Well, she couldn't possibly be carrying any concealed weapons. Miles stepped within, and was unsurprised to see her bodyguard, idling in one corner of the hostel room. The man nodded to Overholt, who nodded back, both wary as two cats. And where was the third man? Not here, evidently.
She drifted to a liquid-filled settee, and arranged herself upon it.
'Are you, uh, Mr. Liga's supervisor?' Miles asked. No, Liga had denied knowing who she was. …
She hesitated fractionally. 'In a sense, yes.'
One of them was lying—no, not necessarily. If she were indeed high in Liga's organization, he would not have identified her to Rotha. Damn.
'—but you may think of me as a procurement agent.'
God. Pol Six really was hip-deep in spies. 'For whom?'
'Ah,' she smiled. 'One of the advantages of dealing with small suppliers is always their no-questions-asked policy. One of the few advantages.'
'No-questions-asked is House Fell's slogan, I believe. They have the advantage of a fixed and secure base. I've learned to be cautious about selling arms to people who might be shooting at me in the near future.'
Her blue eyes widened. 'Who would want to shoot at you?'
'Misguided folk,' Miles tossed off. Ye gods. He was not in control of this conversation. He exchanged a harried look with Overholt, who was being out-blanded by his counterpart.
'We must chat.' She patted the cushion beside her invitingly. 'Do sit down, Victor. Ah,' she nodded to her bodyguard, 'why don't you wait outside.'
Miles seated himself on the edge of the settee, trying to guess woman's age. Her complexion was smooth and white. Only the skin of her eyelids was soft and faintly puckered. Miles thought of Ungari's orders—take bribes, blend in. . . .
'Perhaps you should wait outsio* also,' he said to Overholt.
Overholt looked torn, but of the two, he clearly wanted more to keep an eye on the large armed man. He nodded, apparently in acquiescence, actually in approval, and followed her man out.
Miles smiled in what he hoped was a friendly way. She looked positively seductive. Miles eased cautiously back in the cushions, and tried to look seduceable. A veritable espionage fantasy encounter, of the sort Ungari had told him never happened. Maybe they just never happened to Ungari, eh?
Her hand went to her cleavage—a riveting gesture—and withdrew a tiny, familiar vid disk. She leaned over to insert it in the vid player on the low table before them, and it took Miles a moment to shift his attention to the vid. The little glittering soldier-figure went through its stylized gestures once again. Ha. So, she really was Liga's supervisor. Very good, he was getting somewhere now.
'This is really remarkable, Victor. How did you come by it?'
'A happy accident.'
'How many can you supply?'
'A strictly limited number. Say, fifty. I'm not a manufacturer. Liga did mention the price?'
'I thought it high.'
'If you can find another supplier who offers these for less, I will be happy to match his price and knock off ten percent.' Miles managed to bow sitting down.
She made a faint amused sound, down in her throat. 'The volume offered is too low.'
'There are several ways you could profit from even a small number of these, if you got into the trade early enough. Such as selling working models to interested governments. I mean to have a share of that profit, before the market is saturated and the price drops. You could too.'
'Why don't you? Sell them directly to governments, that is.'
'What makes you think I haven't?' Miles smiled. 'But—consider my routes out of this area. I came in past Barrayar and Pol. I must exit via either Jackson's Whole or the Cetagandan Empire. Unfortunately, through either route I run a high risk of being relieved of this particular cargo without any compensation whatsoever.' For that matter, where had Barrayar obtained its working model of the shield-suit? Was there a real Victor Rotha, and where was he now? Where
'So, you carry them with you?'
'I didn't say that.'
'Hm.' She smiled. 'Can you deliver one tonight?'
'What size?'
'Small.' One long-nailed finger traced a line down her body, from breast to thigh, to indicate exactly how small.
Miles sighed mournfully. 'Unfortunately, these were sized for the average-to-large combat soldier. Cutting one down is a considerable technical challenge—one which I am in fact still working on myself.'
'How thoughtless of the manufacturer.'
'I entirely agree, Citizen Nu.'
She looked at him more carefully. Did her smile grow slightly more genuine?
'Anyway, I prefer to sell them in wholesale lots. If your organization isn't financially up to it—'
'An arrangement might yet be made.'
'Promptly, I trust. I'll be moving on soon.'
She murmured absently, 'Perhaps not . . .' then looked up with a quick frown. 'What's your next stop?'
Ungari had to file a public flight plan anyway. 'Aslund.'
'Hm . . . yes, we must come to some arrangement. Absolutely.' Were those blue flickers what were called bedroom eyes? The effect was lulling, almost hypnotic.
'Can I meet your boss?'
'Who?' Her brows lowered.
'The man I saw you both with this morning.'
'. . . oh. So, you've already seen him.'
'Set me up a meeting. Let's do serious business. Betan dollars, remember.'
'Pleasure before business, surely.' Her breath puffed against his ear, a faint spicy fog.
Was she trying to soften him up? What
Her hand tightened. In pure nervous reflex, Miles leapt to his feet.
And stood there feeling like an idiot. It had been a caress, not incipient strangulation. The angle was all wrong for attack leverage.
She flung herself back in the seat, slim arm stretching along the top of the cushions. 'Victor!' Her voice was amused, her brow arched. 'I wasn't going to bite your neck.'
His face was hot. 'I-have-to-go-now.' He cleared his throat to bring his voice back down to its lower register. His hand swooped to pluck the vid disk from the player. Her hand leapt toward it, then fell back languidly, pretending disinterest. Miles hit the door comm.
Overholt was there at once, in the sliding door aperture. Miles's gut eased. If his bodyguard had been gone, Miles would have known this at once for some kind of set-up. Too late, of course.
'Maybe later,' Miles gabbled. 'After you've taken delivery. We could get together.' Delivery of a nonexistent cargo? What was he saying?
She shook her head in disbelief. Her laugh followed him down the corridor. It had a brittle edge.
Miles lurched awake when the lights snapped on in his cabin. Ungari, fully dressed, was in the doorway.