size. Tribes, clans. We knit our six together into one bigger group, to permit the braiding of recessive genetic trait without excessive inbreeding. But if you triple our numbers—well, there was a reason we were susceptible to civil war eighty years ago. If a tribe grows too large it splinters along factional lines.”
“But you’re—” Riordan stopped. “Oh.”
Patricia nodded. “Yes. If Hildegarde’s idea—bring the newborn world-walkers into the Clan’s client families and raise them among us—had worked, we’d have grown much too fast to maintain control. It would have set us up for another damaging civil war.”
“Have you destroyed the records, then?”
She shook her head. “No need. We may even need them later. I leave that to the Council’s future deliberations; but in the meantime, I took steps to insure that nobody would use them to breed an army of world- walkers. It has to be done openly, with the consent of the entire Clan, or not at all.”
“I can live with that—if you can guarantee it.”
“The problem is ven Hjalmar.” She turned her face to the window. A beam of sunlight splashed through it, lengthening across the floor. “The sleazy little tapeworm’s stolen a set of the records. And now he’s gone missing.
Riordan stared at her. “You think he’d defect to … who? The Lees?”
“I wouldn’t bet against it. He might be lying low in America, but what’s he going to do? He can’t fake up a good enough identity to practice as an ob-gyn—the full academic and employment track record would be a
“God-on-a-stick.” Riordan ran one hand through his thin hair. “I’ll point Olga after him. One more damn thing to worry about.”
“I have a question.” Patricia waited.
“Yes?”
“My daughter’s
“WARBUCKS—” For a moment Riordan looked confused. He shook his head. “Let me think. There was something about it in the files. The old man knew there was a leak; Olga was investigating. I think he may have set her on him—she was still under cover so she could run the fresh-faced ingenue pumping her fiance—to see if he was the leak.
“A tame army of world-walkers,” Patricia said tartly. “If Roland had been planning to defect, and if he could get his hands on the breeding-program records and take them to WARBUCKS, he could have named his own price, couldn’t he? Was that why he had to die?”
Riordan gave her a flat stare. “You might think that, but I couldn’t possibly comment.”
Patricia met his gaze. After several long seconds she nodded, very slightly. “In any case, there are other plausible explanations. My mother, for example. There’s no way she would have allowed her granddaughter to marry a mere
“That is true.” Riordan inclined his head. Then he took a deep breath. “I find the weight of your half-brother’s secrets inordinately onerous, my lady. I wish I could confide fully in you; it’s only those matters concerning your bloodline which give me cause for hesitation. I hope you can forgive me—but can you put yourself in my place?”
Patricia nodded again. “I beg your forgiveness. I don’t believe even for a moment that you might have arranged the liquidation of your elder brother Roland, not even on the duke’s orders. I don’t think Angbard would have given such a—but we live in paranoid times, do we not? And we
“Indeed. Did I mention it was his signature on your brother’s death certificate?”
“Was it really?” Patricia breathed.
“Yes. Really.” Riordan cleared his throat. “Just so you understand what—who—we’re dealing with here. I gather Helge has given her retainers certain orders in his regard. I’m inclined to declare him outlaw before Clan Security. If you, and the committee, concur?”
Patricia nodded emphatically. “Oh, yes.”
They sat in contemplative silence for a minute.
“Are you sure I can’t convince you to go to New Britain?” asked Riordan. “Your daughter could use your support.”
“She’s a grown woman who can make her own mistakes,” Patricia said sharply. “And I’ll thank you for not telling her what I had to do to give her that freedom.” Softly: “I think it better for the older generation to retire discreetly, you know. Rather than fighting, kicking and screaming, against the bitter end.”
“I’m certain they could take care of you, over there,” the earl pointed out. “If you stay behind when the Americans come…”
“I’ll die.” She sniffed. “I’ve been there, to the other world, Frederick. It’s backward and dangerous. With my condition it’s just a matter of time. Did I tell you, my mother was dying? She thought she had a year to live. Didn’t occur to her to ask how
“You’re not that ill, are you?”
“Not yet. But without my medication I will be. And when the Americans come, it won’t matter whether I’m hale and hearty or on my deathbed. If I evacuate, those medicines I need to sustain me will run out by and by. And if I stay…” She fixed him with a gimlet stare. “I hope you’re going to evacuate yourself before the end. My daughter doesn’t need old dead wood like me clogging up her household and draining her resources; but a young, energetic lord of security is another matter.”
Riordan stared right back at her. “This land is my land. And enough of my people are staying that I’d be derelict if I abandoned them.”
“My mother said something like that. My mother was also a damned fool.” Patricia took a deep breath. “She shot a man-eating tiger in the tip of its tail, where the wound is calculated to cause maximum pain and outrage, but to do no lasting harm. Do you really expect it not to bite?”
“Oh, it’s going to bite all right.” Riordan looked as resigned as a condemned man on his way to the scaffold. “You are correct, your grace. And I am encouraging every man and woman I meet to make their way to the evacuation points. But it’s an uphill battle, and many of our less well-traveled cousins are skeptical. If I go, my powers of persuasion are vastly reduced. So, like the captain of a sinking ship, my station is on the bridge.”
“Exactly.” Patricia folded her hands. “But I’m not going anywhere, even if you throw wide the doors to this gilded cell. So why not let me help?”
* * *
On the other side of the sprawling metropolis, a steamer drove slowly along a road lined with big houses, set back behind the wire-topped fences and overgrown hedges of a mostly absent bourgeoisie. Those with royalist connections or a history with the Polis or sympathies with the Patriot Party had mostly decided that they had pressing business out of town, far from urban militias who might recognize them and Leveler Party commissioners who might think the city better off without their ilk.
Sitting in the back of the steamer, James Lee stared pensively at the padlocked gates from behind smoked glass pince-nez spectacles. There, but for the lubrication of certain palms and the careful maintenance of appearances, were his own family’s estates; in time of civil war, nobody suffered quite like foreign merchants,