'No.'

Gregor raised his brows at this concise certainty. 'Truly?' he asked softly.

'Truly,' Miles said firmly. 'I'm not playing hard-to-get. It's a desk job stuffed with the most tedious routine, in between the terror-weeks, and the chief of ImpSec not only almost never gets off-planet further than Komarr, he scarcely ever gets out of Cockro—out of ImpSec HQ. I would hate it.'

'I think you could do it.'

'I think I could do almost anything I had to do, if you ordered it, Gregor. Is this an order?'

'No.' Gregor sat back. 'It was a genuine question.'

'Then you have my genuine answer. Guy Allegre is much better fitted than I am for this job. He has the downside and the bureaucratic experience, and he's well respected on Komarr as well as on Barrayar. He is fully engaged with his work, and cares a lot about it, but he's not distorted by ambition. He's the right age, neither too young nor too old. No one will question his appointment.'

Gregor smiled slightly. 'That's what I thought you'd say, actually.'

'What is this, then, some sort of spiritual exercise?' I think I've had all of those I want for a while, thanks. His heart still seemed to ache, the way an overstrained muscle twinged when one put weight on it. Like muscle strain, it would pass with a little rest, he suspected.

'No,' said Gregor. 'Just a courtesy. I wanted to give you first refusal.'

He did not ask again, which saved Miles the embarrassment of refusing him again. Instead he leaned forward, and put down the gold chain and played with it a moment, arranging the links in a smooth oval pattern. Then he asked, 'Would you like some coffee? Tea? Breakfast?'

'No, thanks.'

'Something stronger?'

'No. Thanks. I have a spot of brain surgery scheduled for this afternoon. Dr. Chenko is ready to install his controlled-seizure chip. It looks like it's going to work. I'm not supposed to eat anything beforehand.'

'Ah, good. It's about time.'

'Yes. I can hardly wait to get back in my lightflyer.'

'Will you miss the egregious Martin?'

'A little, I think. He grew on me.'

Gregor glanced again at his office door. Was he waiting for something? Now was a good time for Miles s request. 'Gregor, I wanted to ask you—'

The door to Gregor's office slid aside, and the majordomo entered. At Gregor's nod, he turned back to the corridor and said, 'If you will, my lords.' He stepped back respectfully.

Four men entered Gregor's office. Miles recognized them at once; he was Barrayaran enough that his first thought was a conscience-stricken, My God, what have I done wrong? Good sense reasserted itself; his feats of evil would have had to have been downright heroic to rate the attention of four Imperial Auditors at one time. Still, it was unusual, as well as unnerving, to see so many Auditors in one room. Miles cleared his throat, and sat up straighter, and exchanged polite Vorish greetings with them as Gregor's majordomo hurried to arrange seats for them all around Gregor's desk.

Lord Vorhovis was back from Komarr, it appeared. In his early sixties, he was the youngest of the crowd, but with a formidable career behind him nonetheless; soldier first, then diplomat, planetary ambassador, and onetime assistant minister of finance. He might be a model for Duv Galeni to emulate. He was a cool, lean, sophisticated man, very much in the modern style of Vor lord—Miles wondered if he shared Gregor's tailor—and he carried Miles's data card case in his hand.

Dr. Vorthys was one of the two recent appointees of Gregor's who was not in the military mold. He was a professor emeritus of engineering failure analysis from Vorbarr Sultana University, and had written the text on his subject. Several of them, in fact. He looked a professor, stout, white-haired, smiling, rumpled, with a noble nose and big ears. Late in his career he had become philosophically interested in the connections between sociopolitical and engineering integrity; his addition to Gregor's array of Auditors had brought in some welcome technical expertise, not that the Auditors exactly worked as a team.

Lord Vann Vorgustafson, chatting amiably with him, was the other civilian, a retired industrialist and noted philanthropist. He was short, and stouter than Vorthys, with a bristling gray beard and pink choleric face that alarmed observers about the state of his cardiovascular system. Surely the most financially unbribable of Gregor's Auditors, he routinely gave away money in lumps larger than the average man saw in his lifetime. One wouldn't guess his wealth to look at him, for he dressed like a workman, if there were any workmen so lacking in color- sense.

Admiral Vorkalloner was an Auditor of the more traditional type, retired from the Service after a long and impeccable career. He seemed socially bland, and was notably unaffiliated with any political party, conservative or progressive, as far as Miles had heard. Tall and thick, he seemed to take up a lot of space.

He nodded cordially to Miles, before taking a chair. 'Good morning. So, you're Aral Vorkosigan's boy.'

'Yes, sir,' Miles sighed.

'Haven't seen you around much in the last ten years. Now I know why.'

Miles tried to work out whether that was a positive or negative statement. Seeing so many of them together, Miles gained a renewed sense of what an odd lot the Auditors were. All were experienced, accomplished, wealthy in their own right. In other ways they were downright eccentric, outside or perhaps above the norms. More than fireproof, they were Gregor's firemen.

Vorhovis seated himself on the Emperor's left.

'So,' Gregor said to him, 'what do you gentlemen think?'

'This'—Vorhovis leaned forward, and laid the data case containing Miles's Auditor's report on the comconsole—'is an extraordinary document, Gregor.'

'Yes,' seconded Vorthys. 'Concise, coherent, and complete. Do you know how rare that is? I congratulate you on it, young man.'

Do I get a good grade, professor? 'Simon Illyan trained me. He didn't have much tolerance for slop. If he didn't like my field reports, he'd fire them back to me for additions. It got to be something of a hobby with him, I think. I could always tell when ImpSec HQ was having a really slow week, because my report would come back shot full of little query boxes with these dryly worded corrections for grammar and style. Ten years of that, and you learn to do it right the first time.'

Vorkalloner smiled. 'Old Vorsmydie,' he noted, 'used to turn in handwritten plastic flimsys. Never more than two pages. He insisted anything important could always be said in two pages.'

'Illegibly handwritten,' muttered Gregor.

'We used to have to go and squeeze the footnotes out of him in person. It became somewhat irritating,' added Vorkalloner.

Vorhovis, with a gesture at the data case, went on to Miles, 'You appear to have left the military prosecutor with very little to do.'

'Nothing, in fact,' said Gregor. 'Allegre reported to me last night that Haroche has given up and is going to plead guilty, trying to reduce his sentence through cooperation. Well, he could hardly have confessed to Us and then turned around and tried to pretend innocence to a Service judge.'

'I wouldn't have bet on that. He did have nerve,' said Miles. 'But I'm glad to hear it's not going to be dragged out.

'It was a truly bizarre case,' Vorhovis went on. 'I'd been worried something might be very wrong when I first heard that Illyan had gone down. But I could not have unraveled the events as you did, Lord Vorkosigan.'

'I'm sure you would have unraveled them in your own way, sir,' said Miles.

'No,' said Vorhovis. He tapped the data case. 'By my analysis, the critical juncture was when you brought in that galactic biochemist, Dr. Weddell. It was from that point that Haroche's plans began to go irretrievably wrong. I would not have known of Weddell's existence, and would have left the selection of the chip autopsy team entirely to Admiral Avakli.'

'Avakli was good,' Miles said, uncertain if this was

a criticism. The biocyberneticist had done his best, certainly.

'We'—a circular wave of Vorhovis's finger indicated the Auditors there assembled—'do not often work

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