“Dance with Kareen.”
“I don’t see the problem with that. You’re allowed to dance. Whatever you are. This is not the play, Mark, and old Prospero has many daughters. One may even have a low taste for fishy fellows.”
“How low?”
“Oh …” The Countess held out her hand at a level about equal to Mark’s standing height. “At least that low. Go dance with the girl, Mark. She thinks you’re interesting. Mother Nature gives a sense of romance to young people, in place of prudence, to advance the species. It’s a trick—that makes us grow.”
Walking across the Residence ballroom to greet Kareen Koudelka felt like the most terrifying thing Mark had ever voluntarily done, not excepting the first Dendarii combat drop onto Jackson’s Whole. There the resemblance ended, for after that, things
“Lord Mark!” she said happily. “They told me you were here.”
You
“Good! It’s about time. I’ve saved out all the mirror dances and the called reels.”
All the simple dances he could be expected to do. “I had Miles teach me the steps to Mazeppa’s Minuet last week,” he added hopefully.
“Perfect. Oh, the music’s starting—” She hauled him onto the inlaid floor.
She wore a swirling dark green dress with red trim, that set off her ash-blonde curls. In a sort of positive paranoia, he wondered if her outfit could possibly have been deliberately color-coordinated with his own clothes. Surely it must be a coincidence. How—?
Grunt, alas, had a distracting and distressing tendency to mentally undress her, and worse. But Grunt was not going to be permitted to speak tonight.
They were in the middle of a mirror dance. “So, Kareen—you’re a girl. I, uh, had this argument with Ivan. What do you think is the most attractive thing a fellow can have? A lightflyer, wealth … rank?” He hoped his tone suggested he was running some sort of scientific survey. Nothing personal, ma’am.
She pursed her lips. “Wit,” she said at last.
“Mirror dance, my turn,” said Kareen. “What’s the most important thing a woman can have?”
“Trust,” he answered without thinking, and then thought about it to the point of almost losing his step. He was going to need a mountain of trust, no lie. So,
He managed to make her laugh out loud four times, after that. He kept count. ,
He ate too much (even Gorge was sneakily sated), drank too much, talked too much, and danced
A word passed to an Imperial household servant brought the Count’s groundcar back for them, driven by the ubiquitous Pym, who had taken the Count and Countess home earlier. Miles and Mark took over the rear compartment, both sagging into their seats. Pym pulled out past the Residence’s guarded gates and into the winter streets, grown as night-quiet as the capital’s streets ever did, only a few other vehicles prowling past. Miles turned the heat up high, and settled back with his eyes half-closed.
Mark and his brother were alone in the compartment. Mark counted the number of people present. One, two. Three, four, five, six, seven. Lord Miles Vorkosigan and Admiral Naismith. Lord Mark Vorkosigan and Gorge, Grunt, Howl, and Killer.
Admiral Naismith was a
But they all ran together, he and the black gang, on the deepest level. No part could be excised without butchering the whole. So,
Mark wondered what Admiral Naismith took care of, for Miles. Something subtle but important—the Countess even saw it. What was it she had said?
“Did I ever apologize, for getting you killed?” Mark asked aloud.
“Not that I recall. … It wasn’t altogether your fault. I had no business mounting that drop mission. Should have taken Vasa Luigi up on his ransom offer. Except …”
“Except what?”
“He wouldn’t sell you to me. I suspect he was already planning to get a higher bid from Ryoval, even then.”
“That would be my guess. Ah … thank you.”
“I’m not sure it made a difference, in the end,” Miles said apologetically. “Since Ryoval just tried again.”
“Oh, yes. It made a huge difference, in the end. All the difference in the world.” Mark smiled slightly, in the dark. Vorbarr Sultana’s wildly assorted architecture passed by outside the canopy, snow-softened to a kind of unity.
“What do we do tomorrow?” Mark asked.
“Sleep in,” murmured Miles, oozing down a little further in his stiff uniform collar, rather like paste being sucked back into a tube.
“After that.”
“The party season ends here in three days, with the Winterfair bonfires. If my—our parents really go down to the District, I suppose I’ll divide my time between Hassadar and here, till ImpSec lets me come back to work. Hassadar is slightly warmer than Vorbarr Sultana, this time of year. Ah—you’re invited to come along with me, if you like.”
“Thank you. I accept.”
“What do you plan to do?”
“After your medical leave is over, I think I’ll sign up for one of your schools.”
“Which one?”
“If the Count and Countess are going to be mainly residing in Hassadar, maybe the District college there.”
“Hm. I should warn you, you’ll find a more, um, rural crowd there than you would in Vorbarr Sultana. You’ll