And Yenaro had been going to dump it all, Miles was sure. At his own feet. With Lady Benello and Lady Arvin looking on. Miles thought of the fate of Lord X"s, Prince Slyke"s, last tool, the Ba Lura. No. Yenaro doesn"t know. He may hate Barrayarans, but he"s not that frigging crazy. He was set up right along with us, this time. Third time"s a charm, all right.
When Ivan rose, his jaw set and his eyes burning, Miles motioned him over and handed him the pitcher again. Ivan took it gingerly, stepping back another pace. Miles knelt and tore off a few threads from the carpet"s edge. The threads parted with a gum-like stretching, confirming his diagnosis. "Lord Vorkosigan!" Lady Arvin objected, her brows drawn down in amused puzzlement at the Barrayarans" bizarre barbarian behavior.
Miles traded the threads to Ivan for the pitcher again, and jerked his head toward Yenaro. "Bring him. Excuse us, please, ladies. Um... man-talk."
Rather to his surprise, this appeal actually worked; Lady Arvin only arched her brows, though Lady Benello pouted slightly. Ivan wrapped one hand around Yenaro"s upper arm, and guided him out of the display area. Ivan"s grip tightened in silent threat when Yenaro tried to shrug him off. Yenaro looked angry and tight-lipped and just a little embarra.s.sed.
They found an empty nook a few s.p.a.ces down. Ivan stood himself and his captive with their backs to the path, shielding Miles from view. Miles gently set the pitcher down, stood, jerked up his chin, and addressed Yenaro in a low-pitched growl. "I will demonstrate what you almost did in just a moment. What I want to know now is just what the h.e.l.l you thought you were doing?"
"I don"t know what you"re talking about," snapped Yenaro. "Let go, you lout!"
Ivan kept his hold, frowning fiercely. "Demonstrate first, coz."
"Right." The paving-stones were some cool artificial marble, and did not look flammable. Miles shook the threads off his finger, and motioned Ivan and Yenaro closer. He waited till there were no pa.s.sersby in sight and said, "Yenaro. Take two drops on your fingers of that harmless liquid you were waving around, and sprinkle them on this."
Ivan forced Yenaro to kneel alongside Miles. Yenaro, with a cold glance at his captors, dipped his hand and sprinkled as ordered. "If you think-"
He was interrupted by a bright flash and a wave of heat that scorched Miles"s eyebrows. The soft report, fortunately, was mostly m.u.f.fled by their shielding bodies. Yenaro froze, arrested.
"And that was only about a gram of material," Miles went on relentlessly. "That whole carpet- bomb ma.s.sed, what, about five kilos? You should know, I"m certain you carried it in here personally. When the catalyst hit, it would have gone up taking out this whole section of the dome, you, me, the ladies... it would have been quite the high point of the show."
"This is some sort of trick," grated Yenaro.
"Oh, it"s a trick all right. But this time the joke was on you. You"ve never had any military training at all, have you? Or with your nose, you"d have recognized it too. Sensitized asterzine. Lovely stuff. Formable, dye-able, you can make it look like practically anything. And totally inert and harmless, till the catalyst hits it. Then..." Miles nodded toward the small scorched patch on the white pavement. "Let me put the question to you another way, Yenaro. What effect did your good friend the haut-governor tell you this was going to have?"
"He-" Yenaro"s breath caught. His hand swept down across the dark and oily residue, then rose to his nose. He inhaled, frowning, then sat back rather weakly on his heels. His wide eyes lifted to meet Miles"s gaze. "Oh."
"Confession," said Ivan meaningfully, "is good for the soul. And body."
Miles took a breath. "Once more, from the top, Yenaro. What did you think you were doing?"
Yenaro swallowed. "It... was supposed to release an ester. That would simulate alcohol poisoning. You Barrayarans are famous for that perversion. Nothing that you don"t already do to yourselves!"
"Allowing Ivan and me to publicly stagger through the rest of the afternoon blind drunk, or a close approximation."
"Something like that."
"And yourself? Did you just ingest the antidote, before we showed up?"
"No, it was harmless!... supposed to be. I had made arrangements to go and rest, till it pa.s.sed off. I thought it might be... an interesting sensation."
"Pervert," murmured Ivan.
Yenaro glared at him.
Miles said slowly, "When I was burned, that first night. All that hand-wringing on your part wasn"t totally feigned, was it? You weren"t expecting it."
Yenaro paled. "I expected... I thought perhaps the Marilacans had done something to the power adjustment. It was only supposed to shock, not injure."
"Or so you were told."
"Yes," Yenaro whispered.
"The zlati ale was your idea, though, wasn"t it," growled Ivan.
"You knew?!"
"I"m not an idiot."
Some pa.s.sing ghem glanced in puzzlement at the three men kneeling in a circle on the floor, though fortunately they pa.s.sed on without comment. Miles nodded to the nearest bench, in the curve of the nook. "I have something to tell you, Lord Yenaro, and I think you had better be sitting down." Ivan guided Yenaro to it and firmly pushed him down. After a thoughtful moment, Ivan then poured the rest of the pitcher of liquid into the nearest tree-tub, before settling between Yenaro and the exit.
"This isn"t just a series of gratifying tricks played on the doltish envoys of a despised enemy, for you to chuckle at," Miles went on lowly "You are being used as a p.a.w.n in a treason plot against the Cetagandan Emperor. Used, discarded, and silenced. It"s beginning to be a pattern. Your last fellow-p.a.w.n was the Ba Lura. I trust you"ve heard what happened to it."
Yenaro"s pale lips parted, but he breathed no word. After a moment he licked his lips and tried again. "This can"t be. It"s too crude. It would have started a blood feud between his clan and those of... all the innocent bystanders."
"No. It would have started a blood feud between their clans and yours. You were set up to take the fall for this one. Not only as an a.s.sa.s.sin, but as one so incompetent that he blew himself up with his own bomb. Following in your grandfather"s footsteps, so to speak. And who would be left alive to deny it? The confusion would multiply within the capital, as well as between your Empire and Barrayar, while his satrapy made its break for independence. No, not crude. Downright elegant."
"The Ba Lura committed suicide. It was said."
"No. Murdered. Cetagandan Imperial Security is on to that one, too. They will unravel it in time. No... they will unravel it eventually. I don"t trust that it will be in time."
"It is impossible for a ba servitor to commit treason."
"Unless the ba servitor thinks that it is acting loyally, in a deliberately ambiguous situation. I don"t think even the ba are so un-human that they cannot be mistaken."
"... No." Yenaro looked up at both the Barrayarans. "You must believe, I would have no regrets whatsoever if you two fell off a cliff. But I would not push you myself."
"I... so I judged," said Miles. "But for my curiosity-what were you to get out of the deal, besides a week"s amus.e.m.e.nt in embarra.s.sing a couple of loutish barbarians? Or was this art for art"s sake on your part?"
"He promised me a post." Yenaro stared at the floor again. "You don"t understand, what it is to be without a post in the capital. You have no position. You have no status. You are... no one. I was tired of being no one."
"What post?"
"Imperial Perfumer." Yenaro"s dark eyes flashed. "I know it doesn"t sound very mighty, but it would have gained me entrance to the Celestial Garden, maybe the Imperial Presence itself. Where I would have worked among... the best in the empire. The top people. And I would have been good."
Miles had no trouble understanding ambition, no matter how arcane its form. "I imagine so."
Yenaro"s lips twitched in half a grateful smile.
Miles glanced at his chrono. "G.o.d, I"m late. Ivan-can you handle this from here?"
"I think so."
Miles rose. "Good day, Lord Yenaro, and a better one than you were destined to have, I think. I may have used up a year"s supply this afternoon already, but wish me luck. I have a little date with Prince Slyke now."
"Good luck," Yenaro said doubtfully.
Miles paused. "It was Prince Slyke, was it not?"
"No! I was talking about Governor the haut Ilsum Kety!"
Miles pursed his lips, and blew out his breath in a slow trickle. I have just been either screwed or saved. I wonder which? "Kety set you up... with all this?"
"Yes..."
Could Kety have sent his fellow governor and cousin Prince Slyke to scout out the Imperial Regalia for him, a stalking horse? Certainly. Or not. For that matter, could Slyke have set up Kety to operate Yenaro for him? Not impossible. Back to square one. d.a.m.n, d.a.m.n, d.a.m.n!
While Miles hovered in new doubt, the protocol officer rounded the corner. His hurried stride slowed as he spotted Miles and Ivan, and a look of relief crossed his face. By the time he strolled into the nook he was projecting the air of a tourist again, but he raked Yenaro with a knife-keen glance.
"h.e.l.lo, my lords." His nod took all three in equally.
"h.e.l.lo, sir," said Miles. "Did you have an interesting conversation?"
"Extraordinarily."
"Ah... I don"t believe you"ve formally met Lord Yenaro, sir. Lord Yenaro, this is my emba.s.sy"s protocol officer, Lord Vorreedi."
The two men exchanged more studied nods, Yenaro"s hand going to his chest in a sketch of a sitting bow.
"What a coincidence, Lord Yenaro," Vorreedi went on. "We were just talking about you."
"Oh?" said Yenaro warily.
"Ah..." Vorreedi sucked his lip thoughtfully, then seemed to come to some internal decision. "Are you aware that you seem to be in the middle of some sort of vendetta at present, Lord Yenaro?"
"I-no! What makes you think so?"
"Hm. Normally, ghem-lords" personal affairs are not my business, only the official ones. But the, ah, chance of a good deed has come up so squarely in my path, I shall not avoid it. This time. I just had a short talk with a, ah, gentleman who informed me he was here today with the mission of seeing that you, in his precise phrasing, did not leave the Moon Garden Hall alive. He was a little vague about what method he proposed to use to accomplish this. What made him peculiar in this venue was that he was no ghem. A purely commercial artist. He did not know who had hired him, that information being concealed behind several layers of screening. Do you have any guesses?"
Yenaro listened to this recital shocked, tight-lipped, and thoughtful. Miles wondered if Yenaro was going through the same set of deductions he was. He rather thought so. The haut-governor, it appeared, whichever one it was, had sent Yenaro"s ploy some backup. Just to make sure nothing went wrong. Such as Yenaro surviving his own bombing to accuse his betrayer.
"I... have a guess, yes."
"Would you care to share it?"
Yenaro regarded him doubtfully. "Not at this time."
"Suit yourself," Vorreedi shrugged. "We left him sitting in a quiet corner. The fast-penta should wear off in about ten minutes. You have that much lead-time to do-whatever you decide."
"Thank you, Lord Vorreedi," said Yenaro quietly. He gathered his dark robes about himself, and rose. He was pale, but admirably controlled, not shaking. "I think I will leave you now."
"Probably a good choice," said Vorreedi.
"Keep in touch, huh?" said Miles. Yenaro gave him a brief, formal nod. "Yes. We must talk again." He strode away, glancing left and right.
Ivan chewed on his fingers. It was better than his blurting out everything to Vorreedi right here and now, Miles"s greatest fear.
"Was that all true, sir?" Miles asked Colonel Vorreedi.
"Yes." Vorreedi rubbed his nose. "Except that I"m not so certain that it isn"t any of our business. Lord Yenaro seems to be taking a great deal of interest in you. One can"t help wondering if there might be some hidden connection. Sifting through that hired thug"s hierarchy would be tedious and time- consuming for my department. And what would we find at the end?" Vorreedi"s eye fell coolly on Miles. "Just how angry were you at getting your legs burned the other night, Lord Vorkosigan?"
"Not that angry!" Miles denied hastily. "Give me credit for a sense of proportion, at least, sir! No. It wasn"t me who hired the goon." Though he had just as surely set up Yenaro for this, by attempting to play all those cute little head-games with his possible patrons, Kety, Prince Slyke, and the Rond. You wanted a reaction, you got one. "But... it"s just a feeling, you understand. But I think pursuing this lead might be time and resources well spent." ,fj "A feeling, eh?"
"You surely have trusted your intuition before, in your work, sir."
"Used, yes. Trusted, never. An ImpSec officer should be clear about the difference."
"I understand, sir."
They all rose to continue the tour of the exhibition, Miles carefully not glancing at the scorched spot on the pavement as they pa.s.sed on. As they approached the west side of the dome, Miles searched the robed crowd for his contact-lady. There she was, sitting near a fountain, frowning. But he would never succeed in ditching Vorreedi now; the man was stuck like glue. He tried anyway. "Excuse me, sir. I have to speak to a lady."
"I"ll come with you," said Vorreedi pleasantly.
Right. Miles sighed, hastily composing his message. The dignified ghem-lady looked up as he approached with his unwelcome companions. Miles realized he didn"t know the woman"s name.
"Pardon me, milady. I just wanted to let you know that I will not be able to accept your invitation to visit, uh, this afternoon. Please convey my deepest regrets to your mistress." Would she, and the haut Rian, interpret this as intended, as Abort, abort abort!? Miles could only pray so. "But if she can arrange instead a visit to the man"s cousin, I think that would be most educational."
The woman"s frown deepened. But she only said, "I will convey your words, Lord Vorkosigan."
Miles nodded farewell, mentally blessing her for avoiding the pitfall of any more complicated reply. When he looked back, she had already swept to her feet and was hurrying away.
CHAPTER ELEVEN.
Miles had not entered the sacred confines of the Barrayaran emba.s.sy"s ImpSec offices before, having stayed discreetly upstairs in the diplomatic corps" plusher territory. As he"d posited, it was on the second lowest bas.e.m.e.nt level. A uniformed corporal ushered him past security scanners and into Colonel Vorreedi"s office.
It was not as austere as Miles expected, being decorated all about with small examples of Cetagandan art objects, though the powered sculptures were all turned off this morning. Some might be mementos, but the rest suggested the so-called protocol officer was a collector of excellent taste, if limited means.
The man himself was seated at a desk cleared in utilitarian bareness. Vorreedi was dressed as usual in the underlayers and robes of a middle-ranking ghem-lord of painfully sober preferences, subdued blues and grays. Except for the lack of face paint, in a crowd of ghem Vorreedi would practically disappear, though behind a Barrayaran ImpSec comconsole desk the effect of the ensemble was a little startling.
Miles moistened his lips. "Good morning, sir. Amba.s.sador Vorob"yev told me you wanted to see me."
"Yes, thank you, Lord Vorkosigan." Vorreedi"s nod dismissed the corporal, who withdrew silently. The doors slid shut behind him with a heavy sealing sound. "Do sit down."
Miles slipped into the station chair across the desk from Vorreedi, and smiled in what he hoped seemed innocent good cheer. Vorreedi looked across at Miles with keen, undivided attention. Not good. Vorreedi was second in authority here only to Amba.s.sador Vorob"yev, and like Vorob"yev, had been chosen as a top man for one of the most critical posts in the Barrayaran diplomatic corps. One might count on Vorreedi to be a very busy man, but never a stupid one. Miles wondered if Vorreedi"s meditations this past night had been one half so busy as his own. Miles braced himself for an Illyanesque opening shot, such as What the h.e.l.l are you up to, Vorkosigan, trying to start a d.a.m.ned war single- handed?!
Instead, Colonel Vorreedi favored him with a long, thoughtful stare, before observing mildly, "Lieutenant Lord Vorkosigan. You are an ImpSec courier officer, by a.s.signment."
"Yes, sir. When I am on duty."
"An interesting breed of men. Utterly reliable and loyal. They go here, go there, deliver whatever is asked of them without question or comment. Or failure, short of intervention by death itself."
"It"s not usually that dramatic. We spend a lot of time riding around in jumpships. One catches up on one"s reading."