“Keep that reflex,” Mark advised.
Bel nodded. “The Imperium wanted to import a galactic geneticist. I don’t quite know why.” It glanced at Quinn.
“Nor do you need to,” said she.
“But a certain Dr. Canaba, who was then one of House Bharaputra’s top genetics people, wanted to defect. House Bharaputra takes a lethally dim view of employees departing with a head full of trade secrets, so Canaba needed help. He struck a deal with the Barrayaran Imperium to take him in.”
“That’s where I come from,” Taura put in.
“Yes,” said Thorne. “Taura was one of his pet projects. He, um, insisted on taking her along. Unfortunately, the super-soldier project had recently been canceled, and Taura sold to Baron Ryoval, who collects genetic, excuse me Sergeant, oddities. So we had to break her out of House Ryoval, in addition to breaking Canaba out of House Bharaputra. Um, Taura, you’d better say what happened next.”
“The Admiral came and rescued me from Ryoval’s main biologicals facility,” the big woman rumbled. She heaved a large sigh, as if at some sweet memory. “In the process of escaping, we totally destroyed House Ryoval’s main gene banks. A hundred-year-old tissue collection went up in smoke. Literally.” She smiled, baring her fangs.
“House Ryoval lost about fifty percent of its assets that night, Baron Fell estimated,” Thorne added. “At least.”
Mark hooted, then sobered. “That explains why you all think Baron Ryoval’s people will be hunting for Admiral Naismith.”
“Mark,” said Thorne desperately, “if Ryoval finds Miles first, he’ll have him revived just so he can kill him again. And again. And again. That’s why we were all so insistent that you play Miles, when we were pulling out of Jackson’s Whole. Ryoval has no motive to take revenge on the clone, just on the Admiral.”
“I see. Gee. Thanks. Ah, whatever happened to Dr. Canaba? If I may ask.”
“He was delivered safely,” said Quinn. “He has a new name, a new face, a new laboratory, and a salary that ought to keep him happy. A loyal new subject for the Imperium.”
“Hm. Well, that brings me to the other cross-connection. It’s not a new or secret one, though I don’t know yet what to make of it. Neither does ImpSec, incidentally, though as a result of it they’ve sent agents to check the Durona Group twice. Baronne Lotus Bharaputra, the Baron’s wife, is a Durona clone.”
Taura’s clawed hand flew to her lips. “That girl!”
“Yes, that girl. I wondered why she gave me the cold chills. I’d seen her before, in another incarnation. The clone of a clone.
“The Baronne is one of the oldest of Lilly Durona’s clone daughters, or sisters, or whatever you want to call the tribe. Hive. She didn’t sell herself cheaply. Lotus went renegade for one of the biggest bribes in Jacksonian history—co-control, or nearly so, of House Bharaputra. She’s been Baron Bharaputra’s mate for twenty years. And now it seems she’s getting one other thing. The Durona Group among them have an astonishing range of bio-expertise, but they refuse to do clone-brain transplants. It was written right into Lilly Durona’s foundation-deal with House Fell. But Baronne Bharaputra, who must be over sixty-standard, apparently plans to embark on her second youth very shortly. Judging from what we witnessed.”
“Rats,” muttered Quinn.
“So that’s another cross-connection,” said Mark. “In fact, it’s a damned cat’s cradle of cross-connections, once you get hold of the right thread. But it doesn’t explain, to me at least, why the Durona Group would conceal Miles from their own House Fell bosses. Yet they must have done so.”
“If they have him,” Quinn said, gnawing on her cheek.
“If,” Mark conceded. “Although,” he brightened slightly, “it would explain why that incriminating cryo-chamber ended up in the Hegen Hub. The Durona Group wasn’t trying to hide it from ImpSec. They were trying to hide it from other Jacksonians.”
“It almost all fits,” said Thorne.
Mark opened his hands and held them apart palm to palm, as if invisible threads ran back and forth between them. “Yeah. Almost.” He closed his hands together. “So here we are. And there we’re going. Our first trick will be to re-enter Jacksonian space past Fell’s jump point station. Captain Quinn has brought along quite a kit for doctoring our identities. Coordinate your ideas with her on that one. We have ten days to play with it.”
The group broke up, to study the new problems each in his, her, or its own way. Bothari-Jesek and Quinn lingered as Mark rose, and stretched his aching back. His aching brain.
“That was quite a pretty piece of analysis, Mark,” said Quinn grudgingly. “If it’s not all hot air.”
She ought to know. “Thank you, Quinn,” he said sincerely. He too prayed it wouldn’t all turn out to be hallucinatory, an elaborate mistake.
“Yes … he’s changed a bit, I think,” Bothari-Jesek observed judiciously. “Grown.”
“Yeah?” Quinn’s gaze swept him, up and down. “True …”
Mark’s heart warmed in hungry anticipation of a crumb of approval.
“—he’s fatter.”
“Let’s get to work,” Mark growled.
Chapter Twenty-Two
He could remember studying tongue-twisters, once. He could even picture a whole screen-list of them, black words on pale blue. Had it been for some sort of rhetoric course? Unfortunately, though he could picture the screen, he could only remember one of the actual lines. He struggled to sit upright in bed, and try it. “Sheshells … shsh … she shells she shit!” He took a breath, and started over. Again. Again. His tongue seemed thick as an old sock. It felt staggeringly important to recover control of his speech. As long as he kept talking like an idiot, they were going to keep treating him like one.
It could be worse. He was eating real food now, not sugar-water or soft sludge. He’d been showering and dressing on his own for two whole days. No more patient gowns. They’d given him a shirt and pants, instead. Like ship knits. Their grey color at first pleased him, :hen worried him because he could not think why it pleased him. ’She. Sells. Sea. Shells. By. The. Sea. Shore. Ha!” He lay back, wheezing in triumph. He glanced up to see Dr. Rowan leaning in the doorway, watching him with a slight smile.
Still catching his breath, he waved his fingers at her in greeting. She pushed off and came to sit at his side on his bed. She wore her usual concealing green smock, and carried a sack.
“Raven said you were babbling half the night,” she remarked, “but you weren’t, were you. You were practicing.”
“Yuh,” he nodded. “Gotta talk. C’mand—” he touched his lips, and waved vaguely around the room, “obey.”
“You think so, do you?” Her brows arched in amusement but her eyes, beneath them, regarded him sharply. She shifted, and swung his tray table across between them. “Sit up, my authoritarian little friend. I brought you some toys.”
“Sec’on chil’hd,” he muttered glumly, and shoved himself upright again. His chest only ached. At least he seemed done with the more repulsive aspects of his second infancy. A second adolescence still to come? God forbid. Maybe he could skip over that part. Why do I dread an adolescence I cannot remember?
He laughed briefly as she upended the bag and spread about two dozen parts from some disassembled hand weapons across the table. “Test, huh?” He began to pick them up and fit them together. Stunner, nerve disrupter, plasma arc, and a projectile gun … slide, twist, click, knock home … one, two, three, four, he laid them in a row. “Pow’r cells dea’. Not armin’ me, eh? These—extras.” He swept half a dozen spare or odd parts aside into a pile. “Ha. Trick.” He grinned smugly at her.