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The AI was interrupted by a different chime. Riel's secretary's tone; Richard put himself on hold, his image hanging motionless as Riel answered the other call. “Yes, Anne?”

“Ma'am, I have a Mr. Tobias Hardy from Unitek here to see you. And General Frye.”

Riel rolled her eyes at Valens. Janet Frye. “Do they have an appointment, Anne?”

“No, ma'am. I checked twice.”

Sometimes, when the prime minister smiled like that, Fred Valens could almost like her. Even knowing that she was a sly old snake, a consummate manipulator, and a gameswoman to match even him. “I'm in a conference right now, Anne. See if you can squeeze them in tomorrow, please? Or perhaps on Monday?”

“I'll do my best, ma'am,” Anne answered, and the link clicked off.

Richard unfroze himself, steepling his long hands in front of his breast. “Toby Hardy I know—”

“Janet Frye,” Valens said, rubbing his eyes with his forefinger and thumb, “is a retired general and part of the opposition leadership, heading up the Home party.”

“Isolationists,” Riel supplied. “The more radical even want us out of the commonwealth. What do you want to bet they want us to play appeasement with the Chinese? The damned Americans are on my back again, too…” She rolled her neck from side to side. “You could have looked that up, Richard; you don't fool me.”

“Sometimes it's more revealing to ask questions.”

Valens crossed to the window himself. “Why do you think they're contacting you now?”

“Oh, that's easy,” Riel said. She went to her desk, thumb locked open a drawer, and drew something small and flat out and laid it on the desk beside the interface panel. “I got some interesting intelligence last night.”

Valens came to get a better look. “An HCD?”

The HCD,” Riel said, and looked at him. “The red telephone, so to speak.”

“What does that have to do with anything?”

The prime minister left the communications device lying on her desk, and went to draw the curtains open again. This time, Valens didn't protest. “I was briefed last night,” Riel called back to him, reaching over her head to fiddle with the cords. “It seems General Frye got a sealed, couriered letter from the PanChinese consulate in the United States yesterday. I'm not privy to the details of what's in that letter.”

“Of course not,” Valens murmured dryly. “That would be espionage, after all.”

“Hah. In any case, I think Richard's guess might be correct, and our primary problem in the PanChinese government is not the premier, but the minister of war, Shijie Shu, who seems about ready to go after his boss's job himself. And I happen to know that he's been in contact with certain members of the U.S. Congress. Through this same embassy official whose return mail code is on the couriered letter.”

“You do have friends in low places.”

“We do our best.” She stepped away from the open curtains, smart enough, at least, not to silhouette herself for long.

“You know,” he said, “I have a few friends of my own. And I happen to know that the secretary general's decision to hold hearings rather than a full war-crimes tribunal — even with all the retractions and reschedulings that entailed — was influenced by a personal call from the office of the PanChinese premier.”

“Did it now?” Riel's eyebrows rose when she was thinking, and right now they furrowed parallel ridges all the way up to her short, dark hair. “That's fascinating, Fred.”

In the silence that followed, Richard cleared his throat. “Am I excused, Prime Minister?”

She nodded. “Yes — no. Wait. Tomorrow. Tonight. Before the delightful Mr. Hardy and his lapdog can reschedule. I'm sending you Xie Min-xue.”

Silence. And then, “Thank you, Prime Minister.”

“There's nothing to thank me for,” she answered. “He and Casey and Fred's granddaughter are all going to be called on to testify, along with you, Richard, if I have my way. Barring a ballistic missile, Montreal is the safest place around right now. I don't think even PanChina is going to risk a second unprovoked attack in front of the world camera. Not this week, in any case. It would put paid to their claim that the attack on Toronto was the result of fringe elements, for one thing—”

Valens nodded, more to himself than to Riel. “What are you going to do about it?”

She lifted her chin and looked at Richard, hovering over her desk. “You can go now, Dick. Thank you.”

“Thank you,” he replied, and derezzed.

Riel stared into the middle distance, her mouth twisting.

“Connie? What are you going to do?”

“I'm going to call Premier Xiong and find out exactly what the hell he thinks is going on.”

11:15 AM

29 September 2063

HMCSS Montreal

Since leaving Sydney, Leslie had developed the abysmally bad habit of humming to himself while he worked, as if he were trying to draw his country and his road around his shoulders, especially in its absence. Restlessness was in his bones, his blood, an itch under his skin like ingrained dirt. He couldn't think unless he walked, and he couldn't walk unless he sang, even if the singing was under his breath.

Now, he set out along the Montreal's toroidal corridors at a good clip, light on his feet, pushing himself a little in the big ship's partial gravity.

Leslie didn't really understand how the Benefactor tech worked, and he knew — in uncomfortable self-honesty — that he did not understand the implications of the discovery that he, Charlie, and Jeremy had made that morning. But he wasn't blind, and he did know that both the xenobiologist and the AI had been frightened—no, had been scared—when they swore him to secrecy on the issue. And so he hummed to himself, big hands swinging loose-fingered on the ends of his arms, eyes just about focused enough to keep him from walking into other pedestrians, ground-eating strides chewing up one lap after another of the Montreal.

On the third lap, pacing footsteps alerted him to company. He didn't glance over, nor did he freeze his uninvited companion out. Instead, he kept walking, still singing under his breath, trusting her to start talking when she had something to say.

Half a lap later, Casey cleared her throat. “We do have treadmills on this tub.”

“Buggered if I'll walk on a treadmill,” Leslie answered amicably. “I like to feel like I'm getting somewhere.”

“And walking in circles does that for you?”

He snorted laughter. “At least the walls move. And I don't have to watch the holos the guy on the next machine is distracting himself with. When I walk, I like to walk.”

“Being in the moment,” she said, surprising him. She had a good, long stride, with a hitch of a limp that he thought was more habit than pain. He stepped up his pace to test her. “What were you singing, Les?”

He grunted and shrugged. “Singing up the country, kind of.”

“Singing up the country?”

“The land must first exist as a concept. It must be sung before it can exist. It must be perceived before it can be walked on. It must be dreamed. You should know something about dreamings, shouldn't you? Or do your folks call them by a different name?”

She was still looking at him, a little quirk twisting her lips out of shape. “You know what an ‘apple' is, Les?”

“A kind of fruit?”

“A kind of Indian,” she said dryly. “Red on the outside. White on the inside. They never taught us any of that shit in Catholic school.”