Cetaganda Part 18
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"I'm not so sure she did," said Rian. "I was only attempting to go as far as distributing inactive copies for backup. The Ba Lura felt our Mistress's desires keenly, but did not understand her subtlety. It wasn't my idea to attempt to distribute the Key now, and I'm not convinced it was hers, either. I don't know if the Ba had a separate understanding with her, or just a separate misunderstanding. And now I never will." She bowed her head. "I apologize to the Council for my failure." Her tone of voice made Miles think of inward-turning knives.
"You did your best, dear," said the haut Nadina kindly. But she added more sternly, "However, you should not have attempted to handle it all alone."
"It was my charge."
"A little less emphasis on the my, and a little more emphasis on the charge, next time."
Miles tried not to squirm at the general applicability of this gentle correction.
A glum silence reigned, for a time.
"We may need to consider altering the genome to make the haut-lords more controllable," said the Rho Cetan consort.
"For renewed expansion, we need the opposite," objected the dark consort. "More aggression."
"The ghem-experiment, filtering favorable genetic combinations upward from the general population, surely suffices for that" said the haut Pel.
"Our Lady, in her wisdom, aimed at less uniformity, not more," conceded Rian.
"I believe we have long made a mistake in leaving the haut-males so entirely to their own devices," said the Rho Cetan consort stubbornly.
Said the dark one, "But how else should we select among them, if there is no free compet.i.tion to sort them out?"
Rian held up a restraining hand. "The time for this larger debate... must be soon. But not now. I myself have been convinced by these events that further refinement must come before further expansion. But that," she sighed, "is a new Empress's task. Now we must decide what state of affairs she will inherit. How many favor the recall of the gene banks?"
The ayes had it. Several were slow in coming, but in some occult way a unanimous vote was achieved through nothing more than an exchange of unreadable glances. Miles breathed relief.
Rian's shoulders slumped wearily. "Then I so order you all. Return them to the Star Creche."
"As what?" asked the haut Pel in a practical tone.
Rian stared into the air a moment, and replied, "As collections of human genomic materials from your various satrapies, requested by the Lady before her death, and received by us in trust for the Star Creches experimental files."
"That will do nicely on this end," nodded the haut Pel. "And on the other end?"
"Tell your governors... we discovered a serious error in the copy, which must be corrected before the genome can be released to them."
"Very good."
The meeting broke up, the women activating their float-chairs, though not yet their private bubbles, and leaving in twos and threes in a murmur of intense discussion. Rian and the haut Pel waited until the room emptied, and Miles perforce waited with them.
"Do you still want me to try and retrieve the Key for you?" Miles asked Rian. "Barrayar remains vulnerable until we nail the satrap governor with solid proof, data a clever man can't diddle. And I especially don't like the toehold he seems to have in your own security."
"I don't know," said Rian. "The return of the gene banks cannot take less than a day. I'll... send someone for you, as we did tonight."
"We'll be down to two days left, then. Not much margin. I'd rather go sooner than later."
"It cannot be helped." She touched her hair, a nervous gesture despite its grace.
Watching her, he searched his heart. The impact of his first mad crush was surely fading, in this drought of response, to be replaced by... what? If she had slaked his thirst with the least little drop of affection, he would be hers body and soul right now. In a way he was glad she wasn't faking anything, depressing as it was to be treated like a ba servitor, his loyalty and obedience a.s.sumed. Maybe his proposed disguise as a ba had been suggested by his subconscious for more than practical reasons. Was his back-brain trying to tell him something?
"The haut Pel will return you to your point of origin," Rian said.
He bowed. "In my experience, milady, we can never get back to exactly where we started, no matter how hard we try."
She returned nothing to this but an odd look, as he rode out again on the haut Pel's float-chair.
Pel carried him through the Celestial Garden as before, in reverse. He wondered if she was as uncomfortable with their compressed proximity as he was. He made a stab at light conversation.
"Did the haut-ladies make all this plant and animal life in the garden? Competing, like the ghem bioesthetics fair? I was particularly impressed by the singing frogs, I must say."
"Oh, no," said the haut Pel. "The lower life-forms are all ghem work. That's their highest reward, to have their art incorporated into the Imperial garden. The haut only work in human material."
He didn't recall seeing any monsters around. "Where?"
"We mostly field-test ideas in the ba servitors. It prevents the accidental release of any genomic materials through s.e.xual routes."
"Oh."
"Our highest honor is for a favorable gene complex we have developed to be taken up into the haut-genome itself."
It was like some golden rule in reverse-never do unto yourself what you have not first tried on another. Miles smiled, rather nervously, and did not pursue the subject further. A groundcar driven by a ba servitor waited for the haut Pel's bubble at the side entrance to the Celestial Garden, and they were returned to Lady d'Har's penthouse by more normal routes.
Pel let him out of her bubble in another private nook, in an un.o.bserved moment, and drifted away again. He pictured her reporting back to Rian-Yes, milady, I released the Barrayaran back into the wild as you ordered. I hope he will be able to find food and a mate out there.... He sat on a bench overlooking the Celestial Garden, and meditated upon that view until Ivan and Amba.s.sador Vorob'yev found him.
They looked, respectively, scared and angry. "You're late," said Ivan. "Where the h.e.l.l did you go?"
"I almost called out Colonel Vorreedi and the guards," added Amba.s.sador Vorob'yev sternly.
"That would have been... futile," sighed Miles. "We can go now."
"Thank G.o.d," muttered Ivan.
Vorob'yev said nothing. Miles rose, wondering how soon the amba.s.sador and Vorreedi were going to stop taking Not yet for an answer.
Not yet. Please, not yet.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN.
There was nothing he would have liked more than a day off, Miles reflected, but not today. The worst was the knowledge that he'd done this to himself. Until the consorts completed their retrieval of the gene banks, all he could do was wait. And unless Rian sent a car to the emba.s.sy to pick him up, a move so overt as to be vigorously resisted by both sets of Imperial Security, it was impossible for Miles to make contact with her again until the Gate-song Ceremonies tomorrow morning at the Celestial Garden. He grumbled under his breath, and called up more data on his suite's comconsole, then stared at it unseeing.
He wasn't sure it was wise to give Lord X an extra day either, for all that this afternoon would contain a nasty shock for him when his consort came to take away his gene bank. That would eliminate his last chance of sitting tight, and gliding away with bank and Key, perhaps dumping his old centrally appointed and controlled consort out an airlock en route. The man must realize now that Rian would turn him in, even if it meant incriminating herself, before letting him get away. a.s.sa.s.sinating the Handmaiden of the Star Creche hadn't been part of the Original Plan, Miles was fairly sure. Rian had been intended to be a blind puppet, accusing Miles and Barrayar of stealing her Key. Lord X had a weakness for blind puppets. But Rian was loyal to the haut, beyond her own self-interest. No right-minded plotter could a.s.sume she would stay paralyzed for long.
Lord X was a tyrant, not a revolutionary. He wanted to take over the system, not change it. The late Empress was the real revolutionary, with her attempt to divide the haut into eight competing sibling branches, and may the best superman win. The Ba Lura might have been closer to its mistress's mind than Rian allowed. You can't give power away and keep it simultaneously. Except posthumously.
So what would Lord X do now? What could he do now, but fight to the last, trying anything he could think of to avoid being brought down for this? It was that or slit his wrists, and Miles didn't think he was the wrist-slitting type. He would still be searching for some way to pin it all on Barrayar, preferably in the form of a dead Miles who couldn't give him the lie. There was even still a faint chance he could bring that off, given the Cetagandan lack of enthusiasm for outlanders in general and Barrayarans in particular. Yes, this was a good day to stay indoors.
So would the results have been any better if Miles had publicly turned over the decoy Key and the truth on the very first day? No... then the emba.s.sy and its envoys would be mired right now in false accusations and public scandal, and no way to prove their innocence. If Lord X had picked any other delegation but Barrayar's upon which to plant his false Key-say, the Marilacans, the Aslunders, or the Vervani-his plan might yet be running along like clockwork. Miles hoped sourly that Lord X was Very, Very Sorry that he'd targeted Barrayar. And I'm going to make you even sorrier, you sod.
Miles's lips thinned as he turned his attention back to his comconsole. The satrap governors' s.h.i.+ps were all to the same general plan, and a general plan, alas, was all the Barrayaran emba.s.sy data bank had available without tapping in to the secret files. Miles shuffled the holovid display though the various levels and sections of the s.h.i.+p. If I were a satrap governor planning revolt, where would I hide the Great Key? Under ray pillow? Probably not.
The governor had the Key, but not the Key's key, so to speak; Rian still possessed that ring. If Lord X could open the Great Key, he could do a data dump, possess himself of a duplicate of the information-contents, and maybe, in a pinch, return the original, divesting himself of material evidence of his treasonous plans. Or even destroy it, hah. But if the Key were easy to get open, he should have done this already, when his plans first began to go seriously wrong. So if he was still trying to access the Key, it ought to be located in some sort of cipher lab. So where on this vast s.h.i.+p was a suitable cipher lab... ?
The chime of his door interrupted Miles's harried perusal. Colonel Vorreedi's voice inquired, "Lord Vorkosigan? May I come in?"
Miles sighed. "Enter." He'd been afraid all this comconsole activity would attract Vorreedi's attention. The protocol officer had to be monitoring from downstairs.
Vorreedi trod in, and studied the holovid display over Miles's shoulder. "Interesting. What is it?"
"Just brus.h.i.+ng up on Cetagandan wars.h.i.+p specs. Continuing education, officer-style, and all that. The hope for promotion to s.h.i.+p duty never dies."
"Hm." Vorreedi straightened. "I thought you might like to hear the latest on your Lord Yenaro."
"I don't think I own him, but-nothing fatal, I hope," said Miles sincerely. Yenaro might be an important witness, later; upon mature reflection Miles was beginning to regret not offering him asylum at the emba.s.sy.
"Not yet. But an order has been issued for his arrest."
"By Cetagandan Security? For treason?"
"No. By the civil police. For theft."
"It's a false charge, I'd lay odds. Somebody's trying to use the system to smoke him out of hiding. Can you find out who laid the charge?"
"A ghem-lord by the name of Nevic. Does that mean anything to you?"
"No. He's got to be a puppet. The man who put Nevic up to it is the man we want. The same man who supplied Yenaro with the plans and money for his fun-fountain. But now you have two strings to pull."
"You imagine it to be the same man?"
"Imagination," said Miles, "has nothing to do with it. But I need proof, stand-up-in-court type proof."
Vorreedi's gaze was uncomfortably level. "Why did you guess the charge against Yenaro would be treason?"
"Oh, well... I wasn't thinking. Theft is much better, less flashy, if what his enemy wants is for the civil police to drag Yenaro out into the open where he can get a clear shot at him."
Vorreedi's brows crimped. "Lord Vorkosigan..." But he appeared to think better of whatever he'd been about to say. He just shook his head and departed.
Ivan wandered in later, flung himself onto Miles's sofa, put up his booted feet on the armrest, and sighed.
"You still here?" Miles shut down his comconsole, which was by now making him cross- eyed. "I thought you'd be out making hay, or rolling in it, or whatever. Our last two days here and all. Or did you run out of invitations?" Miles jerked his thumb ceilingward, We may be bugged.
Ivan's lip curled, Screw it. "Vorreedi has laid on more bodyguards. It kind of takes the spontaneity out of things." He stared into the air. "Besides, I worry about where I put my feet, now. Wasn't it some queen of Egypt who was delivered in a rolled-up carpet? Could happen again."
"Could indeed," Miles had to agree. "Almost certainly will, in fact."
"Great. Remind me not to stand next to you."
Miles grimaced.
After a minute or two Ivan added, "I'm bored."
Miles chased him from his room.
The ceremony of Singing Open The Great Gates did not entail the opening of any gates, though it did involve singing. A ma.s.sed chorus of several hundred ghem, both male and female, robed in white-on-white, arranged themselves near the eastern entrance inside the Celestial Garden. They planned to pa.s.s in procession around the four cardinal directions and eventually, later in the afternoon, finish at the north gate. The chorus stood to sing along an undulating area of ground with surprising acoustic properties, and the galactic envoys and ghem and haut mourners stood to listen. Miles flexed his legs, inside his boots, and prepared to endure. The open venue left lots of s.p.a.ce for haut-lady bubbles, and they were out in force-some hundreds, scattered about the glade. How many haut-women did live here?
Miles glanced around his little delegation-himself, Ivan, Vorob'yev, and Vorreedi all in House blacks, Mia Maz dressed as before, striking in black and white. Vorreedi looked more Barrayaran, more officer-like, and, Miles had to admit, a lot more sinister out of his deliberately dull Cetagandan civvies. Maz rested one hand on Vorob'yev's arm and stood on tiptoe as the music started.
Breathtaking, Miles realized, could be a quite literal term-his lips parted and the hairs on the backs of his arms stood on end as the incredible sounds washed over him. Harmonies and dissonances followed one another up and down the scale with such precision, the listener could make out every word, when the voices were not simply wordless vibrations that seemed to crawl right up the spine, and ring in the back-brain in a succession of pure emotions. Even Ivan stood transfixed. Miles wanted to comment, to express his astonishment, but breaking into the absolute concentration the music demanded seemed some sort of sacrilege. After about a thirty-minute performance, the music came to a temporary close, and the chorus prepared to move gracefully off to its next station, followed more clumsily by the delegates.
The two groups took different routes. Ba servitors under the direction of a dignified ghem- lord major-domo shepherded the delegates to a buffet, to both refresh and delay them while the chorus set up for its next performance at the southern gate. Miles stared anxiously after the haut-lady bubbles, which naturally did not accompany the outlander envoys, but floated off in their own mob in yet a third direction. He was getting less distracted by the diversions of the Celestial Garden. Could one finally grow to take it entirely for granted? The haut certainly seemed to.
"I think I'm getting used to this place," he confided to Ivan, as he walked along between him and Vorob'yev in the ragged parade of outlander guests. "Or... I could."
"Mm," said Amba.s.sador Vorob'yev. "But when these pretty folks turned their pet ghem-lords loose to pick up some cheap new real estate out past Komarr, five million of us died. I hope that hasn't slipped your mind, my lord."
"No," said Miles tightly. "Not ever. But... even you are not old enough to remember the war personally, sir. I'm really starting to wonder if we'll ever see an effort like that from the Cetagandan Empire again."
"Optimist," murmured Ivan.
"Let me qualify that. My mother always says, behavior that is rewarded is repeated. And the reverse. I think... that if the ghem-lords fail to score any new territorial successes in our generation, it's going to be a long time till we see them try again. An expansionist period followed by an isolationist one isn't a new historical phenomenon, after all."
"Didn't know you'd taken up political science," said Ivan.
"Can you prove your point?" asked Vorob'yev. "In less than a generation?"
Miles shrugged. "Don't know. It's one of those subliminal gut-feel things. If you gave me a year and a department, I could probably produce a reasoned a.n.a.lysis, with graphs."
"I admit," said Ivan, "it's hard to imagine, say, Lord Yenaro conquering anybody."
"It's not that he couldn't. It's just that by the time he ever got a chance, he'd be too old to care. I don't know. After the next isolationist period, though, all bets are off. When the haut are done with ten more generations of tinkering with themselves, I don't know what they'll be." And neither do they. That was an odd realization. You mean no one is in charge here? "Universal conquest may seem like a crude dull game from their childhood after that. Or else," he added glumly, "they'll be unstoppable."
"Jolly thought," grumbled Ivan.
A delicate breakfast offering was set up in a nearby pavilion. On the other side of it, the float- cars with the white silk upholstery waited to convey refreshed funeral envoys the couple of kilometers across the Celestial Garden to the South Gate. Miles nabbed a hot drink, refused with concealed loathing the offer of a pastry tray-his stomach was knotting with nervous antic.i.p.ation-and watched the movements of the ba servitors with hawk-like attention. It has to break today. There's no more time. Come on, Rian! And how the devil was he to take Rian's next report when he had Vorreedi glued to his hip? The man was noting his every eye-flicker, Miles swore.
The day wore on with a repeat of the cycle of music and food and transportation. A number of the delegates were looking gla.s.sily over-loaded with it all; even Ivan had stopped eating in self-defense at about stop three. When the contact did come, at the buffet after the fourth and last choral performance, Miles almost missed it. He was making idle chit-chat with Vorreedi, reminiscing about Keroslav District baking styles, and wondering how he was going to distract and ditch the man. Miles had reached the point of desperation of fantasizing slipping Amba.s.sador Vorob'yev an emetic and siccing, so to speak, the protocol officer on his superior while Miles ducked out, when he saw out of the corner of his eye Ivan talking with a grave ba servitor. He did not recognize this ba; it was not Rian's favorite little creature, for it was young and had a brush of blond hair. Ivan's hands turned palm-out, and he shrugged, then he followed the servitor from the pavilion, looking puzzled. Ivan? What the h.e.l.l does she want Ivan for?
"Excuse me, sir," Miles cut across Vorreedi's words, and around his side. By the time Vorreedi had turned after him, Miles had darted past another delegation and was halfway to the exit after Ivan. Vorreedi would follow, but Miles would just have to deal with that later.
Miles emerged, blinking, into the artificial afternoon light of the dome just in time to see the dark shadow and boot-gleam of Ivan's uniform disappear around some flowering shrubbery, beyond an open s.p.a.ce featuring a fountain. He trotted after, his own boots scuffing unevenly on the colored stone walks threading the greenery. "Lord Vorkosigan?" Vorreedi called after him. Miles didn't turn around, but raised his hand in an acknowledging, but still rapidly receding, wave. Vorreedi was too polite to curse out loud, but Miles could fill in the blanks.
The man-high shrubbery, broken up by artistic groupings of trees, wasn't quite a maze, but nearly so. Miles's first choice of directions opened onto some sort of unpeopled water meadow, with the stream generated from the nearby fountain running like silver embroidery through its center. He ran back along his route, cursing his legs and his limp, and swung around the other end of the bushes.
Cetaganda Part 18
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Cetaganda Part 18 summary
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