Overholt detached Miles from his wrist as the lieutenant asked, “Uh, will you be safe, sir?”
“I expect so,” said the man dryly.
Yeah, but what about me? Miles wailed inwardly. The two soldiers exited, and left Miles alone, standing literally on the carpet. Unwashed, unshaven, still wearing the faintly reeking black fatigues he’d flung on—only last night? Face weather-raked, with his swollen hands and feet still encased in their plastic medical mittens—his toes now wriggled in their squishy matrix. No boots. He had dozed in a jerky intermittent exhaustion on the two-hour shuttle flight, without being noticeably refreshed. His throat was raw, his sinuses felt stuffed with packing fiber, and his chest hurt when he breathed.
Simon Illyan, Chief of Barrayaran Imperial Security, crossed his arms and looked Miles over slowly, from head to toe and back again. It gave Miles a skewed sense of déja vù.
Practically everyone on Barrayar feared this man’s name, though few knew his face. This effect was carefully cultivated by Illyan, building in part—but only in part—on the legacy of his formidable predecessor, the legendary Security Chief Negri. Illyan and his department, in turn, had provided security for Miles’s father for the twenty years of his political career, and had slipped up only once, during the night of the infamous soltoxin attack. Offhand, Miles knew of no one Illyan feared except Miles’s mother. He’d once asked his father if this was guilt, about the soltoxin, but Count Vorkosigan had replied, No, it was only the lasting effect of vivid first impressions. Miles had called Illyan “Uncle Simon” all his life until he’d entered the Service, “Sir” after that.
Looking at Illyan’s face now, Miles thought he finally grasped the distinction between exasperation, and utter exasperation.
Illyan finished his inspection, shook his head, and groaned, “Wonderful. Just wonderful.”
Miles cleared his throat. “Am I . . . really under arrest, sir?”
“That is what this interview will determine.” Illyan sighed, leaning back in his chair. “I have been up since two hours after midnight over this escapade. Rumors are flying all over the Service, as fast as the vid net can carry them. The facts appear to be mutating every forty minutes, like bacteria. I don’t suppose you could have picked some more public way to self-destruct? Attempted to assassinate the Emperor with your pocketknife during the Birthday Review, say, or raped a sheep in the Great Square during rush hour?” The sarcasm melted to genuine pain. “He had so much hope of you. How could you betray him so?”
No need to ask who “he” was. The Vorkosigan. “I . . . don’t think I did, sir. I don’t know.”
A light blinked on Illyan’s comconsole. He exhaled, with a sharp glance at Miles, and touched a control. The second door to his office, camouflaged in the wall to the right of his desk, slid open, and two men in dress greens ducked through.
Prime Minister Admiral Count Aral Vorkosigan wore the uniform as naturally as an animal wears its fur. He was a man of no more than middle height, stocky, gray-haired, heavy-jawed, scarred, almost a thug’s body and yet with the most penetrating gray eyes Miles had ever encountered. He was flanked by his aide, a tall blond lieutenant named Jole. Miles had met Jole on his last home leave. Now, there was a perfect officer, brave and brilliant—he’d served in space, been decorated for some courage and quick thinking during a horrendous on-board accident, been rotated through HQ while recovering from his injuries, and promptly been snabbled up as his military secretary by the Prime Minister, who had a sharp eye for hot new talent. Jaw-dropping gorgeous, to boot; he ought to be making recruiting vids. Miles sighed in hopeless jealousy every time he ran across him. Jole was even worse than Ivan, who while darkly handsome had never been accused of brilliance.
“Thanks, Jole,” Count Vorkosigan murmured to his aide, as his eye found Miles. “I’ll see you back at the office.”
“Yes, sir.” So dismissed, Jole ducked back out, glancing back at Miles and his superior with worried eyes, and the door hissed closed again.
Illyan still had his hand pressed to a control on his desk. “Are you officially here?” he asked Count Vorkosigan.
“No.”
Illyan keyed something off—recording equipment, Miles realized. “Very well,” he said, editorial doubt injected into his tone.
Miles saluted his father. His father ignored the salute and embraced him gravely, wordlessly, sat in the room’s only other chair, crossed his arms and booted ankles, and said, “Continue, Simon.”
Illyan, who had been cut off in the middle of what had been shaping up, in Miles’s estimation, to be a really classic reaming, chewed his lip in frustration. “Rumors aside,” Illyan said to Miles, “what really happened last night out on that damned island?”
In the most neutral and succinct terms he could muster, Miles described the previous night’s events, starting with the fetaine spill and ending with his arrest/detainment/to-be-determined by Imperial Security. His father said nothing during the whole recitation, but he had a light-pen in his hand which he kept turning absently around and over, tap against his knee, around and over.
Silence fell when Miles finished. The light-pen was driving Miles to distraction. He wished his father would put the damned thing away, or drop it, or anything.
His father slipped the light-pen back into his breast pocket, thank God, leaned back, and steepled his fingers, frowning. “Let me get this straight. You say Metzov hopscotched the command chain and dragooned trainees for his firing squad?”
“Ten of them. I don’t know if they were volunteers or not; I wasn’t there for that part.”
“Trainees.” Count Vorkosigan’s face was dark. “Boys.”
“He was babbling something about it being like the army versus the navy, back on Old Earth.”
“Huh?” said Illyan.
“I don’t think Metzov was any too stable when he was exiled to Kyril Island after his troubles in the Komarr Revolt, and fifteen years of brooding about it didn’t improve his grip.” Miles hesitated. “Will . . . General Metzov be questioned about his actions at all, sir?”
“General Metzov, by your account,” said Admiral Vorkosigan, “dragged a platoon of eighteen-year-olds into what came within a hair of being a mass torture-murder.”
Miles nodded in memory. His body still twinged with assorted agonies.
“For that sin, there is no hole deep enough to hide him from my wrath. Metzov will be taken care of, all right.” Count Vorkosigan was terrifyingly grim.
“What about Miles and the mutineers?” asked Illyan.
“Necessarily, I fear we will have to treat that as a separate matter.”
“Or two separate matters,” said Illyan suggestively.
“Mm. So, Miles, tell me about the men on the other end of the weapons.”
“Techs, sir, mostly. A lot of greekies.”
Illyan winced. “Good God, had the man no political sense at all?”
“None that I ever saw. I thought it would be a problem.” Well, later he’d thought of it, lying awake on his cell cot after the med squad left. The other political ramifications had spun through his mind. Over half the slowly freezing techs had been of the Greek-speaking minority. The language separatists would have been rioting in the streets, had it become a massacre, sure to claim the general had ordered the greekies into the cleanup as racial sabotage. More deaths, chaos reverberating down the timeline like the consequences of the Solstice Massacre? “It . . . occurred to me, that if I died with them, at least it would be crystal clear that it hadn’t been some plot of your government or the Vor oligarchy. So that if I lived, I won, and if I died, I won too. Or at least served. Strategy, of sorts.”