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“Have you considered another possible solution to the problem?” said Quinn slowly. “Send ahead to Jackson’s Whole and warn them. Have, say, House Fell arrest Mark and impound the Ariel till you arrive to retrieve them. Fell hates Ryoval enough to protect Mark from him for the annoyance-factor alone.”

Miles sighed. “I have considered it.” He traced a formless pattern on the polished tabletop with his fingertip.

“You asked for a cross-check, Miles,” Elena pointed out. “What’s wrong with that idea?”

“It might work. But if Mark has really convinced Bel he’s me, they might resist arrest. Maybe fatally. Mark is paranoid about Jackson’s Whole. Mark is paranoid, period. I don’t know what he’d do in a panic.”

“You are awfully tender of Mark’s sensibilities,” said Elena.

“I’m trying to get him to trust me. I can hardly start the process by betraying him.”

“Have you considered how much this little side-jaunt is going to cost, once the bill for it arrives on Simon Illyan’s desk?” Quinn asked.

“ImpSec will pay. Without question.”

Quinn said, “You sure? What’s Mark to ImpSec anyway, now that he’s only a left-over from the exploded plot? There is no danger any more to Barrayar of him being secretly substituted for you. I thought they only watched him for us as a courtesy. A rather expensive courtesy.”

Miles replied carefully, “It is ImpSec’s explicit task to guard the Barrayaran Imperium. That includes not only protecting Gregor’s person, and running a certain amount of galactic espionage—” a wave of his hand included the Dendarii fleet, and Illyan’s far-flung, if thinly stretched, network of agents, military attaches, and informants, “but also keeping watch over Gregor’s immediate heirs. Keeping watch not only to protect them, but to protect the Imperium from any little plot got up by them, or by others seeking to use them. I am acutely conscious that the question of just who is Gregor’s heir is rather tangled at present. I wish to hell he’d marry and get us all off the hook soon.” Miles hesitated for a long moment. “By one interpretation, Lord Mark Pierre Vorkosigan has a place as heir-claimant to the Barrayaran Imperium second only to my own. That makes him not only ImpSec’s business, it makes him our primary business. My personal pursuit of the Ariel is fully justified.”

“Justifiable,” Quinn corrected dryly.

“Whatever.”

“If Barrayar—as you have often claimed—would not accept you as Emperor because of suspicion of mutation, I should think it’d go into spasms at the thought of your clone installed in the Imperial Residence,” said Baz. “Twin brother,” he amended hastily as Miles opened his mouth.

“It doesn’t require the probability of success at gaining the Imperium to make the possibility of an attempt to do so into an ImpSec problem.” Miles snorted. “It’s funny. All the time the Komarrans thought of their faux-Miles as an imposter-claimant. I don’t think either they or Mark realized they’d made a real claimant. Well, I’d have to be dead first anyway, so from my point of view the question is moot.” He rapped the table and rose. “Let’s get moving, people.”

On the way out the door, Elena lowered her voice to ask him, “Miles—did your mother see those horrific investigation-reports of Illyan’s about Mark, too?”

He smiled bleakly. “Who d’you think ordered them done?”

Chapter Five

He began donning the half-armor. First, next to his skin, a piece of the hottest new technology on the market: a nerve-disrupter shield-net. The field-generating net was worked into the fabric of a close-fitting grey body-suit and a hood that protected skull, neck, and forehead, leaving only his eyes, nose, and mouth peeping from the hole. And so the threat of one of the most fearsome anti-personnel weapons, the brain-killing nerve disrupter, was rendered null. As an added bonus, the suit stopped stunner-fire, too. Trust Naismith to have the best and newest, and custom-made to fit … was the elastic fabric supposed to be this bloody tight?

Over the net-suit went a flexible torso-armor that would stop any projectile up to small hand-missiles and down to deadly needier spines. Fortunately for his ability to breathe, its catches were adjustable. He let them out to their fullest extension, rendering the valuable protection merely comfortably and correctly snug. Over it went blessedly loose camouflage-grey fatigues, made of a combat-rated fabric that would neither melt nor burn. Then came belts and bandoliers with stunner, nerve disrupter, plasma arc, grenades, power cells, a rappel-harness and spool, emergency oxygen. On his back he shrugged the harness holding a neat, flat power pack that generated, at the first touch of enemy fire, a one-man-sized plasma arc mirror field, with so miniscule a time lag one barely had time to cook, much. It was good for absorbing thirty or forty direct hits before the power cell, and its porter, died. It seemed almost a misnomer to call it all half-armor: triple armor was more like it.

Over the nerve-disruptor net covering his feet he pulled thick socks, then Naismith’s combat boots. At least the boots fit without any embarrassing adjustments. A mere week of inactivity, and his body fought him, thickening … Naismith was a damned anorectic, that was it. A hyperactive anorectic. He straightened. Properly distributed, the formidible array of equipment was surprisingly light.

On the countertop next to his cabin comconsole, the command helmet sat waiting. The empty shadow beneath its forehead flange made him think, for whatever morbid reason, of an empty skull. He raised the helmet in his hands, and turned it in the light, and stared hungrily at its elegant curves. His hands could control one weapon, two at most. This, through the people it commanded, controlled dozens; potentially, hundreds or even thousands. This was Naismith’s real power.

The cabin buzzer blatted; he jumped, nearly dropping the helmet. He could have pitched it against the wall and not harmed it, but still he set it down carefully.

“Miles?” came Captain Thorne’s voice on the intercom. “You about ready?”

“Yes, come in.” He touched the keypad to release the door lock.

Thorne entered, attired identically to himself, but with hood temporarily pushed back. The formless fatigues rendered Thorne not bi-sexed, but neuter, a genderless thing, a soldier. Thorne too bore a command helmet under its arm, of a slightly older and different make.

Thorne walked around him, eyes flicking over every weapon and belt-hook, and checking the readouts of his plasma-shield pack. “Good.” Did Captain Thorne normally inspect its Admiral before combat? Was Naismith in the habit of wandering into battle with his boots unfastened, or something? Thorne nodded to the command helmet sitting on the countertop. “That’s quite a machine. Sure you can handle it?”

The helmet appeared new, but not that new. He doubted Naismith supplied himself with used military surplus for his personal use, regardless of what economies he practiced in the fleet at large. “Why not?” he shrugged. “I have before.”

“These things,” Thorne lifted his own, “can be pretty overwhelming at first. It’s not a data flow, it’s a damn data flood. You have to learn to ignore everything you don’t need, otherwise it can be almost better to switch the thing off. You, now …” Thorne hesitated, “have that same uncanny ability as old Tung did, of appearing to ignore everything as it goes by, and yet being able to remember and yank it out instantly if it’s needed. Of somehow always being on the right channel at the right time. It’s like your mind works on two levels. Your command-response time is incredibly fast, when your adrenalin is up. It’s kind of addictive. People who work with you a lot come to expect—and rely—on it.” Thorne stopped, waited.

What was it expecting him to say? He shrugged again. “I do my best.”