Mark had declared the yacht’s lounge to be the mission-briefing room. He glanced around now at his invitees, draped variously over the furniture secured to the carpeted deck around a fake fireplace that ran a vid program of atavistic dancing flames, complete with infra-red radiance.
Quinn was there, of course, still in her Dendarii uniform. She had entirely overgrazed her fingernails and had taken to cheek-biting instead. Bel Thorne sat silent and reserved, a permanent bleakness emphasizing the fine lines around its eyes. Sergeant Taura loomed next to Thorne, big and puzzled and wary.
It was no strike-group. Mark wondered if he ought to have packed along more muscle … no. If there was one thing his first mission had taught him, it was that if you didn’t have enough force to win, it was better not to engage force at all. What he had done was cream off the maximum expertise the Dendarii could supply on the subject of Jackson’s Whole.
Captain Bothari-Jesek entered, and gave him a nod. “We’re on our way. We’ve broken orbit, and your pilot has the comm. Twenty hours to the first jump point.”
“Thank you, Captain.”
Quinn made a place beside her for Bothari-Jesek; Mark sat on the fake fieldstone hearth with his back to the crackling flames, his hands clasped loosely between his knees. He took a deep breath. “Welcome aboard, and thank you all for coming. You all understand, this is not in official Dendarii expedition, and is neither authorized nor funded by ImpSec. Our expenses are being privately paid by Countess Vorkosigan. You are all listed as being on unpaid personal leave. With one exception, I have no formal authority over any of you. Nor you over me. We do have an urgent mutual interest, which demands we pool our skills and information. The first piece is the proper identity of Admiral Naismith. You’ve brought Captain Thorne and Sergeant Taura up to speed on that, haven’t you, Quinn?”
Bel Thorne nodded. “Old Tung and I had it figured out a long time ago. Miles’s secret identity isn’t as secret as he hoped, I’m afraid.”
“It was news to me,” rumbled Sergeant Taura. “It sure explained a lot I’d wondered about, though.”
“Welcome to the Inner Circle anyway,” said Quinn. “Officially.” She turned to Mark. “All right, what do you have? A connection, finally?”
“Oh, Quinn. I’m up to my ass in connections. It’s motive I’m missing now.”
“You’re ahead of ImpSec, then.”
“Maybe not for long. They’ve sent an agent to Escobar for more details on the Beauchene Life Center—they’re bound to make the same connection I did. Eventually. But I planned this expedition with a primary list of twenty sites on Jackson’s Whole to re-check in depth. As a result of something I found in Norwood’s personal effects, I’ve altered the order of the list. If Miles gets revived—which is part of my hypothesis—how long d’you think it would be till he did something to draw attention to himself?”
“Not long,” said Bothari-Jesek reluctantly.
Quinn nodded wryly. “Though he could well wake amnesic, for a time.” Or forever, she did not add aloud, though Mark could see the fear in her face. “It’s almost more normal than not, in cryo-revivals.”
“The thing is—ImpSec and we are not the only ones looking for him. I’m getting a timing-itch. Whose attention will he draw first?”
“Mm,” said Quinn glumly. Thorne and Taura exchanged a worried look.
“All right.” Mark rubbed his hands through his hair. He did not rise and pace, Miles-fashion; for one thing, Quinn’s disapproving glances made him feel like he was starting to waddle. “Here’s what I found and here’s what I think. When Norwood was on Escobar for his cryo-prep training, he met a certain Dr. Roberta or Rowanna Durona, from Jackson’s Whole, who was there also taking a residency in cryo-revival. They had some positive relationship, enough, anyway, that when Norwood was cornered at Bharaputra’s, he remembered her. And trusted her enough to ship her the cryo-chamber. Remember, Norwood was also under the impression at this time that House Fell was our ally. Because the Durona Group works for House Fell.”
“Wait a minute,” said Quinn instantly. “House Fell claims not to have the cryo-chamber!”
Mark held up a restraining hand. “Let me give you a little Jacksonian history, as far as I know it. About ninety or a hundred years ago—”
“My God, Lord Mark, how long is this story going to be?” asked Bothari-Jesek. Quinn glanced up sharply at her use of the Barrayaran honorific.
“Bear with me. You have to understand who the Durona Group is. About ninety years ago, the present Baron Ryoval’s father was setting up his arcane little genetic slave-trade, the manufacture of humans to order. At some point it occurred to him: Why hire genius from outside? Grow your own. Mental properties are the most elusive to create genetically, but the old Ryoval was a genius himself. He started a project that culminated in the creation of a woman he named Lilly Durona. She was to be his medical research muse, his slave-doctor. In both senses.
“She grew, was trained, and put to work. And she was brilliant. About this time the old Baron Ryoval died, not too mysteriously, during an early attempt at a brain transplant.
“I say not too mysteriously because of the character his son and successor, the present Baron Ryoval, immediately revealed. His first project was to get rid of all his potential sibling-rivals. The old man had sired a lot of children. Ryoval’s early career is something of a Jacksonian legend. The eldest and most dangerous males, he simply had assassinated. The females and some of the younger males he sent to his body-modification laboratories, and thence to his very-private bordellos, to service the customers on that side of the business. I suppose they’re all dead by now. If they’re lucky.
“Ryoval also, apparently, used this direct management approach on the staff he had inherited. His father had handled Lilly Durona as a cherished treasure, but the new Baron Ryoval threatened to send her after his sisters, to satisfy the biological fantasies of his customers directly, if she didn’t cooperate. She began to plot her escape with a despised young half-brother of Ryoval’s by the name of Georish Stauber.”
“Ah! Baron Fell!” said Thorne. Thorne was looking enlightened, Taura fascinated, Quinn and Bothari-Jesek horrified.
“The same, but not yet. Lilly and young Georish escaped to the protection of House Fell. In fact, I gather that Lilly was Georish’s ticket in. They both set up in service to their new masters, with considerable negotiated autonomy, at least on Lilly’s part. It was the Deal. Deals are as semi-sacred as anything can be, on Jackson’s Whole.
“Georish began to rise through the ranks of House Fell. And Lilly began the Durona Research Group by cloning herself. Again and again. The Durona Group, which is now up to thirty or forty cloned sisters, serves House Fell in several ways. It’s sort of a family doctor for upper level Fell executives who don’t want to entrust their health to outside specialist houses like Bharaputra. And since House Fell’s stock in trade is weapons, they’ve done R&D on military poisons and biologicals. And their antidotes. The Durona Group made House Fell a small fortune on Peritaint, and a few years later made it a huge fortune on Peritaint’s antidote. The Durona Group is kind of quietly famous, if you follow that sort of thing. Which ImpSec does. There was a pile of stuff on ’em even in the stripped-down files they let me see. Though most of this is common knowledge on Jackson’s Whole.
“Georish, not least owing to the coup he brought House Fell in the person of Lilly, ascended to the pinnacle a few years back when he became Baron Fell. Now, enter the Dendarii Mercenaries. And now you have to tell me what happened.” Mark nodded to Bel Thorne. “I’ve only caught garbled bits.”
Bel whistled. “I knew some of this, but I don’t think I’d ever heard the whole story. No wonder Fell and Ryoval hate each other.” It glanced at Quinn: she nodded permission to proceed. “Well, about four years ago, Miles brought the Dendarii a little contract. It was for a pick-up. Our Employer—excuse me, Barrayar, I’ve been calling them Our Employer for so long it’s a reflex.”