She realized she was grinding her teeth and stopped herself. And, she reminded herself again, the fabrication Mesa had woven really did have a damning plausibility. For that matter, Elizabeth couldn't shake her own strong suspicion that—
Her thoughts hiccuped as her office door opened once more.
'Ms. Montaigne, Your Majesty,' the chamberlain announced.
'Thank you, Martin,' Elizabeth said once more and rose behind her desk as Catherine Montaigne crossed the carpet towards her.
Montaigne had changed even less than Elizabeth—physically, at least—over the decades since their close adolescent friendship foundered on the rocks of Montaigne's strident principles. Even now, despite the way their relationship had cooled over those same decades, Elizabeth Winton the woman continued to regard Montaigne as a friend, even though Montaigne's involvement with a legally proscribed terrorist organization continued to prevent Elizabeth Winton the Queen from officially acknowledging that friendship. It couldn't have been any other way, given all the thorny difficulties Montaigne's effective endorsement of the aforesaid legally prescribed terrorist organization created where the Manticoran political calculus was concerned. Especially since the ex-Countess of the Tor had become the leader of what remained of the Manticoran Liberal Party.
'Cathy,' the queen said, extending her hand across the desk.
'Your Majesty,' Montaigne replied as she shook the proffered hand, and Elizabeth snorted mentally. No one had ever accused Catherine Montaigne of a chutzpah deficiency, but she was clearly on her best behavior this morning. Despite the other woman's lifetime of experience in the public eye, Elizabeth could see wariness and worry in her eyes, and the formality of her greeting suggested Montaigne was aware of just how thin the ice underfoot had become.
'I'm sorry my invitation didn't come under more pleasant circumstances,' Elizabeth said out loud, pointing at a waiting armchair when Montaigne released her hand, and the ex-countess' lips twitched ever so slightly.
'So am I,' she said.
'Unfortunately,' Elizabeth continued, sitting back down in her own chair, 'I didn't have much choice. As I'm sure you'd already deduced.'
'Oh, you might say that.' Montaigne's expression was sour. 'I've been under siege by newsies of every possible description since this broke.'
'Of course you have. And it's going to get one hell of a lot worse before it gets better . . . assuming it ever
'Cathy, what the
The queen didn't need a treecat's empathic sense to recognize Montaigne's sudden flash of anger. Part of Elizabeth sympathized with the other woman; most of her didn't give much of a damn, though. Whatever else, Montaigne had
The good news was that Montaigne had always understood that. And it was evident she'd anticipated that question—or one very much like it—from the moment she received Elizabeth's 'invitation.'
'I assume you're talking about Green Pines,' she said.
'No, I'm talking about Jack's decision to assault the beanstalk,' Elizabeth said caustically. 'Of
'I'm afraid,' Montaigne replied with a degree of calm remarkable even in a politician of her experience, 'that at this moment you know just as much about what actually happened in Green Pines as I do.'
'Oh, cut the
'Yes, I do.' Montaigne's calm slipped for a moment, and the three words came out flat, hard, and challenging. Then she shook herself. 'Yes, I do,' she repeated in a more normal tone, 'but all I can tell you is that to the best of my knowledge he wasn't involved in this at all.'
Elizabeth looked at her incredulously, and Montaigne shrugged.
'It's the truth, Beth.'
'And I suppose you're going to tell me the Ballroom wasn't involved 'to the best of your knowledge,' either?'
'I don't know. That's the truth,' Montaigne insisted more forcefully as Elizabeth rolled her eyes. 'I'm not telling you they weren't; I'm only saying I don't know one way or the other.'
'Well, would you like to propose another villain for the piece?' Elizabeth demanded. 'Somebody else who hates Mesa enough to set off multiple nuclear explosions in one of its capital's suburbs?'
'Personally, I think the idea would appeal to most people who've ever had to deal with the sick bastards,' Montaigne returned levelly, her eyes as unflinching as her voice. 'In answer to what you're actually asking, however, I have to admit the Ballroom—or possibly some seccy Ballroom wannabe—has to be the most likely culprit. Beyond that, I genuinely can't tell you anything about who actually did it. I can say, though, that the last time I was on Torch—and, for that matter, the last time Anton and I spoke—no one on Torch, and sure as hell not Anton, was even
'And you're confident your good friend and general all-around philanthropist Jeremy X. would've
'Actually, yes,' Montaigne shrugged. 'I won't pretend my having plausible deniability about Ballroom ops hasn't come in handy from time to time. For that matter, I won't pretend I haven't outright lied about whether or not the Ballroom was behind something . . . or whether or not I had prior knowledge of the 'atrocity' du jour. But now that he and Web Du Havel—and your own niece, for that matter—have finally given the galaxy's genetic slaves a genuine home world of their own? You think he'd be crazy enough to plan something like this—something that
The ex-countess looked disgusted by her monarch's obtuseness, and Elizabeth gritted her teeth. Then she made herself sit back.
'Look,' she said, 'I know the Ballroom's never been as monolithic as the public thinks. Or, for that matter, as monolithic as people like Jeremy—and you—like to pretend. I know it's riddled with splinter factions and no one ever knows when a charismatic leader's going to take some chunk of the official organization with him on his own little crusade. But the bottom line is that
'Assuming the reports out of Mesa are accurate, then, yes, I'd have to agree with that,' Montaigne acknowledged in that same unflinching tone. 'But you're right about the Ballroom's occasional internal divisions. For that matter, I'd have to admit some of the action leaders who'd accepted Jeremy's leadership before Torch became independent are royally pissed off with him now for 'betraying the armed struggle' when he 'went legit.' At least some of them think he's sold out in return for open political power; most of them just think he's