal and mechanical aptitudes will come into balance eventually. If he
survives." "There's all of us
adults, and one of him. We ought to be able to keep up. Why do I feel like he
has us outnumbered and surrounded?" She crested the hill. Piotr's stable
complex lay in the shallow valley below, half a dozen red-painted wood and
stone buildings, fenced paddocks, pastures planted to bright green Earth
grasses. She saw horses, but no children. Bothari was ahead of them, though,
just exiting one building and entering another. His bellow carried up to them,
thinned by distance. "Lord Miles?" "Oh, dear, I hope
he's not bothering Piotr's horses," said Cordelia. "Do you really
think this reconciliation attempt will work, this time? Just because Miles is
finally walking?" "He was civil, last
night at dinner," said Aral, judiciously hopeful. "I was civil, last
night at dinner," Cordelia shrugged. "He as much as accused me of
starving your son into dwarfism. Can I help it if the kid would rather play
with his food than eat it? I just don't know about stepping up the growth
hormone, Vaagen's so uncertain about its effect on bone friability." A crooked smile stole
over Aral's face. "I did think the dialogue with the peas marching to
surround the bread-roll and demand surrender was rather ingenious. You could
almost picture them as little soldiers in Imperial greens." "Yes, and you were
no help, laughing instead of terrorizing him into eating like a proper
Da." "I did not
laugh." "Your eyes were
laughing. He knew it, too. Twisting you round his thumb." The warm organic scent
of horses and their inevitable by-products permeated the air as they approached
the buildings. Bothari re-appeared, saw them, and waved an apologetic hand.
"I just saw Elena. I told her to get down out of that loft. She said Lord
Miles wasn't up there, but he's around here somewhere. Sorry, Milady, when he
talked about looking at the animals, I didn't realize he meant immediately. I'm
sure I'll find him in just a moment." "I was hoping Piotr
would offer a tour," Cordelia sighed. "I thought you
didn't like horses," said Aral. "I loathe them. But
I thought it might get the old man talking to him, like a human being, instead
of over him like a potted plant. And Miles was so excited about the stupid
beasts. I don't like to linger here, though. This place is so ... Piotr."
Archaic, dangerous, and you have to watch your step. Speak of the devil.
Piotr himself emerged from the old stone tack storage shed, coiling a web rope.
"Hah. There you are," he said neutrally. He joined them sociably
enough, though. "I don't suppose you would like to see the new
filly." His tone was so flat,
she couldn't tell if he wanted her to say yes, or no. But she seized the
opportunity. "I'm sure Miles would." "Mm." She turned to Bothari.
"Why don't you go get—" But Bothari was staring past her, his lips
rippling in dismay. She wheeled. One of Piotr's most
enormous horses, quite naked of bridle, saddle, halter, or any other handle to
grab, was trotting out of the barn. Clinging to its mane like a burr was a
dark-haired, dwarfish little boy. Miles's sharp features shone with a mixture
of exaltation and terror. Cordelia nearly fainted. "My imported
stallion!" yelped Piotr in horror. In pure reflex, Bothari
snatched his stunner from its holster. He then stood paralyzed with the
uncertainty of what to shoot and where. If the horse went down and rolled on
its little rider— "Look,
Sergeant!" Miles's thin voice called eagerly. "I'm taller than
you!" Bothari started to run
toward him. The horse, spooked, wheeled away and broke into a canter. "—and I can run
faster, too!" The words were whipped away in the bounding motion of the
gait. The horse shied out of sight around the stable. The four adults pelted
after. Cordelia heard no other cry, but when they turned the corner Miles was
lying on the ground, and the horse had stopped further on and lowered its head
to nibble at the grass. It snorted in hostility when it saw them, raised its
head, danced from foot to foot, then snatched a few more bites. Cordelia fell to her
knees beside Miles, who was already sitting up and waving her away. He was
pale, and his right hand clutched his left arm in an all-too-familiar signal of
pain. "You see,
Sergeant?" Miles panted. "I can ride, I can." Piotr, on his way toward
his horse, paused and looked down. "I didn't mean to
say you weren't able" said the sergeant in a driven tone. "I meant
you didn't have permission." "Oh." "Did you break
it?" Bothari nodded to the arm. "Yeah," the
boy sighed. There were tears of pain in his eyes, but his teeth set against any
quaver entering his voice. The sergeant grumbled,
and rolled up Miles's sleeve, and palpated the forearm. Miles hissed.
"Yep." Bothari pulled, twisted, adjusted, took a plastic sleeve from
his pocket, slipped it over the arm and wrist, and blew it up. "That'll
keep it till the doctor sees it." "Hadn't you better
... containerize that horrendous horse?" Cordelia said to Piotr. " 'S not
h'rrendous," Miles insisted, scrambling to his feet. "It's the
prettiest." "You think so,
eh?" said Piotr roughly. "How do you figure that? You like brown?" "It moves the
springiest," Miles explained earnestly, bouncing in imitation. Piotr's attention was
arrested. "And so it does," he said, sounding bemused. "It's my
hottest dressage prospect ... You like horses?" "They're great.
They're wonderful." Miles pirouetted. "I could never much
interest your father in them." Piotr gave Aral a dirty look. Thank God, thought
Cordelia. "On a horse, I
could go as fast as anybody, I bet," said Miles. "I doubt it,"
said Piotr coldly, "if that was a sample. If you're going to do it, you
have to do it right." "Teach me,"
said Miles instantly. Piotr's brows shot up.
He glanced at Cordelia, and smiled sourly. "If your mother gives
permission." He rocked on his heels, in certain smug safety, knowing
Cordelias rooted antipathy to the beasts. Cordelia bit her tongue
on Over my dead body, and thought fast. Aral's intent eyes were signaling
something, but she couldn't read it. Was this a new way for Piotr to try and
kill Miles? Take him out and get him smashed, trampled, broken ... tired out?
Now there was a thought. ... Risk, or security? In
the few months since Miles had at last acquired a full range of motion, she'd
run on panicked overdrive, trying to save him from physical harm; he'd spent
the same time near-frantically trying to escape her supervision. Much more of
this struggle, and either she'd be insane, or he would. If she could not keep
him safe, perhaps the next best thing was to teach him competence at living
dangerously. He was almost undrownable already. His big grey eyes were
radiating a desperate, silent plea at her, Let me, let me, let me ... with
enough transmission energy to burn through steel. I would fight the world for
you, but I'm damned if I can figure out how to save you from yourself. Go for
it, kid. "Yes," she
said. "If the sergeant accompanies you." Bothari shot her a look
of horrified reproach. Aral rubbed his chin, his eyes alight. Piotr looked
utterly taken aback to have his bluff called. "Good," said
Miles. "Can I have my own horse? Can I have that one?" "No, not that
one," said Piotr indignantly. Then drawn in, added, "Perhaps a
pony." "Horse," said
Miles, watching his face. Cordelia recognized the
Instant Re-Negotiation Mode, a spinal reflex, as far as she could tell,
triggered by the faintest concession. The kid should be put to work beating out
treaties with the Cetagandans. She wondered how many horses he'd finally end up
with. "A pony," she put in, giving Piotr the support that he did not
yet recognize how badly he was going to need. "A gentle pony. A gentle
short pony." Piotr pursed his lips,
and gave her a challenging look. "Perhaps you can work up to a
horse," he said to Miles. "Earn it, by learning well." "Can I start
now?" "You have to get
your arm set first," said Cordelia firmly. "I don't have to
wait till it heals, do I?" "It will teach you
not to run around breaking things!" Piotr regarded Cordelia
through half-lidded eyes. "Actually, proper dressage training starts on a
lunge line. You aren't permitted to use your arms till you've developed your
seat." "Yeah?" said
Miles, hanging worshipfully on his words. "What else—?" By the time Cordelia
withdrew to hunt up the personal physician who accompanied the Lord Regent's
traveling circus, ah, entourage, Piotr had recaptured his horse—rather
efficiently, though Cordelia wondered if the sugar in his pockets was
cheating—and was already explaining to Miles how to make a simple line into an
effective halter, which side of the beast to stand on, and what direction to
face while leading. The boy, barely waist-high to the old man, was taking it in
like a sponge, upturned face passionately intent. "Want to lay a
side-bet, who's leading who on that lunge line by the end of the week?"
Aral murmured in her ear. "No contest. I must
say, the months Miles spent immobilized in that dreadful spinal brace did teach
him how to do charm. The most efficient long-term way to control those about
you, and thus exert your will. I'm glad he didn't decide to perfect whining as
a strategy. He's the most willful little monster I've ever encountered, but he
makes you not notice." "I don't think the
Count has a chance," Aral agreed. She smiled at the
vision, then glanced at him more seriously. "When my father was home on
leave one time from the Betan Astronomical Survey, we made model gliders
together. Two things were required to get them to fly. First we had to give
them a running start. Then we had to let them go." She sighed.
"Learning just when to let go was the hardest part." Piotr, his horse,
Bothari, and Miles turned out of sight into the barn. By his gestures, Miles
was asking questions at a rapid-fire rate. Aral gripped her hand as
they turned to go up the hill. "I believe he'll soar high, dear
Captain." AUTHOR'S
AFTERWORD I was asked by my
publisher if I would like to contribute a preface to Cordelia's Honor. Upon
reflection, I decided I'd rather write an afterword. For one thing, it was a
horrifying thought that anything at all should further delay new readers from
meeting my characters; secondly, discursive comments about a book make ever so
much more sense after people have read it. I'd like to thank Baen
Books for this combined edition of Shards of Honor and Barrayar. Here at last
in one set of covers is the whole story arc, very much as I originally
conceived its shape, if not its details. As a longtime series reader, and now
writer, I'm very aware of the pitfalls of what I've come to believe is another
story form, as distinct from the novel as the novel is from the short story. A
proper series in this sense is neither an extension of the novel (as in the
multi-volume single story) nor a replication (as when essentially the same
story is told over and over, cookie-cutter fashion), but another animal altogether,
with its own internal demands. In addition, one must assume that readers, as I
did when reading my own favorite series, will encounter the books in utterly
random order. Therefore each series novel must simultaneously be a complete
tale in itself, and uphold its unique place in the growing structure; it must
be two books at once. The understructure must be global and timeless as well as
linear and sequential. The series landscape must satisfy its readers regardless
of what direction they chance to travel through it, or how often. I had no more idea of
all this when I started writing the Vorkosigan series than I had of what my own
life would be like when I started living it. A brief history of how I came to
write these two books may illustrate both. I began what was to
become Shards of Honor in December of 1982. Inspired by the example of a
new-writer friend, and by the economic pressures of the rust-belt Midwest town
in which I was living, I set out to Write A Novel. My writing career has been
on-the-job training throughout, and this was no exception; my only plan of how
to structure my material was to plant an eavesdropping device in my main
character's brain and follow her through her first weeks of action. This
brought Cordelia and me to the end of what later became the first section of
Shards. (It then had the working title of Mirrors.) I now had in hand a messy
first draft of about a hundred pages of narrative, with no chapter breaks, that
clearly wasn't long enough to be a novel. I paused briefly, flirted with a
really bad scenario about a convenient alien invasion that would force Barrayar
and Beta to ally, decided "Why should I make things easy on my
characters?", and plunged on to the much better and more inherent idea of
the Escobar invasion, thus accidentally discovering my first application of the
rule for finding plots for character-centered novels, which is to ask "So
what's the worst possible thing I can do to this guy?" And then do it. Thus I already knew, at
this early date, that Aral and Cordelia would have a physically handicapped son
in Barrayar's intensely militaristic culture, though I did not yet know how it
would come about. Though I was not really aware of it when I was writing
Chapter One, Ensign Dubauer is clearly the first statement of this theme. I had
a toddler myself at that time, and I thought of the injured ensign as a
180-pound one-year-old, and amused myself putting Aral and Cordelia through
reflections of my own harried parental tribulations—which incidentally allowed them
to unconsciously scope each other out as potential parents. The birth of a
child is the proper climax, after all, of any romance that starts out "boy
meets girl," if the romance is not falsely truncated. So I knew even then
that the end of the story should be Miles's birth. I wrote industriously
through the spring and early summer of 1983. The book had now acquired the
opposite problem from that of mid-winter, of being too short; it was now
getting longer, but not getting any closer to the end. (I've experienced that
phenomenon subsequently on other books, one of which managed to stay three
chapters from the end for at least five chapters straight, so now it doesn't
daunt me so much.) Since it was apparent that this really was going to be a
book, and not just another false start in life, marketing considerations began
to come into play. Editors' slush piles of unsolicited manuscripts from
unknowns were enormous, I was told; a thinner book had a better chance of being
read first than a fat one. Besides, new characters with entire attached
subplots were arriving on page 378, all demanding development at length, my
internal clue that I had overshot the end and was already into the sequel,
unless this was going to be a multi-volume novel as fat as a major fantasy
trilogy. The last scene I wrote
back in '83 before making the decision to go back and cut it short was
Cordelia's conversation with Dr. Vaagen; the introduction of Droushnakovi,
Koudelka's swordstick and depression, Cordelia's first encounters with Barrayaran
culture, with Padma and Alys, with the Vorhalas clan, and the soltoxin attack
were already written then. I did not yet have the ideas for the war of
Vordarian's Pretendership; the action-plot upon which all this good stuff then
hung was much weaker, making the decision to stop easier, if still a little
heartbreaking. With much labor, and a
lot of help from writer-friends, I revised and put Mirrors into proper
submission format. I then went on to write the book which became The Warrior's
Apprentice (which, for you fellow Dumas fans out there, I thought of for a
while as Twenty Years After, though it opens seventeen years after the events
of Shards). Though I hoped to develop a series, I didn't dare count on it;
series books might float together, but they also can sink together, and I
wanted to make sure each novel had its own lifeboat. So the
each-book-independent format, which I later came to regard as a Really Good
Artistic Idea, began as a mere survival plan. Mirrors came back rejected from
its first submission when I was about halfway through Warrior's, with an
editorial suggestion that I tighten it; I set it aside till the second book was
finished, then turned my attention to one last edit, cutting altogether about
80 pages, mostly in sentence or paragraph lengths. It was a good learning
experience; I've written more tightly ever since, and no, there isn't much of
it I'd put back now if I could. Trust me on this one. In the late summer of
'85, about the time I was finishing Ethan of Athos, Warrior's made it in over
the transom at Baen Books, and I was abruptly elevated from slush-pile wannabe
to real author with three completed books sold. The re-titled Shards of Honor
was published in June of 1986, allowing my father to see the finished book just
six weeks before he died. Having captured a
publisher at last, I went on to write Falling Free, which was serialized in
Analog magazine, and won me my first Nebula Award, for best SF novel of 1988.
Brothers in Arms, Borders of Infinity, and The Vor Game followed, as the
ever-lively Miles proceeded to take over his surroundings as usual. About this
time—summer of 1989—Philcon, a long-established science fiction convention in
Philadelphia, invited me to be a writer guest. Their program-book editor asked
me for a short story or outtake to donate for their program book. I hadn't
written a short story since 1986, but I thought of the soltoxin scene, reasoned
that enough readers were familiar with Miles by this time to make it
interesting in its own right, and took myself to my overheated attic to find
the box with the old drafts. Leafing through the carbons (Shards/Mirrors was
written in my old typewriter days, pre-word-processor), I was caught again by
my own story, and the desire to finish it grew. It ought to be easy and quick,
I reasoned; it was already a third written, after all. Jim Baen was at first a
little nonplussed to be offered a sequel to my then-least-selling novel, but we
struck deals that fall for Barrayar, for a fantasy novel I'd long wanted to
write, and also for a blank Miles book, contents to be announced by me later.
(That one turned out to be Mirror Dance, which won my third best-novel Hugo.) Still under the happy
illusion about the "easy and quick" part (Hah. Novels never are.
Never.), I started Barrayar, with the unenticing working title of Shardssequel.
I wrote a new opening chapter, to reintroduce the characters and situation for
new readers, cut and fit most of the old material into its new frame, and began
the story again as Count Piotr argued with Cordelia and Captain Negri expired
on the lawn at Vorkosigan Surleau. From that point on, the tale ran on its own
legs, and turned into something I didn't expect. It turned into the book it
always should have been, a real book, where plot, character, and theme all
worked together to make a whole greater than the sum of the parts. It turned
out to be about something, beyond itself. It's a bizarre but wonderful feeling,
to arrive dead center of a target you didn't even know you were aiming for. Shards/Barrayar, as it
finally evolved, became a book about the price of becoming a parent,
particularly but not exclusively a mother. Not just Aral and Cordelia, but all
the other supporting couples took up and played their symphonic variations on
the theme, exploring its complexities: Kou and Drou, Padma and Alys, Piotr and
his dead wife, Vordarian and Serg and Kareen, and most strangely and finally,
Bothari and the uterine replicator. All great human deeds
both consume and transform their doers. Consider an athlete, or a scientist, or
an artist, or an independent business creator. In service of their goals they
lay down time and energy and many other choices and pleasures; in return, they
become most truly themselves. A false destiny may be spotted by the fact that
it consumes without transforming, without giving back the enlarged self.
Becoming a parent is one of these basic human transformational deeds. By this
act, we change our fundamental relationship with the universe—if nothing else,
we lose our place as the pinnacle and end-point of evolution, and become a mere
link. The demands of motherhood especially consume the old self, and replace it
with something new, often better and wiser, sometimes wearier or disillusioned,
or tense and terrified, certainly more self-knowing, but never the same again.
Cordelia undergoes such a fearsome transformation, at the climax of Barrayar
laying down everything about her old persona, even her cherished Betan
principles, to bring her child to life. Shards and Barrayar
between them contain most of what I presently have to say about being a mother;
it's not by chance that Barrayar was dedicated to my children, who were my
teachers in learning about this part of becoming human. Further explorations on
this theme will almost certainly not return to Cordelia, but take a new
start-point, though Cordelia may yet have a word to say on other topics.
Growing up, I have discovered over time, is rather like housework: never
finished. It's not something you do once for all. Miles and his family and
friends have become my vehicle for exploring identity, in what promises to be a
continuing fascination. I have not come to the end of that story yet, nor will
I, till I stop learning new things about what it takes to be human. |
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