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“Am I s-supposed to th-thank you for this?” Bonn asked Miles through chattering teeth. Their hands and feet swung like paralyzed lumps; he leaned on Miles, Miles hung on him, hobbling down the road together.

“We got what we wanted, eh? He’s going to plasma the fetaine on-site before the wind shifts in the morning. Nobody dies. Nobody gets their nuts curdled. We win. I think.” Miles emitted a deathly cackle through numb lips.

“I never thought,” wheezed Bonn, “that I’d ever meet anybody crazier than Metzov.”

“I didn’t do anything you didn’t,” protested Miles. “Except I made it work. Sort of. It’ll all look different in the morning, anyway.”

“Yeah. Worse,” Bonn predicted glumly.

* * *

Miles jerked up out of an uneasy doze on his cell cot when the door hissed open. They were bringing Bonn back.

Miles rubbed his unshaven face. “What time is it out there, Lieutenant?”

“Dawn.” Bonn looked as pale, stubbled, and criminally low as Miles felt. He eased himself down on his cot with a pained grunt.

“What’s happening?”

“Service Security’s all over the place. They flew in a captain from the mainland, just arrived, who seems to be in charge. Metzov’s been filling his ear, I think. They’re just taking depositions, so far.”

“They get the fetaine taken care of?”

“Yep.” Bonn vented a grim snicker. “They just had me out to check it, and sign the job off. The bunker made a neat little oven, all right.”

“Ensign Vorkosigan, you’re wanted,” said the security guard who’d delivered Bonn. “Come with me now.”

Miles creaked to his feet and limped toward the cell door. “See you later, Lieutenant.”

“Right. If you spot anybody out there with breakfast, why don’t you use your political influence to send ’em my way, eh?”

Miles grinned bleakly. “I’ll try.”

Miles followed the guard up the stockade’s short corridor. Lazkowski Base’s stockade was not exactly what one would call a high-security facility, being scarcely more than a living quarters bunker with doors that only locked from the outside, and no windows. The weather usually made a better guard than any force screen—not to mention the five-hundred-kilometer-wide ice-water moat surrounding the island.

The Base security office was busy this morning. Two grim strangers stood waiting by the door, a lieutenant and a big sergeant with the Horus-eye insignia of Imperial Security on their sleek uniforms. Imperial Security, not Service Security. Miles’s very own Security, who had guarded his family all his father’s political life. Miles regarded them with possessive delight.

The Base security clerk looked harried, his desk console lit up and blinking. “Ensign Vorkosigan, sir, I need your palm print on this.”

“All right. What am I signing?”

“Just the travel orders, sir.”

“What? Ah . . .” Miles paused, holding up his plastic-mitted hands. “Which one?”

“The right, I guess would do, sir.”

With difficulty, Miles peeled off the right mitten with his awkward left. His hand glistened with the medical gel that was supposed to be healing the frostbite. His hand was swollen, red-blotched and mangled-looking, but the stuff must be working. All his fingers now wriggled. It took three tries, pressing down on the ID pad, before the computer recognized him.

“Now yours, sir,” the clerk nodded to the Imperial Security lieutenant. The ImpSec man laid his hand on the pad and the computer bleeped approval. He lifted it and glanced dubiously at the sticky sheen, looked around futilely for some towel, and wiped it surreptitiously on his trouser seam just behind his stunner holster. The clerk dabbed nervously at the pad with his uniform sleeve, then touched his intercom.

“Am I glad to see you fellows,” Miles told the ImpSec officer. “Wish you’d been here last night.”

The lieutenant did not smile in return. “I’m just a courier, Ensign. I’m not supposed to discuss your case.”

General Metzov ducked through the door from the inner office, a sheaf of plastic flimsies in one hand and a Service Security captain at his elbow, who nodded warily to his counterpart on the Imperial side.

The general was almost smiling. “Good morning, Ensign Vorkosigan.” His glance took in Imperial Security without dismay. Dammit, ImpSec should be making that near-murderer shake in his combat boots. “It seems there’s a wrinkle in this case even I hadn’t realized. When a Vor lord involves himself in a military mutiny, a charge of high treason follows automatically.”

“What?” Miles swallowed, to bring his voice back down. “Lieutenant, I’m not under arrest by Imperial Security, am I?”

The lieutenant produced a set of handcuffs and proceeded to attach Miles to the big sergeant. Overholt, read the name on the man’s badge, which Miles mentally redubbed Overkill. He had only to lift his arm to dangle Miles like a kitten.

“You are being detained, pending further investigation,” said the lieutenant formally.

“How long?”

“Indefinitely.”

The lieutenant headed for the door, the sergeant and perforce Miles following. “Where?” Miles asked frantically.

“Imperial Security Headquarters.”

Vorbarr Sultana! “I need to get my things—”

“Your quarters have already been cleared.”

“Will I be coming back here?”

“I don’t know, Ensign.”

Late dawn was streaking Camp Permafrost with gray and yellow when the scat-cat deposited them at the shuttlepad. The Imperial Security sub-orbital courier shuttle sat on the icy concrete like a bird of prey accidentally placed in a pigeon cote. Slick and black and deadly, it seemed to break the sound barrier just resting there. Its pilot was at the ready, engines primed for takeoff.

Miles shuffled awkwardly up the ramp after Sergeant Overkill, the handcuff jerking coldly on his wrist. Tiny ice crystals danced in the northeasterly wind. The temperature would be stabilizing this morning, he could tell by the particular dry bite of the relative humidity in his sinuses. Dear God, it was past time to get off this island.

Miles took one last sharp breath, then the shuttle door sealed behind them with a snaky hiss. Within was a thick, upholstered silence that even the howl of the engines scarcely penetrated.

At least it was warm.

* * *

Autumn in the city of Vorbarr Sultana was a beautiful time of year, and today was exemplary. The air was high and blue, the temperature cool and perfect, and even the tang of industrial haze smelled good. The autumn flowers were not yet frosted off, but the Earth-import trees had turned their colors. As he was hustled out of the Security lift van and into a back entrance to the big, blocky building that was Imperial Security Headquarters, Miles glimpsed one such tree. An Earth maple, with carnelian leaves and a silver-gray trunk, across the street. Then the door closed. Miles held that tree before his mind’s eye, trying to memorize it, just in case he never saw it again.

The Security lieutenant produced passes that sped Miles and Overholt through the door guards, then led them into a maze of corridors to a pair of lift tubes. They entered the up tube, not the down one. So, Miles was not being taken directly to the ultra-secure cell block beneath the building. He woke to what this meant, and wished wistfully for the down tube.

They were ushered into an office on an upper level, past a Security captain, then into an inner office. A man, slight, bland, civilian-clothed, with brown hair graying at the temples, sat at his very large comconsole desk, studying a vid. He glanced up at Miles’s escort. “Thank you, Lieutenant, Sergeant. You may go.”