take Rian's next report when he had Vorreedi glued to his hip? The man was noting his every eye-flicker, Miles swore.
The day wore on with a repeat of the cycle of music and food and transportation. A number of the delegates were looking glassily over-loaded with it all; even Ivan had stopped eating in self-defense at about stop three. When the contact did come, at the buffet after the fourth and last choral performance, Miles almost missed it. He was making idle chit-chat with Vorreedi, reminiscing about Keroslav District baking styles, and wondering how he was going to distract and ditch the man. Miles had reached the point of desperation of fantasizing slipping Ambassador Vorob'yev an emetic and siccing, so to speak, the protocol officer on his superior while Miles ducked out, when he saw out of the corner of his eye Ivan talking with a grave ba servitor. He did not recognize this ba; it was not Rian's favorite little creature, for it was young and had a brush of blond hair. Ivan's hands turned palm-out, and he shrugged, then he followed the servitor from the pavilion, looking puzzled.
'Excuse me, sir,' Miles cut across Vorreedi's words, and around his side. By the time Vorreedi had turned after him, Miles had darted past another delegation and was halfway to the exit after Ivan. Vorreedi would follow, but Miles would just have to deal with that later.
Miles emerged, blinking, into the artificial afternoon light of the dome just in time to see the dark shadow and boot-gleam of Ivan's uniform disappear around some flowering shrubbery, beyond an open space featuring a fountain. He trotted after, his own boots scuffing unevenly on the colored stone walks threading the greenery. 'Lord Vorkosigan?' Vorreedi called after him. Miles didn't turn around, but raised his hand in an acknowledging, but still rapidly receding, wave. Vorreedi was too polite to curse out loud, but Miles could fill in the blanks.
The man-high shrubbery, broken up by artistic groupings of trees, wasn't quite a maze, but nearly so. Miles's first choice of directions opened onto some sort of unpeopled water meadow, with the stream generated from the nearby fountain running like silver embroidery through its center. He ran back along his route, cursing his legs and his limp, and swung around the other end of the bushes.
In the center of a tree-shaded circle lined with benches, a haut-chair floated with its high back to Miles, its screen down. The blond servitor was gone already. Ivan leaned in toward the float-chair's occupant, his lips parted in fascination, his brows drawn down in suspicion. A white-robed arm lifted. A faint cloud of iridescent mist puffed into Ivan's surprised face. Ivan's eyes rolled back, and he collapsed forward across the seated occupant's knees. The force-screen snapped up, white and blank. Miles yelled and ran toward it.
The haut-ladies' float-chairs were hardly race cars, but they could move faster than Miles could run. In two turns through the shrubbery it was out of sight. When Miles cleared the last stand of flowers, he found himself facing one of the major carved-white-jade-paved walkways that curved through the Celestial Garden. Floating along it in both directions were half a dozen haut-bubbles, all now moving at the same dignified walking pace. Miles had no breath left to swear, but black thoughts boiled off his brain.
He spun on his heel, and ran straight into Colonel Vorreedi.
Vorreedi's hand descended on his shoulder and took a good solid grip on the uniform cloth. 'Vorkosigan, what the hell is going on? And where is Vorpatril?'
'I'm . . . just about to go check on that right now, sir, if you'll permit me.'
'Cetagandan Security had better know. I'll light up their lives if they've—'
'I … don't think Security can help us on this one, sir. I think I need to talk to a ba servitor. Immediately.'
Vorreedi frowned, trying to process this. It obviously did not compute. Miles couldn't blame him. Until a week ago, he too had shared the universal assumption that Cetagandan Imperial Security was in charge here.
Speak of the devil. As Miles and Vorreedi turned to retrace their steps to the pavilion, a red-uniformed, zebra-faced guard appeared, striding rapidly toward them. Sheepdog, Miles judged, sent to round up straying galactic envoys. Fast, but not fast enough.
'My lords,' the guard, a low-ranker, nodded very politely. 'The pavilion is this way, if you please. The float-cars will take you to the South Gate.'
Vorreedi appeared to come to a quick decision. 'Thank you. But we seem to have mislaid a member of our party. Would you please find Lord Vorpatril for me?'
'Certainly.' The guard touched a wrist com and reported the request in neutral tones, while still firmly herding Miles and Vorreedi pavilion-ward. Taking Ivan, for now, as merely a lost guest; that had to happen fairly often, since the garden was designed to entice the viewer on into its delights.
The guard split off as they climbed the steps to the pavilion. Back inside, Miles approached the oldest bald servitor he saw. 'Excuse me, Ba,' he said respectfully. The ba glanced up, nonplussed at not being invisible. 'I must communicate immediately with the haut Rian Degtiar. It's an emergency.' He opened his hands and stood back.
The ba appeared to digest this for a moment, then gave a half bow and motioned Miles to follow. Vorreedi came too. Around a corner in the semi-privacy of a service area, the ba pulled back its gray and white uniform sleeve and spoke into its wrist-comm, a quick gabble of words and code phrases. Its non-existent eyebrows rose in surprise at the return message. It took off its wrist-comm, handed it to Miles with a low bow, and retreated out of earshot. Miles wished Vorreedi, looming over his shoulder, would do the same, but he didn't.
'Lord Vorkosigan?' came Rian's voice from the comm—unfiltered, she must be speaking from inside her bubble.
'Milady. Did you just send one of your . . . people, to pick up my cousin Ivan?'
There was a short pause. 'No.'
'I witnessed this.'
'Oh.' Another, much longer pause. When her voice came back again, it had gone low and dangerous. 'I know what is happening.'
'I'm glad somebody does.'
'I will send
'And Ivan?'
'Just what did you witness, Lord Vorkosigan?' Vorreedi demanded.
'Ivan . . . left with a lady.'
'What,
'I believe I can retrieve him very discreetly, sir, if you will allow me.' Miles felt a faint twinge of guilt for slandering Ivan by implication, but the twinge was lost in his general, heart-hammering fear. Had that aerosol been a knockout drug, or a lethal poison?
Vorreedi took a long, long minute to think this one over, his eye cold on Miles. Vorreedi, Miles reminded himself, was Intelligence, not Counter-intelligence; curiosity, not paranoia, was his driving force. Miles shoved his hands into his trouser pockets and tried to look calm, unworried, merely annoyed. As the silence lengthened, he dared to add, 'If you trust nothing else, sir, please trust my competence. That's all I ask.'
'Discreet, eh?' said Vorreedi. 'You've made some interesting friends here, Lord Vorkosigan. I'd like to hear a lot more about them.'
'Soon, I hope, sir.'
'Mm . . . very well. But be prompt.'
'I'll do my best, sir,' Miles lied. It had to be today. Once away from his guardian, he wasn't coming back till the job was done.
He went to the open side of the pavilion and stepped down into the artificial sunlight just as a float-car arrived that was not funerally decorated: a simple two-passenger cart with room for cargo behind. A familiar aged little bald ba was at the controls. The ba spotted Miles, and swung closer, and brought its vehicle to a halt. They