wonder we couldn't find a body!”
“You run—you hurry ahead, I believe. I grant you the scenario has grown extremely murky. My request, then, is that you locate all possible facilities on Graf Station where such a tissue synthesis could be carried out, and see if there is any record of such a batch being run off, and who for. Or if it could have been slipped through off the record, for that matter. I think we can safely assume that whoever had it done, Solian or some unknown, was keenly interested in concealment. The surgeon reports the blood likely was generated not much more than a day before it was spilled, but the inquiry had better be run back to the time the
“I . . . follow your logic, certainly.” Venn held his coffee bulb to his mouth and squeezed, then transferred it absently to his lower left hand. “Yes, certainly,” he echoed himself more faintly. “I'll see to it myself.”
Miles felt satisfied that he'd rocked Venn off-balance to just the right degree to embarrass him into effective action, yet not freeze him into defensiveness. “Thank you.”
Venn added, “I believe Sealer Greenlaw wished to speak with you this morning, also, Lord Vorkosigan.”
“Very well. You may transfer my call to her, if you please.”
Greenlaw was a morning person, it appeared, or else had drunk her coffee earlier. She appeared in the holovid dressed in a different elaborate doublet, stern, and fully awake. Perhaps more by diplomatic habit than any desire to please, she twitched herself around right-side-up to Miles.
“Good morning, Lord Auditor Vorkosigan. In response to their petitions, I have arranged you an appointment with the Komarran fleet's stranded passengers at ten-hundred. You may meet with them to answer their questions at the larger of the two hostels where they are presently housed. Portmaster Thorne will meet you at your ship and conduct you there.”
Miles's head jerked back at this cavalier arrangement of his time and attention. Not to mention blatant pressure move. On the other hand . . . this delivered him a room
“That, I must leave to you. These people came in with you Barrayarans; they are your responsibility.”
“Madam, if that were so, they would all be on their way already. There can be no responsibility without power. It is the Union authorities who have placed them under this house arrest, and therefore the Union authorities who must free them.”
“When you finish settling the fines, costs, and charges your people have incurred here, we will be only too happy to do so.”
Miles smiled thinly, and laced his hands together on the tabletop. He wished the only new card he had to play this morning were less ambiguous. Nevertheless, he repeated to her the news about Solian's manufactured blood sample, well-larded with complaint about quaddie Security not having determined this peculiar fact earlier. She bounced it back instantly, as Venn had, as evidence more supporting of desertion than murder.
“Fine,” said Miles. “Then have Union Security produce the man. A foreign downsider wandering about in Quaddiespace can't be that hard for a
“Quaddiespace,” she sniffed back, “is not a
“So why hasn't he asked for asylum like Ensign Corbeau? No. I greatly fear what we have here is not a missing man, but a missing corpse. The dead cannot cry out for justice; it is a duty of the living to do so for them. And that
They closed the conversation on that note; Miles could only hope he'd made her morning as aggravating as she'd made his. He cut the com and rubbed the back of his neck. “Gah. That ties
Roic quickly drew himself upright. “My lord?”
“Have
“Well . . . I was just a street guard, mostly. But I got to go along and help the senior officers on a few fraud and assault cases. And one kidnapping. We got her back alive. Several missing persons. Oh, and about a dozen murders, though like I said, they weren't hardly mysteries. And the series of arsons that time that—”
“Right.” Miles waved a hand to stem this gentle tide of reminiscence. “I want you to do the detail work for me on Solian. First, the timetable. I want you to find out every documented thing the man did. His watch reports, where he was, what he ate, when he slept—and who with, if anyone—minute by minute, or as nearly as you can come to it, from the time of his disappearance right on back as far as you can take it. Especially any movements off the ship, and missing time. And then I want the personal slant—talk to the crew and captain of the
“No, m'lord. But . . .”
“Vorpatril and Brun will give you full cooperation and access, I promise you. Or if they don't, let me know.” Miles smiled a bit grimly.
“It's not that, m'lord. Who'll run your personal security on Graf Station if I'm off poking around Admiral Vorpatril's fleet?”
Miles managed to swallow his airy,
Roic looked dubious. “I can't approve, m'lord. He's—it's—not even Barrayaran. What do you really know about, um, the portmaster?”
“Lots,” Miles assured him.
“I'll try, m'lord.”
* * *
Back in what he was starting to think of as their cabinet, Miles encountered Ekaterin returning from the shower, dressed again in her red tunic and leggings. They maneuvered for a kiss, and he said, “I've acquired an involuntary appointment. I have to go stationside almost immediately.”
“You
He glanced down at his bare legs. “Planned to, yeah.”
Her eyes danced. “You looked abstracted. I thought it would be safer to ask.”
He grinned. “I wonder how strangely I
“Judging by some of the stories my Uncle Vorthys tells me of the Imperial Auditors of past generations, a lot stranger than that.”
“No, I'm afraid it would only be our loyal Barrayarans who'd have to bite their tongues.” He captured her hand and rubbed it enticingly. “Want to come along with me?”
“Doing what?” she asked, with commendable suspicion.
“Telling the trade fleet's galactic passengers I can't do a damned thing for them, they're stuck till Greenlaw shifts, thank you very much, have a pleasant day.”
“That sounds . . . really unrewarding.”
“That would be my best guess.”
“A Countess is by law and tradition something of an assistant Count. An Auditor's wife, however, is not an assistant Auditor,” she said in a firm tone, reminiscent to Miles's ear of her aunt—Professora Vorthys was herself an Auditor's spouse of some experience. “Nicol and Garnet Five made arrangements to take me out this morning and show me quaddie horticulture. If you don't mind, I think I'll stick to my original plan.” She softened this sensible refusal with another kiss.
A flash of guilt made him grimace. “Graf Station is not exactly what we had in mind for a honeymoon