Mirror Dance b-9

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Mirror Dance b-9 Page 48

by Lois McMaster Bujold


  Elena came back from a peek in the next room. “Who do you figure did the honors on Ryoval?”

  Miles opened his hands. “Don’t know. He had hundreds of mortal enemies, after his career.”

  “He was killed by an unarmed person. A kick to the throat, then beaten to death somehow after he was down.”

  “I noticed that.”

  “You notice the tool kit?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Miles, it was Mark.”

  “How could it have been? It had to have happened sometime last night. After what, five days of being worked over—and Mark’s a little guy like me. I don’t think it’s physically possible.”

  “Mark’s a little guy, but not like you,” said Elena. “And he almost killed a man in Vorbarr Sultana with a kick to the throat.”

  “What?”

  “He was trained, Miles. He was trained to take out your father, who is an even bigger man than Ryoval, and has years of combat experience.”

  “Yes, but I never believed— when was Mark in Vorbarr Sultana?” Amazing, how being dead for two or three months will put you out of touch. For the first time, his impulse to fling himself directly back into active-duty command status was checked. A maniac with three-quarters of a memory and a habit of going into convulsions is just what we want in charge, sure. Not to mention the shortness of breath.

  “Oh, and about your father, I should mention—no, maybe that had better wait.” Elena eyed him in worry.

  “What about—” He was interrupted by a buzz from the comm link Iverson had given him as a courtesy. “Yes, Lieutenant?”

  “Admiral Naismith, Baron Fell is here at the entrance. With a double-squad. He, ah … says he’s here to collect his deceased half-brother’s body, as next-of-kin.”

  Miles whistled soundlessly, and grinned. “Is he, now? Well. Tell you what. Let him come inside, with one bodyguard. And well talk. He may know something. Don’t let his squad in yet, though.”

  “Do you think that’s wise?”

  How the hell should I know? “Sure.”

  In a few minutes, Baron Fell himself puffed in, escorted by one of Iverson’s rental troopers and flanked by a big green-clad guard. Baron’s Fell’s round face was slightly pinker than usual with the exertion, otherwise he was the same plump, grandfatherly figure as ever, exuding the usual dangerously deceptive good cheer.

  “Baron Fell,” Miles nodded. “How good to see you again.”

  Fell nodded back. “Admiral. Yes, I imagine everything looks good to you just now. So, it really was you the Bharaputran sniper shot. Your clone-twin did an excellent job of pretending to be you, afterward, I must say, much to the confusion of an already very confused situation.”

  Argh! “Yes. And, ah, what brings you here?”

  “Trade,” stated Fell, Jacksonian short-hand for, You first.

  Miles nodded. “The late Baron Ryoval had me brought me here in a lightflyer by two of his erstwhile bodyguards. We found things much as you see them. I, um, neutralized them at my first opportunity. How I came to be in their hands is a more complicated story.” Meaning, That’s all you get till I get some.

  “There are some extraordinary rumors starting to circulate about my dear departed—he is departed, I trust?”

  “Oh, yes. You can see in a moment.”

  “Thank you. My dear departed half-brother’s death. I had one firsthand.”

  A former Ryoval employee from here fled directly to him as an informant. Right. “I hope his virtue was rewarded.”

  “It will be, as soon as I ascertain he was telling the truth.”

  “Well. Why don’t you come look.” He had to get up out of the station chair. He marshalled the effort with difficulty, and led the Baron into the living room, the House Fell bodyguard and the Dendarii following.

  The big bodyguard shot a worried glance at Sergeant Taura, looming over him; she smiled back, her fangs gleaming. “Hi, there. You’re kinda cute, you know?” she told him. He recoiled, and sidled closer to his master.

  Fell hurried to the body, knelt by its right side, and held up the severed wrist. He hissed with disappointment. “Who has done this?”

  “We don’t know yet,” said Miles. “That’s how I found him.”

  “Exactly?” Fell shot him a sharp glance.

  “Yes.”

  Fell traced the black holes across the corpse’s forehead. “Whoever did this, knew what he was doing. I want to find the assassin.”

  “To … avenge your brother’s death?” Elena asked cautiously.

  “No. To offer him a job!” Fell laughed, a booming, jolly sound. “Do you realize how many people have been trying, for how many years, to accomplish this?”

  “I’ve an idea,” said Miles. “If you can help—”

  In the next room, Ryoval’s half-butchered comconsole chimed.

  Fell looked up, eyes intent. “No one can call in here without the code-key,” he stated, and heaved to his feet. Miles barely beat him back into the study, and slid into the station chair.

  He activated the vid plate. “Yes?” And almost fell out of his seat again.

  Mark’s puffy face formed above the vid plate. He looked like he’d just come out of a shower, face scrubbed, hair wet and slicked back. He was wearing grey knits like Miles’s. Blue bruises, going greenish-yellow around the edges, made what skin Miles could see look like a patch-work quilt, but both eyes were open and very bright. His ears were still on. “Ah,” he said cheerfully, “there you are. I thought you might be. Have you figured out who you are yet?”

  “Mark!” Miles almost tried to crawl through the vid image. “Are you all right? Where are you?”

  “You have, I see. Good. I’m at Lilly Durona’s. God, Miles. What a place. What a woman. She let me have a bath. She put my skin back on. She fixed my foot. She gave me a hypo of muscle-relaxant for my back. With her own hands, she performed medical services too intimate and disgusting to describe, but very badly needed, I assure you, and held my head while I screamed. Did I mention the bath? I love her, and I want to marry her.”

  All this was delivered with such dead-pan enthusiasm, Miles could not tell if Mark was joking. “What are you on?” he asked suspiciously.

  “Pain killers. Lots and lots of pain killers. Oh, it’s wonderful!” He favored Miles with a weird broad grin. “But don’t worry, my head is perfectly clear. It’s just the bath. I was holding it together till she gave me the bath. It unmanned me. Do you know what a wonderful thing a bath is, when you’re washing off—never mind.”

  “How did you get out of here, and back to the Durona Clinic?” Miles asked urgently.

  “In Ryoval’s lightflyer, of course. The code-key worked.”

  Behind Miles, Baron Fell drew in his breath. “Mark,” he leaned into the vid pick up with a smile. “Would you put Lilly on a moment, please?”

  “Ah, Baron Fell!” said Mark. “Good. I was going to call you next. I want to invite you to tea, here at Lilly’s. We have a lot to talk about. You too, Miles. And bring all your friends.” Mark gave him a sharply meaningful glance.

  Quietly, Miles reached down and pressed the “alert” button on Iverson’s comm link. “Why, Mark?”

  “Because I need them. My own troops are much too tired for any more work today.”

  “Your troops?”

  “Please do as I ask. Because I ask it. Because you owe me,” Mark added, in a voice so low Miles had to strain to hear. Mark’s eyes burned, a brief spark.

  Fell muttered, “He used it. He has to know—” He leaned in again, and said to Mark, “Do you know what you have in ah, hand, Mark?”

  “Oh, Baron. I know what I’m doing. I don’t know why so many people have so much trouble believing that,” Mark added in a tone of hurt complaint. “I know exactly what I’m doing.” Then he laughed. It was a very disturbing laugh, edgy and too loud.

  “Let me talk to Lilly,” said Fell.

  “No. You come here and talk to Lilly,” said Mark petulantly.
“Anyway, you want to talk to me.” He nailed Fell’s eye with a direct look. “I promise you will find it profitable.”

  “I believe I do want to talk with you,” murmured Fell. “Very well.”

  “Miles. You’re there in Ryoval’s study, where I was.” Mark searched his face, for what Miles could not guess, but then Mark nodded quietly to himself, as if satisfied. “Is Elena there?”

  “Yes …”

  Elena leaned forward on Miles’s other side. “What do you need, Mark?”

  “I want to talk to you a moment. Armswoman. Privately. Would you clear the room of everyone else, please? Everyone.”

  “You can’t,” Miles began. ”… Armswoman? Not—not leige-sworn? You can’t be.”

  “Technically, I suppose she’s not, now that you’re alive again,” said Mark. He smiled sadly. “But I want a service. My first and last request, Elena. Privately.”

  Elena looked around. “Everybody out. Please, Miles. This is between Mark and me.”

  “Armswoman?” Miles muttered, allowing himself to be thrust back out into the corridor. “How can—” Elena shut the door on them all. Miles called Iverson to arrange transport, and other things. It was still a polite race with Fell, but it was clearly a race.

  Elena emerged after a few minutes. Her face was strained. “You go on to Durona’s. Mark has asked me to find something for him here. I’ll catch up.”

  “Collect all the data you can for ImpSec while you’re at it, then,” said Miles, feeling bewildered by the pace of events. Somehow, he seemed not to be in charge here. “I’ll tell Iverson to give you a free hand. But—Armswoman? Does that mean what I think it does? How can—”

  “It means nothing, now. But I owe Mark. We all do. He killed Ryoval, you know.”

  “I was beginning to realize it had to be so. I just didn’t see how.”

  “With both hands tied behind his back, he says. I believe him.” She turned again toward Ryoval’s suite.

  “That was Mark?” Miles muttered, heading reluctantly in the opposite direction. He couldn’t have acquired some other clone-brother while he was dead, could he? “It didn’t sound like Mark. For one thing, he sounded like he was glad to see me. That’s Mark?”

  “Oh, yes,” said Quinn. “That was Mark all right.”

  He quickened his pace. Even Taura had to lengthen her stride to keep up.

  Chapter Thirty

  The Dendarii’s little personnel shuttle kept pace with Baron Fell’s larger drop shuttle; they arrived at the Durona Group’s clinic almost simultaneously. A House Dyne shuttle belonging temporarily to ImpSec was waiting politely across the street from the entrance, by the little park. Just waiting.

  As they were circling for a landing, Miles asked Quinn, who was piloting, “Elli—if we were flying along, in a lightflyer or an aircar or something, and I suddenly ordered you to crash it, would you?”

  “Now?” asked Quinn, startled. The shuttle lurched.

  “No! Not now. I mean theoretically. Obey, instantly, no questions asked.”

  “Well, sure, I suppose so. I’d ask questions afterward though. Probably with my hands wrapped around your neck.”

  “That’s what I thought.” Miles sat back, satisfied.

  They rendezvoused with Baron Fell at the front entrance, where the gate guards prepared to code open a portal in the force screen. Fell frowned at the three Dendarii in their half-armor, Quinn and Bel and Taura, trailing Miles in his grey knits.

  “This is my facility,” Fell pointed out. His own pair of green-clad men eyed them without favor.

  “These are my bodyguards,” said Miles, “for whom I have a demonstrated need. Your force screen appears to have a malfunction.”

  “He was taken care of,” said Fell grimly. “That won’t happen again.”

  “Nevertheless.” By way of concession, Miles jerked his thumb at the shuttle by the park. “My other friends can wait outside.”

  Fell frowned, thinking it over. “All right,” he said at last. They followed him inside. Hawk met them, bowed to the Baron, and escorted them formally up through the series of lift tubes to Lilly Durona’s penthouse. .

  The word for it, Miles thought, rising past the chromium railing, was “tableau.” It was all arranged as perfectly as any stage setting.

  Mark was the centerpiece. He sat back comfortably in Lilly Durona’s own chair, his bandaged right foot propped on a silk pillow on the low round tea table. Surrounded by Duronas. Lilly herself, her white hair braided today like a crown wreathing her head, stood at Mark’s right hand, leaning bemusedly on the upholstered chair back, smiling down beneficently upon the top of his head. Hawk took up position on Mark’s left side. Dr. Chrys, Dr. Poppy, and Dr. Rose clustered admiringly around them. Dr. Chrys had a large fire-extinguisher by her knee. Rowan was not here. The window had been repaired.

  On the center of the table sat a transparent cold-box. Within it lay a severed hand wearing a big silver ring set with what appeared to be a square black onyx.

  Mark’s physical appearance disturbed Miles. He had been braced to witness traumas of unnamed tortures, but Mark was covered neck to ankle in concealing grey knits like his own. Only the bruises on his face and the bandage on his foot hinted at the past five days’ activities. But his face and body were strangely and unhealthily bloated, his stomach shockingly so, more than the stoutly-balanced figure he’d seen here in Dendarii uniform just a few days ago, and far beyond the almost-duplicate of himself he’d tried to rescue from the raid on the clone creche four months ago. In another person, Baron Fell for example, the near-obesity wouldn’t have made him even blink, but Mark … could this be Miles himself, someday, if he slowed down? He had a sudden urge to swear off desserts. Elli was frankly staring, horrified and repelled.

  Mark was smiling. A little control box lay under his right hand. His index finger kept pressure on a button.

  Baron Fell saw the cold-box containing the hand, and started for it, crying, “Ah!”

  “Stop,” said Mark.

  The Baron stopped, and cocked his head at him. “Yes?” he said warily.

  “The object you are interested in is sitting in that sealed box on top of a small thermal grenade. Controlled,” he lifted his hand with the remote in it, “by this dead-man switch. There is a second, positive-control switch in the hands of another person, outside of this room. Stun me or jump me, and it will go off. Frighten me, and my hand might slip. Tire me out, and my finger might give way. Annoy me enough, and I might just let go for the hell of it.”

  “The fact that you have made such an arrangement,” said Fell slowly, “tells me you know the value of what you hold. You wouldn’t. You’re bluffing.” He stared piercingly at Lilly.

  “Don’t try me,” said Mark, still smiling. “After five days of your half-brother’s hospitality, I’m in a real hostile mood. What’s in that box is valuable to you. Not to me. However,” he took a breath, “you do have some things that are valuable to me. Baron, let’s Deal.”

  Fell sucked on his lower lip, and stared into Mark’s glittering eyes. “I’ll listen,” he said at last.

  Mark nodded. A couple of Duronas hurried to bring chairs for Baron Fell and Miles; the bodyguards arranged themselves standing. Fell’s guards looked like they were thinking hard, watching the box and their master; the Dendarii watched the green-clad guards in turn. Fell settled himself with a formal air, half-smiling, eyes intent.

  “Tea?” inquired Lilly.

  “Thank you,” said the Baron. The two Durona children hurried out at her nod. The ritual was begun. Miles sat gingerly, and clamped his teeth together, hard. Whatever was going on here, he hadn’t been briefed. It was clearly Mark’s show. But he wasn’t entirely sure Mark was sane, right now. Smart, yes. Sane, no. Baron Fell looked like he might be coming to the same conclusion, staring across the tea table at his self-appointed host.

  The two opponents waited in silence for the tea to arrive, sizing each other up the while. The boy brought in t
he tray, and set it beside the gruesome box. The girl poured just two cups, Lilly’s finest imported Japan Green, for Mark and the Baron, and offered tea cookies with them.

  “No,” said Mark to the cookies in a tone of loathing, “thank you.” The Baron took two, and nibbled one. Mark started to lift his tea cup left-handed, but his hand was shaking too badly, and he set it hastily back in its saucer on the arm of Lilly’s chair before it could spill and scald. The girl slipped silently up to him, and lifted it to his lips; he sipped and nodded gratefully, and she settled down with the cup by his left knee to serve again at his word. He’s hurt one hell of a lot worse than he’s managing to look right now, Miles realized, his stomach cold. The Baron looked at Mark’s trembling left hand, and more dubiously at his right, and shifted uneasily.

  “Baron Fell,” Mark said, “I think you will agree with me that time is of the essence. Shall I begin?”

  “Please do.”

  “In that cold-box,” Mark nodded toward the severed hand, “is the key to House Ryoval. Ry Ryoval’s, ah, secret decoder ring.” Mark cackled loudly, bit back the laugh, and nodded to the girl for another sip of tea. He regained control of his voice and continued. “Embedded in the ring’s crystal are all of the late Baron Ryoval’s personal code-keys. Now, House Ryoval has a peculiar administrative structure. To say that Ry Ryoval was a paranoid control freak would be a gross understatement. But Ryoval is dead, leaving his scattered subordinates at scattered locations without their accustomed direction. When the rumors of his death reach them, who knows what they will do? You’ve seen one example.

  “And a day or two from now, the vultures will be flying in from all over to tear at the carcass of House Ryoval. Possession is rather more than nine points of the non-existent law around here. House Bharaputra alone has obvious congruent interests in House Ryoval’s wares. I’m sure you can think of others, Baron.”

  Fell nodded.

  “But a man who had Ryoval’s own code-keys in his hand today could be at a considerable advantage,” Mark went on. “Particularly if he was well-supplied with personnel to provide material back-up. Without the tedious delays of cracking Ryoval’s codes one by one, he could put himself in position to take immediate control of most or all of House Ryoval’s current assets, from the top down instead of piecemeal. Add to that a well-known tie of blood to lend legitimacy to his claims, and I think most of the competition would sheer off without need for any expensive confrontation at all.”

 

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