“Your mother and I shared many ideas when we were in school together,” Polly said. “We were very close friends. Still are.”
“You must be to do all this for me,” Orne said, his own voice giving him an oddly alienated feeling. Such banality! Such hypocrisy! But the words flowed right on: “I don’t know how I’m ever going to repay you for…”
“Ah, here we are!” A deep masculine voice boomed from the open door behind Orne. He turned, saw Ipscott Bullone, High Commissioner of the League, suspected conspirator.
Bullone was tall with a face of harsh angles and deep lines. His dark eyes peered from beneath heavy brows and black hair trained in receding waves. He radiated a look of ungainly clumsiness which was probably a political affectation.
He just doesn’t strike me as the dictator or conspirator type, Orne thought.
Bullone advanced into the room, his voice filling it. “Glad you made it out all right, son. Hope everything’s to your taste. If it isn’t you just say the word.”
“It’s… fine,” Orne said.
“Lewis was just telling me how our place is very much like his home on Chargon,” Polly said.
“Old-fashioned, but we like it that way,” Bullone said. “I don’t like the modern trend in architecture. Too mechanical. Give me an old-fashioned tetragon on a central pivot every time.”
“You sound just like my family,” Orne said.
“Good! Good! We usually keep the main salon turned toward the northeast. View of the capital, you know. But if you want the sun, the shade or a breeze in your room, feel free to turn the house on your own.”
“That’s very kind of you,” Orne said. “We have a sea breeze on Chargon that we usually keep the main salon centered on. We like the air.”
“So do we. So do we. You must tell me all about Chargon when we can sit down together, man to man. It’ll be good to get your views on things there.”
“I’m sure Lewis would like to be left alone for a while now,” Polly said. “This is his first day out of the hospital and we mustn’t tire him.”
She’s rushing him out, Orne thought. She hasn’t told him yet that I’ve been away from home since I was seventeen.
Polly crossed to the polawindow, adjusted it to neutral gray, turned the selectacol until the room’s dominant color shifted to green. “There, that’s more restful,” she said. “If there’s anything you need, just ring the bell there by your bed. The autobutle will know what to do or where to find us if it doesn’t.”
“We’ll see you at dinner, then,” Bullone said.
They left.
Orne crossed to the window, looked out at the pool. The young woman hadn’t returned yet. When the chauffeur-driven limousine flitter had dropped down to the house’s landing pad, Orne had seen a parasol and sun hat nodding to each other on the blue tiles beside the pool. The parasol had shielded Polly Bullone. The sun hat had been worn by a shapely young woman in swimming tights. She had rushed off into the house at first sight of the flitter.
Orne thought about the young woman. She had been no taller than Polly, but slender and with golden-red hair caught under the sun hat in a swimmer’s chignon. She wasn’t beautiful—face too narrow and with suggestions of the father’s cragginess. The eyes were overlarge. But her mouth was full-lipped, chin strong. There had been an air of exquisite assurance about her. The total effect had been one of striking elegance—extremely feminine.
So that was his target—Diana Bullone. Where’d she gone in such a hurry?
Orne lifted his gaze to the landscape beyond the pooclass="underline" wooded hills and, dimly on the horizon, a broken line of mountains. The Bullones lived in costly isolation despite their love of traditional simplicity… or perhaps because of it. Urban centers didn’t lend themselves to such old-time elegance. But here, centered in kilometers of wilderness and rugged, planned neglect of countryside, they could be what they wanted to be.
They could also be insulated from prying eyes.
Time to report in, Orne thought. He pressed the neck stud for his transceiver, got Stetson, brought him up to date.
“All right,” Stetson said. “Find the daughter. She fits the description of the woman you saw by the pool.”
“I know,” Orne said. He broke the connection, wondered at himself. He felt that he had become several people—one of them playing Stetson’s game, another off on personal interests, still another observing and disapproving. Through all of this, he felt that some essential core of himself had returned from death to become immersed in life—warm life teeming with beauty and movement. His body performed in one way, but an essential part of him filled with life and force, floated somewhere on a plane which interpreted death as only part of maturing.
It was a sensation of distortion and stretching. He fled from it, changing into light blue fatigues and letting himself out of the room into a curved yellow hallway. A touch to the timebeat repeater at his temple told him it was shortly before local noon. There was latitude for a bit of scouting before they called lunch. He knew from his brief tour of the house and its similarity to his childhood home that the hallway led into the main living salon. Public rooms and men’s quarters would be in this outside ring. Secluded family apartments and women’s quarters would occupy the inner circle.
Orne made his way to the salon. It was a long room built around two sections of the tetragon. Low divans occupied the space beneath the windows, some facing inward, some outward. Thick pile rugs formed a crazy patchwork of reds and browns throughout the room.
At the far end of the salon, a figure in blue fatigues much like his own stood bent over a metal stand. The figure straightened and a tinkle of music filled the room. Orne stood entranced at the familiar sound. It transported him in memory back to his childhood. The instrument was a kaithra. His own sisters had played it in a setting such as this one. He recognized the woman at the kaithra—the same red-gold hair, the same figure. It was the young woman he had seen beside the pool. She wielded two mallets in each hand to play the instrument which lay in a long dish of carved black wood on the metal stand, the strings stretched in six bands of five.
Orne, moody and caught in memories, moved up behind her, his footsteps muffled by the thick carpeting. The music possessed a curious rhythm. It suggested figures dancing wildly around firelight, rising, falling, stamping. She struck a final chord, muted the strings.
“That makes me homesick,” Orne said.
“Oh!” She whirled, gasped. “You startled me. I thought I was alone.”
“Sorry. I was just enjoying the music.”
She smiled. “I am Diana Bullone. You’re Lewis Orne.”
“Lew to all of your family, I hope,” he said. He enjoyed the warmth of her smile.
“Of course… Lew.” She put the mallets atop the kaithra’s strings. “This is a very old instrument. Most people find its music… well, rather strange. The ability to play it has been handed down for generations in mother’s family.”
“The kaithra,” Orne said. “My sisters play it. Been a long time since I’ve heard one.”
“Of course,” she said. “Your mother’s…” She stopped, appeared confused. “I have to get used to the fact that you’re… I mean, that we have a strange man around the house who isn’t exactly strange.”
Orne found himself grinning and aware of self-loathing from the inner observer part of his being.
In spite of the severely cut I-A fatigues and hair pulled back into a tight beretknot, Diana was a handsome woman. She possessed an electric presence. Orne reminded himself that this was Stetson’s prime suspect in the Nathian plot. Diana and Maddie? It was too odd a situation to accept casually. He could not afford to like this woman, but he did. She was the daughter of a family which had been kind to him, which was taking him into its own household as an honored guest. And how was such hospitality being repaid? By spying and prying.