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“I didn’t,” Guar said. “I always said her nose was too short.”

“All right, all right,” Heris said, fighting back a chuckle. “I get your point. We’re all old friends and we all made a mistake, and we go on from here, sadder but wiser. If Sirkin dies, a lot sadder.”

“I’d bet on her to make it,” Petris said. “With Lady Cecelia sitting there radiating mother-hen protectiveness. She doesn’t need speech to convey how much she cares.”

Heris’s tight beam receiver lit again, and she picked up the headset. “Heris, how close are you to your critical jump distance?”

She looked at Oblo and mouthed, “Jump? How long?” He looked at his plot and punched in some corrections, then looked again.

“Less than an hour, Captain—looks like we might make it. Forty-three minutes and a handful of seconds, to be more precise.”

Heris relayed that to Livadhi. “Good,” he said. “If nothing else lights up, I’ll expect you to jump out of here as soon as you can—take my medical teams with you for now—and I’ll cover your backtrail. Don’t tell me your destination, but do you need any coordinates for a safe jump out?”

“Yes,” Heris said. “I’d like to clear the Benignity with one jump—possible?”

“Yes—here—” He read off a string of numbers that Heris passed to Oblo. When she read them back, he said, “Fine. Now—I am authorized to say that the situation we both know about is extremely unstable. The Council would like to speak with Lady Cecelia at her earliest convenience; Lord Thornbuckle has filed a Question with the Grand Table; the Crown asks if you can transport a certain Mr. Smith and his friend back home.”

“Medical intervention must come first,” Heris said, her mind beginning to buzz with the implications of Livadhi’s report.

“Of course. I understand. I would urge extreme caution, and suggest that we rendezvous for your return so that we can provide an escort. You might also consider rearming—”

“Thank you,” Heris said. “Give me a contact coordinate.” Another string of numbers followed. Then Livadhi broke contact. Minute by minute the yacht edged closer to safety. Heris kept expecting something else to go wrong—another Compassionate Hand ship appearing in their path, another crisis aboard—but nothing interrupted them, and at last Oblo was able to put them back into jump mode, into the undefined and chaotic existence that lay between the times and spaces they knew.

Livadhi’s trauma teams had turned two of the guest suites into sickbays. In one, Sirkin lay attached to more tubes and wires than she had arms and legs. Beside her, on a stretcher, Lady Cecelia lay on her side holding Sirkin’s hand. Across that room, two of the less critically wounded were dozing, their bandages making humps and lumps under the bedclothes.

“Lady Cecelia,” Heris said. Her employer looked only slightly better than Sirkin, pale and exhausted.

“I . . . told . . . you . . .” Her own voice, with its cracked and uneven tone, was just understandable.

“You did, and you were right. I’m very sorry. I should have listened to you.”

“If . . . I . . . could . . . talk . . . dammit . . .”

“I know—you have so much to say—and your people died, too. Must be much worse for you—”

“Thought . . . we . . . all . . . die . . .”

“So did I, for a while there. Let me tell you what happened.” Heris outlined the events, and then waited for Cecelia’s response.

“Damn . . . lucky . . .”

“It’s not over,” Heris said. “We have to get you all to Guerni; we have to get you home safely, and survive whatever’s going on. And find out who’s doing it, and why.”

“Lorenza . . . Tourinos,” Cecelia said. “Remember . . .”

“I will. But you’re going to be able to give your own testimony.”

The Guerni Republic’s customs were as quick and capable with incoming medical emergencies as with casual trade. Heris requested the fastest possible incoming lane; customs sent an escort alongside to do a close-up scan.

“You’ve been here before; your references are good; you’re cleared with the usual warnings,” the escort officer said.

“Thanks. What about a medical shuttle from the Station?”

“We’ll arrange it. Actually, trauma cases may not need to go downside; we have major medical available on all stations. We normally handle everything onstation unless that facility is full—saves transport stress and time.”

Heris was impressed all over again. It made sense, but in Familias space, most stations transferred serious trauma down to the planet. She had heard it explained as being more cost-effective, but the Guernesi were supposed to be the galaxy experts on cost-effectiveness.

When they arrived at the Station, medical teams awaited them dockside, and the casualties were transferred quickly to the Station trauma center. Cecelia would be shuttled down to the neuromedical center later; she had agreed to have Meharry and Ginese escort her there. Heris would stay up at the Station until Sirkin was out of danger. As soon as she had arranged a private shuttle for Cecelia, her surviving attendants, and her bodyguards, Heris went to the Station hospital.

“Just barely in time,” she was told. “That artificial blood substitute saved her, but you really pushed its limits—should have been using exterior gas exchange as well . . . I’m surprised your doctors didn’t.”

Heris decided not to explain the limits of transferring medical equipment between ships in deep space while in hostile territory. “When they’ve finished packing up on our ship, maybe they’ll talk to you about it,” she said. After all, Livadhi’s medical teams had already said they wanted to explore the medical riches of the system.

“And we have a newer substitute with a better performance you might want to consider stocking—a license to manufacture would be available through our medical technology exports office—”

Typical. To the Guernesi, every disaster had the seeds of profit in it. “When can I see our casualties?” she asked. “Especially Brigdis Sirkin . . .”

“The two worst, not for at least two days. They’ll have two long sessions in regen, but they need transfusions first. The other three will be out of the regen tanks in another six hours, so any time after that—”

Heris went back to the yacht, and found that Livadhi’s teams had scoured the areas they’d been using; these now smelled like any sickbay. But one of them stopped her in the midst of her thanks.

“What’s this, Captain?” The woman held up an unmistakable cockroach egg case. Heris had a sudden vision of being detained forever on a charge of importing illegal biologicals.

“An egg case,” Heris said, trying to sound unconcerned. Inspiration hit. “We had to evacuate Lady Cecelia from Rotterdam in haste; we had no time for proper disinfection procedures. And she was living at a training stable.”

“Ah. I presume you disinfected the ship—?”

“Oh, yes. I can’t be sure we got them all, but we’ll do it again. It was on my schedule, but then we came out of jump in the wrong place—”

“Oh—of course.” The woman’s accusing expression relaxed. “I’d forgotten about Lady Cecelia’s luggage . . . and from a stable yard . . . it’s just that contamination from vermin is a serious problem.”

You don’t know the half of it, Heris thought. At least they’d found an egg case, and not one of the albino cockroaches. She wasn’t about to tell this starchy person about the cockroach colonies down in ’ponics.

“They were telling me in the hospital here that they have a newer, more efficient oxygen-exchange fluid for blood replacement,” she said. Sure enough, that took the woman’s attention off cockroach egg cases.

“Really! Expensive?”

“They said something about a license to manufacture—if you found something the Fleet wanted to use, it might make your time here worthwhile.”