Ivan reappeared at the edge of the dispersing crowd, and gave Miles a thumbs-up signal. After a few more minutes of excruciating social niceties, Vorob"yev and Ivan managed to get him escorted back down the lift tube to the waiting Barrayaran emba.s.sy groundcar. Miles flung himself into the upholstery and sat, grinning in pain, breath shallow. Ivan eyed his shivering form, skinned out of his tunic, and tucked it around Miles"s shoulders. Miles let him.
"All right, let"s see the damages," demanded Ivan. He propped one of Miles"s heels on his knee and rolled back the trouser leg. "d.a.m.n, that"s got to hurt."
"Quite," agreed Miles thinly.
"It could hardly have been an a.s.sa.s.sination attempt, though," said Vorob"yev, his lips compressed with calculation.
"No," agreed Miles.
"Bernaux told me he had his own security people examine the sculpture before they installed it. Looking for bombs and bugs, of course, but they cleared it."
"I"m sure they did. This could not have hurt anyone... but me."
Vorob"yev followed his reasoning without effort. "A trap?"
"Awfully elaborate, if so," noted Ivan.
"I"m... not sure," said Miles. I"m meant to be not-sure. That"s the beauty of it. "It had to have taken days, maybe weeks, of preparation. We didn"t even know we were coming here till two weeks ago. When did it arrive at the Marilacan emba.s.sy?"
"Last night, according to Bernaux," Vorob"yev said.
"Before we even arrived." Before our little encounter with the man with no eyebrows. It can"t possibly be connected-can it? "How long have we been scheduled for that party?"
"The emba.s.sies arranged the invitations about three days ago," said Vorob"yev.
"The timing is awfully tight, for a conspiracy," Ivan observed.
Vorob"yev thought it over. "I think I must agree with you, Lord Vorpatril. Shall we put it down as an unfortunate accident, then?"
"Provisionally," said Miles. That was no accident. I was set up. Me, personally. You know there"s a war on when the opening salvo arrives.
Except that, usually, one knew why a war had been declared. It was all very well to swear not to be blindsided again, but who was the enemy here?
Lord Yenaro, I bet you throw a fascinating party. I wouldn"t miss it for worlds.
CHAPTER THREE.
"The proper name for the Cetagandan imperial residence is the Celestial Garden," said Vorob"yev, "but all the galactics just call it Xanadu. You"ll see why in a moment. Duvi, take the scenic approach."
"Yes, my lord," returned the young sergeant who was driving. He altered the control program. The Barrayaran emba.s.sy aircar banked, and shot through a shining stalagmite array of city towers.
"Gently, if you please, Duvi. My stomach, at this hour of the morning..."
"Yes, my lord." Regretfully, the driver slowed them to a saner pace. They dipped, wove around a building that Miles estimated must have been a kilometer high, and rose again. The horizon dropped away.
"Whoa," said Ivan. "That"s the biggest force dome I"ve ever seen. I didn"t know they could expand them to that size."
"It absorbs the output of an entire generating plant," said Vorob"yev, "for the dome alone. Another for the interior."
A flattened opalescent bubble six kilometers across reflected the late morning sun of Eta Ceta. It lay in the midst of the city like a vast egg in a bowl, a pearl beyond price. It was ringed first by a kilometer-wide park with trees, then by a street reflecting silver, then by another park, then by an ordinary street, thick with traffic. From this, eight wide boulevards fanned out like the spokes of a wheel, centering the city. Centering the universe, Miles gained the impression. The effect was doubtless intended.
"The ceremony today is in some measure a dress rehearsal for the final one in a week and a half," Vorob"yev went on, "since absolutely everyone will be there, ghem-lords, haut-lords, galactics and all. There will likely be organizational delays. As long as they"re not on our part. I spent a week of hard negotiating to get you your official rankings and place in this."
"Which is?" said Miles.
"You two will be placed equivalently to second-order ghem-lords." Vorob"yev shrugged. "It was the best I could do."
In the mob, though toward the front of it. The better to watch without being much noticed himself, Miles supposed. Today, that seemed like a good idea. All three of them, Vorob"yev, Ivan, and himself, were wearing their respective House mourning uniforms, logos and decorations of rank st.i.tched in black silk on black cloth. Maximum formal, since they were to be in the Imperial presence itself. Miles ordinarily liked his Vorkosigan House uniform, whether the original brown and silver or this somber and elegant version, because the tall boots not only allowed but required him to dispense with the leg braces. But getting the boots on over his swollen burns this morning had been... painful. He was going to be limping more noticeably than usual, even tanked as he was on painkillers. I"ll remember this, Yenaro.
They spiraled down to a landing by the southernmost dome entrance, fronted by a landing lot already crowded with other vehicles. Vorob"yev dismissed the driver and aircar.
"We keep no escort, my lord?" Miles said doubtfully, watching it go, and awkwardly shifting the long polished maplewood box he carried.
Vorob"yev shook his head. "Not for security purposes. No one but the Cetagandan emperor himself could arrange an a.s.sa.s.sination inside the Celestial Garden, and if he wished to have you eliminated here, a regiment of bodyguards would do you no good."
Some very tall men in the dress uniforms of the Cetagandan Imperial Guard vetted them through the dome locks. The guardsmen shunted them toward a collection of float-pallets set up as open cars, with white silky upholstered seats, the color of Cetagandan Imperial mourning. Each amba.s.sadorial party was bowed on board by what looked to be senior servants in white and gray. The robotically-routed float-cars set off at a sedate pace a hand-span above the white-jade-paved walkways winding through a vast arboretum and botanical garden. Here and there Miles saw the rooftops of scattered and hidden pavilions peeking through the trees. All the buildings were low and private, except for some elaborate towers poking up in the center of the magic circle, almost three kilometers away. Though the sun shone outside in an Eta Ceta spring day, the weather inside the dome was set to a gray, cloudy, and appropriately mournful dampness, promising, but doubtless not delivering, rain.
At length they wafted to a sprawling pavilion just to the west of the central towers, where another servant bowed them out of the car and directed them inside, along with a dozen other delegations. Miles stared around, trying to identify them all.
The Marilacans, yes, there was the silver-haired Bernaux, some green-clad people who might be Jacksonians, a delegation from Aslund which included their chief of state-even they had only two guards, disarmed-the Betan amba.s.sadoress in a black-on-purple brocade jacket and matching sarong, all streaming in to honor this one dead woman who would never have met them face-to-face when alive. Surreal seemed an understatement. Miles felt like he"d crossed the border into Faerie, and when they emerged this afternoon, a hundred years would have pa.s.sed outside. The galactics had to pause at the doorway to make way for the party of a haut-lord satrap governor. He had an escort of a dozen ghem- guards, Miles noted, in full formal face paint, orange, green, and white swirls.
The decor inside was surprisingly simple-tasteful, Miles supposed-tending heavily to the organic, arrangements of live flowers and plants and little fountains, as if bringing the garden indoors. The connecting halls were hushed, not echoing, yet one"s voice carried clearly. They"d done something extraordinary with acoustics. More palace servants circulated offering food and drinks to the guests.
A pair of pearl-colored spheres drifted at a walking pace across the far end of one hall, and Miles blinked at his first glimpse of haut-ladies. Sort of.
Outside their very private quarters haut-women all hid themselves behind personal force- shields, usually generated, Miles had been told, from a float-chair. The shields could be made any color, according to the mood or whim of the wearer, but today would all be white for the occasion. The haut- lady could see out with perfect clarity, but no one could see in. Or reach in, or penetrate the barrier with stunner, plasma, or nerve disrupter fire, or small projectile weapons or minor explosions. True, the force- screen also eliminated the opportunity to fire out, but that seemed not to be a haut-lady concern. The shield could be cut in half with a gravitic imploder lance, Miles supposed, but the imploders" bulky power packs, ma.s.sing several hundred kilos, made them strictly field ordnance, not hand weapons.
Inside their bubbles, the haut-women could be wearing anything. Did they ever cheat? Slop around in old clothes and comfy slippers when they were supposed to be dressed up? Go nude to garden parties? Who could tell?
A tall elderly man in the pure white robes reserved for the haut- and ghem-lords approached the Barrayaran party. His features were austere, his skin finely wrinkled and almost transparent. He was the Cetagandan equivalent of an Imperial majordomo, apparently, though with a much more flowery t.i.tle, for after collecting their credentials from Vorob"yev he provided them with exact instructions as to their place and timing in the upcoming procession. His att.i.tude conveyed that outlanders might be hopelessly gauche, but if one repeated the directions in a firm tone and made them simple enough, there was a chance of getting through this ceremony without disgrace.
He looked down his hawk-beak nose at the polished box. "And this is your gift, Lord Vorkosigan?"
Miles managed to unlatch the box and open it for display without dropping it. Within, nestled on a black velvet bed, lay an old, nicked sword. "This is the gift selected from his collection by my Emperor, Gregor Vorbarra, in honor of your late Empress. It is the sword his Imperial ancestor Dorca Vorbarra the Just carried in the First Cetagandan War." One of several, but no need to go into that. "A priceless and irreplaceable historical artifact. Here is its doc.u.mentation of provenance."
"Oh," the majordomo"s feathery white brows lifted almost despite themselves. He took the packet, sealed with Gregor s personal mark, with more respect. "Please convey my Imperial masters thanks to yours." He half-bowed, and withdrew.
"That worked well," said Vorob"yev with satisfaction.
"I should b.l.o.o.d.y think so," growled Miles. "Breaks my heart." He handed off the box to Ivan to juggle for a while.
Nothing seemed to be happening just yet-organizational delays, Miles supposed. He drifted away from Ivan and Vorob"yev in search of a hot drink. He was on the point of capturing something steaming and, he hoped, non-sedating, from a pa.s.sing tray when a quiet voice at his elbow intoned, "Lord Vorkosigan?"
He turned, and stifled an indrawn breath. A short and rather androgynous elderly... woman?--stood by his side, dressed in the gray and white of Xanadu"s service staff. Her head was bald as an egg, her face devoid of hair. Not even eyebrows. "Yes... ma"am?"
"Ba," she said in the tone of one offering a polite correction. "A lady wishes to speak with you. Would you accompany me, please?"
"Uh... sure." She turned and paced soundlessly away, and he followed in alert antic.i.p.ation. A lady? With luck, it might be Mia Maz of the Vervani delegation, who ought to be around somewhere in this mob of a thousand people. He was developing some urgent questions for her. No eyebrows? I was expecting a contact sometime, but... here?
They exited the hall. Pa.s.sing out of sight of Vorob"yev and Ivan stretched Miles"s nerves still further. He followed the gliding servant down a couple of corridors, and across a little open garden thick with moss and tiny flowers misted with dew. The noises from the reception hall still carried faintly through the damp air. They entered a small building, open to the garden on two sides and floored with dark wood that made his black boots echo unevenly in time with his limping stride. In a dim recess of the pavilion, a woman-sized pearlescent sphere floated a few centimeters above the polished floor, which reflected an inverted halo from its light.
"Leave us," a voice from the sphere directed the servant, who bowed and withdrew, eyes downcast. The transmission through the force screen gave the voice a low, flat timbre.
The silence lengthened. Maybe she"d never seen a physically imperfect man before. Miles bowed, and waited, trying to look cool and suave, and not stunned and wildly curious.
"So, Lord Vorkosigan," came the voice again at last. "Here I am."
"Er... quite." Miles hesitated. "And just who are you, milady, besides a very pretty soap- bubble?"
There was a longer pause, then, "I am the haut Rian Degtiar. Servant of the Celestial Lady, and Handmaiden of the Star Creche."
Another flowery haut-t.i.tle that gave no clue to its function. He could name every ghem-lord on the Cetagandan General Staff, all the satrap governors and their ghem-officers, but this female haut- babble was new to him. But the Celestial Lady was the polite name for the late Empress haut Lisbet Degtiar, and that name at least he knew- "You are a relative of the late Dowager Empress, milady?"
"I am of her genomic constellation, yes. Three generations removed. I have served her half my life."
A lady-in-waiting, all right. One of the old Empress"s personal retinue, then, the most inward of insiders. Very high rank, probably very aged as well. "Uh... you"re not related to a ghem-lord named Yenaro, by chance, are you?"
"Who?" Even through the force-screen the voice conveyed utter bafflement.
"Never mind. Clearly not important." His legs were beginning to throb. Getting the d.a.m.n boots back off when he returned to the emba.s.sy was going to be an even better trick than getting them on had been. "I could not help noticing your serving woman. Are there many folk around here with no hair?"
"It is not a woman. It is Ba."
"Ba?"
"The neuter ones, the Emperor"s high-slaves. In his Celestial Father"s time it was the fashion to make them smooth like that."
Ah. Genetically engineered, genderless servants. He"d heard rumors about them, mostly connected, illogically enough, with s.e.xual scenarios that had more to do with the teller"s hopeful fantasies than with any likely reality. But they were reputed to be a race utterly loyal to the lord who had, after all, literally created them. "So... not all ba are hairless, but all the hairless ones are ba?" he worked it out.
"Yes..." More silence, then, "Why have you come to the Celestial Garden, Lord Vorkosigan?"
His brow wrinkled. "To hold up Barrayar"s honor in this circu-um, solemn procession, and to present your late Empress"s bier-gift. I"m an envoy. By appointment of Emperor Gregor Vorbarra, whom / serve. In my own small way."
Another, longer pause. "You mock me in my misery."
"What?"
"What do you want, Lord Vorkosigan?"
"What do I want? You called me here, Lady, isn"t it the other way around?" He rubbed his neck, tried again. "Er... can I help you, by chance?"
"You?!"
Her astonished tone stung him. "Yeah, me! I"m not as..." incompetent as I look. "I"ve been known to accomplish a thing or two, in my time. But if you won"t give me a clue as to what this is all about, I can"t. I will if I do know but I can"t if I don"t. Don"t you see?"
Now he had confused himself, tongue-tangled. "Look, can we start this conversation over?" He bowed low. "Good day, I am Lord Miles Vorkosigan of Barrayar. How may I a.s.sist you, milady?"
"Thief--!"
The light dawned at last. "Oh. Oh, no. I am a Vorkosigan, and no thief, milady. Though as possibly a recipient of stolen property, I may be a fence," he allowed judiciously.
More baffled silence; perhaps she was not familiar with criminal jargon. Miles went on a little desperately, "Have you, uh, by chance lost an object? Rod-shaped electronic device with a bird-crest seal on the cap?"
"You have it!" Her voice was a wail of dismay.
"Well, not on me."
Her voice went low, throaty, desperate. "You still have it. You must return it to me."
"Gladly, if you can prove it belongs to you. I certainly don"t pretend it belongs to me," he added pointedly.
"You would do this... for nothing?"
"For the honor of my name, and, er... I am ImpSec. I"d do almost anything for information. Satisfy my curiosity, and the deed is done."
Her voice came back in a shocked whisper, "You mean you don"t even know what it is?"
The silence stretched for so long after that, he was beginning to be afraid the old lady had fainted dead away in there. Processional music wafted faintly through the air from the great pavilion.
"Oh, shi-er, oh. That d.a.m.n parade is starting, and I"m supposed to be near the front. Milady, how can I reach you?"
"You can"t." Her voice was suddenly breathless. "I have to go too. I"ll send for you." The white bubble rose, and began to float away.
"Where? When--?" The music was building toward the start-cue.
"Say nothing of this!"
He managed a sketchy bow at her retreating maybe-back, and began hobbling hastily across the garden. He had a horrible feeling he was about to be very publicly late.
When he"d wended his way back into the reception area, he found the scene was every bit as bad as he"d feared. A line of people was advancing to the main exit, toward the tower buildings, and Vorob"yev in the Barrayaran delegation"s place was dragging his feet, creating an obvious gap, and staring around urgently. He spotted Miles and mouthed silently, Hurry up, dammit! Miles hobbled faster, feeling as if every eye in the room was on him.
Ivan, with an exasperated look on his face, handed over the box to him as he arrived. "Where the h.e.l.l were you all this time, in the lav? I looked there-"
"Sh. Tell you later. I"ve just had the most bizarre..." Miles struggled with the heavy maplewood box, and straightened it around into an appropriate presentational position. He marched forward across a courtyard paved with more carved jade, catching up at last with the delegation in front of them just as they reached the door to one of the high-towered buildings. They all filed into an echoing rotunda. Miles spied a few white bubbles in the line ahead, but there was no telling if one was his old haut-lady. The game plan called for everyone to slowly circle the bier, genuflect, and lay their gifts in a spiral pattern in order of seniority/status/clout, and file out the opposite doors to the Northern Pavilion (for the haut-lords and ghem-lords), or the Eastern Pavilion (for the galactic amba.s.sadors) where a funereal luncheon would be served.
But the steady procession stopped, and began to pile up in the wide arched doorways. From the rotunda ahead, instead of quiet music and hushed, shuffling footsteps, a startled babble poured. Voices were raised in sharp astonishment, then other voices in even sharper command.
"What"s gone wrong?" Ivan wondered, craning his neck. "Did somebody faint or something?"
Since Miles"s eye-level view was of the shoulders of the man ahead of him, he could scarcely answer this. With a lurch, the line began to proceed again. It reached the rotunda, but then was shunted out a door immediately to the left. A ghem-commander stood at the intersection, directing traffic with low-voiced instructions, repeated over and over, "Please retain your gifts and proceed directly around the outside walkway to the Eastern Pavilion, please retain your gifts and proceed directly to the Eastern Pavilion, all will be re-ordered presently, please retain-"
At the center of the rotunda, above everyone"s heads on a great catafalque, lay the Dowager Empress in state. Even in death outlander eyes were not invited to look upon her. Her bier was surrounded by a force-bubble, made translucent; only a shadow of her form was visible through it, as if through gauze, a white-clad, slight, sleeping ghost. A line of mixed ghem-guards apparently just drafted from the pa.s.sing satrap governors stood in a row from catafalque to wall on either side of the bier, shielding something else from the pa.s.sing eyes.