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“You can’t possibly,” her father said again, but this time with no strength. He led the way to his study without another word; Esmay followed, forcing herself not to strike him down from behind. He moved to the console, and stabbed at the controls. Esmay noticed that his fingers were shaking; she felt a calm satisfaction. Then he stepped back, and she came forward to look.

The faces came up, six to a screen. She stared at them, one part of her mind sure that she would know, and another sure that she wouldn’t. Had her father even called up the right year? He wanted her to fail, that was clear enough. He might have cheated—but she could not believe that of him, even now.

Suizas did not lie . . . and he was her father.

He had lied before, because he was her father. She tore her mind away from that dilemma and stared at the screen.

She did not recognize most of the faces at all. She had no reason to; she had not been to Buhollow Barracks after her father was posted there. She found a few faces vaguely familiar, but unthreatening. They would have been men who had served with her father before, even among the household guard at the estancia. Among them, a much younger Sebastian Coron, whom she recognized instantly . . . so her memory was clear in some details that far back.

She could hear her father’s breathing, as she scrolled through the list. She did not look at him. It was hard enough to focus on the screen, to breathe through the tightness in her throat. Screen after screen . . . she heard her father shift in his chair, but he did not interrupt. Someone came to the door; she heard the rustle of clothing, but did not look up. Her father must have gestured, for without a word she heard the rustle of clothing retreat, and the gentle thud of the door as it shut.

Through the entire enlisted ranks, and she had not found that face her mind refused to show her. Doubts chilled her. The face she remembered had been contorted with whatever emotion makes men rape children . . . she might never find it among these solemn, almost expressionless faces in the catalog. It must be here . . . surely Coron would have told her if it had been someone in another unit, or an officer.

Or would he? She made herself keep going, to the officer ranks. There at the head was her father, no gray in his hair, his mouth one long firm line. Beneath, in descending order, the . . . her breath caught. Yes. Her heart fluttered then raced thunderously in her chest, spurred by the old fear. He stared out of the page, sleek and handsome, the honey-colored hair swept back . . . she remembered it darker, matted with sweat and dirt. But no doubt at all, not one.

She searched his face for clues to his choices . . . for some mark of depravity. Nothing. Regular features, clear gray eyes—coloring not that common on Altiplano, but much prized. The little button of an honor graduate, the braid on his epaulet that declared him an eldest son, of whom more was expected. His mouth was set in a straight line, a conscious copy of her father’s . . . it looked no crueler. His name . . . she knew his name. She knew his family. She had danced with his younger brothers, at the Harvest Games, the year before she left Altiplano for the stars.

Her mouth was too dry to speak. She struggled to swallow, to clear her tongue. She had struggled then, too. Finally she got out a word: “This.” She laid her finger on the image, surprised at the steadiness of her hand; her finger didn’t tremble at all.

Her father got up; she could hear him coming up behind her and fought not to flinch away. He grunted first, as if someone had slugged him in the belly. “Gods! You did—how did you—?”

Anger released her tongue. “I told you. I remember.”

“Esmaya . . .” It was a groan, a plea, and his hand on her hair was another. She slid aside from it, pushing herself away from the console, scrambling out of the chair.

“I didn’t know his name,” she said. Amazingly, it was easy to keep her tone even, her words crisp. “I was too young to have been introduced, even if he’d been at our house before. I couldn’t tell you his name, or give the kind of description that an adult might have been able to give. But I knew. You did not show me the rolls then, did you?”

Her father’s face, when she looked, might have been carven in bleached wood; it looked dry and stiff, unnatural. Was that her vision, or his reality? Her gaze wandered away, around the room, just noticing the familiar things before moving on to something else. In her mind, more and more of the certainties shifted, as if stone walls had been only scenery painted on movable screens. What did she really know about herself, about her past? What could she rely on?

Against this chaos the past years in Fleet stood firm: she knew what had happened there. From her first day in the prep school to the last day of the court-martial, she knew exactly what she had done, and who had done what to her. She had created that world for herself; she could trust it. Admiral Vida Serrano, an easy match for her father, had never lied to her . . . had never screened anyone else, at her expense.

Whatever she had had to suppress, to limit, in herself in order to make this haven was expendable. She didn’t need to find the part of herself that had loved to ride, or paint, or play antique instruments . . . she needed to keep herself safe, and she had managed that quite well. She could give up Altiplano; she had already done it.

“Esmaya . . . I’m sorry.” He probably was, she let herself think, but it didn’t matter. He was sorry too late and too little. “If—since you remember, you probably need therapy.”

“Therapy here?” That got out before she could control the emotion in it, the scorn and anger. “Here, where the therapists told me it was all my imagination, all fever dreams?”

“I’m sorry,” he said, but this time with an edge of irritation. She knew that tone; he could apologize, but that was supposed to be the end of it. She was supposed to accept that apology and let it go. Not this time. Not again. “I—we—made a mistake, Esmaya. We can’t change that now; it’s past. I can’t possibly convince you how badly I feel about it—that it was a mistake—but there were reasons. I asked advice . . .”

“Don’t,” she said harshly. “Don’t make excuses. I’m not stupid; I can see what you would like to call the realities. He—” she could not bring herself to dirty her mouth with the name. “He was an officer, the son of a friend; there was a civil war in progress; you could not risk a feud—” Memory reminded her that the young man’s father had commanded a sizable force himself. Not merely a feud, but potentially a lost war. Her military training argued that a child’s pain—even her pain—weighed less than an entire campaign. But the child she had been, the child whose pain still shaped her reactions, the child whose witness had been denied, refused that easy answer. She had not been the only victim—and for the victims, no victories sufficed . . . the victories were not for them, did not help them. Yet defeat promised only more of the same. She squeezed her eyes shut, trying to force back all the feelings that wanted to escape, shut them back into the darkness. “It did not take rejuvenation to make you prudent,” she said, throwing at him the only new weapon she had.

A short silence, during which her father’s breathing was almost as harsh as hers had been that bitter day.

“You need help, Esmaya,” her father said, finally. His voice was almost back to normal, warm and steady; the general in command of himself, a lifetime’s habit. She wanted to relax into the promise of fatherly love and protection.

She dared not. “Probably I do,” she said. “But not here. Not now.” Not with the father who had betrayed her.

“You won’t come back,” he said. He had never been stupid, only selfish. That wasn’t entirely fair, but neither was he. Now he looked at her, as straight a look as he might have given a commander he respected. “You won’t come back again, will you?”